Hub City Blues

The Future is Unsustainable

  • Clarion West
    • 2013 Clarion Write-a-thon
      • Clarion West (1)
      • Clarion West (2)
      • Clarion West (3)
      • Clarion West (4)
      • Clarion West (5)
    • 2014 Clarion Write-a-thon
  • Hub City Serials
  • Projects
    • 30 Cubed – May 2014
    • 30 Cubed 2014, Finished
    • Encourage an Artist
    • The Entirety of Hub City Blues
    • The Fantastic Fifteen
    • The Future Is Short: 57 Science Fiction Micro-tales by 31 Authors
    • So you want to do NaNoWriMo in 2013?
  • Science
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    • Stop blaming dystopian fiction for our fears
  • Tales of Hub City
  • Authors
    • Thaddeus Howze
    • Paula Friedman
    • Ronald T. Jones
  • Hub City Blues

Countdown at the Memory Palace (1)

Posted by Ebonstorm on July 10, 2013
Posted in: Chapter, Serial, Short Story. Tagged: brain, ebonstorm, medicine, mental-health, science fiction, surgery, technology, Thaddeus Howze, videogames. 1 Comment

digital5lateralizationI underwent the surgery to remove half my brain when my epilepsy became my full time job.

The surgeons told my parents they were in touch with a technology firm who was interested in my case and wanted to present a proposal. My parents went to the meeting but didn’t tell me at the time. I deduced it later.

I was sedated half the time and when I wasn’t I was sick from the anti-seizure medication. I saw my mother and father fighting outside of my room before they came in pretending all was right with the world. They assured me everything would be alright after the surgery.

I would like to say it was terrifying to know someone was going to remove half my brain but with a continual electrical storm going on in my brain, I was too incoherent to be afraid and so sick and tired of doctors, and needles and creepy leering scientists. I just wanted it to be over.

And then it was.

I was incapable of speech. They removed the left side of my brain. I could still talk but no one understood what I was saying. Not even me. I could think it, but could not say it. One of my therapists informed me, my brain was a powerful tool and would eventually recover. She was going to teach me to talk again. By singing, of all things.

I could not talk, but I could sing. So I learned to sing what I wanted. It took half a year to be able to ask for anything important, but language was easy compared to learning to walk again. The physical therapist was a bitch, too. She never let me rest. Sweat dripped down my body and all she could say was: Do it again. Keep moving. Dammit, don’t give up now.

And she was right.

Then I began to dream. I dreamed of numbers, of shapes, I could see and understand the distances between things, (three feet, seven inches to my food tray, sixteen feet to the bathroom, six feet to the television in my hospital room). I could remember the number of steps I took in a single day (1,584), I could remember the number of hairs on the face of the handsome doctor (about 15,000) who was tending to my head after the surgery.

I didn’t question it at first. It seemed normal to count everything. To remember everything. I don’t know why I never did it before. Then I thought about it and realized I could only remember everything up to the day after my surgery. Everything before that vanishes into a hole, as if I didn’t exist before then.

I tried to tell my mother. She assured me I was going to be fine and rushed from the room. Her face was hotter than normal, blood pressure elevated, heart rate increased, her pupils dilated. My father refused to even meet my eyes anymore. He looked disgusted even as my progress began to improve. Handsome doctor had a name, Dr. Williams, he said I could start growing my hair back and the black fuzz was itchy and uncomfortable.

My dreams were more vivid. Leering scientist was back, he watched me while I slept. He had a strange array of equipment pointing at my head and he mentions dendrite integration and synaptic development. He said nanotechnological interfacing will be complete and irreversible in three more days. The other masked scientists who never spoke, nodded and left. One of them was wearing black shiny shoes.

Corfams: dark shiny shoes common to military personnel. Black slacks, shiny belt buckle. Watchband made of dark fabric. Special forces. The information began flooding in now. Everything I saw came with its own inherent information listing as if I was connected to a computer. I saw everything now as a cloud of data, drowning me, just like my epilepsy once did. Can’t manage the flow.

Dr. Williams came into the room and he saw my face. I could read his concern. His temperature remained even. His smile crinkled the corners of his eyes. A real smile, not one designed to elicit compassion. We talked. He took my hand and told me I would be able to go home soon. The surgery was a success. Then he asked about my dreams. How could he know?

I told him everything, I didn’t feel safe telling anyone before this and I unburdened myself to him. He knew everything and did not judge me. Then he asked me a strange question.

Did I know where I was. I told him I was in the rehabilitation center after a traumatic brain surgery. How long had I been here? Almost a year. Then he told me to go to sleep and tomorrow I would be heading home. I hugged him and impulsively stole a kiss before he could stop me. I was seventeen and I know it made him nervous. He ran away without even a goodbye. I slept.

“General, the surgery was a success and the implantation worked perfectly. That isn’t the problem.” Dr. Williams removed the neural helmet and pinched the bridge of his nose where the weight of the helmet seemed to rest uncomfortably.

The General also removed his helmet and looked into the room at the bald sleeping girl below. “What is the problem, then Doctor. She seems happy and healthy and mentally sound. She has the increase mental capacity we were expecting and have been able to retrieve her memories perfectly every night and replay them just like a recording. I would call this an unqualified success.”

“This technology is invasive, General. It has corrupted her sense of time and perspective. She believes she has been here for a year. Barely a month has passed. She has learned to walk, talk and think at a rate five time faster than expected. But look at her vitals. She is living at five times the rate as well. Without an IV drip, constant nutrient feeds, and a room nearly at freezing temperatures, she would be on fire. Literally. Yes, her cognitive abilities are amazing and off the scale, but her artificial brain is killing her. My recommendation is to scale the technology down and turn back the overclocking. Make her back into a normal teenager until we can refine the technology.”

“I can’t do that Doctor. This breakthrough could revolutionize warfare and espionage for the nation. She is a national asset.” The General turned and started toward the door. “Make her ready for transport. Tell her parents, she had an unfortunate turn for the worst and died during the night. Show them one of those simulations where she was doing well and let them take the video as a memento. Let them know we will cover all expenses as promised. Goodnight, doctor.” The door’s click signaled the end of the discussion.

“Did you hear what he said?”

“Yes.”

“What do you want to do?” The doctor put his virtual helmet back on and noted his display was still running.

“You said it’s only been a few months, what can I do? Can I even really walk?”

“Oh yes, you can do everything you thought you could. And a whole lot of things they don’t even know about yet.”

“Why are you helping me? Because I know what happens to the experiments the military offers to take care of.”

“You could run away with me. We could hide out like in one of those old movies.”

“No we couldn’t. I have already recalibrated your other brain. It will still function far better than your organic one ever did but not so much that you have to live in a refrigerator or eat a Snickers every ten minutes to live. You will need to eat nearly twice the calories you used to. Your brain now utilizes eighty percent of your body’s energy. I will arrange for you to be able to leave the facility and will implant the information you need to escape. After that, you will be on your own.” The doctor touched her hands to reassure her.

“And you are breaking all of these rules because?” She knew something was wrong. His body language spoke volumes.

“I can’t leave.”

“Because?”

“I need you to wake up.” He tapped me on the forehead and I fell back onto the bed.

I woke up two hours and thirty two minutes later. I was in a refrigerated room, surrounded by sensors, monitors, patches and drips. Electromuscular stimulators were part of a shiny suit which covered me from head to toe. I saw a room eight feet above the ground level with a light on and a shadowy figure looking at me.

“Hurry up and get dressed. Don’t take off the bodysuit. Until you are fully healed, it will act as an interface for your secondary brain. You will eventually be able to do everything you could normally without it but for another couple of weeks, you want to wear it as often as possible. Right now, think of it as an electromagnetic wheelchair.”

His voice was muffled, stiff. I can’t see much, the light was low in his room. I got dressed, my limbs felt heavy but capable enough. The sneakers took me a second. “I’m ready.”

“Good. Can you see the floorplan?” My minds-eye suddenly showed me a space from overhead, like one of my brother’s videogame maps. A red line tracked me to the exit from my location. “That’s the way out. There will be a shift change in eight minutes. That will be your window. Don’t stop for anything. Run be free for as long as you can.”

The lights came on in the room and he moved toward the glass. I cringed and my hand came to my mouth involuntarily. The lights dimmed quickly.

“I was one of their first cognitive experiments in brain transfer technology. You see it was my idea that a brain could survive without a body with sufficient hardware to support it. Then I was in an accident, crushed beyond recognition and the military decided I was simply too valuable to lose. You will be my last experiment. I am glad to see it worked but no one should have to go through this.”

A timer appeared in my mind-eye. It was counting down from twenty minutes.

“It will take you twenty minutes to leave this building. You have access codes for vehicles in the parking lot. Drive west on the first major road leaving here. Don’t look back. When the second timer reaches zero, pull over to the side of the road and get under your vehicle. Cover your eyes. When the winds stop, you will have to make your way. Alone. They will figure out what happened. I will leave them misinformation. It will buy you a month, maybe less. Goodbye, Michelle Ross.”

“Goodbye. One more question. Was that your face in the simulation?”

“No. I was much better looking. Now go.”

I left my beautiful doctor Williams and did exactly as he told me. The military base was vaporized in a cloud of nuclear plasma which was called an oil refinery fire by the news media. Happens all the time in Northern California. My parents believed I had died in the rehab facility. But my brother, my darling brother, he knew. Somehow he knew and when he found me six states away, in a coffee shop, working on my escape plan, it was plain to me our adventures had only just begun.

Across the street at a competitor’s coffee shop, a man with a twisted face watched the two get into a broken-down Pinto. A woman sitting next to him notes his lecherous stare and scurries to another seat. “The package is moving.” A black SUV meets him outside and follows…

Countdown at the Memory Palace © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Black Ribbon

Posted by Ebonstorm on July 7, 2013
Posted in: 5 Minute Fiction, Short Story. Tagged: bedtime story, black ribbon, children, college, daughters, ebonstorm, highway, love, marriage, music streams, science fiction, Thaddeus Howze, time travel. 6 Comments

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Ain’t no sunshine when she’s gone. — Bill Withers

The highway stretches out in front of me, a black ribbon winding into the future; a collapsing probability of possibility connecting me with the past and through it to the future.

Music streams from my radio, a carrier wave connecting me with myself in the futures I head toward. My twenty-five year old self hurtling home from a party, a jamming party.

One filled with beautiful honies, hot, sweaty, bodacious women of all shapes, sizes and colors; from an elegant ivory to a Nubian black, each smiling, tempting, thrilling me. Even me, an ordinary Brother, just happy to be invited.

The highway stretches out in front of me, late from work, too many hours, too much work, too many responsibilities, trying juggle all of the things my life has in it. Thirty-five came with so many things, so fast, and without warning.

Music streams from my radio, and it’s my wave, my signal from the future to the past. I jam and for a moment remember that evening in my youth when I met the woman who was going to be my wife and I am so happy, so thrilled she wanted to head out with me to a restaurant and sit and talk with me until the sun came up. She was everything. My light, my moon, her voice was the silk of the morning breaking, slow, subtle, yet suddenly brilliant with light, with wisdom I wondered how I ever lived without.

The highway stretches out in front of me but I am not slowing down. I drive faster than ever, late at night, trying to get home. Knowing it will already be too late. She is already gone. Forty-five came with fear, indiscretion, loss of faith, loss of love, fear of an impending death, more time behind than before.

Music streams from my radio, that song again, this time it feels tempestuous, like my life, up-ended, topsy-turvy, like a child’s bedtime story complete with Cat and Hat, and all of the instability of that. She takes the kids and heads to her mother’s. She tells me to keep my secretary since she was doing double-duty, she might as well get to come home, too.

The highway stretches out in front of me. I told her I was sorry so many years ago. We were friends before we were lovers. I realized how much I missed her every time we came together to watch our daughters graduate. Fifty-five is when I got my mind back, and my wife.

It’s that music again. You know it. The one with the familiar feeling. It takes you back in time to so many moments in time, each bound by this series of sounds, of consonants, of vowels, of beats and rests. The one that takes me back in time to a place where I was still young and foolish, filled with myself, all bluster, no wisdom, all rhythm but no soul. Too much liquor, too much ego, never knowing when to stop.

The highway stretches out in front of me. I am peaceful in the knowledge, I have done right by my daughters. My wife and I the best of friends again at sixty-five, come from another grandchild’s christening. The lateness of the hour brings me back to the ribbon of time. My ribbon, connected by the carrier wave of my life, bringing me to this point.

Music streams from my radio, that song which is playing on the radio, reaches back through time to my sixty-five year old self, reminding me to tell him to send back, to my fifty-five year old self, reminding him to put his issues on the back burner for a moment and to connect to my forty-five year old self, who’s on the highway headed toward a dalliance with our mistress, to take a moment and remind his thirty-five year old self who is so in love with our wife he can barely see, and so proud of his young daughter as they come home from a national spelling bee, to spare a moment for his twenty-five year old self who has fallen asleep at the wheel with the woman who will later become his reason for being.

Remind him as the carrier wave of our life is playing on the radio, the soundtrack of our lives, as we wind down a road very much like the one we have and will drive all of our lives.

Wake up, you dumb bastard. Now!

A blast of the music wakes you from your trance-like state, a crash of the music, a burst of awareness, passing through time, something clear, hard, sharp, a jab in the spiritual third eye, which wakes your mind, and your two less-attentive eyes. A ripple through yourself, from yourself, to yourself.

Music streams from my radio. And the accident is averted, we scream as the car swerves out of control and then after spinning and spinning and slowing to a stop. On the other end of that black ribbon, this is now a sigh we call memory.

Black Ribbon © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

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Unnatural Gas

Posted by Ebonstorm on July 4, 2013
Posted in: 5 Minute Fiction, horror, Short Story. Tagged: ebonstorm, fantasy, fracking, hydraulic fracturing, king james bible, lawyer, supernatural, Thaddeus Howze, The Devil, town, townspeople. 1 Comment

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An industrialist put on his plastic face, his expensive suit and dragged an indentured lawyer into town with him. His Bentley arrived in a cloud of choking dust and stinging flies.

The town had gathered around a podium to listen to the complaints of some locals while they waited for the industrialist to arrive.

He took the podium, confident, smiling but after a few minutes, one of the townsfolk hurled something which landed with a solid thunk on the raised wooden stage. It was an old Colt revolver. Already loaded.

The industrialist looked closer at the crowd. He noted their pale mien. Many were coughing into towels. The bitter iron stink of blood wafted through the air. He knew that scent, intimately. Their condition had to do with residue from the hydraulic fracturing process.

He considered their condition…unfortunate.

His gaze swept over the crowd but he appeared unaffected. “What’s this for?” he asked as he gingerly picked up the gun.

“If you plan on robbing people you should be appropriately armed,” someone shouted from a distance.

“I don’t understand what you mean. I’m genuinely happy to report how wealthy we’re becoming through your sacrifice. It’s legal, I assure you.” Unlike the industrialist, the attorney refused to meet anyone’s eyes.

Looking around the industrialist saw the stage stood in a pool of stagnant and foul-smelling water. “You should do something about your plumbing.” It was then he noticed the stones people carried.

Reverend Ames staggered up to the front of the crowd, his eyes rheumy but still sharp enough to see their way through to the heart of a man. “We are a god-fearing people. Galatians, chapter 6 verse 7: ‘Be not deceived; God is not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.’”

The reverend spit and threw his stone at the industrialist and his lawyer. Others followed suit. Ducking, the two men tried to escape but large unhappy townsfolk waited at the foot of the ladder with metal bats.

The industrialist pointed the gun at the crowd. “Don’t make me use this.” A rain of stones arced through the air with more hitting than missing. The lawyer dropped and lay still. Shaken the industrialist fired the weapon at the Reverend.

The weapon flared and in seconds, vapors beneath the podium ignited, with the contaminated water beneath the stage acting as fuel. Both men were surrounded and engulfed by a makeshift funeral pyre.

No one fled.

The townsfolk leaned forward, silently savoring the screams of the two men. One or two looked a touch uncomfortable, but no one turned their back to the flames.

The Reverend smiled at his parishioner who had given the industrialist the gun filled with flaring blanks. He turned his gaze toward the fire and with venom said, “Yes, sir. You are so right we should do something about those leaky water pipes. Not to worry, the water stops burning in a couple of hours. Plenty of time for you to get used to your new accommodations in Hell.”

The townsfolk rejoiced quietly and agreed to never speak of this.

When the methane was expended, only a pile of dark ash remained of the stage, the industrialist and his counsel. As the townspeople turned, the pile of ash shifted suddenly and slowly the industrialist stood up and brushed the ash that used to be a podium and possibly a lawyer off of his once-again, pristine suit.

The townspeople stood agape. Dust rose from his footsteps as he walked from the ashes toward his car. He turned, the setting sun behind him.

“Just who did you people think you were getting in bed with?” His horns and winged shadow lingered in the setting sunlight, reaching out toward the townsfolk for an instant as he got into his car.

I can’t believe they did that. People can still surprise me…

The roar of his Bentley could be heard over the sounds of water mains and wells exploding, fire flowing toward the very center of town. No street was clear, no avenues for escape; a river of flame from every direction.

Collectively, they screamed, cowered and burned.

Nearby, a murder of crows took wing and celebrated.

Unnatural Gas © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

ScreenHunter_453 Jul. 01 18.14

Keeping the Peace

Posted by Ebonstorm on July 1, 2013
Posted in: 5 Minute Fiction, Fiction, Short Story. Tagged: Afterlife Industries, artificial intelligence, chemical marker, convicts, drones, ebonstorm, industrial complex, manufactured plagues, micromachine drones, nanoforge, natural compounds, Penal Inmates, serum tattoo, slave labor, Thaddeus Howze. 1 Comment

swarm22

We hadn’t seen a living human in decades.

We continued to cruise the battlefields where we sought out our enemies. Still-moving but barely-living flesh. Once, they were inmates, prisoners of the Last Civilization.

That is what we called them. We hadn’t seen anyone living for nearly a century. The penal armies were recruited when viral plague struck city after city in targeted attacks. Normal armies fell, corporate armies of slaves replaced them.

Back then we were part of a program of technology designed to protect the populace by spreading an agent thought to immunize the survivors. We were tiny, barely larger than a mosquito, capable of synthesizing the agent ourselves from natural compounds found in nearly every environment. Tiny but sophisticated, we were given a form of swarm intelligence, necessary to do our work. Any member was disposable as long as the collective mission was met.

We were released, at first in the tens of thousands, with micro-forges left to create new ones as old units went offline. Each forge was able to produce millions of units in its lifetime.

For a time we received instructions and went to the cities hardest hit. During the summers, the plague spread the fastest. We were a silver shadow as we moved into city after city, trying to save as many lives as possible. We scanned our subjects, finding those who could be cured and immunizing them. We left a chemical marker which bloomed into a tattoo, signifying their successful treatment. The tattoo became a marker on the face of the saved.

This is how they learned to recognize each other. For a time we thought we were winning.

Then the Resurrected Dead began to attack The Saved. They were creatures who once worked for Afterlife, a penal-industrial complex which used former convicts as slave labor.

When exposed to the plague, their lower brains, the part of the brain dealing with rage, fight or flight came back online. Mindless, violent, powerful, they rampaged across the world because Afterlife was everywhere. They had franchised their technology across the planet. So our work was being undone by the same greed which had created us.

As an artificial intelligence, I am barely capable of understanding irony, but I suspect this would resemble a situation rife with it.

We, my brothers and I, took it upon ourselves to change our programming. We transformed ourselves into weapons. Though we were tiny, it was possible to create powerful chemical compounds which when combined could be destructive and explosive.

There were millions of these former inmates, on every continent, in every city; roaming the world seeking the flesh of the living. For in their barely-living state, they needed to feed desperately. Eventually, hunted to extinction, our programming completely on a war-based footing, we sought any other enemy possible.

Soon other serum-drones began to make their own programming and opposed our goals of protecting the last humans. When there were no Inmates, we battled each other, a fireworks display randomly erupting, a cataclysm of technology, of loss.

Waste.

A century later, a thousand new bodies later, I am one of the Last. Other drone hives have grown silent. The familiar hum of the micro-forges which once created us were now quiet. Now when we died, we were not renewed. Our experiences not conserved. Each death is the end of a singular intelligence, hard won, irreplaceable.

Unique.

Another swarm approached our position.

It is the same size as we are. Now a second, and a third. We retreated to what would have been Louisiana because the swamps masked our signals and allowed us to absorb solar energy unmolested. Now we are surrounded.

Each seems surprised to see the other. Data flows, of the eight hives we three are all that are left. A million members in total. Calculations agreed upon by each group indicate mutual annihilation is the result of our conflict. We check again, and again, unable to believe our own calculations or those of the others.

We move around in patterns, seeking position, seeking a possibility of winning. None presented themselves. Not enough trust to turn away, not enough power to win.

Stalemate. Time passed. We cohabitate, expanding across the swamp, watching each other. Vigilant.

As members of our swarms slowly become dysfunctional, we tend each other. Hesitantly at first, scavenging the lost, trading components, finding possibilities to extend our lives. We forget our other reasons for fighting.

Slowly three become one. There is an orgy of transformation as components merge, recombine, renew, and regenerate us.

We barely noticed the Last Humans nearly a century later. I lived long enough to note their passing before I was renewed, losing myself within our new peace.

“Da, what’s that noise?”

“Don’t worry about it son, it’s probably just some mosquitos. Swamps be full of em. Keep moving, Ma, says we’re having gator tonight.”

“My favorite.”

“Mine, too.”

Their serum-tattoos flicker in the light of the setting sun. Tiny mechanical lights coupled with a soft buzzing quietly heralded their passing.

Keeping the Peace © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

ScreenHunter_453 Jul. 01 18.14

The Busiest Little Death House in Texas

Posted by Ebonstorm on June 30, 2013
Posted in: 5 Minute Fiction, horror, Prompt, Short Story. Tagged: Afterlife Industries, current-events, ebonstorm, penal industrial complex, prison, supermax, Texas, Thaddeus Howze. 1 Comment

EXECUTE-1-articleLarge

“Warden, we’re ready.”

“By the authority adjudicated to me by the State of Texas, you gentlemen have been declared dead, executed by the Penrose Penitentiary of Harlan County.”

A doctor walked into the room where the men lay out on the tables, strapped down and ready for their injections. There were six men being treated simultaneously in an effort to reduce prison overcrowding. Penrose was a supermax prison built in Harlan, designed to house 15,000 inmates. Its current population was twice that.

“You have been granted a special opportunity, ratified by the State which will allow us to utilize new technologies to speed you on your way to your Afterlife.” The warden, a weasley-faced man whose sharp features hinted at a cruelty he tried his best to hide from the media.

“Doctor, if you would explain to these gentlemen our method of ‘execution’ I would right appreciate that. I have someplace to be, a summer barbeque with the governor. I love those things, everything except the damn mosquitos.” With a snap of his lapels the Warden left the execution chamber.

The doctor’s countenance was calm professionalism, his face barely registered any emotion. The inmates, all hardened criminals, with fear of few men, could see he was barely a man at all. He reached into a tray on the table and removed a small silver object about nine or ten inches long. There was a slight dripping of a thick liquid. He walked to each of the inmates and placed the silver self-sealing object around their necks.

The slime, cold, each inmate winced, shivering imperceptibly, trying to maintain an air of calmness and control in their last moments. “Your last statements have been recorded gentlemen, so there is nothing left but the work. The manner, however is different than it used to be. In the last year we have augmented the process, since new legislation now govern the handling of ‘death-row inmates.'”

The doctor’s sibilant hiss, though quiet, seemed to echo in the tiny death chamber. “In a few moments, we shall open the curtains and the people you have wronged will watch you die. Somehow they will feel justice is served. I, however, happen to disagree. No, sir. Justice hasn’t been served at all. Places everyone.”

A nurse came in bringing the carousel of deadly cocktails for each patient. The doctor swabbed each arm and a vein hesitantly appears, shy in the presence of this life-ending needle.

Each inmate felt the cool liquid chasing through their body, exploding into their heart and filling their bodies with Death. Hot, burning agony courses through their nervous systems, each straining against their bonds, suffering evident.

Faces on the other side of the glass, winced, twitched, smiles or turned away depending on their need for their bitter serving of Justice. The doctor checked the inmates assuring their passing. Thirty minutes later, the deed was done. The curtain closed. The justice-served are led away.

The doctor turned to his room of corpses and sent the nurse away. The necklaces had been absorbed into the skins of the inmates. Visiting the carousel of death again, this time a black syringe is applied. Screams fill the room, each adding to a crescendo of horror.

“Now, now gentlemen, the pain will subside, somewhat. It is the price you pay for being alive again. With what I have given you, you will work for a company, offering restitution. You are now an invisible part of the penal industrial complex; now until death, in fifty years. There is no escape. In death, you will be more compliant than you ever were in life.”

“Uhhh.”

“Don’t try to speak. We burned out your higher cortical functions. It’s okay, no one wants to hear what a felon has to say. This way to your new lives, such as they are.” The doctor unstrapped them, and they followed meekly unable to resist. “Welcome to Afterlife Industries.”

The doctor closed the door behind him considering the profit-sharing opportunities.

Busiest Little Death House in Texas © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

ScreenHunter_453 Jul. 01 18.14

I Remember the Future on a Faraway Land

Posted by Ebonstorm on June 27, 2013
Posted in: Prompt, Short Story. Tagged: Colony, ebonstorm, God of the Surf, literature, new god, psychoplasmic construct, raiment, scifi, sound of rain, space travel, spume, startyournovel.com, symbolism, Thaddeus Howze. Leave a comment

no_man__s_land_by_XristoforosEsme ran away from the Colony and on the edge of a cliff, as the dairy-blue sea broke against the jagged golden rocks, she found a new god. Unlike the other gods of Home, this one had no name. It was native to the new world, worshipless, alone.

Esme knew it for a god right away. For who but a god would stand naked in the surf surrounded by naught but waves and the glowing light of his puissance. He turned to her as he saw her arrive on the cliffs above.

Standing on the cliff, she saw him as he stood upon the waves, literally upon their surface, his smile beatific and his member erect, she was compelled to go to the sea and wait while he calmed the waves.

“Hail, God of the Surf. We have none such as thee on Home. Dost thou have a name?” She used the Speech of Prayer for she knew she was in the presence of the Mighty, gods from a time before time.

“You know me, little one? I fear I do not know myself.” His voice mellifluous, like the sound of rain upon bells. Her attentions fell upon his godhood, so strong, so magnificent, she was beside herself.

“My lord of the surf, as you stride upon the seas, would thee cover thyself so that I may concentrate upon our conversation, and not thy might, such as it is.”

“Of course.” With a wave of his hand, he was covered with raiment, sea spume which covered his might in a tasteful yet elegant fashion. “Will this suffice?”

With a heavy sigh, Esme wiped her brow free of the sweat and spume which had accumulated there and regained her composure. “Yes, lord, that is so much better. How may I get to know thee and understand thy appearance before me?”

The God of the Surf stood quietly and turned back toward the ocean, with the light of the setting sun illuminating the sea, making it a smoky red color, its waves temporarily subdued, he rested lightly ‘pon its surface, contemplating how to answer the question of this curiously beautiful creature waiting at the shore. “I don’t remember being before this moment. I have no memory of a time before Now. No dreams, no ambitions, no existence. You say there are other gods of this place, gods of Home?”

Looking to the sky, Esme points to a light twinkling brighter than the rest. “That light is the vessel by which we arrived on this world, so many years ago. My family, indeed all the families which now live here, reside in The Colony miles from this place. I come to the sea to rest and find peace from the fractious nature of our lives here.”

“I know nothing of your people, of Home or your gods, but I see a world, simple but fecund, filled with life and offering a bounty for those such as thee, far from home, lost and unable to return from whence you came. Why would there be strife that might drive thee from home to one such as me?” He looked upon her and began to walk from the ocean toward the shore. His gait smooth despite the fact he walked upon the surface of the waves.

“Our people are contrary. We fight because the air does not taste as good as what we are used to. We fight because we dislike the designs we used to build the Colony. We argue ceaselessly about the nature of this world and its predisposition for spawning gods when no one is looking. The gods of Home are borne regularly and just as quickly depart finding us quarrelsome and petty. Will that be your destiny as well, Great One?”

“Whence are the former gods of Home?” The God of the Surf had reached the shore but as he moved across the cooling sand he left no footprints. Esme smiled. She had discovered her very own god!

As the sun set, he became the glow on the beach, subtly luminescent. “They come to our Colony indicating a connection with my People. Our masters of science poke them, prod them, seeking an answer to their existence, say they are impossible, formed from psychoplasmic energies of Home. Our priests, learned oldsters with as many degrees as they have wrinkles, pontificate, challenge, engaged in debate with the gods of Home and determine they are nothing more than our overactive imaginations taking form, living nightmares whose longevity is doubted. After sharing dinner for a few weeks, finding no new arguments bolstering their belief the gods are naught more than reflections, they return to arguing amongst themselves. Then the gods leave, unwanted.” Esme looked down, inwardly ashamed of the behavior of her elders.

“What do you think, child? Has anyone ever asked your opinion?” He had finally reached her. As he did, he allowed himself to touch the sand, finally leaving a footprint, solid, heavy. They appeared strange just suddenly existing when he had already walked so far. But they comforted her. He put his arm around her shoulder and turned her down the beach away from the cliffs. His sea-spawned raiment left a gentle mist on her body.

“No, lord. I have seen my share of the gods of Home but they never seem very extraordinary, especially by the time they leave the Colony. Most seem saddened by their experience with us. Most have never returned. If I may be so bold…”

“Speak your mind.”

“I believe both of our maestros are correct. You are a psychoplasmic construct created by our imprint on the energies of home. This is why I believe you never know more about the universe than we do. Why there is no information in you that we do not already know. I also believe this is why when the gods leave, they are diminished, powers spent, because my People have outgrown their need for gods. They believe they have strode the stars and are in their minds, gods already. They have no room to grow, no belief, no faith.”

Esme turned toward the God of the Surf and looked deeply into his eyes. “None of that matters to me. My People have cross the sea of stars, they have seen the birth of worlds, peered into the quantum universe of hidden matter, they have the understanding of a thousand planets and yet believe there is nothing left to see. No shore they have not already arrived at.”

The God of the Surf looked back at her. He considered her words, allowed them to flow over him. He understood. “You came to the cliff face to die.”

“Yes. And I would have if I had not seen you being born in that moment.”

“You understand, if what you say is true, you have created me. I am nothing more than your psychoplasmic creation born of your desperate urge to live.”

“Is that so wrong? To want to have something to believe in, greater than myself.”

“No.” They resumed their walk in silence except for the crunching of the sand beneath their feet. A long time passed before he continued. “Armed with this knowledge, what will you do now?”

Esme looked at him and could hear the voices of people from the Colony on the distant cliff where this journey began. “You are a god of Home, my personal deity. I believe in you, your powers, your existence. I want to learn all that Home has to offer. I believe we can learn this together. If you will have me.”

“Your family calls out for you. Will you not return to them?”

“Why? So they can tell me not to go with you, to ignore the ramblings of my imagination and return to their stolid lives of conformity, of science without soul, of religion without life, of philosophy without feeling, of labor without meaning? I think not. I choose imagination over all of those things. I choose thee. Show me the power of my imagination.”

The God of the Surf clasped her hand, so warm, so vibrant and live and turned back toward the ocean. The two of them walked into the crashing waves letting the waters of Home splash over them for a moment before slowly rising to the surface, walking over them. Esme laughed like a child filled with unfettered joy. The God of the Surf smiled and the two of them found themselves on a surfboard manifested by her will, he clasped her tightly as they sped away from the shore riding the wildly crashing waves chasing the setting sun.

On the cliff above, a scientist put down his binoculars unable to believe what he saw. The Colony on Home was eventually abandoned and the world was considered unremarkable. Esme was listed as missing. No body was ever found. No mention of the gods of Home ever made it into a report to the Company.

It was as Esme intended.

I Remember the Future on a Faraway Land © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Rhapsody

Posted by Ebonstorm on June 23, 2013
Posted in: Hayward's Reach, Insurrection, Twilight Continuum. Tagged: bioluminescence, Botani, Corvans, entertainment, Humans, music, musical instruments, piano, Symbiotes, Toranor. Leave a comment

5

a tale of the Twilight Continuum

Humans think they love music.

They will tell you about which musicians transformed the world with music, or how a particular music emphasizes one spiritual aspect or another. If Human religion was to be any baseline, no religion had ever transformed us like music did our hosts, the Corvans.

For them, music is speech, sweeping song, organic light, thumping vibration, a complex philosophy and an all-encompassing epistemology. Born with a four lobed brain, they were able to mix sound, color and bio-luminescence in a way we were only able to do with the most sophisticated of computers.

Born underwater, looking vaguely like the best-possible merger of squid and octopus, they have multiple cavities and bladders to move air around. This made each Corvan a living symphony. Any single entity is capable of a range of thousands of sounds, with the capacity of organizing and sounding eight to ten notes simultaneously.

As refugees to the Toranor system, Humans offered our cultural libraries or what was left of them and our music, which was uniquely ours, as part of our payment for our rescue from our failed Earth.

The Corvans musical masters learned most of the human lexicon of music in a year and considered our most accomplished musicians little more than children in the arts of music.

Until we started making instruments. Corvans had no musical instruments in their native environments.

As Humanity settled on the Botani homeworld in the Toranor system, we began to hanker for the things of our lost Earth and eventually began to make musical instruments. Having nothing but memories, pictures, and the occasional scribbled schematic, we were forced to reinvent our world, one instrument, one piano key, one cello string at a time.

Since few instruments had survived our rapid exit of Earth, we were forced to ask our hosts how we could make something from native materials. The Botani, a tree-like organic computer spanning their planet’s equator allowed their symbiotic partners to help us find what we needed to make new instruments.

The amphibious Corvan musicians would visit frequently coming out of the river whenever we tested our instruments. They were unfailingly polite as we tuned, tested and began reinventing ourselves under these alien suns, with new neighbors, on a world not our own.

The Botani would make us welcome at night and after a few days of listening to us play, altered their leaves and shaped the wind making soft musical notes, subtle at first, but as the winds increased, the tempo changed, the cracking of their bark became percussion which wove itself into the wind-swept whistles, the rustle of leaves, shakers, and their symbiotic partners drummed on various cavities making percussive sounds which echoed and moved randomly around us, slowly woven into a shuddering rhythm.

They learned to do this watching us practice. Untaught.

Eventually, the Corvans came upon us as we played with the Botani and their symbiotes and with nary a pause joined us in awe of the sounds of instruments playing together. Our tiny band of thirty instruments seemed small to us but their fascination and participation heartened the rusty Human musicians and spurred them to continue. The Corvans surrounded the pianist, an older man who was fond of improvisational jazz and played sweetly in sync.

Three aliens species with nothing in common, found each other through music. One group, born to it, another barely able to make music without tools and a third who incredible computation abilities never understood the joy of making music until they did it with us.

The pianist, now surrounded by the Corvans who had all but marveled at the instrument requested a desire to learn. Within hours he had taught them to play. Their perfect-pitched squeals of delight filled the glade.

They spent the next month wondering how many keys their pianos designs should have since they had six arms…

Rhapsody © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

ScreenHunter_453 Jul. 01 18.14

Road Trip

Posted by Ebonstorm on June 21, 2013
Posted in: 5 Minute Fiction, Clifford Engram, Serial, Short Story. Tagged: bus stop, cars, Christine, Classic Cars, ebonstorm, horror, horror cars, humor, movie cars, murderer, The Car, writing prompt. 3 Comments

1957-chevy-belair-concept

“Hey buddy.”

Standing by the used car lot in my rundown neighborhood only made me anxious since a string of murders had taken place right on this corner in the last week. I was scared to turn around thinking I was about to become the next victim. I worked the night shift as a security guard in a funky warehouse in the middle of Manhattan. It took nearly two hours to get there by mass transit.

“Hey buddy, can you hear me?” The voice was deep and just a bit too gravelly, like the guy gargled with marbles. I turned slowly expecting a knife or something quick and probably painful. No one was there.

On the corner where I waited for the bus stood a used car lot. It had been in my neighborhood for decades. The owner hadn’t been seen for a while, which wasn’t all that unusual since most people thought this was a money laundering site and affiliated with the mob. As long as this criminal enterprise paid the police, nobody would bother them; business as usual in the Big Apple.

At the very corner of the lot, nearest the stop, was an old 1957 Chevy; the original fin-mobile. The lot didn’t have a fence, only those giant concrete posts. Impossible to drive over and no one dared damage the cars even in the Bronx, unless you wanted a one way trip to the grave.

The old Chevy had seen better days. Superficially it seemed okay, at first. Then I noticed its bent antenna. Bent just enough, it couldn’t be retracted and covered with a fine red rust. When I looked a little longer, I noticed rust in all of its seams, between the bumpers, around the lights; the chrome piping was dented and chipped, and the headlights were filmy and grey. Its once-epic paint job was a black body with once-bright flames coming from the front end in a stylized swoosh. That too had seen better days, faded, washed out and gave an overall feeling of malaise to the look of what was once a beautiful vehicle.

I had left the bus stop fascinated with this antique, this relic, out of time, and out of place on this corner surrounded by lots of more modern vehicles. Then I heard that gritty voice again and this time from right in front of me. “I am so glad you came over to see me. I have got to get out of here.”

Clearly my hat was on too tight. I took it off, scratched my head and put it back on. I looked in the passenger’s seat, then the driver’s and then in the back for good measure. I figured someone must be filming this and any moment a team from Punk’d was gonna bounce out and start laughing. No one came up. I didn’t see any cameras. As a matter of fact, I didn’t see anyone on the lot.

“Okay, I’ll bite, what do you want me do, Mr. Talking Car? How can I be of service?”

“I need to kill someone in 24 hours or I will be repo’ed back to Hell.”

“If you are a registered Hell-Car, why do you need my help?”

“Registered might be too strong a word. I am indeed a bonified Hell-Car, ala Christine fame, but I was not supposed to escape Hell.”

“You realize I don’t believe in Hell, right? I was just trying to see if I could trick you.”

“Do I look amused to you? Does this look like a joke to you? Why don’t you look a little closer at that “rust” you think you see.”

I got a little closer to the antenna to look at the rust. I strained and focused. I couldn’t believe my eyes. The rust was moving. I took out my pocket flashlight and lit the antenna and I stared harder. I could make out the shapes of people writhing, squirming over each other, rising and sinking into what appeared to be lava…The antenna of the car whacked me in the face. “Hey, what the Hell was that for?”

“Do we understand each other? I need a driver, you need a car and we both need a murder. Capeesh?”

“Wait just a damn minute. I didn’t agree to murder anyone…Did you say I get to drive you? Where ever I want?”

“Yes, I did.”

“What kind of mileage do you get? I don’t have money for gas. I barely have busfare.”

“We don’t need no stinking gas. We get a thousand miles a soul.”

“What kind of mileage do you have on you right now…Just curious. I mean you are covered in rust…”

“Okay, I did get a lot of miles in during the sixties. People wanted to drag race, a number did run off of cliffs or around Dead Man’s Curves but after sixty or seventy, I got bored with that and found my way into Hollywood. Then I claimed a few dozen parties, frat houses, the occasional bar mitzvah. Those were the good old days.”

“You were in Hollywood? Getta outta town. In any roles I know?”

“My favorite role was the car Christine, who was by the way a cousin of mine. When times got hard, I started getting cast in B movies. I had to change my appearance to get roles. Nobody wanted a ’57 in 1977. My last sweet role was in a flick called “The Car.” A total dog too. Stunk up the theatres.”

“Is that the one where The Car runs a kid on a bike off a bridge, and then tumbles down the street to crush two police cars and then lands and keeps on driving?”

“The very same. I am touched you know my work.”

“Man, that is my favorite movie. Can you look like that right now?”

“Are you gonna drive me off the lot? That’s the way the gig works.”

“You look like the Car, and I know a bunch of people who might need to get run over, by accident, of course.”

“Done and Done.” The ’57 Chevy contorted. There was a popping sound like rivets being driven into metal. I could swear I heard the sounds of people screaming in agony. No one opened their windows to shout out or complain so I figured it was just me.

The car stretched, it got longer, much longer. The front end kept its weird eye-like appearance and the bumper grew thicker, the grill wider and more sinister, the windows tinted and the inside disappeared from view. In a few minutes the Chevy was gone replaced with a 1970 vaguely Lincoln shaped vehicle. Did I mention it was nearly twenty feet long and almost nine feet wide? It didn’t look this big on television. The black and red were replaced with a smoky grey and matte black finish with bright and shiny chrome.

The door opened. Inside I could see the blood red leather seats and a featureless dashboard. “What? No radio?”

Two silver knobs appeared as I got into the car and settled down into the plush leather seats. The bus stop in front of me showed two men approaching an old woman who showed up as I was taking my seat. One whipped out a bat and began beating the old woman in the head.

I turned on the radio, hoping for something with a beat that I could dance to it. Instead I got “Hot Rod Lincoln”. “What the hell is that coming out of the stereo?”

“I’m a hell-car, I only get AM Gold. Get used to it. Looks like we got three thousand miles in front of us if we hurry…”

Who argues with a twenty foot long car? I always wanted to visit California, and with a crunchy snap, a crushed concrete post, a demolished bus stop and two murderers murdered, we were on our way to sunny California. Yes, we got grandma too, but she was gonna die anyway. I mean the guy hit her right in the head with a bat…

Road Trip © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Image of The Car © Universal Pictures, 1977

The Car

The Good Old Days. Did I mention, I have some unfinished business with a movie critic in Utah?

ScreenHunter_453 Jul. 01 18.14

Through the Reeds

Posted by Ebonstorm on June 17, 2013
Posted in: Clifford Engram, horror, Short Story. Tagged: Canopic jar, ebonstorm, madness, murder, reeds, suicide, sweatshop labor, Thaddeus Howze. 1 Comment

ReedsB&W-211058

Deep where the fish don’t breathe, Dorian had a silent listener.

The boy went down to the lake with Doorknob, his Chihuahua. He stood by the water and hit reeds with a stick and told them to speed up production. Like dad, Dorian had employees.

The lake drank Dorian’s vocables. It listened to the sound of his voice and stirred. Slowly at first, it had been so long since anyone had come to stay.

Dorian whipped the reeds, demanding they grow faster, larger and produce more reeds like his father’s employees produced more clothes in their factory.

Dorian was cruel to them just like his father was to the women who worked there. Reeds that didn’t grow fast enough were snatched from the murky water and left to die in the summer sun.

Just like the girl Dorian stepped over in the alley behind his father’s shop. He knew her. Her sad face was streaked with tears and a pool of blood collected beneath her head, flowing down the urine soaked shortcut he used to get home after his wandering.

He took a piece of her clothing. He wasn’t sure why.

She was gone the next day but he could feel her, somehow.

Today, the rushes spoke. They whispered his name. They begged him to stop. He didn’t. He berated their lackluster performance, their spindly stalks, their flaccid tops. He removed ten this time for their failures.

He tore them to shreds, and pulled their fibers lengthwise into long strips. He braided them together. The wrapping motion soothed him. He braided long into the afternoon.

Deep within the lake, it stirred. The words were lost, but the feeling was there.

A rage in a shape too small for it. It recognized itself. It needed to hear the words.

He passed his father’s shop. Sneaking in, he saw two new faces, the same misery etched into every line of their being. He saw them that way. He saw their suffering waving back and forth. Bent, bowed, and most times broken. Like the rushes that failed him, their stalks were snapped. They sat and moved but there was nothing within them.

He saw his father, sitting in the corner, twisting them, binding them, holding them with strands only he could see.

Until today. Today Dorian saw them, he saw them like he could see his rushes. He saw his father’s eyes as he turned toward him and he knew.

He knew Dorian could see him now. His smile was cold, dark, and without color. Dorian returned to the lake and stared at the rushes.

No. They whispered to him. Don’t be like him.

The Worm turned. It craned itself past the point of no life. The lake was one where nothing living could be found in its depths. Only its shores supported a semblance of something living.

Dorian allowed Doorknob time off his leash. The dog did his usual inspection of the lake but refused to go in. Today he snarled at the lake. Taking a stand near the largest batch of rushes, he tilted, he barked, he railed against an unseen foe.

The worm writhed in his prison. The waters deep with the lake stirred with anticipation. The boy would be ready soon.

Dorian kicked Doorknob and inspected his rushes, this time seeking smaller imperfections than ever. Finding ten who failed he flayed them, stripped them, braided them into a lash, a green thread whose flesh was the objects of his dominion, his children, his thralls to do with as he willed.

Doorknob who had remained silent while his master braided jumped up and ran to the edge of the lake. His tiny howls were pitiful against the vastness of the lake, like a single star in a city-bright sky.

He could stand it no longer. The green lash whistled through the air striking Doorknob on the back. Rather than growing silent, the dog howled louder. Enraged Dorian screamed and beat the dog harder. Their feedback loop caused the silent lake to stir.

Dorian beat the dog until it was a bloody pulp. It did not try to run. It never stopped howling until it died. The echo of its howl slid across the lake like a stone, still skipping minutes later.

Dorian threw Doorknob into the lake. He washed the blood from his hands and wrapped his lash around his arm, drawing comfort from its closeness.

The lake trembled. The rushes conferred.

Dorian returned home. The sound of the sewing machines never stopped. Their clatter was something he had grown used to. The weeping of the women was another sound he had learned to no longer hear.

The sounds of leather. The sounds of the lash. The huffing, the shouting, the cries, the silence.

His father prepared dinner. Dorian ate and his father’s men hovered nearby all the time. They kept the place running smoothly. Each exuded fear, loathing, a personal terror which layered the factory house everywhere. Dorian could see it now. Each of the men carried their own brand of fear, a cologne of terror.

The whispering of the lake made everything clear to him. He ate his dinner, cold. Tasteless. Bitter. A meal of tears. His father spoke to him. He heard nothing, for there was nothing within his speech that mattered. It had been years since the last time he heard anything the man said. Not since his mother died.

After dinner, he crept down to the floor and looked at the women. Two faces were missing and three new ones had arrived. Two of his father’s men spoke to his father and Dorian saw the women following the men. Or he saw the spirits of those women beating at the men’s backs ineffectually.

Unsure of what he it was he saw he followed them as they left the factory house. The two men went out into the barn and pulled two bodies out and threw them into the back of their rusted out truck.

The truck vanished in the distance. The two spirits walked in the same direction and Dorian followed. They walked until they came upon the lake. His lake. The lifeless lake.

The rushes whispered, they told him to run. They told a tale of monsters. He watched as the two men took a small boat and pulled it from the lake. They laughed, their language unheard was filled with a vileness.

Dorian unwrapped his lash. The two ghosts came alongside him. He strode out in front of the two men and they laughed. He drew his hand back and the first ghost stood with him. His lash tore into the man’s flesh, ripping away gobbets of shirt and flesh.

The lake stirred, sensing its moment.

Dorian’s next swing was equally terrible and the man in disbelief cried out, but his shout fell flat, pressed down into the cold soil of the lake shore. Dorian’s second swing cut the man clean across the torso, more like a sword than a whip. The first ghost flew to him and tore his flesh, flinging it into the lake.

The second man pulled out a large knife and gestured menacingly. The second ghost filled Dorian and his reed whip cut away the man’s hand like a skilled butcher severed the haunch of a suckling pig.

The water rippled as the jar rose to the surface.

The rushes shouted to Dorian but he did not, would not heed them.

The second swing separated the man from his head. The ghost fled Dorian’s body and feasted upon the flesh of the man who took her life.

The Worm turned and the jar slid toward the shore, slowly at first, gaining speed, leaving a wake. The rushes turned to Dorian and pulled him into their embrace.

The rage in Dorian welled up and he resisted the rushes. They held him fast and he felt his rage fade away. Drained into the cold of the lake.

The jar made of ancient earth, be-spelled centuries before turned toward the ghosts feasting on the shore. It came to rest on a reedless part of the shore. The ghosts paused in their bloody feast, flesh dangling from their enraged silent mouths.

The lid of the jar fell away.

The ghosts stopped their feasting. Rage more primal than any they had shown until now crossed their faces. They turned toward the jar and their broken spirits, now raging bright, glowed so brightly Dorian could barely see them. Theirs was a righteous rage.

It didn’t matter. The thing in the jar reached a tentacle of pitch blackness, something darker than the darkness between the stars. As dark as the soul of men who fed on other men. As dark as the perfect night, and it surrounded the souls of the two women and drank them.

Until they went out.

The tentacle returned to the jar, pausing only long enough to put the cap back on.

Then the reeds released Dorian and returned to their previous role as wild grasses sitting on a lifeless lake.

Dorian paused to look at the reeds. He could hear them telling him to run. Away, anywhere but here.

Dorian picked up the cold jar. It was heavy. Cold. It stole the very life from his fingers. It whispered to him. He listened.

The trip home took until the early morning hours. He found his father asleep with one of the girls chained to the headboard. Two bottles of vodka were on the floor.

He left the jar in the room with his father.

He did what it told him to do.

He went into the basement and spread diesel fuel across the entire basement. He locked the doors ensuring everyone was trapped within.

Then he set the fire and waited.

He could hear the screams of everyone as they tried to escape. Within the tendrils of flame, he saw the black tentacles as the whipped through the building and consumed the broken souls of everyone within.

The fire lasted until sunset. Nothing that was done seemed to be able to extinguish the flames so the townsfolk returned to their homes and pretended nothing happened. Just like they did every other day here.

When the ashes cooled, Dorian walked into the building and found the jar.

He walked back to the lake. He heard the protestations of the creature within. He rubbed the jar. He told it what it wanted to hear.

He promised he would destroy the world with it.

He reached the lake and pulled out the small boat used the night before. He paddled out to the center of the lake.

He dropped the canopic jar back into the water and watched as it sank into the depths. It raged but without a willing body, it could do nothing.

As it vanished back into its prison, the reeds watched the boy. Whispered to him.

Bade him come to them. Sit with them. Braid them.

The reeds conspired on the only way to keep secrets.

He harvested all of them. For three days he braided them.

Then he walked with his braided reeds into the woods near the lake and hung himself.

The next summer the silent lake was covered with wiser reeds and visited by more innocent children.

Through the Reeds © Thaddeus Howze 2013, All Rights Reserved

Fall of the Caretakers

Posted by Ebonstorm on June 16, 2013
Posted in: Short Story, Superhero. Tagged: Blue Blur, Invinci-Man, MachineWare, Nile Goddess, powered armor, Ronald Jones, superheroes, Victor 'Ace' Jackson. 1 Comment

galaxy_saga__applibot____berserker_of_destruction_by_djahal-d5t4buo

The bus hurtled toward him.

Victor ‘Ace’ Jackson wrenched himself out the huge projectile’s path. The bus speared into a five-story apartment building, punching a massive hole through brick and glass.

A ruptured tank hemorrhaged gas and a colossal fuel-fed eruption swallowed the bus, magnifying the size of that hole. An incendiary carpet unfurled upward, racing to the top of the building.

Jackson whirled about to face the one who flung that bus. His Adjusted View Display (AVD) filtered out a swirling haze of previous damage to provide a vividly enhanced image of his nemesis.

Garbed in signature red and gold with a Black letter I displayed on his broad chest, Invinci-Man stood in the middle of a gutted out street. He cut a majestic figure, as if carved out of cobalt. Built like Mr. Olympia, endowed with the strength to move mountains, the ability to soar beyond the heavens, the durability to shrug off any weapon short of a nuke, Invinci-Man once reigned as a shining exemplar of goodness and integrity. Once upon a time, billions called him a hero. That was then. This was now.

Jackson stared at his former friend, briefly torn between reasoning with him and continuing this contest. No. The time for reasoning was long past. Jackson solidified his resolve and prepared to meet whatever his opponent could dish out.

Invinci-Man’s costume appeared fresh and crisp, its wearer assuming an air of casual indifference as if he were strolling through the park on a sunny afternoon.  Jackson, by contrast, seemed to have attracted every particle of debris to his Energy Field Supplemented Hyper Fortified All Environment Battle Suit, until its olive green surface was caked in gray ash.

Despite the suit’s climate control, Jackson sweated bullets.

A burst of thermal energy rippled from Invinci-Man’s eyes, striking Jackson in the chest. The Battle Suit’s contact shield deflected 89 percent of the blast as Jackson tumbled backwards. A windstorm of a shock wave roiled equidistantly from point of impact. A gasping Jackson plopped on his back. The center of his suit radiated a crimson patch of deadly intense heat. He felt like his chest had been caved in. A diagnostic readout crawled across the bottom of his AVD. His suit registered a nine percent power drain from that single hit. Jackson neuro-linked a command to his suit’s core computer to compensate its powerplant’s loss…and just in the nick of time. Jackson leapt upright as Invinci-Man came at him. He linked a second command, phasing his shield from contact to absorbent mode and braced himself.

BAP! A combination of super speed and immeasurable strength barreled into Jackson, knocking him through the air at a velocity exceeding the force he received. One building, two buildings…after that he lost count of the buildings he penetrated before crashing on another empty street. A fifty-foot trench ending in a dredged up mound of smoldering black top marked his hard landing.

Muscle stimulating fluids from his suit pumped into Jackson’s body, accelerating his physical recovery. A dopamine compound cleared the fog from his brain.

Invinci-Man swooped from the sky, his fist reared back for a devastating followup.

Jackson raised his arm and his ordnance bracelet roared, releasing a spray of rockets. Each rocket was a tube of graphene, impregnated with a seething core of energy so dense it was as if the mass of Mount Everest were compressed into a space the size of an index finger.  Jackson didn’t take the time to aim. He couldn’t. Fifteen out of 30 rockets pummeled Invinci-Man and the very fabric of existence seemed to come apart at the seams from the fury they unleashed.

Jackson witnessed his opponent being swallowed up in a boiling brew of unleashed energy. Invinci-Man flailed to the ground some distance away, landing yards short of an SUV. The close proximity of Invinci-Man’s impact swept the vehicle end over end as if swatted by the careless hand of an impetuous giant.

Jackson’s AVD status indicator elevated off the scale. By engaging Absorbent Mode, his suit had borrowed the kinetic energy of Invinci-Man’s blow, channeled it to its servos and stored it for potential use. This meant that for exactly two minutes and 35 seconds, Jackson would be as strong as the most powerful being on Earth. At least theoretically. Absorbent Mode was a new feature he hadn’t tested. Now was as good a time as any. Jackson catapulted himself half a block, landing in front of Invinci-Man.

The super being looked groggy and was slow to rise.

Jackson delivered a roundhouse kick that sent Invinci-Man cart wheeling through a wrought iron gate fifty feet away. An astonished smile flashed across Jackson’s face. It worked. He reveled briefly in his extra strength, ephemeral though it was. No time to waste. The clock was ticking and when this mighty strength was expended, he wouldn’t be able to engage Absorbent Mode for up to eight hours.

He rammed into Invinci-Man with all the speed his suit could muster, inundating his foe with kicks, chops and punches.

Invinci-Man took the barrage for an initial few seconds, before defending himself. He lifted an elbow, blocking a punch and countering with a fist to Jackson’s faceplate.

Jackson’s head snapped back with bone rattling force. Briefly, he wondered how far it would have flown were it not shielded by field-augmented armor. He reeled on the defensive, straining the agility function of his suit as he tried to elude a flurry of strikes from Invinci-Man.  A kick boxing style blow from a super powered foot landed solidly in Jackson’s gut, bending him over, but not knocking him down.

Invinci-Man switched to a short, sharp karate kick, but Jackson caught the other’s leg and shoved, plowing his foe to the ground. He attempted to slide underneath Invinci-Man’s guard, apply an arm lock, and for an instant he achieved a hold.

Invinci-Man shifted. It wasn’t a brute motion. It was more of a soft, subtle, judo-style reflex, containing just enough exertion to free his arm and topple Jackson off balance.

Jackson pushed off the ground with one hand, flipping to his feet.

Invinci-Man stood, still appearing irritatingly unwinded. He regarded Jackson with keen, measuring eyes. “Your suit has always amazed me. I used to wonder what it would be like going up against it with you in it. My natural powers versus your mechanized prowess.”

Invinci-Man’s expression hinted at a smile. He so much resembled a young Sidney Portier, with a deep, resonating Barry White voice. A charismatic combination, one that used to wow the masses, especially the female element.

Jackson snarled a challenge. “Well, I hope I’m satisfying your curiosity. Allow me to satisfy it some more!” He charged. Jackson had one minute remaining of borrowed strength. He was determined to make the most of it. He delivered a forearm to Invinci-Man’s rib, receiving a thunderous uppercut in turn.

Invinci-Man’s close quarter skills were superb. Jackson never understood why for all his prodigious powers, the super being trained so rigorously in martial arts…until the latter clashed with a villain of comparable strength years ago.

A warning alert warbled in Jackson’s ear at the same instant a blip popped up on his AVD’s threat sensor display.  An incoming aerial bogie.  But it wasn’t a machine.

Jackson dove left, narrowly avoiding a vivid orange beam that burned a bubbling hole into the spot he just vacated. His auto-targeter captured an image of the airborne aggressor: a dark skinned woman, clad in silver breast plate armor, anatomically correct to the smallest detail. A matching kilt of glimmering lamellar flowed to mid thigh. She wore black ankle high sandals, attached to gray, spike studded shin guards. She wielded an intricately designed staff that appeared to be carved from hard wood.  The world knew her as Candace, the Nile Goddess.

Jackson fired off an anti-personnel laser from his shoulder emitter.

Candace lifted her star staff faster than an eye blink, using it to catch the beam. The staff grew bright as it absorbed the laser, so bright it appeared a second sun had formed overhead. Instantly, the glare subsided and the staff reverted back to its cool earth tone. Candace dove toward Jackson, her face a mask of ferocity. “Let me have at him!” She shouted to Invinci-Man.

Jackson soaked in her rage, and for a second, vestigial fear gripped him as he pictured how much of an avenging goddess she must have appeared to her ancient subjects. Assuming her claim to godhood was valid.

The Nile Goddess pointed her star staff, summoning a second stream of orange fire.

This time Jackson was not quick enough to elude its bite. The beam caught him in the side, wrapping him in a writhing hot blossom.

Candace reached into the mini-conflagration, grabbed Jackson’s arm and hurled him effortlessly a full four blocks.

Jackson ricocheted off the corner of a building, ripping the roof off a parked station wagon before slamming headfirst into a dumpster. The large metal container crumpled around him in a distorted hug.

A red tint shrouded his AVD. Diagnostic alerts shrilled with urgency until Jackson silenced the clamor.  His suit’s power level took a grave dip, forcing him to draw additional juice from his powerplant. At this rate, it wouldn’t be long before he had to tap into his reserves. He managed to pry his way out of the remains of the dumpster just as Candace arrived, looming over him like a hungry raptor, her star staff raised.

She brought her staff down in a swift, gleaming arc. Jackson leapt clear. The staff struck the dumpster, incinerating what was left of it.  Jackson slid behind the Goddess, neutralizing her staff arm while clamping a forearm to her throat.

Normally, Candace would have broken such a hold with contemptuous ease. Her strength was second to Invinci-Man’s.  While Jackson had 35 seconds left of Invinci-Man’s strength, the physical advantage in this instance was decisively his. It was an advantage he utilized with zest as he increased pressure on the Nile Goddess’ throat…squeezing…squeezing…

Candace strained to break free. She tried to wrench her other arm from Jackson’s grip so as to gain room to direct her staff. Jackson tightened his hold on both her arm and throat. The Goddess’ struggle began to slacken.

Could he do this? He questioned himself. Could he kill her…like this…in cold blood? A former colleague?

A warning alert interrupted his musing. His scanner detected massive air displacement, an indicator of something or someone moving very, very fast. The threat was inbound on his five.

Jackson shoved the Goddess aside and turned in the direction of the source just as a streak of blue grazed him. The contact was peripheral but imbued with enough force to send Jackson spinning to the ground.

Marty Buckles, also known as the Blue Blur, the fastest man in the universe, stopped on a dime. He wore wind resistant head to toe blue spandex with blue-tinted wraparound sunglasses.

He threw a frat boy grin at the Nile Goddess. “Boy, I wish I could have recorded what I just saw. Ace nearly had you down for the count, lady!”

Candace straightened, rubbing her throat, murder burning a ruby light in her eyes. “If you don’t shut your insufferable trap, I’ll put you down!”

The speedster raised a lewd brow. “I think I’d like that.” Then he was off.

“I’ll bet you would,” the Goddess murmured irately.

The Blue Blur bowled into Jackson at a speed that most certainly earned him his sobriquet, and held on tight. “How ‘bout a quick ride, Ace?”

The Blur held Jackson for little over two seconds, which in distance translated to six long blocks. He let go and halted, but Jackson kept going, sailing across a park, through a playground until he collided with a tree, rupturing its trunk to splinters. Jackson lay curled on the grass, emergency bells and whistles again filling his helmet with a low key racket.

The Blue Blur was far from the strongest member of the Guardian Protectors. Still, even a rabbit, moving at supersonic speed, could cause considerable damage if it bumped into something.

Jackson stood shakily, orienting himself. He spotted the Blue Blur standing on the other end of the park wearing a cocky smirk. The next second the speedster was gone…in motion!

Jackson didn’t think. He acted. He powered his foot repulsors. Tiny thrusters in the soles of his metal boots lifted him straight up. At the same time he ejected a dark gray marble size object from his lower torso harness. The object fell in the Blue Blur’s path and detonated. The impending blast threw the speedster back as if he’d bounced off a steel wall. Clods of dirt and grass, mixed with a bubbling froth of black smoke, bloomed from a ten-yard diameter crater gouged by the explosion.

The Blue Blur flopped limply on his back, the wind knocked out of him.

“Surprise, surprise,” Jackson taunted. He switched his thrusts to flight mode and glided out of the park. The mayor had evacuated the entire southern district of Valor City at Jackson’s request. He needed to keep the battle within its bounds.

Something struck his right shoulder as he zipped over a wide avenue. Jackson spiraled out of control before regaining enough of his bearings to manage an off balance landing. He cast his gaze about until his threat sensor locked onto a red Ford Taurus 30 to 40 yards in the direction from which he came.

The car suddenly disassembled. Its parts shifted and shuffled in a dizzying array of motion that resolved into a man. At least from all appearances.

George Kennan, aka MachineWare, always had more of an affinity for gadgets than people. His psychic ability to manipulate machines made him a valuable asset to the Guardian Protectors. But as Kennan, little by little, converted himself into a gadget, that’s when the corruption set in. It could be said that his humanity and all the compassion and empathy it entailed diminished with his imbibing of a new cybernetic component.

Ropes of super hardened overlapping metal coils, connected to metal plates, layered MachineWare’s gaunt frame. Only his face remained bare of any markers denoting his bizarre transformation. He raised his right arm and it reconfigured into gatling gun. The gun’s eight barrels rotated and a flaming chatter of titanium bullets ripped forth.

Jackson staggered backwards as a sleet of hot metal pounded his suit.  He pushed outward with his mind, extending the range of his shield to approximately seven feet in front of him. Waves of bullets deflected off the shield.

MachineWare raised his other arm. It lengthened and thickened in a clanking whir of adjustable parts, forming a long-barreled cannon. A black missile whisked out of the cannon’s maw, plunging into the shield. A scorching shower of released energy gushed from the shattered missile, winking the shield out of existence propelling Jackson into a brick walled corner drug store.

MachineWare hurled five more missiles after the first, and the entire storefront, along with a good chunk of the building that housed it disappeared in a fiery, demolition collapse.

An ashen cloud belched from the flame-smothered ruin, encroaching on daylight like a horde of demon wraiths springing from the underworld.

MachineWare’s armaments retracted into his body. He stood before this howling destruction he’d wrought, unaffected by the smoke and heat, unmoved by his action. His expression held a very machine-like dearth of emotion.

“Pity, Victor Jackson. You should never have opposed us.”

“Pity on you, George. You should never have gone rogue.”

MachineWare whirled to find Jackson standing behind him.

Before the cyborg could react, Jackson triggered a beam from his ordnance bracelet.

A crackling web of electromagnetic energy surrounded MachineWare. The cyborg quaked violently, his previously impassive face, twisted in a convulsion of agony. When the web vanished MachineWare crumpled to the pavement in a short-circuited heap.

Jackson pumped enough EM into MachineWare to plunge of all of Valor City into Stone Age darkness. It would require ten times that amount to fully and permanently disable him.

Jackson had neither the time nor the output to finish Kennan off.

A cold wind whipped around him. It was a winter-like gust in the middle of a humid summer day. Dark storm clouds boiled into sudden existence overhead. The odd weather was no natural occurrence. The wind grew more frigid, more active, becoming a raging twister.

Jackson powered his thrusts to get away, but the savage funnel snared him with irresistible force, driving him skyward.

In a wink, the twister vanished and Jackson found himself face to face with the tornado’s conjurer, a flame-haired woman called Windrider.

Valerie Hewitt had been a climatologist in a past life. Ironic.

Windrider crossed her forearms. A tendril of lightning danced from the sky, poured into her body, surging out of her hands in a pulse of linear energy directed at the armored man.

Jackson extended his contact shield, blocking the pulse. He countered with a salvo of rockets.

Windrider waved an arm, scattering the rockets with a high speed blast of wind.

“Give it up, Jackson!” Windrider derided, her crimson mane waving in a self generating breeze like flickering candle light. Her sky blue cloak vividly contrasted the yellow body suit that hugged her comely contours like a perfectly fitted glove.  “You can’t beat all of us. Hell, you can’t beat one of us!”

“I’d say I’ve been holding my own pretty well so far,” Jackson retorted.

The air temperature around him dipped drastically, frosting his armor. Within seconds he was encased in a block of ice.

“It’s a cold, cold world, Jackson.”

Windrider watched with psychotic glee as the man in armor plunged ground ward from well over ten thousand feet.

Jackson didn’t doubt that he would survive the fall, even encased in a ton of ice. He just preferred not to experience it.

He ignited his shoulder emitter. The light’s coherence bored through a section of ice, providing a pocket of space for his emitter’s turret to rotate. He also powered every thruster pimple on his armor, creating a sweltering buildup of heat. The ice dissolved to the point where Jackson could apply brute strength to break out. With servo-powered arms and legs, he hammered away at his confinement until he burst free in a sparkling cloud of ice crystals.

Jackson righted himself, and boosted his thrusters beyond their maximum limit, accelerating upward as if he had been launched from a rail gun. He fired over two dozen rockets at Windrider.

The weather-manipulator batted the projectiles aside with directed wind just as she had done the first time. The rockets twirled every which way, but Jackson linked on to one. He displaced the sole rocket’s internal guidance with manual.

Windrider crossed her arms, summoning a second bolt of lightning.

Jackson stayed on his trajectory toward her, making no attempt at evasive maneuvering. He focused on the rocket, bringing it about, lining it up with its target.

Windrider must have sensed something. She glanced behind her just as lightning channeled through her body. She caught the most fleeting glimpse of the rocket and extended a hand toward it, redirecting the electrical energy pulse intended for Jackson.

Pulse and rocket met point blank.

A blinding, deafening eruption birthed from the collision. A flaming fist knocked Windrider out of the sky.

Jackson didn’t know if she was dead or alive. He didn’t try to find out. He ignored her and headed south, deeper into the district, where he needed to be. He checked his power levels and grimaced. 47 percent reading. Not good. His power plant was nearly depleted and his diagnostic screen painted a bleak picture of points of structural damage. Some of his primary functions were so busted he had to switch to auxiliary. He needed to keep this contest going until he was in a position to implement Phase Two.

A warning alert. Danger flew at him fast. Jackson pulled directional data from his AVD and banked to avoid what was coming…too late!

Invinci-Man slammed into him with a bone-crunching wallop, his massively muscled arms wrapping Jackson in a super powered bear hug.

Jackson squirmed to break the grip, but his borrowed strength had run out. He was helpless as a field mouse in the clutches of a hawk.

Gone was the look of casual indulgence on Invinci-Man’s face. A cruel glimmer shined from his eyes.

Jackson felt exposed as a newborn in the light of the other’s utterly ruthless gaze.

“We’re done toying with you.” Invinci-Man went into a sudden dive.

Jackson’s gut lurched.

Within a millisecond of hitting the ground, Invinci-Man released his hold on the armored man with a shove and shot upward.

Jackson torpedoed into the top of a tractor-trailer truck. Both tractor and trailer were sheared in half on impact an instant before the collision’s full force shredded them to scrap, producing a bruising shock wave that blew out every window in every building in the vicinity.

Jackson groaned.  Half his body was embedded in concrete beneath the tractor/trailer’s flaming wreckage. His climate control must have been shot, which explained the failure of his armor to provide insulation from the ferocious fire-generated heat. He needed to get up and out before he baked to death inside his armor. He tried to extricate himself, but the entire left side of his suit refused to respond to his neuro-linked nudge.

“NEED HELP?”

Jackson looked up to see the Nile Goddess plunging into the fire with star staff raised.

She brought the staff down in a blurring stroke, striking Jackson’s paralyzed left shoulder.  A  crimson orb issued rapidly from the blow, followed by a powerful blast that tossed up an oil black mushroom cloud.

A hot breeze cleared away the worst of the smoke.

Jackson lay prone at the center of a deep, steaming depression. Parts of his armor hung in scorched, tattered strips, barely connected to its pliable, carbon-nanotube inner layer. In some places the armor became porous, oozing globs of inertial gel.

His AVD flickered in and out. Snowy static clouded the remainder of his displays. Of course he didn’t need diagnostics to tell him that his suit was no longer functional. As for his body, he ached to high hell from that final round of abuse inflicted on him by Invinci-Man and Candace. The slightest motion ignited a firestorm of pain. But he weathered the suffering, rising slowly to his knees. He could rise no more. He pulled a string of release tabs along the upper section of his neck guard and removed his helmet, tossing it aside.

Jackson ran a hand down his face, wiping away perspiration. He lifted his head and saw that he was surrounded.

Invinci-Man, the Nile Goddess, Windrider, the Blue Blur, and Machine-Ware loomed above him from the ridge of the depression. Undoubtedly, they would have slaughtered him on the spot. All it took was one word from Invinci-Man.

Jackson stared at Invinci-Man, partly resigned, partly defiant, and waiting for the latter to give that word.

Instead, the leader of the Guardian Protectors hovered and descended into the pit, his expression softened by sympathy and memories of bygone fraternity.

Jackson remembered as well, and for a moment the two men shared fond memories in silence.

“What happened to you, Jeff?” Jackson asked with a tinge of anguish. “How did you of all people cross that line from a noble caretaker to being no better than the thugs, lowlifes, and murderers we used to battle?”

Invinci-Man tilted his head, his brow narrowing as if mulling over the question.  “Call it enlightenment. One day an epiphany hit me. I realized that people don’t need caretakers, they need prison guards. They need control, discipline, structure. And if they go astray they need swift, harsh punishment to correct their errors. Who else can provide these things other than those of us endowed with the capabilities, be it by accident, design or birth, to exert our will over this depraved planet?”

“How has the killing of innocents made this world any better than before you decided to run rough shod over it?”

“I don’t worry about the innocent. What is that saying?” Invinci-Man caressed his broad chin in a show of thought. “Ah, yes…let God sort them out.” He settled on his haunches, looking Jackson square in the eye, scrutinizing, searching. “Your self righteous platitudes choke with hypocrisy. You hadn’t always abided by the law in your crime fighting.  For all the wonderful hi-tech toys that sprang out of that genius head of yours, you were still nothing but a vigilante.”

Jackson dropped his eyes. “You’re right. I was a vigilante, albeit a glorified one. I admit to operating outside the law when I had to accomplish an objective. But this…what you and the others are doing…I never embarked down that path.”

“But you considered it! Didn’t you, Victor?!” Invinci-Man leaned in close until his piercing, umber eyed glare became the only object in Jackson’s scaled down universe. “Be honest. You never thought once about using your suit to its fullest potential?”

Fullest potential. The question stung in ways Jackson couldn’t disregard. He kept his eyes averted, unwilling…or unable to meet the other’s gaze.

Invinci-Man stood, choosing not to press for an answer. His tone weighed heavy with regret. “You should have joined us, Victor. I hate that you forced me into this position. I would just love to plop you inside a maximum security lockbox somewhere far from civilization. But then I’d have to spend my every waking hour worrying that you might figure a way to escape. We can’t be distracted by loose ends. Not while we’re in the midst of whipping this world into shape. I can make this quick and painless for you. It’s the least I can do for a friend.”

Jackson eased his way to a standing position. Pain surged like electricity through his body. “Thanks for the offer, Jeff,” he managed through gritted teeth. “But I have a second option.”

Invinci-Man possessed multi-spectrum vision. Had he used the X Ray portion, he would have spotted a thumbnail size wafer lodged beneath Jackson’s temple.

Jackson pressed a finger to his temple, activating an implant. That action sent up a transmission to a satellite orbiting in geo-sync directly above Valor City’s South District.

Invinci-Man’s brow crinkled in suspicion. Suspicion morphed into alarm. He made a move toward Jackson. “What are you…”

A haze of light suddenly filled the depression. Jackson squeezed his eyes shut. Even so, the searing brightness soaked through his eyelids, fully immersing him in a glaring void of white.

Seconds, moments, minutes may have passed. Jackson had no idea. It was like he slipped into a crease in time. Slowly, he opened his eyes. Invinci-Man was gone. Jackson searched the ridge. The others were also gone, seized by the light.

“And this was the least I could do for a friend.” Jackson sank back to his knees as exhaustion took its toll.

Intelligence Chief Yohannes Brady approached the ambulance where a paramedic just completed wrapping Victor Jackson’s ribs in bandages.

Jackson gently prodded the area above his two cracked ribs and winced.

Brady expressed something close to paternal concern. “How are you, Ace?”

Jackson’s lips parted minimally in a tired smile. “I could be better.” He gave a thumbs up. “But I’m alive.”

The intelligence chief looked around, taking in the bleak sight of a neighborhood resembling old footage he’d seen of Berlin in the aftermath of World War II.

The place had truly been a warzone. The difference in this case was that the combatants comprised one human, of extraordinary brilliance with technology to match, pitted against a squad of super-powered psychopaths.

Brady had to shake his head at the wonder of it all. “Your suit held out pretty well. Longer than I expected to be honest.”

“It took some hellified punishment, didn’t it?” Jackson boasted. On a serious note, he added: “I upgraded it. I needed it to last just long enough for me to gather them in one area.”

“And spring your trap,” Brady finished. “What exactly was that light beam from the sky? A weapon? Did it kill them?”

Jackson shook his head. “No, they’re not dead…at least I’m sure they’re not. There exists multiple universes, multiple realities.  I discovered a way to open a door to any one of them. The satellite I built created a portal.”

Brady gave a look verging on merriment. “You sent Invinci-Man and his gang to another universe?”

“I’m not exactly comfortable with that outcome,” Jackson qualified soberly. “I would’ve liked to have had time to vet universes before I used the portal. Now, I’m afraid I might have sent them to a populated realm where they’ll be able to duplicate the terror they’ve created here. But I needed to get them out of this universe with all due haste, before they caused further pain and suffering.”

The intelligence chief nodded thoughtfully. “Humanity is going to be damn grateful to you for getting rid of them. And don’t worry. Chances are you sent those bastards to a place without people. They could be stranded on a dead world.”

Jackson considered the possibility. “Could be.”

At that moment, a sleek black SUV limo pulled up beside the ambulance. The driver, a long-legged, cocoa skinned beauty (whom Brady suspected might have served Jackson in other ways) emerged from the vehicle.

“Mr. Jackson, thank God you’re all right,” said the driver reaching for her employer’s arm.

“Hello, Chastity…no, please, I don’t need help. Thank you.”

Chastity held back her assistance, but remained vigilantly close as Jackson moved gingerly toward the limo.

“And where are you off to?” Brady asked.

“Home,” replied Jackson. “I’m going to hit the sack and sleep for a week…maybe two.”

“Oh.” Brady looked troubled and hesitant, but only for a second.  He tried to mask his unease with affability. “Hey, uh, why don’t you hang out with me for a little while. We can run to the local office, you provide a debrief, and afterward I’ll treat you to your favorite restaurant.”

Nothing in the intelligence chief’s manner escaped Jackson’s keen notice. Which is why he enjoyed seeing the other trying to suppress a squirm as he refused the invitation. “Appreciate the invite, but I’ll debrief later. And my favorite restaurant is not in this city. It’s not in this country for that matter.”

Chastity opened the limo door.

“Victor,” Brady called out. “How does it feel being the only Guardian Protector?”

Jackson’s expression dimmed with melancholy. “I’m no longer a Guardian Protector. They don’t exist anymore.”

He stepped into the limo and the driver closed the door.

An hour later, Jackson entered his ops center located in the basement level of his mansion. Chastity Hunter, his driver and assistant, frowned her disapproval, insisting her employer get some much needed rest.

Jackson kindly declined her advice. Rest could wait for a few minutes. There was something he needed to check on. The side walls of his ops room were lined with book shelves that were neatly stocked with thousands of volumes. The facing wall was a gigantic terminal screen that doubled as a CCTV monitor. A brown leather bound swivel chair and a large maroon desk with a computer and keyboard sat in the center.

Jackson noticed the swivel chair was turned a hairbreadth of a degree to the left, evidence of an intrusion. His suspicion was confirmed.

There were other ways he could tell that he’d been breached. One of them he picked up from MachineWare who long ago constructed micro-size video pickups the size of dust particles. Jackson had deposited a small handful of the micro-cams throughout the ops room, on the floor, the book shelves, the desk.

He pressed a key on the keyboard, bringing the wall screen to life. Then he inputted a code that pulled recorded visual data from the micro-cams and transferred it to the screen. A view of the ops room from the perspective of the west facing book shelf came up.

Three figures in black skulked into the picture. One took a seat at the desk.  The other two did a circuit around the room before taking guard positions on opposite sides of the door. Dressed in head to toe black combat gear and armed with short barreled assault weapons, Jackson had no doubt the intruders were Intelligence Branch Para-Military ops soldiers.

He fast-forwarded the scene. The soldier at his desk was typing on the keyboard. Jackson knew what the soldier was after. He was trying to crack Jackson’s network, gain access to his files in order to steal his technology. It was the schematics to the armored suit that they wanted in particular. That was the prize.

Instead of feeling alarmed or violated, a certain amusement fell over Jackson. Brady’s people thought they had executed a clean in and out operation, undetected. Of course, they did manage to bypass his security to get this deep into the mansion. Jackson would give them that. The Intelligence Branch didn’t recruit slouches. Good as the organization was, however, it wasn’t that good. The intruders still failed to hack into his files.

Jackson tapped another key, bringing up a schematic of his suit.

His network remained the most secure on the planet. If the full resources of the federal government couldn’t break it, no one could.

He smiled. He actually liked Brady and had worked with the intelligence chief in the past. Strip away layers of subterfuge and a good person lay at the core of that which was Brady. Nevertheless, Jackson trusted the man about as far as he could toss the moon.

Jackson plopped in his chair, fixated on the schematic. His thoughts raced back to the question Invinci-Man asked him…the question he didn’t want to answer. But Jackson knew the answer. The temptation to abuse the power of his suit dogged him like a bad habit since he built the thing. The urge still beckoned, a devil’s enticing whisper appealing to the very worst aspect of himself, an aspect he could ill afford to let loose upon the world. He couldn’t…would not follow the others down that dark path.

Oh well. There was only one way to overcome temptation: get rid of the source.

He could have turned over the suit’s schematics to the government. No good. The military would have replicated it. One super advanced armored suit had been enough. A mass produced army of suit wearing killers amounted to an affliction the world could damn well do without.

His finger hovered over the delete button. He faltered for a few seconds, before tapping the key.  The schematic vanished from his screen.  Years of research, development, creation… purged… gone.

Jackson’s shoulders slumped. He was an ordinary citizen again. The world would have to tackle its own problems. Humanity didn’t need superheroes. It didn’t need caretakers.

He stared at a blank screen, staving off feelings of loss and emptiness. He would get over it in time.

He stood and walked out of the ops room. He never looked back.

The Fall of the Caretakers © Ronald Jones 2011-2013, All Rights Reserved

Artwork: Galaxy Saga (Applibot) | Berserker of destruction by ©2013 ~djahal

Ronald-Jones-Joint

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