June132012

Universal Monsters XXIII

We carried our ghosts.

Lucian strapped the dustbuster to his back like a katana as we walked west. Into the sun.

Tesla and Art Fleming could be heard whining from time to time, from deep inside the tiny vacuum.  It reminded us of Limbaugh and Hannity bitching on the radio.  The bulls listened to that shit non-stop.  We don’t know why.  You’d think being in prison you’d get your fill of mindless hate and poisoned tongues and misery and lies.  Maybe that was the point.  Maybe the right’s hate and violent bigotry kept screws warm on break, like the way a pitcher wears a jacket when his team is at bat, even on summer nights.  As a bull, you let your hate get cold, you could throw out your arm the next time you beat a nineteen year old kid for something he never did wrong.  You don’t want that.

Anyway.  It reminded us of Limbaugh and Hannity.  Reminded us that the apocalypse wasn’t all bad. Anything that kills those two, ya know?

We imagined the feast the demons must have had dining on their fat asses and made mental notes to high five those ones before we ripped them apart.  Even if they were fucking hippogriffs we would high five those bastards.

We carried the dustbuster in part because it was a weapon, in case spirits that didn’t used to host Jeopardy showed up, but also because it was really funny. Why those two could float through the concrete walls of a planetarium but were trapped inside something someone bought on sale at Sears eluded even Space and he got a little lost in the math for a while, a little drunk on algorithms or something, but mostly it was just funny.

Brinkmire chewed on the irony.

We had become jailers.

It’s not that the rest of us didn’t get it, we just had other things on our minds. Food was becoming problematic.

Perishable things were already pretty much boned, because refrigerators don’t work in an apocalypse, apparently.  And hunting wasn’t an option.  The demons didn’t much discriminate between animals.  On that tuesday, if it walked it burned.

A lot of markets still existed, existed enough, and convenient stores, and there weren’t very many things with teeth to scavenge, so we were all right for now.  And there were always homes and things we could break into. But the scarcity was worth considering.

It was worth talking about. Hell, it was about the only thing we talked about for miles and miles.  At some point we just started listing foods we had once eaten, and salivating over how awesome it was before Satan killed Sizzler.  Eventually it started to feel like a scene from the damn Oliver musical. Hot sausage and mustard!/While we’re in the mood/Cold jelly and custard!

It was worth talking about until we found the woman in red sitting on the hood of a Buick on the side of the road.

She called us by our names and, before we could say a word, we were struck dumb.

“My name is Pythia,” she said.

She said, “Turn around.”

———————-

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Audiobook for Chapter 23

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March82012

Universal Monsters XXII

Being dead didn’t make Nikola Tesla any saner and it didn’t help that Art Fleming was egging him on.

It also didn’t help (it never helps) that if you’re in a room with more than ten people you are in a room with a fucking ghost expert.  They’ve seen Ghostbusters One and Two and they’ve got a respectable Casper collection, two or three long boxes at least, and they watch Ghost Hunter without irony and they know every damn thing there is to know about spirits.  Half the time they have a business card that says they’re a “Paranormal Investigator” when they aren’t fixing stereos.  Half the time “Paranormal” is misspelled.  Half the time, so is “Investigator.”

Business cards should be like drivers licenses.  There should be a test.

Their websites all sparkle and dance and seem to be built on Geocities architecture which may be proof enough of demonic possession in and of itself.

Anyway.  Tesla was a crazy ass ghost and Art’s suit was shit.

Probably this should have been a lot weirder or scarier or something, but Tuesday seemed ages ago already and we were remembering who we were and fuck it.  None of us ran.  None of us screamed.  Most of us didn’t even stand.

They floated in right through the wall, like if Kitty Pride were old and a dude and creepy and a ghost.  And there were two of her.  Tesla looked directly at Space and said, “I thought I heard your voice, Gerald.”

Some of us surely thought “Gerald?” But most of us pretty much just thought, “Huh.  Ghost.”

Jackson, who is regularly an exception said, “Nobody move.  Their vision is based on movement.”

Space wasn’t listening.  No one was listening but Space was super not-listening.  He threw his head back, rolled it round a few times and shouted at the taller of the two ghosts, which is something none of us had really ever seen.  He busted up his cool.  Shook it off like rainwater.  It was like watching Spock kick the shit out of Kirk on the bridge of the Enterprise.  Or like watching a Muppet ride a bicycle.  It was entertaining but also a little wrong.

“Fuck me!” Space screamed.  “What the fuck are you doing here?”

Tesla smiled and the temperature dropped ten degrees.  “I’m here to help, as I always have been.”

Space threw a chair at Nikola Tesla.  It passed through him like you’d expect.  Effortlessly, like a lie through a newsreaders lips.

“You can’t hit a ghost with a chair unless it’s been blessed by a blind rabbi,” Jackson instructed.  “Or a blind rabbit.  Or Blind Melon.  I don’t…I need to brush up.  That was a great band, though.”

Space threw a finger out to Jackson who traced the digit back through a sinewy, shaking arm, over a tree-knot shoulder and up to a gritted face.  The message was clear.  The message was “Shut the fuck up, Jackson.”  But Jackson was never a very good reader.

“I was floating by because that’s what I do now.  I float.” Said Tesla.  “It’s my primary mode of transportation and also my basic entertainment.  It’s pretty good cardio, I guess, considering I’m dead and don’t have what you would call a circulatory system any more.  Anyway, I was floating by and I felt you and I knew you needed me now just as you always have.  I am returned.  And you are very welcome”

Art added, “You’re a lucky mook.  Nick is the greatest mind of any generation.”

Space threw someone else’s shoe at Tesla and said, “I never needed anything from you but silence and absence.”

And someone else said, “Dammit, that was my shoe.”

Jackson whispered, “Shoes won’t work either, unless they have a proton in them.”

“All shoes have protons in them, idiot!” Scolded Space.

Jackson was undeterred.  “Does anyone else smell that?  Ghosts often make their presence known through smell.

“He farted!” Space said, raising his voice again.  “He’s a farty, farty ghost.  And he’s making his presence know by appearing in front of us and speaking condescendingly, jackass.”

“You can’t be so negative,” Jackson said.  “Negativity can drive spirits away.  It can also make them farty probably.”

“I want him to go away.  I hate him.” Space said, his anger deliquescing into something closer to sadness.

“Who is this?” asked Brinkmire while Lucian walked calmly out into the hall.  “You seem to know him.”

“Tesla.  Nikola Tesla.”

“Who the fuck is Nokola Tesla?”

Space thought for just a moment how to explain a man the size of Tesla to a brain the size of Brinkmire’s and then said, “He’s like, like a hipster Thomas Edison.”

“Not fucking cool,” said Tesla while everyone else laughed at a joke we really didn’t understand.”

Space gave us all a little more, “Mad genius. Mad scientist.  Lived in hotels.  Only stayed in rooms with numbers divisible by three, hated pearls, ‘bout the only scientist I can think of that hated Einstein.”

“I didn’t hate Einstein.”

“You hated him.”

“A bit, I did.”

Space continued, “Claimed to hate war, too, but he died working on a death ray.”  

“It was not a death ray, it was a teleforce weapon.”

“What’s a teleforce weapon, Nick?

“Death ray.”

Space grinned like the Grinch who hate the canary, “Died in poverty, now he’s on money. The Serbian 100 dinar bill.  That’s how I like my irony served.”

Jackson who still hadn’t figured out he was meant to be shut up said, “The hundred? Ballin’!”

Space said, “That’s about a dollar thirty eight, US.”

Jackson seemed sad for a moment but then, “Even better!  He’s basically Washington!”

Space turned to Tesla and said, “One hundred, by the way, not divisible by three.”

Tesla said, “Yeah, that one gets me.”

Space went on, “Also, he’s a fuck-off annoying, farty ghost that’s been following me around all my life taking credit for my work.”

“I’ve been your muse!”

“You only ever inspired me to go to therapy because I was sure you were a figment of my imagination.  You used to haunt my dreams and I thought it was just because I was a lonely, fucked up orphan who idolized you until I found out how fuck-off annoying you are.  But, no, you were actually haunting me, weren’t you?”

Art Flemming was aghast.  “You’re not gonna take that?  Are ya, Nick?  Huh?  Huh?  Are ya?”

“Oh, come on,” implored the spirit. “I was hugely helpful.  You never would have made that Pringles rocket without my help.”

“All you did was convince me to paint flames on it.”

“Looked like it was going faster that way.”

Space rubbed his eyes and gritted his teeth.  More than a ghost, it was a migraine that floated through those walls.  “I hate you.”

“I also told you to put an AM/FM radio on board.”

“Yeah.  I’m pretty sure that’s what made it explode and burn down my parents house and make them leave.”

“Well, you put it in the wrong place.”

“There is no proper place on a Pringles rocket for…no.  No.  I’m not going to have this conversation I’m just…I’m going to figure out how to kill you.  Re-kill you, I guess.”

Tesla’s demeanor shifted, his entire presence contorted into something a little more solid and much less kind and his floating, translucent body went crimson.  His voice shook the room now.  “You think they’re gonna rename Mars for you now you little shit?  Now that the demons are bending Earth?  It’ll never happen.  And what do I care?  I’ve already got a planet named after me.”

“A minor planet!”

“It’s a good size!”

Art Flemming tugged at Tesla’s robes and said, “This guys a graceless ingrate. Let’s bodyjack his ass!”

Brinkmire spoke up again, “And who the fuck is this one?

Space shook his head.  “I have no idea.  Never seen him before.  He wants to jack my ass, though.  So that’s funny.”

Lucian walked in the door holding a dust buster that he got we-don’t-know-where.  “Think I’ll name him ‘Butt-Monkey,’” he said before switching on the vacuum cleaner and sucking the ghosts up in a well-practiced sweeping motion.  He smiled, “Or is that too nineties?”

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<— Previous Chapter                Next Chapter —>

Audiobook of Chapter 22

October172011

Universal Monsters XXI

Space started pulling at the stuffing in the planetarium chairs with two fingers, like getting the yellow foam out of them one fiber at a time was the only thing in the world worth doing, and he took enough time off talking that we pretty much all assumed the story was over.  It was a good story, not as funny as maybe some of us would have liked, some of us might have added a chase scene in act two, but it had girls and exploding asteroids and it was an excellent story we all agreed, but it was time to be over.  The sun had set dozens of times, Mars had dragged Phobos and Deimos along its elliptical orbit at least twice and the daylight was coming on.  But after what seemed like an hour, when his seat wasn’t really something that could properly be described as a seat any longer, he spoke again.  I mean, none of us are seatologists, but by the time he started up again what he was sitting on was something else.

“The thing about being the guy that bends a planet is you’ll never get to touch it,” Space said.  “Even if you live out the fifty years of slingshotting hell and salvation at the fucking thing, even if you live that fifty years, never a guarantee even in a world without vampires, you still have to let shit settle.  For hundreds of years the entire planet has to calm the fuck down before you can go anywhere near it.  It won’t thank you for what you’ve done.  You only ever made it better.  It was useless and wasted and just spinning in the dark until you got there but it won’t thank you.  It will hate you.  And you’ll never get near it.”

Brinkmire finished a cup of tea drunk from that simple ceramic mug that he smuggled out of MGD 64 and held the teabag up to his mouth before realizing that he didn’t really need to eat it anymore.  He smiled maybe for the first time in his life and dropped the bag back into his cup where it landed with a squish and a thud, and he said, “Why didn’t you get away with it?  A guy like you, as clever as you, feet smarter than the smartest cop in the world I’d imagine, how did you get caught?”

“I didn’t,” Space said.  No one understood what the hell that meant in this context but at least half of us pretended we did.  Some of us pretended because we didn’t want to seem daft, most of us did it just so he would finally stop talking but Brinkmire, who really should have switched his brew to Sleepytime hours back kept on.

“How’s that?  You are here, aren’t you?  I mean, I don’t want to get into a whole Cartesian thing about the nature of existence and if we’re just brains bubbling in a thing.  I just mean, you are here.  Were there.  Prison.  MGD  You got caught.”

“I turned myself in.”

Someone asked, “Why?”  Might have been Brinkmire or it might have been anyone else.

Space answered, “Because I’ll never get to touch Mars.  My Mars.  The Mars into which I breathed all life.  But the people who live there damn sure better know who I am.  What I did.  They better name, at the very least, the capital city after me.  Maybe the whole damn planet.  The Statue of Liberty that welcomes immigrants to that whole new world will be a statue of me.  I turned myself in because when I do something I sign my name.”

Lucian snarled, “Ego.”

“Yeah,” Space agreed.

“Is she smarter than you?”

“The Statue of Liberty?”

“The girl.  The girl you bent.”

“No.”

“As smart as you?”

“No.”

“Then why the hell would you trade her for you?”

Space raised his eyebrows and shrugged just a hint of a shrug and said, “That’s just about the only question I’ve ever thought was hard.”

And then, whether he meant for it to be or not, the story was over for sure.  Because that’s when the ghosts walked in.

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Audiobook of Chapter 21

September142011

Universal Monsters XX

“Here’s how terraforming Mars will work.”  Space was rolling now and maybe a little drunk on a story that’s been fermented and aging in his mind-cask for over a decade and we don’t know if he cared that we were in the room at all at this point.  He didn’t seem to notice but someone switched the presentation on the planetarium dome from “Sunrise” to “Mars.”  The red planet spun overhead like a blood-stained Deathstar and Space said, “Asteroids,” and then there was another long silence, which had become kind of trademark at this point.

“It sounds like something out of a terrible movie but this is how it will happen.  We’ll attach nuclear thermal rocket engines to giant, icy, ammonia filled fuck-off asteroids and hurl the bastards at Mars.  We know where these asteroids are, they’re just hanging out on the edges of the solar system, all we have to do is duct tape the rockets to them and we’re off.  The energy released from the impact of each ten-billion-ton asteroid would be approximately one hundred thirty million megawatts.  Enough to power the Earth for a decade.  Enough energy to send the Delorean back in time 107,438 times.” Space did that math in his head without slowing down.

“Each asteroid would raise the temperature of the planet three degrees Celsius and melt a trillion tons of water.  Enough to form a lake the size of Connecticut and one meter deep.  

“We would do this for fifty years.  For fifty years we’d sling rocks at her and at the end of it all we’d have a temperate climate on that shithole of a planet, which would now be about twenty-five percent covered in water.

“What I’m saying is, creating an environment where life can flourish is violent like you can’t imagine.  We can go up there right now.  I’ve built the rad shield, we’ve got the rockets.  But we’d have to be hermetically sealed.  We could walk around a bit, even build a little bubble, probably.  But that’s not living.  That’s quarantine.  And that’s not who we are.  A rock is not the boss of us.  Not while I’m around.  I can bend proud planets to my will.  Mars is hard.  I’m much harder.  And to live like you mean it?  To thrive?  Fifty years of nuclear powered asteroids, each one equal to seventy-thousand one-megaton H-bombs is what it takes in the best case scenario.

“Living, really living, is violent like you can’t imagine.

“So I looked her up in the phone book.  It was a day-trip to her place.  Her front door had a five pin tumbler lock.  The house was wired with a single circuit alarm.  My cat could have bypassed it after an hour of googling.

“But first I just watched.  I built a surveillance van to spec with what the FBI was using at the time, working with designs I took off of their server.  Three trips to radio shack and I was set.  Wired for video and sound.  I had eyes and ears on them twenty-four hours a day.  

I could set my watch by their schedule.  Get up, shitty breakfast, peck on the lips for goodbyes and off to their jobs, about as aware of their lives as Rags.  Home, shitty dinner, shitty TV and bed.  Husband on the north side of the mattress, wife on the south.  Never touching   Not even a peck for goodnights.  No talking if they could help it.  No thinking.  Even the toddlers’ tantrums were on a timetable, accurate to within seven minutes and dependent on how far they were from a snack and a nap on each end.

“Emerson taught us that ‘consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds,’ but he never warned us about the enemies that fire consistency at us from orbital stations.  Husbands and children and television shows about doctors that never go to work and mortgages and cheese you eat in strings.

“That’s not living.  That’s quarantine.

“She was just so…ordinary.  That’s not who we are.  And it was.  It was treasonous.  

“And I can bend worlds.  

“I did what had to be done.  In the middle of the night on day fourteen, after accumulating terabytes of data, when I was dead-sure my hypothesis was correct and articulately simple to the point a fourth grader could have presented my findings and won the school science fair,  I bypassed her lock and her security system and I walked into her home and I very gently murdered her husband and her children and I set everything she owned on fire.  Because her life-entire needed to burn.

“She needed to watch her world explode and to catch the ashes on her tongue.

I watched her lay on her lawn and sob.  And her tears pooled into a lake roughly the size of Connecticut.  And one meter deep.”

—————

<— Previous Chapter

Audiobook version of Chapter 20

August292011

Universal Monsters Chapter XIX

“There was a time when music only existed while it was being played,” Space said.  And then he paused like we were all supposed to get that this was way, way deep and maybe “ooh” or “gasp” or something.  Brinkmire choked on some candy corn he found under a chair but we didn’t think that counted.  

“It was not very long ago, really,” Space continued.  “Wasn’t till Edison came up with the phonograph cylinder in 1877 that we had any reasonable way to record it and reproduce it.  Before then it only existed while it was being played.  People are like that.  Not all people.  Some people are just noise, but some of us are melodic.  She was.  For a time.  For a spell she was magic.  I’m a scientist but I’ve always believed in magic because I’ve always believed in girls.  She was flaxen haired and she was the reason I learned the word “flaxen” and, probably, she was the reason the word was created.  And she was skin.  And she was light.

“She was never going to be Oppenheimer but she was going to contribute.  She was going to be…she was going to…nothing much has happened in physics since String Theory and…she was making it elegant.  She wasn’t trying to, I don’t think, but she was.  Her notebook read like Byron.  Her equations were cloudless climes and starry skies.  Simple pleasures.  Poetry in potions.  She worked out a formula for a hyper-efficient nitrogen-based fuel on the back of a napkin once that I swear gave me a boner.  I mean, I was thirteen at the time so the napkin alone could probably give me a boner but…she was something else.

“And I was her lab-partner and I was thirteen and she never treated me like a child, but we were never going to be…and I would have given up all the cleverness and purpose and fuck Mars and sat in a box for five years just waiting to be old enough if I could have.  If she could stay the same.  But time is linear probably just to fuck with me.  Einstein said, ‘The reason for time is so that everything doesn’t happen at once.’  But I’ve thought about it and I’m pretty sure it’s just to fuck with my head.

“Platypi are like that.  There’s no other reason I can think of for a duck-beaver that lays eggs.  The fuck is up with that?  I may be off topic again.

“I figured she’d write the book that brought high-level science to the masses.  Not dumbed down just dressed up.  You’d be amazed what even an average mind can grasp when it’s laid out like underwear by a pretty girl.  Maybe, if we were very lucky, it would be the new Bible.  Not the new Bible, the companion piece.  One in every drawer beside the other.  Telling us that God and science can co-exist just as long as you keep your eyes and your mind open and understand that love and chemistry hold hands on the beach and the age of the earth ends in ‘illion.’  And then she would write a book of poetry with math.  She was Shakespeare in a lab coat and she would write the psalms and the sonnets.

“We would talk about her future and the things she would publish and the minds she would change. ‘The sky isn’t the limit,’ she would say to me.  ‘Not anymore.  There are no limits.  I’ll take us anywhere and when we get there you’ll bend the fuckin’ thing.’

“You guys can probably fill in the really sad shit.  The shit where I would just stare at her and draw love-fractals and the longing and all that unrequited whatever.  That part isn’t important, really, but it was my first crush and I want to be honest about it because, I mean, fuck it.  Why else would I tell the story?

“We graduated and I lost track of her.  This was in the days before Facespaces and Mybooks and Frienderfritters and I lost track.  And I got my Ph.D and I went to work for NASA like I was always going to and I grew up a little and actually kissed a girl at one point.  And I went about trying to bend a piece of shit little red planet into something that just might not kill you if you’re very, very hard and very, very lucky.  But that’s okay.  Hard is good.  Luck is good.  That’s why America is great.  We’re a country built on the backs of the hardest, most ambitious people the rest of the world had to offer.  If you were satisfied with your life, if you were complacent, you stayed in Europe.  If you were willing to take a fifty/fifty roll of the dice that you would die on the boat to a new country, and miss your stop by two-hundred miles and watch most of your family waste away or freeze to death in a mini ice-age or both all on the chance that you might be great, then you were American.  Then you were music.  You were fucking metal.  You just didn’t have a name for it yet.  Because Black Sabbath hadn’t taught us what we were yet.

“I’m actually not off on a tangent here, believe it or not.  Not really

“I lost track of her but every three months or so I’d walk the aisles of bookstores and look for her name.  I never saw it.  I looked for years.  It got easier when I got a driver’s licence.

“Then one day I found her at a shop called Demarcation.  Not her book.  Her.  She was on Merrit Island, where I worked.  She had been living in Jupiter, Florida for years.  She didn’t recognize me at first.  I was nineteen and the last time she saw me I was fourteen and I guess those are a pretty important five years for a lot of people.  I needed a shave.  But I told her who I was and she said, ‘Oh my god!  Look at you!’  And I thought, I’ve been in a box for five years.  A box of research and grease boards and rockets.  I told her I was building off of her nitrogen fuel ideas for power sources on Mars, the one she worked out on the cocktail napkin and she said that made her very proud and she introduced me to her children Tyler and Barret.

“Tyler ignored me because he was ripping a copy of A Study In Scarlett to pieces and Barret said something that resembled hello and then licked me and told me I tasted like paint and spat on my pants.  His spit was green and red at the same time and to this day I haven’t worked that one out.

“She told me, ‘Boys will be boys’ and I smiled and I nodded and in my head I calculated the torque I would need to snap their necks.”

She told me she met someone the summer after college and she was meant to do research at MIT for the fall semester but instead they got married and now she teaches physical science to high school freshmen at a public school in Jupiter.  And in my head I calculated the torque I would need to snap my own neck.  I worked out if it was possible to do.  It isn’t.  I mean, not without a fairly complex mechanical rig.  In my head I built the rig out of things I saw around the bookstore.

I asked her if Tyler liked Sherlock, because he was my favorite growing up.  She said he can’t read and I reminded her that he was almost five and what the fuck?  She said that Jared didn’t want to rush the boys or pressure them to excel and I guessed that Jared was her husband and that he was European.

I asked her if I could buy her dinner and she said she was just in town antiquing and had to be home in time to make Jared’s dinner.  And probably Tyler or Barret would need their diapers changed soon.  And I reminded her that Tyler was nearly five and then I was sure Jared was European.

She told me he was a found-art sculptor and I said of course he was and had no idea what that meant and I went out to my car.  It was the first time I can ever remember crying.

I’m the guy whose parents left him in the shell of a burned out house in the middle of winter when he was five and just took off and didn’t say goodbye or leave him food or electricity and in that car, outside that store, that was the first time I can ever remember crying.

I couldn’t get her out of my head.  For days.  For weeks.  That was nothing new but this time it wasn’t sexy or fun or her laugh or her napkins.  Now it was like she was an entire planet made of sadness and broken shit.  And it was up to me to bend her.”

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<— Previous Chapter                           Next Chapter —>

Audiobook for Chapter 19

August12011

Universal Monsters Chapter XVIII

“There was always going to be an extinction event, so it was my job to bend Mars,” Space said as he worked something out in the middle distance.  Like he was pulling the memories through a crack in time.

Everyone gathered in a circle like we were at camp and that was okay because we all knew it was a ghost story coming.

Jackson said before we went on we needed music.  He told us it would be more cinematic.  None of us knew where all this electricity was coming from but Brinkmire had read a book called “The Hiding Place” that he said was also about monsters and that it taught him not to look too closely at blessings like this and we thought that sounded good.

Frank found a copy of Back to Black in the planetarium PA and he put it on to soundtrack the story.  We listened to the dead.

Space continued.  “There was always going to be an extinction event.  If it wasn’t this it would have been anything else.  Not many people had hippogriffs in the office pool, but this was always going to happen.  Most of us didn’t even guess this century, but this is what futurists are for.  

“We already had one ice age, what’s to say we won’t have another?  Or a lava age.  Or a Geoff age where everybody gets turned into a Geoff and then a Geoff-only disease wipes us all out.  You can’t trust the weather.  Or Geoffs.  I dunno.  Asteroids are a good bet.  Nuclear war.  Nuclear winter.  Smallpox.  Bigpox.  There are a million ways the human race could die.  A million ways we haven’t even thought up, yet.  Like that Geoff thing.  The very best case scenario is overpopulation, probably.  Where we live long enough to fuck our way to the planet not being viable.  Nowhere to put us and nowhere to grow the food to keep us.  I mean, that was best case, not really a concern now I guess.  Not for a while.  Anyway.  There is no long-term scenario where being Earthbound makes sense.  But I should go back.  I met this girl in college.”

He pauses like he’s listening for someone to call to him, but the only other voice in the world as far as we can tell is on the speakers.  Amy Winehouse is saying, “We only said goodbye with words,” while the sun rises for the forty-fourth time today.

“I should go back further,” Space said.

“I was born genius.  I guess that’s how most people catch it.  If there were a pill to prevent it you should load up on that shit.  

“My IQ can’t be accurately measured.  Gifted they call it.  But genius is a gift like a puppy is a gift.  It’s mostly a responsibility.  Genius pisses on your carpet all the time.  Genius will eat all of your shoes.  

“When you’re born genius you have a lot fewer options than you think.  You’re supposed to do something to…I don’t know, fix us.  It’s treasonous to the species to play Street Fighter or to watch TV or to sleep when you could be curing something or figuring out how to make pizza out of nothing but corn and the tears of Africans.  That’s what they tell you.  I decided to use my genius to get us off-world.  Like you mean it.  Mars.  Mars is the only real option right now.  Mercury is a suicide run and we can’t stay here.  A single planet is irresponsible.  It’s a closed system.  Those are never sustainable.  That’s QED.

“Mars is a shitty option, though.  No magnetic field, really, it’s balls cold, we still have no clue what the water situation is like up there, but if there is any it’ll be a bitch to get to.  It’s a shithole, but maybe we can shape it.

“I built my first rocket when I was three.  Mostly it was pressurized cleaning products and a little black powder from some of my dad’s bullets and a bunch of Pringles cans and duct tape.  I worked on the thing for two years.  By the fifteenth iteration of the design I achieved low-earth orbit.  With potato crisps.  The first seven set small fires.  The eighth gave a deer a heart attack and taught me that, in a pinch, I can perform CPR on a dear.  It mostly tasted like leaves.  The ninth one burned down most of my parents house and that was the last time I saw them.

“They never knew what to do with me.  They looked at me like we look at Fraction.  Like we’re not the same species and one of us is fucking scary.  Like I had a second head that was hungry for human flesh or, I don’t know.  I didn’t really know them so it’s hard to guess how they thought.  I can’t remember being touched by my parents even once.  Still I didn’t mean to…  Anyway.  So they packed up the things that were only mostly singed and took off in a car I built the year before.  They didn’t tell me they were going and I waited nine days and then I called social services myself from a neighbor’s phone because they cut off the utilities when they went.

“The next six months are mostly foster homes and beatings,” Space says.

Amy says, “Love is a losing hand.”

Space says, “When I turned six I got scholarships to private schools.  I went to class but mostly at this point I was working on building a rad shield for space exploration.  Before me, any theoretical trip to Mars meant nine months and at least twice the radiation exposure any human can withstand.  Without a proper shield we’re just a bunch of burritos watching Cheers reruns while we cook.  No point in bending a planet we can only get to dead and glowing.

“I built the shield and NASA bought it.  I sold it cheap because it didn’t take a mind like mine to realize the American space program would be fucked sideways any day.  They told me when I was out of college to give them a call and I was nine and I told them to give me five years.

“I falsified documents to make it look like I had parents so I could leave school on holidays and during the summer I took AP classes and I never kissed a girl and I worked on teraforming theory, because without resources like you wouldn’t believe it’s awfully hard to work practically with teraforming.

“When I was twelve I went to CalTech and I met this girl and she had poetry in her fingers and in her eyes and it bled into everything she touched and, of course, that’s why I had to kill her.  But I didn’t know that, yet.  And, of course, neither did she.”

And Amy says, “The shadow covers me.”

And we listened to the dead.

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Audiobook for chapter 18

July222011

Universal Monsters Chapter XVII

We slept that night in a junior college planetarium with the “Sunrise” presentation on a loop.  We had no idea if it would work on the vampires, but we had high hopes.  We had high hopes, also, that bloodsuckers couldn’t come in unless they were invited.  There really doesn’t seem to be any kind of consensus on the matter amongst fiction writers or inmates and, at the time, documentaries on vampires were difficult to come by.

Jackson was a big Buffy fan growing up and he did a lap around the perimeter to make sure there were no signs that said, “Enter all who seek knowledge” or some irresponsible shit like that.  On the south lawn he found one sign that said, “Omnia mea mecum porto” but he didn’t speak Latin and couldn’t take the chance it said “Come the fuck in and drink us.” so he he broke it into about ninety-three pieces and brought the shards in with him.  Some of us learned to whittle that night.

Space was the man of the hour.  The man with the daylightsaber.  And while Frank sulked and Brinkmire tried to bandage a frankly crybaby Jack Quietly with the remnants of a campus-issue first aid kit the rest of us asked Space to tell us his story.  Some of us knew a little but most of us didn’t.  MGD wasn’t so big you didn’t know most everyones face, but prison is not a socially progressive place, even by Civil War standards, and if you were white you probably only knew the Hispanics and African Americans by various racist slurs and you sure as hell don’t know where they come from.  And vice vice versa or however you say might that.  And we all wanted to know what brings a man like Space to a prison like that.  

He was younger than most of us but he’d been on the inside longer, too.  Space was the only proper genius any of us had ever seen in real life and he did everything accelerated, like a cheetah wearing rocket skates.  Graduated high school by 12, college by 14, had his PhD when he was 16 and by 19 he was Inmate 9932033-A in the Florida Department of Corrections.

Pretty much we all knew that much.  Space was a legend at MGD.  He did all the guards taxes and shit because they saw that movie once.  He got his law degree on the inside and he’d represent anyone who wanted him to the extent that he could from a prison cell.  Also, he wrote a one-act play the New York Times called “The funniest dissection of ichthyology you’re likely to see this year.”  We knew his thing was the shouting and the crazy, but most of us figured he did that just to fit in.  Nobody would hurt Space because probably you’d need him at some point.  We knew he taught classes in the yard on…anything.  Everything.  You could go to Space and ask him what was the deal with Wonder Woman and her rope and he’d tell you her creator believed that sexual bondage was the path to world peace.  He would teach.  He would preach.  Space was 34 when we walked over the walls and we all knew the legends and some of us knew the man but knew almost nothing pre-MGD.  Just the degrees.  And even that we only knew because they hung in glassless frames on the walls of his cell.  Frames he made himself out of fashioned, painted paper and memories he couldn’t seem to leave behind.

He folded them and took them in a knapsack when we left for the last time.

Pretty much everyone at MGD liked to say they were the only guilty man in prison but that makes pretty much everyone in prison guilty.  In fact, most of us admit we did what we did and at least half of us brag about it and more than a lot of us were pretty glad to be inside.  Nine times out of ten running is way worse than being caught.  It’s true what they say, a guilty man can sleep in prison.

But Space, he never said if he was guilty.  Never even said what he was rung up on and I guess we never asked.  Until that night in the planetarium, I mean.

“I’m guessing he split an atom in his guest bathroom,” Lucian said.  “With a knife and fork.  Took out a whole village.”

Jackson answered with, “I’m thinking he might be dead, too, that were the case.”

Brinkmire spoke loudly to be heard over Jack Quietly who was mumbling something about, “Seriously.  Seriously” over and over.  

“Maybe,” Brinkmire said, “Maybe he hid in a refrigerator.”  And then most of us threw whatever was nearby at Brinkmire because we all kind of agreed to pretend The Kingdom of the Crystal Skull didn’t exist.

Lucian threw Hancock at him which Hancock didn’t really appreciate but the rest of us thought was awfully funny.

After he landed Hancock said, “I’m betting he melted a bunch of Smurfs down for gold and he’s inside on Smurficide,” because Gargamel was Hancock’s only reference point for a mad scientist.

Space turned his flashlight over in his hands and looked around at us and smiled like we don’t usually see, like he was having a pretty good time.

Someone said, “Well, what was it, then?”  

And Space said, “Nothing as special as Smurfs, though I bet we find some before all this is through.  Bet we find a Thundercat or three, too.  Nah.  Just murder.  Pretty simple.  Pretty pedestrian.  I’m just like all the other boys in here.”

“Well,” someone else said.  “D’ja do it?”

“I did it,” he said.  “Sure I did.  Of course I did.  I murdered a young family and I’m not sorry.  Probably they’d send me a thank you card and maybe a nice basket of mini-muffins if there were post between here and hell.”

And it wasn’t until right then that it occurred to any of us that we really aught to be able to at least write to our dead what with them walking around and trying to stab us with other peoples teeth and all.

And it wasn’t until right then that we all realized that we all really wanted some damn mini-muffins.

And Space looked down at the ground and his smile kind of left him and so did his posture which, generally, was pretty impeccable.  And finally he looked up and he grimaced just a little and he squinted and he said, “It starts like this.”

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Audiobook version of Chapter 17

July122011

Universal Monsters Chapter XVI

Ever stood in the kind of rain you can’t see through?  Sure you have.  It’s also the kind of rain you can’t hear through.  It’s loud and thick and everywhere at once.  It piles up in your eyes like you’re crying and it ruins your phone.  Probably you’ve kissed in that kind of rain and maybe danced and laughed.  This would have been before that Tuesday when you still believed in dancing and love and kissing.  It was like that only what it was raining was blood and meat.  Crimson tears.  It wasn’t all our blood but a lot of it was and either way it was blood.  And the noise we couldn’t hear through was us.  We were screaming.  

Shit jumped off like we couldn’t understand.  We met the vampires on the road and, basically, it was like, “Hello.” Beat.  “Oh, you’re eating us, then.  Okay.”

Jack Quietly was a bull through and through and still.  He stepped to the bastards and lost his other arm almost immediately.  Jack screamed, “Are you fucking kidding me!?!” to no one in particular while the rest of us made Monty Python jokes and the vamp who ripped the arm out of its socket worked the thing like corn on the cob.  We would swear at one point it salted the thing.

Brinkmire played dead and it worked.  We pretty much figured it didn’t fool anyone but that the vamps just didn’t want to eat something that sad.  A weeping hamburger.

Frank, of course, was much too ugly to eat.  One of the blood suckers grabbed him and just kind of stared at him the way maybe your four year old stares at green beans and, after a while he pushed Frank away with an, “I just can’t.”

It saved his life but Frank has been pretty down about it ever since.

We lost seven men to the vampires and it could have been everyone but Frank if Space weren’t there.  He watched them under the half moon and he sorted out that the vamps had eyes that see better in darkness than light.  Shine a a dead police’s LED right in their face, he figured, it’d be like sparking a road flair next to someone wearing night vision goggles.  It was a sound enough theory.  They’d be blind.

Space took the unlikely weapon off his belt and shot it right into the face of the toothy bastard that was gnawing on Lucian’s leg while Lucian gnawed on his.  And in a turn none of us expected the half-breed demon’s head exploded and the world-entire smelled like sulfur we thought.

All of us, convicts, inmates and demons alike, we all stopped what we were doing and in time like we practiced it we said, “What the fuck?”  Some of us spoke with our mouths full.

Space looked down at the torch and it only took him about moment to realize he had sunlight in his hands.  He had sunlight in a tube.
“It’s UV,” he said.  “It’s a daylight saber.”  And he wielded it like he’d seen Empire thirty-six times.  Which, of course, he had.

He cut them all down in a heartbeat and and he stood inside a circle of smoke and death and he smiled and said, “I’ll never walk around a vampire again.”

And we all agreed it was time to stop by the Wal-Mart.

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Audiobook for Chapter 16

June302011

Universal Monsters Chapter XV

We had to walk around Alabama.  The entire damn thing was on fire.  Fire to the skies, and, hell, maybe into the heavens and maybe into Heaven proper.  Fire as high as we could see.  And something swam in the flames.  Brimstone Whales or Ember Sharks.  Something.  They were only silhouettes, really.  We couldn’t get to close enough to make much out.  Hair started burning ten or fifteen feet away from the state line and there was nothing to breathe but heat and fear and rage.

Jackson tried to fish into the fire, just to see what he could get and because we were in no particular hurry and because, we suppose, Jackson liked to fish.  But even when he spent half a day making a line out of the Kevlar he found on the ashes of a city police a few days earlier, the thing dissolved a good three feet in front of the flames.  And we didn’t say it, but we all thought of Fraction.  And how he probably would have just walked right into the damn thing, he would have stood barefoot on streets of conflagration, with flickering tongues of flame lapping at him and he would have walked out with a demon squid in his teeth.  Food that cooks itself.  We thought of how Fraction would have laughed and about how demon squid would probably still be chewy.

We took other things from what little was left of the body of that police.  A flashlight and a service revolver with one bullet in the chamber.  We talked about how well the flashlight was made to survive whatever turned its owner to dust and about how whatever took down the lawman was probably still out there carrying five of his bullets.  It was the first time any of us ever liked a police and we all agreed that it probably helped that we didn’t know him.

This was back when Alabama wasn’t even on the horizon, when we met the vampires for the first time and lost seven men.  Maybe even good men.  Surely we knew their names once but bodies stack like we suck at Tetris and we move on like we’re a dot org because it’s all we can do.  Space told us about a book where death was the only thing that granted a man a name and we all liked the story and we nodded and laughed but it didn’t apply to us.  We had our great war now.  Apathy borne of fortune was about the last thing we needed to worry about.  We were not Jack’s broken heart.  We got rid of those things ages ago.

These vampires, the first ones, walked.  They wore sunglasses at night and no shirts and when we cut them they didn’t bleed and that bothered us.

When we first saw them we thought they were maybe a gang and, like us, they had survived through the cunning use of hiding behind folk.  They were hard men, we could see that, and they were roughly the color of the ash that hangs off a cigarette you’ve forgotten about and we greeted them cautiously outside of Sarasota.  We knew we couldn’t trust anyone but we knew also that we couldn’t afford to ignore any potential allies.  We knew that the days of men hating men were over.  Space was the cleverest person in the state as far as any of us could see and as we got closer to the grey men we told him to suss out their intentions and alert us if he thought they meant us harm.

Someone reached out his hand to shake and the vampire started eating him and Space tugged on his ear like he was signalling to his children watching at home and we thought, “Yeah.  Picked up on that one.”

They didn’t know karate which was frankly disappointing.  They were strong, stronger than most of us but not stronger than all of us and when they growled we growled.  And with our own blood staining our teeth we smiled.

And most of us, we were glad Armageddon came on that Tuesday.  We never knew how boredom got invented but we knew, then, for-sure how it died.

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Click here for the audiobook version of Chapter 15.

March82011

Universal Monsters XIV

It was Space that figured the rags would be combustible.  It was Space that figured they were eraseable.

He did a little math and came up with the Anti-Life equation.  He put two and two together and it equaled kaboom.
 
He rubbed his chin a little and nodded for a while and said they’d be “Inflammable like a drunken fleet of crispy, undead Hindenburgs.”  Then he spent about fifteen minutes explaining that flammable and inflammable mean the same thing.  About how “flammable” wasn’t even a word until the 1920’s when the fire safety people felt that folk would be confused by the proper word, so they invented a new one.  He told us academics to this day think that anyone that gets baffled about it deserves to die in the fires they set when they have a smoke in the hottub they filled with acetone, paraffin and matches.  We listened and told him that English is stupid.  He said we were stupid and then Lucian punched him in the balls and we all laughed.

Even Jack Quietly laughed and we all thought, “Damn, Jack we forgot you were there.”  But none of us said it because it seemed rude since he saved most of our lives and most of his arm was still gone.

Once setting them all on fire became the goal, and we all agreed this was more or less always a good goal, a catch-all solution, the problem became the most efficient way to blaze them.  And then the efficiency argument gave way to trying to figure out which way would be most fun.  Time is probably not on our side, but pretty much the only thing that’s ever been on our side is us so fuck it, right?  And if time wants to fuck with us, then we’ll set it on fire, too.

Brinkmire had been napping most of the day but he woke up and said we should find a sporting goods store, get a bunch of archery shit and lob fire-arrows at them.  It’d be “So damn King Arthur.” he said.  And we told him that sounds fun but it also sounds like a lot of work and also no one saw that movie but him.  He grumbled something about wanting a cup of tea and went back to sleep.

Jackson had the right idea.  He said the important thing was to have a good time.  He said to keep it simple.  Space said something about Occam’s razor and Lucian hit him in the balls again and it was funny again.  

We waited for dark.

We couldn’t really tell if the rags had eyes at all, but we figured if they did it would be harder to see us coming in the low light.  Also, you don’t throw fireworks in the daytime.  That’s wasteful.

We sneaked around the edges of their camp.  Turns out Mummies sleep.  They’ve been asleep for thousands of years so you’d think they’d be into staying up but, then again, they did build and sink, like, seven pyramids today and that shit has to be exhausting.  And if Letterman and Ferguson are even alive they sure as hell aren’t on the television so late-night is as good a time to nap as any.

We spent the afternoon breaking in to anything still standing.  We all found watches, mostly on what was left of wrists, and we synchronized them.  

We encircled our enemies.  Or as close to encircling them as we could being outnumbered fifty to one.  At 1:01 eastern standard time we sparked the lighters we found at gas stations and head shops.  

And the black, moonless night glowed bright orange.  And they wanted to bring hell to us, so we brought hell to them.

They went up like powder and ran like methed-out bottle rockets.  They tripped over one another and crashed into themselves and the fire spread like gossip.  Every time a rag touched another rag the fire went bigger and bigger.  One rag hit two rags, and those two rags hit two rags and it it got all kinds of exponenty.  The inferno squared and cubed and went to the power of fuck-yes.

It was pinball.  It was mummy-pinball and we were everyone of us Tommy.  We played the silver ball.  We were wizards.  And we laughed to drown out their barks and screams.  

They ricocheted and exploded and when they tried to escape we paddled them back into play.

They smelled like sandlewood and church when they burned.  And we knew they were probably diseased like you read about, but we breathed deep because they smelled, also, like vengeance.

The high-score was genocide.  We played to win.  By morning we stood in the shadow of a pyramid in south Florida and we were ankle deep in ash and we were the only things moving.  Brinkmire dragged a branch threw the black until he spelled “TILT” in letters twenty feet long.

And we smiled and we felt righteous and we breathed deep.

And we felt like we were beginning.

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The audiobook of Chapter 14 is now available. Click here for ear candy and whatnot.

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