Just Super- Ep. 8: Superheroics 101

“In the comics they always make it look so easy. Superman swoops down, saves the day, and Lois Lane swoons. I outta sue the bastards for false advertising.”

-Keith Green to Sam Daylin and Jennifer Chase, Oct. 31st 2016

***

Jenn was just walking up to the front of Keith’s apartment building when we pulled up in Keith’s beat up blue and white Chevy truck. The corner of her mouth quirked up in a nervous kind of smile as we got out and I caught the unspoken question she sent my direction with an arched eyebrow.

I smiled and waved my hands exaggeratedly. “We’re all still alive.”

Keith nodded sincerely as he walked around the front of the truck. “It was touch and go there for a while, but we made it. He’s still in one piece.”

Her nervous smile became relaxed as Keith gave her a peck on the cheek. “Well thank God for small favors.”

He laughed. “I’m gonna go up and grab my stuff. I’ll be right back.”

Keith and I exchanged nods as he went through the door and the look of pure amazement on Jenn’s face made me chuckle as she walked over to me. “Well, miracles do happen. I was half expecting for you to come back a tenderized piece of meat.”

“Ah, so your motives become clear!”

I expected another joke, or maybe a playful slap. Instead she half tackled me as she grabbed the sides of my face and kissed me. My back slammed against Keith’s truck with a thunk and after the initial momentary shock wore off I had the common sense to wrap my arms around her and kiss back. I’m not sure how much time passed before the kiss ended because all the blood had rushed from my brain to other parts of my anatomy, but when she finally did gently pull away her eyes glinted in the pale blue fluorescent of the street light from unshed tears.

As one started to roll down her cheek I caught it with a thumb and whispered. “I know it’s been a while, but I didn’t think I was that bad.”

She wordlessly shook her head then laid it against my chest. I tightened my arms around her and kissed the top of her head. “What is it?”

Her voice came back, slightly muffled from her face being half buried in my shirt. “I just wanted you to you know how I feel. How I’ve always felt.”

My response was cut off as Keith came back through the door. Jenn pulled away and with a smile whispered, “To be continued later tonight.”

Talk about a cliffhanger.

If Keith noticed anything he didn’t let it show as he put the box of equipment into the back seat of Jenn’s car. “You two ready? I’ve got superheroin’ to do.”

***

The batting cages had become our unofficial superhero training grounds over the past couple of weeks. Charlie didn’t even pay us any attention anymore. He had the entrance already unlocked and he gave me a slight nod as I dropped off the envelope with his money as we walked past. Keith changed in one of the bathrooms and when he came out Jenn and I applauded. I couldn’t see his expression behind the mirrored surface of his helmet, but the obscene gesture he made at us as he walked past gave me a hint.

We went through the usual routine of shooting baseballs at him but they didn’t even faze him anymore. I even took my own life in my hands when I snuck up behind him and swung at his back with a baseball bat. The bat shattered and my throbbing hands reminded me of what an idiot I was. Keith just casually looked over his shoulder and shrugged.

Jenn walked over and glanced at where I’d struck him with the bat. “Well, you’re certainly doing better at directing your focus. How does the suit feel?”

He doffed the helmet and had a wicked case of helmet hair. He ran a hand through it, which only made things worse. “It’s not bad. It felt kinda bulky at first, but once you get used to it you almost forget you’re wearing it. It moves well, has a lot of flexibility. I think we’ve got a winner.”

“Great! Well I think the next ste-“

She was cut off by the sound of squealing tires and police sirens. Lots of police sirens, which were quickly punctuated by the ratta-ratta-ratta of automatic gunfire. On instinct I jumped over, grabbed Jenn and pulled her down to the ground with my body covering her. Sparks flew as bullets ripped through the wooden barrier and ricocheted off the chain link fence surrounding the park next to us. I heard a few dull thuds and looked up to see Keith standing in front of us, almost mirroring what I was doing with Jenn though not actually touching me.

The sirens faded a bit into the distance and I felt it was safe to let Jenn back up. Keith was looking over his shoulder, trying to see his back. When he turned I could see three impact points with bullets mashed up into little metal pancakes. I reached out to grab one and instantly snatched my hand back with a curse. They were still hot.

“Holy shit.”

Keith looked down at us and I caught a glint of fire in his eyes as he moved to put the helmet on. “Get Jenn home!”

I was helping Jenn to her feet when she pushed past me and grabbed at Keith’s arm. “Wait, where do you think you’re going?”

Keith gently moved her hand and his voice came back a bit distorted behind the helmet. “Schools out.”

With a jump he disappeared into the night sky.

Jenn shouted a curse and I grabbed her hand and pulled her along with me. “C’mon, we have to get back to the apartment.”

She broke my grip and put her hands on her waist. “Look, I know your manly juices are all flowing right now but I’m not some fine piece of china that needs protect-“

I cut her off when I grabbed her hand again and started pulling her towards to exit. “No, not because of that. We need to get to the equipment.”

I ran every red light there was between the batting cages and our apartment, and we were damn lucky that we didn’t get pulled over or die in a flaming wreck. Kids dressed as superheroes, ghosts, and vampires littered the streets as parents took them from door to door trick-or treating. I had to dodge a particularly older looking and pudgy angel as we bolted through the apartment door with a muttered “Sorry, no candy.”

Jenn made a beeline for the walkie talkies while I ran into my bedroom. She glanced up at me as I wheeled my TV into the living room and started playing with the transceiver. She bent down to get a better look at what I was doing and gave me a quizzical look. “You trying to get the news?”

I shook my head. “Keith’s helmet has a built in camera that transmits a streaming signal. This transceiver should be able to pick it up so we can see everything he does.”

She smirked. “And you just forgot to mention this feature when you were showing Keith how the helmet worked?”

I shrugged and said deadpan, “Oops.”

***

Keith’s vision was the washed out green of night vision as the H.U.D. adjusted for the lack of natural light and the bright flashing lights of the police cars and the occasional gunfire could be seen clearly in the distance. There was the deafening rumble of a sonic boom as Keith pushed himself past the sound barrier and sped towards the chase.

“Keith, can you hear us?”

He clicked on his comm-system and his voice sounded a little strained as he responded, “I’ve got you. You must’ve been flying to have made it back to the apartment already.”

Jenn’s voice came over the channel. “Just call him Speed Racer.”

Keith snorted. “Oh, and Sam? Remind me to thank you for telling me about the video feed. You kids see everything okay or should I move my head a bit so you can get a better picture?”

“Sorry, it slipped my mind. How’d you know about it?”

The sirens and gunfire could be clearly heard over the pickup mikes on the suit now that Keith was closer and had dialed back his speed a bit. “Oh, well the flashing ‘streaming live feed’ message that popped up on the H.U.D. a few seconds ago was my first clue. It’s fine though. This makes things a bit easier.”

Relief washed over me but I tried to keep it out of my voice. “Yep, and the picture’s coming back clear. Have any idea what this thing is about yet? Besides the obvious that is.”

“Radio chatter suggests they’re suspects from a bank robbery. They killed two cops already while they were making a break for it, hence the army of squad cars following them.”

Jenn sat down next to me, her laptop open and a live news feed of the chase playing over the local news channel’s website. Worry laced Jenn’s voice. “You have any idea what you’re going to do?”

“Thought I’d improvise a little.”

The news anchors voice sounded a bit distorted in the small speakers on her laptop. “Wait, something’s happening. It appears some sort of object has flown in and is hovering next to the car. We can’t be sure but it looks like…oh God, is that a person?”

Through the camera feed we could see that he was over the suspects car now and dipping down towards it, pulling up next to the driver side window like he was going to ask if they had any Grey Poupon. The driver’s eyes bulged as Keith gave him a little wave. “Excuse me sir, could you pull over and show me your license and registration please?”

“What the hell?!” The driver jerked on the wheel and the car swerved to the right, almost taking out a Honda that was in the far lane and causing it to spin out. Gunfire erupted from the windows and Keith spun away while almost rebounding off of the pavement of the highway in an effort to dodge. With a grunt he arched back up into the sky.

“Well, that didn’t work. Time for a more direct approach.”

For a moment all we could see is the night sky as he shot straight up and into the clouds. A few seconds later we could see the car chase again only this time they looked more like little toy cars. “Tallyho.”

With a boom Keith sped down towards the cars like a meteorite. Jenn screamed into the walkie talkie but I doubt Keith could have heard her. Her hand grabbed my arm in a death grip as we helplessly watched Keith plummet down towards the suspect’s car until at the last second the world spun and there was a deafening squeal as the feed went to static.

Our eyes jerked over to the news feed and I watched slack jawed as a black blur sped down towards the car and slammed into the hood. In an instant the front of the car buckled and flipped the car end over end. Debris and sparks exploded in all directions until finally what remained of the car skidded to a screeching halt in the middle of the highway.

Jenn’s walkie talkie hit the floor as she screamed into the laptop’s screen. “KEITH!”

I could barely hear the anchor’s voice over the sound of her sobs, “We’re not sure what happened folks, but it appears that object from earlier streaked down and impacted with the suspect’s car, causing a massive crash. As you can see the police are quickly surrounding the area and the car is now on fire. Emergency vehicles are on their way…”

I ignore the rest as I bent down to wrap my arms around Jenn’s shoulders. Her hysteric cries had died down into a fit of sobs that shook my body. I wanted to comfort her but there was nothing to say. The shock of what I’d just witnessed left me numb and I found that my eyes were glued to the static filled screen of my T.V.

Then, for the third time that night I almost had a heart attack. The static on the screen started to flicker, and labored breathing echoed from my walkie talkie. Jenn shot out of her chair, dumping her laptop the floor as she dove for her own walkie talkie and screamed into it. “Keith?!”

From the laptop’s speakers I could hear the shocked voice of the reporter, who was straining to be heard over the sounds of the helicopter. “We can’t be sure folks but it appears that there’s a man crouched in the middle of the highway where the impact just occurred. Police are rushing in to surround him now and we’re trying to get closer and get a better picture of this. Larry, can you see this?”

The live feed from Keith’s H.U.D. flickered back to life and I could see car debris and flames spread out all around him. It looked like ground zero from a bomb. As Keith glanced down I could see crumpled pieces of what used to be the car’s fender and front end in the middle of the crater Keith was standing in.

His voice came back strained, “Mental note: don’t do that again.”

Jenn looked as though she couldn’t decide to be relieved or furious. In the end she went with furious. “You stupid son of a bitch! You could‘ve been killed!”

On the live feed screen police, with guns drawn, were circling Keith and shouting demands I couldn’t quite make out. Keith’s voice came back a whisper, “Uh, can’t talk right now.” Then louder as he shouted at the officers, “Hey, take it easy! I was just trying to help!”

Gunfire erupted as Keith leapt out of his crater and into the night sky, “Jesus! They’re shooting at me!”

I screamed into my own walkie talkie, “Get the hell out of there!”

“What the hell do you think I’m doing? I can’t believe those bastards are shooting at me!”

Jenn looked like she was about to shoot fire out of her mouth. “Just get your ass home.”

“Yes mom. I’m on my way.”

I added, “And try not to let those news choppers see which direction you’re going.” I glanced up at her and gave her a weak smile. “Well… it could have been worse.”

The look of pure death she gave me made my insides freeze and I quickly bent down to pick up her laptop from the floor- anything to break that gaze. One of these days I’m going to learn when to keep my mouth shut.

Yeah, right.

Just Super Ep. 7: Bonding

“You know what? For a smart-assed know-it-all, you’re all right.”

-Keith Green to Sam Daylin, Oct. 27th 2016

***

Milano’s was a small pizza café in the southeastern part of town. The guys that run it are both straight from Italy and I’d found that their pizza is the town’s best kept secret. Keith and I sat at a small table out on their patio, him nursing a domestic beer, me taking long drags off my cigarette and doing my best to avoid awkward conversation.

Dusk was coming on and the cool autumn breeze felt great as it gently caressed my face as I watched the leaves of the trees across the street dance and sway to nature’s rhythm. Autumn was always my favorite season. Not the sweltering heat of summer or the bitter cold of winter, but the happy medium. The browns and reds of the trees always seemed more beautiful to me than the lush yellows and greens of the spring and summer months. Jenn always kidded with me that finding the death of the leaves more beautiful than their birth spoke volumes about my personality. Perhaps she was right.

I looked over to find Keith staring at the trees as well, and was mildly surprised when he smiled faintly and spoke. “Beautiful, isn’t it? I love the fall. It’s my favorite time of year.”

I nodded as I flicked the ash from my cigarette into the tray in front of me. “Yeah, I was just thinking that.”

“I wanted to apologize to you.”

Now I wasn’t just mildly surprised, I was downright bewildered. “Oh?”

His gaze never left the trees, as though eye contact would make things too hard, too personal. “I’ve been kind of a jerk towards you the past couple of weeks. I’m not used to being around people a lot, or letting them into my world- no one but Jenn. It’s been hard, and I’m sure it hasn’t been a picnic for you either, but you’ve done a lot to help me out and I wanted you to know that I appreciate it.”

He took a swig from his beer, as though to wash the aftertaste of the apology from his mouth. I winced sympathetically. That couldn’t have been easy for him to admit. I decided to bite the bullet and extend an olive branch of my own. It’d make Jenn happy.

“It’s no problem Keith. I understand. I’m not used to being around people much myself, and I haven’t exactly been the model roommate either. So let’s just call it even and start fresh.”

“Sounds like a plan to me.”

We both raised our beers and took a drink, then went back to our nature watch until the food came. We each dished a slice of steaming pizza the size of Rome onto our plates and I got the third shock of the evening as Keith casually asked, “So what’s the deal with you and Jennifer? You back together now or what?”

I almost choked on my pepperoni. “Excuse me?”

He continued on as though we were talking about the Grizzlies game while I struggled frantically not to freak out, flashbacks of him lifting me one handed off the ground as though I were a paperweight assaulting my stunned brain. “You two used to be a pretty serious item back in college, right?”

I managed to swallow the bite of pizza and chased it with a long pull of my beer before answering, “That’s right, but that was a long time ago.”

He smirked. “Yeah, but I’ve seen the way you two still look at each other. There’s something there.”

I considered making a run for it but since he could move faster than the speed of sound, it was a safe bet I wouldn’t get too far. The look on my face must have spoke volumes for me because he started to laugh. That freaked me out more than anything. “What’s so funny?”

He gestured at me with his slice of pizza as he took a bite. “You are. You look like you’re afraid I’m going to leap over the table and kick the shit out of you or something.”

“Or something,” I murmured.

“Relax, Sam. If I wanted to hurt you I’d have done it already.”

He winked, and I felt my face go hot. “And if Jenn and I are interested in each other?”

He shrugged. “Good for you. As long as she’s happy, I am. She’s like a sister to me and you’re a pretty decent guy. She could do worse…and has in the past.”

I wasn’t sure if he was referring to himself by that last comment or not but decided not to press my luck. “I’m glad to hear that, Keith.”

He shrugged again as he took another bite of pizza. “Of course, if you hurt her I’ll tear you apart…literally.”

I drained my bottle of beer and gestured at our waiter to bring me another. “Gee, Keith, I’m so glad we had this chance to talk.”

“Me too.”

We ate in silence for a while after that, and it wasn’t until the pizza was gone and we’d had a few beers in us that he spoke again. “So, honestly, you think this whole thing is going to work?”

I shrugged as I wiped pizza sauce from the corner of my mouth. “I honestly don’t know. You have amazing abilities, and I think it’s very noble of you to want to do what you can with them-“

“While I can?”

He was smiling but I could sense the nugget of fear behind it. “Yeah, while you can. You’re learning to use your…talents in more exciting and creative ways every day. Just in the last week you’ve grown leaps and bounds, as far as juggling what you can do. I think if you start slow and are careful about it…”

He nodded absently as I trailed off, his gaze lost back into the trees now just barely visible behind the glare of the street lights. “Yeah, I guess all I can do is get out there and get my feet wet and see what happens. The suit was cool, by the way. I’m looking forward to giving it a trial run tonight.”

I saluted with my beer bottle before draining it. “Glad I could help.”

He glanced at his watch then motioned for our waiter. “Speaking of which, it’s getting about that time. Jenn will be waiting for us.”

“Well, we can’t have that.” I pulled out my wallet and laid some cash on the table. “Dinner’s on me.”

He started to hand the money back to me. “You don’t have to do that.”

I stopped him and smirked. “Do me a favor. Take me up tonight for a few minutes and we’ll call it even. I’d never admit it to Jenn but I’ve been a Superman fan since I was a little kid and I’ve always wanted to see what it was like to fly.”

He returned the smile as he stood up and pulled on his jacket. “Deal.”

“Just don’t drop me.”

“I make no promises.”

Just Super Update

Starting this week Just Super will be updated once a week, on Fridays, instead of twice. This week I’m starting two new online classes and when you add that workload on top of Down With the Thickness and the work I’m doing on a new novel it’s just too much. So keep checking back here on Friday’s for your Just Super fix, and I’ll try to have some additional stuff for you to look at soon.

Just Super- Ep.6: Dress For Success

Remember about six years ago? Some jackass dressed up in red spandex with a pair of goggles and called himself the…”

“The Masked Avenger?”

Yeah, right, the Masked Avenger. Not the most original of names, but then again anyone who would do what that schmuck did doesn’t have too much going for him in the upstairs department, right? Anyway, he made the news because he stopped a bank robbery out in L.A.

“Yeah, I remember hearing about that on the wire. I was overseas at the time. He kept them busy until the cops could get there or something, right?”

Right. Unfortunately for him he also stopped three bullets with his chest and ended up eating nothing but soup and pudding for six months. Of course this was after he was charged with vigilantism and public endangerment. Apparently the judge felt sorry for him and figured his medical bills were punishment enough and let him off with a warning. I hear he’s the janitor for his old high school now. That’s really my biggest fear about this whole thing. I’m not afraid of dying, I’m afraid of failing.”

- Excerpt from transcripts of the audio interview between Keith Green A.K.A. Justice and Sam Daylin on October 2nd, 2016.

***

Keith had already showered and changed clothes by the time we got to the apartment, and was still toweling off his hair as we walked in the door. “About time. What were you doing, forty the whole way?”

Jenn stuck a tongue out at him. “Not all of us can move at the speed of sound.” She gestured at the towel around his neck as she laid her purse down on the counter. “Though most of us do dry off before getting dressed.”

“Yeah, yeah. So we ready for this little pow-wow or what?”

I stayed quiet and took a seat on one of the bar stools as Jenn and Keith sat down on the sofa. I took out my trusty little recorder and hit the button as she began to tick off points.

“Okay, here’s what we know so far. One, your powers are telekinetic like I suspected. Two, just like any muscle you’re going to have to practice and work up your endurance and concentration, especially when it comes to doing more than one thing at once.”

“Yeah, we found that out the hard way.” Keith glanced up in my direction but I didn’t detect any malice behind the look.

Jenn nodded. “Right, which brings me to my next point: I think we need to talk about your costume.”

Keith shook his head as he stood up and headed for the coffee pot. “I’m not wearing a costume. We’ve talked about this already. I refuse to look like some retard at a convention.”

Jenn draped her left arm over the back of the couch as she turned to face him. “I don’t mean a cape and spandex, but I do think we need to have some sort of body armor. Something that’ll protect you. Even with practice I don’t think it’d be safe for you to rely just on your abilities for protection. Besides, you told me you’ll need some sort of eye protection for when you’re flying anyway and I don’t think diving goggles is the fashion statement you want to make to strike fear into the hearts of criminals everywhere.”

I spoke up from my little place off to the side. “Besides, you’re going to want to wear something that’ll help conceal your identity. I mean, for legal reasons alone you’re not going to want anyone to know who you are.”

Keith seemed to consider that a moment as he stirred his coffee, then nodded. “Okay, I can see what you mean. Any suggestions?”

I nodded. “I’ve got a guy I know- one of my informants. He’s something of a collector when it comes to guns and stuff like that. He’s like one of those militant rednecks you see on T.V. that’ll barricade themselves in compounds to keep out ‘the man’- totally nuts but mostly harmless. He may have some stuff we could look at that’d offer you some protection. Used military and police stuff.”

Jenn smirked. “What happened to ‘I’m just an observer’?”

I shrugged. “Hey, I’m observing…in an active sort of way. Besides, there’s no story if wonder boy goes and gets killed his first time out.”

Keith held up his coffee mug like he was toasting. “Thanks for the vote of confidence.”

Jenn got on her knees and leaned over the back of the sofa. “Speaking of which, what’s the plan? After you practice a bit and we find you a costume, what next?”

I hopped up from my stool and headed for my room. “I think I can help there too. Just a sec.”

I emerged a minute later with a journalist’s best friend. Keith smirked and walked over to get a closer look as I laid it on the counter and plugged it in. “A police scanner. Nice.”

I nodded. “A journalist’s bread and butter.”

Jenn walked over and joined us. “Isn’t monitoring the police band illegal? “

I snickered. “So’s vigilantism.”

“So what, we just listen to the police band then Keith jumps out the window and saves the day?”

“Why not?”

Keith smiled and clapped me on the back again. “I like it. Maybe you aren’t a complete pain in the ass after all.”

I grimaced but decided to hold back the wise-assed comment I had ready to fire. Instead I said, “Well, I’m heading to bed. I’ll swing by Gimpy’s place tomorrow and see what he’s got.”

Jenn looked up quizzically. “Gimpy?”

I waved it away. “Don’t ask. I’ll see you both tomorrow.”

I retired to my little closet of a room and did my best to try and sleep, but memories of a life long past flooded my mind and made that impossible. Instead I tossed and turned, trying to occupy my mind with other thoughts but always coming back to the same thing: Jenn. I had known as soon as Keith mentioned her name that if I got involved I’d have to face a lot of things I’d tried to bury with time and never addressed. At the time it had been easy for me to write it off as something that wouldn’t be that big a deal. Then I saw her and that all went out the window.

Instead it was like I was twenty-two again, before I stepped on that plane and left the best thing I’d ever known behind. Like then, this had all started out about a job, but this time I was going to make the right choice. I made a silent promise that I would do anything I could to help Keith in his mission. Not because I believed in him and what he was trying to do, but because I believed in her and what was important to her. I knew I was being given a second chance and I wasn’t going to pass it up. It wasn’t just a job anymore. I wasn’t just an observer. I’d become a participant.

I snorted into my pillow. “Well, so much for objectivity.”

I rolled over and closed my eyes. Sleep claimed me instantly.

***

It took me a few weeks but I was finally able to set up a time when I could meet up with Gimpy and see about a super suit. Richard “Gimpy” Melvin lived in a trailer park out in West Memphis. He was nicknamed Gimpy because of the bum knee he’d acquired running from the cops a few years back. He’d tried to jump a fence, only to discover as he was falling down the other side that there was a good ten foot drop which ended in solid concrete. Pop went the weasel.

True to the stereotypical image that living in a trailer park brings to mind, Gimpy took pride in dressing like a complete hillbilly: long, dingy hair of an unquantifiable color; scruffy beard; straw cowboy hat; wife-beater complete with unidentifiable stains that had started out in life white but was now closer to grey; blue jeans covered in tears and oil spots with the ends of the legs worn down to stings of cloth, which only accentuated the SpongeBob flip flops he wore. Yep, Gimpy was all class.

He was also well connected.

In addition to his little black market for military and police surplus, Gimpy ran one of the biggest gambling rings in the south. As such he was a veritable fountain of information about just about anything you’d want to know. When you hear the phrase “word on the street” they’re talking about Gimpy. He’d been an invaluable resource for me in the past, but this trip I was there to tap into his other talents.

“Body armor, huh? Ya going back out on the front lines, or did‘ja write an article that someone honoree out there might not like? Heheeee!”

His laugh was like a donkey braying on helium. I smiled and shook my head. “No, nothing like that. I thought I’d try my hand at fiction in my spare time. I’m writing a book about an S.W.A.T. team. Thought I’d pick up some gear as research props. You know, get dressed up, see how it feels, that sort of thing. I figured you’d be the man to see.”

He slapped me hard on the back and laughed again. “Heheee! Ya got that right, buddy! Step inna my office and we’ll see if we can’t set ya up proper.”

His “office” was a dilapidated barn that sat on the back of his property. It looked that way on the outside, anyway. On the inside it was like a Best Buy for the militant redneck circuit. The walls and ceiling had been reinforced and gleamed like new, and each section was neatly labeled and displayed. I half expected to hear muzak playing gently in the background. Guns, ammo, combat gear, if Rambo wanted it, he could find it at Gimpy’s. I let out a whistle.

“Heheeee! It’s a beut, ain’t it?  My pride’n’joy, right here. Now ya said you wanted S.W.A.T. gear?”

I nodded.

He thought for a second, stroking absently at his ragged beard until he suddenly snapped his fingers, grinned like an idiot and pointed a grease-stained finger in a general direction. “I got jus the thang! Came in last week. Wait here and I’ll fetch it fer ya.”

He sauntered off and disappeared in the forest of hardware and I silently prayed that the place wouldn’t get raided while I waited. About five minutes later Gimpy came back into view pushing an old shopping cart filled with stuff. He smiled at me and I tried not to stare at the gaps in his grill. “Had an ex-cop come through here last week. Dropped twenty large at the tables and came up short. Used to be Memphis S.W.A.T. but was forced to go on disability when he got his hand blown off by a midget pimp. Heheeeee!”

He pointed down at the cart. “Gave me all his old stuff fer credit. Yer welcome to whatever’s here.”

I reached down into the cart and started shifting through what I saw there. There was a jumpsuit and combat vest like you see on T.V.; a helmet complete with a full visor; combat boots; even built in comm gear. “Wow, this is great, Gimp. How much?”

“Fer you Sammy? Take it.”

I arched an eyebrow. “What?”

He shook his head. “You’ve been good to me over the years, boy. Helped me out when times were rough. Now I’m prosperin better than a grizzly in a fish market! Heheeee! I figger this is the least I can do fer ya. Just mention me in yer book and we’ll call it even.”

I smiled and offered him my hand, which he took. “Deal.”

***

Back at the apartment it was like a military Christmas morning as Keith and Jenn went through the box of swag I’d gotten. Jenn giggled excitedly. “Wow, Sam. This is great!”

Keith grunted as he held up the tactical vest. “What’s with this on the back? Justice?”

Jenn walked over and looked. “It’s on the front too, see?”

I glanced over and shrugged. “Must’ve been the name of the cop that owned it last. Kind of an ironic name, isn’t it?”

Jenn chuckled. “Well, I’m sure I can take it off or cover it up.”

Keith stared at it for a second then shook his head. “No, it’s okay. Having a name on the back will help me to look more like a cop. I’ll be able to blend when I need to.”

I snorted. “Well, anywhere that’s gone to hell enough that S.W.A.T. gets called in, anyway.”

He nodded absently as he dug deeper into the pile. “Hey, you got the communication gear too?”

“Yep.” I reached down into my laptop bag and pulled out two tactical walkie talkies. “Got these for me and Jenn, too. This way we can keep in contact while you’re out on missions. Gimp said we’ll just have to be careful about the frequency we use and what we say. Anyone with the right gear will be able to listen in if they find the right channel.”

Keith nodded and put the gear back down in the pile. “Right. Good thinking.”

Jenn pulled on the helmet and snapped down the visor. She looked like a little kid dressing up for Halloween. “This should work for when you’re flying!”

I laughed. “Wow, you’re really getting into this, aren’t you?”

She yanked off the helmet and had a horrendous case of hat hair. She ran her hands through it a few times in an attempt to get it under control, and was only half-successful. “Sure! This stuff is kinda cool. I mean, you see it on T.V. and in the movies all the time. It’s fun to be able to actually play around with it.”

Keith grabbed the helmet and stuck it on top of the pile, then hefted the box. “Well, I’m going to go try this stuff on. See how it fits. I’ll be out in a minute.”

Once he was gone Jenn walked over and gave me a hug. “I really appreciate you doing this. You’re being a huge help. I don’t know what he would’ve done without you.”

I pulled her back enough to where I could look her in the eye and lowered my voice to a sultry whisper. “I’m not doing it for him.”

I pulled her close and kissed her. She tried half-heartedly to pull away at first, but then she melted into my arms and started to kiss me back and it was as though time had never past. Cue sweeping music. After a few seconds we broke the embrace, breathing heavily, and she took a few steps back. “Sam, I-“

I held up a hand. “I know. I just wanted you to know how I feel. I should have let you know a long time ago.”

Just then Keith walked back out into the living room and struck a heroic pose, with both hands on his hips. Talk about being saved by the bell. “Well, how do I look?”

Jenn’s gaze lingered on mine for a second before she turned around and smiled at him. “You look great! Looks like everything really fits!”

I had to admit he did look impressive, like something straight out of an action movie, and if I didn’t know better I’d swear he was the real deal. In the last few years, due to the increase in gang violence and terrorist threats police gear, and more specifically the S.W.A.T. stuff, had been upgraded just as much as military gear had- to improve protection and thus, life expectancy of the officers. The outfit itself was all black, naturally, though rather than just having a bullet-proof vest all the material was made in a bullet resistant mesh.  It was still relatively light-weight and had good mobility, but it’d also stop all but the most persistent debris and shrapnel and most small caliber bullets, even at close range. The vest itself was even more resistant- double reinforced so that even hollow-point bullets, commonly referred to on the streets as “cop killers,” wouldn’t penetrate. The gloves were made of a less resistant but more flexible version of the mesh, and the boots were steel tipped with anti-slip grip on the bottom. The helmet was the most impressive, however. It was black and domed with a solid visor that not only protected the eyes but the whole face. The visor itself was mirrored, which was a bit disconcerting to anyone looking into it, which I assumed was the point. It was equipped with a H.U.D. that registered targets, helped with navigation, and, though I failed to mention it to Keith just yet, broadcasted a live data stream that was simultaneously recorded to a hard drive. Not all the innovations were for just police protection. Jenn and I would be able to see and hear everything that went on while Keith was in his masked persona.

Keith spread out his hands and did a slow turn as though he were a fashion model. His voice came out a bit distorted behind the visor. “Not bad, huh? This helmet is freakin’ sweet!”

Jenn grimaced. “It’s a little scary. You look like a bad guy from a sci-fi movie.”

Keith shrugged, but the gesture was muted a bit by the suit. “I don’t think that’s really a bad thing. Strike fear into the hearts of criminals and all that. Besides, this’ll be great for when I’m flying! It’s got a zoom function, digital readouts and targeting. Hell, I even see a little icon for gas and smoke protection!”

I nodded. “Gimpy said it has a built in filter, so it’ll give you some protection during fires or with some gasses, but it’s not a license to thrill. It’s not like you have your own oxygen supply or anything so don’t go Superman on us and think you can walk into anything and be okay. “

He waved a hand at me dismissively. “Yeah, yeah. I get it. Don’t be such a kill joy. I can’t wait to go flying with this thing on.”

Jenn threw an arm over his shoulder. “Well, you’ll get your chance tonight, flyboy. Now that you’ve got your costume we’re going to have to hit the practicing hard.”

Keith gave a little mock-salute. “Aye aye, cap’n. Hey Sammy, how am I supposed to talk to you guys with this thing?”

“Stick out your tongue. There should be a little switch you can click on and off… though I’d wait and sanitize the thing first before you try.”

Keith reached up and pulled the helmet off. “Yeah, good point.”

He glanced inside and pointed. “There it is. That’s gonna be a little weird.”

“You’ll get used to it.”

He nodded and shifted the helmet under his arm. “Well, I’m going to go take this stuff off. No sense in getting it all gunked up before tonight. You guys up for getting some pizza?”

“Fine with me. Jenn?”

She shot me a devilish smirk. “I’ve got some stuff I’ve got to do at the office, so you boys can go and have fun. Get in a little bonding time.”

I tried to keep the sarcasm from my voice. “Great. Guys night out.”

Keith didn’t look any happier. “Yeah, I’ll go get dressed.”

Jenn walked over and gave me a kiss on the cheek. “It won’t be that bad. I bet you two will find out you’ve got a lot in common. It’ll be good for you.”

I reached in my pocket for a cigarette and gave her my best reassuring smile as I resisted rolling my eyes. “Yeah. Great.”

Down With the Thickness is Being Published!

The first chapter of DWTT is being published as an essay in this month’s Inscribed Magazine!

Just Super Ep. 5- Will We Be Tested on This?

“Flying isn’t nearly as fun as you’d think it’d be. For one, if you move anywhere at speed the wind is a huge pain in the ass. Just stick your head out of a car window when you’re rolling down the freeway and you’ll see what I mean. It hurts your eyes and it’s hard to keep them open. Not to mention all the crap that can fly into them. I used to have to wear these neon green diving goggles when I went out to fly. I looked like a complete retard.”

- Excerpt from transcripts of the audio interview between Keith Green A.K.A. Justice and Sam Daylin on October 2nd, 2016.

***

Keith had monitoring stuff all over his head again, only this time it was in the middle of the night and we were in the neurology wing of Baptist Memorial Hospital. Keith was sitting down in front of one of those huge white machines with the tube that you see on all those medical shows. Jenn was quickly getting all the technical gizmos working while he did his best to look incredibly anxious. I was sitting off in a corner and enjoying Keith’s apparent discomfort and trying to ignore the sterile “hospital” smell all around me.

I hate hospitals. During the war I had to spend far too much time in them, though quite a few were more of the make-shift variety. At first it was just to visit the wounded, interview a few of the soldiers and staff, put a human spin on the story and what the real consequences of us being over there were. The last time was to get a bullet pulled out of me.

I was riding along with some of the boys on our way to Baghdad after a training exercise, swapping smokes and stories as we headed over that sand and dust covered nothingness that they call a country. The first explosion seemed to come from nowhere. I mean we were surrounded by fucking sand. But the attack came just the same. That first explosion took out our front transport. The soldiers were yelling for me to get down as machine gun fire erupted all around me, like firecrackers on the 4th of July. As I dropped to the floor of the hummer I heard glass snap and suddenly I was spinning to the floor, my left arm an explosion of pain and blood. Apparently I hadn’t dropped fast enough. I must’ve hit my head because the next thing I remember was waking up in a hospital bed in Baghdad. I was on a flight back home the next day.

Keith pulled at one of the wires hanging off of his head and his voice snapped me back into the present. “What the hell does this do again?”

Jenn slapped at his hand as she briskly walked past on her way to another machine. “Don’t touch! It’s an Electroencephalogram.”

“An Electroenowhat?”

Jenn sighed as she flipped at switches. “An EEG. It measures electrical activity in the brain. We’re going to test out my theory that your powers come from your limited thinkbox, so hold still, don’t touch anything, and do what I tell you. Jeremy said he could only give us an hour.”

Dr. Jeremy Darson was a friend of Jenn’s. Apparently they worked their E.R. rotation together and hit it off. Personally, I didn’t like the way he stared at her ass when she walked past. Of course, that makes me a hypocrite because I do the same damn thing. Keith didn’t look like he liked him either, but the guy let us in, gave us use of the equipment, and didn’t ask questions so we both played nice and kept our mouths shut. Yes folks, miracles can happen.

“Okay, I think we’re set. Sam and I are going to be up there.” She pointed to the little control room behind us. “What you’re going to do is lay down while I do an fMRI.”

Keith held up a hand and looked like a kid in grade school who’d just been sent to the corner. All that was missing was a dunce hat. “Um, I thought we were doing an EEG, hence all this shit hooked up to my head.”

Jenn put her hands on her hips and for a moment reminded me of how my mother looked back when I was a kid and she was annoyed. “We are, but we’re doing an fMRI too. The EEG monitors brain activity, the fMRI will show us where the activity is taking place, so lay down and stop acting like such a baby.”

Keith mumbled as he laid back. “You’re the baby…”

“What was that?”

“Nothing! Ready when you are, Captain!”

She rolled her eyes and hit me lightly on the arm as she walked past. “C’mon Sam.”

I followed her out and up into the control room. We were a good ten feet up from where Keith was laying down and slowly sliding back into the tube. On the monitors I could see a live feed of Keith and next to it another one that looked like a black and white picture of Keith’s brain. Jenn held down a switch and spoke into the little microphone sticking up out of the control board. “Okay Keith, we’re about to start. Don’t do anything until I tell you. I want to get a base reading first. Just think happy thoughts for a minute.”

She clicked off the intercom and pointed at the black and white picture. “Ok, when Keith starts to do his thing this should light up orange where the brain activity is taking place.”

“Gotcha.”

She clicked on the mike again. “Okay Keith, now I want you to see if you can hover for me.”

His voice came out a little distorted. “Uh, it’s not like there’s a lot of room in this thing.”

“I know. I just need you to do it a little.”

“Fine.”

After a few minutes the monitor lit up like someone spilled orange juice on it. “My God… I was right. Look at all that activity.” She pointed a finger and traced it around the orange blob. “I’m not going to get all technical on you, but basically this part of the brain is normally dormant. Wow, this EEG is off the charts!”

She spoke into the mike again. “Okay Keith, now I want you to do something else. Can you do what you did before, the super strength thing? Just push with your hands on the side of the tube- don’t break anything! Do it as light as you can.”

“Anything else I can do for you? Like try to breathe through my anus?”

“Well, if you think you can, go for it.”

We waited for a few minutes and nothing on the monitor changed. “Uh, Keith, are you doing it?”

“No, I’ve been contemplating my navel.”

“Keith…”

“Yes! Okay? For the past ten minutes. Why? What’re you seeing?”

Jenn gaped at the monitor, awestruck. “I was right. It’s coming from the same location.” She clicked on the mike again. “Okay, Keith, we’re done. You can come out now.”

Keith was sliding out of the tube when we got there, and Jenn started to help him take off the little electrode thingies as she talked. “Well it looks like I was right. Your powers are manifesting from the same part of the brain- all of them. I think they’re telekinetic in nature.”

I spoke up. “Telekinetic, as in moving stuff with your mind? Jedi stuff?”

She nodded. “Keith is using telekinesis to do the things he’s doing.”

Keith rubbed at some gel still on his head where one of those suction cup things had been. “Well, that makes sense with the flying I guess, but what about the other stuff?”

Jenn started to gather all the readouts and fold them up as she turned off equipment. “Well, until we do a few more tests I can’t be sure, but my guess is that your strength isn’t really super strength at all. I think you’re using your body as a conduit for telekinesis. So when you lift stuff you’re actually just channeling energy through your arms and giving it a focus. Same with the invulnerability. I think you’re just pushing out with your mind and creating a sort of telekinetic barrier between yourself and whatever it is that’s threatening you.”

I nodded. “Okay, so what next?”

She handed Keith his shirt, which he pulled on. “Well, next we test out what his limits are. If I’m right then he’s going to be pretty limited on just what he can do and how often. From the way he described the flying it sounds like this works just like any muscle, and with practice he’ll get stronger at it, but I’m wondering how easy it’ll be for him to do more than one thing at once and still keep his focus.”

Keith hopped down from the table and stretched. “In other words you want to make sure that when I’m doing my Superman thing I won’t get shot in the head while flying. That sort of thing.”

Jenn grimaced. “Yeah, that sort of thing.”

Keith clapped his hands together and rubbed them up and down. “Awesome! Where to next?”

I grinned. “I’ve got an idea.”

***

Twenty minutes later we were at one of my favorite places on Earth- the batting cages. Keith shot me a sidelong glance. “You’ve got to be joking…”

Jenn gave me an enthusiastic side-hug. “No, it’s perfect! Good thinking Sam!”

I shrugged as we made our way through the empty parking lot and to the gate. “I come here at night to relax, especially when I’m working on an article or something and need to think. Charlie, the security guard, is a friend of mine and lets me in. He won’t bother us, so you won’t have to worry about him seeing anything we do.”

Keith slapped me hard on the back. “Ok, let’s do it.”

Twenty bucks and five minutes later we had the place all to ourselves. Charlie let us in then hustled back to his little guard post to watch Sanford and Son reruns. I motioned to Jenn. “It’s your show, Doc. What do you want to do first?”

Her nose scrunched up a bit while she thought about it. “Let’s start with invulnerability, since that’s the one he has the least experience with. Get in the cage, Keith.”

He fished around in his pockets. “Anyone have any quarters?”

“Here.” I handed him a roll of quarters from my trench coat pocket.

He arched an eyebrow at me and I smirked. “I told you, I come here a lot.”

Keith walked over and stuck a quarter into the machine while Chase and I got behind the cage. Jenn called out, “Alright, when you’re ready try and push out with your mind, I guess like you do when you’re flying, only not.”

I murmured to her. “That doesn’t sound very helpful.”

She elbowed me in the ribs. “Hey, it’s not like I’ve done this before.” She spoke up loud enough for Keith to hear. “Just do what you did when those beams were falling towards you. Pretend the baseballs are bullets….really big bullets.”

I heard him mutter “Right…” as he took a deep breath and stepped out in front of the oncoming ball. The first one socked him in the stomach and doubled him over with an audible woof. The next one caught him in the head and he went down like a sack of rice. He rolled out of the ball path and sat up, rubbing at his head. “Jeeezus! How fast are these damn things?”

I smirked as I called out. “Around seventy miles an hour or so. Think of it as incentive to not get hit.”

“Yeah, thanks jackass.”

He grunted as he stood up, gritted his teeth, and then stepped into the path of the ball again. It shot at him with a mild thunk of compressed air and rebounded about an inch from his chest. “Booyah!”

Thunk! “Woo!”

Thunk! “That all ya got bitch?!”

Thunk! “Get some!”

I hadn’t noticed Jenn leave my side but when I looked up I saw that she was standing behind the ball machine. I watched with a mixture of shock and lust as she lifted up her black t-shirt, bra and all, and flashed us. Keith’s jaw hit his chest about a second before the ball did, and he was back down on the ground with a grunt.

“Sunnova bitch!”

She laughed mischievously as she pulled her shirt back down. I’m not ashamed to admit that I was a little disappointed. “Gotta stay focused, Hero!”

He hauled himself up and pointed. “Not fair! I want a redo!”

I couldn’t help myself. “Yeah, me too!”

Keith glared back at me and I responded with a lopsided smirk as I lit a cigarette. Jenn winked, but I couldn’t tell who she was aiming it at. “I don’t think so. Let’s try something else. Keith, throw another quarter in. We’re going to do the same thing, only this time I want you to hover while you try to stop the balls.”

I exhaled a cloud of smoke and scoffed. “Yeah, so this time when you get hit it’ll be in the twig and berries. Maybe we should get you a cup.”

Jenn gave me a longsuffering look. “Sam, you’re not helping.”

Keith folded his arms and continued to glare up at me. “Yeah, I thought you were just here to observe. So shut the hell up and observe!”

I held up my hands as though I were surrendering and said around my cigarette. “Okay, okay! My bad. Consider me mute.”

Keith growled as he slid another quarter into the machine, “Thank God.”

It was at that point that it occurred to me that it might not be the healthiest decision in the world to piss off the guy with a hair trigger temper that can lift two tons over his head. I took a few steps back and decided to keep my mouth shut. The machine started to spit out balls with the familiar thunk sound and Keith took a deep breath before stepping once more into the path. Just like before the ball bounced harmlessly off the invisible barrier and inch in front of him. Slowly, Keith started to float upwards until he was a couple of inches off the ground.

Thunk. Once again the ball rebounded off of the barrier, but I could see a bit of strain on his face. His voice sounded a little stressed. “Wow, it really is more difficult to do both at once.”

Jenn was slowly walking back around to where I was standing and I noticed that she had a baseball in her hands. She walked over to me and whispered, “You still got an arm?”

I saw where she was going. “Haven’t played since college, but I’m sure I’ve got something left.”

She winked and I felt the baseball being pressed into my hand. “Good. Slip in the cage and when I tell you, hurl this at him from behind.”

I nodded and made my way casually to the side of the cage, the whole time thinking to myself “I’m so about to get my ass kicked.”

Keith was so focused on the oncoming balls that he didn’t notice when I slid in beside him. There wasn’t much room, but I managed to slip in and still have enough room to wind up a bit.

The next time the machine went thunk Jenn shouted “Now!”

I hurled the ball as hard as I could at Keith’s back. The first ball rebounded off of the barrier, my ball didn’t. The ball struck him hard enough on the back that he tipped forward, which was enough to cause him to flip forward in the air and send him tumbling face first to the ground. I had to jump to the side to dodge an incoming ball, and when I looked up there was one hundred and eighty pounds of pissed off wannabe-superhero charging at me. His hand gripped my throat like a vice and I was suddenly being dangled two inches off the ground as he slammed me back against the chain link fence. Stars exploded inside my head and the world around me got a little dimmer for a second.

I heard Jenn scream “No!’ from behind me, but that didn’t seem to faze Keith any. Through gritted teeth he growled “What the hell is your problem?”

Even in the face of impending doom, I still manage to be a complete smart-ass.

God love me.

I choked out, “At the moment…I can’t breathe.”

Then Jenn was there, pulling at Keith’s arm and yelling for him to let go. He did, and I slid down the fence and to the ground, coughing as I tried to suck in air. Jenn shoved Keith to the side and punched him in the arm.

“What the hell are you doing?! I told him to throw it at you! It was part of the test!”

Keith raged back, “Look, the guy’s had an attitude problem all damn day and I’m sick of it!”

By this time I’d managed to pull myself off the ground, and though I was still coughing like a lung cancer patient I managed to croak out, “Look, I’m sorry.”

I took another couple of deep breathes but I still felt like hacking up a lung. I gotta quit smoking. After a few seconds I was able to talk without sounding like Louis Armstrong. “I’m sorry if I’ve been a jerk. This is all kind of a lot to take in, and no offense, but you’re not exactly Mr. Social, you know?”

He stared hard at me for a second before nodding sharply and offering me his hand. “You’re right. I’m sorry. You’re only trying to help.”

I took the hand and we shook in a very manly sort of way, then Jenn grabbed us each by the shoulder and pulled us close. “There we go. One big happy family. Good boys. Now, if you two are done with your little peeing for distance contest, I think it’s time we go home and talk about what we’ve learned.”

***

Keith seemed a little distant as we walked out to the car…well, distant for him anyway. Once we got there he looked up at the sky for a minute then turned to Jenn. “If it’s alright with you, I’ll meet you back at the apartment. It’s a nice night and I feel like flying a bit. Clear my head.”

Jenn gave him a reassuring smile and kissed him on the cheek. “Sure, we’ll meet you there.”

He tugged on a pair of black swimming goggles and after a quick look around to make sure no one was looking, and a curt nod in my direction, he took off like a bottle rocket and disappeared into the night sky. I shook my head in amazement. “I don’t think I’ll ever get used to that.”

Jenn laughed as she opened the car door. “Me either. C’mon, let’s go.”

We rode in silence for a few minutes and I used the time wisely by dutifully looking out the window as though I found the passing scenery of downtown Memphis that I’ve seen hundreds of times interesting. Things had been awkward with Jenn and I couldn’t deny all the feelings that spending time with her again had stirred up. It didn’t hurt that she was drop dead gorgeous. I mean, she was no supermodel or anything, but to me she’d always been a knockout. I was smitten the first time I met her and deep down, no matter what had happened between us, I’d always held a torch for her.

She broke the silence a bit abruptly, as though we’d been talking the whole time. “As much as I love Keith, I think you need to be careful around him.”

I glanced over at her and leaned back in my chair a bit. “Oh really? Why do you say that, you know, aside from the almost strangling me to death thing a few minutes ago.”

She stared ahead and crinkled her nose a bit, as though trying hard to find the right words to say, and when she did finally speak I could detect the stress in her voice. “He hasn’t been himself lately. I mean, he always had a temper, and given the way he grew up and the crap he’s had to endure, you can’t really blame him for being the way he is, but the past few months there’s been a change.”

In the passing car lights I could see a tear reflected off of her cheek. I made sure to keep my voice gentle, not pushing, but my reporter sense was tingling. “What kind of a change?”

“He gets agitated a lot more easily. His temper flares, he has outbursts… I’m worried about him. I think the powers aren’t just affecting his body, I think they’re messing with his head too. I mean, that much activity going on with that kind of intensity, it’s no wonder, right?”

I didn’t say anything, but offered her a handkerchief I kept in my coat pocket. She smiled gratefully as she dabbed at her eyes with it and sniffed as she continued. “I pleaded with him not to do this. I wanted him to stop altogether and lead a normal life. He’d still have a good chunk of time…”

I felt a twinge in my gut. “You love him, don’t you?”

She looked at me as though stunned, then quickly looked back to the road. “Well, yeah. I mean we grew up together. I’ve known him most of my life. We’ve always been there for each other.”

I nodded. “I understand. I mean, I always knew you had a history before I met you, and I wondered if since you’ve been back in town you and he had-“

She did a double take again and then did the last thing I was expecting. She laughed. “Oh, you thought… Oh God, Sam. I’m sorry!” She placed a hand on mine and squeezed as she chuckled a bit more. “No, it’s not like that at all. I mean, we dated a bit during high school, and I love him dearly, but it was never anything like that. He’s like a brother to me.”

I arched an eyebrow at her. “Are you sure he knows that?”

That seemed to trouble her. “Well of course he does.”

I snorted. “Could’a fooled me.”

She squeezed my hand one more time before putting it back on the wheel. “He’s just protective of me, that’s all.” I saw her smirk out of the corner of my eye. “Plus, it’s not like you haven’t been doing the full court press on me since I walked through the door.”

I leaned over in my seat and leered. “Well, can you blame me?”

She smiled as she pushed me back with her right hand. “Dial it back, Romeo. I think we’ve got enough to handle right now, don’t you?”

I spread out my hands. “Oh come on. Can you really tell me that you haven’t thought about what it would be like if we had-“

She scoffed. “Had what? Gotten married?”

Stung, I sat back and looked out the window again. “Well, I did ask, remember?”

“Yeah, I do. I also seem to remember you wanting me to drop my whole life to go to Iraq with you. Remember that?”

I flinched at the memory. I had been so excited. The New York Times had liked a piece I wrote and wanted to hire me as a full time staff writer. They had an opening in the war coverage and wanted me to fly out to Iraq for a year. It was the chance of a lifetime for a journalist right out of college and an opportunity I couldn’t pass up. I wanted Jenn to come with me, but she was only a year into med school and it just wouldn’t have worked out. Honestly, I never blamed her for saying no. As much as I loved her I made a choice and took the job. I’ve regretted it ever since.

Of course, I didn’t tell her that. Instead I kept right on looking out the window. “Yeah, I remember.”

She sighed. “Look, we’re almost at the apartment. Can we pick this back up again later?”

I felt like I’d been kicked in the gut but I managed a weak smile. “Sure. No problem.”

Just Super- Ep.4: Accidental Hero

“For over fifteen years I’ve been afraid of what would happen if anyone found out about me, so I generally try to keep to myself; but there’ve been a few times where I really didn’t have a choice but to help, you know? If I just stood by and let something bad happen knowing I could have helped…I just don’t think I could live with that.”

-Excerpt from transcripts of the audio interview between Keith Green A.K.A. Justice and Sam Daylin on October 2nd, 2016.

***

Most people at the age of twenty-one are at the prime of their youth. They’re either in college or working some job during the day, then at night they go out, drink until they puke, then screw like rabbits. They drive fast, take stupid risks, make stupid choices, date stupid people, and just generally live the life of a young, ignorant human being. For Keith Green the age of twenty-one wasn’t the prime of his youth, it was the end of it.

Things started out routine enough. It was July 22, 2003 and Keith had been working on the construction of the Fed Ex Forum, just like practically every other construction worker in the city, and was told to haul some equipment and materials to another site. While he was grabbing the stuff and stacking it next to the truck, Scott, a rather heavy-set man in his mid-thirties with a full beard that made him look like a member of ZZ Top, was loading.

Unfortunately, that was the day when an Alberta clipper windstorm hit the city. The cranes got hit hard, one almost tumbling down onto Beal Street. Keith’s head jerked up when he heard the snap of the cable, and watched in horror as an entire load of metal beams that were being lifted by one of the cranes tumbled towards the truck where Scott was still loading almost fifty yards away. Time seemed to slow as Keith moved and the gusts of the wind threatened to knock him off course, but Keith pushed harder- harder than he ever had before.

Keith slammed into Scott and pushed out as hard as he could, hoping to throw Scott clear just as the first of the beams landed with a ringing thud. The last thing Keith saw before being buried under tons of rust-colored metal was the white service truck being crushed like a tin can, its windows exploding in a shower of glass as beams landed on top of it. Keith wasn’t sure how long he’d been in the dark but he could hear the howl of the wind as it rushed past and he could feel a pressure crushing his chest. With a grunt Keith summoned all the strength he could and pushed up. There was a metallic groan as the weight on his chest slowly subsided, and small beams of light shined through the darkness. Encouraged he pushed harder, straining, willing the beams to move. They did.

Keith threw aside the beam that had landed across his chest and managed to pull himself out from under the other two that had crossed over his legs. Workers were running towards him now but he didn’t care. All he could focus on was the screams of pain coming from beside him, being carried by the bursts of wind.

Scott was still pinned.

Keith had managed to push him mostly clear, though the impact of flying into him at speed had dislocated and shattered the poor guys arm and cracked a few ribs. Unfortunately, Keith hadn’t been fast enough, and the end of a beam had caught Scott’s leg, crushing it. Keith knew he didn’t have much time. Workers were already hauling ass over to them, but with all the beams and debris in the way it was slowing their progress. Keith didn’t stop to think; he just reached down for the end of the beam and pulled, pumping all the energy he could into the action. To his amazement the beam moved easily, but he only lifted it up high enough to move it off of Scott’s foot before letting it fall back to the ground, kicking up a small cloud of dirt in its wake.

Keith told everyone later that he had been lucky and the beams had landed on top of each other in a way where it kept him from being crushed. No one but Scott saw what had happened, but when Scott told them about what Keith had done everyone had joked it off, contributing it to shock. I guess deep down most of the time people don’t want to believe the unbelievable. It’s easier to believe what’s comfortable, safe, no matter how ridiculous it sounds given evidence to the contrary.

Keith had dodged a bullet, but the accident had shaken him to his core. Not only had he lifted a two ton beam like it was a paperweight, but he walked away from being buried underneath a pile of them without a scratch. He couldn’t just ignore what was happening to him any longer and he couldn’t keep it to himself. He had to tell someone, and there was only one person on the planet that he trusted.

Jenn.

I actually remember the day that Keith came up to see her. Jenn and I were living together at the time, and I remember how nervous she was about Keith finding out about us. She’d told him that she was seeing someone, but she never told him how serious we were. Jenn had pleaded with me to make myself scarce for the night.

“He’s just so sensitive, and he doesn’t have anyone else since his mother died last year. I’m just afraid of how he’d take it.”

I told her I understood, though I found the whole thing annoying, and went out to the movies that night with friends so they could talk about whatever it was that bothered him so much that he had to drive seventeen hours straight to tell her. By the time I got back to the apartment he had already left and Jenn was so shaken that she locked herself in our bedroom and wouldn’t come out until the next morning. She never did tell me what had her so spooked, and she asked me to never bring it up again, which I didn’t.

It wasn’t until that first morning with Keith, watching him jog on a treadmill while Jenn monitored his readings, that she finally told me the story.

“Well, when he first came in I thought something horrible had happened. He was so pale- white as a ghost. I’d never seen him like that before, not even when Doris passed.”

She marked a few things down on her clipboard then spoke into the microphone next to her and her voice echoed into the room where Keith was running. “I want you to up the speed another few notches.”

He’d been running for over an hour and sweat had soaked his shirt to the bone, but he didn’t seem to care. He wasn’t even breathing hard, the bastard. He stuck up a thumb at us. “No problem. This is easy.”

Jenn rolled her eyes and hit the transmit switch again. “Just stay focused, Superboy. This is just the beginning.”

She leveled her gaze back on me. “So he comes in and tells me he has something important to tell me, but that we had to go up to the roof. I thought it was pretty odd but I decided to humor him and followed him on up to the roof of our building, near where we used to have those cookouts, remember?”

I nodded but didn’t comment.

“Anyway, so he just blurts out everything all in a rush. He tells me about being able to fly and how he was always scared to tell me, but then what had happened the day before with the accident and everything.”

I smirked. “So how’d you take it?”

She made a few more markings on her clipboard as she spoke. “Well, like anyone would, I guess. I figured he’d lost it, but he seemed so shaken up I was afraid to say that so I humored him and told him I believed him.”

She smiled. “I guess I’m not that great an actress because he knew I was lying. He said ‘I know you don’t believe me, so I’ll show you.’ Then the little jerk ran and jumped off the freaking roof! I thought I was going to have a heart attack! I couldn’t even scream. By the time I made it to the ledge he was already floating back up. He came eye to eye with me and I did what any normal human being would do. I passed out.”

I laughed. “You didn’t!”

She nodded. “When I came to I was lying on the roof with Keith holding me in his arms, shaking me. The first thing I did was smack him clean across the face. You should have seen the look he gave me. He was stunned! Anyway, I was pretty shaken up and he helped me back inside. He made some coffee and we talked a little bit about when it first started, what had happened during the accident and everything. He told me that he just couldn’t keep it to himself anymore, and I was the only person he had to talk to. So we talked for a bit more but it was getting late and I knew you’d be home soon so we said our goodbyes and he left.”

I shook my head and snorted. “My God… I always wondered what the hell had happened that night.”

She put her hands on mine and looked me in the eye. “I never told you, but I always appreciated how you never pushed. I know it had to kill you not knowing, with that obnoxious journalistic curiosity and all. Thank you.”

The little monitoring room we were in was suddenly very hot. “I-“

Keith’s bellow cut off anything I could have said. “Hey, I hate to interrupt, but are we about done with this?”

Jenn blushed a bit then hit the comm. “Yeah, I think I have enough. Go ahead and stop and I’ll be in to help get those wires off of you.”

After she left I sat there and stared off into space for a second before remembering that my small tape recorder was still on. I hit the stop button then reached down for a cigarette. I didn’t care if it was a doctor’s office. I needed a smoke.

Repent, Sinners, for the T-Rex is Near!

The story too hot for the Bible- Jesus rode a raptor!

Just Super Ep. 3: Origin Story

“It’s fun to fantasize about having super powers and being special, but when it actually happens it’s terrifying. Not knowing what they are or why I could do them- I was afraid of what it meant. I was afraid of what I might be able to do…or what they might do to me. In the end, it looks like I had a right to be worried.”

-Excerpt from transcripts of the audio interview between Keith Green A.K.A. Justice and Sam Daylin on October 2nd, 2016.

***

Keith Green was born in Memphis, Tennessee on the third of May in nineteen eighty-one. His father was an alcoholic that left when Keith was five, which left Keith’s mother having to work two jobs just to pay the rent for a crappy two bedroom apartment in the part of town that you want to go ten miles out of your way to drive around rather than through.  As a result Keith was a typical latch-key kid that spent a lot of time alone and if it wasn’t for Jennifer Chase living next door this story would have ended up very, very different.

Jenn was a fun loving, kindhearted girl who could always be seen with her nose in a book. Keith was the exact opposite. Maybe it was because his dad left at an early age and he needed a father figure. Maybe Keith was just born a jackass. Either way, he had a short fuse and a wise mouth which resulted in Keith getting into fights on a daily basis- a habit that tended to be fatal in the neighborhood he lived in if you weren’t careful.

Jenn moved in next to Keith when they were both ten. Jenn’s father had owned his own grocery store in Germantown until a big chain moved in and caused the store to go bust, and as the new “prep kid” Jenn practically had a target painted on her back. The neighborhood kids would all tease Jenn at the bus stop or on her way home and make her feel like an outcast. That is, until the day Keith stepped in. After a few shouted obscenities and several beatings later the rest of the neighborhood knew not to mess with Jennifer Chase, and Keith Green had just made himself his first, and only, friend.

From then on the two had become virtually inseparable. Keith started staying over at the Chase’s until his mother would get home. Jenn helped him with his homework and they played games. Keith would make sure the other kids left Jenn alone. Things went on that way for a few years, until the night that Keith had his dream.

Now everyone has had a dream about flying at one point or another, especially when you’re a kid. But when Keith found himself floating over New York City in the middle of the night, the chill night wind lapping at his cheeks, he knew this was something different. He was thinking clearly, not in a haze like in most dreams. He was aware of what was happening. He knew that he wasn’t just floating, like on a cloud; he was hovering. He could feel himself pushing against the air and he somehow knew that if he lost his concentration and didn’t stay focused on keeping himself up he’d fall.

It scared him at first, but after a moment he tried to push. He found that the more he’d push with his thoughts the faster he’d start to move, like pushing yourself through the water when you’re swimming. Soon he was soaring above the clouds, feeling their cool mist on his face as he went through them. He dipped down towards the city, zoomed past skyscrapers, pushing as hard as he could until soon the lights of the city were just blurs.

Unfortunately, like all dreams, this one came to an end. Keith found himself back in his tiny bedroom in Memphis, lying tangled among the sheets and blanket on his bed, soaked in sweat. He lay there for a second, staring at the ceiling and trying to calm his racing heart, convinced he had just flown- convinced that the dream had been real. So, like all little boys who have had such dreams, he tried to do it again.

He got out of bed and stood in the middle of his room, closed his eyes, and he pushed just like he had in his dream. Nothing happened. This is the part where most little boys would have got back into bed, disappointed, and went back to sleep, hoping to capture that same dream again and once more soar through the clouds.

Keith Green was not like most boys.

He was convinced that the dream was real. He knew he could fly. He pushed harder. He pushed until his head shook with the effort and started to throb with pain. Then he felt a trickle of blood run down from his nose. He was a little light headed and felt as though he were about to fall. Defeated, he opened his eyes- only to find that his feet weren’t on the floor anymore.

He was standing three inches off the ground.

Shock rocked his concentration and he fell. His feet hit hard and he collapsed to the ground, exhausted. He sat on the cold wooden floor for a moment, struggling to catch his breath as excitement and fear warred in his head for domination. Excitement won out and he immediately got up and tried again. He found that it came easier this time, and he was able to keep himself up a few seconds before falling. All night long he kept at it, practicing, working his new ability like a muscle, until by the time the sun came up Keith was able to hover vertically a good foot over his bed. He’d learned early on that it hurt a lot less if he landed on the mattress instead of his ass.

Keith didn’t know why or how he could do this. He didn’t care. He could fly! He wanted to tell his mom, to tell Jenn, to share with them what he could do. He couldn’t wait for them to wake up, to show them. But as time ticked by before morning- his mother would be up at seven to get ready for work- Keith really thought about what had happened.

The excitement had started to fade and fear was there, waiting to replace it. What would they think? What would they say? Would they be scared?  He knew his mom would probably want to take him to the hospital to try and explain what was happening. Keith had seen enough T.V. and read enough comics in all the time he’d spent by himself to know that when you have powers people want to do bad things. They get scared of you. They want to do tests on you. They want to know why.

Keith didn’t want to know why. He didn’t want his mom or Jenn to look at him funny. He didn’t want to give up this special gift he could do, so instead he decided to keep it a secret. Keith stopped staying over at the Chase’s so much after school. He’d spend a little time with Jenn and do his homework, and then he’d go home, lock himself in his room and practice flying.

Flying became easier and easier. Just like in his dreams, the harder he pushed in a direction, the more he focused, the faster he could go. Soon he had to move practice from his house to a park not far from where he lived. He’d sneak away at night while his mom was at her second job waiting tables and he’d practice until he was exhausted.

Things went on this way on through high school. By day he was the anti-social kid that kept to himself. By night he pretended to be Superboy, weaving through the trees and floating among the clouds.

As they got older, I found out, Keith’s friendship with Jenn had grown to be something more and the two remained a steady couple on through high school. But the fear of how Jenn would react if she knew Keith’s secret only made Keith draw into himself that much more, which caused a rift between them. Jenn had always done well in school, and when she was accepted to Columbia University with a full scholarship the two decided it would be best if they saw other people, though they still remained close friends. Jenn and Keith kept in touch all that time, and she would come home to see him on holidays and breaks. After med school Jenn moved back to Memphis and started her practice there.

Keith got a job in construction the summer after graduation. School had never been his thing, and without Jenn there to help him out Keith figured he wouldn’t get too far anyway. He moved out of his mother’s place and into a small one bedroom apartment. He kept to himself and spent most of his free time reading. He developed a love for reading due to Jenn’s influence, and eventually started to devour anything he could get his hands on. That and flying. There was always flying.

And that’s how life was for Keith Green. He’d spend his days working in the sun and his nights reading and soaring through the air; and he was content. Then fate stepped in and changed things once again.

Mars Station

I wrote Mars Station a few years ago around the same time as Discovery. Like that story, this one is also a homage to the old Twilight Zone and Outer Limits stories that used to fascinate me as a kid. I was raised on stuff like Star Wars and Star Trek, but it was shows like the Outer Limits that really inspired me to become a writer and tell stories that could impact people with the sci-fi take on the morality tales that fables of old used to tell. I hope you enjoy my attempt at adding to that tradition of story telling.

Mars Station

Will today be any different than the last three hundred and sixty eight?

The star-filled sky beyond the atmosphere dome didn’t have any answers as I stepped out of my apartment corridor and onto the automatic slideway.  I gripped the hand bar next to me as I glided along and glanced around at the other slideways that criss-crossed above and below me, all leading to various lift tubes or corridors on this level of the station. When I first got here I found the vastness of the station breathtaking. Everything was wide open, with the backdrop of Mars rotating below us and the star field beyond. Every time you stepped out onto a slideway it was almost as though you were floating through space itself. I still found the view astonishing; it was just everything else that had lost its luster. The other apartment corridors, the restaurant level, everything all looked the same: pearl white, pristine, sterile- like a hospital ward. I’m told that the designers did that because it was considered psychologically soothing. After more than a year the blandness of my surroundings had me longing for the graffiti covered buildings of home.

I had transferred from the 21st police precinct in Houston to Mars Station because I wanted to be on the leading edge of what was going on out there. Apparently, what was going on was absolutely nothing. The most exciting things to happen around the station were the occasional case of vandalism or domestic disturbance. This was definitely not what I had in mind when I accepted the position. I guess I just watched too many of those old sci-fi vids as a kid. Aliens, adventure, excitement; those were the things I thought of when I thought of outer space. So far more accurate adjectives have been boring, repetitive, and dull.

I stepped off the slideway as it came to the lift tube station- large columns of tubes whose compartments worked a lot like elevators, except these could move sideways as well. There weren’t many people waiting, not that I expected there to be. Most of the people living on Mars Station were the scientists, who worked on the terraforming of the red planet below, and their families. With a population of just fifteen hundred people it was a wonder that you ever saw anyone. Especially on the upper levels, since the scientists spent most of their time in the labs that were in the bottom section of the station and a majority of the housing complexes were in levels four through seven. Most residents only came up past level eight when they wanted to eat at one of the restaurants or have a drink to unwind.

The thought of the day ahead of me darkened my mood even further and I sighed as I stepped into the tube and muttered my destination. The tube chimed, letting me know it understood me, then took off. The trip only took a minute, but it was enough time for me to prepare myself for what I knew was about to happen. It was the same thing that happened nearly everyday since I had come to the station. The lift stopped with a beep and the door swooshed open. I took a deep breath and stepped into the police precinct.

“Weeelll, there he is! Wyatt Earp himself!”

Bernard James was the resident wannabe-comedian. He was about forty-five as near as I could tell, with salt and pepper hair that was beginning to thin out, and a round chubby face with a permanent five ‘o clock shadow. He was about 6’2 and his thick frame hinted at a powerful physique, but that must have decayed along with his verbal acuity. His black uniform bulged across his expanding stomach, and if his breath was any indication, he’d hidden a mini-bar inside earlier. His laugh reminded me of a braying donkey, which only amplified Bernard’s ability to annoy the hell out of me.

The man lounging in the chair behind the front desk with his feet up and a toothpick between his teeth was Alex Lamar. He had short-cropped red hair and the type of nondescript face that would blend into the crowd wherever he went. His blue eyes seemed to pick up the light in the room and throw it back at you, which he’d say with a smirk was “a trait the ladies couldn’t resist”.

Alex was a nice enough guy, once you got to know him; he was the one person on the entire station that I considered my friend. That’s probably because he was the one person on the station that I had met so far that I didn’t want to avoid or shoot.  He chuckled as he leaned forward and lightly slapped Bernard on the back with the magazine that he was holding. “Leave the man alone, Bernard. He is the superior officer, ya know.”

Bernard smiled like a Cheshire cat. “Awww, the Cap’n knows I’m just playin with him, doncha, sir?”

I wasn’t amused. “Don’t you have a patrol you should be on right now, Sergeant?”

His smile faltered for just a second and then it was back, but I considered it a personal victory. “Yes, sir, Captain Richards, sir.”

He gave me a mock salute, shot a glance at Alex as he grabbed his hat from the desk, and then brushed past me into the lift tube. Alex laughed, shaking his head as he stood up, walked around the desk, and planted a hand on my shoulder. “Zach, you really need to lighten up a bit.”

I tried not to let the annoyance show on my face and knew I was only partially successful. “Really? I thought I was the life of the party around here.” I hooked a thumb back in the direction of the lift tube that Bernard had just disappeared into. “Speaking of which, happy hour start a little early today?”

Alex frowned and shook his head. “You know Bernie.”

I rolled my eyes as I grabbed a Cosmoburger wrapper from the top of the desk and pitched it in the trash. “Yeah, I know Bernie. If this were any other precinct he would have been suspended a long time ago.”

“Yeah, but it’s not; and considering he’s one of the five officers we have at the moment and it’d take a few months to replace him, we can’t afford to lose him right now.”

“I’m not so sure about that.”

Alex snorted as I took his former chair and started pulling up the reports from the night before. There weren’t many. Alex must have caught the grimace on my face. “See, look at you. You act like it’s a bad thing that we don’t have more to do around here.”

“No, that’s not it at all.” I sighed as I turned off the monitor, since the “paperwork” was light and it wasn’t going anywhere. “I guess I just thought things would be a bit different here, but it’s not: I get up, have my coffee, come here, take crap from Bernard, fill out reports, sit here and twiddle my thumbs for a few hours, then I go home. It’s the same crap, different day. I could have done all this stuff in Houston.”

“Yeah, but then you wouldn’t get to see my cheery face every day.”

I smirked. “Well, there’s a bright spot I never thought about.”

The smile on his face reminded me of the one my father used to give me when I was a kid and would complain that something wasn’t fair. “I understand you came out here looking for an adventure; but you aren’t seeing the big picture buddy. We are standing at the cusp of history!”

He raised his arms like a fat kid that just walked into an all you can eat buffet for the first time. “I mean, look at this place! This is the adventure! You know how bad Earth is getting. This place, what they‘re doing here, is the future, man! It’s important to everyone. We may not be using laser swords and phasers to fight against alien invaders, but we are working towards saving the future of the human race!”

I couldn’t help but smile at his enthusiasm. “’Cusp of history’? Since when did you start using phrases like that? You watching history vids in your spare time or something?” I waved his unspoken retort away and continued. “You’re right, I guess. I just need try and look at things differently.”

“There ya go.” He slapped my back as he picked up his hat from the top of the monitor. “Well, I’m off for a few hours so I’ll see you later. Maybe I can get that cute waitress at the Uranus Grill to get a cup of coffee with me.” He adjusted his hat to rest sideways, leaned back against the wall, and winked as he shot me with imaginary guns.

I shook my head. “I still can’t get over that name. What the hell were they thinking?”

“Yeah, that’s probably why the place is always empty.” We both laughed as he sashayed his way over to the lift tube door. “Just remember man, we’re a part of history.”

“Right. Have fun.”

“Will do.”

He disappeared through the lift tube and I sat back and really thought about what he said. He was right, even if he was being a bit over-dramatic. Earth was getting bad; between the ozone layer breaking up and the nuclear fallout in Europe and the Middle East from the last war, scientists estimated that it would only be another twenty years before the planet would become uninhabitable. Sure, there were other stations like this one: resource satellites and colonies scattered across the solar system, not to mention the moon, Earth’s first terraforming effort. However, the moon was already over-populated and most people didn’t want to raise their kids on a space station if they had a choice.

They could never build enough stations to house the entire population in time anyway. Mars was Earth’s only chance for the foreseeable future. Scientists hoped that they might be able to make Earth habitable again using terraforming technology, but that could take several years or more after the Earth was deemed unusable.

The vibration from my phone shook me from my reverie. “Richards here.”

“Zach, its Alex.”

I laughed as I looked down at my watch. “What, you get shot down already? You just left five minutes ago.”

The vibration from my phone shook me from my reverie. “Richards here.”

“Zach, it’s Alex.”

I laughed as I looked down at my watch. “What, you get shot down already? You just left five minutes ago.”

“We didn’t have a shipment scheduled for today, did we?”

I could feel butterflies starting to dance in my stomach and my smile vanished. “No. We aren’t due for a shuttle until next week when the rest of the crew comes back from leave.”

“That’s what I thought, but I was taking a walkway past the hanger on my way to the diner, and I saw a shuttle on approach for the station. Want me to go check it out?”

I shook my head; not that anyone was there to see it. “No, wait for me there. Give Bernard a call, then try and get in touch with the shuttle or whoever it is operating the hanger bay. It’s probably nothing. Maybe someone got the schedules mixed up, but it’s better to be safe than sorry.”

“Right.”

Alex didn’t sound any more convinced than I was. Scheduling mix-ups involving shuttles never happen. Everything is checked, then double checked, then confirmed with a whole different group of people that did their own double-checking just because of the sheer expense involved. No, there was no mix-up, which meant that whoever was coming was uninvited.

A few small terrorist groups that were staunchly against the terraforming project had come out of the woodwork recently on Earth. They were all religious fanatics that felt we had no right to play god by changing another planet when through our “sins” we had killed our own. The powers that be on Earth had assured us that these groups were small and not financially able to pose a threat to the station. However, if one of the groups had somehow managed to gain access to a shuttle then we could have a serious problem.

I rushed to the lift tube and told it to take me to the section nearest the hanger bays. My last thought before the tube closed was that I might have gotten my wish for adventure after all, and the old saying ‘Be careful what you wish for…’ was right on its heels.

***

I met Alex just outside the entrance to the hanger bays and silently cursed the fact that this had to happen when most of our precinct was on leave. That’s probably exactly why this is happening now.

“Where the hell is Bernard?”

Alex was busy loading his gun and didn’t bother to look up. “He didn’t respond. I think his phone‘s off. I didn’t get the message system.”

“If he’s sleeping it off somewhere, I’ll kill him!” I reached down and checked my own gun to make sure it was fully loaded.

One thing that everyone involved in the space station’s planning could agree on was blowing holes in the hull was not a good idea. For that reason, police officers were equipped with stun guns rather than conventional firearms. Stun guns fire small chips the size of a pellet that deliver an electrical charge on contact.  They weren’t very productive when used around electrical equipment, but that was a whole lot better than opening the station up to space and the charge was more than enough to make a man stop and think twice. More accurately, it just makes the man stop. The thinking part happens eventually after he regains consciousness.

I’ve only had to use the gun once. When I first took over the station precinct an engineer got liquored up one night and decided he wanted to play cricket using a co-worker’s head. When I arrived to try and talk some sense into him, he decided to take a swing at me, so I lit him up. When Alex asked him what it felt like to be shot by the gun, the man said that when he woke up it felt like he had been dropped from a two-story platform and landed on concrete. I’ve been told that after waking up with that hangover, he hasn’t taken a drink since.

Alex finished loading his gun and looked out the viewport at the approaching shuttle, which was firing its thrusters to shed some momentum for its final approach into the bay. “So, what are the odds that we’re just being paranoid and this will end up being some huge misunderstanding?”

The outer bay doors began to open with red lights flashing and sirens warning all those in the area to clear out before the room was opened to vacuum. “I dunno. You get a hold of the hanger bay or that ship to make sure it wasn’t a screw up on our end?”

Alex nodded. “Nothing but static from either.”

“Then I’d say the odds aren’t looking very good.” I glanced down at the Portable Access Datapad, or P.A.D., I’d been fidgeting with and shook my head. “Well, whoever they are they have at least one person working for them on the inside. All of the defenses and overrides have been locked down so I can’t access them.”

“Right, I was wondering why you hadn’t done that yet. Who would be crazy enough to try and do anything to this place? Don’t they know what we’re doing out here?”

I shrugged, “I guess not everyone got that memo.”

“You think it might be one of those terrorist groups we’ve been hearing about?”

I took another glance out the viewport and saw that the shuttle had landed and the docking bay doors were closing. “Well, as soon as they get that bay pressurized, I think we’re going to find out.”

Alex cursed and bumped his head back against the wall. He took a deep breath then let it out slowly as he glanced up at me. “What’s the plan, chief?”

I closed my eyes as I ran my hand through my hair and tried to think, but it felt like my head was full of molasses. “Well, I guess all we can do right now is wait and see what we’re up against. Try Bernard again and see if you can reach him.”

“I don’t think that’ll be necessary.”

I didn’t like the tone of his voice. “What makes you say that?”

“Because it looks like he’s playing for the other team. Take a look.”

The bay had been re-pressurized and Bernard was walking over to shake the hand of one of the eight people that were walking down the shuttle ramp wearing full vacuum suits and carrying what looked like metal brief cases. The lead spaceman removed his helmet and gave Bernard a smile as he took his hand. He was completely bald with a goatee, a nasty looking scar that went from his eyebrow in an arc down to his chin, and a build that suggested he was really a superhero in disguise. The others, all men, had similar builds and were all working on removing the vacuum suits to reveal black jumpsuits underneath.

“They don’t look like they’re here for a social visit, do they?”

I grunted at Alex’s quip as I ducked down out of site of the viewport and began to work on my P.A.D. “I don’t know what they’re planning, but right now we have one advantage.”

Alex ducked down next to me, his face covered with sweat. “And what would that be, oh wise one?”

I forced myself to smirk at his joke, and I was surprised when my voice didn’t shake at all as I responded. “Well, they were expecting to take us by surprise. If you hadn’t have decided to play Casanova, we never would have known they were here until it was too late. They would have caught me going over reports and you asleep in your bed.” The P.A.D. beeped and I grinned. “Perfect.”

Alex tried to look over my shoulder to see what I was doing, and I ignored the sweat that was dripping down on the P.A.D. screen and me. “Ok, so what are you doing then?”

“Well, all the residential housing and science labs are on the bottom seven levels, right? Well, I just made the computer think there was a hull breach up here, so it’s locking those levels off from the rest of the station. That should keep most of the civilians safe, and hopefully slow down whatever Bernard and his friends have planned. It probably won’t keep them out long, so we have to make the most of whatever time it buys us.”

“Right, so what now?”

My phone vibed and I already knew who it was before I looked at the caller ID. Marvin Taim, Mars Station’s project head, was an extremely excitable man who acted like the world was going to end when a shoelace snaps. How he got to be assigned as head of this project, I’ll never know. No doubt hearing that there was a hull breach had him chewing his nails to nubs. He didn’t disappoint. “Richards, what’s going on up there? The computer said there was a hull breach!”

“Calm down Dr. Taim, there isn’t a hull breach. We have an unknown shuttle that has just docked with the station. They managed to lock out my access to the station defenses, so I made the computer think there was a hull breach to try and keep them away from the lower levels. I want you to stay there, be calm, and don’t let anyone else know what’s happening. Tell them it was a computer glitch or something and to go back to work. I’ll let you know more when I do. Richards out.” It was best not to let the good doctor reply, otherwise it would have taken forever to explain everything and I wasn’t sure how much time I managed to buy us with my little stunt.

I took a quick look out the viewport. Bernard and Scarface were still talking with one another, and the others were unloading some crates from the cargo bay of the shuttle. “Well, I’m going to sneak closer and see if I can’t hear a little of what they are planning. Then, I’m going to try and get a message off to Earth and see what they want us to do. I want you to stay here and keep an eye out. My phone is on vibe, so gimmie a ring if anything happens, then head back to the precinct and lock her down unless you hear my signal to open it from this phone.”

“You got it, boss.” He grinned weakly. “Well, looks like you got your adventure.”

“Yeah and if I ever wish for anything stupid like that again, I give you permission to shoot me.” I threw him a small salute as I ducked down to crawl into the engineering access tube. “See ya soon.”

“Good luck.”

***

I never had any notions about becoming an engineer, and after spending a few minutes inside a cramped access tube I thanked God for small favors. Sweat poured off me in tiny rivers that constantly made my hands slip as I slowly crawled my way towards the hanger control access door, and my uniform felt like it was trying to merge itself with my skin.

As I got closer to the access door I could hear talking from within the control room, which meant there was at least one other person working with Bernard. I couldn’t be sure if it was a person talking on a phone or if there was more than one person in the room, so I decided to try and get closer and see if I could overhear anything. I managed to pull my gun from its holster, wincing slightly when it scraped a bit against the tube wall. I didn’t hear a change in the voice from the room, so I hoped that meant that no one had heard it.

“So who are these guys anyway?”

“I dunno. Bernard didn’t say. I don’t really care as long as we get paid the money he promised us.”

There were two separate voices, and I didn’t hear a third. I eased my way up against the door and prepared myself to open and shoot if I needed to.

“You don’t think they are going to do anything that will hurt anyone, do you? I didn’t sign on for-“

“Look, stop worrying about it! You think Bernard would let anyone get hurt? I’m sure he knows what he’s doing.”

“I guess.”

“Just relax. Are all our programs still running ok?”

“Um…yeah, except it looks like someone locked down the bottom seven sections.”

The other’s tone darkened. “That wasn’t a part of the plan.”

“I better give Bernie a call.”

Uh-oh!

I flipped the latch and slammed my weight against the door with my shoulder. I snapped off a shot at the first person I saw as I fell and extreme luck caused the shot to hit the phone dead center, which the tech dropped as it was enveloped in blue-white tendrils of electrical charge. The phone clanked to the deck and sputtered smoke, and both techs took turns looking down at the phone, and then to me. They were both wearing those long white lab coats that always made me think of mad scientists, although one was a bit taller with black hair while the other was blonde. Both wore wire-rimmed glasses to complete the stereotypical image. The look on their faces would have been comical had it been under different circumstances.

“Alright boys, keep your hands where I can see them and act like you’re looking down at your monitors. We wouldn’t want to tip your friends off downstairs.” I forced myself to smile and tried to put as much cockiness in my voice as I could to give off the impression that everything had happened exactly how I planned it. “That would take the fun out of everything.”

I got myself into position on one knee, making sure that I couldn’t be seen if someone in the bay happened to look up, and kept the gun trained in their general direction. “Now, who wants to tell me who those guys are and what they’re doing here?”

The blonde one looked ready to vomit, so I assumed that he was the one who was expressing his doubts earlier. He confirmed my assumptions when he spoke. “We don’t know! They didn’t tell us anything!”

“Shhhhh! Calm down.”

The black haired guy rolled his eyes and glanced over at his partner with a look of utter disgust, but his voice was surprisingly calm. “You’re making a fool of yourself. He’s a police officer. Look at the uniform; he isn’t going to hurt you.”

He looked back at me with a smile and a predatory look in his eyes that made my stomach crawl. “Now, officer, what my rather excited friend was saying is true. We have no idea what is happening. Officer James simply hired us to shut down the defensive programs and to guide the landing procedure. If you wish to know anything more you’ll have to ask your friend when we see him.”

I was about to ask what he was talking about when I heard the woosh of the door behind me. I leapt up from my position, turning as I went and bringing the gun to bear behind me when a large hand knocked it from my grip, followed by an uppercut to my chin. The last thing I remembered before the darkness took me was my phone vibrating.

***

I was only unconscious for a few minutes, but I kept my eyes shut and faked it as the larger man carried me and dropped me unceremoniously down on the deck. I was hoping that if they thought I was still out cold I might overhear something that could be useful. I guess I used up all my luck on that shot to the phone, because as soon as I was on the deck a splash of cold water hit my face. My eyes snapped open to see Bernard smiling down at me as though I was a porterhouse steak and he was starving.

“Nice to see you’re enjoying yourself,” I muttered as I groggily got to my feet. No one moved to stop me.

His smile seemed to grow, but his voice was darker in tone than I ever remembered it being. “Oh, you have no idea how much I enjoyed that.”

“Actually, I think I have a pretty good idea. You always were easily entertained.”

His smile disappeared and was replaced by a sneer. “I don’t have to take crap from you any more Richards! I had to play nice around you before, but now it’s my turn.” He jabbed himself in the chest with his thumb then moved a few steps closer. For a second I thought he was about to hit me. Perhaps he was. “You have no idea how good you had it! First you get handed the job that was mine, but then you have the nerve to mope around here as though you were better than everyone else. Like this wasn’t good enough for you.” The smile returned, but now it was more a leer. “But now it’s my time.”

“If you are quite finished.”

The voice was calm and even but with a hint of command underlying it. If I didn’t know better, I would have thought the speaker was royalty. Bernard stepped aside, his icy glare never leaving my face, as Scarface walked towards me and surprised me by offering a small bow. “My name is Jakel, Captain Richards, and I would like to apologize for the…shall we say rather unfortunate circumstances of our meeting this way. This was not my intent at all. We may be here under less than positive circumstances but that is no reason to be impolite about things.”

“Right. Well Jacko, would you mind telling me what ‘less than positive circumstances’ you and the goon squad are here for?” I said it without thinking and apparently Bernard was just as shocked by my response as I was.

Jakel simply smiled tightly and continued. “To come right to the point, we mean to destroy this station.”

WHAT?” Bernard’s face turned beet red and he spun around to face Jakel, hands balled into fists. “That was never a part of our agreement! You said you were going to hold the station for ransom. You never said anything about destroying it! You lying piece of-“

There was a bright flash of light and suddenly Bernard was on the ground. Behind him I could see one of the goon squad lowering a wicked looking rifle. Jakel glanced down at the floor then back up to me as though nothing of importance had happened. “As I said, there is no need to be impolite.” He noticed that my eyes were still locked on Bernard’s body so he added, “Oh, don’t worry. He is only unconscious. My people don’t believe in killing unless it is absolutely necessary.”

I managed to drag my eyes away from the body and back up to meet his. “Your people? Who the hell are you guys and why do you want to destroy this station?”

Jakel reached up and pressed something behind his ear and the air in front of him seemed to shimmer and twist. When the effect faded the human I had been looking at moments before had been replaced by what looked to be a cross between a man and a fish. He still had his human build, but his skin had become a leathery dark green with splotches of brown; his lips were a lighter shade of green and protruded like a large mouth bass; and his eyes were like black mirrors, with no whites at all. The scar still remained, and it was the only way for me to tell that I was still talking to the same…thing. When he spoke, his voice had gone from regal to gargled, as though he were talking under water. “We are the Taverin, and we will destroy this station to protect our home.”

I had to choke down the shock and forced myself to croak out, “Your home. You mean Mars? No one lives on Mars. Mars is uninhabitable.”

Jakel shook his head slowly. “You humans are so arrogant to assume that you know everything. My people lived on the planet you call Mars when life on the Earth was still young.” He seemed to stare through me as he continued, “We were not so much unlike you then. Technologically advanced, industrial, we thought we knew it all. Also, like you, we fought amongst ourselves constantly. It was that arrogance and stupidity that destroyed the surface of our world. We used all our technological know-how to create a weapon that managed, quite by mistake, to burn away our atmosphere and kill all those on the surface. Some of us were already living in the underworld colonies, and that is what saved our race. In time those few colonies became cities, and the few hundred that were left became millions.”

He seemed to be looking at me again, and seeing my own reflection in his eyes was a bit disconcerting. “We have tried very hard to avoid contact with your machines that you have sent to our world. Time has erased all evidence of our existence on the surface, and we had hoped that you would do your exploring, see that there was nothing there of interest, then move on. But when you started your remaking of our world, it caused massive damage to many of our cities, and thousands of our people have perished. We cannot allow it to continue any longer.” He nodded towards the large man who had shot Bernard, who scooped up the body and threw the man over his shoulder as though he were a sack of flour. “If you would be so kind to accompany Markan, he will take you to a secure room where you can wait until we are ready.”

I held up a hand and backed away slowly as Markan approached, pointing what I realized was my stun gun at my chest. “Wait a second. You said you didn’t believe in killing unless it was absolutely necessary. If you destroy this station you will be killing all fifteen hundred people that live here, not to mention three fourths of the population of Earth who are relying on this station to fulfill its mission.”

Jakel held up a hand and Markan stopped his advance. “The people on this station will be jettisoned in the escape pods before the station’s destruction. As for the rest…it is unfortunate but it is not our concern. Your people are threatened because of your own actions. You must face the consequences just as my people did.”

He motioned with his hand again then turned without giving me another glance. Markan, still looking like a professional wrestling reject instead of what I assumed was his natural form, grunted and gestured with my gun. “Ok, ok. I’m going! Apparently your boss was the only one that went to charm school, huh?”

He led me to a room that was near the place where Alex and I had been watching the shuttle land. Alex was nowhere in sight so I hoped that meant he got away. The door opened and the two techs from earlier were already sitting at the large table in the middle of the room. The calm one with the black hair simply looked up then back down again, as if he couldn’t be bothered with more of a reaction. Markan dropped Bernard on top of the table, and the blonde tech nearly fell out of his chair.

There was a whistle from behind me and I turned just in time to see Markan swing my gun around to point at something behind him. Suddenly, he spasmed and fell to the floor. Alex popped his head inside the doorway and smiled. “Come on, Captain! This is a jail break!”

***

We managed to make it back to the precinct and get it locked down a few minutes later. We had the techs carry Bernard after we convinced the jumpy one, we found out his name was George, to stop rocking back and forth and muttering “This isn’t happening” over and over.

I debated bringing Bernard back. I figured leaving him there to whatever the aliens would do with him would serve him right, but Alex reminded me that he might be able to give us some additional intel. Not to mention the fact that we could use all the help we could get. I reluctantly agreed.

Regardless of the fact that Bernard had sold out, he didn’t actually know about the aliens and their plans to screw things over for everybody. That didn’t excuse what he did, but it meant we could probably trust him to help. Especially since his friends with the fish lips shot him once already. I promised myself that whatever else happened, I’d make sure that Bernard was brought to justice for what he did.

So after we made sure that the lift tube into the station was locked down and there was no way for the aliens to get in, we sat down in the briefing room and had a small council of war. Alex was the first to start. “Ok, so you want to tell me who those guys are and what they’re doing here? It took two shots to take down that big guy guarding you. I’ve never heard of that happening before. They mercs hopped up on some new drug or something?”

“Or something,” Bernard murmured from the back. He had his head down and was still trying to shake off the effects of whatever it was they shot him with. Apparently it was something similar to our own stun guns.

I scratched my head and tried to think of the best way to explain it. “I don’t know how to say this, but they’re Martians. Well, they call themselves Tavern-“

“Taverin.” Bernard muttered.

“Whatever, but they’re from Mars.”

Alex was laughing so hard that he had tears coming down his cheeks until he noticed that no one else was laughing and tried to recover with a cough. “Martians? I hate to say this but I think the stress is starting to get to you, buddy.”

“It’s true.”

It was the first time that the tech with the black hair had spoken since I had gotten captured. The smile on Alex’s face became that of pure shock as the tech disappeared in a distorted haze and was replaced with that face that only a mother could love…or maybe a mackerel. Alex went completely pale, and George simply fainted. I already had my gun trained on him and I noticed that Bernard was slowly moving towards the one Alex had left on the table.

The alien merely blinked and held up a gnarled green hand. “There is no need for that.”

Bernard’s curse pretty much said it all, and Alex had recovered enough to snatch up his gun before Bernard could grab it. I just shrugged and leveled my gun at its head. “Prove it.”

“I am not with them. Not now, at any rate.” He looked down at the gun, so I lowered it but still kept it pointed in his direction. He nodded slightly and continued. “Thank you. My name is Frogen. I was sent here to find out the intentions behind the project, to report that information back to my superiors, and then to assist Jakel in finding a peaceful way to get onto the station. With the help of Sergeant James, that wasn’t a difficulty.”

Bernard gave him a look that was pure venom but he continued as if he hadn’t noticed. “Representatives have already made their way to Earth, and a message was supposed to have gotten to you today. We were not aware that Jakel had lied to Sergeant James, and that he had intentions of destroying the station. That was why he locked me up along with you. He didn’t want me to get this information off to our superiors.”

“Or this could all just be a really great story to get us to trust you while you make sure we don’t do anything to get in the way of Jakel.” At this point I wasn’t anything at face value anymore.

Frogen leaned back in his chair and placed his hands out in front of him on the table. “If you do not believe me, check your messages. You should have already received a message from your superiors by now.”

“Right. Alex, watch him. If he so much as twitches a lip, light him up.”

“You got it.” To further emphasize the point, he cocked the gun and leveled at Frogen’s face with a smile like the one he had given me this morning.

Frogen blinked but didn’t say anything.

I pulled out my phone and braced myself for the onslaught I was about to receive as I called Dr. Taim’s number. “Richards? What’s going on up there? Are you alright?”

“We’re all fine up here. I need you to check and see if you received a message from Control.”

“A message? Uh…hold on.” After a few minutes of listening to him punching buttons I heard a gasp. “My god…Mars is inhabited?”

I nodded towards Alex and he lowered his gun. “Apparently. I’ve got one of them with me here, but we have a problem.”

“What kind of a problem? With the representatives? I assume that was the shuttle you mentioned earlier. This message said they were peaceful and-“

“Doctor, please. The delegation that came here has gone rogue and plans on destroying the station.”

“Destroy the station?!” He sounded almost as bad as George did. Maybe they were related.

“Doctor, calm down please. We’re not going to let them do anything to the station. I need you to send off a message to Earth and let them know the situation. Until then make sure you put the terraforming on hold and keep the breach locks in place. Don’t let anyone in until I call you again. Also, do your best to try and lock out all of the computer systems, just in case they find a way to get in. Richards out.”

“But Captain, I-“

The feed cut out and Alex laughed. “You know, he’s going to get tired of you doing that.”

I smirked as I holstered my gun. “He can fire me. Ok, so it seems Froggy here is telling the truth. Now we have to figure out how to keep the fish platoon from blowing up the station.” I looked at Frogen and raised an eyebrow. “Any idea what they may be planning on doing?”

“The name is Frogen-“

“I know. Don’t care.”

“-and I’m not sure. My best guess would be that those crates they were unloading before had some sort of explosive devices inside.”

“That’s just beautiful.” Apparently the effects had worn off and Bernard was his old, cheerful self again. “So not only do we have to take on a bunch of fish heads, but now we have to worry about blowing ourselves up while doing it. Wonderful.”

“Maybe you should just remember that this wouldn’t even be happening if you hadn’t have sold us out!” I didn’t meant to snap at him, but the stress really was starting to get to me, and we had enough problems without Bernard adding negativity to it.

“Zach.”

Alex’s eyes were on my gun, which made me look down and realize that I was pointing it at Bernard. Apparently Bernard realized that too, because he bit back whatever response he was about to shout at me and sat back in his chair. I didn’t remember drawing it again, but I made myself put it back into its holster. “You going to be part of the problem, or part of the solution? Because your negativity isn’t helping anyone, and if you keep it up, I’ll leave you here in one of our holding cells. It’s your choice.”

“Sorry.” It was short, and it sounded more like a curse than an apology, but I knew that was the best that I was going to get from him so I let it go.

“Fine. So here is what we’re going to do. We’re going to split up into teams. Alex, you take Bernard, I’ll take Frogen. If we hurry we may be able to get to them before they have much time to do anything. Alex already took out one, so that should leave seven more, right?”

Frogen nodded, so I continued. “Alright then. Alex, get Bernard and Frogen here a gun. Remember that these may be stun guns, but watch your fire. We don’t want to accidentally short out any equipment we might need, and I’d be willing to bet that hitting whatever explosive devices they brought with them with an electric charge probably won’t be a good thing.”

Alex pointed towards where George had passed out. “What about him?”

I shrugged as I unlocked the lift tube. “Leave him. He’d be a bigger help here out of the way than for us to have to worry about him.”

“Right. So where do you want us?”

“Well, there are two entrances to the docking bay, so we’ll take one while you take the other.”

Alex nodded as he handed Bernard and Frogen a gun. “Straightforward enough. So we just shoot anything that moves?”

“That’s the general idea. Frogen, you know how to use that thing?”

The alien examined the gun then cocked it once and nodded. “A bit simplistic, but it should be no problem.”

I grunted as I stepped into the lift tube. “Just remember, it takes two hits with these things to put them down. Frogen and I will go first. You two follow. Good luck.”

I told the lift to stop at the same place that I had this morning and as the lift beeped and began to move, something occurred to me. “Frogen, how is it that you and Jakel know our language?”

Frogen shrugged. “We have studied your people from afar for many years now. Jakel and myself were both trained as infiltrators, those of us sent to live among your people and gather information about you. We wanted to make sure you wouldn’t pose a threat to our people before we let you know of our existence.”

“So there are a bunch of you on Earth already? Then why didn’t you try to stop this project sooner?”

“We had no way of knowing that your transformation of the planet would cause harm to our cities.”

I shook my head and chuckled. “In other words, you wanted to wait and see if we could restore your world for you.”

His lips parted in what I assumed was a smile. “Something like that, yes.”

The lift beeped and I drew my gun. I stuck my head out just enough to see if there was anyone waiting for us. I didn’t see anyone so I motioned for Frogen to move out of the lift. We walked over to the viewport where Alex and I had watched the shuttle land this morning and saw that the remaining Taverin were taking the explosive devices out of crates and arming them. They were about the size of a suitcase, red, with silver casings on the side, and a timer in alien script on the front. It looked like they had them all wired together for one big bang. Apparently since they couldn’t get to the bottom part of the station and plant them individually, they decided to just blow them all together. The result would be the same. “How much time are they set for?”

Frogen looked out the viewport and his mirror eyes bulged. “Two minutes. That isn’t near enough time to evacuate the station.”

I forced myself to take a deep breath and focus. “Apparently he changed his mind. I guess we’ll have to change it back for him.”

My phone vibed. It was Alex. “We’re in position.”

“It looks like they are just planning to blow the station and everybody else with it. We don’t have a lot of time, so we move in and take them all down. Watch your fire.” One of the aliens glanced up and locked eyes with me. He started to shout and went for his rifle. “Move!”

I hit the release on the door and jumped through, firing as I went. My shots went wide and enveloped the metal landing behind the aliens in electrical tendrils that danced around the walkway. I saw Alex and Bernard swing through on the opposite side, and watched in complete horror as Bernard leveled his gun and shot Alex in the back.

With a bellow of rage I took aim and was about to fire back at Bernard, when suddenly it felt like all the muscles in my body began to spasm. I hit the deck hard and convulsed uncontrollably. It was like my entire body had gotten a Charlie horse. Seconds later the familiar blackness of unconsciousness came to pay me a second visit.

***

I woke up tied next to Alex; our hands bound to the railing that surrounded the loading area of the shuttle bay. It felt as though my whole body had been beaten for days by a group of chimps with sledgehammers. “Damn Alex, no wonder that guy stopped drinking.”

Alex’s eyes were still shut but I could see his chest rise and fall, so I was assured he was still alive. I glanced painfully to my right at what we had assumed were explosives. In reality, it appeared to be some sort of transportation device.

Several of the briefcase-looking things were linked together to form a circle. There was an electrical light show and then the circle began to glow with a neon blue pulse that hurt my eyes when I looked directly at it. More of the Taverin appeared to rise up from the center as though it were a lift. Jakel was moving enough of his people in to fully staff the station.

The three stooges, Jakel, Frogen and Bernard, emerged from the far lift and marched purposefully towards me; Bernard with his trademark grin plastered across his face. Jakel smiled politely; at least, that’s what I assumed he was doing. For all I could tell he might have just eaten something for lunch that was disagreeing with him.

“It’s good to have you back with us.” He crouched down so that he could meet me at eye level and put his hands together as though he were a priest about to pray over a condemned inmate. “I find myself in the rather awkward position of requiring your assistance, Captain. It seems your Dr. Taim didn’t take too kindly to our presence on the station; especially when he received word from someone on Earth and found out what was happening. He took it upon himself to try and destroy the facility, so my men were forced to breach the lockdown area with explosives and kill him. Unfortunately, Dr. Taim was able to lock out the stations computer systems, and hardwire them so that nothing in the station can be accessed before we could reach him.”

I felt bile rise into my throat and I tried my best to keep the extreme sorrow and rage I was feeling from showing on my face. “Gee, that’s too bad.”

Jakel nodded solemnly, either not recognizing the sarcasm in my response or choosing to ignore it. “Indeed. This is not the way we had hoped events would transpire at all. However, this brings me to my current dilemma. You are the only person left on this station that has the ability to access the computer systems, so it would make things much easier, both on us as well as your people, if you would see fit to help us without further need for…shall we say, persuasion.”

I fixed him with a hard stare and forced myself to smile humorlessly, then silently cursed at how much the effort hurt. “You know, I really would like to help, but I think I left those codes in my other pair of pants.”

“I see.”

Bernard slowly pulled his nightstick from his belt and began to walk towards me. “Please, allow me to persuade him.”

Jakel stood and nodded towards Frogen, who pulled a small handgun from the holster at his side and shot Bernard point blank in the back of the head, which exploded in a shower of gore that enveloped me in blood and skull fragments. As the body collapsed to the ground with a wet thud, the bile I had been holding back before came rushing up in full force, and I added to the colorful display on the front of my uniform with a lurch.

When I was finished, Jakel once again bent down in front of me. If the sickening display around us bothered him, he showed no signs of it. “Now, Captain, I ask that you please reconsider your position.”

Any further attempts at playing the tough wise ass left with my lunch, so I decided to go with the direct approach. “Go to Hell, you monster!”

Jakel shook his head and chuckled to himself. “Such compassion for a man that hated you so intensely. Fascinating.” Jakel stood up, walked over to where Bernard’s body had fallen, and toed it with the point of his boot. “Mr. Bernard was a detestable man that sold out his planet for nothing more than the promise of wealth and power. I cannot trust someone who would betray his people for something so petty. You, on the other hand, have a chance to protect the lives of everyone on this station. Not to mention saving your friend next to you from what I promise will be considerable pain. I do hope you’ll reconsider.”

I couldn’t help but to follow Jakel’s gaze to where Alex hung next to me, wincing as I did so. His eyes were open now, and he was looking directly at me. He shook his head slowly, then closed his eyes once more. My chest felt as though an elephant were sitting on it, but I still managed to croak out a “No,” before my head fell to my chest, as though that small effort had cost me all the strength I had remaining.

I heard Jakel say “Very well,” in a tone of voice that honestly sounded remorseful. I brought my head up just in time to see him once again nod to Frogen, who now was holding some sort of rod in his right hand. He calmly walked over to where Alex was hanging, and poked him with the device.

Alex lurched violently as he screamed. I couldn’t hear or see anything coming from the rod, which made the whole situation that much more terrifying. I wasn’t sure what it was doing to him, but it very obviously wasn’t much fun. Blood began to run down his nose, and his eyes rolled up into the back of his head as he convulsed.

Words cannot describe how intensely I wanted to scream out for them to stop and that I would tell them anything that they wanted to know. I wanted the whole thing to be over. I wanted it to be some vivid dream that was aroused by something that I had eaten before I went to bed. I wanted to wake up from the nightmare, but I couldn’t wake up because this wasn’t a dream. It was a living nightmare so horrid that you would never think it could happen outside some book or movie. So I had to watch those monsters torture my best friend to death in front of me.

Two more of Jakel’s men came to retrieve the bodies as Frogen left for destinations unknown, probably to go recharge his little pleasure wand. Jakel crouched down and looked me in the eye once more, and I would have given anything for my hands to come miraculously free so that I could beat the living hell out of him. Instead, he shook his head and made a little gurgling noise. “I truly am sorry that things have had to happen the way they have Captain; but you must understand that these things I do, I do for the survival of my people.”

He paused, as though considering his words. “I must confess that I lied to you about a few things earlier. My people are not from Mars, but from a planet in a solar system very near this one. It is true that we were once very much like you, and that we, too, destroyed our world. All that is left of our people are on a large spacecraft that we call a LifeShip, in orbit around your planet Jupiter. Our resources are depleting, and Earth was the only habitable planet within range. Now it seems as though your people have fallen into the same trap as ours.”

He spread his arms wide and gestured around the room. “However, with this station I will be able to form a new home for my people; and with Earth, we will have all the resources we need to survive until our planet is ready. We even have a sizable work force just waiting to help us rebuild again.”

I lifted my head to look Jakel in the eyes. “You’re a fool! Apparently in all your research on our planet you didn’t study our history very well. Humanity will never allow itself to be enslaved, especially not by a bunch of fish-headed freaks like you!”

He smiled and his fish lips parted wide enough for me to see for the first time the double rows of jagged teeth hidden behind, and I felt my heart freeze within my chest. “My dear Captain, they already have.”

I shook my head hard, as though the act would clear away everything that had happened over the course of the day. He was lying. He had to be. Now, more than ever, I wanted my bonds to break so I could lash out at my captor. I silently cried out to God to let me have my one last moment of revenge, like Samson within the temple of Dagon. Apparently, God wasn’t taking any more calls.

“Resistance was passionate, but easily staunched. We had more than enough agents on the ground to ensure a quick victory. The entire planet was under our control in less than twenty-four hours.” Jakel stood and looked down at me, all trace of lightheartedness gone. “Please, I implore you, make this all easier on yourself and save me the trouble of torturing you next. I’d hate to lose yet another slave today.”

“When the gods wish to punish us, they answer our prayers.”

-Oscar Wilde (1854 – 1900)

Copyright © 2009 J.R. Broadwater

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