Hello Everyone!
What's up with the weird title? Beats me--it just happened. Anyway, lots of stuff for this week's blog! Welcome again to all the new readers from North Carolina! Looking forward to coming down there on March 14-16 for Stellarcon—hoping to meet many of you in person! After that its back home to Virginia for a one day event out in Virginia Beach on March 22—check out the events section for more details.
This week we have the last short story from my anthology, Aliens and Satanic Creatures Wanted: Humans Need Not Apply. Hard to believe we have gone through all 39 of them! I know that perhaps many of you have not had a chance to read all of them—I think many of them are archived on myspace—but if that's not the case we need to do something so let me know how you feel about that.
So what will replace the short story? Well I have a few other stories that I will be posting and as a work in progress—I may be posting from a new novel as well. If all else fails—there will just be the meanderings of a madman—in other words—just my ramblings about lifeJ
But we also have a special addition for this week—an exchange blog with Gail Martin—author of the Summoner & The Blood King. You can also go and listen to the conversation by clicking on the link for Gail's podcast:
It was great to talk with Tony on my Ghost in the Machine podcast
http://gzmartin.audioacrobat.com/rss/gailzmartinpodcast.xml .
I met Tony at StellarCon last year, and we had a great talk about aliens, conspiracy theories and why it's always so much more fun to come up with a complex explanation when a simple one might work!
I'm not sure why we Americans love conspiracy theories quite so much—we just can't resist turning over rocks to see what's underneath. From the Kennedy assassination to Area 51, and even to today's biggest news stories, someone has an alternative explanation of what 'really' happened. And of course it's the stuff of adventure, science fiction and fantasy to let us see how those alternatives would work!
Even though my Chronicles of the Necromancer series is fantasy, it's got its share of conspiracies and hidden agendas. That's what makes an adventure fun. And while my books, The Summoner and The Blood King, don't include aliens, they've got enough vampires, magic-users and other strange creatures to keep a ghost hunting crew busy for a long time! As an author, setting up a hall of mirrors for the reader is part of the fun. Conspiracy theories keep us guessing about the real motives of characters all the way until the end. After all, it's what puts the 'plot' in plotting!
Gail Z. Martin, author of The Summoner and The Blood King
www.ChroniclesOfTheNecromancer.com
And alas…the last story from the collection of Aliens and Satanic Creatures Wanted: Humans Need Not Apply. Hope you enjoy!
Fulfillment
BOB LAY IN the jet-black shiny coffin; his face appeared full of the contentment of a man at total peace with everything in his forty-two year life. The billowing backdrops of murky gray curtains were obscured by the large flower arrangements that encircled his coffin.
Many people came to pay their last respects to Bob. He had been well respected and liked by most of the community. Few seats were vacant as even more people entered the establishment. Tomorrow would be the actual funeral and the trip to the cemetery.
A man in a black suit entered the funeral parlor and slowly made his way to the viewing area. He had the appearance of a man in good shape by the look of his physique, and his hair was tightly cropped. Yet his eyes were sharp and obviously avoiding contact with all those that looked his way.
Conversations were ongoing throughout the funeral parlor. They ranged from the last time someone had talked to Bob, to seeing if someone knew who had just entered the funeral home because they didn't recognize them. Another group drifted around examining the cards on the flowers to see who had sent them, comparing sizes and types to an obvious price differential. Funerals were more of a spectacle for the living then they were for the dead.
ALL THE VISUAL display readouts in his helmet were nominal. Oxygen ratio mix, temperature sensors, heating units, waste disposal, filtration system and exterior lighting were all good: phase one stationary systems functioning checks were complete. All systems go for phase two, movement and agility testing.
Bob knew that representatives from the Environsuit Corporation were monitoring the readouts from inside the mother craft. They had pushed this ambitious project even though designers urged caution. The vice president of marketing himself was here to witness the tests. He probably had one finger poised to make his press release, that Environsuit Corporation had the best and cheapest off-world environmental suit on the market. Affordable suits for everyone and at just the right price. Bob knew the type, they had to be first before someone else laid claim to it no matter what the cost, because this was business. How he hated their kind. All they cared about was making a buck regardless of the cost and sacrifice of others.
CLARA DABBED AT the tears that were forever forming at the corner of her eyes. She was an attractive woman in her mid-forties, but now appeared older because of the obvious stress she was under. Her eyes were blood shot red from the tears that never seem to cease. As much as she had loved Bob, she found it difficult to gaze at his former self in the coffin. Just a shell; it was so empty. She wanted back the man who flowed with life.
Uncle Jim sat next to Clara in the front row. He was the stalwart protectorate—every family had one. The kind and generous person who always wore a cardigan sweater and was always willing to listen and offer help, the person who was always there at the right moment.
He had always been there for Bob and Clara. Whenever something happened, Uncle Jim was there.
"You know, Clara," Uncle Jim began, his voice calm and soft sounding. "Bob always had a flair for the way-out sort of thing, didn't he?"
Uncle Jim remembered out loud how Bob could always get excited about anything concerning space travel or other scientific issues.
Clara's eyes began to glass over again as she listened to the words.
Uncle Jim's pleasant, reminiscing thoughts were interrupted when a well-built man in a black suit caught her attention. The man was obviously nervous for some reason, his eyes darting back and forth as if looking to see if he was being observed.
BOB STROLLED IN mental luxury on the Martian surface, kicking and shuffling his feet in the red soil. He forgot about the corporate joker in the dome and his designs on how rich he was going to become. Bob had higher priorities to think about. He couldn't care an ounce whether the suit would make the company a zillion dollars. He learned a long time ago that money was not the most important thing in life.
He was relishing every moment of being on Mars. It was hard to imagine getting paid to live your ultimate desire and fantasy. Dreams did come true. He had finally made it! It had taken him forty-two years but he had made it to Mars, to his dream of actually stepping on the surface of this red, magnificent planet.
Ever since he was a child, Bob knew that he belonged out here. He was the child that wanted the telescope for Christmas instead of the baseball glove. He never had the same interest as all the other guys. He was the kid at school who was interested in astronomy instead of football, baseball or fast cars.
CLARA TOOK A MOMENT before she answered, wiping a couple of wayward strands of hair from her face.
"He would have described it differently, he would have said that he was born before his time," she said smiling for a brief moment. "He was so involved with his love for science fiction that I think it...possessed him to the end."
"How so Clara?" Uncle Jim asked keeping an eye on the man who'd entered. Uncle Jim knew just about everyone. But this man, he did not recognize and there was something odd about the way he was acting.
Clara's words were slow and difficult to come out. "The doctors told me in the beginning that the heart attack and internal injuries from the auto accident would be fatal and that it was just a matter of time. There was just too much damage. He was in a coma most of the time, but...toward the end," Clara paused.
"What?" Uncle Jim asked. "What happened?"
"It was how he said it. It was so clear and concise, as if he was actually coherent and everything he said was the truth."
EVEN AS BOB got older it hadn't been easy. He'd had to go to work instead of college in order to help out his mom, because his dad was gone. He'd kept up with his hobby, though, in what little spare time he had. He'd watched videos, studied space research and kept up with the technological advances.
But his mom became very ill, and he could barely manage taking care of her. He hired a part time home caregiver to help out during the day. That was Clara, who, he would later marry.
After his mom passed away, he began to look for ways to get into space and to Mars. The military was too rigid for what he wanted to do. He didn't have the education to be in demand by one of the big corporate conglomerates because he hadn't gone on to higher education. So he hopped around from job to job trying to find his "in."
After so much disappointment, he lost confidence and was about to give up all hope of accomplishing his dream. Time to get realistic, settle down to life on Earth. It was at this point of his life that he married Clara. Clara renewed his hopes and desires and gave him confidence.
UNCLE JIM GENTLY grasped Clara's hand as he heard the pain in her voice. He tried to offer some reassurance to her as he watched the stranger kneel at the coffin and close his eyes.
"Clara, you don't have to tell me."
"I don't have to but I need to, Uncle Jim. Bob went on and on about how he had finally made it to Mars! I know it sounds crazy for Christ's sake, but it's true, Uncle Jim."
Uncle Jim listened intently to Clara as he continued to watch the stranger. He saw the stranger's lips moving. He assumed he was saying some kind of prayer. He grasped Clara's hand and stroked it reassuringly.
WITH RENEWED VIGOR, Bob continued his search to find a way to get to Mars. With persistence and perseverance he eventually found one. A new company called Environsuit Corporation, which designed environmental suits, was looking for a regular type of guy to advertise their new line of equipment.
Space travel was still too expensive for the average citizen on a regular basis, but it was getting more popular by the month and companies were sprouting up everyday to take advantage of the coming of the new market. They searched for cheaper ways to do things in order to make it more affordable. Everyone was going to get his or her cut by getting there first before anyone else, space travel for the average person; vacations on Mars, cruises through the solar system.
All Bob wanted to do was just get there once, just once before he died Earth-bound.
"TAKE IT EASY, Clara, he must have been delirious. Bob wouldn't even go on the mildest of roller coasters. In fact, I remember a story where he got sick on a teacup ride if I remember right."
Uncle Jim chuckled a bit as he ended the statement. It caused Clara to smile, momentarily. Clara glanced at the casket, looked at her hands in her lap, then continued.
"He described everything so vividly that he even had me convinced he was really there. The training he had undergone, the suit he was wearing, what the displays read and what the landscape was like and..." Clara's voice continued on but Uncle Jim was drawn to the man in the black suit whom he did not know. The man stood up and began to walk from the casket, obviously heading for the exit.
THE WAY BOB found the right door was by sheer luck. It was mainly because he knew George Nicholson. George worked for Environsuit Corporation. Bob knew him from the local bar that he frequented. Now George was a good old boy, he was the kind of guy that would stop when you got a flat tire when everyone else was passing you by at light speed.
However he had a bad habit of drinking a little too much sometimes and flirting with the women in the bar. All in all he was harmless most of the time. Well, one night things went a little too far and George's wife found out about it. She didn't find it so "harmless."
Bob stepped in as a kind of character witness; he lied for George and got things patched up with his wife. George was eternally grateful and he swore he owed Bob a large favor.
When Bob heard about the advertisement gimmick for their new lightweight, inexpensive and, of course, ultra safe off-planet suit, you can bet it didn't take five minutes before he had George on the phone reminding him about that evening and the favor that he owed him. With George's position and influence, Bob got the job.
Environsuit Corporation was not taking any chances. Their suit may have been for the average guy, but they were going to make absolutely sure that this average guy would be in excellent physical health. There was a lot of conditioning and training Bob had to go through. It was a long hard nine months of preparation, with exercise, simulators, test flights and the classroom work. Those nine months were full of a lot of fifteen to eighteen hour days.
Bob told Clara that he was working a new job and he had to put in the extra hours to move up quickly in the organization. He also mentioned that a lot of traveling would be involved. He hated lying, but he couldn't tell her the truth. Not yet. There were obvious risks involved and as much as he loved her, Clara would be extremely nervous and might even try to talk him out of it.
Bob wasn't sure what was tougher—the training, the wait to the launch date, or trying not to tell Clara about the whole affair. But that was all behind him now. All that mattered was that he was here, on Mars.
Part of the agility test was to ensure maximum flexibility and use of limbs. He started with small strides slowly increasing in tempo and in length. Soon he was moving at a pretty good clip along the surface. The terrain was pretty rough so he had to be careful. The view was fabulous!
As he strolled along, he was in awe over the landscape of the red planet. How right they were when they named this planet. The red soil and the mountains were remarkable. He wished Clara could be here to see it.
"HE DESCRIBED IT right down to the weightless feeling as he moved around," Clara's voice continued. "The soil and dust that kicked up, the landscape covered with its odd-shaped rocks. God, even I could almost picture it in my mind as he described it." Clara closed her eyes to compose herself.
Uncle Jim now felt drawn to this strange visitor and his reason for being here.
"Clara, I'm sorry to interrupt you, but I need to use the men's room. I'll be right back, okay, dear?"
"Okay, Uncle Jim."
Uncle Jim headed toward the bathrooms but did not have to use them. He placed himself where his path would cross with the stranger who interested him. The man approached.
"Excuse me, sir," Uncle Jim said. The man appeared startled.
"My name is Jim Carnanah. Most know me as Uncle Jim. I don't recognize you...are you a friend of Bob's?"
The man spoke slowly. "Yes. We worked on a project together. I have come to pay my respects, and to meet...you."
"Me?" Uncle Jim asked.
"Bob told me that you were the person to see if something...went wrong," the man said nervously as he looked side to side.
"What do you mean if something went wrong?"
"Bob wanted me to tell you...it was what he wanted." The man paused. "I'm sorry, I must leave. If I were seen talking to you it could...well it would not be a good thing. It has been a pleasure meeting you," he said as he grasped Uncle Jim's hand and shook it.
The man turned and left before Uncle Jim could say anything, but he had deposited a card in Uncle Jim's hand when he had shaken it.
THE VOICE IN Bob's headset brought him back from his daydreaming. The sense of urgency, the shouting...report back...seismic activity...meteor impact...it was too late. The surface gave way under his weight. He was falling down the side of the embankment, rolling over and over. His vision blurred from the cartwheeling effect. He tried to recover but his momentum was carrying him uncontrollably down, farther and farther.
His suit scraped the rocks and soil, but it was still maintaining a safe environment. How much could it take? He continued rolling, trying to grab onto anything to obtain a hold to slow down or possibly stop. Finally, he found something to grab, a small outcropping of stone. He slowed and finally stopped, breathing a sigh of relief.
It was then that the display lit up. "Environment Breach." The temperature dropped quickly and he became very still, only wanting to sleep.
When help finally arrived he remembered being carried away and catching bits and pieces of conversations. Irreparable damage, cellular decay, only a matter of time before he will be in a coma, too late to save him by the time they get him back to Earth.
UNCLE JIM SUBCONSCIOUSLY slipped the card into his jacket pocket and quickly returned to Clara. He knew she needed him by her side. He would try to figure out this mysterious person later.
Remembering where she had left off in the story, Uncle Jim sat down and commented to her. "Sounds like he had a hell of a trip." Uncle Jim said, smiling as Clara looked at his face.
"But it wasn't real?" Clara said pleadingly.
"Was it? Hell, I don't know? Who knows? If that was what he always wanted, at least he got to experience it or think he did. I'm happy for him and you should be, too, Clara."
Clara thought for a moment. A look of relief slowly washed over her face. "I am happy for him, Uncle Jim. Very happy," she said as fresh tears rolled down her face.
Uncle Jim removed his handkerchief from his pocket and handed it to Clara. The card that he had thrust into his pocket fell out onto the floor. He picked it up, the print facing him. Two words stood out in bold letters: Environsuit Corporation. Underneath the company name and in smaller print: Making space affordable for all.
THE END
As always folks—please visit my webpage at www.tonyruggiero.com as well as my page on Facebook and Myspace.
Take care & Best Wishes
Tony