Intermezzo 7

intermezzo 7

One arc closing, another waits on a park bench. Time for tea, I reckon. And a little salmon.

[CSN \\ Just a Song Before I Go]

Intermezzo    Madness and the Desperate Flight of aquaTarkus

Part VII: Final Flight

Dreams die when solutions and outcomes are reduced to the inevitable.

+++++

Thunderstorms lined the southern horizon, vast arcs of lightning crossed the night sky, and Henry Taggart looked up at Orion, gauging the distance between the advancing clouds and Rigel. The big island was about a hundred and twenty miles due south, Maui about seventy miles ahead and Honolulu another hundred or so miles beyond that, which meant keeping Molokai’s windward shore to windward all day tomorrow. The hurricane was bleeding energy fast now and would – probably – be down to tropical depression force by morning, but whatever force remained in the storm would hit Honolulu about the same time aquaTarkus arrived off Diamond Head, and already the seas were rough.

‘So,’ he asked the night, ‘what are my options?’

Despite appearances, there are really precious few facilities for visiting sailboats in Hawaii, with almost every facility located in and around Honolulu, on the island of O’ahu. There are almost no ‘hurricane holes’ in the islands – save for the Pearl Harbor region – which explains why the Japanese didn’t even try to invade in 1941. Invasion by any means other than air is an extremely hard nut to crack, and this dearth of anchorages also explains the how and the why it took so long for European colonies to take hold in the islands.

So Henry Taggart faced the same difficult choice: push on to Honolulu and hope the storm kept away long enough to allow a relatively mild weather window during their approach, or to veer off to the north into colder air, and wait for the storm’s passage. ‘But what if the storm gains strength and turns to the north?’ He knew if that happened that they’d be in serious trouble – and that help would be even further away.

Then Sumner Bacon came up to the wheel, with the latest Coast Guard weather-fax map in hand.

“Well,” Henry sighed, “what’s the verdict?”

“My guess is that the storm gets stronger and turns north,” the cop said. “Lots of talk about steering currents and a dip in the jet stream.”

“Okay, so that makes the decision easy,” Henry muttered. “We skirt Maui and Molokai as close as we can, stay in their wind shadow, and hope for the best as we approach Diamond Head.”

“That Ocean Passages book says pretty much the same thing,” Bacon added. “What’s the wind speed now?”

“Twenty two right now, but gusts to thirty in the last hour. It ought to be rough as pig snot by morning.”

“Pig snot? Where do you guys come up with all this stuff?”

“You make it through a couple storms and you’ll know.”

“Gee, thanks –– that sounds encouraging,” Bacon said, a little warily as he looked at lightning along the southern horizon.

Taggart grumbled something unintelligible as he moved waypoints on the chartplotter’s screen, changing their heading about ten degrees to port. “How are things down below?” he asked.

“Deb and the baby are asleep; the rocket scientist is on the computer again.”

“What’s he doing now?”

“Beats me. I saw a graph and a bunch intersecting parabolas, if that means anything to you.”

“Nope,” Taggart said. “Take the helm for a minute, I’m gonna check the bilge.” Which was, Bacon knew, what Taggart said when he was going below to check on Deb and the baby. So Henry made his way carefully down the companionway and stepped down into the aft cabin – only to find Deb and Brendan both wide awake – and playing with a rather large toddler on the bunk. The “baby” had grown at least a foot and a half over the course of the voyage, and she now weighed too much for Deb to comfortably pick up. And now, to Henry’s dismay, the “baby” was talking.

“Have you ever seen anything like this?” Deb asked Henry as he came into her stateroom.

Brendan had a notebook computer open and was showing the baby a problem in calculus, and Henry watched as the infant entered numbers onscreen, immediately adjusting the parabola to solve for the missing variable – and even Brendan seemed impressed by her accomplishment. “That’s very good,” Brendan told her, smiling.

“Why do you smile?” the infant asked. 

“Because you make me happy,” Brendan said, and then the little girl turned to Henry.

“Hello, Father.”

Taggart seemed to recoil under the weight of the girl’s words and he staggered back a step or two. “Father?” he replied. “What makes you say that?”

The baby turned to Debra then. “She is the mother,” she said, and then, as she turned back to Taggart, she added: “and you are the father.”

Not “my father,” but “the father,” and the difference wasn’t lost on Henry – or on Debra. 

But Henry leaned into her words, thinking what all this might mean. “So, who is he?” Henry asked, pointing at Brendan.

“Brendan is a teacher and a student. I have been teaching him for years, and now he is teaching me.”

“I see,” Henry said, though clearly he didn’t. “So tell me…do you have a name?”

The question seemed to puzzle the girl, then she brightened: “Dana. You may call me Dana.”

“Okay – Dana. Can you tell me why you are here?”

“No.”

“Do you know why you are here?”

“Of course.”

“But you can’t tell me? Is that correct?”

“Yes, that is correct.”

“Well, ain’t that ducky,” Henry muttered.

“Father?”

“Yes, Dana?”

“The weather is dissipating. You needn’t worry.”

“How do you know that?”

“I know.”

Henry saw Deb’s sat-phone and put two and two together, so he left it at that. “Deb? I’m going to make a sammie. Want something while I’m in the galley?”

“I’ll come with you,” Deb said, clearly as rattled as he was by this turn of events. Even Daisy-Jane seemed to realize something had unsettled everyone.

Henry pulled out a loaf of bread, then some mayo, sliced chicken and tomatoes and he made four sandwiches, passing one up to Sumner and two over to Deb, and after she handed one to Brendan she joined him over the galley sink.

“So, mom and dad. That’s quite a development, don’t you think?” Debra said.

“I didn’t see that one coming,” he sighed. “What do you think she means about the kid and being his teacher?”

Deb shrugged. “First time she’s mentioned that. No clue,” she said, taking a bite out of her sandwich. “Have you been worried about the weather?” she added.

“A little. The hurricane that formed south of Cabo San Lucas has been closing on the islands for a couple of days now. We’re going to get there at about the same time.”

“Geez…why didn’t you say something?”

“No need to worry you ‘til I know more. Now I know more.”

“Assuming she’s right, you mean?” 

“The sat-phone is out. Did you call someone?” he asked.

“No, I was checking the batteries after Brendan made a call.”

“Oh? Well then, I guess that means two things. She can read minds and she’s in touch with someone who knows one helluva lot about weather forecasting.”

“Or maybe it has something to do with what she and Brendan are doing on the computer.”

“What have they been doing, Deb?”

“As far as I can tell, a problem in differential calculus.”

“Like…maybe decay rates in an air mass?”

“Maybe,” Deb sighed. “You don’t think…?”

“I don’t know what to think right now, Deb. That – “baby” – in there should be sucking down formula straight out of a baby bottle, not doing trig and calculus on a fucking PC,” Henry growled. “If she asks for a goddamn martini with lunch, just tell her no, and that her father said so,” he grumbled as he stomped up the companionway steps into the cockpit.

Deb smiled as he walked off, then she shook her head. “A martini doesn’t sound half bad, does it Daisy?” she asked her old friend.

Daisy-Jane looked at Deb with soft, soulful eyes, yet she was most worried about Henry now. Something was very wrong…and she could feel it now. But so could he, and that had hurt most of all. She would miss him very much, but she hoped he’d recognize her when the time came.

+++++

They were abeam Kahului when Taggart saw the alarm on the radar toggle and fire off a 36 mile intrusion alarm. The target was at the end of the radar’s effective range, but given the sea state the target had to be fairly large and therefore capable of producing strong returns. Using the cursor, he set up both bearing and range marker lines and started to keep an eye on the target, immediately noting the vessel was on an intercept course and that the closest point of approach was about ninety minutes out. Whoever it was, they were hauling ass and going to take a real beating.

The wind speed had kicked it up a notch – though it had been holding in the low thirty-knot range most of the morning. Now peak gusts were in the low-40s, and wave height had picked up, too, with a good guess of 5 to 8 footers rolling beam-on under the keel. He’d reefed the main again after sunrise, then rolled up the genoa entirely, deciding to ride with the staysail for now. They were still sailing along decently enough, and with most of the swell coming in on the port quarter the ride down below wasn’t too hideous. Deb and Brendan had both come up for air a couple of times, but Dana seemed totally unconcerned – about anything.

Maui was too far away to see, even under perfect viewing conditions, but when Henry ran the range out to 72 miles he could just pick up Pu’u Kukui’s 1700 meter summit. He noted the peak’s bearing on his ChartKit and then penciled in the line, noting with satisfaction that his DR plot wasn’t off by much, then his eyes went to the radar target still closing on their track. He pulled his Steiner binoculars out of their cubby and sighted along the internal bearing line, and a couple of times he thought he could just make out the fly-bridge of a large sport fisher – and that could only mean one thing. Someone had chartered a boat to come out and see who was onboard, and as far as Taggart was concerned that someone had to be Ted Sorensen.

“Sumner, would you go ask Deb to come up here?”

The cop looked at Taggart then at the companionway, afraid of moving in this ragged seaway and not at all wanting to spend even a millisecond down below, but he took a deep breath and darted below, returning to the cockpit about ten seconds after he left. “She’s on her way,” Bacon sighed, taking a deep breath and hanging onto the main winch as he slammed down onto the cockpit seat. “I think Einstein is puking his guts out in the head, just in case you happen to be wondering what that smell is.”

“Look at the horizon,” Henry sighed, “and try not to think about it.”

Bacon growled a little at that. “First time on a goddam boat and it has to be a sailboat,” he shuddered – then he bolted for the windward rail and started feeding the fish. Deb came up the companionway just then – and when their eyes met she noted Taggart’s knowing grin and twinkling eyes.

“A stereo puke-fest,” she sighed. “My-oh-my. You’d think after two weeks…”

“Oh…cram it up your ass,” Bacon growled – just as another convulsive heave wracked his frame, this eruption capped off by a raging, two alarm fart.

Which only made Taggart laugh. Then Deb threw in her lot and started laughing.

Bacon struggled to crawl back into the cockpit, his face now almost pea green.

“Uh, Sumner,” Henry said politely, “you got a big chunk in the left mustache. Better wipe it off…”

And that was enough to send the cop back to the rail, and Taggart slapped his knee at this little victory.

“Be nice, Henry,” Deb sighed.

“Yeah Henry,” Bacon snarled. “Be nice.”

“I’ll try. Deb,” Henry said as he handed over the Steiners to Deb, “site along one-seven-zero and tell me what you see?”

“What am I looking for?”

“Your father.”

“What?” she said – as she took the glasses from his hand. “Okay, I see a boat, a pretty big fishing boat…and a young girl is barfing – over the rail.”

“Geez,” Henry sighed, “it must be catching.”

Sumner blew another load over the rail, but as he was on the windward rail this load of puke sprayed right back in his face – which caused him to let slip another load.

“Try the leeward rail, would you, Slick?” Taggart moaned, wiping a few big chunks off his legs.

“There’s a guy next to a woman now,” Debra said.

“Don’t tell me. He’s puking too…”

“No, this guy just looks pissed. Wait, there are at least two more men out there, maybe a third woman, too.”

“Anyone happen to be fishing?” Henry asked.

“Nope. Oh, wait, someone else is barfing now.”

“Interesting. Landlubbers.” Henry sighed as he looked down at the plotter, because he had to think fast now. If he turned and ran with the wind the fishing boat would have to push hard to make an intercept during daylight, but they also might give up and turn back. But…if Sorensen wasn’t on the boat, where was the threat? Was there any danger now? If there wasn’t, maybe he needed to turn and facilitate an intercept. “Are they looking at us?”

“Yes, I think so.”

Taggart changed course again, pointing into the wind a bit more – which also increased the ship’s motion – and Brendan came darting up the companionway and leapt to the – windward – rail, getting there just in time to blow beets into a nasty gust – and everyone got pelted with the results.

Henry shook his head. “Hey, Einstein, try puking with the wind at your back next time.”

Brendan lurched across the cockpit and joined the cop at the leeward rail, both of them hanging on for dear life while they dry-heaved for the next half hour. “Gee, this sure is fun,” Henry said as he turned into the wind another few degrees, trying to find the groove to cut between swells and waves.

“You’re a real prick, Taggart!” Bacon growled as he lurched back to his seat in the cockpit.

Taggart stood at the wheel and he could see the sport-fisher clearly now, and he noted they were taking a real beating, too. The wind and the waves were coming in on the boat’s starboard quarter so she was wallowing between the wave-tops, and the powerboat’s diesel exhaust wasn’t being blown clear of the cockpit. Everyone standing out there was getting a double jolt of motion and exhaust induced nausea, but the trip back to port would be even more brutal for them.

When the other boat was about a quarter mile off Taggart turned on their motor and turned to run parallel with the other boat, furling all sail as he steadied on their new course, and about then Brendan chimed in: “That’s Harry Callahan,” he said, sounding almost grateful to see a familiar face.

“What’s a Harry Callahan?” Taggart said.

“He’s a cop, and he knows all about the spheres. I think I see my father, too.”

Henry looked at Debra, and they shared a little ‘Eureka!’ moment. “Do you recognize any other people out there?” Henry asked Brendan.

“No sir, I sure don’t.”

“Which one is Callahan?” Henry asked.

“The tall, skinny guy.”

And just then Callahan picked up a hailer and called out to them: “Stay off the radio,” Callahan said via the loud-hailer. “Brendan, you and Sumner prepare to come over here, and Mr. Taggart, please bring Dana with you.”

Debra looked at Brendan just then. “Brendan? Did you call this man on the sat-phone?”

“No. He called me.”

“Did you tell him about Dana?”

“No.”

Deb looked at Henry and shrugged. “I’m not sure I like this,” she sighed.

“You can trust Harry,” Brendan said. “He knows everything.”

“Everything, huh,” Henry said. “Well then, ask him how we’re supposed to get a baby from this boat to their’s – in these seas?”

Deb came close then, and she still looked worried: “Why no radios?” she asked Henry.

Henry thought about that for a moment, but he didn’t like the obvious conclusion he reached: “Someone’s listening – for us, which means someone is waiting for us in Honolulu. And…this Callahan has apparently decided to let you finish by yourself.”

Debra had always seemed taken aback by the idea of single-handed sailing, but now here she was, confronted by…this storm…

“Henry, I can’t do it.”

“Deb, how many times are you going to make me say it? I and can’t are the two most overused words in the world.”

“On a clear day, maybe I could, Henry. But in this weather?”

“Just hold on, Deb. No jumping to conclusions just yet, okay?”

The other boat was getting close now, and Henry could see it was a fairly new sixty five foot Pacemaker, a robust, well made boat strong enough to handle these seas, and he could also see that there were a bunch of people standing by to help with the transfer. As the other boat came alongside she turned beam to the seas, creating a little calm area in her lee – and to Henry’s surprise a teenaged girl jumped across to aquaTarkus, followed by a man about Henry’s age. ‘Her father?’ Taggart sighed to himself.

The the cop, this Callahan fellow, stood by the rail – waiting – and Henry could see the cop had one good leg, the other an elaborate stainless steel contraption that didn’t seem to be holding him back any. “Okay!” Callahan shouted as he tossed a line across. “Brendan! Come on!”

Brendan hopped across, then Sumner Bacon followed, leaving Henry behind at the wheel – suddenly feeling very conflicted. “Who are you?” he asked the two newcomers.

“Oh. Sorry. Ralph Richardson, and this is my daughter. Inspector Callahan will explain everything, but you need to get Dana and be on your way.”

“What’s the rush?” Taggart asked – more than a little suspiciously.

“Sorensen is waiting in Honolulu, but I suspect as soon as the skies clear just a little they’ll have an aircraft up and headed this way.”

“And you know all this how?”

“Again, Mr. Taggart, Callahan will explain everything.”

“Who’s that with Brendan,” Henry asked.

“His parents,” Richardson sighed, turning to face Deb. “Debra, would you be so kind as to get Dana, please? They need to head in – now.”

She nodded and went below, returning a moment later with the girl – for that was indeed what she now. Not quite a teenager – yet – but well on her way, and Taggart was stunned by how much she’d changed in not quite twenty days…let alone the last twenty hours.

And Richardson was equally thunderstruck. “That’s…Dana?” he asked, and Deb nodded.

“I think she grew about a foot overnight,” she added.

Henry took her hand then, and Dana turned to face him. “I’m ready, Father.”

And when Richardson heard that he seemed to grow pale, then he looked on in stunned silence as Henry picked her up and leapt across to Callahan. Dana waved at Debra from the other boat, and Henry saw a tear or two run down her face.

“Bye-bye, Mommy,” she whispered.

“You two better get below, now,” the cop said, and moments later everyone was sitting in the saloon toweling off as the powerboat’s captain set a return course for Maui.

“Anyone care to tell me what’s going on?” Henry asked – as Dana climbed up on his knee.

“Daddy,” she said, “you forgot to say goodbye to Daisy-Jane.”

Henry turned and saw the pup standing on the aft deck, staring at him as he pulled away. He raised a hand and waved, and his heart sank when she stood with her hands on the rail and barked after him.

“It’s okay, Father. She told me to tell you to look for her. She’ll be there when you need her.”

Maybe it was the way she spoke. Maybe it was the look of pure love in her eyes, but whatever it was he believed her.

“Don’t cry, Daddy. She knows you love her.”

He nodded once, then he turned to the peg-legged cop, this Callahan. “So. What’s up, Doc…?” he asked, yet in his mind’s eye he saw a yellow dog on a park bench – waiting for him as the sun started to set.

Next up: The Eighty-eighth Key, Chapter 64

© 2016-22 adrian leverkühn | abw | and as always, thanks for stopping by for a look around the memory warehouse…[but wait, there’s more…so how about a word or two on our sources: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgments until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need before work is finalized. Yet with current circumstances waiting to list said sources might not be the best way to proceed, and this listing will grow over time – until the story is complete. To begin, the ‘primary source’ material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two seminal Hollywood ‘cop’ films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of the screenplay for The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s brilliant screenplay. Steve McQueen’s grin was never trade-marked, though perhaps it should have been. John Milius (Red Dawn) penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’/vigilante storyline derives from characters and plot elements originally found in that rich screenplay, as does the Captain McKay character. The Jennifer Spencer/Threlkis crime family storyline was first introduced in Sudden Impact, screenplay by Joseph Stinson, original story by Earl Smith and Charles Pierce. The Samantha Walker television reporter is found in The Dead Pool, screenplay by Steve Sharon, story by Steve Sharon, Durk Pearson, and Sandy Shaw. I have to credit the Jim Parish, M.D., character first seen in the Vietnam segments to John A. Parrish, M.D., author of the most fascinating account of an American physician’s tour of duty in Vietnam – and as found in his autobiographical 12, 20, and 5: A Doctor’s Year in Vietnam, a book worth noting as one of the most stirring accounts of modern warfare I’ve ever read (think Richard Hooker’s M*A*S*H, only featuring a blazing sense of irony conjoined within a searing non-fiction narrative). Denton Cooley, M.D. founded the Texas Heart Institute, as mentioned. Of course, James Clavell’s Shōgun forms a principle backdrop in later chapters. The teahouse and hotel of spires in Ch. 42 is a product of the imagination; so-sorry. The UH-1Y image used from Pt VI on taken by Jodson Graves. The snippets of lyrics from Lucy in the Sky are publicly available as ‘open-sourced.’ Many of the other figures in this story derive from characters developed within the works cited above, but keep in mind that, as always, the rest of this story is in all other respects a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing cinematic-historical fabric. Using the established characters referenced above, as well as the few new characters I’ve managed to come up with here and there, I hoped to create something new – perhaps a running commentary on the times we’ve shared with these fictional characters? And the standard disclaimer also here applies: the central characters in this tale should not be mistaken for persons living or dead. This was, in other words, just a little walk down a road more or less imagined, and nothing more than that should be inferred. I’d be remiss not to mention Clint Eastwood’s Harry Callahan, and Steve McQueen’s Frank Bullitt. Talk about the roles of a lifetime…and what a gift.]

[David Gilmour \\ Metallic Spheres]

Thanks to DB for this one. Enjoy.

Intermezzo 6

intermezzo 6 7

Every crossing hits the doldrums.

[Alan Parsons \\ Siren Song]

Intermezzo    Madness and the Desperate Flight of aquaTarkus

Part VI: Flight II

The dream comes in numbers, yet the solution still avoids him.

+++++

Taggart watched Geddes whenever he could, but most often when the kid took the wheel and steered. There is a rhythm to the waves that eludes most people, yet this boy seemed to understand the sea, to anticipate her moves, so much so that Taggart considered the kid a natural. If he’d known Geddes at all he’d have understood that the kid was smiling for the first time in his life, that he finally felt alive – yet Taggart alone was most likely to understand. He’d always felt pretty much the same way – whenever he took the wheel and began to vibrate to the ancient rhythm of water flowing over a rudder in a seaway.

The first morning out of LA Debra came up into the sun carrying the little baby, but already Taggart could see something different in this odd little creature’s eyes. There was an innate inquisitiveness deep inside the gaze, an expressiveness he found oddly inhuman at this age, like it was reading his soul, imprinting his deepest secrets. Henry watched it somewhat warily after that, not yet sure what he was dealing with but certain that trouble lurked in those eyes.

They sailed into Avalon Harbor well before noon and refueled at the dock by the old casino while Debra and Geddes ran ashore to get supplies, and while Daisy-Jane dumped a load on the grass – accompanied by a huge sigh of relief. Taggart scanned the sky, saw not a thing to cause any sort of alarm – which only alarmed him more – and then he helped get all the supplies stowed before backing from the fuel dock. Henry then cut under the south side of the island before resuming their westbound course, and he still considered Hawaii the most logical first step.

Debra fed the baby girl – for that was indeed what she was – and Brendan scanned through the LA Times that morning, finding no mention of the UAV episode but breathlessly endless coverage of the robbery and downing of the American 777 over South Central. There was scant coverage of the fracas on the Vincent Thomas Bridge, which he found the most surprising of all the omissions – because he had already figured out that the baby was the keystone holding the entire chain of events in place. The way Geddes now saw things, time could be divided between the period before and after the baby’s arrival on earth – because the baby was the fundamental shift. She was the plan. He still wasn’t sure who’s plan she was a part of, but that was a trivial concern at this point. Time had been reset – of that much he was sure.

Debra warmed formula and prepared a bottle, and all the while Geddes and Bacon took turns holding the little girl in their laps, cradling her close to keep her out of the wind and the sun. And then, two hours after aquaTarkus left Avalon the first orca appeared, and within an hour or so a half dozen more had joined them swimming just ahead, like sentinels out ahead of their legion, and at one point Geddes was sure he’d seen a fifty meter long white oblate form moving along about a hundred feet beneath the keel. He’d started to say something to Henry but then the oblate disappeared and he thought better of it. 

Debra took the spud down below and the two of them napped, but Geddes saw the oblate again and he stepped closer to Henry. “There’s something down there following us,” Brendan said, his reedy voice coming across in hushed conspiratorial sighs.

But Henry had only nodded. “It showed up after the orca arrived. They’re following us.”

“Do you see a correlation?”

Taggart nodded, but he didn’t explain his thinking. “You ready to steer again?”

“Yes, of course,” Geddes said, his demeanor brightening in an instant.

“Swell. Uh, Sumner, you know anything about single sideband radio?”

“Uh…no, not really.”

“Okay…well…it’s time for your first lesson. It will be on how to download GRIB files and construct a 72 hour weather forecast.”

“A what file?”

Taggart groaned. “Never mind. Let’s go down to the chart table…”

Yet Taggart first noted that day that the kid could steer for hours on end, and the boy’s mind didn’t wander, either. If he told Brendan to hold two-seven-zero on the compass that’s exactly what the kid did, for hour after hour and with not a single complaint voiced. Yet, at one point Taggart came up to the kid and he found they boy’s eyes locked on a cloud. 

“See something?” Taggart asked, now looking at the cloud suspiciously.

“Hm-m, oh…no. I was just reading something.”

“Reading something? In a cloud?”

“Yes. Tell me, Henry. Do you believe in God?”

“Excuse me, but where’d that come from?”

“Oh, I was just reading something…”

“Up there in that cloud?”

“Yes, of course.”

“Okee-doke.”

“And, well, it seems to me that most religious texts have set up a patriarchal view of our relationship to animals…”

“To…animals? Well, that seems to go with the territory, don’t you think?”

“What do you mean?”

“Well, gee, don’t you think religions tend to be pretty paternalistic?”

“Ah, yes, I see what you mean, but I don’t eat meat. Never have. It seems cruel to me, yet most religions have no prohibitions against eating animal flesh. Then I read that these same religions don’t regard animals as sentient, which seems to mean that religions don’t see animals as having feelings like love or that they cannot experience friendship.”

“Just curious, Brendan, but what do you eat?”

“Avocados, for the most part.”

“And are you pretty sure avocados don’t experience love or friendship?”

That seemed to stump the kid for a moment. “Avocados don’t have a brain, so how could they?”

“Hey, don’t ask me, ask a fruitarian.”

“A what?”

“That, Brendan, is someone who only eats fruit. And some fruitarians hold that even fruit have feelings.”

Brendan’s eyes went wide. “Seriously?”

Taggart nodded his head. “You could get real hungry real fast if you hold to extreme points of view.”

“So do you think that eating an animal isn’t cruel?”

“I don’t know, but I’ll ask the next cheeseburger I run across.”

“That’s a specious argument.”

“Not if you’re a cheeseburger,” Taggart sighed. “But tell me…what if it could be demonstrated that avocados have feelings. What would you do?”

“I don’t know,” Geddes said, now completely flummoxed.

“Really? You’d choose death by starvation over eating the avocado?”

“Probably not.”

“Okay, so what about the Inuit people of the arctic north. There’s no ready food supply but whales…”

“But that’s not true. They can go to a store, or even…”

“Brendan, there were no stores until about fifty years ago, so try again. Their choice was simple; either eat meat or starve to death. What should they have done?”

“That doesn’t seem right.”

“Okay. So, if I hear you correctly, you shouldn’t eat something that has the capacity to feel emotions.”

“Yes. I think that’s correct.”

“So, if you fall overboard, should that shark over there not eat you?”

Brendan turned and looked at a scythe-like dorsal fin slicing through the water about fifty feet off their starboard beam, and he instinctively inched towards the center of the boat. “What is that?” he moaned, now terrified. 

“Tiger shark. About a twelve footer.”

“Isn’t that a man-eater?”

“A spud like you would take him about three bites, so yeah, you could say that.”

“But he’s not sentient.”

“Oh? Are you sure about that? What about the Inuit? Are they not sentient?”

“Well, that seems to be what all these religious texts seem to say.”

“Oh? How do they define humanity?”

“I’d say compassion and empathy are the difference?” Geddes said after he thought about it for a moment.

“So, that Killer Whale over there cannot feel compassion or empathy? Is that what you’re telling me?”

“I think that’s probably so. Yes.”

“You think so? Does that mean you aren’t sure?”

Geddes seemed to hesitate. “Maybe they feel those things for their own offspring, but…”

“But not for us?”

“Yes.”

“Are you sure about that?”

Geddes shrugged. “No. Not really.”

“Well, why don’t we find out,” Taggart sighed as he started for the aft rail. “Come with me,” he added, stopping to engage the autopilot. Once Geddes was with him aft, standing above the swim platform, Taggart looked down into the water then over at the Tiger Shark. “What do you think the orca would do if you were to fall overboard?”

“I don’t know,” Brendan said, his voice now a little tremulous.

“Well, let’s find out,” Taggart said – just before he jumped off the platform and into the sailboat’s wake. 

Geddes watched as the Tiger Shark turned towards the sound of Taggart’s thrashing splash and he turned towards the cockpit: “Help! Man overboard!” he cried, and then he heard Debra and Sumner running up from below. The shark had closed about half the distance when it seemed to explode, then vault into the air; seconds later an orca appeared beside Taggart and then cupped him in what appeared to be a protective embrace. The orca came to the platform and lifted Taggart out of the water, and Henry stepped aboard, wiping sea water from his eyes.

“Any questions?” Taggart sighed as he turned to the orca and waved.

“Did you know it was going to do that?” Geddes cried, clearly exasperated.

“Did I know?” Taggart asked with a shrug. “I dunno. Let’s just say I had faith, and we’ll call it a day.”

“That doesn’t make any sense,” Brendan said, muttering to himself as he walked back to the wheel.

“Well…I guess you could say that about faith in general, Brendan,” Henry said to the boy as he caught the towel Debra tossed his way. “Then again, I could just be full of shit.”

+++++

From the Log of SV aquaTarkus

Saturday, 20 December 2008 local noon by reduction

Lat: 28°40’24.85″N  Lon: 132°51’31.69″W

Winds 030 degrees at 12-15 kts  OAT 52 degrees F; Seas 2-4 feet; Depth: 13k charted SeaTemp 50F

Worked out a noon site today, first time with the sextant since last Vic-Maui race on the Swan. TG for Bowditch. Showed the kid how to shoot a site and reduce using the tables and he took to it like a duck to water. The cop was mystified. The kid also spotted the triangular shaped UAV again, about 0200 last night. Spotted by the craft occulting stars in Cassiopeia; I’d have never caught that. Bright kid but strange as hell, always looking at the sky. The baby is stranger still; she has grown about a foot and is eating solid food now as she has all her teeth. Quite a feat given that she’s ten days old. She seems to me like a passive receptacle, sponging up every word we say, gauging our every emotion. Never seen anything like it, which, given her probable origins sounds about right. Deb thinks the ship is keeping an eye on the baby, but keeping an eye on what? Something has been bothering me all day, namely that we really have no idea who the actors in this drama really are. If the UAV is somehow related to Ted Sorensen then that means what? He had to know the kid would appear on the bridge – but how the hell could that happen – could that even be possible? So, what if the UAV is in fact ‘alien’? That would mean we have another spacefaring civilization playing around down here on earth? And if that’s the case, what is their relationship to the ‘sphere civilization’? Already seeing signs that the Pinks are not on the same page as the Blues and Greens, and they all seem terrified of the Reds. Assuming this is a factional disagreement within the sphere groups, how will they react to another group of real outsiders beginning to meddle in our affairs? I get the feeling about the only way I’ll find any answers to these questions is to get back to Seattle, but then the moment passes. Yet the question remains: what do we do if something happens as we approach Hawaii? If dropping off the grid failed? Then we’re in the deep do-do – without a paddle, and with no place left to run.

+++++

The man-child stood at the aft rail staring down into the water. Looking at the fat oblate forms down there, following – him – just like that shark had. He didn’t know what to think now, not after Taggart and his orca, but he knew the ships were still down there, watching. ‘Watching me watching them, like a perfect infinity mirror…’

The cop was sitting at the wheel, the red from the binnacle casting a ghoulish glow over the cockpit, and Geddes wanted to jump into the blackness and wait to see who came for him first. The orca or another shark, so…faith or darkness. But then, inside the briefest flash of peripheral insight, he saw the other choice, the third option. The white shadows down there, following him. They wouldn’t let him die, wouldn’t let him be eaten alive. They couldn’t. Not now. Why else had they put him on the bridge just before time shuddered to a stop.

Brendan was about to step off the platform when Henry came up from behind and put a hand on his shoulder. “Having a moment?” Taggart sighed, his voice gentle and reassuring.

“They won’t let anything happen to me,” Geddes whispered. “They’re afraid of me, but they won’t let anything happen to me.”

“Who are they, Brendan? Do you know?”

“Of course I do.”

“And?”

“They came from Sagittarius. They sent the signal. But they aren’t alone. And they are afraid.”

The hair on Taggart’s neck stood on end, perhaps because of the way the man-child spoke those words. So certain, like the certainty of numbers. Somehow the kid had worked it out, and now he had the answer to one question. Ted Sorensen wouldn’t be waiting for them in Hawaii. “Do you know why they’re here?” Taggart asked.

“I’m not sure. At first I thought the child interested them most of all.”

“But not now?”

“No, not now. Not after you jumped in the water.”

“What does that mean?”

“I think they’re interested in you, Mr. Taggart. You, most of all.”

Taggart shook his head. “That doesn’t make sense. Why me?”

“I’m not sure yet.”

“Okay. Well, maybe you could let me know when you are?”

“I’ll be dead before that happens.”

“Excuse me?”

“I’ll be dead next week, at least that’s what I worked out. Probably next Wednesday.”

“Indeed. And how is this going to come about, if you don’t mind my asking?”

“I think you’re going to kill me,” the man-child sighed.

© 2016-22 adrian leverkühn | abw | and as always, thanks for stopping by for a look around the memory warehouse…[but wait, there’s more…so how about a word or two on our sources: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgments until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need before work is finalized. Yet with current circumstances waiting to list said sources might not be the best way to proceed, and this listing will grow over time – until the story is complete. To begin, the ‘primary source’ material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two seminal Hollywood ‘cop’ films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of the screenplay for The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s brilliant screenplay. Steve McQueen’s grin was never trade-marked, though perhaps it should have been. John Milius (Red Dawn) penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’/vigilante storyline derives from characters and plot elements originally found in that rich screenplay, as does the Captain McKay character. The Jennifer Spencer/Threlkis crime family storyline was first introduced in Sudden Impact, screenplay by Joseph Stinson, original story by Earl Smith and Charles Pierce. The Samantha Walker television reporter is found in The Dead Pool, screenplay by Steve Sharon, story by Steve Sharon, Durk Pearson, and Sandy Shaw. I have to credit the Jim Parish, M.D., character first seen in the Vietnam segments to John A. Parrish, M.D., author of the most fascinating account of an American physician’s tour of duty in Vietnam – and as found in his autobiographical 12, 20, and 5: A Doctor’s Year in Vietnam, a book worth noting as one of the most stirring accounts of modern warfare I’ve ever read (think Richard Hooker’s M*A*S*H, only featuring a blazing sense of irony conjoined within a searing non-fiction narrative). Denton Cooley, M.D. founded the Texas Heart Institute, as mentioned. Of course, James Clavell’s Shōgun forms a principle backdrop in later chapters. The teahouse and hotel of spires in Ch. 42 is a product of the imagination; so-sorry. The UH-1Y image used from Pt VI on taken by Jodson Graves. The snippets of lyrics from Lucy in the Sky are publicly available as ‘open-sourced.’ Many of the other figures in this story derive from characters developed within the works cited above, but keep in mind that, as always, the rest of this story is in all other respects a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing cinematic-historical fabric. Using the established characters referenced above, as well as the few new characters I’ve managed to come up with here and there, I hoped to create something new – perhaps a running commentary on the times we’ve shared with these fictional characters? And the standard disclaimer also here applies: the central characters in this tale should not be mistaken for persons living or dead. This was, in other words, just a little walk down a road more or less imagined, and nothing more than that should be inferred. I’d be remiss not to mention Clint Eastwood’s Harry Callahan, and Steve McQueen’s Frank Bullitt. Talk about the roles of a lifetime…and what a gift.]

[Mark Tiemens \\ Hold On Blue Eyes]

Intermezzo 5

intermezzo 5 implosion

Visitors and old friends return.

[Watching and Waiting \\ The Moody Blues]

Intermezzo    Madness and the Desperate Flight of aquaTarkus

Part V: Implosion

His dreams came in numbers, only now the dream never relented.

+++++

He found driving uncomfortable, a dizzying rush of kaleidoscopic information he had trouble sorting through. A semi passed his rental and the space around the tractor filled with equations: mass and velocity vectors flowed into linear momentum calculations and as he passed a school bus his mind reeled as dozens of interacting data sets assaulted his senses. He squinted and looked away, trying to staunch the flow in information, but it was useless now…

Because even as he tried to close his eyes to the world crowding in all around him, his mind leapt to the other cascade of terminal datapoints he was still trying to process – as images of the stricken airliner plummeting to earth returned to fill his consciousness. So…driving into the night now he was left to face the prospect that there was no safe place left for his mind to go in order to simply rest. Painful and unwanted information once again began filling his mind after the brief respite during the flight down from San Francisco, only now the inrushing data was coming-on so fast he feared it might soon reach an incapacitating velocity. Then what? Would he reach a breaking point? And what might wait on the other side? He felt alone now, lost inside cascades of incessant numerical solutions to unwanted problems, and for the first time in his life he grew afraid of the numbers flowing through his mind. He felt lonely now, like maybe God had forsaken him. And suddenly he was forced to consider the nature of God. Does God even exist, he wondered. He had always had faith in numbers because life was nothing more or less than problems in search of a solution. Could God, he wondered, be a solution in search of problems? He laughed at that, perhaps because he’d never considered that fear and faith always seemed to be the solutions humans clung to.

He could see the Vincent Thomas Bridge rising ahead, and yet the air seemed heavy – almost like moisture was about to coalesce over the harbor – and surely fog would soon follow – but then he saw something that made his heart lurch as pure fear returned…

Because another blue sphere had appeared, and it was falling through the fog and settling on the bridge. And then the moisture-laden air seemed to ripple under the weight of a massive shock wave, causing his little Toyota to skip sideways – like a flat rock skimming across a pond. 

And this was something new, something completely unexpected. Nothing he’d solved for had indicated the possibility of anything like this happening, so there had to be a discontinuity, some new variable involved.

Perhaps, he thought, this new variable was intuition. Something outside the bounds of statistical relevance.

Because, in his mind’s eye, and even as he struggled to regain control of the skipping Toyota, he rewatched the helicopter vaulting up and slamming into the airliner – and as he analyzed the replay he saw dozens of new, interconnecting variables sliding into place. Waiting. To be. Rearranged?

Or. Simply. To Be.

To be? Being? Or Becoming? ‘Which do I solve for…?’

“But how do you account for transubstantiation?” a faraway voice chided.

The little car seemed to spin and spin and he saw new variables form like planets out of dust and he struggled to come to terms with all these new variables.

The little car came to rest on the right shoulder – only the engine wasn’t running now, and when he looked up he saw that the power was out almost everywhere he looked – and even the streetlights were out. “Was this an EMP event?” he wondered aloud…so he tried the ignition and the motor sprang to life. He slipped the car back into Drive and took off up the first incline that lead to the summit of the bridge – and even from a quarter mile away he could see the sphere up ahead, hovering above the roadway, only now the settling fog had turned the night an eerie translucent blue. Then he saw the…lightning.

Jagged blue sprites danced in the air around the sphere, and as he approached the top of the bridge the suspension cables produced a strobing effect that instantly made his head ache. As he came to the top of the bridge he saw a police car of some sort was on its side, and an ambulance had been blown through the center divider. Stranger still was a network news van, which had, apparently, been knocked about viciously and had crashed through the suicide fencing and was now dangling out over the water, the front wheels jutting precariously out over the edge of the bridge – as if the van was going to jump.

Yet he saw a cameraman moving around the sphere, and what looked like reporters or technicians trailing the cameraman with microphones and clipboards at the ready. And then he saw what at first glance appeared to be a cop of some kind; at least the heavy brown belt Brendan could just see was adorned with a firearm and handcuffs, so that seemed…logical. Yet the cop was holding an infant in his arms, and the cop’s uniform was scorched and smoldering – and that just didn’t seem to fit…at all… 

Brendan got out of his rental and dashed over to the scene, thinking that, perhaps, because he had a working car he might be able to help out… 

But then who did he see?

Debra. Sorensen. The girl next door. She was with the cameraman, and her skin appeared scorched and abraded, too. So was the skin of the man next to her.

Then Debra saw Brendan and she stopped in her tracks.

“Brendan?” she asked. “What are you doing here?”

“I’m not sure yet,” Geddes replied. “Can I help?”

“Uh, we need to get going,” the man with her said. He was pointing to the sky behind Geddes so her turned and looked…

And Geddes saw a black triangular opening in the sky, and then he could just make out the shape of a craft coming out of the opening. Triangular. No sound. Very slow.

“We’ve got to go!” Debra screamed. “Now!”

“What?” Brendan said, mesmerized by the sight. “But…why? Shouldn’t we…”

“They’re here to take the baby!” Debra cried as she ran up to the cop. “Come on!” she yelled at the dazed and confused man, who appeared to be locked inside a trance and seemed unable to break free. “We’ve got to get out of here!”

Brendan looked at the ship then at the baby, and, as he didn’t like the problem shaping up, he began to scowl. “You can’t run from a ship like that,” he said to himself, but just then he saw the cop turn to face the presumed danger. The cop carefully handed the infant to Debra and she ran for Brendan’s Toyota.

“Open the hatch!” she yelled at Brendan. “Now!”

And that broke him free of his own trance. He turned and ran to the little SUV and found the lever just inside the driver’s door and he popped the hatch just as Debra reached the opening. The cop and the man with the clipboard ran up to the Toyota, and the man with the clipboard pushed Brendan into the back seat.

“I’ll drive,” Henry Taggart said as he looked at the descending ship over his shoulder.

“What the fuck is that thing,” the cop cried.

“ARV,” Taggart said, “probably Russian, maybe Chinese.”

“What’s an ARV?” Brendan asked.

“Alien Reproduction, reverse engineered technology.”

“How do you know it’s not aliens,” Brendan sighed, “in one of their ships?”

Taggart nodded. “Because, Slick, we’re still fucking alive.”

“Oh,” Brendan Geddes nodded. That seemed a logical deduction.

“Who are you?” Taggart asked the cop, getting the Toyota started and flooring the accelerator.

“Sumner Bacon, and where the hell are we going?”

Taggart swerved to avoid damaged and destroyed vehicles – and more than a few bodies – before he made it to the one-ten and turned onto the northbound lanes. “The marina. We’re going to get out to sea.”

“Why out there?” Bacon asked.

“Because I’ve called for backup,” Taggart said, grinning like a madman, “but we need to keep this shit out of sight. UFOs over LA? That’s a shit-show. No way,” Taggart said, thinking out loud as he pulled a charred bit of skin off his cheek. “Once that’s done, well, then we can get the fuck out of Dodge and figure out what to do with the kid.”

“The kid?” Brendan sighed. “What’s with the kid?”

“Yeah,” Taggart growled at the cop, “what’s with the kid?”

 “You got me,” Bacon said. “I was trying to get a jumper off the fence and the next thing I know I’m flat on my ass with a kid in my hands…”

Brendan leaned forward, his face now inches from the cops – then he could see, and smell, all the singed hair on Bacon’s face and arms. “What do you remember about the time in between?”

The cop shrugged and shook his head. “I’m not sure.” He seemed to try and focus, then he turned to Taggart. “I had a rookie with me,” he said, his voice now full of concern; “Did you see another cop out there?”

“Down, yes,” Taggart replied.

“What’s that supposed to mean?” Bacon asked.

“I don’t think he made it. There are a bunch of bodies out there.”

“Goddamn, no…” Bacon muttered.

“Deb?” Taggart called out. “You see that ship?”

“Yup. They’re up in the clouds but they are definitely following us.”

“How’s the kid?”

“Strange.”

“Strange? Like how?”

“She’s just studying everything. My face, the car…everything… It’s kind of surreal, really. Do you have any idea who might be following us?”

“No, but if I had to guess I’d say it probably has something to do with your father…”

+++++

The ship in the clouds following the Toyota was indeed shaped like an equilateral triangle; each side was a hundred meters long, and the bottom was flat and black and almost smooth. The top of the craft was smooth and white and studded with a wide variety of sensor arrays and particle weapons. There were two occupants inside the craft, and neither was human, not even remotely. The liquid atmosphere inside the ship was similar to seawater but was rich in ammonia and would kill a Terran organism after an exposure measured in milliseconds. The occupants were low level military-scientists; they had been sent to observe the child but had orders to remain out of sight and to not provoke any kind of confrontation, military or otherwise.

They spoke in clicks and whistles, in a language similar in linguistic structure to those employed by mammalian sea creatures commonly found on this planet, and in fact one of the occupants of this ship could understand the language of the large black and whites. One of these occupants, the sensor operator, was studying various EM readouts, while the other followed the child as best as he could.

“Three aircraft approaching; their profile is military.”

“Deploy three drones.”

White oblate forms formed outside of the hull and took off towards the Terran aircraft, and once the military aircraft saw and responded to their presence, the drones turned out to sea. Two aircraft followed the drones, but one did not.

“One is not following. This unit is closing in.”

“I see it. Fire a pulse, warn him off.”

The sensor operator fired off a focused beam similar in effect to an electro-magnetic pulse, but the US Air Force F-22 was hardened against such interference; the Air Force pilot now had the UAV in sight and his radar was locked-on. The pilot did not have permission to engage, and as the UAV slowed to a dead stop her F-22 shot by – not fifty meters off to the right, so the F-22’s pilot reefed her jet into a vectored turn, the pilot never taking her eyes off the unusual looking craft as her F-22 circled around to come in for a closer look.

“I have lost the child,” the pilot said.

“Abort. Return to orbit,” the copilot-sensor operator advised.

“Concur.”

And as the F-22 pilot looked on helplessly, the triangle shaped UAV simply accelerated straight up and out of the atmosphere; her companions reported that the capsule shaped objects disappeared under the surface of the sea out past Catalina Island. And though perhaps ‘only’ a quarter million people had watched as the encounter played out in the skies above Long Beach and Torrance, hardly anyone knew or could quite comprehend what they’d just witnessed. And while the Air Force pilots dutifully filled out their contact reports – which were duly read before being classified and filed away – no one at their base in Nevada or at the Pentagon had the slightest idea what had happened.

But Henry Taggart thought he knew exactly what had just gone down. He had no idea, however, just how far off his understanding of events really was.

+++++

Debra and Brendan wrapped the baby in a windbreaker and hustled it out to aquaTarkus, while Taggart and Sumner Bacon cleaned out the car, taking care to wipe away fingerprints before they sprinted down the pier to Debra’s sailboat. Spheres hovered in the clouds overhead, and an Old Man watched from a nearby park bench.

In the same approximate timeframe, the triangular shaped UAV made the ninety seven million mile sprint out past the sun – where it docked with a much larger ship. After the crew boarded their base ship they reported what had transpired on the planet’s surface to the task force commander.

The commander nodded and sighed. He knew the mission was high risk and would almost certainly fail, but it had been worth a try. He suited-up and went to speak with his superiors.

He spoke through translating devices, explaining what had transpired in Los Angeles a half hour ago.

“Was there any contact between your ship and ours?” President Franklin Roosevelt asked the task force commander.

“Incidental visual contact only between the responding aircraft and our scout ship, and an unknown number of inhabitants on the ground more than likely witnessed the encounter.”

Roosevelt turned to Claire Aubuchon. “Well?” he asked. “Do we risk another intervention?”

“My opinion is unchanged, Mr. President,” Claire replied. “If she reaches maturity and reproduces, there will be no way to stop the next phase.”

“And you still think we should?”

“I don’t know, sir. I really don’t. Maybe it was going to happen anyway. Maybe the Blues are just helping the process along.”

Roosevelt sighed. “Then as far as the child goes, we move from containment to isolate and protect?”

Aubuchon nodded. “The Adler Group is isolated in Argentina now, but they won’t stay there very long. They’re moving their assets into place right now, so we should expect them to move on the child any time now.”

“Do you think we should warn the Israelis now?”

“My assumption, sir, is they already know. If we tell them now at least they’ll understand we won’t stand in their way.”

Roosevelt made up his mind and he turned to the task force commander. “Protect the child,” he told the alien.

The commander turned and returned to the comfort of his atmosphere, and once out of his suit he gave new orders to his team of scouts, then he turned and looked at Roosevelt through one of the viewing ports. “We have to keep him alive,” he said to the fleet physician.

“He is very ill.”

“You fully understand the biological processes?”

“Yes.”

“Have you discussed genetic manipulation with him?”

“Yes. He is very reluctant.”

“On my responsibility, begin the process now. We cannot afford to lose him.”

+++++

It was still dark out when aquaTarkus slipped her lines and motored out of the marina and into the Pacific. Henry Taggart laid out a great circle course for Honolulu and engaged the autopilot. He flipped off the A.I.S. then went to speak to the cop, needing to know if he’d ever been on a sailboat before.

And of course he hadn’t. The cop had military experience, in the Navy, so not all was lost. The other guy, the Geddes kid, looked like a lost cause, a total geek.

Geddes was standing at the aft rail just above the swim platform, and he was staring at Los Angeles as the city disappeared in the haze surrounding the rising sun. When Taggart walked up to the kid he appeared lost inside a deep trance, staring at the sky above the city.

“We’re being followed,” Geddes sighed uneasily.

“Oh? Did you see something?”

But the boy just shook his head in answer to the question.

“Okay, so how do you know?”

“It’s inevitable, given the circumstances.”

“The circumstances? And what might those be?”

“The child isn’t human, and we’ve stolen it. Someone will come for it.”

“And? What else aren’t you telling me?” Taggart asked.

But Geddes turned away from Taggart and looked at the sea ahead, then the boy turned again and looked down into the sea – and his hands began trembling. 

© 2016-22 adrian leverkühn | abw | and as always, thanks for stopping by for a look around the memory warehouse…[but wait, there’s more…how about a word or two on sources: I typically don’t post all a story’s acknowledgments until I’ve finished, if only because I’m not sure how many I’ll need before work is finalized. Yet with current circumstances waiting to list said sources might not be the best way to proceed, and this listing will grow over time – until the story is complete. To begin, the ‘primary source’ material in this case – so far, at least – derives from two seminal Hollywood ‘cop’ films: Dirty Harry and Bullitt. The first Harry film was penned by Harry Julian Fink, R.M. Fink, Dean Riesner, John Milius, Terrence Malick, and Jo Heims. Bullitt came primarily from the author of the screenplay for The Thomas Crown Affair, Alan R Trustman, with help from Harry Kleiner, as well Robert L Fish, whose short story Mute Witness formed the basis of Trustman’s brilliant screenplay. Steve McQueen’s grin was never trade-marked, though perhaps it should have been. John Milius (Red Dawn) penned Magnum Force, and the ‘Briggs’/vigilante storyline derives from characters and plot elements originally found in that rich screenplay, as does the Captain McKay character. The Jennifer Spencer/Threlkis crime family storyline was first introduced in Sudden Impact, screenplay by Joseph Stinson, original story by Earl Smith and Charles Pierce. The Samantha Walker television reporter is found in The Dead Pool, screenplay by Steve Sharon, story by Steve Sharon, Durk Pearson, and Sandy Shaw. I have to credit the Jim Parish, M.D., character first seen in the Vietnam segments to John A. Parrish, M.D., author of the most fascinating account of an American physician’s tour of duty in Vietnam – and as found in his autobiographical 12, 20, and 5: A Doctor’s Year in Vietnam, a book worth noting as one of the most stirring accounts of modern warfare I’ve ever read (think Richard Hooker’s M*A*S*H, only featuring a blazing sense of irony conjoined within a searing non-fiction narrative). Denton Cooley, M.D. founded the Texas Heart Institute, as mentioned. Of course, James Clavell’s Shōgun forms a principle backdrop in later chapters. The teahouse and hotel of spires in Ch. 42 is a product of the imagination; so-sorry. The UH-1Y image used from Pt VI on taken by Jodson Graves. The snippets of lyrics from Lucy in the Sky are publicly available as ‘open-sourced.’ Many of the other figures in this story derive from characters developed within the works cited above, but keep in mind that, as always, the rest of this story is in all other respects a work of fiction woven into a pre-existing cinematic-historical fabric. Using the established characters referenced above, as well as the few new characters I’ve managed to come up with here and there, I hoped to create something new – perhaps a running commentary on the times we’ve shared with these fictional characters? And the standard disclaimer also here applies: the central characters in this tale should not be mistaken for persons living or dead. This was, in other words, just a little walk down a road more or less imagined, and nothing more than that should be inferred. I’d be remiss not to mention Clint Eastwood’s Harry Callahan, and Steve McQueen’s Frank Bullitt. Talk about the roles of a lifetime…and what a gift.]