Sunday, November 26, 2017

THE PROJECTOR part 3

Copyright (c) 2017 by Randall R. Peterson ALL RIGHTS RESERVED This is a work of fiction. All persons, locations and actions are from the author's imagination or have been used in a fictitious manner.



By R. Peterson

A sudden gust of wind blew leaves and a scattering of twigs from a giant maple tree in the old woman’s yard. Kurt and Jesse watched in awe as the leaves merged with the twigs and transformed into a flock of what looked like sparrows and then flew northwest. “I’m out of tea,” Melania explained as she led them through the door. “The young Asian lady who works at Hunter’s grocery will send some when she gets my message.” She noticed the boys staring after the birds. “It’s much faster than starting my old Buick and making the drive. Petrol is so expensive these days – ninety-six cents a gallon last I looked. What can a few tea bags weigh? The sparrows will be fine!”
“How did you do that?” Kurt gasped as he pointed to the tree and the tiny specks in the sky.
“The branches and leaves on the trees are all living things and thus are interchangeable with man-made creations.” Melania noticed Jesse staring at her gnarled and twisted hands. “The secret is in science and nature … not in my boney fingers!”

-------2-------

Jesse had imagined the heavy wooden entrance door would creak when she opened it, because doors as old as this one always creaked in the movies, but even though its hinges were rusted, it rolled without a whisper. “I wasn’t exaggerating about waking the dead,” Melania said brushing her fingers across the cast iron gargoyle. “There’s more nonliving things in this house than living, especially in the basement, and an enchantment on a door knocker is much better than a burglar alarm.”
Melania led them through an old fashioned parlor or sitting room and into what looked like a freshly-painted canary yellow kitchen. She motioned for them to sit at a large round table with a glass top as she filled an ancient looking  Dallah Bedouin tea pot with water and placed it on a burner.
Kurt cleared his throat. “I guess you’re wondering why we’re here?”
            “I know why you’re here,” Melania said with a smile. “Otherwise I wouldn’t have invited you in.” Kurt was amazed at how beautiful the old woman was … her eyes were like dark garden pools lit from below, with shimmering moonlight dancing on the surface.  He found it nearly impossible to guess her age although reason and stories from his parents and grandparents told him she had to be ancient.
Both Jesse and Kurt could feel a slight breeze that was somehow intoxicating … like a mother’s tender caress after an infant’s injury. Lights on a spinning fan above the table rotated along with the blades and created ever changing shadows and angles of light. One second Melania looked like a school girl no older than sixteen the next instant she was a twisted hag lurching well past a hundred.
            “You know about the Royal Theater’s new projector?”
            “No,” Melania said. “But I know Joseph Callahan. He used to throw-off bravura sparks when we were together … nineteen thirty-one to thirty-three I believe it was … and I would catch them like glowing embers while we danced. People didn’t have a lot of money back then so we were forced to fall in love with all the simple things in life. Then something terrible happened between us and the raging fire inside that I felt for him was extinguished. But that’s a miserable story better suited for those who seek out and adore gloom. It’s a pity; in some ways he and I are still very much alike. We both dabble in magic … although his is of a more practical almost you could say scientific type.”
            “How did you know we needed to see him?” Jesse was astonished that Melania took their arrival so matter-of-factly.
            “All non-physical things such as dreams, thoughts and emotions can be found riding a dark energy wind called fatoma,” Melania told them. “Especially whispers from the obsoletes … as it is the poor lingering souls only way of communicating.”
            “That’s amazing! How do you receive this information?” Jesse was staring through an arched doorway into the living room where a large porcelain jar sitting on an upright piano had just fallen on its side. Hundreds of glass balls rained down onto the keyboard playing an exuberant rendition of Tchaikovsky’s - Piano Concerto No. 3 in E flat major.
            “Sorry for the noise,” Melania said. “I do need to have that piano tuned.” Just then there was a tapping from outside a large stained-glass panel hanging over the sink. The colored glass depicted a ragged medieval-city rat perched atop a mountain of bones. Melania put on a pair of thick gardening gloves and opened the window “Thank the gods the dark and horrible plagues that ravaged the world six centuries ago are now imprisoned in this masterful glass … I just hope the more mischievous children in Cloverdale never decide to start throwing stones!”
A dozen sparrows flew inside. Each one held a bag of Da-Hong Pao tea in their tiny talons. The boys noticed that the birds appeared to be constructed of tiny whirling gears and with wings made of silk. “I do hope you like this blend of Wuyi rock tea,” Melania said looking at a tiny bill attached to one sparrow’s leg. She had to take her gloves off to remove it. “The price has been rather dear as of late.” She noticed Kurt and Jesse both looking at her oddly and shook her head. “You must excuse me; how rude not to have answered your question, Jesse. There have been so many distractions as of late and my dimly lit brain flutters about like a cluster of Fuoco-flies caught in a bottle. I know what you want because you both left this house not an hour ago!”
            Both boys were now gaping open-mouthed.
“Sometimes reversing Fatoma winds can be as easy as flipping a switch!” They watched as she walked to a wall plate and turned off the ceiling-fan. The exuberant feeling of having their faces caressed by a loving mother slowly faded. A moment later Melania once again pressed the switch this time downward. The fan began to turn slowly at first and then picking up speed everything was moving in reverse. Both boys now seemed to be in a dark theater watching as the film stopped and then began to run backward at high speed. The flock of sparrows flew backward out the stained-glass window and Melania closed it behind them. Tchaikovsky’s - Piano Concerto sounded like Indian music as it played in reverse. They watched themselves leave the room with Melania … all three walking backwards. After they watched the door close before it was opened there was a lull of almost thirty seconds before they once again left the kitchen. This time Jesse had a cut above his left cheek and Kurt had two black eyes. Melania stopped the fan once again and started it moving forward. “Those in need who bend the dark wonders into useful tools call it magic,” she said. “Joseph Callahan would call it Quantum Physics.”
Just then the antique tea-pot began to sing Credence Clearwater Revival’s Bad Moon Rising in Arabic.  “Many people think the Genie from the Arabian Nights comes from a lamp,” Melania said. “They’re wrong … he’s always lived in this brass container … turn over your cups the tea is almost ready.”

-------3-------



Kurt and Jesse turned over tiny porcelain cups on the glass table and dangled in tiny woven bags filled with tea leaves as Melania poured the steaming water. She now looked well over a hundred. “Let the tea seep for a few moments,” she said. “It doesn’t strengthen the flavor … but the cups are quite delicate. They were crafted in China in 1419 and like my old bones they tend to get brittle when exposed to sudden heat or cold.”
Jesse watched as a mist from the tea swirled upward creating prisms of light that danced on the walls of the room. “If you knew that we were trying to find Joseph Callahan then you must know that we’re looking for a way into Motha Forest … that is if the projector’s inventor still resides in the old textile mill.”
“He does,” Melania said sitting down. “And you’re right about the forest. The domain of the Mommet is a dark and dangerous place for the unwary traveler.” Melania took a sip of her tea and she was suddenly young again darkly ravaging and dangerously beautiful.
“This Wuyi stuff is so very very … cool!” Jesse and Kurt both gazed at the old woman with dreamy eyes.
“Oh that’s not the rock tea,” Melania confessed with a blush. “It’s the blended Ginseng … so much better for avaricious things … and I must say a great deal cheaper! But enough of that. Don’t worry about getting into that dark forest … I’ll drive you myself, my old Buick needs a good run.  Although I will not go inside the mill …. spiders! Too large for a broom and I never took a fancy to them. But right now while we enjoy ourselves with this intoxicating brew perhaps you’ll tell me about Bridget Bardot … I’ve often wondered what enchantments she uses on men in general.  Did you notice if her eyes changed color under the moonlight?  Were her lips as soft as rose petals or as firm as teenage anticipation? Was she dripping with Ein Gedi from Israel or just splashed with a bit of Chanel No. 5? I’m sure she must be a witch. Come now … don’t be stingy with the details!”

-------4-------

The front seat of the 1949 Roadmaster was huge – easily big enough to seat both Jesse and Kurt in comfort. With what looked like flames shooting out of the port holes on each side of the classic Buick, they felt like they were in a Word War II fighter plane. Melania tore down unpaved roads catching-air on every bridge they crossed, taking corners at more than 90 MPH and burying the speedometer on the straight sections. “I don’t know how much being a witch pays,” Kurt said gripping the armrests with white knuckles. “But if you ever decide to change professions I’m sure NASCAR would create an opening.”
Jesse was startled when the old woman tuned the radio to KRNR, a local Rock and Roll radio station, and then cranked the volume almost all the way up. Deep Purple was playing Smoke on the Water. “I keep hearing imaginary noises every time I drive this piece of junk,” Melania said. “Tires about to blow, leaking radiators and loose push rods … extra-loud music helps me to relax.”
Before the song ended Melania was careening sideways into the gravel yard of an old farm house on River Road that seemed built next to a wall of trees. The boys didn’t know whether to be thankful or not when the car finally skidded to a stop; they were alive but the old farm house looked like something that might soon change that. Black windows like the empty eye-sockets of a corpse stared as Melania opened her door and they slowly did the same. “There’s a tunnel entrance in the basement covered by about an inch of old cotton fibers. It’s about a mile long and comes out a few hundred yards from the old mill. Joseph’s place and most of the rest of Motha Forest is guarded by a group of colorless women who call themselves my daughters.” Melania snapped her fingers and a black rose in full bloom appeared in her hand as if by magic. She gave it to Jesse. Show this to the most aggressive one when you’re caught … and make no mistake you will be. They usually follow my advice and there’s a good chance they’ll let you live … at least long enough to talk to Joseph Callahan.”
Both boys stood frozen as they watched Melania drive away. Then slowly they turned and entered the old house.

-------5-------

“There’s a good chance they’ll let you live …” Kurt mimicked Melania’s words as he and Jesse crept through the old tunnel with flashlights supplied by Melania. “I don’t know about you but I don’t plan on getting caught. Especially not by a bunch of women who cover their faces with white cloth bags.”
“This is kind of disturbing,” Jesse said. “We both saw ourselves entering Melania’s house in reverse even though to the best of my knowledge neither of us has ever been there before. I had a cut above my left cheek and you had two black eyes; we didn’t get those by not tangling with anyone.”
Kurt rubbed his eyes as if to make certain they weren’t swollen. “I just hope that when we find Callahan he has the means and the will to fix the projector! What if he knows exactly what it does and just doesn’t care?”
“Melania said they were alike … let’s hope he’s as helpful as she has been!”
At the end of the tunnel, they found an old wooden ladder fastened to the wall … its upper rungs disappeared into the darkness. “Looks like we’re almost there,” Jesse said as he started to climb. “Perhaps we can sneak into the mill without getting caught!”
            “If you fall, try not to make any noise … screaming, or that sort of thing,” Kurt suggested as he followed. Within a couple of minutes they had clambered up more than one-hundred rungs. “It really won’t do any good … and it makes it hard for those of us that are always careful with everything we do.”
            “Watch that last rung,” Jesse warned as he lifted open the top hatch. He heard Kurt scream and was just quick enough to turn and catch his friend before he fell. “My God! A snake!” Kurt wailed as he scrambled to get his feet back on the ladder. “I put my hand right on it!”
            “So much for being quiet,” Jesse said as he pulled Kurt out of the shaft. The Moonlit forest looked almost as bright as day after being in the dark tunnel. They could see the old mill in the distance, silhouetted against a background of stars.
            Kurt brushed himself off and began to laugh. “Were almost there and I don’t see any sign of Melania’s so-ugly-they-bag-their-faces daughters!”
The stars were suddenly extinguished as a large black tarp or blanket was thrown over them. The fabric was dry but clung to them as if it were wet. They couldn’t move and could barely breathe. Kurt heard a female voice speaking right above him. “What makes you think we’re ugly just because we wear sacks on our faces?” she said. And then she kicked him.

TO BE CONTINUED …


Sunday, November 19, 2017

THE PROJECTOR part 2

Copyright (c) 2017 by Randall R. Peterson ALL RIGHTS RESERVED This is a work of fiction. All persons, locations and actions are from the author's imagination or have been used in a fictitious manner.



By R. Peterson


Jesse tried everything to get Chloe O’Brian’s attention. She wouldn’t even turn her head in his direction, not even when he tripped Ruben Butterfield, and caused hysterical laughter from the boys in the classroom as the beefy teen returned from the pencil sharpener and ripped the back of his pants exposing yellow polka dot underwear. “I owe you double, Paco!” Ruben promised.
 Mrs. Dern stopped reading mid-sentence. Several girls were crying as the English Literature teacher slammed the almost finished An Episode of Sparrows onto her desk. “Jesse Paco! To the principal’s office. Now!”
Kurt Smith covered his mouth and whispered words of encouragement as Jesse shuffled past. “Moss broke a yard-stick over my butt last week … The janitor has a whole pile of broken ones by that clanking furnace in the basement along with a pile of rags he uses to wipe up blood. Bernie burns them to start the coal on fire and of course to destroy criminal assault evidence against the principal.” Kurt began to giggle. “I hear Porky buys them by the truckload.”

Jesse turned to look just once before he closed the classroom door. Chloe O’Brian’s dangerous green eyes flashed at him for the briefest of moments, but it was enough. It had to be … he was in love.

 Louise Porter, the Junior High Principal’s part-time secretary, was compiling absentee reports when Jesse approached her desk. She was a high school senior and five years older. Jesse had had a huge crush on her before Chloe O’Brian stole his heart. “Is Por … mmm I mean Principal Moss in? I need to get a re-admittance slip for Mrs. Dern’s English class.”
            “Mr. Moss is in conference with the girls’ volleyball coach.” Louise looked up from her pages and smiled when she saw him. Her dark brown hair framed her face perfectly and her blue eyes danced. “What have you done now Jesse?”
            “Ruben Butterfield tripped over my foot in the classroom,” Jesse explained. “Mrs. Dern thinks I did it on purpose.”
            “Yeah, as if you wanted a black eye from that brute during lunch break.” Louise pulled out a pad of re-admittance slips and began filling one out.
            “Don’t you have to get Porky’s signature on that?” Jesse realized his error almost as the words flew out of his mouth but there was no coaxing them back in.
            “I sign the principal’s name on almost everything,” Louise grinned. “It’s really my signature not his. But I don’t write Porky … it’s always just J. Peter Moss.”
            “Thanks,” Jesse told her.
            “Try not to get detention,” Louise said as she handed him the slip. “Ruben Butterfield got two weeks for beating up two High School seniors. Spending an hour after school with him in Mr. Larsen’s unsupervised classroom would be like being locked in a zoo-cage with a gorilla.”
            “I’ll try to be good.”
Louise laughed. “I’m sure you will try Jesse … just don’t get caught.”
The bell rang when Jesse was halfway down the hall. He didn’t want to meet up with an enraged Ruben Butterfield so he took the long way to his locker … His face was already starting to hurt … lunch time would come soon enough.

-------2-------

            Kurt Smith looked at the re-admittance slip Jesse showed him at lunch. They were sitting on a table outside watching the cheerleaders practice on the lawn next to the sprinklers. “I know you’ve had a thing for Louise Porter for years … looks like you finally consummated things huh?”
            “Nothing like that,” Jesse snorted. “She’s like my big sister.”
            “And your family was so poor you had to shower together to save water …” Kurt was shaking his head.
            “She’s not as old as Brigitte Bardot … you two was like wet minks wrapped around each other!”
            “What happened Friday night still freaks me out. Do you think Cranston knows what his new projector is capable of doing?”
            “I’ve been thinking about that,” Jesse said. “I think we’d better have a talk with him before the weekend.”
            “Friday night wasn’t so bad.” Kurt’s eyes were half closed as he stared at the sky above the school entrance.
            “Having Brigitte Bardot to make out with on a city park picnic table is one thing,” Jesse said. “Having that demon thing that possesses Linda Blair spider-walking across the theater ceiling looking for trouble is an entirely different situation.”
            “If that thing would only hook-up with Ruben Butterfield we might have had a better chance of graduating High School without being in wheel-chairs …” Kurt pointed.
Ruben thundered across the lawn like a three-hundred pound freight train wearing a cowboy hat and with a full roll of masking tape covering the seat of his pants. “Today is my lucky day,” he bellowed. Jesse half expected steam to come out of his ears. “I owe both you chicken bastards a payback and it looks like I get to kill two stones with one bird!”
            “That’s two birds and one stone … you dimwit cowpuncher!” Kurt taunted.
            “Birds? I really wish we had wings!” Jesse was on his feet trying to pull Kurt after him.
            “Chickens don’t fly from dogs, they run around in crazy circles,” Kurt said.
Jesse didn’t like the wild look in his friend’s eyes. “Whatever you’re thinking … it won’t work!”
            “No one has ever accused me of thinking …” Kurt was on his feet sprinting toward Ruben flapping his arms and making rooster crowing noises before Jesse could stop him.
Ruben skidded to a stop and drew back his beefy right arm as Kurt ran directly at him. Just as he swung his fist Kurt veered sharply to the left and Ruben’s knockout punch went wild. “You clumsy, lumbering ox!” Kurt chanted just before he slipped on the grass.
            For a very large teen Ruben was remarkably fast. He kicked Kurt as he tried to stand and had already punched him once in the face before Jesse could get to his floundering friend. Jesse pummeled the schoolyard monster from behind without effect and an instant later Ruben had his beefy arms wrapped around both boys’ necks dragging them across the grass. He stopped long enough to punch Jesse in the face and pull out a clump of his hair.
Chloe O’Brian and the rest of the cheerleaders stared open mouthed as Ruben plopped each boy down on a running sprinkler. “Look the little babies have wet their pants!” Ruben chuckled at his own joke just as the school-bell rang.
Chloe turned and smiled as she and the rest of the girl’s strolled past. “If only that whore Bardot could see you now,” she snickered.

-------3-------

Ruben rode the same school-bus as Kurt so he decided to stay in town with Jesse and have his mom pick him up later. Coach Evans had allowed them to put their wet clothes in the dryer during gym class. Mr. Cranston was mopping the floor in the theatre entrance when Jesse knocked on the door and he let both boys in.
“What’s the matter … you don’t like the free tickets for next Friday’s show?”
“The tickets are fine,” Kurt told him. “We just don’t think you should be showing a film like The Exorcist until you get the bugs out of your new projector.”
“What bugs?” Cranston was animate. “Everyone said it was the most real movie experience they’d ever seen!”
“Maybe a little too real,” Jesse told him. “We ran into Brigitte Bardot in the park after the movie. When you said it looked like she jumped right off the screen … well it was because she did!”
“It’s true,” Kurt said. “I’ve got the sucking marks on my neck to prove it.
“Why didn’t you mention this before?”
“At first we thought it was kind of cool,” Kurt said. “Bring our fantasies to life that sort of thing. But if you show the Exorcist this Friday night this town could be in real trouble.”
“But it’s out of my hands,” Cranston threw both arms in the air. “I’ve given out almost two hundred free tickets … if I cancel the show now … no one will ever trust me again.”
“We’ve got to do something. You just can’t let a little girl with a demon inside her run loose in town just to save face.”
“That’s how you two knew when I’d fixed the film and finished running it. Brigitte Bardot disappeared when the film ended … right?”
“Yes, I guess she did,” Jesse and Kurt both reluctantly agreed.
“Then there is no problem,” Cranston told them. “I told you I installed a high powered fan to keep the film cool … what could go wrong this time?”
“Mr. Cranston, we’re talking about Cloverdale,” Jesse pleaded.
The theatre owner was quiet for a moment … then he nodded.  The truth about the small town was hard to argue with. “I’m not cancelling the show and I don’t have any answers. Perhaps you two better talk to the projector’s inventor … explain what’s going on. If anyone can fix this … problem … old Joe can.”
            “I haven’t seen Joseph Callahan for years,” Jesse said. “I didn’t know he was still alive. Does he still live in that old textile mill just inside Motha Forest?”
            “As far as I know,” Cranston said. “He called me on a radio phone that he invented and had the projector delivered by a local driver.”

            “This keeps getting better and better,” Kurt said as they walked back to Jesse’s house. “Not only is it illegal for anyone to go into Motha Forest, but Chloe’s father is the administrator of a special land trust set up for that strange Mommet cult. We’ll be lucky if we don’t get shot. Airplanes are not even allowed to fly over the forest. No one knows the way in. It’s like the trees bunch up and create a wall whenever anyone gets too close.”
            “There’s one person in town who knows almost all of Cloverdale’s secrets,” Jesse said. “All we have to do is ask an old lady to help us!”
            “Dr. Descombey’s witch sister!” Kurt gasped. “I’d rather call Ruben Butterfield and ask him if he’d like to dance with me by the river!”
            “It may come to that,” Jesse said. “If we don’t stop that movie from showing … that might seem like an easy way out.”

-------4-------

            All the windows in the Victorian mansion on the south west corner of Galbraith and Main Street in Cloverdale appeared to be blind. The enormous house was even scarier than Kurt remembered from October nights half a dozen years earlier. It was scarier now because he knew this time they would have to face whoever or whatever answered the door instead of shrieking and running like howling banshees after they banged on the heavy carved door during a Halloween dare.
            A pathway made of flat stones, mortised with blackened green moss and crawling with worms, led up three levels, each intersected with six stone steps. A flock of shadowy ravens rose into the sky with only a slight whooshing sound and settled on the numerous gables. Dark eyes followed them like cameras. Snowball bushes, clipped in the shape of funeral attendants and weeks past the blooming stage, lined both sides of the sunken entryway. Something dark with a spiked tail vanished into the shadows ahead.     
“There’s no law that says we have to go to the movies every Friday night,” Kurt said with a shiver.  “Plenty of kids go roller-skating or God forbid bowling on the weekends.”
            “While we’re at it, let’s pull our pants up to our armpits, tie them in place with twine and see if we can get ourselves library cards,” Jesse told him. “We’ll both end up writing books about flowers and dancing horses with yellow bows in their manes instead of being astronauts or helicopter pilots.”
Kurt was forced to laugh in spite of his fear. “Don’t you have to have some kind of a certificate from a vocational college to do that?”
Both boys were aware that they were being watched; by who or what they knew not … and the thought sobered them.
Rows of dust-caked arched-top windows set deep in the stone walls loomed above them like tombstones expecting still limber tenants. The entryway was inset at least three feet from the exterior walls. A cast-iron knocker in the shape of a horrible gargoyle rested against a tarnished striker plate.
Kurt stretched his hand and slowly lifted the heavy iron. A sound like breathless words falling into a rusty bucket from the bushes behind them almost made the ring slip from his trembling fingers. “I wouldn’t do that if I were you!”
A figure seemingly made of darkness stepped from the foliage. “That’s a thumping sure to wake the dead … and we wouldn’t want that … no, we wouldn’t want that!”

TO BE CONTINUED …

           


Sunday, November 12, 2017

THE PROJECTOR

Copyright (c) 2017 by Randall R. Peterson ALL RIGHTS RESERVED This is a work of fiction. All persons, locations and actions are from the author's imagination or have been used in a fictitious manner.



By R. Peterson



            “What the Hell!” Tommy Everett pointed to a cardboard sign attached to the ticket booth at the entrance to the Royal Theatre. “Now it costs fifty cents for kids under twelve to get in the damn show!”
            “I know you ain’t under twelve,” Louise Porter stopped chewing her gum long enough to get angry. “Pay the seventy-five cents or go back home!”
           
            “This is outrageous!” Tommy looked at the movie poster for Viva Maria! showing an almost naked Brigitte Bardot and then reached for his wallet. “If I didn’t want to see the scene where BB invents striptease I’d go down the street to the Main.”
            “The Main is still showing Zorba the Greek Louise laughed. “I think old man Clancy actually bought the film reels … so be my guest!”
            “That film has been stinking up the place for two months,” Tommy moaned as he handed over a dollar bill.
            “Hurry the hell up Everett!” someone yelled from the back of the line. “We don’t want to miss the opening credits!”
Tommy was arguing with the theatre’s owner when Kurt Smith and Jesse Paco walked past the concession stand. “I had to raise my prices,” Mr. Cranston explained to a belligerent Tommy. “This new projector cost a fortune … but wait till you see the picture! It’s so real the characters seem to jump right off the screen!”
            “We’re not gonna have to wear any of them hokey 3D glasses are we?” Kurt joined the conversation as Jesse bought a large-popcorn from Cranston’s wife.
            “No … No nothing like that,” Cranston insisted. “It’s all in the projector!”
            “Film is film,” Tommy argued. “A beam of light just enlarges it on a screen.”
            “Let me show you boys,” Cranston insisted. He included Kurt and Jesse by looking at them. “You’ve never seen anything like this before.”
            “I don’t know,” Jesse stammered scanning the crowd already entering the dark theatre. “We don’t want to miss the movie.”
Cranston laughed. “Who do you think starts the projector?” The boys followed him up a tiny set of stairs.

-------2-------
           
            The first thing Jesse noticed was a metal tag on the side of the technical wonder that read THE PROJECTOR THAT MAKES THE WORLD COME TO LIFE Callahan Industries. Other than a strange box attached to the lamp compartment it looked like an ordinary 35 mm movie projector. “I thought old-man Callahan only built refrigerators?”

Tommy laughed. “He only built a couple of Frostman 419’s before his crummy plant closed down. I heard it was a million bucks down the drain.”

            “Joseph Callahan was a genius,” Cranston said. “He invented more things than Toby Edison.”
            “I think you mean Thomas Edison,” Kurt corrected.

            “No Toby was Thomas’ brother,” Cranston said with a wry grin. “Kind of the black-sheep in the famous inventor’s family.”

            “I heard Callahan used technology he stole from a crashed UFO in the bottom of Palasidies Lake to build the damn refrigerators,” Tommy said. “Is that where he got the idea for this crummy projector?”

Cranston ignored him.

All three boys watched as the theatre owner threaded the first reel into the projector. “Better get to your seats,” he said looking at his watch. “The show starts in three minutes!”


-------3-------

            The lobby was full of kids buying popcorn, soda and candy before the show began. Jesse caught a glimpse of Chloe O’Brian as she disappeared into the right aisle of the dark theatre with one of her friends. Kurt started down the left aisle but Jesse pulled him back. “No this way,” he insisted.

It was dark inside. Interlude Music was playing. Only the shadowy silhouettes of heads could be seen. Most of the seats were already taken. I think there’s a couple of seats in the middle of this row,” Kurt pointed. Jesse had to squeeze past two fat ladies each with half the concession stand piled in their ample laps. Ruben Butterfield had both his bowed legs draped over the seat in front of him and refused to move. He was sitting next to Nancy Benton. Jesse and Kurt were forced to step over him and his gum chewing girlfriend. “Why don’t you two girly boys go around?” Ruben complained from under a ten-gallon John Wayne hat as he yanked at Kurt’s hair.
            Kurt turned and bent back the pudgy fingers on Ruben’s hand. The scruffy cowboy roared in pain. “The Butterfield Ranch, where men are men … and the sheep are scared!” Kurt chanted.
Ruben clambered to his feet and took a wild swing. Kurt ducked and Jesse had to drag his ready to fight friend away so there wouldn’t be a scuffle. “Not now Cassius! We don’t want to get kicked out!”
Mr. Cranston’s wife was already walking down the aisle with a flashlight in her hand sweeping the rows looking for the cause of the disturbance. Ruben sat down swearing under his breath. “This ain’t done you bastards!”
Kurt and Jesse moved three more spaces over and slipped into the first seats available. Jesse’s nose picked up the delightful scent of Chanel No. 5. He was almost afraid to turn his head and look. When he did he was sitting next to Chloe O’Brian.

-------4-------


            Chloe’s smile was dazzling in the light from the projector as the movie previews started. “Hi,” she said.
            Jesse felt like someone had poured a bottle of Elmer’s glue into his mouth and it was setting up fast. All he could manage was a distorted “mmmmeeeeeeyaaakk” sound.
            “Hi, Kurt responded. “You’ll have to excuse my friend. A baby bird fell out of a tree and he’s still looking for the nest.”
Chloe and her friend Susan McKinney both laughed. “I like guys who are kind to animals.” Chloe gave Jesse’s hand a squeeze.
            “Yeah,” Kurt said. “Jesse wouldn’t hurt a fly!” He replicated the pulsing screech from Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho almost perfectly and made both girls jump.
Someone on a back row didn’t like Ruben’s  oversized cowboy hat. “Hey Ruben! Take off your damn hat!” a voice called. It sounded like Tommy Everett.
Ruben turned around and raised his middle finger.
He had just turned back toward the screen when a half-full box of Junior Mints struck him in the back of the head knocking off his hat. “Thank you,” the same voice called out.

Jesse finally got his tongue untangled and was about to say something when the movie started. To say the Royal’s new projection system was mesmerizing was a vast understatement. The characters looked so real they appeared to almost jump off the screen. “Wow!” Jesse gasped as Brigitte Bardot and Jeanne Moreau, both named Maria, met in a South American country and then start to sing and dance together in a nineteen-twenty circus. Brigitte tears her skirt during the performance and finally removes it so Jeanne takes hers off too. Brigitte flings her skirt into the audience and Kurt feels the material brush past his cheek. What follows is two breathtaking women undressing to out-do each other as they sing and dance.
            Jesse is unaware that Chloe has been trying to talk to him until she punches his arm. “Me and Susan are going to get a Coke … do you want one?”
            “Do I want what?” Jesse’s eyes were spinning in his head and he couldn’t peel them away from the screen.
            “Forget it,” Chloe snapped. She and Susan both stormed up the aisle.
Jesse felt like it wasn’t so much that he was being drawn into the film world it was the film being drawn into theirs.

“Wow!”
“Damn”
“Oh my God!”

An hour later Brigitte and Jeanne are captured and their Catholic inquisitors decide to tickle-torture them.
            Kurt and Jesse stared transfixed as a giggling Bridget escaped her captors and then bolted right off the screen. Jesse felt the sex Goddess’s delicate hands on his shoulders as she vaulted over him and then caught a whiff of Intimate perfume as she ran up the aisle.
The audience exploded in mayhem as the film broke and the screen was suddenly a huge wall of flashing white light.
           
Mr. Cranston’s voice came over the sound system. “I’m sorry folks. Our equipment is new and we seem to be having some technical problems. Please hang on to your ticket stubs and you can see the film’s ending tomorrow.”
The lights came on and Kurt was one of the first ones on his feet. Snorting like a rodeo bull Ruben Butterfield spied them and was pushing people out of the way as he charged forward. “Let’s get the hell out of here, Paco!

Kurt and Jesse ran from the theatre weaving around people on the sidewalk and didn’t stop until they were safely inside Cloverdale City Park.

            “Those muscles on that rodeo ape are good for pounding fence-posts into the ground,” Kurt gasped. “But Ruben can’t run worth a damn!”

Both boys burst out laughing and finally got over the giggles when they heard a noise.
            “I don’t believe this,” Jesse gaped. Moonlight slipping from behind dark clouds illuminated the open space between cottonwood trees almost like a movie screen. They walked forward with slow steps … suddenly terrified.
Brigitte Bardot was sitting on a picnic table with her head in her hands … crying.

-------5-------

           
“You’re real!” Jesse gasped.
“Je suis perdu et je ne peux pas trouver mon chemin du retour,” Brigitte moved her hands from her face and looked at the two boys hopefully.
“On the film she spoke our language almost perfectly!” Jesse looked bewildered. “Your mother was born in France; what did she say?”
“The film was dubbed in English you moron,” Kurt told him. “I think she’s lost and wants to go home.”
“Où habite-tu ?” Kurt spoke the French hesitantly.
Brigitte smiled. “Tu parles comme un chien... J’habite à Paris.”
“What did she say?”
“She says you remind her of her dog in Paris,” Kurt said.
Brigitte shook her head and then began to cry again.
            “Tell her as soon as Mr. Cranston gets the film spliced back together I’m sure she’ll go back to where she belongs.”
            “That’s the craziest thing I’ve ever heard of”
            “We have to tell her something!”
            “Nous devons seulement attendre ici un peu de temps, et alors tout sera fixé.”
Brigitte wiped her eyes and then smiled at both boys. “Peut-être nous pouvons être plus que des amis!” She moved to the center of the table and motioned for both boys to sit beside her.
            The moon slipped slyly behind some more clouds as Brigitte shivered and then put her arms around both boys drawing them close. “Je suis tellement heureux que j’ai trouvé des amis !”

Warm!
Wonderful!
Strange sensations!

            “What did she say?” Jesse whispered.
Brigitte was brushing her pouty lips against Kurt’s cheek. Both boys realized that the best part of their lives might be in their dreams as their eyes closed. The trees seemed to be singing. To everything … there is a season … and a time to every purpose … under heaven …
            “Who cares … I think I’m falling in love!”

-------6-------

Kurt and Jesse both felt a chill like someone had pulled away a warm blanket; they both opened their eyes; Brigitte was gone. “Was that real?” Kurt gasped. “I’ve got a hickey on my neck … it must have been.”

Jesse and Kurt wandered through the park making sure she was really gone and then walked with great sadness down Townsend Avenue. The lights were on in the Royal Theatre and when Mr. Cranston saw them on the sidewalk he opened the door.
            “Sorry about the film,” he said. “This new projector uses a tremendous amount of power and I had to install a large cooling fan to keep the film from burning.”
            “You fixed the film and ran it to the finish about twenty minutes ago didn’t you?” Jesse was smiling at Kurt.
Mr. Cranston looked at his watch and then looked bewildered. “I spliced the film back together and then ran it to the end to make sure everything was okay.”
            “I told you so.”
Kurt glanced at his best friend and then shrugged his shoulders.
            “I won’t be able to show the rest of the film tomorrow,” Mr. Cranston apologized. “It was already rented to a theatre in Missoula so I’m handing out free passes to next week’s show.”
            “You sure everything is going to be fixed this time?”
            “With any new technology there are always glitches … but I hope for the best!”
Kurt and Jesse thanked him as he handed them each a ticket and then locked his doors.
            “The next show should be even better. I made some adjustments and if you think my new projector made this film came to life … just wait until next week!” He waved as he walked toward his ride, one of the only cars left on the street.

The boys were halfway home when Kurt finally got a chance to look at his ticket. Ruben Butterfield had been secretly driving up and down the empty streets in a smoky old Ford pickup with a bent tailgate and he had chased them down several alleys before they finally ditched him. “I think we’re in trouble,” Kurt gasped.
            Jesse looked up and down the street but he didn’t see the angry cowboy. “We always go to the Friday night show and we’re always in trouble,” Jesse was trying to catch his breath. “So what else is new?”
Kurt held up his ticket. “Ever heard of a movie called The Exorcist?”

TO BE CONTINUED …
           




            

Sunday, November 5, 2017

GOBLIN

Copyright (c) 2017 by Randall R. Peterson ALL RIGHTS RESERVED This is a work of fiction. All persons, locations and actions are from the author's imagination or have been used in a fictitious manner.



By R. Peterson

In nightmarish fashion my legs moved toward the dark corner of the room without being able to stop them. You aren’t supposed to be able to smell in dreams but I caught a whiff like burnt almonds. A tiny silver-bell attached to a heavy-timber threshold tinkled once as I opened the rough plank door. Warped wooden stairs led down into the darkness. God in heaven! I didn’t want to go down there! My legs refused my frantic commands to stop. Floating cobwebs investigated my cheeks with a spider’s touch and icy daggers stabbed at my spine with every step I took.
            When I’d crept about halfway to what looked like a dirt-floor bottom a squat figure suddenly stepped from the darkness. An overlarge swollen nose jutted out and down from a dried-apple face in which gleaming black eyes stared upward with murderous intent. There was no railing and wooden splinters tore into my finger-tips as I tried to slow my descent. Pudgy fingers with dirty nails like ragged claws reached upward for me. The touch was as cold as death …
            I woke and sat up in bed without a scream … I had no breath. It took a few moments to realize where I was. I was home in the fold-down bed in the living room that I shared with my brother Mike. “You better hurry you don’t want to miss the bus!” my mother called from the tiny kitchen. This was the third night in a row that I’d had the same horrible dream. Each night the dark fantasy got a little longer and with greater detail. Last night the creature had touched me. Tonight would he grab my arm and lead me into the darkness?
            I couldn’t handle another night of terror. Using a child’s logic even though I was five months past six-years old I folded my arms and began to pray. Father in heaven … if you will make the dreams stop I will not have them again until my wedding night.
            “Rupert Lynn James! Fold up that bed and get in here right now! You don’t want to miss the first day of school and I don’t have a car to drive you!”  I lifted the frame at the head of the mattress until it clicked into place and then did the same to the bottom. Locking the two halves together with a slotted metal bar. I covered the bed neatly with an old pink quilt and rolled it against the wall next to the rattling furnace heater.
My older brother was already drinking milk from a bowl behind a box of Kellogg’s cereal. He slapped my hand and grabbed it from me when I tried to look at the illustration for a free Model Guards Bandsman on the back. Mike smiled as he dropped the cellophane-wrapped plastic figure, molded to look like a Buckingham Palace guard, into his shirt pocket. “I had to reach all the way to the bottom for it!” I noticed the spilled cornflakes on the table and the floor.
I ate my own cereal as fast as I could then my mother herded me into the bathroom before she dragged my winter coat from the closet brushed off some dust and then dabbed at several stains with a damp rag. “Be sure to comb your hair after you brush your teeth. You don’t want to look like a hooligan!”
The ride into Cloverdale was a dizzy adventure. I’d never ridden in a long car with more than one back seat. There were more than twenty with a narrow isle between two rows. There were only a couple of kids I knew … the rest were strangers.
Mike left me at the foot of very wide stairs right after we entered the two-story brick building. He was just starting third grade and his classroom was on the second floor. I clutched tightly to the slip of paper my mother had given me looking for an adult in a sea of tiny faces … some of them were crying. “Dern room five,” the woman with the sharp nose and glasses read after she snatched the paper from my hand. “It’s the third door on the left.” She pointed.  The bewildered look on my face must have made her angry. She frowned as she dragged me down the hallway.
            Mrs. Dern smiled just before she began each lesson. Only a few things I could comprehend. We read from tiny books an older student passed out. By recess I knew a few the words … Dick, Jane … Spot. The girls surrounded three swings and a merry-go round on a playground set while I followed the boys to a grassy field. I had no mitt. I looked on shyly as two bigger boys took turns choosing up sides. I didn’t know much about baseball but I was sure I could learn. My heart sank … as I was chosen last.
My first day at school was a jumbled mixture of change, apprehension and homesickness but that night … the bad dreams stopped.

-------2-------

            I had to be the loneliest kid in school until the start of fourth grade. That was the year my parents moved into town from the country. Suddenly I was surrounded by neighbors most with children about my age. Nights were spent sleeping out in each other’s backyards, wandering the streets of Cloverdale after midnight, filching apples from strangers’ orchards and tumbling in the coin operated dryers at the local Laundromat for just a dime. Summers were forever for nine-year olds.
            Winters were what we made them. Snowplows were unheard of. We caught rides all over town holding tight to the back bumpers of cars whose tires spun on the packed snow and ice. If you had any guts at all you “hooky-bobbed” the cop car as he made his rounds. We were fearless.
            By age eleven we were habitual Friday night movie goers. The theatre tickets were thirty cents if you were under twelve. We watched all the Frankie Avalon – Annette Funicello beach movies and one of my friends could talk just like Harvey Lembeck: When Eric Von Zipper likes someone, they stay liked! James Bond gave us our first taste of sex and A Hard Day’s Night showed us girls were crazy about guys who could play music.
            I sat on the cement steps of my house and listened to the band playing two doors down and I knew they were good; too bad they were already full up. We spent hours going through stacks of record albums at the local drugstore. My best friend talked me into buying an album by a black guy named Jimi Hendrix. I’d never heard of him but when I got home I listened to his songs for hours and learned Purple Haze by ear. The Bass player for the band two doors down came to my room in the basement while I had my amplifier cranked to the max … and was blown away by the distortion … and the smoke.  It was my job to tell the former lead guitar player he was no longer in the band.
            We played mostly High School victory dances and had a strobe light on a high pole that we could activate with a car’s floorboard dimmer switch mounted in a wooden box. The entire system was powered by an electric-fence generator and a twisted neon tube inside a huge reflector made by the local electronics genius. Girls were fun to watch in the flashing lights and fights even more exciting.
            The band broke up after four years of High School and one year of College but by then we were all moving in new directions. I got married when I was twenty one and she was just seventeen … you know what I mean.
Even after thirteen years I remembered the covenant my six year-old self had made. As my wedding day approached I grew more and more anxious. I spent hours in the library researching dwarfs and other little people. To the best of my knowledge the thing I’d seen in my nightmares was a Goblin a small and grotesque creature from the middle-ages.
After the traditional consummate sex - not the first time by a long shot … I lay awake wondering about the ugly little man and if I’d have the nightmare … the plank door, the stairs, the darkness and him. To my great relief … I woke the next morning with no bad dreams. Perhaps my bargain was just a childish fantasy.

-------3-------

Thirteen years later, my marriage began to break up and I was devastated. She was in love with someone else. My brother described it best: Divorce is like tripping when there is nothing in your way. My parents forced me to eat food along with the cigarettes I chain-smoked and I struggled through the bad times. Depression is a deep dark hole in your mind that only time fills in.
I met my second wife at work and it was love at first sight even though she was already married. I brought my guitar to work and sang songs to her during breaks. Her marriage was failing and she longed to have children. After her divorce we began dating. The wedding ceremony was rushed because she was already pregnant. We honeymooned in Jackson Hole Wyoming, the playground of the rich and famous.
I thought about the goblin that night, I’d given him the name Hobb years before, and wondered if he would appear in my dreams. I prayed that he wouldn’t. What twenty seven year-old woman wants to wake up in bed with her new husband screaming? Hobb was a no show, no splintered plank door, no stairs leading into the darkness and thank God! No ugly little man.

-------4-------

The marriage was a success. We raised three children and my wife lived to bounce nine grandchildren on her knees. My wife was so much younger than me I always thought I’d go first. Cancer never plays by the rules. The best part of me died with her.
I was eighty-eight years old and very lonely. The doctor says I have a bad heart and can go anytime. Molly worked in a garden shop and I stopped in one spring to buy red-potato seed. She was easy to talk to and at my age that’s what counts the most. After dozens of dinners and long walks by the river we decided to get married. I’d sold my house years before just to make ends meet and we decided to move into her parent’s old house in the country. I’d never been there … it was to be a surprise.
We were married by the county clerk without ceremony this morning. Molly just drove with her daughter into town to buy stuff to make a wedding cake. I’ve been here alone the last half-hour just thinking … remembering my life. When Molly showed me around the place, a small farm with an old barn and empty corrals, I didn’t remember seeing the old plank door in one dark corner of the rustic kitchen. It looks familiar … probably leads to a basement … or a cellar. There is a smell … burnt almonds. Perhaps Molly is baking … but the oven is cold.

-------5-------

A few minutes ago just as I finished my coffee I thought I heard a sound … coming from below … my hands are shaking … it is time.
I’m standing up now. My legs are moving toward the dark corner of the room and I can’t stop them. A tiny silver-bell, attached to a heavy-timber threshold, tinkles once as I open the rough plank door. Warped wooden stairs lead down into darkness. God in heaven! I don’t want to go down there! My legs refuse my frantic commands to stop. Floating cobwebs brush my cheeks with a spider’s touch and icy daggers stab at my spine with every step I take.
            Halfway to what looks like a filthy dirt-floor bottom a squat figure suddenly steps from the darkness. An overlarge swollen nose juts out and down from a dried-apple face in which gleaming black eyes stare upward with murderous intent. This time he smiles. There is no railing and wooden splinters tear into my finger-tips as I try to slow my descent. Pudgy fingers with dirty nails like ragged claws reach upward for me.
The goblin’s touch is as cold as death …


THE END ?