Free Fiction Fifteenth – Dangerous Machines

 

June’s free story is another oldie,  and a little quirky too. It first came out back in 2021 but had lingered on the hard drive for a while while I tinkered on it and grew busy with other things. There are maybe a few things I would do differently today, but the writer I was then was just that, so, as with other stories I post here, I’m letting it stand as it was without attempting to edit it too very much.

I think it points the way to a whole lot of my other fiction too-people exploring mysterious alien structures. I even have a novel coming out later in the year with similar tropes.

Oh, I should mention that it’s kind of long for a short story – about 8500 words, maybe 50 regular pages of a book. So, maybe a funny choice for online reading.

I hope you enjoy “Dangerous Machines”.

Thanks for reading.


Dangerous Machines – blurb

Celebrated writer Sean Monaghan’s stories beguile and entice the reader.

Explorer Gina Parker searches  through strange underground alien tubes. The mystery of their existence draws her. The odd sounds and acrid smells change as she travels deeper and deeper.

Creepy.

But the tubes hold more than mysteries.

And Gina might just find more than the answers she so desperately seeks.

A quirky story of courage and resilience with a human touch.


Dangerous Machines

 

Chapter One

Gina Parker stood on the rocky base of the vertical tube. Around her the air was cold and dark. Several passages led off from the sides.

Here she was, underground. Again. Should be used to this kind of day.

The space reeked of something dead.

She hoped she didn’t tread on the carcass in the dark.

The tube directly above her reached to the sunny surface. Three meters across. Fifteen meters deep. The cables of the rope ladder clacked against the stone sides. Still shifting from her climb.

Gina had a couple of minutes before the others came down. If they did. They’d been getting antsy lately. Lowering the remote on a rope.

She unclipped the flashlight from her waist and shone the light around.

It was just after midday, but hardly any light made it down the shaft. Some reflection from the slick walls, but not really enough to see by. Not into the other tunnels.

At least it was cooler here at the bottom.

The light did its best to show the surrounds. Gloom and more gloom. Five tunnels led off in a star pattern. Each a cylinder two meters across. The light reached a hundred or so meters along. Dark glassy walls.

Artificial. Machine dug.

Alien machine.

Not a good start to the day.

Gina sighed. She rubbed her shoulder where she’d fallen earlier in the day. Still sore. She’d had a weak shoulder for years anyway because of dislocating it surfing when she’d been a teenager.

Almost twenty years ago now.

So much had changed in her life in the meantime. Qualifications, losing her father, the arrival of the mechismas.

Gina wore investigation overalls and her OAL jacket. Not an especially comfortable or fetching outfit. But her job called for practical more often than formal. At least her tough boots were fitting and comfy.

Keeping the flashlight beam on the ground, Gina took a step toward the first of the side passages. The light glistened beautifully. Refracting a rainbow, with golds and blues. The kind of thing Mel, her sister, would love.

Gina took another step. She called out a quiet, “Hello,” into the tube. Her voice echoed back at her. Fading away.

She hadn’t seen one quite like this before. Tubes with one or two horizontal passages, but never five.

Five. What was going on?

OAL, the Office for Alien Landings had been created around the time someone realized that the mechismas were a more serious problem than the FBI or Homeland or any of the other agencies could handle.

Frankly, the OAL was really little more than a shadow agency. No real powers. Just an investigative role. Sixteen of them in the whole agency. Squeezed into a musty old office building just outside of downtown Missoula.

Not that there was anything much special about Missoula. Cold in the winter. Filled up with skiers and other mountain fiends.

Also, cheap, practically abandoned office space.

Plus, the first real investigations into the mechismas had been around Montana anyway.

The mechismas came from who knew where? Sirius? Betelgeuse? Mars?

Yeah, some people said Mars. Said we sent all our rovers there, so Mars was returning the favor.

Mechismas came in a range sizes, from millimeter to small-car. Machines. Or maybe machine life.

They’d been witnessed. Photographed. But no one had an actual specimen yet.

No official agencies had arrived in time from one of the sightings. Another good thing for the big agencies; having the OAL meant there was someone to blame. Gina’s job description practically had Scapegoat in big letters across the top.

The mechismas looked like short slugs. Fat at the head end, tapered at the tail. They had articulations in their bodies. Like an armadillo, or a slater. Their sides came flush with the ground.

No one knew what they looked like underneath. Or inside.

The external parts were dark gray. Gun metal. But in the gaps the visible cogs and springs and joints were all kinds of colors. Coke can reds, old ice blues, mineral pool greens. Like the Grand Prismatic Pool in Yellowstone.

Beautiful, Melanie had said. She’d used some of the photographs in compiling an online exhibition. She’d actually gotten a lot of traffic.

Good. After the way things had gone, it was real good that Melanie had a focus in her life. Not that she would ever be the same.

Video footage showed the mechismas digging these holes. Always three meters across. Always fifteen meters deep.

The smaller mechismas moved in a spiral. Digging from the inside out. They scraped off a layer, spraying earth, then rock, out the side.

Once they’d completed a layer, they spiraled their way inward. Working back and forth, they dug. And they dug fast.

The first meter in under five minutes. According to reports. A bit slower as the soil grew coarser and they began chewing through rock.

The spoil came out in a fine, directed fountain. It fell to Earth, forming a neat circular berm around the hole.

No one had seen any of the big ones dig. But they had been witnessed, and filmed, making their way into pre-dug holes.

Gina wished she’d seen the digging in action. But the reports always came in with a lag.

She’d yet to actually see one of the mechismas with her own eyes.

Only two of them in the agency had. Doug Mikhyeyeva, and Sally Jenkins. Both of them before they’d joined OAL.

“Hello?” Gina called again.

Of course, just her own voice came back.

“Who’re you talking to down there?” someone said from above.

She looked up and saw Doug’s mustached face staring down at her from the surface. He was smiling.

Doug was a cop from Seattle. He’d been camping in the west of Washington with his family. Near Spokane. They’d seen, and filmed, and posted, a cat-sized mechisma spiraling, sending out the spray, building up the berm. The kids had played in the loose spoil, making castles and digging their own holes.

A week later Doug had found himself transferred.

Nice guy. Accepted the transfer. Got on with it.

Similar story with Sally, just that she didn’t think much of getting moved from San Diego to Missoula. Who would?

“Just listening to my echo,” Gina called back to Doug. “This set is different. Five tunnels.”

“Good. You should get back up here. Croddy has just pulled up. He’s going to want to talk with you.”

“I bet.”

Jose Croddy was the OAL’s head. He’d been there since day one. Encyclopedic knowledge of the mechismas—not that there was a lot of information anyway—extensive investigative experience. Montana man.

He’d come up through the military. MP, and counsel. Rumor had it that he’d gone through some of the steps to get into the astronaut program. Tough competition.

Now here he was bossing around a team of fifteen misfits without any clear direction. Making it up as they went along.

“Is she down the hole again?” Croddy’s voice came from the distance. Echoing down the tube. “… again… again… again…”

Ah, well. Better get back up top.

As she reached around for the rope ladder, Gina’s flashlight caught movement down one of the side tubes.

She stopped. Moved the light again.

“Hey!” Croddy called, voice clear now. Peering into the hole with Doug. “Get out of there will you? I’ll end up having to reprimand you, do you know that?”

“Right.” Gina moved away from the hole. She stepped slightly into the side tube. Directed the beam down it.

Nothing.

Just a trick of the light. Reflections.

“What are you doing?” Croddy said.

A sound from along the tube. A whisper of metallic movement. A scraping sound.

“Gina!”

“Shush now!” she shouted back at him. “I heard something.”

She took another step into the tube.

“Gina!”

 

Chapter Two

Gina stood a hundred and sixty eight centimeters. Her father, scientist with a drinking problem, had eschewed the imperial system. She’d known her weight in kilograms, her height in centimeters, the distance to school in kilometers.

Of course that got to be an issue when she’d learned to drive. The speedometer was in miles per hour. The distances on signs, and posted speed limits were in miles. In plenty of countries the speed limit was 100. Kilometers per hour, of course. About sixty three miles per hour.

But 100 seemed like such a nice figure. Printed in a circle. Like a target.

65, even 75, seemed like a crawl.

Thing was, with a two-meter high tube, Gina had plenty of head clearance.

“Gina,” Croddy called from the top of the vertical tube. “Get back up here.”

“Just a minute,” she called back. “There’s something here.”

She shone the light ahead again. No sign of anything. The light petered out after about twenty or thirty meters. It was just a hand flashlight. Maybe they needed to get some high-powered lights down here. Maybe some strobes.

“What’s that?” Croddy said.

“Just a minute.”

She’d walked out of the light from the vertical tube now. Into the darkness of the side tube. Still no sign of whatever had moved. Not visual anyway.

That metallic scraping sound continued.

“Gina!” A shout this time.

She took another couple of steps. This was going way off briefing. Bad enough that she’d come down the hole. Technically they weren’t supposed to.

Even though they brought the ladder, it was meant to be for emergencies only. If, say, a teleoperator fell down the hole. They needed to be ready to send someone down to get them.

But Gina had been down every hole so far. Taking photos. Getting a sense of the place. All before the teleoperator even showed up with their little remote-controlled buggies to send deeper into the tubes. Today that would be Peter. Usually he was more prompt.

Some of those remote photos had made their way into Melanie’s exhibitions. With acknowledgement to Gina. Melanie gave acknowledgement to all the original photographers, even though the manipulations—cropping and color enhancement and so on—were all her own.

Gina had been to the last one. Titled Some of These Machines are Actually Pretty Dangerous. Silly and over the top. Clearly they weren’t dangerous. They kept to themselves. Dug their holes.

Melanie had a much better developed sense of irony than Gina. And that had only gotten better in the last year. Sometimes Melanie could be worrying. With her darker moods.

Gina never knew what to say.

“Gina! Get back up here. I’m not kidding.”

The word ‘kidding’ echoed around her.

She shone the light around again. The refractions flickered, casting their brilliant displays.

Just an illusion.

She turned and took the ladder. Just hearing that whisper of metallic sound again.

Maybe just an echo from the ladder’s cables.

But then, the sound came from just one of the tubes.

 

Chapter Three

Up top the sun was brilliant and scorching. This part of Colorado verged on desert. It hadn’t rained in months, and it was into August now. Meteorologists were hopeful, climate change scientists less so.

Croddy had hired a campervan to be their local base. He’d parked it five minutes walk from the hole. At the end of a local dirt road.

They didn’t have their own vehicle. This location had been a short flight out of Missoula, via Bozeman, into Denver. Then a long drive back toward Grand Junction. Government systems.

Gina stepped over the berm, her feet sinking into the soft spoil. Doug and Sally were standing a few yards away, with Peter Bensemann and Avril Smith. Two of the other on-duty OAL agents. All four of them wore light slacks, with collared shirts. Peter wore a peaked cap, on account of his balding pate.

The hole lay on the northern side of a gently-sloping valley. Not very deep, but pretty old. By some craggy rocks on the southern flank’s ridge a cell phone tower stood. Partially obscured from her vantage.

There were wiry trees growing around the area. A tough looking bird twittered from the branches of one. The bird darted off, hunting a flying insect.

“Hey,” Doug called. He waved Gina over.

“Why am I the only one wearing overalls?” she said, joining them.

There were some other vehicles parked by the camper. Black SUVs. Government, probably.

“Nothing going on here,” Peter said. “We’re going back home.” He nodded at the vehicles.

“We’ve been pulled out,” Sally said. She didn’t seem happy about it.

“By whom?”

Peter shrugged. “Go talk to Croddy. He pointed farther along the road. The one that led back toward the main highway. Another vehicle parked there. Bigger.

A truck the size of a big rig. No articulated trailer, but a connected paneled box on a long chassis. Black, with some white markings. A couple of small windows.

More like a genuine mobile command post. Less makeshift than just a rented camper.

Croddy was down there. Talking with about six other people. Three in uniform, two dressed like Doug and Avril and the others, and one in board shorts and a t-shirt.

They had clipboards and equipment in boxes. Croddy was waving and pointing. Gesticulating was the word. Adding emphasis to whatever he was saying.

Frustrated, clearly. Upset even.

“How did they even get that thing up the road?” Gina said. It had been rough enough coming up in the camper.

She started walking down. Her feet crunched on the surface grit.

“I wouldn’t go over there,” Doug said.

“And why not?” Gina kept walking. Who knew if these things—the mechismas—were a threat? The thing was if multiple agencies were working on it, they needed to work together.

“Because,” Avril called, “Croddy’s down there trying to placate them.”

Gina turned.

“You went down the hole,” Doug said. He pointed. Her footprints, and his and Croddy’s, were all over the berm.

“Protocols,” Avril said.

“How are we supposed to get anything done if we can’t go down the hole? And where is the remote anyway? I thought I saw and heard something down there.”

“You did?” Sally said, at the same time as Peter said, “There’s your problem right there.”

Gina stopped. “My problem?”

“You charge in. We need to be circumspect. Follow the protocols.”

She stared at him a moment. Took a breath.

“We should just go grab a beer,” Avril said. “It’s hot. We’re not going to make any headway. Leave them to it.”

There were beers in the fridge in the camper. Croddy had seen to that. Tough taskmaster, but still knew that people needed to unwind.

But now wasn’t the time for that.

“Tell you what, Peter. Avril,” Gina said. “You go follow protocols and have a beer or whatever.”

“Gina,” Doug said.

“Me. I’m going to be a whole lot less circumspect.”

Gina turned and headed for the big vehicle.

 

Chapter Four

A big insect buzzed at Gina as she strode across the rough ground toward that mobile command post. Some kind of beetle with a black carapace and dangling legs.

She waved it away and ducked. Sweat dripped into her eyes. It would be better down the tube. Much cooler down there.

And a beer would be nice.

“Hey!” she shouted as she approached the others. “What’s going on?” She tried to sound friendly, but worried that it had come out as aggressive.

Melanie always said Gina needed to work on her manner. Be less abrupt, Melanie would say. Let people warm up to you.

“You should use that for the title of one of your exhibitions,” Gina had said.

Melanie had laughed.

The group turned toward her. Croddy’s already raised hands went to his head. His fingers knitted.

Not happy.

There was a rickety wire farm fence between Gina and the group. She stopped and put her hand on one of the uprights. It was rough under her palm.

The big vehicle hummed. Kind of like an ice cream truck. Except this thing was never going to attract neighborhood children. It loomed. The sound had to be aircon. For all the equipment in there.

Like one of those films, with operatives wearing headsets, hunched before a bank of monitors.

“What’s going on?” she said.

The three in uniforms were young. Probably just signed up. Light fawn, with a kind of enlarged pixel pattern. Was that army? Did they call those BDUs?

“We’re just discussing the handover,” Croddy said. “Could I ask you, Gina, to head back to our post and prepare things for departure. Please.”

“Handover? Peter hasn’t even gotten the remote down there yet. We’ve hardly even started.”

“And we’re done, Gina.”

“But this is special. There are five horizontal tunnels leading… from the…” She trailed off. That was the point. Something had changed.

That’s why these guys were here.

“I did see something down there, didn’t I?” she said.

“You saw something?” the guy with board shorts said. He stepped over.

“Saw and heard,” she said.

“All right, Gina,” Croddy said. “Let’s get this packed up now. Please.”

“Just a second,” board shorts said. He was nice looking. About thirty, maybe. Dark brows and a day of stubble. Hazel eyes. “Mitch,” he said, holding out his hand. “Mitch Templeton.”

“Gina Parker.” She took his hand and shook. He had a firm grip and a dry palm.

He smiled. Stared right into her.

“You saw and heard something?” he said.

Her eyes flicked to Croddy’s glare. He still had his hands on his head. Frustrated.

“Might have,” Gina said. “There are a lot of reflections down there. Light bounces around the walls. They’re pretty glassy. And sounds echo. It might have been the rope ladder’s clicks against the side. My own footsteps.”

“You were down the hole?”

“Sure.”

“For how long?”

“Four or five minutes. I know it’s not protocol, but we haven’t been making any headway. So, yeah, I’ve been—”

“Enough, Gina,” Croddy said.

Mitch glanced around. “Claire, why don’t you show Mr Croddy our plan and set up.”

“Yes,” one of the women in the BDUs said. “This way Mr Croddy.”

“But I…” Croddy trailed off. He threw another glare Gina’s way and followed the woman toward the back of the big truck.

“Good,” Mitch said. “Gina. Let’s go see this hole.”

 

Chapter Five

Ten minutes later Gina stood at the bottom of the tube again. It hadn’t changed. Glassy reflections. The echo of her voice along the tubes.

She stepped away from the bottom of the rope ladder as Mitch came down. Gina kept one hand on the ladder to steady it.

Mitch dropped down beside her with a thump. His breath smelled of cinnamon. He was chewing gum.

“Well look at this,” he said, shining a flashlight around the five tubes. “Look at this. Which one did you hear the sound from?”

Had she said the sound had come from just one? Probably. Mitch had pumped her for information on the short walk back to the tube entry.

“That one,” she said, pointing left. The tubes all looked identical, but the rope ladder gave her a compass point.

“Good. Let’s go take a look, shall we?” Shining the beam ahead, he strode off along the corridor.

“Wait,” Gina said. “You can’t just go down there.”

“Wouldn’t you?” Mitch stopped and turned to face her. “Except for the rules?”

Gina nodded. “Mr Croddy runs a tight ship.”

Mitch laughed. “Quaint expression. But yes, I got the sense from him that he’s playing all this very safe.”

“The remotes,” Gina said. “They gather the imagery. Everything we need. Temperature data, atmospheric, sound.”

“Right. You mean those little remote-controlled cars you send rolling off along the tubes, don’t you?”

“Which agency are you with?”

“Well, technically I work for JPL. You know, out in Pasadena.” Mitch turned again and headed away along the tube gain.

“I know JPL. How does this involve them? You?”

“You saw the uniforms?”

“Couldn’t miss them.”

“Turns out this might be a bigger issue than we thought.”

“We don’t know how big of an issue it is anyway,” Gina said. “There are about twenty-two holes. Hundreds of photographs. We don’t know where the mechismas go.”

In all these excursions, the remotes had only reached the end of one of the tubes on three occasions. The shortest had been after about sixty meters, the longest more than two hundred.

No sign of the mechismas. No answer as to what had happened to the spoil from the horizontal tunneling. A lot of it had been reconstituted as glass, but that didn’t account for it. Glass’s density was close to that of the material mined.

“Maybe they go down the other tubes,” Gina said. “The ones where we haven’t yet seen the end.”

Mitch kept walking. “Your team is pretty under-resourced right?”

“With too big of a remit, yes.”

“Figures. And everyone is trying to pin it all on you. Everything that’s not going right out here.”

“Or anywhere.”

Before they’d come down the tube, Mitch had introduced himself enthusiastically to Doug, Sally, Peter and Avril. He’d even thanked them for the work.

“How many sites are you monitoring?” Mitch said, still walking. He shone his own light up and down, and from his feet to far ahead. “Did you say twenty-two?”

“Seventeen,” Gina said. “The other five were early. We didn’t have the equipment. We hope to make it back to them sometime in the near future.”

“Right.”

“Thing is, new holes keep showing up. So we have to check those. Which is just as well, because this one is a whole world of different.”

Gina ran her fingertips along the wall. Cold and smooth. A slight tingle of electricity to it.

“Different?” Mitch said.

“Five side tubes. More than any ever before. There should be people with better skills than us on it.”

“That’s why I’m here.”

“Of course.” Funny, from anyone else it would have sounded patronizing, but from Mitch it was friendly.

“And they’re coming in at the rate of about one every three days now,” Mitch said. “Am I right?”

“About that.” Gina found herself liking him. Easy going, not too concerned. Either about the protocols or about the issue of the mechismas.

“So you’re pushed. Your team has to gather resources, fly in. Figure out how to use local infrastructure to investigate. I mean, filling the gaps in your equipment list. Like the rental camper.”

“Like the camper, yeah.”

They kept walking. Gina looked back. The light from the vertical tunnel shone into a kind of dusty haze. About forty meters back. Reassuring, at least.

“Well, what have we here?” Mitch said. He slowed.

Gina came up behind him. Leaning, she tried to see around him.

Something lay on the tubeway floor. A lump. Maybe twenty-five centimeters high. Maybe forty meters farther along. In the dimmer part of Mitch’s light.

“Hello there, little friend,” Mitch said.

 

Chapter Six

As they approached the lump, Gina glanced back at the entry. The light seemed very far off. Almost as if the tube walls were closing in. The air smelled oily.

Mitch stopped and crouched down. He shone his light around the lump.

At first it had seemed like one of the mechismas. But now it was clear that it was just a pile of parts. Almost as if one of the remotes had been here and broken down. Why would it fall apart like that though?

Gina had never seen a mechisma in the flesh, so to speak, but she’d seen enough footage and photographs to know exactly what they looked like.

This wasn’t one.

But it might have been the remains of one.

“You did hear something,” Mitch said. “And saw it too.” He had a real camera out. He took a lot of photos.

“We’re a long way down the tube.” She stepped around Mitch and around the pile of junk. Careful with her footing on the sloping part of the tube.

On the other side of the pile, she crouched. Shone her light into it.

Curved plates. Dull gray. With other pieces. More colorful.

Tiny cogs and sprockets. Springs. Thin rods. Unidentifiable parts. Dozens of them.

“It’s a mechisma,” she said. She took out her phone and started taking photos too. Melanie would love them. In a morbid way.

Gina shivered. Death. Not good. Melanie was always willing to talk about losing her baby, but Gina never knew what to say. Who would?

Maybe that was the appeal of Missoula. Far from having to sit through those family ordeals. The awkwardness. Melanie so easy and so fragile at once.

“Gina?” Mitch said. “You all right?”

Oh, and the research. “Is it dead?” She focused back on the pile. “Maybe just discarded parts?”

Mitch took a pen from his pocket and poked at the pile. It made a tinkling sound as pieces moved around.

“Keep taking pictures,” he said.

It wasn’t discarded parts. It was one of the small ones. Dead, somehow.

How did a machine die? Or were they even machines?

Usual story. The more they found out, the more questions that came up.

“We need to bag it,” she said. “Take it topside.” Suddenly she felt very amateur. Coming down without full equipment. They should have a proper team down here, with all the gear.

Just that they didn’t know enough yet. All they’d done so far really was come and document the holes. Location. Size. Gather any local footage and images. Put it all into the database. Wait for the next one.

“Unprecedented,” she whispered.

“All of this is unprecedented,” Mitch said. “Everything about them.”

“Right. But finding one. We haven’t gotten any of them yet. They always vanish. We should—”

“Gina!” someone called from back along the tube. Voice only just audible. Echoing quietly around them.

“What?” She stood.

“You need to get out!” Get out… get out…

“Why?”

“There’s a big one coming!”

 

Chapter Seven

At her feet the pile made a loud tinkling sound. Mitch had grabbed at it.

“Come on,” he said. “You know what the big ones do.”

“Right.” Gina moved around him.

The big ones got into the holes.

She started along the tubeway. Running. Mitch’s footsteps right behind.

Ahead the light ahead changed. Dimmed. Then darkened more.

Went out entirely.

Just the bobbing of their flashlights as they ran.

“Don’t like the look of that,” Mitch said, already puffing.

Gina kept running. A noise grew ahead. That familiar clanking and hissing she’d heard before.

But only in recordings.

From when she’d seen those videos of the big ones. Going down into a hole.

Taking up most of the space.

The vertical tubes were wider than the horizontal holes. Those big ones would just fit.

No space for a couple of humans.

Only a one in five chance that it would choose their tube.

The light dimmed even more. They were about halfway back to the junction.

Gina slowed. The reek of rotting vegetation rolled across her.

“Phew!” Mitch said. “That’s something those videos don’t convey. These things stink.”

“We’re relying on luck here,” Gina said. If the mechisma did decide to come along their tube it would crush them.

And there was no spare space at the junction. They had to choose one or other of the tubes.

No way to tell if the mechisma would choose to go down, or avoid, their one. Perhaps it was coming to look at the dead one.

Perhaps not.

How fast was the mechisma coming down anyway?

Maybe all her headwork now was moot anyway. The mechisma only had to descend fifteen meters. Gina and Mitch had more like a hundred to cover.

Not that the mechismas were particularly fast. But still.

A thump from behind. Gina stopped. Turned.

Mitch had stumbled. He was scrambling up from his knees.

“Keep going,” he called. “Get out.”

Gina shone the light at the junction again. They were only about ten meters away now.

Something hung into the junction. Two waving things. Like vines.

Antennas? From the mechisma?

Gina kept moving. The smell was getting worse. The sounds too. Hisses and clanks. Frightening.

She took another couple of steps. Stopped.

The front end of the mechisma appeared. Metallic eyes looked around at her.

It stopped.

Stared at her.

“We’ve attracted it,” Gina whispered.

Mitch came up behind her. “What do you think?” he said. “Stay? Run? Try for another tube?”

The mechisma started moving again. Lowering into the junction.

No way past it now anyway.

“Run,” Gina said. “Back the way we went.”

“Got it.” Mitch’s footsteps came from along the tubeway. Running back.

Gina stayed watching the mechisma for a moment. It kept its eyes on her.

Was it really watching her?

Its descent was slow, but accelerating.

Gina took a step back. What if it came this way? What if this was a blind tube?

And if it wasn’t, where did it lead?

Nowhere. They had to all be blind. Just because they hadn’t gotten any of the remotes as far as the end of some tubes, didn’t mean those were endless.

But where did the mechismas go? Those little hard-working ones who dug and dug? They had to go somewhere.

“Unless they all died,” she whispered. Like the one she and Mitch had found.

“Come on Gina,” Mitch called.

The large mechisma was halfway down now. A full meter of it sticking below the top of the tube.

Gina wished she could see the underside. Was it legs, or wheels, or what?

“Gina!”

“Yeah. Coming.”

As she turned something whipped out from the mechisma.

One of the antennas. It grabbed at her ankle.

Gina yelped. She stumbled.

The antenna wrapped around. It dragged her back along the tube.

 

Chapter Eight

The tube was cold and hard. It grabbed at her skin. Almost sticky.

The whiplike antenna kept pulling her back.

“Gina!” Mitch shouted.

Gina found herself thinking of Melanie. What would her sister make of this?

Melanie would probably tell Gina that it was her own fault.

The earthy stink of the mechisma felt like a cloud over her. Thick and strong.

The wiry antenna clung on. It dug into her ankle. Not cutting, but maybe cutting off her circulation.

Mitch grabbed her hand. “Hang on,” he said. He sounded freaked out. He tugged her back along the tube.

“I think it’s stronger than you.” Gina felt calm. If this was meant to be, well then that was that.

“Right.” Mitch let go. He went around her. He put his hands on her ankle. Tried to prize off the antenna.

“Ow,” Gina said.

“Sorry.” Another pull. “Can’t budge it.”

The antenna continued to drag Gina along. She’d almost reached the vertical tube. The mechisma.

Its sound was intriguing. She should be scared. Freaking out. Instead she was intrigued by the sound.

A kind of soft variation on white noise. Something rhythmic in there too. As if the thing was breathing.

And a quiet chittering. Actually the thing was quieter than she’d expected.

“Take some photos,” she said. “And record the sound.”

“We need to get you out of this.” Mitch kept tugging.

“You won’t. We don’t have the right tools. But we need the data.”

Mitch took a beat. “We’re going to die.”

The title of Melanie’s exhibition popped into Gina’s head. Pretty dangerous all right. So much for the mechismas keeping out of people’s way.

The rope ladder lay in a heap. It had fallen. Cut off somewhere up there by the descending mechisma.

“Maybe Croddy was right,” Gina said. “We shouldn’t come down the holes.”

“You say that now.”

Mitch crouched right down. They were practically under the mechisma. The stink just about fell from it in gristly blocks.

“It’s only a couple of meters across,” Mitch said. There’s a gap between it and the vertical tube’s wall. We could climb up.”

“The rope ladder has dropped. Are you going to chimney up?” Wasn’t that what rock climbers did in narrow, vertical crevices? Too wide for that anyway.

“There are handholds in the mechisma’s structure.”

“You want to do that, you should go ahead. Get clear.”

“I’m not leaving you.” Mitch looked up again. “Anyway, I’d only get partway up.”

“Photos,” Gina said. “At least they’ll maybe get data about what happened here.”

“I…” Mitch slumped back.

The mechisma had stopped moving down. The antenna still gripped her ankle. But it had stopped pulling her along.

The mechisma’s glassy eyes peered at her.

Mitch got out his camera. He fooled with the back panel a moment. He held the camera out and took a photo of her.

“Not of me!”

“Posterity,” he said. “They should at least know who we were.” He spun the camera around and selfied.

“Sheesh,” Gina said.

The mechisma still didn’t move. If it dropped it would crush them. Well, all of Mitch, and Gina’s legs. If the mechisma withdrew the antenna, it could chew her up into… well, whatever was inside them.

Gina reached into her overalls pocket. She found her phone.

Mitch photographed her ankle. The mechisma’s eyes. More of the antenna. He scooted around under it farther. Taking more pictures.

“Don’t go farther under it.”

“This is great,” he said. “No one’s got pictures like this yet. Up close.”

“You should use the flash.”

“Don’t want to disturb it. Anyway, this has a CCD with pretty good ISO. Our flashlights are providing good light.”

Skeptical, Gina swiped through to the camera on her phone. There was enough light there for dull, grainy images. Still, when they retrieved the phone, they might be able to do some enhancing.

“You’re very calm,” Mitch said.

“I’m twisted in knots inside. And, who knows? It might just back up out of the hole. Or take another tube. Maybe it’s just curious.”

“Right.”

“Either way, you should come out from under it.”

“I’m going into one of the other tubes,” Mitch said. Something rattled.

Gina jerked. But it was just Mitch bumping the rope ladder.

“Sorry,” he said.

“Don’t go into another tube.”

He was right, though, in a way. Separation gave them an individual better chance of survival. Probably much better for himself too. The mechisma already had her in its clutches.

“Right,” Mitch said. “I’ll stick with you.”

He started coming back over.

“No. I changed my mind. You’re probably better away from me.

The mechisma kept peering at her.

The scent in the air changed. The muddy, organic smell faded. Something sweeter replacing it. As if the mechisma knew it was fouling the air.

Or if it was changing processes.

Mitch scuttled across beside her.

“Hey!” someone shouted from above. “Are you all right? Gina?”

It sounded like Croddy. Probably only a couple of minutes had passed.

Where had the Mechisma come from anyway? Had they seen it moving across the ground?

“We’re here,” Gina shouted.

“Hurt?”

“No. The mechisma’s got hold of my leg.”

“All right.” All right? How was that all right? “We’re sending down a rope.”

The mechisma shuffled. Shifted.

It moved back up the tube a few centimeters.

“Uh-oh,” Mitch said.

A quiet whooshing sound started. The mechisma shook.

“Hey,” Peter shouted down. “Watch out down there. It’s getting bigger.”

Mitch peered up around it again. “How about that?” he said. “It’s expanding.”

“Cutting off our escape?” Gina said.

Mitch didn’t reply.

 

Chapter Nine

The mechisma made a quiet tinkling sound. Kind of like toy Christmas bells.

“You should get down the tube,” Gina told Mitch. Why hadn’t it grabbed him too? The thing had two antennas.

“I’ll stay with you,” he said. He pulled back from the hole.

Made sense. If she’d asked him to join her in the same tube, then it didn’t make sense to send him away again.

Especially since they weren’t climbing out now. Even if the mechisma released that air and shrank, she wouldn’t want to risk attempting to climb past it.

“I appreciate it,” she said.

Mitch kept taking photographs. “You know if that the camera will get crushed too. There’ll be nothing left. Dust and ashes.”

“Perhaps the mechisma will eat the camera?”

Mitch laughed. “I hadn’t thought of that. Organic life forms eat organics. Machine life forms eat machines.”

“It’s life? You think they’re alive?”

“Of course. Look at it. Just because we only know organic life—carbon-based life—doesn’t mean that’s the only kind.”

The mechisma clanked.

It shifted down some more.

Mitch backed up.

The antenna unraveled from Gina’s leg. She shuffled back. Still lying on the tube floor. A kind of backward crawl.

The mechisma came right down.

It swarmed into the tube. No other word for it. The parts moved, one riding over the top of the other. Sliding back underneath the next.

Perhaps it was a swarm. Perhaps it was hundreds upon hundreds of individual machines. All working in unison.

Like a body’s cells.

The eyes peered. Moving around, examining the tube. Watching Gina.

“It’s chosen this tube!” Mitch yelped, his voice a panicked squeak. Clearly he hadn’t thought through the consequences of staying down here.

One in five chance.

The mechisma advanced slowly. It rattled and tinkled as it came.

The air still smelled sweeter than it had, but it felt thicker. As if the mechisma was breathing out.

The air was getting warmer too.

Mitch was a long way down the tube. His pounding footsteps sounded as if he was panicked.

“Mitch,” Gina called. “Slow down. It’s not moving fast.”

“They can move faster,” he shouted back. His echo came almost like an instruction, faster… faster… faster.

Gina kept up a steady pace, but walking backwards.

Mitch’s footsteps echoed around her.

Gina kept moving. She glanced along as she went. Light from Mitch’s flashlight darted and bobbed. Diminishing too.

They weren’t far from the pile of pieces. The dead one.

Gina was surprised. It had felt like a long way when they’d first found it.

She kept moving. Stepped around the pile.

The mechisma tinkled and rattled. The tube vibrated slightly as the mechisma trundled along.

The thing had to be heavy.

So many details they didn’t know. Some much was extrapolation. Between the images, and the tubes.

Wasn’t that how paleontologists worked? Joining together pieces of information to create whole dinosaurs from just a few bones.

The mechisma came to a stop. Right by the pile. The mechisma’s antennas darted out. Touching and probing.

Gina stopped.

She took a step toward the mechisma.

Another.

Why had it stopped?

 

Chapter Ten

Gina tried to keep her breathing even. She shone her light right down at the pile of parts.

A dead little mechisma.

The air was still thick. The sweet scent continued to seep from the mechisma.

“What are you doing?” Gina said.

“Gina!” Mitch called. His voice blurred with echo. He had to be a long way down the tube.

Perhaps there was an exit. Or a branch.

Or something. A bigger area. Maybe like one of those wide bays in the middle of a long narrow bridge. Where two vehicles could slip by each other.

Did the mechismas come back and forth?

The mechisma continued to tinkle. The vibration had stopped.

The eyes moved around. Looking at her. Looking at the pile. The eyes made quiet whirring sounds.

Just like a fancy camera’s lens mechanism.

Maybe it had eaten some cameras.

The tinkling continued. The eyes all looked down.

Right at the pile.

Some probes came out of the mechisma’s forward end. Kind of robotic arms, with three little thin sharp fingers.

They poked at the pile.

The mechisma hummed.

Another probe came out. This one with two scoops. Like garden trowels for bedding in carrots.

The mechisma picked up the pile.

Gentle. Like a midwife with a newborn.

Or a stillborn.

Gina’s breath caught. It was impossible not to feel something.

The scoops had collected every piece. Holding it together as it had been on the floor. Tiny mechanical tendrils came out from around the sides of the scoops. Touching and brushing the pieces.

The arms lifted the pile right up to the mechisma’s tube eyes. It peered. The whole mechisma rocked gently side to side.

The tinkling even seemed to be in a minor key.

Gina reached out. She put her hand on one of the eye tubes.

It was warm.

Soft to the touch.

“I’m sorry,” she said. “I don’t…” She didn’t have the words.

Where had this emotion come from?

No. She knew where.

The mechisma brought the pile close to itself. Right up against the forward plates. Right under the eyes.

Gina put her other hand up. Pressed into the plates just above the arms. Just above the baby. Child. Whatever.

The plates were warm. Soft. Not metallic. More like rubber. Maybe a coating.

The tinkling continued. With a kind of a hum too.

A sad, sad sound.

Gina leaned in. Right against the mechisma. She leaned her body against it. Felt the eyes pressing into her breasts. Into her belly.

She bent her head. Leaned her cheek right against the mechisma.

Gina stood there, holding it.

The antennas touched her back. Caressing this time. Not grabbing.

Stroking.

Gina held on.

“It’s all right,” she said. “I’m sorry. I’m sorry.”

The mechisma seemed to be purring now. A change in the tinkling.

“Gina!” Mitch shouted. Some echo, but much closer.

He’d come back along the tube.

“Get away from it!” he yelled.

Next thing, he grabbed her. Yanked her back.

“No!” she yelled. She stumbled back, landing hard.

The tinkling started up again. With something else.

A deep, deep rumble.

They mechisma’s eyes all focused on Mitch.

 

Chapter Eleven

The sound of the mechisma echoed along the tube. Gina got to her feet.

“Mitch!” she shouted. “Leave it.”

Mitch had stepped back.

The mechisma’s eyes stayed on him.

“Mitch.” Gina got to her feet. Twangs from her ankle. She’d twisted it when she landed. She took a limping step forward.

Mitch turned. “Come on,” he said. “Let’s go. The tunnel goes a long way. We might be able to find an alternative exit.”

“We don’t need it,” Gina said. “She was only coming this far.”

“She?”

Gina stepped around him. She touched one of the mechisma’s eyetubes again.

The mechisma still cradled the dead one.

“It’s all right,” Gina whispered.

She felt the gentle touch of the antenna again. On her knee. The antenna slid to her ankle and closed in again.

Gina didn’t feel frightened.

“Come away, Gina,” Mitch said. “Come on.” He’d moved farther along the tube again.

The antenna gripped. It pressed and massaged. Gina’s ankle tingled. It felt good. Relaxing.

Healing, even.

“Thank you,” she whispered. She leaned in again. Hugging the mechisma.

“Gina, this is nuts,” Mitch said.

The mechisma shifted. As if leaning back from her. A section on the left, below the eyes, opened. More digits came out. Carrying a kind of foil.

The fingers worked quickly, wrapping the dead one up. The foil cinched in, compressing.

After a moment, it was done.

Another arm came out and pressed to the tube wall. The arm had a disk on the end. It spun. Touched. Cut a hole. Silently.

Just big enough for the foil package.

Dust flew back from the cutting. The dust smelled earthy. It formed a vortex that spun into another opening in the mechisma’s side.

“What’s going on?” Mitch said. Far along the tube. “Are you documenting it.”

“No,” Gina whispered. It didn’t feel appropriate. This was a private moment.

A privilege to share it.

The mechisma withdrew the digging arm and placed the package into the hole. The foil slipped away out of view.

The digging arm tipped the disk over. It pressed into the tube wall and moved around the outside of the hole. A burning, brittle smell filled the air. The tube wall crackled.

After a minute or so, the arm and disk pulled away. The tube wall was as smooth as before. There was a discoloration in the glass—a blue tinge to it—where the hole had been filled.

The mechisma reached out with its antenna again. The tip touched Gina’s belly. She shivered.

The eyes stared at her.

Gina stared back.

More tinkling. Clanks. Rattling. The plates around the eyes moved. Openings formed. The eyes folded in through the openings.

“What?” Gina said.

The sound grew louder. More rumblings. The plates closed up. Shifted more. They seemed to settle lower.

A vague whiff of smoke in the air. And it got cooler.

The mechisma started moving away. Backwards.

No. Its front had settled and lowered so much that it had become the tail. Had they eyes moved through the mechisma to appear at the front?

How did all those plates move over the internal workings?

The mechisma ratcheted along the tube floor. Gina followed. Soon they came to the junction and the mechisma headed away along another tube.

Gina looked up. Doug looked down at her. “Do you want a rope?” he called.

“Yeah,” she said with a smile. “A rope would be good.”

 

Chapter Twelve

At the top of the tube, the berm had been crushed by the mechisma. When it had come across into the hole. There were scrapes and track marks in the ground nearby. Some of the small plants crushed too.

It had taken ten minutes for Gina to be able to excuse herself from the group. Everyone had questions. Everyone liked the drama.

Mitch liked the attention. He didn’t understand it really.

But it would all go into Gina’s report. These weren’t random machines. The mechismas were living things.

Like us. Just not biological.

“Gina!” Mitch called as she stepped away. “Come back here.”

She waved and held up her phone. “Got to make a call.”

“I… all right. As soon as you can.”

“Will do.” The others had barely noticed that she’d stepped away. They clustered around Mitch. He was showing them his images. They were more like social media fiends, than scientists, right now.

Gina strode across the dry ground. Reception would be better a little higher up the slope. A little better sightline to that tower.

A couple of hundred yards from the little group—who were still baling Mitch up—Gina stopped.

She looked back around. The valley was very pretty, in a desolate way. Rough, low scrub, and a lot of dry ground. A light-colored bird hopped around, pecking at a struggling insect.

Gina took a breath. How long since she’d spoken with Melanie?

Too long, maybe.

Gina looked at her phone’s display. She flicked through some of the photos. Interesting colors and shapes. Melanie would like them.

With a touch, Gina sent one to Melanie. The sending circle twirled slowly in the screen’s center. Data struggling so far out in the wilds. Even though the tower was visible, she still had just a single bar.

With a couple more taps she brought up her contacts and connected.

Dialing the phone said.

She held it to her ear.

The phone rang. Rang again.

Maybe it would be better to go see her. Instead of just calling.

The phone clicked, and Melanie said, “Hello?”

It took Gina a moment to find her voice. Even then, it caught in her throat.

“Gina?” Melanie said. “Are you all right?”

“Not me,” Gina managed. “I mean, I’m fine, yes. Hi. I was calling really to see… to see how you were.” Stumbling over her words. Was she really this bad at emotion?

“Me? I’m fine,” Melanie said. “Oh! Look. You sent me another photo. Is that new?”

“Yes. From just now.”

“You took it?” Melanie sounded excited. “It’s not like the others. The ones from other people.”

“No. It’s from me all right.”

“This is so cool. You got a picture yourself.”

“Yes. Quiet down for a moment. This isn’t easy for me.”

“What?”

“I wanted to ask how you were,” Gina took a breath. This really wasn’t easy. “I mean how you really are.”

Melanie paused a beat. “Me. I’m doing okay. Sure. What’s this about?”

“I saw something. Today. Just now. And it made me think of you. Of you and your…” Gina swallowed. “Your baby.”

Silence.

More silence.

“Melanie?” Gina said. “I’m sorry, I just—”

“Shut up,” Melanie was crying now.

“I didn’t mean to—”

“No,” Melanie said. “This is good. This is good tears. I love you. But you never asked before. You never… and I understood. Because of who you are. The way you are. I just… I just didn’t think you’d ever ask. It’s… sorry, I’m losing my words.”

“Mel.”

“Thanks for asking.” Crying, crying, crying. “It’s crushingly sad, Gina. Every single day. But I get on. I do.”

“You carry it. Well, I suppose.”

“I have to. You have to get on with life, yes?”

“Yes.”

“And now it’s so much better. I can’t tell you.”

“Better?” Gina frowned.

“Because you asked. You actually asked. That means the world, sister. It means everything.”

Now Gina was crying herself. Seeing the mechisma bury the dead one. So sad.

And talking to Melanie.

“Something’s shifted in you?” Melanie said. “I can hear it in your voice.”

“Yes,” Gina said. “It really has. I think I’ll fly out and visit. If you’ll have me. And we can talk and—”

If I’ll have you? Of course. Come now.”

“All right,” Gina said, grinning and crying at once. She started walking for the vehicles. “I’m on my way.”


 


If you wanted a copy to keep, “Dangerous Machines” is available in ebook directly from the website – seanmonaghan.com – and also from the usual places for ebook, and in print from Amazon – click this link to go choose your favorite retailer.

Free Fiction Fifteenth – Let’s Go Find Karl – Coming May 15th

Each month I put up one of my stories here to read for free. Last month it was the Captain Arlon Stoddard story, “Sea Skimmers”, and coming in May I’ll put out an oldie, but goodie, “Let’s Go Find Karl”. A fun little heist tale.

Descend into the depths of a diabolical world of deception and double-cross.

Melinda has a snippet of Karl’s brain and she needs to join it up with the rest of him.

If only she knew where he was.

A brain-bending surreal story of love, loss and little litigation.

 

If you missed “Sea Skimmers”, you can pick up for free at the website by using the code Skimming26 at checkout. Use this link. Valid through until May 15th (when the “Let’s Go Find Karl” goes free here.).


My Captain Arlon Stoddard Adventures series now has twelve novels. It was fun to write them all, and I’ll admit that I do have some favorites among them.

Along the way I’ve written a few short stories and a couple of novellas. Both the novella “Ortanide Steppers” and the story “Sea Skimmers” have been out for some time now, but I’ve been tardy getting the further short adventures out.

The plan is to fix that this year.

You can check out the whole series at the Captain Arlon Stoddard page on the website. And keep an eye out for a new story “Arkevarka Chasers” available to purchase from April 26th.

Thanks for reading.


Sea Skimmers – blurb

Experienced Captain Ulliana Alvis loves skimming above the forty-five hundred kilometer stretch of the Tegh Sea. Her vessel the Mourave carries fifty passengers in safety and comfort. The calm of the water always reassures and moves her at once.

But safety can be an illusion.

A Captain Arlon Stoddard short story that pits the crew against cascading events and into a desperate attempt to save lives.

A great place to jump in if you’re new to the series, and a wonderful addition for fans.

 

Much Too Familiar – free to read Cole Wright short story

With the new Cole Wright novel Hard Ground due out on December 20th, it’s time once again to release a short story here on the website for a few days (at least up until Hard Ground’s release, and then maybe through the holidays for a little while.


Much Too Familiar

Cole Wright finds too many evenings in his tiny cul-de-sac apartment shattered by rumbling engines and squealing tires.

His neighbors miss their sleep.

Cole needs to do something about it.

Unless someone else does something about it first.

A Cole Wright story that asks the question ‘can we make a difference?’


Chapter One

From out on the road came the too-familiar sound of tires squealing as tearaway kids spun their too-fast, souped-up cars in tight circles around the cul-de-sacs keyhole.

Cole Wright lay back in his comfortable bed, stretching out, watching the flicker of light on the ceiling. It was a warm night. As far as nights Spokane went at this time of year.

He had a quilt drawn up. It was patchwork and light and surprisingly comfortable. It had come with the apartment. Fully-furnished meant fully furnished, right down to hand-stitched cushions on the living room sofa, crockery and cutlery in the kitchen, and a filled bottle of laundry detergent for the machine.

Hed taken a three month lease. Quiet part of town. Had seemed like a good idea at the time.

A pity about Saturday nights, when the wannabe drivers arrived at random times into the small hours, for burnouts. And Fridays. And Thursdays.

Even other days.

The apartment was in back of a two story home. A nice place, for sure, though Wright had never seen the inside rest of the house.

The first floor was occupied by a double garage, a foyer and mudroom beside that, with the stairs to the second floor where Daphne Fletcher lived. Well into her eighties, she was still spry and sharp and quick to explain to the guy who cut the lawns and trimmed her hedges exactly the parts hed missed.

Not the kind of person youd want to cross.

Still, she was taking care of him. Not just the furnishings, but she would ask if hed eaten right and if he was getting enough sleep.

Some mornings he would wake and find a plastic-wrapped plate of fresh baked chocolate chip cookies, and a silvery bag of coffee waiting on the back step.

The apartment was a simple thing in the corner behind Daphnes foyer, facing out into her manicured yard filled with stone fruit trees bursting with green leaves. The apartment had a combined living room, kitchen and dining space, a small bedroom and a tiny bathroom.

Plenty adequate for him.

On the walls were pieces of art, some of which Daphne had painted herself. Sunrises over dark canyons, rivers running wild, horses on the open prairie.

Shed been quite the painter, and had made a good living for many years from it. Shed even had a private gallery in Santa Fe.

In my good years,” shed said. While I was able to keep up with the younger ones.”

Years back, Wright had been to Santa Fe. It was a fascinating place. Nestled up in the mountains. The adobe style of the buildings was the first thing you noticed really. Especially when it was a gas station or fast food place devoid of its livery save for a small sign.

Almost as if the companies had had to battle the city building ordinances to get even that bolted to the side of their traditional construction.

Next thing was the tourists. Hordes of them. Or herds, as they seemed to move in groups from gallery to gallery.

And that was the other thing. The galleries. It had seemed as if every second business in town was selling art.

Wright glanced at the bedside clock. It was a little, simple electronic thing with red LED showing blocky numbers representing the time.

02:44.

The bottom of the two central dots flashed, indicating that it was into the second half of the minute.

The squeals came again. Followed by  snapping, tearing sound.

Shouts.

Wright sat up.

A long time since hed been a cop, but that instinct was still there.

More shouting.

Wright reached over the edge of the low bed and grabbed his jeans. He was still wearing a tee shirt and underwear.

He sat on the edge of the bed and pulled the jeans on. Pulled on socks.

More shouts. Two, three people. Something banged.

He stuffed his feet into his hiking boots. Hed bought a good pair of Surtsey boots. Icelandic, but less expensive than hed expected. He did plenty of walking, so a good pair of boots was a must.

It was three steps to the door. It let out into Daphnes back yard, filled with the scent of fruit and flowers. A little haven.

At least it should be.

Wright strode around the side of the house and out onto the driveway.

There were lights on in a couple of houses. Most of them were like Daphnes—two storied with established trees and well-cared for yards. Most of them had an SUV or two parked out front of closed garage doors.

A silvery Subaru wagon was parked near the center of the keyhole.

Daphnes house was on the left side, at about three oclock on the circle.

A six oclock, the access out to Mayberry Street, there was a man holding a golf club.

The Subaru was facing him.

The Subarus engine revved.

Chapter Two

A breeze ran through the big trees around the cul-de-sac, making the leaves rustle. A bird twittered. Perhaps roused from its sleep by the wind, having slept through the tire squeals and shouting.

Wright walked along Daphnes concrete driveway. Shed had it waterblasted recently and it practically gleamed in the light from the streetlamps.

The Subaru was an older model. Ten, maybe fifteen years old. It had fancy spoked wheels with thin tires. Perhaps an inch of sidewall on each. The bodywork sat practically right on the tires themselves, as if every bump the vehicle crossed would have the metal edge shaving strips of rubber off.

The engine grumbled.

The man with the golf club was wearing a dressing gown. Red tartan, with long, tasseled ties. He had black slippers on his feet.

Norton or Nathan or something. Wright had spoken with him a couple of times. The man lived at number six, not far from where he was standing. He had a magnolia tree that bloomed fabulously twice a year, but come fall would dump truckloads of stiff leaves. Wright had yet to see either.

Morton. That was it. Morton Sellars. He ran a car wash at the edge of the city. In his fifties and doing just okay. The car wash was neither a cash cow, nor a drain. It ticked over, was how Morton had put it.

Wright reached the curb and stepped down. He kept walking. Heading for a point equidistant between Morton and the Subaru.

There were other people out on their driveways.

The Sandersons. They had a couple of preschoolers and a cousin who was apparently quite a good author.

A woman Wright had only spoken to once. Tall slim, originally from Florida, but said she preferred the cooler climate here in Spokane. She was dressed in black slacks, a white shirt and a black jacket, as if she was already up and preparing for a day at the office.

Morton,” Wright said. I didnt know you played golf.”

Wright was about fifteen yards now, from Morton. A few yards ahead of the Subaru, and off to the side. A triangle between them, like the tall sail on a racing yacht.

I dont play golf,” Morton said. Sally plays golf.”

Sally? I dont know Sally.”

My ex. She took the Mercedes, the original parts store, and the goldfish. She did leave behind her golf clubs.”

About a yard back from the line between the Subaru and Morton, Wright stopped and crouched. He tied his boot laces. Gave them a good yank to hold them firm.

If it came to running, or balancing or anything like that, he needed to keep them on his feet.

Didnt your ex call around for them sometime?” Wright said.

Morton laughed. That whole situation, she aint going to call around. Not ever. She thinks Im the devil, I believe.”

How about that? Youve always seemed pretty reasonable and friendly to me.”

Exactly.”

The Subarus engine revved.

Wright took a look over. He was on the passengers side, the right.

The  side windows were tinted, but the front windshield was clear. Hard to see inside with light from the overhead lamps glinting from it.

Wright glanced again at Morton.

He was standing right in the center of the street. The highest point in the curve of it.

At that point, the tarmac was probably only about ten yards across, curb to curb.

The Subarus driver had a choice here.

Drive either side of Morton and risk getting panels and paint dinged up by a middle-aged maniac wielding a heavy-headed golf club.

Wright didnt know much about golf, but he figured this was a wood. It probably had a number. A 3 wood or something.

But it was the hefty kind of club. Used for driving a golf ball three hundred yards or something. Not for the subtle work of chipping a ball out of the rough, nor for tapping it across the green into a hole.

A club like that could do a lot of damage to the bodywork on any car built after about 1975.

Another choice the driver had was to just straight-line it and trust that Morton would leap out of the way in time. That he would drop the club in the process, and the car could flee without repercussion.

Perhaps the driver might try to run up one of the driveway entries, mount the sidewalk and skirt around the maniac that way.

There were trash bins and fences and two streetlamp poles to consider in that scenario.

Youre up pretty early in the morning here, Morton,” Wright said. Trouble sleeping?”

You know it. I was on Ambien for a while after Sally departed, and that helped, but I didnt want to become dependent. I tapered off about a year ago.”

Smart thinking.”

Sure, but my sleeps not as good as it was then.”

Life is a series of trade-offs.”

Like now, you mean?” Morton said, slapping the handle of the club. He had the club held across his body, both hands on it, the head hanging down on his left.

Like,” he went on, do I smash up this kids hot rod, or go back to bed and deal with the same thing tomorrow night, and next Thursday and on out until they wheel me off in a box?”

Better than they wheel you off in a box tonight.”

The Subarus engine revved.

Hard and long.

It jumped forward with squeal, coming to a stop almost immediately.

The driver knew their vehicle.

Wright looked again, angling his head for a better view.

The driver had a baseball cap on backwards. She couldnt have been more than sixteen.

She winked at Wright.

Revved the engine again.

Chapter Three

At the street end of the cul-de-sac, out on Mayberry, a garbage truck rumbled by, loud and booming. They started early, but surely before three AM was taking it a bit too far.

The Subarus engine revved.

Morton slapped the club again.

Let him do it!” the tall slim woman from Florida called out. Alexa, that was her name. She was an accountant, on her way to starting her own practice. Shed been very forthcoming in the one conversation Wright had had with her.

Come on,” Mr. Sanderson called. Wright couldnt recall his first name. Lets get this done and we can all get some sleep.”

How are you doing there Morton?” Wright said. Ready to go back to bed?”

Absolutely.”

Morton swung the club out to his right. He gave it a little looping swing, like an egg beater, and swung it back to his left, deftly changing hands and stepping as he went.

Very clear that the car wouldnt get by without making contact.

How about I talk to her?” Wright said.

Would you?” Morton said, brightening and smiling. Well, thats all very reasonable.”

Dont talk to her!” Alexa said. Go get another club and pound on the car all night.”

Good point,” Morton said. Alexa, my house is open and the clubs are by the door.”

On my way.” Alexa started across the road. She was wearing heels that were practically stilettos. Completely incongruous next to Mortons slippers and dressing gown.

While Alexas getting another club,” Wright said, Im going to talk to the driver.”

Fine. Go talk to her.”

Wright took a step. It put him almost in line with the Subarus potential trajectory.

The driver revved and jumped the car forward again. Now she was just a few yards from him.

And Wright had a choice. He could step back and go around behind the car, thereby reducing the risk.

Or, he could go in front.

That would put him between the car and Morton. And that reduced the risk for Morton.

Wright stepped in front of the car.

Chapter Four

From far in the distance came the vague sound of sirens. Could be something else. Could be someone in actual real danger, like a domestic incident. Or perhaps something with guns.

A kid in a car and an angry middle-aged guy with a golf club sat down the list.

Over in their driveway, the Sandersons looked on. Mrs. Sanderson had a phone to her ear. She nodded and said occasional words.

Possibly on the line to police dispatch.

Wright took another step.

Now he was directly in line with the cars center. The stars of the Subaru logo on the grill glinted at him.

Just a few yards back.

Wright angled his course, heading for the left hand headlamp.

The car revved.

From the corner of his eye, Wright saw Alexa appear with a golf club. Looked like a wedge or something. Whatever they were called. The head was smaller than Mortons, and metal rather than polished wood.

Probably easier to swing.

Wright kept going.

The driver watched him. She seemed so young.

Wright rounded the headlamp and followed along the front fender. When he reached the side, he couldnt see into the car. The filming on the windows was real dark.

With his knuckles, he knocked on the glass.

No response.

He knocked again.

The engine revved.

Wright looked around the roof pillar so he could see inside. He made a rotary motion with his hand and mouthed, Wind down the window.

She gave a little shake of her head.

She was crying. Glistening tears in her eyes.

Chapter Five

Wright looked back around the cul-de-sac. There were more lights on in houses now, but no more people had come down their driveways.

Some were peering into the night from narrow gaps in curtains or the side of blinds.

Wright knocked on the Subarus windshield. He made the winding motion with his hand again.

Open,” he said.

She revved the engine once more. The stink of exhaust wafted around.

Now!”

Wright stepped back and stood by the window.

He didnt do anything else. Just stood.

Just waited.

She revved the engine again.

Alexa made it back onto the road. She went and stood next to Morton. The pair of them with the golf clubs. They were going to end up braining each other.

Dont hit me with that thing,” Morton said, as if reading Wrights thoughts.

The drivers window made a quiet pop sound, and moved down a half an inch. Just cracked open.

Further,” Wright said. I need to see your face.”

The cars engine puttered at idle. Deep and throaty.

Wright waited.

I didnt do anything,” she said from inside the car. Shed glanced up at him. He could just see her eyes and the strap from the ball cap.

Open up further.” He said.

Youll just grab me.”

Wouldnt dare. Assault of a minor. And you know what happens to ex-cops on the inside.”

Youre a cop?”

Was a cop. Not anymore.”

Right. But if you did go inside, theyd send you to that special cop prison.”

Would they now? Where is that?”

Besides,” she said, moving on, Im not a minor.”

How old are you?”

Fourteen.”

Wright didnt bother to correct her. She was well and truly a minor.

Shouldnt even be behind the wheel.

Open up further,” he said.

The mechanism clunked and the gap grew wider. She sniffed. Stared straight ahead.

Whats your name?” Wright said.

Im not telling you my name.”

Im Wright. Cole Wright.”

Im not telling you my name.”

You see whats the trouble here?” Wright said. Middle of the night. Youve woken up these people. Theyre upset. Its not the first time. Theyre feeling like theyre going to take the law into their own hands.”

Another sniff.

If theres a scratch on the car,” she said, Zacks gonna kill… hes gonna be real mad with me.”

She glanced at Wright. Faced ahead again. She sat there, staring at Morton and Alexa.

Who is Zack?” Wright said.

My brother.”

Does he know youve got his car?”

Why do you think its his car?”

Wright tried not to smile. Shed practically told him.

But he stayed quiet.

Waited for her.

She leaned back against the headrest. Sniffed again.

Things have been bad since Zara moved in,” she said, quietly. Barely audible above the sound of the engine.

Zara?”

Zack and Zara, right? Of course they were going to hit it off, you know? Of course she was going to come in with her pretty eyes and sweet tongue to distract him.”

Zack.”

Yes.”

Your brother?” Wright was starting to piece it together a little. What about your parents?”

Dead. Yeah. Dead. All right? Gone.” She swore quietly.

Long?”

Six months.” She swallowed. Looked away through the passengers window.

Zacks your guardian?” Wright said.

They thought it was a good idea. He was twenty. No other family. No mention that he was a dope head just like nice old Mom and Dad.”

They“ being Child Protection Services?”

The court, I guess. I dont know. I dont remember much of that. Listen, mister, I dont know why Im giving you my lifes story. Why dont you go talk to those dickheads with the golf bats to get out of the way and Ill go home.”

How about this?” Wright said. Why dont we all go and see Zack? They can bring their golf clubs.”

You want to go beat up Zack?” she said. He has friends.”

What I want to do,” Wright said, is see that youre safe, and encourage you to avoid returning here. Also, you shouldnt be driving, so one of us would drive.”

And you want to bring them because you cant be alone with a child? Dont you trust me? Think I might report you?”

I dont think you would, but, well, you did steal your brothers car. You are out in the suburbs at three AM tearing up the street.”

She nodded. Im Mel.”

Wright.”

Yeah, you said.”

Wright smiled. Sounds like youve had things pretty tough.”

She shrugged.

Maybe theres something I could do to help? Maybe get you into another home?” Even as he said it, it seemed weak. She didnt seem like the right kind of kid for the foster system.

You?” she said. You mean like come around and beat up Zack?”

No. I mean to look at options for you until you can go out on your own.”

All right. Ill…” she trailed off as headlights appeared. Turning from Mayberry into the cul-de-sac.

Chapter Six

The sound of sirens was still far off. There were more houses around the cul-de-sac with lights in the windows. People looking out. It seemed like Daphnes, above Wrights little apartment, was the only one still dark.

A black cat with a white bib strolled along the sidewalk out front, unperturbed by the human angst playing out in the street.

Thats Zack,” Mel said. She shuffled down even lower in the Subarus drivers seat.

The other car had come to a stop. Parked right at the entry. Right in the middle of the street.

Why do you think its Zack?” Wright said. Could be someone who lives here.”

Thats Zaras car. Double headlights with the blue lights in the grill.”

In the glare, it just looked like headlights to Wright. He couldnt see any blue in the grill.

Mel spat a filthy epithet, questioning her brothers parentage.

Hes tracked me with my phone,” she said. She called him more names.

Maybe I go talk to them,” Wright said. Like I talked to you. We were making good progress.”

We were?”

Yes. Wait here. Shut off the engine.”

Im not shutting off the engine. You go tell your friends to go back to the fairway.”

Wright smiled. A golf joke. Thats good.”

The slightest of smiles crossed her face, but she just kept staring straight ahead.

Wait here,” Wright said. I wont be long.”

He headed away from the car.

Headed for the new arrival.

Chapter Seven

Wright slowed as he approached Morton and Alexa. They still stood, an unlikely pair, near the middle of the street. Both holding golf clubs.

Maybe three minutes had passed since Wright had first come to speak with Morton.

You should go home to bed,” Wright said. Both of you. Smashing up someones car isnt going to stop them from coming. Only now theyll be coming, and mad. Theyll come more often. More of them.”

Wrong,” Morton said.

Nothing else will work,” Alexa said.

No,” Wright said. Im not wrong. Let me spell it out. You dent the car with your golf club, then the police get involved. You get charged with willful damage. Then youve got court dates and all the associated costs. Not so much for you, Morton, but for you Alexa, say your boss gets wind of it. Doesnt look good for the firm to have a felon on the staff, even if youre still awaiting trial, or whichever direction it goes. So say then they just let you go. Furlough you because times are tight.”

Times arent tight,” Alexa said. They need me.”

Id hope so, because getting to court could take a while. Both of you go home to bed. Lets not make this worse.”

Wright stepped around them and continued on toward the new arrival. Zaras car, according to Mel

The engine revved. Long and hard.

As if it was like some mating call between vehicles. As if the occupants had to establish their territory.

Wright walked straight at the car.

As he drew closer, he saw that it did indeed have blue lights in the grill. It was lowered too, and older, but still from this century.

When Wrights father had been around, theyd gone to some hotrod shows. Cars from the fifties and earlier, modified a little, or a lot—some almost beyond recognition—but they had nice lines and interesting shapes and features. Metallic paint jobs and chopped roofs.

Hotrod culture was a whole different thing now. For people beyond middle-age, trying to recapture something perhaps.

The kids now drove cars that were originally meant for grabbing the groceries and taking the family around various soccer and ball games on a Saturday. Hatchbacks and station wagons. Lowered suspensions and gigantic exhausts.

If the kids liked them, well fine, but these vehicles didnt have the elegance of their predecessors.

Wright began angling for the drivers side.

He didnt look back, but he had the sense that Morton and Alexa hadnt budged. Probably one had turned to face him, while the other stayed facing Mels Subaru.

The car was a Nissan, but a model Wright didnt recognize. More at the sports-car end of the spectrum. Longer hood and two doors, with just a token back seat.

The side windows were tinted.

A woman sat behind the wheel. There didnt seem to be anyone else in the car.

Wright made the same winding motion with his hand, attempting to suggest that she bring down the window. It seemed archaic. Most vehicles now were crammed with electric motors doing all the jobs. Adjusting the mirrors and winding down the windows. Maybe even closing the trunk. No vehicle from the last couple of decades required anyone to physically turn a winder.

She gave him a nod, but didnt bring down the window.

Wright reached the door and he knocked. Same as hed done on Mels window. Like that one, this window was tinted.

The door clunked and pushed open a fraction.

Windows busted,” the woman said from inside. She didnt open the door more than a couple of inches.

Are you Zara?” Wright said.

Whos asking?” As good as a yes.

Im Cole Wright,” he said. I was talking to Mel back there. Sounds as if Zack upset her.”

Big surprise there.”

She knows it was wrong to take his car. Shes just young and impetuous. She wants to apologize and say itll never happen again.”

She said that, huh?”

No, but I figure deep down, thats how she feels.”

Really. I think that deep down shed just as happily put a hunting knife through his ribs.”

It was always good to get another persons point of view.

Zara pushed the door wider. Wright stepped back, and she got out.

She was tiny, but clearly older than Mel. Maybe in her late twenties. She was wearing a black jacket with fur lining, stovepipe jeans and Dr Martens boots. Her hair was thick and dark.

Not,” she said, that he doesnt deserve a knife through the ribs.”

Chapter Eight

A tingle ran up Wrights spine.

Zara had suggested a knife into Zacks ribs.

Right away that set off alarm bells. All that old training. You had to take someone seriously when they started talking like that. They might mean it metaphorically, or even might have thought that they were just joking around.

Trouble was, when they werent.

When they were serious about it. When they had a plan.

The sound of the sirens still seemed a long way off. Blocks and blocks.

Do you have a knife?” Wright said, staring at Zara.

She stared right back at him.

Sure I do,” she said. Kitchen knives. Who doesnt?”

I dont.”

You dont have a kitchen knife?”

Im renting. Fully furnished. I dont own any knives.”

Huh. How about that? But really youre talking about a technicality. You dont own knives, but youre leasing the place. I guess you live around here? The place youre leasing. You could hop right on over there now and get one of the knives youre leasing and, well, I dont know. Cut up an apple?”

Fair point,” Wright said. So are you planning harming Zack?”

No! What?” Zara frowned. You a cop? Night off? Thats a cop question.”

Used to be a cop. I cant arrest you anymore.”

Couldnt arrest me then, either. The words would have to be very specific. All I said was not that he doesnt deserve a knife through the ribs. Youd write it in your little notebook, and even a public defender would destroy your testimony.”

Wright inclined his head, listening to the sirens.

Sure,” he said. Youre right. What Im interested in is, getting Mel out of here safely. Encouraging her to not come back, and letting the golfing buddies get back to sleep.”

Or not, in Alexas case. Who knew why she was up and dressed at this time? It wasnt as if the accountantsplace ran on overlapping shifts.

Golf!” Zara said. Thats what theyre…” she trailed off as loud car turned onto Mayberry a few blocks down.

Zara stepped away from the car. Looked.

Zack,” she said.

Really?”

Yeah. Thats Todds car. Not good for Zack to be behind the wheel in his state.”

The engine noise grew louder. Coming fast along Mayberry. The lights flickered across the trees along the sidewalk, and the cars parked at the curb.

What state?” Wright said.

Angry and high.”

Chapter Nine

The black cat with the white bib galloped across the cul-de-sac and plunged into some shrubs at the front of number four. Another cat howled and took off across number fours front yard, the first cat racing along right behind.

Todds car continued speeding along Mayberry. Had to be hitting fifty already.

The sirens were perhaps a little closer.

This is gonna be a mess,” Zara said, getting back into her car.

Dont go anywhere,” Wright said.

Todds car was maybe a block away.

Zara had her hand on her door handle. Figure Im going to park right here at the side of the road. Watch and wait.”

Good plan.” Wright stepped back.

The door closed. The engine roared. The car moved. Pulled to the right, easing up to the curb.

Whats going on now?” Alexa said.

She was still brandishing the club.

More new arrivals,” Wright said.

The sirens were growing closer. Todds car was about at the corner. Possibly Zack at the wheel.

Mels brother. Zaras boyfriend, presumably.

As Wright walked toward Morton and Alexa, tires squealed from behind. All show.

Headlights panned across the scene.

Across Wright. Across Morton and Alexa. Across Mel in Zacks car.

On across Zaras car parked at the curb.

Wright tensed. The car came to a stop. Parked right about where Zara had been.

She got out of her car.

Wright stopped. Turned.

The new arrival was a black Camaro. Hard top. It had the slot of a wide, low air-intake on the hood. Perhaps after-market.

Two people inside.

Todds driving,” Zara said, standing by her drivers door. Dont know if that makes it better or worse.”

From along Mayberry came the reflection of red and blue flashers. The cops. Very close now.

The Camaros engine revved.

Todd works?” Wright said. Thats a pricey vehicle right there.”

Todds a dealer,” Zara said. Zacks a customer. And does some dealing too. You know, to fund being a customer.”

You a customer too?”

Was. Not any more.”

Good to hear.”

Settled. Got a job. A few hours back I dumped Zack. I cant be in that environment. Looks like he didnt take it very well.”

Apparently not.”

I tried to do something for him,” Zara said. Hes out of reach. Wish I could do something for Mel, though.”

Huh. Maybe you can.”

Really?”

Lets see.”

The Camaro revved again.

Wright took a step toward them.

Morton,” he called. Alexa. The cops will be here any moment. Now would be a good time have your hands empty. Toss the clubs.”

Toss the clubs?” Morton said.

Exactly. Toss them into your yard.”

Behind the Camaros wheel, Todd was hunched forward. He was wearing aviator sunglasses and had a trimmed, blonde mustache.

Zack sat next to him, mouth downcast. He looked bleary and exhausted.

As the cops came around the corner onto Mayberry, the sound of the sirens leapt in volume, and the light from the roof-mounted flashers flared.

A single car.

Todd revved the Camaros engine again. Zara pressed herself back against the side of her car.

From Mortons yard came the rustle of bushes. Just audible. Hopefully he and Alexa had tossed the clubs.

Wright took a step toward the Camaro.

The cops arrived. The cruisers hood dipped as it braked hard. The vehicle parked across the entry to the cul-de-sac. Perhaps a judicious driver could ease a car by at either end without mounting the curb.

It was clear, though, that neither Todd nor Mel were judicious drivers.

Todd perked up. He looked in the rearview mirror, as if just realizing that the cops had arrived.

He muttered something inaudible. Clearly an epithet.

He put the car in gear and revved it again.

Off the street,” Wright said. Everyone! Off the street!”

The Camaro surged forward.

Chapter Ten

From the cop car at the Mayberry end of the cul-de-sac, someone shouted.

Wright had already turned.

He ran.

Glad that hed tied his boots.

Morton and Alexa were still standing in the middle of the street. Dumbfounded.

Wright kept running.

The pair jerked into action. They ran for their own sides of the street.

Wright angled for the sidewalk. Right hand side.

The Camaro was right behind him.

In a standing race between someone on foot and a car, the car will always win. No question.

Wright, on his best day, in his best year, might have run a hundred yards in twelve seconds.

Something like twenty miles an hour.

Of course, thats a flat out sprint. Unsustainable.

The Camaro probably did zero to sixty in four point eight seconds, or three point two seconds or something like that. That seemed to be one of the specs that car enthusiasts liked to know. Yeah, but whats its acceleration like?

The distinction here was practically immaterial.

If Todd was behind the wheel of some old farm pickup, maybe Wright could outrun him over a short distance, but driving anything else, Todd could catch him easily.

Wright got onto the sidewalk.

The Sandersons were still standing in their driveway. Perhaps all of four minutes had passed since theyd gotten up. They werent losing that much sleep.

The soles of Wrights boots slapped on the concrete.

The Camaro surged by him. Zack looked at Wright through the untinted side window.

Then the Camaro was gone. Speeding into the cul-de-sac.

Heading right for Mel in the Subaru.

Chapter Eleven

The police were shouting. A woman.

Familiar voice too.

Wright knew some of the cops on the Spokane force. Some good people.

He kept running.

The Camaro rounded the Subaru, tires squealing. The Sandersons scurried back along their driveway.

The Camaro pulled in right beside the Subaru. Mel in the drivers seat, next to Todd in the Camaros drivers side.

Wright slowed. He came to a stop in front of the cars. To the left of the Camaro, but still on the curb. Just where it began curving away into the keyhole.

The black cat with the white bib appeared. It leapt onto the low white fence separating the Sandersonsplace from their neighbors. The cat sat on a post and began washing its head.

The drivers window on the Subaru slid down.

Mel said something.

Wright stayed where he was.

Zack leaned across to look at Mel. Talking. Wright couldnt hear what he was saying.

The engines on both cars were still running.

Hey,” someone said, coming up next to Wright.

Lieutenant Ione Anders, from the Spokane PD. Slim and about his height, close to his age. Her gun was holstered, but she had her right hand on the grip.

Hi,” Wright said. Youre on nights?”

Covering. You know how it is.”

Yes I do.”

What do we have?”

Fourteen year old kid stole her brothers car.” Wright gave a rundown on what had happened and what hed seen.

He left out the part about Morton and Alexa with the golf clubs. He could tell her about that another time. No sense in clouding things now.

We know that car,” Anders said. The Camaro.”

I am unsurprised.”

Me, Id think that a dealer would go for something less ostentatious. You know. A Corolla. Something to keep under the radar. Car like that gets attention.”

Not how they think. They want to show off.”

Yes they do.” Anders took a step forward away from Wright. What are you thinking?”

Me?” Wright said. Im just a bystander. These guys woke me up. I came out to make sure no one got hurt or anything.”

Thats you all over.”

I suppose it is. Im worried about the young woman. Mel. Her brothers in the car with the dealer.”

You said. Customer? Or associate?”

From the look of him, and what Zara had said, a customer.”

Zara being?”

Girlfriend over there.” Wright pointed at the parked Nissan

Uh-huh.”

I dont want her going back under the guys care. Not unless he gets clean.”

Sounds reasonable,” Anders said. Whats your interest here? You know her?”

Sure.”

How long?”

Six minutes,” Wright said. More or less.”

Anders shook her head and sighed. She took another step. Went down from the curb.

Todd, the driver, was staring at her. If his head had been transparent, Wright would have been able to see the cogs spinning fast. Clearly trying to figure out his next move.

How to get out of the cul-de-sac.

How to get away from the cops.

Wright glanced back and saw the Anderss cruiser easing forward into the straight part of the cul-de-sac. Slow. Her partner at the wheel.

The spotlight shone into the Camaros interior. The light glinted from Todds aviators.

Zack had his hand up, shielding his eyes.

Then Zack was out of the car. Standing.

He zipped around the hood.

Grabbed at the Subarus door handle.

Mel yelped.

Wright moved.

Ran by Anders.

Chapter Twelve

The Camaros engine roared. But the car didnt move.

The police cruiser turned, angling across the street again. Blocking it.

Mostly.

The Camaros revs dropped again, before rising once more. Louder this time.

Wright!” Anders shouted.

Zack was screaming at Mel now. He punched at her through the window.

The window was winding up.

Get away!” Mel shouted.

Wright ran as if he was heading for the gap between the cars.

At the last moment, he broke right. Headed straight for the Camaros drivers door.

It would be unlocked. Zack had just gotten out. The passengers door was still open.

Todd watched Wright coming. Realized too late what was going on.

Wright grabbed the handle.

He ripped the door open.

Just as Todd was swiping to lock it.

Out!” Wright said.

It wasnt hard, really. In going for the lock Todd was off balance.

He practically fell out of the car.

On the ground,” Wright said. That old police voice right there. Ready for anytime he needed it.

Zack yelped. Wailed. His arm was jammed in the Subarus almost-closed window.

Todd was on his hands and knees. But he wasnt going to stay down.

Wright took a step back.

Todd scrambled to his feet. He eyed Wright, considering his chances of taking Wright down.

But then Anders was there.

Now she had her weapon out. Both hands. Standing five feet back.

Back on the ground!” she said.

Zack continued to wail.

The far door on the Subaru opened.

Kneeling,” Anders said. Hands on your head. Fingers interlocked.”

Yeah, yeah,” Todd said. Been here before.”

He got onto his knees.

Zack kept wailing. Plaintive and panicked.

Mel emerged from the other side of the Subaru. She stopped a moment. Stared at Zack.

She made eye contact with Wright.

Try to do a buddy a favor,” Todd said. Look what happens.” He swore.

You should look after your friend,” Wright said.

The other officer was approaching.

Wright backed away. Space for them to do their job.

Todd Spach,” Anders said. You are under arrest.”

She read him his rights.

Blah, blah, blah,” Todd said as she recited. I know all this.”

Mel looked back and forth along the cul-de-sac. She took in the cop car. Zara standing by the little Nissan. The lights in the houses. The Sandersons still watching.

Mel came back to Wright.

She looked as if she might take off.

Zara,” Wright called, going back around Anders and the other officer as they cuffed Todd.

Still here,” Zara said. Im both amused and horrified by Zacks predicament.”

Zack continued to wail, his arm pinned in the Subarus window.

Likewise,” Wright said. He kept Mel in his peripheral vision.

She still looked as if she was going to bolt.

Uncertain.

He didnt want to look at her in case it triggered flight.

What did we talk about?” Wright called to Zara. Getting her into a decent home?”

With me,” Zara said. Was that what we talked about?”

Something like that.” Wright smiled as he walked toward her. Smart woman. Right away able to take in what was going on and to improvise with him.

None of it set in stone, but if it got Mel to stay close, then it was worth it.

Otherwise, she might take off. Become just another runaway.

Things didnt go well for runaway teenage girls. Even in Spokane.

You could take her home now?” Wright kept walking toward Zara. If she wanted to go.”

Sure,” Zara said. Im still unboxing, but theres space. Up to her, of course.”

Now Wright looked back.

Mel was standing two yards from the Subaru now. Staring at Wright and Zara.

Mel looked over at Zack. His wails had subsided. He was attempting to work his arm free from the window. He wasnt in much of a state to free anything from anything.

Mel shifted her gaze to Anders and the other officer. They were hauling Todd toward the cruiser.

There were more sirens coming. Not far off.

Mel,” Wright said. What do you say? Want to go hang with Zara for a few days? See how it goes?”

She just stared.

Tell you what,” Wright said. Im going to come help your brother out of is jam there. He might be losing circulation.”

My fingers are numb!” Zack wailed.

No surprise.

Wright took a step.

Mel stayed right where she was.

Come on, hon,” Zara said.

You wouldnt want me,” Mel said. Im trouble.”

Well, maybe we can figure out how to stay out of trouble together.”

Thirteen

Two days later, with the morning sun striking its way through the blinds by Wrights apartments sink bench, there was a knock on the door.

The coffeemaker hummed to itself, sending the strong fragrance through the air, and the toaster ticked, the case heating up as the bread toasted.

Wright was up and dressed in jeans and tee shirt. He was planning a walk maybe head to the library, and maybe go see a movie. He would see what the day brought.

He opened the door and it took him a moment to recognize the young woman standing there.

Zara.

I had to ask around to figure out where you lived.” she said. She was dressed in leggings and a black skirt, with a plain shirt and a black jacket on top. She looked just about ready to go to a job interview.

I have friendly neighbors,” he said.

Except for the two who bring out golf clubs in the middle of the night.”

Wright smiled. Mostly theyre all right too.”

Sure. I guess. I just wanted to stop by with Mel so she could thank you. And me. I wanted to thank you too.”

Thank me? I didnt do anything really.”

You were there. You didnt have golf clubs. You just talked.”

Sure.” Wright nodded. You want a coffee?”

Thats all right. Were just stopping by. Were heading for Oregon. Ive got a sister who lives there. Near the coast. Near the California state line.”

Quite a move.”

Had to be done. Need the break. Zacks not in a good space. Well come up and see him. Trying to get him into a program.”

Good plan.”

Anyway, thank you.” Zara held out her hand to shake.

Wright took it and her grip was firm and sure.

Mel!” Zara called as they released. Come on.”

Wright looked out through the door. Mel was standing against the corner of the house, by the walk that led to the street.

She was wearing ripped jeans and football jacket with a big S on the left side.

She gave him a half smile and headed along toward him.

Wright held out his hand, but she ignored it and just grabbed him into a hug.

Wright hugged her back.

Thank you,” she whispered.

You be good,” he told her.

She released and stepped back and looked him in the eye.

You bet,” she said, with a little smile.

And he could see under that that she meant, You bet, but not too good.

And that was fine.


Thanks for reading. If you enjoyed the story, feel free to let me know.  Go ahead and check out the other Cole Wright stories on the Cole Wright Thrillers page.

Remember the new Cole Wright thriller, Hard Ground is out on December 20th. Can’t wait? As a thanks for visiting here, and reading the story (you’re here at the bottom of the page, so I assume you read and enjoyed it), you can get the new novel half price here on the Sean Monaghan shopify page. $2.99. Enter the code “Hard Ground” at checkout to get the discount.

Thanks again for reading. Have a great Christmas and New Year.

Cheers

Sean

 

Stillness – a Cole Wright short story

It’s been a little while since I’ve put out a new Cole Wright story, but with the seventh Cole Wright thriller novel Not Above The Law due out on June 20th, I figure it’s time to drum up a little notice. On the principle of, you know, maybe if you like the short story, it might pique your interest in the novel. Maybe even the other novels. And the short stories.

This is also the first short story since the No Lack of Courage collection, which gathered all the other stories so far. While the output of novels is slowing (last year they came in a little burst since I’d been writing them over the previous couple of years and wanted to have an ‘instant platform’, such as that might be), I do have a few other short stories completed and just awaiting copy-editing and formatting and so on, so I may well have more out later in the year, even if there is no new novel to pair them with. Is that like when a band releases a single that’s not on an album? Do bands really do that anymore, or is that 1990s thinking?

Anyway, here’s the blurb and cover, and first chapter.

For those interested, it’s about 7500 words (say 25 pages) over 9 chapters. Link goes to the UBL for the ebook and the paperback – $2.99/$6.99


Stillness

A quiet Spokane diner. A tasty meal. A relaxing break.

All Cole Wright wants.

But at another table someone watches him.

Intent. Focused. Maybe even a little agitated.

None of Wright’s business.

Until trouble arrives.

A story that asks the question,

how long should we wait to speak up?

Text copyright © Sean Monaghan, 2023

Cover image, © Cmoulton | Dreamstime.com (Diner), © Anton Greave – Dreamscape (figure)


Chapter 1

In the diner, Three tables along, a guy was pretending not to watch Cole Wright.

And not doing a very good job of it.

Wright sat at his own table, sipping from a soda. Home made cola. Sweet and bitter at once, and a little rich. The waitress came by periodically with a pitcher to refill for him.

The diner had a good homely feel to it. The tables were solid, molded plastic, thick and hefty, and the upper surface was printed with a gingham pattern. Pink and white checks that would be far easier to clean than actual gingham.

The tied back curtains at the windows were actual gingham fabric.

On the walls were old black and white photographs of lumberjacks with long-handled axes and mule carts, and of the Spokane River and the waterworks. Of the bridges and the old State Capitol building. One of an open-topped Mercury parked on an overlook, with trees and towns spread out below.

The waitstaff wore black, with aprons. They bustled with a practiced efficiency.

A constant scent of brisket and chicken and omelets wafted through the space.

The diner’s layout followed an L, with the long leg facing out onto the roadway. Rows of tables along the outside, mostly booths, with a few standalone around the L’s corner. The counter, facing the kitchen, had a row of stools, some occupied, but mostly empty.

Business people stopping in for a quick coffee, construction workers with big meals. The diner did a special lunchtime deal on their loaded plate. Sausages, bacon, eggs, biscuit, grilled tomatoes and rocket. Some of those big guys looked like they ate here every day. Maybe for breakfast too.

The guy watching Wright glanced up as the waitress came by with the coffee flask. He glanced her way. She topped his mug up and asked him something. He gave a shake of his head.

“I’ll bring your check,” she said, just audible to Wright. “Thanks.”

The man gave her a nod and looked back at his coffee.

Couldn’t stop his eyes flicking toward Wright on the way though.

He’d come in after Wright. Maybe fifteen minutes back. He’d looked through Wright at first, but taken to glancing at him, nursing a coffee.

Wright sat back and took a breath. He was in the last booth at the end of the L. Back to the wall. Farthest from the windows. Gap on the left, long windowless wall on his right, stretching out to the front windows. Seven booths, with a larger one right in the front corner. Seating for eight or ten easily.

Wright’s table was a little close to the bathrooms. People came and went. Through the wall he could periodically hear the sound of the hand dryer blowing.

Still, the position gave him a better view of the patrons. People watching. Always fascinating.

He wasn’t used to being watched himself so much. At least not with such intensity.

The man with the flicking eyes was likely in his mid to late twenties, though he looked tired. Almost beaten down. He was wearing a black jacket over a black tee shirt. He had a silver stud in one ear. His dark hair was cropped short along the sides, feathered into length across the top. The cut looked fresh. As if he’d just come from the barbers’.

An elderly man with an aluminum cane came around the corner from the counter, heading for the bathroom. Around and almost out of sight, a woman burst out laughing.

One of the waiters came from behind the counter, carrying a tray with two tall floats. The glass sparkled and the whipped cream on top was mountainous, topped with a cherry on each.

The guy watching Wright looked at the door again. Looked back at Wright.

Real case of nerves, that one.

Wright had been a cop. In a previous existence. That kind of thing would have had him and whichever partner discussing whether to go have a word with him.

Is everything all right sir?

Just checking in. Could be nothing. Maybe his date hadn’t shown and this was the sixth time this month. Different person every time.

Maybe he’d just come from the hospital and was worried about a sick relative. Maybe he’d just lost his job.

Any number of innocent, even if troubling, reasons for someone to seem nervous.

His eyes flicked to Wright again.

But that was different. If he’d been in uniform, then maybe that would have explained that.

Plenty of reasons people could feel nervous around a cop in a diner.

Not so much for just some guy waiting for his lunch. Wright was probably reading too much into it. Instinct. Some people would say it was force of habit. You could leave the force, but you were still a cop. You still exuded that presence.

The waitress returned to Wright’s table, carrying a laden plate. She set it down, with a knife and fork wrapped in a gingham-style paper napkin. Heat seemed to rise from the plate.

A folded and loaded cheesy omelet. Filled with bacon, potato, tomatoes, beans and plenty of other vital ingredients. Cheese oozed from it. The other half of the plate had a biscuit, crushed and drenched in white sauce.

“I’ll be right on back with your salad there,” she said.

“Well, thank you. Quick question.”

“Shoot.” She smiled. She had curly, thick blonde hair, tied back. Her name tag read Naomi.

“Nervous gentleman sitting facing me. Three tables down. Is he a regular?”

Naomi glanced over. The guy was focused now on his coffee.

“Regular?” she said, quietly. “You a cop there? You’re not a regular.”

“No I’m not a regular. I’m no longer cop. Just thought, he seems to be, I don’t know, keeping an eye on me. I might just be a little sensitive myself.”

She nodded.

“That’s Rick,” she said. “Rick Baker. Comes in a couple of times a week. Nurses a coffee. Judy in the kitchen knows him and she’s basically assistant manager, so makes sure he’s no trouble. Got divorced nearly a year back and is still moping. Harmless.”

“Well, thanks,” Wright said. “That’s reassuring.”

She smiled. Nodded. “I’ll grab you your salad. Be right back.”

She slipped away.

Wright freed the knife and fork from the napkin and started in on the omelet. The smell was heavenly.

Just the thing after a

Out front a big delivery truck slid by slowly. Arnold’s Furnishings, Spokane, WA stood out in big letters on the white side, with a stylized image of a dining table.

Rick Baker picked up his coffee mug. Drained it.

He met Wright’s eyes.

Baker stood. Took out his wallet and removed some notes. He lifted the coffee mug and set it down again, on top of the notes.

He put the wallet away and headed toward Wright.


End of excerpt. Continue reading by purchasing the ebook or the little paperback – available here.

If you missed it, keep an eye on the website here, from time to time I put up a free story.

Text copyright © Sean Monaghan, 2023


Thanks for reading. I hope you enjoyed the story. It’s also available as an ebook and in print, alongside the other Cole Wright books.

More news coming soon – this is a busy week for my tiny publishing empire and I need to keep up with it.

 

A Steep Climb – a Cole Wright short story

NB, Post updated June 2023 – First chapter of story only here now –

STORY NOW AVAILABLE AS A STANDALONE PAPERBACK AND EBOOK – HERE.

Also (and probably a better bet) available in the collection No Lack of CourageHERE – which has all the Cole Wright stories from 2022.


A little slow off the mark with this… call it the end of the year blues. Mostly I like to have a Cole Wright short story up free to read in the first week of the month when a Cole Wright novel is coming out. This time, I missed that by a wide margin – Zero Kills, book 6 in the series, has already been out for a few days now.

The idea with a free story on the website here is to promote the upcoming title and the series as a whole. Since I’m kind of goofy with that whole marketing thing, sometimes pieces fall by the wayside. Social media? Advertising? Up to date website? Email list? What’s all that?

“A Steep Climb” as it turns out, was actually the first Cole Wright short story I wrote. When I was getting a feel for the character. It was fun coming back to it at this point (and making a couple of important changes) and cool to let it out into the world. I’ll leave it free here for a week or two. Maybe longer.

More Cole Wright news soon – an update on Zero Kills (you know, promotion), a little news on book 7, which has been drafted and as such is in the machine to get up to scratch to be publishable, and on a collection of all the Cole Wright short stories so far, including the novella.

A Steep Climb will also be out soon as an ebook and in paperback – priced as usual at $2.99 and around $5.99.

Enough of my waffling on – here’s the story. STORY NOW AVAILABLE AS A STANDALONE PAPERBACK AND EBOOK – HERE.

Also (and probably a better bet) available in the collection No Lack of CourageHERE – which has all the Cole Wright stories from 2022.


A Steep Climb – blurb

Hitching a ride, Cole Wright finds himself listening to tall tales. He meets some remarkable people on the road.

When the driver suggests a detour to a beautiful overlook, they find more than they expect. People dressed and ready for a ball.

But they have other things on their mind.

Cover illustration © Janusz Walczak (figure) ©Jing (landscape) Both | Pixabay


A Steep Climb

 

Chapter 1

Delle Brodie climbed the steep face of the grassy slope, nursing her twisted ankle, watching the rage of angry waves below.

There were rocks there, at the base. Old granite or basalt or something. The kind of rock that sat implacable against the ocean’s onslaught for millions of years. Or against the impact of a boat’s hull.

Above the rock, the grassy slope was something she had to cling to. Maybe mountain goats or bighorn sheep could traverse it easily, but for a reasonably fit woman like herself, it was still a struggle.

Unnerving, even.

The grass was crisp and dry. The blades crackled underfoot and in her hands as she grasped at them. Some came away in her fingers. Hopefully the root mass was tougher. Otherwise, her urgent traverse might dislodge something and send a whole volume of it down into the Pacific. Her with it.

Back down with the debris of Hibiscus, her boat.

Insects buzzed around. Hornets, maybe, or bees. Despite the dryness of the landscape, there were still weedy flowers around. The smell was a heady mix of dusty earth, pine and a mess of floral scents.

If you could bottle it, you’d make a killing selling it at state fairs.

The sun beat down on Delle. Late September in Oregon you’d think it would be more temperate. There had been some fires a year or two back, racing up through parts of this countryside. Relentless and without mercy. Times were sure getting hotter.

Still, at least the sun would be setting soon. It might have been six PM already. Maybe later. On the boat, time hadn’t seemed to matter so much.

Somewhere south of Portland, north of Crater Lake National Park, one of her favorite places. Amazing that a lake could be so deep–deepest in the country–but only be accessible at the top of a mountain. Stunning, summer or winter.

It would be a whole lot better there right now, than here.

She was wearing running gear, which was a good thing. Tights, Nikes, a wicking, long-sleeved Ladbrook top. Black with bright colors–pinky-crimson on the upper half of the top, and the same color highlights along the leggings.

Better than if she was in jeans, sandals and some old baggy sweater.

She was in good shape, for her age. Pushing forty. She ran five miles a day, put in a couple of regular weekly sessions at Stone’s Gym in Tacoma hefting weights and pulling the oars on a rowing machine.

Delle stopped and took a breath. The slope had to be sixty degrees. Math had never been her strong suit. Ask her to pick the chords in a song and she could do that easy. Listen to something once, then play it on the piano no problem.

But angles and square roots and even multiplication baffled her.

Honey, her mother had said right through school, Music is just math.

Well, she got that. All the notes relate, one to the other. That was easy. But when you had to look up the cosine of an angle to figure out how long the side of a triangle was, well, that just lost her.

And why was she thinking about that now?

As if poor math skills were something to worry about when her boat was wrecked, she was stuck here scrambling up some wasteland into who knew where?

Another glance down–didn’t they say don’t look down?–and she could see that she was actually making progress.

She didn’t remember scaling the rocks. Just being thrown into the water, then she was here on the slope. Some survival instinct taking over. The conscious, memory-forming part of her brain shoved aside as something took over to get her away from those waves and out of the water.

A plunge through the water–she was still wet–and a scramble up the rock face. She had some cuts on her fingers and the left knee of her leggings was torn, the skin beneath scraped.

She stopped for another breath. Impossible to tell how far the slope reached. It curved back away from her.

It was tiring. And already she’d had to deal with the broken steering on the boat.

Hibiscus was a forty-foot fiberglass cutter. At least, she had been. Now she was just jetsam, with the mast bobbing in the waves, the keel sitting at the bottom of this little cove.

Her own fault, really. It was her father who’d been the sailing enthusiast. He’d gifted her the boat in his will.

He’d tried to share a lot of his enthusiams with her. Taking her to Jayhawks games, teaching her to shoot at the local range, watching bad fifties science fiction movies. Some of them were really terrible.

Maybe it was some desire to honor his name, to take the boat out. Maybe it was something clouding her judgement.

She’d been out on the boat plenty of times with him, from when she was maybe ten and he’d come into the money to purchase it.

He made it look easy. Adjust the sheets, work the tiller, change the sail configuration.

The last five years it had sat almost idle–just occasional rentals that helped pay the hospital bills–while he made noises about beating his cancer. Right up until the last day.

I’ll lick it, you hear me? I will.

Sure Dad.

Delle climbed on. Maybe it wasn’t too much farther. And the slope definitely seemed to be growing less steep. Something darted away through the grass to her right. Maybe a mouse. Maybe a small snake.

She should know more about the area’s wildlife, really.

The slope evened out. The grass was more vibrant and strong. Soon the slope was shallow enough that she could stand and walk upright.

The tips of trees showed farther up. Some pieces of litter were caught in the grass in places. Burger wrappers, plastic bottles.

The slope changed not far ahead. An edge to it. The grass scruffier, a low fence made from fat round pieces of wood. When she reached it though, the fence was higher than it had seemed. More like three feet high, with wire mesh between the posts.

Beyond, there was a gravel area, with tall pines behind. The scent of them was strong.

A black Cadillac was parked in the middle of the gravel area.

With a man standing at the open driver’s door. Just watching her.

 

Chapter 2

Cole Wright sat in the passenger seat of the rickety old Ford, listening to the driver talk about his time in the marines. Nice guy, though perhaps getting on a bit to still be driving, especially at the speeds he was doing. Staying within the posted limit, but the twists and turns didn’t lend themselves to the aggressive mode at all.

….

COMPLETE STORY NOW AVAILABLE AS A STANDALONE PAPERBACK AND EBOOK – HERE.

Also (and probably a better bet) available in the collection No Lack of CourageHERE – which has all the Cole Wright stories from 2022.


Thanks for reading a little of “A Steep Climb”. I hope you enjoyed it. If you did (after all, this is marketing, right), check out the other stories and novels in the series on the Cole Wright page on the website here. Ebooks, paperbacks and even hardbacks (of the novels). Does anyone want audiobooks? Seems as if lately the AI revolution is making that a little more cost effective (as expense, I suspect, of numerous skilled voice artists – that’s kind of scary). Maybe I should wander down that path for a little while.

Again, thanks. Feel free to comment, even just to say hi.

Take care,

Sean

“Cardinals” – A Cole Wright short story, and Cold Highway – A Cole Wright novella

With my last post, I was deep in the heart of writing the ninth Captain Arlon Stoddard novel, Dead Ringers, and as I write this, I’m deep in the heart of writing the seventh Cole Wright novel (as yet untitled), which shows that I go too long between posts here.


Cold Highway – A Cole Wright Novella – out now

A trip north of the border takes Cole Wright into the heart of snowbound Canada. Friendly people, vast distances, tough vehicles, isolation.

When a breakdown looms, Wright finds himself caught in the white, compacted landscape. A road thirty feet wide, hemmed in by the piled up ridges left by snowploughs. And an endless forest that could hide just about anything.

Unfriendly territory. Dangerous places.

A Cole Wright novella that focuses down on a single moment where the slightest error could be his last.


With “Cold Highway” the first Cole Wright novella came on November 20th, and the sixth novel Zero Kills will be out on December 20th, it’s a busy time for my little thriller series.

Stay tuned for more news – another free story in December, and plans for Cole Wright and other series next year.

“Cold Highway” is available now. $3.99 ebook / $10.99 print.


Cardinals – A Cole Wright Short Story – also out now

Lieutenant Ione Anders of the Spokane Police Department stares at a blade jutting from one of the tires on her new issue vehicle.

Looks like the start of another one of those days.

A day that proves full of surprises.

A Cole Wright story with a difference, putting him right there in the action as he tags along.

Cover illustration © Constantin Opris | Dreamstime.

 

“Cardinals” is available as as an ebook and in print, usual thing of $2.99 and $5.99, since it’s just a short story. Link here.


Keep an eye out for a short story free to read here in December, and Zero Kills released on December 20th – preorder link here


 

“Sea Skimmers” – a Captain Arlon Stoddard short story

I am currently deep in the heart of writing the ninth Captain Arlon Stoddard novel, Dead Ringers, which is proving to be one of the most complex I’ve ever written – I’m taking more notes as I go than ever, and I’m tinkering a whole lot more with early parts of the story. It’s fun and different, and I hope to have it out in the first quarter of next year, all going well.

Also out is “Ortanide Steppers“, the first novella in the series.


Sea Skimmers

Experienced Captain Ulliana Alvis loves skimming above the forty-five hundred kilometer stretch of the Tegh Sea. Her vessel the Mourave carries fifty passengers in safety and comfort. The calm of the water always reassures and moves her at once.

But safety can be an illusion.

A Captain Arlon Stoddard short story that pits the crew against cascading events and into a desperate attempt to save lives.

A great place to jump in if you’re new to the series, and a wonderful addition for fans.

Cover illustration © Savagerus | Dreamstime.

“Sea Skimmers” is out now as an ebook and a little paperback. Usual thing of $2.99/$5.99.


 

 

One Little Broken Leg – A Cole Wright short story taster

With Scorpion Bait, book 5 of the Cole Wright series on preorder and available from September 20th, it seemed like a good moment to post another Cole Wright short story. “One Little Broken Leg” is the fifth of these, and it was fun to write. While I love writing the novels, I love the stories just as much, but in a different way. It’s fun being concise and looking as just one event that can usually be resolved quickly.

Read the first two chapters below. Keep an eye out on the site here, I’m working on posting a story free to read for a week or two from time to time. The next one should be the first couple of weeks of December.

Check out the Cole Wright Thrillers page for other details and links to the novels and stories.


One Little Broken Leg

Blurb

Sally loves hiking. She knows her way around and knows all the pitfalls and problems. She uses the best equipment.

Caught by surprise, she injures her leg while out alone, forcing her to dig for new strength. To improvise.

When Cole Wright catches up, what he finds makes no sense.

A story of people thrown together in challenging circumstances.

 

 

Cover image © Idenviktor | Dreamstime.com

Also available as an ebook and in print, from Amazon and elsewhere.


Chapter One

One little broken leg was never going to slow down Sally. Not out here in the wilds, five miles from the freeway. Two miles from the nearest road.

Sally sat on a black rock, poking up from the mossy, earthy soil all around. An outcrop of granite or gneiss. She’d learned rocks back at NAU. Just a couple of geology courses as a freshman.

None of that had stuck.

Not that that would help her situation right away.

The sky overhead was clear, a brilliant dome of blue. A few scudding, icy wisps to the north east, and a few billowing thunderheads a hundred miles to the south. It was late in the day and the air was cooling. Behind her the range rose slowly, and the sun would dip behind soon.

Then it would get real cold.

Around her, ponderosa and Oregon pines shivered in a light breeze. Their scent was heady and strong. Invigorating. Life-giving.

The rock was nobbly and rough. It poked against her butt, but the nobbles were small enough and even enough that it didn’t hurt. Tiny pieces of it looked like they were ready to break out. Little blocks of the stuff like the tips of miniature french fries.

The fall had happened just beyond the rock, on the uphill side. A trail there that might once have been clear and open, but now was tending to weeds and saplings. Dry in places, boggy in others. Some parts, farther down, back toward Jessie’s car

The Ryeling Park Forest was eighty-nine hundred acres of old growth. It sounded like a lot, but it wasn’t really. A jagged shape, six miles long, and four miles across at its widest.

Abandoned rugged country. Too hard to farm, really. Too beautiful to mill, though the way the lumber companies were getting now, they would happily come in and fell every last tree, plant some saplings and vanish.

Sally’s leg throbbed.

She’d fallen. Distracted by the flight of a raptor. A hawk probably, not an eagle. Too small. Brilliant speckled brown feathers, with a tail that tipped left and right adjusting its flight.

The bird had been gliding along above the clearing around the rock. The bird’s head had turned and its yellow eye had glinted at Sally.

Pulling its wings in, the bird plunged at the ground.

Vanished behind the rock.

Sally had hurried to watch.

Stumbled.

Fallen across part of the rock. Her foot jammed. The rest of her kept going.

The pain in that moment had been explosive.

As if her foot had been ripped off.

It had taken minutes for her breathing to come back to normal.

She’d shucked her backpack and lay there on the trail. Staring at the sky. Letting her leg throb.

Calculating how long before dark. Calculating whether she could hobble back before dark. Calculating if she could even drive the car.

Jessie’s car was a old Ford Fusion. A little beat up, with wheel bearings the squeaked sometimes.

It wouldn’t drive itself.

If only she had a Tesla, ha, ha.

But, it was kind of Jessie to let her use it like this. In exchange for a little childcare. Sally would do that for free.

Her phone had been in her back pocket. In the fall, the screen had smashed. The phone was still working, but the display was flickery and fragmented. And wouldn’t respond to her taps.

she couldn’t make a call. Couldn’t text.

So now here she was, sitting on top of a rock, miles from anywhere with her leg throbbing. No phone. No one around.

Still the view was nice.

She dragged her pack up after her and unzipped the top flap. It was a decent overnight pack. Sixty-five liter capacity. She had a quick coffin tent and a good sleeping bag. All middle of the range—best she could afford—but they did the job.

Maybe she would have to camp out for the night. She would have to drag herself back along the trail a ways. Just before the small clearing around the rock outcrop, she’d spotted a kind of flat area that would have enough space for the tent.

She could wait out the night and hobble on back to her car come morning.

When she’d bought the pack, at Wilbur and Son, the sales assistant had suggested an emergency locator. A little thing like a cross between a flashlight and a GPS. It had a secret button that sent a signal to the satellites. A kind of automated S.O.S.

She’d balked, though at the price. Not that it wouldn’t be three hundred dollars well spent, just that she didn’t really have three hundred dollars to spare.

She’d hiked plenty, with no problems. She was young and fit.

Now, though, maybe she should have had that locator.

From the zipped pouch, she pulled out a baggie with trail mix. Nuts and seeds and sultanas, with a smattering of chocolate chips and yoghurt balls. Quite delicious.

Buried below, she had a full dried meal—stroganoff—and a little camp cooker to boil it in. She would have to use her drinking water, since she wasn’t going to be collecting water from a stream anytime soon.

If she could even get the cooker set up.

Fine mess you’ve gotten yourself into, girl.

She took a mouthful of the mix. It was yum. And cheering.

From farther up the trail came a sound. Someone running?

Sally sat up straighter. Looked around.

Not from up the trail. From down. Back toward the small carpark.

Her heart pounded.

Fifteen yards away, someone burst from the trees.

A man.

Sally waved. Shouted.

“Hey,” she said. “Little help.”

He came to a stop.

Stared at her.

He had thick, lank black hair and three days of stubble.

He stared at her with piercing eyes.

“I fell,” she said. “I need…”

She trailed off.

He was just staring.

He was wearing jeans. Dirty jeans. Tan work boots. Muddy.

A plaid shirt over a white tee shirt.

No backpack.

No water bottle.

He was carrying just one thing.

A little black pistol.

 

Chapter Two

Cole Wright stepped from the passenger side of Lieutenant Ione Anders’s Tahoe. Police issue SUV with the full package. Bars on the front, lights on the top, cage in the back. Painted black and white, with the Spokane Police Department decals.

Nothing subtle about it at all.

The vehicle was starting to get a bit worn and tired. Chips in the paint and wear on the seat vinyl. A corner of the dash where the peg had failed and the plastic was bending up against the windshield glass.

“Let me read this,” Lieutenant Ione Anders said from the driver’s seat. She was looking at the vehicle’s police-connected laptop display.

“Happy to wait here,” Wright said.

They’d parked in a small parking lot out of town. In the hills. Pines stood all around, making the roadway into a canyon and sending the sweet drifting smell of pine and earth. From across the other side of the road, beyond the tinkling stream it followed, came the chirruping of a pair of hidden birds. Fighting, perhaps, over some tidbit.

A sign at the far end of the lot identified the place as Ryeling Park Forest with some logos for the Department of Wildlife and Washington Parks.

A map in the top right corner, with marked trails, and a list below showing the walking times. Camping prohibited. Fires prohibited. Dogs banned.

“Go look at those other vehicles,” Ione said, stepping out of the vehicle. “Got another call about a domestic shooting south of here. Suspect left in a Dodge pickup. Got one right there.”

“And this guy?” Wright said.

“Let me go talk to him first,”

“Go ahead. I’m enjoying a moment with the peace of nature.”

She made a face at him and headed toward the other vehicles.

There were three. An old Ford sedan, and even older Dodge pickup, real beat-up, and a near new BMW. It was the BMW she was heading for. A white-haired gentleman well into his seventies stood at the right front fender.

Strictly speaking, Wright shouldn’t really even be here. Not in her vehicle. Retired cop, fraternizing with a younger, off-duty cop.

He was happy to help, always. He enjoyed their time together, but there would always be a tension.

He’d quit the force, in Seattle. Disillusioned and jaded. She, on the other hand, was on the ascendant here in Spokane. A career. An energy. Colleagues who supported her.

Still, he had to remind himself to enjoy the moment. Live in the moment.

Later, after this little diversion, they could grab dinner at Denny’s or maybe that little Mongolian barbeque he’d spotted just off downtown. They could head back to his little leased apartment and see what happened.

“Wright,” she said. “Come listen.”

From across the road, one of the squabbling birds shot out of the trees. I flew like a bullet. Dead straight. Directly above Wright’s head. Vanished into the trees on the park side.

The other bird appeared a fraction of a second later. Followed the same trajectory.

Wright smiled to himself. Wildlife was always on its own schedule. Didn’t care a whit about people.

Wright went around the Tahoe and across a few empty slots to the Beemer. Shiny and well-kept. Dark blue. Two-seater. Little shark gills on the fender just ahead of the door.

“Listen to this,” Anders said.

“It don’t change the more times I tell it,” the man said. He sounded like he was from down south somewhere. He was wearing black chinos and a button shirt. A bolo tie with a picture of steer horns on the clasp.

“No,” Wright said, “But I might hear something different.”

The man looked Wright up and down. Frowned.

Anders was in uniform—and she looked great in it—but Wright was just in faded jeans, work boots and a tee shirt, with a black jacket over.

“Detective?” the man said.

“Retired,” Wright said. He’d been a regular beat cop, but some days it had felt like he knew more than the detectives.

“Heck, look at you? You’re all of twenty years old, and retired. I’m seventy-five and I have no plans to retire.”

Wright was well into his thirties, but there was no need to correct the man.

“What did you see?” Wright said.

“Guy there comes screaming around the corner from down Abernathy way.” The man pointed to a curve in the road where Wright and Anders would have found themselves if they’d continued on.

“Must’ve been doing eighty,” the man said. “His tire blew. You can see it there. Strips of it.”

Wright looked. Sure enough, black strips from a ruined tire. And now that he looked more closely, he could see that the pickup was parked at a poor angle. And that it was down at the front left, with the back right corner of the tray higher. Lifted on the rear suspension.

“The whole tire stripped off?” Anders said.

“Yes ma’am. You look at these two tires on the near side, you can see they’re old and bald. Retreads, at best. Shouldn’t be on the road, let alone doing eighty up in here in the hills. You see how narrow these roads can get?”

“I saw.”

“He was lucky to make it into the lot here. Lucky he didn’t total my car.”

“Then what happened?” Wright said. He walked around the rear end of the Beemer. Out on the road there were black skid marks. Some gouges in the tarmac that looked fresh.

Easy to picture the tire blowing. Shredding. The driver fighting for control. Automatically slamming on the brakes. Shuddering along, barely making it into the lot.

The front bumper was actually right up against the low log fence that separated the parking lot from a grassy berm, and the start of the forest.

To the right of the pickup was a gap in the fence, with a sign.

Black Rock Loop. Allow 6 hours.

Wright read the pickup’s plate number and called it out to Anders.

“That’s the one,” she said.

Wright turned. Looked up into the trail. It was bright for a ways, but soon the thickness of forest got the better of the sun and it turned into a dark tunnel.

“Then he got out,” the man with the Beemer said.

“Where is he now,” Anders said.

“Took off into the woods.”

“This way?” Wright said, pointing up Black Rock Trail.

“Yep. Guess he didn’t want his head blown off.”

“Excuse me,” Anders said.

“Well, he tried to carjack me. That’s why I called.”

“Carjack you?” Wright said.

“Yes.”

A squirrel ran from the woods and through the grass. Climbed onto one of the uprights on the log fence. The squirrel’s tail twitched. Black eyes stared at Wright.

“He tried to carjack you,” Anders said. “But instead ran into the woods?”

“Yes.”

“Why did he run into the woods?” Wright said.

“Well, he got out of the junk heap there and brandished a gun.”

Wright saw Anders stiffen right away.

“What kind of gun?” Wright said.

“Glock 18.”

“That’s very specific.”

The man shrugged. “I know a little about guns.”

“So he had a gun,” Anders said.

“Yes. Told me to give him my keys. I declined.”

“And so he ran into the woods.”

Wright could see where this was going.

“He did,” the man said.

“What kind of gun do you have?” Wright said.

The man smiled. “Let me show you.”


The full story is available in ebook and as a paperback from the usual channels. ebook $2.99, print $5.99

Links and details on the Cole Wright Thrillers page.


Book 5, Scorpion Bait is available for preorder now. Full release on September 20th

Blurb:

Jerome Miller lies in scorching, gritty sand, staring up out of the rugged ditch.

Bleeding and broken.

The start of a very bad day, for him.

Cole Wright hitches into the town of Gollick, Arizona. Somewhere between Tuscon and Yuma. Looking for a good meal and maybe a bed for the night. Not looking for trouble. Sometimes, though, trouble hides away in those out of the way places. Sometimes trouble just finds him.

Sometimes Wright just meets it head on.


 

Writing Liquid Machine

I’m deep in the heart of writing Liquid Machine, the ninth book (though fifth in reading order) in the Karnish River Navigations series.

Mostly I think I wait until I’m done with a book before I post about it, but I’m having a blast writing this one, so I thought I just drop by here and give a little update.

A draft cover here, with main art by Ateliersommerland with the background by Bertrandb, both through Dreamstime. I am enjoying getting a relatively consistent look to the series now. I’m still learning design of course (yes I do my own covers), and feel like I’m improving little step by little step. Trying for a unified look, but still based on the original images.


Need a little more contrast in the text there – the dark red on the yellow aren’t doing it for me. Still, there’s time. Liquid Machine should be done soon, and once it’s edited and tinkered with, and the cover is finished, it should be out in the first quarter of next year.

Then, in keeping with the alphabetical titles there, the next one I’ll write will be Rorqual Saitu or similar. Has anyone read T.J. Bass’s 1974 novel The Godwhale? That’s my touchstone there. I love that novel and, without becoming fan fiction, the Karnish canals will have an android rorqual. Am I giving too much away, for a novel that’s not written yet and likely won’t be out for at least a year?

My story “Scour”, which appeared in the December 2016 issue of New Myths magazine, (free to read at the link) is set in the same world. Different characters, but the scour of the title is a relative of the upcoming rorqual novel.

Which leads me neatly into my next little topic here – short stories and novellas which fit into the worlds of my series.


I’ve been doing it a whole lot this year with my Cole Wright series, which I’ve been working on over the last few years. With each novel, I put out a short story too. It’s been real fun writing the stories with the character. Also a good taster if you want a quick read, and want to see if the character and style matches your taste – the stories are cheaper than a cup of coffee (depending where you get your coffee I guess).

Four novels – The Arrival, Measured Aggression, Hide Away, and Slow Burn, and four short stories “Dark Fields”, “Schedule Interruption”, “The Forest Doesn’t Care”, and “The Handler”.

See the Cole Wright page for details on them all.

The cool part of this is that I put the stories up here free to read in the early part of the month when there’s a novel coming out.

September sees book five Scorpion Bait released, with “One Little Broken Leg” available free to read from about the fifth. Also available in print and as an ebook.


I guess that’s enough of a ramble from me for now. Go check out “Scour” at New Myths – it’s a little dated now, and I like to think I’ve improved as a writer in the meantime, but it’s a fun read. At least, I think so. Also, free to read.

Thanks for reading

The Forest Doesn’t Care – A Cole Wright short story

My Cole Wright thrillers are out now. Visit the page for the full rundown.

The third novel Hide Away will be out on May 20th, so to entice you, I’m putting up this story in the lead up to release day. The story will be up for a week or so from May 10th (and then available for purchase as and ebook and in print). I hope you enjoy this taster.


Blurb

Charlie and Suze just want a quiet, relaxing hike through Crater Top park. A beautiful, tranquil and hidden in the mountains.

Helping out with the park’s trails, Cole Wright enjoys the change. The chance to do something different.

No one expects trouble. Not way out there.

But then, trouble has a way of showing up.

Available in ebook, $2.99, and paperback, $2.99 – from the Universal Book Link.

Read on for the first couple of chapters



The Forest Doesn’t Care

by Sean Monaghan

Chapter One

A speck of rain struck Charlie’s ragged old peaked cap. Right on the brim. Louder than rain had any right to be. He reached up and touched the brim, running his fingers along the threads there, feeling the softness of the edge where it was fraying.

It was a Cardinals cap bought at a game when his grandfather had taken him umpteen years ago. Some game that had been too. Drosser had smacked it clean out of the park, but the Cardinals had still lost.

Now Charlie touched a spot of damp right there on the peak. Definitely rain. On the way. It had seemed distant for a while, the swish of a squall coming through. Others had passed them by.

Charlie looked back along the rugged trail. He’d stepped over roots and rocks, now not even sure if it was a trail. The ground was boggy, reeking like old compost. There was a clear path back through the pines. Either side it was dark. The overcast sucking light from everything, especially here in the woods.

He adjusted his pack, the straps were cutting a little into his shoulders. Wrong kind of thing really to take out on this kind of walk.

Just a little generic daypack. Practically the kind of thing a down on their luck mom or dad might purchase at one of those dollar stores so their kid had something to take what little lunch they had to school

Charlie had just tossed in a raincoat—a light one, fat lot of good that would if it really rained—some tasty chocolate protein bars and a half liter of Jungle Juice.

The trail sloped up here, heading for some peak or other. There had been tantalizing glimpses of light, as if there were clearings, or a road or even the peak itself.

When he and Suze reached them, though, each time, it was just a deceptive, momentary change in slope.

Suze was somewhere ahead. Better prepared, that was for sure. She’d bought herself a Fairbreaker coat. A layered jacket that keeps rain out, but wicks away sweat in some kind of magical transference. She had a proper pack with wide straps and some kind of spout that reached over her shoulder, connected to a built-in water flask. Kept her hydrated.

If this rain came to anything, hydrated wasn’t going to be a problem.

From nearby, something squawked. Some kind of bird, chasing down a rodent or smaller bird.

There was wildlife here. Half the reason for coming. ‘Crater Top Nature Park’. Sixty acres of beautiful old growth forest, so it said on the webpage. Didn’t mention that it was sixty acres set in thousands of acres of clear-felling. The view from one of the little ledge clearing they’d reached seemed to encompass just a vast swathe of broken land. Brown, churned earth, with stumps and branches and abandoned lodgepoles that had broken or split on felling. A rusted, yellow trailer of some kind with one of the tires canted and twisted at a bad angle.

The idea was to focus on the surrounds. The pretty mosses growing in around the roots. The bursts of mushrooms from rotting trunks. The swish and sway of the trees in the gentle wind.

“Charlie?” Suze called from ahead. She was around a bend and hidden from sight. He’d last seen the flash of her guacamole-green pack a few minutes back.

She was the serious hiker. He was happy to do day walks here and there, but she was in the club. Trailblazers. A bunch of early to late middle aged women who would rise at the crack of dawn, march over a mountain range and sleep on some windswept plateau in rustling tents.

“Not far behind,” he called back.

Ahead there were gaps in the trees. Daylight. Or, at least, the overcast. Another of those tantalizing shifts in the slope that made you think you were coming up on the ridge.

From off to his right, east, came the patter of rain. Coming closer. The leading edge. Probably heading straight for them.

Easing through the curve in the trail, he spotted Suze forty yards ahead. Her red coat already on and the hood up. Her pack on the ground, leaning against her legs.

Facing away from him. She had her hands out. Moving her head as if talking to someone.

There was a definite slope change where she was. From his angle it looked almost as if she was on the ridge. But beyond, there was a bank, then more trees.

The road cutting. She’d mentioned it. Shown him on the map. An old forestry road, used by the park’s people now to service the various amenities. There was some kind of vault toilet near the top, apparently.

For rescues too perhaps. If Charlie tripped and busted his ankle here, he would need carrying out.

As he drew closer, Charlie saw the back end of a pickup. Big and new. Black. Shiny. Chunky tires. A tow ball.

The tailgate was open. The front end was hidden by the foliage.

More rain was coming in. Still just a shower, but pretty soon it would be torrential.

Charlie kept walking.

There was someone else there. Standing just the other side of the pickup. Head and shoulders visible.

Older guy. Lot of gray in his thick beard. He had a maroon beanie on his head. He was saying something to Suze.

Charlie drew up almost to them. Maybe these guys could give them a ride back down to the parking lot at the trailhead. Save them a walk in the rain.

Charlie came up almost level. Just a few yards from Suze. The guy stepped forward.

“Hey,” Charlie said. Now he could see into the pickup’s tray.

A body lying there.

A woman. Blood all over her face. Eyes staring blankly.

“Welcome to the party,” the guy said, stepping around.

He was holding a rifle.

Level.

Aimed right at Suze.

Chapter Two

Cole Wright Stood by the open door of the park’s busted and beat up SUV. A twelve-year old RAV4. Bought secondhand on a very tight budget. Bought from donations a few years back.

Jim Targell, who’d employed Wright, said that it had been one of the best investments they’d ever made.

Right now, at the rocky, exposed crown of Crater Top, Wright had a fabulous view across the local landscape. There were tall trees below, but around the top they only grew a few feet high. Too rocky and dry and barren. The air was filled with their sweet pine scent.

Across the valley, on private land, some huge acreages of forest had been clear-felled. Every single tree cut down, leaving stumps a foot high. In five years it would look better, with neat rows of green saplings.

Farther off the hills turned to blue, fading into the distance. An to the east, a curtain of rain was drawing in. Maybe another few minutes and Wright and Targell were in for a drenching.

“One minute,” Targell said from nearby.

The crown hosted a cellphone tower. Something put in by T-Mobile. They paid to have it here, and made a contribution to the road. Even made a grant to put new tires on the RAV a year back. Targell liked to tell the stories.

The name Crater Top was kind of a misnomer. There was a crater, but it was far below and lost in the forest. The peak might have been part of the rim a hundred thousand or a million years ago. There was a flat area with just enough room to turn the vehicle around, and the tower.

A trail led off to the south, and fifty yards farther down, occupying a flat spot, there was a functional toilet hidden in the trees. Functional in that you could use it. It stank and attracted flies. A half hour back Wright had replaced the rolls of paper and the squeeze bottle of sanitizer. Before he left he’d squirted a couple of good dollops onto his hands and rubbed it around. Still didn’t feel quite clean.

Wright was just here for a few days, probably. Help out with maintenance on the trails and amenities. Another grant, from the county, was paying for it. Suited him. It came with a simple room in the park’s office, meals and a little spending cash for his back pocket.

He and Targell were up here tasked with maintenance on the cyclone wire fence that protected the base of the tower. T-Mobile were paying. Tightening bolts and wires and sending photos back to the technicians who would do the regular and more technical maintenance.

“All right,” Targell said, closing up his toolbox and loading it into the RAV’s rear. He came around and got into the driver’s seat.

Wright got in next to him and they closed their doors with groaning, squeaky thunks. Wright was tempted to donate his meagre salary back to the park so they could get a service done on the vehicle.

“The phone company could do all this themselves,” Targell said, reaching through the gap between the seats and pulling out his little blue cooler.

“They could,” Wright said, knowing what was coming. The company has to charge out their own workers at seventy dollars an hour. Two of them for a full day really added up. Cheaper to give every second inspection to the park volunteers and make another donation.

Targell folded down the top of his cooler and handed Wright a plastic-wrapped sandwich and a Coke can.

“Got a bit warm there, sorry,” Targell said.

“No trouble.” Wright unwrapped the sandwich. Targell lived fifteen minutes away, in Clawville, a town of nearly four thousand. He’d been a doctor, but become a part-time ranger—part-time paid, full-time employed, he would say—because things weren’t working out. Wright figured a malpractice suit that wasn’t worth fighting.

Targell always made lunch for them both. Trout in the sandwiches, that he’d caught and gutted and seared himself. Wright wasn’t sure about trout sandwiches that had been warming in a cooler all morning, but it was food and he wasn’t fussy. With rocket and mayo, the sandwich was pretty delicious.

He sipped from the cola as Targell ranted on about the phone company and their generosity, but with a level of corporate cynicism.

The vehicle was parked facing east and the rain was almost upon them. The first scattered drops already impacting the windshield.

“Well,” Targell said, balling up the plastic wrap from his sandwich, “we’d better head on down before there’s some landslide that does the job for us.”

He started the engine and the old vehicle shook and rattled. Targell put his own soda in the central cup holder, adjusted the shift and backed carefully around. It took three goes. A K turn.

Then they were on the road. Gravel crunching under the tires. The angle was steep. The little vehicle was ideal. Light and agile. Targell was a cautious driver.

But he had to throw on the brakes as they came around one of the switchbacks to see a big black pickup blocking the way.

End of Chapter Two


Continue reading “The Forest Doesn’t Care” in ebook or paperback – click here. For more intrigue check out the Cole Wright page on the website. And feel free to drop me a line.

Cheers

Sean