The Generals of October by John T. Cullen, Simon & Schuster, October 2004 -- as sinister forces seize power, only two young Army officers, David Gordon and Victoria 'Tory' Breen, can unravel the dark secrets of Operation Ivory Baton to the nation
John T. Cullen has authored over 20 books, including The Generals of October (Simon & Schuster, 2004)—pulse-pounding political-military suspense fiction set in a near-future U.S. Constitutional crisis.
Scorpion--a screenplay by John T. Cullen--out of the horrors of the Balkan Wars rises a strange serial killer
John T. Cullen also writes screenplays, including one for Nebula Express (adapted from his SF novel) and the violent, darkly glistening, utterly strange tale of a serial killer in Scorpion.

If you like what you read here, please send at least two other avid readers here so a growing readership can enjoy these books. That would be a great, painless, easy way to provide a huge assist. If you'd like to do more...click.


go to main page

Copyright © 2005 by John T. Cullen. All Rights Reserved.
go to cover page
Comment: publishers@cox.net   go back to the Reading Room

go to chapter 17

Go to Chapter:   1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24
   Cover   Synopsis   Buy   Home

Lantern Road by John T. Cullen

Lantern Road

a science fiction novel

by John T. Cullen

16

Freshly barbered, and wearing overalls, Jory appeared at the Captain's door, escorted by Josenda. She knocked, and, when a small light winked above, pushed the door open for him. "Good luck, Jory. I'll be on call when you're done."

Jory stepped into a sprawling, low-ceilinged, carpeted space that reeked of luxury. Josenda pulled the door shut behind him.

"This way!" a rich voice boomed.

Jory, noting the paintings and sculptures all around, abstract and mute, followed the sound of the voice around a wallpapered corner. A wide flight of stairs, three shallow steps deep, brought him down into a lower dining room. Carpeted stairs cascaded up in three directions to more carpeted acreage—one a library, another a working office with desk laden with electronic tablets, the third a casual lounge.

"Welcome," boomed the huge man who sat at the central place of honor. He had a dark mane of hair, and short black hair fairly bursting from his white blouse. He appeared to have taken off his leather uniform, for he swaggered about in cloth breeches that reached just below the knee. "I'm Captain Aptath N'Ruandap. You recognize my other guest?" Aptath nodded to a man who stepped out of the shadows.

A bald man of indeterminate age, the man wore an expensive black uniform with fine silver piping. "Colonel Jstraki at your service, Astropath." He bowed slightly. "We met before."

Jory suddenly recognized him. "Yedy of Anamo, outside Kusi-O!" Jory was too surprised to be angry at the scoundrel who'd seemed to have handed him to the Imperial road police.

Aptath, as he filled two glasses from a bottle, said: "Colonel Jstraki is a skilled agent for Ruandap Intelligence. When I headed for the Shur system, rumor of your existence floated by me. I couldn't resist the temptation to find you and commission you. It took an agent of Jstraki's caliber a kjir to worm his way in, invent a local personality—"

"—In that infernal dampness and gloom!—" Jstraki injected.

"—Find you, and bring you out."

Jory remembered nothing of the period from when he saw Yedi receiving payment from the Obayyo police official until he woke up sick as a dog in Girex and Giru's chimney. "How did you manage to smuggle me through the drum wall?"

Jstraki grinned coldly, evidencing ferocious intelligence and efficiency. "We have two old sayings on Ruandap—Gravity is heavy no matter where you are in the universe. I found the cracks in the system very easily. Also: Money penetrates all, like water finding its way through a crack. I paid the right people, and, I'm afraid to admit, killed a few others. We wrapped you up in a membrane with state of the art AIC breathing apparatus, knocked out colder than a day-old noodle, and secreted you in a vat of fungus."

"I thought I was poisoned by the babas," Jory said. He remembered the taste and wanted to spit, but only made a bitter face.

"No," Jstraki said, "I didn't need to rely on native crafts. The drug was JF-VII, and I almost feared we had lost you at one point. I think Giru's soup brought you back to life."

"They were good people," Jory said stubbornly.

Jstraki laughed coldly and shook Jory's hand. "A man of principle. I leave you now."

Aptath handed Jory a glass and raised his own in a toast. "I celebrate the arrival of a promising astropath."

Jory stared into his glass. "No more kjaba surprises?"

Aptath laughed. "It's wine, a drink they used to make on Earth from a fruit called the grape."

Jory sipped. The liquid was dry, and made him sweat. Its taste had a strangely robust, rubbed quality, like something overripe and too sweet, but also severe. It had many interesting after tastes that lingered like broken music notes.

"Have a seat," Aptath boomed.

Jory chose the casual lounge, walking up to a circle of C-shaped couches around a central glass table at knee height. Surrounding them was a bubble, and outside that were the stars.

Aptath sat down opposite. "Welcome aboard. How do you like it so far?"

"I could be dead in an Oba latrine."

"So it's upward of that?" Aptath said patiently as he refilled the two plain, transparent glasses that had narrow glass stems and a wider glass foot.

"I must measure all things from there, Sir; forgive me, I didn't mean to seem rude."

"No offense taken, young man." He handed Jory the half-empty bottle with a paper label on it. "Recognize that?"

Jory stared at the label, at the bottom of the bottle, into the neck. He sniffed the liquid, which was yellowish and smelled musty-sweet.

"That's white wine," Aptath said. "Of course, I forget your people on Shur have been cut off for centuries." He sat back and sipped his wine. "We're only beginning, Jory. We haven't even started to turn the tide. But we'll win the galaxy back."

"We, Captain?"

"We—yes." He slipped into near-reverie. "We from Earth."

"You believe in those legends?"

Aptath smiled. "Oh yes." His eyes glowed as if he were looking directly at the mythical planet. "I have seen it with my own eyes, so close and so pretty that it seemed I could reach out and hold it in my two hands." He held up his hands and looked from one hand to the other. "But our ship could go no closer. No closer than Earth's single stony, battered moon. A big moon it is, that shines greenish, with an odd sort of pattern in the light, like a man singing."

Jory listened to this recitation and wondered if the man were mad, or drunk. But his voice wasn't slurry, and his manner was steady.

"It was the most glorious run of my life, and one day I must do it again, not once but a thousand times. You should stay with us, Jory O'Call, you have the gift of planets and stars in your blood. We can make a run there again. She's round, and blue as ice, with white clouds around her like angel dust. She is a fine confection, mostly ocean, but with deep swatches of green forest and mountain ranges that sing in the wind, I'm told."

Jory swallowed, then spoke slowly, "You say you've been to—Earth?"

"Yes." Aptath's eyes still glowed. "It's a secret only a few of us know. Only a few of us on this ship, including the Astropaths."

"Where is it?"

"That's the rub, Jory. I don't know. It's a secret. We'll have to look for her. When the old Earth empire fell, the last pre-Inversion scientists hid her in a well of time. They were powerful people, your race. Our kind. They did many things. Why do you think you carry those horn plates in your skull?"

"They cultured some of their own kind to specialize—?"

"Yes. They had no regard for the individual."

Jory was silent, thinking about the cruelties of Oba and now, apparently, the whole galaxy.

"Do you know," Aptath said thickly, "at one time your race hunted my race?"

Jory shook his head slowly. "The old women who count mendz don't tell such stories. Much is lost."

"Ah, not lost, just misplaced, like Earth herself."

Jory said: "Why do you say 'your race' in one breath and 'our kind' in the next?"

"Because both our races come from Earth. Any living thing from Earth is our kind, Jory, though we may be a million races and species. Even those of us who were altered, like you and I."

Jory frowned. "You are—?"

Aptath set his wine glass aside and rose. "Let's see if you have any racial memory at all." He reared up to his full height. "Does this strike any chords in you?" He took off his shirt, revealing a brawny, furry body twice the size of the largest human man's. He held his arms out as far as he could, as if extending something flexible. Then he curled his hands inward, leaned forward stiff-backed, and, touching his fists to the table top, leaned massively on his knuckles. "My legs are longer than they should be, and my arms are a bit shorter so that I can walk more like you. Before they altered us a bit, they came to hunt us. Some of your race protected us, but many of my race were killed for their hands and feet, which some of your race ignorantly believed could be made into medicine. For that alone, I should kill all of you. But then, you gave us some of the spark from the fire of your own intelligence. I like to think we have used it more wisely. Do you recognize me, Jory boy?"

Jory shook his head slowly, as if the Captain's words had made him drunk with their heaviness.

"I am a gorilla."

The room steeped in silence for a moment, while they stood frozen—the man, an underling, sitting uncomfortably on the edge of his couch, while the gorilla, a space captain, demonstrated a posture that was but a memory.

Aptath broke the spell by walking quickly to a small book case and bringing back two pictures. Each showed a hairy creature whose face resembled Aptath's, in a posture much like the one Aptath had just demonstrated. "One is my ancestor long ago. The other is yours."

While Jory studied the picture, Aptath poured the rest of the wine.

"Is this somewhere on Earth then," Jory asked.

"Yes. It's on the savannah in a place called Africa. A place called Rwanda, to be specific, in a rain forest where my race lived for millions of kjirs before—all hell broke loose." He held up the bottle. "This wine, Jory, is from Earth. I was very young, and our captain was an alien, a scoundrel. He was accepted for the secret trade route, but he tried to sell the secret, and their spies killed him in the next port before he could pry the first word through his teeth. Our spies, I should say. We are still a dangerous kind."

Jory said: "I never had a choice about being born on Oba of Shur. I never had a chance to decide when my parents sold me to the palace. I never did choose my way out. But here I am, and I could say no?"

"Most assuredly," Aptath said darkly.

"Then I freely say yes."

"Good!" Aptath boomed, reaching for Jory's hand. "Welcome to my crew. I make you Astropath Four, but I think you will rise to the top of your profession. Let those three teach you what you need to know. You'll be safe with me. I've been sailing for fifty kjirs, and I've never once lost a single human crew member to the alien terror. The Inversion of Man, I should say. And of you I will take special care, for you will be the sail that takes me down the well of time and to that wonderful blue vision once more." He held up his glass. "It was one of my last bottles. I managed to buy a case of them, shipped up from a place called San Francisco."

They clinked glasses.

Aptath spoke softly. "You know what decided me on you? You know what made me want to trust you with this information? It was the way you insisted on a proper burial for those two Fril people. The child will be very sad, but it is expected he will live despite his sickness, and at least he will be able to visit their grave. You are an honorable man, Jory O'Call. You are a fine human. I will enjoy working with you."

Jory said "Thank you." He waggled his near-empty glass. "Time to go back for more." He sipped the last few mouthfuls tenderly, savoring every molecule. "I think I can taste Earth. I can taste real sunshine."

If you like what you're reading, please send at least two other avid readers to this website.
     —Thank you!  …Your grateful author, John T. Cullen.

Go to Chapter:   1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24
   Cover   Synopsis   Buy   Home

  go back to top of page  
previous

Other gripping books by the author:


Read other exciting books by John T. Cullen

Copyright © 2005 by John T. Cullen. All Rights Reserved.

John T. Cullen has been a pioneer in digital publishing since 1996. He is listed by digital publishing historian Karen Wiesner as the sixth digital publisher in history, and the second person to publish serialized chapters on line (starting 1996). His web magazine Deep Outside SFFH was the first to be listed along with the professional pulps in Writer's Market (1999) and was at one time the oldest professional SFFH magazine in the world. John T. Cullen continues to explore new ways to adapt the primordial power of storytelling to emerging new digital opportunities as the Third Millennium springs to light.

go to chapter 2
A Walk in Ancient Rome by John T. Cullen, Simon & Schuster 2005, 2d Ed. Summer 2008
A Walk in Ancient Rome John T. Cullen (Simon&Schuster May 2005) innovative, acclaimed walking & teaching tour—explore every corner of the Imperial capital at its zenith almost 2000 years ago; learn its history—smell and taste the very air of Classical Rome.





= Summer 2008 =

A Walk in Ancient Rome by John T. Cullen, Second Edition - Summer 2008, originally First Edition Simon & Schuster 2005
A Walk in Ancient Rome, Second Edition John T. Cullen (Clocktower Books 2008)—New! Many new maps; images from the unique scale model of AndréCaron of Quebec. Read this innovative book, with its acclaimed walking & teaching tour. Explore every corner of the Imperial capital at its zenith almost 2000 years ago; learn its history. Smell and taste the very air of Classical Rome. The new edition is bigger, like an atlas. Some people have carried the 1st edition with them to Rome, and found it greatly enhanced their experience.




Dead Move: Kate Morgan and the Haunting Mystery of Coronado, 2nd Ed. by John T. Cullen, (Clocktower Books, San Diego, Summer 2008)
Dead Move: Kate Morgan and the Haunting Mystery of Coronado, 2nd Ed. John T. Cullen (Clocktower Books, San Diego, Summer 2008). John T. Cullen has tackled the mystery of the ghost at the Hotel del Coronado. He has assembled a dramatic new theory about how and why she violently died on the back steps of the hotel in 1892. A first-class ghost story and whodunit wrapped in one.