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.

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Epilog  

Nebula Express by John T. Cullen

This Shoal of Space

a novel

by John T. Cullen

10.

Ann Temple brought her son Jeremy to Mary-Shane’s apartment that evening. Kippy and Jeremy were astronauts in a computer game, shooting each other between the planets of an alien sun.

“We’re going out!” Mary-Shane and Ann said. “Keep the door locked!”

“Okay,” they singsonged disinterestedly, bleary eyes hooked on Captain Colorado, Space Hero.

At Pepper’s Steak House, a billboard in the form of a giant menu advertised today’s specials. Behind the billboard menu sprawled Pepper’s: heavy beams smothered in ivy; lead-paned windows sautéed in shadows. Ann said: “Used to be Long Tom’s.”

“I remember.” Mary-Shane looked up at the crossed salt and pepper shakers. “We met Frank MacLemore and Attila here when we were 18 years old.”

“Can you imagine?” Ann said. “Knowing what we know now?”

Inside the restaurant, burgundy light glowed among oddly placed wooden pylons. Mary-Shane remembered that in its earliest incarnation this place had been an inexpensive family seafood restaurant. She tried to think—no, something was rushing her along, past fading images of her wild late teen years, into deeper layers of memory. Her parents had brought her here when she’d been a little girl.

“Mary-Shane?”

She felt Ann tugging at her sleeve. A cocktail waitress’s airbrushed smile glowed white in the darkness. “Would you like cocktails while you wait?” the waitress said in a heightened voice, as though it were the second or third time she said it. Mary-Shane ordered wine. In the lounge, they sat on bar stools.

Ann sighed deeply. “We gotta lighten up here, Lull. What is this kinda glow you have tonight?”

Mary-Shane could still see Frank’s pale young face, scruffed up with beard shadow, as he leaned toward her the very first occasion she’d seen him. They had been eyeing each other for about an hour. She could still see the hunger in his dark eyes as he inched toward her in the crowd. She remembered how her stomach had fluttered. She had not really cared that much for him at first. Until it had been too late. Once those love hormones started to circulate, it was Niagara wreathed in shattered water like smoke.

“We can always go somewhere else,” Ann suggested.

“What? Oh no, it’s okay. I haven’t been here in a long time, but I don’t want to have to leave anywhere because of old memories. C’mon, let’s live it up.” She raised her wine glass.

Ann raised hers, and they clinked glasses. Ann told about some software her company had just bought, and how she was enjoying using it in her accounting job.

“And I am going to write The Big Story,” Mary-Shane said.

“I’m very excited for you. It’s time you had some luck. You’re intelligent, well-spoken...”

Mary-Shane interrupted: “...Have a nice ass.”

“That too.” Ann sniggered. She had a nice ass too, according to various sources over the years. She and Ann made quite a pair. They clinked glasses again. The hostess escorted them to the dining room. There, over flickering candles and mauve tablecloths, they ordered steak dinners.

“My parents brought me here once when I was small,” Mary-Shane said.

“Wow, that’s a priceless memory,” Ann said.

Mary-Shane’s father had died when she was ten. She grew silent, not wanting to drag the conversation into a sad valley. She kept the rest of the memory to herself. That memory was a sunny, semisweet piece of grayware, for her father had been killed in a plane crash over the ocean less than a month after that long ago dinner. Mary-Shane’s troubles—with her mother, with herself, even with Kippy—had grown out of that tragedy.

The dinners came, and Mary-Shane and Ann ate hungrily. Mary-Shane was drinking her second glass of wine and feeling giddy. She remembered that long-ago day with her parents as though it were yesterday: Late on a Sunday afternoon. Time seemed to stand still. A big bar of sunlight leaned in through the window. My Dad was telling jokes and Mother was telling him to be careful I might understand but I was already laughing. Funny thing is they were clean jokes. Mother just didn’t get them. “...Like this duck walks in the cosmetics store and points to the lipsticks. Says I’ll take this one and that one and that one.” Dad pointed at his nose. “And just put them on my bill.”

Mary-Shane ate mechanically. She stared at the far table, her gaze truncated again and again by hustling waitresses. She tried to unravel time in her mind. She tried to remember first the lost world of Long Tom’s, where in the haze of adolescent anger she’d seen herself as a Cortez in the jungles of newly discovered sexuality. Plunging deeper through the tunnel of memory—ah, there it was, the lump of pain surrounding Dad’s death that had changed her life forever—and further back...to that place over there. How had it been? Not drab and dark like now or angry-smoky like the Long Tom’s days... but simple, tidy, lit with light, secure, reasonable. Checkered table cloths a little girl would like, baby blue on white, with lacy frills. A fly circling over ketchup grown black and tacky on a wrinkled Spike’s Family Diner menu... So that was the old name, Spike’s Family Diner. She wanted to ask Ann if she remembered, but a half-chewed mouthful of steak was stuck in the corner of her mouth, laying a numbing choke-hold on the muscle there. One thing she remembered about Daddy was his eyebrows. They wobbled up and down when he told jokes. Funny, she had forgotten how fat he was. No not fat, just big and square with lots of extra flesh, but everything neatly tucked inside a clean shirt and a gray suit with wide lapels. He had pudgy white hands clasped under his belly. She hadn’t realized how soft his fingers looked, as though soaked for hours in soapy water. But his eyebrows! How they moved up and down when he talked. His lips glistened wetly. His teeth glittered like pebbles. His tongue...

Mary-Shane put her fork down. She rose slowly. She took the napkin from her lap and meant to leave it on the chair but she felt it brush against her calf as it fell to the ground. A waitress excused herself and Mary-Shane nodded, barely noting the annoyed face.

“Mary-Shane. Mary-Shane! Mary-Shane?” she heard Ann’s voice somewhere far away. All clinking forks fell silent. The laughing, talking, rustling of menus stopped, even a distant pounding jukebox fell silent.

“Daddy?” She stopped right before his table, pretty much where she’d sat that afternoon long ago, and looked up at him. Way up. His eyebrows waggled up and down. He bored into her with laughing eyes. His cheekbones glittered as though they had been made of glaze, like a doll’s. His padded shoulders and chest heaved, no, bounced up and down. He reared his head back with laughter. Mother looked away, embarrassed. He slapped his soft white fingers on the table and turned toward Mother to see if she got the joke. Mary-Shane took a hesitant step forward. She reached out.

“Mary-Shane!”

Her heart pounded like an engine gone wild.

Closer, closer...

The eyes... ...the eyes... ...were empty as the black of space, devoid of feeling, drained of emotion... There was no speck of love in those eyes... The white fingers...

...fingers of death. The white powder of the undertakers was on them. Powder flaked and crumbled from the dark prune-like fingertips. Powder caked and piled up in the laugh lines at the edges of the face. Ceramic filled in the face that had been shattered and torn open in the airplane crash. The lips, the cheeks, the nose, eaten by fish, glittered now, a glass mask. But the eyes, oh the lovelessness in the eyes was what finally told her this was not her Daddy, this was nobody who had ever loved her, and she felt a Dark Feeling. Something was about to—Explode. Nothing would matter anymore. Hadn’t—someone—awful—recently said that? Her mind reeled.

“Mary-Shane, are you okay?” Ann stood beside her, an arm around her. She was staring at a man in the checkered suit stared at her, puzzled. He had a coarse, kindly red face with droopy furrows.

Ann led her back to their table. “You were like in outer space there for a few minutes. I was like whoo-aa, where’s this woman gone to? Welcome back.”

“Thanks,” Mary-Shane said. “I feel better now.”

“Can I finish my steak or do you want to leave?”

“If all these people will stop staring.” Mary-Shane picked at her food. The music picked up. Forks knives and spoons restarted their randomizations. Laughter and talk ballooned under the wood rafters. “Ann, I think I’m cracking up.”

Eyebrow. “Oh?”

“I thought I saw my Dad sitting over there.”

Fork. “Oh well, you were remembering.” Mouth.

“Yes, but it was so real. It was like a nightmare, only I wasn’t asleep.”

Chewing. “You’re under a lot of stress.”

“I’ll say. Look, maybe I’m really losing my marbles. You’d... you and Jeremy would look in on Kippy sometimes if I weren’t here anymore, wouldn’t you?”

Choke. “Mary-Shane! What ever are you talking about.” Ann drank half her water. “Mary-Shane, maybe you are under a lot of stress, but I don’t think you’re cracking up. I’ve known you too long. Well, unless you’ve changed somehow the past few years, and I don’t feel that. I remember how nervous you used to be when Frank and Attila were out drinking.”

Attila had been Ann’s boyfriend, Frank’s favorite biker buddy. Mary-Shane could picture Frank and Attila, tangled in a bloody ball of flesh and torn clothing, pale dead faces staring out from the mangled steel of Attila’s chopped Harley. She cringed, hoping this would not bring on another vivid illusion. But it didn’t.

“So far this has been one really WEIRD evening,” Ann said as they sat in her car outside. “You ARE going to be OKAY, aren’t you?”

Mary-Shane touched her head with both hands. “I’m going to call my shrink.”

“I think that’s a good idea, Mary-Shane.”

“I thought I was done with him years ago, but here I am again. Fucked up as always. Ann—?” She turned toward her friend. “You were with me years ago. What happened?”

Ann’s face was dark and hard.

Mary-Shane gripped her friend’s arm. “Please, if you know anything, tell me.”

Ann looked like a different person, carved from stone. “It’s just as well you don’t remember.”

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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.

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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.