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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Nebula Express by John T. Cullen

This Shoal of Space

a novel

by John T. Cullen

61.

In the morning, after dropping the kids off at school, Mary-Shane decided to stop by her apartment and pick up her bathrobe and a few things, pack a proper suitcase and move in with Roger.

Something was not quite right, she saw as she drove down her street. The street was the same, but somehow looked different, as if she’d been away for a long time. Then she realized what it was. She wasn’t quite the same person she’d been before this relationship with Roger Chatfield. So she might as well have been away for years. She imagined the apartment would probably seem small and tawdry after she’d started getting used to the big house. But it was still her true home. Mustn’t forget that. Mustn’t let go too much, not set myself up to get hurt, in case he...

Something else was wrong. What? Water dripped from the green tree crowns. Here and there, old folks doddered along with their canes. There: White stuff along the telephone wires. She stared up at the wires. It looked like snow; no, shaving cream; no, maybe...

Pulling up at the curb of her mother’s apartment building, she saw some of the stuff lying on the little grassy patch on the sidewalk. What was this stuff anyway? She touched it hesitantly. Plastic? It was dry and neutral. She picked a piece up and smelled it. Faint plastic smell. Foamed plastic! That was it. Foamed plastic. Maybe some kids had played a joke on someone. She looked up worried. The white stuff ran ominously to the roof beams of the apartments. She got her key out as she pushed through the gate...

...And slowed down. Her door, which was locked, had a rim of white stuff all around, sealing all the cracks and openings. Same with the windows.

She had trouble with the lock. Finally she pushed the door open and gasped. The inside of her precious home had been trashed. Books, papers, notebooks lay open. Tables, chairs, lamps were overturned. A lamp was broken. Trashcans had been emptied on the floor. Cabinets stood open.

White Stuff oozed out of the electrical outlets, out of faucets, even the cable TV outlet, and hardened into foamed plastic. White Stuff ran along the walls and ceilings wherever electrical wiring was buried; she could tell, because it ran perpendicular and crossed over outlets. And then: Under the sink, the modem which she had stashed after Kippy’s wolf misadventure: It was totally encased in White Stuff. Afraid to touch it, she looked closely and saw that shiny new wire ran through the White Stuff. Ran... She stumbled along in her running shoes... ran into her bedroom, made a trail like something dug by a gopher, and swirled itself around the telephone there. The TV, the radio, the toaster in the kitchen, all the appliances looked as though someone had gutted them. She tried to work the telephone answering machine, but the wiring inside the buttons had been leached out.

The picture tube hung out of the TV and seemed to be following her like a big eye. White Stuff creaked like foamed plastic as the screen turned and faced her.

She backed away ready to scream.

A face appeared on the screen, black and white like an old movie, and snowy as though it were coming in over rabbit ears. It took her a moment longer to recognize who it was. “Hello, Mary-Shane,” Wiz said and her glasses slid down her nose. Her voice came fuzzy through the White Stuff as through a torn speaker.

“No,” Mary-Shane said.

“Yes, Mary-Shane. Where is the ship?”

“It can’t be you,” Mary-Shane said.

“The ship, Mary-Shane. Where?”

“There is no ship.”

“There is one last line of defense,” Wiz said.

Mary-Shane felt her entire body shivering. “I have your glasses in my car. And I stood in the morgue and looked at your bones. You are dead.”

Wiz’s face changed. The picture faded. Mary-Shane screamed.

Her first call was to St. Andrew’s, but the receptionist said the students were all in class. The news was breaking on the radio as Mary-Shane drove through town, and she was furious that she couldn’t be on the city desk. She pitied Jules, fired just before the story of his lifetime. Why had her apartment been trashed? No matter, I am losing my marbles finally, seeing a dead person on a broken TV tube.

Confused faces peered from doors and windows as White Stuff dangled from their trees and telephone poles. Mary-Shane heard distant sirens. She passed a group of people clustered around a spot on a corner sidewalk, possibly where someone had fallen into a coma. The governor was expected to declare an emergency in San Tomas County at any minute. What the White Stuff was, nobody knew. End of the world? A ravaged environment gone mad?

Mary-Shane ran up the stairs to Dr. Stanislaus’s clinic and yanked on the door. Locked.She peered in through the glass panes. The dark corridors were choked with White Stuff.

Mary-Shane stopped on Mulberry Street. She left the car running, went in to see Mother. Found Mother in the kitchen stirring coffee. “Hello, Mary-Shane darling.”

“Hi Mother.” She noted her mother’s transfigured look. There were flecks of White Stuff in Mother’s cobwebby hair, and Mary-Shane picked them out. “What has happened to you?” She suppressed a sob. “To all of us?”

“I have been having the most wonderful conversation with your father, Mary-Shane. He keeps asking about you.”

Mary-Shane shook Mother’s shoulders. “He’s been dead for almost twenty years! Stop it!” Hot coffee spilled on Mother’s arm.

“You mustn’t be so excited, Mary-Shane. Always excited. It wears one out.” She didn’t seem to notice the steaming coffee.

Mary-Shane dabbed furiously. “Sorry, Mother, PLEASE. There is something going the fuck on all over town. Don’t fall apart on me, I just can’t stand another weight on top of all the rest!”

“Here, here,” Mother said and pulled her close. Mother stroked Mary-Shane’s hair as Mary-Shane fell to her knees and rested her head against Mother’s frail body. Mother’s fingers ruffled Mary-Shane’s thick curls. “I know you don’t understand but I’ll tell Daddy hello for—”

“STOP IT!!” Mary-Shane balled her fists against her temples and screamed and popped up like a cork. She ran to the phone and dialed Roger’s number at work. While the phone rang, she felt a quake, heard a low rumbling noise, felt the house swaying. She watched as Mother gripped the table with both hands trying to steady it. Crash crash crash went precious crystal bowls and china vases and ceramic figurines hitting the floor and breaking. “Roger,” she shouted when he answered, “do you have any idea what’s going on?”

The phone line was fuzzy. She heard him shouting: “Hello! We just had an earthquake. I don’t know what’s going on, and all the animals are shaken up. There’s White Stuff all over the place. You can’t get near the Pagoda.”

“Roger, I’m going to pick the kids up. I’m at my mother’s and something is wrong with her.”

“Bring her along,” he yelled. “Meet you at school.”

Mother smiled broadly. A piece of plaster sat on one shoulder, big enough to be noticed by a sane person. She had her head cocked and was nodding, as though someone were speaking with her.

The streets were jammed with ambulances, fire engines, and police cars coming and going. Every telephone company truck, every power company, cable television, water company vehicle was parked along the curb somewhere. Manholes lay open, their heavy steel covers dragged aside while crews in orange jerseys and white hard hats tried to puzzle out and fix the damage. White Stuff gummed everything up.

Sister Sincere stood like a traffic cop on the front sidewalk. The children were lined up by classes. The littlest ones huddled in rows of two, holding hands and looking scared. Teachers formed a skirmish line.

Rudy, Elisa, and Kippy were already breaking from their classes because Roger had managed to get there before Mary-Shane.

Kippy pecked a kiss on her forehead. “Hi Mom.”

“Hi, sweetie. Glad to see you. Looks like we’re all safe.”

“Hi Dad, Hi Mary-Shane,” Rudy blared. “The earthquake threw all the books off their shelves.”

“Nobody was hurt,” Elisa said.

The power was out. Roger’s house was dark and cold. He brought in loads of firewood from the yard. The dogs barked and jumped. “Poor guys,” Mary-Shane said. “The quake must have spooked them.” She picked cottony wisps of White Stuff from their fur. “What IS this stuff?”

Mother’s eyes were bright. “It’s insulation, dear. They’re blowing the ceiling. It’s going to be real warm during the winter and nice and cool during the summers, you’ll see.”

Mary-Shane sat down and put an arm around her mother’s shoulder. “Mommy,” she said (first time in yea how many decades she’d called Mother that), “Mommy, look at me. They blew the ceiling twenty years ago. Remember? Daddy was home from work to make sure they did everything right.”

Mother clutched Mary-Shane with a hand like a cold claw. “We will see your father really soon.”

The power was still out when darkness fell. That was when the kids stopped having fun. Things started getting creepy. It was the first touch of desperation.

Fire crackled powerfully in the huge hearth. Mary-Shane cooked some soup on the fire. There was some stale bread to warm up. Nobody was very hungry. Roger had found batteries and the radio now dominated their attentions:

“...new reports of a tidal wave traveling up the coast. Out at sea, the eighty-foot boat “Fishy Tails” with thirteen people on board sent out a brief and choppy distress signal earlier today, then fell silent. Search planes went out from Blue Harbor, but Coast Guard officials say the boat has not been located. Local marina officials say the ship was skippered by a seasoned fisherman. Unofficial sources have told KSTC Radio News that they believe the boat has disappeared at sea in connection with the mysterious White Stuff that has been raining in San Tomas. KSTC’s Angela Moorehead has more:

“Chuck, I’ve been speaking with University of California at San Tomas meteorologist Vernon LeGrier. He says that the flaky or fluffy white material we’ve been seeing most closely resembles volcanic ash in that it gets into everything, but he says there is really no close comparison. The White Stuff, as everyone is calling it, resembles the stuff of which insects build their cocoons, but seems more likely to be a derivative of common silica, which comprises most forms of soil, sand, and rocks. In fact, most the earth’s mantle is composed of silica. It may actually be coming up out of the earth itself like some kind of ‘toothpaste.’ Several witnesses claim to have seen it extruding from sewer pipes, underground electrical conduits, and the like.”

“Thanks, Angela. The Mayor persuaded the Governor this afternoon to declare San Tomas a disaster area and ask for federal assistance. Between the earthquake, which was a moderate 5.5 on the Richter scale, and this White Stuff blowing around, and people still keeling over on the streets, nobody knows what is going on, but everyone is convinced that something big is happening. The Governor today appealed for calm and promised to keep order, prevent looting, and get things back to normal...”

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.
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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.