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Sunday, 17 May 2020

Flamingo Podnyalsya Ch 5


Flamingo Podnyalsya Ch 5

By Phil Miller

Chapter 5

In the Spero Private Hospital on the outskirts of North London, staff were getting ready for shift change. It was 8pm and most patients were either sedated or relaxing in their individual rooms watching T.V or reading. One patient, who had been unconscious for almost two days, blinked open his eyes and sat bolt upright in bed. He panned the room, looking left then right, then at the door.
A lead was attached to his forefinger and some other leads were stuck to his chest. The heart monitor showed a steady rhythm.  He was just about to climb out of bed when the door opened. It was the night nurse.
“Ah! Mr Burnett. Awake at last. How are you feeling?”
“Where am I? how long have I been here? Where’s my……?
“So!”, she said, as she picked up the board at the end of his bed. “You have been here at Kelsey Ward, Spero, for 2 days now.” She peered at Craig over her glasses. “Hmm! You have been poorly. If you lie back I’ll see if the Dr is available for a quick chat.” She put the clipboard back and left. Craig sat back in bed waiting. “What the hell is going on?  Need my phone.” He looked in the side drawer of the cabinet beneath the heart monitor. Nothing. Just a bible. He started to climb out of bed again when the door opened.
“Dr Nicholls.” He held out his hand. “glad to see you awake. How are you?”
“I had some kind of episode. I was talking to my boss, then I…I….”. He shook his head.
“I’m afraid you have suffered extreme trauma. Your low blood pressure along with the trauma of your loss, caused you to pass out. There is also something going on with the rhythm of your heart, which, although not dangerous does need monitoring. You can probably go home in a few day’s but we need to keep a check on you till then so just sit back and relax. The nurse will bring you some medication shortly.” Papers were shuffled and the clipboard was signed before the Dr smiled and left.  Craig disconnected the monitor, climbed out of his bed and made his way uneasily along the corridor. He walked down the fire escape stairs and broke the seal on the door at ground level. No-one about. That’s good. The area was very familiar to him. A1 Cars were just up the road. No money. No problem. Rama knew he was good for it. Craig had spent so much money on his cab service in recent years the least he could do was give him a credit note. It was getting cold. Time to pick the pace up. It took him 20 minutes. He was starting to get palpitations. When he walked into A1’s waiting room, Rama looked up, cut off his customer and sat open-mouthed staring at the in-patient in his midst.
“Do me a favour Rama.”

Twenty-five minutes later the cab pulled up outside Craig’s 2 bedroomed purpose-built Victorian flat in Hackney. He climbed up the concrete steps, punched in the code to his key safe, let himself in and made his way upstairs. It felt cold inside the empty flat. A steaming hot soaking beckoned, so he ran the bath.

                
                                                   10
Then he plugged in his laptop and booted it up. Pacing the floor now. “Shit! the bath.” Running to the bathroom, something caught his eye.
The kitchen window was wide open. A shiver went through him. He looked around and then made for the cutlery drawer and pulled out his razor-sharp fish knife. Tentatively stepping across the stone floor, he started to search each room. All ok! Just the utility and small bedroom near the bathroom now. He had his left arm up in front of him and the knife held in a fighting grip in his right hand. Just as he reached in to switch the light on in the bedroom an arm swiftly wrapped around his throat, locking him in a sleeper move, before yanking him viciously backwards. Chris dropped the knife, then frantically grabbed at the arm choking him, while trying to punch behind into his attacker’s face, but to no avail. He could feel himself losing consciousness again, his body losing all strength as he was dragged into the bathroom and forced into the bath. The face staring down at him was distorted, twisted, evil. He started to kick out but it was no use. He was being strangled, slowly, and he was drowning. His eyes were bulging as his body went limp.

Although he knew he had his man, Pepe Brown decided he wanted to play with his victim. He liked knives. The fish knife looked sharp. “This fucker looks like a fish. I wonder how easy it is to gut this stinking fish.” Pepe walked out to the hallway and picked up the knife.
“Naughty boy. I’ll show you what happens when you muck about with knives.” Craig lay motionless in the bath. Pepe stood staring down at him. Just as he thought about the mutilation of his prize catch he felt a punch to the middle of his back. He couldn’t breathe. He couldn’t move. He looked down at his chest. A split second, another punch. That’s when he saw 3 inches of steel rip through his shirt. He coughed and gurgled as the blood rose in his throat. He looked down again and then dropped as the blade was twisted and pulled out, causing him to smash his mouth against the old iron bath. He looked up in disbelief before gasping his last breath as his assailant dragged the body of Craig Burnett from the bath and quickly began CPR. It wasn’t long before the young man spluttered back to life. He lay there, coughing up bath water and spitting blood. When he recovered, he looked over at the imposing figure holding his grandfather’s bloodstained prized T30 bayonet.

“Donyevsky.” Wiping the rusted blade clean on the arm of a chair. “You have nine lives. Sorry!” Moving closer to the young officer. “Seven now.”
Craig stood wearily, swaying slightly. His head was throbbing. He fell to his knees and tried to calm his breathing as he felt tightness in his chest.
“Don’t worry, I’m not here to kill you.” Offering a hand out to Craig who, after a momentary pause, and a deep breath, took hold.
“I don’t know what’s going on, said Craig, as he steadied himself and reached for his robe on the back of the sofa.”
Peter seated the cleaned 16” metal blade into an old tanned and worn scabbard.
“I feel like that sometimes,”
“What?” said Craig.
“Like this bayonet. Old and worn out but still have my uses.”
“What’s going to happen now? I don’t understand. Does this have something to do with that old guy Ruberov? Moreau.  I got to talk to Moreau.”
Craig made for his laptop, but Peter was up in a flash, tutting and waving his index finger as if scolding a child. “Sit down and shut up.” He sat back down and directed Craig to a chair opposite him.
“I’m not going to hurt you. We are on the same side.” He lit a cigarette and, although Craig had given up years ago, he politely asked for one.
“Who is that bastard?” Nodding in the direction of the bathroom.
“Pepe Brown. He is….. Was, an agent of the motherland. He has been here many years.  His real name is Dostoyevsky, which is pretty ironic.  I knew he would come for you. I was dropped outside your flat. I walked around the back looking for a way in, away from prying eyes, and that is when I saw him shimmying up to your rooftop garden. Lucky for me he is not as sharp as he used to be or we would both be dead. Your security is shit.”
“What are you going to do with him,” Said Craig, as he held his head in his hands.
“Don’t worry about it. I will sort it out.”
“I need a drink. Do you want one? Scotch, vodka?
“I don’t drink.”
Craig poured a large single malt whiskey and downed it in one.
“You won’t solve your problems by drinking, comrade.”
“Drink is the least of my worries. You should try some.”
“I stopped years ago. I killed my wife and son. Long story.” The tall Russian got up and walked back to the bathroom. Craig could hear him moving the body, then a splash. He thought about making a run for it, stood up and sat back down almost immediately as Peter walked back into the living room, thumbing his way through a mobile phone.
“Do you know this place?” He turned the screen to Craig.
“Yes, it's about a forty-five-minute drive.”
“Get dressed.”
“Hang on, I’m not going anywhere.”
“Yes, you are.” Moving closer to Craig, pointing the sheathed weapon at his chest. “If you want to help Moreau, and the rest of the people on this tiny little island, then move, now.”


Copyright Phil Miller






 

You're Not to Blame


Not to Blame

By Rosemary Clark

If they put their hand upon your knee
It isn't you
If they go where none should see
It isn't you
A lover's feelings are not there, in their hard touch they do not care, when you need help they're never there
It isn't you
When they say they love you best of all
It isn't you
If you believe you're bound to fall..
It isn't you
Things like this just shouldn't be, it's their ego don't you see that's no life for you or me
It isn't you.

Copyright Rosemary Clark


Saturday, 16 May 2020

THE SPIDER'S WEB (Ch 5 & Last)


THE SPIDER'S WEB (Ch 5 & Last)

 By Bob French

CHAPTER FIVE -  RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA
Bond was met by the First Secretary of the British Embassy in Riyadh and vanished into the secure zone of the building.
          “Good to meet you, Bond. I have been fully briefed by M.  Just let me know what you want and I will fix.”
          Bond relaxed and took the cup of tea offered by one of the staff.
          “Thank you, just two things if I may. A good hacker and a guide to take me in and out of Yemen.”  The First Secretary nodded, turned to the young woman who had just delivered the tea and asked her if she would ask Warrant Officer Fellows and Yeoman Barrister to join him.
          “Fellows is out here training the Saudi Special Forces and Yeoman of Signals Kenny Barrister is on loan from the Royal Signals; he looks after my discrete comms equipment.
          Bond took the hard hand of Fellows and nodded, instantly recognizing the suntanned hard look of a man who lived and survived in the desert. A minute later Barrister entered the room.  A tall balding muscular man who clearly did not like the sun, Bond felt the firm grip of his hand and nodded. 
          “Gentlemen, this is Mr Bond from London.  He needs your help with a little project.”  With that, he nodded to Bond then left the room.
          Bond briefly explained the operation whereby three teams from the CIA, MI6 and DGSE would take out the buyers in Cuba, Madagascar and Yemen at exactly the same time, then re-route the buyer's laptop to theirs and take control of the operation so that their masters are unaware anything has changed. My part of the operation is to infiltrate Sana’a, locate the buyer, take him out and take control of his laptop.  Winston will then take overall control of all three machines thereby deceiving the person sending him instructions so they think nothing is amiss. Then get out without being noticed.  Can you do that?” Both men nodded their confirmation.

          Twenty minutes later the three of them had roughed out a plan of infill and exfil from Sana’a.  Bond, although trained, wasn’t enthusiastic about parachuting in at night and Fellows summed up by saying that once they’d reached the Red Sea, men from his training team would ferry us back up to Jeddah where he could fly back to the UK and them back to Riyadh.       


 ANTANANARIVO, MADAGASCAR
Adrian Benoit had landed in Madagascar and vanished into the suburbs of the capital, Antananarivo before anyone noticed him.  It took him just under half an hour to trace Jules Philipp Sadine, his old Lieutenant of the Paratroop Regiment of the Foreign Legion.  They had spent a year here a few years back when France had been called in to put down a rebellion. Sadine had retired from the Legion and chose to live in this paradise island in the Indian Ocean. When Sadine opened his front door he gave a yell then hugged Adrian like a long lost brother and pulled him inside to meet the family.  After a light lunch, Adrian nodded Jules to the back door.
          “You have a mission?  I had heard that you had been working for the ‘Shadows,’ the slang for the French Intelligence Services.”  Adrian nodded. 
          “Jules Mon Ami, how many of the lads retired here and can be counted on?”
          The old Lieutenant thought for a minute then said “Three and they still have their weapons,” he said enthusiastically.
          “I also need access to a really good hacker.  Do you still know that young girl we used in the old days?”
          “Ah we, but she is no longer young or pretty.”
          “Can we meet this evening?”  Jules stared at his friend and nodded slowly. 
          “This is important. Who is it, Mozambique rebels or Somali pirates?” Benoit shook his head.
          “I will explain what is to be done when we meet.   Can you call the lads in at nine tonight?  But first I want to meet our lady hacker.”
          They met at a run-down café on the outskirts of the capital and after brief introductions, Adrian explained what he wanted her to do. “Are you happy to help? I will pay you very well once the job has been done.”
          The broad grin on her face told him that she would do anything for him.
          He explained that someone called Winston of the CIA would contact her with instructions once we have taken control of the enemy laptop.  She was to comply with any messages from him.  Eve nodded.

BEIJING - CHINA
Bud Westerbrooken slammed down his phone, then stared at his team.
          “Just tell me how the hell did Emily get picked up by the MSS?” It was Abraham who spoke after a minute’s silence.
          “We think she was set up.”
          “By who?”
          “By a Triad War Lord who controls the Gansu Province. A real hard nose bastard.  He is known as ‘The Spider.’”
          “How do we get her back?”
          “We don’t.  Not unless we mount a covert Op into the heart of his domain and snatch her back.”
          Bud turned to a short stocky Texan.  “Three things Hank. One,”  He counted them off on his fingers. “Gansu province is your patch, so get your contacts out and about.  I want to know where she is being held. Two, where is the nearest SEAL team? And Three, how quickly can we spring her?” 
          Hank stood, stubbed out his cigar and left the room.

          Lee Ping Woo, unlike his elder brother Chow, had not gone to Peeking University and then been head-hunted by the State Ministry of Health.  Life was more exciting on the streets.  It wasn’t long before his talents had been noticed by the local Triad Master and invited to join them.  That was fifteen years ago.  Since then he had risen to the rank of War Lord in the movement and over the years had mapped out his own kingdom on Gansu Provence.  He chose this province because it had an outlet into the great Gobi Desert of Mongolia to the north, easy access for his gun-running, people and Heroin smuggling.
          Every Sunday Lee would meet up with Chow at their mother’s home for the weekly family meal.  It was here over a glass of beer that Chow, who looked strained, told Lee of the threat of America and Europeans sanctions over the lack of control of the virus that was affecting the world.
          “Why not give them a hand?”  Chow looked at his brother.
          “What do you mean?”
          “Look I know that the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress is meeting on Monday afternoon and…”  Chow suddenly stood up.
          “How did you know that?  These meetings are secret!”
          Lee had given up trying to explain to his brother that the Triad had infiltrated every level of government, so just shrugged his shoulders,
          “The western news is all about the shortage of protective clothing, so I was thinking, if your ministry decided to sell or donate this protective clothing, and we do have sheds full of the stuff stored in and around Gansu Province, they might look upon us with a little more kindness, besides, it may also get you promoted.”
          That evening, with the help of Lee, Chow compiled a brief detailing the number of pallets, their locations and a suggested amount of PPE the government could give to the rest of the world. Lee had been surprisingly helpful with quantities and locations and trucking companies that could move the equipment from the warehouses to the airport.
          As the senior members of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress assembled to discuss the epidemic, Chow quietly approached his senior legislator bowed, then passed him his brief, then slowly retired to the back row of his staff.

St. JOHNS - ANTIGUA
          It took Winston forty-eight hours to trace the exact locations of the three buyers.  He had also set up a secure link with Eve, Kenny Barrister and Felix.  Once he had sent over the locations of the buyers Winston sat back and waited.  One by one the teams came back with one word, ‘ready.’ 
          At exactly ten minutes to ten that night, Bond, Adrian and Felix covertly took control of the buyers and their operation.  They had secured bank details, dates when to bank, passwords, contacts and transmission times. The three buyers were all Russian, which did not surprise Bond, but Winston discovered that the instructions were coming from Beijing, which seemed to fit in with what Alison Wentworth had told Bond.  By two the following morning Winston had routed all traffic into and out of the three buyer’s machines to his laptop.  He was now the buyer for all three locations and when whoever made contact with him, he would act the part of the buyer.

BEIJINGCHINA
          The three of them decided to fly to Beijing and kill this operation off altogether. To their surprise, they were each met off their separate aircraft by a senior officer of the Ministry of State Security, the MSS, and taken to the Headquarters of the MSS.
          Once they had all been detained, they were ushered into a small room on the second floor to wait.  To their surprise, the door opened and Moneypenny stepped in.
          “James, Adrian, Felix.  So nice to see you boys getting along.  Please follow me.”
          They followed her down the corridor until she stopped, then pushed a heavy door open and stood aside. M, the DGSE Director, Bud Westerbrooken and a stern-looking Chinese official of the MSS stood to greet them.
          “Bond.” Was all M said.  Beniot simply nodded at his director and Felix said nothing, but stared at the Chinese official.  M spoke.
          “We have a problem which needs you three to sort out. A CIA operative who went undercover has been captured.  You need to find her and get her out.”
          Bond took out his silver cigarette case, extracted a Morland cigarette with its three gold bands and lit up.  “Do we have any leads on where or who has her?”  M frowned at Bond’s cigarette, cleared her throat.
          “Thanks to Mr Ping here, his chaps think she is being held in an electrical warehouse just outside Lanzhou, it’s in the Gansu Province.”
          Adrian spoke rapidly with his Director, who replied in English.  “Yes, heavily armed and we suspect that they are Triad.”
          Bond turned to M.  “Once we have retrieved this CIA agent, can we close down the controller of the stocks and shares operations Sir?”
          M noticed the sarcasm in Bond’s request and gave him a curt nod.
          That evening Bond, Felix and Adrian watched as hundreds of MSS soldiers noisily surrounded the electronics complex.  Adrian quietly mentioned, “So much for stealth and surprise.”
          Bond agreed and yelled “This is ridiculous, follow Me!” and within minutes they had gained access through an open window and were rushing down a dark corridor.  A figure jumped out from the shadows and Adrian brought him down with his silenced 9mm pistol.  They kept moving until they reached the back of the factory.
          Felix, who was in the lead paused, then stopped.  “According to Ping, this looks like her cell. Three guards.”  Bond brought down two before he even stopped and Adrian the last man who was startled by the sudden arrival of three men.  Felix kicked in the door and push into a dimly lit office.
          “Miss Michaels, it’s the CIA.”  Adrian pushed Felix aside and brought down a man who stood over a figure on the floor with a single shot.  Bond flicked on the light and saw the figure of Michaels lying on the floor.  She had been badly beaten.
          “Felix, stay with her. Winston told me that the controller operated from this complex.  We have to find it before our friends do.”
          Within ten minutes, Bond and Adrian had found the office on the top floor and burst in.  The Man was trying to disconnect cables from his server, but Bond brought him down with a headshot.  Fifteen minutes later, Winston had control of the network.  The mission Bond had been sent to do was over.  All that was left was to report back to London for debriefing.


EPILOGUE
          Bond straightened his tie and knocked on the door and pushed it open.  “Moneypenny, so good to see you again.”
          “James,” she smiled and stood, then the squawk box on her desk suddenly came to life. 
          “When Bond has finished, tell him we are waiting.”  Moneypenny shrugged her shoulders as Bond turned towards M’s door and quietly vanished.
          M, waved him to the seat opposite Sir Michael Scavandish and went straight into his brief.
          “I have received notification from the CIA that their end of the operation was a complete success.  The Russians haven’t as yet caught onto the fact that their control cell in Beijing and the three buyers have been replaced by our network.”
          Sir Michael nodded. “Yes Bond, you seemed to have pulled off a blinder.  Moscow continues to think that the stocks and shares they purchasing were destined for their bankers, in fact, they have been routed to Lloyds who will share them out with Washington and Paris, and this chap Winston has also deceived Moscow by getting them to pay top dollar for the shares which means that their Swiss bank accounts have taken a hammering.”
          “I’m sorry we didn’t catch The Spider Sir…..” Bond said, but was interrupted.
          “This Spider is an exceptionally cunning man. He created the smokescreen by telling everyone that there was an outbreak of a virus in the Wuhan Province and that he had taken control of it.  In fact, it was he who acquired the contaminated waste from the markets and spread it around causing the virus in the first place.  The CIA have confirmed that there was no Chinese military chemical weapons plot behind this virus.  It appears that as a result of the MERS epidemic, the Chinese stockpiled all their PPE equipment for any future outbreak in Gansu Province, which happens to be The Spiders domain. We are not sure at this moment, but The Spider seems to have bribed or blackmailed a high ranking official in the Ministry of Health to loan or sell vast quantities of PPE to those countries who were badly in need of it.  This was agreed and under the careful eyes of The Spider’s Triad movement, hundreds of pallets of the PPE were packed and prepared for shipment to those countries who were screaming for it.  Now here’s the brilliance of his plan.  For every twenty pallets destined for a country, one pallet contained thousands of packets of Heroin.  His organization at receiving airports were already pre-warned so once the RAF landed in the UK, it was his men who unloaded it and made sure that the one market pallet vanished into the shadows.  I have spoken to the French, Spanish and Italians including our Scotland Yard about the plot.  The police have now intercepted the second and subsequent shipments; he thinks that the value on the streets of just one pallet would be in the region of millions upon millions of pounds.
          “So what you are saying Sir, is that this was all a smokescreen, nothing to do with us trying to find out who had control of the virus or the vaccine? Spider knew that after the last virus scare, there would be countries screaming for PPE. With this panic, it would allow him to distribute his drugs knowing that the usual customs checks would be waived as this PPE would be urgently needed.”
          No one spoke for a minute, then Sir Michael shook his head slowly.  “It will take the Russians a little while before they realize their operation has been infiltrated, but thank you for sorting things out.  He rose, nodded to Bond and left.
          M, looked at Bond.  “Right 007.  I want you to look into the missing, possible assassination, of Kim Jong Un.  He’s not been seen for a week or two.  Some say he’s been overthrown...”
The End

Copyright Bob French

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events, locales, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.


Open Mike By The Sea



Open Mike By The Sea

by Shelley Miller

Whelky Brooks was down in Leigh
Belting out her hits,
Will I Clam sneaked in for free,
Just to see her t***

Bon Anchovy joined him there,
They sat beside Ed Herring,
He laughed and toppled off his chair
Soon, everyone was staring.

Tuna Turner came in next,
Cod Stewart by her side,
He said "I'll send my wife a text"
So Tuna sat and cried.

They bumped into the great Skate Bush,
She looked just like a star.
She said "it's impolite to push,
Who do you think you are?"

She grabbed her coat and said "I'm off,
This joint is run of the mill"
Someone said "she's had enough,
She's running up that hill"

Catfish Stevens said "let's dance"
And jumped up on the stage,
But Whelky shouted, "not a chance!"
And locked him in a cage.

Barry Whitebait found the key
And promptly let him out,
"Well done!" said Count Sea Bassie,
"That's what I'm talking about."

The night was young and Eely Dan
Asked Whelky for the Mike,
She said "I'm singing, Mister Man,
And you can take a hike!"

Pikel Jackson shook his head
And screamed "I'm going to thrill-er,
Ice- creams are on me," he said
"Chocolate or vanilla?

Squid Vicious starting jumping,
He was feeling wild and free.
Nancy said "I'll thump him,
If he makes a fool of me."


Nat King Sole said "come on Nanc,
Don't be such a prawn,
I'm all alone, let's fancy pants
Until the break of dawn."

Bob Marley and the Whalers
Said, "the world's a concrete jungle"
They legged it from their jailers,
Zippy, George and Bungle.

Everybody joined the fun
But no one got on stage,
They tried but Whelky drew her gun
And flew into a rage.

Robert Crayfish had a go,
He said "Whelky's just a thug,"
Codley said to Creme "I know,
Let's call in young Hake Bugg."

Bugg arrived and grabbed the Mike
But Whelky beat him down,
She shouted "Bugg, get on your bike
And cycle out of town!"

Eelton John turned up just then
And offered her a can,
He said "I'm only here 'till ten
'cause I'm the rocket Man."

When Whelky finished drinking
She fainted on the spot,
Everyone was thinking
It must be 'cause she's hot.

Will I Clam was not amused
"that drink was spiked, I bet!"
Then Whelky said "my ego's bruised
But the diva's not dead yet!"

Copyright Shelley Miller

Friday, 15 May 2020

Stick to the Rules you fools

Stick to the Rules you fools


by Rosemary Clarke

Do we need mummy to hold our hand?
Why can't we stick to the rules?
They're only made to keep us safe
Those who don't care are the fools.
Rushing impatient with everyone else
we’re fooling ourselves let's be clear
is it the rules make us really afraid
and not the disease we should fear?


Copyright Rosemary Clarke

Hikkaba ~ (Part 1 of 3)


Hikkaba  ~  Part 1 of 3


By Len Morgan
   The Hikkaba tree had been there forever.   Five acres of woodlands had grown up around it, cushioning it from the world outside.
   There was a time when magic was everywhere, in the sea, the air, the land, every stone, and grain of sand.
   Then, about a hundred and ninety-five thousand years ago, a small biped called man started building an empire.  He built farms, storage facilities, and workshops.  As they built the land around them slowly lost its magic, and the building continued unabated.   Hamlets, villages, towns and ultimately cities grew up and with each additional expansion, more of the magic dissipated until it now resided only in that one small area of woodland surrounding Hikkaba.   Men had changed the world forever.
.-…-.
  If he’d been a millionaire, Ferlin Varaski would have been considered eccentric.   But he wasn’t, so his neighbours just referred to him as the nut at 24 Hickory Close.   His garden was an overgrown extension of the five acres of woodland he’d inherited from his father.   It had been in his family forever.   A distant ancestor had settled there when it was miles from the tiny hamlet of Berlington.   Berlington was now a sprawling city, ringed by tall buildings erected in the fifties and sixties.   His grandfather and father had both been pressured to sell the land to development companies, but they steadfastly resisted the lure of instant wealth.   It was their link to the past, they were its guardians, they would maintain it and pass it on just as they found it.   Unable to acquire the land, developers just built around it.   At some stage, a council official assumed it was a public amenity and erected gates at the end of Hickory close, between No.23 and 24.   From its entrance, Hickory Park looked to be a model well-managed wildlife sanctuary.   A little overgrown but, giving the impression of being in regular use.   Except for one thing, nobody ever entered it. Many times, people reached the entrance and remembered a more pressing engagement elsewhere.  Where it abutted with the cityscape, the light was occluded, and the woodlands were dwarfed.  But, in sunlight, the trees reached for the sky without let or hindrance.
Ferlin was not a young man; he had no heir and worried about what would happen to the woodlands when he died.   Because it had been treated as a public amenity the five acres had for years been exempt from local taxation, however, nothing lasts forever.  Ferlin reread the official tax demand he’d received from the city council two days earlier. 
 
.-…-.
Alan Fry took a furtive glance over his shoulder. “Damn!” they’re still following me.   It was Billy and Jack, the Hanson twins, and their cousin Roland, not his favourite people.   Alan was in foster care.   To the Hanson’s that was like having a disease, like measles or mumps; ‘fostered’ ugh!   They decided it gave them the right to bully him at every opportunity.   It didn’t help his situation when he scored higher than the Hanson's in the 11+ exam.   Today, he’d committed the ultimate sin; he’d taken Jack’s place on the Daventry Junior School football team.   Since then, they had hassled him at every opportunity making his life a misery.
He turned the corner and ran.   He looked back at the street sign—Hickory Close— “Close,” damn, no way out and nowhere to hide.   Then he saw the gates, at the bottom of the close, his spirits rose.   As he drew nearer he became less sure of his actions, then Roland rounded the corner and Alan's doubts were dispelled.   He dashed into the park and down the path.   It stopped abruptly thirty yards inside the entrance.   He hid behind a tree so he had a good view of Billy, Jack and Roland as they approached the gates and peered in.  

.-…-.
Ferlin was taking his daily stroll through the woods.   As guardian, this was one of his more pleasant duties.   As he walked he thought on world events he’d seen on the news.   He liked to think out here.   But, that tax demand for a thousand pounds a year, backdated ten years drove everything else from his mind.   “Ten thousand pounds, where can I get that sort of money?”
“Uh?”  Said Alan, startled by the voice from the woods.   He would have run, but the Hanson’s were still lingering just beyond the gates.   He stepped through the hedge and found himself gazing into the quizzical green eyes of a slim bespectacled man in his forties.   Ferlin sported a shock of wild frizzy ginger hair and sparse facial chin hair.
“Uh!” gasped Ferlin, roused from his thoughts by the unaccustomed sight of an eleven-year-old boy with dishevelled blonde hair and green eyes that mirrored his own.
“Who are you,” they said as one.
“If your hiding from them, don’t worry, they won't come in,” said Ferlin.  “Nobody ever does, there’s an enchantment on this place that keeps people out.”
“You’re here, and so am I, so maybe your spell has worn off?”
Ferlin considered it, “Mmm, I think not, there has to be a good reason.”   As they watched, the Hanson's moved away.   “My name is Ferlin Varaski,” he offered his hand and a generous smile.
“Alan Fry,” their hands pumped vigorously.
“Hikkaba has been protecting these woods since the dawn of time.   How else could a privately owned five-acre plot of prime land remain undeveloped in a city the size of Berlington?”   
“Then how did we get in?”
“Well, I’m its guardian by birth and at a guess—since I have no heir—you’ve been selected to be my apprentice.”
“At a guess?   Surely a guardian wouldn’t need to guess.   So, what would an apprentice be expected to do, and isn’t it customary to ask a person if they would like to be apprenticed?”
“Woa woh, so many questions.   Before we do or say anything more I think you’d better come and see the Hikkaba tree.”
“You what?   Surely you could think of a better name than that?   Where is it from anyway, outer Mongolia?”
“Alan, just hold the questions and follow me.   Maybe we can provide you with some answers,” he led the way through a tangle of branches that seemed to move out of their way to create a path.
 It was a circuitous route Alan judged, from the positions of the surrounding buildings, would bring them to the centre of the park.  They entered a clearing the air filled with the scent of summer flowers, the drone of bees, the gentle burbling of a stream and the air was alive with birdsong.   Alan pinched himself it was hard to believe it was the 20th of November.
“It’s good to see you again,” said Ferlin.
“Who are you talking to, I can’t hear any voices?” said Alan.
Ferlin took a step closer to a gnarled and rather dumpy little tree with sparse star-shaped silver leaves.   “Alan Fry, this is the Hikkaba tree.”   He leaned forward and plucked one of the star-shaped silver leaves and handed it to Alan.
He tentatively took the offering.  “Hello Alan, I have…”  The greeting ceased abruptly as he threw the leaf away in shocked surprise.
“You can’t converse with Hikkaba if you break contact,” Ferlin retrieved the leaf and offered it to him again.
“How do you converse then, you don't have a leaf.”
Ferlin lifted his thin knurled black cane.   Oh, I have contact!” he smiled, "the handle is of Hikkaba wood."
Alan fingered the small seven-pointed star, it was leathery but pliable, he rubbed the tiny ribs on its reverse, that tickles, said the voice in his head,
“Uh!   Sorry,” he said.  
Ferlin was smiling and he knew it was okay.  Close your eyes.   Alan closed his eyes.  The glade did not disappear, he could still see it in his mind.   It shimmered, as happens on TV, to depict a period of time passing.
The trees were all changed and the buildings were gone, the sounds and smells were different, yet Hikkaba looked the same, unchanged.   This is how it was ten thousand years ago.
The scene shimmered again.   The vegetation was lush and greener, the air was thick and balmy.   As he watched, animals both familiar and strange came and went.   Sounds were eerie and discordant, but Hikkaba seemed no different.  This is how it was a hundred thousand years ago.
As he watched the scene changed a third time.   The greenery was low and fern-like, growing taller and more substantial at a distance of half a mile.   Scaled slow-moving creatures cropped the ferns with beak-like mouths; Alan realized at once, they were Dinosaurs.   The air smelt sulphurous like the chemistry lab at school.   The atmosphere was hot and clammy and shimmering like a steam room.   There were deep sonorous calls and grating sounds like a badly fitting gate.  Occasionally high ululating sounds pierced the mist, echoing long after the sound ceased.   There were sudden wild gusts of wind, bringing unfamiliar aromas.  Decaying vegetation and, other unimaginable, stomach-churning, aroma's assailed his olfactory senses.   There in the midst of it all stood the Hikkaba tree, just as he remembered.   He forced his eyes open and felt nauseous as all his senses became disoriented at the same instant.   He was back in the present.   I am the only one, I am Hikkaba, I have been sentient for more than five hundred million years.   I arrived when Earth was a turbulent and barren place, long before life existed on the land.   I first became aware, when tiny things crawled in the primaeval soup.   I have observed life in all its diversity.   I have become the consciousness and conscience of this world.   I cannot move but through my contact with others, I have witnessed the progression of life on Earth.   I have experienced and can recall several billion years having never moved from this spot.   My knowledge comes from the minds of others.   I see through their eyes, without bias. My leaves have been widely distributed throughout the world, they do not perish and have been passed on.   Since the advent of radio and television, I get even wider exposure to global politics.
“Do you make Ferlin watch TV all day?”
I have no influence over higher forms.   They live their lives and I observe. 
Alan turned to Ferlin.  “What about private things, you know, like girls.  You know, sex and stuff.   Isn’t it awkward?”
“The tree is just an observer, non-judgemental, whatever I get up to is probably boring and old hat to Hik but, I can always break contact if I choose,” he stabbed his cane into the ground and stepped away from it. “But, I have always sensed Hik withdrawing at such times.”
“So, he never intrudes when he’s not wanted?”
“Hikkaba’s sex is not determined, but we can call it ‘he’ if you wish.”  He chuckled inwardly, “there was one time in my reckless youth Heh heh!   I persuaded a girl to hold a leaf, told her it was to concentrate her mind.   We had a three-way love-in.”
“How was it?” Alan asked.
“Quite disappointing actually, her anticipation caused her more excitement than the act.   I tried to find out how to turn her on, and discovered she was more aroused by other women, than by men.”
“Are they all like that?”
Ferlin shrugged, “Who knows, that was the first and last time I tried.   It was so deflating.   She said I shouldn’t feel bad, that was the best she'd ever experienced.”
“And?”
“I asked her about other women.   She slapped my face and looked at me with disgusted.   ‘Do you think I’m a pervert?’  She yelled and stormed out.   It was several years before I saw her again, and she had a female partner with her.   She kissed me and thanked me for opening her eyes.   When she'd thought about it she discovered another person inside waiting to be let out.”
“I see,” said Alan "She was gay?".
“Yup.  But, this isn’t the kind of conversation I should be having with an eleven-year-old…”
“Why not?   Mr Truman my English teacher says we can’t write about life without experiencing it.” 

To be continued/...

Copyright Len Morgan




First Steps


First Steps


By Rob Kingston

Pages keep turning
                     first forward then back
Attempting to decipher
                     the power He now lacks
Challenged by the attention, 
                     amazed by the help
Encouraged each day
                     to face the life He’s been dealt

Making a difference 
                     with each tiny step
Attacking the challenges 
                     through tears blood and sweat 
Keeping the faith 
                     when feeling quite low
Encouraging others
                     To conquer this grief He’s come to know 
Recognising life's strengths   
                     Upon reaching each goal

Copyright Rob Kingston