It has been a long time since I've been on this blog. In honor of Back to the Future Day, I wanted to take a minute and express my thoughts on this day, my own life, and--of course--the future.
I remember when I first saw Back to the Future II on home video and first witnessed Marty McFly heading to the far-off mystical date of October 21, 2015. I was just a little kid then, and never thought much about 2015, or where I would be in my own life by that point. In fact, as I grew up a diehard BTTF fan and watched the Trilogy on repeat for hours and hours--even as I spent nearly three years of my life writing a comprehensive guide to the chronology of the series (it's now on sale, go buy it)--I STILL gave very little thought about my own future, particularly what my life would look like on that date.
So, here we are: It's October 21, 2015. It is The Future.
This isn't where I thought I would be on this date, but I don't mean that in a negative light. For the most part, I have a great life. A steady day job, a happy marriage, great kids. Things are pretty great on that front.
But on this date, I'm also dealing with a lot of grief. Not even three months ago I unexpectedly lost one of my dearest friends, Zachary Malcolm to complications following a stroke. We talked a lot about this day, about the famed future as foretold by Back to the Future. We planned to be there together. And he's not here. I'm struggling with that a lot. Especially with this being Halloweentime, which was our time. Our time to revel in gothic Hammer Horror movies and talk about costumes and decorations and that most wonderful night when the monsters come out to play. He's not here, but I still feel him in the October Wind.
This has also been a time of great searching for me, in terms of my writing. Trying to figure out who I am as a writer. Who do I want to be, moving forward?
As I said, I always expected October 21, 2015 to just be a regular old Wednesday, but as it's turned out, this has been a very big day. Doors have been closed in my writing life--at least for the moment--while others are now widening with new possibility. No, I don't have any projects lined up--but that's the beauty of it. For the first time in YEARS, I have a clean slate. I have no stress, no deadlines, no commitments. I've been given an opportunity to enjoy my great life a little bit. To write for me. For fun, for awhile. Some things I hope to publish, others are just for me and my family to enjoy. But I've got that freedom now. I've been doing a lot of soul searching for the last few months--ever since Zach died. I've been lost, guys. And I've prayed that God would show me some direction. Throw me some clue as to what path I'm supposed to be on.
Today, He has. It's all come to a head on this day, of all days, October 21, 2015. For the first time, my future feels unwritten and I'm not scared about that. I'm hopeful, and I'm excited, and I know that God is not through me and that, together, we are not through with this writer's journey. I don't know where it's going to lead next, but that's okay. Where we're going, we don't need roads.
So I'm embracing my future, ready to push through and see what's beyond that time barrier. In the immortal words of Doctor Emmett Lathrop Brown, "Your future is whatever you make of it. So make it a good one."
I intend to.
--Greg Mitchell
October 21, 2015: The Future
Wednesday, October 21, 2015
Monday, July 13, 2015
Zombie Shark--July 20th!
It's official! My second SyFy Original Movie, "ZOMBIE SHARK", is bloodying up the waters this coming Monday, July 20th at 8 PM Central Time! Don't miss it!
Monday, June 29, 2015
Look! Up In the Sky!
I'm pleased to announce today that the MONSTER anthology (seriously, this thing is gargantuan) Superhero Monster Hunter: The Good Fight is now live on Amazon from the fine folks at Emby Press! Right now, you can feast your eyes on the digital copy, with a hard copy soon on the horizon.
An original pic of Light Sphere I drew back in '97, I think |
My short story "Red Fog" is included in this mammoth text, featuring my own superhero creation Light Sphere. I've spoken about Light Sphere and his creation before on this very blog, but I created the character way back in junior high in the early '90s when the X-Men were really cooking. Seriously, the comics were back in vogue and there was the new FOX cartoon (which totally blew my mind). "Mutants" were all the rage and I jumped in with my own variation on the concept, but I wanted something with a bit of a twist. In Light Sphere, I created a character whose greatest strength was his greatest weakness--he had the ability to blast energy from his hands, but to do so without wearing these special mechanized gauntlets, he'd fry his arms to crispy husks. It's a severe limitation and, I thought, would make for an interesting predicament. Or, at least I did when I was thirteen.
I wrote and drew (re: traced) two whole issues of Light Sphere back in ninth grade or so, in the back of my classrooms while I was supposed to be learning something. Then, after that, Light Sphere got stuffed in a shelf and forgotten until about 2012 when I resurrected him, gave him a fresh polish, and included him in my multidimensional cosmic horror romp Rift Jump. He showed up to duke it out with my main protagonist in that book (another comic book character I created later in high school--Michael Morrison) and, like any good superhero yarn, the two slugged it out before becoming friends and allies.
Since then, I've had fun crafting new stories for Light Sphere. Late last year he tangled with a very strange lycanthrope in Lion's Share Press' anthology Metahumans vs Robots. Most recently, Light Sphere made a return in my brand new novel Rift Jump II: Sara's Song!
Needless to say, the guy's making the rounds and it's been a real blast playing with this character after so long and telling his stories after all these years. As for "Red Fog" in particular, it is my homage to the classic Batman/Dracula series of graphic novels: Red Rain, Bloodstorm, and Crimson Mist. Those things were a revelation to me when I was a teenager, combining Gothic horror and the noble plight of the superhero. I hope I've done that style of story justice, as well as adding my own spin on the material.
Check out Light Sphere battling vampire hordes in "Red Fog" collected in the pages of Superhero Monster Hunter: The Good Fight! And now I leave you with this:
Labels:
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Monday, June 15, 2015
Release Day--"Sara's Song"!
The wait is over.
Available today is my new release Rift Jump, Volume Two: Sara's Song--the concluding chapter of the Rift Jump duology! As always, the book is available in print, Kindle, and other ebook formats.
Folks, this has been a crazy ride. I knew when I wrote the original Rift Jump that I had one more book in me to wrap up Michael and Sara's trip across the multiverse, but Sara's Song has really surprised me. For starters, this is the longest thing I've ever written, and it is jam-packed with adventure, heartache, cosmic horrors, and explosive action--and the stakes have never been higher. All of existence is in danger of being eradicated, and our two favorite dysfunctional teenage runaways are at the very heart of it.
What was perhaps most surprising to me is that this book also lays the groundwork for the entire uber-mythology that encompasses most of my work, including The Coming Evil Trilogy. Trust me, you'll never look at the little town of Greensboro the same after reading this! It's all setting up for where I would like to take The Coming Evil series in future books.
So enough of the sales pitch. Go out and pick up your copy today. Here's the cover and synopsis. And, if you're behind on this series that spans space and time, you can also buy the recent Rift Jump: Revised and Expanded Edition and experience the journey from the beginning.
About the Book:
For over a year, Sara Morrison has been living a life she never dreamed possible. Rift jumping across parallel dimensions with her husband Michael, who is on a quest to battle the Rage, and their adopted son Toby, who possesses superpowers of his own, Sara has experienced wonders beyond belief. But she can't help but feel inferior to Michael as he saves the day time and again, and Sara longs for the chance to shin on her own.
When Michael and Sara encounter a cosmic storm that is shattering the worlds within the multiverse, Sara begins to uncover devastating truths about her past, her foretold future, and her connection to the reality-devouring storm. In order to overcome her own frightful fate, Sara will have to make a harrowing journey across the worlds and into the very heart of hell itself, before the multiverse falls to total darkness and her family is lost forever.
Available today is my new release Rift Jump, Volume Two: Sara's Song--the concluding chapter of the Rift Jump duology! As always, the book is available in print, Kindle, and other ebook formats.
Folks, this has been a crazy ride. I knew when I wrote the original Rift Jump that I had one more book in me to wrap up Michael and Sara's trip across the multiverse, but Sara's Song has really surprised me. For starters, this is the longest thing I've ever written, and it is jam-packed with adventure, heartache, cosmic horrors, and explosive action--and the stakes have never been higher. All of existence is in danger of being eradicated, and our two favorite dysfunctional teenage runaways are at the very heart of it.
What was perhaps most surprising to me is that this book also lays the groundwork for the entire uber-mythology that encompasses most of my work, including The Coming Evil Trilogy. Trust me, you'll never look at the little town of Greensboro the same after reading this! It's all setting up for where I would like to take The Coming Evil series in future books.
So enough of the sales pitch. Go out and pick up your copy today. Here's the cover and synopsis. And, if you're behind on this series that spans space and time, you can also buy the recent Rift Jump: Revised and Expanded Edition and experience the journey from the beginning.
About the Book:
For over a year, Sara Morrison has been living a life she never dreamed possible. Rift jumping across parallel dimensions with her husband Michael, who is on a quest to battle the Rage, and their adopted son Toby, who possesses superpowers of his own, Sara has experienced wonders beyond belief. But she can't help but feel inferior to Michael as he saves the day time and again, and Sara longs for the chance to shin on her own.
When Michael and Sara encounter a cosmic storm that is shattering the worlds within the multiverse, Sara begins to uncover devastating truths about her past, her foretold future, and her connection to the reality-devouring storm. In order to overcome her own frightful fate, Sara will have to make a harrowing journey across the worlds and into the very heart of hell itself, before the multiverse falls to total darkness and her family is lost forever.
Labels:
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horror,
Rift Jump,
Sara's Song,
superhero,
the coming evil
Monday, June 8, 2015
An Update and a Release!
Been awhile since we've had an update around here because I've been knee-deep in the final phases of production for my new novel Rift Jump Volume 2: Sara's Song. I'm happy to report that we're almost there! The e-book will most likely be online this week, with the paperback soon to follow--if not released simultaneously. Ironing out all the kinks and getting it ready to unleash upon the world.
Sara's Song is meant to be the capper to my wild little ride through the multiverse and, believe me when I say, this is the biggest project I've ever done. There's some mind-bending, reality-warping, galaxy-shattering goodness going on in this thing. Think Lovecraft meets Star Wars with teen love thrown in the mix, all wrapped in a comic book package. This is a fantasy epic I've been working on since high school and I'm excited to share it with you all.
In the meantime, now is the perfect time to get caught up on the Rift Jump saga. The Revised and Expanded Edition is now available in print and e-book. Check it out and stay tuned for the big release of the epic finale!
Sara's Song is meant to be the capper to my wild little ride through the multiverse and, believe me when I say, this is the biggest project I've ever done. There's some mind-bending, reality-warping, galaxy-shattering goodness going on in this thing. Think Lovecraft meets Star Wars with teen love thrown in the mix, all wrapped in a comic book package. This is a fantasy epic I've been working on since high school and I'm excited to share it with you all.
In the meantime, now is the perfect time to get caught up on the Rift Jump saga. The Revised and Expanded Edition is now available in print and e-book. Check it out and stay tuned for the big release of the epic finale!
Friday, April 24, 2015
Don't Go in the Water! Zombie Shark is coming!
At last the veil of secrecy is lifted.
As a follow-up to last summer's Snakehead Swamp (now available to own and rent on Redbox, I thank you :p), I'm thrilled to announce that my second Syfy Original Movie is headed your way this summer:
ZOMBIE SHARK!
Still not sure how much I can say at this point, except that among its stars are Cassie Steele, Jason London, and Ross Britz (who you'll remember as the mega-jerk Ian in Snakehead Swamp). This is another fine film from the folks at Active Entertainment and is directed by the super-cool Misty Talley.
Zombie Shark comes as part of Syfy's summer lineup to celebrate the release of the latest installment in the blockbuster Sharknado franchise. Not sure yet on the exact date and time that Zombie Shark will be on the prowl, but here's the official press release in regards to Sharknado Week:
SHARKNADO WEEK (PROGRAMMING EVENT)
Premieres Saturday, July 18 to Saturday, July 25
The second annual SHARKNADO WEEK will feature seven original movies, including:
· Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No!
· Sharktopus Vs. Whale Wolf (Roger Corman’s third installment of the ‘Sharktopus’ franchise, starring Casper Van Dien)
· 3-Headed Shark Attack (starring Danny Trejo)
· Roboshark
· Mega Shark Vs. Kolossus (starring Illeana Douglas)
· Zombie Shark (starring Jason London)
· The world premiere of Lavalantula, starring Steve Guttenberg and fellow Police Academy alums Leslie Easterbrook and Michael Winslow, as they battle lava-breathing tarantulas threatening to destroy Los Angeles.
Be sure to set your DVRs! As always, stay tuned here for updates and the eventual trailer!
As a follow-up to last summer's Snakehead Swamp (now available to own and rent on Redbox, I thank you :p), I'm thrilled to announce that my second Syfy Original Movie is headed your way this summer:
ZOMBIE SHARK!
Still not sure how much I can say at this point, except that among its stars are Cassie Steele, Jason London, and Ross Britz (who you'll remember as the mega-jerk Ian in Snakehead Swamp). This is another fine film from the folks at Active Entertainment and is directed by the super-cool Misty Talley.
Zombie Shark comes as part of Syfy's summer lineup to celebrate the release of the latest installment in the blockbuster Sharknado franchise. Not sure yet on the exact date and time that Zombie Shark will be on the prowl, but here's the official press release in regards to Sharknado Week:
SHARKNADO WEEK (PROGRAMMING EVENT)
Premieres Saturday, July 18 to Saturday, July 25
The second annual SHARKNADO WEEK will feature seven original movies, including:
· Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No!
· Sharktopus Vs. Whale Wolf (Roger Corman’s third installment of the ‘Sharktopus’ franchise, starring Casper Van Dien)
· 3-Headed Shark Attack (starring Danny Trejo)
· Roboshark
· Mega Shark Vs. Kolossus (starring Illeana Douglas)
· Zombie Shark (starring Jason London)
· The world premiere of Lavalantula, starring Steve Guttenberg and fellow Police Academy alums Leslie Easterbrook and Michael Winslow, as they battle lava-breathing tarantulas threatening to destroy Los Angeles.
Be sure to set your DVRs! As always, stay tuned here for updates and the eventual trailer!
Labels:
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sharknado 3,
snakehead swamp,
syfy,
zombie shark
Monday, March 16, 2015
Free Short Fiction--"Company Man: Finale"
Welcome to the final installment of an all-new Rift Jump short story, exclusive to this site. In "Company Man", we explore the origins of the villainous Hooded Man from the original Rift Jump novel--now on sale in the new Revised and Expanded Edition.
Click here to read Part One of our tale.
Click here to read Part Two!
Click here for Part Three.
Click here for Part Four.
Copyright 2015 Greg Mitchell
Thanks for reading, everyone. Go out and get your copy of Rift Jump: Revised and Expanded Edition, and stay tuned for the release of this summer's stunning sequel--Sara's Song!
Click here to read Part One of our tale.
Click here to read Part Two!
Click here for Part Three.
Click here for Part Four.
PART FIVE
Michael
lined up his shot, looking through the rifle scope at the deer that nibbled at
grass down range. Keeping perfectly still, hiding in the brush, Michael held in
his breath and slowly exhaled, pulling the trigger. A loud clap split the
countryside serenity and the deer bolted, only making four or five paces before
it collapsed—a fresh hole just behind the shoulder.
Michael
grinned and stood. The winter cold assaulted his senses and he pulled his dirty
and tattered long coat closer, drawing the hood to shadow his eyes from the
merciless sun. He slung the rifle over his shoulder by the strap and trudged
through the icy river to his felled prey. It was a big one. The biggest one
he’d caught all winter. Sara would have her hands full packing the meat, but it
was sure to last them for months.
He
bundled up the deer methodically, preparing to haul it back to his four-wheeler
some yards away. Even as he did so, he snickered, remembering those first few
months out in the Wilds, learning how to hunt. He’d been so green back then,
fearful of his own shadow, only good for scribbling figures for those blasted
machines. So long ago…
He
hadn’t seen a machine since they’d escaped to the Wilds fifteen years ago.
His
mind drifted back to that old life. Sometimes he felt that another person lived
those years. At the time, he’d not been aware how angry he was, but now he saw
how easily it had been for Rip to manipulate him—to control him, just as the
monitors had done.
Michael
wondered where Rip was now. What terrible things he was doing across the
cosmos. That could have been my life.
But it wasn’t. His life was here, in the peace and quiet, with Sara at his
side.
Without
regret, he journeyed over the plains on his old four-wheeler, finally spotting his
and Sara’s cottage. He pulled the four-wheeler into the yard with his prize in
tow. Blowing hot breath into his hands to warm them, he pushed his way through
the front door. He slipped off his hood and called out, “Hey, I’m back.”
Sara’s
usual reply did not meet him. He stepped into the kitchen, but did not find
her. “Sara?”
Moved
to the next room, their bedroom. Empty, too.
He
stood still, his heart beginning to pound. “Sara? Where…?”
Then
he heard whimpering. From above.
Jerking
his head skyward, he saw Sara pinned to the ceiling by some invisible force.
She wept, her long red tresses dangling down past her face.
“Sara!”
He
reached for her, his mind whirring to figure out some way to get her down, when
a wave of unseen energy slammed him, shot him across the room, and pinned him
in place against the wall.
Michael
grunted in pain and shock, struggling to move his arms—even his fingers—but he
was frozen solid. “Sara!”
A
voice spoke from somewhere within the shadows of the room, low and calm. “Michael.”
He
twisted without success, tears building in his eyes. “Who are you? Why are you
doing this?”
Michael’s
panicked eyes darted every which way, trying to find the source of the voice.
At last, the shadows parted and a tall, thin man in a black suit with coattails
exited. The pale man’s hair was wild and white, as though styled by static
electricity. His eyelids were half-closed, his nose upturned in a display of
arrogance. He nearly floated along the hard wood floor, coming to a stop before
Michael.
“Who
are you?” Michael demanded.
“I
believe you once knew an associate of mine. Rip?”
Michael
swallowed hard. No…please, no.
Suddenly, Rip’s words returned to him, after fifteen years: “You can’t run from us! You can’t run from
what you are!”
“You’re
Rip’s Boss,” Michael stuttered. “The one he talked about.”
The
thin man considered, then shook his head. “I’m more of a…conductor of a
symphony. Rip played for me, but we both make music at the behest of a greater muse.
Something greater than anything you can imagine. And he is not pleased with
you.” The man circled the room, casually eyeing Sara still sobbing on the
ceiling.
I’ll get you down, Michael thought to her, meeting her
terrified eyes. I’ll save you, just like
I did before.
“You
see,” the stranger said, “you’ve stolen from him.”
“I
didn’t steal anything!” Michael blurted, tears spilling down his weathered face,
and he suddenly felt so very old.
“Ah,
but you have. All that power, churning inside. It doesn’t belong to you, though
you’ve certainly profited from it, haven’t you? Leaving your mechanical oppressors,
building a life out here for you and your…woman.
All made possible by the Rage. And now it’s time to pay up.”
Michael
gnashed his teeth, trying to will himself to move. “Please, I’ll—I’ll do
whatever you want.”
“Michael,
no,” Sara sobbed.
He
winced, and continued, “Rip said I was supposed to help make Chaos or something,
right? I’ll—I’ll do it. Just, please, don’t hurt Sara.”
The
thin man faced Michael, tapping his chin. The man’s long face was impassive,
devoid of all emotion. Just dead, staring eyes, and a put-upon air about him,
as though he had more pressing matters to attend to. “It’s too late for that,
Michael,” he stated without mirth.
Michael
whimpered. “No, please…”
“We
have a new part for you to play. You see, we have another stray, running
rampant across the multiverse, causing us a
lot of trouble. Another Michael Morrison, as a matter of fact.”
Michael
blinked in surprise.
The
thin man continued, “He, like you, thinks he can escape us, but he’s wrong.”
Leveling a disdainful glare on Michael, he finished, “You both are.” He paced
again, glancing to Sara on the ceiling. “You will help us find and convince him
that to flee from us is futile. We are your fate—the very reason you were
created. But to share that truth with him, you must share it from a place of conviction.”
The
man fixed a cold, unflinching stare on Sara, then lifted a hand and snapped his
fingers. Sara screamed, her body making terrible crunching noises. Bones
breaking. Michael grunted, trying to pull himself free. “What are you doing? Stop!”
The
thin man spoke over Sara’s shouts, “You are an instrument, Michael, but one
that is out of tune. We have to refine you, to prepare you for my symphony.”
Sara
continued to scream, her body breaking at the demonic man’s command. Michael
wailed and raged against his invisible restraints. “I’ll kill you!”
The
man only shook his head. “Still out of tune. Come on, Michael. You are a
company man. You remember how this game works, or have you forgotten, living
out here in the Wilds? You have to be taught your place. You. Will. Heel.”
“Sara!”
he cried, his heart breaking, a thousand memories of their life together
passing before his eyes.
But
Sara’s screams finally trailed off. Her head hung limp, her body still. The man
gave a wave of his hand and Sara collapsed to the bed, lifeless.
Dead.
Michael
wept deep ragged gasps that pained his chest.
At
last, the man—this sick Maestro of misery—regarded him. “Ah, much better. The
song of your pain is beautiful—don’t ever try to hide that. Now you will be
able to sing with passion, to spread my music.”
Michael
bowed his head, weeping, his hood slipping over his features. At once, he was
released from his imprisonment and collapsed to all fours.
The
Maestro moved to him, his polished shoes clicking on the hard wood floor. “Will
you submit now?”
Michael
thought to rebel, to punch and kick and die fighting. He’d been ready to die
when he left The Company, to be with Sara. He’d had fire back then, desperate
to be away—determined that his life would belong only to him.
But,
in the end, maybe his father was right. Better to blend in. To obey.
If
he had, Sara would still be alive.
He
stood, his hood draping over his eyes, bathing his sight in shadow. “Yes.”
EPILOGUE
The
Hooded Man arranged Sara’s body on their bed and softly kissed her forehead.
Then
he set the house on fire.
He
stood now, wrapped in his tattered coat and hood, watching the last remnants of
his independence burn away. It’d been a good life, the last fifteen years. A
good distraction, but a distraction all the same. Rip had tried to tell him
that he was meant for more, but he’d refused. Resistance was useless. He
understood that now, here at the end, and he would teach it to this other Michael Morrison.
You can’t run from who you
are.
He
was a company man, through and through.
“Are
you ready to leave?” the voice spoke from the shadows behind him.
He
nodded, not facing the Maestro. “I’m ready.”
“Then
let us begin the concerto.”
To Be Continued In
Now on sale from Genre Experience
Copyright 2015 Greg Mitchell
Thanks for reading, everyone. Go out and get your copy of Rift Jump: Revised and Expanded Edition, and stay tuned for the release of this summer's stunning sequel--Sara's Song!
Labels:
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Rift Jump,
Sara's Song,
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Thursday, March 12, 2015
Free Short Fiction--"Company Man: Part Four"
Welcome to the fourth installment of an all-new Rift Jump short story, exclusive to this site. In "Company Man", we explore the origins of the villainous Hooded Man from the original Rift Jump novel--now on sale in the new Revised and Expanded Edition.
Click here to read Part One of our tale.
Click here to read Part Two!
Click here for Part Three.
Copyright 2015 Greg Mitchell
Tune in on Monday, March 16 for the conclusion to the Hooded Man's tale!
Click here to read Part One of our tale.
Click here to read Part Two!
Click here for Part Three.
PART FOUR
Michael
and Sara raced down the hall, pushing workers out of the way. More robots
joined in the pursuit, their metal feet clanking on the floor as they gave
chase, all the while shouting their commands to halt. Even some of Michael’s
co-workers hollered after him, telling him to give up, to give in, to blend in.
One man even reached out, anger marring his features.
“What
do you think you’re doing?” the man snapped. “Have you lost your mind?”
Scowling,
he wrapped strong arms around Michael, to pin him in place, but Michael jerked
wildly, slipping from the grip. In one fluid move he curled his fingers into a
fist and punched. He’d never hit a man before, and was struck by how painful it
was. Nevertheless, it did the trick. Surprised, the co-worker sprawled to the
ground, his nose busted.
Michael
stood over him, then regarded his shaking hand, exhilaration pumping through
his veins. He laughed, elated, until Sara tugged on his arm, grinning as well.
“Hurry!”
They
did. Michael saw a side door up ahead that would take them down the fire escape
to the floors below, but as they were about to reach it, anther monitor
emerged. It pointed at Michael, its feminine voice deeper and agitated, “STOP!”
Michael
and Sara slid to a halt as the robots closed in, blocking off every avenue of
escape. Sara clung to him, trembling, and Michael worried what their fate would
be. At the very least, they would be forever separated from each other,
re-stationed in two cities on opposite ends of the country.
But
the likeliest outcome was that they both would be liquidated for their
rebellion.
“I’m
sorry, Sara,” he shouted over the increasingly loud commands to get on the
ground and submit.
“Don’t
be,” she said, looking into his eyes. “For a moment, we were free. Truly free.”
He
smiled and realized that, if these were his last moments on Earth, there was
only one thing left to do.
He
leaned down and kissed her. She cupped the back of his hair, pulling him
closer, melting into him. Michael wrapped his arms around her, determined to
never let her go.
A
loud crash shattered their kiss. Michael parted from Sara and turned to the
glass wall at the far end of the hallway, looking out over the city. Presently,
a hovercar sat parked in the hallway, broken glass littering the carpet, and
one robot pinned underneath the heavy vehicle. In the cockpit—
“Rip!”
Rip
undid the hatch on the vehicle and stood, crowing. “C’mon, little brother, get
a move on, will ya!”
Michael
laughed out loud, clutched Sara, and made a run for the hovercar. Monitors
reached out for him, their cold metal fingers clamping the air around him,
missing him by inches.
A
phalanx of androids swarmed them, but Michael helped Sara into the cockpit as
carefully as he could. One droid secured his arm and Michael kicked at it,
roaring in rage and adrenaline. He wouldn’t go back! He would be free!
He
stamped with his foot until the robot let go, its neck spurting sparks where
Michael had broken it. He scrambled into the hovercar as Rip pulled away. One
of the droids leapt through the broken window, sailing through the air and
landing squarely on the hovercar’s hood.
Rip
floored the engine—somehow he must have rewired the controls and shut off the
automatic pilot—and swerved, trying to dislodge their unwanted occupant. “Thing
won’t budge!” Rip grunted, jerking the yoke, but unable to lose the mechanical
parasite. “You’re gonna have to go out there, dude!”
Michael
gulped and looked to Rip. “What?”
“Go
on! You were born for this!” Rip guffawed, then reached up and jettisoned the
canopy lid. Hard winds pummeled them and Sara screamed, strapping herself in,
clinging to Rip’s tattooed arm as he drove. His long, braided hair whipped in
the gusts, and he just howled in laughter.
Michael
felt like he would vomit, but steeled himself. Ahead, the robot’s fingers
punched holes in the hood as the thing pulled itself up slowly. Straining, the
mechanical beast reached out with a clawed hand, relentless in its pursuit.
“Scribbler
Morrison, Michael A,” the woman’s voice remained calm, even as the robot
struggled to hold its grip. “Return to your designated station immediately.
Failure to comply will result in your liquidation.”
“Michael!”
Sara squealed.
Michael
grit his teeth and wobbled to a stand in the cockpit, slammed by winds. “I’m
done taking orders!” he roared, the ferocious gale stealing his words, but not
his passion. Letting loose a roar, he dove forward onto the speeding car, grappling
with the robot. The monitor used its free hand to swat at Michael, and he took
a hard slap to the face, but he would not let go.
He
rose up on the monster, yanking at it, trying to dislodge it, to save Sara. A
wild, uncontrollable rage coiled in his gut, swelling to consume every nerve.
It powered his fingers as he tightened his hold on the robot’s neck. Wires
popped loose, sparks shot out, and Michael grimaced, snarling now. “Die!” he
spat, cold inside. So wonderfully cold and numb to pain and fear and worry and
doubt.
Rip
was right. He was a killer. An animal, caged for far too long.
He
savagely ripped the monitor’s head off and heaved it over the side of the car. Sparks spurted from the
neck stump, and the robot’s body twitched, loosened its fingers, and slid off
the hovercar like so much useless junk.
Michael
held onto the car as it sped on, breathing heavy, but cooling. He faced Rip who
offered him a hearty thumbs-up. “Always knew you had it in you, Mike!”
Michael
sneered, feeling powerful—indomitable. Godlike.
Then
he saw Sara watching him, apprehensive. His rakish grin softened and faded to a
frown.
* * *
They
rode in silence for the rest of the trip once Michael pulled himself back into
the cockpit. At last they left behind the city, finally reaching a lush
landscape of green, teeming with real, organic life.
The
Wilds.
Michael
and Sara held hands as they soared over the mysterious forest, quietly savoring
the sight. Michael only spotted a few homes out here, small cabins hewed from
stone and straw, with pleasant smelling aromas wafting from their chimneys. At
once he was struck with terror. Where would they live? How would they eat?
Surely they’d have to eat animals.
The monitors forbade meat, keeping their human drones on a strict vegetarian
diet. Michael realized he would have to hunt, to kill. Learn to cook, to clean.
Everything.
But
he would, he was sure of it. With Sara at his side, he could face any obstacle.
He’d scared her when he lost control against the monitor, but he wouldn’t lose
control again. He would protect her, clothe her, feed her.
“You’re
safe now,” he told her, patting her knuckles.
She
warmed, snuggling close.
Rip
announced, “I think this is far enough,” and settled the hovercar in a soft
grassy field. Michael and Sara hopped out of the cockpit and knelt down on
their hands and knees, feeling the grass. Sara laughed and tore a handful of it
out, holding it under her nose. “Smell it!” she said. “It smells wonderful!”
Michael
did and agreed. Next, he unstrapped his boots and dug his toes in the grass and
soft dirt, finding it cool and refreshing. Rip, meanwhile, just leaned on the
car, crossing his arms, a bemused smirk on his whiskered face.
With
his merriment finished, Michael stood, dusting off his pants, sheepishly.
“Got
that all out of our system, did we?” Rip asked with a mocking smirk.
“Sorry.”
Rip
shrugged, then looked back to the horizon, shielding his eyes against the light
as though he were searching for something. “No problem. Don’t worry—there’s
plenty more to see.” He sighed. “Yep, there we go.”
Sara
stood now, moving closer to Michael, interlocking her fingers with his. They
held close, joining Rip in watching as the sheet of paper from yesterday came
into view, rustling on the light breeze. At length, the paper touched down on
the ground and stilled. Rip presented the paper to Michael with an accomplished
bow. “Your chariot awaits.”
Michael
snickered, then looked to Sara. “What?”
Rip
rolled his eyes. “You think I busted you out of that joint just so you and Red,
here, could go live in some cave out here in the boonies? Ha, you got bigger
things ahead of you, Mike.”
Michael
released Sara’s hand, inching closer to the paper, captivated by it; by the
colors that danced on its surface: The rainbow from his dreams. In his heart,
he heard the whispers, the call, urging him to step into the paper, to join the
light and find his destiny. “What is it?” he whispered, tempted to run and dive
right into the paper, if such a ridiculous notion were possible.
In
a suddenly reverent tone, Rip said, “Just the door, Mike. To take you to all
the worlds in the multiverse. See, this dimension of yours—as crappy as it
is—is only one in a billion. You
think the Wilds is impressive? Wait ‘til you visit the underside of the
Mountain of Or! You just touch the cave
walls, and they sing.”
Michael
took a step back, holding Sara’s hand again. “B-But, I’m not ready. I can’t.”
Rip
rubbed his eyes, and groaned. “I was afraid of this. Look, dude, this life
ain’t for you. I told you that. My Boss has chosen you. We’ve got things to do, little brother. You think those
robots were bad? That’s just the tip of the iceberg! The whole multiverse is nothing
but order and rigidity, instituted by a God whose only desire is to bend you to
his way of thinkin’.” Rip spread his hands wide, clenching them into fists.
“You and me, we were made to rebel, brother. To tear down the rules—the walls
keeping the worlds separated. Chaos, little brother! We gotta make some
beautiful Chaos! Set the captives free!”
Michael
frowned. In his soul, Rip’s words made perfect sense, as though he’d always
been waiting for this day, secretly desiring someone to say these terrible
things to him. But he feared their meaning and the reality of what he was being
called to do.
He
shook his head, feeling dizzy. “No, I can’t. I’m not… It’s too much. I want to
stay here.” He held Sara closer. “With her. We’re just getting started. We’ve
been dreaming of this our whole lives.”
Rip
quieted, his eyes narrowing. Darkening. “Don’t do this, Mike,” he said, his
voice like gravel. “You’ll regret it. See, my Boss? He don’t take too kindly to
rejection. He’s got a lot invested in you. You felt it, dangling on that car up
above the city, wrasslin’ with that robot. That’s Rage, little brother. It’s a gift; makes you strong. But it comes
with obligations. You take off like a stray, he’s gonna tighten the leash. Make
you heel. And it won’t be pretty.”
Michael
swallowed hard, his throat dry. Shaking, he extended a hand for Rip to shake.
“I-I appreciate everything you’ve done, but my answer’s ‘no’.”
Rip
eyed the offered hand, then snarled, touching the tip of his tongue to a canine
in concentration. He grumbled and reached behind his jeans, retrieving a crude,
homemade knife with a lion’s head carved in the handle. “I didn’t wanna have to
do this, Mike. You Morrisons were always my favorite.”
Michael’s
eyes widened as Rip lunged with the blade. Cold hate bloomed in his stomach,
injecting into every muscle, every nerve. Instantly, Michael danced out of the
way of the knife, catching Rip’s blade hand and turning it up. Rip loosed an
anguished grunt, and dropped the knife.
Michael
glanced to Sara. “Get in! Quick!”
Sara
nodded and scurried to the hovercar, climbing into the cockpit.
“We’ll
find you!” Rip hollered. “We’ll find her!”
Rip
twirled with his free hand, slugging Michael hard in the stomach. Michael
doubled over in a cough as Rip groped through the tall grass, grabbing his
knife. As soon as he retrieved it, Michael hurried and swung a leg, catching
Rip in the side. The older man cried out and toppled over onto the soft earth.
Michael
hurried to the car and got in. He powered the engines to life, the thrust motors
pressing down on the grass as the hovercar lifted off the ground. Rip stood,
out of breath, holding his side with a pained expression. “You can’t run from
us!” he shouted over the roar of the wind, waving the blade at the air. “You
can’t run from what you are!”
Michael
grimaced at the man. “Watch me.”
They
left Rip behind, ascending into the sky. Sara looked to Michael, small and
fearful. “Where will we go now?”
He
smiled at her. “Wherever we want.”
Copyright 2015 Greg Mitchell
Tune in on Monday, March 16 for the conclusion to the Hooded Man's tale!
Labels:
free,
Genre Experience,
multiverse,
Rift Jump,
short fiction
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