REUSED – Chapter One


Chapter One

“At ease, Major Blake.” The older man lowered himself carefully into a chair and turned to study the younger officer. As Colonel Barton’s recent replacement in St. Louis, he was familiarizing himself with the new command and had requested Major Blake, specifically, for this detail. He busied himself for a few moments with a stack of papers on his desk, while covertly watching the newer recruit for any signs of recognition or remembrance.

Finally, he spoke again.

“Major, we have a very important mission for you. There are still pockets of rebels out there, somewhere, even after all this time. One would think they’d have accepted the status quo by now, but…” The colonel shrugged. “Perhaps not. Colonel Barton was remiss in not following through on our original plans which, I suppose, is why I am now here.

“Please, Major, have a seat. We have much to discuss.” He shuffled the papers on his desk again, appeared to have found what he was looking for, and continued, “So, Brad, if I may address you as such?”

“Yes, sir!”

“It appears that you have had, in the past, some knowledge of these fringe groups, yes? And that you may still possess some familiarity with some individuals so involved?”

“Yes, sir. I know where to find them. I know them, I know how they operate. And I have every desire to bring them to justice, sir, if I may say so.”

“I’m sure you do,” murmured the colonel, barely audible. “And I assume that, given specific direction, you will be able to take out these insurgents, without any qualms whatsoever? Even supposing there are, say, a woman and a young girl among them?”

“No, sir. No reservations whatsoever. My time among those people was a poor decision on my part, and I cannot forget the things to which I was subjected during those few years.” Brad’s face was inscrutable. The colonel continued to watch him closely, for any signs of a breakthrough, any signs of wavering in his duty or, in his own case, of identification. There were none.

“That is as it should be. Very good, Major. I see we are on the same page and, if you are able to finish what was begun five years ago, you will indeed be rewarded.

“Your immediate territory will be to the south of the city, as far south as is needed. You will work with a handpicked squad and you will have much discretion as to how you perform your…er…duties. You will report only to me and, in matters of urgency, the code word “Pops” will get you through to me immediately.”

Brad’s face showed nothing, not even a tiny flicker of memory. The colonel handed him a file and rose from his seat.

“Dismissed.”

Colonel Clarence Hoefer walked around the desk and closed the door. Now, his real work could begin.

For years, Co-opCom had struggled with the whys and wherefores of VADER. Why were some individuals targeted, and others seemed to be immune? More specifically, why were there so many for whom the profile was inaccurate? It was supposed to have worked a whole lot better than it had.

VADER had been developed some two decades earlier, by the Ultratron Corporation in conjunction with the new government, the Cooperative Commonwealth. The purpose was to target certain groups of people, those who were opposed to Co-opCom’s heavy-handed takeover and, in effect, stop the protest. In other words, terminate them.

The remaining population would support the government, as the government would support them, and all threats would have been eliminated. Those who now occupied certain key cities throughout the US were as sheep – as long as they were fed, sheltered, clothed, they required nothing more than an occasional sacrifice of freedom.

Guns or other weaponry were outlawed entirely, except for the military; travel was heavily restricted from zone to zone – in fact, none was allowed at all. Speech was monitored, everywhere, all the time, and one wrong word would get a person locked up for months at a time with no contact, let alone a trial or even official charges filed.

When VADER was unleashed, the plan had indeed worked on much of the population – 95% of it, which was slightly more than intended. It decimated the military, which was to be expected, but Co-opCom had been prepared with a mercenary force. No civilians had yet volunteered in this new regime.

Yet, it wasn’t a perfect system, to remove the dissidents in order to construct this so-called utopian rule. Many of Co-Op Com’s supporters were eliminated and a few, a very few, of its detractors not only lived but now were threatening the new government by their very existence.

When one could be found, and terminated, they were that that much closer to their final vision of a monarchy. And that was Pops’ promotion, based on his success in the field nearly eight years ago combined with the gross ineptitude of a certain Colonel Barton.

The years Pops had spent down at the camp with Abby and little Juliet and all the others was etched in his mind as one of the most difficult assignments he’d had to date. He’d known some of those “kids” since they actually were children, and yes, he did care about them, in his own fashion. And Millie. That had almost been his undoing.

But they were all hell-bent on making their own way, on opposing everything this new regime stood for – and he couldn’t let that happen. He had his own life at stake, his own dreams. Hell, he wasn’t that old yet. He was waiting for the right time to retire, and then he’d have anything he wanted. Anything at all.

Ghost Story


I was asked to attend a book signing on Saturday night at The Book House here in STL, and another tonight at the Rendezvous Cafe and Wine Bar in O’Fallon, Missouri. For both, I needed a spooky tale – so here it is:

Abby made her way north, through the darkness. She’d hated to leave the girls behind but it was much safer for them to remain at the cave. With no communication at this distance, she was completely disconnected and she deeply felt the utter solitude of this journey.

As daylight broke through the clouds, she reached her destination, the DeMenil mansion. Or what was left of it.

The four stately columns lay burned and blackened in craggy heaps on the front lawn. The ancient oaks were toppled. The enormous twin brick chimneys were simply…gone. Shadows played among the ruins, some dark and foreboding, others fleeting as the sun touched them.

Colonel Barton hadn’t played any favorites when he’d determined that the best way to stop the rebellion was with his bombs and his choppers. Abby shuddered, remembering her escape from the city…with Emmy. Her city. Gone at the whim of a madman. Or, more likely, a man who followed the relentless orders of his superiors, those in charge of the new government, those who wished to obliterate all independent thought, all freedoms.

Abby rested for a few minutes, taking a long drink from her water bottle. Then she made her way carefully through the chaos to back of the mansion, to where the cellar doors stood askew as if giant hands had ripped them from their hinges.

She shined her flashlight down the stairs.

Satisfied that the scurrying sounds were merely rodents, Abby slowly descended, keeping close to the inside wall. At the bottom, she peered into the deep darkness that her light could barely penetrate, looking for a path to the supposed doorway.

For decades, probably much longer, rumors had swirled around the area; they spoke of caves and caverns and passages, far below the city of St. Louis, where breweries had once flourished and even slaves had huddled for sanctuary as they fled Missouri. Abby had heard, too, from the handful of old Indians in the area, that there were connections from here clear to Chicago. If, she supposed, one wished to go to Chicago; not her. Things were much worse up there, or so the grapevine suggested.

Slowly, Abby began to make her way through the towering piles and stacks of old junk. Some of it, she noticed, appeared to once have been priceless antiques but were now merely more obstacles in her way. Much of the first floor of the mansion had fallen through, compounding the issue.

At last she saw it, nearly hidden behind a large, tilted armoire and assorted small tables.

Setting down her flashlight, Abby moved the smaller pieces carefully, although she wondered why she was bothering. Surely they were beyond hope by now and besides, who would ever come down here to retrieve anything? Or have a use for it?

The armoire, however, was hopelessly wedged into its spot.

Abby sat down for a moment to rest, contemplating a new strategy. Suddenly, the hair on the back of her neck prickled and she rubbed her arms, trying to warm herself. She held her breath, listening. Nothing. Muscles tense, she grabbed her light and shined it around, watching and waiting.

Still nothing.

She set the light on the floor at her feet and stood, giving the armoire another chance to budge so she could pry open that door. Straining with her arms and back, pushing hard with her legs, Abby gave one more mighty shove.

The armoire flew across the room, splintering into pieces with a loud crash.

Abby blinked. No way that could have happened, or should have happened. She knew her own strength, and she knew that, at most, the heavy wood could have moved a foot or so to allow her to break the lock on the door. Inexplicably, she shivered again.

Shrugging it off, she reached for the old-fashioned padlock on the door.

It fell into her hand. The door swung wide.

Abby gasped. A hand appeared…almost, but not quite, transparent. As she watched, an arm appeared, solid and seeming so real that she could touch it. It was followed rapidly by the full figure of a man, tall and slender but slightly stooped. He wore an old-fashioned striped suit, and a felt hat. Abby felt as though she were watching an old movie, no color, and silent.

She nearly glanced around to see if anyone else was present, but was afraid that if she looked away he would disappear. She stood there, transfixed, her feet rooted firmly to the dusty floor, her jaw dropped.

With a sad smile, the man bowed and gestured gallantly toward the dark passage beyond the door. Shaking herself mentally, Abby nodded at him and scurried through the opening. She stopped to look back, but he had vanished.

The open lock was still clenched tightly in her hand as she made her way through the darkness.