Tag Archives: life

My First Novel: The Final Chapters

Chapter Twenty-Four

The next morning, Mike and Andy checked Huber’s email. The paramilitary RSVPs were already flooding in from Arizona, Oregon, Texas, Idaho — even as far as Michigan. There was a lot of excitement over seeing Goebbels’ and Himmler’s medals and decorations — and sheer ecstasy over what appeared to be Hitler’s own uniform! These right-wing freaks really knew their Nazi gear. There was no way they were going to miss the big show. It looked like Mike would have a full house, or a full barn, for the big bash he had planned.

With less than forty-eight hours to prepare for the party, Mike and Andy packed his van with the necessary supplies, including all the explosives, Mike’s TEC-9, and a fully loaded AR-15 from Andy’s arsenal with four additional 30-round magazines. “I got this baby when the assault weapons ban ended four years ago, like a lot of those militia nuts did. If things get out of hand, you’ll need the extra firepower.”

“Good idea, Andy. But drive extra careful. We can’t get stopped with all this stuff in your van.”

“Relax, pal. I’ve got handicapped plates. They always get me out of trouble. Cops don’t like to mess with an old guy in a wheelchair. What are they gonna say? ‘Step out of the car, mister?’ It’s too much of a hassle with the ramp and everything.”

“I get it, Andy, but stick to the speed limit and don’t run any red lights, okay?”

“Okay, dad.”

Andy observed all the traffic laws as they drove back up to the deserted farm north of Goleta. Just as Andy expected, there was nobody there. They parked near the closed gate and Mike used bolt cutters on the padlock so Andy could drive in and park behind his dead buddy’s abandoned farmhouse. Mike pocketed the broken lock, replaced it with a new one, then closed the gate and locked it. This farm didn’t need any surprise visitors today.

Mike went to work. He knew his way around explosives. Though not trained in the Marines as a sapper or combat engineer, he’d been pressed to help those guys blow up roads and bridges when they’d taken too many casualties to handle the job on their own. He knew where to place the charges for maximum effect, how to hide them, and how to wire them for detonation.

As he prepped the old barn to explode with a maximum loss of life, a nagging thought entered Mike’s mind. Was he any better than the Nazis with their death camps? Or the Japs in the Pacific, ruthlessly killing tens of thousands of civilians and prisoners of war?  

Hell yes, he reassured himself. Hitler and Tojo’s armies murdered innocent people. They and their minions were guilty of war crimes. The assholes Mike was targeting were just as bad: racist killers who’d already started slaughtering blameless, unsuspecting Americans who weren’t like them. The other. Like the Jews, Gypsies, homosexuals, the mentally retarded, intellectuals, and everyone else who didn’t conform to the Nazi’s perverse Aryan ideal. Or the Chinese, Filipinos, and other Pacific islanders sacrificed on the bloody altar of Japanese imperialism.

But still, Mike wondered, should he just alert the cops to this gathering? Stage a police raid, and hand all these militia bastards over to the authorities? Leave them to justice?

No way.

As a cop, Mike had seen all too often how bad guys would lawyer-up and get away with their crimes. Even now, he was hearing right wingers on TV and radio making pathetic excuses for the rash of mass shootings. The killings were regrettable, but the shooters were aggrieved. “We’ve got to understand why these militia men feel the way they do. They’ve been ‘radicalized’ by changing demographics in what they feel has always been their country – ‘alienated’ by a loss of white privilege.” To the apologists it was all about economic anxiety and “cultural dislocation” among the white working class: too many immigrants from Africa and Central and South America taking away their jobs.

Mike was calling bullshit on all that claptrap. None of these jerks were ever going to spend a single day in the hot sun, bent over row upon row of lettuce or strawberries. Their teenage sons weren’t going to clean hotel bathrooms or wash dishes or mow anybody’s damned lawn but their own. These gun-loving militia yokels were just fascist stooges, easily led by soulless men who preyed on their hatreds, fears and insecurity. Mike and his GI pals had defeated creeps like these in the war – and he was ready to, once again, send them all back to hell.

Before the sun dropped below the Pacific Ocean’s western horizon, all the explosives were in place. Tomorrow, it was down to Mike to play his part.

He and Andy camped out overnight on the farm. Siting in Andy’s car, they watched as the excited email chatter continued to pour in on Huber’s iPhone. The top militia boys had clearly taken the bait. Mike figured there’d be at least forty to fifty of these bastards at the big event tomorrow night. The plan was for this secret shindig to end with a big bang. But before Mike could set it off, he had to start the show on the right note. He had to keep these lowbrows in suspense. They were expecting something spectacular.

Perhaps the inconceivable arrival of the Fuhrer himself! 

The sun finally sank behind the ocean. Maybe it was the cool ocean breeze, or the exertion of playing sapper again after all these years, but Mike had no trouble drifting off to sleep. As he slept, there were no challenging thoughts of the day to come. Just blessed rest. Much needed rest. Not enough rest.

The next morning, Mike woke up to a crowing rooster. Abandoned as it was, this was still a farm. As he shook off the fog of sleep, he considered calling Gloria, but he couldn’t use Andy’s phone. That could put Andy and Gloria both in hot water. And there was no way he could use his phone – Huber’s phone. At this point, Mike knew he should only use it for official business. Militia business. He knew just enough about these damn iPhones to suspect that the militia nuts might be able to track down Gloria somehow through his phone activity.

However the day turned out, Mike was determined to protect Gloria. If he somehow got out of this crazy situation alive, he needed her to be there for him. There were a lot of big ideas on the line — democracy, equality, freedom from fascism, and defeating racist hate — but Gloria was foremost on his mind.

Despite the insanity of their years apart, and the difference in their ages, he was no less in love with Gloria than on that day in ’51 when he disappeared down the rabbit hole. She was his point of focus. Do the right thing, take the right steps, make the right moves, and he might get back to the girl he loved. He might survive. That’s why so many Marine pals carried photos of their sweethearts into battle — and kissed them just before the shells started flying.

It was 10:00 in the morning. The meeting would start at 9:00 PM — only eleven hours away. There were many things Mike still had to do, but Andy was useless at this point. In fact, he was a burden. You can’t tool around a farm in a wheelchair. Especially when the shit is hitting the fan.

Mike woke Andy up and told him to drive back home and wait for his call after the show over. “You kidding, Mike? I should be standing by. You don’t know what’s gonna happen! I might need to come to your rescue…”

Mike stopped him. “You can’t help me now, buddy. You’ve done all you can do. You’re the brains of this outfit. This whole setup is yours: the plan, the pyro, the farm, the barn. It’s all you, my friend – and it’s all wired to explode. But I’ve got to greet these assholes and dazzle them for a while before I blow them all to hell. If I manage to come out alive, I’ll call you to come and pick me up. Go home, pal. I’ll call you as soon as I can.”

Andy was crestfallen, but he was no fool. He knew he couldn’t be much help in the madhouse situation Mike was facing. Instead, he’d wind up being a burden. “Okay, Mike. I’m driving out of here. But I’m not going far. Maybe I’ll get a motel room in Santa Barbara. Hell, I might even go wine tasting over in Santa Ynez. Drown my sorrows in Chardonnay.”

“Sounds good, buddy. A fine idea.”

“Better yet, I’ll toast your impending victory. At two or three vineyards at least!”

“You do that, Andy. And bring back a bottle or two for me. We’ll share them with Gloria when we get back.”

“Okay. I’ll wait for you in Los Olivos. Love that little town. I’ll hang out at Mattei’s Tavern. That way I’ll be close when I get your call.”

“See, Andy? You are the brains of the operation.”

Andy blushed for a split second, then recovered. “If you need me, call me. And fuck you if you don’t.”

“If I don’t call you, Andy,” Mike replied, “You’ll know I’m truly fucked.” 

Mike watched his old buddy drive away and turn right on the 101, heading north toward the Gaviota Pass. It was now less than ten hours before showtime.

Mike had already set the barn to blow. The explosives were connected to a switch that would set off the blast. He hid that switch in a chicken coop located forty yards from the barn. Gritting through the searing pangs in his hip, he practiced running from the barn to the switch. The world’s best athletes could run a forty-yard dash in around 4.25 seconds. Mike was no Olympic sprinter, but even with his old, aching war wound, he covered that distance in a little more than five. Hopefully, that would be enough.

The chicken coop was twenty yards from the front porch of the farmhouse. Mike stashed Andy’s four AR-15 magazines and his loaded TEC-9 under the front porch. From that concealed vantage point, he’d have a clear field of fire between the closest barn door from which anyone might escape and their parked cars.

He was rehearsing an ambush. If anyone survived the blast, he wasn’t taking prisoners.

Next, to be certain of where any blast survivors might emerge, Mike made sure there was just one working door in and out of the barn. He boarded up the door facing away from the farmhouse and closed up any gaps in the walls that might allow for escape. He made sure that the one exit that remained, the door that opened toward the farmhouse and chicken coop, could be bolted shut from the outside. He was glad to find that the large, rusty old iron latch bolt still worked. Mike latched it closed — and tugged mightily. It would hold. For a while at least.  

Starting at that door, Mike stepped off about thirty yards behind the barn. This is where he’d direct his guests to park — hidden from the view of passing traffic on the 101. A bunch of cars, vans, and pickups parked on what looked like a vacant farm property might draw attention. The paranoid militia boys would no doubt appreciate yet another level of operational security.

Mike walked down the road past the farmhouse and out to the gate. There was almost no traffic on the 101. As he walked, he rehearsed the speech he’d give to his audience in German. Andy had helped him prepare it by using a translation “app” on his computer. Modern advances like this made Mike’s head spin, but German was, after all, his mother’s tongue. He’d spoken enough around the house as a kid that his accent was passable. He had to admit that, after several dozen rehearsals, he sounded pretty good.

“Gentleman. Es ist mir eine Ehre, heute Abend unter Helden zu sein. Sie haben bereits den großen Krieg für die Erlösung Ihrer Nation begonnen, aber jetzt biete ich Ihnen etwas mehr an als die Waffen, die Ihnen versprochen wurden. Heute Abend bringen wir Ihnen historische Führung. Heil Hitler!”

Translated, Mike would say to the gathered militiamen, “Gentleman. I am honored to be among heroes tonight. You have already begun the great war for the salvation of your nation, but now I offer you something more than the weapons you have been promised. Tonight, we bring you historic leadership. Heil Hitler!” That’s when Mike would walk out the barn door as if to usher in Hitler and his Nazi minions. Instead, that’s when he’d bolt the barn door shut, race to the chicken coop — and blow them all to bits!

Mike rehearsed his speech over and over as he made his final preparations. It soothed his nerves and focused his attention on the task at hand. Tonight, he’d strike a death blow against a movement that was already betraying the proud, democratic nation that his Marine comrades had given their all to defend from island to blasted, bloody island across the Pacific.

All Mike had to do was keep his shit together, stay calm, and pull off the plan. Eight hours from now, he’d know if he measured up to the task.

Chapter Twenty-Five

At 6:00 PM Pacific time, the sun was diving beneath the Pacific Ocean, sending long shadows across the neglected farm where Mike Delaney was preparing to launch a counter-offensive against the right-wing terror that was gripping his beloved country.

And there was still a lot to be done.

With three hours to go before D-Day in Goleta, Mike carried a table from the farmhouse and placed it in the center of the barn. He took the bin of Nazi gear he’d taken from Hitler, Goebbels, and Himmler and laid it on the table: an assortment of insignia, medals, and uniforms that any true Nazi fan would die for. That thought brought a hard-hearted grin to Mike’s face. “Die for,” he mused. That was, indeed, the plan.

Mike knew his audience. This vintage collection of Third Reich memorabilia would focus the attention of every white supremacist in the room. Mike placed Hitler’s Walther and Goebbels’ Luger on display. All unloaded, of course. Then he walked out of the barn, closed the door, and bolted it shut.

At 7:45 PM, he trotted down to the gate, unlocked it, and swung it open. Then he ran back up the road toward the barn. It was time for him to get dressed. He chose the Nazi uniform that fit him best. Heinrich Himmler was five-foot-nine inches. Mike was nearly six feet tall. It was close enough. As he admired his reflection in one of the farmhouse windows, Mike had to admit that — evil though they were — the Nazis turned out some sharp-looking duds.

Mike slung Andy’s AR-15 across his back and holstered one of the Walther pistols on his hip. The sight of a World War Two era Nazi officer armed with a modern automatic weapon and a classic Nazi sidearm would no doubt thrill the men who showed up for tonight’s event.

Mike wasn’t shooting fish in a barrel, but it was damned close.

At 8:00 PM, Mike stood next to the barn and brandished a flashlight. Over the next hour, he signaled the militia boys as they arrived via the 101 and turned into the deserted farm. In his role as a well-armed imperious Nazi officer, Mike said very little, and what he said in the way of direction was minimal – and spoken in broken English with a heavy German accent. There was no friendly chatter. He assumed an air of command and was met with obedience.

With few words, Mike showed the arrivals where to park – and they dutifully lined up thirty yards behind the barn in rows of five cars each. Stacked in that way, the vehicles could not be seen from the highway.

Most of the vehicles carried more than one man. Mike made a tally of all the occupants as they drove in. By the time the last vehicle was in place, he counted thirty-two cars, trucks, and vans containing a total of seventy-three men. This was more militiamen than Mike had seen at the Griffith Park Zoo and Murphy’s Ranch combined. Clearly, the spate of racist mass shootings across the country had energized the right-wing militia movement.

Any vestige of guilt that Mike felt about what he was about to do vanished.

The night grew chilly. Mike ordered the militiamen to stay in their vehicles until 9:00 PM sharp. The door to the barn wouldn’t be opened until then. This caused some grumbling among the more cantankerous guys. One guy in particular, a member of the Boogaloo Boyz, didn’t take kindly to Mike’s directions and let him know it. But most of the arriving guests followed orders without complaint.

Mike ran down the road to the gate, closed it, and locked it — then came back to patrol the rows of neatly parked cars, listening to what the men were saying among themselves: a lot of chest-beating about the mass shootings that were taking place and curiosity about the Nazi gear they saw on the internet. That led to speculation about which Nazi leaders might be showing up. Would they be contemporary neo-Nazis from Europe or South Africa? Or were they about to meet senior officials of the actual historic Third Reich? If time travel was possible, surely a certifiable genius like Dr. Huber would have mastered it.

They’d all know soon enough.

At 9:00 PM, Mike ordered the men to exit their vehicles and gather in front of the barn door. There was some muttering as they assembled. They’d been patient so far, but these guys weren’t used to taking orders. Mike had to maintain control if he was going to pull this thing off. He required strict obedience, whatever it took.

The same member of the Boogaloo Boyz that had chafed at Mike’s orders upon his arrival less than an hour ago pushed his way forward through the crowd. He stood two feet from Mike, looked him in the eye, and issued a direct challenge. “Who the fuck are you, pal? And why should we take orders from you?”

Mike instantly drew his Walther pistol and calmly put a bullet through the man’s forehead. As his dead body hit the ground, Mike glared at the assemblage, and without raising his voice or betraying any emotion, spoke with force in his convincing German accent.

“Do you think this is a game? I say to you all – we’ve not come so far to suffer fools who doubt our cause!Small men who put their own egos above our sacred mission. We have all devoted our lives to the master plan! Our brothers in arms are already in the field! This is no time for weak minds that don’t understand the need for total obedience to Nazi leadership. No time for small men without stout hearts and wills of solid steel! Forward now brothers, to our glorious future!”

Mike opened the barn door and motioned the militiamen to enter, filing past the man he’d just killed. They did so. Obediently. Most of them enthusiastically.

The table full of Nazi gear stood in the center of the barn. The sight of the uniforms, the medals, the insignia — especially all the SS emblems and weapons — had an electric effect on the assembly. They were like little boys on Christmas morning getting their first look at the delights that Santa stashed under the tree. Hitler’s uniform was not on the table. Mike wanted the militia boys to imagine that the great man himself might wear that uniform when he entered the barn to take personal control of their racist crusade.

Mike gave the men a moment to appreciate what this display represented before directing them to take up positions in the back half of the barn. Once they all fell into place, Mike addressed the group in his well-rehearsed German, as though the Fuhrer himself were listening.

“Gentleman. I am honored to be among heroes tonight. You have already begun the great war for the salvation of your nation, but now I offer you something more than the weapons you have been promised. Tonight, we bring you historic leadership. Heil Hitler!”

The crowd responded with a hearty, “Heil Hitler!” Mike continued, this time in his heavily accented English.

“My brothers in arms. I am Helmut Brinkmann. I wear the uniform of Reichsführer of the Schutzstaffel, the Nazi cadre you may know as the SS. I wear this uniform because the day will soon be upon us when we will all be proud to show the world who we are and what we stand for. The day is coming when white Christian men will regain supremacy in America and the world. I am, like all of you, a patriot in this battle for the soul of our nation: a battle in which God himself has ordained our victory. Seig Heil!”

Mike may have gotten carried away, but the lusty “Seig Heil” shouted back in reply assured him that he knew his audience all too well.

“Dr. Huber and Horst Mueller cannot be with us tonight. Their scientific breakthrough – which has led to the miracles you will witness tonight — has aroused the interest of those in the U.S, government that would oppose our noble goals. Concerned they might be under surveillance,” Mike gestured to the table of Nazi gear, “they have sent me in their stead with these tokens from the past – and this message.”

Mike’s mention of “tokens from the past” did not go unnoticed. When he repeated the part about giving them “something more than the weapons you have been promised. Tonight, I present you not just with arms – but with historic leadership,” the gathering was, to a man, nearly foaming at the mouth. Mike’s final “Heil Hitler!” was met with a thunderous response that would have made the Brownshirts of the Beer Hall Putsch proud.

Mike held his AR-15 aloft and told the whipped-up crowd that, after they met their new leaders, they would all head over to the farmhouse where hundreds of these weapons were waiting for them. That drew more cheers. But first, Mike redirected their attention to the display of Nazi paraphernalia, saying the items “are clues to the identities of the great men you are about to meet — leaders who will guide us to a glorious victory over the mud races who stain the blood of our proud white Christian nation!”

Summoning all the bravado he could muster; Mike ordered the militiamen to stand at attention while he brought in the Nazi leaders. Every man stood rigid, obeying his command. Mike had them right where he wanted them. He strode out the door, bolted it closed from the outside – then sprinted the 40 yards to the switch that would detonate the explosives. In the few seconds it took to reach the switch, Mike could hear some shouting inside the barn and men pounding on the locked door.

Mike flattened himself on the ground — and threw the switch.

The barn exploded in a rapid series of powerful blasts that shattered the wooden walls and engulfed what remained of the structure in a roiling maelstrom of fire.

Mike could hear the screams as he raced to his hideout under the farmhouse stairs and trained his AR-15 on anything that might emerge from the inferno. Within seconds, he was gunning down wounded men staggering from the blaze — many with their clothes and bodies on fire. The few that managed to escape the conflagration unharmed, some with weapons in hand, fell victim to Mike’s withering automatic fire. A handful of them managed to get off a shot at their unseen attacker before Mike dropped them.

Four minutes and four thirty-round magazines later, nothing was moving in Mike’s kill zone. Nobody had gotten as far as their vehicle.

The cops and the firemen would be on the scene before too long. The locked gate would make it harder for them to get to the burning barn, and the carnage behind it. It would also help Mike put more distance between him and this grisly scene. He went looking for any survivors, found just a few terribly wounded men – and with a few quick bursts from his TEC-9, he left no one alive.

Mike took off his Nazi uniform and tossed it along with his AR-15 into the back of a burning pickup truck before running to the farmhouse and putting on his old clothes.

Carrying his TEC-9 and trusty old .45 automatic, he disappeared into the woods on the northern edge of the farm. He paused for a moment, hidden, and looked back at the dreadful scene.

Nothing was moving except the devouring flames. No sirens could be heard yet.

It was time to get lost.

Chapter Twenty-Six

Mike hiked north, parallel to the highway, staying well off the road and out of sight. Fifteen minutes after he fled the farm, emergency vehicles started racing by on the 101, heading southwest from towns like Buellton and Solvang. There were probably more of them racing north from Goleta and Santa Barbara. Mike wondered whether Andy could hear all those screaming sirens up in Los Olivos.

Mike had made a hell of a mess back there. He’d done some grim, hard-hearted, cold-blooded things. But this was all-out war — and those bastards had started it. He’d never forget their full-throated shouts of “Seig Heil’ and “Heil Hitler!” There was only one way to deal with that kind of evil. And he’d done it. Just like he and his men had done with M1 rifles, flame throwers, and satchel charges on Iwo Jima and all those other places where the forces of hate and extremism had dug in for a fight to the bitter end.

When he finally got a chance to sleep — if he ever got that chance — he’d sleep just fine.

For the next three and a half hours, Mike trudged more than ten arduous miles through farmland, woods, and occasional streams and irrigations ditches. High and bright, the winter moon lit his way but kept him mindful of staying hidden. Then, that annoying shred of shrapnel in his hip insisted he stop soon for a rest.

It was past midnight when he gave in to the pain and settled on a secluded spot where he felt safe enough to take a breather and call Andy.

“How was the wine tasting, buddy?”

“Mike! Are you okay?”

“I’m fine, Andy. Listen. I’m about twelve miles or so south of Gaviota Pass. I’m gonna rest here for a while before pushing on. I figure I’ll reach the pass sometime before five or six in the morning, just before sunrise. Can you pick me up there?”

“No chance, pal. I’ve got another wine tasting.”

There was a brief, confused pause. Mike’s wits weren’t the sharpest at that moment.

“Of course, you asshole, I’ll pick you up. Jeez, Mike! Where’s your sense of humor?”

“Sorry, Andy. That was hilarious. You’re a regular George Burns.”

“You know he lived to be a hundred? He died just twelve years ago.”

“That’s amazing. Good for George. Listen, Andy. I’ll be waiting near the historical marker. You know, the one about Fremont in the Mexican War?”

“Sure. Sure. I know where that is.”

“Good. I’ll see you there by six o’clock.”

“I’ll be there, pal. You know, Gloria called me asking about you…”

“For Pete’s sake, Andy — don’t talk to Gloria or anyone else until you pick me up. Radio silence, buddy. Got that?”

“Roger.”

“Okay, my friend. Over and out.”

Mike hung up. What would he do without Andy?

Nearly five hours after he hung up with Andy, Mike arrived at Gaviota Pass and collapsed, totally exhausted, behind a large clump of chapparal. The sun had yet to rise over the steep Santa Ynez Mountains to the east — and there was almost no traffic moving through the pass.

Mike welcomed the relative peace of the small roadside park on the south side of the road that featured the Fremont-Foxen Memorial. Mike was around fifteen years old when the memorial was erected. His dad was the kind of guy who always stopped at roadside history markers, so no family trip to the Santa Ynez Valley was complete without a brief visit to California Historical Landmark No. 248.

Mike was too tired to get up and walk over to the metal plaque, plus he wanted to keep out of sight. But he knew what the memorial said. He’d once memorized the text for a high school history presentation on the Mexican American War. It was either that or build another sugar cube replica of the Santa Barbara, Santa Ines, or La Purisima Missions.

“Here on Christmas Day, 1846, natives and soldiers from the Presidio of Santa Barbara lay in ambush for Lt. Col. John C. Fremont, U.S.A. and his battalion. Advised of the plot, Fremont was guided over the San Marcos Pass by Benjamin Foxen and his son William, and captured Santa Barbara without bloodshed.”

Researching his presentation, Mike learned that the events inscribed on the memorial weren’t true. According to local lore, Mexican soldiers from the Presidio of Santa Barbara lay in ambush on the cliffs above Gaviota Pass, ready to rain an avalanche of boulders down on Fremont and his troops. But, in fact, those Mexican soldiers were way down south in Los Angeles at the time, and torrential rains had flooded the Gaviota Pass. So, there was no such plot. Fremont and his command actually marched out of the Santa Ynez valley for Santa Barbara through the San Marcos pass on the other end of the valley because it was the most direct way out.

Still, the local legend made a hero out of William Benjamin Foxen, a former merchant seaman who eventually became a wealthy rancher.

That’s how it is with events in war, Mike reflected. The dark truth gets confused over time. Deadly command mistakes, self-glorifying lies, and savage, brutal battles, butchery, and carnage become sanitized tales of victory and heroism as they’re told through the years.

Mike didn’t have to wonder about how his story would be told. Nobody would believe it anyway. There were only two people in the world who would know what happened. Only Gloria and Andy could judge whether what Mike had just done was a heroic act of national defense in a budding civil war or just evil piled upon evil. Only Gloria and Andy…

His mind was wandering. Where was Andy?

A short time later – was it seconds, minutes, or more? — Mike was awakened by the short blast of a car horn. He shook the cobwebs from his brain and poked his head over the bushes. It was Andy alright. Mike got up, waved to him, then trotted over to his van. “Six o-clock on the dot,” said Andy, as Mike climbed into the passenger seat.

“Thanks, pal. Let’s get out of here.”

Andy pulled out of the park, heading northeast toward the Gaviota Tunnel. “You know, this is a divided highway, buddy. I had to drive about 10 miles south before I could get in a northbound lane. I got within eight or so miles of the farm you torched last night.”

“Did you see any cops or fire trucks?”

“I heard some faint sirens in Los Olivos last night. Nothing unusual. But I didn’t hear anything this morning. Not even on the 101 near the farm.” Andy took a good look at Mike. “You look like shit.”

“I feel worse.”

“Want me to turn on the radio? Local news is blowing up with stories about last night.”

“Blowing up?’

“Sorry, Mike, I wasn’t trying to be funny.”

“Take the 154 through the San Marcos Pass into Santa Barbara.”

“Just like Fremont?”

“Yeah, Andy. Just like Fremont.”

Mike leaned back in his seat as Andy switched on the radio. KZSB was on the story big time. The broadcasters were saying it was the biggest new story in Santa Barbara County since the 1968 oil spill disaster — or that time in 1942 when a Jap submarine lobbed some shells at the oil installations on the Gaviota Coast.   

Reporters close to scene weren’t getting a lot of information from local authorities, but from the number of ambulances and emergency vehicles arriving from both north and south, it appeared to be a mass casualty event.

“Why so many bodies and vehicles have been found on this abandoned farm is still a mystery,” a reporter informed his radio audience. “The absentee owners, who both live out of state, are the only children of the man who owned the farm before he passed away two years ago.” Mike was impressed with how soon they’d gathered so many details. But he knew they’d never know the full story.

The reporter went on. “Authorities will be holding a news conference at noon to update the public on the latest information. At this point, there is no reason to believe that residents of Santa Barbara County are in any immediate danger.”

“The local cops don’t know shit,” said Andy. “And what little they do know they aren’t about to talk about. Before long, the ATF and FBI are gonna come in and bigfoot the whole case. And then, nobody’s gonna get any information until the Feds are damn good and ready to release it.” He turned to Mike. “But you, my friend, know all the details. And you don’t exist. So, this shit could hardly be more nuts.”

As they briefly lost radio traffic in the Gaviota Tunnel, Mike took it all in for a moment. He hadn’t felt this physically and emotionally spent since the war. Emerging from the tunnel, the breathless radio reports resumed, but Mike wasn’t listening. Andy was right. Mike already knew what happened. And he knew that law enforcement, no matter how good they were — local, state, or federal — had any chance of figuring it all out.

Less than a half hour later, they were almost out of the valley. The Cold Spring Canyon Arch Bridge approaching the San Marcos Pass on Highway 154 rose four hundred feet above the canyon floor. One of the highest bridges in the nation, Mike had never seen it before. “Holy shit, Andy! When did they build this?”

“They cut the ribbon in ’64. Thirteen years before your dumb ass disappeared. Still scares me to drive over it. Dozens of folks have killed themselves jumping off this thing. It’s what they call an attractive nuisance. But it beats winding your way up these hills like we did back in the day, remember? Although, stopping for drinks and barbecued tri-tip at Cold Spring Tavern was well worth the trouble, wasn’t it, buddy?”

“Sure was, my friend,” Mike replied, happy to think for a moment about good old times.

“Cold Spring Tavern’s still going gangbusters, Mike. But they’re closed ‘til lunch time, or I’d take you there for breakfast right now.”

“I’m damned hungry, Andy. But I want to see Gloria as soon as I can. I gotta touch base with her before I can relax.”

“I get it, pal. You just get some rest. I’ll wake you up when we get to Malibu.”

A restful half-hour later, Mike woke up as Andy pulled off the 101 to park along the coast at County Line surf break — so named for being on the border between Ventura and Santa Barbara counties. “Sorry for stopping, Mike. But I just love this place. It’s like therapy, you know? We caught a lot of great waves here back in the day.”

“We sure did. But I caught a hell of a lot more than you.”

“So, what! You were younger.”

“Two years is nothing. Besides, I was riding those waves with Jap shrapnel in my hip.”

“Don’t give me that ‘shrapnel’ crap, pal. Sometimes I wonder if you were ever even wounded. Sometimes I think to myself, ‘He’s just making this shrapnel shit up.’”

“I don’t blame you, buddy. Fact is, the truth is only the stories we tell each other, right?”

“I guess so, Mike. But your story’s getting so fucking impossible to believe – and it’s true. That’s the crazy part. Among a fuck ton of totally crazy parts — it’s true.”

Mike fell silent for a moment. He hadn’t been through anything like what happened last night since Iwo Jima. Andy knew what he was thinking.

“You gonna tell Gloria everything?”

Mike gave Andy a solemn look. “No, Andy. And you won’t tell her either, okay?”

“Hell, I don’t even know all the details. I’ll back whatever story you want to tell her.”

“Thanks, buddy,” Mike replied, taking the phone out of his pocket. “I’ll give her a heads-up.”

Gloria came on the line, overtaken by waves of heart-rending relief at finally hearing from Mike. He told her he was with Andy and he’d be home soon, but that he didn’t want to stay on the line too long. They exchanged an emotional, tearful goodbye for now, then Mike hung up.

He held the phone in his hand: the black, mysterious object that had started this whole insane adventure. He realized that the time had come for this thing — Dr. Otto Huber’s iPhone – to disappear.

Andy agreed. “There’s too much information stored on that sucker, Mike. You have no idea. Too many ways to track you or Gloria – or me – down.”

“Okay,” said Mike, “Let’s give it a burial at sea.”

He ran down the beach, paused at the water’s edge – and threw the iPhone as far as he could. It sailed through the moist morning air for nearly one hundred feet until it finally splashed into the water and disappeared beneath the waves.

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Andy dropped Mike off at Gloria’s house. Mike looked like shit. And Gloria agreed.

“You look like hell, lover-boy. Is this what I waited for the past two days?”

Gloria’s jest landed for just a split second before she broke down and threw her arms around Mike. “I missed you, baby. I was so worried. Hell, I’m still worried,” she gushed. “Are you okay? I heard on the radio about that big farm fire in Goleta…”

“Yeah, I heard about it, too, baby.” Mike held on to her for life. He kissed her forehead, then her lips. “They don’t really know anything, babe. The reporters don’t know — and the cops won’t say. That’s usually how it goes.” He gave Gloria another kiss. “It’s crazy. But you know what I know?

“What’s that?”

“I know that I love you, baby.”

“I know, Mike. And I love you, too. That’s just one more crazy thing, right?”

“Right, doll.”

Just then, Gloria caught a whiff of her returning hero. “First things first, boyfriend. Jump in the shower and do something about your sorry self.”

Gloria started making breakfast while Mike cleansed himself of his ordeal. As he washed away the filth of the past two days, he wondered what Gloria was thinking. How much did she know? How far did she think he went? He’d told her he could do things the cops couldn’t do: things she didn’t need to know. But could he be completely honest with her? Could he tell her the whole story? And if he did, would she be horrified? Not just by all the killing – but by him. By what he was capable of doing.

After Mike’s shower, he wrapped the towel around his waist. He could glimpse Gloria in the kitchen, and the smell of bacon was in the air. He never wanted to move from that spot, that moment, for the rest of his life. But he walked into the kitchen.

“Nice outfit, Mike.”

Gloria looked him over, his banged-up 29-year-old torso was nonetheless like a Roman statue. “It’s nice to see you’re finally trying to appeal to my intellect.”

She put a big plate of bacon and eggs, a steaming cup of coffee, and a stack of pancakes in front of him. “So, what’ve you been doing all night?”

“Andy and I were working a job.” 

“Up in Santa Barbara County?”

Mike didn’t say a word.

“I’m not a mind reader, Mike. I know where you were. You called me from County Line.” Gloria showed him her phone. “See? It’s right there, Sherlock. Welcome to the modern world.”

Mike was happy to see Gloria in a joking mood. It might be best, he thought, not to burden her with too much darkness.

“Were you and Andy just riding some waves?”

Mike wanted to share as much as he could with Gloria, but he had to protect her. The militia nuts would be looking for revenge. And while he couldn’t imagine how they might track his 76-year-old girlfriend down – it wasn’t a zero percent chance. Nothing was. Not after everything he’d been through.  

“Gloria, baby.” Mike looked her in the eyes and took her hands in his. “The less you know the better. It was a really bad night for the bad guys. And now I’m back home with you. Let’s just start there and go from here.”

“Start there and go from here?’ You’re so damned smooth, Detective Delaney,” she pretended to purr, “How can an old gal resist such witty repartee? You’re the most eloquent guy I’ve known since Abe Shatz and Ignatz Kalicky held up one end of my bar.” Their lips were about to meet when Gloria’s phone rang.

It was Andy. She gave Mike the phone. “You want me to leave? Is this some kind of Batman and Robin shit? Or can I finish my breakfast?”

Mike motioned for Gloria to stay. “What’ve you heard, buddy?”

Andy had been listening to local AM radio since he dropped Mike off at Gloria’s. Now, he told Mike, the story is getting covered on television. “You gotta tune in, Mike. They don’t know much, but it’s clear that the bodies are stacking up. Holy hell, man! You really bagged…”

“Andy!” Mike cut him off cold. “Don’t talk like that. Understand? And since your phone was talking to the good doctor’s phone, you better get yours replaced. Pronto.” He looked at Gloria. “Gloria needs a new phone, too.”

“Done,” said Andy. “It’s taken care of. But turn on the news. It’s a big deal.”

Mike handed the phone back to Gloria. “Don’t use this thing until Andy gets you a new one.”

“Don’t scare me, Mike.”

“You don’t have to be scared. You told me yourself. I’m an impossible person. I shouldn’t even exist. Look at me. I’m eighty-six years old. You’re seventy-seven. I’m almost ten years older than you – and look at us. It’s crazy. We’re in love, babe. Don’t worry about anything else.”

Gloria gave Mike a pointed look. “Gina’s been asking about you. ‘Where’s Mike? What happened to Mike?’ What am I supposed to tell her? I think she likes you. And who could blame her?”

Mike gave Gloria a squeeze and a deep seal-the-deal, kiss.

“We’ll figure it out, babe. Just tell her that I’m into older women.”

“You’re into her grandmother?”

“Well, you’re the cradle robber.”

They kissed again. It was a “get a room” kind of kiss.

“Okay, baby doll. Let’s see what the hell is going on this morning.”

Gloria turned on the television just as a reporter was saying that “as many as sixty or seventy bodies have been recovered from the scene of the fire. Many, we are being told, look like they’ve also been shot.”

Gloria and Mike settled into the couch. After a moment, she looked back at Mike, tears welling up in her eyes. He met her gaze and said simply, “We’re at war, baby.”

“And you’re America’s secret weapon. Is that it, Mike?”

They sat together, switching from channel to channel as “The Goleta Massacre” was fast becoming a national story.

Gloria hit the pause button and stared at Mike, seeing right through him. “So, you’re just gonna play house with me until Andy sends out the Bat Signal – and then you’ll go off into the unknown to battle the forces of evil. Is that it?”

Mike just stared at Gloria: the absolute magnificence of the woman.

“Because if that’s what you’re saying, Mike. If that’s what the future holds for us. Then all I can say is…”

She looked straight at him, “I guess it’s okay with me, my hero.”

“Now, give me your plate, lover-boy. I’ll toss it in the sink,” she said heading back to the kitchen. “But let’s switch channels. I need a break from all this heavy shit. Let’s watch ‘Celebrity Apprentice.’ I recorded it last night.”

“You recorded it last night?”

“Yes, on DVR.”

“What’s that?”

“I forgot. You’re an unfrozen caveman. It’s a digital video recorder. You can set your TV to record shows now.”

“Any TV?”

“No. Just the newer ones. This one’s brand new. Unlike you, my dear.”

“Wild. A couple weeks ago, TV was black and white…”

“I get it, babe. It’s a lot to deal with. But I think you’ll like “Celebrity Apprentice.’ It’s a reality game show on NBC.”

“A reality game show?”

“Well, it’s not ‘Your Show of Shows’, my dinosaur darling. It’s a contest hosted by this New York business mogul, Donald Trump. He’s a pompous ass, but it’s a lot of fun. Celebrities compete to win money for their charities. If they lose, Trump fires them.”

“Can we just take a nap instead?” Mike reached out to grab Gloria around the waist.

She sidestepped him.

“Save it for later, Batman,” she cooed. “Just get your rest so you can take me out to dinner later tonight. After dinner, I’ll think about it.”

Walking out of the room, she turned and blew him a kiss.

He followed Gloria’s every step as she disappeared into the kitchen.

Crazy, Mike thought.

Absolutely crazy.                                                               

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My First Novel: Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Two

Leaving the fiery chaos that was Physics Lab #7 behind, Mike made his way to a dark street just a few blocks from the Cal Tech campus. San Pasqual was a quiet, lane in a tranquil, upscale part of town. Fire truck sirens wailed in the distance, but they aroused no evident concern in this peaceful neighborhood. Mike called Andy to pick him up — and within an hour he arrived on the spot.

Mike put the bin full of Nazi gear in the back of Andy’s van, then got in the passenger seat. The van was fixed so Andy could drive while still seated in his wheelchair. He noticed that Mike was staring at the modifications.

“Cool rig, right? It’s got a ramp that lets me roll up in my chair and get behind the wheel. And I can drive the damn thing using only my hands.”

Andy started driving away. “So, mind if I ask who got whacked back there?”

“You won’t believe it.”

“At this point, I’ll believe anything.”

“Huber, Horst – and Himmler and Goebbels and Adolph Hitler himself!’’

“No shit! That’s nuts.”

“Tell me about it. But ya gotta wonder, Andy. How’s this gonna change history? Does it change history?”

“Who knows? Think about it, Mike. All those big Nazi assholes killed themselves right around the time our troops reached Berlin. So, if Hitler and his boys went off the grid a few months earlier, does it really matter? They’d already lost the war. And none of those creeps were in the dock at Nuremberg anyway. So, there’s no point in wondering about it.”

As they turned right off San Pasqual onto Hill Avenue, bound for the 134 Freeway, Andy jerked a thumb toward the back of the van. “What’s in the bin, Mike? Souvenirs?”

“Nazi stuff. Their uniforms, medals, sidearms, and everything else.”

“No shit! That’s a goddamn treasure trove, buddy. Those right-wing militia freaks would pay beaucoup bucks for big time Nazi shit like that. You could make a mint.”

“It’s not for sale, Andy, but it could be bait. I’ve got some ideas brewing about next steps. But what I want to know right now is how’s Gloria? Is she okay? Can I see her?”

“She’s home, Mike. She’s fine. They discharged her two days ago. The bullet passed through her arm. No broken bones. She lost lots of blood, but she was using an improvised tourniquet when the paramedics found her. Was that you, Mike?’

“I used my tie.”

“Good call, buddy. You probably saved her life.”

“Take me to her, Andy.”

“Will do.”

Andy turned the van onto the northbound ramp of the 134 Freeway. They were passing through Glendale when Mike broke a period of anxious silence.

“So, Andy. What’s the latest on that footage I shot at Murphy’s Ranch? What do your guys at the FBI think? Are they taking any action?”

“I don’t know, Mike. They stopped talking to me.”

“They what…?

“They’re polite when I call, but they say they can’t talk. The higher-ups must’ve gotten spooked. Maybe they’re worried the video’s a fake. All that excitement and now? Nada.”

“Goddammit! I almost got killed shooting that stuff.”

“Yeah, and so did a cop.”

“What about that whole damn Rustic Canyon Shootout? The cops killed some of those militia bastards, right? Doesn’t that confirm what’s on the footage?”

“I don’t know what to tell you, Mike. They’re stonewalling me.”

“They’re fucking this up, Andy. That’s what they’re doing. They’ve got no idea what they’re dealing with. Our democracy is on the line. This is a neo-Nazi, fascist wet dream. I’m not shitting you, Andy, we’re looking at civil war!”

“Aw, c’mon, Mike…”

“Listen! This is no bullshit. Maybe I just cut off the head of the snake, but the rest of it is alive and growing — all across the country. And I’m the only asshole who knows exactly what’s going on. That means I’m probably the only one who might be able to stop it.”

“So,” Andy asked, “What’s your plan?”

“I’m working on it, pal. I’m working on it. But first, I gotta see Gloria.”

Nearly an hour later, Andy dropped Mike off at Gloria’s Malibu beach house. Dressed in Andy’s police uniform, Mike looked like shit, and smelled like gasoline. How would she receive him? He’d only been gone for a week or so – time being totally fucked up at this point. But it felt like ages to him. What had it been like for her? She took a bullet for him, and he left her behind, wounded, as he ran off after Horst. Was she still going to be okay with that?

Mike knocked on Gloria’s door like a nervous high school boy picking up his freshman prom date. It felt like forever before she spoke through the screen door.

“Is that you, Mike Delaney?”

“Yes, ma’am, it’s me.”

“Any reason why I should open this door and let you in?”

“I was the guy who gave you that tourniquet?”

“Weren’t you the asshole who got me shot?”

“Guilty as charged. But…”

“But what?”

“I love you, Gloria.”

“You do?”

“I just traveled sixty-three years to get back to you.”

“Big deal. Did you get shot?”

“No.”

“Good. I’m glad.”

Gloria opened the door, her arm in a sling. “Kiss me, asshole. And mind my wounded wing.”

Two hours later, after several drinks and the whole, mad story, Mike and Gloria lay in bed, sexually spent — and way too tired to think.

After Gloria fell asleep, her head resting on his shoulder, Mike turned on the television in time for a report on the latest racist mass murder — this time in the American heartland. Fifty-seven Hispanic farm workers and family members gunned down in rural southern Ohio. Masked men in combat gear attacked a local community center, run by a Catholic church, that provided support to immigrant farm laborers. They were having a fiesta to celebrate the upcoming Christmas holiday.

In the days since Mike had stalked Dr. Huber into the past, the race war had spread across the country. The news anchor ran down a list of mass shootings in the past week. There were dozens of them. The fifty-seven dead in Ohio was the highest toll, but more than five hundred innocent people had lost their lives so far. Most of the dead were minorities. The southern states were hit hardest. Texas was the worst.

So far, none of the shooters were in custody.

A former FBI profiler came on TV to emphasize that this wasn’t a series of “lone wolf” attacks. Unlike most mass shooters looking to go out in a blaze of glory, none of these perps killed themselves – or left any kind of manifesto. And they always worked in teams. Witnesses reported anywhere from three to five shooters at each scene: all masked and equipped for war. On the few occasions that police arrived in time to confront the attackers, the cops were outgunned by what appeared to be AR-15s. Fifteen responding lawmen had been killed so far.

Just as the anchor was reporting that the governors of California, Oregon and New Mexico were preparing to call up the National Guard, Mike switched off the television.

“I’m not done, Gloria. I’m not done.”

She heard him. She’d only appeared to be sleeping. Much as she wanted Mike to be safe – to be hers — she knew it was coming.

“I’ve got to take these guys down. And I think I know how to do it.”

“Why is this your job, Mike? You’ve already done enough. Give whatever information you’ve got to Andy, and he can feed it to the FBI or the CIA or whoever…”

“Look, babe,” Mike said, holding Gloria close and gazing into her eyes with all the longing a woman could ever dream of, “I want to be here with you more than anything. But I’m the only guy in the world who really knows what the hell is going on.”

“So, tell Andy everything you know – and he can pass it on to the cops!”

Mike squeezed Gloria harder, maybe too hard. “Baby. Think about it. They’d wonder where Andy got all that information. He’s just an old, retired desk jockey. They’d think he was nuts.”

“But Andy gave them the video you shot at Murphy’s Ranch, right? He said that when they saw that video their hair was on fire, remember? So, the FBI already knows about these militia guys and all the guns. Anybody who saw that video could connect the dots.”

“Maybe they did connect them, baby. Maybe my video is helping. I don’t know. But Andy says nobody at the Bureau is talking to him now. They might’ve gotten cold feet. It was an insane scene after all. Crazy Nazis talking about leading a race war in America.”

“But what can you do on your own? What can any one man do?’

“I can do things the cops can’t do. Things they’d never imagine. Things you don’t need to know.”

“You’re scaring me, Mike.”

“Baby, listen. If I can’t throw a wrench in this crazy militia shit, you and I can never truly be happy. We’d just be fucking our way through the apocalypse.”

“What a way to go, right?”

“Amen, baby.”

Mike kissed Gloria with all the passion he could muster in his weary, time-traveling state. She wiped away a tear. “Mike Delaney. You’re an impossible person. You shouldn’t even exist. But you know more than anyone else how all this craziness started. So, it’s just my luck that my long-lost lover boy is the only guy who can bring it to an end.”

Gloria was sending her beloved knight on a righteous crusade — and he’d prove himself worthy of her favor.

“Gina asks about you, Mike. She wonders who you are and what the deal is between us. I tell her you’re an old friend, but she asks how old. Should I tell her the truth? Can she deal with the fact that her grandmother’s boyfriend is really eighty-six years old? It’s weird as hell.”

“And getting weirder.” Mike kissed Gloria’s hand. “Weirder every damned day.”

“So, go solve this fascist Armageddon shit, Mike. Then we’ll sort out the personal stuff. Now, let’s get to sleep. You need some rest for whatever comes next.”

Mike woke up the next morning, still exhausted. Gloria teased that he was suffering from “time travel lag.” She thought it was funny, but Mike didn’t get the joke. “Time travel lag, honey,” she said, a bit miffed that he didn’t appreciate her wit. “You know, like jet lag.”

“Jet lag?”

“You never heard of jet lag?”

After a beat, Gloria realized. “Oh, that’s right. No passenger jets in 1951. Sorry. I keep forgetting you’re a dinosaur. Would you like some eggs?”

“About a hundred of ‘em. Us dinosaurs have to maintain our enormous weight.”

Mike wrapped his arms around Gloria’s waist while she fried up breakfast. She shook him off, pretending to be annoyed. He wished it could go on like this with her: cracking jokes around the house, sharing lost time, living in the moment, and loving each other for as long as it could possibly last. But not a chance.

The phone rang and Gloria picked it up. She handed it to Mike. “It’s Andy. He’s got news.”

“Hey, Mike. How’re you feeling this morning?”

“I’m okay, Andy. As okay as I can be right now. Just about to have some breakfast. So, what’ve you got?”

“Have you been watching the news?”

“I just woke up, buddy. I don’t know shit. I killed a bunch of Nazis and blew up Cal Tech yesterday. Did anybody notice?”

“Very funny, pal. Local TV is covering the fire at Cal Tech, but they don’t know much at all. They certainly haven’t connected it to all these shootings. The fire ran through most of the building. They say it appeared to have started somewhere on the first floor. No students were hurt. But they obviously don’t know what we know.”

“Don’t know or aren’t saying?”

“Who can tell?” Andy continued. “I talked to an old surfing pal in the Pasadena FD. Nobody’ll go on the record, but he says there were a bunch of bodies found at the scene. As many as seven. Burned to a crisp. Two looked like they were dressed in body armor. A pile of bodies in the lab didn’t look like they were wearing anything at all. My guy got the scoop from one of the first responders. Then word from the top came to shut the fuck up! So now, nobody’s talking. Either they don’t know what Physics Lab #7 was all about — or they’re covering up.”  

“Have they ID’d any of the bodies?”

“Are you nuts, Mike? They were nothing but ashes.”

Mike knew they’d probably identify Horst – and maybe the militia guys — from dental records, but what about the other charred bodies? Will they search dental records all the way back to ‘45? From fucking Berlin? Mike suddenly felt very good about taking all their Nazi uniforms and shit.

“Don’t ask too many questions, Andy, but keep the lines of communication open.”

“Right, Mike. I’m just a curious old ex-cop, trying to stay ahead of the TV news.”

“That’s right, pal.”

Gloria chimed in. “They might think Horst was just a Nobel Prize winning genius who went crazy and destroyed his work.”

Mike smiled. Gloria was beautiful and brilliant. “True, my love. But what about the four Nazis who died with him?”

“Potential investors?” Gloria turned back to the stove. “You’re breakfast’s almost ready.”

Mike continued with Andy. “Do you have that box of Nazi stuff I left in your van?”

“No. I donated it to Goodwill. Are you kidding? I’ve been on eBay all morning. Nazi fan boys will pay big time money for vintage Third Reich uniforms and stuff. Even if that shit wasn’t worn by the actual real-life motherfuckers, it’s worth tens of thousands. Maybe millions. Mint condition Nazi paraphernalia really sells.”

“No doubt, Andy. That’s why I need it. It’s bait. Big-time bait.

“I’ve got ‘em whenever you need ‘em.”

“You still fixed for explosives?”

“Still got plenty of dynamite and C-4. Why? What’s the plan?”

“I’m still working on it. But I’ll see you later.”

“How much later?”

“After I’ve had my breakfast. I don’t want to disappoint my beautiful cook.”

“I swim at the gym until 10:00 – we can meet after that.”

“Okay. Noon. Your place.”

Mike hung up the phone. Gloria gave him a loving look — both sad and very, very proud.

“Eat your breakfast, Lancelot. Then go out and slay me some dragons.”

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My First Novel: Chapter Ten

Thanks, folks! Glad to know you’re following Mike’s story. It’s always nice to hear from readers! As pharmacist David says in the Prevagen commercials, “That makes my day.”

Chapter Ten

Mike walked along the road out of Griffith Park toward Los Feliz Boulevard looking for his next mount. He felt guilty about stealing another car, but what choice did he have? He couldn’t hitchhike all the way to Malibu. Odds were slim to none that anyone would pick up a ratty-looking guy like him and give him a thirty-five-mile ride to the coast.

The intersection with Los Feliz Boulevard was in sight when Mike spotted his prey: a beat-up Cadillac Coupe DeVille with a license plate reading “CADDY63.” He’d hotwired a few Cadillacs back in the day. Skillfully using his tools, it was a cinch to pinch. He switched plates with the car parked next to the Caddy and was soon on the road.

Moments later, Mike was cruising west on the Ventura Freeway, a road that didn’t exist back in his day. After twenty miles, he took the Las Virgenes exit and drove south for ten miles until he hit Pacific Coast Highway. From there, he was home free. Mike had concerns about driving around in another automotive museum piece, but from the looks of the modern cars that whizzed by, he’d never be able to boost one of them. Once he got this car close to Zack’s, he’d leave it somewhere as a gift to the cops, who would soon be looking for a missing ‘63 Cadillac Coupe DeVille.  

A few minutes later, Mike pulled onto the shoulder of PCH a quarter of a mile from Zack’s and left the Caddy for the police. He walked the rest of the way, dog tired, and reached Zack’s more in need of a drink than he’d ever been in his life. Problem was, he had no cash. As he staggered through the door, he wasn’t firing on all cylinders — but he was glad to see Gina behind the bar. Maybe she’d pour him a beer on credit. He was more than willing to swallow his pride for a swig tonight. He looked like hell. And he smelled bad, too. He’d have to rely on what was left of his minimal charms.

Mike had only a puncher’s chance of guessing what would happen next. It was all way too much. He told himself to focus on the here and now. Walk up to the bar, take a seat, and hope for the best. Flag down the lovely Gina and hope she’s in a giving mood. He felt three sheets to the wind – and he hadn’t even had a drink yet.

Mike settled onto a barstool and waved to Gina. How could be possibly tell her what he’d seen and heard and done this evening? He couldn’t. He couldn’t tell the cops, either. The whole thing was insane. All he could do was get hammered and steel his nerves for tomorrow night’s meeting at Murphy’s Ranch.

It was a busy Saturday night at Zack’s. Gina caught his eye and signaled she’d be right with him. Exhausted as he was, her attention thrilled him. And made him feel guilty, too. His thoughts turned to Gloria.

After serving another customer, Gina greeted Mike and asked what she could get him. Mike blushed and stammered, knowing full well how bad he looked. He needed a beer, he confessed, but he was out of cash. Tapping the dregs of his pride, he asked if he could possibly get a beer or two on credit. Gina smiled sweetly, without an ounce of pity. “Let me talk to my grandma, Mike. She’s the boss. If it was up to me, I’d give you a six-pack on the house.”  

Mike watched as Gina disappeared behind the bar. Soon after, her grandmother came out, stared at Mike in a meaningful, penetrating way, and walked over to the jukebox. She punched in some numbers, and after a beat, some guy was singing…

Won’t you wear my ring — up around your neck?
To tell the world I’m yours, by heck
Let them know I love you so…

Gina’s grandma strode from the jukebox over to Mike. She had to be in her seventies, but she’d clearly been a real looker in her day. In fact, take away the years and she looked an awful lot like his Gloria. She fingered a chain around her neck as she sidled up to him. Like she’d known him all her life.

“Gina says your name is Mike,” she said.

“That’s right…” Mike stammered.

“Call me crazy, Mike,” she said, leaning in close. “Haven’t we met before?”

Mike realized he was staring at her open-mouthed like the village idiot. He lowered his gaze – and saw his ring on the chain around her neck! There was no mistaking it: a little diamond between two blue sapphires. Then he caught the scent of her perfume. Jasmine. Of course! His head and heart were about to explode.

“You know who’s singing this song?”

Mike had no idea.

“Of course, you don’t, Mike. You have no idea who Elvis Presley is, do you?”

He had to admit he didn’t.

“Who won the World Series this year? And don’t look it up on your smart phone.”

It was a standard spy-catching trick during the war. Many a Kraut in a G.I. uniform had been stumped by that question while trying to infiltrate the American lines. Mike didn’t even venture a guess.

“The drinks are on the house, Mike. I don’t know what in this crazy world is going on,” she said, fondling his ring, “but you’re not leaving my bar until you tell me all about it.”

How could he tell her? What could he tell her?

Then again, who else could he tell?

“Gina! Get this young man a beer – and keep ‘em coming. I’ll have the top shelf bourbon myself.” She turned back to Mike. “Join me at my private table.”

Mike followed her to the last booth along the wall that faced the sea. Through the windows, the moonlight caught the whitecaps as choppy waves rose and fell. Mike’s heart was churning like the surf. He was in a drunken stupor and had yet to touch a drop. As she slid into the booth, he knew who this woman was. Who she had to be.

“My name’s Gloria, she said, looking straight through him. “Ring a bell?”

Mike searched his tumbling thoughts for something to say at this impossible moment – but he couldn’t take his eyes off Gloria’s face. As he looked at her, the years melted away. He beheld the girl she’d been all those years ago — though, for him, it had only been a couple of days. How could be possibly make sense of that?

Luckily, Gina arrived with their drinks, granting him a brief reprieve.

Gloria told Mike to take off his jacket, and he did as he was told. “Roll up your sleeves and get comfortable. We’re gonna be here awhile.” Mike obeyed, revealing the Marine Corps tattoo on his right forearm. It was just what Gloria was looking for. She raised her glass.

“Here’s looking at you, Mike. I believe we both could use a stiff drink right now.”

Mike took a long chug of his beer, hoping to steel his nerves. He still hadn’t said anything, but Gloria took control. Hadn’t she always taken control? “We can play twenty questions, Mike. But just a couple will do. Let’s start with this ring. When do you think I got it?”

There was nothing he could do but tell the truth – and hope for the best. “Well, for me, it was — just a few days ago. But for you, it’s been fifty-seven years.”

He searched her face for a response. “Fifty-seven years — and three days.”

Her eyes flickered for a moment, but she went on, calmly and directly. “Four days, Mike. And where was I when you gave it to me?”

“You were behind the bar. But you didn’t wear it until the next day — when you wore it on that chain around your neck.”

She smiled. “You told me not to dip it in somebody’s chili.” She remembered it all.

At that point, there was no holding back. This 76-year-old woman was the girl he’d asked to marry him — and then he vanished. As incredible as the story was, she had a right to know what the hell was going on. She had to know that he didn’t just run out on her.

“I had to break our movie date that night because I was on a new case.”

“You said you had to go to a meeting at 7:00.”

“I did. It’s the truth. But before I left, you went out to the parking lot with me and gave me a great big kiss. It was the greatest feeling I ever had in my life.”

“And after I kissed you — what did I say?”

“You said you’d marry me.”

“And what did you say?”

“I promised we’d get married as soon as I closed the case”

“So, Mike Delaney,” she said with the same warmth she’d bathed him in when she accepted his proposal all those years ago, “Have you closed the case?” She finished her bourbon with a longing, pained smile. “A girl can’t wait forever.”

Gina interrupted with another round of drinks and left as fast as she came. She’d never seen that look on her grandmother’s face.

The look of a young girl in love.

Mike’s weary mind wandered for a moment. If he hadn’t followed Huber through that time portal, he would be eighty-five years old right now, enjoying his golden years with Gloria. Probably sitting in this very same booth…

Gloria patted his hand, snapping him out of his reverie. “Drink up, Mike.” She sipped her second bourbon. “What the hell happened after you drove off that day?”

Mike took a long slug from his beer mug, heaved an exhausted sigh, looked deep into Gloria’s eyes — and summoned the strength to tell her the whole unbelievable story.

He must have talked for an hour straight, leaving out no detail, however small: how he found the strange black brick, traced it to Murphy’s Ranch, and discovered the mad Nazi time-travel plot. How he tracked down Dr. Huber and followed him through the time portal and into the future.

He told her about the meeting with the Bund Boys in Griffith Park and the dangerous plans they had for igniting a race war. He paused; worried that Gloria might think him insane — but she wasn’t judgmental. It was almost as though he was convincing himself that it all actually happened.

He paused only when Gina came by with another round.

Gloria said nothing. Her eyes flared when he recounted moments of danger and teared up when he said how desperate he was to return to her. When he was finished, when he had taken her up to the point where he parked the stolen Caddy and walked into Zack’s that night, Gloria finally asked him a question.

“Why did you do it, Mike? Why did you go through the time portal?”

She was near tears now, struggling under the weight of all the lost years. “Why did you take that risk?”

“Because I had to, baby. I’m a detective.”

He continued in his defense, “I’m not a great one, I’ll admit, but I’m a detective. Maybe I could’ve gotten the drop on Horst and bagged Huber that night. But would that have stopped their plan? I didn’t know, Gloria. I still don’t know.”

“But if you gave Huber to the FBI, you would’ve collected the reward money, Horst would go to prison for harboring a wanted fugitive, and you and I would have spent all these years together.” It sounded like a rebuke, but there was no bitterness in it. Gloria gazed right through him.

“I know why you did it, Mike. You wanted to solve the mystery. Busting Huber before he went through that portal would’ve closed the case – but it wouldn’t have solved the mystery.”

Gloria was right, of course. Mike’s eyes grew wet. It had been a selfish thing to do. He’d gambled their happiness on the unknown: on an inconceivable adventure. “I’m sorry, baby,” he said as the tears came, “I should’ve been thinking about you. About us.” Mike was nearly overcome.

Gina approached the table with another round, but Gloria waved her granddaughter off.

She leaned into Mike, close enough to kiss him. “So, what are we gonna do about it, lover? Cry in your beer? Or work our way through this crazy maze?” She sniffed. Then smiled. “First thing we’ve gotta do is get you a bath — and tomorrow, a new suit. You need a jacket, too. It’s winter, for godsakes.”

“I can’t have my man looking like a homeless bum, no matter what century he came from.”

Mike was amazed. Gloria’s love for him had endured for decades. She told him about the guy she married ten years after Mike went missing: a poor, unhappy fella who soon learned that she’d always be carrying a torch for the detective that disappeared. They gave birth to Gina’s mother, but he couldn’t play second fiddle to a phantom. So, he took a powder and Gloria never saw him again.

Mike had ruined Gloria’s second chance for happiness all those years ago. What could he offer her now?

The situation was impossible, but Gloria didn’t see it that way. She wasn’t shocked by the notion of time travel. She’d seen a lot in her long life. Anything seemed possible. Technology was out of this world. She told Mike that the iPhone he was carrying had more computing power than NASA had when they put men on the moon.

Mike had no idea what NASA was. He wasn’t even sure what “computing” was. “They put a man on the moon?” His bloodshot eyes were wide in amazement.

“When in the hell did that happen?”

Gloria saw that Mike had way too much to learn. She’d have to take the lead.

“I’ll fill you in on the space race later,” she said. “Right now, you’re coming home with me.”

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My First Novel: Chapter Eight

And now, my friends, Chapter Eight! When we get to 160 “likes” — I’ll drop Chapter Nine. You can read the whole novel-to-date in sequence by clicking on “My Novel” in the “Landmarks” menu at right. Enjoy!

Chapter Eight

Late the next morning, as the sun rose over the still-agitated Pacific, Mike woke up in his cave with a brutal hangover. He’d have to do a lot better than he did last night if he wanted to solve this case and return to 1951 and Gloria. Mike looked like a fall-down drunk on a week-long bender. If he didn’t find some clean clothes soon, he’d be mistaken for a homeless bum. Of course, he was currently homeless. He’d figure out what to do about that later.

Right now, Mike had to find Dr. Huber – and fast. Huber would be looking to connect with his old protégé, Horst Mueller, who was, according to their plan, likely at Cal Tech in Pasadena.

Last night at Zack’s, Gina told him that his iPhone just needed a charge. So, that was the next step. He’d charge up the crazy black brick and see what else it could tell him. There was no time to lose. He staggered out to the highway and walked into a corner store.

“Sorry, buddy,” the old man behind the counter said. “You can just turn around and get out. I can smell you from here. You look like you slept on the damn beach.”

“I did. But don’t worry, I’m not staying long…”

“You sure as hell ain’t!”

Mike held up his iPhone. “Do you know where I can charge this thing?”

“I don’t know nothin’ about those newfangled phones. I have a flip-phone myself. My daughter got it for me. Don’t need all those bells and whistles.”

“I get it, pal. But do you know where I can charge this thing?”

“You don’t have a charger?”

“No, I don’t.”

“Then you gotta get one.”

“Any idea where?”

“What am I? The Answer Man? Try the Apple Store in Santa Monica. It’s on the Third Street promenade. My daughter took me there once. They got everything. It’s all too goddamned expensive. Me? I’ll keep my flip-phone, thank you.”

The Apple Store. So, that’s what that apple on the back of his iPhone meant. It was a trademark. “Thanks for the tip,” he said to the cantankerous proprietor.

“You’re welcome. And here’s another tip. Take a goddamn shower. You’re stinkin’ up the joint.”

Mike walked out onto the street. The guy was right. Mike was smelling awfully ripe. He ran down to the beach, took off everything but his boxer shorts, and plunged into the ocean. The cold water was cleansing — and invigorating. After a few moments, he got out of the surf, ditched his soggy boxers, and put his clothes and shoes back on. It wasn’t the hot, soapy shower he needed, but it would have to do for now. 

Mike walked back to PCH and spent some of his precious cash on a cab ride to Santa Monica. Fifteen minutes later, the cabbie pulled up in front of the Apple Store, which clearly had nothing to do with fruit.

It was like no store Mike had ever seen before: the hushed, polite voices, the unnatural pleasantness, and all those futuristic devices. The overhead light was way too bright, and the ridiculously young staff was way too upbeat, intelligent, and eager to help. Mike felt awkward admitting that he didn’t know how to use his iPhone — but there was no problem. He was directed to the “genius bar”, where a 20-something “Apple Genius” quickly powered-up Mike’s phone and showed him the basics, like how to retrieve old messages, click on “links” and “Google” things he wanted to know. The damn thing was also a camera. He could take pictures with his phone! How crazy is that?

It was mind-bending how much information Mike now had at his fingertips. He spent more of his dwindling cash on a charger, left the Apple Store, and sat down on a bench to do his first “online” research.

Whatever Mike “Googled” came up on his iPhone with lightning speed. Mike typed “Horst Mueller” into Google and the screen soon displayed a series of “links” to articles about Horst, including the recent announcement of his Nobel Prize in Astrophysics. He also learned that Dr. Horst Mueller was now 79 years old and a Professor Emeritus at Cal Tech.

Dr. Huber’s old protégé had stuck to the script and played his part to the letter.

Another link led Mike to the vital information that Horst kept office hours at Cal Tech on Tuesday and Thursday evenings between 4:00 and 6:00 pm. And today was Thursday. Mike marveled, at the speed with which he could gather information. It was a detective’s dream! But it was already 11:30 am, so Mike had to move fast. Horst would surely lead him to Dr. Huber. But first, he had to solve his transportation problem.

With the scant cash he had left, Mike couldn’t afford cab fare from Santa Monica to Pasadena, and he didn’t have a valid driver’s license. The one in his wallet expired on March 31, 1952. He hated to do it, but Mike would have to steal a car. He found a hardware store and spent his last few dollars on a thin metal ruler, flat head and Phillips screwdrivers, a hammer, and wire cutters – all tools of the car stealing trade. Plus, a box of matches and a new pocket notebook.

Mike walked down Santa Monica Boulevard and came upon an upscale vintage car lot, where he picked out a 1962 Chevy Impala Sport Coupe in cherry condition. The Impala’s technology was old enough that Mike, employing his low-tech private eye skills, would have no trouble getting it started. He set a fire in a dumpster on the opposite end of the car lot, and while everybody was reacting to the raging dumpster fire, Mike jimmied the driver’s side door open and hotwired the ignition. The Impala’s 283 V-8 engine roared to life — and Mike drove it off the lot without anyone noticing.

Despite his surface cool, Mike was a desperate man. He turned the Impala into an alley, took out a screwdriver, and switched license plates with a parked car. He wasn’t proud of his theft, but the situation was dire. He was trying to save America from an evil Nazi plot. He couldn’t possibly go to the police for help. At least not yet. They’d figure he was nuts.

Mike never trained for a mission like this in the Marines – and they didn’t cover stuff like this at the police academy. As he steered his hot Impala out of the alley, his mind was racing. He was going to have to make it up as he went along. Go with his gut.

Rather than driving directly to Pasadena and staking out Professor Mueller at Cal Tech, Mike took the risk of going back to Zack’s in his stolen car. Why take such a chance? The only explanation was his magnetic attraction to the lovely Gina. He had a few hours to spare before who-knows-what might happen, and he wanted to spend that time at Zack’s with her. He wasn’t sure why, but Gina reminded him of Gloria.

Mike pulled into Zack’s parking lot. No sirens pursued him. So far, so good. Ten minutes later, Gina was serving him lunch at the bar. As he gazed at her, Mike felt guilty. Was he really that fickle? Was the memory of his beloved Gloria so easily replaced by this new vision of female perfection? What was he doing here anyway? He was wasting time. He should be in Pasadena, waiting for Horst and Huber to make contact.

The nation’s future might be in the balance. But here he was, sitting on his old barstool.

Gina asked Mike if he wanted dessert. He ordered a slice of pecan pie and told her he had to go to Cal Tech. She showed him how to “MapQuest” the quickest route from Zack’s to Cal Tech. Factoring traffic, he was about 90 minutes away. Mike had to get going, but it was hard to tear himself away from Gina. They were still huddled over Mike’s iPhone when Gina’s grandmother came out from the back room.

She saw Mike and froze.

She was stunned to see the spitting image of her old flame, Mike Delaney, sitting at her bar, chatting up her granddaughter.

It was impossible. Was this the same guy who ran out on her fifty-seven years ago — on the day she accepted his marriage proposal? Was he the faithless fiancé who disappeared without a trace? Had he been here before and she didn’t notice? How long had Gina known him? Her heart was beating fast. Could this guy be her long-lost Mike? Or did he just look like Mike? Hell, he was wearing the same suit Mike always wore. The only suit he owned.

77-year-old Gloria fingered the vintage ring around her neck and wondered whether she was losing her mind.

It was 1:30 pm. Mike had to go, or he’d be cutting it way too close. He devoured his pecan pie and went out the door in a hurry. Gloria watched him from the window as he fired up an old Impala and drove out of the parking lot.

“Who is that guy, Gina?”

“Which guy?”

“The one you were just talking with at the bar. The one in the dirty suit.”

“Oh, him. That’s Mike. He’s new. Came in here last night for the first time.”

“Did you catch his last name?”

“No, just Mike. He’s kind of funny. He’s got an iPhone and he barely knows how to use it. I was just showing him how to use MapQuest. He’s worse than you with technology.”

“You sure he came in here for the first time last night?”

“Yeah. First time I ever saw him here.”

Gloria glanced at the calendar hanging over the bar. It was December 13th. Last night was the 12th – fifty-seven years to the day since Mike Delaney vanished. She’d worn his ring ever since. The memory of him haunted her to this day.

Ten years after Mike disappeared, Gloria married — but the guy wound up being a jerk, and their brief, unhappy union produced nothing more than Gina’s mother.

For more than five decades, Gloria carried a torch for the man that went away. Could this young guy somehow be that man? It was a crazy thought, she told herself. But, as she cleaned up after the lunch crowd, it was a thought she couldn’t put away.

Mike was making good time as he exited the 210 Freeway at Hill Street, headed for the Cal Tech campus in Pasadena. He drove down Hill Street and approached the intersection with Colorado Boulevard. He held the iPhone close to his face. It was hard to see the directions with the glare from the sunlight hitting the glass face of the phone.

As he went through the intersection, Mike heard what sounded like a short blast of a police siren. Looking in his rearview mirror, he saw he was being pulled over by Pasadena’s finest. Damn. This was going to be a problem for a whole host of reasons. How could he save American democracy while in prison for grand theft auto?

As a cop, Mike had made a lot of traffic stops in his time. He knew the drill. And he knew he’d be screwed as soon as they asked for his driver’s license — the one with an expiration date in 1952! He pulled over and weighed his options. They were all bad. The cops got out of their squad car and started walking toward him with their hands on their holsters. Were they worried he was a violent felon? Of course, they were. He was driving a stolen car.

The cop on the driver’s side tapped the window. Mike rolled it down. He knew the best thing to do was to be polite and comply with the officer’s directions.

“Hey, buddy,” the cop said with the same false friendliness Mike always employed in such stops when he was a cop. “You are aware that, since July of this year, it’s been illegal to use a hand-held cell phone while driving in California?”

“Yeah,” Mike lied. “I’m sorry, I couldn’t see the directions.”

“Distracted driving can get you killed, buddy – and others along with you. I’m going to have to write you a ticket.”

For a split second, Mike felt a wave of relief. They weren’t aware he’d stolen the car. Yet he knew all hell would break loose with the officer’s next question.

“Can I see your driver’s license?”

With that, Mike gunned his engine, burning rubber, and accelerating as fast as a 1962 Impala could go. The cops were caught flat-footed. Why would anyone in his right mind flee a traffic ticket? They ran back to their squad car, hit the siren, lights flashing, and followed in pursuit. Mike was already out of sight, but he knew exactly what they’d be saying as they radioed for backup. “Be on the lookout for a red, early-60’s Chevy Impala sedan. Driver is wanted for using a hand-held cell phone while driving. Suspect he may be guilty of something worse…”

Mike’s adrenaline was racing as fast as his stolen car. When the cops ran his plates, they’d be thrown off course. That gave him some comfort. And some more time. He could no longer hear any sirens as he took a winding course through side streets before pulling into an alley behind one of the more nondescript buildings on the Cal Tech campus. He parked the car out of sight behind a large trash bin. There was no one around. According to MapQuest, he was within blocks of Horst Mueller’s office in the Applied Physics and Materials Science Department.

It was now 3:00 — an hour before Horst was scheduled to be in his office.

Mike proceeded on foot to Horst’s office building, taking care to use a less-traveled path through alleys, behind buildings, dumpsters, and bushes. He strode calmly and casually to attract as little attention as possible. It appeared that most of the students were indoors now. It figured, Mike thought. It’s cold outside, and most of these Cal Tech eggheads were probably in the library, in class, or in their dorm rooms studying. That’s not how Mike approached his studies at UCLA. Rare were the days when he didn’t swap his homework for a game of pickup basketball or a movie at The Fox in Westwood.

Mike found a safe spot in the shadows directly across from the Applied Physics and Materials Science building. It was 3:20. Horst could be arriving anytime. So, too, might his old mentor, Dr. Huber. Mike settled in for the stakeout. The sun was sinking. He wished he had his overcoat. He really needed to do something about his clothes. He was, he had to admit, a mess. He needed a shave. And he smelled awful again.

A short time later, Mike watched as a black Mercedes Benz sedan pulled up in front of Horst’s building. A uniformed driver got out and opened the rear passenger door facing the curb. He helped an elderly man out of the car and up onto the sidewalk. The old guy walked with a cane, but he was nimble enough to manage the fifty or so feet to the front door of the building. Mike wished he had a pair of binoculars. He was doing a lot of wishing lately.

The sun had dropped behind the building at this point, casting a shadow on the sidewalk, so Mike moved up behind a tree to get a closer look at the old man before he went inside. He was Horst Mueller alright. A half-century older, but definitely Mike’s man.

Horst’s driver waited in the car out front. Mike concluded the old man wasn’t planning to stay in his office very long. Hopefully he was waiting for Dr. Huber to arrive and then they’d both travel to the time portal – or wherever else they planned to go. As long as Horst’s car was parked right where Mike could see it, he figured it was best to stay put and see what developed. But Jesus, it was getting cold.

It was a few degrees colder by 4:45. The sun was setting when Mike caught sight of Dr. Otto Huber in the glow of a streetlight, headed toward Horst’s office. Mike watched Dr. Huber walk in and out of the darkness as he passed under several streetlights before reaching Horst’s car. The driver came out to greet him, opened the door to the back seat, and helped the old Nazi inside. Huber was surely waiting for Horst to come out of his office. Then Mike would trail the two conspirators as they proceeded to do whatever they planned to do next.

It was weird, thought Mike, that Dr. Huber was now at least twenty years younger than his protégé.

Then again, what about this situation wasn’t weird?

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My First Novel: Chapter Five

Okay. We’ve reached 90 likes. So, here’s Chapter Five! Thanks for reading, folks. Keep those comments coming. Our boy Mike is getting deeper into the unknown. Of course, you can read the whole novel in sequence at right in “Landmarks” by clicking on “My Novel”. 100 “likes” and I’ll drop Chapter Six.

Chapter Five

The sun was setting as Mike drove slowly up Sullivan Ridge Road above Rustic Canyon. After a while, the road wasn’t paved. A half-mile in, it got bumpy, and he knew he was close to Murphy’s Ranch. The road wasn’t well travelled, but it wasn’t forgotten. For decades, Hollywood big shots had made their homes in the hills high above the hidden Nazi compound. It was dark when Mike parked his car, tucking it out of sight behind the roadside chaparral.

Mike had no reason to think anybody was following him, but he moved like he was being tracked. As on any dangerous case, he had his old Marine combat knife strapped to his right shin. He was also packing the 45-caliber automatic pistol he’d found on a shell-torn Pacific battlefield and smuggled stateside as a souvenir. Both had saved his life more than once. If things got as crazy as he imagined they might, he could need them tonight.

Mike had only walked about a few dozen yards when he managed to find the overgrown gate to Murphy’s Ranch. He climbed over the chained and locked gate and made his way down the five hundred vertigo-inducing concrete steps into what remained of the secret fascist enclave. He couldn’t see much in what little moonlight there was, but he didn’t dare use his flashlight. He advanced as if he was walking point on a night patrol. He had to find the meeting place, wherever it was, by 8:00. And he only had twenty minutes to get there.

Mike followed the shallow creek at the bottom of the canyon and with ten minutes to spare, he came upon a cinder block pillbox with lights ablaze in the one small window he could see. Voices could be heard inside.

The meeting was already underway.

Mike looked at his watch. 7:56. “Holy crap,” he whispered, it was really happening. He felt for the .45 under his jacket and crept up beside the window, careful to stay out of sight.

Keeping in the shadows, Mike peered through the window. It was a twenty-five-foot square chamber. Sophisticated machinery was in evidence everywhere: lots of wires and pipes and dials and buttons, but nothing Mike recognized. Two men were speaking what sounded like a mix of English and German. The young man didn’t seem to be as fluent in German as the older man, whose vocabulary and accent were superb. Mike listened for a moment. The younger man, who appeared to be in his early twenties, addressed the older man as “Doctor Huber.”

Mike understood the dynamics of rank and could tell that the younger guy was clearly subordinate to Huber, who looked more than thirty years older than his obvious assistant. Extremely agitated, Huber told the young man, whom he called “Horst,” that he was angry with himself for losing something. Some wondrous piece of advanced technology. At that moment, Mike wished his mom had spoken a lot more German around the house, and that he’d been more attentive in class at UCLA. But since Horst spoke less German than Huber, it wasn’t hard for Mike to get the gist of what they were saying. He was pleased with how well he was keeping up with their conversation — though what Dr. Huber said next made Mike wonder if he truly understood what they were saying at all.

If Mike heard him right, Dr. Huber was complaining to Horst that he’d intended to bring this incredible object “Zurück aus der Zukunft.” Mike took out his pocket notebook and wrote it down. “Zurück aus der Zukunft.” He had to make sure he remembered the words right – because they meant “back from the future.”

Did Huber really say, “back from the future”? What could that mean? Horst mentioned the word “future” several times. But Mike still couldn’t make out what exactly Dr. Huber had lost.

Huber told Horst that the device he’d just lost had far more computing power than anything current science had produced. Huber was adamant that he had to go back through the “Zeitportal” to find another such device. Mike jotted “Zeitportal” in his notebook. It wasn’t a difficult word to understand. “Ziet” meant “time”. And “portal” was the same word in English. Were these guys talking about a time portal?

Mike was listening very closely now, keen to understand every word of this crazy conversation. He took notes as the two scientists discussed how Huber’s lost piece of technology could advance their master plan. “Time portal?” “Master plan?” Mike didn’t like the sound of Germans talking about a master plan.

Mike couldn’t believe what he was hearing and seeing. This might turn out to be the wildest case he’d ever stumbled into.

And he was stone cold sober.

As Mike eavesdropped, he gathered that Horst was living in the hidden, forgotten compound, guarding the time portal that he and Dr. Huber had built. The portal was comprised of a large ring of wires and steel about thirty feet in circumference, with electronics and lights that meant nothing at all to Mike. Dr. Huber stepped toward that otherworldly contraption and declared he’d be back within the hour with another device like the one he lost. Mike watched in amazement as Horst fiddled with various controls and fired up the time portal, which hummed to life. Then, Dr. Huber entered the time portal and disappeared.

Mike was slack-jawed at what he was witnessing, but he steeled himself to calm down and focus. Did Huber really just disappear? This was when Mike was always at his best. When the crap was about to hit the fan, whether on Tarawa or in a dark alley in Long Beach, he knew how to shift into low gear and keep his mind on the mission.

With Huber gone, Mike turned his attention to Huber’s protégé, who was furiously writing up his notes. He couldn’t quite make out the situation between the two men. Dr. Huber was clearly in charge, but what organization were they working for? Was this a continuation of the Nazi fantasy embraced by Herr Schmidt and the founders of Murphy’s Ranch? Or was this something else?

Mike knew he had to stay put until Dr. Huber got back. That is if he got back.From the future?

It was all totally nuts.

The night was getting colder, and Mike regretted not wearing an overcoat. Of course, only in Los Angeles would forty degrees on a December night be considered cold. He’d been shivering in the dark for nearly an hour when Dr. Huber reappeared.

Mike watched as Huber emerged from the Zeitportal, triumphantly holding a small rectangular thing in his hand. Mike rubbed his eyes and stared at the object that Huber proudly showed to his protégé. It looked just like the same strange black device Mike had in his pants pocket!

Huber told Horst that the people of the future call it a “smart phone” or an “eye phone.” There was no mistaking those two names as Huber apparently didn’t know a German language equivalent. Mike took the device out of his pocket and looked at the writing on the back. “iPhone 3G.”

Mike realized his “iPhone” must be the very same “eye-phone” that Huber had lost, since the message on its screen led Mike directly to this meeting. He knew he had to hold on tightly to his mystery gizmo. There was no telling how it might help him as he tried to figure out just what the hell was going on.

In a commanding tone, Dr. Huber ordered Horst to make sure the portal’s systems were fully recharged by 7:00 pm tomorrow night. That’s when he’d go back to the future and start to put their plan into action. The two men ended their meeting with a crisp Nazi salute and a hearty “Heil Hitler!”

Mike could see that, just like those fanatic Japanese soldiers still hiding in caves, unwilling to surrender six years after the war, Horst and Huber were devoted dead-enders. Only they weren’t at a dead end. They’d apparently cooked up some wild, nefarious time-traveling plan. And that made them more dangerous than those Jap holdouts, hiding from their victorious enemies.

Then again, their whole time-traveling master plan might turn out to be a lot of kooky sci-fi bullshit, like that crazy flying-saucer flick he’d seen last month, The Day the Earth Stood Still. 

Mike followed Dr. Huber as the older man left his cinder block laboratory and labored up the long flight of concrete steps out of the canyon.

Huber was nimble for man his age. Mike drew on his stalking talents, which he credited to his time as a Boy Scout and improved upon as a Marine. He kept up with Huber undetected, tracking the old scientist until he got into his car and drove off. To where, Mike wondered? He didn’t try to follow. By the time he’d get to where his own car was parked, Huber would be long gone.

Besides, Mike knew exactly where Dr. Huber would be tomorrow – and when. He thought of going back down all those crazy stairs to see what young Horst was going to do next, but he was exhausted. He’d pulled off his surveillance mission so far and there was no good reason to take chances with a return visit to Murphy’s Ranch. He’s already gotten more information than he knew what to do with.

More than he could fathom.

It had been an incredible day. Did he really propose to Gloria and then watch a guy go back and forth through a time portal in the same evening? Mike had seen a lot in this world — an awful lot. But these last twenty-four hours had been like no other. He went back to his car, his thoughts swirling.

Did Dr. Huber really make a round trip to the future and back? Who was this Horst guy? What kind of plot were they cooking up? Should he alert any of his pals from the police force? And what the hell does an “iPhone” do?

At least he now had a couple of names to work with: Dr. Huber and Horst. Was Horst the guy’s first name or last?

Sleep didn’t come easy that night.

Early the next morning, as he often did, Mike went surfing at Paradise Cove before it got too crowded. As he paddled out, large swells were still being pushed onshore by yesterday’s storm. It wouldn’t be hard to catch a big wave in these conditions. Riding that wave would be the challenge.

From the time Mike was a teenager, surfing was a way to keep his body toned and his mind sharp. He surfed through high school, college, and right up to the war. Not long after his war wounds were healed, he got back on top of the waves. It was therapy. It was his religion. It was the closest thing to great sex. Conjuring the ecstasy of making love to Gloria, Mike missed his first big wave.

Despite the crazy scene Mike had witnessed at Murphy’s Ranch the night before, his proposal to Gloria was top of mind. Did he really just pop the question? Of course, he did. He was crazy about that girl. If she honored him with a “yes” he’d be the happiest jerk in the world. Lost in that thought, he missed another big wave. He wasn’t paying attention. It was Gloria. And the weird time travel thing. But it was mostly Gloria. Get your head in the game, he told himself.

These waves were too big to trifle with.

Before long Mike saw his buddy paddling out to meet him. Sergeant Andy Pafko was two years older than Mike, with over a decade of service in the LAPD. Andy tried to enlist in the Army right after the attack on Pearl, but since he was already a police officer, he was turned down by the draft board, which gave him a Class II-A deferment as he was deemed “essential.” Andy could never let that go. He wanted to be part of the big fight overseas. He hated spending his war years stateside, patrolling the seedy streets of L.A. So, of course, he drank a lot. The war took a toll even on the guys who couldn’t go.  

Andy and Mike were detectives and partners a few years ago, until they both got demoted for leaning on some crooks with connections in City Hall. Mike lost his detective rank and was busted back to walk a beat. Andy got reassigned to a shitty desk job. The police chief at the time, Clemence Brooks Horrall, wound up resigning from the department a year later in ’49, when a grand jury started investigating police corruption. But Mike had quit the force before that shit went down. Meanwhile, Andy stayed as his desk doing research: looking through case files for the hot shot detectives — kept out of the main action again.

Mike understood that, for a while, Andy was wary of association with his hot-headed, hard-charging ex-partner. He knew Andy blamed him for their demotion, though they both knew the jerks they busted were mobbed up, with city officials in their pockets. But ultimately, he and Andy remained friends. And they both loved to surf.  After riding a satisfying set of waves, Mike asked Andy to run down a name for him: some German-speaking guy named Dr. Huber.

Andy laughed. He didn’t have to work hard on that one.

“If we’re talking about the same Dr. Huber, then he’s on the FBI’s Most Wanted list. Dr. Otto Huber. Fifty-something years old. He’s a former Nazi physicist. Some kind of uber-genius. There’s a price on his head. We want him to work for our side. The Russians want him, too.”

Andy explained that in these six years after the war, Dr. Huber managed to elude the Soviet and American governments, both hungry for his technological expertise, as they ramped up production of atomic weapons and advanced their rocket programs. “If both sides can’t get Huber to come in from the cold and join them,” said Andy, “they’d all rather see him dead.”

Andy looked Mike straight in the eyes. He knew when his old partner’s wheels were turning. “Why the interest in Huber? You hear anything about his whereabouts?”

Mike played dumb. “Nothing solid, Andy. Just heard the name and was wondering who he was. I haven’t been to the post office lately, so I didn’t see his mug on the poster.”

“You’re full of shit,” said Andy. He knew Mike wasn’t asking about some random guy just because his name came up in conversation. Mike was a UCLA college boy, but Andy still couldn’t see his surf bum pal getting into a casual chat about nuclear physics.

As they lugged their longboards off the beach, Andy warned Mike. “If you know anything about this Huber fella, you should go to the Feds. Don’t try to bust him on your own, Mike. He’s a dangerous, fanatical bastard. A real Nazi dead-ender. Taking him down is a job for the G-men.”

Mike asked, “Is there a reward?”

“Yeah,” Andy replied, his concern growing evident. “There’s a big one. Ten grand. But you can’t spend it when you’re dead.”

“Thanks, buddy,” replied Mike with a grin. “I love you, too.”

Andy slugged him in the arm. “See you next week, my friend,” he said, walking away. “That is, if you’re still alive.”

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My First Novel: Chapter Three

Thanks, folks. Between my Facebook page and Blog we’re at a combined total of 50 “likes”, so here’s Chapter Three. Please note that on the right hand side of my Blog there’s a menu called “Landmarks”. There you’ll find a listing for “My Novel”. Click on that and you’ll see all three chapters in sequence. It’s easier to read that way. I’ll update “My Novel” as we go until the whole book is in there. Now, when we reach 70 likes, I’ll drop Chapter Four. Thanks for reading!

Chapter Three

Mike woke up in his parked car the next morning with a hangover from all his birthday beers. The storm had arrived just before sunrise and the rain was pounding on the roof of the car, running hard off the Spanish tile roof of his beachfront apartment building, streaming along the gutters and down the spouts, spilling over the drains, and flooding the courtyard. That’s southern California. No rain for months. Then you get clobbered.

Mike pulled his jacket over his head and ran up the steps to his apartment, getting drenched before he finally managed to open his door and collapse on the couch — soggy and sore-necked from snoozing behind the wheel. He hadn’t slept well. Drunken dreams of Gloria contended all night with nagging questions about the strange device he’d found and the meaning of “Murphy’s Ranch Thursday night 8:00.”

He took the mystery object out of his pocket and examined it. It was now Thursday morning, so if today was the Thursday in the message, maybe he still had time to learn something about this mystery before 8:00 that night. Nobody was paying him to work a case at the moment, so why not look into this weird device and its cryptic message?

But first, he was determined to buy that engagement ring.

He got himself cleaned up, put on one of his better suits, and got back on the road. The storm had died down, and the light rain falling over the bay in the morning sun created a rainbow, as Mike drove down to Santa Monica where he knew a jeweler he could trust.

Mike didn’t know a damn thing about jewelry or gems. He didn’t own anything more precious than a fifty-dollar Longines wristwatch. But he’d gotten to know Albert Borroni a few years ago when his store on Wilshire and Third Street was robbed. Mike and his partner nabbed the burglars trying to fence a dozen diamond rings. An accomplice they cut out of the deal ratted them out. Albert was grateful for the swift justice – and he and Mike had been pals ever since. At least as much of a pal as antisocial Mike had.

Mike stepped out of the drizzle and into Al’s jewelry store. He caught the proprietor’s attention, they exchanged greetings, and Mike got down to business. Al was thunderstruck.

“You’re looking for an engagement ring? You? Amazing! You mean to tell me the lone wolf has formed an actual attachment to another human being?”

Albert’s surprise and sarcasm were justified. He’d never talked to Al about having so much as a date. Fact is, Mike didn’t date much at all. There was nothing wrong with his sex drive, but Mike couldn’t make small talk to save his life. He didn’t want to talk about the war, his life as a cop, or his career as a private dick. That didn’t leave much to chat about over dinner and drinks. Professional girls didn’t require conversation. But with Gloria it was different. He wanted to tell her everything.

“You got a budget for this ring, Mike?”

“A hundred fifty bucks.”

“Wow. Big spender!”

“Too cheap?”

“Don’t be an ass! I can show you some nice rings at that price.”

Albert showed him a variety of rings, some with diamonds, some with rubies and other stones. “Look at this one,” he said, “It’s one of the rings those bastards stole, and you guys got back.” Mike took the ring and examined it — not that he had any idea what to be looking for. “It was made in the early 1920’s,” Al explained. “It has a nice little diamond, flanked by two blue sapphires. And the setting is classic Art Deco. She’ll love it.”

Mike didn’t know Art Deco from Art Carney. “I’ll take it,” he said.

“An excellent choice, my gumshoe goombah.” Albert rang up the sale. “Is there a date for this wedding?”

“Tell you the truth, Al. I don’t even know if there’s gonna be a wedding. But I’ve got the ring – so that’s a start.”

Albert put the ring in a box and handed it to Mike. “She must be a special girl. You, my friend, are not for all markets.”

“I’ll let you know how it works out,” said Mike, pocketing the ring as he strode to the door. “Wish me luck.”

“My wife and I will pray a rosary. Hell – we many even sponsor a novena!”

Al Borroni was chuckling to himself as Mike hit the pavement, pleased with his purchase. If his courage didn’t fail, Mike would pop the question to Gloria tonight. He wondered how she’d react. Would she be charmed — or spooked? Maybe it was too much, too soon. He wasn’t sure where he stood with Gloria, but he just wanted to ante up. To place his bet. He’d fallen in love with her, and he wanted her to know it.

But first, he wanted to settle the other matter weighing on his mind: the mystery of “Murphy’s Ranch Thursday night 8:00”.

The Santa Monica Public Library was just a couple blocks away. The rain was only a mist as Mike made his way down the street, into the library, and straight to the card catalog. He couldn’t find a listing for “Murphy’s Ranch”. The librarian sensed Mike’s frustration. An older woman in her early 50’s, maybe she knew something the card catalog didn’t.

“Can I help you, sir?”

“Maybe. You have anything here about Murphy’s Ranch?”

“Murphy’s Ranch?”

“That’s right, Murphy’s Ranch. Ring a bell?”

An odd look passed across the librarian’s face. “Murphy’s Ranch. You must be a local, right?”

“I grew up in Malibu. Why?”

She walked to her desk, motioning for Mike to follow. “It was a local story, about ten years ago.” She opened the bottom drawer of her desk and pulled out a stack of folders. “It happened right after Pearl Harbor.”

The librarian found the folder she was looking for, opened it, and picked through a stash of old newspaper articles. “Here it is.” She handed the article to Mike. “Crazy as it sounds,” she said, “Murphy’s Ranch was a Nazi hideout up in the Santa Monica mountains. In Pacific Palisades not far up the coast from here.”

“A Nazi hideout? No kidding.” Mike scanned the yellowing Los Angeles Times article covering the arrest of some Nazi sympathizers on December 8, 1941.

“Most people around here have forgotten all about it, but it caused quite a stir at the time. Of course, it’s not exactly a source of local pride. But I’m Jewish, so it made an impression on me and my family. You don’t forget finding out you had some secret Nazi neighbors lurking deep in a canyon, close to where you live, plotting who knows what.”

The librarian told Mike everything she knew. After Pearl Harbor, the cops arrested some American Nazis in a hidden compound they’d built in Rustic Canyon. They were members of an anti-Semitic, white supremacist group called the Silver Legion of America. They built their hideaway at Murphy’s Ranch before the war as a base for Nazi plots in America.

“They were hoping that after Hitler conquered Europe, he’d invade America – and they’d be waiting to support him. They planned their compound to be self-sustaining,” she explained, “with a water storage tank, a fuel tank, a concrete bomb shelter, cinder block storeroom — the works. Ironically, the main gate was designed by the great Negro architect Paul Williams.”

“He couldn’t have known too much about his clients,” Mike mused.

“It was known as Murphy’s Ranch because the owner of record was a guy named Murphy,” the librarian went on, “The real owners were Winona and Norman Stephens. Some say the Murphy thing was just an alias. The place is still there. Or what remains of it. You’ve got to go down hundreds of concrete stairs to get to it.”

Wow. This was far more than Mike expected. American Nazis living and plotting in a hidden compound in the Pacific Palisades? Hell, Mike was living in Malibu and attending UCLA in Westwood in ‘41 when the cops broke up this crazy fascist fantasy. He’d driven past a secret Nazi camp every day — and he had no idea. But now that he knew a little something about Murphy’s Ranch, “Thursday night 8:00” became a lot more intriguing.

It was 11:15 am. Mike had less than nine hours to learn more about Murphy’s Ranch and find out what, if anything, might be going on in that old Nazi hideout.

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