Thursday, December 23, 2004

The Blue Man Post 12

FINISHED! Total number of words = 7185

Cyndia stood up as Thestern’s frantic motions slowed down and finally stopped. “Is he dead?”

Murdock pulled away from the Odrichan. “No, nearly unconscious.” The face sculpted in the orange smiled. “My faith in you was not misplaced.”

“I was lucky.”

“There is no such thing as luck,” Murdock said. “It is a conglomeration of factors that need you to fit them together. Others call it luck because they don't realize you are the deciding factor.”

“Is my dog okay?” Billy shut the sliding glass door. He ran to the dog pen, and pulled out the fuzzy white puppy. He hugged it while staring at them.

“Your dog is fine, he just didn’t like us fighting.” Cyndia smiled. “Did your parents hear anything?”

“Just Tiger barking. They’re watching a movie. Is that the cop from outer space?”

“Yeap. We caught the bad guy and he’s going to an outer space prison.”

Murdock grunted as he slid under Thestern’s body and lifted it up. “We need to get him secured.”

“Right. You better get inside, Billy. And this is our secret.”

“Cool. Bye Cyndia, bye Mr. Outer space cop.”

#

Murdock had sent the camera robot flying back to the saucer, but he had forgotten about his vidplayer. Cyndia was sent home after Thestern was secured in the saucer, which was actually okay with here, she needed to pack. Murdock wouldn’t leave the vidplayer behind.

She hid the trunk out in the woods between Mrs. Baton’s house and the saucer that night. The vidplayer she set on the wood side of the hedge that morning when she left to hide with her trunk.

He left to go find it and she watched him go. He would probably be upset that she wasn’t there to say good-bye but he probably wouldn’t make a big deal out of it. She hefted her trunk. After all, he had a prisoner to get back to prison.

Cyndia dropped the trunk in the storage room, and made sure the door was closed. She laid down next to the trunk. And there she waited until the throbbing noise under the metal plates grew louder and lulled her to sleep.

#

Nearly ten hours had passed when she woke up again. Taking the chance that ten hours away from Earth was too far to turn around, she left the storage room. Murdock was in the main room of the saucer, standing behind his desk in a relaxed blob, typing on the vidplayer with ten outstretched tentacles. “Hi, Murdock.”

A ripple moved through his translucent body before the face formed to look at her. “I should have anticipated this development.”

Her foot scuffed against the floor. “You sound like me being here is a bad idea.”

“It is! There are guidelines in dealing with primitive….”

“Primative! You didn’t think I was primitive when you needed my help.” She planted her hands on her hips.

“They are as much for your protection as it is….”

“Oh that’s a load of crap. You said you had faith in me. That’s all gone now that I want to be what you are.” Cyndia folded her arms and stared at the metal floor.

“What do you mean?”

“I want to be an agent like you. And now you’re telling me there’s some rule that I can’t. No different from anything else in my life.” She kicked the floor again.

His face frowned in puzzlement. “You want to be an agent?”

“You can’t take me back, Murdock. I know I need training, but I have a knack for detecting, don’t I? I’ve wanted to be is a detective for as long as I can remember. Don’t send me back.” She balled her fists at her sides. She couldn’t look at him.

Murdock slid over to stand besides her. “Well we can’t have a perspective trainee sleeping in the storage room.” He started forming into a humanoid shape as he moved toward the hallway. “Regulations be castigated. You have too much talent to waste on that planet.”

Wednesday, December 22, 2004

The Blue Man Post 11

Total number of words = 6869

Murdock guarded the front door. He could flatten himself in the shadows much better than she could. Cyndia laid under the shrubbery in the back yard like a soldier ready to crawl out on her stomach.

The puppy whimpered in its kennel. A vague uneasiness cleared in her mind. How could she stop Thestern? She needed self-defense training or boxing lessons or karate or something. Her throat hurt. Why didn’t she think of the shotgun earlier? She could hit him over the head with it at least. There wasn’t even a baseball bat in the yard. Billy’s liked cars of all sizes and large action figures.

The only thing that the computer found on why Thestern was replicating constellation patterns with the murders was that ancient Odrichans used stars to mark their sacrifices and bring down the power of the gods. Loony but it did explain why he didn’t kill her outside the house, it would have messed up the way the constellation would look on the ground.

A dark mass gathered at the top of the wooden fence and jumped into the yard. Cyndia’s stomach tightened. No, he wasn’t going to hurt another baby so he could become a god.

She shimmied out of the shrubbery as the figure crept closer to the house. A sandpit was between her and the figure and the house; a sandpit filled with toys. She heaved a Tonka dump truck with both hands. It hit Thestern in the legs.

He hit the ground, but sprang back up. The next toy flew towards his head. A blue hand batted it away. The puppy now realized there were intruders in the yards, and yelped continuously.

Thestern steadily advanced, avoiding the thrown toys. “I’m not letting you hurt anyone else!” Cyndia launched the Spider-man action figure. “You’re no god, you moron!” Thestern ducked and it sailed over his head.

Cyndia braced herself. She twined her fingers together, and hit Thestern in the head with a volleyball blow. But he still tackled her, knocking her back into the grass.

She grabbed his wrists, but his fingers inched closer. Kicking didn’t unbalance him at all. If I get out of this, I’m learning how to shoot and some fancy judo chops.

Something wrapped around Thestern’s head and he reared back. He clawed to try to remove the orange, but more slid back.

Cyndia stood up as Thestern’s frantic motions slowed down and finally stopped. “Is he dead?”

Murdock pulled away from the Odrichan. “No, nearly unconscious.” The face sculpted in the orange smiled. “My faith in you was not misplaced.”

“Is my dog okay?” Billy shut the sliding glass door. He ran to the dog pen, and pulled out the fuzzy white puppy. He hugged it while staring at them.

“Your dog is fine, he just didn’t like us fighting.” Cyndia smiled. “Did your parents hear anything?”

“Just Tiger barking. They’re watching a movie. Is that the cop from outer space?”

“Yeap. We caught the bad guy and he’s going to an outer space prison.”

Murdock grunted as he slid under Thestern’s body and lifted it up. “We need to get him secured.”

“Right. You better get inside, Billy. And this is our secret.”

“Cool. Bye Cyndia, bye Mr. Outer space cop.”

#

Murdock had sent the camera robot flying back to the saucer, but he had forgotten about his vidplayer. Cyndia was sent home after Thestern was secured in the saucer, which was actually okay with here, she needed to pack. Murdock wouldn’t leave the vidplayer behind.

She hid the trunk out in the woods between Mrs. Baton’s house and the saucer that night. The vidplayer she set on the wood side of the hedge that morning when she left to hide with her trunk.

He left to go find it and she watched him go. He would probably be upset that she wasn’t there to say good-bye but he probably wouldn’t make a big deal out of it. She hefted her trunk. After all, he had a prisoner to get back to prison.

Cyndia dropped the trunk in the storage room, and made sure the door was closed. She laid down next to the trunk. And there she waited until the throbbing noise under the metal plates grew louder and lulled her to sleep.

#

Nearly ten hours had passed when she woke up again. Taking the chance that ten hours away from Earth was too far to turn around, she left the storage room.

Monday, December 20, 2004

The Blue Man Post 10

Total number of words = 6160

Murdock bent over the vidplayer. Cyndia draped herself over the bed so she could see the screen over his shoulder shape. He opened up multiple windows, maps with marked locations and star maps with the constellations drawn on them. “He paused between sprees, waiting at least a local Odrichan week. But the sprees always had a different amount of killings, different number of houses struck.” He typed in something and some of the marks disappeared on the street map. “Let’s see if the computer can match the first spree.”

A new window opened and constellation patterns flipped on it. It stopped on one and superimposed over the map with the crime scenes marked. All the stars fit over the red dots.

“I think you have concluded it. Let’s check the next spree. This is the one that was interrupted.”

The computer found three constellations that matched. Cyndia frowned. “That only had four crime scenes. Can we find the constellation off of just two?”

“We need a map of this area. It’s possible that Thestern has started over on the same constellation pattern he was stopped on.”

It took a while to find a map of the subdivision in Mrs. Baton’s files. Only one constellation of the three matched to an occupied house. “So we have to guard the O’Neals’ house tonight.”

“Yes. Thestern will strike as soon as it is dark.”

“But why? What does putting constellations down with murder do for him?” Cyndia sat crosslegged on her bed.

“He is sacrificing them.” Murdock frowned. “I’ll let the computer search on sacrifices in Odrichan culture. We must rest for tonight.”

#

Murdock guarded the front door. He could flatten himself in the shadows much better than she could. Cyndia laid under the shrubbery in the back yard like a soldier ready to crawl out on her stomach.

Friday, December 17, 2004

The Blue Man Post 9

Total number of words = 5945

Cyndia rolled her eyes. Murdock and his equipment was gone. “It’s safe to come out now.”

Part of the orange mass slid out from under the bed. “A good agent doesn’t always resort to sarcasm. Especially if they need something from the other party.”

“She shouldn’t always jump to stupid conclusions.” Cyndia scowled. “And I better do what she says, otherwise she’ll be barging in every five minutes.”

#

Sleep was disjointed between the unfamiliar glow from Murdock’s equipment and feeling hands wrap around her throat. After the fifth time of waking up having almost drifted to sleep, a warm tendril smoothed back her brown hair. “Fear not, Zy. He will not harm you here.”

She didn’t answer Murdock. She didn’t know how. But sleep stayed after that.

#

Cyndia had never skipped school a day in her life so far. Therefore, she felt reasonable sure Mrs. Baton wouldn’t call to make sure she was there. But she still had to hide before the woman would leave for her excursion into the city—usually about late morning. She straddled a root and leaned her back against the Millers’ back yard. The lake’s brown waters sparkled where the sun shone on its laps.

“Where are you going to strike next when you come out? You’re following some logical plan, vision, something. We just can’t see it.” Murdock had muttered the same thing while she got dressed this morning. Then he had showed her his comparisons of the two crime scenes, pointing out Thestern’s signature touches. Eating breakfast wasn’t an option after that.

“You shouldn’t be here, trespassing on a crime scene.” Officer Peterson closed the back yard gate.

“I didn’t realize the yard was part of the crime scene. Sorry.”

“No harm done if you’re staying out of the house.”

She took a deep breath and averted her eyes. “I saw enough of it.”

“Shouldn’t you be in school?”

“I couldn’t.” She looked back at him. “The lights never went off at the Johnsons’ and nobody left for work this morning. They’re across the street from us. I told Mrs. Baton last night, but she didn’t think it was important enough to bother the police about.”

Peterson frowned. Yes, he understood what she was implying. “You didn’t go over to look?”

She looked away again. “No.”

“Well, I won’t tell the trauance officer on you, if this is the last time.”

“It will be. Will you check out the Johnsons’?”

“Yes. You’re not going to stay here all day?”

Cyndia smiled. “Just until Mrs. Baton leaves, and then I’ll lock myself back in the house again.”

“All right.” He left the yard, shutting the gate after him.

That was one less thing to worry about. And said in such a way that she wouldn’t be number one on their suspect list. She looked back at the lake. Astronomy, that was telling the future from where constellations were when you were born. No, that was astrology; astronomy must be the scientific one. So he liked to look at the stars. And constellations came from mythology.

You disturb God’s name. He was spelling out names with the murders, names of the gods and goddesses from the mythology books.

She peered around the fence. Mrs. Baton’s car chugged down the street. Cyndia ran to the house, pausing to unlock and lock the door, and running back up the stairs. She threw her book sack on the bed. “He’s spelling names of gods and goddesses with the murder!”

Murdock’s eye hollows shifted to the side to look at her. “We thought of that. None of the Odrichan murders matched their written language.”

“What about constellations? How many of the gods are pictured as constellations?”

Murdock bent over the vidplayer. Cyndia draped herself over the bed so she could see the screen over his shoulder shape. He opened up multiple windows, maps with marked locations and star maps with the constellations drawn on them. “He paused between sprees, waiting at least a local Odrichan week. But the sprees always had a different amount of killings, different number of houses struck.” He typed in something and some of the marks disappeared on the street map. “Let’s see if the computer can match the first spree.”

Wednesday, December 15, 2004

The Blue Man Post 8

Total number of words = 5255

You disturb God’s name. It almost sounds like an insult, only he hadn’t delivered it like an insult, he was being literal. She was messing with God’s name? How could you do that?

The camera robot tapped against the glass. “I’ll get it.” She couldn’t resist sticking her head out the window once it had flown in. The Johnsons’ house was still lit. Mrs. Baton’s car pulled into the driveway. She closed the window and turned to Murdock. “Mrs. Baton’s back.”

He was plugging a wire from the camera robot to the vidplayer. “Do you foresee problems?”

“She’s not exactly hands off.”

Like Cyndia had spoken a cue, a quick knock hit the door before it swung open. “What were you doing half out the window? Sneaking out?” Mrs. Baton slammed her fist onto her hips.

Cyndia looked straight ahead. Couldn’t give Murdock away. “If I was sneaking out, I would use the door. You weren’t home.”

“Nothing normal like wanting to see a boy; probably going to sneak out and pretend to be a detective. This is real life, and people who pry into other people’s lives are not heroes. They hurt people, and turn into alcoholics. You have to get your head out of those books.” Mrs. Baton clicked her tongue. “What is this, more trash?” She pulled the book from Cyndia’s hands.

“It’s a library book for the history paper I have to write.”

“You’re not reading this before bed.” She tucked the book under her arm. “Now get to bed. You have to go to school tomorrow.”

“The Johnsons’ lights are still on.”

Mrs. Baton sighed. “There you go, being nosy again. Their kids are probably just upset and they need longer to get them to bed. Now good-night.”

Cyndia rolled her eyes. Murdock and his equipment was gone. “It’s safe to come out now.”

Tuesday, December 14, 2004

The Blue Man Post 7

She stood at the window and pointed to the still lit Johnson house. “I need to go take care of my face.”

Her cheek in the mirror wasn’t too bad. She put ice on it to reduce the swelling, but she could get away with saying she ran into a door. The bruises on her neck probably wouldn’t show up until tomorrow.

She returned to her bedroom holding the ice pack against her cheekbone. Murdock had set up on the floor on the other side of the bed, and only the top of his orange mass was visible from the door. “What does disturbing God’s name mean? Is Thestern a religious fanatic?” She moved around the bed to see him.

Murdock frowned and consulted his vidplayer. “Not according to his personal library. The Odrichan law enforcement catalogued nearly three hundred books divided between astronomy and mythology.”

“I think religious fanatics usually say demons made them kill or their victims were demons. Did Thestern say anything like that while he was in custody?”

“Only that he wasn’t finished and we would regret stopping him. Repeatedly.”

“A man of one theme?”

“At least he isn’t a liar. He did start killing as soon as he was free to do so. I need to study the crime scene to discover why he picks certain families opposed to others.”

“Okay, I’ll study my book to see if we missed an angle.” Cyndia laid down on her bed. “How was Thestern caught?”

“He targeted the home of a member of the local law enforcement. The officer was prepared for him.”

“Can’t count on that here. No cops live in this subdivision.”

Murdock made a noncommittal sound as he leaned over the vidplayer. She flipped through the book. The killers featured mostly acted on their sexual impulses, killing who attracted them. Son of Sam seemed the closest, and he just killed pretty girls he found on the streets at random. Whatever caused Thestern to choose his victims, it wasn’t sex.

You disturb God’s name. It almost sounds like an insult, only he hadn’t delivered it like an insult, he was being literal. She was messing with God’s name? How could you do that?

Tuesday, December 07, 2004

The Blue Man Post 6

Total number of words = 4669

“That’s the only thing that’s mine.” Cyndia looked up from True Crime: Serial Killers. “This is Mrs. Baton’s house, bedroom, and decorations. She’s paid by the government to look after me since my parents are dead. She’s the fourth person to have the job, and probably won’t be the last. So if I run across something I like and it can’t fit into that trunk, I don’t need to own it.” She stared back down at the book again. There was no answer from Murdock. “Sorry, you didn’t want to hear about all that. Let’s concentrate on the case.”

“We need to see the current crime scene, the one where you were injured.”

“I had a feeling you’d say that. Do you want me to take you there?”

“Not necessary, we can program the coordinates into the robot.”

She stood at the window and pointed to the still lit Johnson house. “I need to go take care of my face.”

Monday, December 06, 2004

The Blue Man Post 5

Total number of words = 4540

“There was not enough time and the Odrichans did not. This is frustrating; I’m too far apart from where I need to be.”

“Mrs. Baton isn’t home right now. You can move in. As long as you hide in my room, she shouldn’t find out.”

“I don’t want to create inconvience for you.”

“The sooner we catch Thestern the better off the neighborhood will be, right?” Cyndia stood up with her best smile. “What do you need me to carry?”

She ended up carrying the laptop thingy that Murdock called a vidplayer and the flying camera Robert. It didn’t take very long to set both up in her bedroom. She pulled out the books she had checked out for the Jack the Ripper paper while Murdock gazed at her bedroom.

“It is aestetically pleasing.” He finally said. “But this doesn’t match.” A tentacle touched the scuffed-up black trunk at the end of the frilly pink bed.

“That’s the only thing that’s mine.” Cyndia looked up from True Crime: Serial Killers. “This is Mrs. Baton’s house, bedroom, and decorations. She’s paid by the government to look after me since my parents are dead. She’s the fourth person to have the job, and probably won’t be the last. So if I run across something I like and it can’t fit into that trunk, I don’t need to own it.”

Friday, December 03, 2004

Zy's Novel Post 16

End of Chapter 5. Total number of words in novel = 18,883

“Would you drop it already, Xeryl! You are the most exasperating man in the galaxy.”

“Me? Only because I’ve been driven to it by you!”

The door to the hall slid open. Mylte pulled his grey robe around his body as the door shut behind him. “Your conversation is audible to anyone in the hall.”

Zy glared at Xeryl before standing. “My clothes?”

“Here, Mistress.” The duffel bag appeared from under his robe.

“We’ve got work to do.” She spared one more glare for Xeryl before retreating to the private bathroom.

Tuesday, November 30, 2004

Zy's Novel Post 15

Total number of words for novel = 18,792

“You can lie better than that.”

“Maybe you’re reading too much into exhaustion.”

“I have to catch this murderer. You said that like there is doubt that you would, that you could. Like you’re going to take this case seriously.”

“Now what’s that supposed to mean? He might not stop with racketeers. He might start wiping out whole towns and planets next.”

He looked at her, his violet eyes nearly black. “The only good racketeer is a dead one.”

“When have I ever said that?” Her voice was quiet, but built on a stone foundation. “Murder is wrong. No other mortal gets to pick when another mortal should die. Doesn’t matter who they are or what they have done. Do you understand me?”

“Your integrity has very few flaws running through it. Now what has you so worried about this case? You didn’t act this way over Ifeket’s murder.”

“I am now. He and Corbaine are connected to this murderer. Maybe representing his learning curve.”

“Learning curve?”

“Did you become a successful racketeer the first time you made a deal? Murder takes practice too, if you plan on doing it or need to do it over and over again. And don’t want to get caught.”

“You have more than enough confidence in your abilities for ten people. Why is this different?”

Zy finished off the drink. “Stop stressing me. A serial killer is hard enough to deal with.”

“And you’ve already dealt with one. Why is this different?”

“It is. Just deal with it.”

Xeryl gritted his teeth. “Why is it so hard to have a conversation with you?”

“Because I can make it that way.” She crossed her arms. “You won’t let go of some delusion you have about me, and I’m tired of having this conversation. He’s a murderer and he has to be stopped.”

“I repeat, you can lie better than that. Why are you so worried about this case?”

“I just don’t want any more people to die because of me, okay? Sounds valid to me.” Zy set the glass down before she threw it at his head. Besides, it was true. It was her job to protect everyone from a threat like this. It didn’t matter how innocent—or not with these victims—the victim was, they didn’t deserve horrible deaths.

“Who would blame you, you’re not doing the killing?”

Monday, November 29, 2004

Zy's Post 14

Total words for whole Novel = 18,403

“That’s why we use cornorbots.” Zy leaned against him. She would fall down if she didn’t, at least, that’s what she kept telling herself. “They can process and we can talk, and talk, and talk. I have to get this murderer.”

“You need a break. At least an hour.”

“Can we get away from D’pa while we take a break?”

“A request for privacy is not what I expected from you.”

“If you let go of me, I fall down. That would be bad in front of D’pa.”

“Good point.” Xeryl shifted his hold a little. “Did you eat before starting this?”

“Knew I forgot something in my hurry. Don’t want to eat now.”

Xeryl made an exasperated sound. He leaned her against the stone block and held onto her shoulders. “You have to eat something.”

Zy pondered that “I can drink, something with gluclose. Can we get some hospitality or do we have to go to my saucer?”

He let go of her but waited a moment before going out the door. She was okay, she could walk. Besides, she needed another set of clothes. Her head spun, but she grabbed the door jamb. No slipping nor stumbling. Xeryl and D’pa spoke in undertones; she ignored them. “Mylte?”

Mylte straightened off the wall. “Yes, Mistress Zy?”

“Please go to the saucer and get me a clean jumpsuit like this one.” She gestured down, and saw the blood smeared on her knees. He looked doubtfully at the two whisperers. “It’s okay, the last thing they want is something to happen to me. Not when IGA knows I’m here.”

D’pa heard that and glared at her. Zy leaned against the door and started pulling off the gloves.

Mylte snapped his teeth together once. “Yes, Mistress Zy.” And moved down the corridor.

Xeryl took her arm. “There is a suite we can use. It’s this way.”




The shower had felt wonderful. Zy rubbed her scalp vigorously with the towel. She sat down before she tripped on the dusky purple bathrobe that was a smidge too long for her. “Can you fix me another drink?”

“Sugary concotions seem to bring out the best in you.” Xeryl’s voice moved across the room and glasses clinked.

“It’s only temporary, but I’d rather get the interviews done before eating.” She pulled the towel off her head and saw his bemused expression as he offered the glass. “What?”

“Nothing. I’m just admiring you in my bathrobe. Remarkable the way you two match, like you were fated to be.”

“Take a pic, it’ll last longer.”

“I would, but we sent the vidrecorder to the lab with the rest of your samples. Don’t worry, D’pa promised their technician was quite thorough. Apparantly, he gets a lot of practice on Ecan 2.”

She sipped the drink, feeling more awake as it slid down her throat.

“I heard something in your voice back in the crime scene that I never thought I would.” Zy looked up. So much for skipping serious flirting. But he wasn’t looking directly at her and his expression was grim. “Desperation. What’s wrong?”

“Wrong? Nothing’s wrong.”

“You can lie better than that.”

Zy's Novel Post 13

“Knew I forgot something in my hurry. Don’t want to eat now.”

Xeryl made an exasperated sound. He leaned her against the stone block and held onto her shoulders. “You have to eat something.”

Zy pondered that “I can drink, something with gluclose. Can we get some hospitality or do we have to go to my saucer?”

He let go of her but waited a moment before going out the door. She was okay, she could walk. Besides, she needed another set of clothes. Her head spun, but she grabbed the door jamb. No slipping nor stumbling. Xeryl and D’pa spoke in undertones; she ignored them. “Mylte?”

Mylte straightened off the wall. “Yes, Mistress Zy?”

“Please go to the saucer and get me a clean jumpsuit like this one.” She gestured down, and saw the blood smeared on her knees. He looked doubtfully at the two whisperers. “It’s okay, the last thing they want is something to happen to me. Not when IGA knows I’m here.”

D’pa heard that and glared at her. Zy leaned against the door and started pulling off the gloves.

Mylte snapped his teeth together once. “Yes, Mistress Zy.” And moved down the corridor.

Xeryl took her arm. “There is a suite we can use. It’s this way.”




Zy rubbed her scalp vigorously with the towel.

Sunday, November 21, 2004

Zy's Novel Post 12 - Day 21

Day 21 of NaNo. 7583 total words. Don't even want to think about where I should be right now.

A through working of the scene is what she concentrated on. She collected samples from the blood under the body, nearest where X had stood, on the far wall, other spots on the floor. The vidrecorder took pics of all of them, triangulating their positions as well. She looked for fingerprints on the wall, but none were there. Course, the murderer could be from a species that didn’t leave fingerprints. She had them get an evidence vacuum in the hope of hair or fiber left behind, but she didn’t see any with the naked eye. All the while explaining to her notes and to Xeryl, who watched silently after the body was removed. She concentrated on what she had to do, trying to ignore the fact that nobody deserved to be processed like this.

She stood up. “Okay, we need to get this stuff to a qualified lab. I need to start interviewing people, starting with D’pa.” Her body swayed, despite her silent instructions not to.

Xeryl grabbed her arm and wrapped his arm around her waist. “Steady. Perhaps you’d best take a break first. Freshen up? You’ve been at this for hours.”

“That’s why we use cornorbots.” Zy leaned against him. She would fall down if she didn’t, at least, that’s what she kept telling herself. “They can process and we can talk, and talk, and talk. Can we get away from D’pa while we take a break?”

“A request for privacy is not what I expected from you.”

“If you let go of me, I fall down. That would be bad in front of D’pa.”

“Good point.” Xeryl shifted his hold a little. “Did you eat before starting this?”

“Knew I forgot something in my hurry. Don’t want to eat now.”

Monday, November 15, 2004

Zy's Novel Post 11 - Day 15

Day 15 of NaNo. Total words = 7403

After vidrecorder had pulled back, Zy bent down. The long tunic he wore was the same style as the Ecanians in the bar had worn, but his had braided trim along the edges. Gold, silver, blue, and green cords wrapped in an intric pattern. She could see the colors best in the trim on the hem. The material around his shoulders and chest had soaked up blood. The leg tentacle was stiff to the touch, the muscles hardened. “Note: rigor mortis has already set in.” The side of the tenatacle on the floor had a dark purple, nearly black tint to the skin. “Note: postmortem lividity shows that the body has not moved from this position.”

“All this gibberish means something?” Xeryl’s voice was behind her. Turning, she saw he was standing where she had stood far enough back not to bump her, and had a handkerchief out.

“It means the body hasn’t been moved since postmortem lividity and rigor mortis started. See the stuff that looks like a huge bruise on his leg?” Xeryl stepped closer and leaned over her to see. His breath was hot against her ear. “That’s actually the blood collecting in the lowest parts of the body.”

“And what is rigor mortis?” He said into her cheek before stepping back.

Zy swallowed hard. “How the body gets stiff after death. I’d need a pathologist specializing in Ecanian biology to tell me how long it’s been on going.”

“So you’re going to want an autopsy?”

“That’s a given. Have to rule out poisons and explosives.” She eased her way up to the left arm tentacle. “Note: finger tentacles splayed out as if going to strike. No defense wounds. The rigidity of the arm is most probably indicitive of cadaveric spasm. The victim was in the midst of gesturing to someone when death occurred.”

“Gesturing at his killer?” Xeryl offered.

“Must have been unless D’pa is sitting on a witness he hasn’t told us about.” She stood up. “It is possible that this murder was triggered by some kind of remote mechanism, but that’s not what we saw at Possatact’s crime scene.” She stood as close to the front of Fudlack’s chair as she could without stepping on the body, and scanned the wall with the door. “There.”

“There what?” Xeryl turned round, but didn’t leave his spot on the floor.

Zy eased her way to a section of stone wall to the right of the door. “Command: close up of this section, starting two meters above the floor. Note: the blood splatters don’t match the rest of the wall in this area.” While the vidrecorder was still taking the pics, she poked her head out the doorway. “Chalk or marking tape?”

“What are you seeing?” Xeryl frowned as she took the chalk and started drawing on the wall. “Fire and ice,” he muttered, as the humanoid shape was outlined, the chalk marking where the blood had not been.

“Note: X stood here to watch, same as with Possatact. And then some how escaped without being seen. Command: pics of the chalk outline.”

“I have never seen such depravity.” Xeryl covered his mouth briefly with the handkerchief.

“I have.” Zy closed her eyes. She could see the golden-yellow living room splattered in red. She opened her eyes to the current crime scene.

“What kind of monster could do this?”

“A serial killer.”

“By your tone of voice, I take it that the term serial killer means more than just killing in a series.”

“They have a compulsion to kill. They take pleasure in the killing. And they don’t stop until they’re stopped.”

“You’ve dealt with one before.”

“My first case, what made me decide to become an Agent. Not that any of that has any bearing on this.” She took a deep breath. “Course it could be a racketeer rubout trying to lok like a serial killer.”

“Rubout?”

“Another racketeer killing the boss to take over the organization.”

Xeryl shook his head. “Within an organization, yes that can happen. But trying to capture two or more system-wide organizations? You’d be as big as IGA and employing that many beings, and where’s the profit in that?”

She sighed, “I know, I was hoping for something normal. This was Fudlack’s office? He didn’t believe in paperwork?”

“Fudlack did his interviews and discussions in here. Record keeping was somewhere else.”

“Tell D’pa they can remove the body and I need an autopsy done.”

“You don’t want to give the orders?” Xeryl’s eyebrows quirked.

“I need to collect the blood evidence, and you can explain it to him in a way he’ll accept..”

Xeryl smiled. “I’ll do my diplomatic best.”

A through working of the scene is what she concentrated on. She collected samples from the blood under the body, nearest where X had stood, on the far wall, other spots on the floor. The vidrecorder took pics of all of them, triangulating their positions as well. She looked for fingerprints on the wall, but none were there. Course, the murderer could be from a species that didn’t leave fingerprints. She had them get a evidence vacuum in the hope of hair or fiber left behind, but she didn’t see any with the naked eye. All the while explaining to her notes and to Xeryl, who watched silently after the body was removed.

Saturday, November 13, 2004

Zy's Novel Post 10 - Days 10 - 12

Days 10 - 12 of NaNo. 725 words.




His smile got bigger. “Thank you.”

“You are so full of yourself.”

D’pa stepped out of the shadows again. “Come this way. Fudlack was killed in his office.” He led them to a branching hallway. Sunlight filled it through the large windows. You could see the skull parade from them as well. Two Ecanians stood next to a door along with a wheeled cart loaded with vials and boxes.

No sense wasting anyone’s time. Zy fitted the breather to her nose, and found a box of rubber-esque gloves. She spied the voice controlled vidrecorder as she pulled on a pair of gloves. It could audio record as well, perfect.

Xeryl pulled a pair of gloves from the box. His violet eyes looked at her, beaming with innocence that she didn’t believe.

“What are you doing?”

“Getting ready to go in with you.”

“I don’t need you to go in with me.”

“It’s better if two people go into a crime scene, and I’m not letting you go in there alone. Besides, I’m D’pa’s insurance that you will not desecrate Fudlack’s body.”

“She will not for if she does, we will execute her.”

“Is execution your answer to everything?” Zy looked at D’pa’s bland expression.

“It solves many issues.”

Zy took a deep breath, picked up the vidrecorder, and opened the door between the two guards. She was glad for the breather. Blood covered the room, darkened to a inky substance, in a fine spray in most spots to a congealed masses of something thicker on the stone walls, ceiling, and floor. Zy shut her eyes and swallowed hard. Show no weakness. She opened them again, turned on the audio, and sent the vidrecorder floating into the room. “Command: three hundred sixty degrees panoramic view of the room. Note: Fudlack crime scene First Standard Day of the Fifth Month year 1012. Command: take pics of the ceiling and floor. Note: people have walked through this crime scene, I don’t know how many yet.”

She followed the smeared and flattened trail through the blood on the floor into the room. It led from the door around the rectanglar stone block in the center of the room. The chair in front of the block was splattered on its back. Most of the seat was clean like the front of the block. Fudlack’s body was on the floor on the other side of the block between it and the second chair. This one was more ornate, clearly the boss’s chair, and also more blood soaked.

Fudlack was an Ecanian, and laid headless on the floor where he must have fallen once decapitated. “Command: pics of the body, all angles and close ups.” The vidrecorder flew down and focused the camera lense on Fudlack’s remains. “Note: the corpse as I found it.”

After vidrecorder had pulled back, Zy bent down. The long tunic he wore was the same style as the Ecanians in the bar had worn, but his had braided trim along the edges. Gold, silver, blue, and green cords wrapped in an intric pattern. She could see the colors best in the trim on the hem. The material around his shoulders and chest had soaked up blood. The leg tentacle was

DURING THE EXAMINING THE CRIME SCENE

“I have never seen such depravity.” Xeryl covered his mouth briefly.

“I have.” Zy closed her eyes. She could see the golden-yellow living room splattered in red. She opened her eyes to the current crime scene.

“What kind of monster could do this?”

“A serial killer.”

“By your tone of voice, I take it that the term serial killer means more than just killing in a series.”

“They have a compulsion to kill. They take pleasure in the killing. And they don’t stop until they’re stopped.”

“You’ve dealt with one before.”

“My first case, what made me decide to become an Agent. Not that any of that has any bearing on this.” She took a deep breath. “Course it could be a racketeer rubout trying to lok like a serial killer.”

“Rubout?”

“Another racketeer killing the boss to take over the organization.”

Xeryl shook his head. “Within an organization, yes that can happen. But trying to capture two or more system-wide organizations? You’d be as big as IGA and employing that many beings, and where’s the profit in that?”

Tuesday, November 09, 2004

Zy's Novel Post Nine - Day 9

Day 9 of NaNo. 285 words.

“What kind of tools do you require, Agent?” Zy hadn’t thought it possible to make her professional title sound so venomous. Another purple humanoid male like the ones from the bar stepped out of a doorway further down the foyer and strode toward them.

“D’pa, this is Zy. Zy, this is D’pa, Fudlack’s second-in-command.”

“Xeryl, I am not interested in becoming social with an IGA Agent. This is a matter we need no outsiders in.”

Zy bit back the retort she wanted to say. She was going to remember Murdock’s warning about her sarcasm and not give into it. “The outsiders need your help. Fudlack’s killer may have killed three other racketeers. If you handle it internally, those deaths will have no closure.”

D’pa frowned at her, but the impact was lessened since they were the same height. “What tools, Agent?”

She took a deep breath. So much for making friends. “Gloves for my hands, paper and plastic bags that can be sealed of different sizes, small vials made of glass with airtight lids, recording device, and Ecanians blood sample kit, evidence tags, and somebody ready to go get anything else that might be needed.”

“Wait here while I make the preparations.” D’pa turned on his heel and vanished into the shadows of the foyer.

Xeryl offered a small smile. “He really is a personable fellow.”

Zy peered down the hallway to make sure he was out of earshot. “After you get him drunk?”

“Please be civil.”

“This is me being civil.”

“I already gave him a list of what you may need to work with. It shouldn’t take that long.”

“How do you know what’s in a forensic collection kit?”

He smiled again. “Research. I’m not incompetent.”

“I have never said you were incompetent. Incorrigable, yes, but not incompetent.”

His smile got bigger. “Thank you.”

Monday, November 08, 2004

Zy's Novel Post Eight - Day 8

Day 8 of NaNoWriMo. 213 words.

Xeryl looked sympathetic. “As long as it doesn’t do anything to Fudlack’s body.” He glanced out the window. “We’re at the estate now.”

It was on the other side of Ursay from the saucer field. They entered through an imposing metal gate to a driveway outlined by poles each with a skull on top. “I see Fudlack and Dracula share the same decorator.” Zy turned from the window, clenching her stomach to stop its recoiling. The bruises didn’t appreciate that.

“Who is Dracula?”

“Someone from my home world.”

“You don’t talk much about your home world.” Xeryl straightened his suit jacket.

“Nothing left for me there. And neither do you.” The hover car stopped in front of the stone mansion. Zy took a deep breath as they went in the metal door. The foyer wasn’t as cavernous as Corbaine’s, but the ceiling was still lost in the darkness high above their heads. “Okay, I’m going to need some things to do a proper forensic examination of the body and the crime scene.” The ceiling carried her voice further than she intended.

Xeryl winced as heads turned to stare. “Have some respect for the dead.”

“I do respect the dead. That’s why I do this job.”

“What kind of tools do you require, Agent?” Zy hadn’t thought it possible to make her professional title sound so venomous.

Friday, November 05, 2004

Zy's Novel Post Seven - Day 5

Day Five. 280 words. Today not done yet.

Zy glanced at Xeryl’s face. His lips twitched, so he found amusement in Mylte’s answer. But his violet eyes were still angry. “His status is still undecided,” she admitted.

“Transportation is this way. We can contact D’pa about this mess from the vehicle.” Xeryl gestured, and Zy let him lead to the vehicle.

They settled in the back of the hover car, Mylte sitting next to Zy. She stayed quiet while Xeryl contacted whoever he needed to and during that short conversation. It had to be said, no matter how much she didn’t want to say it. “I’m sorry. I let my feelings cloud my judgment and disregarded your advice.”

“Should I be flattered that I get under your skin so well?”

Zy crossed her arms and stared at the tinted window. “You know me so well, don’t you.”

“Facets of your personality are quite enigmatic, but your animosity for me is right on the surface.”

“Then let’s focus on business. When did Fudlack die?”

“Two standard days ago. Ecanians have an aversion to robots, so I talked them into leaving the crime scene intact for you.”

“Great, another dead body all by lonesome.”

“You’re not alone, you have me. Stop shooting me with your glares. If I don’t stay, you’re going to end up executed.”

“And you don’t want that on your conscious.”

“Actually, no I don’t.”

“They do realize I’m going to need at least the analyzer bot, right?”

Xeryl shook his head. “Sorry, you can’t use it.”

Zy tried to suppress the shudder, but didn’t succeed fully. “Can I at least have a breather?”

Xeryl looked sympathetic. “As long as it doesn’t do anything to Fudlack’s body.”

Thursday, November 04, 2004

Zy's Novel Post Six Day 4

Day Four of NaNoWriMo. 1495 words.




Zy terminated the transmission, and let a strangled growl escape her throat. She pulled up the hyperspace calculations. Finish the downloads, bury Corbaine, and she could still make it to Ecan 2 by tomorrow. Good thing she could sleep in space.

She took a deep breath. Beat Xeryl to Ecan 2, nothing better than rubbing his smug face in it. That was the best plan. She pulled up what Sara was downloading. She couldn’t search it yet; she couldn’t read the language it was written in. She would have to wait until Sara had enough computing power to start searching. Sara needed to compare Corbaine’s employee list with the one she had for Ifeket. She would have to get a current list from Xeryl; Zy gritted her teeth. Looking for Ifeket and Possatact’s names would be the next step.

She got up and went to the door of the saucer. A stack of wood was already forming across the roadway to the doors of the bunker castle.




A rift in the thick purple clouds poured the orange setting sunlight onto the plateau. Zy pulled her leather jacket tighter around her. Where Mylte had found enough wood to make this pyre, she wasn’t going to ask. He had wrapped the corpse in a white sheet and set it on top, refusing any assistance from her. “My last service for Master” was his explanation.

He thrust the torch into the wood five times, waiting for the kindling to catch before moving it. He left it in the last time.

She cleared her throat when he stood next to her. “Would you like to say something for Corbaine?”

“I have no words, Mistress.”

Zy swallowed hard. Everybody should have something said at their funeral. “I haven’t had much use for God since I saw babies murdered. And I try not to think about the afterlife. I don’t know what kind of being you were before, and God will have to settle your afterlife. But I promise to catch whoever is responsible for your death. Rest in peace and don’t become a ghost or something. Amen.”

The fire crackled, wrapping around the sheet. They moved so they stood upwind of the thick, black smoke.

“How did that sound?”

“It sounded fine, Mistress.”




The Personal Journal of IGA Agent Zy

18.3.1012/July 20, 1998

Man, man, man, how did this happen! I don’t know what to do. Have to calm down while writing this down.

HE KISSED ME! Yeah, that’s calm. I’ve been working for the past week in Xeryl’s office. He’s not someone I would have pegged as a racketeer. He doesn’t feel sleazy like Ifeket does. What the hell I’m I listening to my feelings for? They’re just going to make the job more complicated.

Anyways, he had me drop him off at a meeting this afternoon. Someone else was picking him up. He’s good at drawing people out; we were chatting like old friends by the end of the ride. Then before he got out, he leaned over and kissed me. On the lips too, since I turned my head to see what the hell he was doing.

What am I going to do? Nobody covered what I should do if the shadow boss puts the moves on me!




Chapter Five




Word Box on Left

Ecan 2 is classified off-limits. The editors cannot stress this badly enough. Tourists have been hunted as sport, and their heads sent back to their nearest relations. IGA considers anyone going to this planet either suicidal or a criminal.

Galactic Travelers Savings Express




Sara freed up enough computing power to upload what IGA had written on Ecan 2. It matched the entry in Galatic Travelers Savings Express, but offered some more gruesome details like the pictures of the murdered tourists’ remains. Spaceport meant park on the outskirts of a town. Largest metropolis was Ursay, and Fudlack’s organization was headquartered there.

“Okay, Sara, I’m going to bed. Finish going through Corbaine’s records and land us outside of Ursay.”

“Acknowledge, Agent Zy.”

Sleep was hard. She kept waking up from stone hallways and funeral pyres. She had gotten enough hours to be functional, and was awake and dressed when the saucer landed.

She strapped her laser pistol gun belt around her waist. Mylte stood by the door out. “I want you to stay here, Mylte.”

“I cannot protect you if I remain here, Mistress.”

“I don’t need protection. They’re all out in the open, not hiding in dark hallways to pounce.” Mylte stared at her. “Just stay here. One less thing for me to worry about.” She locked the saucer, and headed into town.

Ursay was built out of low-slung, stone buildings. Nothing was taller than three stories. The streets were tarmac, and an assortment of wheeled and anti-grav vehicles parked and in use. Zy moved closer to the buildings, which seem to be the undesignated pedestrian crossing. The building at the end of the street seemed to be one of the local bars with brightly lit signs. When in need of information, a bar is usually the best place to pick it up.

She plunged into the darkened interior, not lingering in the doorway. Most of the bar patrons and the bartender were Ecanians. A few humanoids were mixed in.




Word box on Right
Ecanians have eight tentacles on a long trunk. The four lower are used as legs; the four lower have smaller tentacles for the grasping of smaller objects. The few that live outside the Ecan system do so in IGA prisons.

Ardley P’kins
Sentient Cultures of the Galaxy Third Edition




Zy sat at a table close to the bar, and ordered a drink from the tentacled waitress. Before she had a chance to survey the crowd, four humanoid men got up from their table and surrounded hers. “A pretty lady shouldn’t drink alone.” Zy didn’t recognize their species. “We should join you.” They seated themselves around the table.

“Make yourselves at home. Maybe you fellas can help me.”

“What’s your problem, pretty lady?” Their spokesman leaned in his chair, trying to do a sexy sprawl. His shirt hung open so you could see his pale purple chest.

“I need to see Fudlack. Can you point out any of his men to me?”

“Fudlack? What do you want with that boss when you got us?”

“That’s between me and Fudlack. Can you help me?”

Another one leaned forward, his red eyes glittering. “You have no business with Fudlack, if you think his underlings is the way into his organization.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?” Zy frowned.

“You better come with us.” He reached out for her arm.

Zy jerked it back. “Oh no, you don’t. I need to see Fudlack.”

“Part of you will see Fudlack, pretty lady.” The one who had spoke first laughed. The two men on the left and right grabbed her arms and hauled her out of the chair.

“Let me go!” She kicked her right leg back, but he moved his leg out of the way.

“Take it outside!” The bartender yelled. “I don’t want to clean the bar again.”

She planted her feet on the floor but they jerked them loose. They dragged her into the street and forced her to her knees. Her gun was jerked out of the holster.

The one who told her she had no business with Fudlack reached under his jacket and pulled out a knife as long as his arm. “We will not be disturbed by….” A dark grey blue landed on his back. The grey arm grabbed the purple wrist and stabbed the knife into the purple chest. Mylte flipped off the falling body and landed on the street.

The other pale purple man swung at Mylte, but the lithe fighter ducked and kicked. The kick swept his legs out from under the man.

Zy kicked with her right leg. The man on her right was hit, but didn’t let go. He let go when Xeryl spun him around and punched him in the face. “Fire and ice, Zy! Why didn’t you call me!”

The last purple man standing tried to run. Zy jumped to her feet, grabbed his amr, and jerked him to a stop. Her right fist connected with his jaw and he crumpled. She kicked him in the torso just to make sure he stayed down.

Xeryl grabbed her arm, and yanked her to face him. “I told you how this organization is! This is my field of expertise. I have spent years learning how the racketeers operate, years of experience you’re not going to get if you keep reacting out of stubbornness!”

The grey talon latched on the Xeryl’s outstretched arm. Mylte snarled as the cloth constricted under the talon. Xeryl’s fingers opened up and released Zy.

“Mylte! Let him go. He wasn’t going to hurt me.” She frowned at Xeryl’s still grimacing face. “And I was not reacting out of stubbornness.”

“Oh please. You hate the potentiality of me being right about something, so dive into it to prove you don’t need me. And I thought you didn’t work with partners.” He glared at Mylte, who glared back.

“He’s not my partner, he’s my witness. And I told you to stay in the saucer.”

Mylte didn’t take his eyes from Xeryl. “I could not protect you from the saucer, Mistress.”

Wednesday, November 03, 2004

Zy's Novel Post Five Day 3

Day Three of NaNoWriMo. 1049 words.

She would need an employee list. And maybe what the three victims met on is still in Corbaine’s records. If he had any left. “Mylte? Did they loot all the computer records too?”

“I do not know for certain, Mistress. They took computer equipment, but the information may still be there.”

“Okay, we’ll have to go see.” Zy unplugged the vidplayer and readied it for traveling. “Sara, what to use to make an interface between you and Corbaine’s computers?”

“The green cords in the storage room. You should find one with the correct port connections.”

Mylte trotted after Zy as they went a little ways down the curving hallway of the saucer to the storage room. She was getting used to that. And it made it easy for her to give the green cords to him, and grab the vidplayer when they left the saucer. She put on a breather before entering Corbaine’s former headquarters. It was a small device that held a filter and fitted over the end of her nose with inserts into the nostrils. Less cumbersome than a gas mask, but it didn’t offer any protection from a chemical attack. It just kept bad smells away.

“We’ll start in the communications room, or whatever the heck it was.” She stopped in the doorway and surveyed the electronic mess.

“It was used to contact other, Mistress.”

“Well, look for a port that matches at least one of those cords.” Zy gingerly moved across the room to start looking from the other end of the control panel. “Still has lights on, guess that means we have power.”

“I tried to turn things off in other areas, but I did not understand how with this equipment, Mistress.”

“Reading other languages is always a problem. I think I found it, let me see the cords.” She picked up a set of headphones blocking her view and tossed them over her shoulder. The vidplayer rested on the board without activating anything, and one of the cords fit between the two ports.

She looked at the screen. Contact established. Downloading all contents. Estimated time to completion: 3 standard hours.

“Sara found something.” Zy rubbed her face. “So now we have to make a decision.”

Mylte blinked his black eyes.

“We have to give Corbaine a funeral or something. I’m not living him here to rot. What do you think would be the best way to… well, dispose of the body?”

“Master told me once the tradition of his people is fire.”

“A funeral pyre?”

“Yes, shall I start preparations, Mistress?”

“Go ahead, I don’t need you for this.”

He pointed to the screen. “It is flashing.”

There is an incoming transmission. Cannot open at the remote location.

“Somebody wants to talk to me at the saucer. You get things started.” Zy ignored his affirmatives, and pulled the breather off as soon as she reached the outside. The only other vidplayer communicator was in her bunk. She sat down at the cubicle attached to the wall. The sender had encrypted it to hide his identity. She sighed, and activated the transmission, “Hello?”

“You look ravishing, Zy.” Xeryl grinned on the screen. “You and Corbaine getting along?”

“I’m burying him.” She propped her chin in her hands.

“I know you don’t approve of his profession, but I don’t think that will help your current investigation. Not to mention how your superiors frown on killing off suspects.” He leaned back in his chair.

“I found him dead. Self-inflected shot to the head in a room full of witnesses who he was begging to stop him. My witness thought he reached the body first and found the gun missing.”

Xeryl straightened. “Other than the witnesses, that’s exactly how we found Ifeket.”

“Based on forensics, he died before Ifeket. Maybe the killer learned something between the two.”

“And learned a new way of killing altogether for Possatact and Fudlack.” He fingered his braid.

Zy sat up. “Who’s Fudlack?”

“The newest murder victim, established in the Ecan system for 10 standard years. His headquarters is on Ecan 2, and that’s where he was killed.”

“And you know about this how?”

“I’m in the process of negotiating a trade deal with Fudlack. His death puts a hamper on that, but I thought we could gather some clues. Yes, that’s the phrase you used before.”

“What do you mean we?”

“You’re not going to be able to talk to any of Fudlack’s people without me. Their philosophy is to kill off law enforcement of any stature.”

“So I’m supposed to accept your protection? I don’t believe this! Who’s the Agent, me or you?”

“I have a vested interest in seeing Possatact’s murderer punished.”

“Because he messed with your plans, and it’s convient to have IGA do your dirty work. It’s not like your care because you liked Possatact or something.”

“Aren’t you the one who kicked him in the gut when he exposed you? If liking the victim makes you a good investigator, you’re the least qualified.”

“It’s my job! One you forced on me because you wouldn’t have any other Agent take Murdock’s place.”

“To see you again! And now you need my help.”

“Says you!”

“Calm down. I just want to help you get through Fudlack’s remaining organization. You’ll end up with your head on a pole if you try kicking them in the collective guts.”

“I don’t work with a partner.”

Xeryl leaned back again. “You are entirely too pessimistic. The situation isn’t that bad.”

“I do not work with a partner. Any partner!”

“Stop being unreasonable.”

“I’m not being unreasonable!”

“Screaming doesn’t help.”

Zy terminated the transmission, and let a strangled growl escape her throat. She pulled up the hyperspace calculations. Finish the downloads, bury Corbaine, and she could still make it to Ecan 2 by tomorrow. Good thing she could sleep in space.




A rift in the thick purple clouds poured the orange setting sunlight onto the plateau. Zy pulled her leather jacket tighter around her. Where Mylte had found enough wood to make this pyre, she wasn’t going to ask. He had wrapped the corpse in a white sheet and set it on top, refusing any assistance from her. “My last service for Master” was his explanation.

Tuesday, November 02, 2004

Zy's Novel Post Four - Day 2

Day Two of NaNoWriMo. 718 words.

Zy stared at the ground. She didn’t want him around because she would be responsible, but if she didn’t let him serve she would be responsible for his death. Holmes and Watson didn’t have that kind of relationship, and she didn’t even want a partner. There has to be a way to get him back to his people. You can’t pick up companions like stray puppies. Best to treat him the same as any other witness. “So Mylte, what did you do for Cobaine?”

“I protected him. Master had great caution for his life, though lately it had gone extreme.”

“Paranoia?”

“Yes, though I suppose it was justifiable in hindsight.”

“When did the caution change to paranoia?”

“Almost five months ago.”

“Local months?”

“Yes. Why does that matter?”

“Possatact, Ifeket, and Corbaine were involved and now they’re all dead. Maybe we can figure out what made him jumpy, we have a possibility into why they were killed.” Zy pulled her knees close and rested her chin on them. “Course, it’s equally possible that these murders are unrelated, but I don’t think so. Ifeket’s and Cobaine’s were both self-inflicted laser pistol wounds and then the gun disappeared—implying that someone was there to take it. In Cobaine’s case, someone a whole room ful of people could not see. Possatact’s head explodes for no reason and someone was there to watch it, but left no clue as to who he, she, or it was.” She looked back at Mylte. “Does that make sense?”

“Complicated, but subtle. Most killers are not subtle in Master’s world. Cunning to keep from being caught, but not subtle.”

“I know. Makes me think X wanted to play with them, torture them.”

Mylte’s head tilted as he looked down at her. “X? Who is X?”

“X is how you refer to the killer until you know who it is.”

“Why not just the killer?”

“X is quicker to write down.”

Mylte didn’t say anything to that, just turned and looked at the sky between the mountains. The familiar whine of engines grew louder. The silver of the saucer flashed sunlight as it slowly hovered into view. It moved over the cregs of the mountains. Zy stood up, and moved closer to the building. It moved slowly, but still kicked up the dust as it settled on the landing struts. Zy shielded her eyes.

The ramp slid out perpendicular to the door of the building. Zy grinned as she went in. “Perfectly executed, Sara.”

“Thank you, Agent Zy.”

Zy caught Mylte trailing after her and looking for the source of the voice. “Sarabel is the model computer that runs the saucer. I call her Sara for short. We’ve got a passanger for a while. His name is Mylte.”

“Greetings, Mylte. Or do you prefer another form of address?”

“Mylte is fine.” He turned to Zy. “What would you have me do now, Mistress?”

“First, we get you a bunk set up. Then we’re going to investigate.”




Zy was loathe to admit it, but Mylte was coming in handy. He could deliver the analyzerbot without gagging or vomitting or otherwise ruining what evidence was left. Though he had done a far job of ruining it by setting up the neverending wake.

She needed to find some more of Cobaine’s ex-employees to corraborate Mylte’s story. How to do that when they could have ran to any planet’s seamy side, no answers were forthcoming. So she turned to seeing what the throne room had left to tell.

Laser blast residue on the wall behind the throne. Sara calculated that it fit the trajectory of the blast that went through Corbaine. And the angle of the shot through Corbaine’s temple was consistant with a self-inflected wound. And correlating what was known of this Rvana 8’s inscects and how long it took them to grow, Corbaine had been dead for about sixty Standard days. The arid climate and Mylte’s constant care kept the worse decomposure away.

She pulled up a calander. Ifeket was killed 3.4.1012. Corbaine was killed on or about 14.2.1012, before she infiltrated Ifeket’s organization. Corbaine was killed first. When did that meeting take place between all thress of them? It was the end of last year, and Xeryl hadn’t known anything about it.

Corbaine was killed two months ago and nobody found out? His ex-employees didn’t say anything? Zy wouldn’t normally credit them with being so closed-mouth. Maybe it had something to do with the demon rumor.

Monday, November 01, 2004

Zy's Novel Post Three - Day 1

Day One of NaNoWriMo. 441 words.

Zy jerked her hand back. “No, no, no, no. This won’t work. I can’t have a servant.”

“I must serve. You are the only one to serve, Mistress.” His tone sound just like Zy’s Algrebra teacher had sounded when the class just wasn’t getting it: slow, patient, and obviously think I’m dealing with a moron.

“My name is Zy.”

“Yes, Mistress Zy.”

She slumped against the wall. “I’m pretty sure IGA has regulations that we can’t have servants. They have to have regulations, we investigate slavers.” She took a deep breath. “Mylte is your name?”

“Yes, Mistress.” Mylte’s black eyes never left her face.

“And most agents have to worry about their witness disappearing on them.” She pushed off the wall. “Okay, the first thing that needs to be done is to examine the remains. Let’s get outside.”

The sunlight hurt her eyes, but she only brought her hand up to turn off the flashlight. The sun hovered in the crevice of the valley. “What anti-saucer defenses are active?”

“Nothing is active. The coculas took the guns when they ran, Mistress.”

“Don’t let the threat of a demon stop the looting.” Zy opened the communication channel with Sara again. “Update, Sara. Cobaine is dead. Apparently the headquarters is deactivated, but the landing strip is big enough. Bring the saucer up to the source of the signal on a cautious route.”

“Acknowledged, Agent Zy.”

Zy sat down on the doorstep. She looked back up at Mylte, who stared back impassively. “Can I have my gun back?”

It emerged from his robe. “My apologies, Mistress.”

“Don’t worry about it. What,” she paused and started over again. “I’m not trying to be rude, really, but what species are you?”

“We call ourselves the Ones Who Hide With Color. Master had a different name for his records.”

The Ones Who Hide With Color; sometimes the nanobots translators translated too well. But then he said things that were untranslatable. “Are you speaking two different languages?”

“I learned Master’s. His employees could not understand me.”

“That makes sense.” She pulled off the flashlight band and rubbed her forehead. Her desire to do anything sank through her butt to the stone. “So there’s no way to avoid this betah thing if you don’t serve?”

“I could end the Mylte cycle. I’m not prepared to do that.”

She stared up at the grey statue. “End the cycle? Kill yourself?”

“The act would restore the honor I have tarnished, but I would rather restore the honor by serving.”

Zy stared at the ground. She didn’t want him around because she would be responsible, but if she didn’t let him serve she would be responsible for his death.

Wednesday, October 27, 2004

The Blue Man Post Four

There was a rustle in the back yard. Had one of the kids escaped? She got up slowly, and crawled to the corner of the house. The back yard was fenced in with large, flowering shrubs that filled the area with a cloying scent. The French doors between the house and the patio stood open. But the yard was empty.

Cyndia stood up and left the corner of the house. How to tell the police? Intrepid amateurs were always accused of being the murderer. Skipping that would be great. And she had to tell Murdock. He’d want to see the crime scene while there was still a way in.

If she hadn’t been staring at the lighted doorway, she would have seen the movement in the shadows of the yard. What she did see and turned toward was the arm in motion.

Her elbow dug into the grass when she hit the ground. The dark blur jumped to land on her legs. She pulled them out of the way and kicked back. He fell on his back. No knife, otherwise he wouldn’t have punched. Cyndia pounced, landing on his torso. She punched his jaw and then hit him again. “You murdering, feathered psycho!”

Thestern rolled Cyndia onto her back. His hands latched onto her throat. Breathing isn’t optional, and she pounded on his arms. “You disturb God’s name.” He let her go and ran through the yard.

She had to lay there, sucking down air to cool her burning lungs. Where was he going now? She crawled about halfway around the house before getting enough strength back to stand up. Staggering across the street to the Baton yard, Cyndia heard a loud splash in the lake. “Great, he thinks he’s the Creature from the Black Lagoon now.”

The Baton house was still empty. Tonight was Bingo night; Mrs. Baton wouldn’t be back for another hour. Cyndia crawled back in through her bedroom window. That should be plenty of time to consult with Murdock. She grabbed a flashlight and the house keys.

The lake only showed a few ripples in a slight fog over it in the flashlight beam.

#

“Murdock?” The spaceship door was still open. “You’re going to get found out if you don’t shut the door.” Cyndia staggered up the ramp.

The orange mass formed a face that looked at her as she came in. “What happened to you?”

“Thestern killed another family. I had a fight with him. He jumped in the lake, I think.”

“The Odrichans are an aquatic species.” He got up from the desk and cupped her chin with a tentacle. “Your skin is discoloring.”

Now she could feel the throbbing across her cheekbone. It hurt to the touch. “He smacked me hard. He said I was disturbing God’s name.”

Murdock had reformed into the humanoid shape. The eye hollows looked down at her. “You fought with Thestern. Do you have any concept of how doltish that was?”

“He hit me first!” Cyndia jerked away and threw herself into a chair. “What does disturbing God’s name mean?”

“I do not know.”

“Didn’t you guys do a psych evaluation when you had him in custody? Psychiatric,” she added to his blank look.

“There was not enough time and the Odrichans did not. This is frustrating; I’m too far apart from where I need to be.”

Tuesday, October 26, 2004

The Blue Man Post Three

Cyndia took a deep breath and took a swipe at the moistness leaking from her eyes. She needed a nap. Yes, that would make her feel better after all this.

#

Pounding heart, what had woken her up? Cyndia blinked in her darkened bedroom before looking at the red numbers of the clock radio. She had been asleep for hours. The unofficial bedtime for the subdivision had already passed.

Cyndia went to her bedroom window. Funny, the bedroom lights at the Johnsons’ across the street were still on. She grabbed her tennis shoes and out them on. The Johnsons’ were usually the first ones out. She eased opened the window and eased out into the flowerbed. The garden stake marking what plant was planted here made sure that the window didn’t shut and lock.

Nobody else was out in the yards or the street to see her sprint to the Johnsons’. Cyndia didn’t want to be mistaken for a murdering prowler tonight. Their living room had a window that faced the side yard. She could peek there without being seen.

She got between the two shrubs planted under the window to prevent easy access. One branch dug into her cheek but she ignored it. Her brown eyes eased up over the window sill. The room was obscured by something red splattered on the glass, a fine red spray.

Cyndia jerked back. The branch snagged her hair and cut her cheek. She landed on her butt and hands. The back of her head hit the fence. Too late, too late, why did she go to sleep?

There was a rustle in the back yard. Had one of the kids escaped? She got up slowly, and crawled to the corner of the house.

Monday, October 25, 2004

Zy's Novel Post Two

Probably the other reason for not getting as much done, I was distracted by getting this part ready to post. Also discovered an oopsie with the calender in the journal of Chapter One. If I get a few second I have to fix that and other oopsies.


The Personal Journal of IGA Agent Zy

1.6.1012/September 16, 1998

I never wanted anyone to be responsible for. Partners ended up dead and you have to do something, Sam Spade was right about that. And look at poor Jessica Fletcher. Everybody she knew either ends up as a corpse or has a corpse thrust on them. Spare the ones you love that.

And what would an IGA agent need with a bodyguard? You’re trained to be able to handle any emergency. But after he saved my life and refused to go home, what could I do?


Pressure bore down onto Zy’s back between her shoulder blades. Her spine cracked. A hand fumbled with the holster on her hip for only a second before drawing out her gun. “Coculas.” The voice was deep but had a hiss to it, like air being forced through many holes. “You come to kill me with this? You show more courage than the others.”

The light reflecting from the floor dazzled her eyes. Have to get this guy off. She pushed up with her arms. The pressure on her back increased, and she gasped for breath.

“Coculas. You will join our Master in death. I will guard him. It is all you and the tkultar have left me. It is all you deserve after abandoning him.”

“I think you’ve made a mistake. I am IGA Agent Zy, here to talk to Cobain about some murders.”

“IGA?” The pressure easied slightly.

“Inter-Galactic Agency for the Apprehension of Felsons and the Investigation of Criminal Activities. Somebody decided to make a shorter name with IGA. I am an official representative, and if anything happens to me, you won’t like the consequences and repercussions.”

“Another organization with business for Master?” There was a rapid clinking sound as the pressure left her back. “You come too late.”

“What do you mean by that?”

“I will show you.” Two talons grabbed her upper arms and lifted her up so she could scramble her legs back underneath her. “Straight.”

Was it worth getting shot with your own gun just to catch a glimpse of your attacker’s face when you wouldn’t have a chance to share that information with anyone? Zy decided not and started walking down the hall.

The smell was getting even stronger, but she couldn’t rummage in her pouch for the breather. The guy behind her would see it as going for a weapon.

The hall opened into a large room, and Zy gagged on the stench. Two torches burned on the other end, wafting thick, black smoke toward the celing. It must be a type of throne room judging by the artwork carved into the wall and the raised platform underneath the torches. A cloth-draped table was on top of that platform with a body laid on it.

She managed to cross the woobly room. The being was six-feet long (use metric equivalent) from the top of the skin hood above the head to the tip of its tail. Cybernetic arms had been crossed over the chest area and gleamed in the flickering light. The jaw hung open, and empty eye sockets stared up at the ceiling. Not quite empty, something white and wormy wiggled out onto the cheek. Dried blood led up to a small hole on the left temple. It was a straight line from there to the missing right back corner of skull and skin hood. More white fat worms wiggled in the gore revealed by her flashlight. The winged insects took flight, darting straight toward her face. Zy batted them away and saw a multi-legged centipede thing with iridescent blue exoskelteton as long as her arm wind its way out of the mouth.

Her stomach rebelled, and she choked back the nausa. It turned to dizziness, and washed over her head with a wave. She sat on the platform edge, bending over so her head was almost between her knees. He was dead, as dead as the corpses Patricia Cornwell never glossed over in her books. Training hadn’t prepared her for this. IGA Agents always came in after the impartial robots dealt with the mess.

The being who had escorted her to this death chamber expelled air, which hissed through many holes again. He stepped on the platform and stood next to her. She could hear a brushing noise. “Stay off Master.” He stepped back down once he was finished.

Zy swallowed hard. How long had he been sweeping off bugs? She couldn’t take this. She couldn’t do this. Ifeket had been different; Xeryl had had cornorbots. She went to his rooms with a breather after the body was taken away to be buried. Nobody told her how to deal with a dead body on a backwater planet. This place was so backwater, it didn’t even dispose of the dead. Even Earth had funeral arrangements. Earth also had training with real dead bodies. The poor dead guy, the poor dead guy.

Tears welled in her eyes. “He died and everyone else ran away. They couldn’t even bury him? Instead of leaving him here like the rest of the junk they didn’t want?” She jerked her head up to find her assailant.

He sidestepped to not be blinded by the flashlight. Sharp, needle-like teeth interlocked perfectly on his massive jaws that extended in a snout from his bald head. His grey skin looked rough, like reptile hide. She couldn’t remember ever seeing mention of his species before. The sleeves of the loose grey monk robe he wore covered his hands. His head titled as he blinked his black eyes. “You mourn Master?” (Description needs to be broken apart more.)

“He doesn’t deserve to be treated like road kill, no matter how horrible he was!” Zy roughly wiped her cheeks. “That’s Cobaine, isn’t it?”

“That is what the tkultar left of Cobaine, yes.”

“Do you know what happened? Who killed him?”

“His employees, the coculas, said it was a demon. He held the gun in his hand and brought it up to his head,” he pantomimed the action with her gun, “while screaming for us present to stop the one making him do it. No one there was close enough to force him. Master fired the gun. I reached his body first through the confusion and the gun was gone. The lieutenant saw the gun was missing and screamed demon. The coculas ran.”

“The gun was missing? Somebody pried it out of those cybernetic hands, somebody you couldn’t see?”

“That is right. There are still shavings from the gun on the claws.”

Zy considered standing to look, but her head still felt light. “Somebody took Ifeket’s gun too.”

“The tkultar has killed others?”

“Possibly Ifeket. Possatact’s head exploded, a different M.O. But these three guys were linked. Why haven’t you buried him? Or cremated him?”

“I must serve.”

“He’s dead.”

“I must serve. As long as Master lies in wait, I can serve.”

“He’s dead now. That usually means you’re free.”

“I cannot be free until the honor has been repaid.”

“Honor of being a slave?”

“I am betah. Unless I serve my master for five years, I will remain a betah forever.”

Being a betah must be fairly horrible if brushing bugs off a dead body looked good by comparison. Zy didn’t think she could keep the bile down any longer. “I have to go.” She stood up and the room spun so fast around her it returned with only slight rocking. Cobaine’s servant grabbed her arm, a solid rock next to her. “I have to go.”

“Go where?”

She closed her eyes. “Go find an invisible killer demon thing. Go someplace where I can breath. Breathing first, then demon.”

“You are breathing.”

“But the smell is making me sick!”

“Smell? Ah, no choice over odors to taste.” His teeth clacked together. “We shall adjourn.” His steps moved her closer to the door, and she wanted not to lean so heavily on his shoulder. The air grew fresher the further back down the hall they went. “Are you a warrior?”

“I’ve had fight training.”

“You hunt demons with only training?”

Zy took a deep breath. The decaying odor at this level she could tolerate. “I doubt it’s a demon. But someone made Cobaine commit suicide in a room full of witnesses. That someone is a murderer and it’s my job to catch them.” The planet was finally steady under her feet.

“Are you only trained to do that as well?”

“I’ve solved five cases successfully! And I’m going to solve this one!”

His expression was unreadable. “What will you do with the tkultar once you find him?”

“Turn him over to my superiors with all of the evidence, and he will be judged and punished.” She hoped his culture had something resembling those concepts.

He snapped his jaws together three times, each time sounding like a mousetrap slamming on a hapless victim. “You serve Master by punishing the killer. Mylte will now serve you to serve Master and fulfill the obligation of betah.” He knelt on one knee, and placed her hand on top of his head.

The Blue Man Post Two

Did not get as much done today that I had hoped. Always bad on Mondays.


“Hey!” The shout jerked Cyndia to the present.

Billy O’Neal put his hands on his hips. “Are you supposed to be here?”

“No, I’m hiding. Could you be quiet about it?”

“I left my Spider-man in the tree house. Can I get it?”

“Sure.”

He scrambled up the rope ladder and brought the Spider-man action figure down in his teeth. Deciding not to leave the yard, he sat on the grass in front of Cyndia. “Mommy says Frank and Harry ain’t coming back. They had to go to Heaven.”

“Your mommy’s right.” Cyndia pulled her knees in and rested her chin on them.

“Mommy says the cops are going to catch the man who killed them.”

“That’s what cops do. Even cops from outer space.”

“There’s cops in outer space?”

“There has to be cops every where.”

Billy thought about that. “Yeah, I guess so. But how will we know when the cops catch him?”

There was a tapping noise on the window. The cylinder tapped against the glass. Cyndia opened the window and it zipped past them, heading over the lake to the forest.

She looked down at Billy’s wide eyes. “Well if our cops catch him, it’ll be on the news. If the outer space cop catches him, I’ll tell you.”

Billy turned from Cyndia to track the cylinder. “Wow.”

“Hey, don’t tell anybody okay? We don’t want a cop hunted like E.T.”

“No, ma’am. I got to go home now. Bye.”

Cyndia took a deep breath and took a swipe at the moistness leaking from her eyes. She needed a nap. Yes, that would make her feel better after all this.

Friday, October 22, 2004

The Blue Man Post One

# - marks section break




The Blue Man on the Porch
“Still not back.” Cyndia dropped The Whitechapel Horror onto the couch. She stretched as she moved toward the kitchen, and glanced toward the front door.
The blue man with a butcher knife locked eyes with her. Cyndia hesitated and lunged for the rusty shotgun her foster mother kept in the umbrella stand next to the door. She rammed it against her shoulder.
The blue man had disappeared from the front door window.
Her chewing gum cemented in her mouth. The back door was locked; she always locked up when left at the house alone. She moved to the back of the living room. She could see both the front door, down the hall to the bedrooms, and the archway to the kitchen, and could jump out the window if necessary. The cordless phone sat on the end table until she grabbed it.
“911. Please state the nature of your emergency.”
“There’s an intruder outside the house. He had a knife.” Cyndia took a deep breath and leaned her back against the wall. She answered the operator’s questions while balancing the shotgun on her shoulder. “I’m here alone. I looked out the front door and saw him through the window. Big knife, butcher knife. Can you give the cops a code word? Okay. There are three entrances, the front door, the patio door, and the back door through the garage. All doors locked, but the garage is open. My foster mother isn’t back yet. My name is Cyndia Taeurs. He was blue. No ma’am, not wearing blue, his skin was blue. It could have been make-up.”
Blue lights flashed from outside. Voices came up to the front porch and then moved back.
She kept the operator on the line until there was knocking at the back door. She eased into the kitchen, keeping her back toward a wall.
“Miss Taeurs? It’s the police. Cagney and Lacey.”
“The police are here.” She ended the call and opened the back door. Two uniformed officers had their guns drawn. Cyndia pointed the shotgun at the floor. “It’s not loaded.”
“Are you injured?” The younger officer with sympathetic blue eyes asked.
“No, I’m fine.”
“Officer Hilden is going to check to the rest of the house. Show me where you saw the intruder.”
Cyndia led him into the living room while his partner headed down the hall. “I was reading on the couch. I got up and saw him at the front door. Grabbed empty shotgun and he was gone. Backed away and called 911, Officer?”
“Peterson. Did you notice if he was bleeding?”
“No, but I only saw waist up. He was blue and had a butcher knife. You found blood out there?”
Officer Peterson frowned. “What do you mean he was blue?”
“His face was blue.”
“A mask?”
“No, his skin was blue.” Cyndia pressed against the door window to see the blood they had seen. “Oh, the neighbors are coming over. Do you need to put up the yellow tape?”
Officer Peterson said something under his breath. “Hilden, we’ve got to protect the scene!” He yelled down the hall.
The taller officer with a bald head came back to the living room. “Rest of the house is clean.”
“Backup ain’t here yet and we have onlookers arriving.” A roll of thunder punctuated the statement. “And now the weather.”
“First that weird plane crash, now this.”
Cyndia put the shotgun back in the umbrella stand and followed them into the kitchen.
“Miss Taeurs, you stay here.”
“The hell I am. What if that guy decides to circle around and come through the patio? Besides, I know the crime scene rules: don’t touch anything, don’t touch anything, don’t touch anything.”
The two cops exchanged why-did-it-have-to-be-us looks, but made no more arguments as they headed out the back door. Hilden moved to the crowd gathering in the front yard. Peterson went to the patrol car and came back with a roll of the crime scene barricade tape. “Just stay back.” Peterson told her as he moved toward the porch.
“Did you guys walk in Mrs. Baton’s flowerbed?” Cyndia frowned at the trampled daylily.
“No,” Peterson looked down. “Geez, we’ve got a footprint. What kind of shoes was this perp wearing?”
Cyndia moved closer. What she could make out in the black potting soil reminded her of a duck’s foot. Swimming fins would be longer. The wind gusted. “You better pour the plaster soon. I think it’s going to rain.”
This time Peterson didn’t bother muttering the swear word. “We don’t have plaster. Forensics has plaster.” (Double check)
That was a dumb move. Cyndia trotted into the garage and scanned the storage shelves. The long plastic box holding Christmas ornaments looked wide enough. Eyes and brains might solve the crime, but you had to have admissible evidence for court. And Forensics always gets to the scene after everybody else.
She dumped the boxes of ornaments gently onto the concrete floor. A swipe with the hem of her T-shirt made sure she wasn’t transferring any debris. Then she presented the plastic box to Peterson. “This should cover the footprint.”
“Resourceful, aren’t you?” He carefully set the translucent box over the portion of the flowerbed. The yellow tape was wrapped around the porch columns.
“If you can’t roll with the punches, you wind up dead.”
Screams turned everyone’s head to a nearly identical house one lot over.
Peterson threw down the yellow tape. “Hell, now what!” He ran toward the screams. “Hilden, keep them here!”
Cyndia ran after Peterson. The Millers’ front door was open, and Mrs. Gregory stood on the threshold screaming. Peterson pulled his gun and he joined her. His other hand grabbed the walkie-talkie clipped to his shoulder. “_________________________. Found a homicide site. Two bodies visible. Alert homicide and send more backup.”
Mrs. Gregory sobbed now, collapsing against Cyndia. Red splattered on the golden-yellow walls. Mr. Miller lay in front of the door on his stomach. A puddle of blood spread over the ceramic tile right inside the door. Mrs. Miller sat on the couch, her head bent over the back with her chin pointing at the ceiling. Cyndia hugged Mrs. Gregory.
“How many people live here?” Peterson still hadn’t holstered his gun.
“They … they have three kids.”
“Stay here and don’t touch anything.” He stepped into the house, avoiding the blood and the body.
Cyndia hugged Mrs. Gregory. The older woman showed no signs of stopping, and the shoulder of Cynthia’s T-shirt was already soaked. She frowned watching Peterson step around bloodstains on the carpet. Stains that looked the same as the footprint in the flowerbed.
#
Morning sunlight poured into the kitchen. Cyndia sat down at the end of the kitchen table, as far from Mrs. Baton and the stove as she could get without leaving the room. She felt like Mrs. Gregory was still attached to her shoulder, even though that had happened hours ago.
“We can’t go on the front porch.” Mrs. Baton gave the grits a quick stir. “And the poor Millers. This used to be such a good neighborhood.” She glanced at Cyndia, pursing her lips.
Cyndia cast her eyes down at the kitchen table. The cops had already interrogated her enough. More commentary from her foster mother wasn’t necessary. She had missed something in Mrs. Baton’s tirade.
“All those stupid mysteries you read, planting ideas in your head. You just dreamed up a prowler.”
“Right and my imaginary friend broke into the Millers, killed them, sauntered over here, and left imaginary blood on the porch.”
“Don’t get impertinent. You just wanted an excuse to call the police. And they actually had the nerve to tell me where I should keep that old shotgun. We don’t need the notoriety and you just revel in it. We’ll never get people to move out here now.”
Cyndia slammed her hands on the table as she pushed herself up. “If I hadn’t called the cops, we wouldn’t have found the Millers until they started decomposing!” She stormed out the patio door.
The late morning sunshine thawed her skin. Being a moody teenager had its advantages; Mrs. Baton didn’t follow her to the back yard to continue the tirade. Probably calling her case worker to tattle on the latest insolence.
She walked to the bench set next to the hedge blocking the yard from the trees. The lake lapped slightly with the breeze, so she watched the ripples kiss the shore that touched the yard. She was tired, up all night, answering the questions of detectives who doubted her judgment. Well-read detectives, one hadn’t liked it at all when she said Inspector Lestrade was mentally quicker and Inspector Japp had better manners.
Her pointy chin rested on her knees. He hadn’t been wearing a mask or make-up. She was ready to swear to that in court.
A bright light hit the back of the house like a camera flash. Paparazzi already? Shouldn’t they still be taking pictures of the Millers’ house? She stood up to look. All that was beyond the hedge was the still heavily wooded area not cleared for house. And the silver dome that had ballooned among them.
Anything that doesn’t fit the pattern must be investigated. Cyndia pushed through the gap in the hedge into the park.
The tall trees filtered the sunlight. The underbrush was kept cut down to prevent anyone not buying because it is unattractive. The silver dome was actually a life-sized, flying saucer right from a faked UFO picture. She touched the smooth surface. It felt like a car, only thicker. It was parked at the edge of the trees and an open patch. She pressed against the metal and it didn’t dent. Thicker than a car.
Something flickered. The silver metal vanished, leaving trees everywhere. But the saucer was still here, she could feel the smooth metal under her fingers. A sliver of light cut the trees. She ran her hand along the saucer, moving closer to it. It was a door with a ramp to the ground. Cyndia walked up the ramp. Too bad I don’t have a camera.
Inside was a normal-sized room, an office desk, a couple of seats bolted to the floor around the desk, two doors leading away from this room. Except for the stark metal and lack of decoration, it could be anybody’s office. “So much for exotic alien technology.”
The door slid shut behind her. Cyndia jumped. No buttons, no doorknob, no movement no matter how hard she waved her arms. “Abduction is a federal offense around here!”
Another door opened and an orange blob slithered out. Cyndia didn’t back away from it. “Let me out now!”
The orange blob moved faster than she gave it credit—straight for her. She threw herself to roll away, but the orange grabbed her before she hit the ground. She beat her fist, but it was hitting Jell-O. Warm Jell-O, tough Jell-O that didn’t break, covering her head. Her lungs burned.
Something hard pressed against the back of her neck and it stung. Suffocated by a giant alien jelly fish? At least that wasn’t a demise predicted by all those mysteries.
The orange pulled back from her face. Cyndia inhaled before pushing against the orange blob again. “Let me go! Let me go!”
It was saying something; at least she thought the sounds coming from it were supposed to be talk. It finished pulling away, and she landed on the floor.
Cyndia rolled to her hands and feet, and stood up.
The blob was keeping his distance now, continuously making those noises. He was changing shape, forming legs and arms and a head.
Having a head to yell at clicked something in her head. “Who the hell do you think you are? What the hell did you do to me? Who the hell are you? What the hell are you doing here?” Her fists balled up.
The head had a face on it now, a human face in orange Jell-O. And he was stilling twilling and chortling at her. Fists were effective earlier. She folded her arms over her chest. “I want out. Let me out.” I can be reasonable despite what Mrs. Baton says. “Let me out right now.” Oh this was hopeless, he obviously didn’t understand English. “They leave the language barrier out of tabloid stories.”
“Twilt… sorry. I am sorry for the incursion. It was the only way to mitigate communication. The nanobots should have established a link by now.”
Cyndia grabbed the back of her neck. She could see something metal floating inside his orange body. “You put robots in me!”
“Tiny ones.” The orange, translucent lips smiled.” “Otherwise, we could not speak. They translate. It is common practice when you have not time to learn the language.”
“Who are you?”
“My name is Murdock. I am an IGA agent. Inter-Galactic Agency for the Apprehension of Felons and the Investigation of Criminal Activities,” he added.
“You’re an alien police officer?”
“For all purposes, yes. And you are?”
“Cyndia Taeurs. Why are you here?”
“I am tracking an escapee. IGA did not anticipate his coming to such an insular planet.” Murdock moved to his desk. “The ship crashed twenty-five kilometers from here. This is the closest population center.”
Cyndia felt the hair on her arms prickle. “What did he do?”
“He murdered,” Murdock glanced at her, “whole families.”
“The Millers.” She bit her lip. “Do you have a mug shot?”
“Mug… shot… are you thirsty?”
“No, it’s a picture used to identify people when they’ve been arrested.”
“Ah,” he turned to what looked like a laptop computer on the desk. “This is Thestern. He is an Odrichan.”
A figure rotated on the screen. A blue humanoid, his torso and head covered in feathers, his legs lost the feathers to hard scales and webbed feet. “I knew it wasn’t make-up!”
“What? You have seen him?”
“Last night on my porch. He killed the Millers.”
“What!”
“He must be a serial killer to feel the need to kill right after crashing here. I kept telling the cops it wasn’t a mask or make-up.” She looked away when the figure turned his orange eyes away.
“I must see the crime scene. Thestern may have left clues.”
“Lots of luck, it’s still roped off. That and our front porch. Even though forensics finished last night. I didn’t even get to see them work, so busy trying to make me change my statement.” Cyndia uncrossed her arms. “How about becoming a house plant or something?”
The brow ridge over Murdock’s eye hollows lifted. “I can create the shape. Provided it is the same mass. But I cannot change my coloration.”
“Well so much for the sneak you in idea.”
“Is it possible to sneak in?”
“I happen to know that the locks on the Millers’ kitchen window are broken. I just boosted Harry through it last week when he got locked out.” She stared at the revolving blue figure. “He was only ten.”
Murdock didn’t turn his head; the facial features slid across it to look at Thestern’s revolving image and back up to her face. “Is this who you saw?”
“Yes.”
“Sit down. Tell me what happened.” He turned off the laptop.
The chair in front of the desk was surprisingly comfortable. He settled behind the desk and listened as she went over last night one more time. How she had just gotten up and saw Thestern through the window. How she and the cops found the blood, the footprint, and the Millers. How the cops and Mr. Gregory had to pry Mrs. Gregory off of her. He only interrupted to ask what a certain word she had used really meant. Completely different from the grilling last night, and she appreciated that.
“You have an excellent grasp of essential details and a concise recall of them.”
“Thanks. This is only the five hundredth time going over it. And I haven’t even been interviewed by the press yet.”
“Press?”
“Reporters, journalists.”
“I understand.” He had a really good disgusted expression for a mass of orange. “You speak very knowledgably about these crimes. Are you in law enforcement?”
“No, I’m too young. I’m a mystery junkie. It’s something special, to be the detective, to be able to see what nobody else can. They’re the only ones who want to help people these days. Sure, they get paid—‘cause they got to eat too—but it ain’t compensation for the trouble they go through.” She glanced at his expression and suddenly felt warm all over. “Sorry, I didn’t mean to give you my whole treatise on the subject.”
“On the converse, it is very illuminating. You may be the best qualified person to help me. Thestern will kill again just as he did on Odricha 4.” Murdock moved from the desk. His bottom half hadn’t made legs and he moved across the room like a slug.
“Wait a minute,” Cyndia followed him to the door. “I’m qualified ‘cause I like mysteries?”
“And you stayed and talked rather than running and screaming.”
“Oh. So what do you want me to do?”
The door led to a curving hallway. The first door on the right opened into a small storage room.
“I have to see the crime scene. Since I cannot go personally, I need you to deliver my robot eyes.” He reached into a bin on a chest-high shelf and pulled out a cylinder as long as her arm. “All I need you to do is put this in the house and press this button.” It was the only button on the top of the cylinder. “Let it back out and it will return to the saucer.”
“Kind of big for a flying camera, isn’t it?”
“It has scanning capabilities as well. Not as advanced as a coronerbot, but it will suffice. Will you do this?”
“Yeah, no problem. I’ll be Archie Goodwin to your Nero Wolfe.” Cyndia took the cylinder.
“Who are you talking about?”
“More fiction, Nero Wolfe is a detective who never left his house so he hired Archie to do all the leg work. Works for us, right?”
“I submit to your superior knowledge of the stories. You best go now.”
Cyndia left the hidden spaceship. She hugged the cylinder to her chest. Aliens and alien cops, and she was helping in a real investigation! The house was dark; no crisis in the subdivision was going to interrupt Mrs. Baton’s regular routine. Good thing, Cyndia didn’t want to deal with her.
A peek through the front door window revealed nothing amiss in the neighborhood, and more importantly, no cops at the Millers. She skirted around the end of the fence that didn’t reach the bank of the lake, and was in the Millers’ back yard. The rope ladder up to Harry and Frank’s tree house swayed. Margaret was too little to climb up it. Cyndia swallowed hard, and trotted up to the smallest window facing the back yard.
The sink right under the window inside was dry. She set the cylinder in it, and pressed the button. Lights flashed along the sides. It lifted up and bobbed through the kitchen, heading toward their living room. Cyndia wiggled loose from the window sill and dropped to the ground. Her knee banged against the siding.
She sat down with her back against the house and rubbed her knee. Robots might be a way to go with forensics. You could program them to be impartial, but could you program them to think of everything?
“Hey!” The shout jerked Cyndia to the present.