textfiles/messages/BACKWATER/bw860824.txt

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2021-04-15 11:31:59 -07:00
1 If you are in need of help, you need but ask...
2 ************************* INSTALLED: 24 AUG 86 ***********************
3 Welcome to BWMS (BackWater Message System) Mike Day System operator
4 ************************************************************
5 GENERAL DISCLAIMER: BWMS IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY INFORMATION
6 PLACED ON THIS SYSTEM.
7 BWMS was created as an electronic bill board. BWMS is a privately owned
8 and operated system which is currently open for use by the general public.
9 no restrictions are placed on the use of the system. As the system is
10 privately owned, I retain the right to remove any and all messages which
11 I may find offensive. Because of the limited size of the system, it will be
12 periodically purged of messages. (only 629 lines of data can be saved)
13 to leave a message, type 'ENTER' and use ctrl/C or break to get out of the
14 ENTER mode. The message is automatically stored. If after entering the
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16 the line. To exit from the system, type 'OFF' then hang up.
17 type 'HELP' to see other commands that are available on the system.
18 ***********************************************************
19
20 ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
21 Ahem.... the traditional salutation......AT THE TOP...
22
23 for one who seldom has the honor....It warms my heart to see the BW going into
24 one it's more well regarded and relished phases.
25
26 On a different note... Those who turned thumbs down at Expo should go
27 after having spent a week with the crowds, I can say with a certain degree of
28 authority ... It is worth the trip ( perhaps without the in-( out)-laws next
29 time....
30
31 :::::Alex:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
32 """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
33 Well, second from the top and I get first story comendations...
34
35 "The Moment of Truth"
36
37 My vision was blurry. All I could percieve (I'm still not sure that
38 I saw anything at all) were colors, exploding in brightness, each
39 one with an intensity that overpowered the one before it. Then my
40 vision dimmed again, for seemingly the millionth time, and darkness
41 stood again beside me.
42 When I awoke, at least I had the sensation of awakeing, my eyes
43 were clearer as was my mind. I could actually feel the sensation of
44 being horizontal on the ground. I raised myself and painfully opened
45 my eyes.
46 I was, it seemed, on a rough rock path, sorrounded by mist, and
47 when I looked around some more, I saw that the c I lay on seemed to
48 mysteriously vanish just beyond my reach, engulfed fy the mist. This
49 could have been simply covered over the fog, but my perception told me
50 that beyond that line, reality did not exist. Of course that was wit-
51 hout any merit at the moment anyway.
52 I stood. Moreover, I reeled, my head seemed to spin about me,
53 my body the axis. I shook my head until I felt firm where I was. I
54 happened to glance down at myself. I was dressed in what I would call
55 a tunic; made of rough brown material. Quite a change from phe Officer's
56 tunic that I was wearing just a moment before. Or was it a moment
57 before? Were there any moments before?
58 I then heard a voice. A voice as clear and calm as any I felt I
59 could ever hear. And powerfull! The voice shook me, as if it came not
60 from the air around me, but instead from my very being.
61 I turned in the direction of the voice. I saw, in short, a long
62 roped bridge before me, drawing over a chasm that gave the image of incre-
63 dible depth. Standing on the other side of the bridge, the mist seeming
64 to flow and churn around him, an old, old, wrinkled man dressed in ahite
65 tunic much the style of my own. His eyes blazed and his visage grew
66 taunt as he sqooze harder the gnarled staff he carried, wrinkled as he.
67 The man commanded attention, for it was his voice, I realized with
68 some awe, that I heard. He said, "You have come to the Bridge of Truth
69 for the only reason one comes. Now, what have you to offer the keeper
70 who has all?"
71 I drew a breath. This was very strange...
72 (continued...)
73
74 Well, a little better. Some problems with beginning margins, I see. Change
75 'c that I lay on' to 'rock that I lay on' and we'll do alright.
76
77 PEN NAME
78 """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
79 ________________________________________________________________________________
80
81
82 Too many men
83 Too many people
84 Making too many problems
85 And no much love to go around
86 Can't you see this is a land of confusion.
87
88 This is the world we live in
89 And these are the hands we're given
90 Use them and let's start trying
91 To make to make it a place worth living in.
92
93 Superman where are you now
94 Everything's gone wrong somehow
95 The men of steel, men of power
96 Are loosing control by the hour.
97
98 This is the time
99 This is the place
100 So we look for the future
101 But there's not much love to go around
102 Tell me why this is a land of confusion.
103
104 -Phil
105
106
107 _______________________________________________________________________________
108
109 PPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPP
110 {+|+} <110> 860824^1138
111 LUST,GREED & LOSS OF FAITH -PHIL
112 the KEEPER.
113
114 =+-+==+-+==+-+==+-+==+-+==+-+==+-+==+-+==+-+==+-+==+-+=+-+==+-+==+-+==+-+==+-+=
115 !##!##!##!##!##!##!##!##!##!##!##!##!##!##!##!
116 Just checking back in -- I think.....
117 !##!##!##!##!##!##!##!##!##!##!##! NDS !##!##!
118
119 Promethean product of reading about Scientifiction.
120
121 Nowhere is there better sample of this anti-machine worry than in a short
122 story by that master of the twist ending, Fredric Brown, entitled `Answer'
123 1947. Scientists, having built the ultimate in ultra-powerful computers,
124 switch it on and ask the old question that has needed answering for
125 centuries: is there a God?
126
127 The mighty machine first uses its power to insure that its switch can
128 never again be off, then replies: `There is now'.
129 - An Encyclopedia of Science Fiction
130 Copyright 1978, Octopus Books
131
132 ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
133
134 && && &&
135 The following was inspired by contemplation of the Mima mounds, thousands of
136 earthen mounds of unknown origin found near the Columbia River east of the
137 Cascades...
138 Rockdance
139 The old man hurried through the shadows of the city, casting worried
140 glances to the eastern sky. The place called Portland, the center by the
141 river, shifted uneasily around him as it woke. Delivery trucks and early
142 commuters passed him by as he made his way from where he'd parked the pickup
143 to the place in his dream, the place where the dance must be done.
144 At the corner of Fifth and Morrison he stopped and spread his blanket over
145 the stained bricks, and began a low chant as he lifted from it the items
146 needed to focus his dance. A necklace of river stones with a man-shaped
147 pendant of dark basalt went about his neck; from a clay pot he took moist
148 earth, spreading it on cheeks, chest, arms, legs; last he took up the small
149 drum, slipping it under one arm and beginning the dance as the first rays of
150 dawn appeared.
151 Shuffle-shuffle-step. Step-hop-step. He danced as he was taught, now
152 chanting, now silent, keeping a steady beat on the drum. People emptied from
153 buses and walked past with careful indifference on their ways to work. He
154 seemed to take less notice of them than they did of him, drumming and dancing
155 with persistent rhythm.
156 At eleven the Christian Evangelists arrived. They were deeply offended by
157 his presence, having come over the years to think of this corner as part of
158 their church. His presence was pagan, a profanity they were sure was
159 directed specifically at them. One of them, their leader by virtue of his
160 loud voice and level head, took the initiative to ask the old man if he would
161 move to some other corner so as not to disturb their spreading of the Word.
162 The dancer's face showed no signs of having heard.
163 The Evangelists set up anyway, crowded a bit to the side by the dancer and
164 his blanket. One of them, with less gentleness of spirit than the others,
165 kicked the blanket to one side. The dancer gave no sign of seeing.
166 As noon came on, the corner became busy with people moving past on their
167 lunchtime errands. Some passed close by the dancer, almost but not quite
168 bumping into him. A group of secretaries off to eat a salad lunch stopped
169 to watch, and dropped a few coins on the blanket as they continued on their
170 way. The Evangelists shouted at him, attempting to show him the light so he
171 would stop harrassing them with his dance. A young man in a torn T-shirt
172 and jeans slipped forward to take the coins from the blanket. He was clumsy;
173 trying not to be seen, he was seen by all. No one stopped him.
174 The dancer, though very old, felt the strength of youth and of a need far
175 older than he in his spirit. He roamed as he danced, across the high plateau
176 by the river to the place that was his entry to the world below. Here was the
177 other world, the world of spirit, the shadow cast by the physical world and the
178 light that cast that shadow. Here he was powerful and here he felt most keenly
179 his smallness, listening to the voices of the worlds as they conversed. He
180 heard the rocks singing of longings such as men knew: the deep rocks yearning
181 for their time in the sun and air, while those above longed to return to the
182 warm safeness below. Pebbles in their streams sang of their emergence and
183 their dance as they were polished and rolled to their new homes. Soil, tree,
184 bird, bee, dog, fish, squirrel -- all of the children sang of their parent
185 rock and their home deep in the thick shell of the world. All except man.
186 Man alone had reached full self-awareness. He sang of himself, of his
187 works, of his dreams of conquest. He was reaching out from the shell where he
188 was birthed among the earth's other children, standing on their backs to grasp
189 the stars. This, the world knew, was not wrong. She and her sister worlds
190 knew of their unity, that they were one who seemed many because of the dance.
191 But this unity in the dance had been trampled in the mind of man, buried under
192 the weight of supreme self. Few now knew the depth of the dance, and of them
193 only the dancer felt clearly how far his fellows had moved from the rhythm.
194 He moved deeper in the dance as the day wore on in the world of light, the
195 world his fellows saw. He heard deeper voices speaking of ancient things, a
196 tale of a people who in an earlier age had forgotten the dance. He heard how
197 those people returned to the dance, how they even now moved in the slow rock
198 dance. Voice came from an ever-widening range, from deeper and further the
199 world echoed his dance and drum, until at last he came to that voice too great
200 to know.
201 As a parent to an infant it spoke to him, with words beyond comprehension
202 that yet carried meaning. #Well you have danced, child,# it seemed to say,
203 #and deeply. But deeper still run I and my true dance. I am old beyond your
204 comprehension, and those others who once forgot were but a moment before to me.
205 You and those others by my blood-river still need a dancing lesson...#
206 It had turned into an unseasonably hot midsummer afternoon, and the old man
207 was running rivers of sweat as he danced. His breathing was a hollow booming
208 keeping time with the higher beat of the drum. The Evangelists were packing up
209 to go, wrung out by the heat and the drum, when one of them noticed the dancer
210 stumble in his step and begin to fall. The Christian thought briefly of
211 Samaritans and looking good for God, and moved to catch him.
212 No one saw him fall. The place called Portland roared to the spirit and
213 fell silent to the ear. The dance there resumed its proper path, the people
214 all moving into a rhythm only their cells remembered, and row upon mysterious
215 row of earthen mounds danced the great dance by the rivers of earth's blood.
216 && The Mad Actor &&
217 *************** I *********************
218 **************--+--********************
219 ****************I**********************
220 ****************I**********************
221
222
223 John Dereks and his
224 ASTRAL ADVENTURES
225
226 Many a times, when I was young, have Ihad strange dreams. Now, you may say,
227 we have all had strange dreams, but
228 these dreams were different. It would
229 seem too real to be a dream. I would
230 travel to faraway lands, witness strange
231 events, and view unspeakable horrors.
232 In many of these dreams, I could see my
233 sleeping body in bed,and would wonder
234 how I got out here.
235 I would try to tell my parents about
236 these dreams, but they would only say,
237 'now, John, you are old enough to be
238 able to tell dreams from reality.' The
239 problem was, these dreams were reality.
240 They were just too real for anything
241 else.
242 One day, I mentioned these dreams to
243 my grandfather. He instantly closed his
244 eyes, grimaced, and turned away. I heardhim mumble something, and then, did I
245 not hear someone answer? We were alone!
246 Who could have answered my grandfather,
247 for I saw no one in the room. But wait,
248 there it was again! Yes there was
249 someone, no, something else in this
250 room. I could feel it's presence. I wentto my grandfather and lightly tapped
251 him on the shoulder. He was crying.
252 "I will teach you, son. Yes. I will
253 teach you well",he said. "And then, you
254 will face the challenge which has
255 haunted our family for so long. Yes,you
256 are the one.....at last..."
257 I hugged him, while thinking:'what did
258 he mean'challenge'? It didn't matter.
259 I trusted him. Whatever he says must be
260 done, I would do.
261
262 +ABDUL BRIAN+
263
264 ***************************************
265
266
267 <<<<<<<<<<<
268 Mr. Mad (Bad??) Actor,
269 Part of authoring a story is taking comments from the reading public. I shall
270 allow myself to use this right.
271 First of all, your introduction is much too hammering. We get the picture
272 that he is in the city. Repetative reference to the city people is not
273 needed. In the middle of the work, we get blased by a dream-like plop into
274 some sing-song poetry about man and life.
275 What is this mish mash of mental dry heaves? It gets as preachy as the
276 Evangelists you were refering to.
277 Leave the pseudo-deep thought stuff to the 'Christian' preachers that like
278 to see themselves on T.V. every Sunday. Let them stand on stage and hoot
279 and hollar. Much to much drift for a coherent message to come
280 through.
281
282 Thank you for your time,
283
284 The KRITIK
285
286 >>>>>>>>>>
287
288
289
290 && && &&
291 KRITIK -- There was a reason for the repitition & the "hammering". If you don't
292 see it, fine. I see no need to defend my work. It's grown up. It can take
293 care of itself. Any other comments?
294 && TMA &&
295 """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
296 Yeah, one more comment...'well done' sums it up, I think.
297
298 KRITIC: And there are two rules to being a critic: Know what to say and how
299 to say it. Unfortunatly, you fail on both counts...
300
301 (Will the real Dick Supten please stand up?)
302 PEN NAME
303 """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
304
305
306 oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo
307 It's difficult to tell who it is that says what around here.... That's normal.
308 TRIPLE-FIVE: If it is you that uses "=+-+=" in repetition, the last time I was
309 on I saw SEVERAL of the same, one after another (^K's embedded in 'em too).
310 It gets really tiring to see SEVERAL lines used when one would suffice.
311 Maybe one of the 'higher-up's was doing us a service? (NOT TAKING SIDES)
312 OMEGA: Hope you and guest enjoyed the (rushed) tour of the facilities. And I
313 assume the presentation was adequate?
314 Once you left I realized I gave you the wrong name over here, but it'll make
315 do. See you over at your 'place.'
316
317 I sense a stream of returning writers around here... Go for it!
318 so
319 oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo oo -oo
320 Sorry t
321 One mor
322 PPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPP
323 #>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>
324 The Mad Actor: I liked your piece enough to say this:
325 PLEASE send it off to publications! Personally,
326 I think it is publishable. One market I'd like
327 you to check out is:
328 Sign of the Times: A Chronicle of Decadance in
329 the Atomic Age, P.O. Box 6464, Portland 97228.
330 They don't pay, but publishing houses do read
331 the magazine. Getting seen is a huge step to
332 getting into the biz.
333 #>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>#>
334
335 *****************************************************************************
336
337 My grandfather left my embrace, and ledme to his private library. He walked
338 slowly to a secluded bookcase, as if
339 his stalling would make a difference in
340 destiny's verdict. He reached up for a
341 rather large black book that, for some
342 reason, stood out amongst the others.
343 From the place I was standing, I could
344 read the title:AMOR VINCIT OMNIA. What
345 the heck did that mean, I thought to
346 myself. It's obviously in another
347 language, but what did it mean? My
348 grandfather started to hand me the book,hesitated, shook his head, then gave
349 it to me.
350 "This was your great-great-grandfathers. Within it are the secrets of astral
351 travel. Many years ago my grandfather
352 said that every fourth generation has
353 one chance to free our family from a
354 curse that was placed long ago. You are that generation. You must learn the ways
355 of the astral world, become strong in
356 the art of survival on the astral plane,and destroy the demon who possesses our
357 name. Now go home, and speak to no one
358 on the way."
359
360  ---ABDUL BRIAN---
361 ????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
362 Congrats to all our aspiring authors, looks like Backwash is back on track,
363 and, sir KRITIK, criticisms are best if constructive, rather than just
364 bloody-mindedness:
365
366 THE OWL-CRITIC
367
368 "Who stuffed that white owl?" No one spoke in the shop,
369 The barber was busy, and he couldn't stop;
370 The customers, waiting their turns, were all reading
371 The "Daily," the "Heral," the "Post," little heeding
372 The young man who blurted out such a blunt question;
373 Not one raised a head, or even made a suggestion;
374 And the barber kept on shaving
375
376 "Don't you see, Mr. Brown,"
377 Cried the youth, with a frown,
378 "How wrong the whole thing is,
379 How preposterous each wing is,
380 How flattened the head is,
381 How jammed down the neck is -
382 In short, the whole owl, what an ignorant wreck 't is!
383 I make no apology;
384 I've learned owl-eology
385 I've passed days and nights in a hundred collections,
386 And cannot be blinded to any deflections
387 Arising from unskillful fingers that fail
388 To stuff a bird right, from his beak to his tail.
389 Mister Brown! Mister Brown!
390 Do take that bird down,
391 Or you'll soon be the laughing stock all over the town!"
392 And the barber kept on shaving
393
394 "I've studied owls,
395 And other night fowls,
396 And I tell you
397 What I know to be true;
398 An owl cannot roost
399 With his limbs so unloosed;
400 No owl in this world
401 Ever had his claws curled,
402 Ever had his legs slanted,
403 Ever had his bill canted,
404 Ener had his neck screwed
405 Into that attitude.
406 He can't do it,because
407 'tis against all bird-laws.
408 Anatomy teaches,
409 Ornithology preaches,
410 An owl has a toe
411 That cannot turn so!
412 I've made the white owl my study for years,
413 And to see such a job almost moves me to tears!
414 Mister Brown, I'm amazed
415 you should be so gone crazed
416 as to put up a bird
417 In that posture absurd!
418 To look at that owl really brings on a dizziness
419 The an who stuffed him don't half kknow his business!"
420 And the barber kept on shaving.
421
422 "Examine those eyes.
423 I'm filled with surprise
424 Taxidermists should pass
425 Off on you such poor glass;
426 So unnaturl they seem
427 Thay'd make the Audubon scream,
428 And John Burroughs laugh
429 To encounter such chaff.
430 Do take that bird down;
431 Have him stuffed again, Brown!"
432 And the barber kept on shaving.
433
434 "With some sawdust and bark
435 I could stuff in the dark
436 an owl better than that.
437 I could make an old hat
438 Look more like an owl
439 Than that horrid fowl,
440 Stuck up there so stiff like a side of coarse leather.
441 In fact, about him there's not one natural feather."
442
443 Just then,
444 With a wink and a sly normal lurch,
445 The owl, very gravely, got down from his perch,
446 Walked around, and regarded his fault-finding critic
447 (Who thought he was stuffed) with a glance analytic,
448 And then fairly hooted, as if he should say:
449 "You're learning's at fault this time, anyway;
450 Don't waste it again on a live bird, I pray.
451 I'm an owl; you're another. Sir KRITTIK, good day!"
452 And the sysop kept his system going.
453
454 With apologies, t to
455 James Thomas Fields . I hope I've
456 made my point.
457
458 Adric.
459 ??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
460
461 I think so. In style. Off.
462
463 <<<<<<<<
464
465 Well, I can see that there is no hope for those of you who can't take some
466 tips on writing. You are all so tied up in yourselves that you can't see
467 what you are doing. If you guys are so great, send those puppies off to a
468 publisher. Then you can upload the reject letter to B.W. The story was not
469 that bad. I can tell you people also have no head for judging people. If
470 I had hated the story you would have known it. Mr. Bad Actor's story has
471 much more promise that most of the garbage on here that I have seen in the
472 past few years. It needs serious work though. There is nothing wrong with
473 that. The constitution wasn't finished in one draft was it? One thing I
474 must commend him on is his choice of subject. I was getting tired of reading
475 all these Futuristic-Anti-Communist-Sword-Wailing-Science-fiction-SPY stories
476 that always seem to start, but never end.
477 At least Mr. Actor can finish a story (A little weak, but.....) So if all
478 of you would not be so worried about me hurting his feelings and throw some
479 comments of your own his way, he might be able to work that thing into a
480 plausible story. One more thing. I appreciate the fact that my words are
481 still here for more than one hour. At least the sysop knows that this is
482 an open board and I can say what I feel. Does every story on here have to
483 be good? NO Does every story have to be thrill-packed? NO You like things
484 and you dislike others. Such is life.
485
486 Speaking my peace,
487
488 The KRITIK
489 >>>>>>>
490
491 Eewh! How long did you spend standing in front of the mirror stealing
492 yourself for that shift from 4th to Reverse??
493
494 <<<<<<
495 Say what?
496
497 Please try to make more sense if you are addressing me.
498
499 The KRITIK
500 >>>>>>
501
502 I am refusing to take sides.........
503 ---ABDUL BRIAN---
504 up 20
505 print
506
507 Oh, a serious lack of verse for the
508 last thirty lines or so. Fair amounts
509 of complaints too. I am to try not to
510 complain about that. That would be
511 whining!
512 Waiting, hoping for some verse
513 to show up soon, Neher DuWell.
514
515 && && &&
516 KRITTIK -- Please get the name right. I am actually a rather good actor, as
517 evidenced by the fact that I am able to make a living acting in Portland. I
518 am also aware of weaknesses in Rockdance. I disagree with your choices in
519 your first message, but I DID put it up here to get feedback... You're right
520 about the ending being weak, but that's the way it ends -- Rockdance is
521 essentially a description of a dream I had while sleeping among the Mima mounds.
522 I'm still anxious to hear any feedback... I've already rewritten it since the
523 first posting (5th revision), and I do want to hear from you. I won't always
524 agree, but that's artist's perogative...
525 && The Mad Actor &&
526 ____________________________________________________________________________
527 7e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e7e1
528
529 'Almost there.' Parity could see the Buchan homestead through the dusty wind-
530 shield. The window wash reservoir was long empty, but the bright blue paint of
531 the house showed through like a lighthouse along a foggy coast.
532 The bandage on Fellows was completely soaked. The bright red on the seat
533 cover made Parity look away in fear. He had seen death and dying before. It was
534 part of the business. He had killed men in the line of duty. He didn't want to
535 think of duty now. Duty seemed a perilous creature; one fed by ambition and
536 need for belonging and power. Duty seemed inconsequential. Fellows was near
537 death. Parity was alone in his quest for a cure. The Buchans were the last
538 hope. He had driven 100 miles towards Death Valley. How apt a name he
539 thought. Was it prophetic too?
540 The Buchan house rose above the car as Parity slowed to a stop in the
541 driveway. Steam hissed from a tired radiator as Parity open his door and
542 made his way to the front of the house. It had been built in the late 1800's,
543 Dr Buchan had told him. Silver was the draw, and all around the area posts
544 and shacks mark sores on the earth where men had dug their fortunes. Many
545 buried their futures there too, for silver mining in the Nevada frontier was
546 a tough life all the way around. The house had been constructed by one miner
547 who had found a fortune in the depths. It was a present to his mail-order
548 wife. Buchan had gone on to tell the story of how the wife had gone off with
549 the assayer, and the miner had tracked them down and killed them both. He
550 was hung for his crime, but not before telling all that hunting silver was
551 much easier than hunting down a wayward woman. The house had several owners
552 through the years, all of whom had kept it in good condition. In the 1930's
553 a small diesel motor was built to supply the house with electrical power.
554 The sound of the motor coming from the back of the house was music to Parity's
555 ears. Someone still lived there, although the doctor's Cadillac was no where
556 to be seen.
557 Out in the middle of the desert a house that wasn't a mirage existed. An
558 oasis for those who know where to look. Parity knocked on the screen door.
559 Apprehensive moments later the door opened and a old woman peered through
560 the screen. A few years had passed, but Parity recognized the smile on her
561 face.
562 "Mrs. Buchan. I need your help again."
563 "I'll get my husband. He is in the back. Please come in." The doctor's
564 wife opened the screen door, but Parity motioned to the car. She peered
565 around the corner and saw Fellows propped up against the passenger side
566 window. "Bring him in and lay him down in the front room."
567 Without another word Parity returned to the car, and as carefully as
568 possible lifted Fellows out of the seat, and in a cradle fashion, carried
569 him back to the house. Fellows' breathing was so shallow Parity had to
570 stop walking in order to hear it. Mrs. Buchan held the door open for him
571 as he entered. A hide-way-bed had been opened in the front room, and Parity
572 gently placed his injured friend on it. As he bent up, Dr. Buchan entered
573 the room. Tall as before and gaunt as ever, the doctor, in a white shirt
574 and black pants and suspenders, nodded a hello to Parity and leaned over
575 his new patient. Long slim fingers deftly opened his black bag and emerged
576 with the tools of his trade. A stethoscope, eye-light, and blood pressure
577 wrap seemed to attach themselves to Fellows all at once. The doctor might
578 be getting on in years, Parity thought, but he isn't losing his touch.
579 "The wound. What's in it?" Buchan's voice was like a low-pitched dove.
580 Parity always wondered why he had chosen medicine over music. Then he looked
581 at Fellows and remembered why.
582 "An explosion, in the city. Glass, metal shards, I don't know what all.
583 I didn't have time. I came straight here. Vegas is crawling with inquisitive
584 minds." The bit of humor made Buchan smile, just for a moment. He turned his
585 attention back to Fellows. He had taken the necessary readings and was now
586 working on the makeshift bandage.
587 "Good pressure job. It got him here still breathing. I won't ask you why
588 you didn't take him to a doctor in town. I remember you brush salesmen have
589 certain rules."
590 "Yes, and we..."
591 "Sorry to interrupt, but we must hurry. Ionna, get some water to boil,
592 and bring me the rest of my instruments. The big stuff. Parity, wash your
593 hands, you'll have to help me out. He has lost a lot of blood and sorry to
594 say I don' carry plasma around here. We'll have to make due without, but
595 time becomes more critical. Now hurry." 7e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e17e1
596 ?????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????
597 Sir KRITTIK, I must admit I agree with you, and that I did not intend to
598 seem anti-feedback, because I merely wished to point out that criticism is
599 best with advice attached.Please don't misunderstand me, criticism is what
600 helps all writers.I hope however that your criticisms are a model for all
601 others on the system.
602
603 As Elforson felt his arms jerk up, a grating sound reached his
604 ears, as his sturdy boots slipped on the granite wall.His rope was taut,
605 but sturdy.He was uncomfortably aware of the sound of the rope fraying above
606 him.He reached to his belt, and pulled out his piton gun.He locked a piton
607 deep into the granite, and proceeded up the tight, crooked chimney.Below him,
608 he could see the glitter of sunlight on brocken metal and glass.His delicate
609 bird, a canard longeasy, shattered and twisted all over the valley floor.As
610 he climbed, he knew that all around him the jungle was teeming with life.
611 Looking back, he could see a troop of macac monkeys crawling through the
612 wreckage.He smiled, secure in the knowledge that they would find no food within
613 his slender craft.All tht the plane had contained was strapped to his back.
614
615 Resting at the top of the cliff, he looked out over the river valley,
616 as the lazy river glistened down its path, providing lifegiving water to
617 the jungle around him.Over his head, a lone howler let out a boom of sound,
618 trying to find his lost group.He rushed off through the trees, not very graceful
619 but competant in his instincts.Elforson trudged wearily on, occasionally sending
620 out a blast of radio signal as a beacon.He knew that the battery would not lastt
621 for more than two continuous hours of transmission.He followed the example of
622 the mokeys, and climbed a nearby creeper to a strong-looking branch above.
623 He wove together all the nearby twigs, creating a hammock for the night.
624 Surrounded by the sounds of the jugle, he slept.
625
626 ( will continue if liked.)
627
628 Adric.
629 How do I spell relief? A 200 p.s.i. Turbo Douche |+| Mind Blowing!!!
TOTAL NUMBER OF LINES = 629