Sunday, September 28, 2008

This day in history...


Hello again, today I slept in for the first time in months. I have been more then just sleepy I have been down right tiered! I think that my lack of sleep has been part of the problems with me and my wife. But things are much better now. we talk, play cards, watch movies, and dance... and the sex!

My daughter is playing with all her new b-day toys - More noise makers, yea! I also spent sometime with Trenton my nephew. He's a good kid.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Thought I would say hi after such a long wait... There isn't much new going on here, I am still working on my new book Beguilement but that is all. I saw my daughter turn 3 last Monday (9-22) and then we had the party today. Fun!

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Note to self...

... Fuck you ... I hate you ...

and stop asking me questions! I don't know the answers! I am just like you... When you look at yourself in the mirror don't forget to tell me something funny...

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

Aggie - By Katie McGxxxx (read comment)

Aggie

I woke up screaming again because I dreamt that Aggie was hurt. She was crying and her face was smeared with tears and dirt. I wanted to help her but I couldn’t move. I tried to tell her I couldn’t move, but my words were all mushy baby-talk. Her eyes were bright bright and Ag was scared bad. There was red all over my pink dress and Aggie’s too, like the roses daddy gave mommy on Valenstine Day and I was crying because Ag was hurt bad and I couldn’t help her. I couldn’t help.

I sat up in bed, knocking Frankie the pink elephant on the floor, and looked out the window. The backyard shimmered in the moonlight like a fairy story and the swing creaked back and forth on its long chain. The swing was moving as though in a breeze but the leaves in the old oak tree didn’t move. I thought, “Aggie’s still outside,” and shivered in the dark. I lay awake for a long time.



The next time I woke up to the sound of daddy crying. Pale morning sunshine sifted through the window and onto daddy’s face, kneeling at the foot of Aggie’s bed on the other side of the room. I peeked through my messy hair at him, pretending to still be asleep, but he didn’t seem to see me. After a minute he shuffled over to my bed and saw Frankie on the floor. He bent over and picked up the stuffed animal, then looked at it as though seeing it for the first time, like something scared him. I squeezed my eyes shut because I didn’t want him to know I was awake. Another sob escaped his throat and he leaned over me and put Frankie on the bed beside the window.



A short while later I heard the screen door slam shut in the kitchen and I crawled out of bed just in time to see my parents’ car backing out of the driveway. Fenway was barking in the kitchen. I wondered where they were going without me, then heard someone singing downstairs. And I smelled cookies. “Gramma Margaret!” I thought.

Gramma Margaret was my daddy’s mommy. I couldn’t remember ever spending so much time with her, but lately she was around a lot. I figured it was because of Aggie, but I didn’t ask, and no one was talking to me much except Gramma Margaret. Mommy and daddy were what the neighbors said in their quiet voices, “grief-stricken.” Or maybe it was “grief-sicken.” I wasn’t sure, but they seemed sick. They were always so sad and didn’t hardly eat. Daddy drank lots of coffee and mommy was drinking something else that smelled icky, but they didn’t eat much. They didn’t even make supper for me, not even a pb and j. So Gramma Margaret was over a lot and she took care of me now. Everyone calls me Maggie, but my real name is Margaret just like her. Daddy said she’s the best cook in the whole world and maybe someday I’d be a great cook too. Ag was named after mommy’s Aunt Agatha, who she spent lots of summers with when she was a little girl. I didn’t know why she wasn’t around too, all I knew was there cookies downstairs and Gramma Margaret made them all for me.

When I went downstairs, my favoritest cartoons were on the TV all morning and Gramma Margaret didn’t even make me eat yucky boring breakfast before letting me have warm cookies right from the oven. Right from the oven was the best. I sat cross-legged on the carpet in the living room with my plate of cookies and a big glass of milk while Gramma Margaret made more cookies and even cupcakes with the surprise frosting in the middle. We didn’t even mind when Fenway barked and barked at us and jumped around on his little pug legs. Gramma said, “Hush Fenway!” and I said, “Yeah, hush Fenway!” He barked anyway but it was still fun to tell him to hush.

One time a long time ago Fenway had worms and he’d drag his bum around on the carpet. Aggie said, “Fenny’s dragging his fanny!” and me and Ag laughed and laughed and rolled around on the floor with Fenway, pulling his curly tail. I think mommy and daddy were laughing more at me and Ag, but we thought it was funny. And Fenway dragging his bum on the floor. Mommy said it was gross so she gave him medicine and he didn’t drag his bum anymore. After that I always watched out for worms on the sidewalk when we were taking walks with Fenny. Mommy said it wasn’t those pink worms that Fenway had, but I thought we couldn’t be too careful. Fenny barked a lot now and I thought maybe he had something else kind of like worms, except instead of dragging his bum it made him bark. I’d have to ask Gramma Margaret.



When mommy and daddy came home later I heard daddy say something about stuffed animals on the floor. I thought he was mad that my room was messy because half of it was Ag’s but she wasn’t here to clean help clean it up anymore. I didn’t want him to have more stuff to be upset about so I ran upstairs and put my animals back on the bed really neatly. Mommy showed me how to make my bed before but sometimes I forgot to do it. I was just finished when mommy and daddy came into my room. Mommy scrunched up her forehead like she was mad or confused and looked at daddy. Daddy made the same face and said, “They were on the floor before. The elephant was over there,” and pointed. “I put it by the window, look where it is now.”

“Frankie,” mommy said. “The elephant’s name is Frankie.” Then she cried and walked out of the room with her face in her hands.

Daddy looked at Ag’s bed, with the stuffed animals all in the same place as when she left them, then looked at my bed again. I looked at him from beside the bed, hoping for him to say it was good. He just looked at the stuffed animals curiously like he saw something weird. Something weird and maybe kind of scary. I was scared too because maybe he saw a spider or something, but I didn’t see it. “Daddy?” I asked. His eyes got wide then and he went out of the room in a hurry. That made me cry because I thought I’d disappointed him.



Things went on like this for a while. Mommy and daddy were gone a lot and acted like they didn’t have a daughter anymore. So Gramma Margaret came over every day and I ate so many cookies I thought I would ‘splode, but I never got sick like mommy said I would one time if I ate bunches of cookies. Sometimes I just watched my favorite cartoons all day, and other times Gramma Margaret would play games with me or color. One time I put a picture up on the fridge for mommy and daddy that I drew with my crayons, of me and Aggie on the swing, but I don’t think they liked it because it made mommy upset and they took it down and put it in a drawer. Fenway still barked a lot but Gramma Margaret said it wasn’t something like worms. She said he was just upset about what happened and that was how he talked about it. I guessed that was okay.



Gramma Margaret asked me about the funeral one time because she didn’t get to go. This made me kind of quiet and sad because I couldn’t hardly remember any of it. I remember there were lots of people and lots of flowers around. I wanted to smell them but I couldn’t. There was a white dress that was new and the face I knew so well was in a box and then the box went under the ground. It made me sad that the box went in the ground because it was pretty like mommy’s jewelry box. It made me smile to think that she was like a pretty necklace in a jewelry box though.

But that night I had bad dreams about Aggie wearing a ruby necklace in a box, except it was mommy’s jewelry box, not the other box that wasn’t for jewelry but for little girls. Then Aggie wasn’t wearing the necklace, but she was a ruby necklace. All red and cold. I told Gramma Margaret about the dream but she said the real Aggie wasn’t in the box. Aggie was somewhere else. I asked her if Aggie was getting cookies and milk too and Gramma Margaret thought she just might be. Maybe she had someone like a Gramma Margaret taking care of her, too.



That night there was a bad storm outside and the big oak tree outside my window blew and blew in the wind. I was scared because it was the first time there was a big storm since I didn’t have Aggie to share a room with. My bed was against the window but hers wasn’t, so I’d go into her bed on those nights and we’d snuggle together and the storm wouldn’t seem so scary. I thought about sleeping in her bed anyway that night, but then I didn’t because I thought it would make daddy upset. I’d been more careful since that other time about putting my stuffed animals back on the bed right. He always seemed to notice when I didn’t. I shut my eyes tight against the night though, because while the storm was scary, I was extra scared because the swing hanging on the tree wasn’t moving at all.



The next day I overheard daddy telling mommy he thought he needed to “Talk to someone.” I thought it was weird because he was already talking to mommy, but I guess that wasn’t what he meant. He said he was seeing things and hearing things, like crying and little girl voices. That scared me because I was the only little girl in the house and I cried but I couldn’t help it sometimes. Why would that make daddy need to “talk to someone” and sound so scared? Daddy also said something about his mother being around. Why would daddy seem upset about Gramma Margaret being around? Mommy didn’t seem scared, but she was drinking the icky smelling drink and it made her act different than my mommy did before Aggie went away. I’d have to ask Gramma Margaret.



The next day I told Gramma Margaret what daddy had said about “talking to someone.” She sighed and handed me a cupcake with the special secret frosting in the middle and asked me what I remembered about the swing. I said the tree broke and Aggie got hurt because she was on the swing under it. She looked at me closely and asked where I was when the tree broke. I said I was right by Aggie because I was pushing her on the swing. Gramma Margaret asked me why I didn’t get hurt too. This made me mad but I didn’t know why and I wouldn’t eat the cupcake. I smashed it onto the plate and the frosting oozed out of it so it wasn’t a special secret anymore but just stuff on a plate and I ran out the kitchen door. Mommy was at the kitchen sink washing dishes and when the door slammed it startled her so much she dropped a glass on the floor and it broke into about a billion pieces. I didn’t look back, but I knew Gramma Margaret didn’t help mommy pick up the broken glass.

I ran across the backyard to the big old oak tree where it happened. Before I could reach the swing I stopped and realized it wasn’t there. How could that be? I wondered. I just saw it through the window. In fact the limb the swing was hanging on wasn’t even there. I remembered it fell, but I had just seen it. At night, in the storm, when I had bad dreams. I always saw the swing from my bedroom window. I ran back into the house to ask Gramma Margaret where the swing was but she wasn’t in the kitchen. Mommy was sitting at the table where I just was, but the smashed cupcake was gone and replaced with a glass of the icky stuff. She didn’t even look up when I went past her and up the stairs to me and Aggie’s room. I slammed the door shut with all the rage I could muster and for the first time in weeks noticed the mirror on the back of the door. I noticed because I wasn’t in it.



Gramma Margaret came back the next day and I told her I wasn’t in the mirror. She didn’t answer but just looked at me for a minute then said, “Aggie’s on her way.”

The phone rang then, loud and abruptly, and daddy answered. After a minute he hung up and his face was gray. He called for mommy and she walked slowly towards him. He told her Aggie was gone and mommy dropped another glass, this time with the icky stuff in it. I was glad she wouldn’t be drinking that particular icky stuff, but I wasn’t glad to see her crying so hard. Mommy and daddy went out then and Gramma Margaret played Go Fish with me.

I felt like we were waiting for something to happen but I was kind of scared. I remembered the empty mirror and the swing that wasn’t there. The box that looked like a jewelry box and the face that looked just like my face inside. “Gramma?”

“Yes sweetheart?”

“That was me in the jewelry box, wasn’t it?”

“Yes it was.”

I cried on my fish cards and Gramma Margaret held me in her arms. I told her it was scary and dark in the box and she said she knew, she had been in a box for a long time. But we had each other because she came back to take care of me until Aggie was ready.

I heard the kitchen door squeak open then and heard my twin sister calling my name. I ran into the kitchen and Aggie was there, not a ruby necklace, not even wearing a ruby necklace, and I hugged hugged hugged her. Standing behind Aggie was a woman I never saw before, but she had a nice Gramma-type face and I knew who she was. “Hi Aunt Agatha,” I said and smiled smiled so big. Fenway barked around us but that was okay. Soon he would get over the not-worms that made him bark and it would be quiet quiet at the house again. I felt bad for mommy and daddy, but happy too because now me and Aggie and Gramma Margaret and Aunt Agatha could all go on together. And I bet there would be cookies where we were going.

Katie McGxxxx

July 18, 2008

Monday, September 15, 2008

Beguilement

Beguilement, I love that word. I like it so much it is the name of my new project. It's a short story about a young Youth Pastor on his way to fulfilling his calling, when a girl in his group starts telling people that they are in love. Although he has done nothing wrong, he is given a permanent sabbatical, and finds it hard to keep faith with god.

More to come...

Friday, September 12, 2008

the snowflake from www.igermanson.com

Snowflake Method for Writing a Novel: (summary from http://www.ingermanson.com/writing/snowflake.php)

1. Take an hour and write a one-sentence summary of your story.
2. Take another hour and expand that sentence to a full paragraph describing the story setup, major disasters, and ending of the book.
3. Write a short summary sheet for each character.
4. Take several hours and expand each sentence of your summary paragraph into a full paragraph. All but the last paragraph should end in a disaster. The final paragraph should tell how the book ends.
5. Take a day or two and write up a one-page description of each major character and a half-page description of the other important characters.
6. Now take a week and expand the one-page plot synopsis of the story to a four-page synopsis.
7. Take another week and expand your character descriptions into full-fledged character charts detailing everything there is to know about each character.
8. Prep for writing the first draft: make a list of all the scenes that you’ll need to turn the story into a novel using a spreadsheet.
9. (Optional.)Switch back to your word processor and begin writing a narrative description of the story.
10. At this point, just sit down and start pounding out the real first draft of the story.

Thursday, September 11, 2008

This is my story

This is my story, it’s about ordinary people: their secrets, their memories of acts of violence, their sexual longings, their abuse of drugs and alcohol and their failing attempts to deal with there own humanity.

Their lives become interrupted when Tyler's, (A college student attending at Lynchburg College in VA.) absent father dies, leaving him nothing but boxes and boxes of journals, where his late father rants about the world ending.

Tyler pays little attention to them until the FBI comes knocking on his door demanding the files. But when a NY detective confronts Tyler who believes his father wasn't nuts and that Tyler’s life may be in danger, he is forced to question all he believes to be true.

Is, it possible….. could the world really end on Dec, 21, 2012?

The hand of the past (Chapter 1 of 2012 the book by Matthew S S)

“The Hand of the past”

“It’s been a long day,” thought Dr. Morton as he sat alone on the back of the number 6 New York City Transit subway train writing in his notebook. He shifts his weight as the train stopped at the 116th street station to pick up other passengers. 116th street was only a block or so from the Central Park North entrance. A woman wearing a waitress uniform gets on the train, caring a bag full of groceries. She had the look of someone who has lived a hard life without even living at all. Her face gave her the look of seventeen or maybe eighteen. He wondered where she lived and if she had a child.

-----

DR. MORTON had always been good with faces, when he was studing for his degree in Anthropology from Illinois State University he would use this talent to try to understand who his class mates where. But there was only one girl that really kept his attention for vary long. She was a junior studing children’s psychiatry. Morton would have never had the nerve to ask her out. But it seemed as if fate put them together, she ended up living in the same apartment building as Morton and he soon found out her name was Joan Saunders.

One night as Morton was walking home it started raining, and as he turned the corner of the apartment building, he saw Joan clinging to the front door franticly searching for her keys. Morton noticed she had no umbrella and realized that the rain must have caught her by surprise as it had him. The way she looked standing they’re all drenched by the rain is an image Morton has never for got. It put a smile on his face, and smiling wasn’t something he did vary often.

Looking at her, he saw she was standing in the light over the door; but she must have felt his eyes upon her, so she turned to look at him. “It’s all right, I have a key,” he said. She nodded and thanked him, when he got to the door. She was taller then he had expected, but not as tall as him. Her face, though it was more triangular than heart-shaped, reminded him of a painting he had once seen in the gallery of necropolis called Voedayon. Perhaps it was her great green eyes, with her lips shaded with a dark red, and black hair that, forming a V far down her forehead, suggesting the hood of a cloak. Whatever the reason, he loved her at once, but being only a young man, he didn’t know it.

Her dark hand, cold, wet, and impossibly small, touched his as he helped her inside. She smiled, and he felt as he had, when as a child, been out side in the cold for too long and had come inside to a warm room and food. She had very white teeth in a wide smile; her eyes, each as deep as the clearest pools of water, shone when she smiled.

“I’m sorry,” he said. “I didn’t hear you.”

The smile came again and she tilted her lovely head to one side. “I told you how happy I was to see someone with a key, I might have been out there for hours if not for you saving me, and I asked if you would like to drink some hot tea in my apartment.”

“No. No, I have no wish to insult your home,” He told her. “By dripping water all over it.” She smiled and reminded him she was soaked as well. He found it easy to talk with Joan, which was unusual for him.

Even in the orphanage he grew up in, he had trouble making friends. He was a loner and preferred his books to the company of other people. That made him the top of his class, and by his nature, a perfectionist. He would have horrible episodes of anxiety just before a test, and he would isolate himself from the world and become immersed in his studies, and if he were to receive anything other then an “A” he would plunge into bouts of depression that could last for days.

But all that changed on that rainy day. As Morton followed Joan through the door of her apartment, he couldn’t help but feel at ease.

“Won’t you come in?” She told him. Then he realized he had been standing in her doorway staring at her. He knew he must look awkward, and quickly took off his jacket and closed the door. “If I had finished unpacking, I could offer you better comfort. Unfortunately, I haven’t found the time.” He shook his head. “Here, I have no refreshments to offer you but this.” She told him as she handed him a small cup filled with warm chamomile tea. He thanked her and let the tea heat his hands as she left the room to put dry cloths on. When she returned in a deep red silk nightgown with black lace accenting the edges, he was so lost in her beauty that he only heard something about a robe in her bathroom for him. After he dried off and had putt on her fuzzy white robe, he bravely walked into the room where Joan sat sipping her tea. When she looked up at him, she almost busted out with laughter. At first, this made Morton feel embarrassment, and his face turned red. But then she apologized and he felt himself smile and start to laugh as well.

They talked and sipped tea for hours, and Morton was very impressed with Joan’s knowledge of Aristotle and Immanuel Kant, and the fact that she had the deepest green eyes he had ever seen help too. She put him at ease very quickly and calmed his awkward nervousness. They talked about theories and politics, until they came to the subject of Roman poetry where Joan excelled, and Morton listened in amazement. From then on, they became best friends and then lovers. Joan was the first person who could talk to him when he was having one of his “episodes”. She could make him laugh and smile, and he fell deeply in love with her. Every Sunday night they would go out to eat and spend hours walking through the city until they came to a little park by their apartments, where they would no longer talk but just sit there looking up at the stars. One night as they sat in the cool February air Morton asked Joan to be his wife, and with tears running down her face, Joan said yes. After all, they seemed to be meant for each other. Morton was the brain and Joan was the heart. They where young dreamers, passionate lovers, and they lived in a world of there own making. After three beautiful years of bliss, Joan became pregnant and for the first time in Morton’s life, he was truly happy.

But when Joan was in labor, the Doctors told him he had to leave the delivery room. They said the baby’s fine but his mothers fading fast. Morton Fell to his knees in the hallway and with tears streaming down his face he did something he had never done before, he prayed. He prayed with all his heart, promising God that he would do anything if he would let his wife live. He told God to take his life but not hers. He was still on his knees when the doctor came out of the delivery room two hours later. Morton didn’t even need to hear what the doctor had to say he could see it on the man’s face, that his wife was dead. Morton got up off the floor wiped the tears from his face and simply walked past the doctor without saying a word.

He drank heavily that night and it wouldn’t be the last night either. Hatred for God turned into hatred for any person unlucky enough to run into him while he was in one of his drunken stupors. From then on, he was either drunk or trying to get that way. He never went to see his son only signed him over to Joan’s sister Janet who was married to s fine man named John Walker. John and Janet had been trying to get pregnant when Joan died, but without any luck. He knew he could never raise a child without Joan, he didn’t even see how he could live his day-to-day life without her. She was his place of peace, his soul mate and now she was gone. Dr. Morton Chambers who had succeeded in anything he wished, could not over come his wife’s death, and it was a heart breaking scene when the tall, dark haired man with glasses crumbled under the weight of his own grief.

There is a point where, when a man’s love dies that in his grief he will either stand tall and over come the pain, or become bitterly angry and self destructive, and self destructive, is just what Morton had become. Almost as if his will to live died with Joan, Morton simply didn’t care any more for anything. As he saw it, life was a cruel joke without Joan to hold in his arms. He sold their house and everything but the clothes on his back to try and ease the pain of her memory. He even emptied out there savings and gave it all to Janet. He only kept what he needed for a plane ticket to New York and six hundred dollars.

-------

NEXT STOP Grand Concourse at 149th Street. ” crackled over the trains intercom system. This brought Morton back to the present. This was his stop and he smiled to the lady in the waitress uniform as he got off the train. He made his way through the dark streets of the Bronx until he came to the steps of his home. “Home”, was a cramped basement apartment with no windows. There was a sense of darkness even when he turned the lights on, and hung his coat up. After pulling out a bottle of whisky from the freezer, he went to his desk, took out a pen and piece of paper, and sat them on the desk. He then took out an object covered in cloth and held it in his hand.

-------

HE CLOSED his eyes and aloud him self to think back to when he had arrived in New York and applied for a job at the popular New York Museum of Natural History. He was given a position as a researcher of the ancient Mayan’s with his main focus to be on the artifacts that had all ready been excavated from southern Mexico, Guatemala and Belize. The job should have kept him from falling even deeper into his depression but it didn’t. He was even more a loner then ever before, refusing to talk with anyone other then Tom his boss. Tom had liked Morton mostly because they went to the same university although Morton did have more education then most of the staff Tom had hired put together.

Tom Dickinson was a large man and imposing character. He always wore a light blue suit that was thought, by most people to be the only one he had. He had done well with landing his job as head of research, no doubt due to his father who had made millions in the stock market. Tom’s father had given a large donation to the museum and the board had hired Tom, who was previously denied the job due to his grades in college. Tom would try to talk with Morton about his historic findings sometimes, Morton would reply with the textbook anser, and Tom would stand there nodding his balding head as every word flew over his head. But no matter how dumb Morton thought, Tom was he was still his boss. But for the most part they where friends, or at least he was the only person Morton wouldn’t immediately insult, and he had almost a reasonable amount respect for Tom.

Morton was a hard worker for the most part. He would arrive to work on time and usually stay later then anyone else. He poured himself into his work, researching pictures of plazas, monoliths, temples and pyramids, each decorated with drawings and hieroglyphs, all hidden in the dense Guatemalan rainforest. He studied ideographic and phonetic scripts written on stelae (stone monuments) that recount civil events and record their calendric and astronomical knowledge. He became fascinated with a book called the Dresden Codex. It was one of the few books that survived the bout of a religious self-righteous Spanish priest who visited Mexico on a charitable mission, but after finding in a cave, aspects of their practices, particularly human sacrifices, he destroyed five thousand Mayan statues and decided that their books were also the devil’s work and saw to it that they were burned, with only three books surviving. Morton believed that the Codex contained detailed astrological tables, which calculated the year to be 365.2420 days long, more accurate than the Julian calendar that we use today. He said, that he had managed to crack the code of the Mayan calendar, and that he could even translate the dated inscriptions found on buildings, stelae and other ancient Mayan artifacts.

But it seemed that Morton’s grip on sanity was slipping. He became increasingly paranoid and vary distant even to Tom himself. Morton drank more often and after twenty years, he was sent home three different times in one month for being too drunk to work. So there was nothing Tom could do when Morton came into his office raving about how he had found evidence that the world would end. Tom was forced to fire him. But Tom felt bad for Morton’s and let him work as a janitor if he promised to see Tom’s therapist twice a week and never talk about the world ending again.

Morton rolled his eyes, but agreed and started seeing Tom’s therapist who’s name was Dr. Greg Stone. Dr. Stone put him on anti-depression meds and told him to sleep. But after five years Morton didn’t get any better, and in fact, he seemed to be even more convinced that the world would end. He stayed up late researching his “work”. He would carry a notebook with him everywhere. Writing in it at subway stations and while in line at the grocery store. He became obsessed with his work and soon refused to take his meds. Saying they made his head to foggy, and that he couldn’t concentrate while on them.

--------

HE OPENED his eyes and sat back in his wooden chair. He unfolded the object he was holding, and stared at the handgun in his hands for a few minutes. He checked to make certain it was loaded, and then sat it on his desk. He took a gulp of the whisky sitting next to the gun and started writing. He was intently focused on what he wrote. His forehead and hands started to sweat with every flick of his pen. When he had finished, he wiped his hands off and picked up the letter to read it.



9/22/2010

I feel as if I were the only one who knows about a global catastrophe. But everyone takes me for a fool. It has cost me everything just because I know the truth, that something will shake the earth to its core. I know that the world might survive, but humanity might not. For this knowledge, I have lost my Job as an anthropologist and my degree is worthless because no one will hirer me. So now, I’m working as a janitor. Here in my darkest moments, I drink myself to sleep every night just so my brain will stop repeating the words “your wrong”. The only thing I have going for me is a small article that I write for a website that’s main focus is on conspiracy theories. With all my sanity ripped from me, only the feeling of always being watched hunts me now. This is how my life has become. So, I have chosen to end it. I will not live with this indignity. My wife is dead, and I can know longer live with the feeling of amenity and doom. Maybe I’ll find peace in the end, or maybe my redemption is to high a price to pay even for a God.

Dr. Morton Chambers

After reading it he sat it back down and grabs the 9mm berretta that his father gave him before his death two years ago, he took another gulp of the whisky finishing the bottle and put the gun into his mouth, as he had done so many times before. Then he put his finger on the trigger, he could taste the gun oil on his tongue and the sent in his nostrils. His hands start to shake and his head pounds as his heart races, pumping even more blood to his head. He starts to pull the gun back out, as his hands shake uncontrollably. But at this bleak time in his life, when pain has him by the throat, grace smiles on him. A tear rolls down his face and with a firm hand, he putts the gun barrel back in his mouth just like all the other times.

But this time, Morton finds the strength to pull the trigger, refusing to back out this time. With more force than he had used to scream his lungs out to try and ask God not to take his wife, adrenalin pumps into his veins, and the hammer of the berretta strikes the primer on the 9mm casing with a ping followed by a loud crash. With the sound of thunder the hollow point explodes from the back of the barrel filling his mouth with it gasses of burning sulfur, replacing the taste of gun oil with smoke.

The force of the gasses expanding makes his checks bulge and flap as if he had stuck his head out of a fast moving car. The back of the hollow point expands pressing its side’s agents the rifling groves along the insides of the barrel. This sends the hollow point into a spiral as it racing out of the gun.

The bullet strikes one of his back molars fragmenting the tooth along with the bullet sending pieces of bone and metal through the right side of his face and up through the thin tissue protecting his brain. His head jerks back and pieces of the hollow point rips though the soft mass of brain matter more like a shot gun blast than a single bullet. The brain feels no pain, so he only feels brief pressure on the side of his face followed by an odd tug on his scalp as what’s left of the bullet, exits the back of his head.

With a thud, he hears the pieces of bullet hit the wall behind him. Then the sensation of warm crimson blood running down that, which is left, of the right side of his face and the back of his head. His face hits with enough force agents the deck in front of him that the gun drops to the floor. His eyes remain open but hazy and glazed.

The colors in the room start to change and become brighter. Colors like blue and white become radiant. It’s beautiful; and the light is so bright now that it drain’s all color from the room. He can almost feel the last Electro’s firing in his brain as the room becomes so bright that it’s blinding and he wishes he could close his eyes.

There’s a since of euphoria that sweeps over Morton and he become weightless and dizzy. The room spins, slow at first then wildly out of control. Crimson blood pours out of his wounds running across the desk staining the corner of the letter he wrote. There’s an overwhelming sound like an old boat horn in his ears and the light in his eyes become even brighter. Just when the sound couldn’t get any louder or the light any brighter with a loud click the sound stops and the room turns to pitch black.

The number that has hunted Morton for the last eight years burns itself into the darkness, twisting his soul one last time. Like a street-sign, shining in the dark, it reads “2012”…

Sunday, September 7, 2008

Acknowledgments

Acknowledgments:

The author wishes to take this moment in history to praise the woman of his dreams, his wife and best friend Khadeshia. To his mother and father his highest honor, to his daughter all his joy, and to his friend’s special thanks for a lifetime filled with the greatest story’s ever told.
To My God, you are my Lord and savior, my divine protector, and because of your love, me, and my house will serve you.

Book one: The Late Chapter - Preface pg1

Preface:

"It could be that the purpose of your life is only to serve as a warning to others."


I once saw a picture of a boat that was sinking into the sea. The scene was of chaos, the boat was an old steam ship and looked vary much like the famous Titanic. It was in the grip of a dark storm and was more under the water than above it. There where jagged, black rocks all around; No doubt, to threaten the remaining life of the broken ship. At the vary bottom of the picture the caption read, "It could be that the purpose of your life is only to serve as a warning to others."

When I think about that ship, I pity her now. Oh, but there have been times that I could see how easy it is to relate with that old rusty ship. Alone, in that darkness, and the only people who see it turn away when there gaze falls on the broken vessel. Watching them pass by safe, and happy, but having to remain in that dangerous place.

Maybe, just maybe in the deepest parts of that black and red ship it smiles. Smiles at all the faces that her death has saved and finds peace in that knowledge. What a great legacy that must be, to be remembered as the one who died saving others. Think of all the people who have failed to make that kind of impact on the world.

I would like to be remember that way...

But I must also remember those who have tried to be a warning to others and have been forgotten. I wonder if the Mayans can see us now, do they believe they made a difference? Or are they more like the people of Jones town? 908 of them died and the only warring they left us with is that you should not drink Cool-Aid given by Jim Jones.

I wonder what will my death leave this world, will I be a humble and battered ship or a follower of a Mad man? Perhaps I wont even get that lucky! I could just fade in to history as the countless before me have with only a stone and obituary to be remembered by. Cold rock and dusty paper... In kindness mother nature might even use my body to feed a beautiful flower.

I think I would like that. I think I could be happy knowing that my death created and withstood a thing of beauty.

Sincerely,
SparrowSM

First Bolg

Dear reader,
Well I guess I have landed on the scene of the modern world, and so I thought I would join the crowd and start a blog. Quick question; What is a blog? I mean, where did it get it's name? But mostly, why did it take me so long to hear about it?

Well now that I am here and am having so much fun, I guess I am required to write something worth reading. I'll start with the name of my blog "Neo-Chambers", you see I was a vary imaginative child and I created a website called "neo-chambers" when I was 12 years old.

The Website was mainly a fan club for a popular RPG game series called Final Fantasy (Yes I was one of those guys). Well for some reason the name popped into my head when I made this blog. Don't really know why.

Now onto me, which I suspect is the point of blogging. I am 24 years old, male, and live in Lynchburg, Va. I grew up in a small town called Neoga in IL, where I guess I was a little bit of a trouble maker, but hay... It was a small town.

I am currently writing a book about 2012, and the idea that the world will end on dec 21, 2012. I also design website and do windows programing. I love to read, and find myself reading Tom Clancy lately.

Can't wait to read your replys,
Yours truly SparrowSM