Posts filed under ‘free stories’

ELMO’S INVENTION, CHAPTER 1

                                     ELMO’S INVENTION

                                              CHAPTER 1

                                     ELMO’S WORKSHOP

“Mildred,” Elmo Baker shouted, “Come down here.  I have something important to show you.”  Standing at the base of the cellar stairs, Elmo was in his usual excited state when a project was completed.  Of medium build, with a broad face and a mass of curly black hair, Elmo’s passion was science, physics in particular.   Mildred, with great trepidation, began walking down the stairs to the cellar.  At the base of the stairs stood Elmo, beaming, not a good sign, and Mildred could tell by the twinkle in his eye as she approached her husband, that a demonstration or explanation of an invention was about to take place.  And that twinkle would slowly if the experiment failed, which was often the case. 

The year was 1966, and Mildred loved Elmo so, but shortly after their marriage three years ago, it became clear how intense Elmo’s love for science was and that love would follow them all of their lives.  Mildred loved Elmo’s sense of curiosity but not the prospect of cleaning up the destruction, the mess of a failed experiment. 

 “Come here, Mil, I’ve got something to show you.” Elmo held out his hand to Mildred and said, “You have got to see this.  I’m ready to make the first test.”

Mildred was not looking forward to what Elmo might present to her.  Her husband was one of the first ‘dumpster divers’.  Los Alamos was the government facility known for its research of the atom, and it was where Elmo worked. And he knew that when an experiment failed, some of the materials that went into the effort were tossed, deemed trash. Lab bosses also discarded equipment they considered ‘obsolete’ to be replaced by the latest version.  But Elmo thought of this trash as treasure.  This was much to Elmo’s benefit and was the source that supplied his cellar laboratory.  At the end of his workday at his Los Alamos lab, Elmo would back his car up to the dumpster area and go to work.  On many days, he would come home with the backseat of his Chevy filled with scientific odds and ends.  To Elmo, Los Alamos’ trash was the building blocks of his inventions.

 Elmo led Mildred to the corner of the cellar where he had his workbench and lab of the cellar.  The remainder of the room was occupied by the usual accumulation of life which now had no use but never thrown away.  Below a bare overhead bulb was his invention.  Which looked to Mildred like and iron lung, one she had seen delivered. Elmo could see the confusion on his wife’s face, and proudly said, “Doll, I have invented a time machine.”

                                             * * *                                                                                                                                                                                                  

  Mildred kept her love for Elmo strong, although that could be difficult at times. 

Elmo was two years older than Mildred.  He was handsome, but that was not what had attracted Mildred to him.  It was his passion for a new curiosity he discovered, usually scientific. He found the world of science fascinating, with the wonder of a child enthralled by a rattle. At times he could sit for hours just thinking and occasionally smiling.  However, the toys that mystified him were sometimes slightly more dangerous than a toy.  

Mildred could not recall how many times Elmo called from the cellar, “Call the fire department!”  Shortly thereafter, dense smoke would issue from the open cellar door and begin to fill the kitchen.  This was long before 911 existed.  Mildred knew the phone number of the local fire department by heart.

She recalled the time Elmo constructed two small chambers attached by wires to an intricate control device with a host of dials and flashing lights.  The device was meant to transfer objects through space.  He wanted to test the machine before building the full-scale model.

Unfortunately for Mildred, she had been busy in the cellar doing some unpacking.  She wanted to display in her hutch the beautiful delicate six china teacups and saucers her mother had left her.  She knew exactly where they were packed and couldn’t wait to see them again.

The search did not take long, and while admiring one of the cups, she heard Elmo mutter, “I need something small.”  He happened to glance at Mildred and exclaimed, “Perfect.”

Before she realized what her husband was up to, he grabbed a cup and put it in one of the chambers.

“Elmo, what are you doing?  That was my mother’s cup!” shouted Mildred. “It’s precious to me.”

Elmo was only half listening as he began turning dials and focusing his attention on the chamber containing the cup.  “Don’t worry, Mildred.  Your cup is perfectly safe.  I’m just going to send it to the chamber at the other end of my workbench.”

Much to Mildred’s surprise, her vision of the cup appeared to waver, and then disappears.

Much to Elmo’s surprise, it did not reappear in the other chamber.

“Don’t worry, Mildred.  Let’s just give it some time.”

An hour later Mildred went storming up the stairs with five cups and six saucers, angry and sad at her loss.

Elmo continued to stare at the second chamber scratching his head and repeating over and over again, “I wonder where it went.”  He was happy that his wife wasn’t there when suddenly he began laughing hysterically, thinking of the cup suddenly appearing someplace quite by surprise and mystifying some unsuspecting person.  He was sure the cup went somewhere as matter.  For if it had been converted to energy, all that would be left of his house and most of the surrounding area would be cinders.

February 10, 2025 at 6:17 pm Leave a comment

ELMO’S INVENTION, CHAPTER 2

                                                  ELMO’S INVENTION

                                              CHAPTER 2

                               THE BEGINNING OF THE TIME MACHINE

One day after visiting the supermarket, although in those days they weren’t very super, Mildred was pulling her two-wheeled shopping cart down the street and was amazed to see a pickup parked in her driveway.  It was three in the afternoon and four burly men stood behind the truck.  They looked relieved when they saw her approach.  In the bed of the truck was a huge piece of equipment.  Mildred recognized it immediately.  It was an iron lung.

Just recently, the newly developed polio vaccine began distribution on sugar cubes. Gradually iron lungs were no longer needed.  However, Mildred had lived with the fear of polio, knew people who had contracted the disease. Some still depended on the device for their lives to continue. “Where do you want this, lady?” asked the man obviously in charge.

“I don’t want it anywhere,” answered Mildred.  She had no idea why they had brought this to her home.  Then her mind had a flash, Elmo.

“Does an Elmo Baker live here?” the man asked. 

There it was.  Her husband had bought an iron lung.  Shaking her head, Mildred said, “I’m sure it belongs in the cellar.  I’ll show you the way.”

After many grunts and groans, the machine rested on its wheels in the cellar.

 “What could Elmo want with this thing?” pondered Mildred out loud.

Hearing Mildred one of the men said, “I don’t know nothing, lady.  We just deliver.”

The crew went back upstairs and climbed into their truck and left. And Elmo had some explaining to do when he came home from work.

February 8, 2025 at 9:16 pm Leave a comment

                                   ELMO IS COMING

                            ELMO IS COMING

Elmo is soon arriving for your reading enjoyment. He is the main character in my two novellas, Elmo’s Invention and Elmo’s Sojourn.

In Elmo’s Sojourn, written first, he is a retired Los Alamos scientist but has never strayed from his love of science. He has a theory that it is possible to travel through space through wormholes. He builds a device, and it works! However, Elmo goes nowhere, but a creature appears in his cellar lab. Elmo being Elmo, decides to return with the creature to its home. Thus, the adventure for Elmo, in a strange world begins.

Elmo’s Sojourn has a long history. The novella was first published online by Bewildering Stories in 2006. Later, it was published by Mélange Books as an eBook and in a print anthology, Curious Hearts, in 2010. Then, purely by accident, I discovered the first two chapters of the eight-chapter novella were published in China in an English-language science fiction publication in 2008.

Elmo’s Invention, written as a prequel to Elmo’s Sojourn, has only been published on my blog. In this novella Elmo is working as a scientist in Los Alamos and has the idea to build a time machine.

He builds it, and it works, but not in the way he intended. His discovery is made public and causes an uproar for Elmo and his wife in their community, and beyond.

After things die down and Elmo is using his machine to raise chickens it ceases to work. In the process of repairing it, he stumbles upon the reason why it was not working as intended. But as a true time machine, more problems lurk in the future.

I had a great deal of fun writing these two novellas and I hope you have as much fun reading them.

I will begin publishing Elmo’s Invention a chapter at a time every three days on by blog. When completed, Elmo’s Sojourn will make its appearance.

February 4, 2025 at 2:21 pm Leave a comment

        THE RELUCTANT ZOMBIE: A SHORT STORY

The Reluctant Zombie is a humorous short story involving a college professor visiting Haiti where he succeeds in getting himself turned into a zombie.

It has been previously published by Blood, Blade & Thruster in their Winter 2006/2007 issue.

                                       THE RELUCTANT ZOMBIE

As Norman stumbled through the dank Haitian swamp, he groaned, “Willard, it seems so unnatural walking around with my arms outstretched, but I can’t put them down. I have an image to uphold.”

Willard, who was also stumbling along shook his head and sighed, “Of course its unnatural, you’re a zombie, damn it – your image is history.”

Norman complained, “I didn’t ask to be a zombie.” With some difficulty he swiveled his neck and surveyed the Haitian countryside.

Norman took in the landscape surrounding him. He walked through a village. It was nothing more than a few huts of mud and straw along a dusty road. Chickens pecked in the brush along the roadside. Chickens! For some reason their presence made him uncomfortable. “I really don’t want to be a zombie,” Norman muttered. He was a forty-year-old college professor, a dark-haired trim man always dressed well. Now he was walking around covered in grim and dressed in rags.

Willard said, “If you didn’t want to be a zombie, you shouldn’t have runover the old voodoo woman’s chickens with your jeep. Was she pissed… She’s also the one that converted me into a zombie, but that’s another story.”

Norman looked at Willard and could not guess what he once looked like. Willard was pale, gaunt and also dressed in rags. His age was made undeterminable by his zombie state.

“As soon as you angered her she began making one of her little dolls. She cackled while she worked. That’s never a good sign. That doll is now where your soul now resides.”

“I can’t believe this is happening to me, Willard. I came to Haiti to do research on Haitian religions. I am, or was, respected and well-publicized anthropologist. Now look at me. I’m wearing rags and walking around like a … like a …”

“Zombie?” asked Willard.

“Just because I ran over a few chickens?”

“Um, Norman, they looked like chickens, but they weren’t. Nothing around the voodoo woman’s house is what it appears to be. They were once her enemies. She changed them into chickens, and you freed them from pecking for insects along the road for the rest of their lives. You ended their suffering. So naturally, in her anger, she turned you into a zombie. I’m here to instruct zombies how to attack people and teach them what are the best parts to eat.”

Norman made a face at this remark.

“Now what’s the matter?” asked Willard.

Norman sighed, “I’m a vegetarian, but I do eat dairy.”

Willard said with discuss, “There are no vegetarian zombies. And attacking the dairy section of a store is not going to do much for the zombie image.”

Norman grumbled, “Oh, I wouldn’t want to do anything to detract from the zombie image. Give be a break.”

As the two zombies were arguing, Willard happened to glance over at the woman’s house. There she stood in the doorway. Willard could tell she was not happy.

She hobbled toward Willard and Norman, a waddling mass adorned with bones and beads. Her crown of thick dreadlocks made her appear as if some multi-legged beast was sitting on her head.

The old voodoo woman shouted at Norman, “I know you be a troublemaker, with your fancy jeep, running over people’s property.”

Norman mumbled, “Sorry about the chickens.”

“You sorry alright. You be good and sorry real soon.”

The old woman produced her Norman doll, lifted the doll skyward, and began chanting in a low rumbling voice.

Norman’s soul returned to his body. He felt like his old self. He laughed with relief, then glanced up. Willard stumbled toward him; arms raised.

Willard, old buddy, we’re friends – right?”

Willard only groaned and roared.

Norman looked desperately for an escape. On either side of him zombies with ash-grey complexions staggered in his direction. He was surrounded.

The old voodoo woman said, “Here be my children, and they be hungry.” She cackled as the circle of zombies grew smaller and smaller around Norman.

From beyond the wall of the living dead, Norman pleaded, “Please, make me a chicken!”

                                             The End

January 2, 2025 at 6:02 pm Leave a comment

       THE LEGEND OF FRENCH CREEK, PART VIII

                                                        The Legend

                                                         of                    

                                                 French Creek

 Once camp was set up, we decided to take a hike and see a few of the waterfalls for which the park is famous.  The air was cool for June, and I anticipated a stress-relieving walk.  As I packed some snacks into my backpack, my hand brushed against an outside pocket of the pack I seldom used.  There was something small and hard inside.  I unzipped the pocket and reached in, withdrawing something that set me shaking.  It was a Druid talisman.  I knew from my research exactly what it was and its blasphemous purpose.  The crude fetish was in the form of a naked woman with prominent breasts and an obvious cleft between her stunted legs.  I had seen a drawing of a statue exactly like this in a book of ancient Druid curses and spells.  Its specific purpose was to summon Druid spirits to its possessor on the night of the summer solstice. After a year, was I still to be haunted by these demonic specters?  I had to dispose of this totem, and soon.

 “I think I’ll take a canoe ride before dinner,” I told Joan after quickly forming a plan.

 I pushed the canoe out, jumped in, and paddled toward the center of the lake.  When I was far from shore, I reached into my pocket, retrieved the crude statue, and hurled it into the water.  I was now free of the talisman and free of its purpose, or so I hoped.

 Tonight, will be a very long night.

                                                         THE END

            HAVE A GREAT THANKSGIVING HOLIDAY

November 28, 2024 at 2:37 pm Leave a comment

THE LEGEND OF FRENCH CREEK, PART VII

                                                                   The Legend

                                                         of                    

                                                 French Creek

The blackness of the forest became full of a milk-white vapor, although above, the sky was full of stars.  There was no wind, yet the mist came rapidly from different directions and formed a shell of white around the concrete slab.  Soon the vapor took the form of a house, becoming a solid structure.  Windows, now present, glowed bright red and I could see figures dancing within.  The door of the house opened and there appeared a group of naked men and women horribly burned, their bodies smoking.  I wanted to look away but could not.  Their obscene presence came toward me.  They lunged at me.  Their hideous laughter screamed in my ears.  Now the horrors surrounded me.  My mind could not take any more.  I lost consciousness and dreamed of daemons and devils surrounding me in an attempt to capture my soul.

 I awoke the next morning with a feeling of dread, not wanting to open my eyes.  The ruin was the same as it appeared the night before, although the debris on the forest floor leading to my campsite appeared disturbed.  I looked down, and to my horror, my sleeping bag bore handprints burnt into the fabric.

 I packed up my gear and headed down the trail to meet my wife and return to the comfort of my home, never wanting to return to French Creek Park again.

                                                   * * *

 I tried to make the horror of that night clear of my mind, but it wouldn’t happen.  I felt I had brought something back from that gruesome night and could not escape its presence.  Damned if I could figure out what it was.  So, I switched gears and embraced the event.  After some research on the Druids, I worked my experience and new-found background into a few stories that I managed to sell.

 Nearly a year had passed since that dreadful night, when Joan announced, “I think we need to get away.  How about a short four-day vacation?”

 “Sounds great, but it better be cheap,” I said.  “You know money is tight.”

 “Camping is not expensive,” she answered.  I’ve reserved a site from June 19 to June 22.”  She saw my face grow deathly pale, and then quickly added, “A site at Rickett’s Glen.”

 “I thought you were talking about French Creek.  I’m never going back there again.”

I tried to make the horror of that night clear of my mind, but it wouldn’t happen.  I felt I had brought something back from that gruesome night and could not escape its presence.  Damned if I could figure out what it was.  So, I switched gears and embraced the event.  After some research on the Druids, I worked my experience and new-found background into a few stories that I managed to sell.

 Nearly a year had passed since that dreadful night, when Joan announced, “I think we need to get away.  How about a short four-day vacation?”

 “Sounds great, but it better be cheap,” I said.  “You know money is tight.”

 “Camping is not expensive,” she answered.  I’ve reserved a site from June 19 to June 22.”  She saw my face grow deathly pale, and then quickly added, “A site at Ricketts Glen.”

 “I thought you were talking about French Creek.  I’m never going back there again.”

November 27, 2024 at 1:13 pm Leave a comment

THE LEGEND OF FRENCH CREEK, PART VI

                                                                  The Legend

                                                         of                    

                                                 French Creek

I formulated a plan.  I would have Joan drop me off the evening of the summer solstice, which would be a Tuesday night.  Joan was hesitant but gave in after I told her it would help me with a story I was working on.  She knew I was going through a dry period.  An hour before dusk, I would set out on the Orange Trail with a pack containing a sleeping bag and whatever I might need for the night.  Appearing to be just another hiker, I would make camp near the ruins and see for myself if there was anything to The Legend of French Creek.

 The night of the summer solstice was rapidly approaching, and my feelings ranged from that of stupidity with this pursuit to fear of spending the night alone deep in the woods.

 The morning of June 21st I found myself packing my gear.  I would not build a fire, so I included a can of beans, bread and a can of SPAM©.  My wife entered the bedroom and wrinkled her nose as she saw the SPAM© going into my backpack.  She does not appreciate this brick of pork-flavored heaven as much as I do.

 “So, you’re really going through with this crazy plan,” she said.  Joan had been trying to humor me but at the same time talks me out of going for some time now.  Her arguments only strengthened my determination to see it through, but also added to my occasional thoughts of what a stupid idea this was.

 At seven o’clock that night we set out on the forty-five-minute drive to the park.  Along the way, Joan would continually ask, “Are you sure you want to do this?”

 I responded, “Yes,” although it was not as firm a ‘yes’ as I intended.

 We entered the park and stopped along the circular road near our former campsite.  I got out, shouldered my backpack, and said, “I guess I’m ready.”

 Joan replied, “I know you won’t reconsider.  Please be careful.  I’ll pick you up tomorrow at noon.”   We kissed, and she drove off.  My writer’s mind was already on hyper drive.  And this was the last time he saw my wife, I thought.

 I walked the Orange Trail toward the ruin.  The smell of campfire smoke filled the air.  Alone on the trail, with thoughts full of horror and mayhem, I pressed on.  As I approached the site of the burned structure, the sun was a giant orange ball peeking through trees racing toward the horizon.  An open space across the trail from my quarry caught my attention.  It was there I would make my camp.

 The forest was darkening now and becoming chilly.  I climbed into my sleeping bag and leaned against a boulder to begin my vigil.  Cutting the SPAM© into slices, I made two sandwiches and opened the beans.  Saving some SPAM© for my morning meal, I consumed my dinner. 

The forest was dark now, but I dare not light a light.  I concentrated on the ruin taking note of the sounds and the feelings of dread I encouraged my mind to pursue.  I tried to remain awake, but the warmth of my sleeping bag and a full stomach made me drowsy, and I soon fell asleep.

 What happened next I wanted to credit to a dream, but I know it was real.

November 26, 2024 at 5:59 pm Leave a comment

THE LEGEND OF FRENCH CREEK, PART V

The Legend

                                                         of                    

                                                 French Creek

Two weeks later, we were packing for our camping trip.  Our dog, Millie, appeared to be as excited as we were, seeing her food and toys packed up and taken out to the van.

We set out on the afternoon of Halloween full of anticipation in leaving our daily lives and spending a weekend in the wilderness with our pup.  After finding our campsite, we quickly set up camp and Millie, attached to a long lead, sniffed the forest floor.  That night, seated by a roaring campfire with Joan, my imagination ran wild.  I pictured Druids descending on our campsite, with us captured for their human sacrifices.  Of course, nothing happened.  The entire night passed, uneventful.  My imagination can be a weird place.

The next morning, we planned our first hike with Millie.  The Orange Trail passed behind our tent.  It was an easy trail, ideal for Millie, my wife and me.  After packing lunch, we set out in late morning with Millie taking the lead, full of excitement.  We walked the trail for a little more than two miles when it meandered toward the perimeter of the park.  After another half mile, Millie’s excitement on this adventure changed dramatically.  Our pup began to growl and pull away from the direction we were going, not wanting to continue.  We pulled her along and her growl became a whimper of fear, something we’d never seen her exhibit.  Another fifty feet and there it was.  I was sure it was the site of the minister’s house described by the old man in the store.

As Millie pulled back on her leash, we approached the destroyed structure.  There was a concrete slab about thirty by twenty feet off the trail with charred posts sticking out from points in the foundation.  A rusted bedspring was the only sign of furniture.  A few decaying pipes punctured the concrete slab.  What was unusual was the lack of vegetation surrounding the slab.  No trees had invaded the immediate area.  Only weeds and forest litter marred the land.

 We stood there, with Millie pulling away.  Joan said, “What a curious place out here in the middle of nowhere.  And why is Millie acting so strange?”

I had yet to relate to Joan the story the old man told me.  As we continued on our hike, I told her about the old man’s story.  We both noticed that the farther we walked along the trail, the more Millie returned to her pleasant disposition.

I knew I had to return to these ruins on the summer solstice to investigate.

November 25, 2024 at 1:01 pm Leave a comment

THE LEGEND OF FRENCH CREEK, PART IV

The Legend

                                                         of                    

                                                 French Creek

“It was in the early 1920’s when a new preacher came to town.  During the late summer the townsfolk said they would build him a house.  He walked not far from the church and saw a level area with little growth.  Apparently, the damn fool picked the site where the pagans’ cabin once stood.

 “The house was built before winter set in and the congregation spent the remainder of the winter and the next spring worshipping, led by the new minister.

 “Then the night of the summer solstice arrived.  No one knows what happened, but the minister’s house burnt down that night with him in it.  The church caught fire and burned to the ground too.

 “Eventually, during the depression, the town died, and the area returned to wilderness.  Here’s where the legend takes over, my young friend.  All the buildings were overgrown by the forest except for the minister’s.  The concrete slab that served as its foundation is still there, along with some burnt up debris.  The forest won’t touch that rubble, so the legend says, because the pagans still dwell there underground.  I don’t know exactly where it is, but it’s somewhere on the perimeter of French Creek State Park.  Folks say it’s still there, easy to find along one of the popular trails, but I never bothered lookin’.  Some say they get a strange feeling when they hike past the rubble on the day of the summer solstice.  No one goes there that night.  Campers all stay snug and warm by their fires or in their tents, and town folks safe in their homes.”

 “That’s a great story,” I told the old man.  “Maybe I could use some of it in a story.  But first, I’ll try to find the ruin you mentioned.”

 “Don’t know if you should, mister.  All legends have a bit of truth.  I wouldn’t want to cause you any harm.”

 “Don’t worry.  I’ll be careful.”

 I shook his hand and left the small store, my mind full of ideas. I kept in mind the details he gave me about the location of the minister’s house.  With our impending camping trip to French Creek State Park, I thought the coincidence was perfect for me to do some research.  If I could locate the site I could use the surroundings to give my story a realistic bent.

November 24, 2024 at 1:32 pm Leave a comment

 THE LEGEND OF FRENCH CREEK, PART III

                                                 The Legend

                                                         of                    

French Creek

I pulled a small pad and a pen from my shirt pocket.  “Mind if I take some notes?”

 “Hell no.  Most around here know the story – it’s no secret.”

 He began his tale.

 “Grandpa first told me this story when I was young.  Wanted to scare the hell out of me, I suppose.  Used to enjoy doing that a lot.  Starts back in the late 1700’s when some people moved in that weren’t welcomed in this neck of the woods.  They came from England.  Some kind of pagan cult called Drubids.”

 “Do you mean Druids?” I asked.

 “Ya, something like that.  Anyway, they wanted to be left alone so they built a house way out in the woods.  There was men and women, but no children.  Young, they was.  Maybe eight or ten of them.

 “Seems the locals, being of the religious type, didn’t take too kindly to these pagans.  Then the trouble started.  Farm animals turned up missing, some cows and sheep.  The locals suspected treachery by the pagans, but they kept their peace.  Then, within two weeks’ time, three children went missing.  A group of townsfolk paid a visit to the pagans.  The heathens said they knew nothing of the animals or children disappearing.  But the locals thought they were acting suspicious.

 “This all happened in the spring.  Then came the massacre.

It was the night of the summer solstice.  The nearest residents to the pagans reported a red glow in the forest that night.  Some of the local men, well-armed, went to investigate.  They approached the pagan camp and saw the men and women dancing naked around a fire.  There was a pile of cut-up carcasses, no one could tell what they were being thrown into the fire.

 “One of the men, nervous I suppose, shot into the air and the pagans made for the cabin.  The story goes that the men surrounded the cabin, and then someone threw a blazing brand onto the roof.  The cabin caught fire.  Screams could be heard coming from the house.  Some of the pagans tried to escape through the door and windows, but they were shot and fell back into the inferno.  While they waited on of the men poked around in the fire.  Found bones, small human bones so the story goes.  The men of the town remained until the house collapsed.  By morning, it was just a smoking ruin.  They left and said little of what they had done to anyone outside the community.  Some of the curious would visit the site of the pagan compound, but that ended after a while.  And as time passed, the story faded but was not totally forgotten.

November 23, 2024 at 7:02 pm Leave a comment

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