Posts tagged ‘writing’

                              MY SCAM EXPERIENCE

MY SCAM EXPERIENCE

I was on my computer when I suddenly got a blue screen from ‘Microsoft’ telling me that I was being hacked it had been locked, and not to shut off my computer. Also, the message gave me a phone number to call.

I called the number and was told all my personal information was at risk. They asked me for my cell phone number. I do not have a cell phone and that seemed to disappoint them. Then they told me not to answer my landline until the next day at 11:00 AM.

At some time during my interaction with them they asked to take control of my computer, and I allowed this. After all, I thought I was dealing with Microsoft. At some point I told them that, “I feel sorry for hackers because they lead such useless lives.” Little did I know that I was talking to a hacker.

When they called the following day they said they were going to connect me to my bank on a secure line. Now, the man I was talking to had a distinct accent. Who knows what country I was talking to? When I was connected to my bank on a secure line the individual I was talking to had the same accent. I immediately hung up, called my bank, and that was the end of the scam.

This happened more than a year ago. I don’t think I lost any personal information and had my computer checked to make sure there were no surprises lurking within.

I’m telling you all this because if you suddenly message from Microsoft like what I received telling you your computer is lock, which you will find is true, and give you a number to call, it is a scam. Shut your computer off and do not call the phone number. Hopefully, when you turn your computer back on it is no longer locked. If it is, you might need help to unlock it.

I hope you learn from my experience not to be scammed.

June 16, 2025 at 8:59 pm Leave a comment

                     A SCAM, IT’S NOT MICROSOFT

A SCAM, IT’S NOT MICROSOFT

This post will be followed by another more lengthy post concerning scams I have experienced three times with my computer being locked with a screen saying Microsoft has found a security leak on my computer. There is usually a blue screen along with one or two others warning you not to turn off your computer. You are given a phone number to call. DO NOT CALL THE NUMBER.

Do turn off your computer. After turning my computer back on one time the screens and lock were gone, one time they weren’t, and I had to seek help to get my computer unlocked.

The first time I experienced this scam I did call the number listed. I will soon post what happens when you call the number

June 11, 2025 at 8:16 pm Leave a comment

WHAT IS AN ‘INFO DUMP’?

                            WHAT IS AN ‘INFO DUMP’?

What is an ‘info dump’?

A ‘info dump’ is something writers try to avoid. In my opinion, an ‘info dump’ slows down the story and may result in boring the reader. Here is the condition which could result in an ‘info dump’ if the writer is not careful. It would be interesting if you now thought about some of the stories you have read and whether they contained an ‘info dump’ and if it affected your appreciation of the story. Say there’s a situation in a story which requires a detailed explanation to carry the story along. How the writer decides to explain these details could result in the story shifting from a story to a lecture and possibly bore the reader. What I usually do is first determine how much detail the reader needs to understand what is happening in the story. Then I deliver the knowledge usually with characters discussing the situation rather than writing a detailed explanation to inform the reader of what is involved in what is occurring in the story. Conversation between characters avoids an ‘info dump’. In my story, Martian Rebirth, I use the head of NASA conducting a press conference to include some prion information in the

June 10, 2025 at 6:22 pm Leave a comment

   PRIONS AND THE MARS INVASION OF EARTH

PRIONS AND THE MARS INVASION OF EARTH

While writing Martian Rebirth I asked myself, “How could enough prions, floating through space, be able to infect an entire planet. This recently resulted in a look at prion replication.  Also, in avoiding including this information, I avoided an ‘info dump’.

The next two posts will involve an explanation of what an ‘info dump’ is and a look and prion replication and how, in my story, prion replication on Earth would be different than that on Mars. These subjects may not instill a burning interest in some. But some may be curious.

I wondered how prions multiply for they are nothing but strains of protein lacking DNA and RNA, standard requirements to multiply.

I also realized if an expensive exploration of my question in this story would probably result in an ‘info dump’ and slow down the story. So now that you have read the story what follows is the explanation of what exactly an ‘info dump’ is and a brief look at prion replication.

June 4, 2025 at 5:02 pm Leave a comment

ELMO’S SOJOURN, CHAPTER 12

                                                  ELMO’S SOJOURN

                                           CHAPTER 12

                          ELMO HAS HIS HOMECOMING

The four stayed up late into the night.  Rolack described how she was made pregnant three times, felt the joy of motherhood as a new life stirred within her body and was filled with revulsion at the sight of the tiny, winged monster she delivered.  She never met any of the women from Earth but had heard talk of them.  They had not she learned, survived for very long on Gylex.  Because they were physically so much smaller than the women of Roth and Gylex, they often died during pregnancies in which they carried fetuses much larger than an Earth child.  Labor and delivery killed the few that survived to term.  All that was left were stories and bones scattered among the trash of the prison.

Valmid and Cal could not take their eyes from their daughter, couldn’t believe she was back, and that the planet was safe from more women suffering her fate.  Valmid explained to Rolack how Elmo had traveled to Roth and how his visit led to her freedom and that of her companions.

After a while, Valmid and Elmo decided to take a walk and let Cal and Rolack have some of the mother-daughter time they both desperately needed.  Valmid sensed also that something troubled Elmo and thought perhaps a stroll in the early morning air would ease his mind and loosen his thoughts.

They walked for a while, enjoying the peaceful countryside.  Then Elmo began, “Valmid, before I arrived on your planet, I was a retired scientist just puttering around in my cellar.  Then I hit on the concept that brought me here.  Back on earth, I have a wife with whom I have spent most of my life.  But that life is over, and I can’t return to it. Now, I’m a young man.  I have a future again.  I cannot go back to Earth and resume my retirement.  There is so much I want to learn from you, from your planet.  I want Mildred to journey here.  She is my life; we share a history.  I need her to share my future on Roth.  If I cannot convince Mildred to come here, I don’t know what I will do.”

They walked on a while more before Valmid shared his thoughts. “Elmo, your knowledge has already proved indispensable to Roth.  Who knows in what ways my planet could benefit from the knowledge you have of Earth?  And if there were a problem on Roth that can only be solved by making a trip to Earth, I would find it difficult to blend into the population.  I have discussed all this with the elders of the planet, and we all reached the same conclusion: We want you to stay.”

They continued their walk in silence until Elmo asked the question that he had been nagging him whenever he thought of making Roth his home.  “Valmid, if Mildred agrees to come here, could she travel through the wormhole that I first used?  If she could, we would both be starting a new life on a new planet.”

Valmid considered this, “If she agrees to come here, I see no problem in granting your request.  I think we should return to Earth and try to convince Mildred to spend time on Roth.”

April 30, 2025 at 5:16 pm Leave a comment

ELMO’S SOJOURN, CHAPTER 11

                                             ELMO’S SOJOURN

                                                     CHAPTER 11

                                    ELMO’S OFFER IS ACCEPTED

The argument went back and forth between Elmo and Valmid, but Valmid finally succumbed to Elmo’s persistence.  “I accept your help my friend.  We shall leave when the devices are ready.”

In a few days the six new Freon throwers were ready and tested.  Valmid called the five other Rothians to his home.  The seven warriors were ready to depart.  Elmo noticed that each member of the team carried a pouch in addition to his Freon throwers on their backs.  Elmo was also given a pouch.

“We are taking as many time-space machines as we can carry.  We have no idea how many women we will be freeing and returning to Roth.  I’m afraid there is little hope of rescuing any of the women abducted from Earth, for the abductions ceased there almost sixty years ago, when the Freon level reached intolerable levels for the Gylex monsters.

“Our plan is to journey to Gylex, hopefully arriving at a deserted area. Then we will try to follow the thoughts of the captive women.”  All five of the Rothians and Elmo nodded and prepared to leave.  Elmo joined Valmid in the center of his machine; the other five occupied two machines facing back-to-back in preparation for a hostile greeting.

In a flash the most dismal landscape imaginable surrounded them, along with four Gylexian monsters.  Three were quickly dispatched, surprise being on the side of the Rothians.  The fourth began flying away, thanks to the weaker gravity of the planet; Elmo was able to leap high enough to douse the creature and it abruptly fell to the ground.

After the initial excitement, the travelers had a chance to inspect their surroundings.  Elmo thought, “If there is a hell, it must look something like this.”  The Rothians were unfamiliar with the concept of Elmo’s hell, but they all shuddered at the scene before them.  Everything was colored shades of gray and black.  The landscape was dotted with miniature volcanoes no more than a few hundred feet high, most in a constant state of eruption that spewed heavy columns of smoke and ash into the air and shed an eerie glow from the magma seeping down their sides.  The atmosphere was thick and oppressive.  The party had timed their arrival for daytime, but a faint twilight was all that greeted them.  The only vegetation visible were huge trees, not unlike those found on Roth.  Their trunks disappeared into the unbroken mantle of black clouds that filled the sky; their leaves seeking the life-giving light denied the planet’s surface.

The rescue party could see larger mountains in the distance; their sides honeycombed with openings.  Occasionally a winged Gylexian would fly in or out of apertures; these must be their cities.

The six Rothians stood still and quietly concentrated, seeking the thoughts of the women they had come to rescue.  It did not take long for them to sense Rothian thoughts and then locate their origin on a distant part of the planet.  They set up their time-space machines, again standing back-to-back and ready for an attack.  They were sure there must be guards at their destination, and to eliminate them by taking advantage of the element of surprise.

In a flash the seven were standing before a Gylexian hill, somewhat smaller than the hill they first had seen.   Perhaps this was the prison where the women were being held.  At the same time, they also found themselves standing before five guards armed with weapons resembling crossbows.  Before the Rothians could react, one of their parties was shot in the neck and collapsed.  Freon spray quickly took care of the guards, but not before they sounded an alarm that brought more guards flying out of the prison, also to fall to the ground as the air filled with Freon.  Three of the party, along with Elmo, remained outside to guard against further attacks.   Valmid and the remaining member of his group entered the prison to free the women.  The sight inside sickened them.  Corpses of ten to 15 Rothian women littered the floor of the forbidding structure.  As they proceeded farther into the dark, dank hallways they came upon the cells they were seeking.  Each cell held two or three women in various stages of pregnancy.  As Valmid had anticipated, there were no women from Earth, only women from Roth.  Valmid searched wildly from cell to cell looking for his daughter, calling her name, “Rolack, Rolack.” He stopped at the entrance of a cell holding two women, then choked back tears and cried, “Rolack!”

A woman inside stood and cried, “Father!”

Valmid had found his daughter.  In short order, the keys to the cells were located and the women released.  They made their way out of the prison, the women breathing free air for the first time since their capture.  One of the women collapsed by the body of the fallen Rothian, crying for the husband she had not seen for years and who had died trying to rescue her.  Valmid ordered everyone to unfurl the time-space machines and, in twos and threes, quickly occupy them. Two Rothians carried the body of their fallen companion to the last machine and gently laid him down.  Then Valmid distributed the preset control boxes, and the group disappeared in a series of flashes, bound for Roth.

Once on Roth, the women cried, laughed and even collapsed when united with their families.  Those who returned pregnant wanted most to immediately cleanse their bodies of the demon cargo they carried.   Valmid, Elmo and Rolack entered their home to find Cal crying out at the sight of her daughter.  The three family members hugged and cried while Elmo stood to the side and felt an emptiness he could no longer deny.

April 27, 2025 at 4:40 pm Leave a comment

ELMO’S SOJOURN, CHAPTER 7

                                              ELMO’S SOJOURN

                                                     CHAPTER 7

                                          ATTACK FROM GYLEX

The scene outside the house was peaceful and remained peaceful until the dingo plants began their shrill alarm, joined moments later by the sound of flapping wings.  The camera recorded a sight, illuminated by the outside lights that sent a chill through Elmo; it was a vision from hell.  What it showed was a creature at least eight feet tall with arms and legs like that of a human.   But there the resemblance ceased.  It flew.  Its wings appeared like that of a bat, leathery and veined, colored blood red, like the rest of its body.  The torso was covered with thickly matted black hair, but the head was its most frightening aspect.  It resembled the head of a wolf, with an elongated snout exposing a vicious set of teeth.  The ears were long and pointed, also like a bat’s.  The creature hovered before the camera, snarled at the dingo’s alarm, then flew off.

Valmid paused a few moments for Elmo’s nerves to settle down then said, “These creatures are a menace to the planet Roth, and someday soon they will again menace Earth.  We know a great deal about these creatures, although no Rothian has ever set foot on their planet.  These creatures do not know of our ability to read their thoughts.  Because of their actions, we never attempted to communicate with them.  Elmo, when you arrived, you stood in wonderment and amazement at all you witnessed.  But when these creatures from Gylex first arrived, they had one thing in mind: to do us harm.  The first attack occurred one night many years ago at a remote location and was not discovered for days.  A worker making a delivery discovered a man and his son, dead and partially devoured.  The wife and the daughter were missing.  Later, other attacks were made in more populated areas, and the reality of these monsters became known.

“We learned that the invasion was from the planet Gylex, which had been wracked by a strange illness, a virus that destroyed most of the female population.  It was finally controlled, but not until ninety percent of the females were dead.  You now know Elmo, that our biochemistry is very similar – almost identical.  The Gylexans share this similarity.  The sexual chemistry of us all is also similar.  The hormones and mating rituals are almost identical.   Only the gestation periods vary slightly.  The primary purpose of the invasion of Roth was to abduct females to sustain their population.  Once captured, the females were implanted with embryos created with eggs harvested from Gylexian females before the females died.”

Elmo shivered at the thought of being touched by one of these monsters, let alone carried to their planet.

“We are a peaceful civilization, unable to defend ourselves from these monsters.  We found that the dingo plants, with their extended nocturnal strands, would warn of an invasion.  The Gylexans came only at night, for their planet had an odious and polluted atmosphere allowing very little light to penetrate.  They cannot bear the life-giving light of our days.”

Valmid paused for a moment and his eyes filled with tears. “One day,” he said, “our daughter was visiting friends.  The dingo plants of the house had not yet surrounded the dwelling with their strands, allowing the fiends to strike and abduct our girl.  Those are her clothes you are wearing now.”

Elmo’s heart sank at this knowledge.  “But Valmid, you said Earth was also in danger and had been invaded in the past.  We have had no invasions by these beasts.”

“Ah Elmo,” Valmid replied, “but you have.  From the Gylexian thoughts we found that Earth had been invaded, your females captured and returned to Gylex.  These monsters kept a low profile on Earth because of your weapons, and the ease with which your society uses them without hesitation.  Earth abductions continued for some time, until an invasion team became deathly ill.  One day, a group of them died; dropped to the ground and instantly decayed. A lone survivor, near death, returned to Gylex and reported this development.  Gylex then ceased its Earth invasions.  They had not consumed anything on your planet, so they assumed something in your atmosphere was killing them.  But these monsters are persistent.  They continued to send parties for short periods of time – always returning to Gylex close to death.  That is until recently.  They still cannot remain on your planet for long, but the time they can tolerate visits is lengthening.  I fear soon the invasion of Earth will begin again.”

Elmo thought for a moment.  He did recall remembering a series of unexplained disappearances of women early in the twentieth century.

“I’ve been to your planet Elmo, so have others from Roth.  But because of the strict rules of our people, we are not allowed to interfere with your civilization.  Imagine the hysteria that would ensue if I were to appear.  Knowing your love for weaponry, I doubt if I would have existed long enough to tell my story.  You cannot imagine the joy, the relief all my brothers and I felt when you came to us.  We hope to learn of this component contained in your atmosphere and banish this plague from our planet.”

Elmo’s mind was overwhelmed by this awesome assignment.  “I am a physicist, not a chemist,” he protested.  But his mind began to consider the evidence.  Something in the Earth’s atmosphere sickened these beasts.  The concentration of whatever it was continued to climb until it began killing them.  Now, it is decreasing, yet this mysterious component of Earth’s atmosphere remains unknown.  Elmo considered, “The only component of the atmosphere that is changing is carbon dioxide – producing the supposed greenhouse effect.  But that gas continues to increase as the population and industry of our planet grows.”

Valmid stood and said, “It is nearly dawn, we should all get some rest.”  He extended his hand to Cal and, as Elmo bounced along behind, they went upstairs.

Elmo went to bed but not to sleep.  He pondered what he had just been told.  Finally, he fell asleep with his mind still in torment.  Blinding light entered through the unshielded window, awakening Elmo as his mind once again filled with the mystery he was asked to solve.  He lay there thinking and testing theory after theory.  There was nothing he could think of that had increased in the Earth’s atmosphere, then decreased without being detected.  Elmo decided he must rest more.  He cleared his mind and suddenly it came to him – crystal clear.  He sat upright in bed and struck his forehead with his hand. “Of course, that has to be it!”

Valmid was aware of Elmo’s thoughts all morning.  He now entered Elmo’s bedroom with a smile on his face “Come my friend,” he said, “we have much to plan and work to do.”

April 15, 2025 at 12:56 pm Leave a comment

ELMO’S SOJOURN, CHAPTER 6

                                    ELMO’S SOJOURN

                                           CHAPTER 6

                         REVELATIONS FROM VALMID

Valmid invited Elmo to walk with him and discover the beauty of Roth.  As they opened the door, the dingo plants were pulling back their last extended strands of nighttime growth.  The sky, colored the deepest lavender Elmo had ever seen, was dotted with fluffy clouds of lemon yellow.  This world was so different yet so beautiful.  Elmo sniffed the air and detected the salty tang of the ocean.  Valmid nodded yes. “We are near the sea.”

A path from the house led to a slight rise.  As they set out Valmid shortened his stride, enabling Elmo to stay by his side.  Zytex followed them, his roving eye taking in the sights of the home he had almost lost.  They passed other Rothians along their climb up the rise.  Valmid greeted them with his whining turbine voice and nodded to Elmo, appearing to tell the other aliens something of him.  As soon as Valmid finished, Elmo noticed relief in the faces of the others.  Once they had climbed to the top of the rise, the beauty of the seascape below struck Elmo with peaceful thoughts of home.  An expanse of ocean, deep blue, stretched into infinity, the water turning shades of turquoise and green close to shore.  “At least,” Elmo thought, “the ocean looks like home.”

A few solitary islands broke the horizon and alien pleasure craft dotted the surface, accompanied by an occasional sail billowing in the wind.  The beach was the darkest black Elmo had ever seen.  He thought there might be black sand on Earth, but he had never seen a beach this color.  The scene was beautiful, with sights both familiar and entirely new, enhanced by aliens from another world enjoying a peaceful day by the ocean.

Elmo’s day was spent observing what life was like on planet Roth.  The streets were mostly deserted except for the occasional Rothian car zipping by and the high-pitched whine of the Rothians greeting one another.  Would he ever grow accustomed to that sound?  Elmo spent a pleasant day with Valmid, walking and discussing Earth and Roth, the similarities and differences between the two planets.  Zytex was never far behind, although he would sometimes stray.  Valmid would then shout to him and grin as Zytex’s eye looked skyward and his small arms shot up as if to say, “Who me?”

As they walked the streets, Elmo noticed that a few structures similar to Valmid’s home seemed deserted.  Just as on Earth, when a caring hand does not tend the property, it shows. 

Valmid’s mind blanked as they passed these abandoned dwellings, as if there was something about the properties he wished to conceal.  Elmo enjoyed being with Valmid, felt he could trust him, but at the same time felt there was something Valmid was hiding.  But there was so much for Elmo to learn and experience in such a short period of time that the thought of some secret being kept drifted to the back of his mind.

The day went by rapidly for Elmo on this new world.  The clouds took on a hint of emerald as the two followed by Zytex, headed home.  Approaching the house, Valmid screeched a greeting to Cal standing in the doorway.

Elmo sat down to another Rothian meal of unfamiliar but tasty food.  He wondered what type of animal and plant life he was consuming – there was still so much he wanted to learn of this planet.  While Valmid and Elmo were gone, Cal had programmed the computer to display various scenes of Roth on the wall mounting, and as each scene was displayed either Valmid or Cal provided a narration.  Elmo saw vast canyons and spectacular mountain ranges.  He considered the differences between the inhabitants of Earth and Roth but acknowledged that the biology was basically the same.  Now he realized that along with the biology, the geology of Roth must also roughly correspond to that of Earth.

The three talked late into the night, the only real sound the occasional report of the dingo plants as some small critter trespassed near the house.  The fullness of the day and the quantity of information Elmo had absorbed took its toll and he began nodding off.  He bid his friends goodnight and bounced up stairs that made him feel as if he were a toddler.  Upon entering the bedroom, he was pleased to see the bed turned down and his pajamas laid out.  Soon he was under the covers and fast asleep.  But his rest did not last long.  Howling and screeching pierced the night accompanied by the shrill voices of Valmid and Cal.  Another sound accompanied all this turmoil, a metallic noise that rang throughout the house.  Elmo soon discovered the source of the clanking as thick sheets of metal slid over his windows, leaving him sitting in total darkness, unable to imagine what was happening.

Elmo stumbled from his room into the hallway, only to encounter Valmid and Cal in an extreme state of distress.  He noticed perspiration on Valmid’s brow.  Since Elmo arrived on Roth Valmid had exhibited such a serene, calming countenance that to see him upset made Elmo’s uneasiness grow even deeper.  He followed Valmid and Cal downstairs, and shortly they were all sitting around the kitchen table with mugs of a warm beverage resembling tea before them. 

Valmid gazed at Elmo. “There is something I have been keeping from you my friend,” he said.  “Something that threatens this planet and might once again threaten Earth.  What you heard tonight was the alarm sounded by the dingo plants to an invasion by the inhabitants of the planet Gylex, a distant planet revolving around a star in much the same way Roth and Earth do.  The inhabitants of Gylex have also discovered the secret of time-space travel, but their intentions are most nefarious.”

“You see,” he continued, “our homes are not surrounded by dingo plants to prevent crime – there is little crime on Roth.  Rather, these plants surround our homes to sound the alarm if invaders from Gylex are nearby.  We do not fully understand the relationship between the dingo plants and these beings, but when a Gylexan is in the vicinity of a dingo plant, the plants emit a piercing scream.  We propagate these plants to warn us of invasion.  We have cameras mounted outside the house to record these intrusions.  Let us see if they recorded anything tonight.”

They all went into the living room and sat facing one of the wall hangings.  Valmid pushed buttons on a remote and the pleasant scenes of the planet Roth were replaced by the view from the house.  While doing this, he told Elmo, “In the short time you have been with us, I feel I have gotten to know you.  You have experienced so much since you arrived.  I was going to wait until tomorrow to tell you how you could be of benefit to my planet.  Now I will show you.” 

April 12, 2025 at 3:37 pm Leave a comment

ELMO’S SOJOURN, CHAPTER 5

                                              ELMO’S SOJOURN

                                                    CHAPTER 5

                         A LESSON IN SPACE AND TIME TRAVEL

Valmid and Cal led Elmo up the stairs to the guest bedroom.  His bed for the night was enormous but welcoming.  It had been a long, eventful day. 

Cal found some pajamas and other clothes from their child’s younger days that fit Elmo perfectly.  Elmo bid Cal and Valmid good night, slipped beneath the covers, and was soon asleep.  His dreams were filled with screaming plants and foreign lands and Mildred.  When he awoke, his first thought was of Mildred, and he was filled with sorrow and longing. It had been many years since he had awoken without her next to him.

Elmo was learning to cope with the oversized house and furniture.  The weaker gravity of Roth enabled him to jump greater distances than he could on Earth.  He found he could hop up and down the stairs and jump into bed with little effort. After dropping down from the bed, Elmo entered the bathroom, took a shower, then carefully made his way down the stairs.  Valmid and Cal were already eating breakfast and invited Elmo to join them. 

Valmid detected Elmo’s reluctance to eat their food, so he reassured him, “Elmo, although we’re very different on the outside, on the inside we are the same.  Not only are our organs identical but the biochemistry that governs them is also similar.  What is edible for us is also edible for you.  The food may appear different, our plants and animals may not resemble the plants and animals you are fond of consuming, but our food will fulfill your requirements.”  During breakfast, Elmo experienced new flavors and textures, both good and not so good, and hoped Valmid was right.

With breakfast finished, Valmid commented, “Your species discovered the existence of worm holes, but only you, Elmo, uncovered the secret of time-space travel.  I can only imagine how crude the device was that you contrived, being the first of its kind on your planet.  I was playing with Zytex when he suddenly vanished, transported by your machine.  You came very close to transporting me, instead of my faithful pet.  Our two planets are not the only ones that have made the discovery. There are other civilizations on other planets that have developed this method of travel.” 

 Valmid sat back and began to explain the more intricate principles and mechanisms of time-space travel to Elmo.  “Elmo, you’ve shown great insight in discovering the use of wormholes for travel, and you were lucky to survive your first attempt.  First, let me explain the change in how old you were when you left Earth to your age now on Roth.  You know that nothing can exceed the speed of light, and you know the whole universe is in motion.  Whole galaxies are propelled with untold speed, some towards and some away from each other. Therefore, if you are on a planet hurtling toward another planet you wish to visit and their combined relative closing speed is greater than the speed of light, the differences in speed results in a change in your age.  Luckily for you, Roth is moving toward Earth.  If the planets had been moving apart at the same speeds, you would have arrived a very old man.”

Valmid continued, “You are lucky in another sense in relation to time-space travel.  You see, my friend, space is crisscrossed with an infinite number of wormholes.  There are, in fact, many that connect Earth and Roth, but they differ in the direction of their routes.  You happened to select one whose path was not the most direct.  If you had, the outcome would have been quite disastrous.  You see your age would have decreased by more years than you have been alive.  So somewhere along your journey, you would have ceased to exist.”

As Elmo listened to Valmid he realized just how lucky he had been in choosing Roth as a destination. At the same time, he was intrigued by the complexity of time-space travel.  He thought a wormhole was a wormhole was a wormhole.  He was also pleased with the fact that life exists on other planets which circle other stars under conditions similar to those of Earth and its sun, thereby verifying a theory he had considered for many years but was careful not to discuss with his colleagues at Los Alamos.  Elmo was afraid he would have found himself conducting research at Roswell if his theories had been known.

“Another item I must discuss with you,” Valmid continued, “is our method of communication.  You know that I can read all your thoughts, but you are only reading those thoughts of mine that I want you to know.  We all need privacy, and when we have a visitor from another planet we like to give him the ability to think without being intruded upon.  You remember when we first met how I could not communicate with you because your thoughts were coming fast and overlapped with one another.  What I’m about to teach you may be difficult at first, but I’m sure you will be able to do it quite easily.  Try humming in your mind.”

Elmo hummed a tune he particularly enjoyed.

“Now try to hum and have a thought simultaneously.”

Elmo did this with some difficulty.

“I have no idea what you just thought.  You see Elmo; the humming sets up white noise through which your thoughts cannot be discerned.  With a little practice, you will be able to have some privacy during your stay with us.”

With great sadness, Elmo wondered how long that stay would be.  He missed Mildred a great deal and felt so alone on Roth.  He had planned a brief visit – not an extended journey. At the same time, he found the whole experience fantastic.

Valmid sensed Elmo’s sadness but knew he would not let his friend return to Earth until he had helped solve a problem that was decimating Roth and profoundly altered Valmid’s life.  Elmo would not be leaving until the dilemma was solved, no matter how long it took.

April 9, 2025 at 4:09 pm Leave a comment

ELMO’S SOJOURN, CHAPTER 4

                                      ELMO’S SOJOURN

                                            CHAPTER 4

                                      ELMO MEETS CAL

                                                  

 “Yes, my wife has breasts,” Valmid communicated.  Elmo had momentarily forgotten that his mind was an open book.  The thoughts he had as he gazed at the female walking towards his new youthful body were not meant for a husband to know.  As Valmid’s wife approached, Elmo could not help but be aroused by the voluptuous figure, barely concealed under a tight red jumpsuit.  Eight feet tall with a gray skinned hairless head or not, the body beneath the jumpsuit could easily be featured in any planet’s version of Playboy.

By now Valmid knew Elmo’s name, so he communicated, “Elmo, this is my wife Cal.  Cal, this is Elmo.”  As Cal stood next to Valmid, Elmo realized he had underestimated her height.  She was well over eight feet tall.

Sensing Elmo’s mind about going into overdrive again, and not wanting to experience discomfort once more, Valmid began a lengthy discussion designed to answer some of Elmo’s questions.

“I know of your planet Elmo,” he said, “I’ve been there twice.  I know that your society, although primitive, is rapidly progressing.  Your species produce rare individuals that jump ahead of the pack when it comes to science.   You are one of those individuals.  I know the theory you developed about other planets – how they might harbor life if their stars and suns had the same traits as yours.  We are the third planet from our sun, just as your planet is.  There are basic similarities between us.  Yet there are many differences, although they are mostly cosmetic.  While our appearances vary strikingly, if you were to compare scans of our internal organs, your best medical personnel could not tell them apart.  Another difference in our appearance, other than the obvious dissimilarities of skin color and hair, is that our females tend to be taller than the males. 

“We have mastered the art of thought transference to enable us to communicate with beings from other planets.  We do not, however, use such communication with each other.  We are able to shield our thoughts so that they are hidden from our own species.  If you are to stay here for any length of time, we will also teach you this ability.”

  Elmo reflected on Valmid’s offer, but had no idea how long his stay would be.

     Elmo’s mind revealed his confusion.  As Valmid finished speaking, Cal desired to address Elmo. “Elmo,” she communicated, “you must wonder how we knew of your arrival.  It was the dingo plants you tread upon that alerted us.  Your planet uses burglar alarms to protect their properties and loved ones. We use dingo plants.  We plant them around our house, and when disturbed, they cry out.  They also produce flowers every morning that emit a rich soothing scent.

“With these plants around our house for protection, we feel totally safe.  If you had arrived after dark, we still would have been aware of your presence even if you had not trodden upon the plants directly.  For as night comes, the plants produce filaments, crossing the walkways and climbing up the walls and covering the roof of the house.  If you come in contact with these filaments, the plants emit the cries you already heard, alerting the residents within.  Through genetic engineering, we have produced a strain of dingo plants with the longest filaments, long enough to protect the roofs of our tallest structures, the most vulnerable part of our buildings.” 

As Cal completed this last statement, Valmid gave her a stare that said, “Enough, more than enough,” and Cal’s mind abruptly ceased communication, leaving Elmo puzzling at the information he just heard.

“Why would you use such a seemingly primitive method of protecting your homes when you have such an advanced technology?” thought Elmo.

The sky had darkened further, with only a thin rim of emerald, green on the horizon.  Both Valmid and Cal looked to the sky as Valmid suggested, “Let us go to our home and let the dingo plants do their nighttime work.”  They walked the path to the house, and Elmo observed the plant’s filaments crossing the path behind them.  His companions seemed relieved to enter the threshold of their home.  Elmo entered the house, and was amazed how everything looked the same, yet different from the houses on earth.  The chairs, of course, were too large for Elmo’s five-foot ten-inch frame.  While Valmid and Cal reclined, Elmo felt like a small child climbing up onto an adult chair.  He finally sat down with his feet dangling.  The walls of the house, made of a composite that Elmo could not identify, glowed a soft bluish white light.  Elmo’s attention was drawn to frames mounted on the walls as images within the frames continued to change from paintings to photos of aliens.

Valmid observed Elmo’s interest and told him, “You seem to be taken with our pictures.  The frames contain very thin video screens and a wireless connection to our computer; practically the whole house is a computer.  Stored pictures are beamed to the screen.  We simply choose a series of pictures and the cycle time, then enjoy the display.”

  Despite the modern technology of the house, Elmo noticed that the floors and stairs leading to the second floor were constructed of highly polished wood.  The stairs, of course, he would need to take one at a time.  Zytex squatted near Elmo’s chair as Elmo studied the first floor of the dwelling more closely.  The kitchen was adjacent to the living room, with cupboards and a futuristic device resembling a stove.

 It was night as Elmo sat with his new friends.  With sunset the light emitted from the walls intensified, maintaining a steady level of illumination.  All was quiet as the trio communicated; the only sound was the occasional scream of the dingo plants.

April 6, 2025 at 11:41 am Leave a comment

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