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"The Brazen Skull"

10/10-10/13/2024

I.

"Now is when I'm going to turn all my diplomas to the wall and go total crackpot," announced Professor Emeritus Alan T. Sherrinford.

Seated at that openwork wrought iron table outside the bistro, his two colleagues did not visibly react. Sherrinford had always been given to flamboyant figures of speech. The oldest of the group at seventy-three, he was a solid bulk whose face and body had relaxed into a comfortable sagging shape. The old-fashioned Irish tweed suit with a herringbone pattern was conservative enough, but his tie was so loosely knotted that both his friends had to fight an urge to reach over and fix it. Thin white fluffy hair refused to stay in place if there was the slightest breeze.

To his right sat Dr Helen Fletcher, poised at a handsome middle age of fifty where her cherubic good looks had become more dignified and imposing. The still-thick black hair was pulled back into a bun and the dark thoughtful eyes were countered by a wry smile growing more pronounced. At the third post of their triangle was the youngest, Ben 'Snark' Millet, still under thirty but quite well off from his simpified YouTube essays on prehistory which were helpful to students desperate to finish their own papers. Snark was a small, energetic young man distinguished by wild stiff black hair that never remained tame for too long. A pointed nose and zealous expression added to the impression he made.

"Ah, it wouldn't be the first time you went off at a wild angle," Fletcher said. "I rather enjoy these digressions. They are always colorful and refreshing."

"Yes, yes, what is it this time?" demanded Snark.

Sherrinford tapped his long dead pipe with evident disappointment and pocketed it. "Damned briar won't stay lit. Anyway my friends, I think I'm on to something big but at the moment, it's all terribly tenuous. You know about the thin layer of iridium found all over the planet?"

"Yes, certainly, it was left by the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs."

"What I seem to have found is something rather similar. I've been noting incidents and collecting examples for more than twenty years now," Sherrinford said. "Let me phrase this carefully. All over the world, I have found a paper-thin line through archaeological digs every kind. No one seems to have even noticed it. The earth and rocks above and below this line are very nearly identical... but not quite!"

"Well, that's interesting," Helen Fletcher said diplomatically, smiling and leaning forward. "Just
how long ago was this line created?"

"Thirty thousand years. Give or take a few thousand, I use that date for convenience. During the Neolithic. Samples above and below the line are chemically and structurally almost identical but," and here he repeated himself with emphasis, "Not quite!"

They had all ordered mixed drinks and Snark had finished his promptly. He had been examining the empty glass with evident disappointment but now he glanced up. "I'll admit it, I have no idea what you're getting at. Was there some sort of worldwide disaster? Volcanos? A global flood or something?"

"No." Sherrinford took a minute to gather his thoughts. "All my hypotheses are completely ridiculous. The explanations I come up with are so wild I laugh at them myself."

"Alan, we know you too well," Fletcher said. "You're agitated. You're still fiddling with your pipe and you keep watching everyone walking by as if they're going to hit you. What's the matter?"

Sherrinford sighed. "I can't hide anything from you two. Yes. Let me get to it. I've spent way too much time on this but basically, since the early 1800s, there have been hundreds of anomalous finds discovered exactly at this thirty thousand year mark. Steel tools where there should be no steel, unidentifiable coins, buckles and brooches, even a few curved swords... way before even the earliest proposed Bronze Age limits."

"That IS odd," Fletcher put in.

"The archaeological community simply shrugs and overlooks all this. There's not even any effort to cover it up, all the journals and seminars just act like there's nothing worth discussing. And even that's not the worst." Sherrinford's rather fair-skinned features had gone even paler. "I've been concentrating on a dozen instances of artifacts discovered which are made of a strange reddish-colored metal which seems to be an iron alloy. These particular artifacts go missing soon after discovery.. and violence is involved!"

Between his long pointed nose and swept-back porcupine hair, Snark always seemed inquisitive but now he actually leaned forward and stared fixedly at his long-time friend. "Are you telling us a campfire story or what? You're giving me the chills."

"I'm all too serious," Sherrinford said. "At least four murders, three more suspicious deaths or disappearances and several burglaries. Everything made of this ruddy-colored metal seems to be sought with great determination by someone. That's why I'm so uneasy about going to this report in North Dakota."

"What, where that rancher wrote you about the metal crate he found while excavating? He said it was the size of a steamer trunk, right?"

"Yes," Sherrinford said. "He actually called my Museum and the Director handed the assignment to me without much interest. The rancher's waiting to open it until a few experts show up. Fellow says he hopes to sell it for a good sum. I'm supposed to fly out there tomorrow."

"Don't tell me," Fletcher said. "This crate he found, is it made of the red steel?"

"That's how he describes it," Sherrinford confirmed as if delivering grim news.

the rest of the story )
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"To Dust We Return"

6/14/2023

I.

Jeremy Bane was in a restless, troubled mood. The hyper metabolism which gave him his enhanced speed and reflexes also charged him with excess energy that had to constantly be burned off. Already that morning, he had gone through his DohRa form, showered and changed into what was practically his uniform of black slacks, turtleneck and sports jacket. And now he was at a loss what to do for the rest of the day. There were no threats in the air as far as he could see. The Midnight War had certainly quieted down since the hectic days when he had led the KDF against the likes of Karl Eldritch, the Preincarnators or Wu Lung.

Pacing around a living room so free from clutter that it seemed no one lived there, the Dire Wolf tried without success to calm down. At sixty-five, he still showed few signs of age other than a scattering of white in the short black hair and lines at the outer corners of those pale grey eyes. He was still lean to the point of seeming gaunt and he circled the room with the easy stride of a much younger man.

The day before, he had called Sable to see if the newest KDF team had anything on hand and had been regretfully told no. He had phoned Sheng at the Fist For Hire agency and gotten the same wry answer. It had been weeks since any sightings of paranormal activity, crypto-beasts or new criminal masterminds. Maybe it was time to return to Tel Shai for a week. He would spend some welcome time with Cindy, get more intense training from Teacher Chael, maybe add annotations to the Great Archives. Yes. That was a good idea.

Bane paused in front of the picture window which looked out on Pierpont Street. A dark blue Subaru Outback was coming to a stop against the curb. That was Police Detective Chatcuff's car and there was the short stocky form of Harvey Chatcuff himself getting out to walk up the short flagstone path across Bane's tiny front yard. The Dire Wolf felt his spirits lift as if hearing a bugle calling charge. Something was up!

As he waited by the door, Bane thought again about how Megan Salenger had repeatedly tried to install Trom scanners on the steps outside to check for ID matches in NYPD or Mandate files, as well as sensors to read off a visitor's height and weight, blood pressure, heartbeat and whether or not large bits of metal were on his person. Bane had refused. He had thought at the time he was actually retiring from the Midnight War. Now, when he remembered Megan, he wished he had humored her. It would have made her happy.

As the doorbell rang, the Dire Wolf took a deep breath. He was counting on his Kunmundu training to be sure that this was Harvey Chatcuff and that the
body language indicated no intention to attack. Opening the door, he swung sideways and gestured for the man to enter. "Detective Chatcuff! I know there's trouble when you drive all the way out here to Forest Hills."

"Hiya, Bane," came the strongly New Yawk accented voice. "Nobody else here?"

"No. Sit down and tell me what disaster you want me to stop."

Lowering himself to a chair facing the leather-covered couch, Chatfuff unbottoned his suit jacket to let his paunch breathe a little. "I have to give the usual speech first. This is unoffical, off the record, unauthorized and all that. The Department does not use you as a freelance vigilante. In fact, I didn't even come here today."

Bane dropped down on the couch, clasping his hands together as he felt alive for the first time in a week. "Understood."

"I don't even have any photos or reports or anything to show you. But I know your memory is good. First victim was Howard John Nivens, 48, lived on Sycamore Avenue in Glenville, Long Island. He was found Monday morning between two residential houses. Both lungs were crammed full of dry dirt."

The Dire Wolf's pale eyes lit up. "That's something new."

"I sure never heard of such a thing. And the ME is so stumped he yells at anyone who asks him how it was done. Then, last night at two-thirty in the morning, a man's body was found behind a Chinese restaurant on Broadway in Carlinton, Long Island. Name was Stan Woodrow. Age 41. His chest was crushed flat, sternum cracked and every rib broken. And like Nivens, it's a mystery how he was killed."

"Yeah? Why is that?" It never occurred to Bane to offer coffee or tea to his visitor. His manners would never be polished.

"Well, the captain has an idea that someone put a flat piece of wood or metal on his body and then drove over it with a car. Sounds plausible. But Woodrow was found sprawled up against the wall of the Chinese restaurant and the forensic guys found fibers from his coat pressed into the bricks. Some blood as well."

Despite himself, the Dire Wolf got up on his feet and began pacing. He couldn't help it, being restless under the best of conditions. "Oh, this is interesting. Let me think about it. I suppose it could still be done. Two guys hold the victim up against the restaurant wall with a board across his chest. Then a third man drives a car or truck forward slowly to press against the board. The victim falls, they grab the board and ride away."

"Could be. But there's one more interesting detail. Bane, dirt was found pressed into the fabric of the front of Woodrow's coat and shirt. Lab says it's identical to the soil that killed Nivens."

the rest of the story )
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"Babe Lincoln"

6/2-6/3/2012

I.

"The super-hero poses are very dramatic, Hales, but they don't get the job done."

Pouting at the snark from her best friend forever, Windcatcher lowered her fists from her hips and threw the heavy blue cloak back over her shoulders. At seventeen, slender and long-legged in snug blue shorts and a long-sleeved white pullover, Haley Lawson had the confidence of youth that nothing really bad could happen to her. No matter how much she asked for it.

Her rich auburn hair blazed in the early September sunlight, and under heavy bangs a pair of lime green eyes winked at Gina and Bentley. "Okay, I'm gonna try it. Not sure how well this will work out."

"That's why we're sitting way over here," called Gina from forty feet away.

"Oh ye of little faith..." Haley grumbled, moving up to a waist high boulder that was standing by an outcropping at the edge of the meadow. "See, I got this idea because of something my mom did when she was in high school. One winter, the driver's door of her car was covered with ice. No way to open. She thought it would be a good idea to bring up a soup pan of boiling water from the house and pour it all over."

Bentley laughed out loud at the thought and Gina smirked in her own subdued way.

"Yeah! She got the door open and drove to school BUT the window on the driver's door was shattered into a million little bits. So, let me take what Mom learned the hard way and put it to good use." She touched the soft choker under her shirt collar to contact the unimaginably ancient Air Gem and concentrated. Over an active volcano on the Big Island of Hawaii, air at a temperature just under two thousand degrees was mystically siphoned the great distance to flow over that rock. The surface turned bright cherry red instantly, and the shape of the rock visibly sagged.

"That's part one," Haley announced and then launched a blast of wind from an Antarctic storm. Eighty degrees below zero, that air struck the superheated rock which exploded like a grenade and sent shards whizzing off in all directions. Haley yelped and jumped back too late to have done any good.

"Haley, come on!" screamed Gina. "Are you TRYING to kill us?!"

"Sorry, sorry, you guys aren't hurt?"

"No. I'm okay. Bentley, did you get hit by any of that?"

The gawky eighteen year old was patting his arms and legs tentatively, looking for blood. "I'm good. But man, that was close. I heard a piece of rock buzz by me and it sounded like a bee."

Haley Lawson herself noticed a gash in the fabric of her blue cloak, down by the lower hem. As sublimely confident as she was, the thought did pass through her head that a sharp fragment of rock could have taken out someone's eye or sliced across an artery. But it hadn't. And as quickly as that, she moved on.

"Okay, okay, I guess my next experiments will be conducted a wee leetle bit more carefully. I think I can manipulate hot and cold air masses enough to cause lightning strikes..."

"Time for us to go!" yelled Gina, hopping to her feet. She was a petite curvy Junior at Haley's high school, with the full wavy hair that came from being full Italian generations back. She was yanking on her boyfriend's arm as if she had spotted a brown bear emerging from the woods.

The Windcatcher trotted over to her friends, waving her hands. "Not today, not today, I swear. That's enough for right now. What we need to experiment on is pizza. How does that sound?"

Both Gina and Bentley came to a halt. "It's always a good time for pizza," the boy agreed. We skipped lunch to come out here and it must be four o'clock by now."


"Out of deference to our jangled nerves, I will not fly us down to the Village Pizza joint but we will walk with our feet solid on the ground. Sound like a plan?"

Gina began tugging Bentley in the opposite direction, toward the long sloping h
ill which led down to Glenville. He didn't mind. He had gotten used to her pulling on his arm to make he was going along with her impulses. "Say, Haley," Gina said, "I was wondering. If you got to be really good with your Air Gem, I mean like perfectly in control, couldn't you make the weather better? Couldn't you stop droughts and break up hurricanes and stuff?"

Unsnapping her cloak and rolling it up to carry under one arm, Windcatcher sighed. "You'd think so, ya know? But Mom said that she tried it when she had the Gem, and things went wrong every time. If she tried to stop a hurricane, she could split it up but it would surge back stronger than before. Redirecting floods caused just as much damage somewhere else. One time she tried to divert a Northeaster, big winter storm ya know? and it split into TWO Northeasters and got much worse."

"I'm sorry to hear that," Bentley offered. "I know you've got a good heart, Haley. You want to help people."

"Thanks. But it seems like weather is just too big and too complicated to mess with. Maybe someday, I'll try starting small and see what I can do. But for now, I think the Air Gem has to be used carefully. With great power...."

"Yeah, we know the quote," Gina laughed. "I still think you need to start reading some real books for a change."

Heading down the hill toward Church Road, Haley said, "Have you guys seen on the local news about this burglar called Babe Lincoln...?"

the )

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