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"The Chimera Is Back!"

6/19/-6/22/2012

I.

Haley's landings needed so much work. Summoning tornado winds to lift her into the sky and even to travel at a hundred feet up was relatively easy with the Air Gem. But lessening those winds gradually and coming down to the ground safely was much more difficult. The concentration needed was so demanding that she couldn't get it right.

So the Windcatcher was practicing over Lake Schoonmaker, eight miles from her home in Glenville, Long Island. Sitting on the white sand shore were her two best friends and romantic couple for more than a year, Gina and Bentley.

Descending to twenty feet, Haley swept back the heavy blue cloak over her shoulders. It was a big help in guiding her flight while in the air, but a real nuisance at the moment. She dropped her legs down, spread her arms out wide and her thoughts wandered for an instant as a fish broke the surface nearby. That was all it took. She plummeted straight down with a mighty splash.

"Drat this anyway!" she spluttered and began stroking toward shore. Tall at seventeen with long legs, she was a strong swimmer who loved the water but at the moment she was vexed beyond endurance. The wet heavy cloak weighed her down like a blanket. Her chestnut hair was tied back in a ponytail but her bangs were too long and hanging in her eyes, dripping heavily.

Standing with his feet in the water, Bentley held a cork lifesaver ring he had taken from his uncle's pool. This had been his idea. He watched Haley drawing nearer without being able to hide his concern. If she seemed to be struggling, he was going in to help her whether she wanted it or not.

Gina Giacomo had come over to stand beside him. Italian on both sides, she was widely considered by the boys to be the sexiest junior at their high school. That day, she was wearing the bottom half of a blue bikini with a fuzzy white long-sleeved shirt. She had no intention of getting in the water after all the time she had spent preparing her long mane of curly black hair.

"It was that fish, Hales!" she sang out. "I saw it. He deliberately screwed up your landing."

Plopping down on the sand, panting after the exertion, Haley unsnapped the cloak and let it fall to one side. "I'm exhausted. My head is killing me. This flying is like doing trig in your head while riding a bicycle uphill. Movies and comics make it look so easy!"

A few feet away were two white beach towels covered with bottles of sunblock, a bag full of empty soda cans and crumpled up potato chip bags, three cell phones and an oversized pair of aviator sunglasses. Getting up on her feet, Haley lurched over there and dropped to her knees to claim the last can of Mountain Dew. "Whew. Thanks for being ready with the lifesaver, Bentley. You're the best."

"He IS. I landed a great boyfriend," Gina added. "Listen, Haley, while you were up there swooping and soaring and whatnot, I saw something on the news that might interest you."

Winging out the soaking wet cloak to let dry in the warm June sunlight, Windcatcher asked, "Like what?"

"Here, I saved it." Shading her phone's screen with one hand, said, "Let's see. Umm, there have been sightings in Danverton of a mysterious man in a purple costume. He beat up three men who were trying to rob an elderly gentlemen on North Wall Street Saturday night. Wednesday at two AM, he chased away a creep who was following a woman walking home from Rustler's Dance Club and made sure she made it to her apartment."

"That's what I should be doing!" yelped Haley. "As soon as I get a little better control, I will patrolling high crime areas late at night. Well, at least until school starts up."

"Sounds like Long Island has another super-hero," Gina said. "Listen to his description. A tall athletic man wearing a purple jumpsuit with black riding boots and a hooded mask which covered his face except around his nose and mouth. On the front of his shirt was a white silhouette of some strange animal neither witness recognized."

"Oh my God, the Chimera!" blurted Haley. "I read all about him when I was little. That was ages ago. He disappeared around the time I was born, late 1995. I couldn't get enough about him. Officially, the police made statements calling upon him to stop his unlawful vigilante crusade but, you know, somehow they never showed up until he was gone. I figured they watched from a distance and only moved in to clear up after Chimera was off the scene."

"There's more," Gina said. "Known from notes he left naming himself as the Chimera, the masked man subdued a gunman who had robbed a liquor store and left the perp tied up with his own belt and shoelaces. In the summer of 1994, he smashed up two Asian massge parlors staffed by underage Korean girls brought into the country illegally. He left the girls at the local FBI office in Manhattan and their testimony led to the arrest and conviction of the owner on human trafficking charges."

"You see why he was my hero?! I still have a scrapbook of newspaper clippings about him somewhere," Haley laughed.

"How come he never got shot?" asked Bentley.

"What?"

"Haley, I know you're nuts about super-hero comics but they've given you seriously unrealistic ideas. I don't care if you're the world's greatest master of kung fu and karate, you can't charge at armed men without getting shot. And it says he did this not once but at least five reported times." Bentley shook his head. "It smells fishy."

"Aw, your feet smell fishy," Haley scoffed. "Maybe he was very very lucky or maybe he's a former Navy SEAL or something. What I want to know is how he can still be active. That was a long time ago."

Gina said, "Hey, suppose he was in his mid-twenties back then. He'd be forty-five today. That's not ANCIENT! My dad is forty-six and he runs three miles a day in all weather. I bet my dad is stronger than any of the wrestlers at our school."

"Maybe your dad is the Chimera," offered Haley in her sweetest, most innocent voice.

"No such luck. Mom watches him like a hawk. If he tried sneaking out at night, she'd bust his eardrums with her yelling."

Haley had that familiar far-away look that warned of trouble brewing in her lime-green eyes. "So where has the Chimera been all these years? Why has he gone back into action now? What's his deal anyway?"

the rest of the story )
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"Slavers of the Secret World"

10/19-10/21/2012

I.

Three teenagers swooped down out of the deep blue sky near the brick structure of VILLAGE PIZZA with the roar of a tornado. Haley was getting better at controlling the winds she summoned, lessening the two hundred mile per hour force down to a mild breeze as they neared the parking lot, but the trio still hit the paving hard enough that they stumbled and Gina fell flat on her face. At once, Bentley was helping her up and making sure she hadn't been hurt.

Haley Lawson twirled the heavy blue cloak with a dramatic gesture and flung it back over her shoulders. At five feet eight, she was the tallest of the three and the oldest, having passed her eighteenth birthday a week earlier. She had on her Windcatcher outfit, the white sneakers, snug blue shorts and long-sleeved white crewneck shirt as well as the blue cloak which fastened around her neck with a clasp. With her chestnut hair and huge pale green eyes, Haley was cute rather than gorgeous and she was satisfied with that. As soon as she got her footing, the Windcatcher hurried over to check her two friends.

"Sorry about the landing," she said blithely, "It's the trickiest part."

"Whoo. Ohmigawd," Gina gasped. "My legs are wobbly. Gimme a second."

Bentley was a skinny youth in a black T-shirt that read JACKSON STRONG WORLD TOUR on the front and had a list of concert dates on the back. Tight blue jeans and clunky work boots completed his outfit. That summer, he had been cultivating a mustache but so far had only bristles to show for it. The tenderness in the way he helped Gina stand up was a bit overdone but then they were still at the infatuation stage. "Yeah. That... that was not what I was expecting."

Haley's grin faltered. "You guys didn't like it? I showed you Glenville from the air at a hundred feet. I thought you'd have a blast."

"Yeah. Yeah." Gina Giacomo went over to lean back against someone's beat-up old pickup truck. "I dunno, it was fun but a bit TOO exciting, ya know? My heart feels it's going a thousand beats a minute." Not much over five feet tall, Gina had glossy black hair down past her shoulder blades and a curvy little figure that was the envy of most girls in the senior class. She was wearing a matching outfit to Bentley's, since they were both fans of the Jackson Strong band. "I need a minute to catch my breath."

"You guys aren't cut out to be super-heroes," Haley muttered but she joined them in leaning against the truck. Fastened to the clasp at her throat was a beautiful oval stone of a deep blue with paler streaks running its surface. She pressed a finger to it thoughtfully."Although, maybe I'm more comfortable with the Air Gem because I'm used to it. I'm sorry, Gina, I expected you to love the ride."

Bentley had an arm around Gina's shoulders, and she snuggled against him. "I was thinking, Haley, maybe the magic in your stone protects you somehow. You have no trouble breathing up there but I felt like I was caught in a storm and couldn't handle it.'

"It could be," Windcatcher admitted. She unsnapped the clasp of her cloak, leaving the gem fastened to her shirt collar, and rolled the thick material into a cylinder which she tucked under one arm. "I'll ask Mom. She owned the Air Gem back in her day, maybe she can explain some more."

The three of them went into VILLAGE PIZZA, pondered their order as if it was the most portentous decision of the ages and emerged with three meatball subs on paper plates and a 64-ounce bottle of Pepsi with some red plastic cups. They settled down around the cast iron table with its glass top and dug into the food with a vengeance.

"Slow down, Gina," Haley laughed at one point. "You look like a chipmunk with your cheeks full that way."

Bentley chugged a glass of soda and punched himself in the chest to release an epic belch. "You know what's the weirdest thing about your whole Windcatcher game, Haley?"

"What?"

"Everyone is so blase about it. I can't figure it. You fly around town in plain sight, you put out that garage fire on Vandermark Street by pouring rain on it and you rescued that old man who was drowning in Coogan Lake at the Fourth of July festival. But everyone takes it for granted."

"You know, I've been wondering about that," she admitted. "I was expecting to be more of a sensation, you know?"

Gina finally finished chewing and swallowed before adding, "Honestly, you should be in all the papers. TV news crews should be following you around. I expected SIXTY MINUTES to do a big interview with you. But nothing. Nada, zilch, bupkis."

"Bupkis?! Where did a nice Italian girl like you hear that word?" Haley said. "But you two are right. Not that I'm looking to be a world famous celebrity, well, actually I am. But instead the world ignores me. It's hard to figure."

"Hey, someone stole my sub!" Bentley yelled in mock indignation. "It was here a second ago."

"Right now, it's on its way to your lower intestine," said Gina, rubbing his back. She wiped her pouty little mouth with a napkin and gazed over at Haley Lawson. "I bet it's some side effect of your jewel, Hales. You said it's unimaginably old and powerful. I have a hunch that the stone is someone keeping everyone from freaking out over you."

"Could be." Picking up the last bit of crust, Haley was frowning at the thought. A few months earlier, she had met her mother's old friend Jeremy Bane, who had spent an evening explaining the Midnight War to her. Along with his somber warnings and unsolicited advice, he had told her the history of the Air Gem she possessed... how it was one of four talismans created thousands of years earlier by someone called Malberon, how her mother and the rest of the family had been known as the Heirs of Buliwyf years before Haley had been born. Not much of the lecture made sense to her.

"I guess there's some deep dark mystery to my gem," she said at last.

Bentley was gathering up the grease-stained paper plates and crumpled napkins. "I'll get rid of this stuff and we can head over to the Green. The rest of the squad is probably there. Scott's showing off his guitar and everyone will want to fool with it."

"You guys go ahead," Haley said as she got up and tucked the rolled-up cloak under one arm. "I think I'll head home for a while."

Leaning over, Gina ruffled Haley's dark reddish hair. "Aw. Thanks for the ride! We'll try it again a few times and get used to it. Send me a text if you wanna come over tonight. We do have Netflix, you know. Bentley and I will be fully dressed."

"Yeah, right, with your shirts on inside out and buttoned up wrong. Thanks, I'll be checking in later." Haley smiled as she watched her two friends hustle across the parking lot. It was Friday afternoon. She had no way to know that was the last anyone in town would see of them.

the rest of the story )
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"May Dusa - Threat Or Menace?"

8/4/-8/5/2012

I.

Entering the living room with her second cup of coffee that morning, Lisa Lawson regarded her seventeen year old daughter with bemused affection. Haley was curled in a ball on the couch with her legs tucked up under her, her arms folded and her head drooping so the gorgeous auburn hair hung down like a curtain to conceal her face. She was rocking half an inch from side to side.

"That is the best performance I've seen in a while," Lisa said, dropping down into an easy chair facing the couch. "Did you join the Drama Club at school?"

For a reply, Haley emitted a low quavering sigh that started down near her belly button. She raised her head. Those large lime-green eyes were her best feature and, although they were sad, no moisture indicating immediate tears was noticeable. "I went and got the mail."

"Yeah, I have the same reaction when I see the bills." Lisa Lawson did not much resemble her daughter, being four inches shorter than Haley's five feet eight and sporting glossy black hair instead of deep red. But their eyes were a family trait and almost identical. "Oh. Oh, you got the results about your driver's license."

"Yes. Busted. Failed. Flunked." Haley sat up straight and smacked her forehead with the back of her hand. "It says I failed to change lanes when turning left from a two-lane one-way street but I do NOT remember it that way."

"Ah, honey, practice and take it again. You know, Jimmy failed three times. His parallel parking is still atrocious." She put down her coffee cup. "I saw the half-finished bowl of Chocolate Rice Krispies by the sink. How about some scrambled eggs and bacon to balance your innards?"

"No, thanks, mom." Haley bounded upright with the ease of youth. She was wearing her usual Navy blue shorts and white long-sleeved pullover. "I crave action! Excitement! The thrill of fighting evil will lift my spirits."

"What on Earth have you been reading, child?"

"Comics. BLAST WOMAN is my favorite. It gets me stirred up in the mood. Did I tell you I'm meeting your friend the Wolf Man next week?"

"Jeremy Bane is called by some the Dire Wolf," Lisa repeated. "Not Wolf Man. Yes. If you insist on using the Air Gem to get into situations where you're likely to break your neck, having him train you is a good idea. Just take his advice and respect him like he's your Marine drill sergeant, he knows what he's talking about."

Haley started from the living room but hesitated in the doorway. "Mom. You're not TOO worried about me being Windcatcher, are you?"

"Of course I'm worried. What do you think?" Lisa stood up and went over to her daughter and placed a hand on each shoulder. "But God forgive me if I don't remember I was as stubborn and reckless at your age. The risks I took. Ugh, makes me shiver to think about. But somehow I trust you. You think quickly on your feet and you're barely sensible enough to draw back if the situation s seem too dangerous."

"You're the best!" Haley laughed as he rushed from the parlor to the staircase leading up to her own room. A few seconds later, her voice drifted down, "Mommmm! I'm going out the window! Back by suppertime!"

"Be careful, dear." Lisa Lawson exhaled and slumped back in her chair. Once, before Haley had been born, it had been Lisa who wore the Air Gem and wielded its power to summon everything from hurricane winds to monsoon rain to Arctic blasts. That had been long ago and, she wistfully realized, it was further faded by time every day.

In her neat tidy room, noticeably free of frills and decorations but ornamented by an acoustic guitar in its case and stacks of books covering horrific crimes, Haley clasped the collar of an ankle-length dark blue cloak around her neck. Fastened at her throat was a lovely oval-cut blue gem that resembled pale tourmaline. She checked the slit pockets in her shorts for the few items she carried as Windcatcher, then flung up the wide window as high as it would go. A warm sunny August morning beckoned to her.

Sporting the widest grin her cheeks could handle, Windcatcher squeezed up onto the ledge of the window. She concentrated with full focus of the image she wanted, drew on the ancient mystic power of the Air Gem. From somewhere in Kansas, tornado winds at two hundred and sixty miles per hour shot her out and upward into the sky.

the rest of the story )

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