Chapter One
Time: September 1989
Place: Blackridge, South Dakota
Sioux Reservation
It began with a kidnapping in a
little house on a desolate corner of the reservation
that no one would ever learn about. The home sat almost
at the foot of the summer ranges where the tribe's herd
of cattle grazed apart from the rest of the tribe. Here
Jon Morningeagle, the tribe's chief wrangler, spent much
of his time in the same rambling structure where a
father even more immersed in the "old ways" than he had
raised him. In this house his father, in a drunken fit
of rage, had fallen off the front porch and broken his
neck to be found by a teenage Jon.
"You leave that child sleep."
Miriam Morningeagle said in a sharp whisper. She wore a
rough cotton shift she had made, and her long raven hair
gathered into a single braid hanging fully to her waist.
Her sensitive eyes never smiled anymore but held a
distant look. Even her sharp words had been thrown at
the air, not directly at her husband.
Jon still wore his T-shirt and
faded Levis dirty from the range. He paused at the
closed door to little James' room which adjoined their
bedroom. He whispered his reply fiercely. "You don't
ever tell me what I can't do with my boy, woman." He
glared at her for a second and eased the door inward.
Jon had painted Little James' room
light green with symbols from Sioux myths decorating the
walls and the crib. Jon's father had been shield maker
for the tribe and although few still wanted them, Jon
served that function on enough occasions to paint the
figures well. Over the crib a painted white buffalo head
in a medicine shield halo looked down at the sleeping
boy with benevolent eyes.
Morningeagle eased the door closed
with out-of-character gentleness, but when he turned,
the granite lines of his face showed his true demeanor.
"I'll do what I please, woman; this is my house."
"Your father's house," she said in
a distant tone.
"I keep it up," he insisted. He
removed his shirt and jeans and moved into the bathroom.
"I keep it up," Miriam said, her
voice a hollow imitation of Jon's. Her fingers idly
toyed with her braid as she stared at the door to the
child's room. She hummed a tuneless song.
"Have you started that again?" Jon
thrust his head from the doorway, his face twisted with
annoyance. "You know I can't stand your constant
whining."
"Constant whining--" she murmured,
then giggled, swaying back and forth. She continued to
play idly with her hair.
"If only you'd take us away from
this place," she whispered.
"Let it be woman! This is my home,
our home. Now come to bed!" Anger flared in
Morningeagle's eyes and he pushed from the doorway and
crossed the room, his bare feet slapping noisily on the
irregular wooden floor. He climbed into the bed with an
air of finality. He wedged himself beneath the covers.
She stood in the center of the room, her head tilted to
one side, listening to the sounds of the house.
"Miriam?" he said in a softer
voice that roused her from her lethargy to slowly move
to the bed and climb in. He grunted his satisfaction and
turned his back to her as she clicked off the night
light.
In short order, her husband snored
deeply, but even with the weight of a long day upon her,
Miriam could not find rest. She listened to the chirping
of crickets and the sound of leaves slapping against one
another in the gentle breeze. At last she slipped from
under the sheets and padded slowly to the child's door.
Little James slept with noisy coos amid rumpled night
clothes dreaming perhaps of plains filled with mighty
buffalo and a stout horse painted bright blue with
rockers all of wood. Their strong son had his father's
chiseled features showing beneath the baby fat and the
same deep coal black eyes as his mother. His name was
James, but Jon had said, "When he's old enough my boy's
gunna choose his own name, in the old ways." And
everyone who knew Jon Morningeagle was sure that it
would be just so.
Miriam held one hand through the
open door so that light from the window swam about it.
Chiaroscuro in the light it had swollen knuckles and
rawhide skin that should belong to a woman twenty years
her senior. She snatched her hand from the light as if
the moon's touch burned the flesh.
Her vision of the room smudged with
teardrops.
Slowly she eased the door closed
and leaned her forehead on the jamb, letting all her
unrealized dreams filter through her lips with one
whispered sentence to her son. "You're all we ever had,"
she said, "all I got left."
She moved with little purpose to
the bed and let exhaustion save her from her thoughts.
A long silence settled over the
sleeping Morningeagle family, filling the house with the
calm of a glassy sea just before a storm.
In the middle of the child's room,
toys scattered the floor awaiting his future pleasures,
and a dot of light blinked into existence without an
apparent light source. No beam shone in the window or
reflected off any shiny toy or surface. The point of
light coalesced in the center of the room about four
feet off the floor, and grew into a vertical line of
coherent luminosity that touched the floor. Without a
sound, it burst into the image of what might well have
been a Gnome of European legend.
The little man-thing was thin and
gray with two huge eyes and a bulb head that throbbed
with a myriad of green-gray veins. It had no mouth.
Clutched tightly in the withered
arms was a tiny bundle of flesh--a baby.
The child was young and curiously
lifeless. It was a perfect image of James Morningeagle.
The silent invader took two steps
to the crib, bent over the railing and gently slid the
strange twin under the covers. Six-digit hands lifted
the real Morningeagle child and carried him to the
center of the room. The two figures collapsed into a
vertical line of light, and were gone.
When the dead child was discovered,
the inner turmoil of the parents turned to anger and
accusation. When the doctors could find no reason why
the tiny heart had stopped beating, the anger turned to
unreasoning hate.
The following day Jon mounted his
best horse and headed off into the mountains moving
north. It was the last anyone saw of him.
Miriam refused to leave the house,
never shed a tear after the first morning, and two weeks
after Jon vanished she tried to kill herself with one of
her husband's antique guns.
After she left the hospital Miriam
went to stay with her parents and it was said that she
sobbed in her sleep.
The house became tribal property
after a time, but no one would enter the place.
Eventually it rotted away.
Time: Spring 1990
Place: Oklahoma, United. States
Phillip Simon screamed. His eyes
shot open and suddenly he was awake. His bedclothes were
clammy with sweat. He panted, his thick black hair hung
in moist ringlets veiling his eyes. "What. . ." he tried
but could not finish the thought. He touched the blanket
and stared at his hand as best the semi-darkness
allowed. "It was a dream again." He felt calm to think
it, so he said it aloud. "I was dreaming." But in words
it didn't ring true. He had been remembering: He was in
a gray concrete cell, six feet by eight feet that
smelled of urine, ammonia and sweat, with one small
square of light set high up in the wall opposite the
door. The moon-glow cast dim shadows into the room; long
gray lines snaked from metal bars planted firmly in the
sill and slithered across the floor to slumber across
the foot of Simon's bunk.
In a few minutes, he gathered his
wits enough to rise. He stripped off the damp pajamas,
throwing a bathrobe over his broad muscled shoulders. He
paced to the sink set in the wall opposite his bunk and
grabbed the towel from the rack, wiping sweat from his
face as he bent to peer at his reflection in the small
steel mirror illuminated by a stark slice of moonlight.
Deep lines from exposure to the sun
and wind lined Simon's craggy face, though his tan had
long since paled from confinement. Beneath bushy brows
his eyes shone hazel with flecks of pure green and brown
that gave them warmth. His mouth twisted in a line
turned down at the corners in a perpetual frown. The
laugh lines had not faded with his confinement in spite
of the leathery roughness of his whole continuance.
In the medicine cabinet sat a
bottle of contraband tequila the guards let him keep.
Simon uncorked the small medicine bottle and drank.
He tried not to think about it all,
that maybe the situation had been predestined: That the
German would also practice Hwa Rang Do, that they both
should enter a tournament in Oklahoma City, that Simon
should pass the dressing room and hear her plead with
the German to marry her: that Phillip Simon and the
German should both love Cynthia.
When he entered the match the inner
Simon knew he was going to kill his rival. At last,
after all the months of the trial and confinement,
Phillip Simon believed that death had been a conscious
wish; so he willed himself to die but as the time
approached, his resolution to accept things calmly faded
away. As the days wound down toward his death, he had
only one regret in an eventful life, one love he had
spurned as Cynthia had spurned him, and it was the inner
ghost that haunted him at night named Liza.
"Only two days to go," he whispered
to himself. He paced to his bunk and willed himself to
lie down. The tequila warmed him inside in spite of a
shudder at the remembered appointment. He closed his
eyes with deliberation, wondering what might come after.
.
Then he saw it!
His eyes were shut, but he saw it.
He sat--frantically erect and rubbed his eyes until they
teared. Then he opened them again, amazed to see only
the bare grayness of the cell.
Relax , it can't be a mercy to
go crazy this late in the game. He smiled a
humorless smile and lay back down. Once more he tried
for sleep.
It was back! Inside his eyelids,
staring straight at him with lidless eyes fixed squarely
at him, a face! It had a round, bulbous head with bony
ridged brows above a parchment expanse where a mouth
should be. A grotesquery Poe would quake at.
"What is it, Simon?" Tanner was the
night guard on duty in the row. He was a man of forty,
bald, but undiminished in other ways by the years. Once
he may have felt compassion for the men he dealt with,
but time had formed a thick scab over his feelings. He
had no time for a killer's aberrations.
"Whadd'ya want; a reprieve?"
"Don't you see it?" The prisoner
gasped. "There, man, there!" He gestured frantically,
pointing to the center of the cell. It was not new to
Tanner, he'd seen a lot of men on death row slip their
knot in the final days.
"It's all right, Simon," the guard
said, his voice rough. "Just calm down and relax. Your
nerves are shot is all. It ain't real; just keep telling
yourself."
"I'm not mad, you idiot, it's
there! Why don't you see it? Those eyes!" Simon pressed
into the angle where the walls met, his blanket wrapped
partially around him.
"Now simmer down and shut up, or
I'll give you something to put you to sleep." Tanner
waved his sedative to emphasize his point, tapping the
club on the bars with a 'clack-clack' Simon started to
say something, thought better of it and lowered his eyes
in a vain effort to avoid the spectral head that
remained at a fixed distance squarely in his line of
sight.
Tanner took the gesture as one of
submission, slid the viewing panel shut and returned to
his paper.
Simon stood alone in the cell with
his private apparition. He did his best to absorb that
fact and deal with it.
After a time he forced himself to
speak to it. "Why are you haunting me?" Silence settled
heavily about him testing his nerves further. After a
time word shapes formed in Simon's mind as clearly as
the face of his tormentor.
"Be calm, Phillip Simon, I am Tar-Myk."
"I really am insane." Simon sat
quietly; while what he was sure was a shattered corner
of his mind, spoke to him.
"I am of a race, old before yours
was born, who seeks now to aid young worlds like yours.
We need your help to guide the course of events on your
tiny world." The image shimmered for a second, the head
becoming distorted, elongated. It flickered like a
television image.
Simon gasped a sigh of relief; his
vision was at last deserting him. However, the nightmare
resolved itself into solidity and continued.
"You have abilities, which once
amplified by our science, will aid your planet. We are
prepared to aid you in your current situation."
"Situation!" Simon was so within
the grasp of the apparition that it seemed no more
insane to conduct a conversation than to merely listen
and certainly no worse to argue! "I'm gonna fry in two
days!"
"Not if you agree to be our
corporeal representative."
Simon stared at the phantom head
and tried to make sense of the whole thing. So maybe
it is just a fractured part of my own head. Play along,
and maybe it'll go away. After all, how many people
had such a bizarre vision that made promises. Aladdin,
or Faust perhaps?
"All right," Simon acquiesced. "Get
me out and it's a deal."
A sudden sharp pain pierced his
left arm where a living beam of white light appeared.
When he looked down the light vanished, leaving behind a
small abrasion.
"You will not die," Tar-Myk said.
Simon started to speak, but the
head wavered, shrank, and faded, leaving him alone in
his cell. "My God!" he murmured.
When the final day came for Phillip
Simon, he was led noisily down the gray corridor crying
and yelling. "I don't want to die. You promised, you
promised!"