Friday, February 25, 2022

Where Were You Fictionalized

 I was digging around and managed to find my fictionalized Where Were You, Roy Rogers?

Where Were You, Roy Rogers?

          Mickey leaned on his arm dreamily, ignoring the reality of the slate grey late November sky and seeing instead bright blue skies and a brilliantly shining sun.  He saw himself looking out the window of the Songbird, Sky King’s personal airplane.  Sky King was one of Mickey’s syndicated television heroes, capturing bad guys and coming to the rescue of good guys.  Mickey sat in dumb old Penny’s seat on the plane.  Why Sky King would want to bother with a niece on board the plane was beyond Mickey.

          “Michael, you look like you’d like to answer the next problem,” his teacher said, interrupting his reverie.

          “Oh,” Mickey gulped, panicking.  Where was the class now?  Why did they have to have math so soon after recess?  He just wasn’t ready to work yet so soon after play time!  He straightened up and looked around, hoping to get a clue from one of his classmates.

          The loudspeaker gave a warning sound and Mickey sat back, relieved.  The coming announcement would buy him a little time.  Maybe Mrs. Higgins would forget she’d called on him.  That would be a really lucky break!  The principal began speaking and Mickey heard him say something about an ambush in Dallas, Texas.  Mrs. Higgins gasped and went fish belly white.  His classmates had begun murmuring in confusion.

          “What?”  Mickey whispered to his neighbor.

          Patrick shook his head in disbelief and whispered back, “Somebody shot the President in the head!”

          There was a babble of voices and then Mrs. Higgins began talking to them softly, trying to calm the children.

          Mickey wasn’t worried.  His number one hero, Roy Rogers, would come to the rescue all right!  Roy and his sidekick Gabby Hayes appeared every Saturday morning and Mickey was a faithful viewer.  Roy had his beautiful and loyal steed, Trigger, who ran as fast as a bullet it seemed, just like Superman.  Roy always caught the bad guys and brought them in.

          Mickey played today’s episode out in his mind.  An old stagecoach rattled down the dusty road.  Suddenly, riders wearing black hats and riding black horses drew alongside the driver, waving their guns.  The driver was forced to stop. 

          Immediately, the President popped the stage door open and demanded, “What’s going on here?”  He sported a flat city slicker hat, a string tie and suit.

          “Give us all your money,” the head bad guy ordered, “or we’ll shoot.”

          “Go ahead and shoot because you’re not going to rob me!” the President retorted bravely.

          One of the bad guys pointed his pistol at the President and fired.  The President fell back, hand to his head.

          Just then, Roy Rogers came over the hill riding Trigger.  Gabby Hayes rode alongside him.  The bad guys took one look, panicked, and rode off in a desperate hurry.  Roy stopped long enough to make sure the President was all right. 

“I’m fine, I’m fine,” the President said, waving Roy away.  The head wound was just a crease.  “Go and get those dastardly criminals!”

Roy and Gabby took off in pursuit of the bad guys.  Mickey knew it was just a matter of time before they were caught.  He began to set up the next scene.  There would be a minor shoot out and then the bad guys would throw down their guns and give up.

          The loudspeaker made its warning noise again.  Mickey knew the principal would announce that the bad guys had been rounded up and brought to the sheriff.  He was so sure of it, he thought he hadn’t heard right when the principal announced the President was dead.  Mrs. Higgins began to sob.  She turned the class lights out and asked the children to put their heads down.

          Mickey complied, in a state of complete shock.  How could this be?  How could the President have been killed by a little scratch on his head?  Why weren’t the bad guys caught and on their way to jail?  This couldn’t be happening!

          As Mickey numbly rested his head on his crossed arms, some awful possibilities began to cross his mind.  Maybe head shot wounds weren’t always just little creases.  Maybe Roy Rogers had arrived too late to save the day.  Worst of all, maybe he hadn’t gotten there at all.  The sun was no longer shining in Mickey’s world.  He looked out the window at the bleak skies and saw that there seemed to be no color anywhere out there.

          Where were you, Roy Rogers?

Wednesday, February 23, 2022

Dark Shadows Fan Fiction

I started writing Dark Shadows fan fiction years ago. I started this one in 2004. I don't know why I stopped or where I was going with it. But this is part of the first chapter of the story, set mostly in 1841 Parallel Time with one character from Regular Real Time: Quentin Collins. 

Quentin felt disoriented and tried to get his bearings.  The young woman before him alternately smiled and then frowned.  He wondered if she was mad.  She was behaving so oddly.  He needed her, though.  He had to get to the room in the east wing.  They were in the west wing, but it was different somehow.  The room he'd just exited held some kind of room with magic-but it wasn't the playroom.

"You did lock the door," the young woman informed him, smiling again.  Her smile was quickly followed by a frown.  "You've been naughty, though, to come here.  You know that Aunt Julia and Mama won't approve."

"It was an accident," he answered lamely.  "I didn't mean to."

"Quentin, you always did get into mischief.  Mama grieved so when you went to prison-" The young woman's voice trailed off, and she studied him closely.  "How did you get here?" she asked suddenly.

As she studied him, Quentin figured out that there was a Quentin in this time and this young woman was his sister-and that he was supposed to be in prison.  "I, uh, well, I went through the door," he answered evasively.

She gave him a crafty look.  "Did you run away from prison, Quentin?  I'll bet you didn't like it.  You never did like to be shut in, did you?"

"No," he agreed.  "Can you help me?  I mean, can you help me get to the east wing without anyone seeing us?"

She clapped her hands.  "Oh!   We're playing a game!  I love games!"  Her expression changed.  "Of course, I don't like them when people are unkind to me.  They are, you know-frequently.  Unkind.  But you always protected me, Quentin, and I'm ever so grateful!"  She threw her arms around him and gave him a big hug.  "I would do anything for you!"

"Thank you," he answered, awkwardly returning the hug.  "And of course, I'd protect you.  You're-my sister."

To his surprise, she stepped back a little and her eyes filled with tears, spilling over her cheeks. 

"Oh, Quentin, you mean that, don't you?"

"I'm sorry," he said, alarmed.  "I didn't mean to make you cry."

"You are so kind, so gentle," she answered, sniffling now.  She found a handkerchief and brought it to her face.  "You're not like the other boys."  She lowered her voice to a whisper.  "They don't accept me as their real sister.  Sometimes I think they don't love me at all!"

Oh Lord, Quentin thought, wondering what mess he'd inadvertently stumbled into.  He put his arms around her awkwardly, wondering who `the boys were and why they wouldn't accept her as their `real' sister.  He wondered what her name was, wishing he knew so that he could say something comforting. 

"They're fools," he said finally.

Her eyes lit up with delight.  "You're right!  They are fools!"

"Will you help me?" he asked, urgently.  He had to get out of here as quickly as possible.

"Yes, I will!" She said, determined.  She took his hand and led him down the hall, quickly ducking into a room.  She felt along the wall and opened a panel.  Relieved, he realized she was taking him into the inner pathway of secret halls within the house.  If the house were similar to the Collinwood he knew, he'd be able to find his way to the East wing.  The young woman picked up a candle and lit it with a long taper she pulled from her pocket.

"I'm glad you remembered," he ventured.  "I really don't want anyone to see me-after running away, I mean."

"They think I'm mad.  They all say, `Melanie is addled since she went into the room'," the young woman said with another crafty smile.  "But I'm not crazy-not all the time.  And when I'm not, I remember

everything."  She studied him thoughtfully.  "You seem different Quentin.  Your manner of speaking-it is different."

"It's the prison that did that," Quentin explained, hoping she would buy it.  He'd been speaking twentieth century vernacular for so long-it was going to be hard not to use slang.  He'd have to make a conscious effort to remember.  Already the strange clothes were itching and pulling at his skin.

"Of course.  What an awful experience for you, dear Quentin," Melanie said softly.

"Melanie," he said softly, glad that he knew her name now.  "You've always been the kind and understanding one."  He imagined that it was true, too.  Her lip quivered, and he said quickly, “We need to hurry."

She regained her composure, nodding, and moved down the hallway.  As they walked, Melanie whispered, "Why do you need to go to the east wing?"

"There's something there that I've forgotten," he answered. 

"I see.  You were naughty again, weren't you?  No one goes to the east wing-ever.  Mama says it would be a waste if we were to have the east wing opened."

"I know," Quentin answered.  "You know how I like to explore, Melanie.  I'm very restless, you know."  He hoped.  She giggled in the semi-darkness and he was relieved that either he was right or she was so mad it didn't matter what he said.  Now that he had his bearings, Quentin began to take the lead.  Melanie handed the taper over to him and followed quietly as he found the hallway he needed. 

Before long, he was at the parallel time room.  "You say no one ever comes here, Melanie?"

"No one.  Mama and Aunt Julia forbid it.  They would be terribly cross with us if they knew that we were here now," Melanie said.  "Don't you remember Papa switching you and Gabriel?"

"Yes," Quentin lied.  "That's why I want you to go back, Melanie, and not say a word about me being here."  He held on to her shoulders and looked into her eyes.

 Melanie looked distraught.  "Do you want me to leave you here all alone?"

"I won't mind," Quentin assured her.  "I won't be gone very long, either.  You must promise me something, Melanie."

Melanie's look of disheartened disappointment changed to one of pleased cunning.  "Oh, is it a secret?  I won't tell, I promise!"

"Well, a sort of a secret," Quentin agreed.  "I don't want you to tell anyone that I was here.  But more important than that, I don't want you to come into this room to look for me."  He looked at her very intently.  "Promise me."

Melanie looked bewildered.  "Don't come into the room?  But why?"

He debated on what to tell her.  She'd already dropped hints about being addled and he didn't want to add to it or to frighten her.  Finally, he said, "There's some magic around this room, too-like the other one."

Melanie's eyes grew round with fear.  "Is it bad-like the curse?"

"There's not a curse on it-it's just different.  Just don't come into the room, please, Melanie, promise me," Quentin urged.  He would have liked to have known what the curse was but just didn't have time.  Melanie began to cry and he held her, stroking her hair.  "Don't cry, it'll be all right."  He cursed to himself.  He really wanted to get going.

"You'll be safe, won't you Quentin?" Melanie asked, distressed.  "I don't want anything bad to happen to you!"

"I'll be all right, I swear," Quentin told her.  He gave her the taper.  "You be my brave sister, all right?  I'm only going to get something, that's all."

"All right," Melanie agreed, her lower lip still trembling as she took the taper.  She backed up a step. 

Quentin opened the doors to the room.  It was empty and bare, just as it usually was.  He went inside and looked around.  He realized that Melanie was following him and so he turned back to close the doors on her.  "Go back to the main part of the house and don't say anything," he urged her again.

"There's not anything in there," Melanie protested.

"I know where it is," Quentin assured her, shutting the door firmly in her face.  He walked to the center of the now darkened room and waited, shivering.  It was very cold in her, as if the room was filled with spirits.  It was true, he reflected.  All of Collinwood seemed to be a magnet for spirits and magic of all types.  As he approached the fireplace, he began to hear a humming sound and realized that the room was about to change.  There was a sound at the door.  He turned back and was horrified to see Melanie standing there.  "No!" he cried out-and then she was gone.

Quentin was still in an empty, dark room and the doors had somehow shut themselves.  He must have flipped over as Melanie opened the doors.  He wondered if she'd seen it happen and hoped not.  He hoped she wouldn't try to follow him here.  Now he had to find his great-uncle's library.  Luckily, it hadn't been that long ago that he helped Elliot and Roger break through the walls to find it.  He could still remember where it was.

Damn, I wish I'd brought that flashlight with me, he thought as he tried to feel his way out into the hall way.  He wasn't sure he'd find any tapers outside.  The 1840 family in his own time hadn't used this wing either.  There was no furniture anywhere.  He wondered when any of the family tried to live in the wing because he remembered boxes and old chairs when he'd been stumbling around in here with Barnabas and Julia.

"Eh, I brought you a gift, pretty one," Cara Linda’s voice came softly.

"You're here, thank God!" Quentin exclaimed.  He looked around, trying to see her.  There was a small glowing light and in the center was a pack of matches.  "You're a genius!"

"Someone has to do the thinking, eh?" Cara Linda chuckled.  Quentin took the matches out of the air and lit one.   He found a taper in a sconce on the wall.  He took the candle and lit the wick before the match burned down to his fingers.  With a sigh of relief, he began to make his way back to the center of the house, hoping that no one was about.

Great-uncle Quentin's library was in the west wing-back where the staircase had been.  He wondered if the room had been sealed over yet.  "Cara Linda, when in time are we?  Is the library there?"

"Your great-uncle has gone on his journey to sea with Tad," Cara Linda answered.  "We are back before Judah Zachary came here."

Thank God for small favors, Quentin thought.  He wouldn't have to break through any walls.  He managed to get through the main part of the house and into the west wing.  He had no idea how long he'd been wandering around between time zones but as they passed a window, he looked out and saw that it was dark.  Hopefully the family was asleep.

He found his great-uncle's library and went inside, looking around in the desk drawers for the I ‘Ching wands.  That's where they'd be, he reasoned.  He'd have to return through the parallel time room.  If his uncle was gone on his journey, then the staircase wasn't finished yet.  He was finding the same volumes of texts that were retrieved from Collinwood in the future. It occurred to him that if he could take these books now and place them strategically, then maybe that whole Judah Zachary disaster could be circumvented from the beginning. 

"Stop thinking foolish thoughts," Cara Linda snapped.  "It's enough that we do not know what kind of changes you make just by taking the I ‘Ching wands!"

Wouldn't it be better to try and stop all this? He wondered. 

"And what if you undo your own birth-what then?"

Maybe that would be better.

"Maybe it's better you listen to me and leave the books alone, foolish one!"

Reluctantly, Quentin set the books aside.  Now he was aggravated by Cara Linda’s presence.  He pulled open another drawer and pulled out the I ‘Ching wands.  Here they are, he thought.  As he turned them over gently in his hands he wondered if these were the same wands he found when he was a boy.  He hadn't known what they were for until Grandmama taught him to use them.  Perhaps she had taken them from his great-uncle. 

"It's time to go back.  It is not a good idea to linger," Cara Linda warned.

All right, all right!  He carefully rewrapped the wands in their linen cloth and made his way back through the house to the east wing, thinking it was a good thing he was so familiar with the house.  Back in the `Alice-in-fucking-Wonderland' room, he settled down to wait.  Cara Linda?  Do you know where everyone is?

"I can guide you.  Some of the times and places-I am not familiar with them.  They are in the future.  I can guide you there."

The future?  How far into the future?

"I don't know.  I cannot see the dates.  I only know they are forward in time."

Who is forward in time?  Do you know that much?

"Your cousin Elizabeth is one forward in time.  She is cold and alone-she is in New York City.  I do not know how she made her way there, but she is frightened.  People think she is mad, but she is not."

Quentin groaned.  Maybe he should try to rescue her first.

"No, you must go for Sabrina first.  She is in the most danger," Cara Linda objected.  "She believes she is with her young man, Chris, but she is not.  Already she had fallen under his spell.  History will change if you do not go for her first."

She thinks she's with her young man?  Quentin's brow furrowed.  Is she with Tom?

"Is that his name?  He looks like his brother but he is like Barnabas."

Oh my God!  Quentin glanced around, wishing for the room to change now. He got tired of standing and sat down on the floor, arms wrapped around himself to try and stay warm.  He felt himself beginning to doze as he waited for the room to change back.

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