
Nocturne 8 – In Space, in an Egg…
The two escape pods pushed out of the back end of the Apatosaurus-shaped command starship both looked like extremely large dinosaur eggs. Two command-level officers were being marooned in space in each pod. Fortunately for those inside the space-dino eggs, Admiral Cloudstalker and Captain Black Fly in one, ADaB and PiP, the two Djinnistani Peris, in the other, they were still on the edge of the Don’t Go Here star system. They could communicate with Aerobase Frieda and be rescued within a couple of hours at sub-light speeds.
“Well, I guess I really blew that one,” Arkin Cloudstalker said, referring to the theft of their command vessel while they were making their initial inspection tour.
“You really can’t blame yourself for this one, sir,” Black Fly said sympathetically.
“What do you mean? Certainly, I can blame myself if I want to. It’s what good leaders do… take responsibility for failures, I mean.”
“You didn’t fail. You were taken prisoner in a very well-planned shipboard insurrection carried out by a group of religious fanatics, the very existence of which no one could’ve even predicted, much less defeated.”
“We were aware such a cult existed, weren’t we?”
“No. We were not. You can take my word for it as a top agent of the White Duke’s special intelligence forces. We knew there were scholars and zealots who followed the prophecies religiously, but no one knew they had leadership with Imperial Intelligence training and a gift for military plans just like the one we fell victim to. If you have to blame someone, blame me. I’m the one with the intelligence responsibilities and long years of training.”
“Well, I certainly don’t blame you. Tell me, since Black Fly is some kinda code name, do you even have a real name?”
“My name is legally now “the Black Fly,” my mother once called me Amanda… and you can too, if you like.”
Arkin nodded. He would certainly remember that name. He knew that he preferred it to her real name.
“Maybe we should put in a call to ADaB and PiP. They may have called Frieda already. I’m sure help is probably on the way.”
“It’s part of the genius of Lizard Lady’s plan that she kidnapped us, and waited until we were at the edge of the heliosphere before she set us adrift in space.”
“How so?”
“She knew that no one could blast her out of orbit with you still on board. You’re the Grand Admiral, after all.”
“Well, that’s something I will have a hard time living down with Tron Blastarr. I lost his brand-new starship design the very first time I was acting as the Grand Admiral.”
“He shouldn’t be that hard to handle. You’re his boss now, you know,” she answered.
“Yes, that’s true, isn’t it?”
Arkin reached over to the comm unit on the inside wall of the space egg. He punched in the code for the other egg.
“Um, Admiral… ah… um, ah, AH, AAAHHH!” said ADaB’s voice, cryptically.
“What’s happening, ADaB? Are you being murdered?”
“Um, ah… no, Admiral. It’s PiP. She says we have a couple of hours to kill. And, well… She’s very much a female you know.”
“Yes, I know.”
“And the average female Peri is taught many years’ worth of love-making skills on Djinnistan. And she’s… she’s… very GOOoooOOOoodddD! Um, gotta go now, boss…”
“Hmm. And here I thought the two of them didn’t really like each other very much.”
When Arkin looked at Black Fly Amanda, though, he noticed the evil sparkle in her eyes and the smirk on her face.
“Why are you looking at me like that?” Arkin asked.
“Well, those two little imps put some ideas in my head. And, anyway, you had to have noticed where it was always going to end up between the two of us. Am I right?”
Arkin Cloudstalker blushed furiously. He was a Space Knight, a hero in a white cowboy hat. He had worked with Lady Knights for years, and never once…
And then beautiful Amanda kissed him. He reached up and switched off the lights.





























The Essayist
I have been working on compiling good essays from this blog into book form. It is becoming a sort of obsession. The problem is, I am likely running out of time. My health is getting worse in the middle of a pandemic that is killing thousands of people just like me. I have been having problems with passing out during the midmornings repeatedly for several days in a row. I fear I may be headed towards heart failure or a stroke. And if it comes down to an ambulance ride, I can’t afford it, and I will not economically survive it. And all the intensive care units around here in North Texas are swamped with COVID patients. It is important for me to finish and publish this book of essays. It is part of me as a writer that I simply must leave behind.
“Why are essays important?” you may ask. And here’s where I would normally insert a joke answer. I try hard not to take myself too seriously. It is the only way I can deal with what has been a very serious life. And at the point in my essay book where I will insert this essay, I will not need to review what those things are that are so serious. (Being a teacher and shaping young minds. Being a sexual assault survivor. Helping teenagers to live through suicidal depressions. I know, I know, I should’ve resisted the urge to list them.)
But I have spent a lifetime teaching kids to write four-and-five-paragraph essays. And I am also a serious reader of essays. I have read and thoroughly studied Loren Eiseley’s The Invisible Pyramid, Henry David Thoreau’s Walden, Collected Essays by H.L. Mencken, selected essays by James Thurber, Life as I Find It: A Treasury of Mark Twain, Charles Lamb’s Essays of Elia, and parts of John Ruskin’s The Stones of Venice. I also thoroughly loved and used as a teacher All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten by Robert Fulghum. So, I do not claim without reason that I do know something about how to write an essay. (Although you are welcome to disagree based on numerous bits of evidence in this goofy blog,)
At this point I am obligated to define for you what I believe an essay should be and what its potential uses are. An essay, simply put, is a pile of a fool’s best thinking put down on paper in prose rather than being distilled down into lines of poetry or embroidered and expanded with lies to make it into fiction. At its best it can open reader’s mental eyes and change societies, if not the entire world. At its worst it can incite violence, stir hatreds, and generally muck everything up. My essays land somewhere between, in the realm of mildly-amusing purple paisley prose that can really waste your time.
An essay, because it is based on truthful observations, can rip away the costumes and masks that authors put on to write fiction and make that educated fool of an author metaphorically naked in front of the reader. After blogging like this since 2013, I admit to having no real secrets left that I have not at least mentioned in my blog somewhere. I am less naked when being a sometime-nudist than I am in the sentences and paragraphs of these essays.
Now that I have thoroughly convinced you that you made a big mistake by reading this far through my essay compilation, I will reveal the fact that I have put this essay somewhere closer to the end of the book rather than near the beginning. Like all essayists, I am a fool (hopefully in the Shakespearean wise-fool sense), but I am not stupid. So I won’t laugh at you for falling for my tricks, but I can’t promise not to be at least a little bit amused. But time is short. So, on to the next essay!
Leave a comment
Filed under commentary, humor, insight, new projects, Paffooney, writing, writing teacher