Doug Donnan

Doug Donnan
Doug Donnan

Friday, September 25, 2015

Check Your Messages

Doug DonnanExecutive Editor/OM-GEN+
donnan.doug@yahoo.com






















"Check Your Messages"      


by

Doug Donnan

            

                                           [ Manhattan, New York 1931 ]


     “That’s right… she’s a damn pigeon!” the senior aide shouted as he looked into the

tinted emerald glass and cedar wood aviary. The entire sanctuary was a demand of
the decidedly eccentric tenant…Nikola Tesla. Its immediate construction came as a
total surprise to even his most dedicated underlings. Varun Caputra knew the peculiar
idiosyncracies of his mentor better than almost anyone. However, this particular
obligation was beyond the reach of colloquial sanity. Caputra was beside himself with
angst as he tried to delegate his understanding of the points and particulars for the
upcoming wedding.

     “The master was adamant that this is to be a private ceremony,” Caputra almost

sighed as he turned to address the group of white smocked assistants there in the
austere confines of Tesla’s hotel suite. “He is now out and about getting fitted for his
tuxedo. Our job, our dilemma if you will, is to locate and make ready the blushing, albeit
winged, bride! The ceremony itself will be held here in these very rooms at exactly three
o’clock,” he said as he looked down at his golden pocket watch. “What we need to—
   
       “But how in blue blazes are we supposed to know which one of those birds out there
is the…bride to be?” a bespectacled young man with slicked down red hair rudely cut in 
as he jabbed a pointing finger out into the coo and chaos of the ‘Teslaviary’.

     “This whole thing is insane!” from a rotund fellow who pulled repeatedly on his long
scraggly black beard. “Let’s just say we find the right pigeon out there and then,
somehow, manage to grab— sequester it. Then what are we going to do…dress it up in
some sort of cockamamie wedding gown and clip some tiny jewelry on it for Christ’ sake?”           

     “No, no, no!” Caputra exclaimed as he reached in and slid out a worn photograph
from the top pocket of his lab coat. “Tesla despises jewelry of any kind worn by a female.
Here, pass this picture around. This is what the bride…Princess Penelope, looks like.”

     “This damn picture is all worn and faded,” black beard announced as he handed it
back to a petite brunette aide who was leaning in over the red leather couch.   

     “The princess looks darkish gray,” she decided as she zoomed in on it with blue eyes,
“almost black it would appear.”

     They all now gathered together at the threshold of the bustling pigeon coop and
stared inside. The cacophony was demoralizing to say the least. Their heads rolled all
around and about as they gazed at the dozens of flapping, cackling birds.

     “Jesus…they’re all dark gray,” red hair sighed. “There’s not much time left. We’re
doomed.”

     Caputra snatched away the dog-eared photograph and sailed it behind them onto the
coffee table. “Well, just maybe, if we get a hold of a similar bird, the master won’t notice
the difference,” he decided.

     “He’s Nikola Tesla!” black beard replied with both hands thrown up high.
“He notices everything!” 

     Come on you three,” Caputra announced with a ridiculous John Wayne-like gesture
of his hand. “Let’s do this!” He pulled back the plastic curtain, and the quartet
tiptoed inside.

      
*     *     *
   
     “What in the name of Montezuma is going on here?” Tesla shouted as he cautiously
entered the apartment and stepped sand-crab-like over to the aviary. The skittish
foursome had only just recently emerged from their safari into the pigeon penthouse.
They stood in a tight guarded group just around the dining room table which they had less
than expertly improvised into a dismal white linen altar. One singular red wax dinner
candle was centered and lighted. A diminutive black robed, bible bearing priest or parson
stood off to one side.

His bespectacled eyes raised in either heavenly appeal or some silent earthly
apprehension. On the opposite side of the altar stood an ashen Caputra. He had cupped
in his feathered grip the group’s pecking pick. His mouth, in a feeble attempt at a smile,
resembled the mail slot in a door more than anything else

     “Are you ready my son?” from the now level eyed holy man.

     “Ready…ready for what my good man?” Tesla almost spat out as he looked around
at the gaping faces of his assistants. He crossed over to the undersized living room area
and stared down at the coffee table. He reached down and picked up the pigeon picture.

     “We used that photograph to locate your…your, Princess Penelope here,” Caputra
gulped as he held out the bobbling, button-eyed pigeon, “for the…the wedding ceremony.”
he all but whispered.

     “You impertinent twit!” Tesla exclaimed as he held high the picture. “This is not a
photograph. It is an electromagnetic miniature copy of a Roentgen ray graphic plate...
An x-ray!

It is part of an ionized gas and rotating alternating current x-ray project that me and my
friend Wilhelm Roentgen are working— he threw up his hands as if trying to explain it
all would be completely futile. “Did you in fact use this picture to make your rude
selection from my pigeon sanctuary?”

     “Yes sir,” from a now blushing Caputra. “I’m afraid it’s all we had to go by. We
wanted to surprise you. You must please try and understand that this whole event is
somewhat unusual for us all. We were only trying to—

     “Let’s see if I can make an educated guess here,” Tesla cut in sharply as he began
to slowly pace around the whole matrimonial scene there in his apartment. “You lot ‘let
yourselves in’ to my humble quarters here in a sad attempt to surprise me with all this
falderal,” he said as he waived his hand dramatically about the conjugal domestic chapel.

“You used this highly sensitive prototype electromagnetic plate to try and seize, perhaps
sequester would be a better word, my bride Penelope. And, the end result was you only
managed to come up with that poor unfortunate creature, who looks absolutely nothing
like her for your information, in a pathetic attempt to not surprise me, but to in fact
heartlessly deceive me!”

     At that point all were speechless. They did in fact hang their varied heads as if they
might be attending a funeral instead of the bizarre wedding they had prepared for. The
room was now totally silent until…

     “There she is!” Tesla cried out as he shot a quick look off to a little bump-out side
window box just above his mahogany roll top desk. “And there, right on time as usual,
was Princess Penelope!”

     The others in the ‘wedding party’ performed an almost choreographed turn to
witness the alabaster pigeon pacing and pecking as she stared back at them from the
window with a dubious goggle-eyed gaze.   

     “You see my fine un-feathered friends, Penelope is an English messenger pigeon, a
homing pigeon if you will,” Tesla said softly as if he was now completely comforted by
the abrupt arrival of his feathered femme. “She is in fact completely snow white in
color as are many of her genus. Now I am quite certain that that was what
preponderated your semi-honest mistake in her identification. I should tell you that
I have secretly been working on her electro-static brain waves with our alternating
current Dynamo Electric Device for the last year or so. I have managed to vastly
increase and refine her appendage and ambulatory skills. I am having absolutely
amazing results so far. My Pen is now a truly amazing bird my friends.”

     The entire groups’ eyes were wide open with astonishment. Their mouths now
formed puckering holes not unlike the entrances to a cluster of ‘birdhouses’. They
were stunned at all this to say the least.

     Never the less and be all that as it may be,” Tesla now proclaimed with a cheery
smile. “I now do declare the matrimonial ceremony officially underway.”

     “Very well then,” the parsimonious parson announced with measured jubilance, “
let the bride in and we shall begin the service.”

     They all turned and made their way over to the window box. Tesla carefully pinched
open the little hatch.

     Hey, there’s a note…a message attached to its... her leg!” Caputra announced.

     “Hmm,” from a curious Tesla as he unclipped the tiny paper scroll. And, just before
he unrolled it, there was a white explosion of flapping wings and feathers as Princess
Penelope flew off like a shot.

     “Wow! She flew the coop!” black beard shouted as they watched her fly off into
the sun.

     “Read the message my son,” from the pusillanimous priest.

     Tesla positioned a pair of delicate pince-nez glasses on the bridge of his prominent
nose.He soon dropped his hands and then stared down at the pigeon dropping stained
carpet.

     “What does it say Mr. Tesla?” from an astonished Caputra.

['Good-bye Nikky. I found another more my type on a statue in Central Park']

                          

                                ___ The End ___ 

Wednesday, September 23, 2015

The Complaint Department

Doug Donnan
Executive Editor/OM-GEN+
donnan.doug@yahoo.com





"The Complaint Department"

by

Doug Donnan


                                [ 2016 / GROC-TECH-MARKET / Palo Alto, Ca ]

"I would like to return this case of bottled water that I bought here yesterday," the
man grunted as he lifted the plastic wrapped case up and into the jutting service chute.

A rather long, serpentine line of vehicles was slowly building up just behind his panting
Toyota Corolla. Garth Brednbuddah had finally made his way up to the massive GTM
machine conspicuously labeled:

| HRETURNS AND COMPLAINTS H|

"Welcome to your friendly neighborhood GTM. How may we serve you?" an
electronic female voice asked from somewhere.

"I don't want the water."

"What seems to be the problem with product #665190-776-55299-007 ||||-|||||||||||||-||||||||?"

"It's yellow," he announced up to the stoic stainless steel machine. "Maybe 'amber'
would be a better description for it.

"It's a complete case of pure bottled water," was the flat, slightly condescending,
reply.

"Pure yellow. I want to return it and have the total price including the sales tax
credited to my GTM credit card."

There was an annoying silent pause as if the machine just might be mulling over
Garth's veracity and/or sanity.

Then:

"Was the product this color... yellow or amber... when you purchased it?"

"I'm not one-hundred per cent certain 'friend', but I would tend to doubt it. My wife
bought it here only two days ago and she never makes mistakes... comprende-vu?"

"'Comprende-vu'?" the machine repeated parrot-like.

"It kind of means... do-you-understand?"

There was another extended period of rather embarrassing waiting.

Then:

"Is your wife there in your vehicle with you now?"

"What damn difference does that make? ...No! She went over to visit with her
mother. She has a cold. Okay?"

"A cold?"

"Yes damn it, a cold. Maybe a touch of the flu bug that's going around town lately.
"This is getting ridiculous are you going to credit my GTM card for the money I...
my wife spent on this yellow crap or not?" Garth asked this question as he leaned
out the window and waved all around and about his red, white and blue GTM card.   

Behind him there were now an assortment of rather rude catcalls accompanied by a
horn blast or two.

[ Would you now please insert your GTM credit card in the flashing red slot marked
REVIEW/CONSIDERATION ]

This was not an audio message. It came across the machine's large video monitor.
It was as if the friendly electronic feminine voice had gone on some type of break.

"Now wait just a damn minute here," Garth shouted, in complete frustration and
fury. "How long is all this gonna' take? I've got a lot of already pissed off folks
lined up right behind me comprende... understand? I don't want to piss 'em off any
more than your damn GTM store here probably already has. And another thing...
I'm not gonna' have my card 'sucked in' to your stupid system over a lousy damn
case of yellow ass water. This is insane!"

[ PLEASE INSERT!... PLEASE INSERT!... PLEASE INSERT!... ] flashed and ran across the screen.

Honking, flashing headlights, loud cursing and angry 'move it or lose it'-like calls had
built to a maddening crescendo just there behind him. All hell was breaking loose.

[ YOU MUST COMPLY!... YOU MUST COMPLY!... YOU MUST COMPLY! ]

"Screw it!" Garth threw the card in the grey plastic barrel labeled 'REFUSE' there
just at the foot of the spastic scolding machine. He sped off and away in a huff.

[ SCREW IT? ... SCREW IT?... SCREW IT? ] the machine's video screen ran on for a
few seconds.

Then:

There was a pause and the video screen cleared. The cacaphony and cursing
ceased. The next car pulled up to replace the completely disappointed and
disatisfied Mr. Garth Brednbuddah.

The computerized audio Female voice had returned...

"Welcome to your friendly neighborhood GTM. How may we serve you?"




___ The End ___      

Monday, September 21, 2015

Red Flags

Doug Donnan

Executive Editor GTNW/OM-GEN+

donnan.doug@yahoo.com

                     

 








Red Flags



by

Doug Donnan
 
                     
                 [ Somewhere along the northern Oregon coast line ]

     The resolute slash of the angry rip tide out across the second tier of splashing
white-water breakers was more than enough reason for the hoisting of the double
red flags.
                   
                                    [ THE BEACH IS CLOSED! ]

     The horrendous surf and weather conditions were a godsend to Sheriff Israel
Lohm and his team of steadfast police officers as they began their thankless patrol
of the extensive shoreline.  

     “Well, let me just set you straight on sumthin’ right off the bat Miss Broadbeam,”

Sheriff Lohm began rather condescendingly as he squinted a look down at the little

wind-blown, ballpoint pen-ready Associated Press reporter.

     “Lootin’ is lootin’ no matter how you choose to define it. And I ain’t about to
have none of that kinda’ evilness goin’ on out on these here beaches. Not on my
watch it won’t missy…comprende-vu?”

     “I am really not here to question your dedication to duty sheriff,” she replied
evenly. “Quite frankly, I am more concerned about the reported shootings out here
on this beach late last night. Two innocent strolling victims, apparently, shot down
just like that… no warning, no anything!  I can’t corroborate any of this of course,
but it would seem to me that if—   

     “If’ that did happen,” he cut in rudely, “the suspects were takin’ their moonlight

stroll in a highly restricted, and I dare say dangerous area. Don’t you see that yellow

police tape that we got stretched out in front of this here beach? All this freakin’
stuff that we got floatin’ up here on this beach is the property of some far off folks
in Japan. It’s gonna’ take quite a good bit of time to sort this whole damn mess out.
So, until that time comes, it would behoove lovers and looters alike…to conduct their
moonlit business elsewhere.”

     She brushed back the whipping wisps of her long dark chocolate hair and stopped
short there in the crunching wet sand and shells. “Suspects? So they were shot and
killed… just like that?”

     The sheriff pulled up in kind and stared a steely ice-eyed look out into the crashing
waves. “I can tell you this one thing for a fact my fair ladybug, King James version
lists the commandments from one to ten pretty as you please. Number eight is...
‘Thou shalt not steal.’  I’m a very religious man and a sworn officer of the law around
here,” he declared as he slapped at the blue-black holstered pistol on his hip. “That
gives me two strikes up on anybody who crosses the line.”

      She turned about alongside him with all the grace and aplomb of the prima ballerina
Alicia Alonso. She raised her pointed chin with nothing short of defiance to the cold
needles of the sea’s intimidating spindrift. “Indeed, all that is true sheriff,” she offered
back coolly with a retracting pinch on her pen top.

     “However, as God is our divine witness, my daddy taught me from the pages of that
very same Bible. If I recall, number six commanded 'Thou shalt not kill'… comprende?

                               
                                                            ___ The End 

Friday, September 18, 2015

LYING ON THE MOON

DOUG DONNANExecutive Editor/OM-GEN+donnan.doug@yahoo.com                      











'LYING ON THE MOON'



by
         
DOUG DONNAN                                            


High Energy Astrophysics Science Archive Research Center
     
        [1 week before the National Press Club Conference]

    
     “I think you’re nuts! That’s what I think,” Doctor
Poole proclaimed as he swept a fat hand over the pink dome
that was his bald head. “You prance into the symposium
with that insane, cockamamie story and you’ll be
laughed right out of the place. No stars in the background,
different shadow projections and secret filming stages out
in the middle of some barren desert,” he continued in a fit
of frustration as he paced all about and around the dimly
lit interior of the observatory control room. He hesitated
and then turned to face the Associated Press investigative
reporter Conrad Finch who was trying to follow him with
cold blue eyes as the diminutive, white smocked Dr. Poole
performed his wandering parade.

     “You say the astronauts from all those moon missions
refuse to talk about their historic visits to the Moon. I mean…
why?” he threw up his arms like some great flapping bird.
“It’s simply preposterous Conrad. You mean to stand there
and tell me that NASA, the United States government and
everyone else involved with all those Apollo missions made
the whole damn thing up? They lied to all of us? You’re
telling me that we never went to or landed on the moon?”

     “I know it seems unbelievable Trent, but the proof is
in the pudding,” Finch replied as he now flung out his
arms in kind. “I’ve got some documentation from the
archives…some unbelievable letters and photos that have
never been seen before…by outsiders!”

     “Where in the hell is all this stuff…evidence if you
will, of yours?” Poole asked tersely. “I’d like to have a
look at it or is that confidential? Perhaps it’s all the
stuff of some soon-to-be blockbuster book you’re writing?”

     Finch put his bony index finger up to his lips in a
gesture for silence. He swept a pensive look around the
room and then back down at the rotund Doctor Poole. As he
took a pad of paper from a nearby work table, he motioned
for Poole to join him. The wary Finch began to scribble
down some furtive details with a ballpoint pen that he
slid out of his shirt pocket:
_______________________________
o                         o                             o

We can’t go back to the Moon—we’ve never been there!
I think I have some hard proof—
I’ll show you—but not here—meet me out by my car in
the parking garage—it’s a blue Honda Accord.

Somebody isn’t real happy with me and all of this stuff
I’m getting into. I think they’re targeting me!!!

I have some of the so called Moon rocks out in my trunk—
I want to take one or two of them down to your lab here
and scan them.I’ve got my doubts about them…
but I’ll need your help!

________________________________________________


     Poole read the note and then cocked his head slightly.
His mouth now puckered into a perfect hole much like the
small opening in a backyard birdhouse. Finch crumpled up
the message and stuffed it into his pants pocket.

     “Moon Rocks?” Poole almost shouted. “Where in the—”

     Finch reached out and covered the little astrophysicists
mouth with his hand. “Sssshh…trust me on this. I’ll
go out first. You follow along in five minutes. Okay?”

     Poole garbled his agreement into Finch’s fingers.


*     *     *  

     He nervously raised his head up and took a quick look
around the dimly lit concrete parking area, then back down
into the gaping trunk of Finch’s car. “Where in the hell
did you get these Finch?” Poole asked almost in shock.

     Finch held up one of the larger stones there in the
pin-light of the shallow trunk well. He quickly responded
to Poole’s obvious apprehension. “Come on, let’s get out of
this place…I don’t like the vibes I’m getting out here in
the dark,” he whispered as he pushed two of the grainy gray
rocks into a small satchel. He handed it to the trembling
astrophysicist. 

     “Oh terrific,” Poole whispered back in mocking response.
“Now you’re a psychic too!”

     “Come on,” Finch said as he lightly closed the trunk.
“Let’s take these inside and check them over, closely on
your state-of-the-art high magnification segment scanner.”

     “How do you know about the HMS?” Poole asked in dis-
belief. “It’s highly secured and we don’t let—”

     “Evening gentlemen,” a voice broke in from the other
side of the car. “It’s rather late to be cavorting around
out here in the dark of night. This is private property.
Are you all affiliated with the research center?”

     “Cavorting?” Poole snapped back in an uneasy reflexive
yelp. “I my redoubtable young man happen to be Doctor Trent
W. Poole. I am the chief resident astrophysicist here at
HEASARC and this gentleman is my good friend from the
Associated Press Mr. Conr—”

     “You have papers?” the dark figure cut him off again.

     “Papers?” Finch chided as he straightened up and
squinted into the dark at the man. His lantern jaw was set
and his mouth appeared to be more of a sinister slit or
gash than anything else. His looming presence there in the
shadows ominously announced…not to be fooled with.      

     “Identification,” he countered coldly as he stepped
around along side them there at the rear of the car. “Well,
well, what have we here?” he said as he scanned Poole’s
little tote bag with a quick draw of a little flashlight he
was carrying and then quickly looked over at Finch as the
trunk lid popped open suddenly.

     PHLUNKK!  

     “He’s out cold! Nice work Poole old bean. You finally
found a use for those damn rocks,” Finch exclaimed as he
clapped the puffing astrophysicist on the back. “Let’s roll
him into the trunk. We’ll deal with him later.”

     “Oh sweet Jesus,” Poole sighed deeply as he slung
the bag over his shoulder. “What next?”

     “Let’s go get those little guys under your new super
duper scope and see what they’re made of,” Finch replied 
as he shut the trunk again. “That’s what’s next.”

     So with Poole leading the way they made off across
the lot heading for the research and diagnostic building.


*     *     *

     “It’s just down this corridor and to the right,”
Poole gasped as though he had just run the Boston Marathon.
“I have a priority pass card right here,” he wheezed as he
pulled a black plastic card from his shirt pocket.

     “Here we go,” Finch called out as they turned the far
corner.
________________________

RESEARCH & DIAGNOSTICS 88
 ____________________      

     As they stood there in front of the large gray metal door
Poole dragged his card through the slot of the electronic
lock box and then keyed in his ID code. “Papers…indeed!”
he said under his heaving breath. He looked over at Finch
who was studying the click and whir of the little overhead
surveillance camera.

     “Those damn cameras are everywhere,” Poole said as he
shouldered open the door.

     They scurried inside and whirled about foolishly in
the dark until Poole finally located the light switch.
“The HMS is just over there,” he shouted as he pointed off
into the corner of the immense white-tiled room. “It’s
quite a piece of equipment,” he announced with pride.
“We put these stones under her piercing eyes and she’ll
tell us everything we want to know…and then some.”

     “Come on then,” Finch replied as he grabbed the bag
from Poole, “Let’s get started. I got a feelin’ that that
strange man in black back in the garage was just one of
many who want to get their hands on these crazy rocks.”

     “Okay—okay,” Poole said as he rolled his eyes. “But
this had all better be worth it because even I’m not supposed
to have access to the HMS without…

     But Finch was gone, dodging around this table of computers
and that bench of robotic machinery as he went.


*     *     *

     Poole had put the first rock through its paces under
the HMS and although its shape and texture did seem rather
peculiar at first, the readings did scan and print out just
as expected; aluminum, titanium, magnesium and very slight 
traces of iron ore. Poole pushed his wire rim reading
glasses up into the broad beam of his forehead and looked
up at an apprehensive Conrad Finch. “I don’t know what you
expect to find here Finch,” he sighed as he held out the
long tickertape-like HMS print strip. “It all looks pretty
legit.”

     “Here,” Finch snapped back as he held out the other
Moon rock, “try this one.”

     Poole swiveled around in the wheeling work chair and
accepted the unusually light second stone. He studied it
in his hand for a second and then looked back up at Finch.

     “You sure this one is from the Moon batch?” he asked.

     “Quite sure,” Finch replied. “In fact, it’s almost a
perfect example of the whole bunch.”

     “Hmmm,” Poole mused as he placed the rock on the HMS
feeding assembly belt. The machine issued a series of soft
clicks and hisses and then accepted the dark object into
it’s interior. And just as it slid down the conveyor belt
an eruption of pounding and kicking came from way back at
the laboratory entrance door.

     “What the hell is that?” Poole yelped as he jumped to
his feet.

     “Sounds like we’ve got company,” Finch answered as
he craned a look back at the rattling gray door. “Can
they get in?”

     If that’s who I think it is, some more of those
sinister… parking lot attendants and some of our crack
security guards, they won’t be using cardkeys and codes
to get in here! We’ve probably still got some time though.
That door is solid.”

     The ruckus outside the lab grew ever louder as the
HMS tongued out its next strip of analytical hard copy.
Poole studied it as it fed out. The results seemed about
the same as the first rock; patches of iron, with large
deposits of aluminum, magnesium, and titanium. He
handed it to Finch.

     “Can’t this contraption of yours just zoom in on this
damn thing and tell us what it…sees?” he asked as he threw
out his arms in frustration. “We’ve got all those elements
right here on Earth. Get this big dog to sniff up close.
I want to know what it sees.”


     “Yes, yes,” Poole said with his fear and irritation
growing by the second. “All we have to do is merge the
electron scanner with the laser video feed and then—

     “Just do it dammit!” Finch yelled.

     After Poole made the necessary adjustments to the HMS
it began to tic out a stream of a perfectly boring gray
lines. One after the other did the readings offer them nothing
out of the ordinary and then, just at the very end, just before
the door was about to blow it’s hinges.

     “Oh my God!” Poole called out in shock as if he had
just seen a ghost. Finch leaned down and squinted a look.

     “There’s your proof old bean,” he almost shouted as
he slapped the astrophysicist on the back. “Now that’s one
giant ‘lie’ for mankind!”

------------------------------------------
+++... MADE IN JAPAN... +++...  MADE IN JAPAN...+++...   
------------------------------------------
0 0 0 0 1234567891011 0 0 0 01234567891011 0 0 0 0 12345


                                    _____THE END__