Our War with Molly Nayfack Read online




  Our War with Molly Nayfack

  Chris Capps

  All characters in this book are fictional. Any resemblance to persons living or dead is purely coincidental.

  Copyright 2013 by Chris Capps

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof.

  "You asked, so I'll tell you," Dr. Karny said leaning forward, his hand slowly reaching for the CB to call the police, "I think you're crazy."

  "You're not alone," the visitor said. His hands were cradling the bleeding canvas feed sack sitting in his lap, "But open it anyway. Do it because I'm crazy. Do it because I've got a gun."

  There was an odd tension after that - one that certainly had Karny's attention. He lifted the edge of the wallet up with his finger for a moment, looking as though he were about to humor the visitor's odd request. And then, after a pause, he let it back down, leaning in toward the other man,

  "If I open the wallet, and it says what you want it to say, and it says who you are - that you're supposed to be here, what will happen?"

  "That's part one," the golden eyed visitor said. The bag squelched as he leaned forward across the table, and he pulled out another wallet from his black trench coat's inner pocket, "This is part two."

  The second wallet slid across Karny's kitchen table under bloody dirty fingers, watched by the visitor's shining golden eyes. His mouth was open, shaking with apprehension as if the corners might turn down and start sobbing at any moment.

  "Look, man," Dr. Karny said, holding the bridge of his nose fast between his fingers, "I don't know why you came here instead of the police. I'm just doing my time on this project until the tunnel stabilizes. I'm a numbers guy. If you say we leave, we leave."

  "You need to know why," the visitor said, "Someone, somewhere needs to know why this all happened tonight. I need to tell one person. I'm gonna have a long life after this full of questions. You're a scientist. Tell me what you see."

  Karny sighed, and flipped open the wallet. It was like someone ripping off a bandage, the way he did it. In one swift movement it was open, its contents visible. He looked down at it, scanning the identification and nodded, letting out an audible hiss of relief,

  "FBI. It says it right here. You are who you claim to be, unless this is a forgery. And I wouldn't know if it was. I don't watch much TV."

  "The other one," the visitor said, his eyes turning to the second wallet, "What does the other one say?"

  Karny reached for the second wallet in front of him, opening it without a thought. He nudged the two next to one another, looking between them, putting his glasses back on. He reached behind the identification in each one, pulling out two identical photographs of a pin-up girl blowing a kiss at the camera. He looked in the billfold where the same clip held together the same three five dollar bills, and two ones. There was a hand written note on the front of the first five in each bundle. Vote McGovern - He'll drop the bomb. Perfect duplicates of one another.

  "Odd, to be sure," Karny said, "but a story like yours, one with such an extraordinary claim requires more than this."

  The visitor hoisted the feed sack onto the table, blood from between the canvas fibers pooling outward, dripping over the edge in slow coagulating splashes on Karny's linoleum floor.

  "Jesus," Karny said, leaping up and knocking his chair over, "What the hell is that?"

  "Proof," the visitor said.

  That was the night they closed the tunnel back to DC.

  Prologue:

  It's been too many years that I've waited to write this letter. My name is John Alvison, and if you're a member of the general public you probably don't know me. That's fine. I'm one of the people who work behind the curtain of our vast American political machine. A name you might know is the man I worked for. I'm here to tell you what really happened to Senator Andrew Archibald Nickel.

  There are ways we do things in the world I live in. They're not big, they're not all-encompassing, and they're not the sort of conspiracies you probably dream about. Most people who are involved have no idea where in the machine their cogs lie. And yet it's brief, calculated, and brutal. It's a sub-element of the DC political machine that everyone agrees surely must exist, but which has stayed comfortably out of the spotlight for the sake of our day-to-day security. I myself didn't know where in the machine I was until one December day in 1972.

  But to do this I have to go back ten years. Ten years earlier and Archie and I are standing on an elevated platform surrounded by thick coniferous trees on all sides. He's grinning like a kid who's convinced his parents there's a second Christmas. He turns to me, slaps me on the back, and in his thick Arkansas accent he says, "I've got three plans for this place. At least for right now. Three." He throws up three fingers and then looks from me to the sprawling fog laden world around us before leaning his heavy frame on the steel railing of our platform once again.

  I don't know enough about what has happened to truly appreciate where we are, or the facility we just passed through. Large sections of my mind still think we're back in the District of Columbia, having traveled through a simple tunnel like any other. The forest is unexplained, sure, but my mind hasn't learned to think outside of space yet. As far as I'm concerned, this facility just has an extremely big yard. Somehow the politician gets it before I do. I suppose that's because he stands to make a lot of money if he can understand what the US military has offered us.

  "Yeah," Senator Nickel says, "We're going to want to clear out this patch of forest. Clear cut it down, start leveling the ground for building. We'll need a few houses for workmen to keep work going. Then we turn that outpost into a town. The town should support around a thousand. Maybe double that. Let's see how it works out. We'll need a rail line to start pulling back trees. Bring them back through that tunnel. This could be the biggest lumber operation in two worlds. How much land did they say they've prospected?"

  "Approximately sixty-two hundred square miles. All of it is like this. No visible changes from one to another aside from occasional pools of standing water. Nearly a hundred species of trees have been identified so far - all with striking similarities to trees found in or near the District of Columbia. No native fauna."

  "Sixty-two hundred square miles, all of it highly exploitable and ready for the picking. We're making history just standing here."

  That's how it began. Senator Nickel arranged the deal with the T.E.A., and we spent more days in the tunneling facility than we did with our families over the next few months. We found workers, hauled the first trailers through the tunnel, and cleared away land quickly. When he wasn't on the ground floor, overseeing operations, the senator was in back rooms arranging deals or drawing up a brain trust of industry men to turn this new discovery into a goldmine.

  It's a new planet. Another dimension. And it's ours.

  If you don't understand the potential here, then you won't survive in the business world.

  Should be 1,600 tons of concrete I'll need. You'll make back three times your investment in a year.

  I can't say what it is, or where. Hell, I couldn't if I wanted to. I'm just a simple man from Arkansas. But you remember the promises I made on your Plantain enterprise in Cuba. I don't seem to recall you complaining when it made you a rich man.

  Nickel was a cunning businessman. And he had a reputation. Soon he had burgeoning tycoons bidding against one another to invest in a project they would be kept completely in the dark on. Just because it was top secret didn't mean it wasn't an excellent business opportunity.

  There are three primary advantages to building an industry off-world, as we soon discovered. First, there's the red tape. Even though the world, or as the military and TEA called it, "th
e Drop Zone" was technically occupying the same space as the US of A, Nickel's family lawyer had made it clear that the same rules wouldn't necessarily apply in other space. Regulations that would have crippled an industry were suddenly lifted. Factory conditions could relax somewhat. The tree huggers never got a chance to see it, so they couldn't picket it. A whole movement of militant environmentalists would march past our industry to picket rainforest depletion in Indonesia. If it had been public knowledge, we could have swayed public opinion on that front fairly easily. Why ruin the Earth when we have a perfectly good off-world production plant? But cheap lumber and relaxed federal guidelines on factories wasn't the half of it. Don't think for a minute that we were snipping away at reality as we know it just for cheap paper.

  Second, there was the missile shield it provided. The town of Cairo, first and only community to be fully resistant to the effects of full blown intercontinental nuclear war was slated to be a resort town for families of note if ever the tensions between the US and the Soviet Union reached a boiling point. Even if the whole globe was swallowed for three generations by nuclear fire and radiation, we would be able to wait it out in a typical suburban looking community with everything we needed. This was the cornerstone that Cairo was founded on. It was also the primary thing that kept government subsidies funneling in through obfuscated channels.

  Third, there was the de facto monopoly we had on the space. Nickel was trusted by the two administrations leading up to the eventual discovery of the Drop Zone, so he got the contract to develop it. No one else got it, because no one else in the United States knew about it. It's possible with the impressive spy program going on that someone in the USSR had heard of this whole thing, but I doubt they would have believed it. They were too busy killing cosmonauts, trying to touch that orbital vacuum surrounding our planet.

  If it had worked, I think things would be different now. It wasn't the untimely death of Senator Nickel that caused us to cancel the project. His death was merely a symptom of something far bigger. He didn't kill himself when his wife demanded a divorce due to his infidelity. That's just the story we leaked to the press to avoid scandal, to preserve some of what remained of his good name. The truth is, I had to do it. He made me do it.

  When I shot him, I swear I remember a beam of light from the setting sun traveling through the car window, through his head, and I saw it make a big white blotch on my hand. Sounds insane. And I think it's impossible. It was only there for a split second, but it's the little things that haunt you most. My hand next to his hollowed out head as I watch light pour through. I had been squeamish, choosing to look at my hand to avoid seeing the gore of it all. He had a rosary in both hands. The senator was a religious man. Part of the reason I had to do the shooting. After that, I wiped my prints off the gun and pressed it into his hand. The rosary he held I took with me. It didn't fit the narrative. I had a hooker call the police for me. I paid her off in cash and that's where the trail would have gone cold if someone had really looked into it, but I knew they wouldn't.

  A week before, I remember going to "the tunnel," or the dimensional gateway to the Drop Zone. It was off, of course. Work crews were disassembling the reel to reel computers, hauling them away to be incinerated. Pieces of paper containing strange mathematics were either shipped to Universities (if they were completely useless) or incinerated (everything else.) I'm unaware of anyone else who was physically neutralized to keep the project secret. Most of them were happy with early retirement and the knowledge that talking meant death. Occasionally I'll read something in Fortean tabloids suggesting to me that someone low on the totem pole talked, but I'm not going to lose sleep over what the crackpots say to one another. It's always to one another. No one else is going to listen to them. Every lunatic in the world could know, but it wouldn't make any difference. They're not the ones we're protecting.

  Sometimes it's easy to lose track of who we actually are protecting. Not the public, not me, certainly not the senator. I hope somewhere someone knows. Maybe we're protecting the public from themselves most of all. Democracy is as dangerous a thing as it is beautiful. We're lying to the public so they'll vote to preserve democracy and the status quo to keep them in charge. That makes a sort of sense, right? Eddie Bernays once called it a 'freedom to engineer consent.'

  "God, country, freedom," the senator said poking his three fingers calculatedly from the platform overlooking the wooded grove. He grinned in a way that made it hard to dislike him. I have to say I liked him a lot. He poked out his pinky finger over the railing, waggling it and wearing that enormous grin, "And a little cash. Alright, four things. Three things and another little thing."

  We don't know why they closed it. I remember before it happened we had several crates rolled into the facility's basement. I don't know what was in them, but I think about it a lot now. The only thing I can guess is that they were afraid of something coming out, back through the tunnel. TNT or something bigger could have taken out the whole facility with as many crates as they brought in. The next day they switched the tunnel off, took parts out of the machines, and finally after extensive interviews among staff members and myself, they removed the boxes. We still don't know who "they" were - only that in the future we'd be hearing more from them.

  The motor convoy carrying the first shipment of lumber was forced off the road, the trucks were unloaded, and in the middle of a field somewhere south of Strasburg Virginia the military burned 130 tons of perfectly good seasoned lumber. Once again, we don't know why. The people doing it didn't know why either. Nickel talked to their commanding officer. He cooperated as best he could, but we learned nothing. Nothing.

  The tunnel was shut off for good. Investors lost an estimated $600 million, but were reimbursed over thirty years with federal discretionary funds adjusted for inflation. They were lucky to get it. Senator Nickel personally lost nearly a quarter of that himself, having invested heavily in the residential development. But that didn't seem to bother him.

  "How many folks did they say were still in Cairo? In the DZ?"

  It was an oddly sentimental question asked nearly three weeks before I would sit next to him in the back seat of a black car, a gun weighing heavily in my hand.

  "Eight hundred... little more," I said.

  For once, he didn't say anything. The senator from Arkansas that always had a joke, a colloquialism, a crass racist or sexual pun about everything just stared at the stone wall in front of him where the tunnel had once been. He must have forgotten that he wasn't alone. He just reached out and touched the wall,

  "Eight..."

  Over the next few months the senator would keep up appearances. I'd see him laughing along with businessmen about the next investment. Japan was starting to make heavy strides forward, exceeding most generous expectations for GDP growth. Whatever profits had been lost in Senator Nickel's joint venture with the military were soon forgotten. He laughed heartily and smoked Virginia grown cigars, refusing to break the trade embargo the US had set up against Cuban tobacco, no matter how fashionable it was.

  In spring one day he told me he had failed to convince anyone involved in the project to ever open the tunnel again.

  "They found something, I'm sure of it. They're afraid. I don't think I'll be able to convince them to reopen the tunnel. Not unless I have the public on my side."

  "They won't let you do that, Archie," I said, "Your wife, kids... Think about them."

  "They're all I can think of," he said, fumbling in his shirt pocket and pulling out a black beaded rosary, "Tomorrow I'm going to the press. I'm telling them everything."

  We sat in silence, fear gripping me as I realized there was no end to the chaos he was about to wreak. He was sentimental in those days in quiet moments. I thought of him laughing heartily with cigars clenched between his teeth. And then I looked at him as he stared at the dashboard, one hand on the door handle and the other trembling with fear, clutching his rosary. Just an old man.

  "There's a gun in the gl
ove compartment," he said finally and got up to sit in the back seat to pray.

  I understood completely. It's strange when someone like Nickel makes the decision to do something right. They're not good at it in some ways, selfish about it in some ways, and then in others they seem to know exactly what to say. And in the case of Andrew Archibald Nickel, that exact thing was nothing.

  Page 67, UFO Proof Magazine, "Letters to the Editor"

  December 31, 1980

  Chapter 1

  The pastor, a rough sinewy man quickly approaching the end of his youth, did have bouts of loneliness on warm November Sundays. Blessed neither with the charisma necessary for his position, nor the complex understanding of the good word, Steven had started his adult life as a small engine repairman. And on this Sunday, as his congregation hall lay empty and silent before him, small engine repair was what he did. Lost in a world between habitual divine reference and the Reader's Digest book of small engine repair, Pastor Ritzer scratched his dry scalp with the edge of a slot screwdriver. Before him, in six pieces of varying size, lay the autopsied appliance still bleeding oil all over his oak and sawdust table. With or without a book to guide him, ethanol conversion was new territory.

  He was so caught up in finalizing his new machine, in fact, that he almost missed the timid sound of knocking coming from the church's double doors. He checked his watch, surprised at the sound. Service would have begun nearly a half an hour ago. The pastor grabbed his old shop rag, stiffened by years of collecting petroleum, and wiped the muck from his hands before walking to the massive door and opening it. The source of the uncertain knock was Andrea Newmann. He could tell by the red cracked veins in her eyes and the trembling of her lips that she had either been crying or hadn't slept in a long time.

  "Hello pastor," she said. Andrea was a thin woman who walked with timid steps but a head held high, approximately six years older than Steven as he recalled. She was wearing the butcher's frock of her husband's profession, a patina of gentle pinks mingling with the deep reds of quickly aging blood. She held her body close to the door as if he were about to close her out, "Is there a service this morning?"