the writing of Kevin Schmitt

.

Thursday, October 24, 2013

Atonement: The Sequel



By Kevin Schmitt


Chapter One



The odd looking monk pulled on the left rein until the monastery was behind him, then pointed the team of horses toward the south tree line. The huge stone structure that was his home would not shrink and drop below the man’s broad shoulders until the wagon was clear off the green, well groomed acreage that surrounded it. The imposing edifice was The Abby of Our Lady of Gethemani; three stories high and resembling a fort in the sense that it was made up of four adjourning wings and an open central courtyard. Covered entirely in white plaster it was an enormous Catholic foot hold in what was essentially a Protestant semi-hinterland. The man driving the wagon only thought about that when some zealot chose to pour it in his ear. The man in the monk’s robe wasn’t a true Catholic and as far as he was concerned, the United States of America could fill up with Catholics, Protestants or Polynesian shark worshipers.
 The wagon driver had experience with all three faiths and a whole lot more. He had traveled the world and seen the elephant. In fact, he had watched men use the elephant to build temples both Christian and pagan. He did not doubt the existence of God, but he was certain enough that mankind could not fathom the particulars of The Almighty any more than they could bring peace in his name.
 Peace.
 It had become a warm cloak effectively hiding a torso covered with scars. The year was 1879. The war had been over for nearly fourteen years now and in all that time he hadn’t been called upon to do anything more dramatic than refereeing fights between young boys. But as he approached the small town of Bardstown, an old and familiar feeling began to creep over him. He raised the hood of his robe up despite the fact that it was a warm day. Bardstown wasn’t a dangerous place, even during prime drinking hours, but the monk stayed alert all the way to the post office.
 When he got there he found himself alone with the postmaster, who doubled as the town marshal. An over the hill lover of apple pies with drooping jowls and eyes that were going bad. His name was Henry Dale, and in the back room somewhere he kept a double barrel shotgun with a cracked stock and some of the first shotgun shells ever produced in the United States. (Something to brag about at the time of purchase, but not anymore.)
 When he spotted the monk he quickly came out from behind his counter and closed the front door so their conversation would stay private.

Thursday, July 11, 2013

The Dire Dimension Affair



     Written by Kevin Schmitt, 

who also wrote The Bear and Eagle Affair






Chapter One


 The amateur radio operator bent over with a grunt to retrieve a fallen screw from an old but well maintained parquet wooden floor. Maybe this bit of electrical work should have been given to one of the lads before they all left for home. Maybe. The hands were getting more and more arthritic and the light from the single forty watt bulb didn’t help. But on the other hand, the teacher didn’t have anything better to do while waiting for a ride back to the guest quarters.    
  
 Tomorrow promised to be a more interesting day for the students.  Eight vibroplex Morse code key boards sat on a long improvised table, except for the one that was being rewired to a portable speaker. That teaching tool would allow the user to hear his own key work and enable the teacher to assess the student’s code sending skill as well. The table took up most of the floor space in the tidy back room. The front area was a pottery shop that had recently gone out of business.
 Somebody’s cousin arranged for the back room to be rented by the Syrian Technical Institute of Radio. How The International Telecommunications Union would benefit from these modestly run workshops was open to debate. Ham Radio was a small but praiseworthy effort made by individuals to bring countries and cultures together. But most of the Middle East was looked upon as a troubled child, where amateur radio aficionados had to bow their heads to the political forces of the region. When a political movement gained power in a Middle Eastern country, that party required assurance that the people with the short wave radio sets would function as nationalists, not as members of a world community.
 The volunteer Morse code instructor was a political wild card, and of the worse sort; but Rashid Jalal was still head of the STAR Program and he had a history of putting logic ahead of politics. That was a comfort, but when a strange automobile rolled up in front of the pottery shop, the British born instructor turned off the light and exited the building with ears wide open.
 A man in his mid-forties bailed out of the French auto and met the instructor while she was still in the doorway.




Continued,  CLICK  HERE

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Atonement




Written by Kevin Schmitt,   

author of The Bear and Eagle Affair.


Chapter One


In the midst of a forest primeval, two men trudged silently on a ribbon of open ground that still held thousands of road stones under refuse made from plants and rain. Young trees luxuriating in the strong sunlight threatened to close in on the old Spanish trail, now that the treasure wagons were a thing of the past. Men carrying mail and perhaps the odd barrel of rum would contribute a cut or two with an ax, and in this way the land route between Portobello and Panama City could live another year.

  The man with the Brown Bess musket didn’t much care for jungles, unless they were the kind that might hide scantily clad women. Tahiti was the first such place to come to mind, but it was not the last as the two men followed the sun from east to west. The fighting man was attired much like a sailor, with a baggy white blouse and dark sea trousers. He hiked in a type of sandal that he had purchased back on the east side of the steamy isthmus. In a backpack he carried his boots, and a few other items that a traveling man might need after leaving the tropics.
   He was perhaps five foot nine in height, with muscles that were suited for a fight or flight existence. Facially, he looked like a man approaching middle age, but his well conditioned musculature put him right around thirty, and if there had ever been any trace of boyish innocent in those dark gray eyes---they had long since disappeared. The man sported a forehead scar, but it did not create a sinister appearance except on those occasions when he was about to take a human life. The man was no Scandinavian, but with sun bleached brownish hair he most certainly stood in contrast with his ebony crowned Indian companion. The native guide was of Wounaan descent, but his clan was nothing now; like blood poured into a swift stream. The guide pointed to a tree some ten feet from the trail and his companion noted the bright piece of cloth that had been nailed to its south side.
   “This is it,” Ramiro stated in a low voice. “Not worry. I not be long.”
    The bigger man didn’t respond. He was all done arguing. But the cloth marker suggested to him that it was time to decide who’s counsel he would bet his hide on; and that decision took all but two seconds to make. He relocated himself, and continued to scan the dank and depressing surroundings.
   The perpetual gloom limited the number of plant species that could survive on the forest floor, but there was a mosaic of competing moss like plant formations that gave ground only to the heartiest ferns. The giant creepers were everywhere, presenting a curtain effect that would give a white man a fifty foot radius of vision between trees.  From the darkness under the forest canopy the creepers would ascend the trees until they could obtain their share of sunlight. Most were easy enough to cut, but some varieties were damn hard. Ramiro never wasted time or energy on anything. He knew what not to dull his blade on, and he knew where not to step.
    At his destination he quickly gathered up twenty fistfuls of hibiscus. Then he backtracked so that his machete arm could remain silent. As he neared the trail his steps became stealthy. The birds told him that the man with the handsome scar on his face was no fool. Perhaps he should have listened to him.
   Perhaps.

Continued  HERE  (click)

Thursday, May 16, 2013

The Bear and Eagle Affair



 by Kevin Schmitt








The Man  From U.N.C.L.E.

 



Chapter One

 



The guard observed the approach of the hand pulled cart with his usual lackluster expression. But as its owner-operator passed through the large barbed wire gate, the middle aged sentry’s eyes widened almost as much as they did the day he was forced back into the Wehrmacht. Behind the shabbily dressed peddler was a collection of old musical instruments, including an honest to God sousaphone.

 John “Busty” Brown, scrounger extraordinaire had been given permission to meet with the salesman in front of the delousing station. Many eyes were upon them, but since no one had any pest control issues at the moment, the two men were pretty much alone. Brown briefly examined the rolling stock and then shook his head in disapproval.

 “Everyone of these instruments has at least one sticky valve.”

 “I’ve made arrangements with a fix it shop to deal with those problems one instrument at a time,” said the peddler.

 “Screw that, Wendal. You get your property fixed, then sell it to me.”

 “I don’t have money to spend on repairs, but you do,” countered the peddler.

 “I won’t after I’ve bought this junk,” declared Brown. “I’ll be tapped out for six months at least.”

 “Oh, God you are such a lying sack of excrement. You deserve to be in jail the way you operate,” Wendal said loud enough for the guards and fellow P.O.W.s to hear.

 That line caused some sporadic chuckling.

 “Need I remind you that I am not a criminal,” the Englishman declared with a lofty expression. “I am a non-commissioned officer who was honorably captured while serving King and Country.”

 “Please, Goebells gives us enough of that sort of crap on the radio. But I’ll take the sousaphone back and get that repaired with my own money.”

 Brown picked up a cornet and pretended to point out a defect to the peddler.

 “John Amery is a traitor. I have my suspicions about William Joyce as well.”

 “You’d better have proof,” the man in the baggy suit muttered under his breath. “Those two won’t be easy to convict, and you will not be remembered with great fondness by your associates.”

 “Scroungers are never popular. We’re envied too much.”

 “And seldom seen in a patriotic light,” muttered Wendal.

 “One last thing: I want you to keep an eye on Margery Booth.”

 “The Abwehr has no doubt taken an interest in the fact that you meet with her. I don’t think—“

 “Do it,” snapped Brown, “or your people can write me off as an operative.”

 “You’re a bleeding heart,” muttered the salesman.

 “And you threw yours away,” Brown countered.

 The salesman was not insulted. He understood John Henry Brown very well and appreciated the fact that they were cut from two different bolts of cloth. Brown had started out as a Quartermaster Sergeant in the British Army. Mi5 recruited him for special service because he had been a member of the British Union of Fascists. It was arranged that he be captured at Dunkirk, and from there on he would have to improvise a way to become a traitor to his country.

Continued here:


Kevin Schmitt lives in Shakopee Minnesota and has been a factory worker for 35 years. He kayaks in the summer and writes fiction during the cold weather months.

Boot Print in Time



  by Kevin Schmitt

  
Chapter One

“Maldicion,” the horseman groaned as his right boot cleared the hind quarters of his battle weary mount.
 Pulled muscles were rare in the nether regions of a cavalryman, but this particular warrior had been reaching too far with his sword. Primarily because the enemy heads were too close to the ground. The young man yanked off his helmet, which along with his stained riding boots were the only belongings that identified him as a Conquistador, albeit a torn and battered one.
 His clothing was made up of dense quilted cotton, courtesy of the people he had been fighting. The material was called lchcahuipilli, and while it was inferior to steel plate armor, it could turn away most obsidian swords or atlatl darts. It was lighter and cooler than chain maille and didn’t rub against the flesh. It also didn’t rust, not that the young nobleman would have to concern himself with that little problem. A gentleman need only keep his beard trimmed and his cock out of reach of any pox infested whores, and as of late, that had been fairly easy to do.
The gore covered Spaniard took a swig f cheap wine from a goat skin then wordlessly nodded to the servant who was never out of calling distance, regardless of the circumstances.
 “Jefa---I am wondering---do you think there are cities in hell?” queried the servant as he slung the goat bag over his chest and shoulder.
 Captain Cisaro Longoria gazed up at the red haze that haloed the nearest wall of the Aztec metropolis. It came from a thousand fires that would illuminate the city until dawn.
 “Oh yes. But that need not concern you my old friend. The Devil would never allow you in. Your farts would be worse than any brimstone smell. Not to mention the rest of you.”
 Old Pedro Gonzales smiled at the joke; anything to divert his attention from the sounds of women shrieking in the distance. Gonzales had long served Cisaro’s father, and in those days he had learned that a city is not simply taken, it is raped, looted and brought down to its lowest possible level of humanity. The Spaniards were taking little joy in that. Their leader, Hernan Cortes had spent the last year recruiting native warriors from the outer regions, and those men were teaching the Spaniards the real meaning of total warfare.
 The Aztec capital was called Tenochtitlan and since it’s founding in 1325 it had faced no real destructive force save that of occasional floods from surrounding bogs. But the endorheic basin wet lands made the city into a kind of Island, which was beneficial from a defensive military point of view. The city itself was incredibly symmetrical with over forty public structures and enough living quarters for twenty-thousand people. Of course as a hub of commerce, the city could also accommodate many thousands of citizens from the outer reaches of the realm.

Continue with the following word document:

http://www.windsweptpress.com/cascatrek.docx