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    Rigby Taylor
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Fidel - 27. Life Continues Pleasantly - Until It Doesn't

The following day, Jardine, Leon and Claudius, Primo, Sebastian, Jarek, and the eight newcomers visited Sebastian’s father, Rex, and his wife Fee, in their comfortable house in the hills above the city. Fourteen visitors should have been a crowd, but they all fitted nicely in the pool, conversation was pleasant and agreeable, and the atmosphere genial.

After a healthy meal, the hosts thanked Jardine, Leon and Claudius for teaching their replacements what was required, hoped all would go well for them up North, and reminded them that they would always be welcome to return, no matter when or why if things didn’t work out.

Rex was pleased to have Hercules take over his job of doing nothing quietly in the background to allow the place to function smoothly. Leon reckoned Robert could handle the finances with no trouble, and Jardine said the grounds would be in good hands with Zadig. Fidel congratulated Fee and Rex for the quality of their genes as exhibited in Primo, who had spent the evening with a smile of vague incredulity on his lips. Speaking when spoken to, and laughing at the right time.

‘Do you think of Rex and Fee as your parents?’ Bart asked him.

‘Of course not. My genes have been so altered that we have nothing in common. I like them, but feel no kinship. Just as I love and admire Jarek and Sebastian for being perfect foster parents to an alien who is so intrinsically different.’

‘Are you pleased to be alive?’ Hylas asked.

‘I am alive and choose to remain so; that means I have no problem with it. I enjoy lots of things, especially being in the forest and having fun as we did the other day.’

‘What about the reasons for creating you? Do you approve?’

‘I am aware of Sebastian and Jarek’s reasons for making me like this, and for creating more of us, but I don’t see the point. I’ve not spent much time with adult humans other than those in this room, but from what I've heard the sooner they exterminate themselves the better. As for taking over the role of top predator—I’ll wait to see what happens when there are more of us. Who knows, we may even fight amongst ourselves and kill off the experiment.’ His smile gave the lie to that possibility.

‘How many will you make?’ Zadig asked Sebastian.

‘As we mentioned the other day, we already have five. The other four are living with Stephen and Chloe, two dear friends who have a lovely old house not far from our place. They're the ideal couple to bring up infant alien geniuses, having more or less alienated themselves from the usual run of humanity… wouldn’t you agree, Primo?’

‘For humans, they're exceptional, that's certain. They're the reason I'm sane, I reckon.’

‘You're possibly right. As for how many we’ll create… fifty donors should give us a sufficient gene pool to create a viable species. From then on they can breed and fill the niches if and when they develop.’

‘Breed. I've been wondering about that,’ Mort admitted. ‘If its not a rude question, how does that happen?’

‘It’s not rude, it’s a good question, and goes to the heart of the whole enterprise. We decided two parents create friction and inhibit a child’s development—especially mental. Separate mothers and fathers have been essential for the survival of our species in the past, but it’s a weakness now. Our solution was to make the new men self pollinating—to borrow a horticultural expression.’ Sebastian shot a smile at Jardine who grinned back. He turned to Primo. ‘Do you mind showing them your sexual apparatus?’

‘Of course not.’ Primo lay back and raised his legs.

‘As you can see everything’s the same as us, except for the almost invisible slit in the perineum between the scrotum and anus. That’s a vulva that opens into a vagina, which opens into a womb that will be fed one egg from a fallopian tube.’

Monthly?’

‘No, that’s an extremely wasteful system. When Primo’s body feels ready to breed, the female sexual organs will swell, an egg will be produced and he will have the urge to inseminate himself. That's the only time the female organs will be used, and it will only happen once—we think.’

‘Will the babies be breast fed?’

‘No. Mammary glands would be a severe disadvantage—they damage too easily. Babies will be able to eat prepared normal food immediately, like birds.’

‘What about regular sex?’

‘Exactly the same way we do it.’

‘By we, I assume you weren't referring to Fee and Rex?’

‘Right. The female parts are for breeding only, not pleasure.’

‘Have you tried self fertilizing, Primo?’

‘Never had the urge. The slit is still sealed and I've no desire to experiment with it, but I'm looking forward to normal sex like you guys have; I’ll just have to wait till the other new men grow.’

‘Would you like to have sex with a human?’

Primo shook his head firmly. ‘Definitely not. No more than you'd like to have sex with an orang-utan. No offence, but… perhaps one day out of curiosity.’ He grinned and gazed down appreciatively at his own perfectly formed body, flawless velvety skin and lean fitness.

‘Makes sense,’ Hercules said softly. ‘I have to admit that compared to you, humans look almost unfinished; coarser, less well designed and assembled somewhat carelessly.’ He grinned at Hylas’s raised eyebrow. ‘Yes, oh beautiful youngish man; even you are not quite in the same league.’

‘That's telling you, brother,’ Fidel laughed. Then as if he’d just thought of it, asked, ‘Have you enough donors? If you haven't, I’d like to suggest Robert’s parents, they are the wisest, kindest, most sensible people I've ever met.’

Sebastian turned to Robert. ‘Do you agree?’

‘Ask Bart.’

‘Definitely.’

‘Good, we’ll work on it.’

 

By the end of the following week, a long, wide and very deep trench had been excavated in the rocky hillside above Sebastian’s house. It was large enough to contain six individual dwellings, each with their own exit and all connected by underground passageways. The two extra dwellings would be for Primo and his ‘brothers’ to live in until they decided how and where they wanted to live. Every spare minute was taken up with plans and ideas for the perfect abode.

 

Six months later, the view from Sebastian and Jarek's verandah was unchanged from the day Hercules and friends first saw it, but behind a stand of melaleucas, the hillside had gained an attractive rockery already covered in sprawling vegetation. The inmates of the new subterranean houses were delighted with their comfortable and charming quarters, each of which had a private outdoor living area concealed in the ‘rockery’ above, where they spent most of their spare time. Primo and his brothers were living in one of the other ‘caves’. Due to the extraordinary precocity of their species they were already capable of taking care of themselves.

Fidel and friends no longer felt like guests, having settled naturally into their jobs at the laboratory, which continued the slow process of turning out new boys who went immediately to live with Primo and his mates. The children were delightful. Serious yet fun loving. Sensible and uncomplaining. Impossibly healthy and quick to learn, able to walk, run, talk and think rationally within the first four months.

 

Robert and Bart made a nervous but uneventful trip back to Brisbane, driving Jarek’s battered Holden, to visit Sanjay and Monique and collect DNA samples. The reunion was deeply moving but they were dismayed to see how their parents had aged. Life seemed to have drained away. Sanjay no longer cared what happened in the world of men, and when Monique showed them their secret hoard of powder and gas bottles, her expression as she locked them away was of impatient longing.

On the way back they called in to see Michael and John, and spent a night in the forest with Peter and Jon, who were involved in the rescue of persecuted youths whose private affections offended men who found it perfectly natural to watch dogs maul suspected thieves and queers to death.

Over the next few years, the others also made trips south, sleeping rough as they preferred, always visiting Peter and Jon. Their sorties into the city and surrounding towns became increasingly unpleasant and therefore infrequent. To a rational man, political exploitation of natural human credulity is a nightmarish mystery. In vain did they attempt to convince the few people they met of the truth about what was happening in their State. But as the elusive Dresden James once observed, When a well-packaged web of lies has been sold to the masses, the truth will seem utterly preposterous and its speaker a raving lunatic. In vain did they point out to otherwise rational people that if you tell someone the paint is wet, they’ll put out a finger and check, but if you tell them there's an invisible god or gangs of terrorists poised ready to strike, they’ll believe it without question. The proposition that what can be asserted without evidence can be dismissed without evidence, made them angry.

Only the government took truth-tellers seriously, publicly cutting them into small pieces and feeding the bits to crocodiles—to the riotous applause of their grateful, god-fearing minions.

 

The officially sanctioned reason for the upstairs laboratory’s existence was researching ways to improve human cloning and, most importantly, discover how to transfer the mental abilities and memory of the man to his clone. In this way the most important Christian Kingdom officials could live forever. The political power of an immortal Lord Cardinal, Cardinal-Duke or Bishop-Baron would be enormous; putting Jesus’ resurrection in the shade.

The clone project was intrinsically interesting, and all the scientists had been working on it when not occupied with the creation of Primo and his brothers. Five Very-Important-Men each demanded three clones of themselves, to test how mentally similar they would be to their progenitors. One of each clone was brought up at home with papa and mama; one was adopted at ‘birth’ by a wealthy family, and one spent his formative years in a religious orphanage. At the age of twelve the clones went to live with their two brothers and ‘parent’.

Like normal identical triplets, the boys had developed individual personalities, interests and peculiarities that affected their posture, movement and interests. Physically they were identical, or would have been if they’d all been the same weight and fitness. As for character, they appeared to be identical to their father/brother - sly, conniving, treacherous, arrogant, selfish. Intuitively, it seemed, they understood the motives and plots of their ‘parents’, whom they then ruthlessly attempted to manipulate. The predictable result being that none were permitted to reach the age of fifteen.

Even if it had been possible to transfer a copy of the contents and memory of the original brain to the clones, none of the scientists would have done it. All agreed that even one of the vile creatures was one too many. Three more of each would be a crime against nature. So when the underground laboratory had produced the required number of healthy new boys, who were now living in the forests and caves on Sebastian and Jarek's property, Sebastian informed the Department of Manipulative Sciences, under whose auspices the research station operated, that they had reached the end of the road because they were unable to come up with a method of transferring memory, so the laboratory would be shut down. As Sebastian had funded the entire operation from his own pocket, there was no need for the government to do anything, but he expected at least an acknowledgement.

There was no response for several years, during which the new boys became new men, maturing and educating themselves under the tutelage of the ageing scientists and everyone else who had been involved. They proved extraordinarily receptive to information, only having to see or hear something once to remember it forever. More importantly, perhaps, they had a natural facility for logic, rational argument and honest common-sense thinking and communication, that would have been irritating had the new men not also been disarmingly cheerful and charmingly honest about what they saw as their own deficiencies.

Mort taught them everything he knew about self-defence, and in a short time their exceptional physical prowess and almost supersonic reactions turned them into calmly efficient hunting and defensive machines with no need of tools other than those provided naturally. Robert instructed them in financial activities, and arranged for the transfer of funds into their new bank accounts once Arnold and Fidel’s combined skills in computing and design had created all necessary documentation from birth certificates to tax-file numbers for each new man. Hylas and Hercules taught them to behave, walk, speak and react like humans, so they wouldn’t attract unwanted attention. Bart introduced them to the philosophical ideas that had inspired humans but failed to change their natures, and encouraged them to think about the sort of life they wanted to live and how to achieve it, including personal relationships.

Zadig’s contribution was perhaps ultimately the most useful. His knowledge of plants, their uses, requirements and ecological significance would enable the new men to maintain and keep healthy the forests around them.

From Sebastian and Jarek they learned about one other important thing… love. ‘If you want to be loved,’ Jarek advised them, ‘make yourself loveable.’

Far North Queensland had been very lucky in the weather. While the rest of the country was sweltering, drying out, being ravaged alternately by storms, droughts, floods and fires on a regular basis, the narrow coastal strip and adjacent tablelands from Cairns right up to Cape York were barely touched. The average temperatures were warmer, but regular monsoons had continued, rainfall remained plentiful and crops up on the tablelands grew constantly. To the relief of the new men, whose natural inclination was to live in forests, growth had been exponential. The entire thousand hectares belonging to Sebastian and Jarek was now a fecund rainforest replete with wildlife. Fine for recreation, but not enough to sustain the thirty new men who now inhabited the property. They’d have to wait and live more or less like humans for many years, because the rest of the vast lands where it still rained, remained in the hands of people who saw land solely in terms of mechanised food production; treating forests as the enemy.

*****

To practice being human the new men went into the civilized world as soon as they looked old enough, and took a variety of jobs including stints as slaves on plantations, in factories or as house slaves. They avoided being sold in the slave markets because their extreme beauty would attract every wealthy matron and many men, who paid good money for sex slaves.

Prolonged contact with humans was not possible because the new men became disorientated and physically ill at having to constantly pretend to be what they considered mentally deranged. Humans were too illogical and irrational. What offended them the most was that instead of worshipping the natural world that was their true creator, they destroyed it and glorified invisible figments of crazed imagination.

After their first lengthy close contact with the human world, they would remain for several days in their room, not speaking to others until their brains had processed the cringing, subservient, depraved and unquestioning credulity of human behaviour. After three days they would come out of their self-imposed shell having shaken off their dismay that humans had not evolved in any useful way from other social mammals.

The only major difference they could see between humans and other apes was the intricacy and quality of the tools they constructed to achieve their puerile aims. Beavers would have done the same damage t the planet if they'd had the tools, as would goats and apes. They knew, thanks to Bart, that some humans were capable of thinking of different ways of behaving, but none of these ideas had ever permanently affected human behaviour.

From the age of twelve, the new men/boys began engaging in sexual activity both as a solo pleasure and with each other in the normal way for men. It was another fun thing to do, a way to bond; not different from eating, exercising or solving puzzles. At the age of twenty, Primo’s almost invisible vulva began to swell and one day he decided it was time to self fertilize. Everyone came to watch as he stroked his penis, which lengthened but remained flexible enough for him to insert the glans into the slit, whereupon he closed his thighs, trapping it inside and worked both thigh and pelvic floor muscles, forcing the entire length inside where it expanded to such an extent it was impossible to remove. Everyone watched in silence as waves of powerful contractions shuddered through every muscle in his body until suddenly he stopped, relaxed and lay back.

‘That's done,’ he said nonchalantly, spreading his legs. His penis, having returned to its normal size, flopped out and the vulva closed again as if nothing had happened.

There had been little sensation, Primo insisted; certainly nothing pleasant that he’d want to repeat. Merely a slight itch that had prompted the urge, which disappeared once the act was complete. That was how he knew when to stop.

Several months later the baby was born with similar lack of fuss, and after a wash down and a drink of warm water, began to munch contentedly on finely ground, mixed-grain porridge.

*****

Days, weeks, months, years sped by in a blur, merging into one seamless experience with almost no sense of time passing. Despite the obvious physical signs of ageing, everyone felt the same as on the first day they became aware of themselves as individuals… a common experience for those who are busy and happy in a natural environment, living simply, with people they like and respect, doing repetitive jobs that are useful and necessary for their survival.

The new men became increasingly different from their human mentors in subtle ways, keeping mostly to themselves, only occasionally visiting the humans who were growing visibly older while the new men remained looking exactly as they had at twenty, all giving birth at around that age.

As human bodies aged, jobs took longer, but needs were fewer so life was good and somewhere in all that, Sebastian and Jarek passed their eightieth birthdays. The scientists and lab technicians had also become old and moved away, farewelled with generous gifts from Sebastian, who retreated permanently with Jarek to his beautiful house and gardens.

Their eight friends spent a lot of time with their hosts, continuing to appreciate their luck and comfortable underground dwellings while laughing, loving, arguing, fighting and making up with their partners like lovers everywhere. Hylas was now in his fifties, Hercules at the end of his sixties and the others in between. But unless they stopped to think about it they didn’t notice. Long walks and exercise continued to keep them fit, the pools and streams provided fish and places to swim, the gardens produced food as long as they worked for it. Every now and again they’d ask each other where they'd like to go next. And always the answer was, ‘Stay here.’ So they did.

Primo’s tribe had created a secret home among the forest giants, and kept everyone intellectually awake with irregular visits.

One sunny afternoon the peace was broken by the appearance of a black limousine flanked by heavily armed Protectors on motorcycles. A slim, elderly man in a black suit with entwined gold crosses embroidered on the lapel, got out and approached Sebastian and Jarek who were relaxing on the verandah. He bowed slightly. ‘Have I the honour of speaking to Sebastian Trovert?’

‘You have.’

‘The gentleman in the limousine is Cardinal Duke Dominic; he wishes to speak with you,’

‘He may.’

‘You can’t expect him to come to you! You must go to him, and please call him Brother Dominic, not your Eminence; he has taken a vow of modesty, you see.’

‘I suppose that's why he’s being chauffeured in a giant black limousine, and has a servant to demand my presence. How can I resist such charming modesty?’ Sebastian and Jarek stood.

‘I'm sorry, but only Mr. Trovert may come.’

Jarek began to object.

‘It’s Ok, Jarek. Brother Dominic is a man of God; if I'm not safe with him, I'm safe with no one.’

‘You're safe with no one then,’ Jarek muttered to their retreating backs.

When they arrived at the enormous vehicle, which was now surrounded by eight fully armed Protectors, guns at the ready, the rear door opened and an oleaginous voice invited Sebastian into the lounge-like interior that contained two arm chairs, a cocktail bar, television, small bookshelf and desk.

Brother Dominic, a gargantuan man swathed in black robes, was leaning back in his armchair. He looked Sebastian up and down critically.

‘You look starving.’

‘You look unwholesomely obese.’

Brother Dominic smiled, showing small, pointed teeth. ‘Thank you for that, it makes what I have to say a pleasure rather than a duty.’ He cleared his throat. ‘It has come to my attention that you have been using your laboratories for ungodly purposes, so they will be destroyed.’

Sebastian nodded thoughtfully. ‘I fully agree, the idea of cloning those unpleasant men was indeed ungodly, I'm very pleased we were unable to succeed.’

‘Where you failed, others will succeed, those researches are god’s will and are continuing at another laboratory. I was referring to your attempt at playing god.’

‘Which god would that be? Humans have worshipped so many.’

‘I warn you not to try my patience, Mr. Trovert. We have evidence that you have been creating other life forms that resemble humans.’

‘You resemble a human, Brother D, but I assure you we’d never want to create anything like you.’

‘I warned you,’ he hissed, then coughed, spraying sputum over the window between him and the driver who was sitting stolidly behind the wheel. ‘We know you’ve been flouting god’s law in that place and it will be destroyed and the land taken as payment of the fine.’

‘When?’

‘You have two weeks to lodge an objection.’

‘Oh, I've no objection. The place is old and needs to come down, you’ll save me the fuss.’ He leaned forward, ready to leave. ‘If that's all, then I’ll be off.’

For once lost for words, brother Dominic glared venomously at the lean old man striding easily up the drive towards the house and his friend.

Dominic had no friends. He told himself he didn’t need them; he had God. Other people would get in the way of his power, influence and promotion. To become Cardinal King was his aim. A title not yet awarded, but he’d deserve it and get it or he wasn’t the man he thought he was.

*****

The friends had been summoned to Sebastian and Jarek’s verandah.

After a few minutes small talk Sebastian stated bluntly, ‘We’ve two weeks before they blow up the laboratory and eliminate Jarek and me. You’d better all leave while you have time—unless you want to join us.’ He smiled wryly. ‘Do you need any help getting shifted?’

‘No, we’re fine, thanks.’ Hercules replied softly. ‘It’s strange… we've been expecting this for several years, yet it’s still a shock. Is everything settled with Primo and his clan?’

‘Yes, no problem. I transferred ownership of everything apart from the laboratory to Primo and the other new men under their legal names, immediately after writing to the government to say we wouldn’t be continuing with the cloning program. Thanks to one of the new men’s brilliant hacking skills, there’s now no record in any government office of my having owned this land; it’s been theirs or their parents since it was first surveyed, so there’ll be no problems with them continuing to live here. Today Jarek and I will transfer all our money to their accounts, and close ours, so when brother Dominic arrives to gloat we’ll be able to leave with no fears for the new men’s futures.’

‘By leave, you mean?’

‘Yes, we both reckon eighty-whatever we are has been quite long enough. Are you sure you're ready?’

‘Yes, we’ll pack up the few things we want to keep and take up Peter and Jon’s invitation to move onto their land. They’ve loads of space and we thought we’d build underground again as it’s so comfortable.’

‘When will you leave?’

‘Next week, probably—after we’ve bought suitably unostentatious vehicles.’

‘We might be a bit later,’ Fidel said. ‘Arnold and I want to dismantle some of the equipment at the laboratory and take it with us for a few projects we've got in mind. It’ll take us at least a week to pack and load into a van we've yet to buy.’

‘Well, don’t leave it too late. Brother Dominic is the most unpleasant man I've met for a long time. I wouldn’t trust him not to arrive early in the hope of catching someone.’

‘Thanks for the warning. Lindoro still keeps a watch on the place, doesn't he? So I’ll get him to warn us if anyone arrives.’

‘Good old Lindoro. With a name like that he ought to be an opera singer instead of a night watchman. He’s been so reliable. Eyes always open and he’s never once asked what we do down at the labs. I hope Dominic lets him remain in the gatehouse.’

Days flashed by and suddenly Hercules, Hylas, Mort, Zadig, Robert and Bart were shaking everyone’s hands and unashamedly shedding tears of farewell.

Two days later, Fidel and Arnold were also on their way when Arnold remembered an essential tool he’d left behind in the bottom lab. They drove to the Institute, and while Arnold trotted down the drive to the labs, waving to Lindoro as he passed, Fidel saved time by driving to the nearest petrol station to fill up the tank.

Arnold retrieved the tool and was locking the main entrance door when a large demolition truck backed towards him stopping only metres away. A Protector in full uniform leaned out the passenger window.

‘Who the fuck are you?’

‘I used to work here.’

‘I asked who the fuck you are!’ the man snarled, pointing a large handgun at Arnold’s chest.

‘The name’s Arnold,’ he said nervously. ‘I didn’t realise I wasn’t allowed here.’

‘Well now you know, so get back inside and wait for me so I can check your papers.’

Arnold nodded, returned inside. As soon as he was out of sight, he disappeared.

The Protector followed him in, didn’t see him, so returned to the driveway. When the other vehicles arrived he marched up to the black stretch limousine and informed Brother Dominic that a worker called Arnold was somewhere in the building.

‘Arnold!’ the priest screeched. ‘A worker from this place! Get him! Guard every exit! All of you find this man and bring him to me. I must have him! A reward to whoever brings him to me alive.’

The search was thorough, but unsuccessful.

‘He must be hiding somewhere in the building,’ the Protector insisted, ‘because all exits were locked and undamaged.’

‘He’s trapped,’ Dominic said, nodding his pleasure. “Blow the place up immediately before he escapes! If I can’t have him alive I’ll make sure he’s dead.’

While preparations were made, he lowered himself onto on a chair that had been placed for him by a young acolyte, who then held a sun umbrella to shield the holy head from the heat. The priest was not happy at missing the worker, but at least he knew the man’s name. Arnold. He’d tell that smarmy Sebastian Trovert that he’d caught him and forced him to admit what they'd been doing in the laboratory. The thought brought a thin smile to his face. Yes, he would compose a confession, have it witnessed and then his case against the laboratory would be rock solid.

After a few minutes he became bored, then nervous, recalling a few disastrous demolitions that had killed workers and observers.

‘I haven't got all day to wait for you sluggards,’ he snarled, standing and waving his stick at the workmen. ‘Make sure there’s nothing left to salvage, or tomorrow there’ll be nothing left of you.’ His twisted smile, more venomous than his customary frown, underlined the threat. Ignoring the nervous nods of his sweating acolytes, he turned, raised an imperial finger in warning and waddled back to his limousine, slashing the air with his stick to ward off mute offers of assistance from heavily armed bodyguards.

After passing silently through the gates, the black car stopped to allow the priest to gaze back through tinted windows, well out of harm’s way. Impassive, he watched until the splendid old buildings and the gymnasium block exploded in a gigantic fireball that briefly rivalled the sun. This wasn’t the first such establishment he’d had the pleasure of demolishing, and wouldn’t be the last. Releasing a wheezy sigh of satisfaction he nodded slightly and chewed thoughtfully on his bottom lip. There were few pleasures to match erasing the stench of blasphemy, nonconformist freethinking tolerance, and secretive research by ungodly intellectuals bent on disrupting god’s plans. He tapped on the bulletproof glass and the chauffeur drove smoothly away, leaving the once grand edifice’s executioners to ensure all had been destroyed.

 

Fidel had returned in time to see the black limousine turn into the drive and disappear. With a pounding heart he parked a hundred metres from the gate, watching in horror as several demolition lorries and a Protector Wagon followed it in and down to the laboratories. Where was Arnold? It would be suicide for Fidel to go down and look. Surely he hadn't been caught? The idea didn’t bear thinking about. But of course he could think of nothing else. If he went down and was caught, but Arnold hadn't been caught, then it’d be insane. If Arnold had been caught, then him running into the lion’s mouth wouldn’t be much use. The trucks and workmen were now completely hidden from the road, but surely Arnold had seen them coming and escaped? Perhaps he was just waiting for them to go away and would return. The urge to do something was powerful, but when he asked himself what Primo would do, Fidel realised his only rational option was to sit tight and wait.

After an age the large black car drove away, stopped, and then the ground shuddered, the air pulsed and Fidel’s heart and brain stopped. The fireball. The smoke cloud. His heart emptied. In cold numbness he sat, not wanting to think, to live, to do anything. If Arnold wasn’t with him his life had no point. No reason. Time passed and the trucks eventually left. And still Fidel sat. Then Lindoro drove out in his car, but before Fidel could get out and stop him to see if he knew anything, he’d driven away in the opposite direction.

In utter despair, tears streaming, Fidel stumbled blindly down the drive and wandered like a mad man around the smoking, stinking rubble of the old gymnasium towards the cottages that for some reason the mad priest had not bothered to destroy.

 

Arnold had kept his wits about him and used the escape tunnel from the lower lab, from where he’d crawled as far as he could before hiding face down in long grass and grevillea bushes, not daring to even raise a finger unless it was seen. The wait was terrible as his head filled with images of Fidel arriving back and driving down into the arms of the mad priest. Worse, he’d not guess Arnold had escaped and would try to rescue him. When the explosion blasted the entire structure to fragments, Arnold waited for the dust to settle and his ears to function again before crawling close enough to see the workers. Then he waited for what seemed like hours until the last truck left, before negotiating the rubble, watching carefully in case they'd left a sentry.

Someone moved up ahead. He pulled back. Looked again, then with a whimper of relief ran towards Fidel, the only person on the planet he could never live without.

**********

Thanks for reading Fidel. If you enjoyed it, please recommend it to other readers. If you’d like to know what happened next, and if Primo and friends managed to survive, you’ll find the answers in my next offering - NumbaCruncha.

As a young Sci-Fi addict in 1960 I was deeply moved by Theodore Sturgeons novel, Venus plus X, the first Sci-fi novel to deal with gender issues using hermaphrodites. A few years ago after listening to my confusing theories about the multitude of faults in human society, a friend told me to shut up, organise my thoughts and write a story to illustrate my idea of Utopia - a perfect, peaceful, sustainable society. The result was NumbaCruncha. But that seemed to require a prequel, so I wrote Fidel, where I introduced the genetic engineering of humans and the sort of dystopian State that might evolve into the City depicted in NumbaCruncha.

NumbaCruncha begins with a chilling peek into the near future, then takes a thousand year leap to Oasis, a future city-state in which the human aptitude for duplicitous and unjust social schemes has reached its logical culmination in a flesh-crawlingly evil dystopia ruled by the most unpleasant gang of conmen and women you're ever likely to encounter. A couple of young scientists who have recently invented a new means of transport, decide to do something about it, despite the tremendous odds.
Meanwhile, out in the forest, Sebastian and Jarek’s secret weapon is patiently waiting.

Copyright © 2018 Rigby Taylor; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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Wow!!! What an ending, but what a beginning as well.  I thought that the new 'race' would move underground, eventually construct spaceships and leave this misbegotten planet. Now, I'm looking forward to NumbaCruncha to see what happens next and to learn about the 'secret weapon.'  If only that fat Dominic had also met a timely end in the explosion of the lab, or if Primo's group had removed all evidence of the Protectors and Dominic's existence from the earth. Theodore Sturgeon was one of my favorite writers back in the 60s. 

Very. well. done.

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Somehow the Protectors and weird princes of the churh ending it all was a matter of when and not if. That they got so long is a testament to their planning.

 

One thing about the hermaphrodites, is that one of the major benefits of sexual reproduction is the mixing of the gene pool. With hermaphroditic breeding isnt their a risk that any imperfect gene, or any corrupted gene will end up destroying these people?

 

Great story. I do like they way your stories make me think (and squirm, fantasize, worry and laugh). 

 

Thanks.

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8 hours ago, skyacer said:

Wow!!! What an ending, but what a beginning as well.  I thought that the new 'race' would move underground, eventually construct spaceships and leave this misbegotten planet. Now, I'm looking forward to NumbaCruncha to see what happens next and to learn about the 'secret weapon.'  If only that fat Dominic had also met a timely end in the explosion of the lab, or if Primo's group had removed all evidence of the Protectors and Dominic's existence from the earth. Theodore Sturgeon was one of my favorite writers back in the 60s. 

Very. well. done.

Thanks, Skyacer. Your wish concerning Dominic will be granted. Primo's gang are perfectly capable of taking care of themselves. As for the misbegotten planet - It is really rather a wonderful place - it's only humans who've stuffed it up - if it was possible to resurrect it, would that satisfy you? I look forward to your comments when I get around to posting NC. 

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8 hours ago, Timothy M. said:

I'm glad they had a long and happy life with Sebastian and Jarek. Interesting concept with the hermaphrodites, but what about the dangers of giving birth?

Primo gave birth easily in front of everyone - no complications whatever - his body was planned by a rational creature, you see, not by an idiot supernatural figment of the imagination. :rolleyes:

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7 hours ago, Terry P said:

Wow!  What an ending!  I'm glad Arnold and Fidel found each other before something terrible happened to one of them.  Now I have an answer to a previous question about a story mentioned in one of the later chapters.  It referred to a story called "NumbaCruncher".  I look forward to reading it, despite the strange name.

I'm very pleased you approve of the ending - I hope you feel the same about the sequel. Thanks for commenting. 

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2 hours ago, Timothy M. said:

This article about the 104-year-old Australian scientist made me think of you and your characters. http://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-43957874

Yes, this country is run by religions, you see. They control marginal electorates, so although 73% of the population want legal assisted dying, no political party will listen - their political futures are more important to them that the will of the electorate. Organising one's own demise is fraught with danger - for both the one who wishes to die, and those around him who will be accused of assisting... as explained in Mortaumal. 

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8 hours ago, Canuk said:

Somehow the Protectors and weird princes of the churh ending it all was a matter of when and not if. That they got so long is a testament to their planning.

 

One thing about the hermaphrodites, is that one of the major benefits of sexual reproduction is the mixing of the gene pool. With hermaphroditic breeding isnt their a risk that any imperfect gene, or any corrupted gene will end up destroying these people?

 

Great story. I do like they way your stories make me think (and squirm, fantasize, worry and laugh). 

 

Thanks.

Thank you, Canuk, for all your thoughtful input about all the stories. The problem of inbreeding is covered in NumbaCruncha, by which I hope you are equally amused. The underlying theme in that farcical tale is ... Ah, I'll leave you to decide. :rolleyes:

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6 hours ago, Rigby Taylor said:

Thank you, Canuk, for all your thoughtful input about all the stories. The problem of inbreeding is covered in NumbaCruncha, by which I hope you are equally amused. The underlying theme in that farcical tale is ... Ah, I'll leave you to decide. :rolleyes:

 

Not sure what's worse, the cliffhangers in your stories or the cliffhangers in your comments!

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I am imagining how this new ‘race’ of individuals will change over time to be the same as the humans. Could they really stay pure in thought and action?  “Utopians”. That was the name for our high school graduating class. We thought we were pretty special. 

I do look forward to the further adventures of our friends. 

Thanks for writing. 

 

 

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6 hours ago, Rigby Taylor said:

Thanks, Skyacer. Your wish concerning Dominic will be granted. Primo's gang are perfectly capable of taking care of themselves. As for the misbegotten planet - It is really rather a wonderful place - it's only humans who've stuffed it up - if it was possible to resurrect it, would that satisfy you? I look forward to your comments when I get around to posting NC. 

I wish for people to treat the planet and all the inhabitants (from the tinest insects up to the whales and I'l throw humans into that mix. I really am an optimist.  I would never want to be much older and face a courtroom of kids, saying 'if you knew it was so bad, why didn't you stop it or fix things before they became so bad.'  That's why I've been involved in environmental committees, birding and the like. 

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4 hours ago, srchr35 said:

I am imagining how this new ‘race’ of individuals will change over time to be the same as the humans. Could they really stay pure in thought and action?  “Utopians”. That was the name for our high school graduating class. We thought we were pretty special. 

I do look forward to the further adventures of our friends. 

Thanks for writing. 

 

 

And thank you for reading! Without people like you there'd be little point in writing. The New Men are genetically wired to remain in a certain behaviour pattern, just as we are, so there's a chance they'll keep  wise, noble and all the rest. :P

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 A fantastic story! Although it makes me uncomfortable. Because I know so many people that I know as followers, air mongers, manipulators.

As Sartre said, 'l'enfer, c'est les autres'. But how much 'evil' or 'gullibility' is there in every 'good' person? And am I one of the good ones? Will I stand up for what I believe is right? 

You have given me food for thought! 

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1 hour ago, Ullyssess said:

 A fantastic story! Although it makes me uncomfortable. Because I know so many people that I know as followers, air mongers, manipulators.

As Sartre said, 'l'enfer, c'est les autres'. But how much 'evil' or 'gullibility' is there in every 'good' person? And am I one of the good ones? Will I stand up for what I believe is right? 

You have given me food for thought! 

Thanks, Ulyssess, for your very kind appraisal. I hope you enjoy some of my other books too. As for your self-examination - congratulations for even thinking about such things. Trust me... you are not only one of the good ones - you are one of the perfect select few who appreciate my writing.:whistle::lol: As for evil - that's witchdoctor terminology;  emotional blackmail stuff. My way of coping with the existential questions you raise is to understand that we evolved and live in a world of 'dog-eat dog' -  therefore we each have to act in our own best interests in order to survive. 'Good' people do their best to do as little harm as possible, while acknowledging that the mere act of being alive means we are harming something - even if it is only the termites whose nest we displace. And we're all gullible sometimes - that's only bad if we never learn from it - keep voting for politicians who never keep promises, for example. As for standing up for what's right, of course we should, but when danger to your life and liberty will be the result, then you have to decide if your life is worth less than someone else's. It might be for your lover or child, but it would be insanity to sacrifice yourself if you didn't know the other person. And that begs the question, who should we help? How much responsibility should people take for their own actions? Can I change the way humans have evolved? It's easy to become overwhelmed by the misery of others, but will it help if I make myself miserable? I think all any individual can do is try to make their own circle as safe and comfortable as possible, and allow others to do the same for their families and friends. We may be our brother's keeper, but not our neighbour's, and certainly we can not ask ourselves to be the keeper of the entire human race. 

  • Like 2
7 hours ago, Rigby Taylor said:

Thanks, Ulyssess, for your very kind appraisal. I hope you enjoy some of my other books too. As for your self-examination - congratulations for even thinking about such things. Trust me... you are not only one of the good ones - you are one of the perfect select few who appreciate my writing.:whistle::lol: As for evil - that's witchdoctor terminology;  emotional blackmail stuff. My way of coping with the existential questions you raise is to understand that we evolved and live in a world of 'dog-eat dog' -  therefore we each have to act in our own best interests in order to survive. 'Good' people do their best to do as little harm as possible, while acknowledging that the mere act of being alive means we are harming something - even if it is only the termites whose nest we displace. And we're all gullible sometimes - that's only bad if we never learn from it - keep voting for politicians who never keep promises, for example. As for standing up for what's right, of course we should, but when danger to your life and liberty will be the result, then you have to decide if your life is worth less than someone else's. It might be for your lover or child, but it would be insanity to sacrifice yourself if you didn't know the other person. And that begs the question, who should we help? How much responsibility should people take for their own actions? Can I change the way humans have evolved? It's easy to become overwhelmed by the misery of others, but will it help if I make myself miserable? I think all any individual can do is try to make their own circle as safe and comfortable as possible, and allow others to do the same for their families and friends. We may be our brother's keeper, but not our neighbour's, and certainly we can not ask ourselves to be the keeper of the entire human race. 

That's well-spoken!

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