short stories

Blueprint

I awoke suddenly in the Drop. The setting, as I scanned my lofty whereabouts: a giant sphere 50 feet in diameter, where I sat in its epicenter on a bed of grass. A waterfall gently pattered nearby, also in the large, spherical Drop. This place was my personal universe, I remembered after my ascension from the ground below. But I had no memory of my life prior to leaping down to that Earth planet. I had returned to my origin point, sure, but what sort of person was I to descend down to the ground in the first place?

I had to reintegrate into heightened reality. The only memories my mind could access were from the most recent Earth—a 42-year stay on some planetary version from the 1980s.

In December of 2024 on planet, I ascended to the Cheshire spaceship, where my Drop had hinged. I opened my eyes for what seemed like the first time, within the sanctuary of that perfect, pristine Drop. I had to recall my former life.

I stood immediately, rising from the lotus position amidst the tranquil zen garden. To my back sat my workstation, consisting of a nice mahogany L-shaped desk, which held my typewriter, a laptop and some personal files and effects. I whisked over to the desk to find out what to do next.

I fired up the laptop. The first screen both read and said aloud, “Welcome… Please enter the temporal length of your last leap.”

I entered 42 years.

“Oh, quite a long stay. We may have to institute a full memory reboot. Please follow these steps:

“1. Report your full story of the last 42 years on that Earth version.

“2. Recite this series of words in this exact order: surf; zen; leap; navigate; teach; thunderbird.”

The prose flew from my head out my fingertips and onto the typewriter keys. Before long, I had filled seven or so pages that promptly synopsized a comprehensive summary of my last leap.

Then, I recited the key phrase.

Flash!!

Memories from my past life precipitated into my higher brain like the droplets of movierain itself. In an instant, I knew how to summon my helmet, which I did. I quickly donned the crucial headpiece. Its viewfinder would then further facilitate my safe and successful reintegration onto the Cheshire.

I still had one more question for the laptop. I looked down at my brand new body, which was unlike my mortal flesh. It was much better.

“Why is my body half covered in black script?” I typed into the Drop terminal. I also added, “And why does it feel like my bones are made of tightly wound carbon fiber?”

The computer responded: “Your Thunderbird structure is comprised of densely packed molecules that can stand the super gravity of massive black holes. The portion of your skin that’s black is due to the many tattoos chronicling how many worlds you’ve visited thus far. One tattoo for every Earth. Look more closely at the etchings.”

I looked down my right arm. The inked script completely covered the limb from shoulder to wrist. It was impossible to count how many Earths had been etched into my neutron skin. I had apparently been Earth hopping for a while.

It had been 42 years since I had seen my crew, but it would only seem like hours to them since I last left. I couldn’t wait to see them again, but would obviously have to curb my longing. Dissonant time dilations were an occupational hazard of a Thunderbird.


My helmet helped me reacclimate to the Cheshire’s status quo. Past life memories were still flooding into my mind. I was regaining full sense of my soul, but the immediate circumstances of that day on the ship just prior to my leap still escaped me.

I had the helmet call up a blueprint. When I climbed up to the upper echelons of the Cheshire and encountered my first crew member, the helmet’s blueprint would project augmented reality (AR) cues onto the viewfinder to smooth the transition.

I bumped into Keith first, who was getting something from the kitchen.

“You’re still wearing your helmet, I see,” Keith said, rummaging around in an overhead cabinet.

“Yeah, just dismounted from a long leap,” I said.

“How long?”

“42 years.”

“Wow,” Keith stopped rummaging and turned to me. “Still reintegrating I bet.”

“You know it,” I said. “Do I owe you answers on anything?”

I could see Keith’s eyes searching. I think he was debating whether or not to to lie.

“Yeah, you said you’d give me $50,” he said with a smirk.

My helmet cued up a clip on the AR viewfinder that played my last conversation with Keith, pre-leap. Keith had asked to borrow $50 himself from me, as I made my way down to the Drop.

“I think you might have that one backwards, Keith,” I said plainly.

“Ahh! Just testin’ ya! Glad to see you’re almost fully back.”

“I’m about 80 percent of the way there,” I said. “How are things with the rest of the crew?”

“Well, Kitty’s not too pleased with ya.”

“Why?”

“Don’t know,” Keith said, resorting back to his rifling through the cabinets for an afternoon snack.


I approached Kitty’s room, the entrance to which held a quaint hallway door like you’d encounter on the second floor of some warm suburban home. The Cheshire corridors were familiar like that, complete with creaky hardwood floors and a distinct savory scent that further spurred core memories into my waking conscious.

I knocked.

Before long, I heard light footsteps approach the door on the other side. The door knob turned and Kitty quickly pulled open the oak wood.

“Remember me??” she said, in a tone by which I could tell she was annoyed.

“Hi— Hi, Kitty,” locking eyes with her sprung a torrent of memories back into my mind. I could barely keep up conversation, but it was so good to see her. It had been 42 years for me, and only a few hours for her.

“Why did you dive so deep without telling me?? You lost recognition of yourself and had to rely upon the code words only after you leapt back aboard the ship?” I could tell Kitty was livid. She must have checked the logs upon my Drop return.

I glanced behind her into the room. Its walls rose to curved ceilings in semicircle archways. She also enjoyed giant circular windows looking out on the Dyson Sphere city in superposition and at a higher plane above relative Earth space. It was true the Cheshire occupied both local space in an Earth Lagrange point and also at the higher plane of the Dyson City that wrapped around a super massive black hole at the center of the Universal Union (UU). I always thought Kitty had one of the nicest rooms on the ship.

“Yeah, it’s all still coming back. I’m sorry. I should have warned you I was going so deep this time,” I was still waiting for my memory recall to reach the point where I could supply her an explanation as to why I nearly got lost to oblivion on this most recent of leaps. Nevertheless, it was good to be home.

I could tell, from her judgmental glare, that Kitty required that explanation right in her doorway. But I said I had a lot to catch up on and assured her we’d reconvene a little later. She rolled her eyes and shut the door.

Instead of continuing up the ship’s corridors to the Captain’s wheelhouse at the top, I decided to descend back down to my Drop. The recall was taking longer than usual to return. I had to know why this last leap went so deep.

It was an accident, I would later learn from the printout of debriefing documents that my laptop produced, processing my report from Earth_42. The logs would reveal that I had rushed down to that planet. I hadn’t told Kitty of my departure beforehand (hence her current frustration with me). In an effort to test how deep I could leap into obscure Earth without a safety net in Kitty, I had stood on the precipice of oblivion from the Cheshire. Kitty was right to be pissed.

The blueprint, you see, wasn’t a single document. It was the confluence of several accounts: the prior life flashback prompted by reciting the unlocking keyword phrase; my report of the planet I just visited, a debrief; and a projection of the overlapping Venn diagram between these two streams, the way two eyes combine their separate, flat pictures to create 3-dimensional perspective.

Traveling back in time to the point just prior to my leap upon this planet, from which I was now returning, would reveal my motive. I had handpicked this Earth as the perfect candidate to prompt a spontaneous recall and thus ascension back to the Cheshire. The fact that I was able to return of my own volition and report this account now is proof the risky technique worked. But had I flown even an inkling closer to the proverbial Sun in this endeavor, my connection to the Cheshire, to Kitty and the rest of the crew could have been severed completely. She would’ve had no information, no intel to guide her on my retrieval.

Kitty knew I could have been lost. That’s why she was pissed. I compiled my final report of the planet. It was a full schematic of the near failed mission. I had it in hand when I returned to Kitty’s room to explain.

“Again, I’m sorry,” I said as she opened the door to her room. “Just got through reviewing the logs. I was testing long leaps without a safety net.”

“Why didn’t you tell me?” she said.

“I knew you wouldn’t let me test, if I told you beforehand.”

“You’re probably right.”

“The extent of memory loss upon returning to my Drop is of concern,” I said, sympathizing with her feeling of slight. “Usually, the keyphrases conjure a full memory recall after only a few moments. This time, I had to compare that with my notes from the planet report to synthesize a full blueprint of the mission retrospective.”

“Well,” she said, “thank god for the blueprint.”

She was still pissed.

We both said good night, and I left. By that point, my full Thunderbird memory had returned. I remembered all of my thoughts and feelings just prior to leaping onto this Earth_42 without the safety of a savvy leaper in Kitty to potentially retrieve me, should things get too murky for my terrestrial existence below.

I sat down to meditate in my zen garden down in the Drop. Though all the information had returned, I had to search my feelings further. “Why would I knowingly leap without safety?” I thought.

The best I could muster was a sense of insecurity. An occupational hazard of a Thunderbird is getting cast so far out into obscurity, you lose your identity. I’d always have Kitty on my six, so long as she knew where I was leaping. She really was so reliable, my dearest, closest friend.

I let all of these thoughts drift in and out of my mind. My third eye cleared and, at once: clarity. I opened my other two eyes. My meditation was complete, because I had my answer.

The reason I had leapt without Kitty’s knowledge had nothing to do with her. It was entirely my own hang-up. I had been scarred from previous leaps that risked complete detachment. And given my recent history upon entering the Cheshire, I was afraid this would happen again: a complete, irreversible memory wipe.

Of course, there was a simple difference between then and now. Now I knew Kitty, who was fast becoming as skilled a Thunderbird as yours truly. I was no longer alone among the multiverse. And resolved to never leap without her knowledge again.

Under the calm granite of mindful meditation, in heavy stillness, one infallible Truth rose above all others: I had to be Kitty’s rock too.


This story is from the universe of “Big Cat,” a novel. If you liked this tale, you might like the book.

read novel >

Standard
short stories

Roundtable

We went around the room, one Wednesday night at the tavern. A regular roundtable discussion. The guys, the locals, gave the Cheshire crew the floor to all share our longest recorded dimensional leaps, respectively.

“What are those?” you might ask.

Well, each of our baker’s dozen of a spaceship personnel had been leaping now for some time. We had, in fact, become quite good at this most existential of crafts. Leaping dimensions, as far as we were concerned, meant dipping out of one version of the planet Earth, into another version of Earth. The “Many Worlds” theory will tell you that there are an infinite number of Earth versions.

Keith’s longest leap was 48 hours. He was newer to our discipline. Then went Sully. His was 20 years, since that’s how long it took me to find him, cast into oblivion from the mishap among the movierain—which is the code name for the torrents of worlds that precipitate the multiverse like falling rain.

Moreover, the “movierain” is my nickname for surfing the multiverse. You’re the dimensional surfer, leaping like lightning between droplets of rain descending down from some divine source. Each droplet is a world, and when Sully accidentally got sucked into one of those falling destinations, while I was teaching him to surf, I had to retrieve him. You can read more about that in my Thunderbird journal, out now in an Equipment Room near you.

We went around the room, including Lucky #13. I had lasted a lifetime on one version of Earth. That was when I became a small-town reporter for their local weekly, The Herald. Jumping from conversation to conversation among the townsfolk for my stories came naturally to this Thunderbird.

A lifetime spent there, and I would have died an old man in my quaint little hilltop bungalow, with a beautiful back porch view. But I made it back to the good ship Cheshire, that magnificent Earth satellite hanging in a Lagrange point in Her orbit. Kitty returned the favor from that time we lost her in the ’80s .

We both told our own versions.

Bill Thunderbird’s Account

By the time it was my turn to chime in, on that Wednesday night storytelling at the tavern, the longest recorded marooning on an obscure version of Earth was 21 years, held by Kitty.

I had that beat.

“In the interest of time, I won’t start at the beginning. It’s best to begin when I finally realized that this world in which I found myself was not my actual home…”

It truly felt like another lifetime conjuring up this former terrestrial life. As I channeled this old self, I looked around the circle we had formed in the back room of the tavern. This wasn’t the typical tale we’d tell on Wednesday nights. And I could tell the crowd hung on every word. I continued.

“I began noticing clues in my everyday routine reporting for the town’s local weekly. It’s like this universe was trying to reach me.”

Signs are real. Pay attention to them. The human brain is trained to recognize patterns. If you’re noticing some pattern in your everyday existence that seems more than coincidence, it is. The pattern carries meaning that someone or something from beyond your current plane has attempted to convey to you.

For example, I’d notice more than the average string of Ford Thunderbirds rolling by downtown streets. While interviewing certain subjects for the local paper—a restaurateur who mentions dew for some reason, the local florist who insisted upon showing me her zen garden, and so on—clues accumulated to a critical mass. Like the moments just after waking up from a deep dream, these clues felt more like memories from another life and another world, rather than imagined.

“It was Kitty,” I told the tavern audience. “She was outside my realm, behind the fourth wall, and couldn’t influence me directly. Had she revealed my true nature too early, the heavy news would have been too overwhelming. It wouldn’t have stuck. And I would have been left to languish there.

“The place was so similar to my home world. That’s why it was easy to get lost there—its familiar allure looming always.

“I also didn’t mind being there. That could have contributed to my blissful complacency. Usually, in similar situations of ignorance, a gut feeling would guide me out of the woods. It was an innate intuition that the world in which I found myself in was not my own. On this Earth, however, ‘Analog Earth’ we’ll call it, never incited this feeling in me. Like I said, I would have remained there until death had Kitty not intervened.”

My crowd started to stir. I could tell I was losing them.

“So how’d you get out of it?” yelled one audience member from the back. One of the reasons this was not the typical tale we’d tell on Wednesday nights was that this crowd appreciated people who got to the point. I was taking my time.

“I’ll let Kitty elaborate more on my liberation,” I said. “But I can tell you what supplied the aha moment. It was quite the stroke of genius.

“The key phrase to unlock past-life memories goes like this: ‘surf; zen; leap; navigate; teach; thunderbird.’ Reading or hearing these words in that order will unlock my mind, should I get lost. Kitty knew this, of course…”

I hesitated for a moment on delivering this news to the group in the back room. I was internally debating how much thunder to steal from Kitty’s version. I decided to tease it.

“One day, I’m walking down Main Street through the town center, en route to report on a story. I was 42 on this planet by this point. I strolled by the local surf shop. I remember reading the word ‘surf’ on the storefront. Just then, a bus drove by with an ad across the side promoting a wellness spa that read, ‘Achieve zen.’ As the word ‘zen’ passed in and out of my mind, I approached a puddle by the curb. I leapt over it, into the street and almost got hit by a Lincoln Navigator. Not too long after that, I bumped into my favorite gradeschool teacher on the sidewalk. I caught up with her for a few minutes before continuing on my path to my source’s destination. I arrived, and right before entering their office, I glanced back at the street. A Ford Thunderbird drove by. I remember entering the building in a daze. I felt high, as my mind ignited otherworldly thoughts. Déjà vu blossomed into full recall of my Thunderbird identity before I made it through the lobby. I stopped dead in my tracks and turned around. I never made it to the interview that day. Through that series of events, at once, I remembered I was a Thunderbird and doubled back to my apartment. I knew I’d have to link up with Kitty to get off planet. But I’ll let her tell you how we rendezvoused…”

I relinquished the floor to my Thunderbird apprentice.

Kitty’s Account

“You should have seen Bill, when I first came across him,” Kitty jumped right in.

“Bill appeared really quite content,” she said. “I was concerned my soul-freeing Thunderbird tactics would not ripple enough to free him. I tailed him for years, until the perfect moment presented itself.

“I felt like his guardian angel, checking in on him over terrestrial milestones. I remember when he first got his job at the paper, how happy he was. I remember when he earned his first byline reporting on a local 3-alarm fire that had burnt down the old Fargus mansion. I’d tail him on dates and visits with friends. I felt like Bill’s ghostly biographer, who knew Him better than he knew Himself. Of course, I was outside of Analog Earth’s timeline and could fast-forward to terrestrial Bill’s pivotal moments.”

“Why did Bill berth into this planet at all, if it ran the risk of forgetting his true identity?” an eager tavern-goer asked of our Thunderbird craft.

I thought to chime in on Kitty’s rendition, but then held back. I wanted to hear the reason in her words.

Kitty continued, first addressing the question from the audience.

“Drastic leaps like these are sometimes necessary for a Thunderbird,” she said. “Ideally, and often, we can leap in and out of worlds all while retaining our highest sense of self. This type of light leaping, however, doesn’t always get to the root of the world. Sometimes, in order to truly know a certain Earth version, the Thunderbird has to live it. That’s what Bill was doing down there on Analog Earth.”

“Makes sense,” we heard from the crowd. Sounded like the same guy who asked the initial question. Kitty veered back to her story.

“Anyway, my monitoring of Bill’s milestones was merely a precaution. Our thought, before mounting this leap, was that Bill’s Thunderbirdhood would occur to him naturally down on the ground. But when that didn’t happen by the checkpoint, I had to intervene. It took months of planning to align those six key-phrase cues on his walk that day.”

“How’d you do it??” apparently this guy thought we were in a Q&A segment, but Kitty pressed on unfazed.

“Well,” she said, “when you live outside a world’s timeline, you can see all causality at once. Cause and effect, in fact, are interchangeable like a chicken and an egg. ‘Which came first?’ It doesn’t matter. I knew what Bill needed to see to inspire the six key phrases. So I picked the best day in his routine where these crucial components could all occur in the correct order.”

I could tell Kitty’s Thunderbird training had really improved her leaping skills. She had answered his question expertly, but not sure it all landed to the pedestrian.

“I— I see,” he said. “Not sure I have the right frame of reference being stuck in this planet’s time, but I trust ya.”

“Thanks,” Kitty said. “Maybe we can take you on a leap sometime, and illustrate our point.”

She looked at me and smirked. We usually only leapt with Cheshire crew. Most terrestrials couldn’t handle the monsooning movierain of the multiverse.

“Once the Thunderbird idea had been firmly planted in Bill,” Kitty continued, “next, we just had to rendezvous. At that point, it was easy, since I was confident Bill had recalled his training. I knew, as he now knew again, that we’d have to meet at a place on planet where a natural vortex whirled. There just so happens to be one such vortex at the mountaintop on the outskirts of town. I was also confident that Bill would remember that timing mattered. He knew, as I knew, that a lunar standstill was coming up in a few days. So we met on the mountaintop three days after I unlocked Bill’s Thunderbird mind, during the full moon of the axial lunar precession that occurs only once every 18.6 years. After a heartfelt reunion, we leapt hand in hand back up to the Cheshire. That’s my story.”

Claps and cheers rang through the tavern back room. Kitty glanced quickly at me to see if I approved of her rendition. I nodded slightly to indicate it was spot on. I looked around at the rest of crew in-house tonight who hadn’t shared yet.

“OK,” I said. “Who else has a long-leap story?”


If you liked that tale, you may like the novel, “Big Cat.” This story emanates from the same universe (or multiverse) of the book.

read novel >

Standard
short stories

Channeling

Worlds As Neurons In The Multiverse Brain

Like separate neurons under a microscope, seeking out each other without sight but somehow detecting where the others are, we could connect with people. Nonlocally. We just had to first think of them. Then, sense them. Feel them. Catch their scent. Then, we’d become entangled and could unite. We were two once seemingly separate neurons connecting in the grander scheme of the God brain.


The Radio

It’s no coincidence that the word “channeling” resembles the numbered channels on a radio dial. The channeler is like a radio themselves, fine-tuning frequencies within their mind’s eye to receive a signal.

In the dichotomy of AM/FM radios, frequency modulated (FM) waves broadcast over far greater distances than their AM (or amplitude modulated) counterparts. In the case of wave functions that transcend this dimension and leave time—tapping into otherworldly sources—the concept of transmission and receiving becomes blurred. And the distances traverse infinitely greater expanses than even the farthest reaching frequency modulated ranges.


Meditations On Channeling

Down on Earth, this Earth, I meditated calmly under the thin veil of silence that my living room provided. In the stillness, I caught hint of a distant world that also somehow felt nearby, hovering above in quiet orbit, hung in a Lagrange point of this planet’s relative space. I had become wise to its extraterrestrial presence by channeling. But I would not become hypnotized under the delusion that I had somehow created its existence, out of the ether, by adeptly receiving its signal. The good ship Cheshire had hung in relative Earth space long before I detected its looming presence.

When I took the channeling one step further, allowing my lucid consciousness to travel upward toward the source of the otherworldly signal, the higher Truth instantly emerged. At once, I opened my eyes, sitting in the lotus position aboard the Cheshire. My higher self, meditating in my Drop on that spaceship, had summoned me. I had not created the signal at all down on Earth. I had merely detected the wave when I was ready. In the end, the wave had created me.

The higher soul self, Bill Thunderbird, had summoned me, a lowly earthling from some Earth adjacent to His home world.

Though Thunderbirds could materialize into your world on a whim, fully actualized as a living, breathing, red-blooded human, it was sometimes easier to plant reference points in local residences. These living bookmarks went about their daily lives, until called upon. A Thunderbird could swoop in, on a moment’s notice and pick up where they left off.

I was one such plant and facilitated the entrance of the local Thunderbird with seamless transition. I was a walking breadcrumb.

When I finally ascented, that was my final memory—that I was some marker for future reference, a breadcrumb trail—before joining the higher mind of Bill Thunderbird. The soul lives many lives and I was but one of His.


Earlier:

“What’s the first thing you’ll do, once you’ve unlocked the key to channeling?”

My friend and I were at coffee. I had just told her that I was close to cracking the code out of this universe.

“Possibilities are endless,” I said. “The multiverse is my oyster.”

“But wouldn’t you want to pay homage to the home world that created you?” she implored. I must say, Stacy was a grounding presence.

“Yeah, that’s reasonable,” I said. “In order to even ascertain the ability to channel other worlds, one must believe that they are the Earth. She’s our mother and we are Her. When we leave this plane, we take Her with us.”

“Yes, exactly,” she continued. “Couldn’t you channel the powers from other worlds who may offer beneficial sophistication to our struggling planet? So, again, I ask you: what would you do first?”

“I’d spread the word to all who may want to learn. Some, not all of us, feel trapped here. I’d want to free them from their self-imposed prisons. The severely disabled come to mind, but really anybody who possesses the mental acuity to understand this life is temporary and that their soul is eternal should be able to transcend.”

If the Earth could provide that perfect incubator to elevate my soul, the least I could do was heal Her by outsourcing aid from other universes.


Channeling People, Not Just Places

As I became a more savvy channeler, I realized that the highest form of this craft concerned resonating with the frequencies of other life forms, fellow people. Animated souls, you see, brought life to otherwise empty spaces.

It helps to know the person you’re channeling. You need to understand their essence when you’re searching for their signature radio signal. In the handshake of entanglement, it also takes two to channel. Once you ping the desired recipient, it’s up to them to reciprocate. It also helps that, the last time you saw this person, that you parted on good terms.

Yes, channeling people is the highest form of the craft. Without them, places don’t exist. After all, how could a place be if no one’s there to acknowledge it?


Big Cat

This short story originates from the universe (or multiverse) of “Big Cat,” a novel.

If you liked that tale, you might like the book.

read novel >

Standard
novel

Big Cat

They say you should never write yourself into the story. Well, that’s what I did around chapter 32 of this here novel. It’s fiction, mind you, but the tale you’re about to read deals with leaping dimensions.

If you subscribe to such multiversal theories, then you know it’s possible one could traverse the fourth wall to enter a world that would appear fictional from his Earth of origin.

The title character breaks through into my study while I write the story to introduce this world to a higher reality. Leaping dimensions isn’t just about experiencing new and exciting worlds; it’s a vehicle toward ascension.

Big Cat’s journal, then, becomes the textbook by which a journeyman, or journeywoman would study to become such an enlightened being.

They’re called Thunderbirds.

read novel >

Standard