Tuesday 14 January 2014

Jimmy and The Professor - The Beginning


One early evening in Wierdlings, a small remote village known by few and inhabited by even fewer, a large black plastic bag bounced down the front steps of the dreary house located on the edge of the deserted Unbelievable Street.
It was a heavy bag that was being slowly dragged and a black cat meowed in surprise as it thudded down to the pavement next to it. The old man who was dragging it swallowed a deep breath before continuing on. The garbage truck was due soon. 7pm, every evening without fail it would arrive and he couldn’t afford to miss it. It’s not like the bag’s contents could be left out for anyone to discover. Someone might get the wrong idea if they ever saw what was inside.
“Half a day wasted cleaning and heaving.” He grumbled with one last heave and plopped the bag beside the bins as two headlights beamed brightly from the end of the street.
The old man sighed with relief and watched as the garbage truck rumbled forwards and as it did, its headlights revealed a figure walking briskly along the pavement towards him. It was a small boy. Twelve, maybe thirteen years old, he guessed but could have been much younger for he was so scrawny and his mop of scraggly brown hair fell over most of his pale face. The boy walked timidly, trying not to look him in the eye, and clutched his small shopping bag tightly.
When was the last time he ate? The old man wondered.
The ghastly boy was painfully thin, a gentle breeze looked like it might bowl him over, and his clothes were old and worn. The scientist glanced at the heavy plastic bag that was being tossed into the back of the garbage truck and couldn’t help but snicker. “Maybe scrawny isn’t such a bad thing.” He chuckled, he alone understanding his private joke.
 Deciding that there was no time like the present, he called to the boy. “You there,” he said sharply “come here.”
The boy eyed him warily. The hunched old man wore a large white coat that was much too big for him which hid his frail body. His face was gaunt and his skin was stretched and there were only wisps of snowy white hair remaining on his head. The boy tried to peer into his eyes but his glasses were so thick that he couldn’t even see behind them. The way he spoke and stood gave him the creeps but he didn’t look dangerous. Just old and rather eccentric.
“Yes?” The boy approached him.
“What’s your name?” The old man demanded.
“I’m Jimmy. Jimmy Timble. What’s your name sir?” Jimmy tried to be polite and remember his manners when speaking to the elderly but he couldn’t help feel unsettled under the penetrating stare of his thick glasses. 
The old man dismissively waved his hand impatiently at him. “Never mind names. We have no such time. Just call me Professor and follow me.”
“Follow you? Follow you where?” A bewildered Jimmy asked, wondering if perhaps the old man needed some help. “My parents are expecting me back soon.”
The Professor ignored Jimmy’s protests and started walking back to his house, using the banister to help him us as he encouraged him to follow. “You’re hired, hired to help me change the world Timmy. This is an opportunity you can’t pass up.”
“It’s Jimmy, not Timmy sir.” Jimmy corrected as he tried to help the Professor but he shook him off and scowled at him.
“That’s what I said. Unclog your ears as I don’t have time to repeat myself.” His bushy white eyebrows narrowed and reminded Jimmy of plods of cotton wool. “Now, you need to eat. Can’t have you fainting on the job and taking up more of my time. You’ve wasted enough as it is! I’ll rustle you up something while we discuss business. When was the last time you ate?”
Very confused by the peculiar man’s behavior, Jimmy had been about to go but the mention of food made his stomach rumble loudly. It had been a while. Not since breakfast had he eaten anything and even that had been only half a slice of stale toast. With only a small portion of cereal to look forward to for dinner, the prospect of food was very tempting. Jimmy also couldn’t help but be intrigued by the Professor and his ramblings.
“Maybe I could stay a little while.” He offered. Maybe he just needs someone to talk to.
“Excellent! Now quickly come inside. We’ve been jabbering much too long.”
Jimmy was hurried inside and the Professor looked suspiciously down each end of the street before closing his front door. It took a few moments for Jimmy’s eyes to adjust to the dimly lit house as he followed the shuffling Professor down the hall. The house was dark and dank and its floorboards creaked with every step. Jimmy wrinkled up his nose at the old man smell that eroded from every room.
“Come, this way to the kitchen. We can talk business there.”
An uneasy feeling gnawed at Jimmy as he followed the Professor. He wondered if he should leave. His parents would be expecting him soon but even though he reminded himself of that, he knew it wasn’t true. They barely knew when he was home and like the Professor, struggled to remember his name.
Instead he couldn't help but let his eyes nosy his surroundings. Every inch of the house was covered with clutter and dust. So much so that he couldn’t see any of the framed pictures. He let out a loud sneeze and the Professor tsked and scowled at him and Jimmy refrained from doing it again but the dust made it hard by ticking at his inner nostrils. As they passed a room with papers and books stacked high and scattered everywhere, his eyes fell upon a bookshelf stocked with a collection of jars. They grabbed his attention and made him stop to squint and stare. Each one contained a peculiar looking object and with his curiosity piqued, Jimmy stepped inside for a closer look but his eyes widened and his jaw dropped when he realised that they were organs; brain, heart, kidney, they were all there. And those that didn’t contain organs were filled with specimens of insects and reptiles.
“Ah, excellent.” The Professor said. “Eager to get straight to work. I like that. Much better than the last one.”
The last one? Jimmy thought. “What’s going on?” He demanded. “Are you going to remove my brain?”
           The Professor paused and considered it for a second. “No,” he finally said “I doubt it could tell me anything useful. No, you’re much more use to me mobile and fully functional of your limbs.”
           “What is all this? Why do you have all these things?”
          The Professor sighed impatiently. “For research. How else do you expect us to carry out our work? I thought I explained all this.”
           “No! You haven’t explained anything! Are you a doctor or something?”
           “BAH!” The Professor snorted. “Doctor? I tried to share my genius with them. Several times in fact but they refused to recognise me. Doctors and their fancy degrees. A doctor! Bah, I’m a scientist! A researcher of the world!”
Jimmy stuttered for words as he tried to make sense when the sound of creaking floorboards came from the hall and there was the soft plod of footsteps. A snout poked around the corner of the door and a small sausage dog entered the room. It whipped its long tail from side to side and its tongue lopped down the side of its mouth but all Jimmy could see was its eyes. They shined a bright yellow, so bright that he had to squint to prevent being blinded as they cast a light throughout the room wherever the dog looked.
“Ah Buster!” The Professor beamed down at the dog as it happily licked his hand. “What do you think Lenny? Buster can light up any dark room. They train dogs for the blind but what about us folk stumbling around the dark? Don’t consider us do they?”
“But, but,” Jimmy was perplexed, too much so to correct the Professor about his name, and continued to stare at Buster who cast light with every glance. “How?”
A large smile spread across the Professor’s face. “A curious mind. Excellent. I really have chosen so much better this time. Come.” He reached to his bookshelf for a book but it wouldn’t extract fully. Instead when he pulled, the bookshelf slid aside to reveal a large elevator door. “Let me show you the future.”

No Longer The Last



Perched high up on a cliff belonging to a solitary mountain that overlooked the small unsuspecting village of Wierdlings, a being thought to belong only to a mystical past and lost to the ages surveyed the stretching land before her for her next meal. Bigger than a house, as fearsome as a wolverine and deadlier than the deadliest snake, she released an arrogant puff of smoke as she watched everything below her.
Nothing evaded her. With her keen eyesight, she saw everything, from the bouncing fleas on the black cat’s fur as it scurried down the street to the slight tremble of the blades of grass at the mouth of the forest from the gentle breeze. She inhaled deeply and even from high up above the ground all the way up the mountain, she could pick up the scent of cooked flesh from the garbage truck that moved through the village streets.
From where she surveyed, she knew everything, yet no one knew of her.
Her existence was unknown to many but of course, nothing is ever truly unknown. There were stories floating around the village and Dreaco knew them all.
“The biggest darn bat you ever did see!”
“Dinosaurs! A flying T-Rex it was!”
“The night came alive and just swallowed that sheep whole before it even managed a bleat!”
That one always tickled her. Her tough black leathery hide helped her blend into the darkness but it always amazed her how stupid the humans could be to even contemplate such a thing. Of course there were those that would guess correctly and try and spread their stories, but they were always rebuffed with howls of laughter.
“A Dragon!”
For thousands of years Dreaco had lived, and for several hundred, she had lived alone as the last remaining Dragon. Portrayed in tales as mindless destructive beasts, Dragons were anything but. True they were massive creatures of incredible strength, capable of setting the world ablaze and possessed a set of teeth and claws adapt for slicing flesh. But they were intelligent. Dreaco could speak as well as any human and could do so in a variety of languages. She had spent her life listening and studying and adapting to her surroundings.
She spread her large leathery wings that spanned over twenty feet in each direction and propelled herself high into the sky. They were so powerful that the gusts of wind that she created felt like a calming breeze to those down below. The fading light cast a faint looming shadow over the village as she soared above it but she wasn’t worried about being seen. The evening dusk allowed her to blend into the night but even on the brightest of days without even so much as a cloud in the sky, she knew there was nothing ever to fear. She soared so high in the sky that they seldom ever detected her, and when they did, they mistook her for one of their airplanes. If her ancestors had lived to see such things as humans taking to the sky, they would have seen them as convenient snacks.
Not Dreaco though. She knew better. She was the last of her species for a reason.
The reason for her longevity was down to her intelligence rather than might. Rather than going from village to village and burning each to the ground, she hunted with stealth, picking off the stray sheep or cattle from the local farms and even the occasional villager that wandered that little too far away from their homes. All done though without ever leaving a trace. As stupid as the humans were, they ruled the planet in numbers and had a knack for eradicating everything else.
She didn’t mind being the last of her species. All the other dragons had been too arrogant and were never smart enough to remain undetected. Dreaco spent a lot of her time praising herself for her cunning and being able to live so close amongst the humans for so long without them ever suspecting a thing.
But she knew she wouldn’t be the last Dragon forever and that was why collecting food tonight was more than just dinner. Back in her lair on top of the mountain, what one would guess as just a boulder was anything but. Though as tough as stone, a small crack had formed across its exterior shell and through the small opening that had been created, a curious eye peered onto the world. Dreaco’s life was about to drastically change. For the moment when she would no longer be the last of the Dragons had finally arrived.