1. California Woman Risks Fate of Entire Human Race

Secrets of Immortality Gleaned from Alien Remains, trumpeted the New York Times on page 1.

Yeah, those were the aliens they dug up from my property up along the California coast. And yes, I admit it, I was the one who had buried them, with the help of my friends. Had to. They were dead, and we didn’t have enough freezer space to hold them.

Also, we wanted to honor them, and NOT let the government cut them up to learn their secrets. But they did that anyway. And they took the space ship from me.

Yet there was another who survived, and it’s her story I want to share with you.

My fans have been clamoring for the real story. I’m Selena M, and even if you’re not familiar with my music, you’ve no doubt seen my name in the tabloids lately. There’s been so much baloney issuing from the media meat grinder. I’ve resisted telling the whole truth because it doesn’t make me look too good. But that’s over. I want to give it to you straight, right from the beginning.

My name for the alien who survived was Breadbox—which she never really understood, even though we had spent the long days of her convalescence learning each other’s language and stories.

She was such an odd-shaped entity, kind of like a cross between a squid and a centipede with a parking meter sticking out the top, and an ever-changing number of pseudopods instead of feet and fingers. And a band of metal around her middle. I told Sheriff Jim that she was bigger than a breadbox, and the name stuck. “Bigger than a breadbox” is a throwback to my Gran’s time, from a show called Twenty Questions, where everything in the world is either bigger or smaller than a breadbox.

She called me her gem of agate among all the infinitesimal grains of sand on the unnamed beaches of the cosmos. I was moved to tears, because I see myself as no more than an insignificant bit on the cosmic shore.

I am so sorry that she was not able to return to her own people and home world. And I miss her more than I can say.

But let’s go back to the beginning.

Clay and me and the Osbornes were sitting on my deck watching the sun set out over the Pacific Ocean—magnificent brilliant oranges, lavenders and greens. My neighbor Meg Osborne was expounding on the green flash, when there was, indeed, a large flash behind the fogbank low over the horizon. What could it be? Lightning? A missile test? As an inveterate weather watcher, I automatically started counting seconds until the thunder arrived. I got up to sixty before I gave up, figuring that little sound would travel more than twelve miles.

Perhaps another minute later came the distant spreading boom, rolling at us across the surface, echoing off the hills behind, then off the higher cloud layers. It was a very large boom of some sort. And then, whistling over us, something hit the old cypress tree with a thwack, strong enough to knock the dead limb off, which fell directly onto my artichoke patch. I was up like a shot, and ran back there, almost jumping over the fence in my haste.

“What the heck flew here?” I wondered, as I looked back toward the sea. “Was it related to the off-shore explosion we just heard?” I gingerly lifted the dead limb from my artichoke plants to survey the damage, and to find the cause—and there it was. As I lifted the limb, the culprit unwound and fell off onto the ground. It was a little chain with an amulet of some piece of dull metal on it. The chain was very fine and woven. I picked it up and it was hot! I got a stick and picked up the chain, and noticed it was quite heavy, like a piece of lead—or even heavier. Uranium? Wow! Maybe it’s radioactive! I dropped it. My friends were gawking timidly as if they were watching the bomb squad at work.

“Clay!” I called out. “Do you still have the radiation meter? You know, the one we used to see if we had any radon leaking in my basement?”

“You are one crazy woman,” he responded. “You should leave that thing alone.” But he did what I requested, as usual. Clay knows where everything is at my house, even though he can’t find anything in his own place. He produced it right away, and we held the sampler by this amulet. No reading. Batteries dead? We gave it a test, and it looked like everything was working well. It read the background radiation okay. But no reading from this. Apparently it’s not radioactive. But it’s sure heavy.

“Heavier than a lead sinker of that size, I’d say,” said Clay, as he rolled it in his fingers.

“I thought lead sinkers were illegal,” said Meg.

“Well, I’ve got a lifetime supply, and the hell with the fish. I can’t catch ’em anyway.”

I touched it. It was cooling down, still warm. I picked it up. It was a stubby cylinder, maybe a centimeter in diameter and two-plus centimeters long. In the fading dusk light it was a plain, indistinguishable gray. We took it inside, shined the Maglite on it. The plain gray transformed into subtle colors, like a pigeon’s wing in bright sunlight.

“What is this thing?” asked Jim Osborne. He’s a Sonoma County deputy sheriff. “Was there an aircraft that crashed or exploded, and this is something worn by one of the passengers?”

“Well, if someone had it around their neck the chain must have sliced their head off,” opined Clay with a grimace. “But I don’t see any sign of blood.”

“I’m sorry, folks,” said Jim, stretching, shaking off the chardonnay. “I guess I’d better mosey back to the station and get in pre-disaster mode. Something’s surely gonna hit the fan tonight with this.” We could already hear the radio squawking from his car in my drive, and then his cell started chirping. “Meg, no need for me to drag you off,” he said as he crunched across my gravel drive.

But that was pretty much the end of our little party.

Later that night I was lying in bed, reliving this. Something bothered me about it. I couldn’t put it out of my mind. We had listened to the radio and TV for reports of a crash at sea, and there was nothing. I called Sheriff Jim again, and he said they’d received a number of reports and presumed it was a sonic boom. Yet it still bothered me. There was something incomplete here.

That night I dreamed of lying on my lounge in the backyard as I often do, looking up at the blue sky. A fly buzzed lazily across my field of vision, a couple of feet above my eyes. Just at that moment a small plane also flew across my field of vision—perhaps several thousand feet up. The fly appeared to be the same size, moving the same speed as the airplane. They were two equivalent objects for a moment. I sat bolt upright in bed, instantly awake, shivering. That was it! There had been two objects, one close by which hit our tree, and another one higher, whooshing through the air.

I could scarcely wait till dawn. At first light I loaded my thermal cup with high-test coffee, climbed up on my roof, and looked east to see where a whoosh might have carried something larger and higher. There on the hills behind my house are the wild acres of scrub, a few trees, and lots of poison oak. Might be on my land, or it might be on Farmer Jed’s up behind me. Whatever “it” was. Fired up the jeep, took off up the hill, put it in low-low four-wheel drive, chugged over the rocks. Got up to the top and could see nothing, nothing at all. Got out, walked around, looked down at my house to see where something might have gone. It might have been much higher—maybe it went clear over the ridge and on east into the redwoods. Or maybe it was my imagination.

Whoa! There it was! Oh, Lord, it was an aircraft, crashed down there in the least accessible place, clear back at the deep end of Poison Oak Gulch, up under the old oak tree. I had waged war against this poison oak ever since I’d moved up here, so that I could get back to the spring at the head of the gulch without turning into one huge rash. So I had created a pathway down there.

I bounded down the narrow path, avoiding the insidious bright green leaves that were everywhere, seemingly ready to grasp me if I veered off course. One slip would plunge me into Poison Oak Hell. There it was—the tangled wreckage. What the heck was it? It was no aircraft I could remember seeing—maybe it was just a piece of one. I edged on down, around the big boulder. Oh, this was only a fragment. Look up there, another whole piece. It looks like half an airliner, but dark grey like a military plane. No sign of smoke or of life. I approached it warily.

Bigger than it looked. It had skidded through several hundred feet of poison oak and chaparral. There was a huge tear in the side. I looked in. Dark. No windows. Smelled very funky. I had my flashlight, but naturally it was way back up at the jeep. Stuck my head in, breathing through my mouth on the theory that if I couldn’t smell it, it wouldn’t hurt me. My eyes got used to the gloom. It was cool and dim within. It looked more like a space shuttle. Were there bodies?

Something was alive here! There was a tiny cry, a whimper, like a baby raccoon makes after it’s been chastised by its mother. A movement and a sigh. I edged closer. There, hanging from the ceiling, was somebody, something. No, things were upside down, so it was hanging from the floor, in some harness. Not a person. It looked more like an octopus or a squid, but a stubby one. It was shivering and sighing. I bolted out through the opening, ran back to my jeep. The hell with the poison oak—got to get that flashlight.

I was back in no time with the big heavy-duty flashlight that had seen me through many storm crises. With it I lit up the interior of this thing, and there before me was a tableau out of this world. I mean literally. It was a live being, but not a human being. Nor animal. It sure wasn’t an escapee from any Earth zoo. I had stumbled into a crashed flying saucer, apparently. This being looked in bad shape. It was amazing it wasn’t dead, but it looked badly injured. A puddle of blood or other bodily fluids grew beneath it.

It saw me, too, with two big eyes on the ends of quivering stalks. What did it think of me? That I was here to do it in? What should I think of it? Was it going to attack me the first chance it got? Huh! Hanging there upside down like a truncated octopus, it didn’t look particularly threatening.

It took me a minute to sort out what was live being and what was instrument or uniform. I noted a breathing orifice at the base of what looked like a neck. It opened an eye, looked at me. Then a second eye on a stalk. They were truly like the eyes of an octopus. The eyes regarded me. Solemnly? with terror? with malevolence? How the hell would I know?

When I think back on it, what I did was incredibly foolhardy. Outside of this thing’s conscious intentions, who knows what kind of disease I could have caught from it. Or unleashed on humanity. But I ignored all that. Here I was, in the presence of a being not from Earth, which has arrived via some kind of vessel, apparently a spaceship. It was hurt; it needed my help.

Besides, I was looking for the next thing in life. I was tired of my same ole, same ole; I had all the money I needed; my so-called music career was fine, but it wasn’t an all-consuming passion. I needed something new in my life. What better to do than to get involved with an injured alien bug-eyed monster?

So there I was, going through every cliché of old science fiction movies—gesturing friendship, “I’m a friend, peace, I mean you no harm.” Since it probably didn’t speak English, I spoke slowly and loudly, as if it were a foreigner. I waved and pointed. But what do gestures mean? I might as well have flipped it the finger. It twittered in response, an incredibly sad song, a bit like a mourning dove. The sound broke my heart.

I did have the presence of mind to look around, to see if there were any Godzilla-type allies. But no. This compartment was quite small. There was one other similar chair or harness, but the other apparatus was empty.

I went over to this being and tried to communicate through gestures that I would be willing to help it down and out of the harness and put it on the floor, or whatever was beneath my feet here. I gestured, kind of removing straps and harnesses and lowering it gently downward. It responded. It went, “Ooww, oooww, oooww.” Did that mean yes, please; don’t touch me, you brute; or I’m hungry and you look really tasty?

Being a soft-hearted idiot, I went for the former. I described through gestures what I was going to do, one move at a time, and then I did it. The strap release was not difficult at all. I figured I’d probably release the straps and it’ll fall to the floor and kill itself. So I stood beneath it to brace the fall, then carefully loosened one clasp at a time. It watched what I was doing, and pointed out with one of its little pseudopods which one to do.

When finally released, it fell on me. It was as heavy as a dead pony. It looked up at me, raised two pseudopods, two stubby tentacles, waved them in an intricate pattern, and crooned in a way that looked just like the pattern it was signing—if you can understand that. It was lying there, and gestured to me then to turn it right side up, I guess—put its pseudopods down. Which I did. More crooning and waving.

Then it pointed, made some more sounds and a little corkscrew motion with the end of its tentacle or whatever—now it looked more like a long finger. I went over to what it was pointing at, and there was a compartment to open. By twisting it in the way it had indicated with its corkscrew motion, it opened. It was full of supplies. This being said words to me, which naturally I could not understand. But they were recognizable as words, not moans or croons. I looked blankly. It picked up instantly that I didn’t understand, and reverted to croons and gestures. English and French, baby, that is all I understand—I’m weak on Martian.

It gestured for me to haul things over to it, so I brought stuff out of this compartment. It pointed to a particular thing; I held it up. It was some sort of pad. The being and I together spread this over this huge gash in its side, which was no longer bleeding—or whatever passes for blood—but clearly looked like as life-threatening a gash as one could imagine.

It started croaking for something else, which I couldn’t understand. It was pointing back toward a part of the vessel which was greatly damaged, and making excited noises. I went back and looked. I would point to things, then look at it. I wasn’t getting it.

It made a little “boop” sound, pointed at me, and I went back over. It was pointing at my face, tracing out a line down my face. What? I didn’t get it. Then a gesture, using several tentacles. Like a hula dancer’s hands. Waves. Then a downward cascade. Then two little balls and a big ball. Two littles and a big. Over and over again. Two of this and one of that. Then she pointed at my face, tracing a line, almost touching me. What the . . . Sweat running down my face! Water! H2O. It was thirsty. Hanging upside down from a harness after a near fatal crash, and it was thirsty. Where’s the canteen?

I looked around. The enormity of what was happening hit me. My knees buckled. Here I was communicating with an alien being, an entity from a different planet. Maybe a different solar system (most likely). Crashed. At my mercy (hopefully).

No canteen, but I had my cell phone, right in my jacket pocket. Should I call NASA? The tabloids? The sheriff? The government? My lawyer? My publicist? Holy shit! I could be famous. Or eaten. Or be the person who brought the plague to Earth.

I looked at this poor thing huddled on the floor at my feet, whimpering for water. I could flick it the sweat off my brow. Snatches of sci-fi movies flashed through my mind. Government scientists carving up alien beings to learn the secrets of their metabolism. In the end, the aliens were always killed. They were either hostile or misunderstood.

Then there was the genre of alien abductions. People snatched off the face of the Earth by flying saucers; weird sexual experiments. And then returned to Earth to tell an unbelieving reporter from Newsweek.

Well, this one had apparently flown in too low, and kaboom! So sexual experiments were out of the question for the time being. But what should I do? What should I do right now? If you wanted to inform the U.S. government or the United Nations that an alien had just crashed on your property, who should you call? INS? It was Sunday—they wouldn’t be there anyway. So I called my buddy Clay. Got out my cell phone, keyed him. The beast was clearly interested in this show of technology. I got his answering machine. “Clay, if you’re there, pick this damn thing up right now—I don’t care what you’re doing. It’s me.” Clay picked up his phone. “What’s up?”

“Clay, listen carefully. Something extraordinary has happened, and I need your help.”

“Are you all right?”

“Yeah, I’m fine. I don’t want to go into detail over the phone. You know where Poison Oak Gulch is?”

“Yeah, I been there.”

“Get your ass up here right now. Bring with you a bottle of purified water. You got that?”

“Yeah, I guess I can.”

“Bring your little videocam, and make sure you bring an extra power pack and some flashlights. And grab some of those hard-backed pads with some felt-tip markers—you know the kind I use in the meetings? You know where those are?”

“Sure, in your place I do.”

“Well then, bring mine. But get up here fast, and don’t let anybody else know about this.”

“Anybody can be listening over a cell line.”

“Well, so get your ass up here. And Clay, keep your phone handy. I might think of some other things and need to call you in the next few minutes.”

“Yes maam. Whatever you say, boss.”

“Call me if you absolutely have to, but mainly just get here. Come up the left side of the cut. You’ll see my Jeep parked up at the north lip. On that side you can get here without having to wade through all the poison oak.”

“Gotcha. So what’d ya find there?”

“Just come. You’ll be glad you did. ”

 

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