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    The Passage

    Page 2
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      Helicopter blades can be heard pulsing as the chopper looks down through

      whispy clouds at a broad wheat field, golden in color. As the clouds part the

      crop circle laid into the wheat is exposed. The wheat has been bent at the

      nodes, not broken. Some grasshoppers are hopping across the bent wheat, trying

      to avoid the approach of the noisy chopper.

      A crop circle investigator is sitting next to the pilot of a helicopter. The

      investigator has a video camera up to his face, but has pulled this away from

      his face in order to speak. He has a distinct British clip. Through the

      chopper window the wisps of clouds are still clearing in the early morning

      light. The investigator says,

      What are they trying to tell us?

      The pilot says something almost unintelligible, given the background noise of

      the chopper, and the investigator responds.

      Yes, yes, overnight. . . There’s not a foot print down

      there. We’re the first here. . . This is huge!

      10

      _______________________________

      Red and Martha are sitting on the porch swing just after dusk. It is summer

      and the night is filled with the thrumming sound of singing insects. Red has

      his elbow on the armrest and is holding a can of beer, one foot resting on the

      knee of his other leg. Martha is adjusting her hairpins, and sighs by way of

      saying that at last the end of day has arrived and she can rest as she drops

      her hands into her lap and looks out on the view. Martha points to the horizon

      at her left, at a Half Moon rising.

      Dad, has the Moon ever come up over there? It’s always

      more . . over there . .

      Martha gestures toward the right, more centered in the view from the porch

      swing. Red says,

      Been that way lately . . but not in all my years

      here, no. Damned peculiar.

      Big Tom’s muffled voice comes from within the house, but we can barely hear

      what he is saying.

      . . bath night, kids . .

      Martha springs up and dashes off, with Red not able to catch her with his free

      hand as he gropes to catch her arm.

      Rest awhile. Martha!

      Martha throws a comment over her shoulder on her way into the house.

      He always forgets their ears . .

      Red smiles affectionately at the backside of his hard-working daughter, as

      though he should have known better than to stop her. His gaze returns to the

      rising moon while his face gets somber.

      What’s chasing you lately?

      Red sighs, as though to say that there is something amiss, but he doesn’t know

      exactly what it is.

      11

      -Theories-

      Zack Maya, the editor of the Daily News, moves slowly around his crowded

      office. His baggy pants, wrinkled around the seat and sagging unevenly below

      the knee announcing without fanfare the editor's priorities. The Daily is

      successful, but the margin, as with all products that depend upon the fickle

      public, required a nervous eye. Maya found he had to be a politician more

      often than a reporter, and where this did not set well with his perfunctory

      personality, he had learned to accept this as a fact of life. Some news came

      with a price, when printed.

      Maya eases into his worn leather chair, flipping the pages of a story laid on

      his chair seat with barely time enough to grasp their meaning. Glancing up

      through his bifocals at Danny, who has been watching from his desk and has

      come to lean in the doorway, the editor is brief and to the point. Maya points

      a finger at Danny.

      This won't fly. I won’t print the story. He has no

      proof! It’s just a crazy idea. Can I remind you that

      you write for a conservative newspaper? You could

      start a panic with this stuff.

      Danny frowns and slips into a wooden chair in front of the editor’s desk - the

      defendant's chair, not meant to be comfortable. Danny is listening but we can

      see he's not buying this explanation. Maya continues,

      Who's going to pay the merchants for damages, for the

      riot that this might cause?

      Danny protests.

      It’s a great article. The guy impressed me, and he had

      plenty of sources. We’ve done documentaries before,

      asteroids slinging by and all. I, I didn’t think this

      was any different.

      Maya just shakes his head, looking unblinkingly across the desk at Danny,

      peering up over his bifocals.

      That was maybe, this isn't saying maybe. I can’t print

      this.

      Maya tosses the story across his desk to Danny, settling back into his chair.

      You're not sitting in my chair, Danny, and I'm telling

      you, this won't fly.

      Danny scoops up the story, his mouth opening and closing as he processes and

      rejects arguments, blinks twice, and slowly rises and walks out the door

      without a comment. Outside the editor's office he stops and is lost in

      thought, his face smooth, showing no emotion. Finally, under his breath.

      12

      Bull shit.

      Danny grabs his jacket and strides out of the office.

      _______________________________

      The wooded campus at Brandon University backs up into the foothills of the

      Appalachian Mountains, crisscrossed with trails worn smooth by the pounding

      feet of jogging students and faculty. For those familiar with the maze, the

      trails led to treasures in the woods known to few. Isaac is fishing with his

      cap down, back against a tree along the river. Isaac casts a fishing line when

      a phone rings. He reaches into his fishing bag, pulls out a phone and

      answers.

      Danny is leaning against the edge of his desk, phone in hand.

      Yes Professor Isaac, this is Danny at the paper. ..

      Well, I want to do the story but my editor says it’s

      crackpot stuff and The Daily is a newspaper of

      integrity .. But I know we’ve done stuff like this

      before. Do you happen to know why he won't publish the

      story? .. I know the place. I’ll be right there.

      _______________________________

      Isaac is fishing with his cap down, back against a tree along the

      river. When Danny arrives, in jeans, he is breathing heavily from the climb.

      He fishes a notebook out of an inside pocket within his lightweight jacket,

      and flips the pages, having tucked a pencil stub momentarily behind his right

      ear. During their conversation, Danny is alternating between believing what

      Isaac is saying and wanting to deny as to take it seriously is to be

      frightened, so he is coming up with plausible explanations for what Isaac is

      laying out. Isaac is familiar with this type of reaction and counters this by

      just laying out the facts until they are overwhelming.

      Danny . . a friend of mine at a large observatory has

      been tracking an incoming object, but has been told to

      keep mum about it if he knows what's good for him.

      Says this has been going on for over a decade, what's

      reported to be Planet X for many years. It comes

      through the Solar System every 3,600 years or so and

      pretty well tears up the Earth. Well, that's the

      rogue planet I was telling you about. It’s real! It’s

      inbound! And none of us is ready for it, that's fo
    r

      damn sure. And that's precisely why the government

      doesn't want the public to know about it. They're not

      ready for it either.

      13

      Danny had been expecting this. The editor rejected his story too quickly,

      barely reading it.

      Who’s asking him to keep quiet and why?

      Isaac lifts his pole and flips the line out into the shallows again before

      answering. Danny is relieved to be having a discussion over the issues, but is

      nonetheless taking this all in but not yet willing to buy it. Isaac says,

      The government doesn't want the public to know about

      it. They're not ready for it, and they don’t know

      what to tell people. So they lean on people to keep it

      quiet. Observatories don’t come cheap, they’re built

      by big money. Universities get government grants. And

      the government can always come in and say it’s a

      national security issue.

      Danny is confused. Why is a passing planet special?

      National security, like, don’t cause panic? They

      didn’t do that for the Near Earth Asteroid scares,

      they were all over the news, TV and everything. How is

      this different?

      Isaac explains - those on top fear losing the upper hand.

      These asteroids either wipe life out or pass by, black

      or white, but this monster passes by and causes a pole

      shift, the globe survives, but civilization is pretty

      much wiped out, crashes. That’s what happened during

      the time of Moses. Egypt lost their slaves, they

      walked away, and Egypt was in chaos for centuries.

      This is what they’re really worried about. They’re

      worried about the working man questioning their

      masters, gaining the upper hand. They’re worried about

      mob rule.

      Danny is beginning to connect the dots.

      They think it’s going to happen? This thing is coming?

      For sure, this is for sure? Boy, that explains Maya

      jumping on me. It was like somebody had leaned on him,

      like he knew more about it than he was telling me.

      It’s not just a theory, says Isaac.

      My friend says they were looking for it, they found it

      and now they're tracking it.

      An astonished Danny says,

      They found it? They found it? Where’d they find it?

      Isaac gives the long suppressed history, the discovery of Planet X in 1983.

      14

      In 1983, they were sending up infrared cameras above

      the clouds, in those days they didn’t have the Hubble,

      and were looking toward Orion because astronomers have

      known there’s something out there, something pulling

      comets and planets in that direction, some

      gravitational force, and by gum, they found it. Scared

      the heck out of them, and it hit the papers before

      they could squelch it. Was in the Washington Post,

      front page, in 1983.

      But Danny is still missing the point.

      Damn! But I don’t understand why mob violence will

      ensue. I mean, so this thing passes. Why would

      civilizations crash?

      Isaac points to the extent of devastation that accompanies a pole shift.

      It doesn’t just pass. Take a look at mountain

      building, fresh mountains like the Rockies or the

      Himalayas. If all we’re having is a few quakes now and

      then, what would drive those mountains thousands of

      feet in the air? What force would overcome the

      resistance?

      Isaac glances sideways at Danny, gauging his skepticism to be slight. Like

      most young people, he is loath to let go of his idealism, not believing the

      government would lie to the people. Isaac is familiar with this resistance

      and these arguments, and takes them in stride. Danny says,

      Uh, well quakes drop buildings, and ..

      Isaac quickly interrupts,

      That’s from the shaking.

      Isaac is pondering a mountain building scene, where flat rock snaps and starts

      to angle upward at a 45 degree angle, climbing over foothills nearby, climbing

      up into the sky to the height of a Mt Everest. He says,

      I’m talking about picking up a mountain and driving it

      up, up, thousands of feet. Whole mountain ranges, up.

      And look at the issue of Ice Ages and wandering poles!

      We just don’t get it, we don’t get it! You know the

      last Ice Age had ice over France, 11,000 years ago or

      so, but at the same time the grasslands of Siberia

      were warm and lush! Now, what did the Sun do there,

      blink on for Siberia, and off for France?

      Isaac pulls his line in and slings it back out again, both men quiet for a

      moment. He says,

      It's going to be a pretty rough ride, son.

      15

      Isaac is envisioning a mammoth is standing in grasslands, snow and howling

      winds descending. The mammoth is backing away from the direction of the winds,

      trunk high as though trying to defend itself, eyes crazed with fear at the

      maelstrom descending. The end of the trunk has grass with buttercups in it, as

      though this were a sudden event, mid-munch for the mammoth.

      Mammoths were found flash frozen in Siberia, been

      frozen like that for thousands of years, with

      buttercups in their stomach. Buttercups, where there

      isn't a blade of grass for hundreds of miles, now.

      The Earth turned under them, son, and moved them to a

      polar zone. They weren't the only species to go

      extinct for no obvious reason. They've been dozens.

      Playing the role of protester, Danny is still trying to lay out arguments.

      Danny’s eyes are shifting from side to side as he rapidly searches for

      rational explanations. Danny is chewing his lower lip slightly but is clearly

      running out of arguments. Finally, he says, weakly.

      Well, the ice formed over France because, uh, um ..

      Isaac keeps up the pressure.

      Makes no sense! Potsdam University documented that the

      axis of the world shifted, pulling Germany South,

      during the Jewish Exodus. The crust moved. The crust

      moved! Pull that back and you’ve got Greenland over

      where the N Pole is now. Got it? The crust moves, and

      during that last Ice Age, France was the N Pole,

      that’s why it was frozen! We don’t have wandering

      poles, we’ve got a wandering crust.

      Isaac flips his line out into the river again, easing back against the tree

      trunk, knowing the argument has been won. Danny, now almost relaxed as he

      realizes he has lost the argument, is giving in, but is reluctant to admit

      defeat to someone in his father's generation. He says,

      Is that why the weather's gone nuts and the compasses

      don't ever seem to work right anymore?

      Isaac is still not done laying out his evidence, and has no intention of

      laying off.

      And then there's the tidal waves, whale bones found on

      hills 400-500 feet above sea level in Ontario. In

      Sicily there's bone piles in the rock crevices that

      include just about every animal in Europe and Africa,

      all broken into bits as though the waves carried them

      there and smashed them into bits against the rocks.

      Danny protests. Surely there is another explanation for tidal wav
    es in our

      past.

      16

      So maybe a meteor fell, like what killed the

      dinosaurs, fell in the ocean and caused a giant tidal

      wave.

      But Isaac has more.

      Chief Mountain in Montana took an 8 mile trip over the

      plains, and the Alps have moved hundreds of miles

      overland. We're talking about slabs of rock thousand

      of feet thick. What force is moving those mountains?

      Danny tries proferring the standard explanation for massive geological changes

      in the Earth's past.

      Oh, that happened millions of years ago.

      But as with all the other protestations, Isaac has the trump card.

      Niagra Falls is running in a channel that's less than

      4,000 years old, son, and several lakes on the West

      Coast have existed for only about 3,500 years. Sound

      familiar? Scientists have known for some time that

      the ocean level dropped 20 feet world wide,

      simultaneously, guess when - 3,000-4,000 years ago.

      Finally, Danny submits.

      Holy cow! This is big! Why wouldn’t they let this out?

      They warn people about floods, about hurricanes, stock

      up for the storm, and all. How is this any different?

      Having reached the end of the game, the contest between generations put aside,

      Isaac admits his own weakness, shows his softer side to Danny, as the argument

      is dropped and has become a discussion. He says,

      Put yourself in the shoes of the people in charge,

      Danny, and look at the list of your worries. One,

      there’s no way after the crust moves and all the

      cities are dust to house and feed the citizens. So

      they get into thinking about saving a select few, and

      the few always includes them, of course. They’ve built

      bunkers, you can be sure, and stocked them well, and

      the heck with the taxpayer. This is why that story

      gets resisted. You can believe they’ve got their

      guards at the newspapers watching for it. Gets shot

     


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