The Cloud
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As prophecy, it is Force Majeure, to state one day Man will be arrayed shoulder to shoulder to face a tribunal of a natural justice. Warnings have been dire this century in literary Jeremiads such as George Orwells Animal Farm, and others, to scarify the conscience of Man, its criminal sordidness, and loutish life of murderer. A novelized framework of a plot, to stir an otherwise sanguine reader.
The plot of the Cloud involves the daily Latin and South American drug wars, massacres, willful wars by despots and legal bandits in fiendish power plays. A void of human law.
Protesters hit the street in civil disobedience who no longer see a political representation in civil government.
Conditions in the world at large are hopeless until the Cloud appears, disguised as an asteroid, actually a host of the billions of unwanted babies, mauled, maimed and slaughtered in the abattoir of sanctioned clinics. The Cloud, charges man with condemnation and extinction if man does not redeem his soul. A trial is in order on the behavior of an ignoble animal. Mans fate lies in the lap of an animal tribunal.
An animal court will judge whether Man deserves a merciful reprieve, a chance to better himself. A home, where Man will not be Wolf to Man and no poisonous spiritless ideologies will rule the people. The children have never understood abandonment to medical waste cans; have a lingering credulous mayhap faith in love of parenthood.
If Man fails the demands of the loveless, lovelorn infants of the Cloud, who will judge? And what judgment? If Orwell, or Dean Swift spot a tear of grace in the docile eyes of a Dalmation firehouse or carriage house, then so be it. Let the gavel fall! If magical solutions, so?
Frank Palescandolo
December 1, 2011
Copyright
Frank Palescandolo
Frank Palescandolo The best way to describe Frank Palescandolo as a writer is to drawl he is a wagon master of literary train, that hitches novels, memoirs, cookbooks, travel, plays, biography, poems, translations into a roundup of genres published or produced on stage, or in a movie. Born and bred in Brooklyn, public schools, Columbia College, Criminologist.
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The Cloud - Frank Palescandolo
The Asteroid
Christopher Christopherson is longer than his name. He is six foot three, a long tanned face grizzled by high altitude air, frosty fair hair worn lengthy across his broad back, thick alpaca jacket, and leather pants. He was sitting at his desk at the open window with a view of the observatory on the peak of this mountain in Bolivia. His eyes were red rimmed by sighting the sky through the giant telescope at a twelve hour stretch, it was sunrise. He was drinking his third glass of Bolivian beer with two leaves of fresh cocaine. He could breathe as well as the natives with a concoction of leaves or chewed raw. It was better than the rancid alcoholic beer. The observatory appeared tilted on the enormous height of the peak, like a huge insect resting after a flight in the frigid night, eye opening as cupped as Venus Fly Trap was closed, and the telescope retracted for once again a probable elusive observation. Maybe he should have another beer and a handful of coca to celebrate his quest, or mission for an unnamed asteroid with erratic orbit, a concern of astronomers of the world.
The mass of the mountain was rough hewn, that of a stone carved God which might resent the steel gantry of the scope mechanism. Natives did not care, the few jobs of the observatory welcome, beside they had coca. Chris had no Gods. He was constantly reminded of his present consort, Isabella Cordova, a former chanteuse of Brazil’s cabarets and cafe chantant where she sang Portuguese love songs, she almost joined a convent after a religious crisis about which he did not question. She was thirty-five, a year younger than Chris, a hefty figure of a woman but stil shapely. Her abundant hair, the color of mahogany was bound by a variety of combs. Her neck was adorned by a silver crucifix. Her eyes large and troubled, were in color secretly crying. She was his housekeeper, helping hand, cook and any hour servant. Despite, the late hour, she was sitting at his feet waiting for his next command. Chris was not unkind to think her utterly jaded. He patted Isabella on her head and demanded a cigar which she already had on hand. He lit it and leaned back. Coca and the beer kicked in, and he felt more sanguine after a disappointing observation all night long.
Chris remained in the control room of the scope in his nightly nocturne with the elusive asteroid, hoping for a sighting from the highest peak of the Andes, the glacier Chacaltya, absent minded, distracted to the point of not caring for anything else in his life. Only gradually he became aware that he and the scope had been abandoned by the staff and help by warnings from administrators and police of the advance of the rebels in the plains and valleys below the glacier. Perhaps, the scope might be an eventual target, heaven knows why. He saw from his vantage point departures of native refugees and the emptied villages. So, he was alone with his parrot, Luis. Pleasurable to him, he, the asteroid, and Luis claimed it as private possession, without gabbling talk.
The air, even in summer, sparkled with snow crystals high above most living things. He perched at seventeen thousand feet, half the size of Everest. High! Empyrean heights, Godlike, his breath rarified, his thoughts too, his imagination extraterrestrial, his dark polarized glasses all astral against the blue glaze of the glacier sight. What happened below him on a plain was ineffective to ever his purpose on the scope. The asteroid was his vacation on a peak that almost surmounted stars.
Alone, time to Chris was a heavy liquid in which he was immersed. It flowed so slowly, day and night, it hung about him like a long woolen cassock. He moved liquidly from room to console, yet whatever he timed was subject to a dozen clocks of all sizes on the walls, atomic, digital, otherwise, his life’s rhythm was the ticking of a grandfather clock. But his mind was alert, so he thought he read all the signals correctly and recorded his observation with accuracy. This tempo did not impede his memory, it framed and froze samples about Montana and his family.
As a kid, his head was in the stars. From the ranch porch that was round, a rotunda, he had a three hundred and sixty degree view. The sky was often free of cumuli and the rolling hills were like a proscenium to a linen-like scrim, all step stones to a festival of stars. Only dawn with its percolating light diminished the spectacle like a Deus Ex Machina to close a performance.
Those Incan eyes that peered at him through the carved effigies! Those eyeballs tilted higher to follow the flight of a condor, their leathery cheeks like soles of battered feet, a downward look not in any abeyance, but to avoid the next cliff, and the lining of the eyes, a circle of cocaine energy. This was carved stone that fitted the arduous life of the Andes. The degraded dialects still toothlessly mumbled the grandeur of the Incan Empire.
So, after a three year tour of the astronomical sites of the world, observations lastly at the observatory in Bolivia, he had been commissioned by the United States Government and the Advance Institute of Astrophysics at Princeton, to observe, report and plot the activity and orbits of asteroids. He had been appointed because for twenty of his thirty five years he had been a leading buff of asteroids, publishing papers describing hundreds of these vagrants in space. Many raced space leaving no sign of predictive destination as they probably expunged themselves in outer space. Whenever he tagged on to one of these hurtling boulders, he predestined its fiery destiny, but there was one asteroid that eluded his constant detection, its idiosyncrasy, for the last three years it occupied his devoted attention. Its vagaries perplexed him, often veering dangerously close to earth then disappearing in luminous areas of deeper distances. Streaking not with the velocity of other asteroids, it sometimes appeared to float. His only dubious guess was that it was a freak , a sport of the universe, and not an asteroid. A comet was ruled out, there was no tail, no brilliance at all, only a dusk grayness, snug-like, in his spectrum.
When he tried to explain in non-scientific terms his experience with the mysterious object, he was told he was an occultist, too many years mountain climbing and breathing the air of high altitudes had boggled his mind. He dared them to observe the object, and they did, were puzzled and happily left the study to him. A queer object in space in the pure view of a quirky astronomer, they openly deserved each other. Deployed for the last three years by the Institute in England, Australia, South Africa, China, and New Zealand, he spent his days and nights in the solitary cockpit of a giant telescope marking the course of the asteroid-like object, through the heavens, it coursed with sudden departures and appearances regardless of where he observed it from. He sighted it last week at dusk, then it appeared to evaporate. He was now thinking it had exploded, or gravitated to dust and ashes. After three years of abstruse contact, he was kind of forlorn, as if he had mistepped a companion on a voyage.
His eyes were teary, his legs cramped against the platform, his chest ached against the eyepiece of the lens. He kept wiping the eyepiece because he could not believe the gyration of the object tonight, it was like a firework out of control, at times it veered close to the earth then zoomed away scooting through the Milky Way and galaxies, metric metal and stone or a lethal plasma, a methane explosion, a miasma of suffocating and eliminating of billions on earth, and possibly extinction of all species? Including man! Of course, his colleagues thought he was a bit mad as was expected of a gifted sky watcher, when Chris once said that he