Date: Sun, 12 Feb 2006 14:59:50 EST
From: PointGuardMo@aol.com
Subject: The SandLot Investment Company Part C

Standard Disclaimer:  This is a mostly fictional portrayal based on mostly
purely coincidental  artistic license taken with a factual accounting of some
brief events that may  involve potentially explicit language and possibly
graphic gay sex. If you are  underage and/or offended by such, please exit now.
You can email your  critique to me at _PointGuardMo@AOL.com_
(mailto:PointGuardMo@AOL.com)
Reader's Comments from  Second Posting:

*  *  *     *  *  *

Your  lead in had me wondering what was going on. T'was so non-nifty! Then
when you  got into the meat of the story, I just read in amazement! I guess in
my age slot  [up there] i have become a bit on the jaded side. I still have a
tough time with  jimmy carter, since he scared the hell out of me while he
filled the chair at  the White House. If only what you write could come to
fruition but one can only  hope. {no holding of breath]. You've set the bar
high for the other nifty  writers, congrats and will be waiting for the
"rest of the story". - A fan,  jim

*  *  *     *  *  *

It is people with a capability such as yours that keep me focused. The
power in your writing and your use of our somewhat confusing language is
astonishing.  True visionaries must be few and far between.  People can't
handle too much truth in a dose. Just the fact that this incredible tale is
yours clues me into the wonder you must be! Bravo! Love Transcends. -
dvldog


*  *  *     *  *  *
This  is such an Excellent & Unique tale! You have touched me in so many
ways. I  have been reminded of my moral obligation to everyone! Thank you for
sharing  your Great spirit here. I am eagerly hoping there is more to  come.
-  Gary ( Ontario, Canada )


*  *  *     *  *  *

I  READ THE SECOND INSTALLMENT OF SANDLOT THIS A.M. AT ABOUT 10:00.  IT'S NOW
 6:08 P.M. AND I AM STILL IN AWE OF THE PEOPLE AND EVENTS IN THE STORY.  I
WAS ACTUALLY SOBBING TO THE POINT I HAD TO STOP AND COMPOSE MYSELF TO BE ABLE
TO  FINISH THE STORY.  I'VE NEVER BEEN SO MOVED BY A STORY!  I DO HOPE IT  IS
ALL FICTIONAL FOR THE SAKE OF THE PEOPLE INVOLVED IN THE STORY.  I HOPE  YOU
CONTINUE TO ADD MORE INSTALLMENTS!  YOU DEFINITELY HAVE A GIFT IN  WRITING.  I
HOPE YOU HAVE MOVED OTHER PEOPLE TO PRAY EVEN MORE FOR THOSE  LESS FORTUNATE
SOULS HERE ON EARTH TOO, AS YOU HAVE ME.  I PRAY A  LOT FOR OTHERS AND THEIR
NEEDS AND GIVE SOME  TO CHARITIES BUT I REALIZE NOW I CAN DO MORE!!  THANKS!! MAY
GOD BLESS  YOU AND ALL YOU CARE ABOUT. -- BEEZERBOY


*  *  *     *  *  *
Extraordinary.   I have never seen the case for man's responsibility for his
fellow man put so  powerfully, except for John Donne's words, "The bell doth
toll for thee."   Beautiful work.  I cried with the students.  And I still ask
myself  why I am not doing more for others. - ciao, Bill


*  *  *     *  *  *
You  did it again!  I sat with tears running down my face making it very
difficult to keep reading. I wonder how you are going move Kahlid forward. Chris
and Trey are too young too adopt him yet he belongs in their lives. Thank you
 for the power of your words. - Hugs, Eric


*  *  *     *  *  *
To  sum it up in one simple three letter word....  WOW! -- Jim  A.


*  *  *     *  *  *
What  a wonderful story. It's sad that that not all of those figures you
shared are  not fiction. And you don't have to go far to find the hunger. I'm
involved with  a regional food bank here in the SW Missouri  and the demand just
keeps growing. Hope there will be more of this very  interesting story. - Randy


*  *  *     *  *  *

SandLot Investment  Company
Part  IV
by
Christopher Robin
Chapter 7
There were a dozen well dressed men  sitting around the large, rectangularly
shaped, polished oak table there in that  sixth floor conference room. On the
glassy-looking table in front of each was a  single beige folder, and stamped
on the jacket of the folder in large bold red  lettering were the words, "NSA
CLASSIFIED: TOP SECRET".
"Gentlemen, since we stumbled across  this kid about a year ago, we've been
keeping close tabs on him," said the well  groomed white haired man, sitting
at the end of the table. "We believe things  are getting to the point where we
have to act."
"Has the National Security  Administration found any more of those writings
floating around?" asked a  spectacle-wearing man seated midway down the left
side of the grand table from  the first speaker.
"Yes. In fact, the most recent  material, supplied to our Virginia  Beach
analysts from the NSA, have our guys convinced he's  going to publish a document
that will spell out the theory those people hold in  such a way as it could
cause us, potentially, some very grave  problems."
"Come on," disbelievingly said another  man, puffing on a long cigar,
sitting there, across from the second speaker, in  the elegant conference room,
there just two blocks down from Pennsylvania  Avenue, in Washington, D.C. "We're
supposed to be a think tank, not some  mindless worry warts.  He's a kid,  for
Pete's sake, and he's posting this stuff on some off-the-wall internet site
that not many people ever heard of in the first  place."
"The gentleman should be reminded that  three-quarters of a century ago,
another obscure young man wrote a book while he  was in prison that, for a time,
turned the world upside down.  Another wrote from an apartment in  London that
basically gave us the birth of communism.  Gandhi was an unknown young man
who  created upheaval in South  Africa before returning to his native India
where he preceded to precipitate the fall  of the British Empire. When an idea
that has  appeal to a sizeable slice of the people hits the streets, it's like a
wildfire,  you'll have a major headache trying to get it contained," argued
the well  groomed white haired man, sitting at the end of the table. "Now, I don
't think  we have to worry about a world war or anything like that, but the
potential  disruption in global commerce and perhaps the change in wealth
distribution  isn't something our donors want to even remotely sense as a
possibility." The  man was becoming aggravated.
"What you're saying, Reverend," said  another man, from near the other end
of the table, "is that we need to come up  with a plan to discredit this kid,
his writings and anybody associated with  him?"
"No. I think we have to keep it  quite.  We need to get rid of this  problem,
completely. We need it never to have existed. Do you  understand?"
"Maybe I'm missing something here,  "said the youngest looking man sitting
there at the table, in his handsomely  tailor-made navy blue suit, just beside
the second speaker. "I still don't see  the threat nearly as serious as our
friend, the Reverend here, and his  colleagues.  I'm wondering if  someone can
explain to me what this, I guess, mostly tedious story, on some  porno site,
mind you, has to do with the security of the  empire?"
"This kid is really rather young,"  said the Reverend. "He has a whole
lifetime ahead of him.  He's a dreamer.  He believes he can play a part in
changing the world.  He's already  following in his damnable uncles footsteps, only he
's no where near as discreet  as the older man was.  We were able  to take
care of that problem with out any questions ever being raised.  This kid,
though, well, he is much more  bold than his benefactor. This boy is a natural born
leader.  People flock to him; they listen to what  he has to say; they jump on
board any bandwagon he's leading. Now, he's pretty  careful about not
claiming any special insights but we believe he sees things  we'd just as soon he
not see, and can in no way, shape, or form, permit the  possibility that he'll
start running around the world preaching sermons that  could jeopardize the
very foundation of not just the infrastructure of religion,  but perhaps the
underpinnings of our entire nation and the nations of our  closest allies as well."

"Reverend, I think you and your  preaching colleagues are over-reacting,"
said the younger man. "I mean, we've  been called bad names by millions of
people and there's not really been any  dramatic adverse effect, has there? I
mean, anti-Imperialism is common  throughout Asia, Europe, all over the world,
even here at home.  I don't see how  it's inhibited, even remotely, anything we'
ve tried to  do."
"Those millions of people, young man,"  said the Reverend, looking sternly
at his colleague, "are growing in numbers  everyday and they're just ripe for
a leader.  This kid could, if left unchecked, very  easily, and doubtless,
likely will, turn our world upside down in an  irreversible way.  We've studied
his  multiphasic personality inventory and what is statistically most probably
to be  the predominate psychological reaction from quite a vast number in our
populations. All our models are very clear on this; There will be growing
upheaval if he continues in his current pursuits.  It is almost a certainty,
strike that;  It is an unquestionable certainty, he will do just that. Our
analysts are  convinced beyond a reasonable margin of error. He's committed. He's a
 fanatic.   This is the  consensus of my brethren across the majority of all
our leading denominations as  well, and I'm stating our position quite
clearly.  He must disappear. The sooner the  better."
"Reverend, I've read this stuff," said  the younger man, tapping the
book-thick folder on the table there in front of  him. "I think it's mostly just
mildly entertaining, albeit, not too  sophisticated.  I agree that he  seems to
have some, at best, novel powers of reasoning, but I just don't see how  this,
I guess, mostly fantasy love story is such a threat. Why in the world  should
it matter, if a few hundred, even thousands of people, start doing more  good
deeds, even contributing more to others doing good deeds? I just don't get  it
and what's more, neither does the President. So tell me something I don't
know, because as it stands right now, neither the White House nor the
Vice-President's office are prepared to sanction what you're  suggesting."
"Mr. Gibbons, your boss and his  sidekick are in office because we put them
there. Don't forget that.  Their replacements will be men of our  choosing as
well. So, whether you or the Administration sanctions what we decide  here, is
not my paramount concern.  You can tell your boss that our allies in the c
ongress can remove him and  his associate any time we so request," the Reverend
was glaring at the young  man.
Mr. Gibbons raised his hands in self  defense, "I'm just asking for
something to take back with me.  I was told I needed to come back with a  damn good
reason why our agents should have to eliminate another one of your  imagined, I'
m sorry, I mean, another person your coalition has determined to be  a
catastrophic threat to the empire."
"Mr. Gibbons, you have the folder on  this boy's uncle.  You know he  seeded
an organization that he hoped would one day turn the entire world's
financial infrastructure on its head. He developed a plan and put it into  action. His
plan was achieving tremendous success. This young man, this boy, is
continuing that plan, even as we sit here, not doing anything.  What's more, we've
confirmed that his  uncle kept a detailed written account of all his plans, his
thoughts and his  dreams for basically putting most of us, and especially our
donors, out of  business, or at least he thought we were not the type of
people that should be  running our respective organizations.  We had some occasions
to do research by getting close to some of his  associates and most of that,
you and the Administration have already seen. What  we've most recently
learned, you and I, is that he kept this record, a journal,  the kid called it, that'
s over a hundred volumes.  We believe, in those volumes, this kid  is going
to find the answer to the question he seems to pursue with all his  efforts."
"What's the  question?"
"Why things are the way they  are."
"That doesn't sound that harmful to  me.  What's the  catch?"
"Mr. Gibbons, I'm told you were in the  top 5 in your class at Yale.  What
part of this situation, specifically, are you having difficulty  grasping?"
"Well, I figure everybody and his  brother ask questions like that. Hell, I'
ve often asked myself sometimes why  things are the way they are.  What's  the
harm in that?"
"What answer did you come up  with?"
"Well, I guess I thought there were  mostly a million different answers, so
eventually, I guess I just came to accept  that things are the way they are,
and there's not much you can do about  it."
"Exactly. That's the right answer.  Everybody comes to that conclusion
sooner or later.  That's the way things work. It's the way  things have always
worked.  When  someone gets the idea that there's another answer, we have a
situation.  Anytime, and every time, in the history  of the world that we have had
a situation, it's never been good. Sometimes,  we've fought wars because of
different answers.  Sometimes there been non-violent  revolutions, not always
turning out the way we'd prefer. This kid's uncle didn't  settle for the right
answer either, though he was mostly discreet when he came  up with the real
answer.  This kid  won't be as discreet. We're convinced of that."
"What's the real  answer?"
"Mr. Gibbons, you're wasting our time  here with all these questions. We've
collectively made our decision. You work  directly for the President. Your job
is to function as the liaison between those  of us in this room and your
boss.  I  want to restate our conclusion. The time to act is now, before it's too
late.  Your friends in the Administration are just going to have to trust us
on this.  We know what we're doing. Some of our best minds have spent weeks and
weeks  modeling different scenarios and I can assure you, not only were we
frightened  with the results, so were our donors, the same donors that put the
members of  your party into their public offices.  Do I make myself clear?"
finished the Reverend, the force in his voice  drawing the acute focus of every
man seated at that pricey conference  table.
Mr. Gibbons shrugged, "I'll pass the  word when I get back."
The meeting broke up and the men left  the conference room, chatting among
themselves.  Bart Gibbons eyed the departing backs of  his curious conspirators
with a suspicious eye, wandering how his boss could  have ever got mixed up
with such a lunatic group. He walked out the door, took  the elevator down to
the garage and found his car.  Getting into the Porsche, he started the  engine
and backed out of the parking space.  He stopped.  A frown covered his face.
What's the Real answer?  He sat there in his car for a few  moments trying to
determine what the hell that was all about.  Another car coming up behind him
forced  him from his contemplation and he shifted the gears and pulled away,
heading in  the direction of the exit.

*  *  *     *  *  *
Chapter  8
It was a three day  weekend and the football team had a bye week, so it had
been decided that  stretching the weekend by a day and a few hours would work
just fine for certain  high priority plans that had been looking for a window
on the  calendar.
Trey descended the stairs leading from  the yacht's upper deck to the
spacious salon below.  He crossed to the door opening to the  passageway for the
staterooms.  He  gently tapped before slowly opening the door to the owner's
suite. "You coming  topside?" he asked Chris, walking towards the bronzed boy
laying there in his  white cotton briefs, now looking up from the book he was
reading.
"How far are we out?" asked  Chris.
"Alan expects to drop anchor in about  forty minutes.  You should come up  to
the aft deck. Gigi has laid out an awesome spread. I think her plan is to
feed us enough so we don't have to eat for the entire three days we're on the
island. She's got Barbadian chicken skewers, Caribbean jerk pork chops, garlic
 Cajun ribs, Grecian pork tenderloin, Cajun grilled corn, and so much other
stuff  that I figure we could stop in Freeport and feed half the  city."
"You been sampling the eats?" teased  Chris, noticing the smudge just to the
right side of Trey's  mouth.
Trey licked his lips, reaching just a  bit further and finding the errant
drop; his eyes went wide and he wowed, "She  made this incredible watermelon
salsa for an appetizer. You have just got to  taste this. Come on," he said,
coming to the side of the bed, reaching and  grasping the blond boy's arm, pulling
him towards the  edge.
Chris rolled his arm free from Trey's  grasp, locked his own right hand
firmly onto the outstretched arm of his friend,  added an additional grasp from his
left hand and yanked the brown haired boy  onto the king sized bed.  A fierce
 wrestling match ensured, Chris in his briefs, Trey in board shorts, though,
those multi-colored shorts were slowly, but surely, exposing more and more
cheek  as Chris and Trey rolled over and over, Chris tugging at the shorts, Trey
 fighting to keep them on, giggling uncontrollably.
Chris rolled to the top and stopped,  looking down into the eyes of the brown
haired boy wearing the wire frame  glasses, "You're the most beautiful
creature, I ever laid eyes on," he whispered  to the warmly smiling boy lying
beneath him, returning his stare with delight  filling his eyes.
Trey could feel the stiffness, his and  Chris', as the pelvic regions of
their bodies gently, yet firmly, massaged the  other, both contributing to the
effort.
"That was quick," whispered Trey,  grinning in an inviting sort of way.
Chris lowered his face and found the  lips of his friend, his love; he gently
caressed those lips with his own and  then the two were merged with
increasingly aggressive passion as they again  begin to roll over and over, from one
side to the other, of the giant bed, their  entire bodies parallel in their
coupling.
"We're not on the island yet,"  whispered Trey, coming up for air, both boys
stilled locked in their shared  embrace, their hips imparting an expressive
energy into the  other.
"Close enough," whispered Chris, again  melding with abandon to the soft
sweet lips of his precious mate, this lovely  gentleness that he had so deeply
treasured since that first night, those many,  many months ago, there on the
farm, just beside the barn, when he first  experienced the vision and touch of
this angel, crossing time and space to  rescue him there in the peak hour of his
aloneness.

*  *  *     *  *  *
The two boys waved bye to the tender  as Alan Mueller motored back towards
the Sea Stallion, there, gently rocking on  the water in this, the east side
harbor.  Chris led the way as they began the hike into the interior of the island
 and onward toward the cave with the makeshift canopy, their island home they
had  simply come to call "the shelter".  It was located just over
three-quarters of a mile from the sands of this,  the east side harbor beach, and almost
exactly the same distance away from  paradise harbor, their most favored
sands, directly across the island on the  other side.  Chris turned onto the
almost virgin path leading towards the north end of the island and they began  the
climb up the slope that would take the boys to the small clearing in front
of the cave, the clearing which had become their "front yard".
The island was a lush tropical paradise, with a  variety of trees and a wide
dispersion of flora.  It was awash, all year round, in a sea  of color: gold,
yellow, pink, violet, green and many shades of red. The Yellow  Elder, the
Bahamian national flower, blooms on a tree that  often grows as high as 20 feet.
The evergreen stands out because of its clusters  of brilliant yellow,
bell-shaped blossoms. They are about an inch across and two  inches long, with red
stripes lightly etched in the corolla. The little bells  are held in a
five-point calyx, and there are nine to 13 leaflets composing the  odd pinnate leaf.
Just before the blooms flare open, bag-like buds pop noisily  if squeezed,
hence, its common name, "the plopper". There were also orchids, morning glory
bushes,  "monkey tails", "paper flowers", and many others; most having nicknames
easier  to remember than their official designations.  There was also a large
assortment of  trees whose branches were filled with varying and vibrant
shades of tint  decorating this place, privately known as their isle of Eden. The
richness of  colors was breathtaking and the array of fragrances literally
intoxicating,  though the only poisonous plant on the island was the Oleander.
The two boys reached the clearing and  deposited their back packs just inside
the mouth of shallow cave, casting a  quick look around their undisturbed
home, here in this wonderland of nature.  They shed their clothes, and donned
their standard attire for life on Eden, the beautiful and  priceless wash and
wear suits that can only be provided by nature and is unique  to their own
species. The boys left the clearing there in front of the shelter  and headed west
through the jungle towards the area just north of paradise  harbor, the sounds
of the ocean growing louder as they came closer to the Island  shore.
The first stop upon arrival here on  their isle of Eden was always the same,
a reverent visit to  the only Frangipani tree on the island. Planted on this
cliff just north of  paradise harbor, looking out over the brilliantly blue
waters below, the "temple  tree", as it is commonly known, marked the final
earthly resting place of the  grand and majestic man, Robert Alexander. The "
temple tree", the source of  flowers for the popular Hawaiian leis, was surrounded
with a carefully designed  exquisite tropical botanical garden, painstakingly
and lovingly crafted by the  hands of Chris, that first summer, after the
tragic passing of his beloved  uncle. In those long endless days of unbearable
grief, the, then, 16 year-old  boy had brought plants, an awe-inspiring display
of colors, from all over the  island, each specially selected, and replanted
here in this clearing, at just  the right distance apart so that as you walked
around the clearing, on the lush  carpet of green, your senses would be
inundated with first one fragrance then  the next, in a veritable buffet of all the
delights the island had to offer. It  was the most spectacular, the most
brilliantly alive place, Trey had ever, in  his whole life, visited; and he didn't
imagine he would ever find anything else,  anywhere, on the entire planet, to
which it could be  compared.
Chris softly stepped onto the lush  green carpet and slowly paced the short
distance across the grand beauty of  paradise garden, stopping there just at
the base of the flowering temple tree,  his back to Trey, still at the edge of
this clearing. He slowly knelt down; both  knees resting on the soft verdant
flooring, slowly and gracefully bowed his head  until he tenderly kissed the
living earth just in front of the stately base of  the majestic tree.  He held
the kiss  for some time before slowly raising his head to again look upon the
beauty which  is the Frangipani tree.   After  some long moments, the blond boy
gracefully climbed to his feet and gently  walked to the west side of the
peacefully serene garden, there just back from  the edge of the towering cliff; he
lowered himself to the soft luxuriant cushion  of alluring green grass,
pulled his knees to his chest, and sat longingly gazing  out over the luminous
turquoise waters of the harbor below.
Trey slowly made his way over to his  friend's side, carefully, without
invasion,  lowering himself into the same position,  there at the edge of paradise
reunion, as the two boys sat there, side by side,  breathing the exotic
fragrances of the exquisite garden, listening to the  lapping of the waves on the
rocks below, and gazing into the distance, seeing an  indescribable tapestry of
magical dimensions, somewhere on the other side of the  horizon, where the
golden sun in the heavens journeyed on its gradual glide down  into the ocean.
As they sat, peacefully, there at the  edge of the magnificently splendid
garden, staring into the vast expanse between  the turbulent ocean and the clear
blue sky, Trey knew, more than saw, the  occasional tear slowly crawling down
his friend's adorable face. His own  countenance was one of sad empathy as he
joined his dearest companion in his  moments of remembrance, a tribute to a
love that time will never  fade.

*  *  *     *  *  *
Chapter 9
"Ahoy, laddie," greeted the smiling  blond boy to his brown haired friend as
the latter woke to the warm rays of the  morning sun and the smell of
sizzling bacon. The waking boy raised himself up on  his elbows, reached for his
glasses, just off to his left side there, and looked  out beyond the canopy as his
friend busied himself over the small fire pit,  preparing a breakfast for the
two on them.  The ahoy language signaled that this was to be one of those
days when  "Calico Jack" Alexander and "Blackbeard" Simmons would roam the
island and swim  the seas, engaged in mortal combat with one another and in search
of the lost  treasure of the former rulers of these islands, a virtual "
Privateer's Republic"  some 300 years since past.
"Arrrgh," came the mumbled reply from  the not yet fully awake boy
Blackbeard. He crawled from his sleeping bag and  made his way to join his friend, long
since having lost any concerns about  modesty around his "bosom buddy", even
when parading about with the usual  morning wood. He walked up behind Calico
Jack and jutted out just enough to make  contact as his wooden member slid
along the cheek of the blond boy, there, now  scrambling some eggs.
"Blimey!!! Avast ye thar wit `at  belayin' pin `ar I a' be havin' ter
gives ye a taste o' der cat!" exclaimed  Calico Jack.
Blackbeard just grunted and slipped  out of the clearing and down the path a
piece to take care of some  business.
"C'mere, me beauty," said Calico, as  Blackbeard stumbled slowly back into
the "front yard", there in front of the  shelter, "smartly, me lad, smartly,"
Calico urged.
Calico handed Blackbeard a wooden  plate filled with several strips of
freshly fried bacon. "Has ye sum' crackle  fruit wit' `at bacon," said Calico
Jack, dishing the newly woken pirate up a  serving of the scrambled eggs. "'Is'll
jist cos' ye a mere 12 pieces o' eight,"  he said, smiling up at the boy
Blackbeard.
"Aye, an' ye's ken has a nipperkin of  `dis clap of thunder as it's rightful
' yorn share of the booty," Calico said,  pouring a cup of the steaming
coffee for his  friend.
"Aye, me be thankin' ye thar Jack,"  managed the boy Blackbeard, "I were
sorely needin' a splice in me main brace."  The boy Blackbeard studied his
friend for a moment, "Jack, me heartie, `tis `der  sea it is what's callin' ye `
is mornin'? `at it?"
"Arr, `at it is, me matey. `At it is,"  replied Calico Jack.
The game had few rules, actually none  other than the play clock. The first
one of the two that woke on any given day,  mostly always the farm boy, would
signal if the game was on with his morning  greeting. The game would continue,
uninterrupted the full day, only ceasing  after both boys had fallen asleep
sometime late that night, usually in the wee  hours of the morning. They always
stayed in character for the entire day and the  challenge was, among other
things, to outperform the other, in character acting  that is, the pirates role.
Other  things, such as the intimate encounters between two boy buccaneers,
had created  additions to the known pirating vocabulary, not yet recorded, but,
the boys  suspected, must have been the way it used to go, some few hundred
years now  past, when their namesakes had ruthlessly ruled these very same
waters.
"O' Calico be seein' ye've `a-cided to  strike colors," remarked Calico
Jack, noting some dissipation of the woodenness  of Blackbeard's otherwise still
very sizeable belayin'  pin.
"Aye, me lad, `at I did, `at I did,"  replied Blackbeard, "Ain't safe `
round `eer, wit yer cutlass next `o ye thar. I  be lurnin' me mann'rs from `ast
time ye `n me war' sailin'  o'getter."
"Tis' a fine mornin' fer ye `n me ta  find sum loot ta fill aire bung hole
back thar," said Calico, nodding toward the  shallow cave in the rocks behind
the boys.
"Arr, `tis so," agreed Blackbeard, "a  fine mornin', indeedy, me hearty."
And so the game would go, around and  around the island and in the waters
just off shore, as the two boys, laughed,  wrestled, giggled, climbed, swam, ran
and played for hours on end, just as two  best friends should; Calico Jack and
Blackbeard did. There were the gentler  moments during the day and in the
evening when mostly the games involved a  display of their true affections for
each other, a soft sharing of tenderness  that would include polishing a
belaying pin or maybe just hiding it for some  period of time.  It was a game they
thoroughly enjoyed with seemingly inspiration being generated from the  other.
The island, this isle of Eden, was their paradise  and much more.  Robert
Alexander's  spirit was on this island, of that the blond boy was confident, and
he shared  his memories of the favored uncle with his best friend as often as
possible,  something cherished by the brown haired boy in the wire frame
glasses, maybe  because of the closeness that it validated.  This island was also
their playground  and the entertainment and amusement they shared amidst the
pristine tropical  jungle and in the seas offshore, raised their spirits to
levels of ever  increasing altitudes. It was an enchanting paradise; it was an
amusement park  filled with wonder; but mostly, it was home.

*  *  *     *  *  *
Trey walked into Chris' office there  at the Concord  Street offices, went
over to the couch in front of  the fireplace and sat down, just staring into the
flames. Chris looked at his  friend, slowly got up from his desk and walked
slowly over to sit with him.  Trey had just come from a meeting with  some
hospice and clinic workers in the city and he seemed well past  dejected.
"Hey," softly said Chris, gently  reaching for his friend's hand.
Trey turned to look into his friend's  eyes and Chris could see the pain and
tears discoloring the beauty most often  seen there.  "What's wrong?" he
whispered.
"It just seems so hopeless," Trey  managed.
The meeting must not have gone that  well. "Want to talk about it?" asked
Chris.
"So many people are dying; so many  others are going to die; so few people
even care until it's too late. Those guys  trying to help out are unbelievably
overworked, underfunded and grossly  underappreciated. I listened to their
stories and not a single one of them could  say more than two words without
breaking my heart. It's so unbelievably  unbearable. I cried all the way here from
the city," he said. "Over 25 million  people have died from this disease, over
40 million are living with it now and 5  million became infected just this
last year. 46% of all known cases are women.  15-24 year olds account for half
of all new cases worldwide, that's 6,000 each  and every day, just in that age
group. Of the 6.5 million cases in developing  and transitional countries
needing live-saving medicines, only 1 million receive  them."
Chris put his arm around his friend  and pulled his head to rest on his own
shoulder, gently stroking his lovely  brown hair.
Trey went on, "Every story they told  was different and so painful. There's
no easy solution.  Sure, we can help out with some funding.  Maybe even one
day they'll get the full federal funding that has been promised  to them year
after year, but the number of deaths probably won't stop until we  figure out a
way to wake people up. There are so many people dying around the  world from
this disease, it's just unbelievable."
Chris just sat there stroking the  boy's hair as he cried on his shoulder,
trying to unload some of the pain that  he'd been trying to absorb from others.

"Some of their patients are really  cases. I mean, some of the guys at the
meeting were from the clinics in  Florida and  the stories they tell. It's like
they don't ever expect to turn the corner  because there's a certain segment
of the community who doesn't have a clue what  the words responsibility and
gratitude mean," he continued. "How can we win when  some of those we want to
help are working for the other side, infecting others,  knowingly, mind you? I
just can't believe it. I know it's a small percentage but  it's just, I don'
t know; I can't even come close to understanding that. These  workers, at the
Hospices and the clinics, they deal with everything. They're  really amazing,
but it's no easy life, that I can tell for  sure."
"I'm sorry," whispered Chris. "I know  those workers are some of our finest
angels but they have training that helps  them deal with a lot of what you're
saying. I think we might ought to let Clyde  fly out from New  York for
future meetings; he's used to handling this  sort of situation. I mean, you're
just a junior in high school; you can't take  the world on your shoulders."
"Don't you dare! I'm doing this  project. Somehow, someway, I want to come
up with a plan to attack this problem  differently; I mean in a way that will
get us past the rut we're stuck in now  with ever increasing numbers of
infections and same for the number of people  dying. I don't know how I'm going to
do it; but I'm not stopping until I know  the numbers are moving in the right
direction and in a major  way."
Chris continued gently stroking the  boy's hair, "Anything I can do to help,
all you have to do is let me know," he  said softly, laying his cheek on the
top of his friend's  head.
"I don't know what the answer is, not  yet, I don't; but I'm going to keep
working on it. I know there are a lot of  good people working their butts off
and their hearts out trying to deal with  this problem and I also know that an
awful lot of them are frustrated for all  kinds of different reasons.  I
think  somehow we have to come up with a better street level solution. I'm not
sure but  I'm thinking maybe something like attacking the problem from the other
side to  try to stem the tide of infections, like really going hard at those
opposing the  distribution of condoms and increasing dramatically the education
effort,  worldwide. For those who are already infected, the only answer is
providing  care, medicines, counseling, and support, lots of support.  Did you
know that these clinic workers  spend a large chunk of their time just trying
to keep some of their patients  from being booted out of their apartment or
having their utilities cut or trying  to get their Medicaid reinstated, stuff
like that; and these patients are  sometimes homebound, maybe some even bedbound,
kind of in their last weeks and  some heartless landlords and bureaucrats
wants to kick them out on the street or  yank their only means of subsistence or
healthcare. Suicide is a big problem  too. I'm amazed. I guess I wasn't
really expecting to hear all I heard today and  it was like, well, the problem is a
lot bigger than I ever thought; what's more,  it's a lot more complicated
than I ever thought,  too."
"I think there's too much posturing,"  he went on, "Politicians talking a
lot about the problem and not matching their  words with the same sort of
action.  Also, I think the pharmaceutical companies are making a fortune off of
other peoples misery. I'm sorry about this. I know this isn't good but that
makes me angry. I mean really angry.  How could any human being be so heartless,
so greedy? I just don't get  it. I never thought evil could be so, well,
utterly  evil."
"I want you to look at me," said  Chris, raising his head so Trey could look
up. "If you allow your emotions to be  dictated by someone else, you're
giving them control over your life. While what  you say is true, I don't want you
to think it's alright to allow the evil of  others to cause you to drop your
guard against such things. Anger can really  mess you up if you let it get out
of hand. The only way to deal with situations  like you're talking about is to
identify it and find out what if anything is  being done about it. If
something is being done, you can contribute to those  efforts; if nothing is being
done, you can start an effort. The important thing  is not to let the evil of
others give birth to something that is destructive in  you."
"Yeah. I guess you're right; it's not  easy though."
"I know."

*  *  *     *  *  *
Chapter  10
It was Thursday afternoon, Trey had  been working in his office there in the
Concord Street building for some time  when he finally saw Chris come in,
having finished his afternoon session of  football practice. Trey put aside the
purchase orders for the equipment and  supplies he'd been filling out for an
Aids Hospice in the city and crossed the  hall, gently tapping on the still open
door of his friend's  office.
"How'd it  go?"
"Great. I think we're ready. This is  going to be a tough game though.
These guys coming in tomorrow night are a lot bigger than us.  We're going to try
to beat them with our  speed.  I think it should be a good  game but we're
basically a two touchdown underdog."
"Do you have a couple minutes to  spare?" asked the brown haired boy with
the wire frame glasses, transitioning  the subject to the real reason for his
interruption.
"Sure. What's on your mind?" replied  Chris.
"I wanted to talk to you about, you  know, the stuff you've been reading in
those journals and I guess some things  you said yesterday."
"Shoot. What do you want to know? From  you, my pet, I have no secrets," he
said, smiling  mischievously.
"You said, you can see the truth? What  does that mean? I mean, how do you
see the truth? I know about seeing and  perceiving and hearing and
understanding.  What I'm asking is how do you see it? Is it the same as knowing the  truth?"

"Well, seeing, knowing, maybe it's all  just semantics. When I see the
truth, I know it's much larger than anything I  can fully comprehend. It's way
bigger than me.  Now, I don't know that much of it, but  mostly, I believe what I
do know and I can recognize any other part of the truth  if I see it. I just
can't get my comprehension around it all at once, and I  figure if I could,
then I would be just like the great teacher, my teacher now,  at least in
spirit. But anyways, I'm not there. I'm really still a long, long  ways from
getting there."
"How do you recognize  it?"
"It's really simple, easy even. All  you have to do is look for it.  Now  if
you're looking for what you want to find, you probably won't find the
truth.  The truth is not about  rationalization.  You have to  genuinely be willing
to be wrong, really wanting to be shown where you're wrong,  if you are
looking for the truth. It's almost like you have to force yourself to  a higher
plane. I've been working on that. It can be tough, especially when  there are so
many distractions. Plus, the natural thing for most people,  including myself,
is to never want to be wrong. It's human nature.  So we'll accept just about
anything that  masquerades as the truth, if it fits our own designs, and there
's enough stuff  out there floating around that a person can find anything he
or she wants to  find, if that's what they're looking for. I think once you
get the core of the  truth inside you, the rest is a lot easier. The core isn'
t about what you want  to be right for you; it's maybe more like what you
think would be right for  everyone, including you."
"You said your uncle wrote about the  world, saying it was upside down and
that SandLot was being built to help turn  it right side up.  Can you tell me
about that?" asked Trey.
"He wrote that there was a tremendous  propaganda effort in place, had been
in place for quite some time, to fix  people's thoughts on a certain path. He
believed the purpose of that effort was  to keep as many people as possible
enslaved to the fewest number of people and  that the effort was highly
successful mostly because it was so damned  sophisticated. The vast majority of those
involved in the effort don't even  realize what they're really doing. They've
been deceived and they go on,  themselves, deceiving countless others, day
after day. That's the biggest key to  its success. It really is a masterful plan."

"Yeah. Tell me how that  works."
"Remember that little speech of sorts  in the auditorium? The part about what
the World bank said about politicians and  rulers?"
"What part  exactly?"
"They said, that poverty stricken  people `can cause little HARM or BENEFIT
to the politicians and officials who  rule them. Such rulers have therefore
little incentive to pay attention to the  interests of the poor and will cater
instead to the interests of agents more  capable of reciprocation, including
foreign governments, companies, and  tourists.' That's the gist of the quote.
Now in the ancient texts, the writer, who was the best friend of the  great
teacher, phrased it differently. He said, referring to the great empires  of
whatever time, `The kings of the earth committed adultery with her and the
merchants of the earth grew rich from her excessive luxuries.' Now I think  anyone
would agree that adultery is simply being unfaithful to the one, or in  this
case, those, you are obligated to. Since we know from the World Bank that  the
kings, politicians, rulers, whatever name they go by, are selling out the
poor to those with the money, it stands to reason, in my uncle's view and mine,
too, that that's the adultery the ancient writer is taking about. Furthermore,
 the richest empire in the history of all mankind is the only remaining
superpower today, right? So there you have it. Scary,  huh?"
"Very  Scary."
"There's  more."
"I don't know that I can take any  more." said Trey, thinking this line of
thinking is, indeed, really scary. "I  mean, wasn't the government already
tapping peoples phone lines, screening their  emails. They might not be happy if
one of their citizens were talking like  this," he thought to himself.
"Well anyway, there's this book called  the Mystery of Capitalism. Its
author is a consultant, along with many others,  for helping nations to transform
their economies into the capitalist  system.  Now, here's the part that's
scary. Only one country in the whole world ever got capitalism right, right off
the bat.  That country is the model  for all others.  The great  economists
studied that country to see what it did where others came up  short.  Want to
know what it  did?"
"Probably not." Trey laughed but it  was the kind of laughter you experience
when you are seriously nervous, the  worried kind of nervous. He had a
suspicion where this was leading and he  figured these secrets were best left
unspoken.
"The reason that one country was  successful where others failed is because
it required that everything have a  mark before it could be bought or sold.
Same with the buyers and sellers. They had to have a mark. Now, the mark  is
basically any form of identification. It can be like a title document, bill  of
sale, social security card, anything like that. Now this author found out  that
countries not requiring the markings of their properties and peoples didn't
do near as well financially, from a wealth standpoint, as the one that did. He
 called this the mystery of capitalism. He said that when a country would
switch  to the marking model, the value of their properties would skyrocket,
stocks  would increase in value ten-fold or more and become on par with value
methods  employed in that model country.  Now, I'm not naming names, but I think
you can guess which is the model  country. When my uncle first came across this
author, the man was working for  this model country as a consultant, at that
time, helping to implement this  model capitalist society in Egypt."
"I'm sensing you're fixing to tell me  something that's not all that good.
Remember, when we first found those journals  and we were taking and I joked
about you didn't have anything to worry about  because the room probably wasn'
t bugged? Well, I take it back. I'm not joking  anymore. I mean, aren't you
worried that talk like this could get you in  trouble," asked Trey.
"I'm not done," said Chris. "That  ancient writer said that there would
come a time when an empire, same as beast  in apocalyptic language, would rule
the world and all nations would follow that  empire.  He went on to say that the
 empire would require that anyone who bought or sold anything, that person
must  have a mark. I told you it was scary."
"I used to think I was afraid of  snakes. I guess once you are more afraid of
something else, you aren't afraid of  the little things anymore." said Trey,
gazing into the dormant fireplace there  in the office.
"There's  more."
"I'm almost sorry I asked. Not really,  but I mean; I want to be with you
and learn as much as possible, but this is  really scary. I mean; I'm scared.
Aren't you?"
"What can they do? The great teacher  said, `Do not be afraid of those who
kill the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather,  be afraid of the One who can
destroy both soul and body.' So yeah, maybe in my body I can  be scared but not
in my soul.  Anyway, back when the Roman empire  existed they threw people
like us into an arena with wild animals so we could be  torn apart by the mouths
of lions and the like. So some of those 15 billion  people had it a lot worse
than we probably ever will, but they didn't shrink  from the truth, not one
bit."
"I hope we never find  out that you were too premature coming to that
conclusion," Trey smiled, a  worried smile.
"Anyway, there's one  more thing. Do you want to hear it?"
"Something tells me to  say no, but I guess I'm already on some watch list
by now anyway, especially if  someone knows anything about what you're saying."

"Well, I will just say  this, and then we can talk about something different.
 Many churches, or as I prefer to call  them, assemblies of people, they
worship the empire. They worship the kingdom of  this world. They call it
patriotism. I don't know about that. One of this  country's great authors wrote that
patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.  The ancient writers in the
scrolls called it worshipping the beast. My uncle  wrote that those people pushing
patriotism were really just trying to distract  people into seeing the truth
their way and no other way. He said they were  causing people to worship this
world; he called it the devil in disguise. The  ancient writers did say that
they would be masters of intrigue, mostly  masquerading as angels of light. My
uncle said he saw one of these men, the son  of a supposedly great preacher,
himself, now also a supposedly preacher, on a  news show back after the New
York attack and the man said we should consider the  proactive use of nuclear
weapons to protect our country. My uncle was stunned.  He knew the great teacher
would never have taught something like that, so he had  to ask himself, where
did this man, supposedly a preacher, come up with such an  evil notion?"
"One of the ancient  writers said that if you are a servant of the King of
kings, you should be a  good citizen, subject to the civil authorities, but a
good soldier does not  become involved in civilian affairs one way or the other.
Another one of the  ancient writers said if anyone is a friend of the world
that person is an enemy  of God. The ancient writers also said while we are in
these bodies, we should  live our lives as strangers here. So I figure we're
suppose to stay out of  trouble, do things the best we can, but we have to stay
focused on the real  world not the false one presented by the few people in
power to preserve their  positions and the wealth of their supporters."
"Anyway, as for me,  there's no way in my mind I want someone to kill anyone
else to defend me. Let  me be killed. Now, mind you, I'm not volunteering
here or anything, but if  that's the way it's got to be, then I really don't
have any choice, I mean, if  someone is going to kill me, and I want to be like
the great teacher, I'm going  to forgive them. The reason is when you kill
someone else for whatever reason,  or in this case, advocate killing someone else;
you are usurping the authority  of God. There has only ever been one entity
that seriously fought against God  and I'm not interested in being on that
side. The ancient writers say, it is for  God to avenge; we are to walk as the
great teacher did and if that means to our  own execution, like him or those who
were thrown to the lions, then that's just  how it's got to be. It'll be over
real quick anyway and then we go on to live  forever in heaven.  If however,
we  decide to become the killers, in our thinking or in our actions, then I don
't  believe we have much hope of getting into heaven. I think that's the
truth that  the great teacher taught."
"So you're a pacifist?" asked  Trey.
"I just want to be like the great  teacher.  He said, `no student is
greater than his teacher but when he is full grown he will be just like his  teacher'
.  I know I've got a lot of  growing up to do yet, but that's what I want to
do. One of the ancient writers,  one who did amazing things in service to
other people and taught so many, many  other people and even wrote a lot of the
ancient scrolls, said, he was the worst  wrong-doer out of everyone. I pretty
much, long ago, figured he wasn't ever  expecting me to come along and take
that title away him, otherwise, he would  have said he was the second worst; but
he did say, we all should look at  ourselves, individually, that same way. So,
yeah, I have a long, long ways to  go, myself, assuming I even get there or
even part way there. Now on some of the  teachings of the great teacher, some
of his students, way back then, well, some  of the things he taught, they
thought were too hard, so they quit his school. I  don't want to ever be a drop out
from his school. I may not pass all the tests  but I don't want to be a drop
out."
"Now, one thing my uncle was concerned  about was wealth, basically, the
income gap between the upper 20% of the people  living in rich countries and the
lower 20% of people living in the poorest  countries.  He noted that right
after our country's constitution was signed, actually a little later in 1820,
that income gap was 3-1.  Then 50  years later, it was 7-1.  In 1913,  it grew
to 11-1. In 1960 it was 30-1. In 1990 it was 60-1 and the latest year he  had
was 1997, then it was 74-1. Now I don't think it's probably going the other
way, so I figure, we in the upper 20% of the richest countries are still
getting  richer and the poor are still getting poorer. I don't think it's a crime,
spiritually or otherwise to be rich, but the great teacher did say it was
very  hard for a rich man to get into heaven, not impossible, he said, but very
hard."
"He told a story of a young man who  did every thing exactly right, never did
anything wrong in his whole life and  this young man wanted to be a student
of the great teacher's. So the great  teacher said, you're doing a great job,
but if you want to me my student go and  sell everything you have and give it
to the poor.  The young man went away feeling really  bad because he knew he
couldn't part with his wealth. So whatever you can't part  with, whatever you
love the most, even if it is your physical life, that's your  god. And this is
a huge trap for rich people so it makes it harder for them to  get into
heaven."
"Some rich people give away large  gifts, kind of like we do, and they think
that entitles them to a ticket to  heaven. The teacher told another story, one
about some rich people like that  compared to an old widow, very poor, who
gave her last red cent to help others,  and he ask a question; which was the
most generous gift? The last red cent or  the million dollar check?"
"There's a lot of wisdom in the  scrolls, huh?"
"Yeah. There is. More, for sure, than  I can absorb, but it was given away
for free if someone wants it.  You just have to open your mind and  listen to
the teacher and writers, realizing they are writing for over 15  billion people.
It's like reading a personal letter from your best friend. Now  when you read
a letter from someone like that, you're normally thinking  different than
when you read a text book of some sort.  You have a different frame of mind.
Anyway, that's how I see things. I read the scrolls and try to see the
perspective of the writer. The great teacher, he mostly told interesting stories  to
illustrate what he was trying to teach. His wisdom was greater than any that
has ever existed before or after. That's why he's the King of kings, you know?
I  mean, he isn't British or German or Asian or anything; He's all of them,
all of  us. I think that's the mystery of God."
"Last thing on this because it ties in  to what we're talking about. The
teacher told his class one day a story about a  rich man and a man named Lazarus.
He said the rich man lived in luxury all his  life and Lazarus, full on
sores, laid at his door, sick, hungry and homeless,  forced to survive off the
scraps that fell from the rich man's table.  I don't think it was called trickle
down  economics back then, but anyway, the story had a happy ending for
Lazarus,  though tragically, the same could not be said for the rich  man."
The boys ended their conversation  there in Chris' office and as Trey made
his way back across the hall to his own  office, he had the uneasy feeling that
these books penned by Robert Alexander  contained thoughts that just might be
best left locked in that safe down there  in Florida.  He didn't really want
to put himself in a position where people might  want to throw him into an
arena to be torn apart by wild animals and he, for  damned sure, wasn't going to
stand by and let anyone mess with his blond haired  mate. He'd just have to
apologize to who ever needed to hear it, but on that  part, he just wasn't
anywhere even in the vicinity of being ready. What's more,  no way he could promise
that he might one day be, not when it comes to his best  friend, the blond
bronzed jock over there that filled his life with so much joy  and love. "I guess
they can kill me," he thought, "but if anyone lays so much as  even a hand
on one of the hairs on his head, so help me; well, I haven't been  training for
nine years for nothing."

*  *  *     *  *  *
Chapter  11
Trey swam closer to his blond friend  as they snorkeled there beneath the
surface just on the outer limits of paradise  harbor. Reaching out to get his
attention, he pointed to their right, just  beyond the pillar reef.  Chris' eyes
followed his direction and both boys pulled up there beneath the water,
watching  the small group of Blacktip sharks feeding on the school of Spanish
mackerel. Chris motioned his  friend to follow and they dove down amidst the reefs
and swam along the bottom  moving south along the coast, away from the not so
friendly sea creatures dining  there just behind them.
The two boys tended to steer clear of  the Blacktips, the eight foot long
monsters responsible for the majority of all  attacks in these waters between
here and the Florida coast.  There were the Blacktips, but the waters  here
around the island were also frequently visited by Spinners, the fastest  swimmers
of all the sharks they had so far encountered. There was also the  Blacknose
sharks and these sharks had proved to be good playmates, at least as  far as
sharks go, finding themselves perhaps even more vulnerable to their  cousins that
the two boys might be. It wasn't like swimming with a pod of  dolphins, the
boys had no desire to reach out and pet any shark, but the  Blacknose would
swim around with the boys without ever hinting that there might  be an interest
in tasting one or more of the appendages dangling from the  humans.
The coral reefs around the island were  well beyond spectacular. The shear
vastness of the beauty would lead your eyes  in every direction making it
difficult, if not impossible, to spend any length  of time in just one area. There
were shapes and colors spanning the spectrum,  finger coral, star coral, pillar
reefs, fire coral, lettuce and many  others.  The sea creatures, both  large
and small, making their homes in, around and above the maze of reefs just
added to the astonishing bouquet of wonder that decorated these pristine blue
waters. Of the well over 500 species of tropical fish said to inhabit the mostly
 shallow depths just off-shore, the boys were not making that much progress
at  identifying all of them. Progress, yes, just not that much. Still, it was
an  underwater oasis of pure marvel, this breathless splendor in such a
variety,  swimming here just above the mostly sugar white sands on the ocean floor
and  among the majestic reefs a bit farther out, all comfortably reachable by
the two  young aqua-boys from the white powder of paradise  beach.
It was the Veteran's day weekend and  as opportunities were rare, this was
one of those precious weekend getaways, the  kind that involves a mad dash to
the airport in faraway KC as the final bell  rang the school day to an end. Then
there was the hop aboard the custom Boeing  737 business jet for the
three-hour flight to the fort, the rush to the Harbor  Beach peninsula and the
boarding of the waiting Sea Stallion for the two and a  half hour comfy cruise out
here to SandLot Island. The boys traveled on Thursday  night making the trip
here, napping in the sleeping cabin on the jet, waking to  mostly just switch
beds to the owner's stateroom on the yacht and arriving at  the island with just
the moon and stars to light their way to the shelter and  then to the "temple
tree". On these trips during the school year, they would  most times depart
early enough on Sundays to arrive back in Missouri in plenty of  time to see the
cows come home, not that either had any cows, still not yet at  least.
The boys could stay in the ocean for  hours, following the schools of first
one species then the next, north and  south, as they swam the warm clear waters
surrounding the island. Each visit had  thus-far offered a wildly
exhilarating experience. On occasion the day would be  spent exploring the reefs,
searching for lost treasure, and not really doing so  is a boyishly pretending way.
Given the rich pirating history of the islands all  around this area of the
Caribbean, both boys were confident it was just a matter  of time until they
stumbled upon some trinket, coin or otherwise, that remained  of the vast amounts
of plunder those buccaneers, the real ones, had taken from  the Spanish,
French and British ships, themselves plundering the natives of  these lands and
those of the Americas just to the west. Other occasions had  provided the truly
awesome and invigorating experience of swimming with the  native dolphins of
these waters.
While the sharks presented one type of  thrill, underwater sightseeing
another, and exploration, yet another, life with  a pod of dolphins was mostly just
marvelously fun. Chris was certain early on  that they could make friends with
the dolphins and oftentimes they would spend  large chunks of the day in
school, that is, on those days when a dolphin family  was nearby and school was in
session. If the boys were in the water and  discovered by the dolphins they'd
always come to visit.
They were intelligent, friendly and  playful creatures. Interaction with
these grand beings was based on trust, play  and curiosity. The boys learned early
on that to keep the attention of the  dolphins, they needed only keep their
level of activity vibrant, swimming,  diving, and playing in the water. The
beautiful sea mammals preferred to swim  shoulder to shoulder with the boys,
sometimes rubbing alongside or touching the  boys with a fin. It was often
difficult to determine who wanted more to pet  whom. The dolphins did however clearly
favor swimming eye to eye and Trey found  making eye contact with a dolphin
to be a truly hypnotic experience as they, the  boys and these kings of the
sea, would glide along side by side, often mimicking  each other's moves,
frolicking for hours on end.
One particular dolphin, the boys had  named Jumper because that appeared to
be his special ability, jumping higher  that his companions, had become their
best friend, in a dolphin sort of way.  Jumper taught the boys how to play
pass. It was a simple game. Any object would  suffice to be the item of attention.
Most often he would gather up a clump of  seaweed with his dorsal fin, swim
out a few yards and drop it to the sands on  the bottom of the harbor. Chris
would swim out and take up the same clump, swim  out another few yards, drop the
clump on the white sandy bottom. Jumper would  swim over, gather up the same
clump with his dorsal fin again, swim out another  few yards and drop it to
the bottom, waiting there for Chris to repeat the  activity. On and on it would
go, sometimes for an entire afternoon. It would  have been obvious to any
casual observer that, for the boys, this school was  definitely preferable to the
one back there in Missouri and with the quality of  instruction available
here, well, Trey was certain they could graduate in, oh,  maybe, two or three
thousand years, not that he was in any hurry, mind you.
The dolphins did exhibit a strong  desire to communicate with the boys and
the honor and privilege was not at all  lost on the two aqua-boys. Every effort
was made to pay extra close attention,  capturing a memory of any repeated
behavior for later analysis and discussion.  If there was some way for a human to
learn the true native language of Jumper  and his family and friends, he had
two of the most ideal and interested  students. There was much for the boys to
learn and they were enthusiastic as  they sought to better understand the
social behavior and physiology of the  joyful and loving creatures, ever trying
to decode the many clicks, chirps and  whistles which comprised the native
language of their new  friends.
Today, Jumper and a few friends had  made a brief appearance, swimming for a
while, Jumper mostly with Trey, just  before the boys decided to return to dry
land.
As the boys came up out of the  brilliantly blue water, sloshing through the
shallows leading to the beach,  Chris looked at Trey, "I think I'm jealous,"
he  teased.
"What?"
"I saw the way you and Jumper were  giving each other the eye," he said,
grinning.
"Well, I don't know. I mean, maybe,  you know. I'm just not sure he's
exactly my type." said Trey, not missing a beat  as he glanced at the waves, now
beneath his knees.
"Did you see that cute little calf  with Jumper's pod? Now, I was thinking,
you know, maybe if he's interested,  well, maybe we could do a double date.
What do you think? I mean, you're cute,  but, well, you got to admit that fellow
was a looker and then some." Chris  teased.
Trey leapt from the shallows in the  direction of his blond friend, the
sports jock already in flight towards the  white powdery sands of the beach.
Flinging their gear to the side as they reached the shore, a hot chase  along the
sands began, as Trey pursued the agile boy across the warm grains of  nature.
Dodging and weaving, circling back and sprinting from one end of the  beach to
the other, the boys teased, tempted and laughed with hilarity, Trey  finally
snagging his prey, though mostly the prey allowing himself to be  snagged, so
he said. The sporty performance continued as Trey brought the bigger  blond
Adonis to the sands, pinning him, sitting astride Chris as his hands held  the
other boy's hands against the sand, stretched there just above his  head.
Gazing into Chris' eyes, Trey said,  "Okay, that breaks the tie. I'm up 6 to
5 now." He rolled off his friend and lay  there at his side, as both boys
breathed a bit harder from all the  exercise.
After a few moments had passed and  their breathing had mostly returned to
normal, Chris allowed, "I was reading  this story; maybe just legend; anyway it'
s about  Blackbeard."
"Yeah?"
"They say that he was the worst cut  throat of them all, even shot some of
his own men so the others would be more  afraid of him."
"Yeah. I guess I'll probably be one  ruthless rogue when I get old," said
Trey.
"Seriously. Back then, they used what  they called a slow match for lighting
off the canons. It was a kind of chord,  burns real slow.  Anyway, when old
Blackbeard went into battle, he'd twist some of these slow matches around his
head, some tied to his beard. The ends of the matches would be burning and
they  looked like fiery, hissing snakes. With the fire all around his head, he'd
try  to scare his prey into surrendering. If they did, he'd take his loot and
let  them go free. If they resisted, well, they would have been better advised
to  have surrendered, at least, if they wanted to  live."
"Cool. Great story. I'll try to be  ready for that next time we have a game,
only, I don't know about the beard,"  said Trey, rubbing his chin. "I've
barely started  shaving."
"He was the governor here, you know?  When these islands were the `Privateer'
s  Republic'."
"I don't have any political  ambitions," said Trey.
Trey figured what with all this talk  about pirates, tomorrow was more than
likely to be another swashbuckling  adventure on SandLot Island. The boys
chatted on, about  pirates, about Jumper and about so many other things; they
almost forgot the  slowly sinking sun.
"Let's grab a shower and something to  eat. We can come back here to relax a
bit afterwards," said Chris, getting up  from the sands, his body coated with
much of the white powder. He reached to  help his mate up and they trekked
across the warm grains towards the jungle  beyond and the small waterfall about
the halfway point between paradise harbor  and the shelter. They'd return to
the beach sometime later so as to welcome in  the coming shadows.
A large part of the lure of paradise  harbor was simply laying there in the
warmth of the evening on the peaceful  beach, listening to the sounds of the
orchestra provided by the crickets, frogs,  egrets and ocean waves and most
striking, experiencing the island's stunning  sunset as it glided into the ocean.
Paradise was not an illusion and Trey had  quickly disavowed any such notion
otherwise on his first visit to this, their  isle of Eden.

*  *  *     *  *  *
Chapter  12
"I have a plan," whispered Trey to the  handful of plotters standing there
in the shadows just off the hallway in the  SandLot office building there on
Concord Street. "I'll be right  back."
Trey tapped lightly on the office door  and seeing Chris look up, he entered,
walking across the room to the desk by the  windows.  "Mind if I look at your
 cell for a second. I think I may get one like  that."
"Help yourself," said Chris, nodding  at the cell phone laying there on the
right side of his  desk.
Trey picked up the phone and began a  thorough inspection, walking over to
the windows as he fiddled with the gadget.  After a couple minutes, he decided he
'd seen enough of the model and laid the  cell on the credenza behind where
Chris was still sitting at his desk, bent over  writing something on a legal
pad there in front of him.  Trey bent down and gave Chris a peck on  the cheek, "
Thanks," he said, "I appreciate it. I'm going to get back to  work."  He
was already moving around  the desk, heading for the door as Chris grunted from
behind  him.
The cell phone laying behind him on  the credenza began ringing and Chris
spun around in the chair to answer,  "Hello?"
"Hello? Is this Christopher  Alexander?" said the voice of a young child.
"Yes, this is Chris, what can I do for  you?" he asked, listening intently.
"I was wondering if you could buy me  some dinner tonight?" said the young
child.
Chris could hear faint sounds of  laughter.
"Who is this?" asked  Chris.
"Turn around if you want to  know."
Chris spun his chair around, dropped  the phone, jumped on the desk, leaping
off the other side and fairly burst  across the room to the door as he wrapped
the grinning carmel colored little boy  in his arms, swinging him wildly as
he spun around and around, laughing and  crying, kissing and hugging Kahlid,
the little boy now lost in a fit of  hysterical giggling.
"Oh, wow, you are so beautiful,"  gasped a breathless Chris, holding the
little boy away from him just enough to  admire the little angel.
Kahlid had just been standing there, a  lone figure, in the open doorway when
Chris had turned to look. John, Sara,  Matt, Debbie and Trey had hung back
out of view, but now were just inside the  door, witnessing this reunion, smiles
pushing up from the souls of all  five.  Still, the center attraction  was
the giggling boy, the littler one; the bigger one was still crazed drunk in  his
own delight, pretty near genuine rapture.
"I'm your brother now for keeps," said  the gleeful boy, catching his breath
between the bouts of blissful loving Chris  had him immersed in. Chris glance
at his Dad and the smiling John nodded  yes.
"I'm adopted to be your brother  forever," excitedly said the widely smiling
little boy, again catching his  breath as Chris ease up on the affection.
"I'm adopted too," said Chris, beaming  affectionately at his new brother.
Kahlid's eyes bugged out, "Wow. That  makes us real brothers, right?"
"Real brothers, forever," grinned the  very elated Chris, as he again
wrapped the little fellow up in his arms,  swinging around and round, smothering
Kahlid with a never-ending string of  kisses, setting off another fit of
irrepressible giggling.
"When you can tear yourself away from  this place," said John, glancing
around the office, "we're all going over to  Applebee's out on the main highway
to celebrate."
"If you're waiting on me," said Chris,  scooping up Kahlid and putting him
in the saddle, "you're falling behind."  Moving towards the door, with his
rider on board, he reached and grabbed Trey by  the hand, pulling him close and
planting a firm kiss right on the mouth of his  now taken aback friend.
"Ewww," said the little boy perched up  there in the saddle, giggling and
covering his eyes. Trey reached up and pinched  the boy's bottom, causing him to
buck there in the saddle as Chris led Trey  through the corridor toward the
Concord Street building  exit.

*  *  *     *  *  *
Kahlid rode in the spider, strapped  there in Trey's lap, and the cockpit of
the Ferrari was filled with boisterous  tunes, the kind coming from the
tri-phonic speakers carrying the excited chatter  of three boys absolutely full of
joy and amazement.  Those three boys didn't really need the  head lamps of the
car either, not to light their way over to the other side of  town that autumn
evening; the bright shining smiles were probably tens times the  power of the
vertically-stacked xenon lamps on the spider, and those smiles were  on high
beam, from each one of them, Chris, Trey, and the little prince  too.
The happy gang of three climbed from  the parked car, there just back from
the main highway, there in the Applebee's  lot, and played euphorically with
each other, continuing their jubilant  celebration as they waited for the old
folks to catch up.
Inside the restaurant, a couple of the  serving staff, Maggie Wallace and
Josh Ryman, watched as the gun barrel gray car  nosed into a parking space and
when Kahlid crawled from the passenger side door,  both former construction
workers flew from the restaurant entrance as they beat  a line right to the little
carmel colored boy, scooping him up, swinging him  around, Maggie kissing,
him ewwing and giggling, Josh patting him on the head,  on the back, hugging
him.  It was a  growing reunion of glad hearts and everyone, it seemed, had cups
filled to  overflowing, thanks to the magical appearance of the little black
haired angel  with the pearly white smile.
Eventually, the Sunday drivers did  arrive and after a brief hug of bubbling
gratitude from their oldest son, John  and Sara Alexander led the little
gathering into the restaurant.  Maggie seated the clan as a few other of  the
establishment's patrons and staff stopped by to share the news and more  genuine
glad handing, and for the little prince, more hair mussing, a few  shoulder
squeezes, and just generally, that sort of welcome normally afforded  the return
of a long lost, cherished member of that little farming  community.
The level of excitement never  diminished, not there in that eatery, not that
autumn evening, at least not in  the vicinity of the tables occupied by the
admiring fans of the little boy from  half-way around the world, finally come
home, at long last. There were the  explanations of this miracle, Shauna in New
York and her connections at the United  Nations as well as the U.S. State
Department. There were the string pullers down  there at the city centre offices
on the south Florida coast and, of course,  there was the master puppeteers,
John and Sara Alexander, who having one son,  now a senior in high school, and
them fully expecting to be deserted in a matter  of just a few months, well,
they needed another boy, you know, just to help on  the farm, kind of,
something like that. The truth is really more simple; anyone  catching even a passing
glance at the beautiful little boy would immediately be  smitten by the
attraction; spending a mere five minutes in his company would  cost you the best
part of your heart.  He was one awesome little Arabian thief, like that, at
least.
Kahlid wasn't too shy around  strangers, not any more anyways. Trey figured
it had a lot to do with going  three days without any food and on more than
just a few occasions, which grew  the little prince into the outgoing little
angel he was now. When you're belly  is empty, growling from the hunger pains and,
as a child, you're wondering if  you'll wake up the next morning, or even if
you do, only having more emptiness  in your stomach to keep you company,
well, you figure out real quick that  walking up to strangers and begging for a
bite to eat isn't really the worst  thing in the world after all.
This secret that John and Sara had  shared only with each other and
eventually Matt and Debbie, began, it seems,  about the third week in Aceh, as the
growing bond between the little boy and  those students and parents wasn't
something to be ignored. Not for him and not  for them either. Sara had told John; no
way was she leaving that place without  that little boy. John had explained
at length and time and time again, the  nature of their problem and the best
thing to do was find someone to care for  him until they could get home and have
some people they trusted help them out.  Chris wasn't to know of their design
because if something went wrong he would be  devastated, having been filled
with false hopes, not that it wasn't hard enough  on him as it all went anyway,
the little prince too, for that matter, and Sara,  and quite a number of the
other homebuilders, forced to abandon the little angel  when the time came for
their return to the states.
Kahlid's new mom was swelled with  pride, watching her sons, both, her pride
and joy, sitting there surrounded by  so much love. As the hours flew by and
the clock reached well into the night,  the number of patrons of the
establishment having dwindled to a few, Sara  decided to interrupt the party as the
little prince had had a very, very long  day and was to have another long day
tomorrow, what with shopping and getting  setup at school and so much more.  There
would be a potluck Saturday night at the farm for all the  construction gang,
and anyone else, to officially welcome home to the little  farming community,
the new son of John and Sara. Now, though, it was time for  young Kahlid to
be mothered a bit, and in this case, that meant, getting him  bathed and in bed
before the witching hour, a mark on the clock that was only  minutes away.
Chris and Trey would be along  directly, they told their parents, and after
hugs and kisses, giggles and  smiles, Kahlid left the party, holding the hands
of his new mom and dad,  followed by their co-conspirators, the parents of
Trey.
Trey looked at his blond haired friend  sitting there, now that the two of
them were alone, and the grin on that  stunning face, he figured probably
matched the one he could feel in his own  features.  He remembered the ocean  rides
in the Lightning and thought, maybe there was something better than the  grin
machine after all, for putting a grin on anyone in its company. The little
prince was home. How great was that. After several long minutes of attempted
relaxation, Chris led the way as they headed out of the restaurant so Trey could
 be reluctantly dropped off at his home and Chris could go look in on his
brother.
As the boys stepped out of the  restaurant into the night air, Chris pointed
to the full moon, the starlit  night, and as Trey stepped up to him, he gently
leaned in and tasted the sweet  lips of his brown haired mate. He turned back
to the car, leading the way as the  night was coming to a close, preparing to
bring them into the bright tomorrow,  which now seemed pretty near magical in
its promises.

*  *  *     *  *  *
Trey heard the sound first, the sound  a bullet makes as its velocity
breaches the sound barrier leaving a barrel on  its way to its intended target. His
lightning movements were a mere flash.  Marshalling all his strength, he lunged
immediately, covering the short distance  to Chris in less than an instant,
pushing his friend to the asphalt with all the  swiftness he could summon.  The
 bullet caught his right shoulder just below his breast, spun him around and
tumbled him to the pavement. He laid there clutching his chest, writhing in
agonizing pain as the hot metal burned a hole in his chest.
Chris heard a car tearing away down  the highway; he recovered himself and
scrambled over to Trey, pulling out his  cell phone as he went. He punched
9-1-1, putting his other hand on the side of  his friends face as their eyes met.
The pained look there was terrifyingly  frightful. Chris felt every nerve in
his body explode. He saw the blood covered  hands of his Love as Trey clutched
at his heart, failing any effort to staunch  the flow of life now streaming out
of his dearest friend's  chest.
"9-1-1, what's the  emergency?"
"Gunshot wound, Applebee's, off the  Main  Highway.  Please hurry; it looks
like the bullet hit right around the  heart."
"EMTs are on the  way."
Chris dropped the cell and cupped  Trey's face in his hands, "Hang on Love,"
whispered a desperate Chris, "we're  going to get you fixed up.  Stay  with
me Trey." The pain in Trey's eyes was appalling, "I'm here, Love.  Stay with
me, Trey. You hear? Stay with  me."
Trey managed a feeble smile, his  breaths coming in short gasps; he looked to
be fading  fast.
Two squad cars, sirens wailing and  lights flashing, came flying into the
parking lot and Sheriff Carl Rollins was  out of his car and running toward the
two boys.  An EMT ambulance followed on the tail of  the sheriff and deputy,
sliding to a stop only a few feet from the  boys.
Two technicians, hands full of  equipment, sprang from the truck, immediately
taking the now unconscious Trey  out of Chris' hands and beginning to
feverishly work on the critically injured  boy.
Chris picked up the wire frame glasses  from where they had fallen and looked
on as the EMTs fought for the life of his  dearest love; he was helpless to
assist.  He prayed, his body beginning to shake as he stood there, "Lord,
please  have mercy on me, your unworthy servant. Please spare this prince of heaven
 tonight."
One of the EMTs looked up into the  anxious face of the Sheriff and shook his
head sadly, "He's got a Pneumothorax,  internal bleeding, nothing we can
stop here.  He needs the hospital in the city. No  way we could get him there in
time.  He's got 20, maybe 30 minutes tops, definitely not the usual golden
hour.  72 miles is just not possible. I've put a Vaseline gauze over the hole,
but  we're not going to be able to save him; I'm sorry; there's just no way."

"Put him in my car," said  Chris.
The EMT looked up at Carl  Rollins.
"NOW!!" barked Chris, already moving  toward the spider, pocketing the wire
frame  glasses.
"Put him in the car," said the  sheriff. "Chris, I'll put out an APB, try
to get you all the help I can." The  sheriff was already moving toward the
squad car.
The EMTs gently moved Trey to the  passenger side of the Ferrari as Chris
climbed in the driver's side and fired  the engine.  The tech was adding
additional straps to immobilize the comatose boy in the seat. He hung an I-V,
feeding blood expanders to the boy, just on the inside of the door's window then
backed away, closing the door just as the tires on the spider began screaming as
 they tore up the asphalt reversing out of the parking space.
Chris slammed the car into first and  the machine roared with its awesome
power as it leapt from the parking lot,  careening onto the main highway and
shooting off down the road in its impossible  flight. The two EMTs stood frozen
watching the car race away into the distance,  tires smoking and engine
screaming, spinning wheels straining for traction, as  Chris moved through each gear,
racing north toward the I-70 interchange, 7 miles  away.
With his own heart fiercely pounding  in his chest, Chris forced his mind to
concentrate on the mission, 72 miles; If  he could average 175 mph for 25
minutes; that would get him the distance, just  barely.  He needed a better  time.
 He would have to run wide  open every chance he got. Just to get the time
down to 20 minutes, he'd have to  have the needle pegged on that 225 number, if
the car could even reach that far.  Doing that for the entire trip, he knew
wasn't viable, not with even the sparse  traffic on the interstate to contend
with, plus the freeway wasn't going to be  straight-aways all the time; he'd
have at least three bends to navigate. The  highway here and the short distance
from the ramp to the hospital in KC would  rob him of even more precious
moments.  He'd push as hard as he dared and maybe just a little bit more.
Sheriff Rollins was on the radio to  the dispatcher, "Janice, I want an APB
right now. Trey Simmons has been shot.  He's got to get to Memorial in KC ASAP.
Chris Alexander is taking him in a  Ferrari F430 Spider, gray. They're on
their way now; I want access restricted to  I-70 west until he gets past. Get as
much help as you can. He'll probably be  flying at some wicked speeds. Tell
the troopers to clear a path to Memorial. Get  it done right now Janice, and
call me back to confirm the trooper  deployment."
Chris leaned hard left, bringing the  spider onto the westbound ramp leading
up to the interstate, the screaming tires  leaving an massive cloud of white
smoke in their wake as the F430 roared with  every liter of its thunderous
power, plowing the roadway as it rocketed onto the  expressway and took command of
the left hand lane. The speedometer was climbing  past 135 and Chris pressed
harder on the accelerator, virtually pushing his foot  through the floor of
the car as he willed it to go  faster.
He flew by cars almost ten at a time  as the Ferrari continued to gain speed.
145.  He prayed and kept his foot pressed to  the floor with as much effort
as he could muster. 165. The interchanges were a  concern; he couldn't forget
the interchanges. He soared past one and prayed that  the road would be clear.
He flew by another interchange,  catching a glimpse of the trooper blocking
the entrance ramp to the interstate,  185 mph.  He glanced at Trey  crumpled up
there in the passenger seat and pressed even harder on the floor  beneath his
right foot, 190. Please, please. The rpm needle was in virgin  territory on
its dial; still he pressed his foot harder, sounds of the roaring  engine
filling his ears, tears filling his eyes.
A trucker up ahead was forcing a car  to the side of the road and he flew by,
racing through the night, trembling with  adrenaline as the car engine
screamed past its design barrier.  195.
Again he glanced as his precious love  laying there motionless in the other
seat; he saw the blood dribbling from the  corner of Trey's mouth and he held
on to the wheel tighter, his teeth clinched,  eyes watering and his cheeks
puffed out as he strained desperately to stay in  control of his emotions,
pressing with all the might he had, on his right foot,  hoping somehow the car would
go faster, 197.
"Please, Lord," he pleaded and every  fiber of his soul was poured into
those two words, into that plea for  help.
He could see a sea of people watching  his straining efforts, millions and
billions of faces witnessing this shattering  moment in his life. They all
looked down from the heavens on this scene with the  most sincere of compassionate
expressions as he pleaded with them for any help  at all. He looked up and
there was the teacher, the King of kings, sitting on  his throne. Chris fell to
one knee, bowed his head and said, "O Great King, You  are my Lord and my Life.
I beg you for mercy in this hour." The King slowly  raised his right arm from
the throne, gently reached out his hand and softly  laid it on the head of
the blond boy kneeling there in front of  him.
Chris blinked. He shook his head and  focused on the road ahead.  He was
still flying through the night. He glanced again at his heart laying there, just
beside him, in the other seat and the stillness of the pale frail figure
laying  there was unbearably frightening. He glanced at the instrument cluster.
RPMs  pegged, Speed pegged.
Lt. Alfred Carter more felt, than saw,  the car go by, as he stood beside his
trooper car, blocking the interstate  entrance there 38 miles east of Kansas
City.  The  sound was all roar of machine and the rushing of a mighty wind
and he was in  awe, mouth wide open. Aside from the sheer coming off the spider
as it sliced  through the night air, he didn't see much of anything else.
Never in his life had he seen or even  heard of anything even remotely that fast.
That was impossible, absolutely  impossible; that can't be real, he thought,
as he stood frozen in his tracks,  cigarette hand stuck there in midair.
Troopers Alice Mateo and Jerry Wright  sat in their cruiser holding back the
traffic there, 23 miles out from the city,  joining this life-saving attempt
here in the middle of the night. The radio  crackled, "State 21, you there?"
"State 21,  go."
"Alice, he's coming through all right, and it's  faster than anything I ever
seen. He's got that car moving faster than a bat out  of hell. You ain't
going to see it unless you're looking real hard.  You'll hear it and feel it all
right;  but you ain't going to see it."
"Roger that,  Alfred."
The two troopers got out of the  cruiser and shut the doors, standing there
in the darkness, looking east on  I-70. They heard the sound roaring toward
them, growing deafening as it came  nearer. Mere seconds passed before the air
there around them was shoved back at  them, causing both to stumble backwards,
fighting to regain their balance.  Alice looked and  saw the twin fire trails
coming from the Ferrari's dual exhaust as it almost  instantly disappeared
miles down the road. It was all in a flash. That car  seemed to be screaming at
just below the speed of sound. She shook her head and  looked at Jerry.  He was
shaking his  head too.
The spider was virtually unseen as it  pierced the distance ahead, soaring
past the I-470-interchange and coming into  the city on the wings of a prayer.
Chris saw the flashing lights up ahead  where the exit ramp leading to the
hospital was.  He eased off the accelerator as those  flashing lights rushed to
meet him from the distance; he waited, and seemingly,  a couple seconds later
the needle on the speed dial backed off its peg and began  to retrace the
numbers.  He hit the  ramp as the needle crawled below triple digits. There were
more flashing lights,  holding traffic for him.  He  careened the spider off
the ramp, tires squalling, onto the highway and again  pushed his foot to the
floor, engine screaming, tires smoking, as he raced  toward the hospital, now
just 3 blocks away.
He braked hard, jerking the Ferrari on  to the drive leading to the emergency
room entrance. He slammed hard on the  brakes, throwing the car into a skid
and, as he neared the doorway to the  building, he swung hard left on the
wheel, causing the rear of the car to slide  around to the right, the spider coming
to a screeching halt with the passenger  side door facing the waiting team of
medics.
Chris threw open his door, flew from  the car and ran to the other side of
the spider. The medical team was already  pulling Trey's body from the car. They
put the boy on a gurney and rushed away  toward the entrance of the hospital.
A nurse halted Chris' effort to pursue,  "you've done your part. It's our
turn now," she said compassionately. "We'll do  everything we can but you need
to calm down," she said, putting her arm around  the still violently shaking
boy.
The nurse gave him a warm comforting  hug, and then pushed him away to look
in his eyes, "I'm going to go inside. I  want you to walk around a bit. Settle
down some.  I'll come find you if we have anything  to report.  He'll likely
be in  surgery for a little while. We have the best staff and I promise you,
we'll do  everything we can. I want you to promise me, you'll try to calm
down."
Chris nodded his head, his body still  over the edge on adrenaline, and the
nurse left him to return to the interior of  the building.
Chris turned back to the car.  A couple troopers had pulled up and  parked
behind the spider and were out looking at the car now. "Son, what kind of
engine do you have in this thing?" said the one burly looking bear of a  trooper.
"It's stock," mumbled  Chris.
"No way. No freaking way," said the  gruff looking man, disbelieving. "Do
you know what you just  did?"
"I just brought my friend to the  hospital," said Chris in a rapidly
weakening voice.  "The EMT back home said he only had  20-30 minutes to get here and
this was the only  way."
"According to Carl Rollins, you only  left 12 minutes ago."
"And?"
"Son, you had to have this thing up  around 400 mph or better to make that
kind of time. That is just not possible,  not even for a car like this."
"I don't know how fast we were going.  The gauge was pegged most of the way,"
 said Chris, feeling faint, "All I know is  we left and then we got here; that
's all I know."
"Well, yeah, if you say so; only take  my advice; get a new set of tires
before you drive too much further.  Those things look pretty well burnt up,"  he
said nodding toward the still smoking wheels.
He looked at Chris, then back to the  car, then back to the boy. He shook his
head in disbelief, and then motioned to  his colleagues that they were
leaving.
"Sir?"
The man turned back to  Chris.
"Thanks," Chris  whispered.
The man didn't say anything right  away; he just stood there for a moment
studying Chris, "Don't thank me kid," he  finally said.  "I don't do miracles;
you should be thanking someone other than me." He got into his car and the
troopers disappeared out into the streets.
Chris took Trey's glasses from his  shirt pocket, looked at them, then gazed
far out beyond oblivion, giving thanks  to the boundless sea of loving faces
looking on from the heavens; he found the  blazing starlight eyes of his
teacher, the Great King, still sitting there on  his throne, and his strength failed
him; he felt the life flow out of his body  as it crumpled to the asphalt of
the driveway, there beside the smoking tires of  the Ferrari, his left hand
still clutching the wire frame  glasses.

*  *  *     *  *  *