“It is not good that man be alone.” Thanks be to God, Europa’s back, even if just for this installment. Everybody gets older. Not one, single clue what happens next. Awesome!
Tag: family
Baton
Over 50k words, he said! Just another 8-10k to finish the book, he said!
Annnnd then, Dorina showed up. To quote from Band of Brothers: “…well, hello 2nd Armored!”
Look, it’s NOT exposition and I AM NOT LECTURING! I can prove it, below the fold! These people just keep showing up… this just keeps happening…!
Seriously: I need to start killing everyone. No! I mean it! Don’t you dare click on Continue reading “Baton”
And… that’s a MRAP!
Sorry: bad pun about how Chris, Cat, and Anton make their final stage north into the ‘no-go’ zone between San Diego and the LA basin.
From having nothing just over a week ago, I’m pleased with the 14k raw material words for how Chris and Cat fell in love with one another. I was also able to get a couple of more plates up and spinning for Maya to cast down in the next act. There was even a little Easter Egg from an unexpected guest appearance!
Below the fold is a some verbal sparring with Chris and Anton; Cat makes a brief appearance in a towel. After posting this, I’m making coffee – yes, with some bourbon – and will get Maya on her way out of the Vancouver BC Airport. She’s been cooped up there for three days (I think), waiting for one of the rare flights south. Not sure if she killed anyone… maybe. Through her eyes we might see the burnt-out, dead city of Seattle as they fly over. A few hours after that, Maya will be standing outside the San Diego Airport, just miles from her brother.
I cannot wait to see this!
Xenophon’s brother
Just over another 10k words this weekend! As I said to a friend of mine, I feel like a wrung-out dish rag. But, once I’d the key – the sight – from late Friday, it was so easy! Part of my last post was just that: Chris and Cat closing the gap between them. What I wrote since then was the 3+1 times they made love (slightly different than having sex), although I only covered #1 and #+1 in detail. That, plus another one of Chris’ recall-dreams of his time at Neuroi Corporation, this time, talking with his kid sister, Maya, made for a fantastic weekend!
Anton is sleeping with Chris & Cat’s next door neighbor; that’s complicated! And he’ll be giving them a tour of the northern ‘no-go’ zones around Camp Pendleton. The civilians of San Diego think the Mexican Army killed about 100k coming south from the 19MM in the LA Basin. Truth is hard, sometimes.
After what he sees, it finally occurs to Chris to reach out to experts beyond him: even machines suffer from the “if I’m good at this, I’m good at everything!” mental illness. The moment he does, he’s going to realize just what he’s overlooked, and how close he and his beloved are to an horrible, violent death.
This is SO COOL!
PS It was pointed out to me by someone in RealLife that my ‘below the folds’ are all banal (my word, not theirs), not ‘the good stuff!’ Well, duh! I welcome everyone into the world I’m making, but this is work, and I want to be paid for it. ‘Defiant’ was, and is, for free. Intellectual property is worth at least, if not more, than physical property. Example: a water pump is worth money; learning how to make a water pump, one or two orders of magnitude more. To continue the analogy, my snippets, in and of themselves, are slightly entertaining. I hope, once complete and edited, y’all think that they plus the other 45k words are worth US$7.
Thank you so much for reading!
“December”
Wow. Never killed a guy during a blowjob. The guy, not me. Well, I was doing the killing… it was Maya…. Never mind; just never mind. Obviously I shan’t be having my teenage daughters proofing that part.
Maya’s at Vancouver International Airport, waiting for one of the rare flights to San Diego. Time to flick back to Chris and Cat (and Anton, too, I guess). Need a double-helping of Relationship Development before a certain someone’s plane touches down. As I learned from “Defiant,” every time I start writing romance, a battle breaks out; so, I’m not sure what’s going to happen, but I know it will.
Below the fold is Maya taking leave of the acquaintances she made on the freighter, Jodhpur, as it crossed the Pacific. Machine Civilization: it’s one, big, dysfunctional family!
“We stand on the shoulders of giants”

Tuesday morning, the 20th, my father-in-law, Leslie Hanusz, died at home, in his bed, with his wife, daughters, and granddaughters, about the house. A peaceful ending to what was otherwise an amazing life.
Born in Budapest, Hungary, June 17th, 1926, to a wealthy, industrialist family, his primary schooling was with the Piarist Fathers. His secondary schooling was at a military academy in Marosvásárhely. He graduated 2nd in his class and was commissioned a 2nd lieutenant of cavalry in December 1944. Assigned a platoon, he was sent to central Poland, and spent the remaining months of WWII trying not to be shot by the Red Army; his stories from this time are harrowing.
Rotated off the front lines two weeks before the German surrender, he and his men found themselves on a Danish island, POWs of the British Army. Some months later, responding to a telegram from his father (the communists had taken all they had), Les resolved to return home.
He was arrested by the AVO (secret police) at the border and tortured for about three months. Surprising his jailers by not dying, he was used as slave labor first in the fields by the River Tisza, then later as an excavator for the new metro lines under the Danube; decompression sickness and aneurisms killed many… his mother would use a hot iron on the nitrogen bubbles in his skin on his back when he came off shift. ‘Paroled,’ but watched, he worked in the black, gray, and white market to help his family & friends. When the Counter-revolution of late-1956 began, rather than immediately fleeing, he used his (rare) commercial driver’s license to shuttle hundreds to the Austrian border and freedom. Only when the Russians came did he know it was time to go. Sick with a high fever, he lied and bribed his way across the frontier.
Weeks later, he and some other Hungarian refugees were allowed – sponsored by Ed Sullivan – to immigrate to the US. Working two jobs as a laborer, he began teaching himself English. Through a mutual friend in the refugee community, he met Susanna Kerekes, whom he soon married. Now working three jobs, one being a engineering draftsman for Dow Chemical, he came to the attention of the head of that department. Given increasing difficult assignments – and constantly learning more engineering and receiving more professional certifications – in ten years Les was one of only a handful of men in the US that could design and certify very high-pressure vessels and pipelines, leading to his travelling constantly about the country, but always making time for his wife and two growing daughters, who, so taken with the marvel of a man they had for a father, became chemical engineers.
I first met him in the Spring of 1989, while dating one of those daughters. He was pleasantly surprised to find someone who could keep up with his free-wheeling discussions of history and politics… even if I couldn’t keep up with him at drinking; try though I did. Whether it was a Manhattan in the winter or a Martini in the summer, these conversations went on for over a quarter century. His keen insights would surprise me every time.
After a couple of heart attacks and some joint replacement, he finally started slowing down around the age of 86. He still kept in constant correspondence with friends now all over the world, but fewer every year. He’d a hard first half of his life, but was certainly blessed for the second. He was my father-in-law, but more importantly, my good friend.
Dis Ease
Wife and daughters in Mason, Ohio for a swim meet. I stayed behind to retrieve our pup post-surgery. Prior to that, I went looking for shoes (once every 5 years; failed. Ordered from ebay), 3 loads of laundry, put towels everywhere for incoming dog, mulched leaves in backyard, restocked at foodstore.
Then, got dog. Drive home, carrying dog about. Early dinner, convince dog to take meds hidden in pork, short walk, bed.
Oh. What didn’t happen? 7500 words, that’s what didn’t happen.
Milo
Friday night, Ohio State University. Wife and I went to see Milo Yiannopoulos, a British free-speech advocate touring US college campuses. . . who seem to have quite a problem with free speech. The full video of his talk can be found here. I was first in line to ask a question (about politics and theology . . . anyone who’s read my books just rolled their eyes) right around the 1:16:18 mark.
Right after me, my wife stepped up to ask her question about legal immigration. However, she led off with a tiny vignette about herself… AND BROUGHT THE HOUSE DOWN!
Married for 24 years, together for 27. I love her more every day. A photo of two awesome people, and one banal, middle-aged drunk below the fold.
RIP, Steven Den Beste
One of the greats has passed.
I’d read all of his posts on his political-military blog, USS Clueless, for years. When he started posting review of Japanese animations, I thought he was losing his mind. Turned out, he was showing me a world I’d not imagined.
As a family, we started watching dubbed anime. Then subbed. We went to anime conventions (usually the whole family cosplaying). We started reading manga. I started playing visual novels; then I made one; then two more. I began to write traditional novels – much of who’s source material came from the years of anime stories in my head. I wrote more novels.
Would I have wandered into anime were it not for Steven? Possibly. But not with his intellectual rigor. To this day, his analysis of Haibane Renmei -still my favorite anime – is breathtaking in its complexity. The few times I posted comments to his website, or communicated with him directly, he was courteous and polite. A gentleman.
The impact of his life upon mine is incalculable. I was not close enough to call him a friend, but certainly a mentor. My world, and the whole world, shall be a darker place at his passing.
Aside: Steven was an atheist, but not militantly so; not like a vegan. I do have to smile, just a little, thinking about how his Exit Interview – with Someone he didn’t believe in – is going right now. I shall have a Mass said for him.
Updates
Only fourteen days left until NaNoWriMo begins. About a week ago I finally dug out the script I’d written for what would have been the webcomic, Poisoned Hearts, thinking I recalled it well enough to serve as a first chapter.
Oops.
While I did recall most of it, the characters were already reforming in my mind for the new story; so, personalities are different, huge timing changes . . . at least the locations…. Nope: I’d reimagined what the lab at Neuroi looks like, based upon my horror short.
So as it is, what was a first chapter of material is now a stack of notes for Cursed Hearts. That still puts me miles ahead of where I started two years ago with The Fourth Law: one mental image and a 20-second sound bite. Barring any unforeseen RealLife consequences – as such happened last November – I’m feeling very good about this project. Of course it’s tempting to actively make notes now, but I think that violates the spirit of the month-long challenge. Dreaming, okay; notes, not so much.
My other October project: converting my father-in-law’s oral history into written history, has also not gone as well as I’d hoped. Once I sat down to write all that I recalled as a framework for him to add onto, I realized just how much I’ve forgotten over the past ten years. Sure, I can ‘see’ the images: him and his cavalry detachment caught in the second floor of a Polish cheese factory when a Red Army platoon motors up. Him in a AVO prison, the former Minister of Foreign Affairs to his right and a 2-star general to his left. I think I shall reallocate this to January, when it’s dark and cold and we’re all inside (December will be given over to editing then publishing Cursed Hearts by Christmas).
Not much meat in this post, but that’s what happens when a writer is between project. Expect things to get very interesting quite soon. Cheers!