About this ebook
Small-town sportswriter Paul Mallory doesn't need much to keep him happy: Red Stripe beer, H. Upmann cigars, and enough money to put down a few bets at the track every so often will do the trick nicely. He likes his quiet, undemanding life in upstate New York, and he really likes his quiet and undemanding girlfriend Pam. Maybe he even loves her.
What Paul doesn't like is travel, complications, and most of all, responsibility for the welfare of others. But when his insatiable curiosity—along with a propensity for showing off—gets the better of him one fine June day, he has to leave his old life (and Pam) behind to take on a lucrative new job; a job he never really wanted in the first place.
Then, on his very first assignment with the mysterious Cramer Press Syndicate, Mallory immediately finds himself in the spotlight at a Russian handball tournament and must decide whether to become personally involved in the biggest story he's ever covered—putting both his career and his life on the line in the process.
Whatever he does, he'll never be the same again.
Stephen C. Spencer
I’m always more than a little diffident when it comes to either talking or writing about myself. As Winston Churchill is alleged to have said about Clement Attlee, I’m a modest man with much to be modest about. (That rhetorical device is called a paraprosdokian, should you want to either impress or alienate your friends one of these fine days. But you don’t have to be impressed with me: I had to look it up. Until just now, I’d always thought it meant a fear of the number thirteen.) I was born and raised in West Palm Beach, Florida, the oldest of three boys. Soon after graduating from high school, I followed in my father’s footsteps and joined the Navy, where, after acing every aptitude test they had, I naturally decided to specialize in laundry and dry cleaning. Make of that what you will. I spent seven years aboard two aircraft carriers, seeing the world—or at least twelve countries’ worth of it. Monaco—you’re not going to believe this, but they actually have a casino there—was far and away my favorite liberty port, with Málaga/Torremolinos on Spain’s Costa del Sol a respectable second. (That they too have a casino I took a fair bit of money away from is purely coincidental!) But it wasn’t until 2003 that I overachieved for the first time in my existence by marrying my wife, Melissa. More than anybody else, she’s the one who’s made it possible for me to indulge this little writing escapade of mine—and she, along with two of the greatest kids in recent memory, Kaitlyn and Evan, make all the work worthwhile. I’ve been writing for as long as I can recall. The way I remember it, my first story (this would have been in the fourth or fifth grade) was about a bumbling explorer who crossed the Atlantic Ocean, losing two of his three ships, half the crew’s food and water supply, and his color television set en route before sailing triumphantly into Ohio’s state capital on 12 October 1492 and christening it Columbus. (He had wanted to use his Spanish name, Colón, but the marketing people shot him down.) These same elements—highly sophisticated humor and a well-intentioned hero who never gives up—are present (I hope!) in my Paul D. Mallory stories of today. You could say that I haven’t come very far in all that time, and I wouldn’t argue with you. But I also wouldn’t care. I’m enjoying the trip far too much to rush through it. Be seeing you! -Steve Update as of 17 December 2014 from Melissa Spencer (Steve's wife): Steve passed away peacefully at home 6 December 2014 after a 2 year battle with brain cancer. Writing was Steve's dream, and I continue to keep his memory alive through Paul Mallory. When you read Paul's adventures, know that a piece of that character is taken from Steve himself through his 58 years of adventure.
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It's Always Darkest - Stephen C. Spencer
It’s Always Darkest
Stephen C. Spencer
Copyright 2014 by Stephen C. Spencer
Published at Smashwords
It's Always Darkest
by
Stephen C. Spencer
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to real people and actual events is purely coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the publisher, except by anyone who wishes to quote brief passages in connection with a review.
The cover art is by Clarissa Yeo. You can see more of her work at http://yocladesigns.com/portfolio
Prologue
Sussex Youth Baseball Complex
Tallahassee, Florida
eleven years ago
Between innings, the two young umpires—at twenty-four and twenty years of age, not much older than the players they were officiating—stood near the visitors' on-deck circle and watched impassively as the rain continued to fall around them, as it had been doing for the last thirty minutes. The visiting team, up by a run and needing only three outs to make it an official game, was already on the field, eager to get on with it. The home side were ready, too: they had the middle of the order coming up, and liked their chances of tying or winning it right now.
The field took water well, but it was near its saturation point. Puddles had begun to form on the infield dirt, and the quick-dry stuff they were using around the batters boxes and the pitcher's mound had all it could do to keep up. A light but steady drizzle came straight down, unaccompanied by wind, thunder, or lightning.
That was the problem.
Added to the rain, any of those three factors would have raised enough safety issues to make calling off the game a no-brainer; but as things stood, the umpires were faced with the mother of all judgment calls. This was the last game of the season, the league championship was on the line, and, because many of the players would soon be leaving town on summer vacation or joining their American Legion teams, there was no good way to reschedule. It was now or never...and everyone seemed to be in favor of now.
What do you think?
the plate umpire asked his partner. Under the rules, he was the de facto umpire-in-chief and had sole discretion in deciding whether to call off the game, but he understandably wanted the younger man's input: the kid had been umpiring on one level or another since he was thirteen, for Chrissake, and his old man was a fifteen-year veteran in the majors, with three World Series under his belt to boot.
The kid
would not have let the game continue. To him, the field was unplayable, maybe borderline unsafe. That was all that mattered. First game of the season or the last, it made no difference. What the players or the coaches or the league wanted was irrelevant. If they needed a champion so badly, they could play tiddly winks for the honor. Or flip a coin. Had he been working the plate, he'd wave the teams off the field in a second, and to hell with everybody.
For a fleeting moment, he considered telling his partner as much. It had been a long hot muggy June night and he yearned to be back at the dorm, where it was cool and dry and where he could—if his roommate hadn't drunk it all again—enjoy a leisurely bottle of Red Stripe beer before bed.
Instead, though, he shook his head—a quick, short shake. Water droplets flew from the bill of his sodden black cap.
Your call, Tom,
he said, grinning. Need to learn to make these decisions for yourself.
Tom stared at him. His mouth opened, then closed. He turned toward the home team's dugout and extended his right arm, beckoning.
Let's go,
he snapped.
The first batter took a ball, then a strike. On the third pitch he swung late and sliced a twisting fly ball into short right field. The right fielder charged in as the second baseman, with farther to run but a better angle, hustled over. Both players shouted that it was their play to make. Both kept coming.
On the other hand, the field umpire, stationed behind first base with nobody on, barely had to move. He had only to turn around to be in perfect position to make two calls: first—always—whether the ball was fair or foul; and second, whether there was a catch or no catch. He watched the ball's descent and registered, rather than saw, that the two fielders were vectoring in on the same point at high speed, neither of them hearing the other player's cries.
It never occurred to him to call out a warning; that wasn't his job.
At the last possible instant, the second baseman seemed to want to give way. He tried to dive to one side, but his foot slipped in the wet grass and the kid launched himself directly into his teammate's right knee just as the ball touched that player's glove, about eighteen inches inside the foul line and six inches off the ground.
There came a sickening crack of bone meeting bone, immediately followed by a long high-pitched shriek of agony that sounded like it came from a twelve-year-old girl instead of a seventeen-year old boy. The right fielder went down, still screaming and rolling from side to side. The second baseman lay face down in the grass and made no sound or movement. Dark red blood oozed from inside his right ear. The falling rain diluted the blood, but failed to wash it completely away. The baseball, throwing up a fishtail of water in its wake, skittered into foul territory and came to a stop.
The field umpire registered all of this, too, but he had eyes and thoughts only for the ball and its position relative to the foul line when it was first touched. His left arm shot out, fingers extended—fair ball. Then he turned and sprinted back down the first-base line, hustling to get in position for a possible play at home plate. As he ran, his peripheral vision picked up Tom, who had moved into the middle of the diamond in order to track the runner's progress around the bases. It was perhaps just as well that he could not see the expression on his partner's face...
There was no play—at home plate or anywhere else. The ball lay untouched and forgotten as teammates in the field and coaches from both dugouts sprinted toward the fallen players. The batter-runner circled the bases uncertainly, stopping at each station to peer out into right field, as though he were in some way responsible for the catastrophe. Eventually he came around and touched home plate, tying the score. The right fielder's screams subsided; the field umpire, at any rate, could no longer hear them. On the now deathly-quiet field, the electronic click of the scoreboard as the number on the HOME side changed from 3 to 4 was audible from almost four hundred feet away.
Twelve minutes later, a helicopter touched down and airlifted the right fielder to Capital Regional Medical Center. Shortly thereafter, two paramedics lifted the second baseman onto a gurney and slid him into the back of a waiting ambulance, which then moved slowly away—lights, no siren. In his case, there was no need for urgency: the boy had died instantly, on impact.
For a long, long time afterward, the umpire remembered very little of what had happened. Indeed, he had in his mind reduced the play to its essentials. A fly ball was touched in fair territory, but not caught. He made the call, then ran to cover home plate, as two-man mechanics dictated in this situation, and as he'd done dozens of times before (because he preferred to go out
on anything doubtful with nobody on base). He saw the batter-runner touch home plate. That was all he saw; it was all that really mattered.
The memory of that evening rarely came back to him these days; but only because it had been supplanted by something far, far worse...
At almost the exact time of the Tallahassee accident—although the local time was fourteen hours ahead of Eastern Daylight—a catastrophe of quite a different sort was taking place. The wedding of a young man in Vladivostok, Russia was canceled when the bride-elect decided against going through with the ceremony.
She appeared at the church and gave her intended the news at T-minus fifteen minutes, giving him the (to her) quite reasonable explanation that she didn't love him and was going to instead marry the man she had broken up with some six months before. Quite unreasonably, she had brought the man along with her, expressing the hope that all three of them could be very good friends.
The jilted groom listened to this stupidity without showing the slightest emotion. When his erstwhile fiancée finished, he nodded once, but said nothing. The two lovebirds left the church hand in hand, and a few minutes later, the baffled wedding party dissolved and went their separate ways.
Within six hours, the cancelled wedding's parallel with the Tallahassee disaster became complete, ending with one of its participants dead and another crippled.
In the boyfriend's case, someone had judged things to a nicety. He had been beaten to within an inch of his life, suffering permanent disfigurement, compound fractures in all four limbs, and brain damage that would forever leave him with the mental acuity of a six-year-old child.
An employee discovered the woman the next morning in the church where she was to have been married. She was bound hand and foot and hanging on a hook in the cloakroom, suspended there by a thin piece of wire around her neck. She was wearing her wedding dress. Equally great pains had apparently been taken with her. Only by standing on tiptoe and craning her neck could she relieve the strangulating pressure on her windpipe; but she couldn't stand that way forever. The coroner later estimated that it might have taken her as long as thirty minutes to die.
Chapter One
I merged into Thursday morning's eastbound traffic, flipped the visor down, and set the cruise control in the wake of a black Lexus doing a reasonable six miles an hour over the limit. The sun got in under my visor, hitting me right between the eyes and instantly raising the temperature in the car another five degrees. Squinting and swearing, I reached over and turned the air conditioner up a notch. The first day of June was going to be a hot one, but the weather was clear and the track fast, for whatever that was worth.
The way I felt, it wasn't worth much.
My stomach rumbled, and I couldn't blame it. In the passenger-side seat, a crumpled and sticky cellophane wrapper was all that remained of my usual nutritious breakfast, and the coffee, when I drained the last ounce or so from its flimsy foam cup, was as cold and sour as my disposition. Even the heaven-sent voice of Karen Carpenter singing Top Of The World
on my satellite radio failed to cheer me up—which for me was saying something.
The track in question was I-495, better known in these parts as the Long Island Expressway. I was on my way to Southampton, a place I didn't like, to interview for a job that I neither wanted nor needed. I'd been on the road for almost three hours and still had an hour to go. For the tenth time that morning, I considered turning around and going home; for the tenth time that morning, I kept heading east.
Like a fool.
I wondered why. I was under no obligation to go and see the man. I never told him I would. Hell, he hadn't given me the chance to tell him anything. And, like I said, I didn't want a job. I already had a job. Covering sports for the East Lambert Tribune wasn't the absolute apex of journalistic achievement, but the work was easy and fun. It paid for beer, cigars, and the occasional trip to the race track. Every once in a while, it even paid some of the bills.
All my considering and wondering was a load of crap. I hated myself for blowing a day off this way, but I knew damned well why I was doing it; knew, too, that I couldn't resist it any more than a compass could resist pointing north. Quite simply, I wanted to know what this crazy deal was all about, and the answer to that lay out at the far end of Long Island, with the mysterious owner of the business card that now rested in the holder next to my empty coffee cup.
Said owner of said card approached me Tuesday night as I left the press box at RCB Ballpark, where I'd just watched the Staten Island Yankees use a seven-run eighth inning to beat the Brooklyn Cyclones, 10-4.
Or maybe approached
is the wrong word, suggesting as it does a gradual drawing near, because I never saw him coming. For all I knew, he could have materialized out of thin air, but there was nothing thin about this guy. Dressed in a dark blue suit with a discreet red pinstripe, he was large enough and round enough to join the solar system with no questions asked. The cigar protruding from the right side of his mouth would have been a full day's work for the best torcedor in Havana, and if he was worried about the stadium being smoke-free, he gave no sign of it. Gave no sign, in fact, of ever being worried about much of anything.
We stood there looking at each other. I didn't have a choice. I couldn't get past him without moving him physically, and to move him physically, I'd have needed to rent a derrick.
The apparition removed the cigar and spoke. His voice, though friendly enough, was deep and authoritative—the voice of a man who was used to getting what he wanted.
Mr. Mallory, isn't it? Mr. Paul Mallory?
I nodded. That's me. What can I—
With a bit of legerdemain even Houdini would have envied, he produced a card and thrust it into my hand. Cramer Press Syndicate, it read, followed by a Southampton address. There was no phone number, no name. I flipped it over. The other side was blank. I looked up, feeling my eyebrows rise as I did so.
What—
I'd like to talk to you about coming to work for me, Mr. Mallory,
the man boomed, his words echoing throughout the now-empty stadium. When is your next free day?
Day after tomorrow,
I answered automatically. Thursday. But what kind of—
Excellent. Nine-thirty suit you? Good. See you then. Don't bother with a résumé.
He spun on his heel and vanished around a corner so quickly that I wondered for a moment whether I'd imagined the whole encounter. I couldn't hear his footsteps; and when I looked around that same corner a few seconds later, there was nothing there to see. But I had his business card (such as it was) in my hand, and the smoke from his cigar still hung in the air over me. It smelled wonderful.
I had never heard of the Cramer Press Syndicate, so when I got home that night, I did some quick and dirty research. Based in New York City, the outfit seemed to consist of a wire service and twenty-four dailies scattered across the country in cities that looked like they'd been chosen by a drunk throwing darts at a map: Medford (Oregon), Yuma (Arizona), Pompano Beach (Florida), and Lewiston (Maine) formed the boundaries of a large and curious quadrilateral.
I didn't learn very much. Each of the papers was described only as a daily newspaper...covering local news, sports, business, jobs, and community events.
Each was published seven days a week. None had a website. Newspapers were a