Saturday, December 16, 2017

Mars Rocks, by Jacob Malewitz, Perry Ellis Sunout, Bartlet in



Static

What scenes do you want today
The hero should move away from comfort zones
Walking cars, the Jupiter jack
Story journey for truth
What does this say about society
Setting: Forest

Mars Rocks
By Jacob Malewitz
1st draft
2nd draft Saturn spec, 1st lion score 10 10 1,000
John Bartlet 50 Perry Ellis 1,000

Cass loved being a madman. Here, we begin at the rocks, in between the two cities, on a slope that a few have jumped off to their planned doom.
The rocks were the chaos of many scientists lives. Cass, ever the student, thought he could become famous by doing what no man did before. This included me.
The problem was the family, the doctors, the boss—they all worked on building up the pain inside Cass. So he ran away, like so many of us do. And they told me, his best friend, the man who supposedly knew him, to find him. I knew more about him than his carefree father—the dreams of being a scientist, the second guessing when he became a teacher, the anger at being a poor man on a planet with such potential … it all became too much for the man to handle. In my experience, man puts too much on his shoulders, forgets the roots, and sometimes falls.
Hours before, he had been sitting at his office in the second district of Planning City. There the madness began. A student had made an attempt on his life;  not just a regular day at the job. The boy had a pleama blade, said to be of Japanese origin, and Cass said he saw little evidence of humanity within him. He had stopped the blade for a second, fallen, and the blade had reached his neck. No one knows what the boy said to him, a moment when he had a choice to make. For ten minutes he had been in a hospital. Then he walked out. He left the city. He went to the hills where the Mars Rocks are, a forbidden zone, and did so without anyone ever noticing. Thirty minutes ago, his wife told me she had a dream. Ten minutes ago, I was on his tail, finding myself lucky he wasn’t the fastest sprinter on Mars.
I followed him down the slope. He was mumbling. Saying something about ending angels and ending time.
“Life, right.” He hadn’t quite lost it yet; give the Mars Rocks time.
The two cities situated on opposite ends of the Mars second plain. He called it second hell, but Cass was like that. Everything was hell—a river styx, a woman Eve, a maniac merely acting upon what society said when he cut throats, all those stories you just don’t want to believe.
I thought he was an ego-maniac. I heard a famous man say, once, “You really have to be an egomaniac in this biz.” Perhaps he intended to change the world all by himself, to teach his classes the truth about life, and tell them how to make a choice. In my experience, students should and shouldn’t be given choices. Deciding whether or not to give them is as painful as putting a blade to a teacher’s neck.
“Styx,” I heard Cass say. I wanted to catch him before he fell, but how would I do that?
“Styx,” he repeated.
I wanted to walk up to him, tell him who I was, see if he remembered, but I would fall. I would not even come close to him.
I watched him move around the Mars Rocks. They stood ten feet in the air, spears, they looked like spears. He never actually touched them, never showing a sign he knew I watched him, and forgetting of the two towers that recorded his every move.
He kicked a stone towards the rocks, but nothing happened—there was no sound of impact, in other words no sign something was there. This made me curious, but let’s move forward anyways.
I sensed, within Cass, a drive to improve. I had this way with people; I could capture them in my mind. In him I sensed fear too, and this fear was becoming of a school teacher whose live had been threatened. A man can only take so much chaos. Eventually he starts fighting back. I so wanted to walk to him, reveal myself, but as a detective I could do little but watch him in his final acts, before he was lost to a mystery.
Finally, he went towards the rocks. He entered. Entered and my heart leapt. This man was not a hero, nor was he a villain, but occupied the space in between, that troublesome gray area angels stood in. He would not be prepared for this, and he would only find an ending in that place. I so hoped he would find his way out before the madness spread, took hold of this red planet, and worst of all entered me.
 “Don’t worry,” I said to myself, “someone will catch him.”
I advanced upon the rocks. The problem was the race to find information, the late hours of study, none of it mattered now that I had to act. I moved in, stopped, waited for him to leave the rocks again, but he never did.
“Call it what you will,” a voice behind me said, “just avoid calling it nothing.” I turned back, to the voice, but standing there was air, a few pebbles on the ground, no signs of movement, only signs of madness.
I recall a conversation with Cass. He studied evil, saying we must acknowledge it, but  within him I saw a living question. Nothing made sense to him. That day, when the conversation occurred, he had given up drinking, so I did the same. Then Cass said he had witnessed an angel falling into the soil of Mars. A deep boom lifted, the angel spreads it wings, and he saw the Mars Rocks. He didn’t understand why, but he told me that one day he would go there and find all those answers to life. I laughed. He did too. We almost ordered a couple shots.
 The angels were the true story years back, when people started seeing them and calling them Sepher’s after a popular angelic story. Sepher World, to me, was just a way to sell magazines and net works—money was everything. He wrote a study for nothing, did case-by-case interviews, tried to sell a book too, but money was not his goal. He wanted truth.
The rocks broke under me as I looked for any sign of movement. The two towers beamed at me from either side, and I wondered why the madman had built them in the first place. Some say God made them, others said Billionaires retired there to spend there lives watching the skies. Yes, two towers, and Mars Rocks, and mysterious voices.
“Don’t fall just yet,” the voice said again.
“Who the hell are you!” I gathered myself; there was no one there, the Rocks were said to have energy, and that was what I heard. Voices entered the Rocks, they left different, a tangle of languages that sometimes turned into clear sentences. Some people said the angels of Mars were to blame. Others said man had pushed to hard to make the world their own.
“I hate life.” And I did, then, but it came out the wrong way. It entered the rocks, came back sounding like a wish instead of something clear.
I walked towards the rocks. Walked and waited to fall, or see Cass step out and find, or even an angel to appear. It made me think—a bad proposition—of how I was chasing down a madman. I had no proof of this: I loved the man, his wife who he hated loved him, his students thought he gave out too much homework but still respected him. He had been unable to find his dream.
I waited. Expecting the voices to return, I just stood a few feet away. There was nothing special to these rocks, a school trip to a museum would find things that appealed to the eyes more, but it did nothing to take the absolute of it. I didn’t want this. I loved my wife; Cass didn’t. I loved teaching; Cass didn’t know what he loved. You plant seeds with every action you take, and something always grows from them.
I made no decision at that moment. I waited. And when I grew sick of that, I sounded off of all the things of order in my life. The Mars Rocks worked on my mind, I wanted to scream, but when I tried nothing came out except Cass. He left the void that was these rocks, entered a new dreamworld, walking immediately out of this field of nothing. I stepped in his way. He walked into me.
For a moment I did not know what to do. I saw the madman, what some would call the inner child, deep within his body. The Rocks had the answers. “Cass,” I said, “we can work something out. You’ve done nothing wrong.”
“The angels will fall.”
I went into the rocks, hoping to save a friend. I saw things there which entered my mind to fast. A chaotic place, madness was here, and I could not work the thought of how it seemed so much like the way Cass’s mind worked. I could almost see the boy who tried to kill him and the wife who slept around on him. These things were life changing, and they were life.
“Tell me the truth,” I said, stepping away from the rocks.
“When the angels fall.”
“What?”
“Truth is when angels fall.”
I stepped into his eyes, saw it, and I think he saw something in mine as well. He began to run, laughing like he had injected himself with something fierce, and I knew I couldn’t let Cass move away. But what had the Mars Rocks done? What did he mean by angels falling?
I lost him after ten minutes of chasing him. I cursed the man who created cigarettes. Coughing, coughing and hacking for miles. I followed his tracks across the lands of Mars. The two cities would not be his destination. He found something within the rocks, they mapped out his mind, and it was my duty to step out of the gray area, to think rationally, and stop him.
I caught up with him a mile later, sitting on a rock, his eyes wide, his mouth open. And amidst it all, I found a gun in his hand, a cut on his chin. There was still life there.
“Tell me everything.”
“I cannot tell a lie.”
I touched the gun, waited for him to end me, but Cass did nothing. I looked into his eyes.
“Just tell me what you saw.”
“I saw what we all see.”
I caught him when I put the bullet in his head. He fell back, his eyes still wide, his mouth still open, and for a brief moment I understood what he had seen at the Mars Rocks. No angels fell when I closed his eyes. Cass always loved playing the madman.

           

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