Characters,
places, and events are works of fiction and not at all indicative or
representative of any real life person places or things. A lot of inspiration
was taken from Vice, a subsidiary of HBO. Much respect is held for the
journalism that goes on at Vice, and I suggest everyone check them out. I do
not represent them, nor do I think my book is a factual retelling of anything
relating to real life. For the true story on everything, check out Vice.com or
tune in daily to Vice News airing on HBO. I personally never
miss an episode.
1x00 “Nobody Does it Better”
Released
on http://www.patreon.com/99geek on
August 2018
Susanne collapsed against the side of the bombed out building, wincing in pain as her hand kept pressure on her side. When she pulled away from the sand stone wall, she left behind a bloody imprint. They’d have no problem tracking her now.
Gunshots rang out
in the distance, and Susanne stumbled forward through the empty alleyway,
tripping over debris of a house hit by military airstrikes. She smacked the
sandy ground hard, propping herself painfully against a metal beam as she
laboriously gasped for breath. It was getting harder.
She looked around
the alley. She was somewhere in the middle of downtown Mosul in the country of
Iraq. Perhaps this would be a good place to die. Quiet. Alone.
More gunshots
rang out, and she could see the people in the street continuing their day.
Gunshots had become a regular soundtrack to these people. Their entire lives
had been only war for so many years now that it seemed the only thing left that
could startle them was peace.
Her bloodstained
hand reached into her pocket, the bullet wound in her side bleeding out
furiously. She was growing cold, in a climate that often hit 115 degrees during
the day, and on top of that her head was spinning. Her hands furiously worked
against her phone’s touchscreen, slapping the keyboard as fast as her thumbs
could keep up with her mind, each tap leaving a bloody thumbprint in its wake.
There were more
gunshots, this time far closer. They were coming from the building just in
front and to the left of her. She could see the muzzle flashes as two more
shots went off, illuminating the shadows on the third floor of a bombed out
structure.
Suddenly an Iraqi
woman, slender and muscular, with military camo jacket pants and hijab, came to
the edge of the third floor. She was facing away from Susanne, and fired two
shots with a pistol into the room she’d just come from, before jumping from the
third floor. She struck the wall of the building across from her with her
shoulder, and bounced off to land heavily on the ground at Susanne’s feet.
Turning onto her
back, the familiar Iraqi freedom fighter raised her pistol at the floor she’d
come from as two large bearded men took her place at the edge of the third
floor. They were wearing turbans and carried AK-47s. She fired up at them, two
shots into one, and two shots into the other. As they fell, she took two more
carefully aimed shots pegging them with headshots before they hit the ground.
She ejected her
magazine, checking the cartridge which only seemed to have a couple shots left
in it. Pocketing the cartridge in a baggy pocket of her cargo pants, she got up
and offered Susanne a hand.
“We must be
moving, Suzie,” she said in a commanding voice.
“Alright Alia”
Susanne said, her thumbs still working the keyboard, “just let me finish this
text.”
“There will be
time for doing this later,” Alia insisted in her thick accent. “They will be
swarming this حارة [hāra] soon.” She
bent over to help Susanne up. “There is place for us to hide. I have people in
the city.”
“Go ahead then and fetch them,” Susanne moved her arm so
Alia could see the blood on her side. “I’m not going to make it with you.”
“Don’t speak
these things,” Alia begged, her face turning soft.
“I have to send
this message out,” Susanne insisted, finishing her email, “No one is watching.
No one knows what’s been going on here.”
“There’s no
time,” Alia said.
“There,” she said
stubbornly. “I’m done.” Susanne raised the phone as high as she could, trying
to get a signal in the spotty locale. “Come on.” Zero bars. “Come on.” Her arm
fell as her head got dizzy. “Come on,” she said as she saw the phone get a bar.
The animation of the email sending began, but the bar flickered out before it
could finish.
“Who is your
friend?” Alia asked.
“We’re not
friends,” Susanne said with a gargling laugh. “Oh that didn’t sound good, did
it? Ugh, we went to university together. She’ll know what to do. Far better
than me.”
There was
screaming from the street at the mouth of the alley, “laqad wajadat alnisa'
kunaa nabhath eanha, allah 'akbar, tueal 'iilaa huna,” and Alia turned quickly
to fire off a shot that went through the man’s neck. The crowds in the street
were finally dispersing as the man went down. The damage was done.
Alia grabbed
Susanne and forced her up in one surprising show of strength for a woman so petite.
Supporting Susanne with her shoulder, the wounded reporter with red hair
screamed and dropped her phone to the floor. Trying to go for it, Alia pulled
her away.
“No!” Susanne
insisted through the pain. “I have to make sure it sends. It’s all that matters.”
It was futile
however, and Alia led her from the alley, the two women far out of sight and
earshot as the phone pinged with the chime of a sent email.
* *
*
“Do you mind if I
smoke?” Robert Daggers said in his deep voice, pulling a cigarette from the
half depleted pack he kept in the breast pocket of his suit jacket. The man was
tall, imposing even, in his traditional black suit with suspenders that seemed
to be doing nothing to hold his pants up when he still wore a belt.
He brought the smoke
to his lips, and with his other hand fished out a lighter. He flicked the
lighter before Isabol Tseung could even respond.
“A little,” She
said, too late. She was sitting across from him in a small foldable chair,
lights beaming down on them both from stands where her cameraman had set up
three fresnels in a triangular pattern to counter act the shadows cast by the
one draped window in the cold library conference room where she was conducting
her interview on the University of Toronto campus.
Robert Daggers
drew deeply from his smoke, and Isabol Tseung tried to share a glance with her
cameraman, though she couldn’t see his eyes through the reflection of light on
his glasses. He threw her a shrug and she gave the American a disapproving
frown. Better to not make a fuss. She wasn’t there to attack him on his
nicotine addiction. Not that.
“I guess we’ll
just have to call this my presidential prerogative,” President Daggers said,
taking another drag, he blew the smoke into Isabol’s face.
“It’s actually
illegal here,” Isabol said, unable to stop herself, “now. Smoking inside.”
“Yes,” the
President of the United States said, ashing his cigarette carelessly on the
floor, getting some of his ash on her shoe. “It’s illegal in the States as
well.” He gave her the thinnest of smiles, almost daring her to get triggered.
Triggering the liberal media was, after all, what President Bob Daggers did
best.
Isabol wasn’t
going to take the bait. She’d been wanting this for only too long, and anyone
who knew her knew she never let an opportunity go to waste. “So you believe,
then, that certain types of people should be allowed to live by a different set
of rules than other people. Such as successful people. Or rich people.”
The president
wasn’t often prone to smile, but his thinly veiled satisfied smirk didn’t budge
once. She hoped to wipe it clean off his face before the interview was over.
“I don’t think
anyone is saying that,” President Daggers said confidently. “But in life there
is an unspoken understanding that people who have made it to the top have
earned a level of respect and privilege that lesser classes are welcome to if
they just work hard for it. I think if someone is a value and benefit to their
society, what good does it do to drudge into their private lives?”
“You mean like Rosanne?”
Isabol asked, brushing her dark hair behind her ear and tapping her pen on the
pad before her. She didn’t have any questions written on it, but she found just
having the pad there an often effective intimidation tool.
“Sure,” The president
agreed.
“Harvey
Weinstein?”
“Maybe.” She
wasn’t going to give him the satisfaction of reacting to that. He ashed his
smoke on the ground again.
“So,” Isabol
said, leaning forward in her chair. “following your logic to its rational
conclusion you probably also don’t think child pedophiles should have to
announce themselves when entering a new neighbourhood.”
“Nobody is saying
that.”
Isabol crossed
her arms. “But you’re not denying it either. Right? What exactly are people
supposed to think?”
“People can think
whatever they want to think,” Daggers told her, smoking away. “I personally
think that my supporters are an intelligent, critical thinking, flock.” The
word flock seemed to jarringly contradict his descriptors of intelligent and
critical thinking. “And I think any intelligent man knows that there’s nuance
to every issue.”
“And what about
intelligent women?”
The president
ignored her question. “You have to take things like that on case by case. Do I
think there’s a lot of wrongfully accused pedophiles who are being treated
unfairly, you’re damned right I do.”
Isabol clicked
her pen. “Do you have any evidence or stats to support that?” She already knew
he didn’t. “Or are we seriously just supposed to take your word on that? That
immigrants are murderers and rapists, and some pedophiles are good people?”
“That’s the
problem with you media folks,” he said in his deep voice, stroking his chiseled
unshaven chin. There were more hairs on his scruffy face than atop his shiny
bald head.
“We’re the enemy
of the people,” Isabol stated flatly. “Those were your words. Would you care to
elaborate?”
“You’re asking
me? How are you the enemy of the people?” the president leaned back
confidently. His smoke now burned to the filter, he tossed it away into the
corner of the room. “Honey,” he said. “you should read my tweets.”
“I was just
hoping you could explain it to my face,” Isabol told him. “Personally I love --
people. I became a reporter because I wanted to help -- people.”
“Maybe you should
have been a nurse.”
“My father wanted
me to be a -- doctor.” She said, in case there was any doubt in his mind women
could be doctors. “It just wasn’t for me. This is where I belong. You still
haven’t answered my question.”
“It’s the lies,”
he said. “The way you attack conservatives.”
“So you feel
attacked,” Isabol said, tapping her pen on her pad.
“You don’t think
I’ve watched Voice News?” he said.
Isabol nodded,
with a polite laugh. “Yeah, I don’t think you’ve watched us.” He was too busy
watching the jokers at Fox News.
“I’ve seen
enough,” the president said. “I’ve seen clips. You make me out like I’m some
kind of pervert. Like I can’t bring up how hot I think you are without you
spinning this interview to make me seem like some kind of creep.”
“And yet,” Isabol
said, leaning back, “despite that, you still brought up my physical qualities
when I’ve only come here to address you at an intellectual level.” She crossed
her arms again, somewhat more tightly this time than last.
“It’s a
compliment,” he said. “I’d be more than happy if you told me I have a hot
body.”
“But I don’t
think you have a hot body,” Isabol Tseung said, trying to keep her voice level.
“What if I brought up your bald head, your sweaty pits, how your face turns
bright red when you get angry. Your fat banana lips.”
The thin smile
he’d been wearing the whole interview was gone. She was starting to get under
his skin.
“None of those
were compliments,” he said. “And there’s the problem with the media. I
complimented you, and you insulted me, and somehow people will watch this
interview and think I’m the bad guy.”
“I think the
problem,” Isabol explained, “is that comments on physical attributes take away
from the real conversation.”
“But you’re not
interested in a real conversation,” he argued before her. “You’re only
interested in spreading fake coverage of nonsense, and distracting people from
what’s really going on.”
“Let’s go through
it all together then,” Isabol said. “The events, from the beginning. It started
in twenty sixteen when you beat Donald Trump to be the conservative
representative.”
“He played a good
game,” Bob Daggers said. “I just played the same game better.”
“But then you
lost to the democratic representative who beat Hilary Clinton, Shirley Manson.”
Bob shifted in
his seat. “Only because of election tampering.”
“You mean the so called
hacking of the elections,” Isabol clarified for the camera.
“It wasn’t so
ridiculous when it was the Democrats complaining about election hacking.”
Isabol frowned,
crinkling her small nose. “For the record though, the democrats meant hacking
in the loosest of senses. The Russians took advantage of social media to push
false narratives and spread discourse. There was no actual hacking, as much as
there was mind hacking or life hacking.”
“And there’s
another false story,” Bob Daggers insisted. “That’s what the media wants you to
believe to hide the real hacking that Hilary Clinton did with the Russians to
get her ultimate revenge.”
“That sounds like
a good movie,” Isabol made the casual observation. “So Shirley Mason wins by
quite a margin—“
“Proof of
election tampering,” Bob Daggers interrupted. “The polls showed the race to be
much closer.”
“So the Russians
didn’t bother to hack the polls first?” Isabol was trying to follow his logic.
She really was.
“Why would they?”
“So then there
was the scandal with Mason’s vice president, and in a shock to practically
everyone, she announced you her new VP.”
“She wanted to
close the divide between the right and the left.”
“Okay,” Isabol
said, tapping her pen against the pad again. “but you then went on and
destroyed her administration from inside, set her up for impeachment, and took
the presidency completely against the wants and votes of the people.”
“More media
spin,” Daggers insisted. “You really can’t help yourself can you? Conservatives
are treated as evil monsters without –“
“But when the
things you believe are monstrous,” Isabol insisted, pushing him. “When the very
tenants of your party are callous and cruel…”
Bob Daggers shook
his head. “That’s a gross misrepresentation of the Republican party. Let me
boil it down for simple minds like yours to understand.” He lit another
cigarette as he spoke, and the smoke around Isabol was making it hard for her
to breathe. “Conservatives believe in small government and free enterprise.
That’s it.”
“I’ve heard this
argument before,” Isabol insisted. “But in practice it seems like conservatives
only believe in small government when it suits them. Where’s your small
government when you’re pushing a law through senate to abolish all abortions in
the country. Forcing women to suffer through pain and horrific body
transformation because you think the government--”
“That’s not
exactly how I would describe child birth,” Daggers said with a laugh.
“You’ll never
know,” Isabol argued angrily. “You could never know.” She was starting to raise
her voice. “What about the girl in Texas, who was raped and was refused an
abortion. She didn’t ask for her life to be changed forever. You don’t know how
traumatizing child birth can be on a person. How life altering. It should
always be a choice. Otherwise you might as well be signing them to torture and
a life of unpaid servitude.”
“That is absurd.”
“Where is your
small government when you are refusing immigrants at the border? When you are kicking
out hard working people for being “illegal” but really just because they are a
different ethnicity as you. People who were providing for our economy, even
without many of the benefits rewarded to legitimate citizens of the country.
How can a small efficient government be so needlessly cruel while
simultaneously shooting themselves in the foot?”
“It’s all spin,”
Daggers insisted. “You can spin it anyway you like.”
“Where is the
conservative focus on economy and a cheaper government, on lowering our
national debt, when Bush started the war in Iraq. Racked up a ten billion
dollar deficit in the process. You claim to care about the debt, and yet the
only way you actually push towards small government is to cut important
environmental protections so you can put that money into funding your
anti-immigration. You cut money from social services that guarantee vulnerable
people will suffer and die, and then you just openly hand that money back into
the hands of the rich with tax breaks, even though they are already doing just
fine for themselves and only keep getting larger in needless assets.”
“My presidency
has been better for both the rich and the hard workers of America,” Bob Daggers
finally butted into her tirade.
Isabol took a
deep breath. “That’s not true. How can you say that and yet deny minimum wage
workers even a living wage. When a single mother works 40 hours a week and
can’t even make enough money to feed her kid, and your argument to support that
is simply that she will learn then how to work harder? It’s despicable.”
Bob Daggers got
up, “I don’t need to listen to this.”
”What about the
allegations against you of women abuse?” Isabol said, getting up with him,
fully aware she was about to lose him. “Do you enjoy taking advantage of people
more vulnerable than yourself? Is power just a trip for you, so you seek new
ways to flaunt it? Or, in that disgustingly perverse misogynistic cave of evil
you call a mind, are you just existentially incapable of accepting a world in
which you can ask something of a woman and her answer to your question is NO.”
She grabbed his
smoke from between his lips, broke it, and tossed it aside. She didn’t realize
she’d tossed it at the blonde secret service agent off to the president’s side,
but the woman in a suit and shades leaned back casually and dodged both pieces.
All while facing away. How could anybody have reflexes that good?
President Bob
Daggers raised his hand as if to slap her, his face twisted in furious abandon.
Isabol planted her feet and locked eyes with him, daring him to follow through.
Instead he chuckled in such a way that sounded like a cough.
“I suppose it’s a
good thing I have diplomatic immunity,” he said, lowering his arm to point at
her instead. “You should watch yourself.” He shared a glance with his secret
service agent. She didn’t seem to hold herself much like the agents Isabol was
used to seeing. There was a rumour that Bob Daggers had fired the entire secret
service staff, replaced them with his own private contractors.
“This conversation
is over.” The president said, turning to
her cameraman with his same hand still outstretched. “Give me the tape.”
“It doesn’t run
on tape,” Tom said, pulled the micro SD card from the back. “We’re all
digital…”
The secret
service woman grabbed the small chip from him.
“Go ahead,” the
president said to Isabol. “Say anything about me that you like. I promise you
that you’ll hear from me again, and that I’ll enjoy our next meeting far more
than you.” The way he said that made her skin crawl, and the way he looked her
up and down was as if he was imagining her naked. He then stormed out of the
room with his protection.
“Jesus,” Tom
said, behind his large glasses that sat awkwardly on his square face. Isabol
jumped, having forgot for a moment that he was in the room. “That was really
intense.
“Tell me you
didn’t give him our only copy,” Isabol insisted, pointing at him the way
Daggers had pointed at her.
“I was connected
to the university WIFI and uploading live to the dropbox,” Tom told her, and
she breathed her first sigh of relief, hugging him with excitement. “He had to
know that though, right?”
“No, you lovable
lump you. I don’t think he did.” She looked at the door he’d only just slammed
on his way out. “I’m really good at pissing off conservatives,” Isabol said. “You
notice that?”
Tom shrugged
while taking the camera off the tripod. “Nobody does it better,” he said
casually, as he slipped the camera into its case.
Isabol sighed,
and picked up her pad where it fell when she stood up. As she did, Tom turned
off the Fresnels and bathed her in black. In the darkness her phone’s screen
was the only light. A notification had popped up, an email. The subject line
was a single word.
Urgent.
Next
Month on Isabol Tseung Voice News at www.patreon.com/99geek in September 2018
Chapter 1: Isabol Tseung is an up and coming reporter who wants to make a name for herself doing more than just local news, and AP reporting. She wants to go into the field, interview the most relevant people, she wants to dig at the story, and find something real to report on. Something that affects millions of lives. She wants to make a difference.
Chapter 1: Isabol Tseung is an up and coming reporter who wants to make a name for herself doing more than just local news, and AP reporting. She wants to go into the field, interview the most relevant people, she wants to dig at the story, and find something real to report on. Something that affects millions of lives. She wants to make a difference.
Next
Time: Adrift Homeless at www.patreon.com/99geek in October 2018
Chapter 6: Just because the Blazkor second rebellion has broken, doesn't mean there isn't still lots to be done. There's a ship to fix, and a crew still must be formed to man it. People will need to be uprooted from their homes and forced to live in an unfamiliar environment. Bureaucracy will have to be tended to. And there are more threats still to come.
Chapter 6: Just because the Blazkor second rebellion has broken, doesn't mean there isn't still lots to be done. There's a ship to fix, and a crew still must be formed to man it. People will need to be uprooted from their homes and forced to live in an unfamiliar environment. Bureaucracy will have to be tended to. And there are more threats still to come.
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