Wednesday, November 27, 2013

THE MAGICAL BICYCLE SHOP

*****

Famagusta Gate: Nicosea
***
Just getting to school each day proved to be a treat. Icarus may have had his wings, but Lucky had Yorgo and his powerful motorbike to thunder along the road to the medieval gates that led into the ancient city of Nicosia.

Jim’s shop in Nicosia was just beyond the Famagusta Gate – a distance of a little over four miles from Lucky’s home in the village of Pallouriotissa.

In the early days, Lucky made the round trip on the back of Yorgo’s motorbike, except when it rained, in which case they’d share a taxi. But even during what they called the rainy season – from November to March – precipitation was rare. Cypriots boasted that the island averaged 340 sunny days a year and from what Lucky could tell, it was no exaggeration.

He soon realized that if he rid himself of the schoolboy habit of dawdling in the mornings, he could get to Yorgo’s house in time to see Athena before she left for school. In Yorgo’s big, cheery kitchen, he’d drink the thick syrupy Cypriot coffee - brewed fresh on hot sand that covered a brick shelf set into the fireplace – and munch on warm black bread straight out of the backyard oven and dripping with honey, or cactus pear preserves. He and Athena would cast eyes at each other while her sisters and brothers giggled. Then Yorgo would kick-start his heavy motorbike and Lucky would climb up behind him and they’d be off – wobbling through the canopy of gourd vines that sheltered the front gate, then bumping across gravel to the pitted tarmac of the main highway.

On the way to Nicosia, almost all traffic headed to the city. There were very few motorized vehicles on the road – a few trucks, an assortment of 1920’s and 30’s era cars and one or two motorbikes like Yorgo’s. Several ancient buses, literally crammed to the rooftop with both human and animal passengers, also made the daily trip. When they passed Lucky could hear the chickens cackling, the roosters crowing and the bleating of lamb and kid off to end their days at the meat market. Water wagons groaned along the side of the road, wobbling back and forth - with the oxen bawling under the terrible weight - spewing water from the leaks in their tanks and leaving a trail of mud in the hot dust of the roadside.

Shopkeepers and their clerks favored bicycles, with their trousers tied at the ankles to keep them from being soiled, or caught in the chain. Shop girls traveled by bike as well – but usually in groups of five or six. It was always a delightful sight, the girls’ hair protected by colorful scarves - their skirts blowing in the wind, chattering away, while pretending to ignore all the lusty young men who called out to them.

Most of the farm people went by wagon, some horse or mule drawn, some pulled by oxen. The carts had huge wheels, many as tall as a man, with long hand-carved spokes. The wheels were rimmed, not with rubber, but with strips of flint-coated iron. Some of the wagons were enormous things – two stories high and full to the groaning with produce and baskets and crates of caged animals off to the slaughter.

Of course, there were always a few camels swaying along on lazy legs that were so long that they moved swiftly through the traffic with elegant ease, their heads moving this way and that on necks so lengthy that the animals seemed half snake. Lucky noticed that people tended to make way for the camels – the creatures had a nasty habit of indiscriminately spitting and biting when annoyed. Or, sometime just for the hell of it.

Out in the fields – which sprawled on either side of the road – people were at work, tilling or weeding or changing the course of an irrigation ditch. In the orchards, boys were plucking enormous oranges and lemons from the trees, or twisting off cactus pears with a special tool that kept the stickers from getting into their fingers.

Herders were already changing grazing grounds, moving their flocks of sheep or goats across the highway, blocking traffic and making everyone curse for being kept from their tasks. But the herders only grinned and made rude gestures and if anyone got too threatening, a big ram or yapping sheep dog would attack and drive them away.

Lucky once saw an ill-tempered bus driver forced back into his vehicle by a barrage of stones flung by a young herder with a deadly sling. The huge, over-loaded bus and the skinny, raggedy boy whirling his sling overhead was a modern-day David and Goliath if there ever was one.

Small, barelegged boys and girls with switches drove honking geese and quacking ducks to market, while through all this colorful and noisy procession, the gypsy kids would dart in and out of the crowd, looking for targets of opportunity. When people saw them they struck out with cudgels and fists. They alternately crossed themselves and blasphemed the gypsies – clutching their valuables and calling down the wrath of saints and devils alike on these interlopers.

Yorgo disliked the gypsies as well, but he was more philosophical than most. "Gypsies have to live," he told Lucky, "like the cock-a-roach and flies your mother hates. If we killed the gypsies, like the poor pests in your mother’s kitchen, why, we’d be like Mr. Hitler with his moustache killing the Gypsies as well as the Jews." He made a cautionary gesture. "Not that I am comparing Gypsies and Jews," he added. "Jews have been in Cyprus for thousands of years. I might even be a little Jewish myself, who knows." He shrugged. "And maybe Gypsy as well. Who can say where the seed of our fathers flowed."

Setting out from his house in the morning, Nicosia was nothing more than an indistinct gray-brown hump on the horizon. Set astride the Pedieos River, which flowed from the distant Troodos Mountains, the city sat virtually in the center of the island. It rose out of the fertile Mesario Plain, which on this fine early Spring day was lush with budding new life.

When Lucky had lived in the hotel he’d explored the city streets only a little. He’d driven past Nicosia daily on his way to the boarding school, visited the cinema and a few other places. Other than that, his main interests had been the village and its surroundings.

But on this - his first day at a new school that wasn’t really a school, but something exotically different - Lucky took special note of the city as they approached on Yorgo’s motor bike. At first all he saw when they grew closer was an imposing gray stone wall, bulking up like a ragged mountain. The area around the walls was naked of trees and buildings, making the ancient fortress even more foreboding.

Lucky eventually learned that ancient ordinances banned all structures within range of a missile from a catapult, or, later, a cannon shot. The city’s origins went all the way back in time to a Neolithic trading village, then a fortress for early kings, then a supreme fortress for the Crusaders in the 12th Century or so. Peering past Yorgo’s bulk, Lucky could see the walls gradually growing to their full grandeur. It was nearly impossible to talk over the roar of the engine, but even if he could be heard, Lucky would have been silent, the view was so impressive. He imagined how cowed attacking armies must have felt marching on such a magnificent defensive structure.

As the traffic thickened, Yorgo slowed his approach to the gated entrance, putting his legs out to balance the bike. Immediately all the sounds and scents crowded in. Lucky could smell raw petrol and oil – the mixture used on less than modern engines, like the bike Yorgo was riding and half the vehicles around them. He heard horns blaring – not the sound of horns you heard in America, but the eerie hoot-hoot-hoot of European horns.

Lucky saw a taxi, desperately signaling a right-hand turn into a narrow place in the single lane that entered the city through the gate. Besides his frantically waving hand, the signal he made included a bar of illuminated yellow plastic that shot out from the side of the car. From experience Lucky knew there was a similar bar on the left. A camel loped into the taxi’s path, turned its head and spit a terrible yellow and green glob of camel spittle on the windshield. The driver leaned out and cursed, shaking his fist. The camel driver –a Turk in baggy black pants - gave the man a look of great sorrow and shrugged - What can you do with a camel? Immediately, the cab driver veered the other way, flipping up another long bar of illuminated direction to point out his path and laying on his horn to clear the way.

Then Lucky saw why the cabbie had been fighting for position: they were about to enter Famagusta Gate and with all the traffic – mechanical, animal and human - even maneuvering on a motorbike would be tricky.

He looked up and caught sight of a long, deadly row of spikes hoisted over the gate. It was as if they were entering a mouth with fanged jaws above and only blunt gums below. Yorgo indicated the spikes. "Closing gates…" he said. Then his hand swept down – his palm a knife – "… crushes your enemy." Now Lucky realized what he was looking at. In ancient times, as the enemy approached, the city leaders would trigger a release and an enormous, fanged gate would crash to the ground, barring entrance.

Yorgo was still talking over the roar of the engine. "But wait and see, Lucky, there is a very clever trick. Wait and I will show you." Then he cried, "Elbows in, Lucky," and he shot for a gap in the traffic blocking the entrance.

Lucky gasped, he couldn’t see how Yorgo could do it. But his friend soon proved himself a past master of such difficulties. He leaned sharply to the right, his foot going down and sliding across the pavement. Lucky had a sudden view of a wagon draped with crates of chickens, all squawking at once as Yorgo headed straight for the wagon. Then, he leaned in the other direction – heading for an ox cart. Lucky spotted a narrow pathway between the lead oxen’s horned head and a streaming water truck.

From Lucky’s viewpoint it was too narrow for their passage. But Yorgo slowed slightly and reached out with his big left hand and gave the ox a mighty blow on its flank. The creature bawled with more indignity than pain and jerked its head to the side. Immediately, Yorgo straightened the bike, gave it some juice and – wheels at first spinning in the spilled water from the water truck – he shot through the entrance and they were inside the Famagusta Gate.

Calmly, as if nothing unusual had occurred, Yorgo pointed overhead. "Look at the second gate, Lucky. That is the trick."

Lucky looked up and saw that indeed there was a second set of fanged gates hoisted into the vaulted ceiling – easily three stories high – and set many yards past the entrance.

Yorgo paused, caught a moment behind a towering camel. He thumbed back to the first gate, the one that guarded the opening. "You allow some of the enemy to enter. Let them think you are stupid and didn’t see them. Then…" He indicated the second set of gates… "You let the first gate go… wait until they enter… then the second. And they are trapped in between."

Lucky nodded, he could see it clearly. The enemy troops tormented by taunting Cypriots, charging the entrance to the city. Shouting in glee when the gate didn’t close – stupid Cypriots were too slow, too busy bragging about the thick walls of their city. Then, once a goodly number were inside – rushing toward that distant point of light that Lucky could see at the far end of the tunnel - Cypriot commanders would give the word and the second set of gates would slam down. Fanged points catching anyone who dodged too slowly. Then, when they tried to retreat, the first set of gates – the ones meant to bar the entrance – would crash down, imprisoning the bravest of the enemy attackers.

Lucky leaned close, so Yorgo could hear. "What happened then?"

But at that moment, as the camel advanced and the motorbike slid forward, the answer became apparent. A flood of sunlight beamed down from above. Yorgo’s thumb shot up, indicating the wide, iron-grated hole set in the ceiling. "Boiling oil," he shouted, tipping his hand, to indicate upturned pots. "That’s the real trick… Hot lead as well… They poured it on the soldiers." He chortled. "They got a good, Cypriot roasting." His laughter was hearty and a little unsettling. "Like the oven at my house. A grand thing to cook all your enemies in."

Lucky’s mind was suddenly filled with visions of men screaming in agony as molten lead and boiling oil poured over their heads and shoulders. Before the picture could take too firm a grip on his imagination, the camel decided to lift its tail and do its business. Yorgo cursed in Greek and swerved to the side. They barely escaped the huge load of camel shit and piss that came pouring out.

"That damned Turk," Yorgo grumbled. "Camels must empty their bowels before they enter the gate. That’s the law. A good and sensible law, even though it is British."

In the following days, Lucky watched more law-abiding camel drivers push their beasts to the fields on either side of the gates. Commands were given, switches were switched and the camels bawled with irritation. Eventually, they gave up their loads of stinking feces and urine. Then, complaining as if they’d been relieved of a treasure instead of bodily waste, they growled and moaned as their masters goaded them through the gates. Clean of bowel and bladder, but certainly not of temper.

Yorgo laughed and made a rude-fisted gesture as he goosed his bike out of harm’s way and blended into the tunnel’s traffic. It was a long tunnel – the exit was a mere shimmer of light in the distance. Lucky would later learn that in many places the city walls were as wide as a soccer field. At the narrowest, the ancient masters who had once ruled the island had decreed that the roadway running on top of the wall must be wide enough for at least two heavy chariots to pass. But the tunnel through the walls was built to handle traffic from a Medieval – and therefore much smaller – population. So on this day, which was not even a regular market day, it was packed front to back and side to side with people, animals and vehicles of all descriptions – both ancient and merely antique.

Pinching in the flow even more were lines of stalls that ran along both sides. Stall keepers cried out their wares in several languages. "Black market," Yorgo said as he gunned past a stall stocked with British army bayonets, field rations and medic packs.. "Don’t come here." He spit to the side. "Very bad people."

Immediately, Lucky determined to return as soon a he could. A moment later the tunnel spilled out onto a broad thoroughfare, jammed with every conceivable vehicle, traffic creeping slowly along as people railed at one another for causing the delay. Narrow sidewalks on either side were packed with foot traffic perusing the wares of small shops of every variety – from boot makers to tobacconists. Spotted here and there were little cafes, and tavernas, with tables and chairs outside, all occupied by men smoking big water pipes and sipping tiny cups of coffee. Waiters scurried from these cafes, heading for the shops with breakfast coffee and sweets for the owners. They carried their orders on three-tiered trays, dangling one beneath the other on chains and never spilling a drop as they wove through the hurrying passersby.

Yorgo made an easy left (traffic in Cyprus kept to the left, in British fashion) at the second street from the gate. It was a cobbled street, rather than tarmac and much narrower than the main avenue. The road climbed a hill that curved past businesses that seemed more industrial than those on the main street. Lucky could hear the steady grind of hand saws, the shriek of drill bits and the rhythmic sounds of foot-driven sewing machines and hand-driven looms. The smells were a mixture of machine oil, glue pots cooking over dung fires, fresh cut wood shavings and good things frying in olive oil from a little restaurant at the top of the street.

Lucky craned to see the street sign when they swept past, then sighed in frustration. He hadn’t learned how to read Greek as yet and the Cyrillic letters on the sign were impenetrable. In most of the countries he’d visited, they used Roman letters and even though he didn’t know the languages, he could make out the names of the streets and even locate them on a map, or follow directions from a hotel concierge. The Cyrillic letters made him feel illiterate and he hoped Jim planned to teach him how to read and write Greek.

Yorgo downshifted to a lower gear to help the bike up the hill – the tires bumping across the cobbles – and gestured with his chin. They had nearly reached their goal. "There is our good friend, Jim."

Jim’s shop was easy to spot. It was about a third of the way up the hill on the right. Gleaming bicycles were lined up in a rack outside a fairly large, glass-fronted store front. Above the door – jutting out from the wall was a large truck tire, painted jet black. A sign dangling beneath it read in English: "Davis Tires." Beneath that, a smaller sign, hanging from two slender chains off the first, said: "Raleigh Bicycles." Both signs were professionally done and a bit out of place on this street. Not because they were in English, but because the styles were so modern.

Jim was standing in the doorway. He was every inch the proud, young proprietor. He had his suit jacket over his shoulder, his shirt was blazing white, the tie stylishly wide and his shoes were shined to a high gloss.

As they rumbled up, he was helping an old Turk sweep the front sidewalk, while a raggedy Cypriot kid polished the bicycles. A waiter was trotting down the hill with newspaper-wrapped bundles under his arm that turned out to be breakfast for Jim’s two workers.

When Jim heard the motorbike he looked up and grinned that crooked smile of his. "Lucky!" he cried, in a delighted voice that made the boy feel entirely welcome. Then he looked ostentatiously at his watch and said to Yorgo "I see that our new scholar has arrived early for his first day of school."

The way he said it, implied that Lucky had been personally responsible for his early arrival, instead of merely abiding by Yorgo’s schedule. "Seven o’clock at my house, Lucky," he’d said. "I must be at my mill by thirty minutes after seven o’clock. I cannot wait, you understand. If you aren’t here, you will have to take a taxi."

Mr. Blaines had coached Lucky to be early to all appointments – the reasons having more to do with inspecting the lay of the land rather than satisfying the grace of punctuality. However, in this case, Lucky had the added inducement of a sloe-eyed beauty named Athena.

He was not about to mention any of this, but he still didn’t want to claim credit that wasn’t rightfully his, so he said shyly, "I was just coming with Yorgo."

The admission immediately endeared him to both men. Beaming, Yorgo clapped the boy’s shoulder and said, "Find me when you and Jim are done, Lucky my friend, and we’ll ride home together." To Jim he said, firmly, but in Greek, "The boy has a good heart, Demetrios. He reminds me of you, when you were being schooled at the monastery."

Lucky understood some of this, but pretended he didn’t, looking over the bikes in their racks with exaggerated interest. Lucky was pleased – and a little startled - to hear Jim reply, but in English, "Of course our Lucky has a good heart. I saw it the moment we met."

Then he said to the boy, "Come and see the books I purchased for us. I think you will be pleased."

As Yorgo drove off, Lucky and Jim entered the tire/bicycle shop that was to be the boy’s schoolroom for many months to come.

It was a rather drab room, its dimensions unencumbered by any furniture other than a large desk in the back, which had two wooden chairs resting in front of it and two more set against the wall – rather like a cantina. The room was large – Lucky learned later that it was two shops knocked into one – and much deeper than it was wide. The walls were white plaster over ancient stone. As one entered the shop the immediate walls were bare, except for a few poster advertisements – in English – touting the qualities of Davis Tires, or Raleigh Bicycles.

After a moment, Lucky noted that Davis Tires posters were confined to one wall, Raleigh the other. Under the Raleigh wall, was a display of a dozen or more bikes, plus empty floor-slots presumably for the ones outside. Against the Davis Tire wall, there were eight different tires of various sizes and quality, resting in slots that held them upright. Above them was a shelf, displaying tire cross-sections to show their inner strengths.

Electrical lines were exposed, rather than hidden. The bricks behind the lathe and plaster façade were nearly as ancient as the city and no electrical line had ever penetrated them. White-painted metal tubes containing the electrical lines ran along the ceiling – where two bare bulbs hung down, one near the front, the other near the back; another line ran along the bicycle wall where a receptacle fed power to a complicated antique lamp that had been converted from gas to electricity. The shades were hand-painted with faded images of Raleigh bicycles going back to the company’s Victorian origins of giant front-wheeled bikes.

On the desk, Lucky noted a double-tier of wire baskets on one side – presumably in and out baskets – there were Greek labels top and bottom identifying each. Nearby was a large basket, very new-looking, with a hand-lettered label in English that said: "Lucky." Nestling in its wire sides were several books, documents enclosed in official-looking covers and a neat pile of unbound papers. The basket was set at the far left corner of the desk, between the wall and a large black telephone with an enormous dial that gave off sparks when you turned the wheel. When a phone call came in – depending on the weather - sparks would shoot out from the bottom where the bell was mounted.

As they approached the desk the phone demonstrated its quirky behavior: it rang and sparks shot out, but Jim picked up the receiver without a flicker and started speaking in Greek. He slipped behind the desk, settling into an imposing leather executive chair. As he talked, he pulled a tablet from the top drawer of the desk, then a pencil, and he started writing swiftly.

Lucky stayed quite still as Jim talked – this was obviously his business – watching for a moment as Jim penciled in Cyrillic letters and Arabic numerals. From his own limited experience at the local market, the rise and fall of Jim’s voice and the scratched out numbers on the pad, Lucky got the idea that Jim was in the process of closing a large order. He spoke so quickly, however, and in a businessman’s idiom Lucky was unfamiliar with – that he missed the gist of the deal and soon grew bored.

He looked at the basket marked "Lucky," craning his head to see the titles of the books. Without pausing his conversation, Jim pushed the basket toward the boy, smiling and nodding for him to go ahead.

The first book wasn’t so interesting – arithmetic – the same text he’d used at the British school. The second was a little more intriguing – a slender volume with a paperboard cover: "Euclidean Geometry." The third book gave him a bit of a start. It was labeled, "Common Mistakes In English." He glanced inside and saw that it was book meant for foreign students of the English language.

Beneath it, was a regular English grammar; then a French textbook. That was interesting… was he going to learn French? A geography full of maps followed; then a single volume world history; A book on Greek mythology by Edith Hamilton was next. He smiled when he lifted that aside and saw a collection of Edgar Allen Poe’s stories and poetry. Finally, he came to a small book with a drawing of an old bug-eyed Greek wearing the robes of the ancients and reclining on a stone bench.

The title was, "The Last Days Of Socrates."

NEXT: THE DAY LUCKY MET SOCRATES
*****


LUCKY IN CYPRUS: IT'S A BOOK!



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Here's what readers say about Lucky In Cyprus:
  • "Bravo, Allan! When I finished Lucky In Cyprus I wept." - Julie Mitchell, Hot Springs, Texas
  • "Lucky In Cyprus brought back many memories... A wonderful book. So many shadows blown away!" - Freddy & Maureen Smart, Episkopi,Cyprus. 
  • "... (Reading) Lucky In Cyprus has been a humbling, haunting, sobering and enlightening experience..." - J.A. Locke, Bookloons.com
THE SPYMASTER'S DAUGHTER:
A new novel by Allan and his daughter, Susan


After laboring as a Doctors Without Borders physician in the teaming refugee camps and minefields of South Asia, Dr. Ann Donovan thought she'd seen Hell as close up as you can get. And as a fifth generation CIA brat, she thought she knew all there was to know about corruption and betrayal. But then her father - a legendary spymaster - shows up, with a ten-year-old boy in tow. A brother she never knew existed. Then in a few violent hours, her whole world is shattered, her father killed and she and her kid brother are one the run with hell hounds on their heels. They finally corner her in a clinic in Hawaii and then all the lies and treachery are revealed on one terrible, bloody storm ravaged night.



BASED ON THE CLASSIC STEN SERIES by Allan Cole & Chris Bunch: Fresh from their mission to pacify the Wolf Worlds, Sten and his Mantis Team encounter a mysterious ship that has been lost among the stars for thousands of years. At first, everyone aboard appears to be long dead. Then a strange Being beckons, pleading for help. More disturbing: the presence of AM2, a strategically vital fuel tightly controlled by their boss - The Eternal Emperor. They are ordered to retrieve the remaining AM2 "at all costs." But once Sten and his heavy worlder sidekick, Alex Kilgour, board the ship they must dare an out of control defense system that attacks without warning as they move through dark warrens filled with unimaginable horrors. When they reach their goal they find that in the midst of all that death are the "seeds" of a lost civilization. 
*****



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TALES OF THE BLUE MEANIE
Audiobook Version Coming Soon!

Venice Boardwalk Circa 1969

In the depths of the Sixties and The Days Of Rage, a young newsman, accompanied by his pregnant wife and orphaned teenage brother, creates a Paradise of sorts in a sprawling Venice Beach community of apartments, populated by students, artists, budding scientists and engineers lifeguards, poets, bikers with  a few junkies thrown in for good measure. The inhabitants come to call the place “Pepperland,” after the Beatles movie, “Yellow Submarine.” Threatening this paradise is  "The Blue Meanie,"  a crazy giant of a man so frightening that he eventually even scares himself. Here's where to buy the book. 

*****

***** 
STEN #1: NOW IN SPANISH!


Diaspar Magazine - the best SF magazine in South America - is publishing the first novel in the Sten series in four  episodes. Here are the links: 

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Friday, November 22, 2013

A TEACHER NAMED JIM DEMETRAKIS

*****
Aristotle And His Pupil, Alexander
*****
***
Lucky was besotted with ants. Since his return from the hospital, he’d lived and breathed myrmecology – which, according to the illustrated book his friends at the hospital had given him as a parting gift – was the scientific name for the study of ants.

The book, titled, simply, "Ants," was by William Morton Wheeler. On the inside leaf was scrawled: "From George And The Gang." Lucky was nearly undone by the inscription, but Harry and the others had so overwhelmed him with effusive farewells and an armful of gifts – including Harry’s much prized copy of "Seven Pillars of Wisdom"– that he had been too distracted to make a fool of himself by crying like a mere child.

So here he was – two weeks out of the hospital – hunched in a ditch, magnifying glass in one hand, the illustrated book in his lap, while he contentedly studied the nest of a red ant colony.

Lucky was at ease with the world. The feared homecoming had not so terrible after all. There was relative peace at home – Cold War emergencies mostly kept his father confined to the CIA base and when he was home he was on 24-hour call and wasn’t allowed to drink. The issue of school had not been raised, although it was always on the edge of his mind. The boy still tired easily, so he couldn’t wander far to see his friends, much less play soccer, or join in other games. Athena was occupied with classes and Larry and his brother weren’t allowed to stray more than a block or two from home.

So he contented himself with the study of ants. The nest he was examining was populated with insects that were rather large, with outsized heads and enormous mandibles - all marching in a double column that wound along to a glob of cactus pear bait and back again to the pyramid of chopped off black ant heads that marked the main entrance to their nest. He’d dubbed the red ants "headhunter ants," for their practice of decapitating their enemies with those huge pincers and carefully displaying their heads in a pyramid-style totem.

The book made reference to some of the most exotic ants of the world – such as the army ants in South America who were so fierce that large animals fled when they were on the march; or the weaver ants, who made living nests by weaving leaves together of certain plants whose properties warded off enemies; or deep-cave ants, who kept luminous worms to light their way to carved out caverns where they kept beetles – like cattle – that they fed until it was time to slaughter them for the nest.

Although there were no army ants, or luminous beetle-herding ants in Cyprus, Lucky was surprised to find countless fascinating varieties in the village of Pallouriotissa. First he scoured his garden, then, as he grew stronger, he ventured into the adjacent field and drainage ditch. Book and magnifying glass in hand, he’d identified dairy ants – ants who raised aphids as cows and milked them of the honey suckled from roses and orange trees. There were underwater ants – ants who burrowed to a stream, let in just so much water to nourish a tasty mold, which they harvested… backing out as they ate and the water level rose. And many, many more.

At the moment, however, Lucky was intent on headhunter ants. It was late morning and the sun warmed the back of his neck as he leaned into his studies. Way down the gravel road where the taverna sat, the first cicadas were awakening, buzzing half-heartedly in the big fig tree that shaded the open-air café. The village was a place where few of the noises of the modern world intruded. The only vehicles with gas driven engines were the village taxi, the occasional lorry full of gravel for one of Yorgo’s construction enterprises, and Yorgo’s motorbike, coughing up the phlegm of civilization as he returned from the city. Frequently, whole days would go by without the sound or sight of a single combustion engine.

The normal sounds of the village were the bray of a donkey, the lowing of an oxen, the pitiful pleas of the sheep and goats wanting to be milked. Or dogs barking… not the dogs Lucky was used to in the U.S. where they were sounding the alarm that the postman was approaching… but real working dogs; dogs that herded animals, dogs that drove off predators; dogs who only raised the alarm when the gypsies came to steal the clothes off the lines, or the tools from their sheds. At times – in the mid-afternoon heat, or the moment at night before the moon rose – every sound was so individualized you could identify it with a person, or an animal you knew personally.

Lucky thought about the sounds of things – or the lack of same - as he crouched over the nest – a mass of vitally important activity carried out in total silence. He was starting to get a little hot and he sat back on his heels, closing his eyes and raising his head to enjoy a fresh wind, scented with lemons and flowers and rosemary just giving up the last of the dew to the early sun.

The sky was a deep, unclouded blue, empty of birds, save a hawk wheeling overhead, looking for opportunity, which explained the absence of other winged creatures. Most of the villagers were in the fields so the only sounds, other than those of nature, were the weep-weep-weep of the widow Anthi’s shuttle cock as it flew across her loom; and the steady ring of the village blacksmith’s hammer, slowly rising and falling against the anvil, in a boom – boom – boom - bump, bump, bump… with the last three beats the rhythmic rebound of the heavy hammer.

Lucky bent closer to his task, warm with contentment, his mind actively, but pleasantly, ferreting out new facts. He found pleasure in the care with which he now operated his powerful magnifying glass – also a gift of his hospital friends. As Harry had warned, one had to be cautious with such a tool, for while you concentrated your view, you also concentrated the light – sometimes dangerously so to the little creatures you were studying.

He was reminded of Panos, the blacksmith, speaking of a newly created blade. "Imagine the knife," Panos had said in Greek, "contemplating its first slicing of the bread." And he’d smote his forehead – Ah – such drama, acting it out… Such a lovely slice of bread as the knife crossed the baker woman’s heavy breast just so – and Panos would demonstrate. The knife slicing, the bread opening up, all those aromas and flavors released. But never, ever, did the knife slice into woman’s breast. To do so, would be a sin of catastrophic proportions in the holy world of edged blades.

As Lucky swept the glass over the marching column he thought about Panos and the baker’s knife and he kept his distance just so – close enough to magnify the view, but not so close as to turn the ants’ nest into a burning Dresden. He wasn’t completely the scientist, however. Perverse boy humor made him stop at the pyramid of black ant skulls and tip it over with a finger. He watched with amusement as first one, then another red ant discovered what had happened to their grisly totem. Then scores of them started racing around, trying to find the intruder who had committed such a dastardly act, while others swarmed in the repair the totem.

A shadow fell over Lucky – it took him a moment to realize it was a human shadow and not a cloud - and then a man’s voice said in accented, but excellent English: "Ah, so that’s what you are up to. The study of ants!"

Mildly startled – Lucky had been so absorbed he hadn’t heard anyone approach – he looked up to see a tall, strongly-built young Cypriot in his middle twenties. He wore a brown business suit, white shirt and tie. A little stunned by the sun and his close work, Lucky found himself staring at the man, taking in his features as if he were appearing in a dream. The man’s face was wide at the cheekbones, with a crooked grin that flashed a hint of Cypriot gold, to show that he was prosperous. His large dark eyes gleamed with humor – and interest - as he contemplated the scene of Lucky and the ants. And the whole thing was topped off by a broad, intelligent brow with a thick shock of black hair so clean and shiny that it glowed in the early sun.

"I’ve been watching you for quite a time," the man a continued. "I couldn’t imagine what you found so interesting in a common drainage ditch."

Lucky felt immediately at ease. He sensed shared interests. He said, "There’s a lot of interesting things in ditches." He looked around for an example, then he indicated a funnel shaped depression near the red ants’ nest. "Do you see the ant lion?"

The man grinned, squinting his eyes as he stared at the place Lucky pointed. "An ant lion? You meant an insect with a hairy mane?"

"No, not exactly," Lucky said. "Here, watch." He picked up a red ant and dropped it in the hole. It tried to scurry out, but the sand gave way under its feet and it kept sliding back. Then there was a sudden motion, a quick flick of sand and the ant fell deeper into the hole. Immediately, a creature with a huge mouth grabbed the ant by the back of the neck and pulled it under the sand. Lucky showed the visitor his book, leafing to an illustration of an ant lion – a ferocious-looking creature if there ever was one.

"Yes, I see what you mean," the man said. "We call it a murmêkoleôn. Which means the same thing. An ant that has transformed into a lion." He grimaced. "It’s a good thing they don’t grow as large as people. We’d all be done for."

"It’s not possible for insects to get too big," Lucky said importantly. "They have tubes in their sides instead of lungs." He mimed breathing through a hose. "You know, if you get under water you can breathe through a hose. But if you get too deep you don’t have the strength to suck in the air."

"When I was a boy, I tried something similar with a reed," the man said, "so I believe what you say is true."

He crouched beside Lucky. "Did you know that the great genius, Leonardo da Vinci encountered exactly the same problem when he was trying to invent the submarine."

Lucky was astounded. "Da Vinci?" he said. "The man who painted the Mona Lisa?"

His new friend nodded. "The very same," he said. "He was not only a great artist, you know, but a fabulous inventor as well. It’s a pity he wasn’t Greek… although there are those who say his mother was Greek." The man gave an elegant Cypriot shrug. "Who can say?"

Lucky had to laugh "I noticed that Greek people say anybody who is a genius must be Greek," he said. "In my family, everybody who is a genius has to be Irish."

The man gave Lucky a sly grin. "But, didn’t you know, my friend," he said, "that the Greeks invented the Irish?"

As Lucky gaped, the man held out a hand. "I should introduce myself," he said. "I’m Jim Demetrakis … a friend of Yorgo’s."

Still enjoying the joke, Lucky shook the proffered hand. He looked up the street. He saw his parents sitting on the veranda having drinks – watching him. His mother waved and Lucky waved back. Something was up, that was for sure.

"I don’t see Yorgo’s motorbike," he said. "Maybe he’ll be by later." Then, realizing he was being rude, he blushed and said, "I’m Lucky Cole. And those are my parents over there."

"Oh, I know who you are, Lucky," Jim said. "I was just visiting with your mother and father and saw you hard at work in your… classroom."

He gestured at the ditch, pleasing the boy to no end because he seemed to grasp what Lucky was up to. He’d been home from the hospital for two weeks – and growing stronger day by day. But no one had brought up the subject of returning to school. Lucky knew that eventually something would have to be done, meanwhile he didn’t want to fall so far behind that he’d be held back a grade.

"I’ve missed a lot of school recently," he told Jim, "so I thought if maybe I did some special projects work – like an essay on ants and maybe T.E. Lawrence – that I could earn some extra credits when I got back to school." He sighed. "I’ve been sick, you know."

Jim clucked sympathetically. "I heard about your illness," he said. "You were quite a lucky young man." He flashed that crooked smile. "But, of course, that’s your name, so it should be no surprise." He studied Lucky a moment, then asked, "Do you like school?"

Lucky hesitated. Until recently, he’d have answered yes, but after the British boarding school, he wasn’t so positive any more. "I like to learn," he said, temporizing. "And I like to read – probably more than anything else. I want to be a writer when I grow up, you know, and reading is a good way to learn how it’s done."

"Who is your favorite author?" Jim asked.

Lucky didn’t hesitate a second. "It changes all the time," he said. "Edgar Allen Poe was my first favorite. My father used to read him to me with I was little. And Mark Twain – whose real name was Samuel Clemens. In the hospital I learned about H.G. Wells and Charles Dickens and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle – Sherlock Holmes is super! Right now I’m keen on T.E. Lawrence – you know: ‘The Seven Pillars Of Wisdom.’ One of the guys in the hospital gave me his book."

Jim nodded. "What about the classical English writers?" Jim asked. "Like Shakespeare and Chaucer?"

Lucky shrugged. "I know about them," he said. "But I haven’t read them yet."

"What of the Greek tales by Homer?" Jim wanted to know. "And all the famous old plays from Sophocles and Euripides and Aeschylus?"

"Sure, I’ve read Homer," Lucky said. "‘The Iliad’ and ‘The Odyssey.’ But only short versions, you know, for kids, so I'll have to read them again in a more serious form. And I’ve heard of Sophocles… but not the others." He scratched his head. "Since I’m living here in Cyprus, I want to learn everything I can about the Greeks."

"I’m told you speak our language, Lucky," Jim said.

Lucky grinned and held two fingers slightly apart. "Teepohtee," he said. "Just a little."

Jim was delighted. "Would you like to learn all those things from me, Lucky?" he asked. "About Shakespeare and Homer and Sophocles."

Lucky was puzzled. "What do you mean?"

"I have a business in Nicosia," Jim said. "It’s quite a new business, but I think it will be a big success. Tires for cars and trucks and also an excellent line of bicycles – Raleigh’s, you know." Lucky was impressed. Raleigh bikes were top of the line English racers – three to ten speed gearing and light as a feather. "I’m also a teacher," Jim continued. "A private tutor, I believe is the term that’s used. My teaching degree is from Athens."

Lucky frowned. "How many kids in your class?"

Jim held up one finger. "With you – it will be one. One student only."

Lucky goggled. "You mean like Aristotle taught Alexander The Great?"

Jim chuckled. "Well, I’m certainly not an Aristotle," he said, "but who knows… you could be Lucky The Great."

Lucky was definitely interested. But he had a sudden, sobering thought. "I wouldn’t have to go back to that… you know… English school?" Lucky hastened to add, "After the hospital, I’ve made scads of English friends. It’s not that I don’t like the English… I just don’t like… well.. that particular English school."

Jim shook his head. "I don’t think your parents want that," he said. He gave a very Cypriot, Themperaze shrug. "You can study with me, or someplace else." Then he lowered his voice. "It is my opinion, Lucky," he said, quite confidentially, "that you will never return to that school no matter what you do."

An entire planetary system of burdens fell from his shoulders and he felt like he was flying in the highest orbit. Excited, he asked, "Can we study ants?" he asked. "You know, biology?"

Jim nodded. "The Greeks – Aristotle again - invented biology," he said, "including the English word that describes it. Modern people say that Aristotle was mistaken in many of his theories… but, I’m not so sure. However, come with me and we’ll investigate. You can argue. Prove me – and Aristotle - wrong."

This astounded the boy. A teacher inviting a challenge. But there was one more question he wanted to ask – the most important one of all. "I told you I wanted to be a writer," he began.

"Yes, you did," Jim replied.

"I really meant it," Lucky said. "It’s not a kid thing. Like this week I want to be a fireman and next week a doctor, or a policeman."

Jim nodded. "Yes, you seem quite serious about it," he said. "I have no doubts."

"I want to make people feel like Edgar Alan Poe makes me feel when I read "The Raven.’" the boy said. "Or like T.E. Lawrence makes me feel when he describes the Arabian desert… Can you teach me how to do that?"

"If you want it badly enough, Lucky," Jim said, "you can accomplish it with or without me."

Lucky laughed. What a great answer. "Okay," he said. "You can be my teacher…" He paused. What an arrogant way of putting it. He lowered his eyes and added, "If you want to, that is."

Jim smiled. "Thank you, Lucky," he said. "I very much want to." Then he rose, brushing off his trousers, saying, "Let’s go tell your mother and father what we’ve decided." He held out his hand and said: "But first you must escape that ditch before the murmêkoleôn, the lion that the ants fear, thinks you are its prey."

Laughing, Lucky grabbed at the strong hand and Jim swung him up in a wide arc. "You shall be like the son of Icarus, Lucky," Jim cried, laughing with him. "Except I won’t let you fly so close to the sun."

"Don’t worry," Lucky shouted. "Don’t you know I’m that Lucky Old Sun?"

NEXT: THE MAGICAL BICYCLE SHOP

****
THE SPYMASTER'S DAUGHTER:
A new novel by Allan and his daughter, Susan


After laboring as a Doctors Without Borders physician in the teaming refugee camps and minefields of South Asia, Dr. Ann Donovan thought she'd seen Hell as close up as you can get. And as a fifth generation CIA brat, she thought she knew all there was to know about corruption and betrayal. But then her father - a legendary spymaster - shows up, with a ten-year-old boy in tow. A brother she never knew existed. Then in a few violent hours, her whole world is shattered, her father killed and she and her kid brother are one the run with hell hounds on their heels. They finally corner her in a clinic in Hawaii and then all the lies and treachery are revealed on one terrible, bloody storm ravaged night.

*****
LUCKY IN CYPRUS: IT'S A BOOK!


Here's where to get the paperback & Kindle editions worldwide: 


Here's what readers say about Lucky In Cyprus:
  • "Bravo, Allan! When I finished Lucky In Cyprus I wept." - Julie Mitchell, Hot Springs, Texas
  • "Lucky In Cyprus brought back many memories... A wonderful book. So many shadows blown away!" - Freddy & Maureen Smart, Episkopi,Cyprus. 
  • "... (Reading) Lucky In Cyprus has been a humbling, haunting, sobering and enlightening experience..." - J.A. Locke, Bookloons.com
*****

BASED ON THE CLASSIC STEN SERIES by Allan Cole & Chris Bunch: Fresh from their mission to pacify the Wolf Worlds, Sten and his Mantis Team encounter a mysterious ship that has been lost among the stars for thousands of years. At first, everyone aboard appears to be long dead. Then a strange Being beckons, pleading for help. More disturbing: the presence of AM2, a strategically vital fuel tightly controlled by their boss - The Eternal Emperor. They are ordered to retrieve the remaining AM2 "at all costs." But once Sten and his heavy worlder sidekick, Alex Kilgour, board the ship they must dare an out of control defense system that attacks without warning as they move through dark warrens filled with unimaginable horrors. When they reach their goal they find that in the midst of all that death are the "seeds" of a lost civilization. 
*****


Here's where you can buy it worldwide in both paperback and Kindle editions:

U.S. .............................................France
United Kingdom ...........................Spain
Canada ........................................ Italy
Germany ..................................... Japan
Brazil .......................................... India

*****
TALES OF THE BLUE MEANIE
Audiobook Version Coming Soon!

Venice Boardwalk Circa 1969

In the depths of the Sixties and The Days Of Rage, a young newsman, accompanied by his pregnant wife and orphaned teenage brother, creates a Paradise of sorts in a sprawling Venice Beach community of apartments, populated by students, artists, budding scientists and engineers lifeguards, poets, bikers with  a few junkies thrown in for good measure. The inhabitants come to call the place “Pepperland,” after the Beatles movie, “Yellow Submarine.” Threatening this paradise is  "The Blue Meanie,"  a crazy giant of a man so frightening that he eventually even scares himself. Here's where to buy the book. 

*****

***** 
STEN #1: NOW IN SPANISH!


Diaspar Magazine - the best SF magazine in South America - is publishing the first novel in the Sten series in four  episodes. Here are the links: 

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