Полная версия
The Writer
Danilo Clementoni
The writer
The adventures of Azakis and Petri
Original Title: Lo Scrittore
Translated by: Linda Thody
This book is a work of fiction. Any names, characters, places and organisations mentioned are the work of the author's imagination and are intended to make the narrative authentic. Any similarity with real events or persons, living or deceased, is purely coincidental.
THE WRITER
Copyright © 2016 Danilo Clementoni
First edition: April 2016
Self-published and printed
facebook: www.facebook.com/libroloscrittore
blog: dclementoni.blogspot.it
e-mail: d.clementoni@gmail.com
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form, including by any mechanical or electronic system, without the written permission of the editor, except for brief passages taken for the purposes of review.
This is the third volume in the series
"The adventures of Azakis and Petriâ To fully enjoy this exciting adventure, before starting this book, I would advise reading the first two volumes entitled respectively âBack to Earthâ and
âIntersection with Nibiruâ
(Authorâs note)
To my wife and son, for their patience and their invaluable suggestions, which helped me to improve both my story and myself.
A special hug for my mother and a huge kiss for my father who, although ill and suffering, motivated me, with his presence and his gaze, to put all my heart into this wonderful story.
Special thanks to all my friends for their continuous encouragement and support, and for spurring me on to complete this work. Without them it may never have seen the light.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Background
Theos spacecraft â The evacuation
Tell el-Mukayyar â Flash in the sky
Shuttle six â Lunar inspection
Tell-el-Mukayyar â Contact with Nibiru
Pasadena, California â The nerd
Taurus constellation - Planet Kerion
Tell-el-Mukayyar â The pyramidsâ energy
Pasadena, California â The News
Planet Kerion â The tragic discovery
Tell-el-Mukayyar â The footage
Pasadena, California â The hideout
Planet Kerion - The Supreme TYK
Tell-el-Mukayyar â The President
Pasadena, California â The test
Planet Kerion â The departure
Shuttle six â The recovery
Pasadena, California â The repairs
Orbiting Saturn â TYKâs arrival
Tell-el-Mukayyar â The plans
Santa Monica, California â The wait
Solar System â Uranus
Tell-el-Mukayyar â The doubt
Santa Monica, California â Revenge
Solar System â Neptune
Island of Hawaii â Surprise in the night
Santa Monica, California â The news
Nibiru â The message
Nevada, Area 51 â Contact with Nibiru
Pasadena, California â The agreement
Solar System â Pluto
Nevada, Area 51 â Plan âBâ
Los Angeles, California â The meeting
Nibiru â The final battle
Channel of Sicily â Telandis
Los Angeles, California â The buyer
ELSAD secret base â The message
Telandis â The laboratories
Mexico - Bahia de Kino
Orbit of Jupiter â Change of plan
Bahia de Kino â The apprehension
Washington â Oval office
Ethiopia â City of Aksum
Ethiopia, Aksum â The Ark of the Covenant
Aksum â The Epafi
Unknown place â The Writer
Area 51 â The return
Tell-el-Mukayyar â The farewell
Bibliographical References
Introduction
The twelfth planet, Nibiru (the planet of the passing) as it was called by the Sumerians, or Marduk (king of the heavens) as it was referred to by the Babylonians, is actually a celestial body orbiting our sun with a period of 3,600 years. Its orbit is significantly elliptical, retrograde (rotating around the sun in the opposite direction to the other planets) and distinctly tilted in relation to the plane of our solar system.
Each cyclical approach has almost always caused huge interplanetary upheavals in our solar system, both in the orbits and the conformation of the planets it consists of. It was during one of its more tumultuous transitions that the majestic planet Tiamat, located between Mars and Jupiter, with a mass approximately nine times that of the Earth as it is today, rich in water and endowed with eleven satellites, was destroyed in a cataclysmic collision. One of the seven moons orbiting Nibiru struck the gigantic Tiamat, effectively splitting it in half, and catapulting the two sections into opposing orbits. In the following transition (the âsecond dayâ of Genesis), the remaining satellites of Nibiru finished off this process, completely destroying one of the two parts formed in the first collision. The debris generated from multiple impacts created what we now know as the âasteroid beltâ, or âhammered braceletâ as it came to be called by the Sumerians. This was partly swallowed up by the neighbouring planets. It was Jupiter, in particular, which captured most of the debris, thus noticeably increasing its own mass.
The satellite artefacts of this disaster, including those surviving from Tiamat, were mostly âfired offâ into outer orbits, forming what we now know as âcometsâ. The part that survived the second transition then positioned itself in a stable orbit between Mars and Venus, taking along with it the last remaining satellite and thus forming what we now call the Earth, together with its inseparable companion, the Moon.
The scar caused by that cosmic impact, which occurred approximately 4 billion years ago, is still partially visible today. The scarred part of the planet is now completely covered by water, in what is now called the Pacific Ocean. This occupies about a third of the earth's surface, extending over 179 million square kilometres. Over this vast area there is virtually no landmass, but instead, a large depression extending to a depth of over ten kilometres.
At present, Nibiru is very much like Earth in its conformation. Two thirds of it is covered in water, whilst the rest is occupied by a single continent that stretches from north to south, with a total surface area of over 100 million square kilometres. For hundreds of thousands of years now, some of its inhabitants have been taking advantage of the cyclical close approaches of their planet to our own, making regular visits, each time influencing the culture, knowledge, technology and the very evolution of the human race. Our predecessors have referred to them in many ways, but perhaps the name that represents them best has always been âGodsâ.
Background
Azakis and Petri, the two lovable and inseparable aliens who are the protagonists of this adventure, have returned to planet Earth after one of their years (3,600 earth years). Their mission? To retrieve a precious cargo, they had been forced to hastily abandon on their previous visit, due to a fault in their docking system. This time however, they have found a very different terrestrial population to the one they left behind. Customs, traditions, culture, technology, communication systems, weapons. Everything was very different to what they had seen on their previous visit.
On arrival, they came across a pair of terrestrials: Doctor Elisa Hunter and Colonel Jack Hudson, who welcomed them enthusiastically and after countless adventures, helped them bring their delicate mission to an end.
But what the two aliens would have preferred never to have to tell their new friends was that their own planet, Nibiru, was rapidly approaching and in just seven earth days would intersect the Earth's orbit. According to their Elders' calculations, one of its seven satellites would come so close as to almost touch the planet, causing a series of climate disruptions comparable to those of its previous passage, which had been summed up in a single definition: The Great Flood.
In the two previous books ("Back to Earth" and "Intersection with Nibiru"), despite countless difficulties, the protagonists of this adventure managed to save the Earth from disaster, but now a new adventure awaits them. Azakisâ and Petriâs return journey home has been sabotaged and an even more terrifying threat is about to befall the entire solar system.
In the last book we left the occupants of the majestic Theos grappling with the sudden activation of the spacecraftâs self-destruct sequence and that is where we will resume the tale of this fantastic new adventure.
Theos spacecraft â The evacuation
"Abandon ship" shouted Azakis desperately.
The Captainâs peremptory order spread simultaneously over all the levels of the Theos. After a brief initial hesitation, the few crew members automatically followed the evacuation procedure they had simulated so many times during emergency drills.
"Eighty seconds to self-destruction" announced the warm, calm female voice of the central system again.
"Come on Zak" shouted Petri. "We havenât got much time left, we must get out of here."
"But canât we do absolutely anything to interrupt the sequence?" replied Azakis incredulously.
"Unfortunately, no, old chap. Otherwise, donât you think Iâd already have done it?"
"But itâs just not possible," said the Captain as his companion in adventure dragged him along by the arm, in the direction of internal communication module number three.
"Well actually we could try to manually interrupt the procedure, but it would take at least thirty minutes and we only have more or less a minute left."
"Wait, stop!" exclaimed Azakis, yanking himself free from his friendâs strong grip. "We canât leave it here to explode. The wave of energy the explosion generates will reach Earth in just a few minutes and the exposed face of the planet will be struck by a gigantic shock wave thatâll destroy everything in its passage."
"Iâve already set up remote control of the Theos from the shuttle. Weâll move it once weâre on board, as long as you get a move on,â scolded Petri as he again grabbed his friendâs arm and bodily dragged him in the direction of the module.
âSixty seconds to self-destruction.â
"But where do you want to move it to?" Azakis continued, as the internal communication module door opened on the shuttleâs bridge, on level six. "A minute wonât be enough to make it reach a sufficient distance to..."
"Will you please just stop babbling on?â Petri interrupted him. "Shut your mouth and sit down there. Iâll handle this now."
Without further comment, Azakis obeyed the order and sat down in the grey armchair at the side of the central console. As he had already done dozens of times before, in equally dangerous situations, he decided to rely completely on the skill and experience of his companion. While Petri feverishly fumbled with a series of three-dimensional manoeuvre holograms, he thought heâd check on the result of the evacuation of the rest of the crew, simultaneously contacting the individual pilots. In a few seconds they all confirmed the successful detachment of their shuttles from the mother spacecraft. They were moving rapidly away. The Captain drew a big sigh of relief and went back to giving his attention to his friendâs skilful manoeuvring.
âThirty seconds to self-destruction.â
"Weâre out" shouted Petri. "Now Iâll move the Theos."
"What can I do to help you?"
âNothing don't worry. Youâre in good hands," and he winked at him with his right eye, as his terrestrial friends had taught him to do. "Iâll position the ship behind the moon. From there it wonât be able to do any harm."
"Gosh," exclaimed Azakis. "I hadnât thought of that."
"Thatâs why I'm here, isnât it?"
"The wave of the explosion will break on the satellite which will absorb all its energy. Youâre a phenomenon my friend."
"And it certainly wonât do any damage on the moon" continued Petri. "Thereâs nothing but rocks and craters there."
âTen seconds to destruction."
âAlmost done....â said Petri faintly.
âThree... Two... One...â
âDone! The Theos is in position."
Precisely at that instant, on the moonâs hidden face, at the decimal degree coordinates latitude 24.446471 and longitude 152.171308, in correspondence to what the terrestrials had called the Komarov crater, there was a strange telluric movement. A large, deep slit with incredibly perfect edges opened on the craterâs barren, rough surface, as if a huge invisible blade had suddenly been stuck into it. Immediately afterwards, a strange ovoid-shaped object darted out at incredible speed, as if it had been shot directly from inside the crater and headed into space, with an inclined path of about thirty degrees with respect to the perpendicular. The object remained visible for only a few seconds before disappearing forever in a flash of bluish light.
On the shuttle, through the elliptical opening giving a view of the exterior, a blinding flash lit up the black, cold outside space, flooding the inside of the shuttle with an almost unreal light.
"My friend, what about getting out of here?" suggested Azakis worriedly, as he watched the wave of energy expand and rapidly approach their position.
"Follow me," shouted Petri into the communicator, to the pilots of the other shuttles. Then, without adding anything else, he manoeuvred his vehicle and quickly moved it to shelter behind the side of the moon that always faces the Earth. "Hold tight," he added, as he firmly gripped the armrests of the command seat where he was sitting.
They waited, in absolute silence, as interminable seconds went by, their gazes fixed on the central display, hoping that the sudden movement of the Theos had managed to avert a catastrophe on Earth.
"The wave of energy is dispersing in space,â Petri said quietly. He paused briefly then, and after checking a whole series of incomprehensible messages that had appeared in the holograms in front of him, he added, "and the moon absorbed the portion directed towards the planet perfectly."
"Well, Iâd say you did a really excellent job there, old chap," commented Azakis after he had begun to breathe again.
"The only thing that really suffered was the poor moon. It took a proper beating."
"Think what might have happened if the wave had arrived on Earth."
"It would have burnt up half the planet."
"Are you all okay?" Azakis hastened to ask all the other pilots through the communicator, who, following Petriâs manoeuvres, had also positioned their shuttles in the shelter of the satellite. Comforting answers came back in sequence and, after the last captain had also confirmed that both his crew and vehicle were in perfect condition, he let himself slump back against the back of his armchair and let out all the air in his lungs.
"That went well," commented Petri satisfied.
"Yes, but now what do we do? The Theos no longer exists. How are we going to get back home?â
Tell el-Mukayyar â Flash in the sky
At doctor Elisa Hunterâs base camp, after jumping out of the archaeologistâs arms, Lulù, the little kitten, had begun to prowl around nervously with her gaze fixed towards the sky. The sun was going down and a beautiful, almost full moon was already high on the horizon.
"Lulù, whatâs the matter?" asked Elisa a little worried, looking at the restless kitten.
"She must be sad because sheâs realised our friends have left," commented Jack laconically, trying to comfort her by stroking her gently under her chin.
The little cat initially seemed to relish the attention, purring and rubbing her nose against the Colonelâs big hand. All of a sudden however, she froze, made a strange sound and turned her eyes straight towards the earthâs pale satellite. Both of them, intrigued by that bizarre behaviour, instinctively, also turned in the same direction. What they saw after a few moments, left them both breathless. An abnormal glow seemed to wrap around the moon. A brilliant white light, that extended about ten times the diameter of the satellite, then formed a sort of crown around it. It only lasted a few seconds, but it was almost as if another sun had suddenly appeared in the sky at dusk, illuminating the whole area with a decidedly unnatural light.
"But what on earth ..." managed only to whisper the stunned Colonel.
Just as it had appeared, the abnormal light vanished, and everything seemed to return exactly as it was before. The moon was still there, and the sun lazily continued its descent behind the dunes silhouetted against the horizon.
"What was that?" asked Elisa in amazement.
"I havenât the faintest idea."
"For a moment I feared the moon had exploded."
"It really was quite incredible" exclaimed the Colonel while, with his open hand resting above his eyebrows, he scanned the clear sky looking for clues.
"Azakis.... Petri..." said Elisa suddenly. "Something must have happened to them, I can feel it."
"Go on, give over. Perhaps it was just the effect of their shipâs engines starting."
"Itâs not possible. That seemed like a real explosion. You should know more than me about these things, no?"
"Darling" the Colonel said patiently. "To see the effects of an explosion like that from all this distance, there would have to have been at least a hundred atomic bombs explode simultaneously on the moon or maybe even a thousand."
"So, what happened then?"
"We could try asking our military friends. After all I am still part of ELSAD. With all that equipment always pointing at the sky, an event of this kind will not have escaped them for sure.â
"Even Lulù noticed it."
"I think this kitten is much smarter than the two of us put together."
"Felines are a superior race," said Elisa as she picked the kitten up again. "Had you still not realised?"
"Yeah. I think the ancient Egyptians adored them too, almost like deities."
"Exactly, my love," said Elisa, happy that the discussion had moved into a field in which she was well versed. "Bastet, for example, was one of the most important and venerated deities of ancient Egyptian religion, depicted as or with the appearance of a woman with a catâs head or directly as a cat. Originally Bastet was a deity of the solar cult, but with time she became more and more a goddess of the lunar cult. When Greek influence extended to Egyptian society, Bastet permanently became a lunar Goddess, as the Greeks identified her with Artemis, the personification of the âRising Moonâ."
âOkay, okay. Thank you for the lesson, eminent doctor" said Jack ironically, emphasizing the phrase with a slight bow. "But now letâs try and understand what the devil just happened up there. Iâll make a couple of phone calls."
"Any time darling, Iâm always here for you," replied Elisa, gradually raising her voice as the Colonel walked away in the direction of the laboratory tent.
Lulù, calm once again, her eyes closed, was enjoying the petting her human friend was dispensing without parsimony.
Shuttle six â Lunar inspection
After the invisible hand of fear that had gripped his stomach, finally disappeared, leaving him in peace, Azakis had begun to pace nervously around the shuttleâs bridge muttering unintelligible phrases.
"Will you stop going around and around in circles like a spinning top?" Petri scolded him. "Youâll wear the floor out and weâll end up drifting about in space like two old disused satellites."
"But how can you be so calm? The Theos has been destroyed, weâre millions of kilometres from our own planet, we canât contact anyone and, even if we were to succeed, it would be impossible for someone to come and fetch us, and what do you do? You lay there slouched in your armchair as if you were on holiday, sitting on the cliff at the Gulf of Saraan enjoying the view at sunset."
"Calm down old chap, calm down. Weâll find a solution, youâll see."
"At the moment I can think of absolutely none whatsoever."
"Why are you so upset. Itâs the gamma waves that your poor tired brain is emitting, that are preventing you from reasoning with lucidity."
âDo you think so?"
"Of course," replied Petri with a lovely big smile. "Come and sit down beside me, take some deep breaths and try to relax. Youâll see, before long everything will seem very different."
"You may well be right, my friend" said Azakis as, following the advice of his companion, he threw himself heavily into the second pilotâs grey armchair, "but at the moment I can do everything but relax."
"If you promise to calm down, Iâll even let you smoke one of those filthy smelly things you always carry around with you."
"Well, actually that might be a good idea. Iâm sure itâd help me a bit." Having said that, he pulled a long dark hand-rolled cigar from a pocket and, after having cut the ends with a strange multicoloured contraption, put it in his mouth and lit it. He quickly inhaled several puffs letting small bluish smoke clouds disperse into the room. With a slight hiss, the shuttleâs automatic air purification system was activated. In a few moments the smoke vanished and with it also the pungent sweetish smell.
"But, this way, thereâs no fun," exclaimed Azakis who was already in a much better mood. "Iâd forgotten how efficient our purification systems are."
"You designed them," answered Petri. "They couldnât be otherwise."
The tension seemed to be slowly melting away.
"Letâs take stock of the situation," proposed Azakis as, with his cigar still between his lips, he enabled a series of holograms which positioned themselves in mid-air all around the two aliens. "Weâve got four operational shuttles including our own. The Theos-2 has now landed on Nibiru and both are outside the range of action of the optical vortices communication system." He puffed out another couple of little clouds of smoke, then he continued, "Propellant and food stocks are at ninety-nine percent."
"Well done, I see youâre taking control of the situation again. Go ahead" Petri urged, satisfied.
"All the remaining six members of the crew are in perfect condition. Shields and equipment are at maximum efficiency. The only problem is that we no longer have an H^COM to contact the Elders and report on the situation."
"And thatâs where youâre wrong" exclaimed Petri.
âWhat do you mean?â
"I mean thereâs still one working H^COM."