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Saturday, July 26, 2014

Kameron's Movie Proposal

Mr. Ron Howard
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
Re: Time Trip: The Journey to Ancient Greece Movie Proposal

Dear Mr. Howard,

I am writing this proposal request in regards to one of my favorite books written by author Jason McKenney. I feel that you should turn the book Time Trip: The Journey to Ancient Greece into a thrilling, and adventurous film. This story is about two cousins named Zammie and Kyla. The children travel back in time all the way to Ancient Greece. They get a strange doll from their elderly neighbor, Ramesh, whom they affectionately called Mr. G. In order for the doll to work you have to twist the upper half of its body and pull its four arms down on both sides, look deep into its eyes and it will take you on a magical trip that will teach you about the past and even better the future. I don’t want to give too much of the book away as I have enclosed a copy for your personal enjoyment.

If you make this book into a movie it would garner much attention from the public. The perfect location to film the movie would be in Samos, Greece. Why? Because in order for the audience to feel the whole medieval Greece theme, what the children really went through, and the journey they experienced, Greece would be ideal. It would really bring to life the problems Zammie and Kyla encountered during their path to get back home as well as their adventurous journey. I picked Samos, Greece because it is a small town and still has the stone buildings, grassy hills, and a great big Sea that surrounds the coast of Samos.

My recommendation for the actor and actress that would play the characters should be Mackenzie Foy (The Conjuring) who would play Kyla and Max Records (Where the Wild Things Are) should play Zammie. I feel like these two young actors are perfect for this role because they both know how to be funny as well as being able to take on serious roles. They are both young and fit the personalities of Kyla and Zammie. Mr. G should be played by David Suchet, he was born in London, speaks four languages, German, French, Russian and Arabic. His years of acting experience and training in some of London’s most prestigious acting theatres will really give life to Mr. G’s character.

Mr. Howard, I am such a fan of a lot of your films, How the Grinch Stole Christmas, Parenthood and my ultimate favorite American Graffiti. Although I am young, American Graffiti made me wish I was born and experienced that 1960’s era. Mr. Howard, making this exciting book in to a Hollywood Box office hit would be one of the best films you have ever directed. I have enclosed a copy for your review and please sir, just think about it.

Sincerely,

Kameron
Your biggest Fan!

Purchase 
at Amazon today! 

Saturday, July 12, 2014

The Bully


The bell for third period had already sounded. It amazed Zammie how quickly the hallways switched from mass hysteria to empty solitude between classes. One moment the locker-lined halls were filled with a couple hundred middle-schoolers, the next they’re as empty as a canteen in the desert.
Usually Zammie would have already been in class himself at this point, but he just arrived at school from a rough teeth cleaning at the dentist. He turned one of the vacant corners and saw four peers standing near the lockers on the other side of the white-tiled hallway. A small boy had his back against the blue lockers while three larger boys hovered over him like night club bouncers. Two of the boys were holding the smaller boy by the arms while the third brute was talking to him with his finger in his face. Zammie recognized the smaller boy. His name was Joseph Suna. His dad was Japanese and his mom was Thai, Asian immigrants like his own parents. Joseph was the quintessential outcast at school. Too smart for his own good. Too small for his age. A dark bowl cut encircled his head, and his brown pants stopped short at his ankles. The kid had no chance. The big red-haired boy’s name was Marvin. Zammie didn’t know him personally, but he heard enough urban legends to stay clear of Marvin at all cost.
“I asked you nicely, Joseph,” said Marvin. “Didn’t I ask you nicely?”
Joseph couldn’t speak. His chin quivered like a ribbon tied to a fan.
“I told you if you talked to her again you’d be punished, you little bitch.”
Without a moment’s hesitation Big Marvin punched Little Joseph right in the stomach. A whimper escaped from Joseph’s mouth and he doubled over, his knees buckled and the other two boys let go of him so he could fall to the floor.
Zammie froze in the hallway. One of the boys spotted him and pointed.
“Look!”
The red-haired boy looked at Zammie and in a flash started walking towards him. Zammie’s heart began racing but he stood his ground. He didn’t want to show fear, but his bladder felt like it was about burst open like a tomato in a microwave.
“What’re you lookin’ at?” growled Marvin, approaching Zammie like a slobbering pitbull.
Zammie tried to speak, but his jaws wouldn’t cooperate.
“You didn’t see nothin’, did ya?” said Marvin, now right on top of Zammie, freckles and all.
Zammie didn’t respond. But he did see something. Something that made him both sick to his stomach and angry at the same time.
Marvin stepped closer. “Say ‘no,’ you little bitch.”
“No,” said Zammie, frightened and fuming.
“Say ‘no I didn’t see nothing’.”
“I … didn’t see anything.” Sudden shame washed over him.
“Smart ass.” Marvin stepped closer to Zammie, looking down at him, his baloney breath filtering out in hot waves. Small acne pustules convalesced around the corners of his mouth like tiny soap bubbles. “You’re name’s Zammie, right?”
Zammie nodded his head, almost proud that Marvin would know who he was.
“If you tell anyone, Zammie, then we’ll find you. Believe it. And you won’t like what we’ll do to you.”
Zammie glanced at Marvin’s two stooges. They were bad news: greasy hair, see-through mustaches, dull eyes. Kids that didn’t amount to much after graduation. If they even graduated.
Zammie had always told himself if he was ever bullied or pushed around he would stand up for himself. If he ever saw someone else being bullied or pushed around he would stand up for them. Well, here he was. And he couldn’t move a muscle. Putting up as much fight the last mushy fruit loop in a bowl of cereal.
Marvin turned away from Zammie, motioned to his two minions, and the three of them walked quickly down the hall and turned a corner, probably off to find someone else to harass. Zammie exhaled and rushed over to where Joseph and trying to stand up again.
“Are you okay? Why did they do that?”
Joseph tried taking a couple deep breaths. He was in the 7th grade like Zammie, but he was only ten years old whereas most of the other 7th graders were twelve or just turning thirteen.  He had been pushed ahead two classes in elementary school by his parents. They believed their gifted child needed the additional challenge of more advanced academics. What they hadn’t taken into consideration was the increased interactions with kids much larger and much less passive than him.
“I’m fine,” he said. Zammie noticed large tears falling from his eyes.
“What’d you do to piss off Marvin?” asked Zammie.
“Nothing … I’ve gotta go to class.”
Joseph picked up his backpack from the other side of the hallway and ran off as quick as his little feet would carry him. One of his laces was undone. Zammie was left alone both confused with what had just happened and disappointed in his response to it.

The sky was crackling blue and the sun glowed like the giant heart of Zeus high above the school building. Kyla was waiting out by the flag pole in front of Rosemont Middle School after the final bell had wrung for the day. That was her and Zammie’s meeting place after school before making the short walk to Zammie’s house a few blocks away. It was warm enough for shorts, by Kyla had stuck with jeans and a pastel top. Her black hair was woven tightly into a single braid down her back.
She was always glad to get Fridays over with, but today she was especially excited. Two days earlier they had gone to visit their neighbor Mister G. They told him about their time trip to Gettysburg and their survival of Hiroshima. The elderly Mister G was amazed at their stories and proud of his two brave time-travelers. Zammie had promised Kyla that they could go on another journey that afternoon. It was addicting, like gently salted corn chips, it was impossible to stop indulging.
Mister G had given the Arjuna statue to Zammie thinking that it might give him visions of the past, but he didn’t expect it to take both he and Kyla back into fully immersed adventures where they’d be able to completely interact intelligently with historical figures. They were even able to bring artifacts back to the present with them. Mister G had never seen the Arjuna statue work so strongly before. Apparently the Arjuna liked these two kids very much, but he was worried that they might grow too involved with it.
When Zammie arrived at the flag pole he wore a pensive look on his face. He was still thinking about Joseph and his inability to help him.
“You ready for Arjuna?” asked Kyla. The smile on her face was as wide as eagle wings.
“Sure.”
Kyla noticed the lack of conviction in her cousin’s answer. “What’s wrong?”
“I dunno. I saw something very strange today, and I’m not sure what I should do about it—”
“Zammie!” A young girl was running towards the two cousins.
Zammie looked over and saw Jessica Guerra approaching. She was one of the eighth graders who worked in the Principal’s Office after school helping sort papers and make phone calls for a work experience credit. She was a pretty Hispanic girl with long, black hair and mocha brown skin. She was a couple inches taller than Zammie which was something that intimidated him a little.
“Zammie. Misses Ellingson wants to see you.”
“Misses Ellingson?” asked Kyla. “What for?”
“I don’t know,” said Jessica. “She just said she needed to see him real quick.”
“Oh, boy.” Zammie had a gut-feeling he knew what this was about. “Go ahead without me, Kyla. Tell mom I’ll be home in a minute.”
“Are you sure?”
“Yes, Kyla. I think I know what this is about.”
“What is it?”
Zammie began walking back towards the school building with Jessica. “It’s okay,” he said over his shoulder. “I’ll tell you when I get home.”
Kyla watched her cousin disappear back inside the school building. The large, brown doors swallowed him up like a little Filipino gingerbread man.

Mrs. Ellingson was the Assistant Principal. She was an athletic, raven-haired woman in her later fifties who was active in yoga. She loved going to wine-tastings and complaining about the poor reading habits of today’s youth. From time to time she would wonder how she got stuck as a middle school AP having to deal with these artless tweens.
Help the minis, was her mantra. This must be the true calling the Cosmos has in mind for me. At least for the time being.
Her office was painted in a sandy beige color and decorated with tiny palm trees and pictures of her with various chefs, authors and other accomplished friends of her husband.
            Jessica Guerra led Zammie into the office where he saw Mrs. Ellingson filling out some paperwork that was neatly stacked on her desk.
 “Hello, Zamuel,” said Mrs. Ellingson. She barely looked up. “Have a seat, please. I’ll be with you in one second.”
Jessica closed the door and returned to her post at the receptionist desk leaving Zammie alone with Mrs. Ellingson. He sat down on the black canvas couch across from her desk. His palms had begun sweating the moment he re-entered the school building. Now that he was actually in the AP’s office he felt he was going to piss himself as well. The second time he felt that way today. How disappointing.
“Alright, sir. You’re probably wondering what this is all about.” Mrs. Ellingson put down her pen. “Or maybe you already know.”
Zammie did his best to look relaxed, but he knew his face had “scared stiff” written all over it.
“I’ve been told we had a bullying incident in the hallway earlier,” she continued. “Do you know anything about that?”
            Zammie felt like he was going to puke. How did she know?
“No, ma’am.”
“Are you sure? I ask because apparently there was another witness of the incident who claims that you were there.”
“What incident, ma’am?”
“I was told that Marvin Waggoner punched Joseph Suna in the hall today. There was a witness who will go nameless for now who claims that you also saw this incident. Right now I have three students who claim that Marvin was in third period study hall this morning and one student who claims he was beating up Joseph. If you also saw the incident it would go a long way towards supporting the case against Marvin.”
“What does Joseph say?”
“He doesn’t want to talk about it. He already went home. But tomorrow, Principal Gainar will be back and we will all be able to meet and discuss this entire issue ... if you did in fact witness it.”
Zammie wanted to speak, but the thought of Big Marvin using his face as a speed bag made the words turn into rocks in his mouth.
“Zammie, you understand that bullying is not something to be taken lightly. I will not tolerate it at this school. Principal Gainar will not tolerate it either. But if we are to be able to hand out a fair punishment we have to be sure of all the facts.”
Zammie was angry with himself. He wanted to speak up, but he couldn’t. Fear had a tethered grip on his tongue as strong as steel. 
“Did you see Marvin punch Joseph, Zammie?”
He remembered hearing a story during the summer about how Big Marvin was playing a game of basketball on the outdoor court one afternoon. Marvin and one of his friends were playing two other boys, and the two other boys won. Marvin apparently didn’t take kindly to their smug attitudes so he picked up a rock from the grass and threw it at one of the boys as they were walking away, hitting him in the back of the head and knocking him to the ground. The other boy ran back at Marvin in an effort to defend his friend, but Marvin grabbed the second boy by the neck and began punching him in the nose, smashing it to pieces until the boy’s face was painted red with blood. Not everyone believed the story was true, but Zammie wasn’t about to hook Marvin up to a polygraph machine to find out.
“No ... I don’t think so, ma’am.”
“You don’t think so? You don’t sound very sure of your answer.”
“I didn’t see the incident, ma’am.” Zammie words trickled out like the heartbeat of a dying church mouse. He looked down at his brown hands. He could feel the stare of Mrs. Ellingson boring into the top of his head.
“Alright. I want you to go home and think about this some more, Zamuel, and on Monday I want you to come in and see Principal Gainar and tell him what you told me, okay?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Unless, of course, you remember anything that you’re not telling me now. Then you can tell him the full story. Understood?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“I can’t force you to admit to anything, Zammie, but I want you to think about what you’re going to say.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Okay. You’re free to go.”
Zammie got up and left the office. He couldn’t get out of there fast enough.


Thursday, July 3, 2014

July 4, 1863 – Kyla at Gettysburg


My vision was blurred by the tears streaming from my eyes. A cool wind chilled my face. I could tell a rainstorm would be moving in soon.
“Kids die all the time, Miss Kyla,” said Steven. He said the statement with some conviction. As if he had seen it firsthand many times before.
Both he and Tillie were with me roaming along Cemetery Ridge. We had been watching the medics and Union infantry going through, picking up the dead bodies. We had been brimming with morbid curiosity to see the rancid corpses of these fallen heroes. I was not prepared for what I had seen. And smelled. Some of these bodies had been lying out in the hot sun for a few days now. Some were bloated with gas, their hands grasping out with rigor mortis, their mouths frozen open in silent cries of torment.
The battle had ended the day before with the Union armies pushing back the last of the Rebel charge and sending them packing back south. That was before I saw Steven kneeling over the form of a young boy that I thought looked familiar. My head spun with shock when I realized it was Zammie. He had a massive bullet wound in his chest where some monster had shot him. Blood had splattered and dried black all over his neck and mouth.      
“Why did your cousin support Secesh?” Tillie asked me.
I wasn’t sure how to answer that. I guessed that the Arjuna had placed him there for some reason. “I’m not sure,” I said. “I hadn’t seen him in a while. He must have had a good reason.”
“Maybe he did.” Tillie didn’t sound convinced. She took the fact that these Rebels had invaded her state very personally. “I’m sorry for your loss, Kyla.”
“Don’t judge him too harsh, Miss Tillie,” said Steven. “He was a good friend.”
The tears began to roll down my face again. I stared down at Zammie’s lifeless body. His glassy eyes were half open staring off into eternity. His purple-coated tongue rested on the edge of his bottom lip. His hands were bent inwards at the wrist. I was glad that his parents couldn’t see him like this. The same thing could be said for every other dead boy out on that field. Regardless of how valiant the cause, I’m sure all of their mothers would trade such a grisly and lonesome death of their sons to have them back safe and sound at home. I guess that’s the way war works. People go to fight with ideas and emotions but the finality of death isn’t quite fully taken into account. If it were I don’t see how war could be as common as it sometimes seems.            
I held out hope that he wasn’t really dead. That this was just an illusion played by the Arjuna. That’s when I noticed the doll being held in Tillie’s left hand.
“What is that, Tillie?”
“This thing?” She held the silver figure up for us to see. “I found it leaning up against the angle in the wall. One of the soldiers must have left it. Do you think we can keep it?”
“Can I see it?” I asked.
“Sure.” She handed me the doll and the archer’s almond-shaped eyes immediately began glowing red. I could have sworn it turned its head and grinned at me.
“It’s already working,” I said.
“What do you mean, already working?” asked Steven. “What’s that thing do?”
“Are you alright, Kyla?” Tillie was trying to talk to me when I fell to my knees and nearly passed out in the grass next to Zammie like I had been hit in the head with a hammer.
“Goodbye Steve . . .” I mumbled. “Bye Tills . . .”
The big orange and blue sky and the rolling green fields of Pennsylvania quickly blurred into a distant gray haze. The colors swirled around like a giant pinwheel until they began fading to black.
Please, Arjuna . . . send us back home . . . 

Excerpt from Killing For Country 
by Jason McKenney

The General and The Emperor

The full Conquest of Mexico covered a much larger stretch of history than just the march of Hernan Cortes on his way to Tenochtitlan in 1519. That was simply the tip of the spear. Centuries of bloodshed, brutality and eradication were still to follow as waves of Spanish and Portuguese conquistadors, along with their assorted priests, arrived on the beautiful shores of Central and South America.

In this book, I have chosen to focus strictly on that fateful march of a fledgling Captain-General and his 400 anxious followers. Barely the shoreline of the land they found had ever been seen by European eyes before. As they met with locals their imaginations were gorged with stories of gold, magic and powerful cities floating among the purple mountains to the West.

They also discovered that this land was ruled by a single god-like man, Moctezuma, whose vast armies patrolled the far reaches of the empire collecting tribute and keeping order. On the surface, this federation of smaller cities and tribes appeared to support Moctezuma, feeding his desire to build the capital city of Tenochtitlan to even grander and more elaborate heights. But as history has often shown, a lack of resources for some can generate marvelous creativity.

Knowing he didn’t have the manpower to confront Moctezuma head-on, Cortes began to identify those cities that truly supported the Emperor and those that simply placated him. This was done through translators as well as the help of a beautiful native slave girl named Malinalli, a young woman who had her own motives for helping the General.

An alliance was built. A “Coalition of the Willing,” you could say. Small tribes working together, but always at the behest of Cortes. The young General proved his worth in the battle field against those natives who did not treat with him peacefully; unleashing weapons of war the locals had never seen before: cannon, muskets, armor and horses.

Repeatedly, the Emperor sent messengers to Cortes, begging him to turn back. And repeatedly the feisty General ignored the requests, claiming he was on a mission from his King and his God, following the True Cross with the intention of converting the entire nation to Christianity while filling the coffers of the Spanish Crown.

In this book, Part 1 of a 2-part epic, I have dropped two time traveling youngsters from our own time into the midst of this cultural upheaval. They will experience everything that the actual participants would have experienced along the way: harsh climates, alien food, beautiful performances, gruesome battles and horrific human sacrifices. History is not always pretty, so be warned.

Our two protagonists will be confronted with decisions, questions and desires pushing them to grow up fast in this vastly different time and space. They will gain a deeper understanding of the pre-Contact landscape, people and traditions as I hope the reader will as well. The Conquest of Mexico still speaks to us today, offering insight into human behavior and runaway ambition that continues to be relevant even 500 years later.


 Conquest of Mexico: To Follow the Cross available at Amazon.com for KINDLE and PAPERBACK.


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Tuesday, June 10, 2014

Alone in the Jungle - Conquest of Mexico Sample



I sat up. My head was throbbing as if I had been smacked by a whiffle bat. I could feel my heart beat pulsing deep in my ear canals for several seconds before it finally began to soothe. I was sitting somewhere in a forest. I could hear it, smell it, but that’s about all I could tell. It was pitch black and I was willing my eyes to quickly adjust to the darkness. The sounds of the wild were loud and close. I could identify sawing crickets nearby and the shrieks of howler monkeys high above. I stood up and listened. I began to recognize an endless array of whistles, chirps, lollops, whillups, growls and all sorts of other noises fluttering in between. A symphony of nature. I must have been really deep in the woods because I couldn’t see any city lights or fires in any direction.
            I soon began to pick out the shapes of trees, large rocks and branches covered in moist, spongy moss. I could hear a gurgling brook close by. I cautiously began stepping towards the sound of water hoping I could steal a drink. I didn’t have any shoes on. The earth felt cool under my bare feet. I jumped once when my toes came down on something small and scaly that quickly wriggled away.
            I forged my way through a thicket of fuzzy palm branches until I could see the water moving slowly down a rocky incline below. The brook emptied into a large pond at the foot of the rocks which created a clearing in the forest. Thanks to this clearing, I could see the gibbous moon shining down like a prison spotlight. I looked up and stared at the night sky, a black canvass bespeckled with millions of lambent stars. I suddenly felt very small. One star in particular was so bright that I guessed it to be a planet. Possibly Venus or Mars. “Stars twinkle, planets don’t.” That was one of the few lessons about astronomy I learned from Zammie. He loved outer space. I once told him in a fit he should go live there. Space was okay, I guess, but looking up at the stars too long just made me dizzy. 
I stepped out onto one of the large, moss-covered boulders. One side of it had a staggered edge, acting as steps leading down to the brook. I decided if I was going to taste this water it would be better to try the running stream than the stagnate pond. I couldn’t tell how deep the pool was, but based on the enduring wildlife clamor from the trees I assumed there were animals living deep within the pond’s murkiness as well, acting as a food source.
            I knelt down on one of the flat rocks. The thick, cool moss felt like springy patio turf under my feet. I suddenly became aware of my clothing. I felt the stiff thread of my blouse. It had a wide neck line that stretched out close to my shoulders. The blouse hung loosely down below my waist, and I had some sort of skirt made of the same material tied at my waist and reaching to my knees. The cloth was rough but warm. I could tell it was a light color, either tan or white, but it was too dark to be certain.
There was a mini waterfall about a two feet tall pouring down over another rock like an outdoor faucet. I cupped my hands under the cold water and brought it towards my mouth. I took a test sip and licked my lips. The taste was pleasant; a little earthy. I drank the rest and decided to stay seated on the mossy boulder until the sun rose. I leaned back against another rock and began wondering where I was and where Zammie could be. Being separated from him was nothing new, but it would still be important to find people soon. I was already starting to feel hungry and I had no idea how to hunt in this forest or which plants would be safe to eat.
While trying to recollect what sorts of berries or mushrooms weren’t poisonous, I felt a cool tickle slowly inching its way up my ankle and towards my shin. I looked down at my leg and could vaguely make out the dark, thin shape of a small snake leisurely gliding towards my knee. I wanted to scream and jump but wasn’t sure if that was the smartest thing to do or not. Is it poisonous? It’s gonna bite me! Will it just go away if I’m still?  
I could barely breathe. My heart was racing like a thoroughbred. I watched as the reptile’s egg-shaped head reached my knee. Its body slinked all the way down my leg and past my feet. I couldn’t tell exactly how long it was because the tail disappeared into the darkness beyond my toes. My right hand was still flat on the mossy rock next to me and I remembered feeling a tree twig there a few moments earlier. Without jostling my body and while still keeping my eyes on the shifting serpent, I scoured the rock next to me with my fingers until I felt the twig. It was small but sturdy and had a split prong near the end. It would have been perfect for roasting marshmallows over a fire if it hadn’t been so short. In my current situation, however, the compact nature of the stick could work to my advantage.
The snake’s head rose up above my knee. When it looked to continue down my thigh I decided I had had enough. I heard a soft hiss come from the snake’s mouth, like a small leak in a bicycle tire. In that instant I caught the upturned head between the prongs of the stick and pushed it off into the darkness, letting go of the stick in hopes that it would take the snake on a long journey. Instead the snake coiled about and landed on the rock right next to me.
Before it could make any sort of strike, I quickly climbed up to the next rock and jumped onto the slanting dirt path I had come from before. I wasn’t sure it was any safer, but at that moment I just wanted to get as far from that snake as possible.

There was no chance for sleep the rest of the night. I thought I saw snakes, rats and creepy-crawlies everywhere I looked. The minutes passed like lifetimes. It felt like months until the dawn finally arrived, but it had probably only been a couple hours. The black sky slowly turned into a soft gray and then into a pale blue. I realized the forest I was in was actually a lush and dense jungle, alive and filled with movement.
The trees reached up high into the sky and were shrouded with heavy leaves and looping vines. Spiky purple bromeliad blossoms poked out between the creepers and drooping elephant ear leaves, some of which were as big as me. The green foliage blocked any real view through the trees beyond a few feet. The sounds of nocturnal animals were slowly being replaced by the noises of daytime creatures. The songs of birds grew louder and more frequent while the flying colonies of bats began to disappear. Some of the chirping was fast and upbeat like laser guns in a distant space opera. Other birds sounded slow and depressed, wailing like lovesick maidens.
I didn’t see any sign of that snake, but I’m sure there were more around, watching and waiting. There were a million hiding places in the shrubs, trees and rocks. Layer upon layer of nooks and crannies and tunnels and holes. Every time I turned around I swore I could see something moving out of the corner of my eye. The leaves and bushes trembled from time to time as if they had just been tapped by precocious leprechauns.
The more I looked, the more signs of life appeared. The forest was literally crawling with it. Teeming with it. Yes, teaming. Millions of little teams of bugs, rodents, lizards and snakes and…hopefully not any bears or lions.
They’re as scared of me as I am of them, I told myself. Could that possibly be true? I was in their house, not mine. If one rat stumbled into my living room when the rest of my family was there I wouldn’t be scared. I’d be the first to help my cousins kill it. 
An ongoing line of giant black ants the size of quarters marched methodically up one of the trees towards a leaking sap-hole in the trunk. They held small crumbs and leaves on their backs. Once there, they would enter in queue and then proceed back out in a returning queue down the trunk, their burdens relieved. One of the small twigs on another tree was gliding slowly across an outstretched branch. I then realized the twig had legs and that it was actually a bizarre sort of brown insect that looked just like a stick. This caused me to double check my immediate surroundings a little more closely. The idea that what looked like simple vegetation may actually be creepy-crawlies all around encouraged a chill down my spine.
I knew the best place to be when lost in the wild was at higher elevation. That way I could see the lay of the land, possibly the smoke of nearby settlements depending on how far back in time I was. I couldn’t see any mountains or hills because of all the trees so I decided to follow the brook upstream. It must’ve been trickling down from a hill top somewhere. I went back to the stream and began climbing up and away from the pond. I used the large rocks as stairs until I found a dirt hill I could trudge up as I followed the water. The soil here was dark and moist and heavily shaded. It probably hadn’t seen real sunlight in years. The canopy of leaves, vines and branches over my head blocked out most of the sky. I could still see monkeys of varying sizes swinging from limb to limb about fifty feet above me. Some were dark brown like chocolate, others were the color of graham crackers. Their long, hairy arms reaching out for branches, their tiny heads looking around in quick, jittery movements before crying out in shrill jungle language.
I turned and looked back at the pond down below. It was larger than I first thought, and the water was now smooth and clear. It was like a giant turquoise mirror. I could see schools of small fish darting about in the depths like hyperactive children filled with energy but given no direction. It was beautiful. I took in a deep breath and noticed how clean the air was. It smelled of wet wood and ripe vegetation. Maybe a little rotten, but wholly natural.
The forest was full of decaying plants and wood that was quickly being consumed by grubs and termites and who knows what else. The dead plants would help fertilize the earth and provide space for new plants. And the cycle would continue. I loved being in the forest. Tranquil but dangerous. Both beautiful and vicious. There was no morality here. Just life. Instinct. Wonderful and terrifying.  
One tree had tiny yellow and purple blossoms about the size of my pinky. I pulled one off and held it under my nose. It smelled like a sweet little fruit so I took a bite. My tongue sizzled and quickly went numb as if I had touched it with a battery. I immediately spit it out and ran over to the brook. I fell to my knees and lapped up handfuls of water, rinsing the bitter pulp out of my mouth. Look for fruit, Kyla, not blossoms.
I continued my hike uphill following the brook until I felt a wet splotch hit my forehead. Rain! There was another drop. And then thunder. And then the heavens tore open. The awning of heavy tree branches above were more layered than a Pilgrim’s petticoat in winter. The trees blocked most of the rain from hitting me initially, but as is usually the case, the water eventually found its way through. Rain dripped down slowly from every leaf and off every branch. It smelled of copper and flowers but it was cold, and I was beginning to shiver. I wished I had socks and shoes and a large rain coat, possibly a heated thermos of hot coco to boot. My blouse and skirt, which were a light cream color trimmed with orange stitching, were tough but they wouldn’t keep me dry in a downpour.
The sounds of the trickling stream and the cold rain also prompted me to have to go pee. I didn’t have on any underwear to speak of so I just went by hiking up my skirt and squatting next to a tree. I’m not sure who I was hiding from, but it felt weird to do my business unless I was behind a tree.
I tried looking for pathways or a clearing through which to walk, but I didn’t see any signs of previous human contact. I felt like the trees were watching me; ancient guardians of this hillside defending their territory with jealous caution. They seemed to turn towards me whenever I stepped past them as if they were sizing me up, twisting their trunks and keeping tabs on this foreign invader.
“I’m no threat to you, my lovelies. I promise.”
Even when dripping with rain, the forest was beautiful. Dense and alive and overflowing with activity. I kept seeing flashes of movement in the shrubbery along the ground where some animal had just darted away.
“Just a rabbit,” I convinced myself.
The birds flying overhead were colorful and loud. A giant green parrot and a red macaw settled in the nook of a fat branch up above. They watched snobbishly as I walked underneath. They stared at me and appeared to prattle amongst themselves. Probably making fun of me.
“A stranger in our midst,” I bet one said.
“Just a pup. She won’t last out the day,” the other replied.
“Don’t judge a girl by her pig-tails!” I said loudly to the birds, my brown, wet face staring up at them with a smile. This sent them fluttering off through the trees, no doubt to find someone else to mock.
This reminded me that I had yet to see my hair since arrival. It had been pinned up off my neck which was a blessing, but I couldn’t tell exactly how. I felt around the crown of my head and I could tell my hair was still long. It had been braided tightly into two long ropes and then wrapped around to the front. I felt along the sides of my head until I found the two thin tips of the braided tails poking out near my forehead like mini deer antlers. It was comfortable, but I bet I looked silly.
The rain stopped almost as fast as it had started and the humidity in the air skyrocketed, quickly steaming up. The jungle grew more impenetrable until it was like being trapped inside a car on a hot summer day. Like wearing a rain slicker while doing aerobics. I kept close to the stream of water, grabbing drinks from time to time. I had to push aside wraith-like branches and step cautiously into patches of mud and weeds filled with jumping frogs, baseball-sized beetles and who knows what else.
My feet were filthy like some orphan pauper from Oliver Twist. Sweat rolled down my forehead and dripped down the sides of my grimy face. A couple times I took off my blouse, doused it in the chilly trickling brook, wrung it out and put it back on. For a few moments at least it felt invigorating, but the rough fiber grew itchy when it was wet. It began to chafe against my shoulders and back but at least I was able to stay somewhat cool.
My stomach was empty and it began rumbling like a busted garbage disposal. I figured if I got real desperate for food I could return to the pond and try to catch those fish. I still felt strong, so for the time being I continued my march. My feet were growing sore with irritation and I was actually having trouble breathing as if the air was short of oxygen.
Duh, Kyla. You’re climbing a mountain. The air will be thinner up here.
Fortunately I was still sheltered from the sun by the trees, otherwise I would’ve really been baking. But I bet there was a breeze in the open air as well. The air inside the forest was damp and stale like the locker room after gym class.
I was wondering how high up I was when I finally reached a clearing in the trees. I stepped out into the sun and was hit with a cool breeze blowing down from the mountain tops ahead of me. The sky was blue and clean. White clouds were sailing away in the distance, running off as if I had startled them. I had been broiling hot just a few minutes before and now I was beginning to shiver again.
The rocks that the brook trickled down from grew steeper, but if I was able to climb up just a little higher I would probably be able to get a good view of everything around me. I stepped up on top of one gray boulder that was almost shoulder high. I used my hands to push myself up on top and get to my feet. I looked around but still couldn’t see much due to the trees. I could make out hints of other tree-covered hilltops to my right and left, but I still needed to climb higher to get a better view.
I was looking for the next safe step to take when I spotted a large rabbit sitting in the shade of a leafy bush down below me. I guess it was a hare because it was big and lean and had a long face that reminded me of a furry camel. It was nestled snuggly in a growth of tall weeds, nibbling on something. The thought of roasted hare made my mouth water and my belly growl. But I had no weapons. Stupid, Kyla. I should have made a spear or knife first before making this long march. I looked around for anything that I could use as a weapon and I saw a couple of long branches dangling from another tree near the hare. I would probably scare the animal off if I took one step towards it, but I certainly wasn’t going to catch it just by staring it to death.
I first had to step back down from the high rock I was on. I slowly eased myself down to the lower rocks near the brook. I kept my eyes on the hare. It sat still in its nest of thick grass, its nostrils sniffing, moving quickly up and down then stopping, then starting again; scanning the environment for any hint of danger. Apparently it didn’t take me as a threat because it didn’t even flinch as I began to move gently towards the long branches. My plan was to grab the branch and then spear the furry varmint before it escaped. If I failed, at least I would have a spear to work with the next time.
The branch I really wanted was about ten yards away from the hare. It had snapped from a larger limb and was hanging loosely by a thread of bark down to the ground. It was thin and long like a broom handle and would make a perfect weapon. I stepped slowly off the rocks and back into the weeds. A fat grasshopper landed on my foot and I nearly yelled. The creature was the size of a minivan and it had wings that were as loud as a helicopter. I flexed my tows but the grasshopper stuck. I could feel its spindly legs pinching slightly into my dirty feet. Suddenly it flew off in another direction, the wings buzzing like a hive of bees. Relief. I made another step towards the branch. The hare continued staring at me dryly as if it were waiting for me to start dancing. Astonishingly, it didn’t move. I slowly reached out to grab the dead tree branch when an orange and black flash zipped from the tree and pounced on the hare.
The hare took one leap, but was quickly corralled again by the hunter. It was some sort of jaguar or panther. It was large and muscular, all power and lightning pinned up inside a beautiful coat of fur. Its hide was a vibrant orange and cream decorated with perfect black diamond shapes. Where had it come from? It must have been tracking the hare for quite some time. Or had it been tracking me?
The cat grabbed the hare’s neck in its teeth with brutal efficiency and snapped it with its powerful jaws. The hare’s rear legs twitched and bucked, but the battle was over in an instant, it’s marbled eyes staring out to oblivion. The jaguar dropped the hare from its now bloody mouth and looked up at me, licking its teeth. It had mesmerizing golden eyes that reminded me of deep swirling ponds. Like a glass of apple juice held up to the sun. It growled a warning with its sharp fangs bared and crouched down as if it was going to attack again. This time I would be the target. I forced myself to take deeper breaths. My heart was racing again and the thin air was making me dizzy. I took a quick look at the dangling tree branch and made a final grab for it.
The jaguar growled again and sprang up from the ground as if it had been shot from a cannon. I tugged at the tree branch but it wouldn’t give. I saw the cat flying towards me, covering several yards with each step, razor-tipped paws extended. For a split second I wondered how painful those claws would feel. Suddenly an object flew out from the forest and collided with the jaguar, sending it screeching against the rocks. The cat wailed and growled an ear-splitting noise as it writhed around on the ground, making sickening rumbles as it convulsed, like an angry drunk woman fighting against a shadow.
The feathered tail of an arrow stuck out from the cat’s rib cage. It must have penetrated pretty deep, because it was holding fast as the suffering animal clawed and bit vainly to get it out. A second arrow flew by, landing cleanly through the cat’s neck. This one put it out of its misery. The convulsions stopped and it lay still in the grass, an almost blissful look of calm shown on its face. 
My mouth felt as dry as summer asphalt, but I was too scared to grab a drink. I looked into the forest half-expecting another arrow to fly out and stab me in the eye. Instead I saw a copper-skinned boy with lean, spindly legs and bright eyes step out from the shade of the trees as if he had been hiding behind a curtain. He held a small bow in his left hand and another arrow pulled back against the string in his right. He was staring intently at the jaguar. He looked up at me and smiled.
“Are you hurt?” he asked. He had the raspy voice of a boy who had just hit puberty.
“I’m fine. Did you shoot that cat?”
“Not just a cat. An ocelot. Very dangerous. It was going to eat you.” He smiled when he said this last part.

CONQUEST OF MEXICO: 
To Follow the Cross...
The new novel by Jason McKenney
For sale now at Amazon.com! 

Tuesday, April 29, 2014

What I've Seen . . .

People say what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger.
But what do those words mean to a survivor who has just lost their entire family?
Does the orphan care? Does the widow feel uplifted?
I’ve seen children torn from their mothers, and wives separated from husbands,
Numerous lives upturned by the whims of others.
In the end, do they feel stronger?

I’ve seen families reunited,
Bonding together with loyalty and love, fighting for a common good.
Showing the world the beauty of their dignity and self-sacrifice.

I’ve seen homes destroyed, the weak plowed under, helpless in defense, treated as dogs.
Cultures lost to eternity. Never to see their moment in the sun again.
I’ve seen people die fighting for what they thought was right,
Only to have the following generation throw away what was so soundly earned.

I’ve seen people struggle to within an inch of their life,
Straining every fiber of their being simply to live. To press forward.
Desperate to make a better world for their children.
Desperate to pass on what they found so endearing from their own parents.

I’ve seen people driven to rage over beautiful things we now take for granted.
I’ve seen people grow beyond their wildest dreams, pushed to their brink to achieve the spectacular.

I’ve seen all this and more.
My name is Zammie Pineda, and I am a time traveler.

I've seen all this and more.
My name is Kyla Reynoso.
And I am a time traveler.


Time Trip: Killing for Country
Now available at Amazon

Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Time Trip #3 Now In Paperback!


Now available in paperback!



The Pilgrims . . .

. . . The Indians . . . 

. . .Plague . . . 

. . . Famine . . . 

Everything you've heard is true!

But there is so much more to learn . . .

Experience the First Thanksgiving 
in a way that's unlike anything 
you've ever read before . . .




TIME TRIP ADVENTURE 4
KILLING FOR COUNTRY  
Available at Amazon.com!

TIME TRIP ADVENTURE 1
THE JOURNEY TO ANCIENT GREECE 
Available at Amazon.com!

TIME TRIP ADVENTURE 2
A RIDE ON THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD
Available at Amazon.com!

TIME TRIP ADVENTURE 3
WITNESS TO THE FIRST THANKSGIVING 
Available at Amazon.com!  

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

The Cast of Killing for Country


TIME TRIP
KILLING FOR COUNTRY  
Available at Amazon.com! 



Sadako Sasaki
Sadako Sasaki was a Japanese girl who was two years old when the atomic bomb was dropped on August 6, 1945, near her home in Hiroshima, Japan. Sadako is remembered through the story of a thousand origami cranes before her death at the age of 12, and is to this day a symbol of innocent victims of war.











Herschel Grynszpan
Herschel Grynszpan was a Polish-Jewish refugee, born in Germany. At the age of 17, his assassination of the Nazi German diplomat Ernst vom Rath on November 7, 1938, in Paris provided the Nazis with the pretext for the Kristallnacht, the antisemitic pogrom of November 9-10, 1938. 





Tillie Pierce
Matilda "Tillie" Pierce was only 15 at the time of the Battle of Gettysburg. Yet her writings of those dramatic three days would make her famous. She would become known as the voice of the civilian side of this most important Civil War battle. 















CHECK OUT THE REST OF THE SERIES AVAILABLE NOW!

TIME TRIP ADVENTURE 1
THE JOURNEY TO ANCIENT GREECE 
Available at Amazon.com!

TIME TRIP ADVENTURE 2
A RIDE ON THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD
Available at Amazon.com!

TIME TRIP ADVENTURE 3
WITNESS TO THE FIRST THANKSGIVING 
Available at Amazon.com!  

TIME TRIP ADVENTURE 4
KILLING FOR COUNTRY  
Available at Amazon.com!