Beyond the Flashback
BEYOND THE
FLASHBACK
Being the Collected Tales of the
Flashback/Dinosaur Apocalypse,
Volume Three
Table of Contents
Title Page
Beyond the Flashback: The Flashback/Dinosaur Apocalypse Trilogy, Book Three (The Flashback Trilogy, #3)
1 | Spears Out
2 | Until We Meet Again
3 | Talon
Wolves of the Jurassic
5 | Wane
6 | Interlude
7 | Dumb like a Fox
8 | Demon and Machine
9 | Basic White Teenage Boy
10 | Fuse
11 | Finale
12 | The Mighty Columbo
13 | Benson Bridge
14 | Roast Pterodactyl
15 | The Garden of Oz
16 | Left Behind
17 | A Bigger Gun
18 | Exit Through the Gift Shop
19 | Giganotosaur
20 | Blood Brothers
by
Wayne Kyle Spitzer
Copyright © 1993-2022 Wayne Kyle Spitzer. All Rights Reserved. Published by Hobb’s End Books, a division of ACME Sprockets & Visions. Cover design Copyright © 2022 Wayne Kyle Spitzer. Please direct all inquiries to: HobbsEndBooks@yahoo.com
All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. This book contains material protected under International and Federal Copyright Laws and Treaties. Any unauthorized reprint or use of this book is prohibited. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author. This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you are reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
Contents
THE DREAMING CITY
FLASHBACK TWILIGHT
THE LOW RUMBLE OF DISTANT THUNDER
THE ELEPHANT SLAYER
MESOZOIC KNIGHTS
THUNDER ROAD
KINGS OF THE ROAD
THE DREAMING CITY (2021)
We would have been quite the sight had there been anyone left alive to see us, rumbling up N. La Brea Avenue in Gargantua One—we’d disengaged the electric motor and were running the 16.1-liter diesel only, but that’s another story—the expedition vehicle’s stainless steel hull glinting back at us from the shop windows and its parabolic antenna whirling; its great pistons rattling.
“Rollin’ down—the Imperial Highway, with a big, nasty redhead at my side,” Sam sang along with the stereo. “Santa Ana winds blowin’ hot from the north, and we were born to ride ...”
“Jesus, not again,” moaned Lazaro. He reached past her toward the deck but she batted his hand away.
Nigel, meanwhile, had to shout over the music: “You want to follow La Brea all the way to Hollywood Boulevard—then hang a right. We’re looking for Gower Street.”
“Looks like it’s going to be smooth sailing,” said Sam.
I glanced out the side window as we passed Pink’s Hot Dogs—the awning of which was covered with moss and vines—saw startled Compies scatter like mice. “Let’s hope Roman’s mission is going as well.”
Black Mr. Fantastic—please; he’d nicknamed himself—was skeptical. “At a big base like Lewis-McChord? I doubt it. That place is one big Army surplus store now. You really think he’s going to just waltz in there and fly out with an Apache?”
“Hard to say,” I drawled. “But I do know this: If he succeeds, and if we’re successful in securing Eagleton’s bunker, nothing will be able to touch us again. That is, if it’s still, how shall I say it? Available.”
“It will be,” said Nigel. “Because nobody knows it’s there.”
“Except you,” sneered Lazaro. “His former lawn guy. Isn’t that it?”
“Ya, mon—that’s right. I told you: he showed it to us while we were working. Just rolled up in his 1947 Packard one day and started jabbering like we were best friends. Nice guy—sharp as a whip. I knew it was him right away because I’d seen him on The Tonight Show; and because he was wearing those same tinted glasses he likes so much.”
“Well, what if he’s there?” asked Sam.
“He won’t be. He never actually lived there, as I said. It was just one of his passion projects—like this rover was for Steve Dannon.” He fell quiet as though in deep thought. “Ain’t it a shame. All those luxuries—the swimming pool, the indoor park, the gourmet galley—not to mention the food stores and hydroponics—all of it just sitting there, collecting dust. Meanwhile, there’s people living in cardboard boxes.”
“Or was,” said Sam.
“Yeah, but, he gave, too. Like, a lot,” I said. “I went to college on one of his scholarships. Read him all the time when I was younger—he was kind of a hero to me. Never thought I’d be barnstorming one of his homes.”
“You never thought you’d be running from dinosaurs, either,” said Sam. She reached over and wiggled my cheek—roughly. “And now look at you go.”
“Okay, here it is,” said Nigel. “Take a right.”
I took a right—swinging the giant rig onto Hollywood Boulevard, watching the big streetlights pass absurdly close to the windshield. “It won’t be long. We’re going to want to—”
“Whoa, whoa, whoa,” said Mr. Fantastic, having noticed the thing—its startling blue, its clean, perfect white—even before I did. “Slow, slow, slow. Go back.”
I left off the gas and applied the brakes—which hissed and squealed, like scythes—bringing us to a complete stop. Then I backed up—the different torque causing the gears to rap and wind—until we had drawn alongside the banner and the cycad trees supporting it.
At last Sam said: “Okay, Batman, riddle me this. What’s stranger than a Donald J. Tucker banner in the middle of L.A.?” She turned to face Mr. Fantastic.
We all turned to face him—our very own Reed Richards; the Nutty Professor to our Desert Isle. Our Dr. Zarkov.
“How about a Donald J. Tucker banner that was put here recently; as in, after the Flashback,” he said—and nodded at the trees. “Because those are cycads—bennettitales, to be precise, from the Upper Jurassic—not palms. And what that means, kids, is—we’re not alone.”
We drove on in silence, Sam having killed the music (The Best of Randy Newman, as I recall), past the TCL Chinese Theatre—where a pack of raptors were picking over the corpse of a diplodocus calf—past the Capitol Records Building (whose round, spired roof was crowded with seagulls and pterodactyls), then left on N. Gower Street and up to Scenic Avenue—which would take us to Beachwood Drive and on to the Hollywoodland hills. That is, had its shoulders not been choked with cycads and its roadway blocked by a black allosaurus (we were all pretty much experts on dinosaurs now): which had simply lazed over in the middle of the asphalt as though it were sunning itself—its long, sinewy legs stretched luxuriously and its tail straight and unfurled, its great, blood-red crests glistening.
“Oh, for fuck’s sake,” I said—and brought us to a gradual halt.
I honked the horn—taking note of the dead triceratops in the reeds (which was partially eaten), as well as the allosaur’s obviously full belly—but there was no response.
“Just go, man,” said Lazaro. “It’ll move. And if it doesn’t, so what.”
“He’s ri
ght, Jamie,” said Sam. “I don’t think we have time for this.”
I put it in gear and inched forward—revving the engine even as I laid on the horn, moving to within a few feet of it.
Still it did not move—only twitched a little as though it were dreaming; maybe flicked its tail once slightly.
“Jesus, are you kidding me?” I was beginning to lose my patience. “Let’s go! It’s time to pick ‘em up and move ‘em out.”
I inched still closer—until one of the thing’s outstretched feet vanished beneath what passed for the hood. Then it did move, rearing its head and gnawing at the push bar—only gently, playfully, like a cat disrupted from a nap—before getting up suddenly and shuffling aside; at which I stepped on the gas and we lurched forward—turning wide as we passed through the intersection; rumbling up Beachwood like an out-of-control freight train; breaking off heavy branches like twigs.
I looked into my sideview mirror even as Sam did the same, saw the thing bounding after us like a leopard, like a wraith, gaining rapidly.
“What is it?” snapped Mr. Fantastic. “What’s going on?”
I glanced between it and the road, accelerating rapidly. “It’s chasing us. Fuck. Better get up into the Crow’s Nest, Lazaro. Just don’t get trigger-happy; we’re gonna need the ammo. Nigel, I’m going to need you to—”
“It’d be best to just let it go,” said Mr. Fantastic. “I mean, what’s it going to do—bite through solid steel?” He put a hand on my shoulder, comfortingly, reassuringly. “Save the ammo, Jamie. It’ll give up before we get there.”
I looked around the cockpit: at the banks and banks of instrumentation, the suffocating array of dials and switches—before focusing on a glowing blue toggle; and flipped it. “I don’t know about you, Doctor ...” There was a thump-thump-thump as I turned to face him. “But where I’m from—they call that ‘borrowing trouble.’”
And then the smoke grenades had detonated and we were crashing through their clouds—at which I hit the brakes hard and hung an immediate left, skidding onto a side street, and whereupon we quickly circumnavigated the block to burst back onto Beachwood. Where we instantly realized—just before swinging north—that we could no longer see the street south of us; nor, for that matter, any evidence whatsoever of a pursuing allosaurus—black with red crests or otherwise.
I’d be lying if I said I hadn’t already felt uneasy—even before we rounded the bend and saw the big pickups. Deronda Drive was that kind of road: the kind that started normally but then began to twist and turn, and to narrow, climbing all the while, so that the houses on both sides (some nearly palatial while others seemed little more than glorified hippie shacks) closed in all around us. Add to that the fact that we’d run out of places to turn back, and you can imagine how on edge we (already) were when we saw the crashed gate and the occupied vehicles beyond it.
Nor had those occupants taken long to train weapons on us—about 4 seconds, by my count—snapping them out through side windows and an open door even as the men in the payloads (one of which was equipped with a large-caliber machine gun and the other some type of rocket launcher) did the same.
And then there we were, faced off like the Hatfields and the McCoys—only we weren’t ready—there beneath the sun in the Hollywoodland hills with the Santa Ana wind blowing and Gargantua idling and their blue and white Tucker flags fluttering, proclaiming “Keep America Great” and “No More Bullshit.” As though there was still somehow a recognizable government—a recognizable enemy; something they could project all their fear and loathing and frustration onto, just as before. As though nothing had changed since the Flashback at all.
I reached up for the targeting goggles slowly, knowing the new windows were tinted but not wanting to take any chances, but didn’t put them on. “Nobody get excited,” I said. “It’s just ... it’s just a precaution.”
“Oh, Jesus,” whispered Sam.
“No, he’s right,” said Mr. Fantastic. “Because—see that rocket launcher?” He pointed at the truck furthest back—a black Dodge Ram with pig ear exhaust stacks and a custom lift. “That, my friends, is what you call bad news. Now, I don’t pretend to know what that is, exactly, but what it reminds me of is the French MILAN ...” He got out of his seat and crouched in front of the windshield. “Okay. Yuh. See that dome just inside the barrel? That’s the warhead. Big, right? Nasty, right? That’s because it’s an anti-tank weapon.” He looked at Sam suddenly—to make his point, I guess. “It kills tanks, see. Stops them dead in their tracks. They’ve even been confirmed to have taken out a U.S.-supplied Abrams—that’s the main battle tank of the U.S. Army—in Iraq, in 2017, during their conflict with the Kurds.”
He turned to me before making eye contact with each and every one of us. “And you better believe it when I say, people, that that thing will cut through this hull like it’s tinfoil. So Jamie’s doing the right thing; providing he keeps his focus on that missile launcher. The question is, do we shoot first and eliminate the threat preemptively—by taking out the operator and anyone else who dares to go near it—or do we try to talk to them? Reason with them? Convince them we’re not a threat?”
“But we are a threat,” said Sam—softly, gravely. “We’re here for the bunker. And so are they, obviously. Or they’ve seized it already. I mean, look at what we’re driving. There’s a machine gun on the roof, for—”
“I say we shoot first,” interjected Nigel—after which he seemed shocked that he’d actually said it. “She’s right, I mean—S-sandahl. Sam. We are a threat; and there’s no point in trying to deny it. So are they. I mean, come on. You saw the banner. If that’s not a territorial claim, I don’t know what is. And they’re white trash, anyway, mon. Stupid and dangerous on—”
“Yo, pound sand!” snapped Lazaro. “I voted for Tucker, too, you know, and I’m not some crazed redneck you can just ...” He trailed off suddenly and looked around—as if for approval—but nobody said a word.
“—on the face of it,” finished Nigel, succinctly. He looked at Mr. Fantastic and then at me. “And you know it as well as I do.”
I looked out through the long, narrow windshield: at the armed, thickset men—most of them were at last partially overweight—and their dirty, dark-colored trucks; at the poised rifles and trained, glinting machine gun, the rocket launcher with its big, tank-killing warhead.
Mr. Fantastic, meanwhile, had gotten back into his seat. “What’s it going to be, Jamie?”
I unbuckled my harness and leaned forward, elbows on my knees—began rubbing my temples.
At last I said, “And this is the only way in? The only road that can be used?”
Paper rattled as Nigel shifted. “Mount Lee Drive, that’s right. Winds all the way up to the City of Los Angeles Communications Facility, which is right above the Hollywood sign.”
“And beneath it? The sign, I mean? That’s our bunker?”
“About 50 yards down from it, that’s right. Only accessible by air or on foot from there, since the private road from below was removed.”
I peered out at the trucks, which shimmered in the heat. “How in the hell did they find out? That’s what I want to know.”
“Does it matter?” asked Mr. Fantastic. “Besides; we don’t actually know that they have—we don’t know anything, really. Not why or how long they’ve been here, nor how many of them there are, we don’t even know if—"
“That’s bullshit, mon. We know it’s a train because that’s how they roll; and we know there’s more of them—probably up there rooting around because they’ve never actually been here and don’t know what they’re looking for. No, scratch that—they’re probably on their way here, because these assholes have already radioed them while we sit here and have a goddamn debate about—”
“Nigel.”
“About—”
“Nigel. Shut the fuck up.”
“But ...”
“Here.” I handed the targeting goggles back to him. “Put them on. Shut the f
uck up. And put them on.”
“Wait, what?” Lazaro just glared at me; it was almost as though I’d stabbed his mother. “Is this a joke?”
“I know, you’re checked out on the internal gun control. But let’s be honest, Dwayne. You don’t want to hurt these people. Hell, they’re like family, right?” I clapped him on the shoulder briskly. “Just one, big, happy Tucker Train. One big tent from Cabela’s. Isn’t that right?”
“What the hell are you talking about?”
“Sam, get the ramp,” I instructed, and watched as she flipped the toggle—reluctantly.
“Because we’re going to go meet your friends with our hands up,” I said. “And you, sir, are going to do all the talking.”
“Ready?”
I looked at Lazaro and he looked back. “Ready.” He squinted at me suddenly. “Why wouldn’t I be?”
I shrugged. “No reason.” I took a deep breath. “Okay. Remember, hands in the air.”
He put his hands in the air.
Then we moved out; stepping into the sunshine from the cool shadow of the expedition vehicle, raising our hands as though we were surrendering.
“Easy does it ...”
There was a rattle of arms as they noticed us and hurriedly re-trained their weapons.
“Halt! Who goes there?”
Both of us froze. “A-Americans. Two of us,” said Lazaro. “We want to talk.”
The wind blew; the sun beat down. Nobody said anything.
“Daryl,” snapped one of them at last—after which a skinny blonde dude stepped out (he couldn’t have been more than 17) and seemed to hesitate; looking at us over his rifle, shifting his weight from one foot to the other, before shuffling forward quickly and giving us a pat-down—briefly, hurriedly. “They’re good,” he said.
The man who’d directed him to frisk us—he looked like John Goodman, I swear—motioned for us to come forward.
“That’s close enough,” he said, after we’d closed the gap. “Trent, Brady, Mitchell—cover us. Everyone else, hold your positions.” He seemed to relax—slowly, grudgingly. “Americans, you say.” He handed the skinny guy his weapon—some kind of long rifle, who knows. “That doesn’t really feel complete to me. You say you’re Americans. Which one?”