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- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!ukma!netnews.louisville.edu!wkuvx1!waltoml
- From: waltoml@wkuvx1.bitnet
- Newsgroups: alt.prose
- Subject: The MacKenna Chronicals
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.012841.4081@wkuvx1.bitnet>
- Date: 19 Nov 92 01:28:41 CST
- Organization: Western Kentucky University, Bowling Green, KY
- Lines: 214
-
-
- Please provide me some criticisms on the first of three novel
- ideas that I've been circulating in my mind for some time. I wrote
- this three years ago...it is just coincidence that last month, a
- student at a regional university died because of a breakup with a
- "computer sex" mate.
-
- Thanks!
- Settumanque!
- Mike Walton (WALTOML@WKUVX1.bitnet)
-
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- The MacKenna Chronicals
- by Mike Walton
- (c) Settummanque, 1989
-
-
- [ Based on a combination of personal emotions and experiences,
- it traces the last few days of Jacob Steven MacKenna, a young "black"
- man (actually of mixed racial heritage) whom takes his life after
- being rejected by a girl he met through the exchange of information
- on a computer.
-
- The novel begins at Jacob's funeral with a grisly but
- understandable request...that his death be a matter of public
- record to all..and that his casket remained closed. ]
-
-
- "I don't want you to see me crying. Of course, I cannot
- cry...I have no moisture to express that emotion with. But if I
- could, I would be crying. I hurt. I hurt in ways that many of you
- hurt when someone tells you that you cannot play with them; when
- you mother or father tells you that you cannot go to see Styx or
- Motley Crue; or when your friend tells you that he's got other
- plans. I hurt. I hurt because I opened myself up to be hurt. I told
- someone that I cared enough to love them. To want to be with them.
- To feel that person next to me..." Jeff started to cry as he read
- aloud those words...then he stopped. Frozen in his anger,
- Jeff searched with his eyes for the woman in the black outfit at
- the front of the room. "You bitch! You could have at least seen
- him! You could have at least....." He was cut off by one of the
- pallbearers, whom took Jeff forcefully back to the rear of the
- chapel, but not before Jeff issued a challenge.
-
- "You find me one person that hated this guy and I'll show you
- a bigot! You bitch!"
-
- The church was buzzing with commotion as Jeff was escorted
- roughly out of the chapel. Some of the older women, hearing the
- stern words that Jeff spoke, rushed out after him. Others were just
- talking between themselves.
-
- Polliana Tolbert walked to the front of the room and waited
- until most of the commotion was toned down. Then, with that soft
- quiet voice of hers, she spoke to the assembled mourners.
-
- "I share with you all your loss. I did not know Jake
- personally. But," she added, looking at the papers on the floor,
- "Jacob would have wanted us to understand why he left us. Please
- let me read the rest of the statement to you because I think that
- it was important to him...."
-
- Jake MacKenna was not a happy person. He looked happy because
- he always carried a smile. He helped others all the time. He was a
- friend to everyone whom needed one. A lover to the ones that wanted
- such a relationship. And most of all, he was background for a lot
- of romances...
-
- But he was not a happy person. Even at his death, he was not
- happy.
-
-
-
- The morning of his death was cool and crisp. A autumn day even
- at this date, late November. Jake stepped out of the resident hall,
- its twin towers staring him in his face as he looked up at his
- room. He then readjusted his backpack and walked toward the arts
- and humanities building. Jake's mind was not on his Philosophy
- class...it was many miles away and replaying in his mind as if he
- had recorded it on his video cassette recorder.
- "I am glad to have finally meet you, Deidre." Jacob's smile
- was genuine and was extending his nervous-laden hand to the young
- lady he had previously shared many evenings with over a computer
- link. This person knows his shoe size, his hat size, his pants and
- shirt size. She knows what he likes, his tastes in music and
- literature.
-
- She also knew what turned him on.
-
- Jacob was scared. He was waiting for one of "those phrases",
- the words which would send him retreating.
-
- Months of conversing at all hours of the night and day;
- fantasies that were replayed out by both parties; and the wondering
- what exactly the other person looked like--what they REALLY looked
- like, not some drummed-up version, but the real image--all of it
- came down to this moment. Jacob shuffled his feet as they looked at
- each other.
-
- "I like your hair."
-
- That was all that Jake could say at the moment. He was in awe
- at this beautiful, if not plump, woman. Deidre looked all of 180
- pounds, but it was evenly distributed among the five foot-eight
- inch skeleton. Her brown hair framed her face nicely; her round
- glasses made her look a little bookwormish but still attractive.
- Her body included medium breasts....breasts that Jake noticed was
- true to her word: uncaged.
-
- "Thanks." She paused. "What would you like to do??"
-
- "Whatever you like. I'm your guest." Jacob looked around the
- campus center.
-
-
- "Hey! Get your ass outta the road!!" Jacob woke back up. He
- was almost hit by a car while walking across the street to the Arts
- and Humanities Building. Jake shook his head as he again captured
- the backpack and placed it again on his shoulder. He continued his
- trek across the street.
-
- Jacob did make it to class. But his mind was still on the
- meeting with the woman in Georgia. He continued thinking about
- it...and thinking about it....and getting angered at the minute.
-
- Later that afternoon, he attempted to reach a girl that he
- took to Georgia with, Carmen. He tried her room, her computer
- terminal, her "hangouts". She was nowhere to be seen. While he was
- on the computer terminals at the Library, he noticed that he
- received a mailing from Deidre...at first he ignored it.
-
- Then, as if he was working by remote control, he typed "read"
- and read the only message in the mail account. Deidre's.
-
- Jacob:
-
- I wanted to apologize. I have never been in
- that kind of situation. Never before have I wanted
- someone like I want you. It's scary the way I wanted
- you. But I didn't even give you a chance. You see, I
- envisioned someone that looked like Jacob. With the
- brown wavy hair. The deep brown eyes. The warm hugs
- and the kisses..oh those kisses...why did you
- meet me?!?
-
- PLEASE...don't look at this as a brush-off; I DO
- like you very much. I just don't want to see you. This
- whole experience has wrecked what I thought I was all
- about. It is making me think about how I perceive myself.
- But, its not about you. Please...
-
- DeeDee
-
-
-
- Jacob took the chair he was sitting on and smashed the
- terminal with it. Then, grabbing his bag, he quickly left the
- building and ran toward the edge of the campus. He finally got hold
- of Carmen....but she was "with company and can't talk long".
-
- "Come on, man..get a life! you spend too much fuckin' time on
- those computers...find a girl. screw her. She wasn't worth your
- spit." Carmen's cruel but direct words hit Jake harder than the
- letter he read. Carmen always had a way of telling Jake exactly
- what she felt about things...after all, she is an English major.
-
- "You don't know what we've shared. shit, I feel that we've
- already went to bed several times." Jacob's voice was tense, as he
- quickly looked around in the booth, looking for the campus police.
- Or maybe some student whom chased him from the library's computer
- lab room. He spoke at the receiver. "you don't know what the fuck
- you're talking about, sister. this girl ain't no bimbo out for a
- quickie. She wanted companionship, she wanted...."
-
- Carmen interrupted him.
-
- "That's bullshit. She's looking for the lay. Only thing was,
- she don't do niggies, friend."
-
- Jacob stood there silent. Carmen then added, "Hey..no offense,
- huh??"
-
- Jacob still stood there.
-
- "Hey man. Whatcha gonna do. Are you going to kill yourself
- about this bitch??" Carmen was trying to fend off her "guest" as
- she was talking to the guy in the phone booth. Jake heard him
- whisper "Hurry up and come back to the bed, woman!" to her ear and
- the speaker.
-
- "Yeah", MacKenna spoke. He then hung the phone up.
-
-
- The campus newspaper wrote the story but the University of
- Southern Kentucky quickly denied the article to be published. To
- them, the suicide never took place. Things were as normal. Until
- the letter reached the television station. It contained three
- sentences:
-
- Jacob MacKenna, a college student majoring in
- biology, is dead. He sliced every part of his
- arms and legs and then stabbed himself and allowed
- himself to die. If you want to see a real coverup in
- action, then come to USK and ask about him.
-
-
- The real story begins at this point.
-
-
-
-
-
-