
(c) K Wicks

(c) K Wicks
There is big talk around private messages again, this time the scrutiny is upon the people who claim to be in charge. But alas, like with a previous political debacle, suddenly the electronic trail that is supposed to be there, is missing. How convenient you might say, that when it comes to accountability there is nothing to prove anything with. Which could work the other way too, as they have no evidence of who did what, they could all be held liable for bankrupting the country. If they can’t remember basic facts and actions of their own selves only a mere few years ago, how can they be trusted with anything. We know they can’t, but it does seem as though gross incompetence, negligence and criminal activities are overlooked currently when it is politicians.
But another thought occurred to me about it, how it might also serve a double purpose aside from getting them all out of a publicly embarrassing jam. It would neatly usher in more monitoring, of personal devices by anyone working in government or certain institutions deemed of interest. Because if the people running the country can just ‘lose’ such vital communications, it should make people question whether 100% electronic is even viable anymore. But instead they will say it was the ‘human hand’ that screwed it up. If only it was monitored and backed up to a central point (which everyone seems to believe WhatsApp did anyway). Whether they can or not won’t be the focus probably, it will be the consequences of those messages all being deleted. No-one gets held accountable, and the technology gets even more scrutiny when it should be the people.
Like the new regulation that has just been bought in which says the government can monitor the bank accounts of pensioners. An odd move when literally they are means tested to get that pension in the first place, and most of the time have actually paid into the system to create that benefit. Not monitoring the people who are known to scam thousands each year via all sorts of benefits which are approved along the way, so they allow the corruption to occur, facilitate it, and then use it as a tool to impose further rules and restrictions, while not actually stopping the flow of thievery.
In fact, it has given new ground to all forms of it, and it’s obviously reaching a tipping point. Elections and more laws and rules to come, power struggles and political wars using people as pawns. It’s clear that someone needs to pull the plug, but that’s why they made sure there is no one plug anymore. A convoluted society with so many middlemen, gatekeepers and jobsworths it creates its own problem. Of shirking responsibility, spending others money and helping to hasten the country’s demise. And they just keep going…

(c) K Wicks

(c) K Wicks
It’s been noted there is a digital revolution trying to take over and sweep away reality, knowledge and history as we knew it. Things being changed and updated, revised and remade quicker than people can keep up.
The Mandela effect was a sign, and probably an early test, to see how quickly they could create a conflicting story or event which people were sure they knew had happened, just as sure as the people who had known it didn’t happen. A firmly affixed memory you can’t quite place, but it is there to convince you of what you think you know, with your own brain playing along to create the ‘memory’. And it helps to keep things up in the air and being questioned, if people can’t agree on what occurred, how can they identify how it occurred? Or avoid it happening again. I have even seen online what is claimed to be newspaper evidence of it being reported that no-one died on the Titanic. Now, you could say that was fabricated, changed, or simply was misreported at the time. Handy how the term can be used to discredit the real information accidently getting through isn’t it? Label it as misinformation, or unverified and then once it has been deemed public worthy, it gets allowed. Factcheckers have that covered now apparently, as with an array of laws, censorship and various agencies set up to create, steer and stem the flow of information as they would like it.
We know that all people do not see or think the same things, even when presented with the same information or view before them. And they say a witness is actually the weakest form of evidence. I think of an event now and again, from 1917 in Portugal. The Miracle of the Sun known as the Fatima Event. It’s a very interesting and strange tale in its entirety, but the brief for this, is that thousands of people witnessed an event, yet did not report witnessing the same thing –
“Newspapers published testimony from witnesses who said that they had seen extraordinary solar activity, such as the Sun appearing to “dance” or zig-zag in the sky, careen towards the Earth, or emit multicolored light and radiant colors. According to these reports, the event lasted approximately ten minutes.”
“There has been much analysis of the event from critical sociological and scientific perspectives. According to critics, the eyewitness testimony was actually a collection of inconsistent and contradictory accounts. Proposed alternative explanations include witnesses being deceived by their senses due to prolonged staring at the Sun and then seeing something unusual as expected“.
But books, games, videos and all the other real things you can hold, have and watch at your leisure, are slowly being replaced by their digital counterparts. To be downloaded or viewed from a central database, where it can not only be monitored and withheld, but it can be altered and revised without scrutiny. Only those with a sharp eye, or good memory will be able to know the difference, others will just accept the new version as no different, possibly already in a semi-hypnotic state so not aware on a real functioning level to notice anything.
The Time Machine – the books that turned to dust when he touched them, and the strange rings with warnings and words of information about what transpired. Making it seem as if the printed word was useless against time, but a sort of digital recording was still there to tell the tale as it were. But of those digital rings, how do we know that at some point in the past of that fictional story, someone didn’t erase and rewrite those rings? We just took it on face value that they were telling the truth, or assumed that it was the truth because it was the future, and most of humanity as we know it was done. And like the Eloi, didn’t really question further the whole set-up, or who might be controlling the morlocks, who were then controlling the Eloi.
I saw a piece today in the Guardian, which fits well in the subject as it’s an article about Digital Wills and how they want to destroy lots of historical documents once they have been digitised. To save on space. The argument is that they important documents of people’s lives, and should all be kept, and to a point I do agree. Especially as they are also legal documents for estates, because to me that will be the real reason to want to destroy the hard copies, rather than find alternate storage options. At a time when ownership and property are of great concern, and of nefarious interests being so heavily involved in rolling out all the technology needed to tie it up. I would worry they want it all digital, so they can change it, and without an original hard copy to verify that, things can easily be rewritten or changed. However, we all know how many records have mysteriously disappeared over the years, or gone up in smoke, or have simply been shredded to get rid of whatever is in the way. And again, you can fake documents too, so how do we even know that what is being preserved is real anyway? We don’t is the short answer to that. Which is why maybe personal truths are so important, the things you can verify, know and understand from your own life and thoughts. Because with everything else, you just can’t be sure…

(c) MKW Publishing
A moody dark start to the day.

(c) K Wicks
A further look at one of the particular nines that came up in my article 7 and 9. Two actually – crossing into each other in my ideas, and then something else tagged itself onto it. But we shall start with the Norse Nine. The nine worlds were Asgard, Midgard, Jotunheim, Niflheim, Muscenters, Helheim, Alfheim, Svartalfheim, and Vanaheim
Asgard, – “enclosure of the Aesir,” the Aesir being some of Gods.
Midgard – Middle Earth – the realm of human beings.
Jotunheim – Giants Land, as you can imagine, was inhabited by giants. And have areas today where it is said there were giants, so is it just that a mythology built up around stories and legends, and then became part of traditions? Or they were based on what they knew to be going on?
Niflheim – Misty/Gloomy Lands
Muscenters – world destroyer, land of fire giants – made me think of the tip of South America that used to look like it was attached to Antarctica, named as Tierra del Fuego, back then and today. Land of Fire. Just below the Patagonia region, where it is said there were giants.
Helheim – World of the Dead, the goddess of death. Again most ancient cultures have underworlds and lands of the dead, with various stories, Gods and myths surrounding them.
Alfheim – Elf Land
Svartalfheim – Dark Elf Land
Vanaheim – another group of Gods associated with fertility, wisdom, and the ability to see the future.
It’s quite a complex structure of thought, as are most of the myths and legends, with intricate, elaborate and very detailed descriptions of everything. But then so is the other thing I thought of, The Lord of the Rings. With that mention of Middle Earth too, with a burning hellish place, elves and realms. So one could argue that fiction can be extremely detailed and seem real, and of that story, the author was quite knowledgeable with languages, maps and the creating an entire world and timeline of history. But was known to be very interested in Norse mythology, so is it that it wove its way in? Or do we just have different retelling of the same story over and over, through different epochs and levels of comprehension. In some cases, needing to be presented as ‘fiction’ for it to make it through to the mainstream. Like the flood story, told across different cultures, beliefs and histories. Of a time that once was, handed down as fragments and ideas, retold and reimagined, woven into fiction and changed, and then in turn, the fiction woven back into ‘fact’.
The second nine I thought it, is as the picture below, and one I have mentioned a few times here and there. The nine circles of hell as depicted in the poem A Divine Comedy, of Dante’s Inferno and journey to and through hell.

And when I also look at the Norse ideas, it also seems to have parallels to the biblical Enoch stories, of Gods, Angels, Nephilim and Man, and that epic story, so is it all one tale? As the flood story is suspected to be? There is also another nine that comes to mind too, 9 Choirs of Angels / 9 Orders of Angels. Which I haven’t looked into too much yet I’ll admit, but it’s the representation of it as a painting by Francesco Botticini that made me include it. I have turned the image upside down for full effect.

It seems there is much to work through and understand. To try and know what is and what was, and of course, what is to come…
(c) K Wicks
Taken from my book of short stories – Under the Apple Tree and other short dark stories currently available through Amazon.
Enjoy the creepiness.
Doctors Visit
His shoes and coat were in the foyer, a briefcase placed beside them. He had left his notes neatly written out, filed in meticulous order, a detailed account of every visit and diagnosis. The detective read them all.
‘The father it was presumed was harbouring a distant mental illness, one that plagued him during the hours of darkness, tormenting his sleep and keeping him awake. Leading to psychosis and hallucinations. Although it seemed to be psychosomatic, as no plausible explanation could be found’.
Despite this the doctor stayed overnight on a number of occasions. It should have been an open and shut case, with a prescription of lithium marked in the corner of the page with a question mark.
‘However, his paranoia towards his family does indeed seem a cause for concern. All of his negative energy and ideas were being thrust upon them, directly and indirectly. He believes intermittently that they were the enemy, possibly not even really his family. As his grasp with reality was deteriorating his perception of friend and foe became blurred and some days he would say they were imposters sent to spy on him.’
This was not unusual the doctor had noted in cases of mania and psychosis, and had been documented in a number of other cases. But it was the other family member’s behaviour that intrigued him so and made him return. It was as if they had all either adapted to accept this new mental state from the head of the house, or they were all suffering from a strange form of mental impairment caused by it.
‘The mother was extremely fragile and pale, almost as if she were made of a fine porcelain, with the darkest hair the doctor had ever seen. The children too had inherited the maternal line of looks, although it was hard to see or imagine what their father may have looked like when fit and healthy.
They were always flitting around the house doing something, making tea, tidying and fussing. They had a fireplace in every room and were constantly stoking them. Never making too much noise though, she said noise would upset her husband. It’s hard to gauge how their relationship was holding up through this, I’ve never seen them in the same room together.’
It was remarked in the notes somewhere around his second week of visits. It was not a surprise that two adults could live in the same vicinity and not make contact on a regular basis. It appeared to be normal in many a household these days. Despite the notes, it was hard to actually tell when he had been here precisely. Each day of the week was catalogued, times of day and interviews, but with no starting date, and in fact, no dates at all. The detective was confused by this case. The house was completely empty save for the doctor’s belongings. Originally a plantation house owned by the Reeder family, who were well known in these parts. It passed down to John F Reeder who took it as a family home with his young wife Emily. They began renovations with John doing most of the work himself.
But that was over 50 years ago. Everyone knew the local story, she had run off with someone else, taking the children. He never recovered and slowly went mad, until he died in the house a number of years later. The house wasn’t left to anyone so by local law it has to be left for 60 years in case any surviving relatives turn up to claim the property. Otherwise the local council had to pay the equivalent value if anyone did turn up, it was cheaper to leave it. John Reeder had burnt all the possessions in the house during his mad years. The only thing that had remained when he died was a prison like bed, a mattress and one blanket in the top bedroom of the house. The body wasn’t discovered for a number of weeks, so the state ended up burning them too. The mangled bed frame that had been thrown from the top window, and was still evident in the garden now covered in creepers and vines. There had been no funeral, in fact he was cremated at the hospital and the ashes scattered back at the house.
So what had the doc been doing there? From his I.D they had worked out he was a professor of psychiatry from the city and had no business even being down here. No-one had reported him missing and they couldn’t even find an employer or trace of him. He checked himself into a local motel a month ago and from what seems to have transpired in his books, made almost daily visits to the house. Although the motel owner doesn’t remember seeing the doctor leave or return on any day. He paid up front and was never seen again. The only evidence of his ever existing was the motel owner as witness and his very sparse personal belongings left in the room after check out day. These included a small notebook with the house address and the name John F Reeder. Without that they wouldn’t have ever been up here until it was time to tear the old place down.
The detective went back to the visit notes. The intensity of what the doctor was observing seemed to increase over time. It was like a small window into a family’s descent into a dark tormented madness. No wonder she ran away with the children the detective thought as he read about the atmosphere in the house. As he did though, a dark haze swept over him and made him drop the book. He steadied himself on the banister closest to him. The room began swirling and his vision swimming. While trying to see through blurry eyes, he could swear that the room suddenly had furniture in it, a lamp in the corner, and curtains over the windows. An almost warm homely feel, just for a moment. Then it was replaced by cold and dark. But a musty dark that also swirled for a moment, slowly clearing to reveal an empty room.
The detective sat down on the bottom of the stairs, his legs suddenly not as stable as they were. He had never been superstitious or a believer in the heebie-jeebies, until now. He picked the book back up and carried on reading. The doctor had mentioned the basement a number of times, but after looking over every inch of the house he realised it didn’t actually have one. Highly unusual for house of this time not to have one, but there were no doors or traps that could be found. He went back to reading.
‘The children have become more withdrawn and I fear they will need help to adjust back into the normal world. He has kept them all isolated for such a time that it will do them no good to stay here. Their obsession with the fireplaces troubles me. This is where they are to be found at all hours of the day and night. Often the mother too. Emily becomes frailer by the hour. She has now told me often to not go into the basement. She stares at the door under the stairs with such fear in her eyes that I cannot say what is down there. I have respected her wishes so far, but with no explanation for the deterioration I may have to investigate.
John doesn’t even seem to acknowledge me, and he creeps around the house, checking his family are stationed at the fireplaces. Poking the flames and ashes, keeping them lit. I am trying to understand his symptoms and possible causes for them. Emily did say that when they started renovations in the basement, there were secrets down there. Secrets they shouldn’t have awoken.’
The detective stood up from his place on the stairs and looked over his shoulder towards the panelling, very neat and ornate, it almost didn’t look one bit out of place. Except that it looked so well done, it did. Wood slightly newer than all the surrounding finishes, although aged, definitely newer. The height was right for a doorway too. He could feel his heart begin to race, the room went swirly again and he held onto the wall opposite the panelling for support. Through hazy vision, he saw the door open to the basement and the shape of a man appear. The shape walked towards the living room and over to the fireplace. There was a dark shape in one hand and a long shape in the other. He squinted, trying to see better through the haze. The dark shape was thrown into the fireplace. The man shape turned back towards the basement and towards the detective. His heart pounded as he saw the long shape was an axe, and over his shoulder the dark shape had now caught fire and a face could be seen. With quickly smouldering dark hair.
The vision faded as quickly as it has happened. The room was empty, there was no doorway, and there was nothing in the fireplace. He wondered for a moment if he was going mad. It sounded crazy. Maybe he had killed his family, maybe he had got away with murder? He walked over to the fireplace in the living room, scuffing his shoes on the floorboard. Wondering what to do next or how to explain this to someone without being sent to the loony bin. He kicked the ashes out of frustration and possibly still a touch of fear. A flash of the face with black hair startling him back a step. But just enough to see the skull protruding slightly through the ashes.
The local newspaper covered the basics after the house had been searched. Plantation House of Death they had called it. Revealing the grisly details of the decapitated family, heads found in the fireplaces and bodies in the basement. But there had been more down there. Even more horror was uncovered going back to the beginning. To the old times and when the house had been a fully working plantation. The town had to accept a new history of the Reeder family after that day.

(c) MKW Publishing