George Brown and the Protector
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GEORGE BROWN AND THE PROTECTOR
by Duane L. Ostler
Copyright 2016 Duane L. Ostler
Book 1 in the 'Uth Stones' series.
All rights reserved. This book may not be reproduced, copied or distributed without the express permission of the author. If you would like to share this book with someone, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you are reading this book and did not purchase it or have it purchased for you, please purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the work of this author
Cover art: Cosmic dust and gas known as "Mystic Mountain" taken by NASA's Hubble Telescope.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1: The Falling Star
Chapter 2: What George Found
Chapter 3: Mid Summer Exams
Chapter 4: The Dream
Chapter 5: Pickled Peaches
Chapter 6: Searching for the Protector
Chapter 7: The Protector's Lair
Chapter 8: The Uth Stone
Chapter 9: The Grak
Chapter 10: A Little Grey Dog
Chapter 11: The Ant
Chapter 12: Another Fallen Star
Chapter 13: A Poke in the Ear
Chapter 14: China
Chapter 15: Jiu Na
Chapter 16: The Ring
Chapter 17: Captured!
Chapter 18: Escape
Chapter 19: Happy Memories
Chapter 20: Suspicion
Chapter 21: Cold Storage
Chapter 22: Portugal
Chapter 23: The Attack
Chapter 24: Ice Cream
Chapter 25: A Prisoner
Chapter 26: Despair
Chapter 27: The Journey
Chapter 28: California Sunshine
OTHER BOOKS BY THE AUTHOR
CHAPTER 1: The Falling Star
George Brown was sitting on the bottom step of his back porch watching the stars while rubbing DoorJam (his sister’s cat) behind the ears. It was a warm, clear summer night, and the stars looked like shiny pebbles that someone had scattered across a dark blue carpet. The world was at peace and so were Doorjam and George, who both gazed sleepily up at the night sky, basking in all of its silent glory.
And then it happened.
A brilliant star appeared, gliding slowly across the night sky. Stretched out behind it as it came was an amazing, impossible stream of purple polka dots, etched brightly against the sky.
George rubbed his eyes. He thought he must be seeing things. After all, falling stars might trail a great many things in their wake, but he had never seen one leaving a trail of purple polka dots.
But they were still there, trailing out behind the glowing star like tire tracks in the snow. The polka dots seemed to ripple as if they were in a stream of moving water, fading gradually the farther they were from the star until they eventually wavered out of sight.
The star was coming closer and getting brighter, causing DoorJam to hiss and dart under the porch. George sat transfixed, staring. The star was not moving fast like most shooting stars, but seemed to be crawling along. The purple polka dots stretched out behind it seemed to be getting brighter.
And then suddenly the star dropped straight down like a bolt of lightning. It looked almost as if it was going to hit George’s house, but instead disappeared behind a hill on the outskirts of town and was gone. There was no noise at all when it contacted earth. The purple polka dots all vanished, and the night was again peaceful and still as if nothing had happened.
At this point most 12-year-old boys would probably jump up and run into the house to tell everyone what they had just seen. However, George did not move. He sat perfectly still, continuing to stare at the black sky. Strangely, he wasn’t frightened or overly excited at the star or the purple polka dots. He was used to things like this happening.
Like the time when a little yellow bird had suddenly started following him around everywhere he went—even the bathroom. What was even more bizarre was that it was walking, not flying. It even came into his classroom at school and sat on the corner of his desk, staring at George until his teacher shooed it out the window. The bird kept this up for 2 weeks before it suddenly disappeared.
And last spring, during his science project on rock crystals his fingernails had suddenly broken out in green spots. The spots had lasted almost a week, changing slowly from emerald green to orange before fading out altogether. (His teacher had gotten very excited and happy, thinking that George had contracted some deadly disease, and was disappointed that George wouldn’t turn himself in for extensive examination and testing).
Odd things like this had happened to George ever since that dreaded night, one year ago, that his world had changed—the night his father disappeared.
Somehow George knew that no one else had seen the falling star with its trailing stream of purple polka dots. There would be no bold headline in tomorrow’s paper about it. Somehow, this was something just for him.
Finally, after a long time of staring at where the star had been, George slowly stood up to go into the house. He would tell his mother about the star and the polka dots, even though he knew what her reaction would be. Like all the other strange things that happened to him, she would just tell him he must have been mistaken and then say that she had to peel some potatoes for a casserole (even though they had just had dinner). Then she would stand at the kitchen sink staring out the window while whittling away at several unlucky potatoes until they were the size of toothpicks. Deep down she knew that he was telling the truth, even though she denied it each time. George’s father used to have strange things happen to him too, which he would tell her about. Before he disappeared.
DoorJam came out from under the porch and followed George into the house. He was a smart enough cat to know that after the potatoes were peeled to nothing, George’s mother would sit in the chair by the fireplace and pet him for hours. George sighed. It was times like these that he found himself wishing he were a cat.
CHAPTER 2: What George Found
The next morning after breakfast George got out his school backpack and filled it with snacks and a canteen of water. His mother watched for a moment, then said quietly, “Where are you going?”
“Oh, I just thought I’d ride my bike over to McGee’s orchard and look around. Nothing much else to do.”
“This wouldn’t have anything to do with that star you think you saw last night would it?” George noticed her hand move involuntarily towards the potato peeler on the counter.
George knew from past experience there was no fooling his mother. “Well,” he said casually, “it did kind of look like it went down over that way. But I also thought I’d climb a few apple trees and steal a little fruit and get sick because they’re green. You know, the normal stuff a boy is supposed to do in the summer.”
“George,” said his mother, worry clearly in her voice, “why don’t you go over to Jason’s house and play instead. Or go see Alex and Michael. I’ll bet they’re dying to see you.”
“Jason’s on vacation the next two weeks,” said George simply. “And Alex and Michael just got a new mini motorcycle.”
George saw his mother cringe. He knew she hated motorcycles as much as all the strange things that kept happening to him.
“Well then, maybe Janet can go with you,” she said. There was an immediate, forceful “I WILL NOT!” from the next room. Then Janet, George’s 16-year-old sister appeared in the doorway. “I planned to go swimming today with Sarah and Jillian. There’s no way I’m going to spend the day in some orchard with little weirdo!” She shot George a malevolent look.
George’s mother sighed. She knew when she was beaten. “Well, at least take
your cell phone with you,” she said as Janet left the room. Then she added firmly, “and make sure you stay in range so you can use it!”
Ever since George’s father had disappeared the year before, his mother had insisted that he and Janet pack a cell phone with them everywhere they went. She would try to call them almost every hour—even if they were in school. It used to annoy George’s lunchroom monitor no end (the lunchroom was the only place he could have his phone on at school), especially since his cell phone range to the tune of ‘You Ain’t Nothin’ But a Hound Dog.’
“Sure mom,” said George, picking up his backpack. “Don’t worry. I’ll be fine. It’s summer. What could go wrong?”
Instead of answering, his mother clutched the potato peeler in a death grip. Seeing his chance for another rubdown, DoorJam jumped onto the counter and tried to paw the peeler out of her hand.
“Bye mom,” called George as he hurriedly went out the door. “Be back this afternoon.” Flipping his backpack on his shoulder, he scooped up his bike from the front lawn and took off, not daring to look back.
McGee’s orchard was on the outskirts of the town of Bartletville, California, where George lived. It only took him 10 minutes to get there, since Bartletville was not a very big place. The trees in the orchard were full of little green apples just as George had told his mother, but of course George didn’t eat them. Instead, he circled the orchard, searching for any sign of a fallen star.
He knew this was crazy. That star, or whatever it was, probably fell hundreds or even thousands of miles away, even though it had looked close last night. It was almost guaranteed that he wouldn’t find it. Still, something inside him told George that he needed to look, and if he did, he just might find something.
George’s mother called on the cell phone when he had only been gone for half an hour. Fortunately, he was still in range even though the connection was a bit fuzzy. “George, are you all right?” he heard his mother say in a static-ey voice.
“Sure, mom,” replied George. “I’m just riding around the orchard. There’s no one around.”
“Well, stay off the state road,” said George’s mother. “You know how fast people drive along there. And don’t go traipsing off into the woods. I’m thinking now you should’ve taken DoorJam with you.”
George cringed. He still had scars from the last time he had taken DoorJam on his bike. “I’ll be o.k. mom,” he said cheerfully. “Don’t worry. I’ll be home soon.”
George kept pedaling up and down the country roads near the orchard, between groves of trees and fields of alfalfa and potatoes, looking for any sign of the fallen star. The sun was warm on his back, and the taste of the fresh, country air made him feel good inside. Being out this way reminded him of the time he and his dad had come out here to look for crystallized rocks, like those he later used in his science project. They hadn’t found any, but they had laughed and talked and shared a peanut butter and tomato sandwich (his dad’s favorite) before coming home empty handed.
Thinking about his dad made George suddenly feel very alone. Maybe he should go home.
He was pedaling back toward town when suddenly he stopped. He couldn’t have told anyone why. He just knew he had to. He got off his bike and started walking across an empty field. About halfway across, he stopped again.
Nothing moved. He couldn’t see anything. He shook his head as if to clear away a fog. “This is silly,” he said out loud. “I think I’ll go home.”
His legs paid no attention to what his mouth was saying. Instead of turning and taking him back to his bike, they carried him farther into the field. Suddenly he came upon a shallow dip in the meadow that was not visible until you were up close.
And that is where he found what he was looking for.
Buried halfway in the dirt was a large, ugly, greyish ball of rock, about three feet in diameter. It was pock-marked and bumpy, as if it had been battered and slammed about by a giant who was playing ping pong. On one side, a strange, hook-like extension stuck out, about two feet long, pointed curiously toward the north. Steam was rising from the dirt where the ball had hit and skidded across the ground. The ball didn’t look bright or impressive now, and there were no purple polka dots in sight.
As George stared at the ball, he shivered even though it was a hot day. He couldn’t say why, but there was something strange about the fallen star that made him feel uneasy. He had thought he would be elated to find it, but now he wished he hadn’t come at all.
He was turning to go when suddenly he noticed a glimmer in the grass at his feet. Kneeling down he saw a roundish, clear rock that sparkled in the sunlight. Fascinated, George saw that he could see right through the rock as if it were clear glass. The rock was about an inch thick.
He reached out and touched it. Instantly, he felt an electric shock run through him from head to toe. He pulled back in alarm. The rock lay in the soil, sparkling and winking up at him. Then he quickly reached down and picked it up. It caused a strange, tingly feeling in his hand and fingers. In spite of the warm day, the rock was perfectly cold, like an ice cube. After staring at it for a moment, George put the rock in his pocket. It was time to go home.
While riding his bike home, George could feel the rock pressing coldly against his leg. He had to reach into his pocket every once in a while and move it from spot to spot to keep his leg from freezing.
When George got home his mother was overjoyed to see him, but not as pleased when he described the gray ball he had seen half buried in the field. “Promise me you’ll never go back there alone,” she said firmly.
“Aw, mom,” said George. “It’s just a big, ugly ball in the ground. It can’t hurt me.”
“Promise me!” she said firmly, through pursed lips. Ever since his father disappeared, she had distrusted anything strange or unusual that George came across, and made him promise to stay away from it if possible. He knew there was no way of getting around it. “Oh, all right,” said George with a sigh.
In a strange way however, he was secretly glad that she had made him promise to stay away from it. While a strange fascination about the ball seemed to draw him to it, he had to admit that he wasn’t sure he wanted to go back there because of the eerie, cold feeling that seemed to cling to it.
As George went to his room he took the little, clear rock he had found out of his pocket and stared at it once more. It was still cold as ice, and made his fingers tingle. At times it almost seemed to glow.
He was glad he hadn’t told his mom anything about it. She would probably have insisted that he get rid of it, just like she had forbidden him to go back to the fallen star. But there was something strange and intriguing about the rock that made George feel like he had to keep it. He looked carefully at it for a minute. Even though it was clear as glass, he noticed that shadows seemed to flicker across it at times. Finally, he put it back into his pocket.
Anyway, he told himself, it was just a rock. There was nothing too unusual about a boy finding a rock and bringing it home.
Little did he know how wrong he was.
CHAPTER 3: Mid Summer Exams
“George. It’s time to go. Are you ready?”
George was in his room, working on a model airplane.
“Sure, mom. Be there in a minute.” He kept working on the model. The last thing in the world he wanted to do was go, but he knew he had no choice.
Midsummer exams. The most cruel, disgusting thing that anyone could have dreamed up. Mr. Smith, the school principal at Bartletville Middle School, had come up with the idea a few years ago of giving a test to all of his pupils in the second week of July, to see if they were retaining what they had learned over the previous school year. Every parent in town had been excited about the idea, but to the students themselves, test day was like finding a big spot of mold on your sandwich after you had already eaten half of it.
“George!” called his mother again. “Come on! You’re going to be late!”
“All right,” answered George w
earily, putting down the model airplane. He knew there was no way of avoiding it. As he passed his dresser on the way out of his room, he noticed the clear rock he had found at the fallen star. It sat there silently, seeming to beckon to him somehow. He picked it up. It felt cold as always, and again caused his fingers to tingle. He put it in his pocket, then went out to meet his fate.
The tests were every bit as disgusting as George had expected them to be. The history portion was full of questions about Lewis and Clark that George struggled with. He didn’t do much better in the science portion on earthquakes. But all of that was easy compared to the algebra questions in the math portion of the test. George just sat in helpless frustration, looking at question after question that he couldn’t answer. They hadn’t covered this last year in school! How could he be tested on something he had never learned?
As George sat staring helplessly at the math questions on his desk, he suddenly realized there was something very hot in his pocket. Reaching inside, he found that it was the clear rock from the fallen star, which had been cold as an ice cube just a short time before. George took the rock out of his pocket and put it on his desk. It was almost too hot to touch. Then he went back to trying to answer—or rather, guess—the impossible math questions.
After making a few wild guesses, George moved the rock and turned the page. The page was crinkly and wouldn’t stay down. George slid the rock over the page, on top of some of the questions. It made a good paperweight.
George was staring absently at the rock, trying to decide what to guess on question 13, when he suddenly noticed that he could see numbers on the page through the rock. At first he assumed he was just seeing the math questions on his test, but when he looked closer, he realized that there were other numbers as well. In fascination he moved the rock—which was still very hot—across the page. Whenever he moved it over a test question, he saw not only the question itself through the rock, but the answer as well! When he moved the rock away, the answer disappeared.