True. That little spiel was mostly me trying to get a feel for a potential 'monster' for a short story I'm working on. The assimilation plot idea is a bit standard though. I want to write a story based on the myth of the
, being the 'real story' of the Silver Star (though with names and circumstances and all that changed from the myth).
If I speak in vagaries I ask for forgiveness. It is the instinctive reaction of a shocked mind to suppress the memory, if only to limit the spread of knowledge of the thing into ever darker depths of the unconscious. I am old, and my peers are all claimed by illness and time. I should join them soon, I feel, wonder it is that I have held on so long. This event is not one I have shared with any souls in my century of years, save some oblique references drawn from the bottom of a bottle, not even my recently deceased wife knows of the events. Only those which I saw fit to share officially.
It was once a fear of disbelief and mockery, if not confinement in a bedlam house, that silences my tongue. Perhaps that would be fitting, but the mad never fear they are the insane ones. A lack of concern for consequences or judgement is a privilege of the elderly, and I have no plans far enough away from the now to concern myself with such matters.
I have always taken a measure of pride in a preference for the material and rational over the lies and appeals to emotion of churches and deities. It would bring me comfort to believe that creature crawled out of the mortal-crafted abyss of a christian myth. It would mean there is some hope for purpose, some chance at a guiding hand behind this madness. It is a comfort my very nature denies myself, for I cannot find the will or restraint to accept the lie on this matter. What I saw is of flesh, and blood, and at least tangentially of this existence. What I saw was real. Gods, was it real.
But enough preamble, the time has come to steel myself and tell my tale. My name is [NAME], and I was the captain of the [SHIP] from the years of 1952 to 1963, after which date the terror at the prospect of travelling the sea became too great for me to bare. I have not set sail once since the thing, and even have avoided the act of flying afforded to me by the ongoing globalisation of the world. To this day, the sight of that vast expense of unthinkably deep blue fills me with a primitive and unshakable dread, and my dreams contribute to haunt me with the thoughts of that which might still flail around blind in the hidden depths.
I was born to a small village in the East Midlands of England, its population now long drained down to the elderly and decrepit; first by two world wars, and then by the continued escape of the young population to the more prosperous cities. I was a soldier myself the second time around, having been much too young to serve in the first great war, and found myself joining in the activities of the British military on the eastern front.
It was no small amount of luck on my part that kept me alive and spared of the more extreme shell-shock. Though many years passed before the gunfire and barking orders quieted out of in my dreams, and to this day I am plagued by the occasional episode of nocturnal malady. My mind otherwise emerged from the war sound and with some semblance of sanity, and in that respect I fared better than many.
It would serve nothing to retell the history of the end of the war, the successful landings at Normandy, the race to Berlin and the discovery of the depths of depravity to which men can sink when compelled to act en-masse, and the horrors inflicted on an innocent people their own leadership found detestable. I was spared these sights, having received a comparatively minor injury during a trench raid, and to my good fortune and shame was condemned to spend the finale of the conflict recovering in a small field hospital.
Returning home after the peace was achieved, I wished to finally be done with the death. The Americans were left to continue the fight, revealing their shattering of the atom and yet more destruction of innocent lives. My ancestral home had fallen into disrepair in my absence, for I was without siblings and my parents had regrettably perished during a german blitz attack whilst visiting friends in London. I sold what land I inherited, for what little they were now worth, and moved to a quiet coastal town on the western side of the British Isles.
I was contracted to a small fishing firm, seeking to capitalise on the safer waters surrounding the British Isles and the people who desired to enjoy life once again now that there had come an end to the rationing of food. A life of following orders served me well, and combined with timely shortages and excesses of able bodies, led to several promotions and ultimately a position as captain of my own modest fishing vessel. The British people had little appetite for more slaughter so soon after two wars had consumed the world, and when chaos began to again engulf formerly war-torn regions in Europe we welcomed a wave of refugees and immigrants to bolster our own diminished working population.
It was through those that I found myself a captain of a queerly mixed crew. The [SHIP] was a purpose-built trawler with capacity for a full complement of 82 souls, though it never once travelled with such numbers during my years of employment. Amongst the souls who rotated through my responsibility were men from England, Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Belgium, Hungary, Bolivia, France, several from the African colonies, and one or two delightful men from Jamaica. Many, but not all, of the crew were drawn from Commonwealth countries, and I trusted all of them with my life. I am ashamed of many things, but it is with pride that I confess to having broken men’s noses at public houses for hurling racist insults I shan’t repeat here at my crew, and by extension myself. Those men were close to family for me, and I abandoned them.
Before I tell the truth of the matter, I should recount the story on record.