Lawrence Roth

This post is continued from Rainwater story concept: Chapter 1 A Bad Cup of Tea.

This is chapter two of the story idea titled Rainwater. Chapter two introduces the protagonist, whose name is Lamar Rainwater. Rainwater is an agent at the CIA. He is also from the state of Oklahoma.

I wanted to find a way to introduce the Rainwater character that was different from the way most characters are introduced in an action movie. Although I intend to write Rainwater as a novel, I visualize the events in mind like it is a movie.

Therefore, I think about how movies have introduced characters in action films. The most popular action movies being James Bond and Indiana Jones. Most of those movies start out with the main character already in action.

I wanted to introduce Rainwater in a relaxed environment.

Here is my description card for chapter two:

Rainwater Chapter 2 Description

Rainwater Chapter 2 Description

The first drawing is of Bailee, an attractive brunette, taking a phone message for Rainwater.

Bailee owns and operates the Borealis Beach Club in Wasilla, Alaska.

Why Alaska? I was born there but I was three-years-old by the time my parents moved back to Oklahoma.

I have no memories of Alaska, other than a train ride out of Fairbanks on the day my parents were moving out of Alaska back to Oklahoma.

Back to the Rainwater story. Bailee hollers at the waiter named Calvin to take a message to Rainwater who is in The Pit.

Rainwater Chapter 2 Index Card 1

Rainwater Chapter 2 Index Card 1

Calvin gets the message from Bailee and heads to the staircase that leads to The Pit.

The way I imagine this event is that as Calvin leaves the front area where Bailee is managing the bar, there is loud music, a live band, lots of people (some drinking and some dancing), and dim lights but with a rainbow of colored lights moving and twisting around in the club.

As Calvin enters The Pit and walks down the stairs, the noise from above fades away.

Rainwater Chapter 2 Index Card 2

Rainwater Chapter 2 Index Card 2

The next card I drew shows Rainwater sitting at a table playing a game of dominoes.

If this was a movie I would frame a shot that shows the dominoes on the table, hands placing dominoes on the table as the game is played, and the players talking.

Why dominoes?

A card game is too cliche. I once worked with a guy who was obsessed with dominoes. He taught me to play–although I have now forgotten how to play–so he would have someone to play dominoes with during break times at work.

In this scene the players are actually placing bets on this game of dominoes. I don’t know if people really do that or not, but since people like to gamble on almost every other sport I decided to make that part of this scene.

“Your move, Rainwater,” one player says.

Rainwater’s hand is seen placing a domino on the table. If this was a movie I would have a shot of only Rainwater’s hand. No one would see the face of the character yet.

Why?

The first and only James Bond movie to not start out with an action sequence was Dr. No. When the character played by Sean Connery is first introduced only his hands are seen as he passes out cards on the table.

A voice of a lady talking to Bond is heard but the face of Bond is not revealed until Connery makes the now famous introduction, “The name is Bond, James Bond.”

That was one of the best introductions of a main character in a film. This scene is inspired by that introduction of James Bond in Dr. No.

Now, back to Rainwater.

There’s laughter from the other players.

Rainwater Index Card 3

Rainwater Index Card 3

“Do you even have a strategy?” one player asks. In movie a shot of this player’s face would be revealed.

“Have you ever played dominoes before?” another player asks. Player’s face is revealed.

A third player’s face is revealed as he chuckles about the comments from the other two players.

Still no revelation of Rainwater’s face but he is heard talking.

“Yes,” Rainwater answers.

“How did you get an American Indian name like Rainwater and an American redneckish first name like Lamar?” one player asks.

Rainwater Chapter 2 Index Card 4

Rainwater Chapter 2 Index Card 4

This question does two things for the story, it provides the name of the main character and it sets the theme of the story, which deals with prejudices.

Although I intend the story to be an action story, I also intend to have a subtle but present theme that addresses human prejudices.

In a movie the face of Rainwater would be revealed.

The character Rainwater is half Native American and half White American. His father was white, and his mother was an American Indian.

The back drop of this story deals with human prejudices so the main character is intentionally given a surname that would most likely sound like a Native American surname, but is in fact a British surname.

Rainwater Chapter 2 Index Card 5

Rainwater Chapter 2 Index Card 5

“Rainwater is not an Indian name,” Rainwater responds. “It’s English.”

“But Lamar is a redneck name, right?”

Again the name Lamar, which sounds like a name for a country boy is purposely given to Rainwater as a first name.

“Just call me Lar.”

Lar is the nickname that Rainwater uses. It is short for Lamar and pronounced like “Dare” but with an L instead of a D.

Calvin interrupts the game to give Rainwater the message.

Rainwater reads the message which says, “Turn your damn phone on and read the text message.”

Rainwater thanks Calvin for the message and hands him a few dollars for his trouble.

“Thank you, sir,” Calvin says and exits The Pit.

Rainwater pulls his phone from his pocket and powers it on. “Looks like I’m going to have to go,” he comments.

“Not until this game is done,” a player says. “And it’s your turn.”

Rainwater places a domino tile on the table and pushes his remaining few dominoes over, which reveals what he has left in his set.

“Hey, why did you do that?” A player asks.

“Because you are blocked.”

“No, I’m–. Shit, how’d you do that?”

“I’m blocked too,” another player says.

“And I’m blocked,” the final player says.

“Please pay my tab with my winnings fellas,” Rainwater says as he puts his jacket on.

And yes this chapter ends with the protagonist winning a game, which is cliche but I’m writing it that way anyway.

Rainwater Chapter Card

Rainwater Chapter Card

Rainwater is the working title of a story idea that I have started to develop. The title will change once I have the story completed. Rainwater is the last name of the main character in the story.

Lamar Rainwater is the protagonist in a spy action adventure story that I have been working on outlining and writing. Lamar Rainwater is a CIA agent that grew up in Oklahoma.

The premise of the story is that Rainwater is sent by the CIA to Uganda to investigate the murder of Oklahoma’s first openly gay United States Senator.

I have worked on this story by using index cards to brainstorm ideas. Then I generated a chapter list and on index cards I wrote a summary of each chapter. Left-click on the image for the Rainwater Chapter Card above to see a larger image of the card.

Although I’m not an artist, I drew a sketch of the events in each chapter.

This post explains what I have done with the first chapter of the Rainwater story with the use of index cards. The main character does not appear in the first chapter so I will explain more about the main character when I discuss chapter 2.

Rainwater Index Card 1

Rainwater Index Card 1

This first sketch on an index card shows a female servant taking a cup of hot tea to the openly gay United States Senator from Oklahoma–Mr. Bradley Hogan. [Characters' names may change as story develops.] Hogan is in Uganda, Africa.

Why does this story have a gay Senator from Oklahoma in Uganda?

Great question.

Inspirations for story ideas come from various sources that merge together as I brainstorm ideas. This idea comes from news events like the anti-homosexuality bill in Uganda, Africa. This bill included the death penalty in some cases for homosexuals.

Even if one disagrees with homosexuality, this was a horribly cruel bill, but the kicker is that bill was allegedly associated with support from American evangelical groups including a group that the Oklahoma United Senator James Inhofe often visited and supported.

Rainwater Index Card 2

Rainwater Index Card 2

Although Oklahoma has had an openly Atheist U.S. Senator, Mr. Thomas Gore who served from 1907 to 1921, as far as I know Oklahoma has never had an openly gay U.S. Senator.

Oklahoma has two U.S. Senator seats. So the question that tickled my creative mind is–what if Oklahoma had an openly gay U.S. Senator who visited Uganda to support gay activists and an openly anti-gay U.S. Senator who visited Uganda to support anti-gay legislation?

Rainwater Index Card 3

Rainwater Index Card 3

The Rainwater story opened with chapter 1 where the gay Senator from Oklahoma drank some hot tea and experienced a hallucination of spiders crawling all over him. He desperately tried to pull them off, but in doing so ripped his own face off. This resulted in him bleeding to death.

The police arrived to investigate after the female servant found the gruesome body of Senator Hogan.

The dialogue between the cops at the crime scene contains some dark humor inspired by the television show CSI that usually opens with a teaser that has one of the CSIs making a joke about the crime scene. The intention here is to show that some Uganda officers have a disregard for a dead person who was gay.

Rainwater Index Card 4

Rainwater Index Card 4

The chapter ended where a cop entered the scene and commented, “Wow, he got ripped off!”

The U.S. Senator Hogan from Oklahoma is now dead.

But was he murdered? If so, was he murdered for being gay? Was this a hate crime?

The next chapter begins with an introduction to the main character who will be assigned to investigate the death of Senator Hogan and to determine if the murder was a hate crime.

Rainwater Index Card 5

Rainwater Index Card 5

Location map for Karla's bridge

Location map for Karla's bridge

Jeff Todd of Mysterious Oklahoma did the research on Karla’s bridge in February of 2010.

I’ve followed behind and created this reference map based on the information that comes from Jeff Todd’s YouTube video.

There are three bridges near the Redbud Valley Nature Preserve. I’ve marked those locations as Location 1, Location 2, and Location 3 based on which bridge is most likely Karla’s bridge. Each location is marked with a red dot.

Please use with caution. Location 1, which is probably the actual Karla’s bridge, is near a neighborhood. Being a curious guy, myself, I like to visit these supposedly haunted locations but since this location is near some residential homes, I advise being respectful of the people that live in this area and not disturbing them.

I also encourage visiting the Redbud Valley Nature Preserve. I walked through part of the nature trail after visiting the potential locations for Karla’s bridge, and it is a beautiful area.

Although, there have been reports of people hearing the giggle of a young girl near Karla’s bridge, I didn’t see or hear anything unusual when I visited the locations. However, this may have been a good thing, because if I had seen or heard something I may have screamed like a girl.

Karla's Bridge

One possible location for Karla's Bridge

In 1976 the body of a schoolgirl named Karla was found in Catoosa, Oklahoma on Redbud Drive near a bridge.

The bridge is in a secluded but scenic area with hills, trees, and a plush plant life near the Redbud Valley Nature Preserve.

Karla’s bridge is considered to be a haunted place because people have reported hearing the laughter of a young girl (Hauntings: Paranormal Social Network).

People have also claimed to have seen a fire on the top of the largest hill in this area that vanishes momentarily (StrangeUSA).

These are the elements of the urban legend about Karla’s bridge that are listed on several websites.

I being a curious and creative guy have some questions and speculations about Karla’s bridge.

Questions About Karla’s Bridge

First the questions:

  • What was the last name of Karla?
  • How old was Karla?
  • How did Karla die?
  • Does a police report exist from 1976 regarding a body found in this area of Catoosa?
  • There are three bridges on Redbud Drive near the Redbud Valley Nature Preserve so which bridge is actually Karla’s bridge?

The above questions, if I had time to investigate, would be the primary question I would like answered.

Speculations About Karla’s Bridge

Before I present my speculations, I want to make it clear that I’m not a psychic, I don’t claim to be a psychic, and I have no other knowledge of Karla’s bridge beyond what I have read online and from visiting the location.

I honestly believe that the legend of Karla’s bridge is just a fictional urban legend.

My speculations are pure fiction. They are bogus. Any actual resemblance to a real incident is purely coincidentally.

The only reason I’m posting my speculations here is because I love a good ghost story and I have an active imagination.

My speculations are:

  • Karla was between the ages of 10 and 18. Since she was identified as a schoolgirl she was at least 18 years of age or younger. Age 10 is an arbitrary number. Karla could have been younger, but since most parents allow children some freedom to walk further from home around the age of ten, I’m guessing 10.
  • Karla was accidentally killed by one or more of her female friends or family who were around her age. My reasons are that some people see a campfire or what appears to be a campfire on top of the largest hill when they heard the laughter of a girl. So from this I speculate that Karla and her family along with friends or family where camping on the hill. Karla and her friends wandered away from camp to explore the woods. Karla tripped, fell, or was pushed and sustained an injury from which she later died.
  • The laughter is from Karla having fun before her tragic death.

For more information on Karla’s bridge please read Haunts in Catoosa Oklahoma at Karla’s bridge.

Station Clock

Station Clock (Credit: SusanMcM)

Use a number two pencil, draw a line on a piece of paper, erase it, and then draw a new line.

What do you see?

In most cases you see evidence that a first line was made, erased, and a new line was made. Essentially, the first line never completely goes away.

Backwards Time Travel

Your past is set in what can be called “Primary History.” Primary History is the original history; the original chain of events in your life that has become your past.

Science Fiction writers deal with time travel in different ways. The most popular time travel story has to be the Back to the Future trilogy.

Michael J. Fox stars as Marty McFly who travels back in time and almost changes his Primary History by preventing his parents from meeting. And actually he does change some aspects of his Primary History.

Backwards Time Travel Ain’t Possible

One thought is that backwards time travel is not possible, because it could erase Primary History. But if Primary History has already occurred, how could it be erased? If it is erased, will there still be evidence that it was erased?

McFly who travels back in time still has memories of his Primary History but when he returns back to his future he recognizes that his Primary History has changed: his parents are rich, Biff works for Marty’s dad, etc.

How could that be? Some would argue that time travel is impossible for this very reason–Primary History could be erased or altered.

Backwards Time Travel Creates an Alternate History

Another line of thought, which was used in the 2009 Star Trek movie, is that one can travel back in time but that creates a Secondary History–an alternate reality.

So once a person leaves Primary History s/he travels back into an Alternate History and cannot return to the Primary History. That person is stuck in the Alternate Reality, unless he or she leaves that History and travels to a Third History or another Alternate Reality.

In this case Spock Prime travels from the 24th century back in time to the 23rd century in an alternate reality. Spock Prime has disappeared from his Primary History.

Using that concept, consider Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home when the crew of the Enterprise travels back in time to find a humpback whale to bring back to the future to save Earth. The crew left Primary History, entered a Secondary History, got the whale, and traveled forward in time in Second History.

Who knows if either is possible?

Either way, Primary History remains protected. Or does it?

David Hume

David Hume (Credit: Wikipedia Commons)

David Hume (1711-1776) is one of the great minds of the past that I only have a superficial knowledge about, but wish I had a more in depth knowledge.

Hume was a smart dude that was influential on the Enlightenment that influenced the Founding Fathers of the United States of America.

The Enlightenment, despite what the historical revisionists claim, was an effort made to use the tools of science to develop an understanding of how life works, to abandoned the supernatural and superstitious versions of how life works, and to encourage a society where people cooperate in government and are not ruled by government.

If our state and federal members of Congress would spend more time studying philosophers, in depth, like David Hume our nation would be much better off.

Here’s what I know:

  • Hume worked to create a natural understanding of human nature
  • Asserted that humans only have knowledge of things they directly experience
  • Influenced future cognitive philosophies
  • Adam Smith acknowledged that Hume influenced his economic and political philosophies
  • Hume’s notable ideas were the problem of causation, Bundle theory, Induction, Is-ought problem, Utility, and the Science of man.
  • James Madison, a Founding Father and the fourth President of the United States, was strongly influenced by David Hume

That’s my brief and superficial understanding of David Hume. As the cliche goes, “that’s just the tip of the iceberg” (or was that what the Captain of the Titanic said),  and there is so much more I (as we all) should know about Hume.

Loch Ness Monster

Loch Ness Monster (Credit: Surgeons Photograph/Wikimedia Commons)

The mythical creature nicknamed Nessie and known as the Loch Ness Monster first gained international attention in 1933.

Loch Ness is a large and deep freshwater lake in the historic region of Scotland known as the Scottish Highlands.

George Spicer claimed that he and his wife spotted a creature that looked like a dragon or a pre-historic animal. Spicer’s claim were reported in a news story on August 4, 1933.

After that report, other people came forward to claim they had seen a large creature in Loch Ness.

The “Surgeon’s Photograph” from 1934 has become the most popular of photographs allegedly taken of Nessie.

Despite the “Surgeon’s Photograph” being revealed as a hoax in 1994 there is still debate on exactly how the hoax was created. Some people dispute that it was a hoax.

Regardless, Nessie remains one of the most popular illusive mythical creatures in the realm of the paranormal.

Shaman

Shaman (Credit: Wikimedia Commons)

A Shaman is a person who communicates with the spiritual world. Shamen is the plural of Shaman.

A portal is a doorway or a gate.

Beaver is a town in the panhandle of Oklahoma. Beaver is also the county seat of Beaver County.

Beaver State Park is located near the town of Beaver and has a variety of outdoor activities. The most popular is the dunes, where people can drive their dune buggies and other off-road vehicles.

Beaver State Park has places to camp, picnic, and hike. Wildlife and nature of many kinds that can be viewed and opportunities to play horseshoes and volleyball.

That’s the natural world of Beaver State Park. According to folklore there’s a supernatural world at Beaver State Park. Actually, there’s a gate into the supernatural world somewhere among the dunes of Beaver State Park.

The legend tells of American Indian Shamen that used the dunes as a meditation area and either created or discovered a portal to a spiritual realm.

People have disappeared, supposedly, swallowed by the Shamen’s Portal.

The legend of the Shamen’s Portal asserts that Fransisco Vasquez de Coronado, who was the governor of a Mexican colony during the 1500s, lead a group of explorers into the area that is now Oklahoma.

When reaching the dunes in what is now Beaver State Park, a group of Coronado’s explorers were swallowed by the sands. Believing it was the work of the Devil Coronado and his remaining men quickly left the area.

The area has been referred to as “No man’s Land.”

The video below was made by Mysterious Oklahoma, which provides an overview of The Shamen’s Portal.

Spoon bender

Spoon bender (Credit: Wikimedia Commons)

Masuaki Kiyota is a Japanese psychic that was found by Uri Geller, an Israeli psychic.

Kiyota became famous by bending spoons and other cutlery. He performed a common routine using a Polaroid camera, imprinting images on a film pack.

Kiyota like his mentor Geller was eventually busted and revealed to be a fake psychic. Being revealed as a fake psychic, however, doesn’t end the career of a psychic.

Kiyota did later admit to cheating.

More information here.

The Cave House

The Cave House (Credit: Cave House Tulsa)

The Cave House is one of the attractions and wonders of Tulsa, Oklahoma.

The Cave House is a unique place at the base of a hill at 1623 West Charles Page Blvd.

Joseph Koberling, Sr. and James Purzer built the Cave House in the 1920s.

The Cave House has stories and legends of outlaws and ghostly visits.

Discover Oklahoma has a video about the Cave House. Watch and enjoy.

© 2012 The Rothline Perspective Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha