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The Inlooker
The Inlooker
The Inlooker
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The Inlooker

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This is a ‘black humor’ science fiction story set in the near future, where a man finds that he has a very special talent. It is to take over other people’s souls and thus possess their bodies as if they were his own.
As he becomes increasingly aware of his abilities, he first uses them to mete out justice to mentally warped criminals, and then to undertake sexual adventures.
Growing tired of what are, in the scheme of things, trivial pursuits, he embarks on a life of crime intent on accumulating serious amounts of money. Whilst fleecing the wealthy, he comes across an alien hiding amongst us and is impressed by the seamless transport system on its own planet, so he decides to emulate it on Planet Earth.
With a colleague recruited from The Lockheed Skunk Works in America, he develops a vehicle based on UFO technology, and uses it as a stepping stone to power. His motivation soon goes beyond his revolutionary and hugely successful transport system, and extends to a serious attempt at population reduction. For this he requires even more prominence on the world stage, as he battles aliens to prevent annihilation of the expanding human race.
This book charts his progress, as he strives to achieve the impossible. It also monitors the impact on his family life, where he eventually has to decide whether to opt for mortality or immortality.
If all you want to read about is sexual adventures, and cannot be bothered with the future of mankind, this book is not for you. It is intended for those who like to ponder the value of life as we lead it, and what it could be like if we choose to take up the challenge.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherTerry Tumbler
Release dateMar 2, 2017
ISBN9781370906581
The Inlooker
Author

Terry Tumbler

I retired in 2004 and am now living with my wife in Spain, amongst the Spanish. For over 30 years I was in the computer industry, some of which were with IBM before I got itchy feet. Afterward, I worked as an Organisation & Methods specialist before moving into mainstream computing and becoming involved in installation, management, analysis and programming. I took up writing at an advanced age simply because I had the time and energy to do so.A keen blogger, especially recently on Brexit related politics, and equally importantly on outlandish matters associated with my area of creativity in writing. My exhaustive research on UFO reported incidents is for authenticity, with the results reflected primarily in my books.

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    The Inlooker - Terry Tumbler

    Copyright

    Copyright © Terry Tumbler 2019

    The right of Terry Tumbler to be identified as the Author of the Work has been asserted by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

    No resemblance is intended to any real person, living or dead.

    This book is sold subject to the condition it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be circulated in any form or by any means, electronic or otherwise without the author’s prior consent.

    ISBN 978-1-909121-80-5

    http://terrytumbler.blogspot.com.es/

    Cover designed by the author

    Vsn 2h

    Dedication

    Deepest thanks are extended to my patient and adorable wife, who helped me with the preparation and revision of this book.

    Acknowledgements

    Special thanks are extended to:

    Literary Titan Reviews

    Who have since emailed me with the following:

    Congratulations!

    We are proud to present you with our Literary Titan Book Award.

    Your book deserves extraordinary praise and The Literary Titan is proud to acknowledge your dedication, writing skill and imagination.

    The Gold Award is bestowed on books that we found to be perfect in their delivery of original content, meticulous development of unique characters in an organic and striking setting, innovative plot that supports a fresh theme, and elegant prose that transforms words into beautifully written novels.

    Thank you,

    Thomas Anderson

    The Literary Titan Book Reviews

    Also, from Kirkus,

    https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/terry-tumbler/inlooker/

    A thoughtful, eccentric sci-fi novel that’s as creepy as it is comic.

    Titles

    If anyone cares to read the range of books written by the same author, they read as follows:

    Seb Cage Begins His Adventures –Terry Tumbler’s grandsons stay with him and his wife on the Costa Blanca, for the summer vacation.

    During this holiday, the elder grandson, Seb, has futuristic adventures when he joins a summer campus run by a mysterious organization called The Sombrella Syndicate.

    Series: The Dreadnought Collective Book 1

    The Inlooker –the uniquely gifted Thomas Beckon realizes his paranormal talents to change the nature of society in Great Britain.

    Thereafter, as an emerging power broker, he helps shape mankind in its future development.

    Series: The Dreadnought Collective Book 2

    The Time Slipsters – A group of misbehaving friends take a trip together in the near future. They will travel on the latest type of flying bus. Unwittingly, they enter a world where time travel is a reality, soon to embark on a tour like nothing they could possibly have imagined. Some have hidden agendas, as are apparent upon arrival at secret locations.

    Series: The Dreadnought Collective Book 3

    The Deaduction Agency witness at first-hand a group of specialist investigators, as they set up and run a new agency, dedicated to the resolution of criminal cases using paranormal assistance. This will be a new and emerging brand of policing, designed to protect our citizens.

    Series: The Dreadnought Collective Book 4

    The Sightseers Agencythe first recruit joins the new Sightseers Agency. He is a remote viewer and participant in the resolution of events that threaten the security of the entire world. Both his fledgling agency and its companion Deaduction Agency are part of The Dreadnought Collective, successor to the FBI and CIA.

    Series: The Dreadnought Collective Book 5

    Future World Rocks! − where past meets future, as two German scientists steal die Glocke, ‘The Bell’, to time travel. New settlers arrive from another galaxy and help reveal the existence of previously unknown beings hiding in the depths of the earth. Also found are slave laborers on the moon, who those in the know feel duty-bound to help.

    This is a space opera set to rock music!

    Series: Carousels of Life Book 1

    Future World Rolls! – the German scientists who originally stole die Glocke seek a new haven, with the aid of two special agents. Hot on their heels is an implacable enemy, not of this world.

    To protect them and the human race, friendly aliens participate in a most unusual manner, hence the title of this, the second book in the series. This is an uplifting space opera also set to music.

    Series: Carousels of Life Book 2

    For those who may be more than remotely interested in his upbringing, the author’s childhood behavior is recounted in a mildly fictionalized autobiographical work called:

    The Rough & Tumbles Of Early Years

    The author regards this as a valuable compendium of incidents, which could be serialized in the same vein as Just William.

    Originally, it was prepared for the benefit of his family, who would otherwise have known nothing about his outrageous childhood behavior.

    Series: A Wonderfully Wacky World Book 1

    Santiago Tales –the irascible Terry Tumbler, who is based loosely on the author’s personality, organizes a trip with his cronies to travel to the sacred city of Santiago de Compostela. They follow sections of the St. James Camino, in Northern Spain.

    En route, as well as swapping stories in the same vein as those described in Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, they endure intriguing encounters.

    Conceptually, this is a semi-fictional book within a travelogue.

    Series: A Wonderfully Wacky World Book 2

    Note. Please be advised that English UK spelling is mainly used in this book. It is the nation state of The Inlooker.

    Foreword

    This story is set in the near future, where a man finds that he has a very special talent. It is to take over other people’s souls and thus possess their bodies as if they were his own.

    As he becomes increasingly aware of his abilities, he first uses them to mete out justice to deranged criminals, then to undertake sexual adventures.

    Growing tired of what are, in the scheme of things, trivial pursuits, he embarks on a life of crime intent on accumulating serious amounts of money.

    Whilst fleecing the wealthy, he comes across an alien hiding amongst us. Impressed by the seamless transport system on its own planet, he decides to try to emulate it on Planet Earth.

    Along with an American colleague recruited from The Lockheed Skunk Works in America, he develops a vehicle based on UFO technology, which becomes his stepping-stone to power.

    His motivation soon goes beyond the revolutionary and hugely successful transport system, and extends to a serious attempt at population reduction.

    For this he requires even more prominence on the world stage, as he battles aliens to prevent annihilation of the expanding human race.

    This book charts his progress, as he strives to achieve the impossible. It also monitors the impact on his family life, where he eventually has to decide whether to opt for mortality or immortality.

    If all you want to read about is sexual adventures, and cannot be bothered with the future of mankind, this book is not for you. It is intended for those who like to ponder the value of life as we lead it, and what it could be like if we choose to take up the challenge.

    A word of warning: this story is initially written in the same pompous style in which the Inlooker thinks, that is to say disdainfully aloof of the people he meets. As he progresses, his personality becomes more worldly-wise and the style of presentation alters to match his growing maturity.

    Contents

    Copyright

    Dedication

    Acknowledgements

    Titles

    Foreword

    Contents

    The Mirrors Karma

    §  1: Unpleasant Specimens

    §  2: The Inlooker Finds His Talent

    §  3: The Inlooker’s Working Life

    §  4: The Talent Is Indulged

    §  5: The Mother Of Invention

    §  6: Squaring The Circle.

    §  7: The Midas Touch Grows

    §  8: Marketing and Product Launch

    §  9: Softly Softly Catchee Monkey

    § 10: A Public Relations Masterstroke

    § 11: The Big Adventure Is Underway

    § 12: The Haves And The Have-nots

    § 13: The Master Plan Takes Shape

    § 14: Living In Parallel Worlds

    § 15: A Leap In The Dark

    § 16: The Leader Of The Pack

    § 17: Long Live The PM

    § 18: The Cull And Related Matters

    § 19: Attempts To Mend Bridges

    § 20: Lost And Traced

    § 21: A Clash Of Priorities

    § 22: Natural Order Is Restored

    § 23: Another Reunion In The Offing

    § 24: Guests Versus Unexpected Visitors

    § 25: Wedding Guests Are Entertained

    § 26: Spiff Tracey, Private Eye

    Addendum

    The Mirrors Karma

    When people insult you, don’t take offense, don’t take it personally, but do listen to their words.

    They are telling you how they see the world, and they are telling you the exact negative qualities that they possess.

    The Law of Mirrors states that one can only see what’s in them, regardless if it is what is actually present in reality or not.

    §  1: Unpleasant Specimens

    The prison warder was beginning to nod off, which was strictly not allowed, when all hell broke loose in one of the cells he was supposed to be monitoring. His head jerked back painfully as the sole male occupant let out a series of blood-curdling screams.

    It’s him again, he grumbled, rubbing his sore neck. They come in here feeling sorry for themselves, insisting they’re innocent and then get all suicidal. He’s an evil swine that one is!

    The prisoner in question had been tried and found guilty of murdering a little girl, presumably for sexual gratification, and disposing of her body. Pretty little thing she had been and no trace of her was ever found, apart from blood splattered everywhere in his rented property.

    I’ll never understand why they don’t painlessly dispose of animals like him, instead of putting them in here at huge cost, he grumbled. He then thought a bit harder and perked up somewhat.

    "On reflection, it’s worth keeping him alive if it means me having a job." He picked up the phone to call for help.

    It took three of them to restrain the wild-eyed, panting prisoner none too gently, while his neighbors cursed from their cells at their sleep being interrupted. It would have been satisfying if he had shown signs of remorse, but he was in a state of incoherent rage at being held captive, nothing more.

    A male nurse who was patiently waiting nearby for the struggling to cease finally had the opportunity to inject a sedative, before they laid him down on his bed where he was stretched out comatose.

    The nurse growled, We’ll put it in his food next time, as an aside before walking off, so he doesn’t get the chance to give us a repeat show.

    He carries on like that again and there’ll be no next time, muttered the original warder, more in hope than expectation of being given his wish.

    Little did he realise that even in this imperfect world in which we live, his desire was going to be granted from an unexpected source.

    Someone who’d witnessed events at court as they were reported on television had been appalled at this loss of an innocent life, and was determined to pursue his own type of justice.

    Already, murderers like the man in question had been slashed with makeshift knives by fellow prisoners, so widespread was the disgust at foul deeds of this nature, although many would have considered the life incarceration of monsters was satisfactory punishment for them.

    But had the scales of justice tipped too far in favour of compassion for serious offenders?

    Increasing revulsion entered the hearts of people who loathed these vile people, which was compacted by contempt at the dominance of those influential citizens who regarded human rights as within the province of the criminals.

    This was putting them before those of the victims and their families.

    In the mind of one man, too much was going wrong with society to let matters continue unchecked, and he desperately wanted to do something about it. That man was Thomas Beckon, and you couldn’t have wished to meet an apparently nicer person than him. He regarded himself as a godsend to the population at large, rather than a ‘God Sent’ individual, with all that implied.

    He felt powerless to intervene in the criminal justice system, but within himself the desire to act was growing and all he needed was to find the means to do it. He was not a Christian at heart, and moral strictures would not hold him back.

    §  2: The Inlooker Finds His Talent

    All Thomas’s friends referred to him affectionately as Tommy, a term of endearment that suggested someone who was obviously friendly, without a sharp edge and presenting no threat to anybody.

    People who were introduced to him warmed at his welcoming smile, and saw a person whom they liked, without reservation.

    He could easily have been mistaken for a man of the cloth, with his meaningful, quizzical countenance, and chestnut-brown intelligent eyes. So memorable had the experience been that, when Tommy was out of earshot, many a person commented, He’s looked into my soul.

    Whilst he appreciated this favourable impression he’d created in strangers’ hearts, he knew clearly what he was really like.

    In fact, he realised that suspicious people of other nationalities might well have referred to him as ‘Adolf’ or ‘Attila’, and dealt with him in a more - how to put it? - circumspect manner.

    You see, Thomas Beckon was a man born with rare and possibly unique skills: he could not only look into a person’s soul, he could equally take possession of it, gently or otherwise. It was an insidious process that he barely realised he was initiating, and not once did he encounter any formidable resistance. At least, that he was aware of.

    He did wonder at times if what he thought was happening did actually occur, but if it didn’t then it was one hell of an imaginative experience.

    His suspicion of his latent abilities was aroused in the most humdrum way, with his cats of all things.

    In his present incarnation, Tommy was a happily married man with a contented wife, Pat, and two adult daughters, the younger one living with them at home. Their modern, four bedroomed two-story house was located in a small but growing village in Northern Essex near the 17th century base of the Witchfinder General in Manningtree.

    Originally, the family had only two cats that they had selected as sisters from a nearby cat rescue centre. Thomas had named them Belle and Mia deliberately; they had two distinctive personalities, as different as chalk and cheese. Thomas loved it when one of the women went into their landscaped garden, and shouted, Bella Mia! to attract the cats back home for their evening meal.

    Bloody child you are! grumbled Pat, as he burst out laughing each time that it happened, when he was at home to witness the calling of the cats.

    Tommy and Pat’s older daughter, Sharon, had suffered a troubled marriage in her late teens after her weirdo husband abandoned her when she was pregnant, leaving her to bring up their baby daughter on her own.

    Naturally, Pat and Thomas helped out as best they could, while their stubborn and independently-minded older daughter and her daughter Rose continued living in her own heavily mortgaged Victorian terraced house until under threat of its repossession by their building society.

    For a while, she rented out rooms to young people to help make ends meet, but the costs of upkeep continued to rise ahead of income. The situation with the mortgage became critical, as was evidenced by the relentless correspondence from the building society, warning that action was pending unless outstanding payments were made forthwith.

    At the instigation of her father, Thomas, Sharon vacated the property and handed back the keys to the society.

    He sternly counselled her by saying, "Let them chase your errant husband for repayment; he’s responsible for what’s happened!"

    It was a blessed relief for her and her parents when she returned home with her precious toddler, Rose, to live with them and Sharon’s younger sister, Julie.

    It was a big house with plenty of bedrooms. Thankfully, they never heard anything more from the mortgage provider, which had changed its corporate tactics and was doubtlessly hounding the ex-husband.

    After a year or so, she met a strapping young man by the name of Chris, and he invited Sharon and Rose to go and stay with him.

    Thomas sighed. Some people never learn!

    His instinct told him that her latest conquest was not to be trifled with.

    Chris’s current abode was a furnished house set in its own grounds, where he and Sharon were to act as live-in caretakers during the wealthy owners’ long absences abroad. This meant that she couldn’t take her beloved male tabby cat, Stusie, with her, so Pat and Tommy temporarily adopted it. They were sorry to see them go, in particular the irrepressibly cheerful Rose who seemed blissfully ignorant of what was going on around her.

    Stusie was the dominant cat out of the three, without being vicious, and soon integrated with those of his race and the family. However, one day he simply vanished After an anxious wait, the family accepted the sad probability that he had either been run over by a vehicle, or been snaffled by a fox in one of the nearby copses.

    This cat’s demise was when Tommy realised that its distinctive personality had transferred itself to Mia, who began behaving in ways that only Stusie would have done. He stared hard into Mia’s eyes, who would normally have looked away shiftily, and with a shiver he recognised it was Stusie staring back at him, and extending her claws into his lap as a typical warning sign that she wanted his attention, without wishing to draw blood.

    Gradually, over the days that followed, Mia’s suppressed soul (that is to say, spirit?) returned to take control of her own body and Stusie passed onto its own spirit world, as Tommy liked to believe.

    Thereafter, normality resumed, although Sharon was naturally upset by the loss of her cherished pet in her enforced absence.

    The next cat to die, through age-related illness, was Mia and it was another sad day when Tommy took her to the vet to be put down. He held her paw as the vet gave her a terminal injection and she fell asleep while he suppressed his desire to weep, it not being considered a manly thing to do.

    That evening, for the first time ever, it was Mia’s soul looking up at him through Belle’s eyes, as she stood at the foot of his chair and leapt up onto his lap. He shivered as he realised that Belle was behaving exactly like Mia used to do, even to the extent of laying on her back for him to tickle her belly and meow contentedly.

    To his consternation, he felt his own spirit wanting to enter the cat and empathise with it as far as a human being could, but he resisted the temptation to do so. After all, it was only a cat. However, temptation became an irresistible urge to which he grudgingly yielded, and Mia’s soul resisted hard as he took possession and suppressed it. He became conscious of the probability that Belle’s soul was lurking somewhere in the background, and was being suppressed by the more dominant Mia.

    A shiver went through him as he looked at himself through the eyes of the cat, almost like he was using a mirror, and he gave an involuntary shudder before returning instantly to his own body. The cat hissed at him in fright and put its weight on its haunches.

    It unsettled him, all this transparently obvious transference of souls, while he and Pat occasionally discussed the cats’ repeatedly strange behaviour in the evenings that followed, until Belle resumed her normal pattern of disinterest and wandered away.

    This was when Tommy’s curiosity about his latent abilities to ‘see into others’ began to develop, and he decided instead to concentrate on people. Granted, his reasons for doing so were slim, with only the cats to guide him, but he had been sure for many years that every living thing felt emotion, from the lowliest ants which scurried away when threatened, to videos of many terrorised animals, penned in abattoirs ready to be slaughtered.

    Presumably, even fish felt scared when they closed up into tight, fast circling shoals as predators attacked, and likewise he scorned the priests in Spain for blessing donkeys before the local population threw them off cliffs, with the helpless animals braying in terror.

    he condemned such behaviour by stating, Cruelty beyond belief, condoned by icon-worshipping priests! That was how he felt.

    Thomas reasoned that if animals felt emotions and could move their souls from their dying bodies to other, living animals of the same species, as the cats had demonstrated, why couldn’t humans do it too, only better?

    The time came when Tommy decided to conduct an experiment on a real person as a guinea pig (or as a potential victim, if you choose), choosing someone he knew and thoroughly disliked.

    Naturally, it was meaningful to him, since he had chosen a person who did something profoundly bad to a member of his family.

    His attitude could be regarded as that of an amoral person, who can distinguish right from wrong but is indifferent to the opinion of others on what he chooses to do with his life. As a result, it can be asserted with confidence that he knew that his actions would offend some people quite significantly.

    The opportunity had presented itself when Chris revealed the nasty side of his nature and decided to knock Sharon about.

    Physically, Tommy realised he was no match for him, and Chris’s superiority was proven when he got into a fight in a pub and effortlessly set about everyone with his fists who tried to give him a hiding. That was practically all those present, who were gypsies that Chris had fallen out with, and were now laying there senseless and occasionally broken-limbed.

    There’s more than a touch of the gypsy about that young man himself, Tommy confided in Pat.

    Immediately Chris turned on her, Sharon made plans to exit their shared accommodation. She applied for sheltered housing with a local council, and after their officials took the child into consideration, the request was granted.

    Sharon decided forthwith to move out with her child and belongings, to get out of harm’s way.

    The actual move was conducted by a local removal company, while Chris was standing to one side near the exit door, under the wary supervision of two police constables, one of whom was a woman.

    Fortunately, he decided to behave himself, having been in trouble before with the law. All went smoothly with him, the root cause of Sharon’s problems.

    He pretended to be as serene as he could possibly be, whilst declaring, I still loves yer, babe!

    Anyone else might have had dreams about what they would like to do; however, Tommy took things to the next stage with determination and heartfelt venom.

    For practise, he imagined himself entering Chris’s brain and using his eyes to look at the world around him.

    Earlier, he had found where Chris lived by casually asking Sharon where she had been lodging, knowing that the two of them had been ‘an item’. Its location was easy to find, after a cursory tour of the area by car one day, using a map.

    A few late nights later, resting on the chaise-longue in his study, he detached his spirit from his body and soared swiftly to the house where Chris was found to be sleeping.

    It was an ideal opportunity to try out his fledgling talent and mete out justice He couldn’t make up his mind whether what he was seeing was imaginary or not, as he straddled his victim’s chest. Putting aside his doubts, he concentrated instead on giving Chris a pounding headache by reaching into his eye sockets and rubbing them hard, thus disorienting his senses.

    Chris’s physical hands reached up to cover his eyes, but it was to no avail as Thomas’s spiritual form continued to rub them aggressively. The pain must have been intense, but Chris had been down the pub and was fairly sozzled.

    When he had finished with his savagery, Thomas raised himself in the air and returned in minutes to his own physical body.

    The next day, feedback from his unsuspecting older daughter proved most satisfactory.

    She told them, Chris phoned and told me that he’s feeling really unwell. But if he thinks I’m going back to him he’s had it!

    The blond-haired young man-mountain was used to doing hard, physical work and had never shown signs of ill-health at any time previously.

    Tommy redoubled his efforts after this, intending to make his target feel sick and disoriented all the time, especially at the wheel of his battered old car. A short while later he was rewarded with news provided by his distraught daughter; Chris had crashed his car into a tree, been taken to hospital concussed, and was now in an induced coma.

    Sharon had sobbed uncontrollably when she told Tommy and Pat about her latest misadventure, while Tommy contained his elation and showed compassion. Eventually Chris died, with no one at his bedside to comfort him.

    "One less evil sod to endure!" was his callous inner thought, while he wondered if he really was responsible for Chris’s demise.

    He remained utterly remorseless in his attitude and felt proud of what he thought he had done.

    §  3: The Inlooker’s Working Life

    Undoubtedly, there was one aspect to Thomas’s life that was the most influential in shaping his character.

    During a commercial apprenticeship with a major industrial group, he took a senior manager’s advice to change employers every two or three years, purely for the sake of gaining a varied experience and to avoid getting stuck in a rut.

    Thereafter, it was a natural progression for him to gravitate towards computing, and he was fortunate to be there almost from the birth of this new profession.

    Recruited by IBM, he participated in sales support, stock control and the maintenance of batch-processing computers, all provided by IBM. Only large enterprises could afford to rent them and the rewards were highly lucrative.

    One of his biggest regrets was to pass the tests that IBM set for programmers but be denied access by his future line manager, who

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