Many thanks to those who offered comments and constructive criticism on my previous stories.
For those who want to say this or that would never happen, remember this is my universe, a place where nearly anything can, and often does, happen.
At least on paper...
The reference to Dr. Steiner comes from "The Beast Within."
Please refer to my profile for more on my personal policy regarding comments, feedback, follows, etc.
And please remember, this is a work of fiction, not a docu-drama...
*
Ron Black, "Ronnie" to his friends and family, studied the chart in front of him, but his mind wasn't on his work. It was on what he had been told earlier that day about Nancy, his wife of two years. He thought he had a good life, which included a beautiful, loving wife. But all that came crashing down not two hours ago.
"I'm sorry to tell you this, but your wife is cheating on you," Bill Jacobs told him as he nursed a beer at the bar down the road from the pharmaceutical company where he worked as a researcher. Ron considered Bill to be more than just a co-worker and respected colleague -- he thought of him as a friend.
"How do you know?" Ron asked. Bill took a sip of beer before he continued.
"I heard a couple of the guys in the lab talk about it in the men's room," Bill said. "They were bragging about having taken her at the last company get-together."
"Damn," Ron said. That explained a lot. The company liked to have regular parties for the employees and their spouses at the newly-finished employee lounge, a huge room with a stage for a band and a giant flat-screen monitor for showing movies. It also doubled as a break room during normal work hours.
The most recent gathering was just two weeks ago. There was a period of about two hours where Nancy was nowhere to be found. When she finally showed up, she claimed someone had given her a tour of the place.
"I'm so sorry, man," Bill said. "I thought you should know."
"Thanks, Bill," Ron said quietly. "You're a real friend."
"You're welcome," Bill said. "I know if it were me, I'd want to know. Just don't do anything stupid." Ron laughed at that. "Stupid" was the last thing anyone could ever accuse Ron of being. Clueless, maybe, perhaps even a bit naive about some things, but never stupid.
"I won't," he told his friend. Bill finished his beer and put a hand on his friend's shoulder as he stood up.
"If there's anything I can do, let me know," he said before leaving. Ron nodded his head and took another sip of his beer. As he processed what Bill said, he took inventory of himself and thought about his life, playing it over in his mind like a movie.
In almost every physical respect, Ron fell below average. The youngest of four children, he was often ridiculed as the "runt" of the litter. Standing at five feet seven inches, he was about two inches shorter than the average male in the United States and weighed about 145 pounds. His body mass never really fully developed and as a result, he was physically weaker than most men his age and size. Even his penis was just a bit smaller than average, but he had never heard any complaints so far.
Add to that his generally mild temperament, and it was easy to understand why most people's first impression was that he was a wimp. He could count on one hand the number of times he had ever lost his temper, and even then, he simply walked away most of the time.
Throughout his entire life, his immediate family took advantage of his small stature, slight frame and quiet manner. They seemed to delight in making fun of him, calling him "little Ronnie," a name he despised. His two brothers, John and George, loved to tease and mock him. His sister, Lisa, who was only a year older than him, often joined in, but was never quite as cruel as his older brothers. Even his parents mocked him and made him feel like less of a man.
"Why can't you be like the other boys?" his mother, June, would ask when he declined to go out with his brothers.
"Because I'm NOT the other boys," he would say. "Why can't they be more like me? Why can't they try reading a book now and then instead of throwing a ball around all the time?"
The only one in his family who didn't rag on him was his grandfather, Mark Black. He loved visiting with the older man, who had the largest personal library he had ever seen. By the time Ron was 12, he had read every book in his grandfather's ever-growing library. His favorite story was Robert Louis Stevenson's 1886 classic, "The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde." He was always amazed at what people often got wrong abut the story.
He also enjoyed reading books about science and devoured everything he could find on the subject. While other kids his age were struggling with "Dick and Jane," he was reading "War and Peace" and treatises on biochemistry. His grandfather saw something in Ron that no one else did, and paid to have his IQ tested. When the score came back, he was astounded. With an IQ of 215, he beat out Albert Einstein and Steven Hawking.
Ron wasn't just a genius, he fell in the classification of an "unmeasurable genius." With Ron's test results in hand, Mark paid to have the young man tested for admission to Mensa, even though he was much younger than the minimum testing age of 14. Mark and Ron celebrated with ice cream and cake when he was accepted into the organization. He certainly wasn't the youngest to be accepted, but he was quite young. For the first time in his life, Ron felt happy.
Mark encouraged the young boy every chance he could and even bought him the most powerful personal computer available on the market. Ron spent much of his free time on the Internet, reading everything he could find.
He thought it would be fun to learn other languages, so Mark bought him software to help. Soon, Ron was fluent in several languages, including Russian, Greek, Spanish and Latin. Just for fun, he taught himself Klingon, even though it wasn't really a true language. Mark joined him and before long, the two often conversed in the language, much to his family's chagrin.
"Dad, you're spoiling the boy," Ron's father, Bob, told Mark one day. "He needs to learn something useful, not spend all his life in those books of his."
"The boy's gifted, Bob," Mark said. "Maybe if you spent as much time with him as you do the other kids, you'd see that. Trust me, he's going places. And I'm going to do everything I can to help him."
Of course, all of this caused more than a few embarrassing moments in school. Like the time his teacher was discussing Shakespeare.
"What's your favorite line from Hamlet?" she asked Ron one day in class.
"
taH pagh taHbe'
," Ron declared in perfect Klingon. Everyone looked at him in shock, thinking he had lost his mind.
"What?" his teacher asked.
"To be or not to be," Ron said. "Or in the original Klingon, 'to live or die!'"
"I see," the teacher said. After class, the teacher kept him back as the other kids left, snickering. She scolded him for his outburst and told him that if it ever happened again, he would be sent to the principal's office.
"I'm sorry," Ron said, looking at the floor.
"What was that, anyway?" she asked. Ron pulled out a copy of Hamlet translated into Klingon and handed it to her. She smiled as she looked at it.
"Please try to stick with the original version, okay?" she asked.
"I will," he said. Of course, Ron had already read the entire play, along with several others written by the bard, since they were part of his grandfather's extensive library. Thanks to his photographic memory, he already had them all memorized. If she had asked, he probably would have recited the whole thing to her from memory.
He caught an earful about the incident when he got home that afternoon from his parents and his siblings teased him unmercifully. That was one of the few times he got angry.
"
Heghlu'meH QaQ jajvam
!" he hissed when they wouldn't shut up about it.
"What's that?" Lisa asked. He looked at her, angrily.
"Today is a good day to die," he said. Her eyes grew wide and she backed away from him slowly. His brothers also slithered away, wondering if their little brother was crazy enough to act on what he had said. They gave him a wide berth for weeks after that.
Mark continued to encourage Ron, buying him college-level textbooks on various subjects. Ron was fascinated with chemistry and biology, partly due to Stevenson's novella, so Mark bought as many texts as he could on the subjects.
Watching his grandson, Mark realized the boy was actually bored with school. He aced every test the teachers threw at him, many times without even studying. Having contacts on the school board, Mark arranged to have Ron test out for his high school diploma. It was time for the boy to face a new challenge, he thought.
"Are you sure about this?" Dr. Williams, the local superintendent asked.