Category Archives: Super Stories

Stories I wrote aged about 11. Personally I consider these my greatest works.

Secret Sabotage Service

Written by . Filed under Super Stories. No comments.

This story and its sequel are combined as the third and final in the collection Sjef’s Super Stories, the product of my 11 year old mind in that last year of primary school, 1992. In this story the names of the characters have been changed in order to protect the identities of the individuals involved, and two words I was required to censor in class have been restored to their rightful place. Now I will also apologize to Germans, what can I say, I knew you only from old pulp war comics. Most of you are alright.

“Lewes bombs,”
“Check.”
“Grenades,”
“Check.”
“All right that’s the lot,” Tom said. “You got the plans Jim?”
“Yep, first we’ll take the jeep and latch onto the convoy headed for the airfield, destroy all the trucks but two, get on the airfield and blow it sky high…”
“And get caught and put in a POW camp.” Joe butted in.
“No,” said Tom, “getting caught is SIG (Special Intelligence Group)’s job.”
“All right, all right,” Joe said. “What do we do then?” he asked me.
“We go out along this back road,” I said. “Then we shoot up the petrol dump on the way and hide out in the hills for a while.”
“Sounds like fun for half a million,” Joe said, “let’s go.”

Two hours later we were racing along when the convoy came into sight.
“O.K Joe, you get behind the first truck then move up and stop the other trucks as Tom and I move along.” The first part of the operation was a cinch. Joe drove up behind the truck, Tom and I jumped onto the back of the truck, ‘quietly detained’ the driver and then kept on driving like nothing had happened. Joe then drove up to the driver of the next truck and asked for a light while I jumped on the back, threw the driver out, gave the thumbs-up to Tom and kept on driving. About 10 seconds later Joe was signaling that he needed to pee so Tom and I quietly stabbed a tire each on the excuse that we had run over a nail. Joe told the other drivers to go on and that he would stay and help. After Joe had had his pee we decided how to get rid of the remaining three trucks. Tom and I would burn past the trucks shooting them up with our M:16’s and Joe would follow up in the jeep biffing grenades into whatever was left.

The tires were quickly changed and soon we were racing down the track leaving three small infernos behind us. We passed onto the airfield easily with Joe passing as an armored escort. That night we crept out onto the airfield and planted lewes bombs with half hour fuses on all the aircraft. Then we took our gear which we had hidden and drove away in the confusion. Half an hour later we were miles away laughing and talking about what we would do with the money from the operation, when we heard the steady beat of a chopper.
“Aw shit!” Joe yelled, “I knew we should have put a bomb on that last shed!” The chopper came into sight and turned out to be nothing but a charter, but when four leant out on the struts brandishing AK47s and rocket launchers our relief was quickly cut off.
“Shivers!” Joe yelled as he swerved off the track into the trees only to crash into a big rock which sent all the equipment over the front and us with it. We got up again rather quickly because of the machine gun storm around our feet.
“Joe you organize some transport, Tom and I are gonna kick some copter!”
About 5 minutes later Tom and I had succeeded in killing one of the men and Tom was just crawling over to grab his bazooka when Joe came racing over the hill on a motorbike rigged with a rocket launcher. He blew the copter away.
“C’mon!” he yelled, “your bikes are over the hill!”

After that we blew up the petrol dump (which was easy meat) and headed for the hills. After about six months, the Germans decided that they couldn’t find us and almost immediately we were wired by our C.O for our next job. As we drove up to the offices Joe reckoned something was wrong but Tom and I ignored him and walked into the building. As soon as we stepped in the door, we knew that Joe had been right. The security doors slammed shut and about 12 men armed with Gatling guns stepped out from behind the desks and from the balconies.
“DAMN!” Tom yelled, “DAMN, DAMN, DAMN!”
Then a German officer stepped out, “Aahhh, the legendary S.S.S… …YOU WILL ALL BE IN COLDITZ FOR LIFE!!!!”


HOW WILL THE S.S.S SQUAD ESCAPE?
FIND OUT IN S.S.S 2, ESCAPE FROM COLDITZ

###

Secret Sabotage Service 2
ESCAPE FROM COLDITZ

“O.K, You were right and we were wrong,” Tom said to Joe as we clanked along, manacled together in the prison exercise yard,
“We aren’t at a total loss, we’ve still got the gelignite we always keep stuffed under our toenails, the fuse Jim keeps in his hair…”
“But not the detonator on my ring,” Joe butted in. “You may recall that we were stripped for jewellery before we even got here…OW!!” he exclaimed as a rifle butt connected with his shoulder.

A few hours later we were discussing our situation over porridge and black bread when Joe became frustrated and biffed his spoon at the wall. The metal struck the rock and sparks flew from it.
“Yes!” yelled Tom jumping in the air and whacking his head on the low roof of our cell.
“What’s so great?” I asked.
“Don’t you see?” Tim said. “These cells have just been fitted with nice new electronic locks, we can stuff our gelignite in the lock, set it alight and fry out the system!”
None of us really thought about the fact that our cell was 2 floors and 20 guards below ground, and when we got outside there were walls, fences, machine guns and dogs before we were free. We agreed to carry out the operation that night.

The 10:00pm guard had just walked past, and Tom was packing the explosive into the locks, Joe was trying to light a fire with the spoon and some leaves and I was keeping watch. Our moment of glory came at about 10:10 when Joe finally got the fuse to burn and we heard a fizzz POP! As our lock snapped open and we climbed out into the hallway, we realised our first mistake. We had no idea where to go or how to get there, and there were about four different passages leading out just down the hall. We decided not to split up but stick together and try the passages by trial and error. We tried two passages but they were both dead ends.
“Oh well, third time lucky,” Tom said.
“Knowing your luck we might as well give up now,” said Joe who seemed to have a sixth sense for failure. He was right. We walked down the passage, opened a door and walked right in on Adolf Hitler, lying on his bed in long johns cuddling a teddybear.
“Oh fuck” I said and made the worst mistake of my life. Cuddly Adolf woke up and before we knew it we were in separate cells in the cooler. That night a guard that spoke english came past and started up a conversation with Joe. Tom and I listened in carefully. Finally came the crunch. The guard asked Joe if he had a motorbike. Joe replied,
“Yeah, a Slow Scrap Suzuki…” to which the guard replied,
“I have a custom with Special Integrated Gearing.”
“Could you slip us some coarse beard?”
“I’ll do even better”, the guard replied, “I’ll get you some hot chilli.”
“Thanks,” I replied, and that was all. The next week the guard came past again, all he said was “By your doors, 2300 hours.”

That night at 11 o’clock we were all waiting at our cell doors, wondering what would happen. Then the guard (whom we later found out was called Steve), came running down the hall. He threw us flack-jackets shouting, “Get down!”

At that moment there was a massive explosion and a colonel came through the hole in the wall brandishing a M:16 with a smoking grenade launcher fitted.
“Anders!” Joe said, “Tom, Anders and I went through high school together!”
“Yeah, wow,” Tom said, “Let’s just get the heck out of here shall we?” The sirens went off then, and searchlights started waving around in the darkness. We were quickly spotted and the air was shattered by the sound of nazi machine gun fire. Then, almost as if on cue, the tower exploded, the searchlights shattered and all power was cut.
“How the heck..!?” Tom exclaimed.
Then Jake and Len whom we knew from S.A.S training came around the corner, grinning with an AK47 and a rocket launcher.
“All right let’s go!” Jake yelled. All it took was a few more grenades and we were out of the prison. We jumped into the waiting jeeps and drove off towards Switzerland.

A few weeks later we were approached by our C.O who offered us a million to blow up the prison we had just escaped from. We relished the thought of vengeance but our answer was,
“No thanks, we quit.”

Sjef van Gaalen, 1992.

Triangle To Doom

Written by . Filed under Super Stories. No comments.

The is the second of ‘Sjef’s Super Stories’, written aged 11 in my last year of primary school; 1992. Unfortunately I have no recollection of why Australia required the SEGA games, but I’m sure they were absolutely necessary at the time.

“Dad’s home!” Jack yelled, hearing the motorbike roaring up the drive. “Yay!” Denny and Ann yelled. “I wanna ride!” said Denny.
“O.K. but I get to do the scratchie,” Ann said.
When Dad finally came in and handed the scratchie to Ann everyone crowded around.
“What kind is it?” Asked Jack.
“ doomsday,” Ann replied.
“All right!” said Jack as he had already won the whole set of gross ghouls and a back-pack with these cards. As Ann scratched, everyone held their breath. Quietly Jack read, “win, win,” then “WIN!”
“WHAT DID WE GET?” Denny yelled. Quickly Ann scratched away the remaining box.
“A cruise smack-bang through the middle of the Bermuda triangle!” exclaimed Dad.
“AAAAAGH!!!!,” Denny yelled, “We’ll all fall into a big warp-zone and get zapped by monsters and eaten by triangles and, and, and, an….”
“Oh shut up,” said Jack (who thought there was a reasonable explanation for everything.) “Boats and planes go through there all the time nothings happened for fifteen years!”
“Then our boat will be overdue,” said Denny, who had all of a sudden become an expert on the Bermuda Triangle and was the ultimate pessimist.
“Well we’ll just have to take our chances with the holes and monsters won’t we?” said Mum who thought that a cruise would be just the thing for a good break.
“O.K,” said Dad, “we’ll go!”

***

“Hurry up you dope, our boat leaves in ten minutes!” yelled Jack at Ann, who was convinced they were going to be shipped away to Australia with a whole lot of SEGA games. “Look,” said dad. “Our boat is called the Bermuda Bounty and THAT’S it THERE!”
“ALRIGHT!” What are you waiting for then?”
Two days later and the cruise wasn’t much fun anymore. Denny was grounded to the cabin for the rest of the day for stealing Mum’s money to go to the spacies on Deck 4, while Ann had to stay inside because she had sunburn and dad was sick in the toilet, drunk as a skunk from the free beer at the bar below. Jack had won a jackpot on the fruit machine and he had spent all of it on the food dispenser and the spacies. Mum had been sea-sick all the way and the weather was about to pack-up.
“MuuuuuuuuuuuM, why can’t I be let off? The weather’s too bad for me to go outside anyway.”
“Oh all right. but if I ever catch you doing anything like that again, CHOP,” Mum said, drawing her finger across her throat. Then a voice came over the intercom.
“This is your captain speaking. It appears that we are experiencing some weather typical in this region of the triangle, but out helmsman has it all under control.”
When Jack heard this message he quickly killed off his game and went over to the custom designed “shipscreen” and punched in “bridge view.”
[Taping requires another $3.00]. Annoyed Jack stuffed in another 2 coins and intently watched the screen. What he saw, then absolutely horrified him. He saw three purplish- yellow blobs fall from the sky and disappear into the water. Then a whirl-pool formed in each spot where a blob had landed. The ship was about to enter one when the screen went dead and the message flashed up, [End of taping, for computer copy insert $2.00]. Jack annoyedly stuffed in the coin, grabbed the disk and ran off to show the others on his father’s laptop.
Ten minutes later everyone was lining up in the dining room where the captain told them their places in the lifeboats. Then, all of a sudden there was a spinning sensation which got faster and faster with every passing second. Suddenly there was a great CRASH which broke the bones of many people. Then about ten blue triangles burst through the wall carrying laser gatling guns and scanning equipment. They herded everyone into a corner before another black triangle came through the hole on the wall, stood up and said, “Greetings surfacelings! I am the great Bermuda! Long ago your people were friends with ours. We lived in peace and harmony until your kind grew greedy and chased us away. Now you put our world at risk, making nuclear weapons that could destroy the earth, so our people have planned a great invasion.”
“So what do you want us for!?” someone in the back yelled.
“It is not you we want, but your ship,” said the great Bermuda, “Now we have enough transport we will be able to start our offensive. But do not worry, there will be no unnecessary killing. We will simply take over. It is the better way.”
“So what will happen to us? someone yelled.
“You will be warped back through time and will not remember anything….anything….anyth…

“Dad’s home!” Jack yelled, hearing the motorbike roaring up the drive…

Sjef van Gaalen, 1992.

Escape Through Thought

Written by . Filed under Super Stories. No comments.

The is the first of ‘Sjef’s Super Stories’, written aged 11 in my last year of primary school; 1992. For this story I would like to apologize to Mexicans. I now believe you can shoot just as straight as everyone else, no demonstrations will be required.

He was standing on the bridge, gallows above him and a stump below him. The soldiers behind him were laughing, gambling over who was going to kick the stump and send him to oblivion. His life had just flashed before his eyes and now he was only thinking of ways to escape. He had already tried yelling “The British, I’m saved!”, but he only received a crack on the head with the butt of a rifle. One of the soldiers was just drawing back his foot to kick the stump when a jeep drove up.

“They have come to watch me die”, he thought miserably, but when the soldiers all sprang to attention he knew differently. “Let him go,” the colonel said, “he has military secrets!”. As the soldiers untied him he saw his chance. When they were halfway across the bridge he suddenly karate-kicked his guard in the face and took a death-defying leap into the raging waters. As he dived he heard the ominous clicking of German assault rifles being cocked amongst a cry of, “Fire at will!” given by the colonel.

He stayed underwater for about two minutes before his lungs forced him up again. As he went back under he felt a white-hot pain in his arm and when he surfaced again he saw a red stain on his shirt where a bullet had ripped through. He knew he was not quite out of range but he risked a look back at the bridge. He saw two things he didn’t like; missile launcher being loaded on the bridge and a jeep coming towards him with five men and two dogs on back. Then he saw a great splash as the rocket launcher was fired, sending its shell which missed him by a few meters. He knew he would be out of range by now, so he clambered out of the river and into the trees. He heard the shouts of the men and barks as the two rotweillers were let off. He ran, stumbling along in a blind panic. The rotweillers were only a few meters away from him now so he leapt for the nearest tree, scrambling up, thinking, “NOT gonna die, NOT gonna die!”. Then he hit his head on a branch and fell.

When he awoke he found his shot arm bandaged and a German looming over him with a syringe.
“Truth drug!” he thought and tried to punch the German in the face but he was tied down. The German laughed, saying something about not learning, and stuck the needle in his arm. When he came around he found himself leaning against a tree with another German pointing a rifle in his face. He braced himself for death but when the German pulled the trigger there was nothing but a click. He started to run, joyfully yelling “Auf wiedersehen!” over his shoulder at the swearing German behind him. He heard many shots but none hit him.
“They must all be Mexican!” he thought laughingly. He looked around himself later, and saw a row of trees up on a ridge. Then, all of a sudden he knew where he was. He ran to the top of the ridge and below him was the farm he knew so well, his house and his family. His wife had seen him and was running up the hill towards him but just as she was a few meters away from him he felt a sudden pain and knew no more.

He had hung, dreaming.

Sjef van Gaalen, 1992

Sjef’s Super Stories

Written by . Filed under Bla, Super Stories. No comments.

I recently rediscovered a manuscript documenting what has long been my most prolific year as a writer, 1992. Sjef’s Super Stories are what remains of my output during writing time in that last year of my primary school education. Each story was written out longhand in a long lost exercise book, spell-checked by a classmate, typed up during computer time on the Apple IIe clone in class and then glued into the cardboard storybook we were required to fabricate, finally reaching ‘published’ status.

Re-reading this collection a few weeks ago for the first time since then I laughed. I laughed hard. If these are half as funny to anyone else as they are to me they are worth sharing. My goal as far as writing is concerned is now clear, I must beat my eleven year old self. Hopefully one day I will be as awesome as I was back then.

Over the next month or so I’ll be authoring a story for the final assignment of the ‘Introduction to Cyberpunk‘ course, which will be the first fiction longer than 140 characters I’ve composed in the 18 years since that work in primary school. For entertainment while you wait and to set a benchmark against which to measure my progress (or lack thereof), I will post one of those old tales every so often till I’m done. You can expect the first installment to appear later this week.