The Masters

Benjamin Willenbring

It’s 1950. Tissue samples, managed by the Los Alamos research group, have been stolen out of a lab in San Juan, arousing the interest of FBI station chief John Spillers, a 500 year old werewolf. The theft was orchestrated by Jesus Santiago, a Taino man who’s been itching for revenge since 1518. Complicating things is Captain Sepulveda, who runs the detention facility holding Santiago. Sepulveda's men were killed in a classified Los Alamos bio weapons exposure trial, and he wants answers. The Masters is a violent sci-fi romp through history, folklore, and science with a dash of magical realism. read less
FictionFiction

Episodes

13. A Game of Pool
Mar 18 2024
13. A Game of Pool
Previously — In episode 12, Vandyck reveals her misgivings about Area J operator procedures — specifically, the over reliance on aperture screen technology. She mockingly compares this to Santiago’s no-frills demonstration from earlier, when he took control of a recorded session to directly address a room full of operators from his stone dungeon in Puerto Rico. Privately, she admires the old man, and wonders if she might be able to duplicate his results — essentially creating a bridge between her world and his. Back at the Grass Cutting Area, there’s a catastrophic descent into chaos shortly after machine gun fire erupts. Communications have been cut off. JTF Alpha is inside the wire. In the confusion, the men of building two rush to the armory to gear up for a fire fight. Meanwhile, Captain Sepulveda takes a two-man detail to collect Santiago from his detainment cell, but when they hear the explosions and gunfire above, they realize building two is lost. The captain leads the group to cell number 3, locks the door, and orders his men to leave through the secret evacuation hatch built into the floor. When they’re safely gone, he draws and uncocks his sidearm, prepared to join his men upstairs. Santiago prevents him from leaving, tell him he’ll die if he walks out that door. They argue a while, but when Dawkins shows up, wiping his bloodied hands along the walls of the hallway outside and loudly boasting of his kills, Sepulveda realizes everyone he cares about is dead. Moments later, just as Dawkins kicks the door in, the air of the room folds over on itself. And Sepulveda and Santiago vanish in a pinwheel of blue sparks.
8. Spillers
Jan 2 2023
8. Spillers
In Episode 8—Spillers arrives at building one of the Grass Cutting Area, a secret interrogation facility nestled in the middle of Ramey Air Force Base. Spillers, who earlier killed Ramler, then reanimated him, seems unsure about whether or not he can count on the man’s loyalty. Sepulveda, having just found out from Ramler the unbelievable story of an indestructible uterus being kept in a jar… doesn’t trust anyone, and begins to wonder how Jesus Santiago fits into all of this. Previously—In episode 7, PORTREX, Captain Sepulveda revealed to Ramler that earlier in the year, several of his men died under mysterious circumstances during a work detail at New York Presbyterian hospital, and that he himself is dying of cancer. Ramler, who had briefly considered killing the captain while being held at gunpoint, instead decided to share bits and pieces of classified information regarding medical experiments that were being done at the hospital under the direction of the war department. He explained that in 1941, after a young Puerto Rican woman underwent an involuntary hysterectomy, her excised uterus was discovered to possess remarkable properties—namely, that the cells didn’t seem to age or die. Through a series of New York contacts, this information wound up catching the attention of the Los Alamos medical research group, at which point, the tissue samples were subjected to more thorough analysis. As Ramler was about to explain how all of this relates to captain Sepulveda’s men, in walked John Spillers.
6. The Ceramicist
Oct 21 2022
6. The Ceramicist
In episode 6—We find out about one of Spillers additional capabilities, alluded to by Dr. Vandyck in the previous episode. We also watch as Captain Sepulveda greets a visitor to building one—an FBI interrogator sent by station chief John Spillers. On the face of things, the purpose of this man’s visit is to demonstrate interrogation techniques, but Sepulveda doesn’t quite trust him. For good reason. Previously—In episode 5, The Hawk’s Bells, we learned that in 1518, John Spillers went to a small Taino village in Aymamio to collect gold (what is now Aguadilla, Puerto Rico). When he discovered there was none to be had, he killed every man, woman, and child. Brutally. All except the young boy Hayuya, who we learn, is actually the young version of Santiago (the old jibaro who was held in the calabozo of la Princesa). Observing the events of 1518 through an aperture portal at Area J, Dr. Vandyck explains that the event stream is not simply a mathematical construct, but a highly complex system—what she calls a consciousness producing biome that behaves exactly like an organism. Further, that some humans have the ability to alter their energetic luminescence in ways that are not fully understood. One example of this is Spillers, who she describes as an aberration threatening to destabilize the event stream. Another example is Santiago, who she mentions is a shape shifter. Her theory is that these two men are on a collision course, and that the event stream has deployed Santiago as a sort of countermeasure to Spillers, in an attempt to set itself back into equilibrium.
1. The Crate
Aug 23 2022
1. The Crate
In this first episode, we jump into the world of 1950 Puerto Rico. There's been a recent break-in at a lab inside of New York Presbyterian hospital in San Juan. As soon as the FBI station chief, John Spillers finds out, he takes an unusual interest in the case. He sends special agent Anton Ramler to recover the stolen items—stashed in a wooden crate. The world that Ramler and Spillers find themselves in is one of heightened paranoia: the cold war has just started. 75,000 communist troops, armed by the Soviet Union, have just crossed the 38th parallel and invaded South Korea. The FBI has a massive presence on the island of Puerto Rico. Luis Muñoz Marín is governor. No one knows it, but he’s in the back pocket of J. Edgar Hoover because of secret files proving he’s a drug addict from his bohemian days in New York City opium dens. Hoover uses this leverage to ensure that Marin plays nicely in the ongoing suppression of the Puerto Rican independence movement, led by the nationalist party. If you’ve never heard of this movement, it’s because the FBI did its job. Starting the in the 30s, they enlisted the aid of tens of thousands of informants—regular citizens—to spy on their neighbors—anyone suspected of harboring sympathies with the independence movement. Even high school students.  Episode 1 starts a couple weeks before major island-wide armed uprisings, that culminate with assassination attempts on Governor Marin and President Harry Truman.  https://roughmasters.substack.com/p/1-the-crate