With Cold War tensions rising, Fantaisie captures the uncertainty of a world rebuilding while secrets still threaten peace. Fantaisie, Historical Fiction by Michael Kenneth Smith Book Tour with Guest Post
With Cold War tensions rising, Fantaisie captures the uncertainty of a world rebuilding while secrets still threaten peace. Jan Orlinski’s journey from pilot to reluctant operative takes him across continents, while Sophie Gordon’s espionage work leads to her imprisonment in a Soviet camp. The story builds toward a high-stakes rescue and a reckoning with the past.
Author Michael Kenneth Smith brings his well-known historical storytelling expertise—seen in The Postwoman—to this new and complex setting.
🔗 Website | Facebook | XExcerpt:
The black sedan was still following them as they neared
the airport, albeit at a distance. Jan decided whoever it was wanted to keep an
eye on them but wasn't looking for a confrontation. He glanced back again as
Brian made a quick turn and then another. After four years in Matadi, he knew
the city's streets well. Soon, they were headed back across the bridge into the
heart of town, the sedan no longer visible behind them. The sun beat down as
Brian guided the truck through Matadi's bustling streets, which smelled of
exhaust and overripe fruit from market stalls and street vendors. He turned
down narrow alleys twice, the truck's tires screeching in protest.
Five minutes later, they pulled up to a small, tidy house
in an affluent neighborhood.
"Come on," Brian said. "We need to
talk."
They entered the house, mostly empty and neglected in
contrast to its well-maintained exterior. Dust motes danced in shafts of
sunlight, revealing bare patches where furniture once stood. In the kitchen, a
mountain of dirty dishes teetered in the sink. Brian gestured to one of two
wooden chairs. "Water?"
"Yes, please," Jan said, taking a seat and
accepting the glass. The water tasted brackish; he grimaced.
"Matadi water," Brian said, wiping sweat from
his brow. "Safe, but an acquired taste."
Jan's eyes fell on a large black box next to the
refrigerator. It hummed softly, its face a maze of dials, switches, and
blinking lights. An antenna poked out from behind it, disappearing through a
small hole in the wall. A large radio? He pushed the glass away and folded his
arms as Brian sat.
"First of all," he said, "my name isn't
Brian Rich. Until recently, I worked for the Office of Strategic Services, or
OSS. It was established in 1942 by President Roosevelt as America's first
centralized intelligence agency, created to coordinate espionage activities
behind enemy lines during World War II. Our work in the Congo was part of a
larger operation called the Alsos Mission. Alsos is Greek for 'grove,' which
was General Groves's codename—he was the head of the Manhattan Project."
"The people who created the atomic bomb," Jan
said.
"Exactly. And Shinkolobwe is where the uranium came
from."
"Hold on," Jan said, feeling numb. "Are you
saying—"
Brian nodded. "That's not cobalt ore you've been
hauling. It's uranium. We kept it from the Germans, though truthfully, they
never seemed that interested. Our Alsos teams discovered their program was
years behind ours. But the Russians, on the other hand..."
Jan drank more water, taste be damned. "The Russians?
Is that why—"
"Why did they steal your cargo? Most likely. They
want the bomb, Jan. They want to be a superpower. And now that Alsos has been
disbanded and the OSS is being dissolved, replaced by something called the
Central Intelligence Group, there's a vacuum. The Soviets are rushing to fill
it."
"But wait," Jan said. "What about Gerston?
If he's supplying the Russians, why would they need to steal my cargo?"
"That's the question," Brian said. "Maybe
multiple entities are competing to be Russia's supplier. Or maybe this Gerston
is trying to keep the uranium out of Russian hands. Or maybe he's working for
another country that wants the bomb. We just don't know."
"Okay, so what now?" Jan asked, his voice
hoarse.
Brian stood, pacing the small kitchen. "I'm sending
an encrypted message to Washington. We should hear back by tomorrow. Until
then, let's get you back to the airport."
Brian took an entirely different route this time, but no
one seemed to be following them. As they pulled up to the C-47, he turned to
Jan. "I'll be back in the morning after I get word from Washington."
As Brian's truck disappeared into the distance, Jan
slumped against the side of the C-47, its metal skin still hot from the day's
sun. He hoped Burundi had found a mechanic and would be back soon. He wanted to
get home. He was done working for Gerston, that much he knew. In fact, he would
have abandoned the man's plane, but Jan had no other way home.
The African sun dipped below the horizon, painting the sky
in brilliant hues of orange and purple. Jan climbed into the plane for the
night. With his cargo stolen, nothing was left to guard, and there was no
reason to sleep outside again under the plane's wing. He supposed that was a
silver lining. He was about to close the rear door when something across the
tarmac caught his eye. He squinted into the gathering darkness and saw the
black sedan, parked almost out of sight behind a dilapidated hangar. He pulled
the door shut, locked it, and lay down with the revolver at his side.
Guest Post:
While researching for Fantaisie, I hit a roadblock trying to accurately portray the
mechanics of the two-seater Messerschmitt Bf-109G-12 that plays such a crucial
role in Jan and Sophie's escape. Aviation forums and history books offered
conflicting information, and I was struggling to visualize how a fighter pilot
accustomed to a Hurricane would adapt to German controls.
My breakthrough came at a small aviation
museum outside Paris where they had a partially restored cockpit section. The
curator, noticing my intense interest, introduced me to an elderly aviation
engineer who had worked on restoring various WWII aircraft. Though he'd never
flown them in combat, he understood their mechanical differences intimately.
He spent an afternoon explaining the quirks of
the Bf-109's control systems, even sketching diagrams of the cockpit layout and
explaining how the handling would differ from Allied planes. His technical
knowledge paired with his storyteller's ability to convey the sensory
experience of these machines transformed what would have been generic flying
scenes into something much more authentic.
When the book was nearly finished, I sent him
the chapter featuring Jan's escape flight. His note back simply said, "I
could feel the wind through those bullet holes in the wing fabric." That
validation from someone who truly understood these machines meant everything.
#Fantaisie #HistoricalFiction #ColdWarFiction #WWII #MichaelKennethSmith
#BookTour #GuestPost #authormarketing
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