An Untold Story of Griffin
and Kemp
by
M.J. Neary
(dedicated to H.G.
Wells)
University College, London, 1884
“Awake,
Samuel! Boarding with a genius will not
transform you into one.”
That was
the voice of reason, one that guided me through most of my career. Yet another voice, one of superstition and
vanity, tried to persuade me of the opposite.
How I wished to believe that a fraction of Jonathan Griffin’s brilliance
could project onto me if I only spent enough time in his vicinity! I fancied our brains being like two
communicating vessels, with grandiose theories and mysteries passing between
them. Little by little, that toxic swamp
of self-flattering fantasies sucked me in.
We enrolled in the same physics seminar led by Professor
Handley, my intellectual father, who promised me an assistant’s position after
my graduation as well as the hand of his daughter Elizabeth. Everyone in the department regarded me as
Professor Handley’s heir, the future king of the laboratory. At least, that was the case until Griffin ’s arrival. In one week this eighteen-year old boy with a
Welsh accent toppled the hierarchy that had been in place since my first solo
demonstration in 1881. When Griffin would enter the
lecture hall, all the chatter would cease and then turn into a collective sigh
of veneration.
It happened
so quickly that I did not even have enough time to grow suspicious, or
indignant, or bitter. He snatched my
invisible crown and placed it on his perfectly shaped head, atop a cloud of
snow-white curls.
Griffin was the only albino I had ever encountered. At first he struck me as a member of an
entirely different race, one that Darwin and Kingsley would declare as superior
to their own, a race untainted by unnecessary pigment. Later I learned that the condition had its
disadvantages. Griffin ’s eyes, garnet-red, were extremely
sensitive to the light, obliging him to wear spectacles made of tinted glass
and a hat. Between those eyes a
permanent crease was forming, growing deeper by the month. I studied that crease furtively, as if it were
some hieroglyph, a clue to the mysteries of his mind.
***
As a child
I suffered from respiratory distress. Slightest
physical exertion caused me to pant and wheeze, cutting me off from the games
of my sturdier peers. No, they did not taunt
me. They simply refused to acknowledge
my existence. At the time I would have
preferred open ridicule to utter indifference.
I found consolation in corresponding with Robert Louis Stevenson, who
had also had a “weak chest” and spent much of his childhood in sickbed. He had shared with me the early drafts of his
novels and poems. I read “The Treasure
Island” long before it was published. His bewildering adventures distracted me
from my affliction, provided me with an opportunity to step out of my
treacherous, uncooperative body. By the
age of sixteen I had reconciled with the thought that I would have no
companions save for the merry crew of the schooner Hispaniola .
All that
changed when I came to University
College and discovered
that in matters of intellect I surpassed most of my peers. Suddenly, my physical infirmities became
inconsequential. A former outcast, I
became the most sought-after individual in the entire medical department. My peers, who snubbed me during my
adolescence, now fought for a chance to have me for a study partner. They rapped on the door of my flat, attempted
subtle bribes, invited me to family outings.
For once, I had the power of rejecting one companion in favor of
another. I think back to the winter of
1881 and the succession of triumphs: my first public demonstration before the
entire department, my first dinner at Professor Handley’s house, my first
evening with Elizabeth
without a chaperone. Unnoticeably to
myself, I outgrew my malady. This
spontaneous recovery prompted me to make a vow to God that I would devote my
life to treating the ailments of the lungs.
Then the
white-haired Welshman barged into my kingdom, and my wheezing attacks returned,
with doubled intensity. When I was near
him, I lacked for air. Griffin was stealing oxygen from me. As slender as he was, as few personal possessions
as he had, somehow he occupied most of the two-bedroom flat that we shared. Every corner bore the mark of his
presence. Some elusive spirit reigned
there, leaving very little space for me.
Still, I had no grounds for complaints, as there was nothing
criminal about Griffin’s behavior. Who
can fault a science student for diligence?
If his work stirred my old illness, it was my private ordeal. Remains of pride forbade me to vocalize my
growing discontent. Most of all I feared
being accused of having a Salieri complex.
There was nothing left for me to do except drive my anger deep into my
inflamed chest. When the tightness in
the lungs became unbearable, I would simply go outside or wander the corridors
of the residence hall.
Nobody ever found out how many nights I spent on the
cushions in the lounge. And nobody found
out about the tempest inside my head. It
was not my crown that I missed – it was my freedom. I learned what it meant to be a spiritual
captive of another human being.
I knew that
when my schoolmates knocked on our door, it was most likely for Griffin , not me. Rarely would he deign to come out of his
sanctuary and greet them. Usually he
would remain behind the closed door upon which our schoolmates would throw
furtive, longing glances. With the
immediacy of small children they would elbow each other and whisper.
“How long
can he toy with explosives?”
“I know: he’s
making a bride for himself.”
“No, he’s building a time machine.”
“Stop
reading so much Jules Verne, dearest. It
will do your pretty little head no good.”
“At least I
can read, unlike some of us.”
“I tell you, albinos are all evil. It’s a mark of the Devil.”
“Listen to
you! Sounding like you’re straight from Oxford . Believing in the devil is no longer
fashionable.”
“Well, if
Devil exists, Griffin is his incarnation.”
“Bah,
you’re just envious!”
“I say,
he’s dissecting rats.”
“Bosh! One doesn’t need to go to a university for
that.”
“This is no
university. It’s a glorified butchery.”
“Gentlemen,
is it just my imagination, or does Griffin ’s
hair look a bit whiter than it was before?
I didn’t think it was possible.
And his skin! Did you see his
skin? It’s translucent. You can see the veins and everything.”
“Here’s an
idea. Why don’t you knock on his door and ask him?”
“Like hell
I will! You knock first.”
“After
you.”
“No, after
you!”
“Coward!”
“Idiot!”
Those were
the typical conversations. Griffin this, Griffin that…
Yes, they still consulted me on academic matters. I convinced myself that they were doing it
out of habit, or duty, or, perhaps, pity.
And yes, I
was still welcome at Professor Handley’s dinner table, but so was Griffin , although he did
not take advantage of this privilege frequently. On those rare occasions when he joined us, Elizabeth would become noticeably
distracted. She would study Griffin ’s face, as
deliberately and as blatantly as her upbringing allowed, while he remained
oblivious to her presence. He spoke very
little and ate even less. Between
courses he scribbled in his notebook with which he never parted. His colorless lips kept moving, whispering
formulas. His garnet eyes would squint
and widen, as if from flashes of light. In
those moments he resembled a monk immersed in perpetual prayer. And Elizabeth
would sigh and smile sadly. Apparently,
the white-haired genius struck a chord that I never had. Not that it mattered to me. One more defeat made no difference.
Handley,
delighted to now have two adopted sons, nurtured his own designs. One Friday afternoon, towards the end of the
seminar, he suggested before the whole group that Griffin and I should collaborate on a
study.
Science professors cannot boast about being the most tactful
men in the world. This is no
earth-shattering revelation. Handley was
no exception to the rule.
“Every semester my students grip each other by the throats
for a chance to partner with Samuel Kemp,” he said, beaming at his own ingenuity. “This time I decided to try a different approach. I will remove both Kemp and Griffin from the battle and assign them to
each other. It would be presumptuous on
my behalf to speak for the entire University
College , but personally I
am very anxious to see what miracles these two brilliant young men can concoct
together.”
For a few seconds everyone in the hall ceased breathing and
looked at Griffin, for he, apparently, had the final say.
“Is this a mandate?” he inquired, tapping his lips with the
tip of his pencil.
“Not at all,” Handley reassured him hastily, “merely an unobtrusive
proposal. Since you and Samuel Kemp
already spend a considerable amount of time under the same roof, perhaps, you
would use this time more constructively, for the benefit of your respective
careers.”
Griffin straightened out and clutched his notebook to his
chest.
“If this is a mere proposal, then I fear I must politely decline
it, Professor. You see, I am not quite
ready to share my work with anyone, even Samuel Kemp – with all due regard.”
There was no deliberate hostility in his voice. Still, his declaration solicited a number of
stifled gasps from the audience.
What? The earth stopped
spinning. Samuel Kemp received his first
outward rejection! Now everyone was
staring at me.
My chest tightened. I
felt a sudden need to unbutton my collar.
The prospect of having a coughing attack in front of my schoolmates
petrified me. God be my witness, I tried
not to be angry with Handley. Nor did I
doubt his benevolence. The man sincerely
believed his idea brilliant.
“Professor,” I mumbled, raising a sweaty, trembling
hand. “I was about to present the same
objection, but Mr. Griffin preceded me. I
believe it is in everyone’s best interests that we work separately. Following his example, I will take no partner
this semester. I would like to think
that I have earned my autonomy.”
Handley looked perplexed, not heartbroken.
“Who am I to argue with geniuses?”
He turned
his back to us and began wiping the blackboard, letting everyone know that the
class was dismissed.
***
Several
weeks went by. I remained faithful to my
promise to work alone for the semester, spending my time in the mezzanine of
the library, avoiding my schoolmates and Handley in particular. The date of my graduation was approaching,
which meant I needed to start thinking about my impending marriage. Elizabeth
had begun making wedding preparations, and I had no idea what that ceremony entailed. She had mentioned names of places, churches
and reception halls, I had never heard of.
In truth, my knowledge of London
outside Bloomsbury was rather sketchy. I simply never had a reason to leave the
cluster of buildings that comprised University
College .
One Sunday
evening, after the library had closed and I returned into my flat, something
unthinkable happened. Griffin emerged from his laboratory and
actually spoke to me.
“Samuel,”
he began with uncharacteristic softness.
I shuddered
at the sound of his voice and pinched myself.
Griffin
had never addressed me, let alone by my given name.
“I was made aware of the inconvenience I have caused you
over the past few months,” he continued.
“I did not know until recently that my experiments were harming your
health. You should’ve informed me at
once. And then that horrid incident at
the lecture hall! Handley took me by
surprise. I suppose, I haven’t grown
accustomed to his antics. That buffoon
of a man…”
I interrupted him quite coldly.
“You were about
to say—”
Did Griffin
truly believe it will take a few words of gossip to melt the ice?
“I was
about to say that an apology would not be out of place.”
“An
apology?” I asked, shaking my head in confusion. “From me to you, I suppose?”
“Samuel, I
would be honored to have you for a study partner. I was simply waiting for the appropriate
moment to initiate you into my discoveries.
I did not wish to do it before the entire class. Most of our schoolmates are sheep. But you know that already, don’t you? Listen, I’m very glad that I met you, even in
a place like this, amidst this bureaucratic circus.”
I opened my
mouth, but no words came out, only a hoarse wheeze. The glass tubes on the shelf began to
blur.
“We have much
to discuss, Samuel. It will take some
time.”
“Honestly,
I’m flattered,” I muttered, wiping the sweat off my cheeks and neck.
“However, I meant what I said in the lecture hall. It isn’t in our best interests to
collaborate. You see plainly that I am
in no state to argue with you. I simply don’t
have enough air in my lungs. Let us
leave things as they are. Please, excuse
me.”
I turned
around, preparing to leave, but Griffin, my idol, my tormentor, stepped towards
me and caught me by the shoulders.
“I need one
full night to work,” he continued, as if he had not heard my objections.
“Come back in the morning, and I will be ready to share my
findings with you. This will be the last
inconvenience to which you’ll be subjected, one last favor. It will be worth your wait, Sam. I promise.”
Losing
footing, I leaned forward and buried my face on his chest, convinced that I was
dying. The fumes from his shirt and his
white hair were poisoning me. It was the
first time we came into physical contact.
Before then he had not as much as shaken my hand. Even on the verge of a swoon I could not help
noticing how hot his skin was. Any other
human being would be delirious at such body temperature. The protein in the blood begins to curdle at forty-two
Celsius. It was one of the first facts I
learned in my medical coursework. And Griffin ’s temperature
must have been close to forty-five. But then,
he was no ordinary human being. His body
chemistry must have been different, either from birth or as result of
mysterious manipulations on his part.
And now this alien creature was embracing me, trying to cajole me into
his plot.
Terrified and jubilant at the same time, I threw my arms
around his neck and clung to him, coughing and laughing.
Suddenly, I
heard him whisper.
“Collect yourself,
Samuel.”
It was
neither a plea nor an attempt to comfort me but an order. Of course, he had no time for this.
Still
panting, I released him. He escorted me
to the door and, with a slap on the back, pushed me into the dark hall.
“Good night,
Samuel.”
***
When I came
to my senses, I was walking down Gower
Street , where every stone in the pavement was
familiar to me. Over the last few months
I had learned the pattern of the cobblestone.
Those clusters of ovals and lopsided rectangles had turned into a mosaic
of bewilderment and muffled fury. But
that night I felt strange heat radiating from those stones, like the heat from
Jonathan’s hands. Those stones were
alive. They whispered to me, as I was
still trying to make sense of the sudden reversal of fate.
He and I… How blind,
how inattentive we both had been!
I must
confess that the promise of partnership and camaraderie with Jonathan thrilled
me more than my engagement to Elizabeth . Her acceptance of my proposal held no triumph
for me. I never pursued her
aggressively, and she never resisted. One
evening Professor Handley, as unceremonious a matchmaker as he was a
peacemaker, simply seated us side by side at the dinner table. It was a marriage of reverence that we shared
for her father. When we said “yes”, it
was not so much to each other but to Professor Handley.
***
In the
morning, when I stopped by our flat to change my shirt and fetch my textbooks,
I found Jonathan’s room empty. I assumed
I would meet him in the lecture hall. I
could not help wondering how we would behave in front of our schoolmates. Would we publicize our newly formed
friendship? Perhaps, he would prefer to
keep it a secret and then stun the entire department at the end of the
semester.
I have
witnessed, on more than one occasion, scenes of jubilation when study partners,
after receiving an award for a successful demonstration, would hang on each
other’s necks, skip, squeal like pups and kiss each other “on the brain” as the
called it. Then they would rip off their
ties and give each other back rides up and down the hall, to the applause of
their mates. It was a chance for these
future high priests of science to temporarily turn into savages. Thankfully, they did not practice such
boorish antics with me, knowing my distaste for them. Perhaps, I had a stricter upbringing. Undoubtedly, even the most civilized men need
a released, especially if it is well-earned.
Still, I could not fathom embracing Jonathan by the shoulders in public,
no matter how much I wanted to.
When I
entered the lecture hall, I saw Handley’s assistant. The professor himself was absent. So was Griffin .
When the
assistant saw me, he pulled me aside.
“Mr. Kemp,
Professor Handley wishes to see you in his office.”
The request
to see the professor in private did not disturb me. I could not recall doing anything that would
lead to repercussions. I assumed that
the nature of the conversation would be purely academic. Perhaps, Griffin informed Handley about our decision
to collaborate and requested some funds from the department.
With a
fairly light heart, I came into Handley’s office. He was there in the company of another
professor by the name Ellsworth.
“Please,
sit down,” Handley commanded, pointing at a vacant armchair. “I am afraid I have some disturbing
news. Your flat mate Griffin was taken to the infirmary earlier
this morning, in a very grave condition.”
“God help
him,” I mumbled, sitting down on the edge of the chair. “What happened?”
“Nobody
knows for certain. He won’t talk to the
doctor. He exhibits every symptom of
severe poisoning: vomiting, pallor, listlessness, reduced circulation in the
limbs.”
“Well, can I see him?”
“Not
yet. The doctors insist on keeping him
secluded.”
“Why on
earth?”
Here Ellsworth
intruded.
“Samuel, do
you know why we called you here?”
“Because I
am Jonathan’s friend, naturally.”
"How odd,”
Ellsworth commented, rubbing his chin.
“I did not think that Jonathan had any friends. But he certainly had his share of enviers. The doctors have reasons to believe that what
he is suffering from is no ordinary infection.
There is evidence of highly toxic substance in his bloodstream. The director is contemplating bringing in the
constable, who may wish to question those with whom Griffin has had contact. We wanted to prepare you for this
possibility. You may be among the first
ones to be interrogated.”
Had I had
any strength left in my legs, I would have leaped up from the chair. All I could do was press my fingers into the
wooden arms.
“Don’t
fear, Samuel, we aren’t trying to incriminate you,” Handley chimed in
hastily. “On the contrary, we are trying
to protect you.”
“I know
what made Griffin
ill,” I blurted out, staring into the floor.
“He drank one of his concoctions.”
The
professors shook their heads in tandem.
“You aren’t
implying that it was a suicide attempt, are you?” asked Ellsworth.
“Nothing of
the sort! It was an experiment.”
“An experiment?”
“Yes! The substance he took was supposed to destroy
the pigment in his blood without altering its properties. I’ve heard him mumble formulas in his
sleep. Pigments, optical density,
refraction index, transparency of living tissues, radiation machine…”
The professors
assumed the same pose – arms crossed, heads tilted. As I continued, Handley’s eyebrow kept
arching steeper and steeper.
“So, what was
the objective of his experiments?” he inquired.
“In your opinion, what was Griffin
trying to accomplish?”
Handley’s
dimwittedness infuriated me indescribably.
How long would it take him to assemble the pieces of the puzzle?
“Gentlemen,”
I said, struggling to keep my voice steady, “is it not obvious that Griffin’s
goal was to turn invisible?”
Both
professors burst out laughing. Handley was
so amused that he needed to pour himself a glass of water from the carafe on
his desk.
“Scientific
impossibility aside,” he resumed after the first sip, “why would a young man
endowed with Griffin ’s
appearance wish to make himself invisible?
I couldn’t help noticing the effect he has on the fair sex.”
"Griffin doesn’t care
about women!” I exclaimed. “You don’t
understand. He doesn’t care about
anyone, least of all himself. He will
risk his life for his work. I’ve grown
to know Griffin
like no other. You can laugh at me now
to your hearts’ content. You didn’t
stand behind the closed door of his bedroom for hours, listening to him rant in
his sleep. Please, let me see him. I can persuade him to let the doctors treat
him. He’ll listen to me. We can save him. I’ve been thinking of little less for the
past four months.”
My eyes
must have been tearing, because Handley offered me his handkerchief. Ellsworth leaned over to his colleague and
mumbled loudly enough for me to hear.
“Something
tells me that this is no longer a story of Mozart and Salieri. Rather, it is a story of Byron and Shelley.”
Handley,
who was not very versed in romantic literature, did not understand the allusion
at once. He began chewing on his lower
lip as he usually did to mask his ignorance.
“This would
be far worse for the school’s reputation,” Ellsworth continued hissing in his
ear. “Sensitive young men, when deprived
of female companionship for prolonged stretches of time, can fall into all
sorts of unwholesome, unnatural affections towards each other. Don’t you know? In ancient Sparta …”
The more Ellsworth
spoke, the more perplexed Handley grew. History
was another subject outside of his expertise.
Both carried on as if I were not present.
“Of what
crime exactly am I being accused?” I asked at last, glancing up. “Let us be clear. Is it attempted murder or homosexuality?”
Now that
was a word that Handley understood. His
jaw dropped, and his hand grasped his tie as if it were choking him.
“Young man! Have you no shame?”
“Shame? Shouldn’t you be posing this question to your
colleague? A student is dying, and
Professor Ellsworth revels in the most piquant practices of ancient Spartans.
Apparently, that is where his mind dwells. Those night walks that he took down Gower Street with
the drama professor must’ve led to Sparta . But who am I to judge? After all, this is a secular, liberal university,
a cradle of progress. Still, all you
care about is your precious reputation. It
comes before everything, even science. And
then you wonder why students hide from you.”
Handley
threw a plaintive glance at his colleague.
“My weak
heart won’t take it. I’m getting much
too old for such an ordeal. What is
happening to our institution? And above
all, why is this happening on my watch?
Two of my best students… After
everything I’ve done for them! I gave
Samuel a seat at my dinner table and my beautiful daughter in marriage. And this is his gratitude I receive!”
“Right before the end of the semester, too!” Ellsworth
replied sympathetically.
“Let me see
Griffin ,” I
demanded through my teeth. “I don’t care
whom you drag into this. I will stand
before the entire Scotland Yard if necessary.
I have nothing to hide, and I don’t need anyone’s protection.”
Handley pulled
his tie off his neck and wrapped it around his fist.
“Go,” he
muttered half-audibly, swinging the silk ribbon towards the door.
***
The drowsy nurse on duty barely stirred as I entered the
chilly hall of the infirmary. All curtains
were closed tight at Griffin ’s
request, who was the only patient there that day. For a minute I lingered at his bedside,
studying the outline of his scrawny body under the white sheet. He did not acknowledge my visit in any way,
even though he was wide awake. His eyes
were fixed on the ceiling, and his hands were still clutching his notebook.
A malicious
thought flashed through my head. This
was my opportunity to exact revenge, however superficial. I could threaten to expose his failed
experiment to our schoolmates, to make him the laughing stock of the entire University College .
But that moment of gloating lasted only a second. I reminded myself that I was a doctor in
training and, as such, took the liberty of feeling his forehead. Now, it was not much warmer to the touch than
the metal bedpost. I estimated that his
body temperature was barely hovering above thirty degrees.
Judging
from the hue of his skin, his experiment was not a complete failure. He looked even paler than before, which led
me to conclude that he succeeded at destroying some of the pigment in his red
blood cells.
“What a
shame, Samuel,” he began, still staring upward.
His voice
was surprisingly strong, given his wretched condition. He did not look defeated in the least.
“I had
every intention of initiating you into my work,” he continued, “but you simply
can’t keep your mouth shut.”
“Neither
can you,” I retaliated, sitting down on the edge of his bed. “You ought to consider gagging yourself for
the night.”
“How much
did you hear?”
“Enough to
confirm my theory that you were not here to study medicine.”
“I wish I
could,” he lamented. “Sometimes I wish I
could take interest in something as mundane as medicine and practice it for the
rest of my life. I wish I could be
content with Handley for a professor and his homely daughter for a wife. But I’ll never be like the others. I always suspected it, but when I came here,
all doubt was removed. This is no place
to practice science.”
His head
twitched on the pillow, and his gaze shifted to me. This sudden attempt to make eye contact threw
me into a state of slight panic. I came
close to jumping up from his bed. His
icy hand released the notebook and seized my wrist.
“I must
leave at once,” he declared.
“Perhaps,
it would be for the better,” I muttered faintly. “No need to stay in a place where you feel
stifled.”
For an
instant I thought that he was going to ask me to abandon everything and follow
him, to the end of the world, wherever he was going. I don’t know what made me think he would
propose such a thing.
He released
my wrist as suddenly as he seized it.
“By the
way, you need not fear,” I continued. “Nobody
will find out.”
“Oh, yes,
they certainly will find out,” Griffin
objected. “The whole world will – in due
time. And those rotten hogs from the
academia who scoffed at me will tremble.
The whole world will tremble.”
The whole
world! Griffin despised it enough to want to hide
himself from it, yet at the same time he coveted it enough to want to dominate
it.
“Will I
ever see you again?” I asked.
“Not if
everything goes according to my plan. I’ll
be sure to visit you when my work is complete.
You won’t see me, but you’ll hear my voice and feel my grip.
He arched
his back on the mattress and laughed.
"Jonathan,
you’ll kill yourself!” I said, rising to my feet and backing away from his bed.
"Don’t let
your hopes soar.”
***
Five days
later Griffin
left the university, citing poor health in his exit letter. One afternoon I returned from the lectures
and found the flat cleared of his possessions except for one cracked tube that
he left behind and which I kept it as a souvenir.
Once again, I could spend the nights under my roof without
the fear of suffocating. Once again, I
was the king of the laboratory. Not that
it mattered anymore. My schoolmates began
flocking back to me, their demeanor being apologetic, almost servile. I did not respond to their insinuations. Their voices blended into one indistinct
buzz. The only voice I heard distinctly
was that of my former flat mate.
Jonathan succeeded at infecting me with his contempt for the University College .
I began viewing that place with his eyes and feeling stifled there. Once my coronation site, it suddenly became
my prison. Graduation could not come
soon enough. I did complete my solo
demonstration and even received an award which left me completely indifferent.
Needless to say, I never accepted the teaching position that
Professor Handley had promised to me.
Nor did I end up marrying Elizabeth . It was difficult to say which one of us was
more relieved to break the engagement.
Stevenson continued writing to me, sending drafts of his
stories and poems, but I never responded.
I felt that by continuing to love my respectable, philistine
life that Jonathan despised so, I would somehow betray him. Perhaps, if I proved myself worthy and
denounced all things ordinary, he would return to me and share his secrets at
last. Those sentiments were completely
absurd and ludicrous. I owed Griffin nothing. No man should have such power over
another.
When nobody was watching, I would pinch, slap and shake
myself, trying to break free from that bizarre vision of Jonathan, the
white-haired, garnet-eyed angel dissolving into air.
______________________________
©
2010 M.J. Neary. All rights reserved.
______________________________
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
M.J.
Neary is an award-winning historical essayist, multilingual arts &
entertainment journalist, novelist, dramatist and poet. Her novel, Wynfield's
Kingdom, is featured in the March 2010 edition of First Edition Magazine
(UK). Her play "Hugo in London" was acquired by Heuer, and the
sequel "Lady with a Lamp" was published by Fireship Press with the
photos from the show. She also has a book of poetry "Bipolar
Express" published by Fireship Press. Currently, M.J. Neary works as
an editorial reviewer and steady contributor for Bewildering Stories e-zine.