15 episodes

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.

The Masters Benjamin Willenbring

    • Fiction
    • 5.0 • 3 Ratings

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.

    13. A Game of Pool

    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.

    • 34 min
    12. The Control Plane

    12. The Control Plane

    Previously — In episode 11, we meet the three-man chalk of JTF Alpha—a motley collection of military oddballs hand-picked by John Spillers. There’s Delaloza, who spends most of his time napping, not saying a word. And Chaulette, a full bird colonel recently transferred from an all black airborne unit known as the Triple Nickels. And Dawkins—a disgraced Navy UDT diver who is, in the words of Ramler “a pile-up of unintended consequences”. Dawkins is in charge of the chalk and their mission objectives are clear: jump into the Grass Cutting Area, cut off the compound’s communications with Ramey, locate and take possession of the detainee Jesus Santiago, and kill anyone who gets in the way. Accompanying the chalk is a tight-lipped jumpmaster who wears a blank piece of fabric where his name tape ought to be. This small violation of uniform SOP immediately arouses the attention of the pilot—captain Will Hardesty, a man who by modern standards, would be classified as on the spectrum—but in 1950 is just another military oddball. Hardesty spends the duration of the flight spitballing possible names for the jumpmaster while observing the men of the chalk with a mixture of suspicion, astonishment, and detached coolness. Though he knows he’s flying them to a spot above Ramey Air Force base in Puerto Rico, he has no idea why.

    • 29 min
    11. JTF Alpha

    11. JTF Alpha

    Previously—In episode 10, Sepulveda walks with Spillers in the Grass Cutting Area compound, only to wake up below the canopy of the enormous ceiba tree. Unable to speak or move his legs, things quickly take a turn for the bizarre when Garcia shows up. This is the Spaniard Santiago’s father killed over 400 years earlier while protecting his family. During the melee, Spillers disappears from view and tells Captain Sepulveda he must get up and fight or die at the hands of the Spaniard. There’s a struggle during which Sepulveda is convinced he will die. In what he believes are his last moments, he finds a macana and uses it to get the better of Garcia. When he rises to his feet, the there is only Santiago. The old man, who appears to be able to change his appearance at will, explains that he has brought Sepulveda here despite his physical body remaining in building one—that the two are now entangled in what he describes as shared intent. He ends by warning him that something ominous is coming. Back at building one, we learn from Spillers and Ramler that JTF Alpha is inbound to Puerto Rico, and will be jumping in in less than 45 minutes.

    • 36 min
    10. The World Behind the World

    10. The World Behind the World

    Previously—In episode 9, Captain Sepulveda and FBI station chief John Spillers go for a short walk. Their conversation is cordial—mostly smalltalk about the new Sikorski helicopters recently shipped to Ramey Air Force base. But deeper into their walk, Spillers suggests moving over to a tall tree in the distance. When this happens, Sepulveda catches a glimpse of something he can’t explain—Spillers’ face seems to wobble and move, capturing and bending the light in a way that acts as a kind of blurring filter. At Area J, we find out that Jesus Santiago has somehow become aware of the activities of Dr. Vandyck and her colleagues—that he can sense the presence of their aperture sessions. When the other operators at Area J learn about this, Vandyck’s FOJIP presentation breaks down into chaos.

    • 30 min
    9. Rough Drafts of Men

    9. Rough Drafts of Men

    Previously—In episode 8, FBI station chief John Spillers arrives at building one of the Grass Cutting Area, and quickly makes it clear to Captain Sepulveda that he and Ramler are there only to interrogate Jesus Santiago. Sepulveda, who’s meeting Spillers for the first time, instantly feels there’s something off about him—he just can’t quite put it into words. After some awkward introductions, Spillers and Ramler leave the captain’s office to confer privately. When they’re gone, Sepulveda calls his old acquaintance Pedro Alvarez, who runs la Princesa prison in San Juan—hoping to learn something that might explain Spillers’ motives in all this. Pedro tells him about the FBI’s aggressive questioning of hospital employees on the day of the break-in, the vast network of informants throughout Puerto Rico, and the arrest of the Ortiz brothers. When Sepulveda learns of Anton Ramler’s involvement in the case, he’s unsure if this is reason enough to distrust everything Ramler told him earlier—about the secret tissue samples and the medical experiments done to his men during the summer. Another thing he can’t quite figure out—what does Spillers really want and what part does Jesus Santiago play in all of this? Just as he’s wrapping things up with Pedro on the telephone, Spillers enters the room, and suggests they go for a walk.

    • 24 min
    8. Spillers

    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.

    • 23 min

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