Guardian Angel-22 Paradise, part 1 of 3

Ethan woke up when he felt Jill rise.  The overhead showed the dawn just coming up, and while in days past he would have grumbled at the early hour, he now felt rested and ready to rise, and loved.  What could be better than that?  Jill had told him with the chits he needed less sleep than he used to need, and with the Gaian built bed, he needed even less sleep to be rested, but he still enjoyed his time in bed, and he might have lingered if Jill had not thrown clothes at him.

“Hey!”  He shouted, but there was love in his voice.

“Up!”  Jill shouted back, and her love sounded just as strong.

Ethan sat up and looked.  Jill was dressed in a white linen mini-skirt and sandals.  It suited her, and he got all sorts of thoughts just looking at her.  They must have reflected in his eyes.

“No time,” Jill said, as if she read his mind.  “I decided you need to meet my family as well, dysfunctional as they are.”

“What?”  Ethan sat all the way up and saw that Jill had tossed him a kind of white mini-skirt of his own, and sandals that tied up to just below the knees.  He dressed while she got breakfast from the ship’s system.  It was bread and olive oil instead of butter, a kind of oatmeal mush with some unknown fruit, and milk for herself.  She allowed him his coffee.  He thought that this could not be the food of paradise, but she assured him that it was.

“Welcome to my Earth,” she said.

When they went to the control room, Ethan found Manomar tugging at his short skirt.  He did not mind wearing a dress, so much.  That would have not been too different from what he wore back home.  In his case, it was the shortness of the dress that bothered him.  Ethan was not sure about the dress itself, even if Jill said he had nice legs.

“So where are we?”  Ethan asked generally as he looked out the screen.  He saw pine trees and palm trees side by side, and just beyond those, he saw the ocean crash up against a bolder strewn shore.  When he squinted, he imagined another landfall in the distance, but there had to be miles of ocean in between.

“Lyoness,” Jill said.  “My private domain.”  When Ethan and Manomar looked at her, she said more.  “My father was tyrant, remember, and I was his eldest.  My ex-husband is now tyrant, what most people call Emperor, and he has been for the past two hundred or so years, though his power is very limited.”

“Yes,” Ethan interrupted.  “Aren’t you on the most wanted list?  Isn’t your picture in the post office?  I mean, is it safe to be here?”

Jill came to stand beside him.  “Archon’s power is limited.  We are a representative republic, very complicated, but there are certain things Archon would not dare on his own.  He would not even be in his position if we had not married and if my baby brother Devon had not disappeared.  Even now, he leans on the fact that we were married.”  She took Ethan’s hand and spoke to Manomar.  “I married him when I was a hundred years old, when the people were beginning to wonder if I was ever going to marry.  We had a son, but by the time my son was twenty-one, I had long since realized what kind of man Archon really was.  We were not together since then, and within days of my father’s death, Archon and I formally divorced, but by then he had already set himself up as Tyrant, and I was too busy with the guardian program to do anything about it.  I guess I didn’t care, since he seemed to represent the feelings of most of the people, I thought it was only just to let him have most of the headaches.”

“So your private domain?”  Ethan brought her back to the present.

Jill turned their view angle and they saw what could only be called a magnificent palace resting on a hill.  The land fell away on both sides to the ocean’s waters.  “We are at the tip of the peninsula,” she said.  “And this is my home.  Much of the guardian program was conceived and directed from this place.”

“And Archon did not shut it down?”  Ethan asked.  He knew the guardian program was technically illegal

“No,” Jill said.  “I told you, there are certain things he would not dare do on his own.”

Ethan slipped his arm around Jill’s shoulder, and she responded with her arm around his waist.  He spoke.  “I am only sorry I did not have a chance to meet your mother and father,” he said.

“Me, too.”  Jill sniffed back some tears.  “They would have liked you.”  She broke free and returned to the Main.  In a second or two, their door rested in the front hallway of the palace.

“Manomar?”  Jill turned to look.  Manomar lifted Ethan’s briefcase without a word; but Ethan looked curious, so she spoke.  “I thought we might find a display case of some kind.  It was a remarkable feat to escape your world as we did.”  She finally admitted it.

“So where is everyone?”  Ethan asked.  He changed the subject and looked at the emptiness of the hall.

“That’s what I was wondering,” Jill said.  “They should have picked up our approach last night, and surely by now they should be filling the hall to see us and welcome us.”

“They?”

“We employ servants.  They are well paid and come and go as they please.  Most don’t even need to be servants, but many choose that profession, often because their families have served the royal house for centuries.”  Jill flipped the view to any number of places in the building, all empty, before she landed on a living room—a sort of lounge area with plenty of books in bookcase walls, soft and inviting furniture, a couple of desks, and a few trophy cases along with various works of art scattered about.  Everything looked expensive, and the art, in particular, was no doubt priceless.

“I don’t like this,” Jill said.  “The Guardian team ought to at least be on hand and watching.  Come on.”  She took Ethan’s hand again and they stepped out on to a luxurious rug, Manomar in their wake.  Ethan took a moment to pinpoint the source of the lighting.  There were windows, or parlor doors of some sort along the far wall, which led out to a patio, which overlooked one of the garden areas.  They were well tinted to limit any possible glare from the sun.  Instead, the light seemed to be diffused sunlight, and it came in through the ceiling tiles.

“I imagined your ultra-futuristic world would be white and sterile looking somehow,” Ethan said.

“Hollywood!”  Jill scoffed.  “And boring in the extreme.”  She took him over to one of the desks.  Manomar followed quietly and looked around at everything like his old Master Ali Pasha would have done.

“And so?”  Ethan asked, after Jill touched the screen on the desk.

“I don’t understand.”  She shook her head and dragged him to a couch where she plopped down and drew her legs up to her chin.  “I thought the library annex would be a good place to rest for an hour.  Our chits have been updated, but it will take a little time to integrate everything, like when we upgraded in Lela’s ship.  We now have the most current information available.”  She paused to think.  “I see the exploration of the Horsehead Nebula is continuing, and one group plans to make the first venture to Andromeda.”

“That will be a long trip.  Hope it is worth it,” Ethan said.  He saw the same information in his mind, even as she mentioned it.

“But there is nothing on why this house is empty.  Even the house banks have been cleaned, but.”  She stopped and Ethan watched her face turn dark red.  He almost backed away.  “Why that Ass!  That creep!”  She jumped up and returned to the desk where she ran her hands with abandon across the screen.  She paced and would not talk either to Ethan or Manomar until there was a shimmering beside the desk.  A woman, a beautiful blond woman took form there, and Ethan immediately noticed the family resemblance.

Guardian Angel-21 Home, part 3 of 3

Later that night, when Jill and Ethan settled into the Captain’s Cabin and Ethan turned down the lights to let the image of stars and the moon glow softly above their heads, both had some thoughts.  Ethan asked and Jill answered, but Jill seemed very distracted the whole time.

“So, where do we go from here?”  Ethan began.

“There are a lot of worlds,” Jill answered.  “I am very behind schedule, and Lela did not finish, either.”

“Lots of choices, I guess.”

“Mmm.  We will have to take Doctor Grimly with us so he can go through some experiential teaching.  There are some lessons that can’t be taught in a classroom.”

“I wouldn’t say that too loud to an academic.”  Ethan teased and Jill let out a little laugh, but it was a small one.  “No, I was thinking Grimly set us up.”  Ethan shared the thought that had crossed his mind more than once.  “Did you talk to him about us, I mean, about your feelings?”

Jill shifted a little to a more comfortable spot.  “He couldn’t have,” she said.  “I mean, he is brilliant, but the technology was just too far beyond him.”

“Guardians don’t have chits that explain transitional technology.”  Ethan understood, and he remembered wiring the dimensional watch all of those worlds ago.  He hardly had to think about it.  He knew what he was doing like it was second nature.

“Guardians only have the chits necessary to do the job.”

“And a few dormant ones just in case, like the psychic ones,” Ethan said.

“Mmm.”  Jill fell silent, but she was not too sleepy.  Her mind got preoccupied with something.

Ethan spoke again after a moment.  “I am not sure what kind of a teacher I’ll make.  I am new at this, you know.”

“You can help,” Jill whispered.

“I am not sticking a knife in your arm,” Ethan said sternly.  “You’ll have to get Manomar to do that.”

“Mmm.”  Jill did not really respond that time, so Ethan finally asked.

“What?”

“I think your mom liked me,” she said, seriously.  Ethan kissed the top of her head.

###

Three hours later, in the wee hours of the morning, Jill got up carefully and went into the control room.  They had planned to visit the Company offices the next day, to see if Ethan still had a job and to get Grimly to take a leave of absence so he could travel with them to the next several places, but first Jill had one more thing in mind.  She made the dimensional shift and sat for a long time just looking out the view screen.  She easily pierced the darkness of the night with her screen-enhanced vision.  Even so, there was nothing to see, but she imagined someone would notice her eventually.  An hour would tell.  When nothing happened after watching for so long, she felt it was safe to finish her night’s sleep.  She went back, curled up again in bed, and told herself that they would see what came in the morning, but she did not sleep again right away.  She felt anxious about the morning.

Guardian Angel-21 Home, part 2 of 3

“Come, Jill dear.”  Ethan’s mom handed her a plate of cookies to set on the coffee table.  The plastic looking smile on the woman’s face said it all.  Jill returned a genuine smile, but she felt pummeled by the woman’s stiff formality as much as the woman’s words and attitude.  It would not have been so bad if the woman did not keep trying to give Jill orders disguised as sage advice.  “When you reach my age,” the woman kept saying, and Jill kept biting her lip.

Jill walked from the kitchen to the dining room and slowly let her breath out through gritted teeth.

“Cookies!”  Melanie shouted.

“Wonderful!” Ethan’s dad heard the word “cookies” over the sound of the football game.  In Jill’s mind, Ethan’s dad balanced things a little with his Lazy-boy approach to life.  “I love those cookies,” he said and leaned up to grab a good handful.  “Do you like football?”  He crunched and said how lucky Ethan was for the millionth time, though his eyes remained attached to the big screen.

“Dad likes anything with sugar.”  Ethan’s little sister, Melanie had planted herself on the couch between Jill and Ethan and acted much like the referee for everyone in the room.  Ethan mostly kept his mouth closed.  That was probably for the best.

“So how is work?”  Ethan’s dad asked during one commercial.

“Fine,” Ethan said.  “I’ve been working with new stuff lately, and that keeps it interesting.”  He knew one word would not suffice, but as he told Jill, he also knew he did not have to say everything.

“Do tell.”  Dad leaned in Ethan’s direction.  “Wait, commercial’s over.”

“Just as well.  Nothing I can talk about,” Ethan said.

“Ooo.  Secret stuff.”  Melanie nudged her brother.  She heard, even if Dad did not.

“And what do you do, dear?”  Mom sat in the comfy chair that put the coffee table between herself and her husband.  That was on Jill’s side of the couch, like it was the women’s side of the room, and it was where Mom could innocently grill Jill down to the bones.

“Research and Development,” Jill said, and then paused with a look at Ethan and one hand on a cookie.  She did promise to work on her honesty so she needed to give it her best shot.  “I am presently working on a Guardian Angel program designed to protect places from unlawful intrusion.”  Ethan looked over and grinned.  She would have done well in public relations if she ever decided to switch jobs.

“Hmm.  Government money I suppose,” Mom said.  She hated to hear about how the government spent money and she always thought it was all a waste of her hard-earned tax dollars, no matter the cause.  Even if she never really worked a day in her life or hard-earned anything herself, it was still her hard-earned tax money they were wasting.

“No,” Jill said pleasantly.  “My work is privately funded.”

Melanie nudged Ethan as he reached for a cookie, but he still held his tongue.

“I see,” Mom said, a bit miffed at having her thunder taken away.  “And what is it you do?  Secretarial?  Administrative assistant?  You must keep the men on their toes.”  She tried to suggest that even lowly work could be seen in a positive light, and she assumed that Jill had to be doing some lowly work, like she was a file clerk or something.

“Mom.”  Ethan just had to interrupt at that point.  “Jill is the project director.  She has advanced degrees and even taught at the University, er, briefly, before coming to work for the Company.”

“I see.”  Mom’s whole face pulled back a little.  She had something to think about now.  She had to find a new avenue to approach this intruder in her house and into her son’s life.  This woman had to be put in her proper place, somehow.

Ethan wiped his brow as Jill avoided giggling nervously by nursing the punch in her hand and keeping it by her lips.  She hardly looked old enough to have spent years teaching at the University, though she did.  Ethan almost let too much slip, but it was a nice recovery.

“You run things?”  Melanie looked up.

“Yes.”  Jill admitted.  “And when you are older, maybe Ethan and I can take you with us some time and show you.”

Ethan waved his hands to suggest that it would not be a good idea, but Melanie, all of twelve years old, kicked the coffee table and got everyone’s attention.

“Hey!”  Dad shouted without shifting his eyes from the television.

“Melanie!”  Mom scolded Melanie just by saying her name in the right tone of voice.

“Why is everything when I’m stupid older?”  Melanie flopped back and folded her arms even as there was a knock on the front door.

“Door!”  Dad shouted.  He was not getting up when his team was in the red zone.

“I’ll get it.”  Mom got up and gave her husband a look which said he should darn well get the door after dark and she did not care if his team was in the pink zone.  “Can I help you?”  She stared at the strange, big black man, and stepped back a little.  It was not what she expected.

“Evening.”  The man said as he tipped his hat.  “I am Doctor Lucas’ driver.  The Doctor and Mister Hill have a big day at the office in the morning, mam.”  Manomar had practiced that speech a thousand times that evening.

“Mister Manomar.”  Ethan stood and rushed for his and Jill’s coats.  Jill got caught by surprise.  “Come on honey, we have to go.”

“Hey, Hey!”  Dad shouted.  His team scored, but he gave up the instant replay to get out of his chair and give Jill a genuine hug.  “Welcome to the family,” he said with all the warmth and sincerity that was in him before he rushed back to his chair.  Ethan and Jill had said they were engaged, which technically they were.

Mom put her hand on Jill’s shoulder in something in between a hug and making sure that Jill did not get too close.  She puckered her lips and made a sound, but never touched Jill’s cheek with her kiss.  “Wonderful to meet you.  Come again,” she said in a voice that dripped with politeness.  Jill refrained from grabbing the woman by the collar and slapping her around while yelling, “Snap out of it!”  She did not think Ethan would appreciate that, and besides, Melanie was hugging her.

“I like you much better than Susan,” Melanie whispered.

“I like you, too,” Jill said, and it was true.

“Call me.”  Mom spoke to Ethan from the doorway as Ethan hustled off with Jill and Manomar.  “You could call once a week at least.  It wouldn’t hurt.”

“Bye.”  Jill, Ethan and at least Melanie waved.

“Hey, Hey!”  They heard the noise from the other room as they walked around the corner and out of sight.  The team must have made the extra point.

Manomar led them a short distance down the street, as if the car was parked there.  “Was that acceptable, masters?”  He asked.

“No masters here, remember?”  Ethan said.  “And that was about perfect timing.”

“You set this up?”  Jill understood well enough.

“My family needs to be taken in limited doses,” Ethan suggested.

Jill took his arm.  “I like your sister,” she said, with a grin.  “She told me all of your secrets.”

Ethan made the door, and the three entered the ship.  “Yeah,” he said.  “And some of them may even be true.”

Guardian Angel-21 Home, part 1 of 3

They encountered no problems secretly letting the three hundred, now only two hundred soldiers from deMartin’s brigade off at their Elizabethtown Barracks.  Several grumbled that now they would have to go back to army food.  Some items were stolen – a few pillows and blankets, a dart board and a couple of decks of cards—but Ethan said nothing and Jill did not seem to mind.  The molecular system could always make more.  It took a little longer to convince the women and children of the hundred left behind on Doctor Augustus’ Earth that their husbands were moving them to another world.  They picked up Colonel deMartin for that work, but soon enough they were ready for one more trip to see Doctor Augustus.

“Hug Peter Alexander for me.”  Jill told the colonel.

“Certainly,” he said.  He recognized that this was her tradition.  “I have been invited to visit him at his trading post since the general has posted me as envoy to the Cherokee.”

“I hope the general is not trying to brush you under the rug with the posting,” Ethan said as they shook hands.

“Alexander and I have plans to make, and I think the general will not find me so easy to brush,” Colonel deMartin responded.

“Oh,” Ethan said.  “And I hope the army reimburses you for our bit of clothes,” he joked.

“Best money I ever spent,” the colonel said, and he left them, rode off on horseback, and gave a shout over his shoulder.  “And I should know.  My wife used to spend a lot of my money.”

###

Three days later, Jill and Ethan were up on the hospital roof in Ridgetown, watching the light fade on the distant ruins while the sun went down at their backs.  It felt like their place.

Ethan had been fairly quiet for those three days, not so quiet that Jill worried, but thinking hard about several things.

“The anti-Chernobyl are learning fast,” Jill remarked, casually.  “It is amazing how having the children here have helped them grow up.”

“They are about at the same developmental level I would guess,” Ethan said without really focusing or shifting his eyes from the risen moon.

“I don’t know.”  Jill was thinking, too.  “Their cognitive functions were well used, and also their short-term memory.  I don’t think it will take them nearly so long to grow up as it would a normal child.”

“Maybe,” Ethan said, like he was half listening.

“What is it?”  Jill finally asked.  She had given him some space over the last few days, but she felt it was time to ask.  “Is there something still troubling you?  Do you want to go home?”

Ethan looked at her.  “I don’t think I will ever be able to go home again,” he said.  “Not that I mind,” he added quickly.  “I really wanted to do investigative journalism.  I never really wanted to get stuck doing marketing and public relations.”

“So now you don’t have to,” Jill said, and scooted in just a bit closer.  “And there are certainly plenty of worlds left for us to investigate.”  She tried to be positive, and he responded by giving her a small kiss, but that was not exactly what he meant.

“I should go see my folks,” he said.

Jill looked down.  Of course, both of her parents were gone.  “I would like to meet your mom,” she said.

“That ritual usually takes place before marriage.”  Ethan joked.  He slipped his arm around her and she snuggled into her comfortable spot in his shoulder.  “But that was not really what I was thinking.”

“Oh?”

“I kind of don’t know how to say this.”  Ethan looked hesitant before he just came out with it.  “I’ve been feeling a little uncomfortable lately with all the lies we’ve been telling, and all the ways we have been manipulating people.”

Jill pulled away a little before she settled in again.  “I don’t lie.”  She said and reached up to hold his hand so he could not escape.

“What?”  He spoke softly and stroked her hair.  “Like the farm we have in the west?  Like telling Lars on the very first day, almost the very first moment, that we were married?”

“It was what I wanted, and besides, I spoke the truth when I said married couples are less likely to be separated.”  Jill squirmed a little.  “You work in PR.  You know all about how to spin things and that is all it is, really.  I was just trying to keep us from standing out in whatever world we were visiting.”

“Spin, yes.  Lie, no,” Ethan said.  “I am usually very careful with the facts.”

“But you don’t have to tell everything you know,” Jill said.

“No,” Ethan agreed.  “You don’t have to tell them everything, but then there is the manipulation, too.”

Jill squirmed a little more.  “What do you mean?”

Ethan waited until she settled down again.  “I mean making us appear like angels, putting the fear of God into a new group of dimensional travelers and bringing that poor Byzantine Colonel to his knees.”

“But that’s not manipulative.”  Jill pulled away to look up into Ethan’s face.  “It is who we are.  DeMartin was right.  He did not see half of what we are capable of.  There was nothing fake in what we did.”

“Angels?”

“Well, like enough as far as they are concerned.  At least I like to think so.  Guardian Angels, and anyway, it is just what we can do based on who we are.  We are Gaian, and you are too, now.  You can call it manipulative if you like, but there is no need to always hide behind the limits of the world we are visiting.  Sometimes we need to show ourselves a little.  It is better than having many scalps taken.”  She smiled and Ethan let out a little laugh at their joke.

“You are Gaian,” he said.

“You are too.”

“Maybe.  But I am still an immigrant.  I did not grow up in your world, don’t forget.  And I am sure I still have some cultural baggage from my world to work through.”

“Does this really bother you?”  Jill asked softly.  She let her nervousness out by rubbing the hand she was holding.  In a minute, Ethan knew she would start squeezing it.  She leaned again into his shoulder.  She needed his assurance, and he understood.

“Some.”  He had to be honest since the subject was honesty.

“I’ll try to be more careful.”

“I’ll work through it.”  He caught sight of her incredible gray-blue eyes.  He thought he could work through anything as long as he could be with her.

###

Doctor Augustus and Captain deMarcos were on the roof to see them off.  Manomar stood silent, waiting, ever vigilant, watching over his two charges as they said good-bye.  Ethan shook the hands of Augustus and deMarcos, and Jill, in her usual fashion, gave each man a hug.

“You have a new world to build,” Ethan said.

The Doctor nodded.  “And with our new additions, the odds of rebuilding this world successfully have gone up dramatically.”

“I’m glad,” Jill said.

“It is an adventure,” deMarcos admitted.  “Probably more than I need at my age, but I feel it will be worth it for my children and grandchildren, God willing.”

“Captain, you can’t be that old.”  Jill smiled.

“Nearly fifty,” the Captain said.  “Older than you, I guess.”

“Try another thousand years,” Ethan whispered.

“Eleven hundred in twelve years and thirteen days, I think,” Jill said.

“I’ll have to start planning the surprise party soon,” Ethan said, and Jill just smiled and kissed him.

“I love surprises.”

Doctor Augustus suppressed his grin when he said his final good-bye.

Manomar was more serious when he followed them through the ship’s door and back into the control room.  “So where are we going?” he asked.

“Back to my Earth,” Ethan said.  “Jill is going to meet my parents.”

Jill looked up at Manomar.  “And you have no idea how nervous I am,” she said.  The big man just smiled.

Guardian Angel-20 Peter Alexander, part 3 of 3

“Colonel.”  Alexander turned quickly to his friend.  “Will the General listen to you?”

“He may,” deMartin said.  “But I gather this is the result of a perceived assassination of the Byzantine Governor.  I should say it is more important to get the Byzantines to listen to you.”

Peter nodded as several artillery shells came out from General Gordon’s position.  Ethan quickly dropped a line of force from the ship to the ground and they all watched as those artillery shells got halfway to their destination and vanished.  Several shells came from the Byzantines in answer and they did the same thing.  They vanished utterly half way across the space between the two armies, and without so much as a pop!

“Ethan!”  Jill scolded and Ethan shrugged.

“We have broken so many rules this trip,” he said.

“That isn’t the point.”

“No,” Manomar interrupted.  “The point is we have two natives to this Earth right here who want peace.  They have every right and should be given every opportunity to convince their compatriots and superiors to make peace.  I thought the Gaian way was to give people an opportunity to work things out in their own way.  I say, give them that opportunity.  They will have to do the work.”

Ethan smiled.  “I knew there was a great thinker in you,” he said to Manomar who simply gave a slight bow.

“The influence of the scholar,” Peter Alexander suggested with a little laugh.

“No doubt,” Colonel deMartin agreed.

“That is really twisting things pretty far.  The people of this world appear to have already decided to settle their differences in a conventional way, and chit filled intruders should not interfere.”  Jill protested, but everyone just waited for her radiant smile.  “But I like your ill logic.”  She touched the Main and the air around the view screen began to shimmer.  When it stabilized again, Jill made a door for Alexander and the Colonel.  “We will go with Peter Alexander and explain about the Governor.  Honest confession is not forbidden.  Manomar, would you accompany Colonel deMartin.”

Manomar looked about to say no, that he was not leaving Jill and Ethan again, but Ethan spoke first.  “I think she means by projection.  I don’t think mother hen means for me to leave the ship until I am fully recovered.”

“Mother hen?”  Jill spoke sharply.

“So you’re not thinking about children?”  Ethan asked.

Jill turned a little red.  “I already have one son,” she reminded him.

“Well, maybe one per husband isn’t asking too much, do you think?”

“Maybe,” she said, turned a little redder and looked away.

“I do excellent child care.”  Manomar said and Alexander and the Colonel both laughed.

Jill looked away from all of them.  “You people are terrible.”

“No.”  Colonel deMartin spoke gently.  “You two not having children would be terrible.”

“Yes, absolutely.”  Manomar and Peter Alexander agreed while Ethan wisely said nothing.

“Manomar, you can sit, I mean in this chair.”  Jill changed the subject, then she ran over and gave Colonel deMartin and Peter Alexander hugs and said good-bye.

“You are coming with me?”  Peter Alexander thought he misheard.

“In spirit,” Jill said, and she escorted them to the door.

Peter Alexander and the Colonel stepped out and found Jill, Ethan and Manomar waiting for them.  “I have given our projections some substance, just so you know, but this way is more impressive if we need to be impressive.”

“Before your visit I would have been shocked half to death on seeing your angelic form,” deMartin admitted.

“And me,” Peter Alexander agreed.  “And I had already met Lela and been filled with my Guardian chits.  But between you and me, deMartin, I suspect we haven’t seen the half of what these Gaian are capable of.”

With that, the two men shook hands and parted.  They would meet again, but for the present, the show was the thing.  They both knew every binocular on the field was pointed at them, and then they looked up and decided perhaps not every binocular.

“Good God!”  DeMartin gasped.  “And I bet that is not a projection.”

“We were riding in that?”  Alexander pointed.  Jill had moved the fighter-destroyer all the way into that dimension.  It floated almost half a mile above their heads, but the size of the thing could not be hidden.  Ethan swallowed exceptionally hard when he remembered that the ship would fit in any of four docking bays of the battleship.

“Big as a Holy Roman Battleship,” DeMartin said.  “Way bigger than the ship those cyborg people came in.”

“Bless my soul,” Manomar said, and everyone paused to look at him.  “As my friend Lars would say.”  He shrugged.

“Quit looking up.”  Jill whispered to Ethan and her projection elbowed him in the ribs, and Ethan felt it.  “You look like a tourist in New York City.”  Even so, as they started to walk, Ethan’s projection nearly tripped.

It took a half hour to reach the front lines.  Jill had made sure that she, Ethan and Manomar all glowed a little, and that helped the soldiers give them plenty of room.  DeMartin and Manomar found General Gordon right away.  Ethan, Jill and Peter Alexander needed a little more time, and in the end, General-Chief David and Colonel Nicholas Alesandros of the Byzantine contingent had to come down the ridge to meet them.

“Peter.”  The Cherokee General was the first to speak.  “Why am I not surprised it is you?”  He spoke to Alexander, but his eyes were on the couple with him

“Catch me up.”  Alexander said in Cherokee.  “What happened to the peace?”

“There can be no peace when those barbarians assassinate the Governor of Balazarius appointed by the Emperor himself in Constantinople.”  The Byzantine Colonel sounded like he had been angry for days, or maybe he was blustering, wanting the approval of the ones who glowed like iconic figures from a cathedral ceiling.

“But the Holy Romans did not assassinate the Governor.”  Peter started to explain, but Jill stopped him before he could accuse himself.

“It was a wicked alien from another world that killed both your Governor and everyone who died in and around the house.”  Jill said.  “And you can see by your own eyes, by our ship and by our presence that we know of what we speak.  Fortunately for you, we killed the monster, and the greater Monster that followed we killed just yesterday.  When you return home, you will find the Governor’s palace gone, but you must count it a small sacrifice to save your city.”

“This war is based on a lie,” Ethan added.  “The Holy Romans did not kill your Governor.”

The Byzantine threw his gloves to the ground and looked ready to shed some tears of frustration.  “No!  I cannot hear this,” he said at last.

“Are you calling us liars?”  Jill asked loudly with a bit of echo in her voice, and she turned up the glow, changed their arraignment to angelic white and lifted her and Ethan a foot off the ground.  The man positively fell to his knees.

“Lord, forgive me.”  He shed a couple of tears, but like most people, it was honestly for himself, and not for a mistake that almost sent countless men to their death.  “But what can I tell the Emperor?”  That was the crux of the matter.

“Speak thusly.”  Jill spoke more softly, almost tenderly to the man and in the man’s own Byzantine, Greco-Latinized tongue.  “The city of Balazarius was invaded by an enemy which has never been seen before in this New World.  The Governor resisted, and he and his household were killed, but with his great sacrifice, the enemy was destroyed.  The only witnessing survivors are Chief Peter Alexander of the Cherokee and Colonel Orlando deMartin of the Holy Romans, without whose help the enemy would not have been defeated.  Say also, since the Holy Romans were willing to set aside their differences to come to the aid of your Governor and destroy this dreaded enemy, it would be dishonorable for you or your men, and dishonorable to the name of the Emperor to turn now like a viper and attack those who have shown a willingness to cooperate in friendship in this dangerous New World.”

“Maybe.”  The man spoke at last as he thought about the words and let them penetrate.  “Maybe it could work.”

“Emotional, isn’t he,” Ethan said to Alexander.

“Byzantium has always been so,” Alexander said.  “How about you, David?”

David never stopped looking at Jill and Ethan, but his words were plain even if his jaw was dropped.  “You know how I feel.  I am against a war in this day.  The native peoples of this land have spent too much time at war without help from the Europeans.  We do not need to be caught up also in their quarrels, lest we do nothing but war and fighting until the last of us is killed.”

“Well said.’  Jill praised the man and returned to the Byzantine.  She checked.  Manomar was ready.  “There will be no war on this day, but what you do tomorrow will be up to you.  The future is in your hands.  Tomorrow is what you make it.”  As she spoke, she and Ethan began to rise up in the air while Manomar did the same from the other side.  By the time they reached the ship, they vanished in a sharp flash of light.  Then the ship itself vanished as Jill returned it to the dead world from which it had come.

Manomar spoke.  “As my former Master would say, that was fun.  Can we do it again?”

Guardian Angel-20 Peter Alexander, part 2 of 3

“Nelkorian Core?”  Ethan asked casually.  His hand covered his wound.  He did not want Jill to panic.

“Uh,” Jill said with a smile and a nod.  She took a few breaths to steady herself and then she spoke.  “Nelkor’s first monster began by making a dozen female copies of himself, and just as strong as he could possibly make them.  They were called the Nelkorian Core, and some expected that they would kill each other off, but instead, the first one convinced them to make a pact to share the world between them.  They did, and then they killed their maker, they killed the first Nelkorian.  Twelve monsters then started to have children, um, less powerful than themselves so they didn’t repeat the first one’s mistake, and those children, mostly male were able to duplicate themselves as well just so you don’t think this was all a female thing.  They used the human race like playthings, Ethan.  It was torment, torture, a kind of living Hell; but that might have been the end of it if they had stayed in their own world.  Soon enough they would have started fighting each other, but one of the core discovered how to move into the Worlds without the help of any technology.  It was like they were able to make a psychic tear in the fabric of reality itself and slip right through.  The children needed technological help, of course, but the core could just shred their way through the worlds.”

“I can see why your father called out the fleet,” Ethan said, weakly.

“I thought we got them all,” Jill said, and she looked up at Ethan in time to see him close his eyes.  Alexander’s knife clattered to the floor.  “Ethan!”  She shouted and then she called out.  “Quick, Alexander.  Help me get him into the lounge and on the couch.”

Peter Alexander, who was just coming to himself, crawled over, and somehow, between the two of them, they managed.  Then Jill opened the door and Manomar came running in, berating himself for leaving them alone.

“There is nothing you could have done,” Jill said through her tears.  “Ethan would have had to fight you too, and you and Alexander probably would have been able to shut down the screens and put us at the Nelkorian’s mercy.  Sometimes it is best to not be there, but I know it makes it hard.”

“Will he be alright?”  Peter Alexander asked.  He knew it was his knife that made the wound, even if he did not exactly remember doing it.

“Yes,” Jill said, and she sat quietly and held Ethan’s hand while the others left her alone.

###

Ethan woke up the next morning near one hundred percent.  His chits had reestablished and re-grown overnight.  Jill was beside him, sleeping in a chair, her hand over his.  He woke her gently only to have her throw herself at him in anything but a gentle manner.

“I’m fine,” he kept saying, and she knew that, but she did not care.  She was just so happy.  “But say,” he said when he finally got her attention.  “Where did our helpers go, and who were they anyway?”

Jill lifted her head for a second.  “A mystery,” she said as she tried to get serious.  “The first was a full Gaian Battleship, Class one no less and as up-to-date as anything in the fleet.  Full psychic keyed and amenities you would not believe.”

“Bigger than ours?”  Ethan asked while he tried to get in touch with the information in his own chits.  Apparently, he still had more chits to replace.

Jill laughed.  “You could fit our fighter-destroyer in one of her four docking bays,” she answered.  Ethan whistled, but since he had never actually seen the size of his own ship in context, he did not fully understand.  “Yes, and that ship and ours combined would have eventually wore the Nelkorian down, I think.”

“You think?”  Ethan understood.

“Fortunately, the Elders came when they did.”

“They are watching.”  Ethan reminded her.

“That is what they always say.”  Jill responded with a flip of her hair to put it back behind her ear.  “But they are not as numerous as you think.  Even they cannot be everywhere, but then they don’t stay in any place too long either, so you never know when they will show up.”  Ethan nodded.  “But why the battleship left, I have no idea,” Jill concluded.  “Our ship scanned the ship and got the specs and all, but for some reason the crew stayed hidden.  They are not supposed to do that.”

“Crew?”  Ethan wondered.  “One person could easily fly this ship.”

“Designed that way,” Jill said.  “The battleship, too.  But why any Gaian should come to our aid and then vanish without making themselves known is a mystery.  That is not polite, to say the least.”

“Yes,” Ethan said as he sat up before he slowly stood.  Jill helped, and when he assured her that he was all right, she took his hand and led him back into the control room.  She grinned like a thousand-year-old school girl, and walked carefully at his side in case he should stumble.

Peter Alexander was pacing again, and Manomar paced with him.  Only Colonel deMartin seemed relaxed as he sat by the view screen.  Then again, Ethan thought, he looked like he was deep in thought.

“As near as I can tell the troops have moved out of Balazarius, and even the militia has been called up from all of the surrounding countryside.”  The Colonel spoke first.

“We have to go,” Alexander said.  He only paused in his pacing long enough to speak.  “I fear the worst.”

Manomar stopped pacing on seeing Ethan recovered and Jill with him, smiling.  “We have no real information,” he said.  “This screen is not easy to use, but we have overheard the words assassins and mustard gas, whatever that is.”

“We know what mustard gas is.”  Ethan assured him, but Jill did not look so sure.  The colonel caught the look.

“A deadly gaseous compound that slithers near to the ground.  Nations have tried to outlaw it, but so far without success.”

“And they think?”  Jill did not get to finish the sentence.

“Apparently, they do think it, and they have taken the Cherokee army with them to the north.”

“Come.”  Jill placed Ethan in Manomar’s hands and went to the Main.  It only took a moment to locate the two opposing armies somewhere near the Watchung ridges.  The Byzantines and Peter’s people had dug in at the base of the first ridge, and had a hot air balloon on the ridge, tied down, but flashing lights as if it was full of binoculars.  From that strong position, the Byzantines could harass Elizabethtown and nibble at the edges, until it was ripe for an all-out attack.

General Gordon and his Holy Roman troops, along with all the militia he could muster, and any number of Delaware natives, had not waited to be nibbled to death.  They came out and were arrayed just off the ridge, facing their enemy, and wonder to behold, they had a crude biplane up for observation purposes.

“This does not look good,” Ethan said.

“World War III.”  Manomar reminded him.

Guardian Angel-20 Peter Alexander, part 1 of 3

Peter Alexander’s pacing made everyone uncomfortable.

“Are we ready to go?”  Jill asked out of politeness.  Manomar and Colonel deMartin were down in the crew quarters, helping to prepare for the return trip to gather the women and children.  Manomar was especially helpful making preparations having spent years taking care of Ali Pasha’s harem and children.  Ethan stood beside Jill and looked happy, but Peter Alexander really needed to be asked.

Peter Alexander paused briefly before he returned to his pacing.  “Wait,” he said, and Jill held her hand from the go.  “Something is not right.”  His face looked drawn, like he was brooding.

“What is it?”  Ethan wondered.

“Not right.  Not right.”  Alexander repeated himself as he paced.

Ethan would have stepped over to place a reassuring hand on the man’s shoulder, but Jill stopped him.

“He was a shaman before he was made a Chief,” Jill said.  “Sometimes, some people can have pictures, visions, feelings, intuitions—whatever—and you should not ignore them.”

“But what is it?”

“I don’t know,” Alexander said frankly.  “Maybe we should back away a little so we don’t come down directly over the Governor’s palace in Balazarius.  It just doesn’t feel right.”  Jill nodded and backed them a mile inland.  Ethan checked to be sure the ship’s screens were up and fully loaded.

“Just be careful,” Alexander said, and he continued to pace and stopped only long enough to be sure his war paint was correct.

Ethan saw what the Cherokee did, but he did not want to think that way.  It seemed to him that every Earth they had visited had been in the midst of a crisis.  If he ever questioned the need for guardians, that question had vanished long ago.  Even the nearly dead world of Doctor Augustus was not immune from external trouble.  He looked at Jill.  She once said that she had a route to establish Guardians on worlds that were especially troubling, and he briefly wondered what terror his own world had faced, or, for that matter, what Jill had been doing for almost forty years before she met Grimly in the late seventies.  Jill looked at him and waited.  Surely they had dealt with both the Holy Roman, Byzantine war and the Nelkorian on Alexander’s world, what else could be so troubling?  He nodded and Jill touched the Main.

They moved to the new World and immediately felt the pressure, like a migraine headache coming on.  Their point of contact was dragged a mile to the Governor’s palace, and they could not stop the forward motion until they were virtually over the palace.  There was something down there.

“Screens are up.”  Ethan shouted, though there was no sound in the room other than the ringing in his ears.

“Psychic screen?”  Jill shouted back.

“Full force,” Ethan said.  There was a rumbling and the whole ship appeared to shake.

Jill slammed her hand on the main and the entire Governor’s palace vanished in a single flash of blue light, but not everything was destroyed.  A Nelkorian, a female with a head three times normal size was there, and it was very, very angry.  Jill kept firing, but the Nelkorian was able to screen itself against the weapon.  That screen flared from red all the way up to violet, but it held.

“Nelkorian Core,” Jill wailed.  “I thought we killed them all.”

The ship shook again, and Ethan heard words screamed into his head.  “You killed my son!”

Jill tried to coax more power into the main gun while she kept them from being dragged closer to the monster.

“You killed my son!”  The phrase repeated again and again.

Ethan turned.  His head throbbed with every move.  He saw the Cherokee pull his knife, shake his head several times, and with a war cry, he headed directly toward Jill.  Ethan got in the way and took the knife in the gut even as he wrestled Alexander to the ground where the Cherokee screamed again and passed out.

Ethan swore, mightily, though the pain cleared his head for a minute.  He pulled out the knife with one great sudden tug, and screamed again and almost passed out himself.  Then his chits got to work on deadening the pain and healing his wound, and he was glad that at least they were still functioning; at least some of them.  He dragged himself back to the Main where he pulled himself up.  Jill was a bucket of sweat.  She concentrated on keeping them back from the beast and poured every shred of power she could into their gun.  It looked like it was going to be a question of who gave out first, and Ethan feared they would since for all their power, they continued to be slowly dragged toward the beast, and their screens were at the limit already.

Ethan was just looking to see if he could shift them out of there when he heard an awful banging at the back of the control room.  He knew what it was.  DeMartin and his men were trying to break in and get at them, but the control room was sealed off.  Jill had somehow managed that.  When he turned back to his business, Ethan saw a second blip arrive.  At once, Gaian style guns were fired at the Nelkorian, and he heard the Nelkorian scream again.  Her natural screen flared again, past violet and ultraviolet and into the higher registers, but it still held.

“You killed my son!”  Ethan heard the words once more before there was a lessening of the pressure in the room.  It was not much less, but enough for Ethan to think straight.  Clearly, the Nelkorian had shifted some of its anger to the new arrival.  Ethan looked at his wound.  The bleeding was stopped and the pain much less, but the healing was slow.  He knew then that many of his chits had been damaged by the beast and he simply did not have the numbers to affect a rapid cure.  He slid to the ground, senseless, but not unconscious.  He needed time and rest to rebuild his damaged chits and heal, but as he slid to his seat, he kept one eye on Alexander.  The man was awake and shaking his head again, but so far he had made no hostile move.  Besides, Ethan clutched the bloody knife.  He looked closely.  It was his own blood.  He chuckled and for some reason found that funny, or perhaps he was becoming delirious.

The view screen to the side of the room still functioned, and Ethan looked in time to see a third group arrive.  This one, though, was different.  It placed a ring of force around the Nelkorian and Ethan heard a scream from the beast, which was so loud in his mind, it almost made him deaf.  Alexander threw his hands to his ears and wept.  Jill let out a counter-scream of her own, but then the ring closed off the beast below and left only an opening for their gunfire and the gunfire of the ship beside them.  Then the third group fired their gun and opened a little hole in the ring of force to let their white energy beam enter.  The Nelkorian screamed again, but this time there were no words.  Almost all pressure vanished from Ethan’s mind as the Nelkorian screens broke, and in an instant there was nothing left to do but wipe up the slime patch on the floor of what had once been the Governor’s palace in Balazarius.

Jill struggled to stay conscious as she slid down beside Ethan.  The banging outside the control room stopped and Alexander shook his head again, though this time, he appeared to be all right.

Guardian Angel-19 Chernobyl, part 3 of 3

Ethan checked once more.  Wouldn’t you know, Doctor Augustus’ world was the first and only transition the Chernobyl had made, thus far.  That gave him time to try his newly reprogrammed chits, when they were ready which he hoped was soon.

“Ethan!”  Jill called.  Ethan ran.  He did a quick check.  He had already found the place where the ship kept track of her vital signs, including psychic health and everything else.  A scan told him everything looked good enough.  Nothing was fluctuating off the scales, but he noticed that she had thrown up, and she certainly had a fever.  He got a damp cloth for her forehead and cleaned her up with another wet cloth and a dry one.

“You are going to be fine,” he said.  “Hang in there a while longer.”  She tried to smile, but her eyes closed again.

I have waited as long as I can, Ethan thought, and if this does not work, I don’t know what I am going to do.  His chits and the ships vast knowledge had little or nothing to suggest in this matter.  He noted the arguments in the record against exactly what he was trying to do.  No one knew when the chits went into the host to fight the Chernobyl variety, if they would extract themselves later, or lay dormant, in a sense, like a new parasite.  They also did not know if the people set free would be able to function, especially if they were possessed by the Chernobyl for decades or even their whole lifetime.  But mostly, they wondered if the Chernobyl chit technology might be planted deep in the brain where the minute the people were set free, the people might start in making new chits with which to infect themselves.  Standard precaution was to seed the worlds with air born anti-virals, and fry any Chernobyl infected people that got too close.

I need Jill, Ethan thought, and it was a good thing he did not read through that stuff before he made his reprogramming chit.  He feared that this might be the only way to save her.  He dropped down over the Chernobyl circle.  He focused in on the scene until he could pick up the trace of the Chernobyl chits themselves.  They were multiplying as fast as they could, but as soon as they entered the air, they were being destroyed by the Gaian chits that had been drawn to the area.  Those Chernobyl chits would soon run out of materials with which to build.  By contrast, the Gaian chits were organic, fulfilling a genetic function, and could reproduce wherever there was organic material available, or even where minerals could be restructured into carbon and protein and strung together in a pattern.  But then, they would reproduce only to the extent they were needed, not to the point of choking the atmosphere.  Ethan likened their action to chewing the Chernobyl bits up and spitting them out as useless waste product.  At once everything stopped.

“Ethan.”  Jill called and Ethan ran, but she was still out of it and calling his name in her delirium.

Ethan checked.  There were no Chernobyl missing, none wandering the wilderness, he was sure; but he changed his mind about what they were doing as soon as their chip production stopped.  They appeared to be communicating, probably with the folks back home, and that was not a good thing.  It would punch great holes in Jill’s cover, unless he made the cover story true.  He sprayed the group with chits he had infected with his enter and destroy programming.  The effect was almost immediate.

Men and women stood up and began to move about wildly, almost thrash about like fish out of water, and a few were injured in the process.  Some gurgled and fell over.  Others staggered out of the circle and stopped only when they ran into a tree, bush or boulder, or when they tripped over some obstacle.  Some appeared incapable of moving at all, and Ethan felt great distress for them, knowing that they had been thus possessed and controlled since they were born, and had never known a day of freedom.  There were a few terrible moments before he was able to scan a body and find it Chernobyl free.  Any chits outside the body would not escape, and any within were now destroyed as well.  Still, he waited to be sure that none of the former hosts died.

“Ethan!”  Jill screamed and Ethan dared not wait any longer.  He let the enter and destroy chits into the ship, and then he held Jill while she did her own thrashing about.  It ended with her in tears, but she was sound and whole.  “They had me,” she said.  “They almost won.”

“Hush.”  Ethan rocked her as she cried.  “It’s all right now.  Hush.”  He was not slow to give up a prayer of thanksgiving to whoever might be listening.

###

“The one we called Missus Gurgle said hi today when I said hi.”  Doctor Augustus told them with some pride in his voice.  “They are like newborn infants just learning to eat and speak for the first time.”

Jill nodded.  “They are Chernobyl free, and psychic probes indicate that the Chernobyl took over cognitive functioning and used short term memory, but nothing was laid down long term, most likely to keep their hosts as flexible to change as possible.”

“No bad habits?”  Ethan joked.  Jill shook her head.

“No reckless stunts either,” she said.  Ethan said no more, but smiled.  He knew he overstepped his bounds by a long shot, but he was glad and fortunate things worked out as well as they did.  Jill took his hand.  She was glad, too.  She had been very close to the edge.

“One of the main arguments against what Ethan did was that the Chernobyl might have implanted some vital, irresistible information to rebuild and re-infect the people at some future date, but that does not seem to be the case.  All the same, I would not take my eyes off of them as long as they live.”

“I understand.”  Doctor Augustus was serious when he turned to Colonel deMartin.  “And I appreciate the volunteers you have allowed to act as my makeshift nurses.  I am sorry to deplete your ranks in that manner, but I will not lie and tell you they are not needed.”

“Not a problem,” deMartin said.  “They are genuine volunteers and they will have Captain deMarcos to watch over them if they should get out of line.”  He turned to Jill and Ethan.  “That is the first time in army history when the only volunteers allowed had to be married with children.”

“We don’t mind bringing the families,” Jill said, sweetly.  “As long as they don’t mind coming.”

“And a little repopulation of the area will not hurt,” Manomar noted and everyone agreed.

“But now we need to go,” Peter Alexander said.  “I have seen cyborgs, Sorvee and these Chernobyl zombies as well as the Nelkorian menace in my own back yard.  When I said yes to dear Lela, I never imagined what might be on the horizon.”

“Just remember, you have friends.  You are not facing the worlds alone,” Jill said and she kissed Ethan’s hand that had slipped over her shoulder.  “You need not ever be alone.”

“That’s right.”  DeMartin slapped Peter Alexander on the shoulder.  “And when we are not fighting off other world monsters, we have a world of our own to save.  To be sure, the culture of war after war has to stop.”

“I’m not listening,” Jill said.  “I am not hearing this.”  Doctor Augustus and Peter Alexander laughed.

“We are not hearing this,” Ethan said, and he kissed her in a commitment that was forever.

Guardian Angel-19 Chernobyl, part 2 of 3

“It will be all right.”  She turned to Ethan and caught hold of his arm.  “I am immunized with the strongest chits, as are you, but I have to get the information on what worlds they have infected so far and I need to reprogram their equipment.”

“Couldn’t we just scan for the information?”  Ethan asked.

“No!”  Jill responded sharply.  “They would not be able to stop us, but they would probably recognize the scan and logic would tell them that we had interfered with their data.  I can’t risk that.”

“But can’t we just vaporize the equipment?”

“No.”  She spoke more softly.  “They would just build more so that would be pointless.  I am going to slip a program into the system that will make it look like the system failed.  They should think that shortly after the jump to the other world or worlds, all the silicon chits shorted out, or as we would say, died, and the hosts were set free.  That should really freak them out, and they will tear their own system apart to try to figure out the problem.  God willing, it will set their Worlds program back twenty years, and that may be enough time to figure out a better solution.”

“But why you?”  Ethan asked.

Jill smiled and kissed him.  “Because you are still too new at this and because I already have my chits ready to go.”

“But hold on.”  Ethan grabbed her.  “Won’t they know you have toyed with their system?”

“Theoretically no,” she said.  “The cautions surrounding this destination indicate that they have no recognition of human flesh apart from indicating a potential host.  They will enter my system, and be destroyed by my immune system.  I will come back in only a minute and they will be none the wiser.”

“What about guards?”

Jill laughed.  “There is no crime here,” she said.  “The whole planet is one big crime, but there’s no need for guards.  That would be a waste of human energy.”

“But enough of a virus can overwhelm even the most powerful immune system,” Ethan said.  Jill broke free of his arms.

“It is a risk,” she answered.  They had arrived in a warehouse-sized building with machines, sophisticated electronics, and sub-electronic technology at work everywhere Ethan looked.  He was struck with how advanced the equipment looked, and how primitive it looked at the same time, depending on whether he looked strictly with his native born eyes or through his Gaian chits.

“I won’t be a minute,” Jill said, and she stepped out into that place as Ethan almost shrieked in his panic.  He did not worry about any Chernobyl chits getting in through the doorway.  No doubt many did, but he knew the ship was covered.  Instead, he was terribly worried about Jill.  He meant what he said about numbers overwhelming the immune system, and he knew that was true, even with his native understanding.

Ethan only watched for a second before he had a thought.  He wondered if he could develop a special chit of his own, like writing his own computer program, he imagined.  He decided to try, and set his mind to develop a program that would cause an anti-Chernobyl chit to enter an infected body and destroy the Chernobyl infection within that body without killing the host-person.  It occurred to him that he did not need to make a completely new chit, but only one to reprogram that additional information task into the chits already in the storage tanks.  Oh yes, and when the person was Chernobyl free, he felt that any remaining or surviving chits should vacate the person and set up shop elsewhere, or otherwise go back to guarding the atmosphere.  He waited, and wondered if his instructions were specific enough while his internal Gaian system worked on the problem, and he watched Jill move from one piece of equipment to another.  She was starting to sneeze, like a person fighting off an allergy.  There had to be trillions of Chernobyl chits around her now, trying to get at her.

The bell went off.  Ethan’s homemade chit was ready sooner than Ethan thought possible.  He located one of the storage tanks and inserted his chit.  He was not sure if it would work, but if it did not, he did not want to spoil every batch of anti-Chernobyl chits aboard the ship.

Jill finally reopened the door and leapt for the safety of the ship.  Ethan caught her and helped her sit in a comfortable chair.  “You were more than a minute,” he scolded while he quickly moved the ship back to Doctor Augustus’ New Rome.  He summoned up a blanket from the ship’s molecular store, and also a cup of chicken soup.  Jill laughed, but she did not look good.  Ethan went to check the Main.  The data Jill collected had downloaded without trouble.  Then he heard a noise.  He spun around.  Jill slid, unconscious to the floor, and the cup of chicken soup fell and scattered soup everywhere.

Jill woke up a few minutes later.  She was lying on a couch in the lounge at the back of the control room, covered in numerous blankets.  She could easily stagger back into the other room, but she could not do much more.  She felt like she had a fever of a hundred and five, or imagined that it was what a fever felt like since she never had one before.  She did know that her thinking was far from clear.  Even her eyes were fuzzy and could hardly focus.  Her system had to be fighting a world war all her own.  She lifted her head, and it fell back to the pillow as she fell unconscious.

Ethan hovered over the Chernobyl.  He tried the mind box Jill had used with Ali Pasha to instruct him about the Sorvee collar.  He got Doctor Augustus after a moment and spoke directly to the man’s mind through his chits.  He explained about Jill.

“I don’t know what I can tell you without examining her,” the Doctor said.  “My guess is you just have to give her system time to fight them off.  She was in the middle of them for some time.  Just keep an eye on her vital signs and call me if they start to drop.”

“How is the battle?”

“It has been quiet,” the Doctor said.  “But if you are wondering, I touched a Chernobyl and knew immediately what they were.  You see, some came crashing through the front windows, I thought, like so many zombies.  The bullets made short work of them.  I guess like the cyborgs you ran into, their technology was not made to ward off anything as primitive as a bullet.  Anyway, I did not like the dead look in their living eyes, so I would not let the soldiers near them.  When I touched one, I was immediately infected, even though the man was dead.  It did not take long for my immunity chits to fight them off, but I did feel weak for a few hours.”

“So I keep an eye on her vitals,” Ethan said.  “Anything else?”

“No.  Just let me know if they start to drop, and for the time being she is probably best off aboard the ship.  That wonderful vehicle may have some things going for her that we could not duplicate here.  She is tuned to the ship, as you said, isn’t she?”

“Yes.  We both are,” Ethan answered.

“So keep her safely there for now.  There is nothing I could do here except watch and our hands are a bit full right now watching other stuff.”

“Right,” Ethan said.  “I’ll keep you posted.”  He signed off and dialed Peter Alexander, as he thought of it.

“How is the princess?”  Those were Peter’s first words.  Then he talked about the battle.  Basically, nothing had happened in the last few minutes, “But the Colonel is afraid the enemy is likely to storm the gate, if you follow me.  If they could infect Doctor Augustus even after the host person was dead, they would not have to get more than one or two inside to potentially infect us all.”

“I understand,” Ethan said.  “But at the moment, I don’t see them doing anything but sitting in a circle.  They are not even talking.”

“Forgive my impertinence, but why don’t you just blast them out of existence?”  He used Ethan’s own words.

“I want to try something first,” Ethan said.

“That’s fine.”  Alexander sounded calm, but Ethan could hear the wish that his life was not the one Ethan was experimenting with.

“I’ll let you know how it goes,” he said, and switched off.

Guardian Angel-19 Chernobyl, part 1 of 3

“I believe it is time for us to go home.”  Peter Alexander spoke up from the corner where he and Colonel deMartin had been watching the events on the view screen.  “The Colonel and I have discussed our world at length, and there is a great deal of work for us to do as well.”

“Ali Pasha will likely be rooting Sorvee out of his world for the next hundred years,” Manomar suggested.

“More than likely,” Jill agreed.

Peter Alexander looked at them.  “That is at least how long it will take us,” he said.

Jill looked at the Cherokee Chief before she spoke sternly.  “Just remember, your chits were not given to you to rule or influence your world.  Your job is to prevent outsiders like the Sorvee from coming in and corrupting your world.  In a way, you are like an outsider now, yourself.  You must not interfere with the normal course and development of the people lest all of our work be for nothing.”

Alexander looked back at Jill for a minute.  It was a hard look, but he dropped his eyes at the last.  “I understand,” he said.  “I waited years and years for someone to come seeking Lela, and I did not overstep my bounds, even if I did not yet understand them.  You will never have cause to return and scold me for going too far.”

“That does not mean we can do nothing,” Colonel deMartin said quickly, though it was more like a question.

Jill nodded.  “It is a line you will have to draw for yourselves.  Kera Ann did not do nothing.  But be careful where you draw that line and do not step over it.”

“So, where are we headed?”  Ethan asked.

“Doctor Augustus first.”  She answered.  “We have wounded soldiers to fetch.”

###

They came to the hospital in time to see the soldiers drive off an attack from some unknown assailants.  Guns blasted from the roof and from the windows, some pulse microwaves and some regular old army issue, and the enemy, whoever they were, retreated down the hill.  None of the defenders looked injured, though there were several large chunks of building missing, and most of the rest of the hospital looked badly burned.  Jill’s hands flew across the Main, and in a minute, she and Ethan had the same information, except she mouthed the word through gritted teeth.  “Chernobyl.”

Ethan’s word was more like, “Damn!”

“Colonel.”  Jill whipped around.  Colonel deMartin, Manomar and Peter Alexander were standing in shock, staring at the screen.  “You have to unload and help defend the hospital until we get back.  Doctor Augustus may need your help in case they break in and one or more of the men become infected.”

“Isn’t this world seeded with anti-Chernobyl chits?”  Ethan asked.

“Of course,” Jill responded as she began to open the necessary doors to the crew’s quarters.  “Out.  Out!”  She shouted into the projector.  “Otherwise, every soldier in the hospital would already be infected.”  She finished her sentence for Ethan alone before she returned to the projector.  “Everyone.  On the double.”  She opened another door in the control room and she did not have to tell everyone what it was for.

“But can’t we go with you?”  Peter Alexander asked.  “You may need us as well, or at least me as the last Guardian aboard.”

“No.”  Jill spoke sharply.  “This is one trip Ethan and I need to take alone.  Besides, Doctor Augustus may need you more.”

“I cannot go,” Manomar said.  “I have promised and I cannot serve you unless I am with you.”

Jill smiled, but shook her head.  Then she got busy while Ethan answered for her.

“Go.  We won’t be long.”  He spoke softly to reassure his friend, though to be honest he had no idea what Jill was planning or how long they might be.  Colonel deMartin saluted and left, and Peter followed if a little more reluctantly.  Manomar was the most reluctant of all, but in the end, he left as well when his commitment to obedience outweighed his commitment to duty.  He would trust his new masters.  Soldiers were running out of the other doors, and Ethan watched as Captain deMarcos came running up to the roof with a salute for his Colonel.

“They came out of nowhere and grabbed two men who were walking in the park.  Degon and Plisser are now fighting for them.  The Doctor says they have been infected and cannot be retrieved.  He said we had to defend the hospital until you got back, but boy, am I glad you are here.”  DeMartin took the Captain off with Alexander for a more detailed explanation of their situation while Ethan turned to Jill.

“We could just blast them out of existence,” he said.

“Shh!”

“What are you thinking?”

“Shhhhh!”  Ethan got quiet.  “It is a strange signature,” she said.  “But there.”  She pointed, and a place on Manhattan, or New Rome came into focus on the screen.  “That is the place where they came through.  We can follow them back the way they came.”

“I thought the radiation interrupted tracers.”

“Normally,” Jill said as the last of the soldiers vacated the ship and the doors closed.  She instantly shifted their position to the new location.  “But this trail is fresh and sloppy, like most newcomers to the worlds.  It is a radiation all its’ own which is strong enough to stand out from all the background noise.”

“And what are we doing?”  Ethan asked.  “Shutting down the doorway?”

“Going to the Chernobyl world,” Jill responded.  Ethan swallowed.

They were there in a moment, smack in the middle of an enormous city, which was so full of smog, Ethan could barely make out the empty streets down below.  “They don’t waste much energy here, at least people energy.”  Jill explained while she worked on something.  “They do only what is necessary to maintain the human population, but no more.  They need people because they are parasites.”

“They can’t live outside the host?”  Ethan asked.

“They can, but they can’t do much without a host who has eyes and ears, hands and fingers and such.  They are silicon, some would say a life form, but most call them an accident or a disease.  They are programmed to multiply, and they are running out of room in their atmosphere, that’s how thick they are, even if they are microscopic.”

“Won’t they detect the ship?”  Ethan was worried by the idea of being overwhelmed with alien chits, but Jill shook her head.

“We are molecular size, simulating a simple viral protein chain.  They may have anti-virals against such things in case they should infect their human hosts, but most likely, they will ignore us.  This ship is full of anti-Chernobyl chits and there are several storage tanks full of the stuff as well.  I am not worried about us, but I have to go down there.”

“Jill!”