Avalon 9.12 Home, part 3 of 4

People talked all at once.  They shuffled around and many stood to look around the table and the floor.  Most said, “What discs?” or “What recording?”  Alice Summers and Fyodor both asked, “What does it look like?”

In the confusion, Gilbert, the new guy stood, but Lockhart had his eye on the man.  When the man made a dash for the door, Lincoln stuck his foot out.  The man tripped but held on to something he had hidden under his suit jacket.  Lockhart landed right on top of the man.  Gilbert struggled, but not too hard because he did not want to damage whatever he had in the box.  Katie and Sergeant Major Thomas arrived and quickly put an end to the attempts to escape.  He got cuffed, so all he had was his mouth to argue with.

“The President wants to review the recordings and decide if some of the records need to be made public,” Gilbert admitted.

“Don’t you mean the Masters want it?” Lincoln said as he walked up.

Gilbert shook his head and stared at Lincoln, but he held his tongue.  An obvious lie would not have helped him at that point.  “General Weber,” he tried to say. “This is government property.”

Katie got the box that held the recordings and retrieved Decker’s ring.  She still wore her necklace with the camera.  She went to hand it to Alice, but Alice waved her off, saying, “Now that we have settled the administration spy in your midst, we have one more thing to do first.  Roland and Boston, would you come up here, please.”  Alice turned to Bobbi and asked.  “Are you ready?”

Bobbi took a deep breath and let it out, slowly.  She smiled and nodded.

Roland and Boston held hands and waved at the empty space at the front of the room.  They said, “How many miles to Avalon?  Three score miles and ten.  Can I get there by candlelight?  Yes, and back again.”

An image of an archaic stone archway eight feet tall and six feet wide appeared in the open space and slowly solidified.  The archway had a door so no one could see into that glorious country.

Alice hugged Bobbi and said, “You can come home and visit anytime.”

Boston called to Sukki. “Sister.  Come with me.  I want to show you my home.  You can come back whenever you are ready.”

Sukki hesitated.  “Mom?  Dad?”

Lockhart nodded as Katie spoke.  “Go on.  Enjoy yourself.  We are home now, and you are a big girl.  Be good but have fun.”  Katie smiled and Sukki responded with a smile.

Bobbi opened the door, and everyone caught the aroma of fresh cut grass, grain ready to harvest, and many kinds of flowers. Some caught the scent of the sea and swore they heard the breakers on the shore. Some heard the birds and bubbling brook.  A few lucky ones that happened to be at the right angle caught sight of the great castle on the hill with its uncountable towers and all the banners fluttering in the breeze.

Bobbi, Boston, Sukki, and Roland went into that other place, and Roland closed the door behind them.  The archway faded and vanished altogether, and Alice smiled.  “Welcome home,” she repeated for the travelers.  “Be good, and Merry Christmas.”  She raised her hands and vanished, this time without the flash of light because everyone was looking at her, and she did not need to get their attention.

While Lockhart and Sergeant Major Don Thomas got Gilbert settled, and two of the security crew carted him away to a lockup, Katie took a closer look around the room.  She had been occupied during the brunch catching up with Alexis, Roland, and Boston.  Now, it looked to Katie like something out of middle school.  The lawyers had a table.  The technology people had a different table.  The security group had a third table. There were a couple of other tables.  One for personnel, one for the medical staff and some scientists like biologists and chemists, and one for what was likely the physicists in the group.  She wondered if they mixed and matched well.

One table appeared to be all military people.  She saw a Lieutenant commander of the navy, two air force captains, though one had a patch that said U. S. Space Force.  She had some catching up to do. She later discovered that the space force was not official yet, and would not be for another four years, but that officer worked in space command.  She saw an army major and noticed that they all came in uniform.  They must have been told in advance.  Eating with the officers were five non-coms from the five branches, one being from the coast guard.  One was a marine staff sergeant, and Katie had to jog her memory to grab the woman’s name.

“Miriam,” she called.  The woman put her napkin on the table and came right over.  She came to attention and saluted.  Katie returned the salute and said, “You work for the director.”  It was a question.

“Yes ma’am.”

“Well, first of all, let’s dispense with coming to attention and the salute.  You can’t be saluting every time I come to the office.  You will never get any work done.  And second, call me Katie, though I suppose in public you should probably make that Lieutenant Colonel.”

“Lieutenant Colonel,” Miriam said.  The marine drilling and discipline to acknowledge rank was strong.  She did not doubt Lieutenant Colonel was what they would all call her, though the army and air force people might just call her Colonel.  They probably called Sergeant Major Thomas simply Sergeant.  Some service branches were not as strict as the marines.

“We ready?” Lockhart asked, interrupting Katie’s thoughts.  She nodded and told Miriam to come along.  Don Thomas also came, and Katie went back to her introspection as they walked.  Oddly, she did not imagine anything about what things might be like in the Pentagon and the Smithsonian.  She did wonder if Miriam was as good a secretary as reported, if maybe she could take the woman with her.

Down the hall, they came to the two elevators that went down to the third basement—the old bomb shelter.  It presently housed the main frame supercomputer that allowed the Men in Black to track just about everything on the planet.  It connected with several satellites, all built with enhanced alien technology garnered from the many different aliens that fell to Earth or visited and left things behind.  It also had regular maintenance and IT people that came in and out of the basement.

The other side of the basement remained a bomb shelter of sorts, where people could go in a time of emergency.  It got some revamping during the Vordan incident.  The security department got oversite for the shelter, to make sure the supplies remained fresh and the equipment like the generators and appliances remained in working order and up to date.  Security oversaw the basement armory.  Lockhart saw some ray-guns there and wondered how they worked.

They came to a big metal door at the back of the shelter and paused.  Lockhart, as the assistant director, had the authorization to open the safe.  One screen scanned his palm print.  Another scanned his iris.  There were other locks, and when the door opened, it made a great whooshing sound.  Miriam told Katie it was vacuum sealed.  Three white cloaked technicians stepped over from the computer side to watch.  They produced handguns when the door opened and told everyone to raise their hands and leave their guns in the holsters.  One technician took the recordings.  One stepped into the safe to retrieve something.  The third one spoke.

“Just as well Gilbert did not get away with these recordings,” he said.  “The Masters want these recordings.”  He paused to threaten Lockhart.  “I imagined taking your daughter as a hostage, but the wife will do.”  He made Katie move back toward the elevator and pushed the button to open the door and another button to hold it open.  The man holding the recording stayed to point his gun at the three by the door, focusing on Lockhart and Don Thomas who were likely dangerous.

“Hurry up,” the man shouted into the safe.  The woman that went in started to return when the other elevator arrived, and the door opened.  Someone shot the man by the door.  The one on the elevator with Katie quickly closed the elevator door to escape with his hostage.  Lockhart looked once at the elevators.  The one started to go up, but Lincoln and Alexis came from the other one.

“I didn’t trust that Gilbert to be working alone,” Lincoln said.

“I trust my husband’s suspicious instinct,” Alexis said with a smile.

************************

Tomorrow

Don’t forget Thursday’s post. It will end the episode and the Avalon Series so don’t miss it. Enjoy the moment and Happy Reading

*

Avalon 9.12 Home, part 2 of 4

The travelers kept walking, while people raced toward them in golf carts and on foot.  Lockhart and Lincoln both saw familiar faces.  Katie brought Sukki to walk between herself and Lockhart having recognized the girl’s discomfort with all these new people.  Katie did manage a question before the people showed up.

“Mister Smith?”

“The alien Zalanid,” Lockhart said.  “He used to speak for the Kargill who does not appear to be on Earth at the moment.  We borrowed him and the Kargill ship when we dealt with the Vordan.”

“You remember,” Sukki said.  “Mister Smith was the alien visitor in Elizabeth’s day.”

Katie remembered.  “Still alive?”

“He sleeps a lot.  Suspended animation, er, cryogenic sleep.”

Katie nodded as the golf carts arrived.

Lockhart got plenty of hugs and handshakes and did his best to introduce people to his wife and daughter.  Lincoln got mobbed before his wife Alexis arrived.  She threw herself into his arms and cried a little between kisses.  Her father passed away shortly after she and Boston came home.

“He looked at me in my elf form and said he was satisfied.  At least his daughter would not die before him,” Alexis said, and sniffled.  “After he died, Alice made me human again, and I waited and worried for you.”

“I’m here now.”  Lincoln did his best to hold her and comfort her.

Katie smiled and shook plenty of hands.  She decided she would have to make a list of everyone’s names, and she looked forward to getting to know these people.  She was especially curious about the two marines, Staff Sergeant Miriam Haddad, who called herself a secretary and chief file clerk, and Sergeant Major Don Thomas who helped run the security group.  They both saluted her and called her Lieutenant Colonel, though she was not in uniform.

“Yes,” the sergeant major said.  “Miriam and I came here with Brigadier General Weber five years ago during the Vordan incident.  The Kairos said at the time I was in over my head. I still am.”

“So am I,” Lockhart interjected and put one hand on Katie’s shoulder.  “The lieutenant colonel is my wife, and did you meet our daughter, Sukki.”

Sukki smiled briefly through her discomfort before she got distracted.  Boston came racing up, faster than any human could run, and she yelled.

“Sister.”

Boston and Sukki hugged and cried tears that were both happy and sad.  Boston’s husband Roland stood back and smiled for the girls, but he also kept one eye on his sister, Alexis.  He also felt some of her sorrow over the loss of their father Mingus.  Father said he was pleased with Boston.  He said she was a good wife and everything an elf maiden should be.  He said he was satisfied that Roland finally grew up.  Roland was not sure about that.  He loved his wife, Boston, and maybe someday they would have a child of their own.  Maybe that was something like being grown-up, sort of.

Ms. Roberta Brooks—Bobbi, the director of the Men in Black hobbled down from the golf cart.  She had aged in the last five years.  She looked seventy.  She limped and pointed to her legs.  “Blocked arteries,” she said with a grin.  “Just like the Storyteller.”  She grabbed Lockhart for a big hug and complained.  “It isn’t entirely fair.  You get your legs back and get out of that wheelchair, and then you get to be young again.  But I understand.”  She let go and took a step back.  “My compensation is giving you all the hassles and headaches of this organization while I get to retire.  Come.  Bring your wife and daughter.  Let’s go up to the big house.”

Bobbi got back in the golf cart and moaned a bit because of her knees.  She patted the seat beside her for Lockhart. Katie and Sukki got in the back while Roland and Boston went to walk with Lincoln and Alexis.  Bobbi said one more thing as she paused to rub and warm her hands before she began to drive.  “Did you pick Christmas Eve on purpose?  It is cold.”

They all went straight to the cafeteria where the cooks had prepared a big brunch.  They had everything from apples to zucchini.  Katie got some eggs, bacon, and toast.  Lockhart stuck with the roast beef, though he took a peanut butter and jelly sandwich to have on the side.  He also filled the biggest mug he could find with coffee and said, “At last.”  Honestly, he had coffee with Casidy, and in Doctor Mishka’s Hollywood, but there seemed to be some principle involved.  Sukki tried to eat a bit of everything.  Many items were new to her.  She did tend to hang out at the desert table.  She swore after that she was going to have a chocolate eclair every morning for breakfast, or maybe some chocolate donuts.

When people were fed and the room settled down into small, soft conversations, Alice arrived in a flash of light that got everyone’s attention.  “I cannot stay long in this place,” she said.  “Sorry for the interruption, but we have business to attend.”  She looked at Bobbi.  “Do you have the box?”

Bobbi nodded and turned to a man at the next table, the lawyers table.  Alice Summers, the woman who designed the peace treaty with the Vordan handed a small box across the table to the man nearest Bobbi.  He handed it across the aisle, but Lockhart raised his eyebrows.  He did not know the man.  Back when Boston pushed him around in a wheelchair, and he was the assistant director, he made a point of getting to know everyone in the building.  Bobbi, who did not notice Lockhart’s reaction, said, “Thank you Gilbert.”  She turned to Katie.  “I believe you need to be in dress uniform for this.”  Then she stood with a minimum of groans and brought the box to Alice.

Katie stood and adjusted her fairy weave clothing to make it appear like a marine full-dress uniform.  Some of the people gasped to see the clothing change in size, shape, texture, and color, though some were still blinking from the appearance of Alice.  Katie stepped forward and had an idea what this was about.

Lady Alice opened the box and pulled out two silver oak leaves, the insignia of a lieutenant colonel.  She spoke first.  “Decker saved these, and they have been kept in the director’s office for the last hundred years.  Jax handed them to Bobbi when he retired along with the hatchet of Lars, the symbol of the North American director.  The oak leaves belong to you.  All of the appropriate papers are on file here and at the Pentagon, but I get the honor of pinning them on.”  Alice did so, and Katie saluted.  Alice returned the salute and put the major’s insignia in the box for safe keeping.  She turned to the gathering as Bobbi retrieved the other artifact from Ms. Summers.

“Lieutenant Colonel Lockhart will head the archeology and anthropology department. She will work out of the Pentagon and the Smithsonian where she will be able to keep tabs on North American activities.  Now, Robert, would you please come up front.”

Lockhart stood and came to stand beside his wife.  Alice took a step back and Bobbi stepped forward.  “Robert Lockhart,” Bobbi said, and she made him take the oath of office right there.  She took the tomahawk, which it was, and handed it to Lockhart, saying, “The claw of the eagle has now passed to the next generation.  Stay true to the Charter.  Uphold the Code of Establishment.  Keep your eyes and ears open.  Do not let down your guard or neglect the watch for the sake of the whole human race.  May peace and quiet be yours throughout your time of service.”

“Not likely,” Lockhart whispered.

“That is just what I said,” Bobbi returned the whisper.

Alice clapped, so everyone did, but she quickly held up her hand for silence.  “Now, we have some cameras and five-years’ worth of recordings to lock up.  Katie, would you fetch the records?”  She watched and waited patiently.

Katie went straight to her backpack and found it improperly tied. She opened it and saw the recording discs were gone.  She shouted.  “Nobody move.  The discs are missing.”

Avalon 9.12 Home, part 1 of 4

After 1953 A.D. Men in Black Headquarters, Washington DC

Kairos lifetime 121: Glen, the Storyteller

Recording End

Lockhart, Katie, Sukki, and Lincoln appeared in a field near the main road.  The air felt like winter.  The trees were bare, but there did not appear to be any snow or ice on the ground.

“December,” Lincoln guessed, and no one disagreed.

They stopped there at first so they could thicken their fairy weave against the cold and Lockhart could explain a couple of things.  Lockhart pointed to the sign at the end of the mile-long driveway that identified the building in the distance as government property and said No Trespassing.  The gate looked closed.  “The guard house looks empty, but the intercom works,” Lockhart began.

“The gate and fence that runs through the trees that line the road are wired, not electrified, but with sensors that will detect anyone unauthorized coming through the gate or climbing over the fence.”  Lincoln added.

“All of this land around is owned by the Men in Black,” Lockhart explained to Katie and Sukki.  “It is mostly rocky, forest covered hills, so I suppose it is not very good farmland.”

Lincoln interrupted again.  “It is marked on the maps as three farms, about five thousand acres altogether.  Three families presumably hold the land in trust.  They run some cattle on two farms, and sheep on one of the farms, but it has mostly been left to grow wild like a buffer area around the main building.”

“That was a good thing five years ago when the Vordan came in their fighter ships and tried to melt the building with their heat rays,” Lockhart said.  “There weren’t any houses or businesses close enough where innocent people might have gotten hurt.”

“So you have said,” Katie responded as she slipped her arm around Sukki’s broad shoulders and gave a little squeeze.  That brought a smile and opened Sukki’s mouth.

“I am sure they were not heat rays.”

Katie looked at the girl and returned the smile.  “Your father thinks all alien weapons are ray guns.”

Lockhart grumped.  “You can see the guard house is run down, looking like it has not been regularly manned since the cold war,” he continued.  “It hasn’t, but the look is deliberate to suggest that anything interesting or secret has long since been removed from the area.  It suggests to the casual passersby that there is nothing worth seeing there.”

The travelers paused as they watched a car move down the road.  The older couple in the car ignored the people in their backpacks and soon drove around the bend while Lincoln added a thought.  “This used to all be farmland for miles around.  Now, there is a village center and a strip mall with a couple of housing developments in that direction. The other direction brings you to towns and suburbs, and eventually Washington.”

“We only have around fifty people that work here on a regular, permanent basis.  This is the headquarters building for North America.  Most operatives are trained and placed back in their regular jobs and regular lives, and fortunately, many are never called to check out any strange and unusual things.”

“Most don’t live like Scully and Mulder,” Katie surmised.

“Who?” Lockhart asked.  Katie just smiled.  Robert was not a science fiction fan.

“There are satellite offices in a couple of dozen places around the continent with a dozen or so people in each place,” Lincoln said.  “Panama City, Mexico City, Los Angeles, Vancouver, Anchorage…”

“And so on,” Lockhart interrupted.  “Maybe five hundred people are on the payroll for all of North America, but there are roughly two thousand or more others spread all over the place, including all through the Caribbean.”

“But they are working their regular jobs, living regular lives, and not likely to ever be needed,” Katie understood.  “I need to get back to work in the Pentagon.”

“Yes,” Lincoln said.  “We need someone to check on archeological digs, worldwide.”

Lockhart did not feel so sure about that.  The Pentagon was a good hour away, not counting traffic.  He supposed they might find a place halfway between.  “Anyway—Swenny Way,” he said.  “We need to cross over to the gate and let people know we are here…”

“Lockhart!”

He got interrupted by a call from across the street.  They saw a woman, a slender and beautiful blonde, wearing what appeared to be an evening gown, or a fancy nightgown.  It was hard to tell.  The woman waved for them to join her, and after a quick look up and down the street, and a slight pause while a dump truck roared by, they crossed over and Lockhart identified the woman.

“Lady Alice.”  He added a note for Katie, who knew, and Sukki, who maybe did not know.  “Lady Alice keeps Avalon, the island of the Kairos in the Second Heavens.”

Lincoln had a question when they got close.  “I thought the Storyteller was the Kairos in this time.  I am glad he made it home from the chaos of the Second Heavens before time began, but shouldn’t he be here.  I thought you couldn’t be in two places at once.”

Alice smiled for them all and made a point of hugging Sukki.  “He is home, four hundred miles from here, sleeping at this hour.  But even if he was awake, I could visit with you.  He does not remember anything about the Men in Black or the Kairos he is, or any such thing.”  She turned and began to walk slowly toward the fence as she continued to explain.

“The golem that filled his shoes over the last nearly six years while he was away remained connected to him during all that time.  That was the main reason we never gave up hoping that he would make it back alive.  The golem began to write about the lives of the Kairos almost from the beginning.  After a couple of years, he began to write about your journey through time.  The stories are up on various websites.  You can read them.  Just don’t argue with them.  Some things were changed to protect the innocent.  Other things, including some historical bits, were fudged, as he says, so the Masters will not get a clear picture of your activities.”

“The Masters,” Lockhart said.  “They worry me, and now that we are in our proper time and have no idea what the future might be, I don’t know how we would even recognize them.”

“I am here,” Alice said.  “I can warn you, so don’t worry.  Yes.  The Masters remain a problem even at this late date, but we can work things out.”

They came to the fence and Alice pulled something like a stick from an unknown pocket in her dress.  She pointed it at the fence and the fence became ghost-like in that spot so they could walk right through it.  Once through, the fence appeared solid again and Alice said she had more to tell them.

“The golem suffered a series of mini strokes at the end of 2012, the beginning of 2013 and stayed in the hospital for four days.  It was not that he needed to stay there so long, but you know doctors don’t work on New Year’s Eve or New Year’s Day, and apparently, they don’t worry about the hospital bills piling up.”  She paused to click her tongue, tsk, tsk.  “But it told us the Storyteller must have suffered the same and the connection remained strong.”

“But the Storyteller is back now,” Lincoln said.  “Time is straightened out again, isn’t it?”

Alice paused as they came to the edge of the trees and started across a very large field toward the building in the distance.  She seemed to be thinking of something before she spoke again.  “He is back home and presently retired and sleeping, but he is continuing to write the stories of the Kairos and finishing your stories.  I am not at liberty to say how he knows about your adventures, or how he knows anything at all about the Kairos, and all the basic details of my many lifetimes in the past and future.  Let us say the block on his memory that the goddess of memory, Mnemosyne, put on him when he visited in the days of the Princess is not a complete block.  The Kairos is counted among the gods, even if the Storyteller is strictly a human mortal and with no special powers, magic, or gifts of any kind.  Let us also say, he believes it is a great product of his active imagination and something to do since he became disabled.  Hopefully, he will be able to finish his years in peace.  He can walk, but not run.  He has blocked arteries in both legs, but telling the stories seems like a tonic for him.”

“Let us hope he does not end up in a wheelchair,” Lockhart said.  “I remember being in one back when I was old before this journey started and I got made young again.”

Katie touched Lockhart in the arm to get his attention, which she had in any case.  “I mostly forget about the age difference these days,” she said.  “I think we have bridged that gap.”

Lockhart smiled and slipped his arm over her shoulder the way she had over Sukki’s shoulder earlier.

“Okay,” Alice said.  “You have been seen so listen up.  First, leave the Storyteller alone if at all possible.  Second, Katie, do you have Decker’s ring?”  Katie nodded.  “You need to put the ring, your necklace, and the full recording of your journey in the safe, here, and leave it there for the time being.  You are not allowed to make copies or share it in any way with the marines, the Pentagon, the government, area 51, or anyone.  You are certainly not allowed to let General Weber get his hands on it.”

“General Weber?” Katie looked up.

“Correct, Lieutenant Colonel Harper-Lockhart.  There have been some changes while you were gone.”

“Understood,” Lockhart said.

“Third,” Alice continued.  “Lockhart, you have been promoted.  You are now officially the Director for North America, and presently for the organization internationally.  Lincoln, you are now the assistant director, which means you get to sit at a desk and shuffle paperwork all day.”

“Ahh,” Lincoln said.  “It sounds like heaven.”

“And fourth, you need to leave Mister Smith in his chamber, sleeping for now.”

Lockhart nodded but Katie looked uncertain.

Lastly, or fifth.  Try to limit your storytelling to what the Storyteller has written in his books.  I know you have not read them yet, but they are safe for public consumption.  You never know who might be listening.  It is good to have you home safe and sound.”

Alice smiled and vanished in a flash of light.  Sukki wanted to ask about Nanette and Decker, Tony, and especially Elder Stow, if Alice could tell her anything.  She would have to wait and ask later.  Presently, the anxiety of meeting a bunch of brand-new people was enough for her to worry about.  And the people were coming, bumping along in some sort of electric buggies, and running.

Avalon 9.11 Blitz, part 4 of 4

Elder Stow got taken to a base just north of York, well away from the bombing areas, where the bombing runs could be viewed, evaluated, and adjusted as needed.  He spent three days there locked up and interrogated.  He told the truth and held nothing back, which surprised his interrogators.  He did not need to be persuaded.

He did not focus on his feelings, nor the way he changed in his attitude and perspective over those years, but that was expected.  No one asked about that. Gott-Druk were a naturally private people.  They did not express their feelings well, even if they often wore their feelings on their sleeve, as Alexis used to say.  Besides, this became something like a report, and personal feelings had no place in a report.

Elder Stow did not share much about the little spirits he encountered, in part because they would not be believed and might be taken a signs of metal distress, and in part, because his people had stories about just such little ones.  They were often not good stories.  Such stories sometimes gave Gott-Druk children nightmares.

He also did not share about finding the long, lost expedition of Burrgh the Mighty—the first attempt to retake the earth for the Gott-Druk in those slower-than-light Agdaline ships.  He did mention Sukki, but he talked about her as a young woman they happened across, and one who belongs in the future.  He did not say exactly when in the future.

One thing Elder Stow did talk about was his impression of Homo Sapiens.  He emphasized their capacity for love, courage, and compassion.  These were things the Gott-Druk might not outwardly admit but might inwardly admire.  He also showed examples of their ingenuity and their capacity to face trouble and adversity head on with only faith and hope to guide them.  He concluded that portion of his report by saying that if it was the intention of the Gott-Druk to break the spirit of the English people with the day and night bombing, they would fail, miserably.

Elder Stow had little hope of converting his Gott-Druk listeners who had a lifetime of anti-human propaganda poured into their heads.  When the brainwashed teachers all say the same thing, and your peers buy into it like sheep, it is hard not to be brainwashed yourself.  Rare is the independent and revolutionary thinker.  Elder Stow understood that most minds would be so closed, hatred for humans would be all they could see.  And the Gott-Druk were very good at closed minds.  Stubborn and Stupid as the Kairos called it.  But some of the younger ones might take a second look.  Many were in their early twenties when they came to earth.  Now in their early thirties, they were probably thinking they should be home getting married and starting their own families.

With that in mind, Elder Stow talked all about the marriages of Boston and Roland, Katie and Lockhart, Decker and Nanette.  He told how Lockhart and Katie adopted Sekhmet and Artie in the ancient days, and Sukki in more recent times. They could not have children of their own on the road because those children would be trapped in the time zone they were born into.  He explained how Millie and Evan stayed in ancient Rome because they wanted to have children.  Millie wanted a little girl.  He did not hold anything back on that score, and figured he got to some of the younger crew members with that.

Since Elder Stow cooperated and needed no persuasion to tell where he had been over the last nine years, he got to ask a few questions of his own, presumably pertaining to the activities of his people in the last nine years.  Things were progressing, but the continent was not being depopulated.  He played dumb, like he did not understand.  He got told the change in plan.  The idea, now, was to make the humans into a slave race.  Elder Stow argued that slaves were not nearly as efficient as the technology they possessed, but his interrogators refused to listen.  He concluded, out loud, that there had to be another reason, since the slave idea made no sense.  That was the only time he got hit and told not to speak of it again.

It sounded suspicious, but it was not evidence of the Masters. For that, he had to wait until the Mother and Father of the expedition arrived on the morning of the fourth day.  Immediately, Mother gave herself away when she called him a traveler, though he had not worn his recognizable glamour that whole time.  Father called him a liar—though he had to be the greatest liar that ever lived to invent so many chronologically perfect, elaborately detailed, and consistent stories.  He indignantly offered to show them if that was necessary to prove the point.  They appeared to secretly smile, but Elder Stow caught it.  It was on their sleeves, even as Alexis said.  They took him up on the offer and Elder Stow kept his own smile in check.

Elder Stow got his old scanner which had been stored in a box, untouched.  He directed the medium-sized people transport to the right spot on some man’s farm.  The transport could carry up to forty people or soldiers.  There were presently twenty-two, with the two being the pilot and co-pilot.  Father and Mother, five Elders, seven younger officers, and five security guards accompanied Elder Stow to the precise location.  When they arrived, he set the parameters of the time gate in his mind before he pushed the button that burned out the scanner.  He did not want the masters to learn how to locate the time gates no matter what.

“Well,” he overreacted.  “This poor little scanner got so much use over these years I’m surprised it lasted this long.”  The others grunted.  Elder Stow was a chief engineer, so they all assumed he knew what he was talking about.

“But what good is that?” Mother yelled at him.  “How do you intend to activate the time gate now?”

Elder Stow shook his head.  “The scanner only locates the time gates.  It has to be activated by something out of sync with time.  Only something that belongs in a different time period can activate the gate.”  Elder Stow clamped his mouth shut.  He suddenly feared that like Lincoln, he might be telling them too much.

“But we have no such thing, unless you mean something that is more than sixty years old,” Father said.

Elder Stow continued to shake his head, though he remembered that there were twenty or forty years in a generation, depending on the context, but sixty years was the original maximum lifespan of the Kairos.  In this case, only the Masters would know that.  “Wouldn’t do,” Elder Stow said.  “Any such artifact would have been here over the last sixty years, so it lived through those years, so to speak, so it is still in its proper time zone.  No, it has to be something displaced in time itself.”

“Where can we find such a thing?” Father demanded.

Mother snarled.  “So, we came here for nothing,” she said.  “You cannot prove your madness.  You are the liar Father first proclaimed.”

Elder Stow stopped shaking his head.  He pulled an American ten-dollar bill from his pocket.  “This bill came forward with me when I came through the gate from the 1930s.  It is now displaced in time.  It is a bit worn, but it was worn when I got it.  Still, you see it came forward in time without ill affect and can now open the time gate.”  It has organic fibers, he thought.  Metal coins would not work, but no need to tell them that.  He squeezed the bill between his thumb and forefinger and reached out carefully.  Everyone saw the shimmering in the air when it appeared.

Elder Stow backed up.  He was in danger if he went through.  He was well over fifty and 2015 was another seventy-four years away.  Over the centuries, the Gott-Druk doubled their life expectancy from forty to eighty years.  Ninety was common enough but one hundred was about the limit.  No Gott-Druk ever live one hundred and thirty years, and Mother and Father were in their late sixties.  Suddenly ageing an additional seventy-four years would make them over one hundred and forty, and that would surely kill them.

“Here, let me go through to demonstrate.  I promise I’ll come right back,” Elder Stow said.

“Wait,” Father shouted and waved at Elder Stow.  Two guards came to grab Elder Stow’s arms.  “I don’t trust you to come back.”

“We must test it ourselves,” Mother said, and with a glance at Father, she stepped through the time gate.  They waited until the time gate deactivated.  They all waited, almost a whole hour before Father turned on Elder Stow.

“Maybe she saw something to explore,” Elder Stow suggested.  “I still have the dollar.  I could go to look for her.”

Father stuck out his hand.  Elder Stow handed over the ten-dollar bill.  Father activated the time gate and took one of the Elders and two guards with him.  “Hold him until I return,” he told the guards.  They went through and immediately people stepped away from a great flash of light.  The Kairos Danna, the goddess stepped from the light surrounded by dozens of elves, fairies, and dwarfs, and she herself deactivated the time gate.

“Elder Tanik,” Danna said.  “You are now the senior officer of the expedition.  May I recommend you go home?  The Gott-Druk may visit here, but nine years is not a visit.”

“But… We have not finished our mission…” Elder Tanik shook in the face of the goddess, but he responded.  Elder Stow spoke plainly in answer to his fellow elder even as he pulled his arms free from the grip of the guards.

“A daft mission.  We cannot make the German’s strong enough to clean the continent for our purposes, which was the original mission in case you have forgotten. What is more, we cannot introduce a disease as they did during the last great conflict because any disease that can infect the humans can also infect us. I had forgotten about that.  Such an evil thing should never be done.  The Spanish Flu ruined the last expedition, and rightly so.”

“But wait,” one of the other Elders spoke to Elder Stow since he dared not look at the goddess.  “What will we do when Father and Mother return?”

“They will never return,” Danna said as she explained about the ageing process and introduced Rupert, the young boy that stood at her side.  She said, “Rupert comes from the place the time gate comes out.  He will bury the bags of bones when they come through in the future.  Listen.  Your Father and Mother are gone.  Go home, or I will send you where you do not want to go.”

Elder Stow began to walk toward the transport.  One by one the rest of the Gott-Druk followed.  Elder Stow felt bad about luring Mother and Father to their death, but clearly, they were serving the Masters, and that made them enemy combatants as Decker would say.  Still, he did not feel too bad about it, and the rest of his people showed no signs of concern.  He knew they were all human of a sort, however, they were not Homo Sapiens.

************************

MONDAY

Episode 9.12 Home, will end book 9 and end the series. Until then, Happy Reading

*

Avalon 9.11 Blitz, part 3 of 4

“John,” Mildred called Elder Stow as he clambered back up to where the people crowded together.

“The tunnel did not collapse altogether,” he said.  “At least we still have air, stuffy as it is.”

“Yes, but the exit is blocked.  We have injured and elderly people who cannot walk all the way to the next station.  They need treatment right away.”  Mildred smiled for him and did not ask him how he did what he did.  The others gave him some room and he got all sorts of odd looks, but Mildred did not doubt.  He was an American, and the Americans were clever.

“Let’s look at the blockage around the stairs,” he said.  They did, and then he moved everyone back, away from the bottom of the stairs.  They heard a vague siren in the distance.

“The all clear,” Mildred said, while Elder Stow nodded and worked on his screen device.  When he set the device the way he wanted, and moved two men back further from one end, he told everyone to hold their ears.  He let loose his sonic device aimed at the rubble in the stairwell.  It shook like the blockage got struck with a mini earthquake.  Rocks and boulders of concrete tumbled to the bottom of the stairs, contained by Elder Stow’s screens so they could not go far.  The result was a narrow opening to the top.

While Elder Stow set his screens to hold back the rubble in the area still blocked, he spoke to Mildred.  “Get the people out while you can. I can hold back the collapse from here, but not forever.”

“Right,” one of the men said, and shouted to get out carefully.  Several men stepped up and helped the families get to the surface.  Two had made a makeshift stretcher to carry a friend with a crushed leg.  The wounded leaned on the healthy.  Some cried.  A few had died in the initial collapse, including a couple in the stairwell.  People, even the children stiffened their lips and climbed the stairs.  Mildred went last, as Elder Stow set the focal point of his screen device to move with him and not deactivate until he got out.

When the screens deactivated, the rubble moved to fill in the stairwell once again.  Mildred saw Firemen and police arriving.  Someone got in an ambulance.  Most of the people hardly moved from the street by the underground entrance.  They were weeping from fear and loss and comforting one another as well as they could.

“Who is in charge?” Elder Stow asked Mildred.

“Captain Hamilton,” Mildred called and waved.  She knew the officials in her neighborhood.  Captain Hamilton also knew her and came where he was headed in any case.  Elder Stow spoke fast.

“I am sorry I cannot help you clear the stairwell.  There may be bodies down there.  There may be someone too injured to be moved.  The tunnel is not blocked, so there is air, and you can reach them from the next station.”  He looked at Mildred and she named the station.  “This is important,” Elder Stow said to regain the man’s full attention.  “This was sabotage.  Men put dynamite in the ceiling to collapse the ceiling and kill the people, or at least trap them underground and cut off their air.  They blew the back half of the station to be sure their plan would work.  They blew the stairs.  I got them before they could get down the tunnel and blow the front half.    You will find unexploded dynamite in the ceiling of the front half of the station, so proceed with caution.”

“John?” Mildred finally wanted to ask a question, but Elder Stow faced her and interrupted.

“It was lovely to meet you,” Elder Stow said. “But I have to go now.  This travesty needs to stop.”

Captain Hamilton looked like he had a few questions as well, but when Elder Stow lifted a few feet up into the air to float with no visible means of support, he swallowed everything that was on his lips.  When Elder Stow turned invisible, Captain Hamilton nearly fainted.  Mildred just smiled.

Elder Stow flew a short distance to where he landed between the bank and the luncheon shop.  He decided looking for Doctor Mishka would not be a good idea.  He imagined it would just put her life in danger.  She was born in Russia.  She was presently in England.  He imagined there were reasons she had not been born in Germany.  At the very least, the temptation to kill Hitler and change the whole future might have been too great.

Elder stow found a secluded spot and became visible again.  He could not think of any way the German conquest of the continent went according to the Gott-Druk plan.  It seemed designed to create a subservient population, one that might soon cry out for the Masters to come and save them.  It finally seemed obvious the leaders of his expedition that were supposedly influencing and guiding the Germans in order to depopulate and retake Europe for the Gott-Druk had become servants of the Masters.  Perhaps they were all along.  He shook his head and let out a slight moan.

“Are you all right?   Mister?”  A man who stood on the sidewalk noticed him.  The man stood in a small crowd that watched the collapse of the luncheon place across the street.  It took a bomb.  “Mister Stow, isn’t it?  You’re American?”

Elder Stow looked up.  It was a man from the bank.  Elder Stow nodded and sighed as he spoke.  “I have just realized what a fool I have been my whole life.  I believed my leaders and followed orders without question.  I believed I was just doing my duty.”  And he thought, how like the Germans in this age.  “I hope everyone got out all right,” he added and turned the man’s attention back to the luncheon place, even as he touched the button on his communication device that would send an identifiable distress signal to his people.

Elder Stow found a different tea shop where he could sit and wait.  He thought the tea was not as good as the other place, but the scone was excellent.  While he waited, he wiped certain information and changes, including improvements he made to the equipment during his journey.  He imagined he would remember most of it, and how to replicate the adjustments he made to the equipment, but these were not things he wanted to share with the Masters.  It did not take long to do the work, but he did not have to wait long.

A small, six-man shuttle came in over the street, invisible of course.  Elder Stow’s scanner beeped, and he adjusted his personal screen so he could see into the invisible spectrum.  Surely, they scanned and identified him down to his genetic signature.  He knew his outward appearance mattered little.  He stood, handed a pound note to the waitress for a tip and said, “Thank you for your good service.”  She had been nice.  She tried to give it back, but he would not take it.  He stepped outside the door and removed his glamour of humanity.  He stood a Neanderthal in the sunlight before he touched his belt and turned invisible.

Two Gott-Druk, a younger officer and a private floated down from where the shuttle hovered over the street.  They had their guns drawn, but Elder Stow had no intention of giving them an argument.  He handed over his equipment but for his personal screen, invisibility, and flotation devices.  He asked their names because the younger officer looked familiar.

“Kern,” the younger said.  The child did not offer his name.  He simply looked at his officer with questions on his face.  “I was not in your group, chief engineer.”

“Yes,” Elder Stow responded with a smile.  “You are security family group.”  The younger nodded.  “Shall we go?” Elder Stow smiled.  “I am sure after nine long years our Mother and Father have many questions.”  Elder Stow handed the last of his things to the child security guard, who looked at him with even more questions.  No telling what the security guard thought, but he likely came prepared for a struggle.

************************

Don’t forget, tomorrow, on Thursday the post will finish this episode.

*

Avalon 9.11 Blitz, part 2 of 4

Elder Stow shrugged.  The man, Duko, was a workman.  Maybe he carried the dynamite to take down some building that had been made unsafe from the bombing.  A controlled collapse would be better than letting the building fall down on its own at some unknown time.  He let the man go from his mind and sipped his tea. He had other things to think about.

He bought a newspaper and read all about the blitz and speculations about what might be happening on the continent.  It did not look like the Germans were emptying the land.  He knew they were building concentration camps and removing certain portions of the population, but the majority of the people were still living in their homes—still living on the land.  They were a conquered people, but they were not going anywhere.  Instead of shipping the people to their various colonies around the world, the Germans appeared to be simply oppressing the people, and angering them.  He supposed given enough time, they might reduce the non-German population to second class citizens, something like slaves, but that would take several generations of oppression.

He shook his head and sipped his tea.

His Gott-Druk people had no interest in human slaves.  That was something the Masters would be interested in.  That thought made him pause.

As an elder on the expedition, he had been privy to the models projecting a clean sweep of the continent in 15-20 years.  By 1942-1952, Earth time, the continent should have been emptied and opened for Gott-Druk resettlement.  Something was wrong.  Things did not appear to be going to plan.

He sipped his tea and wondered if the leaders of his expedition were secretly servants of the Masters.  He had imagined the Masters were a Homo Sapiens thing, but maybe their corruption was more universal than he previously imagined.  He had much to think about.

###

After lunch, he decided he had to find Doctor Mishka.  He began by going back to the place he arrived, where German bombs reduced the bank and other buildings to rubble.  Unfortunately, his scanner could not pinpoint the location of the Kairos the way Sukki’s amulet could.

He expanded the scanner search area until he found the time gate that would take him back to 1875.  It appeared to be somewhere around Paris, as he estimated the distance.  It would let him out somewhere in the United States, depending on where Marshal Casidy traveled to in the last month.  Of course, he could not go there since he was now time locked in the exact point in time where he belonged.  Going through that time gate now would remove sixty-six years of his life as his personal time clock, as the others called it, would compensate for the time difference.  He was not even sixty years old.  He would cease to exist.

He played with the scanner until he found the time gate that would send him to 2015. That gate appeared to be around York, or maybe closer to the Scottish border.  He could not go there either.  Going through that time gate would age him seventy-four years in an instant.  No one lived seventy-four years on top of his current age.  One hundred was the limit, though he remembered reading about one Gott-Druk who lived to be a hundred and eight.  Remarkable constitution.  Elder Stow knew if he survived the time trip to 2015, he would probably die in a matter of seconds.

He sighed.  He well understood that the only reason he and the travelers could travel through time was because they were out of sync with time.  Their personal time clocks moved independently from the time period they traveled through.  Now that he was back where he belonged, his personal time clock linked up once again with general time.  Now he would suffer the consequences of getting younger or getting older depending on which time gate he tried.

Elder Stow felt sad that his travels through time were over.  He spent nine years lost in time, and like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz, all he kept thinking was he wanted to get home.  Now that he was home, he was not sure home was where he wanted to be.  He learned a lot on the road, including about the Masters.  He thought again about the expedition he was on. Things were not proceeding according to the original plan.  He knew the Mother and Father of the expedition had to be responsible.  He suspected the Masters.  He needed evidence.  He decided that now, he had a different job to do, but a job, certainly.  He imagined a likely scenario.

Doctor Mishka—Colonel Mishka would be Colonel Nadia Kolchenkov, leaving off the name of the German husband she divorced. She had to be somewhere midway between the two natural time gates. That would put her somewhere in London.  She had to have come to this part of the city and maybe helped in the area with the injured.  She may have been present with the firetrucks and ambulances, and maybe sent some survivors to the hospital.  He might have arrived even as her car was taking her away.  He would not know.

She was a Russian. She probably came to London as part of a diplomatic mission from Moscow.  She had contacts and she spoke English well.  Elder Stow supposed it was in the interests of the Soviet Union to see a strong England—one that would not be cowed by German bombs and would not surrender.  As long as England stood, that would keep half of the German army in the west, and that would be less potential pressure on the Russians in the east.

Elder Stow would have to search for her.  He would have to go to Whitehall, to Parliament and inquire.  He would have to think about how to do that safely, where they did not arrest him as a spy or something.  He was a naturally cautious person.  He wondered if his travels made him paranoid.  No, he decided.  Caution was not a bad thing.

Sirens went off in the neighborhood.  People looked up to the sky.  Elder Stow found his eyes drawn upward.  It was the middle of the day.  He dd not recall bombing in daylight, or maybe he did not know.  He found himself hustled along with the people who headed for the nearest underground station.  He could have activated his screen device and weathered the storm easily enough.  He looked.  His screen device was still set for a Decker wall.  He let it go and followed the crowd.  He felt curious.

He found plenty of noise in the underground.  People mostly shouted out names.  They wanted to be sure family and friends made it to the shelter.  It was not a kind of mad dash, however, as apparently, after months of bombing, families had staked out areas where they could be found.  “John.”  He heard a woman call.  “John.  Mister Stow.”

Elder Stow spied Mildred from the bank.  “Hello,” he said and waved before he went to sit beside the woman.  She had a thermos and offered him some tea.  He smiled his thank you, but his eyes remained on the people.  Some down the way started singing.  People laughed, smiled, told jokes and stories.  Some brought books to read. A couple of men read newspapers.  Some wrote in notebooks, and others simply looked around with some uncertainty.  To be sure, Mothers kept their children close.  Elder Stow had a question.

“How long do these raids go on?”

Mildred returned his smile.  “Daylight raids are usually not so long.  The Germans try to get in and out quickly before the RAF start shooting them down.  Nighttime raids might last longer.”

“Shorter and longer are not very accurate,” Elder Stow said.

Mildred shrugged.  “Best I can do,” she said as they began to hear some rumbling through the underground and something like dull pounding above.  “That sounds like down by the Thames,” Mildred said, one hand to her ear.  Elder Stow took her word for it, but as they listened, the pounding grew louder and closer until it sounded like the bombs were falling overhead.

“Seems to me they already flattened your neighborhood,” Elder Stow suggested.

“They are not that precise,” Mildred responded, as Elder stow got distracted by a man who got down on the tracks and walked a short way to the edge of the tunnel.  It was Duko, and he appeared to have a lever of some sort in his hands.  Even as the pounding overhead increased and Elder Stow looked up, he figured out what Duko did with that dynamite.  He turned on his personal screen before he whipped out his screen device and barely got the Decker wall turned in time for the ceiling on the back half of the station to explode.  People screamed and held their ears.  Some of the ceiling fell, and some people got hurt before the ceiling stopped miraculously in midair.

Elder Stow got out his sonic device and used it to amplify his voice.  “Get out from under the collapsing ceiling.  I can’t hold it up forever.”  He did not have to shout.  People were already moving from under the collapsing section of the roof.

Elder Stow saw more dynamite over his head, and all the way to the stairs.  He saw more over Duko’s head where it would block the tunnel on both ends.  He imagined Duko, and the two men with him would head down the tunnel far enough to be safe before blowing up the other half of the ceiling, effectively trapping the survivors, if any.  But Elder Stow imagined they would not be entirely trapped.  Even as he looked toward the stairs, the stairwell exploded, and more people got hurt.

Duko began to yell and pointed at Elder Stow.  The two men pulled out handguns and opened fire, hitting one man, the wall, and Elder Stow with one bullet that bounced off his personal screen.  By then, Elder Stow had his personal weapon in hand.  He noticed it was still set to full power and wide angle.  He dared not wait.  He turned off his screen device which allowed the ceiling at the far end to collapse before he rushed right at Duko and his men.  He jumped to the tracks and fired down into the tunnel before they could escape.  All three men became smoking hulks of ash and burning flesh and whatever detonation device Duko had melted.  The walls down the tunned got inadvertently widened and the ceiling in that place collapsed enough to bury the men so the people did not have to stare at the carcasses.  Fortunately, the ceiling did not collapse enough to block the air from that direction.

Elder Stow quickly looked overhead and saw that the dynamite above his position did not detonate.  The ceiling looked solid enough to hold up.

Avalon 9.11 Blitz, part 1 of 4

1941 A.D. London

Kairos lifetime 120: Nadia Iliana Kolchenkov, Doctor Mishka

Recording …

Doctor Misha knew where she was in 1914.  She might not have remembered the exact time and location, but she could make a good guess.  Where she might be in 1941 was a complete mystery.  About all she could do was dress Elder Stow in a suit, gather some American dollars, and tell Elder Stow to go to a bank when he arrived to exchange the dollars for the local currency.  That, and she hugged him and said good luck.  Elder Stow hugged them all and when he stepped out on to a city street, he sniffed and wiped his eyes.

“Who would have thought?” he asked himself.  Homo Sapiens were not the evolutionary mistake he grew up believing.  They were complex, indomitable spirits.  And the Earth belonged to them.  It was no longer the Gott-Druk home.  It took a couple of years of travel to realize that, but he no longer had doubts.  The Gott-Druk home world was out there, in the night sky, and it was a good world—no, it was a very good world.

Elder Stow pulled out his scanner.  It did not take much effort to recognize he landed in London.  He had visited most of the European capitals in his day and set their recognition patterns in his scanner.  Of course, he was most familiar with Berlin where his people settled and decided on a strategy to take down the human race.  He touched his communication device but paused.  He thought first to find that bank.  He might be stuck in this place for a long time if there were no Gott-Druk presently monitoring the planet.  He looked around.

Elder Stow saw several damaged buildings and one that collapsed entirely.  Men walked around the rubble that looked like it had been on fire several hours ago.  He saw the emergency vehicles parked in the street and plenty of street repair vehicles as well.  He saw three men rummaging through the rubble of one building.  Somehow, he knew they were looking for bodies.

“Excuse me,” he interrupted one man’s journey as the man crossed the street.  “The nearest bank?” he asked.  The man pointed at a broken building where several police officers stood around guarding the vault in case the crowd decided to see what money got liberated by the bombs.  “The nearest open bank?”  Elder Stow rephrased the question.

The man, a workman of some sort frowned and set down the bag he carried.  Elder Stow stared at the bag.  It appeared full of red sticks.  The man did not notice.  He got busy looking around at the streets.  He appeared to think, but at last, he pointed.  “Two blocks, turn left, two more blocks on the right.”

Elder Stow shifted his eyes again to the man and smiled.  “My thanks, Mister…”

“Duko,” the man said.  He snatched up his bag and hurried off.

Elder Stow walked the four blocks shaking his head.  Something did not seem right about that man.  He wondered about the red sticks as well, but he had to pause as he got to a street wholly untouched by the bombs.  It looked full of cars and commerce like any street in any major European city untouched by the ravages of war.

He stopped an elderly woman on the street.  “The bank?”

“That is where I am headed.  You can walk with me,” the woman said, and Elder Stow grunted.  He realized what was wrong with that man. He was not an Englishman.  He spoke with an accent, though Elder Stow could not pinpoint the man’s country of origin.

The woman walked, Elder Stow beside her, and she spoke.  “I’m Mildred Harkness.  I assume you are not from this neighborhood.”

Elder stow shook his head to clear his mind and focus.  “Stow,” he said, and then thought to humanize the named.  “John Stow, and no, I am from America.”  It was the last time zone he visited so he figured it was not entirely a lie.

“I thought I heard Irish for a minute,” Mildred said.

Aha, Elder Stow thought.  The man was Irish, and something else…  “No,” Elder Stow responded.  “Strictly American, and I have some money I need to exchange into the local currency.”  He pulled out a bill to show her.

“Yes, I see,” Mildred said, and smiled for him.  “It just so happens I know the right person to talk to.  Mister Wilson is the man that keeps up with all the current exchange rates.  I’ll introduce you.”

“That would be very kind of you,” Elder Stow responded and returned the old woman’s smile.  They walked in silence for a minute.  Elder Stow hardly knew what to ask.  He thought through information he had gleaned about the second world war.  That was during the early part of his journey with the travelers before he honestly realized the integrity of history was at stake.  At first, he was curious to hear about what his crew might be facing in the future, and what the shape of the world might be in if and when he returned.  He heard all about the Nazis and the atrocities they committed as well as the subsequent Soviet oppressors.  Oddly enough, neither wiped the European map clean the way the Gott-Druk would have wanted.  Something must have interrupted the Gott-Druk plans, because surely a relatively empty Europe that the Gott-Druk could recolonize would have been the plan.

“Odd time to be in London,” Mildred picked up the conversation.  “I assume you are here on official business.  Odd time for a tourist to visit London, what with the blitz and all, though the spring is nice.”

“I have a feeling the blitz may be coming to an end,” Elder Stow said and smiled again.  He recalled it was less than a year.  October to May if he remembered correctly.  He imagined his people would have wanted to break the spirit of the English people, but that just told him how little the Gott-Druk really understood Homo Sapiens.

“An end to the constant barrage of bombs day and night would be wonderful, especially the night raids.  I hardly remember what a good night’s sleep feels like.”

“I would say hang in there, but you Londoners appear to be doing that very well.”

Mildred nodded before she said, “Here we are.”  She took Elder Stow to the window and Mister Williams was very accommodating.  Elder Stow had to remember pounds and shillings were not decimal like dollars and cents, but he could handle the math well enough.

When he left the bank, he saw Mildred had gone.  She seemed a nice person.  Many humans were nice people, and it was good to remember that.  He saw an open luncheon place across the street and thought to get a snack, and tea.  He thought, England and tea.  He had some things to think through before he stumbled forward any further.

Of course, his people did not give the Germans atomic weapons.  They did not want an empty Europe that was full of atomic radiation, even though atomic energy would be the next logical step on the technological ladder, followed by lasers and some primitive sort of computers—what Lockhart and the others called computers—and rocketry.  Such rocketry was little more than fancy explosions that did not happen to use gunpowder.  So anyway, his people planned to empty the continent by more primitive means, by using gunpowder and such, even if it took a long time to do it.

Elder Stow paused.  He recognized the red sticks the man carried.  Trinitrotoluene.  Decker called it TNT; a stable explosive that needed to be set off with a simple pressure wave.  Elder Stow wondered why a man would be carrying around a bag full of…what was the word? …Dynamite.

Avalon 9.10 July Crisis, part 4 of 4

Klaus, Man in Black, Europe, drove the Mercedes to the stables where they picked up the wagon and two horses, a gift of Count Stefan von Hoffmann.  Stefan saw that the horses were saddled and ready when they arrived.  Nanette got right up on the buckboard and asked Klaus a question.

“Do you have a last name?”

“Novak,” Klaus said.  “It is honestly Nowak, a Polish name.  I am only half-Prussian.  Klaus is a good German name, and I stick mostly with that.  It raises no questions.”

“My husband is Milton Decker, but he says he does not like the name Milton.”

“A good English name,” Klaus said as they started out.  “Perhaps he does not like the name because he is not an Englishman.”

“No,” Nanette said.  “He just doesn’t like it.  He says he even got his mother to call him Decker.  The people we traveled with all called him Decker.  Other people call him Decker or Colonel Decker.”

“What do you call him?”

“I tried calling him Milton a couple of times, but it did not fit him.  I call him Decker.  I guess I am getting used to it.”

Decker and Tony came up to the front and Tony asked, “So why didn’t we take the train to Paris?”

Klaus raised his voice a bit to answer.  “They are beginning to stop the trains heading into the west.  Your papers are in order, and they should not bother Americans, but you never know.  We are three days from Saarbrucken on the border with Lorraine.  Another two days will get us to Metz on the border with France.  We will probably have to show our papers twice, but then we will move on.  Even if the soldiers on the train do not question your papers, personally, we may be stuck in the station for a day, maybe a week while they check everyone else.”

“Better to keep moving,” Decker agreed.  He was not sure when the war would start.  He thought maybe August fourteenth.  He did not have Lincoln there to look it up in the database.  Maybe that was just as well.  Less chance he could screw something up.  Better to get out of Germany without stopping.

Klaus got Tony’s attention.  “You have the purse Count Stefan provided?”  Tony nodded. It was mostly paper Marks and Francs, not the gold, silver, and copper coins he was used to.  He patted his britches leg glad Lincoln showed him a few things he could do in shaping his fairy weave to hide the money.

The travelers did get stopped on the border of Lorraine, as predicted.  The province had only been in German hands for forty-three years, and while that might sound like plenty of time to adjust, it is a mere drop in the bucket the way Europeans read time.  Before 1871, the area was French, and the French sympathies in the province still ran strong along with some resentment against the imposition of the German language on everyday life.

As expected, though, they did not wait long.  Decker tried his line.  “I’ve been recalled, what with all the potential trouble on the continent.  I have a ship for the United States waiting in Le Havre.”

“Why didn’t you take the train?” the man asked.

Tony took up the answer.  “Trains get stopped and face unexpected delays.”

The man nodded and returned their papers.  He did not know if that was true, but it sounded right.

“Besides,” Tony said.  “On the train we would miss all the good people we have seen in our travels.”  He smiled, so the man smiled and gave a small salute as Tony and Decker mounted and they all continued down the road to Metz.

They also got stopped after Metz, on the actual border with France, again as expected.  These guards were tougher and nosier.  They wanted to search the wagon and wanted Decker and Tony to give up their service revolvers.  One soldier lifted the blanket in the back of the wagon and asked, “What is this?”

Nanette watched from the buckboard and held her wand in her lap.  The blanket mysteriously slipped from the soldier’s hand.

Tony and Klaus were up front arguing with the sergeant in charge.  Tony was afraid they found Decker’s rifle, but Decker was right there to answer.  “It is a prototype grill for the general.  He likes outdoor cooking.  This grills without the need for a fire.”  He made it up.

“How does it work?”  The man lifted the blanket again only to have it slip once again from his fingers.

“The black screen.  It collects the sunlight and focuses it, like a magnifying glass.”

“You have two?”  The man tried one last time on the blanket.  This time, he grabbed a chunk of blanket and held it firmly.

“No. It is taken apart.  They work together.”  Decker yanked the blanket out of the man’s hand and recovered the equipment.  He smiled at Nanette and yelled.  “Sergeant.  You better check with your commanding officer before you go any further.  You might be fighting the Russians, French, and British if things don’t settle down.  Do you really want to anger the United States as well with an international incident?  Klaus, get in the driver’s seat.  Tony, mount up. We are going.”

The sergeant felt suddenly like he wanted to let them go.  He thought about the international incident while Nanette put her wand back into her lap.  He moved his soldiers back and let the Americans ride on.  He only later decided he should have looked in the wagon himself and found out what they had back there, but it was too late.

Klaus explained when they got fully into French territory.  “It is a communication device.  There are two of them.”

“They look like monitors,” Decker said.  “I assume they project video as well as audio.”

Klaus shrugged and looked at Tony and Nanette, but they were no help being native to that time and place.  “A ship came down in the Crimea.  We salvaged these four units and brought them to Mishka.  Martok worked on them. Do you know what I mean?”  They did.  Martok was another life of the Kairos, one from the far future who was an engineer and mathematician.  That was about all they knew, but they knew who he was talking about.

“She said she was going to leave a week earlier, only a week after the Archduke got assassinated, but she had to do extra work on your communicator so it would function properly on American electricity.  I didn’t even know there were different kinds of electricity.”

“Anyway,” Decker prompted.

“Anyway, we need three right now in Europe.  Men in Black from satellite offices in Athens, Warsaw, and Scandinavia are headed to Moscow.  Men from the central offices like Istanbul, Sophia, and Vienna, are all headed to Berlin.  Western Europeans, including from the main Men in Black European office in London are meeting in Paris.  Mishka says your job is to deliver the fourth device to the main North American office in Washington.  She says you won’t get there before the first meeting, but it will be needed in the future, as you well know… Whatever that means.”

“World War Two?” Tony blurted out.

“Thanks Lincoln,” Decker said with a grin for Nanette.  “Not for public consumption might have been a better thing to say.”

“Oh.  Yeah.  Sorry.” Tony said.

“So, what are you all meeting about?” Nanette asked to move away from Tony’s embarrassment.

“Mostly about sticking to our job and not getting drawn in if the world goes to war.  We need to watch for aliens and alien threats and let the human race do whatever it needs to do.”

“And the Masters.”  Nanette added.  “We need to watch out for the Masters, too.”

Klaus nodded before he killed that thought.  “The trouble is we have no way of knowing in advance what is or is not supposed to happen, historically.  Only the Kairos can know that.  Maybe if some obscure German arms maker comes up with an alien type of ray-gun. That might indicate something is amiss, but even then, we are just guessing.”

“So, I need to be watchful,” Decker said in part to himself.  Then he spoke to everyone.  “But first we need to get to Paris, then to Le Havre, then back to the United States.  I’m looking forward to all that back pay.”

Nanette nodded.  “I’m looking forward to spending it.  But mostly I can’t wait until you meet my mother.”

Decker made a face like he might want to put that off for as long as possible.  He tried not to let Nanette see.  Tony saw and grinned.  Nanette grinned as well because she saw without having to see.

************************

MONDAY

9.11 Blitz. Elder Stow finds himself in the midst of London’ darkest hours. Don’t miss it, and remember, the episode will run Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, AND Thursday. Enjoy, and Happy Reading

*

Avalon 9.10 July Crisis, part 3 of 4

Mishka picked up her thoughts when they all got seated and had mugs of the local brew.  “Decker, I don’t know if you can grasp this, but stupidity and ignorance come in all shapes and sizes as well as colors.  It is not always color.  It is not always a black and white situation… If you know what I mean.  Right now, this whole continent looks like war, maybe the whole world, and it has nothing to do with black or brown people.  In fact, the American Civil War is the only war I can think of where the color of a person’s skin mattered, and that was fought to keep things as they were or set people free, not to make matters worse.  Some fought to end the tragedy of human slavery, but some states wanted to decide for themselves what was property and what was not.  Okay.  It got decided.  Human beings are not property, though human trafficking continues well into the future.  You understand human trafficking, and it touches just as many white women as black, brown, and Asian women.”  Mishka paused to growl at her mug.  “The point is, this coming war has nothing to do with the color of a person’s skin, or with European colonialism, or any such thing.  Some people want freedom.  They are oppressed minorities in certain countries and such.  They don’t like the way the European map is currently drawn.  Frankly, I think this whole thing is no more than too much testosterone run amok.”  She shrugged.

“Go on,” Stefan encouraged her as she looked down at her untouched beer.

“It is plain stupidity and ignorance, in my opinion.  America has the right idea, to prohibit discrimination based on race, creed, color, national origin, or sex, even if it takes years and years—a century or two before the nation begins to live up to that ideal.  In 1914, there is still a long way to go.  There may always be some personal incidents or instances of discrimination.  I cannot say.  But they are small, personal incidents.  The system has got it right.  People just have to live up to the ideals.”

“You are on fire right now,” Walter said.  “What are you thinking?”

“I’m thinking I may have to give up everything I have worked so hard for since I was a child.  You have no idea what I have been through and the struggles I have had, as a woman.”

“Tell us,” Nanette said, and reached over to take Mishka’s hand.  Mishka nodded, pulled in her breath, looked at the table, and talked.

“I was born in Estonia.  My mother was second generation English.  My father was technically Russian, though he undoubtedly had mostly Western European blood as well.  We spoke Russian in the house and moved shortly after I was born.  My father was an engineer and we lived in several cities, including Kiev and Moscow, where he ran the waterworks for the community.  He eventually got promoted to the Saint Petersburg waterworks.  He met the Tsar and his family several times, and knew many members of the Duma, including Kerensky and others.”

“Lenin?” Decker asked.

Mishka waved him off.  “I have met him,” she said, and continued her story.  “In Saint Petersburg I had the best education, all the top tutors, and connected with a doctor who treated all the top people in the city, including the Tsar and his family.  I hate Rasputin, I must say.  As early as 1901, when I turned twelve, my doctor-mentor began to write to universities all over Western Europe.  My father encouraged the doctor, though I had no idea.  The doctor did not think much of Russian medical schools and refused to see me shoved into some nursing-midwife program.  He and my father got the Duma itself to write recommendations and they even pledged some money to support me in my time of study.  I had no idea, but when I turned eighteen, I got put on a train and headed for Paris.  Paris was difficult, especially at first…”  She let her voice trail off into the silence and finally took a sip of her beer.

“Tell me,” Nanette encouraged her.

“Well, at first they thought N. I. Kolchenkov was a man.  They had me assigned to housing with a bunch of men.  I had to find and pay for my own housing.  Then I had one professor in particular who said I had no business studying medicine and he planned to fail me and get me kicked out of the school.  I had to work double hard—triple hard.  I passed his class, but barely.  It was hard for four years.  There are many stories you don’t need to hear.”

Food came.

“Lord Leslie was nice, before Walter.”  She patted Walter’s hand.  “He took me to London for Christmas, twice, and the summer between on summer break.  He was studying antiquities.” she said that to Tony.  “He was fascinated with Stonehenge.  He was also part of the upper nobility.  His father was in the House of Lords.  He said he planned to marry me.  I said I was not going to marry him, and I believe his mother sighed a great sigh of relief on hearing that.”  Mishka smiled at her thoughts and ate a little.  “I got a letter and donation from the Empress Alexandra that summer.  She encouraged me to strike a blow for all women.  That letter made Leslie’s mother sigh not so loud, perhaps.

“So, how did you end up here?” Tony asked.

“It was the only residency in surgery I could get in all of Europe, and they thought I was a man.  They were positively delighted to have me until they found out I was a woman.  I immediately got put in charge of the women’s clinic and ignored.  I spent a whole year delivering babies and training the nurse-midwives to run the clinic while I complained to everyone I knew.  I was accepted to residence in surgery.  I had no business in the clinic.  The surgical staff was where I needed to be.  Finally, and I don’t know who got to the university, but I got the chance.”

“And she is the best surgeon on the staff, hands down,” Stefan said.

“Absolutely,” Walter agreed.  “And I think she should stay.  If old Kress gets drafted, she could run the surgical department.”

“Kress is too old to get drafted and Stottlemeyer would probably take over.  You and I, however, will undoubtedly be dragged into it, however it goes,” Stefan countered.

Walter put on his mopey face.

Mishka nodded for the men and then shook her head.  “Now, I don’t know.  Women doctors are rare, in case you did not get that message.  They are even more rare in Russia, and mostly confined to women’s issues.  I’m thinking N. I. Kolchenkov might join the army.  I might get commissioned before they realize I am a woman.  At least I could practice real medicine and my surgical craft.”

“If they don’t discharge you right away,” Decker said.

Mishka smiled for the man.  “But for you, I have the Men in Black in North America getting yours and Tony’s papers in order.  I also have a present for you before you leave.”

“We have to leave?” Nanette asked.  “Right away?”

MIshka nodded this time without shaking her head.  “I will be taking the Sunday train in the morning to Prague. I will change trains there for Bucharest.  Romania is making noises about remaining neutral in whatever madness breaks out.  I should be able to get home from there.  Meanwhile, you shot a man, in case you forgot.  He will be all right…” She looked at Stefan and Stefan nodded.  “But I expect the police to show up at some time, probably in the morning, or it being Sunday, maybe the afternoon the way things work around here, but you need to be gone.  So, Decker, stand up.”  Mishka stood so Decker stood to face her.

Doctor Mishka took two insignia of rank from her purse.  She unpinned his insignia of lieutenant colonel and pinned on the full bird.  “It is my honor.  Congratulations Colonel,” she said. Decker came to attention and saluted.  She returned the salute saying, “I will have to learn how to do that properly.”  She handed Decker the lieutenant colonel silver leaves and a pair of captain’s bars.  “You might recognize the captain’s bars.  They were yours that Casidy got from Major Lockhart.  She kept them through all your adventures with her own lieutenant bars.  Give the captain bars to Tony when he is ready. He has been registered as a captain and your adjutant back in the states, but I know he has more to learn.  You, on the other hand, will train African American marines and no doubt some of your ideas will filter into the whole marine corps.  Watch your history.  Don’t get ahead of yourself.”

“Ma’am,” Decker said with another small salute.  He put the insignia away for safe keeping.  He patted Tony on the shoulder.  “You need to hit the books as soon as we get some.”

“Sir,” Tony said, and swallowed.  He was a scholar, not a fighter.  Books he could handle.  He was not sure about war, but he would not let his country down in their time of need.

************************

Don’t Forget tomorrow (Thursday) there will be a post and the end of the episode.

*

Avalon 9.10 July Crisis, part 2 of 4

Mishka raised the sword in her left hand and tried to position herself the way the Princess told her. She looked at her opponent.  He had a nice scar on his right cheek.  The Princess said she would see what she could do about that.

“You fight with your left hand?” Van Stassen said. This was not expected.

“Right-handed would be too easy,” Mishka replied.  She turned to look at her companions and winked.  She traded places again with the Princess and she was ready.

Van Stassen shrugged.  He came at her legs, her left side and right side on the backswing.  She easily parried and he stepped back.  He grinned for his companions who returned his smile.

With more determination and strength, he came at her neck and arms, left and right on the backswing.  He probably expected to break through her defenses by strength alone, but again she easily parried, and he took a step back to consider his options.

The Princess risked a word in German with her heavy Greek accent.  “Boring,” she said, and came at him with the exact same blows he aimed at her, but all four in quick succession.  Right, left, right, left.  He backed up in surprise.  He almost failed to block the last blow.  He tripped over a protruding rock and fell on his backside.  The men with him tried not to laugh, but some could not help themselves.

The Princess graciously waited for the man to get up.  He got up angry.  If he thought, he would have realized she was much better than him.  The way she moved, she appeared to be toying with him, like she was preparing to teach him a lesson.  But he did not think.  He just got angry and came at her with wide, wild swings.  Mishka later remarked that his footwork was all wrong as well.  His blows were extra strong because of his adrenalin, but she had long since learned to let such blows slide off her sword rather than try to stop them.

He swung at her legs, and she took one step back.  He swung at her head, and she took another step back.  He tried her mid-section, and she did not bother to step back.  To the untrained eye, it might have looked like he was gaining the advantage and she was losing ground, but in fact, he was tiring himself out because he had no way though her defenses, and she was looking for a weakness she could easily exploit.

He showed her when he raised his sword again to strike at her head.  He raised it too high thinking to put some extra strength from gravity into his blow, but all he did was expose his shoulder.  She stabbed.  A quick in and out.  Then she ducked a little and pointed her sword straight up, grabbing the hilt with both hands.  The swords struck near the hilt of his sword.  He may have cracked her sword, but his sword reverberated right up his arm and into his wound.  He shouted, dropped his weapon, and put his good hand to his bleeding shoulder.  When the Princess pulled her sword back and stepped back, she scraped the man’s cheek making a two-inch-long cut.

“There,” Doctor Mishka said as she returned and watched the man’s cheek turn bloody red.  “Now you have matching scars. One on each side.”

One of the men with van Stassen pulled a pistol.  He looked like he had every intention of shooting Mishka.  Decker had his rifle in his hands, as usual, and he shot first.  The man dropped his pistol, grabbed his own shoulder, and fell to the dirt.  “That is not how this game is played,” Decker bellowed.  Stefan nodded and looked at van Stassen’s second.  After a moment, the man also nodded.

Mishka put her helmet and possibly cracked sword in the back of the wagon.  She called Nanette to sit on the Buckboard beside Klaus and told Decker and Tony they had to ride in the back.  The buckboard at least cushioned the ride a bit.  Mishka mounted her horse and Walter and Stefan mounted as well.  While Klaus drove the wagon past the motor coach, Mishka stopped to face van Stassen.

“You need to respect women.  You have good nurse-midwives who will run the whole clinic if you let them, but in any case, the women come to you for help, not to be emotionally scarred and damaged by you.”  She turned to one of the men supporting van Stassen.  “Doctor Meier, I am ashamed of you.  One day, people like you who blindly follow orders and go along with the crowd will be the downfall of Germany.”  She rode off, Stefan and Walter on her tail.  She turned in her resignation letter a week ago and already argued with Kress and Stottlemeyer, so leaving Heidelberg should not be a problem.

When they got back to the housing near the University Hospital, the travelers saw that Mishka was all packed and ready to go.  “It is July,” she said.  “The Archduke Ferdinand got assassinated two Sundays past.  Whole nations are mobilizing on the verge of war.  Russia and Germany are on opposite sides.  If Serbia and Austria-Hungary fought each other, just the two of them, that would be one thing, but there are alliances and connections everywhere.  The continent is ready fall like dominoes.”

“I heard the British foreign office is trying to mediate between the parties,” Stefan said.  “Even Kaiser Wilhelm is thinking of a diplomatic solution, if my sources are correct.”

Mishka shook her head, vigorously.  “You know, tomorrow is just as much a mystery to me as it is to anyone.  The twists and turns in life are just as surprising to me as they are to you.  But every once in a while, history rises up and slaps me in the face.”  She took a brush out of what would someday be called a carryon bag.  She stared at it like she did not know what it was.  “There will be a war—A Great War, and God help us.”

“We usually ignore her when she says things like that, I mean about the future,” Walter said.

“She said she wanted to face van Stassen right before she left in case he got in a lucky blow,” Stefan added.

Mishka put the brush back in the bag without using it and latched the bag shut.  “I need to get out of here.”

“I told her she should stay,” Walter said.  “She is an excellent doctor and surgeon.  The staff will mostly be taken into the armed services, but as a woman and a foreigner she would not have to worry about that.  This could be an excellent opportunity for her. She could teach, stay on the surgical staff, oversee the women’s clinic.  She might even get promoted to van Stassen’s boss.  Wouldn’t that be fun?”

Mishka took a blouse out of a trunk and looked it over.  She frowned when she saw a small spot.  “I am going home while I still can,” she said and licked her finger to try dabbing the spot.  “Mother Russia needs doctoring.  Who knows?  With my training as a surgeon, I might join the army myself.”  She folded the blouse and repacked it, slamming the trunk lid closed.  “Sorry Walter.”

The man sighed while Stefan suggested they all troop down to the tavern for a bite of lunch before anyone leaves.