Avalon 1.3: The Way of Dreams

After 4447BC in the Sinai Peninsula.  Kairos: Ranear of the Ophir.

Recording…

            Lunch was quail that Boston and Roland flushed out and bagged.  People had been on edge the whole day, but they needed to eat.  They all mentioned the bokarus at one time or another that morning, but they all agreed that was not right.  Several times Roland, and once Captain Decker claimed they heard something, but found nothing.  Still, they all felt a sense of dread, like they were being followed by something inexplicable.

            “This quail is good.”  Lincoln attempted to lighten the mood

            “Tastes like chicken,” Captain Decker said flatly.  Lockhart was beginning to wonder if the man ever smiled.

            Lieutenant Harper frowned and looked around at the terrain.  It was rocky, but that would not account for the poor vegetation.  Boston said they were in the Sinai and as far as she knew it would not change much in the next six thousand plus years. The grass was poor, like it was overgrazed, the bushes were full of brambles and thorns – one day a real pain to shepherds – and  the trees, what there were of them, were short and spindly.  Still, the rocks were everywhere, sticking up from beneath the earth like fingers pointing at the sky.  She imagined there was not enough rain in the region to wear them down.  “Maybe in twelve thousand years,” She muttered.

            Lockhart stood and stretched and made his own attempt to lighten the mood.  “You know, it is remarkable being thirty again.  You cannot imagine the aches and pains that develop by the time you reach sixty.”

            “What was that?”  Mingus looked up, but he was not asking Lockhart to repeat himself.  Roland scooted up to spy from behind a rock,  They heard something.  Then they heard a word, “Ophir!” and three spears came shooting into their camp.  Two missed as people reacted, but Lockhart got one in the thigh and cursed,  He pulled himself up behind Roland’s rock even as the marines returned fire.

            A few moments later, Lincoln and Boston brought their pistols to bear and Roland fired Lockhart’s shotgun once when he saw some movement.  He would have been more accurate with his bow, but the arrow supply was limited and movement did not necessarily equal a person.  Captain Decker slipped out of the camp and very quickly the gunfire stopped.  There were no more spears and nothing to see among the bushes, trees and rocks within view.

            “I think we may have scared them off,” Lincoln suggested.

            “Primitive,” Lieutenant Harper examined one of the spears.  “I would say locally and human made.”  She felt funny having to add that last part, but given their experience thus far, and given their feelings all morning, it was necessary.

            “Sit still.” Alexis yelled at Lockhart.  “The spear is about to come out on its own but you don’t want to make the wound worse.”

            “It’s those Gaian healing chits still running through his body,” Lincoln suggested and Lockhart confirmed that with a nod.

            “The whole area is already numb.  I imagine I will be fine, shortly.”

            “The muscle is torn.  I would guess that will take longer than shortly to heal this wound.”

            “I don’t know,” Mingus started to add his opinion when Captain Decker came back escorting a native with a bullet crease in his own thigh.  The native, a young, dark skinned boy of maybe sixteen summers collapsed when he came into the camp and Alexis immediately turned her attention to him.

            The Captain gave his report.  “One dead, the others ran but this one couldn’t run.  You can stand down.”

            “You are Ophir?”  Boston asked because the Kairos was listed as being of the Ophir people, but it was sketchy on the details.

            “No, you are Ophir.”  His eyes got big as he watched Lockhart’s wound stop bleeding and then heal over like it was never there.  His eyes got even bigger when Alexis laid her hands over his own wound and he felt the warmth and healing power flow into his leg.  He looked up at Captain Decker.

            “You are Hivite, like me.  Why are you with these enemies?”  Decker said nothing and the boy looked again at Boston’s red hair and changed his mind.  “You are not Hivite and you are not Ophir.”

            “No, but the Ophir are our friends.”

            “Ahh!”  The boy suddenly put his face in his hands and shivered.  “I have fallen among the gods of the Ophir.  You kill with lightning and thunder and cannot be killed.  I will be meat.  I will be consumed.  Help me Set.”  He began to weep.  He was terribly afraid, and everyone saw that.

            “We won’t harm you,” Alexis assured him and smiled for him, but he pulled back from her hand which was meant to comfort him.  He shrieked again when Mingus came over to extract his daughter from the boy’s side and the boy got a good look at the elf.

            “One dead?”  Lockhart asked.  Decker nodded.  “Is he strong enough to carry his friend?”

            “I don’t know,” Alexis said honestly.  “His leg is fine.  The bullet only creased him.  It was not really much of a wound.  I would say it depends on how big his friend is and how far he has to go.”

            “We could help,” Boston suggested, but Lockhart shook his head. 

            “Direction?”  Lockhart turned to Doctor Procter and the doctor pointed.  Decker pointed the opposite way to say which way the others ran off.  “No.”  Lockhart said, and he knelt to the boy.  “Get up,” he insisted and they both stood.  “Take your dead.  There is no help we can give him.”  Then he added something the Kairos often said.  “Go in peace.” 

            The boy backed out of the camp.  The tears never entirely left his eyes, but when he realized he was going to live, they noticed the change.  Now he was crying for his dead friend.  They watched as he retrieved the body, scant yards from their camp.  It was hard, but he managed the young man around his shoulders like he might carry a deer and he soon disappeared in the wilderness.

            “Maybe the others are not so far away,” Lieutenant Harper suggested.  People nodded.  They liked to think that as they packed their things.  No one said they already had enough to worry about what with the bokarus, the ghouls and a missing bogy man.  Worry about the locals, about getting caught up in some war or trouble was not something they were prepared for, yet.

            “That was not what has been following us,” Lincoln said.  They all knew it was true and it did not help.

            “This way,” Doctor Procter said.  They followed him.  Lockhart only limped a little.

M / F Story. Avalon 1.2: Bogy Beast

            The bogy beast was a small one.  It was only about sixteen feet when it stood on its hind legs which it did as soon as it reached the first hut.  It had to be on all fours to walk.  The hair of the beast turned out to be more like shredded steel than hair.  It was sharper than a porcupine and able to reject every bullet short of a direct hit.  The snout was more like a wolf than a bear and it had some extra teeth.  It was impossible to tell if it was a reptile or a mammal, but it was easy to see what it had in mind.  The hut was torn to shreds and then it nosed around in the wreckage for any tasty morsels it might find.  When it found nothing, flames came with a roar and crisped the remains of the hut.

            “Fire!”  Lockhart yelled and gunfire burst out from every corner.  The beast was surrounded except for the avenue by which it arrived.  Several bullets penetrated and the beast roared and turned.  It reared up in the midst of the withering fire and swiped at the air with its great caws as if trying to tear the bullets from the air.

            It roared again and spread fire in a circle around its body.  The gunfire paused while people ducked behind their cover.  Then the gunfire started again, but overall it had minimal effect until Lieutenant Harper had the idea of going for the eyes.  She paused, but only long enough to clip her scope to the rifle.  When she fired, she certainly struck something.  The beast reared its head back, roared and shot a stream of flame straight into the sky.

            With a final roar of protest, the beast returned to all fours, turned and galloped out of the village.  It ran very close to Boston who wisely crouched down in the shadows and tried to become as invisible as possible.  Then it was gone.

            The people came pouring from their hiding places around the village and began to celebrate, but Lockhart knew better.  “It is wounded now and that will make it more dangerous.” 

            “We must track it while we can,” Roland said.

             “Unfortunately,” Mingus agreed,  “And I will be here when you get back.”

            “Won’t that be dangerous?”  Alexis asked.

            “Yes,” Lincoln said.  “That is why you need to stay here with Boston, your father and Doctor Procter.”  She kissed him, but Boston heard.

            “Heck no,” she said.  “I’m going.  I’m good on a hunt.  Probably better than you.”

            “Lieutenant, you stay in case the beast doubles back,” Captain Decker commanded.

            “Yes, sir,” Lieutenant Harper was quicker with the sir this time, but it was clear she was unhappy once again with the order.

            “Okay redneck,” Lockhart smiled at Boston when that was settled.  “You lead the way.”

            Boston grabbed Roland and together they started out front.  It was actually an easy trail.  The purple puss that served for blood in the beast glowed a little, like neon.  It was probably fire inspired.  When they reached the edge of the woods, the broken branches and crushed saplings made the trail even easier.

            “I don’t like this,” Boston whispered.  She looked back.  Lockhart and Lincoln were alert and trying to listen for what they could not see in the dark.  Captain Decker had his night goggles on, but it was hard to see behind a tree.  “This trail is too easy.”

            Roland paused and looked at her.  He knelt and she knelt beside him as the company came to a halt.  “A bogy beast is clever, but like a fox, not a person,” he assured her before he turned to the group and spoke a bit louder.  “It stopped here and I would guess it licked its wounds.  The thing is, if it makes it until morning, it will rest underground and be all but healed in a day.”

            “So we have to find it before it rests,” Lockhart said even as the beast reared up in front of them.  One roar of fire and a backwards swipe of a claw caught  all three who were standing there.  Captain Decker was knocked to the ground while Lincoln and Lockhart crashed into the trees.  All were temporarily knocked senseless.  The beast looked down on the two still kneeling on the ground and roared fire again.  Roland quickly hovered over Boston.

            “I set a shield,” Roland shouted next to Boston’s ear.  They still felt the heat and Roland’s back turned red, but the fire was deflected.  All the same, Boston screamed.  It was answered by a white light in the distance that raced toward them. 

            The bogy beast reared up, determined to let its claws do what the flame failed to do, but it also saw the streaking light and certainly sensed something.  It began to turn away and let out a very different sound as the unicorn leapt over Roland and Boston and drove its horn deep into the beast’s chest.  The beast let out a chilling noise as it clawed the unicorn and knocked it away.  Then it stumbled as its putrid, flaming purple insides came pouring out of the gaping hole. 

            Decker was up by then and they began to blast away at the hole.  The beast collapsed.  It kept up that unnerving sound of pain and surprise until its body quit wiggling.  Captain Decker shot out the eye Harper had missed as his way of making sure the beast was dead.

            “My guess is the bogy could not see the unicorn out of the eye Lieutenant Harper shot until it was too late,” Roland surmised.

            Lockhart came up limping and leaning on Lincoln, but he waved them off.  He would be fine, shortly.  Meanwhile, Boston had run to the unicorn.  It was injured, terribly.

            Keng chose that moment to come running up.  “I missed it?  I missed everything!”  He was not happy, but the others smiled at the young man.

            “Glen!  Please help me.”  Boston called.

            “I – I can’t,” Keng said.

            Then someone else showed up.  She glowed in the night and Roland immediately fell to his knees.  It took the others a bit longer to feel the awesome fear of this person.  Then they joined the elf on their knees.  It was not quite like the angel, but something in that direction.

            “I go away for a few days and the whole place falls apart,” the woman complained. 

            Keng, of course, kept to his feet, and the woman gave him a curious look before she did something to tone down her glow.  “Who are these people?”  She asked Keng.

            “These are friends of mine,” Keng said proudly, and to the woman’s stare he added, “What?  I can have friends.”  The woman said nothing, so Keng introduced the five who were there.  “They have fallen back in time, but they are trying to get home.  You could maybe help them.”  He was not exactly asking.

            The woman stepped up to Lockhart and looked down into the man’s eyes.  Lockhart had to look away before she spoke again.  “Three days is the most even the gods are permitted to bend time.  It will not help these.”

            “Yes, of course.  I knew that,” Keng said.  “Oh, yes, this is Nagi.  She is the goddess of my village.”  He remembered himself then and went to his knees, but Nagi just made a face before she smiled.

            “A bit late for that,” she said and stepped in close for a look at the bogy beast.  Then she stepped up to stand behind Boston who was wracked with tears and crying all over the unicorn.  “A gift for defending my village,” she said and waved her hand.  The unicorn was made whole, and as it stood, Boston’s tears turned from sorrow to joy.  “The bogy does not belong here and neither does this creature.  There are no unicorns in this part of the world at present so you must take your pet with you when you leave.”  Boston simply nodded as the goddess turned her back and returned to the others.  The unicorn bowed to the goddess in the way of horses.  It touched its horn to the earth before it turned and bounded off into the woods.

            The goddess did not seem concerned with that as she stepped up to Keng and made him stand once again.  She walked once around him like a person might examine a prize animal.  She began to glow again, but in a different sort of way.  Every male eye became fastened to her like they were glued to her as she spoke her conclusion.  “I think I could have use for this one.”  She smiled at her own thoughts.  “Yes, I will,” she said and vanished.

            When they returned to the village and reported their success – without mentioning the goddess on Keng’s insistence, Mingus put a damper on their celebration.

            “But that means the bogy man is still out there, somewhere, and he is not going to be happy.”

            “We will burn that bridge when we come to it,” Captain Decker suggested.

            “Meanwhile, get some sleep,” Lockhart ordered.

            “I vote we stay here a couple of days to heal and help these people rebuild,” Alexis said as she laid hands on her brother to heal his scorched back.

            “I think the goddess would rather see us move on in the morning,” Lincoln responded, and he told her, Mingus and Doctor Procter of their encounter. 

            Doctor Procter appeared thoughtful.  “Perhaps we should move on tonight.”

            Lockhart did not answer the man directly.  All he said was “Get some rest.”

M/F Story. Avalon 1.2: The Village

            The travelers arrived at what looked to them like the first real village they had seen.  Instead of tents, there were makeshift dwellings built of bamboo and grasses.  They were crude to be sure, and easily taken down, but solid enough.  They were also easily burned from the look of some of them.

            “Strangers.  Strangers!”  One man saw them, yelled in panic and ran off.  A few women screamed and ran into their huts.  Lockhart halted their progress somewhere near the middle of the village, a village deserted by the time they stopped.

            “Nothing like a first class welcome,” he said.

            “Why are they afraid of us?”  Boston wondered out loud.

            “They are certainly afraid of something,” Roland added.

            “Some people are just afraid of anything they don’t understand,” Lincoln suggested and Lieutenant Harper stepped up to agree, but Mingus spoke first.

            “No, they are just rabbits.  Scared rabbits.  So, son-in-law, welcome home.”

            “Father!”  Alexis objected, but Lincoln just ignored the elf.

            Six elderly men appeared at the end of the row of houses.  They did not look too brave themselves.  They came forward in a group where they might not have come by themselves.  The eldest spoke when they were near.  “Are you of the goddess or of the beast?”

            “Neither,” Lockhart spoke plainly enough.  “We are travelers and seek only shelter for the night.  We will move on tomorrow.”

            The men turned to each other and began a whispered argument.

            “Tell me about the goddess,” Lieutenant Harper butted in and the men paused so the eldest could speak again.

            “Nagi-di is the goddess of our village.  Some say she has sent the beast because she is angry with us.  Others say the beast was sent by a jealous, rival god.  We have prayed everyday and made offerings to the goddess for her help, but we do not know if she has abandoned us.  Please, are you the help or have you come to kill all the beast has not destroyed?”

            “We are here to help,” Alexis spoke up and Lockhart turned on her.

            “What is it with you and Boston?  You are not permitted to offer bread or help or anything else that commits this group in any way without asking permission.  Is that clear?”  He was not happy.

             Alexis dropped her eyes but said nothing as Mingus stepped forward with a question.  “What kind of beast?”

            The men took one look at Mingus and took a big step back, but to their credit they did not turn and run.  They simply appeared afraid to answer.  A boy came around the corner and pushed right passed the men.  He was a young man of about fifteen and one of the men yelled at him.

            “Keng!”

            But Keng ignored the man and ran right up to Boston and gave her a big hug.  “You guys got here just in time,” Keng said.  He let go of Boston and turned toward Mingus.  “It’s a bogy beast,” he said.  “I was beginning to think it would be the end for us all, but here you are.”

            “But if the beast is the end of the story, we might mess things up if we help.”  Lincoln was concerned about changing time.

            “Maybe,” Keng admitted.  “But I don’t think it is supposed to be here.  I haven’t seen its master, but you know they are never far away.”

            “Master?”  Lockhart asked.

            Keng looked at the man and paused before he smiled.  “Not the masters, like that.  I mean the bogy man.”

            “What is a bogy beast?”  Captain Decker wanted to know.

            “A bogy man’s dog,” Mingus answered.

            “A lesser spirit, up to twenty feet tall or long with razor sharp claws and teeth and it breathes fire.  Nearly impossible to kill, the database says.  It does look sort of like a bear.”  Boston added the last for Lieutenant Harper.

            “Definitely not good,” Mingus added under his breath.

            “So, you will stay and help?”  Keng asked.  He looked up at Lockhart again and Lockhart reluctantly nodded.

            “But my first duty is to get this crew home,” he said.  “If it becomes impossible, we are out of here.”

            “Understood.”  Keng turned to the men.  “They will stay and help, but we need to treat them well while they are here.”

            The man who yelled at Keng stepped free of the group and slapped Keng in the ear, hard.  “You have no business telling your elders what to do.”   He immediately turned to the travelers.  “You are welcome here, and Nagi’s blessing be upon you.”

            “Come out, come out.”  Other men yelled.  “They are sent by the goddess and are here to help.”

            Alexis stepped up to Keng to make sure that he was alright.  Boston moved up, too, but her lips were moving.  “Come out, come out wherever you are and meet the young lady who fell from a star.”

            Keng had a hand on his ear, but he smiled on hearing that.

            The travelers set up camp in the middle of the village.  The people brought some of their food, but did not stand around to stare.  They especially avoided the elves and some, no doubt, felt the elves were as dangerous as the beast.  One of the elder men commented on this.

            “How is it that the spirits of the earth do your bidding?  Are they safe?”

            “We have a common goal,” Lockhart said with a sideways look at Mingus.  “And no, they are not safe, but they will help.”

            “But you have them so well trained,” another man commented.  Roland had to step in front of his father to prevent an incident.

            “So tell me, do we have to hunt the beast?”

            The two elders looked at each other, surprised at being asked such a question.  “Why, no,” one finally said.  “It has come to the village twice in the night.

            “Though it did not come last night,” the other said, thoughtfully.

            “Yes, something must have distracted it,” the first concluded.

            “Us,” Lockhart said.  “Only a ghoul got in the way.”

            It was not long after that they heard the not too distant roar.

Avalon 1.2: Beasts in the Night

            Boston and Katie Harper had the last watch in the night.  They sat side by side as the sun readied to come up and talked about their lives and loves.

            “I’m a good Catholic girl,” Boston insisted.  “I finished High School when I was sixteen and went to Saint Elizabeth’s, an all girls college.  I finished there in three years and went straight on to graduate school where I studied.  I mean, I went to parties and all, but electrical engineering takes real work.  I didn’t have time for much dating, and then I got drafted by the Men in Black and just sort of ended up pushing Lockhart around in that wheelchair for the next two years.  That’s all, really.”

            Katie Harper looked back toward the camp.  “Yes, it is hard to remember him as an old man.”

            Boston nodded.  “Him and Lincoln and Alexis who I never met before now.  They were all old.”

            “I understand,” Katie said as she looked again around the perimeter.  “Given the environment, it was a good thing the Kairos was able to make them young again.  A bunch of old people and a cripple would never have been able to keep up.”

            “Glen,” Boston responded.  “He likes to be called by name.  Kairos is too formal, more like a title.”

            “God of event time.”

            “That’s right.”  Boston smiled.  “The Watcher over History, he calls it.”  She looked at the lieutenant and Katie got the impression that it was her turn.

            “I did my graduate work in human cultural studies, specifically the technologies of early cultures.  I have a strong background in modern technology as well, though not exactly an engineering degree.  Still, I am sure that is why Colonel Weber chose me for this assignment.”

            “No doubt,” Boston said before she jumped.  Something roared in the distance.  It was out of sight, down the hill and hidden by the trees, but it was loud enough to wake the camp.  Lieutenant Harper stood with her weapon ready.  Boston had her Beretta, but stayed seated where she was.

            “Bears?”  Katie asked.  She knew it was no lion or tiger sound.

            Boston shook her head.  “I hunted bears in Canada.  That was no bear.”

            The roar came again along with another sound.  It was a squeal that dropped to a low roar of its own.  The trees swayed.  They heard at least one crash to the ground.  Then they heard a whine and something like thunder.  And then there was silence.  There was smoke among the trees, just visible in the dim light before dawn and the women thought the trees might be on fire, but they saw no light from flames.

            “Are you alright?”  That was Lockhart’s first concern when he arrived, Captain Decker beside him.  The women nodded.  “We wait until the light is better before we investigate,”  he decided, and Mingus, Roland and Captain Decker saw the wisdom in that.

            Back in camp, they made what breakfast they could out of the leftover deer and greens and then Lincoln distracted them all by suggesting they pack the camp and be prepared to move out quickly, just in case.  The way he phrased it, the others could hardly argue.

            The sun was well up by the time Lockhart, Mingus, Roland, Captain Decker and Boston made for the faint wisps of smoke that still trailed into the sky.  Lieutenant Harper wanted to go with them, but Captain Decker ordered her to stay and defend the camp.

            “Yes, sir,” Katie responded, but she did not sound too happy about it.

            Boston started out front.  She thought for a second that only she could pinpoint the location, but then she saw the smoke and remembered the roar and slipped back to a safer place between Lockhart and Roland.  They had to separate a little when they got to the trees at the bottom of the hill.  Boston immediately came across a great, old tree that was torn up by the roots.  Lockhart pointed out several smaller, young trees that were broken and crushed to the ground like they had been stepped on. 

            “This is not good,” Mingus said.  He examined the trees and bushes that were burnt and singed.  Some of the trees were still smoking, though none were outright burning.

            “Over here,” Roland called.

            They found the ghoul sitting with his back to a tree, dying.  He was bleeding, Boston guessed, though it looked more like slimy green sauce than blood.  The ghoul looked up at them and made a sound that could only have been laughter.  Boston felt the hair rise on the back of her neck at that sound. 

            “This is definitely not good,” Mingus said.

            “Your unicorn?”  Captain Decker asked, but Boston shook her head.  That was no unicorn sound she heard in the night.

            The ghoul looked up at the Captain and laughed at the word unicorn.  The Captain responded by shooting the ghoul.  It deflated and compressed and left a green smudge on the dirt while the Captain spoke.

            “Mercy killing.”

            “We might have gotten some information.”  Lockhart scolded the man.  Mingus mitigated.

            “No, we wouldn’t.”

            They started back up the hill to the camp when there was another roar in the distance.  Fortunately it was some distance away.

            “I hope that’s a dragon,” Roland spoke softly and Boston looked at the man like he must be crazy.

            “A dragon spirit would be better,” Mingus heard his son with his good elf ears and responded.

            “And if it is not?”  Lockhart asked.

            “Definitely not good.”  Mingus said it again.

Avalon 1.2: Unexpected Encounters

After 4465BC.  in Southern China.  Kairos:  Keng

Recording…

            Boston checked the database and read the results out loud.  She concluded with her finger on the map and a note that they appeared to be somewhere between the Yangtze River and the southern mountains.

            “How many time zones do we have to go through to get back to our own time?”  Lieutenant Harper asked from the rear where she and Captain Decker continued to act as rear guard.

            “One hundred and twenty,” Boston answered from where she was straggling at the back of the pack.  “Glen is the one hundred and twenty-first lifetime of the Kairos.”

            “It won’t be anytime soon,” Alexis looked back.

            The land was a mix of forest and meadow with much steeper hills than the Sahara.  When they came to the top of one of those hills, a place where there were rocks sticking out through the soil, Lockhart called a halt.  It would be dark soon, and they needed the rest.

            “As good a place as any,” Lincoln sighed.

            “Yeah,” Captain Decker added.  “Something is bound to catch up to us no matter what we do and this is as defensible a position as any.”

            “Chinese deer,” Roland announced and he got out his bow and jogged back down the hill.

            “And some greens,” Alexis said as she dragged Boston and Lieutenant Harper off to gather.  “I was never a big fan of Atkins.”

            “Some rice would be nice,” Boston thought out loud.  “Too bad we don’t have a wok.”

            Once Alexis showed the others what to look for, they gathered as the sun sank in the west.  They saw plenty of deer, and Boston was sure Roland was already back at the camp and had cut the beast for the fire.  She stepped around a few trees and caught sight of a light in the forest.  It was not too far away so curiosity drove her to take a closer look.

            There was an opening among the trees and sweet grass and flowers in that little place.  There was a bubbling spring, and a creature that positively glowed a brilliant white against the growing shadows.  Boston put her hands together in delight, but she dared not say a thing, not even to call to the others for fear of frightening off the beast.  Thus she simply watched, enthralled as the sun sank lower in the sky.

            “Unicorn.”  Roland came up beside her and whispered.  Alexis and Katie Harper were with him. 

            “But no bones have ever been found of such a creature,” Katie protested.  “I thought such things did not exist.”

            “It isn’t a creature,” Alexis said.  “It is a spirit, a greater spirit of purity and virtue, though it behaves much like a creature.  There are a few still in our day on Avalon.  Certain elf maids pledge themselves to their feeding and protection and do not marry or have relations with men until they retire at age one hundred.”

            “You met Mirowen back at the Headquarters building,” Boston whispered.  “She was a unicorn maid before she met Doctor Roberts.”

            “She lost her unicorn on earth and it was captured.  Doctor Roberts helped her retrieve it from area 51,” Alexis added.  “I imagined you knew that since you and Captain Decker are stationed there.”

            Lieutenant Harper shook her head.  “The whole complex at area 51 is strictly on a need to know basis,” she said.  “Colonel Weber,” she added by way of explanation.

            They watched while the unicorn went to the spring for a drink.  “Unicorns can be injured and even killed when they inhabit this form,” Alexis continued with the information.  “But they are very powerful creatures, much more powerful than the form implies.”

            “If it chose to charge, we would not escape,” Roland added.

            “And it knows full well we are here,” Alexis said.  “But I don’t get it. They usually are not seen unless there is an innocent in need of protection.”

            “Hey.” Roland reached out, but it was too late.  Boston had stepped out on to the meadow.

            “Unicorns are dangerous.”  Alexis spoke quickly.

            “You said it knows we are here,” Boston responded softly.

            “Boston,” Roland raised his voice a little.  “Don’t you dare.”  He turned on Lieutenant Harper because she raised her weapon to the ready.

            “You have to be a virgin.”  Alexis whispered very loud.  Boston paused, turned to look back at them in the bushes and then turned again to continue toward the unicorn.  The unicorn raised its head and began to nod, but it made no hostile moves in Boston’s direction.  When she arrived, the beast turned its horn away from the girl as Boston reached out carefully to touch the unicorn’s neck.  She felt a moment of electric shock when she touched before she was drawn to do what was in her heart.  She put her arms gently around the unicorn’s neck and kissed it right behind the ear.  It was something she dreamed about.

            The unicorn nodded again and broke free, gently.  With one more nod, it turned and bounded into the bushes to be lost in the coming night.  The light it emitted vanished with the beast, and Boston remained to cry gentle tears of joy.

            When the others joined her in the meadow, Boston turned to Alexis.  “You don’t mind?  It was something I just had to do.”

            “It called to you,” Alexis smiled.  “I don’t mind at all.”  She punched her grinning brother in the stomach before they escorted Boston back to the camp. 

            “Boston visited with it,” Alexis said in a cryptic way.  She said nothing about the virgin qualification.  She imagined Lincoln understood and Lockhart may have guessed.  She assumed Captain Decker had no idea, and Alexis was not going to spell it out for him.

            “A unicorn.”  Mingus understood right away.  “Then we may have help guarding the camp against the creatures following us.”

            “I see no good in it,” Doctor Procter said, and he looked morose.

            “We still set a good watch,” Lockhart insisted.  “And if you think you hear or see something, make sure everyone is awake before you go to investigate.”

            That night, when everyone else was worried about defending the camp from ghouls and the bokarus, Boston dreamed about riding on the back of a unicorn.

Avalon 1.1: The Morning After

            “Did you hear that?”  The man picked up his spear

            “Hear what?”  The other man squinted into the dark beyond the wood.  “A predator of some kind?”

            “No.  Hush.”  The first man crawled slowly over the wood, crouched down low and began to inch forward.

            “Oleon.  Wait, shouldn’t we wake the strangers?”

            “No.  It may be nothing.  Just wait here.”

            The second man waited and waited.  He was about to go for help when he heard the rustle of the grass in front of him.  “Oleon, is that you?”  The man whispered before he saw the ghoul rise up right in front of him.  He barely had time to grab his spear and thrust.  He caught the ghoul dead center even as he looked down and saw a spear thrust into his own chest.

            The sun rose hot, but by that time most of the tents and things the people would carry were already packed and ready to go.  They found the two dead men at first light.  It was not hard to piece together what happened. 

            “It is just the ghoul’s way of reminding us that he is still here, watching,” Mingus said.

            “I’d rather have my bokarus back,” Lincoln said.

            “I’d rather have him here than running back to warn the other ninety,” Captain Decker said.  “You did say a hundred.”

            Mingus nodded.  “And where there are a hundred, there is a chief who controls and directs the others.  They may not know exactly what we did, but you can be sure, whatever time zone they are in, they already know we are here.”

            “Cheery thought,” Lockhart said, and he looked over to where the girls had gathered.  Iris was there, and Hespah had warmed up to Katie, Boston and Alexis.  Iris was speaking.

            “Hespah said I can keep mother’s comb.  Isn’t it beautiful?”  She held up the comb, white and clean.

            “Ivory,” Katie identified it.

            “Yes, it is beautiful,” Boston confirmed.

            “Now you will always have your mother with you,” Alexis said, and she reached for Hespah’s hand which the girl willingly gave.  “Both of you.  And you will always have each other.”  Alexis smiled.

            Iris was ten and still a girl.  Hespah was thirteen but had the look of a young woman.  But when the two hugged and a few more tears fell, the others remarked how much they looked alike.

            “I don’t understand how she can look so much like her sister,” Boston wondered.

            “Because she is her sister,”  Alexis responded.  “I mean Hespah is her sister.  But what I don’t understand is why she doesn’t look more like Amri, or Pan for that matter.”

            Katie raised her hand.  “I understand that much.  Outward appearance is a very small portion of a person’s genetic makeup.  I suppose she will always look different, especially when she is a he which is the part I still don’t really get.”

            “Won’t always look different,” Alexis said.  “There are the reflections.”

            Katie looked at Alexis with curiosity etched all over her face, but she said nothing because Iris and Hespah were finished crying for the moment.

            The people, with the help of the travelers, piled all of the remaining firewood on the bodies and set them on fire.  Then the people headed North while the Travelers headed south.

            “We will go to Neamon’s village by the sea and seek to live among them,” Atonis said.

            “I am sure everything will work out well,” Lockhart said and shook the man’s hand.  He paused, then, because Iris was tugging on his sleeve.  “Yes Iris?”

            “The gate should come up quick since we will be moving in opposite directions.”  Iris said it and turned her back immediately to stand beside Hespah and take her hand.

            It was an hour before anyone spoke.  A mass grave will do that.

            “We are making excellent time.”  Doctor Procter looked at his amulet.

            “Shut up.”  Captain Decker was rude and people stopped to look at the man.  “Something in the bushes following us.”

            “Can’t be the ghoul.  They are creatures of the night,” Roland said.

            “They are not bound to the night,” Mingus countered.

            “Ahh!”  Lieutenant Harper was startled and Captain Decker fired his weapon.  The ghoul was there, but also in three other places.

            “What are you firing at?”  Lockhart yelled.

            “Close your eyes,” Mingus commanded.  “The ghoul has your eyes.”  Lieutenant Harper did not hesitate, but Captain Decker took a second before he closed his.  They heard the ghoul let out a sound of frustration, and Doctor Procter took several steps in that direction. 

            “No!”  The doctor shouted at the creature.  “You cannot have them.”  With that, they all saw it just ahead, but it was only a glimpse.  The thing made another sound.  It sounded hesitant and uncertain before it melted right down into the solid ground.

            “It has gone underground,” Mingus said.  “It will rest.  Quick, now is our chance to put some distance between us.”

            “Could we dig it up?”  Captain Decker asked as he opened his eyes.

            Mingus shook his head.  “They are insubstantial underground.  There is no way we could hurt it.”

            “Too bad,” Lockhart said as they made for the gate.  “And I noticed it went first for the marines, so they are not just dumb beasts following instinct.”

            “Neither is the bokarus which I assume is still on our trail,” Lincoln said, and Alexis took his arm.  He worried too much, but at least this time there were things to worry about.

Avalon 1.1: Out of the Darkness

            “It was a good thing the bokarus left you alone after that.”  Boston had a good imagination and could not get the image of the horribly burned man out of her mind.

            “It was my daughter,” Atonis said softly.  “Not Hespah, but my little one, Iris.  She was only seven.  She stood up in the face of that great wind and yelled as loud as her little lungs could yell.  “Bokarus!”  That is how we know the name.  “No!  Go away!  You do not belong here!”  The spirit had just thrown Mumbai into the fire and it stopped to face my daughter.  I was very afraid for her, but then Iris reached for the ghost and it raced away before she could touch it.  It never came back, until now.

            Boston said no more so Atonis said no more.  But Boston did take Lockhart’s arm the way Alexis held Lincoln’s arm, and Lockhart did not push her away.

            The sun went down while the moon came up bright in the sky, though it looked to be a waning moon.  From a distance, the camp appeared to be a well ordered community with a half-dozen tent-like structures in a circle around a central fire.  It was up on the highest hill in the middle of nowhere.  The nearest little woods were some distance, but there appeared to be plenty of deadwood stacked around the camp like a barrier against the wild.

            Captain Decker and Lieutenant Harper got out their night vision binoculars and passed them around.  They had to get close to the camp before they heard the shouting and screaming.  They started to run when two dark but human looking figures rose up before them.  They paused, but Captain Decker had put on his night goggles and he opened fire without waiting for the order.  Both figures fell.

            Roland touched Lockhart’s shoulder before Lockhart could yell.  He got all their feet moving with one word.  “Ghouls.”

            Alexis got out the wand she had been working on and managed a light, like a golden spotlight on their path to the camp.  It helped, until a darkness responded.  It came out from the camp, put out the light that it followed like a dog might follow a trail and with a snap it knocked Alexis back on her rump.

            Captain Decker fired in the direction from which the darkness came, and this time Lockhart yelled.  “Decker.  There are people here!”

            They pushed through the firewood that circled the camp and broke into the center space by the fire.  Men had spears and women threw stones, but the ghouls did not appear to be bothered by it all.  Captain Decker, Lieutenant Harper and Lincoln all opened fire as soon as they had a clear shot.  Three ghouls went down.  Another was mauled by Lockhart’s shotgun, and if not yet dead, it soon would be.

            Mingus appeared to be counting, but came alert as a ghoul grabbed Boston by the back of her collar.  He sent a fireball into the Ghoul’s face which made it let go.  Boston fell and spun and unloaded six bullets into the creature’s chest. 

            Lieutenant Harper and Alexis were already checking the men, women and children who appeared to be dead.  Captain Decker with his night goggles caught another attempting to flee the camp.  Then Lincoln heard a scream from one of the tents.  Girls were screaming and it sounded like Atonis responded “Aaii-ii”

            Lincoln ran and arrived at the same time as Atonis.  They saw a ghoul with a woman in one hand.  She was limp and lifted completely off the ground, and the ghoul tossed her away like so much dead meat.  There were two young girls in the corner, screaming and scared senseless.  That was about all Lincoln could see in the second he had to glimpse the action.  He opened fire and did not stop firing until the ghoul was laid out flat. 

            Lincoln watched Atonis run to his children.  The ghoul, one of the big ones at about eight feet in height, shriveled up like a beach ball with an air leak.  It began to compress until it was no bigger than a hand, and then it melted into the soil and left only a sickly green smudge where it had been.

            “Alexis.  Lockhart.”  Lincoln called, and they came to the door.  Lockhart helped Atonis carry his dead wife out into the open where she was put with the others.  Alexis and Lincoln brought the children who looked like they might never stop crying.  As they walked past, Lockhart heard Mingus utter two words:  “only nine.”

            The survivors slept outside by the fire that night to be near their loved ones one last time.  There was never a moment in the night when crying could not be heard.  The travelers stayed with them out in the open and left their tents packed away.  Over supper,  Boston read from her database for any who cared to listen.

            “Ghouls, a type of lesser spirit of the family of Djin.  They feed off the fear and terror they induce in their victims and in the end suck out the life force.  It is said, where there is one, there are ten and where there are ten, there are a hundred.”  She looked up at Roland before she turned her eyes to Lockhart.  “So there may be more of them out there.”

            “I think maybe one more,” Mingus said.  “I think these are the ten who followed us through a number of time zones before we lost them.”

            Alexis apologized.  “I’m sorry.  I did not think they came this far or I would have mentioned them.”  She looked at her father and wondered why he did not mention them either.

            “Probably still looking for you and your father,” Lincoln said.

            “The family of Djin?”  Lieutenant Harper interrupted.

            “Genies,” Roland and Boston spoke together.

            “Tell me about these ghouls,” Lockhart said and he looked at Mingus.

            “They can play with the mind,” Roland said  “They can make you see things that aren’t there.”

            “I may have mentioned that glamours are hard to cast on others,” Mingus spoke openly.  “It would be hard for Procter, Roland Alexis and I to make everyone here look African to blend in with the locals.  But Ghouls can easily cast illusions over others and over things to make you see and hear all sorts of things and literally frighten you to death.  We caught these by surprise and unprepared, but there is likely one still out there.”

            “So we need to set up a watch in the night,” Captain Decker concluded.

            “A single ghoul can only affect one or two minds at a time,” Mingus added.  “What do you think, Procter?”  He looked over, but Doctor Procter was sound asleep.  He did not appear to be adversely affected by all the death around him.  Mingus just shook his head.

            “We will help to watch in the night,” Atonis volunteered the survivors in the camp and Lockhart nodded while Alexis spoke.

            “You don’t mind?”

            Atonis looked back at his people.  Six had died, but there were eighteen survivors.  “We will not sleep well in any case,” he said and turned again to look at Alexis.  “And without your help we would all be dead.”

            Iris came up to Boston and knelt beside her.  Her older sister, Hespah kept back just a little, but Iris came right up close  “Boston?”  When Boston turned her head, Iris cried all over her.  What could Boston do but hold the young girl, pat her back and say, “hush” and comfort the girl.

Avalon 1.1: The Lone Hunter

            The travelers stayed where they were for the rest of that night.  It was hard for them to get back to sleep, but the high ground was a good defensive position and the trees were there to fall back into in case whatever scared the bokarus decided to show up.

            By morning, most of the herd had wandered off and everyone took a deep breath.  There were predators in the night that came to feast on the beasts they had to shoot, and even then they could see the vultures shredding the remains, but that was far enough away so as not to cause concern.

            Alexis was rinsing out her pot when she saw the man in the distance.  He stood straight and tall and held a spear that was half-again his height. 

            “What do you think he wants?”  Lincoln whispered to her.  Alexis shrugged and went back to her work.  They packed the camp and even as Doctor Procter checked the amulet, the distant man began to trot toward them.  Lockhart made them wait.

            The man was tall and dark skinned which caused Lincoln to comment.  “He looks more like a Massai warrior than a North African.”

            “No Phoenician, Roman, Visigoth or Arab blood in him yet,” Lieutenant Harper responded first.

            “Yes.  Very good,” Mingus praised her even as Captain Decker raised his gun to ready position.

            “Halloo.”  The man called when he was still distant.  “You were in the stampede.  I hope everyone is alright.”

            “Yes, thank you,” Lockhart shouted back as the man began to come up the rise.  He looked once at Captain Decker and his dark skin before he turned to the speaker.

            “You are from the land of the Great River?”  The man asked.

            “We are travelers,” Lockhart said.  “And you live in this land?”

            The man pointed and Lockhart saw that Doctor Procter confirmed that it was the right direction for them as well.  “But it is only our camp.  We are also travelers.  We follow after the herd.” 

            “My name is Lockhart,” he said and this time he forcibly took the man’s hand and shook it.  Then he introduced everyone around.  After the man got the idea, the man grinned and shook everyone’s hand except the elves.  He merely stared at them and Doctor Procter did not offer his hand.

            “I am Atonis,” he said at last.  “If you are traveling in my direction you must come and stay the night in my camp.  You will be safe there from the stampede and the beasts of the night.”

            Lockhart simply nodded, so Alexis spoke.  “Thank you.”

            “My camp is a whole day from here,” the man spoke again after they started to walk. 

            “Perhaps we can add some meat to your fire,” Boston tried to be cordial.

            “Along the way we will have to do lunch,” Lockhart told her.  “And you thought that expression just belonged to your generation.”  Lockhart looked back.  Mingus and Roland were on the flanks.  Decker and Harper were in rear guard position.  Lincoln and Alexis were in front of the marines and Lincoln was jotting something down in his notebook.  Boston was on his heels or beside him, and Doctor Procter was wandering aimlessly in the middle, not even looking at his amulet.

            “I must ask,” Atonis said after a while.  “I heard the wail of the spirit in the night.  I was not surprised to see the herd start to run.  But tell me, do you know what makes this sound?”

            “A bokarus,” Boston spoke right up.  “A green man.  It is a spirit of the wild.  It protects the wilderness and hates any human intrusion that interferes with the natural order of things.”

            “And it is following us,” Lockhart added and looked back at Doctor Procter, but this time the doctor made no objection.  More likely, the Doctor did not hear.

            “I have heard this once before,” Atonis said.  “This spirit is not a good thing.”  He said no more about it until lunch.  Roland brought in a gazelle after only a few minutes chase, and Mingus got a fire started.  Alexis made bread but that was the only thing that opened Atonis’ eyes.  Clearly he knew what the elves were and was not going to be surprised at anything they might do.

            It was a good lunch but they overstayed their time, first because Boston explained why they were traveling with two spirits of the earth, as Atonis called the elves; and then Atonis told the story of his first encounter with the bokarus.

            “It was three years ago and my friend Mumbai was to celebrate the marriage of his daughter to a good man.  He wanted to build a great celebration fire and so he had us gather all the wood in the little forest that we could find.  It was not enough for him, so he took a sharp stone and cut many young trees to add to the fire.  They did not burn well, being green, but Mumbai was determined that his daughter should have the biggest fire, ever.

            “As we celebrated, we were interrupted in the night by the wail of the angry spirit.  It flew like a bird in the sky around and around.  The wind became strong and people fell to their knees, afraid of the sound and the wind.  We were all afraid.  All at once, the wind picked Mumbai up off the ground and threw him into the heart of the great fire.  People screamed and the bokarus left us as we pulled my friend from the fire. 

            “His clothes were burned to him and could not be taken off him.  He had great swellings of white bubbles everywhere that burst and made him smell of cooked meat.  Much of his body was charred like the ash after the fire is done.  He was in great pain and in the morning he died.

            “Many said then that we should go to the village of Neamon and dwell there with the village people.  They said the grasslands were becoming too dangerous, but many said no.  We have lived well since then, but we have not forgotten.  And now that the bokarus is back, I do not know what we will do.”

            Everyone said they were sorry and Boston and Alexis hugged the man while he cried.  Lincoln handed him a handkerchief and got him to blow his nose.  It was already late when they started walking again.

            “It will be dark before we arrive,” Atonis said.  “But with this host of people, I expect no trouble.”  Lockhart and Lincoln both looked back and wondered if what scared off the bokarus might follow them after dark, but neither said a word.

Avalon 1.1: The Dead of Night

After 4480 BC on the Sahara Grasslands.  Kairos: Iris of the Anamites

Recording…

            Boston stepped through the gate and found a hand pressed over her mouth.  It was Lincoln’s hand.  Good thing he was there because otherwise she would have screamed.  A wildebeest was pressed up against her leg.  It begrudgingly moved.  Meanwhile, Lockhart and the others came through quietly, and the herd made a little room, but that was all.

            “Doctor.”  Lockhart whispered the word, but Doctor Procter did not move.  He appeared frozen in place.  Roland stepped up and one beast stepped aside while Roland reached for the amulet.

            “No!”  The Doctor yelled and covered his chest with his hand like he was protecting some great secret.  Several beasts were startled.  They made more room for the people and soon settled down again, but that was a dangerous moment.  They might have all been trampled if the herd started to run.  Doctor Procter looked up at Roland and his outstretched hand.  He looked surprised by his own word.  He pulled out the amulet and both he and Roland looked, and Roland pointed to the south and west, into the setting sun.

            They walked slowly, like a little herd of their own, while the sun went down and the moon rose.  There were zebras, gazelle and antelope in this herd.  Just as the last of the light began to fade, they found some elephants and a couple of giraffes grazing on a small copse of trees.  Boston though it was safe to speak if she whispered.

            “Sahara grasslands,” she spoke as they moved to the far side of the trees where there was some room for them to breathe.  They had walked for more than an hour by then and still there was no end of the herd in sight.  “I didn’t know what that meant, but I see it meant Africa.”

            “No kidding,” Captain Decker said.

            “Before the Sahara turned to dust,” Lincoln nodded.

            “But the soil is no good here.”  Mingus knelt to touch a handful.  “Full of sand already.”

            Alexis joined him to look for herself.  “Unless this land is getting good rainfall, a herd such as this won’t take long to turn the Sahara into the desert we all know.”

            Something laughed in the distance.  “Hyenas,” Roland named them.

            “Lions and tigers and bears,” Lockhart said.  “We better keep moving while we can and pray we find the edge of this herd before too long.”  He looked up.  They were lucky the moon was already up and three quarters full.  In that land with little undulating hills, it was sufficient to see where they were going.

            It took two hours to reach a point where the herd thinned out sufficiently for the group to spread out a little and relax.   A lion roared a warning somewhere off to their left and it made Lincoln jump.  It was another half-hour before Lockhart finally agreed they were far enough out of range to pitch camp for the night.  They stopped on the edge of another small woods, so there was plenty of wood for the fire.  In fact, they built three fires on a small hill out in the open.  They placed the fires in a triangle shape far enough apart so they could set up their tents inside the light.

            “At least there is no shortage of game,” Captain Decker said.

            “Good for attracting lions, I bet,”  Lieutenant Harper countered.

            Roland simply pulled his bow and trotted back the way they had come.  He easily shot a Wildebeest and a zebra and cut rather large flank steaks.  He returned to the camp and left the carcasses where they lay in the open.

            They ate well that night, though the wildebeest proved to be tough and stringy.  The zebra was good.  Everyone said so except Boston who declined to partake.  She said zebras reminded her too much of her horse back home – Spunky.

            After they ate, Lockhart looked at the moon.  It was still rising.  “Lincoln and Alexis get the first watch.  Captain Decker and Roland take the second watch.  Mingus and I will take the third watch.  Boston and Katie can watch the sun come up,” Lockhart ordered.

            “What?”  Boston sat up straight.  “You want Katie and me up early so we can cook breakfast?  Well, forget it.”

            “Actually, I want a pair of Elf eyes available in the dark of the night, but now that you mention it, I take my eggs over easy.”

            Boston made a face.

            “What about me?”  Doctor Procter asked, not that he sounded like he minded getting a full night’s sleep.

            Lockhart looked at the man.  There was something wrong there, but Lockhart smiled.  “Old man, you just hang on to that amulet and keep it safe for us all.”

            Doctor Procter did not argue.

            It was three in the morning when Mingus abandoned his corner of the watch to speak with Lockhart.  “I do not understand my friend,” he admitted.  “Procter is usually a gregarious and talkative fellow, but he has been so quiet.”

            “I’ve been thinking about that myself,” Lockhart said as he moved a little so the elder elf could sit on the log they dragged out from the woods.  He was adjusting.  “Of course, I didn’t know him before.”

            “Strange.  You think you know someone.”  Mingus shrugged.

            “I was thinking that maybe after all those years of study, to now finally have a chance to see with his own eyes.  It must be overwhelming,”  Lockhart offered an explanation.

            Mingus shook his head at that.  “I studied the lives of the Kairos longer than him.  It is exciting, but I would have thought it would make him talk more, not less.”

            They were interrupted by the sound of a distant howl.  It started out low and rose up the scale to a scream.  It was no animal.

            “The bokarus,” Mingus said.

            “It followed us.”  Lockhart nodded.

            They heard the howl rise up to a scream three times before they heard something else.  It sounded like thunder.

            “Everybody up!” They yelled and went to the tents to be sure.

            “Stampede,” Boston named it.

            “And headed right for us,” Roland confirmed.

            “To the trees?”  Lincoln asked.  But Mingus shook his head.  That would not help.

            “Roland.”  Alexis called her brother.  “Split the herd.”

            They grabbed hands.  “One, two, three,” and the light went out from their hands and formed a golden triangle with the point in the distance.  The stampede split down both sides of the triangle and away from their camp, but a few animals stumbled through the light.

            “Lieutenant.”  Captain Decker only had to say that much before both marines raised their rifles and began to pick off the ones inside the light.  Boston and Lincoln pulled out their pistols and Lockhart readied the shotgun in case the ones inside got too close.

            In the distance the howls continued until suddenly it cut off in mid-scream.  Then they heard it no more.

            “Father!”  Alexis yelled.  The pressure against the outer edge of the triangle of light was becoming too much to bear.

            “Father.”  Roland spoke softly through his teeth as Mingus stepped up and laid a hand on each shoulder.  The light strengthened as the elder elf managed to add his magic to the force, and it was enough.  Once the screaming stopped, the herd soon settled down.  It was too large to move far and fast outside of a migration.

            “The bokarus must have broken off a piece off the main herd,” Lincoln said.  “Good thing the screaming stopped.”

            “Yes,” Lockhart shouldered his shotgun.  “But I want to know what scared the bokarus bad enough to make it stop.”

Avalon 1.0: The Storm

            It did not take long for the boys to get in position.  Pan listened for the bird calls.  Duba was last, as usual, but as soon as he was set, Pan put his fingers to his lips and let the whistle scream.  It echoed from around the Shemashi camp, and then there was shouting, two tents collapsed and sticks on fire were tossed into the crowd gathered around Alexis.  Several of the Shemashi panicked.  They began to gather the children and run toward their own tents and shouted at each other which increased the confusion. 

            The boys ran through the crowd yelling “Fire!” in the Shemashi tongue.  The shaman stuck his head out from his tent and frowned.  Hog, Chodo and Shmee appeared to be frozen where they were, beside Alexis who stood and wiped off her clothes.  Then the boys melted back into the woods and Pan said, “Go.”

            Mingus, Roland and Lincoln walked toward the camp while Bluebell and Honeysuckle flew up to Alexis and spoke in English.  “Come on, we have to go now.”

            “I’m coming,” Alexis said as she picked up her medical bag.  Shmee threw his hands over his eyes on sight of the Fee.  Chodo dropped his jaw.  Hog just looked angry, but he did nothing to interfere.

            “Miss Bell,” Hog said, and Bluebell paused long enough to stick her little tongue out at the man.

            Mingus, Roland and Lincoln stopped at ten yards and waited for Alexis.  The rest stood just visible at the edge of the camp.  They were armed, but looked relaxed, except Doctor Procter who stepped forward and pointed at the three men by the fire who had been their guests.

            “Kill them,” Doctor Procter shrieked.  “Quick.  Now is your chance.  Kill them all –“ The Doctor slammed his own hand against his mouth as Captain Decker and Lockhart both turned to stare at him.  “I don’t know why I said that,” Doctor Procter spoke in all honesty.  “I hate killing.”  He shook his head.

            The shaman came out to watch as Alexis stepped up to Mingus.  “Father.” She spoke in Shemashi and kissed Mingus on the cheek.  “Brother.”  They touched fists.  “Husband.”  They kissed in a way that made Honeysuckle sigh while Bluebell made embarrassed noises and flew rapidly in circles and backflips.

            Then it got dark, or as Mingus called it, goblin dark.  There was a scream much worse than the whistles.  Most of the people still in sight grabbed their ears and fell to the dirt.  A frightening presence was felt in the pit of the stomach and a spirit like a ghost began to fly in circles around the camp.  It quickly built up to a speed that called up a great wind and the sea began to rise.

            “Bokarus!”  The shaman identified the creature and began to chant and dance and rattle his necklace of claws and teeth.  Honeysuckle, Bluebell and Alexis all got out their wands and began to zap at the sky, though the thing moved too fast to hit.  The leaves in all the trees shook quite apart from the wind and the sea continued to rise.

            Pan climbed up on a boulder and shouted.  “Bokarus!  No!”  The thing stopped screaming and paused to face the boy.  It had an ethereal, ghost-like quality that frightened everyone except Pan who was angry and Mingus who was at an angle to send out a zap of his own.  Pan reached out to grab the creature, but Mingus’ ball of flame struck at the same time.  The creature screamed again, this time from being struck, and it tumbled off among the trees to disappear in the wilderness.

            “You almost singed my fingers,” Pan protested as he climbed back down.  The wind stopped.  The sea receded, and the oppressive air cleared and brightened. 

            After it was all over, Doctor Procter pulled his wand from his sleeve and looked at it like he hardly knew what it was.

            “Big help,” Mingus scolded as he walked by.

            “Honeysuckle.  Bluebell.”  Pan called and the fairies came right away.  “You need to stay with our friends and escort them to the next gate,” he whispered.  “Do what Lockhart tells you.  Watch them along the sides as they walk and don’t let the Bokarus near them.”

            “Oh, but that is scary,” Bluebell whispered in return.

            “We will do it,” Honeysuckle spoke for them both, and Pan smiled and spun around to find his boys gathered nearby.

            “Come on, boys.  Back to the secret tree.” Pan yelled, and he ran off, followed by the others, Ramina hot on his heels and the Duba bringing up the rear.

            It was late, but with Alexis’ insistence, the travelers opted to stay the night in the Shemashi camp rather than risk the Bokarus in the dark.  It was something Alexis and the Shaman worked out.  The people in the village kept their distance, but they appreciated the help rebuilding all the things knocked down by the boys and the wind, and they loved the bread.

            “I think the bread-crackers are self replicating,” Alexis pointed out.  “I used my whole pouch but now it is full again.”

            “Like the bullets,” Captain Decker said, but he said it in a way which suggested he was sorry he had not used any yet.

            “And the vitamins.”  Alexis nodded as she handed them out.  They had missed their daily dose in the morning.

            “You know,” Doctor Procter spoke up.  “A bokarus is not a greater spirit.  I am not sure it even qualifies as a lesser spirit.  I am surprised it has taken an interest in you humans, what with our traveling with the company.”

            Mingus explained, as usual.  “What he means is a bokarus is not beyond elf magic. We may pose a threat to it.  But evidently, the bokarus has judged you people from the future to be a bigger threat to the environment so it is willing to take the risk to take you out.”

            “Yes, I was wondering why it was following us,” Lockhart said.  He was thinking it was the same bokarus from the last time zone, and that meant it could follow them from zone to zone.  “But how do we take it out?  You got a good shot at it, but it did not seem badly injured.”

            Mingus shrugged, so Roland spoke.  “They are nearly impossible to damage as long as they remain in their ghost form.”

            Boston got out her database.  “Bokarus or Green man is a defender of the primordial wilderness.  It is catalogued here somewhere between little and lesser spirit.”  She showed the chart, and Bluebell spoke from her shoulder.

            “Yes, but they are scary.”

            Lincoln thought what Bluebell thought but verbalized what Lockhart wondered.  “But it seems to me the question is whether or not this bokarus is the same as the last one or if we just happened to run into two of them.”

            “Yes,” Lockhart agreed.

            “Can’t be the same,” Doctor Procter said quickly.

            “It must be,” Captain Decker said at the same time.

            “It might be, but not necessarily,” Mingus danced between the two opinions.

            Boston stood in the silence that followed.  “Well, while you argue about it, Katie and I and our new friends are going to get some sleep.  I assume we will have to leave about dawn if we hope to reach the gate in daylight.”  She looked at Doctor Procter who looked at his amulet.  He only shook it once before he spoke.

            “Yes.  Er, yes.” 

            Lieutenant Harper stood and followed Boston while Honeysuckle zipped ahead to open the tent flap.

            “But what about Pan?”  Bluebell picked right up where she left off, which was very unusual for a Fee.  “He is my heart.” 

            “I am sure he is,” Boston responded.  “But maybe you just need to back up a little and give him a chance to grow up first.”

            “That is what I have been telling her,” Honeysuckle said as they went inside the tent.

            After that, the morning came quick.  Hog and Shmee came back in their boat not expecting the village to still have visitors.  They avoided the strangers as well as they could, but Chodo was pleased to point them out.  None of the travelers felt obliged to confront the man.  Instead, they concentrated on packing and preparing to leave.

            They moved as quickly as they could through the wilderness.  They took a few rests and stopped only briefly for lunch, eyes open the whole way.  Bluebell and Honeysuckle watched their flank along the way, but they never caught wind of the bokarus until the end of the day as they approached the gate.  Then they only heard a wailing in the distance.  It was a mournful song, like the wail of a ghost in torment.

            “I hope that thing isn’t the same one,” Captain Decker said.

            “You see, Hon?”  Alexis grinned at Lincoln.  “You did not need to say it.”

            “Sounds like you stepped on its toe pretty good,” Lockhart said to Mingus who merely nodded.

            “Here it is.”  Doctor Procter did not wait for them.  Boston and Lieutenant Harper took a couple of minutes to make the fairies get big so they could properly hug them.  It was no surprise that Honeysuckle appeared as a full grown woman and Bluebell appeared as a fourteen-year-old.

            “I’m going to miss you, Katie,” Honeysuckle said.

            “And I will miss you,” Lieutenant Harper admitted.

            “Maybe we will see each other again?”  Honeysuckle suggested.  Lieutenant Harper looked at Boston who shook her head.

            “Maybe,” Lieutenant Harper smiled and she and Boston went through the gate.  Lockhart, Captain Decker and Mingus brought up the rear.