Medieval 6: K and Y 16 Good Men, part 2 of 4

Yasmina

Yasmina stepped aside and Junior came from all that way in the past to stand in her shoes, as the Kairos sometimes says. He kindly kept up a glamour, so he looked, sounded, and even acted like Yasmina, though it was actually Junior in her place.

“Be free,” he said simply to the governor, and the governor became instantly free of the enchantment. The governor shook his head once and looked up and shouted. “Badroul!” She and al-Din were presently kissing. Then, everyone came at once. Suffar and a handful of guards came from the palace, because, through his sorcery, he was able to perceive that something was happening in the garden. The Jinn came to see what disturbed his spell over the governor, and he took one look, and despite the glamour, he shrieked and tried to run away.

“Stay,” Junior said, and the Jinn froze in mid-air, about two feet off the ground.

“I have sent the guards to the gates and to the docks,” Suffar bragged. “There will be no escape for you.”

Al-Rahim pulled his sword. Ziri joined him, though he faced three on one until Harun and al-Asad came up from the other side. Ziri got stabbed, but then it was four on six, and Aisha made it five on six and would fight like Yrsa the She Bear. Al-Din, if he could tear himself away from his girl, would even the odds.

Two men came at al-Rahim at once, but the old soldier easily drove them back and cut one in the arm. Ziri, Harun, and al-Asad each took a man, though Ziri was already finished.

Al-Suffar had no patience to let things play out. He fired something like sorcerer’s poison at al-Rahim and struck the old retainer square in the chest. Al-Rahim’s heart skipped a beat. He clutched his chest and stumbled. Suffar grinned, but Aisha arrived, and the two guardsmen had no better luck against her than they did against the old man. Aisha cut the other one with her knife that flashed out at super speed.

Al-Din pulled his sword and moved to defend his love, and Junior moved with him, looking like Yasmina now dressed in her armor. Badroul would have followed, but Junior made sure she felt a sudden need to see to her father who stayed on the bench and looked stunned. He stared at the Jinn frozen in mid-air. He kept trying to figure out how the trick was done. He did not see any rope or wires or anything.

“Enough,” Junior said in Yasmina’s voice. “You have misused the gift of magic given to you. Besides, the Prophet has condemned sorcery, so let it be taken from you.” He waved his hand, and suddenly Suffar was the one who clutched his chest.

Al-Rahim got up and faced his man. Aisha faced the other guard and made quick work of the man. Al-Din arrived and faced Suffar who pulled his sword and tried to defend himself. Their swords crossed twice, and al-Din slipped and stabbed Suffar in the chest. Al-Din was the lucky one. It could have gone either way.

Ziri did not survive, and Harun would now limp like his friend, al-Asad, but the guards were all put down. Junior nodded and returned to the Jinn. He lifted his hand and the lamp appeared.

“Please. Give me another chance,” the Jinn begged.

Junior just shook Yasmina’s head and crushed the lamp. The Jinn faded, yelling “No. Please,” until he vanished altogether. A great flash of light appeared, and Yasmina rubbed her eyes and asked, “What happened?”

“You killed the wicked Jinn and set my father free,” Badroul said.

“You killed him?” Aisha asked as she walked up, helping al-Rahim, who pushed away her help.

“He is free from the lamp, but he is now on the other side in the fiery land of the Jinn where he will live out the last of his years, unable to return to this earth. Junior checked. He does not have many years left, and the sad thing is he knows he could have lived them here, in the land of the living, but he simply could not resist being wicked.” Yasmina rubbed her eyes some more and found some tears, but they were from the flash of light, not sympathy for the Jinn.

“We must get to the docks,” al-Rahim said suddenly, taking everyone’s attention. Suffar and the Jinn sent the army to the docks and al-Din’s men and others are prepared to defend their ships. Men will die on both sides.”

“Governor?” Yasmina asked to stir him from his staring at where the Jinn used to be.

The governor looked at her in her armor and looked at Badroul. He looked at al-Din and threw his hands up in surrender. He said to Yasmina, “You look like a Roman, all immodest with your face and hair uncovered.” He shook his head, and it looked like a what is this world coming to kind of shake. “We must hurry,” he finished.

When they arrived at the docks, they found there had been one attack, but the guards were badly outnumbered at first, so they withdrew after light casualties on both sides. Clearly, the guards did not expect resistance. They probably imagined marching in and simply taking control of who came and went. They had to get reinforcements, and brought up men from the caravan camps, and some from the gates.

Fortunately, the governor was able to put an end to further bloodshed. It helped that the guards no longer felt compelled to interfere with lawful commerce in the port. The men of al-Din were glad to have him home. The men from Amalfi were glad they did not have to fight. Only a couple of Vikings were unhappy and said things like, “You call that a fight?”

“They sound like dwarfs,” Yasmina whispered to Aisha just before Francesco ran up.

“I was so afraid for you.” he said as he took hold of her.

“I was afraid for you,” she said, wrapping her arms around him.

“No, I knew what I was doing. You might have been walking into a trap and I would have lost you just when I found you.”

“No. I was afraid you would do something heroic and stupid and get yourself killed and make me a double widow before we even got married.”

“No… and anyway, besides Lady Kristina and your spirit maid, who I see clearly now. Do you have any more surprises?”

“Lots,” she said with a big grin.

He nodded. “Good thing I like surprises,” he said, and kissed her briefly before they caught up with what was happening.

Al-Rahim sat on a chest; the same chest Yasmina sat on earlier. He said he could not stand. His legs were numb.

“Lady?” Aisha asked. It was a serious question. Aisha had gotten in the habit of calling her by her name or calling her princess. Lady was a reference to the Kairos and Yasmina understood what she was asking with her having to ask. She shook her head. The truth was people died and even the gods were not allowed to change that truth. She began to cry just thinking about it, but al-Rahim reached out and grabbed Francesco by the shirt. He pulled the man close.

“You better take care of my princess and always love her and treat her like the precious flower she is, or I swear I will come back from the grave and haunt you.”

Francesco was not disturbed by the rough handling. “I will. I do. And it is my desire and plan to respect her and treat her well for as long as we shall live.”

“Good,” al-Rahim said. “Just so we understand each other.” With that, he closed his eyes and slipped off the chest. Yasmina and Aisha cried. Badroul and al-Din found some tears. Omar, Ali, and Sulayman, who came to join them, stayed silent with Francesco. Only the governor said something.

“I think he was a very good man.”

Medieval 6: K and Y 13 To the New World, part 3 of 3

Yasmina

Men came to the edge to look, and one big, ugly young man near her age stepped to the edge and let out a lustful smile, like he could see what lay hidden inside her abaya and niqab where only her eyes showed. “Nidaros, in Norway, a land so far to the north, even the bears turn white in the snow, if you know what snow is.” He chuckled. “I am William Brantsson, and you are?”

“I am Princess Yasmina of Mecca and Medina,” she said over al-Rahim’s and Aisha’s protests. “William is not a Norwegian name. How did you come by it?”

“My mother. Inga the Volva of Trondelag.’

“Is Inga still alive?” Yasmina asked.

“Yes,” the man said, and his expression turned to pure curiosity.

“And is Buttercup still her friend? And how are Yrsa and Alm?”

“How can… How do you…”

“William,” a gruff voice interrupted the conversation. Three older men, near fifty came to the railing, and the one in the middle spoke. “I am Captain Knud Frodeson. What can we do for you?”

“You and all your men can help,” Yasmina said. She smiled, though they could not see it. She smiled harder when she recognized the two old men that stood beside the captain, and then the pressure on her became too great to resist. Yasmina went away, and Kirstie took her place and came dressed in her well-known armor, her shield and battleaxe at her back. Kirstie was a good four inches taller than Yasmina and her eyes were bright blue as against Yasmina light brown eyes. The rest had not been noticeable under all of Yasmina’s clothing, but Kirstie knew she still had Yasmina’s smile in place.

“Knud,” she said. “Are you still raising puppies? Oswald and Edwin, is your mother still alive? How is your brother, Sibelius?”

“Lady Kristina of Strindlos.” Knud shouted. “You don’t look a day older than when I saw you.”

“It is Oswald the Elder now,” the old man said of himself. “And Edwin the Dog.” he pointed and the old man on the end appeared to be crying. “Mother passed away some years ago.”

“I am sorry to hear that,” Kirstie said.

Knud got hold of his voice. “But how can you be here? what happened to that young girl?”

Kirstie did not answer them. She said, simply. “Bring your men and weapons. We may have to defend the docks and your ship.” She turned and reached out to kiss al-Rahim’s cheek. Unlike Yasmina, she did not have to get on her toes to do it. “Thank you for taking good care of me,” she added and took Aisha’s hand. “And your cousin says thank you, and she never thought of making herself appear older, obvious as that is.”

“Maybe you didn’t need older,” Aisha said. “Yasmina needs as much older as she can get.”

Kirstie listened to Yasmina protesting in her head before she agreed with the elf.

The next stop for Kirstie, even as the Vikings began to come to the dock, was the longboat from the Amalfi ship. This time al-Din shouted first.

“Francesco!”

“Al-Din,” Francesco responded, and he hurried to get to the dock. “I’ve been looking for you for more than a year. I was beginning to think what the governor said was true, that you met your end among the Fatimids. You know, I went there a few years ago searching for Yasmina. I opened trade with the Fatimids for all the Amalfitani. I have been up the coast, all the way to Syria and beyond, to Roman territory, but I have heard nothing of her.”

Kirstie paused in her conversation with William Brantsson to respond. “I was held captive in the palace in Mahdiya. I was forced to marry al-Hakim, the Mahdi’s grandson. Sadly, or maybe fortunately, he had no interest in marriage, at least to a girl. I had to kill him because he was serving the Masters. I suppose that makes me a widow.”

“Who is this person?” Francesco asked al-Din.

Al-Din smiled hugely because he thought he understood. “Yasmina, except she is not Yasmina at the moment. She is…”

“Lady Kristina of Strindlos,” Aisha said with an equally big smile.

“Stop it,” Francesco said. “I have searched for Yasmina for these past four years, and though I have not found her, I will not be giving up.”

“Why is that?” Kirstie asked, even if she knew it was cheating.

“Because I want to tell her that I love her, though we hardly spent a week together. She sets my soul on fire. I kissed her once and I will not rest until I can kiss her again and every day for the rest of our lives. I may get old and die looking for her, but so be it.” He made a determined face. Kirstie thought he looked a bit silly, but Yasmina protested and said he looked wonderful. Meanwhile, the pressure in the other direction became too great and Kirstie traded again with Yasmina. She stayed in her armor, though the battleaxe and shield got replaced by a smaller shield such as a horseman might hold, and a sword, while Yasmina’s scimitar appeared at her side. She also came with her cloak, hood up, but her veil down so Francesco could see her face, and she spoke, not what Kirstie would say, but from her own heart.

“Did you mean it?”

Francesco gawked at the transition, but only for a moment before he stepped forward and took her in his arms. They kissed for the next few minutes and that settled matters nicely for the both of them.

Al-Rahim spoke to the Amalfi skipper. “Bring your fighting men to the dock. We may have to defend your ships and crew, depending on how things turn.”

At that moment, a young Arab came up with a young woman in tow. The woman shuffled along with her feet and never looked up. A middle-aged man came from the other direction, and he had his sword drawn. Al-Rahim turned to the swordsman first because he knew the man.

“Zayd the Christian.”

“Mubarak is dead,” Zayd said. “Some went to the house and Abu ibn Suffar is reported to be dead. I cannot confirm that, but many will be along shortly.”

Aisha hardly glanced at the Young Arab man, because she knew the girl from their time in the governor’s palace. She spoke because Yasmina was busy. “Sharin. Speak to me.”

Sharin finally looked up when she heard her name, and she breathed a great sigh of relief. “Oh, lady Aisha. I didn’t know it was you.”

“Here is the need,” Aisha spoke sharply like a commander on the battlefield, or in the kitchen as the case may be. “We need to get a few men, Princess Yasmina, and myself in to see the governor when he is not near Suffar or the Jinn. Perhaps in Princess Badroul’s chambers, if that can be arranged.”

“Oh, Lady. Men in the chamber of the Princess will be killed,” Sharin said.

“Only her Fiancé. There is precedent, as long as Captain al-Rahim and Ziri, Yasmina’s harem guard are there to chaperone, and maybe if you know a friendly guard in Badroul’s harem, that might help.”

“Sharin hardly had to think. “Harun and al-Asad are still here. They survived the pirates, though Harun limps. They have been assigned to the guards. They may help.”

Yasmina took a breath. “Harun and al-Asad are alive,” she said, and went right back at it with Francesco.

“It will take some time to arrange,” Sharin stated while her face showed that she was thinking about exactly how to arrange things. “Come to the princess garden gate in two hours.”

Francesco took a breath. “We can climb over where the tree is again,” he said, and returned to his preoccupation.

“We may need the two hours to calm these two down,” Aisha said and looked at the men who were all standing around, grinning at the couple.

“Come along Nasr,” Sharin said. She grabbed the young Arab’s hand to drag him behind her, and he did not seem to mind at all.

Yasmina pulled her head back for a minute to see. She said an aside to William Brantsson. “Like your mother once said, it must be in the air.” she paused long enough to think pressing up against poor Francesco with her chain mail could not be very comfortable. She thought of Kirstie’s blue dress, having just been Kirstie, and called to it. The dress instantly replaced her armor and weapons. It left her head and hair completely uncovered and showed a bit of her arms above the wrist and her shoulders. It even showed a bit down the front, which made Yasmina feel completely naked, but Francesco liked it. He almost fell over to look at her, but she held on to him so they could squeeze together and go for round two.

Medieval 6: K and Y 13 To the New World, part 2 of 3

Yasmina

Two women in full length, straight cut abayas made of black died Egyptian linen, and wearing full length niqabs so only their eyes were revealed came and knocked on the door to inquire about al-Din, the owner of the house. An old man, a retainer of some sort stood beside them, and a young man in traveling clothes complete with a veil of his own did most of the talking.

“We have come from Burqah in the west at the invitation of Ala al-Din to partake of his gracious hospitality as he offered in his many letters. My lord is in waiting to see the governor, and he sent his daughter and her maid ahead so that they might be refreshed. Is this not the house of al-Din?” Ali asked.

Al-Rahim determined that both Ali and Sulayman had both the brains and the courage that their leader Omar lacked. He ordered Omar to be in charge and told Sulayman privately to watch the horses and watch al-Din, and to keep al-Din’s face covered against being recognized and keep him out of trouble.

Ziri, the last Berber with them put on the appearance of a typical Bedouin guide. He was the one who went ahead through their long journey and spoke with the Berbers and Bedouin they encountered along the way to secure food for the people and fodder for the horses. They stopped at many farms and paid generously for what they received. Al-Rahim made sure he packed plenty of silver in the saddle bags for the journey. But often Ziri, or when he was still with them, Gwafa would do the talking. Now, in Alexandria, Ali got to do the talking. Ziri’s Arabic had a definite western accent. Al-Rahim’s was near enough perfect, but he and Yasmina had a slight accent and their being from the Hejaz might be noticed in certain word choices and phrases.

“Alas,” the man actually said the word as several other servant men and women came up behind him to listen. “Our young master al-Din went on a mission to the west, to the Fatimid fanatics. He has been declared dead by the governor and the property has been given to the governor’s vizir, al-Suffar. He is now the owner of this house, and his son now rules in al-Din’s place.”

“You do not sound happy about that,” Aisha spoke out of turn.

The man paused to look around at who was listening in. “No, no. We are all happy here,” he said without any conviction. “But Abu ibn Suffar does not like visitors. Please go away.” He sounded like he wanted to say, “Please run and save yourselves.”

“What happened to Princess Badroul, his true love?” Yasmina spoke before the man could close the door.

The man looked around again before he answered in a whisper. “Al-Suffar wishes her to marry his son, but she has resisted. She claims she will not marry until she hears for certain whether al-Din is dead or alive. The pressure to marry is great. I fear the governor may force his daughter. But that would be terrible for the girl. Abu is… sometimes…” He decided not to finish his sentence. “Good day,” he said and shut the door.

“So, we go to the palace and confront the governor,” al-Rahim suggested, but looked at Yasmina for confirmation.

“We will,” she agreed. “But first we need some inside information. Suffar is likely at that palace, and we want to get the governor alone and out of the influence of Suffar or the traitorous Jinn. She began to walk toward the docks on a whim, wondering if a friendly merchant might supply them with some information. She honestly thought of Francesco, but she hardly expected to find him.

Yasmina did not expect to get entirely accurate information, but she did find one of al-Din’s merchant captains, and he willingly shared what he knew. “The governor is hardly more than Suffar’s puppet. I heard rumors that a mighty Jinn is the power behind Suffar’s sudden rise to power, and I believe it has to be something like that. The man, Suffar, is as cruel and selfish as any I have ever seen. Now that young al-Din is gone, it is insufferable to work for the man, and his son is even worse. You were lucky to catch me in port. I have been considering sailing away and not coming back, but taking myself, my crew, and my ship to work for someone else.”

Yasmina remembered that Suffar was a sorcerer of a sort. But she concluded that the Jinn was the key to everything. “Well,” she said. “I can at least assure you of one thing.” she smiled for the captain as she called. “Aladdin.”

“Princess?” Al-Rahim questioned Yasmina’s decision s al-Din stumbled forward. The captain looked, fell to one knee, and praised Allah and the prophet for bringing the master home. Yasmina explained to al-Rahim.

“We need allies, back-up. Maybe an army of sailors and merchants who would rather work for al-Din. Captain Hazem al-Zahir is the first, and I bet he knows who to contact among al-Din’s people.”

The man stood at al-Din’s insistence, and al-Din hugged the man which both surprised the captain and put a look of determination on the man’s face. “I know exactly who to gather. Al-Suffar has elevated the three worst men to oversee the business. One runs the dock. One runs the house. And one, Mubarak, runs the stables and warehouse where the caravans gather.” He turned to call his nearby crew to come to him so he could send them to fetch the good men ready to rebel.

“The same Mubarak?” Yasmina asked Aisha. The elf had to pause and look at the sky before she produced an answer.

“I believe so.”

Yasmina smiled. “It’s a small world,” she said, and then looked at Aisha with a touch of fear in her eyes.

“Don’t worry,” Aisha said. “I won’t start singing.”

“Princess,” al-Rahim got her attention and pointed. “It appears the Amalfi are coming into the port.”

“Maybe they will help,” al-Din said. He had excellent trade relations with the Amalfitani through his friend Francesco d’Amalfi.

“Francesco?” Yasmina could not keep the desire from her voice.

“It may be,” Aisha said. There weren’t any imps, elves, dwarfs, or fee handy in the water to check for her. She grew up in the Hejaz, as did Yasmina. Aisha had some minimal contact with the sprites in the red sea, but she did not know any in the Mediterranean. She was a spirit of the earth and not automatically connected to the spirits in the water, air, or fire, so all she could do was shrug.

“Wait here,” Captain Hazem got her attention. He looked to the sky to judge the time. “Three hours and we will be back with plenty of men.”

Yasmina interrupted the man. “What I need is someone who has contacts inside the palace. We need to get al-Din alone with the governor where Suffar and the Jinn cannot interfere. It would be best to settle matters peacefully if we can.”

Hazem nodded as he stroked his beard. “I’ll see who I can find. Meanwhile, Ibrahim here will stay with you until we get back.” The man smiled and bowed to al-Din. Captain Hazem bellowed his orders and the crew split off in several direction to disappear in the crowd around the docks.

Yasmina’s eyes shot back to the Amalfi ship dropping anchor in the bay. She hoped it might be Francesco but she had no reason to suppose it was, or that the man ever even thought of her. He was Italian, hot-blooded, and probably had a girl in every port. She sighed and then caught sight of a ship pulled right up to the dock, and it was the last ship she ever expected to see. She stood from the chest she had been sitting on and walked straight to the ship. Of course, Aisha and all the men had to follow her.

“Princess?” Al-Rahim asked where she was going, but Yasmina did not answer. It was an actual Viking Longship, and she just had to know.

“Norsemen. Where are you from?” She asked in Kirstie’s Norwegian language.

Medieval 5: K and Y 18 Unexpected Meetings, part 4 of 4

Yasmina

When they entered the gates of Alexandria, Yasmina looked around at all the people bustling about on their errands and commented. “This city is alive, industrious. Not like the lazy places and villages we have visited.”

“It is full of Greeks and Turks. There are plenty of Christians and some Jews mingled in,” Aisha agreed, and pointed to several things, including a church.

“Very cosmopolitan,” Yasmina named it as they came to the market area and she got to look at many faces. Aisha continued to point out various things and people, but Yasmina zeroed in on one face in particular.

“Hold up,” al-Rahim said as they had to wait for a handful of armed men who crossed the street in front of them. Yasmina hardly noticed. Her eyes focused on the old man, and after a moment, it struck her.

“You there, Jinn,” Yasmina pointed at the old man and the old man looked startled. Yasmina stopped moving so Aisha stopped. The guards stopped, and only al-Rahim out front rode another twenty feet before he noticed and came back. “Yes, you. What are you doing here?”

“Who? Me?” The old man asked and pointed to himself. His eyes went wide with either shock or surprise, and he looked around to see people who paused to watch.

“Lady,” Aisha looked and sounded offended. “We do not traffic with such creatures.”

“Ah,” the old man seemed to understand something. “A spirit of light.”

“You do not belong here,” Yasmina said. “How did you get here? What are you doing here?”

The old man looked around at the people who were becoming curious about this exchange. “I can explain, only please, not here. I will take you to my master’s house and make all matters clear. Come.” He turned and waved for them to follow. “Come, come.”

Yasmina walked her horse after the man, so the others fell in behind her, but al-Rahim had to say something. “Princess?”

“It will be all right, I think,” Yasmina said. “But I may have to do something terrible if I don’t get a good answer.”

After a short way, they came to a gate and entered into the courtyard of a home which appeared to be a palace of sorts. Servants came to collect the horses, and al-Rahim only had to threaten them a little to take good care of their steeds and things. “And if anything is missing, you will be missing your heads,” he said. In that time and place that was only a little threat.

The old man Jinn took them inside to a large room with many cushions and tables set for guests, and he spoke. “I will just go and see about refreshments.”

“You will stay here,” Yasmina said sharply. “I don’t want you out of sight before I get an explanation.” She sat and the others sat with her except al-Rahim who fingered his knife.

“Very well,” the old man did not argue. He clapped for servants and gave instructions before he sat to face his guests. “How is it that you, a mere mortal should see through my disguise?” he asked.

Yasmina was not distracted. “What are you doing here? I know in the past Solomon the Great attached many of your kind to rings and lamps, whatever came to hand, and many jugs and jars where you were sealed in with his great seal. I also know, in the last days of the gods your kind were sent over to the other side, to the land of fire and sand, and a great veil was placed against your return. I also know that no Jinn has the power to pierce that veil and return to this world. It takes a great power on this side to bring one of you back to this Earth. So how did you get here and what are you doing here?”

The old man widened his eyes again in shock or surprise. “Who are you to be so wise, to know the ways of the Jinn?”

Aisha, who frowned in the Jinn’s presence, spoke plainly. “She is the Kairos, the Traveler in Time, the Watcher over History.”

The old man fell to his face and prostrated himself. “Al-Khidr,” he called her.

Yasmina gave Aisha a dirty look and spoke, trying to put kindness in her voice. “Sit up. Tell me your story. Make it a good one, but be honest, hard as that may be for you.”

The old man sat up slowly as he began. “You know, the Jinn do not live forever. We may live thousands of years, but we are not immortal. Neither are we gods, though we may appear that way to some because of the power we possess. I was one who was neither good nor bad. I was selfish and full of pride, and I used my skills to my advantage over the mortal world. It was Solomon himself who turned my pride against me and trapped me in a lamp.” He held out his hands and the lamp appeared in his palms. He set it gently on the table between them.

“Did you not go to the other side?” Al-Rahim asked as he finally took a seat.

“I did,” he said. “And for two thousand years, trapped in the lamp, and I contemplated all I had done in my days. I… I reformed and vowed if I had a chance to live again on the Earth, I would do good for others what I would have them do for me. Sadly, I was reaching my final days and began to despair. It was the god Abraxas two hundred years ago who reached out to the land of the Jinn and rescued me. I believe he wanted a Jinn he could easily control, like me being tied to the lamp. I do not know what wicked plans he had, but when I would not cooperate, he threw me away.”

“Did you wonder what he wanted?” Yasmina asked.

The old Jinn shook his head. “But being discarded, my despair grew a hundred-fold. Here I was in the land of the living, but I remained trapped in the lamp and saw no way to escape. I was found and used to bring light to a home, a small consolation, but then one day, a young beggar boy stole me from my place. He cleaned me up to sell, and in rubbing me, he set me free. I accepted him as my master, and I have served faithfully ever since. I have accepted young al-Din as like a son to me, and he is in love.”

“Wait,” Aisha said, while Yasmina put her face in the palm of her hand for thinking about it. “This is not the home of a beggar boy.”

“My master wanted to be rich,” the old Jinn said. “His father slaved for al-Zaatar, who ruled this place. He was not treated well, which is why the young son had to beg in the streets. It was a simple thing to convince the old man al-Zaatar to make his faithful servant the elder al-Din his heir since the man had no children. Al-Zaatar died within the year. The next year, the elder al-Din passed away and the young man inherited it all, though he was but sixteen years. He is presently eighteen and at one of his properties, but he should be returning shortly, and you can meet him.”

“Tough luck having his father die like that, right after gaining all this,” Harun said, and al-Asad agreed.

The old Jinn ran his fingers through his beard and looked at the table. “So I have come to understand. Human mortals live such short lives as it is. I thought a few years before his time would not matter, but I see now that they hold on to life for as long as they can, maybe because it is so short.”

“So, is he happy now?” Aisha asked.

The old Jinn shook his head. “But there is hope,” he said. “He has fallen in love with the Lady Badroul, though he has only seen her a few times. I believe the young lady also loves him from afar, but she is just fourteen, so it will be a few years before she is old enough to marry. She is also the daughter of the Governor of Alexandria and the Sharif of all this land. That might be a problem, but not a difficult one.”

Yasmina finally removed the palm from her face. “So, she is Badroulbadour, daughter of the Sultan of Egypt, and you are the genie of the lamp, and you serve Ala al-Din, or as some say, Aladdin. Is this not so?”

The old Jinn shrugged. “I do not know some of those words, but I suppose that is about it.”

“How can I be so lucky?” Yasmina said with a great amount of sarcasm, and everyone looked at her, wondering what else she might know.

The old Jinn lifted a hand to regain their attention. “Love is the most mysterious thing in the universe. It is so simple and so complex. But there is one thing standing in the way of the young lovers. Suffar is a great man who has gained the ear of the governor. He has become the chief advisor… “

“Vizir,” Yasmina corrected. “But I thought he was Jafar.”

The old Jinn nodded. “He has his eyes on Badroul for his own son, though the boy is presently only fifteen. He needs a few years as does she. So, that is the complication, not the least because Suffar is a wicked and powerful sorcerer.”

“Of course, he is,” Yasmina said and threw her hands up.

The younger al-Din proved to be as good and kind a young man as Yasmina expected. They stayed with him for three days before they moved to the governor’s palace. Yasmina, though only seventeen, found the eighteen-year-old Ala al-Din rather childish about some things. She found his Roman friend, however, enchanting. Unfortunately, the twenty-one-year-old was a Christian, but Yasmina thought, well, no one is perfect. She was surprised how easily the name Francesco d’Amalfi fit on her tongue.

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MONDAY

Kirstie and Yrsa discover the real target of the Vikings is the monastery at Lindisfarne. Somehow, they have to get Father McAndrews and warn the people there. Until Monday, Happy Reading.

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Avalon 8.7 Escaping, part 6 of 6

Elder Stow stood outside the door to the Ape ship when Lincoln, Alexis, Nanette, and Tony arrived.  Tony went to the wagon where Ghost dutifully stood in the shadow of the ship munching on a small pile of oats Tony left at the back of the wagon.  He watered the mule while Lincoln and Nanette dug out four of the solar powered lanterns the travelers sometimes used in the night.  They would need them to light the halls and rooms in the ship if they did not want to go with the emergency lighting alone.

Alexis stepped up to the door but stopped when she saw Elder Stow alternately staring into the distance and staring at his scanner.  “What?” she asked as she turned her own eyes to the edge of the rise where all the Berbers and their horses got killed.  It was far enough away so she thankfully she did not have to see all the details.

“Six people.  Maybe seven,” Elder stow said.  “Seven horses.  They are coming this way.  And I am picking up thirty or more—what should I call them—disturbances that appear to be checking the Berbers like an opposing army might check the dead on a battlefield, to be sure the dead are actually dead.”

“Disturbances?”  Alexis thought for a second.  “Like little ones?”  Elder Stow nodded.  “Maybe it is Yasmina.”

Elder Stow appeared to relax. “That would explain it.”

“Alexis,” the cry came through the wristwatches.  Boston sounded anxious.

“Coming,” Alexis responded.  “The Kairos appears to be on the horizon and headed in our direction,” she added and stepped into the ship.  Nanette followed and made a path of three lanterns between the door and the central chamber where Sukki and Boston had Captain Argh down, lying flat on the floor.  Lincoln came with his gun drawn just in case there were more Apes around, or maybe a Flesh Eater that snuck in the open door.

When they arrived, Alexis took a deep breath and went to work on the Ape’s leg.  She put her hands near the wound and her hands began to glow.  Soon, the wounded area glowed as well, and the unconscious Ape appeared to sigh.

“I’m going to see Yasmina,” Boston announced and headed toward the door.  Sukki added a word for Lincoln before she followed.

“Boston and Elder Stow examined the main lines and concluded they are damaged beyond repair.  Even if Elder Stow could power up the ship, it would not be able to fly.  They might be able to send a distress call, but that is about it.”  She jogged to catch up to Boston.

“And you are?” Captain Argh opened his eyes and started to come around.

“Your doctor.  Hush,” Alexis said.  “Nanette is my apprentice, and Lincoln is my husband, now keep still.”

The captain seemed to nod and closed his eyes again.

Boston arrived outside in time to see a young woman introduce her companions to the travelers, who had arrived with their seven prisoners and seven extra horses.  “Muhammad al Rahim is my faithful friend,” she pointed to the old man who looked armored and carried plenty of weapons in the heat. “Aisha is my elf maid, or near as one gets to one in these parts.”  The maid appeared to genuflect to the travelers.  It looked like something between a bow and a curtsey.  “And this…” She pulled a young man forward.

“Hello,” the man said in a very unpretentious voice.  “These are my men.”  He pointed to the three men with him.

Yasmina continued with a big grin.  “This is Ala al Din.”  She waited.

It took a few seconds before Katie blurted out, “Aladdin?”  Yasmina nodded.

“We already did the genie bit.  At least, the first half of it.  Aladdin lost the lamp.”

“What is it with you” Lockhart said.  “Every time it gets stranger and harder to believe.”

“We met Ali Baba and the three sons of Sassan and their magical artifacts, including the magic carpet,” Katie said.

“And Sinbad,” Lockhart remembered.  “We fought skeleton-zombies.”

“And now Aladdin?  Hard to believe,” Katie finished.

“Stranger and stranger.” Lockhart shook his head again.

“Can’t argue with that,” Decker added under his breath.

“I’ve done all I can,” Alexis’ voice came from the wristwatches present.  “Captain Argh needs to stay off his leg as much as possible for the next week or so, but I believe it will heal from here without infection.  He might be able to travel if he had a place to go.”

Yasmina reached out and grabbed Katie’s wrist to answer.  “Tell the captain to be patient.  Elder Stow and I will be there shortly to see what we can work out.  I have just a couple of things to do first.”

“Roger,” Lincoln answered as Yasmina backed up and opened her arms.

“Boston.”  Boston ran into the hug, and it was hard to tell which young woman grinned the hardest.  Yasmina whispered. “Do I sound confident, like I know what I am doing?”

“You are doing a great job,” Boston whispered back.

“Thanks,” Yasmina squeezed the elf. “You know I am just making it up as I go along.”

“That works,” Boston said and took a step back.  “It is all we ever do.”  Yasmina looked down, humbly, but nodded.

One of the seven Berber prisoners took that moment to make a run for it. Al Rahim pulled his sword. Aladdin’s three men pulled their swords, like men who had learned to follow the lead of the old man.  Decker raised his rifle, but they all stopped when they saw two ogre-like monsters rise right up out of the sand.  While the man screamed, the monsters grabbed the man from each side and ripped him in half.  They sank back into the earth and took their prizes with them.

Al Rahim yelled at the remaining six Berbers.  “That was foolish.  Any of the rest of you want to try that?”

“No.  No, please.  Please, no.”  The Berbers looked frightened to the point of tears.

“You need to stay here, touch nothing, and keep quiet until the princess gives you permission to leave.  Is that understood?”

“Yes.  Yes, Lord.  Understood.  Yes.  Thank you.”

Al Rahim turned from the Berbers to see Yasmina had already gone inside the ship with Elder Stow, Boston, Sukki, and Aladdin in her trail.  Tony stepped up to the crew with a pointed question.

“Should I start to set up the camp for the night?”

Lockhart shrugged, but Katie and Al Rahim spoke at the same time.  “Might as well.”

###

Yasmina let the six Berbers go that evening.  Aladdin picked the best of the seven horses for his stables, he said.  The six men rode off on the six other horses.  Lockhart was surprised she just let them ride off.

“I thought that was better than killing them,” she explained.  “They won’t remember the guns, the aliens, or you, or anything.  They will head back to the capitol and by the time they get there, they will remember searching for me, but think they had to battle troops loyal to the Emir of Egypt and they won, but they alone survived the encounter.”

“Nice tall tale” Katie said.

Yasmina smiled and nodded.  “I am sure Creeper the imp will spice up the tale by the time they arrive.”

“This isn’t Fatimid territory?” Katie asked, and Tony said he was just wondering the same thing.

“Sallum is as far as certain Fatimid territory goes,” al Rahim answered for the princess who seemed more comfortable talking quietly with Aisha, Boston, Nanette, and Sukki.  “Between Sallum and El Alamein is territory no one fully owns.  After El Alamein, the land remains in Abbasid hands through the Emir of Egypt, but I will not count the Princess safe until we reach Alexandria.”

Yasmina interrupted.  “Except now I will spend the next ten days or more here cleaning up this mess.”  Clearly, while she spoke with the girls, she kept one ear open for the other conversation.  “Lockhart.  You will have ten days to get to the time gate.  Then we head for El Alamein, and that may help move the gate toward you, but be careful it doesn’t pass you by.”

Lockhart said he understood, but Decker changed the subject as he turned to Aladdin.  “So, what is your story?”

“Me?” Aladdin looked surprised that anyone would be interested in him.  “I lost the lamp and the Sharif sent me on a diplomatic mission to the Fatimids, maybe hoping I would get killed.  The Djin did not have to work hard for that. The Sharif’’s daughter and I were close.  The Imam who stole the lamp wanted her and wanted me out of the way.  You see, the Caliph told the Emir of Egypt to make peace. The Emir told the Sharif and the Sharif told me.  That was that.  Anyway, I had a minor post in the diplomatic mission, but the Isma’ili fanatics were not interested in peace.  Most of the mission got killed for heresy, but Princess Yasmina saved me and my men.  We owe her our lives.”

“And now you are going home?” Alexis asked.

Aladdin nodded.  “And I will marry the girl, if she will have me, even if her father is the Sharif.”

“Good luck,” Decker said, and glanced at Nanette.

In the morning, Yasmina said there was another one to send home. They got the Ape shuttle out of the main ship. Captain Argh complained that it was not capable of interstellar travel, and he certainly expected his few ships to be long gone, but Yasmina assured him it would do.  Elder Stow charged the ship, fully.  All Captain Argh had to do was pilot it toward deep space and he would be found.

“Sometimes you must trust others,” Eder Stow said.  “Even if they are not your species.”

“A good lesson,” Yasmina said.  They all said good-bye to Captain Argh and wished him well.  Yasmina also said good-bye to the travelers.  Then she complained. “Al Rahim!  It is going to take forever to clean up this mess.  Aladdin.  Don’t touch anything.”

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MONDAY

Don Giovanni runs the Greatest Show on Earth (a bit of temporal tampering), but mostly they run through the Black Forest because the Big Bad Wolv have landed.  Until Monday, Happy Reading.

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