Avalon Pilot part III-5: Nimrod

“To the high ground and prepare to defend yourselves,” Lockhart shouted, and the marines moved before they noticed what the others saw right away.  The people did not follow them.  None of the people so much as stepped on the mound.  They looked like they did not dare touch it, and after only a moment, they began to wander back to whatever they had been doing, as if the travelers were never there.

“Very primitive construction.”  Doctor Procter had already moved on to examine the crude tent.  It appeared to be no more than a number of overlapping animal skins held up by some precious lumber.  It seemed larger than Lincoln thought when he saw it from a distance, and might easily hold a dozen or more people.  He sketched furiously, but at the same time, he imagined a good gust of wind could blow it apart.

“Wow.”  Boston stared at Alexis and Roland.

Alexis smiled.  “On my bad days, Benjamin calls me a witch.”  She looked at her father.  “But he says it with love,” she added.

Boston got herself spun around to face a pair of angry eyes.  Lockhart did not look happy.  “You nearly got us all killed.  I said leave the food alone.”

Boston dropped her eyes.  “I know.  I’m sorry.”

“You’re lucky they didn’t mob you and tear you to pieces looking for the food.”

“Don’t be too hard on her,” Roland came to her defense.  “She was thinking and just trying to help.”  Boston heard, but she was busy.  She looked up into Lockhart’s eyes.  She saw that he loved her and the scolding was out of love, and that made her happy.

“I won’t do it again,” she said.

“Yes you will.”  Lockhart softened a little as the relief he felt washed over him.  He hugged her.  “You just need to remember I’m the director here in Bobbi’s absence.  Maybe I can’t tell these elves what to do, but I’m still your boss.”  He looked up.  “And that goes for you, too.”

“Yes boss.”  Lincoln spoke absentmindedly since he was busy.  Alexis grimaced and gave a sloppy little salute.

“Oh!”  Doctor Procter got ready to open the front flap of the tent when he got surprised instead.  A woman came out and held the flap open.  She opened her hand to invite them in.

“It appears we are wanted,” Mingus said.

“Careful,” Lincoln whispered, as they walked into the dark tent one by one.

“Come in, come in.”  They heard the man’s words before their eyes adjusted to the dim light.  It turned out to be not much of a tent.  It had no furniture, just some straw in the corner to sleep on and a big stump to sit on.  The man looked very old, but when he stood up from the stump, he also proved to be a very big man.  “We do not often have strangers here.”  He examined them as closely as they examined him.

“Where are we, exactly?”  Lincoln asked.

“In my world.  And my people, as you have seen, are hungry.”  He took a step and paused in front of Mingus.  “I do not traffic much with elves.”  He stepped over to examine Doctor Procter.  “And there is something different about you.  Something wrong.”

“He is a half-elf,” Boston offered.

The man shivered a little, reacting the way Lockhart reacted when he first thought about it.  “But you others.”  He paused to point at Alexis.  “Six, I think.  You six are my people.  You should be helping with the tower.  You should be building the monument to my eternity.”  A compulsion filled his words.  For a moment, Lockhart felt very much like that was what he wanted to do; but then Alexis touched him.  He watched Roland touch the two marines while Alexis touched Boston and took her husband’s arm.  The feeling of compulsion faded.

“So that is how it is.”  The old man stared at them for another moment before he noticed the doctor’s amulet.  Of all the sophisticated things they had, the big old man went for something he might call familiar.  “And what is this?”

“It is just a bit of sentimental wood.”  Doctor Procter practiced that lie.

“No, wait.  Don’t tell me.  It is, how should I call it, a locator.”  The big old man smiled at himself.  He obviously had special powers of discernment as well as compulsion.  “I should have this, but then you know how to use it.”  Doctor Procter could do little more than nod.  “I need you to locate something for me.”  He turned his back on them to walk again to the stump and bed where he lifted a spear as tall as the tent top.  “Please.”  He said that last word without facing any of them, and it sounded like it came out, forced through gritted teeth.

“Well, I don’t know.  It isn’t…”  The doctor started to speak, but stopped when Mingus bumped him.  Mingus, a full-blood elf, knew the sound of a bargain when he heard one.

“What would you have us find?” he asked.

The big man stood with his spear.  “There is a creature,” he said, before then he thought to explain.  “My people are hungry because the powers in my world have rebelled against me.  They have made this unnatural abomination and kept the food to feed it and help it grow.  This travesty must stop.  You must help me find it so I can end it.”

“And what is in it for us?”  Mingus responded.

The big old man turned and eyed the elf with big, sad eyes.  “My people are hungry,” he repeated.

“A true manipulator,” Mingus spoke, with a bit of admiration in his voice.  He would have said something else, but Lockhart interrupted.

“We will do it.”  Several eyes shot to him in wonder.  “Doctor, we can follow the direction on your amulet and I am sure this fine man will help us with the crowd.”

“But—”

“Yes, of course.”  Alexis stepped up and took the doctor’s hand.  “We will follow the direction pointed out on the amulet and this man will help us through the masses of people.”  She turned to the big man.  “We will help you because the people need food.  People should not starve.  That isn’t right.”

The big man smiled weakly but called with some strength.  “Moragga!”  The woman poked her head into the tent.  “Gather the men.  We are going on a hunt.”

Avalon Pilot part II-5: The Middle of the Night

“My lady.”  The elf maid tried to wake Boston, but Boston felt determined to sleep in.  She never had so comfortable a sleep in her whole life.  “My lady.”  It did no good.

“Stand aside.”  The fairy fluttered down to the end of the bed and pulled out her wand.

“Oh, no.”  The elf shut her eyes.  The fairy waved her wand and a spark struck Boston on her toe.  Boston sat up like she got charged with lightening.

“What?  What?  I’m awake, mom!”  Boston’s eyes came into focus.  “Fairy,” she said.  The fairy had her hands on her hips and tapped her foot in mid-air.

“Up, lazy bones.”

“My lady.”  Boston heard, turned to look at the elf beside her, and got right up, though she was naked.

“What is it?  Why is it still dark out?”

“You must dress.  You are needed.”

Boston looked around.  “But my clothes?  I laid them out here for the morning.  Where did they go?”

“Lady Alice said fairy weave only.”  The elf maid lifted a skimpy bit of cloth from the bed.

With the word fairy, Boston dared another look at the one in the room.  “I am sorry miss fairy,” she said.  “I was having such a wonderful dream.”

The fairy softened her look.  “Quite all right.  Good dreams are worth holding on to.  And it is Mistletoe.”

“I’m Mary Riley, but everyone calls me Boston.”  She looked at the elf who was still holding the little bit of cloth.

“Lady, you must put this on.”

“But that isn’t even enough for a bikini,” Boston protested.

“It is fairy weave.”  The fairy fluttered in close.  “Her name is Rosemary, and this little cloth is magical.  It can be grown or shaped with a thought.  It can be separated into several pieces and even hardened to make shoes or boots.  You can make everything from an arctic outfit to a bikini and even color your bikini with lavender flowers, if you like.  Here.”

Mistletoe helped Boston dress in sensible jeans, running shoes and a shirt while Rosemary took up the explanation.  “You can make a nightgown for the night and freshen the clothes in the morning with a thought and without ever having to put them in the wash.”

“Remarkable,” Boston responded at last.  “But how do I know it won’t change every-which-way every time I have a stray thought?”

“Because you are human, it won’t change with your thoughts like normal.  You will have to tell it to change.”

“Good to know,” Boston said, and while they fixed her shoes she had another thought.  “How is it you know about running shoes and such?”

“I’ve been to Earth,” Mistletoe said, flatly, like Boston should have guessed.

“And Miss Mistletoe is friends with the Kairos’ daughter.”

“I was once.  I am sure she does not remember.”

“Of course, in your big size.”  Boston had a revelation.  “You can pass for a human.  I remember Missus Pumpkin getting big.  So, you have been to Earth and pretended to be human.”

“Not too well,” Rosemary whispered and nodded at the fairy, as if Mistletoe could not hear.  “She is too pretty to be human.”  The fairy shrugged and Boston turned to the elf, but Rosemary anticipated the question.  “Oh no, Lady.  You are the first mortal human I have ever seen.”

“And I think you are rather pretty yourself,” Boston complimented the elf and saw her turn her eyes away, just a little.

“Enough now.  Come.  We must be going.  They are waiting on you.”  Mistletoe led the way.  Rosemary stayed behind to straighten the bed.

“Why so early?”  Boston asked, but Mistletoe did not know.

Boston found the others in the banquet hall where she made herself a plate of hot eggs and biscuits from the breakfast bar someone had set up.  She imagined it had to be the fat little dwarf lady from the night before that seemed determined to make her gain twenty pounds in one night.  She enjoyed the breakfast, and only got startled briefly when Lockhart set a backpack beside her.

“What is this?” she asked.

“Medical kit.  Hope we don’t need it.”  Lockhart gave a short answer as he checked his shotgun.  Boston saw he was also armed with a police pistol.  Lincoln had a pistol and a wicked looking knife attached to his belt.  Roland sat at a nearby table, sharpening his sword with a whetstone.  Boston looked quickly in her pack and found a Berretta, like the one she used on the range, and her own wicked looking knife.  Beside the medical kit, there was something else.  She pulled it out.

She saw it was a handheld computer, which she immediately recognized as a database, and maybe a few other things.  “What is this?” she asked out loud.  No one answered at first, and then Boston had a real shock.  She saw Captain Decker and Lieutenant Harper.  They looked more than well-armed, with weapons that looked pretty sophisticated for regular issue.  Decker also had some equipment, which from her distance looked like scanning equipment.  Harper had a similar handheld, and she walked toward Boston.

Boston held up the handheld so Harper saw the back of the unit.  “That is a Reichgo battery,” Harper said.  “We haven’t learned how to duplicate it yet, but it will put out a continual electrical charge up to ten years or more depending on usage.”

Boston paused and thought about what she was going to say.  “I don’t get it,” she said at last, to whoever might be listening.  “I thought we were just going to retrieve them and come right back.”

“Here.”  Lieutenant Harper put something like a watch on the table.  “This is an old-style walkie-talkie with a ten to twenty-mile range that should work without satellites.”  She walked back to her equipment.

Boston picked up the watch, examined it closely, and put it on in time to see Lady Alice come in, followed by Doctor Procter.  The Doctor carried an amulet, which he shook, listened to, and shook again. The amulet appeared to be made of wood and strung with leather so it looked like nothing special, but Boston knew appearances could be deceiving.  She wondered what it was for.

“Are we ready?”  Alice clapped her hands when she spoke to be sure she had everyone’s attention.  Boston raised her hand like a schoolgirl and Alice answered her unspoken question.  “Mingus has taken his daughter to the beginning of history and insanely leapt into the chaotic void beyond where even I cannot reach him.  I do not know if they can be saved, but we need to be prepared for any eventuality.  The guns will never run out of bullets.  The fairy weave you are all wearing can be shaped and colored as needed to blend in with the locals.  Oh, and…”  Alice reached out like she was picking an apple from a tree.  A golden orb appeared in her hand, which she quickly put into the pouch that hung at her side.  Then she vanished and Glen came back to stand in her place.  He looked once around the room.

“You have no idea how much I miss this place when I am not here,” he said.

“I can imagine,” Boston spoke softly as she put on her backpack and noticed Katie Harper looking at her with wonder in her eyes.

“Perhaps you can.”  Glen smiled for Boston before he clapped his hands like Alice and they all found themselves floating in a multi-colored stickiness and unable to breathe.