Avalon 1.11 Dance the Night Away part 4 of 5

By the end of the second night, Katie and Alexis could hardly keep moving. Everything hurt, and while the pain helped clear their minds a little, they were so deep into the dance by then, they hardly knew what else to think. Lockhart, Lincoln, and Captain Decker were also up and moving, and without having any sleep in forty-eight hours, Lincoln felt he was hallucinating. Near noon on the next day, after about sixty hours, Lincoln was the first to collapse. Even unconscious, his arms and legs continued to move like a puppet to the music. One thing did happen before that, though.

Kartesh finally got Saturn to a sufficient sobriety, or at least awake state where she could talk sense to him and feel he honestly heard her. Whether he would listen or not was another issue.

“I don’t know how the centaurs and fauns and the others stand it for a whole month, but normal human flesh and blood is not made to go without sleep and without food for that long.”

“But Kartesh. The human element is adding such spice to the dance. I have never heard Pan and his helpers play so well. There is something truly great going on with your friends in the mix.

“But you are killing them!” Kartesh shouted. Saturn heard but did not want to hear. He wanted some more grapes.

~~~*~~~

Around eight o’clock, with the sun well up in the sky, they heard the “Aye-Aye, Yip!” followed by “Blithering Genius!”

The less than enthusiastic men went carefully to the clearing and saw the branches over the trap removed. They got excited to think that something actually worked. They inched up to the hole expecting to see Silenus trapped in the bottom and were surprised to see it empty. Suddenly, the hole got bigger. Truscas fell in. Mingus grabbed on to the lip, but it shook him off and he slid to the bottom. Roland jumped back and began to run around the edge of the clearing while the hole followed him. He got caught when the hole disappeared and reappeared in front of his moving feet.

Boston came to the edge of the clearing and tried not to laugh, though it was a sight to see Truscas from the arms up and the top of Roland’s head. Mingus was not tall enough to stick out.

“Yip-Yip.” Silenus danced across the clearing and stared at her.

“Yippie!” Boston shouted back. A serious expression crossed Silenus’ face before he smiled and shouted back.

“Yappy!”

“Yahooo-ee!” Boston responded appropriately. The next thing she knew, Silenus stood beside her, his arm around her shoulder.

“I like you,” he said.

After a brief moment of shock, Boston responded. “I think I like you, too.”

“I love your red hair,” Silenus continued. “It is a unique color and I love what you have done with it.”

Boston had started growing it out, not that she had a choice. It was not as short as it had been, but she thought for the moment that it had to be rather scraggly. She could only respond politely. “Thank you.”

“We could retire to my boudoir.”

“Sir, I have a young man,” Boston looked down at her feet for a second.

“Oh, I see,” Silenus responded.

Afraid she might lose him Boston leaned over and kissed the man on the cheek. “But I think you are sweet.”

Silenus raised his eyebrows before he smiled again. “I see. Fatherly type. To be honest, I might prefer a young man myself.” Boston did not flinch. “Grape?”

Boston raised a hand. “No thank you. My mother does not approve of me drinking.”

“Silly mother,” Silenus said, as he turned them to walk toward the hole.

“A little help here.” They heard Mingus’ voice.

“But now, I assume all of this is because you want something of me,” Silenus became as serious as the fat drunkard could be.

“Yes,” Boston said, turning to the god. “My friends are trapped in the dance and Kartesh says Saturn is the only one who can set them free. She thought you might have some way of sobering him up, at least temporarily.”  She saw Silenus put his hand to his goat-skinned cloak, as if feeling for something, but he said nothing, so she said nothing.

“Your friends?”

“Humans like me. Kartesh says the dance will kill them. Please.”

Silenus appeared to think for a minute. “That Egyptian woman is said to be very smart. She is…” he snapped his fingers as if trying to remember the word.

“The Kairos,” Roland offered.

“Exactly. Goddess of time. They say she knows the future.”

“We are from the future and trying to get back there.” Boston could hardly keep the desperation out of her voice. Silenus put that serious expression on his face again.

“You and the elves and no doubt the friends you want to save, but the centaur belongs here, I believe.”

“A good person who was kind enough to help us in our time of need,” Boston said.

Silenus looked down at the centaur. He snapped his finger and the three in the hole shot up in the air while the hole closed itself up beneath their feet. “At the risk of sounding like an elf, what’s in it for me?” Silenus asked.

“I need a cup to show you,” Boston said. She had prepared for this possibility. She lifted her hand and a crude wooden cup, more like a bowl appeared. She took the grapes from Silenus’ hand, squeezed them and allowed the juice to flow into the cup. She stirred it with her finger while Silenus watched carefully. Then she got the canteen from her side, added a little water, and stirred it again. When it was as ready as she could make it, she handed it to Silenus. He took it carefully and sniffed it.

“Nice bouquet,” he said before he put it to his lips.

“It’s called wine and it has no seeds or stems.”

“Interesting,” Silenus liked it and stood still while Boston thought through the wine making process, what she knew of it. She knew Silenus followed along in her mind. “Interesting,” Silenus said, when she finished. “You humans are very clever. Sometimes I think the gods don’t give you nearly enough credit.”

“So, you will help us?” Boston tried not to plead.

Silenus looked up at the centaur once before he looked back at Boston. “Never let it be said a centaur was kinder than the god.” He smiled and pulled a clay jar from his clothing. “A formula I developed in case I ever got drunk. I call it Ipecac. It may do the trick, but I think I had better administer it.” With another snap of his fingers, they found themselves once again standing outside that giant door.

The travelers with Silenus did not have to knock on the giant door. Kartesh appeared in their midst and said Saturn was sleeping some of it off. “But he will be right back at it if we don’t administer a cure.” She curtsied to Silenus.

Silenus said, “Tut, tut woman,” and held out the jar. Kartesh took it, opened it without asking permission, put a touch on her finger and touched it to her tongue.

“Ipecac,” she called it by name though no one had mentioned that name. “This might help.”

Silenus raised his eyebrows. “You are as bright and insightful as I have heard, indeed. And by the way, you have very nice friends.”

“Actually, she’s my boss,” Boston said.

“Our goddess,” Mingus added with his hat in his hand and an elbow in Roland’s ribs.

They looked at the centaur, but he seemed to be having a hard time just keeping up with what was going on.

“I thought we might get him to take it in some of this lovely wine young miss Boston told me about,” Silenus suggested.

Kartesh gave Boston a hard look, but Boston shrugged. “I had to bargain. Was I wrong?”

“No,” Kartesh said. “4000 BC is about right for wine, but I’m not sure it appears in this part of the world for another two thousand years or so.” She looked at Silenus. She saw him rubbing his hands.

“A secret. I like secrets, and I am very good at keeping them.” He grinned as broadly as he could, and it looked much too broad for a human face.

Kartesh said no more. She lifted her hand and a goblet of wine appeared. She poured the ipecac into the wine and stirred it with her finger much as Boston had. Then she said, “wait here,” and vanished. Only a few moments, they heard a roar. “Woman. What have you done? You have poisoned me!”

A moment after that, the giant hovel vanished and left two elves, one centaur and one young woman staring at each other because Silenus had, perhaps wisely, vanished as well.

“Now what do we do?” Boston asked, but no one answered as they waited in that place for over an hour.

“I’m hungry,” Boston finally added, and they trudged back to their camp where they had lunch in silence.

Avalon 1.11 Dance the Night Away part 3 of 5

Truscas argued hard for his idea, and in the end, since the centaur would be doing most of the heavy labor, they thought it only fair to give it a try. Roland still had his sword, and though it had not been designed to be used as an ax, it made it possible to cut through small and young trees. Turning them into logs and lashing them together into walls and a roof was not easy.

Truscas dragged the trees to the clearing. They did not want their work seen too near the clearing itself. Mingus found and used the vines to tie everything. It took the rest of the day. When they were at last satisfied that they had pieced together a reasonable bottomless box that would not fall apart the minute it dropped, they propped up one end of the box with the sturdiest sapling they could find. They had a strong vine tied to the base of that sapling and cleverly hid it under leaves as they stretched it back to their camp.

“I used to catch rabbits this way when I was young,” Mingus said.

“Me, too,” Truscas said. His flanks were full of sweat, and when a centaur sweats, it is something to see.

“I think we need better bait than carrots, though.” Roland got thoughtful as he nibbled on the deer they had for supper.

“Yes,” Mingus agreed. “But what kind of bait would be appropriate for a donkey-eared drunkard?”

“Speaking of which, don’t eat too many of those fermented grapes,” Boston pointed at the cluster in Roland’s hand, though she made a point of looking at all the men. “You’ll never catch anything if you get drunk yourselves.”

Roland smiled and set his down. Truscas swore the grass was sweet enough. He did not need any more grapes. “Yes, well.” Mingus frowned and put down the handful he was about to enjoy.

“Yip-Yip!” They had heard that all day, and though it gave them all headaches, they never caught sight of the old man until just then when they heard a loud voice. “Very interesting!” It came from the clearing with the box, and it echoed, like someone would if they were standing beneath the box.

“Quick!” Mingus yanked the rope and Roland pulled with him. They heard a great crashing sound and ran to the clearing. Truscas came only a moment behind them, still frozen in mid-chew at the sound of that voice. When Roland and Mingus arrived in the clearing, they saw the box still standing, supported by the sapling. They ran underneath to see if there might be some defect in the box or the set-up. Of course, when Truscas arrived to join them, one of his big back hooves struck the sapling and the thing came down and trapped the three of them on the inside. Boston did not laugh too hard.

Someone whistled, and Boston looked to the side. Silenus was just dancing off into the bushes, wiggling his butt and his ears in rhythm to some unheard music. The trouble was, when Boston concentrated on the god’s ears, he looked remarkably like Bugs Bunny, but when she took in his belly and remembered the one glimpse of his face that she caught, he looked more like Elmer Fudd.

Boston yawned, said good night to the boys and went back to the camp. She found all her things there, and everyone else’s as well. She assumed Kartesh must have managed that much, somehow. She called out for her but got no answer. Still. She put a big log on the fire, got the fairy weave blanket she called her own, and curled up beside the light while the men spent the next hour cutting a hole big enough in their box to escape.

Boston had fallen asleep by the time the others came back to the camp, hot, tired, cranky, and sweating more than ever.

~~~*~~~

Alexis and Katie danced all through that day and night, except when they ran from one Satyr or another. They were not Nymphs to give their sexual pleasure on a whim, and the Satyrs knew this and did not press themselves. Still, they had fun now and then chasing the women, and the women dutifully laughed and ran and hid.

Alexis found the dance of the fauns too complex for her taste. The dance of the centaurs looked too stately and, she felt, too dangerous lest she be stepped on. The dwarfs, on the other hand, simply wiggled and jumped like young children at a rock concert. My, how they enjoyed themselves.  And Katie danced, often in circles like a prima ballerina. Alexis guessed Katie had studied ballet when she was young, and then she wondered where these stray thoughts kept coming from. She wished she could get rid of them. They were interfering with her enjoyment of the dance.

Katie simply enjoyed, and all the more when the sun set, and the stars came up and the thin sliver of a moon.

To be sure, Lockhart, Captain Decker, and Lincoln did not spend all their time dancing, though they did not sleep or rest and did not eat anything other than grapes. The Nymphs corralled them early on and made them lay down on the grass so they could feed them the grapes and giggle. The more drunk the men got, the more the Nymphs giggled.

Lockhart felt nagged from somewhere in the back of his mind that he ought to be doing something. He did not know what, but it had to be something. Unfortunately, he also did not care to think about it. He looked at Decker and Lincoln occasionally. At first, he remembered something about them. By the end of the day, he had trouble remembering their names. By the following morning, he felt surprised that they actually let humans participate in the dance.

~~~*~~~

Roland got up early in the morning and salvaged as many of the vines he could from the wreckage of their box project. He wove the vines together into a fine net and let his father Mingus and Truscas clear away their ill-conceived trap. By the time the clearing had been once again relatively cleared of the debris, Roland finished with his weaving. He sent the older men out to gather more vine. In particular, he needed four long vines.

“I think we’ve cleared a square mile of vines,” Mingus commented on his return. Boston arrived with the rope from Captain Decker’s pack, and Truscas came in a short while later with the last of the long vines. Then Roland got to work in earnest.

He needed Truscas to bend a bigger tree than he liked, but they had cut all the nearby saplings. He tied the rope to the tree and the long vines to the rope on one end and the net on the four corners. He held the tree down with a last vine that he found and stretched it tight across the center of the net. Then he covered the net with leaves and made everyone keep back, especially the Centaur. One trip on that vine in the center and the net would be pulled straight up, trapping whatever got caught inside.

As a final precaution, Roland cast a small spell to ward off any innocent animals who might be tempted to cross the clearing. Then they headed back to camp to wait. Boston had a fine lunch ready, including some warm bread. That helped them all feel better, and Truscas marveled at the bread.

“Magic?” Truscas wondered about it.

“Yes,” Boston lied like an elf before either elf could lie for her.

Once again, they did not have to wait long before they heard “Aye-Aye, Yip!” Then they heard Silenus in the clearing. He shouted, “Ingenius!” This time, the three men walked carefully to a position where they could watch. They saw Silenus deliberately kick the trip vine. The trap sprung and he got caught. He swung wildly because the tree had been too big, but the whole time he shouted “Weeee!”

The three stepped out from the trees when the net stopped swinging, but then Silenus dripped himself through the spaces in the net like a glass of wine through a strainer and he reformed again on the ground. He shook a finger at the three, grinned, waved at Boston and ran back into the woods faster than they could follow. Mingus only had one thing to say.

“Dig.”

Boston shook her head while they used the lumber they had cut and some stones to dig a hole in the earth. It took all afternoon with Truscas hauling the dirt away in a couple of baskets Roland hastily wove out of the net. When the hole became six feet deep and about six feet long and wide, Mingus covered it over with branches and leaves.

“I’m tired,” he said when he was done. “I need a night’s sleep.” And he did that. In fact, they all did that, and without bothering to eat supper.

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

MONDAY

If Silenus can be convinced to help and they can get Saturn sober, the travelers might yet be saved. Until Monday, Happy Reading

*

Avalon 1.11 Dance the Night Away part 2 of 5

They entered the valley of the Tiber River and the music cut off as soon as they got far enough down the hill to lose line of sight. They heard another sound, “Aye-Aye-Yip!” and the elves wondered what it was. “Yip-Yip!”

“Silenus,” the old centaur spoke. “Probably fermenting the grapes even while they are still on the vine.”

“As long as it is not hypnotic,” Roland used a word the centaur did not understand. He set Boston on the grass. She had passed out, and he had been carrying her. Meanwhile, Mingus approached the centaur.

“Mingus, my son Roland, and Boston,” Mingus introduced everyone.

“Truscas,” the centaur gave his name. “And I owe you my thanks, elder elf. One more dance would have killed this poor old body.”

“Mine, too.” Mingus agreed, while the Centaur stepped over to Boston. He looked long and hard before he concluded.

“She is human.”

“Yes,” Roland confirmed as Boston opened her eyes and put a hand to her head.

“Splitting headache,” she groused.

“I’m just glad you are all right.” Roland helped Boston slowly sit up. “Truscas,” Roland gave the Centaur’s name as Boston looked around.

“Where is the camp? Where is our stuff? Where are we?”

“A curious one,” Truscas noted.

“Yes,” Mingus agreed, as Roland explained what happened.

“But what can we do?” she wanted to know.

“Nothing, for the moment,” Mingus answered. “They are trapped by the dance and the Satyrs and Nymphs that lead the dance are far more powerful than our meager elf magic. And Pan is a god. We cannot fight that.”

“Pan is a lesser god,” the centaur corrected. “But come, it is still dangerous as long as we remain on this side of the river.”

The centaur set out and the others fell in behind. “But father, I don’t know if Boston is strong enough to swim a river,” Roland said.

“Isola Tiberi sits in the center of the river and the river may be crossed there,” the centaur responded. With a turn of his head, he added a thought. “If it is too deep at the ford and she cannot swim, I can carry her.” Roland thought that might work.

“What is Isola Tiberi?” Boston wondered, just before she saw it—an island that split the river in two.

~~~*~~~

Another hour passed before Truscas brought them to a gigantic hovel in the woods by the river. He explained nothing until they arrived. “If your friends are captive of Pan, as are my people, I believe the only way we may set them free is to visit the master of this land. Am I wrong? I judge if these other humans are as fragile as Miss Boston, we may need help to save their lives.”

Mingus looked down the side of the house. It appeared to be a single room dwelling.

Boston looked up at the door. It looked ten times her height, at least.

Roland defended Boston. “These humans are far sturdier than many think. Boston was attacked four days ago and beaten close to death. You see how well she is recovered already.”

“I think you have the right idea,” Mingus turned to the centaur. “By the way, who lives here?”

Boston found a knocker on the door that she could just reach by standing on her toes. It proved heavy, but it only needed to be struck once.

“Saturn.” Truscas got the word out before the sound of the knock rose in volume to prohibit further conversation. After a moment, they had to cover their ears against the sound. They, and perhaps the earth, began to shake from the vibrations before the sound fell away again and they heard the door handle being turned.

Boston, Mingus, and Roland fully expected to see a giant, but Boston discovered it was quite another thing to actually see one. Her mouth opened and she tried not to scream. The giant got on his knees but finally had to lie down on his stomach and put his chin on the ground to see his visitors eye to eye. And such big eyes they were!

“Your pardon,” Mingus tried to speak but he seemed to have trouble forming the words.

“Lord,” Roland managed that much when those eyes fell on him.

Boston said nothing. Her mouth would not close. The giant looked at her most closely and even closed one eye for an extra stare, like he had trouble focusing. The centaur he hardly looked at before he smiled. It looked like a silly smile, but everyone breathed. Then the giant opened his mouth and belched, loud and long.

Mingus, Roland, and Boston got blown back a good ten feet and landed on their butts. Truscas managed to keep to his four hooves, but he backed up several steps and made a face, having caught the full aroma of that burp.

They heard a scraping sound from inside the house and saw a hand come out beside the face. Saturn tapped the centaur, and he fell to his side. That way, all four visitors were knocked over like so many tin soldiers. With a self-satisfied smile, Saturn got up and closed the door.

“Saturn!” They heard a woman’s voice inside, complain. The next thing they knew; they were standing inside the house beside the woman. Saturn had gone back to sitting at the one chair at the big table, but the woman had not finished speaking. “These are friends come to visit. It is impolite to leave them standing outside in the cold.”

Saturn dropped his smile at the scolding. He raised a finger and studied it for a second before he spoke. “It’s not cold out.” His doofy smile returned, and he reached for the only thing on the table, a primitive bowl full of grapes. He grabbed a handful of grapes, stuffed them in his mouth, and chewed with his mouth open, to show grapes, seeds, stems, and all.

“He’s plastered. Drunk out of his gourd,” Boston whispered.

“Am I?” Of course, Saturn heard. “Is that what I am? Ish that a good thing? Issshhhh.” He laughed at himself.

“Lord,” the woman got Saturn’s attention. “These fine travelers need a chance to refresh themselves and rest from their travels. Let me take them to their rooms. Maybe they need a nap.”

“A nap!” Saturn perked up on the word. “What a wonderful…” He began to snore.

The woman snapped her fingers and they all found themselves outside again. They could still hear the snoring and heard when it abruptly stopped. The big voice boomed. “I got rooms?” Then the snoring returned.

~~~*~~~

“Kartesh.” Roland figured it out, though Boston was about to say the same thing.

“Truscas,” Mingus introduced the centaur who bowed royally before the goddess.

“No need for that,” Kartesh waved him to stand. “You have my thanks for bringing my friends, but where are the others? Oh no!” She said, “Oh no”, before Mingus could explain.

“Prisoners of the dance.”

“But that will kill them,” Kartesh said, and the centaur smiled for thinking he had been right. “The dance will go on until the next new moon, and they won’t stop to sleep and will hardly eat anything but grapes for the full twenty-eight days. If they don’t collapse from the strain, they will starve to death.”

“But what can we do?” Boston asked the same question she asked earlier in the day.

“I thought his Lordship might help,” Truscas said.

Kartesh looked back at the door. “You were right to bring them here. He is the only one who can help, but in his present condition.” She shook her head. “Listen, there is only one who might help us. Silenus. He may have some way of sobering up Saturn. I don’t know. All of my remedies are folk remedies of dubious value. Even Doctor Mishka has nothing to suggest in this time-period.”

“Silenus?” Roland jumped.

“What. Are we supposed to just walk up and ask for his help?” Mingus asked.

“Oh, that might not be so easy,” Truscas admitted.

“Seriously. I would have to strip Brazil bare to get enough coffee, and then no guarantee he would drink it,” Kartesh said. “But I am sure you will work things out. You must if we hope to save Lockhart and the others. Meanwhile, I have to go. It isn’t safe to leave him alone for too long.” She vanished, and Mingus, Roland and Truscas looked at each other, dumbfounded. Boston did not know what to look at.

Avalon Pilot part III-2: Myths and Legends

Lockhart peered out, like from a cave on to a ridge, but he could not see much or very far outside of a blue hazy line in the great distance.  He thought that might be the sea.  He put his hand gently forward until he touched the gate.

“I see the shimmer of the gate in this light,” Boston said, and everyone nodded.  She had come up to the front and looked around at her fellow-travelers.  They could all see it, but not well.

“This would be easy to overlook, especially if we were in a hurry,” Lieutenant Harper said.

“Weapons ready?” Decker suggested, and Lockhart nodded.  Mingus rolled his eyes, but Roland got out his bow, Boston fetched her Beretta, Lincoln checked his pistol, and Lockhart cradled the shotgun in his arms like a baby.  The marines, of course, were always ready.  Doctor Procter pulled a rickety stick from some secret place up his sleeve.  It was his wand, and with that, Alexis felt prompted to look around for something she might use to focus her magic as well.

When they were set, Mingus rolled his eyes again, but Lieutenant Harper saw and threw the elf’s words back at him.  “Better to be safe,” she said, and they all stepped into the next time zone.

The ridge top proved not very wide, and though it did not end in a cliff or sharp drop off, the slope looked steep enough to make them keep to the ridge top in the hope of finding an easier way down.  Lockhart headed them east, toward the rising sun, and Boston remarked how lucky they were to arrive at sunrise instead of the dark of night.

“Of course it is dawn.”  Doctor Procter squinted in the early light.  “The time zones all share the same twenty-four-hour cycle.  They may be different days or different times of year, or on different phases of the moon, but they all have twenty-four hours.”

Mingus added a thought, getting used to making up for what the Doctor left unsaid.  “He means when it is noon here, it will be noon in every time zone.  The only way we will enter a zone at night is if we leave a zone at night.”

“Nine in the morning or so, not dawn,” Lincoln interrupted.  “It is hard to tell with the sun rising behind the mountains.”

“Chain of mountains,” Alexis spoke to her husband.  “And we seem to be fairly-high up, though it is warm.  I would guess near the tropics.”  Lincoln nodded and for the first time he got out his proverbial notepad and pen.  The pistol got put away since there did not appear to be anyone or anything around apart from a few birds.

After a short distance, they found a place where the ridge crumbled and rolled to the bottom ages ago.  It seemed a gentle slope, but instead of being full of rocks and loose pebbles, it had become covered in grass.

“Our way down,” Lockhart said.

“Mmm.”  Boston looked around and half-listened, as usual.  She had her hand up to shade her eyes, and looked up now that they could see several peaks at once above them.  “I like the way the rising sun sets off the peaks like so many islands in the sea.”

“Islands in the sea, indeed.”  Captain Decker pointed across the slope to where the ridge top picked up again.  A large wooden structure looked abandoned there—a man-made structure.  It remained partly hidden behind some boulders, but for want of a better word, it looked like a boat, and a big boat at that.

“It can’t be.”  Doctor Procter said it first.  No one else said anything until they arrived at the site, and then they all said, “It can’t be,” except Mingus, who suggested it stunk.

“Father!”  Alexis protested and Roland stood right beside her.  “You stuff all those animals in a boat for forty days and forty nights and see how much stink there is.”

“The stink is hardly the point,” Roland added.

“Look at this.”  Doctor Procter got everyone’s attention.  The boat had graffiti on one panel near the quadruple-wide door and ramp.  Over all was a picture of the sun and the moon squeezed together so it was a half-moon and a half-sun.  A mermaid had been crudely drawn on one side.

“Half-woman and half-fish,” Alexis said while Lincoln desperately tried to make a rendering of the drawings in his notebook.  He cursed not having a camera.  “And a centaur, half-man and half-horse on the other side,” Alexis finished her thought.  She ignored her husband’s curse and pointed with her finger.

“And the middle picture?”  The captain, lieutenant and Lockhart did not see it, but to their defense, the pictures were very primitive.

“The Kairos,” both Doctor Procter and Boston spoke together, and Boston let the doctor describe it.

“The two persons of the Kairos are attached on her right and his left, so there are only three legs and two hands on a double-wide body.  You can see the two heads clear enough.”

“And she has little boobs,” Boston added, and watched Roland redden just a bit.

“So, you like my work?”  Everyone jumped and looked up.  A man stood inside the Ark, at the top of the ramp.  “You are future travelers.  I thought that sort of thing was not possible—a self-contradicting proposition.”

“We are accidental travelers.”  Lockhart spoke up quickly and just as quickly got Captain Decker to lower his weapon.  Lockhart stood back from the others and still cradled the shotgun.  Mingus stood beside him on the other side and frowned for some reason.  “We plan to move on as soon as we can,” Lockhart finished.

The man nodded and asked for no further explanation.  “I am just glad there is a future.  I have worked hard so what I once saw might not come true.  My wife says I am making freaks.  I said they are her children too.”  He paused to smile, but since no one but Decker joined in the smile, he finished his thought.  “The truth is these offer hope, and there are others working elsewhere.”

“Why centaurs and mermaids?” Lieutenant Harper asked.

“Because the world is empty and needs to be filled.  If the ones who would-be gods have nothing to occupy their time and attention, they will be occupied with each other, and that would be very dangerous.”

“Do I know you?” Doctor Procter asked, and squinted at the man, but the man shook his head.

“But I know you.  I can’t help it.  Boston.  You will live much longer than a human should live.  Alexis, your days will be shorter than they might have been.  Doctor.”  The man paused and scrutinized the doctor.  “There is something different about you—something wrong.”

“He is half-elf and half-human,” Boston suggested.

“Half and half.  No.  But what an interesting concept.  I wonder why I did not think of that.  It would certainly cut down on their wild rampaging through the earth.”

“But wait,” Lieutenant Harper spoke quickly.  She felt afraid that the man might run off, or maybe just disappear.  “I still don’t understand the centaurs and mermaids.  What about human beings.”

The man looked up at the lieutenant and smiled.  “A sharp mind.  They are the future—your future.  But right now, they are all bunched up on the plains of Shinar.  Oh, there are some small groups scattered here and there around the world, but mostly Shinar.”  He pointed.  “I see your way lies in that direction.”  People looked, though there was nothing to see but mountainside.  He waited until they all looked at him again before he spoke.  “I must think on these things you have said, only I fear my children will find me before I can act on my thoughts.”  He vanished.  One moment he stood there, contemplating eternity, and the next moment he disappeared.  Mingus answered everyone’s question when he spat the man’s name.

“Cronos.”