Guardian Angel-10 End Game, part 1 of 3

Ethan awoke to the sound of arguing.  Lucky he was not awake to hear Colonel deMartin’s first words, which were enough to turn anyone’s ears red.  Lars of the quick draw and Manomar of the long knife disarmed the man, so at least there was no chance for him to start shooting people out of fear or panic.  Still, he sounded far from calm, and Alexander and Ali Pasha tried their best to explain the inexplicable and somehow bring the man back to his reasonable senses.  Jill, meanwhile, hovered over Ethan and when he opened his eyes, she kissed him several times and let a tear fall.

“I was so afraid for you.  Lars got knocked on his back and he did not actually touch the unit.  I was afraid you were not strong enough yet to hold it,” she said.  She helped him sit up.

“I’m not,” he admitted and shook his head.  “But I couldn’t leave you to face being hung, tortured, burned at the stake, shot by a firing squad and fried by some Neanderthal ray guns without me.”  She kissed him again as he hoped she would, and then she helped him to his feet while he listened to what was going on.

“So, what you are telling me is this is some completely different world, not only not on the map, but not even in the universe.”  Colonel deMartin at least sounded rational.

“We are in a universe,” Lars said.  “It is just not your universe, and not mine either by the looks of things.”  Ethan followed that cue and looked around, but he saw only stunted trees and bushes trying to grow in an impossibly dead and dry environment.  The grass looked all scraggly and he saw no sign of birds or animals at all.

“Paradise?” he asked Jill, with a frown.

“No,” she answered.  “A different place altogether.  Twenty-second century in your terms, maybe twenty-third.”

“A world you have been to,” he guessed.

“I had to take us somewhere to maybe get rid of the trace.”  Jill nodded and started to let go, but grabbed on again as Ethan began to fall.  Alexander came over to help and on Jill’s instructions, he repacked the laptop, which she had shut down.  He also, carefully put the transitional unit in the briefcase.  Lars and Manomar came back from their little scouting expedition and reported no signs of life.

“We must go west, and quickly,” Jill said.  “We are too close to the ruins across the Hudson.  Heavy radiation area.”  She added that last word for Ethan’s ears only, not that the others would have understood.

“Come, my friend.”  Ali Pasha helped deMartin to his feet, and they started to walk as quickly as Ethan’s feet and deMartin’s mind could handle.  As the day wore on, the flora that surrounded them improved until it appeared almost normal.  Then Lars and Colonel deMartin both found the remains of bricks and burned wood in several places.

“This area used to be all towns and villages, about a hundred and fifty years ago,” Jill said.  “The scientists who came here after the bomb was dropped on New Rome used to say they were walking on graves.”

“Bomb on New York?”  Ethan asked, catching up with what she said earlier about radiation.  Jill nodded.   “It went off just above the Hudson.”  She explained as they walked.  Ali Pasha and Peter Alexander began to walk very carefully.  They were put off by the idea of walking on graves.

“More than the colonel’s world, and more than Ali Pasha’s world, this world truly evolved down to five great empires that covered the globe.  The Persians conquered Greece, or they were handed Greece after Phillip of Macedon and his son Alexander were both murdered.  I thought of here when you suggested that the other day.”

Ethan nodded.

“The Persians might have gone on to take the whole world at that point if the Greeks cooperated, but the wars of subjection, actually subduing the Greeks, is not called the two-hundred-years war for nothing, and what this did was allow Rome and Carthage the time they needed to grow strong.”

Ethan nodded again.  He followed her thus far, but he could not yet talk and walk at the same time, so he held his tongue.

“Carthage and Rome joined in a Pax Romana, as it was called, and stood together against the Persian threat.  While in the East, in India, the Mauryan Empire got seriously started under a man named Asoka.  That was near the same time, between two and three hundred years before Christ, and in China, the Ch’in took over under the First Emperor, and never relinquished power.”

“Holy Romans?”  Alexander asked, but Jill shook her head.

“By the time I came here, the whole globe was covered with one or another of those empires, but they were ahead of all of your worlds, even yours, Ethan.  With Persia in the middle to act as the ultimate merchants, things like Gunpowder, paper and printing spread fast.  Trouble came to this continent when the Roman Colonies, thirteen originally, coincidentally, vied for their independence.  It was something about taxation without representation.  The revolution did not last long.  It ended when the Romans dropped the first bomb on their own people in New York, or rather, New Rome.”

Jill turned to Ethan.  “This all happened about when your America was suffering through a Civil War.”  Ethan understood about how long ago that was, and he was a bit concerned that the radiation was still strong enough to be a danger.  Jill picked up the story then for everyone.

“Since then, since the New World got fully settled and there were no more frontiers for the excess populations.  The Empires lived in a shaky peace, constantly realigning in new, alternate alliances, and constantly nibbling at each other’s borders.  When I was last here, Carthage and the Chin were the outsiders aligned against Rome, Persia and the Mauryan in the middle, and it looked like the true World War might finally happen.”

“I do not understand.”  Colonel deMartin interrupted.  “How many bombs did they drop on that city and why should it affect the countryside to this distance and after all this time?”

“Exactly.”  Lars had been wondering much the same thing, but he hardly knew how to frame the question.  “How many bombs?”

“Just one bomb,” Jill said.

Guardian Angel-9 In the Trenches, part 3 of 3

Mid-afternoon, Jill finally came back.  It seemed improbable that there would be fighting on that day, though the colonel gave orders in case the enemy tried to come in the night.  As they came close, Ethan broke ranks and ran to Jill. No one made a move to stop him.  The Cherokee warrior was with her, and they seemed to be conversing freely in a language Ethan could not quite grasp.  He recognized that he was getting better at catching languages, even if he did not know how, but he was not there yet.  When he grabbed Jill, he felt surprised by the strength of his feelings.  She looked happy to see it, though, and responded freely, while the native kept still and waited.

General Gordon arrived and surprised everyone with his announcement.  “The Cherokee have agreed to withdraw, over the objections of their Byzantine Masters.  But they say there has been too much bad blood in this world and they plan to make restitution to the Delaware.  Whether or not the Algonquin nation will accept compensation for the dead remains to be seen, but for the present there will be peace, because the Byzantine cannot raise a large enough force by themselves.”

“Praise God.”  That was heard all around the area where the general spoke, and there were prayers of thanksgiving sent up to Mary and any number of saints.

“This remarkable young woman and Chief Peter Alexander were the primary movers in the negotiations.”  General Gordon told the colonel.  “Apparently, they met before.”

“Ethan.”  Jill spoke in that same strange language that Ethan had never heard before, but by then he understood it.  “Let me introduce Peter Alexander.”  She indicated the man in war paint.

“Alexander is sufficient,” the man said. as he shook Ethan’s hand.  Ethan looked close, and despite the fact that Alexander was young and handsome, he could not have been one of Jill’s people.  He looked too Cherokee.

“A native to this world?” he asked his question out loud.

“Yes.”  Alexander answered forthrightly.

“Lela is dead as I feared,” Jill said and took Ethan’s hand for support.  He gave it to her, even if he did not know who Lela was.  “I sent her out, but her communications ended in this world.  I became concerned about her when I got stranded, and I see that I was right to be worried.  The Byzantines beheaded her as a witch, but not before she passed the Guardian nano-chits to Alexander.  He has been waiting here since then for someone to come.  Since his Guardian chits are adjusted to alert him when someone world hops into this place, though he did not know this, he felt us arrive and came to see with his own eyes.  He guessed rightly that I was of Lela’s people.”

“And so now we have another passenger to take with us.”  Ethan finished the thought.  Jill nodded and looked at Alexander with a wide smile.

“I told you he was bright.”  She took Ethan’s hand and kissed his shoulder, and then she introduced Alexander to the others, and in so doing, she said something that Ethan did not expect.  “Alexander has already received his chits and has agreed to guard his world, though he has not yet been trained to the task, so he will be going with us.”  Ali Pasha, Lars and Manomar all nodded as if they understood what she was saying, and Ethan looked at Jill.  He felt suddenly very cold toward her.

Jill touched his arm, gently.  “We need to talk,” she said.

“About what?” he asked.  He did not respond to her touch and did not look at all happy.  “About being another one of your flunkies?”

“No!”  She said the word in a tone which protested that he would even think such a thing, but before she could say anything more, Alexander let out a screech.

“Eeeee!  Quickly.  Everyone get down.”  He turned to the colonel, the general already having taken transport back into town.  “Incoming,” he said.

“Incoming!”  Colonel deMartin shouted without hesitation, and the word echoed down the line as Jill and her men made a rifle shot for the nearest trench.  They no sooner got down, when Ethan heard the last noise he expected.  He looked above his head and saw the flash of baby blue laser light and then he covered his head as a nearby automobile exploded.

“How did they find us?”  Ethan asked.  Jill was already going for the laptop and the transfer unit.

“I don’t know!”  She shouted.  “Maybe they have a dimensional tracer of some kind.”

“Who are they?” he asked.

“I don’t know,” she answered as she began to type and Ethan wired the watch.  Curiously, he knew exactly what to do, but he did not think that odd at the time.  Indeed, he could hardly think at all.

After the first salvo, Ethan heard rifle fire as the men of that world tried to return fire, though they hardly knew what they were firing at.  Then there was another sound, and Ethan braved a peek above the trench rim just to confirm the Neanderthal behind him.

“The other side has arrived,” he told Jill.  She hushed him while she typed frantically.

“Almost out of power,” she said as if thinking aloud.  “I think I know where we can go to scramble any dimensional trace.”

Colonel deMartin jumped into their trench after the return fire slackened off, and just before it became a flame on flame all-out battle.

“What the hell is going on!”  He yelled.  “Who are you people?”

No one answered him because Jill interrupted.  “Everybody hold hands.  Be sure to touch flesh.”  She added that last comment because Alexander wanted to hold her hair.  He touched her neck while everyone else grabbed on.  Jill only waited a moment and looked briefly to be sure before she hit the enter button.  This time, Ethan closed his eyes, but he was holding the transfer unit, and he felt the shock everywhere and temporarily passed out.

Guardian Angel-9 In the Trenches, part 2 of 3

It was Colonel deMartin, not Captain deMarcos who collected them for their shopping spree.  The clothes they found were rather plain, but Jill had no trouble finding a dress that fit well.  There was no reason to hide her figure, and the dress certainly did not hide much, but then the matron of the shop made her get an apron to wear over all, and it made her look a bit more dowdy.  This upset the men but that was no doubt the matron’s point.

Ethan, on the other hand, proved a little more difficult.  He willingly gave up his suit pants for plain brown pants and added a white shirt with some ruffle in the front along with a plain brown vest with pockets.  There were also socks for his feet, and a western style hat for his head, which Lars picked out.  All of that was simple enough, but then he needed some sturdy boots.  Finding two boots, a left and a right that actually fit and matched took time, and Ethan saw that Jill spent a lot of that time talking with Lars and Ali Pasha when she was not schmoosing with the colonel.

When they were finally ready, the colonel graciously laid out some coins.  “I think the army can afford to pay for clothes for a couple of refugees, so no arguments.”  Then things got interesting as a soldier came bounding into the shop with a message.  He whispered in the colonel’s ear.  The colonel eyed Jill.

“Bring them,” the colonel ordered sharply, and the entourage encouraged the travelers to follow the colonel who set a wicked pace across the town to the outskirts.  Ethan was glad that he and Lars had made a strap for the briefcase and their all-important equipment, and that he was presently carrying it across his shoulder and on his hip like a woman might carry her purse in a crowded shopping mall.  In fact, he had no intention of letting their means of escape leave his side ever again, if he could help it.

When they approached the front lines that strung out along the edge of town, they found field batteries and what looked like a couple of real, modern artillery pieces.  There were hastily made bunkers of a sort, some being no more than bricked in houses that happened to be on the outskirts of town and so first in the line of fire.  Ethan wondered if the army compensated the people for those houses as easily as they bought his boots.  Somehow, he doubted it, but maybe the people got something.  Further out in the fields, the trenches began, and they could see where trees and other obstacles had been cut down and removed so as not to obstruct the line of fire.  In fact, from what Ethan could see, it looked like a whole warren of trenches had been carefully dug, barbed wire got laid out, and the fields beyond were cleared for some distance.

“The trouble with early nineteen-hundreds warfare is the way it devastates the environment,” Jill said sadly, framing things for Ethan to understand.

“World War I?”  Ethan asked, getting the gist of the time-period clearly in his mind.

“World War III,” Lars corrected, not otherwise following their words.

Colonel deMartin came bounding out of a tent.  “Come,” he said.  “You speak Cherokee.”  He spoke to Jill.  She looked up.  “There is a delegation of the enemy come to talk and as near as we can figure out, the chief has asked for you.”  Jill said nothing and stood, but Ethan and Lars both stepped up beside her, protectively.  Ali Pasha and Manomar kept the rear guard position.  “I could just as easily have you all shot, you know.”  DeMartin was blunt.  Jill patted Ethan’s hand to offer encouragement and followed the colonel.

They found the Cherokee off one section of the front line, within shooting distance of both the trees and trenches.  Two Natives and two soldiers of the Holy Romans had guard positions at the four corners of a square, and held similar weapons at the ready.  There was a native seated on the ground inside the square.  There was also a man who clearly looked like a Byzantine, if one had a guess.  His dress was full of flowery patterns and feathers, his black hair, almost as curly as Manomar’s, suggested a Middle Eastern origin, and he appeared to be seated on a folding chair.  Facing him was a man who had to be a Holy Roman officer of some sort, and he had a guard with him as well, perhaps a lieutenant, but that man stood.

“General Gordon is expecting you.”  DeMartin spoke sharply to identify the officer as he pointed at the gathering in the center of the field.  “If you are a spy or betray the General, your friends will be instantly shot.”  He raised his hand.  Men with rifles surrounded the others, and the bayonets looked very sharp.

“It will be all right,” Jill said to assure everyone.  “Ethan knows what to do.”

“That isn’t the point.”  Ethan spoke quickly before she could add, “If I don’t come back.”  He caught her and kissed her hard, right in front of everyone.

“I’ll be all right,” she insisted when they began to part.  “But don’t lose your place.  We will pick up where we left off, later.”  She turned, rushed into the field, and then slowed to a walk while the others could do nothing but watch.  As she approached the gathering, the native stood.  Then they began to talk, and that left Ethan and the others completely in the dark as to what was happening.

They waited.  The General sent his man back to fetch lunch for everyone.  Ethan felt totally frustrated by then, beyond his ability to hold his tongue, and beyond the ability of the others to comfort him.  “What is taking so long?” he shouted.  Colonel deMartin looked at him and shrugged.

“I feel for you,” he said.  “But I would guess you are not spies or something improper would have happened by now.”

“Unless we are very, very clever,” Lars said, and Ethan and Manomar took Jill’s part and hit him to shut his mouth.

Guardian Angel-9 In the Trenches, part 1 of 3

When the morning came, they found Colonel deMartin already up working, and his people occupied nearly all of the tables in the dining room.  His staff scurried here and there, and many of the tables were taken up with papers and printed maps of what Ethan would call the East Coast of the United States and the New York metropolitan area.  Lars said he was sorry there were no dragons drawn in the Atlantic or notes on unicorns in the margins.

While Jill and Ethan got their breakfast, Lars wandered over to look.  “You need Gatlings here, here and here,” he said between bites of the sandwich the staff had scrounged up for their breakfast.

“Machine guns,” deMartin confirmed and stopped what he was doing to look up.  Then he spoke in a kind of Latinized Danish.  “You are Scandinavian, are you not?”

Lars caught the gist of what he was asked well enough to respond, but he wisely responded in his best Anglish, or British as it was called in that world.  “Swedish.  I don’t hold much for that pseudo-Danish talk.”

DeMartin nodded and did not question Lars further.  “But to speak of Gatlings suggests you have spent too much time in that antique shop of yours.  You really should get out more, maybe travel a little.”  Lars smiled deeply at that suggestion.  Jill and Ethan came over, having heard, and Ethan was a little put off by the fact that Jill did not hit Lars the way she would have hit him, for sure.

“I’m sorry,” Jill interrupted the Colonel and Ethan realized she had something more important on her mind.  “I forgot all about our encounter with the Cherokee warrior yesterday on the road.  I should have told you last night.”  She proceeded to tell an amended version of the story, that they came face to face with the man before he ran off, back into the woods, when Jill tried to speak to him; and she added a note that Ethan would have left out altogether.  “I am a quarter Cherokee, so I speak the language a little, but it was touch and go for a while.  I was almost afraid Lars was going to have to use his antique, and that would not have done much good if there were more Cherokee hidden in the woods.”

DeMartin appeared to think for a minute before he called a man and gave him a message for a certain forward position.  For that, he spoke in French, though it was a very German sounding French.

“I don’t know what possibly made me forget to mention it last night.”  Jill apologized again.

“We all forgot about it, dear.  That’s all right,” Ethan said while he slipped his arm around her in a most protective way.

“I hear you are with child,” the Colonel suggested as he turned back to the couple.

Jill smiled deeply and placed her hand on her tummy.  She looked up at Ethan with a look that made him melt.  “I may be,” she said.  “It is too soon to tell.”

“Auch!”  Lars interrupted.  “Newlyweds.”  He laughed and waved his hands at them as if to suggest they could hardly think of much but each other, so how could they possibly remember something like such a brief encounter.

DeMartin seemed to accept that along with all of their other half-truths, and Ethan became a bit concerned that the man did not question more.  He was obviously sharp and probably saw through his soldiers easily enough, but here he simply waved them to the only unoccupied table.  “Have your breakfast,” he said.  “I won’t be another hour.  Captain deMarcos will keep you company, and then we will visit those shops I promised.”

“Most kind of you,” Jill said, and she dragged Lars and Ethan to the table.

“We aren’t doing a good job of fitting in and being inconspicuous, are we?”  Ethan noticed.  Lars rubbed his beard and looked serious.

Jill shook her head.  The question was rhetorical and the answer was obvious.  “And it will get worse in a minute.”  Captain deMarcos stepped over to join them and Jill immediately started in, even as Ethan waved for Manomar to drag Ali Pasha away from his study of the window to join them.  Anyone else would have thought the scholar was looking out the window, but Ethan knew he was examining the glass.

“So Captain.  We have been out of touch for months with our guests and all.  Please tell me what has been going on.  We had no idea there was anything but peace in the air until we got burned out.”

The captain looked at them like they were either mad or terminally stupid, but then Ali Pasha and Manomar arrived at the table and it suggested a possible grain of truth in their words.

He sat.  “It is the same old story.  The Byzantines in South Italy claim Rome.  The Pope has moved back to Avingon for the umpteenth time, and the Emperor in Versailles is demanding the return of Dacia from the last war.  Meanwhile, the Monophysites are agitating for independence in Egypt, and the Nestorians in China are still claiming the Silk Road which neither the Byzantines nor Thomasites in India will give up.  You see, the Emperor has made common cause with the Nestorians and believes the Byzantines cannot fight a war on two fronts and handle Egypt all at once.  He is hoping the Byzantines will settle in the west, but the smart money is on war.”

“Sounds like a World War.”  Ethan said.

“World War III.”  Captain deMarcos nodded grimly.  “And this time it looks like the New World will not be spared.”

“Well, we haven’t been in this New World all that long.”  Jill said, having figured out that much.

“Elizabethtown was settled a hundred years ago.”

“But, I mean overall.”

“No,” Captain deMarcos admitted.  “About two hundred years, and the Byzantines came here later, but there were plenty of trade expeditions dating back, oh, hundreds of years.”

“Yes, but the Cherokee and Algonquin have their own lands and government.”

“They didn’t have much before the traders taught them.”  Captain deMarcos said proudly, but then he backed down a little.  “You’re right to some extent, of course.  The Creek and Iroquois Confederations and some further south and in the Central and the South Continents were quite advanced in their own ways.  More so, now, with the missionaries and all.”

“But that is why we came,” Ethan said.  “To convert the heathen.”

Captain deMarcos did not know the word, heathen, but he nodded.  “Honestly, I think things back home just got too crowded.”

“That is usually the way things go.”  Lars spoke at last and looked at Ali Pasha who nodded.

“Excuse me.”  A man came up to the table and Captain deMarcos had to go and speak with him.  Jill took that opportunity to speak to Ethan, though everyone listened.

“Your Christian world, with the Holy Office and everyone at war.  World War III no less.”

“I bet they are not as bad as the Society of the Mahdi,” Ethan countered.

“Same idea.”

Ali Pasha interrupted before Jill and Ethan could really get going.  “As for war, sounding like home.  Arabs hate Turks.  Greeks want free.  Moguls never have peace.  Kahns purging all the time.  Everyone hates Persia and maybe thinking they are not really of the Holy Prophet.  Always big wars.”

Guardian Angel-8 Undercover, part 3 of 3

“Colonel Orlando deMartin.”  The man introduced himself by removing his hat briefly and pronouncing his last name, “deMarteen.”  He smiled for Jill.  Ethan decided that though the man was older, there was something very Dominic about him.   “Commander of the Emperor’s Third Colonial Light Armored Infantry Brigade.  Please forgive the intrusion, but I understand you have just arrived in the city.”

Manomar stood up and looked down on the man, being a full head taller.  DeMartin was not intimidated as he looked up.  “Please join us,” Manomar said.  He grabbed a nearby chair and placed it between himself and Lars where he could keep himself between this intruder and his master.

“Yes, we just came in from the far west,” Jill said, and she proceeded to tell her sad little story about their poor little farm.  When she was done, Ethan interrupted with a question before the colonel could ask any questions of his own.

“So, Colonel, where is your aid?  Don’t men in your position usually travel with an entourage?”

“Ah.”  The colonel nodded and seemed perfectly willing to be distracted for the moment.  “I am staying in this inn,” he said.  “My entourage is all around, but I have at least some freedom here.  But, you see, it was some of my men who picked you up this afternoon, so when I saw you I just naturally put two and two together.”

Ali Pasha said something in Arabic and Manomar translated.  “My Master says you will never catch the savages banging around the countryside in your noisy automobiles.”

“Master?”  The Colonel caught the word and acted like it was a swear word.  Jill quickly jumped in.

“It is an affectation from his homeland, a sign of respect.  Ali Pasha is a scholar and Manomar is his student.”

“Ah.”  The Colonel seemed to understand well enough, but then he looked thoughtful.  “Ali Pasha.”  The name rang a bell, always a danger in world hopping, until deMartin smiled and nodded.  “Are you the same Ali Pasha who penned that famous book in defense of evolution?”  The group around the table shared eye contact until Ali Pasha himself answered.

“Perhaps,” he said.

“But I thought you were being held by the Holy Office in the Bastille of Granada.”

“He got out early for good behavior,” Ethan interjected.  Jill almost hit him, hard, but Colonel deMartin laughed.

“Privately, I agree with most of what you said in your tome, but publically, of course.”  He shrugged.  “It is an honor to meet you, but we must be careful.  I do not wish to get on the wrong side of the Holy Office.  Even a knighted colonel is not above suspicion in times like these.”

Jill took that as an excellent opportunity to jump in.  “I would think you would have far more important business than to worry about a few stragglers coming late into town.”

“You misunderstand me, dear lady.  I have volunteered several of my junior officers to double up so you may have a room.  I can see, though, the volunteering will have to move deeper in the ranks.  Two rooms would be more appropriate.”

“I thank you very kindly,” Jill said.

“My wife and I could use some clothes as well,” Ethan added.  “We left in a terrible hurry and Ali Pasha and Manomar were kind enough to share their robes with us.”  He opened his to expose his naked chest.

“I see.  Yes, I will be happy to escort you to the clothiers in the morning.  You may ignore the entourage in the morning as you please.”  He laughed.

“Wine?”  Jill offered, and the conversation that followed was much more relaxed.  At one point, deMartin asked to see Lars’ gun.  Lars drew it and cocked it in the blink of an eye; but then he put the hammer back down and turned it to hand it to the Colonel.

“Impressive,” the Colonel said.  “Thirty-eight?”

“Forty-four,” Lars said.

“That’s a big caliber for a handgun, especially in the hands of an amateur.”

“I hit what I aim at, but if you don’t mind, I am trying to save my precious bit of ammunition.”

“Quite right.”  DeMartin returned the gun.  “I doubt we have ammunition that caliber that would fit, but I would keep the antique holstered if I were you.  These sorts of overcrowded, uncertain conditions bring out the thieves in some people and your antique looks to be in prime condition.”  It was a fair warning, not a threat, and Lars took it as it was meant.

The rest of the night centered around the theories of evolution and natural selection.  Ali Pasha’s only comment was, “I have done my saying.  Now you speak, I am listening.”  Ethan imagined the poor man wished he could take notes.

When they were finally shown to their rooms, the first thing out of Ethan’s mouth was, “He wants us close so he can keep an eye on us.”

“You’re becoming paranoid,” Jill responded.

“Being sentenced to hang, being tortured and being sentenced to be burned at the stake can do that to a man, you know.”

“Poor baby.  I’ll protect you,” she responded.

“I was hoping you would.  Better stay close to my side.”

“Is this close enough?”

Ethan swallowed.  “Almost,” he said.

It was some time later when Ethan spoke again.  “This isn’t paradise, is it?”

“It isn’t?”  Jill teased.  “I think it is.”  She snuggled a little closer.  Ethan said nothing.  He just waited because she knew what he meant.  “Okay, I have to be honest.  It probably is not safe for me to go home right now.  I don’t know.  My information about that is not up-to-date enough, so I have been bringing us to places where I know we are needed.”

“How did you know we were needed?”  Ethan asked.

“Where do you think the test rabbits went?”  She asked with a sly grin.  “A dozen different worlds, but Lars’ world and Ali Pasha’s needed some fairly quick action.”

“How did you know?” he asked again.

“The chits I sent with the rabbits brought back some disturbing information,” she said, and then added, “Oh.  You saw the collars for yourself.”

“Oh, yeah.”  Ethan remembered.

Jill continued.  “And then I came here because I was concerned about a friend of mine.”

“What?”

“I don’t know yet,” Jill said, and then she did not want to talk about it anymore.  That was all right because Ethan did not want to talk anymore either.

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

Nest Monday, Jill and Ethan find themselves in a war zone.  Guardian Angel-9 In the Trenches.  Happy Reading.

.

Guardian Angel-8 Undercover, part 2 of 3

“But you can’t turn us out.  It is almost dark.”  Jill got angry.  They had been to six places, and there was no room anywhere.  They had avoided the religious orders thus far, but it was beginning to look like they might have no choice.  Ethan had thought the Dominicans might be able to place them in a family home.  Many homes had been opened to refugees from the countryside, but Jill felt reluctant to take a Lutheran and a couple of Moslems into the heart of Catholic Central.

“At least it is not likely that we will be tortured,” Ethan pointed out, with a glance at Ali Pasha.

“Don’t be so parochial,” Jill scolded him.  “Many worlds have had their share of Spanish Inquisitions.”

Ethan understood, and he went quietly back to trying to figure a way out of their dilemma while Jill turned back to the innkeeper.

“But you must have something!”  She was about to throw a fit when Ethan had a thought.

“My wife,” he interrupted.  “She is pregnant, you see, and with all that we suffered getting here, I am afraid we may lose the baby.”  That at least got the clerk to look up.  “Tell me there is no room at the inn.  Don’t you have a stable, maybe a manger?”

The clerk chuckled.  “Now I have heard it all,” he said, and went back to his papers and to ignoring them.

All this time, Ali Pasha had blindly followed along.  He examined everything he could see and touch and paid no attention to what was going on.  This city, as he called it, was nearly Fifteen thousand people strong, and double that with all the influx from the countryside.  More importantly, it was full of wonders, from the cobblestone streets to the buildings and inhabitants that dwelt there.  Ali Pasha was particularly taken with a corner of the city they wandered through about an hour earlier.  It had been given over to Swiss-Bavarian architecture.  The people spoke a kind of German there, though most of the rest of the city spoke British.  Thus it was Elizabethtown rather than something German.  It was not named after the first Elizabeth, though, who was forced to suffer a marriage to Phillip II of Spain, but after the current beloved Queen who knew her place well beneath the Holy Roman Emperor. Yet, as with all times of wonder, a person must come up sometime for air, and when Ali Pasha breathed, he asked what was wrong.

“Here,” he said in Arabic after they explained to him what was happening.  He handed Ethan a bag of coins, all gold.  “It was all the money I had plus what I begged from my neighbors.  I planned to come and buy you at the slave market, but I suppose it may not have value in this place.”

“Not the coins, maybe,” Ethan agreed.  “But gold is gold.”  He pulled one out and shoved it under the clerk’s nose.  The clerk drooled.

“What?  You work for Appalachian oil or something?”  He took the coin and examined it on both sides.  “Mister, I wish I had room.  Hell, we haven’t even got a closet.”  He handed the coin back.

“We could eat.”  Lars shoved his nose into the conversation.  The clerk snatched the gold back.

“For another one of these, I’ll let all of you have anything you want off the menu.”  Ethan did not begrudge him another one.  When he handed the bag back to Ali Pasha, he added a word of caution

“Guard this with your life,” he said.  Ali Pasha understood and immediately handed the bag to Manomar.

Ali Pasha tried several dishes that evening, but he was a picky eater.  Lars and Ethan did not care what it was or what it tasted like.  They were hungry, and Jill was inclined to agree with them.  Manomar ate enough for two people, though there was a bit of a problem at first since he refused to sit at the same table with his Master.  Ali Pasha finally had to order him to do it, but it was clear that the big slave was not comfortable.

Supper consisted of boiled everything: beef, potatoes and vegetables.  There really was little choice.  No one around them talked about rationing.  Food could always be brought in through the port, but selection was going to be limited for some time.  At least the wine was good, and Ethan was thrilled to find coffee on the menu.  True, it was not the plain American coffee he was used to, but he was in heaven, regardless.  They were just about to try the sweets, a whole cartload of pastries, when Jill bumped Ethan’s leg and pointed with her head.

“We have company,” she said.  There was a man in a fancy army uniform at the front desk, and the clerk pointed straight at them.  As the man walked directly toward them, Ethan felt the need to pull Jill’s robe tight to be sure she was well covered.  Jill said nothing.

Guardian Angel-8 Undercover, part 1 of 3

It seemed a pleasant afternoon among the birds and trees.  The late afternoon sun warmed them nicely.  They hardly noticed it back when thy had to look through all the cooking smoke and haze in New Ark.  Jill felt content to hold Ethan’s hand and Ethan thought life could not get any better.  He was happy; until they stepped around a bend in the road and came face to face with a native dressed out in war paint.  The warrior sported a rifle with a full cartridge belt strapped hip to shoulder and the company of travelers were obliged to stop and stare.  The warrior stared back with hardly a blink.  When the warrior finally spoke, Ethan did not quite catch what the man said, but Jill immediately knew the tongue.  She responded in kind, and there was a rapid exchange of words before the warrior stepped off the road and vanished again into the woods.

“I am one quarter Cherokee,” Jill reminded everyone.  “Now we must hurry.”  She spoke, as she went into the lead and picked up the pace.  “The Cherokee have come up from the south and driven out the Delaware from this immediate area.  Quite a few farms have been burned.  They promised the Byzantines that they would lay siege to Fort Elizabeth, but it must be done before the Algonquin arrive to retaliate.”

“Byzantines?”  Ethan asked.  Jill nodded.

“Elizabethtown is Holy Roman,” she said.  “But the Cherokee are gathering around Mountainside and will be at the city gates by dawn.  This one came out to scout.”

“They are gathering near Hill Town.”  Ethan explained to Lars.  “Close to your farm.”

“Trailside.”  Lars nodded.  “It is a small village with a general store, a Lutheran Church and not much else.  I would not call it a mountain side.”

After a short way, they paused.  There was a terrible racket coming up from behind them and Manomar pulled the wicked looking knife he had hidden in his robe.  Lars noticed and unstrapped his six-shooter in case he needed to draw it rapidly.  Ali Pasha wailed, but softly.

“Is it a monster?” he asked.

“No,” Jill and Ethan responded together.  They both recognized the sound.

A moment later, a horseless carriage came chugging around the corner and ground to a halt about twenty feet away.  Ethan was surprised that it held together with the pounding it got on that rough, two-rutted road, though he admitted that the road was better than Lars’ farm road.  Most were.

“What are you doing here?”  The man in the passenger seat stood.  The top of the convertible was down, or missing.  He shouted at them in an English with strong French overtones.  “Where did you come from?  I thought we had all of the farms accounted for three days ago!”  His words were difficult, but not impossible to understand.  These were apparently soldiers from Fort Elizabeth, a Sergeant, his driver and a rifleman in the back.  They were out doing some scouting of their own, though Ethan could not imagine how they expected to see anything when their vehicle, limited as it was to whatever road they could find, announced their presence miles in advance of their position.

“Everyone hush.”  Jill spoke quickly to Ali Pasha and Manomar in Arabic, and then to Lars in Swedish.  “We must pretend to be native to this world,” she insisted.  “I will tell them that our farm is in the far west and we barely escaped with our lives when we were burned out.  I hope Iberia and Scandinavia are part of the Holy Roman lands; but in any case, it is better to say nothing than say the wrong thing.”  She shook her finger sternly at them and did not spare Ethan from her determined look.

“My tongue is held,” Ali Pasha responded.  Lars and Manomar simply nodded.

“I am learning to trust my wife,” Ethan said with a grin of surrender, which encouraged Jill to slip her arm around his waist.  She softened her look, and then she spoke to the soldiers as the man in the passenger seat and the rifleman, who sported a rifle like the one carried by the Cherokee warrior, came up to face them.  The driver stayed behind the wheel.

Jill told her sad tale of their farm, embellishing very little, leaving the men to make assumptions on their own, and only adding that they did not come in earlier because they thought they were far enough away to not be caught up in the fighting.

“We got out with just the clothes on our backs,” Ethan added.  “Or not.”  He shrugged, being naked from the waist up.

“I found your shirt,” the man from the auto said.  “I expected to find you a bloody mess.”

“The shirt was shredded in the barn while we were escaping.  It was a miracle that my husband’s back was not shredded as well,” Jill said.

“Backed into the bailer,” the soldier with the rifle suggested and laughed.  Most likely a farmer himself,  who got drafted for the emergency, if not the duration.

“Something like that,” Ethan agreed.  He engaged his sheepish disguise.

“Praise God and Mother Mary for their tender mercies,” the rifleman concluded.

“Well, you better hop on,” the Sergeant interrupted with a frown, not fully satisfied with the explanation of their appearance.  They did hop on; but then they had to hold on for dear life as the vehicle chugged, bounded and bounced its’ way along at the remarkable speed of about ten miles an hour.  When they arrived at Elizabethtown, everyone was bruised, and this time Ethan did not hold his tongue.  The Sergeant merely laughed and pointed across the square where Napoleonic looking cavalry were trooping across the road.

“You may be able to find some rooms at one of the inns in town, but I doubt it.  Otherwise, the convent of Santa Theresa or the Dominicans may be able to find you lodging.  The walls around this town are non-existent, and even the fort is only half stone, not much good against artillery.  We clear the streets after dark, though, so you only have a couple of hours to find shelter.”

“Thank you kindly,” Jill said.  “I feel much safer now.”

The man looked up from his passenger seat and frowned once more.  He waved his arm forward, and the auto lurched off across the cobblestone streets.

“My guess is he thinks we may be Byzantine spies,” Ethan whispered.  Jill nodded and Lars let out a soft, “Auch.”

Ali Pasha had another thought.  “Can we be riding on one of those machines again?  That was most wonderful.”

Everyone, including Manomar, looked at Ali Pasha like he had a loose screw.

Guardian Angel-7 Gun Diplomacy, part 3 of 3

“Gunfire?”  Jill was the one who recognized the sound and snapped Ethan out of escape mode.  They turned and saw Lars run up.  Ali Pasha was right behind him while Manomar protectively brought up the rear, and he had the briefcase held tightly in his hands.

“Behind crates.”  Ali Pasha shouted, and they got behind as several arrows came close.  Lars shot his last shot in the direction from which the arrows came, but whether he hit anyone or not was hard to tell.  Obviously, the man was a good shot, which reinforced Ethan’s image of the cowboy.  There were three men down in the yard, though they all still appeared to be moving, if in pain, and Ethan had no doubt the two guards at the gate were also either dead or near enough.  Ethan turned away from the yard to look at Jill

“You must be taking me.”  Ali Pasha insisted and he would not let Manomar hand over the briefcase until Jill agreed.  Jill looked put out, but not too much.  Ethan imagined that for some reason she was willing enough to take the scholar along.

“All right, but hurry.”  She groused as Manomar relinquished the equipment.  Jill slipped the dimensional watch on her wrist and turned on the laptop.  She wired the watch to the machine while the machine booted up, and she cursed several times while she waited on the software when something entirely unexpected happened.

A beam of baby blue, laser-like light came from the back of the house, scorched the grass and set some of the nearby wood on fire.  It came from a bad angle to reach them, but whoever fired that shot would surely have them in sight soon enough.

Another streak of light, this one thick and almost pure white came from the direction of the wall and gate, and Ethan all but surrendered.  He thought that they were caught in a crossfire and doubted that a few old wooden crates would protect them from whatever power was being unleashed by those weapons.  Lars corrected Ethan’s thinking.

“Looks like we have some friends.”  He pointed, and it did appear to Ethan like several men were hunkered down behind the gated wall, and they were firing their own laser-like weapons at the ones behind the house.  When he looked a second time and more closely to be sure, he drew his breath in sharply because the men by the front wall were not men at all.  They had every appearance of being Neanderthals and with that revelation, Ethan just decided that all of this was getting much too weird when Jill yelled.  “Hold hands.”

Ethan grabbed Jill’s hand.  Lars put his big hand around Ethan’s other hand, the one that now held the briefcase.  Ali Pasha took the free hand of the big Swede and made a face like he wondered if this was going to hurt, while Jill’s finger hovered over the enter button.  She dared not wait any longer.  The baby blue fire started coming too close.

“Ready, set, go!”  She shouted in one breath, just before the next stream of fire struck. There was a terrific flash of light and Ethan’s voice said, “Damn!”  He forgot to close his eyes again.

###

Ethan’s eyes adjusted more quickly this time, and without the need for rubbing.  He chalked it up to the nano-chits, and looked around.  They appeared to have landed in a forest.  Apart from Ali Pasha having taken over his eye rubbing routine, Ethan noticed Manomar was also blinking wildly and holding tight to his master’s collar.  Obviously, the big black slave was not going to let his master go off without him.

Lars got on the ground to help Jill sit up while Ethan closed-down the laptop.  He noticed the battery life was down to fifty percent, but he was not worried yet, even if this place was clearly another new world.  He felt certain about that, though the bit of forest they were in provided no evidence.  He bent down.

“Are you all right Missus Lucas?”  He asked and she gave him a look.  He shrugged.  “If you like Lucas, I’ll accept that.  I figured whatever makes you happy.  What else are husbands good for?”  Her look turned into a wry smile.

“Just fine Mister Lucas,” Jill said and she let him and Lars get her back on her feet.  Jill explained while they put the laptop and the transitional unit back in the briefcase.  “You called it a dimensional watch, but it is not really made to touch the skin.  The forces associated with travel through the worlds needs insulation.”

“So it’s like a massive electric shock.”  Ethan suggested.

Jill nodded.  “I temporarily short circuited.”  She took his arm, Ethan smiled, and Lars patted them both on the shoulder for reassurance.

“You make a fine couple,” he said.

“But where are we?”  Ali Pasha interrupted and reverted to his native Arabic.  “I do not recognize this place.”

“Same place, different world,” Jill responded.  She tried to answer Ali Pasha more thoroughly while Lars and Manomar began to scout around.

“A couple of good horses would not hurt,” Lars said when he caught up with the Moor.  Manomar agreed, but since they were on foot, they separated to cover more territory.  A few minutes later and they came back.  They found a rough dirt road out beyond the clump of trees, and that seemed their best option.  When they arrived on the road, Jill wet her finger, held it up in the air, and pointed in one direction, north.

“Magic?”  Manomar asked, and Lars scoffed.

“An affectation,” Jill answered, and they were ready to go except Ali Pasha said, “Wait.”

Ali Pasha took his robe and laid it around Jill’s shoulders.  She was practically naked.  “Forgive me,” Ali Pasha said.  “This may be a different world, as you say, but humans are humans and naked female flesh is to be avoided in public.”

Jill nodded and accepted the cloak gracefully, while Ethan chose to drop the remains of his shredded shirt.  Jill gave him a look, which suggested that she would not mind if he took everything off.  Ethan was not at all embarrassed by the idea until Lars guffawed.

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

Next week, since the two have become a team, they need to become inconspicuous, if possible.

Free read beginning Monday:  Guardian Angel-8, Undercover.  Until then, Happy Reading

Guardian Angel-7 Gun Diplomacy, part 2 of 3

Ethan and Jill got dragged outside and tied to two of the five poles, which looked like permanent fixtures in the yard.  They had to wait while the executioners lazily collected firewood.  Not expecting to have a chance to get Jill alone again, Ethan started right in with the questions.

“So what did you infect me with?”  He waited, and while he could not see her face, exactly, he imagined she winced.

“Nano-chits,” she admitted.

“Chernobyl?”  He remembered.

“No.  Never.  These are organic based, not silicon nightmares.  That they have successfully restructured to match your unique genetic and psychic patterns is evident by the fact that they have been effective, but they are not intelligent and they have no capacity to develop intelligence.  In some ways it limits their abilities, but it is safer when they are not self-directed.”

“But I was able to understand Ali Pasha’s Arabic without thinking about it.”  Ethan spoke while two men tied him to the pole in the yard.

“Well, they are very sophisticated in their programming, you must remember.  Think of your computer, it allows you to store and retrieve masses of information and allows you to perform numerous tasks like calculations that would otherwise take days, if you knew the math.  But your computer is not self-directed.  It is only as good as the information it receives.  You hear Arabic and in a very short time, the chits allow you to understand and respond.  In time, if you hear enough Arabic from enough people, you will be able to pass yourself off as a native.”

“But I needed to think the pain away and think my healing from the whip.”

“Of course.  The chits are not a panacea for life.  They will never automatically erase any pain or pleasure, except that they are antibiotics which no known bacteria, virus or sub-virus can overcome.  Listen, thousands of men and women continue to seed worlds against the expected Chernobyl plague and those organic chits will function automatically.”  Jill paused for a moment in case Ethan had a question, but Ethan could not think what to ask, so she continued.  “But for things like setting yourself free from bondage, you must think it to happen.  Now.”

With that last word, Jill stepped free of her pole, and Ethan looked up.  All of the executioners were over at the woodpile or getting straw to start the fire.  She smiled for him as she walked behind his back.  “I will help you this time,” she said.  “But next time I will expect you to do this for yourself.”  Ethan was instantly free.  It was much quicker than if she had tried to untie the knots that bound him and much safer than if she had used a knife.

“Hey!”  One of the men by the straw noticed.  “Ahmed, you fool!”  The man shouted, and Ethan guessed that Ahmed was the one who had tied them to the poles in the first place.

Ethan grabbed Jill by the elbow as she had once grabbed him, and he ran with her toward the exit, but as they neared the gate in the stone wall, Ethan remembered the guards just outside the gate.  The commotion of pursuit was beginning behind them, so he had no option but to redirect their path on the only open route—back toward the house of torture.  There was shouting, and two shots fired in the distance.  As they reached the side of the house and ducked behind a number of crates that were lazily stacked there, they heard three more shots.

###

Lars ran from the docks as fast as he could.  The sailors, who were concerned first about their captain, lost him in the crowd when he got to the marketplace.  Lars ducked into a doorway and checked to be sure his gun was loaded.  When he was ready to run again, he took off back in the direction he had been taken, which was toward the slave market.  He hoped he was not too late to pull Jill and Ethan to safety, and he worried especially that Jill might not be able to break free as easily as he had.  He hoped they were all right.

Some commotion started behind him.  Someone shouted about an escaped slave, and he knew the masses would be after him any minute.  He was not surprised that the people in this world reacted as they did.  They could not afford to have their slaves even think about freedom, much less get away, since the slaves outnumbered the freemen.

“Auch!”  Lars said to himself.  He was going to save his friends, and woe to anyone who got in his way.

When he arrived at the slave market gate, he was not sure which way to go.  He wasted precious time and risked being seen when he stopped to think through to his best option, but he knew it would do no good just running in blindly.

At that same time, Ali Pasha came out from inside the market and he seemed in a terrible hurry.  “Sveeden!”  He shouted on seeing Lars and stopped dead in his tracks

“Where are Jill and Ethan?”  Lars asked quickly as he ran up.  Manomar looked around the street and hastily threw his robe over Lars’ shoulders.  The robe had a hood, which he also pulled up to cover Lars’ blond locks.

“Disguise.”  Manomar said.  Lars ignored him and concentrated on the scholar who appeared to be out of breath.

“I have money to be buying you from market, but taking time to raise money.”  Ali Pasha breathed heavily.  “Now you already selling, and Jill and Ethan taken to Examiners.  Come, we must be hurrying.”

“These Examiners are not nice?”  Lars guessed.

“Torture.”  Manomar said the one word, and held up the briefcase.  “Maybe we can send you home.”

Lars ran with them, but he managed a guffaw.  “I hope not.  I haven’t hardly traveled anywhere yet.”

When they came to the wall and the gate outside the house of the Society of the Mahdi, there appeared to be some commotion inside the gate.  Lars caught a glimpse of Ethan and Jill as they neared and suddenly turned away.  One of the gate guards looked about to take off after them, while the other presented his pike to the three approaching in order to stop their forward progress.  Ali Pasha went into conversation mode, a man prepared to demand entry, but Lars and Manomar both knew that this was no time for talking.  Manomar held back his master and went for his knife.  Lars was quicker and did not have his hands full of scholar and briefcase.  With two bullets, he put two guards out of commission, and Manomar left his knife where it was.

They began to run again, but as soon as they entered the yard, Lars saw Ethan and Jill headed toward some crates, three men on their heels.  It took a careful eye to stop those men without hitting his friends, but Lars was up to the task, and on seeing their fellows dropped by a thunderous crack! and what looked like magic, the other men in the yard decided not to challenge their visitors further.

Guardian Angel-7 Gun Diplomacy, part 1 of 3

“I speak Swedish, Anglish, er, Englander and a little Netherlander,” Lars said.  He could not understand what he was being told, and it was very frustrating.  The man who bought him led him along with a rope tied in a noose around his neck, and he talked to his two fellows and ignored Lars but for the occasional tug.  Lars decided it was not yet time to resist since they were still too close to the guards in the slave market.  He figured the opportunity would either be forced on him or present itself in due course.

“Sveedish.”  Lars understood that much and the rest was gibberish, but the men knew what they were saying.

“I just know he is a sailor.  I would not be surprised if he guided the boat with his friends all of the way from the Old World.”  The captain spoke first.

“As you say, Captain.  You always did have a good eye for crew,” the first man said.

“Almost as good as for the ladies,” the second man said.

“Did you see that black-haired beauty?”  The first man’s eyes, hands and mouth all praised her.

“Only a glimpse,” the captain admitted.  “But I saw enough to know she is too much for the likes of you.  I am sure she will be some rich man’s first concubine soon enough.”

“I would guess a very rich man,” the second said, and they all agreed and laughed as they came to the port.  New Ark was not a very big place.

A small boat rested on the bank, one just big enough for two oarsmen and a couple of passengers.  It pointed at a much bigger boat in the kill, which had large lateen sails, but looked to be of a shallow draft, like a ship designed for coastal sailing.

Lars stopped walking when the men stopped, and he grabbed the rope to keep from being choked when they were ready to go.  He tried to think how he could get out of going any further.  The two men with the captain were getting that small boat ready, so Lars knew what was coming.  He would have balked at being taken aboard any ship for fear of losing his ticket home, but then he saw something that caused him to blink.  He shouted.

“Kirsten!”

The girl stopped what she was doing, looked up and wrinkled her nose with a most curious expression.  “You know my name?”  She asked, but Lars did not understand a word of the language she spoke.  Lars responded to her quickly in Swedish but the girl shook her head.  She looked curious, though, as if she grasped something of what he said, because she kept squinting at him.

Lars felt a tug on his rope necktie.  The Captain, who had paused to see what captured the big man’s attention, looked ready to go.  The others held the boat and were prepared to shove off.  Lars tugged back hard enough to rip the rope free and fling the Captain to the ground.

“That’s my daughter.”  Lars spouted in Anglish, even if the Captain could not understand.

“Papa?”  The girl put down her netting and came close.  At least she spoke Englander.  “But Papa, you died ten years ago.  How can you be here?”

“Your mother, Angelica?”

Kirsten’s eyebrows went straight up.  “She died in Devon, back in England when I was taken and sold.”

At once Lars realized his mistake.  He remembered where he was and that this was not his daughter after all, but he marveled at the subtle changes that made the world what it was.  He also noticed the Captain fumbling for the rope and the two mates getting back out of the boat and sporting knives.  Lars began to run.  He had to find the others.  He had to get home, to his own Angelica and to his own Kirsten in his own world.