R5 Greta: Confrontation, part 3 of 3

Immediately, the two men who held Greta’s arms jumped back. This proved good, because Greta needed to collapse to the floor and take a moment to herself, to recover from the brink of death, and fortunately, Lady Brunhild gave her that moment.  The woman stared at her and seemed to be recovering a bit of her own strength as well, but outwardly she appeared to be examining the armor as if deciding what to do.

“I must tell you.”  Greta breathed as she struggled to her feet.  She would have appreciated the opportunity to pass out, but she was not about to stay prostrate before the woman.  “The armor belongs to the Nameless god.”  She spoke of the one with whom Brunhild and the men with her were most familiar.  “Defender and the sword, Salvation, have a mind of their own.  I do not want you to be hurt.”

Even as Greta finally got to her feet, Lady Brunhild spit in her face.  “Strip her.” She ordered.  The two who had been holding her arms stepped up and touched her.  Greta cried out.  She felt the power surge through her.  It struck the two men like lightening and shot them twenty feet through the air where they crumpled, unconscious, if not dead.

Greta caught her breath again, but found it much easier this time, as if the armor protected her from more than just arrows. Lady Brunhild stared hard at her and began to pace, once again to decide what to do.

“Ruby slippers,” Greta said, and Brunhild squinted at her, not understanding.

“I saw these weapons and this armor in a dream.” Brunhild began to speak.  “It was before Boarshag and it may be why you startled me so at the time.  The great God, Mithras, bless his name, revealed to me that if I could take them from the one wearing them I would receive riches and power beyond counting.” She stopped in front of Greta’s face and Greta tried to smile for her, and it would have been a truly obnoxious smile if her cheeks were not hurting.  “Give it to me, now!”  The Lady said and threw her every ounce of compulsion behind the words.

This time, Greta hardly felt it, though she knew it had to be very draining for the Lady.  She knew Lady Brunhild would sleep well that night, but for Greta, she merely smiled more broadly.  The Lady, however, did not attack Greta.  Greta remained as vulnerable and human as ever.  But the Lady went after the armor of the Kairos, and as such she had zero chance of success.  Greta watched the Lady’s face flush and she could almost taste the anger that rose up in the woman’s veins.  By contrast, Greta stood very calm and resolute, and smiled as much as her cheeks allowed.  Finally, the Lady grabbed the hilt of Salvation which stuck up over Greta’s shoulder. This time, the charge appeared sufficient to glue the Lady’s hands to the sword.  The more the Lady tried to pull, the more she got drained, until a small surge kicked her free before she killed herself.

“I told you, you cannot have it,” Greta said, and something rose up in her from all the days in the ancient past.  “And your Mithras will not help you.  He has no given authority in this region, and he knows if he shows his face he will be killed for real, and this time I will not be there to bring him back.”  Nameless got tired of the game, and he was a master game player, arguably second only to Loki among the northern gods of old.  Indeed, some of the men thought they were hearing directly from the Nameless god, the reported owner of the armor, and they would not have been wrong in that assumption even though Greta remained where she stood.

Meanwhile, Lady Brunhild fainted in Kunther’s arms. “Watch her tonight,” she said and promptly passed out.  They took Greta away at sword point because no one would touch her.  To Greta’s disappointment, however, they did not return her to the room with the others.  Instead, she got driven into a real storage closet which did not even have a window.  When they shut the door, she sat in utter darkness.

The state of grace Greta had felt, left her with the light.  She tried to reach out to Yin-mo.  She tried to tell him it would be all right to plan for the morning attack, as he thought best, but please limit his and the knight’s contact with humans as much as possible.  She felt he acknowledged her, but she could not be sure.

She searched for Thorn in her mind’s eye, but he seemed to be asleep.  Thissle, on the other hand, seemed awake and curious.  She and Bragi were half-way down the Mount on night watch.  They had been busy.  Thissle left the glamour that Lady Brunhild found.  She left it to fool the guards when Bragi stole the real statue and took it to the diggings.  After hiding the statue beside the powder, they talked to any number of men. Thissle tired from all of that. More than once she had to step up and break the spell Lady Brunhild had set like a glaze over the men’s eyes. That seemed the only way they could be sure about the men, and then Bragi went on duty with a rocket-like flare which would be the signal for all of the men to vacate the Temple.

All at once, Greta seemed to be seeing out of Thissle’s eyes and hearing with her ears.  Thissle yawned and Greta yawned with her.

“But in reality,” Bragi said.  “I think Karina is so very beautiful, it has made her shy. She is shy around men and shy about outshining all of the women around her.”

“Silly boy.”  Thissle yawned again.  “Human women live to outshine each other.  Why, for some, if they can’t outshine their neighbors, life is hardly worth living.”

Greta jumped back into her own skin.  That felt like a strange experience, and now Greta had a monster headache on top of her hunger and all of her other pains.  She did not expect to sleep.

She tried to reach out to Berry, to see how she was.  She imagined her and Hans, Fae and Hobknot all sitting in Fae’s tent worrying about her. It seemed a sweet thought, but then, Greta felt sure it was only her imagination.  Greta smiled at the thought and got struck with a vision, like the opening of a curtain on a scene that looked all too real.

She saw a young woman, screaming and terrified. She looked about Greta’s age, perhaps seventeen, but absolutely beautiful.  Greta well understood her terror.  A worm, a dragon hovered over her, looking at her like a tasty morsel.

Bragi stood there, yelling at the monster. Greta could not hear the words. But no, it was not Bragi.  She heard the young woman.

“No, father.  Please!  Hans, help me!”

It was Hans, but Bragi’s age.

“Berry!”  Greta snapped out of it, shouted the word out loud.  But how did she age so much in her big form?  She should have still looked thirteen, even if Hans looked eighteen or nineteen.  It seemed a mystery.  She would have to puzzle it out somehow, but even as she began to think, she fell fast asleep.

Elect II—20 Underground, part 3 of 3

Roland rubbed his hands together and something like fire appeared in his hands.  He dropped the flame and it illuminated the shaft all the way down, about twenty feet,

“Here’s a rope,” Jessica said and brought one end to Latasha.  She went back and tied the other end to a steel column that held up the ceiling.

“Me first,” Roland said and grabbed the rope from Latasha.

Officer Dickenson spoke while Roland went down, slowly and quietly.  “Science teacher?”

“Biology,” Boston said.  “I’m thinking of letting Latasha do her project on arachnids.”

ac-jessica-2Officer Dickenson nodded.  Jessica had a comment.

“I never had cool teachers like you.  My science teachers in high school were all dorks.”

Roland directed his speech up as he got some kind of lights in place that stayed on.  “Come down quietly.”

Fiona came next, but she looked first at Jessica and spoke to Harmony.  “You did say these were not spiritual creatures.”   Boston made Harmony call her troop so they could guard the opening while they went exploring.

Boston was the last to reach the bottom of the hole.  She saw a cavern made of natural limestone and granite.  There was an old cot along a wall with a couple of moldy woolen blankets folded on top.  Several boxes held World War II ration packs and there was a rifle and a rusty revolver in one corner.

“Fallout shelter,” Harmony named the place.

“Nineteen-fifties, I would guess,” Boston agreed.

“Wow,” Latasha was curious about it all.  “People used to think they were going to get bombs dropped on their heads?”  She did not understand the thinking behind bomb shelters in America.  Boston at least understood the history.

ac-roland“Over here,” Roland called, and he showed them an opening at the back of the cavern.  It was a perfect archway, like a door, framed in metal.  “Looks like someone uncovered this more recently.”  He pointed to the rocks and rubble pushed aside.

“Or some slight earthquake revealed it, and someone recently dug it out,” Jessica, the California girl suggested.

“Possible,” Boston agreed.  She stood in the opening, tried to pierce the darkness of the long hallway and made a decision.  “Roland and I.  The rest of you wait here.  Latasha, you have to guard our escape hatch.”

“But I—.”  Latasha saw the look in her teacher’s eye and amended her words.  “Yes Ma’am.”

Roland had another globe in a hidden pocket which glowed with a silver light that he could increase or dim with a word.  It was like the three globes he left floating around the cavern with no visual means of support.  Roland went first and Boston followed with a hand on his back.  She immediately spoke.

“I have to call Lockhart.”  They had entered a hallway of some kind of ship—no doubt an alien ship.  There were small chambers on either side of the hall that glowed ever so slightly with a sickly green light.  Each one held a spider, unmoving, and the hall looked like it led to a huge central room that gave off a green glow from hundreds if not thousands of such chambers.

“They appear to be in suspension, some kind of cryogenics,” Roland said, touching the outside of one of the chambers.

“I wonder how long,” Boston thought out loud.

boston-4b“No telling.  I don’t recognize the writing.”  Roland pointed at the scribbles over each chamber which appeared to be a numbering system

“So wait.”  Boston tapped her head and paced in the hallway while she talked.  “Latasha’s enemy, Carlos the drug dealer finds this place to hide out from the police.  He finds a partially uncovered door and manages to open it.  After a time, he manages to revive a spider.  A stupid thing to do, but it turns out to be a not so smart male with whom he can make a deal to kill off his rival drug dealers.  All is well but he does not know that secretly the male has revived a female which he keeps hidden while she is busy laying eggs.  When the babies are born, Carlos finds through the male he can have some control over the babies.  He thinks this is even better, but when he meets Mama, he has to make a new deal, especially after Jessica and Latasha slice up the male.  Mama goes along with it while she gets the lay of the land, but terminates Carlos as soon as she realizes she will do better without him.”

“That is correct.”  Roland and Boston heard the voice.  The big spider was clinging to the ceiling of the hallway looking down at them with multi-faceted eyes and snapping jaws.  Roland and Boston wore a glamour that made them appear human, but they were not human.  The spider shot her web to trap them, but they vanished at elf speed and were already in the cavern yelling by the time the webbing struck the empty hallway floor.

“Get out!  Get out!”

ab-spider-web-5A strand of webbing shot from the darkened hole before the Mama appeared.  It wrapped around Latasha’s leg and yanked her feet from beneath her.  A whip of the spider’s head and Latasha shot across the room to crash into the cavern wall.  That hurt, but mostly it made Latasha angry, and she still had her ax gripped tightly in her hand.

Harmony rushed up the rope first to prepare her troop for what she expected might be an invasion of spiders.  Officer Dickenson was right behind her, but not elf fast.  He stopped at the hole.  He swore mightily, turned, pulled his revolver and fired on the giant spider.  Jessica and Fiona both fired their arrows as well.  Officer Dickenson did not have the best aim, but both arrows struck the spider.  The spider did not seem bothered by two arrows.  Jessica and Fiona escaped up the rope without a word.

Mama spider tried to fire her webbing several times, but Boston had her wand up and the webbing went astray.  Officer Dickenson ran out of bullets as Roland had his bow out and fired a flaming arrow.  It struck the back end of the spider and exploded even as Latasha arrived.  The spider was already leaking guts from the back when Latasha brought her ax down on the head and ended it.  And there was silence for a moment before they heard the clickity-clack sound of spider feet in the hallway.

“Babies!” Officer Dickenson shouted.  He about had his revolver reloaded.

“Get out!” Roland said again and Boston repeated it as she held her hands and her wand up.

ac-ash-dickersonDickenson grabbed Latasha by the arm and also repeated the words, but softly, “Get out.”  Latasha looked like she wanted to argue, but she did not.  She went ahead of the police officer and jumped almost the entire way to the top.  Dickenson followed more slowly.

Roland grabbed Boston around the middle and brought her to the base of the hole, even as the babies came pouring into the room and stopped at the magical barrier Boston put up.  Roland tied the bottom of the rope in a harness around Boston so she could be pulled up, then he raced to the top.

Boston was straining against the pressure of the spiders trying to break through when the rope tightened and she began to move.  Immediately, she pulled her barrier back to cover only the bottom of the hole, and then she tried to do something she did not know if she could do.  As she went up, she sucked the air out of the hole to create a vacuum.  The rocks around the hole collapsed into the vacuum to seal the exit.  No doubt some babies were crushed at the bottom when the rocks settled, but it was more magic than Boston could handle and she arrived at the top of the sealed hole, dizzy and incoherent.

Roland kissed her quickly and stole her phone.  “I have to call Lockhart,” he said without explaining for the uninformed.  But even as he started through Boston’s interminable contact list, Jessica interrupted.

ac-jessica-2“Wait,” Jessica turned off her phone.  “The ghouls have taken over city hall.  Sara is trapped.  We have to go.”

“Ghouls?” Officer Dickenson asked in a shaky voice.  Latasha could only nod

Jessica stared for a second at her phone before she asked.  “Ghouls in city hall?  Why is that unusual?”

Elect II—17 Closing the Door, part 2 of 3

Everyone gathered at the library at five-thirty.  They were all armed, taking no chances in case the door was guarded.  Some feared that any attempt to close the door might trigger some alarm.

“Mindy,” Sara spoke up when the elevator arrived.  “Are you sure it will be all right?  You know, my position with the chaplain’s office will not cover invading a restricted area.”

Jessica grinned her little grin.  “I still say we should have borrowed some pest control uniforms.”

ac-mindy-5No one wants Mindy to get in trouble,” Emily said.

Mindy shrugged off the worry and got everyone on the elevator.  “Some orcs will be stranded here if we are successful,” she changed the subject.

“Yes,” Amina agreed.  “But at least no more should get in.”

“It is not going to be easy hunting down the ones stranded here,” Jessica admitted, seriously.

“We may have help with that,” Emily said, but she did not explain as the elevator stopped and the doors opened.  Amina stuck her head out first.  Bill was there, but she ignored him.

“All clear,” Bill said.

“All clear,” Amina confirmed and the women poured out of the elevator.  Only Mindy paused to offer Bill a quick kiss.  Melissa and Maria went straight to their places and Maria began to sprinkle the liquid they had prepared around the door.  Melissa opened her book and began to chant, throwing occasional bits of powder at the door, while Sara stood beside her and called on what she imagined might be a different power.  She prayed.

Emily set Diane, Greta, Hilde and Natasha at the four corners around the work.  She kept herself and Jessica in the middle to watch the door.  They stood beside Mindy and Amina.  Mindy was there to make sure no part of the ritual was forgotten, and Amina kept her senses flared.

As the ritual progressed, Amina shook her head.  She was getting nothing.  That was not right.  When it came time to turn the dragon and open the door to complete the ritual, Mindy paused with her hand on the statue.  “Wait a minute,” she said.  “Bill?”  The kiss caught up with her and it did not feel right.  Besides, Bill still stood by the elevator, like he was waiting for new arrivals.  Her Bill would have been in the middle of the action asking annoying questions.

ac-amina-3Amina shook her head once more at that same time.  Her words sounded out over Mindy’s question.  “It’s a trap!”

Amina pointed and Diane and Natasha left their corners to join Greta and Hilde and make a wall of spears.

Mindy turned the dragon and turned it back with the words, “Keep working.”  Then she grabbed her bow and stood beside Jessica and Emily.  Three bows lifted as orcs poured out from the stacks of books and artifacts.  They lined up to charge and only hesitated a second in the face of the spears.  The girls at least looked like they knew what they were doing, even if they had only been learning to use them since the Granger incident last semester.

Emily did not hesitate.  Three arrows killed three orcs.  Three more orcs fell from three spears, spears which were pulled from the hands of the girls.  The fourth freshman, Natasha, pinned her orc to the side of a book case.  But then, the spears were out of action and the freshmen only had their staffs.  And there were still a half-dozen orcs to contend with.

Emily waded forward and temporarily drove back three of the orcs, her sword flashing in the dim light of the sub-basement.  Then the big one knocked her into a rack of artifacts, many of which fell and broke.  That just made Emily mad.

Natasha and Greta double-teamed one orc.  Diane and Hilde took another.  Amina and Mindy backed up the third.  Emily, Jessica and Sara each took one, as one of the orcs ran around the wall of spears to get at the ritual from the back side, and only Sara stood there.

ac-j-j-orc-2The orc hesitated on sight of the Priestess, as if he knew who she was and her place in the tribe.  She seemed much more frightening to the orc than even the witch might have been.  He overcame his fear enough to make a half-hearted stab at her, but Sara shouted, “You shall not.”  She easily blocked the sword with her shepherd’s crook and promptly clocked the orc on the head.  She followed up by lifting the base of her crook between the orc’s legs, and the orc felt it.  The third hit cracked the side of the orc’s head and sent him sprawling to the floor.  The sword clattered away and Sara stood over the orc with the base of her crook against the orc’s temple.  She could not finish it, and the orc sensed this.  He made a grab for her leg and growled.  Sara cried as she rammed her crook three times into the orc’s temple.  The blood burst forth.  The orc let go of her leg.  The orc died, and Sara wept.

On the opposite side of the room, Natasha got knocked to the floor and Greta’s block of the orc’s back-swing was not entirely successful.  Her arm got cut, but Natasha managed to pick up a fallen orc sword and rammed it into the orc’s chest.  The orc collapsed and Greta, bleeding though she was, did not hesitate to finish the job.

Emily killed her big orc in time to see Jessica ram an arrow into the eye of her assailant.  Jessica’s staff broke in two, but with half a staff she kept the orc’s sword at bay while she snatched up her wicked army knife from the floor and shoved it up under the orc’s chin.

Amina and Mindy had finished their enemy quick enough for Mindy to hover over an unconscious Bill.  They had teamed up in close quarters combat with orcs before and were far better trained than the freshman.  Hilde had a cut in her leg, but Diane was in one piece and standing over their orc growling and sweating.

ac-j-j-orcEveryone survived, and Emily breathed her relief until she heard a rumbling at the door.  The tile doorway was open, and again Emily did not hesitate.  The ritual Maria and Melissa were performing was seconds from completion, but they could not wait.  A monster of an orc showed itself at the door.  Emily picked up the dragon statue and threw it.

“Catch.”

The big brute caught it and looked at it dumbly as Emily leapt and let out a war cry.  Her feet bounced off the chest of the beast, but it was enough to make the beast stumble back through the door.  At once there was a great flash of light, like when the elves arrived in the world, but this light came with a great wind.  Everything not tied down got blown to the back wall before something of an implosion sucked everything back toward the tile door.  Some artifacts were lost in the other world.  Some cracked against the old Spanish tile floor as the door closed.  People laid out flat and grabbed anything nailed down to keep from being sucked in themselves.  And after all that drama, there was a small pop sound, and the door was closed.

Melissa looked up at Emily as Emily stood and brushed herself off.  “I finished just in time,” Melissa said.

“But will the door stay closed?” Emily asked.

Melissa looked at Mindy who was cradling Bill’s head.  “It will,” Mindy said.  “As long as the artifact stays on the other side.”  She paused before she added, “Of course, that doesn’t prevent the person who opened the door from opening another if they find another artifact from Avalon.”  Bill moaned and Mindy became lost to the conversation.

emily-a2Emily looked around.  Jessica and Natasha were tending Greta’s cut arm, and Greta was trying not to cry.  Maria was already laying hands on Hilde’s leg.  She kept saying, “She won’t lose the leg,” but Diane leaned over the two on the ground and kept repeating, “I’m sorry.  I’m sorry.”  Amina hugged Sara who cried softly.  Emily stepped over, said nothing, hugged the Priestess briefly, and turned to the wall.

“Riverbend,” she called, not knowing if the elf would hear her.  “Captain Riverbend,” she called again, and the wall began to shimmer with light.  Everyone paid attention when Captain Riverbend stepped from the light.  She came in her disguise of blue jeans and T, fancy cloak and glasses which she straightened, even as Maria straightened her glasses to get a better look at this newcomer.

“Emily?”  Riverbend could not help looking around the room at the devastation.

Emily scrunched her face and snapped her fingers until her face brightened.  “Picker.  I need Picker, Bluetooth and, I forget.”  Riverbend just looked curious.  “Restorations.  Isn’t that what they do?”

“Yes?”  Riverbend did not understand.

Emily sighed.  “I need the archives room here restored and cleaned up, including getting rid of all the bodies and signs of struggle.  I don’t know what they charge, but it is not right that Mindy should be expelled or barred from her work here.”

“I’ll pay,” Sara quickly spoke up.

“My dad has money,” Jessica spoke from the other side of the room.

ac-riverbend-a8“No,’ Emily held up her hand.  “Maybe my friends can help me, but I pay.”

Riverbend looked again around the room.  “It is an honor meeting you all.  You have no idea.”  She returned her eyes to Emily.  “Majesty, I will fetch him right away.”  She dipped her head and stepped back into the light as the light vanished.

“Get your things,” Emily ordered.  “We have people who need a doctor, no offense Maria.”

“None taken.  I was about to say that.”

“You don’t want us here when Picker, Bluetooth and whoever show up?” Natasha asked.

“Block,” Emily responded as she led the way to the freight elevator.  They had the regular elevator stuck at the bottom and the freight elevator rigged to break once they got back up to the top.  “Picker, Block and Bluetooth I think.  I have their card somewhere back at the suite.”

“They won’t have much time to work,” Melissa suggested and she carried arms full of magical things.  “It won’t take long to get an elevator repairman here, even at this time of night.”

“Hopefully enough time,” Mindy said as she helped Bill walk and took one last look around at the devastation.

Elect II—10 Green People, part 2 of 3

Monday morning, Doctor Singh met with the new hire in the biology department.

“Doctor Assur, it is good to have you on the staff at last,” Professor Singh was clearly delighted.  Doctor Assur merely looked around the small office and saw that it was at least a corner office.

“Who had this office?”

a-science-hall-1Professor Singh knew the question would come up.  “Doctor Hilde, Biochemistry.  He got involved in the Pentagon project last year and is no longer with us.”

“Is there money?”

“Well, yes, some.  The school has a research reputation.  There is some NSF money.  Orlov and Maynard have some CDC money,” Professor Singh paused and understood.  “Oh, there is a small budget.  You can give me the expenses for furniture and such, and as long as it is not extravagant, I am sure the university will reimburse you.

“What about quiet?”

“Oh yes.  This year all is quiet.  Orlov, Maynard, myself and the others are very quiet people.”

“Good.  Now if only we could get the students to shut-up, right?”

Professor Singh tried to smile.

a-a-orlov###

Monday evening, Maria and Emily cornered Professor Orlov.  He seemed in a hurry, but they handed him the papers before he could escape.  They had discussed it and determined that Orlov and Maynard were the most obvious suspects, and maybe the only suspects.

“From the coroner’s office,” Maria said.

“Apparently there are a number of mindless young people rampaging around the woods behind the parade ground,” Emily added.

“The baseball field?”  Professor Orlov wanted to be sure he knew where she was talking about.  “What do you mean, mindless?”

Maria pointed to the papers, and the professor took a minute to read.  He said only one thing while he was reading, and it was softly spoken, like he was not aware he said it out loud.  “No,” he said.  “That’s not right.”  He looked up at the girls and waved the papers.  “Mind if I keep these.  I need to examine the findings closely and check out a couple of things.”

“No, fine.  We were hoping you might help us track down what might be happening.”  The professor grabbed his briefcase and shot out of the room in a hurry and without another word.

“I would say we got his attention,” Maria said.  Emily just nodded.  The janitor was there and he wanted to close up the science building for the night.

###

As the light broke above the horizon on Tuesday morning, Amina brought a troop of police armed with dart guns into the forest behind the parade ground.  Melissa went with her, as she said, for moral support.

“No one is making a record of this?” Melissa had to ask.  Her magic would not show up on camera except in the effects, but Melissa was mostly shy when it came to magic in public.

Millsaps answered.  “Any blabbing to reporters is grounds for dismissal.”  He moved several yards away from the girls.  It was not really what Melissa was asking, but it was good to know.

“Jessica would be better at this,” Amina was not keen on the idea of getting too close to the mindless ones.

Melissa shook her head.  “We know where they are, just not exactly where or how many.”

ac-rob-parker-1“You can’t catch it if they bite you, can you?”  Officer Rob Parker asked.  He was assigned to stay with the girls.

“No, they are not zombies, I mean like in the movies,” Melissa answered.  “Julie and Maria have ruled out any danger to us all, unless one of us is tempted to eat one of their brains, we can’t get contaminated.”  Melissa picked her boots way up against the grass which was still tall despite the winter.  She watched her steps and so she did not see the look of disgust that crossed Officer Parker’s face at the idea of eating someone’s brains.  She also bumped into Amina when Amina stopped suddenly.

Amina shook her head.  “I cannot see them well.  It is like they are an empty space in the world that should not be there, like they are absent and that makes a hole.”

“What?”  Millsaps stepped over to hear.  The whole line of police had stopped.

“The space is behind those trees and up in the trees.  They are becoming active with the light.  Please.  I don’t want to look anymore.”

Millsaps nodded.  “Stay here.”  He waved to both sides of the police line and pointed to the trees and also pointed up in the trees.  They started forward.  Amina, Melissa and officer Parker watched, and listened.

Very quickly there were screams and screeches and howls like howler monkeys defending their territory.  Amina knew a few would break through the police line and she dreaded finding her way to those last mindless souls.  Their very existence scratched against her senses like coarse sandpaper.  She feared if she examined them too closely she might start to weep and not be able to stop.  She could not identify them, who they once were, and that, at least, was a blessing.

kac-melissa-magicHer thoughts were interrupted when two of them came rushing out from the trees and headed straight toward them.  Officer Parker got to one knee to be sure he struck his targets.  He squeezed the trigger twice, slowly, and the mindless ones staggered, stumbled, and went down like the tranquilized beasts they had become.

Amina drew in her breath and looked to the side as she felt another one.  Melissa had him.  She had her hands up and one hand sweated around her wand.  The young man looked frozen in place and would remain that way as long as Melissa’s strength held out.  Rob Parker squeezed off another shot and the young man’s eyes rolled up and he fell to the grass even as Amina screamed.

“Joel!”

Elect II—1 Summer Fun, part 2 of 3

Maria and Melissa got the twin beds in Tyler’s room.  Mom apologized, but both of them had brothers and said they understood.  Amina and Mindy got the twins in David’s room.  David was in the National Guard and currently deployed oversees in some place he could not talk about.  Jessica got the other twin in Emily’s room.

“Just like at school,” Jessica commented as she unpacked.  “This is a preview.”

“Except at school we won’t have Mom downstairs in the kitchen cooking way too much food.”  Emily yawned.  Now that the gang was there, her exhaustion started catching up with her.  She felt safe, whether she was or not.  Melissa freaked her out a bit when she sat cross-legged on the floor in Emily’s room, chanted and sprinkled what looked like dust all around.

“Mom’s going to get out the vacuum if you keep it up,” she commented.

Melissa also smeared some oil in a corner of every window and door in the house, and secretly to keep the window cleaner from coming out.  Melissa was satisfied that she had done all she could, until Jessica pointed out the heating and air conditioning ducts.

“It might get in through the roof and come down through the ductwork,” so Melissa applied some oil there, too.  It was odorless in the air conditioning of August, but it might have smelled in the winter with the heat turned on.  Once that was done, there was nothing else to do but go down to the living room where Dad had the Yankee game on.  He was an old time Clippers fan and offered to treat them all to a game at the stadium, hot dogs and all.  The Mud Hens were coming to town on Monday, he said, but the girls declined.

“I could go,” Tyler offered, and his dad agreed.  They had a date.

“And there are always some tickets at the box office if you girls change your minds,” he said.

ac-emily-5aPoor Tyler, Emily thought.  He was sleeping in the basement, but he could hardly complain about having his house invaded by all these young and good looking women.  He mostly sat and watched, and it was not the Yankee game he watched.  But he said little, like he was suddenly shy.  Then again, Emily did not have the strength at the moment to tease him, so maybe he got off lucky.

After supper, which Emily struggled through, the girls made various excuses to go up to bed early.  It was the plane trip and the drag waiting at the airports and a busy day of travel, and the family understood, even if Tyler was disappointed to see them disappear up the stairs.  Once up, Maria got out her concoction of anti-dream juice and then they had a schedule of sitting up through the night to watch over Emily.

“I feel like the helpless one for a change,” Emily said with a big yawn.

“You are,” Jessica responded.  “We’re a team.  Go to sleep.”

Emily nodded and had no trouble doing that very thing.

 

###

 

The banging started around midnight.  There was banging all around the outside of the house.  Mindy sat on watch and Jessica was asleep but sat straight up when there was a tap-tap on Emily’s window.  Mindy jumped out of her chair and switched on the overhead light.

ab-bogyman-5“Turn it off,” Jessica ordered, and when she did, Jessica peered out the window to see if she could glimpse something in the night.  There was nothing to be seen, so Mindy turned the light back on when Melissa came to the doorway.  She was sweating and trembling.

“I don’t have very much magic,” Melissa said.  “I won’t be able to keep it out.  I’m sorry.”  She collapsed in the doorway and Jessica and Mindy got her into Jessica’s bed.

Amina and Maria came last to the door and Amina spoke quickly.  “It has not gotten in.”  Emily’s mom came out of her room.

“I don’t mind the slumber party, but I would appreciate if you would keep it down a little.”

“Sorry to wake you.”

“Did we wake Mister Hudson?”

Emily’s mom shook her head.  “He could snore through a hurricane.”  She turned and went back to her room.

After that, Jessica found Emily’s old sleeping bag in the closet beside the bed Melissa was now occupying.  Jessica was not leaving the room.  Emily, and now Melissa were both asleep and unharmed as far as Maria could tell, but Jessica would not abandon them.  Maria took Mindy back to the other room, but Mindy swore she would not be able to sleep.  It was Amina’s turn to watch, but before she turned off the light, Jessica got out the army knife her dad bought her when she announced she was going into ROTC.  Then she found Emily’s sword, the one made by hand by the four hundred and seventy-year-old Heinrich Schultz.  Jessica had no idea if the sword had any magical properties, but she felt safer when she curled up beside it.

ab-bogyman-1The wind picked up at two in the morning.  It rapidly reached dangerous proportions around the house.  The windows shook.  Every door rattled, and if the women had been aware to notice, the doors rattled one at a time.

Melissa became a bucket of sweat and began to whimper in her sleep.  Jessica could not wake her enough to get a word out of her.  Maria came in and managed to get Melissa to swallow some liquid.

“A mild sedative,” Maria said.  “I would rather she sleep than be injured.”

The wind stopped.  Amina who was in the corner made her announcement.  “It has not gotten in.”

“Good thing,” Maria and Jessica spoke together.

Oddly, this time Mindy slept through the noise.  Emily’s mom also did not make an appearance.  Tyler did come up from the basement.  He decided to finish the night on the living room couch, with the kitchen light on, but the women upstairs did not know this.

ab-bogyman-4Four in the morning is when everything happened, only this time there was silence.  Maria was on watch.  Maria turned on the small light beside the bed to act like a night light.  Melissa and Emily were both asleep, and Maria felt like nodding herself.  Jessica’s eyes popped open, not because she had some sixth sense, she imagined, but because Emily’s closet door was slowly opening and pushing up against the bottom of the sleeping bag.

Jessica could feel the presence in the room and it frightened her, terribly.  She felt it pause over Melissa before it rounded the bed to Emily’s side of the room.  Emily had said that when she was little she took the bed farthest away from the closet door, and now Jessica knew why.

When she had her chance, Jessica leapt up and switched on the light.  Both Jessica and Maria caught a glimpse of the creature before it went invisible.  It did not look at all like the man in the movie.  This creature had absolutely no humanity about it.

As soon as it vanished, Jessica got grabbed by her hair, tossed to the ground, and the light got put out.  Maria’s chair got knocked to the floor, and the small light between the beds also went out.  Jessica grabbed Emily’s sword, and when Maria crawled to the door and switched the overhead light back on, she was ready.  She saw the indent in the rug where the creature stood, hovering over Emily, and she swung the sword as hard as she could.  The creature howled.

ab-bogeyman-2Emily and Melissa both sat straight up at that sound.  Emily punched, and connected with something that doubled over.  Melissa raised her hands, though it seemed to the others that Melissa was still mostly asleep.  There was a small gust like wind and they heard something crash into the upper corner of the room.  The howl came again from there, and they saw a purple smear, like bogy-blood spread across the wall.

Something ran between Maria and Jessica, shoved them out of the way and dove out the window.  The glass shattered and everyone in the house came running, except Mister Hudson who continued to snore.

“It is gone,” Amina announced.

“Where?”  Emily got up and avoided the broken glass

Amina shook her head.  “It is too powerful,” she said as she and Maria helped Melissa to her feet and carried her away from the broken glass.

“I never thought my little spell would stop it,” Melissa confessed in a sleepy mumble.

“A simple lock might confuse an ogre for a second,” Mindy said.  “But eventually the ogre will just rip the door off the hinges and without breaking a sweat.”

“I like that analogy,” Melissa said with a bit more strength.

Mindy screamed, “Don’t touch it!”  Emily and Jessica were staring at the smear of bogy blood up by the ceiling.  Emily at five-six would have had to jump to touch it, but Jessica at five-nine had her hand poised.  “Don’t touch it,” Mindy said more calmly, but with a strict to-be-obeyed voice.  “Unless you want to be haunted by nightmares for the rest of your life.”  She finished the sentence and Jessica snatched her hand back.

“What on earth happened here?”  Emily’s mom was aghast at the destruction.

“Maybe it was that big wind,” Tyler spoke over his mother’s shoulder.  “I bet it was that wind.”

Emily’s mom looked hard at the girls in the room, but none of them denied it so what could she say?

“Shoes,” Jessica said, and Emily echoed, “Shoes everyone,” while she slipped her feet in her sneakers which were by the door.  Emily was thinking about the glass, but Jessica was worried about the bogy blood in case someone accidentally stepped in it.

“Go back to bed, mom,” Emily said.  “We will clean up.”

“You think I can sleep?  Now I’ll have to call the window people first thing Monday morning, and that is going to cost,” she said.  “And your father is going to have to get some plywood in the morning.  He is not going to like that.  Sunday is his sleep day.”  She closed the door to her room.

“Your mom doesn’t know anything, does she?”  Jessica noticed.

Emily shook her head.  “She doesn’t want to know.”

“You’re welcome for the wind thing,” Tyler said, quick to point out that he lied for them.  “So what was it?”

“A bogyman.”  Emily spoke honestly.

“It came out of the closet,” Jessica added.

“Awesome!  You had a boogyman in the closet.”  They did not feel the need to correct him since that was essentially correct.  Instead, they went to get gloves and the strongest cleaners they could find.

“I like my closet,” Jessica said.  “Of course it is about as big as Emily’s room.”

“Beverly Hills,” Emily told her staring brother.  She looked up at the corner of her room and did not doubt that by the time they finished cleaning, the corner of her room would have to be repainted.

Avalon 4.0: part 4 of 7, Run for Cover

“I’m not making myself look like a man,” Boston protested.

“I’m not worried about that,” Mingus responded.  “You can make yourself appear human easily enough, as I have seen, but in this case, you need to show oriental features and change your red head to dark brown.”

“Like this,” Alexis showed her own features.  She still looked like Alexis, but the Chinese version.  Boston tried to copy her work, and also came out looking like a Chinese version of Alexis.

“I don’t have a mirror,” Boston complained, as Alexis put her hand over her mouth to hold back asian twins 1her laugh.

“It will do,” MIngus said.  “Now the clothes.”  That was easy enough, since they were all wearing fairy weave which they could shape and color with a thought.  Alexis, being human, had to speak out loud to get her fairy weave to change, but it all came out fine since they could see what they were doing.  “And now the horses,” Mingus added.

“I don’t have that kind of power,” Boston protested, as she turned her robe to a light blue, just to be different.

“None of us do, alone,” Alexis said, and took her father’s hand.  Boston touched his shoulder so they could both give him their magic.  He took it and immediately cast his hand over the horses, flinging a bit of sand in their direction to make the magic work.  At once, all three horses looked like shaggy Black Sea ponies, with blankets and small packs in place of their saddles.  Honey and Horse did not bat an eye at the change, but Alexis’ horse, Misty Gray, bucked a little, once.

“We are ready,” Mingus turned to Shanjo, who again stared, dumbfounded at what just happened.

“Close your mouth,” Boston repeated her earlier statement along with her laugh.

Shanjo shook his head.  “I recognize the fire headed voice, but you do not look like the woman.”

“Still me,” Boston said as she stepped over and grabbed Alexis’ arm.  “But now I look more like my sister,” she said.

“Sisters?” Shanjo was curious.  “I see, like twins.”

“And I am the father of two daughters,” Mingus interrupted.  “Who plans to get them safely to the protection of the army camp as soon as possible.  Can we go?”

donkey 5“Of course, of course,” Shanjo said, “Shuz, shuz,” and they started walking.

They stopped early that evening, well before the ghoul ambush, so they did not get very far that day.  Alexis and Boston shared a tent while Mingus slept out by the fire.  The women did not get much sleep as they stayed up late, talking about being an elf and growing up an elf maid.

“I haven’t practiced much with my bow and arrows,” Boston admitted.  “I mean, I practiced with a hunting bow when I was growing up.  It was part of my redneck training.”  She grinned.  “I know where it is, in my own personal slip.  I mean I haven’t gotten it out to practice since I became an elf.”

“Don’t let father push you into learning to kill,” Alexis said.  “Some elf maids are bloodthirsty, warriors, who can fire two or three arrows with deadly accuracy in the time it takes a human to fire one, but most are not.  Some are weavers, true artists, like the makers of this fairy weave.  Some care for the spiritual creatures left in the world.  In our day, in the future, there are elf maids that care for the remaining unicorns of the world.  Mirowen, Doctor Robert’s mate back home, was a hundred years a unicorn maid before she got tangled up with Emile.  I, actually worked for the science department on Avalon.  I had my hands on a laptop computer almost fifty years before they appeared in the human world.”

“I know,” Boston said.  “I’m impressed.”

“Don’t be.  I was a secretary and file clerk, about what I still do to this day for the Men in Black, truth be told.”

“Still.  Who would have thought the elves of Avalon would even have a science department.  I mean, we are spiritual creatures, are we not?”

Alexis nodded.  “Spiritual people, but not necessarily ignorant ones.  Swords and knives and bows alexis momand arrows in our day are an affectation, you know.”

Boston nodded and said, “Tell me about growing up, about Father Mingus and about your and Roland’s mother, please.  I never hear about your mother, much.”

alexis and RAlexis did, but it quickly became stories of her childhood and youth, covering the first hundred to hundred and fifty years or so of her life, and mostly humorous stories, the way such memories go.  So the dawn came without much sleep, but in human terms, Boston was maybe twenty and Alexis was at most twenty-five, so it did not bother them so much, having the strength of their youth.

That day would tell what the ghouls were after.  Ideally, Lockhart and the others got behind the ghouls on the previous afternoon, and would open up even as the ghouls were distracted and watching the caravan travel beneath their noses, as Mingus said.  They had no reason to suppose the ghouls had any interest in the merchants, or the opium they carried.  Everyone assumed they would only be looking for the travelers.  As it was, things did not work exactly that way.

Mingus rushed everyone, so the caravan moved by the ghouls in the early light before Lockhart and company could see well enough to get a clear shot.  It was not the plan, but Mingus was anxious to get his two daughters to the safety of the army camp, as he saw it, and he wanted to reach there by that evening.  That meant hurry, hurry.  He had no intention of spending another night out in the unprotected wilderness.

While Lockhart and the others were ready by dawn, having found a large clump of rocks on the edge of the desert that they could hide behind, and more importantly, keep their horses from giving away their position.  Mingus already drove the caravan beyond the narrow point.  He did not let them stop often to rest, and he hardly let them stop for lunch.  He felt justified when he caught a glimpse of the brigands attempting to cut them off before they reached the army camp.

This time, there were twice the number, or about sixty men that came off the hillside.  Mingus actually wondered why so few, unless the brigand chief had in mind to save most of his men to take on the army group.  As an elf, Mingus knew the mind of the brigand chief was calculating the odds, and decided sixty men was more than enough for a merchant caravan, now that those people on their horses were nowhere to be seen.  Normally, the chief would have been correct, but Mingus had something else in mind.pep battle fight

“Alexis.  Miss Riley.  Split the herd,” he said.  Alexis understood right away.  Boston remembered when Alexis and Roland did it, but she was not sure of herself.

“I’ll direct it,” Alexis said as she grabbed Boston’s hand.  They swung their hands as Alexis counted.  “On three.  One, two, three.”  Boston felt the power surge out of her.  It struck the brigands in the center of their charge, knocking down about ten to mumble, shake their heads, and crawl away.  Of the rest, about twenty-five headed to the left where there were trees and brambles.  They would be busy for a while until they figured out they were headed in the wrong direction.  Then it would take some time to get back through the bramble bushes.

The other twenty-five headed for the front of the caravan, and were more inclined to notice right away.  Fortunately, Shanjo and his twenty men had the numbers to meet such a force and started right away with a devastating barrage of arrows.  Clearly, the men were practiced at fending off bandits, and in fact, Shanjo had told the group that they began the journey a year earlier with a full company of fifty men.  They were all that was left.

“But every one a real fighter at this point,” Shanjo said to compliment the men before he confided more softly, “If not, they would be as dead as the others.”

By the time it came to hand to hand, Shanjo’s hardened men had the numbers reversed and met the enemy two to one in Shanjo’s favor.

A half dozen of Shanjo’s men came to Mingus’ side, at the back of the caravan, by the time the other half of the brigands made it out of the briars.  Mingus started the fireworks as he lobbed several fireballs toward the enemy.  A number of bushes, a couple of trees, and a couple of men caught fire.  Then the half dozen of Shanjo’s men fired their bows, and Boston belatedly reached explosion 1for her own bow.  Alexis pulled her wand, but then they stood there for a minute, not sure of what to do.

Boston and Alexis moved together, but in opposite directions.  Boston pulled out an arrow and fired it, not imagining to hit anything, but she remembered how Roland used to fire his arrows.  When it reached the front of the charging enemy, it exploded right on cue.  She grinned and fired two more, even as Alexis said, in the time it took Shanjo’s men to fire a second arrow.

Alexis turned toward the men they had knocked down when they split the herd.  They were getting up and looked angry.  She waved her wand and lifted her arms, and a great wind rose up.  It picked up pebbles, twigs, leaves, and plenty of insects and slapped the men in the face.  Those men had to cover up, and backed up to get away from the howling wind.  By then, Boston turned and fired two more exploding arrows.  Mingus also did not let up with his fireballs, and the rest of the brigands had enough and headed back up the hill.

Shanjo lost two men, but he did not complain.  With sixty against his twenty, he should have lost all his men and his cargo besides.

decker

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If you have come late to the episode, don’t panic.  Parts 1-3 are here on the blog under ‘recent posts’ and you can read them in order you wish.  Be sure and stick with the blog on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday to get the complete episode, Avalon 4.0, The Impossible Journey.

 

The Elect 17, part 2 of 4: Amazon Mindy

“Maynard in a moron!”  Emily griped about her professor and slammed her Earth Science book shut.  She slouched down in her lounge chair and ran her hand through her hair.  It was coming along nicely, but still in that awkward short but not too short stage.  “I swear she just hates people, all people.  I don’t take it personally.”  Maria and Amina looked up from their studies, but only briefly.

Jessica returned from the vending machine with a bag of peanuts that she was trying to open.  “Ugh.  Why do you think I am majoring in business?  Ugh.”ac jessica 2

Emily put out her hand.  Jessica handed her the bag and Emily opened it easily, except one peanut shot across the room.

“Hey!”  Jessica protested.  “I am perfectly capable of spilling them myself.”  Maria had her hand out.  Jessica gave her a few.  Amina lifted her hand and got a few as well.  Emily just looked at her but Jessica shook her head and pointed.  “Yours is over there.”

“I don’t need them,” Emily said with a pat on her stomach.

Amina tapped Emily’s arm and smiled.  “I have seen you eat.  You should be very fat.”

“High metabolism,” Maria said without looking up from her book.

“No, it’s those workouts with Heinrich and the sophomore ROTC class,” Emily said.  She put her book back into her backpack, which was sitting on the empty chair between her and Jessica.  Maria ac maria 4and Amina were on the couch.

“So no word from Detective Lisa?”  Maria looked up then and wanted to talk.

Emily shook her head.  “They have people searching as far away as the Philadelphia shipyards, but no sign of any lab.”

“Oh, thanks for reminding me about the zombies.”  Jessica threw her pencil down and stared at Emily.  It did not take much to turn her from her studies.  “I just hope this semester I don’t have another teacher killed.”

“You passed art history,” Maria pointed out.

“Yeah, but I spent a whole semester buttering up Missus Farmer for an A.  That was all wasted.”

Amina and Emily just looked at each other and shook their respective heads before Amina spoke.ac amina 6  “Funny.  The magic involved in making them was so very strong even if it only took a small spark to make it work.  But you would think such a thing would be easy to find.”

“Easy for you, maybe,” Emily said, and Amina looked away.

“I imagine it is hidden on many levels,” Maria suggested.

“Please, magic?”  Jessica started up again.  “I mean, I know.  I’m not stupid, but I’m still trying to get used to the idea of zombies.”  None of the people on campus had any memory of their time as Abby worshipers.

“More like Frankenstein type monsters,” Emily used the term her sisters used.

“That is actually a very good description.”  Maria had not been there when Emily and her sisters met and described them.  Maria liked the description, but she did not have time to comment further.  She fell silent as someone came in the door.  It was Mindy from Daughters of the Amazon ac mindy 6fame.  Mindy came up, acknowledged them all by name, and turned to Maria.

“Do you mind?  I heard you say you were having some trouble with Crocker’s class.”  Mindy had her book and Amina scooted over so Mindy could sit between her and Maria.

“Actually, I would not mind some help,” Maria said.  “Calc,” she said to the others.  “Math,” she added for Jessica who pretended offence.  They no sooner got settled when the door opened again.  It was Connie and she had a girl on her heels that at first glance looked more like a football player than a female.

“Mindy.”  Connie got ready to scold her roommate for some offence, but Emily interrupted.

“Homework.  Math.  Priority.”  Connie just looked at Emily for a second before she introduced the group to her friend, Lilly.

“So you’re Emily,” Lilly said through a crooked grin that creased her face.  Connie stepped back a half step to stand behind the couch.  She was beaming.  “I hear you think you’re pretty tough.”

“Me?”  Emily widened her eyes.  “No, I like people, unlike certain Earth Science professors.”

ac lilly 1

“Well, I think you should move over and give me your seat.”  Lilly threatened without actually saying it out loud.

“No problem.”  Emily got up, moved her backpack and took the empty seat.  She pointed to her former seat as if inviting Lilly to sit.  The girl sat, but Amina could not contain herself.  She giggled.  She tried to cover up with both of her hands.  Lilly turned on her like a shark.

“What are you laughing at, shithead?”

Emily had to move fast.  She caught Lilly’s fist before that fist touched Amina’s face.  She also squeezed a little which had to hurt poor Lilly.  She grabbed Lilly with her other hand on the girl’s shoulder and tossed the girl five feet down the hall.  Lilly landed on her back and continued to slide another five feet before she stopped.ac emily 7

“Ow!”  They heard Lilly say, but when Lilly looked up, Connie was already racing for the door.  Lilly decided to go out the door at the other end of the hall, and Emily reclaimed her seat, after she picked it up.

“Sorry.”  Emily spoke to the group, but she said it loud enough with the hope that Lilly might hear.  They all looked at Mindy, but she seemed unfazed by it all, until they noticed a tear in Mindy’s eye.  Amina was the first to speak.

“We are getting a suite next year in Brown.  You could be my roommate.”

Mindy let her tears out and threw her arms around Amina.  “Oh, thank you, thank you.”  Then she turned on Maria.  “Thank you.”  Jessica got up with “what the heck,” and gave the girl a hug as well.   Emily counted.

“But that only makes five.  The housing office will assign a stranger.”

Maria raised her hand.  “Melissa.”

“Oh, right.”

ac mindy 5So, we are getting a suite?”  Jessica looked nonchalant and sounded unruffled by the news.

“The Sybil has spoken,” Maria said.  “Welcome to the club,” she added for Mindy.

Mindy smiled and picked up her math paper.  She looked around, then looked seriously at her math while her mouth spoke.  “So were we talking about the zombies or the witch?”

The Elect 14, part 4 of 4: Finding

Emily turned slowly and shuffled her way back to her room.  The campus was quiet, but she did not really notice.  She had Pierce on her mind and wondered how serious they might actually be.  She would not be nineteen for another two months and that still felt very young.  He was closer to twenty-four, not that it mattered.  Emily hugged her coat for warmth and briefly wondered why February, the shortest month, always felt like the longest month.

Emily unlocked the door to her room.  The first thing she noticed was a red rose on her desk. ac emily 8 There was no Shakespeare this time, but she smiled all the same.  It appeared as if Pierce was having the same thoughts she was having.

Jessica was not home at the moment.  That was fine.  Emily had some work to do and then she had to gather her stuff since it looked like sleeping over at Lisa’s might be a regular thing for a while.  She felt the urge to go to the campus center, but ignored it.  She did not need a latte.  She needed to catch up on some work so she buckled down, but it did no good.  The urge for the campus center nagged at her and of course, she could not avoid the Pierce fantasies.  After a time of being unable to properly concentrate on her schoolwork, Emily went next door.  Maria was not home either but her door was curiously unlocked.  Emily poked around and found Maria’s phone.  That really made her curious.  Maria was never without her phone.

Emily stepped back into the hall, Maria’s phone still in her hand, and realized the whole dorm was unaccountably quiet.  Normally after supper, the halls and lounges would be full of people trying hard to avoid studying.  Now there was only stillness.

There was a sudden bang in the stairwell and Emily was startled.  Two students came bouncing down the stairs and crashed open the door to the outside.  Emily stepped over to see the two head for the campus center.  It did not feel right.  Suddenly nothing felt right.  Maria’s phone rang and ac melissa 3Emily answered it.

“Hello?  Maria?”  Emily heard the voice and knew instantly who it was though she had only talked to the girl a couple of times.

“Melissa?  This is Emily.  Maria is not here right now.  What is it?”

Emily felt the hesitation on the other side of the line.  “Emily?”

“You remembered something.”  Emily’s intuition acted up.  “You can tell me, I’ll be sure Maria gets the message.”

“It’s just…” Melissa still hesitated.  “It’s just I remembered that girl’s last name.”  Melissa did not have to say which girl.  Emily knew she was talking about Abby.  “It is Swenson.  She is Abigail Swenson, the professor’s daughter.”

Shit!  Emily did not say that aloud.  Instead, she said, “What else?”

“I remembered the campus center.  There is a conference room upstairs.  That girl was talking about turning it into her shrine.”  Melissa sounded finished, but Emily did not need any further information.  The urge to go to the campus center was still in her system.  She thanked Melissa and promised to call back as soon as there was news.  Then she exchanged Maria’s phone for her own.  She had Lisa in her contacts.  Damn!  It was voice mail.  She left what information she had a student cent 2and started to run and crashed out the same door by the stairs that the two students had crashed out of moments before.

Emily was not surprised to see Jessica and Maria in the campus center, posted at the bottom of the stairs.  They were there to stop her.  They could not, but it took a minute to get by them without hurting them.  Of course, Maria and Jessica were not home.  Their eyes looked empty, but it was them, all the same on the outside, and it would be them again if Emily could do anything about it.

“Don’t worry,” Emily said as she peeled Jessica’s nails off her arm and flung the girl to the floor.  “I’ll get you back.”

She took two steps at a time and burst into the room to find Abby sitting on the floor, staring with red, blank eyes of her own.  The girl said one unintelligible word, and that became just like a pebble dropped into a still pond.  Something, some force or wind came from her and expanded out well beyond the building.  It knocked Emily to the floor as it went by.   When she sat up, she had the terrible urge to worship the bitch, but this time that feeling could not find a place in her mind to grab hold of her, and she did not get intoxicated.

ac abby w6When she looked up, she saw Abby staring at her, wondering how her magic fared.  Emily answered by pulling her knife.  Abby looked mad, but only for a minute before she spoke.  “It’s too late, you know.”  She began to laugh and pointed at Emily with the words, “Kill her.”  There had to be fifty students in that room eager to do whatever Abby said.

Emily threw a chair through the nearest window and then followed the chair.  She dropped from the second floor, got a small glass cut in her upper arm and imagined the others could not follow her in the two-story jump.  She was surprised to see several students jump after her.  They mostly got hurt, a couple rather badly.  She did not wait around.  She could still hear Abby’s giggle as if the girl thought this was all such great fun.  Abby came to the window and applauded as Emily rushed off across the campus.

Emily still had her knife and her most important weapon, her phone.  She thought first of the a library 1library.  She imagined there were secluded places among the books where she could hide and make some calls.  To her surprise, the students came roaring out of the library front door, yelling at her and throwing whatever came to hand, books, notebooks, backpacks, pens and pencils.

“My God, how far did that wave travel?”  She did a u-turn and turned up the speed with which she could easily outrun even the swiftest pursuer.  She ran around the science building and ducked in the back door.  There was no one in the downstairs hall so she ran the length.  She kicked open the door to the lab room she blew up.  They were rebuilding the room and there signs of progress everywhere, including the lab desks all pushed together in the center, gas piping snaked all over the floor, and wallboard stacked in the corner.  Emily opened the side window, the one she went through before, and kicked out the storm window.

a science 2She checked out front.  They were gathering from the library, the student center and the nearby dorms and spreading out again in every direction.  They were hunting, and several looked ready to come up to the science building, though Emily clearly and deliberately ran around the building to make them think she headed for the engineering school.  Emily raced across the hall to the front stairwell and pulled herself into the shadows behind and beneath the stairs.  There was a fire alarm exit door if she needed it.  She hoped she would not.  She had to call Lisa, but for the moment, she had to remain quiet as she heard the students come in.

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Monday, the Elect chapter 15, Abbyland…don’t miss it.

 

The Elect, Episode 12 part 4 of 4: Homework

Latasha sat at the kitchen table dutifully doing her homework.  She never bothered with that much before, but for the first time ever she felt good about herself and her life.  She felt like she had a future, and that was an utterly new feeling.

“What are you doing?”  Leon asked.  He was the eldest and sometimes watched over them, though he had two children of his own, one by one of Latasha’s friends who was herself only sixteen years old.ac lat OB 1

“Homework,” Latasha said.

“Why?”  He was not asking what she was thinking.  He was asking why she bothered.  She had heard that bad attitude all her life.

“Detective Lisa says there is no reason I can’t go to community college and study law enforcement.  I am going to be a police woman.”  She was stating what she considered the facts, though she had to get the grades to get through high school first.  She felt the tension, spun and caught Leon’s wrist.  He had his hand open and he fully intended to whack her in the back of the head, hard.

He gave her his meanest stare, but she was not going to let him hit her again.  He finally yanked his hand free with a word.  “Stupid bitch.  The police are the main thing that keeps us down.  Why are you going to join the enemy?”

Latasha stood and made her little fists.  She did not need to hear this.  “They are not the enemy,” she yelled.  “The only thing that keeps you down is you.”

He had some choice words.  She returned as good as she got.  Even a year ago, he would have slapped her silly.  Now all he could do was growl at her and stomp out the back door.

ac lat mama 1Latasha could not sit down right away.  She was too steamed.  Her mother came down the stairs to finish puttering in the kitchen and put dishes away.

“He’s right, you know,” she said.

“He is not right.”  Latasha plopped on her chair.  “I want to do something positive and important with my life.  What’s wrong with that?  I mean, God didn’t put us here to sit around and do nothing, did he?”

“Baby.”  Mama sat beside her.  “I know the Lord has given you the most special gift I have ever seen, you and your…sisters?”  Mama was asking about the word and Latasha nodded.  Sisters was right, and in a way that went way beyond anything as petty as blood or skin color.  “Well, maybe if you can knock some sense into the heads of some of the men around here I am sure it will all be worth it.”  She patted Latasha’s hand and stood to clap her hands at the little ones who were spacing out in front of the television.  “You two, to bed.”

“No, not yet.”  That was expected, but they went upstairs with Mama.  They were tired from playing whack a zombie all day and hitting each other over the head with sticks.

James came down when they went up.  He was the youngest of Latasha’s older brothers at nineteen.  He finished high school last year and had some reasonably good grades.  Mama ac lat james 1cheered louder than anyone at his graduation.  He was her first who made it all the way.  He looked at Latasha.  He always encouraged her to do the work, and in that respect, he was like the black sheep of the family.  Latasha finally put down her pencil and looked up.

“I didn’t want to interrupt,” he said.

“Well, you did.”  The sarcasm just popped out like the old days, and she was immediately sorry.  She really looked at him and gave all her attention.

“I thought you might be interested.  I talked to Sergeant Whitaker today.”  Latasha raised her eyebrows.  She was getting to know some of the police but she did not recall a Sergeant Whitaker.  “Marine recruiter.  He says my grades may be good enough.  I’m thinking of joining the marines.”

Latasha dropped her pencil and rushed around the table to give him a big hug.  He said, “ouch,” and she lightened up.  Then he added, “Mama doesn’t know,” and Latasha pretended to zip her mouth closed.  Then she had to speak.

“I’m so proud of you.”

“Me, too.  Proud of you, I mean.”  He pointed to her open schoolbook.

“I’ll make you proud,” she said.  He just smiled for her and went out.

Latasha was just about finished with her work when Darren sat down in the chair opposite her.  She tried to concentrate, but at last threw her pencil to the paper and frowned.  “Every country ac lat darren 2heard from,” she said and looked up.  Darren had on his serious face, but it was also his manipulative face and Latasha was never quite sure which one she was seeing.

“I’ve been thinking a lot about what you did to those people,” he started right in.  “About you joining the police and all that.  I’ve decided that maybe I need to do something with my life, too.  I’m gonna get a job and work hard to make something of myself.”  Latasha waited for the but.  “The problem is I owe this money and well, I don’t know how to say this, I need your help.”

“I don’t have any money.”

“No, not like that.  I have the money.”  He patted his jacket pocket.  “I just want to pay it back so I can start with a clean slate.  You see?  The thing is I owe it to one of the real bad guys and I am late in paying him back.  I’m afraid.”

Latasha lifted her head and shook it a little.  “No.  That is not what I am supposed to do.”

“But you could go with me.”

Latasha waved her hand at him.  “Regular people problems have to be solved by regular people.  I’m not supposed to interfere with things that way.”

“But we are family.”  Darren paused and laughed as if the thought just occurred to him.  “No, I wasn’t saying you should come and beat them up or something.”  He laughed again.  “No, I was just thinking if my little sister was along, I would have a witness and they might not beat me up.”

Latasha was not sure.  “What about Leon?”ac latasha 7

“No way,” Darren was firm.  “If I brought Leon and James that would be like starting a world war.  But you, they are not going to beat up my little sister and a girl besides or make you watch while they beat me up so you can identify them later.  I don’t think so.  Really, listen.  All I want to do is pay them back and then make a new start with my life.  Really.”

He sounded sincere, but Darren was good at that.

“Saturday morning if nothing else is going on.  Just think about it.  Now I’ll go away so you can finish your homework.”  He did, and she would have to think about it.

###

Lisa and Ashish pulled up the alley as quietly as they could and turned off the engine well before they arrived.  “Still no word from Heinrich?”  Ashish had to ask.

“No.”  Lisa was still adjusting to the idea that she had a member of the mysterious council in town looking over her shoulder.  Maybe he was not exactly breathing down her neck.  In fact, he could be a great help to them.  But it felt like he was watching her every move.  “And no word from Emily ac lisa 4either.”

“Latasha?”

Lisa shook her head.  “She just needs to get her homework done and pass her tests.  Libby is working with her some and that is for the best.  They are too young and too old to be more deeply involved.”

Ashish nodded.  He was not going to argue, though it honestly looked like it might be impossible to keep them from being involved.  “Millsaps.”  Ashish spoke into the radio.

“Ready.”  The answer was brief and Ashish looked at Lisa.  She did not move immediately, like she had something on her mind, but she moved at last and it was quick and forceful steps.

Guns were drawn, and when they were in position, Ashish said “Now” into the radio while Lisa kicked in the warehouse door.  Police officers came in from the back door and the side windows were covered as well, but the place was empty.  There was an old forklift, some stacks of wooden pallets and a broken toilet cover on a pile of rubbish in the corner, but no sign of zombies or even that it had ever been used for such.  Lisa sniffed the air but said nothing.

Ashish holstered his gun with the words, “No surprise.”  It was the address where those rare and ac ashish 2controlled substances had been delivered, but they honestly did not expect it to be the operation center.

The police did a thorough job of it and even checked the dust pile beneath an abandoned push broom, but there was nothing.  Ashish thought to speak again.  “There are too many abandoned buildings in this city, and the lab isn’t necessarily in this city.”  Lisa was still sniffing and Ashish finally had to ask, “What?”

“Smells like magic,” she said.

Wizard’s Bane, a short story that crosses the fine line between Halloween and Christmas

Coriander gently lifted the sleeping child’s curly, golden locks and pulled the ancient quilt up to her chin. He tried hard not to wake her. Coriander feared earlier in the evening that his golden, three-year-old girl might be too excited to sleep, it being Christmas Eve and all. He bathed her in warm water and dressed her in her warmest flannel nightgown to protect her from the worst chills in the old, stone castle. He read her a bedtime tale about Santa and the elves, and all of the reindeer, which he remembered by name. And without any prompting, he thought, proudly. Then he kissed her goodnight and sat up in the dark to contemplate what was to come. He feared to think about it.

While he watched her sleep, his little golden haired wonder, he considered his options. He had no a caste bedroom 1friends, no family, no neighbors he could call on. No one would help him in his time of need. He exhaled a heavy sigh. He could not blame them. He was not a good man—and he knew it. But he was far better than the cruel and wicked witch who had vowed to destroy him and who even now was coming to steal his joy.

Coriander sighed when he recalled that bright Sunday morning in June when this innocent wonder that lay sleeping in his bed entered his life and changed it forever. He realized, on that day, this child was his one chance at redemption. He would love her with every shred of love that was in him, however little that might be, and he would protect this child from the cruelty of the world—the same world that taught him to be cruel. He leaned over the sleeping child and kissed that precious forehead once more before he stood and walked ever so slowly to his study.

Through all of his years, his worst enemy was the witch, Moria of Avila, a powerful sorceress filled with the most noble and magical blood and able to practice the most powerful, ancient and cruel magic. Coriander had little hope against her, but he had to try, because the witch had vowed to take the child from him. It took no prophet to know she would come on Christmas Eve in order to sting his heart in a witch 2the worst possible way and leave him bereft and alone on Christmas morning.

Coriander stepped into his study. Despite the December chill in the stones, he opened a window for fresh air. He breathed deeply several times while he contemplated exactly what he would do. He looked around the room at the walls filled with books, but there were no answers in those tomes. The tables were filled with magical equipment of all sorts, but these simple tools of the art would not stop this wicked witch. She would brush them aside like play toys.

He considered the lab where he kept his ingredients, his cauldron, and other tools to make potions, but there was no potion that would solve this problem. He knew, as he had always known, that this would come down to a battle of wills and magic, and Coriander wondered if he had the will to keep her out. He wondered whose will would prevail—who would end up with the child and who might be destroyed.a wizards study 3

Coriander shook his head before he brushed his gray streaked hair back out of his eyes. His were eyes that glowed as red as his anger, determination, fear and power that surged up from his innermost depths. Those eyes could turn a man to stone, like old Medusa, and they could pierce the armor of the strongest knight quicker and cleaner than any sword. They could set a whole forest ablaze in seconds, but would they be enough against Moria? Not likely.

He heard a commotion in the courtyard inside the castle wall and turned to the window quickly to focus his attention on what he could see. It was Moria, he was sure of it. He could sense her presence. He could smell her musky scent. He could not quite see her, but by his power, he saw the golden shield she projected against the arrows from the wall; arrows that were shot in a half-hearted manner, he noticed. That was a fault that would be corrected, assuming he survived the night.a castle

“Moria is clever,” he admitted to himself. She must have expended some power to fly over the castle wall, and now she stood at the very gate of the inner house. He hoped that expenditure would tire and drain her, but he doubted it. As he turned from the window, he did not give it another thought. He had to settle his mind and heart to focus on his work, to employ whatever magic he could contrive to stop her.

The crystal on his desk lit up with a wave of his hand. He would stop her at the gate where he had a whole squad of the undead ready to guard the door. He saw them first as they came to mind when he looked into the crystal. With a surge of the power that was within him, he animated that decaying flesha zombie guard.

Then Moria stepped into the picture, and with a wave of her own hand, there came a flash of golden light against his red magic. Thousands of worms and maggots sprayed across the steps toward the doorway, attached themselves to the undead and literally covered the zombies from head to toe. The rats that came swarming up from the cellars and dungeons in answer to Moria’s pied piper call were almost superfluous. The flesh of those zombies got stripped in a few short moments, but Coriander still smiled. Though not as strong as their flesh covered cousins, skeletons armed with swords and shields might still be sufficient to a skeleton guardkeep out the witch.

“Betsy.” The crystal in the study conveyed Moria’s word and it showed something else which made Coriander swallow hard. A massive, reptilian head came into view, and Coriander saw the fire in its snake’s eyes. It was a dragon, and in one breath, his skeletons went up like a bonfire doused in oil. That was the weakness of skeletons. They burned like kindling. In a few moments, there was no longer anything to prevent Moria’s access to the house. What is more, Coriander realized that the witch must have flown over the wall on the dragon’s back, so it cost her nothing in the way of energy. Coriander shook his head and brushed back his hair once more while he repeated his words.

“Moria is clever, and resourceful.”

He concentrated on the crystal and sent an illusion, a glamour to make the entrance hall appear to spin in an hypnotic fashion. He knew there was no hope of hypnotizing the witch, but he thought he might disorient her and perhaps cause her to get sick or pass out. There was a slim chance, he told himself, even as he sent his real spell and the room below very quickly filled with dust. The dust was not enough to notice, unless Moria looked real close. If she did, she might catch the glimpse of the faint red glow of his magic attached to each little particle. Even if she saw it, though, he imagined it would be too late. He sent enough dust to be effective, and that was all that mattered.a dragon

The front door exploded and the picture looked very real and very close. Coriander jumped back from the crystal. When he took a breath and returned to concentrate again on the crystal orb, he praised himself for his forethought. He had found a better lock. Even the witch could not simply unlock it and walk in.

Coriander watched as the dragon head butted against the door until it was no more than scrap metal. Coriander’s smile broadened. The door was fireproof too, even against dragons. Moria had to expend herself to gain entry.

He watched as she stepped in and immediately put one hand to her head. She stretched out her other hand as if trying to gain her balance. He watched as she pulled a pair of spectacles out of her bag and slipped them on. After that, she appeared to have no trouble with his illusion, and again he cursed the fact that she did not have to expend any of her energy to overcome his hard work.

a crystal ball 3“Clever and resourceful,” he shouted into the crystal.

“Coriander! Bring me Alicia!” Moria shouted back, but Coriander did not hear as he was busy mumbling.

“Stupid, despicable, horrible creature.” He kept it to a mumble because he figured there was no point in enraging the woman. “Such strength of mind and magic should not belong to such a one as this,” he said to himself, and paused. He wondered how often others had said that about him. He quickly convinced himself that he was not such a terrible man. He had no one who would help him because not one would dare lift a finger against the witch lest they too face her wrath.

He shook that thought far away as soon as his mind was settled on the lie, and he peered ever closer into the crystal. Moria was already beginning to itch and scratch herself. Good. He took a real close look and noticed, not for the first time, how stunning she was. It made him pause and wonder how one could be so gorgeous on the outside and so rotten on the inside.

“No! You will not have her,” he shouted into the crystal in response to Moria’s demand for the child, a crystal ball 2even as the first boils began to break out on Moria’s skin. Coriander kept his giggles to a minimum, but it got hard to stifle himself when a pimple appeared on Moria’s face, followed by the proverbial wart on the nose.

Moria screamed. “I’ll give you no!” A flash of brilliant golden light, strong enough to make Coriander blink and take a step back, suddenly lit up the room below. Coriander felt his knee itch. Then his cheek itched, but he refused to respond. His study remained well protected, even against his own spells cast back at him; but his chin itched all the same.

Coriander looked again into the crystal in time to see Moria cast an illusion of her own. There were three Morias in sight of the crystal, and it was a masterful glamour. He had no way of knowing which was the real one. They split up and he reached for a rendering of the castle to quickly calculate where they would have to be rejoined. “A-ha!” He shouted, grabbed a vial off one of the shelves, and raced out of his study.a castle stairs 1

They would be close, he thought, as he arrived at the spot where an upper hall met a stairway that came up from below. Moria would be close to the goal, but this should do it. He grinned. He took three giant steps back from the spot, uncorked the vial and splashed the liquid all across the floor between him and the stairs. When he was satisfied that the area was well covered, he stepped back around the bend in the hall to wait and watch. He also thought of ways to negotiate, just in case.

One of the Morias came down the hall before a different Moria reached the top of the stairs, but then the one in the hall did not stop and wait for her sister-self to catch up as Coriander had expected. It came on, and his red magic a flashed as the potion took effect. The Moria in the hall stopped, frozen like a well carved block of ice, unable to move, even the least polished pinky.a caste room 1

“Clever.” The Moria on the stairs spoke and the voice grated in Coriander’s ears, not the least because he knew he trapped the wrong one. Moria waved her arm and a touch of her golden magic revealed that the frozen Moria was only a cellar rat, temporarily transformed. It was not entirely an illusion, which was why Coriander could not tell which was real and which was the illusion. Of course, the poor rat would stay frozen in place for several hours before the spell wore off and it could return to the dungeon.

Fortunately, Coriander was not frozen in place, and he currently ran with all speed back to his study. He wracked his brain to think of something, anything! But all he could think was Moria had been cleverer. “Bring me Alicia!” He heard Moria yell. He did not answer.

In the end, there was nothing else Coriander could think to do. The study was to his left hand, but Alicia’s room was not much further along on his right. He had put her to bed in the room he sometimes used to rest from his studies. He did not want her to be far away. He had thought if she was close he would be able to protect her better, but now he wished he had secreted her away somewhere; not that Moria would not have pierced his secret. Now, there was nothing to do but wait. He gave himself little hope. He felt kind of glad that he did not have to wait very long.a castle hall 1

“Coriander. Bring me Alicia.” Moria spoke as she came around the corner.

“No.” Coriander was defiant, but Moria did not hesitate. Her golden magic poured from her hands and Coriander answered with his red magic, and barely in time, but it was enough. In this way, the witch and the wizard stood like statues. They kept each other at bay for a long time. When they stopped, it happened suddenly, as if by some unspoken agreement. Both needed to catch their breath and take a respite from the exertion, like boxers between rounds.

“Coriander.” Moria spoke again.

a witch 1“But it’s Christmas,” Coriander countered and watched carefully as the conflicting emotions ran across Moria’s face. At first, it looked like she might say she did not care if it was Samhane, Beltane and New Year’s Eve all rolled into one; but then she seemed to relent and a look of understanding flashed ever so briefly behind those eyes. Coriander got caught up by the look, but maybe he knew better. He had been fooled by that look once too often.

Moria struck again, and this time, Coriander struck right back with all of his strength. Where the red and golden magic met, there was an orange barrier. It gave off orange sparks like an arc welder at work, only these sparks were much more powerful and much more destructive. The priceless painting on the wall got burned and scratched beyond repair. The very stones in the wall smoked wherever a spark touched as if vaporized in those spots. The floor beneath their feet trembled, and the ceiling above their heads sent down streams of dust as if caught in an earthquake and in imminent danger of collapse. The witch was determined to take the child. The wizard was equally determined to keep the child, and neither made headway; and neither gave up.a magic battle

At last, the magic subsided when both witch and wizard collapsed to their knees, exhausted and worn to their last ounces of strength. Coriander then heard the squeak of the door behind him. He could do nothing about that. He no longer had the strength.

The little girl with the golden curls came out into the hall and blinked because of the bright light. She rubbed her sleepy eyes. “Has Santa come?” Coriander knew the noise would wake her, and he was not at all surprised to hear the girl’s next word. “Mommy!” The girl ran right past Coriander as if he was a slug on the floor, and she dashed into Moria’s waiting arms. The woman found strength in that wonderful hug.

a witch 3“Alicia, darling. It is time to go home.”

“But it’s Christmas.” Coriander whined. He sounded like he had a frog in his throat, like his magic had streamed out of his mouth and rubbed his vocal chords raw. Both he and Moria struggled to their feet, Moria holding tight to her precious child.

“You agreed to every other weekend.” Moria spoke in a voice as uncertain as Coriander’s. “You pull a stunt like this again and I’ll see you get no weekends.” Coriander looked ready to speak, so Moria added, “I’ll get a restraining order!”

“But mommy, it’s Christmas.” Alicia mouthed the words she had heard. “Mommy, I’m cold. Can I have some hot chocolate?”a girl

Moria looked up, but Coriander merely shrugged so Moria spoke. “Of course, sweetie. I’ll make it.”

“Oh, so you don’t trust me?” Coriander spoke at last.

Moria turned and started toward the kitchen. Coriander expected her to say something nasty and cutting in response to his remark, but she said nothing. Maybe she was too tired, and anyway, Alicia aChristmas starspoke into the silence.

“Daddy,” she said, and she held out her little hand and looked at him with those great big eyes. Coriander felt obliged to shut his mouth. He lowered his own eyes and came up close so those little fingers could wrap around his big finger and she could drag him along with them.a christmas star

They say that Christmas is the most magical time of year, but when it is combined with the heart of a little girl with a golden curl, well, there is no greater magic in all the universe.

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

Beginning Monday, look for The Elect: Freshman Year, posted as a serialized novel:

The elect are one in a million, maybe one in ten million. They are women chosen at birth and empowered from ancient days by the goddess of old, originally, to protect and defend the home when the men went away, to hunt or to war. Emily Hudson is an elect who has no idea how gifted she is until she arrives at New Jersey State University, in Trenton, and meets another elect—a police Detective, Lisa. Together they find a third elect, Latasha, a high school freshman, and realize that three elect in the same community, maybe even three in the same state, defies all odds. There are not very many elect in the whole world. Then again, maybe three together is by some divine design, because there are things going on in Trenton and around the university which will take every gift they have to give, and then some.

This is a serialized novel, to use the classic term, but neatly divided into “episodes” like a television show. It is jam packed and fast paced to where I have been accused of squeezing three seasons worth of material into a single season. The emphasis is on dialogue and relationships, with enough showing, but a fair amount of telling which on film would be showing…so don’t write and complain about the telling, please. Also, there are quite a number of characters, but again, you must imagine them on film where they would be easier to remember by matching a face with a name. All you really need to remember are the three elect, Emily with her college friends, Detective Lisa, and the local girl, Latasha. Everyone else is either family (mom, dad, brother), friend, co-worker (detective, police officer, teacher) or antagonist of some sort. Oh, and then there is Heinrich…e NJSU 1

The pilot episode will post the first two weeks in November 2015, M, T, W and Th of next week, and then M, T, W and Th of next week. After that, each of the 22 episodes will post weekly (M, T, W and Th) over the next 22 weeks. If you wait until Thursday, you will find all posts for the given episode on the right side of the blog under “recent posts”, plus the last post of the previous episode to help set things in context. Some might want to wait until Friday, or even the weekend to read the whole episode at once. That is fine.

If you miss an episode, or find your way to this story somewhere in the middle, feel free to click on the archives button and select November, 2015. The pilot episode begins it all at the beginning of November 2015. Happy reading. Lets see how good your visualization skills really are.