Avalon Prequel Invasion of Memories Pumpkin Seeds part 4 of 10

A young female head poked in through the tent door. Her face looked more human, being not nearly so skinny, but the ears were still a giveaway. The face looked unsure, though, so Glen felt obliged to speak up.

“No human cooties, I promise,” he said.

“Well.” The elf came in slowly to take a seat beside Macreedy. “As long as you promise.”

“My name is Sandra,” Sandra said. “Daughter of Mona, daughter of Edna, daughter of another woman and another and another who was a daughter of a full blood fairy.”

“Really?” The elf maid found her smile as Sandra nodded and the maid turned to Macreedy. “That may explain how they came to be here,” she said, but Macreedy shook his head.

“Let me see if I can say this the way Master Olerian of the Bean taught the lesson.” He coughed, lowered his voice and affected a very formal tone and look. “The magic is generally well faded by the third generation, and the blood indiscernible by the seventh, though the child is not considered fully human again until the tenth generation.” The elf maid giggled, and Glen decided that this young elf was a simple girl who might have passed for a sixteen or seventeen- year-old human.

“I’m the seventh generation and Melissa is the eighth,” Sandra said, and looked mostly at Glen in case she counted wrong.

“You have a baby?” The elf girl looked surprised. Macreedy still shook his head as if to say that would not explain how they came to be there.

“Ellean.” Glen interrupted and got the elf girl’s attention. He called the girl by name because his inner voice said that was the elf maiden’s name, not because she had given her name. “Just to be clear, how old are you?” Ellean lost her smile. She looked embarrassed by the question. Macreedy spoke for them both.

“I will be one hundred and ten this year,” he said proudly. “Ellean is seventy-three.”

“Only,” Ellean said and she looked down at the fire.

Sandra felt the shame and reached out to the girl. “Women mature faster,” she said.

Ellean did not take Sandra’s hand, but she did look up and smile briefly.

“That’s years,” Glen said, and Sandra looked at him in surprise. She thought something, like maybe a lunar calendar. Macreedy looked about nineteen or twenty and Ellean appeared to be sixteen or so. “Standard counting is roughly seven to one, sort of like dog years except we are the dogs.” Glen concluded, and he pulled himself a bit closer to the fire. After a moment, Sandra also scooted closer in order to close the circle.

“Old Lord Inaros is reported to be fifteen hundred years old,” Macreedy said. “But that is extremely rare, even among elf-kind.” He smiled for Sandra, but Sandra did not pay attention. Ellean kept staring at her.

“What?”

“I was wondering if your real name is Cassandra,” Ellean said.

“Her hair is too blond.” Macreedy interrupted and shook his head.

“There are dyes.” Ellean came back, but this time Sandra shook her head.

“Just Sandra,” she said. “Why?”

The elves paused to look at each other before Macreedy spoke. “Our goddess was once named Cassandra,” he said. “It is not to be spoken of with humans, but I can say this much, that we have many gods and goddesses, but they are all one.”

“I thought maybe…” Ellean began to speak, but Macreedy took her hand to quiet her.

“So, we still do not know how you came to be here,” Macreedy said. “Even if Miss Sandra managed the passage by some virtue in her blood, it does not explain the presence of this man.”

Glen reached for Sandra’s hand and she readily gave it, and her smile, too. “We are thinking of doing a lot of things together,” he said, and Sandra’s smile broadened. “How about you two?”

Macreedy shifted in his seat and looked uncomfortable as he glanced at Ellean and dropped the girl’s hand. Ellean had no trouble matching Sandra’s smile. “We have talked,” she told Sandra, and she held out her hand again, but Macreedy did not take it.

“But about how you got here,” Macreedy spoke hastily to try to get back on the topic. He got interrupted by a new voice from the door.

“How they came to be here is less important than why,” the voice said. An elderly elf came in, followed by the commander of the troop that picked up Sandra and Glen. “I am Alderon and this is Commander Peregrine.”

“The Falcon.” Glen gave a sloppy salute. “But let me ask, why are you here?” Glen spoke quickly, and the old elf raised an eyebrow so Glen continued. “You have brought an army into the wilderness. I hope we have not fallen into the midst of a war.” Sandra suddenly looked concerned. She had not thought of that.

“No fear,” Alderon said. “Wars in our realm are rare events these days. Rather, we had a report of a demon djin crossing close to the border. We sought to destroy it, if we could, or at least keep it from our homes.”

“A ghoul?” Glen asked.

Alderon shook his old head. “Our observers did not see it well enough to classify it, except to say it is one of the lesser djin.”

“But a terror all the same,” Glen thought out loud and turned toward Sandra. “They can possess people and feed off the fear and pain they cause in tormenting their victims.”

“And how do you know the ways of the djin?” Macreedy asked.

“Behavioral Sciences,” Glen answered. “I have studied my Anthropology and my folklore, unless we humans have it all wrong.” Glen looked up at Alderon who smiled, just barely.

“Essentially right,” Alderon confirmed. “But now you must answer a question. Why have you come here?”

“My daughter and mother disappeared.” Sandra spoke quickly. “We were following their trail and found ourselves here. I don’t know how. None of this makes any sense, but now I fear we have lost the trail.” Glen felt the surge of emotion rise-up inside Sandra and watched as a few tears began to fall. He quickly put his arms around her and reassured her.

“We will find them. Hush. It will be all right.” He stroked her hair, gently, and she quieted. “We were following the seeds, but I don’t know if we can pick up that trail again without going back and getting tangled up with the ogre.”

Alderon waved and Commander Peregrine held out his hand. “Were they pumpkin seeds like this?” Alderon asked.

Sandra jumped up and took the elf’s hand, not thinking twice about it. The hand was full of pumpkin seeds. “Yes,” she shouted. “But where did you find them?”

“In this place,” Commander Peregrine responded. “My command was charged with following them to see where they lead, and they brought us to you.”

“So, wait.” Glen said. “You’re saying if we followed the pumpkin seed trail from the beginning, it would have brought us to this place?”

Alderon nodded, and Sandra turned. “Oh, Glen, we haven’t lost them.” She just had to fall into Glen’s arms and kiss him smack on the lips, and she kissed his cheek as well before she grabbed his arm and turned to sit beside him and pull herself together.

At the mention of Glen’s name, Commander Peregrine looked surprised, Macreedy had one eyebrow up, Ellean stayed too busy watching Sandra and thinking her own thoughts to notice, but Alderon smiled that almost invisible smile of his. “But where does the trail go from here?” Glen asked.

“Ahh…” Alderon said as he stepped up behind Macreedy and Ellean. “There are a small number of seeds heading into the caves of Cormac. We have chosen not to explore that way since it leads away from our homes.”

“The caves of Cormac?” Macreedy did not think much of those caves and Ellean looked positively frightened.

“What’s a Cormac?” Sandra drew herself as close to Glen’s side as she could get.

“An ever-hungry troll,” Macreedy said.

“And the caves are full of goblins as well, no doubt trying not to be eaten,” Commander Peregrine added.

Alderon simply looked at Glen and would not let go of that smile that touched the mere corners of his lips. “Somehow, though, I have a good feeling about your chances,” he said. “And since young Macreedy and young Ellean have agreed to see to your welfare, I know you will do well.”

“What?” Macreedy looked up sharply at his elder and tried to stand, but Alderon put a hand on the elf’s shoulder to keep him seated. Then he clapped his hands and stepped aside while two elf maids came and went, quickly. The first had two more blankets and the second carried four little packs, provisions for the expected journey.

“You planned this.” Macreedy accused his elders as Commander Peregrine set down his handful of pumpkin seeds and followed the maids out the tent door.

“Yes.” Alderon finally let out a bit more of that smile. He held up his hand and twisted it, like one might twist a dimmer switch, and the light in the glow-balls dimmed to night-lights. “Sleep well,” he said, and left.

Macreedy did not look entirely happy, but Ellean set about immediately showing their companions what they could do with the Fairy Weave blankets, changing the color, size, thickness and texture, and all with a thought.

“I don’t know why it is called Fairy Weave, though, since it is made by elves. These were made by the elves of the grove,” Macreedy said. Glen just nodded and he got the idea easily enough and made something like an air mattress with covers to sleep on. Sandra had a little more trouble with hers so Ellean helped; but by then with the thoughts and worries about the caves of Cormac getting in the way, Ellean became the only one still smiling.

“This will be so much fun,” she said. “I just know I can learn so much from you.”

Sandra stared at the elf maid in disbelief. “You’re seventy-three years old and I’m just twenty-three. How are you going to learn anything from me?”

Ellean cocked her head to the side and spoke in all seriousness. “You have a baby.” She stole a glance at Macreedy.

“But I haven’t got a husband,” Sandra said, and Ellean looked at her again with eyes that were big and brown and suddenly sad.

“I’m sorry.”

“No, actually he was a jerk. Melissa and I are better off without him.”

“Well.” Ellean did not know what to say until she looked over at Glen. “Glen seems very nice, what do you think?”

Sandra just looked, and since Macreedy and Glen heard everything in that small tent, they also looked. Sandra appeared to be more concerned to find out if Glen thought she was nice, and while Glen did not feel ready to answer that question, he did feel that he ought to say something.

“I think we all ought to try and get some sleep.” He got under his covers and turned his back on them all. Macreedy finished dousing the glow-balls so only the dying embers from the fire provided the light in the tent.

It did not take long before Glen relaxed. He felt certain that everyone else in the tent had fallen asleep by then. He felt a little surprised when Sandra crawled under his covers to curl up beside him. He felt more surprised when the other two spoke.

“I wish I had thought of that,” Ellean said.

“Go to sleep,” Macreedy responded.

Avalon Prequel Invasion of Memories Pumpkin Seeds part 2 of 10

Glen left his Anthropology seminar at two-fifty. He ran to his dorm, tossed his books in the room by two-fifty-five, and ran the rest of the way to Haddon House. Though he breathed hard when he arrived, the excitement and adrenaline that rose-up inside of him made it more than worthwhile. After five minutes, he calmed and thought that maybe she was not as excited to be with him as he imagined. At ten minutes, he thought she might have run into some Friday traffic, so he sat on the steps where he could watch the parking lot and the woods. Not much longer, and his curiosity and trust began to turn. He began to doubt. He wondered if she would come at all. He began to think that perhaps she did not have feelings for him—that perhaps he just projected his feelings on her. But he knew he did not project anything, so with a deep breath, he wondered if he should go look for her.

Sandra arrived moments later. She squealed her tires and stopped without pulling properly into a space. She ran out of her car the instant she turned it off.

“Glen.” She cried out, and she did not hesitate to run straight into his arms. “She is gone. They are both gone, Melissa and my mother.”

“What?” Glen got that much out.

“I dropped Mother in the main lot and she put Melissa in the stroller while I found a safe place to park. She was going to walk Melissa across the campus to the fork on the path in the woods. I followed behind, but not too close so people would not see, you know.” She paused, but Glen reassured her with a nod. “I was going to get you and when we caught up with them, Mother was going to have errands to run, you know.” Glen hugged her and patted her back, but Sandra pulled away and looked into his face to gauge his reactions. There were tears in her eyes, and Glen saw that along with the upset, she also seemed very afraid.

“It’s all right. They must be somewhere.” Glen tried to sound confident.

“No. You don’t understand. They disappeared. I saw it. I was behind, and I saw it. They were there, a hundred yards ahead of me on the path and I was just about to come and get you when they just vanished. Glen, I don’t know what to do. I looked everywhere. I even went back to the car in case they went back there, but I am sure they did not.”

“They turned a corner or stepped behind a tree?”

Sandra grabbed Glen by the arms and squeezed, hard. “No. They vanished, disappeared, went invisible. Oh, I know it sounds impossible but you must believe me,” she pleaded. “One minute they were in front of me and the next they were gone.” She began to cry.

“Sandra.” Glen pulled her close and let her cry into his shirt. “We will find them. They must be somewhere. Show me where this happened.” Glen was not sure what he believed, but Sandra sounded so sincere.

Sandra backed up and without a word; she grabbed Glen’s hand and ran. Glen did his best to keep up. They were both worn out when they arrived, and Glen mumbled something about running more that day than the past six months put together, but Sandra had her adrenaline running faster than her feet at that point, and she started right in.

“They were here, I swear. I was back at the beginning of the trail there.” She pointed. “And they were right here and they vanished. They just went invisible. I swear to God. I swear it.” Glen examined the ground and saw the faint impression of what might be tire tracks from a stroller. He got down to look more closely and ran his finger over the dirt. He realized that these tracks were dry dirt and imagined that something got pushed through when the dirt had been moist or wet and made the tracks, which since dried. Thus, he just admitted that the tracks could not have been from Melissa’s stroller when he found a little pile of seeds.

“What are these?” he asked and held them up so Sandra could see.

“Pumpkin seeds!” Sandra yelled and threw her arms around Glen’s neck and kissed him, but it was ever so brief. “Where did you find them?”

Glen pointed. “And look. There are a few more.” They were easy enough to see since the seeds were still on the trail.

Sandra ran ahead to pick them up. “Mother! Melissa, Mother!” She called out, but heard no response, so she came back to Glen who moved slowly down the path, looking for more seeds or some other something that might indicate the way they went. Sandra talked.

“Melissa is teething and she has a whole bag of pumpkin seeds. She likes to chew on them. Mother, Melissa!”

Glen grabbed Sandra’s hand when he found another seed. “Don’t run off,” he said. “You need to help me look.” He paused and looked up at Sandra while he picked up the seed with his free hand. “They can’t have gone far, but we need to stick to the right trail.” Sandra nodded, trusted absolutely, and Glen swallowed. He did not want to disappoint her.

“Melissa has a whole bag of seeds.” She repeated herself, and they walked slowly forward until Glen caught something out of the corner of his eye. A breakaway trail pushed off to the left. The trail was not easy to see. It looked badly overgrown and rough, so only a trained hunter might spot it, but it was a trail all the same. Glen paused.

“What?” Sandra asked.

Glen paused because he was not a trained hunter, or anything close. He wondered how he could be so certain about the side trail. It felt like someone had gotten inside his mind, to look through his eyes and help, somehow, but then he spied a lone pumpkin seed and felt better until he imagined that the someone inside had directed his eyes to the seed as well. Glen shook himself to break free of that feeling. “Here,” he said, and picked up the seed. As he handed it to Sandra, he lifted an overhanging tree branch and they stepped underneath and into another place altogether.

“I don’t feel well,” Sandra said immediately. “I feel faint.” She did faint, and Glen barely caught her before she hit the dirt. He felt a bit woozy himself, but as he went to one knee to hold up the woman in his arms, and as he looked at her tranquil face, his dizzy feelings soon passed. He felt like he had been in this place before, but that did not make sense because he could not say when or exactly where in this place he might have been. In any case, if once upon a time he came to that place, it certainly was not with such a lovely companion.

“I have to,” Glen said to himself. “I can feel guilty about it later.” He dipped his head, touched his lips to hers, and thought again that one kiss would never be enough. To his surprise, she kissed him back and with some fervor, though she never opened her eyes. When they separated, she smiled, her eyes popped open to look at him, and she began to scream.