Avalon 2.3: In the Dark

 

            “Lockhart,” Boston shook the man.  He was too tired to wake and having pleasant dreams.

            “Boston, go pick on some other old man,” he said before he sprang awake, eyes wide open.  “Why is it still dark out?  Why is it so cold?”

            “The sun didn’t come up today,” Boston said.

            “What?”  Lockhart shouted.

            “What?”  Lincoln echoed as he sat up straight.

            “Bread?”  Boston held it out and grinned.

            Lockhart took a piece, but not without comment.  “You are spending too much time with that elf. 

            “Okay,” Boston said.  “Roland Katie and Elder Stow are down by the beach, away from the hillside.  Elder Stow has his equipment and is examining the stars.  In fact, they were coming into the cave as she spoke, arguing in the normal human way.

            “Can’t be,” Katie said.

            “Must be, but we shall see,” Elder Stow countered.

            “We will see,” Katie said, skeptically.

            “What?”  Lockhart and Boston asked at the same time.  Lincoln had bread in his mouth.

            “It is eight in the morning,” Katie said with a look at her watch.

            “Your timepiece is correct?”  The Elder asked.

            “It is correct,” Roland said.  “Internal clock cannot be fooled by light and dark, at least not for many days.”

            “Elder Stow claims it is summer and the stars we saw were winter stars which we could only see if the sun is not there.”

            “We will look again, eight this evening,” Elder Stow said.  “We should see the summer night stars then.”

            “But the sun has to be there!”  Katie protested.

            “But it is not.”

            Lockhart left the argument behind as he stepped out of the mouth of the cave.  The sea was calmed, but still thundering enough against the rocks to fill his ears.  And it remained as dark as the night.  He looked up at the stars in the sky, but he did not look long.  “Everyone,” he shouted as he turned back to the others.  “Saddle up, we ride as fast as is safe in the dark.”

            Oh, not that torturous beast again,” Elder Stow complained.

            “Katie, I figure without the warmth of the sun the temperature is going to drop rapidly, and keep dropping.”

            “Best to stay close to the water.  Water is slower to lose heat,” Boston shouted as she went for her horse.

            “Best to thicken up your fairy weave clothes,” Katie added.

            “Lockhart,” Roland got his attention.  “We can use the fairy weave tents like medieval blankets for the horses.”

            “Good idea,” Lockhart agreed before Elder Stow spoke up.  The Gott-Druk had a pitiful look on his face which reminded Lockhart how human this Neanderthal really was.

            “If I had my things, I could keep up well without having to ride that beast again.”

            Seeing that look nudged Lockhart to give a serious answer.  “First you must prove yourself a good son who means no harm to the tribe.”

            The Gott-Druk looked surprised before he lowered his eyes in a sign of submission.  “My father,” he said and bravely went to mount his horse which Lincoln had ready and waiting.

            As fast as they could in the dark was not very fast.  There were not many journeys inland to get around breaks in the shoreline, but they just could not move fast without light.  The lamps helped a bit, but Lockhart was concerned by noon and ordered three lamps only, one with each pair of riders.  The other two he turned off to save what battery life they might have.  They would all need time in the sun to recharge.

            It was not much further before they came to a fishing village that was built along a gray beach.  It was about that same time it began to snow.  The villagers were afraid of them, which was to be expected as it was likely their first experience with horse riders.  What was not expected was the immediate reception by three elders who cried out to them.

            “Help us, help us.”

            They all heard the scream in the distance.  They dismounted, drew their weapons and marched toward the sound, escorted by the elders.  Lincoln and Elder Stow gladly stayed with the horses.

            Something flew out from one of the huts, like a specter in the dark with just enough glow to be visible. 

            “Alexis?”  Lincoln thought he recognized the ghost, but Katie spoke at the same time.

            “Father?”

            The elders cowered, squatted down, turned their faces to the dirt and cried.  The specter circled around the newcomers several times before it flew off and disappeared into the dark sky.

            “What was that?”  Lockhart asked, not expecting an answer.

            “Succubus, or near enough,” Roland answered.

            “Not Alexis?”  Lincoln had to be sure.

            “Not Alexis, though it may appear to you that way.  Or your father, Lieutenant.  It will appear in whatever way necessary to get close enough to suck out your life force.”

            “On that happy thought, what say we stop for lunch.”

            “Indoors?”  Boston asked.

            Lockhart picked one of the local elders off the ground.  “Indoors,” he did not ask.

            The snow flurries became a constant downfall by the time they finished eating what they and the village had.   “And now we shall all die,” the elder said.  “My wife was drained of life before my eyes, and I have but two daughters left to me in my age.  I was angry at the loss of my wife, but she has eaten the food of the dead and cannot return.  Now, I feel as if the spirit showed mercy to take her life.”  The old man pulled his cloak tighter around his body, but it was thin, and even with all the heated rocks it was not enough.

            “Don’t give up,” Katie encouraged.  “If we can find our boss, there may yet be hope.”

            “Our boss?” Lockhart asked.

            Katie just smiled.  “You don’t think after all this I could go back to just being a marine, do you?”

            “I don’t think we will get back to anything if this situation continues much longer.”

            Roland, Lincoln and Elder Stow were off checking on the rest of the village, heating all the rocks they could find and drag inside the homes.  They were lucky none of the straw and bamboo huts caught fire, though at least that would have provided some light and heat against the cold darkness.

            “I have faith,” Katie said with a look in Lockhart’s eyes.

            “I am not sure you and Elder Stow will make it to the eight o’clock evening stars,” Lockhart countered.

 

###

Avalon 2.3:  To Warm the Heart … Next Time

 

Avalon 2.3: The Dark of the Sun

 

After 3794BC on the Korean Peninsula.  Kairos, life 23: Kim

 

Recording…

 

            “Hey!  Who turned out the lights?”  Boston called out into the dark and against the roaring sound of the sea breaking on the rocks. 

            “Over here,” Roland’s voice rang out.  He could make himself heard against the thunder of wind and waves.

            “Glad it is not raining,” Lincoln said as he and Lockhart came up.  Lincoln retrieved his lantern from his pack.

            “Can’t hardly tell from the sea spray,” Lockhart responded and added, “Where’s the Gott-Druk?”  He went for his own lantern.

            “Here,” Katie shouted and a moment later she appeared, holding tight to the reigns of the Gott-Druk’s horse.  Elder Stow looked as seasick as a man caught in a boat in the storm, but he held tight to the saddle horn and tried to grip with his legs as instructed.  “I caught him just before his panicked horse dove into the drink.”

            “Lucky for him,” Lincoln said.

            “Lucky for Decker’s horse,” Lockhart offered the alternate view.

            “We can’t stay here,” Boston shouted as she coaxed her horse up the rocks from the other side.

            “Inland?”  Roland decided but looked at Lockhart for confirmation.

            “But keep to the shore?” Lockhart suggested and in turn looked at Boston.  She checked the amulet, pointed up the shoreline and it was settled.

            Katie handed the reins for Decker’s horse back to Lincoln and he took up his usual place in the center, the Gott-Druk beside or behind him.  Boston, with her lantern lit, traveled out front with Roland.  Lockhart and Katie with their lanterns brought up the rear.  Lockhart kept watch on the Gott-Druk.  Katie kept looking back as if she could sense something following them in the dark.

            “I don’t like this,” Katie said at last.  “We need to find shelter for the night.”

            “Working on that,” Roland heard with his elf ears and made his voice heard to the back of the troop.  Shortly, his elf eyes spotted a cave in the hillside above sea level.  It was not the best accommodations, not the least because there was no wood around to build a fire, something they all wanted, but it was big enough to get the horses away from the sounds of the storm, and it was shelter in case it did decide to start raining.

            Elder Stow got off his horse and fell to kiss the dirt and rocks.  He bowed and chanted for a good ten minutes before he collapsed and laid out flat.  They left him alone.  They rode hard all day in Cophu’s time and came through the time gate to this forsaken place.  They all remembered when they first started to ride, how painful it was.  They were improved now, or at least toughened up, but poor Elder Stow had to be rubbed raw. 

            Lincoln went first to the back wall to make sure the cave did not continue off into the dark.  He was glad to see it did not.  He did not want his sleep interrupted by some troll or worse.  He just got a comfortable seat in the light and pulled out the database for some reading when Roland came from the back of the cave. 

            “No hidden dwarf or ogre doors I could find,” he said.  “Of course, goblins can be clever so we may never know.”

            “Thanks,” Lincoln said and he tried to concentrate on his reading.  It helped to read it out loud.  “Kim is the Kairos we are looking for.”

            “Kim?”  Lockhart sat by the entrance to put Katie between him and Lincoln.  Elder Stow stayed on Lincoln’s other side next to the elf whom he kept looking at with big eyes.

            “That’s it.  Kim is the only name.  It says he married the sun, whatever that means.”

            “Maybe he was a bright fellow,” Lockhart suggested.  Only Katie nudged his arm.

            “I have some fresh water in my canteen.  At least we can make some bread out of these crackers,” she said.

            “Hardtack,” Lockhart called it.

            “Good elf bread,” Roland defended his people.  “It will sustain you when nothing else will.”

            Lincoln leaned back into a rock.  “This is either Korea or Japan, depending on the time.”

            “Korea,” Lockhart said with enough certainty to get a few stares.  “I can smell the kimchi.” 

            “Not kimchi,” Boston countered.  “I’ve had kimchi.  This smells more like a compost heap.”

            “Chinese food?”  Lincoln made a joke.

            Elder Stow finally touched the elf.  “You are a strange tribe.”  He turned to Lockhart.  “May I have my sonic device?”

            Lockhart looked at Katie.  They spoke without speaking before Lockhart reached into the bag and pulled out three suspects.  Elder Stow pointed and tried to smile when Lockhart handed it over.  The Gott-Druk stood and lifted a stone far bigger than any of the humans could lift.  He set it square in their midst so they sat around it.  Then he adjusted the device and pointed it at the rock.  In a short time, the rock began to glow.  A minute longer and it got positively hot.

            “Warm bread is better than cold,” Boston said, and Katie put the water on to boil.  Elder Stow handed back the sonic device.  Lockhart looked squarely at the Gott-Druk.

            “This could be used as a weapon, couldn’t it?”

            “Easily,” the Gott-Druk looked away.  “But I am much too exhausted to argue.”

            “Argue?”  Katie asked.

            “In Gott-Druk, even fighting is in familial terms.  Argue means fight.”

            “What is that smell!”  Roland looked like he could hardly take it.

            “Rotting seaweed?”  Boston suggested.

            “I’ve been wondering,” Elder Stow said.  “It is making me hungry.”

            Katie screamed, and when Lincoln saw he screamed too.  Vines were creeping into the cave from the sea, not all that fast until they touched Katie’s ankle.  They whipped around her leg like a constricting snake and gave a great tug to drag her out to sea.  Katie had her knife out and cut herself free almost before the others could react.  When the vine snapped they heard a wail from the water and the dark that chilled them all.

            “The horses!” Lincoln yelled.  They were prepared to panic.  He and Boston got in their way and calmed them as well as they could while Lockhart drew his knife and Roland pulled out his sword.  Two more creeping vines were cut and got the same chilling sound from the deep.  Yet for every vine they cut, two seemed to take its place.

            “A Kraken.”  Roland yelled between strikes.  “But they stay in the deep.  It takes a week of stormy darkness to tempt them to the surface.  The sun is death to them.”

            Elder Stow watched, until Roland mentioned the sun.  Then he stood.  “My sonic device.”

            Lockhart still had it in his other hand and gave it to the Gott-Druk without hesitation.  He was otherwise busy.  The Gott-Druk took it and turned it on the vines.  They quickly burst into flame, full of sea water or not.  The sound that got from the Kraken was more like pain rather than shock.  Then he turned it to the sea straight out from the cave and turned the volume all the way up.  Roland held his ears, opened his mouth in a scream, but that scream was overwhelmed by the scream from the creature.  They saw a streak of fire rise from the surface of the sea to several hundred feet in the air.  That quickly shrank as the kraken submerged.  The vines were all withdrawn and Elder Stow stopped firing. 

            “Now I will sleep,” the Elder said, and he lay where he was beside the hot rock and closed his eyes.

            Boston and Lincoln came back.  Lincoln had his foot stepped on by one of the horses, but nothing was broken.  “Katie and I first watch,” Lockhart said.  “Lincoln, you can overlap with me and Roland.  Roland and Boston third watch.  Get some sleep.”

            “What about the sonic device?” Lincoln asked.

            “Leave it with the Elder for now, and pray we don’t need it again.”

 

###

 

Avalon 2.3:  In the Dark … Next Time

 

.

Avalon 2.2: Escape

 

            Cophu took Elder Stow down to the Elenar ship after lunch since he was the only other person who knew anything at all about advanced electronic systems.  Boston and Katie came along out of curiosity, though Katie also came to keep one eye on the Gott-Druk. 

            “Elenar?  No wonder everything is backwards.  Primitive junk.”  Elder Stow complained the whole time, but he did  a good job checking the systems, especially since Cophu said he would be taking the Gott-Druk into space so he had better be sure everything worked.

            “I can’t imagine the Gott-Druk systems you saw in the past were much better,” Boston groused right back at the Elder.

            The Gott-Druk frowned before he nodded.  “It is a wonder my ancestors dared to go into space with such junk.”

            “Wonder or not, we need to check the screens,” Cophu interrupted.  “I’m detecting some variation in the negatively charged ion screen.”

            “Let’s see,” Elder Stow went to look.

            “I would think the particle screen would be the important one,” Boston suggested.

            “Not in deep space,” the Gott-Druk explained.  “Well, yes, but you don’t want to arrive at your destination dead from radiation poisoning.”

            “Don’t want to show up glowing in the dark,” Cophu said from beneath the panel.  “Loose wire.”

            “Good,” Elder Stow pronounced the patient cured.

            “Scanners are good too as far as I can tell,” Katie stepped up to the group.  “Still just fancy radar equipment to me.”

            “About right,” Cophu agreed and lead the party back outside in time to see the gnomes coax the last of the horses into the cargo hold.  He turned to Elder Stow.  “Oh, I forgot to mention the travelers will be going with us as well.”

            Elder Stow reacted as expected.  He looked like he might have sabotaged something if he knew, but then he shrugged in a very human way.  “I am not the suicide type.  Besides, three of the tribe are still missing.”

            Katie and Boston looked at each other, wide-eyed.  “Good to know,” Katie said.

            The evening went well enough.  The Gott-Druk behaved himself.  There were Little Ones – Dark elves posted to watch him and his things in the night, but he was allowed his tent which was good because certainly no one wanted to invite him in.

            The Gott-Druk only made a passing stab at the deer Roland brought in for their supper.  He liked the elf bread well enough, but found the local bread too gritty for his tastes.  The others all told Ranna how much they liked it to make up for Elder Stow’s rudeness.  That was good, considering Ranna spent the afternoon carefully grinding the grain between two well worn stones, without the need to touch the stones, of course.

            The only difficult thing that evening was trying to keep the wolfman calm around the smell of blood, and to feed him.  He wanted nothing to do with the greens or bread, and cried a little when he was offered cooked meat.  Lockhart was the one who figured it out.  He found the most undercooked portion of deer on the spit, added some raw, stringy guts tossed over on the fertilizer pile, and the wolfman ate it like a dog.  Then they tied him for the night and set a troll to watch him.  The troll gladly finished eating the guts the wolfman did not eat.

            When the morning came, Cophu hurried everyone aboard the Elenar ship.  They barely got the door closed and the engines warmed before he drove them straight up to the clouds.  He raced them two miles from Jericho and his home and found a clear field to set them down.  Then he spoke.

            “I measured the wall of Chaos.  It is like a ring, only eighty feet high.  I don’t suppose she imagined we could fly to our freedom.”

            Signs of understanding spread across the faces of the travelers and Elder Stow responded.

            “Still, she is a power and we better move on while we can.  As long as we are in her territory, she can always fetch us back.”

            They stepped outside and any number of waiting Elenar drew their weapons on sight of the Gott-Druk.  Lockhart, Katie and Roland immediately stepped between the weapons and Elder Stow.  Lincoln and Boston went to retrieve the horses and Lincoln yelled first.  The wolfman ran off into the woods.

            “Damn it!” Lincoln swore.  “Now we will never find him.”

            Cophu came out and yelled second.

            “Stop it!  Put your weapons down.  You and the Gott-Druk are allies against the Balok.  Save your weapons for the serpent people.” 

            Several of the Elenar hesitated and lowered their guns while they looked at the pilot, their ranking officer.  “It is true,” the pilot said as he holstered his weapon.  “We have made an ill-advised alliance with the beast men against the serpents.”

            “Gee, prejudiced much?”  Boston asked as she and Lincoln brought out the horses.  “Here, Stowy, you get Decker’s horse.”

            “No, I,” The Gott-Druk started to back away.  Cophu had to put a hand on Elder Stow’s shoulder and move him forward.  He spoke while Boston shortened the stirrups.

            “Use your knees.  Your butt and legs will probably hurt for a week, but you will get used to it.  Next time zone, I’ll try and borrow Wlvn and properly lay hands on you to pass along relevant horse care and riding information.”

            “Why not now?”  Lincoln asked.

            Cophu shook his head.  “That would attract too much attention.  AhnYani and KimKeri and some others have the woman,you-know-who preoccupied for the moment, but you better ride fast to the time gate.  Fool her once, shame on her.  We won’t be able to fool her twice.”

            “But what about you?  Why didn’t you bring your family with you?  You could have escaped, too.”  Boston, Lincoln and Katie all had something to say.

            Cophu shook his head.  “I need to go back.  I need to liberate my Shemsu people.  We have a destiny in the Tigris-Euphrates valley turning Anenki’s towns into Sumarian Cities.”

            “You mean go back behind the wall?”  Katie asked.

            Cophu nodded and turned to the Elenar for some final instructions.  Lockhart saluted, whether Cophu saw or not, and rode.  The others followed, at a gallop when the land allowed it.  The sun was set and the last of the daylight was fading when they reached the next gate and paused.

            “I hope all goes well for him,” Boston said as she looked back.

            “So do I,”  Elder Stow said to everyone’s surprise.  He wanted to stretch the time they stopped to rub every muscle that hurt, which was every muscle.

            Then they did something they had hoped never to do again.  They went through the time gate into the dark.

 ### 

Next Time:  Avalon 2.3 The Dark of the Sun

Avalon 2.2: Forgotten and Unexpected

            Roland nosed his mount forward, wary, eyes wide open.  He came to a clearing.  There were a few trees there, but several had been crushed and Roland guessed this was where the Elenar ship landed.  “Hello!” he called.  He got the expected answer, but it was from behind a tree.

            “Are you friend or foe?”

            Roland instantly recognized the voice.  “Alexis.”

            Alexis walked her horse into the open and mounted.  “How do you know my name?”

            “You don’t know me?”  Roland had to be sure.  If she was enchanted, sudden information contrary to what she had been told might be as dangerous as waking a sleep-walker.

            “I have never seen you before,” Alexis confirmed his fear.  “But I see you are an elf, like my father, and a wise one to have up a glamour to make you appear human in this place.  Perhaps you know my father.  Mingus is his name.”

            “Yes, I know your father.  We have been close all of my life.  Is he near?”

            “No,” Alexis said.  “He is in the camp and probably being very cross right now for my sneaking away.  The geis of the Kairos came upon him as it fell on all of the little spirits who were near.  They took the alien ship behind the forbidden wall so it might be fixed.  I snuck away because I was curious to see it, but I see it has already been taken behind the wall and the geis has been removed.  That is why I said my father is likely cross with me, for sneaking off.”

            “Alexis, can you take me to your father?”

            Alexis paused.  “I like your face,” she said.  “You remind me of someone I love very much, only I cannot think of who.”

            “It will come to you.  Remember my face whenever you wonder where your father is taking you.  Whenever something does not feel right, think of me and it will come to you.”

            “What a strange suggestion.”

            “So can you take me to your father?”

            “I think not.  You see, we are escaping from the terrible thing that is following us.  Father will not explain it, but he says it wants to take my life and I am much too young to be destroyed in that way.  You see, that was why I asked if you were friend or foe.  I believe you are friend, but I feel for safety sake it is best not to take any chances.”  With that word, a mist came up from the ground and enveloped Alexis.  It spread out and would have enveloped Roland, too, if he did not turn around and move away quickly.  He knew there was no way he could follow his sister or even find her when she did not want to be followed or found, so he thought it best to report back to the others.  Unfortunately, the others were just then returning to Cophu’s house.

            “I was afraid this would happen,” Cophu spoke calmly but they could all see his frustration beneath the surface.  “The wall makes you turn back the way you came and won’t let you leave.”

            Ranna smiled since it seemed impossible for her husband to do so.  “Well, I am glad to have you back.  I enjoy the company, and so do the children, but where is Roland?”  She looked up at Boston

            Boston turned her head to look back while Lincoln spoke.  “He probably made it through the wall.”

            “Chaos said she had no use for the elf,” Katie added.

            Ranna walked up to Boston as Boston dismounted and she helped the woman walk to the house.  “I am sure he will come back,” she said.  Boston said nothing and managed not to cry.

            “People!”  There was a sound of thunder which startled the horses badly but certainly got their attention.  It was Tiamut and she had two people with her that caused them all to stare.  “These do not belong here.  I assume they are yours,” Tiamut said.  “And I trust you had a pleasant journey.”  The goddess vanished but let her laughter linger.  Clearly she thought it was funny.

            One of the men was naked, filthy, bruised, cut in any number of places and showed only fear and distrust in his eyes.  “The werewolf,” Katie said as she stepped up beside Lockhart.

            The other, dressed in an orange jumpsuit, eyed a pile of equipment Tiamut left half-way between him and the travelers.  He was the Gott-Druk from the future that followed them since the days of Odelion.  He rushed for his things, but Lockhart drew his police pistol and shouted.

            “Don’t you dare.”  The Gott-Druk stopped, his hand outstretched but still too far from his things to touch.  Lockhart noticed Katie drew her pistol a smidgen faster than he did.  He nodded to her, and she stepped up and used her foot to move everything a bit further from the spaceman.

            “Careful,” it was Cophu who shouted as he came trotting up with a shoulder bag.  “I made this for when my Shemsu people left this place to travel to the young cities along the Tigris and Euphrates.  Now, you see, Tiamut has us trapped and will not let us leave.”  He handed a bit of bread to Katie without explanation before he bent down and carefully examined everything in the pile.  He put it piece by piece into the bag.

            “Yes,” Lincoln stepped up having finally calmed his and Captain Decker’s and Boston’s horses.  “And she won’t let us leave either.”

            “Ahhh!”  The Gott-Druk reacted when Cophu touched a particular piece.  Cophu had made sure it was shut down, but with that reaction he looked more closely.

            “No need to go invisible now,” he said.

            “It has other properties,” the Gott-Druk said.

            “Yes, of course.”  Cophu turned it on and considered the readout.  He held it up to Lincoln and then waved it past Lockhart and Harper.  “I see.  Good little scanner.”  He shut it off again and put it in the bag.  The Gott-Druk responded by tossing his hands in the air and grunting.  “No doubt how he followed your trail through the various gates,” Cophu added.

            “Neanderthal, got a name?”  Katie asked and Lincoln and Lockhart spoke at the same time.

            “Gott-Druk.”

            “Elder Stow,” the Gott-Druk responded.

            “Katie Harper, Robert Lockhart, Benjamin Lincoln, and Cophu,” Katie made the introductions.  “Boston is the redhead that went inside with Cophu’s wife, Ranna.”

            “Elder?”  Lockhart interrupted with a question.

            “Yes,” Cophu answered for the Gott-Druk.  “They travel in small groups and their ships are designed that way.  The Captain and first mate are called “Father and Mother,” the officers are “Elders and Youngers,” and the crew are their children, at least in name.  It is all very familial.”

            “Actually, Father and Mother share equal duties in captaining a ship,” Elder Stow said.

            “Indeed,” Cophu went back to his last few pieces.

            There was an awkward moment of silence until Cophu finished, stood and spoke again.

             “Elder Stow, why are you here?”

            “You are the one they call the Watcher?  You are the one who sometimes becomes other people in time?”

            “I am.”

            “I have watched you.”

            “I have watched you watching me, even when you thought you were invisible.”

            The Gott-Druk considered this before he dipped his head in a small bow and spoke.  “It was some years ago when my children and I found ourselves in a whirlwind that picked us up from our place and deposited us in the deep past.  At first I feared we landed before the flood, but I soon came to see the land was dominated by humans.  We avoided them.  We lived apart until one of my children discovered a door to another time.  We moved then, not knowing if we were going forward or backward in time until we came at last to the island world where we found ancient people – our people.  We set ourselves to help them become masters of that world, but you intervened and my children were killed.  After that, I followed you having scanned and isolated your being.  At first I was seeking a way to destroy you, but then you helped my people against the ghoulish ones and I became very confused.”

            “Their job is to find their way home,” Cophu said.  “And not interfere with history if they can help it.”

            “So I have perceived,” Elder Stow said.  “You are seeking to return to the future where I also belong.  I would rather go with you than follow you.”  He looked at Lockhart.  “You are the father of your tribe.  May I be as one of your children.”  He bowed his head and waited.  Everyone turned to look at Lockhart.  Based on the encounter he had with the Gott-Druk in the future, Lockhart did not trust this one.  Add to that the fact that they killed Stow’s crew and it was not advisable.  But then, it might be better to know where this one was and stranding him in the past was out of the question.

            “Human parents in my day have a saying for their children,” Lockhart said.  “We’ll see.”  He was not going to commit to a yes or no since as far as he knew the matter was moot.  They could not escape Jericho anymore than Cohpu or his Shemsu people could escape.

            “Fair enough for now,” Cophu said, and he looked up as Boston came tumbling back out of the house and Katie used the bread and tried to coax the wolfman to move toward the house at the same time.  The wolfman stepped back again when Boston yelled out.

            “Roland!”  Roland was still some distance away, but coming on.

 

Avalon 2.2:  Escape … Next Time

Avalon 2.2: The Wall

            Lockhart explained for Katie, and Roland if he did not know.  “The Elenar are one of the two primary elder races that survived the flood by moving out into space using Agdaline technology.  The Elenar are like proto-humans or Cro-Magnon.  The Neanderthals, that is the Gott-Druk you have already met.

            “And this is an Elenar ship?”  Katie was just checking.  When Lockhart nodded she asked her real question.  “Why don’t they repair it themselves?”

            “They lost a section of the bulkhead,” Cophu interrupted.  “Space got their engineering staff and most of the technical staff as well.  They still have their pilot and he can take the rest of the crew home if they have a working ship.”

            “Will you be able to fix it?” Boston wondered.

            “Replacing the bulkhead is easy.  We just use some of their inner walls and double reinforce them.  My little ones about have that done already.  And as far as I can tell, the actual explosion that blew out the bulkhead did not really damage any of their systems.  I’ll spend tomorrow doing a systems check, but I expect no problems.”  He looked over at the ship where the fires burned and the sound of the night shift could be heard in the clang of metal against metal.

            “Where is home?”  Lockhart had his head pointed up at the stars.

            “About there.”  Cophu pointed at a star, though it was hard to tell exactly which star since after the rain the sky had turned perfectly clear and cloudless and it was covered with millions of stars.

            “These are the same stars Abraham looked at,” Lincoln mused.  “And he was told his seed would number more than the stars in the heavens.  Looking at this sky I can understand why that was so hard to believe.”

            “If you don’t mind,” Cophu gave Lincoln a hard stare.  “That has not happened yet so I would appreciate you keeping such things to yourself.”

            “Right, sorry.”

            “We have broken that rule a few times so far.  Sorry.”  Boston apologized for them all as Ranna came out from the house.

            “All asleep,” she announced quietly.  She stepped over to the fire and sat beside Cophu.  She took his hand which he was happy to give her.  “I thought the boys would never get to sleep with all the excitement today.”

            Lockhart looked at Katie.  It was the first time he looked at her all evening.  She did not seem to notice, but when he turned back to the fire, she looked at him.  “Well, we have had some excitement today as well,” Lockhart said.  “We should also get to sleep if we hope to get an early start in the morning.”  He got up, said goodnight and went to the tent he shared with Roland.  Katie stood as well.

            “Coming Boston?”  Boston let go of Roland’s hand and followed.  Lincoln had his own tent at his insistence, but sometimes he slept by the fire.

            Cophu said nothing.  He did not want to jinx them.  He took Ranna quietly into the house and to bed.

            Come the dawn, there was quiet down by the Elenar ship.  The travelers packed quickly and as quietly as they could, but were not surprised to find Cophu and Ranna up to see them off.  The two held each other in the morning mist, and Ranna whispered in Cophu’s ear.

            “Will they be able to get through?”

            “I don’t think so,” Cophu admitted while he smiled and waved.

            “The trail is clear enough,” Boston said from the front.  “All we have to do is follow the trench made by all those ogres that dragged in the Elenar ship.”

            “I just hope none of those ogres stuck around after the job was done,” Lincoln said.  Boston and Roland looked back and Katie and Lockhart looked up as well.  “What?  It’s my job to say things like that.”

            “So when do you think we will reach the wall of Chaos?”  Katie asked quietly.

            “We should feel it, like coming in.  You remember, that static electricity feeling,” Lockhart answered with equal quiet, and then they rode in silence.

            The way was in truth easy to where Roland only had to ride out front a few times to check sounds in the distance.  It was all farm fields at first, mostly wheat and some rye.  The sky remained clear, and the sun came out so it got warm, but not too hot.  In all, it was a pleasant ride and all went well until Roland called the group to halt.

            “Hold your horses quiet,” Roland said softly.  He had his elf ears tuned to something.  He turned after a moment and looked at Lincoln.  “It sounds like a horse up ahead, but you better let me check it out first.”

            “That’s an order.”  Lockhart quickly spoke from the rear.  Lincoln turned with his face full of hope that it might be Alexis, but he was good and waited.  Boston, who was up front, kept her eyes on Roland for as long as she could.  She shrieked.  It startled everyone.

            “He vanished,” she said, and raced forward.  With one “damn,” from Lockhart since the others were obliged to follow her.

            “Roland?  Roland?”  Boston began to call out as she rode.

            “Roland?”  Lockhart added his voice to the call and Lincoln and Katie echoed him, but at last he forced Boston to halt.  “We may have passed him,” he said.  “We might need to turn around and check off the trail for signs of him.”

            “No.  I looked at the grain on either side as we went by.  It hasn’t been disturbed.”  Boston was in a fretful state.

            “I have to say I checked, too.” Katie spoke up.  “If he left the trail, I missed it.”

            “Wait,” Lincoln made Boston pause.  She already had her horse turned.  “What is that?”  He pointed.  It was the Elenar ship.  It could be seen even if the houses near it were still hidden by the grain.

            “We can’t have gotten turned around,” Lockhart said.  Again, Boston did not wait.  She turned away from sight of the ship and spurred her horse to a run.  Again the others were obliged to follow.

            “Roland!  Roland!”  She called, but there was no answer, and in less than ten minutes they were back at Lincoln’s spot, staring at the distant ship.

            “But we never turned around.” Katie insisted and no one argued.

            “Roland!”  Boston stood up in her stirrups and shouted as loud as she could.

            “Look here,” Katie was being practical.  Lincoln looked as did Lockhart, but Lockhart kept one eye on Boston.  “I can see where our tracks galloped off from here.”  Katie pointed in the direction that would take them away from the ship.

            “What does the amulet say?”  Lockhart asked.

            Boston paused.  She pulled it out and stared at it.  She looked up and looked bewildered and a little afraid.  “It doesn’t say anything.”

            “Tiamut’s wall,” Lincoln said.  “Apparently she did not want the elf.”

 

Avalon 2.2:  Forgotten and Unexpected … Next Time

Avalon 2.2: Goddesses

 

            The sun was just rising when a man stepped out of the house next door and found six large and strange beasts in his barn and seven strange people sitting around a table out front having a breakfast fit for a king and a pleasant conversation besides.  He responded as anyone might.

            “Hey!  What the Hell are you doing on my property.  Who are you people?”

            AhnYani and KimKeri got up immediately and Roland ventured a comment.  “Don’t look.”

            The others were distracted, but only for a second as AhnYani and KimKeri began to glow with power and holiness.  The man fell to his knees as they neared, and he threw his hands to his trembling face to cover his eyes.  He looked afraid for his life, but all KimKeri did was bend down and kiss the man on his balding forehead.

            “Love your wife and be content,” she said.  “And stay away from the prostitutes.”

            “What’s wrong with the prostitutes?” AhnYani wondered.  KimKeri just grabbed AhnYani’s hand and brought her back to the table.  The man stood like one in a trance and went back inside his house.

            “That was very interesting,” Lincoln said.

            “I can’t eat another bite,” Lockhart suggested, and KimKeri looked at him and nodded to his wisdom.

            “We should go,” she agreed and the table and all vanished while the travelers readied their horses.

            The walk through town was uneventful.  There were times Katie imagined the goddesses made them invisible, but then there were times when they were clearly seen.  People gaped at them, jaws wide open, but no one imagined getting in their way, and probably would have let them pass without incident even if they were not being escorted by goddesses.

            When they reached the other side of the city, there were some small open fields, like public parks, and the architecture changed.  Most of the city was wood structures with thatch or clay and wood roofs that had a post-neolithic look about them.  Here, the houses were stone, and stone without mortar to hold them together, no less.  The stones looked to be fitted perfectly like they were machine crafted and surely nothing primitive.

            “These are Shemsu people, like Qito’s people,” Lincoln explained as he read from the database.

            “So they know how to work the stones,” Katie surmised.

            “And levitate them into place,” Lincoln nodded.

            “Probably built the city walls,” Boston suggested.

            “No doubt,” Lincoln agreed as they moved through a gate in that wall.  They had reached the other side of the city. 

            A small group of huts extended beyond the wall, well into the fields the people farmed like a hamlet.  “Just as well,” Lockhart verbalized his own thoughts as he looked back at the massive stones in that wall.  “I would rather have the wall between us and the city people.”  Katie, who walked beside him, nodded.

            In the very last house, as far from the city as one could go, they found two boys, seven-year-old twins   They were having a contest to see who could hold the stone in the air the longest, using only their minds, of course.  When the travelers became visible, the stone plummeted to the earth because the travelers were not all strangers.

            “KimKeri!” The boys shouted and ran up for hugs, and Kimkeri hugged them like a mother might hug her own.  They hugged her back with equal fervor before they turned to AhnYani.

            “AhnYani!”  They shouted her name in unison, too, and the goddess grabbed them and tossed them both up in the air – about twenty feet.  She caught them, of course, as they plummeted like their stone, screaming their joy and giggling like babies.  It had to be better than a roller coaster.

            “Ranna,” KimKeri called ahead toward the house.  A little girl of maybe five years came out first, and she ran as well as she could, her arms outstretched, but she caught her foot on a stone and fell.  She skinned her knee and looked up at KimKeri with tears in her eyes.  KimKeri was there and picked up the girl before the travelers could blink.  The girl’s skinned knee was instantly healed and, there is no other way to say it, KimKeri mothered all over the girl.

            A round but good looking woman came from the house with a two-year-old on her hip.  “Ladies,” she said with a slight, temporary lowering of her eyes.

            “You have company,” KimKeri pointed as she came up and exchanged kisses on the cheek.

            AhnYani bounced up with the two boys, one in each hand.  “They are Cophu’s friends from the future.”

            The woman looked at the travelers for the first time and gave them the same sort of reception she gave the goddesses.  She lowered her eyes for a moment and dipped her head ever so slightly before she spoke.

            “My husband is out retrieving some great thing, I know not.  It is outside the wall Chaos erected so he had to ask his little ones to bring it in.  He says he must fix it for the ones from far away.”  Ranna took her free hand and waved it at the sky.  “While we wait, you are welcome here.  We do not have much, but you are welcome to share in all that we have.”

            Lockhart and Katie stepped up and with a look at the side of the house, the others nodded and went to tie their horses off while Lockhart spoke.  “It seems to me if you have these two lovely ladies as friends you have everything a person could want.”

            Katie put her hand up to pat his shoulder, to encourage him.  She thought that was very well said.

            “But we see so little of our friends,” Ranna replied as she gave AhnYani the same sort of kiss on her cheek.

            “Chaos does keep us busy,” KimKeri admitted.  “El and his court can be very demanding.”

            AhnYani said nothing,  She was busy tickling the two-year-old while the five-year-old hid in KimKeri’s shoulder.

            “What are these wonderful beasts.” The boys were right there with Boston, Roland and Lincoln who looked trapped into answering.  The two boys had the three grown-ups surrounded.  Lockhart laughed at the sight as Katie spoke.

            “Chaos has threatened to use us as well, be we hope to move on in the morning.”  She looked at Lockhart to be sure and he nodded.

            “That may not be so easy,” Ranna said.  “Even Cophu is trapped by the wall outside the wall that Chaos has put up.”

            “You mean Tiamut?”  Lincoln escaped the boys and caught up with the conversation.  The two goddesses and Ranna looked at him and frowned.  Even Lockhart and Katie had avoided that name, even if just on principle. 

            “Best not to say her name,” KimKeri said.

            “She will hear you,” AhnYani whispered.

            “Ah, but here comes Cophu now,” KimKeri pointed toward a rise in the distance.  All the people could see was something was coming and it looked terribly big.

            “The ship we saw plummeting to the ground when we first arrived,” Katie said, and her hand went again to touch Lockhart’s upper arm as if vying for his attention.

            “Not a stick ship, nor Agdaline nor Balok,” Lockhart said and he looked at Katie who quickly removed her hand.

            “No, don’t you dare,” KimKeri said, firmly, but she was talking to AhnYani and did not explain what she was talking about.

            Lockhart, Katie and Lincoln watched for a moment before they turned to figure out overnight accommodations for the horses.  They pitched their tents, not wishing to crowd the home where six already crowded in.  They built a fire, and KimKeri and AhnYani provided a late afternoon feast before they said their good-byes.  It was actually several hours before Cophu arrived, and when he did he was not in a good mood at first.

 

Avalon 2.2:  The Wall … Next Time

Avalon 2.2: Chaos Inside and Out

            The travelers settled in for a bite to eat.  With Boston’s careful tending, the fire roared well for such a wet and dreary night.  The priest watched and tried the bread, but was non-committal about it all.  He stayed quiet and appeared content to listen while the travelers talked among themselves.  Roland and Boston sometimes whispered to each other.  Katie and Lockhart included Lincoln in their conversation. 

            The rain drifted away at sunset, though the cloudy night would take some time to clear.  Lincoln suggested they might see the stars by midnight, and Lockhart was ready to set the watch through the night when a group of twenty or more men arrived and Asspurbinal the priest stood to greet them.  This was what he had been waiting for.

            “Now I think you will give me everything from the future,” the priest said.  “Including your clothes that you change with a word, as I have seen.”

            The travelers stood, their weapons ready.  The men were armed with spears and clubs and several held torches against the dark.  Roland pulled his sword, pointed it at the priest and let him feel how sharp it was while Lockhart spoke.

            “Don’t make us kill all these men,” Lockhart said.  “Because we would have to kill you first.”

            “The future is not for you to take,” Boston added as she pulled her Beretta and stood close to Roland’s side.

            The priest touched the sword, looked at the travelers and thought about it while the men in the street awaited orders.  In that moment of hesitation, a woman appeared in their midst.  She was seven feet tall and glowed in the dark with an awesome presence that made her hard to look at directly.  The men stepped back and several ran.  The priest trembled and fell to his face.  The travelers recognized her and growled, having met her before.  Katie named her.

            “Tiamut.”

            “Marine,” Tiamut responded and reached out her hand.  Lockhart’s shotgun broke free of his grip and flew to the woman.  She shouldered the weapon, not expertly, but well enough to turn it on the crowd of men.  She shot three of them before they scattered and vanished back into the darkness of the city.  “I have to get one of these,” Tiamut said and tossed the weapon back to Lockhart.

            “Do you expect our thanks?”  Boston asked.

            “Elf lover,” Tiamut turned her eyes on the redhead.  “What a disgusting thought.  I like it.” 

            “Mistress,” Asspurbinal the priest could barely manage the word through a throat constricted by fear.  Tiamut bent down to him as if to whisper, though her words were loud enough for all to hear.

            “These people are mine.  You leave them alone.  Now I suggest you run for your life.”  She backed up to watch.

            The priest looked up once at the travelers, dared not look at the goddess, leapt to his feet and ran off screaming into the night.

            “We are not yours,” Lockhart said.

            “But you are,” Tiamut turned on him.  “I have a mind to keep you for a time.  Maybe not the elf.  I have no use for such.”

            “But our journey,” Lincoln was afraid to protest too strongly.  He was learning that in the ancient days it was not wise to cross the gods.  They were all learning.

            Tiamut looked at him which caused him to look away.  “Yes, your human wife and her elf father.  They were wise enough to perceive my wall outside the wall and went around.  But no, you will never see them again, not the father you fear nor the abomination you married.”

            “But my wife,” Lincoln started to speak, but Tiamut interrupted.

            “My priest is unscrupulous, greedy, manipulative and full of many such admirable qualities, but do not worry, I will set a guard for the night.  Now you must sleep and rest while I decide how I will use you.”  She waved her hand and the travelers fell to the ground where they were.  As they fell into a fitful, nightmare-filled sleep they heard the laughter of Tiamut, goddess of chaos, float away on the wind.

            Katie was the first to wake, and she found herself very comfortable in Lockhart’s arms.  In a way, she hated to wake him.  After the rough start to the night, everyone slept wonderfully well, or at least she did.  Lockhart looked to be very comfortable as well.

            “Robert,” Katie backed up a bit and shook him.  With that sound, Roland sat up on the other side of the fire.  As Katie and Lockhart separated with looks of uncertainty, Boston pulled Roland back down so she could snuggle a bit more.  She wasn’t finished sleeping.

            Lincoln in the middle had his arms around two unknown women and both Katie and Lockhart were surprised to see such a smile on Lincoln’s face.  Everyone was fully dressed, but Lincoln was grinning as wide as his face could go.

            “He is dreaming about his wife,” the blond woman spoke up. 

            “She must be very nice,” the dark haired woman added, and since the two women were awake they both sat up and then stood up.

            “I’m KimKeri,” the blond intoned in a voice deep and filled with promise.

            “I’m AhnYani,” the dark haired, well tanned woman spoke in a devil-may-care tone.

            “Young goddesses of love,” Roland was up again, and this time he stood and bowed.

            “Of the lesser variety,” AhnYani sighed like a child who was not allowed out to play.

            “And just as trapped here as you,” KimKeri also sighed like a woman who only wanted to satisfy her man.  The men heard that, but so did the women.  Katie and Boston both stepped in front of Lockhart and Roland.

            “Don’t fret,” KimKeri continued.  “We have no interest in your men.  We were sent to guard you in the night.  That is all.”

            “But our mistress did not say anything about the day.”  AhnYani spoke with glee in her voice and a twinkle in her eye.  “If we happen to be going to visit our friend Cophu, I suppose we can’t help it if you happen to follow us.”

            “Give us a minute to get our horses saddled and ready,” Lockhart replied.  He had no doubt in his mind these lesser goddesses meant what they said.

            “More than a minute,” KimKeri said.  She waved her arm and a table full of food and all sorts of delicacies appeared.  “I would hardly be worthy of the name, goddess of satisfaction if I let you go hungry.”  She waved her other arm.  “And grain for the horses.  Let them enjoy the morning.”

            “And what are you goddess of?” Katie asked AhnYani as she stepped up beside Lockhart.  Without thinking, Katie slipped her arm around the man’s waist.  He let his fall across her shoulder.  They turned their heads to each other and let their lips touch.  Then at once they separated, though it was clear that they both needed to think about what just happened.

            “Wait a minute,” Boston shouted and turned Roland to face her.  She kissed him, she did not just touch his lips, and to be fair he kissed her right back.

            “Now, AhnYani that will be quite enough,” KimKeri scolded.  “Spontaneity.  She is spontaneous joy and love,” KimKeri described her friend as she looked down at Lincoln.  He was stirring, still dreaming before he bolted upright.

            “Alexis!”  He looked around and saw Roland and Boston, the two strange women, the table filled with breakfast and Lockhart and Katie Harper who seemed to have no eyes for anything but each other, but no Alexis.  “What is going on?”

 

Avalon 2.2:  Goddesses … Next Time

Avalon 2.2: Jericho

 

After 3852 BC in Jericho.  Kairos life 22: Cophu of the Shemsu

Recording… 

 

            The travelers paused at the edge of the rise despite the rain and looked across the fields to the city wall.  It was mammoth, built of standing stones, and the gates looked formidable as well.

            “Bigger than anything we have seen so far.”  Roland’s voice carried through the weather.  He had the ability to make himself heard, if necessary.

            “One of Anenki’s cities come to fruition?”  Boston asked.  Roland shook his head, but Lincoln who was on the other side of her spoke up.  He had the database and was trying to read it and keep it dry at the same time.  He was not entirely successful.

            “This is older.  I think it is Jericho.  If we entered Cophu’s life early on, it has to be Jericho.”

            “Well, wherever we are, we better move,” Lockhart shouted.  “This wind is picking up.  Huh?”  He looked at Katie who nudged him on the shoulder and pointed to the sky.  There was a ship of some kind and it looked to be in distress.  They all saw it.  It was coming down through the low clouds, probably hoping to land on the other side of the city.  A stroke of lightning flashed across the sky, and the ship was gone without even telltale smoke to mark its passage.

            Lockhart said nothing and nudged his horse down the rise.  The others followed and immediately they all felt like they were passing through a gate or invisible wall of some sort.  It was an electrical tingle that touched the edges of their skin and the smell of ozone was strong. 

            “Keep moving,” Lockhart said.  They would discuss it later. 

            There was no neat path through the farmland, but they went single file through the wheat to minimize the damage.  When they arrived at the actual double-door gate in that massive stone wall, they found it shut fast.  There did not appear to be anyone around.

            “No lock to shoot,” Lockhart commented and watched as Roland got down from his horse.  Boston held the reigns while Roland studied the situation.  Lincoln and Katie tried to fend off the rain, Lincoln to keep the database dry and Katie to keep her weapon dry.  Captain Decker’s horse pranced nervously every time the lightning struck, but Lincoln kept it under control.  Lockhart sat like a stone in the saddle, but inside he felt like Decker’s horse.

            Roland raised his hands and thrust them at the door three times, hard.  They all heard the boom, boom, boom.  “Open up.”  Roland shouted.  He could make himself heard.

            They waited.

            Finally, Roland picked up some mud and spread it horizontally across both doors of the gate.  When he was satisfied with his work, he paused to concentrate.  Suddenly, he lifted his hands straight up and shoved, like he was lifting something terribly heavy and throwing it away.  Then he threw his shoulder into the place where the doors met.  Lockhart leapt to help, and in a few seconds, they had the doors open wide enough to squeeze through.  The big piece of lumber that had kept the doors locked was a few feet away.

            Roland grabbed one door and tugged as hard as he could while Lockhart tugged on the other.  Lincoln pushed his horse in and brought Decker’s horse along.  Boston followed with Roland’s horse in tow.  Katie came last.  She had taken a moment to stow her rifle and get out her pistol, just in case.  There were men in the plaza beyond the gate, and they looked afraid.  Fear, she knew, could sometimes cause people to react foolishly.

            “Friend, friend.”  Katie shouted, not sure if she was heard through the rain or understood.  Lockhart understood something.

            “Roland, you need to appear more human here.”  He turned to the group while Roland turned his back on the men in the plaza in order to affect a glamour to give himself the right look.  “Dismount.  We need to walk the horses.”  He took the reins for his horse and Captain Decker’s horse.  “Lincoln, search the database for any relevant information on this city.”

            “We go through it, I think,”  Boston spoke up after she examined the amulet.  “We might have gone around.”  Boston looked at the men while the others looked around the plaza.  “Excuse me.”  Boston handed her reins to Roland and stepped up to the men who huddled together.  Lockhart almost stopped her, but at the last second turned to Lincoln.

            “Got to get out of this rain,” he said, and that was what Boston asked the men.  One of the men reached out and touched Boston’s red hair.  Katie raised her pistol and the motion caused two other men to look in her direction.  Her blond hair was probably not a whole lot better.  But then one of the elder men stepped forward.

            “This way,” he said, and the group followed that man through a back street to what appeared to be a barn.  There was room for the horses and the group immediately began to strip them and brush them free of the wet.  The older man and one other stayed to watch.  The rest probably went back to the gate.

            “Thank you.”  Katie spoke to the men while Roland found some hay for the horses to chew.  Lincoln pulled out a fairy weave tent and made it into an awning that extended out from the barn door.  He had in mind to make a fire right there, but away from the barn if possible.

            “You are of the gods?”  The elderly man asked.  Clearly he did not understand everything he saw, but began to doubt that these people were divine.  They were soaking wet and behaved like anyone who stood for too long out in the rain.

            “No,” Boston started to answer but Lockhart hushed her with a wave of his hand.

            “We are ordinary people but we come from tomorrow.  We have accidentally fallen back into today.  We are trying to get back to tomorrow.”  Lockhart spent a long time figuring out how to say that in a way a post-Neolithic copper and soft metals civilization might understand.

            “You are from the future?”  The old man understood very well.

            “Yes,” Lockhart affirmed, though he hated the idea of saying they were trying to get back to the future.

            The old man turned to the man beside him and whispered.  That man ran off into the rain.  Then he turned to the group.  “Welcome to Jericho.  May I see the future?”

            Lockhart shook his head.  “Not advisable.”

            Lincoln spoke up.  “Keep your eyes open.  I am sure you will see some things.”  The man nodded and watched while the travelers cared for their animals, found a dry wood pile  in the back of the barn and started Lincoln’s fire out front.  They also found some lumber to sit on to keep their pants dry and off the wet ground.

            “I would recommend staying the night here near the horses,” Katie said as she sat down beside Lockhart.

            Lockhart was studying the old man but Katie’s words shook him awake.  “My name is Lockhart, and these are my companions.  Katie Harper, Lincoln, Boston and Roland.”

            “I am Asspurbinal, priest of Tiamut.”

            On the word, Tiamut, Lincoln and Katie retrieved their high powered rifles and Lockhart drew and cradled his shotgun.  Roland checked his blades, including his sword, and Boston spoke.

            “I second the idea that we stay here near the horses tonight.”

 ###

Avalon 2.2:  Chaos Inside and Out … Next Time

Avalon 2.1: Intervention

 

            When the lioness finished destroying the last night creature, it turned and everyone watched in horror as it began a slow walk directly toward Phoenix.  But then it slowly transformed into a woman with short black hair and golden eyes.  By the time she reached Phoenix, the final box that separated them vanished and she caught Phoenix to keep her from falling.  Then she embraced Phoenix and kissed her lip to lip in a true lover’s kiss.  It was hard to say what Phoenix thought of that kiss since she did not even have the strength to stand on her own; but it was easy to see she did not exactly struggle against the idea.  When they separated, Phoenix said the woman’s name.

            “Wadjet.”

            Wadjet simply smiled and spoke with some volume.  “I always wanted to do that.”

            Then a man appeared out of nowhere, an older man who looked wise with experience.  “Enough,” he spoke from Wadjt’s elbow.  Wadjt bowed her head to the man and stepped back so the man could catch Phoenix.  He kissed Phoenix on her head like a doting father, and again Phoenix identified the person.

            “Papi Amun.”

            “And her husband right here.”  Amun scolded Wadjet who did not look the least bit embarrassed.  Amun leaned over Phoenix’ shoulder and waved to Baran.  Baran said nothing, but he took his hand from his ribs and smiled up at the man.

            All this while, the big housecat sat and watched.  It did not so much as wash itself.

            At once everyone could move again and two lovely women came into the clearing escorting a man who was tall and lean and yellow skinned and looked crooked.  He protested.  “It isn’t fair.”  But no one listened.

            There was a brilliant flash of light reminiscent of Phoenix’ fire and four more men appeared to face the crooked man.  One burned like fire.  One had the head of a long beaked bird.  The normal one had a skull cap and a square trimmed beard.  The last had the head of a jackal.  The latter three stepped back as the one that was shining and full of light stepped forward.

            The crooked one whined one more word.  “Father?”

            The shining one offered no preliminaries.  “The Kairos has served her term, and honorably.  The rest of her days are her own and to be respected.  You stay away.  I will be watching all the day long.”

            “And I will watch in the night.”  A new voice entered the clearing, but this man never became fully present as if he did not belong there.  He could be seen well enough and identified.  Indeed, Boston blurted out the man’s name since the travelers had met him before.  “Varuna.”

            Anubis of the Jackal head stepped forward, but stopped on the word of the bearded one. 

            “The Kairos was counted among all the gods by an act of all the gods.  The presence and pledge of this one simply affirms her place.”

            There was yet another gruffer and hearty voice.  “And I will watch both day and night.”  The man who appeared, this one fully, was a giant, being eight feet tall.  He wore a simple robe and carried a simple staff, but there was something about the eyes that made him hard to look at, like they penetrated too deep.

            The bearded one spoke again.  “The far seeing of Heimdahl is legendary even among the gods.”

            “So be it,” the shining one said, though he did not sound happy with all the outsiders.  He waved his hand and they all vanished with the words of the crooked one wafting on the wind.

            “It isn’t fair.”

            Wadjet turned her eyes once more to Phoenix and smiled before she transformed into the biggest cobra any had ever seen.  She slithered off back into the delta, and Katie was hardly able to keep from screaming.

            Papi Amun kissed Phoenix once again on the forehead and restored some of her strength.  “Be good,” he whispered and vanished.

            Last of all the big cat moved.  She came up to the Phoenix and, big as she was, she acted like a true housecat.  She purred and rubbed Phoenix’ legs before she changed into the most beautiful woman of all.  When she kissed Phoenix on the cheek, she faded from sight.  That left only Baran, Phoenix and the travelers at the house.  Even the carcasses of the night creatures had vanished.

            “Would someone explain to me what just happened?” Lockhart said with a look at Lincoln and at Katie.

            Phoenix rattled off names.  “Bast, Amun, Wadjet, Isis, Nephthys, Ptah, Thoth, Anubis the Ra, Aton, and Set in the middle, with Varuna and Heimdahl attending.”

            “Wow.”  Boston leaned into Roland.  He had his arm around her shoulder.

            “Quite a collection,” Lincoln said as he pulled out the database.

            “You don’t know the half of it,” Baran confided to Lincoln.

            Katie shrugged as Lockhart spoke again.  “Would someone explain to me what just happened?”

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Next Time:  Avalon 2.2:  Jericho …

 

Avalon 2.1 Defense of the Phoenix

 

            Everyone heard the baby cry in the wilderness and eyes went wide when that cry dropped to a guttural, thunderous roar.  It was only moments before Roland’s elf eyes spied the night creatures on the road.  There were three of them.  They came to the edge of the clearing in front of Phoenix’ house and paused in the face of the barricade.       

            Phoenix let three globes of fire and light escape her hands.  They drifted slowly into the sky and acted like flares, suddenly setting the whole scene to light.  The night creatures spread out as if to approach the barricade on all three sides, but Katie and Lincoln did not wait.  They opened up with their high powered rifles, set to multi-shot.  They saw the bullets strike home, but it hardly slowed the night creatures as they charged.

            Lincoln kept up continuous fire until the creature leapt over the boxes.  It knocked two aside and crushed one and headed straight for Phoenix.  But when the creature came down from the top of the barricade, it felt Baran’s spear penetrate its throat and pop out the back of its head.  Alone, Baran might not have penetrated the skin, but the creature’s own weight killed it.  It collapsed, even as Baran’s shaft snapped and Baran was knocked to the ground with a broken rib.

            Katie also kept up her fire, but when the second night creature leapt the barricade, Lockhart managed two slugs from his shotgun.  It was not as effective as the big spear point, but it caused the night creature to stop and shake its head when it hit the dirt.  Katie spun and finished the work with six rapid-fire shots to the back of the creature’s head.

            Boston only had her Beretta, but she kept up a continual stream of fire as Roland beside her fired Lockhart’s police pistol.  The third creature was leaking blood from multiple holes when it leapt over the barrels.  Roland added his knife which he shoved deep into the creature’s hide.  The creature hardly slowed as it bumped the elf out of the way.  Roland fell back into Boston before he turned and covered her.

            Phoenix rose up and the fire danced in her eyes.  It focused in her hands, shot fire straight to the night creature’s head and turned the head to a charcoal cinder in a flash.  Everyone had to look away from the light.  Everyone felt the heat, and Baran, Roland and Lincoln all sustained first degree burns just being near.  But then it was over.

            Phoenix collapsed and had a hard time catching her breath.  Baran dragged himself to her, one hand holding his rib cage.  Boston and Katie met where Phoenix gasped and tried to help her to her feet, but Phoenix was too drained.  Then they heard the growl and every eye turned to see the rear guard.  Night creatures always sent a scout out front on a hunt and always had one in reserve.

            Katie, Lincoln, Lockhart and Boston all lifted their guns, but that was where they stopped.  No one could move, or take their eyes from the creature who sat and seemed to have gotten the message that there was no hurry.  Even Baran was stuck to the ground and only Phoenix could drag herself to the barricade for a good look.  The creature saw her, but paused to lick its paw like a disinterested cat.

            Curiously, in that moment a cat came to the edge of the clearing.  It was much bigger than a housecat – more bobcat size – but it had the look of a housecat.  It sat, front legs straight to the ground to watch the show and otherwise it remained still, apart from a small twitch in the tail.

            The night creature took note, but ignored the cat.  It looked ready to charge, but first that lioness they all heard earlier in the night came bounding right past the watching cat and headed straight for the night creature.  The creature ignored the lion.  Either it was unaware of the danger or it had dealt with lions before and found them inconsequential.  That was a mistake.

            The lioness roared as it sank its fangs into the back of the night creature’s neck.  The night creature looked surprised, if it can be said a creature can look that way.  It tried to bite off the lioness’ front paw, but its terrible jaw simply passed through the paw like it might have chomped down on smoke.  The lioness’ back legs reached from underneath and took the night creature to its back.  The lioness ripped out a huge chunk of the back of the creature’s neck in the process.  Then it tore out the night creature’s throat.

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Avalon 2.1:  Intervention … Next Time …