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Fit for Life

Twists​


“Rigel.” Chen, in a rare moment riding, eased Strider alongside Tornado, on Rigel’s left; as usual, Austin was on his right – usual when the squire wasn’t dashing about somewhere, at any rate.

“Scout One. ‘Sup?”

“Last night you saw me working on something by the fire. I finished.” Chen pulled a cloth-wrapped item about half a meter long from his right boot. “I found it in Scout Central, brought it out to clean. I had the blade done last night and was chipping away at the hilt.” Guiding Strider with his knees, he pulled at one corner of the cloth, sending the weapon side spinning to plop into his right hand. “I almost finished before we broke camp this morning, so I kept working while riding.” Vacation at the Springs over, the group was taking the back route to Druids’ Inn; excepting unforeseen events, they planned to arrive within the first hour after dark. “When I saw what was under the really rough part, I nearly came right to you. Then I decided it would be better to clean it all up.” The Scout was holding the hilt in a way that hid most of one side, which was plainly his intent because it was an awkward way to hold it as a weapon. “When you see it, you’ll understand.” Chen looked back over his shoulder. “I asked Dmitri to find Rita and bring her.”

That alone told Rigel this was no simple blade. Rita’s only interest in weapons boiled down to two thing: one, were they effective, and ready to be used?, or two, did they have important meaning that had little or nothing to do with their being weapons? Unless Chen meant to give it to Rita, the first didn’t apply – which was obvious, since there was not real need to involve Rigel – so whatever Chen had found was going to shift things around them... again. “Good steel?” he asked, to fill the waiting time.

“Decent. About what the Celt smiths do – most of them, I mean; the ones with the newer furnaces and using coal achieve better. Whoever owned it did a good job of storing it, though; it was actually not just smeared with grease but slid into a slab of thick animal fat – pig, I’d guess. The hilt was wrapped with leather that was almost gone. So cleaning the blade wasn’t bad, and the only rust was a patch by the guard and a line near the tip. But the grip...” He shook his head. “That was bad. At the Springs I soaked it in the really nasty pool Ryan said was acidic.”

“You soaked what?” Rita asked, reigning in. Hestia greeted Strider and matched pace.

“The hilt of this blade”, Chen answered, lifting the weapon but still not uncovering that part of the hilt. “I found it as Scout Central. Before I show it to you and Rigel, I have some questions.
“First – the British here, they got Snatched about the mid-nineteenth century, right?”

“Correct”, Rita replied, eyeing the blade and wondering where this was going.

Chen nodded. “Second – you and Ryan believe that the Celts we know might not have all arrived in one batch, true?”

“Also correct”, Rita responded.

“Third: you also believe that some groups who were Snatched just didn’t survive?”

“Almost certainly – we almost didn’t.”

“Arguable. Well then, look at this.” Chen set the weapon on Strider’s neck, cradling it and holding the blade so the hilt was fully revealed except where he held it between thumb and finger..

“Gems, inlay, wire wrapping”, Rigel observed, his first impulse – to assess it as a useful grip for fighting – set aside. But he indulged that anyway. “Too pretty to be useful in a real fight – that’s for decoration.”

“It’s a coat of arms”, Rita noted first. “Eagle wing motif with lion heads... harp and fleur-de-lis? axe? a griffon? and a unicorn head?!” Rigel winced at her frown, which was so intense it looked painful. “What a mess! Eagle motifs are usually imperial – the Hapsburgs had stylized lion heads on top of the wings. The harp is Ireland, fleur-de-lis are France, griffon is Wales, Gwynned really, I think the unicorn showed up when they made Great Britain. But what’s the axe? And why all this together?

“If you were guessing....?” Chen prompted.

“A Great Britain that really had Ireland and Wales and – oh, duh, the unicorn is Scotland, so it’s the whole British Isles represented, with a claim to or possession of France, or at least Normandy. So the eagle wings would show this was an empire, but those lion heads... could a Hapsburg have married in?” She shrugged. “Crazy. But what’s so important?”

“This was in Scout Central”, Chen reiterated. “Scout Central dates from before the big war against the Others, when Lord Escobar saved the day and all. Going in, I figured out the pattern because it held a British flavor. That didn’t make sense – I realized that our fourth night soaking in the springs, during Hobbit Intermission: they wouldn’t have made Scout Central without entry ways, and the entry ways wouldn’t have a British flavor without British around, but as far as we know the British weren’t much in the War – correct?” Rita nodded. “But someone British had a big part in doing those entries, and they were done before the War. I kept going ‘round and ‘round on it, then I gave up and started cleaning this.” He hefted the blade and plopped it back into the supporting palm.
“This morning I got the last bit off – here.” The Scout’s thumb slid off the last hidden bit of hilt.

Rita squinted and read. “Ap Gruffyd Bruceque.” She winced at the mingling of languages. “Moin Habzburg.” Their Wise Woman glared at the inscription. “The language is terrible, and that’s ridiculous.”

“See the year?” Chen asked. “Clear at the bottom.”

Rita leaned over close and squinted again. “That’s lousy workmanship. But it says 1717.”

Rigel sighed, lost. “Rita, what’s ridiculous?”

“Poor Rigel.” She reached across Chen and patted Rigel’s hand. “Okay: ‘Ap Gruffyd’ is ‘son of Gruffyd’, which usually literally means the father was named ‘Gruffyd’, but to foreigners it seemed the name of a house, a noble house. ‘Bruceque” is a horrid use of Latin, with the ‘que’ on the end coming to English as a preceding ‘and’, so it means” – again she winced – ‘and Bruce’. That part looks like someone taking Ap Gruffyd as a noble – or royal – house, and saying it’s united with the house of Bruce. That would be Wales connected to Scotland. But Wales was conquered....” Her voice trailed off as pieces switched places in her mental view. “Rigel, the last part is poor French and badly spelled German that means ‘lesser, Hapsburg’. That could indicate a union between the House of Hapsburg and this house of ‘Ap Gruffyd Bruceque’. So in the history this knife came from, the Welsh weren’t ground under by the English, and somehow the House of Bruce united with this Welsh royal house, and later some important Hapsburg married in, and” – she shook her head and laughed a little unsteady laugh – “they ruled an empire that had all of the British Isles, probably Normandy, and possessions over by Austria!.” She turned and grinned at Rigel. “And that is one screwed-up reality!”

“What’s the royal house down south?” Chen inquired.

“Stuart-Bóruma – Scottish royalty and Irish. There, Robert the Bruce – to be honest, his brother – sacked, or at least occupied and stripped of treasure, London, and by union with the leading family of Ireland – again, Robert’s brother at work – to make a monarchy that ruled the whole Isles. This makes another Britain that unites the Isles, but a different way! And 1717, that was back far enough to be in the big War!” She started laughing and just kept on for a minute; Chen thought through what she’d said as Rigel tried to remember enough history to remember why it would be connected to Austria.

“Want more?” Chen asked. Rita went into more laughter, but nodded. Chen lifted the blade and tilted it for her to look at. “Close to the guard.”

“Loryndh de Lillebonne, Esq.”, she read, and laughed again. “Rigel, this knife is from a crazy world! And Chen, I see the point of your questions!” She decided Rigel needed some additional enlightenment. “The ‘Esq’ probably indicates he was a knight. His first name is in Celtic form – call it Welsh – but the second part says he’s from Lillebonne, which has to be in Normandy.”

“It is, in our world”, Chen affirmed.

“So my guess was right: here we have a Britain that is the whole united Isles, under a Welsh-Scottish dynasty with a Hapsburg connection, and they still hold Normandy a long generation before our Revolutionary War. If the Hapsburg connection was strong”, she mused, speculating, "then they might–“

Rita didn’t get any farther. From ahead, a galloping figure came toward them, a horse with two riders. The second rider was clearly barely hanging on; reflex sent Rigel, Austin, and Chen cantering to meet the two, leaving Rita alone, mouth open, staring after them. That lasted only a moment, and she was racing to catch up.

She arrived as the rider was gulping water from a skin Rigel held and her passenger was swallowing dribbles from Austin’s skin. The horse had been run hard; the girl was a Celt, armed with the best available, including a scabbarded rifle. She saw Rita’s eyebrows rise.

“I was at the raising of our King!” the girl declared. “It is mine by right!”

Rita mixed a grin and a glare. “I’d say it’s yours by gift from Lord Rigel, here.” At that the girl gulped; she may have been at the raising, but she hadn’t been near enough to learn to recognize Rigel.

“Earl Rigel! I come from the Malcolm, with the king,, bringing this one.” She didn’t even look at her passenger, a red-headed, skinny kid with slightly wild eyes amidst delicate features.

The kid spoke up. “Can you save me from these savages?!” It was English, of a very familiar kind.

“Maybe”, Rigel replied calmly. “First, who are you, and where are you from?”

“You speak common! Oh, God, I’m saved.” He took the skin from Austin and downed a large gulp. “Ah! Well, I’m Benjamin Ernst Naegli. I’m from Connecticut.”


358266.jpg
 
Kuli:
As I said in my e-mail - Verrry Interesting.

A Celtic Empire of the Joint FKA "British" Isles, the Emeral Isle of Ireland, Brittany/Normandy coast of FKA "France", plus the Austro-Prussian regions.

Scor a BIG one in this alternate universe's world for my
Welsh/Irish/German ancestors - Wales as the powerhouse instead of the "Slimy Limeys" lol, joined with Ireland an Robbie the Bruce's realm of Scotland, taking charge of the Norman/Saxon "Brits", and marrying the "lesser" Hapsburg dynasty.

Did they ALL die in the wars, or were any survivors quietly, discretely blended in with the later arriving Celts? Since there's been no mention of them til now, it would appear not.

And, what of the closing lines - the apparent recent introduction or discovery of "A Connecticut Yankee in King Artur's Court" lol.

Well, Benjamin Ernst Naegli, You're Not in CT anymore! lol.

You promised me that you'd come up with several twists to play games with our minds and, so far, you are definitely delivering!

:=D: :D
 
Outstanding chapter! And I LOVE the images at the end of each chapter. Sometimes I'm amazed by how apropos each one is.

I wonder what this kid's Connecticut is like. He called English "common," which is pretty bizarre.
 
I wonder what this kid's Connecticut is like. He called English "common," which is pretty bizarre.


I viewed that as like "our" Brits down South of the Escobars - the "Common" language is the crude, unsophisticated, plain speak we use, versus the High, "Proper", Nose-in-the-Air variety found in Buckingham Palace and such. If he's from a timeline/universe similar to them, then the Yanks would be part of the greater United Kingdom on whom the Sun never sets.

Not so bizarre, given the variety of histories our Celts, Quistadors, and Brits have presented.

And, Thanks for reminding me to check out the graphic - I read off-line, so I didn't get a chance to look at graphic then, forgot when I posted on lunch.
..|
 
CT??? What the ???? :eek:

SO! ... The "Scout Central" Brits maybe aren't as "Modern" as I thought they might be! And, they're obviously from a totally different "Time Line"! :cool:

You've got my mind spinning, Kuli! Can't put into words how much I'm enjoying, and appreciating, this!! ..| :=D: (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Beachhead​


Debris flew through the air. Ducking had become reflex: when you heard the crump! of explosives, you took cover with your head down, even back on the ship ten meters off shore. Kevin MacNeil, Knight-Major of Her Majesty’s Dragoons, Earl Dennishire, Bride’s Spokesman for a Queen in pursuit of a Consort, was better at it than was Sir Percival Sidmuth; a decade of responding to explosions from ceremonial revolver loads to royal field cannon had given him superior reflexes.

“I withdraw my former charge, my lord”, Percival declared as they huddled together against a large and battered tree, waiting for flying debris to come to rest.

“Which would that be?” MacNeil asked, never on for formality, especially in the field.

“When I told Her Majesty she was foolish sending you. I dare say I would never have learned to duck and cover half so well without you. Willingly would I shed blood for the kingdom, yet rather it not be in drips and driblets.” Kevin recalled that day; none of the lords involved had considered it a good idea to send the Queen-Bride’s Spokesman on an expedition to build a fortress, His Queen’s response would have made her father proud:

“If the Aliens come calling, who else have I who has stood and fought them? If the nomads return, who else have I who has spoken with them? Yet more, where better to put my Spokesman that beyond the prying eyes of the capital? For I remind you, gentlemen, that the unsettling of the matter of my marriage would be the unsettling of the realm”, she’d said, pure unflinching monarch through and through. And that had ended the matter; images of blood and sack had rolled through Kevin’s mind, from the stories every lord’s child and every Navy officer learned, from Xenephon’s Anabasis to The Fall of Troy to The Rape of the Sabine Women, parallel or identical images rolling through the other minds as well – and for all that they shared little else, the nobility of Lost Britain shared one thing, engrained deeply (as deeply as the need to shit, Kevin’s uncle had once asserted): the genetic heritage of the Kingdom was to be preserved, and that meant there could be no civil war. Lesser men would have risked it, indeed had in days not so long past, but no such men were involved by Elizabeth in her endeavors. In that, her maneuver had already paid off: a near dozen ne’er-do-wells and vain vacant-skulled peacocks had been left to strut outside the real business of the kingdom, cut off and their feet cut from beneath them, as their queen parlayed the small advantages she’d gained into larger ones.

“I have on occasion shed some bits that way”, Kevin conceded, standing and brushing himself off. “It is to be preferred to the other”, he added as he strode off toward the source of the sound and debris. Percival stood staring after him the several seconds he took to work through the meaning. Then he sprinted to catch up.

“My lord, I meant no offense!” he cried, remembering in good time to not grab MacNeil’s shoulder. “I know you lost men here–“

The Earl shook his head and grabbed at Sidmuth’s sleeve. “I lost men north of here. Hold no fear; I heard no offense.” With the back of three fingers of his left hand he reached and felt the other lord’s neck. “Did you skip your fruit this morn?”

Lord Sidmuth brushed the hand away. “You pry too much. This is–“

Kevin didn’t let him continue. He caught the hand that had brushed his away. “This is my duty! The Queen sent me as her personal representative to see that the progress goes well. The progress cannot go well if the lord given charge is not thinking well. When you skip your fruit at breakfast, it muddles your thoughts. Now I ask as Her Royal Majesty’s personally chosen representative: did you skip your fruit this morn?”

The chastised lord tried to compose himself; that he was coming to like MacNeil would make no difference if a personal representative of the Crown decided he was not best for the venture. “In truth, I do not recall. Things were somewhat frantic, as I am sure you remember.” Kevin did, and frantic was an understatement for what had struck the camp when a rare winter storm of blown dust and snow was mistaken for a very large band of possible hostile intruders headed for the camp. He chuckled.

“I can’t disagree there. I fact I’m sure I remember I didn’t finish my mug of spiced char. I’ll send a boy for some of each and we can replenish ourselves while we decide if the workers are blasting well enough or ought to be blasted.” At that last, and the twinkle in Kevin’s eye, Sidmuth relaxed and nodded. Together they finished making their way up the gradual slope to the massive trench being cut across the rocky narrow isthmus they and the expedition’s senior Navy captain had chosen. It was hardly perfect, especially in Lord Sidmuth’s estimation, but it had the great virtue that Senior Chief Engineer (Fortifications) Granger of Her Majesty’s Own (Second Battalion, attached) had declared he could have a basic defensive outer bulwark across it in a month – in the cold as it was.

For the first few days Major MacNeil had begun to doubt that confidence, but Jeffrays Granger – with a line-rank equivalent of under-major – hadn’t shown the slightest bit of dismay. They’d scrambled over the terrain the first day in a rapid manner that reminded the Major of Dragoons of an infantry advance, line staggered covering. That had ended at a seam across the small peninsula, a sort of ravine filled with crumbled and jumbled shattered rock of different types, dominated with something rough and gritty MacNeil could hold in a hand and crush, but which the S.C.E., as they’d abbreviated in short order, referred to as “tough” – rather, “tuff”, he’d corrected, spelling it when MacNeil and Sidmuth both got it wrong in conversation with a junior officer.

“Tee - yoo - eff - eff”, he’d set it out. “Baked rather together, frequently easily weathered. This comes from volcanoes. For us it’s a wonderful thing – crumbles, you see.” So they’d spent another three days scrambling along that seam, what S.C.E. Granger said was a rift, though he later retreated from that, changing his mind to refer to it as a fault. “The two sides match, you see, but the rock in the middle is different. So those slipped apart someways, and this other filled in.”

“And now”, he was saying as the two members of the nobility marched up together, as though continuing from his statement of two days before, “we blast it all out.” The crew he addressed nodded, and scurried off to undertake engineer tasks neither of the lords cared about nor was likely to be able to be interested in.

“We’ve been blasting it out”, Sidmuth complained, rubbing his left shoulder blade where a small sheet of rock had struck, knocking him flat, the day before. MacNeil waved a messenger boy and sent him off as promised.

Granger waggled a finger. “Just the preparations, just the preparations. As in drilling holes in a board afore driving pegs, is what we’ve been making.” Kevin MacNeil kept from laughing only because he knew that when the chief engineer’s speech became eccentric, the mind behind was busy with something important.

“And now you put pegs in these holes?” Sir Percival asked, doubt coloring his tone. “Quite large pegs, they’d be.”

The engineer shook his head once and blinked. “Ah – humorous, I see. Well, I say we shall put pegs in these holes, but better to call them pipes, and fuse to attach to them. When it’s ready, we’ll have a bit of a show, we will, that we will.” The mind that had attended to them briefly went off again.

Kevin considered what he’d heard, made a decent guess what it meant. When the messenger boy came a minute and a half later with bread, fruit, and char – a dark drink truly loved by those whose hearts belonged above the deck of a ship – the Knight-Major had orders. “My compliments to Captain O’Rourke, and would he please sound ‘Return to Ship’ an hour before lunch.”

“Sir, it’s closer than that now.”

Kevin looked up. Through the haze he couldn’t tell where the sun was, just that a large portion of the ever-threatening, rarely-delivering clouds glowed brighter than the rest. For a moment he considered being a touch mean, but negated the notion. “Well, then”, he said, to no one in particular though both boy and fellow lord had learned the statement frequently meant Lord MacNeil’s thoughts had run aground and he was backing to set course again. “Half an hour after lunch”, he corrected, with a glance at Granger, who nodded agreement. “Return to Ship, easy pace.”


Only forty minutes after lunch, by the Engineer’s piece, and six seconds short of that by the ship’s clock, with everyone well away from the rift, the last workers climbed out of the holes, all in dusty reddish-brown turning the color of dried blood as tiny snowflakes drifted to land and melt on skin and clothing. “All out, sir.” The leftenant, unusual in being not merely of the same rank in both Royal Engineers and Royal Marines, was female. Bucking for Amazon, MacNeil had thought when first introduced, but he’d found himself quite seriously wrong; young Ekaterina Headhyr Agnes Korwyndd enjoyed the company of other women, a more mythic than real aspect of the Amazons, but she had no desire to tie herself to the narrow task to which those women were devoted; her dreams were of a wider world. In the previous two days, it seemed she’d found her place: she could talk weapons with the Marines, tracking with the scouts, navigation with the officers, and engineering with the Royal Engineers, of course. She’d scored three to MacNeil’s seven in ‘take it or lose it’ shooting the morning after they’d landed, but the day before, in the evening, it had been a draw – and sharpshooting wasn’t the only skill she’d been improving; soon she’d not only fit in, but would be quite worthy of commanding the post.

“Sound ‘Clear All’, corp”, Engineer Granger commanded softly. The trumpet corporal rode a chair; his body below the waist mangled by an excavation accident six years earlier. The Engineers, as was true of all Her Majesty’s Services, took care of their own, so he’d gotten the best care available outside the Palace, received training in side disciplines – such as accounting, stress of materials, and site management – and got assigned to this expedition working in all three. He lifted the brass horn to his lips and blew a mildly complex series of notes, waited thirty seconds, and repeated the call. After another minute, he blew again, and the same time later once more. It was nearly a formality, but one which the engineering corps took quite seriously; it only took one mistake, their saying went, to go from walking tall to filling a hole.

One by one, runners came jogging up from the different work sections. “All clear, all accounted”, each stated. When the last had reported thus, Leftenant Korwyndd had another Declaration for Granger. “All out and accounted for”, she reported. MacNeil glanced toward the shore, where all traces of the Marines’ camp had vanished and H.M.S. Reginald was warping out to deeper water. Save for a few with himself and Lord Sidmuth, plus Granger’s absolute minimum blasting crew, the entire expedition was now not merely at a distance, but off the peninsula entirely.

The experienced engineer spoke quietly, just a trace of excitement in his voice; he’d told the two lords it wasn’t often a man oversaw a charge as great as this would be. “Sound the count.” The British used a countdown, but since for the military, nearly any moment could bring a call to action, and voices weren’t always heard, the countdown was done musically: the trumpeter started on a high note and descended, snapping out each new note clearly and brilliantly. When the final note sounded, actually an octave leap up, Granger dropped the hand he’d been holding high, sweeping a bright orange flag down. Before the flag hit the ground, everyone in sight was down flat, a precaution always taken even without so many explosives at once.

CRUMP. The ground under MacNeil shuddered as a spout of dust rolled along the line of holes. “Wait for it, lads!” he heard Granger yell, as the trumpeter sounded again, dropping not by single steps in the scale but jumping down the scale half an octave at a time. That was a warning: any moment now! So keep your ass low and your head lower, the Major of Dragoons whispered wryly, hugging himself to the earth. A chuckle from his left where Sidmuth had dropped informed him he wasn’t the only one whose Serjent of Marines had screamed that at his trainees in live-fire exercises. Revelation struck MacNeil; all at once he believed he knew why Percival Sidmuth was hesitant about many things yet totally driven in life: that little matter of morning fruit for an outstanding knight of a noted family had meant he could never be an officer.

Later he didn’t even remember the words he’d started to say to Lord Percival. The noisy shudder had merely been the warm-up for this; the main event made the earth lurch. An amount of blasting powder equivalent to what a ship of the line would have spent in a trio of broadsides had served only to loosen the contents of the fault gap, and had rolled from end to end. Now came an explosion ripping along that rift so rapidly no one who hadn’t known to watch for it would have been likely to tell it wasn’t a single event. A wave ripped out from the shore where solid rock met water. And as Kevin waited for the trumpeter to signal safety so they could all get up, while he winced at every pebble that hit his back. You wanted to be close, MacNeil, he chided himself. Curiosity screamed at him to look; the instinct of preservation cried for worm genes, to burrow into the soil; intelligence balanced urges and bade him wait for word from those who knew what they were doing.

Kevin Aidan Cathal MacNei
l, he could hear his nurse’s voice in memory as the experienced Dragoon who could never pass up at least looking into the face of a risk raised his head for a peek, are you seeking to grant your mother an early grave? So he was the only one who saw Granger rise to one knee, not at all the unflappable, cheery, composed officer who’d directed almost their every move for the better part of a week. The look of shock and uncertainty on the face of the pick of royal senior chief engineers (Fortifications) of Her Majesty’s forces frightened Her Majesty’s chosen representative nearly as much as composing his forces to receive that last rush of Aliens. “What’s gone wrong?” he called, though the sounded of settling and even still-falling debris drown out his words.

Granger slapped the ground. If he’d dropped flat, Kevin would have taken it as a warning to get low. But the engineer had his head tipped, listening, and that was a different clue.

“It rumbles!” Sidmuth was looking as well, though just with head turned, not raised. Kevin nodded, his attention on the man who, if any did, understood what was happening. Granger was getting to his feet, grabbing and leaning on a staff he certainly didn’t need. If he thought walking was permissible....

“Let’s to him!” MacNeil rolled to his feet and nearly lifted Sidmuth bodily. “Grab one of those measuring poles”, he added, his brain realizing where Granger had found a staff so ready at hand. He pointed at the engineer. “If he think he wants something to lean on, I certainly think I should!”

“Holy Savior Jesus Christ and His Ever-Lovin’ Mother!” Granger didn’t whisper in awe; he yelled in utter disbelief. “Damnation to demons, but I’m a fool – I kicked a ball from the lower edge!” The image fit what MacNeil’s eyes were trying to put in perspective and his mind didn’t want to believe: cannon balls were often stacked in pyramids, where the weak point was the bottom edge; dislodge a ball from there, and the whole heap could come down, shifting and rolling unstoppably until mass had found new rest. It was used as a curse in various forms – “What’re ye doin’, kickin’ the balls on the low edge?” was a rebuke Kevin had heard over and again growing up, from a fiercely loyal and burningly proper old family retainer.

“Corner ball, at that”, Sidmuth breathed. The ground under them rumbled again; MacNeil didn’t object to the hand that grabbed his left biceps. “God our Preserver! Under-major, is that our doing?” A half kilometer west, perhaps nearer six hundred meters, a line of earth, jumbled hummocks and twisted ridges, was lurching south, and into the sea. Kevin thought it would be majestic if it would stop catching and then lurching. His jaw literally dropped at the sight of the southernmost end, covered in a thick stand of woods, fell away from the rest and vanish into the waves.

Waves! his mind yelled, a warning, while his ears were hearing Lord Sidmuth cry, “The ships!”

MacNeil wasn’t worried about Angus; he doubted the man would lose his head, but would guide his command safely if the earth opened up and the sea carried them down to Hell. And calmly ready the men to open fire on the Devil himself, too, he had no doubt. His concerns about the three warships with them disappeared even while he was turning; they were turning, too, warned by alert watchers in the crow’s nest, aided by probably half each ship’s crew already in the rigging, to watch. The captains already had their vessels turning, getting ready to face the inevitable waves: the Navy was not unfamiliar with large masses dropping suddenly into the sea, nor the side effects.

But the engineers hadn’t come in warships, or even proper service vessels like the Reginald. Though their transport was closer in design to merchant haulers than to barges, their ability to maneuver, to do anything quickly, was minimal. Worse, to a newly minted Knight-Major of Dragoons, was that their crews weren’t accustomed to responding to events without warning.

He had to tear his eyes from the incredible sight of a huge chunk of land marching drunkenly into the sea. What he grasped as he watched the ships react wasn’t at all what he’d expected. Signals were flying from vessel to vessel, senior captain Elwood “The Hammer” Hamner, Lord Howe, demanding action. The flagship turned to face what was coming, but the Eagle And, the expedition’s fast and nimble “errand boat”, was advancing toward the cataclysm, putting on sail, heeling over....

“What’s that foo – no, Lord Howe wouldn’t ‘bide a fool”, Jeffrays Ganger thought out loud. “Saints above, that’s bold!” he yelled as he figured it out, a moment before MacNeil. Sidmuth looked at them both blankly.

“His line is almost going to rip Reginald’s bowsprit off”, Kevin explained, amazed at how calm he was. “He’ll come close enough for men to jump across. Come over just a touch, and he does the same with the Tudor. They’ll lose some, but he’s going to drop maybe enough men onto the Savery and the Connaughton to make the difference.”

“But then what’s he do?” Sidmuth yelped the last word as the ground beneath them lurched yet again.

“He’ll ride the beastie risin’ outa the sea”, Granger answered, voice full of admiration. Both lords winced at the indirect reference to the visions of The Apocalypse penned by Saint John on another world. “And if God grants no greater bumps than that last, I’m believing he’ll stay in the saddle.”

It went as Kevin and Jeffrays had predicted, men jumping, some missing. With more time to prepare, the Tudor had a freight net of men ready to swing over; screams told of some who wouldn’t be working, after the landing, but the uninjured organized themselves quickly. When Commander Shaunessey dropped sail and let the Eagle And coast alongside the Savery, the transfer was orderly, with no screaming to tell of injuries; when he turned, half-sail on, to pass the Connaughton, there was no sign at all of the desperate urgency of the moment.

“That’s more men that he can afford”, Kevin McNeil muttered. But sails were stretching and billowing out, the Eagle And was turning back to face the first truly massive wave.

“And you’re a ship’s captain and I a major of dragoons”, commented Percival Sidmuth, the biggest bit of humor either of those standing with him had ever heard from him. “Shaunessey loves that ship more than his own dear mother – he’ll not be making risks.” He considered as the ground lurched again. “Not great ones, anyway.”

Granger looked worried at that lurch, but things got quiet then. What looked like a column of hills gliding along kept slipping smoothly into the water. The Eagle And came under full sail, and more – “Studdings and gaffs”, MacNeil marveled. “By the Maker, he’s throwing on deck sails!”

“Charging down its throat”, Granger declared in awe and admiration as white cloth continued to spring out in every place the Royal Navy had ever imagined – even some ridiculous ones.

“The man’s trying to fly, I think.” Ekaternia Korwyndd had arrived and been standing with them since the final transfer of men between ships. “Ram-sails are something midshipmen joke about.” But Captain Shaugnessey wasn’t joking; ramrods emerged from every other gun port, sailcoth strung. Kevin laughed in spite of himself; the Marine leftenant was right.

“Like a patch of fog that won’t go away”, he quipped, earning a look from the female warrior that sent fire through him.

“He’ll – down!” Engineer Granger yelled, throwing himself flat. Half a kilometer away the last bit of ground slipping to the sea had popped free and shot out whatever slot it was riding. Even Korwyndd cried out as the ground jerked away from them, then came back up to slap them flat.

“Last one, God willing”, the engineer breathed, getting back to his knees. But his voice was full of sorrow, and they all understood why: that was going to make a wave no ship could ride. Their eyes went back to the Eagle And. Nothing looked different, but they all knew the captain’s eyes were ahead, estimating the wave that last lurch would bring. The ship turned, cresting a second huge wave, then turned even tighter as it rode down the wave’s back.

“Gaining more wind”, Korwyndd observed. “He’ll sail up the face.”

“Aye, and right into the cliffs”, Sidmuth said bitterly, angry at a fate that made a man’s best hope a route to certain doom.

“He’ll never make the cliff”, Granger judged softly. “Not without wings.”

Those sails that had made the leftenant joke the ship was trying to fly were changing. Cursing himself, MacNeil grabbed finally for his eyeglass. When he got the ship into focus, he yelped. “He’s dumping cannon! By God, he means to ride it out!” While he watched, the Eagle And lurched.

“He’s climbing. Those ram sails....” Sidmutch chewed on his lower lip. The comment explained the lurch.

“Dear Savior, he just ran the cannon on out, and dumped them sail and all”, Kevin concluded in awe. “No time to pull in sail, he dumps the whole thing.”

Granger chuckled. “He’s ahead of you, my lord. He knew he’d want to shed those wings suddenly, so he had the guns blocked, then unchained. What’s he done on this side?”

“Cannon right up the line, all the ports without ram sails. His purser....” The Earl whistled, imagining the expensive equipment being dumped over the side.

“His purser may yet live to count again, Kevin”, whispered Percival Sidmuth. “There go the rest!” It didn’t take a telescope to see the ram sails disappear into a set of simultaneous splashes along the starboard length of the ship. Then for a time there was nothing else to say; the wave grew, the ship climbed. Closer, and closer, splashes as it went marking the effort to get ever lighter.

The crest was still twice as high above the crow’s nest as the mainmast was tall when it broke. Froth measured in tons broke, falling toward the ship and burying it. Not wanting to ruin the hope by speaking it, MacNeil said nothing about the fact that barely a handful remained on deck, that all hatches and ports were shut tight. He said nothing as Sidmuth cried out, “It’s ripped his masts off!”, because what he saw was not masts ripped off, but masts already cut loose, jettisoned in a moment almost too late. Nor did he say anything when Leftenant Korwyndd whispered ancient words, ‘Eternal Father, strong to save, Whose arm hath bound the restless wave...”; he just touched her arm and said softly, “Wait.”

Less than a minute later her indignation turned to wonder, turned to joy, and she launched herself into the air high than MacNeil had thought a human being could go. “There is a God in Heaven, and He has come to earth!” Granger swore, slamming a mighty fist into open palm, as Sidmuth burst into sobs of relief. As the wave rolled on, a large object that could only be the Eagle And lurched to the surface, rolled, tipped, crashed back down, righted itself, rotated, and began a slide down the back of the wave. Any of them could have predicted disaster then, but they waited; Shaugnessey had ridden the edge this far, and none were willing to bet against him now.

And sure enough, MacNeil saw through his telescope, there was a man, and another, and another, climbing up to the wheel, taking the ship in hand. There was no wind to drive her, but if they could sail up a cliff of water, they could sail down its back.



“There!” Kevin MacNeil was too tired to remember the name of the scout who called out the first sighting. A firm hand – a female hand – shook him to alertness. “My lord”, the leftenant called Ekaterina called softly, “we’ve found them.” So he looked, and blinked, but there ahead of them, on a shingle beach where the day before had been a creekbed, sat the shell of a ship of Her Majesty’s Navy, dry and a bit too high to be easily floated again, but whole. On the beach around three fires sat her men, and women, many wounded. Kevin raised his eyes back to the ship, those eyes again irritated at all that looked so wrong about the Eagle And’s lines now. At the broken foremost end of the bow stood a solitary figure, a captain unwilling to leave his ship.

The climb wasn’t easy, the ship's hull shorn of rigging and gear, but MacNeil made it. Captain Shaugnessey stood by a still form wrapped in a blanket; Kevin guessed there hadn’t been any sailcoth left to wrap the dead. Fumbling, he came up with, “Her Majesty will honor you for this.” Shaugnessey merely nodded, watching over his men, his eyes returning to the still form by his feet.

“Can Her Majesty....” The Royal Navy captain’s reserved cracked. “Major, please leave. The wave was breaking, the hatch above not tight. He went to secure it, and likely saved us all. But the impact... he fell, and his neck broke.” Knowing MacNeil’s reputation, he knew he wouldn’t get his solitude back until he answered the unspoken question.

“My lord, this was my son. I mean to burn the ship around him. Please go.”

Kevin pinned him with his best command look. “Captain, as Her Majesty’s personal representative, I forbid you to burn Her Majesty’s ship. If you wish a funeral barge, Engineer Granger has noted there are far more trees along the line of the new wall location than he can possibly use. We can build a fair replica of the Eagle And, or of the Victory, or the Indomitable, if you wish, but you will not burn Her Majesty’s ship without permission – her permission.
“For the moment, stay. There’s a certain young woman, not quite an Amazon, who I’m sure will stand in honor if you’ll permit. And Lord Howe has on board the dozen Amazons I’m due as a personal representative; I’ll send them and your son will have an unbroken watch of honor.” He waited.

“Send her”, the words came finally. “My crew need me, do they not?” Kevin nodded. A great sigh preceded the next words. “Then I shall come.” There was a moment of anguish betrayed by shifting feet. “My lord Earl, I have no other sons.”

Kevin ached; he had none at all, but to have, and to lose? Then he remembered that this was the Shaugnessey who’d married “under the blade”, a forced marriage which was nevertheless for love, just before achieving knighthood, which was therefore never bestowed – and a marriage which produced two sons, both killed in a riot at just over a dozen years of age.

“What was his name?” The question felt foolish before he finished it.

A half smile cracked the captain’s face. “She idolized your father, did you know that? I mean my second wife. So she named her son what your father named his.” He looked down at his feet. “Here lies Kevin Aidan Cathal Shaugnessey.” The gaze of a broken man returned to Kevin’s face. “Did you not share his name, I would have shot you for not going as I bid.” From beneath the officer’s sea cloak, a revolver emerged, tossed to the deck.

Kevin wished for something he could do. He thought of Elizabeth, of Prime Minister Logan... and smiled, on the inside, from two memories connected to the Prime Minister, and a small distant hope. “Your first sons, their deaths weren’t just accidents, were they? I cannot bring back Kevin Aidan, but I may be able to bring your sons’ killers to meet their Maker. I make no promise, but whatever Her Majesty does to honor you and this son, I will bend what resources I can to track down a set of murderers.”

Shaugnessey misunderstood. “You would use the office of Bride’s Spokesman....?”

Kevin smiled grimly. “I didn’t mean that, but as I speak for the Queen – I will ask her if I might, ah, ask some ‘extraordinary questions’. I also have certain resources of my own.”

The captain searched the knight-major’s face. Satisfied, he sighed. “Don’t dishonor them by your methods. But I welcome your generosity. And now, if I may....?”

“I’ll leave you alone. Leftenant Korwyndd shall attend you.”



“Tell me again why we’re throwing away the plan?” asked Lord Sidmuth the next morning.

Granger sighed. “This new finger cove, Shaugnessey’s Harbor, cuts the peninsula nicely. Here, now, from water to water, it’s only a bit longer than at the first site. But when we wall this, we’ll be having over thrice the land behind! So we move here.”

Lord MacNeil, Earl Dennishire sat up, taking the cold cloth off his forehead. “Percival, we’ll do it his way. We’ve got two ships in bad enough shape we have a couple of hundred men who could use some work. Jeffrays says it’ll only take fifteen days longer to do it here, and the advantage is great.”

Their subdued, quiet guest spoke up. “My lords, my son paid for this soil. So put it here, Her Majesty’s beachhead.”



<< image coming later >>​
 
Kuli,
From one "British Beachhead" to another.

From the Celt Conquered Scout Central, to Kevin and the two Lords.

What a phenomenal chapter, sir. The detail, the imagery. It would do any major work of literature or feature length motion picture magnificent justice.

A most sombering scene. The love of a father for his only formerly surviving son. And, the price he paid for that son. Love afore wedlock, a knighthood lost.

A brave, noble son he raised.

I'm too awestruck to be able to recount the details of the chapter.
Wow.
:=D: (*8*)
 
That's very exciting. I wish this story could be a TV show. This chapter is made for the screen.
 
Kuli,
From one "British Beachhead" to another.

Liked that touch, huh? I hadn't planned it, but when I realized it, I had to put these two chapters next to each other.

A most sombering scene. The love of a father for his only formerly surviving son. And, the price he paid for that son. Love afore wedlock, a knighthood lost.

A brave, noble son he raised.

I'm too awestruck to be able to recount the details of the chapter.
Wow.
:=D: (*8*)

Just a detail: this son was of his second wife.

That's very exciting. I wish this story could be a TV show. This chapter is made for the screen.

This chapter got five rewrites, totally apart from the regular pre-post editing and during-final-error-checking editing.

And blast it, I cried every time.




BTW, the image is supposed to be the Eagle And cresting the tsunami as its masts cut loose. I gave up after four hours of searching -- found some awesome tsunami pics, but nothing good for the ship.
 
I'd like to speak "above and beyond", more like the "Bigger Picture", outside the realms of the story, itself ...

Is it my imagination? Has anyone else noticed? These last three chapters, at least to Me, each seem to have a different "Tone". We were brought "Home" with the interactions of "Our Snatched", then delved into the world of "Bishop Theo", and, now, brought "back" to the Brits. What amazes me is that each of those chapters "read" as though written by different Authors!!

And, it's not just the Subject matter! It's a question of "Style"! Those chapters read as though written by different people! Yes, there are common "undertones", some similar phrasing, yet still completely, individual, approaches!

The workings of Your mind Amazes me, Kuli!! (ww) :=D: ..| (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:

P.S.
Posted this while you were typing, too!
 
^ beats me. I write them, and am rarely able to tell the difference between styles in things I wrote without leaving them for six months and coming back. Otherwise it's the same voice in my head.
 
Maybe it Is the subject matter. A "warp" of different perspectives. But, I think it goes beyond that. It's not just a change in "Tone", but there's also a different "Style". ..|

I'd like to get the chance to sit down, and have a chat, with that "Voice" inside your head! :D

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
Okay, I'm hollering for help.

Not too far back, there was a reference to a route from (IIRC) the Springs to what I once called "Druid's Rest", the place with the living tree roof. I can't find it, and I need it!

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


Chapter placed here by request


In King Artur’s Court


Inevitably, the laughter began all over again when Ryan caught up, sparking Rita anew as he cracked up. Rigel found it amusing, but not that hilarious. Their messenger’s passenger stared nervously, almost as though he wanted his rider to take them away.

“Scout”, Chen noted, with an inclination of his head to the girl.

“Rabhadhrí”, she replied, with a deeper inclination. It was literally “scout king”, but more accurately meant “Chief Scout” or “Head Scout”. To her passenger – or captive, depending on the perspective – she said, “Only wait. These of Earl Rigel laugh at many things we do not understand.”

The comment caught Ryan’s attention and served to break his laughter, but not his thought. “Naegli, are you a Yankee?” he asked.

Their guest sat up straighter. “Without question!” he declared proudly.

“Shards! Rita, it’s too much!” Ryan exclaimed, and the laughter began all over again. Chen shook his head; he knew the tale, but didn’t find the parallel nearly as humorous. He moved to consult with his Scout.

Rita invoked a Wise Woman technique and banished the laughter. She chuckled at the expression on the face of Benjamin Ernst Naegli from Connecticut. “You don’t know the story?” she asked. He shook his head, looking blank. “Samuel Clemens, pen name ‘Mark Twain’, wrote a story called A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court. You’re a Connecticut Yankee, and you got dropped into King Arthur’s court.” She switched her attention to the Scout turned messenger and delivery person. “Or.... did he?” she asked.

“Nearby”, the girl answered. “They know nothing of the wilderness! Children found them, and aided some to aid, for the rest. Artur-king commanded one be brought to Rigel-lord, for they speak as you do.”

“‘They’?” Rigel inquired. “More than just him?”

She nodded affirmation. “This one I brought, him being the lightest.” She poked Benjamin in the ribs; he squawked. “Hey!”

“Austin!” Rigel yelled. “Table and tea! Tanner – early break!” Activity sped up as his orders were carried out. He turned back to the girl. “Okay, Scout....?”

“Meccheagh – Meccheagh Waretii.”

Rita raised an eyebrow and interrupted. “Is that ‘daughter of the fire’?” she asked.

Scout Meccheagh grinned. “Aye. Meccheagh Meckenzee du Waretii.” She cocked her head and waited. Oran was looking at her and jabbing Chen in the ribs with his elbow.

Anaph beat Rita to it. “Fiery daughter of the wise one, of the Waretii”, he rendered. “Fitting for a scout-hunter. Who did you wrestle for the horse?”

Meccheagh howled in glee. “Ah, Anaph-Drûdh! My brother I beat, running and climbing, for the having!” She swatted the mare on the neck with affection. “The chief’s own, she is, and mine to ride.”

Rigel’s frown spoke disapproval. “A mare, and you risk her like this? She’s your clan’s future herds!”

Chen held up a hand. “She’s not at risk, Rye.” He pinned the girl Scout with his gaze. “You other companion is welcome, you know.”

Meccheagh hesitated; Casey took things into his own hands, and whistled. A bare second later, Streaker came bounding toward them out of the trees, a beautiful gold-and-white-streaked cat by his side, bouncing playfully to the larger cat’s seriously.

>newfriend found < To Casey, there was a solid bit of self-satisfaction in his feline partner’s tone.

“She’s new”, he passed on to Rigel. “Not Streaker’s family – from out in the woods.” A lot more information had passed than just that; it unfolded in Casey’s mind as he spoke. “She was shadowing humans and didn’t understand why.” He laughed as the new cat nuzzled at her human’s left riding boot. “Now she does.”

>swift breeze< Streaker named her. Casey’s image was of a rich banner of gold and white snapping proudly in a tearing wind. He passed that on with a grin.

Meccheagh’s eyes went wide. “I see blue trim – you can barely pick it against the sky.”

Casey closed his eyes and squinted, resulting in an expression that sent Oran into giggles.

>morsel< It became Oran’s turn for wide eyes and Casey’s for laughter.

Table and tea arrived, Austin in the middle, pointing out landing places. He took Tornado’s lead and thumped Rigel’s boot. “By your command”, he intoned.

Rigel rolled his eyes. “You make a crappy Cylon”, he pronounced, set his right hand on Austin’s shoulder and swung down. “Maybe from the second series....”




Benjamin Naegli soon looked as though he’d rather be hunting skunk, Ryan thought, faced by questioners all around. The change in him when Austin moved around and set hands on both shoulders with a gentle squeeze was astounding. A sharp look at Rigel sent Ryan’s opinion.

“All right, just the basics”, Rigel assured the kid, whom he guessed at nineteen. “Meccheagh, help him on things he doesn’t know.
“Now, what I know is you landed in the woods near Artur’s traveling court, weren’t handling it well, and there were more than you. Just how many?”, he ended.

Naegli shrugged. “I don’t know. My chapter is three, but... well, everyone from Loren’s suite, and more. That would be... twenty, twenty-five. We were all watching IBBC, the coverage of the terrorist announcement....” He closed his eyes and choked off a sob at the sight of total non-understanding on the faces of his listeners. “God, we’re cut off! But you know that – and there’s no way back, is there?” Austin gently squeezed the slender shoulders and tugged, encouraging white-knuckled grips on the table to relax.

“Rigel, he’s not up to this”, Rita intervened. “Benjamin, this Loren – he’s a leader?”

“Yes, of the New England Association. But he’s running for–“ Words crumbled into a moan of despair.

Rita reached out and laid a hand gently on each of his. “We’ll go to Loren, then. You’ve told us plenty to think about. Austin, take him to rest.”

“He can have my bed”, Austin replied. “But we still have traveling. Finish your tea. Meccheagh, Titanium can carry him. You should ride with Oran, probably.”

“Titanium could carry ten of him”, she responded, half-teasing. Her eyes were going from stallion to mare, measuring. Austin

Tanner watched Austin direct departures and movements with a smile. “He’s developing command, Rigel”, he observed with approval.


“Another alternate timeline”, Ryan said the moment he was sure Austin and Benjamin were out of hearing. “But what’s ‘common’? How is he a Yankee but hasn’t heard of Mark Twain?”

“And how is he a Yankee, and proud of it, and has a slight British accent?” Chen added softly, getting their attention. “I think we’ve got another variation on British history here. Sort of an epidemic, rather.”

“A variation from our time, with terrorists”, Devon pointed out, “terrorists big-time enough to be making some announcement on this IBBC, and a bunch of people at some conference get together to actually listen.”

“Conference?” Rigel asked, still stuck on the anguish in the kid’s voice at the conclusion that this was a one-way destination.

Devon snorted. “He’s a college kid. Some organization has chapters at universities, they all get together for some conference. So we’ve got a bunch of college kids on our hands.” Rigel nodded slowly; it fit. Neither of them noticed the way Ryan suddenly swallowed hard, his eyes meeting Rita’s – who nodded.



Just how on target Devon’s assessment had been hit them like a mailed fist a day later. They’d reached the place called Druid’s Inn, where an actual inn was now rising outside the great dome of trees with their net of life energies. “The Riders have their priorities right”, Ryan observed with a grin: beside the framework of the future inn, large stables were already complete. “That’ll hold all of us, I think.”

“Twelve squads”, Meccheagh informed him, “once it’s complete. That part is the first one of three.”

Anaph was looking beyond the stables, even past the inn where the finished kitchen more than bustled with activity. He stood in his stirrups, his face troubled. “Rigel – come on!” he urged without even turning. Gloaming moved without apparent command; Rigel kneed Tornado to follow. Behind them, Austin called out orders to their retainers to get everything settled before joining.

“Barbarians, now knights”, someone said. The voice sounded defeated.

“Some joe in a long robe”, another commented, nearly as depressed.

But ahead three figures got to their feet. Anaph seemed to relax, and focused on them. Reaching the border of the great tree dome he sild off Gloaming. Three young Celts, whom he greeted by name, ran to take mounts and lead them away. “None but otherworlders”, he instructed without pausing.

“Your will, Drûdh-ri.” The warrior, graceful and deadly in motion, sprinted and shouted.

Rita licked her lips as she fell in with Anaph, Rigel, and Ryan. “That’s more than thirty. “It’s at least a hundred!”

“Wait.” The way Anaph said it, the word was a command to shut up until he said otherwise. So the wedge of Snatched moved in silence, Anaph at the point, toward the three who’d stood. When they arrived, the once-skinny kid who’d become a great Druid faced someone almost in that former image; this young man, though, radiated confidence and calm.

“He’s beautiful!” Austin whispered, low enough only those at the point of their wedge could hear. Rita hummed agreement: even in tattered clothes plainly modern but hardly at all reminiscent of their own origins, slight scars on his right shoulder and a hint of a limp as he stepped forward, this obvious leader would have been in the finals for a beauty contest including all the ancient pantheons of gods.

“I’m Lum – Aaron Lum”, he stated softly. “You’re here to make sense of this mess?”

Anaph let his staff stand and stepped close. His right hand slid along Aaron’s side, not touching but quite obviously feeling something, following some hidden contour visible to Druids, not quite parallel to Aaron’s own body but never far off. “Lumina”, he whispered, “check them.” The pain in Anaph’s voice made Rigel bite his lip; he wanted to ask, but honored Anaph’s earlier order. A moment came to mind, when aq Celt chief had asked whether Rigel gave the Druid orders, since Anaph was “his” Druid, and he’d pointed out that he was Anaph’s lord – and neither meant that one owned the other. The question of whether Anaph could give Rigel orders had been left murky, but here he was, doing just that.

“Rigel, this was... they almost botched it! The Snatcher....” Rigel let Anaph struggle for words. “It didn’t get full patterns. He’s got whole batches of not-quite-cells in his body, and dead ones all over.” Rigel reached out his hand and leaned it firmly between the Druid’s shoulder blades as his friend shuddered visibly, threatening his balance.

Anaph leaned back into the support and comfort, turning to the waiting Lum. “Are any of you dead?”

“No. Close.” Eyes looked to where Lumina was moving from one horizontal form to another. “One of those Healers?” he asked.

The Healer”, Austin answered proudly. “Lumina K•nay’zee.”

Hope joined the calm confidence. “Some of us – they’ve been unconscious since we got here. The other Healers” – a sense of wonder crept into his voice – “kept everyone alive, fixed the bad wounds. Half of us can hardly eat, but they got water into everyone.” His eyes went wide and he dropped into a definite martial-arts defensive stance. “Tell me!” he snapped.

Casey moved up to stand by Austin. He gave Aaron a quick up and down before speaking. “Streaker says you’re ghosty”, he announced. “Like you’re not all there.”

The phrase apparently wasn’t current where Lum was from; there was no reaction. “You cat?” he said, not entirely surprised.

Casey shrugged. “Or I’m his human. Or both. He wants to sniff you.”

Aaron looked from Streaker to Pounces and back, then relaxed his stance and extended a hand, palm down. “Not banned”, he stated, willing but clearly ready to act.

“Kung Fu”, Chen stated, catching Aaron’s eye.

“Taiwan, Chai Shek”, came the soft response, the eyes still on Streaker as the cat’s great tongue almost caressed his hand. His shudder was obvious enough Rita chuckled. “Saints and bards!” he swore softly, “that could light a fellow’s torch!” The idiom wasn’t theirs, but the meaning was obvious – and Austin laughed, running a finger across his crotch, while Casey blushed, visibly embarrassed.

>death all over<

Streaker’s comment shook Casey out of his desire to hide. “Streaker says you’ve got death all through you, like stars all through the sky or dirt in muddy water.”

Anaph’s eyebrows rose. “He can tell that? Maybe Healers ought to have cats, too.”

Aaron relaxed the rest of the way. “Death all through – like lots of dead cells, randomly?”

“Exactly. Do you know how you got here?”

Aaron Lum laughed. “We have guesses. Um, this is Loren, Abel, Nymphette, and Patryk. We’re–“ He fumbled for words.

Abel was looking Austin over carefully. “We’re Parliament, just not elected. Everything anyone here knows, we know. You have questions, we have questions; we have answers, you have answers.”

“You ask first”, Patryk suggested. “We need help, observation suggests you have it, so you need to know about us first.”

Rigel could practically feel heat from Austin but it didn’t click. Ryan and Rita got it; it was the other piece of the puzzle. “First”, Rigel asked, “how many of you are there?”

“Six score and seventeen”, Nymphette replied. “All moved from Toronto to this wilderness in a shake.” Ryan wondered if that was a physicist’s reference, the “two shakes of a lamb’s tail” notion used by designers of nuclear weapons, but didn’t ask.

“Toronto. Okay, Naegli is from Connecticut”, Rigel recalled. “Was this some international conference?”

“Just the Dominion”, Aaron answered. “At least in our group.”

Rigel closed his eyes. “Ryan....”

“Don’t like different histories, huh, buddy?”

“I’m losing track.”

Chen cut in. “What’s the Dominion? Wait – where you’re from, it has Europe, Asia, Africa, the Americas, and like?”

“And the Dominion’s in North America?” Ryan asked.

“It’s the North American Dominion of Her Imperial British Majesty Bronwynn II”, Aaron replied.

“With a problem with terrorists?” Tanner inquired. He couldn’t imagine why Canada would have terrorist troubles.

Their counterparts’ attention swivelled to him. “The terrorists are everyone’s problem”, Abel responded. “Everyone civilized, anyway.”

“The conference almost got cancelled because of the threats”, Patryk explained, though it didn’t explain much at all – which he saw. “The University Association of Engineering Students of the Empire”, he went on. “Except no one from overseas came except from New Zealand – they make no compromises, and didn’t care if the terrorists threatened to blow up any planes or such a thing. India was participating by fi-com, so was Australia. We all got in to the Stuart Pyramid and linked the Alliance. The IBBC had announced a statement from Al Markaz. They bumped Last of the Summer’s Brew for it, so it was important. Ah, they refused to run any statements of less than a certain significance, and made it stick – rumor is they demonstrated they could crash Al Jazeera’s com net any time they wanted. A bit of an uneasy truce, that, but it gave everyone a way to know if an Al Markaz announcement was important: if it came on the regular news, it was just interesting, if it came in an hourly news flash bulletin, it was worth listening to, but if they bumped scheduling, it could be earth-shaking. Hey, is there any real beer here to drink?”

“I’ll find some”, Austin promised, though what he did was signal one of Anaph’s warriors and send him off; he wasn’t going to miss a moment of this.

“So what was the announcement?” Rita asked, annoyed at the random progress the questioning was making, but intrigued.

Patryk shook his head and snorted. “Roarings of a mouse”, he answered disgustedly.

“Nasty roarings”, Loren disagreed. “Saints and bards, but they hate us! They had fiss-bombs – weapons based on nuclear fission?” he asked of the puzzled expressions.

“We call them ‘nukes’”, Ryan told him. “Go on.”

“Certainly we all knew they had fiss-bombs – nukes”, he added with a slight grin. “Since Emperor Akihito – Yamato Dynasty, you know – let slip that Japan had lost a missile submarine in the ruckus with China....” he shrugged and plowed on, “and then the Taiwanese navy couldn’t find it, everyone concluded that the ‘Wizards of Doha’ had pulled one off for one of the oil princes. Then it was just a question of which Islamist pseudo-army was getting the gift.
“But to us – the Alliance was gathering in the big presentation hall, except a bunch of us were staging in my suite. I had the wall on, for a full view. And the robe-brain started off declaring that the patience of Allah was running out, and that to avoid His wrath, the Soldiers of Islam, Al Markaz, had to humble themselves and chastise the vile and unbelieving. He said they’d fasted and prayed and sorrowfully chosen twelve cities, though one would be spared to show Allah’s mercy. The cities were supposed to be those sending up the worst stink to Heaven.”

“And of course the worst stink to them was either prostitutes or ‘mirror-lovers’”, Patryk sneered. “Idiots. We wanted to see if it was going to be real.” A muscle spasm shook him, and Aaron slipped an arm around his waist. “We watched Sydney blow up”, he whispered, anger mixed with horror. “A bomb in a tourist ship – the Aten’s Blossom. Prince Ethan was on it, the Prince of London.” He lost control and started screaming, a roar of pure rage; Aaron pinned his arms to his sides and held him.

“Prince Ethan’s consort was Prince Emilio of Spain”, Abel explained. “It was an” – he hesitated, then forged on – “all-male cruise, singles mostly, looking for, encounters, especially with celebrities. The princes went to... bestow favors.” He took a deep breath.
“Then the picture switched to Swansea. We all thought there was no way they could have cracked that security, but if they could get a weapon on the Prince’s ship....” He bit his lip so hard blood flowed. “It was underwater, in the harbor mouth. We watched the fireball, and the hole in the ocean, and waited for number three.”

Nymphette’s eyes had gone wide while Abel talked, and she’d dropped to her knees, hard, when he mentioned “the Prince’s ship”. Dry sobs wracked her, but she spoke up. “Oh, Aaron! We did it! We’re here because we died! They say we’re not fit for life, and they fissed Toronto because we were there! All those people, and it’s our fault!” she wailed.

Rita decided it was time to cut to the core. She stepped forward and grabbed Nymphette’s chin, catching the girl’s eyes and lifting her both bodily and by force of will back to her feet. “Jettison that rubbish!” she ordered in a voice that reminded Rigel of Maolmin – and made him wonder just how much Wise Women picked up from the Stone, from each other. “If you blame yourselves, they win! The only fault belongs with that Al Markaz and their hate and their barbarity and their evil hearts!”

“I don’t believe in evil”, the girl muttered, trying to look away but unable. “They had different values–“

Austin had figured out what was going on. “Yeah, my dad had ‘different values’, too”, he snapped. “So he hired people to try ti kill me. If some of these warriors here thought it would be fun to cut some of you up for dinner, would that be ‘different values’? If the Quistadors up north found two of you unmarried and having sex, and burned the girl at the stake and made the man a slave, or the other way around, would that be just ‘different values’? If some lord decided all the women in his place belonged to him and he could have one any time he wanted, would that be ‘different values’?
“Fuck all that! If someone says you’re not fit for life, that isn’t ‘different values’ – it’s evil! If someone thinks you’re property, like... like a bowl or a shirt, that isn’t ‘different values, either – it’s evil!” He stood shaking, fists clenching and unclenching, then suddenly turned and in one step wrapped his arms around a Patryk stunned to silence by the squire’s outburst.
“Burn what they say”, he whispered. “They’re evil. This is what I say.” His left arm slid around the confused newcomer, his right up behind his neck. Austin’s eyes held Patryk’s as he pulled them together, Aaron releasing his hold and just steadying them. “This is what I say”, Austin whispered again into an incredible silence, and landed his lips ever-so-gently on Patryk’s. His body flowed against the other’s, shifting and adjusting for maximum surface contact as his right hand stroked the slender neck.

And the dam burst. Frozen in shock, lost in despair and horror one moment, the next Patryk was swarming into Austin’s arms, the kiss turning hungry. “Find them a place”, Rita urged softly without looking from the two, or releasing Nymphette. Loren turned and pointed at a stocky guy nearby; two seconds later Austin and a now sobbing Patryk – sobs of release – were being led off to one side, where others opened a space for them.

‘We call it being ‘gay’”, Rita stated softly. “Some people are, some people aren’t, some people are in between. All of us are fit for life, and may those who say otherwise burn in their own fires.” It was out of character for her, but she decided it would help Nymphette: she stepped forward and planted a quick peck on the girl’s lips, then one on each cheek.” Shock, horror, and guilt didn’t leave Nymphette’s eyes, but wonder and a touch of calm joined in.
“No, I’m not”, Rita told her, now taking hand in hand. “But I welcome you.” Now she tugged the hands and bestowed a gentle bear hug.

“Just how many of you are gay?” Ryan asked. “Or bi – what we call people who are attracted to either sex?”

Aaron was laughing softly, as was Loren. A few louder laughs erupted from some who were listening, but those quickly faded. “Delivered from barbarians, indeed!” he declared, still laughing, not loud nor too softly. “We all are, friend....?”

“Ryan – Lord Ryan, around here.” He looked over his left shoulder and then right. “All of you? All hundred and thirty-seven?” he asked, disbelief coloring his tone.

“Lord Ryan, you heard us speak of the Alliance. Our conference was of the University Association of Engineering Students of the Empire. Our gathering within that gathering, the Alliance, was the Alliance of Differently-Attracted Souls – ADAS.” He sobered. “And she’s right – Toronto is dead because we were there.” He me Rita’s sharp glare. “And you’re right, too – Toronto’s dead because Al Markaz and all its allies and all its ilk are evil.” He emphasized the word with a squeeze to Nymphette’s right shoulder, not just volume. “And if there were a way to reach back.....”

Ryan was resisting the urge to dance. “You’re all ‘wizards’, here – or ‘engineers’. And you’re the answer to a lot of wishes and prayers. Listen: you died because of evil barbarians, but you live here new because you’re not just fit for life, you’re an incredible, wonderful treasure.” He laughed and gave in, dancing a sort of hybrid jig. “Woot!”

“Holy frak”, Rigel said. “Ryan’s right – and by the way, I’m Lord Rigel, Earl Fitzwin, and head honcho of this little bunch. All the other people here are Celts – in fact right over there is their king, Artur. So you’re my guests, and he’ll probably be happy to chase you all out with me, but for now, you’re” – he paused to let Ryan and Rita join in – “in King Artur’s court.”
 
Dreamer​


Ryan had been watching the look on Ocean’s face for too long. “You’re working on it, aren’t you?” he asked, settling on his best guess.

She blinked and seemed to notice he was there as though he’d suddenly appeared. “On what?”

He grinned; Ocean always seemed innocent, and in his opinion that helped the group stay sane. “You read ‘A Connecticut Yankee’ once, and you’re going to get it all set down, just like The Hobbit.”

Ocean actually blushed, looking a bit like a trapped rabbit crossed with a kid caught with hand in cookie jar – a description that was finally appropriate in this world, since the kitchens first at Wizards’ Tower and then at Cavern Hold had started making cookies, and of course he’d described the proper utensil for holding them. “Well, yes. I’m not sure I remember it all, though.” She looked embarrassed. “I sort of skipped sentences... paragraphs.” She looked at him hopefully, her desire transparent.

Ryan laughed out loud. “All right, I’ll work with Eraigh, and we’ll get the whole thing down. Might as well let Artur-king have a copy of the book that keeps making us laugh.” He stuck out a hand and she slapped it. The action was so natural, yet now so alien, he blinked back tears of homesickness – and saw her doing the same.

“Rita says it’s because they’re all so close to our world. It reminds us of what we’ve lost”, Ocean told him, gripping and squeezing the hand she’d just slapped. “Getting over something can mean not being reminded.”

“And we just got reminded, big time”, Ryan agreed. “But with differences....” His words trailed off as he stared at the Falls, thinking of the differences – center most being that the Earth from which their newly-Snatched came was dominated by a British Empire that held better than a quarter of the globe under a complex constitutional monarchy with far more than merely ceremonial powers. All the British Isles, the islands of the Atlantic and some in the Caribbean, most of North America, a piece of Central and one of South, more islands across the Pacific, Hong Kong and a score of places like it in southeast Asia, Australia and New Zealand to the south with all of New Guinea and the Solomons, and Hawaii out in the middle, a subject kingdom intact under its own dynasty, then around to India, South Africa, Gibraltar... and that list wasn’t complete, it was just what stuck in his mind. And they all looked to a queen named like out of a fairy tale, Bronwynn, of the House of Shelby – a tale in itself, one he’d missed so far.

In fact it was a world of empires: Russia was still Tsarist, though immensely changed, for when the Tsar had appealed to a British throne then held by a former nun of Irish descent, the queen called “Mother Superior” both fondly and with ire had been quite firm that the British Empire would aid only if certain conditions were agreed to. There had gone serfdom in an eye blink – literally, according to one of their newly Snatched, as Crown Prince Anatoliy had stared down Queen Esther, and blinked first, or so the tale had it. When the Bolsheviks had been finally put down, the Russian Empire was a constitutional monarchial Republic – one immediately challenged by a surging Empire of the Sun, Japan rising under a vigorous, if not entirely bright, emperor Botan. Fortunately for the world, the war-loving monarch hadn’t lived up to his name, which meant “long life” – though it hadn’t been the Russians who handled that, but a Hashishim of a nascent Muslim brotherhood called Al Markaz, angry over the Sun Emperor’s treatment of their religious kin over a matter of oil.

Ryan sighed; terrorists and oil were linked for Aaron and Loren and their friends just as for Rigel’s group, and for the same reason: foreign empires regarded the Arabs and their neighbors as backwards remnants of a primitive age, and treated them that way: contracts were little more than extortion, regimes were toppled and successions interfered with, holy places ignored. And as in his world, so in Aaron’s: the British had treated the people of the Middle East as pawns and property, justified by the need for oil.

Ocean broke his musings. “Here’s Devon and Crystal.” She giggled. “Devon looks drunk.”

Ryan stood to greet them. “Devon, this isn’t in the diagrams”, he accused teasingly, waving around at the half-terrace, half-tower they occupied. “How did you pull this off without me noticing? It’s not even visible from the valley!”

Devon sighed, a happy sigh, drawing another giggle from Ocean. Ryan decided he sounded stoned more than drunk. “I have four road builders, two bridge builders, two who do tunnels, a gal who knows stone like enough to build the Hagia Sophia. Three can do drilling – wells, vent shafts, water shafts.” His eyes focused and settled on Ryan. “And a pair want to do railroad beds!”

Laughing, Ryan shook his head. “You didn’t hear a thing I said, did you? I know, it’s awesome – five of them totally took over the steam engine program, and three more the design effort for rail cars. Now – how did you get this built without me noticing?” He waved at the terrace again, turning it into a wave at Dmitri, Melanie, and Casey as they arrived.

Devon snorted. “You get your nose in your wizard work, I could march the Trojan Horse up and down the valley with a Salvation Army band playing Wagner and you wouldn’t notice!”

“I would!” Crystal declared indignantly. “A Salvation Army band playing Wagner?! That’s disgusting!”

“I’d listen, if Devon could find the band”, Casey asserted. “Life! After listening to our noobs, I’d listen to any band! Oh – Crystal, two girls and a cute guy asked about musical instruments. I told them to find you at the Crystal Organ in the morning.”

“That works”, she responded. “Devon, tell Ryan – he’s suffering.” They all laughed, Tanner and Rita joining in as they came out the great double doors onto the stone floor of the terrace.

The Engineer shrugged. “I left back passages through the unfinished parts of the castle. One goes right through the bottom of this space I left for a possible tower. I wanted a place for getting away, small groups, just a mellow spot isolated from everything but available. The view from the towers already built is fantastic, so I figured a good idea would be finishing this tower to make a spot. Everything came through the back passages until we punched through the top. After that I redid the layout so this tower belongs to just our level – there’s no other way here. When Rigel decreed we’re going to have ‘just us’ time from now on, I decided this was the perfect ‘just us’ place. The tower will go up over it later, but we keep the view.” His grin was so broad it looked painful. “Reesha, from Bombay but at MIT studying architecture, has a bachelor’s from the Imperial University of” – he paused, his lips moving – “Visakhapatnam” – it came out carefully, syllable by syllable – “in historical architectural engineering. If it’s ever been built from stone, she can do it again, and she says we can arch out that whole third of the edge so the view isn’t hurt at all.”

“And you want me to make a ‘Druid window’, right?” Anaph asked, sounded quite cheerful as he brought n Lumina – both of them in the colors of their callings, but in clothes that would not have looked much out of place in Los Angeles or Miami.

“Now that you mention it....” Devon teased. “Damn – those look practical!” He tugged at a pocket of Anaph’s multi-pocketed cargo pants. “Just what an engineer needs!”

“Or a wizard”, Ryan agreed. “Now tell – where did you get these?”

Lumina beamed. “A gift from the staff at Healer Hall. Shannon and Shannon had everyone tell them anything I said, or Anaph said, about what we used to wear. They had some of our original clothes to work from, too – Melanie helped them.”

The girl chuckled. “I didn’t know what they were up to. But they did good!”

“Better than good”, Anaph responded. “I don’t care what anyone says; super cargo pants are acceptable as Druid clothes now!”

“I think that goes for everyone.” Rigel stood in the middle of the double doors as Chen and Oran passed him on both sides. “Bet they’d sell to the Escobars and Brits, too – once everyone here has some!” That got the sort of good laugh that ends thoughtfully, because in reality the idea is so true.

With Rigel’s entry, all the Snatched – their own Snatched, that is – were present. But they weren’t to be alone; with Rigel came Aaron and a companion – one whose presence with Aaron made Austin grin in delight, for they were hip to hip, with hands in each other’s back pockets. Rigel’s squire clasped his hands together and held them high; the two saw it, and in response turned and kissed. Lips cemented, hands slid to necks, hands already in place squeezed.... Ocean clapped, while Lumina and Ryan whistled.

“Okay, Vaidyanaath, come up for air!” the Healer called. That drew everyone’s attention to her, which in turn allowed the two to disentangle with a substantially reduced audience.
“We met”, Lumina informed them all – not that it was news; she’d met every one of the new Snatched at one point in the mad journey from Druid’s Inn, a journey that brought thoughtful expressions and puzzled to both newly Snatched and Celts, as Healer gave orders to lord and Celt and Druid alike, bending all to her will to get all alive to her Hall. And in fact that Hall was where most of the newcomers still rested, packed tightly, healer services withdrawn from village and castle to attend people on the edge of death, and snatch them back. Druids served there, too; Eraigh presided over a Druid Hall empty but for himself and a few students he wouldn’t permit to break routine. “His name means, ‘master of medicines’, he says, and he is.” She turned and grinned at Ocean. “We’re going to have to share him, because he’s not just good at herbs, he’s got the Healer spark.” Which was why he was there; he and three others had been instrumental in helping Lumina, and this was in a way a reward.

“He’s mine; you just get to borrow him”, Aaron responded firmly, planting another kiss of that sort on first one cheek and then the other.

“Two more cheeks!” Austin called. Ocean giggled, then whooped, as Aaron dropped to one knee and, lifting a tattered pant leg to position a hole, planted a kiss on bare brown skin. He made a show of looking for another hole.

Rigel laughed and pushed the pair forward. “Keep the pants on; this isn’t the baths”, he admonished to general laughter as the two hugged before dropping onto a bench. He managed to keep his smile in place at the sight of a big tear running down Austin’s right cheek. “Hey, squire – I need one of those, too”, he announced, miming a hug. He wiped the tear away with his own cheek.
“Let’s ride, after”, he whispered, and delivered a sharp squeeze. Austin’s wasn’t immediate, but was followed by a kiss on his own cheek, one he decided to return. When they parted, the new couple – for they were, as everyone could tell – was looking at them curiously.

“Ask later”, Rigel told them. “Now....” The lord of all he surveyed, surveyed the expectant faces. “I suppose you’re all wondering why I called you here....”

Ryan laughed loudest. “For pizza?” he called.

“Not today. No, Aaron’s going to give us a summary of the help his people can give. A lot – well, most of us already know some of the help, because they’re already helping. But not even half of them are fit for much of anything, and most of those who are, are drifting to Devon and Ryan. Anyway...” He looked and found whom he wanted. “Tanner, you asked for what they can do that could change what you have to work with. We’ll start with that. Aaron?”

“Thanks.” Lum closed his eyes briefly; they were most when they opened. “And thanks for that welcome. We got your assurances, but I think our greatest worry was that the words were just to make us feel better with all the barb– the Celts around.” His hand sought Vaidyanaath’s and they twined fingers. “I think we can tell everyone it’s real, and we haven’t dropped from a world where we’re people like everyone into something backwards.” A deep breath showed off his chest to good effect; Ocean noticed Austin adjusting his kilt and grinned; Crystal saw it and looked unhappy. Rita saw Crystal’s expression and made a mental note: she’s okay with gays until there are too many.

“Okay – report. Major Tanner, I think the main things we can do are two: improve your rifling a hundred percent on personal weapons and artillery, and give you powder with at least twice the punch. Wizard Ryan knows it as pyrocellulose or ‘gun cotton’, and he’s almost there – we’ll give you the next steps. And the metal–“

Ocean had Aaron, Rigel, Tanner, and Antonio in sight. The four figures blurred and shifted.....

Quistador fought Quistador, no quarter given. Ramón Alejandro Rafael don Delgado watched as the town gates fell, waiting. His own men fell back, letting the ordinary soldiers into the town. For a moment he glanced south, a look of pleading on his face. Then the figures in black and red, red on black, their every movement screaming elite bringers of death, were in the gateway. He fired the first arrow himself; up, over, and down it went. Flames sprang up where it touched, but others were already raining down, and that path through the walls became a temporary suburb of Hell....

Antonio’s sword dropped, and the line charged. Behind, cannon roared, high explosives ripping into a town wall, incendiaries arching high to fall among towers with banners hated across the land....

Tanner’s sword pointed; cannon roared, and the entire front face of a castle – walls, gates, towers – ruptured and fell away. He lifted his sword, and dropped it again....

Celts swarmed up the ladders, a mass of warriors topping the town wall. Torches that lit their way kept going, thrown onto thatched roofs; those fires would give plenty of light. Druids were among them, but many wore capes with a great Celtic cross, the symbol from Artur’s shield with the bottom branch lengthened downward...

Rigel’s sword dropped, and twenty torches flew toward piles of dry limbs with figures in black chained to iron posts in the middle....

“Rigel, NO!!!” Ocean’s scream overwhelmed Aaron’s words, as well as ending any attention to them. Eighteen faces turned as one to look at her, confusion and bewilderment written across them. What those eyes saw was Ocean reaching toward Rigel, a look of horror on her face, right arm stretching out.

Lumina was already moving before Ocean started to collapse. She caught the arm outstretched towards Rigel and used it to ease the older woman to the floor. Anaph was nearly as fast; Vaidyanaath was hardly a heartbeat later, dodging between Rigel and Ryan to get there. As dry sand before an incoming surge of tide, the relaxed atmosphere vanished under shock and concern.

As soon as she was on the paving stones, Ocean blinked and sat up. “No! Don’t....” She looked around, confused, touching Lumina, then the a chair she’d come to rest by, as though checking to see if they were real.

“What is this, visions?” Aaron asked. “Are we supposed to believe in magic?”

Three voices answered as one: “There is no magic!” A weal smile touched Rigel’s lips to hear Anaph, Lumina, and Ryan say that together.

“I don’t know”, he told Aaron. “Let’s listen.”

“Ocean, what happened?” Lumina asked.

“I was.... but.... oh, life! we’re all still here.” The shudder that convulsed her shook Lumina and Anaph, too, as they held her. “Rigel! Rigel, I saw–“ Their Herbalist took a deep breath. “You ordered Inquisitors burned at the stake! You had a whole army! And Antonio had an army, he attacked a town, and there were fires, and he dropped fire on the Inquisition palace. And Tanner, you had an army, and there was a castle....” She frowned. “Someone..... And there were Celts, burning and killing, Artur’s Celts....” A shudder wracked her.

“Ocean – have some tea; breath deep, organize your thoughts.” It was Vaidyanaath who guided them all the get Ocean back on a seat, get a cup of tea in her hand, and a long sip taken. “Now – take your time.”

Aaron cut in as Ocean sipped again. “Inquisition? What else didn’t you tell us?”

Austin waved Rigel off. “We can’t tell you everything at once, all right? Out there”, he began, pointing north, “are Spanish types. We got Snatched, you got Snatched, the Celts got Snatched, well, so did some Conquistadors back when, and they live north of us. They have a Duke and Counts and knights, and they have a high bishop and bishops and priests.” He took a deep breath. “And they have Inquisitors, who burn people at the stake and sell people as slaves. They’re not our friends. We can’t just wish them away, though.”

“But we’re working on it”, Antonio added earnestly, his hand firm but gentle on Aaron’s shoulder. “I’m working on suckering a whole Inquisitor army into a nasty trap, and there’s a bishop–“

Ocean sat up so fast she lost her tea cup, which spun briefly, cycling around three times before falling off the table. “Bishop! Rigel, I saw a bishop! Someone captured him, and Antonio went to get him back, and it started a war!” She moaned. “Oh, it’s like my dreams!”

“And I burned Inquisitors at the stake?! Give me a break!” Rigel exclaimed.

Rita chuckled, but turned to Antonio. “If Inquisitors got your bishop and took him for torture, would you go to war to get him back?”

“You better believe it!”

She nodded. “I thought so. Rigel, if Antonio was at war with the Inquisitors, and asked for help, would you go?”

“Of course – especially the Inquisitors.”

“And if you found the Inquisitors were torturing the bishop, and probably his family to try to break him, and almost certainly random people from his church, too – would you burn Inquisitors at the stake?”

Rigel was ready to swear he wouldn’t, but Rita’s gaze wouldn’t allow a quick answer. He let what she’d described sink in, and looked at the result. “Yes, blast it! If everything we tried wouldn’t get him back, and then they killed him – yeah, I’d hunt them all down, and I’d burn them.” He turned and stalked to the balcony, angry at Rita for poking him with it, angry at himself for having that truth in him.

Antonio watched Rigel, looked down at Ocean. “Casey”, he called softly, “how fast can you get to Padillo?”

“By myself, or with don Delgado?”

“Yourself.”

Anaph had been speaking softly with Ocean. Now he interrupted. “Wait, Antonio. Ocean wasn’t seeing the future.”

“So what was she seeing?” asked Ryan.

“Possibilities.” The Druid stood. “Listen. Ocean, tell about the dreams.”

She looked sheepish, embarrassed. “I get them every now and then. When Devon started getting coal, I had a dream of a steam engine train, streaming out black smoke. It was funny-looking, but it was a train. And when Anaph was so far off east, I had a dream of Celts fighting like the Romans in the movies, all in lines. When Rigel put Ryan in charge here, I had a dream of castles springing up all over. I had a dream of Celts and Quistadors herding sheep south from the Springs, and one of lots of like homeless people walking north just with what they could carry. When Devon was using so much blue oak, I had a dream of the forest getting big gaps in it.” She stopped at the sight of Anaph’s smile and squeeze of her shoulder.

The Druid took two steps, sat and got his own cup of tea. “We all know the Snatcher, in a simple way. We know it brought us here, we know it isn’t perfect– “

Vaidyanaath laughed caustically. “Yeah, it brought us here partly dead!” He ignored the giggles that line prompted, not even looking for the source. “What’s it got to do with daydreams?”

Anaph shook his head. “Not daydreams, but dreams – or visions”, he amended with a nod to Aaron.. “The Snatcher doesn’t know us any better than we know it. It’s been trying – yes, Ryan, for a couple of thousand years! But it’s trying hard, with us. It listens, it watches.” He paused for another sip of tea. “Sometimes it tracks our thoughts. Sometimes it tries to give ideas. We know it’s been trying to help, making people friendly to Rigel. The way we think must be a lot closer to its way than anyone before.
“And” – he took a deep breath – “I’ve had a flicks myself, like repeated thoughts – not a déja vu, Ryan, more like... the black cat in The Matrix: It’s trying to get closer, get into our thoughts. So this -- I think it just... borrowed Ocean’s brain for a while.”

“Like a coprocessor?” Aaron asked. “Just a tool?”

“More like a test module, I'd say”, Rita suggested. “It had some ideas, and let Ocean’s brain try them out. Anaph, I’ve had dreams, too – dreams when I get woke up for someone to ask me questions, dreams where I’m ding something and have to stop to answer questions. I never remember the questions, just that I had to answer.” Anaph’s slight smile told her she wasn’t alone.

“So what were the things she saw?” Austin asked.

“Possibilities”, Anaph answered. “Things that could flow from something new. Implications.”

“Implications of pyrocellulose!” Ryan exclaimed, turning to Antonio. “But your bishop, too – what’s his name?”

“Bishop Theodoro. But he’s not really mine”, Antonio pointed out.

“Whatever; the Snatcher thinks he’s important – so do I”, he added after a tiny pause.. “So the Snatcher knows this bishop is a critical piece on the board, and it wanted a human opinion for re-evaluating how that could go, when Aaron told us about what they can do for our rifles and cannon and explosives. It’s used Ocean’s brain before, been in her mind, so – sorry, Ocean, but I think your mind is a lot more relaxed than anyone else’s, so it picks on you.” He tapped a toe on the floor.
“Anaph, I think Antonio’s right – Casey should go and see what more protection Theodoro can have. We don’t have those explosives yet, but the Inquisition is already interested in the guy, right?” Antonio and Casey both nodded. “So get him protected, and avoid Rigel having to decide whether to burn Inquisitors. Avoid a real war with the Quistadors, and stick with doing things... underhanded”, he finished with a grin.

“And get that artillery ready in case you need it”, Aaron added. “Something I should say before I forget: sabots.”

“Sabots?” Ryan fished around, trying to pin a reference on the sort-of-familiar word. “Okay, I give – it’s more military than I know!”

Aaron laughed. “It’s ballistics. You’ve got ball rounds; your tries at cylinder shells rot – um, you say ‘suck’. You don’t have the tools or the materials to make good ones yet, so forget it. A sabot fits in the barrel and provides a snug fit to the projectile. You want a deep-ring sabot to let the fuse for the explosive to be lit. Ilkin says you can make a separate detonator that goes off on impact. You won’t have to push the gun barrel limits so hard, then.”

“What do we need – more iron?” Ryan asked.

Aaron’s grin was infectious. “Wood – not too hard, not too soft. You could even use wood sabots in rifles if brass is short – oh, and Ilkin says he can make you a primer that works in a round with a ball bullet and wood sabot coated in wax.”

Ocean butted in. “Will that help the bishop?” It brought attention back to her vision.

“Frak!” Rigel swore from where he’d turned in place and now leaned back against the railing. “There goes our quiet winter. Antonio, you’re right – let’s get Theodoro more protection. Casey, don’t go alone – round up some other Scouts to take for backup. They won’t be worth anything in the towns up there, but maybe they can... interrupt Inquisitor communications, or something, and set up escape options. Antonio, talk with Tanner about what you need to increase your security in Padillo and.... the other town, whatever it is. Devon, if you can push that tunnel schedule, do it.” An idea struck.
“Aaron, if you have anyone who could play the part of a Spanish priest, I’d love to drop an advisor into Antonio’s Padillo townhouse. “

Aaron grinned wryly. “T-cubed will do it. Taban Tadeo Tirado. His father was a bishop and wanted him to be a priest..”

“But he wants to be a chemical engineer”, Vaidyanaath added.

“He’ll have to function as a priest”, Rita pointed out. “That means he should probably get ordained.”

Aaron shrugged. “I’ll talk to him.”

“Good”, was Rigel’s response. “I want to meet these guys – Ilkin and Tay... Taybor?”

“Taban. They’re both still at Healer Hall, so that’s Lumina’s. Want to hear the rest, first?”

Rigel laughed. “Okay, let’s hear the rest. I just hope the Snatcher doesn’t decide to borrow anyone else’s brain!”




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Kuli,
A most interesting chapter that is leaving me begging the question for more information.

When last we left our erstwhile group of "snatched", they were winding up a vacation cum exploration trip of Scout Central, to have a Celt rider making a mad gallop at full speed with a disoriented chap who seemed about to soil his breeches, screaming to be saved from the "savages".

And, a realization that, at least these people to whom he'd been taken, spoke the "common" tongue.

Now, we're suddenly back at Cavern Castle, in a new almost tower and terrace, accessible only from "their" level, with a group of "freshly snatched" who come from an alternate reality of monstrous "English" proportions - an Irish Nun Queen (Empress might be more precise). And these poor folk arrived damned near dead.

Heavy healing going on at healer hall, compliments of Lumina & Co AND druids galore.

(Rita's "dreams" aka scenarios played out by the snatcher are the least of it, lol.)

I'm hoping that the closing lines mean that we're going to be told a story to fill in the blanks re: not only where they come from, but their turmoils from The Duid Ritz in the Woods to Healer Hall and on to Cavern Castle.

We want more!

We NEED More.
Thanks, Kuli.
(*8*)
 
Kuli,
Remember, Autolycus can paste the missing chapter at the beginning of Dreams, so it flows in order long term.

:wave:
 
Kuli,
The missing piece of the puzzle - still questions, but a lot of answers.
So, 137 GAY college students from around the Commonwealth.

I get the feeling that, because of the size of the snatch, and nuclear fission in the equation, may be one of the reasons for the widely scattered dead cells.

The Healers and Druids have their work cut out for them.
The ratio of straight to gay in Rigel Land just got a lot more mixed.

Engineering students - just what the Head Wizard and Lord over all ordered, so to speak.
:=D:


Fixed - see post 1100
 
Whoo-hoo! Hooray! More gay people! About FRAKKIN' TIME!

And from yet another alternate reality.

Wow, you've set quite a cat among the pigeons. Again. In fact I worry that you have more cats than you have pigeons, if you understand me! :-)
 
Ain't they cute? And cuddly? And damned smart?
And, yeah, deadly if you're on the wrong side of one.
 
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