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Fit for Life

At least the hunter "leader" is an honourable caballero.

You keep us on our toes and looking for the next installment.
:=D:

And, those that were not may thank their lucky stars that they've found it, anyway!

I wanted to have an "honourable" caballero high in the death squad, one who would indeed "thank his lucky stars". Given they were on an essentially evil mission, that looked tricky.
Of course, they were working for hire, which gave an opening, but still: what real gentleman would sign on for such an operation, especially when many of the men being hired are his, at least in loyalty?

What did you think of my solution? (and the problems inherent in it?)


oh -- could you tell what the image is? and how it relates?
 
It's a stiletto - an assassin's dagger.

Curious. I see a sword - as in "of Escobar" - Justicia?
And Silver coin - what the assassins were trying to take from the one of their party - more than just 30 pieces of silver, the silver to start to ransom those who would be made slaves.

Kuli, Your solution - the Caballero has a psychological failing - he needs a leader to swear allegiance to, even if he does not always agree with the marching orders.

Time for him to discover what a true caballero is all about.

Welcome back, Crio. Glad you made it back so soon.
:wave:
 

154
Traffic


Tanner’s amusement was evident. “Rita, you’re not making sense. Before we reached the Colinas de San Rigel, and you were going to have just a day to get ready for the wedding, you said it wouldn’t be a problem. But we didn’t go all the way to San Tesifón, and that saved us two days, we had good weather crossing the savanna, which saved us half a day, Anaph asked Rigel to hurry, which saved more than half a day. Now you’ve got three entire days to prepare, and you say you’re going to be busy the whole time!”

Rita gave him a pitying look. “Of course I’ll be busy. Getting ready for a wedding, especially when there are five couples, is a lot of work!”

Tanner looked a bit like a man might if someone told him his pants were on backwards. He shook his head. “But if you weren’t going to be rushed before, you should have two days to relax!”

Lady Escobar decided to intervene. Thanks to Hedraing at Hills’ Edge, she had a basic command of English, and of Celtic, but she stuck with the tongue she knew. Rigel and the Snatched, along with most of the men in the expedition, were by this time so fluent in all three tongues it really didn’t make much difference to them, except when a phrase from one happened to be more efficient or clearer than its equivalent in the others. That swapping and borrowing of phrases made for a strange mix; though English was mostly the common tongue, no conversation of more than a few minutes failed to make use of Spanish and Celtic both.

“Major Tanner, it is not so difficult a thing. You have many men at your Academy, do you not?”

“Well, not at the moment, because we’re spread out, but usually, yes.” Being on familiar ground made him a bit more relaxed, but Rigel could see his military “right arm” suspected some strange female logic at work.

“So. While you are gone, your officers perform inspections, do they not?” she went on methodically.

Tanner chuckled. “Of course – no skipping inspections!”

“Yet when you return, do you not carry out inspections yourself?” she pressed farther.

“I – well, yes. It’s my Academy, and I need to stay on top – oh.”

Rita burst out laughing. “Wow – if I had a camera....”

“I suspected there was logic to it”, Rigel offered. “If there’s a great conspiracy of female thinking that baffles men, I doubt Rita would be entangled in it.” Her look of don’t-go-there didn’t daunt him in the least. “A participant, certainly, maybe even an executive direc– Hey!” His surprise wasn’t merely that she’d plastered him with a snowball, but that she’d had one in the first place!

“Frozen things stay frozen in saddlebags, when it’s freezing”, she remarked. Lady Escobar leaned over and whispered something in Rita’s ear, and the two laughed.


“Rider”, Vaidyanaath called out. Back now in more familiar lands, he and Aaron had taken to riding up front more often. Rita’s view was that their Yankees had suffered a collective attack from the strangeness of the savanna, but they hadn’t mentioned anything at all.

“Who’s being ‘horse’?” Austin teased. Aaron laughed, and Rigel’s squire laughed with him. Vaidyanaath ignored them.

“Lord!” the Rider snapped, saluting fist to chest as he swung his mount smartly beside Tornado. “Semaphore stations off – icing rain freezes them. Lord Ryan ordered Riders.” He paused. “Didn’t expect you so far.” A grin flashed. “I’m sent to find you – thought I’d have to ride to Hills’ Edge in this cold.”

Rigel shook his head, grinning. “If you’d had to come that far, we’d have been late.”

“The universe would have trembled, if Lay Rita were late to her own bonding”, Geilan quipped.

Wisely, the Rider didn’t comment. “Have you news I should bear back?” he asked instead.

“Tell Lord Ryan we didn’t get to see Osvaldo – but Lady Escobar, his mother and head of the House, is with us, along with two-score of her people. Also–“ He turned to Anaph.

“Also that Anaph-Druid requires word from Eraigh-Druid concerning what took place a handful of days past”, Anaph said. Gone were the days when a Rider would have asked for enough to make sense of that message; they now took for granted that their lords and druids – and Scouts and Healers, not to mention engineers and wizards – understood things mere Riders didn’t, and what sounded like a stray comment from one of those made perfect sense to one of them.

But still they checked. “That’s all?” he asked, looking from one to the other.

Rigel decided it wasn’t, quite. “Add that I want to be going back south within four days of the festivities.” He didn’t specify further; fr all he knew there would be a whole day of celebration for each wedding, and he knew he wasn’t going to get anything important done while that went on. “And I’ll be wanting more wagons than I expected.”

The Rider nodded, closed his eyes, and repeated it back. “And a message for you, Lord Rigel: Lord Ryan wishes to meet with you immediately when you return.”

While Rigel frowned at what seemed a silly message, Rita got it. “Rigel, he’s stressed about something. This is his way of making sure you don’t decide an hour’s soak in the baths comes before ‘immediately’ when we reach the Cavern.”

“Okay.” His shrug died a mere twitch. “Now I’m going to worry all the way there.”


“He’s got who?!” Antonio exclaimed. Not showing her amusement, the Rider repeated: “Lady Escobar accompanies Lord Rigel.” Helpfully, she added, “you can see for yourself, tomorrow. You and Lord Rigel are both about five hours from the tunnel.”

Antonio shuddered. He didn’t like that tunnel; it was narrow and cold even in the summer. Thankfully the wind baffle at the entrances – Devon had surrendered to necessity and placed one at each end, since their weather came from both directions. When it isn’t from one of the other two, he thought wryly. When he’d come through eighty-ish days before, crews had been working toward each other from the Stone Cold Inn to this end, making a second passage. If that was finished, there would be westbound and eastbound – a definite improvement – but it would still be cramped. On the other hand, it’s better than another handful of days going around, he conceded.

“Don Antonio, I overheard...?” Victor prompted.

Antonio sighed. Here was one thing he hated about being a lord: Rigel was coming with Lady Escobar, he had here a portion of the investigatory mission the Escobars had sent, and he had to decide whether Rigel would want them barging in. Put yourself in Rigel’s place, he heard Rita’s voice in his mind – the same advice Samson had given more than once, for that matter. In Rigel’s place, I would want my peace and quiet until I got home, he decided, while admitting that he got more annoyed by such interruptions than did Rigel. He thought back to when he’d first called Rigel “big man”, a designation that had given way soon enough to “lord”, as the Snatcher molded them to a patter it knew. But did it mold them for its sake, to make them over into what was familiar, or for our sake, to fit us for, well fitting in? He wasn’t the only one who’d puzzled over that, though he knew others took it farther into complexities that would give him a headache.

Suddenly he found himself very thankful for Oran, and for “Brother Dismas” who’d set Oran on the path of seeing what others missed, discerning things others couldn’t see. There was no way he’d be able to keep the second-highest Scout for himself, but he had a feeling Oran would be around fairly often in the future – or at least he hoped so. Samson, too, was a gift, one more able to see weaknesses and strengths, motivations and rationalizations in people. Antonio knew he was a very direct sort, mostly, and that though he could fathom turns of plot when set before him – automatically at that he turned and patted the extra, heavily-wrapped scabbard fastened firmly to his pommel, where L’Espada d’Aragon hung – but he didn’t expect ever to spin any... not that he wanted to.

“Yes, Lady Escobar is coming”, he replied. “But you’re part of a whole mission, and you’ll meet her as part of it.” And what reason do I give Leonido?

Victor sighed. “You have the right of it. My thanks for the reasoning; you could merely have ordered.”

Antonio grinned, a not very ambitious grin. “You at least understand reasons. You could have argued.”

The del Rio representative on the mission nodded. “I will ‘happen’ to mention, where some can hear, that you are allowing no one to go ahead.”

That thought triggered a groan from Antonio. “Rider, you said we’re both about the same distance from the tunnel?”

“Yes – you’ll be seeing each other in three hours... except that dark will come in two.”

That was all Antonio wanted: not just having to go through the tunnel, but having two very large groups trying to do so. “Samson – have our Mounted Rifle leftenant escort our unfriendly prisoners to the nearest Celt village. They’re not to be harmed, but they don’t have to be given hospitality. And bid Caballero-Ayudante Montdragón pick a dozen he can trust – they remain.” Unfortunately, those were all he could think to get rid of; on the other hand, it would be fifty fewer – but wait, was it? Did all those refugees, with Leonido, have to come along? He couldn’t in fact think fo a reason they were with him except that it had been easier than sending them back to the Mesa. “Add in the refugees with Leonido – and ask that they be given hospitality, though they’re strangers. Blast! – they don’t talk Celt.”

“Several elders and warriors at the village speak Spanish”, the Rider messenger informed him. “What gift do you offer in exchange for this extraordinary hospitality?”

What Antonio had first been in this world stirred. “A dozen who vie for the chance can come with me to hunt elk – if those really were elk we sighted. I have to ask Anaph-Druid if we can kill any, but we can at least learn how to catch one.” Samson cleared his throat and raised an eyebrow, telling Antonio more was needed. “And they can have all the gravel from the Mesa that they can carry, till Fall equinox.” He heard Samson groan; the Steward was the one who’d have to work that out. Well, not completely. “Samson, there’s a ridge north of the Mesa that needs to disappear – you know the one that would let someone a day away climb to get a good look at us? If they’ll agree to take that off, they can have the trees, too.” Thinking he’d need a Druid to turn the scar into something that looked natural prompted another thought: “Except redtree and blue oak.”

“If there’s blue oak, they call a Druid”, Samson noted. “And are we going to keep on in the dark?”

Antonio looked up. The sky was patchy with clouds, but the road was wide enough starlight alone would be sufficient if they went slow. “You know me too well”, he groused, more teasing than anything.

“Blow me.” That wasn’t an exclamation where Samson was from, but they’d picked it up quickly.

“Reverse that, and we’ll discuss it”, Antonio quipped back. Samson licked his lips dramatically, then turned to bear commands.

I really need a squire, Antonio thought.



Rigel was having the same thoughts about the tunnel. He, however, who had settled comfortably into the role of lord, didn’t hesitate. “We press on”, he told their Rider messenger. “You stay with us until we’re an hour from the tunnel – then go see if there’s room at the Stone Cold Inn.”

“Which we hope is warmer than its name”, Vaidyanaath commented.

“Rider, why don’t you ride with squire Austin”, Rita suggestion, making an assessment. Twenty minutes later she observed that her gaydar had been accurate: the Rider was resting his horse, sharing a saddle very snugly with Austin, and hanging on with his hands on the squire’s thighs – one on the inside of his pants.


Conan came riding back from his journey forward with the Rider beginning the return trip to the Cavern, laughing. “Lord Rigel, Lord Antonio also made haste.” He cut off Rigel’s groan with the next news. “I spoke with Scout Oran – we’ve moved faster, and are two-thirds of an hour ahead, judging from the Stone Cold Inn. Oran said he will suggest to Lord Antonio that they camp, and let us pass through first.”

Rigel sighed, letting go tension. Antonio doing the same had been a fear, one he hadn’t wanted to admit to. “If Oran says it, Antonio will do it. That means we can slow down.” That would please Lady Escobar, who had never traveled at night in her life, to hear her tell it. Her Amazons were another matter – they’d been treating it as a new game. He suspected Conal meant to bed one, but felt certain the choice would be made by Maritza and Lucita. He didn’t know whether to envy the lad or worry for him – or both. He did know that thinking about it was making him horny. At least we’re on gravel – I wouldn’t want to be on stone, as cold as it is. Maybe Devon should rethink that surface, up here.”

Five minutes later, Lady Escobar arrived to thank him in person. The front of the column was still moving at the original pace, but slowed as she fell in beside Rigel. It was something Tanner knew, that Rigel would have never thought of: when slowing a column “on the march”, one started from the back, since there was no way human beings had ever managed to get an entire column to slow at once, or to drop to the same pace. Highly-trained military could achieve the latter, but no matter the training, spacing between sections was thrown off – at best – when a column tried to slow all at once; more likely was that people would rear-end others, just because of difference in response times. It made sense the moment Tanner explained it; the image of traffic starting up at a light had come to mind, and the same thing in reverse made sense.

“Earl Rigel, many thanks for the slower pace. I believe that perhaps I’ve become accustomed to the hurry, though the darkness makes it daunting. I see now why the trees are taken so far from the road; I had wondered at how those with such rich forests would keep them so at bay.”

Rigel chuckled. “That’s one reason – on a clear night when the moon is showing, this lets in enough light to travel by. The other is that we’ve been using a lot of timber for building – the Celts, too, who got the itch to build larger, sturdier halls and homes. It’s easier to cut it near the roads.”

Visions of her home, all but deforested, filled her mind. “Surely you will not just cut wider and wider!”

“Hardly”, he answered with a vigorous shake of his head. “This is the widest the Druids and chieftains allow. We’ve got new creatures in the forest, now, that like clearings, so the clan Druids choose places to clear and turn to woodland meadow. Plus we don’t burn as much wood as you, even though it gets colder here – we have a black rock called ‘coal’” – he shook his head with a twisted smile – “and somehow the Druids keep it from pouring black smoke into the sky.
“I wonder... maybe you have the stuff in the Hills?”

“In Refuge? the Constant Hills?” She frowned. “I have never heard of such a thing. But we have no Druids, anyway.”

Rita chimed in. “We can fix that. The spark pops up everywhere.”


“You burn wood here”, Lady Escobar observed nearly two hours later, in a suite in the Cold Stone Inn. A half dozen rooms surrounded a sort of lounge with a fireplace.

“Only because guests enjoy fires”, the attendant who’d just added wood to the brick-lined wood nook to the right of the fireplace explained. “Your rooms are heated by a flow of hot water, which is heated at a furnace fed by black rock.”

Rigel’s eyebrows rose. “The Inn is heated by water pipes?!” he exclaimed.

The attendant shook his head. “Only this suite. The next was to be finished by equinox, but will be six days late. The rest is heated by Kinneagh stoves. They burn black rock, save when banked at night, with good oak.”

Rita emerged from the room she was sharing with Rosalina. “The walls are warm, along the floor. The floor is warm, around the bed anyway.”

Rigel grinned. “We just learned we about that”, he told her, indicating their attendant. “We have the only suite with heating from hot water.”

Rita nodded. “That explains the stone shelf – they cut back, and cut behind, to make the place for the pipes. So this is the luxury suite?”

“Oh, no, Wise Woman! All the lower suites are to be like this. Master Devon says the rooms above, when carved, will be the luxury ones.”

“What about baths?” asked Lady Escobar. “That would be luxury.”

The attendant assessed the foreigner. “There are no private tubs, such as you might know”, he said, choosing to be plain in the Celt fashion. “There are two pools, one warm, one cool. The warm water is what comes through the pipes heating the suites. It is warmer than at first”, she added. “The engineers say we are heating the mountain.” He shrugged, tossing his head in a gesture of dismissal of that notion as unimportant to him. “The waters will not heat your body, but they are warm enough to get clean. There is room for twenty.”

“I... see”, responded the Lady after a stretch of silence. “Lady Rita, might we....” Fluttering hands showed she was struggling with how to ask.

Rita chuckled. “Take turns? I don’t know that the men will wait. But I think if we hung a curtain across.... Lad, is the warm pool a single depth?”

“The ends are shallow, with benches for sitting. The middle is deep – enough that if I stand on the bottom, my eyes are lapped by waves.” He bowed to Rita. “Wise Woman, for you, I will arrange a curtain.” He glanced at Rosalina. “Though people will laugh.”

“Tell them it’s a Wise-Woman experiment”, Austin suggested from the doorway of the room he’d selected, then packed with Conal and a pair of Riders.

Rita fixed him wit an icy stare. “Studying what?”

The squire shrugged. “How about if men behave themselves without women to keep an eye on them?” he asked innocently.

After a heartbeat’s stare, Rita laughed. “You’re safe. No one will believe it, but they’ll laugh.”

“And think there’s some really deep Wise Woman study going on”, Rigel said wryly in a very dry tone. “If you have a joke to hide behind, you’re doing something very wise.”

Rita mimed throwing a snowball it him; he ducked. Austin pretended to catch the ball, and mimed taking a bite. “Probably. Now Rosalina and I are going to the baths. You men can come when there’s a curtain.”

“I can swim under curtains”, Austin pointed out in a teasing tone.

Lady Escobar jumped in to show she could play at this. “Why would you? You’re interested in what’s on the men’s side.”

Austin grinned. “I like you”, he pronounced. “Maybe I’ll swim by once just to give you a glimpse.” He favored her with a half-bow, grinned and spun into his room, dragging a shirtless Rider back with him. “Holler when our end of the pool’s ready”, he called. Muffled scolding followed; Rigel imagined a Rider was getting a scolding for still having pants on – though probably a pretend one, since Austin definitely enjoyed kneeling down to do the job himself.


Antonio watched the light of a Druid stick disappear and emerge again. It was Oran’s way of demonstrating that though in the dark they couldn’t see the tunnel entrance, they were close enough that it would be visible in the morning. A sigh both revealed and dissipated nervous tension. He was suddenly tired, ready for bed.

“So Rigel’s gone in, we’re not far behind”, Samson summarized. “Fun – if we start too early, we ruin into him.”

Antonio chuckled tiredly. “That’s why Oran’s going to the Inn, now that he’s shown us the entrance is right there. He’ll come tell us once they’re all moving.”

Samson nodded. “Nice to have someone directing traffic.”




361886.jpg
 
Hmm. Whether you stop a column from the front or the back depends on whether you want it to bunch up or stretch out, surely? And in turn, that decision depends on how tightly it was bunched up in the first place. Cars stopping at a light stop from the front and bunch up, mostly without rear-ending each other.

But wait, even the ones farthest back can see the color change. Unless you have a system of shouting halt signals back along the column, you have no way of simultaneously signalling everyone. I guess that would be the military way.

OK, makes sense now.

When is Austin going to turn 18 so we can read about his sexploits sexplicitly?!?!?! That makes me horny every time, but of course you can't put it in while he's underage.
 
Traffic jams in the great outdoors, lol.

I loved the banter about the bathing pools and the curtain.
I can just see our naughty boy Austin giving Lady Escobar a thrill, lol.

Lots of negotiating going on - and divesting themselves, at least temporarily, of the prisoners and the emigrees.

Ryan is learning the art of tact and diplomacy, still the reluctant commander, but improving there as well.

Thanks for the update!
I must have needs be off, else I'd write more.
 
DQ! Your "green light" is STILL on! :grrr: :slap:

NOW! Get thy sorry ass up to BED!! :zzz: ..|

And, in the mean time, I'll gladly follow Austin to "warmer" quarters, with shirtless Riders, and ponder what Kuli may have in mind for the 'morrow! :rolleyes:

HA! Tunnels!! :badgrin:

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

155
Middle Parliament

Kevin MacNeil tugged at his court robes. He hated ceremony, but of all ceremony, what he hated the most was what he was about to endure: an appearance before Parliament.

“It could be worse”, Elizabeth murmured. “It’s only Middle Parliament.” The term was an informal one, not legal – yet still a strong tradition. In the structure of Lost Britain, a system similar to that of ancient Rome’s patronage had emerged, where the weaker looked to the stronger for their interests, and the stronger did the talking to their peers. Here in the Middle Parliament were those lords who spoke, some for themselves alone, most for others as well. The term came from the concept, set forth by a past group of influential lords, that those who spoke through their patrons stood around the outside, and those who spoke for them or had the standing to speak on their own stood closer to the Prime Minister and to the throne – thus putting them in the Middle. The monarch and ministers, in this picture, were the Core, not the “Center”, lest there be confusion.

“I know, I have to listen to anything any of them says”, Kevin replied sarcastically, “instead of being able to dismiss some of it as the chattering of squirrels.” Yet at the same time that he dreaded this, he also welcomed it: he’d gotten to visit his father, and the experience had set him back more even than the battle against the Aliens. The old man could speak clearly, but his words came at less than a tenth the rate Kevin’s own when he spoke unhurried. He couldn’t hold a tea cup to save his life, and his once-strong and sure legs, the legs of a man who could fence against two on the quarterdeck of a squall-tossed ship, twitched and jerked uncontrollably when he tried to use them.

This visit, he hadn’t needed the physicians to point out the bulge growing on the side of his father’s head, destroying its noble proportions. He had listened to one explanation, after dismissing the others angrily, how the growth had begun inside, but pushed itself out as it got larger, and that as it squeezed on the brain and the spine, it was like a pinch on a leg that made it all tingly and “sleepy”, or a blow to an elbow that made the arms jerk and wander when a man tried to use it. It was an image he understood; it made sense to him, having an invader and blows exchanged – while the others spoke of humours and one even wanted to let out blood! He’d asked only one question: “Can you cut it out?” – and gotten a plain reply, “I could try. I could make it worse, I could save him, I could kill him. Most likely, kill him.” But he’d recommended an herb, one from old journals – one not found on the islands, but on the mainland.

“Kevin!” Elizabeth jerked at his sleeve. MacNeil snapped to reality: trumpets had sounded, pages were moving, the Staff stood with Prime Minister Owen Logan, about two beats from moving. The beats, sounded by the soft hand bells Elizabeth so loved, and not even audible past the podium – so none of the waiting Lords could hear the tempo they marked for the grand entrance – soothed him, especially when the beats marking their own beginning came in full major chords.

He wasn’t aware of the ceremony, except insofar as a portion of his mind kept track in order to go through the proper motions. One again he was thankful that Elizabeth had one day gotten tired of having the same full ceremony for a Middle Parliament as for a full Parliament, and cut it short. That was something he’d viewed from the side, not up front, and the memory still made him smile: there was the Queen, on the throne but two years and some months, who had moved from one bow not to the next step, but as though it were the final bow of the ritual, skipping over the several minutes of the middle. She’d said nothing at the time, so the whispering had begun, that they had a Queen whose mind was deficient. But only a few weeks later, when she’d initiated a visit to a Middle Parliament, a near-dozen puzzled ministers had been bundled into an arc instead of their usual long string of places, and gotten one bow for the batch of them. At the podium, she’d been marvelous. “My lords, you are too important, and your time too valuable, to waste time watching a girl bow over and over and perhaps lose track of how many times she’d bowed. It pleases me more to do honor all at once, for here you are Lost Britain, not as little pieces but as one.” It had been all the right words – and her first move to take ownership of Parliament, after securing all the details with respect to her House, after taking the throne.

And she’d never looked back – nor was she now. Kevin mostly ignored the subjects of the questions, waiting for the ones at the end. Supposedly it wasn’t proper for a monarch to decide anything about the order of questions, but by simply playing deaf on a few occasions she’d established her right in one small bit: if there was a topic she wanted to be last, it would be last, because she just simply would not even acknowledge the questions. After a handful of tests, the Middle lords had accepted this, as she had shown that she held strictly to her one topic, not broadening it at all. Having found her trustworthy, they humored her. Yet today’s “final topic” was broad no matter how it was addressed, and would spill over onto himself. Already in some faces he could see recognition that he wasn’t just a ceremonial escort, as Bride’s Spokesman to Bride, but would be answering questions for his Queen. With one exception, those were lords he wouldn’t mind hearing questions from, either – just as they thought clearly enough to understand why Elizabeth had really brought him, so they would think clearly enough to ask sensible questions. “Which ought to be a requirement for this body”, he muttered, softly enough, he thought, but earning a marked glance from the Staff.

Finally his mental watchdog alerted him. “Majesty, this is twelve ships! Nearly two thousand men! The year’s apportionment will be gone before the year! Do you truly expect us to vote an increment?” a not-quite-snide voice demanded.

“Lord Sheehan, let me first correct you”, Elizabeth’s voice rang out. Sniggers rose in response; she had adopted a tone reminiscent of that of the schoolmarm in a popular play – just enough to slap the lord down, slight enough to make it deniable. “It is twelve ships of war which will remain, four which will return, and eight of cargo. It is not ‘nearly two thousand men’, it is two thousand and forty – none of whom shall return.” She paused and stared down three lords who had been fidgeting, not really paying attention – a sign not of boredom, not in this assembly, but that their minds were made up, and they didn’t care at all what their Queen had to say. “And yes”, she continued softly, making them strain to hear, “I expect you to vote an increment. And I expect you to understand that the apportionment for the Fleet may need that increment permanently – and perhaps more.”

“Majesty”, a more rational voice came – a much younger voice, as well. “We have only Major MacNeil’s report of Aliens – apologies, Lord MacNeil; I mean do disparagement of your report, only that it is, thankfully, alone. Is this response not... excessive?”

Elizabeth nodded. “It may appear so. Yet of a night now and then, I lose sleep, wondering this: what if it is insufficient? What if seventeen ships and two thousand men are not enough to hold, when the Aliens come, and all we have begun is swept under as they swarm over everything, seeking our children to eat?”

Kevin almost laughed; that last was nearly unfair. The young lord made no mention, though. “Majesty, standing here, I cannot choose between those two.” To MacNeil, his slight shift of posture broadcast that here came the real reason he’d stood. “I request that at least one other military man, of the ground, be dispatched to assess the situation at this wall and harbor and peninsula. I suggest no choice, but leave that to your Majesty.” Kevin really had to hold in his laughter – on the other hand, the man sounded reasonable, and shouldn’t be too bad a companion. That his thoughts were ahead of the speaker’s became clear a moment later, as Elizabeth demonstrated her knowledge of her lords.

“Royal Marines, Royal Artillery, Royal Archers. Holder of a degree in fortifications”, she mused as though thinking aloud. “Rose to First Leftenant before switching to Marines – these are goodly recommendations, are they not?” The young lord blanched as he recognized she was stating his own qualifications. Elizabeth didn’t wait for a response. “Aston George Michael Nightingale-Hughes, second son yet likely Heir”, she went on, now looking him straight in the eye, “I find merit in your request. I appoint you, as you are both qualified and had the foresight to make the request.” Somewhere out there, Kevin suspected, an older lord was congratulating himself for how well that had worked. “For the other – I can think of only one officer other than... but wait a moment.” She turned “Major MacNeil, approach.”

She’d caught him off guard. It wouldn’t do to appear wary, so Kevin walked confidently to her. A slight narrowing of his eyes, visible to no one else, was all the chastisement he would even be allowed. A hint of an impish grin was her rejoinder. “Major MacNeil, you have command of this endeavor. For one set over so many men, the rank of Major is insufficient. So” – from her cleavage she produced colonel’s lens-star and crown – “you’re now Colonel MacNeil”, she stated as she attached the insignia. When she was finished, she patted the new decorations on his jacket, then gave him a gentle push back toward his seat.

“...than our Colonel MacNeil who has faced actual combat in our lifetimes”, she went on almost as though she hadn’t interrupted herself, “and that is General Gilliam Ernest McCutcheon. Lord Owen, do you think he might be nearby?”

The Prime Minister closed his eyes and shook his head ever so faintly. They’d had an informal breakfast encounter with the man, who’d been invited to the Palace to dine – by the Captain of the Guard, who of course would swear it had been on his own initiative. So the General was a minute away, at most. “I shall endeavor to enquire, Majesty”, he intoned, bowing. Kevin found himself feeling honored at the prospect of not merely meeting, but working with, a man who was close to being a legend.

“If I do not wish the position, Majesty?” the distinguished general responded not two minutes later.

“I could order you”, Elizabeth noted, though with a twinkle in her eyes.

McCutcheon sighed. “No, Majesty, you could not. Oh, you could say it”, he went on as gasps and groans sounded across the chamber – gasps from those how didn’t know him, groans from many who did, “but words would not make it so. You could have me dragged bodily to gaol, but words do not command my body – I command it.” He stated it as a professor might a proposition to a class in philosophy, not caring one way or the other what the students did with it. An angry murmur gave the gathering an undertone Elizabeth ignored.

MacNeil saw Elizabeth waiting for something, and decided he wasn’t going to play that game. He stepped up to the general’s side, but looked at Parliament. “The general’s right, and any man of action knows it. When it comes to acting, what moves a man or woman is that man or woman. No order from a leftenant or colonel or general – or monarch – can make a soldier’s body move. When you face it, your body either responds to your own mind, or it doesn’t respond at all.” He smiled wryly. “Of course, if your body doesn’t respond to you in battle, likely you’ll never have a chance to remedy that.”

Elizabeth laughed softly. “Two of a kind – men of action. While we live”, she went on, turning to Parliament, “our kingdom is going to need men of action. Look, all of you, on these two, and learn.” She spun to the general, then, sharp as any Marine on drill. “General, you speak bluntly. That is exactly what I need from you: see the great wall Engineer Granger is erecting, see the preparations Colonel MacNeil is making, and come speak bluntly. Some here will fail to find such blunt speech stimulating – I find it refreshing.”

McCutcheon nodded. “Well played, your Majesty. But offer me no ‘honors’ for this service. Common I was born, and common I’ll die.”

Elizabeth laughed again. “Gilliam McCutcheon, there’s nothing common about you. Well, you may not take honors, but you’ll have a reward – one you’ll even accept.” McCutcheon raised an eyebrow. MacNeil made a bet with himself, that his queen would find a way to make that true – or rather, she probably already had a way. “In the meantime, you’re back on the list – duty pay, for the duration.”

“And don’t tell her you don’t have to take it”, MacNeil whispered out of the side of his mouth.

“Well I don’t, now, do I lad?” came the return whisper as McCutcheon turned, not one to wait on ceremony.

“How’d he get to be a general?” It was a comment Kevin overheard from a young lord he didn’t recognize, right in the front. He went and leaned down, to answer. “Because he’s very, very good”, he said softly. “Will you be?” He spun too rapidly to allow for a response. Before he got back to his place, the questions had begun again.

“Majesty, you have commanded the largest ponies of the Kingdom! How are we to breed larger, if you take them all?” Unstated was the question of whether she expected them to pay for it.

Elizabeth was ready. “The Aliens are swift. Though the Dragoons are mostly smaller than most, they are still a burden. If a slightly larger pony will keep even one of my Dragoons out of reach of those foul jaws, then larger ponies I shall have.”

“Why ponies at all? Why have the Wall, and not stay behind it?” Because we’re not sniveling cowards, MacNeil wanted to say, just as he realized this one was really his. Elizabeth was in fact already turning.

“Colonel MacNeil will answer this, my lords”, the queen said, and stepped aside.

Kevin gripped the podium. “That’s a bundle to unwrap”, he responded. “You want larger steeds, so does Her Majesty. Unsaid last year, about the nomads I met: their have larger steeds. Thanks to policy” – and this body! – “last year I was not permitted to enter into discussions with them. We hope to encounter them again, or some like them. If we do, we can negotiate for larger steeds. But to meet them, we must be out looking again.
“So if we stay behind the walls, we won’t need to use larger steeds – but we’ll throw away the chance of getting yet larger ones.
“Without the walls, we’d have little chance at all. With Aliens about – and I do not believe that the small band which nearly slaughtered my command will have no counterparts this year – patrols will not be able to count on fleeing to ships, for while boarding they would be overrun. But with a fortress – there, gates can be opened, and they can stream in while those above rain death on the enemy.
“So it ties together – to have the one, we must have the other, and to have the other, we must have yet another, and to have it, we must have the first. So we need larger ponies. And if God is gracious – well, He’s always gracious, but if He’s favorable and especially generous in aiding us, Her Majesty will have the pleasure of selling back some of those ponies.
“Oh – don’t bother asking about who might get to have some of these larger steeds, until we’ve actually met some more nomads and learned just how much larger their steeds are and if we can trade for them.”

“What if they want to trade ponies for them?” some wit called. Replies came as shouts of derision mixed with laughter.

Kevin shrugged. “If for some strange reason they want to trade larger for smaller, I expect we ought to oblige them.”

“How much larger?!” The voice was from the back; Kevin knew it as belonging to a reasonable, if grasping, man.

“Well, I remember their saddles as higher than my eyes”, he joked. “But you know the heat of batt– No, you don’t know the heat of battle, do you?” He turned at a noise, and found McCutcheon beside him.

“I do, lad”, the general said softly. “In my dreams, those pygmies I fought still bear five-meter spears, and their shields are big enough a man could mount a sail and travel the islands.” He shook his head. “Some men remember aright, and others remember what hot blood told them. Others remember some of each. It's the rare man who remembers aright.” He smiled bleakly at Kevin, then turned to Elizabeth. “Majesty, if those steeds are eighteen hands high, one for my own would be all the reward I might ever want.” Back to Parliament, “But perhaps they’re only thirteen hands high – a bit taller than our best.” All eyes were on him as he scanned the faces, and Kevin saw another reason the man had risen to general rank as a commoner: he could command men without giving commands. “Should you truly wish to know how things look when a foe is coming with malice in his mind and weapons in his hands – or about his mouth, as the Colonel faced – come take a time, and learn it. I doubt neither Her Majesty nor her Colonel – they’ll be back.”
He had words for Kevin before he retreated. “It was a scouting party, lad. They’ll have others come to look where it went.” General’s eyes searched Colonel’s face as the words were received.

“Just let me pick the ground, sir.” He let the man older than his own father take a seat before turning back to the Middle Parliament.

“A thing to add”, MacNeil announced. “Those two thousand and a few aren’t the end of it. You’ve seen the requisitions for ponies – I’ll have two men for each of those.”

“Why so many? We could attack the southerners with that!”

“Might be easier, at that”, Kevin remarked, drawing chuckles. Attacking south, hopefully gaining sea room out of their cramped sea – like the eastern end of the Mediterranean on the Earth stolen from their ancestors – into a real ocean, was a commonly recurring dream. At the moment, having seen the real enemy face to face, the Colonel of Dragoons could concede that it would be much more a comfortable thing to fight humans. “But here’s why so many: my patrols are to be three hundred strong – four hundred, if they leave sight of shore. Without the nomads’ surprise assistance last year, none in my command would be other than Alien-food. From that battle, I judge that with the weapons and steeds we have, two hundred would likely have sufficed to allow fifty of us to survive and come home to tell of it.
“General McCutcheon has written of the wisdom of never assuming that what you know about the enemy is what is true about the enemy. What I knew was that the one band of Aliens was a certain size. I could not assume that meant all would be of that size. Thus, a standard patrol will have three hundred, not two, and an inland patrol will have four hundred, not three.
“But know this: I do not trust that even such numbers will suffice to win battles against these creatures. My wish, desiring to win, was for near-shore patrols of five hundred, and inland patrols of eight hundred. Unfortunately, there is another fact about armies which the general has written down to remind us: the larger the army, the slower it goes.” He flashed his best disarming grin. “More than that – Her Majesty reminded me that the Exchequer requires revenue; it is not magic.” The humor was rewarded with chuckles; among the more thoughtful, the reminded went home that without their vote of funding, none of this would happen.
“By any measure, enough on that. Another?”

“Lord – I suppose in this context, Colonel MacNeil, I believe I nearly understand the issues of wall and ponies and numbers: the wall is to keep from being overwhelmed, and to give patrols a place unto which they might flee; the larger ponies are to advantage the Dragoons in the matter of fleeing, that they might survive; the numbers are so that the patrols might not be slaughtered outright by the Aliens.
“Yet in that I find myself unable to discover one seemingly important aspect: when do we make an end of fleeing, and actually fight?”

“I judge you worthy of higher rank than you hold”, Kevin began. “You state our problem succinctly.
“Part of the answer is that we cannot at this time fully answer. Her Majesty and I find that the prospect of standing alone against these vermin is not pleasant. The appearance of the nomads at just this time is hopeful: consider – they wander across the hills, traveling the savanna as they please, apparently with no fear of the Aliens, yet no strangers to them either, and with a willingness – nay, a ferocious eagerness, to fight them. We hope for an alliance; until we know if such is possible, and then what form it might take, we really have no plans to ‘actually fight’...
“... except one. In the old records, a pattern appears. General, you’ve had some things to say about patterns....”

McCutcheon didn’t bother to even stand up. “Patterns. If the enemy falls into patterns, use them to defeat him.” He scratched his chin. “You mean the way they never left human fortifications be, once found.” The white-crowned head began to nod firmly. “Aye, the wall isn’t there just to keep them out, it’s to draw them in. The trick is to destroy their patrols until the whole thing is ready, and then fight one without quite killing it. Then it is to wait for word to get back to their kingdom, and to prepare.” His smile was friendly and the nod became approving. “Aye, the wall isn’t there so you don’t have to fight, it’s your decision on where to fight. Their pattern will draw them to your chosen field, so they can die.
“Majesty”, he added, “I’ll be taking some kin and friends along, if your coin stretches so far. I know some who hold a bit more understanding of fortifications, than myself.”

“No more than a dozen”, Elizabeth replied with a smile. The general nodded, satisfied.

“Basically that’s it”, Kevin agreed. “We want to fight – but the best way we can do that right now is make a place for them to come and die.”

“I wish to come see this peninsula”, a voice called from the left. “Did you choose it so the ships can bombard the Aliens as they approach the fortifications?”

“Hire a ship and sail on over”, Kevin replied. “True, that is part of the function of the squadron. There are zones down the center, though, where Aliens will be safe from bombardment. Under-major Granger has examined the ground, and we and Lord Sidmuth agree that will persuade the Aliens to avoid the shorelines, which will in turn bring them against the fortifications in a certain small area. The whole is designed to make the best use of that.”

“I see you’re trying to make the best use of the best we have – what, then, of these bloody commoners and their ancient bows?” The question dripped with sarcasm.

Kevin was just amused by the attitude. “There’s a tactic the nomads use that we don’t have the weapons for. Rather than try to teach hundreds of men totally new weapons, I asked what it is the weapons achieve, and what we might do to accomplish that. The answer was simple: the nomads were piercing the Aliens with weapons that don’t come out again, so when the injured Alien moves about, it finds the movement more difficult, and makes the wound worse with each motion.
“We really don’t have anything we can use, if we get close. But Captain Shaugnessey’s enjoyment of archery reminded me that we have a weapon which strikes from a range, throwing a projectile which pierces. But ordinary arrows are just an annoyance to these creatures, so I turned to the longbow.
“I don’t care who draws them. I care only about a few things: that they can send an arrow from a goodly distance, that enough men know their use that I don’t need to train anyone, and that the arrows they fire can be altered to be heavier and very difficult to pull out. Put a handful of these harpoon-like arrows into an Alien, and it won’t be moving faster than a pony any longer – and that’s the important thing.”

“Colonel, are you giving up the task of Bride’s Spokesman? If you’re out there, commanding this show, how will you do both?”

Lord Richard Grenville answered before Kevin’s mental gears finished switching. “Gerald”, he called with a laugh, “were I Bride’s Spokesman, I could think of no better place to be, or job to have! The few dozens of dispatches of Spokesman’s business would be lost in the scores from being commander of the scheme! Surrounded by other military men, I could be confident I wasn’t being spied on to learn of my inquiries, or their object. Oh, true”, he conceded with a wave of his hand, “some military folk can be bribed, but I think none such are likely to be found in a situation where death and deprivation are a likely part of events.
“Lord MacNeil, I envy you – no Bride’s Spokesman, I think, has ever had such a good place to hide.” He gave Kevin a casual version of a hand-to-brow salute.

“Well, I’m not there yet”, Kevin commented back, drawing laughter.

“Have you even talked to the family?” That came from Lord Henry Creevy, a man busy building a new place for himself in kingdom politics.

“Not so they’d know”, Kevin answered after a brief hesitation. General laughter erupted.

“So if we haven’t had any inquiries, we know it’s not us?” It was a frequent foe of Creevy, one Chauncy Chalmers.

“You catch me in an error”, Kevin dead-panned. “I seems you’re correct. Now several families will know they’re not on the list!” He let the laughter rise and begin to fade. “Lord Creevy, I’m sure you’re concerned with the succession, securing it with an heir. Rest assured; I will ask the necessary questions at the proper time.”

“And a lot of rubbish along the way!”

“There’s a funny thing about being Bride’s Spokesman”, Kevin related. “It comes from all the queries – make ten, be sure that three are just misdirection. Get ten answers back, find that two of the real seven don’t answer any question at all... but that one of those done for misdirection reveals some aspect never imagined. And it can be quite revealing, what some know about their neighbors, yet don’t even know the importance!”

One of the ladies in the chamber raised her voice. “What if he says ‘no’?” Silence fell.

It was a question Kevin had contemplated all too often, with a weight that sent him back to gripping the podium. If his rescuer didn’t come to aid his Queen.... “In that case, my lords and ladies, God help us all – in that case, God help us all.”




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I say, my dear Kuli, that session of Middle Parliament was spot on.

A goodly dissertation by her majesty; smart assignation of duties to them what asked pertinent questions, and the tactful taking on of a legend in his own time as military consultant, observer and reported to the Lords back at the "ranch", as it were.

Loved the interchange and wordplay.

Who says that all Brits have no sense of timing, panache for the dance?
;)
 
As much as I adore those Brits, long winded, and obscurative, they can be! #-o

SO! The bottom line is more troops, more ships, more ponies, and, hopefully (careful Rigel!), and heir to the throne, while eradicating the Aliens! ..|

Another change in style, and tone, Kuli! :=D:

GAWD! I do LOVE this story!! (group)

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


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Anaph halted. The column had to dodge around him; he was oblivious. Rigel waited a dozen heartbeats, then turned back to join him. A Rider mover to redirect traffic. Straining to see what Anaph might be looking for, Rigel saw movement on the slope.

“Idiot Scout”, Anaph muttered.

“Who?” The last Scout he’d seen came to mind. “Oran?”

“Oran’s not so... impetuous. One of the Yankees.” Anaph sighed. “He’s after the body. Someone already tried.”

And failed, Rigel understood. “Could you melt the snow for him, make it easier?”

Anaph chuckled. “No – okay, really, I could, but I won’t. It wouldn’t be good for the organisms there, and the need isn’t worth damaging them.”

“How big’s the need?” asked Rigel, curious. To most people, bringing back the body of a friend was pretty important.

Anaph was blunt. “Zero. The body is frozen. It’s not going anywhere. When the snow thaws and the path is plain, someone can go retrieve his things. I wouldn’t bring the body back at all – I’d rot it where it is.” Seeing Rigel’s shock, he explained.
“He went up there to die. It didn’t work – he’s up on top.” His Druid’s staff leveled to make a line from Rigel’s eyes to the distant building.

Rigel swallowed hard. “You said that before. You mean his pattern’s up in the – what, the circuits?”

Anaph shook his head. “No – but wait. I feel Ryan coming. I’ll tell you both.”

Equisetum, apparently, had come to love the snow; the two galloped with great abandon, Ryan leaning forward to hide from the force of the wind, but otherwise just riding. His horse didn’t seem to have a goal, until Titanium whistled; after that, it wasn’t quite a beeline, but still came right at the three, Druid, Earl, and squire. Rigel tried not to look at what he knew appeared to be one horse bowing to its superior.

“Ryan. I was ready to tell Rigel: the Yankee who came here to die is up above, in the building. He isn’t in the circuits, not completely. The Snatcher is building him a body.” That was disturbing enough; what came next made it seem nothing at all. “It’s not really a human body – it’s got something else mixed in.” His scowl would have frightened both lords if Anaph hadn’t been their friend. “It has circuits or whatever in it, like in my staff.”

“Puppet”, Ryan stated with a little shudder.

Rigel got the reference. “You think the Snatcher decided it needed a body?”

Ryan and Anaph shook their heads in unison. The Druid yielded to the Wizard. “Not that simple. It’s got his mind – what was his name.... Merlyn, or something. Right, Anaph?”

Before the Druid answered, there was a yell. Above, the Scout who’d gone after the body tumbled, then stopped on an outcrop. As they watched, he swung once, twice, then reached out and grabbed to the right, to hang from another rock point. He repeated the process twice, rested a bit, then started again.

Anaph frowned. “That one won’t hold.” He thought about yelling, but decided it wouldn’t do any good; the Scout’s only sensible option was to slide back down, but the best path for sliding was actually beyond his goal. Instead, the Druid studied the slope. Ryan noticed his humming first, and looked. Rigel saw the motion, but his turn was arrested at the sight of the Scout beginning his swing.

Anaph’s staff rose at the same moment, and the Druid stood in his stirrups. A small piece of Ryan’s mind was annoyed with the antics, but mostly he was trying to guess what Anaph had in mind. The answer showed above, as the Scout, with a surprised yelp, swung more powerfully than anything he’d done yet, and then back to the right even more powerfully. His momentum alone at that point would have carried him past his goal, but his muscles demonstrated a will not his own, carrying him farther still. His left hand, not his right, latched onto the sort of horn-shaped rock – and then he yelled, in fear, as the rock crumbled to gravel and he began to slide. Reflex caused him to push with that hand, spinning him so he could see below. Knees bent, turning feet into spring-mounted bumpers; hands pressed lightly on the slope, serving as rudders. Those below, an audience that slowed to watch, tracked him a hundred and forty meters along his way to the bottom. He only yelled once, a cry of pain – after which his left arm sucked into his body, and every bounce brought a yelp.

Anaph dismounted and walked to the landing site. He extended his staff to assist the Scout, who on standing found he couldn’t let go. “Peace, Scout”, Anaph commanded. “You were a fool to go up there. Now stand still.” The Druid no longer bothered to touch the part of a body he was examining, but for his subject’s sake he traced the length of the injured arm, with two fingers in the air and hand’s-width away. “It’s not broken. Got to Master Devon’s Healer” – he could sense one, near the river – “and tell him you’ve torn the tissues around the elbow, and bruised the bone on your forearm. Your wrist is badly strained, too. If you hurry, that will be easier to fix.” The Scout found he could let go of the staff; he stood mildly glaring at it, then glancing at ANaph, as he flexed the freed fingers. “Oh – tell everyone to stay off that slope! The first Scout that tried climbing there smacked his head and tore a knee, and now you’re not much better. You can all wait until the snow melts, and the ground dries, or I’ll rot the body and all its possessions right where it is! Got it?”

“But–“ There was no meeting those Druid eyes. “Understood, chief Druid. But – it’s not right to leave Mervynn there, all frozen”, the Scout added stubbornly.

Anaph sighed. Rita would do this better, but he wasn’t Rita. “Mervynn is where he wanted to be. He came out into the snow because life had become nothing but pain for him. He climbed that hill because he hoped he’d do what you just did – fall. Except he wanted to die. He didn’t fall, but he did die.” Except not really, he added mentally, but even I’m not stupid enough to go saying that. Yet. “So if you want to honor poor Mervynn, leave his body alone, and go listen to your fellow Yankees. There’s probably twenty more of you feeling almost that bad, okay? Put your energy to making sure no more follow him. Keep them alive, instead. Serve Life.”

“Serve Life”, the Yankee echoed in a shocked voice. Then, boldly, he added, “You’re a mean piece of work, Druid.”

Anaph felt guilty, at that. “Okay – I need to learn better. But we’re out here in the cold, and you have an arm that needs a Healer like five minutes ago, so there’s no time to be nice even if I knew how. So go.” He moved as though to prod the Scout with his staff; the Scout went, jogging, holding the injured arm close. Anaph watched, sensing; he turned away in a long moment, satisfied that this one, anyway, wasn’t aiming to die.

“Nice guesses”, Ryan congratulated him.

“Not guesses”, Anaph contradicted “His pain – you know this is hard to explain even to other Druids?” he asked. “His pain sort of stirred the echo of the other Scout’s pain, and the whole hillside is.... depressed, from Mervynn’s wish to die. It was enough to make clear what I felt from Eraigh.” He looked up the hill. “And up there... the Snatcher is sloppy with human patterns – I can feel Mervynn, everything from when he left the mills and – well, everything.”

“Sloppy – yeah”, Ryan responded. “Like the way all our patterns got like pieces ripped off that all got mixed and the mixed versions pasted back on.” He glanced at Austin. “I think it made us all a little bit more understanding, and a little more patient, with a little more endurance, and a little more gay.”

Austin glared for a moment before laughing. “That’s terrible”, he scolded. “What a thing to say! You should be pissed.”

“Um... why should I be pissed?” Ryan asked, taking the bait.

“That it didn’t make you totally gay – you’re too cute to be straight!” The squire managed to look both totally innocent and downright erotic at the same time.

“How long till you’re eighteen?” Ryan asked. “No, don’t answer that – it’s at least a year, right?. That should be long enough to explain what I promised for your birthday, to Lucinda.”

Rigel tried to hold it in, and failed; he laughed. That had shut Austin up, quite effectively. He got a dirty look from his squire, which stirred a wish he hadn’t made “Rigel’s Rule”; the dirty look seemed to want dirty desires as an answer. Or dirty dancing, a piece of his mind quipped, giving birth to an idea.

Ryan had turned back to Anaph. “So part human, part something else, part like your staff, except more. Is – does Mervynn even know what’s going on?”

Anaph looked away. “Yes. But I don’t think he’ll be just Mervynn when the Snatcher is done. It think he’s getting to help decide how this new body will look, but he’s not in charge of who he’ll be.”

“How could the Snatcher do this?” Austin questioned. “It’s horrible! It could have just turned any of us into some... thing.” His expression as he looked uphill wasn’t friendly.

“No”, Ryan said softly. “We want to live, and we want to be ourselves. That’s the only thing that makes sense – it could have turned us into anything it wanted right at the start. Instead, I think it had to hunt for us, to find a group of people with what it needed. Remember when it was shaping Anaph? It stopped – and I don’t think it was because you were so pissed, Rigel, I think it was because Anaph made up his mind that he didn’t want to be that other guy. I think it’s why the pool is so important for Druids and everyone: you have to known who you are, and want to be that guy, right Anaph? And it’s why the division between the Druids back during the war was so sharp: a Druid either wanted to conform to what the Snatcher had, or he was secure enough in his identity that it wasn’t even a possibility.
“I think Ocean understands that without having to say it. Sometimes I think she could teach the Stone – she owns herself so thoroughly there’s no space left for imagining it could be different. Sometimes she looks like she feels sorry for people who aren't confident of themselves, like they’re cripples. Heck, I’m not sure I get how the Snatcher could even carry her pattern here, she’s so... solid in belonging to herself.
“Now take this Mervynn: he came out here to die, right? That’s a real strong way of saying, ‘I don’t want to be ths self. I want this self to end. I want things to be different. From the Snatcher’s point of view I can see where that would be permission to do whatever it wanted.
“It didn’t do any of that to us, because we didn’t give permission. It must need permission, or it would have changed us all when it Snatched us.”

“Maybe they did.” The soft voice caught them all by surprise – except Anaph, who greeted the Scout without turning.

“Oran. You’re not going up.”

Scout Two shook his head. “Scout Eldredge told me. I made it a Scout order, too – not just stay off, but keep off anyone they see.” He went right back to topic. “How do you know the Snatcher didn’t change us?”

Ryan frowned and chewed on his upper lip, plainly thinking. Anaph shook his head. “We woke up here the same people we were before. The Snatcher doesn’t understand us enough to change memories.”

Oran shook his head. “Not like that – little things. Anaph, I can run for two days – I’ve done it. The worst effect it has on me is I get super-horny.” Austin perked up and looked at Oran afresh; Oran had expected it, and responded with a soft chuckle and shake of his head. “My eyes are good enough I can see almost as good as you guys with a telescope. I can hear as well as a rabbit, and when I get in the groove I can dodge rocks and bushes like a deer.”
His eyes settled on Ryan, as though daring him to disagree. “That’s not human – any of it. When I can jog into camp and tell Austin’s been sucking but not swallowing, by the smell, I know it’s Austin and not Ryan or another guy because you all smell different, and that’s not human.”

“You can tell whose cum it is by smell?” Austin blurted out.

“Yeah”, Oran answered shortly. “And I can tell if it’s you sneaking around in the snow or Rigel, by the sound of your walk, okay? You think that’s exciting, right? Well, some ways it is, but it’s scary, too – people aren’t supposed to be able to do those things. And I know”, he emphasized to Anaph, “people couldn’t do those on Earth. So the only way we can do them here is the Snatcher.”

“Maybe they were mutations here”, Ryan suggested, realizing his error before he finished the ast word.

“Maybe – that could be why the Snatcher knew how to do them”, Oran agreed. “But that doesn’t explain how we got them. This isn’t Marvel Comics, abilities don’t show up from getting bit by a spider or falling in chemicals. We didn’t pick them up from any infection, either. The only way we got them was when the Snatcher put us back together on this end. So it has played with us, and I don’t remember signing a permission form.”

“It was part of your pattern”, Anaph declared softly. “You loved to run, it changed you so you could really run. When you went backpacking, you loved to know everything around you, didn’t you?” Oran had to nod. “So it gave you things that fulfilled that. It gave you abilities that would have saved you some bad situations out in the wilderness. It gave you an ability to have a pet like you never dared ask for, but one that’s a friend, too – just like Casey. We all have things like that about us”, he said firmly, heading off Oran’s stirring anger – because if Oran demanded how Anaph knew that, he would have no answer but, “I can see it”... because he didn’t know how he knew them, either, and in fact was only certain they were dead-on with Oran because of Oran’s reaction. “So the Snatcher felt those things about us, and added gifts we’d need, that fit.”

Ryan gave his head a little shake. “More”, eh observed, awe in his voice. “It chose us as a group because we were the right kinds of people to give those gifts to. It needed a Healer, a Druid, Scouts, a Hunter, and all the rest. We had the desires those things would match.”

“Yea, I wanted to be a lord”, Rigel said sarcastically.

Ryan laughed. “You didn’t know what you wanted to be! But think about it, Rye – when we all argued about what flick to see, or where to eat, who sorted it through and took charge? You.”

Rigel blinked; his friend was right... mostly. “I just wanted everyone to stop arguing so we could just go do something.”

Oran was grinning now. “That’s what you do as Earl, dude! You pick directions and keep everyone from arguing, and then get out of the way!”

Ryan punched his best friend in the shoulder. “Actually, what he does is goes and hides, to be left alone till he has to do it again”, he related, laughing.

“Well, I do”, Rigel admitted, embarrassed. “But not as much as I used to”, he added thoughtfully. “I guess I was a good choice for leader, except... Anaph, is the Snatcher still changing us, or... what?”

“Shaping what it gave at the first”, Anaph replied. “Ryan, I know – it kept changing me. That’s easy: I kneeled to Rigel because I needed a leader. I needed someone to tell me where to go. I was like a little kid, mostly insecure. All I had was I used to sit in gardens and parks and talk to the trees. Trees listened, and they didn’t tell me I was full of shit or an idiot.”

Rigel saw that first encounter with a new light. “Do the trees really talk?”

Anaph laughed, shedding his somber reflective mood. “No. When I thought I heard the trees, I was hearing the Snatcher.” Anger crept in as the Druid stopped sounding light-hearted. “It has the voices of captive Druids, the ones that betrayed the Stone. Many of them still loved trees, so it had voices to talk the way it needed me to hear.”

“Yeah, well I think the listening goes the other way, now”, Rigel assured his young friend.

Ryan agreed. “I’d say the Snatcher finally hit the jackpot with us. We have super-Scouts, the Druid to end all Druids, and the rest, and an awesome Earl to keep us focused. We have knights and warriors and workers and servants, with smiths and mills to make things for us. The Snatcher is looking, and seeing that we’re the ones it needed. Maybe getting rid of the Others is why we’re here, and we’re doing it smart, not just charging into battle painted blue.” He caught them all up with a glance, but his gaze landed on Anaph.
“And when someone needs something, it isn’t the Snatcher picking one of us to fetch and carry – it’s our mighty Druid doing the calling, and the Snatcher lends a hand.”

“Except it’s kind of broken”, Oran reminded them. “And now it has someone to play with – a slave”, he stated, waving uphill.

“Not a slave”, Ryan disagreed. “Not a puppet, either – an avatar.”




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Kuli,
An interesting chapter.

We start with the continuation of our "I wanna die" guy, and his compatriots trying to get up to retrieve his body. I love the way Anaph "gave assist" to get the guy over to "safe" ground to slide back down the hill.

The discussions of the Snatcher and what he has or has not done is intriguing, too.
Especially the Six Million Dollar Avatar project currently under way.

The "fine tuning" discussions were quite interesting, too - and I KNOW Austin appreciated one of the side effects of Scout Run capability - Oran Scout, Squire Austin is in need of a protein boost - Cum on Down.

Oran can smell each guy's scent and cum and know who the donor was?
Spooky.

:D ..| :=D: :wave: (*8*)
 
Fascinating developments. Oran should be able to tell approximately what each guy's been eating, too!

They've been talking about "gifts" for ages...is this really the first time they realized that the gifts were changes from the Snatcher?

I have to confess, I don't remember Mervynn's suicide. What chapter was that in?
 
Especially the Six Million Dollar Avatar project currently under way.

:rotflmao:

Wait till you see..... :eek:

Oran can smell each guy's scent and cum and know who the donor was?
Spooky.

Not as good a nose as Streaker or Pounces, I know, but it's something. :D

Fascinating developments. Oran should be able to tell approximately what each guy's been eating, too!

Absolutely. Especially when their diet is so restricted.

They've been talking about "gifts" for ages...is this really the first time they realized that the gifts were changes from the Snatcher?

Maybe no one's had the guts to vocalize it before.

I have to confess, I don't remember Mervynn's suicide. What chapter was that in?

http://www.justusboys.com/forum/showpost.php?p=6672650&postcount=1201
 
OK, I do remember that. I don't remember any leadin, or Mervynn being a character before that (but there are a lot of characters in this, and I can't keep track as well as I'd like to). I guess he wasn't noticeably despondent beforehand or anything?

Anyway, it's nice to know I didn't miss anything.
 
OK, I do remember that. I don't remember any leadin, or Mervynn being a character before that (but there are a lot of characters in this, and I can't keep track as well as I'd like to). I guess he wasn't noticeably despondent beforehand or anything?

Anyway, it's nice to know I didn't miss anything.

Note that in the chapter, even one of his group's own leaders wasn't sure of who he was. You were supposed to feel the same way.
 
Note that in the chapter, even one of his group's own leaders wasn't sure of who he was. You were supposed to feel the same way.

I guess part of the tragedy of the whole thing was that no one really knew him. No wonder he felt isolated.
 
Hmmm ... Fascinating!

SO ... Were the Celts, Quistadors, and Brits, "gifted" too?

The Celts had their Druids, Healers, Wise Women, and Elders. The Quistadors had, well, the Sword of Escobar, but not much else, and that was "granted" by the Druids. And, the Brits seem pretty much themselves, just as they are.

It is becoming even more obvious that this is a Battle between "The Snatcher(s)" and "The Others". And, The Snatcher is using "pawns" to fight it, not directly engaging itself (at least not at this late stage).

Which brings up another question ...

Are The Others perhaps the pawns of yet another entity? Are we into something here akin to "Tron"?

Now my old, tired, brain is churning, and it's time to head up to bed. Should make for some interesting dreams, though! :=D: ..|

THANK YOU!, Kuli!! (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss:(*8*)
Chaz :luv:
 
157
Negotiations


Elizabeth, heir of the House of Stuart-Bóruma, stared west across the hills, mist making them look like waves, toward her port where rolled real waves. From the high balcony of what her father had made a conference suite, the shore was sometimes visible as a hint of color, a thin trace distinguishable mostly because it wasn’t land – but only when conditions were just right, when (as old Roberson, the royal astronomer and general scientist, had explained) the atmosphere bent light from beyond the horizon. She knew this wasn’t one of those times, but just then she dearly wished she could see farther, to what was changing from distant land to a frontier of the Kingdom. On a more practical level, though, she was waiting for Kevin MacNeil, for the moment when she would speak and prevent his inevitable foray against her defenses. With her best course at the moment being silence, she entertained herself with watching men scrambling over bundled spar and line, checking yet again that all was ready for the first venture of the Fleet in over two decades that wasn’t just an exercise of one sort or another. These supplies were for a heavy frigate – the Hindmost, she knew, from the figurehead parts in the lead wagon. Something had failed to be ship-shape, or so she deduced from the way two officers were vigorously disputing some matter. The ship’s name amused her; from the phrase “Devil take the hindmost!”, it had been a bit of an off-line joke from the eccentric lord who’d paid for the keel and frame, a tweak at a sometime foe in Parliament who was fond of muttering, or even exclaiming “Every man for himself!” when debate became argument and order broke down. As had her father, she abode by Fleet’s revenge: never, ever naming the man who’d inflicted the name on them. But her new captain had transformed it to a war cry, to be yelled when engaging the enemy, instead of the cringing cowardice it had originally meant. She wondered if that new captain realized that the phrase came from two centuries or more before the Boarding – few cared about “pre-history”, as it was sometimes deridingly called. If he did, what – Kevin was shuffling pages. She turned just as he was clearing his throat.

“He will come, won’t he?” she asked, all concern. “You told Parliament, ‘God help us all’ – so he will come, you are sure?”

MacNeil rolled together the papers he’d finished with and made as though to throw them in the fire. The queen tensed, unsure of how upset he was with her. He nodded, satisfied he’d made a point, and instead tossed them on the room’s large oval table. “You’re mad”, he commented as he hooked an upholstered chair with a foot and dropped into it as it landed behind him. “Parliament will panic.” He shrugged. “Let’s see what Owen has to say, though.”

“And Alfred”, came a voice from the far end, where a door stood open, a young voice, “and Jays.” Elizabeth and Kevin chuckled together; of course, since Jays had been given charge of seeing that Elizabeth’s document was copied, he and Alfred would have made a copy for themselves, enabling them to offer advice, asked or not.

“Jays”, Kevin called back, “have you not taught that young whelp to read?”

“Two young whelps, master Kevin”, returned Alfred’s voice. “If Sir Jays finds thought of a replacement to be wise, I judge it best to imitate his prudence. As for reading, they are better pupils than were you, for they know not merely how to read, but when not to.” Boys’ muffled laughter followed that.

“Touché”, Elizabeth pronounced, skewering Kevin with a finger under the third rib.

He shook his head. “It wasn’t that sharp.” He raised his voice. “Perhaps later they can learn better than their teachers when to read and when not.”

“Who in the realm could judge that better than a gentleman’s gentleman?” Lord Logan, Prime Minister to Elizabeth the Queen, entered the fray, and ended it, with that. Tossing his copy of the queen’s latest on the table, he dropped into the seat with its back nearest the fire. “Alfred, has either of them learned to tend a fire?” he called. Both came running. One would have passed unremarked on any street in Lost Britain; at sight of the other, Kevin gasped. “He looks pureblood!”

Elizabeth nodded. “He does”, she marveled.

“Three-quarters”, Alfred declared. “Onatah, show the queen your marks.”

The boy who looked like those who had met the Mayflower rather than those on it stood. “Master Okanatee”, he said softly, bowing to Alfred. One smooth movement landed his shirt on the Prime Minister’s chair arm; a second dropped his trousers, and a third the loincloth beneath. Kevin didn’t remember being that composed, in just bare skin, in front of any female, once he’d become aware of the difference. This lad was plainly old enough to be aware, yet–

“Hey! Why the cuts there?” he asked in astonishment, pointing.

Onatah patted his crotch hair, under which fine scars showed. “Our people lost most of our ancient ways. I am strong, and swift. So it was I joined the manhood test before my time, and did well. One of age by custom is marked by the Source, as I am now. Since I was not, then, the elders sought wisdom from the spirits. So I was given marks to show men and the spirits I was a man also.” Kevin whistled; that had taken courage of a kind few he knew had.

“The ones on your buttocks?” inquired Lord Logan.

“They are a message to me. And to those who know the marks. It is concerning my life-path”, he explained. From the tone of his voice they all understood that was the end of the explanation.

Well, perhaps not all. “Those, too, belong to a young man strong and swift and come early to being a man?” Elizabeth wondered, reaching to trace the hash marks on one smooth cheek, which could be seen to be a mirror of the set on the other.

Onatah inclined his head. “You see well. Will you speak of these?” He finished with a word Kevin didn’t hear clearly, but was sure he couldn’t have pronounced anyway. The boy turned tracing a double line that rose faintly up the outside of his thigh, curved inward before reaching the crease where leg meets hip, and then hooking in to end behind his genitals – a location he showed by lifting one leg high and draping it over his own neck, showing about as much difficulty as MacNeil had getting seated on a pony.

Three guesses came to Elizabeth’s mind, but they weren’t what really struck her. A firm impression came when she watched that toned young leg hook up and over Onatah’s neck. “Very strong, to stand alone on one foot, while the” – she had to hunt for the term, and wasn’t sure even when she grabbed at what came – “Source-speaker wrote the spirits’... boundaries on you. I don’t know if that’s the right word – no, I’m confident it isn’t, but I don’t know the right word”, she corrected herself.

Onatah unhooked his leg with no help from hands that he folded in front of him, fingertips to elbow, palm to arm. Foot touched floor, but there was no interruption on the flow of motion that took the boy to balancing on his toes, tipping forward, and touching his nose to the floor between Elizabeth’s toes. Then he stood, still in the same flowing motion. “Truly the Source sent me! Chief Mother, I am delivered to you.”

Elizabeth smiled. “Alfred, which of these lads was yours?

Alfred shook his head, a wry smile on his features. “Onatah had not yet said. My queen, the Haudenosaunee elders sent him. I would not have chosen him, but when three of them brave Blackpool, one guesses a thing ought be taken seriously. Onatah, please dress again.”

“Yes, Okanatee.” He wasn’t quite as efficient at dressing as undressing, but few humans are.

“Wasn’t that ‘master Okanatee’?” Kevin inquired.

“I am delivered to Chief Mother”, was all the reply he got, one he took to mean he’d transferred service -- which meant in turn that this youngster of the North American natives who weren't quite subjects of the Crown was to be Jays' replacement.

“I dare say, Elizabeth, having him about would render your plans less lamentable lunacy and a bit more palatable”, Jays’ voice observed as its own used a simple wooden chair to assist himself in making the walk from side room to conference table. “He lacks polish, but there a yet a number of days.”

Once, not long before, Elizabeth would have protested that she didn’t need a replacement for Jays. She knew when not to make herself seem foolish, though: today was one of her faithful friend’s stronger showings in some time. Instead she glided past the boy to plant a kiss on the old man’s head. When she pulled back, Onatah reached over to touch where her lips hand been, then touched those fingers to his bare chest, right over his heart. No one asked, as he pulled his shirt fully on; no one believed they’d get an answer that made sense.

“The other Haudenosaunee went back home?” Kevin asked Alfred.

His faithful companion shook his head. “They wished to stay a time. Their people are overdue hospitality here, so they have a room in the palace.”

“I’d like to meet them”, Kevin told Alfred and Onatah both. Then it was Elizabeth’s turn. “Girl, why should we not chain you to your bed and keep you in the palace?” he demanded. The expression on Owen Logan’s face offered no refuge.

“Kevin, I have to meet him! You suggested the marriage. The few who know see it’s brilliant. I see the excellent advantages. But I’ll no more just marry someone I haven’t met just because it seems like a good plan than... than Onatah would strip and let us draw on his body with our knives just because the slices he has now are impressive!” There was no acting, here; she put her foot down firmly. “I will not marry a man I haven’t met. And I won’t settle for ‘meeting’ at some banquet, or a quiet ride at Aidan’s Port. I require that I see him as his accustomed self, in actual life – not some contrived affair or situation.
“Yes, there is risk – of course there’s risk! But a sad life is what one would have, with no risk.”

“Majesty, take more Amazons”, the Prime Minister practically ordered. “Half a century would not be amiss.”

“Yet very obvious”, Elizabeth countered.

Kevin shook his head, smiling. His turn was next, to counter the complaint. “Many Amazons qualify as Marines. Most qualify as sailors. A few extra of each....” He and Lord Owen exchanged a knowing look: in the end, she’d get her way, and in the end, they’d have arrangements to satisfy them – mostly; there would be compromise on both sides.

“An hour”, the Prime Minister mouthed.

“Three-quarters”, MacNeil countered – and the battle was on.




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The Haudenosaunee are also represented in the land of New Britain?
Now we're talking natives VERY close to my neck of the woods.

Our Museum and Science Center has a section on the Keepers of the Western Door (Senecas) as well as the other 5 Nations. We also have a large cultural center fairly close by.

An interesting chapter. Elizabeth WILL undertake to meet this "Ard Rye" character in his native element.

The "replacement" for Jay is an interesting young man. Unabashed, he disrobes to show his marks, regardless of their location on his body, or the persons in attendance.

You continue to build our interest, Kuli.
:wave:
 
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