Episode 56







 


It was the smell you noticed first. Because the garden was inside, the air was thick with heady scents, like breathing pure perfume, and the colours burst in on you and ran riot behind your eyes, drowning the senses with delight.


The sheer relief of seeing something solid was a blessing to the soul and a balm to the body. Dutch’s first instinct was to reach out for the nearest bush and run the leaves between her fingers, or kneel down and dig her hands into the lovely brown soil. And if this wasn’t enough to lift the heart and heal the mind, one of the walls was lined with diamond shaped windows. Without hesitation Dutch walked towards them and stood staring out at the now familiar landscape of winding rivers and overarching bone pillars running down the side of the green valley. She was quite high up, so the slum city wasn’t immediately visible unless she looked down. All this did much to propitiate Dutch’s bad mood and set her in a more beautiful frame of mind. But the balance was fragile and Officer Angelo was busy tipping the scales in the wrong direction.


Officer Angelo, wild eyed and hollow cheeked was haranguing a poor Ahram woman who couldn’t understand what he was talking about. He had nearly gone crazy through the days and nights wondering where Rose was and had hollered himself hoarse to no avail.


“They’ve done something to her,” he said, expecting Dutch to sympathise and suggest something to help alleviate his anxiety which was running rampant. But Dutch’s ability to care was gone. She shrugged her shoulders and tried her best to hold onto her peace of mind, but his whining and bleating was starting to get on her tits.


“Why won’t they let me see her? Have you seen her?”


She waved him off like an irritating little buzzy fly. She felt it impossible to drum up any sympathy for him. He wasn’t worried about Rose; he was just feeling sorry for himself because he was all on his lonesome now. What’s a boy to do without his momma?   What’s a boy to do without being waited on hand and foot? ‘Leave Rose alone for god’s sake’ she thought. ‘She just needs a break from you is what’s wrong with her’.


She didn’t care much for Rose at that moment either. Not that she had anything against her – she liked her really, but Rose’s life was Rose’s life and she was interested in her own for once.


There was more shuffling behind her as Sweet Mary and her female guide entered. Officer Angelo immediately headed for Sweet Mary and began pouring out his litany of woes into her ear.


“Ah,” said Dutch, unaware that she was speaking out loud. “Here she comes, right on cue. Miss I’m-too-good-for-you-now. ‘It was okay for us to be friends when I was a whore….but I’m better than that now. I’ve changed’’,” she said, mimicking Sweet Mary’s cutie-pie voice.


Sweet Mary and Officer Angelo froze in their tracks. Slowly they turned to look back at Dutch as if she was a fly in their soup.


“What you looking at, Barbie doll? Why don’t you comfort the little cry baby there. Comfort the men who treat you like shit, and just ignore me.”


Sweet Mary stood there with her mouth opening and closing like a fish out of water, too stunned to say anything.


“Except of course when you need me to carry and cajole and kiss you better. Ever since we met I’ve had to hold your hand every step of the way, practically had to wipe your arse for you. And what thanks do I get?”


The voices in her head had switched themselves on now and it seemed there was no switching them off. Sometimes Dutch was aware and appalled by what she was saying, other times she simply revelled in the nastiness of it, wallowing in the words she was spitting out. Her inner censor had broken down completely and her emotions were out of her control.


Then Righteous and Noot entered the room and redirected her attention.


“Uh,” she said. “Uh, oh, The righteous one. Enter the Sage. We are all saved. God be praised. So tell us all-seeing one….what have you to sooth for us today?” Dutch did a little curtsy and bowed her head. “Anything? A little crumb of wisdom…advice? No? Nothing new there then. And I see you have your trusted companion with you, Sancho Panza, to point you in the right direction…. oops. Sorry. I forgot you might have feelings.”


Righteous showed no sign of having heard her. He stood like a sentinel in the centre of the room, Noot’s hand lying lightly on his arm. In fact everyone was standing pretty much like statues, struck dumb to their roots. But Dutch wasn’t finished yet. Swivelling on her heel she was just in time to catch the Seesh entering the room.


“Well lookee here. See what the dog brought in, Mr I’m-just-a-lovable-old-man, doing my best for the munchkins. So tell us Mr Wizard. Where is his Rose? Please give her back because this guy is driving me nuts with his wailing and he’s just not going to shut up until he sees her.”


The Seesh stood for a moment and appraised the situation.


“I can understand that you are upset…”


“Don’t give us that crap. He wants to see his girlfriend. You know; the old broad with the neon streak in her hair? Christ you’d think she’d have acquired a bit of dignity in her old age. C’mon uncle,” said Dutch, and walked towards the Seesh in a no-nonsense manner. “I am sick and tired of all this frittering about. No more talking unless you want me to slap you around a bit. I’ve had a gutful of you buggers and I’m just dying to get my hands on one of you lizard’s gizzards.”


Dutch stopped and stared at the Seesh from a very dangerous edge about six inches away.


“Of course I will take you to her,” he answered with cool aplomb.


“…was the correct answer. Lead on McDuff. Jesus. It’s like squeezing blood out of a stone here. Come on Blondie, keep up or do we have to carry you again.”


Sweet Mary’s face was beginning to crumble now. Her lower lip trembled as she spoke.


“You don’t have to carry me ever again,” she said and flounced after the Seesh.


 


Rose’s room was every little girl’s dream, from the Sleeping-Beauty wallpaper to the squirrel and woodland-animal motif eiderdown. A soft pile Mickey Mouse carpet stretched from wall to wall and little wooden windows opened to let in the wonderful sounds of birds and babbling brooks. There were cute little cupboards of different colours, labelled ‘Toys’ and ‘Clothes’ and ‘Books’ and ever so much more. It was in short a wonderland….and right in the middle of it was Rose, sitting on the floor, legs folded neatly underneath her, her favourite doll upon her lap, bone flute clutched to her chest. She looked just like a child, figuratively and also literally. She looked tiny because the whole room was SO large. To Dutch and the gang who stood in the giant doorway, it looked the way it would look to a child. Everything was huge. The bed came up to chest height and the dressing table as high as a mountain peak. The doll’s cradle looked like a full size one.


Angelo immediately went forward and found himself halted by an invisible barrier. Dutch watched him try again but with the same result. Sweet Mary also tried but neither could cross the threshold. No one could approach her.


Dutch turned her suspicious eye on the Seesh.


“This just will not do you know.”


“I had nothing to do with this. She’s doing it herself,” said the Seesh quickly before Dutch could threaten him. “She doesn’t want anyone to approach her. Not even me. I don’t know how she is doing it. This room is of her own making and seemingly inviolate.”


“Rose,” called Angelo with a touch a hysteria in his voice, but she gave no acknowledgment of hearing him.


“Hoo boy, things are going to get interesting around here,” said Dutch, cracking her knuckles. “How come she can suddenly do something like this?” she said, looking hard at the Seesh.


“The bones have a lot of energy. She has learned how to use it to her advantage.”


“And there’s no way you can get to her?” asked Dutch, her lips locked in a grim smile.


“No.”


Dutch stared at the Seesh for a long time, trying to weigh up whether he was telling the truth or not. He seemed genuine but she had made it her motto never to trust a man. Suddenly she burst out laughing. It was so sudden that everyone jumped. It wasn’t sarcastic, facetious laughter, but real heartfelt humour that went on and on. Everyone looked at her as if she had lost her mind completely.


 “She got away!” she said. “She got away from you,” and burst out laughing again. Sweet Mary and Angelo just looked confused.


“Rose has managed to escape,” explained Dutch. “He has taken us prisoner, but he can’t touch her. She managed to get away from him.” Dutch wiped her eye with the back of her hand. “Oh that feels so much better. Seems she’s spoilt your plans for you,” she said to the Seesh.


But the Seesh was no longer paying her any attention. His eyes were riveted to Righteous Alchemy and both stood staring at each other, unmoving and breathless, like two snakes about to strike. Something was going down.


 


The ship slewed and yawed as the storm broke all around. The rigging slapped in the wind and sang as the sails filled and billowed out, bending the masts to their limit and buffeting the ship against the angry sea. Waves crashed over the deck and all was awash in the darkening chaos. Bare feet slapped the wet deck as the sailors ran and clambered up into the rigging, clawing at the sails to try and spill the wind that was threatening to capsize them. Of the three main masts, all the mainsails and the mizzens were set and ready to rip themselves to bits at any moment.


The storm had come out of nowhere, catching the drunken pirate captain with his pants down and fast asleep on his favourite whore. They had just cleared land west of the Amerigues and were headed for the Interstellar Transporter Terminal in Katainya. The ‘Maria Rosa’ was a pirate slaver cruising the coasts of the southern Atlantic Ocean for slaves to work on the Terra-forming colonies in Messier 31. But because of the massively long space flights to these colonies, some ten years in hyper drive, there was a great demand for children, who would be in their prime by the time they got there.


“Well, well. What have we here?” boomed the voice of God from the heart of the thunderstorm as the ten year old Righteous ran pell-mell into two tree-trunk legs that blocked his way.


 


The source of his blackness stood right there in front of him. Righteous stood like blind Samson, chained to two pillars, straining to push them over and bring this whole imaginary charade tumbling down about his ears. But the pillars held. Again and again Righteous strove to sweep aside the veil of blindness and peek beneath the whitewash of reality that the Seesh was presenting to them; but without success. He felt his body quivering with strain as if he’d just run a hundred miles. Noot patted his arm and tried to calm him down but Righteous swept away this irritation with his mind, keeping his concentration on the little old man. He knew he was not who he pretended to be. He knew he was the key, but he did not know how to turn him. The Seesh was playing hide and seek, and as Righteous lunged to grab hold of him he found himself clutching a phantom. They were like two shadows dodging each other in the abyss, the Seesh always one step ahead of Righteous.


Dutch and the others watched in fascination as the two stood locked in a silent deadly battle, Righteous sweating from every pore and struggling for breath, the old man leaning on his stick, calm and collected.


Nothing happened physically and yet they could feel the battle raging just beneath the skin, a battle of perception; a battle of minds which Righteous seemed to be slowly losing. Dutch cast around for something that would help Righteous and once again her eyes alighted on Rose, sitting so calmly and quietly with her doll on her lap…and the penny dropped.


“It’s Rose,” she shouted at Righteous. “It’s Rose,” came her cry again, hoping on hope that she could penetrate Righteous’ consciousness. She had to get her message through to him.


“Rose is his Achilles heel.”


 


Young Righteous tried to dodge around the massive hairy legs of the captain blocking his way, desperately clinging to a little rag-and-bone doll his mother had made for him. He never quite knew if the doll was an effigy of himself designed to give him protection from his father and other evils, or a voodoo-effigy of his father which his mother had used to put an end to his useless life. The crudely carved face gave him no clue, but he loved that doll and clung to it for dear life. It was all he had to remind him of them. Then a watery wave hit him square in the face and sent him skidding into the scuppers. More laughter from God and a divine hand plucked him up and set him back on his feet.


He was a sturdy little boy, well used to straddling the deck in all sorts of weather while his father fished and drank and cursed his luck for having a son born blind as a bat.


“What have you got there you little thief?” roared the captain in good humour. “Show me your little treasure.”


Little Righteous clutched frantically at the doll. He knew it was only a matter of moments before this vindictive old reprobate would take it away from him. He also believed, mistakenly or not, that then he would never be free of this man, for whoever held the doll would hold his soul.


Without thinking he flung the doll out over the side of the ship into the broiling darkness.


 


With a flick of his wrist Righteous sent Rose and her room spinning off into the whirlwind of white which immediately swallowed them up. Officer Angelo watched her go in dumb horror and instinctively the Seesh reached out for Rose but she was already beyond his grasp.


In that split second Righteous stepped in between the pillars of illusion – and began bleeding his blackness all over the nice white floors. He struck down to the root of the bone structure, seeking to burn out the bane of his blindness. The Seesh battled desperately to save his citadel and redress the balance, but Righteous was rampantly ripping up his world by the handfuls and casting it into nothingness. And then, as if in sympathy with his domain, the Seesh also started to come apart at the seams. As they watched he began to waver and his mortal frame began to age and sag. Soon his empty skin hung in wrinkled folds upon his bent bones and he stooped almost to the ground. Righteous kept up the relentless pressure and the humans almost began to feel sorry for the Seesh…….until they saw a strange incandescence begin to burn from within the withered husk of his body.


For a moment Dutch and the gang doubted their eyes as the old man seemed to rise up again, younger and more rejuvenated - that smile upon his face. His body began to glow with renewed vigour as he grew bigger and higher; his body no longer flesh, but transmuted into blazing light. He was still recognizably Ahram, but much more, much greater, increasing in power and size until he stood towering many miles above them: absolute, invincible, glowing like a divine being, as if he were the original godhead archetype from the beginning of time, a mould of pure energy on which all the other Ahram were fashioned and then brought to life.


 


The pirate was a jolly old soul, and his laughter thundered from the mouth of the storm. He was jolly especially at times like this when the world stood on its end, revelling in the daring high-wire walk along the razors edge as his ship keeled over again and dipped her main-top spars into the briny.


“Get those sails in you devils or we’re done for,” he bellowed.


It wasn’t possible that something wouldn’t give way, and everyone waited for that crack of wood that would signify a broken mast and a quick trip down to Davey Jones’ locker with all sails still set.


“Enough of these games,” said the pirate and picked up the little boy by the scruff of the neck with his stainless steel hook.


 


The old Ahram man’s walking stick was the final surprise for the stupefied humans as it transmuted into a darkly flaming crozier whose looped bone circle seemed barely able to contain the miniature black hole swimming malignly within its perimeter.


This was no ordinary crozier like the Rider used.


This was a destroyer of worlds.


This was Armageddon on a stick, blazing with such intensity as if to rip apart the fabric of the cosmos and churn everything into a maelstrom of primal particles. Its only drawback was that it drew heavily on flesh and blood to fuel it. Through all this sizzling energy they could just see the old Ahram man, his eyes burning black like his crozier, as if he and it were one and the same, interchangeable, the one bleeding into the other. His physical body was so used up, consumed, that it seemed to be held upright and animated only by the power of the crozier, and begged the question; who was the master of who?


In one simple swoop he lifted Righteous up and pinned him against the stars, hanging him on an invisible nail. Laughter rang through the hall, and Righteous began to dance. He laughed and danced like a mad voodoo doll, jerking and jiving with obscene gaiety until his bones rattled like stones in a bag.


And then for an encore the Seesh opened up a wormhole at their feet.

Episode 55









 


THE DRAGONS DOOR


 




The giant planetoid convulsed. A gigantic fart tore through Eric the ore-miner’s old cave where he had taken refuge after his crash. An eruption of sulphurous wind blasted away any signs of his recent sojourn there, hurling all his paraphernalia out of the cave and into outer space: his empty oxygen cylinders and Mech-suit, his personal knickknacks and his old army blanket, all floated off towards the stars, tumbling over each other in slow motion like laundry in some vast washing machine. The wreck of his old abandoned spaceship rattled as some inner convulsions heaved up the surface of the green planet and then settled down again.


 




 ***************


 


They never knew quite when they had entered the spaceship, or Cantave as Garm had called it, if indeed they had done so; they just knew that they had walked for a long time in absolute whiteness. Every time they took a step they felt like they were going to fall right through the cloud of white.


“This is as far as I go,” said the Rider. “I hope you have enjoyed the tour so far, but this is where the fun actually starts. Untie them,” he said, and the guards shuffled to obey.


Then he said, looking at Dutch but indicating to Sweet Mary. “It looked a lot worse than it actually was.”


Dutch looked back at him with a cold, blank expression that would have sent shivers down any mortal spine.


The Rider shrugged and smiled a strange little smile. “I have to go now. Perhaps we’ll meet again,” he said looking at Dutch. “Who knows? Maybe you’ll get your chance for revenge.” Dutch didn’t say a word.


“If you would care to wait here,” he said. “The Seesh will be out shortly to entertain you,” he laughed and then turned and glided off into the white. The guards quickly cut the prisoners loose and marched off, leaving the little group to grope around on their own.


“What are we supposed to do now?” asked Angelo just for something to say.


Dutch found herself being more than a little aggravated that she hadn’t been able to rip the Rider limb from limb.


“Hello?” she called out belligerently, quite surprised that there was an echo. That meant they were in a big hall of sorts, not in an actual cloud. When she looked at the white, she couldn’t tell whether there was a wall five inches from her nose or five miles away. Even when she turned to look at the others, the white seemed to engulf them and the further away they were, the less clearly she could see them.


As she stared, several female Ahram appeared out of the whiteness bearing trays of food and seat-cushions which they placed seemingly in mid-air in front of the humans. The tables were invisible to the humans; similarly the doors through which the women had entered, and through which they now exited. Dutch walked over to a food tray and explored underneath it. Sure enough, there was a boxlike shape holding up the tray, but these objects had absolutely no delineation. Without any shadows they were impossible to see.


So there they stood, looking in stupid amazement at the cushion seats and trays of food hovering in the air. Dutch was the first to snap out of the trance.


“Where is the Counsellor?” she asked, noticing that he too was missing. Everyone looked round but could offer no explanation.


“He is being taken care of elsewhere,” said an old Ahram man who appeared out of nowhere too.


“Please come and sit down. You must be weary,” he spoke in a quiet, soothing voice. “Come, eat and rest,” he indicated the couches and the trays laden with fruit and food with his walking stick. Rose went forward without hesitation and sat down close to him. She sat quite happily with her hands folded in her lap and a smile on her face. Her eyes never left the Ahram.


“Who are you?” asked Dutch in her own inimitable style.


“I am the Seesh, and I am pleased to make your acquaintance.”


They all were mystified. Everyone believed the legendary Seesh to be an all-powerful and terrifying figure who struck fear into all his people. But there in front of them stood an ordinary old Ahram man.


‘So much for rumours’ thought Dutch. When someone hides themselves away for long enough their reputation can grow to gigantic proportions. It made sense.


The old Ahram tapped his way over to a couch next to Rose and sat down heavily, as if he suffered from arthritis or something. He twirled his walking stick in his hands as he spoke.


“The joys of getting old,” he said. “And I am old. Several hundred years I should think. I have lost count. What you’d call a biblical age.” He turned to Rose and stroked her hair. Rose beamed back at him.


“Don’t do that,” said Angelo, not liking all this one little bit, but the Seesh just ignored him.


“It has its advantages. With age comes wisdom…mainly from making many mistakes I grant you, but I never make the same one twice.


Dutch listened to him with one ear, her eyes scanning the place for clues and information.


“And how do you manage to live so long?” she asked, just to keep him talking.


“One ages very slowly in here.”


“And where exactly is ‘here’?” Dutch seemed to be the only one not mesmerized into strangeness by the situation. “An Ahram told us this is a warship and that you plan to invade Earth?” she said coming straight to the point.


“Ahram say the most amazing things. This…er…construction is far too big to be a spaceship. No. This is a home I am preparing for my people – for when the power of the bones finally fail and the valley dies. Soon the bones will not have enough power to warm such a big place as the valley and keep the ice at bay. In here we can live happily for many hundreds, if not thousands of years.


“What about food and water?


“There are gardens within,” he waved a delicate hand in a sweeping sideways gesture, “many, many gardens. Perhaps once you have rested I could give you a guided tour.”


“How come we can understand you?


“For much the same reason you can understand the Rider,” he shrugged as if that wasn’t important.


“You have women here,” said Dutch, indicating the trays of food. “What about the breeding dens; why do you keep the women separate from the men?”


“Ah, a philosophical question that bodes a long answer, so please bear with me,” he said, glancing patronizingly at Rose who once more beamed back at him as if he was the all-beneficent life-giver.


“Since the beginning of time it has been known that if you want to motivate men to do something: work together on a big project like building a civilization or a city like this - the best way to do it is to tap into their sexual energy. We curb their sexual appetites by withholding women from them: either physically by separating them, or through a taboo; and so cause an unnatural desire with plenty of suppressed energy which needs to be channelled into things like sport or exercise. Here in the valley it is simply a case of getting the men to let off steam by making them build the city as fast as possible. If they had a woman to dally with, they wouldn’t be so dedicated and hard working. Men tend to get very lazy if you give them a woman. Women also make men unhappy and anxious, and therefore unreliable and unproductive.”


This sounded all very plausible to Dutch. She didn’t like it. She didn’t like it like hell. But there didn’t seem to be anything sinister about it, only brutal pragmatism.


“But what about the rumours of sacrificing virgins to the Worm?”


“That’s all they are, rumours. It’s actually a throwback from the old days when the sun was young and we were spread out all across the planet. We were trying to build and maintain a stable civilization so we used the taboo method, much like you do on Earth. We taught the children from a very young age that sex was, to use your own words, a sin, and only to be used for procreation purposes. To make this work we had to invent an invisible deity, a giant worm that would punish them for their transgressions, and to whom they had to pray for the strength to resist their natural urges; which were then redirected into Work and War – the two pillars that every civilization rests on.


“So you’re saying that the worm and the sacrifices are just a myth that you invented to keep the people in line?”


“Not me personally, I am not that old, but yes. Once the city is built we can go back to normal…where male and female can live together in disharmony where they seem to be happiest.”


But Dutch wasn’t falling for any of his disarming jokes and smiles.


“What about the women in the caves?”


“Of course,” said the Seesh, “with incarceration and captivity there is bound to be a rebellious faction. For these women we provide an escape route, care of your friend Garm, and a nice safe place for them to live. That way we keep everyone happy.


“You mean Garm is working for you? But he’s the one who told us about the warship and your invasion plans.”


“No, he doesn’t work for me. He doesn’t know any more than the others. Only the Rider and I know the true state of affairs, and the nature of this building. We actually encourage the others to believe in that rumour.”


“Why?” went on the relentless Dutch


“You’re not going to like the answer. Are you sure you want to know?” asked the Seesh.


“Yes,” said Dutch, without hesitation.


The Seesh shrugged his shoulders and continued. “Well, the bare truth is that this city is not big enough for everyone. It will only sustain so many people – about a tenth of the current population. Most of the Ahram are too stupid to work that out, but Garm is a scholar and a scribe and he would soon notice the accounting error, and then more than likely he will cause trouble and spread dissention. So it is vitally important that Garm, above all others, believes it is a warship. It also helps to motivate the workers.”


The thought did cross Dutch’s mind that if the Seesh was telling them this, then he knew they would never be leaving this place alive. Dutch ploughed on, lining up her questions before he’d finished answering the last. She needed as much information as she could get about this place if they were ever going to survive.


“Garm also mentioned the Song of the Sleepers. What’s that?”


“Also all made up.” The Seesh shrugged as if it wasn’t anything important. “Just part of the myth. But that’s enough for now,” he said. “Your Rose needs attention and rest – as do the rest of you. So eat and take your ease. Tomorrow I will meet with you again and answer all your questions. For now you will be taken to your rooms which I hope you find to be in the height of comfort.”


“But how do we find our way around. I can’t see any doors…or any furniture for that matter,” complained Dutch.


“It is the whiteness to which your eyes will soon attune. We see perfectly clearly. It won’t take long, don’t worry. For now, just rest.” And with that he was gone. Almost immediately five women appeared and took each human by the arm, leading them off into the whiteness. It all happened so quickly that Dutch didn’t have time to protest their separation until it was too late.


“I want to go with my friends,” she said to the Ahram guiding her who just looked at her without comprehension. Fuming with impatience, Dutch followed the woman down invisible corridors and through invisible doors until they came to her room, or she presumed it was a room, for all she saw was whiteness.


Anyway, in her room there was a tray of food, a plant pot with a shrub, and a mossy kind of mattress, all hovering at knee height. There was also a little stream of water that came from nowhere and disappeared back into nowhere after pooling itself in mid-air. ‘This kinda thing can drive you crazy’ she thought.


With nothing else to do, Dutch rinsed herself off as best she could and lay down on the bed, wondering what was going to happen to them. That was the last thought she had before she fell asleep.


 


She woke up feeling groggy and threw her legs over the edge of the bed. That was as far as she got. Nothing would induce her to move any further. It was as if the whiteness had sucked all volition out of her. Her mind could follow no particular vein of thought either, just random words or images popping in and out, as if the whiteness allowed no hook for her thoughts. Everything slid away. She had no compulsion to do anything either, or go anywhere.


There was a fresh basket of food hovering near her bed but she wasn’t interested. She seemed to have no emotions at all except that she was tired of being told what to do, tired of telling herself what to do. She wanted to lie down again and go to sleep, but something nagged at the back of her brain. What about the others? Well, what about them? Go away. She was also tired of worrying about other people. Why should she? Nobody ever worried about her. ‘Good ole Dutch, she can take it. Tough ole Dutch, tough as old boots, and pretty much looking like one…she’ll kick-ass; she’ll look after us’.


“Well, fuck you. I’m tired of being the responsible one,” she said, vaguely aware that she was talking to herself and wondering whether that was a good thing. “Fuck it! I don’t fucking care. You can all go to hell.” The last words echoed hollowly in her brain and she lapsed into silent thoughtlessness again.


One breath…two breaths…Dutch sighed and shifted her weight on the bed. Inadvertently her eyes flickered towards the mattress and a voice came screaming back at her, “MAKE YOUR FUCKING BED YOU LAZY WHORE – I’M NOT YOUR FUCKING SLAVE,” and her brain vomited up a black river of spiteful mocking faces tumbling over one another in their haste to have their say and release their bile into her bloodstream. She slapped her hands over her ears to shut out the rising tide of clamouring voices but to no avail. Her eyes darted about the room desperately. There was nowhere to hide. She looked around and found herself in the middle of a playground full of boys and girls standing around her in a circle. They were pointing at her and sniggering.


“She’s pooped in her pants,” said a mean little voice and the whole world erupted in laughter.


“Dirty Dulcinea. Stinky Dulcinea,” said the leering voices pressing in on her. “Dutchy made a doo-doo. Dutchy made a doo-doo. Dutchy made a doo-doo.”


Dutch squeezed her eyes tight shut, ground her fingers into her ears and sang as loudly as she could to drown them out.


And then it was quiet again.


That’s the trouble with these white rooms. They sure showed up the dirt.


She took in a shuddering breath.


Alone again.


A thought about her husband drifted by like a little black cloud but she didn’t try and touch it. ‘Been there before’ she thought. Just let it go – bye, bye baby – bye, bye murder.


Silence.


Whiteness again.


Then another little thought scurried across the floor like a mouse but still she didn’t fall for the bait. Just let it go.


She looked down at her crossed legs and smoothed down her stockings. She kicked her foot out and admired her new hi-heel shoes. Red. Like her fingernails. Like the lipstick on her cigarette filter. She looked up into the old dressing table mirror and saw her mother smile at her victoriously.


“You have finally become a woman Dulcinea. You have finally become like me – Ha, ha, ha, ha.”


Dutch stabbed at the image and the whiteness returned. But she knew her mother was still there. She could feel her – very close. She was going to have to keep a sharp lookout from now on.


“After all these years the bitch is still following me,” she murmured to herself


Silence.


Dullness.


She looked at her muscled hands. ‘I am past all hope’ she thought as she watched them twisting together, trying to strangle each other.


Then she stopped and breathed out a sigh of relaxation.


“I will kill them,” she said matter-of-factly. “I will kill all the beautiful ones. I will kill them all and then I will be the beautiful one. With this rocket I will blow them all to bits. With this spaceship I will…….”


Dutch’s eyes snapped open. She got up and walked around the room, hands outstretched in front of her, feeling for the walls. She had to get some sort of perspective.


The room was bigger than she thought, for no matter how far she walked in any direction she could find no end to it. She came back to the bed and sat down quietly and let the whiteness leach all her desires away again. She sat like one of her dolls, propped up on the edge of the bed, her chin resting upon her chest, her arms hanging limply by her side…….dumb sawdust brain nodding in the nowhere.


Hours went by.


Days.


The food on the tray disappeared. Some unseen force laid this human dummy doll down to sleep.


Another night.


Another day.


Dutch swung her legs over the edge of the bed and looked at her naked knees.


After a while there came the need to wee, and she didn’t bother to resist. She just let go. Oh how she had missed that lovely warm feeling. The mossy mattress soaked it all up so what did she care. She sighed a Sarah Bernhard sigh and slumped wistfully over forward, her elbows on her naked knees, her big banana-bunch hands under her chin in a cutie pie pose.


 


Seemingly years later a female Ahram came in and laid a cloak upon the bed, but Dutch hardly noticed her. The Ahram stood by and waited patiently for Dutch to put the robe on. Dutch didn’t move. The Ahram then rearranged the robe and laid it out closer to Dutch in the hopes of enticing her into it. The two women waited.


Still.


Nothing.


The Ahram woman came forward and laid her tiny prehensile hand ever so gently on Dutch’s knee. So unexpected was this touch that Dutch felt it like a kick in the solar plexus. She felt open and vulnerable – as if that touch had drawn all her hidden pain to the surface. She looked up into the woman’s kindly eyes. What beautiful eyes. The woman indicated to the robe with a genteel wave of her hand.


‘And such tiny hands’ thought Dutch and a flood of emotion for the woman poured over her. She wasn’t used to someone being nice to her; and the tears burned hotly behind her eyelids. In a sudden and uncharacteristic gesture, Dutch reached out and took the woman’s hand in hers, being careful not to hurt her with her big hams. The woman waited patiently. Dutch didn’t even know she was crying. She could just feel all this hurt, all this loneliness; that the only bit of affection she ever managed to elicit was from an Alien reptile on a dying planet in some unknown galaxy. Well, fate makes for strange bedfellows.


The woman gestured once more at the robe with her free hand, then at an unseen door behind her. Dutch nodded. The woman obviously had orders to fetch her and she didn’t want to get her into trouble. She let go of her hand, dried her eyes and put on the robe.


The harsh feel of the cloth on her skin was at once sensual and comforting, bringing her mind back into her body. She turned around and admired herself. This way, that way, a little step…and sway…the rhythm of the dress pulling her on, swishing against her legs as she swayed lightly on her toes….and dance Dulcinea, with your pretty frock and bare feet twirling and twinkling across the floor. Isn’t she beautiful? Doesn’t she look lovely? Play you pipes. Play a tune for Dulcinea. Does she not deserve a pretty tune? Does she, damn. Does she not?


Nay, a dark discord for Dulcinea, with her black hands and her black heart. Wasn’t it from the very beginning that there was something wrong with her? Didn’t her mother say? Dirty Dulcinea. Didn’t we all know? Didn’t we all tell you?


‘Dance for us Dulcinea. Dance for all the ones who passed you by. Dance because it is over; a dance of death; a dance of the end.’


Dutch came to a giddy stop in the middle of the room and drew a deep breath.


“Time to go to the ball Cinderella,” she said. “Time to kill Prince Charming.”

Episode 54









Night time came and still they were no nearer to the cathedral-like structure. The Rider decamped them in a grassy valley and positioned the guards in a circle around them. He didn’t have them untied though and they had to muddle through all roped together. After dinner they were allowed to bathe in a nearby river but that did little to raise their spirits. Angelo, Dutch and Sweet Mary sat tensely in the twilight, listening to Rose singing happily away at her nonsensical rhymes, providing a macabre counterpoint to Righteous who would occasionally burst out and berate an invisible foe, shouting and laughing intermittently.

‘We’re all coming apart,’ thought Dutch with a shock, wondering if she was next to lose her marbles. “If I have to listen to this much longer….” But she was very glad that Sweet Mary was alright. At the beginning she was very suspicious of her chirpy cheerfulness, but as the day wore on Sweet Mary’s sanity became very obvious…the opposite of Rose and Righteous. Whatever the Rider had done to her it had obviously not damaged her mind in any way – and her body seemed healthy enough. In fact she looked less affected by the journey than all the others…including the Ahram. Dutch’s eye wandered involuntarily towards the Rider some yards away and caught him looking at them with a strangely empathetic expression on his face. They both looked away at the same moment.

 

The next morning dawned before they had even fallen asleep. No one wanted to get up, except Rags who was flapping and creeping and gorkling so loudly they didn’t have a choice. Breakfast was being served by him whether they liked it or not. Angelo wasn’t interested in food; his mind was on Rose, and her mind was definitely missing. There had been no change to her condition during the night. He held her hand and talked to her, trying to elicit some spark of recognition from those beautiful eyes he loved so much, but alas, they remained as blank as the new moon.

“I will pay you anything you like,” begged the Counsellor as he tried to bribe some of his bearers into being more merciful.

 “Why are you so horrible to me? What have I done to….” The Counsellor never finished his sentence as it was drowned out by a chorus of derisive hoots and coughs.

“Never mind. We’re nearly there now Counsellor. Just a few more miles,” laughed the Rider and set off down the road before they finished eating.

And once again they all followed on behind him, the power of his crozier flaming in the shimmering heat waves of another hot day, distorting the air out of all recognition and almost hiding him behind a veil of turbulent energy - as if he was passing through into some other realm. Hour after unholy hour passed, the marchers hanging their heads and staring at the road as yet another foot came into view and kicked up another puff of dust, and then the other, left, right, swish, swash, swishing tails adding to the dust in their mouths. So little feeling did the humans have left in their bodies that sometimes it seemed that their feet didn’t even belong to them, but to someone else who was carrying them.

They were marching along the road that ran down the centre of the valley, never too far away from the spine. Occasionally as they went through a village they could see some Ahram watching them curiously from the cool shade of a doorway, but no-one dared come any closer with the Rider there. No one even waved or said anything.

After a while however, Dutch became aware that something was going on. There was definitely a hum of excitement running through the Ahram host. There was coughing and hooting amongst the bearers and even some disturbance in the normally surgical marching precision of the soldiers.

“Something’s up,” murmured Dutch.

“What are you doing you fools?” shouted the Counsellor. “Stop that!” The bearers seemed to be in the throes of a full scale protest. They began hooting and jumping up and down, pitching the poor counsellor this way and that and finally dropping him on the ground with an emphatic thump. Then they made a break for it and took off across the fields. The soldiers, though also agitated, held their ranks.

The deserters didn’t get very far though. A flash of fire seared the path in front of the fleeing bearers and a huge concussion wave knocked them all over backwards, effectively stopping the rout.

“Now,” said the Rider. “Unless you want me to fry your lazy carcasses, you will return to your duties and behave yourselves.”

A disoriented group of Ahram picked themselves up and shuffled reluctantly back to the counsellor, who was moaning in pain.

“And carry him properly from now on. I am tired of listening to his whining…so one more complaint from him and I will decapitate you all.”

“What’s going on,” Dutch turned to Garm for clarification.

Garm pointed across the plains. In the distance, half hidden in a grove of trees, they could see a high white wall enclosing what could barely be discerned as many small buildings within. It was hard to tell in the heat haze and the glare. Garm looked at the Rider and whispered to Dutch, “I will tell in a little while.”

The Rider waited until the Counsellor had been hoisted back up on his palanquin, then turned and floated away down the road again. Garm waited until they were well underway.

“That is a breeding den. The men get excited,” said Garm, his English improving with every sentence.

“There are twelve, hidden in the countryside. Well guarded. They keep the most beautiful women there. To breed.”

“And the not-so-beautiful women?” asked Dutch brusquely, feeling a bit of a sore point here. “What happens to them?”

“The…er…others are sacrificed to the Worm. It is said they pass through the Dragons Door to the other side. This ensures good health for the race and the valley.”

Everyone was very silent for a while, Dutch remembering what the Rider had said earlier about a giant snake.

“What happens to the children?” she said to change the topic

“The male children are taken away after weaning and live with the men. The girls stay with their mothers until they reach childbearing age and the Seesh decides which are to stay and which are to go. Anyway, that is why the bearers became so agitated. None of them have seen a woman since they were very young, probably too young to even remember.”

“Who fathers the children then?”

“The men are chosen from the strongest and cleverest in the land…and they are kept in the Cantave,” his eyes indicating forwards to where the Warship towered over them.

 

*

 

And then they were there. Coming over the rise of a hill it finally stood in front of them. The massive spaceship rose up into the clouds so high that they couldn’t see more than half of it. It was a startling sight. But even more so was the shanty town that sprawled like a dirty grey blanket over the countryside for miles in every direction, and washed up in waves against a massive wall that encompassed the spaceship, still some ten or so miles distant. The sprawling slum city looked like a battleground of trenches and tents, decay and detritus stretching out towards them, lapping almost to the foot of the hill upon which they stood.

 “Oh my god, is this where all the people live?” asked Angelo.

“This is where most of the workers sleep, nobody ‘lives’ here. The administrators and such like me live inside the wall,” replied Garm.

They watched as distant lines of workers streamed back and forth like ants along the maze of muddy walkways that wound through the slum-city, curling this way and that, some winding towards the spaceship, others away, but always on the move. And even on the spaceship they could see Ahram construction workers crawling like a creeping grey fungus all over the pristine white of the ship, shaping and polishing. Everywhere they looked, hundreds of thousands of Ahram were on the move. It was a mammoth workforce like they had never seen before. Even Rose and Righteous were silent at the sight. For many minutes no one even seemed to draw breath.

“They have laboured like this day and night for fifty years,” said Garm, shaking his head in sympathy. “The power of the bones is dying, just like the sun. They are working so hard because the wormhole is closing. If they do not complete the ship in time, then we all die.”

“It’s closing? When?” asked Dutch.

“Soon,” said Garm

 

The road through the slum narrowed to a single track and the Rider tightened up the cordon. The humans were sandwiched up between the soldiers while the counsellor brought up the rear. It was a humbling feeling being crowded in by these soldiers, all of whom were over seven feet tall with massively muscled haunches. It was like walking next to a herd of Tyrannosaurus Rex just hoping you didn’t get stepped on.

The little band wound this way and that through the city, unable to avoid tramping in the many dubious piles and puddles that lay in their way. There was no sanitation of any sort, just reeking rivulets running down the path. Sullen, red-eyed workers stared at them from the hovels and from under makeshift constructions. A few brave ones came out and stood at the side of the path to get a look at these strange creatures being paraded in front of them like in a carnival procession. None made any sound. They all looked emaciated and unhealthy – some of them even held their hands out for tit-bits of food, which sent Rose into a lather of unrequited mercy, desperately turning this way and that but unable to help any of the poor souls she saw. And to add to the pot of things bubbling under, Righteous was starting to become disturbed again. Noot held onto him, cooing and mooing and trying to calm him down, but the proximity of the ship seemed to be having a strong effect on him. Soon Righteous was making that same keening sound, like a choir of dead people singing. The Rider however didn’t take much notice of any of this and continued blithely on with the journey. The rest kept their eyes on their feet and tried to avoid stepping in anything nasty.

 

When they looked up again the great wall surrounding the ship loomed high above them. Everyone sensed they were nearly at the end of their journey and paid more attention to where they were going. For the next half hour they followed the curve of the wall until they finally came to a gate.

Unlike the flamboyant Greek or Roman temples with their colonnades and pillars and ornately carved friezes, this entranceway was just a smooth white opening cut out in the shape of a Gothic arch. What it did have in common with the ancients was the scale. It must have been over a quarter mile high. There was no actual gate to guard against anyone getting in or out; merely a huge opening in the wall. A flat, wide pathway ran from the gate towards the mass of white that was the base of the spaceship. How long the path was, they couldn’t tell, for everything now was white, unless one craned ones neck straight upwards towards the sky, and even that was washed out from the glare of the polished bone.

It was at about this point that Dutch noticed Garm was no longer with them. Noot still held onto Righteous, and the Counsellor continued to creak and complain…but no Garm. He must have taken off sometime before they entered the gate. Dutch turned round to see if she could spot him and got the shock of her life. Even though they had just come through it, the gateway was no more. It was as if the wall had just closed up behind them.

’Trick of the light’ she thought to herself, but the glare was beginning to get her down. Everything was white. There were no shadows to give anything definition; even the ground they walked on was not quite there. It was a bit like walking on a cloud; white before, white after, and white underneath. She felt at any moment that she was going to slip through into the world below. 

WHAT HORROR AWAITS THEM IN THE CANTAVE? AND HOW WILL THEY SURVIVE THEIR MEETING WITH THE SEESH? DON'T FORGET TO WATCH OUT FOR NEXT WEEKS EPISODE.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Episode 53





The journey back was a nightmare in slow motion. They remembered very little of the road, and every moment of Sweet Mary’s St Vitus’ dance. Every agonizing jerk and twitch tore at them as if it was happening to them, but none were allowed near her, no one was able to give her any succour, even their kind words and exhortations to be brave fell on deaf ears and only caused the Rider to go into paroxysms of laughter and mirth.

Soon the familiar sight of the stockade came into view and, even though it was getting late, there was a huge crowd of Ahram waiting for them. In the most regal manner, the Rider brought his craft to a halt and gave Sweet Mary a final little jig to do for the crowd. No one else thought it was funny. Many in the crowd gasped in horror. He was obviously not a popular guy.

“So Garm…what a surprise to see you here,” said the Rider. “Come to save the humans have you? Sorry. It seems I spoiled your plans; and you, Counsellor,” he said, switching to Urghanese, “who’s been a naughty boy then? The Seesh is not going to be pleased with you, not looking after his prisoners properly and letting them escape. But I am sure you have a good excuse lined up, and what’s more, I am going to offer you the chance of telling it to the Seesh in person, as you will be joining us for the journey back to the Cantave.”

The Counsellor groaned at the thought of the Seesh, and more immanently, the fifty mile bounce he would have to endure at the hands of his bearers who could barely contain their smiles of anticipation at the torture they would be able to inflict on him.

Noot was also there, hunched over in the background hoping he wouldn’t be noticed.

“And Crouch, my little friend. Thou knowest I have a soft spot for thee…but thou must be more careful when choosing thy friends.”  He gave him a meaningful look which made Noot squirm and then turned to a bunch of tough looking Ahram standing in military formation in front of him.

“Tie them up and put them in a cage,” he said, indicating the humans. “I don’t want them sneaking off in the night. But just in case…” he said and gave Sweet Mary another little shake that set her dancing a ghoulish jig, her legs going up and down like a fiddlers elbow.

“Right, Counsellor,” said the Rider. “I hope you have a feast laid on for tonight? I’m ravenous.”

 


 

 

For the humans the night had passed very slowly. Even though they snuggled up together and tried to get as comfortable as possible, the cage was too small for any of them to get any real sleep. Angelo held Rose in his arms and luxuriated in the feel of her skin against his, but no one spoke. Everyone was in a state of shock over the tribulations of Sweet Mary. Dutch, of course, more so than the others. She had sat for a long time thinking that this was yet another night she was spending incarcerated. It seemed like she was doomed to spend the rest of her life in jails and cages and stockades. This time there wasn’t even the compensation of having Sweet Mary with her. Not that it would have helped much.  Thanks to her bitchiness, Sweet Mary was growing daily more distant and more independent. Things had been said and done and there was no taking them back. Even she didn’t like herself anymore and that wasn’t a good thing. To tell the truth she had never really liked herself much anyway. She had the personality of a five pound hammer. No one else had liked her other than Sweet Mary and she had just gone and pissed all over that one. ‘Ugly bitch’ she thought and hugged herself against the cold night air. Eventually she too fell asleep and woke with the sun streaming in the bars.

 

The sun was up and getting hotter by the minute, and the humans were all stark naked with no protection against sunburn. They were quiet and watchful, their discomfort as nothing compared to what Sweet Mary must be suffering. Their first thoughts were for her and how she fared in the night, and whether she was still alive.

It was now that Angelo had time to pay more attention to Rose who had been unnaturally quiet since she’d found those toys and the flute under the honey tree. Something was definitely not right with her, but he couldn’t say what. All this time she had been going along with the crowd so obediently that no-one had given her a second thought. He moved a little closer to her.

“Rose,” he asked. “You okay?”

“You okay. Auntie May. Who can say? Want to play?” She said in a little girly voice and then proceeded to hum a little tune to herself. Angelo’s blood ran cold in his overheated veins and prickles rose up on his scalp.

“Rose? Are you alright?”

“Alright. Hold on tight. Nighty night.”

Angelo put his hand on her shoulder and she looked up into his eyes.

“Hello, my name is Rosemary. How do you do?” Her eyes were blank and unresponsive.

By now Dutch had also realized that something was up.

“What’s wrong with her,” she asked.

Angelo just shrugged his shoulders, not trusting himself to speak, lest his voice betray his overwhelming emotions. He put his arms around Rose and hugged her as if that would set her to rights. Rose meekly submitted to his embrace and waited for him to finish.

“Please come back to me,” he whispered in her ear, “I can’t do this without you.”

“Just give her time,” said Dutch, laying a consoling hand upon his arm.

But there was no more time. The crowd had begun to gather; a lot of dozy-eyed Ahram shuffled around, coughing and snooting and getting into position. Not long after that the Rider and his ever-blazing crozier appeared with Sweet Mary dangling in front of him like a limp doll and - most amazingly – with Rags clinging to her midriff. The flying rodent had somehow found her again and had wrapped himself tightly around her body. More amazingly, the Rider didn’t seem to mind about this and let him be. And furthermore he didn’t seem so intent on jerking Sweet Mary about. Perhaps he had taken pity on her.

He hadn’t taken any pity on the Counsellor though, for there he was, dressed up in his Sunday best and mounted on his weapon of torture with his bearers groaning under the weight of his bulk, the poles straining to breaking point. Garm was also there, with Noot by his side, both of them trying to stay out of harm’s way.

“Alright, let them out the cage and tether them together. A rope around the neck from one to another should do it.”

The soldiers wasted no time in dragging the humans out of the cage and tying them up together.

“Are we all ready? Good.”

The Rider’s flying platform turned and glided effortlessly off down the road and the long journey towards the Cantave had begun.

 

Like slaves in a row they trudged after the Rider in the boiling hot sun, the dust from the road wafting up into their mouths and noses and eyes. Dutch was in the lead, then Rose, Angelo and Righteous. After six hours of marching in the sun they were burning with thirst and heat exhaustion, but the Rider kept on going and didn’t allow them a moment of rest. Sweet Mary’s flaccid form hung limp and lifeless in front, but it was more than the humans could bear so they kept their eyes downcast. Except for Dutch, whose eyes never left Sweet Mary. In her frustration she kept imagining rescue scenarios in her mind, and kept running up against a brick wall – there was no way she could help her.

Every now and then one of the humans would trip and fall, often dragging the others with them, skinning their hands and knees until all was raw and livid with pain. Angelo did his best to help Rose, always at the ready to catch her if she stumbled. Their parched mouths soon ceased to operate and speech became impossible. It took all their energy just to hang on and survive the journey. Motes of dust spun dizzily in the baking sunshine and not a breath of air stirred to ease the dreadful heat. Even the Ahram guard, spread out on either side and covering the rear, swishing their tails in unison as they marched – left, right, left, right - were hypnotised by the dreary droning sameness of the procession and seemed to drift off into worlds of their own, walking on and on and on and on.

The Counsellor fared little better than the walkers. Even though he had an awning to shade him from the sun, there was no escaping the dust and the humidity. On top of that the bumping and buffeting he was being subjected to by his carriers was causing him to vent forth a flurry of expletives and curses. Threats to ‘fire the whole damn lot of them’ had no effect at all. Not only did he vent forth verbally, but every time they bounced him in his cradle it caused him to fart involuntarily and rather loudly. Once it was so loud and long that even the Rider turned around to smile at him.

“Pardon, sorry,” he said to the Rider. “Fools – I’ll have your gizzards removed for this,” and off they went again, bumping and farting.

Garm and Noot kept discretely to the rear, not daring to interfere in any way lest the Rider take too keen an interest in them. There was no way of offering the poor humans any water or sustenance, so they bided their time and hoped for the best. Righteous stalked along in the rear of the human train, his thoughts floating around in front of his eyes like fish in a fishbowl – evil thoughts that excited him, humble thoughts that made him sick, but every raging passion that bloomed in him served only to immobilize him further. The more he strove with violence to break……….the more the vines of lethargy twined round him and swaddled him like a baby in a blanket. And all the time he could hear the laughter: laughter at his impotence, laughter at his humiliation, laughter at the rope around his neck; and the harder he struggled the harder he laughed. Dutch turned around at the sound and wondered if Righteous had finally lost his mind. Like some mad old lunatic he was laughing aloud at the empty air. Noot, daring the wrath of the Rider, could stand his friend’s agony no more and sidled up next to him. He put his hand upon Righteous’ arm soothingly and began speaking softly in his ear. For a long time he made no difference, but then slowly, Righteous began to calm down and soon he was walking along quietly behind the others. Noot stayed by his side, unable to communicate with his friend, but at least able to offer him some succour. When they had finally gone far beyond what they thought they could endure, the Rider called a halt.

“Alright Garm,” said the Rider. “You can feed and water your friends now. But slowly, and only a little at a time or else they’ll die. You can take them under the tree there. We’ll rest up for an hour or so.”

Astonishingly, the Rider let Sweet Mary down and placed her quite gently on the ground in front of them.

“Take her too. She will need caring for,” he said, then floated his flying disc some distance off and parked beneath a distant tree.

 

Sweet Mary was in a terrible state. She was breathing but that was about all. Dutch burned with black hatred for the Rider and swore to rip his guts out at the first available opportunity. Her fingers jerked and twitched as she pried Sweet Mary’s lips apart and dripped a few drops of water into her mouth. Then she washed and cleaned her as tenderly as she could, cradling her head in her lap all the time.

It was a good half hour before Sweet Mary groaned and tried to open her eyes.

“How are you feeling?” asked Dutch anxiously.

“I’m fine,” she said, trying to sit up. “Just a little dizzy. What happened? Where are we?”

“Relax, don’t move for a while,” said Dutch, trying to prolong the moment.

“I’m alright,” said Sweet Mary, and forced herself up onto one elbow. “What happened?”

Dutch didn’t really want to go into the particulars so she just said, “We’ve been taken captive I’m afraid,” her eyes indicating the Rider resting under a tree.

Sweet Mary sat up and took a good look at him.

“What’s he standing on?”

“A flying saucer, I think,” said Dutch.

Sweet Mary turned to look at her. “That makes sense. Where are we going?”

“To the city-thing over there I presume.”

Sweet Mary stood up unsteadily and turned to look at the Spire. Rags in the meantime had flown off and now returned with some fruit. Sweet Mary sat down again, crossed her legs and began eating like a prize fighter. She wolfed it down, and whatever else was offered to her.

“Take it easy, you might get sick.”

“I’m fine,” she smiled at Dutch. “But thank you for being so concerned.”

When she had finished she stood up and yawned and stretched herself as if she’d been asleep forever. Rags, displaced for a moment, greeped and gorkled and flattened himself against Sweet Mary again, fitting around her like a second skin.

“Hello Sweetie. Thank you too for looking after me. By the way, how is Righteous?” she asked, turning to look at him.

“Still catatonic. He did try and rescue you at some point…but he’s quiet again.”

“Did I need rescuing?”

“I’m afraid so. Glad you’re okay now. You are okay aren’t you?”

“I’m fine. Really.” She smiled at Dutch again. “Never felt better.”

Dutch and Angelo stared at her half in disbelief, and half relieved that she had recovered so well.

“I take it I have been unconscious for a while?”

“Something like that,” said Dutch.

Sweet Mary turned and noticed that Rose was sitting very quietly, hands folded in her lap, watching her with an angelic smile on her face.

“Hello Rose, how are you?”

“Hello. I am fine. Thank you for asking,” and then giggled like a little girl embarrassed at being spoken to by an adult. Sweet Mary’s puzzlement was plain to see on her face.

Angelo felt it his duty to jump in here and explain.

“She’s been a bit…different. Ever since the honey tree. It’s like….it’s like she’s become a child again. She doesn’t know us anymore.” He held his hands up signifying that he could say no more that would enlighten them. Sweet Mary moved next to her and took her hand. Rose’s other hand still clutched the bone flute.

“Hello Rose. Do you remember me?”

“You’re my friend. I remember.”

“Do you remember my name?”

Rose thought for a while and then her face fell and tears began to form in the corner of her eyes. The corners of her lips also turned down.

“It’s alright. It’s alright. My name is Sweet Mary.”

Sniff. “How do you do? My name is…My name is…” Once again her face fell and she started to cry.

“Rose,” said Angelo. “Your name is Rose.”

“Rose. That’s a nice name,” she said brightening up, “Rose…” and then lapsed into silence again.

Sweet Mary stared at her for a long time and then patted her hand.

“We’ll just have to wait and see I suppose,” said Angelo, devastated by the turn of events. So as not to have to sit and stare at his pain, Sweet Mary looked around her again, taking in their immediate surroundings. They were on a well-worn path…obviously a busy highway of sorts because, as they rested by the wayside, several Ahram plodded past with great packs of food and supplies on their backs, all headed for the big white building in the distance. She wondered just how far away it was. But it was hard to tell. Once again it was like the giant trees, the thing was so big that it looked nearer than it actually was.

“I wonder what in hell it is anyway?” said Angelo, following her gaze.

“It is….a spaceship,” said Garm, struggling over the unfamiliar words.

They all turned to stare in amazement.

“Are you also translating through the crozier?” asked Angelo.

“No,” he said, contorting his snout in trying to enunciate the unfamiliar language. “I speak…a little English,” he answered, keeping his voice low and one eye on the Rider.

“Where did you learn?”

“The women….in the caves, they speak….well. Teach me.”

“You mean the ones that attacked us in the mountain passage?” said Sweet Mary.

“No attack….you. Attack…..men.”

“Why?”

Garm thought for a while and then said, “Long story.”

“Alright, but you said that…thing over there is a spaceship?”

“Indeed. Warship. Under construction. Nearly finish. Not good”

“Warship?” said Angelo, all sorts of alarm bells going off in his head.

“It must have massive engines to lift something of that size off the planet,” mused Dutch. “Who are you going to war with?”

There was a long pause.

“You.” Garm sat quietly after delivering this last missive as if it explained everything.

“Why? How?” asked Angelo.

“Because planet….here…..die. Bones die. Heat gone. Ice comes back to the valley. No life. Soon, all dead. Spaceship is to take us to a new planet.” As he spoke some of Garm’s English lessons started to come back to him and he found it easier to communicate what he wanted to say. “Your planet….Earth.”

“The wormhole,” said Dutch as the penny dropped. “They can get to us through the wormhole. How soon?” she asked Garm.

Garm just shrugged his shoulders. “Soon,” he said enigmatically.

They all turned and looked at the construction again. This time it took on a new and terrible meaning. It wasn’t so beautiful anymore. Dutch looked across at the Rider and his crozier. With that kind of weaponry, a clash of cultures could only have one outcome, even though the Ahram were relatively few. And if they could launch something this big….?

The building was vast. It was as broad at the base as several human city blocks and tapered up to a needle point so high in the sky that it disappeared into the blue.

“I presume it is made from bone?” asked Angelo.

“It is bonecraft….yes.”

“If that ship has anything like the weaponry that this guy with his stick is wielding,” said Dutch, “then we’re in for big trouble. Well, the Federation is,” she corrected herself. “That’s some serious firepower he’s got there. But how do they power the ship. What kind of engines does it have?”

“No engines. The bones fly,” he said. “It is powered from the song of the sleepers.”

But before they could question him any further they were being roused up onto their feet again. Two of the Guards shuffled over to Sweet Mary with the intention of roping her to the others.

“Leave her be,” said the Rider, hovering nearby, and by way of explanation he gave a rueful smile and said, “We’re not animals you know.” Then half to himself he said, “not all of us anyway.” With which he glided off down the long dusty road and everyone jerked into action.

THE STAKES HAVE JUST BEEN UPPED. IS THERE ANYTHING THE HUMANS CAN DO ABOUT IT? AND WHAT HAS HAPPENED TO ROSE. DON'T MISS NEXT WEEKS EXCITING INSTALLMENT.