A very Strange Christmas

Warm days and a busy work schedule had kept Rain from thinking about Christmas during most of December.  It wasn’t until the chill north wind swept down through the The Estate campus and across the bay that thoughts of carols popped into his mind and with it the feeling that Christmas soon would be there.  The first that anyone else knew about Christmas was the seven foot tall Douglas fir being delivered into the foyer of the Estate’s dormitory.

“Why do we need a tree?”  Algernon frowned as the tree was finally pushed through the door and propped up in a small waiting area that the group used as a lounge. It’s lower branches lay across the two guest chairs and the coffee table. 

“It’s a pagan ritual that the early Christians adopted.  That, and it smells amazing.” Rain leaned into the heavy branches and breathed in.  Christmas was there at last.

“But why do we  need a tree?”  Algernon asked again, sniffing the tree experimentally himself.  It was nice, like the automatic air freshener in the men’s bathroom only requiring the killing a tree and taking up a huge amount of space.

“It’s a Christmas tradition, ”  Bruce supplied when it was clear that Rain was trying to get  high on the pine scent, “ though down home we use to go out to a farm and cut our own.”

“Is it better to murder your own tree than to have one killed for you?”  Algernon thought he was getting an idea of this Christmas sacrifice.

“It’s not murder when its a tree, Algernon.  As to your question, yes, it is better. Part of the tradition.”

“Rain, we should have cut down that big tree in front of the labs.”  Algernon suggested.

Rain rolled over making pine needle angels amongst the boughs so he could see his friends.

“Thought of it, but they’d just blame me and I don’t need Keaton breathing down my neck, “  He rolled around again to hug the tree, “ beside that tree was far too big to bring inside and think of all that hard work of cutting it down and dragging it around to this side of the campus.”

Algernon nodded his head sagely, all good points.

“But if the killing is important to the ceremony….”

“Can we stop talking about killing.”  Rain finally let go of the tree and joined the others, loose needles sticking to his hair and coat. “Christmas was never about killing a tree but celebrating life and joy and goodwill to everyone.”

“Except trees, of course.  They probably think of Christmas as a genocide.”

Rain grew visibly ill at Algernon’s words but was soon distracted by a large sports bag Bruce was carrying.

“You don’t usually take your whole wardrobe down to the gym, what up?” 

“It’s Christmas in a few days.” Bruce replied as if that explained everything.  

“Yes!  Hence the tree.”  He pointed at the tree leaning limply to one side,  “But Christmas doesn’t explain your sudden interest in luggage.  Unless there are presents inside.”  

A sudden bright-eyed excitement suffused Rain at the thought of Christmas presents and he ran his hands over the bumps and shapes of the sports bag to work out what it hid.

“Rain, there are presents, but they’re for my family.  I’m going home for the holidays.” Bruce finally admitted.  He hadn’t wanted to tell the group like this, but they’d been so busy recently that he’d forgotten until it was too late.

Rain stopped frozen, his hands hovering above the bag.  With a sudden intake of breath he quickly dropped arms to his sides and smiled his most winning smile.

 “Of course, Of course!”  He chuckled and patted Bruce’s arm.  “You have John and your mother and your uncle and grandfather Algernon to see.”

Bruce could see straight through the facade of his worrisome companion.

“Grandpaps has been dead for ten years.”

“Oh, I’m sorry to hear that.”

“I meant to tell you before…”

“About Grandpaps?”

“No, about going home for Christmas.”

“What for, it’s only natural that you would…”

“…the time just snuck up…”

“…you don’t owe us any explanations…”

“…if I’d thought, I’d have invited you all…”

“No…no!  No, we’ll be fine here, Algernon and I and Peggy….Peggy you’re not going home for Christmas are you?”  Rain yelled in an unusually manic voice across the foyer to the Mess where Peggy was finishing lunch.

“No.”  She replied loudly back, “Cultural rituals and festivals have no impact on the progress of science.”  Still eating the last of her lunch she joined the group in front of the tree, “Besides, if I were to celebrate Christmas, it wouldn’t be until the new year.  And Greeks don’t murder trees.”

Algernon was going to ask about the difference in Christmas practices when Rain exclaimed,

“No more talk of murder, genocide, massacres or killing of any sort during Christmas, that’s my tradition!”  Rain pointed at the leaning douglas fir, “That tree gave it’s life to make our Christmas bright and cheery so show a little respect.”

They all looked at the tree.  A few needles fell to the carpet.

“Rain, I don’t know how cheery your dead tree looks.”

“It just needs decorating, I haven’t been out to get decorations as yet.”  Rain responded through gritted teeth. 

“The Estate may have some in storage somewhere.”  Bruce suggested, “Why don’t you ask your supervisor?”

At this comment Rain brightened considerably, 

“Hey yeah.  Keaton’s always trying to show me how important he is.  Maybe he can actually come good and provide a little Christmas spirit.”  He turned to his friend of the last six months now genuinely pleased. 

“Merry Christmas, Professor!”  

“That’s…Merry Christmas Rain.”  Bruce quietly accepted the moniker feeling better he’d been able to provide happier ending to what was becoming an awkward farewell.

“Say hi to John for us, and kiss your mother from me.” 

“To the first, I will.  To the second, never from you to any of my female relations.” 

“Does that mean you have other female relations?”  Rain replied raising a knowing eyebrow.

Bruce shook his head and left the three to contemplate the tree.

“Well, this has been a waste of my time.”  Peggy finally said, breaking away, “I’ll be in my lab if you need me. And I suggest, you don’t  need me.” And with that she walked out leaving Algernon and Rain alone with the tree.

Lawrence Keaton, Chief of Investigations was tidying his office.  After a taxing year, much of it coming from two junior agents under his authority, he was happy to put it all behind him and celebrate with his family.  Outside, the administration staff and assistants were all wishing each other a Merry Christmas and slowly leaving. Occasionally one would pop their head in to wish him a happy holiday, but on the whole they just left until the whole office was quiet and still.  

Keaton drank off the last of his bourbon and stood up to leave himself when he was aware he wasn’t alone.  Standing in the door was Algernon looking nervously from Keaton to a point to his right. Keaton followed his glance to see, on a filing cabinet, Rain sitting cross-legged reading a report Keaton had only just put away.

“Algernon.  Rain.” Keaton greeted the two curtly as he strode over to Rain and snatched the file from his hand before stuffing it back into the filing cabinet, “I hope we can make this quick, I was about to leave.”
“That wouldn’t do, not with two of your agents hot on the case.”  Rain quipped in a passable bronx accent reminicinent to Mike Hammer.

“What are you two up to?”  He looked to Algernon to help make sense of their visit. ”Why haven’t you left for the holidays?

“We’re decorating a dead tree.”  The younger man supplied adamantly.

“Yes we are.  And where would you expect us to go?”  Rain added in a questioning tone.  

Keaton hadn’t accounted for these two to be left unsupervised over Christmas and his shoulders visibly slumped as he realised his job for the year wasn’t quite over.  He walked back to his desk and sat down.

“You’re staying on campus over Christmas and you’re wanting to decorate a tree?”

“A dead one.”  Algernon insisted.

“You didn’t cut down that one outside the labs, did you?”  Keaton turned to his window and looked out across the campus to see the balsam fir where it had ever been.  

“Who do you take us for?”  Rain replied in mock outrage,  “We’ve had a beautiful tree delivered to the dormitory and we’re hoping the Estate have a supply of Christmas decorations that we can use.”

“And that’s it.  A quiet few days, decorating a tree and NOTHING ELSE.”

“Just think of it as your contribution to your agent’s health and welfare.” Rain acknowledge with one of his self-satisfied smiles.

At this point Keaton would have been glad to hand over his own credit card,  tell them to go shopping and be done with it. But then he recalled an Administration manager who had been very pro-Christmas.  That year every department had been decorated for the season, with the resulting boxes of tinsel, fake mistletoe and baubles ending up in storage.

“In fact, there is a large supply of decorations in storage under the labs in what use to be the old fallout shelters.”  Keaton replied happily, knowing he was going to get out and leave these two behind him after all.

“In Doctor Peggy’s lab?”  Algernon asked nervously, “Is that safe, they could be trapped in a portal and send anywhere…everywhere!”

Keaton looked to Rain, hoping if one was talking nonsense at least the other could translate.

“We don’t tend to go down to Peggy’s lab if we can help it.”  Rain supplied unhelpfully.

“I do believe that Dr Martin has a lab down in one section of the old shelters.  The complex is extensive and virtually untouched since the Cold War.”

“Well if sacrifices have to be made in the name of Christmas…”

“…like a tree…”

“…we’re ready.”

With the key to the storage space in hand, the two men walked briskly across the campus to the labs as thick low clouds rolls lazily across the sky adding to the campus’s empty feeling.  

“Do you mind if meet you in the store room? I want to ask Doctor Peggy about Christmas.”  Algernon asked as they escaped the winter wind for the quiet of the lab block. 

“Your funeral.  If you’re not checking boxes with me in half an hour I’ll call security as backup and go in after you.”  Rain joked as he two parted at the bottom of the stairs, Algernon to the right and Peggy’s lab, and Rain to the left. 

The door to Peggy’s laboratory had a large imposing sign.

DANGER NO UNAUTHORISED PERSONNEL ALLOWED

The sign gave Algernon pause, but then he figured he was not an unauthorised person so the sign, and the dangers inherent in it, did not count for him.  He knocked on the door.

“I swear if that’s you Rain I will open a portal now and push you in!”  Peggy’s voice echoed dully through the metal door.

“Ur…no, it’s me.”  Algernon replied wondering how good an idea this was.

“Oh, the other one.”  The door lock clicked, “Come in, but stay behind the yellow lines.”

The laboratory was a long low ceilinged room lit by hanging fluorescent lights.  Sets of laboratory benches and fume hoods surrounded a yellow demarcation zone where Peggy’s homemade portal device stood.   Made of scrap and spare parts that she was able to buy, borrow or steal (though taking essential equipment from her previous place of employment was not considered stealing by Peggy) the device looked more like a junkyard than a revolution in portal technology.

Algernon stayed well back behind the yellow line, wary of Peggy and her contraption.  Presently she was taking the opportunity of the holidays to look over Hertzfeld’s multi-phasing glove with the thought of eventually linking it to the energies of The Strange.  Right now, that application only theoretical, she was becoming well versed in its workings.  

“What do you want?”  She asked mechanically not bothering to look up from her work.

“I want to understand Christmas, it seems like a very significant event.  The Estate has closed down operations and nearly all staff including the senior officers have left their posts and traveled home.  And then you said that you would commemorate at a different time and would not kill a tree as part of the ritual because of your Greek origins.  How does your own matriarchal lineage affect how and when you commemorate Christmas?” Algernon recited his queries all at once distracting even the ever focused Peggy.

“Christmas was something that my Yaya took very seriously.”  Peggy put down the glove and gave her attention to Algernon. “We would fast from the end of November to Christmas Eve, then go to midnight Mass.”

“You starved yourself for more than a month?”

“Not exactly.  No meat, dairy, fish, wine or oil, but other foods were permissible, though in smaller portions.”

“And no tree?”

“I understand it is very popular in Greece, but my Yaya would have none of what she thought of as Pagan traditions.”

“And stopping work?”

“It is considered a time for family so many travel home.”

“But not you.”

“No.”

“Why?”

Peggy did not like where Algernon’s line of questioning had brought them.  She understood the importance of educating Algernon into the society and culture of the place she had inadvertently dragged him to and usually supported it.  Still, the answer to that particular question was not something that was open to discussion.  

She had just opened her mouth to tell him it was “…none of his business…” when a scream followed by the slamming of a heavy metal door echoed through from outside her lab door. 

“What is all this disturbance,? No one should be down here.” She said getting up from her bench.

“Rain!”  Algernon sprinted, flinging the heavy metal door aside and running down the hallway.

Curled up with his arms around his legs, Rain sat with his back to the door, his puzzle box flipping open and closed in his hands, his eyes staring into nothing in front of him.

“Rain?”  Algernon searched the area for dangers but saw nothing. He stepped closer placing his hand on his friend’s shoulder.  No response.

    * * * * * *  * * *

Rain had found the storeroom door easily enough, it was the only one at this end of the complex.  The key fit the lock but lack of use had made the lock stiff and it had taken him a few moments before the door opened. Inside was black, with the only light spilling in from the doorway.  He knew from experience of Peggy’s lab that a large main electrical switchboard would be located just in from the door, but inconveniently out of sight of where Rain now stood.  

Flicking on his phone’s light he stepped in and worked his way along the wall, coming across nothing but boxes of files.  As he turned the beam, it hit the white bone of a giant rodent skull leered back at him from a stack of magazines.

“That’s where you went.”  He patted the mole rat skull affectionately and continued along the wall looking for the light switch.  A gust of cold wind rolled through the space and the metal door groaned and swung shut. Rain cursed his bad luck but continued further into the room.

Boxes of broken oddments, crates of random detritus and the cast offs from decades of recursive travel seemed stored haphazardly along with broken furniture and out of date office technology.  There was no logic to the collections and Rain started to despair that he would find anything of use.

Voices whispered among the rows of junk as he walked deeper.  At first he just thought these were the voices of Algernon and Peggy echoing along the empty hallway outside until he stopped to listen to what they had to say and a chill went up his spine.  They weren’t speaking in English.

“Hello?”  He called only to find his voice muffled by the mouldering boxes and piles of paper around him.  In the light of his phone, Rain’s breath was visible as short fast puffs and a feeling of being watched stole over him.  It as time to leave.

But where was the exit? The door’s seal, meant for a nuclear holocaust, was intact and let neither light or a breeze through.  With nothing to go on but memory and the beam from his phone he started back along the row he had come. 

Instead of things become more familiar, the collections around him seemed to become older as if he was going back in time with each step.  Simultaneously, the voices were now coming through clearer, joined with the very real feeling of being watched. A loud crack, followed by a volley of other loud snapping sounds had Rain diving for cover behind a moth eaten sofa, The air around him filled with the all too familiar smell of cordite.  It alone usually sent his heart racing, but he had no attention to give as he was fixed solely on the whispered voices seemingly moving around him.

Where are we going?

No please, my son…

What do they want?

Where are they taking us?

But my wife, she…

God is great… God is great….

He couldn’t recognise the voices, nor explain how he could understand them, but he knew them well from his nightmares.  He knew he had to get out of this room, fast. Shakily he stood and, with phone out in front like a shield, he ran.

More cracks of gun fire from the right and left, a sharp pain scored his scalp.  He reached up and his hand came away slick and black in the half-light. In gaps between piles the shadows moved, unfolded and stepped into the aisle.  

How big was this room?  Had he really come this far?  

He could now feel the shadows pushing in around him, faces white and staring at him and he could no longer hold back the cry of terror and despair he felt looking upon them. 

“Please…please…”  he cried a plea to the faces or for an unseen rescuer, he didn’t know.

Panicked he stopped, all around him now shadows gathered.  The phone’s light cut through them to reflect off the boxes and white of a skull.

Skull!  He quickly swung the beam around again and focused it on the giant mole rat skull!

Just as he realised the door couldn’t be far away, the shadows rushed in, crushing him.  In panic he dropped his phone extinguishing the light. Suddenly Rain couldn’t fill his lungs.  His heart beat madly against his chest and he felt that right there in the dark he was going to die.

Both hands free, he reached through the now complete darkness, through the faces of the familiar ghosts,  and touched …a door handle.

  *     * *     * * *     * * *

Peggy walked up behind Algernon, also checking for dangers.  Her mind, sensitive to the Strange, reached out into the local area but she could pick up nothing unusual.

“Let me try.” She said to Algernon who stepped aside to give her access to Rain.  With a short sharp action she pulled her hand back and slapped Rain sharply across the face.

“Oooow!” Rain complained.  The puzzle box disappearing and his now free left hand reached up to hold a reddening cheek.

“You were unresponsive, it seemed appropriate.”  Peggy said by way of explanation.

“Okay, thank you.  Don’t do that again.”  He looked at his empty right hand, turning it over to check both sides, but there was nothing to see.

“I will, if I find it necessary.”

“What happened?  Why did you scream?” Algernon crouched down in front of Rain.

“Scream?”  Rain smile incredulous for a moment until his memory of the last few minutes reasserted itself. He stared back at the door behind him.  “There’s something wrong with that room.”  

“Wrong?  How?”

“Ghosts from my past.” He mumbled standing up shakily, “I have to go…think, um..don’t go in there.”

“What..?  Wait, you can’t just leave..explain yourself!”  Peggy exclaimed as Rain stumbled up the stairs.

“Just don’t…go alone…I’ll be back.”

Peggy seethed at the lack of information.  What had caused such a response for the nervous little conman?  He hadn’t shown any claustropobia or scotophobia at other times, though his fears did seem to be varied and many.

“This is ridiculous!”  She finally said out loud making Algernon jump. “How am I supposed to get any work done with something terrorising staff next door?”

She reached for the door.

“Is that safe?”  Algernon piped up coming around to stand in front of Peggy, “Something attacked Rain, shouldn’t we wait for help…with big guns…and plastic explosives?”

“Did you see a mark on him?  A scratch or even a bruise?” She asked and Algernon had to shake his head.

“But you do make a valid point.”  She admitted, Algernon let out a huge silent sigh of relief.  “Wait here.”  

Muttering to herself she walked back to her lab and a few minutes later returned with an assortment of hand-made and  high-end technology. On her head she wore a safety helmet with a torch strapped to the side with gaffer tape. In her left hand a small geiger counter, in her right her revolver.  She went to hand the geiger counter to Alergnon who shook his head and stepped aside.

“Very well. Keep the door open and if anything happens go find security in the gatehouse and inform them of what’s going on.”  Peggy instructed as she turned the handle to the door and stepped inside.

 * * * * * * * * *

It  didn’t take Peggy long to know that something was definitely wrong with the room.  As soon as she entered the darkness between the aisles, her back molars buzzed in her head.  There was a low level presence of The Strange everywhere. She too found the mole rat skull and not long later Rain’s phone, which she pocketed.  As she walked deeper, everywhere she looked there were items touched by The Strange. A pristine clean white scarf, an egg made of an unknown steel, green tinted glasses, a necklace of teeth from a mysterious reptile.  There were broken things as well, used ciphers, broken artifacts all things that had spent too long in contact with the Strange. Individually they were nothing, used batteries that held little spark. But together in a sealed room where neither fresh air or sunlight could reach they…worked on each other.

She was just about to head back to Algernon and tell him her theory when a moisture ladened breeze carrying the smell of green things drifted in her direction.  It was such an unexpected yet wholly familiar sensation that she stopped in her tracks to breathe it in. Now she could make out the brown smell of damp earth, the bright yellow fragrance of aboral orchids.  Here too she could now hear the sounds of the forest, the constant snap, shuffle, creak, screech and splash of life.

A movement caught her eye and she picked up an old dirt and water stained notebook.  Her lost notebook, she was sure, the pages flicking back and forward in the breeze. Beside it, in a padded wooden crate for Inca Cola, were fossils of a bird-like creature that she’d seen only once before.  Incredulous, she reached out a hand to touch the rock skeleton when she heard footsteps behind her and turned, her gun ready…

…pointing to the beaming face of Noel.

Noel. Tall and thin, he slipped through the aisle like he walked through the forest, as if born to it.  Long fingered hands touched everything as he past as if his other senses weren’t enough to inform him about the world.  And then his face, his stupid charming face that made everyone listen to what he had to say.  

“Peggy, put that thing away before you have my head off with it.” He said in his rich baritone, a hint of humour as always.  For a moment she didn’t understand what he was talking about until the muzzle of the gun wavered in view and she quickly put the safety back on and returned it to its holster.”Well, aren’t you going to say something?”

“You’re dead.” She stated in her most matter of fact tone while inside her thoughts swirled trying to make sense of what was happening.

Without a word he slowly reached out a hand and touched her cheek.  She flinched, not use to any human contact. Glacially, she too raised her hand to cradle his hand against her face.  She leaned in an breathed the warm male of him, so familiar and comforting. She relaxed and closed her eyes.

“They said you were dead.  We couldn’t find your body after the avalanche, they said you were buried.”  The words tumbled out like a breaking dam, “I didn’t want to believe it, but you never came back.”

“And I’m sorry for that, believe me it was not my intent.”

“I needed you!”  Peggy exclaimed and shocked herself as tears sprung from here eyes and rolled down her hand.  She dropped his hand and stepped back. “ I tried to continue our work, but without the fossil evidence or you to persuade them…”

“I know, it’s been hard on you…”

“Hard…”  She stepped back again, “…I lost everything that day.  No one would take me seriously, they thought I’d gone mad.  I lost my tenure, my entire lab, but that wasn’t the worst. The worst was I was alone.”

 *     * *     * * *     * * *

Rain hadn’t been in a church for a while. He’d noted the church’s location on one of their trips out of campus, more for nostalgia than anything.  Now, Rain stumbled in like a man being chased by a mob. A man looking for Sanctuary.

He followed a line of brick archways that lined either side of the nave where empty pews sat. Dappled in the multi coloured light from the stained glass window, he turned his gaze from the broken and bleeding figure hung over the altar and made a beeline to a small alcove.  In its dark interior, a metal stand lay prepared with a few small tea-light candles, a box of matches and a donations box.  

The image reminded him of his childhood visits to Sunday Mass with his foster family.  Each child had been given 50p to either put in the box in front of the baby Jesus and Mary or to light a candle in remembrance of someone they would pray for.  Lots of the kids gave to the baby Jesus thinking that’s what the Morris’s wanted. Others just kept the coin, only pretending to drop it in the donation box. The boy, Rain had once been, had a feeling that there were people who he should pray for…but he didn’t know who.  Instead he gave his coin and lit a candle and hoped to know one day.

Adult Rain stuffed several banknotes into the donation slot and started lighting candles, one for every face he’s seen in that room.  His usually sure hands shook so badly he needed to lean on the metal stand to keep the match over the wick of each new candle. When he’d filled a row with light he started on another.  

“You’re either thinking to burn the church down one candle at a time or you you’re planning on doing a lot of praying.”  Said a man’s voice from the altar. “How many prayers are you intending to make?”

“I don’t know.”  Rain stopped his frantic lighting and turned to a priest, middle age and balding walking the few steps down from the altar. “Tell me, how many to appease 8372 souls?”

The priest’s steps faltered a moment, but to his credit he continued to walk towards Rain.

“That’s a highly specific and heavy burden to bear.”  The priest said coming to stand beside Rain as he watched the candles flicker. “Are you sure you bear it alone, or at all?”

“I survived.”  Rain had never expressed out loud the guilt and sense of loss he had carried.  Two words were all he could offer in explanation, but they seemed to be enough.

“Ah.”  The priest took Rain by the arm and led him like a lost child to one of the front pews, “ Let me tell you a story about a small church called St Paul’s Chapel. It is right in the heart of New York, overshadowed by some of the tallest buildings that humans have created.  One day those buildings fell down, but by some miracle the little chapel stood untouched. Then rescue workers, police, firefighters and ambulances needed a place to rest and regroup. The little chapel became a place of peace in the middle of what seemed to all of us a living hell.  At first it was just a place to rest for an hour or two, eventually volunteers brought food and other services and the chapel became a place of hope and support.”

“You’re talking about September 11.”  

The priest nodded.

“I also have a few numbers I carry around with me.  2606 people died at the Twin Towers and that’s including those on the flights and those brave souls who went in to help.  I also know that more than 3000 people made the Chapel a place of Sanctuary. See, I know. Right now you are a place of devastation, a living hell.  Right now you need peace, but eventually you will also need hope and support if you are ever to heal. Christmas, a time of family and community. It can be a hard time for the lonely.”

Like Peggy’s slap, the priest’s comment was unexpectant and stung.

“I’m not lonely.” He smiled incredulous. “I make friends wherever I go.”

“I’m sure you have many acquaintances,” The priest acknowledged, “ But where are your friends when things get real?  Where are those people right now?”

Rain thought of the three friends he had stumbled into one wet night outside New Orleans six months previous.  They may bicker and gripe at each other, but they were always there. Then he remembered where he’d left them and cringed.

“Oh…I’ve left them in a bad situation.  I need to get back.”

“Are you, and they, going to be alright?”

“We have so far, “Rain shrugged, “Can I ask you something personal?”

“You can try.”

“Those who died, do you see them…sometimes?”

“Sometimes.”

“What do you do?”

The priest thought for a moment.

“Love them. That way I keep them alive and also give purpose to my own life.”

Rain shook his head at the simplicity of the statement.  

“You know,  guys get a bad rap.”

“Don’t I know it.” the priest acknowledged with a smile.

“Merry Christmas.”

  *     * *     * * *     * * *

Algernon stood alone in the hallway wondering what to do next. He turned from the open door of the storeroom to the flight of stairs leading outside, and back again. 

Peggy had been gone a long time.  She had said to go to security, but security were authority and it was never a good idea to gain the attention of authority.  

Rain had been gone a long time.  He said not to go into the room alone, but Peggy had gone in alone and if he were to find her he’d have to go in alone too.

He looked to the door, he looked to the stairs and made up his mind.  

Sprinting across campus to the dormitory he grabbed his crossbow.  He rummaged around in Bruce’s things until he found the crowbar. Running back to Peggy’s lab he found her home made safety equipment and put that on.  He would have liked some grenades or an automatic weapon but all those were locked up and out of reach. Finally, equipped as best he could, he stood in front of the doorway and looked into the storeroom.

It was dark.  In the gloom off to one side he saw the mole rat skull glowing in the ambient light.  Algernon brought his crossbow up and targeted the skull. Any false move from the long dead rodent and it would get a bolt between the eye sockets.  

He stepped in and cautiously started down the first aisle of junk, a torch attached to his crossbow lighting the way.  So focused was he on the light from his torch he almost failed to see the pale blue glow that was lighting everything around him, until the turned a corner in the piles.  Ahead, spinning slowly was a portal, the event horizon flashed and flickered sickeningly. Inside Algernon could almost see the outline of two people, one with the distinct disheveled look of Peggy.

“Algernon…Peggy!”  From behind Rain’s voice  came through the open doorway.  Relief swept through Algernon and he crept back to the door and Rain. 

“Where did you go?”  Algernon asked not really caring for the answer, only happy to see Rain.

“Sorry about that, I guess I don’t like storerooms.”  Rain conceded.

“No, you were right.  There’s a portal in that room, and I don’t think it’s stable.”  Algernon replied.

“Where’s Peggy?”

“She’s…in the portal…it’s odd.  She’s in the portal but I can still see her, standing with another person.”

“Another person…”  Rain looked into the gloom around Algernon and paled. “First things, get her out of the portal.”

Algernon nodded and turned to go back in.  Rain stayed in the doorway.

“Are you coming?”  Algernon asked in a whisper.

Rain closed his eyes, took a deep shuddering breath and stepped forward into the room. When his eyes opened they were fixed on Algernon.

“Lead the way.”

Algernon did, his crossbow on his back, the flashlight searching ahead.  He lead them both straight to the portal where it still swirled like a disturbed pool of blue light.  

“She’s in there.” He pointed his flashlight at the portal.  Rain’s eyes followed the beam for a moment. He cowered as something disturbed him and his gaze focused back on Algernon.

“I don’t see it.”  He replied disappointment replacing the fear,  “Can you see her?”

Algernon turned back to the portal.  He was disturbed to see the two figures seemed less distinct, just movement in a fog of light.  He nodded.

“When you’re ready, grab her and we’ll make for the door.”  Rain pulled out his own trusty golf club and wrapped it around Algernon’s chest.  “Ready, when you are.”

 *     * *     * * *     * * *

“Everythings finally ready for you.  It’s taken so long but it’s time that you should see it.”  Noel was gestured to Peggy, leading the way further into the bright green of the jungle ahead, but Peggy was having doubts.

For one, she couldn’t remember how she’d got to the jungle.  That could just be just exhaustion, but if so, why was she so poorly equipped with only a gun, helmet and a geiger counter?  It didn’t make any sense. She tried to think back. Wasn’t there a storeroom…?

“Come and see.”  Noel beckoned again and a fog parted and they were both on a plateau overlooking a brown scar in the a green jungle.  In the scar of raw earth, a large camp filled with dozens of tents and hundreds of workers. A stream of workers,like jungle ants, all moved with purpose to and from a large gridded dig site surrounded by thick walls made of the trunks of jungle trees to protect against another landslide. Peggy made to move a step closer.

“It’s everything we ever wanted. A fully funded expedition, the first fossil secure and others being revealed everyday.  You’re not alone here Peggy. Everyone believes in the work, some have spent their life savings to get here and help It’s been a long time, Peggy, but I think you can see it was worth it.”

It has been a long time,  She thought, returning her focus to Noel.  He looked the same as she remembered him, exactly the same.  Surely years in the jungle climate would have changed him a little.

And there!  A tear in his shirt that he’d caught on a thorn the morning of the avalanche.  

“How did you survive?” Peggy asked moving away from the view and closer to Noel.  

“What does it matter.  What matters is that you have a purpose.”

Peggy touched the tear in the shirt, if felt like material.  She pulled it apart and saw a deep red line, a cut in the skin where the thorn had penetrated, still raw with a little congealed blood sealing the wound.  It looked no more than a few hours old.

She lept back as Noel reach out to touch her hand, a look of bemusement on his face.

“What are you?”  Peggy asked and instinctively reached for her gun once more.

“What am I?” Asked Noel all confidence gone, “Can’t I be Noel?”

A red leather clad arm shot out of nowhere and grabbed Peggy around the waist and Noel grabbed her arm.  It was now a tug of war that Peggy was yet to take sides in.

“Don’t leave me Peggy, you give me purpose!”  The now panic stricken Noel pleaded with Peggy.

“No, you can’t be Noel he’s gone. You have to be you.”  Peggy planted her feet, not willing to be drawn back by the arm around her waist but equally as disinterested in following the creature pretending to be Noel.

“Please…please…”  Noel cried

“Peggy!  I’m sorry for leaving!  Please come back!” A faint voice and a redoubling of effort to pull her back made up Peggy’s mind.  With a twist of her arm she shook free of Noel’s grasp and allowed herself to be pulled backwards and away, keeping her eyes on him the whole time.

The jungle disappeared and Peggy fell backwards into Algernon who stepped back and fell into Rain. They all landed in a heap of bodies and limbs amongst the broken and forgotten of the room. 

“Out, now!”  Barked Rain as he sprung to his feet in time to help the other two.  

“What was that?”  Peggy asked as both Rain and Algernon grabbed a hand each and ran back for the open door at the far end of the room.

It wasn’t until the storeroom door was closed and they were all back in Peggy’s lab that Rain allowed himself to sink to the floor.  Algernon took a stool at one of the lab benches and started removing Peggy’s protective equipment as Peggy stood dejectedly in the middle of her lab.

“I know it’s powered by the Strange, there’s a lot of Strange touched items in that room all in close proximity.  But what…?”

“It was a portal, “ Algernon described the portal and the way its event horizon flickered weakly. “You made another one.”

“No, these rooms are lead lined with metres thick walls, my machine could not have made a portal in that room.”  Peggy replied back logically, “Besides, I never saw a portal.”

“No, only Algernon could see it.”  Rain added from the floor.

“Yeah, what did you see?”  Algernon asked Rain, curious as to what had scared his friend so.
“Ghosts, people…lost.” Rain stared at the cold vinyl floor, unable to look Algernon in the face.

“Why did you go back in?”
“You were there and Peggy was inside…I didn’t want you to face it alone.”  

“I heard you, from inside…”  Peggy replied, realising it was Rain who she had heard.  “I heard you and it help me work out what was real and what wasn’t.”

“What did you see, if not a portal?”  Algernon asked Peggy. She looked for a moment like she would tell him to get lost.  Instead her face softened and she replied in her most matter of fact manner.

“As I don’t believe in such ludicrous theories as ghosts, I would have to say the portal you described showed me… memories of what I thought I’d lost.”  

“Why didn’t the portal affect you the same way?”  Rain asked Algernon who just shrugged. 

“I guess I never lost something I missed.”

“You’re whole planet, your culture, your people?”

Algernon just shrugged, 

“Nothing as good as what I have here.”

A grim little smile crept over Rain’s face and he nodded picking himself off the floor.

“Well, I think it’s pretty clear what we have to do.”

“Is it?”

Rain didn’t answer.  He walked out of Peggy’s lab and climbed the stairs to Hetzfeld’s office door.  A few locks picked later and the three of them were standing in front of a metal locker, its door open revealing a gun-like device with a wide barrel and a large battery where the ammunition usually sat.

“We don’t need to close it down straight away,”  Peggy looked at the device remembering how effective it was at disrupting and dispersing the portal that had opened in her lab a few months earlier. “ It’s hardly a portal at all and that’s the point.  It’s creating a connection with us powered only by a few odd and broken items linked to the Strange. How? What instigated the connections? Could we use the process to power our own devices like Hertzfeld’s glove?”

“You can do all the studies you want after the portal is gone.”  Rain glared at the device and stepped aside for Algernon.

“There can be no study once the connections are disrupted.  I won’t let you destroy this discovery like…” Peggy’s voice rose as she realised she was once more the brink of an incredible discovery that was about to be snatched away.

“Like what Peggy? The little day dream we interrupted?  It wasn’t real…” Rain’s own emotions fizzed inside him, wanting a release
“Oh like your ghosts?”  Peggy quipped back making it very clear what she thought of his imagined spirits.

Algernon quietly stepped between his two quarrelling family members and picked up the gun.  It was heavier than he expected, heavier than most he’d practised with on the gun range. He’d seen Hertzfeld wield the gun against the aborted recursion and knew it was a simple point and shoot.

“Those ghosts were real for me, Peggy.  In the past just as much as they were in that room.”

“Maybe if you thought less about your past and more about what your senses tell you in the here and now you wouldn’t be such a gibbering mess.”

“Says the woman who planted landmines at her front door against underground fish people!”

Algernon looked at Peggy and Rain.  He knew that a gun may get their attention.  He could grab Peggy’s gun from its holster and point it at them. It would shut them up for a moment,  but then what? He couldn’t stop them from thinking the way they did with a gun, and neither did he really want to.  But, he knew what to do with the gun he had. He left them to their bickering and started back down to the storeroom. 

It was quiet in the storeroom after the yelling match upstairs.  This time Algernon found the switchboard and turned on all the lights to the room.  The fluorescents moaned and flashed before filling the space completely with white light.  Under their glare the room looked smaller and more shabby than it had in the dark. The piles of broken and forgotten objects were smaller, more mundane.  

Hefting the heavy gun across his body, Algernon started down the aisle marked with the giant mole rat skull knowing the portal was at the other end.  At first he thought it had disappeared, finally blinked out of existence with too little energy to support it. As he stared at the spot where he knew it had been, his eyes picked up the shimmer of blue, like that off the surface of a pond.  It was here, but like a torchlight in the sun it was washed out by the brighter light source. Algernon expertly adjusted the gun in his arms, flicked off the safety and raised it to his shoulder. His finger found the trigger and was about to squeeze it just as he practiced when he became aware of a buzzing coming from all around him. 

Curious, he lowered the gun and listened trying to hone in on the sound.  As he did the sound cleared and a voice soft at first, could be distinctly heard.

“Please…please…”
“Please what?” He asked, his response bouncing off the stained white walls.

“What… what…” The voice echoed and he wondered for a moment if he’d misheard the first plea at all. Then he realised whatever the intelligence was, it was using his words because it had none of its own.

“What I’ve lost?  What I want?”

The response when it came was not words, more a feeling of warmth and approval.  Agreement. Yes.

“I have what I want.  Sometimes I wish they wouldn’t fight, sometimes I wish they were better, but they’re my family.”

Again a response, not as words but as a feeling of being directionless, lost  and confused, not knowing what to do. For a while Algernon just thought. He knew that feeling very well. That first day hiding in the abandoned house after Peggy’s machine had dragged him into this world.  With only what he wore on him he spent hours wandering around the empty ruin wondering what next? Where he was? What should he do now? Who could he turn to?  

He realised, like his words, the intelligence was also using his own feelings to communicate.  That’s what it had been doing all along, using memories and feelings from both Rain and Peggy to communicate. It had been born into the dark of a forgotten storeroom from the broken leftovers of The Strange.  It was just unfortunate that the two minds it should first meet were so broken themselves.

“You want to know your purpose, you want to know where you belong and what you should be doing?” He said, the gun now forgotten, pointing at the ground.  He was physically knocked off his feet when the response came back. Bright and loud like a shout, not of anger but absolute affirmation. The emotion was completely overpowering dulling all his other senses so he was only vaguely aware of his body falling backwards.

Hands cupped his head and held his shoulders as his world tilted until he found himself looking up at the concerned faces of both Peggy and Rain. 

“Hey mate, stay with me.” Rain said moving around to take Algernon’s hand as Peggy checked his automatic responses with her light. 

“I’m here.”  Algernon blinked and Peggy lowered her torch.

“We stopped yelling when we noticed you were gone.  What happened?” She asked, slowing lifting him up to sitting position against the nearest pile.

“I heard it, the intelligence powered by the Strange.”  Algernon replied, “It was born here in the dark and was alone not knowing what it was or what it should do.”  He sat up straighter feeling more himself, then remembered the gun and turned on the safety and it powered down. “The first person it met was Rain and it found memories and emotions that it understood in your mind.  Rain, you’re pretty messed up.”

Rain’s look of concern turned into one of his knowing smiles.  He let Algernon continue. “Those memories were too much for you and you ran.  Then it met Peggy and found something in her too, but you were right Peggy, it was just memories of being lost, alone, not knowing what to do…”

“Yes, thank you Algernon well put.”  She interrupted Algernon and gestured for him to continue. “But what about you?  How did it finally communicate with you?”

“I think it had learnt from you two.  It couldn’t confront me with my memory without making me scared like Rain. There was no one I wanted to talk to, so it had to use what it had learnt from us already.  It used emotions from my mind to ask me what its purpose was. When I understood it was so pleased that it …it was very happy.”

“So, what’s a pile of junks purpose?”  Peggy asked completely oblivious to the larger story laid out in front of her.

“The same as every intelligent creature ever,”  Rain beamed now appreciating the wonder they had discovered. “You were right, Peggy.  We can’t destroy it, but I don’t think you have the right to experiment on it either.  We have a brand new life on our hands.”

“New life, made from remnants of the Strange?”  Peggy mused, “It would probably be best in its own habitat.”  She stood up and walked back down the aisle to the mole rat skull.  She picked it up and returned the two men still sitting on the floor.

“If it were to travel out to Railsea but stop part way, it would find itself in the Strange.  There it could find purpose, but I don’t know how to communicate all that to a being with no language.”

“I’d say if it can use our memories and feelings, we can use them too.”  Rain pointed out and brought his legs around to sit cross legged. “Think of that journey we took to Railsea.  We moved from world to world all swimming in the energies of the Strange. The feeling of acceleration through the stars.”

Algernon closed his eyes and listened for the intelligence.  It seemed silent at the moment, but he knew it was still there, listening itself, waiting.  He thought of that trip, the tug as they left Earth and travelled as stardust across the Strange to Railsea.  He also thought of all the broken ciphers and oddments that powered the creature and made a connection between that power and the vast swirling energies of the Strange.  

A bright sharp thought, like an intake of breath, a sudden realisation, a rush of knowing.

Algernon’s eyes flicked open in time to see the faint blue shimmer coalesce and form a tight ball of energy.  The ball drift between Rain and himself and into the skull, filling it with the same pale energy until it was too intense to watch and Algernon had to look away.  When the glow subsided he opened his eyes. The light had gone and the mole rat skull sat there in Peggy’s arms as before.

“Right.  There’s obviously been an appalling lack of cipher safety in this room.”  Peggy suddenly very brusk, started ordering the two men about. “I’ll stay here and find anything Strange-touched, you two move everything else out.”  

Algernon wasn’t sure, but it seemed her eyes shimmered like the light from the portal.

“Everything?” He asked getting to his feet.

“I think chopping down the tree outside the lab would have been easier,”  Rain joked also rising to pat Algernon on the shoulder, “Nevermind, I have an idea.  Peggy, just let us know what we can take.”

For the rest of the afternoon they moved boxes from the storeroom on to the green lawn of the campus commons. When Peggy found an item that set her sense tingling she put it carefully aside ready for proper disposal or storage.  Rain arranged the boxes and old furniture into a pyre lighting it just as the sun disappeared from the winter sky. The fire started slowly in the cold night air, stacks of paper and cardboard not being the best fuel. Eventually the wood and other combustible ignited and the warm glow lit the whole common.  

The few security that remained at the Campus swarmed the commons, equipped for an emergency.  A quick word from Rain and the mention of Peggy’s name and reputation soon had the security officer in charge noting that the fire was their responsibility and soon left them to their blaze.

“Where’s Peggy?”  Rain basked in the glow of the fire.  For the first time that day the little man looked at peace.

Algernon shook his head,  “I guess still down in the lab, she said she had something to do.”

“Her loss.  You know, every Christmas they burn bonfires just like this one up and down the Mississippi River.  Even if her Yaya didn’t approve, Peggy could not have helped but know about them.”

“Another Christmas tradition?”

“Yep.  I guess it shows how important it really is.”

They stayed out watching the fire until it was little more than ill-shapen coals and the heat no longer kept out the cold.  With a shrug they silently made their way back across the now darkened common to the dormitory building.  

Before they had even entered, there was a noticeable difference to the quality of the light coming from inside.  Gone was the fluro white shining through the windows. It was replaced by a softer warmer glow coming from one source.  Rain stopped, his mouth agape in delighted surprise.

“No way, she didn’t!”  He exclaimed, racing up the few steps and in through the front doors. 

 Puzzled, Algernon ran after him, stopped by the wondrous sight that now filled the lounge.  Instead of the leaning dead fir tree of the morning, the tree had been propped up on a tripod made for the task. The branches were wreathed in red, green and gold bands of tinsel with every second or third holding a warm yellow light in the shape of a candle.  On top of the tree a silver blue star perched, reflecting back the light from the tree below. The effect was balanced and aesthetically pleasing. Algernon wasn’t sure if it warranted the killing of a tree, but he could appreciate that it was beautiful.

“You crazy unbelievable woman!”  Rain turned when Peggy appeared from out of the women’s dormitory room.  He ran to embrace her but was held back by a stern look and a warning finger,  “For someone who said they never killed a tree at Christmas, where did you learn to decorate like that?!”

“My Yaya would not have a tree.”  She acknowledged walking back to the lounge to gaze upon her work, “But my parents, on the other hand, love their plastic spruce.  It was a family ritual to decorate it altogether on December first. When I found the boxes of decorations, it seemed only appropriate that I put them to good use.”

“Your parents?”  Algernon asked, noting this was the first time she’d ever spoken about family other than her grandmother or brother.

“Yes, I did have them.” She replied in her usual matter of fact tone that cease all further conversation.  When Rain stepped up to the tree to tweak a light and move a piece of tinsel she stepped closer to Algernon and whispered, 

“You asked before why I’m not going home for Christmas.”

“Y-es.”  He stuttered very aware of how she’d responded to him the first time.

Instead she just looked up at the tree and Rain fussing at the decorations.

“I am where I belong.  If that is not my home, than where is?”

 *     * *     * * *     * * *

The day after Boxing day the Estate started coming back to life again as staff returned to work from all over the world. No less at the dormitories where a large figure, carrying a noticeably lighter bag, pushed open the outside door.

“Brucie!  Welcome back!”  Rain called across the dormitory as Bruce walked back in. ”I never thought I’d say it, but don’t ever leave again.  This place falls apart without you.”

“Oh does it.”  He responded, putting his bag down to admire the tree, “Why?  What did you do?”

“Attention all staff, “ The artificial voice of the announcement program broadcast through the Estate’s PA system, “Would Rain Bigby please report to Mr Keaton’s office immediately.”

Rain rolled his eyes, patted Bruce on shoulder by way of welcome and silently walked through the doors that Bruce had only just entered, Algernon in his wake.

“Why?  What have you done, Rain?”  Bruce repeated now concerned over what had happened during his absence.  He started to follow Rain but was called back by Peggy.

“Sit down Bruce, “  She ordered, pointing to one of the lounge chairs that had been rescued from the embrace of the tree, “Let me tell you about our very Strange Christmas.”

11. Road Trippin

The Estate’s clandestine power  fell into place around Bruce and Peggy as they rolled in the gates of the campus later that night.  Without discussion or preamble Peggy was asked to pull up and they were all ordered to vacate the car.  Just as quickly it was taken off the Estate grounds by another agent to be disposed off or ‘cleaned’ of any connection to the Estate.  A small contingent of armed agents escorted, Peggy, Bruce with the Cowboy to an interrogation room where they were left to do ‘whatever was required’.  This later fact was made very clear to Bruce. He thought of his brother in the throes of Spiral Dust and the demise of the erstwhile drug dealer Eldritch Chopra and steeled himself for what needed to be done.  He noted the well used telephone book beside the door and felt for the reassuring weight of his crowbar in it’s harness.

“Well LeRoy, nasty number you did on Chopra.”  He began as the audio system ticked down the seconds recording their interview.

“I did nothing.”  LeRoy Cain sat relaxed, handcuffed to the table.  He was an old hand at the rules of police interrogations, but Peggy and Bruce were not the police and there were no rules.

“We have footage showing you did.”  Peggy bluffed trying to intimidate the murderer.

“How would you have footage from his musty old apartment?”

“We’d been watching Eldritch for a while.  You have to admit he was pretty obvious.”

LeRoy gave Peggy a hard look and sat back in his chair not buying her story.

“Really, you snuck a surveillance system into the computer-geeks place?  Pull the other one, it plays Jingle Bells.”

“The thing is, LeRoy, we’re pretty sure you did it and we don’t need to prove anything.  If we want you’ll just disappear, no trial, no lawyers, nothing.”

Bruce, seeing Peggy was getting nowhere stepped in, drawing the comfortable weight of his crowbar off his back.

“Look, he’s seeing through what your doing, Peggy.  What he can’t see through is my crowbar when I pry out his eye.”  Bruce stood to his full 6 foot 6 and flexed the substantial muscle that time and hard work had created. “You did a nasty job on Chopra and I’ll gladly do the same to you for what you did to my brother.”  

“Do be careful with the eye,”  Peggy commented coolly, “I need samples  and they’re so hard to come by.”

Bruce was slow and deliberate as he circled the table to grasp LeRoy by the hair and bring the crowbar hook in contact with the tissue-thin skin around the eye.  It may have been the cold steel, it could have been Bruce firm grasp or his look of determination but the tough guy soon came to the realisation that here, he had no rights.

“What do you want to know?”

He told them that the dust came from Colorado and was shipped to him once a month in the parcel mail.  It was sent from a woman called Lydia Lance who owned a gemstore in Nederland called, “The Dreaming Crystal”.  She had contacted him a few years ago about being a distributor. How she’d got his name he didn’t know, but Bruce go the impression that he’d made a big enough name for himself to be known Interstate.

“I did a few jobs.  I’m always in work.”  He glared menacingly. His attempt was completely lost on Peggy and Bruce had been menaced enough as a union representative to know a bully when he saw one. 

“So why Chopra?”  Bruce wanted to know recalling the scene of devastation that had once been a human body.

“He was cutting into my business, I couldn’t have him reselling.”

“And that’s it?  Business?”

That seemed to be it.

“One more thing. There had been another woman, before Lydia. Strange bird, didn’t see her again.”

Bruce, satisfied they’d got everything they were going to get from LeRoy, reported to his supervisor.

“We’ve got some information out of him, what do we do with him now?”

“Leave that with me, “ She said matter of factly, “You got a lead on a supplier?”

He filled her in on LeRoy’s capture and what he’d told them.

“The police were called to investigate.  Shots were fired and a car turned over.”

“Yes, so I heard.  Nevermind, the Estate is onto it.”  She noted coolly getting back to the topic at hand, “LeRoy’s contact, would you go on a road trip to investigate this?”

“Why wouldn’t we fly? Quicker and cheaper.”
“Two reasons.  Firstly, your group’s recent…activities will need some smoothing over and for that it would be best if you were out of town for at least a few days.  Secondly, you still have a task given by Lisa Banks, Chief of Public Relations. One Gwendoline Wurtz and her ability to charge smart devices with body heat?”

Bruce remembered, it  just didn’t seem a priority, but he nodded his agreement.

“We’ll get right onto that.”

Rain and Algernon still hadn’t reported back when Bruce left Katherine’s office.  He rung Rain’s number, it rung out. He tried Algernon’s number, also no answer. Now getting concerned he sent a text message to both numbers.

Phone in when you’re safe.

    *     * *     * * *     *

Algernon and Rain ran through the dark Seattle streets, Algernon lugging the duffle bag, Rain his head still ringing from the tumble in the pick up. When the alley they were travelling emptied out onto inhabited streets once more the pair slowed down keeping an eye out for cabs and police cars with equal interest.

“So, bro’,” Rain finally said when he’d caught his breath, “What do you say to a night on the town?”

“Night on the town?”  Algernon questioned at the unfamiliar use of language.

“Let’s go to a nightclub.  I know of a place not far from the Estate.  I’m sure we can leave that bag at the cloakroom and there’ll be live music.”

Music was a new experience for Algernon, having only experienced it for the first time while travelling on The Limness in Railsea.  It seemed to him that music had a lot of potential.

“Absolutely!”  He said with enthusiasm until a thought came to him, “But…is it safe? 

Rain walked in silence a dark expression on his face.

“Algernon, I’ve never said and never will say things will be safe.  Safe is a metal box that you lock things away in. Do you want to live in a metaphorical metal box?”

The image was not exactly appealing to Algernon, but if you could guarantee safety would being locked in a metal box be worthwhile?  Algernon’s thought did not get a chance to be aired as Rain did not wait for a reply but continued with his monologue.

“The only person who goes on about making things safe is Bruce and look what happened last time, you nearly got eaten by a molerat.  The assumption should always be that things are not going to be safe, and do what you can to look out for each other.”  Rain now turned to his companion to see if he’d understood. 

“But isn’t safety something we should always strive to be?”

“You know, it’s amazing how often fun and safety are mutually exclusive concepts.”

“So it’s an issue of risk mitigation?”

Rain smiled for the first time that evening, 

“Exactly. Life is about not avoiding risk but mitigating the dangers when you can.  But let’s not talk of dangers for one night. We’ll listen to some music, make some friends that know nothing about us or our insane lives. You’ll get to see the real US outside of your favourite ‘documentaries’.  Have a few drinks without Mr Disapproval looking down his nose. Do a little sleight of hand…hey I’ll teach you some. And then we can toddle home as the sun rises over the gasworks, and beat Bruce to breakfast.”

Now there was a concept that Algernon could get behind, coffee and bacon and night out with Rain.  He nodded and Rain hailed the next free taxi.

“Driver!  To the High Dive, please.”

    *     * *     * * *     *   

Celia Fisher

Celia Fisher was confused at first when her hair salon couldn’t book an appointment with her favourite hairdresser.  It seems she wasn’t sick and hadn’t quit or been given the sack, she just wasn’t there. She became more concerned when she tried getting in touch with Melissa directly and her phone went straight to voicemail.  Melissa’s phone never went straight to voicemail. Melissa Romero, a charming twenty-something hairdresser collected people like some collected bottle caps or shiny pebbles. Celia had been ‘collected’ as they chatted over a salon appointment months previously.  They had exchanged phone numbers and that had been that.  

Celia’s senses tingled as she felt a mystery, and there was nothing that Celia liked better than a mystery to solve.  As a private detective in Seattle she usually had plenty of people that were willing to pay her to solve their mysteries.  Most of those didn’t count as real mysteries, cheating spouses and thieving employees are usually not experienced enough to know how to cover their tracks effectively.  Celia thought that Melissa’s case was different.

She visited Melissa’s home and found her sister Jennifer talking to police.  Having identified herself as a friend of Melissa’s Jennifer admitted that she was gratified that Melissa had so many caring people around her.

“Why do you say that?”  Celia asked.

“I was here trying to get Melissa to answer the door when three other friends turned up.  One said his name was Simun Otiluke. They came in with me and found her place deserted. It just looked like she was….”  At this point, Jennifer started choking up as the emotions got too much for her, “…she was just in another room. Everything was there, her keys, her phone.  Her phone had gone flat so she must have been gone days and days…” She started crying and Celia played her part well, consoling the family member while her mind raced through the possibilities.

“Jennifer listen. I’m not just a friend of Melissa’s but also an investigator.”  At this moment she handed Jennifer her business card. “I want to help you find Melissa.  Tell me, this is not the sort of behaviour you’d expect from her? To just go off without even her phone? Without a word?”

“She could be flighty, but she loved her work and Simun said she hadn’t been there either.  Melissa and I talked every week. If I didn’t ring her she’d be on the phone to me.”

“Okay, good so we can rule out that she’s just dropped out.  Do you mind if I walk through Melissa’s apartment, maybe take a look at her phone.”

Jennifer nodded.

“The police have done all that and said I can lock up, but what if she comes back and can’t get in?”

Celia didn’t answer.  Melissa leaving and not taking her keys was disturbing.  Her turning up to a lock house would be only be inconvenient.
“Was the apartment locked when you got here?”

“Yes,”  Jennifer thought for a moment, “One of them thought she may have been abducted,  or…translated, but Melissa didn’t know any other languages and what would that have to do with her disappearance?”

“Translated?  Are you sure they said, translated?”

“I’m sure. Simun seemed concerned it had been mentioned and suggested we try her bedroom …that’s when I found…”  Jennifer held out her hand to reveal Melissa’s iPhone now with ten percent charge.

“May I?”  Celia eyed the phone. She knew Melissa’s whole world was in that phone, but didn’t want to seem rude.  Jennifer handed it over.

“Did you get a name for the other two friend?”  Celia asked casually as she flipped through the messages and recent calls.

“No …no.  They all seemed to know each other though, maybe you can ask Simun?”  Jennifer wrapped her arms around herself, though the evening was warm. “Do you want to come inside, I don’t feel safe out here.”

Celia agreed and followed Jennifer into the apartment.  She noted the pile of mail inside the door, and the full cup of cold coffee on the kitchen counter.  She noted that the apartment was in good order with only the bedroom looking like it had been ‘lived in’.  As she moved through the apartment she shared Melissa’s contact list with her phone and took photos of all the messages.  When she had finished her investigation of the house she handed back the phone to Jennifer.

“Was there anyone new in Melissa’s life?  A new man or someone she particularly talked about?”  Celia asked on the off chance. She was sure that if Melissa has a boyfriend everyone would have known.

“Funny you should ask that, the big one, one of the friends asked that too?  I didn’t remember anyone at the time but I remembered later she had mentioned a new guy called LeRoy.  I remember because I thought she’d said the drink first, you know LaCroix. I thought it a funny name at the time.”

Celia went through the contacts list and found one for LeRoy Cain with phone number and an address.

“These friends, what did they look like?”

Jennifer described the three as best she could, but she kept coming back to the short one with the unusually coloured eyes.  

“When he looked at me it was like there was no else around.  It was a little creepy…” Jennifer let her words drift, Celia thought Jennifer may like this Simun character a little more than she let on.

“LeRoy, know anymore about him?”

“Last Tuesday I spoke to her, she said that she had to cut our call short because she was going to meet him.”

“LeRoy?”

“Yes, she was being very mysterious about it.  You don’t think he had something to do with her disappearance?”

“I don’t know, but I’d certainly like a chance to talk to this LeRoy character for myself.”

Being  Monday night, Celia went home and started processing the information she had.  She cross referenced all the contacts in Melissa’s phone to Melissa’s Facebook and Instagram accounts.  Out of all the name only two can up blank. LeRoy Cain and Simun Otiluke and his friends. In fact a simple trawl through the social networking sites brought up nothing for either man.  

Next she started ringing Melissa’s friends.  This took a while as each one wanted to know what was going on and all had their opinions on what happened.  She‘d only run six friends but was already seeing a pattern. No one had heard of a Simun Otiluke, not social friends, nor workmates which was odd as he supposedly connected through the salon.  On the other hand, most had heard about Leroy Cain and one admitted to have known him. From their information it was clear that LeRoy was a very shady character, who like dressing as a cowboy and may have sold drugs to the friends.  He was only accessible Tuesday nights from the address in Melissa’s phone.

Celia put down her phone and scanned her notes.  Melissa hadn’t been seen for more than a week, possibly after seeing LeRoy on the Tuesday she spoke to her sister.  Sometime after, she went home and disappeared off the face of the earth. Leroy may not be involved but he seemed at present to be the last person to have seen Melissa alive.  Satisfied she could do no more that night, Celia turned in knowing that whatever happened, tomorrow was going to be a long day.

Celia Fisher rode through the evening streets of Seattle, her black trench coat fluttering behind her as she weaved through the remains of the peak-hour traffic.  She was a local and she knew Seattle’s streets well, but even for her this part of town was not well travelled. She had been out to this neighbourhood precisely once before, checking out a car parts racket.  The owner of the auto-repair shop had been so concerned to find out that his supplier was selling him stolen parts that he pleaded for her to forget his name in her reports to the insurance company. She had, earning her a favour that she was about to cash in.  

The office of the auto-repairs was at the front of the store and overlooked the intersection.  It also had the convenience of a back exit onto an alley where she intended to park her bike. With the lights off she could sit and watch the intersection and when it was time to move she would go out the back and never be seen from the street.  It was this alley she now turned into as the owner and his apprentices were just leaving.

“Are you sure you’re going to be right by yourself here?”  The owner said as they shook hands. She had been a private investigator for a little less than ten years and it still rankled when people underestimated her.

“I don’t intend for anyone to know I’m there.  Don’t worry about me, I do this all the time in places a lot less secure than your office.”  Celia replied confidently and he seemed mollified.

“Well, just remember to pull the door shut when you leave.”  

Promising to make sure the shop was locked up before she left, Celia then made her way through the dark garage.  She didn’t dare even a phone light as she picked her way around tool chests and piles of tyres to reach the office.  As she remembered, the office windows looked out onto the street and showed a view of intersection the other two buildings, and the carpark. 

 From her trench coat she pulled out a thermos and a pile of sandwiches.  From a messenger bag she pulled out a digital SLR camera with a 300mm image stabilizer lens.  It wasn’t the most powerful of her lenses, but the big front element picked up all available light, perfect for late night work like this.  Leaning back in one of the office chairs she scanned the area looking for any signs of life. A few people were still on the street at this hour  the general store was getting its share of customers picking up a few essentials before heading home and the last car drove out of the carpark and sped away for places unknown.  

Celia trained the viewfinder over the abandoned building and picked up the faint blue glow from one of the first floor windows. She looked closer and noticed that the window had been opened, the street lights failing to reflect off the velvet blackness of the building’s interior.  She cursed she hadn’t brought a longer lens as she couldn’t make out any details but she thought there was something propped up on the window sill. Something quite like a rifle.

She lowered her camera and wondered what to do next.  There was no sight of LeRoy Cain, but he could arrive at any moment.  She could report what she’d seen to the police, but what had she seen?  And any police would surely scare Cain off . In the end she stayed where she was and watched as a man in a black coat walked out the front door of the supposedly empty office building and entered the store.  She followed him with her camera as he talked to the shopkeeper and bought a drink, returning to the office block taking in the neighbourhood as he closed the door. Celia pulled out her notes and looked up the description of the three friends Jennifer had given her.  She couldn’t be sure, but she wondered if this was the mysterious Mr Simun Otiluke.

An hour past, night settled onto the city and filled the street with darkness.  The blue glow in the first floor window became more obvious, so too the fact that there was someone behind the possible rifle as she caught the shifting of a shadow in the window.  Car headlights filled the car park opposite as a Dodge Ram turned into the driveway and parked. She knew she had her man as soon as he got out, the big ten gallon hat and cowboy boots advertising the arrival of LeRoy Cain.  

She watched as LeRoy took up position on the street next to the auto-repair shop and waited.  From the front doors of the office building, the one she thought of as Simun flanked by a woman in beige and a big guy  with a crowbar strapped to his back walked out. Now she knew she’d found the three ‘friends’. Simun waved to get LeRoy’s attention as something the size of a bird shot out of the upstairs window and across the road.  The projectile sailed over LeRoy’s head and hit the brickwork down from where Celia was hiding. A beat past as the three ‘friends’ realised something hadn’t gone as planned. They started running, but they were only halfway across the road when LeRoy disappeared.  

Celia checked her lens sure that something had obscured her view.  He hadn’t slipped into a shadow or slunk away down an alley, he just ceased to be.  The friends stopped in their tracks, Simun collapsed to his knees. It was no illusion, they could see it…or not see it…too.  LeRoy had vanished.  

The big guy started towards the Dodge, Simun following after with a defeated air when the Dodge’s door opened and the car started, headlights filling the car park with light once more.  But there was no one there. Even with the poor light Celia could see the carseat and through the truck cab, there was no one there. And yet the Dodge started moving towards the two men.  

The big one pulled a pistol from his belt as Simun produced a small rectangle seemingly from nowhere.  Celia thought it may have been a mace canister or a taser, until he fanned playing cards in the direction of the driver’s seat.  The cards bounced off thin air and the big man aimed his gun at the outlined shape. The bullets missed their mark and now the truck was on them in earnest.  The big guy leaped aside and out of harm’s way. Simun seemed to vault onto the bonnet of the truck, roll up the window and flip around and through the passenger window.  He now wrestled nothing in truck cab as it bumped down the curb and into the street.  

Out of the corner of her vision, Celia saw movement at the first floor window.  She almost missed it, focused as she was on the action on the ground. She almost failed to see as a young man climbed onto the window ledge, leaped out and…floated to the ground.  Camera forgotten she sat stunned as the young man jogged across to another car parked nearby just as easily as he’d jumped 12 metres to the ground. 

Meanwhile, the woman and big guy were shooting the Dodge’s tyres.  Bullets sparked off the asphalt others hit true and the truck went down onto the wheel rims striking up even more sparks.  Inside the cab, Celia could see Simun grab hold of the steering wheel and yanked it down. The sharp wheel rims bit into the road and with a horrible suddenness, the truck flipped.  

Celia stood dumbstruck as she watched the Dodge flip onto its roof, its seeming lone occupant thrown around like a ragdoll.  The big guy yell something that could not be heard over the roar of the now disconnected engine and the screeching groan of the truck as it came to a stop in the middle of the road.  He yanked the driver door open as far as it would go and grabbed…nothing…struggling with Simun. Pulling both out, the big one holding nothing in a headlock and dragging it across the road to the car the young man stood beside.  

Celia hadn’t realised she had been standing and quickly sat back down.  Had she really seen a full grown man disappear and be kidnapped by three…no four…special forces?  And the boy. That wasn’t clever parkour or an abseiling stunt. He had floated to the ground, right in front of her.

Outside, the invisible LeRoy (she had to admit it) was being bundled into the back seat of the sedan as the young man ran across to the truck and grabbed something first from the glove compartment and then the upturned tray.  Simun was inside the front door of the office, calling for the young man to follow him as the sedan sped off, the woman at the wheel. It was then that Celia heard the sirens. The young man made it through the door as the police car turned the corner into the intersection. When they got out, the door was lock and there was no one in sight.

It was time to go.  Talking to the police may have been an option before, but now guns had been fired, a car had overturned and Celia not where she should be.  With practised speed she packed up her stakeout, carefully put away her camera and lens and moved through the garage to the back door. The alley where her bike waited was quiet after the noise and violence of the last few minutes.  Celcia pushed her bike down the alley the 20 or 30 metres and watched as the two young men exited the office block via a back door.  

Keeping to streets that ran parallel to their alley, Celia followed them as they stumbled into more populated districts.  When they called a cab, she turned into traffic behind and followed them north out of the city. Eventually the cab pulled up outside a jazz bar and the two men went in carrying a large duffle bag.  She slowly rode past, parked down the block and made her way back to the bar. 

    *     * *     * * *     *     

Much to Rain’s surprise, the High Dive was a substantial and  thoroughly respectable bar part of a group of stripshops in a recently gentrified suburbs of Seattle.  Being a Tuesday night, they had no problem getting in, storing Algernon’s duffle and finding seats. Rain was just settling in to the ‘vibe’, enjoying the familiar buzz of the crowd as another buzz caught his attention.  Without looking at his phone he knew it would be Bruce wanting to know where they were. The right thing would be to answer it, let him know they were safe and that they would be home about sunrise the next day. Then he looked around the crowd, the band on the stage,  Algernon sitting beside him ‘researching’ the alcohol list. Listening to Bruce and explaining where they were, why and hearing how irresponsible their actions were in light of the capture of the Cowboy seemed like it belonged to another…recursion. With a deep and satisfying breath out, he ignored the phone and called over a waiter.

Algernon nearly jumped out of his seat when his phone rang a few minutes later, Mission Impossible only just identifiable over the sound of the band.  He looked at the phone and his youthful face creased in worry seeing Bruce’s name pop up. Without a word he showed Rain.

“Yeah, he just rang me, but I can’t talk to him tonight.”

Algernon propped the phone up on the small table they shared.  He was frozen with indecision as to answer it or not. How would he respond to Bruce’s probing questions?  What if Bruce got angry? The phone stopped ringing and he gave a sigh of relief only to jump once more when a text message arrived.

Phone in when you’re safe.

“Are we safe?”  Algernon asked as the waiter returned with two drinks both a depressing brown colour.

“You know my response to that question.”  Rain replied, once more scanning the busy scene in front of them, “What do you think?”

“I don’t know!”  

Rain’s phone buzzed again and he pulled it out of his pocket like something rotten. This time Algernon answered it.  Somehow the fact that it was Rain’s phone and not his own made the task easier. He was just doing Rain a favour.

“Hey Rain.” It was Bruce, it was too hard to tell if he was angry from two words.

“Hi Bruce.” Algernon said tentatively.

“Algernon.”  Algernon could almost hear Bruce’s mind whirling through the possibilities as to why he would be answering Rain’s phone.

“We’re fine.  It’s just us…alone…and I’m not drinking alcohol.”

A moment of silence.

“Okay, are you safe?” Bruce asked carefully.  Algernon wasn’t sure that was a good sign.

“Rain says we’re never safe.”

“You  know he’s just riding you.”

“No, he’s right beside me.”

More silence.

“He’s having a little fun.”

“Oh.”

“So…where are you?
“The…jazz…bar” Algernon’s minds stumbled over the lie.  How did Rain make it seem so easy.

“Yes, I know it’s a bar I can hear the music.  That’s not what it’s called, is it?”

“No.”

Another silence, maybe the grinding of teeth.

“Right.  Look, you be careful and look after yourself.  You’re not used to that stuff and who knows how it will affect you.”

“I will, thank you Bruce.”  He hung up and sculled the drink in front of him.  They’d had a few drinks so far, some tasted better than others, this one had a pleasing sort of warmth to it, but none made him ‘feel’ anything that his research had prepared him for.  Mimicking Rain, he called over the waiter again and asked for the next thing on the list.

“Something not brown this time.  Maybe something sweet?”

It had been the good part of Rain’s job in The Last Shot to sometimes act as host.  Welcoming the customers, keeping them happy and buying drinks, watching out for the loners who could cause trouble or just needed a little attention.  It was with this experience he now scanned the bar and saw a woman in a black trench coat sitting alone. She sipped slowly on a nondescript drink and like him, watched the crowd. She didn’t look like she was waiting for someone (she wasn’t interested in new arrivals) nor did she look like she was here for the music.  She looked like a professional just off work, with expertly applied makeup and her long brown hair twisted into a bun at the nape of her neck. She was intriguing, and with all intriguing people, Rain had to know.

“Algernon, there’s a woman over there all alone.  Why don’t we go over and keep her company?” He pointed her out to his companion who had just finished a large apple schnapps.  Algernon smacked his lips appreciating the syrup sweet liquor. Now, if it were just colder and with a fizz. He looked up to the woman at a table alone and was about to ask, was she safe?  Instead he nodded agreement and followed Rain across the bar.

“Good evening, I noticed you were alone and we’re strangers in town, would you mind if we joined you?”  Rain asked falling into the swing and rhythm of his native English accent.

“I’m waiting for friends.” she replied coolly, meant to send them on their way.  Rain gave her one of his knowing smiles and tried again.

“We can leave as soon as they arrive.  We really are strangers in town and you look like someone who knows a little about Seattle and its sights.”

This time there was a grudging acceptance and she waved them to the empty seats at her table.

“My name is Simun and this is Algernon.”  Rain introduced them and winced internally as he realised he’d forgotten the standard US accent he usually used with the Simun persona.  He blamed the slip on his tiredness and sat down.

“Celia Fisher, “ She introduced herself and held out her hand to shake and Rain gladly took it.

They sat and chatted about Seattle for more than an hour. Celia seemed a font of information about Seattle and its history.  Algernon continued to work his way through the top shelf of the bar with no ill effect and Rain was just starting to feel comfortably numb when Celia said something that stopped his heart.

“So, I happened to see you floating out a window.” She said casually, turned to Algernon.

Rain took a sip of his drink stalling, the ice tinkling against the glass.  Algernon clunked his down on the table.

“Rain?”  He looked to Rain for guidance.  Surely this was exactly the sort of situation that constituted them not  being safe.

“Let me introduce ourselves again.  My friends call me Rain and this is Algernon and you are very good.”  He acknowledged that they…he… had allowed them to be followed.  “What were you doing in such a lonely part of Seattle?”

“Out on my bike.”  She replied nonchalantly.  A bike, he hadn’t seen a bike.  She was good.

“You weren’t there by accident were you?”  

“Maybe.” 

“What do you know about the Cowboy?”

“What do you know?”

Rain smiled and admired her focus.  Most people liked to talk about themselves. This one knew how to ask questions and get answers.

“Not much, but I know some who do.”  He relented putting down his drink. He’d had enough.

“Could you introduce me?” Celcia asked now sitting on the edge of her seat.

“I think I have to.”

As the bar closed up for the night, the two men and a woman collected a large duffle bag and walked out into the cold morning air.  Strolling together companionably they retrieved Celia’s motorbike and they continued their walk to the gates of The Estate. Rain, with a friend on security and a bluff as solid as the gates themselves, got Celia through and into the dormitories.

“Introductions are required. Celia, these are my friends Bruce and Peggy,” Rain announced when they arrived at the mess with both already at breakfast, “This is Celia Fisher, she followed us from…the incident last night.”  

“You conned her in through security?”  Bruce asked by way of greeting.
“The bar closed, I live here, I invited her back.”  Rain collapsed dramatically into a chair no longer caring to keep up pretences. “Did you hear me also mention that she knows about last night, all of it including Algernon’s levitation from a first storey window?  She’s on the same case as us and I didn’t feel qualified to fill her in.”

“What I heard is that you picked up some woman at a bar.” Peggy commented hotly, “You should both come by and be checked for communicatible diseases.”

“Peggy!”

“You are a natural liar.” Bruce commented adding more fuel to Peggy’s fire.

” Yes, I can only assume this woman has obviously been brought here under false pretenses. If she feels it necessary I’m sure the medical unit have a rape kit. Or should we just call the police and let them deal with it. “

“Is this because I didn’t ring in…?”

“We’ll need to let Katherine know about Celia, “ Bruce ignored Peggy’s abuse as just deserts. Instead he also turned his attentions on Rain and Algernon.

“As for you,” Before he could start, Rain put up his hands  in surrender.
“I’m tired, I’m sore, I had a very good night and met an amazing new friend.  I can really do without the Bruce treatment this morning.”

Bruce took a moment to take in Rain, he did look worn thin.  Now two nights without sleep, a car accident and something else…

“You’ll keep.”  he warned and instead he started sniffing Algernon.

“You were drinking.”  It wasn’t a question, but Algernon answered it anyway.

“Yes.” 

“You don’t look like you were drinking.”

“Th-thank you?”  Algernon had actually been disappointed at his bodies response to the alcohol he had consumed.  It hadn’t seemed to have any effect on him whatsoever.

“How much did you drink?”

“In amount of beverages or in overall litres?”

Bruce’s mind boggled at what he was hearing

“You should look worse than Rain this morning.  Peggy, you should take him back and….”

“Run young man!”  Rain exclaimed in a overdramatize voice, “ the next word will be EX-PER-I-MENT-ATION!”

Algernon took the hint and ran.

“Why was that young man flying through a window?”  Celia finally saw a gap in the family bickering and took her chance.

Rain, Bruce and Peggy all look to each other.

“I don’t know if that for us to explain.”  Bruce finally said, “I think you should come with me and see a superior.”

“They might ‘Men in Black” her.”  Peggy warned.

“They can’t do that, can they…I don’t remember that…”  Bruce thought for a moment before turning back to Rain. “You stay here.” 

Rain got up and wandered off to have a shower.

They went to see Katherine.

Celia had been just biding her time.  When she was brought in to the office of Katherine Manners Chief of Operations at The Estate, she felt a sudden jolt of knowing that this was where the decisions got made.   Bruce introduced the two and filled Katherine in on what had transpired for Rain and Algernon.

“She’s been following the same trail as us and was there when we took the Cowboy, she deserves some sort of explanation.”

Katherine sat,  her hands steepled and watched Celia intently.  Celia sat equally as still and waited patiently.

“Celia Fisher?”  Katherine leaned back towards her desk and typed something into her computer, “Can I ask your profession?”

“I’m a private investigator on the trail of a LeRoy Cain. I was on stakeout to contact LeRoy when I happened to see a young man fly out a window.”

Katherine nodded and spent a moment reading her screen.

“You seem a level headed woman.  Normally, in these circumstances I’d ask you to leave, but your professionalism is refreshing.  In fact, you could teach some around here about discretion.” 

Somewhere a printer whirled to life and a few minutes later an assistant came in with a stapled document.

“The Estate has been watching you for a while for potential recruitment.  So, if you would like to find out what is going on, please read and sign this NDA.”  Katherine handed over a pen and the document.

“I would have expected nothing less.”  Celia replied and pick up both.

“Rain Bigby, please report to the Office.”  The somewhat mechanical voice came through the public address system throughout The Estate.  Rain who had just stepped into a shower looked at the speaker above his head.

“Well that ‘s not happening.” and continued to scrub away days of grim, exhaustion and worry.  In the office building across campus, Algernon turned up to support his friend.

“I wanted Rain.”  Lawrence Keaton said when he saw Algernon waiting at his door.

“Yes.”  Answered Algernon looking as confused as Keaton felt.

“Do you know where he is?”

“Third cubicle in the men’s bathroom?”  Algernon guessed.

“What?  Nevermind, I don’t want to know.”  

It must be said that the water pressure and temperature at the Estate were excellent.  Rain luxuriated in the hot water and steam until it started lulling him to sleep. Shaking off the exhaustion he stepped out of the shower to grab a towel, only to face Lawrence Keaton.

“What and unexpected surprise.”  Rain beamed as if inviting Keaton into his home, exquisitely dressed in a satin house gown and slippers, not naked and sopping wet, “To what do I owe this housecall?”  He reached for one of the fluffy towels on the rack, only to have Keaton lean on the rack pinning the towels to the wall. 

“Why did you invite a civilian onto campus?”

Rain also tried to lean back, but the divide between the shower cubicles was cold, much colder than his showered skin.  He settled for righteous indignation.

“Celia Fisher not a civilian.  She was tracking down the Cowboy just as we were and she was doing it alone.”

“So you took it upon yourself to recruit her?”

Rain was missing some nuance to this conversation which was unusual for him. Then he realised why, the powerplay and the very public call over the P.A.

“Is this a supervisor thing?”

“Yes, it is.” came the simple reply

“Never have worked out why I needed one.”

“I know, this would be an excellent example.”

“She’s good. She was there when we took him down. She then tracked Algernon and I across Seattle.  We chatted for an hour before she let us know.”

“You got lucky.  We were already thinking of recruiting her.”  Keaton retorted

“You say luck, I say skill at reading a person’s soul.”

“I do say luck.”

“Not in my experience.”  Rain grew dark. Regardless of the hot steam, the temperature of the room became decidedly colder.

Keaton stood up and threw Rain a towel before turning to leave.

“Don’t let it happen again.”

After the debrief with Katherine Manners, Bruce gave Celia a tour of the Estate Campus and facilities. He showed her the public side, the training centre, computer lab and library and then he showed her the private face, the gun range, the gate house and the labs.  At the same time he filled her in on their family of misfits.

“Yeah, Rain’s good hearted, even if he doesn’t know it.  Algernon is…naive even for his years but the things that kids can do.  Then there’s Peggy,” He lead her down a set of stairs leading to the basement of the labs, “Eighteen dimension of science she understands, but not one of humanity.”

At the bottom the stairs a reinforced metal door stood closed with an ominous sign reading DANGER NO UNAUTHORISED PERSONNEL ALLOWED.  Bruce rapped on the metal as if it were a teenager’s bedroom.

“Peggy, I have our new team member. Can I bring her in to show her around?”

“No we don’t, she’s here under false pretenses.”  Came Peggy’s voice from behind the door. “I’ll not have Rain’s….friend playing around with sensitive experiments.”

“Not false, true pretenses.  Seems like she was going to be pulled in by the Estate.”

“What? Oh very well.” Replied Peggy with a heavy sigh and the heavier slam of a metal door. “Let me put away the isotropic material.”  A few minutes later the door clicked as a magnetic bolt was released.

”Yes, yes don’t touch anything and don’t step over the yellow lines.”

Bruce pushed open the door to reveal a large fluro lit space  filled with lab benches, fume hoods surrounding a ugly collection of equipment of various ages and heritages.  The mentioned yellow lines scribed a large circle around the pile of ‘junk’. 

“I’m in the middle of experiments to determine if  Spiral Dust can conduct the Strange.” Peggy explained, motioning to equipment within the yellow lines. 

“Is that likely?”  Bruce asked

“The Spiral Dust definitely has a connection to the Strange and more interestingly, an entity in the Strange.”

“An entity?  Like the thonics.”  This got Bruce’s attention.  Their one interaction with thonics, the energy creatures  of the strange, nearly cost him his life. He didn’t want to imagine that there were other beasts that made the Strange home.

“Native to the Strange, yes.  As to the nature of this entity, that is not my concern.  I’m interested in manipulating that connection.”

“Well you’ll get to put all that aside for a week or so, we’re off to Colorado.”

“A week or so? I assume this has to do with LeRoy?  I can spare a few days, surely that’s enough for a flight to and from….”

“We’re not flying, Peggy.  Katherine’s ordered that we get out of the Estate for a while, do another job on the way back.  We’ll be drivingall the way.”

“They want us to continue to do field work after the shit-show last night?”  Now Bruce had Peggy’s attention, “Well, I’m honoured but I have too many things that need monitoring.”  She turned back to her machines as data scroll across numerous screens.

“I don’t think you have a choice, Peggy.” 

Peggy grumbled something about them needing her more than she needed them but in the end relented enough to go with them to pick out the car for the trip.

The Estate’s carpool was not flush with vehicles big enough to take all five and their luggage.  There were in fact two vehicle, chosen because of their ability to blend into everyday society.

“Wait, what?!”  Peggy exclaimed as she was shown what was on offer.  One was a delivery van setup with surveillance equipment, but not a lot of room for personnel, the other was a relic from another time, a combi van equipped with regulation flower power foliage.  It had the required seating but Peggy quickly found some black paint and tried obliterating the symbols of peace and love. Celia went and collected a few things from home required for the trip and Bruce rounded up the boys.  On the way back he stopped off at his supervisor’s office.

“One question, how do you we bring back the dealer from Colorado?”

“I suggest you don’t.”  Katherine replied with Estate efficiency, “Find out what you can and come back.  Learning and disrupting are more important.”

“But what do we do with the prisoner?”  

“Do what you think is best.”

For a short while there was talk of heading out early the next morning, necessitating Celia staying overnight.

“I will not share!” Peggy roared in protest when it clear that Celia was expected to bunk in the women’s dorms with her.

Instead, van hit the road early that afternoon with a new coat of black matt and two motorbikes strapped to the back.  Heading to the heart of the country the group had a lot of free time to exchanged phone numbers and share what they knew .  

“I’ll drive!” Algernon called driver’s seat and was quickly directed to a seat in the back by Bruce.

“Yes, you will, but you need muscle memory and coordination.”

“But Bruce, I’m already fully co-ordinated.”  Algernon replied. Eventually he settled in and listened to the audiofile of the interrogation with the LeRoy Cain.

Rain was happy to be out on the road again, untied from rules and restrictions.  He kept himself awake by singing road tunes and at one stage reading through Sharon Cooper-Smith article on  her experience under the influence of Spiral Dust. He was once again disappointed to find no correlation between his vision and hers except the floating nothingness.  It was then that Bruce remembered he wanted a word with Rain.

“Rain, you took Algernon to a nightclub without telling anyone, for the purpose of getting him drunk.”

“Not just,”  Rain argued, annoyed that his conversation had come up again, “To hear some music, to meet people, to NOT HAVE TO DEAL WITH THIS.”  They both looked at Algernon, but he seemed absorbed in listening to the Interview. “Can’t we just have a night out without the twenty questions, dad?”

“As much as he might look it, he’s not human, we don’t know how his system deals with alcohol.”

“He had some in Railsea and then again after his near electrocution.  He was fine.” Rain ticked the examples off on his fingers remembering too late that Bruce probably didn’t know about the last.

“What if he had a bad reaction to mixing the different alcohols, what if he had a heart attack and died.”

  Bruce knew this was a good way to break through Rain’s seeming casual indifference.  Rain looked at Bruce horrified that he would even contemplate such an outcome. He crumpled under the image of Algernon dying in a pool of his own vomit. Shutting his eyes and covering his face, nothing removed the image.  Once realised it could never be removed from Rain’s mind.

“No, Bruce, don’t do that!”  

“Yes Rain, because you just don’t think. You don’t consider what could happen and when horrible things happen you feel bad, but it’s too late.”

“Stop it!  We can’t live for ‘what ifs’!  You’ll drown us in ‘what ifs’!”

“Listen…guys…Rain, Bruce…listen.”  Algernon had taken off his headphones and had his head turned as if listening to something.

“What is it?”  Rain asked all thoughts of  Bruce and dead Algernon forgotten for the live one in front of him.

“I don’t know …a sort of…buzzing.”

At this the whole van listened to the engine puttering along, the road noise and the whistle of the air whipping through open windows, but no buzzing of any sort.

“He’s young, they say they can hear better than adults.” Bruce suggested, Rain shook his head thinking back on all his reading into the gifts of the Strange. He knew that both Algernon and Peggy were of a group most susceptible to the Strange, most touched and most gifted.  They’re subclass developed the most gifts and of the most dramatic sort. Algernon’s levitation and Peggy’s psychic scream were examples of how the power manifested and it seemed to him that he may have just discovered another.

“You can hear something that they rest of us can’t?”

Algernon nodded, shaking his head in an attempt to clear what was causing the sound.

Rain focused on Algernon and with as sharp and clear a thought as possible he projected one short phrase.
“DON’T BE STUPID, ALGERNON!”

Straight away, as if he’d spoken the phrase out loud, Algernon replied.

“I’m not being stupid, I can really hear it.”

Rain clapped his hands over his mouth.  Celia and Bruce looked back and forward between the two boys in confusion.  

“What?”  Bruce had to nudge Rain to explain.

“In my mind, I told him not to be stupid.”  Rain replied numbly.

“Really, you can read minds?”

“I don’t know…maybe.”

“Try me.”

The group projected images, phrases, songs at Algernon, and all but one time he was able to respond back with a description of what he saw.  One time Bruce purposely projected an image of pink elephants while Algernon was looking away, the image was not received, but one of Big Ben (a giant time device) and the tune to the Rain’s Railsea shanty (Algernon hummed along with the tune) were.  It seemed he could gain an impression of a person’s surface thoughts only when he was looking at them. Eventually Algernon complained of headaches and the game lost its appeal. 

Rain seethed with bitter self recrimination and envy silently in the backseat.  He wanted to be happy for his friend, this was a miracle beyond the comprehension of most people.  A gift so rare it only appeared in stories and was never taken seriously in the real world. But he couldn’t, no matter how he tried to centre himself to gain control.  The thought that Algernon had simply ‘found’ telepathy, whereas he had search is whole life and found nothing made frustrated tears well in his eyes. Horrified, he realised that Algernon could probably pick every negative thought. 

He wanted to run, to get far away from Algernon taking his evil bitter thoughts with him, but he couldn’t, he was stuck in the back of a Kombi van for another three days with his best friend able to see every putrid, spiteful thought.  Too tired, too confused and just too far gone to care, Rain curled up on the back seat and wept.

“I don’t think you realise what you do, Rain.” It was Bruce again, this time in a quieter more conciliatory voice. “You do something that makes things easier.”

This again. 

“Have you felt it too, Algernon?”

“Yeah, an energy.  It makes things happen.”  Algernon replied with enthusiasm.

The sweetness of their gesture only made his feel more wretched. It was just words.  Words to build up, to encourage and inspire. He’d known the power of words from a very young age, to make someone less than human, to label and eventually make those labels stick with soldiers and bullets. 

“It’s…just….words.”  He finally got out, “Illusions…nothing.”

“No, “ Bruce was adamant, “It’s something…subtle.”

Yeah, so bloody subtle as to be undetectable. The dark thoughts said, the ones that threatened to consume him when the panic attacks hit.  

But, …subtle also meant, delicate, precise, difficult to pin down, crafty …cunning.  Said the other voice, the one that was resilient and resourceful.

The word took root and around it Rain built an image of himself that wasn’t a failure or broken.  It was a fragile construct, a simple dismissal would have destroyed it, but it existed.

“Subtle…I like subtle.” He whispered. Exhausted and hopeful, Rain for the first time in three days forgot about the velvet darkness and fell asleep to the rocking of the van.

It was midday on the third day of travel.  A black matt Kombi rolled passed a sign saying NEDERLAND – LIFE IS BETTER UP HERE!  A dusty Highway 72 lead straight down to the wateredge of Barker Meadow Reservoir through the heart of the idyllic mountain township, home to almost 1,500  residents. Raw wood sided buildings and tree clad mountains were a constant reminder that the city of Seattle had been left a long way behind.

Inside the Kombi, electronic devices guided the way to The Dreaming Crystal gemstore.  Algernon was making himself acquainted with the stores merchandise and came across a word he didn’t recognise.

“Rain, what is libido and why does it need restoring?”  he asked 

“Libido is your ability to….”

“And desire…” Bruce added.

“…and desire to …procreate.”

“And it needs restoring?”

“For some, possibly. What have you found that’s got you all worked up?

Algernon turned his laptop around to show the website for the Dreaming Crystal.  Beside a wide selection of geological samples from fossils to geodes the website also catered for the New Age desire to solve life’s problems with with anything other than common sense.  

Minutes later (the township of Nederland not being all that large) Peggy pulled up outside The Dreaming Crystal guided by Celia in the passenger seat.

After three days stuck together, Celia has proven herself to Peggy, if not completely trustworthy, at least useful. She decided to check out the shop with Celia first, leaving the men in the car.

“Can’t I go, the thorn between two roses?”  Rain scrambled to crouch between the two front seat illustrating his point.

“No.”  Was Peggy’s simple reply.  Celia’s no nonsense attitude seemed more appropriate for a shopping trip than Rain’s theatrics.

“But who will talk if not for Rain?” Algernon spoke up for his brother.

“Celcia will.”  Peggy replied as if it were the most obvious thing in the world.

“What! Now I’m being replaced because I’m a magical cripple?”

“Your words, not mine.”  Peggy turned away from the only half joking Rain and stepped out of the van.

Inside the store, sunlight and display lighting  twinkled from every surface as crystals of all shapes, sizes and colours.  Fossils lay in box frames or purpose built display cases looking old and important beside shelves of books ranging from fossil and mineral fossicking to crystal auras and their properties.  At the counter, an elderly man smiled genially as the two ladies entered. Celia slipped in amongst the displays looking like a browsing tourist leaving Peggy to deal with the sales assistant.

“Good day, can I help you with anything?”  He said, his hands folded neatly in front of him.  

“Yes, I want high quality trilobites fossils, from the Ohio beds, specifically.”  She marched up to the counter, creating a very physical and psychological distraction for Celia.

“Oh my, yes…well, let me see what we have.”  The old man dithered under Peggy’s intense scrutiny and started checking boxes under the counter. 

This was the opportunity Celia was waiting for as she slipped undetected past the sales assistant and through a doorway to the staff areas beyond.

“No, no, no these don’t have the definition I required, please look again.”  Celia could hear Peggy bark as she made her way down a hallway lined by four doors.

“May I ask what the fossils are for, maybe I could narrow down my search?”

“To prove a point.”

“Which is?”

“None of your business.”

Celia was just about to try the first door when a heavily tattooed woman smelling of smoke stepped out of another and gave her a searching look.

“This part of the store is restricted. Is there something I can help you with?”  The woman asked making a show of closing the door behind her.

“Oh, yes thank,” Celia bluffed , “I was just wondering where the Bathroom is.”

The woman’s eyes narrowed, but she voiced no complaint at the intruder’s presence.

“We don’t have one in the store, but there is a public facility in the park.”  She pointed out the store and down the street to the reservoir. 

“My mistake, thanks for the information.”  Celia waved as she was guided back to the shop front.  She made a show of leaving, but went around the corner to hide until the woman left.  While there, she found a door to the rear of the shop and started towards that instead.

Meanwhile, Peggy was actively looking for CCTV cameras while she waited at the counter.  When the tattooed woman followed Celia into the store she noticed Peggy and her investigations.

“Is there something specific you’re looking for?”  She asked in a tone of deep suspicion which was completely lost on Peggy.
“Trilobite fossils.”  Peggy replied simply 

“Well you won’t find them in the corners of the shop.” Replied the woman now openly hostile.  The old man stopped searching boxes and watched the two sparing women with round eyes.

“I’m checking your security.  But as I’ve seen the quality of your stock I’m not surprised you don’t bother with any.”

“Get out.”

“No.  I’m being served.”  Peggy gestured to the man who instinctively ducked back under the counter.

“I’m afraid we don’t have what you’re looking for.”  He replied meekly, peaking back over the counter at the fuming face of Peggy.

Peggy was willing to argue the point but as Celia had left she didn’t see the need to continue the farce and finally left.

Outside, Rain was bored. He stepped out of the van with the idea to chat to the store owners either side of The Dreaming Crystal when he saw Celia working at a door in a small alleyway.  Silently, he follows as she expertly picked the door open and disappeared inside.

Peggy stormed out to the van.

“Two people one heavily tattooed with a bad attitude the other a spineless male.”

“Our target is a woman, where is she?.”  Algernon commented, Peggy qualified her statement explaining the tattooed one was a woman.

“I hate to say it, “  Bruce added once Peggy and briefed them on her experience in the store, “But we may need an Algernon solution.”

Algernon responded by clicking his new crossbow together and engaging a new net canister.

“Let’s just see what the other two are up to.”  Bruce pulled out his phone and texted Rain.

What have you found out?

Rain had caught up with Celia in a basement storeroom when his phone buzzed silently in his pocket.  Seeing Bruce’s message he replied simply, Let you know. Before checking the boxes for the grey rock they had come to know as unprocessed Spiral Dust.  They found nothing but fossils and store supplies. 

Two locked doors remained, Celia crept up to pick the lock.

“If you hold your hand like this you’ll pick up the barrels cleaner.”  He whispered and Celia felt the frisson of energy. She picked the lock like she’d used the key and they were soon travelling down a flight of wooden steps to another door.  Beside the door a box of flashlights sat ready. Both Celia and Rain had their phone lights on and left the flashlights undisturbed as Celia opened the door. A cool wave of decay and rotten flesh swept up the stairs towards them and Rain stepped back instinctively.  Celia swept the blackened room with her light, picking up a number of buckets full of stagnant water, full of squirming mosquito larvae. Above, large wrapped bundles the size of people hung suspended on thin threads of silk. Then her light picked up something distinctly not mosquito. Eight eyes perched on a head holding salivating mandibles entered the beam, eight legs, each taller than Celia and Rain stepped out of the shadows. From another corner, the creak of chintin drew Celia’s light to a second giant spider.

No stopping to discuss her discovery with Rain, she stepped back and shut the door, the pounding of heavy bodies rattling the door on its hinges.

Spider, found spiders. Rain texted to the party before Celia qualified the statement.

Horse-sized spiders.

Shall I come in and bust heads?  Was Bruce’s reply

No. One more door and we’ll be out. Rain answered as he and Celia snuck back up the stairs.

In the hallway the woman walked past rolling ‘tobacco’ between paper as She walked along the hallway from the shopfront to the back door.  Celia let her past before she and Rain stepped out and stood outside the last door. She looked to him before putting her lockpicks to the lock.

He smiled gratified and whispered, “You’ve got this.”

The lock opened smoothly under her hands and they quickly stepped into the room and close the door

This room was an office, with a desk and computer, phone,  floor safe and corkboard. Beside the computer a scrap of paper held the WIFI password and on the corkboard a map of the world highlighted locations, one being Seattle.  Celia moved to the safe and tried the door. Again Rain gave encouragement, but her skills did not extend to picking safes and it remained firmly locked. Rain sat at the desk and turned on the computer.  Breaking in was simple and he was soon downloading files to his phone labelled with Spirals, Cryptocurrency and a crow symbol. Rain linked the computer to Algernon’s via the WIFI and set up a small program to ping whenever the computer was turned on.  

Celia kept busy placing a bug in the phone and checking out the filing cabinet.  She found personnel files for two staff: Delsey Robinson and Everett Rand. She took photos of these files as well as the corkboard and each of the locations marked with a pin.

“This is my good side.”  Rain turned in the office chair as Celia snapped a shot of him working at the computer.  When everything they could get access to was recorded and the computer once more shutdown, they left the room and the store via the back door.  Minutes later they were back in the van sharing the information they had discovered.

As Peggy drove away from the store to find accommodation for the night, the group poured over the information.

“I guess those bundles you found with the spiders were people who didn’t leave the shop.”  Bruce joked darkly.  

“It also seems those two in the shop were only employees, “  Peggy added, “So where is Lydia?”

Rain opened the files  on his phone, quickly sharing it with the others once he realised what he’d discovered.  The first, labelled Spirals contained 20 subfolders all with a person’s name and location.  

LeRoy Cain, Seattle

Obol Demer, Bangkok

Jack Chen, Beijing

Joaquin Lopez, Buenos Aires

Nader Boutros, Cairo

Sania Beit, Delphi

Elia Yilmaz, Istanbul…

They all seemed to detail transactions, goods and money moving in and out.

Algernon poured over the photographs of the map and noticed the pins followed a pattern. The pin locations were specifically chosen to be equidistance from each other and formed a lattice of triangles across the globe. Celia matched each of the folders to a pin on the board except for one pin in the middle of the Atlantic.  It was a map of the entire Spiral Dust Empire.

“This thing is International.”

The second folder contained a ewallet for cryptocurrency transactions.  Currently, it held 321 bitcoins, approximately $US 20,000.

The third, the one marked only with a crow symbol was the most interesting of all.  It seemed to be a diary, of sorts, complete with an image of a woman with dark hair and eyes and a long hooked nose.  In it Lydia described Dona Ilsa and her fear of her. She spoke of the spiders as ‘the things in the basement’ and she was sure they would eat her or Dona Ilsa would kill her if she didn’t move the dust’.  She described the way the dust was delivered to the prep room without hindrance from the store’s security. She felt that the simple way she bypassed all locks showed the power of Dona Ilsa and was meant as a reminder to Lydia just what Dona Ilsa could do.

When all the information was laid out, Bruce sent it to Katherine asking what she knew of a Dona Ilsa and the locations on the map, especially the one in the middle of the ocean.   It made sense that Dona Ilsa and Don Whitecliff were leaders of possibly rival Crows Hollow families and that the group may have stumbled into the middle of a crime syndicate turf war for Spiral Dust distribution stretching across the world and into other recursions.

Katherine’s reply was prompt and short.

“The pattern was well spotted. Sent to Hertzfeld to make sense out of it. I’ll be in touch when I have more.”

In the light of Lydia’s fear of Dona Ilsa and the Spiral Dust, Peggy was reminded by her own discoveries. She told the group that spiral dust was not just connected to the Strange but also to a living entity within the Strange. 

Algernon, whose research in the Strange was better than anyone’s present, grew worried, but before he got even a chance to share, Rain informed him of Celia’s phone tap and the moment was gone.

That night the group turned in determined to find out where Lydia Lance was and to shut down this end of the Spiral Dust distribution.

A first Christmas

December 1995 – Morris House, Slough – 7 years old

The Morrises had bought a dead tree and put it in their living room.  It took up the entire corner Tobias liked to sit in when no one was around.  Even now he tried hiding behind the tree, crushing piney needles, making his palms sticky.

The rest of the children of the Morris’ foster house were excited about the visitors from the local church.  Tobias wasn’t sure why the fuss. They saw the same people every Sunday and barely ever spoke to them unless told to by the Morrises.  Of course, it was Christmas, but in Tobias’ short life and even shorter memory, that didn’t warrant all this excitement

He remembered classmates being excited for Djeda Mraz’s visitation New Years day, but the bearded man never made an appearance at his home…

Don’t go there. Danger ! Danger!.

Okay.

Britain also had Djeda Mraz but without his grand-daughter Sneguochka. He wore red and seemed to arrive at Christmas instead of New Years.  It made sense, there were a lot of places to visit and he couldn’t be everywhere on one day.

“Mrs Morris, Toby’s hiding in the tree again.”  Christine chorused as she spotted him shift uncomfortably. A branch was poking into his side, he broke it off.

“Toby.  Get out from under the tree.  I don’t want you full of pine needles for the guests.”  Mrs Morris called from the kitchen where she was busy making tasty treats with the bigger boys and girls.

“He hasn’t moved, Mrs Morris.”  Christine called again a few moments later.  She was too busy rummaging through boxes of colourful balls and strings of lights to pay much attention to him other than to get him in trouble.

A deep murmured voice and a heavy footfall signaled the arrival of Mr Morris.  Tobias shrank back against the wall. Through the branches he could see Mr Morris’s huge frame taking up the entire doorway.  With the same heavy gait his foster father marched across the lounge and knelt in front of the tree.

“I don’t know Toby,” he said quietly enough so only Tobias could hear, “There’s a lot of crazy goings on out here.  Do you think there’s room for me behind the tree?”

Tobias grinned.  It was ridiculous, there was barely room for him behind the tree, how would a huge man like Mr Morris fit.  He shook his head shyly.

“Shame.  I could really do with a break from all their Christmas shenanigans.  I guess your family didn’t celebrate Christmas did they?”

Tobias thought.  It that why I don’t remember….

No!  Leave those alone!

He shook his head.

“No. Still, lots of people do in your country.  The Catholics like us and the Orthodox. What do you remember of that time of year?”

Again he though.  Careful to steer clear of the dangerous memories. He remembered late at night hearing singing coming through his bedroom window.  From his bed he couldn’t hear the words, but he remembered very well the sound of all those voices singing together as one.

“I like…” and he started humming the tune as best as he could remember it.

“That’s a lovely Christmas carol. I’m fond of them too.”  And in response Mr Morris started singing in his rich baritone a song Tobias hadn’t heard before.

O come, o come Emmanuel

And ransom captive Israel.

That mourn in lonely exile here

Until the Son of God appears.

Rejoice!  Rejoice! Emmauel

Shall come to thee, O Israel.

It was  very sad, sweet tune that seemed to cry as well as celebrate.  When he stopped there wasn’t a sound in the house. Slowly the kitchen chatter started again and Christine went back to rummaging through the boxes.

“That is a very old song, do you know it?”  Mr Morris asked the tree. The tree shook its head.

”Beau-ti-ful.”

“Oh yes.  It is about the people of Israel, stolen from their home and made slaves. But they were promised a mighty king would bring them altogether one day and he would be called Emmanuel.  So even in their captivity they celebrated.”

Tobias nodded, picking up one word in three.  He was pretty smart, and though English wasn’t even his second language he could tell this was a story meant for him.

“See, being happy is about how you feel. But joy is you saying ‘No, this bad time will not last and I will live like I am living in the good times until they come for real.’  Does that make sense?”

Tobias nodded slowly.  He thought he understood.

“You teach…Em-man-uel?”

Mr Morris beamed and held a hand out to the tree.  A small delicate hand took his and Tobias climbed out.

“It would be my pleasure.  If you like we could sing it for the guests coming today.”

Tobias didn’t know about that.  He liked to sing but was forever in trouble for getting the words wrong.  

Mr Morris however, quickly rounded up Christine and a few other children and taught them all, O Come, O Come, as a small choir. Some were not interested at first and others couldn’t hold a tune, but slowly the voices built.  

What Tobias lacked in pronounciation he made up for in having a decent singing voice and a love of music. Mr Morris gave him a small harmony in verses so he didn’t stumble over unknown words.

When the guests arrived all bundled with parcels and silly hats, the choir of 5 children and Mr Morris welcomed them.

“If I’d known we’d be welcomed with music I would have brought my singing hat.”  Joked a very elderly stranger who was introduced as Mr Samuels, and friend to several of the church members.

Tobias wasn’t sure about a singing hat, but he was sure he like this man.  For one thing he was short for an adult, and thin but he had a bright spark of mischief in his eyes and was always ready with a joke or a laugh.

Throughout the day, Tobias felt drawn to Mr Samuels side, making excuses to bring him snacks or sit closer to listen to him talk. He spoke perfect English, but his accent was not English and reminded him of…

Don’t think of them!

He shrunk down beside Mr Samuel’s chair and allowed the excitement to flow around him.  The older foster children knew that after the meal they would be given the presents brought by the guests from the church congregation as a whole.  The others tried to guess what they would be given when Tobias noticed Mr Samuels watching him.

“I’d say this is an unusual scene for you, Tobias.”  Mr Samuels said surprising Tobias. He’d not realised the old man had noticed him or for that matter even knew his name.  “Mr Morris told me your name after the carol. You have a fine voice.”

“I have…little English….”  He wanted to explain. He needed the old man to know it wasn’t that he was stupid or mean that he didn’t speak for himself, but that right now he had no words.

“But you make yourself heard eloquently regardless.”  Mr Samuels replied with a smile, “That means, I understand you.”

Tobias laughed with relief and he felt warmed by the old man’s attention.

“Now, I don’t know if anyone has got around to asking you, but what would you like for Christmas?”

Tobias wasn’t sure.  He hadn’t thought he would get anything.  Toys and books were all well and good, but after you’ve found out all they do or read to the last page, then what?  He remembered watching a television Christmas special with a famous magician who had put swords all through his assistant in a box, and the assistant had come out untouched.

“For Christmas please…I want …magic.” he said haltingly to Mr Samuel, whose eyebrows disappeared into his silly Christmas hat.

“Magic.  Tell me, how did you come to think of that?”

Slowly with gestures and  a quick run to find pen and paper, Tobias told, signed and drew what he had seen.  It took sometime and Mrs Morris came with plates of food for both of them before they had finished.

“You know what Tobias, that is some very powerful magic.  It would take years of training and a good assistant to pull off magic like that.”

Tobias sighed, of course it would.  How could such amazing feats be compared to dolls and construction sets.

“That’s not to say you can’t start learning magic.”  Mr Samuels slowly stood groaning from his chair. “I’ll have a word with your foster parents and then…well…we’ll see.  Will you be patient and wait for me to come back?”

Tobias wasn’t sure what was happening, but there was a light in Mr Samuels’ eyes and a feeling that something important was about to happen.  He nodded with eager agreement.

Mr Samuels went to find the Morrises and then he left and Tobias was alone again.

“Why don’t you join the rest of us, “  Mr Morris called from the hall. Tobias didn’t want to, he wanted to hide behind the tree again and think about Mr Samuels.  But then, he remembered the song and what it meant. He took a deep breath.

“Yes, Mr Morris…I come.”

The others had all gathered in the newly cleared dining room.  A large stack of parcels all colourfully wrapped now stood on the table.  As each child’s name was called, they would excitedly step up and be given a parcel that they would either open on the spot for everyone to see, or take away to open in private.  The adults laughed at the antics of each of the children as they exclaimed over their gifts.

Tobias sat watching as one child after another got a gift.  He clapped and even laughed with them in their happiness knowing that Mr Samuels had promised to come back.  The thought didn’t make him happy, but he was content to wait, knowing he was bringing magic!

When all the gifts were given and commented on, and the other children had wandered off to play with their new items, the adults settled into discussions about leaving.

“But Mr Samuels come back.”  Tobias protested and the adults accepted his rebuke with good humour and chatted a while longer.  As time went on, however, there was more glances at watches and concerns for what needed to be done at home.  One by one the guests left until it was only Tobias and the Morrises left.  

Outside the winter day fled quickly leaving nothing but a blustery wind that fitfully buffeted the garden outside the lounge windows.

“Tobias, go to bed.  Mr Samuels is an old man and can’t be expected to come out in the dark and cold for you.”  Mrs Morris bustled around, much like the breeze outside. Everywhere she went she moved, sorted and picked up things leaving everything much as she had found them.  Mr Morris sat nearby in silence and watching much like the moon, changing nothing but providing a guiding light. Tobias fidgetted. He didn’t want to go against the authority of Mrs Morris but Mr Samuels had promised and had asked for patience.  He didn’t want to disappoint the old man by being asleep when he did come back.

The story of the captive Israelites came to him a second time and without explanation, Tobias opened his  mouth and started singing the song he had learnt only that morning.

“O Come, O Come Emmanuel

And ransom captive Israel

Who mourn in lonely exile here…”

“I think he’s made his decision, love.”  Mr Morris said to Mrs Morris trying to hide a smile.

“Don’t smirk at me…”  She chided her husband,  “Oh, I guess it’s okay as long as he doesn’t wake the others.”

“Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel

Shall come to thee O Israel.”

Tobias stumbled through all seven verses with the help of Mr Morris until they got to the end  and he started again. By the fourth time he was singing it alone when car lights lit the front garden.  Mrs Morris went to get the door.

“Mr Samuels!  Get in here out of the cold before you catch your death!”  She exclaimed from the front door.

“I had to come, I could hear the joyful song calling me.”  said Mr Samuels jubilant voice over the wind.

Tobias’ song stumbled and died as in limped Mr Samuels handing his coat and scarf to a waiting Mrs Morris.  In one hand a plastic bag, on his head a little white hat was pinned to his thin grey hair.

“And see, I have brought my singing hat.”  he pointed to the yarmulke and laughed.

“You didn’t need to come out on a night like this…”  Mrs Morris started but when Mr Morris got up and offered his seat to Mr Samuels he said quietly, 

“Tobias never gave up waiting.”

Tears started in the old man’s eyes and he brushed them away deftly, checking his yarmulke was still in place.

“Well then I hope it was worth the wait.”  He sat down and now turned his attention to the little boy standing near the window.  

“Come here, this is something that demands close attention.”  He beckoned Tobias over as he pulled a small wooden box and a worn paperback book from his plastic bag.

“I’m afraid it took me longer to find than I’d thought.  Fifty years in a place you tend to collect a lot of junk.”

He put the box in Tobias’ yielding hand and placed the book beside him.

“This is old.  Older than me and I don’t doubt that there’s magic in it as I’ve only ever opened one compartment.  It is called a puzzle box and it’s meant to test and delight bright minds.”

He then picked up the book.  Tobias could see on its creased and yellow cover the title, Bobo’s modern coin magic.

“This also tests and delights a bright mind.  These are tricks you can learn that look like magic and to those who don’t know the secret they will be.”  He handed the book to the boy as well. “Would you like me to show you how they work?”

Tobias nodded, wide eyed with awe and pleasure as Mr Samuels rolled up his sleeves and got to work.  On the inside of Mr Samuel’s arm, Tobias noticed a set off numbers smudged and dull blue on his tissue paper skin.

“Never mind those.”  Mr Samuels said when he saw Tobias looking, “They are a reminder to me to always live in hope, no matter how bad things get.”

“Just like…Emmanuel!”  Tobias replied touching the tattoo.

“Just like your song.”

And the two of them worked deep into the night practising magic tricks and learning the secrets of the magic puzzle box.

Musings 12: Plans

Every good magic show needs a plan.  A set of plans really, one for each illusion, all linking together to form a story or whole.

Everyone knows the plan.  From the magicians on the stage, the lighting and sound, the gaffers behind stage and even an audience member or two.  The plan lets everyone responsible know what’s needed, where and when it’s needed, who’ll be using it and how. All movements, locations, props and staging are taken into account for timing and for safety.  Planning is essential for big illusions.  

Good plans allow for when things go wrong.  Small gaffs, crack a joke and move on. Medium gaffs, insert standby illusion in its place.  Major gaffs, close the curtains and call for an ambulance.

So, when a plan is created and understood by all, it describes and explains the use of all props and safely moves participants through the show, why change it at the last moment?

It would be like Houdini planning and preparing  his water escape only to decide as the curtain rises he’d prefer to try lion taming instead.  Sure he can do it, but he hasn’t trained with the lions, the equipment is not available, who knows how safe it is and really where do you get a couple of lions on short notice anyway?

What does it mean when dropping a plan is proposed and no one argues the point?  Who’s at fault when it all inevitably fails? The proposer or the one who knew better… and…said…nothing.

Smart people make plans and make them work.  What does that say about us when we create a plan then fail to use it?

10. Hunting

As was his routine, Bruce woke early and walked to the mess room for breakfast.  Not part of his morning routine was a Rain hunched over his laptop, coffee in hand.  The mug rings on the tabletop showed it wasn’t the first coffee as did the half drained coffee pot.  Rain could never be accused of being a morning person and it was often a race to see who between him and Algernon would get to breakfast last.  Usually Rain won.

“Why are you up so early?”  Bruce said as he made his way to the breakfast bain-marie.

“Huh?” Rain’s head shot up from what he was doing and fixed on Bruce in a blery way, “Is it that time?”

“So it’s ‘What are you doing up so late?’”

“Um…yeah, it seems.  I did some knife training in the gun range late last night…”

“You went training…?” Now Rain had Bruce’s attention has he brought his meal over to Rain’s table and sat down. In the months since the group joined the Estate Rain had not once shown interest in training other than practising his sleight of hand.

“Lightfeather’s speed bugged me.  He threw two daggers to my one.” Rain complained and sipped his now cold coffee. “Anyway, I was on  the way back when I got thinking about Algernon’s idea. I’ve been working on it ever since.”

“All night? Rain, you’re paying for today with tomorrow.  You have to look after yourself or you’ll be no use to us.”

Rain scowled and grumbled back uncharacteristically,

“I’ll be fine. Sleep and me have never been on good terms.”  He brushed aside Bruce’s concerns and topped up his coffee.

Bruce watched Rain, weighing his words and paid attention to his every movement.

“What is this idea of Algernon’s?” He asked, turning the computer screen to himself.  He didn’t make much sense of it, a diagram of the old copper telephone network throughout Seattle?  Rain quickly made it back to the seat, coffee in hand and turn the screen back.

“A great idea, it will cut down all our processing time to a fraction.  And all the surveillance footage we’re currently wading through manually, all done automatically.”  The speil came out smooth and polished. It was something Rain had been thinking on awhile, no doubt.

“You know, I can see straight through you.  Usually I have to pay attention, but this morning you’re hiding something as effectively as Algernon.”

Peggy made her way into the mess looking for coffee.  She was disappointed to see there was barely a cup. She took it, leaving the dregs and got herself some toast.

Rain slumped in his chair, seeming to lack the energy to continue arguing.

“Things have been going…okay.    Railsea was successful but we lost a simple way to Crows Hollow, nearly lost Peggy not to mention making an enemy of Lightfeather. ” He shivered and continued, “You guys are displaying amazing powers, and I’m no closer to understanding how. We found out about the Cowboy, but lost another person to the dust.  The drug trial went fine but it didn’t answer any of my questions…” He looked up at Bruce and it was clear that something weighed heavily on him. “I just need a victory.”
“You ride yourself too hard.”

“Life’s a gamble and we’re losing too often.  How long before it’s all taken away again?”

Last of all this morning, Algernon stumbled in and went straight for the coffee machine. Eyeing the dregs forlornly he poured them over cereal, piled on cold strips of bacon, scrambled egg and toast and put it all in the microwave to reheat.  

“I swear you’re up to something. I tell you, I can see straight through you.”  Bruce repeated as Algernon sat down and gave Rain an odd examining look.

“I can’t.”  

“As far as I know my father wasn’t a glassblower, “ Rain quipped before turning his attention to his partner in crime. “Come see what I’ve done.”

Algernon scanned silently through Rain’s work as he ate his breakfast.

“We need a safe connection.” he commented after a while through salty-coffee-egged-cereal.

“That’s why I’ve been looking at the old copper network.  It’s everywhere and some places still have it connected.”

“We don’t want it to connect to Estate though. We know the Cowboy knows something about technology.  He used a VoIP to mask who he was. Could be useful?”

“Yeah, but we’ve got to catch him first.”

After collecting her breakfast of coffee and toast, Peggy found Hertzfeld in his office and asked him for a matter converter.

“Ah, that’s a highly experimental piece of equipment.  Tell me, what use could you put such a thing?”

“For a The Strange battery.  I need currently unknown compounds that will be able to respond and withstand the chaos of The Strange.  The amorphous nature of The Strange requires elements and compounds of specific tolerances that are not found in current materials technology.”

She argued the  technicals with him until he had to admit that though there were a number of steps she was overlooking, her idea was exciting .

“Such work has been done by myself, but I could never get it  to work. I’d like to see where you get with it. Unfortunately I can’t justify highly expensive and highly experimental tools on such a premise.”

“You’ve worked on a similar idea?  May I see your notes?”

“By all means.” He pulled up his notes and for the morning the two of them arguing his theory all the way to midday.

While Bruce was working out and mulling over the revelations of the morning, Algernon and Rain continued with their plans to hack the NSA and gain access to time on the supercomputer.  Algernon spent the morning setting up a relay of cryptocurrencies starting with Bitcoin, purchasing Monero, converting through a number of other currencies until he had Ethereum that he could use safely to purchase on the Dark Web via a Tor browser.  

With his purchased 20 botnet servers in hand, he planned a  network configuration that never relayed the signal the same way twice making it even more difficult for whitehats to trace them back. 

Rain had spent the night hunting out information about the NSA and significant members. The search included a scan through HR records for The Estate. He was pleased to find a link, one Tanya Darwol who had been a NSA agent only twelve months ago who now worked with El McCain.  The file did not detail the reasons for her leaving, but a disagreement with a Director called Prashant Gohr was mentioned. Golden handshake? Seemed likely to Rain. The director was still on the Department of Defence payroll and what was more interesting to Rain, had worked a section that had recently been closed.  Sure that the sections infrastructure would still be in place. If reconnected, it would provide a base within the DoD from which to work.

With this knowledge in hand, he worked through the Estate and found Tanya Darwol.  

“Ms Darwol?  My name is Rain Bigby, I was part of the group that came back with El McCain.”

“Hey yeah, you found him out in that canibal wasteland.  Wild ride for a first time out.”

“I’m glad you said that.  I certainly felt out of my depth…to be honest I always feel that way.”

“Oh, well how can I help you?”

“I’m new. I’m just looking to experienced agents such as yourself for advice, examples from life.”

“I don’t know, did you go to any of the Estate’s training?”

A standard answer to get rid of the newbie, but he was ready for such a reply.

“Theory is all well and good, but I’m looking for the lived experience.  You’re a highly experienced agent, are there not examples from your past that would be worth knowing?”

She narrowed her eyes and took a moment to take in the unassuming man in front of her.  He looked genuine.

“Well… standing up for what you believe is right is a good start. If you believe something to be right, pursuit it. Another is getting good at finding patterns in the mundane was fundamental to my work.  People are creatures of habit and following the patterns often gives you information about their personality or just about where they will be at any given time.”

“Yes, I understand routine.”  Rain was finding Tanya hard to crack. Maybe she was suspicious, but he thought it more likely that she was just used to keeping things to herself.  He tried one of his precious nuggets of information to help open up the conversation. 

“Rowe Campbell was all about finding the good in routine, finding the gaps that one could be taken advantage of.”

“You know Rowe?”  She looked surprised, had he pushed his hand too hard?  Rowe had been the direct supervisor of the infamous Prashant and Chief on the now defunct section.

“You know, it’s amazing who you meet in this business.  She’s all for modernisation, but she had a chap working under her that was change for change sake.  That sort of thing has got to make it hard to focus on the patterns when everything is changing all around you.”  He knew Prashant had been the director that had got Tanya sacked and he could see how a character like that would get under the skin of the detail driven Ms Darwol.  If he could just get her to talk about him then he would have an in. He just wasn’t sure if she’d take the bait.

“Oh him!”  she replied and he let go of the breath he’d been holding the whole conversation. “Yeah, some people have no sense of priority.”

Rain sat back and silently noted everything she said about Prashant and his section.  She was careful to never mention names or details of specific operations but it was clear to both of them who she was referring to.  Her information was a year old, but amongst her diatribe on Gohr she dropped some tasty nuggets of information about the NSA’s inner workings.   After an hour Rain felt he had all he was going to get and offered his thanks to the busy agent.

“I think I understand why McCain rates you so highly.”  he shook her hand and left to inform Algernon what he had found out.

Rain and Algernon were working on their plan during lunch.  The basics of the were in place, but a safe entry into the Internet was still required .  Bruce was there, eating lunch and trying to weedle out information about the project when Peggy stormed in.

She’d got no where with Hertzfeld that morning and he had not approved the expense and risk of the matter converter.  Now she fumed using his name in some unsavoury ways, means and locations. With a sheaf of notes tucked haphazardly under her arm she made no comment to the three of them but muttered to herself as she took a seat across from Rain’s laptop. 

Algernon, nervous around the scientist when she was in a mood, got up to leave, but was stopped when she glared a challenge at him.  He quickly sat down again.

“We’re going to need her in a better frame of mind for this afternoon.”  Bruce quietly said to Rain who took up a plate and piled it full of all the tastiest treats he knew she liked from previous meals.  He placed the plate beside her elbow looking over her shoulder at the notes she was checking and rechecking.

“Whatcha doin’?” he said casually letting the cockney in his usual standard London accent peak through.

Without a word she showed her working, pages of maths that only swam in the con man’s vision.

“Oh, batteries.”  Algernon looked over understanding the principles behind her workings instantly.

“Yes!”  Peggy leapt at the chance at another intelligent mind, “Tell me, where in my working out am I wrong?  Hertzfeld says I’m missing something but I just can’t see it.”

Staying where he was, Algernon looked over the notes she pushed across the table towards him.

“There’s no particular error in your reasoning, but the materials technology just can’t support it.  Have you thought about engineering a biological solution to the problem. Unlike dead materials, living flesh can change and adapt as needed.  At least that’s what we’d do.”

“Biological engineering?  What a thought.” Peggy mused sitting back for the first time that lunch and nibbling at the food on her plate.

“We’d do?  And who would that be?”  Bruce and Rain now looked interested.

“Yes Algernon, do tell.”

Algernon was once more looking uncomfortable.  Talking about the past for all of them seemed a touchy subject, but no one more than Algernon who until recently had known nothing else but a seemingly unpleasant  life in a laboratory. Fortunately for him he was saved this day by the most unlikely person.

“Forget about that for a moment.”  Peggy put aside her notes indicating that subject was now closed. “We have three recursion keys, what do you say try one?”

The three men glanced around the table.  They’d been talking all morning about the Cowboy, though no plans had been laid and Peggy and not been part of discussions.

“The Cowboy is only in town tonight, and we have to stakeout the block and plan how we’re going to take him.”  Bruce opened up the subject.

“Well, when does that start?”  Peggy folded her arms, put out that her idea had to be put aside.

“Now, really.”  Rain turned to his laptop and brought up a satellite view of the street corner in question.  He turned the screen so the group could see. “We have to plan what we’re going to do and get into place before the Cowboy turns up tonight.”

“So, what do we know?  We don’t have surveillance in the area, but he does works alone…”
“He is a very violent man, right Peggy?  You worked that out from Eldritch’s place.“  Rain asked Peggy as she reflected on the scene of murderous destruction she had processed when first investigating Spiral Dust.

“Yes, he was very angry and took it out on Eldritch.”  she agreed.

“And we want him alive.”  Algernon added, Rain nodded agreement. “Shame we don’t have our surveillance up yet.”

“Yes, the plan of yours.”  Bruce latched onto Algernon’s verbal musing.

“I told you all about Algernon’s plan.  Lots of computer work, very technical and tedious.”  Rain tried covering with little success.

“You’re going to tell us anyway, why not now?”  Bruce asked suspicious of the plan the two boys were keeping so tightly lipped about.

Rain looked at Algernon who looked scared at his own verbal gaff.

“Nah…”  Rain replied with a childish grin and turned back to the map on his laptop.

Looking at the satellite view of the street corner it was clear it was near a carpark where the Cowboy would assumedly leave any vehicle. It gave good access to the road in both directions and was free of a building that could hide an operations like theirs.  On the other corners were a mechanics, a bodega (that Rain was informed was a grocery store, not a Spanish wine bar as he’d hoped) and an unknown building. A quick search of the building under Real Estate found that it was for lease and was listed as office space.

“That looks like the place for our stakeout.”  Rain pointed out the empty office block, “ A two storey building, street access, with a view of the whole intersection.  I’ll see if the Estate can lend me some Lockpicks.”

“Speaking of supplies, I’ll see Katherine about what the Estate can offer to help catch this guy. “  Bruce said and left.

At the mention of supplies Algernon too got up and visited the canteen.  He returned sometime later with a jug of hot coffee and a paper bag dark with fat.

“Supplies, for the stakeout.  Coffee and bacon.” That the canteen had no cooked bacon and had given him what they had out of the fridge didn’t seem to bother him.  Neither did the fact that the jug had no lid.

Bruce returned after discussions with his supervisor with a large crossbow-like gun and a box of cartridges.

“She offered some experienced hands to come along and help but I didn’t think it necessary.  She did recommend this thing and I thought Algernon may be able to use it.” He handed it to Algernon who  looked dubiously at the stocky cartridge placed in the flight grove instead of a streamline bolt. “It launches a net short range, there are a few cartridges so you can practise beforehand.”

“Okay,” Algernon nodded after a moment investigation of the weapon, “Could you run over there?”  He pointed at the far end of the mess. Bruce shook his head.

“No way.” he laughed and mood of the group shifted to one of silly banter.  “What else do we want to tackle this guy?”

“Taser in the nuts?”  Algernon suggested.

“No, we have that covered.” Rain replied gesturing to Peggy.

“What do you mean?”  Algernon asked unsure what horror the scientist may unleash.

“Peggy’s kick-arse boot!”  Rain answer, Peggy added much to his embarrassment.

“I kicked him in the nuts once.”  

This made Bruce roar with laughter.

“And I still helped killed a that spider.”  Rain announced not to be outdone.

“In the theatre!?”  Bruce was now gasping for breath between gaffors.

By the end of their planning each member had their part.  Algernon would sit up in the office building and shoot the net casting crossbow or levitate the the Cowboy if he tried any violence. Rain would distract the Cowboy pretending to be a potential client as Peggy and Bruce would be to be ordinary citizens out for a stroll.  Peggy would train her sense on The Strange so she could warn the group if he had a recursion key or cipher, she also had her gun. Bruce would come in with the physical stuff and was ready with his crowbar. The plan was…the plan, and what it didn’t have in subtly it made up with everyone knowing their part in it.

That afternoon as the group walked into the carpool, Algernon added one more item.  From a line of equally ungainly machines, Algernon pulled one of the Estate’s Honda CT110 motorbikes and put it in the boot of the car.

“You won’t need it.”  Bruce commented and Algernon got into the car balancing his coffee and bacon.

“Just in case.”

The car park was empty when they stopped opposite the office block later that afternoon.  Bruce made Algernon leave his coffee and bacon in the car as he walked the block checking out the neighbourhood. It was an area of  the city between workplaces and homes, the local area was quiet before quitting time at 5pm. He made it behind the office building without meeting a soul and found another door.   On a chance he tried the doorknob and it turned in his hand, the door swinging in on an empty storeroom. Silently he stepped in and close the door behind him.

 The other three went straight for the front door of the unoccupied building and Rain pulled out his newly acquired lockpicks. In truth he hadn’t had a lot of experience with door locks, but he wouldn’t have been able to call himself a student of Houdini if he’d failed in front of his friends.  All fears, however, were groundless as the lock clicked and the door swung open silently. 

“Go see where Algernon’s got to.” suggested Bruce as Rain stepped back and let him and Peggy in.  With a tip of an imaginary hat, Rain pulled out his phone and called Algernon’s number.

Algernon adjusted his eyes to the storeroom.  There wasn’t much to see, a few empty boxes shelving and the pervasive feeling of neglect.  He sniffed the air searching for the smells of human habitation, cooking, aftershave or cigarettes.  All he got was the musk of rats and mould. To his left an opening lead to stairs going up to the first floor, straight ahead another door that he assumed must lead to the front of the building.  Silently he trod the risers , climbing up the stairs when his phone started playing the Mission Impossible theme tune. Scrabbling to silence the thing, he saw the call was from Rain and answered it.

“Shhhh!”  he hissed into the receiver and Rain hung up only to send a text message asking where he was.  

On the ground floor Bruce heard the phone ring.  Crowbar drawn, he followed the sound to the back room, finding the door and stairs going to the first floor.  Again he heard the phone, this time bugle call for charge and confronted Algernon texting back to Rain. Shhhhh!

 Bruce rolled his eyes and pulled out his own phone calling Rain.

“He’s in here.  You might as well come in yourself.”

The first floor was one room, carpeted a grubby industrial green. It was furnitureless but lined with sashed windows overlooking the intersection.  While Algernon set up his stakeout spot which included: his supplies, a constant video feed of the street and the crossbow, Peggy pulled out her handgun and loaded it.

“I brought this in case this turns into a knife fight.” She said and loaded a round in the chamber.

“The right side of the equation to be on.”  Rain acknowledged wary of her new found fascination with guns and headed across the road to the Bodega.

Again disappointed that the shop owner was not Spanish or sold wine, he did chat pleasantly with him about about the area.

“I’m thinking of renting the office space across the street and I’m wondering what this place is like a night?”

“Pretty quiet.  There’s a rave a block or two down the street that gets some attention.  Then there’s this dodgy guy in a cowboy hat hangs around sometimes. Doesn’t do any harm though so I say live and let live.”

“Wise words.”  Rain toasted the shop owner with a can of Cola and returned to the office block to await the arrival of the Cowboy.

It was 7pm and fully dark by the time a large pickup  drove into the carpark and stopped. It was clear this was the guy when he climbed out of the driver’s side in full cowboy hat and jacket.  Algernon quickly snapped a few photos of the Cowboy and the car with his phone and sent the images to the rest of the group. The Cowboy, confidently strolled out to his favourite spot on the corner and waited or his business to come to him.  It was time to act.

“Let’s just go out there and get him, no theatrics.  Just walk up casual, Algernon fires the net and we grab him.”  Bruce said as everyone got into place. Rain thought , but said nothing, just nodded and started out into the road.  When they were half way across, he waved to gain the Cowboy’s attention before…

Whizz crack! 

The canister containing the net flew overhead and crashed into the brick wall of the mechanics behind the Cowboy’s head.  The shot had failed and now the Cowboy knew something was up.

“Quick, before he…” But the warning remained unfinished as the Cowboy reached into his pocket and disappeared.  Another instantaneous translation and their quarry was gone, who knew where.

Rain slumped to the asphalt in the middle of the road, sure they’d just screwed up their best chance at getting the Cowboy.

If I had gone up to him as discussed I would have been closer when the canister failed, I could have grabbed him, I could have.  He thought bitterly, but said instead, ”His car is there.”  

Picking himself up, Rain followed Bruce who was already heading for the truck. Both started when the door open of its own accord.

“The bastard’s invisible!  Get him!”

Bruce forgot his crowbar and pulled out his revolver readying a shot.  Seeing the change in tactics, Rain’s deck of cards were suddenly in his hand.  He fanned them out spraying them in a cone at the open door of the pick up as Bruce trained his gun on the spot where the cards bounced off something not there.

Bruce shot went wild and he swore as the Dodge’s engine turned over.  The cowboy aimed the car at Bruce and Rain and stomped on the pedal. Bruce dodged aside, but Rain rolled up the bonnet and window of the pickup, caught hold of the passenger door frame and swung in feet first.

From his window position above, Algernon could do nothing.  He couldn’t see the Cowboy to levitate him and there was nothing he could do to support his friends. In frustration he threw the useless net launcher aside and started climbing out the window.  Bruce and Peggy both shot the pickup’s tyres, Bruce’s ricocheting off the road. Peggy’s hit, bringing the truck down on its rims on one side. It was at that moment that Rain grabbed the steering wheel out of the invisible Cowboy’s hands and yanked it  around hard. 

There was a moment’s realisation as the front wheel rim turned and bit into the road surface. Then chaos as the truck flipped and rolled in a scream of twisting metal and shattering glass.  

“Rain!”  Bruce yelled and ran for the truck as it settled on it roof in the middle of the intersection. Algernon soared out his window and levitated to the ground near their car and Peggy ran towards the truck.  No sound came from the truck. A distance away, Police sirens wailed.

Inside, Rain was dazed from the battering he’d just receive when the truck rolled.  There were no clever words and only one thought whirling around in his addle brain. Get the Cowboy.  As the driver’s door groaned open he pounced, fingers like claws for the man he knew must be there. The struggle was perfunctory and the Cowboy finally went limp as Bruce grabbed him and dragged both him and Rain out of the truck.

“Please keep struggling.  I’m told I need more biological material.”  Peggy trained her gun on the invisible man.

“Anything Strange, Peggy?” Bruce grunted getting a firm grip on nothing.

“That he’s invisible is pretty strange wouldn’t you say?”  She felt for the Strange but felt nothing. Whatever it was had been spent. ‘Turn off the invisibility.”

“I can’t, “ The Cowboy groaned, “It lasts ten minutes.”

“Peggy!  Keys!” Algernon called from the car holding his hands up to catch the keys.  Instead, Peggy put away her gun and walked over to the car.

“You’ve got this.” she said over her shoulder.

The sirens were getting louder, it was time to go.  

Bruce now had control of the Cowboy and hauled him bodily to the car as Peggy drove along side the overturned pickup. Algernon crawled into the cab of the pick up, rummaging through the glove compartment.  

“We don’t have time, we’ve got to go now!”  Bruce yelled as Rain stumbled back to the office building clutching his head.

“You go, we’ll catch up.”  he called keeping the door open for Algernon who now had a set of keys in his hand and pulled a duffle bag from under the pickup’s tray. “Algernon, you can make it.”

As swiftly as he could with the heavy duffle, Algeron ran through the door and Rain locked it shut. The car carrying Peggy, Bruce and the Cowboy sped away.  The siren wail grew louder, only blocks away as both Algernon and Rain stumbled upstairs and watched the police arrive from the windows. They were trapped in the building, no way to cross to another and even the back door was currently not safe from the keen eyes of the police.  

One officer went to the Bodego, locked up for the night, another walked up to the front door of the building and knocked.

Rain gestured, he’d go down and talk.  Algernon nodded and started breaking down the net launcher.  He stuffed the pieces in the duffle bag noting the contents as he did.  Camping equipment: tent, cooking utensils, and a sleeping bag.

Raking his fingers shakily through his bloodied hair Rain did the best he could to make himself presentable before unlocking the door to the officer on the other side.

“Good evening officer, is there a problem?”  he asked meekly, projecting an aura of unthreatening-average-citizen.

“The shopkeeper across the way called a few moments ago about gunshots.  Has there been some sort of accident here tonight, sir?” She gestured to the Dodge standing silent on its roof in the middle of the street.

“Goodness!”  Rain starred surprised at the truck as blood trickled down his neck and into his shirt collar. “I heard something, I thought it was firecrackers.  I’m afraid I was working in the back of the building.”

The police officer sighed,

“Your name sir?”

“Gygax, Libor Gygax.”  The new persona rolled off his tongue as did his statement to the officer.  When the officer was finished she walked over to the Dodge and radioed in the license plate.  Rain didn’t wait. Quietly he relocked the door and, with Algernon and the duffle, they snuck out the back door while the police were occupied. 

Another knock at the door, but there was no one left to answer it.

9. Fears and Failures

It was late Monday morning on a Seattle Autumn day as two young men walked the campus of The Estate.  Both of their minds were full of visions of their latest excursion or lists of to do now they were back.  The older one, no taller or larger than his companion looked out at the world around him furtively. His younger companion flicked idly through a well thumbed notebook trying to make sense of the world.  Without preamble, their quiet shared contemplation was broken by the elder who finally voiced a question he’d been holding like a hot rock in his mouth.

“So, when you say you’re 15, what do you mean by that?”  Rain asked casually if a question of general conversation.

“That’s an age concept…right?” Algernon responded nervously, these questions were always fraught.

“But what do you mean by it.  You do know you won’t be legally able to drink in a few days, right?”

Algernon shook his head, unsure in disbelief or surprise that it needed saying.

“I actually don’t know how old I am.”

“Oh!”  Rain stopped in surprise, making his companion stop as  well, “I’m sorry, I didn’t know.” Rain considered Algernon for a moment as if making a decision.  He opened his mouth as if to speak, but no words came out. In the end he glanced away and added, “You know you can always tell me stuff like this.”

Algernon nodded but felt then on that something had been left unsaid. There had to be a better way of gaining information than these obfuscating words.

At the same time, across campus in the labs of The Estate, a female scientist was berating one of her co-workers.  It’s not until the words were heard that listeners just outside the door would realise that she was a junior operative just returned from a mission and he was her supervisor.

“I told you I wasn’t ready for fieldwork, why do you insist I continue to go on these missions?”  Peggy complained to Hertzfeld without regard to his rank or who may be listening.

“As I understand you did rather well.”

“And I got stabbed!”
“That is unfortunate, but that is why you go out with a team.”  Hertzfeld was not to be belittled by Peggy’s negativity, “You just can’t learn everything you need to know in the lab.”

“Anyone who says that is just not trying hard enough.”  She grumbled well aware that exactly what he said of his own career.  “Anyway we did find some translation keys.”

“See.  Well done.”  She handed them over to him all anger seemingly forgotten. “Do you know where they could be from?”

“No, but leave them with me.” Hertzfeld put the bucket, med kit box and signet ring down on his desk, “Tell me about your latest translation.”

Peggy gave a verbal report on the Spiral Dust transportation through Railsea including the interest that a particular giant mole took in the raw mineral. She mentioned Caw Eh Carve and the information about Crows Hollow he had provided as well as a detailed account of the arrival of Elvin Lightfeather.

“And then he stabbed me.”

“Just once?” Hertzfeld replied dryly.  His attempt at humour was ignored.

“We also got the name of a prominent character involved in the Spiral Dust smuggling.  A Don Whitecliff?”
“Oh, we know of Whitecliff, a very prominent character all round. I look forward to reading all about it in your report, but…”  he gestured to an adjacent room, “In the meantime, I’ve been waiting to hear your thoughts on my little project, it has to do with the thonic your party brought in a few weeks ago.”

He lead her through to his private lab where he had a glass aquarium with a single pebble inside.  Beside it, a metal glove attached to a power cord. Hertzfeld had shown the gloves to Peggy before and it had some potential at phasing through solid materials.  Hertzfeld now plugged in his glove and put it on.

“Now watch this.” and he slowly moved his hand through the glass of the aquarium and picked up the pebble within.
“You succeeded at material differential phasing?” she sounded impressed as he dropped the pebble back on the glass surface of the aquarium and pulled his hand through its wall. 

“It takes a lot of juice and it’s hardly portable at the moment but yes, the experiments have been very positive so far.” Hertzfeld unplugged the device and handed it to Peggy.

“But what if we incorporate what I’ve been able to gather from my research and actually the tap The Strange for the energy to power it…”

“That’s exactly why I’m here,”  Rain said as he as Algernon walked into the lab “but my query is a little more personal.”

“Good.  Are you ready for the spiral dust experiment?” Peggy. Rain instantly looked like he was ready to turn and walk straight out of the lab again all thought of Hertzfeld’s notes forgotten.

“Oh there’s so much to do right now.”  Rain started backing out only to bump into Algernon walking behind him,   “I want to train with Algernon and we’ve been asked to check the video feeds…”

“Don’t you want to do these experiments anymore?”  

“No…I mean yes, I do…I…”

“And don’t you want to do it safely with all medical facilities standing by if something goes wrong?”

“Yes… that sounds good.”  He winced.

“And Algernon are you willing to help?”

“You said you’d watch didn’t you?” Rain’s head snapped around to Algernon.

“Yes I will be there for Rain.”  Algernon replied stoically, voicing no opinion of his own.

Peggy took a calming breath, 

“So, what’s the problem?”

Rain looked around him, at the practical Peggy, the curious Hertzfeld and the imperious Algernon.  He felt trapped, but it was a trap of his own making, one he wanted to walk into ever since finding out about the Spiral Dust.  A chance to touch The Strange, maybe harness its energies like Peggy did with her machines, like the others do with their powers.  At the same time the memories brought out by another experiment seventeen years previous made him scramble for his puzzle box.

“Because…because people get things wrong, stuff goes wrong…”
“Do you think I’ll hurt you?” Peggy asked almost insulted.

“No…look.  I’ve done something like this before and it didn’t go well.”
“A drug trial?  For what? At college?”

“A London University.  It was experimental, a drug trial for depression. They gave me LSD.”

“What happened?”

“I didn’t have depression and…there was a bad trip…a very bad trip.”  He turned to Peggy, his eyes large and swimming from frustration and shame, but his expression was full conviction.  “Look, I know this stuff isn’t the same thing at all, we know what it does, I don’t think the same thing will happen.  I want to do this.”

“Okay then.”Peggy replied more conciliatory, “I’ve booked a room near the medical unit, not in my lab.  Algernon will be there and we’ll start with the very lowest dose I believe will still have an effect. Does that sound good to you?”

“Yes.” Rain replied more confidently than he felt.

“Right, we’ll reconvene this afternoon.   Don’t eat or drink anything more today.”

“I don’t think I could.”

In the hours before the Spiral Dust experiment, Algernon got busy with the task they had been set, going through the footage at the warehouse.  Visits to the warehouse and diminished significantly since they closed that little operation, but there was at least one person that visited twice in the four days they’d been in Railsea.  Carefully Algernon captured numerous images of the woman in her mid 30s, blond, tall, 180cm to compare her to the door, right handed (the hand she used to knock) wearing tie-dye shirt, jacket, jeans and sunglasses.

With his new information he went and found Rain in a room near the medical unit.

“Hey Rain, I’ve been thinking.  Going through the video recordings is not efficient.”

“A boring and yet essential job it seems.”  he fussed as the nurse placed sticky electrodes against bare skin,   “You have something in mind?”

Algernon nodded, 

“Let’s hack the NSA.”

Rain was stunned to silence so Algernon felt encouraged to continue.  The nurse, hearing something he knew he shouldn’t, quietly excused himself from the room.

“We can get access to all the national camera networks as well as use of the Supercomputer, it would really save us a lot of time.”

“The NSA is a bit like Crows Hollow.” Rain finally replied after taking in the enormity of the task.  When Algernon looked confused, he added, “It’s a bit above us at the moment.”

“Well, how about the carrier waves for the mobile networks?” Algernon was not to be put off so easily. To this Rain nodded encouragingly his mind really not on the task at the moment.

“That’s doable, maybe later though.” He answered distractedly.

“Oh, and…” Algernon handed over the image of the woman from the warehouse, “…she’s been twice while we were away.”  This got Rain’s attention and he quickly took a copy of the image with his phone.

“This is good news, now we just have to find out who she is.”

Peggy and the nurse were soon back with discussions about dosages and procedures about how the experiment would progress.  With no interest or heart for the details of what was to come, Algernon left and returned to the computer labs near the library.

Here he talked to a number of I.T. members about finding someone from just their image alone.  They sent him along to the small office of the Digital investigation specialist, Walter Taylor.

“Give me what details you have on the woman in question and I’ll see what I can find with a reverse image search.”  Walter said as Algernon laid out what he knew.

“I’d love to stay and watch how you search, but I need to be somewhere else.  Would it be all right if you teach me how to do this some other time?” Algernon asked as Walter started entering the information.

“Sure, next time I need to run one of these I’ll send a message so you can sit in.”  Walter agreed and Algernon left making sure he’d be in time for Rain’s experiment.

When Algernon arrived he found Rain alternatively chatting to the nurse, who was well used to such nonsense, and talking to Peggy about what was to come.

“Thank you for putting this all together,” Rain said to Peggy and there was a frizzon that Algernon picked up the edges of. “I really am grateful for all the thought and attention.”

“Okay.” Peggy replied awkwardly.

“Oh and make sure you use the pure stuff, either what’s left of your original ounce or from this.” and Rain opened his puzzle box to reveal the other two ounces inside.

Peggy, instead of providing a container for the spiral dust, took the whole box to empty and clean out.

“No!  Give it back!”  Rain almost jumped out of the bed after Peggy, but he was held down by electrodes, drip lines and other monitoring equipment as well as  the nurses quick reflexes. So violent was his reaction that some of the measuring equipment started chiming in alarm. Peggy gave back the now clean puzzle box but not before noting its connection to The Strange.  The buzz in her teeth was unmistakable, the box was touched by The Strange in some way. She made a note to investigate its properties at a later time.

“Rain, remember Will Robinson.”  Algernon said from Rain’s bedside.

“He’s never far from my mind.” Rain responded weakly as he clutched the puzzle box in two shaking hands.

“Are you nervous?”

“Peggy, you have to realise there is always a base level of fear.”  Rain admitted which gave Peggy pause.

“Any sort of fear or nervous tension will affect our readings.” she checked that all the machines were running as expected again, “Are you uncomfortable?”

“Yes,” Rain replied truthfully.

“Then we’re not doing this. Nurse, you can release the patient.” Peggy turned away to start clearing away her notes.

“What!”  Rain cried, now in fear that what he had dreaded all morning was no going to happen at all.

“I will not run such as experiment with an unwilling patient and that is flat.”  She turned back to the bed to see Algernon pick up the syringe she’d prepared with the solution of Spiral Dust.

“PUT THAT DOWN!” she commanded, “You will not experiment on an unwilling subject under my watch!”
“Do it!”  Rain stuck out his arm and turned his face away so as not to see the needle.  Without hesitation, Algernon plunged the needle into Rain’s arm and depressed the plunger.

As the drug took effect, Rain slumped to the bed, as pandemonium broke out in the room.  

“Get out!  Get out! And never enter my lab again!”  Peggy screamed at Algernon who scurried like a whipped dog for the door to knock directly into Bruce who was coming in the door the other way.

Bruce’s morning had been spent with Katherine Manners, his direct supervisor, debriefing and discussing what their next steps should be.  After which he’d headed over to the dormitory and had a long hot shower, his first in ten days of dusty travel through the Railsea. He ate a leisurely brunch then headed over the computer lab where their video feed was collected and viewed.  There he met Walter Taylor from whom he was surprised to learn Algernon had beat him to the task.

“He said he had to be somewhere and couldn’t stay to help. I feel I’m going to be here all day on this one.”

“Once before you found my brother through his phone number,” Bruce suggested, “could you possibly do the reverse and find this woman’s phone number from the location and time?”

“Good idea, I’ll get onto it. Good luck on your search.”

He started asking around campus for his team and found that there was a scheduled experiment on for that afternoon. One which he had not been invited.  

And so Bruce happened to find himself entering a scene of chaos with a red faced Peggy screaming at a terrified looking Algernon as Rain lay unsettlingly still on a bed.

“What’s happening here?”  Bruce asked, grabbing a hold of Algernon as he tried to make his escape.

Peggy took a deep breath and regained some semblance of composure.

“Rain wanted to experiment with the Spiral Dust drug to see what effect it would have.  I offered to provide a safe place where data both physical and psychological could be recorded accurately.  Algernon was here at Rain’s request as a support and witness but he took control of the experiment when the patient showed signs of resistance.  I will not have that sort of practise in my lab, he can’t stay.”

“Rain’s not a patient!”  Algernon retorted, slightly more sure of himself now backed by Bruce.

“Of course he is, he’s my patient.” Peggy snapped back.

Bruce scowled at the situation and at his companions with deep disgust. 

“He stays.”  Bruce stepped into the room, dragging Algernon in behind him.  Algernon scuttled to a corner and sat crouched on the ground, his eyes darting from Bruce to Peggy.

“I forbid it!  He interfered, I don’t know what damage he’s done…”

“Well then you know your job, make sure it’s right.”  And with that Bruce pulled out his crowbar menacingly and stood at the foot of the bed watching the lifeless looking Rain.  “Make sure he’s safe.”

After recognising there was no arguing with him, Peggy gave in and turned to her patient whose vital were already showing signs of deep sleep.

“Look doctor, at his eyes.” the nurse held open one of Rain’s eyelids.  The eye was rolled back as expected in sleep, but the iris itself was spinning creating the spirals the dust was known for. 

Rain found himself floating in comfortable darkness.  Floating was good. It wasn’t what he wanted but floating had its advantages.  While floating there were no distractions, no ties, no cares or any real fears.  Floating was freeing. Floating was a revelation.

Still floating, the darkness around him began to lighten and coalesce into a landscape, a coastal scene.  Sandy shores and rocky cliffs soon made way to an ancient walled city, dust coloured on the horizon. The city was completely encircled by high stone walls, ancient and crumbling, with six gates providing access around its perimeter.  

Without control of where he went, Rain drifted down towards the nearest of the six gates, protected by the collapsing statue of a sphinx.  Inside the walls the city was a sprawling mass of tightly packed buildings both large and small in all states of disrepair and decay. Now he saw humanoids for the first time, ungainly creatures with human upper bodies, furry legs and long wickedly sharp clawed hands.  As he drifted closer to the creatures he could see that their unusual walking style was due to having the hips and legs of goats that ended in cloven hooves.

None of the creatures seemed to notice his presence and as he touched down he realised he made no impression at all on the dusty ground.  To them and their world, he did not exist. Now he was walking amongst the people of the town, with no control over his movements. He couldn’t stop to check out a detail or listen to a conversation, maybe pick up the language.  It was like a virtual tour without the VR visor and with all the smells and feel of the real world.

Ahead he could see that the buildings were opening up into a city square.  The buildings here were as old and weathered looking as the rest of the city.  The only things that looked undamaged by time were two huge stone lion statues made of grey stone.  They flanked a large set of basalt stairs that headed deep underground in front of what remained of official looking public buildings.

It was clear now that the destination was the stairs and what lay under the city as his walking feet carried him between the lions.  Down deep under the city the stair travelled in a spiral lit only by the white faint glow of moss on the walls. The ceiling was soon lost in darkness above as Rain continued to travel ever deeper into the heart of the earth.

After a long time of stairs finished at a vast open chamber.  Sounds echoes in the darkness, the moss now only providing the most basic of lighting as the wall stretched out either side.  Rain found himself walking on uneven ground and as he went past a patch of illumination he could see the flagstone floor of the chamber was covered in bones all showing the unmistakable marks of teeth.

Rain shot up from the bed with a start. The room looked the same as it had when went under except Algernon was only now getting up from a crouching position on the floor in one corner and Bruce was standing at the foot of the bed looking stern.

“Oh, hi Bruce.” he said lamely as his head swam dizzily, “we…I had to know.”

“I know,” Bruce replied nodding, “So do I.”

“Better that it be me, right?  Who else?”

“Yep.”  he settled is crowbar back in its loop by his side and sat down in a nearby chair, “Thank you.”

Rain was so overcome by the big man’s acceptance that he found himself with nothing to say.  Instead he just nodded and let Peggy and the nurse do their job.

“Do you remember what day it is?”  Asked the nurse as he checked Rain’s eyes and other vitals.

“Same day as we came back from Railsea.” he responded confusing the nurse.  Peggy nodded, 

“He’s fine.” she said dryly looking more tired and washed out than she usually did while experimenting.

“How long was I out?”  he asked her now a little concerned for her health.

She checked the clock,

“Twenty minutes approximately.”  she responded shooting a glance at Algernon who flinched under her gaze.  She put a small audio recorder on the blanket in front of Rain. “Tell us what you remember, in as much detail as you can.”

Rain nodded and settled himself cross-legged on the bed.  He closed his eyes and visualised the experience again, this time relaying it to the others.  He took his time, described the details of the buildings the statues and most of all the people he’d seen ending with the stair, the chamber and the bones.

“There were bones everywhere and they all had teeth marks in them.  It startled me and I found myself back here.” he looked up and found all three of his companions standing around the bed listening intently.

“Were you detached?”  Peggy asked monitoring his responses, “That is to say, Did you feel fear or frustration or any other emotions while under?”

“I remember being frustrated about not being able to control where I went.”  he replied carefully, leaving out the sensation of floating and the peace it had offered.   “I wanted to stop and take it in, but the vision just continued like a movie walking me toward the underground chamber.  I was also shocked when I realised what was on the ground, I think that’s what finally snapped me out of it.”  

Again he looked around the group and settle on Bruce’s intense expression.  Suddenly ashamed he admitted, 

“I thought…I thought because I was awakened that I could control it, make the vision do what I wanted.  I thought I was better than John.”

“John?” Bruce was surprised to be reminded of his brother back in New Orleans at this moment and pulled out his phone.

“Yeah.  I feel a bit of an idiot.  The whole thing was better than expected, rather nice really except for the end but also disappointing at the same time.”  Rain was aware that his words did not give meaning to the disappointment and frustration he felt. After all Peggy’s work and all his fussing he had no control, no link with the strange, nothing to show for it all but a random visit to an unknown location.

“So would you take it again?”  Bruce asked carefully aware of his loudly held stance on drugs and drug taking.

“Yeah, I would.“ Rain replied thoughtfully, “Like it was fine, better than I feared.  It just wasn’t very useful.”

“So legs of animals and cloven hooves, “ Algernon prompted when the conversation had finally petered out, “What like a satyr but with claws?”

“Yeah, just like.  I wonder if they’re in the archives?”

Bruce had moved to the farthest corner of the room and dialed a phone number.  Both Rain and Algernon stopped talking as someone picked up on the other side.  

“Hey John?”

“Bruce?  Is that you, man?”

 “Yeah, it’s me.  Just checking in.”

“Well how are things in Seattle?”

“Good. I’m more interested in you.  Are you still doing to the drugs?”

“No man.”

“Yeah, would you tell me if you were?”

“I wouldn’t not after last time. It was…I’ve been out of work for a while and…”

“I know it’s been tough.”

“I just wanted to feel good for a little while, but look where it got me.”

“Yeah, I just don’t want to see you doing that stuff okay?  I worry about you.”  

“Thanks Bruce.”

“Sure, family have got to look out for one another.”

“Yeah.”

“So still looking for work? What sort?”

“Haulage mostly, why?”

“I’ve got connections.  I could ask around, make some recommendations.”

“That would be a big help, yeah thanks Bruce.  But what about you in Seattle, what have you been up to?”

“You wouldn’t believe.”  Bruce laughed looking back at Algernon and Rain watching him expectantly.

“Probably not.  You’re sure hanging with a crazy bunch up there.”

“No kidding.  Say tell mom hi and I’ll call later.”

“Yeah no prob. See ya Bro.”

“See ya.”  

“I’m glad you did that, “ Rain said once the phone we hung up, “Family is…”
“Important.” Bruce added when Rain searched for the right word.

Rain nodded and his usual lopsided smile reappeared on his face.  

“Yes, very important.” he glanced up at Algernon to press the point, “They look out for each other.”

Algernon shrunk away a little and Rain instantly regretted it.  He realised he had no idea what the boy had gone through after he’d past out and still here he was.

Before Rain to say anything though, Peggy was finally ready to bring down judgement on what had happened.

“A word with you, in private.”  Peggy grabbed Algernon’s ear and dragged him out into the hallway outside the door.

“You need to learn something about ethics and putting the welfare of patients first above everything.  You never, ever experiment on an unwilling patient.” She said quietly but with all the passion of her convictions.  

“Rain’s not a patient.”  Algernon repeated from earlier, “Doctor Peggy can you please let go my ear.”

“Don’t talk nonsense.  Keep this up and you won’t be invited to the next experiment.”

“I don’t like experiments.”

“On you or anyone?”

“Anyone.”  Algernon admitted flatly

“There will be other times, this is bound to happen again.”

“And I’ll be there…because Rain asked.”

For all of Peggy’s internal firewalls against the emotional states of others, not even she could ignore that statement of dedication. 

At the same time, Bruce stepped in and spoke a quiet but forceful tone,

“Peggy, Rain is an adult who volunteered for something that frightened him. Algernon was only helping.”

Peggy thought about Algernon had said earlier.

“What do you mean when you say that Rain is not a patient?”

“He was a participant, he wanted to do this he was just scared.  An experiment on a patient usually involves tying them down…” As soon as he saw the horror on Peggy’s face he knew he’d said too much.  A horrible silence filled the hall and the room where Rain and Bruce were listening. “I …got to go…” he tried to run.

“Oh no, “ Peggy gripped even tighter to the squirming ear and Algernon stayed where he was.  “I can see that your ethics education as been seriously lacking. Tonight, we’re going off to the library for some medical ethics research and see why we do not do such things here.”

“Ethics?  What would ethics say about opening portal into unknown dimensions?”  Algernon countered, once he had his ear back. He was referring to Peggy’s experiments in her garage that brought all of them together.

“There no ethical dilemma there,” Peggy replied not understanding all the implications of his statement, “We voluntarily go through the portals…unfortunately.”

The next day, the others kept themselves busy as Rain sat in observation reading Hetzfeld’s report on the ‘Gifts of the Strange’.  After breakfast Algernon took Bruce to the gym, a rare reversal.

“I want to see how far you can toss me.”  He said after they’d found and laid out a set of crash mats. Having an inkling of  what Algernon had in mind he picked up the boy and threw him around his body and into the mats making him land a little under 4 metres away.

“Good, now do it again.”  Algernon’s eyes glinted with hidden mischief as Bruce picked him up one more and tossed him.  This time Algernon levitated as he was released and to the surprise of the others in the gym that morning the young man flew ungainly across the room almost 8 metres before he ran out of forward momentum.  He let go of the levitate and dropped into the crash mats.

“Hey, I’ve got an idea.  Levitate first before I throw you.”  Bruce said to the beaming Algernon. Algernon did and though his mass was no less, he was now much lighter and Bruce was able to sling him one handed over the mats.  This style lead to a more streamlined Algernon in the air, resulting in him sailing past the mats laid out and hitting the wall more than 10 metres away.

“Now it’s your turn.” The triumphant Algernon crowed and gestured to the crash mats.  Bruce grinned and stepped back giving himself a running jump. With a strong run and impressive leap Bruce made it out 4 metres before face-planting in the mats.

“And again.”  Algernon instructed now grinning with unconcealed glee.  Bruce stepped back and again ran for the maps, launching himself into the air at the last minute.  When his feet left the ground, Algernon levitated Bruce so he too soared through the air powered by his own momentum.  Bruce kept up the run, pushing the air back with flailing arms and legs until he too ran out of momentum around the 8 metre mark.  Algernon dropped him into the mats and the audience of gym users applauded.

They practised this new routine refining the holds and launch positions each time for maximum  distance until Algernon received a message from Walter Taylor saying he had some information for him.  Walter wouldn’t provide details over the phone, but when they made it to his office he gave them a full run down on the mystery woman.

“She’s a journalist by the name of Sharon Cooper-Smith.”  said Walter as he handed Algernon a page of notes. “She’s had a few by-lines for the syndicated newspapers in town and she’s recently published articles in the New Aquarian.  She’s based here in Seattle and I got you her home address and phone number.”

Algernon spent some time asking Walter how he had come by the information so quickly and was shown how the process was conducted.  Though still time consuming and requiring specific software, Algernon paid attention and was confident that he too could try a similar techniques in the future. 

“Are you going out then?”  Algernon said as they left the computer labs and headed back to the office blocks, “I’ll get a crossbow.”

“You can’t walk down Seattle streets with a crossbow in your hand.” Bruce replied imagining the looks the young man would get with something like his giant Railsea crossbow.  What worked in a backwater recursions did not work in downtown U.S.A.

“Oh no, of course not.” Algernon agreed, “I’ll put it on my back. “

“Your supervisor will not let you out with a crossbow.  Look, you’re pretty good with small arms, he may let you out with one of those.”

“Yeah, but they’re…small.”

The two walked companionably back to the dormitory where packages were waiting for both of them.  Bruce’s was a long rectangular box from a company of tool and accessory suppliers. Algernon’s was large, flat didn’t seem to weigh a lot.

“Are they bombs?”  Algernon looked at his suspiciously as it lay on his bed.

“Who would know to send us a bomb?”  Bruce opened his to find a leather back holster for his sledgehammer incorporating a small easy to reach second pocket for his crowbar.  It was sturdy and practical gift that left his hands free while still allowed good weight distribution for the bulky sledge. Bruce searched the box for an invoice, note or packing slip, but nothing gave a hint as to who had sent it.

Now that Algernon saw that Bruce’s box was safe he also carefully started opening his box.  He was less circumspect when he saw the red motorcycle jacket inside. With a whooped he snatched it out of the box and turned it around to see an embossed blue and white capsule encircled with the words, Good for health.  Bad for Education.  Without another word he ran out of the dormitory putting it on as he went.

“Rain!  Rain! Look what came!”  he ran straight into Rain’s room as his last physical was being recorded by the nurse.  Rain himself had been staring at his face in a small hand mirror when Algernon burst in looking and acting for once the 15 years he was suppose to be.  Rain looked up and beamed.
“Hey, it fits well.”  he commented, “Now all you need is to get you a laser rifle and you’d be set.”

“Do I get to keep it?”  Algernon gawped unable to comprehend how or why he would be given such an item to keep.  Rain’s smile slipped a little at the realisation that this may well be the first present Algernon had ever received.

“It’s  yours, you deserve it.”

Not long after Bruce walked in wearing his harness and tools and watched as Algernon started levitating the nurse.

“Remember, only Kaneda gets the jacket, not Tetsuo.”  Rain joked and Algernon put the nurse back down on the ground.  

“You did this?” Bruce asked indicating the jacket and his harness.

“Well George Weasley actually, but what’s a first…honestly earned …pay for if not to share.”  Rain responded lightly, “Besides, I find that I have a lot to be grateful for.”

“Well…Thank you.”  Bruce noticing for the first time something different about Rain’s eyes.  He walked up for a closer look and realised they were a new shade of violet instead of their clear blue.  Without a word he took out his phone and took a picture.

“Yeah, I have a new look.” Rain replied to Bruce’s unspoken comment as Peggy walked in and signed off on notes handed to her by the nurse. “But it seems I’m not the only one.”

Peggy looked as Peggy always did, her dark hair piled and forgotten slipping out of a loose bun, wearing a bland loose fit jumper and chinos.  On her feet though, platform Doc Martens with lacing that disappeared into the trouser leg gave her an extra little bounce to her step.

“Kick arse boot there, Doc.”  

“Yes.”  was her only reply, “You’re clear and free to continue your duties.  Inform me if you have any side effects or questions.”

“I have one,” Rain replied in all seriousness,  “Where’s the rest of the ensemble?”

Peggy scowled and looked as though she wouldn’t reply. 

“It is inappropriate.”

“It is thoroughly appropriate, the coat is superfine merino, durable and stain resistant, the colour suits you and you’d look amazing in it.”

“If you think it’s so amazing why don’t you wear it?” she retorted annoyed at getting dressing instructions from a man.

“Not my colour.”  he replied simply.  He would not be put off by her gruff behaviour.

“The neckline is far too plunging.” She finally admitted even now covering her chest with her hand though the beige of her jumper made her look like a an asexual lump.

“Peggy, you should look after yourself.”

“I do!”

“You deserve to look after yourself.”  

She didn’t have anything to say to that, instead she turned to the other two and barked,

“And your business here?”

“We’re going out!”  Algernon exclaimed still on a new jacket high.

“We have a lead, the name and address of the mysterious woman.”  Bruce informed Peggy sensibly, giving her all the details.

“And I’m getting a gun.”  Algernon added

“You’re not going to need a gun for this one.” Bruce replied starting off the old argument between the two of them

“I need a gun.”  

“She’s a writer…and you’re a teenage kid…yeah sure, go get your gun.”  

Once Rain was ready they all travelled together to Keaton’s office where they let him know what they’d found out as requested a gun for Algernon.

“So you don’t think this Sharon Cooper-Smith is a threat, but people she’s mixed up with could be?”  Keaton summarised, “Okay, I request a gun for you and Rain.” he started filling in the paperwork.

“Ah, not for me thank you.” Rain said before he caught Algernon’s eye.

“I would have gladly taken two guns.”  Algernon whispered low, but not low enough.

“Oh, you’re right sir.  Can never be too careful.” Rain quickly changed his mind, but Keaton held out the form with one gun listed.

“No chance.”  he said and they left his office with Rain apologising.

“I’m sorry, I panicked.”

After their last excursion, Peggy also wanted a gun, and her argument to  Hertzfeld was more simple and straightforward.

“Three reasons:  1, 2, 3 stab wounds.”  

Out of guilt Hertzfeld gave her a gun.  

“I’ll drive.”  Rain took the keys to the car as the group set out for the journalist home.  Peggy and Bruce nearly had fits as Rain started driving on the left hand side leaving the car park.

“Oh you drive on the wrong, right side of the road.” he laughed as Peggy got out of the car and opened the driver’s door.

“How long have you been driving in the U.S.?”

“How long have we been in the car?”

“Get out.”

“I have a license,” Algernon suggested, “I could drive.”

“For a motorcycle.”  Bruce retorted and Rain wriggled into the passenger seat and let Peggy drive.

On reaching Sharon’s home, Rain knocked.  She answered the door in sunglasses

“Good morning Ms Cooper-Smith.  My name is Simun Otiluke.” he flashed his Estate identification and the general U.S. accent he affected for the name, “My associates and I would like to speak to you about drug deals at the docks.”

“Drugs? I don’t know anything about drugs.” she replied with a nervous laugh.

“Blue Rain?  Do you really want us to discuss this on your front doorstep, please could we come in?”

“That?  That’s not a drug, that’s power for your dreams.  It expands your mind to new and lost worlds.” she replied more confidently.  It sounded like she was quoting something, maybe her own work?

“Are the lights inside your house too bright, Mam?”  Bruce asked and Sharon’s hand went to her glasses.

“You need to be aware that the drug has been related to one death already,” Rain bluffed.  No deaths as far as they know were directly related to the Spiral Dust, but that wouldn’t help find Eldritch Chopra’s killer. Bruce backed it up, 

“Please let our doctor look you over. “ he gestured to Peggy who stepped forward.

“Deaths?” she didn’t sound so sure of herself anymore, “I guess you better come in.”

Once inside she took off her glasses to reveal the identifiable swirling pattern to her irises and allowed Peggy to run a basic check up.

“How do you take the drug?” Peggy asked as she looked for signs of puncture marks or burning to the nasal cavity.

“In the eye, “  Sharon mimed pulling down her lower lid and sprinkling something directly onto her eye, “I based a whole expose on what I discovered through using the dust, you may have read it, ‘The secret pyramids under the sea’.”

“Yes, I remember reading it.” Peggy commented without opinion which was probably a good thing at the time.

“How did you find out about Blue Rain?”

“In my trade one hears rumours and I first went to the docks just to confirm what I’d heard, but then I discovered the dust and my whole world changed.” 

“And so you used it.”  Rain prompted, but it was hardly required, she’d found an audience.

“That’s how I know it’s safe.  It just…shows you things, places.  Even my hairdresser…well it’s hard to hide your eyes especially from your hairdresser.  She was using it too and told me of another supplier.”

“Your hairdresser?  Could we have her name please?”  Rain looked to Algernon but he already had out the laptop and was preparing to do a search.

“Her name is Melissa Romero, but I don’t want to get her into any trouble, we’ve become good friends over the past few months and I know her experiences are the same as mine.”

“Melissa is safe from us.  But tell us about this other supplier.”

She gave and address and described the man as best she could.  Rain pulled up the picture of the Cowboy he had taken of the Seven-11 security and passed it to her.

“Yes, that’s him.” she replied happily enough.

“Do you have a name to go with this gentleman?”

“No, just the location and time, always Tuesday nights.”

In the meantime Algernon had already found the girl through social sites.  She was in her 20s and usually had an active social life to go by her timelines, except for the past week when she had been unusually quiet.  Getting her work address and number were equally as easy and he soon had her home address as well. Quietly he let the group know what he’d found out and the mood quickly turned serious.

“I will be straight with you Sharon, there are people who have killed to control this drug distribution.  We’re happy to see you alive and well, but now Melissa has gone missing. Tell us all you know so we can help find Melissa.”

“Murder?  That doesn’t sound good.” Maybe such things were beyond her understanding but the thought of murder didn’t seem to affect her greatly, ‘But I’m sure Melissa’s disappearance has nothing to do with all this.”

Bruce, who was having difficulty dealing with the thought of leaving this woman to continue her  Spiral Dust addiction. As the others talked he checked the house and made sure it was secure. When it was decided that Sharon had nothing more to tell at that time, Rain gave her his mobile number and requested that if she found anything to let him know.

Now with a new potential victim identified, the group drove to find Melissa Romero.  On the way Rain rang the salon where she worked.

“Oh hi, I’d like to make a booking with Melissa this afternoon.” he said in a passable woman’s voice.

“I…don’t think she’s in.” said the woman who answered the phone.

“Oh no!  And she’s the only one that gets my hair.  Can you tell me when she’ll be back?” 

“Certainly.  I’ll check with the manager and get back to you.” The woman took Rain’s number and told the group what he’d learned.

Melissa lived in an apartment block surrounded by several other residences.  Algernon checked out video cameras in the area. He found two, one a near neighbour and one down the street.  He hacked into the WIFI networks and gain access to the video for the last week.  

When the rest of the group made it inside the apartment block a woman as already knocking at Melissa’s door.  

“I think we can assume she’s family.”  Bruce whispered to Rain who nodded and stepped up.

“Ms Romero?”

“Yes. I’m Jennifer Romero.”

“Hi, I’m Simun. We’re friends of Melissa.” he shook Jennifer’s hand and gained her full attention, “Is she all right, we haven’t seen her all week and she hasn’t been to work.”

“I don’t know. Usually we call each other for a weekly chat but I haven’t heard from her and she’s not answering her door.”

“I’m really starting to worry about her.  Do you know if there’s a spare key?”

Jennifer glanced past Rain to Bruce and Peggy.

“Well, I do have a key for emergencies….I guess this is an emergency.” 

“I think you’re right.”  Rain nodded as if it wasn’t his idea.

Jennifer pulled out a ring of keys and found the correct one to open the door.  Jennifer lead the way into the one bedroom apartment. A pile of mail banked up against the front door and a cup of coffee lay cold and forgotten on the counter. Otherwise the apartment look tidy and well ordered.

“The door was locked so we’ve either got an abduction by someone quick enough to take her by surprise or she’s somehow translated to a recursion.”  Bruce started theorizing and Rain’s eyes grew large and gestured towards Jennifer.

“Maybe you could check Melissa’s bedroom see if anything odd.” he said to Jennifer and then quietly to Bruce and Peggy, “And now you can theorise about recursions all you like.”

As Jennifer and Rain check the bedroom, Peggy closed her eyes and tried to sense The Strange in the space.  Frustratingly there was no trace of The Strange. Bruce left the apartment and started knocking on the doors of neighbours.  Neighbours that answered the door knew Melissa as a friendly young woman, but none had seen her for at least a week.  

In the bedroom the bed was unmade, clothes lay on a chair in the corner and a flat cell phone and house keys were lying together on the bedside table.

“Oh dear.” Rain took Jennifer’s hand and their eye alighted on the modern life essentials.

“I guess I should ring the police.”  Jennifer said as tears came to her eyes.

“I think so.  Here’s my number, if you need anything, let me know?”  Quietly the group left and joined Algernon back in the car.  

After viewing the weeks worth of video he was able to tell them that a week ago Melissa came home as usual and never left again.  No one visited and no one until the group entered had been inside since that time.

“She translated then.  But how and where?”

“Hertzfeld theorised that if you took enough Spiral Dust you could physically translate.” Algernon suggested and the group went silent.  She could be literally anywhere.  

There is one more stop to make, the address where the Cowboy was known to be on Tuesday nights.  When the group got to the address, Algernon once again looked for CCTV cameras in the area. There were two, both vandalised.  

“What if we put a live camera inside the case of one of those busted ones?”  he suggested, rummaging around in the back of the car for leftover CCTV equipment from the warehouse job.

“Brilliant idea.  You’ve done this before, you can make this work.”  Rain encouraged Algernon and once again Algernon felt the frizzon once more.

“You know, when you encourage like that I feel more confident.”  Algernon started climbing up to the broken camera.

“Ah, now you see the power of words”  Rain smiled, “The power to build and the power to break.”

Algernon thought on Rain’s words as he put his hand into the case of the camera, and brushed his hand against a live wire.  

Zaaap!

Algernon was thrown across the street and hit the wall of the nearest building.

“Maybe we’ll come back in the morning.” Bruce helped the dazed and singed Algernon back onto his feet and bundled him into the car.

On the way back Rain dropped in at a bottle shop and picked up a small bottle of Scotch.  That night he made the still fuzzy Algernon an Irish Coffee. Regardless of the caffeine before bed, it was the first night Algernon slept all the way through.

Musings 11: Addiction

During my early years as a street performer I spent a lot of time tiptoeing around junkies, drunks, and sex fiends that made up street life.  Addicts and their vices of choice were a hazard of daily life and one I successfully steered clear.  

Addiction was something I didn’t much empathise with.  The rapture of a crowd’s applause, the sense of achievement of a practised  trick pulled off to perfection, the self worth realised at a plan well played.  These things were what I craved from ordinary people, tourists, children, anyone who would give me a little of their time.

The distractions, as I saw them, only hindered my goals.  I watched those who let their addictions rule their lives and pitied them the waste of potential, of energy and spirit.  I watched as people became husks. Single-minded zombies that would do whatever it took to feed their craving for a few hours.  They ceased to be people to me, just hazards, and cadavers that didn’t know it was time to lie down. I am not proud of these thoughts, they are what they are.

Hadn’t Houdini done without drink?  Didn’t Lustig write in his Ten Commandments, Never be drunk?  Why would I be any different?  Indeed, it could be said I pursued the magical arts with an addict’s focus, but with the achievement of indisputable results no one would have considered it pitiful or a waste of energy and potential.  In fact, my skills in sleight of hand are seen as a credit to me, if I may say.

Then I was made aware of Spiral Dust, a substance not of this world, that allowed insights into places beyond and into the basic stuff that makes all things.  I pursued knowledge about Spiral Dust as an extension to my life-long search for the magical arts and knew that my efforts were not seen as wasteful, but would be of credit to me when the time was right.  I reasoned that if I could control the effects of the dust, then I would be directly linked to the energies of the universe, and finally have the powers of real magic.

I had reasons to fear the consequences of using such a substance. They are internal to me and I feared facing again those events I would not want my enemies to experience.  I long for them to stay safely locked away behind forgotten memory. There would be no reason to take the dust if, as it was thought, the dust was an internal not an external voyage.

So, the one step I did not take for the longest time was to actually use the substance.  I told myself I did not know enough, it would not pay to rush such a process. I asked the experts, searched the archives, even hunted out dubious characters to gain what they knew.  No one knew what the dust was truly capable of, though tantalising theories were expounded.  

It was one such theory, based on good science, that finally convinced me to try.  The same companion that discovered the theory also supported limited experimentation, I had my pusher.  I admit to trepidation over the experiment, even with all the processes and procedures for safety. I was stepping into an unknown world and I wouldn’t have wanted it any other way.  To be the first to really make strides in understanding of the dust, and above all the tantalising idea that I alone could control the experience.

Maybe all addicts think that.  Maybe they all conspire against themselves into thinking that for them, it will be different.  I believe I must have. I was wrong.

As an experiment it was a complete success.  The data was collected, the experience recorded, no serious side effects witnessed or experienced, no physical addiction.  The fact that I could not ‘touch the infinite’ or control my experience as I had hoped was of little consequence to those around me.  They were pleased that they had not created a junkie or even worse damaged the experimental subject.  

But, I have changed.  

I am haunted by the feeling of…weightlessness.  Not just the physical sense of floating, but also of a weightless mind and spirit. In that 20 minutes, I was free of fear and frustration.  Past memories, present difficulties, future dangers did not exist in that space and I discovered the appeal of oblivion. In the dream of the dust I was nothing and everything.  

Now my everyday is heavy and onerous in comparison to memory of weightlessness.  Even the thought of those who supported me in my pursuits are tainted. You only have to see the evidence of my own words.  These are my friends, those I am coming to consider family. In my mind I make them mad scientists toying with their powerless victim.  

I said I would not have had it any other way and that still holds true.  There is no one I would wish this burden onto. If there had been a way of finding out this knowledge without taking the dust I…no I wanted to experience it for myself, with my own senses, in my own mind.  

There is no going back now.  I find I am an addict and now understand that addiction is for life. 

8: In the Shadow of the Crows

After following Caw Eh Carve to his apartment to retrieve a key to Crows Hollow, the group were confronted by a vision from Rain’s past, in the form of Elvin Lightfeather, a mafia heavy.  The group fled with most of their lives intact from Elvin Lightfeather and his goon through the streets of Bollons. Peggy was badly injured and needed a place to rest up before the group can move on.

    *      * *     * *  

Peggy winced and stumbled as they wormed their way through the crowds of the main street of Bollons.  Instinctively, Bruce stepped her side, supporting her and protecting her from the buffetting of the crowd.

“Where does it hurt?” 

“Where I was stabbed, “ Peggy replied in her usual curtness, now without the energy.  Shock was setting in.

“Okay…okay…okay…” Rain, a whirlwind of panic, threw the cloak from the phantom of the opera costume over Bruce, the hat he gave to Peggy and the mask to Algernon.  Bruce shrugged off his makeshift disguise in disgust.

“Oh, can I wear the cloak, I have to hide this thing.” Algernon pointed behind his back to the large crossbow.  The cloak was thrown over his shoulders and Rain sighed at Bruce standing out even in the crowd.

“Ah..We need a place to hold up for a while.” he looked around trying to see above the heads of the busy city at the shops and buildings, “I think there were some Inns closer to the docks, I”ll go see.”

“Do I need to hog-tie you to keep you with the group?” Bruce said stopping the little man in his tracks, “What if those guys find you and I’m not there?”

“I’ll go with him,” Algernon suggested, Bruce shook his head sternly. In the end they travelled together walking down the hill to the docks, Bruce supporting Peggy.

Even in a panic, Rain was aware of what he was looking for.  Somewhere that had rooms to rent but also a bar full of customers that wouldn’t notice them arriving and staff too busy to interfere.  Fortunately, with a few trains in at the docks that day, it didn’t take long to find what he was looking for. Rain paid for the room overnight and ushered everyone upstairs and behind the safety of wooden walls.  That done he collapsed into a corner, eyes closed and clutching his puzzle box to his chest.

As Peggy laid out on the only bed in the room, Bruce pulled out his first aid kit and went to work patching up the knife wounds inflicted by Lightfeather.

“Okay, so what’s our next move?”  Bruce asked when he’d finished, “Is there anything we need to do here or can we report back?”

“Yes, “ Rain whispered from the corner defeated, “We need to report back.  I can go without selling my rumour now.”

“No, “  Algernon spoke up, “ I want to see the rumour markets and talk to people in town.  Maybe there’s something we can find out before we leave.”

Waxen faced, Rain opened his eyes and looked up at his younger protege in surprise. 

“Really?”

“I think we need to go.”  Algernon held his gaze, and Rain gave a faint smile. 

“Ah…you’re becoming a bad influence.”

“Well, can we can go while Peggy rests up and Bruce stays with her.”  Algernon added looking to the other two for support.

“Right and how long do I wait before I have to leave here and come rescue your sorry asses.”  Bruce folded his arms and leaned back in his chair. “You know they could be out there looking for you right now, they know Rain and may want to tie up loose ends.”

Rain slumped again clear he was now a liability to everyone.

“You don’t have to.  If we don’t come back translate with Peggy.  Rain and I can translate back by ourselves.”

“That’s not going to happen,”  Bruce shook his head, then stopped as what Algernon suggested sunk in, “Wait, could we do that?”

“Both Algernon and Peggy can initiate translations.  If we were to split up, that would make the most natural partnerships.”  Rain added from his corner with no real hope that it would help.

The discussion went backwards and forwards, but Algernon wouldn’t be put off the chance of seeing the town with the hope of finding out more about Lightfeather and Caw Eh Carve.  In the end it was settled that they would rest up overnight and all go as a group. At least that way if they were attacked they’d be together.

A cramped uncomfortable night eventually gave way to morning and the group started waking.  Without their favourite stimulant both Algernon and Rain were sluggish. Bruce suggested push ups and demonstrated by doing a few himself before giving the floor to someone else.  Rain wasn’t interested, but Algernon always ready to try something new, got down on his hands and attempted the push ups. Supported by locked arms he thrust his hips up and down in what he thought simulated Bruce’s movements.

“You have to bend your arms.  Press down onto the ground.” Bruce instructed and though the results were slightly better, of course it was harder to do.  Rain now stepped in with his putter, wrapping the shaft under Algernon’s chest he helped pull up, from above, but now he was straddling the thrusting Algernon in a pose that no one needed to see including the now rested Peggy.

“Peggy, “  Rain pulled her aside for a moment as the other two talk about morning exercises and quietly asked, “Are you okay?”

“Yes, I’m good now, thank you.” she replied in her usual curt way without humor or bitterness.

“I’m…I’m sorry.”

“Sorry?  For what?”

“Don’t mind him, he just feels guilty for a  misspent life.” butted in Bruce. He and Algernon had been listening in the whole time. “Nevermind Rain, remorse is the first step to redemption.”

“Well, it had never been a problem until now.”  Rain mumbled morsley.

“Was it misspent?  Did you live a deliberate life?”  she turned to Rain with her odd turn of phrase in complete sincerity.

“It’s been a very deliberate life so far.” he smiled, despite how he felt about her being injured, “It was pretty good at the time.”

“Did you throw a dagger at me?”

“He threw a dagger, but to try to save you.” Algernon added in defence.

“But…”

“Then, you have nothing to be sorry about.”  she finished and left and headed down to the common room to find breakfast.

Breakfast was substantial with a bacon made of molemeat, eggs, beans and bread.  For those with more adventurous tastes there was also naked mole rat (of the standard size) on a stick.  Bubbling away on a stovetop, a black beverage drew both Algernon and Rain to it with little thought for anything else.  The Louisanna locals who regularly added chicory to their coffee knew the smell as soon as they hit the common room, but kept that knowledge to themselves until first Rain then Algernon complained about the quality of the coffee.

“That’s because it’s chicory and not coffee at all.”  Bruce replied enjoying their looks of dismay and disgust.

Rain forgot breakfast after that and talked to some of the bar’s customers who either hadn’t left from the night before or had come in for an early morning pick-me-ups.  From them he was able to glean the way to the rumour markets without too much problem.

“Okay, so if we’re doing this, we should agree to a set of safe words, so if those guys turn up at the market we can all run in the same direction.”

“Oh, I know about safe words, “ Algernon added with some of his research into Earth culture, “they use them in the porn films.”

Bruce and Peggy stopped and stared at the youth before them.  Peggy in particular looked shocked. Her stunned face moved from Algernon to Rain.

“Don’t look at me.  Yes its my laptop but….”  Peggy’s eyes narrowed, “I said, don’t look at me!”

“I was thinking more substitutions for left or right, or up and down as in the case of Bollons, as it’s all on a slope.”  Bruce moved the conversation back on topic much to Rain’s relief. “Maybe Canada and Mexico?”  

The discussion moved through several ideas from substitution to actual cardinal points or their mnemonic replacements.  Eventually it was brought down to simply warning of danger.

“Danger, Will Robinson!”  Algernon parroted from one of his many ‘documentaries’.   This was shortened to the name, Will Robinson.

“Will Robinson, is a good safe word.” Rain agreed when it was finally chosen,   ‘Oh look there’s Will Robinson.’ ‘Hi, my name is Will Robinson.’”

Fed and now equipped with a new safe word, the group headed into the morning streets to find the Rumour Markets.  Bollons was famous through Railsea for the Rumour Market that was only second to the Salvers markets on Scabbing Street, Manikiki.  Here salvers could buy and sell information about almost anything from prominent members of society, where good salvage could be found or where the molling grounds were abundant.  

Everyone came to the Rumour Markets at some time and even in the morning the place was full of foot traffic, carts of salvage and stalls all ready to sell.  Rain moved through the crowd looking for something specific. He ignored the first two tents that advertised rumours for sale and spotted a third. The tent was older and worn at the edges, but had an air of prosperity about it shown by the brightly painted sign and quality of the furniture.  The stall looked like it had been there a while and was doing well.

“Good morning, buy or sell?”  The owner greeted the group as they all tried squeezing into the tent.

“Trade actually.  I have information on a unique salvage site that has only just been uncovered.  In return, I’d like some information on some individuals in town.” Rain cleared his throat, now unsure he wanted to voice the next part of his spiel, “Tell me …do you have information on either a Caw Eh Carve or Elvin Lightfeather?”

The trader thought for a moment, 

“Eh Carve, I do.  Nothing about Lightfeather, but I’d be willing to give good currency to know what you know.”

“Hmm, how about a place called Crows Hollow or even stories about individuals travelling between worlds.”

At that the trader started, 

“Funny you should say that… crows, yes…but I don’t know what use it will be to you, though.”

Rain agreed and told the Rumourmonger about the theatre, it’s contents (showing the quality of the items found as worn by Algernon) and its location.  In kind the Rumourmonger gave Rain a small collection of copper and silver coins and the requested information.

“Caw Eh Carve arrived out of the blue a few months ago, no one seems to know from where.  With him he brought two things, money enough to get a broke Captain by the name of Alaventi back on the rails and his cargo of chalky blue rocks.  Where the rocks come from nobody knows but he pays well to have them shipped over Railsea. He has an apartment here in town, neighbours say that he can spend days in there when he’s here and keeps mostly to himself if he’s not here in the salvage markets looking for trinkets.” The Rumourmonger then coughed as if nervous to even take good money for the next piece of information.

“As for your crows…a drunk by the name of Gurf has been spreading a story about being transported to a world where crows walk around like men.  Where there are giant trees.” He gave a description of Gurf and where he usually hunts through trash for things to sell. “But surely that’s just a drunk’s fantasy.”

In return Rain gave a loose story of Elvin Lightfeather, saying he was a known organised crime figure from Manikiki instead of the truth that would not be believed anyway.  

As the group walked away, Rain sidled up beside Peggy.

“Crow people.  Could be important.”

“I don’t know.” she replied non committedly.

“If there are bird people there  could be fish people.”
“I never doubted it.” 

“One step closer?”

“I’ll have to see them to know.” she finally relented.

“Then crow people are important.”  Rain announced to the group, sounding more like himself again after this small success. 

“I want to look around the markets.” Algernon announced and Rain promptly handed over the small bag of coins he received from the Rumourmonger. The markets were array of all sorts of junk from familiar Earth garbage to unidentifiable items, even materials that were labeled Alt-salvage.  Of all bits and pieces on offer, Peggy was drawn to three items that seemed to have a touch of The Strange about them. 

The store owner had the three items on display in different corners of their shop.  The first was a plastic Jack-o-Lantern bucket which looked in remarkably good condition for being, as listed, arche-salvage and from the ancient past.  Another was an empty med-kit box, the third a signet ring with the symbol of crossed sword and hammer etched into it.

“I think these are recursion keys, simple ones.  Maybe one use.” Peggy commented almost to herself, but everyone including the store owner heard her.

“What did you call them?”  Asked the owner sensing a sale.

“Ah, slang from where we’re from.” Rain butted in as Bruce drew Peggy aside,  “Just one use simple trinkets, but she’s taken a liking so how much for the three?”

 “I’ll take a silver for the three, rare items those.” The store owner offered and Rain tried to counter offer without success.

“No really they’re obviously only worth 5 copper.”  Peggy barged back into the conversation annoyed at being left out. She planted five copper from her own money supplies onto the counter, “I have that.  You can take it or leave it.”

“Well if you say so, I trust your judgement.”  Rain encouraged her. A look came over her and she stared the store owner in the eye with a poise she rarely showed.

“As the lady says then, “ the storeowner grumbled and took the offered coppers, “Five coppers it is.”

The group took their treasures and headed for the dock, to hunt out the drunk called Gurf and see if there were any more details to his story.  He wasn’t hard to find, scavenging around in garbage behind one of the dockside pubs. Algernon went to the pub and bought a cheap bottle of whatever was on offer.  When he returned to the group it was confiscated by Bruce.

“You’re too young.” Bruce handed the bottle on to Rain. 

“Don’t worry about his puritanical leanings.” Rain commented, a cheeky glint in his eye,   “You have to remember they’re whole country had no alcohol for years, it’s a bit of a phobia for them.  You could always try with Keaton though, he’s not afraid of alcohol.” He walked away to talk to Gurf.

“No alcohol?  But how did they clean their wounds?” Algernon asked unsure of why someone would fear alcohol.

“You’re too young to drink it, buy it or possess it.  Do you know at your age it will actually hinder the growth of brain cells?”

“Drink it?”  Algernon seemed genuinely disgusted at the thought initially, but then his natural curiosity took over. “Why?”

“The moderate intake of ethanol lowers inhibitions which is usually  considered beneficial in some social settings.” Peggy commented interested in expanding Algernon’s knowledge of their world.

“Oh.  What’s it like?”

In the meantime, Rain had made contact with Gurf, gaining his attention by brandishing the Algernon’s bottle.

“Hi I’m Havel.  I understand you can tell some amazing stories about giant crows?”

The old bum,  lured by the offer of a drink, started at the mention of crows.

“I was…um… fossicking ‘ere… among the stuff they leave behind when I touched somethin’ and found myself in another place.  There were tall trees full of market stalls, a whole city. And the crows, giant crows walking around. Some of them saw me and chased me.  I hid and then… I was back here again.”

“You touched a thing, do you remember what it was?”

“Huh…uh…no.”

Rain looked at the bum critically, there was something missing from his story.  He handed over the bottle.

“You know I’m not the law or anything.  If there’s something about the story that you’re not proud of you can tell me, I won’t tell anyone.”

Gruf took a swig from the bottle, gathering some dutch courage and nodded his head sheepishly.

“Well yeah, there’s this dude called Eh Carve whose hardly home. I went by his place when I knew he wasn’t there and had a little look around.”

Rain nodded, this made more sense.
“And the thing you touched?”

“It was a pebble, a dumb stupid pebble with a clawed foot engraved on it.  I just touched it as I was reaching for a coin with a crow on it.”

“Good. And how did you get back from this other place, you were hiding and ….”

“That was it, I found myself back in the apartment and I ran out of there.”  Gruf looked past his bottle to the little man asking questions, “Do you believe me?”

“Let’s just say that it’s a great story.  Thank you Gruf, enjoy your drink.”

One last stop in Bollons, back to where it started at Caw Eh Carve’s apartment.  As they turned into his street Bruce noticed a suspicious looking character lurching outside the apartment building. He was new to the group, though his distinctive large hooked nose gave him an almost family resemblance to Caw Eh Carve,  Lightfeather and his goon. 

“Do you  think their noses look like beaks?” Algernon asked the group and Rain groaned.

“Uhh…Light-feather.  Caw eh Carve.”

“Oh no,” Peggy picked up on the connection,  “they’re all crow people.”

“They’re beaks must translate into large hooked noses.  Why didn’t we see that before?”

“Well do we talk to him or what?”  Bruce wanted to know, as standing in the middle of the street was getting them noticed.

“What if Peggy and I go around the back and wait for you and Rain to open the window.” Algernon suggested as Rain watched the guy noting his body language and posture.  

“Yeah, he’s just a bouncer.  We can get past him, eh Bruce?”

“It’s your show, do your thing.” he replied, readjusting his sledgehammer on his back in preparation.

“Don’t worry, “ Algernon added, “I’ll plug him full of lead if he looks like a threat.”

Rain with Bruce behind, walked confidently up to the man on  guard as if they had every right to be there.

“Mr Lightfeather sent us.  We need to get into the apartment.” Rain said quietly so only the guard and Bruce could hear.

“Huh, he never sent word.”  the guard replied. He wasn’t suspicious as yet, but he was certainly taking an interesting their story.

“Yeah, new information just in.  It seems it has something to do with that group that were working with Caw Eh Carve. We’ve been sent to let you know to keep an eye out and to let us in to look for clues.”  Rain’s patter fell on the guard and he shook it off uninterested.

“Yeah, yeah whatever.” he waved them both in.

Once inside and the window opened the group were reunited in the tiny apartment.  It looked no different. One room with a bed, a chest of draws, a small kitchenette with the cupboard door open from when Caw Eh Carve had searched for the key.

Peggy closed her eyes and used her other senses to ‘feel’ for signs of The Strange in the space. Nothing.  Algernon and Bruce used their eyes and searched everywhere for a pebble with a crow’s claw imprint or the coin but all they found were impressions in the dust where they had once lay.  There was nothing left for them there.

Now sure they’d tied up as many loose ends as they were likely to in the backwaters of Railsea, the group locked the door and window and formed their circle for translation.  For once Bruce did not argue the holding of hands as Peggy focused her thoughts on Earth and home.

The translation was swift and painless and they all found themselves back in Peggy’s old lab now empty and dark.  There was nothing to show how much time had past or they had been away at all.  

Rain and Algernon went straight to Lawrence Keaton’s office.  They quickly debriefed, informing him about the world linked to the mole rat skull and the shipments of Spiral Dust as chalky rock from a recursion called Crows Hollow. 

“We know of Crows Hollow.” Keaton informed them, “It is one of the older Earth-based recursions.  It is a society of crow people governed by a number of families, think of the mafia. Don Whitecliff is the head of the Drood family, one of the largest and most powerful families in Crows Hollow.”  

Rain laughed almost hysterically as he shook his head in disbelief.

“It is…interesting to discover that the Droods are caught up in all this.  The Lightfeather connection is a good lead. Well done.”

“So how do we take him out?”  Algernon, straight to the point sobered Rain and focused Keaton on him.

“You need more firepower than you currently have.”

“I’m pleased you mentioned that, I realise that an anti-tank gun….”
“You’re not getting an anti-tank gun.”

“So you said, but what about a crossbow?”

The question was such a departure from  what Keaton was expecting that he stopped and thought for a moment.

“Why a crossbow?”
“I got used to handling one out on the Railsea and I’d like to keep training with one here.”

“He did practise a lot while we were travelling to Bollons.” Rain added supportively.

“I guess.  I’ll write up permission for you to train with one here in the gun range.” Keaton started filling in a note to the master of arms. “Anything else you gentleman want?”

“Yes, several things.  Lightfeather is a figure from my past that I would be interested in knowing more about.  Please, and yes I am asking, please could I have access to any records on Lightfeather and his operations?”

“Yes, I think that would be appropriate, you said several things?”

Rain looked at Algernon and took a breath.

“While we were out in Railsea the other three, Algernon, Bruce and Peggy, all displayed extraordinary powers all linked to The Strange.”  Rain said quickly as if ripping the bandages from a wound. “Does the Estate know about such…abilities amongst those who are awakened”

Keaton sat back in his chair and watched Rain for a moment, 

“Just the other three.”
“Yes.”  Rain replied curtly sure he’d shown a weakness to this Keaton he may come to regret.

“You must understand that those who are awakened are a very small number.  But it has been noted in those rare individuals, that overtime they gain…an affinity with The Strange that allows them to do some amazing things.”

“I would like to study all The Estate has on those powers if I may?”

“Certainly.  You’ll want to talk the Hertzfeld about that.”  Rain nodded and Keaton made a note, “There was something else?”

“You said you’d looked into pay for Algernon and myself?”  Rain replied somewhat more cherrily at the prospects of being liquid again.

“Ah yes.”  Keaton got up and went to a small safe he had inside a cupboard.  From it he withdrew two slim envelopes, “The boffins in admin put their heads together and made you both bank accounts in false names.  It seems word of you two has got around as they thought it all highly amusing.”  

He came back and handed one envelope to Algernon labelled Bank account:  Fred Weasley and the other to Rain with a label, Bank account: George Weasley.  Rain just laughed as Algernon looked up the significance of the names on his smartphone.  Inside was a bank receipt for several thousand dollars (their pays to that date) and a debit card.

“I see us more as Kanada and Tetsuo, but I’ve never worked out which one of us is which.  It seems to change.” Rain commented referencing Algernon’s favourite ‘documentary’, Akira.

“Yes, “  Algernon replied looking thoughtful, “those names do seem more suitable.”

“Now if there’s nothing else, “ Keaton moved around the table to usher the two out of his office, but Algernon had one more request.

“I understand you could offer an alcoholic beverage.”

Keaton looked to from the innocently looking young man to the smiling silent crook beside him with a meaningful glare. 
“I’m sorry Algernon, regardless of what you’ve been told, you’re a little young for hard liquor.”
“I’m 15.” Algernon retorted frustrated by his lack of years and how much it meant.

“Sorry, too young sonny.”  Keaton patted his head patronisingly and Rain could only shrug his shoulders.

“I’ll come back then.  In a few days?”

“Try a few years.”

At about the same time Bruce had made his way to Katherine Manners’ office and was having a similar debrief with her.

“….if seems that Lightfeather is known to Rain, some sort of mafia connection.” Bruce concluded, “And now we’re back.  Is there anything that we should be doing now? Any Advice on what to do about Crows Hollow and Lightfeather?”

“I think my advice at this time is to step back.  Crows Hollow and Alvin Lightfeather aren’t going anywhere. Earthside, you have a few loose ends to tie up.  The individual you call the Cowboy is still loose and unidentified and the cameras your group set up at the docks are still in operation.  Though that smuggling route has been closed down there are undoubtedly many more. If that is not enough to keep you busy I do have other tasks.”

“I guess there’d been a backlog of footage from those cameras after a ten days in Railsea.”  Bruce replied thoughtfully at all there was still to do. 

“Ten?  You’ve only been gone four. Don’t worry about it, it’s a hazard of translations. Not all recursions time flows the same as here.”


“You mentioned other tasks?”  Bruce changed the subject quickly, sure heard such disturbing talk from the others.  

“Yes…” she referred to notes in front of her, “Liza Banks, our Chief of Public Relations,  would like some staff to give a Morrison Fellowship prize to a surprising young woman called Gwendolyn Wurtz.  It seems she’s able to power a smartphone through only body heat.”

“Oh…?” Bruce replied a little confused.  He wasn’t sure how doing a public relations job would keep the world safe.

“We do this from time to time when The Estate comes across unusual stories .  The Morrison Fellowship is a cover that allows us to go in and investigate. You’re to make sure Gwendolyn’s discovery is what it claims to be and not the result of a cipher or some other world interference.”

Bruce nodded, now understanding a little more the importance of The Estate for world safely.

“Before I go I wanted to ask about the story we got from the drunk, Gurf?  It seems when he touched the stone he was temporarily transported to Crows Hollow.  I seems the stone was a one use key that then teleported him back.”

“Yes, that was an interesting point in your story.  Please remember to put that into your report.”

“Oh, and I feel I need to report that Algernon is trying to get himself drunk.”  Bruce added as a passing thought as he stood to leave.

“Young men and their idle thoughts.”  Katherine shook her head and saw Bruce out.

Musings 10: Tourists

I am a citizen of the world.  Born of a nation that would have seen me dead in a ditch.  Kidnapped (in the nicest way) to Northern Europe where my mere presence was an embarrassment.  Palmed off to an ally that accepted me like all refugees to that country, as requiring assimilation.  And assimilate I did. You wouldn’t know me from a native Brit, but I’ve never really belonged there.  Though my accent is pure London I am all too aware that it’s a borrowed tongue.

Recently, I had reason to think on this issue in a larger scale.  What if you were a citizen of planet Earth, roaming worlds like some of us roam countries.

Language has no correlations to anything in your experience, so understanding the words doesn’t mean understanding the meaning or the intent.  

Imagine culture shock when you’re not even the same species as your hosts.  Gestures take on a whole new meaning when there’s more digits to express them.

Food and drink that may be incompatible. Bali Belly would look like a mind stomach complaint.

No embassies to run to , hardly any other travellers to ask advice. Like early explorers into untouched lands, you are alone.

And you, unable to obfuscate, the glaring fact that you do not belong. 

Of course, if we can travel to these amazing worlds, so can residents of these worlds come here.  Getting a better view on the scale of border control? Maybe you already met some of these visitors.

Did that Japanese lady who asked directions to the beach have gills? The gentleman in the all you can eat restaurant, was that double chins or double mouths?Was that a hooked-nose the guy in the bar was sporting actually a nose or was it a beak?

So, what sort of host are we being to our interplanetary visitors?  And, maybe a more interesting question, what incompatibles are they bringing with them?

Musings 9: A small universe…

I’m not a fool, I know that right now my life is pretty good.  I have a place is relatively safe, I have companions, some more agreeable than others.  I have a job that is mind -alteringly amazing as well as terrifying and deadly all at the same time.  It could be said that I’ve landed on my feet.

And then a figure from my past steps in.  Now I know people say “…it’s a small world…”  to explain how you can meet best friends fiance on a trip to the centre of Africa, fall in love, break up their relationship and destroy three lives. It happens.  But in my case…lets say its more of a ‘small universe’.

When I first came to the US I worked for a mob boss called Louis (as in the French Kings) Astra.  He called himself ‘The King of the Stars’ and no one laughed. No one forgot to call him Mr Astra and if he asked them to call him Louis they never forgot the pronounciation.  He was that tough a guy. He ran nightclubs.
At one called ‘The Last Shot’ (both meanings appropriate there) I would do my close work sleight of hand to tables of customers. To these nightclubs a Mr Elvin Lightfeather would sometimes come and see the boss.  

I know my boss had people killed. I saw is henchmen’s handy work on occassion.  Hell, I know the boss wasn’t afraid of the wet work himself. And to Mr Lightfeather he was grovelling obsequiousness. Lightfoot was a guy that the tough-guys fear.

After I saw how little Mr Astra thought of life, I got out.  I’m not ashamed to admit it, I ran. So imagine my horror when months later, in literally the last place I could even imagine, Mr Elvin Lightfeather is on the other side of a door threshold to me.  This is the man, that the man I run from is scared of. I admit it, I panicked. I slammed the door in his face and ran. 

 It didn’t go so well.

When my past caught up before, only I took the brunt, I only had to worry about me.  Now, there are three others who are now in Lightfeather’s sights.  I don’t know if this time running from my past it going to be enough.

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started