Once A Wolf
©2004 by Cherysse St. Claire
"But the Woman that God gave him, every fibre of her frame Proves
her launched for one sole issue, armed and engined for the same;
And to serve that single issue, lest the generations fail, The
female of the species must be deadlier than the male."
- Rudyard Kipling
Mikey Blair had to pee. He had been putting it off for the past twenty
minutes, not wanting to get out of his snug, warm bunk. It was cold out
there in comparison. He really liked summer camp, liked being in the
woods of northern Wisconsin, away from his folks and the dull sameness
of Elmhurst. But all the activities and running around always made him
really thirsty. He drank too much water, and it had to go somewhere. He
usually got up at least once in the middle of each night, and it was
time now.
He threw the covers off, rolled out onto the cold, hard wooden floor,
and padded softly towards the cabin door, to the sound of crickets
outside and a lot of snoring inside. Once out the door, He went up the
path a ways before turning into the woods. He was supposed to go to the
latrine but that was a couple hundred yards away. That was too far; he
couldn't hold it that long. Even so, he wanted to make certain he was
far enough away from the cabin that his cabin mates wouldn't smell it in
the morning. That would have been almost as bad as peeing the bunk.
The angel came for him just as he was finishing his business. Mikey
wasn't particularly religious ? never had been ? but he knew this
apparition was an angel. She had to be an angel; only God made titties
like those! She wasn't dressed like an angel, though. The child expected
white robes, wings, and halo and there was none of that. This was?
scarier. Maybe she was an avenging angel. Whatever she was, she did have
a really nice smile, dimples and all ? except for her eyes. They looked
sad, tired, like she had carried the weight of the world on her
shoulders for a long, long time.
The angel had magically whisked Mikey out of the woods and into a place
he couldn't begin to describe, the kind of place that only a child's
imagination can truly do justice. It wasn't Heaven; this was better,
like a spaceship in the movies! There he stood, in this magical place,
confronting this gorgeous vision of a woman, with his shorts around his
ankles and his pee-pee in his hand. The angel was good about it. She bit
her lower lip and only smiled a little as the child pulled his shorts
up. The beautiful angel with the sad, tired eyes took the Mikey's hand,
sat him down, and told him a story. Before returning him to the woods,
the angel made him promise: Never Again!
The First Day
She had been feet-dry on that desert rock only six hours. They had
clashed twice already. These had been probes, really. They were feeling
each other out, testing for strengths and weaknesses. Reconnaissance.
That was nothing new for her; she had practiced the craft for a long,
long time.
At six feet, she was no Shrinking Violet. Still, he was bigger, broader.
Not Shaq-sized, by any means; but really solid. He was strong, too. Two
hours on, her jaw still ached ? and that had been a glancing blow. She
had seen the sweeping roundhouse right from her peripheral vision and
had spun in the opposite direction, away from the punch ? almost. The
last time she had seen that many stars had been? well, a long time ago.
But that had been on another planet.
The Golganthan, as the Praetor had called him, was of porcine evolution,
but not like any friendly farmyard Hampshire hog. Forget about Porky
Pig, too. This one was more like a surly, three-hundred-pound Arkansas
Razorback with tusks to match. Still, he was bipedal, intelligent, and
she had learned to stay out of range of those massive arms. His bulk
made him slower and his limbs were jointed. That was one point of
vulnerability, as her spinning foot sweep had proven. How's your head,
Sparky? If you want to be King of this Hill, you're gonna have to work
for it.
Who gave a rat's ass about this place? It was just another nameless,
faceless battlefield, like all the rest. It was the 'hill' back home she
was worried about. The rules of the contest were simple. There were two
of you; one from Earth, one from Golgantha. You fought. You won ? or you
died. The catch was, if you died, so did your planet ? the whole planet,
and all life on it. Gee, no pressure there?. Oh, by the way; the entire
Arcturan Empire was watching you, real-time. Offices and stores closed.
They even let the kiddies out of school. Wasn't that special?
The Praetor had shown her the real-time holographic image of the
starship, in orbit high above Arcturus Prime. The engineer in her
admired its clean, elegant lines. It was a beautiful 'styling statement'
? if you ignored fact that it was designed to destroy planets. The ship
had its own portal generators; it could be anywhere in the charted
Universe in moments. The Praetor assured her the coordinates for
Golgantha ? and Earth ? had already been plotted and locked into the
cruiser's mainframe. She had asked the Praetor what they called the
ship. He told her "1jb29742GL385W9." She glibly asked if they called it
"1jb" for short. That hadn't gone over well.
A contestant started with nothing. As you proved your worth, you gained
access to food, medical kits, clothing and other logistical supplies,
increasingly complex and lethal weaponry, even teammates. To her, it
sounded like one of those wretched kids' video games ? or a bad episode
of Star Trek. Apparently, the Arcturans ate this stuff up.
The Praetor had conducted a quasi-interview, asking her name, occupation
and a little about herself, in order to introduce her to her 'audience'.
He had made a big deal about her being unemployed. Yeah, thanks, Buster;
it's a real joy for me, too. He then asked about the special
significance of her middle name in her culture. What famous person or
persons had carried that name? There were a few, she knew, but no one
that really stood out. She asked what significance that might have?
The Praetor avowed that in Arcturan culture, those who carried a famous
middle name were thought to carry the qualities of that famous person,
if not being the actual reincarnation. This was an especially popular
tradition within their warrior class. She smiled sadly and shook her
head, not really surprised this particular piece of macho bullshit
extended beyond her own race. She observed out loud she thought that was
the dumbest thing she had ever heard ? which was probably not the
smartest thing she had ever done. She started The Tournament with
nothing but the clothes on her back ? and the determination to win, no
matter what.
In her initial inspection of the area, she had found a cave, which she
now called 'home'. An investigation of the cave itself had turned up a
nearly endless maze of rear passages and chambers. One chamber had a
running spring. She hesitated to drink from it without the proper
testing equipment or even decon tablets. Still, she was thirsty and the
Praetor had indicated The Arena would provide at least minimal life
support.
She decided to take a chance. She was rewarded with the coldest,
slightly sweet water she had tasted in a long time. It was almost like
Lake Michigan water, the way it had been in her childhood - before the
ocean-going ships and industrial plants had polluted it. At least, she
wouldn't die of thirst. She wondered if her opponent (she thought he was
male) had found similar accommodations and imagined he had.
They had each taken their lumps in their two short, frenzied encounters.
She had not dwelled on the minor injuries. With the help of her spirit
guide, she would heal quickly. The Praetor contacted her, via
holographic projection. He had complimented them both on their display
of unarmed combat. She hadn't really shown them anything; at this early
stage, she didn't want them to know what she was capable of.
They would each be granted two edged weapons; a sword and hand knife.
All she had to do was ask and/or describe them, the Praetor had said,
and they would appear. She should not bother asking for more lethal
weaponry at this stage because it would not be granted.
In addition, the Praetor had intoned, they would each receive one
teammate of Arcturan choosing. It was an unusual move at this stage of
the game, he related, but they were ? how did you humans put it? ?
'tweaking' the rules to make it more interesting. Yeah, right. C'mere,
Bud; I'll give you a 'tweak' you will NEVER forget! She could just
imagine the kind of 'teammate' they were going to saddle her with, but
she would worry about that when the time came. As for the weapons, that
choice was easy?.
Within moments of describing where to find it, her shinobikatana was
there: forty-two inches overall, with long, cloth-wrapped handle, wide,
square tsubo handguard, and a black saya scabbard that sheathed a
straight, single-edged blade. Unlike others of its kind, this blade had
been folded two hundred times during forging for additional strength, in
the traditional samuraikatana manner.
Sharp? Oh, yeah. Flesh or bone made little difference; it was all in the
technique. This was neither a ceremonial prop nor a decoration meant to
hang over a fireplace. This was a working weapon whose predecessors had
seen thirteen centuries of continuous service in the hands of other
ronin. She had worked hard on developing her kobudo skills ? but she
wasn't going to tell the Praetor that, either.
Instead of a traditional tanto, she chose a more modern knife, one she
had grown to trust through her years of service; the double-edged Gerber
Mark II. The knife went on her belt. The customized harness on the
sword's scabbard allowed her to drape it diagonally across her back and
secure it in place, allowing her to draw the sword smoothly over her
left shoulder.
She felt the ripple in the fabric of space behind her. It was a portal
opening and closing; she knew that from the experience of her own
transport to this place. There was no mistaking that tingly, almost
crawling sensation. She sensed, rather than saw the presence behind her.
She didn't know what it was, but it was alive.
No untrained human eye would have been able to comprehend the speed and
grace of her movement. It was as though she had turned herself inside-
out. One moment, she had been facing the cave's entrance; the next, she
was facing it's inner recesses in the forward stance, back straight,
back leg extended, sword held firmly in hand-over-hand grip, extended
straight forward, edge parallel to the ground. That edge rested lightly
against the side of his neck. Her surprise nearly equaled his. They
stood there for several moments, openly gaping at each other.
Finally, he glanced sideways, and slightly down.
"Thank you, but I have already shaven today."
She flushed red and lowered, then spun the blade around to smoothly re-
sheathe it over her shoulder. He dabbed at his neck, noting the thin
trickle of blood. She fumbled for the cloth at her belt ? and an
apology. She offered him both.
"Um, sorry. I wasn't expecting company so soon."
"I'm rather glad you weren't. I wouldn't fancy the cauldrons of boiling
oil streaming down from the parapets."
Maybe she could convince him she had really bad sunburn; she was
certainly red enough at that moment. Damn, this wasn't like her one bit.
She was never this nervous around men.
Then again, this wasn't just any man. She had only seen pictures of him
before; film or videotape footage from the nightly news. He was even
better-looking in person. She knew he was in his early twenties, just
finishing college. He had opted for military service, in his family's
tradition, but had not yet reported for duty. That explained, in part,
how he could be here now. He was tall, like her; slender, yet firm. That
blonde hair and those steel blue eyes made him look so much like his
late mother?.
He had nothing to compare her to. He couldn't remember seeing another
woman like her, ever. He could tell the Platinum hair was fairly long,
but she wore it tightly pulled back, rolled into a bun and clipped in
place with a kind of clamshell-like contrivance that kept it firmly
balled up. She was, what? Nineteen? Twenty? Flawless complexion, thin,
high-arched eyebrows, huge, wide-set sapphire-blue eyes that pulled up
and back at the corners, killer cheekbones over a model-chic indented
mid-face, narrow, delicate nose, and wide, over-full lips. Her rare
smiles flashed hints of the most gorgeous dimples at the corners of her
mouth. There was something about her that was absolutely ? magnetic.
He stood almost exactly eye-to-eye with her, but well over half her
height was legs ? and that body! She reminded him of one of those
American exotic dancers - or one of Hajime Sorayama's warrior women. He
was more than a bit apprehensive. He was face-to-face with this
stunning, sexy-looking woman with sword on her back and knife at her
belt. He knew nothing about her - and his security detail was nowhere in
sight. Old habits?. Still, he couldn't help but stare in wonder at the
vision before him.
She had felt like a deer frozen in oncoming headlights. Gradually, she
became aware his focus had shifted. She followed the direction of his
gaze to? dammit! Why did men always do that? You would think he had
never seen a pair of EE's before in his life! Being human, she sometimes
forgot her body had been intentionally designed to elicit exactly that
reaction. Her eyes narrowed. He felt the weight of her gaze and averted
his. It was his turn to be embarrassed.
"My apology. That was inappropriate of me."
She signed expressively. Her chest heaved.
"It's OK, she avowed. "It's not like it hasn't happened before. Anyway,
welcome to my nightmare."
"Erm, thank you," he professed. "I confess I am a little bit flustered
by all of this. I was locked away in my room at college, studying for
final examinations. Then, suddenly, I was here - wherever 'here' is ?
confronting a beautiful woman holding a sword to my throat. Usually,
that doesn't happen until at least the second date."
She laughed. He did, too.
"So, where is 'here'?" he inquired. "How did I get here ? and why?"
"I can't answer the first question," she responded. "As to the second
and third?."
She told him what she knew, as the Praetor had explained it to her.
The Tournament had a long, proud tradition on Arcturus Prime. Their
Elders had decided on this action as a necessary replacement for
generations of endless internecine, then interstellar warfare that had
been draining their planet's resources and population. They had
stabilized the borders of the Arcturan Empire by naked force. Arcturus
Prime itself basked within its planetary force field. With the 'shields'
raised, the planet was impervious to all outside attack. Any planet
incurring Arcturan displeasure received a visit from "1jb" ? and was
pulverized. So, the other planets toed the Arcturan line. With major
conflict with the other worlds gone, the Arcturans had begun The
Tournament to satisfy their collective bloodlust without turning on each
other.
Originally, the contestants had been drawn from the war-like Arcturan
race itself. They fought to the death, however long it took, and that
was that. As time passed, that formula had gotten stale. They needed a
new thrill to keep it fresh. Progress, and the introduction of Portal
technology, had made that possible. They could instantly transport
anything from any point in the Universe to any other point through a
precisely-calculated 'wormhole' that could be opened and closed at will.
The inclusion of portal generators on their spacegoing vessels ? such as
'1jb' ? rendered warp drive and other such concepts obsolete.
Now, the conflict was waged by representatives chosen from savage,
emerging races culled from among the many that dotted the Universe.
Previous military experience was acceptable ? given Arcturan tradition,
it was almost de rigueur ? but current service was not. The Arcturans
considered it more entertaining if the contestants were 'average Joes',
not hardened professionals. A raw, undeveloped planet whose environment
could provide at least basic life support for both contestants was
chosen as the 'arena'.
All things in consideration, he took it rather well.
"Then we and these ? Golganthans, you said? ? were chosen at random?"
"They were. As I understand it, we ? Humankind ? were champions once
before."
"We've done this before?" When? I've never heard of it."
"According to the Praetor, that was about two millennia ago, Earth time.
I got the impression the last time had been a big laugh and they are
ready for an encore performance."
"Damn! They really intend to destroy Earth?"
"Only if we lose. I don't intend to do that."
"I should say not! So, these Arcturans just plucked me out of thin air?"
"The polite term would be 'random chance'. The impolite term would be
'blind, idiot luck'. I rather think bad luck on your part."
She still couldn't believe it herself. Of all the men in the world for
the Arcturans to pair her with ? if it was to be a man at all - they had
selected this one. What were the odds?
"Do you have any idea why they picked you?"
She sighed expressively.
"Since the last 'Earther' was male, they thought it might be amusing to
see what a female of our species can do. Of course, the stakes will
remain the same, win or lose."
"Of course."
"As for why me, as opposed to any other woman on Earth, well, I guess I
was just in the right place at the right time."
"That is a curious way of looking at it."
"Perhaps, but I would rather be here, determining my own fate, than
sitting at home while someone I don't know has my life in their hands ?
and I am not even aware of it."
"I see your point."
There was a long, pregnant pause in the conversation.
"It's going to be a little awkward," she began. "I mean, your title?."
He shook his head.
"Don't," he reassured her. "I hear that all day, every day. To tell you
the truth, I get fed up with it. There is a time and place for it and,
apparently, this is neither. Since it appears to be just the two of us
here, would you please call me Geoff? My family and friends do."
"I would be honored, although you will have to forgive me from time to
time if I call you Geoffrey. I rather like the sound of that."
"Coming from your lips, I rather do, too."
"You flatter me, Sir. Anyway, I'm Giselle."
"Giselle? What an enchanting name! What is the rest of it?"
"Uh, Giselle? Ren? Du Mont."
"Then you are French? Or Qu?b?cois? I thought for certain you were
American."
"I am."
"Then, this is your? stage name? I mean, you look like an actress."
The corners of her mouth twitched upward.
"You could say that."
"In any event, it is lovely and suits you."
"Thank you, Your Roy? Geoff. I appreciate that."
She had said it so matter-of-factly, as though she hadn't even been
aware of the change in her speech. Geoff immediately noted the broad
vowels, clipped consonants and sibilant "c". lifted an eyebrow.
"Why did you do that just now?"
"Do what?"
"That. The accent. It was like you turned a switch and suddenly, you
sounded? well, British."
She looked puzzled a moment. She shrugged her shoulders a little.
"Oh. I am sorry. It is just that, when I am around people, I tend to
pick up their accents and inflections and begin using them. I am not
attempting to mock you in any way. I just try to?blend in. I was taught
to do that."
"Then, you are an actress."
The tiny smile reappeared.
"I suppose I am."
She had transferred her belt knife to him, until he could acquire a more
suitable weapon. Then again, he wasn't trained, as she was. She would
have to attend to that as well. It would not be possible to bring him up
to her level in so short a time. She had trained five years in Japan
with the Togakure Clan ? after Mike? well, it was still difficult to
think about. She and "Ajax" (his Dad had nicknamed him that) had been as
close as two humans could be. He had been her inspiration, had given her
everything that was his to give ? including his sense of purpose. It had
all been about two little words: Never Again. Mike had been gone a long
time. Now, Geoff was here. If she could instill in him even a small part
of what she had learned, they would be doing well.
She went over the background of how they would approach this 'mission'.
They sat on the floor of the cave as they talked He sat very near her.
She didn't want to say anything, but she wished he would move back a
bit. She found the nearness of him? unsettling. His smell was disturbing
as well. No; "smell" was not the right word. His essence was disturbing,
and seemed to permeate everything around her. Unbeknownst to the
statuesque blonde, he was experiencing the same disquieting feelings
about her.
She then ran him through some basic exercises with the sword and knife;
proper stances, grip, some basic movements, offensive and defensive. In
the case of the hand knife, which would be his weapon for now, she
admonished not to hold it blade-forward. A quick opponent could knock it
out of his grasp or take it from him. Instead, he should reverse the
knife, shielding the blade along the underside of his forearm. Then, he
would sweep the blade outward when he was slashing at his opponent.
They set off for a 'sweep' of the area in the late afternoon. The sun
had already lost much of its mid-afternoon intensity. She wanted to take
him on a nice, easy patrol, just so he could get acclimated to the
routine. Perhaps they could even pick up some good intel on their
opponent. She worried the Golganthan ? who would undoubtedly have his
teammate by now ? might also do the same. She didn't really want to get
Geoff involved in actual combat just yet, but they couldn't hole up in
the cave and outlast the bastards, either. As it happened, the
Golganthans were the last of their problems.
As the sun dropped further, the sound began. It was a chirping sound,
almost like a squeaky wheel. More precisely, it was like a thousand
squeaky wheels, ten thousand, all chirping at once. The sound emanated
from everywhere, and nowhere. Whatever it was, it was getting louder.
They both looked around, trying to spy the source. Geoff climbed a
little rise to get a better view of the surrounding terrain. Both swept
the area with their eyes. Then the smell hit them. It was sharp,
slightly metallic, and acidic. It had already become so strong she could
actually taste it.
Geoff was behind her. She turned to face him. She could not believe her
eyes. Her companion was sprouting a pair of antennae, one from each
shoulder. As she watched in fascination, the antennae rose higher and
higher over his head. They waved back and forth animatedly. Yet, he
seemed completely oblivious to their presence. He simply gazed down at
her, perplexed at the look of astonishment on her face. In horror,
Giselle realized they weren't rising from him; they were rising behind
him!
She was on him in a flash. In one fluid motion, she planted both feet,
grabbed his rugby shirt in her right hand and yanked hard. Geoff sailed
over her right shoulder, tumbling head-over-heels down the embankment.
Her left hand was a blur. Steel glinted brightly in the late afternoon
sun. In six fluid battojutsu strokes, the towering blonde sliced through
the antennae, mandibles, and front legs in order. The beast dipped
forward and down, blind and crippled but far from helpless. All it had
to do was fall on her and the game would be over before it had truly
begun. On the seventh stroke, she whirled clockwise to her left, raised
the sword over her head and slashed down, left to right. The massive,
reddish-brown bulk and severed head collapsed as one - and were still.
The corpse gushed dark green blood that brightened as it oxygenated.
Her entire response, from first move to last, had taken five seconds.
She wiped the blade clean with the cloth at her belt, and re-sheathed
the sword. Then, she turned to her companion. He sat, sprawled, at the
foot of the incline, staring up at her dumbly. He picked himself up,
dusted himself off, and returned to her side. He stared down at the mass
of ? whatever it had been, then back at her in open amazement.
"What is? was it?"
The words came to her then, as though she had just heard them for the
first time. This was a different species, but she accurately identified
the beast in the same matter-of-fact inflection Edmund Gwenn had used
fifty years before.
"Solenopsis invicta, of the order Hymenoptera. A fire ant."
Geoff just stared at her as though she had said: "Howdy Doody".
"No. No, no, no, no, NO! I know ants. I have seen ants. I have NEVER
seen an ant eight feet long."
"Ten. We were lucky; this looks to have been a minor worker. The major
workers would be bigger still."
Geoff snorted.
"Oh, well, thank the Lord for small favors! I feel so much better now.
Do ants always bleed green blood?"
She had been puzzling over that very question since she beheaded the
monster.
"No, they don't."
The sound continued, more frenzied than before. Giselle looked up at her
companion, then slipped her arm through his.
"Let's go. We won't accomplish anything more here this afternoon and it
would be a really bad idea to stick around right now."
"So? What about tomorrow?" he demanded. "What will we do then?"
She was stunned by the sudden appearance of this particular beast, in
this place and under these circumstances. A thought occurred to her -
more like intuition. More than anything else, it was the green blood
that had convinced her. She believed she already had the answer to that
one.
"Nothing. They won't be here."
She avoided his gaze ? and expression of utter incredulity. He almost
missed the single word she uttered sotto voz.
"Cupraglobin."
They returned to the cave and slaked their thirsts. The Praetor appeared
to them. It was the first time Geoff had seen the holographic
transmission. The young man spent a good three minutes ranting to the
Arcturan about the ant, why they hadn't been apprised of the Arena's
indigenous threats, his lack of substantial firepower, and how unfair it
was for Giselle to have to shoulder the entire burden. Not once did he
even imply it was unfair of them to have placed him there, in jeopardy,
in the first place. In the end, all of it was for naught. The Praetor
completely ignored him, in favor of his female companion.
There was food there, the Arcturan intoned. Additional non-combat
supplies would be available on request and more advanced weaponry would
be forthcoming as they racked up more points. All of Arcturus had been
utterly stunned at the speed and skill with which she had dispatched her
first challenge.
"What do you mean?" asked Giselle. "What 'challenge'?"
"Ah, yes, the Challenges?."
To make it more interesting for the audience, the Praetor droned, the
contestants would also face additional 'challenges', above and beyond
those posed by their primary opponents. These challenges could, and
would, pop up at any time and take any form. The jeopardy was exactly
the same; if a 'challenge' killed you, your opponent won by default.
He "regretted wasting her time on a task that was so obviously beneath
her advanced skillset." They would attempt to find others more worthy of
her talents. Although the words, at face value, were high praise indeed,
she somehow felt they had been intended as a rebuke.
The 'food' was similar to, and as bland as, the average granola bar.
Still, they were plentiful and the pair was famished. As she chewed,
Giselle reflected on the events of the day, as well as their somewhat
dubious dinner. This was one of those few moments in her life when an
MRE would have been a welcome substitute. She would do better for them
tomorrow, she vowed. In fact, an MRE might not be a bad idea?.
The trembling began later. It was nothing new to her; she had dealt with
it for a most of her adult life. In the heat of combat, you cannot
afford the luxury of emotions. You shut them off, lock them away, so you
can do the job you know you have to do. If you get hit in the meantime,
oh well. If one of your team gets killed, tough luck; keep going.
Eventually, the job is over, the day is done. You have to face the
uncomfortable proposition of unlocking that which you locked away ? and
dealing with it. Bullets and bombs were one thing; monsters from her
childhood, monsters that had taken on physical, flesh-and-blood form
were a different story?.
He watched her, sitting on the opposite side of the cave, hugging her
knees tightly and rocking back and forth. She looked? small; nothing
like the strong, confident woman he had accompanied on patrol ? the one
who had so nonchalantly carved up the monster ant and saved his life
before he even had time to react. Now, she sat alone, forlorn, and
shaking like a leaf.
She jumped at his touch. He had sat down next to her, closer than he had
been that afternoon, and put his arm around her.
"In all the fuss this afternoon, I completely lost my head ? and
manners. Thank you for saving my life. What you did with that sword was
amazing. I don't know why I am here in the first place, but if I must, I
am glad it is with you."
She was confused; wanting him to be there, yet wanting him to get away
from her. This was a complication she didn't need right now. He was
right there. She could feel his heat ? and it felt good. She gazed up
into those blue eyes, losing herself in them. At that moment, she was
vulnerable. She lowered her gaze, fixing her sight on that beautiful,
sensual mouth?.
He was tender and she needed that. He caressed her in a gentle, sensual
manner that belied his youthful countenance. She had never truly needed
a man before, but she needed this one now. She needed his kiss, his
touch, his warmth. He was special. Being with him was special, too.
"I shouldn't be doing this," she thought, "but he is SO good. It's just
like I thought it would b-"
Her eyes flew open as a terrible thought occurred to her. NO! Dear God,
they can't be! She pressed her hand to his lips.
"Please, we have to stop right now."
The visibly shaken young woman retreated to the opposite side of the
cave. She collapsed in a heap and sobbed uncontrollably. When Geoff
approached, attempting to console her, she swatted at him with one hand,
warning him with her glare to stay away. He returned to his side in
misery. He vowed if he lived to be one thousand, he would never
understand women.
The anger burned deep within her. You Bastards! I hope you are enjoying
the show!
They were enjoying the show. Initial reaction to the female's stunning
dismemberment of the giant insect had been overwhelming. The interplay
between her and her companion was shaping up nicely, too, although her
sudden refusal of him at the last moment had been a disappointment.
This looked to be much more promising than the last outing with a Human.
That event had dragged on for almost two decades; two bumbling nits
flailing away at each other ineffectually, day after day, year after
year. That had been too funny. Finally, the Human's opponent had died of
natural causes. Boredom, if you asked the Praetor. The "winner" had been
sent home, a laughingstock in the eyes of the Arcturans.
In a routine follow-up, the Praetor had discovered the man's own people
had murdered him upon his return, nailed him to a wooden cross ? and
they had not even had to endure his drawn-out, lackluster effort. During
the contest, there had been no shortage of Arcturan 'volunteers'
demanding to put the contestant out of their misery.
The Second Day
When Geoff awoke, she was gone. He didn't exactly panic, but he was
concerned. Had he mucked it up with her that badly, that she didn't even
want to be around him? What had set her off in the first place? They
hadn't really done anything but kiss and cuddle. Why was it affecting
him this way, anyway? It wasn't as though he were starved for female
attention in his life, but this one?.
She was everything the others were not; smart, strong, tough, assertive,
self-reliant, intuitive, yet still charming, coquettish, and amazingly,
surreally feminine. She was vulnerable, very human, too, as she had
displayed so eloquently the night before. If only he could figure out
what was going through her head?. He hated to admit she had gotten to
him, fast and hard, gotten under his skin. Whatever happened between
them from now on, he didn't want her to think badly of him, although he
couldn't figure out why she thought badly of him in the first place.
He had no idea where she could have gotten off to and didn't fancy going
to look for her by himself. The memory of yesterday was still fresh in
his mind. She might have been confident the ants ? and he was certain
there had been more than one of the monsters ? would be gone, but he was
not. The thought of running into another ? alone - was not high on his
"to do" list. Perhaps he should just stay here a bit and see if she
comes ba?.
He heard the sound. It was faint; he couldn't quite make out what it
was. His eyes strayed to the corner. Her sword was there, where she had
left it the night before. That seemed damn peculiar. He didn't know her
that well yet, but it was his impression she would no more leave without
her sword than without her clothes. There was that sound again! He
couldn't get a clear read on it, but it seemed to be coming from? one of
the passages at the rear of the cave. Then, the thought occurred to him.
God, Giselle! She wasn't in trouble, was she? All he could picture was
one of those six-legged monsters grabbing her in its mandibles and
dragging her back into the far reaches of the cave ? while he had
slumbered on in blissful ignorance.
He was moving then ? fast. He snatched up the sword and made for the
rear passage, stopping at intervals to listen and get his bearings. He
had expected the cave to get darker the further into it he went. That
was not the case. The rock walls were laced with minerals that appeared
to have a natural luminescence to them. It was an eerie twilight, but a
visible one. Once his eyes adjusted, he made his way quickly.
At last, he was able to make out the nature of the sound; splashing. A
couple more quick turns, through otherwise empty chambers, around a
corner and ? he could not believe his own eyes. There, spread out before
him, was? a grotto; a deep, subterranean pool, fed by a waterfall off to
one side. The entrance to the grotto was at the top of a flight of stone
stairs, seemingly formed by eons of natural erosion. The stairs curved
downward to water level ? actually, below it, like a swimming pool. The
walls of the grotto were heavily infiltrated with the luminous minerals,
above and below the waterline. The chamber was an oasis; a little piece
of Paradise in the middle of nowhere.
Fittingly, Giselle was there; her lush, womanly body glided gracefully
through the water. She approached the bottom of the stairs and began her
ascent. Glancing up, she beheld him, standing at the top of the stairs ?
and just kept stepping. As she rose from the water, it became readily
apparent she hadn't a stitch of clothing on. If she was at all
embarrassed about revealing herself to him, she gave not the slightest
clue. With that lush, curvaceous body, he thought, she had nothing to be
embarrassed about. He descended the stairs, meeting her halfway. She
noted the sword in his hands, then just looked up at him ? and smiled.
Dear God, she was beautiful, standing there like that! He thought his
heart would burst.
"First," she asserted, "thank you for coming to my rescue. Since I am
not in need of it this time, might I take a rain check?"
His mind raced, trying to think of something, anything to say to put the
trauma of the previous night behind them. Before he could say anything,
she glanced down, towards the far side of the step he was standing on.
He looked down, seeing? two plush towels sitting there! He looked at her
quizzically. She smiled. His heart skipped a beat at that.
"They are a gift from the Arcturans ? along with a few other little
goodies I 'requisitioned'," Giselle revealed. "Sorry; no new weapons
yet. I don't know about you, but I am grateful to be able to get cleaned
up. I found this?"
She swept her hand in an arc, indicating the grotto.
"?early this morning. Isn't it exquisite? It is exactly what I needed to
feel better about myself. A shower and a swim, and I feel like a whole
new woman, so to speak. However, I really would like to dry off now,
so?."
Rather than stand there, looking like a complete idiot, he put down the
sword, snatched up a towel, unfurled it, and held it up. She turned
appreciatively and allowed him to wrap her in it, patting her dry in the
process.
She turned back to face him. She raised her left hand and rested it
softly on his cheek.
"I apologize for last night," the woman offered. "I want you to know
that whatever you think happened, it was not your fault. I'm not ready
to talk about it just yet, but we will talk; I promise you that."
Her hand had moved from his cheek to his chest. He felt her warmth
against his own. His heart hammered madly in his chest. His other
reaction was the obvious one. She glanced down, smiling mischievously.
"Here. You'll need this," the blonde observed.
He accepted from her the clear plastic bottle with the green and white
label.
"Dr. Bronner's 18-in-1 Hemp Almond Pure-Castile? Soap?" he queried.
She smiled, nodded ? and pushed. Geoff flew off the staircase, into the
pool. He surfaced, shaking his head.
"You really needed a bath, Tiger," Giselle avowed. "First, lose the
clothes. Don't be modest; I've already 'shown you mine'. The soap is
concentrated; a little goes a long way. Use the ledge under the stairs.
Rinse off under the waterfall. Take a swim after, if you wish. I found
it really refreshing."
She sat there, on the step, watching him with a bemused smile on her
lips. Geoff felt self-conscious and elated at the same time as he shed
his dirty, smelly clothing. He couldn't remember a better, more joyful
morning in a long, long time.
The grotto was a study in contrasts, just as was the woman who had
introduced him to it. The ledge she had alluded to actually ran from the
base of the stairs, around the curve of the chamber and behind the
waterfall. There was a smaller pool in a recessed area behind the
waterfall, surrounded by rock and separate from the main pool. The
waterfall and main pool's waters were warm, yet the hidden pool was icy-
cold. Perhaps there was a separate source feeding the smaller pool, or
none at all; the still waters stood apart from the rest in their cold
stone 'refrigerator'. Either way, Geoff was amazed with this natural
spa.
He soaped, rinsed off, and swam, relishing the warming waters. All the
while, he tried not to make it obvious that he was watching Giselle out
of his peripheral vision. He could not get enough of the sight of her.
She was making no bones about watching him! Perhaps she wasn't making
any bones, but he was. He was embarrassed to step out of the water in
that condition, but it wasn't going anywhere and they had to. There was
only one thing to do?.
He made his way back to the waterfall and stepped into the icy pool.
Almost immediately, he spied a glint beneath the surface. It was a metal
cylinder, perhaps two feet in length and eight inches in diameter. He
looked up in puzzlement. Giselle caught his eye immediately. He read the
warning expression on her face. She briefly cast her eyes upward, which
he took to be a reference to 'eyes watching from above'. He nodded his
understanding, then dove into the main pool and swam to the bottom of
the steps.
Giselle awaited him at mid-step, towel in hand, as he had earlier for
her. Despite his recent icy plunge, the sight of her standing nude
before him awoke his 'friend' yet again. She was decent about it. She
kept her eyes on his as he mounted the steps ? but she was smiling a
notch more than before. She patted him dry, as he had done for her. She
spun him around ? and they were face-to-face, and very close. His
'friend' was being particularly naughty, poking into places it oughtn't.
She didn't object, didn't shy away, nor did she encourage him to go
further. She just stood there, looking into his eyes, as if trying to
decide exactly what her reaction should be. She settled on one, and
voiced it.
"I want to thank you for a lovely first date," she asserted. "I really
can't remember when I've had a more enjoyable time."
She smiled alluringly. Then, she picked up her sword, turned and headed
up the stairs. He followed, lost for words.
The chamber just before the grotto wasn't as empty as he had first
surmised. There were two piles of clothing: standard-issue military
camouflage fatigues, desert pattern, with "Sally Mae" utility harness,
canteens, soft, floppy-brimmed hats, underwear, sox, and boots. He
pulled his head back and looked at her askance. Giselle smiled and
shrugged her shoulders.
"I figured if we were going to play 'soldier' we should at least look
the part. I guessed at your sizes. It should be pretty close."
Somehow, he felt this woman was not playing 'soldier'. How did the Yanks
put it? She was the "real deal". Did their armed forces now have female
combat troops serving on the line? And who had taught her to wield a
sword that way? Certainly not the American Army, nor any army he knew
of. She hadn't said anything about it, nor would he ask her. The
Arcturans were watching, and after what she had told him about the
parameters they established for their 'contestants', it would be
something best left unsaid.
A thought occurred to him then. How much were they watching? Were they
only interested in the actual combat, or did they digest everything? He
remembered the interlude in the grotto, her silent visual reference to
their 'audience'. Were they watching even then? Given the situation, he
had no reason to believe otherwise. The Arcturans apparently regarded
them as little more than lab rats. If that thought had occurred to
Giselle the night before, her reaction, then and now, suddenly made more
sense. Once again, he felt slow on the uptake. As for her being "close"
on guessing his sizes, he discovered she had been spot-on. She gazed at
him approvingly from head to toe.
"I do so adore a man in uniform."
She kissed him lightly on the cheek. He held her there, against him, for
a moment. She stiffened briefly, until she realized he wanted nothing
more than that. Then, she relaxed and melted against him. He put his
lips to her ear, as though he was nuzzling it.
"What is in the cylinder in the grotto?"
She nuzzled his ear in return.
"That, My Dear, is a little piece of the most destructive force known to
Humankind."
He simply stared at her in wide-eyed disbelief. Although he knew little
of this woman, he was not prepared to doubt even this.
They shared that brief intimacy before having to return to their roles
as 'professionals'. In truth, he wanted much more, wanted to ask more.
He wisely kept his mouth shut. She had already given every indication
she was still interested ? and that when she was ready to talk, she
would do so. He chose to believe the previous night had not been a
mistake; just ill-timed.
The American military-issue MRE ("Meal, Ready to Eat") had been a luxury
he had not expected. It was even self-heating! Then again, he hadn't
expected any of this ? or her. This was like nothing he had ever
expected in his life ? for stakes he had never expected to face. He
hoped he was up to the task. Above all else, he hoped that, if the time
came when she needed him, he would not fail her.
After policing their trash, he recovered his belt knife. She had him
practice a bit more with his sword and knife movements, concentrating
more at that point on fluidity of motion than speed. After a good
workout, they donned polarized dark amber goggles to ward off the bright
sunlight and set out on their morning patrol.
To Giselle, this was to be a simple reconnaissance mission. They still
needed more information about the Golganthans. Where were they? What
were they up to? What kind of weapons did they use? What tactics would
they employ? How did they think? She didn't expect to learn much, if
anything about their Arcturan 'hosts', but she would be receptive to any
information she might glean.
They climbed an embankment, Geoff in the lead. He reached down to help
her up. She flashed an appreciative smile. They just stood there a
moment, him holding her hand. Neither made a move to release the clasp.
After a bit, they just turned and resumed walking. Even Geoff knew there
was nothing 'professional' about this, but it was an open space and they
would be able to see danger well before it presented itself.
"Giselle?"
"Yes?"
"Yesterday, I mean, the ant?."
"We've already been through this."
"No, not that. I froze. I didn't know what to do. I didn't even have
time to think about what to do."
"That's the nature of this business, Geoffrey. If you have to think
about it, you're dead."
"That worries me. I mean, I'm here and all. If I'm not to muck things up
all the time, I'll need to learn how to stay alive at the least. I would
like to be a help, not a hindrance. I've had some firearms training, and
some martial arts, but nothing for a situation like this. I mean, what
would I do if I had to defend myself right now?"
Giselle raised one eyebrow, glanced down at their clasped hands, and
smiled bemusedly. Her response was pure jocular American.
"Boy, you must be a real fun date."
He blushed beet red.
"You know what I mean."
Giselle smiled, adding her other hand to encompass his.
"Sorry, couldn't resist. All right, if I were to suddenly get this
uncontrollable urge to molest you, I suppose you would just have to?
turn around."
"Turn around?"
"Yes. Turn around."
With that, the blonde pivoted on the ball of her foot, turning to the
inside of their clasped hands. She trapped his hand firmly within her
own, holding his arm close. She twisted outward and down with her arms,
using his elbow as a pivot point. Geoff cartwheeled through the air,
landing on his upper back with a thump. The wind was knocked from him.
He lay there for a moment, looking up. In a moment, he collected air and
wits.
"I see."
Giselle giggled and helped him to his feet. He glared at her with mock
ferocity.
"You enjoyed that, didn't you?", he growled.
His companion smirked.
"Rather. It isn't often I get a really good-looking guy to fall for me."
He softened his glance.
"I doubt that very much. I can't imagine a man who wouldn't take a
tumble for you."
Her smile faded just a bit.
"Not as many as you might believe. There really hasn't been time for it.
Besides?"
She placed her hand on his cheek.
"? I'm choosey."
He rather liked the sound of that.
Geoff stumbled upon it as he scouted an outcropping of rock. He had been
momentarily struck dumb in terror, then shouted out her name as he drew
his knife. Giselle had come on the run, sword at the ready. When they
determined it was no longer a threat, they relaxed and examined the
carcass.
This one had been a 'major worker'. It spanned some fifteen feet in
length. There had been nothing of Giselle's surgical precision in this
kill. The beast had been deliberately, systematically hacked to death.
It was apparent from the severity of the damage that great strength had
been employed. That was consistent with what Giselle already knew about
the Golganthans. This information was revealing in what to expect from
their adversaries. It also gave them one other important piece of
information: Human challenges could just as easily become Golganthan
challenges. Conversely, an ordeal intended for the Golganthans?.
There was something else about the carcass that troubled her. The kill
was old ? along the same timeframe as her own. Most of the damage had
been to the head and upper thorax, as it should be; that was where the
mortal blows had been struck. But there was a section of the gaster that
was also incised. This one did not resemble the type of wound inflicted
in the heat of combat. More time had been taken, more care.
That didn't make sense. The stinger was back there, and the sting from a
fire ant this size was certain to be lethal ? even for the Golganthans.
If they were attacking the stinger outright, fine - but it hadn't been
touched. Why even put yourself in range of being stung? Unless? the
gaster wound had been inflicted post-mortem. That made a little more
sense, but what would be the purpose of cutting into a dead ant's
abdomen? Suddenly, she realized the incision hadn't just been inflicted
post-mortem; it was fresh!
The first boulder missed them by inches. The second, larger one,
following immediately in the wake of the first, would have crushed them
both ? had they still been in the same spot. At that moment they were
encircling the outcropping in opposite directions, looking for a way up.
Geoff's first view of a Golganthan was, in fact, the business end of a
Golganthan fighting dagger. It missed his eyes by a whisker as he raised
his head above the ledge. Dipping down to allow the return sweep to pass
harmlessly over his head, he gathered all his strength and thrust upward
with his arms, pivoting at the hips to vault both legs across the ledge.
He caught the female behind the ankles, knocking her legs out from under
her. She tumbled backwards and crashed on the rocks, bellowing in pain.
He made his way to his feet. She was not far behind, the blade held
before her, waving back and forth. He could hear the repeated clang of
metal on metal from beyond the crest and knew Giselle and the male were
having at it. Geoff was in a precarious position; poised on the edge
with the female before him and a long drop behind. She was not a pro;
but then, neither was he. He focused not on the blade, but on her eyes,
waiting for her to telegraph her next move.
She thrust twice in rapid succession; first right, then left. He dodged
in opposite succession, his superior speed enabling him to evade the
blade. She danced to her right, then thrust across. He turned to his
right, taking her thrust harmlessly down his left side. Without
conscious thought, he clamped his left hand down atop her right wrist,
reversed direction, brought his right hand up to clamp the underside of
her wrist, then pivoted down and out with his arms, using her arm as a
fulcrum.
The effect was spectacular. The Golganthan flew off her legs, spun
through the air ? and over the ledge. He could hear the recurrent,
sickening crunch as she bounced down the side of the rocks, then the
dull thud as she hit the ground. Geoff just looked at his two hands, not
comprehending what they had just done. A flicker of movement below him
caught his eye. To his utter amazement, the Golganthan was hobbling
away, in distress, but under her own power. He knew with certainty he
would not have survived such a fall.
"Nicely done. Apparently, you are picking up some of my bad habits. I
like that in a man.You know, you could have used YOUR knife."
Giselle was before him, re-sheathing her sword in that fluid, effortless
flourish he admired. He glanced at his belt. There it was, right where
he had put it before they had left the cave.
"In the heat of battle, I didn't even think of it," he moaned. "See what
I meant earlier? How stupid of me. The male?"
She smiled.
"Beating a similarly hasty retreat. I nicked him. He'll live."
She stood before him, placing her hand upon his cheek. He was beginning
to realize just how much he enjoyed the feel of it there.
"Surviving any combat, particularly hand-to-hand combat, is not
'stupid'," she intoned. What you did displays an amazing degree of
courage and coolness under fire. In case it was lost upon you, you
didn't just mimic what I showed you; you improvised. You faced a
different combat situation and adapted your technique to it. I don't
wish to sound condescending, but I am proud of you."
His heart skipped a beat.
"This is the first time I have ever had the Bad Guys on the run," he
opined.
Giselle looked down, pursing her lips. She spoke her next words quietly.
"Geoff, the Golganthans are our opponents. We have no quarrel with them;
we are simply obliged to fight them. The Arcturans are the 'Bad Guys'
for creating this artificial conflict and throwing the four of us into
it. Remember that. Let's go. We still have work to do."
They made their way down from the outcropping. The two Golganthans had
retreated in different directions. Giselle chose to track the male first
and, if necessary, return to the outcropping to track the female. As
they made their way around the base of the rock, Geoff couldn't help but
notice the smooth, vertical walls without viable handholds on the side
that Giselle would have had to scale. The lowest available ledge was
some ten or eleven feet up. He couldn't, for the life of him, imagine
how she had made her ascent so quickly.
The skirmish had been a blessing in disguise. The male had been cagy
enough, doubling back several times and hiding his tracks. The injured
female had not. She had made a beeline back to their cave. Giselle and
Geoff followed her tracks, noted its location, then withdrew, lest they
be caught in an ambush even while planning their own.
They took a circuitous route back to their own cave, lest they repeat
the Golganthan female's mistake. Along the way, both were quiet,
introspective. Geoff mulled over Giselle's description of their
adversarial relationship with the Golganthans. He didn't like his
conclusions one bit. She read his thoughts and spoke.
"You can't let it eat at you."
"Excuse me?" he replied.
"What we did to the Golganthans," she continued. "It wasn't personal. If
we had been a little slower, we would be the ones hurting right now."
"That doesn't make it right," Geoff interjected.
"It never is," Giselle pointed out. "Studs Terkel once described World
War Two as "The Last Good War". That was an unfortunate choice of words.
There has never been a 'good war'. Some are worse than others and they
all end badly. The only people who believe in a 'good war' have either
forgotten it over time or were never there. Ask any soldier who was
there ? if you can get them to talk about it at all.
"World War Two was the last good CAUSE, one with a clear-cut sense of
right and wrong that everyone could believe in and rally behind. Even
that was subject to interpretation, depending where you lived. Almost
every significant conflict since has been largely based on hype, a
manufactured motive; again, some more grievous than others.
"I would love to say this 'tournament' is a new low. It isn't. It isn't
even new to us. American Rules Football. Hockey. Rugby. Professional
Wrestling. Bullfights. Cockfights. Dogfights. Modern Lacrosse is played
with a type of 'ball', but the original was played with a freshly-
severed human head. It is all bread and circuses for the masses. Give
them a little good old fashioned blood and gore to keep them satisfied."
Giselle stopped, grabbed her companion by the arms and turned him to
face her.
"Geoff, this is the new Coliseum and we are the new Gladiators."
She released him, raising her arms and voice to the heavens.
"Ave Caesar! Morituri Te Salutant!"
He took her in his arms. She was close to tears.
"You really hate this, don't you?"
Her eyes glittered; twin sapphire flames.
"I really hate people jerking my chain. I hate being used, manipulated,
to further someone else's agenda. I always have?"
She looked down dejectedly.
"?and, pretty much, I always have been."
"Giselle?"
"Yes?"
"Who is Studs Terkel?"
She laughed through her tears.
"Get outta town!"
Geoff's admiration for ? no, attraction to ? this amazing woman with her
oddly compelling combination of clipped British tones and American
idioms grew stronger by the minute. He knew he still had so much to
learn?.
***
On a moonlit summer evening long before that one, Mike Blair had also
known he still had so much to learn. He stood at the crest of the St.
Charles Road Bridge, gazing east. Below him, cars whizzed by on the Tri-
State Tollway. The State of Illinois would soon be extending the
Eisenhower Expressway north and west. It would occupy the empty space
parallel to the Tollway below. Beyond, the lights of Chicago beckoned in
the distance. He wanted to remember this moment, savor it.
Instinctively, he knew it would be a long time before he would see it
again.
Mike's parents thought he had lost his mind. It was bad enough he had
spent the last year studying Japanese and devouring everything he could
about martial arts and Japanese culture. Then, they learned he had been
corresponding with a "Toshisugu Takamatsu" through his colleague, a "Dr.
Masaaki Hatsumi". This Dr. Hatsumi had sent a letter inviting Mike to
come to Japan as a foreign exchange student, with himself as their
child's sponsor.
It wouldn't even be in Tokyo, or any of the other major cities they knew
of. He would be going to a small village called Ueno in the Iga
Prefecture, wherever that was. Dr. Hatsumi was not without influence.
The State Department and Japanese Interior Ministry had both signed off
on the deal, which made them feel a little more at ease. It was an honor
to be an exchange student, especially to be accepted at so young an age.
But Japan?. Mike's father had served in the Eleventh Armored Division
under General Patton. Neither he nor his wife trusted any of the former
Axis powers, nor ever would again.
In the end, Mike's mother convinced his father to let him go. Marilynn
Blair knew her child was every bit as stubborn and determined as her
husband. If they didn't let him try this, they would never hear the end
of it. Hopefully, in a few months, he would be homesick enough to want
to come back. They watched his plane taxi away from the gate at O'Hare,
not knowing what to expect. Neither did he. All he knew was a vow he had
made and fully intended to keep: Never Again.
Second Day - Afternoon
They came upon a grove of scrub trees and sawgrass that looked oddly out
of place for the terrain. The hair on the back of Giselle's neck stood
up. She advanced cautiously, turning this way and that, maintaining a
close watch in all directions. Geoff followed, adding his eyes to the
scan. If the grove seemed out of place, the dilapidated, two-story frame
house was doubly so. Giselle approached the stairs to the porch at a
half-crouch, placing each footfall quietly, carefully, deliberately, her
left hand over her shoulder, resting comfortably on the hilt of her
sword. There was no sign of life on the porch or at the door. They
mounted the steps and entered.
There were stairs ahead of the door and a parlor to the right. They
stepped into the latter room, Geoff keeping a close eye on their rear.
The room itself was unremarkable, aside from the entire structure being
hideously out of place. It had a high ceiling and a few pieces of old
furniture with threadbare upholstery scattered around the periphery.
Tattered lace curtains fluttered at the windows. For the most part, it
was just a big, empty room, ending in a door.
It was the closed door that held the experienced tactician's attention.
It wasn't a 'door' door. Rather, it was an industrial-style steel fire
door, mounted on tracks, which slid to one side rather than swinging on
hinges. When she saw that door, she knew.
Her hands flew to her chest, unbuckling the sword harness. She thrust
the sword back into Geoff's hands.
"Step back. Do not interfere. If this goes south, get out, don't look
back, and stay on the mission."
"But?"
"STEP BACK," she hissed.
Then, they heard the buzzing roar. Giselle faced the steel door,
positioning her feet shoulder-width apart, flexing her knees slightly.
The door flew to one side. The man who stepped through it ? and it did
appear to be a man ? was perhaps six-foot-three, two-hundred-thirty
pounds, wearing commercial-grade denim overalls, a stained, full-length
leather apron and matching mask. He stank of death and decay. A long,
menacing chain saw swung from his arms in a wide figure-eight arc.
It was the kind of specter that would have terrified any normal human
being, let alone a normal young woman. Giselle Du Mont had never been
either. She calculated the speed of his advance, plus that of the saw's
recurring circular motion. She waited until he was just before her, the
spinning chain at the apogee of its arc, directly above her head. Then,
she struck.
The front snap kick caught him squarely in the groin, momentarily
lifting him off the floor. Even through the heavy combat boot, she could
feel his testicles collapse from the force of the blow. As he doubled
over, the saw would have neatly bisected the woman ? had she still been
standing where she had been. She was already squatted to one side,
spinning clockwise on her left foot, right leg extended, heel-forward.
She swept the man's feet out from under him from behind in one fluid
motion. He somersaulted backwards in mid-air, landing with a crash on
his head and shoulders. His legs were above him, parallel to the floor.
Giselle rocked back on her shoulders, thrusting both legs straight up,
then snapped them out and down. She caught his legs behind the ankles,
pinning him to the floor, the chain saw trapped between his thighs and
belly. She reached out with her right hand, covered his, and firmly
squeezed the trigger. The icy blonde held him there, watching
dispassionately, as the chain saw ripped him apart. His trapped body
shuddered violently as green blood, flesh, and bits of bone flew in
every direction.
It was over in a few seconds. She rolled off him when his legs came
loose and collapsed on top of the remains of his torso. Kipping up to
her feet, she stepped to the window, yanked a lace curtain from its rod,
and wiped the gore from her face, neck and hands. Throwing the bloody
rag down, she walked determinedly from the room and house, eyes fixed
straight ahead. Geoff followed in her wake, too stunned to speak.
He caught up with her fifty yards on, grabbing her by the arm and
spinning her around. Her eyes burned brightly. Her jaw was still tightly
clenched, distended at the hinges. Geoff held her firmly by the arms. He
didn't care one whit that she could, if she chose, dispatch him as
easily as she had the man in the house. His eyes bore into hers,
demanding answers.
"What? just? happened? That was a man back there, one of our own kind,
and he just tried to kill us! Has the entire Universe gone insane? What
was he doing here in the first place? And why did he bleed green blood,
like the ant?"
Her demeanor softened. She eased her right arm from his grasp, softly
put her fingers to his lips and shook her head.
"No, it wasn't," she replied calmly. "A man, that is. We could probably
come back here in an hour and none of it would be here; the house, the
grove, anything. Just like the ants."
"What about the Golganthan's ant?" Geoff countered.
"The Arcturans were not done with it yet," Giselle responded. "Rather,
the Golganthans weren't. As to why he bled green, like the ant? that
just proves he wasn't human. The color indicates cupraglobin; copper-
based blood. I think they were both constructs, derived from a similar
source. Replicas."
The lanky young man turned his head this way and that, thoroughly
confused.
"Was it real? Any of it?" he inquired incredulously.
"Real enough to kill us both if we had been less skillful."
"I was less skillful," Geoff avowed. "I would be mincemeat twice over if
not for you."
She placed her hand on his chest.
"You, My Dear, would have been smart enough not to go into the house in
the first place."
"Why did you?" he demanded.
She pursed her lips.
"Because the Arcturans expected me to. If I hadn't? I don't know, they
might have penalized us in some way. I took a calculated risk. We won.
We will be rewarded for it, just as we will be rewarded for our earlier
combat with the Golganthans. In