Synopsis of the Night Skies Hotel Universe: Centuries ago, two world-
spanning civilizations made first contact via technology that enabled
access to multiple realities. Each civilization was unique in the sense
that a single sex dominated it -- Terra's Patriarchy by males, and
Gaia's Sisterhood by females. Gaia was the more artistic of the two,
had closer links to nature and was more advanced than Terra in some of
the sciences, such as biology and physics. Terra, on the other hand,
had a cultural drive to explore and dominate other timelines, and
excelled in a number of scientific fields, including spaceflight and
computers.
For a time, scientific and cultural exchanges were profitable for both
sides, until a Gaian pathogen was inadvertently introduced into Terra's
population and began turning males and females alike into females of
Gaia's Sisterhood. The final straw came when the son of a powerful
politician was infected. The Patriarchy conquered Gaia, but a remnant
of the Sisterhood managed to escape the onslaught.
The war has raged for centuries, with the Sisterhood's victories few
and far between as the Patriarchy advances through the known timelines,
drawing ever closer to Earth and its billions of unsuspecting
inhabitants. But the Sisterhood doesn't give up easily and, using the
pathogen to swell its ranks and its dimensional transport technology to
remain hidden from its nemesis, devises plans to one day retake Gaia
and stop the Patriarchy once and for all.
***
Historian's note: This story takes place during the "modern" era of the
Night Skies Hotel; specifically, in September 2009.
***
"This only is denied to God: the power to undo the past." -- Agathon
(448 BCE-400 BCE, Timeline 0600), from Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics.
***
Night Skies Hotel XI: Humanity's Birthright I: In the Eye of the
Beholder
By Solari
CHAPTER I: THE CAGED DRAGON
Darkness. Pain. Screams.
It was all the ebony-skinned, muscular man sitting stoically in the
chair knew, a smelly, burlap sack covering his head, his hands bound
behind the chair by rusted, metal manacles. CRACK! A savage blow rocked
his world, leaving him seeing madly spinning stars. He smiled despite
this, knowing the torture meant his captors were desperate for the
information he had. Information he would never ...
THWACK! "Where will your comrades --" THWACK!! "-- strike? How many --"
THWACK!!! "-- will there be? What sort of --" THWACK!!!! "-- firepower
will they have?" He savored the hysterical edge in his tormentor's
otherwise crisp English, its presence empowering him. "What time will
they strike?!" his tormentor bellowed. THWACK! THWACK!! THWACK!!! "What
time will they strike?!"
"I am Centurion Moturo Kali'zat of the 503rd Patriarchal reconnaissance
unit," the man recited emotionlessly. "I have allowed myself to be
captured twice before by this timeline's authorities, to test their
capabilities, and both times I escaped." Moturo slowly turned his head
in the direction of his captor's voice. "Rest assured, this time will
be no different."
"You're a cocky son of a bitch," his captor hissed. "But don't think
the learning process was a one-way street. We know what you're capable
of, and have some nasty little surprises up our sleeves."
The heavy-set, beetle-browed man with thinning brown hair yanked the
burlap sack off Moturo's head. The recon trooper squinted, sweat
beading his face as the spotlight threw its harsh, white beam squarely
into it. "Your unit's actions have maimed and killed thousands, left
others transformed and terrorized millions more," his captor said
grimly. "You're going to pay dearly for that."
"Orders are orders ... sir," Moturo mocked.
THWACK! "You insolent fucker!" Another flurry of blows landed in quick
succession.
Unfazed, the Sentinel grinned, his lips pulled back to reveal gleaming
white teeth. "What we've done so far is just the tip of the iceberg. By
the time we're finished using your world's schisms against itself,
it'll be a stroll in the park to take over TL-600." His grin widened.
"A pity, really. We had such high hopes of facing a united timeline.
They're always more of a challenge to conquer and pacify -- and my
people relish a chall ... OMPFH!"
His captor sank a fist into Moturo's gut, then pulled back and
delivered a walloping blow -- CRACK! -- to the trooper's jaw. "We've
been going back and forth like this for days," he said, "but you can
end it anytime you want. Tell us, what the hell were you doing at
Egypt's Aswan High Dam?!"
Drawing attention away from Arik and Hsan, Moturo thought. Aloud,
"You've wasted valuable time, American. The Patriarchy trains its
troops -- especially its Sentinels -- to withstand all manner of
interrogation and torture." He stared imperiously at his captor. "I'm
done playing your game, Captain Travis Banner of Earth's Guardian
Council Special Forces. Now, you're going to dance to my tune."
Banner glared at Moturo, noting that the trooper was perspiring heavily
under the unforgiving glare of the spotlight. Good, the bastard
deserves to squirm a little bit, Banner thought. Maybe I'll have the
technicians turn up the spotlight even more, just to see him ...
Moturo leaped from the chair, snarling, his hands -- no longer
restrained by the manacles -- reaching for Banner's throat. The
American's training kicked in an instant too late and he tumbled to the
floor, Moturo's heavy, muscular body pinning him down. Banner gurgled
helplessly; his air supply was being choked off by the thick, steel-
like fingers digging relentlessly into his throat.
Banner tried to move, but it was impossible. His vision starting to
gray and blur, he ground his teeth, trying to activate the distress
beacon hidden in a false molar. He knew it had been risky continuing
the interrogation after his partner was abruptly called away, but time
had been of the essence. That damn Patriarchal recon team has wreaked
so much havoc, sowed so much pain and misery and ...
His blurry vision tunneled. He wheezed, desperate to buy time. "How ...
how did you ...?"
"Nanites." Moturo gazed dispassionately at Banner, noting that the
man's face was beginning to turn a sickly shade of blue. "All Sentinels
have them -- in their blood, their sweat, their tears. They're quite
effective at neutralizing all sorts of physical restraints and
obstructions."
"Perspiration. Oh, God. The spotlight. You were ... perspiring the ...
entire time."
"Give the man a cigar." Moturo paused, then added, "You might have made
a fine Ghulam, Banner."
"A slave soldier?" Banner felt light-headed. "Never. I'd rather ... be
dead ..."
"As you wish, serf." Moturo effortlessly snapped Banner's neck like a
twig. Rising from the corpse of his former captor, its head twisted at
a grotesque angle, Moturo's nanite-enhanced hearing detected the
pounding of booted feet racing toward the cell. "Oh, how I admire their
spirit, if nothing else."
The Sentinel helped himself to his equipment, which Banner and the
others had taken from him and then arrogantly demanded an explanation
on its functions. "As if they could have ever hoped to comprehend any
of it," Moturo snorted, hiding his near-nakedness beneath a sleek,
black underuniform.
Mostly satisfied, despite the fact that his directed-energy weapons and
cartridges of weaponized Tyrekk's Folly were missing -- It appears
Banner and his friends aren't dumb as posts after all, just nearly so,
the Sentinel thought -- Moturo took a projectile gun from Banner's
holster and made his way toward the locked, metal door that blocked his
access to the rest of the Egyptian military base.
Wiping the sweat from his brow, Moturo grinned. The barrier wouldn't be
a hindrance for long.
***
WHOOP! BLAM! WHOOP! BLAM! WHOOP! BLAM!
It really isn't fair, Moturo thought, ignoring the howling sirens as he
stepped over the bodies of the three guards, stooping only to pick up
their guns. He was already focused on the heat signatures of six other
men and women converging on his position from adjoining corridors. Here
I am, a nanite-enhanced Sentinel using his full capabilities, taking on
opponents who really don't know what they're facing, despite what they
believe. The towering, well-built black man grinned coldly. After all,
did they really think I showed them all of my surprises the other times
I allowed myself to be captured?
He flicked perspiration into the remaining surveillance cameras,
shorting them out as the nanites destroyed the devices' delicate
electronic guts. Heavy gunfire echoed in the distance; Moturo "saw"
five, three-round bursts zipping toward him and, allowing the nanites
to temporarily take command of his muscles, sidestepped three of the
deadly bursts. The other two grazed him, but the nano-matrix of his
deployed battle armor -- black as night, marked by his unit and rank
inscription, along with the bat-winged, fire-breathing dragon insignia
of the Patriarchy -- easily shrugged off their kinetic energy.
The Sentinel returned fire. Two of the six figures dropped like rag
dolls while another two staggered, their grunts of pain music to
Moturo's ears. Nonetheless, the four who hadn't fallen were going to be
a real problem, judging from what his nanite-enhanced vision revealed.
"Bullet-proof gear. Kevlar. Impervious to the peashooters I have,"
Moturo noted calmly, moving purposefully toward his adversaries. "A
laser weapon could slice right through their defenses, but --"
Moturo's opponents suddenly pulled back, retreating in an orderly
fashion as blast doors crashed into place, sealing off the adjoining
corridors. The Sentinel knew his foes were trying to channel him in a
certain direction. It's too bad I only have a limited supply of
nanites, Moturo thought, or I'd simply use them to tunnel straight
through the walls and out of this base.
Coming upon the bodies of the man and woman he had just killed, Moturo
admired his marksmanship, the remnants of their cratered faces
forevermore contorted into shocked expressions. The Sentinel noted that
the survivors had taken their dead comrades' M-16 rifles with them,
depriving him of harder-hitting weapons. Another smart move on their
part, but it only delays the inevitable, Moturo thought. I shan't be
confined here much longer. Once out, I'll reestablish contact with Arik
and Hsan.
He wished he could have added "and the others" to his thoughts, but
Moturo couldn't: It was a fact that, over the past two and a half
years, this timeline's authorities had succeeded in killing some of the
recon unit's Sentinels, usually under the guise of "anti-terrorist"
actions, so as not to alarm the unsuspecting public about the true
nature of these particular enemies. Yet others had been lost while
probing the Sisterhood's activities in this timeline, which appeared to
mostly involve abducting and transforming unfortunate males, and some
females, into new sisters for use in the war against the Patriarchy.
While Moturo felt the loss of his brothers, he didn't give a damn about
the people of TL-600.
Respect has to be earned, Moturo thought, and about the only thing I
respect about the people of TL-600 is their fighting spirit. Otherwise,
they're just cattle waiting to be rounded up and put to better use.
His thoughts turned to the Sisterhood. They've been really cranky since
Arik nearly killed the Queen Dominus and the mistress of the Military
Guild with that nanobomb of his, Moturo thought. You'd think that after
centuries of fighting, those PMSing bitches would realize that all's
fair in love and war.
The corridor opened up into a chamber ahead of Moturo. The Sentinel
didn't need his nanites to know what awaited him as he entered it: A
dozen heavily armed soldiers, including two manning an autocannon, each
pointing the business end of his or her weapon squarely at his chest.
"FREEZE!" a voice barked.
"Oh, my," Moturo said in a droll voice, "I seem to have met my
Waterloo."
"DROP YOUR WEAPONS!"
The Sentinel did as he was commanded, tossing four handguns onto the
floor, grinning the entire time as he used the fleeting interlude to
ascertain his enemies' positions and weapons. The multi-barreled
autocannon posed the biggest threat, its fast rate of fire and large,
explosive rounds likely capable of breaching his armored form.
"DEACTIVATE YOUR ARMOR. LAY FACE DOWN, HANDS BEHIND YOUR BACK."
The lights flickered, then failed with an electric snap and hiss,
plunging the chamber into darkness.
"Lights out, boys and girls."
The thud of heavy weapons fire filled the chamber, the tracer-lit
streams of lethal metal passing through Moturo's position, but he was
already long gone, scuttling toward the autocannon's position. The
screams began in earnest as, in the darkness, the Sentinel literally
tore into his opponents, using his unnatural strength to rip arms out
of sockets, gouge out eyes and snap necks. A tearing sound and
brilliant stream of light filled the chamber as the autocannon went off
one last time, then fell silent, its two-man crew dying as they vainly
tried to stuff their entrails back into their savaged bellies.
Emergency lights kicked in, their wan illumination revealing a literal
chamber of horrors, its walls splattered with blood, with moans and
groans providing a sort of ghoulish music. Moturo rose from his crouch,
his armored figure presiding over a gruesome slaughterhouse: The twelve
soldiers lay dead or dying, brave men and women simply outclassed by an
enemy whose society had raised him from birth to destroy those who
opposed its Champions and dominate those who didn't.
A single figure appeared in the far entrance. Moturo's eyes narrowed as
he studied the stone-faced man, who stood as tall as he did -- 6'6" --
and sported a fit, muscular form topped off by prematurely graying,
close-cropped hair.
The Sentinel cocked his helmeted head. "Well, well. Look what the cat
dragged in."
"I am --"
"The Patriarchy knows your identity," Moturo interrupted forcefully,
"Colonel Anthony Gage. You're the leader of the Guardian Council's
Special Forces." He gestured at the carnage around him. "I'm about to
leave, but I can maim and kill more of your troops, if that's what you
want."
"You're going nowhere."
Moturo laughed. "Such spirit! I love it!" Advancing slowly on Gage, his
lean face hidden behind a black, shimmering faceplate, he growled,
"What's your plan, colonel? Everything we know about you points to a
man who's smart and pragmatic. You're not stupid enough to face a
Sentinel alone, are you? Of course not. Yet while I sense others in
this facility, none are in position to help you."
Gage crossed his arms. "I'm not alone."
"Sure you are."
A third, unseen, voice spoke. "Gage tells the truth, Sentinel Centurion
Moturo Kali'zat. He's not alone. He's never been alone."
Moturo stumbled to a stop, his eyes widening as, on either side of
Gage, fuzzy apparitions appeared, then solidified into the forms of two
well-endowed, raven-haired women wearing skintight, chameleonic
uniforms. Both were carrying heavy, black guns whose business ends
pointed unwaveringly at him. More apparitions appeared around the
Sentinel, resolving into frowning, taut-faced gorgeous women who
covered him with identical weapons.
"They're working together," Moturo muttered, his gaze alternately
focusing on Gage and the bitch in the matriarch's uniform next to him.
"This ... this is an unexpected development."
"Not for us it isn't," Gage offered.
The matriarch grinned, fingering the firing stud on her gun. "Time to
meet your destiny, Sentinel."
A flash of golden light filled Moturo's world, followed an instant
later by an all-engulfing darkness.
***
"You should have informed us sooner about the prisoner, colonel,"
Matriarch Sonora observed, shaking her head as she surveyed the
chamber. "Lives would have been saved."
"Everything was under control until Banner broke protocol," Gage
protested.
The chamber's main lighting flickered on, then -- with another snap and
hiss -- fizzled again.
"You were fortunate we were nearby, looking into some old ruins."
Gage's nod was barely perceptible. "Yes, we were." His voice was stiff.
"The Sentinel undoubtedly had multiple escape plans in place. All
Banner did was give him an immediate opening." Sonora studied the fried
light fixtures. "Never underestimate Sentinels, Gage, especially those
who are seemingly unarmed. Weaponized nanites are among their unseen
armaments."
Four women lifted Moturo's insensate form -- his nanite-powered combat
armor recessed into the utilitarian black underuniform he wore -- into
a silvery, 7-foot-long pod, then gripped its handles. Sonora and Gage
looked on dispassionately as the group disappeared in a golden glow,
transported up to a Chimera command craft that would take the Sentinel
to the Night Skies Hotel.
"We were fooled," Gage grudgingly admitted. "Having captured Sentinel
Centurion Moturo Kali'zat twice before, and learning the hard way how
good he is at escaping, we thought we were prepared the third time
around." He watched as body recovery teams entered the chamber and went
about their grim business. "Obviously, it wasn't enough." He jabbed an
accusing finger at Sonora. "Of course, it would benefit us immensely if
the Sisterhood shares its nanite-detection technology."
"As we speak, the Sisterhood is actively opposing the Patriarchy in
more than two dozen timelines," the matriarch noted dispassionately.
"They're focused on us and our sudden ferocity, a trait we really
haven't shown since the First and Second campaigns. It diverts most of
their attention from your timeline, to the point where all you've had
to deal with is a single, elite recon unit."
Sonora shot Gage a piercing look. "My point being, if we were to give
you advanced technology while members of that recon unit are still
freely roaming your world, it would be the equivalent of painting a big
target on your backs and yelling, ?Hey! We're allies of the Sisterhood!
Come kill us, already!'" She paused, then added, "And as bad as that
recon unit is, you really don't want the Patriarchy to commit more of
its resources to TL-600 -- and neither does the Sisterhood."
"Then the sooner we finish off that recon team, the better," Gage
grumbled.
"Agreed. Only then can the proposed alliance move to the next stage."
"I look forward to that day." Gage closed his eyes, bowing his head as
the limp bodies of a young man and woman, cut down in the prime of
their lives, were carried past him. "In the meantime, I need to go over
the intel we gleaned from this incident -- and write condolence letters
to some families."
The matriarch understood the pain Gage felt, having lost many of her
beloved sisters-in-arms during the centuries of fighting. "Well, for
what it's worth, TL-600 has been doing pretty good," Sonora said
gently. "Just so long as you stick to killing the Sentinels from a
distance, rather than trying to capture them for interrogation." She
licked her full, red, sensuous lips and smiled. "Leave that to us."
***
Consciousness gradually returned to Moturo. Cracking open an eye, he
scanned his surroundings while trying to make sense of his still-fuzzy
memories. He was in a small, utilitarian room that had a single, closed
entrance. Its golden-colored metal walls and floors emitted a soft,
diffused white light and were warm to the touch. He sensed, more than
felt, a heartbeat-like rhythm, seemingly filling the air all around
him, its pulse almost like a mother's lullaby. Moturo grimaced. As if
I'd know, he thought, never having known my mother. Probably some
nameless slave slut who's long dead now.
The Sentinel tried to move, but found that his nude form was
restrained, upright, against a wall by some sort of invisible force. He
tested the bond again, only to stifle a howl as a jolt of pain seared
his nerve endings.
The jolt crystallized his memories. "The Sisterhood and TL-600 ...
they've formed an alliance against the Patriarchy!" he whispered
fiercely. "Grand Fleet Lord Devus' suspicions were right!"
"An alliance? Not quite yet, but we're working on it."
Moturo grimaced. It was a woman's voice. Twisting his head in its
direction, he found himself gazing into the sparkling, emerald-green
eyes of one of the most beautiful women he had ever seen. She wasn't
there a moment ago! he swore to himself.
Her creamy white, oval-shaped face with its pert nose and full, red
pouty lips was framed by a lush, cascading mane of ringleted, shiny,
black hair. She wore nondescript clothing, but it did little to hide
her fit form or its generous assets -- including her soft, feminine
hands with long, elegant, short-nailed fingers, a very nice, yet firm,
bosom, a round rear and wide, baby-bearing hips. A very male part of
Moturo reacted instinctually -- he wanted to mate with this woman, to
impregnate her with his seed.
She smiled, flashing a set of perfect, white teeth. "Sorry, but I'm a
Joined woman. It wouldn't be proper for me to mate with you."
Moturo's face slackened with shock. "How did you know what I was
thinking?" he demanded. "How?!"
The woman tsked. "You know how. You're just too frightened to admit
it." Her smile turned predatory. "You're deep within the Night Skies
Hotel. You're our prisoner. We've stripped you of all your defenses.
You've been here for days, unconscious, breathing our air. We've given
you our water and fed you our food." She paused, drawing out the
torture. "The pathogen is inside you, multiplying, opening your mind to
our thoughts, and vice-versa. And, soon, with a bit of help from me, it
will bring out the woman hidden within you."
Moturo gritted his teeth. Nothing happened. Refusing to panic, he
focused his mind on a single word: TERMINATE. Again, nothing happened.
TERMINATE! TERMINATE!! A flicker of desperation erupted into a torrent.
TERMINATE!!!
"Silly male," the woman laughed, slinking in closer to the Sentinel,
"we've replaced your false, poison tooth with a real tooth -- enamel,
nerve pulp, and all." She leered at him. "And your suicide nanites? On
their own, they could have killed you the moment they detected the
pathogen in your bloodstream. But since they were slaved to a
particular mental command from you, and you were out of it, they
couldn't. And so we had time to scrub them from your system. Oh, the
wonders of biotechnology!"
"Bitch!"
"Oh, yes, and not just any bitch, my dear Sentinel, but the Queen
Dominus bitch herself."
Moturo's defiance grew. So this is the woman Arik nearly killed. Aloud,
"I'm not impressed, bitch."
"You will be."
Artemis reached in, clasping his hands in her own. Her flesh was warm,
moist and soft. Smiling enigmatically, she kissed his knuckles, then
released his hands. Moturo stared at her, more confused than anything
else. He knew the bitches could be unpredictable, but this took the
cake. Maybe being on the losing side of a centuries-long war has
knocked a screw loose or something, the Sentinel thought.
"You underestimate my capabilities, my dear Moturo," Artemis
pronounced, reading his mind. "But you're young, so it's not entirely
unexpected. Your family tree, as such, wasn't even a seedling yet when
the battles of the First and Second campaigns were fought. But soon,
very soon, you will become a part of the Fifth Campaign in a way you
never imagined."
"I will nev --" Moturo stopped. His hands were tingling. "What the
...?!"
Before his eyes, the Sentinel's hands changed, losing their masculinity
as flesh and bone warped and shifted into smaller, softer proportions.
Fingers lengthened and thinned, and nails grew outward, stretching into
half-inch long, ruby-red talons. The changes stopped and, from the
wrist down, Moturo sported a pair of delicate, chocolate-colored hands
that would be the envy of any ordinary woman.
But was Moturo grateful for the gift he was given? Of course not.
"AUGH! You bitch, you fucking bitch!" the Sentinel screamed, any
pretense of discipline gone, instantly swept away by the sight of his
new, slutty hands. He had seen the training holos of captured
Patriarchal troops being turned into women, but the holos were nothing
compared to the real deal. "They'll never take me back like this! You
BITCH! You fucking BITCH!"
"Your outburst amuses me, sister-to-be," Artemis observed. "But you're
right: You're damaged goods to the Patriarchy -- they'll never take you
back with hands like that." She smirked. "So, let's do something to
make you feel more at home in the Sisterhood."
Kneeling at Moturo's feet, she gently massaged the Sentinel's still
form, starting with his toes and working her way up. Wherever her hands
touched, skin softened, hair retracted and scars and blemishes
vanished. Moturo looked on, speechless, his eyes big as saucers as his
mind struggled to comprehend what was happening to his body -- and,
increasingly, his very sense of self.
It took Artemis twenty minutes to finish the massage. Admiring her
handiwork, she said, "I like what I see, and this is just the
beginning."
"If you were an honorable foe," Moturo whispered, regaining his ability
to speak, "you would end this torture and kill me."
The Queen Dominus' eyes narrowed. "It fascinates me that you, of all
people, would bring up the subject of honor. You, whose actions led to
the deaths of thousands in March 2007 when your recon unit destroyed a
major part of TL-600's ability to gather, refine and distribute
petroleum. You, whose disruptions since then have killed, maimed and
terrorized other innocent lives ..." her voice trailed off. A small,
sad smile crossed her face. "It's ironic that you're asking for an
honorable exit from this life, considering you were part of a unit
whose remaining members continue to deny it to so many others."
"Whatever, bitch. It's not like you or the Sisterhood carry any moral
weight about right and wrong!"
"The Champions started the war when they attacked Gaia!" Artemis
snarled, quivering with sudden fury. "They conquered my homeworld! They
killed my mother!! They abducted my soulmate!!!" Her voice became a
screech. "They decimated Gaia!!!! They exterminated our allies!!!!!
They --"
"We hurt you bad, didn't we?" Moturo growled. "Good. I hope the pain
never ends, bitch. I hope you live long enough to see the last of your
people, the whores of the timelines, die at our hands."
"Never." Artemis was resolute. "The Sisterhood has done some things
since Gaia's fall that our foremothers, in their innocence, would have
found appalling." Her face was mere inches from his. "We live with that
fact day in and day out, eating at our souls. I can only imagine what
it's like for the Patriarchy, whose sins are orders of magnitude worse
than anything we've ever done."
She drew back. "That said, two wrongs don't make a right. The Fifth
Campaign will break the 800-plus-year cycle of war once and for all."
Artemis smiled. "And you're going to help us."
Moturo snorted. "Then get it over with. One more gun-toting bitch isn't
going to make a difference."
"Oh, my dear Sentinel. You're going to be so much more than a run-of-
the-mill member of the Sisterhood," Artemis murmured. "You see, we
don't acquire Sentinels very often. So, when we do -- well, let's just
say that some of our best matriarchs have come from the Patriarchy."
Her words were like an ice pick rammed into Moturo's heart. "Oh, gods,
no," he croaked. "You --"
"Oh, goddesses, yes!" Artemis purred. She unzipped her slacks, their
crotch already dimpled with feminine dew, and reached in, gently
stroking her Venus mound's inner vaginal lips. "I'm not wearing
panties," she cooed. "They'd just get in the way of things." Artemis
closed her eyes, savoring the exquisite sensation emanating from
between her legs. Moments later, she quaked, then sighed. "That hit the
spot," she said, withdrawing her hands. They were slathered in a clear,
jelly-like substance.
"Royal jelly -- it's the pathogen in its most potent form," Artemis
explained. "Using this, a woman doesn't even have to have intercourse
with a male to complete his transformation. It also lessens the risk of
his mind being shattered. But only queens and guild mistresses can
produce it." She paused, listening to Moturo's ragged breathing.
"Obviously, I'm one of them."
Artemis grabbed Moturo's nipples, gently twisting them in her fingers.
He screamed as, instantly, they grew erect and bloomed in size and
sensitivity. In the next moment, his aerolae were spreading out and
thickening, surrounding his new female nipples, pushing them out from
his still-flat chest.
"Nice. Very nice," the Queen Dominus observed. "Now, for the next
step."
She released Moturo's nipples, only to cup his chest in her hands and
begin, literally, kneading his breasts into existence. The flesh
continued growing outward as Artemis repeated the exercise, her eyes
locked on the Sentinel's swelling assets -- assets that, in perhaps two
minutes' time, became newly rounded, full-nippled tits jutting proudly
from his hairless, feminine chest.
"They definitely won't take you back now," the Queen Dominus said
gleefully. She wrapped her full, red, pouty-lipped mouth around one of
Moturo's pencil eraser-sized nipples and suckled, slathering it in her
hot, pathogen-rich saliva. "Ooh. You're already producing milk!" she
exclaimed, licking daintily at a thin, white trail dribbling down her
chin. "You'll be able to breast-feed your newborn children!"
Moturo didn't acknowledge her. He stared up Artemis, seemingly lost to
the outside world as, within his body, a losing battle was being fought
at a cellular and genetic level. The pathogen was rewriting his DNA,
inserting itself into every nook and cranny -- and now it was breaching
his mind's defenses.
Artemis grabbed his balls, squeezing and pushing at them, forcing them
up into his body, where they changed into egg-laden ovaries. She smiled
as his now-empty scrotum pulled tight against his crotch and fissured,
splitting into two, thick, outer labial lips. The thin, red fissure
deepened, opening a tunnel into his body, a tunnel that linked up with
a developing womb, which in turn sprouted a pair of fallopian tubes
that snaked their way into his newly formed ovaries.
"Your new, internal plumbing is just about finished, Moturo," she
whispered into his ear. "Now it's time for some additional work on your
exterior."
The Queen Dominus tugged at the Sentinel's short, curly black hair,
pulling it into long, thick locks of shiny, straight blackness that
spilled past Moturo's smaller shoulders, tumbling down his back to
tickle his buttocks. As his hips began cracking and widening into baby-
bearing proportions, she cupped his firm, muscular ass cheeks in her
soft hands and began kneading. New layers of feminine fat appeared
wherever she kneaded, adding a fullness and softness to a behind that
was now as plump and round as any woman's.
Reaching between Moturo's legs, Artemis slipped a finger into her
sister's vaginal cleft and grunted approvingly, pulling out after
gently massaging her clitoris with her thumb and lightly touching her
unbroken hymen. Placing a hand across Moturo's vagina, she focused
briefly, gently teasing out a bare, Venus mound. Finally, Artemis
traced her finger over his mound, causing a line of thick, curly black
pubic hair to sprout in its wake, forming the outline of an inverted
triangle that quickly filled in.
"Let's see ... what are we missing?" Artemis asked herself, admiring
her handiwork as an artist would a painting. "Nipples, check. Breasts,
check. Vagina, check. Nice, long, thick hair, check. Great ass, check.
Good hips, check. Ah, I see!"
And so she leaned in and gently kissed Moturo. After a moment's
hesitation, the new sister's lips parted, and she reciprocated Artemis'
action, their soft, pink tongues dueling playfully. At the same time,
the Queen Dominus tickled her throat, further warping already-changing
vocal cords.
A while later, their mouths separated, a thin, silvery thread of hot
saliva linking the two women for only a moment longer. "You taste
great, Monora," Artemis proclaimed, using Moturo's new name for the
first time, watching the former Sentinel's mouth becoming full and
pouty like her own.
A thick layer of shimmering, bright red lipstick painted Monora's mouth
as it curved upward in a tentative smile -- one that faltered. "Monora?
That doesn't sound quite right. I ... I'm Moturo. I am a Sentinel. I
belong to the 503rd Patriarchal reconnaissance unit. I am --"
His voice trailed off as he saw his firm, generous, chocolate-colored
bosom protruding proudly from his chest, his erect nipples leaking a
mix of milk and warm, clear fluid. Only then did he feel the emptiness
between his legs, the cushion of his buttocks and, worst of all, a
yearning to pass the gift of womanhood on to another male. He looked up
at Artemis, his brown eyes questioning. "I ... I --"
A sparkling, emerald-green tide spread through his irises, forcing the
brown to the edges, then washing it out entirely. There was a moment of
silence, the gentle, rhythmic heartbeat of the Night Skies Hotel's
Infinity crystal the only thing that could be sensed. Artemis looked on
expectantly.
"I am Monora." Her emerald-green eyes glittered. "I belong to, and
serve, a loving Sisterhood."
***
CHAPTER II: RESURRECTION
***
"Well, don't you look like the cat who just ate the canary," Tegan
observed wryly, looking up from her experiment to see Artemis walking
jauntily into the laboratory.
"You would, too, had you just initiated a Sentinel into our ranks," the
Queen Dominus chirped, coming over to the scientist. "Monora is
currently satiating her lust on, ironically, a wannabe gangsta rapper.
However, I expect her to be of great benefit to us once she's past the
initial phase -- in fact, I think she'll earn a matriarch's feathers in
no time at all."
"Good. I'm sure Basima and the Military Guild can use all the help they
can get."
Artemis nodded gravely. "Agreed. Now, tell me: What's the latest
progress in getting those crystalline artifacts to do something other
than occupy shelf space and soak up irreplaceable lab time?"
The artifacts -- two crystals, one red and one green -- had been given
to the Sisterhood two and a half years ago by Earth's Guardian Council,
as part of an exchange intended to pave the way for a full alliance
between the powers. Believed to date to a time period roughly 14,000
years in Earth's past, the crystals were etched with a language that
bore an uncanny resemblance to Gaia's ancestral tongue. In the years
since the exchange, the words had been roughly translated to mean: "The
all-seeing fount of knowledge."
Needless to say, the finding had whetted the Science Guild's appetite,
which immediately devoted as many of its resources as possible to
unraveling the mystery of the crystals and other, related, artifacts
the Sisterhood possessed. More than once, however, the attention and
resources lavished by the guild were undercut by the needs of Project
Gaia's Aegis, an equally important endeavor that held the promise of
ending, once and for all, the war between the Sisterhood's remnant and
the Patriarchy.
"Well," Tegan said, gesturing toward a device that held the two
artifacts and a micro Infinity crystal in its slots, "we've discovered
that these particular artifacts respond only to dark energy -- and lap
it up like there's no tomorrow." She removed the micro Infinity crystal
from its slot, handing it to Artemis.
"By the goddesses!" the Queen Dominus gasped. The crystal was cold and
dark. "Are you telling me the artifacts did this?!"
Tegan nodded. "In a matter of seconds, no less. Their power demands
were simply too much for the micro crystal to handle -- it burned out,
unable to handle the flow of dark energy." She sighed. "If that wasn't
enough, this micro was optimized to handle power demands. Extrapolating
the results onto other classes of Infinity crystals finds greater
endurance times, but only a few minutes at most."
"How far up the scale did you go?"
"Large Infinity crystals were the highest we went -- and those almost
did the trick, I think."
Artemis frowned, deep in thought. "That leaves only the giga-class of
Infinity crystal," she finally said.
Tegan nodded in silent agreement. Artemis knew what the scientist
wanted -- And, she admitted to herself, what I want, too: answers.
Particularly regarding the ancient plague, especially with the
Patriarchy still hellbent on finding a reservoir of the diabolical
stuff to use against us.
"OK, link the artifacts to the hotel's crystal, but make sure all
safeguards are in place to sever the connection instantly, if need be."
"You're not comfortable with this," Tegan noted, reading her queen's
body language.
"I'm not," the Queen Dominus agreed. "But the Night Skies Hotel's
Infinity crystal is the oldest and most powerful of the giga-class
crystals. If it can't handle the artifacts' power demands ..."
"As much as it pains me to say this, we could always abandon this line
of research, my queen," Tegan said softly. "We have other leads on
links between our preherstoric ancestors and TL-600, after all. For
starters, those unusual formations on the ocean floor off the coast of
Cuba that Seren told us about. Other possible ruins, as well."
Artemis shook her head. "We've invested too much to give up now," she
said. "Besides, most of those alleged ruins are going to be hard to
properly investigate without drawing attention to ourselves -- just ask
Sonora and Trissa about that -- something we can't afford until the
alliance with TL-600 has been cemented and our presence publicly
acknowledged to the masses by their leaders."
"Very well, then. My team and I will get to work on it right away."
"How long?"
Tegan ran some quick mental calculations. "Four days."
"Excellent. I'll inform Seren." Artemis saw Tegan's questioning look.
"Those artifacts are as much a part of TL-600's herstory as they are
ours," the Queen Dominus explained. "Besides, this will give Seren and
her colleagues a chance to see a side of the Sisterhood they haven't
experienced yet."
***
"You promise you'll be back in time, mother?"
Seren looked up from packing the last of her bags, seeing her beautiful
little girl standing in the doorway. "Yes, honeybunch, I'll be back. I
wouldn't miss seeing you sing for anything."
Nine-year-old Kimora smiled and rushed into her mother's arms. "Hey,
there!" Seren laughed, swinging her only child high into the air.
"Aren't you full of energy this morning!"
"I love you."
"You're the light of my life, little one." Seren buried her face in
Kimora's dark hair, inhaling her scent. God, Seren thought, she has so
much of Tritt in her. "Truly, the light of my life."
There was a discreet cough from the doorway. "Seren? The Hummingbird
has alighted. It's waiting for you." The voice belonged to Etrusca,
Kimora's nanny, who had the necessary security clearances and training
to assist Seren in caring not only for Kimora, but Traci as well.
"Tell the sisters I'll be up shortly." Gazing into her daughter's big,
brown eyes, Seren smiled and tousled her hair. "You behave yourself,
now, OK? Don't give Etrusca any grief or I'll hear about it."
Kimora hugged her mother. "I'll be good. I always am." The girl's tone
grew serious. "I'll help keep an eye on Traci, too."
Seren blinked back sudden, unbidden tears. "That's my littler trooper."
She stood, deftly sidestepping Etrusca as the young woman came in and
picked up her bags. "I'll be counting the hours until I can hold you
again, honeybunch."
With a final, longing look at Kimora, Seren stepped out of the bedroom
and into the apartment's hallway, heading toward the main entrance.
Passing by the living room, she heard the television blaring; poking
her head inside, she saw Traci sitting on the sofa, staring at the big-
screen plasma set. An old "Jerry Springer" show was on, one that was
actually a tamer-than-usual episode. Traci looked at it passively, with
no animation or energy whatsoever on her part.
Seren pursed her lips. I wish they could take her off those damn
sedatives, she thought, irritated. But the archaeologist knew that's
all it was, a wish. If the sedatives were removed, Traci's sex drive
would reassert itself, which wasn't a good thing, considering she was
the result of Tritt being exposed to Tyrekk's Folly by the Patriarchy
while imprisoned on TL-171 -- Uhrth. It was a bastardized version of
the Sisterhood's pathogen, one which left its male victims as
permanent, bimbo-like females.
"Traci?" Seren called out softly. The woman didn't stir. Seren spoke
louder. "Traci!"
Her curly brown-haired head turned toward Seren. Sunglasses hid the
buxom woman's golden-hued eyes. "Yes ... oh, Seren! It's you! I'm sorry
... I must have zoned out there for a moment."
"You really should be watching something other than ?Jerry Springer,'
you know," Seren chided.
Traci smiled wanly. "True. But I just feel so tired today."
Nonetheless, her long, crimson-nailed hand darted to the remote and,
after a bit of fumbling, tapped a pair of buttons. Animal Planet's
"Meerkat Manor" filled the 50-inch, 1080p high-definition screen.
"There. That better?"
Seren laughed. "Definitely!" Hearing the nanny calling her name, Seren
spoke faster. "I'll be back from this business trip by the end of the
week and, uh --" Seren's voice faltered "-- I just wanted to let you
know that I love you like a sister."
Her face flushing at Traci's confused expression and words -- "Well,
I'd hope so. You're my older sister, after all!" -- Seren ducked out of
the room, her mind awhirl. I wish she could understand that she's
really Tritt, that she's really my husband. But she can't, damnit,
thanks to Tyrekk's Folly!
Almost running toward the apartment's entrance, where Etrusca was
patiently waiting after delivering Seren's bags to the Hummingbird, she
heard Kimora's plaintive voice. Turning, she saw her daughter standing
outside her bedroom, biting her lip.
"Yes, honeybunch, what is it? Momma's really got to get going --"
"I want dad back. I like Traci, and she's fun to be around when she's
with it, but it's not the same."
"I know how you feel, Kimora," Seren said. Her heart nearly broke,
seeing her daughter's serious little face. Oh, how she's had to grow up
so fast! It isn't fair to either of us! Aloud, "I've wanted to see,
hold and love your father again for more than four years now."
"Tell the sisters to never give up, to try harder, that they owe us."
"I will." Seren then turned and stepped out of the apartment. Looking
back one last time, she saw Etrusca incline her head, then close the
door. Making her way toward the roof, Kimora's parting words echoed in
her mind. "If only it were that simple, honeybunch," Seren whispered
regretfully. "If only."
***
Stepping out onto the apartment tower's roof, Seren spared a look at
the neighborhood around it. Homes dotted the lush, rolling green
landscape below her, linked by roads that had only a few vehicles on
them. Copses of old-growth trees -- mainly oaks, maples and pines
spared by the bulldozers -- filled in many areas, while newer trees
were planted near the homes and other apartment towers.
In the distance, she spied the "privacy barrier" that surrounded the
neighborhood -- in reality, a 15-foot-tall, 6-foot-thick, steel-
reinforced concrete blast barricade disguised as a rammed-earth wall.
Hidden within and near the wall were heavy weapons emplacements,
including anti-aircraft guns, additions made two and a half years ago
after it was learned that an elite Patriarchal reconnaissance unit was
prowling the planet. From her vantage point, Seren spied men and women
manning the barrier's two main entrances and patrolling its perimeter.
They wore civilian clothing and affected civilian behaviors, but she
knew they were really highly trained special forces personnel with but
one duty: protect and defend the people living inside the barrier.
Such was life within the aptly named Solitude, a United Nations-built
district in rural Virginia that was home to most of the people,
including members of Earth's Guardian Council and their families, who
were aware that their Earth was merely one of a staggering number of
parallel Earths, all inhabiting the seemingly endless multiverse.
"It's enough to make one wonder what life's really all about," Seren
said wistfully. "There could be another me out there right now, no more
than a quantum ripple away, living another life."
Ahead of her, the outlines of the Hummingbird -- a key-shaped ship
whose fore was wide and rounded while its aft tapered into a thick,
conical form -- appeared out of thin air, its translucent lines
shimmering into solidity. It was the Sisterhood's successor to the
Floater-class of vehicles, which had been the private and public
workhorses back in the old days on long-conquered Gaia.
A circular doorway cycled opened, revealing not only Seren's neatly
stacked bags, but a carpeted, bejeweled interior and the pilot and co-
pilot as well -- two buxom, raven-haired women with entrancing,
emerald-green eyes. Climbing aboard, Seren sat in a plush seat and,
moments later, marveled as the ship "vanished" around her -- Wow, she
thought, it's sort of like the invisible jet used by the comic book
character Wonder Woman! -- and lifted off with nary a sound. It was
with a mixture of exhilaration and fear that she watched the roof drop
away below, becoming smaller and smaller until, eventually, Solitude
itself wasn't much bigger than an oversized postage stamp.
Clearly, this was no ordinary, run-of-the-mill Hummingbird used for
hauling cargo or carrying lineages. No, this Hummingbird was obviously
a high-end, diplomatic model meant to ferry what the Sisterhood
considered to be important dignitaries. Seren grinned, deciding to
fulfill the role expected of her.
"Take me to your leaders," Seren gravely commanded, a small smile
tugging at her mouth.
"Will do, ma'am," the pilot said, her eyes twinkling as her hands flew
across a holographic display.
A gateway opened up and, this time, the Hummingbird really did vanish -
- disappearing for an instant as it leapt into the vortex and
reappeared moments later above the Andean Altiplano in South America,
where the Night Skies Hotel awaited its guest.
***
Queen Dominus Artemis surveyed the scene before her: Rows upon rows of
occupied chairs sat in the lush, green meadow before the dais she stood
on, which itself fronted the pulsing heart of the Night Skies Hotel --
the largest and oldest of the Infinity crystals, the one from which so
many others could trace their origins to. It rose majestically into the
cloudless, azure sky, its 20-foot-thick, emerald-green pillar aglow as
it slowly pulsed, its capabilities nowhere near being fully tapped.
Well, that's going to change pretty damn soon, Artemis thought, looking
thoughtfully at the hubbub of activity going on around the crystal's
base, which was deeply embedded in the soil.
Its crystalline roots, ranging from the size of tree trunks to no
thicker than a line of thread, were a jumbled mass spread throughout
the arboretum and beyond, linking every aspect of the hotel to the
power source. Short of somehow neutralizing the crystal itself, there
would never be a way to knock out power to the entire Night Skies Hotel
complex, so dense and tangled was its root system. It was an
intentionally organic design dating back to the year 820 CE, when the
Sisterhood made the transition to crystalline-based technology.
"How much longer, Tegan?" Artemis called out impatiently.
"Another minute, that's all," the scientist said absent-mindedly, her
mind fully attuned to a shimmering, crystalline tendril no thicker than
a straw that had just burst out of the ground. "I'm encoding it with
the final fail-safes."
"Good, because I think our guests are getting bored." Artemis smiled.
"I'd offer them drinks and food, but I doubt they'd accept, despite our
assurances about its safety." The smile faltered. "Goddesses! With that
sort of paranoia, I'm surprised some of them didn't bring along their
own oxygen tanks."
"Got it!" Tegan gave the Queen Dominus a thumbs up sign. "You're good
to go!"
Artemis moved to the front of the dais, her eyes solemnly scanning the
dignitaries, picking out not only Seren, but also Colonel Anthony Gage
among the representatives from Earth's Guardian Council. As for the
Sisterhood, its representatives included Corona, mistress of the
Culture Guild; Megan; Tessa; and the newly minted Monora. Conspicuously
absent was Basima, mistress of the Military Guild; she was currently
engaged with her matriarchs, including Sonora, in planning and waging
war against the encroaching Patriarchy in dozens of timelines -- in
particular, TL-579, aka Enlil.
"Today is a herstoric moment," Artemis boomed, sonicphones amplifying
her voice. "For it is today we shall learn more about the intertwined
herstory of Gaia and TL-600."
A smattering of applause erupted from the crowd. Inclining her head and
smiling softly, the Queen Dominus continued: "What was it that brought
Gaia's unexpectedly advanced ancestors to TL-600 more than 14,000 years
ago? What did they do when they were here? What sort of civilization
did they have? And what --" Artemis' countenance darkened "--
ultimately led to the plague that swept not only Gaia, but TL-600 as
well, wiping out both timelines' predecessors?
"It is these these questions that we seek answers to, along with other
enlightenment, and not only for Gaia, but for the people of TL-600 as
well," Artemis concluded.
She made a small motion with her hand and, moments later, Tegan's
crystalline tendril wound its way onto and across the dais toward
Artemis. At the same time, one of Tegan's assistants carefully handed
two inscribed crystals -- one red, one green -- to the Queen Dominus.
The relics. The ones whose words had been translated to mean, "The all-
seeing fount of knowledge." Artemis allowed the tendril to wrap itself
around first the red crystal, then its green counterpart. Nothing
happened, nor would anything happen until she focused her mind and gave
the appropriate command.
A bird-like trill filled the suddenly still meadow. It was Artemis,
speaking in the musical, native tongue of Gaia. There followed, in
quick succession, another trill, two warbles, a squawk and two
whistles.
The tendril flared, its brilliance nearly blinding. The relics were
sucking in dark energy, much as a newborn babe at its mother's breast
drinks her milk.
It wasn't enough.
Other tendrils in the Infinity crystal's root system went silent, their
dark energy siphoned off by the now-thickening tendril feeding the
relics. The main crystal compensated, rerouting power to other parts of
its root system, keeping the hotel complex at full power.
Still, it wasn't enough.
Thick, cable-like roots were the next to lose their dark energy as it
was voraciously gobbled up by the relics, with no apparent results to
show for their seemingly insatiable hunger.
The relics widened their search for the all-sustaining dark energy.
Now tree trunk-sized roots fell silent, their energy drawn off by the
relics, which had started to glow with an unearthly light. A heartbeat-
like pulse became audible, filling the meadow, followed an instant
later by a similar pulse -- the first originating from the relics, the
second from the Infinity crystal.
The crowd gasped. Artemis followed their shocked gazes and had to clamp
down on her own rising fear as she saw entire sections of the hotel
complex going dark, enough of the root system compromised to the point
that the main crystal could no longer fully compensate. Not since the
terrible days of the First and Second campaigns had the hotel suffered
such an extensive loss of power.
"By the goddesses' blackest hearts!" Artemis cried out. "Tegan --!"
"I know, I know!" the scientist said, once again turning her mind
inward to focus on the tendril. "At least 70 percent of the root system
has to be idled in order for these sorts of power interruptions!"
Inside the hotel complex, chaos was spreading despite the Sisterhood's
knowledge, and preparation for, the power disruptions that had been
deemed a possibility: Club XXXscape plunged into darkness, leaving
hundreds of sisters huddled in the inky blackness. The Las Vegas-style
casino came to a screeching halt, its machines blinkered by the power
loss, its showgirls, pit bosses and other employees left with nothing
to do but wait and hope for the best. Worse yet, two of the major
housing blocs for hotel employees blacked out, catching more than a
thousand women in various states of dress and undress, in showers and
baths and saunas and not, eating, reading and in the rapture of sex.
About the only ones not directly affected were those who were in the
middle of their sleep cycles.
At least there aren't any native guests to worry about, Artemis
thought, briefly opening her telepathic link to her sisters and
instantly regretting it. While the hotel complex had manifested on the
Andean Altiplano, it hadn't revealed itself to what few inhabitants
there were in its immediate environs.
"Artemis! Are things under control?!" Seren demanded.
"Yes!" the Queen Dominus snapped. "The fail-safes don't kick in unless
the primary Infinity crystal is threatened -- and it's not!" Her harsh
tone immediately softened. "My apologies, Seren. We knew disruptions
were possible, but had hoped they wouldn't materialize this fast or be
so extensive."
"Well, they did, and --"
The heartbeat-like pulse emanating from the Infinity crystal suddenly
increased in frequency and intensity, and the crystal's glare filled
the meadow, not yet painful, but quickly getting there.
"-- oh, my God," Seren finished, staring up in awe at the spectacle
before her.
It was no longer possible to distinguish between the heartbeat of the
Infinity crystal or that of the relics. They were beating in complete
unison. And then it happened: the fail-safes kicked in. Or, rather,
tried to kick in. The twin heartbeats stuttered, falling out of sync --
but the interruption lasted for only an instant. In the next instant,
the Infinity crystal and relics were as one again, pulsing faster and
becoming brighter.
"It's time to put a stop this." Artemis moved toward the Infinity
crystal, her arms outstretched, the musical language of ancient Gaia
emerging not only from her mouth, but singing through her mind,
reaching out to the crystal with its telepathic capabilities. "I will
have no more of this!"
"NO!" A form hurtled across the dais, slamming into the Queen Dominus,
sending her headfirst onto the meadow floor, where she landed with a
heavy THUMP! "Even you, Artemis, who has forged the deepest mindbond
with the crystal, cannot stop the chain reaction now!"
"Corona!" Artemis yelled as Seren and Gage helped her to her feet. "I
knew what I was doing!"
"Those fail-safes were your own, and look at what happened to them!"
The Culture Guild's mistress gave her queen a pleading look. "The
torrent of energy pouring through the crystal would have blown your
mind apart! Is that what you want?! To die? To --"
The arboretum trembled ever so slightly.
"-- what was that?"
The earthquake struck the Night Skies Hotel, jolting the complex to its
very foundation. And, while the physical damage was negligible -- the
complex having been built tough in the first place and further
reinforced over the centuries -- the same couldn't be said for the
psyches of its inhabitants.
Corona, Tegan and the others on the dais were tossed off like so many
ragdolls, landing in crumpled heaps on the heaving, quaking ground,
where Artemis, Seren and the other dignitaries had fallen to their
hands and knees, riding out the land's turbulence. Twelve agonizingly
slow seconds passed before the quake subsided, and an eerie stillness
returned.
Artemis scrambled over to Corona's side, her earlier anger replaced by
concern for her friend. "Thank the goddesses you're still in one
piece!" the Queen Dominus murmured, checking Corona's vital signs and
finding nothing amiss, other than for a dazed look in the mistress'
eyes.
Around them, similar scenes of compassion were unfolding: Megan
assisting Monora to her feet; Seren and Gage moving about, giving first
aid and comforting words where needed; and other dignitaries, of all
races, creeds, and cultures, lending each other a helping hand. Artemis
marveled at the scene, seeing a microcosm of unity -- as brief as it
might be -- that, if properly nurtured, would one day lead to the
Patriarchy's final defeat and the liberation of its empire of
timelines.
"Is it over?"
Artemis rose, lifting Corona with her. "I think so," the Queen Dominus
said cautiously.
Turning toward the Infinity crystal, she saw that it still glowed
fiercely, along with the artifacts, which were engulfed by the now tree
trunk-thick crystalline tendril. But the heartbeat-like pulses were
missing, a calming stillness filling the arboretum in their absence.
"This, ah, this didn't go quite as planned," Artemis announced,
surprised to hear that the sonicphone system was still functioning. The
neutral-faced dignitaries crowded around her. "The Science Guild will
do some tweaking in the coming days and weeks to resolve these issues
so we can move --"
WHUMP! The dais exploded, raining debris all around Artemis and the
dignitaries.
"-- now what?!" the Queen Dominus yelped, a plaintive note in her
voice.
The ground continued convulsing around the base of the Infinity
crystal, finally splitting open as not one or two or even three, but a
dozen log-thick crystalline shoots sprouted and reached for the sky.
They grew and grew and grew, until finally stopping 10 or so feet below
the height of the main crystal. One by one, the shoots began glowing,
drawing in even more dark energy, further augmenting the flow from the
main crystal into the artifacts. Artemis and the others drew back,
shading their eyes from the intensity, a glare that was building to the
point of supernova brilliance.
And then it happened: A spear of pure, white light shot up from a
shoot, quickly followed by another spear of light from its neighbor, a
process repeated ten more times before the main crystal itself blasted
a gigantic beam of energy straight up through Earth's atmosphere.
Combining with the lesser beams beyond the atmosphere, the now-massive
stream of energy roared past the shocked inhabitants aboard the
international space station, reaching for a distant, desolate point
upon the cratered and scarred surface of the moon. The beam vaporized
the lunar regolith covering the region, along with an unmanned Chinese
lander, exposing bedrock to light for the first time in nearly 14,000
years -- and revealing a giant pyramid, one that dwarfed anything the
ancient Egyptians had ever built, literally sculpted from a single,
gargantuan block of blue-veined, black crystal.
The energy set off a reaction within the strange pyramid, causing it to
shimmer with a golden energy that rapidly intensified as it drew in its
own dark energy, almost as if it were a giant battery powering up for
the first time in untold ages. The pyramid shot out a stream of golden
light into the airless void around it, then dimmed once more, returning
to its age-old slumber. This thick, pulsating glob of energy swept past
a space shuttle, leaving its crew slack-jawed in amazement. Near
Earth's exosphere, the blob split into multiple, massive balls of
energy that "caged" the planet and then disintegrated into a sleet of
golden energy that plummeted toward its surface.
The day side of the planet didn't get much of a show, but it was a
different story on the night side, where people witnessed a global
aurora borealis, the most beautiful they had ever seen, with sheets of
golden energy dancing in the skies before seemingly plunging toward the
ground, merging not only with land and water, but people as well. Of
those shafts, a single one reached out toward a specific location in
the Andean Altiplano of central South America. Angling toward the Night
Skies Hotel complex, it struck the Infinity crystal, coursing through
it and into the relics, shattering them.
"Wow!" "Ooh!" "Aah!"
Artemis, Seren and the other dignitaries watched with apprehension as
the red and green shards sublimed into two masses of electrically
charged energy. The roiling energy merged, forming a yellowish cloud, a
cloud that coalesced into the form of a tall, adult human male holding
a wooden staff engraved with odd-looking glyphs and elegant, cursive
script. The being's long, flowing white hair and short, white beard
lent it an air of ageless wisdom that reinforced its regal appearance.
The entity slowly scanned the crowd in front of it, its head swiveling
from side to side. Turning its attention to Artemis, its silver-colored
eyes studied her, as if it were reading her soul. Finally, it spoke:
"Greetings, Neera. It gladdens me to see that you survived the
Sorrows."
***
Artemis blinked. "What? I'm sorry, but you're mistaken. I'm not --"
"You are Neera," the entity repeated, "and you're one of Haven's finest
alpha apexes."
"Haven? Alpha apexes? The Sorrows? What the --" Artemis shook her head,
flustered by the unexpected turn of events. "Who ... who -- what are
you?" the Queen Dominus stammered.
"I am Janus, a Beholder of the Oversoul, the all-seeing fount of
knowledge," the entity stated. Concern creased its face. "You seem
confused, Neera. Are you ill? Do you require medical attention?"
"I'm not confused, I'm not ill and I don't need medical attention,"
Artemis said flatly. It's time to take charge of the situation, she
thought. "It's you who might need help. I am Queen Dominus Artemis,
leader of Gaia's Sisterhood." She gestured to those around her. "This
is Corona, mistress of the Sisterhood's Culture Guild. Over there is
Seren, representative of Earth's Guardian Council. And that imposing,
pissed off-looking man next to her? He's Colonel Anthony Gage,
commanding officer of the special forces troops that are the Guardian
Council's teeth."
"No one here knows what the hell you're talking about, Beholder," Gage
said tersely.
The silvery-eyed entity silently shifted its gaze skyward, leaving the
Queen Dominus with the distinct impression that it was acquiring more
information, a thought further reinforced when the Beholder's form
brightened from within, revealing not human organs and blood vessels,
but a solid, yellow crystal core aglow with energy, surrounded by some
sort of clear liquid. In due time the glow faded, and the entity
returned its attention to Artemis and the others, regarding them with a
now-bewildered look.
"Well, what is it?" It was Artemis, unnerved by the entity's attitude.
The Beholder stirred. "You are the spitting image of Neera -- and yet,
more than 14,000 years have passed since I was last activated," Janus
whispered.
"Yes. We dated the shale your crystals were buried in to roughly 12,000
BCE," Artemis affirmed.
"They were dug out of the seabed off the coast of Cuba," Seren added,
"more than a mile below the ocean's surface, amid the ruins of what
might once have been a city."
Artemis nodded. "Other ruins and relics have also been --"
An eerie keening filled the arboretum, cutting off the Queen Dominus.
She and the others involuntarily stepped back, shocked by the
Beholder's wail. They traded uneasy glances, unused to seeing grief in
anything other than another human being, and the Beholder was clearly
not human.
"The world I knew is gone!" Janus cried out. "Others of my kind are
unresponsive, and I am isolated from the Oversoul. The omnisexes are
nowhere to be found. None of the magnificent CITIrings and megalithic
cities of the Consensus -- teeming with the people I was sworn to serve
and enlighten -- grace the skies nor dot the land!
"Then there's the planet itself ... the ice sheets have retreated,
exposing land that now blooms with life ... oceans have risen, drowning
other lands ... there are deserts where savannas and forests once
dominated and vice-versa. And the beasts -- so many have vanished,
includi