Chapter Ten: The Shadow of Cincinnatus
The Grove: Day Six, 1600 hours
--------------------------------
*Sisters, can you hear me?* she again pleaded with the silence that was
roiling her mind with its emptiness. When she finally had been able to
rise after the mind link was broken, it was not just her own reaction to
what she had witnessed there that had driven her to her knees. That may
have been difficult for her to cope with, but it was nothing compared to
the sudden silence that filled her mind in its aftermath. It was a
terrifying sensation for her to experience such absolute stillness in
her mind. Until now, there had been no single moment of her existence
that had not been shadowed by the presence of her sisters.
They had always been there in her thoughts. And even if she withdrew
from them for her own privacy they were still there as a distant murmurs
that comforted her and soothed her in its companionship. And now that
murmur had ceased. For the first time in her life she could not hear the
presence of her sisters there and in that solitude she began to
comprehend how lonely their brothers, the race of men must be with only
themselves inside of their thoughts.
M'Tehr was still slowly making her way back from where she had parted
from Singh and those who accompanied him. The impact of the vision that
the Arath' Mahar had forced on them all still weighing heavily on her
shoulders. Every fiber of her being trembled with the aftereffects of
what she had just experienced. Two hundred years had come and gone for
her. Two hundred years and she had never understood until now how it
would feel to be an elderly human. How it would feel when just making
the simple effort to take a step consumed your entire focus. It had been
a blind spot that she could not comprehend and now in an instant she had
a bare glimpse of how time's touch scarred them in its passing. She took
each halting step back toward the Grove's heart and as she did she felt
more insight into the things that drove her brother race gather and
settle into her understanding. It was a tiring experience for her.
She only thought she had known what that meant before, but now feeling a
bone deep weariness fill her every fiber she understood that what she
thought of as tired bore little relation to what she felt now. She took
another halting step and stopped beside a young oak to lean against it
for a moment. She had never had to do that before either. She had not
understood what it meant to need that brief moment of support to be able
to gather her strength to even be able to continue.
It was yet another concept that she had difficulty with before that only
recently she had begun to comprehend how it might influence her in ways
subtle and direct. Grasping the totality of it since coming here had
been a revelation in so many ways and she was finding that like
experience it was often painfully acquired.
*We are here,* the faint voices bubbled up in the silence of her mind
and she shuddered against the sapling oak and if she had tears to give
she would have shed them in her gratitude for the feeling of relief that
hearing them gave her now. Her sisters had finally summoned enough
strength to respond to her and their voices echoed in that weakened
response in her mind. It was frail and fleeting and it was everything to
M'Tehr. At best there were only a few voices that had joined together to
speak with her. But it was enough to give her reason to rejoice.
M'Tehr could hear her own weariness echoed in their voices, all who were
linked to her had suffered the same force of the blow that the Arath'
Mahar had dealt them.
*Are you well sisters?* she asked them. She knew that they couldn't be.
Not after what they all had been part of, but she needed to say the
words.
*We are weakened,* the few voices that spoke with her answered. *Many
are still finding the strength to move, but we are here,* they said to
her.
Relief swelled in M'Tehr. She directed that feeling toward the ones who
were able to speak with her now so that they might feel the depth of
what words were insufficient to convey.
Another voice joined in with the ones who had reached out to her. The
Grove network; the linking of individual minds in connection and contact
with each other was starting to re-form. For a single brief moment they
had all existed only as the sum of themselves. They had witnessed a
moment of creation together and it had been too much for them to bear
when the vision released them. The shock of it had driven them apart and
each had to come to grips with what it was that they saw with only their
own experience to guide their understanding.
For a single moment they were only individuals coping with something
they could barely grasp. It was if the veil that shadowed everything
that had stood dimly understood before now had been lifted to burn them
in the brightness it had shaded them from. And in the glare of that
light everything they thought they knew could only cower and accept what
it was that was revealed in all its glory.
*It is not as we thought,* she said although that was more spoken to
herself than to her sisters.
*It is not,* the few voices that had rejoined her agreed. *It is more.*
*Can we accept what we have seen?* M'Tehr asked them.
*We can do nothing else,* they answered and that in itself was of more
meaning somehow. It was a decision that was made by each sister in the
solitude of her own existence and somehow made more meaningful by doing
so.
M'Tehr felt strong enough to continue and she thanked the oak for
allowing her to rest against it. She started to hobble toward where
Jacen waited for her feeling more voices of sisters everywhere joining
into the chorus that bubbled in her mind.
*But now we must ask ourselves the vital question. Will the men see it
as we do?* she asked, again more for her own ears than for theirs.
*How can they not?* the ragged chorus asked in her mind.
*Some will not believe. They are not as we are,* she answered *There are
always some who will refuse to do so, even to the moment that disbelief
should not be entertained any longer. Some will always refuse. For them
it is too much to accept, the last step that they cannot take no matter
how necessary it is.*
*And is the one who speaks for the men of this breed?* they asked. *Is
he one of those who will stand against us now?* Their voices were
stronger now in her thoughts. More and more of her lesser sisters were
recovering from the experience of the Arath' Mahar's vision and
rejoining their voices to their sisters.
*He is not one of those,* M'Tehr answered. *He has always been one who
has borne the burden of knowing what is coming as long as I have known
him. He will not balk now that it is here. He understands what he saw
and he will do what he needs to do now that it is here.*
*Will he speak for us as well before his own kind?* they asked. *Has he
the strength to do this?*
*I think he is one that does,* M'Tehr said to them. *But his path will
not be clear, not for some time. It will be a chancy thing for him now.
It will be dangerous for all of us.*
*Others will oppose then?* her sisters asked.
M'Tehr regretfully told them that they would. One thing that the Grove
had as its great strength was that all of them everywhere shared their
understanding of things and that unity purged of misunderstanding gave
them a common purpose to draw from. It was not the smothering of
conformity, there were dissenting opinions with their understanding, but
there was also understanding of why that difference existed. Theirs was
not a hive mind as some others believed that tolerated only the
acceptance of one belief regardless of the truth of it; but it did have
its limitations even so.
What M'Tehr had to confront with her sisters now was one of those
limitations. As a group, the Grove network had difficulty not accepting
what something was once the evidence for it was made clear. To refuse to
accept the truth of something because they did not agree with its
conclusions or for their own personal reasons was an alien concept to
them. That men did so frequently was a source of great confusion to them
at times. That was one of the reasons that dryads such as M'Tehr walked
among them and with them; that the experience that they gained from
trying to understand their brother race might serve the needs of the
Grove.
*How could they oppose what must be done?* they asked her.
*Some will,* she answered them. *For them conflict will be the first
choice. This may be too much for them to accept.*
*We will not allow this Grove to Wither. What was precious before
because it was thought to be lost is even more precious now that it has
been found. If they oppose it will fracture the Concord.*
*It is precious,* she agreed with them, *and we must do everything to
protect it. This Grove will stand. It is the harbinger and everything
that is to come lies in its shadow. Friend Singh understands this and he
understands that the Concord hangs on this one moment as well.*
*Will the other men understand this?* they asked her. *Will they
understand all the way to the root that we can do nothing else and still
stand under the Concord? Will they accept it?*
*Friend Singh understands,* she told them again. *In this he will speak
for us, he kens to the root what we have seen.*
*Will his words be enough?* they asked her. *Will he be able to stand
against his own who will not?*
*They may be enough,* she said to them. *But he has more than words with
which to use on both of our behalf's. He may even not need to use all
that he can, but I fear that may not be possible. His brothers may be
more intractable than we would wish.*
*Let him do what he will do then, sister.* they said after pausing to
consider her words. *Safeguarding the Arath' Mahar and her Grove is what
we will do. That is our will.*
*That is our will,* she murmured in agreement. Her sisters fell silent
for now. They had withdrawn to continue discussion amongst themselves
and leave her in such peace as they could so that she could focus on
what needed doing here. Behind her the path was swallowed up by the
undergrowth as she continued to hobble back. Back to Jacen who was
standing watch over the Arath' Mahar and waiting for her return.
------------------------------------
The Arath' Mahar was still unconscious when she returned. As she
expected Jacen was hovering over her. She should not have really
expected a different sight. It had only been a few minutes since she had
left them both to escort the men out of the Grove. Still she needed to
ask.
"Has there been any change Jacen?" she asked the big satyr.
Jacen shook his heavy head and said that there had not been and then
asked after her own wellbeing. She assured him that she was recovering
and would soon return to strength, but she could tell from the look in
his eyes that he did not fully accept her assurances. In truth she could
little blame him for doubting her. The force of the Arath' Mahar's mind
sharing had been like standing unblinking in the maw of a typhoon for
her. And to think that only this morning that she had doubted that her
sister might be able to even do such a thing with just her alone. M'Tehr
shuddered in the memory of that power and was grateful that Arath' Mahar
had refused her entreaty to mentally join with her before.
Her reluctance, a reluctance that M'Tehr in her blindness was starting
to take for inability, was well understood by her now for what it was.
The Arath' Mahar had not ventured to do such a thing because she could
not, but because she could she could do so on a level that M'Tehr still
had difficulty comprehending. Even after she had seen with her own eyes
as sister forged her own being out of what she was and the living energy
of the world itself, she still had difficulty grasping the totality of
it all.
The idea of opening her entire being and allowing the full force of the
living world around her to flow through her unchecked; to smother her in
its full sum of existence. That was something that she would never
conceive of doing for any reason. She had lived her entire life seeing
what it was in its naked essence all around her every time she walked in
the aether. Her lone existence was little more than that of a flea
riding the largest of animals compared to the life that made up the
entirety of what was contained in the aether.
There was too much there for her to envisage herself tapping into and
allowing herself to be subsumed by. And now that she had witnessed it
happening, now that she knew that such a thing could even be done; she
knew she would never attempt to do so herself. If she did, she would
make the error of thinking that she could control it and she would fail
and be swept away with it. No dryad that was living today could do such
a thing and survive. This was something that she knew down into the very
seed of her being. Neither M'Tehr nor any sister in the living line of
dryads could do this. They were too far removed from their own Arath'
Mahar.
The generations that had passed to bring her to this moment had
distanced her from the pure font of her own wellspring. She was not the
same as her sister and in recognizing that she realized how far she had
come from where her line began.
The Arath' Mahar could do this thing and M'Tehr never would. She could
reach into the living essence of the world around her and handle it as
easily as a child played with river clay, but only because she was
formed out of it. Arath' Mahar was part of the life of the world and she
took it into her palms and channeled it without needing to fear it
because she was part of it. M'Tehr was only a distant descendant of one
who had once done so.
She knelt and laid her hand on the unconscious form of the woman cradled
by the elm's roots.
"She is not as we thought she was," Jacen said to her slowly his words
echoing her own spoken earlier.
"When we spoke before, when I could not find the body of the other man
that the humans sought I was inclined to agree with you when she first
told you of her memories return. I thought then that if a small part of
what she was telling us was true, that it was nothing more than what
remained of a man completely devoured by her while she was lost in her
nature. That her memories were all that was left after one of their kind
trod where they should not. That if they were true that man had been
shattered for doing so. But this is much more. She is much more, so much
more."
"She is," M'Tehr agreed.
"And all saw as well?" he asked her.
"They did, dear Jacen. They saw and they understand what it was that she
showed us. There is no doubt of it. There was a Grove here long ago.
That Grove did Wither, as it could not fail to do in that time, and only
the memory of it remained. Those memories held by the trees were here
for her to find in her desperation. I think the Grove that was; the
sisters, who perished with it, would be pleased that they were kept
close to those who grew here afterward. That out of that memory of them
their home was reborn in this fashion."
"The second voice was not a revenant sister," he said. "After thinking
only of that as the one true explanation for that mind, it is hard to
accept that it was never so."
"Jacen, that is an idea that we need to let slip away now. It was only a
hope and now that we have seen otherwise we have what is real given to
us to protect. "She answered him, "I thought as you did, that the mind
we encountered was that of our awakened sister; but the truth is
otherwise. It was only that part of her that she clove away in her
desperation, that part of her that kept some small fraction of her whole
while the rest of her mind shattered."
She looked up into the branches of the elm spreading over them. "That
small part of her that had been mixed with her Phar' ador's essence and
in absence of other direction allowed its function to dictate her form.
Its memories of what had been lost brought her to us. She was formed
here because of what she did and she is heir to this fallen Grove as
much as she would have been if she were one of its daughters that
perished."
"It will still cause conflict," Jacen said. "The men will look at her
and see this Grove as a threat. What they do when they perceive a
threat, what they do when fear of the unknown is facing them does not
give hope to me that this difference can be resolved easily. Once it
becomes apparent to them what the outcome of these last days finally are
bending toward, once it becomes clear to them they will respond."
"It is unavoidable," M'Tehr repeated to him.
"Does it need to be so?" he asked.
"I have no choice but to think that is so," she said to him. "I have
told my sisters as much. As I have told them that we do not stand
alone."
"What can we do then?" Jacen asked. He was standing by her side looking
down on the Arath' Mahar.
"We protect her," M'Tehr answered. "As we must, as we will. We protect
her and guide her as best we can. In some ways my friend, nothing has
really changed. Our charge remains the same."
Jacen looked at her and did not answer. He did that sometimes. It was a
way of inviting her to verbalize her thoughts and in that fashion bring
order to them by speaking them aloud.
"We came here seeking a sister that was lost to us. We found a sister
who was lost. She was just lost in a way that we had not considered."
Jacen nodded in silent agreement with M'Tehr's words. No matter how
different her form was from what they expected to find that was never
something that he was in doubt of. When he saw the knotted and twisted
cocoon of vines and roots that contained the missing man, he had
recognized it at once for what it was; the result of a dryad's mating.
Every nymph he had ever seeded had bound him in a similar fashion when
she had successfully consummated their procreation. But even knowing
that, even after looking at the remains of what the man's form had
become after they had drawn him from its woody depths he had no doubt of
who and what she was and had known that there had to be more to her than
his sisters thought.
Indeed, Jacen had marveled when the man's face had emerged from the mass
of vine and earth that she hadn't killed him outright in her need. That
binding would have taken him even longer to work free from than the one
that she had used with him and he had rarely felt it's like before. It
must have been a terrible thing to be a mortal man and the sole focus of
that need; it had been terrible enough for him when she was moderated in
the small way she had been by M'Tehr being nearby. Terrible and
exhilarating at the same time.
"We sought to protect a restored Grove. This Grove fell and now a Grove
is restored and our charge is the same. We found a sister who did not
know herself, who needed us to connect with what she is, and that has
not changed. All that has changed is that now we know what we have found
and how much more importance safeguarding it has become for us."
M'Tehr laid her other hand on the elm and entreated it to take her
sister inside to rest. The two of them watched as the tree drew her into
its depths and then they were alone.
"Come for me Jacen when she awakens, there is much that needs to be done
when she does and the time we have to do it in is not as long as we wish
it was," M'Tehr leaned on her staff and began to make her way through
the forest to the oak that sheltered her. As she passed out of sight,
Jacen remained where he was and kept himself company with his own
thoughts.
--------------------------------------
Grove Containment Zone: Day Six, 1600 hours
Jim was starting to feel less like the world was spinning out of control
around him. As long as he remained still on the hard, woven, dark green
fabric of the stretcher and didn't try to move the vertigo was starting
to fade. Mitch was strapped into a similar stretcher secured to locking
pins in the floor of the military style ambulance next to him. Singh was
at their feet, he was sitting in a metal and fabric seat that unfolded
from the wall where it normally was secured. Across from him the E.M.T.
rode silently in a similar folding seat.
It seemed to Jim that he could feel each crack and every distortion in
the pavement of the road. He could even feel the coughing, throbbing
rumble of the ambulance's powerful engine. It was not as if the
ambulance was rocketing over bumpy, rough terrain as it had been
designed to do. In point of fact, the road was not really any different
than the one that stretched in front of his own home. It was that his
wounded mind was perceiving each imperfection in the road surface in a
highly exaggerated fashion and even in the kaleidoscope of dizziness
that he felt, Jim found a moment to be grateful that he was on a paved
road; if they truly had been in a place such as this vehicle had been
designed for, it may well have killed him or at least felt that way
anyway.
The ambulance bore them away from the Grove, it's steady pace ate up the
distance and Jim wondered where it was that it was taking them. It
couldn't be the command tent that they had departed from; that was only
a short distance away from where they were loaded into this snorting
lumbering beast. Did it even matter where they were being taken? Lying
on the fabric of the stretcher, still encased save for his head in the
protective suit, Jim couldn't really see how it mattered.
The engine groaned and Jim felt them turn and begin climbing a slight
incline. The front of the ambulance dipped downward and Jim could feel
the shift of gravity as his head inclined with the new direction that
the vehicle was moving toward. It was only a brief feeling, the
ambulance leveled off almost immediately and Jim guessed that there had
been a slight hump in the road leading into wherever they were going to.
The ambulance stopped reversed slightly and then adjusted in some small
slight ways before the diesel engine abruptly shuddered and ceased. It
seemed they were here.
Now that the rumbling diesel was no longer drowning out other lesser
noises, Jim could hear the sounds of people speaking outside. Their
voices carried through the thin walls. There was a grinding sound and
the latches that secured the rear doors were unlocked and then bright
sunlight as they were pulled open. The ladder that had been folded up
when they were loaded in was swung down with a creaking of metal hinges
and the E.M.T clambered down it and offered to help Singh down.
"That won't be necessary, thank you very much," Singh said and slowly
made his way down the heavy ladder; the springs lurched upward slightly
as the weight of both men was removed and Jim felt his consciousness
swirl in response to the sudden movement.
"Unload detective Travers first if you will," he heard Singh say to the
men, "His reaction is slightly more severe than detective Brighton's and
he would benefit from more immediate attention."
'That's a matter of opinion,' Jim thought. As much as he was concerned
over his partner's well being, right now he found it hard to concentrate
on the suffering of someone else at the moment; his own suffering was
more than enough to occupy his attention thank you.
There was a metallic clicking as the locking pins were released and then
the upward motion of the springs as the stretcher was slid backward
toward the open doors and removed from the vehicle. Damn you Singh! Jim
thought feeling his vertigo wash over him erasing whatever relief he had
begun to feel. Singh heard him too, he was sure of that, but right now
he didn't care that he did. All he wanted was for the world to stop
spinning.
There was another sound of pins snapping free and then a lurch as his
own stretcher was jolted into motion. I take it back Singh, this is
worse, he thought as the nausea returned with the vertigo and he could
feel the vomit coiling inside of him only moments away from being
expelled.
Singh loomed into his field of vision. "It will pass detective
Brighton," he said to him in reassurance as they walked away from the
ambulance. "Don't try to do anything other than let the sensations
fade."
There was nothing more that Jim wanted at that moment then for exactly
that to happen. There was the upper traverse of a door jamb passing in
his sight as he was carried into the building. "See to it that both of
them are undisturbed as much as possible. What they just experienced
must be allowed to fade. Time and rest is all that will do that," Singh
said.
Jim heard the men carrying him acknowledge their instructions and heard
the hollow thudding of their boots against the tile floor as the tiles
of a suspended ceiling passed overhead. From the echoes that he could
hear around him the door had led into a large open room. There were a
lot of other noises as well from the office machinery around them and
from the people who were crowded into the space as well. The sounds
faded as the two men carried him down a hallway and then put him down in
a small room that looked to Jim as if it had been converted into a
temporary sleeping quarters.
Hands gently but firmly stripped the protective suit off of him and then
moved him until he was laying on his side and he cursed them for doing
it even though he knew that they had been as careful as they could with
him. Mitch's stretcher had been placed a few feet away and it looked as
though they had done the same thing to him as they had done to Jim. They
don't want us to pass out and choke on our own vomit he thought. He
appreciated the concern, but he still didn't forgive them for moving
him. The door closed as the men left and Jim was left to navigate the
shoals of his vertigo in what silence that there was.
-----------------------------------------
"What happened sir?" Agent Fitzhugh asked Singh. Singh didn't answer
right away and asked her instead if there was an office prepared that
they might use. Fitzhugh acknowledged that there was and started leading
him through the knots of men and women clustered around tables into the
crowded community center. They had only just finished converting it into
the Area Command and Control and it showed in its raw adaptation to its
new role.
They passed through the clustered knots of men and women until they came
to the glass door that separated the room it led into from the rest of
the building. It was still somewhat cluttered, the director of the
Alagosta Gardens community center may have been evicted from his lair,
but all the F.R.T. had done was shift his things out of the way. Singh
settled gratefully into the director's executive chair and sighed. "Oh
that is so much better," he said. He looked across the desk at Fitzhugh
who was still waiting to hear his answer. "See that detectives Brighton
and Travers are left undisturbed as much as possible. Have someone check
them every twenty minutes, but do not disturb either of them unless
necessary."
"I'll see that it's done sir," Fitzhugh replied crisply.
"Tell whoever checks on them that both men were swallowed up in a
broadcast telepathic vision. One that included not only the full range
of visual and auditory stimuli, but its full empathic range as well. One
whose power I shudder now to even recall. It may be best to have someone
with the medical staff alerted regarding both men's condition and tasked
to do so. Someone familiar with the effects of having such an event
forced upon an unprepared mind. Unless that staff doctor recommends
other treatment, then allow them to rest and regain their strength,"
Singh said.
Fitzhugh made a note on a small notepad that she took out of her inner
pocket.
"Has the advisory committee been assembled yet?" he asked.
"Yes sir," she answered. "A committee of five has been assembled and is
on its way here for you to brief. The committee members were notified
that there would be a delay in meeting until you had returned."
"And who are the persons that are included in this committee?" he asked.
Fitzhugh flipped through some more pages in her notebook until she found
the relevant data. "From the Stafford police department, Lt. Belinda
Clayton. From the Governor's office there is a Jacob Meyers, some sort
of staffer, an assistant to the Governor I believe. Stafford Mayor Andre
Watson and a Marla Ramirez from the Civil Defense office. And lastly, an
Alderman Matthew Kinsey. As I understand it he was included in the panel
because the quarantine zone is in the center of his district."
"Thank you Agent Fitzhugh, have the relevant briefing materials been
prepared for them?"
"Yes sir," she answered. "The materials as well as the updated and
projected data. Everything we have now is waiting in the conference
room."
"Very well then, thank you for your efforts Agent Fitzhugh, the
professionalism and attention to detail that you and your team have
shown thus far during this crisis is of considerable assistance. I
commend you all for it."
"Thank you sir," she responded. "I'll make certain to let the entire
team know that."
"Agent Fitzhugh, there is another matter as well if I may bring it to
your attention."
"Yes sir? What would that be?" she said.
"Detective Brighton made a shrewd observation before we entered the
Grove earlier. Inform the drone operators to immediately begin targeting
random drones that are carrying conventional cameras. Not all of them,
but enough so that the fact that we are targeting those with a night
vision capacity is obscured."
"I'll see to it first thing," she said.
"Now unless there is something that requires my personal attention I
would prefer to rest if I can the vision that has incapacitated
detectives Brighton and Travers has also had its effect on me as well.
Please inform me when the advisory council arrives," Singh finished.
"I'll see that you're informed immediately upon their arrival sir," she
said and turned to leave the office. As she closed the door behind her
Singh leaned back into the padded chair and closed his eyes. He'd
neglected to ask her how many members of the advisory council were aware
of the full scope of what it was that they were dealing with. That
information was something that he could query her about when they
arrived though. It would be certain that some members of the board would
just be hearing about the existence of the Fae during this meeting and
he had little time to waste on dispelling their disbelief.
Singh wished that Pantra were by his side right now, but that was not
possible. She was now completely swallowed by the silk of her healing
cocoon and would be unreachable until she emerged from it; if she
emerged from it as the same person at all. Singh missed her presence
greatly, as he had since she was struck down. Not only would her company
be of comfort and support to him, he missed her personally. Aside from
those considerations which were of more importance to him personally,
she could have also provided instant confirmation that what he had to
tell the council was in fact truth and not fantasy, but he would have to
soldier on without her for the nonce.
It was a good thing that Lt. Clayton was on the council, he thought. She
would be an ally; especially since she had already had frequent contact
with what the council faced in one way or another and it made sense for
the commissioner to assign her to it when he was requested to send a
representative to join its ranks.
The mayor himself participating was also not a surprising choice. As the
chief administrator for the city, what was decided here would fall most
heavily on his shoulders to implement, although being an elected
official he may not have been fully informed of as much about the Fae as
he could be. He would have to ask Fitzhugh to check for him.
The representative from the Governor also was expected. His
responsibility was to the state that surrounded Stafford and what
happened here was as much his concern as it was Singh's. As for the man
that had been sent that person was an unknown. The man may or may not
know just what it was that he was here to take part in fully, but Singh
didn't think that the governor would send someone to represent him that
was unaware of what he should expect.
As part of the Civil Defense office, this Marla Ramirez would also be
privy to knowledge about the full nature of the Fae, so he would not
have to waste any time trying to convince her of their existence at
least. The Civil Defense office would have to be staffed by fools indeed
if they sent a representative that was ignorant of the Fae and if that
was the case then the city would have even greater problems dealing with
this crisis if that were so. Ms. Ramirez could also prove to be an ally,
but he would have to wait to see if that would indeed be the case.
Alderman Matthew Kinsey was not who Singh would have expected to be
appointed to the advisory council, but there was logic in the choice.
Olympia was mostly his political fiefdom and whatever was decided by
these events and at this council would have far ranging implications for
him and his constituents. Still Singh wished that another had been
chosen. He knew of Kinsey already by reputation and that reputation was
not flattering. Singh leaned back further in the chair closed his eyes
and waited.
-------------------------------------------
There was a soft knock on the door and Singh jolted at the sound and
realized that he had been dozing. "Come in," he said.
The door opened and Agent Fitzhugh entered and quickly closed it behind
her. "Sir, the advisory council has arrived. They are being shown to the
briefing room that we have prepared."
"Thank you Agent Fitzhugh," Singh replied. "And detectives Brighton and
Travers?"
"They are continuing to rest, the person I spoke with from the medical
detachment informed me that he would arrive shortly, but that for the
time being for us to continue to do as you instructed until he could
examine them," she said.
"Are the latest estimates of the projected situation with the expansion
of the Grove prepared?" He asked.
"Yes sir, they are linked in real time to the database, if there is any
change that is noted it will be reflected there," she responded.
"Excellent and how many of the council members are numbered among those
with special knowledge of what it is that we face?" he asked.
Fitzhugh consulted her notes again and responded almost immediately.
"Lt. Clayton and Ms. Ramirez have a level three awareness, Mayor Watson
possesses level two awareness and Mr. Meyer holds a level four
clearance. Only Alderman Kinsey has neither an awareness level nor a
clearance level. Should we request that another be appointed in his
place sir?"
"No, Agent Fitzhugh," Singh said rising to his feet and beginning to
strip off the protective suit. "That would only cause needless
distraction and delay at this point as well as fan the flame of
resentment. None of which we can have while we must remain focused on
the task at hand. Alderman Kinsey is going to have to learn that he
lives in a much wider world is all and perhaps he may become the better
for it. Although from what I know of the man, I have doubts that will be
the case. Is there anything else I should be aware of before I meet with
the council?" he asked finishing removing the suit.
"Only that the glamour concealing the situation in the Grove ceased to
function for nearly half an hour after you and the detectives were
evacuated from the area. We immediately increased our aerial presence
and we may have been able to conceal its absence, but that is not a
promise sir," she said.
"That should have been expected I suppose. That glamour is being
maintained and directed by both M'Tehr and Jacen and they, like the rest
of the Grove network that were present through her, were rocked by what
was revealed to us all. Little surprise then that their contribution to
our efforts here was allowed to slip for a time. Is the glamour back in
operation now?" he asked.
"Yes sir, it resumed function twenty-eight point four minutes after it
failed and has been in constant operation ever since," she said crisply.
"Good, continue with the increased level of drone patrols, let any
observers think that we are merely increasing our security rather than
fostering concealment."
"How long should we continue with the increased patrol levels sir?" she
asked.
"Several more hours I think, Agent Fitzhugh, then reduce them and
schedule random times of increased patrol activity. Let those who are
looking in think that what we are doing is simply a security measure
that we already intended to implement."
"I'll see that it is taken care of sir," Fitzhugh said.
Singh followed her out of the office and through the crowded room. The
pair of them wove their way through the busy team and turned down the
hallway that ran past where Jim and Mitch had been taken. At the end of
the hallway was a pair of industrial style double doors that led into
the basketball court that made up the majority of the community center.
Right now the basketball court had been converted into a barracks,
medical section and mess area for the members of the F.R.T that were
billeted here.
Those sections that were off duty occupied their time with sleeping on
the cots sandwiched knee to elbow as close to each other as could be
managed, eating the food that was prepared by sinking T-rations into
immersion heaters and then opened and served on long folding tables.
Between meeting those needs of sleep, food and duty; the members of the
detachment occupied themselves with finding what amusements as they
could during their down time. Through the large open windows at the far
end of the cavernous space Singh could see where other large tents had
been erected on the soccer field just outside to house those that had
not found a berth inside the cavernous building.
Along the far wall of the basketball court were several enclosed rooms,
the largest of them had been set aside for the use of the advisory
council. There were two agents on duty flanking each side of the door
leading into the room. As they approached the maroon painted door, the
two agents became even more alert and a third one rose from a small desk
nearby reached for the binder in front of him and moved to intercept
them.
The agent met them while they were about three meters from the entrance
and asked them for their identification. Singh and Fitzhugh both
produced theirs quickly and handed it to the man. He peered intently at
both of their faces and then looked at the identification. Singh was
pleased to see him doing this before allowing them entry. Not many
agents had the ability to see through glamour and it was good that one
had been secured for this assignment. Once both of their identities had
been confirmed the agent handed them back their identification cards and
stepped away. The pair flanking the door relaxed slightly. As they
approached one of the agents moved to open the door for them and then
resumed his position.
When the door opened into the small conference room the slight buzz of
conversation ceased as the two of them entered. There were an additional
two agents posted along the back of the wall facing the entrance. A long
table had been set in the center of the room itself and each of the
council members were seated behind hastily prepared nameplates. The
nameplates sat silently in front of them and were flanked with pads of
paper, pens and small bottles of water. Briefing materials were in
folders in front of each person and most of the folders lay open where
they had been perused by the council before Singh arrived. The curtains
had been drawn in front of the wire embedded window that looked out on
the basketball court and there was the slight odor of the storage room
that this place had been until recently lingering in the air.
A large flat screen television on a wheeled table had been set up
opposite of the table connected to a computer and a secure wireless
connection to the F.R.T. database. Singh crossed the room and picked up
the remote control that was lying in front of the computer and opened
the briefing materials he would need. There was a slight whine as the
computer responded to the higher demand running the programs made. Singh
turned to face the table. "Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. If you
are sufficiently prepared I can begin this briefing."
"By all means, we've been kept waiting for far too long as it is sir."
That was Alderman Kinsey that spoke; Singh recognized his voice although
he had not had the occasion to actually meet the man before now.
"The delay was unavoidable I fear. Once you hear what I have to impart
to you all, you will have a better idea of the scope of the current
situation," Singh said to him in response, although he knew even as he
spoke that it was only a response to an exaggerated claim on the
Alderman's part. They had in fact been kept waiting little more than the
few minutes that it had taken for him to be summoned here and pass
through the security protocols to enter this room. Alderman Kinsey was
apparently, for his own reasons, seeking to put Singh on the defensive
right away.
"I should certainly hope so," Kinsey responded. "This entire operation
has been a black hole as far as proper oversight is concerned, and that
sir, is an unacceptable situation. One of the many things this council
intends to rectify today. Of that you can be certain. Now, you have been
summoned to this council today to..."
"A point of order, if I may Alderman Kinsey," Singh interrupted, "but I
have not been summoned anywhere. This council has been formed to address
the situation that has consumed our efforts at containment and
resolution. I am here to provide information and advice that the council
needs to know so that it may make the proper recommendations as to how
the higher civil authorities should facilitate those efforts," Singh
said to him before he could continue.
"Be that as it may, sir," he said trying to lean forward over the table
in an imposing manner, "but this council is formed now and that is a
determination that we will make. Now if you will identify yourself we
can get started now."
Singh could see that this was already going to be a trial. Kinsey had
tried to put him on the defensive immediately and now it was clear that
he was trying to brandish the authority of the council to overawe him.
Clearly he had made an error in judgment is just what this body was here
for, but for now correcting him in that regard would have to wait.
"Ladies and gentlemen of the F.R.T. Advisory council, I am Special
Detective Armin Singh. I hold this position with the Stafford Police
Department and I am currently the department laison on special
assignment with the Federal Response Team," he began making it clear by
his tone that he did so because that was what he was here for and not
because Kinsey had demanded it.
"What I have to tell you this afternoon, some of you will be hearing for
the first time, while others will have differing levels of knowledge
concerning what I am to impart to you," Singh began.
Kinsey was the only one that had no recorded exposure to the Fae, but if
Singh were to point that out the man would likely resent that he was the
most ignorant one here and become even more combative than he had
already demonstrated that he was willing to be.
-----------------------------
Matthew Kinsey already didn't like the short squat little man who had
introduced himself as Special Detective Singh. First he breezed in here
after keeping them all waiting for hours and then he had the gall to act
like the few minutes of quiet in the pathetic excuse for a council
meeting room actually counted as not delaying them since he was in to
meet them only moments after they had been shoved into this shoebox that
was hidden in the middle of a damned armed camp.
And just who were these interlopers from the so-called F.R.T. anyway? As
much as they resembled a military operation they were no part of the
military that he was aware of and even if they were, what right did they
have to even be here anyway? This whole thing was nothing more than some
kind of power grab by those people. He was certain of it and if he had
anything to do with it, then it was going to be shut down in jig time.
There were a lot more important things that needed to be done then
humoring this collection of fools while they went off chasing windmills.
And that fellow Singh was going to have to learn that fact most of all
he thought as he started in with his blather about secret knowledge. The
only thing secret that he could see about this whole thing was that they
were hiding what they really were doing here and that was their bad luck
that they tried to include him in those that they had roped into this
fool's circus.
Singh, he wondered as he let most of what the man with the iron grey
mustache was saying roll over him, just what kind of man was he with
that kind of name anyway? Probably some kind of foreigner who had no
good right to be here. And that whole Special Detective title that he
threw around was probably nothing more than a sop thrown to keep other's
who had no right to even be here in the first place happy.
More than likely this fellow was some token idiot that was wasting time
and money that could have better been used addressing the real problem
the city had instead of indulging his imagination. Until now he had
never heard of it even existing and now that he had he intended to see
what he could do about clearing away some deadwood from the city
infrastructure and he was already pretty sure he knew which branch it
was that he should start with.
-----------------------------
Singh looked at the assembled council noting how it was arranged as he
spoke to them. Alderman Kinsey had seated himself in the center of the
row of chairs. He was clearly trying to assume preeminence by doing so.
That matched what he had already known of the blustering politician
before today.
Mayor Watson was seated to his left and the governor's representative,
Mr. Meyer was placed to his right. Lt. Clayton was at the far left of
the table and Ms. Ramirez, the Civil Defense office representative was
on the far right.
Both of the women were about the same age, somewhere in their mid-
thirties. Ms. Ramirez was the older of the two he thought but not by
very much. Mr. Meyer was a man of short stature who wore old fashioned
metal rimmed glasses and had regarded Singh with an intent interest
since he had begun speaking. Considering his own level of clearance and
his relationship to the governor he had more reason to claim leadership
of the council than Alderman Kinsey seemed to have done; but he had
declined to do so. That spoke well of him to Singh. It suggested that he
was more interested in what he was going to hear than in posturing over
who was more important in this room.
Mayor Watson was an older man in his early fifties. Before becoming
mayor he had been involved in several moderately successful businesses,
usually as an investor. His family was the local equivalent of old money
and other members of his family had taken turns gracing the mayor's
office from time to time before it was his turn to do so.
Singh didn't really think of the man most of the time. He seemed for the
most part a competent enough person and there had not been anything he
had been involved in that cast suspicions on him as long as he had been
in the public spotlight, but upon meeting him now in person Singh could
tell one thing about him that he didn't think was generally known. He
was a man that tried to work with the general consensus and that under
these circumstances may make him weak in ways.
The man who Singh judged that he was weakest in relation to was sitting
next to him at the centre of the table. Alderman Kinsey was a tall man
with a big frame. He was only a couple of years younger than Mayor
Watson. He had graying sandy hair and a hawk nose. He had the frame of
someone who had played high school football and had not let his physical
condition deteriorate as much as others his age did.
He was also from a family with old money in its pedigree, he had held
his current position for nearly twenty years and he was also spent
almost as much of that time as a real estate developer who owned the
majority of the rental units in the area. His family having bought many
of them outright from the Alagosta Mills when it shuttered its doors. He
had been making a name for himself as a developer and was one of the
driving forces behind the current revitalization of the part of Olympia
that he represented.
"For some of you what I am about to tell you will come as a surprise,
perhaps even a shock...?"
"It could hardly be more shocking than the behavior we have witnessed by
this F.R.T over the last few days Detective Singh," Kinsey said
deliberately interrupting him.
Singh looked at the big man who was attempting to overawe and intimidate
him and gazed directly into his eyes as he did so. He was no longer
going to play this game with Kinsey. Kinsey locked eyes back with him
and tried to stare him down.
"If I may be allowed to continue without interruption Alderman Kinsey,
this briefing would proceed much more quickly. There will be sufficient
time for questions presently, but I will have to ask you to cease these
interruptions, sir," he said firmly.
Mayor Watson leaned over and whispered to Kinsey making him break his
eye connection with Singh. Singh saw a scowl start to darken Kinsey's
face, but he controlled it and made it vanish quickly. Clearly he was
the type that would regard having to give ground for any reason as a
sign of weakness and being a natural born bully, he didn't like it when
anything like that happened. Singh resisted the urge to dip into his
mind briefly to see just what it was that was animating the man's
obvious hostility, but he made a rule not to do that in most cases and
for the most part he was able to hew to that rule.
"Now, if we may continue," he said eyeing the Alderman specifically.
"The first detail that every one of you should be aware of is that this
situation is very different from what you might believe that it is. That
difference is that the reason for the response that the Alderman has
noted. The difference being that there is a great deal of involvement in
this matter with creatures that are believed by the general population
to be nothing more than relics from mythology."
"Upon hearing what I have to tell you, some of you may dismiss the
existence of these creatures, but I assure you this is not the case at
all. Approximately four days ago whilst conducting a missing persons
investigation, my partner, I and two other detectives with the Stafford
police department whom we were assisting with certain troubling aspects
of that and a related case stumbled on a hitherto unsuspected Grove in
the vicinity of Magnolia Circle."
His thumb clicked against the remote and an aerial display of the
location of the Grove and Magnolia Circle was displayed behind him.
"In making the discovery of that Grove we found ourselves unexpectedly
under attack by its inhabitant and were forced to withdraw to a safe
distance as well as being forced leave my partner Special Detective
Pantra behind after she had been injured in the melee. I immediately
instituted a code Bravo-Three-Seven-Four as well as issuing the code
phrase 'firefly down' indicating that a Special Detective, specifically
a Fae officer had been killed or injured."
"I and the other two detectives with me, Detective Jim Brighton and
Detective Mitchell Travers, began to conduct an evacuation first of
Magnolia Circle and then as additional officers of the Stafford police
department arrived, we widened and expanded that evacuation area to
include the surrounding four streets to the east, west, north and south
as are indicated on the map here," he said highlighting the image on the
screen."
"According to the Bravo-Three-Seven-Four protocol the dispatching agent
continued to direct all available officers to our position, alerted our
superiors and contacted the Grove representative in the capitol and
requested that an emissary immediately be dispatched to this location to
assist us."
While we waited for this emissary to arrived, the three of us oversaw
the initial quarantine of the affected area. The responsibility for its
supervision at this time was mine and mine alone. When the F.R.T.
advance team arrived early the next morning I turned over the control of
the quarantined zone to Agent Fitzhugh who is responsible for
maintaining it currently."
"During the early evening the Grove representative and an additional
associate arrived and were briefed by me regarding the current
situation. The Grove emissary confirmed that we had indeed encountered a
previously unknown dryad..."
"Excuse me detective, did you just say a dry add? Just what is it that
you are asking this council to believe?" Kinsey said interrupting him
again.
"Alderman Kinsey, if you will be patient I will address that once I have
made certain that the entire council is familiar with both what has
necessitated this action as well as its current status. Now if I may
continue," he said.
Mayor Watson leaned over and whispered to Kinsey again. Kinsey frowned
but he didn't venture to speak again.
-----------------------------------
He had to be going mad. That was the only explanation for what he was
hearing. This clearly incompetent idiot was engage in blowing a
volcano's worth of smoke up their collective asses and the others on
this council were just sitting there in silence and actually listening
to it like it was something to be taken seriously and not the ravings of
a disordered mind that had overdosed on too many moonbeams and utter
bullshit pumped out by equally obsessed idiots. Who did this moron think
he was if he thought that Alderman Matthew Kinsey was going to swallow
this load of crap that he was serving up to them?
And that stuff about the so-called Fae? Utter nonsense. Everyone with a
functioning brain knew that the so-called Fae were nothing but excuses
dreamed up by ignorant fools back when people didn't know enough about
how the world worked to even wipe their asses properly without
supervision. When he had been forced in school to listen to the tripe
that ignorant peasants had dreamed up to explain their own failures as
men he had immediately recognized it for what it was. Nothing more than
a collection of fairy tales that those losers told their betters in a
failed attempt to explain their own incompetence.
In his opinion the best thing those people who really mattered back then
could have done was make an example of that sort. One that would have
gotten through to the rest of the liars and loafers that you kept a whip
hovering over them just to get a decent days work out of them. If it had
been him back then that is just what he would have done the moment
someone dared to wave that pathetic excuse for their own worthlessness
in his face. If only someone had the guts to do that back then he was
certain that this harebrained lunacy would have been long forgotten by
now.
But it hadn't been and because it hadn't there was a fresh crop of
idiots believed in it, just like the one standing in front of him now.
New age fools who only existed to get in the way of what really mattered
in this country and who always were making a fresh nuisance of
themselves every time one of them got their panties in a twist over
something that was none of their business in the first place.
And then there was Andre. He couldn't have believed before today that
Andre was weak minded enough to be taken in by this utter foolishness
but there he was going along with it and even worse siding with that
moron who was wasting their time when they should be busy shutting this
all down as quickly as possible. He had to be going mad that was the
only explanation for what he was seeing and hearing right now.
------------------------------
"This dryad was suspected at the time of being a revenant, a member of
the Grove that was in deep hibernation and had for some reason been
revived, we have since learned that is not entirely the case as I will
inform you shortly."
"The Grove emissary, Hamadryad M'Tehr of the Morleth Phar' entered the
Grove and attempted to calm this suspected revenant along with the
assistance of her associate Jacen, in this they were eventually
successful."
"Once they had managed to reduce the danger to the general public caused
by the situation, they endeavored to locate not only my fallen partner
Special Detective Pantra, but also to ascertain the whereabouts of one
of the missing men that we had entered the Grove in search of."
"In this they were successful. Special Detective Pantra was located
quickly and transported to the intensive care unit of Mercy General
Hospital. According to the doctors who are presently overseeing her case
they are quite hopeful that she will recover although she has not
regained consciousness."
"The missing man we were searching for, one Hank Phillips was also
located and returned to us by M'Tehr a few hours later. He was
transported also to Mercy General, where he remains in critical
condition under the strictest of quarantine measures stemming from
unexpected complications in his current condition. I will not go deeper
into those complications at this time. If it becomes necessary to do so,
one of the doctors from the CDC will be able to give you a more complete
picture then I presently have for you." At the mention of the CDC, Singh
could see several of them shift in their seats and there was a murmur in
response to his news.
"At this time I have been informed that there is not enough information
regarding Mr. Phillips status for immediate alarm and he is being
watched closely at this time. If this situation changes that information
will be provided to this council immediately. After establishing the
perimeter of the quarantine zone and successfully evacuating Mr.
Phillips; this zone was maintained while the Grove emissary attempted to
gain more information on our behalf. Earlier today I, Detectives
Brighton and Travers entered the area to conduct an interview with the
Prime dryad of this Grove to determine not only how this Grove had come
to be, but also to continue our other investigation into another missing
individual."
"During our encounter the situation was complicated by an invocation of
a Statement of Being conducted under the aegis of the Concord. We also
learned that the other missing man in question, one mister Cecil Barnes
is in fact responsible for the appearance of this Grove due to actions
that he took in self defense. The current situation is as thus:" he said
changing the image of the Grove that was being projected to the real
time image linked to the F.R.T. cameras orbiting over it.
"With an official Statement of Being lodged under the terms of the
Concord, we are looking at this Grove now as a permanent feature of the
city of Stafford. Unfortunately there is no way to avoid it. However the
compensation provisions of the Concord will also come into immediate
effect and those conditions will still have to discuss with the
representatives of the Grove network as soon as possible. Their envoy is
already traveling here to meet with us now and I expect that they will
be quite generous in their offers. The current area controlled by the
Grove is small at the moment, but it will in all likelihood mean that,
once established a larger section of the woodland in this part of the
city will eventually come under the sway of the Grove itself. This is
going to have a particular impact on homes that are currently empty. The
Grove, by its nature, does not recognize uninhabited buildings in the
same manner that it does inhabited ones. They view them as abandoned and
act accordingly."
------------------------------
There was no way that he had heard what he thought that he just heard
that idiot say. It just couldn't be possible. There was no way that
anything that he has just told them had even actually taken place. Oh
there had been an earthquake. He knew that was true and in his opinion
the center of the old lint-head district was the ideal place for
something like that to happen to begin with. That way it didn't damage
anyplace that actually mattered and if they were lucky it would force
the indigents who infested that part of town to go somewhere else and
stop plaguing decent folks the way they did with their corrosive habits.
Inwardly he couldn't help but look down on the malingerer standing in
front of them and trying to get them to buy this pig in his poke.
Clearly reading too much fantasy trash at a younger age had addled his
brain and now he couldn't tell reality from fantasy anymore. His own boy
had started to be sucked in by that trash a few years ago and it had
taken an almost herculean effort on his part to break the boy of that
character flaw. He'd like to say that he hated doing it, but the truth
was he didn't. It was for his own good and now at least his boy knew
what was what. He knew the difference between treasure and trash and he
was pretty sure that one day his son would thank him for making sure
that his head was firmly screwed on straight. He might have to cope with
living in a world of imbeciles but at least he wouldn't be one himself.
And what was this tripe about these so-called Fae making some kind of
claim as if they were some breed of thieves who think that because they
said so, something was theirs? That would have never flown if they were
trying the same stupidity back when this country was being set up in the
first place. At least those men knew what to do with squatters and
outright invaders. Pity that their descendants had become so weak minded
that they were no longer made of the same stern stuff. The only reason
they even lived they way they did was because of people like him and if
they didn't have him, then Matthew Kinsey almost shuddered to think of
the chaos that would exist if he and his like minded allies were not
here to make sure the world ran properly.
Most of what this Singh was saying wasn't worth Kinsey's attention. He'd
tuned out most of it except for just enough to keep his thumb on the
gist of it. He did the same thing in every pointless meeting that he was
obliged to attend. There would be time later for him to take things in
hand and get them pointed in the right direction and thinking that he
almost missed what the fool was talking about until he started talking
about their interest in the housing that was in the area. That got his
full attention. Kinsey stopped woolgathering and started paying very
close attention to what that rascal Singh was talking about now.
-------------------------------
"More importantly, today in our earlier interview with the Prime Dryad
we determined that she was not a revenant as we suspected but what the
dryad's of the Grove refer to as an Arath' Mahar, an individual of
infinitely much more value to them. Because of the presence of this
Arath' Mahar the Grove network will refuse to give up this Grove and we
can likely expect that it will begin to expand in the following fashion
based on the information that we have at present."
Singh shifted the image on the screen from the static one and activated
the shading program to predict the likely spread for them.
"As you can see here, once the current barrier containing it has been
removed it will likely expand to follow the natural line of the forest
here, here, here and here."
The areas that Singh indicated were those that formed the spokes of the
woodland areas that radiated between the houses in the neighborhood.
"It will eventually spread to reach the river walk itself here and from
there will likely expand along the riverbank itself until it reaches
this section of undeveloped land here. From there, it will continue to
spread more slowly. This of course is only a projection. The expansion
of the Grove itself will be based on the eventual population and what
their future needs are as it develops."
"Are you trying to tell me a pack of goddamned hippies have taken over
land in my district and all you're saying to me that you're going to do
is say we have to hand even more of my land over to those goddamned
thieves?" Kinsey shouted, his face now flushing red with anger. "That is
not gonna happen son!" he spat.
"Alderman Kinsey you will please be seated immediately and control
yourself," Singh said to him stressing in his emphasis that it was not a
request. Mayor Watson leaned over and spoke urgently with Kinsey in
hushed tones. Kinsey grumbled and was clearly not satisfied but he did
sit down. Singh resumed his briefing.
-------------------------------
He was livid. Not just with that dangerous fool who presumed to speak to
him like that, but with the whole idea that this was not even anything
more than what he knew it was. Some damned environut group was behind
this he was certain of that now. It was just too damned convenient to be
anything else and he was going have nothing to do with allowing it to
pass.
And Andre was going to pay for what he did to him just now. He'd always
been able to keep that spineless jackanapes in line before now and here
he had already contradicted him twice in the same meeting. He cut his
eyes over to the man sitting to his left side and decided that Andre had
just outlived his usefulness to him. And he knew just how to start
reining him in. It was a shame really to watch someone forget their
place; that just meant that, when the lesson they had coming to remind
them of it actually happened, it needed to be worse than it otherwise
had to be. Just to make certain that others of the same stripe didn't
get similar ideas about being uppity either.
That was for later on though and one thing was sure, when he served up
to Andre what he had earned today it was going to indeed be cold just
the way revenge should be. His daddy taught him that when he was little
and he had never forgotten the lesson. Andre should not have forgotten
it either.
This was going to be tricky though. From what he could see in the faces
of the rest of his fellow 'council' members they didn't see what needed
to be done the way he did. And they would probably not have the stomach
for it even if they did. From what he was hearing it was all too likely
that he was going to have to do what great-granddaddy had done when
there were carpetbaggers and scalawags that needed to be run out before
things could be set right again. And like great-granddaddy he was in all
likelihood going to be going at all by himself when the time came to do
what needed to be done.
-------------------------------
"Once the final outline of the Grove has been determined in the short
term, Fae negotiators will immediately begin making offers for
compensation. That negotiating team, as I said before, will be arriving
before long and it is in the best interests of this State and the city
of Stafford to arrive at a quick resolution."
"Now, as to managing public awareness of the situation. Currently the
quarantine of the area has been explained as being caused by a gas leak
created during the recent earthquake, and indeed that earthquake did
cause damage of that type to the city infrastructure that will need to
be attended to. In addition a cover story has been fabricated and
disseminated that in responding to the damage incurred by the earthquake
a previously unknown toxic dump has been uncovered, necessitating the
current quarantine. I will now endeavor to answer your questions council
members."
"You're goddamned right you will son," Kinsey spat at him, "starting
with why you are dick dancing around with this pack of thieves and not
tossing them into jail where they belong! And then we'll get to why you
felt the need to lie to everyone in this whole damned city and waste God
knows how much taxpayer money on this damned dog and pony show!"
"Matthew, for God's sake will you just shut the hell up," the mayor said
to Kinsey. "This is not an Alderman's meeting and you are not in
charge."
"What in the hell do you think you're doing Andre? You don't talk to me
like that!" Kinsey retorted.
"I do today Matthew, because unlike you I know something about what is
going on today and if you would shut your damned mouth you might learn
something and be useful on this council," Mayor Watson said.
"You need to think some things over now Andre. Don't no one need to be
getting too big for their britches now."
"Matthew, I'm going to do something I should have done years ago. I
really don't know why I didn't do it before now, but I'm going to. Shut
your big stupid mouth and open your ears and listen, this is a lot more
serious that what you think it is. I'm only going to tell you this
once."
From the glare that Mayor Watson gave him and the angry silence in
response from Kinsey it elicited, this had been something that was
already brewing rather than having been brought on by these
circumstances. Kinsey settled back in his chair and glowered at everyone
except the two female council members; them he ignored.
"Please continue if you would detective," Watson said.
"Thank you mayor," Singh said. "Now to get to the meat of this. This is
something that is going to happen, we quite simply have no choice, and
regardless of what some of you might think presently," he said looking
at Kinsey again before the man could make another outburst.
"Most of you already have some degree of understanding of what is
happening and what is at stake in this matter." Singh directed the
latter comment towards Meyer, the only member of the council with a
level four clearance. "So I will take this time to give to you as much
background information as I can now. Once you have this information and
can see the relevance I'm certain that you will understand the
constraints that we function under now."
"The Grove and the dryads who make up the Grove are not 'hippies' as
Alderman Kinsey mislabeled them just a moment ago nor are they thieves
as he accused them of being. They are but one of a group of mystical
races that we collectively call the Fae. The Fae have been with us for
millennia ladies and gentlemen. They have existed in small enclaves
hidden away from man for the most part and for many of them they are
quite happy to continue to do so today."
"However that situation is changing and I will tell you why. The
mystical energy that sustains and is part of every Fae race is
increasing daily. This is a situation that we have known has been
developing for a very long time and to deal with it very long ago a
covenant between mankind and the Fae was negotiated. This covenant is
referred to as the Concord and it is what is the governing principle
that we must adapt to in this situation."
"That is why this council has been created, so that a peaceful and swift
resolution to this matter under the terms of the Concord can be arrived
at so the disruption that Stafford has needed to endure can be
minimized. Now are there any questions that I may answer at this time?"
"I have a question for you detective," Kinsey said.
"Yes, Alderman?" Singh replied already knowing what was going to spill
from the man's mouth.
"Just what is it that you think to gain, by dreaming up this cock and
bull story? Nobody in their right mind is going to believe that bucket
of hogwash you just served up to us. So what in God's green earth are
you really trying to pull here?"
"Alderman, I am going to speak frankly to you," Singh said.
"Well that would certainly be a nice change from this fairy tale you've
been spinning us since you opened up your mouth."
"Alderman, the truth is I have no idea of just why it is that you are
even a member of this council at all. The only reason that I can see
that makes any degree of sense is that you are the most immediate
representative of the area affected by this change. In my opinion that
is a poor reason to choose someone for this particular task. Worse yet,
you are the only member of this council who has absolutely no knowledge
of what it is that we are dealing with."
"The Fae, sir are quite real, as is your glaring ignorance of them. I
have hesitated to make this known, but your comments thus far have made
your deficiency in that knowledge quite clear already so I will just say
it bluntly. You are the only person in the room who is unaware of the
existence of these other races and if you had not been so belligerent
thus far you might have figured that fact out already. So please take my
advice and the advice of Mayor Watson, Alderman and follow the lead of
your fellow council members. Now are there any actual relevant
questions?" Singh asked. Jacob Meyer, the governor's assistant posed a
question and Singh with a great deal of relief settled in to actually
doing what he was there for.
-----------------------------------------
F.R.T. Advisory Council Room, Day Six: 1730 hours
Matthew Kinsey was already irritated by everything that he had seen the
last few days before Andre had told him that a special committee was
being formed to deal with the situation in Alagosta Gardens. The so
called state of emergency smelled wrong to him from the moment that it
was reported on the news. He had already been summoned into an
Alderman's meeting when the quarantine first went into effect, but right
from the start he knew that he was being played. There was something
going on in his project and he wanted to know what it was. He had
invested too much time, effort and especially money in turning around
the lint-head part of town to walk away now and he wanted some answers.
With each day that passed and little seeming to be accomplished other
than blocking access to the area, he resented the presence of the
government thugs that had descended on Stafford more and more. He
expected Andre to be part of this committee of course and a
representative from the Governor's office too, but he had no idea why
they bothered sending the two skirts from the police department and from
civil defense. He wondered what was wrong with them for doing something
like that. Didn't they have to have enough men who were more than
qualified to handle this? And even if they needed to send a skirt just
for the optics they only needed one of them to make coffee and fetch for
them, not two.
More P.C. horse manure he decided. Everywhere he looked anymore were
people that had no business being where they were just because too many
sheep in the population had bought into that foolishness. The bad part
of the whole deal in his opinion aside from having to put up with the
presence of two women who shouldn't even be here, was being shoehorned
into this joke of a conference room in the middle of the armed camp that
they had shoved down his district's throat and then worse having to cool
his heels waiting on that arrogant little know it all. No, that wasn't
really the worst part in his opinion; the worst part was how seriously
they were taking what that imbecile was saying.
Kinsey knew it was going to be bad when that joke flipped on the
projection and started talking about how the whole area, the entire area
in Alagosta Gardens was going to have to be turned over to some nature
loving freaks without so much as a whimper. He had not the slightest
intention of doing any such thing. He'd already spent the better part of
a year clearing all the working class trash out of one part of his
neighborhood and was set to begin demolition of those worthless wooden
firetraps early next month.
The money he stood to make from the upscale housing that would go up in
its place especially with that nice view of the river walk would easily
net him twenty times what he got from the worthless renters that he was
stuck with now. By the time phase two was ready to launch early next
year he'd have the next section just as clear as phase one was now. In
five years the only remnants of Alagosta mill village would be the
homeowners that he hadn't been able to buy out and they would probably
leave once they couldn't afford the higher tax cost of living in a
better neighborhood. He planned on picking up their places cheap too
once they figured out that he was going to be the only buyer that they
would get.
The way he looked at it having that renter trash gone was a win-win. The
city got an eyesore revitalized and he would make a fortune doing it.
And he had plans for that fortune, he was still a young man and then
this happened. It was that tree clearing donnybrook along the river walk
all over again. Listening to this idiot blather on he wished he could
make this problem go away as easily as he made that one disappear.
Early in his development of that area he'd sited some of his luxury
homes on property he owned that was part of the original wood lot
bordering the river walk. The sale of those houses was going to be
impressive enough as it was, but not as impressive as it could be. The
problem was the thick belt of trees blocking the view of the riverside
units; you couldn't see the river at all and then only barely from the
second floor in bits and pieces.
The city wasn't going to issue a permit to let him thin them out without
a lot of trouble over it; so he did it anyway. Over a long holiday
weekend in the fall he sent in a day crew he'd hired to cut everything
down all the way to the edge of that ridiculous public walkway they had
set up bordering the river. He had his pet environmental engineer
certify that the trees were diseased after the fact and there might even
have been one that was. That didn't matter. What did matter was that one
hard weekends work by some day laborers with a bulldozer and he had a
river view that shot his profit margin much higher than it would have
been otherwise; even with the fine they slapped on him because he had
burned all of the wood and no one could verify his EE's assessment.
Of course there was a stink when none of the laborers could be found to
verify his side of the story either, it just was too bad that most of
them got swept up and deported a few days later. The worthless tree
hugging protesters screaming about how his actions had turned the shady
cool beauty of the River Walk into nothing more than another sidewalk
went away eventually as well. It was a nice clean operation as far as he
was concerned and it cleared away a problem very efficiently. Too bad he
couldn't do the same thing to this woodlot. Fifty bucks and a crackhead
firebug would be marvelous for getting rid of this problem in his
opinion and if he was lucky the fire might clear out some of the renters
that he hadn't evicted yet as well and on top of that he could add the
insurance payout for the burned units to his profit margin.
He held his tongue until that short little idiot said that whatever this
was would likely extend to cover the area that he had in mind for
redevelopment. When he said that whatever this was would likely include
a great deal of his property that was too much for him to stand. Who did
this soft in the head pissant think he was coming in and telling them he
would have to give up his property to some nature loving freaks?
And then Andre openly sided with that pudding head to boot. That was
almost too much to take. Well he'd settle with Andre later. He didn't
know who loaned that imbecile a spine, but he didn't like it one bit.
And then to have that low class excuse for a cop call him on the carpet
because he didn't believe in the garbage he was spouting, well that was
just a straw too much in his opinion. He'd have to look into dealing
with him later as well. That uppity little nimrod didn't know just how
much trouble he'd bought by crossing him, but he was going to find out.
He sat though the rest of that short imbecile's so called briefing
stewing over what had happened and turning over ways to deal with the
two of them later on, while the rest of them asked ridiculous questions
as if they were taking his load of hog manure seriously. He was going to
have to seriously re-evaluate Andre's level of intelligence after this
he decided. But that could wait until after he'd gotten even with him so
that he learned his lesson to never cross him again.
The only good thing about the whole last part of that meeting in his
opinion was that it was the shortest part. The two skirts mostly kept
their mouths shut and let the men talk, even if the men weren't saying
anything that was important. He looked around as it was winding down. He
had his work cut out for him getting this horse back in the right cart
trace, no question about it. And both of those women needed to go.
He wondered who he could get put into their place instead. He had more
than enough pull in both of their departments and it should be easy
enough have a qualified man sent to replace them and to have the two of
them sent back making coffee and running errands the way they should be
doing anyway. God he hated this crap. What was the world coming to when
you had to bite your tongue to keep from 'offending' your inferiors?
That short little shit finally finished shooting off his mouth and
cleared out leaving him to finally start unfucking this cluster. He sat
back for now. He needed to get a handle on that man the Governor had
sent and Andre; he needed to snap Andre back into line soon, before he
started thinking that he actually called some of the shots around here.
Before he could do that he needed to do a little damage control first.
He stood up and placed his hands on the table and let his head hang
slightly in a repentant manner. "I'd like to apologize to the members of
this council for my earlier behavior. It was unacceptable on my part
especially in light of the information that has been revealed to this
body. As hard as that information was to believe at first I do stand
corrected in the matter and I offer my humblest of apologies if I did
offend any of you by my outburst earlier."
That should do it for now he thought as he sat down, Andre looked over
at him but he kept his opinion to himself for now. That was all to the
good. If he was stupid enough to believe that Kinsey meant a single word
of what he said then he deserved everything that Kinsey had planned for
him later on. Unbelievably to Kinsey, he actually asked that wetback
what she thought first, as if the unqualified little ditz had anything
relevant to say on the matter.
"Ms. Ramirez, now that you've heard from the detective, what bearing
does this situation have as far as civil defense is concerned? Is this
something that the city will have to accept or is there still some way
around it?" Mayor Watson asked.
"Honestly Mayor, I'd have to have time to study the relevant passages of
the documents that the F.R.T. has provided us and see how they pertain
to our situation before I could give a full recommendation about a
response; but from looking at what he has shown us so far we may not
have to accept it."
"Could you explain your reasoning Ms. Ramirez?" Mr. Meyer asked. "The
governor is very interested in resolving this issue in favor of the
status quo if possible."
Kinsey kept quiet for now. Maybe that splittail from civil defense might
not be so useless after all.
"Well I'd have to check against the documents of course, but it may be
that a good case could be made that having something like this would be
considered a danger to the existing population. I'm not an expert on the
Fae, but the presence of this one has already been more than disruptive
and as I understand it one man is missing and another is hospitalized?
Isn't that right Lt. Clayton?"
"According to the reports my department has received so far that is
indeed the case, also two of my detectives mentioned to me when I
debriefed them initially that there may be a connection to other
outstanding missing persons cases as well. I'm currently having my
department investigating that possibility."
"That certainly doesn't sound like something that we want to put our
stamp of approval on if that is the case Lieutenant," Mayor Watson said.
"Is there any evidence that these, what did the detective call them
dryads?
"Yes, Mr. Mayor. He did say dryads," Clayton said.
"Is there any indication that these dryads are the threat that they seem
to be given this information?"
"Not according to the background data we've been given," Ramirez said,
"But from how the detective just briefed us there may be some bias in
that assessment that we shouldn't ignore. Our responsibility is the
protection of the citizens of Stafford and this situation is looking a
little too much like an illegal land grab on the surface of it if you
want my opinion. It seems that they are trying to invoke a version of
eminent domain as a justification for doing so, but they are not trying
to prove that such a step is necessary beyond referencing this Concord
as the basis of the decision. You could say that it looks very much like
this group of Fae is taking advantage of the situation to invade us in a
manner of speaking."
If there was anyone at this table that would know about invading a place
where they weren't wanted, Kinsey thought to himself, it was that little
wetback slit. Her whole lot was nothing but a pack of invaders in the
opinions of decent folks, but he could ignore that for the time being.
She may not be entirely useless so far, but he would still have
preferred having a qualified man sitting in her chair.
"Would that be a violation of this Concord?" the mayor asked.
"Yes it could be," Lt. Clayton answered. "But maybe not as much as we
think it would be. From what I know from my earlier briefings, under the
Concord this single Fae should have been removed at the earliest
opportunity, not invited to establish an enclave."
"So they are breaking this agreement by insisting that she stay then?"
"It appears so, Mr. Mayor," Ramirez said looking up from scanning the
text on her reading pad. "There is an entire section dealing with
illegal and unsanctioned expansion here and if it is as Lt. Clayton
says, a single Fae of this type certainly falls under that category."
"Now ladies," Mr. Meyer said, "wait just a minute if you would. The
governor does want this situation resolved in a favorable manner that
preserves the status quo, but I think that the sections that you are
looking at don't apply entirely to this situation as it stands. There
are other passages in the Concord that would have more bearing on it I
think and I can't, in all honesty, recommend to the governor a plan of
action without taking all of that information into consideration."
"Are you suggesting that both of these ladies, these dedicated public
servants are incapable of making the correct assessment sir?" Kinsey
said to him. "Because if that is the case then I think that you should
apologize to both of these ladies before you say anything more sir. It
sounded to me like both of them are very well versed in their points and
they made them quite well."
"I didn't mean to imply anything of the sort Alderman, I just ..."
"Just what? Didn't like what you were hearing because it's a woman
saying it? I don't think that's an attitude that a man in your position
should be suggesting Mr. Meyer."
"That's not what at all what I'm trying to say Alderman and if I implied
anything like that, it was unintentional I assure you. It's just the
governor..."
"The governor is going to accept your recommendation Mr. Meyer is that
not true? You wouldn't be here if he wouldn't. So maybe it would be best
if you just be a man about it and accept that you were a little out of
line a moment ago and let these ladies finish what they were saying
sir."
Kinsey was smiling inside as Meyer was completely thrown off of his
track. He might have no other use for P.C. tripe, but it made a
marvelous club to beat the knuckleheads who did subscribe to it with.
And that was just the kind of club that he liked to use in cases like
these.
Kinsey flashed his charming smile at the splittail with the spic name.
"Ms. Ramirez if you would be so good as to continue what you were saying
a moment ago?" pouring as much insincere charm as he could muster into
his words.
"Well as I said I need to examine all of the documents in their
entirety, but it may be that this claim that has been made rests on
weaker foundations than we are led to believe and if that is the case
there are civil defense plans in place that are intended to be activated
to deal with this sort of situation."
"What civil defense plans do you refer to Ms. Ramirez?" Mayor Watson
asked.
"Well I am a little hesitant to bring them up; some of them could be
viewed in the aftermath as extreme."
"How extreme?" Watson asked.
"Mr. Mayor, I'll be blunt," she said, "None of the plans that would be
effective in an instance like this would be able to be concealed. Almost
all of the ones that I know of have a high probability of excessive
destruction in the area that they are implemented in."
"Ms. Ramirez, it sounds very much like you are referencing some sort of
war plan almost," Kinsey said to her. "Are you certain in your
professional capability that such a plan is appropriate under the
circumstances?"
"Based on the initial information that I have here, that may be the only
response that we could make outside of ceding the land in question and
that opens our entire population up to living with in close proximity to
a possibly dangerous Fae presence on a permanent basis," she said.
"Lt. Clayton what is your take on this situation? What can the police
department do in the likelihood we have to adjust to a permanent Fae
presence as Ms. Ramirez suggests?" Mayor Watkins asked.
"Mr. Mayor, I honestly don't see how we could do it. Not and maintain
concealment of the existence of the Fae. Officers would have to have
additional training and there would be the additional cost of special
weapons that are needed to handle them in lethal and non lethal
situations.
All of which are currently in drastically short supply. It would be
almost prohibitive to our current budget projections to stockpile the
amounts that we would need to effectively deal with a Fae presence on
the scale that special detective Singh is suggesting. As well as the
fact that having them here in that way increases the awareness level of
them with every casual contact. I'd have to speak with the commissioner
and the chief, but I fairly certain that they would agree with me that
it would be an untenable situation for Stafford P.D. in that event."
"So both of you are agreed then that this situation needs to be cleared
up as soon as possible and that this Grove needs to be removed from
Stafford?" he asked.
"Yes sir, I'm afraid that as the Stafford P.D. representative I'm going
to have to recommend just that. There may come a time soon when we have
to face this particular circumstance, but considering the small
contained nature of what we are dealing with now it may be that the best
thing to do is to just go ahead with removal," Clayton said.
"And you agree with that assessment Ms. Ramirez?"
"I'm afraid that I do, the threat of exposure would make it an
unacceptable risk to the population right now Mr. Mayor and that is
without taking into consideration the possibly dangerous nature of these
Fae," she said.
Kinsey felt like chortling, here he thought he was going to have to
actually have to work to make this turn out the way he wanted it to and
then God smiled down on him and moved these two clueless wenches to open
their dim mouths and do it for him. Well the good book did say that the
Lord did once move an ass to speak, so of course it would be a simple
matter for Him to make another pair of dumb beasts do something similar.
"Andre, I think that we should thank both of these intelligent ladies
for their professional recommendations. I'm sure that counseling us on
this matter couldn't have been an easy decision for them to make
considering the subject matter at hand, but they have shared with us all
the honest assessment that their expertise leads them to share with us
and I think we would be foolish if we disregarded that professional
assessment," Kinsey said
"Can the population be removed quietly from the area in the event that
we do agree to go ahead with one of these options?" Mayor Watson asked.
Kinsey could tell that the little weasel was sweating this one. Pathetic
bastard actually thought that it mattered what the scum of the city
thought about clearing out this problem just because it might break a
few eggs when they did it.
"Yes sir that can be done using only Stafford emergency service
personnel, there are contingencies in the plans in that event. But I
would suggest that we do take more time to review the matter before
taking such steps," Ms. Ramirez said. "It's not just a matter of
evacuation and the damage that whichever civil defense plan that's
chosen will cause. There is also dealing with what happens afterward."
"I don't think that is quite as much of a problem as you might think Ms.
Ramirez," Kinsey said. "Didn't the detective already say that the story
of a toxic dump site being discovered was being used to explain this
whole thing already? Couldn't that effort be expanded on to explain this
as well?"
"I suppose, if it was handled the right way Alderman Kinsey that it
could be. But at the same time I don't think that you have a full grasp
of just what some of these plans involve. There's going to be a lot of
destruction if we go this route. These are, as you said earlier, war
plans after all."
What Kinsey really wanted to do was backhand the silly cunt for even
suggesting that he didn't understand something. Maybe he could arrange
some trouble for her later on to remind her not to speak back to a man
in that fashion in the future, but for now he had to play nice since
this greaser was doing his heavy lifting for him.
"Ms. Ramirez, I'm sure that we can trust your recommendations in that
area. After all you are the councilmember most familiar with what that
all entails now aren't you?" Kinsey asked.
"Matthew," Watson interrupted, "I really think that we need a lot more
discussion of this matter. Taking a step like this is something that we
can't walk away from and we need to look at all of the options and not
just choose between let them stay or blowing them off the map. We don't
need a rush to judgment."
"Of course Andre, of course we don't. We need to look at this in a sober
and careful manner. But whatever we decide is going to take time to set
up and in the meantime it wouldn't hurt to go ahead with evacuating
those in that area. Just as a precaution of course. And if we do decide
that this route is the best one to take then there is less of a panic.
And we certainly don't want a panic now do we Andre?" Kinsey said.
"I suppose there isn't any harm in taking that step just now," Watson
said. Kinsey smiled inside again. Andre just needed a little reminder of
what he owed him. He knew that shit for brains son of Watson's would be
good for something eventually when he cleaned up that little drunken
asshole's mess, not that he ever expected to have to cash in that
particular chip. Still it was good to have it handy he supposed.
"Ms. Ramirez, it would be in all of our interests if we could keep this
entire matter as contained as possible. What would be the most likely of
these options to have limited impact on the area and still eliminate the
problem the way it seems to need to be eliminated?"
"I'd have to check to be sure sir but Gamma fourteen may be the only one
that may meet those requirements," Ramirez said.
"I'm sorry sir but I do have to object to considering this kind of
action at this time," Lt. Clayton said. "Detective Singh has been a
valuable member of my department for a long time and no matter how
reasonable our concerns are he and the F.R.T. would all raise very
strong objections to taking steps like this."
"Your objection is noted Lt. Clayton," Kinsey said, "But the fact of the
matter is that regardless of their objections they are still under civil
control and we are the duly constituted civil authorities in this area.
They may not like our decisions, but they are bound to carry them out
regardless. Whether they like it or not."
"It will still be a contentious decision at best Alderman Kinsey," she
said.
"I understand that Lieutenant. And I understand the difficult position
that such a decision places you in. That's why I would be happy to be
the one to take the burden of passing on whatever the decision this
council makes to the good detective and the members of the F.R.T."
Kinsey leaned back in his chair slightly, getting what he wanted just
felt right when it happened and when he didn't have to exert himself
that much to get it that was just the icing on the cake as far as he was
concerned. This particular horse was headed in the right direction, but
he still had to make certain that it was a done deal.
"Ms. Ramirez, would you be so good as to tell us just what plan Gamma
fourteen entails? Just so we know exactly what it is that we are
considering. After all we wouldn't want to make a rash or hasty decision
now would we?"
"No Alderman we would not," she said and started to brief them on the
details of the plan from her data pad.
------------------------------------
Brighton Home, Day Six: 2100 hours
The pounding on the door of his home was just one more unwelcome factor
in Jim's attempt to rest. After four hours of everything in the world
spinning mercilessly around him in the little room they put him and
Mitch in at the Area Command and Control center he finally regained
enough of his equilibrium to rise to his feet. The doctor who had been
monitoring him and Mitch certified that both of them could be release
from constant observation but had cautioned them against trying to focus
on the imagery of the vision for a couple of more days if they could
avoid it. As he told them that amount of sensory information being
imposed on them had in effect short circuited their own senses and
caused then to spin down into the vertigo like sensation that had
enveloped them.
He recommended to them that both of them return home and spend the next
couple of days resting until their senses had returned to something
close to their normal function. He had warned them about trying to push
themselves too much too soon and made it very clear that if they did
that they were very much in danger of ending up on the floor again.
Since Jim was absolutely certain that he intended to do nothing of the
sort, agreeing to follow the doctor's recommendations was easy for him
to comply with. Mitch said pretty much the same thing and only added
that once he was on his feet that Andrea was going to really go to town
on him about doing something else for a living again.
The both of them were allowed to leave the ACC shortly after the doctor
cleared them. Fitzhugh scared up a dark sedan from somewhere to hustle
them home and once it dropped him off other than giving Raja a quick
head rub on the way in Jim went right to bed without even bothering to
do more than strip off of his shoes. He thought he had even managed to
start to get some rest before the thumping on his front door made that
idea futile.
Jim cautiously got out of the bed and reached out for the wall to steady
his balance. The thumping at the front door was still continuing and he
heard the faint voice on the other side identifying itself as Stafford
P.D. Jim made his way to the door and got a quick glance through the
peep sight to confirm that whoever on the other side was who he claimed
to be. He was in uniform and there was a black and white parked along
the street so Jim reached for his badge and opened the door.
"Detective Brighton officer," he said showing the uni his shield.
"What's going on here? Did Lt. Clayton send you to get me from the
station?"
"No detective, it's nothing like that," the officer said.
"Then why are you rousting me just after nine in the evening if I'm not
being called back to the station Officer...?"
"Cavendish sir, we've been ordered to begin evacuating this
neighborhood," the uni said. "Orders just came down to clear out
everything from the river's edge all the way west to Sixteenth Street."
"Are you certain of that Cavendish?" he asked. "I'm part of the F.R.T
laison and if there was an update about requiring additional evacuation
then I would be one of the first to be informed about it."
"I don't know anything about that sir," he said. "All I know is we are
to clear all residents out of this area immediately."
"For how long?" Jim asked.
"I wasn't informed how long detective, I just was told to tell evacuees
to take all vital documents with them and any medications that they
would need for several days."
"This doesn't sound right Cavendish, but you go on and follow your
orders for now. I'm going to call in and try to get to the bottom of
this."
"Yes sir," he said and started walking down the walking path in front of
Jim's home on his way to the next house.
"Oh and sir?" he called back pausing in mid walkway.
"Yes Cavendish?" Jim answered.
"If you have any pets you should probably take them with you, we aren't
supposed to let anyone back into this area again once it's been
cleared."
"Okay, thanks for the heads up Cavendish," Jim said and watched as the
uni resumed walking away on his way to the next house. Jim turned back
inside his door and closed it behind him. He'd have to talk to Singh and
see just what was what with this whole thing, but right now he needed to
get clear. Mitch could probably put him up for the next few days. His
house was not in the expanded quarantine zone so Jim shouldn't have to
pop for a hotel that way.
He reached in his closet and pulled out his small suitcase. He didn't
need much in the way of clothes or toiletries so those fit in quickly
enough. His safe didn't have much in the way of must haves in it either
but he slipped the contents into one of the inner pockets of the bag as
well as his backup revolver and the ammunition that he kept in there.
There was some cash as well so that and the envelope that held it also
went into the bag. He did a quick sweep around the house and grabbed his
phone charger and laptop and squeezed them into the bag as well.
He did a walkthrough in the kitchen and swept some canned goods into a
couple of shopping bags as well. No point in leaving them behind and it
wasn't like they needed anything else to keep them edible while they
were sealed. He took the lot out and put it in his car. It was a good
thing that Singh had arranged for someone to drop it off before he got
home, otherwise he would have needed to call Mitch to have Andrea come
and pick him up.
He made another two trips and added some things like his old sleeping
bag and some other odds and ends that would be useful if he needed to be
away for more than a few days. He tossed the contents in the fridge that
would go off if he was gone longer than the uni had told him that he
would be and made a quick meal of what he didn't toss. That done he did
one last walk through and stopped by the fuse box to shut off everything
except what needed to remain on while he was gone. He tossed the last
bit into the back of his car along with a couple gallons of water he
kept for emergencies. Doing things like this always had driven his wife
crazy but he was of the school that emphasized covering as many of your
bases as you could beforehand. He took one last look around and closed
the door after he flicked off the light and locked it.
Raja was sitting on the carport table and mrrowed at him in a
questioning fashion. Jim reached up on the shelf for the plastic box of
kitty treats that he kept there and scooped the cat up.
"Looks like you're coming with me Pal," he said ruffling the cats head.
Raja didn't object when Jim put him in the car and shook out three or
four kitty treats on the floorboards. He just jumped down there quickly
ate them and then jumped up on the seat beside him and curled up in a
furry black ball and started purring while Jim started the engine and
quickly backed out onto the street. More of his neighbors were still
packing up than were leaving just yet and it looked like he might have
clear streets for a little while all the way to Mitch and Andrea's
place. He just hoped that he didn't have to pull over on the way there
because of having a relapse of earlier today.
--------------------------------------
The Grove: Day Seven-1100 hours
M'Tehr heard Jacen approaching before he arrived. She had sunk deep into
her borrowed oak and allowed the feeling of becoming one with it sooth
her. If the tree had not accepted her or the Grove had not accepted the
tree when it spread around it she didn't know how she would have been
able to long endure remaining here on the far end of her range,
separated from her Phar' ador when she needed it's touch the most.
This entire mission had been more stressful than even she had thought
that it might be. But that was to be expected she supposed. No hamadryad
had ever embarked on such a journey as this and should a similar journey
be needed in the future that sister would at least have the comfort of
knowing what she did now to carry with her. Still M'Tehr would almost
have rather been the second one. She could use comfort of that sort more
than she thought she would need it before leaving Morleth' Phar.
She exited from the oak and faced Jacen as he came closer to her oak and
then slowed and came to a stop beside her.
"She has awakened?" she asked.
"She has," Jacen said, "she is in the aether beside her Phar' ador. She
waits for you to join her."
"And is she well?" she asked.
"She seems to be," Jacen said.
"Then I will go to her," she said and slipped into the aether. The world
faded away around her and bloomed into a nightmare vision all around
her.
All around her walls of fire were sweeping in waves as far as the eye
could see. The heat the radiated from the roaring flames made the air
dance and shimmer .There was a sharp crack overhead as a flaming branch
exploded and she felt the ghost of those flaming splinters lance through
her body. The air was thick with smoke and if she needed to breathe she
wasn't sure there would be air enough for her to do so. The vortex of
flame around her howled and sucked every trace of oxygen into its
furnace to fuel the blaze.
M'Tehr wailed at the sight and dropped away from it to cower beneath the
flaming trunk of her oak. All around her was darkness and light.
Darkness from the smoke that blackened the sky and light from the fire
that consumed everything around her. She shut her eyes and then as the
sound faded she opened them again. The flames had passed and her body
shook from her visceral reaction to what it was that she had just
witnessed. She rose to her feet and looked around her in absolute
disbelief at what the fire had left in its wake.
The bare smoking earth below her feet was scoured clean of life as far
as the eye could see. The burnt and broken stumps still smoldered as
residual fires slowly ate out their hearts, burning them to the junction
of their roots deep in the earth below. The houses that men had raised
were nothing more that shattered toys that were splintered and undone.
Smoking ruins and all around her, where once the life of the Grove had
reached was only barren earth separated by the scorched and blackened
man stone that remained to delineate the roads from what was around
them. She could see the Arath' Mahar standing silently beside the
smoking ruin of her elm looking around the aethereal world in confusion
and loathing. M'Tehr bit down on her horror at seeing this dream; this
nightmare the land was showing them and made her way to her side. It was
only a dream she reminded herself. A terrible one but still only a
dream. She forced herself to regain her composure and focused on Arath'
Mahar.
"It has burned for hours," she said sadly as she heard M'Tehr's
footsteps approach behind her. "It burns, the flames consume all, the
ashes blow in the wind and then it burns again," she turned and faced
M'Tehr and as she did so M'Tehr saw that there were tears streaking the
ashes coating her face.
"Is this something that will happen?" she asked M'Tehr as she approached
and stopped beside her with the smoking ruin of Arath' Mahar's elm
between them.
"It is a dream of the land Arath' Mahar," M'Tehr said to her. Sometimes
the land dreams of what has touched it before, sometimes it sees what
may touch it; it does not always mean that what we see will be."
"I watched it happen," she said. "I looked up and saw the fire overhead
and felt it sweep through everything. I was watching a sunrise and then
I saw a second sun overhead. I screamed when it fell. I could almost
feel it, but there was nothing to feel."
"Arath' Mahar I cannot say that this will not happen, but that does not
mean that it will. If this is a dream of the earth about something that
in motion we may yet halt it, others who stand with us may yet bar its
path."
"Arath' Mahar," she said. "Before this you called me sister."
"You are more than that Arath' Mahar," she said reverently, "Speaking to
you as less would be wrong to me. I cannot bring myself to do that. It
would be disrespectful."
"I think of you as sister even though," she said. "So what shall we do
now sister?" she asked.
"A choosing of names would strength your claim under the Concord Arath'
Maher," she answered. "Perhaps enough to avert this dream that land
dreams."
"Can such a small thing really do so much?" she asked.
"A name is no small thing Arath' Mahar," she said. "A name is the
recognition of what is singular and what is singular is precious in its
rarity."
"Would me delaying this step help or hinder I wonder?" she said. "A step
like that could provoke what we see here."
"Or it may avert it Arath' Mahar," M'Tehr said. "It is not for me to
say. To speak the name of your Phar is solely in your hands. As it was
for each Arath' Mahar before you when they summoned the land to bear
witness to what the Phar they had brought to birth was to be. This is
your joy and your burden. I cannot lighten it. It is not my place."
"Why are you so certain of this sister?" she asked.
"Arath' Mahar, a name is not a name. It cannot ever be such a small
thing. There is power in names. To name something is to control its
destiny. To shape every day forward for good or ill. It is not a label
or merely a word that is kept so that something may be kept track of. It
is part of the being of what it is given to. Every Grove that survived
the Withering cherishes the name bestowed by the Arath' Mahar that gave
it. Every daughter that stems from those Groves bears the name of the
mother that brought it into being. It is a root that stretches across
the ages and binds what was to what is and reaches forward to what will
be."
The Arath' Mahar didn't respond. She looked steadily at the ruined
landscape around them and M'Tehr waited for her to speak, but no words
came.
"There was once a Grove here, Arath' Mahar," she said softly,
reverently. Your own vision gave us that comfort of knowing. To know
that those lost sisters were still remembered in some small fashion."
"What was its name?" she asked. "Does anyone know?"
"No, Arath' Mahar," M'Tehr said quietly, "That was lost when it was
lost. And if not for you it would be lost still. Its loss is our sorrow.
Sorrow no less sharp for happening long ago. We grieved all of our lost
sisters and we grieve these lost sisters now. Knowing they were here
brings our loss close to us again and that is the price we pay for
loving them."
"I understand. My father was killed long before we knew he was dead.
Finding out made it as fresh as if we had seen it happen. And seeing him
finally being brought back to us made it just as raw as when I heard it
had happened. Once was bad enough, twice was worse. I wish one had at
least survived in the way that you thought me to be," she said. "It
would be easier if one of those you mourn were here now."
"Yes, that would be a joy for us, but even as we mourn anew we still
have our joy as well," M'Tehr said.
"How can you?" she answered looking at her. "How can you not be bitter
over it?"
"Our sisters are gone, their Grove gone with them. And we mourn them,"
she said slowly. "But we can mourn those that were here, the ones that
raised this Grove and tended it. Their names are gone but we have surety
that this was not ever forgotten. And we have you Arath' Mahar. Without
the memory of the lost we would not have you now. You are what tempers
the loss. You and the Grove you raise with you."
"I cannot be who I was again," she said. "Who I was is as lost as this
Grove was."
"Who you are now will still carry that with you Arath' Mahar," M'Tehr
said. "But who will you be?"
"That is what I have been wondering," she said. "I cannot be Cecil
Barnes any more. The shadowy man took that part of my existence from
me."
"Then who you are is in your hands alone now, not those that robbed you.
Arath' Mahar," M'Tehr said.
"I cannot let him do that though," she said. "If I let that part of me
be forgotten then what remains of me loses something that I don't want
to lose. I lose that, then that is, in a small way like this Grove
losing who it was because no one remembered it was here. And if no one
remembers then it is as if it never was. I can't bring myself to erase
what is left of me that way."
"What will you do Arath' Mahar?"
"The only thing I can do," she said. "Keep some small part of me with me
always. That way I have something to carry forward with me."
"And what will you carry Arath' Mahar?" M'Tehr asked. "What would you
carry all your days that would be precious and not a burden?"
"A small part of who I was. I can't be Cecil Barnes anymore, but I can
carry a small part of my name to honor the small part of who I have
left. I can be Selicia," she said.
"As you have said it so shall it be, Arath' Mahar TsL' H'sia," M'Tehr
said trying to wrap her mouth around the syllables.
Selicia looked down at her distended form. "And what should I call you I
wonder?" she said. Selicia looked up from herself to M'Tehr. "This is
not real is it?" she asked.
"No, Arath' Mahar TsL' H'sia, it is not. It is a representation of what
is there. You carry your sister, but not in the way your mind has chosen
to show it," she said.
"What will happen?" she asked.
"Soon you must choose a Phar' ador for your sister. And when the time
comes you must take her into it and join her with its heart," she said.
"And what happens then?" Selicia asked.
"There in her Phar' ador she will wait and take form and when she is
ready she will leave it so that we will know that she is when she is
complete."
"And who will she be?" she asked.
"She will be another part of you. She will be of you and she will carry
you with her always. And the Grove will grow anew. As it should."
"I'm afraid," she said.
"Arath Mahar you only speak what one in your position could say knowing
what it is that you know. You say that you are afraid but that fear is
not an admission of weakness as some might think it would be."
"How can it be otherwise?" she asked her.
"How can it be weakness if it gives you strength? M'Tehr asked her in
turn. When you were as you were, before you showed us in your vision,
you were captive of the fear that birthed you. And I myself was witness
to how you turned that fear to your advantage and became stronger for
it. This is only a degree of difference and when the time comes I
believe that you will make the right choice then as you did before."
"That wasn't the same thing," Selicia said to her. "When that happened I
had no choice. I had to act and I had to do so without thinking of the
consequences. What you are talking about me doing now is just as
frightening now but the difference is that I have time to see what might
be in front of me and seeing it I don't know if that is what I truly
need to do. I think that having more time like I do to make this
decision is acting more as a hobble than a help."
"Then take off the hobble Arath Mahar. Look into yourself and recognize
what it is that you need to do. I know only too well what you will do
when you face the moment of decision and you did what was needed to be
done to meet what fear rose up to strike at you with then. Look inside
yourself and listen to what you hear from the aether around us."
Selicia looked at the smoking ruin around them and even though her tie
to the land was only recently forged seeing it brought low in this
fashion tore at her as nothing that she had felt before had ever done
so.
"Do you remember when you searched on my body to find something?" she
asked M'Tehr. "You insisted that it was important and it might be the
most important thing that you could do for me in finding it?"
"Yes Arath Mahar," she answered her. "Not being able to find your Grove
mark should have made me realize what it was that you truly were when I
could not find it. It should have made me understand that there was no
mark for me to find since you had not chosen one yet."
She looked down on her left arm where the twisting stem of the rose
wound around her wrist and ended in her inner elbow. She reached over
with her right hand and laid her fingertips on the dark design that
marked her flesh.
"I thought that this was what you were talking about," she said softly
looking at the ruin of her tree. "I thought that because it became so
visible after I escaped the first time that it was something that had
been done to protect me. To show that I was part of something much
bigger than I imagined it was."
"I was wrong to discount what you told me about that before you opened
your mind and shared what was kept there to us all. I rushed to dismiss
what you told me and looked for what I thought I should see instead.
Doing that made me careless Arath Mahar. I missed seeing what was in
favour of trying to find what I thought should be."
"And has something like this happened before sister?" she asked M'Tehr
looking up from the mark on her arm to the mark on M'Tehr's chest.
M'Tehr hesitated before answering her. It had to have happened sometime
before; else there would never have even been a first Grove for M'Tehr
to spring from. No Grove for her to emerge into the first time she left
her Phar' ador for the light of the world.
Her head swum with the power of the vision and remembering it was like
seeing the face of a deity. She had witnessed an act of creation that
was unlike anything this world had seen in ages and in light of that it
was of little wonder that she had missed its import because she could
not envision that such a thing was even possible in her limited
understanding.
"Arath Mahar TsL' H'sia I can only say that it must have happened
before. But it was not possible for it to happen until now. The blooming
is approaching and you are its harbinger. You are showing us the way and
in my focus on the past I nearly missed the future beginning to unfold
around us all. I was wrong to do that. I failed you when I did that and
I can only ask your forgiveness for failing you."
"Sister there is no forgiveness needed for you. How can I forgive you
when I have not been wronged?"
"But I have wronged you Arath Mahar," she insisted. "My blindness
wronged you and my insistence on shaping you into what I thought you
were and not seeing what was plainly before me wronged you."
M'Tehr kneeled on the scorched earth next to Selicia and asked her for
her forgiveness again.
Selicia lay her hand on the kneeling dryad and bid her to rise. M'Tehr
hesitated and then did so. In the aether her sister had shed her glamour
as she did when there were no others around that made such a thing
necessary. She looked into the blank features of the smooth shaped wood
that she appeared as and in the light of the aether she was able to
perceive M'Tehr's true face looking back at her.
In the physical world without her glamour all a person who saw her would
see was the faceless blank that seemed unfinished but that was not what
Selicia was seeing when she looked into her eyes now.
M'Tehr's eyes were enormous and arched upward with impossible seeming
size. Her mouth was not the thin slit that it appeared as but was lush
with the life that she reflected around her. If it was true that her
ancestress was once someone like Selicia, then there were still traces
of M'Tehr's distant Arath' Mahar in the cast of her own features even
now and looking at what she was now and what M'Tehr was as well she felt
the burden that was hanging over her even more keenly than she did
before.
There would one day be another like M'Tehr standing in this place she
realized. That one that stemmed from her would look just as M'Tehr
looked now. Time and generations would work it's will over those to come
and one that sprang from the seed she was planting now. One that the law
governing form and function would hold sway over.
She was not here yet but the echo of what Selicia was doing now was
already echoing in her existence and for her to hear what the echo was
telling her she needed to name what it was to be. She needed to name the
guiding principle that would be part of all who sprang from this place.
"You are forgiven sister," she said to her.
She could tell that even if she didn't think it was necessary for her to
do such a thing that M'Tehr did think it so. She rose to her feet beside
her and she inclined her head toward Selicia in a gesture of deep
respect. It was not possible for her to dissuade her of doing this
anymore Selicia realized. She just didn't have any other way to respond
to what Selicia represented to her and she resolved to not try and force
her in this manner to reject what was clearly a deep part of her being
any more.
"If this is not the mark you were looking for then it needs to come from
somewhere," she said to her. "So how did your mark come to be?"
"You must craft the mark Arath' Mahar," she said reverently. "As all
Arath' Mahar's did in their time.
"But how?" she asked. "Does anyone even remember it being done?"
M'Tehr felt the stir of her sister's voices in her mind and in the
tumult there was no answer to be found that she could give.
"The mark of a Grove is part of the name that it bears," she said
finally. "Beyond that there is little known of how it was done each time
it was. The Arath' Mahar is the only one who ever did such a thing and
it was only done once."
"But there has to be some way of knowing what they did then," Selicia
said. "If only so that it could be remembered as being done."
The babble of voices in M'Tehr's mind increased as many agreed with what
Arath' Mahar TsL' H'sia was saying. There were calls even as they
discussed this matter for the archives to be opened and searched for
anything that might be of use to her and M'Tehr was one of those that
added her own voice in support of such an effort.
"We will look in our oldest records Arath" Mahar TsL' H'sia," she said
to her. If it can be found then it will be known to you."
Selicia nodded her head in gratitude and started walking through the
charred field. M'Tehr fell in and walked half a step behind her as she
did so. She walked beyond where the growth had been scorched away to
where there had only been grass growing in her vision. She walked and
then stopped and knelt on one spot.
She laid her hand on the blistered earth and looked up at M'Tehr. "This
is where it began," she said simply. "This is where I was born."
M'Tehr didn't answer her. It was hard for her to see the connection
between what the land was dreaming of now and what had been here when
the shadowy man had used this spot to set the Arath' Mahar's feet on the
path that led to them being here now.
"This is where the name needs to come from," she said to her. "I don't
understand why it needs to come from here only that it does."
Selicia looked up and her and rose to her feet as she brushed the dust
from her hands and let it fall to the earth below them.
"What would you have called this place if you were standing where I am
now? She asked M'Tehr.
"When I thought that you were less than you are I had such presumptions
Arath' Mahar. In my ignorance I would have suggested to you that this
place might be called Khopthalmi Phar."
"And what does that mean?" Selicia asked her.
"Resurgent heart," she answered. "I thought when I was mistaken that if
you did not remember the name by which our sisters once called this
place that you would consider that meaning of some worth."
"And do you still think so?"
"No," she said. "This Grove is a new place." She knelt down and picked
up a handful of the ashes that humped on the aethereal soil and let them
drift through her fingers. "It is new," she repeated, "but it can only
be built on the ashes of what is no longer here. And what is lost will
not be lost so long as this place remembers it."
She let the rest of the ashes fall and together the two of them watched
them drift down and settle back into the ashes from which they had been
taken from. "It should have a new name as well," she said with finality.
"And why not the one you suggested?" Selicia asked.
M'Tehr looked at the spot of earth where the Arath' Mahar had hatched
from. "Arath' Mahar if it were the right name you would already know
that it is so. This spot would tell you if it rings true and I don't
think that it does for you."
Selicia looked at the place where she had been twisted into what she was
now and inclined her head in agreement with her sister.
"You are right sister," she said finally. "That name does not echo here
and it would not ring true if I accepted it. The name of this place must
come from within; from what forged its beginning."
She looked around them and then looked back at M'Tehr. "The shadowy man
was the midwife of this Grove," she said. "Without what he did here
there would be no Grove now. She looked back at her elm. The smoking
stump of her Phar' Ador that stood forlorn in the desolation around
them. "And he is connected with what we are seeing here in some way as
well. The land dreams of what he desires," she said, her eyes narrowing
in building fury. "It does not matter that this small good came from
him. What is evil might do something good to serve its own ends, but
that does not erase the evil."
She looked across the river to the city that stood now clearly seen from
the heart of the murdered Grove the aether was dreaming of. "And that
must be part of the purpose of this place," she declared to M'Tehr and
in her words she felt the solidity of that truth fall into place. "I
cannot allow whatever he is move around freely to work his will on
others the way he planned to do with me. In that my resolution is firm
sister."
M'Tehr couldn't disagree with Arath' Mahar TsL' H'sia. What she had
already spoken was something that she could feel as a connection
actively being forged from the words that they were speaking now. And
that connection was echoing strongly in this place. Too strongly for her
to dismiss it.
"I must find him and put an end to what he has wrought," Selicia said
with firm conviction. "Vengeance is all he has left owed to him now.
Vengeance for what he did here, what he has done and what he will do
before he is brought down. That is the only justice that he could be
held accountable to. I am certain that aspect should be part of what
this place should become. A token of the commitment to see that fight
carried out and finished. So that all those who come from here remember
what this place was born from; pain and fear and they should be bound to
stand against that. To guard against it for all time."
M'Tehr looked at Arath' Mahar in horror. "No," she said trembling at her
need to contradict her. It must not be that, she thought desperately to
herself, never that. She needed to make the Arath' Mahar understand that
while a name was needed now it should not include that as its primary
keystone. The Arath' Mahar was on the verge of speaking the name that
was already brewing in her heart and she was right in what she said for
the reason that she said, but that was nothing compared to the
suggestion that she was making now.
"Not Dormath' Phar," she insisted. "That very name reeks of evil. Arath'
Mahar."
"Is that what it would be?" she asked turning her attention back to her
sister. "Dormath' Phar," she said allowing the syllables to roll over
her tongue. "It sounds almost right. What does it mean?"
"It means Vengeful Heart," she said saying its meaning again to Selicia
in English. "Whatever else you do please do not do this, Arath' Mahar.
Do not embrace this name," she begged.
"Not Dormath' Phar. That name would taint this place irrevocably and
twist it in turn. The dark pattern that you would weave with bestowing
this name would echo through the ages and it would be true; but it would
also pollute this place. And that pollution would be carried at their
core by every daughter that is spawned from here. Every daughter Grove
that stems from this place would carry that taint as well and you would
come to regret what you do today if you give in to this impulse now.
Please, Arath' Mahar. I beg you choose another name."
"And why do you say this sister?" she asked her. "How could you know
that what you are saying would be what you say it is?"
"Because once there was a Dormath' Phar," she said shuddering as she
needed to speak its name again. "Or rather there was Phar' Dormath; the
Heart of Vengeance."
"And what happened to this Phar' Dormath?" she asked her.
"Their focus on vengeance to the exclusion of all else destroyed them,"
M'Tehr said her voice low with the horror of it. "Their Groves became
dark twisted places and that was long before they ever struck their
final blow against the ones they stood against. And when those ones were
gone they no longer had purpose and they turned on all who came near
because the purpose they had was now gone. And when none came near they
turned on themselves until none remained."
"Do you know where they were then?" Selicia asked her, her voice clearly
reflecting the recognition for what M'Tehr was telling her."
"Not precisely," M'Tehr said. "But the earth that they once stood over
is still poisoned by what they became today. Find a wasteland and at the
heart of it was where one of their strongholds once stood. They were
fanatics and that poison they harboured within their breasts still seeps
up from the earth and taints those who spring from there today. I beg
you, do not resurrect Dormath' Phar."
"I will not give this name then. I must not let what fights the shadowy
man become worse than him," she said finally. "But what grows here still
must stand a vigil against him and those like him as well. There can be
no other way."
M'Tehr heaved a sigh of relief inwardly as she felt the words that
Arath' Mahar speak were already echoing with that meaning around them.
"Let it be as you say then Arath' Maher. Let it be Phar' Naqua as you
have said. That is a name that does not speak from darkness but from
light."
Selicia turned the words over in her mind and tasted them as they
caressed her tongue. She knelt and laid her hand on the spot of her
birth. "Phar' Naqua," she said softly and in saying them she felt the
rightness of them echoed in the Grove around them.
--------------------------------------------
Traver's Home: Day Six, 2215 hours
The lights in Mitch's place were all on as Jim slowed down and pulled
his car up to the curb and killed the engine. He could see Mitch and
Andrea moving around inside behind curtains that were only half open in
some windows. The problem was that Mitch and Andrea weren't the only
ones doing that. Almost every house on the street was lit up either the
same amount or nearly as much and from what Jim could see they were
almost as busy. Jim looked down at Raja who was still purring and doing
his best to impersonate a furry black ball on the seat. "Something
doesn't smell right Raja old boy," he said. "You stay here buddy."
Raja barely lifted his head when Jim opened the door and got out. Jim
was half worried that he might bolt since Raja wasn't really his cat to
begin with, but Raja seemed happy with where he was. His only reaction
was to stretch out his forelegs until his claws popped out while making
a wide mouthed cat yawn before settling back into the seat to resume his
nap.
Jim stepped up to Mitch's front door and popped the door three times in
rapid fire secession. "Hey Mitch, Andrea its Jim," he said through the
wood loud enough that they could hear him. There was as sound of
movement on the other side and Andrea instead of Mitch opened the door.
"Hey Jim," she said stepping back so he could come in.
"Hey Andrea. Where's Mitch?" he said stepping in.
"He's still getting some stuff together. Did he call you?" she asked.
"No, he didn't call me," Jim said and before he could tell her why he
was here she turned half around and called back to Mitch.
"Mitch? Jim's here. Did you call him already?" she asked.
"No," Mitch's muffled voice came from the back. "Send him back this way
would ya' hon?"
Andrea turned back to Jim. "He's back in the laundry room getting some
things together. You go on back Jim; I gotta get back in the bedroom and
get some of this stuff together," Andrea headed down the hall and
disappeared around the corner.
Jim passed through the open archway from the living room into the
kitchen and headed to the back of the house where the laundry room was.
Mitch used part of the big room for storage and when Jim peeked his head
through the open door Mitch was pulling down a plastic storage bin down
from an overhead rack.
"Well I guess that answers that question," Jim said looking him over.
"Which one was that?" Mitch said.
"How you're feeling."
"A lot better than I was feeling earlier," Mitch said and reached for
another storage bin.
"Yeah, me too," Jim said. "So what's this?" he asked.
"Yeah, I was about to call you. A fireman stopped by here about thirty
minutes ago. he said that they were evacuating everything on this side
of Eighteenth Street all the way east to the interstate. I was about to
call you and see if you minded putting up with Andrea and me for a
couple of days."
"Mitch I can't do that. I just came over to ask you the same thing. A
uni stopped by my place a little over an hour ago and told me they were
evacuating all the way west to Sixteenth Street from the river's edge. I
was going to ask you to put me up."
Mitch set down the plastic storage bin. Someone, probably Andrea had put
a strip of masking tape on it and written blankets with a marker.
"That's just about the entire area around the quarantine zone cleared
out Jim. That's a hell of a lot of people being moved right now and a
hell of a lot of space being cleared out. That's too much for what we
have going on there."
"Have you called Singh?" Jim asked.
"I was going to do that after I called you. How about you?" he asked.
"I was going to do the same when I got here," Jim said.
"You call Singh and I'll have Andrea call her sister and see if we can
stay with her tonight since your place isn't an option anymore," he said
putting down the bin and heading back to where Andrea was in the back
bedroom.
Jim reached fished his phone out of his pocket and dialed Singh.
---------------------------------------------
Area Command and Control: Day Six, 2240 hours
Singh ended the call and slipped the phone back into his jacket pocket.
"Agent Fitzhugh, would you be good enough to come in here please?" he
called through the door to the room outside.
Fitzhugh stepped in a moment later. "Yes sir?" she asked. Singh could
only marvel at the woman's constitution. It seemed like she never slept.
He was certain that she must, but she was always right at his arm
whenever he needed her still.
"Agent Fitzhugh, I just finished a call with Detective Brighton. From
what he tells me the entire area from the river to the interstate that
is currently just outside of the containment zone is being evacuated. Is
this an F.R.T. evacuation and if so what is the reasoning for it?" he
asked.
"I'm not aware of any expansion of the evacuation area sir," she
answered. "But I'll find out as much as I can about it right now."
"Please do that. Find out what is the reasoning behind it, who is
conducting it and more importantly why and then find out how it is that
we were not informed of it at all apparently," Singh said turning back
to the pad that he had been writing on before Jim called him.
Singh continued to write on the pad. It was a habit he had developed to
deal with the effects of experiencing a broadcast vision like they had
been part of earlier. For him it was a tool to help organize what he had
seen while he was still able to recall all of the elements in fresh
detail. He know that before long the ultra real experience would begin
to fade and he wouldn't be able to extract nearly as much useful
information from what he knew as he could shortly after it happened. He
didn't want that to happen with this latest experience. There was too
much there that was valuable not only to resolving this Grove crisis but
even more that was highly relevant to the Barnes investigation itself.
Perhaps even more than that, but to find that out he had to get it down
first and the first part of that was to get his own mind out of the way
and act as a stenographer for what he saw.
That was the trick of this. You had to take yourself out of the picture
and write it down as if you were observing it firsthand rather than as a
shared experience the way a broadcast vision did. If you did it right
when you finished you had a complete statement that was exacting in as
many details as possible without being swamped in documenting each
movement. That was also another issue with that; it was easy to drown in
what you saw and identify with the one who shared it rather than remain
objective as an observer. And when it was shared without warning as had
been done today that made the whole process even more difficult as well.
When Barnes recovered M'Tehr was going to have to instruct her in a
little etiquette regarding that particular talent of hers Singh thought.
"Sir?" Agent Fitzhugh said leaning into the door leading into the
office.
"Yes?" Singh said putting the pad and pen down.
"We have verification on that evacuation order. It covers from the west
bank of the river all the way to the interstate. It's been in effect for
almost four hours now," she said.
"And why didn't this notification include us?" Singh asked.
"It's being carried out by Stafford Police and fire department sir; it
hasn't been shared beyond those organizations. Apparently they started
at the interstate line and have been working their way to the river
border since it was issued. That's why none of our personnel have
reported anything back to us yet. We're on the leading edge of the
evacuation zone right now."
"And what is the stated purpose of this evacuation?" Singh asked.
"From what we've been able to determine it is being explained as a
precautionary move," she said.
Singh leaned back into the chair. "Agent Fitzhugh I find it very
difficult to believe that a precautionary move that encompasses such a
scope of operation and covers so much territory is anything but. I also
find it highly interesting that such an operation was conducted in a
fashion intended to keep those of us involved in this operation blind of
its actions. There is a purpose behind this and someone had decided that
it is not for our eyes to see or for our minds to know until it has
nearly been completed and that bothers me greatly."
"I agree sir," she said. "There is something that is very irregular
about this."
"Is the Advisory council still present?" he asked.
"No sir, they left over two hours ago," Fitzhugh answered.
"Have them brought back, wake them up at home if need be, but get them
back here. All of them. I suspect the actions that we are seeing here
are a direct result of some decision that the Advisory council has
reached and had not deemed necessary to share with us for their own
reasons. Whatever that action is it is imperative that we are aware of
its intentions as soon as can be determined."
"Yes sir," Fitzhugh answered and stepped back into the command room and
started issuing orders to the staff there.
Singh was sitting in the council chamber when the members began to drift
in and take their seats. It was already after one in the morning before
Clayton and Meyers arrived. They were the first to do so. Meyers because
he was closest and Clayton because she was already at the station when
Fitzhugh called. The mayor was the next to follow them followed shortly
in turn by Ramirez. Both of them had been home but from what Fitzhugh
had informed him they had apparently not been sleeping when either of
them was contacted. Kinsey was the last one to arrive and he kept them
all waiting for him for nearly an hour after the others were assembled,
even though he probably lived closer to the Area Command and Control
building than any of them.
"And just what is the reason that you feel the need to call us back here
at this time of night detective?" Kinsey complained. "I fail to see how
any of this is justified in any way. Would you care to explain yourself
sir?"
"Alderman Kinsey that was the very thought that I had when I asked for
this council to be called into session here tonight. There is a complete
evacuation that is underway that spans from the river's edge to the
interstate bypass and seems intended to remove every person who resides
in this part of the city from this area. For what purpose is this action
being conducted? And why are the members of the F.R.T. not only being
kept unaware that this action is underway, but it seems that action also
is also being actively concealed from them that it was even taking
place?"
"This evacuation is a precautionary measure that the council had
determined is in the best interests of Stafford, Detective," Kinsey said
to him. "You and your organization here would have been informed when it
was completed. There was no reason for you to be involved in it at this
time. This is a local matter and it does not concern any others,
especially your F.R.T."
"And for what purpose is such an undertaking in service of Alderman
Kinsey?" Singh asked.
"Why the best interests of Stafford detective, that's all it's ever been
about," he answered with particular relish.
And just what are those interests then Alderman Kinsey?" Singh asked
him.
"Why the entire reason for this council being formed as you yourself
said earlier detective. The swift resolution of this current crisis."
"And just how are you defining that objective?" Singh asked.
"Well detective, it's been suggested to some on this council that
perhaps the best way this whole situation could be resolved is, if this
Grove you called it?
"Yes, Alderman Kinsey. That is indeed what we are presently facing."
"If this Grove then, were to just go away entirely," he said with
evident satisfaction over being able to tell Singh that.
"That is no longer possible Alderman, once a Statement of Being is made
the relevant articles of the Concord supersedes other concerns. The
Grove network already were resistant to the idea of removal even before
they were aware that it contained an Arath' Mahar, and now they will
utterly refuse to countenance it."
"Well accidents do happen unfortunately. And there are only three of
them there," Kinsey said taking his seat and leaning back in the chair.
If there was a poster depicting arrogance he stood a good contender as
the model just then.
"And what is it that am I to understand that you intend by making such a
statement Alderman Kinsey?" he demanded.
"Absolutely nothing detective, but if a fire were to say sweep the area
as happens from time to time, it would certainly be a great tragedy for
all concerned of course, but the status quo would likely return to what
it was before," Kinsey's eyes were twinkling with pleasure as he made
his suggestion.
"And what do you base such a preposterous notion on Alderman?" he
demanded.
"Nothing detective, just a possibility that must be considered is all,"
Kinsey answered.
"What have you done Alderman?" Singh demanded, his eyes narrowing.
Nothing yet, detective, but as we were discussing earlier Civil Defense
plan Gamma Fourteen seems like it would be the best solution to the
entire matter," Kinsey was like a child with a new toy that he couldn't
wait to use when he said that. Singh didn't like that one bit.
"And what does this civil defense plan Gamma Fourteen have to do with
any of this Alderman; those plans have no relevance in the current
situation?" Singh demanded.
"It was just presented as one of the options the council had at its
disposal and once the specifics of it were explained that particular
response seems like it might be tailor made to eliminate this problem
for us."
Singh looked back the man. He was almost emanating an air of smug
satisfaction over this. Considering what he had just said and his
earlier behavior he thought that he was justified in seeing just what it
was that this man was hiding in his thoughts right now. He concentrated
and accessed just what it was that he was hiding there.
"You want to drop a fuel air bomb on the Grove in the center of that
part of the city? Are you insane?!" Singh exploded at him.
"A modified fuel air bomb Detective, with an aerial dispersion of iron
filings afterward. According to the information here a thorough
evacuation of the area can be made very quickly before it's done and if
it is performed just before dawn it can be explained as the result of
some of the toxic drums rupturing and causing an explosion. It seemed
the best option from hypothetical scenarios that we were presented. The
numbers look good for its success. A 97.4% probability of success in
fact."
"This is no hypothetical scenario. You've already ordered it haven't
you?" he spat.
"I can't really say that for certain but it is a viable option is it
not?" he answered in a jovial way. He was enjoying watching this little
pissant twist around helplessly while a real leader acted.
"Haven't you!!!" Singh demanded.
"The evacuation is already underway Detective. You are already aware of
that. Now why don't you just go back into your little office and let
this council handle this nuisance. That's all you have to do and before
much longer this problem will just fade away. And once it does we can
pick up the pieces and forget this ever happened," Kinsey said a slow
satisfied smile spreading over his face.
"Believe me detective, we wrestled with the necessity with for this
action, but in the end the majority of us decided that this was the best
chance to restore the status quo and the governor agreed with us," Meyer
said.
"My God, what do you lunatics think you are doing? This is not why you
are here!" Singh said rising and leaning over the table to stare down at
them.
Kinsey smiled inwardly. It was so satisfying when they hung themselves
like Singh had just done. He had been looking forward to this ever since
the last time they spoke.
"Detective, you will apologize for those remarks. And you will do it
now. I don't think outbursts like that have any place in this
discussion. You do not run this council and when you are in front of it
you are here to provide answers not half baked opinions or flights of
fancy to excuse your actions over the last few days like you did
earlier. And when you are in front of this council you will confine your
responses to answering the needs of this council and not questioning its
decisions sir. And I will move to hold you in contempt and have you
arrested if you persist in doing so."
"And what will you do when the Satyr armies march in response to what
you have done? What then?" Singh demanded ignoring the threat.
"I was made aware of your so-called Esper abilities detective, I'm not
sure that I really believe in them, but it seems you neglected to
mention that you can see the future as well. Perhaps, you should
enlighten us?" Kinsey said in his satisfied mocking tone.
"It does not take any form of precognition to see what the outcome of
this misbegotten idea will be Alderman Kinsey, merely a reasonably
functioning brain. Something whomever it was that suggested this asinine
response clearly lacks," he spat.
"Shall I tell you what will happen if you should do anything of this
sort you blithering idiot? Someone should because if you think that this
is a rational response, then perhaps it is best that you not appear in
public in the future without a competent keeper close beside you," he
said glaring directly at Kinsey.
"You are out of line detective! If you say one more word that is not in
service to meeting the demands of this council there will be
consequences sir! Do you see what I am saying to you sir!" Kinsey
shouted back at him.
"Oh I see very clearly Alderman Kinsey exactly what it is that you
intend. This entire farce has nothing to do with addressing the
situation in Olympia and everything to do with preventing loss.
Particularly your own."
Kinsey felt a cold chill sink into him. There was no way that this man
could know just how he had maneuvered this situation the way he had to
preserve his personal plans. That claptrap about reading minds was just
new age foolishness wasn't' it? Best to shut this down as quickly as
possible he decided.
"That will be quite enough out of you detective. You are completely out
of order and if you do not shut up and do as you are instructed to by
this council you will be removed and barred from it regardless of what
your so-called position with the Stafford FRT task force is."
"But then you do have a great deal to lose don't you," Singh continued
speaking, ignoring his threats. "A Grove in your district would have a
tremendous impact on your personal circumstances as you see it wouldn't
it Alderman Kinsey? This has less to do with resolving this crisis and
more to do I think, with preserving your personal circumstances doesn't
it? You own a great deal of property in the vicinity of that Grove don't
you Alderman Kinsey? Property that would see a sharp decrease in its
value in your estimation if it were to remain there, especially since by
doing so it would end your own very profitable plans for that area."
Kinsey gawped at him. There was no way that this man could know anything
about what he had planned. He wasn't even planning on announcing Phase
one for almost another three weeks.
"Don't deny it; I see it clearly in your own thoughts. Much of your
personal holdings are in the rental properties there, but the land those
properties sit on; that land is much more valuable should those
properties be cleared away isn't it? And the insurance for those
properties will net for you a tidy sum if they were to burn, won't it?
But not as tidy as what you are already planning to erect in place of
what is there at present now is it? Oh I see your intentions quite
clearly Alderman. For you destruction on that scale is both profitable
and preferable to avoiding it."
Kinsey's face was already starting to turn purple with rage. He glared
at Singh and pounded his hands on the table as he shouted back at him.
"Now see here Detective, I will not be slandered or have my motivations
impugned by some nothing little pissant. I will see personally that you
pay for your allegations. You can count on it. And I keep my promises
'detective'. Officers remove this man immediately! He is not to ever
return before this council. Take him away and lock him up for contempt!"
"Gentlemen, please restrain and gag the Alderman if necessary. His
intemperate outburst has cost us far too much time as it is, as has this
fool's errand that has been launched because of it.
"You can't do that!" I'll..." Kinsey sputtered.
He didn't sputter long though. One of the agents stepped swiftly behind
the man and brought him under control with a knee in his back even more
rapidly. Why the man was carrying materials with which to gag the man
Singh didn't really care. All that mattered was that this farce was put
to an immediate halt while the others sat in stunned silence.
"I assure you Alderman I can and as you already are experiencing I have.
You seem to be operating under the misconception that my position with
the Stafford police department is the sum totality of my authority here.
Allow me dispel those misconceptions...for all of you. The moment that I
invoked the situation code that alerted us all to the existence of this
Grove, plenipotentiary powers authorized under the Concord itself were
granted to me, as its sole agent, to resolve this matter. Those powers
exist for the duration of this emergency. This council is not a
deliberative nor is it a ruling body as some of you seem to think that
it is, its sole purpose is to function in an advisory capacity to
facilitate a rapid and peaceful resolution in accordance to what is laid
out in pages of the Concord.
Singh placed his hands on the table heavily and leaned toward the row of
men and women seated on the other side of it.
"Alderman clearly, as you have demonstrated, you have your own
priorities in this matter, misguided as they are, but I cannot help but
pity you for your willful refusal to acknowledge the assistance offered
you by those who have gained full knowledge of the true situation we
live under as a race and are hence unable to truly grasp the magnitude
of our situation here. We have but one positive factor in our favor
presently. And that is that this entire crisis revolves around the
sudden existence of a dryad where none has been in residence for ages
uncounted. That, ladies and gentlemen, is our single stroke of good
fortune."
"Dryads and the satyrs that are symbiotically joined with them are
amongst the more peaceful of Fae races, were that not so our efforts to
deal what is taking place now would be infinitely more difficult."
"So I will give you a little history lesson Alderman Kinsey. Perhaps it
will be to all of your benefit that I do so."
"The Concord that is in operation and has suzerainty in this matter was
negotiated and finally agreed to a little over one hundred and fifty
years ago. At that time, the race of man enjoyed multiple distinct
advantages over every single other race that we share this planet with."
"We were, even with our division into competing nations, religions and
ethnic groups, without question the dominant race. Our numbers far
exceeded those of our neighbors, we enjoyed technological advantages
that even then were rapidly increasing and in the event of armed
conflict the amount of weaponry that harnessed the destructive nature of
cold iron was by itself enough to guarantee victory over whichever
opponent it was that rose against us. And most importantly we did not
suffer the deleterious effects that a racial dependence on magical
energy to even exist engendered in our neighbors."
"The Fae, in contrast had almost nothing comparable. Instances, where
conflict became inevitable were quickly resolved with terrible
casualties among those who chose the sword in a manner of speaking. They
were scattered across the globe. Even members of the same racial groups
were unable to act in solidarity even if they wished to. And those who
were able to link with their own kind so that all were aware and could
coordinate their actions were still few in number and handicapped in
other myriad ways. Too many of them at that time were on the brink of
extinction as it was and would not dare risk certain oblivion in
conflict with mankind. So the majority of them chose to withdraw from
contact with mankind more and more often. A choice that more and more of
them had been making in the interest of their species self preservation
for generations already."
"But the men who came together, the ones that proposed the Concord were
very much aware that the time of their domination was an illusion and
even then rapidly passing away. Magical energy that was slowly seeping
back into the world in glacially increasing amounts was not an
aberration, but a harbinger. Year by year those who were aware that a
change was underway urged those who would listen to pay attention to the
ramifications of such a change. And they were fortunate that there were
men in positions of influence who listened."
"It took those men decades to get the disparate Fae races not only to
speak with them, but to trust them and to agree to meet in good faith.
To meet and to begin to craft a binding agreement between all of the
sentient species of this world. To moderate what it was that would one
day be. It took them even more decades to alleviate hostilities earned
over centuries on all sides and to craft a set of compromises that each
of them could accept and abide by."
"For these men this was not the work of the few short years they
claimed. They dreamed mightily those men, and they had the courage to
forge that dream into a reality. Birthing this agreement was, for them,
a task that consumed entire lifetimes. And those extraordinary men used
those lifetimes to build well indeed. What they built with their vision
gave us peace with the Fae for over a century and a half. They gave us
what we needed most but were unaware that we needed at all. They gave us
the tools to meet what is upon us today and to master it. To pass
through the crucible and emerge better for it on the other side. What
they built was an accomplishment for the ages. And that accomplishment
is not for small men to tear down in service to even smaller desires."
"Agent Fitzhugh," Singh said. "Find out who is responsible for executing
plan Gamma Fourteen. Find out and have them unwrap and eat their
popsicle and then order them under my authority to abort the mission if
it has been ordered. Contact those responsible for overseeing the
evacuation and have them cease doing so immediately. Inform every person
responsible for executing such a feckless plan that unless in the future
such orders come directly from me that they are to disregard them in
their entirety as the ravings of a lunatic."
"Right away Detective Singh," Fitzhugh responded and scooped up the
briefing documents and hustled out of the room.
"Now, ladies and gentlemen of the council, that this reckless stupidity
is on its way to being arrested we are going to end part of our history
lesson and see how it is of relevance to our lives today. I trust that
once you have those facts presented to you that you will finally
understand the dire consequences of just what it is that you attempted
to do in your mass delusion today."
"The first matter of importance that none of you who supported this
madness understand, what you have failed to grasp entirely is that it is
already doomed to fail utterly. I witnessed the creation of this dryad,
a vital piece of information that none of you possess and even if you
shared what it is that I saw I doubt any of you would have the
background to fully grasp just what it entails. Indeed I know what the
import of such a vision means and even I quail in the deepest recess of
my being when considering its full implications."
"This dryad that you intended to destroy in your arrogance is something
this world has not seen in ages, something that has not walked this
world since the very beginning of the Fae race. She is what they refer
to reverently as Arath' Mahar; a sacred forebear."
"This word and its meaning in our language have no relevance for you,
this I understand. So I will strive to make certain that you do. A
dryad, indeed any others of the various surviving Fae races can
certainly be killed; they can feel pain and be destroyed if enough
effort is devoted to doing so."
"But not this one, this is where you and your small plans to remove her
are doomed. She took into herself vast quantities of the resting energy
of the entire world at the moment of her creation and she is still
connected to those energies even now. So great a force did she sup upon
that she may well be what no Fae has been for centuries; she may be
immortal. The raw forces of creation itself are what animates her and in
the face of such force your febrile attempt to do away with her is
little more than that of a toddler threatening to injure a mountain
range with intemperate words. And she is merely the first of her breed,"
he roared.
"Should your plan have been so rashly consummated I can promise you that
this would have been the result. She would pass through it unscathed and
all you would have done is create an implacable enemy where before there
was none. There would be no forgiving this action and her wroth would be
a terrible thing to behold."
"Even if she were little more than another of her kind there was little
chance of such a plan succeeding. She, like the other Fae who are with
her would seek refuge from the fire in the aether itself. It would pass
over them burning the physical part of where they are and leaving them
burning for vengeance in the ashes. All you would have accomplished
would have been the destruction of what it is that they love and from
that injury they would be compelled to lash out at you in return until
they have extracted the full measure of retribution and that would just
be the beginning."
"In response to such an action Satyr armies would march. They would have
no other choice but to do so immediately. Contrary to your ignorant
supposition that you could dispose of these inconvenient Fae with none
of their kindred becoming aware that you had done so, let me enlighten
you. Nothing is further from the truth. Dryads, like very few other Fae
races are interconnected. They are always aware of their relationship
with their own kind at a level and scale few others can comprehend, let
alone even match. And because of what has occurred here in Stafford all
of their eyes are fixated upon what happens here."
"Begging your pardon Detective Singh", Alderman Kinsey said slipping his
gag for a moment and in a mocking tone that dripped with contempt, " but
at best a few thousand of these satyrs are hardly even a few days worth
of grief in my opinion. Maybe a couple of hundred years ago something
like that might have been a threat, but the state of modern warfare is
nothing like they have ever faced and if any mistake is made it would
not be ours, it would be theirs."
Singh shook his head at the Alderman's words in slow deliberate
movements trying to convey his deep disappointment in his willful
refusal to see what he was trying to make them understand.
"Just when I begin to think that there is a slim hope for my own race.
For the idea that we have begun to even slightly mature as a species, no
sooner do I have that thought then out of the most idiotic shallow end
of our collective gene pool scampers an absolute idiot who demonstrates
beyond a shadow of a doubt that I am gravely mistaken in that
assessment."
The Alderman bristled at Singh's words, but before he could speak in
rebuttal, Singh ordered him gagged again and continued.
"And now I shall tell you sir why it is that I speak to you is this
fashion although I am loathe to waste my time with the effort. The
simple reason that your misinformed outburst has no relevance is that
you fail to grasp the full scope of what the changes at hand since the
Concord was signed truly are.
"The Satyr's would march in response to such an act of unmitigated
aggression and the entire Fae world would know that they do so at the
behest and with the blessing of the entire Grove network at their backs.
The other Fae would demand to know just why it is that some of the most
peaceful of their number would break the agreement that they have been
one of the staunchest supporters of since before it was even
negotiated."
"They would ask why and the Grove would answer them. The other Fae would
be sickened and outraged over such callous disregard of the foundation
of our dealings with each other since the Concord's acceptance and that,
council members, is just the reaction they would feel over one who was
only newly awakened from that past slumber as we thought this dryad was
until recently. The very idea that you, that we would attempt to destroy
an Arath' Mahar would enrage them beyond reason. That is an attack on
their very future and they would not let such an action pass without
returning it in kind."
"The Naiads would rise with them in solidarity and no stretch of water
would be safe for us no matter how insignificant. The Sasquatch would
abandon their games of playing with those who hope to glimpse them and
emerge from their forests to stand with their ancient allies the Grove
network. The Mer will strike from the seas and we would be helpless to
stop them because the Sirens who are their allies would no longer muffle
their song and none who heard them could stand unmoved by what they hear
and not leap to their deaths without heed. And compared to others, these
breeds of Fae are some of the more harmless ones when left alone."
"The more violent ones would rush join them as well. The giants would
leave their mountains, The Trolls, the goblins and all of the nightmares
that were last to agree to the peace would be the first to rush to join
the rest and against their combined strength there would be no defense
that could be mounted. When you spoke so blithely of defeating the Fae
as you suggested a moment ago you did not know it, but the ability of
mankind to do any such thing passed into oblivion decades ago."
"This would not be a rising as it was of old. This would not be the
scattered members of one clan who could be dispatched before their
brethren could arrive to aid them as it was long ago. This action would
forge the entire population of the Fae into a weapon. A weapon aimed at
our very hearts. These are not the Fae of past days council members.
These are not creatures that could be dealt with using fire and steel
and bullets and blades. Oh no, that time has long passed."
"And where before they were divided, separated by distance and distrust,
now they would be united; against us. Where technology was once our
wellspring and font of power, now they match us and even exceed our
capabilities and cold iron, council members, is no longer our strong
shield. Our numbers are meaningless if you chanced to think that once we
were committed to the path that that would turn the tide in our favor.
Few of our people are aware of the Fae's existence now and are ill
prepared to stand against them under these circumstances. And of those
who do know of them, truly know of them; many of them would be repelled
by what we attempted to do and side with the Fae. You would have us meet
such retribution unprepared and divided and that would be folly of the
worst kind."
"And the most important thing that you have failed to consider, because
you deemed it of little importance. Magic is no longer the pale pallid
thing it was when the Concord was signed, and the Fae are no longer the
starving dying races who signed it. They stand on the cusp of an
expansion of the very energy that sustains them the like of which we
have no concept of with which to understand the scale of the changes
that would be wrought. Only those who lived though when it failed
centuries ago would understand its ramifications and they are long
turned to dust."
"Let me illustrate the point to you in a way you might understand. My
partner Pantra is a pixie. Pixies are agreeable sorts and are some of
the most delightful creatures that make up the Fae. They are what, even
you in your ignorance, would consider harmless. And in the distant past
such a judgment would be valid; today that is far from the situation
that we face. Sixty years ago, long before I was born, my Pixie partner
Pantra could barely call into being an illumination little brighter than
a small LED light. Barely a week ago she poured such a torrent of raw
flame from her person that she was able to stagger and hold back the
mindless rage of a powerful dryad before being struck down. And this,
council members, was done even before the ever growing wave of magic
rising against us has even finished swelling let alone cresting and
striking us."
"The Fae who face us under such circumstances will not be weak, they
will not be starving and they will not remain few in number for very
long; that, council members, is precisely why the Concord exists at all.
This was not something done out of our benevolence. We did not look down
on them from our pinnacle of power, the very height of our supremacy and
opt to show mercy to the few remaining survivors that clung to
existence. The men who wrought the Concord looked forward across the
years to this day and trembled. They seized the moment they had. The
waning days of our dominance and from that last position of strength won
for us the only chance we have to survive."
"The Concord exists not to protect only the Fae. It exists to protect
the entire race of mankind against the Fae; it always has. It is the
true reason it exists at all. It is its only purpose and for a century
and a half we have carefully built up the goodwill that would sustain us
from what is coming. A reordering of the very world around us; a
reordering we cannot stop. That is what your petty, short sighted, ill-
considered action has threatened."
Singh rocked back away from the council table. "Now you have no excuse
for your actions from this point forward. Ignorance will no longer serve
you as shield for what you do nor will it cloak you either. I will leave
you to consider what it truly is that you face here with no illusions
standing between you and what you are called upon to do. I pray you can
find it within you summon such wisdom as you may and choose wisely. To
be worthy heirs of those who won you this one chance and use your moment
to aspire to rise to their level. Good day council members."
Singh turned on his heel and strode from the room without another word
and as the door closed behind him he prayed that his words would be
sufficient to the moment. God help them all if they hadn't been.
----------------------------------------
Area Command and Control: Day Seven, 0325 hours
Mitch and Jim had come directly to the ACC after Jim had spoken with
Singh about the evacuation orders for their areas. When they arrived the
meeting was already underway and for the time being Fitzhugh's assistant
had directed them to wait in the office that Singh was using for now. It
had already been another long day for them and when the door opened they
were both surprised by the sound of it. The quiet and the hour had
conspired to make the two of them doze while they waited.
Singh was more furious than Mitch had ever seen him before. He didn't
think it was possible for him to even show anything like what it was
that they were seeing from him now. Considering how self possessed the
man routinely was seeing him in this way was almost like he was
teetering on the edge of losing control even though it might not seem
that way to others. Mitch hadn't known him for long but he did know
enough to realize that whatever had happened in the council chambers was
not just a matter of someone trying to poach his authority.
When he lay out what had happened in the council chambers it was even
more than Mitch or Jim thought might have happened. Once they understood
what it was that had almost happened they couldn't believe that such a
reckless plan had come so close to being executed either and once they
heard from Singh what would happen once it had they could only be glad
that he had averted it.
When they time came for him to tell them how it was that he rated such
authority and could even do such a thing there was only one response
that Mitch could voice.
"Jesus! I had no idea that you had anything like that kind of power
Singh," Mitch said his jaw gaping in astonishment once where he was
sitting opposite the desk he had slumped behind.
"Detective Travers, for the duration of this emergency I do," he said
sadly in response. "Would that my burden was nothing more than that of a
special detective who's greatest concern was enduring the sniggers and
ridicule of those in my department who think my position is as best a
joke and at worst an outright waste of an office."
"So just what can you do with all that power Singh?" Jim asked him.
"Just what can you do? And what the hell stops you if you don't feel
like giving it up now that you have it?"
"In the short term Detective Brighton the simple answer is that I have
complete authority to use and full range of access to every resource in
this nation that is available without question or hindrance until this
crisis is brought to a conclusion. In the long term I can call upon
every resource the entire race of man has at its disposal if I should so
require them."
"Christ you're the king of the fucking world!" Mitch blurted out in
uneasy astonishment.
"Hardly Detective Travers," Singh answered. "Even I have my limitations
and those limitations bind me with far stronger lashings then are
generally known, even among those who are aware that such dire
necessities even exist."
"But what keeps anyone with that kind of authority in line? Jim asked
again.
"Quis custodiet ipsos custodes," answered Singh with slow precision.
"I've heard that before," Mitch said. "Where have I heard that before?"
"Perhaps you would know it better as 'Who will watch the watchmen'
detective Travers," Singh answered.
"Now that I have heard," Mitch said.
Agent Fitzhugh stepped into the far side of the long bustling control
room; she caught sight of Singh and the two detectives speaking with him
through the open office door and bustled in their direction clasping a
sheaf of papers against her blouse.
"Detective Singh," she said to him in a quiet urgent manner.
"Yes, Agent Fitzhugh?"
"The bird had flown as of 0230 hours when we contacted Earhart ANG base,
it was entering a holding pattern in the target area in preparation to
commencing its attack run when we issued the abort code."
"And the status of the bird itself?"
"Approaching the nest. The eggs in question will be removed and
neutralized upon landing."
Singh exhaled in a slow controlled fashion, his relief visible to those
around him. "Good, and the commander of Earhart is clear as to their
responsibilities in this matter henceforth Agent Fitzhugh?"
"I personally verified that the base commander has unwrapped and eaten
the popsicle Detective Singh. There will be no further misunderstanding
from that direction."
"In light of what nearly occurred just now Agent Fitzhugh, I believe
that it would be a prudent move to counteract the possibility of any
similar instances being set into motion by those who might still have
reasons of their own to oppose this situation's peaceful resolution. We
will need to immediately take steps to ensure that all actions that are
in any way, shape or form capable of causing an outcome similar to that
of Gamma fourteen are to be proscribed without my explicit authorization
immediately. Inform all those who may be capable of authorizing a
similar action independently to open and eat their popsicles as well."
"I'll see to it immediately sir," she said and moved to leave.
"Agent Fitzhugh?"
"Yes sir?"
"Despite my words to them before I think it best that Karmek visit the
council's room immediately to impress upon them the gravity of those
words."
"I'll see to it sir," she said.
"One more thing Agent Fitzhugh," Singh asked her.
"Yes sir?" she responded.
"Would you be so kind as to inform the detectives with me of your
standing orders in regard to myself should I attempt to abuse my
authority, to seek to profit from it or attempt to make it permanent in
any manner? Speak freely if you would, the detectives are authorized to
hear what you have to say."
"In the event of such an occurrence all members of the FRT are to take
whatever measures are necessary implement the Cincinnatus Protocol. Once
the Cincinnatus protocol is successfully completed, the regional command
authority is to step in and complete the mission sir. Will that be all?"
she asked.
"Thank you Agent Fitzhugh that will be all. Inform me as soon as it is
verified that all the popsicles in question have been consumed."
"Of course sir," she said and hustled away from them.
"Who's Karmek?" Jim asked.
"Karmek is an eleven foot high mountain troll. He is of a singularly bad
disposition and resents that he has been seconded to us by his tribe for
the purposes of impressing on strangers the full awareness that he
exists. In his words he resents being our trained monkey. Contrary to
his rough appearance though, he does have a wonderful singing voice."
"And just what is this Cincinnatus protocol? Mitch asked.
"Detective Travers, that is an entirely different matter. Its creation
had everything to do with the problem of how to prevent even an
honourable and decent person from being corrupted by the lure of
absolute power. A problem that is as old as the human race
unfortunately. It was a problem the ancient Romans who gave us the
expression 'who watches the watchmen' wrestled with and failed. And in
crafting the methods and doctrines of how we would implement the
requirements of the Concord, it is one that better men that any of us
present also wrestled with as well. Their solution was the Cincinnatus
Protocol," Singh said.
"Lucius Quinctius Cincinnatus was a Roman patrician who in his old age
lived quietly on his farm after retiring from public life. In the great
crisis of 458 B.C. the Aequi broke their treaty with Rome and attempted
to recapture the city of Tusculum. In response to this two armies were
sent to fight them under the leadership of the Consuls Augurinus and
Rutilus. When they took the field to meet them they met disaster. In the
Alban hills, under the shadow of Mount Algidus, the army of Consul
Augurinus was attacked in their camp and besieged. Only five men escaped
the noose that the Aequi and their Sabine allies had so successfully
cast. The army of the second Consul Rutilus was helpless, unable to
offer any assistance to his beleaguered colleague and facing such a dire
situation the Senators in Rome panicked."
"A senate delegation was sent to Cincinnatus where according to Livy,
they found him ploughing his fields. After insisting that he don his
senatorial toga, the delegation informed him that he had been called
back into service by the senate in order to meet the crisis that was
underway. To do so they granted him total and absolute control over the
state; they made him the absolute dictator of Rome."
Cincinnatus left his plough behind and returned to Rome. When he arrived
he mobilized every single man of military age in the Campus Martinus,
the Field of Mars and moved swiftly to bring his army to bear against
the Aequi. At the battle of Mount Algidus they surrounded the besiegers
and forced their surrender. Cincinnatus did not chose to slaughter the
Aequi after the battle though, only the principle three leaders who had
brought this crisis. After demonstrating their submission the Aequi were
granted amnesty and Cincinnatus marched his army home, disbanded it,
yielded his authority back to the Senate and returned to his plough a
mere fifteen days after accepting his role as absolute ruler and master
of Rome. For his behaviour his actions have been passed down through the
ages ever since as a shining example of public virtue for others to
learn from and hopefully emulate."
"The Cincinnatus protocol is a failsafe measure to ensure that should a
special detective or other agent of the Concord ever be thrust in a
similar situation that such power does not ever result in creating a
terrible mistake. Put simply gentlemen should I fail to uphold the
principles embodied by the example of Cincinnatus I am to be retired
with extreme prejudice at the earliest opportunity."
"You mean that they're supposed to kill you? How the hell would they
even get close to you? You caused an earthquake right in front of us.
You could tear down everything around you and if that weren't enough you
could hear their intentions the moment they come near you? How are any
of them supposed to even think of drawing their weapons around you, let
alone do it?" Mitch asked.
"Detective Travers, Detective Brighton there is no need for any of them
to do anything so mundane as draw their weapon and use it against me.
All that is required for them to complete the Cincinnatus protocol is to
release the bullet that is already aimed at the base of my skull."
"You have a bullet aimed at your skull? What bullet, why?" Jim demanded
shocked as Singh's casual elaboration of this detail regarding his own
elimination.
"Every special detective, every agent of the Concord from the moment
they take up their cross to the day they lay it aside lives every moment
of every day of their life with their own death as their closest
companion. They live under the shadow of Cincinnatus. It is the only
certain way that was accepted as reasonable by those who drafted the
Concord gentlemen. No person, no matter how well intentioned or morally
fortified it was thought could long stand against the temptation of such
power indefinitely. It would corrupt absolutely and those it would
corrupt would rationalize it in myriads of ways."
"To prevent such an occurrence from ever transpiring those who were
tasked to create a defence against it developed the Cincinnatus
protocol. We have had one hundred and fifty years to prepare for an
event like this and that preparation involved more than just creating
the logistics and the command structure and developing the technology
necessary to meet it. It was also girded against the weakness of those
who would have to carry that torch when it passed to them."
"Before I assumed my duty as a special detective I was executed, the
bullet that is intended to kill me is even now just breaking the skin
behind my left ear. It rests in the aether where it will remain until it
is released by the need for my death. Like calls to like gentlemen, once
loosed it cannot be stopped. Always it is held in abeyance until such
time as it is required. That bullet, gentlemen is always there waiting
for me, my constant companion and my judgement should I fail in my duty.
That is why the agents of the FRT have no need to fear whatever it may
be that I might do to prevent them from carrying out their mission. I am
not the master of the world; I am merely a tool to be disposed of if I
am unfit for the task entrusted to me."
"What happens if someone triggers it to get rid of you? What happens if
someone who wants that power uses it to get you out of the way?" Jim
asked.
"There is no need to fear such a scenario Detective Brighton. In the
event that such a coup attempt was to take place anyone who did so would
quickly follow me to my grave when their own bullet is released in
response. And the only those who are subject to the Cincinnatus protocol
are able to trigger it."
"But who pulls the trigger?" Mitch asked.
"There are two circumstances that active the Cincinnatus Protocol. One
is as I just told you, performed by a random member of the F.R.T.; the
other is triggered by my own thoughts. When I accepted the necessity of
it and acceded to the firing that of bullet into my own skull, it was
linked with the condition that if I would be corrupted and desire to
keep what had been entrusted to me the bonds holding it would be
dissolved instantly. So long as I keep faith with the principles that
guide the Concord I am never in any danger of that bullet being loosed
to conclude its path."