Gateway - What Lies BeyondChapter 52 free porn video

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I met with the men first. To put it bluntly, they were the most important.

Our biggest issue with the men was the fact that most came from different villages. While they were all River People, and most were fishermen, a lot of them were suspicious of each other; particularly the men who’d been captured and used as slaves. It meant getting them all to come together as a single group was hard. In fact, I had to meet each major group of men separately first before moving on to the next stage; meeting together.

The easiest group to deal with was the band that Burton had united during his spell in the south causing problems for Winslow and his thugs, and helping the locals fight back. In addition to the twelve young men that he’d taken under his tutelage, arming them and teaching them to fight, his group included ten other adult males. The bulk of them were older by the local standard of aging, spread between their late thirties and early forties, but they were still active members in the community that Burton had forged.

I met this group after the uptime people had left. Burton had fetched them from the cave along with the group of villagers that we’d rescued from the local thugs that Winslow had been employing as troops. That community was now living at the upper base in the apartments that had once been home to the people that had left today.

Burton joined me in the discussion. I reiterated my offer to take them north with me if they so desired, but I also presented them with another offer. I explained that Burton would be staying here for the next year or more setting up a new settlement and that he would welcome them as members of his group. The suggestion actually piqued their interest.

These people weren’t stupid. They’d spent about six weeks in Burton’s company. They’d seen him deal with Winslow’s men, both those he’d brought through the Gateway and those he’d recruited here. They’d seen what Burton had to offer in the way of leadership, in skills as a hunter, and in the innovations in weaponry that was clearly possible if they chose to continue their relationship with the man. These people were also aware of what I was capable of doing. Their young hunters had participated in the raid and while they hadn’t been instrumental in the actual combat, they’d experienced the thrill of it while supporting our operations and they’d seen the results of it. Many of the young men had helped bury the dead. It had left an imprint on their minds.

It still took a lot of talking. I intended the southern settlement to develop in ways similar to the north. More importantly, following our customs and speaking our language would be a necessity, for them to be part of the Bear Tribe. That was a contentious point. To most of them they were River People first and foremost and the thought of being another tribe scared them. Fortunately, I’d sent Ozmat and Holgar with Burton originally, tasking them to help integrate anyone they encountered into our tribe. They’d laid the ground work. At the meeting I included Ozmat in the discussions and I included Gogra, hoping his presence would help allay any fears or uncertainty.

It worked.

There was one point besides the language issue that held up discussions that morning. That issue was women. While the band Burton had pulled together was a nice mix of men, women, and children, only four of the women in the group were mated to any of the men. The rest were widows. To make matters worse, some of the children had no parents. The women had taken care of the children both out of instinct and because Burton had fallen back on my mantra. He’d pulled the whole, everyone works and everyone eats stance. It had worked while everyone was dependent on each other for survival, but now that the men were thinking about moving on, the women and the children who had no male protector was beginning to worry. I suggested that some of the men take one of the women in the camp as a mate. One man did admit that he was tempted, but he was afraid of the bad luck. I just shook my head in disbelief and then sighed.

That was a problem that I knew I was going to have regardless of which group of men I spoke to and I knew it. Personally I was hoping that the men would take on a couple of wives, thus helping me reduce the number of women I needed to take back to my settlement. However that hope started to fade the moment the hunter voiced his concern that he was worried about the bad luck.

“We need to do something about this bad luck problem,” I voiced aloud after Burton’s group had called it a day so they could go off and think about our proposal. “If we don’t do something quickly, then Burton’s going to have a hell of a lot of bed companions.”

“What the hell do you mean by that?” Burton spat out in surprise and horror. “How come I’m going to have to sleep with them? What about you?”

“Oh, Jake’s going to be busy as well,” Kim chuckled in reply, speaking up before I could. “Just look at what he’s inherited from Winslow. Of the thirty-five people staying behind, twelve of them are men. Most of those men are like Bob the Quartermaster or Terry. They all have at least one local girl friend if not more. While that reduces the number of ex-slaves we need to find mates for, it still leaves twenty-three uptime women without partners. We do know that none of the local men will want them, and I seriously doubt that any of the women would like a local male as a husband. I like Sygor, but I wouldn’t want to live with him. That means that if Jake brings those twenty-three women back to the settlement to live, either he or one of the other uptime men will be sleeping with them, unless there is a lesbian or two in there that we don’t know about. You’d have to ask Carmen about that.”

“So what Kim is saying, is that if I’m providing food, shelter, and sexual services to twenty-three up time women,” I informed Burton bluntly, although I did it with a smile on my face, “you’ll be doing the same down here. Hopefully, Helen won’t mind.”

“Oh, shit,” Burton declared shaking his head, “she’s going to kill me.”

It was the same story that afternoon when I spoke to the group of men we’d liberated from the fishing village. They liked the idea of joining our community now that they’d seen our weapons, horses, and what we could do, but they were hung up on the language issue, and the taking of one of the ex-slave women as a mate.

“I don’t get it!” I told the leader of the six men in an outburst of frustration. “Why won’t you take one of the young women who weren’t mated when they were taken by the bad men? Surely they aren’t cursed.”

The man’s name was Talet. He was twenty-five years old and the oldest of the men that had been held at the fishing village. He was medium tall, fit enough considering the ordeal he’d been through during the last six months, and he seemed intelligent enough. He certainly knew what he wanted and what he did not. For whatever the reason might be the man didn’t want to take any of the ex-slave women as a mate. I just had to press him on the issue.

“They are tainted as well,” the man declared solemnly. “They were taken by evil men and the evil remains with them. No man will take such a woman as a mate. It is just too unlucky. Evil could befall the man,”

I wasn’t impressed by the suggestion. I frowned at Talet, displaying openly my displeasure. It didn’t faze him. With a sigh I tried a different tack.

“Is there any ceremony that your shaman’s use to perform that could remove the bad luck?” I asked in desperation.

“None,” the man confessed without giving it any thought. “Bad luck cannot be sent away.”

“So tell me then, who will tend your hearth and share your furs if none of these women can be mated to you?” I demanded to know forcefully.

“We will find mates elsewhere,” Talet replied with a shrug of his shoulders. “It may take time and much effort on our part, but eventually we will find a new mate who carries no bad luck.”

“So what will you do in the meantime?” I pressed. “Who will cook for you and make you clothing to wear? Who will see to gathering food for the winter? Tell me what you will do?”

“We will stay with your man Burton,” Talet replied promptly, although clearly with much thought. “It will be as he has told us since you freed us. Everyone will work and everyone will eat. We men will fish and the women of Burton’s hearth will feed us. Is this not so?”

It was and I admitted it. Sometimes I just hated how smart I could get. Boy was Burton in for a big surprise.

I spoke to Gogra that night about the problem hoping he might be able to assist me. Regrettably the old man was a product of his upbringing. It didn’t mean he didn’t understand my frustration, but he couldn’t offer me a solution. To his mindset, the men of the River People were just being smart. No man, fisherman or hunter wanted to bring bad luck down upon his head.

“What about me?” I asked pointedly. “I’ve mated more widows than there are mated women in our tribe. I haven’t suffered for it.”

Gogra sat in silence for a moment or two, musing over my statement. After several seconds he replied.

“You are different Jake,” Gogra sighed. “You are both a chief and a shaman. There is great power in you and it keeps the bad luck away. Even this fight with the bad men goes in your favour because of the power in you. The Earth Mother protects you and the spirits walk with you. Everyone knows this. You are not a man.”

I was dumbfounded by this declaration. I had never tried to take on a god mantle with my people. I’ve clearly made mistakes and I’ve admitted to them when they’ve happened. I just couldn’t believe what Gogra was telling me.

“You know I am a man,” I told Gogra in protest. “I’ve bled. You know this.”

“I know you are a man, Jake,” Gogra sighed softly in reply, “but what I know does not matter. What matters to our tribe is that you are chief and shaman and more importantly our protector. What matters is that the Earth Mother gives you the power to teach men to hunt with new weapons, to ride a horse when others could not and to tame a wild animal making it obey you. What matters is that the power of the Bear Spirit fills your body giving you strength to fight bad men. Only these things matter; and to others, they prove that you are not a man.”

I couldn’t say anything in reply to this statement. I hadn’t ever thought about it before. I certainly hadn’t experienced it to the best of my knowledge. I’d seen what I’d have considered a touch of hero worship from the younger men, particularly the boys that I’d elevated to the status of men, like Gort and Wutar, but never had I ever suspected that I could be more. I sighed and wished that Wodon was with us. Perhaps he could help me understand this. For now I had to leave it be.

“Tell me something, Gogra,” I finally enquired after a few minutes of silent contemplation. “If I am not a man and have all this power, could I not purify the women that were touched by bad luck, and take it away?”

Gogra paused for a second or two to think about this question, pulling at his lip as he thought about it. Eventually he spoke up.

“Perhaps,” the older man declared solemnly, “although I do not know for certain. I am not a shaman so I can not say. Perhaps Wodon would know, but he isn’t here. However, I know this to be true. Uttar took Koda as his mate after she’d lain with you and bore you a son. He is still well, and though he does not hunt often, when he does, he always returns with a kill. It is possible that the evil does go away once a woman has borne you a child.”

For the second time in a very short while I looked at Gogra with a stunned look upon my face, not believing what he had told me. The problem was the man was totally serious. I just shook my head and sighed. I’d been hoping for a way to make the men in the area accept the women as eligible mates. If what Gogra had just said was true, I had a hell of a lot of work to do. Boy, did I need a beer!

Kim laughed that evening at supper when I told her what Gogra had implied. So did almost everyone who’d come down with me. Even Carmen snickered when I stated that the only way to make the women eligible to be mates once again was to bed them and to impregnate them. I’d hoped at the very least, Kim would have been indignant about the idea. She just laughed a little more when I chided her for that.

“You can’t blame us for laughing at you,” Kim rebuked me, though smiling as she did. “You are the person that caused twenty-one containers to appear out of nowhere. Even the locals know about it. Those two young women who live with Bob know enough English to understand that you did something that Bob considers impossible. They took what they knew and they passed it on to their friends, who in turn passed it onto their friends. By now almost everyone who was an ex-slave knows that you are a powerful shaman. It’s probably why most of the men are willing to listen to your plan. There are good points to it and there are bad and unfortunately for you, you’re going to have to live with it.”

I just sighed and wished for that beer again. Unfortunately there weren’t any left. My people had been thirsty and Winslow hadn’t had many left.

I knew Kim was right. I did have to live with it. There were things that I needed to tend to before I headed north and sulking about what people were thinking about me wasn’t going to get those jobs done. I knew it and so did my people.

My next job was actually that night. I had a funeral to preside over.

I’d come to a conclusion the other day when I’d gone and visited our dead. While keeping the remains on ice and flying them home when we finally packed up and left here was a workable option, it wasn’t something that I really wanted to do. While my men and women had made it through the attack on the base relatively safe and sound physically, losing three friends had impacted on them. Oh, my people were coping, they were stoic and most of them had faced the death of a friend or loved one before, so these deaths didn’t keep my people from moving on, but still the deaths had marked them. They were the first deaths my tribe had sustained in the time that I’d led it and everyone knew it. I just couldn’t let the matter lie. Besides, the people who knew the dead youths the best were here. They deserved the opportunity to say good-bye.

My intent was to cremate the young men so we could take their ashes home. My people thought it was a good idea. From there things sort of spiralled out of control, although for the good and not the bad.

The thing was, I’d planned a simple ceremony. I figured to keep the occasion private. Other people got involved and by the time I showed up to lead the bodies to where the pyres stood, the private ceremony had become an act of public mourning. It was surprising to say the least. I understood it later. Every ex-slave, male and female attended the service. They’d come to say thanks to the men who’d given their lives for their freedom, and to pray to the spirits to guide them on their trip to the afterlife. They’d also come for themselves, to grieve for what they had lost because of Winslow and his goons.

The procession went from the makeshift morgue to the top of the hill in solemn silence. Each body was carried on a wooden litter by those young men and women who’d grown up with the deceased and who knew them best. The procession moved slowly with me leading it, and an honour guard flanking each litter. The only sound heard during the whole march up the hill was the sound of bagpipes.

Terry, the skipper of the ‘Blooming Heather’ was a piper. He stood at the top of the rise while we slowly made our way up to him and to where the pyres stood, and he played a mournful tune. The sound actually tugged at my heart, and filled my eyes with tears, as memories of other deaths welled up to remind me of other days and other battles, and the friends that I had lost. It was a very powerful moment.

I didn’t talk much at the ceremony. I ordered the remains of our fallen to be placed upon the pyres that had been erected. They were massive affairs. The truth was that it takes a lot to burn a body. Hopefully we’d done our job right.

“Children of the Bear Tribe,” I intoned loudly once the bodies were laid out and everything was in readiness, “and friends who have come to share our sorrow, I welcome you. This night we send three hunters on their way. They were young, but they served our tribe well and now they lie cradled in the bosom of the Earth Mother. They were born of the River, but they took on the spirit of the Bear. Each did his task in life well and should know that we are grateful for it. I ask that you pray for them. Their spirits leave us now, and they are bound towards the afterlife. The spirits of the River and the Bear will guide them, but your prayers will strengthen them and protect them. Be at peace, my people, and say your farewells.”

At that I picked up three torches that had been placed by my feet and I lit them in a small fire that someone had kindled and lit before I’d started my speech. I handed one to Tonko who stepped forward to accept it, and one to Durt, who was up and out of bed. I took the third. Together we lit the pyres.

Thankfully someone had doused the bodies with some kind of accelerant. I found out later that it had been courtesy of Penny and Bob the Quartermaster. When the flickering flames of the torches touched the pyres, the pyres went up in a whoosh.

It was a strange sight standing there watching the pyres burn. For a long while there was only silence, except for the crackling and spitting of burning wood. Then Terry puffed up his pipes again and he started to play. It was a very moving moment.

The pipes had an immediate effect on everyone. It was as if the pipes reached down into people’s souls and they pulled out all the pain and sorrow they felt, forcing it to be released. Within seconds of the first few notes people began to cry. Some cried silently and some began to sob aloud. It was painful, yet it was very cathartic.

The tears went on for a time. Eventually as the grief was washed away people turned to one another for comfort and relief. Women embraced women and men embraced men and as the need for reassurance grew, I found myself at the very centre of it all.

I was the leader and the people turned to me. I met each of them with open arms. I hugged Gort to me for several moments allowing him to cry in my arms, and then I pulled Bogdi and Geeta in with us so we four could share our embrace. I then clasped arms with Gogra and Tonko locking eyes for a moment and sharing a silent thought before I moved on to another. Sygor came to me and slapped me on the shoulder. I smiled at him and we spoke for a moment. Not much was really said, but we shared and that was all that was important. Eventually I pulled Ruba to me and I kissed her. I kissed Kim and Penny as well, plus Ohba. While there would be no orgy tonight, there would be a lot of love and comfort.

By then people started drifting away, returning to their quarters for the night, leaving only my people behind to see our fallen off.

The fact was that the ceremony wouldn’t be over until the pyres had burnt themselves out. They most likely would burn throughout the night and then smoulder well into the next day. It was a very long process. My people and I ended up staying there the whole night. It was a solemn time. Some people curled up in furs, emotionally exhausted, and went to sleep. Many more stayed up the whole night, softly conversing about the three young men who’d died, or about those that they themselves had lost. For the most part I was left alone.

The intent was that once the ashes were cooled they would be gathered. Ohba had volunteered for this job. She’d found an urn in the wreckage of Winslow’s headquarters; some piece of art that hadn’t been destroyed when we’d stormed the place, and that would serve the job of containing the ashes. Her intent was to put the ashes in the urn so we could carry them home. That was fine with me. My role was to see that the ashes were gathered, and any bones remaining were pulverized so they could fit in the urn. It was also to give some of the ashes to the River spirit. In this case my intentions were to scatter the ashes at sea.

Regrettably I didn’t get to do that job, at least not that day. Trouble showed up on our doorstep, and when it did, people came looking for me.

“Jake, we’ve got trouble down the hill and we need you,” Kim shouted at me as she hurried in my direction, about mid-morning the next day.

I was seated at a small fire drinking tea and reflecting on the ceremony that had taken place the night before, waiting for the ashes to cool. I had simply been staring off into space. Kim’s words brought me back to earth.

“What’s going on?” I quickly asked as I leapt to my feet, tossing aside my cup of tea as I did. “What’s the problem?”

“Forest People,” Kim declared forcefully. “Tonko put together a hunting party today. He decided that taking a group of River men out and introducing them to the use of a bow would be a good idea. He recruited Sygor, Bogdi, and Gort to help him out. They headed west a few hours ago in search of some game. Unfortunately they found more than that. Gort just showed back up a few minutes ago, huffing and puffing. He reported that they’d just made a kill when a large hunting party of Forest People descended upon them. Tonko tried to keep the peace, but he didn’t speak their language and the Forest People didn’t respond when spoken to in the River dialect. When he saw that any hope of communication and understanding was failing, Tonko organized a retreat, hoping that breaking off conflict and leaving the Forest People the kill, would stave off any further problems. Unfortunately, it looks like the Forest People are looking for trouble. They didn’t break off contact. They followed Tonko and the others back here.”

Kim didn’t need to say anymore. I was already dressed and ready to go by the time she was finished speaking. All I had to throw on was my webbing. I already had my carbine in hand and I was ready to go.

We took an ATV down the hill. I learned during the trip that Tonko had set up a defensive line just beyond the fishing village. By now most of our troops were there with him armed with a mixture of bow weapons and firearms. Unfortunately while we had the numeric and more importantly the military superiority, the Forest People didn’t care. They were all about attitude and for the moment, they didn’t care.

“What are you doing here?” I demanded to know, shouting loudly as I pushed my way through the front rank of my people so I could face off with the leader of the Forest People. Naturally I used what little of their language that I knew. It took them by surprise.

I was surprised as well. The leader of the hunting party was Makor. He glowered at me for a moment or two, as if sizing me up, and then he spat back a reply.

“Leave here, dog,” Makor ordered vehemently, sneering at me as he did, “and take your women with you. These are our lands.”

That was the only thing the man got to say. I didn’t hesitate. Makor was armed with a spear. He was holding it in one hand, thrusting it about in the air as if to accentuate his words, but that was all he was doing with it. It was just a prop to him, and at that moment it wasn’t much help to him. I doubted that he expected me to react, particularly since I’d arrived armed only with a blade in my hand.

I’d left my carbine with Kim. Seeing the number of our troops at the ready, and knowing the personality of the Forest People, I decided brute force was called for instead of just walking in and shooting every one. If it didn’t work, so be it. My people would take everyone else down. My concern was Makor.

I stepped towards Makor as quickly as I could, moving to close the distance between us. That startled Makor and the men behind him and it gave me an extra moment to act. It wasn’t much. Makor shifted his stance, taking a step backwards, as he moved to bring his spear down and into play. I feinted one way and as the spear shifted in that direction, I slipped by it, blocking it with my free hand and taking hold of it as I struck.

Once inside Makor’s defensive space, I brought the heft of the blade I was holding in my right hand up and I smashed it into the bridge of the man’s nose. That sent him staggering back. As he did, he let go of his spear.

Same as Gateway - What Lies Beyond
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 36

The shot hadn’t come from the compound. That much was certain. It sounded a lot further away than where we were in relationship to the compound. It also sounded a little further to my left, towards where I’d fought the assholes that had shot at me. It made sense, as I remembered the terrain in that area. That was where the trail from the southwest came out of the forest on the other side of the valley where the compound stood. Obviously, whoever had fired the shot was somewhere off along that...

1 year ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 54

We rode out again the next day early in the morning, and headed east again to another small valley that stood just north of the one we had checked the day before. This one was even smaller in size than the first one. It had a small stream flowing through it that actually fed into the river that flowed out of the first valley. The valley was quaint, but nothing special. It took us an hour to get to it on horseback, an hour to check it out, and an hour to ride back to the base. We made it back...

1 year ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 41

I held a council of war the next day, right after breakfast. I invited Kim, Clara, Dunbar and Burton, Gogra, Rugar, and Tonko, and Penny. I had matters to discuss. The fact of life was that I had to start taking Quantum a little more seriously than I had been. I had thought that we had months to prepare to confront them, without worrying that they’d show up suddenly and unexpectedly. As their base was hundreds of miles away, I had let myself treat the problem as if we had all the time in...

3 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 62

Kirov didn’t make it through the night. My people had staked him out as ordered, and the sentries had been told to keep an eye on him. They did, at least for the most part, and then someone turned a blind eye in the middle of the night. When that happened, one of my people had slipped out into the night and they had slit the man’s throat. I wasn’t happy about it. While I hadn’t expected to get anything out of the man, beyond what Struthers had told us the night before, I had wanted to ask him...

2 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 13

We made it to the mouth of the valley five days later. We were all tired and sweaty and most of us just wanted to get home. It was midday and the weather was hot. Thankfully, the end of our trek was near and as we turned into the valley our spirits picked up. Then it happened. Out of the corner of my eye, I spotted something in the air. “Stop,” I cried out as my mind registered what I’d actually spotted. As I spoke I dropped the travois I’d been pulling and grabbed my carbine....

1 year ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 38

I called a meeting the next morning, inviting Ozmat and the other surviving youth to attend. We had things to speak about and I figured the two young men needed to attend, if only so they felt included in our discussions and would know that we weren’t just bullying their people. The second youth’s name was Nolgar. We met outside in the courtyard about a blazing fire. “We’ll be staying here for a few days,” I told everyone who was gathered there with me. “I’ve spoken to Clara and Alexa and...

2 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 5

“Gort and Unna are too perfect,” I declared in reply. “Just look at him. I might be totally mistaken, but besides the fact Gort needs a good bath and to have his hair shampooed, he doesn’t look like I would expect him to look, given all the briefings that Dr. Jenkins gave us on what the locals looked like. Oh I know that technically there really isn’t that much difference between early modern man and us; but there were a few, and I’m not seeing them in either Gort or Unna. In fact, given that...

2 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 31

I hadn’t been prepared for that. Fortunately, Katherine was, and answered the calling flash with a quick reply. “Don’t,” I snapped when I realized what she was doing. “This could be a trap.” “It’s not,” Katherine responded dismissively, although she did lower the flashlight she was holding, shoving it once more into her coat pocket once she’d turned it off. I just glared at her sternly in the dark and then I glanced back towards the compound. By then the message was coming in. It repeated...

3 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 32

Kim’s people showed up shortly after Ohba and I had conversed. I had the young woman stay in the kitchen area, while I took Kim and the others into the communications centre to have a chat. The room was bigger than the kitchen area, but it was still a tight squeeze for all of us to get into it to have a chat, even after displacing the people who were already there. Kim introduced me to her four technicians before we got down to business. Not surprising to me, three of them were women. The...

3 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 48

The capture of the two Cougars changed my plans completely. I still intended to use the ‘Heather’ to land a raiding party on the seaward side of Winslow’s base, but instead of me leading that raid, I sent Burton. He took his original team plus Dunbar. They also took along a pair of guards to watch Terry once he’d dropped them off beneath the cliffs that overlooked the sea. Their orders were the same as before; capture the two shelters and the occupants of them, strike down any of Winslow’s...

3 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 67

We rose early the next morning to get ready to go. The women started breakfast while I went outside with Tonko and Bogdi to tend to our horses. Tikál joined us after a few minutes, offering to help out. Between the four of us, we led all the animals to the river so they could have a drink and then turned them out on the grassy area between the river and the ruined enclosure so that they could graze. By the time we were done, it was time for us to eat. I sat with Dunbar and Burton as we ate....

1 year ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 27

Katherine didn’t bite; or, to be more precise, she didn’t bite my cock. She did leave bite marks on my shoulder when I pounded her through her fourth straight orgasm, while she lay under me with her tits jiggling with every thrust, on a bearskin that Clara had thrown down by the stream where the women had bathed me. I didn’t mind at all. Katherine’s biting me helped to keep her from disturbing the wildlife with her cries of pleasure. The woman was definitely a screamer. I met with Rolf...

3 years ago
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GATEWAY CHAPTER 2

CHAPTER 2: JACOBIf that appearance I encountered in the hallway was what scared the other buyers of the house off over the years, it had a different effect on me. Could it have been the wine? Or, was it my already peaked arousal? Or, could it merely have been that in the short time since my arrival I had committed to new experiences and opportunities for both my personal and professional lives? Whatever I saw, it had quite an effect on me.After the apparition disappeared, I continued to my...

1 year ago
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GATEWAY 2 JACOB

If that appearance I encountered in the hallway was what scared the other buyers of the house off over the years, it had a different effect on me. Could it have been the wine? Or, was it my already peaked arousal? Or, could it merely have been that in the short time since my arrival I had committed to new experiences and opportunities for both my personal and professional lives? Whatever I saw, it had quite an effect on me. After the apparition disappeared, I continued to my bedroom,...

3 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 29

We didn’t make it off the plateau and into the pass without an incident with the Horse People. Fortunately it was a very minor incident, at least from my perspective, and one that I didn’t mind addressing forcefully. More importantly, it didn’t take more than fifteen minutes to resolve. By midmorning we were into the foothills and winding our way upward into the pass. It was a clear warm day and the trail was good. I was feeling good, even after the long night I’d experienced the night...

2 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 37

The helicopter was totally unexpected. We were deep in the forest, just north of the compound, when the big bird flew overhead. Naturally, it caused a hell of a lot of panic. “Fuck,” I cried out angrily as my horse kicked up a fuss, attempting to bolt, while at the same time trying to keep Ohba’s horse from taking off as well. “Merdé!” Clara exclaimed in French, also trying to keep her seat, “What the hell was that?” “A helicopter,” I shouted back to her, just before swinging off my horse...

3 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 30

Durt led us into the forest. The trail we were following was narrow. It quickly turned away from the broad flowing river and headed inland, climbing uphill as it meandered about trees and outcroppings of rock. The rest of us followed him in silence. For the most part the trail was bare earth and mud. It climbed one hill and then it slid down the other side, falling into a ravine or a gully only to start climbing again, the hill that lay beyond it. It was wet and miserable in the forest....

2 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 65

The riders were indeed Horse People. They rode in at a gallop, kicking up grass and dirt as they did, and they only reined in their mounts at the last moment, when their lead rider spotted me waving them down. “Greetings, riders!” I called out to the men as they brought their horses to a halt a few feet away from me, falling back on my rusty knowledge of their language. “What brings the Horse People off the great plateau into this valley? Are you hunting, or are you looking for someone?” My...

1 year ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 19

I will not brag that my chat with my people in December resolved all the difficulties facing our budding community, and I will not imply that my relationship with the other women improved once I’d bedded Binda. In truth it didn’t, in either case, though life did get easier in a manner of speaking. People started coming to me to arbitrate for them when something came up. Even Sygor seemed to have relaxed a bit. It helped that he’d taken an interest in Trika. Trika was a cute girl who was...

4 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 56

Bob the Quartermaster wasn’t a major issue to me until he made himself one. That was his mistake. The fact was that I wanted to wrap up business at the base, hand everything over to Burton and Monty, and head north. I wanted to get home, see my women and children, speak to my friends, and then go looking for Winslow. To me Winslow was the number one bad guy. Bob changed that. I’d spoken to Monty about getting a couple of drones into the air. He’d told me he’d look into it. I left him to the...

2 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 49

I left Sygor to watch Winslow’s headquarters, while the rest of us packed up and headed out to sweep the rest of the buildings about us. I wanted to make certain none of the bad guys were hiding in them, before doing anything else. I figured that securing our back would give me time to come up with a plan to take Winslow down without getting half my men killed. As we left, I ordered Tonko and his men to take the prisoners we had over to the mess hall and leave them there, for now. It would be...

1 year ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 43

I flew out with Burton and his team. Clara didn’t want me to go, but I told her it was necessary as I wanted the opportunity to see what the terrain was like south of our location. More importantly, I felt I needed to be there just in case Lottie decided to act up, and tried to screw up the operation. Dunbar was riding shotgun, but he needed someone there to keep an eye on Sarah during the flight, particularly after Burton and the others had been dropped off. We’d covered up the shattered...

2 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 4

Gabby started by squatting down across from where the boy was standing so she could speak to the boy without shouting, and to look him in the eye. She started with the old stand by in trying to communicate with the pointing to herself and saying her name and then pointing to the boy. It didn’t take long for the boy to catch on. The boy pointed to himself and said, “Gort.” From there Gabby moved on to Clara’s name and then mine. Once the boy had repeated those, Gabby got into the really...

3 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 3

I saw to it that all our water bottles and skins were filled up before we started. We ate a couple of energy bars for lunch and then we headed out. It took us all day to work our way down from the cave to the edge of the tree line. The first five hundred yards was so steep that all three of us had to shift one sled, and then return for the other, to get them both down. I had to tie a rope to the sled and anchor it with my weight as Clara and Gabby guided the sled down the slope to where the...

3 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 8

Our trek back to the cave took us four and a half days of walking. The main reason it took so long, was the fact that I wanted to do some sightseeing. I picked a route that took us down towards the lake, before swinging west. I wanted to get a good look at the lay of the land in this region. Before leaving, I’d held a short council with the men of the village and the shaman. Many were concerned that I was leaving them without a leader. I didn’t care too much about that, given that we were...

2 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 18

November led into December and we became even more cave bound than before. It snowed almost every week for at least three to four days per week, and it was definitely cold outside the cave. Sneaking off to the latrine was a major endeavour. In fact, chamber pots started springing up in secluded corners of the cave. The women had brought them with them from the hilltop village and from the Horse People. They helped, but they needed to be emptied every day, too. Water also became a problem...

2 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 35

It continued to snow for the next two weeks. By the time it actually stopped, the valley floor was covered in so much snow that without snowshoes, a person sank down almost to their chest. It made moving about very difficult, at best. The snow didn’t stop me from getting my work done. Time was of the essence! I couldn’t waste a moment of it, just because the weather was against us. While what I could actually achieve was limited, a lot did get done. I spent the first couple of days...

3 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 25

I was down below our valley, amongst the tree shrouded slopes that dominated the terrain south of where we lived. I’d been down there hunting often over the past two summers, once all the construction had been taken care of up at the enclosure. It was a great place to stalk deer and wild boar and even an occasional bear. I was with Gogra, Rugar, and Sygor that day. We were on foot, our horses trailing behind us on lead ropes as we walked the hillside path in search of our prey. The gunshot...

2 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 28

Life got interesting shortly after my party took off to go hunting, and the two young women returned to their people in the compound. I’d paced about for a bit, waiting for something to happen. I’d figured that once the two young women got inside the compound and they’d told their story to this Womack character that he’d be back up on the roof of the command post container shouting down at me. Hopefully from there, we’d strike up a dialogue. I didn’t expect him to throw open the gate to the...

2 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 6

It happened the morning of day fifteen of our sojourn into the past, a week after having met Gort and Unna. By then Unna was up and about, wanting to prove her usefulness. To my amazement I found out that the little girl was smart. I know I shouldn’t have assumed otherwise; but then again, I’d spent the last dozen years or so of my life being a soldier. I hadn’t been exposed to kids, and I had no idea about how smart they really were. I found out the error of my ways when Unna pointed out to...

1 year ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 45

As it turned out, getting the price demanded by Tako wasn’t a big problem. Lottie had spotted a herd of wild cattle a few miles up the valley we were in, to the east of our big grassy meadow. She’d spotted the animals as she’d been looking around for some place to put the helicopter down. It only meant that we needed to hoof it cross country for a bit to get to the herd. If she’d been one of my women, I’d have given her a kiss. Instead I just thanked her for the information and gathered my...

3 years ago
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GATEWAY CHAPTER 3

CHAPTER 3: THE GATEWAY BOYSMy eyes crack open the next morning to the filtered light of a clear sky. The sheers softly move on the breeze. The muted sounds of my isolated property filter in through the open balcony French doors. I tentatively search the room without moving my head. I see nothing except the furnishings of my bedroom. I cautiously lift my head and turn my body to search further. I still see nothing. Of course, all seven could be here and I wouldn’t know it unless they...

4 years ago
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GATEWAY CHAPTER 1

CHAPTER 1: GATEWAY HOUSEThe real estate agent turns her signal on. We are traveling down a county road dozens of miles from the nearest small town that held her office. I find myself leaning forward against the seat belt in anticipate that we must be getting close but I can’t see where the next turn is among the trees ahead on either side of the narrow, paved road. From all reports, the property we are nearing by the mile is a steal, almost a give-away … perfect for what I have been looking...

2 years ago
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GATEWAY 1 GATEWAY HOUSE

The real estate agent turns her signal on. We are traveling down a county road dozens of miles from the nearest small town that held her office. I find myself leaning forward against the seat belt in anticipate that we must be getting close but I can’t see where the next turn is among the trees ahead on either side of the narrow, paved road. From all reports, the property we are nearing by the mile is a steal, almost a give-away … perfect for what I have been looking for. I turn from the...

3 years ago
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GATEWAY 3 THE GATEWAY BOYS

My eyes crack open the next morning to the filtered light of a clear sky. The sheers softly move on the breeze. The muted sounds of my isolated property filter in through the open balcony French doors. I tentatively search the room without moving my head. I see nothing except the furnishings of my bedroom. I cautiously lift my head and turn my body to search further. I still see nothing. Of course, all seven could be here and I wouldn’t know it unless they materialize. I throw off the...

2 years ago
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GATEWAY 4 SAVED

I had fallen into the mindset of wondering how idyllic my situation had become. The house and property are a dream come true. This is comfortably isolated, private, beautiful, and peaceful. For once in my life since … a very long time, I am content and satisfied physically and emotionally. Professionally, my writing flows with detailed eroticism; I am actually nervously excited to see what my agent thinks. And, personally, I have a group of middle-aged women in town I enjoy from time to...

1 year ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 17

It took four weeks for us to empty the compound, and in truth we still left a lot of stuff behind. Unfortunately, it started raining near the end, making dragging travois and crossing fords much more difficult than they had been previously for my people. It actually rained all the way home to the cave, on the last trip. The locals moved in with little or no problem. By that point the communication issue had been resolved. It also helped that all of them knew at least half of the people in my...

3 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 66

I had actually met Cadar a few times in the past, when I had visited the Horse People just after I had taught Agar how to ride. The man was medium tall, in his late thirties or early forties, well weathered in appearance, yet still physically fit and healthy looking. He even had all of his teeth. He had been a hunter on the verge of retiring when I had first met him, but like Agar and Gogra, the man had seen the benefit of using bows, hunting lances, and riding horses. He’d caught onto what I...

4 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 53

“So was it a good night?” Dunbar enquired as we rode across the floor of a small valley towards the distant forest where we knew that Maket’s village stood. It was early in the morning. I just grunted in reply. I was still feeling my age. Terry had brought the ‘Heather’ in just after dawn. He and Bayla had slept the night away on deck while Ohba and the three lovelies spent the night wearing me out. It had been late when we’d finally fallen asleep, and I hadn’t wanted to wake so early....

3 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 57

The wedding turned out to be a smash hit! Everyone on the base came to it, regardless of the fact that most of the people didn’t speak our language. It was an event, it was an occasion, it was something to do that was fun; and, more importantly, somebody baked a cake! What more could a person ask. We actually held two ceremonies that night. The first was a naming ceremony. From my perspective I wasn’t going to officiate a wedding of some person who wasn’t a card carrying member of my tribe....

1 year ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 2

“We need to clear out of here quickly, Doc,” I told Dr. Beaufort a second or two later, my voice taking on a hint of urgency as I spoke to her. “It’s not safe to stay here.” We’d all been just standing there looking about and taking in the death of Jenkins and the four hunters, who’d all been alive, just a moment ago. I think we were all simply stunned. Fortunately, it didn’t take long for us to recover. “Agreed, Mr. Ryerson,” Dr. Beaufort replied without giving it any thought. “What do you...

1 year ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 44

By the end of February, Marta had bounced back from giving birth and she’d wangled for herself an invitation into my bed. The tall woman was an enthusiastic lover and while her primary focus was on being bedded by me, she had no problem with the fact that there were four other women in my bed or that they liked to get involved. Since everyone in the bed ended up happy once all the moaning and groaning was over, no one minded that Marta had a habit of monopolizing my attention. It did however...

3 years ago
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Gateway What Lies BeyondChapter 23

We left the next morning just after dawn and right after breakfast. My people were ready to go, and thankfully Gogra and his people were ready as well. We formed up on the other side of the stream and then, after a final farewell from Agar we were off. Gogra rode beside me, riding on my left. We were mounted. Behind us our joint party marched, with my group on one side and Gogra’s on the other. Hopefully in time, once acquaintances had been made, the two groups would become one. We’d see....

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