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{{Story_Box_Talmid|written_by=talmid|written_on=5 December 2018|posted_on=20 September 2020|universe=Lego Universe|date=2980 AF|locations=Jirdia | {{Story_Box_Talmid|written_by=talmid|written_on=5 December 2018|posted_on=20 September 2020|universe=Lego Universe|date=2980 AF|locations=Jirdia | ||
Avant Gardens|characters=Ben Allenby}}<p class="MsoTitle">Paine is Temporary</p> | Avant Gardens|characters=Ben Allenby}}<p class="MsoTitle">Paine is Temporary</p><p class="MsoSubtitle">2980 AF</p> | ||
== <span Times New Roman";mso-fareast-theme-font: major-fareast">1</span>== | |||
<p class="MsoSubtitle">2980 AF</p> | <p class="MsoNormal">A horse-drawn carriage rolled down the cobble-stone main road of the town of Paine. Emblazoned in silver, cursive text on the carriageâs mahogany paneled doors was the name: Talmid Letter Company.</p><p class="MsoNormal">The old man in the carriageâs booth was 65 years strong. Other men of his day had long passed to heaven, or cremation, or the nexus force, or whichever next world they so believed in. But Isaac Talmid had a job to do. The letter company was responsible for efficient and effective mail delivery across the entire town of Paine, its villages, and two of the three neighboring towns.</p><p class="MsoNormal">The carriage rolled slowly through the misty morning, the driver was careful, and at the horseâs pace they were easily catchable by running feet. Isaac heard the slapping of soles on the stonework before the courier arrived at his window. The courier was breathing heavily, and Isaac motioned for the driver to give the boy a moment to catch himself. Looking out at the dark haired, slightly scrawny and still in the process of filling out teenaged youth, Isaac had it in his heart to smile.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âTake a breather,â the old man said, âand come in if you like.â He reached out to take the courierâs messenger bag and was delighted to find it empty. It meant all the mail in it had been delivered.</p><p class="MsoNormal">He swung open the door to let the boy in, and once he faced him Isaac said, âReady for another round?â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âYes, sir.â the boy said.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âThis oneâs from me personally,â Isaac reached into his coat to procure a letter. âI would have had Ethan or the regular man deliver it, but youâre here now and thereâs nothing better than early mail. The address is on the back. Then you can go home, I can imagine the morningâs run has tired you out.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âYes, sir.â the boy agreed. He still looked a little winded, but in good spirits. Isaac handed him the letter and sent him off.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Alone in the carriage again, Isaac was content with himself. He knew that past the time he too would pass, the Talmid Letter Company would be in good hands. There was only one thing more important to the old man than the success of his company, and it was the welfare of his only grandson.</p> | ||
==<span | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">A horse-drawn carriage rolled down the cobble-stone main road of the town of Paine. Emblazoned in silver, cursive text on the carriageâs mahogany paneled doors was the name: Talmid Letter Company.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">The old man in the carriageâs booth was 65 years strong. Other men of his day had long passed to heaven, or cremation, or the nexus force, or whichever next world they so believed in. But Isaac Talmid had a job to do. The letter company was responsible for efficient and effective mail delivery across the entire town of Paine, its villages, and two of the three neighboring towns.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">The carriage rolled slowly through the misty morning, the driver was careful, and at the horseâs pace they were easily catchable by running feet. Isaac heard the slapping of soles on the stonework before the courier arrived at his window. The courier was breathing heavily, and Isaac motioned for the driver to give the boy a moment to catch himself. Looking out at the dark haired, slightly scrawny and still in the process of filling out teenaged youth, Isaac had it in his heart to smile.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âTake a breather,â the old man said, âand come in if you like.â He reached out to take the courierâs messenger bag and was delighted to find it empty. It meant all the mail in it had been delivered.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">He swung open the door to let the boy in, and once he faced him Isaac said, âReady for another round?â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âYes, sir.â the boy said.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âThis oneâs from me personally,â Isaac reached into his coat to procure a letter. âI would have had Ethan or the regular man deliver it, but youâre here now and thereâs nothing better than early mail. The address is on the back. Then you can go home, I can imagine the morningâs run has tired you out.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âYes, sir.â the boy agreed. He still looked a little winded, but in good spirits. Isaac handed him the letter and sent him off.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Alone in the carriage again, Isaac was content with himself. He knew that past the time he too would pass, the Talmid Letter Company would be in good hands. There was only one thing more important to the old man than the success of his company, and it was the welfare of his only grandson.</p> | |||
==2== | ==2== | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben Allenby was an orphan.</p> | <p class="MsoNormal">Ben Allenby was an orphan.</p><p class="MsoNormal">The Paine homestead was new to two generations of the Allenby family, that of Benâs parents and of their progeny, four children including himself. As the youngest by several years, all of Benâs sisters were nearly grown up, marriageable as well, until disaster struck. The home was built around technologies such as gas lines and electron conductors, newfangled machinations and schemes that much of Paineâs regulars were too poor to afford or technophobic to entertain.</p><p class="MsoNormal">But the Allenbys were of a wealthy class, hailing from the city of Avante. They settled in Paine for its natural merits, but not at the loss of modern conveniences, hence the technological installations. Such luxury became their undoing at the junction of a leaking pipe and a sparking socket.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben survived the fire and his mother was survived by him and her father, a 65 year old man called Isaac Talmid, an old widower. With no further children and no further interest in wives to bear children with, Isaac continued his business as usual, letter sorting and delivery. He was a man of class, but not the type that his deceased daughter wed into. He took Ben in and put him to work with the letters.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Receiving, sorting, and delivering letters. It was an endless effort, but fulfilling at the dayâs end, Ben rationalized, and the motions fulfilled his quota for physical activity, and then some. He was still new to it, only starting the job a week ago. He was still new to being alone. Isaac seemed a fine fellow, but he was hardly what the Allenbys considered fine company.</p><p class="MsoNormal">''Stop thinking about them'', Ben thought hard to himself, ''think about the job''.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Isaacâs letter was addressed to a certain Jameson at the Tory Smithing Company, another local business in Paine. Like any other letter it was rolled and sealed, and it was not Benâs privilege to be concerned by its contents. Luckily for him, his destination was barely off the main street where heâd rendezvoused with Isaac, and he looked forward to returning home after its delivery. He dipped into an alley, a shortcut.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Then he heard light whimpering, followed by a huskily hushed voice, âHush now.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">As soon as Ben turned to look, he was too late to leave with his ignorance intact, and the man whoâs eyes he met knew it too. Phineas Tory. One of his large hands held the loose strands of a young womanâs hair that hung out her bonnet, the other kept her corseted torso close in front of him by her waist.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âGot something worth interrupting me, Ben?â Phineas patronized. He had a handsome face for truly a boy only a few years Benâs senior, while being naturally taller and stronger, features he used to intimidate, attract, bully, and womanize. âAny of your sisters with you?â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âNo,â Ben said. Heat flashed in his chest but he swallowed it down.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âShame. Shouldnât you be,â Phineas squinted at the letter, âdelivering? Unless itâs for me?â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âNo,â Ben said, and Phineas gestured him away like a pest, letting him off easy.</p><p class="MsoNormal">So Ben ran.</p> | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">The Paine homestead was new to two generations of the Allenby family, that of Benâs parents and of their progeny, four children including himself. As the youngest by several years, all of Benâs sisters were nearly grown up, marriageable as well, until disaster struck. The home was built around technologies such as gas lines and electron conductors, newfangled machinations and schemes that much of Paineâs regulars were too poor to afford or technophobic to entertain.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">But the Allenbys were of a wealthy class, hailing from the city of Avante. They settled in Paine for its natural merits, but not at the loss of modern conveniences, hence the technological installations. Such luxury became their undoing at the junction of a leaking pipe and a sparking socket.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben survived the fire and his mother was survived by him and her father, a 65 year old man called Isaac Talmid, an old widower. With no further children and no further interest in wives to bear children with, Isaac continued his business as usual, letter sorting and delivery. He was a man of class, but not the type that his deceased daughter wed into. He took Ben in and put him to work with the letters.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Receiving, sorting, and delivering letters. It was an endless effort, but fulfilling at the dayâs end, Ben rationalized, and the motions fulfilled his quota for physical activity, and then some. He was still new to it, only starting the job a week ago. He was still new to being alone. Isaac seemed a fine fellow, but he was hardly what the Allenbys considered fine company.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">''Stop thinking about them'', Ben thought hard to himself, ''think about the job''.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Isaacâs letter was addressed to a certain Jameson at the Tory Smithing Company, another local business in Paine. Like any other letter it was rolled and sealed, and it was not Benâs privilege to be concerned by its contents. Luckily for him, his destination was barely off the main street where heâd rendezvoused with Isaac, and he looked forward to returning home after its delivery. He dipped into an alley, a shortcut.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Then he heard light whimpering, followed by a huskily hushed voice, âHush now.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">As soon as Ben turned to look, he was too late to leave with his ignorance intact, and the man whoâs eyes he met knew it too. Phineas Tory. One of his large hands held the loose strands of a young womanâs hair that hung out her bonnet, the other kept her corseted torso close in front of him by her waist.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âGot something worth interrupting me, Ben?â Phineas patronized. He had a handsome face for truly a boy only a few years Benâs senior, while being naturally taller and stronger, features he used to intimidate, attract, bully, and womanize. âAny of your sisters with you?â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âNo,â Ben said. Heat flashed in his chest but he swallowed it down.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âShame. Shouldnât you be,â Phineas squinted at the letter, âdelivering? Unless itâs for me?â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âNo,â Ben said, and Phineas gestured him away like a pest, letting him off easy.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">So Ben ran.</p> | |||
==3== | ==3== | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">Isaac returned home for supper, which Ben had already set on the stove. âI thank you,â the man regarded the boy with a smile as he brought the warmed stew to their wooden dining table. âI have matters with you to discuss.â</p> | <p class="MsoNormal">Isaac returned home for supper, which Ben had already set on the stove. âI thank you,â the man regarded the boy with a smile as he brought the warmed stew to their wooden dining table. âI have matters with you to discuss.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âOh, yes, sir?â Ben responded.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âI received word from Philip,â Isaac said of Benâs uncle, Philip Allenby, his fatherâs brother. âHe has declined to challenge the ruled claim to your guardianship.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben stirred his bowl aimlessly.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Isaac finished tying a napkin over his neck and picked up his own spoon, but not to utilize it yet. âThat secures your place here,â the man concluded.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben half shrugged. âThat figures, sir. No one else wants me.â He said that for Isaacâs credit, as the man had given him his home and his work.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âI mean this not as a criticism of Elisha, or her choice in marriage,â Isaac sighed, âbut it would seem your cousins worry less about you as a person, than your stake in their estates.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âItâd be different if I were female,â Ben grumbled. âThen they could marry me.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Isaac grunted. âPerhaps better by the Allenbys, they accepted my daughter after all, but perhaps worse. I wouldnât let a girl do your work.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben nodded. âI like the work.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âIâm delighted you do,â the man said. âItâs all Iâve got for you, at present.â He stared at Ben and raised his eyebrows while sipping his stew.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben recognized the prompt. âWhat do you plan, sir?â he asked.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Isaac wiped his mustache and snorted. âThe shareholders think Iâm expiring shortly. The fools are wrong, but it pleases their optics if it looks like I have a successor lined up. Itâs just another way your presence blesses me, you should know.â He paused another spoonful. âOf course, you can earn the position too, if you desire it. Thereâs no one else in my payroll I rather desire it go to.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben knew better than to commit rashly. âIâll think about it,â he said.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âThe towns pay well,â Isaac said. âYouâll need it to support a family of your own, in the years to come. Thereâs many fair ladies about. I may not be in ''that'' field myself no more, but consider me a source for some wisdom, when it comes to it.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âWhen it comes to it,â Ben repeated. Life with Isaac may be different, but at least Isaac was looking out for him. It was easy to accept his guidance and follow like a drone whatever plan the man laid out for him. Benâs aspiration and ambition had burnt out when his home burnt down. It felt like a long time ago, even if only a week had passed.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben sighed and went back to eating. He had a long life ahead.</p> | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">âOh, yes, sir?â Ben responded.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âI received word from Philip,â Isaac said of Benâs uncle, Philip Allenby, his fatherâs brother. âHe has declined to challenge the ruled claim to your guardianship.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben stirred his bowl aimlessly.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Isaac finished tying a napkin over his neck and picked up his own spoon, but not to utilize it yet. âThat secures your place here,â the man concluded.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben half shrugged. âThat figures, sir. No one else wants me.â He said that for Isaacâs credit, as the man had given him his home and his work.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âI mean this not as a criticism of Elisha, or her choice in marriage,â Isaac sighed, âbut it would seem your cousins worry less about you as a person, than your stake in their estates.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âItâd be different if I were female,â Ben grumbled. âThen they could marry me.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Isaac grunted. âPerhaps better by the Allenbys, they accepted my daughter after all, but perhaps worse. I wouldnât let a girl do your work.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben nodded. âI like the work.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âIâm delighted you do,â the man said. âItâs all Iâve got for you, at present.â He stared at Ben and raised his eyebrows while sipping his stew.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben recognized the prompt. âWhat do you plan, sir?â he asked.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Isaac wiped his mustache and snorted. âThe shareholders think Iâm expiring shortly. The fools are wrong, but it pleases their optics if it looks like I have a successor lined up. Itâs just another way your presence blesses me, you should know.â He paused another spoonful. âOf course, you can earn the position too, if you desire it. Thereâs no one else in my payroll I rather desire it go to.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben knew better than to commit rashly. âIâll think about it,â he said.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âThe towns pay well,â Isaac said. âYouâll need it to support a family of your own, in the years to come. Thereâs many fair ladies about. I may not be in ''that'' field myself no more, but consider me a source for some wisdom, when it comes to it.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âWhen it comes to it,â Ben repeated. Life with Isaac may be different, but at least Isaac was looking out for him. It was easy to accept his guidance and follow like a drone whatever plan the man laid out for him. Benâs aspiration and ambition had burnt out when his home burnt down. It felt like a long time ago, even if only a week had passed.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben sighed and went back to eating. He had a long life ahead.</p> | |||
==4== | ==4== | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">âThis oneâs for the bloke in the woods,â Ethan huffed. The middle-aged postal worker stuck the envelope toward Ben, nearly hitting him in the face as he wasnât even looking at him, preoccupied with penning out the return lines on several identical envelopes himself, working his way through a stack.</p> | <p class="MsoNormal">âThis oneâs for the bloke in the woods,â Ethan huffed. The middle-aged postal worker stuck the envelope toward Ben, nearly hitting him in the face as he wasnât even looking at him, preoccupied with penning out the return lines on several identical envelopes himself, working his way through a stack.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben took it before it could stab him in the eye. âWho?â he asked.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âThe bloke,â Ethan repeated, âin the woods. Thereâs only one of him. Iâm fudging surprised anyoneâd be writing him, even the township. Heâs a total nobody.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben read the named address and went to the town map. âDamn it, he really is out in the woods.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âI said so,â Ethan grunted. âYou can take B Route on the way back, the satchelâs already loaded. Itâs the only one I finished so far, these census forms are gonna take all day.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben shouldered the knapsack and eagerly made his way out. Ethan was pissy when he was pissed, today being no exception. Ben almost gave in himself. The load was heavy today, like itâd been filled with rocks. The Talmid Letter Company made no exceptions, however. The mail, any mail, was guaranteed to be delivered, it was their edge over lazier competition.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âIâm taking the buggy!â Ben called back into the office, hoping Ethan heard him, before changing his direction towards their horse-drawn carriage. There was no way he was lugging literal rocks or objects of similar weight across the entire town and half its perimeter back. He threw the satchel inside and grabbed the reins.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Banditry was low these days, according to Isaac, especially since the militia put up a fort in the forests. So Ben relied on. He knew how to drive, courtesy of the Allenby homesteadâs stables. His cousins inherited the horses, doubtlessly. Ben resisted frowning. ''Think about the job''.</p><p class="MsoNormal">The job took him past the townâs opposite border and into that part of the surrounding woodlands, where the bloke in the woods had his shack. He was a total nobody, just sticking to himself and living off the forestâs natural resources. Still, Ben had no temptation to know the contents of his letter. Well, coming from the census collector made it pretty obvious, but his service was indiscriminate. All mail had to be delivered.</p><p class="MsoNormal">The horse suddenly halted.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âThe Hell, Missus?â Ben looked up from the envelope to address the horse. He followed the twitching of her ears to look into the forest past the roadside, and there he saw it, a glare like a candle in the night, or a fireplace in a dark chamber, but green like a barium firework, bright as the sunâs rays in the day, and massive like a bonfire.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âHell,â Ben repeated. It was magical, but the mail had to be delivered. He cracked the carriageâs whip but the horse neighed in protest. Shaking his head, Ben reached behind him for the horseâs blinders and dismounted to attach them.</p><p class="MsoNormal">As he did so, a motion caught his eye in the forest, a young man sprinting toward the glare. Ben froze when he recognized Phineas Toryâs well-to-do clothes and of course his handsome yet horrible face. The boy slowed as he approached the glare closely, revealing its massive size as it silhouetted his figure. He stepped into it until the glow swallowed him completely. Then the glare disappeared.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben stared into the empty space. He was less concerned with the ruffianâs wellbeing, he deserved whatever his stupidity wrought unto him, than to the ramifications of his vanished form.</p><p class="MsoNormal">The glow suddenly started up again, starting as a spark hovering in the air and expanding into the swirling green vortex of its previous state. As Ben watched, another person approached out of the woods, clad in a tight brown jacket and leggings that betrayed their wearer was a woman, along with a small satchel and a green fedora. She headed straight for the green glare, which Phineas had just disappeared into.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben felt a sudden bout of distress. Then he surprised himself by leaving Missus and the road, and his job behind, trampling towards the glare himself. His distress had transformed into something he forgot he could feel â ambition. Phineas being here was bad enough, but letting another young lady fall into what could be his machination was worse, but not as bad as doing nothing.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âExcuse me,â Ben huffed, disappointed in his own gasping voice. The underbrush was tough to traverse yet the woman was nearly into the glare herself. âWait!â he called.</p><p class="MsoNormal">He thought he saw her look over at him, when the glare flashed, expanding in all directions so rapidly that all he saw was green light.</p> | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben took it before it could stab him in the eye. âWho?â he asked.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âThe bloke,â Ethan repeated, âin the woods. Thereâs only one of him. Iâm fudging surprised anyoneâd be writing him, even the township. Heâs a total nobody.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben read the named address and went to the town map. âDamn it, he really is out in the woods.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âI said so,â Ethan grunted. âYou can take B Route on the way back, the satchelâs already loaded. Itâs the only one I finished so far, these census forms are gonna take all day.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben shouldered the knapsack and eagerly made his way out. Ethan was pissy when he was pissed, today being no exception. Ben almost gave in himself. The load was heavy today, like itâd been filled with rocks. The Talmid Letter Company made no exceptions, however. The mail, any mail, was guaranteed to be delivered, it was their edge over lazier competition.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âIâm taking the buggy!â Ben called back into the office, hoping Ethan heard him, before changing his direction towards their horse-drawn carriage. There was no way he was lugging literal rocks or objects of similar weight across the entire town and half its perimeter back. He threw the satchel inside and grabbed the reins.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Banditry was low these days, according to Isaac, especially since the militia put up a fort in the forests. So Ben relied on. He knew how to drive, courtesy of the Allenby homesteadâs stables. His cousins inherited the horses, doubtlessly. Ben resisted frowning. ''Think about the job''.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">The job took him past the townâs opposite border and into that part of the surrounding woodlands, where the bloke in the woods had his shack. He was a total nobody, just sticking to himself and living off the forestâs natural resources. Still, Ben had no temptation to know the contents of his letter. Well, coming from the census collector made it pretty obvious, but his service was indiscriminate. All mail had to be delivered.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">The horse suddenly halted.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âThe Hell, Missus?â Ben looked up from the envelope to address the horse. He followed the twitching of her ears to look into the forest past the roadside, and there he saw it, a glare like a candle in the night, or a fireplace in a dark chamber, but green like a barium firework, bright as the sunâs rays in the day, and massive like a bonfire.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âHell,â Ben repeated. It was magical, but the mail had to be delivered. He cracked the carriageâs whip but the horse neighed in protest. Shaking his head, Ben reached behind him for the horseâs blinders and dismounted to attach them.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">As he did so, a motion caught his eye in the forest, a young man sprinting toward the glare. Ben froze when he recognized Phineas Toryâs well-to-do clothes and of course his handsome yet horrible face. The boy slowed as he approached the glare closely, revealing its massive size as it silhouetted his figure. He stepped into it until the glow swallowed him completely. Then the glare disappeared.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben stared into the empty space. He was less concerned with the ruffianâs wellbeing, he deserved whatever his stupidity wrought unto him, than to the ramifications of his vanished form.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">The glow suddenly started up again, starting as a spark hovering in the air and expanding into the swirling green vortex of its previous state. As Ben watched, another person approached out of the woods, clad in a tight brown jacket and leggings that betrayed their wearer was a woman, along with a small satchel and a green fedora. She headed straight for the green glare, which Phineas had just disappeared into.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben felt a sudden bout of distress. Then he surprised himself by leaving Missus and the road, and his job behind, trampling towards the glare himself. His distress had transformed into something he forgot he could feel â ambition. Phineas being here was bad enough, but letting another young lady fall into what could be his machination was worse, but not as bad as doing nothing.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âExcuse me,â Ben huffed, disappointed in his own gasping voice. The underbrush was tough to traverse yet the woman was nearly into the glare herself. âWait!â he called.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">He thought he saw her look over at him, when the glare flashed, expanding in all directions so rapidly that all he saw was green light.</p> | |||
==5== | ==5== | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">âAre you okay?â asked a feminine voice.</p> | <p class="MsoNormal">âAre you okay?â asked a feminine voice.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben blinked quickly and tried sitting up, only for his head to fall backward onto a hard surface. He hadnât realized he was lying down. It was dark, like night had fallen.</p><p class="MsoNormal">With a start, he realized it was nighttime. The letters! âOh no, no, no!â Ben groaned.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âYouâre talking at least, thatâs good,â the voice continued, and Ben turned his head to find her direction. It took a lot of effort as his entire person was tingling itself out of the devilâs needles, paralysis.</p><p class="MsoNormal">His eyes landed on the woman from the forest, he recognized by her jacket, leggings, and hat. She was staring at him intently, her young face lit up by a clear white light from a strange tube she held, unlike any lantern heâd seen before in design or warmth of light. They were still in the forest, too. Phineas was nowhere to be seen, for better or worse.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben managed to prop himself onto his elbows. âHow long was I out?â he asked her.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âOnly a minute,â she responded.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âA minute?!â Ben yelled incredulously. It had been daytime!</p><p class="MsoNormal">âYouâre from Paine, arenât you?â the woman responded with another question, although by her obvious young age, probably close to his own, Ben was beginning to consider her a girl. He nodded either way.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âAre you not?â he reciprocated. He hadnât heard of any foreign travelers arriving, as her radical attire certainly indicated.</p><p class="MsoNormal">The girl nodded back, her brown hair bobbing in the glow of the strange candlelight as she did so. âNo, Iâm not from around here. I doubt youâve heard of Yorkanton.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben shook his head. âIs it far?â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âSeveral thousand lightyears away,â the girl said.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Benâs expression must have betrayed his confusion because the girl laughed.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âItâs from another planet,â she explained. âThe one weâre on now is Elistra.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âI knew that much,â Ben retorted. âAre you saying youâre some sort of alien? Because thatâs insane.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âIâm as human as you, maybe more in a way,â the girl said without a hint of offense, and she even extended a hand. âLucy.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben accepted her hand carefully, it was soft and smooth. âBen Allenby.â He let go quickly, feeling awkward. âHow did it become night so fast?â</p><p class="MsoNormal"> âWait,â Lucy said, bringing a finger to her lips, and the light suddenly extinguished.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Plunged into darkness, once Benâs eyes adjusted he was able to make out Lucyâs silhouette in only the moonslight. With their silence, he also paid attention to the forest noises. Then something growled in the distance. It was followed by several more growls from multiple directions. Lucy shifted and he felt her hand touch his shoulder, and she spoke softly, âBe very, very, quiet.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Something sounding like crumpling paper crackled right next to them and Lucy shouted, âShit!â</p><p class="MsoNormal">A phantom male voice followed. âSerenity to scout, weâre reading high maelstrom levels in your area, please standby for a rapid clearance, over!â</p><p class="MsoNormal">The growls became louder, accompanied by the obvious tramplings of their sources through the underbrush around them, towards them.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âYouâre an idiot, Danvers,â Lucy spoke into the air before hoisting Ben to his feet. He looked around for the man she addressed but saw nobody except for them, even though the trampling grew louder.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âWho are you talking to?â Ben hissed.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Lucyâs gaze was darting around them, seeing things he couldnât, when her arm suddenly pointed just north of the horizon. âLook.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Twin streaks of light like a pair of shooting stars shot across the sky. Ben craned his neck as the streaks slowed to a stop directly above them. Something was up there in the sky and Ben grabbed his head, waiting for it to fall on top of them. Craning his neck, he saw it coming down.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âThatâs our ship,â Lucy said. âGet ready-â</p><p class="MsoNormal">It moved as fast as a real shooting star, a purple beam that struck the âshipâ, exploding into an orange fireball. The shockwave sent tremors through Benâs entire body and he nearly stumbled. The fiery light illuminated the shipâs frame, vaguely birdlike as it careened towards the ground, but now away from them.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âWe canât land here,â Danversâs voice returned, âfollow us to coordinates-â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Another ear-splitting explosion rocked the forest from a shockwave ballooning out of the ship itself. Lucy shouted another vulgarity that went unheard as the ship disappeared into a shower of flaming particles. Then Lucy was shoving Ben in the opposite direction.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âI canât hear you,â Ben called. His ears were ringing.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âThere goes our ride,â Lucy repeated. âWeâll make our way to the city ourselves.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âWhich city?â Ben asked.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âPhoenixburg,â Lucy answered.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âNever heard of it,â Ben scoffed.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âIt was only built last year,â Lucy said. âafter the battle in 3026.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âThe what?â Ben stopped and Lucy skidded around, probably giving him a perplexed look invisible in the darkness, which would be mirroring his own.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âOh thatâs right,â she realized with a nod. âWhat year is it for you?â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âFor ''me''?â Ben squeaked. He gulped his voice back to its proper pitch, so he hoped. âItâs 2980,â he said less waveringly.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âDamn, youâre old,â Lucy said. âItâs actually 3027.â</p> | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben blinked quickly and tried sitting up, only for his head to fall backward onto a hard surface. He hadnât realized he was lying down. It was dark, like night had fallen.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">With a start, he realized it was nighttime. The letters! âOh no, no, no!â Ben groaned.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âYouâre talking at least, thatâs good,â the voice continued, and Ben turned his head to find her direction. It took a lot of effort as his entire person was tingling itself out of the devilâs needles, paralysis.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">His eyes landed on the woman from the forest, he recognized by her jacket, leggings, and hat. She was staring at him intently, her young face lit up by a clear white light from a strange tube she held, unlike any lantern heâd seen before in design or warmth of light. They were still in the forest, too. Phineas was nowhere to be seen, for better or worse.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben managed to prop himself onto his elbows. âHow long was I out?â he asked her.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âOnly a minute,â she responded.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âA minute?!â Ben yelled incredulously. It had been daytime!</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âYouâre from Paine, arenât you?â the woman responded with another question, although by her obvious young age, probably close to his own, Ben was beginning to consider her a girl. He nodded either way.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âAre you not?â he reciprocated. He hadnât heard of any foreign travelers arriving, as her radical attire certainly indicated.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">The girl nodded back, her brown hair bobbing in the glow of the strange candlelight as she did so. âNo, Iâm not from around here. I doubt youâve heard of Yorkanton.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben shook his head. âIs it far?â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âSeveral thousand lightyears away,â the girl said.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Benâs expression must have betrayed his confusion because the girl laughed.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âItâs from another planet,â she explained. âThe one weâre on now is Elistra.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âI knew that much,â Ben retorted. âAre you saying youâre some sort of alien? Because thatâs insane.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âIâm as human as you, maybe more in a way,â the girl said without a hint of offense, and she even extended a hand. âLucy.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben accepted her hand carefully, it was soft and smooth. âBen Allenby.â He let go quickly, feeling awkward. âHow did it become night so fast?â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal" | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Plunged into darkness, once Benâs eyes adjusted he was able to make out Lucyâs silhouette in only the moonslight. With their silence, he also paid attention to the forest noises. Then something growled in the distance. It was followed by several more growls from multiple directions. Lucy shifted and he felt her hand touch his shoulder, and she spoke softly, âBe very, very, quiet.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Something sounding like crumpling paper crackled right next to them and Lucy shouted, âShit!â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">A phantom male voice followed. âSerenity to scout, weâre reading high maelstrom levels in your area, please standby for a rapid clearance, over!â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">The growls became louder, accompanied by the obvious tramplings of their sources through the underbrush around them, towards them.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âYouâre an idiot, Danvers,â Lucy spoke into the air before hoisting Ben to his feet. He looked around for the man she addressed but saw nobody except for them, even though the trampling grew louder.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âWho are you talking to?â Ben hissed.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Lucyâs gaze was darting around them, seeing things he couldnât, when her arm suddenly pointed just north of the horizon. âLook.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Twin streaks of light like a pair of shooting stars shot across the sky. Ben craned his neck as the streaks slowed to a stop directly above them. Something was up there in the sky and Ben grabbed his head, waiting for it to fall on top of them. Craning his neck, he saw it coming down.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âThatâs our ship,â Lucy said. âGet ready-â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">It moved as fast as a real shooting star, a purple beam that struck the âshipâ, exploding into an orange fireball. The shockwave sent tremors through Benâs entire body and he nearly stumbled. The fiery light illuminated the shipâs frame, vaguely birdlike as it careened towards the ground, but now away from them.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âWe canât land here,â Danversâs voice returned, âfollow us to coordinates-â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Another ear-splitting explosion rocked the forest from a shockwave ballooning out of the ship itself. Lucy shouted another vulgarity that went unheard as the ship disappeared into a shower of flaming particles. Then Lucy was shoving Ben in the opposite direction.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âI canât hear you,â Ben called. His ears were ringing.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âThere goes our ride,â Lucy repeated. âWeâll make our way to the city ourselves.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âWhich city?â Ben asked.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âPhoenixburg,â Lucy answered.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âNever heard of it,â Ben scoffed.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âIt was only built last year,â Lucy said. âafter the battle in 3026.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âThe what?â Ben stopped and Lucy skidded around, probably giving him a perplexed look invisible in the darkness, which would be mirroring his own.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âOh thatâs right,â she realized with a nod. âWhat year is it for you?â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âFor ''me''?â Ben squeaked. He gulped his voice back to its proper pitch, so he hoped. âItâs 2980,â he said less waveringly.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âDamn, youâre old,â Lucy said. âItâs actually 3027.â</p> | |||
==6== | ==6== | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">âAre you saying Iâve been sleeping forâ¦â Ben did a quick calculation, âforty-seven years?â</p> | <p class="MsoNormal">âAre you saying Iâve been sleeping forâ¦â Ben did a quick calculation, âforty-seven years?â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âNo,â Lucy grabbed his arm and began pulling him along. She was strong and for a second it was all he could not to tumble behind her. âYou were only out for a minute, and this confirms it. We time traveled.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âBut how?â Ben demanded. âCan we go back?â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âI used this,â Lucy withdrew a small rock, glowing green in her hand, half of it smooth and the other half crystalline. Ben reached for it but she quickly pocketed it somewhere he was uncomfortable reaching for. âI was sent here to get it. Itâs going to the nexus force.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âAre you serious-â Ben started. Nexus force was one of the heavens, hells, or purgatories that the religious believed in, according to Isaac. Isaac! Was he still alive forty-seven years later? Heâd be a hundred and⦠twelve?</p><p class="MsoNormal">âDuh, I work for them,â Lucy said. âVenture league adventurer here.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben nodded to nobody in particular, it was the least awkward thing to do although nothing she said made sense to him. âSo can we use your crystal to go back?â he asked again.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âNo, it has to go straight to the nexus force,â Lucy said firmly. âAnd donât try leaving my side. Thereâs still darklings all around us.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben figured the darklings were the source of the growls, which he recalled sounded pretty malevolent. As he listened, he could still hear them in the distance, but not from any single direction. âHell,â he invoked softly.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Lucy dropped his hand and something glinting appeared in her own instead. âStay close,â she instructed. âWe may be in for a fight.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Then he heard the ping of gunfire, from Lucyâs revolver. Her shot was true as it was immediately followed by a demonic squeal. Ben whirled to face it, and he saw it, a pair of red eyes glowing in the darkness, blinking out from the injury.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Another pair of red eyes appeared next to it. Then another behind it. Then another and another.</p><p class="MsoNormal">He counted five more gunshots before his companion dumped the chamber. There was a rustling from the red eyes as they bounced up and down, rushing closer.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âShit,â Lucy cursed again, dropping the revolver and some ammo into Benâs hands while a larger weapon appeared in both of hers, a glistening longsword, which she swung in front of them and slicing an inky black enemy in half. An ooze splattered onto Benâs arm and he sucked in his breath at its stinging chill, while Lucy continued hacking and slashing at the onslaught.</p><p class="MsoNormal">The bullets just fell out of Benâs hand as he fumbled with reloading the revolver. ''Accursed weapon'', he thought, letting it all fall to the ground. Then he saw the felled darklings werenât dead. Even as they degraded into pools of sludge, they still oozed towards them, grasping hands popping out of the blackness and reaching for Lucyâs ankles.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âGet back!â he shouted and she jumped to do so, narrowly escaping a lethal touch. âGive me a better weapon!â</p><p class="MsoNormal">She shoved the sword into his hands while a totally different pistol appeared in hers. Ben had no idea where they were coming from, but he accepted the sword and whirled around to cover their rear. Red eyes were approaching but the weight of the sword disconcerted him. He was weak and didnât think heâd be good in a fight but having something was better than nothing.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âThis way,â Lucy called and he spun back to follow her. Running was a better idea, he agreed, appreciating that she found an opening. She moved through the brush quickly and by sticking to her path so did he. She turned around a few times to fire dazzling flares from her pistol past him.</p><p class="MsoNormal">They ran like that for several minutes. It turned into ten minutes, then twenty. Ben pushed himself against his exhaustion. It was run or die, and while heâd considered the embrace of death prior, he didnât want it at the hands of the darklings.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Lucy suddenly stopped. âWeâre here,â she breathed, and Ben fell to his knees. Several projections of white light, like from Lucyâs strange lantern, danced toward them. Their wielders were human, friendly, dressed in different colors of uniforms, red, blue, yellow, and green, most armored but some not.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âAlpha team is routing out the darklings,â said a woman with strawberry blond hair and a cropped jacket barely covering an undershirt that exposed her midriff. âThat was unexpected resistance from them. I wonder if they knew what you were going for?â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âPossibly. Thanks for the relief, Melodie,â Lucy said.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âIâm sorry we couldnât respond sooner. So, did you get it?â Melodie asked.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Lucy nodded and held out the stone, revealing its green glow but only for the second it took to exchange hands.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âThe ''Renaissance ''is ready to take you back to Nimbus.â Melodie reported. âWhoâs the kid?â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben pushed himself to his feet. âA recruit. I want to join you.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Lucy stared at him with a surprised look which Ben honestly related to, as he surprised himself with his statement as well, but there was no going back now, neither from it nor to Paine. âIâm an orphan, my family is dead, my town is gone. Thereâs nothing left for me here, but to come back as a Nexus Forcer and rid my planet of the scourge of the darklings.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Melodie looked him up and down while Lucy started, âWell, actually-â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âI really have nothing left,â Ben interrupted. The Allenbys didnât want him forty-seven years ago and certainly didnât want him now, if they even still lived. But Isaac had. Ben closed his eyes and tried removing the memory of the man from his mind. The old man was surely dead now, by the darklingsâ hands if not his own advanced age. At least he had cared, like a father, and Ben realized he missed him.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âWhatâs your name, son?â Melodie asked.</p><p class="MsoNormal">He opened his eyes. âIâm Ben Talmid.â</p> | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">âNo,â Lucy grabbed his arm and began pulling him along. She was strong and for a second it was all he could not to tumble behind her. âYou were only out for a minute, and this confirms it. We time traveled.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âBut how?â Ben demanded. âCan we go back?â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âI used this,â Lucy withdrew a small rock, glowing green in her hand, half of it smooth and the other half crystalline. Ben reached for it but she quickly pocketed it somewhere he was uncomfortable reaching for. âI was sent here to get it. Itâs going to the nexus force.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âAre you serious-â Ben started. Nexus force was one of the heavens, hells, or purgatories that the religious believed in, according to Isaac. Isaac! Was he still alive forty-seven years later? Heâd be a hundred and⦠twelve?</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âDuh, I work for them,â Lucy said. âVenture league adventurer here.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben nodded to nobody in particular, it was the least awkward thing to do although nothing she said made sense to him. âSo can we use your crystal to go back?â he asked again.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âNo, it has to go straight to the nexus force,â Lucy said firmly. âAnd donât try leaving my side. Thereâs still darklings all around us.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben figured the darklings were the source of the growls, which he recalled sounded pretty malevolent. As he listened, he could still hear them in the distance, but not from any single direction. âHell,â he invoked softly.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Lucy dropped his hand and something glinting appeared in her own instead. âStay close,â she instructed. âWe may be in for a fight.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Then he heard the ping of gunfire, from Lucyâs revolver. Her shot was true as it was immediately followed by a demonic squeal. Ben whirled to face it, and he saw it, a pair of red eyes glowing in the darkness, blinking out from the injury.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Another pair of red eyes appeared next to it. Then another behind it. Then another and another.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">He counted five more gunshots before his companion dumped the chamber. There was a rustling from the red eyes as they bounced up and down, rushing closer.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âShit,â Lucy cursed again, dropping the revolver and some ammo into Benâs hands while a larger weapon appeared in both of hers, a glistening longsword, which she swung in front of them and slicing an inky black enemy in half. An ooze splattered onto Benâs arm and he sucked in his breath at its stinging chill, while Lucy continued hacking and slashing at the onslaught.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">The bullets just fell out of Benâs hand as he fumbled with reloading the revolver. ''Accursed weapon'', he thought, letting it all fall to the ground. Then he saw the felled darklings werenât dead. Even as they degraded into pools of sludge, they still oozed towards them, grasping hands popping out of the blackness and reaching for Lucyâs ankles.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âGet back!â he shouted and she jumped to do so, narrowly escaping a lethal touch. âGive me a better weapon!â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">She shoved the sword into his hands while a totally different pistol appeared in hers. Ben had no idea where they were coming from, but he accepted the sword and whirled around to cover their rear. Red eyes were approaching but the weight of the sword disconcerted him. He was weak and didnât think heâd be good in a fight but having something was better than nothing.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âThis way,â Lucy called and he spun back to follow her. Running was a better idea, he agreed, appreciating that she found an opening. She moved through the brush quickly and by sticking to her path so did he. She turned around a few times to fire dazzling flares from her pistol past him.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">They ran like that for several minutes. It turned into ten minutes, then twenty. Ben pushed himself against his exhaustion. It was run or die, and while heâd considered the embrace of death prior, he didnât want it at the hands of the darklings.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Lucy suddenly stopped. âWeâre here,â she breathed, and Ben fell to his knees. Several projections of white light, like from Lucyâs strange lantern, danced toward them. Their wielders were human, friendly, dressed in different colors of uniforms, red, blue, yellow, and green, most armored but some not.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âAlpha team is routing out the darklings,â said a woman with strawberry blond hair and a cropped jacket barely covering an undershirt that exposed her midriff. âThat was unexpected resistance from them. I wonder if they knew what you were going for?â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âPossibly. Thanks for the relief, Melodie,â Lucy said.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âIâm sorry we couldnât respond sooner. So, did you get it?â Melodie asked.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Lucy nodded and held out the stone, revealing its green glow but only for the second it took to exchange hands.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âThe ''Renaissance ''is ready to take you back to Nimbus.â Melodie reported. âWhoâs the kid?â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben pushed himself to his feet. âA recruit. I want to join you.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Lucy stared at him with a surprised look which Ben honestly related to, as he surprised himself with his statement as well, but there was no going back now, neither from it nor to Paine. âIâm an orphan, my family is dead, my town is gone. Thereâs nothing left for me here, but to come back as a Nexus Forcer and rid my planet of the scourge of the darklings.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Melodie looked him up and down while Lucy started, âWell, actually-â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âI really have nothing left,â Ben interrupted. The Allenbys didnât want him forty-seven years ago and certainly didnât want him now, if they even still lived. But Isaac had. Ben closed his eyes and tried removing the memory of the man from his mind. The old man was surely dead now, by the darklingsâ hands if not his own advanced age. At least he had cared, like a father, and Ben realized he missed him.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âWhatâs your name, son?â Melodie asked.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">He opened his eyes. âIâm Ben Talmid.â</p> | |||
==7== | ==7== | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">''Renaissance ''was a Venture Explorer class starship, Ben went on to learn. As it hurtled past countless moons, planets, and stars between the planet of Elistra and the world known as Nimbus Station, he took on himself the challenge to learn as much as he could about the future heâd been flung into.</p> | <p class="MsoNormal">''Renaissance ''was a Venture Explorer class starship, Ben went on to learn. As it hurtled past countless moons, planets, and stars between the planet of Elistra and the world known as Nimbus Station, he took on himself the challenge to learn as much as he could about the future heâd been flung into.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Lucy was aboard as well, along with the green crystal, although just as she was somewhere else it too was stowed somewhere safe and secured, away from any chance of his own investigation. Such desire no longer mattered, as Ben doubted he could use it even if he wanted. There was so much to learn, which he did on his own.</p><p class="MsoNormal">He let his discoveries take him to every corner of the ship. He saw its engine room containing massive reactors fueled by an energy called Imagination, pumping out endless streams of thrusts powering their velocity through outer space. He could hardly believe he was in space, but the viewports didnât lie. Next he navigated the shipâs cargo bays, situated in the shipâs belly. He looked into the supply crates, noting the different supplies. There was food and drink, weapons, stasis chambers.</p><p class="MsoNormal">One crate opened up to reveal a man, and Benâs heart stopped.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âAt last!â Phineas Tory exclaimed, jumping out and grabbing Ben around the throat. Ben kicked out, tripping the bigger boy and tumbling the both of them into a bulkhead. Phineasâs hands slipped off Ben and he used the opportunity to scoot away, until Phineas delivered a kick to his rear end, sprawling him.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âForgot about me?â Phineas taunted.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âNo,â Ben gritted, turning around weakly. The older boy was already on his feet. He grabbed Ben by the shoulders and hoisted him against the wall.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âWeâre in the future, Benny boy,â Phineas said with a wild, animalistic grin. âHave you seen the chicks?â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âThey can kick your ass,â Ben huffed.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âMaybe. But you canât,â Phineas smirked. âYou know, we might be all thatâs left of our time period. Thatâs kind of romantic, donât you think? And Iâve never been just a ladiesâ man.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âGet off me,â Ben warned.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Phineasâs eyes flashed dangerously. âOr what?â</p><p class="MsoNormal">The ship shifted, knocking Phineas backward and sending light cargo smashing into each other as red lights began to flash. âThis is the captain speaking,â came a voice over the technology Ben identified as radio. âWe are under attack by space maelstrom. All hands, please secure yourself and prepare for emergency landing. I repeat, we are under-â</p><p class="MsoNormal">An explosion that rocked the ship cut off the captainâs broadcast, followed by sparks erupting from behind the bulkheads, from shorting electrical lines. They didnât hit him, but Ben froze as he realized the network that was all around him, powering so many functions of the ship. The lights, screens, and sliding doors â it was all electricity, the invisible energy, the invisible enemy. He had to get away from it.</p><p class="MsoNormal">He amazingly left Phineas behind in his mad dash up the stairwell to the primary level. But not even that kept him away from the sparks of death. Electricity was everywhere, powering everything. More sparks fell around Ben as the ship came under more fire. Flames licked the outside of the hull, their orange tongues visible through the portholes and the massive front windows. The fire surrounded them.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âItâs just re-entry,â Lucyâs voice came from behind him. She was hunkered next to a low bulkhead, strapped into a seat and gripping the handlebars. âYou need to brace yourself!â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben spotted an open spot across from her and went for it. He almost made it when the ship made a sickening downward lurch and he was flung off his feet and into the air. Glass shattered around him but he kept flying. Blue sky was all around him. He couldnât scream from the rush of air in his face triggering his airpaths to close, so he squeezed his eyes shut himself.</p><p class="MsoNormal">He was going to die, and in the moment before he lost consciousness he was alright with that.</p> | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">Lucy was aboard as well, along with the green crystal, although just as she was somewhere else it too was stowed somewhere safe and secured, away from any chance of his own investigation. Such desire no longer mattered, as Ben doubted he could use it even if he wanted. There was so much to learn, which he did on his own.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">He let his discoveries take him to every corner of the ship. He saw its engine room containing massive reactors fueled by an energy called Imagination, pumping out endless streams of thrusts powering their velocity through outer space. He could hardly believe he was in space, but the viewports didnât lie. Next he navigated the shipâs cargo bays, situated in the shipâs belly. He looked into the supply crates, noting the different supplies. There was food and drink, weapons, stasis chambers.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">One crate opened up to reveal a man, and Benâs heart stopped.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âAt last!â Phineas Tory exclaimed, jumping out and grabbing Ben around the throat. Ben kicked out, tripping the bigger boy and tumbling the both of them into a bulkhead. Phineasâs hands slipped off Ben and he used the opportunity to scoot away, until Phineas delivered a kick to his rear end, sprawling him.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âForgot about me?â Phineas taunted.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âNo,â Ben gritted, turning around weakly. The older boy was already on his feet. He grabbed Ben by the shoulders and hoisted him against the wall.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âWeâre in the future, Benny boy,â Phineas said with a wild, animalistic grin. âHave you seen the chicks?â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âThey can kick your ass,â Ben huffed.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âMaybe. But you canât,â Phineas smirked. âYou know, we might be all thatâs left of our time period. Thatâs kind of romantic, donât you think? And Iâve never been just a ladiesâ man.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âGet off me,â Ben warned.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Phineasâs eyes flashed dangerously. âOr what?â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">The ship shifted, knocking Phineas backward and sending light cargo smashing into each other as red lights began to flash. âThis is the captain speaking,â came a voice over the technology Ben identified as radio. âWe are under attack by space maelstrom. All hands, please secure yourself and prepare for emergency landing. I repeat, we are under-â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">An explosion that rocked the ship cut off the captainâs broadcast, followed by sparks erupting from behind the bulkheads, from shorting electrical lines. They didnât hit him, but Ben froze as he realized the network that was all around him, powering so many functions of the ship. The lights, screens, and sliding doors â it was all electricity, the invisible energy, the invisible enemy. He had to get away from it.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">He amazingly left Phineas behind in his mad dash up the stairwell to the primary level. But not even that kept him away from the sparks of death. Electricity was everywhere, powering everything. More sparks fell around Ben as the ship came under more fire. Flames licked the outside of the hull, their orange tongues visible through the portholes and the massive front windows. The fire surrounded them.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âItâs just re-entry,â Lucyâs voice came from behind him. She was hunkered next to a low bulkhead, strapped into a seat and gripping the handlebars. âYou need to brace yourself!â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben spotted an open spot across from her and went for it. He almost made it when the ship made a sickening downward lurch and he was flung off his feet and into the air. Glass shattered around him but he kept flying. Blue sky was all around him. He couldnât scream from the rush of air in his face triggering his airpaths to close, so he squeezed his eyes shut himself.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">He was going to die, and in the moment before he lost consciousness he was alright with that.</p> | |||
==8== | ==8== | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">âAre you okay?â asked a gruff, male voice.</p> | <p class="MsoNormal">âAre you okay?â asked a gruff, male voice.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben opened his eyes. It was dark again, but not from the cover of night. Thick, gray smoke filled the air like deep, dark clouds. He could taste the embers burning in the air, it was full of it, dancing sparks blowing out from the hulk of the crashed starship, embedded a thousand feet away into a formerly green field, now stained black with burning debris and purple with the presence of Maelstrom.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âYou were ejected,â the voice continued flatly. âI need to know if youâre injured, uninjured, or even worth the energy saving.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âWorth saving?â Ben yelped, quickly getting to his feet. That itself proved his limbs were working, and he tested them further to face his potential rescuer. The man wore an assortment of mismatched gear: green aviator pants, a red chainmail shirt, a burgundy breastplate, and a spiky silver helm. It was different than any of the Nexus Force gear heâd seen so far and revealed no faction allegiance.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âLooks like youâre in good shape after all,â the man noted.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âAre you Nexus Force?â Ben asked.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âBarely,â the man replied. âWas there anyone alive in that ship before it went down?â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben thought back. Heâd seen Lucy, and admittedly Phineas, but who knew how long ago that was? âYes,â he said, making a move toward the ship, but the man yanked him back.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âIf they havenât rebuilt here, theyâre dead by now,â he muttered.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âNo!â Ben shouted, wrenching away from the man and sprinting toward the ship.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âIdiot!â the man cursed, but he was thudding behind Ben. âLook out, Stromlings coming up!â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben glanced to his sides, then he saw them, skeletal hands with claws for nails digging themselves out of the ground, followed by decayed arms and partially decomposed torsos. The Stromlingsâ heads were the worst, wearing grotesque facades of formerly human faces, greasy with bacterial effuse and the corrosion of Maelstrom. Yet they were animated, breaking into runs and swinging their blades for arms, charging Ben.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Loud bangs from the Nexus Forcerâs firearm dropped several of the Stromlings in their tracks, but the rest still homed in on Ben. He swerved, trying to juke the ones in front of him, when the Nexus Forcer suddenly sped past him, a jaggedly curved sword swinging in front of him. He cut Stromlings down and even took some of their slashes, crying out but not being felled, as if he were protected by some force. The rest of the Stromlings converged on the Nexus Forcer, and Ben used the reprieve to gain more ground on the fallen starship.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben knew what he was getting into, fire and furious sparks. But he wouldnât do nothing to save those trapped within. Against all odds, he had to have been kept alive for a reason. He wouldnât fail it now.</p><p class="MsoNormal">The ''Renaissance''âs forward windows, now missing their glass, provided him an entry into the shipâs tilted interior. From the bridge, Ben continued to run. Fire had spread to the floors below him, but he had a clear path on the shipâs elevated walkways. He remembered where heâd last seen Lucy, strapped to a bulkhead near the supports for the higher levels. If he survived impact, she had to have as well.</p><p class="MsoNormal">There he found her, ripped from the wall and inches from the encroaching flames. With all the strength he could muster, Ben grabbed her arms and pulled, to little use. He was weak and could never lift the girl. âNexus Forcer!â he yelled in desperation.</p><p class="MsoNormal">The fire licked over her boots. Ben shook the sweat out of his eyes. This couldnât be it. He had to save the day. He had to save her. He crouched down, pulling her shoulders over his, and heaved. The ship shuddered, or he shuddered. But he was moving, she was moving with him, and he took step after step behind him, dragging her along, away from the fire, the danger.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âLucy,â Ben panted, âhelp me.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âAllow me,â came a new voice, from a young lady dressed identically to the male Nexus Forcer outside. Ben hadnât seen where she came from, but he presumed from outside. The newcomer hoisted Lucyâs legs and as a team they moved her to the windows. Another Nexus Forcer, a blond male with his helmet removed, received Lucyâs limp figure on the ground. The first Nexus Forcer continued to battle the Stromlings.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âSheâs alive,â the blond reported. âGood job, newbie.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âYeah, good on you newbie.â the girl agreed.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben exhaled in relief, nearly collapsing as his exertion caught up to him. Was it over?</p><p class="MsoNormal">It wasnât. Not far from the ship, a green crystal glinted, it had to have been ejected from the ship as well. As Ben eyed it, the glint steadily grew into an expansive glare, taller than a man and swirling with mystical, beckoning energy.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âWhat is that?â the blond boy asked.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âItâs for me,â Ben realized, there could be no other reason for the chance encounter. He gulped back his tears as he began an unsteady walk toward the portal. It wasnât even a definite that it would take him back to Paine, to his time, but he knew it had to, as there was no other explanation for the seemingly coincidental occurrence. Heâd been brought to the future accidentally, but now he entered the portal with purpose. Heâd done his job, and now it was time to return home.</p><p class="MsoNormal">The green glare surrounded him, filling all his senses, before fading into familiar woodlands, bright and clear as the day heâd left. On the nearby road, latched to a mahogany carriage emblazoned with the text of the Talmid Letter Company, was a white horse named Missus, nickering nervously until she spotted his arrival.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âYes!â Ben shouted, pumping a fist into the air and jumping for joy. âHoorah! Boo-yeah! Iâm back, Missus, Iâm back!â</p><p class="MsoNormal">âWeâre back,â a feminine voice said behind him.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben whirled and tripped on a root, tumbling backward until Lucy grabbed his arm, catching his fall and pulling him back to his feet.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âWhat are you doing here?!â Ben demanded. âThe portalâs closing!â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Lucy looked over her shoulder at the diminishing glow, then turned back to Ben. She opened her other hand, revealing the shattered pieces of the green crystal, disintegrated and devoid of any more power. Ben took a shuddering breath, understanding the ramification for his companion.</p><p class="MsoNormal">âWhy?â he asked quietly.</p><p class="MsoNormal">She met his gaze. âWhen you said you had nothing left, you reminded me of someone. Everyone she loved was killed by Stromlings, and with nothing left, she joined the only cause that gave her purpose. Youâre not the only one whoâs alone,â she said. âBut perhaps, weâre not meant to be alone, not by ourselves. Perhaps, weâre meant be alone together.â</p><p class="MsoNormal">Ben stared at her. âThereâs a few ways to interpret what you just said,â he said.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Lucy smiled. âLetâs try them all.â</p> | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben opened his eyes. It was dark again, but not from the cover of night. Thick, gray smoke filled the air like deep, dark clouds. He could taste the embers burning in the air, it was full of it, dancing sparks blowing out from the hulk of the crashed starship, embedded a thousand feet away into a formerly green field, now stained black with burning debris and purple with the presence of Maelstrom.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âYou were ejected,â the voice continued flatly. âI need to know if youâre injured, uninjured, or even worth the energy saving.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âWorth saving?â Ben yelped, quickly getting to his feet. That itself proved his limbs were working, and he tested them further to face his potential rescuer. The man wore an assortment of mismatched gear: green aviator pants, a red chainmail shirt, a burgundy breastplate, and a spiky silver helm. It was different than any of the Nexus Force gear heâd seen so far and revealed no faction allegiance.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âLooks like youâre in good shape after all,â the man noted.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âAre you Nexus Force?â Ben asked.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âBarely,â the man replied. âWas there anyone alive in that ship before it went down?â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben thought back. Heâd seen Lucy, and admittedly Phineas, but who knew how long ago that was? âYes,â he said, making a move toward the ship, but the man yanked him back.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âIf they havenât rebuilt here, theyâre dead by now,â he muttered.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âNo!â Ben shouted, wrenching away from the man and sprinting toward the ship.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âIdiot!â the man cursed, but he was thudding behind Ben. âLook out, Stromlings coming up!â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben glanced to his sides, then he saw them, skeletal hands with claws for nails digging themselves out of the ground, followed by decayed arms and partially decomposed torsos. The Stromlingsâ heads were the worst, wearing grotesque facades of formerly human faces, greasy with bacterial effuse and the corrosion of Maelstrom. Yet they were animated, breaking into runs and swinging their blades for arms, charging Ben.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Loud bangs from the Nexus Forcerâs firearm dropped several of the Stromlings in their tracks, but the rest still homed in on Ben. He swerved, trying to juke the ones in front of him, when the Nexus Forcer suddenly sped past him, a jaggedly curved sword swinging in front of him. He cut Stromlings down and even took some of their slashes, crying out but not being felled, as if he were protected by some force. The rest of the Stromlings converged on the Nexus Forcer, and Ben used the reprieve to gain more ground on the fallen starship.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben knew what he was getting into, fire and furious sparks. But he wouldnât do nothing to save those trapped within. Against all odds, he had to have been kept alive for a reason. He wouldnât fail it now.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">The ''Renaissance''âs forward windows, now missing their glass, provided him an entry into the shipâs tilted interior. From the bridge, Ben continued to run. Fire had spread to the floors below him, but he had a clear path on the shipâs elevated walkways. He remembered where heâd last seen Lucy, strapped to a bulkhead near the supports for the higher levels. If he survived impact, she had to have as well.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">There he found her, ripped from the wall and inches from the encroaching flames. With all the strength he could muster, Ben grabbed her arms and pulled, to little use. He was weak and could never lift the girl. âNexus Forcer!â he yelled in desperation.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">The fire licked over her boots. Ben shook the sweat out of his eyes. This couldnât be it. He had to save the day. He had to save her. He crouched down, pulling her shoulders over his, and heaved. The ship shuddered, or he shuddered. But he was moving, she was moving with him, and he took step after step behind him, dragging her along, away from the fire, the danger.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âLucy,â Ben panted, âhelp me.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âAllow me,â came a new voice, from a young lady dressed identically to the male Nexus Forcer outside. Ben hadnât seen where she came from, but he presumed from outside. The newcomer hoisted Lucyâs legs and as a team they moved her to the windows. Another Nexus Forcer, a blond male with his helmet removed, received Lucyâs limp figure on the ground. The first Nexus Forcer continued to battle the Stromlings.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âSheâs alive,â the blond reported. âGood job, newbie.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âYeah, good on you newbie.â the girl agreed.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben exhaled in relief, nearly collapsing as his exertion caught up to him. Was it over?</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">It wasnât. Not far from the ship, a green crystal glinted, it had to have been ejected from the ship as well. As Ben eyed it, the glint steadily grew into an expansive glare, taller than a man and swirling with mystical, beckoning energy.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âWhat is that?â the blond boy asked.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âItâs for me,â Ben realized, there could be no other reason for the chance encounter. He gulped back his tears as he began an unsteady walk toward the portal. It wasnât even a definite that it would take him back to Paine, to his time, but he knew it had to, as there was no other explanation for the seemingly coincidental occurrence. Heâd been brought to the future accidentally, but now he entered the portal with purpose. Heâd done his job, and now it was time to return home.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">The green glare surrounded him, filling all his senses, before fading into familiar woodlands, bright and clear as the day heâd left. On the nearby road, latched to a mahogany carriage emblazoned with the text of the Talmid Letter Company, was a white horse named Missus, nickering nervously until she spotted his arrival.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âYes!â Ben shouted, pumping a fist into the air and jumping for joy. âHoorah! Boo-yeah! Iâm back, Missus, Iâm back!â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âWeâre back,â a feminine voice said behind him.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben whirled and tripped on a root, tumbling backward until Lucy grabbed his arm, catching his fall and pulling him back to his feet.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âWhat are you doing here?!â Ben demanded. âThe portalâs closing!â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Lucy looked over her shoulder at the diminishing glow, then turned back to Ben. She opened her other hand, revealing the shattered pieces of the green crystal, disintegrated and devoid of any more power. Ben took a shuddering breath, understanding the ramification for his companion.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">âWhy?â he asked quietly.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">She met his gaze. âWhen you said you had nothing left, you reminded me of someone. Everyone she loved was killed by Stromlings, and with nothing left, she joined the only cause that gave her purpose. Youâre not the only one whoâs alone,â she said. âBut perhaps, weâre not meant to be alone, not by ourselves. Perhaps, weâre meant be alone together.â</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Ben stared at her. âThereâs a few ways to interpret what you just said,â he said.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Lucy smiled. âLetâs try them all.â</p> | |||
==9== | ==9== | ||
<p class="MsoNormal">'''<span | <p class="MsoNormal">'''<span Times New Roman";mso-fareast-theme-font:major-fareast">2986 AF</span>'''</p><p class="MsoNormal"><span Times New Roman";mso-fareast-theme-font:major-fareast">Ben and Lucille are wed.</span></p><p class="MsoNormal">'''<span Times New Roman";mso-fareast-theme-font:major-fareast">2989 AF</span>'''</p><p class="MsoNormal"><span Times New Roman";mso-fareast-theme-font:major-fareast">Tiberius Talmid is born.</span></p><p class="MsoNormal">'''<span Times New Roman";mso-fareast-theme-font:major-fareast">2991 AF</span>'''</p><p class="MsoNormal">Abe Talmid is born.</p><p class="MsoNormal">'''<span Times New Roman";mso-fareast-theme-font:major-fareast"><span id="2995_AF">2995 AF</span></span>'''</p><p class="MsoNormal">Marie Talmid is born.</p><p class="MsoNormal">'''<span Times New Roman";mso-fareast-theme-font:major-fareast"><span id="2999_AF">2999 AF</span></span>'''</p><p class="MsoNormal">Killian Talmid is born.</p><p class="MsoNormal">'''<span Times New Roman";mso-fareast-theme-font:major-fareast"><span id="3012_AF">3012 AF</span></span>'''</p><p class="MsoNormal">Abe and Hafwyn are wed.</p><p class="MsoNormal">'''<span Times New Roman";mso-fareast-theme-font:major-fareast">3013 AF</span>'''</p><p class="MsoNormal">Shira Talmid is born.</p><p class="MsoNormal">Aiden Talmid is born.</p><p class="MsoNormal">'''3014 AF'''</p><p class="MsoNormal">Evelyne Talmid is born.</p><p class="MsoNormal">'''3015 AF'''</p><p class="MsoNormal">Alex Talmid is born.</p><p class="MsoNormal">'''3019 AF'''</p><p class="MsoNormal">Chloe Talmid is born.</p><p class="MsoNormal">And the story continuesâ¦.</p> | ||
<p class="MsoNormal"><span | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">'''<span | |||
<p class="MsoNormal"><span | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">'''<span | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Abe Talmid is born. </p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">'''<span | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Marie Talmid is born. </p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">'''<span | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Killian Talmid is born. </p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">'''<span | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Abe and Hafwyn are wed. </p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">'''<span | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Shira Talmid is born. </p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Aiden Talmid is born. </p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">'''3014 AF'''</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Evelyne Talmid is born. </p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">'''3015 AF'''</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Alex Talmid is born.</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">'''3019 AF'''</p> | |||
<p class="MsoNormal">Chloe Talmid is born.</p> | |||
[[Category:Lego Universe]] | [[Category:Lego Universe]] | ||
[[Category:Stories]] | [[Category:Stories]] | ||
[[Category:Stories by talmid]] | [[Category:Stories by talmid]] | ||
Latest revision as of 04:13, 2 January 2025
<infobox>
<title source="title1"> <default>Paine is Temporary</default> </title> <image source="image1">
</image> <label>Written by</label> <label>Written on</label> <label>Posted on</label> <label>Theme song</label> <group> <header>Info</header> <label>Universe</label> <label>Date</label> <label>Locations</label> <label>Characters</label> </group> <group> <header>Timeline</header> <label>Previous</label> <label>Next</label> </group> </infobox>
Paine is Temporary
2980 AF
1
A horse-drawn carriage rolled down the cobble-stone main road of the town of Paine. Emblazoned in silver, cursive text on the carriageâs mahogany paneled doors was the name: Talmid Letter Company.
The old man in the carriageâs booth was 65 years strong. Other men of his day had long passed to heaven, or cremation, or the nexus force, or whichever next world they so believed in. But Isaac Talmid had a job to do. The letter company was responsible for efficient and effective mail delivery across the entire town of Paine, its villages, and two of the three neighboring towns.
The carriage rolled slowly through the misty morning, the driver was careful, and at the horseâs pace they were easily catchable by running feet. Isaac heard the slapping of soles on the stonework before the courier arrived at his window. The courier was breathing heavily, and Isaac motioned for the driver to give the boy a moment to catch himself. Looking out at the dark haired, slightly scrawny and still in the process of filling out teenaged youth, Isaac had it in his heart to smile.
âTake a breather,â the old man said, âand come in if you like.â He reached out to take the courierâs messenger bag and was delighted to find it empty. It meant all the mail in it had been delivered.
He swung open the door to let the boy in, and once he faced him Isaac said, âReady for another round?â
âYes, sir.â the boy said.
âThis oneâs from me personally,â Isaac reached into his coat to procure a letter. âI would have had Ethan or the regular man deliver it, but youâre here now and thereâs nothing better than early mail. The address is on the back. Then you can go home, I can imagine the morningâs run has tired you out.â
âYes, sir.â the boy agreed. He still looked a little winded, but in good spirits. Isaac handed him the letter and sent him off.
Alone in the carriage again, Isaac was content with himself. He knew that past the time he too would pass, the Talmid Letter Company would be in good hands. There was only one thing more important to the old man than the success of his company, and it was the welfare of his only grandson.
2
Ben Allenby was an orphan.
The Paine homestead was new to two generations of the Allenby family, that of Benâs parents and of their progeny, four children including himself. As the youngest by several years, all of Benâs sisters were nearly grown up, marriageable as well, until disaster struck. The home was built around technologies such as gas lines and electron conductors, newfangled machinations and schemes that much of Paineâs regulars were too poor to afford or technophobic to entertain.
But the Allenbys were of a wealthy class, hailing from the city of Avante. They settled in Paine for its natural merits, but not at the loss of modern conveniences, hence the technological installations. Such luxury became their undoing at the junction of a leaking pipe and a sparking socket.
Ben survived the fire and his mother was survived by him and her father, a 65 year old man called Isaac Talmid, an old widower. With no further children and no further interest in wives to bear children with, Isaac continued his business as usual, letter sorting and delivery. He was a man of class, but not the type that his deceased daughter wed into. He took Ben in and put him to work with the letters.
Receiving, sorting, and delivering letters. It was an endless effort, but fulfilling at the dayâs end, Ben rationalized, and the motions fulfilled his quota for physical activity, and then some. He was still new to it, only starting the job a week ago. He was still new to being alone. Isaac seemed a fine fellow, but he was hardly what the Allenbys considered fine company.
Stop thinking about them, Ben thought hard to himself, think about the job.
Isaacâs letter was addressed to a certain Jameson at the Tory Smithing Company, another local business in Paine. Like any other letter it was rolled and sealed, and it was not Benâs privilege to be concerned by its contents. Luckily for him, his destination was barely off the main street where heâd rendezvoused with Isaac, and he looked forward to returning home after its delivery. He dipped into an alley, a shortcut.
Then he heard light whimpering, followed by a huskily hushed voice, âHush now.â
As soon as Ben turned to look, he was too late to leave with his ignorance intact, and the man whoâs eyes he met knew it too. Phineas Tory. One of his large hands held the loose strands of a young womanâs hair that hung out her bonnet, the other kept her corseted torso close in front of him by her waist.
âGot something worth interrupting me, Ben?â Phineas patronized. He had a handsome face for truly a boy only a few years Benâs senior, while being naturally taller and stronger, features he used to intimidate, attract, bully, and womanize. âAny of your sisters with you?â
âNo,â Ben said. Heat flashed in his chest but he swallowed it down.
âShame. Shouldnât you be,â Phineas squinted at the letter, âdelivering? Unless itâs for me?â
âNo,â Ben said, and Phineas gestured him away like a pest, letting him off easy.
So Ben ran.
3
Isaac returned home for supper, which Ben had already set on the stove. âI thank you,â the man regarded the boy with a smile as he brought the warmed stew to their wooden dining table. âI have matters with you to discuss.â
âOh, yes, sir?â Ben responded.
âI received word from Philip,â Isaac said of Benâs uncle, Philip Allenby, his fatherâs brother. âHe has declined to challenge the ruled claim to your guardianship.â
Ben stirred his bowl aimlessly.
Isaac finished tying a napkin over his neck and picked up his own spoon, but not to utilize it yet. âThat secures your place here,â the man concluded.
Ben half shrugged. âThat figures, sir. No one else wants me.â He said that for Isaacâs credit, as the man had given him his home and his work.
âI mean this not as a criticism of Elisha, or her choice in marriage,â Isaac sighed, âbut it would seem your cousins worry less about you as a person, than your stake in their estates.â
âItâd be different if I were female,â Ben grumbled. âThen they could marry me.â
Isaac grunted. âPerhaps better by the Allenbys, they accepted my daughter after all, but perhaps worse. I wouldnât let a girl do your work.â
Ben nodded. âI like the work.â
âIâm delighted you do,â the man said. âItâs all Iâve got for you, at present.â He stared at Ben and raised his eyebrows while sipping his stew.
Ben recognized the prompt. âWhat do you plan, sir?â he asked.
Isaac wiped his mustache and snorted. âThe shareholders think Iâm expiring shortly. The fools are wrong, but it pleases their optics if it looks like I have a successor lined up. Itâs just another way your presence blesses me, you should know.â He paused another spoonful. âOf course, you can earn the position too, if you desire it. Thereâs no one else in my payroll I rather desire it go to.â
Ben knew better than to commit rashly. âIâll think about it,â he said.
âThe towns pay well,â Isaac said. âYouâll need it to support a family of your own, in the years to come. Thereâs many fair ladies about. I may not be in that field myself no more, but consider me a source for some wisdom, when it comes to it.â
âWhen it comes to it,â Ben repeated. Life with Isaac may be different, but at least Isaac was looking out for him. It was easy to accept his guidance and follow like a drone whatever plan the man laid out for him. Benâs aspiration and ambition had burnt out when his home burnt down. It felt like a long time ago, even if only a week had passed.
Ben sighed and went back to eating. He had a long life ahead.
4
âThis oneâs for the bloke in the woods,â Ethan huffed. The middle-aged postal worker stuck the envelope toward Ben, nearly hitting him in the face as he wasnât even looking at him, preoccupied with penning out the return lines on several identical envelopes himself, working his way through a stack.
Ben took it before it could stab him in the eye. âWho?â he asked.
âThe bloke,â Ethan repeated, âin the woods. Thereâs only one of him. Iâm fudging surprised anyoneâd be writing him, even the township. Heâs a total nobody.â
Ben read the named address and went to the town map. âDamn it, he really is out in the woods.â
âI said so,â Ethan grunted. âYou can take B Route on the way back, the satchelâs already loaded. Itâs the only one I finished so far, these census forms are gonna take all day.â
Ben shouldered the knapsack and eagerly made his way out. Ethan was pissy when he was pissed, today being no exception. Ben almost gave in himself. The load was heavy today, like itâd been filled with rocks. The Talmid Letter Company made no exceptions, however. The mail, any mail, was guaranteed to be delivered, it was their edge over lazier competition.
âIâm taking the buggy!â Ben called back into the office, hoping Ethan heard him, before changing his direction towards their horse-drawn carriage. There was no way he was lugging literal rocks or objects of similar weight across the entire town and half its perimeter back. He threw the satchel inside and grabbed the reins.
Banditry was low these days, according to Isaac, especially since the militia put up a fort in the forests. So Ben relied on. He knew how to drive, courtesy of the Allenby homesteadâs stables. His cousins inherited the horses, doubtlessly. Ben resisted frowning. Think about the job.
The job took him past the townâs opposite border and into that part of the surrounding woodlands, where the bloke in the woods had his shack. He was a total nobody, just sticking to himself and living off the forestâs natural resources. Still, Ben had no temptation to know the contents of his letter. Well, coming from the census collector made it pretty obvious, but his service was indiscriminate. All mail had to be delivered.
The horse suddenly halted.
âThe Hell, Missus?â Ben looked up from the envelope to address the horse. He followed the twitching of her ears to look into the forest past the roadside, and there he saw it, a glare like a candle in the night, or a fireplace in a dark chamber, but green like a barium firework, bright as the sunâs rays in the day, and massive like a bonfire.
âHell,â Ben repeated. It was magical, but the mail had to be delivered. He cracked the carriageâs whip but the horse neighed in protest. Shaking his head, Ben reached behind him for the horseâs blinders and dismounted to attach them.
As he did so, a motion caught his eye in the forest, a young man sprinting toward the glare. Ben froze when he recognized Phineas Toryâs well-to-do clothes and of course his handsome yet horrible face. The boy slowed as he approached the glare closely, revealing its massive size as it silhouetted his figure. He stepped into it until the glow swallowed him completely. Then the glare disappeared.
Ben stared into the empty space. He was less concerned with the ruffianâs wellbeing, he deserved whatever his stupidity wrought unto him, than to the ramifications of his vanished form.
The glow suddenly started up again, starting as a spark hovering in the air and expanding into the swirling green vortex of its previous state. As Ben watched, another person approached out of the woods, clad in a tight brown jacket and leggings that betrayed their wearer was a woman, along with a small satchel and a green fedora. She headed straight for the green glare, which Phineas had just disappeared into.
Ben felt a sudden bout of distress. Then he surprised himself by leaving Missus and the road, and his job behind, trampling towards the glare himself. His distress had transformed into something he forgot he could feel â ambition. Phineas being here was bad enough, but letting another young lady fall into what could be his machination was worse, but not as bad as doing nothing.
âExcuse me,â Ben huffed, disappointed in his own gasping voice. The underbrush was tough to traverse yet the woman was nearly into the glare herself. âWait!â he called.
He thought he saw her look over at him, when the glare flashed, expanding in all directions so rapidly that all he saw was green light.
5
âAre you okay?â asked a feminine voice.
Ben blinked quickly and tried sitting up, only for his head to fall backward onto a hard surface. He hadnât realized he was lying down. It was dark, like night had fallen.
With a start, he realized it was nighttime. The letters! âOh no, no, no!â Ben groaned.
âYouâre talking at least, thatâs good,â the voice continued, and Ben turned his head to find her direction. It took a lot of effort as his entire person was tingling itself out of the devilâs needles, paralysis.
His eyes landed on the woman from the forest, he recognized by her jacket, leggings, and hat. She was staring at him intently, her young face lit up by a clear white light from a strange tube she held, unlike any lantern heâd seen before in design or warmth of light. They were still in the forest, too. Phineas was nowhere to be seen, for better or worse.
Ben managed to prop himself onto his elbows. âHow long was I out?â he asked her.
âOnly a minute,â she responded.
âA minute?!â Ben yelled incredulously. It had been daytime!
âYouâre from Paine, arenât you?â the woman responded with another question, although by her obvious young age, probably close to his own, Ben was beginning to consider her a girl. He nodded either way.
âAre you not?â he reciprocated. He hadnât heard of any foreign travelers arriving, as her radical attire certainly indicated.
The girl nodded back, her brown hair bobbing in the glow of the strange candlelight as she did so. âNo, Iâm not from around here. I doubt youâve heard of Yorkanton.â
Ben shook his head. âIs it far?â
âSeveral thousand lightyears away,â the girl said.
Benâs expression must have betrayed his confusion because the girl laughed.
âItâs from another planet,â she explained. âThe one weâre on now is Elistra.â
âI knew that much,â Ben retorted. âAre you saying youâre some sort of alien? Because thatâs insane.â
âIâm as human as you, maybe more in a way,â the girl said without a hint of offense, and she even extended a hand. âLucy.â
Ben accepted her hand carefully, it was soft and smooth. âBen Allenby.â He let go quickly, feeling awkward. âHow did it become night so fast?â
âWait,â Lucy said, bringing a finger to her lips, and the light suddenly extinguished.
Plunged into darkness, once Benâs eyes adjusted he was able to make out Lucyâs silhouette in only the moonslight. With their silence, he also paid attention to the forest noises. Then something growled in the distance. It was followed by several more growls from multiple directions. Lucy shifted and he felt her hand touch his shoulder, and she spoke softly, âBe very, very, quiet.â
Something sounding like crumpling paper crackled right next to them and Lucy shouted, âShit!â
A phantom male voice followed. âSerenity to scout, weâre reading high maelstrom levels in your area, please standby for a rapid clearance, over!â
The growls became louder, accompanied by the obvious tramplings of their sources through the underbrush around them, towards them.
âYouâre an idiot, Danvers,â Lucy spoke into the air before hoisting Ben to his feet. He looked around for the man she addressed but saw nobody except for them, even though the trampling grew louder.
âWho are you talking to?â Ben hissed.
Lucyâs gaze was darting around them, seeing things he couldnât, when her arm suddenly pointed just north of the horizon. âLook.â
Twin streaks of light like a pair of shooting stars shot across the sky. Ben craned his neck as the streaks slowed to a stop directly above them. Something was up there in the sky and Ben grabbed his head, waiting for it to fall on top of them. Craning his neck, he saw it coming down.
âThatâs our ship,â Lucy said. âGet ready-â
It moved as fast as a real shooting star, a purple beam that struck the âshipâ, exploding into an orange fireball. The shockwave sent tremors through Benâs entire body and he nearly stumbled. The fiery light illuminated the shipâs frame, vaguely birdlike as it careened towards the ground, but now away from them.
âWe canât land here,â Danversâs voice returned, âfollow us to coordinates-â
Another ear-splitting explosion rocked the forest from a shockwave ballooning out of the ship itself. Lucy shouted another vulgarity that went unheard as the ship disappeared into a shower of flaming particles. Then Lucy was shoving Ben in the opposite direction.
âI canât hear you,â Ben called. His ears were ringing.
âThere goes our ride,â Lucy repeated. âWeâll make our way to the city ourselves.â
âWhich city?â Ben asked.
âPhoenixburg,â Lucy answered.
âNever heard of it,â Ben scoffed.
âIt was only built last year,â Lucy said. âafter the battle in 3026.â
âThe what?â Ben stopped and Lucy skidded around, probably giving him a perplexed look invisible in the darkness, which would be mirroring his own.
âOh thatâs right,â she realized with a nod. âWhat year is it for you?â
âFor me?â Ben squeaked. He gulped his voice back to its proper pitch, so he hoped. âItâs 2980,â he said less waveringly.
âDamn, youâre old,â Lucy said. âItâs actually 3027.â
6
âAre you saying Iâve been sleeping forâ¦â Ben did a quick calculation, âforty-seven years?â
âNo,â Lucy grabbed his arm and began pulling him along. She was strong and for a second it was all he could not to tumble behind her. âYou were only out for a minute, and this confirms it. We time traveled.â
âBut how?â Ben demanded. âCan we go back?â
âI used this,â Lucy withdrew a small rock, glowing green in her hand, half of it smooth and the other half crystalline. Ben reached for it but she quickly pocketed it somewhere he was uncomfortable reaching for. âI was sent here to get it. Itâs going to the nexus force.â
âAre you serious-â Ben started. Nexus force was one of the heavens, hells, or purgatories that the religious believed in, according to Isaac. Isaac! Was he still alive forty-seven years later? Heâd be a hundred and⦠twelve?
âDuh, I work for them,â Lucy said. âVenture league adventurer here.â
Ben nodded to nobody in particular, it was the least awkward thing to do although nothing she said made sense to him. âSo can we use your crystal to go back?â he asked again.
âNo, it has to go straight to the nexus force,â Lucy said firmly. âAnd donât try leaving my side. Thereâs still darklings all around us.â
Ben figured the darklings were the source of the growls, which he recalled sounded pretty malevolent. As he listened, he could still hear them in the distance, but not from any single direction. âHell,â he invoked softly.
Lucy dropped his hand and something glinting appeared in her own instead. âStay close,â she instructed. âWe may be in for a fight.â
Then he heard the ping of gunfire, from Lucyâs revolver. Her shot was true as it was immediately followed by a demonic squeal. Ben whirled to face it, and he saw it, a pair of red eyes glowing in the darkness, blinking out from the injury.
Another pair of red eyes appeared next to it. Then another behind it. Then another and another.
He counted five more gunshots before his companion dumped the chamber. There was a rustling from the red eyes as they bounced up and down, rushing closer.
âShit,â Lucy cursed again, dropping the revolver and some ammo into Benâs hands while a larger weapon appeared in both of hers, a glistening longsword, which she swung in front of them and slicing an inky black enemy in half. An ooze splattered onto Benâs arm and he sucked in his breath at its stinging chill, while Lucy continued hacking and slashing at the onslaught.
The bullets just fell out of Benâs hand as he fumbled with reloading the revolver. Accursed weapon, he thought, letting it all fall to the ground. Then he saw the felled darklings werenât dead. Even as they degraded into pools of sludge, they still oozed towards them, grasping hands popping out of the blackness and reaching for Lucyâs ankles.
âGet back!â he shouted and she jumped to do so, narrowly escaping a lethal touch. âGive me a better weapon!â
She shoved the sword into his hands while a totally different pistol appeared in hers. Ben had no idea where they were coming from, but he accepted the sword and whirled around to cover their rear. Red eyes were approaching but the weight of the sword disconcerted him. He was weak and didnât think heâd be good in a fight but having something was better than nothing.
âThis way,â Lucy called and he spun back to follow her. Running was a better idea, he agreed, appreciating that she found an opening. She moved through the brush quickly and by sticking to her path so did he. She turned around a few times to fire dazzling flares from her pistol past him.
They ran like that for several minutes. It turned into ten minutes, then twenty. Ben pushed himself against his exhaustion. It was run or die, and while heâd considered the embrace of death prior, he didnât want it at the hands of the darklings.
Lucy suddenly stopped. âWeâre here,â she breathed, and Ben fell to his knees. Several projections of white light, like from Lucyâs strange lantern, danced toward them. Their wielders were human, friendly, dressed in different colors of uniforms, red, blue, yellow, and green, most armored but some not.
âAlpha team is routing out the darklings,â said a woman with strawberry blond hair and a cropped jacket barely covering an undershirt that exposed her midriff. âThat was unexpected resistance from them. I wonder if they knew what you were going for?â
âPossibly. Thanks for the relief, Melodie,â Lucy said.
âIâm sorry we couldnât respond sooner. So, did you get it?â Melodie asked.
Lucy nodded and held out the stone, revealing its green glow but only for the second it took to exchange hands.
âThe Renaissance is ready to take you back to Nimbus.â Melodie reported. âWhoâs the kid?â
Ben pushed himself to his feet. âA recruit. I want to join you.â
Lucy stared at him with a surprised look which Ben honestly related to, as he surprised himself with his statement as well, but there was no going back now, neither from it nor to Paine. âIâm an orphan, my family is dead, my town is gone. Thereâs nothing left for me here, but to come back as a Nexus Forcer and rid my planet of the scourge of the darklings.â
Melodie looked him up and down while Lucy started, âWell, actually-â
âI really have nothing left,â Ben interrupted. The Allenbys didnât want him forty-seven years ago and certainly didnât want him now, if they even still lived. But Isaac had. Ben closed his eyes and tried removing the memory of the man from his mind. The old man was surely dead now, by the darklingsâ hands if not his own advanced age. At least he had cared, like a father, and Ben realized he missed him.
âWhatâs your name, son?â Melodie asked.
He opened his eyes. âIâm Ben Talmid.â
7
Renaissance was a Venture Explorer class starship, Ben went on to learn. As it hurtled past countless moons, planets, and stars between the planet of Elistra and the world known as Nimbus Station, he took on himself the challenge to learn as much as he could about the future heâd been flung into.
Lucy was aboard as well, along with the green crystal, although just as she was somewhere else it too was stowed somewhere safe and secured, away from any chance of his own investigation. Such desire no longer mattered, as Ben doubted he could use it even if he wanted. There was so much to learn, which he did on his own.
He let his discoveries take him to every corner of the ship. He saw its engine room containing massive reactors fueled by an energy called Imagination, pumping out endless streams of thrusts powering their velocity through outer space. He could hardly believe he was in space, but the viewports didnât lie. Next he navigated the shipâs cargo bays, situated in the shipâs belly. He looked into the supply crates, noting the different supplies. There was food and drink, weapons, stasis chambers.
One crate opened up to reveal a man, and Benâs heart stopped.
âAt last!â Phineas Tory exclaimed, jumping out and grabbing Ben around the throat. Ben kicked out, tripping the bigger boy and tumbling the both of them into a bulkhead. Phineasâs hands slipped off Ben and he used the opportunity to scoot away, until Phineas delivered a kick to his rear end, sprawling him.
âForgot about me?â Phineas taunted.
âNo,â Ben gritted, turning around weakly. The older boy was already on his feet. He grabbed Ben by the shoulders and hoisted him against the wall.
âWeâre in the future, Benny boy,â Phineas said with a wild, animalistic grin. âHave you seen the chicks?â
âThey can kick your ass,â Ben huffed.
âMaybe. But you canât,â Phineas smirked. âYou know, we might be all thatâs left of our time period. Thatâs kind of romantic, donât you think? And Iâve never been just a ladiesâ man.â
âGet off me,â Ben warned.
Phineasâs eyes flashed dangerously. âOr what?â
The ship shifted, knocking Phineas backward and sending light cargo smashing into each other as red lights began to flash. âThis is the captain speaking,â came a voice over the technology Ben identified as radio. âWe are under attack by space maelstrom. All hands, please secure yourself and prepare for emergency landing. I repeat, we are under-â
An explosion that rocked the ship cut off the captainâs broadcast, followed by sparks erupting from behind the bulkheads, from shorting electrical lines. They didnât hit him, but Ben froze as he realized the network that was all around him, powering so many functions of the ship. The lights, screens, and sliding doors â it was all electricity, the invisible energy, the invisible enemy. He had to get away from it.
He amazingly left Phineas behind in his mad dash up the stairwell to the primary level. But not even that kept him away from the sparks of death. Electricity was everywhere, powering everything. More sparks fell around Ben as the ship came under more fire. Flames licked the outside of the hull, their orange tongues visible through the portholes and the massive front windows. The fire surrounded them.
âItâs just re-entry,â Lucyâs voice came from behind him. She was hunkered next to a low bulkhead, strapped into a seat and gripping the handlebars. âYou need to brace yourself!â
Ben spotted an open spot across from her and went for it. He almost made it when the ship made a sickening downward lurch and he was flung off his feet and into the air. Glass shattered around him but he kept flying. Blue sky was all around him. He couldnât scream from the rush of air in his face triggering his airpaths to close, so he squeezed his eyes shut himself.
He was going to die, and in the moment before he lost consciousness he was alright with that.
8
âAre you okay?â asked a gruff, male voice.
Ben opened his eyes. It was dark again, but not from the cover of night. Thick, gray smoke filled the air like deep, dark clouds. He could taste the embers burning in the air, it was full of it, dancing sparks blowing out from the hulk of the crashed starship, embedded a thousand feet away into a formerly green field, now stained black with burning debris and purple with the presence of Maelstrom.
âYou were ejected,â the voice continued flatly. âI need to know if youâre injured, uninjured, or even worth the energy saving.â
âWorth saving?â Ben yelped, quickly getting to his feet. That itself proved his limbs were working, and he tested them further to face his potential rescuer. The man wore an assortment of mismatched gear: green aviator pants, a red chainmail shirt, a burgundy breastplate, and a spiky silver helm. It was different than any of the Nexus Force gear heâd seen so far and revealed no faction allegiance.
âLooks like youâre in good shape after all,â the man noted.
âAre you Nexus Force?â Ben asked.
âBarely,â the man replied. âWas there anyone alive in that ship before it went down?â
Ben thought back. Heâd seen Lucy, and admittedly Phineas, but who knew how long ago that was? âYes,â he said, making a move toward the ship, but the man yanked him back.
âIf they havenât rebuilt here, theyâre dead by now,â he muttered.
âNo!â Ben shouted, wrenching away from the man and sprinting toward the ship.
âIdiot!â the man cursed, but he was thudding behind Ben. âLook out, Stromlings coming up!â
Ben glanced to his sides, then he saw them, skeletal hands with claws for nails digging themselves out of the ground, followed by decayed arms and partially decomposed torsos. The Stromlingsâ heads were the worst, wearing grotesque facades of formerly human faces, greasy with bacterial effuse and the corrosion of Maelstrom. Yet they were animated, breaking into runs and swinging their blades for arms, charging Ben.
Loud bangs from the Nexus Forcerâs firearm dropped several of the Stromlings in their tracks, but the rest still homed in on Ben. He swerved, trying to juke the ones in front of him, when the Nexus Forcer suddenly sped past him, a jaggedly curved sword swinging in front of him. He cut Stromlings down and even took some of their slashes, crying out but not being felled, as if he were protected by some force. The rest of the Stromlings converged on the Nexus Forcer, and Ben used the reprieve to gain more ground on the fallen starship.
Ben knew what he was getting into, fire and furious sparks. But he wouldnât do nothing to save those trapped within. Against all odds, he had to have been kept alive for a reason. He wouldnât fail it now.
The Renaissanceâs forward windows, now missing their glass, provided him an entry into the shipâs tilted interior. From the bridge, Ben continued to run. Fire had spread to the floors below him, but he had a clear path on the shipâs elevated walkways. He remembered where heâd last seen Lucy, strapped to a bulkhead near the supports for the higher levels. If he survived impact, she had to have as well.
There he found her, ripped from the wall and inches from the encroaching flames. With all the strength he could muster, Ben grabbed her arms and pulled, to little use. He was weak and could never lift the girl. âNexus Forcer!â he yelled in desperation.
The fire licked over her boots. Ben shook the sweat out of his eyes. This couldnât be it. He had to save the day. He had to save her. He crouched down, pulling her shoulders over his, and heaved. The ship shuddered, or he shuddered. But he was moving, she was moving with him, and he took step after step behind him, dragging her along, away from the fire, the danger.
âLucy,â Ben panted, âhelp me.â
âAllow me,â came a new voice, from a young lady dressed identically to the male Nexus Forcer outside. Ben hadnât seen where she came from, but he presumed from outside. The newcomer hoisted Lucyâs legs and as a team they moved her to the windows. Another Nexus Forcer, a blond male with his helmet removed, received Lucyâs limp figure on the ground. The first Nexus Forcer continued to battle the Stromlings.
âSheâs alive,â the blond reported. âGood job, newbie.â
âYeah, good on you newbie.â the girl agreed.
Ben exhaled in relief, nearly collapsing as his exertion caught up to him. Was it over?
It wasnât. Not far from the ship, a green crystal glinted, it had to have been ejected from the ship as well. As Ben eyed it, the glint steadily grew into an expansive glare, taller than a man and swirling with mystical, beckoning energy.
âWhat is that?â the blond boy asked.
âItâs for me,â Ben realized, there could be no other reason for the chance encounter. He gulped back his tears as he began an unsteady walk toward the portal. It wasnât even a definite that it would take him back to Paine, to his time, but he knew it had to, as there was no other explanation for the seemingly coincidental occurrence. Heâd been brought to the future accidentally, but now he entered the portal with purpose. Heâd done his job, and now it was time to return home.
The green glare surrounded him, filling all his senses, before fading into familiar woodlands, bright and clear as the day heâd left. On the nearby road, latched to a mahogany carriage emblazoned with the text of the Talmid Letter Company, was a white horse named Missus, nickering nervously until she spotted his arrival.
âYes!â Ben shouted, pumping a fist into the air and jumping for joy. âHoorah! Boo-yeah! Iâm back, Missus, Iâm back!â
âWeâre back,â a feminine voice said behind him.
Ben whirled and tripped on a root, tumbling backward until Lucy grabbed his arm, catching his fall and pulling him back to his feet.
âWhat are you doing here?!â Ben demanded. âThe portalâs closing!â
Lucy looked over her shoulder at the diminishing glow, then turned back to Ben. She opened her other hand, revealing the shattered pieces of the green crystal, disintegrated and devoid of any more power. Ben took a shuddering breath, understanding the ramification for his companion.
âWhy?â he asked quietly.
She met his gaze. âWhen you said you had nothing left, you reminded me of someone. Everyone she loved was killed by Stromlings, and with nothing left, she joined the only cause that gave her purpose. Youâre not the only one whoâs alone,â she said. âBut perhaps, weâre not meant to be alone, not by ourselves. Perhaps, weâre meant be alone together.â
Ben stared at her. âThereâs a few ways to interpret what you just said,â he said.
Lucy smiled. âLetâs try them all.â
9
2986 AF
Ben and Lucille are wed.
2989 AF
Tiberius Talmid is born.
2991 AF
Abe Talmid is born.
2995 AF
Marie Talmid is born.
2999 AF
Killian Talmid is born.
3012 AF
Abe and Hafwyn are wed.
3013 AF
Shira Talmid is born.
Aiden Talmid is born.
3014 AF
Evelyne Talmid is born.
3015 AF
Alex Talmid is born.
3019 AF
Chloe Talmid is born.
And the story continuesâ¦.