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The Elder Origins

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by Bre Faucheux




  The Elder Origins

  Copyright © 2013 by Bre Faucheux

  All Rights Reserved.

  www.brefaucheux.com

  Dedication

  To my mom and dad, who believed in my writing long before I did.

  Contents

  Copyright Page

  Contents

  The Elder Origins

  PART I

  PROLOGUE

  Fall 1346

  Eastern Coast of Future North America

  Two miles from the Atlantic Coast

  Native American Vam-pyr-ei-ak Tribe

  Smoke stirred through the elderly man’s hands. He manipulated it with his every movement. It seeped inside of his tall black deer skinned tent, blending with the night air surrounding it. The two men inside held their eyes shut, communicating with the life inside the surrounding forest. The smoke and mist before them mingled with the fire and seemed to penetrate each breath Kuruk took. He breathed it in, embracing the visions it gave him.

  His people revered him for this purpose. As chief he was expected to care for their well-being, which was why he only trusted his son with what he was planning. Kuruk’s thoughts regarded the distant future, not the present. His long years amongst his people gave him the authority to make decisions that no one else could or would question. The “Elders” as he and his son were called, were respected and feared. Their habits were unnatural, and yet they were created from the Earth. They took from life, but preserved the lives of others.

  Kuruk opened his eyes and gazed upon his son.

  “Is it still so,” asked He Lush Ka. “Do you still sense the white men approaching?”

  Kuruk did not immediately respond. He sighed a deep breath and allowed the mist to dwindle into nothing. The fire remained, but the fumes went upwards towards the opening of the tepee. He no longer braided it through his hands.

  “You know what you must tell our people,” said Kuruk. “They are to know only what we want them to. No more.”

  “Yes, father. They are to know that the white men are coming, and our future must not be determined by their greed. They will pillage our lands and bring an onslaught of disease.”

  “Which we know is true,” his father said.

  “But not the whole truth.”

  “Indeed,” said Kuruk, now looking at his son with full confidence in his choice of action. “They will come, but this small group to approach next spring, they are not of the larger oncoming. Our people must not know that. Otherwise, our future will only be determined by darkness. Now repeat it to me again. I need to know that you understand completely.”

  Kuruk stopped to look at his son. His confidence in his son’s ability to keep silent on the matter was unwavering. But he needed to hear him say it once more.

  “This small group of white men is approaching our lands to seek refuge. But a larger group that cannot be stopped will come in time. Our people are to believe that this smaller gathering of white men is of the larger coming,” said He Lush Ka.

  “And what must be done of them?”

  “They must turn on their own. Only if we destroy the white men will our future be protected,” said He Lush Ka.

  “We must consider the well-being of our people in the future, and not only in the present. Do you understand that many of our people will die in this pursuit?” asked Kuruk.

  “Yes, I do.”

  “And you understand that it is for the better?” Kuruk took his son’s hand, allowing him to penetrate his emotions through touch. He trusted in his son’s silence, and there were no secrets between them. Their guiding words had kept their people safe for generations. And now their words were destined to become the decline of many of their own people. But the understanding was mutual. Sacrifice a few, and perhaps save many.

  He Lush Ka stood and left the tall enclosure. He beckoned for those outside waiting to approach. Their warriors were ready for what was to come without knowing what they were truly preparing for. The Elders only meditated for such long periods when a critical decision was being made.

  “There is no need for your weapons, men. At least not yet,” he said to them. “But there is a danger we must speak of. My father and I have sensed a future that we must stop before it consumes us all. Do you remember the stories my father told as you grew into men? The stories of how your Elders, including myself, came into being?”

  They nodded. Others began to look onward, and He Lush Ka made certain that his voice could be heard by all.

  “There are people coming to our lands who must suffer the same fate.”

  “They are to become Elders?” one asked.

  He Lush Ka stopped and looked at the man solemnly, then spoke. “They are to become a reflection of what happens to men who take life in the pursuit of surviving it.”

  1

  Winter 1347

  English Coast

  The height of the Hundred Year War between France and England

  Madison was awoken by a coarse smell permeating the air around her. The screams quickly followed. But they were faint, as if they were a distance away. Reaching for her cloth shoes, she quickly placed them on and thrust herself from bed. Jamison was not in the bed directly across from her. Her brother was not even in the cottage. She cried his name but heard no response. Madison touched the handle of the door. It was warm. She had grown used to everything her hands touched being ice cold by this time of year.

  Chaos ensued when she emerged from the small confines of her home. Fire was nearly everywhere. Her cottage had not yet been touched by it, but it was only a matter of moments.

  “Jamison!” she cried. Lifting her long night dress from the knee, she ran forward and cried his name again. She was only greeted by people yelling all around her. Two children ran passed her. She turned around and saw several people running for the woods nearby. Men grabbed their small children in their arms, their wives in tow beside them.

  Madison looked forward again. She saw the cause immediately. There were men on horseback. Their armor gleamed from the light of the fire, giving them a nearly demonic appearance. The people who had just emerged from their cottages as she had were slain with swords before they knew what was happening. These men were everywhere with torches, throwing them on every home they could find. Madison had heard that the battles were growing closer, but she never imagined that they would be so bold as to attack villagers nearby. Jamison told her that war was meant for the battlefield, and that armies should never engage in war upon townships and the innocent. Regardless of whether it was noble to keep the fighting from the local towns, these men were not men of honor.

  Madison watched, completely frozen in place. People she had known her entire life were either running or laying upon the ground bleeding. She had never seen so much blood. A few bodies had caught fire. She began to cough from the fumes and looked all around, still unable to move her legs. Her cottage was now on fire behind her. The wood and clay cracked and crumbled before her eyes.

  She wanted to cry out for Jamison again, but feared that these men would spot her. Her eyes began to seethe. She covered them and nearly buckled from the lack of air. Her lungs burned from inside her.

  Before her hands could reach the ground beneath her, a sharp pain struck her shoulder. Jamison grabbed her arm and threw her backward. He was nearly dragging her before she picked up her feet and began to run. He led her to one of the cottages that had seen the least of the fire. It was the stables. He took her inside and went for his horse. The porcelain white creature had nearly broken the rope that tied her to the side bar of the stables. She reached for the roof with her hooves and made an awful sound in panic. Jamison reached for the ropes and pulled her down. The horse showed a slight hint of calm when she saw Jamison. He
quickly untied her and leapt upon her back. Madison still could not move unless forced. Jamison reached down, grabbed for her below the waist and brought her upon the horse behind him. He forced her to wrap her arms around him and held them there for a moment, making sure that she was securely attached. As tight as she had gripped him on their past rides, she never held on as tight as she did now.

  Jamison yelled at the horse, and led her out the back of the stable. Not even seconds after they had left, it too caught fire. Madison shut her eyes to everything around her. The sounds were enough to create a stain on her memory. Jamison made the horse run faster than he had ever pushed her. But the animal recognized the urgency was immediate. Madison knew it had been aching to run since before Jamison had reached her. The wooded trail he and Madison had ridden through so many times was abandoned. People had scattered everywhere else and the men on horses ran after them. Only Jamison knew these woods well enough to run through them in the dark completely unbothered. Men from behind shouted in French, or at least Madison had thought it was French. She had heard the language before, but it was unknown to her. She had no preconceived judgments of the people until this moment. She had been told to hate them by everyone. Only Jamison had told her not to hold such sentiments against an entire people, and that it was only the armies that fought amongst each other that deserved such blame. She wondered if he still thought so now.

  Madison’s eyes quickly began to throb from holding them shut so tightly. She opened them only to see Jamison’s tunic, her head lodged deep into his back. She lifted it long enough to see the distance they had travelled. They were coasting the seashore. Jamison ran the horse on its sands, making it through the mile of thick woods quicker than he ever had.

  The horse suddenly stalled, crying out in disbelief that his master wanted to go farther. Madison only saw for a second what was before them when the horse went onto his hind legs, refusing to push forward. Dozens of wooden ships grazed the sea in the distance. There were men scattered everywhere along the beach only hundreds of feet away. More men in armor clamored on their horses on the beach’s rocky sands. They were heading in their direction. Jamison doubted that they had been seen, but these were not men that would see the distinction between those from a local township, and those wearing enemy armor.

  “Allez,” a man yelled repeatedly in the distance. “Allez, vite!”

  The more the man in front yelled, the more men gathered behind him and rode their horses onward.

  Jamison tightened the reigns of his horse and led her backwards. He had no idea which direction was the right way to go. He took the horse to the left and ran her into the woods once more. He had only ever known the trail back to the village, but this time he led her off the path and directly into the woods where they had never ventured.

  Madison heard the men coming from behind. Now they had been spotted. Jamison had no notion of where these thick woods would lead, but he knew that they were the only available option.

  Horses came closer from behind. Jamison led them rightward, trying to throw them off their trail. Even though he could hardly see anywhere but a few feet in front of him, the horse seemed to know what lay ahead. She leapt over heights of fallen trees that Jamison did not know her capable of reaching. Madison could hear the men from behind being told something, but could not make sense of it. She only hoped that the horses from behind were too cowardly to make such leaps.

  When they reached the edge of the woods, a light greeted them. It was their neighboring village only a short distance away. Jamison often went there to trade, but had no idea that these woods would lead there. He plowed the path near the cottages, yelling for the men who were not even out of their beds yet. His voice attracted attention quickly and men emerged with their wives behind them, still in their night gowns and caps as Madison was. Her auburn hair trailed down the length of her back now, loosened by the horse’s fast pace.

  “Awaken, all of you!” Jamison yelled.

  The town’s priest emerged from his lodgings. Jamison had known him many years, but he looked at him as though he were a strange intruder.

  “What is the meaning of this,” the priest said hastily, seeing Madison gripping his back as tight as she could. The horror on her face and her disheveled hair spoke volumes.

  “They are here. The French burned our village to the ground. We lost them in the woods, but they will find this place, I assure you,” said Jamison, his voice reaching heights that even startled Madison. Normally calm and composed, Jamison’s voice now scorched her ears, demanding everyone’s attention. More people came out of their cottages and stared at him.

  “Leave, all of you! Now! They destroyed our home, they will come for yours next. They already have the lands west and south of here. Head north. Take your children and run.”

  “This war is between the gentility, not us,” said a man from behind. “The lords can take care of their own affairs.”

  “In a matter of moments, sir, it will become your affair,” said Jamison. He took the horse’s reigns tighter in his hands and thrust her forward.

  Madison saw only open space. They were headed toward a valley. Herds of sheep that had bedded down for the night began to stir as the sound of hooves approached them.

  It was a long time before Jamison slowed the horse and allowed her a break. He took Madison’s hands and broke them free from his waist. He slowly descended and took her into his arms. He did not let her go when she reached the ground. Holding her close, he felt her heart racing from under her garments.

  There was nothing for him to say, no comforting words to give her. He only held her. That was all he could do. Their new reality was not yet realized; only the knowledge that their home was gone.

  Madison knew no haven they created for themselves would ever feel safe again.

  2

  Early Spring 1347

  Miles from North American Shores

  Madison was led down the hall by Jamison’s hand. The walls around her were far too close for comfort. As if the cramped room they shared was not enough for her to feel uncomfortable, trying to balance between the rocking walls was enough to make her panic. Her legs felt unsteady as she walked. It was as if she had forgotten how to properly place one foot in front of another.

  “I am telling you with complete confidence, getting outside of that room will do you better than anything in the world,” he said to her.

  “I don’t think visualizing how isolated we have become will indeed aid me in any way,” she responded.

  “Yes, it shall. You will see.”

  A harsh light struck her eyes as he opened the door to the outside and led her up the small staircase to the deck. Her eyes adjusted soon enough, but probably sooner than she would have liked. The sight before her was the one she had been dreading for weeks. Men stood all around her, moving about, making sure the lines were straight and cleaning the wooden surface. She knew that her presence was preferred below decks as they had not taken kindly to the few women who had been brought aboard the ship. She looked down at the wood beneath her feet so she wouldn’t be immediately forced to gaze out from the side that Jamison was leading her towards. His grip on her arm was dragging her along, yet again. The room she occupied had become her own private sanctuary, as dreary as it was and as secluded as she had been during these long weeks, it felt better to her than being outside.

  “I would have been perfectly fine through the duration of our journey in the room. I don’t need to see this,” she said in a soft voice.

  “Stop this instant. The view is too beautiful for you not to witness it.”

  He brought her to the deck’s edge and she slowly lifted her head. He took his arm around her shoulders and waited in anticipation as she saw the expanse of water that surrounded them. The colors within the sky as the sun set and the shimmery lights that cascaded on the water were indeed as he had described them. They were stunning. But the knowledge that no one was around for miles, and that they could be swept away to the
darkness beneath them at any moment did little to help her to enjoy the beauty of the sight before her. Jamison merely took her silence as a moment of awe.

  “You see now, do you not? It is as if God placed it here just to comfort us,” he spoke into her ear. “He knows we are journeying toward a land of great mystery. You must have faith now that we are safe. God would not have willed such a beautiful sight if our journey had not been blessed by his grace.”

  Madison wished that she had his faith. As beautiful as the sky was, her mind drifted to the impending nightfall. She knew Jamison wanted her to see the sky after dark. He would probably wake her from her slumber to come gaze upon the stars with him. He described the night sky as she had never seen it, with tints of blue and purple, and more stars than one could possibly behold. He had said that the night sky on the sea is unlike the night sky anywhere else in the world. It held mysteries that man has been desperate to uncover for centuries. But she did not want to see it. She could see it in its glory once they arrived to where ever it was they were going. She did not know how Jamison could be so confident that they were blessed in their journey. How could sailing blind by night be blessed? She trusted that the men in charge had a greater knowledge of the ocean’s power than she did. But all their faith was within a god she had never felt the presence of. She looked to Jamison with faith and trusted in him. All she had ever known through their small chapel and their visits to hear the word of God given every week was the sense that she was always committing sins. She had always felt as though her mistakes taught her more of life and how to be kind to others. And those she was meant to follow in guiding her to better faith only made her feel like she was failing. Her sins in the eyes of the men giving sermons were inevitably damning her soul for eternity. She hoped against hope that they only helped to show her a better way to live. But on these waters, she did not feel as though her brother’s will to move forward was toward finding a better way. All she felt was the darkness that would likely await them.

 

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