Contents
Title Page
Prologue
Village
Oath
Trader
Mission
Regrets
Servant
Merchant
Invasion
Plan
Return
Cave
Scheme
Innovator
Wheel
Traveler
Fear
Finale
Shunning
Trial
Banishment
Fallout
Party
Execution
Burial
Confessions
Reunion
Brother
Rebirth
Author's Note
Preserving Hope
The Aliomenti Saga — Book 2
by Alex Albrinck
Copyright (c) 2012 by Alex Albrinck. All rights reserved.
Cover by Karri Klawiter: http://artbykarri.com
Stock art by Melissa Offutt: http://melyssah6-stock.deviantart.com/
Other Books by Alex Albrinck
The Aliomenti Saga
Book 1: A Question of Will
Book 2: Preserving Hope
Book 3: Ascent of the Aliomenti
Book 4: Coming in 2013!
For new release notification, plus access to the free prequel and short stories, sign up at:
http://smarturl.it/c49mzo
Prologue
Will Stark watched the villagers seal the lid of Elizabeth Lowell’s coffin.
She had been the daughter of Genevieve and Arthur Lowell. Genevieve wasn’t here to watch as the simple pine box holding her only child was lowered into the grave. Genevieve wasn’t able to cry until there were no more tears to cry, nor was she able to curse her every breath as one stolen from the young woman buried that day. Genevieve had found her eternal rest three years earlier, and she now waited in silence as Elizabeth became her eternal companion.
Arthur, though, had to live through this event, not shielded from every parent’s worst nightmare, the nightmare of burying your own child. For Arthur, the experience was far more profound, for deep down, he knew that his only child was dead before her twentieth birthday because of his own greed and selfishness.
At least, he should have known that.
Arthur had been part of a group of slaves who had escaped into the wilds of medieval northern England, revolting against a return to a life of servitude. The group had been forced to serve as human test subjects for a baron desirous of getting his slaves to live longer and work harder by freeing them of the diseases and ill health that lessened his return on his investment in human capital. If the experiments worked, they’d be healthy; if the experiments failed – as they had with earlier groups – then the slaves would die. The experiments with Arthur’s group had succeeded, but had the curious side-effect of giving that group of slaves a thirst for freedom that could not be quenched. Arthur and the others had escaped, built up modest wealth, and had constructed a thriving village. There, they’d conducted experiments of their own choosing, seeking a far greater payoff than mere good health. The experiments were all conducted by a single “volunteer,” a young girl “hired” each day to test out every possible “magical” substance reputed to provide a payoff of mythical proportions. Though she worked against her will and received none of the money paid for her services, the young girl – Elizabeth – was expected to freely share any breakthroughs with those who enslaved her.
In the end, though, the experiments had led only to the early and violent death of that girl. Two women had protested her treatment – Genevieve, and the woman who had come to be a second mother to Elizabeth – and those protests had led to those women preceding Elizabeth in death. For Arthur, these three deaths were a small price to pay to gain the knowledge and power he sought above all else.
Several of the men of the village pounded nails into the wood, sealing the box for eternity, just after Will caught a final glimpse of Elizabeth. Her hair was a flaming-red color like that of Will’s daughter, Angel, but in death it lacked the same vibrancy. Elizabeth’s hair now looked like the dying embers remaining from a once-great fire, the dirty hair matted against her head with blood and sweat. The bruises still marred her face, never having had the chance to heal before her bodily functions ceased. Her blue eyes, a window into the sadness of her life, were hidden behind eyelids sealed shut from the beating she’d endured. Her neighbors, aroused to a fearful passion aided by Elizabeth’s own father, had exacted their final toll. After a decade of physical trauma and emotional neglect, Arthur had disowned his own daughter in her time of greatest need and peril, delivering Elizabeth to her early grave rather than standing up for the daughter he’d long ceased to show any fondness. Instead, the former slave had discarded his own child when she no longer served him any purpose.
Will bent to the ground and grasped one of the three long, wooden poles used to lift and carry the coffin. At a count of three, he joined the two women and three men in standing up, lifting the pine box off the ground for transport to the grave site. They walked in silence, pausing as Will momentarily lost his balance. There were no tears shed during this solemn time, for outside of one of the men carrying the coffin, they all bore a share of the guilt for the young woman’s demise, a fatality that seemed predestined. No priest presided over the ceremony, for none of them wanted to be reminded of the terrible guilt they all shared.
The earth had already been removed from Elizabeth’s final resting place. The dirt sat in a large pile atop Genevieve’s grave, preventing anyone from stepping there. The pallbearers placed the pine box atop the open grave, where the wooden poles allowed the coffin to remain above ground. Will and two other men unrolled three coils of sturdy rope, which were fed under the coffin. The pallbearers lifted the box a few inches off the ground using the ropes, and one of the villagers removed the three poles from beneath the coffin. Inch by inch, the six lowered the box down into the grave, until it reached the bottom with a finality fitting for the end of a young life. They dropped the lengths of rope into the hole and stepped back.
Arthur Lowell stepped forward. As the father of the deceased, it was his duty to speak. “We have suffered a great loss. Elizabeth was a young woman of beauty, possessing a generosity of spirit rare among any I’ve ever met. She has uniquely contributed to the success of this community, and we mourn that she will be unable to continue to share in that success. In her memory, we must continue to move forward along the path she cleared, to see the sights she made available for all of us. In many ways, she epitomizes what we are striving to be, ever seeking to push the boundaries of human development. We will not let her death be in vain.” There were murmurs of agreement and appreciation of his words.
Will looked around at the small assembly, incredulous. “That was a beautiful speech, Arthur. Why, if I didn’t know any better, I’d think her death was of her own choosing. Let me offer my eulogy. Today, this young woman is laid to rest as a human sacrifice on the altar of greed and laziness and cowardice. She is mourned by those gathered here, not because they truly sorrow at her loss, but because they do not know where the next sacrificial victim will be found. They cry not because she is gone, but because they fear they’ll be the next chosen to join her, the next innocent bludgeoned to death by so-called neighbors. None of you have any right to be standing on this ground; you all bear the guilt of her demise, regardless of the number of blows you delivered.”
Most of the eyes in the gathering fell to the ground, their silence speaking volumes to the guilt they bore and the truth of his words. Arthur’s eyes blazed in anger. “How dare you!” he hissed. “How dare you belittle her in such a fashion! My daugh
ter worked harder than anyone here to unlock the secrets we know wait just beyond our grasp, teasing us with their potential, and you tarnish her memory before the dirt is in her grave?”
Will marched straight to Arthur, until he could lean down and stare directly into the shorter man’s terrified eyes. “Get out of here now, Arthur.” Will turned around, his gaze taking in all of those assembled. “All of you. Leave this place. You gave this woman no peace during her life. You failed to give her a childhood full of fun and play and laughter. You never gave her the love all children so desperately need. You feign interest in her now, as if you expect that to atone for the crimes you’ve committed against her. Her life is over; it’s too late to seek forgiveness now. Leave, so that her final burial is performed by hands that didn’t drive her into that grave.”
Will turned back to Arthur and again stared down the shorter man, who finally withered under his gaze. Arthur turned and left the clearing, followed by the rest of the villagers, leaving Will alone with the coffin and the empty grave. Silence followed their departure, suggesting that he was alone, but Will knew that Arthur had not gone all the way back to the village with the others.
After a few moments of quiet contemplation kneeling by the coffin, Will stood and seized a shovel. He began pushing the dirt back into the open grave, covering the coffin and filling the hole. He worked without stopping, ignoring the sweat beading on his forehead and dampening his clothes. Once the grave was filled with dirt, Will located a small piece of rope on the ground nearby, and used it to fashion a small cross from two tree branches. He pushed the marker into the ground, and knelt down. He allowed the tears to flow, weeping over the tortuous life the young woman had lived. He wept at the love she’d so desperately sought from her father, love that the man had never reciprocated. He wept at her horror at the realization that that same man had permitted and encouraged her final end.
Will rose to his feet and marched into the trees, where Arthur stood, watching the entire scene.
“You loved her, didn’t you?” It wasn’t a question that Arthur directed at Will. It was an accusation, one designed to twist the emotional knife just a bit deeper, and perhaps locate a weak point for future exploitation.
Will fixed Arthur with a steady gaze, his eyes bright with malice toward the shorter man. “I will love her until the end of my days.”
And then he punched Arthur square in the face, turned, and headed away from the village, ignoring Arthur’s cries of pain.
He needed to get as far from this spot as possible. Only then could he determine if the woman lying in the box was still alive, or if he’d accidentally killed his future wife.
I
Village
The morning sun rested low in the sky, casting its early summer rays over an empty field in the wilds of northern England. In the distance, off to the west and north, loomed a large forest, boasting magnificent old trees that had survived for centuries. Two rivers merged into one north of the main body of the forest, the smaller branches of water surrounding the ancient old trees in a loving embrace.
There was only a single human in sight, a tall man with jet-black hair carrying nothing but the bag of coins in his pocket. He walked awkwardly, his feet protesting the unusual shoes he was forced to wear, as he made his way through the fields between the two rivers and toward the forest. Two months earlier, as he’d lived those months, he’d experienced a similar issue with footwear. He’d tried to sprint the length of a long, winding driveway toward his home in business shoes not designed for such use. Those tortuous footsteps marked the beginning of a dramatic transformation in his life, a transformation that now saw him walking in an open field thousands of miles from the land he called home, a thousand years before he’d even been born.
Though he knew what he was supposed to do in these strange lands and stranger times, he had little idea of how it would be accomplished.
Two months earlier, Will Stark had been an incredibly successful businessman and philanthropist, living his dream life with the woman he loved and their young son. He’d arrived at the entry to their gated community – a community built to provide them security against those who meant them harm – to find the guards slaughtered and a killer on the loose inside the fortress-like walls. He’d run to try to save his family, for his car was blocked from entry by the very security he’d designed. He’d been too late. His house had exploded into a massive fireball, ending the lives of his wife and son, who were still inside. Will had been attacked and beaten as he’d tried to get inside the house in a futile effort to save them.
Two men and a woman had rescued him and healed him using incredibly advanced medical devices based on nanotechnology. Will was introduced to the Aliomenti, a group which had mastered the development and use of Energy, an inner force capable of incredible actions like telepathy, empathy, telekinesis, clairvoyance, and for the most advanced practitioners, teleportation. The Aliomenti prescribed harsh penalties for sharing the knowledge of developing this Energy and associated abilities with the outside world, and a small faction had broken away in protest, choosing to pursue the goal of advancing all of humanity from the shadows rather than suppressing them. The core Aliomenti leadership formed a trio of Hunters who would track down deserters. An Assassin would kill any “humans” suspected of having knowledge of the Aliomenti or their technological advancements. They’d believed Will the most prominent of the deserters, and the explosion, fire, and attack were triggered by the Assassin and Hunters for that reason. They’d realized Will wasn’t who – or more accurately, what – they’d expected as they’d prepared to incarcerate him.
Will had been rescued by members of the breakaway faction, the Alliance, and they’d healed his wounds and taught him the secrets of Energy. They’d also introduced their secret technology, based on self-directed, problem-solving nanomachines that could collaborate in sufficient numbers to perform nearly any activity, all without detection by the Hunters. Will, seeing in those skills and machines the chance to avenge his family or, failing that, to prevent others from suffering the same fate, had progressed in rapid fashion, until he’d drawn the attention of the Hunters and Assassin again. In the process of meeting the Hunters and their Leader, Will had learned he’d been living nearly two centuries into his future since the time of his rescue, among people who had learned to live, effectively, forever. Those who’d saved him admitted that he’d been brought forward to the future in a time machine.
When the trio offered him the chance to use the time machine to go back and save his wife and son, Will had literally leaped at the chance. He’d been made aware of several challenges in such a trip, the most notable being the fact that nobody named Will Stark existed on the planet after the fire. He’d either succeeded, or died trying, and in this case dying might mean he’d had to end his own life to protect the integrity of history. Even then, he’d accepted his duty. As the time machine started its journey, he’d learned that one of the men helping him – and aggravating him – was his own grown son, Josh, and that the woman was the grown daughter he’d never known he’d had.
Now he found himself in the distant past, knowing only that a young Hope was in some unspecified danger and that Will, with his advanced Energy skills and nanomachines, was to protect her. The letter he’d received indicated only that she was sixteen years old. Will had also inferred, based upon his history lessons, that he was arriving at a time when the original Aliomenti hadn’t yet figured out how to live forever or unleash their Energy.
His abilities and technology, therefore, would give him tremendous advantages. Yet based on his beliefs and the promises he’d made to his children, no matter the deception, he wouldn’t use those advantages to impose his own will. That meant he’d rely on the skills he’d built in his business dealings to read the emotions and body language of others, rather than using Empathy and Telepathy to remove the risk of misreading. He’d use those advanced Energy skills and the nanos for protecting himself and others he found in
danger – especially Hope – but he’d not actively try to hurt or coerce others. He also decided not to arm himself with a sword, or bow, or whatever form of weapon was common in this era. He could protect himself from any foe or weapon, and suspected that choosing to be unarmed would make him seem a lesser threat.
Then again, considering that he’d been thoroughly manipulated by his children into accepting this mission, he might not be much of a threat regardless of the advantages he held. They’d maneuvered every concern he had back to saving Hope and Josh from the fire, or guilt over having failed to prevent their deaths, until he’d finally snapped. When they’d offered him the chance to save the two of them, his affirmative response was assured. They’d done their duty, and it allowed them to send Will back in time to the year 1018 A.D. Now they expected him to do his duty, and make sure that Elizabeth – her name in this era – survived.
Right now, he hated his future self for his good fortune in meeting Hope. And he’d like the chance to ground his children and take away their allowances for lying to their father and not allowing him to make his own decision, fully informed, about his centuries-long journey. He vowed he’d never mislead others in the way he’d been misled. And though he’d been deceived as to the nature of his mission, the objective was one he’d attack with fervor. Hope, regardless of her age or name, was someone he’d always be willing to protect, regardless of the inconvenience or pain it might bring to him.
His only guidance on this journey of a thousand years came in the form of a piece of highly advanced technology, a computer that looked and felt like a blank piece of paper. He pulled it out and looked at it again. In reality, it looked the type of paper he’d expect to see in a scroll, which would be useful if he happened to be caught reading the screen. He checked it, and found nothing useful; in fact, the original letter he’d read when he found the time machine gone had vanished. He remembered reading that his wife was now about sixteen years old, and that she’d soon lose her mother if she hadn’t already. His fist clenched. Elizabeth had been used by her own father. He remembered that. So it was his job to take care of her. She lived in the earliest group of the Aliomenti, and that meant he’d need to join up. He had no idea how to accomplish such a feat, though if they’d developed modest Energy levels he could pretend to be quite intuitive in the Energy’s usage and help advance their skills. He suspected, however, that a group that would cause harm to a young girl wouldn’t be trustworthy. Therefore, he’d show nothing of his Energy skills until he needed to do so, until he was sure he could trust them.
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