Major Forest pointed forward and told Trevor what Jaff already knew: "It's been hit."
Trevor saw black burn marks on the weapons array. Wires hung loose from the cannon and sparks flickered.
"Oh."
The bridge crew worked frantically, restoring power and navigation control in two quick minutes. During those two minutes, Fromm’s ground team sent a wave of Behemoths into the mass. They extended their jaws to grasp and pull away flesh, only to be enveloped by the squirming beast; their carcasses pulled, stretched, and broke.
Infantry threw hand grenades and used a rocket launcher. All to no avail. When they aimed for any of the three heads, walls of gory flesh rose like defensive shields to block the shots.
Next, the Golems engaged at close range. Their missiles blew away chunks of the repulsive hulk, but the thing did not appear the least bit bothered.
Two of Fromm’s version of the Steel Guard made ‘suicide’ runs, only to become engulfed, tossed, and then torn into inoperable piles of metal and wires. The remaining robotic sentries stood off and fired explosive shells. Of the weapons thrown against it, those shells made the most impact. Yet they were not enough.
Trevor felt helpless as he watched from above.
"We have to do something! We have to help them!"
Jaff roared, "I know this Trevor Stone! Our main gun is not working!"
"Wait…Jaff…do you have maneuvering power?"
Jaff looked toward one of his technicians and asked a question in the Chaktaw language. Jaff accepted the answer then nodded to Trevor, who asked another question…
…This beast horrified Fromm, as it was certainly one of Voggoth’s children. A spawn not truly alive but not dead, either. An abomination.
Whatever he threw against the beast failed to cause any significant damage, and every attempt to circumvent the thing and drive for the obelisk was blocked by its tentacles.
He knew he possessed two artillery batteries onboard the battleship. He would need to get them to the surface. But even then, the vile monster’s pulsating body seemed capable of protecting the only part of it that appeared vulnerable, the three bulb-like heads.
Fromm, however, did not even know the status of the zeppelin. Obviously, the monster's energy blast had disabled the main gun. Judging from the amount of energy that had enveloped the front half of the battleship, Fromm feared it possible that the entire crew had been killed or the whole vessel disabled, a fear augmented by his failure to communicate with anyone onboard.
Regardless, he would not retreat. He stood on the brink of the greatest victory for his people since the beginning of the invasion. No more hiding; the time had come to strike at his enemies. Not long ago, that meant hitting the Geryons and human cities, but now that strike could prove even greater. Cutting off the gateways…that would be the blow to tip the scales in his favor.
No, he would not retreat. This beast would be slain, or he would die trying. Whatever the result, he would not leave the Ring of Ice without the runes.
As valiant his determination, his confidence faded measure as the monster grew. Its mass actually expanded. Suddenly, several of his men who were out of reach of the writhing tentacles were held in death grips.
Worse, another ball of energy formed in one of the three mouths.
Fromm barked orders.
Two of his shock troops moved forward, each sporting acid-throwers. They took position and opened the hoses of their weapons. The gusting, cold wind at the top of the world turned the streams into wider, less-effective sprays. Still, most of the acid splashed onto the creature and sizzled on its rotten flesh. But before the Chaktaw could celebrate this blow, a new coat of skin grew over the wound.
At that moment, another ball of energy flew from one of the monstrous heads and engulfed the two acid-sprayers. The explosion of electricity triggered an explosion of chemicals. The two soldiers fried and dissolved while the shock wave sent other Chaktaw warriors hurling through the air to bone-crunching halts on the ice-covered ground.
Fromm motioned his troops and Behemoths to fall back. They did so while continuing to spew useless rounds of munitions from their magnetic rifles. Temporary retreat seemed the only course of action in face of the reaching tendrils and impenetrable hide. Fromm needed time to regroup and plan a more effective assault
Then a shadow flew overhead. The shadow of the battleship advancing.
Fromm and his men gaped skyward. The dirigible inched forward under power of its maneuvering thrusters, moving very slow until it hovered over the monster.
Still, Fromm clearly saw that the main gun remained out of action. Yet something moved up there, near the bow. Not so much near the cannon but underneath the main balloon near one of the support struts.
Fromm pulled away his poncho hood and raised a pair of spyglasses to his eyes. Through the magnified view he saw see two people reaching out from an access hatch near a large rectangular compartment. He recognized them as Jaff and Trevor Stone.
Fromm recognized the compartment at the same time that he noticed Jaff handing Trevor first one then another round cartridge.
Fromm shouted and led his men away from the monster a good fifty yards. The beast responded with a roar that suggested it saw victory in the enemy's withdrawal. He then stood and watched as his second-in-command and the human named Trevor executed their plan.
The rectangular compartment opened and one of the zeppelin’s massive metal anchors dropped to the ground like a giant arrow cast from a titan’s bow, its now-disconnected chain falling loose behind. Around that anchor were straps holding in place several cartridges.
Chaktaw artillery cartridges.
The anchor’s strike hit slightly between two of the three heads and the singularities inside the cartridges activated. A cone of destruction blast outward from the middle of the beast. At the center of that cone, two glowing red balls that hated all things made of matter.
And while Voggoth’s pet could withstand acid and fire; while it could shrug off bullets and shrapnel, it was still made of matter. The evil fiend collapsed inward, its blob-like mass and reaching appendages sucked down by two tiny black holes born in its midst.
Those points of destruction greedily competed for the body of the monster, tearing its ugly form into big chunks until disintegrating those chunks into nothingness, leaving behind a smoky haze and a black ditch.
---
After destroying the wretched monstrosity, Fromm’s expedition entered the massive, dark portal to the city-sized enigma. The Chaktaw entry team included some thirty troops and several Jaw-Wolves. Trevor, Nina, and the balance of the battleship’s crew waited behind.
The puzzle-like obelisk began turning again moments after the expeditionary force disappeared inside. Each layer of the thing rotated and spun at varying speeds and no exit appeared, all to the sound of a constant, grinding drone.
Time dragged as the observers on the bridge waited in an atmosphere coated with tension. Tempers grew sharp; Jaff had to break up confrontations between techs and soldiers on numerous occasions.
Those confrontations mainly arose over the repair work which continued for hours but eventually half the ship’s controls had been replaced or safely bypassed. Jaff told Trevor that while the dirigible could not be completely repaired without additional resources from home, the ship would be capable of the return trip.
Neither Trevor nor Major Nina Forest would be accompanying Jaff on that return flight. The enigma stopped, the cessation of the constant grind coming as a thunderclap of silence.
From their vantage point in the gondola, the observers saw that not only had the object halted its motion, but a doorway locked open. From that doorway, Fromm emerged onto the snowy plains and radioed the battleship.
Jaff listened and translated to Trevor, "It is time for you to go."
---
So this is what Jon saw?
Trevor marveled at the gargantuan pendulums and gears, the arcane oversized sockets and whirr
ing mechanisms frozen in mid-stride throughout the cavernous interior of the enigma.
He could not imagine what it must have been like to lead a team through that machine while operating. He did see signs of the difficulties Fromm faced: Chaktaw bodies, some torn to pieces, others impaled on metallic poles, a few crushed.
Nina pointed out a carcass that was not Chaktaw, something diamond shaped with a hole blasted through its frame. Trevor could not discern if it was animal or machine and the remains were too far away to bother with closer inspection. No doubt it had been one of the guardians.
Trevor gained newfound respect for what his good friend Jon Brewer had accomplished during humanity’s trip to seize the runes. Jon had not only faced the same chaotic devices and guardians that decimated Fromm’s ranks, he also battled two armies in the process.
Stone and Major Forest descended the levels alongside Fromm and a pair of Chaktaw soldiers as well as the human slave. The click and clack of their footsteps and the jingle of equipment echoed through the silent chamber.
Trevor and Nina discarded the heavy blankets that had protected them from the arctic cold, for it was warm inside the mechanical metropolis.
Their last journey together reached its final destination at the center; the bottom of the enigma. There waited the runes. They looked identical to the runes Jon had brought to the estate. Indeed, if they worked as expected, Trevor would return to his Earth by walking through the Chaktaw’s runes and appearing in that secure chamber behind the estate where humanity’s captured relics waited.
If all worked as expected.
The complexity of the frozen machines faded behind and the stage at the center seemed disconnected from the rest of the universe, its own lonely corner of existence that just happened to be a doorway beyond honest comprehension.
Trevor spied the round orbs atop the jagged, stalagmite-like cones. Fromm had placed his hands on those orbs to claim this Earth for his people, the same way Jon Brewer had forever imprinted his mark on the runes on humanity’s world.
Trevor saw no difference in the hand prints.
The group assembled around the perimeter. The two lonely pillars waited in silence to guide travelers to their home worlds…to their home universes.
Trevor stood for a moment, enthralled by how an object could look so primitive, so advanced, and so mystical all at the same time. Nina did the same. Her gaze was seasoned with misgiving. She not only had to worry about the function of the runes, she had to contend with the doubt as to how she would be greeted on her home world. On Sirius.
Trevor turned to Fromm. The Chaktaw leader had removed his hood and stood next to the slave that served as his translator and the guard who held her leash.
"I wish you a safe journey, Trevor Stone," she translated Fromm's words.
"I wish you good fortune in your fight to save your Earth," he responded.
"We are very much alike," the Chaktaw leader admitted. "I would believe that there is no one in all of existence who understands me as you do."
"And you I, Fromm."
The Chaktaw leader tilted his head as if considering something and then, very slowly, pulled an elegantly crafted blade from his belt. He turned to his human translator—his slave—and slit the cord around her neck. It took the woman several seconds to realize that she was no tethered. Her eyes widened and her jaw dropped.
He spoke to her then pointed to the runes.
The woman said the only words Trevor ever heard her say that did not belong to someone else. She spoke them in Fromm’s native tongue, but Trevor knew she said thank you.
The woman staggered forward, glanced at both Trevor and Nina, and then moved toward the runes. She stopped in front of the two pillars, reached out tentatively, then stepped between. Her body dissolved into atoms and faded away.
"She’s home now," Trevor said to himself and Major Forest.
With no translator nearby, Trevor knew he could no longer use words to speak to Fromm. Instead, he gazed at his counter part from another universe and bowed his head. Fromm returned the gesture, no words needed.
He turned to Nina and said, "It seems I’m always saying goodbye to you."
There was the slightest hint of water in the corner of her eyes. But she was brave. She was going to have to be brave from now on.
"I’m sorry," she said it honestly. "I’m sorry for what I tried to turn you into. I’m glad it didn’t work."
Trevor pondered, "It nearly did. But now I know that part of me is in there. Now I can be on guard; control it."
"Thank you for showing me…giving me…helping…" she struggled but he knew what she tried to say.
"Find that strength inside. The strength I know you have, Nina. Don’t let anyone else tell you who you are. You can’t love someone else until you’ve found a way to love yourself."
She cast her eyes to the ground and considered for a long moment. The runes beckoned.
"I hope you find her. I hope you get her back. I want you to be happy."
Happy? Exactly what is that?
Trevor appreciated her wish but shook his head, "Thank you, but the woman I loved…she doesn’t exist anymore. She’s gone."
He put his lips to her forehead; she closed her eyes and accepted the tender moment.
Trevor raised his open hand in search of her grasp. She took it and he squeezed tight as their fingers intertwined. They each took a deep breath and walked forward, toward the silent posts leading away from that world where neither of them belonged.
The steps were certain and strong, for each of them left that Earth with much more than they had brought. Deeper understanding, both of the outside and the in.
One long step, then another…their hands held firm…
The man and the woman stepped between the pillars. The atoms of their bodies broke into pieces and then faded from the Chaktaw’s Earth as Trevor Stone and Major Nina Forest continued the journeys of their lives, along separate paths.
33. Where the Heart Is
Nina lay naked and alone on a steel table. It felt cold and sterile.
Darkness surrounded her. She felt no breeze, smelled nothing in the air, heard no sounds. A solitary light hovered above.
A figure walked toward her, taking shape as the patterns of his arms and legs and eyes formed from the fog of darkness. She had the feeling—the impression—he had been standing in that darkness for a long time, watching. Yet she had never taken note of him.
Now she saw the familiar lines of his face. He was the man she loved with all her heart. The balance to the other side of her life’s equation.
Trevor Stone.
He brought a blanket and pulled its fuzzy, soothing fabric over her body comfortably to her chin and pressed gently around the edges to wrap her snugly in the cover. The chill of the table evaporated, replaced with warmth.
Captain Nina Forest felt the burning, salty sting of tears in the corner of her eyes as her heart opened wide. His hand gently caressed her cheek as he offered a reassuring, kind smile. She brought her own hand over his as if to grab on and not let go. She did not want him to recede into the dark again.
"I…I love you," she told the phantom. "I miss you."
"I love you, too. I always will."
"Where have you been? Why haven’t I seen you before?"
The dream answered, "I’m always here, even when you don’t see me."
His hand withdrew. His smile softened to sadness.
"No…no please…don’t go," she pleaded.
"Someday," he promised. "Someday…"
…"Mom, you okay?"
Nina sat up on the couch in her Annapolis apartment. The early evening sun flickered through half-closed blinds. Additional flickers came from the television set in front of Denise who sat on the living room floor.
"You okay?" her thirteen-year-old adopted daughter repeated.
Nina’s head spun as she grabbed hold of her surroundings. Apparently a full day of training while waiting for her next assig
nment had exhausted her to the point of a nap.
"You were dreaming," Denise said. "I think…I think you were crying."
Nina rubbed under her eyes finding the slightest hint of moisture there.
"I guess I…"
"Must have been a really sad dream," Denise said although the girl appeared more concerned that mom’s noise had detracted from the TV.
She thought about that and answered, "No…no I don’t think it was."
Denise twisted around and said, "Um, mom, you’re not, like, going through the change or something are you? You know, hot flashes and—"
"Denise! I’m only thirty!"
"Any cute guys in that dream? Huh?" the younger girl goaded.
Nina paused. There had been…there had been someone. She thought…she thought she should remember but could only recall a feeling of warmth.
"I don’t know."
"Geez, mom, even your dreams are boring. But good thing you're up you DO NOT want to miss this."
Denise slid aside so her mother could see the images on the television.
"Looks like it’s all going crazy," Denise said. "What with Trevor gone and all."
Nina ignored Denise’s casual toss of the Emperor’s first name and focused on the video. A reporter stood outside the Imperial mansion. Words in the corner of the screen announced LIVE VIA SATELLITE.
While she knew they had managed to access some communications satellites, someone had gone to a lot of trouble to ensure live coverage of whatever was happening at the lakeside estate.
---
Evan Godfrey’s great march had started when hundreds marched out of Washington D.C., then boarded buses as well as cars and horse-drawn carts. Hundreds more joined after a rally in Baltimore, even more after another stop in Wilmington, Delaware.
Between Evan Godfrey and Sharon Parsons, they covered all the talking points, from notes on democracy seemingly taken from Thomas Jefferson's pen to tender vigils in remembrance of New Winnabow. Guest speakers from union organizers to the relatives of dead soldiers excited the crowds with talk of workers' rights, a corrupt justice system, and the need to seek a peaceful solution to the invasion.
Beyond Armageddon: Book 03 - Parallels Page 49