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Journal Entry 00918 151 000 Reunion Part 6

Reunion, Part 6

Journal Entry 151 / 00918

Aldea, Cerim 04, 00918

The water surrounded him; the sound of bubbles rose around him as air that

had followed him down found its natural course back to the surface. He had

adjusted to the intense cold, and found pleasure in just floating in the

silent, crystalline water. As he floated a peculiar feeling swept him,

a feeling that seemed to come more from within his own brain then from

anything outside. He opened his eyes and headed for air.

As he broke surface, he looked around. "Greta?" She was nowhere to

be seen. And he was no longer in the pool of water he had jumped into

earlier; he was in what looked like a fountain, only it was obviously deep

enough to hold his body. It was also very still; only his treading water

disturbed the otherwise calm surface. The fountain was lined with ancient,

dusty-gray granite stones, each square-cut to fit against its neighbor,

and each overgrown with ivy. The day had been warm and sunny; now clouds

covered the sky and hid the overhead sun. He swam for the edge and pulled

himself out, looking around; he stood on the edge of some sort of open

theatre, long disused and overgrown. Much of the stonework was cracked

by the tenacity of nature pushing through it. Nickolai turned around;

behind the fountain stood a great, curved wall, and in English writing,

obscured by the climbing ivy, it read:

WHO CAN CONTROL HIS FATE?

- OTHELLO, ACT V, SCENE II. Wm. SHAKESPEARE.

"Not me," Nickolai sighed gently.

"Perhaps not," a masculine voice said behind him. "But that should not

stop you from seeing it."

Nickolai turned around, surprised. "Who are you?"

"Call me Hal," the man replied. "No relation to Hal Masters, of course,

but still... Hal."

"Hal," Nickolai said, smiling. "Three quarters of Hall?"

"Something like that. I'm here to keep your mind occupied."

"For how long?"

The man, an older man using a cane to stand, and dressed in a flowing

white robe that draped off of his shoulders, walked forward and laid his

hand on Nickolai's shoulder. "It's been long enough." He smiled and turned

his back, walking up the stairs and out of sight through the theatre.

"Hey!" Nickolai shouted, to no avail as the elderly man disappeared.

Nickolai ran after him. Beyond the rotting stone archway of the theatre

the stone turned to sand and reeds grew up out of the sand around him. He

ran, feeling a need to run now more than a desire to catch the old man,

and as he ran the sounds of pounding surf caught his ear.

He ran harder still, his lungs starting to burn, his body starting to

pound with his straining heart. He ran fast, faster than he thought he

had ever run before, and when the reeds ended and the sand path ejected

onto the beach, he stumbled forwards, losing his footing and falling

forward into the sand.

"Ooof!" he said, rolling before sitting up on his hand and knees,

shaking the sand free of his hair and his clothes. "Yech."

"Oy!" a voice said to his right. "Are you okay?"

"Um... Yeah," he said. "I think so." Nickolai looked down at himself,

bewildered. He was still wearing the T-shirt and jeans he had worn on

the walk to the Hall. Only his shoes were missing.

"Where did you come from?"

"Right..." Nickolai turned around, looking back at an unbroken wall of

reeds. His appreciation for what was happening to him caught up with

the rest of his confusion. "Let me guess. There's no theater back there,

is there?"

"What kind of theatre?" the voice, belonging to a male Ssphynx with

long, shaggy fur that leant him vaguely leonine look. He smiled down

at Nickolai.

"Stone. Kinda old?"

"Nope. Lived here nearly eight centuries and I've never seen nothing

like that. Where were you before you came here?"

"The Great Hall."

"Aye," the Ssphynx said. "You're a long way from home then, aren't you?

Name's Kedar."

"Nickolai," Nickolai said as he accepted the Ssphynx's hand and rose to

a sitting position. "Where am I?"

"It's name is Gaerdim," the Ssphynx replied. "I named it when I found it,

two centuries ago. It was a dark and dreary day, I remember. Kinda like

today. So you came through the Hall. Congratulations, son. I imagine

you'd be wanting to head on back towards civilization?"

Nickolai nodded. Kedar continued, "Well, I'm afraid the nearest SDisk

is twenty kilometers from here, and you'll have to walk to get there. I

wouldn't recommend you try it until tomorrow. There's gonna be a hell

of a storm tonight."

"Can you... can you tell where I could find shelter?"

"Sure," the Ssphynx replied. "Come on, I'll show you my home." He led

Nickolai up the beach a short distance, in the direction opposite where

he had indicated the SDisk would be, and over a rickety wooden bridge

that had been erected so the Ssphynx could walk over the dune without

disturbing the sand. On the other side of the dune sat a squat, colorful

home with a front porch facing along the line of the beach. Apparently

made of cement bricks and mortar, it had been painted with ocean motifs;

curling waves crashed towards the back of the house as white seagulls

floated over them. Plants were hung along the length of the porch, their

long leaves dangling downwards from their pots towards the ground. "It's

not much, but I've lived here for a long time."

"How long?" Nickolai asked.

"Almost eight centuries," the Ssphynx repeated. Nickolai's mind, boggled

at the thought the first time, still didn't want to parse that phrase

correctly. "You're the first person to come this way since I moved here."

"You've lived here all by yourself?" Nickolai asked. Alone for a thousand

years, out here, with nothing but yourself? This male must be mad!

"That's right. It's quiet out here. No folks, not too many machines. Just

me and my ocean."

Nickolai nodded. "Maybe I should head for the SDisk tonight. It'll be

cooler, and I wouldn't want to disturb your solitude."

"Naah, that's all right. You got kicked out here for a reason, and I

may be a hermit, but I'll be damned if I'm going to be a bad host." The

Ssphynx grinned. "Come on, I'll feed you some chowder I've got lying

around."

Still wary, but appreciating the Ssphynx's company, Nickolai decided to

accept. "I'd appreciate that," he said, his stomach suddenly informing

him of just how starving he really felt.

"Well, if you're going to be a Pendorian, you've got to learn to eat

like one." He led Nickolai in through a battered screen door, then

wandered over to a large metal pot (Nickolai thought "cauldron" might

be a good word to describe it) and dished out a large helping of brown,

meat-laden soup. "Here," the old Ssphynx said. "Eat."

Nickolai accepted the bowl gratefully. "What time is it?"

"Nearing dark, I imagine." The Ssphynx padded towards the window, which

had no glass, and peered out. "And that storm's comin' in somethin'

strong. Seeing as your my guest, can I get some help from you to close

up the storm shutters?"

Nickolai nodded around a mouthful of hot soup. "Yes," he finally said

after swallowing.

"I appreciate it. Eat fast, son."

Nickolai did as instructed, and then he and the Ssphynx walked around

the house, latching down wooden storm shutters, pulling in the potted

plants, lashing down some larger items the Ssphynx had scattered around

his house. From the look of the place, Nickolai could see old trees

towering a few hundred meters back from the shoreline. The Ssphynx had

chosen some natural outcropping of sand and shell that spread back from

the dunes on which to build his home. Behind the house, Nickolai now

saw, a stream flowed by slowly, bringing the house fresh water. A few

droplets fell on his head as they tied a picnic table down to a pair of

palm trees that erupted from the sand. "The rain's begun," Nickolai said.

"I felt it." They ran into the house, and he Ssphynx closed the door,

throwing two heavy beams of timber over it to keep it closed. "I get

these storms from time to time. Tonight looks to be a real blower,

but I think we'll come through all right."

The rain did indeed began to fall, at first lightly. But then the wind

picked up and howled outside, and as Nickolai sat in the one chair in the

house and wondered, nervously, what he could do to pass the time. "Tell

me something, K..."

"Kedar," the Ssphynx replied. "Don't worry about it. You're probably the

first living thing to hear it since I left civilization behind. Nice thing

about Pendor. It'll be millions of years before the place gets crowded.

That's my ocean out there, even though it's the size of all Terra's waters

put together. But nobody else lives on that ocean. It's mine alone."

Nickolai nodded, thinking back to the day when he and Furry had made love

on the Vinyare' beach and he had been so impressed, so wondrous that they

had been alone, just he and Jofuran. So alone in fact that they had made

love on a warm beach under a blazing sun and nobody had been the wiser.

But this, Kedar's kind of alone, was more than he could bear imagining. He

was glad, at the end of their day, that he had had a place to return to,

with live people to talk to. "Kedar..."

"Aye?"

"Why do you live all the way out here?"

"Because when I was born Shardik broke a promise to me."

Nickolai looked up. "What kind of promise?"

"He made a promise to let me be free. But he also threatened to kill me

if I got out of line."

"You, or all Ssphynx?"

"All Ssphynx. Son, there's something wrong with the Ssphynx brain. It's

hard to describe. But it's a serious problem. Ssphynxes weren't programmed

to be social. Somehow a serious case of xenophobia lives in all the first

gen Ssphynxes. Maybe it was our shape or something. Doesn't matter what

it was. Of the whole hrair of Ssphynxes that Shardik made, less than a

thousand integrated into Pendor."

Nickolai nodded. "Where are the rest of the Ssphynxes?"

"Oh, I imagine most of them made it back eventually. I can't imagine

ninety percent of a species becoming lonely hermits, like me."

Nickolai nodded. "Why don't you come home?"

"Habit," the old man said. "I got my Nixie friend who comes by once

a year to give me stuff she thinks I'll need. I lost count a long time

ago. Only reason I know what time it is is Nixie tells me." A thunderbolt

crackled outside, startling Nickolai.

"How about you, son? What makes you come this way?"

Nickolai decided to start at the beginning and work his way all the way

through to today. He explained meeting Jofuran, falling in love with her,

Shardik's deal, everything he could remember about that fateful summer

two years ago. Then he progressed forward until he came to today, when

he walked out, or rather ran out, onto the beach.

The Ssphynx nodded quietly during the whole thing, then stretched and

yawned. "There's not much we can do about the storm outside. I've got some

spare bedding and the like," he said, rising and tossing Nickolai some

blankets. "I'm afraid there's not much more for you except the floor."

Nickolai nodded, laying most of the blankets out on the floor to provide

some padding. The night was warm, like the day had been. The rain came

down in torrents outside, and Nickolai eventually found sleep.

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The Journal Entries of Kennet R'yal Shardik, et. al., and Related Tales

are Copyright (c) 1989-2000 Elf Mathieu Sternberg. Distribution limited

to electronic media not-for-profit use only. All other rights are reserved

to the author.