See part one for explanation and disclaimers. Hallmark & James Gurney still own the characters and I’m still not profiting from this. Hope you’re enjoying this. Still recommended for teens and up for action/violence and mild language.
Alano
had never seen a ‘submarine’, not even a picture of one. He knew that they were off-worlder machines
and that they were designed to carry people beneath the ocean just like
fish. The only pictures of such
machines were hidden in the bowels of the ‘topian libraries, well beyond the reach
of outsiders like him. So, he hadn’t
known what to expect when he saw the submarine that rested at the bottom of the
cove.
He
thought it looked like some giant metal fish---a metal fish with a hollow belly
and many little teeth marks dotting it, as though a larger fish had taken bite
out of it. That was probably
accurate---the rumor was that, in the days when the sunstones had failed, the
traitorous ‘topian Cyrus had tricked Karl and Jack Scott into using Marion’s
pendant to power the submarine and taken them to the underwater caverns of the
island, where they’d found an abundant supply of sunstones…and where Frank
Scott had been stranded since the plane crash.
Cyrus had abandoned the Scotts there, but not before the boys sabotaged
his submarine to prevent his escape. The sub had stalled halfway to the surface
and been swallowed whole by a dino-fish---along with the traitor, Cyrus.
Must have given the large beastie a belly ache for it to have spit the
thing back out more or less in one piece, Alano mused. He didn’t have much time to
ponder Cyrus’ fate. He was working
against the tide and on as much air as his lungs could hold. He was among the divers who had dove from
the boat Gabriel Dane had provided and swam to the bottom of the shallow waters
where the sub was stuck. With the help
of Dane and Le Sage’s men, Alano found a few places on the sub’s exterior that
looked solid without being jagged enough to slice through a rope. Needing to resurface for air, it took a few
tries for the divers to get the ends of four ropes secured to the sunken
vessel. They finished without much time
to spare. Soon the sun would set and
the high tide would put this cove and the pier underwater.
Once the last rope was in
place, Alano resurfaced and climbed into the waiting boat, drained by the
exertion.
On the shore, the two packs
were dividing their labor. Some were
laying traps along the perimeter of the cove just in case some predator braved
the sunstone pendant Le Sage wore and ventured too close to the camp. Others had made small fires and were cooking
the afternoon meals. Dane’s men, Miguel
and Thomas, and Le Sage’s lacky, Bertram, were tying the other ends of the
ropes to a massive harness. Freefall
was perched on rocks at the top of the cliffs, watching the proceedings. The pterosaur looked to be getting
impatient, Alano noted. He could
sympathize. The sooner this bit of
business was over with, the sooner Alano and Freefall could get back to
Waterfall City and spring David from the ‘topian’s prison.
The harness was ready to go
by the time the boat returned to the shore.
“I hope this bloody well works,” Alano said privately to Le Sage.
“It will,” she said
confidently.
Together, Miguel, Thomas,
Bertram, and Dane hefted the massive collar up. Alano raised his arm the way David had shown him and shouted to
the albino dinosaur, hoping the temperamental scalie would comply with the
command. They weren’t trained pets,
after all. Freefall barely obeyed
David. It took a minute, but, finally,
Freefall sprang aloft and glided down to the beach and landed near Alano. More than a few outsiders still gave the
scalie a wide berth.
They slung the harness
around the pterosaur’s neck. “Here we
go-it’s up to you, beastie,” Alano tried sounding encouraging. Le Sage and Dane’s men took up positions
beside the four ropes, lending their strength to the scalie’s.
“Pull!” Dane shouted.
“Pull, Freefall,” Alano took
hold of the ropes as close as he could without risking getting the way of
Freefall’s powerful wings or carried off the ground when the dinosaur once
again became airborne as it used the strength in its body and wings to pull.
It took a bit of work, even
with the pterosaur’s help; Alano was drenched in sweat, muscles screaming in
protest at the abuse. Freefall was
showing signs of fatigue. But, finally,
the sub took its first slide from the sandbar towards the deeper water and
freedom. The plan was working.
“My friends---I give you our
ticket home.” Dane grinned to the
chorus of cheers from his pack. “Come,
now, keep pulling! She’s almost
free. Pull! Pull together!”
*
“Pull! Pull together!”
The summer camp tradition-the
tug-of-war between the rival cabins of Camp Tehema--- was in full swing
directly above the stinkiest mud pit the camp had to offer. Fourteen-year-old
Karl Scott had no intention of doing a face-plant in that disgusting mud, not
after a summer of the butt-munches in the blue cabin (the ‘Pirates’) beating
his cabin (the ‘Dragons’) in every camp competition…and especially not when the
girls from Camp Tehema were sitting only a short distance away, watching the
competition while they swam in the lake.
In particular, not while Mandy
Petersen (a.k.a. the most gorgeous girl in Camp Tehema/the state/the
country/the world) was watching. If
that weren’t distracting enough, she was also wearing a very wet camp t-shirt
that clearly revealed the outline of the skimpy two-piece bathing suit she had
on beneath it. That only reminded Karl
of the very soft skin beneath that very skimpy bathing suit, skin he’d had a
length opportunity to feel first-hand last night when they’d both sneaked out
of their cabins and had a moonlight skinny-dip in that same lake---
So, of course, it had to
happen---the rope jerked, throwing everyone on Karl’s side off-balance. Being near the end of the line and therefore
one of the anchors, he tried to regain his footing before he lost his balance
altogether. That was when two very
familiar feet tripped him up. Karl
stumbled into the boy in front of him and the rest of the team went down like
dominos. His brain warned him to let go
of the rope before it was too late, but his hands refused to obey.
It was amazing how quickly the
smelly mud pit came sailing up to meet him as the rope dragged the lot of ‘Dragons’
across the grass and into the pit. He
heard cheers from the ‘Pirates’, but only distantly. Karl was busy noticing that the mud was now covering him from
head to foot and was just as vile up close as it had first appeared. Judging from the look on Mandy’s face as she
watched, she agreed.
He didn’t need to ask what had
happened or who had tripped him up. It
was some consolation that, with his face caked in muck, no one could tell that
Karl was flushing bright red as he crawled out of the ooze.
Yep, there he was, Karl observed,
sitting on the grass where he’d tripped---and where he’d tripped Karl after
losing his grip on the rope. He didn’t
even have the decency to fall into the mud like the rest of the team. Not that it mattered---the slime-covered
members of the red cabin were making a point of pitching mud onto him as they
walked back to camp. A few grumbled,
“Nice work, Scott” at Karl’s brother.
“That’s great, bro, thanks,” Karl
added. “Do me a favor? Next year, stay
home!”
It was no real insult---his brother
had made it quite clear that staying home for the summer would have suited him
just fine. Dad was the one to insist
that they both go. “Oh gee, Karl, I’m
so sorry I embarrassed you in front of your flavor of the week,” his voice dripped
sarcasm as he looked at Karl, then at Mandy.
He dragged an arm across his own face, wiping away mud, only to have
more ‘Dragons’ dump more of the foul stuff on him.
“Karl?”
Oh no,
Karl groaned. It was Mandy. She was jogging over to him, still grinning.
Or, rather, he thought she was grinning---he wasn’t exactly looking at her face
at the moment. She used the corner of
that clingy t-shirt of hers to dab at a glob of mud on his face. Okay,
maybe doing a nose-dive into the slime wasn’t such a total loss.
“Don’t feel so bad. In
California, people pay lots of money for a mud bath.”
Karl gave Mandy the
million-dollar-smile. “Maybe you could
wash it off at the waterfall this afternoon.
My friends say there’s a nice pool at the bottom…”
Behind her, Karl’s brother stood, shook his head, and trudged back
towards to the cabins, grumbling, “Oh brother…” He gave Karl a look of complete
disgust as he left…
…but it wasn’t Jack’s face.
It was David Barrett’s face.
“Karl?”
“Karl!’
Someone was shaking him and he wished they’d stop. He was trying to open his eyes to see who it was, but the blue
visions were stronger and tried to draw him back into his own memory. “Karl!
Wake up!”
At
Marion’s command, reinforced by her empathic healing abilities, Karl jerked
awake. He felt the blue visions trying
to pull him back, but resisted with all his might. Marion and Noree were still hovering nervously nearby, but he’d
been moved from the main hall of the Temple to a cot in one of the small
rooms. His body felt like he’d just
gotten the shock of a lifetime.
Marion
sat on a chair beside the cot. “Are you
all right?” she asked, relieved that he was finally conscious. He’d been under for hours now.
“Think---my
teeth---are vibrating,” he answered slowly.
Smiling
at that, she helped him sit up. “The
ritual didn’t work. You both got a
nasty shock from the Tohma Faiere.
You’ve been out most of the day.
Noree thinks there’s still another outsider who used the stone, that’s
why the spell wasn’t broken.”
“The
Tohma Faiere revealed nothing to you?” Noree fretted.
“Just…bad
dreams.” Karl tried rubbing the
tingling feeling out of his aching fingers.
Marion
and Noree’s interest increased.
“Dreams? About what?” Marion
asked.
“Er---”
No way was Karl going to tell his girlfriend that he’d been having dreams about
an alternate lifetime where he was some oversexed skirt-chaser. That just couldn’t be true. A nagging voice
in his mind urged him to tell her about the other vision, though, about David
Barrett being Karl’s br—
No, that couldn’t be true
either. It just couldn’t.
“---old camping trips,
nothing to do with Dinotopia or magic rocks.
Sorry.”
“The ritual should have revealed what is
different, what was changed by your prayer to the faith stone. Are you sure---”
“I
DID NOT PRAY TO THAT DAMN ROCK!”
Noree
backed up a step from the human, ruffled by his outburst. Marion admonished, “Karl, calm down. I’ll speak to David if he’s awake…the Tohma Faiere
at least showed Karl memories, maybe David saw something that can be of
use. I might be able to convince him to
tell us who else used the faith stone.”
“No,”
Karl stopped her. After what happened
at Le Sage’s, he didn’t want her near the outsider. The idea triggered another surge of jealousy---‘unwarranted’ or
not. At Marion’s confused look, he explained, “I’ll talk to him.” He pushed himself off the bunk, ignoring their
protests that he needed to rest.
“You’re right, Noree, the sooner we straighten this out and send him
back to the pack, the better.”
*
Karl
should have dismissed the whole situation outright.
It was absurd. He’d read his share of sci-fi novels and this
would have made a good plot for an episode of “Star Trek” or a Disney movie,
but it wasn’t the sort of thing that happened in real life. Then
again, dinosaurs and humans co-existing on an uncharted island shouldn’t happen
in reality either, but here we are.
Still, logic told him to reject the whole ‘Tohma Faiere altered the
timeline’ theory, and he would have, but for one problem:
Dinotopians
didn’t lie. Period. Outsiders? Sure. Off-worlders? Absolutely.
Even Karl had, when necessary, told a few white lies to the sometimes
naïve island folk. Hell, he’d just lied
by omission when he hadn’t told Marion and Noree what he’d seen when the faith
stone zapped him. But, born and bred
Dinotopians like Marion, Noree, Rosemary, and all of them…no, they didn’t
lie. It went against their utopian
principles, their code for living.
Therefore,
if the Dinotopians said that one of their magic meteorites had changed
something in Karl’s life because it glowed like a traffic light at his touch,
they meant it and he’d better believe it---logical or not. Certainly, Karl had seen chunks of the
meteor do things that were unusual---bordering on supernatural: White sunstones
that kept carnivores away from the populated areas, green rocks that attracted
said carnivores like cats to cat nip, and so on. So, a blue Tohma Faiere could alter reality and one’s memories of
said reality? Okay, it wouldn’t be the strangest thing he’d ever seen one of
the meteorites do…but it would be pretty close.
Therefore,
no matter how Karl turned over the situation in his mind, the conclusion was
the same: Sometime and in some way,
that blue rock had done something to mess with him---with his memory at
best. At worst…
Karl
hesitated at the door to the sanctuary chamber where the outsider was being
kept. A wave of doubt crashed over
him. Blue memories forced themselves
once again into his mind…
“There’s a real nice pool at the bottom of the falls. No one knows about it. You just get to the bend near Lark’s
Crossing and there’s a path that leads right down to it. They won’t even notice we’re gone.” Fifteen-year-old Karl was trying hard not to
sound too desperate, but they were almost to the crossing and its detour. He was running out of time to convince
Valerie Delano to ditch the co-ed hike and take a side-trip to the falls. If he didn’t get alone time with her now,
there’d be no more opportunities before they returned home next week. Besides, Karl knew for a fact that Jim
Walker had been trying to talk Valerie into a midnight trip to Camp Tehema’s
boathouse.
“Sounds nice,” Valerie agreed, cheeks just a bit pink. Karl was so surprised that it took a minute
for him to process what she’d said.
Karl and Valerie were at that spot by the falls, isolated from prying
eyes by the trees and undergrowth of the forest, roar of the falls drowning out
all noises, in the middle of a make-out session that definitely had potential
to go further…then Valerie had broken off their activities abruptly. She jerked away from Karl, and for a second,
he wondered if he’d ticked her off or done something wrong. He tried to recall how far up her t-shirt
his hands had been wandering before she’d pulled away. Had he gone too far?
Then he saw what had drawn her attention---Counselor Troy (a grizzly
bear of a forty-eight year old man and butt of jokes from every ‘Star Trek’
geek in Camp Tehema, including Karl’s nerdy brother) was standing over
them. The sounds of his approach had
been muffled by the roar of the falls.
Better still, it looked like half of the campers who’d been on the co-ed
nature hike were standing behind him.
Half were snickering, half were applauding, until Troy yelled for them
to “zip it”. Troy stared at Karl quite
pointedly until the teen realized that his hands were still in a telltale
position under Valerie’s shirt. He
withdrew his hand immediately. Valerie
was bright red.
“Scott! The nurse wants to see
you back at camp. Now!” Troy barked.
Karl knew what was coming even before the counselor added, “Your
brother’s sick.” The word ‘again’ Troy
didn’t throw in. “See me when you’re
done with the nurse---you and Ms. Delano have tons of work to do in the mess
tent for the rest of your stay with us.
Move it!”
Karl remembered hoping that he
wouldn’t die of humiliation on the walk back to the camp---he wanted to
strangle his brother first, just as soon as he stopped at the nurse’s cabin and
made sure that what could only have been another asthma attack hadn’t finished
David off…
The
whole situation was like an exercise from a Philosophy class: Am I the dream of another man and if so will
I cease to exist when he wakes up?
If the Tohma Faiere had done what Marion and Noree said it could do,
then which life was real?
This one, with Jack, Marion,
and the skybax corps…or the one the faith stone had showed him?
That other world---bouncing
from girlfriend to girlfriend, being the outdoorsman, the sportsman, actually
being friends with his father---didn’t seem plausible. Karl had never liked spending summers at Camp
Tehema or dad’s excursions to whatever adventurous place caught his attention
that year. Karl was the geek with his
nose in a book, was never into sports or competition. And being a Don Juan? Yeah, as if! If the Tohma Faiere had changed him from being those things, Karl
was personally all for it.
Then
there was the last image the faith stone had showed him…
“You ruin everything!” Seventeen-year-old
Karl bitched.
“I’m sorry if free-climbing up a
mountain with a very long drop onto very sharp rocks isn’t my idea of a great
vacation,” his brother retorted.
“You never want to do anything Dad
and I want to do! Why don’t you just
stay home? At least then our trip doesn’t have to get screwed up ‘cause of your
asthma or ‘cause you can’t handle heights or ‘cause you just want to piss off
Dad!”
The tirade rolled right off his
sibling. David brother didn’t even look
up from his book, knowing the fastest way to get Karl’s goat was not to get
sucked into a fight with him. Karl couldn’t even see his brother’s face to know
if he was getting a reaction with that textbook in front of it. Dad had given
up on making peace between the boys and disappeared into his own tent hours
ago. “Fine with me…although it’d be tough to give up the evening belching contests
and watching you trying to beat your own record for how many local skanks you
can feel up in one week.”
“Hey, at least I’m in the game! I’ll be the closest thing you’ve gotten to
making out with a girl is rescue breathing the Resusi-Annie dolls in CPR
class.”
“Is this the part where I’m supposed
to get offended or try to punch you or something stupid like that?” David
closed the textbook, muttered something about ‘family vacations’, and began
throwing dirt on the small campfire.
“You know what?” Karl continued,
“Read your book---spend all week in the tent if you want. First light, Dad and I are going back up the
mountain. You can stay here and maybe
next Christmas, Santa will bring you a backbone.”
“For the last time...” His brother
pointed to himself. “Jewish.”
“I swear, I don’t even believe we’re
brother sometimes---“
An angry shout came from their
father’s tent: “Karl and David! The two of you knock it off and get your
butts to bed! Now!”
In the blue visions, it was fourteen-and-a-half years old David, no mistaking it, his face caked with mud, sitting on the grass at Camp Tehema.
It
was fifteen-and-a-half years old David in the nurse’s cabin following another
of his asthma attacks.
It
was seventeen-and-a-half years old David, looking quite fed up, with Karl in
the tent.
Not
David Barrett. David Scott.
It wasn’t just the notion of
someone who’d been a thorn in Karl’s side since he’d washed up on the island
potentially being Karl’s brother that
bugged him. It’s just for that to be
true…and it couldn’t be, it made no sense…something more than Karl’s
personality had to have changed.
Someone---Karl, David
Barrett, or the yet-to-be-identified-other party who’d used the faith
stone---had wished away Karl and David’s being brothers. Who would change that? Why?
If someone had screwed with
him and his family, whoever did is was going to pay for it.
The stone glowed for David and Karl.
David was wearing a skybax
rider’s uniform in one of Karl’s visions.
Karl stared at the sleeves of his own rider’s tunic. Or was it his? If David was the skybax rider in that timeline, then what was
Karl?
And who did Marion
love?
More questions flowed
through his mind: Was Karl really meant
to be some horny self-centered ding-dong?
Was David Barrett supposed to be some bookworm/nerd and Karl and Jack’s
brother? A dinotopian like them? Karl
had a bitter laugh at the very idea of the obnoxious outsider trying to fit in
with the peaceful island people. Most
of all, why did someone change their
lives so?
Did I change it just to get this
uniform? To get Marion? That possibility bothered Karl more than
he cared to admit. No, he would never
do something that rotten…not in this lifetime or any other. Karl was sure of that.
The
doubtful voice still nagged at him. What
about the other Karl? The ‘real’
Karl? Maybe he would have. If so, Karl
had even less desire to go back to that ‘reality’, to being that guy…
He
sighed. A guy could get a migraine trying
to figure this out.
Karl
found the outsider stretched out on his back on a small cot, hands behind his
head, staring at the clay ceiling and its saurian inscriptions, lost in his own
thoughts. Barrett was pointedly ignoring
the saurian guard who stood beside the door.
However, at the sound of footsteps-the light gait of a human---he
reluctantly turned his attention to the newcomer. Karl tried to read David’s reaction to his arrival to see if the
outsider betrayed any hint of what he’d seen when the faith stone zapped
him. Barrett’s expression was stoic,
but his eyes were full of suspicion, even hostility.
His eyes are the wrong color. He’s supposed to have dad’s eyes, the
strange thought came to Karl unbidden, and he hurriedly pushed it out of his
head. Covering the lapse, he jabbed,
“Thanks for keeping your pants on this time.”
“I
do what I can,” the outsider said with forced pleasantness. He went back to staring at the ceiling. If he’d seen anything during his contact
with the Tohma Faiere, he was covering it well. “Time to go get electrocuted by
your lizard-woman statue again?”
“Depends.”
“On?”
“Noree
is under the impression that you’re lying to us.”
“About?”
“You
used the faith stone to change something.
What did you wish for?” Karl was trying to be intimidating, and failing
miserably. If anything, the outsider
looked amused, not intimidated.
David
snorted at that. “If I were going to have a wish granted, I wouldn’t waste it
changing things on this island, I’d use it to wish myself off of this cesspool
and go home. Think about it, Scott, do I really strike
you as the type of guy who would pray to a rock?”
Well, when he put it that way…”Who else
used the Tohma Faiere after you stole it from our Temple?”
Barrett
grinned wickedly. “You did, apparently.”
That
struck a nerve. Karl’s hand balled into a fist, just for an instant, before he
collected his cool. “Maybe you don’t
get it, but I’m serious---one of your forest-crawling buddies probably used
that stone to screw up a lot of lives…”
David
jumped off the bunk so fast that the saurian guard advanced on the
outsider. Karl waved the guard
off. “You dragged me down here to your
little temple and had some Godzilla statue zap me, then you locked me in this
stinking cell with Olaf the Enforcer there breathing lizard breath on
me…believe me, Dino-scout, I get that
you’re serious. Try to understand
what I’m saying---” He spoke very
slowly as if speaking to someone incredibly dense. “I don’t know who the hell’s been playing with
your meteor rock. And if I did, believe
me God, I wouldn’t be trying to extend my stay in these lovely accommodations
by keeping it a secret. I do have
places to be, you know, and much better things to do.”
That was true enough. Al would wait for David, and Le Sage might (might), but Gabriel Dane and Payden
Boreal would take the submarine and leave David behind without a second
thought, no problem. David had to get
out of this ‘topian prison before then or he could kiss his ride off this
island good-bye.
“Then
we have a problem, ‘cause I don’t have time to file every man, woman, child,
and saurian on the island into this temple to touch the faith stone just to see
who sets off its alarm. And if you don’t
have any idea who we’re looking for, that’s what I’m going to have to do. I promise you that you will wait here in
this room for however long that takes,” Karl warned.
David
shrugged and hopped back onto the cot.
He turned on his side, facing away from the skybax rider and the saurian
guard. “Whatever. Wake me when you’re finished.”
It
was another close call, but again Karl restrained himself from decking---or
better still, walking over there and shaking the answers out of ---the
outsider. If David Barrett wasn’t going to volunteer information, maybe he’d
like to try getting zapped by the temple sentinel again. “Get Noree and tell her we’re going to try
that ritual again,” Karl instructed the guard.
Karl
heard a distinct snort from the prisoner.
“What?” he asked, defensively.
“You,”
David said. “The scalie-lovers really
have you brainwashed, don’t they?”
“Excuse
me?!”
The
outsider rolled onto his back again, facing the skybax rider. “C’mon, Scott. You’re an off-worlder just like me. You don’t buy into all this crap a bout magic rocks that can
alter reality, do you? You can tell
me---I promise not to blow your secret in front of your pretty little matriarch…”
At
the mention of Marion, Karl lost his battle with his temper. He was halfway across the room before he
realized what he was doing and stopped.
From the amusement in Barrett’s eyes, the lapse hadn’t gone unnoticed.
“I
don’t get people like you,” Karl said.
“You obviously got that pterosaur to put up with you, so you can’t be as
complete a loser as you act like. You
could make a home here and instead you throw it back in----”
David
laughed. “And I could wear a fancy
uniform just like yours and have a baby dinosaur call me ‘daddy’? Can’t you just picture that?” The good humor lasted long enough for him to
shake his head. Then it vanished. He sat up on the bunk. “Let’s get one thing straight: This ‘Jurassic Park’ island is not my home. My home is back in the States with real food and television and
cars and multiplexes and baseball games and, most important of all, without
scalies trying to make a Happy Meal out of me!
And I don’t get how you can forget all that so easy if the
scalie-lovers aren’t using their
magic rocks to brainwash you!”
“You
did see something with the faith
stone, didn’t you?” Karl guessed…no, he
knew it.
It was David’s turn to falter, just for a second. Blue images swam through his head, but with every bit of willpower, he forced the images out of his mind. They might have been memories of another lifetime, like the ‘topians said, or they might have been mind tricks, attempts to win him over to their way of life through brainwashing. It didn’t matter either way. David wasn’t interested in being a ‘topian in this reality or in any imaginary alternate lifetime…especially if it prevented him from getting off this miserable island. He was going home---and home wasn’t this place. He was getting out of here, heading for the sub, and making a try for the mainland just as soon as these scalie-lovers let their guard down. His only dilemma right now involved figuring out the fastest way to make that happen: Pretend to go along with their mind games or pretend not to know what they were talking about when they mentioned magic rocks and altered reality.
“I saw about a million volts
of meteorite electricity rocketing towards me, that’s what I saw,” he said to
the skybax rider, picking the latter option.
David
Barrett, Karl observed, wasn’t good at bluffing. His eyes gave him away. “Anyone
ever tell you, Barrett, that you’re a rotten liar?” Karl asked.
“Here’s
an idea, why don’t you just tell me what answer will get me out of your
charming little temple as fast as possible, and I’ll tell your scalie friend
that’s what I saw,” David suggested.
“Karl?” Noree appeared in the doorway. “Forgive the interruption, but the guard
said you want to attempt the Tohma Faiere ritual again?” She was carrying a tray of food, which she
placed on the table beside David’s bunk.
“Hey,
why not? That gem of yours has quite a
punch---clears the sinuses and I think it melted a tooth that’s been bugging me
for weeks,” David said with forced cheerfulness. He stared at the gray food-like stuff that Noree had brought. “What the hell is that stuff? No, wait, I
don’t want to know. There’s no answer
that could possibly make me happy.”
Karl
could see any slim hope he’d had of getting a straight answer from the outsider
was gone. “We’ll try again after
dinner,” he said to the Keeper. With
that, he turned and walked out, leaving David alone in the dimly lit makeshift
prison. He listened until the
dinoscout’s footsteps retreated down the hall, probably back to that Temple to
tell the other scalie-lovers that their little brainwashing scheme wasn’t working. Under the wide gap between the bottom of the
door and the stone floor, David saw shadows move…the saurian guards taking up
their position outside his door, David assumed, preventing the outsider from
escaping before that scalie priestess could try again. Sorry,
Svengali, you’re not getting another crack at me.
It
was now or never.
David
reached into his boots and withdrew a bundle of dried, carefully selected and
prepared twigs, plants, and herbs and held the tip of the bundle to the flame
of the lantern that lit the room…
*