The Night The Dreams Died - (CC, ALL, TEEN) Ch 32-55 -8/8/05

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isndbreeze
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The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by isndbreeze »

The Night The Dreams Died



Hell To Pay

Chapter 6


VI



The coffin opened, and Jim and Dan both reached in to touch the corpse. It looked like Michael. It even had injuries evident on the body… injuries that might have been sustained by falling from a motorbike and by being shot with a high-powered rifle. It felt real to the touch. But a careful examination of the face revealed a small bulge at the neckline. Jim pried at it with his fingertip until the bulge became larger. Then the entire face peeled off. Jim handed the “face” to Dan Lubetkin.

“Another mask,” Dan said, passing the mask to Liz, who was sitting beside him in her wheelchair. “Jim, I don’t understand any of this. What’s going on?”

“The judge might be able to help us with that question, Dan,” Jim said… “when he wakes up.”

“You think aliens had something to do with this, Jim?”

“No.”

“Well, that’s good. I was worried that you were going to go that route… like your father did.”

Jim looked up, his face stern and sober. “I thought my father was deluded, too, Dan. But there were things going on that led him to the conclusions he came to. I’m not at liberty to tell you everything I know, but this crime was committed by humans like you and me.”

Jim looked back at the “wounds” on Michael’s “body…”

“Well, maybe not quite like you and me,” he clarified, the anger evident in his voice.

“Jim… if these bodies are all fakes… where are the real ones?”

“That’s what I’m going to find out, Dan… That’s assuming you and the judge will let me do my job now.”

Dan nodded. “You won’t have any problems from the state board or me, Jim. I think I can promise you that. I’ll make sure that Judge Lewis leaves you alone, too.”

“That would help a lot,” Jim said.

“Sir?” Deputy Hansen interrupted, “Have you noticed the hardware on these caskets?”

“What about it, Deputy?”

“Well, it’s all military issue.”

Jim looked at it… “How do you know that? It just looks like regular hardware to me.”

“No, sir. Hardware made for military use has a higher brass content, and some pieces contain titanium… too expensive for your average use. See the color? And look inside…” Hansen pulled part of the ticking away from the casket lid to reveal the hardware from the inside. There were tiny letters, LMM, on one hinge.

“Military hardware often is stamped with letters indicating the plant at which the hardware originated. It helps to track down where something was made when a plane crashes or something.”

“Deputy, remind me to give you a raise.”

Hansen smiled.

“The army, Jim?” Dan said. “You think the army has the bodies?”

Jim just looked at Dan without answering.

“Why? What would the army want with some high school kids’ corpses… unless…”

Jim nodded.

“Jim, this is… I don’t know… maybe I ought to stay out of this.”

Dan and Jim both turned around as they noticed a commotion building behind them. Deputies Carter, Davis, and Johnson were trying to hold someone back… and apparently having little success. Deputy Carter yowled, as a woman’s voice rose over the din…

“Get out of my way or I’ll kick you somewhere that’ll hurt even worse!”

“Amy,” Jim sighed… “Deputies… let her pass.”

The deputies moved aside reluctantly, and Amy charged up to Jim, her face a myriad of conflicting emotions.

“Jim, what is going on here? I hear you’re opening the graves up and checking the bodies, and there’s rumors all over town that the bodies are being mutilated… and taken away.”

Jim shook his head emphatically. “No, Amy, that’s not it! I assure you, we’re not doing anything disrespectful.”

Amy noticed Judge Lewis lying on the ground and the bloody “hand” beside him. Her eyes welled up with tears, and she began to shake.

Jim quickly picked up the hand. “It’s not real, Amy… See?” He peeled a layer of latex from the hand. Dan walked over and showed her the “face” Jim had removed from Michael. Amy gasped.

“Jim, what’s going on? What is all this?”

“That’s what we’re trying to find out,” Jim said, trying to sound comforting and in command. “We don’t have all the answers yet.”

“But you know something, Jim. What is it?”

Jim swallowed and realized that he was going to have to tell Amy something.

“The bodies we’ve dug up aren’t real, Amy. They’re fakes… latex mannequins… made to look exactly like Max and Michael.”

“And Maria?”

“We haven’t checked hers yet… or Isabel’s.”

Amy grabbed the shovel beside Michael’s open grave and walked quickly over to Maria’s grave then began to dig.

“Amy, we’ll do that!”

“When, Jim? When you get around to it? I need to know if that’s my daughter in there or… or something else.” Amy began to sob, and Jim put his arms around her and pulled her against his chest. “I need to know where she is, Jim. I need to know if she’s…”

“We’ll find out,” Jim said. “I promise you, Amy. We’ll find out.”

Jim motioned to the gravediggers, and they immediately began to dig Maria’s grave up. In less than twenty minutes, they had the coffin on the ground. Jim held Amy, as she watched, her face white and her eyes wide with fear.

“Open it,” Jim said. Amy turned her face against Jim’s chest and began to cry as the coffin opened and she glimpsed the body inside. “Is it her, Jim?”

Dan and Jeff carefully turned the face, looking for the telltale evidence. It took some time, but Jeff put his fingernail under an almost invisible seam and pulled, and the seam became larger.

“Look, Amy,” Jim said. Amy turned around, as Jeff pulled the face off, leaving a blank head-shaped object where Maria’s face had been.

Amy took the latex mask in her hands and looked at it then looked at the fake body again.

“Who did this, Jim?”

“We think the army may have them,” Deputy Davis said.

Jim shot the deputy a look that let him know immediately that he was out of line.

“I’m… I’m sorry,” the deputy said. “I mean, we don’t know… we were just speculating.”

“Amy,” Jim said, “we have reasons to believe that the army was interested in Max and Michael… and Isabel and Liz and Maria.”

“Because of the alien thing?” Amy asked.

“You know about that?” Jim asked, surprised.

“Well, I knew they weren’t Czechoslovakians, Jim, for God’s sake. I can put two and two together.”

“You never let on…”

“What was I going to say, Jim? Maria, you can’t go out with Michael. He’s an alien? Maria was too much like me, Jim… rebellious and head strong…”

“You, Amy? No…”

Amy shot Jim a sharp look, which all considered, was a lot easier than Deputy Carter had got off.

“Jim, I’m not saying Michael or Max was a real alien, just that there was something different about them, and Maria knew it. Maybe she thought they were aliens. Hell, maybe they were. This is Roswell, right? But I do know that there were certain people who were unusually interested in those kids… including the FBI and some army types. I wouldn’t be surprised if they actually thought they were aliens. And I wouldn’t be surprised to find out that’s where they are now…” Amy looked at the latex “face” again. “I’m going to get answers, Jim. You can count on it. One way or the other… I’m going to get answers.”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<<<<<<<>>>>>>>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

At the gate to the army base, the young sergeant was trying heroically to hold his own, but it just wasn’t enough.

“Private, you can get out of my way or you can get run over, but either way, I am going to see the person in charge here.”

“Lady… I’m a sergeant. See the stripes? And secondly, nobody just waltzes in here to see the person in charge. I’m not even sure who that would be.”

“Well, sergeant,” Amy said, edging her Jetta forward, “I’ll find out!”

The young sergeant placed himself squarely in front of Amy’s car and took his AK-47 off of his shoulder. “Lady,” he said with exasperation evident in his voice, “if you pass this spot, I will have to shoot you.”

At that moment several TV vans pulled up and began unloading cameramen and videocams. Amy smiled, and the young sergeant realized that their arrival was not by coincidence. Obviously, she had called them.

“BACK OFF!” the young sergeant barked at the TV crews in his most authoritative voice. “Lady, turn around NOW and leave… ALL OF YOU… You are trespassing on federal property! I have the authority to shoot anyone who does not leave. Put the cameras down!”

The cameramen looked at each other uneasily and lowered their videocams. Amy edged her Jetta forward again, this time pushing the young sergeant onto the hood. He rolled and jumped off, coming back to his feet in a crouching position with his AK-47 pointed directly at Amy. Immediately all the videocams went back up. The young sergeant hesitated a moment, and that was all it took. Amy pressed down on the accelerator and left desert dust between her and the sergeant, as she drove off toward the base. He raised his weapon again then looked back at the videocams all aimed in his direction. Then he pulled out a walkie-talkie and pressed the button.

“Sir, there’s a civvie on her way in… She’s driving a Volkswagen Jetta. I couldn’t stop her.”

“That’s why we give you a gun, sergeant! Alright. I’ll have her stopped.”

“Roger.”

The young sergeant looked at the camera crews again. “Well, what are you waiting for? The shows over! Get out of here!” To punctuate his order, he pointed his AK-47 in the direction of the nearest cameraman. The crews slowly got back into their vans, then one by one, they drove off.

About a mile down the road, Amy saw a humvee headed toward her moving very fast. She moved to the right slightly to give it plenty of room to pass, but something told her that that wasn’t what it intended to do. Her intuition was right. As the two vehicles drew closer to each other, the humvee swerved in front of Amy, cutting her off. Then, as she tried to go around it, gunfire riddled the side of her Jetta, and she momentarily lost control on the edge of the road. Trying to get back onto the road, she spun the car around, then before she could get it aimed straight again, her doors were jerked open and she was dragged roughly out of the car and thrown on the ground hard. A boot came down on her back, and an AK-47 was placed against her neck.

“Get your foot off of my back, or I will break that leg,” Amy threatened with sincere vehemence, but the corporal only pressed down harder. Amy screamed, as her back felt like it was going to break, and tears came into her eyes. She reached back with her left hand –her right hand was pinned beneath her- and grabbed the gun barrel, pulling it away with a jerk. Not expecting this, the corporal accidentally depressed the trigger for a second, firing ten or twenty rounds into the ground beside Amy. Before he could recover his wits, Amy had rolled over and sat up, biting him hard on the inside of the knee. The corporal howled, and the private with him came to his aid, grabbing Amy and trying to restrain her. Amy, however, had no intention of being subdued again without a fight. She came up off the ground with a handful of dirt in her fist, letting it fly in the private’s face. Momentarily blinded and choking, the private made his biggest mistake. He turned his back on Amy.

Confident that the private would subdue Amy handily, the corporal was still moaning over his injury, his pants leg rolled up beyond the knee so he could see the damage that had been done. Before either one realized what had happened, Amy had the private’s AK-47 in her hands. Seeing Amy grab the private’s gun, the corporal grabbed his own gun and aimed it at Amy, who already had the one in her hands aimed at him.

“Give me back the gun,” the corporal said threateningly.

“It’s not yours,” Amy said. “It’s his.”

“Then give it to him… before I shoot you!”

“It looks to me like a standoff,” Amy said. “You shoot me, I shoot you.”

The corporal swallowed and breathed deep for a moment. “What do you want, lady?”

“I want to see the person in charge here.”

“You can’t.”

Amy shrugged. “Then we can stay here and see who blinks first. I’ve never used one of these before. I never liked guns. I hope my finger doesn’t twitch.”

The corporal paled slightly, realizing that there was a certain honesty in what Amy was saying. He was also hoping that the private didn’t do something stupid like making a grab for his gun while it was aimed at him.

“Okay, look, I’ll call the general… see what he wants to do… Okay? But you’re in a heap of trouble. You don’t know what you’ve got yourself into, lady… You’d be a lot better off hightailing it out of here and never being seen again.”

“Can’t do that,” Amy said. “And my hand’s getting tired. This gun is heavy. That makes my finger twitch.”

“Alright… alright… look, could you just… point it slightly that way… in case your finger… you know?”

Amy shook her head. “Call the general.”

The corporal swallowed again then took out his walkie-talkie with his left hand, as he held his gun on Amy with his right hand.

“Sir, we have a… a situation here.”

“What’s the problem?”

“I, uh, I don’t have complete, um, control of the subject.”

“How the hell can you not have complete control, Connors? Either you have her or you don’t!”

“We sort of have each other, sir.”

There was a long pause on the walkie.

“So you let the subject gain control… Is that what you’re saying?”

“She wants to see you, sir.”

Again, there was a pause.

“Then bring her in,” the voice on the other end said at last. That was all the general said.

The corporal motioned toward the humvee with his free hand. “Well, you got what you wanted. God help you. You’re gonna need it.”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<<<<<<<>>>>>>>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The general stood up and stared at the wisp of a woman walking into his office. Then he looked at the corporal and the private. Both men looked like they had been through a major battle… scratched, dirty faces and arms… and the corporal was obviously hobbling. The general could barely suppress a smile.

“Is this the demon that got you guys whimpering with your tails tucked between your legs? I’d have you both neutered, but apparently you already have been.”

Both men stood at attention, and both respectfully answered, “Yes, sir” together.

“You’re dismissed. I can handle the big bad lady.”

“Yes, sir,” both men said again, turning to leave.

The general sat back down in his chair, smiling.

“So what is so important that you’re willing to get shot for it?”

“My daughter,” Amy replied simply.

“Oh? And… what would I have to do with your daughter?”

“That’s what I need to find out,” Amy said.

“Who is your daughter?”

“Maria DeLuca.”

The general’s smile wavered then disappeared, but he quickly smiled again as though he didn’t recognize the name.

“Don’t know her.”

“Max Evans, Isabel Evans, Michael Guerin…” Amy said. “Do those names ring a bell?”

The general shook his head. “No. I’m afraid not.”

“Liar!” Amy said. “Trials were held here on the base for men from your special unit who killed them. You wouldn’t forget that.”

“Oh, yes! Now I remember. A shame what happened to those poor kids. But the men that did it were court-martialed. They’d been drinking you know…”

“I was out at the cemetery this morning.”

The general sat quietly for a moment then shrugged. “I know all about it already. I know the sheriff was out there digging the graves up… and I know what he found.”

“And that doesn’t surprise or shock you, General?”

The general tapped his fingers on the desk, trying to decide what the best way to handle this would be.

“What do you think he found?” he asked at last.

“Dummys… mannequins… fakes! Our children… my Maria… isn’t there. I think you can tell me where they are.”

“That’s a bit presumptuous of you,” the general said. “I wouldn’t know where they are. I suggest you ask the county hospital… or the morgue… or the mortician.”

Amy closed her eyes momentarily. “The coffin hinges were military hardware.”

The general’s smile, already faked and weary, disappeared completely.

“You’d better be very careful what you’re insinuating, lady…”

“Amy. Amy DeLuca.”

“Mrs. DeLuca… yes, well… if you spread those kinds of insinuations publicly, I will have to reel you in.”

“And just what does that mean,” Amy asked.

“The army will sue you, Mrs. DeLuca. And you may be thrown in jail… for a very, very long time.”

“General, if you see me shaking, it’s from indignation and anger. You don’t intimidate me.”

“Well, maybe I should,” the general said matter-of-factly.

“How can you sit here and lie about what happened to those children, general? Doesn’t your conscience ever bother you? Didn’t your mother teach you right from wrong?”

The general smiled again. “I didn’t have a mother, Mrs. DeLuca.”

“Well, I would almost believe that, general. Except that it’s physically impossible unless you’re a clone, and I pray to God there’s only one of you.”

“My mother gave me up for adoption when I was a baby, Mrs. DeLuca.”

“I’m sorry.”

“Don’t be. I didn’t miss anything.”

“Somebody raised you. Obviously they didn’t have any morals or didn’t bother to teach you any.”

“Hey! Grandma Hawkins was a saint! Don’t bring her into this!”

“Didn’t she teach you not to lie?”

The general glared at Amy. “Mrs. DeLuca, you are not going to find your daughter’s body on this base. I can assure you that. You have used up your welcome. I’ll have you escorted to the gate.”

“No, you won’t. Not until I get some straight answers. I didn’t risk my life coming here to be brushed off.”

The general pressed a button on his desk, and a voice on the intercom asked him what he needed.

“Please have someone escort Mrs. DeLuca to the main gate… and make sure that she does not return.”

“Yes, sir.”

Within seconds, two burly-looking guards stood in the room.

“Go with them, Mrs. DeLuca. And do yourself a favor. Drop this hunt of yours. It’s only going to bring you to grief. There’s nothing for you to gain from it.”

Amy stood silently, then the guards led her from the room. General Hawkins leaned back in his chair and sighed deeply, calming his nerves, then he buzzed the receptionist again.

“Yes, sir?”

“Jeannie, call my masseuse and have her come to my office… and tell her to bring a bottle of scotch. I need to relax.”

“Yes, sir.”

The general leaned back again and rubbed his temples. Then the buzzer rang again.

“Yes? General Hawkins here. What is it?”

“Sir, the lady has escaped.”

General Hawkins sat up suddenly, his face turned bright red, and the veins in his neck seemed to throb. “Well, get some backup, then! Get her back… and get rid of her!”

“Permanently, sir?”

The general was silent for several moments, as he thought about it. “No… somebody probably knows she’s here. It would be hard to explain… on top of the other problems the sheriff has caused us this morning. Just get her and escort her off the base… IMMEDIATELY!”

“We’re working on it, sir.”

“What does that mean?”

“We don’t know where she is, sir. She’s disappeared.”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<<<<<<<>>>>>>>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

In her house above the CrashDown, Liz looked up suddenly. In front of her stood Maria.

“Maria?” Liz gasped. “How did you get here?”

Then Liz realized that the figure in front of her was a vision.

“Can you hear me, Maria? No… I guess not.”

“Liz, if you can hear me or see me… I tried to use the power that Isabel was teaching me… to dreamwalk with you… but I don’t seem to be able to do it. Maybe I’ll learn to… but right now… Liz, I saw you in a vision. I guess I’m developing some kind of power like that, but I still can’t seem to do it when I need to. I know you’re alive. I want you to know… where we are… We need you…”

The vision of Maria began to fade away.

“Maria! Wait! Maria, come back!” Liz said. “Where are you?”

But the vision was gone.


tbc


Coming up: Judge Lewis makes other plans to get rid of Liz. Amy continues to terrorize the army base. And Liz makes an unexpected connection while trying to contact Maria… with someone much further away.
isndbreeze
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Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by isndbreeze »

Thanks for the great feedbacks, FallenMagic and Roswellkitkat! To answer your question, Melisa, I don't think Angie Lee is going to be bad, but that's still not completely determined. At this time, I expect her to be good. Well, here's the next part. Enjoy! :) :ufo :ufo
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Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by Anonymous »

:jawdrop Imagine my mouth opening and closing without a sound like a fish and that's pretty much my reaction to this last part! That was one hell of a part! First off, the idea that liz saw Maria and Maria asked for her help was soo terrible bittersweet! God, I wish there was some way they knew where they were!

On a more lighter note...Amy Deluca?! :spit Man she sure is a firecracker! Now we know where Maria gets her fire from! Taking on an army base...i can already imagine it now...come back soon! :green :blue :pinkie :yellow :hotgreen :hotred
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roswellkitkat
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Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by roswellkitkat »

Gerry, Gerry,Gerry...how do you do that? I was on the edge of my seat, my mouth hung open and my eyes opened wide in anticipation! This update was so dam* good! :clap :clap :clap

Leave it to Amy Deluca to get onto an Army base and cause a ruckus! And the connection between Liz and Maria...was sweet. I can't wait til they get to the bottom of it all!!!!
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Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by vecastone »

:clap :clap :clap :clap :clap

Awesome !!! :thumbsup :thumbsup :thumbsup

I am worried about Amy , she will get herself in trouble. I want to know about the others !! I am so happy they are aliveeeeeee

*****jump*****jump****

Great work Gerry :)
Anonymous

Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by Anonymous »

BUMP! Gerry where are you! Besides vacation that is! Hope you're loaded with parts ! *hint hint * :slinkie
isndbreeze
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The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by isndbreeze »

The Night The Dreams Died



Wrath Of Innocents

Chapter 7


VII



Judge Lewis looked up when his door opened and three men let themselves quietly into his chambers.

“That door was locked. How’d you get in? Don’t you guys ever knock?”

Judge Lewis got no answer to his questions; the three men simply ignored them. All three wore street clothes, but Judge Lewis recognized them. He should… they had left enough money on his desk and in his pockets recently.

“You were supposed to get rid of the Parker girl, Horace,” one of the men said calmly, his face stony and emotionless. “You didn’t do that. The Brass isn’t happy.”

“Hey, look, guys, I tried! You know I’ve done everything in my power, but the sheriff is always in my way. And if it’s not him, it’s that deputy of his. And the girl doesn’t seem inclined to want to leave Roswell.”

“Well, you see, Judge, that was your job. You were supposed to incline her… or solve our problem for us in some other way.”

“What problem… What way,” Judge Lewis sputtered, feigning naïveté, but the men again ignored him.

“The Brass doesn’t like ineffectual agents, Judge… and they don’t like failure. We’ve been told to… rectify the situation.”

The blood temporarily drained out of Judge Lewis’ face. He was good at feigning ignorance or pretending not to know what was going on when it served his purposes, but his face said that he understood all too well what the agent was saying.

“Rectify… how…” he stammered.

The agents remained silent for several long moments… allowing Judge Lewis to sweat. Then one of them checked the door to make sure that it was locked. All of them looked around cautiously, then the first one reached inside his jacket. Judge Lewis dropped behind his desk and scooted under it quickly. Crouched there, he waited for the inevitable, but what he heard sounded like something being plopped down above him. Cautiously, Judge Lewis emerged from under his desk and looked at the new pile of money stacked neatly on his desk.

“You… you’re giving me a bonus?”

The second agent patted Judge Lewis gently on the chest in a feigned gesture of friendliness; then suddenly, with no warning, he twisted the judge’s collar tight, cutting off his airway. Judge Lewis wheezed momentarily and tried to protest, but by then nothing would come out and no air would go in. After a few seconds, the agent released the judge’s collar and patted him again in a friendly way.

“Not a bonus, Judge. Let’s call it an ‘incentive.’ The bonus will come if you fail us again… if you’re eager to get a bonus, we can explain the plan.”

Judge Lewis shook his head vigorously. “No! No bonus… I don’t need a bonus. You’ve been very generous! I’ll do what I can.”

“You’ll do what has to be done,” the third agent said. “What you can is irrelevant.”

Judge Lewis nodded.

“And Judge,” the first agent added before closing the door behind them, “That’s a real nice sofa you’ve got over there. I’d change those pants before I sat on it.”



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<<<<<<<>>>>>>>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

It was dark. The area around them was damp and muggy… and miserable. Maria couldn’t see her own hands, but she knew that Isabel was still beside her. And she could hear a faint plink, plink, plink, as water dripped somewhere nearby.

“Iz, don’t give up on me now… Not here. We’ve come so far…” Maria felt Isabel’s face. It was clammy. “Damn! Max, I really need you! Why did you and Michael go back and try to hold them off for us? If they caught you, it won’t matter that you helped us escape. Isabel will die here, and I will, too… eventually… one way or the other.”

Maria reached out in the dark and pulled Isabel to her. Isabel was shaking. Maria knew that at night it could get very cold here. They had huddled together in these underground tunnels through… well, Maria had lost count of how many nights. She wasn’t even sure that she always knew when it was night or day. The only difference was that at night it got very cold. But it wasn’t cold now. Actually, at the moment, it was uncomfortably warm… and Isabel was shaking.

“I’m so sorry, Iz. I’ve done everything I know how. I can’t heal bullet wounds and bring people back like Max did for us after they brought us here.” Maria pulled Isabel close to try to warm her, and as she touched Isabel’s back, she felt blood trickle over her hand. “Damn, the wound is open again!” She laid Isabel back against the wall then reached down and tore another piece of her own pants leg off and pressed it tightly against Isabel’s back, pushing it gently into the hole left by the bullet that struck her as they were escaping. “I’ve got to try to stop the bleeding…

Max, I need you… Oh, God, I need you!”

Maria pushed the cloth carefully into the wound. She had no tape… nothing with which to make a bandage. Several days before, she had half-torn, half-cut the waist band off of Isabel’s pants with a small piece of broken glass she had found and then pulled the waist band up to her lower back to hold the previous “plug” in place. Now she pulled the band back over the new plug. It seemed to be working… for the moment. The bleeding had stopped again.

“Iz, I still need you. Don’t give up now. You’ve got to teach me how to dreamwalk without you helping me. You promised, remember? You have to hang on. A promise is a promise, Iz. You can’t go back on a promise. We…” Maria choked back tears. “Just don’t give up, Iz. We’ll make it. You’ve just got to hang on.”

Maria reached over to pull Isabel back against her own body again to warm her, and as she did, she saw a flash of bright light… and a glimpse of someone hiding… someone familiar…

“Mom?” Maria started to yell, but she realized that she couldn’t. It might give them away if anyone heard her… and secondly, she realized that what she had seen was a vision… Her mother could be anywhere.

“Did you do that, Isabel?” Maria asked. Isabel didn’t answer. Maria pulled Isabel close again and closed her eyes, concentrating. “Isabel, help me out here if you can hear me.”

Suddenly, Maria saw Amy clearly. She was crouching behind a large stack of steel storage drums. Then she sneaked out and ran to a new hiding place, passing behind two soldiers who were talking to each other.

“Mom, it is you,” Maria whispered. “You’re here! But how? Where are you?” Maria concentrated harder. “Mom, try to see me. Try to see me.”

Amy stopped and looked around momentarily with a puzzled look on her face. “Maria?” Then she shook her head and ducked underneath a large craft of some kind. As she did, the two men turned and looked around the room. Knowing that she would be seen if she couldn’t find a place to hide quickly, and noticing that the craft was open on the bottom, Amy climbed inside. The two guards looked around the large room a couple of times and, seeing nothing amiss, resumed their discussion.

Amy stood up and looked around the interior of the craft. It seemed large for an airplane, but she guessed that this was because all the seats had been removed… or not put in yet. In any case, there was a lot of room to move around inside. Amy walked along the wall on the left side until she came to a door. She knew that she probably shouldn’t, but curiosity had always been her biggest weakness. She reached for the door but found no door handle. Feeling certain that there had to be some way to open a door, Amy felt around the wall and on the door itself for any evidence of an opening device. Then, frustrated, she sat down on the floor in front of the door and stared at it.

After a few minutes, Amy stood up again and looked around. The only thing she could see was a square outline of some kind on the wall near the door. But there was no handle on the square… nothing to pull or push… not even any evidence of a sensor of some kind. But the square was the only thing around… there was nothing else… so Amy pushed on the area inside the square. Nothing happened. She hadn’t really expected anything to happen, but she had hoped that maybe…

Not to be defeated so easily, she pressed it again, placing the palm of her hand flat against the area inside the square. This time, there was a flash. Amy suddenly saw Maria.

“Mom, try to see me! I’m here, Mom!”

Amy looked around frantically. “I hear you, baby. Where are you? Oh, God!”

Amy looked around for several moments but saw nothing. “Maria? Where did you go? I heard you! I didn’t imagine it…” There was no reply. Amy turned back toward the door and saw that it was now open… and in the square outline beside the door, a handprint had appeared. She put her hand against the print again. It didn’t seem to have any effect. Somehow the door had opened at the exact moment she got the flash of Maria calling her. She had had her hand against the square when she got the flash… and at that precise moment, the handprint had appeared and the door had opened. It had to be connected. Not one to question the whys for too long, Amy quickly walked into what appeared to be a control room… but not like any she had ever seen. She reached out and touched the console… then her hand came upon a large crystal that was inserted into a niche in the console. The crystal moved. Carefully, she extracted it from its cradle and looked at it. Then she slipped it into her pocket.

Amy sat down in one of the control seats and looked around her at all the sophisticated gadgetry and sensors. She had seen the cockpit controls of a 747 once. They had been unbelievably impressive. This was less… cluttered… but somehow more impressive. She wasn’t exactly sure why. It seemed somehow… otherworldly. As Amy thought about it, she noticed something glimmer above her head. It was a tiny device of some kind, and it appeared to be attached to a small rod near the ceiling magnetically, so she detached it and looked at it. It looked very much like a tiny spycam, but it was no bigger than an average-sized setting in a ring, and that set Amy’s mind to thinking. She placed the tiny camera-like device on her ring, and it stuck. Then she ran her hands over the console to see if there was anything else that looked unusual. Not finding anything else that looked like it might be useful to her, Amy sat back in her seat and thought for a while about what she should do next.

Amy knew that if she was going to find Maria or the others she needed to be moving. She had probably already sat here for twenty minutes. That was long enough. She turned in her seat and stood up… and found herself face to face with six soldiers with their rifles all pointed at her heart.

For several moments, no one spoke and no one moved. Then Amy swallowed.

“I must have taken a wrong turn off of 285. Imagine that! I’ll just be on my way if you gentlemen will move aside.”

It wasn’t working. Not that she had ever entertained any real thoughts that it would.

A young corporal showed up at that moment and staked out a position between Amy and the six armed soldiers. “General Hawkins wants to see you… Now!”

“Well, really guys, I don’t think we hit it off so well the last time we were together. That was kind of a relationship that just wasn’t meant to be, you know what I mean? If you’ll just tell the General that for me, I’m sure he’ll understand, and…”

The young corporal stepped out of the way, and the rifles all went to ready.

“Okay, okay. I’m going! But I’m telling you, this is not my idea of a good time. The General needs to find a girl who’s more into S&M. I’m more plain vanilla… Okay, maybe raspberry, really, I guess, but…”

“Move it!” the young corporal harfed in an annoyed tone. “And shut up.”

“Doesn’t anyone in this placed have any manners,” Amy asked abashedly. The young corporal gave her a stabbing look.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<<<<<<<>>>>>>>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The door opened, and Amy walked into General Hawkins’ office suite, followed closely by the six soldiers with their rifles still pointed at her. This time, the General was not smiling, and he did not request that the soldiers put down their guns or leave him alone with her.

“Mrs. DeLuca,” General Hawkins said, in a very annoyed tone, “You have done what no one else has ever managed to do in all the years I have been in the military. You have made me look like a complete fool.”

Amy shrugged. “It was nothing, sir, really.”

General Hawkins bristled but ignored Amy’s comment.

“Mrs. DeLuca, what am I going to do with you?”

“Well, sir, I tried to tell these boys that it just wasn’t going to work out between us. I’m really not looking for the Romeo and Juliet thing right now, you know…”

“Romeo and Juliet wasn’t what I had in mind, Mrs. DeLuca. I was thinking more along the lines of Henry the eighth.”

Amy swallowed. “You wouldn’t do anything to me, General. Too many people know where I am.”

The General shook his head. “Your car was seen driving off the base about three hours ago. It went over the side of Bald Mountain near the upper pass. That was a drop of about 700 feet, I believe. I understand it was a very fiery crash. The sheriff of Copper City is on the site now, but no remains have been found. The fire was so intense, you know…” The General smiled and waited for Amy’s reaction.

“You can’t just get rid of me, General…”

The General nodded. “Corporal, take Mrs. DeLuca away… and make sure that her departure is permanent.

“Permanent, sir?”

Permanent, Corporal. You heard me.”

Amy looked at her ring. “General, do you know what this is?”

“A ring? You think I’m worried about your husband? You don’t have one, Mrs. DeLuca. Don’t you think I know that? And if you did, it wouldn’t matter.”

Amy detached the tiny camera-like device and held it in her hand. “Not the ring, General, the camera.”

General Hawkins’ smile left him, and some of the blood drained from his face. “Let me see that!”

The corporal took it from Amy’s hand and handed it to the General. He turned it over several times. “Where did you get this?”

“From the TV station,” Amy said, bluffing. “Everything going on here is being recorded by all three local networks… and by now probably by CNN and Fox, too.”

“I don’t believe you.”

Amy smiled. “It doesn’t matter whether you believe it or not.”

General Hawkins swallowed. There was a long pause, as he thought about the possible consequences of this revelation.

“Corporal!” General Hawkins said at end.

“Yes, sir!”

“Didn’t you hear me? Escort Mrs. DeLuca off the base, and make sure that she stays away from here permanently this time. You got that?”

“Just off the base, sir?”

“Of course, just off the base! What did you think I meant?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Oh, and Mrs. DeLuca… I was trying to make a point with you about how dangerous it can be for a civilian to be running around out here unaccompanied. I wouldn’t want you to get hurt.”

“Of course not,” Amy said. “What about my car?”

The General breathed deeply. “It was damaged, Mrs. DeLuca. It was unsafe to drive… and since it was on the base, it was our obligation to dispose of it in a safe manner. As I told you, it was being towed to a recycling plant, but it broke loose on the pass and went over the side. Fortunately, no one was in it, so there was no one hurt in the accident.”

“That car was my only means of transportation.”

General Hawkins set his jaw tightly and forced a smile. “I’ll see if we can find you a replacement, Mrs. DeLuca. The Army wasn’t responsible for what happened to your car, you know. The damage to your car was your own fault. We had to dispose of it responsibly. But I’m sure Washington would not want to make a big deal out of this. I’ll get you a new car.”

“New?”

“New,” General Hawkins muttered. “Corporal!”

“Yes, sir!”

General Hawkins pointed at the door. The corporal pushed Amy out and escorted her quickly to a waiting humvee. There, the corporal had handcuffs and chains placed on Amy’s wrists and feet, then she was driven off the base, followed by three more humvees with four armed soldiers in each one.

Back in General Hawkins’ office, the General was still examining the tiny camera-like device.

“Lieutenant!”

“Yes, sir!” a young lieutenant said, hurrying into the General’s office.

“Have you ever seen anything like this?”

“Looks like a spy camera, sir.”

“I know what it looks like, lieutenant. Have you ever seen one like this one?”

“Well… not this small, sir. But they’re making them smaller every day.”

“Hmmm, yes, but I’m usually kept abreast of developments that might be useful to me. Lieutenant, how did the DeLuca woman get into the craft?”

“The bottom hatch was left open, sir. The crew trying to get into the control room was planning to return later today to try again with a new type of torch.”

“But the DeLuca woman got into the control room, lieutenant. I want to know how!”

“We don’t know how, sir. After she came back out, the door closed again.”

“And it didn’t occur to any of you to put something there to jam it or station someone inside the control room while the door was open?”

“Uh, no sir. How would someone inside get back out after the door closed?”

“I don’t know, lieutenant! I don’t care! Maybe there’s a door handle inside!”

“I don’t think so, sir.”

“Lieutenant, we’ve had this craft in our hangar for sixty years… give or take a few years… and no one, ever, has been able to find so much as a seam or a rivet anywhere on the craft. We can’t dismantle it. No one has ever been able to get into the control room. No torch or blaster will melt or penetrate the metal… or whatever the hell it is the thing’s made of. It has frustrated every effort we have made to open the control room or dismantle the ship for SIXTY DAMN YEARS! And that woman just goes in and, open-sesame! The door opens for her?”

“It seems that way, sir.”

“Find out why! I want someone watching that woman twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. I don’t want her to go to the bathroom without someone knowing where she is. You got that?”

“Yes, sir!”

“Good. I’m surprised she didn’t ask you idiots if there was a key and fly the thing away under your noses! Get out of here. Oh, and lieutenant…”

“Sir?”

“Find out who makes these tiny spycams. I need some. And find out why I wasn’t advised of their development. I don’t like having local TV networks using equipment that I didn’t even know existed.”

“Yes, sir!”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<<<<<<<>>>>>>>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Liz sat on a park bench, her wheelchair nearby, tossing seeds to the birds and enjoying the sunshine. Her diary lay at her side, where she had been writing in it moments earlier.

“Hello, Liz.”

Liz looked up and smiled. “Sheriff! What brings you out to the park?”

“Four of my best deputies are, uh, bird watching somewhere out here. I thought I’d check up on them.”

“Bird watching?”

“Yeah, well, you never know what you’ll see out here, Liz. Besides, I enjoy the park, too. It’s a pleasant place to spend time.”

“I know.” Liz smiled.

“I see you’re writing in your diary again. That’s good! It’s important to come to terms with one’s feelings. A diary’s a good way to do that.”

Liz picked the diary up and held it out to Jim.

“What? You want me to read it?”

Liz nodded.

“Oh, I… Liz, this is personal. I don’t think I should.”

“It’s not the juicy romantic stuff or my hot sex escapades, Sheriff,” Liz said with a sly grin. “I keep all that in another diary… under lock and key.”

Jim smiled. “Oh, okay then. What do you want me to read?”

Liz flipped the pages and handed it back to Jim. Jim read the page. Then he turned and read the next page… and the next. Finally, he closed the book and handed it back to Liz.

“Is this like your hopes for what your life will be like in the future, Liz? Or are you planning to publish it and go for a sci-fi award… one of those Yugos or whatever that guy at graduation had?”

“Hugo,” Liz, corrected. A Yugo’s a little car… about the same size, I think. I can see how you could confuse them.” She smiled coyly.

“Actually,” Liz continued, “it’s more complicated than that, Sheriff. I’ve been having dreams… or visions… sometimes when I’m asleep and sometimes when I’m awake, of another place. I think it’s Max’s planet, you know, Antar. And the people there are us. I’m there, Max is there, Maria and Michael are there… even you’re there, Sheriff.”

Jim smiled. “Well, that does sound exciting. I don’t see how it can be anything but a dream, though, Liz. Maybe it’s like Dorothy in the Wizard of Oz. You know, all her friends were there… This planet hasn’t gotten quite used to me yet. I don’t think I could break another planet in at this stage in my life.”

Liz nodded. “I know it sounds incredible on the surface of it, Sheriff, but when I’m seeing this other place… this other life… it all seems so right… so… I don’t know, like it’s supposed to be or something… and this…” she indicated the wheelchair… “all seems so wrong.”

Jim sat down beside Liz and put his arm around her. “It is wrong, Liz. You shouldn’t be in that chair. You should be going to college, meeting the guy of your dreams, or going with Max if that’s who it is, learning about life’s… happy times. Not about life’s dark side. I can understand why you’re having these dreams.

“You don’t think I’m crazy then, Sheriff?”

Jim laughed. “Crazy? We should all be crazy like you, Liz. The world would be a lot better place! No, I don’t think you’re crazy. You have an invincible spirit that will get you through the darkest parts of life by showing you light when you need it most. I don’t know where that light is coming from… if it’s real or in your mind… but it’s not crazy. It’s the most sane thing I could ever imagine. I’ve seen too many people give up under stress and allow themselves to drift off into self pity, anger, even self-loathing. And the world says, hey that’s normal… They should be feeling angry and bitter. But you’ve never felt anger or bitterness, Liz. You just see things the way they should be. And that’s why you will find your happiness. You will.”

Liz wiped a tear from the corner of her eye and kissed Jim on the cheek.

“Thanks, Sheriff. With friends like you and Kyle, I know I will.”

“Will you be okay here for a while, Liz? I need to check on my deputies.”

“Sure,” Liz said. “I like being out here with the birds and my thoughts… and my diary. I’ll be fine. Vera’s just over there at the fountains anyway. She’ll be back to get me in about an hour. I asked her to leave me alone for a while. But I’m really glad you came by, Sheriff! You make me feel like everything’s going to be fine!”

“It is, Liz. You’ll make sure of that. Trust me.”

Liz smiled.

“I’ll pass back by here in a little while to check on you, Liz.”

“Okay.”

Liz went back to feeding the birds, but no more than two minutes later, another person approached. Liz looked up at the new arrival.

“Judge Lewis?”

Without speaking or asking permission, the judge sat down beside Liz. Liz pulled herself to the other side of the bench automatically without being aware she was doing it.

“Miss Parker.”

Liz waited to see what the judge was going to say.

“I’ve been thinking about you… what you’ve been through and all. I would think you would be happier somewhere where they can give you more help… or therapy… you know, a big city or something. Roswell’s such a little place really. A girl with your… needs… doesn’t belong here.”

“I’m happy here, Judge. My friends are here. I grew up here.”

“Yes, well, most of your friends have gone off to college, but you’re stuck here, unable to do anything but depend on the charity of people like Sheriff Valenti to take care of you.”

“The sheriff is a friend. I’m not charity to him… or to any of my friends, Judge.”

“Is that what you think? He sees someone in need and he takes time out from his valuable time to try to help them. We have to do things like that as city officials. It’s incumbent of us… you know, it’s expected. But do you really think you’re doing him any favors by making him have to take care of you like an invalid daughter? It costs him valuable time. It costs the city valuable time. Do you really think he’d rather be pushing some invalid girl around in a wheelchair than finishing his shift so he could go out on a date or something once in a while? He’s not married you know. He needs to have time for a life, too.”

Liz wiped another tear from her eyes. “I didn’t know I was being a burden to anyone. The sheriff is just being a good friend. I’ll make sure that he doesn’t spend too much ‘valuable’ city time with me.”

“Well, Miss Parker, that might seem easy to you, but as long as you are here, he will always have to take care of you. As good public servants, we have to do that. So you will always be a burden. But don’t take that wrong, Miss Parker. I feel sorry for you. I really do. I’m not blaming you. What happened to you is just unpleasant circumstance. No one could have foreseen it. You couldn’t have stopped it. But you can do something now, Miss Parker… for yourself and for the Sheriff’s benefit. He won’t tell you this. But you know he’d like to.”

Liz sniffed and wiped her cheek. Then she looked Judge Lewis in the eyes.

“Judge, with all due respect, what you’re doing is feeding me a load of horse manure! You can try to make me feel bad about being dependent on others, but my heart tells me that I’m not as big a burden as you’re pretending I am. And my heart tells me that I have friends here… real friends… not like you! So I would really just appreciate it if you would leave now. If you have anything else to say, I’m sure the Sheriff or my father would be interested in hearing it.”

Judge Lewis flushed and stood up.

“Well, Miss Parker, I was trying to be kind to you. I could have you institutionalized. You’ve been through a lot. It’s not unusual for people in your… situation… to require psychiatric help. There’s a very good psychiatric hospital over in Arizona I could get you in to…”

“Judge, just leave! Please!”

“You’re refusal to accept our charitable help, Miss Parker, could be construed by a court as evidence of your need for psychiatric help.”

“Especially if you were the judge, right, Judge? I said leave! I even said please!”

“What’s this,” Judge Lewis asked, grabbing Liz’s diary.

“Give me that back! That’s mine! That’s private! You can’t take my diary! VERA! HELP ME! SHERIFF VALENTI! HELP! …Please. Give me back my diary.”

Judge Lewis thumbed through several pages smiling, then he stuck the diary into his pocket.

“This should do nicely, Miss Parker. Very nicely.”

As the judge turned around, something that felt like a sledgehammer slammed head on into his jaw, breaking it and laying him out flat on the ground. Liz looked up at her benefactor…

“Alex! Omigod, Alex!”

Sheriff Valenti was right beside Alex, and Vera was running across the grass from the fountains, where she had heard Liz screaming for help.

Alex shook his hand up and down several times. “Ow, that hurt.” Then he smiled. “But it was worth it. Looked like you needed some help. I just happened to be in the neighborhood.”

Liz took Alex’s hand and pulled him down beside her then hugged him and started to cry. Sheriff Valenti saw Liz’s diary fall out of Judge Lewis’ pocket, and he picked it up and brushed it off.

“I think this is yours, Liz.”

Liz nodded. “Thanks, Sheriff… Sheriff?”

“Yes?”

“Am I… Am I being a burden to you… or others… by staying here in Roswell?”

Sheriff Valenti looked at Judge Lewis, who was moaning as he regained consciousness, and suppressed an urge to kick him back into his more amenable unconscious state.

“Don’t ever think that, Liz! No matter what anyone ever tells you. DO NOT EVER think that again! You’re no burden to me or to anyone here. You’re an inspiration to us. Some company possibly excluded,” Jim said, looking at Judge Lewis.

“Sheriff!” Judge Lewis moaned.

“Can I help you up, Judge?”

“Sheriff, arrest this young man! He hit me! I think my jaw is broke!” Judge Lewis spit blood out into his hand, and two teeth fell into his hand with it. He appeared faint, as though he might pass out again.

“I’m afraid I can’t do that, Judge,” Jim said. “You just had a bad fall. You need to be looked at by a doctor.”

“Arrest him first, Sheriff! He hit me!”

“Well, I didn’t exactly see that, Judge. You turned around fast and tripped over my foot. I guess you hit your jaw on the pavement. I’m really sorry about my foot being in the way.”

“It wasn’t your foot, Jim! I know a foot from a fist! That boy hit me!”

“You’re delusional right now, Judge. For your own safety, I’m going to have to have one of my deputies take you to a hospital for treatment. If you persist with this accusation, I’ll have to tell the court that I witnessed it and you tripped over my foot… after stealing Miss Parker’s diary and trying to flee with it.”

Judge Lewis glared at Jim but said nothing. By now, his jaw was hurting so bad that he was asking Deputy Carter, who had just arrived, to take him to the hospital. Deputy Carter led him to his patrol car and put him in the back then drove off.

“Thank you, Sheriff. Thank you so much,” Liz said sincerely.

“Yeah,” Alex said, nodding… “for me, too. I thought you were going to have to lock me up.”

Jim chuckled. “No… I’ve wanted to do that myself for years. You just lived out my fantasies for me.”

“I feel bad about causing you to have to lie for me,” Alex said.

“Shhh! It wasn’t a complete lie, Alex. I did have my foot out, and Judge Lewis did fall over it… accidentally, of course. Anything else that might have hit him, too, even if it helped him fall over my foot, is irrelevant here, and I think we can just keep it to ourselves.”

“Thanks, Sheriff.”

“Don’t mention it. Really.”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<<<<<<<>>>>>>>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

“Liz, will you be alright now,” Alex asked, as he stood up and started to walk to the door of the Parkers’ house above the CrashDown.

“Yeah. Thanks again, Alex! You don’t know what it means to me to have friends like you and Kyle and the Sheriff. I just wish we could find Max, Maria and Isabel. That would be so great.”

Alex nodded. “Yeah. That would be great, Liz. But I hope you won’t get frustrated if, you know…”

“No, they’re alive, Alex! I feel it! I saw Max, and I saw Maria in visions. I saw Max when I touched his ring, and Maria was trying to contact me. I think Isabel was helping her.”

“Maybe you should try to contact her back, Liz. You probably have more chance of doing that than she does. Maria doesn’t have any powers… unless…”

“Unless what?”

“Unless Max healed her after she was shot and she’s starting to develop some. Liz, do you still have those orbs that Max had?”

“Yeah.”

“Well, Max and Michael always thought that the orbs might be some kind of communication devices. Why don’t you try them… see if you can contact Maria?”

“Will you help me, Alex?”

“Yeah, I guess I can stay a while longer.”

Liz rolled her chair into her room and returned with the orbs. “What do we do with them, Alex?” She held one orb and handed Alex the other one. Alex placed the orb to his ear and walked around the room, saying, “Can you hear me now? Can you hear me now?”

Liz started to laugh. “Be serious, Alex.”

“I made you laugh.”

“Yeah,” Liz nodded. “Thanks, Alex.”

“Try putting them together,” Alex suggested. Liz took both of the orbs and placed them beside each other. “What now?”

“I don’t know. Maybe we need to touch them or something.”

“Yeah, that would make sense,” Liz said. She took Alex’s hand and placed it on top of the two orbs, then she placed her hands on top of his. “I’m going to concentrate, Alex. I’m going to think about Maria.”

“Is this going to be a long distance call, Liz… ‘cause roaming charges can get pretty steep you know.”

Liz giggled. “Alex, please. Be serious.”

Liz closed her eyes and cleared her mind of everything but Maria. Alex did the same. As he did, there was a bright light. It didn’t flash on; it just sort of grew until it looked like daylight. Then they both saw Maria. She was wearing some kind of exotic-looking swimsuit and walking out of a golden-colored ocean. Her hair hung down, wet, over her shoulders and back, but she looked beautiful… even if more than a few years older.

Liz and Alex approached Maria, and Liz waved her hands back and forth. “Maria, can you see me?”

“Can you see us,” Alex repeated.

“What’s got into you two,” Maria said. “Of course I see you. You’re standing right in front of me. I may have salt water in my eyes, but I haven’t gone blind.”

Liz and Alex both looked at the sand around them. They were indeed standing on the beach. Liz felt the breeze. She heard the low swish of the surf. She felt the warm sand under her feet and felt the salt water rushing over her feet… Her feet? She hadn’t even realized until now that she was standing up… and her wheelchair was nowhere in sight.

“Omigod,” Liz said, as reality began to set in. “Alex, where are we?”



tbc

Coming Next: Liz and Alex meet Liz and Alex. Judge Lewis continues to try to get rid of Liz but is not prepared for the surprise he gets. Amy’s misadventures continue to cause ripples on the army base… and in a place much further away. And the search is on for Maria and Isabel… and Max and Michael.
isndbreeze
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Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by isndbreeze »

Thanks, Fallen Magic, Melisa, and Veca! I really loved your feedbacks! The part about the fish opening and closing its mouth and nothing coming out had me ROTFL! Thanks to all of you! :love :love :love Okay, I've been too tied up wit RL to get back sooner with this new part, but here it is at last. I hope the wait was worth it. :ufo
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roswellkitkat
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Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by roswellkitkat »

Wonderful, wonderful! :thumbsup

Gerry, you got Amy's character down so good! She really had me cracking up!

Can't wait for the next part!
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Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by Anonymous »

:hotred Go Alex! Watch him knock that damn Judge down! Giveme an A :yellow give me a L :blue ...well you get the point ;) But it just made my day to read him punch him!

On a more different note...Maria and Isabel?! Why are they underground and where are Max and Michael? You're not going to let Isabel die are you? :nono :hotred she could hear Maria!!!

And you can't stop there! you're as bad as Angel ;) Damn, Liz is on Antar? how? how can Maria see her?? What's gonna happen next! hurry hurry! I think I'm gonna be sick with all this waiting!!



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Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by vecastone »

wow awesome !!!!

Feelings reading this chapter: pleasure reading that judge being presured jejeje !!

Saddnes when María was feeling so desperate and lonely !! thanks Amy heard her.

Happy when Amy surprised the Colonel with the camera jejejeje !! great part !!

Anger when the judge told Liz all that awful things, about being a burden....bad judge, bad judge. Go Alex, punch him on the face again.
JOy - Alex making Liz smile with all his jokes , our Alex ***sigh***
Surprise -when both of them appeared on Antar wow !!

How is it possible that María didn´t notice the difference ? :) :)
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Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by Anonymous »

:hotgreen :hotgreen B :hotred U :hotred M :hotred P!!!! :hotgreen
isndbreeze
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Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by isndbreeze »

Thanks for the feedback, Melisa, Isabel, and Veca! Thanks for the bump, too, Isabel! We'll find out more about Max and Michael soon. As to letting Isabel die, well, I don't want to give too much away, but let's just say she's lucky she's got Maria helping her. Maria has spunk and determination. If anybody can help Isabel get to safety besides Max and Michael it has to be Maria.

And Veca, Maria didn't immediately realize that Liz and Alex in front of her weren't the one's she knew, because she had just come out of the ocean and had salt water in her eyes. But you can be sure that she noticed pretty quickly after she got a closer look.
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Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by isndbreeze »

NOTE TO ALL:

Coming up are three chapters. The first two are the last two chapters from The Four Faces Of Rath, so if you already read them there, you can read them again here or skip straight to the third one, which is an ALL-NEW TNTDD chapter. The reason I am including the last two chapters of TFFOR here is that they are as much a part of this story as they are part of that one, and they are important to understanding this story. I won't be doing that with other chapters of TFFOR unless they are crucial to understanding this story... and possibly not even then, I don't know yet.

Here are the two TFFOR chapters and the ALL-NEW TNTDD chapter. Hope you like it!
isndbreeze
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Posts: 348
Joined: Sat Jun 29, 2002 7:13 pm

The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by isndbreeze »

The Night The Dreams Died



E.T. Call Home

Chapter 8
(TFFOR Chapter 56)

VIII



The young AVMTech at the Antar Space Field outside CoruzAntar knocked anxiously on the door of his supervisor’s office.

“Enter! The door’s open!”

“Sir! We are receiving a transmission from a ship that was lost seventy years ago. We have video and audio from the vessel.”

The supervisor looked up, obviously interested. “Where is it? Do we know which vessel it is?”

“Yes, sir. A70932. It was lost 70 years ago on Eluymer, the planet Zan and Rath grew up on. It was one of the original ships sent there… part of the scouting mission sent to find a secure site for the pods and the granolith. After the primary ship crashed, two ships returned, and a fourth disappeared.”

“Yes, I remember. It was always believed that it stayed on Eluymer, or ‘Earth’ as the Eluymerians call it, to try to rescue the crew of the crashed vessel and help to secure the… cargo. I guess we can say it now, the pods. It’s no longer a secret… Kivar is only a bad memory now. No one from that ship ever returned, and they never contacted the home base again. After twenty years, it was all but taken for granted that the entire crew was lost due to some unknown tragedy.”

“Yes, sir. Well, the E.T. came back on unexpectedly this morning. You will want to see the video and audio that have been intercepted from the ship since the telemetry began arriving again.”

“Do you have it with you, Dak?”

“Yes, sir!” The young tech took a small crystal from his pocket and inserted it into a device on the supervisor’s desk. A screen on the opposite wall came on. As they watched, the vessel’s onboard camera, called an Emergency Telemetry Monitor, or E.T. for short, suddenly came to life; then, a second later, the door to the control room opened and someone walked in. It was a woman.

“Sir, I know this woman,” the young tech said. “It’s Varec’s wife.”

“The Eluymerian?” The supervisor seemed surprised. “Hmmm… yes, it does look like her… but this woman is younger than Varec’s wife. And besides, I saw Varec and his wife only yesterday here in CoruzAntar. They were on their way to that Eluymerian ‘Café,’ the ‘CrashDown,’ to eat.”

“It’s a good restaurant, sir.”

The supervisor nodded. “It’s very popular with the younger people. I know older ones who like it, too, though. Dak, did you say that this signal just began coming in this morning?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Hmmm.”

As they watched, the young woman looked up suddenly and stared directly into the tiny camera, which was no bigger than a small sunflower seed. The E.T. was attached magnetically to a wire-thin but unbendable bar that ran across the ceiling of the craft. The young woman reached up and removed the tiny camera from the bar… then, after examining it, she appeared to attach it to herself in some manner.

“I believe she has attached it to a ring on her finger, sir,” the young tech said. The supervisor nodded.

For a time, the young woman sat in the pilot’s seat, thinking… and occasionally looking around at the console and systems monitors. Then she appeared to be about to leave, but as she stood up, she stopped again suddenly.

“Why did she stop,” the supervisor asked.

“You’ll see in just a moment, sir. Here it is now.”

The young woman moved her hand, and the two men saw that six armed soldiers were pointing weapons at her. The supervisor gasped.

“Eluymerian soldiers! …in charge of our craft! Where is our crew? Who is this woman?”

The young tech shook his head. “Not certain, sir. She does look very much like Varec’s wife to me, though, sir. It is possible, given the evidence seen here, that the Eluymerians also have our crew. If that is the case, I would not be overly optimistic about their survival after seventy years, sir.”

The supervisor shook his head sadly. “I’m afraid I have to agree with you, Dak.”

As Dak and his supervisor watched, the young woman made an oddly nonchalant remark; by all appearances, seeming to take the danger she was in much too lightly…

“I must have taken a wrong turn off of 285. Imagine that! I’ll just be on my way if you gentlemen will move aside.”

The supervisor looked at Dak questioningly. “What is 285, Dak?”

“I don’t know, sir. By their reaction, I believe that she is being insincere with them… possibly offering an explanation for why she is there.”

The supervisor nodded. “Yes, and she believes that they will allow her to leave, but it appears that this is a misconception on her part.”

At that moment, another soldier, one who appeared to have a higher ranking, showed up and stood between the young woman and the six men with guns. “General Hawkins wants to see you… Now!”

The young woman replied in a facetious tone that both the supervisor and Dak understood readily, “Well, really guys, I don’t think the General and I hit it off so well the last time we were together. That was kind of a relationship that just wasn’t meant to be, you know what I mean? If you’ll just tell the General that for me, I’m sure he’ll understand, and…”

The young soldier with the higher rank stepped out of the way, and the weapons all went to ready.

“Okay, okay. I’m going! But I’m telling you, this is not my idea of a good time. The General needs to find a girl who’s more into S&M. I’m more plain vanilla… Okay, maybe raspberry, really, I guess, but…”

“Move it!”
the young soldier with the higher rank said in an annoyed tone. “And shut up.”

The soldiers forced the young woman to walk a considerable distance down several long halls until they came to an office, which appeared to be their final destination. The one with the higher rank opened the door and they all went in, forcing the young woman to enter ahead of them. The soldiers kept their weapons pointed at the young woman as she went in. Inside, there was a man seated behind a desk. He appeared to be someone of importance as far as the soldiers were concerned. Even the young soldier with the higher rank showed deference to him.

“Mrs. DeLuca,” the man behind the desk said, in a very annoyed tone, “You have done what no one else has ever managed to do in all the years I have been in the military. You have made me look like a complete fool.”

The young woman shrugged. “It was nothing, sir, really.”

The supervisor looked at Dak and smiled. “I think I like her, Dak. She has sh’mys. She appears not to like this man, and he has an air of pompousness to him that I find distasteful.”

“Yes, sir,” the young Tech said. “I agree, sir.”

“Mrs. DeLuca, what am I going to do with you?” the pompous-looking man behind the desk asked.

“Well, sir, I tried to tell these boys that it just wasn’t going to work out between us. I’m really not looking for the Romeo and Juliet thing right now, you know…”

“Romeo and Juliet wasn’t what I had in mind, Mrs. DeLuca. I was thinking more along the lines of Henry the eighth.”


The supervisor reached up and stopped the playback momentarily.

“Dak… Isn’t DeLuca the name of Varec’s wife?”

“I believe so, sir. She uses two names, like most Eluymerians. Her full unmarried name was Amy DeLuca.”

“But how can this woman be Varec’s wife if this transmission came from Eluymer today, and I saw Varec’s wife here only yesterday?”

“Maybe she went to Eluymer with the sphere that Zan uses,” the young tech said.

“Yes, that’s possible, I guess,” the supervisor agreed. “But still, this woman is years younger than Varec’s wife, wouldn’t you agree?”

“Um, yes, sir. It would appear so, sir. I can’t explain it.”

The supervisor replayed the last two lines of the transmission.

“Well, sir, I tried to tell these boys that it just wasn’t going to work out between us. I’m really not looking for the Romeo and Juliet thing right now, you know…”

“Romeo and Juliet wasn’t what I had in mind, Mrs. DeLuca. I was thinking more along the lines of Henry the eighth.”


“Do you know who this Romeo and Juliet are that she is referring to, Dak… or the Henry the eighth that he is referring to? It could be important.”

“Yes, sir,” the tech said. “Actually, I saw something only a few days ago about them on the Eluymer channel… the virtual link that Varec established to the Eluymerian’s cable system. Romeo and Juliet were two young lovers, barely teenagers, who were not allowed to be together. He killed himself because he believed that she had died, but she had not. When she saw that he had killed himself, she killed herself, too.”

The supervisor seemed perplexed. “Do you think this young woman, DeLuca, intends to kill herself? These people are so strange. I do not always understand them.”

“I believe… sir… that she is probably referring to her relationship with the pompous one in the chair. She means that he is her Romeo and she is his Juliet… romantically.”

“You cannot mean that, Dak.”

“Well… perhaps she was being facetious, sir. I believe she did say that being Romeo and Juliet with him was not her desire, not that it was her desire.”

“I’m sure that is what she meant, Dak. It is obvious that she does not like the man. Who is this Henry the eighth that he compared himself to?”

“Henry the eighth was a king on Eluymer who had many of his wives executed. Their heads were cut off.”

“So he is threatening her by comparing himself to this king?”

“Yes, I believe so, sir. I believe that is her impression, too, based on her reaction.”

“Play the rest, Dak.”

The young tech started the sequence again from where it had left off.

“You wouldn’t do anything to me, General. Too many people know where I am,” the young woman said.

The pompous man shook his head. “Your car was seen driving off the base about three hours ago. It went over the side of Bald Mountain near the upper pass. That was a drop of about 700 feet, I believe. I understand it was a very fiery crash. The sheriff of Copper City is on the site now, but no remains have been found. The fire was so intense, you know…”

“Dak, I believe this woman is in danger. Even I understood that to be a threat.”

“Yes, sir.”

“You can’t just get rid of me, General…” the young woman said.

The pompous man smiled and nodded, indicating that he believed that he could. “Corporal, take Mrs. DeLuca away… and make sure that her departure is permanent.

“Permanent, sir?”

Permanent, Corporal. You heard me.”


The young woman held up her ring. “General, do you know what this is?”

“A ring? You think I’m worried about your husband? You don’t have one, Mrs. DeLuca. Don’t you think I know that? And if you did, it wouldn’t matter.”


The young woman detached the tiny E.T. and held it in her hand. “Not the ring, General, the camera.”

“Let me see that!” the pompous officer said, the smile on his face quickly fading away.

The corporal took it from Amy’s hand and handed it to the General. He turned it over several times. “Where did you get this?”

“From the TV station,”
the young woman said, obviously lying. “Everything going on here is being recorded by all three local networks… and by now probably by CNN and Fox, too.”

“I don’t believe you.”

“It doesn’t matter whether you believe it or not.”


The pompous man swallowed, and there was a long pause.

“Corporal!” the pompous man said at end.

“Yes, sir!”

“Didn’t you hear me? Escort Mrs. DeLuca off the base, and make sure that she stays away from here permanently this time. You got that?”

“Just off the base, sir?”

“Of course, just off the base! What did you think I meant?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Oh, and Mrs. DeLuca… I was trying to make a point with you about how dangerous it can be for a civilian to be running around out here unaccompanied. I wouldn’t want you to get hurt.”

“Of course not,”
the young woman said. “What about my car?”

“It was damaged, Mrs. DeLuca. It was unsafe to drive… and since it was on the base, it was our obligation to dispose of it in a safe manner. As I told you, it was being towed to a recycling plant, but it broke loose on the pass and went over the side. Fortunately, no one was in it, so there was no one hurt in the accident.”

“That car was my only means of transportation.”


The pompous man seemed to be making a forced effort to smile. “I’ll see if we can find you a replacement, Mrs. DeLuca. The Army wasn’t responsible for what happened to your car, you know. The damage to your car was your own fault. We had to dispose of it responsibly. But I’m sure Washington would not want to make a big deal out of this. I’ll get you a new car.”

“New?”

“New,”
the pompous man muttered. “Corporal!”

“Yes, sir!”


The General pointed at the door.

After the soldiers had taken the young woman away, the General continued to examine the tiny monitor.

“Lieutenant!”

“Yes, sir!”

“Have you ever seen anything like this?”

“Looks like a spy camera, sir.”

“I know what it looks like, lieutenant. Have you ever seen one like this one?”

“Well… not this small, sir. But they’re making them smaller every day.”

“Hmmm, yes, but I’m usually kept abreast of developments that might be useful to me. Lieutenant, how did the DeLuca woman get into the craft?”

“The bottom hatch was left open, sir. The crew trying to get into the control room was planning to return later today to try again with a new type of torch.”

“But the DeLuca woman got into the control room, lieutenant. I want to know how!”

“We don’t know how, sir. After she came back out, the door closed again.”

“And it didn’t occur to any of you to put something there to jam it or station someone inside the control room while the door was open?”

“Uh, no sir. How would someone inside get back out after the door closed?”

“I don’t know, lieutenant! I don’t care! Maybe there’s a door handle inside!”

“I don’t think so, sir.”

“Lieutenant, we’ve had this craft in our hangar for sixty years… give or take a few years… and no one, ever, has been able to find so much as a seam or a rivet anywhere on the craft. We can’t dismantle it. No one has ever been able to get into the control room. No torch or blaster will melt or penetrate the metal… or whatever the hell it is the thing’s made of. It has frustrated every effort we have made to open the control room or dismantle the ship for SIXTY DAMN YEARS! And that woman just goes in and, open-sesame! The door opens for her?”

“It seems that way, sir.”

“Find out why! I want someone watching that woman twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. I don’t want her to go to the bathroom without someone knowing where she is. You got that?”

“Yes, sir!”

“Good. I’m surprised she didn’t ask you idiots if there was a key and fly the thing away under your noses! Get out of here. Oh, and lieutenant…”

“Sir?”

“Find out who makes these tiny spycams. I need some. And find out why I wasn’t advised of their development. I don’t like having local TV networks using equipment that I didn’t even know existed.”

“Yes, sir!”


The General put the tiny monitor into a desk drawer and closed the drawer. With no light or sound reaching it any more, the little camera cut itself off. The supervisor and Dak both knew that it could come back on at any time, though, if the General should decide to take it out of his drawer again at some future time.

“Dak, I think Zan and Rath need to see this. I’m going to take it to them right now. Continue monitoring the transmissions in case the pompous Eluymerian general takes our monitoring device back out of his drawer.”

“Yes, sir.”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<<<<<<<>>>>>>>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

At the palace, Max and Liz huddled in front of the VidScreen with Alex and Isabel, as the supervisor from the spaceport watched from behind them. Max turned the VidScreen off and removed the small crystal, then he handed it to the supervisor.

“You were right, Kesvyn. This is important.”

“I thought you would want to know about it immediately, Zan. The fact that an Antarian craft… and possibly Antarian crewmen… are being held by Eluymerian soldiers… Then there is also the danger to the young woman, though it would seem that she was able to talk her way out of being executed… for now at least. Dak and I were thinking that this young woman looks very much like Varec’s wife.”

Max nodded. “It is Varec’s wife, Kesvyn.”

“But I saw her with Varec only yesterday, Zan. They were on their way to the CrashDown.”

“The young woman in the transmission is Amy DeLuca,” Max said. “But not the Amy we know here on Antar. I’m not entirely sure what is going on, Kesvyn. We may be receiving transmissions from the past…”

“Or from another dimension…” Alex offered.

Max nodded. “We don’t have any experience with dimensional theory or travel. We’ve never proven that alternate dimensions even exist… or that they don’t exist, of course. But we have had experience with traveling to the past.”

“If this was from a past timeline,” Alex said, “Amy would remember this happening to her… and she would have mentioned it, don’t you think?”

Max nodded. “It would seem so, Alex. “What is the difference between a timeline and a dimension anyway?”

“A timeline is a branch or alteration of the existing past,” Liz said. “It can change, depending on the factors that affect and shape it. But only one timeline can exist at a time. Once a part of a timeline is changed, the entire timeline is changed. It’s like going back and killing your grandfather… You would never be born, and the entire timeline would be changed. On the other hand, theoretically, at least, there could be any number of dimensions all existing at the same time, and each dimension could have its own progression of events. Dimensions wouldn’t have to be the same. In an alternate dimension, for instance, your dupes from New York might be living here on Antar now, and the Antarian scientists might not have ever created another set… so you might not exist. Or Kivar might still control Antar. There could be any number of possibilities. Max and Tess could be married…”

Max threw a pillow playfully at Liz. “Some things were meant to be, Liz, and some things never were. I don’t see that happening in any dimension!”

“Wasn’t Zan married to Ava in the past that Michael went back to,” Liz asked. “You know, the older Zan and Ava? Michael said they were quite happy together.”

“Yeah, they were,” Max agreed. “But they were an extension of the past… In that timeline, we were never killed, so we never went to Earth and never met you and Maria… The older me and Rath and Ava were kind of like… us before there was us, you know… or us if there never was an us.”

“That’s true.”

“Believe me, Liz,” Max said. “There’s only one girl for me in any dimension.”

“That remains to be seen, Max. But I like it that you think so.” Liz leaned over and kissed Max, which to Max’s embarrassment, seemed to have the approval of everyone in the room, judging by the smiles and applause, especially from Alex.

“Just wait, Alex. I’ll catch you and Isabel all wrapped up together sometime. Payback is coming.”

Isabel looked at Alex and grinned.

“Uh, moving right along here,” Alex said…

“Well, the question, as I see it,” Max said… “is what are we going to do with this information? And there’s something else that may possibly be involved here. I don’t know if it’s related, but Maya has had dreams… or perhaps visions… recently of something unexplainable going on. Maya saw Liz in a wheelchair, and she said that she thought her mother looked younger… like a teenager. She said that she saw someone shoot Liz from a tree, but then Jim Valenti chopped the tree down, and when she looked again, Liz was not shot. Then a couple of days later, Maya saw me in a coffin, and she said I looked younger, too.”

“It could be related, Max,” Liz agreed. “You and I were younger in Maya’s visions, and Amy is younger in this transmission…”

“But the transmission was sent today,” Kesvyn said.

“Yeah, Alex nodded, “but if we’re picking up some kind of vibes from, like, an alternate dimension or something, maybe we’re all still younger there… like Liz said… We wouldn’t have to be the same.”

“That could be,” Max agreed. “But then the thought occurs to me that maybe it might be wrong for us to interfere at all in another dimension’s… progression… or whatever. You know what I mean?”

“What?” Isabel said… “You mean if Liz was going to be killed, you wouldn’t want to save her, Max?”

“No, I didn’t say that, Iz. I’d want to… You know that. I just don’t know if I should.”

“But would you?” Isabel asked.

Max looked at Liz and sighed. “Yeah, I guess I’d have to defend Liz in any dimension. I just couldn’t not protect her, you know?”

“But maybe I’m supposed to die in that other dimension, Max,” Liz said. “Then you would be changing what was supposed to be.”

“Well, that’s assuming you subscribe to the theory that something is ‘supposed’ to go a certain way,” Max said. “What if it’s all random… just what we make it? If I saw you about to be harmed here, Liz, I’d protect you. What’s the difference? If it’s right for me to intervene in this dimension can it be wrong somewhere else? If I wasn’t around and something was going to happen to you and someone from another dimension saved you, I’d be thankful! I wouldn’t question what was supposed to be, because I don’t believe in destiny.”

“Like us being together?” Liz asked.

“Well, sure, that’s… I believe in that,” Max said. But that’s a destiny that I made… that we made… together. It didn’t just happen without our help. We had to put something into it.”

“That’s true,” Liz said. “Future Max tried to change our destiny once.”

“And he screwed it up for all of us,” Alex reminded Liz… until Max and Michael fixed it.”

“But he did it,” Max said. “And we did it again… by changing it back. ’Meant to be’ and ’Destiny’ are real… but they’re what we make them. If something works out well, we say that it was meant to be. If it works out badly, we say that it wasn’t meant to be. It refers to the ‘rightness’ of something. But that doesn’t make things happen. Only we can affect our destinies.

Max looked up to see Kyle standing there.

“Max, you’ve got visitors.”

“Who is it, Kyle?”

“I think you’d better see for yourself.”

Kyle turned and motioned to someone to come in. Michael and Maria walked through the door… and there were two other people with them.

Max, Liz, Alex, Isabel, and the spaceport supervisor, Kesvyn, all stood up as the guests entered. Their mouths were open far enough that they could have been shouting, but no words seemed to come out.

“Alex Whitman and Liz… uh… Evans…” Kyle said with a wry grin, obviously loving their reactions… “I want you to meet Alex Whitman and Liz Parker.”



tbc

Coming Next: Max and Liz’s “guests,” Alex and Liz, are overwhelmed by the palace and Antar and unsure what has happened to them. Max and the others realize that there no longer is a moral argument or question about helping them. The questions now become merely when and how… and what to do with… well, another Alex and Liz.
isndbreeze
Fan Fic Devotee
Posts: 348
Joined: Sat Jun 29, 2002 7:13 pm

The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by isndbreeze »

The Night The Dreams Died



Alex And Liz In Wonderland

Chapter 9
(TFFOR Chapter 57)

IX



Max, Liz, Alex, Isabel, and Spaceport Director, Kesvyn had been watching the transmissions received from the lost Antarian space ship and discussing dimensional theories when Kyle walked in with a broad smile on his face. Max knew instantly that whatever Kyle had to tell them, it was probably going to be interesting, but even he could not have guessed what Kyle was grinning about.

“You’ve got visitors, Max.”

“Who is it, Kyle?”

“I think you’d better see for yourself.”

Kyle turned and motioned to someone to come in, and Michael and Maria walked through the door followed by two other people.

Max stood up, and his mouth opened, but he found himself momentarily at a loss for words. He looked at Liz, who was standing beside him… then at Alex. If Max appeared to be shocked, though, Liz and Alex’s reactions were of stunned disbelief.

“Alex Whitman and Liz… uh… Evans…” Kyle said with a wry grin, obviously loving the reactions the new arrivals had elicited from his friends… “I want you to meet Alex Whitman and Liz Parker.”

For several moments, there was only silence. The younger Liz and Alex stared in awe at the walls, the ceilings, the floors, and the decorations of the palace… then they looked at the two people standing in front of them. These people appeared to be a few years older… but there was no doubting who they were.

“Oh… Oh! I’m so sorry,” Liz Evans said, suddenly realizing that someone needed to say something. “I uh, I guess we must all seem like idiots standing here with our mouths hanging open. It’s just that… that…”

“Hello,” Liz Parker said, extending her hand politely and swallowing. Liz Evans took Liz Parker’s hand and shook it… and both smiled.

“Something tells me we’ve got a very interesting evening ahead of us,” Liz Evans said. “Why don’t you two have a seat and make yourselves… at home. We aren’t usually so unsocial. We’re just all kind of in shock right now.”

Liz Parker nodded. “Yeah, I’m right in there with you. Are you… Are you…?”

Liz Evans nodded. “Yeah… I guess I’m you. It looks like it anyway… And I presume you would be Alex Whitman,” she said, extending her hand to the younger Alex.

Still at a loss for words, Alex nodded and took her hand.

“I guess this is your, uh… doppelganger, or something,” Liz Evans said, indicating the older Alex. “This is his wife, Isabel… and this is my husband, Max… or King Zan, as he insists I call him.”

Alex looked at Max in surprise.

“She’s kidding,” Max said.

Liz giggled. “Well, he is the king… but since I’m married to him, he usually lets me just call him ‘Your Majesty,’” she said, giving the younger couple a wink.

Realizing that she was trying to break the ice and make them feel more at ease, the younger Alex and Liz seemed to relax a bit, and they smiled.

“Should I… uh… call you… King Zan or Your Majesty,” Alex asked hesitantly.

“Yeah, those will do,” Max said with a trace of a smile. Liz slapped him playfully on the arm.

“You can call him Max… and you can call me Liz. That’s Isabel and Alex over there, as I said before… and this is Kesvyn. Kesvyn’s the Director of the Spaceport… and our friend. It appears that you’ve already met Michael and Maria.

“Hi,” the younger Alex said, raising his hand. Liz Parker smiled and added a “Hi” of her own.

“Sit down,” Max said, pointing at a sofa. “That’s a royal order.”

Liz and Alex sat down together on the sofa.

“I guess the first thing we… the first thing I need to know,” Max said “…is how you got here. The second thing would be where you came from?”

“We’re not sure,” Alex said sincerely. “Liz had these orbs, and we wanted to contact Maria, because she’s been missing, and instead of contacting Maria, we wound up here.”

“Well, actually, we did find Maria,” Liz corrected, gesturing toward Michael and Maria. “We were transported to a beach where Maria was… only it wasn’t our Maria. I mean, it is Maria but… you know…”

Max and Liz Evans both nodded. “The orbs seem to have powers that we still have not discovered,” Max said. “We know they can be used for communication… and in some cases, for healing. And now, it appears that you were able to transport yourselves here to Antar with them.”

“Antar…” Alex repeated, incredulous. Hearing it still made him shake his head in disbelief. “How did we get all the way across the galaxy to some planet with an ocean that looks like… lite beer? And what are you doing here, Max?”

“I live here,” Max said. “It’s my planet.”

“Well, yeah, I know that,” Alex said. “But when we left Earth, you were missing…”

“Wait, you said that Maria was missing,” Liz said.

Alex nodded. “Well, you see, Maria, Michael, Isabel, and Max were shot by these Army sharpshooters. Liz was, too. The Army claimed the sharpshooters were drunk and acting on their own, but we never believed it.”

“When did this happen,” Liz Evans asked.

“At graduation,” Liz Parker said.

Liz Evans put her hand over her mouth and gasped, remembering her own premonitions and the close call she and the others had had at their own graduation.

“And the others… Are they…?”

“Supposedly dead,” Liz Parker answered.

“They were dead,” Alex insisted. “I was there. I saw them. Well, Isabel and Maria were dead anyway. Michael and Max escaped on Michael’s bike. They were shot as they escaped and were found dead at the edge of town where the bike crashed.”

“Found by the Army or FBI, I assume,” the older Alex said.

The younger Alex nodded. “There were funerals for all of them, but just the other day, Sheriff Valenti opened the graves and found out that the bodies in the coffins were dummies… made out of latex and paraffin. And Liz had a vision of Maria trying to contact her.”

“Maria?” Liz repeated, surprised, looking at Maria and Michael. Michael shrugged.

“Well,” the younger Liz said, “Maria did say something about Isabel needing to help her.”

“Why didn’t Isabel do it herself,” Liz Evans asked. “Isabel could have dreamwalked you.”

“I don’t know,” Liz Parker replied.

“I must have been injured,” Isabel said, placing herself in the place of the younger Isabel. “I’m sure that I would have dreamwalked you if I had been able to and if Maria needed help. Do you know where they were when she tried to contact you?”

Liz Parker shook her head. “I think they’re on the Army base somewhere.”

Max paled visibly. “I hope not,” he said, remembering his own experiences in the White Room.

“Alex said you were shot, too, Liz,” Isabel said. “I take it, you weren’t seriously hurt?”

“She was shot in the head and spine,” Alex answered for her. “Liz was in a coma for over four months. No one knew if she would survive. Since she came out of the coma, she’s been paralyzed.”

“Omigod! The visions Maya’s been having!” Liz Evans exclaimed. “Maya saw a young woman who looked like me in a wheelchair, and she thought she was in some kind of danger. She said that a man in a tree wanted to shoot her, but Jim Valenti cut the tree down and chased the bad man off.”

“Yeah! That really happened!” Liz Parker said. “I knew Sheriff Valenti had that chainsaw in his hand for a reason! He said that he confiscated it from some illegal loggers in the park. He’s been protecting me. He won’t say so, but I know it.”

Liz suddenly realized that, for someone who was supposedly paralyzed, she looked the picture of good health.

“Oh! Yeah, I know… I’m standing up… I really was in a wheelchair, though. I don’t know what happened. When Alex and I used the orbs and we appeared here, I wasn’t paralyzed anymore. Do you think the orbs could have healed me?”

Max nodded then slowly shook his head. “The orbs probably didn’t heal you. They teleported your essence here and reassembled you the way your DNA says that you are supposed to be assembled.”

“So… if I go back… I’ll still be paralyzed?”

“Maybe,” Max said. “Or maybe not.”

“You could heal her, Max,” Maria said.

Max nodded. “If there was anything wrong with her, I could… but there’s nothing wrong with her now. The orbs reassembled her perfectly. The question is, when she goes back, will she be reassembled according to her DNA plan or the way the orbs found her? And why didn’t the orbs reassemble her the way they found her when they brought her here? There’s a lot that we don’t know about the orbs.”

“You could check her out, Max,” the older Alex said. “Maybe you could tell something.”

Max stood up and walked over to Liz then placed his hands on her back. As he stood there, the others noticed that his face showed surprise at first, then concern. Max felt Liz’s arms then picked her wrist up and checked for the pulse. Then he picked up Alex’s wrist and checked for his pulse. Finally, Max sat back down.

“You gonna tell us what that was all about, Max?” the older Alex asked.

“What do you mean,” Max said.

“I mean that look on your face. Something wasn’t what you were expecting. Even I could see that.”

“I don’t know,” Max said, shaking his head. “I’m not a doctor or a scientist. I’m probably not qualified to speculate.”

“You’re all we’ve got, Max,” Isabel said. “Varec’s not here. Speculate!

“What is it?” the younger Liz asked.

Max sighed. “You don’t have a pulse or a heartbeat… Neither of you do.”

Alex picked up his left hand with his right hand and felt for a pulse, then he tried to feel the pulse in the carotid artery in his neck. “There’s gotta be a pulse, Max. We wouldn’t be alive if there was no pulse. You can’t live with no heartbeat… Can you?”

“Not that I know of,” Max said.

Not finding his own pulse, Alex felt Liz’s wrist. Then he looked at Max. “Oh, sh*t! I think we’re dead!”

“You’re not dead,” Max said. “I don’t understand what’s going on, but I can vouch that you’re definitely alive… heartbeat or not.”

“How can they not have a heartbeat and still be alive,” Isabel asked. “Maybe you just couldn’t feel it, Max.”

“No, No… Wait…” Michael said, thinking. “Suppose they aren’t really here.”

“Of course they’re here,” Isabel said. “You see them. I see them. They’re sitting right there on the sofa.” Isabel touched the younger Alex and Liz on the arm and face. “They’re here,” Michael. You can’t feel a ghost. I can feel Liz and Alex. They’re as real as you and me!”

“Maybe not,” Michael said. “Well, yes and no, actually. Suppose that the orbs reassembled a duplicate set… a copy… of them here, but the original set is still on Earth.”

“That’s ridiculous,” Isabel said. “You don’t make copies of people. Human minds can barely think for one body. I don’t mean that as an insult, but humans don’t even have special powers… Their minds certainly aren’t developed enough to control two bodies at once.”

“Maybe they don’t have to,” Michael said. “Suppose their real bodies back on Earth are, like, in a coma or something, but their minds are here… sort of taking a vacation… in these other bodies.”

“Michael, you need help.” Isabel said.

“Don’t mind Michael,” she said to the younger Alex, adding with a tone of sarcasm, “He’s just swallowed too much of our ‘Lite Beer’ Sea lately! I thought it looked like the beach was getting bigger!”

“No, No, Isabel,” Max said. “It makes sense really. Think about it. The orbs could transport a DNA pattern and a memory core much more easily and efficiently than they could two whole human bodies. Michael may just have something there.”

“Uh, guys,” the younger Alex interrupted. “I hate to just butt in here, but since we’re talking about Liz and me, could somebody tell us what this all means?”

“I wish I could, Alex,” Max said. “If Michael is right, though… and we really aren’t certain about that… It’s only a theory… then your real bodies could still be on Earth, probably lying comatose where you left them, waiting for your return.”

“Yeah,” Michael said… “So enjoy these while you have them, ‘cause they may be disposables. They may just be on loan for your holiday, so use ‘em and abuse ‘em. Have some fun!”

“Michael!” Isabel exclaimed.

“Just kidding, Iz! Don’t get in a frit!”

“Talk about tiny minds,” Isabel fumed.

“Okay, I get it,” the younger Alex said, “but wouldn’t I still have to have a heartbeat… and be breathing,” he added, holding his hand under his nose.

“I would have thought so,” Max said. “But it’s possible that your bodies back on Earth are breathing and beating for you, and these bodies are… are… well, I hate to use Michael’s term, but… disposables… You know, just temporary for the time you’re here.”

“So… what happens if we’re still here when the expiration date… or the warranty… runs out?” Alex asked.

Isabel shook her head. “You see! You see what you guys did?”

“Well, it’s a reasonable question, Iz,” Michael said.

“Oh!” Isabel huffed, waving her hand. “Alex, if the orbs brought you… that is, your essences or whatever… here and created some kind of temporary bodies for them… I’m sure that when these bodies… when they… when they… you know…”

“Say it, Isabel,” Michael said, with an ‘I-told-you-so’ grin. “Say ‘expire.’”

“I was going to say, when they are no longer needed…” Isabel said. “You will be returned to your regular bodies on Earth.”

“Maybe you’re all being concerned needlessly,” Max said to Michael and Isabel as well as to the younger Alex and Liz. “I think it’s likely that the bodies you have now will last as long as they’re needed… however long that may be. The orbs aren’t limited by our conceptions or limitations. These bodies could have unlimited life spans… at least they may last as long as your real bodies on Earth still survive to support them.”

“That makes sense,” Michael said. Isabel nodded.

“These bodies have fewer moving parts,” Michael said, “so maybe they won’t wear out as fast.”

“Michael!” Isabel exclaimed, glaring at him again.

“What?”

“Okay, Liz Evans said. “If that’s out of the way, can we move on to something else here? Liz… Oh, Wow! It’s hard to address myself by my own name! I feel like I’m looking in a mirror talking to myself and somebody needs to lock me up!”

Everyone laughed.

Liz tried again. “Liz… Maya said that she saw Max in one of her visions, and he was in a box… a coffin, I think, and he fell out. Do you know what that was about?”

Liz Parker nodded. “When Sheriff Valenti wanted to open the coffins and he already had Max’s dug up, Judge Lewis showed up and blocked him with a cease and desist order, but Kyle pulled on the ropes holding the coffin up, and the coffin fell and broke open. That’s when the fake body rolled out.”

“That must be what Maya saw,” Liz Evans said.

“I had visions, too, Liz Parker said. “I saw your Golden Sea… Oh, and Alex, it’s salt water, not lite beer.”

“Damn, now you tell me… after I came all the way across the galaxy to get here!”

Everyone laughed again.

“And I know the names of all your children,” Liz Parker said.

Liz Evans seemed shocked by this information. “You know their names?”

Liz Parker nodded. “I thought I was seeing my own future or something and they were my children. I felt like I was right here sometimes.”

“You must have been seeing through Maya,” Liz Evans said. “Her ability to see and communicate across the universe sometimes seems to leave her open to a sort of back flow of information. Some of the Antarians Too said that they had had occasional brief flashes of Antar, too.”

“After we found out that the body in Max’s grave was a fake… and that the others were all fakes too…” Liz Parker said, “we started wondering where the real bodies were. We’re pretty sure they were taken to the Army base. I had a flash of Max calling me when I touched his ring. And later I had the vision of Maria asking for our help… so I believe that all of them could still be alive. But I think they’re in danger, and one or more of them may possibly be badly hurt. I haven’t been able to make a move without Judge Lewis showing up and trying to stop me or convince me that I should leave Roswell or that I should allow myself to be committed to an insane asylum he wants to send me to somewhere in Arizona.”

“Judge Lewis,” the older Alex mumbled. “A real friend he turned out to be!”

Kyle, standing beside Alex, nodded. “I seem to remember saying those exact words to Dad once… exactly! When Judge Lewis had Dad fired.”

“So is anyone looking for Max and Maria… and Michael and Isabel…” Liz Evans asked.

“The Sheriff has been helping all he could. And I think Amy went to the base to try to find Maria herself. When we left, she still hadn’t come back.”

Max winced. “I hope that’s not because of what my worst fears are suggesting. I know Amy. She won’t give up. They’ll have to shoot her to stop her… and they will.”

“Mom would give them a fight,” Maria said. “She wouldn’t go down easy. She may not look formidable, but you have to know Mom. She probably could take on that whole base by herself… if the right incentive was there.”

“To find you?” Isabel asked.

Maria nodded. “Yeah… to find me. I hope she’s okay.”

“I’m sure she is,” Michael said soothingly. “We probably should be worrying more about the poor soldiers she meets up with.”

Maria laughed and nodded, but deep inside, she was worried about Amy, even knowing that this Amy was not the mother that she knew here on Antar… and that if anything happened to this Amy it would not affect her mother here in any way.

“Do you have saber tooth tigers here,” Liz Parker asked out of the blue.

Liz Evans laughed. “You saw Jim’s pawgor? That must have given you a pause!”

Liz Parker smiled. “I saw a saber tooth tiger playing with a little boy.”

“That would be Danyy,” Liz Evans said. “Danyy is Jim and Kathleen’s son. He can talk to animals.”

“Jim and Kathleen?” Liz Parker asked.

Liz Evans nodded. “Kathleen Topolsky.”

Liz Parker looked shocked. “Topolsky? Here? She’s working against us! Topolsky is FBI!”

“She was,” Liz Evans said. “She’s not anymore… ours isn’t anyway. Kathleen was betrayed by her own people and locked up and tortured for a long time after she tried to help us. They made up a story that she had been killed in a fire at an insane asylum…”

“Like Judge Lewis wants to put me in,” Liz Parker said.

Liz Evans shuddered involuntarily, wondering if it could be a coincidence. “Don’t let him do that,” she said to the younger Liz. “Fight it!”

Liz Parker nodded. “I always thought that the Sheriff would marry Amy DeLuca. They seemed to have a thing for each other.”

“Well, our Jim married Kathleen,” Isabel said. “And Amy married Varec, a young Antarian scientist. Both of them could not be happier. But if you’re from an alternate dimension, as we think you may be, then there’s no guarantee that things will happen the same way with your Jim and Amy. They could wind up marrying each other.”

Liz Parker smiled. “I have this feeling about that.”

A staff person came into the room and whispered to Liz Evans, and Liz nodded then stood up.

“Dinner is ready. If everyone would like to head for the dining room, we can continue this conversation there.” Turning to Max, she added, “After we eat, I’d like to take Liz to Kyyks and get her something to wear. We don’t know how long they may be here. Would you like to come, too, Alex?”

“Uh, well… yeah, sure, I guess.”

“Or I could take you out to Jim’s place to see his pawgor,” the older Alex said.

Alex brightened then looked at Liz Parker.

“No… that’s okay. I’ll stay with Liz. I probably should get another shirt and some pants so I don’t have to wear the same ones all the time. Maybe we can go see the paguar together later. We really need to get back to Earth as soon as possible, though… if we can figure out how to do that. The others still need us.”

The older Alex smiled understandingly. “It’s called a Pawgor,” he said, correcting his younger self’s pronunciation.

Max pulled out seats for Liz Parker and for his wife, and both sat down at the table.

“you’ve got to be twice the gentleman today, huh, Max,” Liz said with a smile. “It’s good for you.”

Max smiled but didn’t reply.

“This looks really good,” Alex said, looking longingly at the food on his plate and the bowls of other foods set out to choose from. “It smells good, too! For some reason, I’m really starved.”

“Me, too,” Liz agreed.

“Are your bodies made to eat,” Michael asked. “I mean, you don’t breathe or have a heartbeat. Can you… you know?”

Isabel’s head sank slowly down onto the table, and she covered her face with her hands and moaned.

Alex looked at the piece of yegg steak on his fork and slowly put it back down.

Liz seemed unsure what to do with her food. “Uh, can I be excused for a moment? I… I really need to… I think I forgot to wash my hands.”

“Right down the hall on the left,” Isabel said without raising her head. “You’ll see it.”

“Thanks,” Liz said, standing up and leaving the table.

“Michael,” Isabel mumbled under her breath, “If the end of this day arrives… and you’re still alive, it’ll be a frikkin’ miracle.”

“Well, it’s something they needed to know,” Michael said. “I wouldn’t want them to blow up like balloons and burst or something. I’d never forgive myself.”

“You need to worry more about me forgiving you, Michael. Your life in the immediate future depends on it… and right now… it’s not looking good. You’ve passed critical, you’re already on life support!”

Liz returned to the table and sat back down then looked at Alex and smiled.

“Is everything… alright,” Alex asked hesitantly.

Liz nodded and picked up her fork, taking a big bite of the grelliats on her plate. “Mmmmmm… This is soooo good!”

That was all Alex needed. He attacked the yegg steak, grelliats, and other foods on his plate like a starving man.

Isabel picked up her fork but seemed to hesitate as she decided whether it would look better sticking out of a grelliat or Michael’s back. She gave Michael a quick stare then stabbed the grelliat and put it in her mouth.

“Hey, it was better that they know now,” Michael said. “I’m only trying to look out for them.”



tbc

Coming up: Liz and Alex see the town and meet the others, and everyone tries to figure out how to get them back home again… and where to send them back to, dimensionally, since they seem to have come from an alternate dimension. They also discuss plans to assist them in finding and rescuing the others. Meanwhile, in The Night The Dreams Died, Jeff Parker discovers Liz and Alex unconscious together above the CrashDown, and Judge Lewis, learning of their condition, sees a light at the end of his tunnel, with a little intervention on his part.
isndbreeze
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The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by isndbreeze »

The Night The Dreams Died



Dead And Furious

Chapter 10


X



Kyle Valenti lay sprawled across a leather easy chair, one leg over the arm of the chair, watching football on TV with his father, Sheriff Jim Valenti, when the phone rang.

“Awwww… geez,” Jim groaned. “One of these days I’m gonna get the number of every salesperson who calls me when I’m busy, and I’m gonna call them back every day for a week while they’re watching a game or having their dinner! See how they like it!” Jim set the bowl of popcorn he and Kyle were sharing down on Kyle’s lap and walked into the dining room to get the phone. Several minutes later, he returned.

“Who was that on the phone, Dad?”

Kyle continued watching the game as he popped another piece of popcorn into his mouth, but after some moments had passed, he noticed that his Dad had not answered, and he looked up from the TV. Jim was sitting down with his head in his hands… and it looked like… but that couldn’t be.

“Dad? Are you okay?”

Kyle muted the TV and extricated himself from his chair. “What’s wrong, Dad?”

Jim shook his head and looked up, clearly making a forced effort to appear calm and in control. But his eyes were red, and Kyle knew that something had to be very, very wrong for it to have affected his father this deeply.

“That was the Sheriff from Copper City, Bob Horton, on the phone,” Jim said. “He got a report that a car went over the side of Bald Mountain near the upper pass earlier today. Horton and a couple of his deputies checked it out, and some climbers climbed down to the wreck. There wasn’t much left… Fire was real hot they said… pretty much burned everything up. No bodies left. It was a straight down drop from the top… ‘bout 700 feet accordin’ to the Sheriff.”

“Do they have any idea who it was, Dad?”

Jim nodded and swallowed hard. “They found the bumper with the license plate still on it… about a hundred feet from the burned out car… It was Amy’s.”

Kyle opened his mouth, but at first nothing came out. Then he put his hand on his father’s shoulder…

“Dad, I’m… I’m sorry. I… Is there anything I can do?”

Jim shook his head and wiped the corners of his reddened eyes.

“No, son. What’s already done… can’t be changed. I’ll have to tell Maria…” As soon as he had said it, Jim realized his mistake. Maria wasn’t around anymore to tell. She was presumed dead since being shot at graduation five and a half months before, but Jim had entertained some hope that Liz’s visions and premonitions might be right and Maria and the others might actually, somehow, turn up alive. He had looked forward to giving that news to Amy. Now there was no Amy to give it to.

“I’ve got to tell the folks that knew her,” Jim said. “We should have a memorial or somethin’. Sheriff Horton said there’s no body to bury.” Jim closed his eyes and breathed in deeply again to maintain his composure. Then he picked up his hat and put it on his head.

“Where you goin’, Dad?”

“Over to see Reverend Garrett… see what can be done about a memorial for Amy. Then I’m gonna check on Liz Parker. And I reckon I’ll have to call Bryan Hollings, the Editor over at the News Journal and let him know… for the paper. Maybe Hansen can do that for me.” Jim paused for a moment. “No… No, I ought to do it myself. It’s Amy.”

Jim closed the door behind him, and Kyle swallowed something that felt like a lump in his throat then sat back down slowly in his chair. But the game didn’t seem to matter anymore.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<<<<<<<>>>>>>>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Jim climbed the steps beside the CrashDown and knocked on Jeff and Nancy’s door. Then he waited. For several moments, he watched the birds fly back and forth between the trees and the telephone lines across the street then fly off again to some points unknown. As he watched, he became aware of a muffled sound, like someone crying, coming from inside the apartment. He knocked on the door again.

“Jeff? Are you in there? Is everything alright?”

The door opened.

“Sheriff! Thank God! We’ve already called Doc Jennings. I was going to call you next.”

“What’s wrong, Jeff,” Jim asked, noticing that Nancy appeared distraught and had been crying.

“It’s Liz. She’s unconscious… in the study… Come on.”

Jim went in quickly. “Did something happen to her?”

“We don’t know,” Jeff said. “She and Alex were up here together, and they both seem to have just collapsed or passed out or something. We can’t wake them up.”

“Did you check your stove, Jeff? You could have a gas leak.”

“It’s electric,” Jeff said.

As they entered the study, Jim saw Alex sitting on a sofa. He appeared to be asleep. Liz was leaning on his arm, and she, too, had every appearance of being merely asleep. Jim leaned over the motionless forms of the two teens and checked their eyes, lifting each one’s eyelids and shining his light into them.

“They’re alive, Jeff. Their pupils react to light.” He pressed his fingers to each one’s neck in turn. “Good heartbeats. They almost seem to just be sleeping, Jeff.”

“I know, but we can’t wake them up, Jim. We thought that, too, but… they won’t wake up.”

Nancy began to cry again softly.

“We’ll figure out what’s wrong, Nancy,” Jim said, turning to reassure her. “Whatever it is.”

“Thanks, Jim.”

“You say Doc Jennings is on the way?”

Jeff nodded.

“Good. If Doc can’t wake them up, we may have to take them to the hospital for some tests.”

“Not Roswell General.” Jeff shook his head emphatically.

“Why not, Jeff? It’s a good hospital.”

“I know it’s supposed to be, Jim, but… it’s just that when Liz was in there before… after the shooting… well, I really think she would have died if we hadn’t got her out when we did. I know they saved her life right after the shooting, but then, about a month after the shooting, she took a sudden unexplained turn for the worse, and she wasn’t improving after that… Just the opposite.”

“You think someone was doing something to her, Jeff?”

Jeff shrugged. “I don’t want to think it, Jim, but I don’t know what else to think. When I took her out of Roswell General and hired Vera to be her personal nurse and just had Doc Jennings check up on her regularly, she stabilized again then began to improve.”

Jim seemed concerned. “If they can’t be awakened, they’ll have to be taken somewhere, Jeff. I don’t think there’s any place else qualified closer than a hundred miles.”

“If she has to go there… will you keep an eye on her, Sheriff?”

“You know I will, Jeff.”

“Okay… but if I see her condition getting any worse… I’m pulling her out of there just like
before.”

Jim nodded and turned around, as Doc Jennings came into the room with Nancy. Jeff pointed at the sofa, and Doctor Jennings pulled out a small light and his stethoscope and proceeded to do what Jim had done… with the same results.

“They seem healthy enough,” Doctor Jennings said. “Doesn’t seem to be any reason why they should both be unconscious. You checked for gas leaks?”

Jeff nodded. “No gas… just electric.”

“How about in the restaurant downstairs? You could have gas leaking up through the floors into the apartment.”

Jeff shook his head.

“Grills can produce carbon monoxide,” Doctor Jennings said, looking at the cuticles on Liz and Alex’s hands. “Hmm. They don’t have signs of carbon monoxide poisoning, though. The cuticles aren’t rosy. Could they have eaten or drank something that was toxic, or… Jeff, I hate to ask this, but… could Liz have been taking drugs?”

Jeff bristled visibly. “No!”

“Well, it’s just that kids sometimes do something crazy when they’re together that they wouldn’t do by themselves,” Doctor Jennings said. “I didn’t think Liz would be doing anything, either, but… well, kids, you know?”

“My kid,” Jeff said. “No! Liz was not taking drugs, Doctor. I’m sure Alex wasn’t either.”

“Was she on any medication that I didn’t give her, Jeff? Something she got from another doctor maybe?”

Jeff shook his head.

Doctor Jennings noticed the two orbs where they had fallen down between Alex and Liz. He picked them up and looked at them briefly, running his fingertips over the unusual symbols on each one.

“Indian souvenirs,” he said, handing them to Jim. “One of them must have been over to the reservation and visited the souvenir shop.” Jim nodded and took the orbs.

“Well, Sheriff… I can’t find anything physically wrong with Liz… or the Whitman boy either. I don’t rightly know what else to do ‘cept to take them for some tests to see if they have anything in their systems that might have poisoned them. I’ll have to get permission from the Whitman boy’s parents… and your permission, of course, too, Jeff… for Liz. Have the Whitman’s been notified?”

“We… we didn’t think about it,” Jeff said. “I’ll do it right now.” Jeff left the room and returned after several minutes.

“They’re going to meet us at the hospital.”

“Okay,” Doctor Jennings said. “Can I use your phone, Jeff? I’ll call for an ambulance.”

Jeff handed the phone to Doctor Jennings. “Jim, am I doing the right thing?”

“What else can you do, Jeff? If something’s wrong with Liz, we need to know what… and it’s better we find out sooner than later… when it could be too late.”

Jeff nodded. “I know Jim… I just can’t shake this feeling that this is more than it appears to be and I may be doing the wrong thing. But like you said, it’s the only choice we can make. Their lives could depend on it.”

Jim swallowed and looked at Jeff hesitantly. “Jeff… there’s another reason I came over here. I really hate to add anything to your problems right now… but Sheriff Horton, over in Copper City, called me on the phone about two hours ago to tell me that they were working an accident… a car went over the side of Bald Mountain near the upper pass. Horton and a couple of his deputies checked it out, and it was Amy’s car. There were no survivors.”

“Oh No!” Nancy Parker gasped, putting her hands over her mouth. “Your Amy, Sheriff?”

Jim hesitated momentarily, caught by surprise by Nancy’s spontaneous remark, and Nancy realized what she had said.

“Oh, I’m sorry, Jim, I didn’t mean that… well… It’s just that I know you two were pretty close.”

“It’s alright,” Jim said, nodding thoughtfully. “I know what you meant. Yeah… my Amy.”

Jim rubbed the corner of his eye with the knuckle of his index finger and sniffed. “I think I must be catching something. Anyway, Jeff, I talked to Reverend Garrett, and there’s going to be a small memorial tomorrow at 3 PM. I’ll understand, of course, if you and Nancy can’t come.”

“We’ll be there, Jim,” Jeff said. “Unless something happens to Liz at the hospital or she needs us… I think we can take an hour or so away to go to the memorial. Will it be at the church?”

“No. It’s going to be at Amy’s house. She has a beautiful backyard garden with hanging arbors. It’s big enough to accommodate everyone. And Amy would appreciate the fact that everyone will be there to see and admire her gardens, I think. She worked hard on them. It seems only right. It’ll feel like Amy’s spirit is there.”

“What’s going to become of her house, Jim?”

“I don’t know yet. We’re looking into that.”

“Well, we’ll be there, Jim, barring any problems with Liz, of course. You can count on us.”

“Thanks, Jeff,” Jim said. “I know Amy would be pleased to know you and Nancy were there.”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~<<<<<<<>>>>>>>~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

-The Next Day-

Jim sat down next to Jeff and Nancy Parker. Amy had arranged her gardens with natural-looking rock benches to sit on all around the outside edges of an open space surrounding a central flowering kiosk with a small clear pool fed by water falling over a layered stack of rocks. The garden had a naturally canopied but breezy, airy feeling, like a small glade and stream in the woods, while at the same time being a wonderland of greenery and flowers of every imaginable type. Jim always thought that if he looked hard enough, he’d probably find a little fairy or two somewhere among the flowers.

“Glad you could make it, Jeff… Hi, Nancy… How’s Liz?”

“Same,” Nancy said. “No change.”

“Yeah, I checked on her earlier this morning,” Jim said. “The doctors said that her signs were all good. There’s that at least.”

Nancy smiled, but it was a smile tempered by sadness.

The Reverend Garrett cleared his throat and looked around the gardens. For such short notice, it appeared that quite a large number of people had shown up. He saw Jim and Kyle Valenti seated with Jeff and Nancy Parker. He saw Brody Davis, who owned the UFO museum, and his daughter. He saw Bryan Hollings, editor of the Roswell Daily Journal. He saw Alex’s parents and his grandparents. A little further back, he saw what appeared to be the entire former football team from Roswell High. Kyle smiled as he saw that his teammates had all shown up. He guessed that he shouldn’t be surprised really. At Roswell High, Amy’s feisty attitude and willingness to help out in almost any cause had gained her a lot of respect and more than a few friends. Looking across the kiosk, Reverend Garrett thought he saw more than a few teachers and students from Roswell High. He saw people he knew well and people who had not graced his church in many a year… some perhaps never.

“My brothers and sisters,” Reverend Garrett began… “We have come today to honor the cherished memory of one who has meant a lot to all of us, Amelia Marie DeLuca… Amy, as we all knew her. As we sit here in her gardens and feel the breeze on our faces… hear the singing of the birds… and smell the eternal summery fragrance of the flowers that she loved and cared for… we cannot help but feel that Amy is here with us even as we speak…”

Jim noticed several gasps from the other side of the kiosk.

“Truly,” Reverend Garrett continued, “Amy’s indomitable spirit is here in the garden that she loved, and she is doubtless smiling as she sees all the people who loved her… and all the friends who have come here to remember her today.”

There were several more gasps. Jim tried to glance back inconspicuously, but he didn’t want to spoil the solemn atmosphere of the occasion.

“Every person here today has something to remember Amy for… her selflessness… her willingness to jump in and help out whenever she was needed… especially those less fortunate… her indomitable spirit… her wit and seemingly boundless energy… her smiling… her… uh… smiling…”

Reverend Garrett glanced up then stood there, his mouth open. Jim and Kyle both turned around. Most of the others present already had.

“Amy?”

Amy was standing behind them, arms crossed, but what was on her face did not look like a smile.

“What’s this, Jim?”

“My God, Amy! You’re alive!”

“I’m gone for a day, Jim, and you have my funeral?” Amy whacked Jim on the arm, and he started to laugh.

“Oh, and now it’s funny, too? I’ve been walking for two days in the hot sun with no car to get back from that base out there in the desert. Nobody came by on that God-forsaken desert road to even offer me a ride! Nobody came to get me or even look for me! I’m hot! I’m bothered! I’m thirsty! I’m filthy with desert dust! My skin feels like that road out there looks! My hair will probably never be clean again! And you’re laughing? Well, I don’t see anything funny!”

“Not funny, Amy,” Jim said, shaking his head. “Relief! I thought you were dead. Sheriff Horton, over in Copper City, said that your car went off the upper pass on Bald Mountain and burned up. He said there were no survivors. We thought…” Jim reached out and pulled Amy into his arms. “We thought you were dead, Amy,” he said, his voice breaking.

“I’m sorry, Jim,” Amy said. “I’m just frustrated. I almost got killed getting onto that base, I got lectured by a pompous general and had guns pointed at me. My car was shot up… WITH ME IN IT! Then I had to walk back to town. And on top of everything, I didn’t find Maria.”

Jim held Amy closer and kissed her on the forehead. “We’ll find Maria, Amy… together.”

Amy nodded.

“You know, Amy, all these people came to see you… Well, to remember you, but… Anyway, it seems a shame to waste a good occasion like this, a nice summer day… with a preacher present and all…”

Amy pulled back and looked at Jim with a look of incredulity.

“Will you marry me, Amy?”

“You’re out of your mind, Jim! Look at me! I’m dustier than the desert right now! I’m hot! I’m sweaty! I’m in a bad mood! And you want to… You want to… you… you want to… what?”

“Marry me, Amy.”

Amy just stood there, her mouth open. Then she shook her dusty clothes and wiped her arms. Desert dust fell off of both. Amy looked at Reverend Garrett. “Well, what are you standing there for? The man could change his mind! Marry us!”

There was a huge roar of laughter and applause from all over the garden.

“Jim, if we do this… we can have a proper wedding later… with Maria, right?”

Jim smiled and nodded.

“Well, come on,” Amy said to Reverend Garrett. “Let’s do this! It’s about time that something good happened to me today!”

Reverend Garrett nodded, still not quite over the shock of everything that was happening.

“Dearly beloved… we are gathered here today to remember… uh… to join this man and this woman in holy matrimony.”

“I do,” Amy said.

“I haven’t got to that part yet,” Reverend Garrett said under his breath.

“I do, too,” Jim said, pulling Amy to him and kissing her.

Reverend Garrett looked at them and tossed his ceremony book aside.

“Then if anyone knows any reason why this man and this woman should not be married, let them speak now or forever hold their peace… I pronounce you man and wife… You may kiss the bride.”

Jim pulled back and looked at Amy, smiled, and wiped some dust off his lips.

“I told you I was dusty,” Amy said, smiling. Jim just grinned… then he kissed her again.



tbc

Coming Next: Amy and Jim work together to try to find out what happened to Maria and the others, and Judge Lewis takes advantage of Liz and Alex’s condition.
Anonymous

Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by Anonymous »

Oh my God!!!!!! That was fabulous! That wedding, the proposal!! It was perfect!! :spit I can't believe Jim did that but i'm happy for him! Hmm....odd how they're married to different people on Antar ;) Gerry but that part was amazing! Wonderful wedding :lol

Now they just have to find Maria and the others and Liz and Alex have to be safe from the evil docs!
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vecastone
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Location: In the South

Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by vecastone »

Great proposal, great wedding. I tottally loved that part. Poor Jim. :b

Those kids should hurrry up because they will end up in bad hands at the hospital , please hurry !!! :love :slinkie
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roswellkitkat
Slightly Neurotic but Loveable
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Joined: Fri Dec 07, 2001 5:00 pm

Re: The Night The Dreams Died - PG-13 M/L, M/M, A/I

Post by roswellkitkat »

So much going on, and so much more to go through for answers! Hurry back!!!
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