An occasional posting that I am considering, based on reader response.
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PROLOGUE
Giza Plateau
Egypt
March 23rd, 1928
Wearing the traditional robes of his people, the man watched as fifty or so people worked to pull the massive stone object into an upright position. He was too far away to make out more than indistinct shapes, even with his excellent eyesight. The stone object, he knew, would be tested in as many ways as these people could do so, but he estimated sixty years before they would be able to understand it. There were a few people who knew him regardless of his wish to be left alone and one of them approached him now. It was a young girl in her early teens. Her father was part of the project to raise this stone device from the ground. She walked into the shade and sat cross-legged on the sand, watching him.
‘You know what they’re doing, don’t you?’ she asked. He raised an eyebrow. ‘You have been coming to this spot for three months, before anything was uncovered. You know that stone was there, didn’t you?’
He knew that she would see through his practised lie, so he told the truth, part of the truth anyway. ‘Yes, I knew they would uncover the stone.’
Her eyes narrowed and she held up an amulet. ‘Since you know so much about the stone, maybe you can tell me what this is.’
He took the amulet and examined it closely. Immediately he saw that the chain was not part of the original piece. It had been added later. It was not an amulet, but a House insignia from a distant place. ‘Where did you find this?’
‘Buried under the stone,’ she replied.
The man raised an eyebrow. ‘I must leave you. Keep this amulet safe in your possession. Let no one know you carry it. I will return to you and I will show you its origin when I return.’
She stood. ‘Where are you going?’
‘I must confer with my friends. You will not be here when I return.’
She seemed to realise that he meant this as a statement of fact and not an order for she ran back to the group of people raising the stone from the desert floor.
The man walked for an hour before he was sure that he was not being followed. He had walked into the desert proper where no ordinary person could survive. Looking around one last time, and spotting no one, he reached into the fold of his robes and pressed an unusual-looking brooch. ‘One to beam up.’
Six seconds later he was no longer in the desert but standing on a platform several thousand miles away. He stepped down and turned to face the five people gathered in the room. ‘It is as I feared. They have already been to this world. These people fought back and buried the gateway several thousand years ago.’
‘Our cousins are making impressive inroads,’ the oldest of the five said gravely. ‘What should we do to combat them?’
‘I will keep in contact with someone and assist them as best I can without revealing my true self or our origins. Our people will help the humans prepare.’
‘Is that wise, Skonn?’ asked the youngest of the five.
‘Perhaps not wise, my young friend, but necessary. If the humans were to discover the truth about us and our cousins, I fear they would kill us all. They are not yet old enough to distinguish us from one another.’
The youngest, almost forty, nodded his acceptance.
‘We are safe here for the moment but I think that is unlikely to last. We will need to return to the homeworld shortly for more equipment and supplies.’
‘I will go, Honoured One,’ the youngest replied.
Skonn nodded his assent and the man went to make his preparations, a slight smirk on his face, obscured by his robe.
‘What did you see?’ asked another of the five.
‘A House sigil from the Praetor himself.’
Eyebrows rose from all, except the young one who knew all too well what was found. Skonn knew who he was and still allowed him to make the journey. The man knew he must inform his superiors because the fact that the sigil was found meant someone had failed and the Praetor did not tolerate failure. The Emperor tolerated it even less.
‘If you will, excuse me, I must meditate.’
Skonn retired to his quarters and thought back to the young woman who would shortly be forced to grow up. He knew that he should not interfere, but he must limit any further damage done to these people by his cousins. They would come in secret to find the sigil and destroy it, along with any trace that they had even been here, at least until they were ready to make themselves known.
The next sixty years were going to be arduous, of that he was sure.
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PROLOGUE
Giza Plateau
Egypt
March 23rd, 1928
Wearing the traditional robes of his people, the man watched as fifty or so people worked to pull the massive stone object into an upright position. He was too far away to make out more than indistinct shapes, even with his excellent eyesight. The stone object, he knew, would be tested in as many ways as these people could do so, but he estimated sixty years before they would be able to understand it. There were a few people who knew him regardless of his wish to be left alone and one of them approached him now. It was a young girl in her early teens. Her father was part of the project to raise this stone device from the ground. She walked into the shade and sat cross-legged on the sand, watching him.
‘You know what they’re doing, don’t you?’ she asked. He raised an eyebrow. ‘You have been coming to this spot for three months, before anything was uncovered. You know that stone was there, didn’t you?’
He knew that she would see through his practised lie, so he told the truth, part of the truth anyway. ‘Yes, I knew they would uncover the stone.’
Her eyes narrowed and she held up an amulet. ‘Since you know so much about the stone, maybe you can tell me what this is.’
He took the amulet and examined it closely. Immediately he saw that the chain was not part of the original piece. It had been added later. It was not an amulet, but a House insignia from a distant place. ‘Where did you find this?’
‘Buried under the stone,’ she replied.
The man raised an eyebrow. ‘I must leave you. Keep this amulet safe in your possession. Let no one know you carry it. I will return to you and I will show you its origin when I return.’
She stood. ‘Where are you going?’
‘I must confer with my friends. You will not be here when I return.’
She seemed to realise that he meant this as a statement of fact and not an order for she ran back to the group of people raising the stone from the desert floor.
The man walked for an hour before he was sure that he was not being followed. He had walked into the desert proper where no ordinary person could survive. Looking around one last time, and spotting no one, he reached into the fold of his robes and pressed an unusual-looking brooch. ‘One to beam up.’
Six seconds later he was no longer in the desert but standing on a platform several thousand miles away. He stepped down and turned to face the five people gathered in the room. ‘It is as I feared. They have already been to this world. These people fought back and buried the gateway several thousand years ago.’
‘Our cousins are making impressive inroads,’ the oldest of the five said gravely. ‘What should we do to combat them?’
‘I will keep in contact with someone and assist them as best I can without revealing my true self or our origins. Our people will help the humans prepare.’
‘Is that wise, Skonn?’ asked the youngest of the five.
‘Perhaps not wise, my young friend, but necessary. If the humans were to discover the truth about us and our cousins, I fear they would kill us all. They are not yet old enough to distinguish us from one another.’
The youngest, almost forty, nodded his acceptance.
‘We are safe here for the moment but I think that is unlikely to last. We will need to return to the homeworld shortly for more equipment and supplies.’
‘I will go, Honoured One,’ the youngest replied.
Skonn nodded his assent and the man went to make his preparations, a slight smirk on his face, obscured by his robe.
‘What did you see?’ asked another of the five.
‘A House sigil from the Praetor himself.’
Eyebrows rose from all, except the young one who knew all too well what was found. Skonn knew who he was and still allowed him to make the journey. The man knew he must inform his superiors because the fact that the sigil was found meant someone had failed and the Praetor did not tolerate failure. The Emperor tolerated it even less.
‘If you will, excuse me, I must meditate.’
Skonn retired to his quarters and thought back to the young woman who would shortly be forced to grow up. He knew that he should not interfere, but he must limit any further damage done to these people by his cousins. They would come in secret to find the sigil and destroy it, along with any trace that they had even been here, at least until they were ready to make themselves known.
The next sixty years were going to be arduous, of that he was sure.