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  • A Fiction Agreed Upon. Episode Eleven: La Égalité. Part Two.

    October 17th, 2017

    Part Two.

    Leonardo, Robespierre, and Richard stumbled out of the transporter. Leonardo dusted himself off, with a small chuckle.

    “Well, that wasn’t so hard.”

    He saw Richard and Robespierre look at each other, eyebrows raised. He grinned slightly to himself. He flicked his fingers at them, looking around.

    “Come, we need to find Kamala.”

    Overhead a cloudless blue sky was dotted with more of the flying vehicles, a low grade buzzing filling the air. The glass buildings soared far into the clouds and a warm breeze wafted through the streets.

    He pointed to one of the buildings. “Look!”

    Richard cursed, and Robespierre gasped. “It’s going to fall!”

    “No, it’s not,” Leonardo grinned. “Look closer, it’s bending.”

    The building was bending and twisting slightly in the wind. When Leonardo’s eyes adjusted to the glare of the sun off the glass, he realized that each floor of the building rotated independently, like segments of a spine.

    “That’s incredible,” Robespierre breathed, eyes blinking rapidly. “How do you think –”

    “We need to find this woman. How, Leonardo?” Richard cut through their speculation. Leonardo frowned slightly, casting a slightly longing look back at the building, before sighing and looking at the rest of the street they found themselves on.

    Past the transporters, there were a few other shop fronts that let onto the street. Leonardo watched one black skinned man step out of the transport and make his way to a corner. He tapped a panel and spoke. Pictures came up and he tapped something, before speaking to a it rapidly, his mouth curling up into a smile. An image of a woman came up, and her eyes widen and her joyful shriek cut through the noise of the street. The man gestured, arms out and the woman nodded eagerly, tapping something onto her screen before disappearing. The man scanned the numbers, nodded and turned the corner. Leonardo titled his head. Then started to the corner.

    He hardly realized that the other two hadn’t followed until a strong grip around his bicep stopped him.

    “Alright, you need to stop bloody doing that,” Richard snapped.

    Leonardo blinked at him. “Pardon?”

    “Wandering away. You’re the only one who understands this blasted world and if you leave me alone with the king slayer, there’s only going to be problems, so you need to alter us if you’re moving.”

    Robespierre stopped in front of both of them. “Stunningly, I agree with Richard, despite his insistence on his erroneous title.” He graced Richard with a lip curl before looking up at Leonardo, his grey-green eyes glittering behind the tinted glasses. “If we’re ever to make it out of here, we need you Leonardo.”

    Leonardo took a deep breath, something heavy settling around his heart. They were right, of course, but that didn’t make the sudden expectation any easier. He figured that if he was going to be saddled with such responsibility, he should ask for something in return.

    “Alright, but in return I ask that the two of you put your quarrel to rest.”

    Immediately both burst in protests. Leonardo put up his hand to stop the deluge. “We’re a thousand years from what either have you have done, no matter who you might have murdered.” He cast a significant look at both of them at this word.

    Both of them froze, Richard looking grey and Robespierre flushing. “There’s no need to keep bicker with each other, and if you expect me to find a solution out of this mess, then please, at least call it to truce.”

    Both men looked away.

    “Please?” Leonardo beseeched.

    At last, reluctantly, Richard held out a hand to Robespierre, who took it as one would a highly disgusting artifact, possibly also covered in poison. He gasped when Richard tightened his grip to crush the other’s hand.

    “Alright Robespierre. For the moment, peace?”

    “Peace,” Robespierre said through gritted teeth. Richard smiled grimly and let go. He gestured to Leonardo. “And?”

    Leonardo smiled slightly. He gestured for them to follow and shortened his stride slightly so he could explain as they walked. Robespierre shook his hand slightly, massaging it.

    “I believe that these panels are public computers, used for contact. If I can find Kamala, then we can ask her if we can come seek sanctuary with her, or at least speak with her.”

    “And you think she’ll oblige?” Richard asked.

    Leonardo shrugged and tapped the panel. It lit up instantly and Leonardo scanned its unfamiliar surface, finger hovering it.

    “We can only try.”

    XXX

    All told it took Leonardo ten minutes to find Kamala Manson’s contact information. Richard was propped against the wall next to him, glaring at anyone who came to close. Robespierre seemed to have been distracted by the birds that fluttered around the street, having taken a piece of their remaining bread and crumbled it to crumbs. It looked like highly enjoyable, but Leonardo resisted the urge to try it himself.

    “Ah!” Leonardo smiled as he found her picture and a list of public information. Her contact number was listed first.

    He tapped it and listened to it beep. A yellow arrow, blinking as it made its way across the screen indicated how soon to connection. Leonardo marveled at the rapidity. In 1500 this would have been unheard of, even if whoever you wanted to speak to was in your city. That still would have required a messenger on foot, or a pigeon. Within seconds it was connected and it beeped again

    “Hello?”

    Leonardo cleared his throat. “Si, hello Tamala. This is Leonardo.”

    For a moment there was silence. “Like…as in da Vinci?”

    “Si.”

    “What- How- does Rain know you’re calling me?”

    Leonardo rubbed his chin. “No. There was a problem. An alien came and told her that she stole-”

    “Wait, she’s not with you?!”

    “No, we left-”

    “We?!”

    “Yes, myself, Robespierre and Richard,” Leonardo said, relived to finally get through a sentence. “We left her and went to Paris. However, uh, that did not work out. We were hoping you could help us.”

    There was a heavy silence. Leonardo glanced over Richard, who was watching with careful grey eyes.

    “Don’t move. I’m coming to grab you,” Kamala finally answered. The computer beeped again and the screen went blank.

    Bring back another dead person already!

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  • A Fiction Agreed Upon. Episode Eleven: La Égalité. Part One.

    October 12th, 2017

    Part One.

    Middleham Castle. North Yorkshire. England.

    Aspen Strong hummed to herself as she parked her hover bike in the underground parking garage of Middleham. Blanche had just come out with a new single and it was insidiously catchy. She was going to end up singing it all day, probably driving Jerome and Magpie crazy.

    She brushed her braids back from her face as she locked the bike down. She’d gone last night to get them re-done and highlighted. Usually Aspen preferred a very dark silver in her black hair but a gold color had caught her eye and she was still adjusting to having the glitter catch her eye every time she turned her head.

    Aspen yawned as she rode the security lift up into the castle proper. She was really going to have to talk to Jerome about switching watch shifts.

    “Hey, morning Kami. How’s it going?” She caught one of the PR managers at the replicator. The diminutive woman smiled at her, grabbing her coffee and croissant from the machine.

    “It goes, Aspen. Nice hair.”

    She tossed her head, grinning and stepping up to the machine. Her metal digits slipped on the touchscreen.

    “Thanks. I just got it done. Are you and Harm both here today?”

    Kami nodded, taking a chunk out of her pastry. She held up a hand to her mouth and gestured.

    “In the office?”

    Kami nodded, and rolled her eyes.

    “He’s still working on his coding for the, um, thing?”

    Kami nodded and swallowed. “Yeah. He says he’s getting close to finishing it. He swears it’s going to revolutionize the way we find artifacts. I think he just hates doing field work.”

    “Men, am I right?”

    Kami snorted. “Yeah. Shame I married him, huh?” She checked her watch. “Speaking of, I should go make sure he’s not going off food again. See you around.”

    Aspen nodded taking a sip of her coffee and winced. Too hot. “I’ll be around to do rounds in a tick.”

    Kami left and Aspen made her leisurely way through the refurbished castle. The weak English sun was trickling through the hand-blown window panes. Thick tapestries, made as close to original as possible hung on the walls. A scrubbed wooden table, nearly the length of the hall, was sitting out. Plaques sat at every few feet, inviting guests to come and sit down to ‘experience life as it had been fifteen hundred years ago!’ People would tab the screen and trigger holographic tour guides and recreated historical figures to explain the history of the castle and Neville family. No one was here yet but Aspen thought she remember a group of kindergarteners on the schedule for later today.

    Middleham had become the heart of a tiny kingdom of ‘historical fetishists’ as she’d heard it called in her time on the base. After she’d lost her arm during a drill of a interplanetary battle and been turfed into desk work, Aspen had jumped at the chance to work security for one of the ‘historical heritage’ bases under Magpie Jones. It was better than desk work, and quiet. Simple.

    Aspen could appreciate simple.

    At the end of the great hall, there was a modern staircase that led up the second story where the administration offices were. As head of entire endeavor, Magpie had been allowed where they wanted their offices to be located and had picked the rebuilt castle, of all places.

    If Aspen had been in charge, she would have picked somewhere well, more modern. Or a pyramid. But that was her, and Aspen was the first to admit she didn’t really ‘get’ most of the long dead references Magpie liked to talk about, or the importance of the project Magpie liked to expound on every quarterly meeting.

    “Knock knock!” She rapped on the door to Magpie’s office, peering in.

    As always her boss was engaged in reading, hunched over their desk and square chin proper in their hand. They looked up and smiled at her, white teeth a smooth contrast to the dark purple lip gloss they preferred and looking expertly tailored as always. Aspen didn’t know how a person who spent ten to eighteen hours everyday in a decrepit castle always looked like they’d gotten professionally dressed by one of the designers from Monaco. But Magpie pulled it off.

    “Good morning, Aspen. Have you checked in with Jerome yet?”

    She shook her head, striding into the room. “Not yet, I’m going there next. Wanted to stop in first and check how the night was.”

    Magpie dismissed this with a flick of their thin ochre fingers. A single diamond was glued to their pinkie nail, the rest merely polished to a high shine.

    “Fine. Not as if we get much traffic passed one anyway. That’ll come with the off season. Go check with Jerome and let him go home. Then go swing by Harmony’s office. He’s getting close to being done with his coding.”

    “Yeah that’s what Kami was saying. But, come on, Magpie. Do you really think that’ll work?” She scoffed. Magpie shook their finger at her.

    “Don’t doubt human ingenuity. Asking ‘why not’ led to the Renaissance, the Enlightenment, the –”

    “Yeah yeah, point taken, professor. Let me know when he makes his breakthrough or whatever.” Aspen turned and spoke over her shoulder. “Still just for bunch of artifacts.”

    She laughed when Magpie muttered “Heretic,” under their breath.

    XXX

    Aspen spent the morning first, filling a report for her commander at Cairo and then walking the boundary of the castle. When she was on her way back, she swung by the office next to Magpie’s.

    “Hey Harm. How’s the project coming?” She asked. The young man pushed his spectacles up his forehead and blinked blurrily. She could still see the lines of code reflecting against his ebony skin.

    “Ughh. I’ve had code shooting into my eyes for the last eight hours. How do you think it’s going?”

    She sat down on desk, staring down at the lines of code. With the visualization program, she could see actual building blocks and webbing of the coding.

    “So what’s this gonna do?”

    Harm rolled his eyes at her, grabbing a chocolate bar from his desk.

    “We talked about at the last meeting, come on.”

    “Indulge me.”

    “Using the global networking surveillance system it’s going to search and find matching data, forms and recognize historically relevancy globally.”

    Aspen stared at him, and waved a hand over her head.

    “Um in English Rainbow Miller. Not all of us went to the North African Academy of excellence in programing.”

    Harm sighed. “It’ll basically find historically relevant artifacts for us, by matching them to preexisting images. So say Queen Elizabeth the second is wearing an item in a photograph. Her tiara. Well this program will take the image of the tiara and match against every single frame recorded by the global surveillance system. Anywhere there’s a camera, that’s where this program is.”

    Aspen stared at him. “And how did Magpie get the Federation to pay for this again?”

    “Uh, boss has massive steel -”

    Kami swung into the room, carrying to cups of coffee. “Java?”

    Harm groaned. “Oh yes, baby talk dirty to me.”

    Kami wrinkled her nose. “You’re weird. It’s good that I like weird, otherwise this would be awkward.”

    Aspen rolled her eyes. “Well I’ll be impressed to see what it can do when you finish.” Harm sipped his coffee and grinned at her.

    “We’re testing it this afternoon. Boss’s orders.”

    Aspen cast a dubious look at the visualization program. It still only looked half built to her. “Better get on that and stop flirting, huh?”

    “I’ll work even faster when you leave, don’t worry,” Harm smiled sweetly at her. Aspen laughed as she left.

    “And pigs will fly and snakes will talk…” she muttered to herself, walking away. Harm was one of the cleverest people she knew, and she didn’t doubt his coding ability. She doubted that it would work.

    XXX

    Magpie had wanted to view the testing herself so they gathered in one of the halls, with a projector already set up and Harm helming the thing. He was busy typing, bent over and tongue in between his teeth. Magpie was pacing tight excited circles around the room. They looked like an eager child, hope and optimism shining in their eyes.

    “What do you want to find?” They asked the room. “Let’s go around and indulge ourselves with some fantasizing.”

    “I did that before I came into work today,” Jerome muttered lowly to Aspen, who smothered her giggles in a cough.

    “Jerome, you go first,” Magpie ordered.

    The other security officer blanched. “Um, uh. Well I guess it would be cool to find one of the sunken cities? Florence or New Orleans. Or maybe L.A.? Heh, what if we found the old Hollywood sign?” He grinned, brown eyes glittering. “I always liked all those old 21st century movies, before the war.”

    Magpie nodded. “That’s a good one. Aspen?”

    Aspen shrugged. “Maybe another one of the lost kings? We’re still looking for some of those ones that were privately acquired, right?”

    Magpie frowned ponderously. “Don’t remind me. Ugh, what a disgrace, selling history to profiteers.”

    “Oh! I want to find the Area 34 facilities. Holy cow can you imagine all of the debates that would solve, if we could prove it was developing atomic weapons and not hiding aliens?” Kami put in.

    “Atlantis,” Harm muttered, still typing.

    “What about you, boss?” Jerome leaned back on the scrubbed hardwood table. “What do you want to find?”

    “Well,” Magpie colored slightly, tawny skin going darker over their high cheekbones and the bridge of their nose. “I want to find Tyrell’s confession, if there is one. It would basically swing the greatest cold case of all time one way or another.” They cast an admiring look at the wall, where the calm visage of the most famous resident of the castle, Richard the III, looked over them.

    He had been the primary motivator for Magpie moving their office here, rather than staying in Cairo with the other Federation regulated cultural projects. Aspen had heard that they were obsessed with the dead monarch but never truly appreciated how much love one could have for a dead white man until she’d talked to Magpie about their passion project. Jerome called it ‘historical voyeurism’, something he thought everyone of the academic they worked with at Middleham had.

    “It’s very nearly some kind of mania. They get their claws into a person or a time, or a war and spend the rest of their life on the planet picking it apart like it’s a compulsion. It’s a little creepy,” he wheedled.

    “Yeah, but hey, at least they’re passionate about something. So many people just take whatever job the Federation gives out now a days, not thought about why, they’re taking it, or how it’s going to impact the world.” She argued back. Jerome had rolled his eyes.

    “So, what’s so bad about that? It ensures everyone is at substance level. Who said you need to do what you’re passionate about to be happy? That’s what the rest of your life is about, anyway.”

    Aspen snorted and slapped her co-worker on the shoulder. “That’s good, cause I think the only thing you’re passionate about is whose in your bed.”

    Jerome grinned and flipped his tight curls out of his face. “Nothing wrong with that.”

    Aspen observed the phenomenon in full force as all of the historians crowded around Harm, who was leaning back and studying the program.

    “I think that’s gonna do it.”

    Magpie clapped his on the shoulder. “We’ll never until we try. Turn it on, and let’s see what turns up.”

    XXX

    That had been two hours ago. Kami was sleeping next to Harm, head propped on his shoulder. Harm was absently watching the screen, while playing with one of the new Nintendo 4-Ds. The room was punctuated with the sound of tiny holograms squeaking while they battled each other.  while Magpie, Aspen and Jerome played Go Fish.

    “Got any kings?” Aspen asked Magpie. She was sitting on 3, and just needed hearts.

    “Go fish,” Magpie ordered.

    Just then the program beeped, a pop up displaying a message that it the search had found something. Magpie threw their cards down in relief, revealing a hand of singles.

    “I had you’re king, sorry,” Jerome smiled at Aspen who groaned and scooped up Magpie’s pile to reshuffle.

    “Best three of five?’

    Behind them, Harm was pulling up what the program had found.

    “Huh, it says it from a public security camera. Um, in Paris.”

    Magpie snorted. “I bet it’s of the La Gioconda.”

    Harm tapped the board and shook his head slowly. “No. It says it’s from Place de la Concorde.” He pulled up the frame the program had focused on and blew it up so it filled the whole wall display.

    The picture was clear, with only a little bit of bur around the edges. The colors were in HD, so Aspen could see the blue of the highlighted figure’s eyes and the sunshine reflecting off his dark hair. He was running, half turned and the camera had caught him in near perfect profile.

    “Isn’t that-”

    Magpie was already shaking their head. “That’s impossible. Pull up what the program is comparing it to.”

    Harm silently complied and soon they had a side by side comparison to a facial reconstruction, based on a skull found in 2012. The contours, highlighted by the green grid overlaid flashed, and ‘100% Match’ flashed on the screen.

    Magpie sat down, slowly in the chair next to Harmony who was frozen, hands hovering over the touchscreen.

    “That’s not possible.” The words seemed to have scraped Magpie’s throat raw, and when she looked over, there were tears in their eyes. “It can’t be, can it?”

    “Reincarnation?” Kami offered weakly after a moment. She ripped her gaze from the display to look around. “Cloning?”

    Harm let out a choked laugh.

    “That’s illegal under Federation law and you know it. Don’t you remember the Disney scandal?”

    Magpie was still staring at the picture, hand pressed to their mouth. They seemed transfixed, but Aspen could see the processed being complied in their head.

    “Harm, can you scan the rest of the video? Is there a part where his back is to the camera?” They asked urgently.

    Harm’s hands shook as he did so. The man completed his turn and with his head down and arms pumping, he sprinted towards the transporters, following after two other running figures.

    “Stop! Go back, right after he turns,” Magpie stood up and leaned forward, watching as the feed went back, and froze. The man’s mixed synthetic shirt pulled against his back, and the fabric revealed what Magpie had been looking for, but Aspen saw something different.

    “Scoliosis!” They gasped.

    “He doesn’t have an ID,” she pointed out at the same time.

    Aspen and Magpie looked at each other.

    “Oh my god. We found Richard the bloody Third.”

    XXX

    After that they came to an impasse. Aspen did a quick database search, and indeed discovered that Federation Special Forces had been ordered to Paris to track down ‘three renegade type four androids.’ However the order didn’t come from the Android Recovery Department, but all the way down from Chikara herself.

    “The plot thickens,” Jerome muttered. Harm was busy trying to track where the man, King Richard, Aspen reminded herself went after he ran out of view of the Place de la Concorde cameras.

    “What do we do when we find him again? Turn him into Chikara?” Kami asked breathlessly. Aspen hesitated.

    Chikara was well known for her extremely protective view of the Federation. To the point where she’d basically pushed the Global Surveillance Program and Planetary Defense Corp single handly through Federation parliament. She was nearly a party of one. Chances were that if she had her sights set on Richard, it couldn’t mean anything good for him. What a dead monarch had done to offend the Head of Security, Aspen couldn’t imagine.

    “Absolutely not.” Magpie’s voice rang out like a church bell. “He falls under historical reclamation and if you’ll remember, that’s my department. Chikara will have him destroyed, just like she campaigned to have so many of the heritage sights removed from the protected lands list.” Magpie shook their head gravely. “No. We cannot let Chikara get him. Harm, figure out where he went.”

    “Then what?” Aspen asked. Magpie spun majestically.

    “Then we reclaim him, for history.”

    Bring back another dead person already!

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  • A Fiction Agreed Upon. Episode Ten: La Liberté. Part Four.

    October 10th, 2017

    Part Four.

    However getting to Cairo, even in the new world of terrors and marvels was proving easier said than done.

    They had gone back to the carriage, after getting lost once.

    “I thought you said you lived here for five years,” Richard pointed out to Robespierre.

    “It was closer to four and a half actually,” Robespierre snapped. “Additionally, if you haven’t noticed, the city has changed significantly.”

    “Oh please do not start now. You’ve actually managed to be civil to each other all morning,” Leonardo begged.

    Turning onto rue Honore the three of them stopped dead, all bickering pushed aside.

    “Turn around slowly,” Leonardo advised lowly, staring at the carriage which was now surrounded by uniformed figures. The carriage itself was being dismantled, and carted into a larger one, that was hovering a few feet off the ground. “Just walk back the way we came.”

    Richard turned stiffly and fell in beside the other two men. Leonardo looked the least suspicious, shoulders relaxed, sketchbook tucked under his arm, and staring around as if there was nothing wrong. Robespierre kept glancing over his shoulder, his step quick and light.

    They managed about a block before, as if of one mind, they all three broke into a run.

    Sprinting past people of all colors and bright lights and crystalline buildings, Richard ran as if Lucifer himself had risen to chase him. The three of them raced away, dipping down countless alleys and nearly crashing into others. Eventually Richard slowed, and the others caught up with him.

    “How on earth did they find us?” Robespierre panted out, clutching his side. He looked as if he did not run very often, face flushed and hair coming lose from the loose tail he wore at the base of his neck. He skittered to a stop next to Richard.

    Leonardo slowed to a stop as well. He coughed twice, bent over at the waist.

    “It was Rain,” Richard said grimly. “She would have told them we stole her property.”

    “Likely. They could have also tracked us independently. The how isn’t important now. We need to get out of the city,” Leonardo spoke shortly.

    “How?” Richard demanded.

    “That terrible light machine that Rain took us in, we can use that,” Robespierre pointed out.

    “We need the IDs to use them.” Leonardo shook his head, then stopped. “Unless, unless! We could tell them that we need to see Kamala that we were sent from Rain.”

    “Yes, do you remember, Rain was able to get us on the um, uh, object,” Robespierre stuttered out.

    “And you think this Kamala will help us?” Richard demanded, grabbing Leonardo around the arm. The man’s eyes took a distant look, and his mouth twisted slightly.

    “Si.”

    Richard met Robespierre’s eyes.

    “Then let us go to Cairo.”

    XXX

    However first they had to get there.

    Leonardo had found a city map, and was scanning over it. Richard watched in fascination it’s bright surface displayed images for food, hotels, and shows.

    “What’s with the windmill?” He asked Robespierre.

    The Frenchmen shrugged. “It wasn’t here when I was here. Neither was ah, the burlesque.” He adjusted his glasses, frowning dubiously.

    Leonardo tapped the map and it magnified upon one part. “There it is. We should be able to use these, transporters to get to Cairo. They should be,” he turned to the east, “this way. They are located next to the Tuileries Gardens.”

    Out of the corner of his eye Richard saw Robespierre shudder. The man’s footsteps were a little slower, a little more ponderous as they followed Leonardo.

    The sun was high in the sky and Richard judged it to maybe be around ten in the morning. All of the odd people who lived now walked around, faces bent downwards to their lit up tablets or watching nearly transparent screens, projected out of bands they wore around their wrists. Some wore spectacles, that were lined with fine blue threads, and randomly laughed or smiled as if they were mad.

    Richard grimaced. It was all mad. He hardly understood at all, from why Rain had seemingly picked him out of the blue, to how carriages floated magically.

    Secretly, Richard was hoping that this other woman, was practiced in some art like Rain’s and would be able to return him home.

    They turned onto a large square, with fine, large fountains on either side and the massive iron tower to the west. It was mostly deserted, with some people sitting around the fountains.

    “Look, there they are.” Leonardo pointed to the magical transporters. He was smiling slightly, and raised an eyebrow at them. “Now we just have to- Robespierre?”

    Richard glanced over and found the Frenchman had gone stiff and pale, as if in death. His eyes were enormous and round behind his glasses.

    “What now?” Richard snapped.

    Robespierre moved his mouth but no sound emerged.

    “What?”

    “I-I died here.” Robespierre gasped. His lips had gone a pale blue and he was shaking from head to toe. Leonardo stepped forward.

    “Robespierre, it’s past. There’s no one here to hurt you now.” His tone was that of talking to a skittish horse, a low gentle tone.

    However whatever had possessed the Frenchman had taken full hold of his body. His eyes were hazy and his breath was coming in short ragged breaths. He swayed on his feet slightly and his hands flitted around his face, clawing at his cheeks and forehead.

    Richard took a step away.

    “He’s been possessed,” he hissed to Leonardo. “Do something!”

    “It’s not possession, it’s- it’s panic. Fear. Robespierre!” Leonardo grabbed the shorter man around the shoulders and shook him gently. However this had the opposite of the intended effect because Robespierre merely gasped and his eyes rolled back. He went slack in Leonardo’s grasp. The Italian cursed and glancing around, dragged him to the nearest bench, sitting him down. However he was insensible, mumbling and flailing weakly. Leonardo caught his hands and gripped them in his own. He touched the man’s face, gently tapping him.

    “Shhh, shhh. Robespierre, Maximilien. Maximilien, you are alright. There is nothing here to hurt you. The guillotine is gone,” Leonardo crooned gently. Richard watched hypnotized as Robespierre seemed to come back to himself, gently. He groaned and his eye lids fluttered.

    “How on earth did you do that?” Richard demanded. Leonardo shrugged.

    “I’ve known men who had night terrors before. This is not so different.” He turned to the still shaken man, who was looking lost. “Maximilien, can you walk?”

    The Frenchman put a hand to his head, but stood up, shakily.

    “Oui, I-I think so.”

    Leonardo dragged them both into the nearest building, Robespierre still looking shaken and pale. Richard looked back over his shoulder at the square behind them. To him it still looked innocent and mostly barren. However, from the way Robespierre clutched the wall to stay upright it was clear something had happened to him there. If Richard had to guess, it probably had to do with the ghastly scars that crossed the man’s face.

    Richard thought that he’d probably deserved it, whatever had happened to him.

    Leonardo didn’t seem to think so, practically holding the other man upright.

    “Maximilien, it’s alright,” the Italian said quietly, patting his shoulder.

    A cough from behind made them all turn.

    “May I help you gentlemen?” The speaker was a dark haired, dark skinned women, dressed in simple back and white clothing. Richard looked around and realized a few people had stopped eating and were looking at them.

    Clearly a tavern of some kind.

    “Ah, yes. We are here to eat,” Richard told her.

    The women looked at them with wide eyes, confusion and a hint of exasperation creeping in.

    “Alright, do you have a reservation?”

    A what? Richard wondered.

    “No, I don’t think so,” he said aloud. The women stared at them silently, mouth open slightly.

    “Let me see if we have any open tables. Why don’t you take a seat right on that bench and I’ll be back in a moment.” She gestured and watched them warily.

    As soon as the women was gone Richard turned to Leonardo.

    “What do we do?” He asked quietly.

    “Maximilien, are you alright now?” Leonardo asked.

    Robespierre nodded, looking less ashen than he had. “Oui.” A flush appeared on his face. “I’m sorry, I don’t know what came over me.”

    Leonardo patted his shoulder again. “It’s alright, we don’t mind.”

    Richard snorted. “I mind.” Leonardo shot him an unimpressed look.

    Robespierre stood. “We should probably go before -”

    “Gentlemen? We have a table open, right this way.” She gestured, clearly expecting them to follow her. Leonardo looked at them helplessly before following.

    Richard set his jaw. “I blame you,” he hissed as he brushed passed Robespierre to follow the women. Robespierre glared at him, mouth twisting. He opened his mouth to respond but was cut off.

    “Falla finita!” Leonardo snapped at both of them, grabbing Robespierre’s wrist, leading him along. “Petty bickering gets us nowhere.”

    They were led to a table with three chairs set up around it.

    “A waiter will be with you gentlemen in a moment, please look through our selection at your leisure.” With that the women quickly left, looking over her shoulder as she did.

    Richard glanced around and found that they were still being stared at. Some of the patrons were whispering to each other, looking apprehensive or shifting in their seats. A table close by had a small ebony-skinned child, who was gazing gape mouthed at them. The little boy touched his mouth then looked at his hand, and to his father, then back at Richard. He crinkled his nose and pointed, looking back to his father.

    “Don’t point, Beni,” the man chided him. He looked up at Richard, looking embarrassed. “Sorry. He’s just never seen anyone, um, like you.”

    Richard frowned. “Like me?” Self-consciously he lowered his right shoulder.

    “You know, white.”

    “Oh.” Richard sat back. He glanced over to Robespierre and Leonardo. Robespierre was holding his hand to his cheek, and was anxiously biting his lower lip.

    Leonardo was fidgeting with something in his lap, apparently oblivious to the conversation. However he looked up and made eye contact with the boy, grinning slightly.

    “You are Beni, si?”

    The child nodded shyly.

    “Do you like birds?” Leonardo held up a folded cloth napkin, cleverly arranged to look like a little sparrow. The boy gasped and held out his hands. Laughing, Leonardo slid the napkin over where it was eagerly picked up. The boy held it up to his father who examined it, eyebrows raised.

    “That’s very impressive, sir. What do we say, Beni?”

    “Thank you,” he lisped quietly.

    Leonardo laughed. “You’re welcome, Beni!”

    Richard glanced around again and while many people had gone back to eating, the remaining gawkers were now exchanging amused glances or smiles. He looked at Leonardo with new eyes.

    Robespierre was looking at Leonardo as well, a small smile on his face.

    “That was a friendly thing to do,” he said quietly.

    The Italian shrugged. “If we are attracting attention, it may as well be positive, si?”

    Robespierre tilted his head. “I’ve never thought of it that way.”

    Richard meanwhile had been suitably by distracted the menu.

    “Do either of you have any idea what any of this is?” He asked quietly. Robespierre looked at it and quirked a coppery eyebrow.

    “No, I’ve never seen any of it. Leonardo?”

    “It looks like raw fish,” the Italian said after a moment of scrutiny. Richard looked at him blankly.

    “Why would anyone -”

    Leonardo hushed him, a man with an apron was headed over to their table.

    “Afternoon gentlemen. Is there anything I can get you drink to start off with?”

    Richard pinched the bridge of his nose. “Yes. Three beers.”

    The waiter nodded. “Alright.” For a moment he seemed to scrutinize his face and Richard noticed a sort of glimmer went over the man’s eyes.

    “And have you gentlemen looked over the menu?”

    Leonardo nodded. “The uh,” he cast a frantic look over the hologram, “dragon roll?”

    “Sounds good, I’ll be back with your beers in just a moment.” With that the waiter turned away.

    Richard scrutinized Leonardo. “What is a ‘Dragon roll’?”

    Leonardo shrugged. “It says it has eels and avocado.”

    Robespierre cast a worried look at the Italian. “What is an avocado?”

    “I do not know, but I suppose you will find out.” Leonardo leaned back in his chair.

    “Us? Why not you?” Richard shot back.

    “I don’t eat the flesh of animals.” Leonardo shrugged, smiling slightly.

    “What?” It was the most absurd thing Richard had ever heard. Even Robespierre looked surprised, raising his eyebrows at the Italian.

    The waiter came back and handed the beers out.

    “Is there anything else I can get you gentlemen?”

    “Yes. May I please have a glass of water?” Robespierre asked.

    The waiter nodded and turned away until Leonardo called him back.

    “Ah, and a small bowl of rice please?”

    With the waiter gone, Richard turned back to Leonardo.

    “What on earth do you mean you don’t eat animals?”

    Leonardo shrugged slightly. “I do not wish to treat my body as a mausoleum, littered with dead things,” he flicked his fingers dismissively. “If you can get your subsistence without harming other living creatures, why wouldn’t you?”

    Richard snorted derisively. But Robespierre was blinking at Leonardo as if they had only just met.

    “That’s…That’s a very good point,” Robespierre said.

    Richard rolled his eyes, but before he could argue back, the waiter returned with the ‘Dragon Roll.’ He set a small dish of rice in front of Leonardo and the water in front of Robespierre.

    “There you go gentlemen. Is there anything else I can do for you?”

    “No, merci,” Robespierre smiled at him.

    “Excellent, the bill will be posted right at the bottom. Just transfer your credits when you’re ready to leave. Enjoy!”

    Robespierre smile vanished as the waiter left.

    “We don’t have any money,” he hissed as Richard reached forward to grab the one of the segments of the ‘Dragon’. It was wrapped in rice and something green. Richard picked it up and examined it closely.

    “So?”

    “So we can’t pay for what we’re about to eat, and that’s thievery.” Robespierre reached forward as if to stop Richard. In retaliation Richard popped the whole segment in his mouth.

    It was cold and there was something slimy to it, but he could taste an underlying fishiness to it, just the mildest hint of brine. Robespierre was staring at him, sallow face pinched in disgust. Leonardo was also looking at him, mouth twisted slightly. Richard chewed and swallowed.

    “It’s not bad. Additionally when I return to England, and explain who I am, we will more than easily be able to pay for some fish. It’s fine,” he insisted. Robespierre, looking mulish, crossed his arms over his chest and threw his head back. However Leonardo timidly started to peck at his rice.

    Despite how meager it seemed, Richard found he was not going to be able to finish the Dragon and contented himself with the beer. He noticed that Robespierre did not touch his, or any of the food, simply sipping at the glass of water and casting cold looks at him and Leonardo. Richard resisted the desire to roll his eyes. When Leonardo had finished his rice, and took a cursory sip of beer, the waiter reappeared.

    “How was everything gentlemen?” He asked genially.

    “Serviceable,” Richard said.

    “Excellent, thank you monsieur,” Leonardo cut over him. The waiter beamed and looked at them expectantly. Richard held himself carefully still, gripping his beer chalice.

    The moment lingered and it seemed that the waiter was going to press the issue, until someone called for him. With a rather annoyed look he left. Richard sighed and pinched the bridge of his nose. He got to his feet, and blinked. The beer had gone to his head faster than he thought.

    “We should go,” Leonardo opinioned lowly, looking around. Richard nodded and grabbed the bag from under the table.

    “I can’t believe you,” Robespierre was still hissing at them as they walked back outside, heading around the edge of the square to where the machines were. Richard knew the man must be feeling better because now he simply would not. Shut. Up. “Stealing, from the mouths of citizens! Refusing to pay your tab, and knowing you wouldn’t be able to!”

    “Would you have us starve instead?” Richard demanded. However before Robespierre could respond, a voice from behind them shouted, “Hey! Hey! Stop! Someone stop them!”

    It was the waiter.

    Several people had turned to look, curious. Richard and Robespierre froze.

    “What do we do?” Richard looked at Leonardo. The Italian grabbed Robespierre and pulled him along as he broke into a sprint.

    “I have an idea, run!”

    With that the three of them sprinted for the transporters.

    Bring back another dead person already!

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  • A Fiction Agreed Upon. Episode Ten: La Liberté. Part Three.

    October 5th, 2017

    Part Three.

    Leonardo couldn’t stop looking back at the illuminated tower. It was one of the most beautiful things he’d ever seen, and he desperately wanted to go towards it, but Robespierre was taking them west, away from it.

    The club had been a wash, with not even a plaque to explain what had happened to it. Robespierre had taken this hard, his head bowed and arms held stiffly at his sides as he marched ahead of them.

    Leonardo stifled a yawn. His internal clock insisted it was extremely late, around midnight. His old age must have been catching up with him, Leonardo mused wryly. Aging a thousand years could really take it out of a person.

    However it didn’t seem the three of them were going to find any safe haven for the night, and now having not better ideas were wandering west, peering down shadowed alley ways and seeking a place where a temporally displaced man might lay his head for the night.

    He yawned again.

    “How far outside of the city do you think we would have to go to find some woods?” Richard asked. “We could likely make camp there for the night and continue on in the morning.”

    Robespierre shrugged. “Paris is extensive. It would take us most of the night to even walk to the boundaries of the city, considering how much it’s expanded in the years. We could always go back to the carriage, um, thing.”

    Leonardo shook his head at this. “I think this is a bad idea. Rain will probably tell them that we took the vehicle. They will find it.”

    “They?” Richard asked.

    “The aliens, the Komali. And since that was an ambassador, whoever is in charge of the earth now, will be informed too,” Leonardo stroked his fingers through his beard, still far too short after years of having it down to the middle of his chest. He looked over to the ex-king.

    Richard sighed. “So we are in the middle of a hunt, and we’re the prey. Excellent.”

    Robespierre had gone quiet, and Leonardo looked up, to ask him if he could possibly think of anywhere else in Paris they could go, only to discover he was gone.

    Leonardo stopped and caught Richard’s shoulder, staring around.

    “What?”

    “Robespierre has left us.”

    “Excellent, that’s one problem solved.”

    Leonardo smothered his sigh. He caught sight of the petite Frenchman across the road, seemingly speaking to group of young people who were sprawled on the ground. He let go of Richard to follow, curiously.

    He heard the Englishman curse and after a moment, clump after him. Leonardo smiled slightly.

    He reached where Robespierre was standing, the yellow light casting odd shadows.

    “Leonardo, these students know where we can stay for the night,” Robespierre informed him. The one closest to them, a long legged and thin man in a truly eye searing jerkin, nodded and pointed.

    “Go two blocks that way, and it’s catty corner from the dispensary. The couple who runs it, real nice, will take anything you have, if you don’t have enough credits. They also don’t make you show your ID, either.”

    Leonardo nodded, the important bits of information floating to the top of the deluge. Location, payment, no ID.

    Excellent.

    “Thank you, we probably would have been walking all night without your aid,” Robespierre gravely informed the youth, who waved it away with a flip of his golden-tinged hand.

    “De nada. I’ve been there, man. Good luck.”

    They walked away and Robespierre looked over at Richard, green eyes blinking rapidly in the dim light.

    “And now, we have a place to stay.”

    XXX

    The ‘place’ ended up being a stone building, with bars over the windows and one lamp torn off it’s front and sagging sadly.

    “It’s practically Fothinghay.” Richard deadpanned as they stood outside, surveying it. Robespierre tsked dismissively.

    “You’d rather the ground? Or to back under Rain’s tyranny?”

    Leonardo rolled his eyes. “Let’s go in.”

    Inside was cramped and somehow seemed more dimly lit than the street. There was an over stuffed divan and a scratched and battered table. Behind a portal in the wall and man sat, reading from a tablet. Leonardo cautiously approached.

    “Ah, hello sir?”

    The man looked up and Leonardo had to stop his jaw from falling open. Instead of two brown eyes, the man had one, clear and attentive. The other was clearly made of metal and as Leonardo looked, he watched the machinery in side of it narrow, and knew he was being carefully examined. Behind him Richard drew a sharp breath and Robespierre coughed, quickly smothering it.

    “Something I can do for you?” The man’s voice, deep and resounding, boomed out.

    Leonardo mentally slapped himself.

    “Si. Do you have any rooms for the night?”

    The man laughed. “Rooms? Bunks, my friend. I have two left.”

    Leonardo stuck his hand out. “Deal.”

    He took it, shaking. “Payment? Or are you staying more than the one night?”

    “Just tonight. Would food do?”

    The man paused to consider this, and Leo watched his eye expand and contract as he looked up at the ceiling. “Sure, I don’t see why not.”

    Leonardo turned to face a very unhappy looking Richard and a dismayed Robespierre.

    “You heard him, pay the man.”

    “I blame you,” Richard hissed, re adjusting the now much lighter bag on his shoulder. They were following a series of illuminated arrows on the wall, each one of them appearing just after the pasted the previous.

    “I did not want to sleep on the ground. This is better than nothing,” Leonardo insisted tiredly. Behind him he heard Robespierre yawn and took it as a general agreement. The arrows stopped and were now illuminating a door with bright red light.

    Leonardo pushed it open quietly, the sound of deep breathing and snores wafting through it. The three men walked to the very other side of the room, next to a window that looked out over the street and toward the tower.

    The beds were stacked on top of each other, like in a barracks and Leonardo heard Richard mutter before bracing his foot on the bottom bunk, hefting himself up and sliding into the bed in a smooth motion. A moment later, there was a thunk as he threw his shoes to the floor. Someone muttered sleepily.

    “The two of you had better be there in the morning,” the Englishman’s voice came down.

    Leonardo and Robespierre looked at each other. Leonardo cleared his throat once before moving to the window side of the bunk and sitting down. It was thin and he could feel the places where the support beams held it up. He leaned down and pulled his shoes off, setting them neatly aside. He grimaced and sighed softly before flipping back the covers and laying down.

    It seemed clean, if nothing else.

    After a moment he heard Robespierre walk to the other side and feel the mattress dip as he slipped in next to him. It wasn’t a large bunk but, Robespierre was a rather small man and Leonardo could only feel a brush of his clothing and a vague warmth.

    Leonardo took a deep breath and shut his eyes.

    XXX

    For Max, sleep was mercifully dreamless. When he was blinking his eyes open the next time, a dim light was starting to illuminate the room. He listened carefully for a moment, and surmised that Leonardo was likely still asleep, another small mercy. Max turned carefully to see.

    Leonardo was asleep, laying flat on his back, with one arm draped over his eyes. His chest was rising and falling with his breath.

    Maximilien hadn’t known if it was going to be awkward to sleep next to the other man or not. The last time he’d slept in a bed with another person, he’d been six, and his sisters had been in his care at his grandparent’s house. Leonardo had seemed annoyed to have to share the bed, immediately turning his back to Max when they got in.

    In an odd way, it reminded Max of Louis le Grand; the sounds of other’s sleeping, the uncomfortable bed, going to sleep with pangs of hunger.

    He could nearly hear Camille trying to whisper to him from across the aisle.

    Max sighed and rubbed his eyes.

    Being back in Paris was clearly making him sentimental.

    Bitterly, he reflected, that they probably shouldn’t have come. Obviously the Republic was seen as a failure, and the fault likely lying with him. Rain had alluded to it enough, and the cold steel plauque on the ground seemed to be the final nail in the coffin.

    Here lies Maximilien Robespierre: Tyrant and Failure.

    Light slowly slid over the floor as Max was lost in his reflections. He distantly heard Richard turn over on the bunk overhead. Leonardo shifted, so he was lying on his side, facing Max.

    “Robespierre, are you awake yet?”

    “Oui.”

    Leonardo yawned, and scrubbed his hand over his eyes. “Not the most comfortable bed I’ve ever slept on, but it will do. Do you have any suggestions over where we should head today?”

    Throat dry, Max shook his head. Leonardo sighed and sat up, tapping the bunk overhead.

    “Richard. Get up.”

    Max could hear the Englishman roll over and a moment later his head, hair rumpled and flyaway from sleep and face stern and hard appeared.

    “What?”

    “Good morning to you too. We need to figure out where to go. I think we are out of options in Paris,” Leonardo leaned over and retrieved his shoes, pulled them on. Max fumbled for his glasses.

    “London, probably. Or York. I was always more popular in the north.”

    Richard looked over at Max, as if expecting a retort. Crossing his arms over his chest, Max merely shrugged.

    Leonardo looked thoughtful.

    “Possibly…” The Italian muttered. He reached under the cot and pulled out his sketchbook. Flipping to the beginning he turned it around to show them a sketch. A woman’s face with soulful eyes and a pinched, concerned expression in the lines of her forehead and lips.

    “Who is that?” Richard asked. The English king had removed himself from the top bunk, snatching up his boots.

    “Kamala Manson. She was Rain’s assistant. She was there when I, ah, woke up.”

    “Do you think she would help us?” Robespierre cast a dubious look at the book. Leonardo added an odd line to the sketch, even though it looked finished to Max.

    “It seemed to me that she did not approve of what Rain was doing. She might be persuaded to help us, or at least explain the situation to the Komali,” Leonardo said softly.

    Richard sighed and met Max’s eyes. He shrugged and threw a hand up in surrender.

    “Did she say where she lived?” Maximilien asked.

    “Cairo, Egypt. I’ve never been there.” Leonardo added, nearly plaintive.

    Richard grabbed the bag off the top bunk, and threw an apple to Leonardo.

    “It’s the best plan we have for now.”

    Bring back another dead person already!

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  • A Fiction Agreed Upon. Episode Ten: La Liberté. Part Two.

    September 27th, 2017

    Part Two.

    The temperature must have been colder than Max remembered it, because he couldn’t stop shivering as they walked along the river. That had not changed at least, still winding her way through the quarters under bridges and cutting her way down south. However, walking along it made Max even colder, the gentle water seeming to suck warmth straight from the air itself.

    “Here,” Leonardo offered him his jacket, made of a course wool and held together by a single line of metal teeth that came together cleverly.

    “M-merci,” Max said through chattering teeth.

    Richard did not seem affected by the cold, but he was English, so that was to be expected, at least according to Maximilien. They were all cold hearted.

    “Is there another place we could go?” Richard asked, lowly. People passed them on the street but did not seem to pay any attention to them. However it seemed to Max that every passing glance was going to catch onto their furtive actions, and they would be sent back to Rain, or worse, to the alien.

    Maximilien stopped, looking over the river. They were walking along the same path he used to take to the Jacobins.

    “If my club is still there, we’d be welcomed.” Probably.

    “And what does that entail? Richard asked, dubiously.

    Max rubbed at his temples. “They are good men, who only ever held the best interests of the people in their hearts.” He stared at Richard coldly, lowering his hands. “Not that you would understand that-“

    Richard growled. “Listen you little-“

    Before Leonardo could intervene or Richard could finish his insult Maximilien turned a corner and stopped dead, causing them all to trip into each other.

    “Robespierre?” Leonardo tapped him gently. “What is wrong?”

    Max, speechless, simply raised his hand and gestured. The other two men finally looked up.

    “My god,” Richard breathed.

    “Dio mio,” Leonardo agreed.

    “That, was not there the last time I was here.” Max said dryly.

    Ahead of them, rising over what must have been the very heart of the city was a tall metal sculpture. It rose like a mountain over a plain, lit up in golden lights, illuminating the entire city. It was dazzling and Maximilien couldn’t quiet decide if he adored it, or hated it. Leonardo started toward it, eyes wide.

    “What is it?”

    “I have no earthly idea. A building of some sort?” Max guessed. Leonardo had whipped out his notebook and was sketching it furiously, seeming entranced by the thing.

    They all jumped when a voice spoke from behind them.

    “First time in Paris?”

    The speaker was an older woman, with a cart of plants. She wore a long grey and yellow striped scarf around her head, and her brown eyes studied them intently. She adjusted her cart so it was carefully between them.

    “Ah, yes?” Leonardo spoke for them all, the smallest hesitation in his voice. Maxime coughed, struck by the sudden insane urge to laugh.

    “La dame der fer is beautiful, no?”

    Richard pointed. “That?”

    “Oui. She’s stood there for over a thousand years. She’s been rebuilt twice, but she’s made her way through.” The woman looked at it fondly, and it suddenly struck Max that this was his national kin.

    “Are you from Paris, citizeness?” The title slipped out without him meaning it to, and he winced. The woman cast him an odd look.

    “Oui.” She grinned suddenly and snapped her fingers. “The north?”

    Max inclined his head bashfully. He was never going to lose his Artoise accent and had been teased about it more than once from Camille. “Oui.”

    “I am surprised you have not been to visit, then. Too much time in Monaco?” She waved the thought away, smiling playfully. “Ah it does not matter. Young people. If you are going to see her, you need to continue down this rue.” She winked. “She is hard to miss.”

    Max bowed. “Merci beaucoup, madame.”

    She shook his hand when he rose, her soft hand gripping his firmly. “And thank you for your service, sir,” she told him gravely, before hefting her cart away.

    “Service?” Richard asked when they started away. Maximilien shrugged.

    “I don’t know what she meant.” He looked at Leonardo, biting his lip, a sudden thought occurring to him. “You don’t think she recognized us, do you?”

    “She thought you were a solider, your scars.” Leonardo waved at his own face and neck. Max felt his stomach drop to his shoes.

    “Oh.”

    “You should be honored. She thought that you had been in battle.” Richard remarked.

    Maximilien stayed silent. He still didn’t quite know how to feel about the bullet scars on his face. They pulled and itched fiercely, and he was uncomfortably reminded of that day. The smell of blood, and gun powder in the air. Augustin screaming, Couthon’s body thudding to the ground. The bang of the gun going off in Phillipe Le Bas’s hands.

    He shuddered.

    Night had settled in around them and Max looked up at the stars. Or he tried to. Nothing more than a few distant pinpricks of light could be seen. He blinked in bewilderment.

    “What on earth happened to the sky?”

    The other two stopped and looked up. After a moment Richard growled and pinched the bridge of his nose.

    “What else? Lands hand sank beneath the ocean, the stars are gone, and I’m in Paris. Did the end of days happen and no one notice?” He demanded at large. For a horrifying moment Maximilien found himself agreeing.

    Leonardo was still staring upward.

    “It’s the lights,” he muttered after a moment.

    “Pardon?” Max asked.

    Leonardo gestured around. “All these lights, they are much stronger than candles or fires, si?”

    “Yes.”

    “All of the light they are giving off, it is obscuring the stars.” He shrugged, then stiffened, a wide-eyed look of amazement coming over him. “Which would mean the same thing happens during the day when the sun is out! Which would mean that the stars are stationary as well!” He clapped, beaming widely. “I knew it!” Richard snorted.

    “The sun is not stationary. It goes around the earth.”

    Maximilien raised a hand, smiling slightly. “Actually it does not. Leonardo is right, the sun is the center and all the other planets rotate around it.”

    Both of them looked at him in silent amazement. Max shrugged.

    “It was taught to me in Louis le Grand. I’m sorry if I don’t know the specifics.”

    “I was right?” Leonardo sounded stunned, a deep contrast to the confident tone he’d been using till then. “Dio mio.”

    “Never mind that, what the devil do you mean, the earth isn’t the center? The Lord made it,” Richard demanded. “That’s what the Church says.”

    “Yes, and it’s incorrect,” Maximilien raised his eyebrows in emphasis.

    Richard looked between the two of them.

    “Heretics. I’m surrounded by heretics,” he muttered, jaw set. Maximilien could barely prevent himself from rolling his eyes.

    Leonardo seemed to have shaken himself from his amazed stupor. He let out a nervous little chuckle.

    “We should keep moving, si? We still have no place to sleep tonight,” he pointed out. Maximilien nodded, then gestured.

    “It’s this way.”

    Or it used to be.

    Bring back another dead person already!

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  • A Fiction Agreed Upon. Episode Ten: La Liberté. Part One.

    September 21st, 2017

    Episode Ten: La Liberté.

    Part One.

    It was evening and Richard was half asleep when He became aware that the vehicle was descending. They’d all started falling asleep somewhere over the ocean, a sight so enormous that even Leonardo had been disturbed by it. Robespierre had been the first to go, slumping over with his hands protectively curled over his chest. The Leonardo, leaning against the window and muttering in Italian. Richard had tried to stay awake, instincts reminding him strongly he could easily be in a vehicle with two people who would see him dead. However eventually the monotony of the location and the comfortable interior wore him down and Richard had found himself slipping into a sleep-like trance.

    He reached over and shook Leonardo roughly.

    “I think we are nearing Paris.”

    The Italian snapped awake near instantaneously. Which was good because the invisible woman who spoke to them came back on.

    “Nearing the city of Paris. The capital of the country of France, and largest European nation. Please enter address.”

    Robespierre was still dead to the world so Richard very gently threw an apple at his head.

    “We are in your precious Paris. Where can we go to spend the night?” He barked at the blurry eyed Frenchmen.

    “Ah, 398 Rue Saint Honore,” he muttered, rubbing at his eyes under his glasses.

    “Address Accepted. Arrival estimated, six minutes.”

    Leonardo stretched, arms bending behind his head and flexing his spine off the seat.

    “Where is it that we are going, Robespierre?” He asked, twisting.

    “My home, the Duplays should-” Suddenly Robespierre cut himself off, looking stricken. “Oh.”

    Richard turned on the bench to stared at him with incredulity. “Did you give us a dead man’s location?”

    Robespierre opened his mouth to respond, cheeks already flushing with anger, before Leonardo smoothly cut across them.

    “It’ll give us a starting point. All we need is a place to land, and this is good enough. We are never going to get anywhere with the two of you sniping at each other every five minutes. Dio mio, make you peace already!”

    Richard and Robespierre stared at each other for a few moments before turning away. Leonardo looked at each other them in turn and muttered something under his breath. Richard thought he heard the words, ‘gone by myself’ and bristled slightly. However before he could the vehicle dropped gently to the ground with a thump. All three of them clutched the seat in surprise.

    “Well, I suppose we are here,” Leonardo commented, still sounding sour with the two of them. He pushed a button on the central console and the machine’s light’s extinguished. The tiny chip that he’d used to start the vehicle up slid out and Leonardo grabbed it, stowing it away in some interior pocket. He turned to look at Richard and Robespierre with a raised eyebrow.

    “Coming?”

    XXX

    Maximilien couldn’t believe that he’d forgotten that the Duplay family would be long dead. In the dreamy moment between sleep and waking he’d thought himself still in the year two of the Revolution. He could have sworn that he could hear the familiar clatter of the workmen just outside his window, the sounds of Brount barking, the footsteps coming up the staircase to his rooms.

    He clambered out of the flying carriage, and looked up at the rooms that used to be his.

    They were gone. There was a large glass building in it’s place. The lights were dim and reflected the starlight.

    Max felt all of the air in his lungs pushed out, as if someone had hit him in the chest. It felt as if he’d been shot all over again.

    “It’s gone. It’s completely gone,” he whispered. Leonardo gently patted his shoulder.

    “I am sorry, Robespierre.”

    He stared at the building, backing away. He looked down when his heel hit against a metal plaque.

    “Residence of Maximilien Robespierre from 1790 till his death 1794.” Richard read, looking down at it.

    Maximilien stared down it numbly.

    So this was what he came down to? A small plaque on the ground, dully noting his death. His position wasn’t even noted. He wondered if his, Charlotte and Bonbon’s house in Arras was gone too. The thought that it might be gone felt as if someone had forced a large icicle into his chest, sharp and cold. He swallowed heavily, and set his jaw.

    “I’m fine. I would not expect them to memorialize me, not if Billaud, Barere, and Collot d’Herbois persisted in saying I had mastery over the Committees.” He clenched his hand at his side.

    The cool night was closing around them and street was quiet. Somewhere a dog barked and Max was struck with a homesickness for his family so intense that for a moment he thought he was going to be ill. Instead he took and deep breath and gestured down the avenue.

    “The Seine is that way. It will take us to the heart of Paris, if nothing else. Or the Tuileries is behind us.”

    Leonardo, still looking at him softly, nodded.

    “Lead on, Robespierre, you know the city best,” he offered quietly. Richard rolled his snorted and re-adjusted the bag on his shoulder, but held his tongue.

    Max nodded and with a shuddering breath turned away from the glass building.

    Bring back another dead person already!

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  • A Fiction Agreed Upon. Episode Nine: Lions and Tigers and Boars. Part Three.

    September 20th, 2017

    PART THREE.

    Ava slowly crept out from under the bed in Richard’s room.

    Strangers had been in the house, smelling of ozone and metal. They’d taken Rain away.

    She slowly nosed the door open, smelling the air. The men were gone too, and from the way Pallas’s human had said goodbye, they weren’t coming back.

    The pack was alone.

    The other dogs were creeping out from where they’d been hiding. Pallas was carrying a scrap of fabric in her teeth. When Bobby tried to sniff it, the poodle growled so furiously that the boarder collie yipped and backed away into the wall, tail tucked.

    “What happened?” Baby asked, crouched low to the floor, shaking. “Where’s Rain?”

    “Gone. She was taken by the strangers.” Berwald growled. The German Shepard shook himself, hopping from one front paw to another. “Alpha, we should leave now. Rain is gone, and the house is empty. We will never have a better chance to run.” At this the pack burst in a flurry of barks and howls. Ava ignored them, sniffing the ground. She could smell the men, and the under lying sense of fear. They thought they were going to be hunted. She shook her tail. Well if it was hunt they wanted, a hunt they would receive.

    “We are leaving.” Her announcement quieted the rest of her pack. Norma jumped off the table, where she’d been lying.

    “Where are we going to go, Ava? Where can we go?” The little corgi demanded.

    Ava turned and bounded over to the door, energy suddenly filling her. She clawed it open, uncaring of the way her claws scratched the door. There was no need for secrecy now.

    It opened and a fading light filled the hallway. It would be sunset soon, all the better for them.

    “We’re going to go after the men!” She crowed. “We’re going to rejoin with them. They are our humans now.”

    Pallas dropped the fabric she’d been clutching. Ava now realized it was a piece of one of shirts that the small, sickly, Robespierre had worn.

    “The men? My human?” She demanded. Ava shook herself in excitement, tail going faster.

    “Yes. We leave at sunset. Everyone should eat. Norma, use the food maker.” She ordered. Ava turned to face the sun, the wind blowing the scent of many animals, humans, things, over her. Out there somewhere, she could feel the pull of her human, of Richard.

    ‘I’ll find you. And then we’ll run.’

    Bring back another dead person already!

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  • A Fiction Agreed Upon. Episode Nine: Lions and Tigers and Boars. Part Two.

    September 14th, 2017

    PART TWO.

    Rain woke to the sound of someone banging furiously on her bathroom door.

    “Doctor Miller! I know you are in there! The humans you brought back are gone, open the door!”

    Rain grinned to herself. She knew they would figure out something.

    Three men who had been dead for a thousand years, lose in the world, and on the run from the government?

    Now this was becoming interesting.

    Rain grabbed her cane and hoisted herself to her feet. She made her way leisurely over to the locked bathroom door, trying not to look too pleased when she opened the door.

    “Oh dear. Where ever could they be?” She opened her eyes wide and looked up at the alien. Maltass sneered. “Do not toy with me. This is a diplomatic incident and as soon as your government hears about this, you will be in prison and those things you made will be destroyed.”

    A buzzing sound overhead made Rain look up, eyes going wide with genuine shock now. She looked back at the ambassador who dipped their head in satisfaction.

    “Ah, there they are now!”

    “You- you didn’t actually call them, did you?” Rain sputtered.

    “I contacted your head of security, Major Chikara, directly,” Maltass hissed.

    Rain attempted to rush past the alien, only to grabbed firmly by the back of the neck in their large hand.

    “Let me go! You don’t know what you’ve done!” She snarled and attempted to hit the Komali with her walking stick.

    “Causing trouble again are we, Doctor?”

    A tremor went up her spine and Rain looked down the hall. At the top of the stairs stood Marie Rivera, Chikara’s metaphorical right hand. The tall heavily built woman looked down her snub nose at Rain. Officers of the federation rushed up the stairs and grabbed the stunned Rain from Maltass’s grasp, quick clapping a pair of electro-magnetic cuffs on her. She dropped her cane as she wrists twisted over on another, effectively making it impossible for her to use her hands together. The officer dragged Rain forward, tight grasp on her shoulder both restraining and supporting her as she was made to stand in front of Marie.

    “I always knew it would come to this. Doctor Rainbow Miller, you are under arrest for treason and banned experimentation. Anything you say can and will be held against you. You will be held at the South west labor camp to await tr-” Marie cut herself off and put a hand to her ear, frowning.

    “Yes, I understand. Alright.”

    Marie clicked her fingers at her helmeted officers.

    “Change of plans. Chikara wants to see to Miller personally. We’re headed to headquarters.”

    “Personally?” Rain asked, despite the cold slimy worms of fear crawling through her belly. People always did say she had more curiosity than sense.

    Marie smiled. It was a beautiful smile. She had a full broad face, with eye’s so pale they almost seemed gold, and dimples in both cheeks. However, it only served to make Rain shudder, despite its beauty.

    “Oh yes. Chikara is very curious to follow up on these claims about the technology you stole. She promised the Komali she would investigate personally. It means she’s going to want to speak to you,” Marie leaned in closer, to where Rain could feel her peppermint scented breath waft over her, “One on one.” Marie clicked her fingers again. “Load them up and let’s move out!”

    XXX

    Chikara Haruka was not a tall woman. She was shorter than even Rain, which in a world where the average height was six foot even and you were only five eight was impressive. Despite this Chikara’s presence seemed to have no problem making up for what her size lacked. From her carefully starched uniform and shiny black hair, pinned back in a severe bun, Haruka’s bearing suggested a person who did not suffer fools or mischief makers lightly. Marie went to Chikara’s side, speaking quietly. Rain was held back by two massive guards, arms pinned down.

    Rain had only met Chikara in passing, when she had first started working for the Federation. As officials, both excelling in their fields, both had been pressed into going to the occasional balls or galas that the Federation had. Rain had the feeling that Chikara was much like herself, more interested in field work than the pomp and circumstance of bureaucracy. Rain caught sight of a plain gold band on her finger and mused that her marriage to Zebadiah had not gentled her at all. However, considering the circumstances of her marriage, Rain could understand why.

    Chikara Haruka’s wedding had been highly publicized. She had been wedded to a member of an alien species as the final effect of a long reaching treaty. Rumor had it that Chikara had only been chosen because she was the only unmarried member of the high government.

    Rain wondered if Chikara knew that Zebadiah also has the technology blueprints as well.

    Zebadiah shook his head. “Alright. Then I’ll tell you plainly. If you do not give me the data on this technology, I will report it, and you will find yourself on a labor farm in short order, never again to work with science. And then I will still take it when the government seizes your possessions. So you can give it to me the easy way, or you can give it to me the hard way. Regardless I will have it.”

    Rain smirked.

    ‘Joke’s on you Zeb. Your wife is a step ahead of us both. But I bet she wants to be rid of you far more than me.’

    Marie stepped back from the shorter woman, who eyed Rain, brown eyes blank and emotionless.

    “Doctor Miller, do you know why you’re here?”

    “Because you’re a fascist,” Rain relied flippantly, smiling.

    Marie sneered, however Chikara didn’t change her expression even slightly.

    “Doctor Miller, why did you take the data from the Komali, despite having electrically signing a contract with the Federation?”

    “Because I could.”

    “Doctor Miller do you understand that you have broken the law and you are going to be charged in jury of your peers, before going to prison?”

    Rain held her head up proudly. “Yes. I don’t care, information should be free to use. I don’t mind going to prison for doing my job.”

    Chikara’s eyes flared with emotion suddenly.

    “Your job? You’ve endanger the life of every person on this planet. Not just from Komali, but from those things you brought back,” Chikara stabbed the air empathetically. Marie handed her the tablet, and Chikara frowned thunderously, scrolling though whatever was there.

    “Savages. Murders. Imbeciles. And you’ve loosed them on the public.” Chikara looked up, and Rain’s confidence started to sieve out of her. “Before I put you onto a labor farm for the rest of your life Doctor Miller, you will help us catch the beasts you made, willingly, or by any force required.”

    Bring back another dead person already!

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  • A Fiction Agreed Upon. Episode Nine: Lions and Tigers and Boars. Part One.

    September 12th, 2017

    PART ONE.

    While Maximilien couldn’t fully relax, not with knowing how far away the earth was, he decided that if he sat in the middle of back bench, and concentrated on the tablet that Leonardo had passed back to him.

    An uneasy silence had fallen over the three men, and Max was uncomfortably aware this was the longest the three of them had been alone together. By themselves, without potential supervision or intervention. A shiver raced up his spine, and he held himself more stiffly against the leather seat.

    “I wonder how long it will take to get to Paris?” Richard asked suddenly, looking over at Leonardo, who had taken the opportunity to press his face against the glass and was scribbling furiously.

    “Tap the center panel, it has the rout mapped out for us, and will have an estimate.” Leonardo never took his eyes off the ground. Max leaned over slightly, trying to see past the other man’s broad shoulders. He caught sight of swirling sketches, thick lines and sprawling city maps.

    Richard raised an eyebrow but sighed and did so.

    “Seven hours?!” He pinched the bridge of his nose. “Dear lord.”

    “It’s faster than three to six months it would have taken us.” Leonardo pointed out mildly. Maximilien smiled slightly.

    “Less comfortable though,” Richard grunted and stretched his back. “An ale wouldn’t go amiss right now.” Max noticed that Leonardo turned all of his attention to the man when he did this, intelligent brown eyes watching carefully. His pen stopped abruptly and Leonardo flipped to a blank page, rapidly scratching out curves.

    “Well the faster we get there, the faster you can have your ale,” Leonardo said calmly.

    “Praise the lord,” Richard said dryly.

    XXX

    Clio sighed and sat down cross legged on the self piloted hover car. The three men inside did not know that technically, their trans-Atlantic flight in vehicle as small as this shouldn’t be possible, but she did. At the moment she was using her own personal powers of plot to move them more quickly forward. If anyone ever caught on to them, she felt confident in her ability to navigate them away from danger.

    “You’re an awful lot of trouble for minor bi-pedals, you know,” she muttered, crossing her arms.

    “Humans, they think they know everything,” Spectra said, sitting down next to Clio. “You should see mine. He’s already stopped an assassination attempted and found roommates and he’s only been there for twenty-four hours!” The anthropomorphic hyena grinned proudly.

    “If only, I’ve put up with weeks of this,” Clio rapped her knuckles on the roof.

    Spectra smiled even more widely, sharp teeth glinting in the sunlight. They hung past her lips, shiny and clean. “Oh please, I know you like the hard cases, and humans most of all.”

    Clio sniffed dismissively but did not refute the other Muse’s rather appropriate understanding of Clio’s unique tastes in narratives.

    “Only because I was raised on earth, nothing more,” she defended herself. Spectra smirked and laughed, dissolving with the wind.

    Bring back another dead person already!

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  • A Fiction Agreed Upon. Episode Eight: Eschewal. Part Four.

    September 5th, 2017

    PART FOUR.

    Rain had taken her sedative upstairs and passed out in her bathroom, propped against the toilet when they went looking for her. Despite the fact Richard didn’t really think it would do much good, he dragged a chair from out of his room, and jammed it under the door-knob.

    Leonardo was busy downloading information he though had been useful from Rain’s database, maps, records, biographies, and some of the older more digestible medical textbooks he’d found. He sent Robespierre down into Rain’s private lab to take what batteries and cords he thought they would need. The Frenchmen originally protested this.

    “That’s still her property.”

    “It’s for a common need, and from what I’ve gathered, talking to her, Rain could replace anything we take three times over. I wouldn’t worry too much about if we’re going to leave her bereft or not,” Leonardo placated him, although Robespierre still did not look entirely convinced.

    Richard busied himself by stripping the bedding from the beds, and stuffing them in all bags he could lay his hands on. Most of them were flimsy looking, made with thin slippery material, and delicate looking stitching. He scowled, but resigned himself. If they happened to come upon anything better, Richard felt confident he’d be able to trade for it.

    Within a quarter of an hour, the three men were leaving Rain’s house. Before they’d left, Ava had grabbed Richard’s wrist and growled.

    “Stay.” He ordered, taking his hand back. To his surprise, the hound obeyed and sat down, watching him mournfully.

    “Good girl,” he said at last, giving the dog a scratch. Robespierre patted her on the head.

    “Smart dog,” he cooed. Richard rolled his eyes.

    “Let’s go, I don’t think that alien will be out much longer.”

    Leonardo nodded and slipped out ahead of them, bag with the electronics slung over his shoulder. Richard gestured to Robespierre.

    “Traitors first,” he said. Robespierre didn’t say anything, but Richard could see the disdain that shone in his eyes for a moment, before he turned and followed Leonardo.

    Richard was careful to relock the door, and jammed a large stone in front of it for good measure, although he didn’t imagine it would hold either the alien or Rain for very long.

    Leonardo was in the shed next to Rain’s house, studying one of the vehicles. He walked around it, muttering in Italian. Richard was more than prepared to walk the distance into wherever the ocean was to catch a ship, but Leonardo insisted that this would be much faster.

    “Do you know how to work it?” Richard asked, frowning.

    “Theoretically, it’s simple enough.” Leonardo smiled at him. “Simply start the engine and then enter the destination of where you want to go.”

    Robespierre, looking hesitant, asked, “Do you know how to start it?”

    Leonardo revealed a data chip in his hand. “No, but this does. Apparently it’s something that Rain was working on. Get in and we’ll see how it works.”

    Richard sighed and eyed the vehicle. It resembled a horseless carriage, however it was made entirely of metal. It sat on the ground, and looked entirely immobile. He consoled himself by remember the horrifying journey here, and thinking that at least this mad Italian was not asking him to be unmade and sent thousands of miles.

    All things considered a horseless carriage he could deal with.

    Richard, after fiddling with the lever on the door, eventually made his way into the front of the carriage. A smooth panel was in front of him.

    Leonardo slid in after him, with considerably more grace.

    “Robespierre, you will have to sit in the back, there is no more room here.”

    Richard smirked to himself.

    Leonardo fiddled with the panel and it lit up under his fingers. He found where to insert the tiny metal bit and slid it in carefully. The panel flickered, once, twice, and then it beeped.

    “User accepted. Destination?” A smooth male voice asked.

    Leonardo fished in his bag for the map.

    “Florence?”

    The panel flashed red.

    “Negative destination. Florence sank in 2310. Please select another destination.”

    “Sank?” Richard muttered. He and Leonardo glanced at each other.

    “Well I suppose it was built on a swamp,” Leonardo said sadly. “Any other suggestions?”

    “Paris,” Robespierre said from the back seat. The panel flashed green before Richard could demand London instead.

    “Destination accepted. Please fastened seat-belt and prepare for lift-off.”

    The three men exchanged looks. Leonardo mouthed the term, ‘lift off’, and frowned.

    Richard’s concerns were closer to home.

    “What in the saints names are sea-AHHHHH!”

    All three of them screamed as the vehicle let out a beep and went from motionless to quickly rising, crashing straight through the shed’s roof. Richard watched with wide eyes as the ground dropped away. He had the funny feeling his guts had stayed. He shut his eyes and gripped the leather bench tightly.

    “We’re flying! My god, we’re really flying!” Leonardo seemed to have recovered the fastest, and was laughing in delight. Richard grit his teeth as he could feel the carriage change direction. Robespierre seemed to share his issue, since he could hear him wretch.

    “Richard, Maximilien! Open your eyes, it’s incredible,” Leonardo said, shaking his arm like a child. Richard shook his head and wrenched his arm away.

    “Absolutely not.”

    “Are you mad?” Robespierre demanded, sounding shaky.

    Leonardo sighed, and Richard bristled. “For heaven’s sake. It’s perfectly safe in here, and you can see the whole of North America. We’re surrounded by clouds and all the sky is spread out under us. The sun is shining and we’re flying. Please, I’m sincerely asking that the two of you open your eyes and join me.”

    Richard pressed his lips together tightly. He didn’t want to see how high they were from the realm of men, from what he knew. But he also understood the logic behind what Leonardo was requesting. He couldn’t very well spend his entire journey to Paris with his eyes shut.

    He took a deep and calming breath before slowly opening his eyes.

    The whole vehicle was awash in bright sunlight, glittering off the glass panel in front of him. The leather was already warming under him and Richard cynically wondered how long it would be till it became unbearable. However very slowly he looked around, eyes going wide and round.

    They were surrounded by fluffy white clouds, the kind that always beckoned him out of the castle as a child, and reminded him of summers spent riding with Ned and George. The sky was a rich royal blue, and when he gathered his courage and looked out one of the glass windows the earth below them was a wash of greens-browns-greys. He could make out massive glass buildings, some of them rising into the clouds with them.

    He looked over at Leonardo, who had tears sparkling in his eyes.

    “We’re flying. I’d dreamt of it for so long, and now,” he touched the glass that separated them from the outside. Richard couldn’t help but feel moved by the other man’s sincere emotion.

    “It’s so far away,” Robespierre whispered from the back. He too had his hand pressed to the glass.

    Bring back another dead person already!

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  • A Fiction Agreed Upon. Episode Eight: Eschewal. Part Three.

    September 1st, 2017

    Part Three.

    It took a long time to convince Richard back into his chair, and even longer to get Robespierre unstuck from the wall but it was eventually accomplished.

    “How did you find me?” Rain asked Maltass. They had been plied with a tall glass of iced water.

    “Doctor Pless admitted what had happened almost immediately. Because this is sacred knowledge, I was the only one who could handle this discreetly.” They scowled at Rain. “Aliens are not supposed to know how to use our technology. If you do not return all of our data and technology the treaty with your Federation will be nullified.”

    Maltass curled they’re lips back. “The Komali have superior technology. If you do not surrender everything you stole, most assuredly we will make you surrender it by force.”

    “And the men?” Rain asked calmly. She placed her hands around her coffee cup to keep them steady.

    “Yes, you’ll need to surrender them as well.”

    “What will happen to them?” She noticed Leonardo, Richard and Maximilien straighten up, staring at her with wide eyes.

    They knew nothing about this world. They were powerless. Helpless. She’d probably killed them all over again by doing this.

    They’d never survive.

    “Of course we cannot let this indiscretion get back to our government. They will be taken and disposed of.”

    XXX

    “And the men?” Rain asked calmly.

    Richard noticed that her hands were shaking.

    “Yes, you’ll need to surrender them as well.”

    “What will happen to them?” Rain continued to speak as if Leonardo, Robespierre and Richard were not sitting there with them.

    “Of course we cannot let this indiscretion get back to our government. They will be taken,” Richard stiffened and Robespierre drew a sharp breath, “And disposed of.”

    Rain nodded slowly, her eyes staring unblinking at the Ambassador. “I…see.” With the tiniest of head movement’s she looked at Richard, and in that brief moment of eye contact, the ex-King understood what he had to do.

    The ambassador was looking around at them all. “Well? Do you want to-” their sentence was cut off as Richard swiftly stood up and the crushing force grabbed the alien’s head and brought it down to meet the kitchen table with a sickening crunch. The ambassador did not move when Richard let go of its head.

    Rain surveyed the whole scene without moving a muscle even as Robespierre and Leonardo jumped.

    Richard turned to Rain.

    “Would you like me to do the same to you or, do you have a sedative to take?”

    Rain considered it for a moment. “You know, I think I will take the sedative. I’ll be back in moment.”

    She got up and limped towards the back of the house. Richard nodded his head decisively. He started moving around the kitchen, opening drawers and cabinets and pulling out the sparse amount of shelf stable food Rain kept on hand.

    “What are you doing?” Robespierre asked, still staring, horror struck at the unconscious alien on the table. “You might have killed him!”

    “I didn’t do it that hard,” Richard said gruffly. He was pulling out knives from the knife block and selected a paring knife, which he slipped into boot and the chopping knife, which he placed in the small pile of food he was gathering.

    “You’re running away.” Leonardo stated calmly.

    “I am. You heard the ambassador, their intention is to kill us. I won’t be here when they turn up with reinforcements.”

    Leonardo titled his head, watching as Richard struggled with the replicator. He hissed when it beeped a negative at him again.

    “Blasted machines.”

    Leonardo went over and calmly punched in the access code. “It should work now.”

    Richard looked at him suspiciously. “What?”

    “Take us with you,” Leonardo said.

    “What?” Richard said, incredulously.

    Robespierre also looked up, surprise all over his face.

    “You said it yourself, they intend to kill us. You are clearly the expert at surviving on the lam, I understand this technology the best of the three of us, and Ma- Robespierre is the only one who has studied the maps of this city. Out best chance of survival is to work together.”

    Richard looked Leonardo up and down.

    “You can come. He stays.” He tilted his head, indication the Frenchman. However before Robespierre could protest, Leonardo frowned and grabbed Richard’s wrist in a vice grip.

    “No. Both of us, or I will go nowhere.”

    Richard grunted, his fingertips going oddly numb as Leonardo steadily increased pressure. He grittted his teeth, staring down Leonardo, who did not even flinch.

    “Fine. But if he slows us down, I’m leaving both of you,” Richard finally conceded. Leonardo let go of his wrist and smiled charmingly.

    “You’ll hardly noticed us.”

    Bring back another dead person already!

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  • A Fiction Agreed Upon. Episode Eight: Eschewal. Part Two.

    August 29th, 2017

    PART TWO.

    Rain’s worst fears were confirmed when she opened the door and a member of the Komali was standing on the porch, shading their eyes and starting to sweat under Earth’s sun.

    Fuck!

    “Hello, may I help you?” Rain asked pleasantly, carefully holding the door so the alien could not see past her shoulder into the house behind her. One of the dogs was behind her, a cold wet nosed pressed to the skin at the back of her knee.

    “You are Doctor Rainbow Miller?” The Komali asked.

    “Yes. Do I know you?” Sweat ran the back of her neck.

    The alien frowned. “No. I am the presiding ambassador of the Komali for your Federation. I am Maltass.” They dipped their head, bird-like.

    Rain dipped back, and prayed that Leonardo’s or Richard’s curiosity wasn’t going to get the better of them.

    “It’s wonderful to meet you  ambassador Maltass. Is there something I can d-”

    The Komali’s face, usually so placid and pleasant, with the droopy eyelids and full lips, and soft pastel colored skin tones, only marked by the stripes of darker color, had hardened and their lips drew back into a grimace.

    “You can return what you stole!”

    XXX

    “Who do think that is?” Robespierre asked quietly, twisting around in his chair to watch Rain’s retreating back. They heard the door open and Rain asked in a loud, and falsely cheer voice, “Hello?”

    Richard was leaning over the table, trying to see. “I can’t tell, maybe someone from the government?”

    Leonardo shook his head. “Why wouldn’t they just contact Rain through her connection, if they need her?” He shook his head again, brushing his hair from his face. He couldn’t wait until it was long enough to tie back and away again. “I think it’s probably her old assistant, Kamala Mason.”

    “The one who left? Why would she come back?” Richard challenged him.

    Leonardo shrugged. “Perhaps she changed her mind?”

    “You can return what you stole!”

    All three of them jumped and Ava’s ears prinked up. Pallas growled from under the table.

    The door suddenly slammed and heavy footsteps started down the hall towards the kitchen. Richard leapt from his chair and backed away, towards the counter, where some knives sat in a block.

    Leonardo too, moved from the table when he realized there was no way that any normal human could be causing such as noise, and quickly proven correct when a figure, over seven feet tall, with pale purple skin, and no hair burst in.

    Robespierre shrieked, and quickly cut himself off, clapping both hands over his mouth, even as his whole frame bucked backward from…from whatever it was. Richard dropped the paring knife he grabbed.

    The thing frowned, and whipped around to confront Rain, who came limping quickly after it.

    “I knew it! Your government tried to protect you, but-”

    “These are my relatives, cousins on my mother’s side,” Rain cut in smoothly. The thing, monster, dragon, thing, sneered.

    “I’ve been on earth for over six months, and have no one that looks like them,” it waved a hand at Robespierre, Richard and Leonardo, all of whom were still too stunned to speak.

    Indeed, Richard looked like he might never speak again.

    “Besides, does it have a ID?”

    The thing grabbed Robespierre around the neck, and Leonardo caught sight of a fear far more primal than a simple distaste of touch would allow for. The man’s face was utterly white, the scare tissue disappearing and making him appear much younger. The thing brushed the hair at the nape of his neck away and bobbed it’s head.

    “Is expected. Nothing.” It release Robespierre, who stumbled away, back to the wall, looking ready to flee. His grey-green eyes had lost all of their usual sharp, able stare instead reverting back to that of a much younger man’s, terrified and speechless.

    Rain stood frozen, staring at between the thing and Robespierre, to Leonardo and Richard back up against the counter. She rubbed her forehead, advertising her thought process.

    “Leonardo da Vinci, Richard the Third, and Maximilien Robespierre, please meet ambassador Maltass, of the Komali. They are an alien,” she clarified at Leonardo’s lost look. Rain turned to the alien ambassador.

    “Won’t you please take a seat and we can talk about this?”

    Bring back another dead person already!

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