Query at the Single Gloves Gate

single-gloves

__Does it still hurt?

He stood as he pulled his pants up.

__What does?

__Your knee.

He lifted his right leg and extended is foot forward. Again, and then once more.

__ I’m fine. I can walk, so I’m good.

As the door of our room slammed shut, the only thing I could hear was the rustling sound of our thermal pants and the light thuds of our footsteps as we walked towards the elevator. It hummed along the piano music faintly drowning the silence between us. I could hear his breathing while he tapped his fingers on the railings of the elevator and the buzz of the engine seemed to compliment it.

He insisted that we take the train to “the gate” despite the condition of his right knee. He’s exhausted, so am I, and I know he’s pushing himself a little too hard. Three days ago, he had just flown in to Madrid and within five hours, he was on board a plane to Reykjavik. From there we hiked mountain ranges, walked miles and miles of frozen land, and endured low temperatures he’s never experienced before.

When we were still together, I promised myself that I’d take him to Iceland once the right time presented itself. The time came, but it never occurred to me that we would come as visitors and not as a couple. We remained friends, though we still do the things we did before. Only less passionate, more regretful. Sometimes painful.

Tomorrow, he returns to Madrid, and he may never want to see me again. He had no more reasons to, I fear. While I hope this won’t be the last, I have enjoyed the last three days spending time with him. We slept on the same bed, made love, kissed, and last night, we watched a film in Icelandic without the subtitles on. He fell asleep on my shoulder while I stayed up as long as I could.

As I woke up to my freezing feet in the bright early morning of Reykjavik, I realized that he had curled on his side of the bed with his back against my thigh. I slid down to lay my body against his. This woke him up, of course, as he threw the blanket over us. I turned to him to wrap my arms around him, expecting him to push me away, but I was too sleepy to remember what happened.

__We can take the cab, you know.

He gave me a weirded-out look and smiled bitterly. The biting cold of the air outside was familiar, but it was nice to see some sunlight. I had never been so thrilled to see my shadow on the ground.

__There’s more stories to be seen when you ride with locals. You can take a cab, and I’ll just meet you there if you want…

Stories, stories… It’s what he always wanted. On our anniversaries, dates, and on his birthdays, all he wanted were stories. I thought he was easy to please, but I was wronged easily. Some stories made him so depressed he would not talk to me for days. Some made him so happy he’d shower me with sweet texts, and on many times, he wrote me letters.

The ride lasted faster than I thought. Neither of us had ever been here, but an avid traveller that he is, I knew he’d already figured out how to get to “the gate” even before he landed in Reykjavik. The same cool air greeted us as we exited the train, and I followed his lead around the exhausted pavements. He led me to where the streets rested, far for the sunlight to reach. The streets were quiet, as most streets in this city were, yet I was beginning to feel lost and far.

__Ah.

He stopped walking, and I almost bumped into him.

Across the street, straight to our left, was a rusty gate. Its walls were painted white, like the plate tied on it. To miss it would be difficult, as most walls on this street were painted in gloomy colors, as if mimicking the moods of the skies. As we crossed the lonely street, the sign became clearer.

“Single Gloves,” it said.

I looked at him, to see his reaction. It was the familiar smile he puts on whenever he becomes one with something or someone special. He smiled at me, and I tried to smile back.

__This is it.

Thousands of miles from his home, somewhere in the depressed streets of this arctic city, he seemed to have found the antidote to the false joy he’s had while spending time with me. I could not find the reason why he was brightened at this moment, but I enjoyed it far better than hearing his laughter.

He walked backwards to lean on the parked car. The sound of his bag being unzipped was the loudest sound I could hear, louder than the faint bustle of the busy street few blocks away. He pulled out his notebook, and at the sound of his retractable pen, I began to disappear from his presence.

I was not sure if I was hearing his pen dance across the paper of his journal or if I was just imagining it. Usually, it wouldn’t take him too much time to write something down when he needed to, so I stood there struggling to keep warm as I stare at the gate.

The bottom part of the sign looked torn, leaving the “g” of the “gloves” look more like a “q.” There were wooden covers inside it, like a reverse scaffold, with the smell of paint, as if someone had just painted its inner walls. Probably. It was too dark to tell what’s inside as if the gate asked light to keep its secrets.

He was still writing.

There were gloves of different kinds covering the spikes of the old gate. Some were just hanging, some on the ground. One was pink with a neon yellow lining whose middle finger covered one of the spikes and another, of brown leather, with its thumb up. There was a gray right glove dangling from the index finger and another gray one on the ground. There was a puffy blue glove smashed into the coils of the gate, a black one, a maroon, and a darker brown. The more I look, the more gloves I see.

My eyes were glued to the gate now, and I felt him walk up beside me.

I looked at him. He’s now smiling at me. I smiled back and asked him.

__What… is this?

I looked back at him, and his smile was gone, though he was looking at the gate now.

__It’s a gate for single gloves.

We were both watching the gate now. Quiet, beside each other, but obviously far away.

__It’s a gate for single gloves.

__I heard you the first time.

__I know.

I sighed, and he chortled. We stood there for a few more minutes until we silently decided that it was time for us to go back. He was content, and I was still confused. We spent the rest of the day hopping from one shop to another as we made our way back to our hotel. We were exchanging stories over the local food and local shops, watching the Icelandic folks spend their day without us, pretending we did not exist. It was all happening to quick for me, as our last night together crept near.

That evening, I found him watching the late gray night of the city as I stepped out of the bathroom.

__What’s the matter?

__Nothing. I’m just tired.

__I know.

He walked towards me, lightly limping.

I was two inches taller than him, yet he easily planted as kiss on my lips. I felt his skinny arms wrap my half naked body.

__Thank you.

He whispered.

 

The following morning, with the sky still dark, I felt his arms still around me. We were naked under the sheets, and though I could not see his face, I knew he was already awake.

__Will I ever see you again?

My question seemed to startle him. I tightened my embrace. He looked up to me.

__’Course you will.

He leaned in to kissed me.

There was a long pause before he finally broke the silence. He slid off the bed and started packing. I watched him do it quickly as I fought the drowsiness. In about two hours, he’d be on a plane and I’d be alone for another day.

As soon as he was ready to leave, I tried to put on clothes – my underwear at least – and said my goodbyes. I wanted it to be more special, thinking that this will be the last time we were alone together, but it turned out like we were still living near each other. We would be in the next few months, but after that, it could be worse.

__Are you sure you don’t want a cab?

As always, he declined my offer as he kissed me, perhaps the last time. As the door shut, I crashed back on the bad and surrendered. For a few minutes, I tried to harness everything and put me to sleep but I just could not. I sat up and watched the same skies he was watching last night.

My feet brushed on something on the floor.

It was his glove.

He must have dropped it.

Quickly, I put on some more clothes and tried to run after him. I knew he’d be long gone, but there was a likelihood that he might still be reading a book while waiting for the next train to the airport.

I ignored the piercing cold air as I bolted out of the hotel doors and walked swiftly to the train stop. There seem to be more people walking around, but I easily managed to get to the stop. I could not find him, as I expected, so I dialed his phone number.

__Hello?

__Hey… You, uh… You forgot your glove.

There was an unfamiliar silence.

__Did I?

For some reasons, I knew he was smiling on the other line. I could feel it. Then I heard a light giggle.

__You’re smiling right now, aren’t you?

__Yes.

He giggled again.

__Yes, I am… I know you’re smiling too.

He hang up, and I started my way back to the hotel.

And so, the air of this Reykjavik’s uninviting autumn breath froze everything I was ever scared off. How I wish there was a mirror in front of me, for I have never seen what true relief looked like. Indeed, I was feeling it at that moment. I’ve felt it, and I’ve heard it – but I wanted to see it.

I put his glove inside the breast pocket of my coat. I breathed out a smile, and the cacophony of the footsteps of the passers-by started to become louder. The air remained criminally cold, with my hands shaking. All these I ignored for I have never before felt satisfaction as timely as this.

The Setting Reach

The crown of horned beasts lie on the crossing’s
heart. The crossing of the crescent moon, sparkling
star, and crossed-spires. The crown lay broken and
beaten but its thorns emerge, from time’s
passing the crosses converge.

The twin spires lay grandiosely on its banks,
of rivers thinned by crying waters and
sinking lands. The tears are blue, but the
eyes are gold, its arching bridges stay bold.

The treasure’s home remains married to its
east, guarded once by blazing beasts and
honored by its sparkling sound. It remains
with the house of hope, as the crescent moon
and shining star slide down its slope.

What light it brings to a sleeping child,
What darkness it hides from a searching soul.

The city remains high, and with time,
its river quietly runs by.IMG_8347

An African Woman from the Future Goes Back to Medieval Period

Draft draft draft!

*************

I’ve been working on this novel for several months now. It’s a product of my intertwined interest in politics, cosmology, history, and sociology. This is one of the three novels I’m mostly serious about getting published.

Preview after this

” Time Sentence convicts criminals to be deported into the future through a light-speed bullet train. In the hopes to eliminate the criminal gene, the Federate State and Union of Nations hear various cases of felony and even misdemeanor, carefully sentencing those that are proven guilty of their crimes beyond reasonable doubt. There are no clues as to what really happens when the train travels back in time, until the 4/15 incident, when a group of intellectual young adults are accidentally transported back in time with vengeful and cunning criminals. Both sinners and victims will find the truth behind the centuries-old Time Sentence. They will struggle in different worlds of different times, to survive in their present’s past to save their future selves.”

*************

If this were death, then I would be happy that I died.

            I could not even tell whether my eyes were open or not. I couldn’t see anything, I couldn’t picture anything. But those didn’t matter, really. A soft bed of what could be clouds seem to carry me midair, and the cool, clean breeze covered my entire body. Was I naked? Again, it didn’t matter.

            I was hoping this was not a dream. I realized that it could have been just few minutes since I died in the train with my fellow Selects. There were no fear and confusion in what I was feeling. I felt relaxed. Safe, but lost.

            In the middle of this silence, a door creaked. My eyes shot open, and I say drapes of linen hanging over me. I sat straight up, and looked around. The smell of incense suddenly filled the room as glowing light lined the square windows directly in front of me. Where was I?

            I noticed that I’ve been wearing a white tunic, and nothing underneath. I reached for the blanket to cover me up, but the weight surprised me. The blanket was embroidered with intricate patterns of vines and flowers. There were sculpted poles on each corner of my bed. One by one, the details on the carved would seem to glow under the faint illumination of my room. There were angels, heralds, even gems. The satin canopy hung still, and the golden linings caught

            The door on my right creaked again. “Hello? Who’s there?”

            On a wooden table on my bedside, there were small spires of shiny matter perched on a fork-like metal piece. There were leather-bound papers, four of them.

            I heard whispers. “Hello?”

            A young boy slowly pushed the door. His bright blue eyes shined bright, and his long blonde hair flowed naturally on his left as he tilted his head, staring at me.

            “You are awake now?” Deep but adorable, his voice echoed in my dim room.

            “Yes. Yes, I am.” I said as I tried to sit up with a better posture. “Where am I? Who are you?”

            The boy looked from his left to his right. “My father said I shouldn’t talk to you and go near you until His Glory talked to you.”

            “It’s alright.” The boy gave me a strange look, not understanding what I am saying. “Where am I?”

            The boy walked inside. The cacophony of his heels came in like an epiphany. I could not have been transchroned… Panic slowly rushed in me. I could not scare this young boy, so I tried my best to speak naturally and calmly. “It would make me happy if you tell me where I am, young man.”

            “I’m no man, your Glory.”

            My glory?

            He was just staring at me now, not blinking, no movement.

            “Tell me your name.”

            “I’m Prince Richard.”

            This was not happening. Prince? Age of Kings?

            “Prince Richard,” I swallowed hard and asked, “tell me, how did I get here?”

            “The hunters found Your Glory with three other angels while they marched to battle the barbarians. My father saw you fell from the heavens. Your presence warded off the Barbarians.”

            Three other angels?

            “What date is it?”

            He was silenced by my question. “Pardon me, Your Glory, but I cannot speak the language of angels.”

            “What are you saying?” He did not respond. I stood up and opened the window. A gust of wind cooled my tense body, but what I saw scared me more. It was a vast field of green grass, with trees. Far beyond was a thick layer of forest, fading into nothingness as it became the blue sky. No clouds, no birds. The view was like a thousand-year old painting.

            Could this be real?

            As if answering my question, a cold touch to my right arm jolted my whole body. I gasped as Prince Richard took several steps back.

            “Pardon me, again, Your Glory. You skin…” I looked at my dark complexion, and then at Prince Richard. He was much smaller than I thought. He was now looking up at me, with amazement and with wonder.

            “May I know Your Glory’s name?”

            “Prince Richard, why are you calling me ‘your glory’?”

            “My father said so, your glory. As also wished by the other angels…”

            “Angels?”

            “Yes. Are you not one, Your Glory?”

            I couldn’t speak. For sure, I knew I was in a different era. But now, a young kid looks at me as if I’m a lost animal but thinks of me as a mythological being?

            “You said other angels. Where are they?”

            He blinked several times, still staring at me, before he answered, “His Glory, Angel Max is being cleansed at the Royal Fountain, your glory…”

            Max? I couldn’t be Maximillian… It… no.

            I was amazed at how easily I calmed myself down, but I knew I could not freak this young boy out. I knelt, and held his shoulders. His eyes widened, and I felt him weakening as my dark hands held him. His eyes were locked on to my right hand as if observing it very closely.

            “Call me Elise, Prince Richard,” I told the curious boy. I stood up and walked him to the edge of the bed. I looked at the wide open door, and I was sure I was not ready to step out of this room just yet. I told Prince Richard to sit beside me, and then asked, “Tell me more about the angels that came with me.”

            “Angel Ban… Banter…”

            “Banastre?”

            “Yes! His glory is in the courtyard with my brothers.”

            Maximilian and Banastre? They were with me?

            “And,” Prince Richard added, “another one sleeps soundly in my sister’s chamber, Angel Iss.

            “Elise,” I corrected him. He repeated it correctly, and I gave him a nervous smile. Gently, he touched my hand and slowly caressed it.

            “Are all woman angels like your, Angel Elise?”

            “Like me?”

            “Yes. Skin color of the night. Are all women like you in heaven?”

            Clearly, he has not seen a person of dark color. Where could I be? Was I becoming mad?

            “And are all man angel like me, Angel Elise?” I reminded myself that I could not scare of this child. I should just become what he wanted me to become.

            “I’m afraid I could not tell you, Prince Richard.” He was still running his fingers all over my hand and up my forearm.

            “Angels truly are magical!” he proclaimed. “I—I must tell father!”

            The sudden burst of excitement from Prince Richard scared me even more. He stood up, and started to run towards to door.

            “Wait!” I called on to him. He stopped, and turned around, “What is it, Angel Elise?” He asked innocently.

            “Can you bring me with you? I do not like to be alone in here.”

            He smiled, ran back to me and grabbed my arm.

            I was still confused and scared of what was out there. Willingly enough, I did not care of how I looked like anymore. I needed to see Max and Banastre.

            At that moment, questioning whether this was real or not was useless. I knew for sure that I am thousands of years back in time. I also knew that people of this time have not seen people of my color.

            Before the view of my window disappeared from my sight as the young prince pulled me outside of the room I though was resting place, I thought to myself, I ought to have died.

           

 

 

DRAFT — TIME SENTENCE — Preview of another chapter

ABOUT TIME SENTECE:

” Time Sentence convicts criminals to be deported into the future through a light-speed bullet train. In the hopes to eliminate the criminal gene, the Federate State and Union of Nations hear various cases of felony and even misdemeanor, carefully sentencing those that are proven guilty of their crimes beyond reasonable doubt. There are no clues as to what really happens when the train travels back in time, until the 4/15 incident, when a group of intellectual young adults are accidentally transported back in time with vengeful and cunning criminals. Both sinners and victims will find the truth behind the centuries-old Time Sentence. They will struggle in different worlds of different times, to survive in their present’s past to save their future selves.”

Here is another preview chapter

————————————————————-

Vasilly and Kiko

I was sure I was not the only one who could not sleep. Sven, my rather quiet roommate, had dowsed off almost immediately after the dinner. It’s already two days into the conference, and we have not had a decent conversation yet.

I felt the elevator slow down after about twenty levels, and a loud ding almost made my ears bleed from the brief silence.

“You startled me man,” Vasilly, the hulking eighteen year old from Australia, said.

“The elevator did,” I replied.

“You’re one of them, too?”

“One of who?” I elected to go to the grand balcony to catch some air and view the city lights against the sky night. The Cassiopeia Tower stood as the third tallest building, with 170 levels. The engineers of the Ultrain stayed here while conceptualizing and blueprinting the train. If I remembered correctly, they also engineered this spiraling tower.

“Everyone seems to be a braggart of smart arses.” Vasilly said, putting both his elbows on the sill. I stood next to him while we stare down into the busy world. It was 23:00 hours, and the city buzzed with tension and beamed overly with electricity and colors.

“Oh,” pursing my lips and avoiding eye contact. Strangely, the night seemed to be warm, and the air rather humid. “Everyone’s quite intellectual and assertive, I agree, but I think I’ve accepted that fact way before I got here. Smart people exude annoying exuberance. I mean, you read everyone’s biography, right?”

Vasilly shook his head. “Only the pretty girls,” he answered as he popped open a soda. “And you’re of them, then,” I replied. He gave me glinting eyes and a silly smiled. He became even more attractive, I give him that. I looked back down the city. We were like angels in the heavens, overlooking what looked like hell in the pool of warm yellow and red lights.

“Where’s your roommate?”

“I have no clue,” he answered, chugging what I think half of his drink.

“Who are you roomed with?”

“Maximillian Lukeforester,” he said with such high honor for perhaps, the most prominent of the Select Scholars while downing the rest of his drink. “He’s pretty cool but too much of a rich dickhead bastard.”

People call him Xim, grandson of Hernan Lukeforester, the physicist behind the Ultrain. Smart, rich, powerful, handsome, domineering – he’s either a heroic being or the most heinous villain. He was selected not because of his family ties or political network. Xim is an intellectual genius. He could challenge me in math and put up a good fight, he ripped his rival’s career in public oral defense, and of course, his knowledge in history of time is spectacular.

“You cannot shove a better personality to someone who’s got everything. Like my money and neuron infested roommate.”

“I am very much impressed with the countless terms you can describe anybody,” I said, amused and for some reasons, elated. I turned around and, leaning my back against the sill and elbows still on them, I looked at the sky. Now it felt like hell looking up. “And with your gorgeous accent, it’s even much better sounding.”

He laughed for a bit. “What about your roommate? Who is he?”

“Sven Lum,” I answered, feeling he was looking at me. I held my gaze into the sky. “We haven’t really talked, and he seemed to be living hours ahead of me. He’s up before I am, and gone before I decide to be.”

I slid downwards and landed on my buttocks. I took off my cuff links and loosened my tie. Vasilly sat down beside me, unbuttoning his shirt. His bowtie laid nicely undone on his shoulders. A nice patch of brown hair was exposed on his defined chest.

He held out his hand saying, “Vasilly Tripp.” I took his hand and shook it firmly, “Francisco Agoncillo,” I said. “You can call me Kiko.”

“So, why are you here?”

Taking in a deep breath and closing my eyes, “I’m just really good in math, I think. Not useful as your medical expertise.”

“You did read all the bios!” I felt his eyes on me. I straightened my back against sill and relaxed my shoulders. They all felt amazing.

“Of course, Vasilly. I thought it would be helpful.”

“Is that why you’re here?”

I looked at him, who now had the same position I had – eyes closed, shoulders down, and back against the sill. “What do you mean?”

He didn’t answer. “I came up here thinking I could catch some sleepiness left from the city. I really could not slee—“

His lips found mine, and his hand caressed my chin. A jolt of tension and ease erupted from spine to my neck as I become attached to him, even for a brief moment that should have been a lightyear. Before I realized this, I was kissing him back. I put my hands behind his head, and we kissed for a longer time. Half of our backs were still leaning as we awkwardly, passionately kissed.

Two Select Scholars making out in the prestigious Cassiopeia – what else could make a better headline tomorrow?

I pulled out and regretted it soon after. We were sitting down again, back straight and shoulders down, as if nothing happened. We were both staring at the balcony across our side, and the air started to cool.

“I’m sorry, “ he started to say, but I held his hand.

“I am happy you did that. I am happy I could not sleep.”

I felt his head turn to me, and he grabbed my hand. “I know you followed me here. I know from the moment you saw me that you liked me, right there and then.”

False. I admired his physique, and I fell for his magnetizing masculinity, but I did not know what kind of person he is. Except for what the bio of him that I read.

Vassily Tripp: gifted in Chemistry and Physics. Medical School at fifteen. Vassily, who mutated a mutated HIV strain that researchers now are utilizing to battle early stages of the disease.

I felt his fingers in between mine as our palms met. He turned his head back to the balcony across. We could hear the hum of the elevators and feel the slight sway of the building as the night breeze cools the air even more.

We kissed, and so what? It was nothing but recognition of how you appreciate a physical beauty. A kiss is gratitude. It’s not a symbol of feeling or emotion – it’s rather a symbol of wanting a tangible beauty. You kiss because you can see, not because you can feel. A hand feels more love than what a kiss can show. While a kiss can give a multitude of wondrous emotions, none of which is love.

“How did you know I was –“

“Stop,” I cut him off as I let go of his hand. “I was attracted to you, yes. But that doesn’t mean I want more.”

I looked at him, “I’m glad we did that. I am.”

I let go of his hand. He stood up and looked down on me. “What does that suppose to mean?”

“I don’t know.”

Silence.

He waited for my answer, standing there like a mannequin. Eyes on me, I feel.

“You know what that means.”

I looked at him, and he looked back. “I am not even sure if that was real.”

“What real?”

His eyebrows met and he walked back towards the elevator. He pressed the button, and then silence.

“You know what, Kiko?” he started, as the elevator dinged. “How much you know affects what’s real about what you know.”

I sat there, senseless. As he entered the capsule, he said, out loud, “I hope you have enough hangers in that closet, deceptive fagg—“

It was not the buzz of the breeze nor the fading, resonating business of the cars hundreds of feet below. It was not the cool heavens above that made me deaf, nor the heat of the midnight blaze the melted my hearing.

It was the long, alarming ding of the elevator that drowned the word that described what I fear I am.

TIME SENTECE — DRAFT — Chapter Preview

I’ve been working on this novel for several months now. It’s a product of my intertwined interest in politics, cosmology, history, and sociology. This is one of the three novels I’m mostly serious about getting published.

Preview after this

” Time Sentence convicts criminals to be deported into the future through a light-speed bullet train. In the hopes to eliminate the criminal gene, the Federate State and Union of Nations hear various cases of felony and even misdemeanor, carefully sentencing those that are proven guilty of their crimes beyond reasonable doubt. There are no clues as to what really happens when the train travels back in time, until the 4/15 incident, when a group of intellectual young adults are accidentally transported back in time with vengeful and cunning criminals. Both sinners and victims will find the truth behind the centuries-old Time Sentence. They will struggle in different worlds of different times, to survive in their present’s past to save their future selves.”

———————————————————————————————————–

Sven and Trina

            I found his metal tag hanging on a branch of a tree about six yards from where we found him. Not far from it were the remains of two other prisoners, starting to stench.

“Wayman Hart,” I said loud enough for Sven to hear. He held his hand out to mean hold on. I looked at the prisoner in the dimming light. Innocence and pain were clear on his face. I’m about half sure that the moment he opens his eyes, pain will wash the innocence off of it. I walked back to be closer to the unconscious body of Wayman and Sven.

“If I estimated it correctly,” Sven started to brush the mud and dirt from his knees, “It’s 1897.” The same fear, shock, and denial rushed in me again. We have been accidentally sentenced to timewith a bullet train full of prisoners. Cunning felons and national enemies that were sentenced to betranschroned to the future for the world to eliminate the criminal gene. One of mankind’s most stupid custom.

But here I am, lost in place and time. Hungry and hurt in a strange… jungle of some sort… dirty, and dying.

The two other criminals laid dead on the rocks, which they impacted when we blasted into the scene. I looked at Wayman again, thinking he’s better of dead. If I had the choice, I would have been one of the two prisoners who hit the rocks. I wouldn’t want to wake up lost and beaten in all senses. Somehow, however, I was thankful to be alive.

“What about error?” I asked Sven. He is the youngest licensed astrophysicist of the country, and with his amazing intelligence on his field, he’s working hard to identify our location and time through the stars. A few minutes ago, while my panic was subsiding, he was explaining how the stars could tell us the time of the year and where we could be. I was scared, and, perhaps, he was better at not showing fear. The idea that we’re never going back to our rightful time seemed to not have sunk on him yet. He managed to be practical when I felt suicidal.

Flattening the muddy ground from his improvised stellar graph, he said indignantly, “Plus or minus two hundred years.” He climbed up the large boulder to sit half way to its tip, looking defeated and beaten. “This star, Hya Epsilon, is perfectly aligned to its east,” pointing to another star. “But still, I could be wrong.”

“You should wash up, Sven.” Dried blood plastered his tossled hair on his right ear. His whole body was smudged in mud, blood, and sweat.

I held on him tightly when we were transported, dug my fingers in his huge arms as we whizzed around the Earth faster than light could. It burned us, but in a flash of light and a brief struggle of air, we were flying past branches and trees, until we landed rather safely into the river. I was lucky I was flew further into the deeper part of the water. Sven, unfortunately, hit the bed, rolled brutally across the rocks before crashing into the shallow waters.

I looked back at the two dead bodies far from the water. One of them is missing an arm. The other’s head popped open. They could have been us.

“France,” Sven whispered.

“What?”

“We’re in France…” Sven said, shooting a worried look at me. He started to give the surrounding a closer, longer look. No sounds of birds, no rustle of wind, no twigs snapping, just the rush of water close by. A clear river of cold water so clear and clean. And around us, beyond the wet soil and muddy ground embedded with rock of sorts and sizes, were tall trees watching us, as if waiting for our graves to rot at any moment.

“We should get help,” I said.

“Yeah, sure.” He gave a long sigh.

“Listen,” walking to him, feeling obligated to keep his spirits up, “We’re right by a river, and some… village or something… should be close by. If this really is France, it’s alright. I speak French – “

“It’s not that simple.”

“I know it’s not!” I shot back.

“We can’t just show up in town and say we’re from the future, Trinity. Did you think about that? We clearly don’t look like we belong here at all. And I’m not even sure if we really are in France!”

“Why would I not consider those?! Sven, we can’t be like this! We gotta move out of here. We’re all hurt and hungry. It’s going to get cold and it’s going to get dark. We have to survive, and we willstart. Right now.”

“We cannot cause damage in time fabric. We’re going to screw this up, don’t you understand?”

“It’s already screwed up, Sven! It’s fucked up! We’re fucked the moment we blasted in here!”

My chest started to rise and fall quickly. My lungs started to burn.

I will not cry.

“But what about him?” Sven asked, giving up.

“Wayman,” I said. “That’s his name.”

“I saw this,” I said, handing out the metal prisoner tag. “His crime is double murder.”

Sven raised his eyebrow. “Hm.”

“Silver and gold,” he said, inspecting the little metal plate in his hand. After a quick look around, he turned his back on me. He picked up a stick, placed the metal at the edge and peeled of a layer of bark from it. This he did again and again until the stick was completely out of bark. The white pulp shined in the dimming light.

“We should camp out here for tonight, and wait for Wayman to wake up. We can’t tell if the… locals, here, are hostile or not. We might need him for whatever he can.” He grabbed another stick and peeled it, this time easier than the first.

“If you want to help, some dry leaves would be helpful for fire.”

Giving off a heavy sigh, I grabbed a long rock and pounded on the wet hard soil. “We need a pit for the fire first.”

Whether it was the silence or not, the river started to roar more loudly that what I could remember. The large boulder Sven sat on was now submerged slightly, and the riverbed condensed, with the water just an arm’s length away from us.

The stars shone brighter, and more seemed to have emerged. It was dark and we needed warmth.

 

I woke up with the cold river water nibbling on my toes.

“You’re lying!”

I shot my eyes open. Sven was not close by, where he was supposed to be.

“We were transchroned just like you!”

I rose up slowly to hide behind the huge rock I was leaning on. The water level seemed to have risen overnight. What I saw numbed my feet from the freezing cold water rushing past me.

“I’m gonna shoot you!” Wayman, with his gun pointed at Sven, stood at the edge of the river.

“No, no, no!” Sven pleaded. “I’m not an officer or spy or whatever you think I am! I was stuck in the transporter by accident! Don’t shoot me, please!” He was hip-deep in the water, and his face red and sweaty.

Where did he get his gun? I know he was not carrying one when we carried him away from the river before he drifted off. One of the two prisoners might have had one, I thought.

Before I could plan, I noticed that the water rose enormously.

“What do you want?! I’m only nineteen, man! You could have died without us!” He started to cry. “Please, please! I’ll do whatever you want. Just, just don’t shoot me! Please, don’t!”

“Us?”  Wayman’s eyebrows met. “Who else is here! Show yourself or this agent of yours is dead! Show yourself!”

“No… no…” Felton started crying even more.

I looked upriver and felt the ground to shake a little. Birds were starting to fly away from the river further up, and I could hear snaps farther away.

The river was flooding, and would wash us off to death.

“Show yourself! I am not falling for this anymore! I will kill this agent of yours!”

I threw a rock deep in the woods, and for a brief moment, it caught Wayman’s attention. I stood up and screamed, “Swim as far as you can, Sven!”

Wayman turned his gun on me and fired. Wayman missed me by inches and hit the rocks. Sven dove underwater immediately.

But before I could hide myself again behind the rock, I caught a glimpse of Wayman turning his gun back to Sven.

He fired.

“No!!!” I screamed, unable to move. All I could do was press myself harder to the rock and hope Sven was fine.

Few yards away, there was something coming that I should be more afraid for. Like a monster devouring nature, with foamy waters like drool engulfing anything on its path, the river rose with power.

I gripped the rock behind me as if it could save my life. I looked at the trees around me for the last few seconds, and even though I know they were to be washed off or be uprooted mercilessly by the roaring waters, they all looked like winners for they shall see three more bodies rot in their territory. The rocks looked at me with compassion and sympathy, and as I give up on my misplaced life at that moment, I entered nature’s monster.