thing had actually changed, only that
we knew.”
“I don’t get it.”
“The power of belief. It is one
thing to say you believe something. It
is a whole different ball game when you
suddenly really do. It’s the point when
believing turns into knowing. With
believing you can still change your
mind. With knowing, there’s no going
back.”
“My god, Scott. Every now and
then you turn into Socrates. I’m not
sure which scares me the most, God or
you.”
“So what about it? Isn’t there still
a tiny bit of doubt there, so that you
don’t have to completely admit God
exists? Aren’t you still safe from that
frightening prospect of knowing?”
“I don’t know. My brain seems to
be preoccupied now with defining God.”
“Oh… Well… That’ll take a while.”
Morning in the sensesuit lab felt
like preparations for a rocket launch.
Everyone understood the objective;
search records from another world.
There were many sidebar discussions
by staff in white lab coats. Others were
dashing about setting up special
monitoring stations. There was no way
to anticipate what might be discovered.
It was necessary to be ready for
anything. Markman almost felt ignored
as he stood in the suit test area
awaiting the signal for helmet-on.
Cassiopia looked on from her console
beside John Paul. The big monitor
screens built into the walls were
flickering whiteout, set to display a
computer representation from
Markman’s eyes. With a nod from John
Paul, Markman was finally allowed to
pull the helmet on. Clicking and hissing
gave way to absolute darkness and
then rising suns. As the pyramid room
lit up around him, Trill stood ready by a
crystal control column.
“Praise the gods of Terra. It is a
joy to see you, sir.”
“Good morning, Trill. Why do you
always refer to the gods of Terra?”
“Sir, they mark the beginning of
our Crillian heritage.”
“I will be transporting to the
Overlook Chamber in the Terra Nova
Castle. Is there any reason I shouldn’t
do that?”
“Sir, none that I am aware of.
Your staff will be waiting when you
arrive.”
“On a different subject Trill, tell
me, you know this is all part of a
computer program, correct?”
“Sir, yes. Centuries ago this
system was set up so that disputes with
neighboring cultures of a higher order
could be settled in a chosen form of
competition. Provisions were also made
for those petitioning for citizenship to
circumvent the long immigration
process by using the overlord clause for
warrior status application.”
“So you’re saying this program
that gives me access to the Dragon
Masters game and the Aurora City has
been operating for many years then?”
“Centuries, sir.”
“Trill, this doesn’t seem like a
computer program to me.”
“I assure you sir, this entire
Centrex pyramid complex was designed
and set up for receiving and
transmitting visitors in this fashion.”
“Have you always been here to
receive these visitors?”
“Sir, I assumed this post from
Sujar when he retired.”
“Do you have parents, Trill?”
“Sir, of course.”
“And you grew up here just like
anyone else?”
“Sir, yes. Just like everyone else.
What an odd question.”
“So you were trained to be here as
an emissary for visitors?”
“Yes, sir.”
“And you consider yourself a real
person?”
“Yes, sir. What else would I be?”
“Thank-you , Trill.” Markman went
to the transporter column and entered.
He turned to face Trill and nodded.
“Terra Nova Castle, Overlook
Chamber.”
The familiar flash of blinding light
carried Markman to his destination. He
found himself standing in the Overlook
Chamber transporter column, looking
out at a room brightly lit by the three
open doors of the overlook balcony. He
slipped out of the tube and went to the
balcony to reflect a moment on the
beauty of the courtyard below. The
rising suns were casting shadows on
the colorful gardens and their decor. A
horse drawn carriage was clickity-
clacking across the grounds. Two
soldiers in bright red, heavily
embellished uniforms marched slowly
back and forth in front of the main
gate. Gardening was taking place at
various points around the yard. It was
a peaceful and beautiful setting. The air
was cool. He turned to find a fire in the
huge fireplace. He could feel gentle
waves of warmth from it and smell a
faint touch of cedar. A knock at the
chamber door broke the spell.
“Come in.”
One of the double doors pushed
open. A chambermaid in a black serge
dress with a wide, white apron and
white collar maneuvered a cart through
the door. She had wavy jet black hair
past the shoulders, a tiny nose, and
dark bedroom eyes. She was
intoxicatingly attractive. She pushed
her cart up to the lounge control seat,
set down a tablecloth on the small table
near it, and poured tea from a heavily
engraved silver tea set. A tray of
strange-looking finger food was placed
next to that. The chambermaid turned,
bowed, and pushed her cart back out
the door without ever speaking.
DuMont entered the doorway as she
left.
“Sir, may I be of service?”
“Thank you, DuMont. No, I’ll be
studying some library records. If I have
a problem, I’ll call you.”
“Very good, sir. I’ll be standing
by.” He nodded and pulled the single
door closed behind him.
Markman shook off the
entrancement of the place and took his
seat. He couldn’t help but lift the cup of
tea to his face. It was almost too hot. It
tasted sweet, like Earl Gray with
honey. He tapped at the controls for
the video display on the wall and to his
dismay it came up showing the same
Crillian Convention talk show that he
had seen on his last visit. Crillian
delegates sitting around the discussion
table were debating, just as before. A
woman in a red dress with her hair in
too high a tower wrap spoke with mild
indignation. “This outsider certainly
does not engender a sense of openness
to the Crillian people. Don’t you agree,
Representative Mandell?”
The individual she was addressing
was a short man with a crew cut and
flowing black beard. “Perhaps we are to
know him by his actions and not his
appearance, Gerenda. There have been
no negative effects to the Crillia that
we know of, and no declarations of
change to our immigration policy.
Could that not be considered a positive
reflection on this new Overlord?”
“Yes, but all we’ve seen of this
new citizen is that short derived video
when he briefly visited the Thought
Exchange. Is that enough for you? It is
not enough for me.”
“By the way,” said the man sitting
next to her. He was bald with no
eyebrows or lashes, and had white
corneas. “That video has since been
uploaded to the Global Gossip Network.
It has had six billion hits in only one
day.”
“That makes my point beautifully,”
replied Gerenda. “Crillians want to
know who this person is and where he
came from. It’s only natural.”
“We all would like to know what
his plans are, I’m sure,” offered a
fourth woman wearing a gaudy crown
of jewels on her violet and silver hair
bun. “How can we feel comfortable
about his intentions here?”
“There is already word that the
petition for dissolution of the overlord
clause in the constitution has been
accepted for debate in the public
forum,” added Gerenda.
“An impulsive overreaction if ever
there was one,” said Mandell. “Perhaps
a lynching will follow.”
“Representative Mandell, you
know very well that absurd ancient
mandate was never expected to
actually be implemented. There has
even been talk of redesigning the
Dome of the Dragon Masters so the
area can be used for a new government
facility,” argued Gerenda.
“Gerenda, I would not suggest
destroying a part of Crillian heritage
quite so lightly were I you. The dome is
one of the oldest, most revered
structures on Crillia.”
“We are not sure even why it was
originally constructed, only that it
supports an obscure, nonsensical
legend, one that now threatens our
sovereignty. How many others will now
follow in this man’s footsteps and begin
a new colonization of Crillia?”
Markman had enough. He shook
his head, shifted in his seat and tapped
the controls until a master menu finally
appeared on the screen. One of the
choices was ‘search’. He hit the same
button and managed to get a search
form, but could not figure how to fill it
out. There were no lettered keys
anywhere on his console. Annoyed, and
without looking, he reached for his tea
on the cart in front of him. Clumsily, he
bumped the cup and sent liquid flying
into the air, and the cup over the side.
As it slipped over the edge, he
instinctively made a lunge for it with
his open hand, but his reach was six
inches short. To his surprise, the tea
cup and the liquid froze in midair.
Keeping his hand in the same
outstretched position, he looked
around. The fire in the fireplace was
still burning. Curtains by the overlook
balcony were still drifting with the
wind. He looked back at his suspended
tea cup and focused on it. Slowly, the
liquid hanging in the air filtered back
into the cup. As he continued to hold
out his open hand and focus on the
cup, it gently drifted back into his
grasp. He closed his hand around it and
sat back. Inside the cup, the tea was
still hot and smelled fresh.
A noise from behind distracted
him. He turned and looked to find
DuMont standing in the doorway, his
mouth agape. DuMont lowered his head
and spoke with dismay. “Sir, please
forgive me for witnessing the power of
an Overload.”
Markman came out of the
moment. “DuMont, it’s perfectly okay.
Please come in. I need your help with
something.”
“Sir, as you wish. I merely came to
inform you all spacecraft are now
operational and ready on the Skyway
Terrace if you should require
transportation.”
“DuMont, I want to search library
records. Does it look like I have the
right screen?”
“Yes, my lord. From the search
prompt you can access anything.”
“But how do I enter what I want to
search for. There are no keys.”
“Sir, we can install manual keys, if
you would prefer them.”
“But how do I do it now?”
“Sir, you need only speak what
you wish to search for. The system will
recognize your voice and proceed
accordingly.”
“But I don’t know what words to
use. Which words does it not
understand?”
“Sir, it is the library. There are no
words it does not understand. You
merely look at the display and
command it.”
Markman looked back at the
display on the wall and said, “Crillian
history.”
Immediately the screen became a
slow scrolling list of subjects related to
Crillian history.
“Thanks DuMont. I think I can
manage from here.”
“Sir, again my apologies for my
intrusion. If you need anything further,
please summon me.”
“DuMont, if I would like to go out
into the city without attracting so much
attention, could you bring me a jacket
with a hood that would conceal who I
am?”
“Sir, you would not want to wear
such a garment. It would be too lacking
in style. A full length cloak would serve
that purpose nicely, and would be
ignored by all.”
“Can you provide me with that?”
“Certainly, sir. Normally I would
caution our people not to wear such a
covering since highway men or other
undesirables might consider you easy
prey. In your case, the mistake would
be theirs, not yours.”
“Great. When you are able, please
have one sent up, will you?”
“Right away, sir. I will take my
leave of you.”
Markman began the search and
quickly found it more difficult than
hoped. Back when he had been
involved with their first intrusion of
Earth, the Salantians had told of a
victorious incursion into Crillian
society. They had said the culture did
not coexist well. They doubted any
Crillians were left. Such a devastating
occupation should have been headline
news in the Crillian historic records,
but after two hours of searching,
Markman had not found a single use of
the name Salantian, or of any foreign
species causing havoc on Crillia. It was
baffling.
DuMont arrived a short time later
bearing a long brown cloak that
reminded Markman of Obi-Wan Kenobi
attire. He started to laugh but cut it
short when DuMont’s expression turned
to one of concern.
“Is it not acceptable, my lord?”
“No, no DuMont. It’s perfect. It
just reminded me of an old story.”
As Markman finished speaking, the
ground suddenly began to vibrate
beneath his feet. The vibration quickly
became shaking. A rumbling sound
echoed through the castle.
“Do not fear, sir. It is Terra
passing too close to Crillia. It happens
every third moon on a four-moon
period. It only happens just shy of
three cycles and is said not to be
serious. The trembling will return
periodically this day and the next, but
the Crillian Ministry of Geology has
decreed that no tremors will ever
exceed the architectural standards set
by the ruling council.”
“Oh. You’re talking about a blue
moon.”
“Sir, blue moon? I am not familiar
with the phrase.”
“It’s one of the names given to the
third moon of a four-moon cycle.”
“I could have it entered into the
Crillian dictionary, sir.”
“No, DuMont. That’s not necessary.
Tell me, does the Aurora library have
any printed records, rather than just
video records?”
“Oh yes, my lord. There are
underground floors kept in the library
which contain bound documents of
almost all that are in the
transmittable.”
“So if I visit there, I could search
those records too, right?”
“Yes. You have access to
everything there, sir.”
“I think I’ll do that. The cloak will
let me come and go without being
recognized, right?”
“Sir, yes. You may need to show
your triangle to the library custodian
for access to some documents,
however. I’m certain they will be
discrete.”
“Thank you, DuMont. I’ll take a
tube rider to the library. I’d like to see
some more of Aurora on the way.”
“Let me help you with your cloak,
sir.”
Markman pulled on his floor length
cloak and drew the hood up over his
head. He closed the front with the cloth
tie provided and went to the tube rider
station in the far corner. Before he
could speak, an empty clear tube rider
coasted in and popped open its door.
Markman climbed in, sat, and
commanded, “Aurora Library.”
The tube rider accelerated out of
the castle, moving quickly out over the
connecting Terra Nova bridge.
Markman leaned back in his seat,
taking in the sites of a noon day
Aurora. Two orange suns hanging
directly overhead. As the rider
approached the city, busy commerce
came into view. People on walkways
above and below the tube rider line
were gathered or going within the
bright colors of the futuristic city.
At the disembarkment point, a
small crowd was assembled. The cloak
seemed to work well. No one paid any
attention to the stranger stealthing by.
Markman looked both ways and
awkwardly followed the lighted
rectangles in the sidewalk and street to
the other side. Many of the strangely
designed buildings still seemed
mysterious and undefined. Most had
symbol signs, but no lettering to
explain. The library turned out to be a
huge expose’ in tinted glass. Written
announcements scrolled across thin air
above the entrance. It seemed to be
constructed entirely of one-inch thick
glass with heavy support columns just
as transparent as the walls. The
transparency varied with the changing
light level outside. Ten rows of long,
glass steps provided access.
Inside, the place was busy. Display
terminals covered long, white
illuminated tables where people sat
doing research. The place was dead
silent. In both corners, near the front
of the building, attendant holograms
were fading in and out, addressing
inquiries from visitors. Hood still
carefully pulled down, Markman made
his way to one of them. When he was
close enough to the lighted purple
circle in the floor, a hologram appeared
and smiled at him.
“Printed material?” thought
Markman.
The hologram nodded. “Elevator
C,” and pointed to the back of the
library.
Markman spotted the area and
headed for it. Halfway there, vibration
began to build beneath his feet.
Patrons around him looked up with
expressions of concern. Apparently not
everyone was absolutely convinced
about the accuracy of the Crillian
Architectural Society. The vibration
quickly turned into shaking and
rumbling. Markman had to pause and
put one hand on a table. These tremors
were worse than the last, much worse.
They lasted a minute or two and finally
subsided. Everyone returned to their
studies. Markman resumed his quest
for elevator C.
Elevator C was just as transparent
as the rest of the building. Though
Markman knew he existed within the
safety of the sensesuit test area,
looking down through the glass floor of
the elevator at a multistory drop into
darkness still gave him the creeps. He
forgot himself and said out loud,
“printed documents.” The elevator
responded by impressing the words,
“specify category,” into his brain.
Markman responded with, “Historical
records.” The elevator dropped quickly
downward.
The ride down was deeper than
expected, possibly ten floors tracked by
figures on an overhead display that
Markman did not understand. It looked
like the elevator could have gone much
deeper if required. The doors slid open
to a vast expanse of shelves and
cabinets. Most isles were blocked by
carts and other equipment, and seemed
to go on forever. At points around the
room, there were video terminals on
research tables with the word ‘FINDER’
displayed on their screens. Markman
went to one, pulled back his hood and
began his hunt.
The exhaustive search still brought
no references to ‘Salantian’. Many alien
cultures were listed, but none by that
name. ‘Invasions’ was no help either.
‘Vortport’ was listed in several spots,
but was not related to the device the
Salantians had used. After another two
hours wandering around the endless
chamber randomly picking out printed
material, Markman gave up and sat at
a reading table drumming his fingers in
frustration. This place could not be
allowed to be a dead end. There had to
be something. The feeling that
something was being missed plagued
Markman.
There was a glass ornament on the
table, a translucent winged horse about
the size of a drinking glass. As his mind
began to wander, Markman
remembered the tea cup caught in
midair back in the Overlook Chamber.
He held out his open hand on the table
and focused on the horse. To his
delight, the horse began to slide across
the table toward him. It picked up
speed as it went and stopped in his
grasp. He sat back and held the horse
in his open hand. Focusing on it, he
tried to will it upward. The horse slowly
levitated and hovered above his hand.
Apparently the Coffer of Dreams had
given him the power of sensesuit
telekinesis. Forgetting his mission
objective, he placed the horse back on
the table and sat back with both hands
outstretched, then concentrated on the
table itself. Slowly the table rose.
Celebrating his new found power,
Markman raised it all the way to the
ceiling and held it there. It was a
spectacle to behold. What power to
possess. But, someone could be
watching. Markman quickly lowered the
table back down and looked around
worriedly. What was he worrying
about? Nobody ever came to this place.
No one had seen his magic trick. But, it
was something not to be done
carelessly. If anyone ever saw, word
would spread like wildfire. His identity
would be blown. He would probably
have to escape using the gold triangle,
possibly another indiscretion. Use of
the power would need to be done more
discretely. He looked around the
deserted hall. This records search was a
bust, at least for now. It was time to
return to the real world and seek help
from Cassiopia and John Paul. They
needed some other search criteria. At
least there was time for a last look
outside at the city. He took the
elevator back up, almost forgot to raise
his hood, and went outside to the
street.
Outside, the ground began a
foreboding shaking once more. Crillia’s
two suns were in the afternoon sky.
The white orb of Terra was rising in the
east, still barely above the city scape.
It loomed there as if threatening
tremors on the people of Crillia.
Markman searched and found a
nearby alley. Concealed within it, he
checked carefully for anyone in visual
range. There was no one. He tapped
the gold triangle on his chest and in
flash found himself back in the Centrex
Pyramid. Trill was waiting.
“Disengagement please, Trill.”
“Was your quest well-fulfilled, sir?”
“Not really.”
“Sir, will you be returning soon?”
“Yes.”
“We will be honored, my lord.”
“Please disengage.”
A second white light brought
Markman back to suit darkness quickly
followed by clicking and hissing. He
lifted off his helmet and shared a tired
stare with Cassiopia, John Paul and the
others. Everyone knew the endeavor
had been for naught. More trips to
Aurora would be needed.
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