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The Space Between
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Tribes of the Hakahei:
Part 1
The Space Between
by
Scott J. Robinson
All characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional,
and any resemblance to real people or incidents is coincidental
(and, let’s face it, unlikely).
Copyright © 2011 by Scott J Robinson
3rd Release. Nov. 2014
Smashwords Edition
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This book is
dedicated to
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Like everything else.
Table of Contents
Prologue
Chapter 1: Festival
Chapter 2: Wilder Parts
Chapter 3: Builder
Chapter 4: Tree and Sky
Chapter 5: Weapons of War
Chapter 6: Open Doors
Chapter 7: Rivers
Chapter 8: Absent Lords
Chapter 9: Shifting Sands
Chapter 10: Old Rules
Chapter 11: Engineer
Chapter 12: Coffee and Cars
Chapter 13: Tourist
Chapter 14: New Paths
Chapter 15: Lessons Learned
Chapter 16: Messages
Chapter 17: Other Gods
Chapter 18: More Trolls
Chapter 19: The Doorway
Chapter 20: Other
Chapter 21: Lost Ones
Chapter 22: Long Day
Chapter 23: Escape
Chapter 24: Deeper
Chapter 25: Song of Being
Chapter 26: Going
Chapter 27: Worlds Away
Chapter 28: One Small Step
Chapter 29: Rugby
Chapter 30: Illumination
Chapter 31: Alignment
Chapter 32: Fly
Chapter 33: You Are Here
Chapter 34: The Enemy
Other Books
About The Author
Prologue
***
Elsewhere
Magic whispered in Scree’s mind, picking at the edges of his consciousness like a vulture working at a carcass. He stopped a meter from the dying stranger, unwilling to get any closer.
"Akawi," the man said, "you must take the books and flee. You must. I know these men are just trolls and will not stop to steal two books, but they may burn them." He coughed a dollop of blood onto the timber floor. One of his legs shook violently, drumming a ragged rhythm. "You must take the books." He coughed again. "We are so close. I know it. Continue the search for the portals."
Scree didn't move, hardly dared to breathe, and the dying man grew more urgent.
"Take the books and go. Flee."
The vulture of magic grew more desperate, fluttering and scrabbling for something to grip. "Where's the books?" Scree asked in a hoarse whisper. "Where?"
"Where they have always been, Akawi. Where my precious books have always been."
"Where's that?"
The man struggled to sit up, though he shouldn't have been alive at all. "Who are you? You are not Akawi. You are a troll." He slumped to the floor as the vulture finally took flight.
Scree stepped closer and kicked him. "Gutted cats. Where's they at?" Akawi, who ever he was, would know. "So, does I finds Akawi? Or does I finds something more useful, like food?" Food did sound good — he hadn't had a half-decent meal in days — but a dying man's last thoughts were for some books, not himself!
As if to decide the issue, a slim young man crept into the room, peering back over his shoulder.
Scree leapt up, a smile on his face, and grabbed the newcomer around the neck before he could react.
"Akawi," he said, "how is ya?"
He received a gurgle in response.
"Your friends here was talking abouts some books." He gestured vaguely. "Where's them books at?"
Akawi, if that was who it was, shook his head and gurgled again. Scree decided he might save himself some time by first discovering if he was talking to the right man.
"You is Akawi, ain't ya? Keeping in minds that if you ain't, thens I mightn't have any more use for you."
The man nodded, eyes widening with fear as if he'd expected to live before that.
"Good, so hows about we makes a deal? You tells me where them books is hid, and I'll let you lives." Scree smiled. "Sounds like a fair deals to me."
Elsewhen
"The giant statues on Easter Island?" Dongoske said. "You know the ones, Miss McLean?"
Kim nodded. "Yeah, of course. In general."
"Well, they're called 'moai'."
"Tuki's people are called moai, right?"
Dongoske nodded. "But wait, there's more. My people, the Hopi, who were based to the southeast of here, have legends about our ancestors arriving from other worlds by climbing up through holes in the ground. That's why most of our ceremonies are carried out in an underground chamber called a Kiva."
"Kiva is the name of Tuki's world," Meledrin said.
"Correct. So, suddenly, ancient legends take on a whole new light. Here we are, within a few meters of an underground gateway to a world called Kiva."
Kim shook her head. "But the Indian cultures aren't that old, are they?"
"They're a few thousand years old, but no, nowhere near the kind of time spans we're talking about here. We aren't saying that the Hopi really crossed from another world, but their legends had to start somewhere and the coincidences are starting to build up. The predecessors of the Hopi were called the Anasazi — a word that means 'ancient ones' or 'lost ones', depending on who you ask."
"What about Roswell? That's around here somewhere, isn't it?"
Dongoske laughed. "Roswell is in New Mexico, not that close to here, but still within the Hopi and Anasazi regions. But, a spaceship did not crash there in 1954. A weather balloon crashed." He smiled at the look of disappointment on Kim's face. "However, when the Air Force went to investigate, they did come across something."
"A spaceship?"
Dongoske smiled some more.
1: Festival
Kim almost ran over Robin Hood. She hit the brakes and the crappy old car slid to a halt with a crunch of gravel and clatter of engine.
Winding down the window, with an effort, she poked her head out into the cool of the early afternoon. "Sorry."
Robin waved away her apology. "No," he said. "My fault. Should look for traffic before stepping onto the road. I'm not as spry as I used to be."
That was obvious enough. This Robin was getting on in years and had spent far too much time drinking ale and not enough time running from the sheriff. Kim pushed long dark hair away from her face. "Well, as long as we're all okay."
"Don't worry, I'm fine."
With a small nod to Robin, she got the car moving again.
The parking lot was packed and, after making her way up and down a few of the lanes, Kim started to wonder why she'd agreed to come here. She finally found a spot in the back corner where the roots of a large oak had broken the road surface, forcing the more careful drivers to leave a gap between cars. Kim really didn't care and ignored the metallic complaints as the car bumped and scraped over the roots. She was just about ready to hock the car to some other poor, unsuspecting backpacker and give up her wandering ways.
After a final clatter and hiss, the car fell silent. Kim sat and enjoyed the peace for a moment then climbed out, stretching her l
egs and back. Starting to feel normal again, she leaned in the back window and pulled her mobile phone from the pocket on the side of her pack. One message. She listened as Nina explained, in a French accent that probably drove guys crazy, that she wouldn't make it to Nottinghamshire until late in the afternoon.
"Shit."
Kim looked at the people around her. Some were heading towards the Sherwood Forest Visitor Centre. Most were following a gravel path towards the wonder and merriment of the Robin Hood Festival. Knowing she was going to regret it, she pocketed her phone, locked the car, and followed this second group.
Beyond the plywood-castle gate the festivities were in full swing. Kim strolled along, watching the strange array of characters who'd made the journey to Sherwood Forest to celebrate Robin's birthday. Robin himself was popular, of course — silly tights and all. He ranged from babies in prams to men older than the one she'd almost run down earlier. Friar Tuck was popular as well — shaven scalp and all. Little John look-alikes were congregating around a tent selling cans of 'ye olde ale'. For the women, the three main choices seemed to be Maid Marion, witches, or fairy princesses. About half the people were dressed normally.
Kim nudged her way among the stalls, past a silver smith and a weaver, a potter and a dressmaker. There was carved timber, weaponry, wrought iron, and all sorts of things for sale. Historical societies had tents and camps where they could tell people about their little piece of the past. She followed the crowd, dodging past lacy wings, capes, drooping feathers, and curly-toed shoes. On any other day Kim could have happily wandered around taking it all in, but she was sore and tired from driving and pissed off that Nina had abandoned her, if only for a few hours.
She stopped to buy a hotdog and spent a moment wondering what such a delicacy might have been made of in the thirteenth century. Probably about the same as it was made from these days. A couple of minutes later she bought a salad sandwich and a drink for the second course. Making her way along the edge of the forest, she spotted a rare vacant seat at a picnic table and sat down with a grateful sigh.
Nearby, a young boy fired a blunt arrow at his sister and received a half-hearted smack from his father. A troubadour got down on one knee to serenade an embarrassed looking Goth girl. A knight, helm under his arm, clanked and rattled through the crowd, smiling and bowing to almost any woman who looked his way. When he spotted Kim he paused.
Kim knew that look. She sighed as the knight jammed his helm onto his head and started in her direction. His armor gleamed. The faceplate of his helm was lowered, offering only a small slit through which he could look.
When he was standing in front of Kim, he bowed with a rattle and a screech of metal that made him sound a lot like her car.
"My lady," he said.
"You know, I'm really too tired to put up with this shit." Kim shifted slightly on the hard wooden bench and examined her sandwich. "I just want to eat my lunch in peace."
"Oh, I see." But he stayed where he was.
"You see?" She was trying to be polite, but it was hard. "That's surprising with that stupid bloody helmet."
He quickly reached up to remove the offending object and seemed to think he'd found an opening. "I apologize for my rudeness in hiding my face, but once I saw you I could think of nothing as trivial as my helm." As if he hadn't put it on just a moment before. But, give a man a suit of armor and a classic phallic symbol like a sword, and he seemed to think he could do anything. "My name is Sir Douglas."
Kim shook her head. "For Christ's sake, Doug, take a hint and piss off, would you."
"Right." He looked around, perhaps searching for witnesses he'd have to eliminate. "Right." And he did as he was asked.
Kim turned her attention back to her sandwich. It tasted better than it looked, which was something.
As she chewed, a haggard old witch zeroed in on the vacated seat next to her. The woman carried a twiggy broom in her arthritic hands and used it to clear a path. She sat down with a sigh of relief and spent a moment getting arranged. She leaned her broom against the tilting picnic table and set her pointed hat down carefully before turning to gaze around the fairground.
Kim looked as well, as if something might have changed in the last few minutes. It was a quaint setting. Picturesque. But, in her current mood, she could only take so much quaint and picturesque. She wondered how much worse her mood would have been if she'd been sitting in some dirty old city.
Several minutes later, when Kim was almost over the whole idea of sitting, the old woman spoke.
"I'll get you my pretty," she said in a convincing Wicked-Witch-of-the-West voice. She added a cackle for good measure.
Kim thought about that for a moment, wondering if she was being offered a line for the second time that day and suddenly wishing she'd chosen bachelor number one. "Pardon."
"I'll get you my pretty," the woman said once more, this time in a normal voice. She shrugged apologetically. "I'd have gone for something out of Macbeth but I can never remember much more than 'When shall we three meet again', and, well, there are only two of us. My memory isn't what it used to be."
Kim dismissed a couple of very lame jokes before saying, "Macbeth probably would've been more suitable to our surroundings. The Wicked Witch of the West is a bit far from home." Or perhaps a fantasy wasn't out of place at all.
"I know. A bit of a shame really. Old Westie is a lot more interesting than anyone dreamed up for Robin Hood."
"Yeah. At least you admit Robin Hood is a fantasy. Nobody else here seems to realize."
The old woman fixed Kim with a surprisingly penetrative gaze. "You shouldn't be that cynical until you get to my age. I think most of these people know Robin was a fabrication, or a conglomeration at best. But they just want to have some fun on Robin's birthday. Look at the clothes they're wearing." She gestured with a knobbly hand. "More of them are in fantasy costumes than traditional medieval ones. They're just having some fun and there's nothing wrong with that."
"Fun is great. Idiots, not so great. If a fifty ton dragon turned up now, half these knights would draw their swords and run to fight it instead of running away and calling in some professionals."
"Professional dragon hunters?"
"You know what I mean."
"Perhaps. But maybe idiocy suits their disposition today. I know being the funny old grandma suits mine."
"You're here with your grandkids?"
"My granddaughter." The witch looked around. "That's her there, by the singer."
"The fairy?" Kim asked, looking at a little girl with blonde, curly hair and pink wings. She was smiling and laughing at the contorted faces made by the singer. "Cute. Shouldn't you be with her?"
"No. That's my daughter just behind her."
"Oh, that's all right then."
"Yes, it is." The old woman cackled her Wicked Witch cackle again as she collected her hat and broom. "They seem to have lost me. I'd better go, I suppose." She smiled and pushed a lock of stringy grey hair away from her face. When she brought her hand away, a few strands were clinging to her fingers. She showed them to Kim with a look of mock horror on her face. "I'm molting," she wailed, then shuffled away through the crowd with a wave and a smile.
"Okey dokey, then." Kim shook her head. "She's probably been waiting all day to do that joke."
Eventually, Kim got to her feet and headed into the crowd once more. She examined some of the stalls and chatted to a woman about the origins of her very Scottish surname.
Just before 2 o'clock, the rhythm of the crowd changed. Kim joined a growing surge of people and jostled her way past several street performers as she crossed the main green. All the performers wore suitable medieval raiment, but one of the acts involved a monocycle called the 'one wheeled chariot of doom'. The two monks who owned the chariot, Brother Phil and Brother Terry, were soon lost from sight as the current moved Kim on. On the far side of the green the throng reached a bottleneck between two rows of stalls and the pace slowed but it wasn't long before Ki
m and everyone else broke into the clear and crossed a dirt road.
"Come to see the battle, have you?"
"What?" Kim turned and discovered she was once more looking at the Wicked Witch of the West. Or, at least, at the top of her pointy hat. The press of people was still too tight to make eye contact an easy task. Her daughter was hovering by her shoulder carrying the little girl with the pink wings.
"The battle," the witch repeated.
"Which battle?"
"No, the usual kind. Not a single witch involved." She cackled.
"Oh, har-de-har-har."
The witch craned her neck. "This is the tourney field, otherwise know as the cricket ground. They have mock battles and such here. Can be interesting. On the other hand, if you don't find this sort of thing interesting, it can be boring." She smiled.
They turned a corner and shuffled along with the crowd. The makeshift grandstand up ahead seemed to be filling fast, so Kim found a likely vantage point on the grassy bank that ran along the edge of the field. The old woman managed to sit down as well, with a grunt of effort and a wince of pain.
"This is my daughter, Karen," she said, settling as comfortably as possible. "And that, is Jessie."
Kim nodded. "Hi, Karen. And hello, Jessie. How are you?"