Date:         Tue, 20 Feb 1996 08:58:53 -0700
Reply-To:     Hank Wyckoff <wyckoff@AG.ARIZONA.EDU>
Sender:       Highlander TV show stories <HLFIC-L@PSUVM.PSU.EDU>
From:         Hank Wyckoff <wyckoff@AG.ARIZONA.EDU>
Subject:      (17B/30) Reading the Endtrails -- HL Posting -- Keep away from
              children

This chapter has been split in order to obey the maximum line rule.

The Cycle of Axer Carrick, Part 4
Reading the Endtrails (17B/30)
A continuation of: When the Veil is Lifted
                   The Duplicity
                   Frostmelt

WARNING: There's something in here your kids shouldn't be
         reading

-----------------------------------------------------------
                           Heimdall's Story
-----------------------------------------------------------

The nineteenth century was a pretty bad one to begin with,
I'll let you know that from the start.  I had left Norway
back in 1798 -- things had gotten pretty bad up there in
Scandinavia, so I thought I'd go out to see the world.

I must have reached the Americas in the 1830s.  I'd seen all
kinds of civilizations, but I found the cities of the
Americas to be both frightening and majestic in a way that I
had never experienced before.  There is something about
crowded humanity that shakes the soul as much as it stirs
the soul.

I'd landed in New York City, and I moved up through the
state, up into New England -- mostly New Hampshire and
Vermont.  Nowadays, it's something of a "nice" place to be -
- I'll have you know that even in 1830, it was a still a
harsh frontier.  Farms *had* carved out a good chunk of the
forests, but there was still a lot that remained untouched.

I was in one of those isolated stretches of Vermont when
something happened to change my life forever.  It must have
been sometime in the middle of the night.  There were heavy
clouds in the sky, but it still didn't keep me from seeing
what occurred.

The lights that came from the sky lit up the land for miles.
The clouds only served to spread the light everywhere.  At
first, the light seemed to be coming from all directions,
but after a few moments, I could see that it came from a
single point in the sky that moved across the sky.

I'd seen a lot in my life, but not that.  I followed the
moving light and saw it land in a homestead.  Again, the
lights were too bright to make out any detail, but I could
hear the animals panicking, and then the horrible screams of
the human family that lived there.

When the lights vanished, I ran down to the farm to see if
there was anything I could do.  The animals were just
scared, and they would forget about this soon enough.  I
entered the house and found a young man and woman asleep on
the bed.  Nothing I could say or do would rouse them.
Looking around, I could see that a child lived here too, but
the child was gone.

I wondered if it was taken away by the lights.

The child was returned uneventfully two weeks later, and
none of the family had any idea that anything had happened,
but I kept a watch over them, and discovered something
pretty amazing: the boy, who had been just a regular boy,
had become nothing short of a genius -- but not in a nerdish
sort of way.

He seemed to be a boy beyond his years, having a store of
knowledge and wisdom that would have been impossible for
anyone of even forty years to know.  He even predicted the
future, and it takes a lot to convince me that something
like that is possible.

Time passed, and the young boy became a man.  He hated farm
work, so he moved on.  I had grown bored with being a smith,
so I moved on too -- it was strictly coincidence that we
left on the same day.  As luck would have it -- good or bad,
I would soon see -- we left on the same road, and he became
directly acquainted with me for the first time.  Although I
had most certainly known him, I made sure that few people --
Kerry included -- knew me directly.

His name was Kerry, and though he was born in Vermont, he
seemed to have a bit of Ireland in him.  He also knew a lot
about Scandinavia, without having been there.

We walked north.  I just wanted to move on.  I guess you
could say I was running away from something -- but it seemed
like Kerry was moving *towards* something.  Again, his
staying with me was coincidence.  We might as well have been
moving in the same direction, but a valley or mountain
apart.  It wouldn't have made any difference.

We took a roundabout route -- along the northern rim of the
Great Lakes, north through the middle of Canada, and then to
the lands of the permafrost and Caribou.  It may seem
strange that we might stay together on these aimless
wanderings just for the hell of it -- but we didn't think it
strange.  We were two people traveling the land, and that's
all we needed.

Perhaps we had already crossed the Arctic Circle when we met
this nomadic tribe of Indians.  I know, I'm being
politically incorrect, but I really don't give a damn.  I
think I'm actually showing more courtesy by using a word
that's easy to use and pronounce, than some word I'll choke
on.  I know it annoys me when I hear Tohono O'odham
pronounced like Tohono Oddam -- they should just stick with
Papago: it's been used for centuries and can't be
mispronounced, even if it does mean 'bean eater.'  I figured
they'd feel the same way -- but that's besides the point.
Look -- *you* started it, so don't look at me that way!
O.K. -- I'll call them 'Inuit', if that makes you happy, but
I still think you two should get a life!

Fine.  Well, anyway...

They behaved as if they were perimeter guards -- they were
wary of anyone crossing into their territory, and they were
afraid of anyone they didn't know.

I would have chalked it up to paranoia, except for the fact
that every single one wore the tattoo of the spear on their
forearm.  This was something that an Odinsson would do,
except that these men bore no other marks of an Odinsson.
My curiosity engaged, I performed enough "tricks" to earn
their respect and startle their superstitious minds.  They
were simple things, really, but to a mind such as theirs,
those tricks were sufficient.

Kerry looked at those tricks with wide eyes.  Maybe
something occurred to him that hadn't before.  In
retrospect, I often wonder about the significance of that
event.

==========================================================

Heimdall stopped talking and took a deep swig of beer.
"Here's some money, why don't you get some decent beer for a
change?"

Tracy was about to hit the roof, but Nick intercepted her,
"We'll continue this discussion at the Raven.  They'll have
everything you want."

Heimdall's eyebrow raised, and he could barely keep himself
from laughing.  "I would greatly look forward to that."

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

Richie heard the sounds of boots in the tunnel below, and
handcuffed Pieter to the table.  "You're not going
anywhere!"

There were two ways in and out -- one was the way the two
came in, and another door opened into an empty warehouse.
Methos barricaded that door, and answered Richie's unspoken
question, "We have no idea what's out there -- and the devil
we do know is coming through the best possible door."

Richie looked confused, until Methos added, "It's a narrow
door, so we can control how many come into the room."

The door got blasted open, and the thugs who came through
were dressed completely in black -- black pants, black
boots, black shirts, and black ski masks.  They had clubs
instead of guns, Methos observed, so their orders must have
been to capture only, and not kill.  //They have those
orders, when they *know* we're immortal?//

He wasn't one to question fate.  Although time seemed to
slow for both the immortals as their adrenalin rushed
through their veins, motion speeded up in real time.  There
seemed to be no end of them as Richie glanced through the
door.  Maybe thirty, or maybe more.  But there couldn't be
*too* many to handle... he thought.

What then happened wasn't some stage fight, where every
movement was theatrical.  There was no flashy fencing,
posturing, or witty exchange of words.  Think of it this way
-- it was like watching a Mafia hit.  The killers involved
are down-to-earth and kill their targets by the 'straight
line between two points' approach.  This skirmish took place
in a similar fashion.

Richie and Methos made a good team.  Richie, although
trained by a swordsman who used predominately Oriental
movements and strategies, fought like more like Brian Cullen
-- with skill and grace, but mixed in with some Bronx-style
bluntness.  He didn't use much footwork, and relied on his
youthful strength to pummel the blackies into the ground.

Methos, though the oldest living immortal, had been out of
the game long enough to lose his skill.  For the last few
years, he had subtly entered the game enough to gain back
some basic skills.  He fought more like a reckless solider
-- discipline in his movements, but overruled by a wildness
that he began to feel in the base of his soul.  It almost
felt good to kill again.

The two immortals stood about a foot from the doorway, their
swords acting like scythes, chopping off limbs, ripping out
intestines, punching out lungs, and taking heads.  The blood
sprayed everywhere, covering everything nearby with a thick
coating of blood.

The smell of ruptured intestines assaulted both of their
nostrils as the bodies began to pile up.  When enough bodies
were piled up to block the doorway, the blackies stopped
coming through blindly, but they didn't give up.

Rather, they kept at the base of the stairs.  Sounds from
the other door were heard as well.

Pieter chuckled, "I asked for a lot of backup.  Since you're
the only two immortals left in Paris, I was able to spare
several hundred men."

A loudspeaker boomed from the tunnel, "You are surrounded.
You have no hope."

Methos looked at one of the monitors that showed a detailed
map of Paris, and an idea of what they would do next.  Then
he chuckled.  "Richie, you're not going to believe this!"

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

Duncan opened up his eyes.  His teeth and gums finally felt
better, and the effects of the hot salsa had faded.  His
eyes adjusted to the light, and he realized that he was
still in the torture room.  His spirits sank.  Then a jolt
of pain filled his body as he realized that he had just been
injected with something.

"You're finally awake," said the silky voice of the
Inquisitor.  "It's so good that you're awake now."  He paced
back and forth, musing, "You know, I think I've been going
about this the wrong way.  I'd almost believe that you loved
pain, the way you keep asking for it.  So I think I'll try
another approach -- pleasure."

The Inquisitor walked over to the door and escorted in a
young blonde woman, smiling innocently, wearing an
uncomprehending expression.  She looked like she could have
been a top model, and certainly dressed for the part.  One
could almost say that she was almost not-dressed, to be more
accurate.

"Meet Tasha.  She failed hairdressing school, and now she
works for me."  He directed Tasha to where Duncan hung from
his chains, "Tell me, Tasha, what do you think of my
prisoner?"

Tasha's eyes bulged as she gazed on the now-healed body of
Duncan, breathing heavily as she lightly touched a finger,
running it along his chest.  "He's *wonderful*!  Like a
*stallion*!"

To Duncan, that touch felt much more intense than it should
have.  He shuddered in a pleasure that he fought with all
his might.  Tasha smiled wickedly.

"Oh yes!" the Inquisitor clapped his hands.  "He's all
yours!"  He winked at Duncan, "I'll leave you two love birds
alone!"

True to his word, the Inquisitor left the room, while Tasha
whispered in Duncan's ear, "Welcome to the *ride* of your
life, 'Stallion'!"

Duncan had already been breathing heavily, and confusion
filled his whole being as he wondered what on earth was
happening.  //Is this a dream?//

The moments passed, and Duncan knew with great certainty
that this was *no* dream.  His eyes closed, and he shuddered
involuntarily as Tasha practiced her craft --  then it ended
suddenly.

Duncan looked down, where Tasha had been kneeling, "No talk
-- no play.  If you answer my questions, I'll do this some
more."

Duncan's eyes closed again, "God help me."

"God can't help you," she smiled evilly, "but *I* can -- all
you have to do is talk."

******************************
And I leave you with this and your imagination -- may it not
be too naughty! ;)
---------------------------------------------------------
Henry Wyckoff  -- wyckoff@ag.arizona.edu
Q:   Want to know how to conserve bandwitdth?
A:   We all stay off the web and watch the servers shut down.
=========================================================================
