《The Dreamside Road》7 - Welcome Aboard
Advertisement
“I heard you were taken into protective custody.” Mary Young had been a staple at local events since Enoa’s early childhood. She didn’t know the older woman well, but almost everyone in Nimauk recognized each other on sight.
Enoa had no hope of escape without detection. She had no hope of vanishing. She didn’t know how Young felt about the Liberty Corps. She didn’t know Young well enough to predict her thoughts on any subject, but there was no way the volunteer would keep this encounter a secret.
The screams from the hilltop spared Enoa from speaking. Young wheeled back toward the dirt road, taking her flashlight beam with her. Even by that light, the gas cloud could be seen, slowly spreading across the hill.
“Won’t this night ever end?” Young asked. More screams came and the Liberty Corps members shouted. Engines revved. There were vehicles moving up on the hilltop. At least one jeep had parked at the top of the dirt road.
Orson was cut off. He could never reach her now.
Enoa fumbled in the darkness, searching for the RV’s door handle. What were the chances the strange man had left his vehicle unlocked?
She found the door’s frigid metal handle. She pulled on it, but it didn’t budge. Of course not.
What had she been thinking? She didn’t know how safe she would be in Liberty Corps custody, but she would undoubtedly be safer than she was now, having evaded and resisted their attempt to apprehend her. Now, she was stranded, by the river, with no hope of escape.
“What’s going on, Enoa?” Young turned the flashlight back toward her. “I’m sure I heard you were brought in for protection. But now you’re here with this weird camper boat. I met the man who drove this. Do you know him? I’m here to give him his change. I was afraid he’d be gone. He paid double for parking! All weird types are here tonight, but now this riot, this violence, these angry security men. I thought it wouldn’t be like this for us. Even after these last few years, I thought we were different.” She stared at Enoa, clearly expecting answers or insight.
“I’m okay.” Enoa spoke only slowly. Screams still called down from the hill. “I actually have protection.”
Enoa was once again spared from delivering a proper answer. Something, some shape, as big as the palm of her hand, came scuttling into the circle of flashlight illumination. Both women jumped away from the creature.
The bug, if bug it was, had a shiny carapace and several quick legs. The creature leapt onto the side of the RV. At face level, Enoa saw the creature’s body shine in the light, shine like metal, moving like something mechanical. The strange thing raced up onto the camper’s roof.
Young screamed. “Dear God! Horrible! What in heavens is that?”
Enoa had her own hunch, now. The RV, Orson’s RV, was a boat, Young had said. It could drive on the water.
Before Enoa could follow her thoughts to their logical conclusion, the RV came alight with a warm, cozy, yellow illumination. Then the RV roared to life with a great, thunderous revving sound.
Young jumped away from the light and noise, clutching both arms to her chest. Enoa also stepped back, just in time for the camper’s door to swing out toward her.
Inside, she could see a plush couch, several chairs, a whole row of computer screens, and a wobbling chrome thing that looked like a modern-art sculpture of a pine tree.
Advertisement
Enoa stepped toward the RV. Should she wait for Orson to get aboard? She still didn’t see how he’d get past the Liberty Corps, but he’d been full of surprises all night. She didn’t know what she should do.
“I’d stay away from that.” Young said. “This thing is weird, and it looks familiar to me, like it’s something I saw in the news. The traveler who drove it, did you say you know him?” She didn’t wait for a reply. “He seemed nice enough, but he could be some fugitive, some murderer for all I know.”
Gunfire sounded on the hill, sustained gunfire. More shouts too, yells, and screams. But one sound, a repeated yell, briefly rose above the noise.
“Get in! Get in! Get in! Get in!”
Enoa didn’t know Orson’s voice well enough to recognize it under duress, through gunfire, through fear. But just then, the RV began to edge forward, crawling toward the river on its own.
Enoa didn’t need to be told twice. She ran to catch up with the camper and its open, welcoming door.
“Where are you going?” Young called after her. “What’s happening?”
“Be safe!” Enoa shouted over her shoulder to the frightened volunteer. “Have a good night! You’ll be safer without me around.”
Enoa dove into the camper, only feet from the water’s edge, her backpack and other bags landing across her back. She slid a foot across the vinyl floor. Inside, Enoa forced herself onto her elbows and looked around. She saw the whole front of the camper was loaded with blinking green lights, monitors and screens, as well as more controls than any camper, even an amphibious one, rightly needed. She saw the chrome pine tree, which spun in slow circles. She saw the neatly furnished living area, filled with several chairs, presumably bolted to the floor. Beyond that was a small kitchenette and walled off compartments, storage or living quarters, probably.
Enoa wriggled free of her packs. She stood and looked back toward the hill, toward Ms. Young, and the fights in the park. She expected to see Orson charge free of the Liberty Corps ranks, running and shouting, legions of men chasing him, before heroically jumping aboard at the last second.
That didn’t happen.
The RV rolled into the water with no sign of the traveler.
Enoa considered jumping out again. Her water craft experience extended no farther than the rafting trips she’d taken, while camping, the better part of a decade earlier. She couldn’t drive some amphibious RV down a river with the Liberty Corps after her. Without Orson she didn’t stand a chance.
The RV shut off, went totally quiet. Enoa looked at the camper’s dashboard again. The many lights had gone out, although she noticed for the first time that there was a key in the RV’s ignition. The key was on a ring with a thick shiny fob, the same color as the creature that had startled her and Ms. Young.
Orson had sent the keys. He clearly had a plan. Could some autopilot drive her down the river? She just wanted some explanation, anything.
Enoa jumped when the RV came to life again. Everything wobbled around her. Enoa grabbed her bags before they could slide toward the open door. She backed away and fell into the camper’s sofa, set against the opposite wall.
The dashboard lights lit up, blue this time. Then the camper pushed away from shore and started off onto the river. The door automatically swung closed before any water sloshed aboard. Enoa had lost her chance. Whether Orson arrived or not, she was stuck.
Advertisement
“Light ‘em up. Light ‘em up!” A command called out from the hilltop. Gunfire sounded again, but this time it was many guns, dozens, blasting. This was not a warning. They were shooting to kill.
Enoa didn’t get to worry or formulate any kind of conjecture. She looked through the round window in the top of the door.
Something, someone, rocketed off the ground and flew high above the hilltop. The gunfire got even louder. The Liberty Corps forces on the hill were trying to aim at the flying thing, trying to shoot it. They were failing.
Enoa saw the flying shape launch itself closer. The shape resolved in her vision, illuminated by the light of its propulsion, until she understood that the flying shape was a flying man.
Orson flew free of the Liberty Corps ranks, light and fire blasting from the bottom of his mechanical boot. He’d pulled his other armor-less leg up inside his billowing coat. He didn’t fly gracefully. He didn’t fly with power or majesty, some pulp character, invincible or heroic.
But he did fly. He flew out of reach of the Liberty Corps. Dozens of armed troops, surprised and then furious, tried and tried and failed to shoot him from the sky. Enoa heard their shouting, their rage, their frothing anger at their ongoing failure.
Orson crested his high arc, up above the river. Then he passed out of sight.
A small round hatch opened in the RV’s ceiling. Enoa didn’t even bother feeling shocked about this. She was still too numb.
Orson dropped through the ceiling with a metallic clunk. The hatch cycled closed above him. He charged forward to the camper’s dashboard. He pulled his sword belt over his head and slid the sheathed weapon into a trio of hooks along the wall. Then he slipped his mask down onto his chest and settled into the driver’s seat, before belting himself in place.
“Why don’t you come on up here?” He waved at the front passenger seat. “Sorry for running late. Things got a little hairy back in the park. I think Man Bun pulled this whole crackdown just to catch little old me.”
Enoa edged forward. She expected the floor to wobble under her feet. It did bob up and down, ever so slightly, but everything moved far smoother than Enoa had imagined. She took the passenger seat, her backpack, shopping bags, and her aunt’s walking stick situated between her knees.
“You scared me half to death.” She buckled her own seatbelt. “What would I have done if you didn’t have a camper boat and a jet boot?”
“That depends.” Orson spun the steering wheel and turned them properly down the river. “Do you have any boating experience?” Then he leaned back toward her and extended his hand. “I almost forgot.”
“Forgot what?” She tentatively shook his gloved hand.
“To welcome you aboard the Aesir. It’s been just me aboard for a long while.”
“The Aesir?” Enoa had heard that weird word before. She definitely had.
“Yeah, I know.” Orson shrugged. “It’s a pretentious name for a ship. I forget that, seeing as I’ve been roaming around in this thing on and off for over a decade. It’s named after some Norse story, the guys the Vikings prayed to or something like that.”
“That’s not what I mean.”
Enoa didn’t get to explain what she meant. Bullets struck the water, just beside the Aesir. The Liberty Corps, firing from the shore, had missed, but not by far.
“Damn!” Orson turned a dial beside his steering wheel. “I’m gonna have to waste a little energy to power up the shields. Then I guess you’d better hang on.”
“Hang on?” Enoa tightened her seatbelt as far as it would go.
“Yeah.” Orson reached for a lever on the wall beside him. “Water takeoffs are a real bitch.”
“Takeoffs?”
“Takeoffs.” He grinned and pulled the lever.
Enoa felt like something slammed into the floor beneath her feet. With an audible splash, the Aesir left the river and glided above the rushing water. Orson began to laugh.
But then the RV let out a strange descending whine. His laughter turned into a groan, and the Aesir flopped into the water, hard. Enoa briefly saw beneath the water’s current.
“Shit!” Orson pressed his hand to his face. “I never switched the solar cells.” He unbuckled his seatbelt and stood, leaving the wheel untended.
“Where are you going?” She shoved against her own seatbelt, pushed as far as it would move. She watched him run toward the back of the camper. “Don’t you need to, I don’t know, drive?”
“Uh.” He looked back at her. “I need to get a new battery, but if you do have boating experience, feel free to slide on over. It’s a pretty easy setup, really.”
Orson left her alone in the front of the cabin.
* * *
Every one of the stories was true.
“I want our boats in the water.” Liberty Corps Captain Maros had learned of Enoa’s escape from the frantic Sheriff. He’d arrived in town square to see the standoff with the wayfarer and the RV on the water. He could assume the rest.
So, this was Orson Gregory, after all.
Maros knew he had only minutes to marshal his forces before Gregory slipped away.
He struggled to remember the odd urban legends he’d heard about Orson Gregory and the allegedly magical wayfarers who wandered the back roads of America, before everything had gone wrong in the world.
“I want the entire war force tracking him from the shore, and I need both our long range guns online.” Maros didn’t know all the names of the men he was leading. Many had been summoned from outside divisions, cycled into Nimauk specifically to help his command with the current operation. Maros worked to keep his voice steady, certain. They all had every reason to be worried, but he couldn’t let that enter his voice.
“Both, sir?” Lieutenant Goes usually served in a separate company, based well to the north, in New England. Maros knew his name, but little else about him. Goes, like most Liberty Corps officers, was at least a few years older than Maros. It was not unusual for the young captain to be forced into explaining his commands twice.
“This is Orson Gregory we’re dealing with, AKA Wayfarer One.” Maros would not make the mistake of underestimating a living folktale. “Have you ever heard of the Aesir?”
“Yes, sir.” Goes went stiff, visible even through his white helmet and armor.
“We need to be ready for anything.” Maros faced the river, where the strange vehicle floated, out of sight. “In the stories I’ve heard, the Aesir can fly.”
Advertisement
- In Serial66 Chapters
Divinity
“Let an old warrior caution you, there are parts of every tale that are not told. The part where none of those mighty champions died peacefully in their beds. The part where the hero meets their end surrounded by the enemy and in horrible agony. They were alone in their final moments and unsure if their sacrifice would bear fruit. I do not want that for you.” The Heavens created the Realm of Man and saved it from the eternal silence of the Void - once. Centuries later, humanity’s unity has fractured beneath the weight of time and the whims of man. Raegn Edelgard fights on in his home of Bastion, one of two everlasting fortifications to protect the Realm from the remnants of the darkness that still persist. Raegn hoped to be written into legend alongside the stories that inspired him since childhood, yet the scouting skirmishes and small battles that have been fought since the time of his forefathers offer little chance at glory. When the Void wakes once more the Realm questions if the first war was ever really won…and if they might be saved again. Raegn is left searching for purpose and must navigate through a world teetering on the brink of extinction. Dire times create the greatest heroes, but tales that stand the test of time are written twice - in blood before ink.Divinity is a fantasy series about Raegn Edelgard, a young man who must make his way through a world that is struggling to realize it is, for the second time in its history, teetering on the brink of extinction. Book Cover Credits: Photo by Prince Akachi on Unsplash | Design by eric.margusity.com
8 211 - In Serial11 Chapters
Errant
Amateur fighter Kestril only remembers two things about her mother's disappearance: a locket and the promise she made to keep her brother safe. That promise is all she thinks of when she jumps in front of a car to save her brother. She expects death, but instead wakes up to a looming clock tower, cobblestone streets, and dead soldiers wearing lockets just like her mother's. Kess's locket marks her as one of the Errant- people with control over dimensions and time, and the same people rumored to have captured her brother across the city. When a military group mistakes Kess for their enemy, she swears allegiance at gunpoint, hoping to search for her brother from within. Inside, Kess finds an even darker side of the city bent on killing the Errant-using any means necessary. When the murder of an important Errant soldier throws the city further into civil war, Kess uncovers a plot that could undo everything she's fought for so far. The only problem? Her brother is at the head of it. Trapped between her promise to her mother and her morals, Kess finds little use for her theatrical brawling of the past. She can only hope to find her brother before it's too late. || Update: 4/24/2022 Have decided to rewrite this novel, but will continue to post chapters of this draft, possibly with commentary. Questions, comments, concerns, and suggestions are welcome. Thanks for supporting me! |||| Story is finished, just getting into a publishing schedule on Royal Road for the first time. ||
8 79 - In Serial19 Chapters
Hazard Lands (Dropped)
Pls don't read, it was my first novel and pretty crap.“This is the end…†heavenly and earth shattering voices echoed throughout the world. Bright flashes of light covered the entirety of the planet, blinding billions of people. Crimson clouds began to cover the atmosphere, painting the landscape a ghastly red. Animals howled in fear and flocks of birds rose to the sky, striving for solace.Many faces were stricken with abstract horror, while others stared up at the bloody sky with curiosity. A glimmer of surprise crossed their faces as seven beams of light stabbed into the world, much more blinding than the previous luminescence.“Begin the Apocalypse,†at this instance, the clouds caved in, showering the land with crimson liquid. Just who did the voice belong to? What were those lights? Is the world ending?Only time can time…
8 218 - In Serial15 Chapters
Profolic
Dior Dior 🥀
8 186 - In Serial11 Chapters
alexander hamilton smut & fics
just alexander and I in make up scenarios .Hamilton has my nonexistent heart !Slow updates but in bulk each time !COMMENT !
8 171 - In Serial104 Chapters
103 Zodiac Signs
zo·di·ac: (noun) a belt of the heavens divided into twelve equal divisions or signs (Aries, Taurus, Gemini, Cancer, Leo, Virgo, Libra, Scorpio, Sagittarius, Capricorn, Aquarius, Pisces)The signs of the Zodiac give us insights into our day to day living as well as the many talents and special qualities we possess. Anyone can discover a great deal of relevant information about themselves by reading about their Zodiac sign. Find your true self!HIGHEST RANKING: #17 in Random //7-3-17\DISCLAIMER: I do not own any of these posts, they belong to the rightful owners.
8 177

