Title: Concourse
Author: Lady Primrose Roxton
Series: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Lost World
Date: 7/2002
Part: 5 - The Circle Be Unbroken
Rating: R
Codes: M/R, N/V
Category: Romance,
Action/Adventure, Sci-Fi
Summary: Starts where HoTS left off. Danger Will Robinson! Mushy shipper alert, cliffhanger resolution
alert, grandfather paradox
alert, and hey, I even like Finn.
Spoilers: OoT,
Prophesy, The Secret, Trapped, HotS
Disclaimer: As a matter of fact, in the shifting planes of
my own reality, I *do* own TLW ;)
Feedback: Tell me -- primrose4@canby.com
Website:
http://www.canby.com/ryukyu4
Posting: ff.net, tlwfix.com, others please let me know
first.
A/N: Thanks again
for the nice feedback. It's music to
the eyes of fanfic writers to see email about their stories...
A/N2: I have again
taken such liberties with history and cultures that you must indulge my whims
to alter things to suit my story. In
many Asian and Druidic/Celtic religions, circles are considered sacred. Be assured that nothing in my story attempts
to truly explain, deny, or support any religious point of view. Please just use my semi-accurate ramblings
as a base of fancy to jump into the storyline.
***
She is a theme of honor and renown,
A spur to valiant and magnanimous deeds,
Whose present courage may beat down our foes,
And fame in time to come canonize us.
William Shakespeare (1564–1616)
"When I'm good, I'm very, very good. But, when I'm bad,
I'm better."
Mae West (1892-1980)
***
It was hard to be at your best while being totally
terrorized, Marguerite thought frantically.
The altar that had previously been put to such wonderful use was now to
be the site of her death. It wasn't
fitting, she thought with bitterness, the memory of one of her greatest joys
being sullied by these idiots in tasteless robes. Oh, God, Roxton, where are you?
Warbek held the ritual dagger high above his head, his
elation growing almost beyond his capacity to control it. He *would* triumph; finally, his circle
would be complete, the way that he wanted it completed. He began the chant to purify the coming
sacrifice.
"Spirits of nature, of the trees and rocks, of the
animals and Earth, show me your favor and your companionship, share with me the
bond of spirit and of life on Earth.
Grant me the power to purify this profane offering. Consecrate this misbegotten being so she may
be offered up to you in the place of that which she has so recklessly
conjured."
Warbek passed the dagger from side to side in arcs over
Marguerite’s body. Moving around the
altar in a slow and deliberate fashion, he began chanting the same phrases over
and over again, "To Taranis we give the knife, to Teutates we give the
water, to Esus we give the shroud."
His chanting became mumbling, the look in his eyes crazed and positively
evil. The other robed and hooded
figures were silent in their circle around the altar.
Marguerite was thinking rapidly while the Druid was
performing the ritual. Somehow, the
words that he was speaking seemed very familiar to her, and she felt that she
should know their significance, but that the knowledge was somehow just outside
the reaches of her conscious mind. She
wanted to panic, to scream for Roxton again, but knew that it would be
futile. Wherever John was, she knew
that he would be trying to get to her as soon as possible. It was quite probable he still had those
Spaniards to deal with, and it looked like she had been shifted to another
time.
Time. There was
something about time that was bothering her, too. She looked, really looked, at the man chanting over her, waving
the knife. He had a hard face and eyes
that were flat and malevolent, marked by an unholy glee that told her that he
was enjoying the thought of her death way too much for a man who said that he
was just trying to prevent her from destroying all of them. That was it, she decided. This guy wanted something, and in her book,
if there wasn't something physically valuable on the line, the only thing worth
going to all this trouble for was power.
Somehow, by killing her, locking her in this chamber without a way for
her soul to escape, he would be securing power for himself.
Forcing herself to be calm, she began to center
herself. Roxton, in what he'd called
'evening the score of secrets', had shared some of his experiences from his
time at the Jokhang temple in Tibet.
One of the things he had shared was meditation, relaxing and letting her
self return to harmony. At first, she'd
wanted to mock it, strangely afraid.
But, she didn't say anything until he'd finished explaining it to
her. She'd then only asked, "What
do I say?" He'd looked at her, a
small smile on his face; happy that she'd accepted this part of himself he'd
offered to her. He'd then replied,
"You say what you feel, Marguerite.
No one can tell you how to feel, can they? You don't have to *say* anything at all, if you don't want
to. It's your circle, your
choice." She'd smiled back at him
at that. He knew how much she needed to
be in control, and he'd just handed over control of herself to herself with
nary a fuss. It had taken her a while
to actually do it, but she'd begun practicing the meditation each day upon
rising, before she went to greet the day and her companions. In the short time she'd been doing it, it
had worked immeasurably in easing some of her stress and irritation, but had
not reduced her need for coffee in the morning.
She felt a calmness wrap around her like a gentle blanket,
and with it came a newfound strength that infused her being. She realized that everything that had
happened to her since she had come to the Plateau had prepared her for
this. All the struggles, tears, losses,
triumphs, knowledge gained, and the rebirth of her heart and soul were
connected. She knew now that Roxton's
opening the vent to this chamber had let out a part of her that had always been
missing before. She'd felt its lack,
but now she was whole again.
She also realized that there was more - this was just the
beginning. This crazed man was trying
to end her circle, to not allow it to complete itself. He was trying to alter her path, change the
outcome. Challenger was always going on
about how you could change the future, and that Gypsy, Isadore, had told her
that you could change your destiny if you were strong enough. Roxton was forever telling her that she was
the most powerful woman he'd ever had the privilege to have known, and he was
certain that she could do anything if she so chose to do so. Marguerite knew that John believed in her as
well as loved her, and remembering that was the last impetus that she
required. Roxton had told her that she
needed to have faith in herself and that it would unlock the last of her fears
holding her back. She damn well hoped
he was right about the extent of her personal power, because she was about to
field test that theory.
***
Roxton and Malone became aware of their surroundings
gradually. It was the humidity and the
smell that they recognized; they were in the jungle, and it seemed to be the Plateau. The scream of a raptor on the hunt clinched
the deal.
"We're back on the Plateau," Malone observed as
they both crouched low and scanned for the location of the dinosaur. Each of them automatically reached for
weapons that weren't there; both made silent curses as they realized their lack
almost simultaneously.
"Very observant of you, Neddie-boy," Roxton
replied sardonically. "I see
you've not lost your charming habit of re-stating the obvious."
"It's one of my more endearing qualities," Malone
agreed nodding. "Behind that stand
of trees, you think?" he gestured to the left and down the hillside.
"Yes," Roxton agreed. "It sounds like it's made a kill. I vote we move in that direction for a bit," he gestured in
the opposite direction of the raptor, "and go like hell."
"I agree," Malone matched his actions to Roxton's
words, and the two men made their way as rapidly and as silently as possible
away from the raptor.
"Which way to find Marguerite?" Ned asked when they'd
put enough distance between them and the raptor to talk.
Roxton looked around and noted that they were on the way to
the Inland Sea. He'd know this path
anywhere. It led to the cave that
Marguerite and he had been trapped in.
The cave that had changed his life.
For a place that had almost killed him, he was very nostalgic about
it. He had a suspicion that the
discoveries they'd made it in that cave had something to do with what was
happening.
"I think I know where we can find Marguerite,"
Roxton finally said. He looked at
Malone, "Do you remember anything about some Druids on the
Plateau?" His tone was casual, but
his expression thoughtful as they continued to walk as quickly as they could.
"You know, I thought it was weird, but I've been having
these dreams lately," Ned replied with wonder. "They've all been about Druids here on the Plateau. Marguerite, you, and I find them and they
were going to kill her..."
"Until they found her birthmark," Roxton finished
for him.
"Yeah," Malone replied, slightly puzzled. "How did you know that?" he asked.
"Because I've had the same dreams, Marguerite,
too," Roxton answered. "Only,
I don't think they're dreams," he continued grimly. "I think they're memories."
"Memories that we've forgotten and are just now
remembering," Malone said hollowly.
He'd had just a little too much of that in his life lately.
"Or been made to forget," Roxton suggested as they
picked up the pace even more. They felt
an urgency that exceeded their previous worries.
Malone looked sharply at Roxton at this last, "Do you
remember that guy? He talked mostly to
Marguerite," Ned asked suddenly.
"Yes," Roxton nodded. "He told her she was the reincarnation of some
priestess."
"Named Morrigan," Malone added as he remembered.
"Come on. We've
got to go to her, now," Roxton moved suddenly.
"Where?" Malone panted as he chased after the
rapidly moving older man.
"The cave," Roxton snarled. At Malone's questioning look, he continued,
"Marguerite and I found this cave a couple of weeks ago. It was sealed up with a door that had Celtic
runes on it."
"That a bit of a coincidence," Ned observed as
they made their way up a steep hill, sweat pouring from their bodies.
"No coincidence," Roxton shook his head. "We got the door open by accident, and
what we found inside was amazing. The
whole place was a tomb. We found a body
of a woman wrapped in a shroud, sealed in this small cave. The thing is, she had the same birthmark as
Marguerite."
"The spirals," Malone observed thoughtfully. "This whole spiral thing is
amazing."
"Circles turned upon themselves," Roxton
responded.
"Yes," Malone looked at Roxton. "You understand."
"A circle is life," Roxton said simply. "Spirals are circles within
circles. Great power," he added,
his breathe short with effort.
"Marguerite has the mark of spirals on her,"
Malone confirmed.
"Yes, the body we found had the exact same marks. At the time, we thought that she might be an
ancestor of Marguerite's, but I'm beginning to think it was her," Roxton
explained.
"The two of you found her body, while she was still
alive?" Ned was totally confused, but the sensation was beginning to be
very familiar.
"Hundreds of years after she died," Roxton replied
grimly. "It seems crazy, but we both
saw her. They sealed her tomb so her
spirit couldn't escape. They wanted to
trap her there for all time," he added angrily.
"Then, you think that's what's happening now?"
Malone asked.
"Each of us has been taken to a time of great
importance in our lives, right?" he asked the younger man.
"Yes," Ned responded. "Each of us has been brought to a critical time in our
lives, a time when we have made decisions that affect our beings, the way we
respond to the rest of our lives."
"This must be the most critical time for
Marguerite," Roxton said with certainty.
"It will decide whether she lives or dies, whether she accepts who
she is, and whether her spirit will remain free and with her self."
"We'd better hurry, then," Ned said moving even
faster.
"My thoughts exactly," Roxton replied and they ran
down the path to the cave.
***
"You can't kill me," Marguerite said in a calmer
voice than she felt. "You know I
can come back, no matter what you do.
I'm here, and you killed me before.
It's useless."
Warbek froze at her words, interrupted in mid-chant. He stared at her for a few seconds, and then
said shaking his head, "It cannot be.
I have read the runes. I will
have your power; my circle will finally be complete. You will be nothing, and I will rule the Druids for all
time."
"All time just got a whole lot shorter than you
think," she taunted, but inwardly her stomach lurched as the faceless,
silent minions grabbed her and began dragging her down the steep incline to the
pool of water. She didn't know how she
knew, but she *knew* what they were going to do to her. They would drown her, while at the same time
this lunatic would stab her, and later they would wrap her in the shroud,
marked with her birthmark, sealing her body and soul. The triple death, trading her life for the cessation of the
storm. The gods would be appeased and
the balance kept.
"You have power here no more, Morrigan," Warbek
said with arrogance, but a tinge of fear tainted his voice, and she could see
his eyes held trepidation.
"You name me," she called out, her head held high
as she was pulled into the water.
"You know the power of a name, don't you?"
"Then, what's mine?" Warbek shot back, more afraid
than he wanted to admit to himself, and gestured to his minions to hold her
still.
Marguerite searched her memories and came up with a face
that matched the one standing before her on the edge of the water. She had last seen him wearing the uniform of
the German army. His name had been
Oberst Wilhelm Stoehr, and he'd been responsible for a lot of pain, for her and
thousands of others. He'd been greedy,
conniving, rapacious, and totally power mad.
Apparently, he ran true to form whatever time he was in. She closed her eyes and let the waves of
energy that she was feeling flow through instead of around her. So much was happening; the climax of events
was coming soon. And there it was - his
face again. This time, he was wearing
the drab robes favored by so many of the Druid priests.
She opened her eyes and mocked with a false smile,
"Still looking for the easy way out, aren't you, Warbek?" At the indrawn hiss of his breath, her smile
widened, "You never believed nor cared.
You wanted it easy - no taxes, no work, always being catered
to." The minions, stunned by these
revelations loosened their hold on Marguerite.
She shook herself free of the hands that held her, walking slowly
through the icy water to the edge where Warbek stood. She held up her right hand, pointed her index finger at him, and
declared in ringing tones, "You are a liar and a fraud, Warbek of the
Averni! Weak and spineless, you hold no
power over that which is mine."
With this last she ascended out of the water and stood on the ledge next
to the Druid.
"You power was lacking in the Great Battle,"
Warbek accused. "You were defeated
and all was lost. They wandered for
centuries, waiting for your return.
Bochra was a fool, but I am not.
I wait for no one, especially a woman who will not yield her place to
her betters." His tone change to
taunting, "Tiarnan watched and wept as you died. You would not heed him, and all of them paid the price. He took the blame for your death, and was
never the same after that. He just
disappeared one day, never to return."
"Some paid more dearly than others, Warbek,"
Marguerite said coldly, looking steadily at him. "Some paid the price of trusting where no trust should have
been placed. That was my weakness, my
flaw. Tiarnan was steadfast to the end
and bore no fault. The faults were mine
alone. I took the emeralds and hid them
where you couldn't find them, didn't I?
You never could divine anything of importance, and now you think you can
read the runes? You are small and weak,
like all whose grasp exceeds their reach are."
"Not so weak as to not know how to harm you where it
would hurt you the most," Warbek shouted and motioned to the water. A mist arose, and then a clearing shaped in
a perfect circle appeared in the midst of it.
Within the clearing there appeared images of Roxton and Malone as they
made their way to the cave.
"Behold, your beloved Tiarnan!
I wonder how he will take being left for power again this time?"
taunted Warbek. "Shall I just kill
him now," he added, raising an arm, "or wait the few minutes until he
and his companion arrive?"
"Stop, or I'll make you regret your very
existence," Marguerite snarled savagely.
"Damn you, my choice was forced on my by you, and I have lived to
regret it ever after," she said hoarsely.
"But, I'm done regretting.
I'm not living in the past or for the past any more. I make my own destiny and I *will not* allow
you to harm him or anyone I care about," her voice rose as she spoke,
ending on a shout and she took several steps toward Warbek and stopped directly
in front of him. Stray sparks of
electricity lit the air as she moved and her eyes had taken on a green glowing
reminiscent of the emeralds she had once hid then replaced in the keystone of
their altar. The vision in the mist
disappeared suddenly.
"You've remembered," Warbek was horrified and
began backing up.
Marguerite said in a calm, steely voice, "Roxton
released the other half of my soul. No
matter what you do, you can't stop me.
I am here. I am whole, and I
*remember*. And, you will soon wish to
forget!" She followed the cringing
man up the stone path, moving deliberately, as a cat might stalk a mouse.
Warbek practically ran to the altar, and then turned around,
putting his hands on the edge to keep him from collapsing in ignoble fear. How had Tiarnan freed her? This Plateau, with all of its intersecting
planes of power, how had he come to be here, and how had he found her within
it? "I have foretold it," he
babbled, his eyes crazed. "Your
power will be mine. The storm that
approaches will be controlled by me."
Marguerite stopped several paces away from Warbek and the
altar and lifted her arms, palms upward, and slowly described a circle until
her hands met over her head. She then
moved her hands down together, as if holding a ball in her hands, to her chest
level. Within her hands a glow of light
began to shine. The intensity of the
light grew in power as she murmured a pattern of words unknown to Warbek.
“Great goddess, you have freed me from the icy prison of
water. This is the beginning. Life renews
itself by Your magic, Earth Goddess. I
walk the earth in friendship, not in dominance. Mother Goddess and Father God, instill within me through my love
a warmth for all living things. Teach
me to revere the Earth and all its treasures.
May I never forget that love is all.”
Warbek cried, "You cannot stop the storm your power
conjured, Morrigan! You will be the
cause of the destruction of all if you chose to keep your power this time! You cannot stop it, nor can you divert it,
for Bochra is not here to help you, you bitch!" The Druid's voice took on a high pitch screeching quality that
left no doubt as to the lack of his sanity.
Marguerite looked up finally at Warbek. Her face was coldly magnificent, and power
radiated throughout her being. She was
about to speak, when she noticed movement in the cave behind the altar. Roxton and Malone appeared at that
moment. Warbek, with the instincts of a
rat on a sinking ship, screamed for his minions to attack them and scuttled to
escape. Marguerite noted that both
Roxton and Malone seemed to be doing fine, so she concentrated on Warbek.
Roxton saw Marguerite acknowledge his presence, but she
seemed to be preoccupied with that one individual. Well, Malone and he could take care of these creatures. The two men waded into the ensuing fistfight
with such fervor that the Druid minions were dispatched in short order.
"Where's Marguerite?" Malone panted as they took
stock of the bodies littering the floor of the cave.
"I saw her heading over toward the rock chimney,"
Roxton replied as he moved rapidly in the direction he'd seen Marguerite and
the other Druid go. He knew something
important was happening and that he had to be there.
As the two men reached the rock chimney, they saw Marguerite
and the Druid locked in battle. They
didn't touch one another, but their hands were raised and pulsing waves of
energy pummeled each other's bodies as they fought. Savage winds buffeted the other occupants of the cave, but they
didn't seem to touch the two combatants.
"Yield!" commanded Marguerite. "You cannot hope to win."
"I may not win, but you will surely lose," taunted
Warbek. "You cannot control me and
the approaching storm, and you will chose to try to control the storm, for you
will never willingly give up your power.
I will escape to fight another day.
It is who you are."
"It was who I was," Marguerite acknowledged. "But, it is not who I am now. For all that has come to pass between us,
you have learned nothing about me."
She looked over at where Roxton stood with Malone. "He knows me, and still forgives me for
what I've done to him, over and over again, before and now." She gazed at Roxton, her heart in her eyes
and voice, "The love that he brings to me is as pure and noble as his
soul, and I will not ignore nor waste it this time."
Deliberately turning away from Warbek, she said to Roxton,
"I give my love to you, Lord John
Roxton - my Tiarnan - my heart and soul.
No greater power is that than love, and freely I give it to
you." With that, she dropped her
hands and the waves of energy ceased to flow from her being. She gazed at Roxton, the great weight of
fear and despair lifted by her faith in him and the power of their love.
A great cry came up from Warbek and the energies that had
been flowing around the room centered themselves directly on him. "No!" he screamed in incredible
pain.
"You wanted the power," Marguerite turned to him
with regret. "You didn't know what
you asked for, did you?" She
looked down at where Warbek writhed on the floor of the cave, in the throes of
death. "I am truly sorry,
Warbek," she added softly as he died, eyes wide open with fear and
understanding of what had finally happened to him.
Roxton rapidly crossed over to Marguerite and took her into
his arms, "Marguerite," he said over and over again as he held her.
"I'm sorry, John," Margeurite said tearfully.
"For what?" asked Roxton, stroking the hair from
her face.
"For choosing power and wealth over you," she
replied sadly.
"But, you didn't," Roxton said puzzled.
"I did before," Marguerite explained. "You can remember if you try. The energies of the planes are very high
now; everything is coming together very fast.
The past, the present, and the future have almost melded."
"I don't need to remember what happened before,"
Roxton replied with surety. He took her
face in both of his hands, "I know how you feel now, and I love you,
Marguerite. That's all that
matters." A watery smile from
Marguerite made him grin in return and they touched their foreheads together
and just gazed at each other.
"I don't want to interrupt a moment," Malone said
wryly. "But, there's a storm
brewing and it doesn't have anything to do with the strange weather patterns on
the Plateau."
Roxton and Marguerite turned to Malone who indicated the
area directly below the rock chimney.
Whirling winds stirred debris in frantic circles and a roaring sound
from above could be heard.
"The storm is approaching," Marguerite said with
concern. "We have to proceed to
the center as soon as possible."
"But, we're not all together," Roxton said.
"He's right," Malone agreed. "Challenger is convinced we have to be
together, ready to face our fears and embrace the changes, or it won't work -
we won't be able to stop the spirals."
"OK," Marguerite nodded her head. "George may be wrong about some things,
but I believe I'll take his word on this."
"With all that's happened, I'm beginning to think I
believe in Father Christmas," Roxton quipped as they made their way out of
the cave.
"Don't even think it," Marguerite shook her head
as they finally were free of the cave that had been the scene of her
death. "He just might show up on
the Plateau, the way our lives are going." She breathed deeply and added, "Thank God. If I never go into another cave again, it
will be too soon!"
"Can you stop the storm, Marguerite?" Malone asked
as they stood in the midst of the growing maelstrom.
"Not by myself," she explained. "I gave away part of my power in the
battle with Warbek. I'll need
Veronica's help to control it, that and everyone's energies to help us if we're
to stop it."
"Why did you cause the storm in the first place?"
Malone wondered.
"I had to, in order to try and stop Warbek the first
time," Marguerite replied. She shook
her head, "He betrayed us to the Roman garrison, said that we were
sacrificing humans in violation of the Roman law. He gave away the location of our tribe, for money, and a chance
to gain the emeralds and the power they represented."
"I remember now," Roxton said hollowly. "They slaughtered us, the Averni, old
and young, searching for our Druids, killing us because we would not betray
them. In the end, it did no good, for
Warbek had betrayed us all."
Roxton looked at Marguerite and shook his head in sorrow, "You
started the storm in an attempt to stop Warbek from getting the emeralds and
the power, but you came to help us and didn't finish the spell."
"I was too late to help and incomplete in my
conjuring," Marguerite said bitterly.
"I would not trust my heart, trust you, as you wanted me to. I wanted to keep all the power, the wealth
of my position, and thought if I gave in to you, I would lose it. In the end, I could not keep either my power
or you, and Warbek killed me, placed me in the cave, and sealed my soul,
trapped it for eternity." She
looked at Roxton, tears flowing down her face, "It was only your love and
faith in me, beyond all reason, that kept us alive in that cave and allowed you
to free me, reunite me with myself.
Thank you..." her voice trailed off as she sobbed.
Roxton pulled her into his arms and stroked her hair,
letting her cry. "I'd never leave
you or stop loving you, even if I ever wanted to for an insane moment, you know
that," he gently reminded her. She
nodded, but still sobbed against his chest, the emotion of the whole day
finally breaking down her formidable walls.
"It's all right, Marguerite," soothed Roxton. "It's not every day you find out you've
been reunited with half of your soul and have to save the universe."
"We have to save the universe, too?" Marguerite
looked up, her voice incredulous.
"Could this day get any better?"
"And, she's back," intoned Malone gleefully.
"And certainly not in the mood, Malone,"
Marguerite sniffed, and then spoiled the whole moment by reaching over and
hugging the startled journalist.
"Don't you ever leave us again like that, Neddie-boy, or I'll have
to hurt you," she shook the younger man's shoulders for emphasis.
"Yes, Ma'am," Ned replied, bemused, but delighted
by her actions.
"The storm," Roxton prodded. "Where do we go now?" he asked.
"We go to the center, where Veronica is," Malone
said with certainty.
"We need to get Finn before we do," Marguerite
said and Roxton nodded.
"Yes, and Challenger, too," Malone added.
"You know when Challenger is, right?" Roxton said
to Malone.
"Yes, I think I'd better go see if he can leave the
future and come to the center," Ned replied.
"We'll have to split up," Marguerite decided. "Time is growing short."
"Where do we come back to? Where is this center, and when?" Roxton asked.
"It's our present day," answered Malone, and
Marguerite looked at him. "I can
see the planes," he explained.
"All of them?" she marveled.
"Most of them, but I can't go to all of them," Ned
explained.
Marguerite shook her head in wonder, "Your time in the
spirit world, right?"
"Yes," Malone affirmed, smiling slightly. "Here I was thinking it was really a
weird thing, but I see I fit right into our little group, not unusual at
all."
Roxton barked a laugh at this last and said, "Can you
see Veronica now, Malone?"
"Yes," Ned's eyes took on a far away
expression. "She's in a great deal
of pain and time is running short," he came back to himself, but his
empathy and concern for Veronica was evident.
"We have to hurry. You can
travel to another plane?" he asked Marguerite.
"Yes, it will be hard, but I can do it," she
replied. "Where is Finn?"
"In the future, where you went before," Malone
replied.
"New Amazonia," Roxton said flatly.
"Oh, joy," Marguerite intoned.
The whirling freshets of air swirled around them as they
shifted their planes again. Margeurite
and Roxton to the near future, Malone to the distance future. In their present, at the center, Veronica keened
her sorrow and pain at her inability to stop the spirals from cascading in upon
one another. The time was growing short
and she didn't know how to stop the gathering storm of power, time, and light. She only knew she had to hold on as long as
possible, to wait and hope that someone would come to help her. Her mind and body concentrated on holding
the Trion steady and attempting to balance the impossible combinations that
were being thrust upon the Plateau, but her heart and soul cried out for Malone.
To Be Continued