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Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

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Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Postby jixer » Tue Dec 17, 2002 2:00 pm

Title: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Author: Jixer

E-mail: jixer@attbi.com

Feedback: Please. Bouquets and brickbats welcome. My wife says I live on feedback.

Distribution: Any free fanfiction site

Spoilers: None. All AU. I'm free of Season 6 here.

Rating: Hard PG-13 to R at most.

Pairing: W/T

Disclaimer: All characters of BtVS are owned by Mutant Enemy and Joss Whedon. All I own are tattered books, the love of a good woman, and a few pots of tomato plants.

Summary: What are the chances of finding your soulmate in the massive sea of stars?

WARNINGS: Does He Ever Get To The Point Warning- It’s long.



Sky Tapestry



A tapestry jewelled hangs over the night;

Have you looked up to see where it gleams?

There are rubies and sapphires and diamonds white

Interwoven with mists of lost dreams.



Cordella Lackey





As humans took to the stars they created, almost by accident, an Empire to hold the web of their civilization together. The two laws that the Empire used to separate itself from the factionalism of Earth were simple. First, anyone could be a full citizen of the Empire by service of a minimum of two years in her forces. Second, the Empire only controlled space and such planetary areas as needed for support. The planets were free to follow their paths as long as they did not interfere with interstellar matters. A one-percent tax was leveled on all interstellar commerce to pay for a Navy, Naval Auxiliary, and the attendant bureaucracy of civilization.



After several hundred years of expansion and colonization the Diaspora of Humanity came to a close. There came two centuries of growth and slow expansion in the outer 'Borders' of the empire. But in the Empire's core the six so-called 'first planets' began to demand more rights as their populations and industries burgeoned. Their reasoning being that
they were the true Empire and the outer 'Borderers' merely parasites on their over-taxed largesse.





The Coming Twilight-Understanding The Fall of the First Empire

Tabitha Summers-McHeath



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



"Did you kiss Rebecca Hansen?" Albert Maclay demanded as he stared at his daughter.



Tara Maclay looked at her father from behind a curtain of hair. She trembled and then nodded as she sobbed quietly.



"You know what this means, Brother Maclay," a hatchet faced woman said sternly.



"I do," he said flatly. "I ask permission to take my wayward one to the Sin House for her reformation."



The group of three elders conferred briefly. Elder Johnson, a severely dressed gaunt man looked at Tara with narrowed eyes.



"Marriage might be a more merciful route for our poor sister," he intoned. "My youngest son has lost his dear wife recently. Perhaps they can heal each other."



Albert Maclay met the man's eyes and nodded. Tara's breath came fast and she looked at her father pleadingly. The young man in question had been sent to a far mining claim of the church's to reform his need for alcohol. By the rumors Tara had heard the effort was a failure.



"We're a poor family," Albert said with a sigh.



"The dowry will be waived," Johnson replied quickly.



"I'll take her home to get her things," Albert said evenly. "Shall we say tomorrow for the happy event?"



"Very good," Johnson said with a wintry smile. The rest of the elders nodded and smiled at the agreement. Tara felt the walls closing in.



"Tara, with me, girl," her father said with an exasperated tone. "Stop daydreaming. We have much to get done."



Tara followed out of the church complex into the dry cold air of Milton's spring. This time Tara didn't look up at the huge gas giant that held Milton in it's orbit. The tiny winking lights clustered around the single bright point of the orbital station had captured her imagination since she first realized there were other places in the galaxy. She knew most of those lights were simply drone ore shuttles, but a few were starships.



Now her whole world had collapsed in on itself, along with her future. She had been lustful and perverse and she was going to pay for her evil. But it wasn't evil, she knew that and now she felt torn in two. Then she looked at her father's worn, frowning face and doubted everything she knew in her heart. It was a silent drive to the outskirts of Gabriel, to the dirt bermed, semi-buried home she had known for all of her nearly seventeen Earth-standard years.



"Get all of your things," her father ordered. "All of them. Don't forget anything. Even the stuff under your bed."



Tara nodded dully and walked through the quiet dwelling. It was just she and her father since Donny had left for Imperial service two years ago; right after the illness had taken her mother. She picked up the framed flat photos of her family and carefully folded them away, her mother's last. Her clothes were old and plain, but patched carefully and as clean as Milton would let them be. Finally she sighed and reached under the bed.



Out came the Empire and romance. Rebecca's image smiled at her in a holo-cube. She pressed the small button on the side and flipped through the half dozen images of the dark haired girl. She wondered how much trouble the mayor's daughter was in thanks to her unholy urgings. Then she pulled out paper books, "Fodor's Guide to the Empire" and "Imperial Service-Is It Right For You?" The filled out enlistment forms she had downloaded over her family's ancient computer now nestled in the cover of the "Guide", waiting for her seventeenth birthday. Her father’s signature was real. It had been her birthday present.



"Let's go," her father said harshly from her door. Tara looked at her clock and wondered where the last hour had gone. She zipped up her two bags, pulled on her goggles and coat, and walked outside. She stopped by the edge of their yard and looked at the tiny markers that stood silent watch over an ancient mongrel's and a tabby's remains. Tears slipped into her goggles but it wasn't until she was in the truck that she pulled them off and cleaned them.



"You forgot something," her father said flatly as he placed her semi automatic shotgun in the rack behind them. "Leapers are bad this year."



Tara shivered at the thought of the pseudo-arachnids. They weighed up to ten kilos and injected a natural acid into their prey. Humans were in fact poisonous to them, but the creatures had brains the size of a pencil lead. They were fast, but fortunately their exoskeleton wasn't very strong. Everyone of age on Milton carried a shotgun in the hinterlands.



As the old truck chugged to life Tara noticed the fuel cell indicator registered full. That was odd, as topping off the truck was one of her duties and when she had last checked it was two thirds full. She didn't mention it though as her father eased the machine down the road until they came to the end of the street. Albert stared at the vista in front of them for several minutes.



The mine's first processing of ore was just finishing. The slag from the processing was being poured out in red orange fury over the trailings of the mine. Tara shivered at the sight. It reminded her of every sermon about Hell. After the slag had cooled and turned a dull red on the heaped waste Albert turned the truck left, away from the settlement.



"F-father?" Tara asked quietly.



"I need some things in Edwardston for your wedding," he said bluntly. "We'll be on the road for a while. Get some sleep."



Tara didn't argue, even though she knew she'd never sleep. Her fear and worry would keep her awake. She secured the webbing and leaned back. She closed her eyes for just a second.



When she opened them there was a glow in the horizon that did not come from either the gas giant or Milton's far off sun. It had a sharp quality to it. Edwardston’s lights filled the cold night as they drove over the bluff. Farther away on the horizon the sharper lights of the starport cut through the darkness. Tara looked at her father hopefully.



“S-s-sir, um, I don’t, um…” Tara found her argument dying as her father stared resolutely out the windshield.



“I’m sorry I’ve failed you, Tara,” her father said evenly. “I hope your husband does better by you.”



“He’s a drunk and I don’t love him!” Tara said desperately. “Daddy, this is wrong.”



“So is a girl kissing another girl!” he snapped back. “I’m sorry, Tara but this has to be.”



Tara said nothing more until they parked outside a large department store that catered to the hardscrabble miners of Milton. Edwardston was not large. Most of it’s buildings were bermed if not buried against the wind and cold. Mr. Maclay got out of the truck.



"You stay right there," he said a stern voice. Then he turned on his heel and almost marched into the store. He caught a glimpse of her in the reflection of the glass door. Her head was down. He hoped she was praying.





“This isn’t right,” Tara whispered to her self as she looked away from her father. “I’m making you do the wrong thing. I’m sorry.” Tara looked up carefully and saw him disappear into the store. “I love you, Daddy.”



Tara waited for him to get inside. When he was gone she pulled her coat close and slid her goggles on. She slid out and walked back to the cargo bed. She pulled out her bags. Then she went back to the cab and retrieved her shotgun. Starports were places of danger to soul and body according to her teachers and her father. According to Fodor's Guide they were places where commerce of all sorts was allowed.



She struggled to get her bags and the shotgun across the street quickly. The automatic trains that ran to the starport from Calvinburg and Edwardston stopped at open stations where everyone could see who was going to the dens of sin. As Tara came to the slab of armorcrete she saw a bright light closing on the station. She almost sobbed in relief as the silvery train stopped in front of her. She used all her strength to push the bags through the door. She didn’t realize she was shivering.



"Need a hand, miss?" came a rough voice.



"Th-thank you," she said as a tattooed arm lifted her bag into the train’s overhead compartment. Tara looked at the strip of short brightly colored hair that ended in a ponytail. The broad man had a mustache that was almost feral. The Imperial Sun patch on his vest indicated he had already served and was a full citizen.



"Joining up?" he asked with a smile.



"I'm trying to," she said quietly as she slipped off her goggles.



"Bravo!" he said and slapped her on the shoulder. "Don't worry about a thing. I'll get you to CHI. Then it's off for the Navy. It's the only service."



"Don't listen to that walrus," a lean woman said as she folded her map. "The Marines are why the Empire has a taxi service like the Navy."



"Heretic," muttered the man.



Tara looked at the lean woman and noticed how hard her body was. She had a discrete button with the Imperial Sun on her lapel. She also wore the strip and ponytail hairstyle. That's when Tara knew her trip was real. The 'spacer' cut came from hours in vacuum suits and combat armor. She looked up as the train stopped. They were on the edge of the starport. A large gate in the fence opened and let in the train.



Tara relaxed as the train passed the fence and the one-meter tall white marker that was the boundary of Imperial territory on Milton. She knew the fence had been put up by the city fathers of Edwardston in an effort to keep the contamination of the Empire to a minimum.



"Good time," the man observed as the train stopped in front of a large gray pile of a building. “Let’s get you over to Customs, Health and Immigration



"Why have Customs if nearly everything is legal in the starport?" Tara wondered out loud.



"Nearly, lass, is why," he said as he and the woman each carried a bag to the imposing armorcrete structure.



"Mostly for the bookkeeping and taxes," the woman said. "Health is perfunctory here but it's critical in other places, and Immigration is to make sure you're not just hanging out in the Imperial starports."



"Oh," Tara said worriedly.



"There's ways around it if you're an underage runaway who's sincere about joining," the woman explained gently.



"Umm," Tara replied with large eyes.



"Been there," she replied. "That's how I met my husband. Just tell the recruiter the truth and good luck."



"Thank you," Tara said as she joined the very short line in the plain lobby. She rummaged through her bag and pulled out her Guide with the filled out enlistment papers. She looked up and saw her escorts were gone.



She didn't even know their names.



An hour later Tara sat on the bench on the other side of the CHI building. Her shotgun was sealed in a pouch next to her. She fingered the bracelet that glowed a faint orange. It was a sign she was officially a legally recognized minor with intent to join Imperial Service. She knew though if push came to shove she would be returned to her father. He would have to file a report with the city police, they would request her return, and only then would there be a hearing. Her father wanted her to do what would damage her soul and his. She had to find a way off planet quickly.



She knew Milton was a small starport but even so she watched dozens of people walk by. There were private security teams in full body armor and weapons walking by Buddhist nuns on the sidewalk in front of her. People in jumpsuits were everywhere. Some brightly dressed people nearby played music and sang as jugglers did impossible things with balls and clubs. She looked at them and found herself singing along very softly with their songs.



"Good pitch," a harried looking balding man said behind her.



"Th-thank you," she said looking down.



"How long until you join?" he asked pointing at her wrist. "Can you read music? Are you a soprano? Ever performed before? Can you sew?"



"F-fifty eight days, s-sir," she replied from behind a curtain of hair. "I can read music and I've s-sung both alto and soprano w-w-with my church group. I helped make the robes. I can kind of play a guitar."



"Want a job?" he asked quickly. "The base rate is on top of food and lodging and you get a one share split of the excess box office or gleaning. Any recording gets the same split after fees."



"Is that good?" she asked in a bewildered tone.



"It's a living," he said with a shrug. "But we do have a gig on a big liner waiting. We just have to get there."



"W-who are you?" Tara finally asked, flustered.



"Ach, I'm sorry, lass," he said. Tara recognized he had an accent but didn't know where it was from. "I'm Terrence McHeath and I'm managing the Shades from the Hills. That's them o'er there. I need another soprano."



Tara looked at the group and listened to their music. The jugglers had stopped and now singers hushed the crowd and then started on an a cappella version of the Skye Boat Song.



"When do we leave?" Tara asked as she stood up and grabbed her bags.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



There are many differences in the rough "Border Nobles" and the sensibilities of the vital true aristocracy of merit and good breeding in the true core of the Empire. The First Planets have such patrons of the arts as Melissa Williams-Sung and Alfred VonCrador who have made the opera season of Miranda a joy. The urchins claiming to be musicians in the streets of much of the Empire look to the McHeaths, remnants of a failed Scottish nationalist "clan" rooted in the moribund Jocelyn sector for their support.

The First Planets, Heirs of Greatness

Clive Meers



Tara walked along the path and felt the crunch of the new snow under her boots. The cold was helping put things into perspective, she hoped. The covered riding ring had not been a good idea for thinking. All she wanted to do was keep riding. It was as if her favorite illicit books about heroes and heroines came to life on the back of a spirited horse. She sighed and headed back into the castle like building that was the McHeath ancestral home. It almost looked like it would have on Earth a thousand years before until she opened the door into the main hall.



"Tara!" shouted little Riku McHeath-Wanatabe as he launched himself at her. She caught the four year old and spun him around in her arms.



"Me next!" piped up Jendra McHeath and held up her arms.



"No!" whined Clara McHeath-Oboto.



"Enough, everybody," Sarah McHeath called out as she pushed back a red lock of hair. "It's music time."



"Sing with us, Tara," Jendra pleaded.



"No," Sarah said firmly. "We’re in rehearsal. Let's go everyone.”



Tara made her way through the busy halls and rooms slowly. The weather had forced most of the hundreds of people and dozens of pets indoors for most of the day. Between invitations to sing or entreaties for petting it took her longer than she had thought to get to "Aunt" Abigail's room. Tara hesitated outside the old woman's door.



"Do come in, Tara," a firm voice called out. "Hector's waiting."



Tara opened the door carefully. A small ancient terrier wagged his tail as hard as he could at her entrance. His mistress was in a chair with a wrap thrown over her shoulders. She was glaring at a data pad as if it had offended her and should apologize. There was a tea service on the table with a mostly ignored sandwich next to it on a side table. Tara cleared her throat.



"Would you like s-some tea with your sandwich?" she asked quietly as she went to side table.



"You're sounding like my granddaughters," the older woman said over her reading glasses. Tara knew the glasses were less an affectation and more a necessity now, along with the cane. Even regenerative medicine could only do so much.



"Thank you," Tara said as she served the tea for both of them.



"I don't suppose you and Moria..." Abigail said easily.



"She and Mai Lin are getting back together," Tara said with a real smile as she sat down.



"Now I wonder how that happened," Abigail sighed. "Fire and hydrogen, those two. Oh well."



"They love each other," Tara said surely.



"I know, I know," the old woman smiled. “I’m sure someone pointed it out to them finally, after much drama.”



Tara simply smiled. The old woman sipped her tea and nibbled at the sandwich.



“You’re welcome here, Tara,” Abigail said evenly after a moment. “You’ve fit in well. Our Terrence sings your praises and says you helped keep the tour running smoothly. There will be someone for you.”



“I-I know,” Tara said politely as she looked down. “But I need to, um, s-stand on my own, you know, make my own way. I won’t do that if I stay here much longer. It’s too nice here. I could have joined three months ago but, um, s-something always came up.”



Abigail just nodded and sipped her tea. She looked at the shy girl in front of her.



Someone needed help, or there was something new to learn, the old woman thought. But you’ve been looking at the stars for a week now even if you’re too young to know what’s coming out there.



“So you’re off to enlist,” Abigail said nodding. “We must have a send off party.”



“Um,” Tara started with a worried look.



“Oh, really,” Abigail said looking over her glasses. “You must let us dour old Scots have a little celebration.”



“Of-of course,” Tara said with a weak smile. “Will there be bagpipes? It-its okay if there are, um, bagpipes, I mean…”



“Good, good,” the older woman said as she stood up and reached for her cane. “Could you be a dear and take Hector for a walk? I need to have an old ladies’ talk with my cousins.”



“I’d like h-his company,” Tara said as she smiled at the small dog. Abigail smiled sadly as they left. A few moments later three ladies of roughly Abigail’s vintage meandered into the study and found their accustomed seats. When they had settled in and a young member of the clan had dropped off more tea and a plate of dainty favorites Abigail cleared her throat.



“She’s not staying then?” Deidre McHeath-Holland asked sadly. “Pity, she has the Sight.”



“No, you old witch,” Abigail said with a sad smirk. “She’s seventeen. And she’s right. She needs to find her own way.”



“Pity,” Deidre repeated.



“Nice figure on her,” Fiona said with a nod. “Our Moira is letting that get away? She’s back with her coloratura?”



“Yes, and I think young Tara had a hand in getting them back together,” Deidre said with a wink.



“Oh dear, our two best sopranos living together again,” Fiona said with a sigh. “It’s going to be Carmen for breakfast.”



The group chuckled and sipped their tea. There was a reluctance to speak in the air. They looked at Abigail. She finished her tea and pulled out a flat data panel.



“You’ve all read and agree with Lorna and Kiska’s analysis?” she asked evenly. At their nodding she took a ragged breath. “Then it’s begun. We’ll be sending out collie teams to collect our strays. Even stochastic analysis doesn’t give us an idea of how much time we have to get everyone settled into the Jocelyn Sector.”



“What does your gut say, cousin?” Arlene asked as she drew out her knitting. “I’m thinking someone who ran Sector Intelligence for her majesty’s Fourth Fleet should be able to guess.”



“Three to five years,” Abigail said after a shrug. “Every day we get from here means we have to strengthen our ties within the Sector. All I can say is thank God our Anne caught an Imperial scion. Peter will be useful in rebuilding.”



“And her wife has good genes, too,” Fiona pointed out. “Didn’t realize she wanted one of each. Have you seen the latest pictures of my great grandchildren?”



“Yes,” Deidre said quickly. “Including the sledding ones. Who tells the McHeath?”



“I’ll tell Donald,” Abigail said as the rest nodded in relief.



Without thinking she touched the model on the mantle of her last command, a Levitow class destroyer. She thought of the crew who had fallen to keep the Pax Terra safe. She put on a sweater with pockets full of small candies and tissues and leaned on her cane as she left to talk with her son on a subject both had dreaded.



This is going to break his heart, she thought. At least we see this coming. Empires are the things of men. They fail in time.



------------------------

MEANWHILE

------------------------



Europa is a beautiful mystery. Only the second terraformed planet in the Jocelyn sector it developed at an unprecedented rate and was ready for full life forms in less than a decade. Designed by Jaeger Interstellar to be one of the "continent" planets, Europa holds a vast array of life forms lost on Terra for generations. If all of this sounds too good to be true, it is.



In addition to a wonderful growing bed Europa has the strongest planetary electromagnetic fields in the Empire. Travelers are warned not to take electric equipment relying on stored power or fields, comm units, or shimmer make up. All of these have a very shortened range or lifespan on Europa. Theories abound but few facts have been proven, so be ready to rough it.



Europa was a popular and inexpensive destination for hundreds of nationalist groups in the closing days of European nationalism, so while on planet be sure to take one of the many quaint transport forms and visit the many post-nationalist and royalist nation states, none of them more than a few hundred kilometres from border to border. Oldenberg is a popular starting point and has an Imperial accredited university.



A word or warning for travelers: cash cards do NOT work except in the larger banks. Be wary of pickpockets in the cities and bandits in the hinterlands.




From Fodor's Guide to the Empire, 285th Edition





Willow Rosenberg read her parents’ letter one more time. She looked at the unsigned Imperial waiver. She folded both up neatly and put them into her satchel. The bench under the oak creaked as her friend joined her.



"No permission, huh?" Lady Beth Summers asked.



"I either get letters that might as well start out 'Dear Colleague' or ones that make me feel ten years old," Willow said with a sigh. "I'm going to be seventeen in a week. I'm not going to stay here. They're just being all delaying with the inevitable."



“I wish I could go,” Beth said soft voice.



“Kind of hard, what with you being the future Countess of Sussex East and West and having the whole United Kingdoms thing on top of that,” Willow said gently. “And by the way, future Countesses don’t say ‘huh’.”



“So if I say it often enough I’ll get to go to space instead?” Beth asked hopefully.



"Who'd want to go up in one of those little things?" a new voice asked.



"They're not all small, Cordelia," Willow explained wearily. "It's the ionosphere and troposphere of Europa that makes it hard to land anything bigger than a D-4 cutter."



"And those people are all rude," the brunette went on.



"You'd know, Cordelia," Willow said sweetly. Beth fought a smile.



"Yes, but do they know that?" Cordelia bristled. "I mean Chases are an old family, I mean pre-Spaceflight old, but they were all 'how quaint' and they were just, well, rude. I don't know why Daddy deals with them."



“Because Europa doesn’t have much in the way of metal ore,” Willow explained carefully. “Kind of hard to run a railroad without metals.”



“That’s why I have to take the stupid iron supplements, right?” Cordelia asked petulantly. Willow sighed. It seemed that everything the daughter of director of the Peninsula Railway didn’t want to be correct about science was blamed on her tutor.



“No, that’s just being female,” Willow said patiently. “There’s enough metal bound up in the ecosphere-



“Oh, no,” Cordelia whined. “Not ecology too!”



“How’s the dance coming?” Beth asked quickly.



“Wonderfully,” Cordelia sighed. “I kind of let it out I and Lady Summers were looking for escorts for the Cotillion next year. I’ve even got an invite out to Benjamin Levy.”



“No!” Willow said with a start. “I mean, oh, really that’s nice and all and he’s going to college and he’s on the rowing team and I’m sure he wants to come down and dance with some girls’ academy junior who’ll just turn into somebody who can’t shut up and who’ll breakout right before the dance-



“Breathe, Will,” Beth said worriedly. “We’ll get you ready.”



“Yeah,” Cordelia said with a nod. “I love a challenge.”



All three girls looked up at the sound of a bell as it rang out over the manicured grounds of the Walsh Academy for Girls. Young women hurried along paved walks to various buildings. Cordelia and Beth smiled as they stood up and headed for the stables.



“Come on, we’ll be late,” Beth said as she broke into an unladylike run. Cordelia followed her.



“Yeah,” Willow muttered. “I’ll bet nobody rides horses on other worlds with orbital stations and the electricity works and there are computers and I want off Europa now.”



Then she too broke into a run. As much as she hated it, equitation was a class.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Willow moved slowly in the library. The gelding everyone had told her was gentle for them had been restless. At least she hadn’t been thrown today, though given the way her muscles felt afterwards it might have been less painful to fall. This evening she had a study session for Beth and Cordelia on mathematics and basic chemistry. She was gathering books when Mrs. Greene, the librarian, had asked her favorite student to put back a health book in the locked cabinets.



“Here’s the key dear,” Mrs. Greene said casually.



“The key to the locked bookcases?” Willow asked with reverence. “I’ll be careful and no one will get in there. I promise!”



“I know, dear,” the older woman said nodding. “I’ll be right back.”



Willow headed to the back of the library and slipped the key into the lock. She was putting back the book when the title of the book beside it made her stop. She pulled it out looked for the place to reshelve it. She stopped and looked at it.



“Oh, ‘Tribadism and Other Practices’, not tribalism,” she said to herself. “What’s a tribad?”



Willow opened the book. A few minutes later she heard Mrs. Greene return through the sound of her blood pounding in her ears. She slipped the book with its illustrations back into the bookcase. Willow hesitated and looked towards the librarian. She pulled out the book again and copied down its information on the flyleaf onto her smallest notebook. Shaking she returned the book and latched the bookcase. She drifted to the desk and handed Mrs. Greene the key.



“Thank you, dear,” the librarian said and then frowned. “Are you all right Willow? You look flushed.”



For once words failed her as she just shook her head. She looked up quickly as her friends entered and smiled weakly.



“Let’s get this over with,” Cordelia sighed.



“Are you okay?” Beth asked worriedly. “Violet was a bit hard-mouthed today.”



“I’m fine,” Willow said quickly. “Just really sore muscles and all, that’s it.”



“Well, didn’t you say the rump is a big muscle?” Cordelia asked with concern. “You need the butt for dance practice.”



“I know!” Beth said brightly. “Massage. Cordy and I will get that big muscle relaxed with some soft liniment and massage.”



“I don’t want to put you out,” Willow said desperately.



“No, it’s all right,” Cordelia said firmly. “I know you’re shy, but trust me, it works. We’ll have you ready for dance lessons in no time.”



“”We’re doing this,” Beth said just as firmly. “Don’t worry, Will. It’ll just be us girls.”







Edited by: jixer at: 12/17/02 12:03:53 pm
jixer
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Postby Lythande » Tue Dec 17, 2002 2:26 pm

Wow! Excellent writing. Great story! I can't wait to see the next installment.

----------------------------------------------------------------------



I'm a bloodsucking fiend! Look at my outfit!

Lythande
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Postby darkmagicwillow » Tue Dec 17, 2002 2:50 pm

Interesting start. The quotes remind me of Asimov's Foundation, while the service reminds me more of Heinlein. I'm amused that Fordor has survived the centuries.

--

"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."

darkmagicwillow
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Postby Grimlock72 » Tue Dec 17, 2002 2:58 pm

Heh, that last line had me smirking: "Don’t worry, Will. It’ll just be us girls."... given the book Willow has just read....: -->>:



Lotsa build up here, I wonder if Tara's father rode her to that town on purpose or not. Nice that several people just helped Tara along. Didn't quite follow what the McHeath's were talking about but that was probably intentional :)



Europe sounds like a sucky planet for Willow. More a place Tara would like with horse-riding being taught at Girl's schools :) Techno-wizz Willow stuck on a planet which disables most of the wonderfull high-tech stuff, such a shame. She probably wanted of and soon as she figured out there were other planets without Europe's problem.



So.... both girl joining the army, wonder what they'll end up doing. Cordelia being all snobish as usual, might be even worse than usual. Army seems a bit modelled after Starship Troopers in which case I recommend Navy for both Tara and Willow. Dont want them to be cannon-fodder :)



We'll just have to wait and such what happens, asking more questions wont help that :)



P.S. Does this new fic mean your other pending fic (the one with the monkey in the library, forgot the title, sorry) is on hold ?



Grimmy

"You hurt Tara," Willow said too calmly. "The last one who tried that was a god. I made her regret it." -- Unexpected Consequences by Lisa of Nine

Grimlock72
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Postby CaptMurdock » Tue Dec 17, 2002 7:31 pm

This is great! Like darkmagicwillow said, a nice cross between Asimov's Foundation and some of Heinlein's stuff.



Now I'm kinda glad that I pre-empted you on doing a W/T-Trek fic, because this looks terrific, and you would not have done it otherwise. :grin



Looking forward to more!



_________________



"Honey, in case you didn't hear me the first six thousand times: no more teleportation spells."

CaptMurdock
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Postby yana » Tue Dec 17, 2002 9:10 pm



Very intriguing beginning. Can't wait to read more! :)





Yana

yana
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Postby sheila wt » Tue Dec 17, 2002 9:16 pm

Wow! Great start. :clap

For me, this is the best mix ever: sci-fi and Willow & Tara. :bounce



Made me remember how hard it is waiting for the last Honor Harrington book to be released in paperback...



Looking forward for more!



--------------------------
"She had tasted Willow on her tongue, and she had worn Willow on her skin. There wasn't a shower in the world that could have washed that away." (Terra Firma, by Tulipp)

sheila wt
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Postby mollyig » Wed Dec 18, 2002 4:41 am

Yet again, you've created a most involving AU jixer.



Tara escaping from the puritanical homelife to a life of adventure. I'm intrigued about what Abigail and her crew are predicting.



Thanks, looking forward to more from you.

Adding up the total of a love that's true, multiply life by the power of two
Indigo Girls

mollyig
 


RE: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Postby tiredsoul » Wed Dec 18, 2002 10:48 pm

Yay, another AU! I love the start of this one. :)



I like the way you've set up both Willow and Tara for what should prove to be an entertaining story. And this...

Quote:
“Are you all right Willow? You look flushed.”


Gotta love it.



Looking forward to more.



--celia

tiredsoul
 


Re: RE: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Postby jixer » Fri Dec 20, 2002 5:19 pm

Hello Kittens-



To everyone a thank you and purrs. Feedback helps so much. I’m sorry this is taking so long but if I’m introducing a new AU I have to make sure I don’t leave my valiant readers scratching their heads.



Lythande-Thank you. Unfortunately the set up was more complex than I thought. My proof reader is taking me to task to make sure I don’t start assuming things.



darkmagicwillow- Thanks. I was trying for that effect. I’m old enough to remember when SF was Heinlein, Clark and Asimov for the most part. And for years one of my favorite books just to pick up and wish on has been an old Fodor’s Guide to Europe.



Grimlock72- Hi!. LOTS of build up, sorry. And the explanations are going to be coming out slowly. The Empire just says service for citizenship. While the military is what everyone knows just ask any port master-sea, air or rail/truck-how much work it takes to move 1 ton of cargo safely. Logistics is the hardest to manage part of any large organization. Then there’s the lovely government sidelight of bureaucracy. In this AU both are covered by General Services. Lots of slots available for just about anyone. As for the Navy Auxiliary-think the US Coast Guard.



Yes, Lost Pages was on hold. I’m past what was holding me back. More chapters are in the works but not before the New Year.



CaptMurdock- Well, it would have been very different at least. I still say Equilibrium is the best Buffy/Trek cross-over of any I’ve seen. Of course it focuses on W/T :grin



Yana- Thank you. I’m working on it, I promise. I hope I don’t disappoint.



sheila wt- Wow! I have the same problem with Weber’s space opera-no hard back funding. Thank you for the compliment!



Mollyig- Thank you. Too kind as usual.:) Ah yes, adventure. And as for the McHeaths planning- the clan is old. They didn’t stay a clan without knowing which way to jump. Who notices a singer in a public transit stop anyway?



tiredsoul- Heh. I couldn’t resist. After all a well appointed library should have all sorts of knowledge, right?:wink



Thank you all. The next update should be out Saturday unless my proof reader strangles me.



Happy holidays everyone,



Jixer



jixer
 


Re: RE: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Postby EffieBlue » Fri Dec 20, 2002 8:46 pm

Hi Jixer.



This is a great story and I have to agree with DarkMagicWillow and Capt Murdock, it reminds me very much of Heinlein, with a touch of Andre Norton too.



I can't wait for the next update.





Jill

EffieBlue
 


Re: RE: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Postby jixer » Sat Dec 21, 2002 2:20 pm

Hello Kittens-



Here's the next chapter, and it's even Saturday! I'm not going to put a time up for the next update since I'm working the holidays. This is the second part of the set up. After this things should meander gently along like a babbling brook, right?



EffieBlue- Wow Jill, Heinlein AND Norton? Thank you!:grin Kittens realy are too generous.



Thank you all for your precious time,



Jixer

jixer
 


Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 2

Postby jixer » Sat Dec 21, 2002 2:28 pm

Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Chapter 2



Only a subject serving a minimum of two years after their training is completed shall be a citizen of the Empire. The only exceptions are death and medical discharge due to injuries received in service. In the case of medical discharge the subject has the option to refuse and take service in any capacity they are fit for upon the approval of a board of review. The exception is experimental medical treatment for the disabling wound.



Those killed in service are entered onto the rolls of citizens.




From Imperial Service-Is It Right For You?





Tara awoke slowly. She looked around and saw the recovery bay just as she’d been shown before the procedure. She looked down and felt hope at the sight of the two bumps under the bottom half of the sheet. Her hands clenched the crisp white sheet over her lower body. She pulled on the material and felt the clinging cover drag on her feet. She started to cry and laugh at the same time. She pulled the sheet aside.



“They’re really there,” a gentle voice said beside her. “Pink and everything. I’m Althea. The surgery and the regen therapy are all over.”



She turned to see a nurse in the ubiquitous green sterile clothing of the surgical ward. She looked tired but was smiling.



“Are they…w-warm?” she asked hesitantly.



“You can touch them and see,” the nurse said as she steadied the younger woman. Tara sat up and felt her feet. Her hands and feet both felt warmth. She started to cry again. Althea settled her back and covered her.



“You’ve got messages waiting, Tara,” the older woman said carefully. “Do you want them now or later?”



“I’ll take them now, I-I guess,” she replied hesitantly.



“There’s no rush,” Althea assured her.



“I’m a clerk’s assistant,” Tara said ruefully. “Paperwork is always a rush.”



“All right,” Althea said with a small smile. “But if you spike a vital sign it’s an early bedtime for you.”



“Its just messages,” Tara said with a tired shrug as she took the data pad.



The first three messages were from members of the 417th Imperial Marine Regiment. The three were at Jocelyn getting medical treatment as well. She smiled at their words and wondered why they were so concerned. Her General Services clerk and she had been attached to their unit very briefly and Tara was just a bureaucratic helper at best. There was a long message mostly filled with children’s drawings from the McHeath compound just off Jocelyn’s huge starport. Abigail had sent a brief note saying she would be dropping by. Tara was smiling broadly when she tabbed the second to last message. She read the opening. A moment later there was a gentle chime in the room.



“Tara, what’s wrong,” Althea asked quickly as she entered the bay.



“I-I-I…don’t…” Tara looked down at the pad. “It’s a mistake. It s-says ‘citizen’. It’s only been six months since training.”



“No, it’s right,” Althea explained gently. “These bone implants are still experimental. They’re the best base for regen work but they’re new.”



Tara nodded mechanically. She looked at the pad and tabbed the last button. Alarms chimed more loudly as she started to cry after a few seconds.



“Oh God, no,” Tara whispered. “I don’t deserve…”



Althea pushed her remote and silenced the high tech alarms. She called on the oldest nursing skills and held the sobbing young woman.



---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



“Hello, Admiral,” Captain Chin said politely as he stood behind his desk at attention.



“Greg, if you call me that, I’ll have to salute,” Abigail McHeath said with a chuckle. “You don’t want to do that to an old retired lady, do you?”



“It’ll keep you in shape,” he replied easily.



“Like a pretzel?” she said as she sat down. “Sit, sit.”



The middle-aged Naval Intelligence officer sat down and pushed a thin wafer of wood on his desk nonchalantly. The outside noise faded quickly. Abigail felt a slight buzz at her throat under the old pendant she wore as her only jewelry aside from her Naval Academy ring. She nodded at the Captain.



“Clear as far as I can tell,” Chin replied evenly.



“Any luck?” Abigail asked without hope.



“No,” the officer said as he stood up and paced. “Nakamura has the best chance of stopping it but Taylor and Kwon are senior. No one can do anything official anyway until the Planets Rights people are caught doing something on an outside world.”



“We don’t have a lot of time,” Abigail said tiredly. “Miranda’s in the worst shape but none of First Planet elites are stable. When they start to lose power it starts.”



“How good is your intel about the PR in this sector?” Chin asked quietly.



“Very good, five by four at least,” the old woman answered. “But they killed…we lost the source. They’re here somewhere. And I’m afraid that means the situation is even worse than I thought.”



“And I’ve got four corks to plug a dozen holes,” the Captain said pulling out his small data pad. “I don’t have anyone to spare for Europa’s, ah special requirements. That’s where I’d go if I were them.”



Abigail just nodded. She’d fought the trend to enhance intelligence agents and case officers with microelectronics while she had been on staff. Her successor had made it mandatory. Now the planet that supplied almost a quarter of the new recruits for the Empire was being targeted by people convinced the Empire was holding back all of humanity. And none of the best intelligence operatives could step on the planet.



“How about some of your musicians or jugglers or dancing cows?” Greg asked.



“Cows don’t dance, city boy,” Abigail said with a small smile. “There’s already half a dozen troupes and acts on Europa anyway. It’s great for live music and acts. There’s a small circus doing the rounds. Some of those little nations even pay mimes.”



“What are they hearing?” Greg asked quickly.



“They’re three weeks away,” Abigail pointed out. “Speed of travel is the speed of communication. And we lost the PR about four weeks ago. Maybe I should say the PR we knew about.”



“Thank you,” Chin replied. “I’m trying not to think about a PR action cell working on Europa. I need more eyes on the ground that won’t short out.”



Abigail looked up at his comment. Chin stayed quiet. She had been his teacher, mentor and colleague. He knew she was thinking, and by her stillness he knew she was struggling with something. He knew the cost of what they did. He wondered how many times the two of them had made choices that robbed them of sleep.



“There’s a girl,” Abigail sighed. “Her name’s Maclay. Bright, talented and an esper even if she doesn’t want to be. I’m going to see her this afternoon.”



Chin touched the data pad and frowned. He went to his desk unit and entered a long password and touched the screen twice.



“She’s a medical discharge with a schedule full of hypno-therapists,” he said unhappily. “A grade one clerk’s assistant? She’s eighteen. And she’s being put up for that? What gives?”



“She was at Tanner’s Crossing,” Abigail said softly. “The hypnos are probably for survivor guilt. That would be like her.”



“Is this citation real?” Chin asked in an awed tone as he read the forms on his monitor.



“According to my Patrick, yes,” Abigail said with a hint of pride.



“Student at Oldenberg?” the intelligence officer asked after a moment. “Scholarship awarded with her decoration from a little heard of fund?”



“Plausible,” the old woman agreed. “I’ll give her a bit more background on the situation. She needs to be needed right now.”



“I’ll take her, sight unseen,” Chin said with a nod. “Every little cork helps.”



“Then I’m off to play spymaster,” Abigail sighed. “Pimping for Empire and Empress.”



“Or watch it break,” Chin replied.



There was no humor in either of their voices.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------







Tara Maclay looked down at the distant planet Europa from the observation deck of the liner. From a million kilometers out it looked like a tiny blue gem. She absently fingered the small gold toned button with the Imperial Sun on her jacket’s lapel. She felt the steward come up behind her.



“Miss Maclay?” he asked in a voice that almost trembled. “We’ll be docking soon. Uh, I was just wondering…could I have your autograph? I was General Services too and, ah…”



“What branch, um…?” Tara asked shyly as she looked down and took the offered pen and paper.



“Tom, and it was Starport Support,” he answered quickly. “Mostly on Nuevo Sonora.”



“That’s not an easy s-station,” she said as she signed the small leather bound book’s page.



“We did our best,” the steward said standing a bit straighter. “It was all right once you got used to it.”



“Sounds too much like w-work and h-hard work at that, Tom,” Tara replied as she handed the autograph book back.



“Thank you,” Tom almost gushed. “Do you need any help getting debarked?”



“I’ll manage, thank you,” Tara said. The steward tipped his cap and smiled broadly as he hurried on to a couple with a baby and luggage. Tara looked up to see a very large woman with a spacer cut looking at her.



“Have you been to Nuevo Sonora?” the woman asked carefully.



“Never, um h-heard of it,” Tara said softly. The woman nodded and joined a group of hard bodied men and women who all looked alike in their movements and careful gaze. They and others like them made up almost all of the passengers on the D-4 winged cutter heading to the planet’s surface.



Marines and security, Tara thought. Mercenaries. I guess this is what ‘Aunt’ Abigail meant by noting unusual things. I still don’t know what instincts I’m supposed to be following if something is ‘unusual’.



Tara shrugged and settled her baggage into the bin. Then she sat in her seat and strapped in. She looked at the list of things the planets oddly powerful electromagnetic fields would interfere with. When she saw shimmer make up she flinched and had brief image of a wonderful restaurant. She saw the scene again.



“I’ve met the most wonderful girl, Tara,” Arabella gushed. “And I wanted you to be the first to know.”



“I’m glad you’re h-happy,” she’d replied. And she had been, for Arabella.



Tara shook away the memory and looked at the growing blue sphere in the seat monitor.



“It’ll be better here,” she whispered to herself. Then she sighed, “Maybe.”





MEANWHILE



The twin facts that the Borders were producing seventy percent of the Imperial forces and the economic downturns caused by planetary governments on the First Planets are now considered the root causes behind a movement that was labeled "Planets Rights". This movement demanded service in the First Planets' own forces to be worthy of full Imperial Citizenship, lower taxes for transport of their exports, and a planetary population based representation of Imperial forces and revenue spent.



The Empire refused out of hand and over the next two decades tensions built inside the core of the Empire. Then a new generation took over the leadership of the Planets' Rights movement. The growing interstellar corporations, now feeling the constraining hand of Imperial law, backed their efforts. For the corporations the Planets' Rights movement seemed to offer the stars themselves. But the new leadership had hidden how eager they were to advance their perfect cause at any price.




The Coming Twilight-Understanding The Fall of the First Empire

Tabitha Summers-McHeath









There was a pleasant snap in the fire as Sir Quentin Travers leaned back in the winged chair with a brandy. Whatever else these foreigners did at least they made good spirits. The pacing young man in the silk suit in front of him glared at the old man.



“Are we sure we can trust him?” the young man asked brusquely.



“Of course not,” Travers said easily. “Really Louis, if you’re going to be King of Aquitaine, and then Oldenberg after your victory, you must learn to trust no one who comes to you offering you something for nothing.”



“And Mercia will recognize my claims?” Louis asked quickly.



“As long as you sign the treaty giving us East Sussex, your highness,” the older man said easily. “Everything has its price.”



“And the Summers brat is just part of the price?” Jean snapped.



“Yes, I’m afraid,” Travers said sadly. “Cousin on my mother’s side, somewhere. Pity. But Lady Dawn will have to be killed in the ‘bandit’ attack.”



“She could not be…kept?” Louis asked with a possessive smile. Travers met the young man’s eyes. His stomach clenched and not for the first time he wished dearly to show the second prince of Aquitaine the outside of a dirigible at a thousand meters in the air. He smiled at the prince.



“Too dangerous,” Travers said evenly. “Alive she is the legitimate heir in the scenario we spin. Dead she is an innocent martyr to her mother’s machinations for power.”



“Innocent,” muttered the young man and then more loudly, “Waste.”



“Fortunes of war,” Travers said with a shrug.



“So we use this Meers,” the young man said. “Him and the timorous little man with the gadgets.”



“And, if we’re careful, we don’t get used,” Travers answered quietly.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



“I don’t understand,” Cordelia said softly. “It’s just a week until graduation. He loves to ride to the hunt. I even got Firebrand shipped down for him. And I had all of Mother’s favorites made up for the tea.”



“I’m sure it was something important,” Willow said earnestly. “Like a bridge falling down or a wreck or something.”



“He has an important job,” Beth added quietly.



“Your mother came across the South Channel,” Cordelia said weakly. “She’s got rumors running around and she shows up with your sister. My mother’s a day away in Anjou.”



“She sent a whole trunk load of new clothes,” Willow pointed out. “None of which are in any color that won’t make me look splotchy.”



“Well, of course,” Cordelia said rolling her eyes.



“And you can get your dad to send a special train to get you to Paris,” Beth pointed out.



“And some of these need to be fitted,” Cordelia said more firmly. “I mean, who could fit into some of this without looking like a sack?”



“So it looks like you’re off to Paris this weekend,” Willow said with a happy grin.



“I know, chocolate and any books on computer stuff,” Cordelia said more lightly. “And pants for the adventuress. If I get time.”



With that the taller girl stood up and gathered her things. She smiled superiorly at the room Beth and Willow alone now shared.



“I need to get ready for this weekend,” she said as she swept out the door, to her private room.



“What do you really think happened?” Beth asked after the door closed.



“Mistress for him, lover for her,” Willow said flatly. “That makes an even dozen events they’ve missed. And mine are crossing the Southern Inland Sea for their next study on parallels between it and the Terran Mediterranean in peoples and trade.”



“Sorry,” Beth said distantly.



“It’s okay,” Willow said evenly. “I think they just went down there to delay me going off to Imperial service.”



“You have to say goodbye?” Beth asked with a small smile.



“Yeah, and I’m not exactly the most traveled girl in the world,” Willow admitted with a weak grin.



“I’ll go with you,” Beth said suddenly.



“You would?” Willow asked brightly. “But you can’t, not with those rumors about…”



“My parentage,” Beth said tightly. “Am I the ‘librarian’s special edition’?”



“Your mom wouldn’t do that,” Willow said surely.



“Maybe she should have,” Beth whispered. “But no, she wouldn’t. Will, I’ll go with you. I need to get away from this anyway. Maybe if I stop punching reporters they’ll let this die off. Damn it, I wish I could see Giles.”



“I’m sure he wants to see you too,” Willow said gently. “But, you know, appearances and all. He’s always been big with the best foot forward and stiff upper lip thing.”



Beth just nodded and leaned on her best friend. Willow put an arm around her shoulders. She could feel Beth’s tense muscles ease. It was one more reason Willow hadn’t told anyone how she was noticing girls now. Beth and even Cordelia needed a friend now more than ever. And the thought of kissing either made her queasy, especially Cordelia. She made her decision.



“All right,” Willow said with a nod and a firm tone. “We travel, but by train or airship maybe or even steamship but only if it’s, you know, not stormy.”



“No horses?” Beth asked innocently.



“No!” Willow said quickly. She saw Beth start to laugh and pushed her. Beth’s real laughter made Willow feel better. With her best friend any thing was possible, even finding the courage to say goodbye.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



The ring of sabres filled the salle as two padded figures pressed each other for an advantage. The taller figure had reach, the smaller quickness. Finally the tall man bound the blades and used his size to unbalance his foe. He lunged instead of cut and lithe man on the floor lifted his blade in surrender.



“Well done, Liam,” he said panting slightly as he took off his mask.



“And you, your highness,” the tall man as he ran a hand through his tousled black hair.



“William, please,” the dark blonde young man said as he stood. “In Oldenberg ‘your highness’ is my father, thank God. Besides, I still owe you a thousand marks after last night’s cards.”



“Well, you made up for some of that with this lesson in swordsmanship, I dare say,” Liam answered evenly.



“You’d both be better served with a lesson in stick fighting,” a hard figure said as he stood at a relaxed parade rest. “Or better yet, logistics.”



“Mr. Finn, I realize you’re from outside our bijou little world,” William said lightly. “But here, gentlemen use swords.”



“Or cards,” Liam added archly. The two young man burst into laughter as the mercenary shook his head.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Warren Meers peered at the gloom and hated Europa all over again. On any other planet he would have night vision gear and dampening fields around the ambush site. On a decent planet there would have been overhead sensor drones to make sure the target was on a mag-lev train. The only good thing tonight was that he had professionals on his flank. He didn’t know which mega-corporation they worked for and he didn’t care. He shivered because wool wasn’t as warm as a stealth suit. Finally he heard the sound of a fuel burning engine.



“About time, don’t you think Sparky?” he said to the man next to him.



The man made no reply. The back of his head was missing. Next to him was another figure just as dead in the same clothes. It had taken fourteen times the number of power cells to get the bodies here in the correct shape. He hesitated to think what the smell would have been like had his patrons not provided him with the private death trap on tracks that passed for luxury travel on Europa.



He picked up the mechanical detonator and waited for the light of the carbide lamp on the front of the train to light up the bend in the track. It had taken hand figuring the angle of attack and the location of explosives. It had to be enough to bring down a rockslide but not enough to push the train down the ravine or fjord or whatever the local cattle called it. All of that was about to pay off. He felt the exhilaration that the power of life and death always gave him.



“It’s show time, Sparky,” he muttered.



“Would stop saying that?” a figure whined nearby. “They’re dead.”



“Shut up Andrew,” Warren snapped. “Have you got the sterile bag ready?”



“Why do they want the DNA if she’s dead?” groused the shivering technician.



“Confirmation,” Warren hissed. The noise grew louder. “Get down.”



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Lady Dawn Summers looked down at the leather bound journal and sighed. In the private train car, provided by Director Chase himself, were herself, Tildy her nurse and old Harold. The old soldier looked out the window nervously and eased the massive revolver under his shoulder. Dawn sighed and returned to her journal. She had to finish if she was going to get any farther in her Claire Durano novel.



Dawn sighed. Claire Durano had a former Imperial Marine Commando teacher named Brock who taught her how to fight and shoot. Brock was strong and quiet and had won the Gold Sunburst. He only saved her when there were too many henchmen for Claire to escape on her own. Claire had a wealthy father with a minor title and his own airship. She could ride her black stallion Nightsilk as fast as she wanted and take a four rail fence. She could even steal cleverly but only did so to feed orphans, or herself when she was escaping kidnappers or anarchists.



Dear Claire-How is my first Special all to myself going you ask? Dawn wrote in her journal. Awful. Momma dragged me to see the evil one at the same prison I’m going to next year. At least Willow was there. So was the snooty one I don’t mention. E.O. did punch one of the-Dawn looked at her nurse across the car knitting-bastards who are bothering my mother so I guess she’s salvageable. I got to ride for ten whole minutes on some old gelding and Momma was all “be careful, sweetie!” in front of everyone!!. Then she got called off to East Sussex on something “urgent” but she wanted me to have a good look at my future. So here I am.



Harold still has only shown me about five moves and none of them have neat names. If I’m ever kidnapped I’m a goner. Tildy was fussing at me to put on a wool sweater on top of the rest of the whole sheep I’m wearing so now I’m SO overheating-




The scream of tortured metal pierced her ears as the train bucked under her. Dawn grabbed at her journal and felt a page tear in her hand. Then there were gunshots. Tildy fell and there was blood on her blouse. Dawn grabbed her purse that held her Girl Scout first aid kit. She saw the blood spreading out underneath the now pallid form of her nurse.



“Tildy!” Dawn screamed as Harold picked the girl up and tossed her out a broken window with a pain filled grunt.



“Run!” he shouted at her.



Harold disappeared inside and Dawn heard his revolver roar again, then the sharp cracks of his back up pistol. Dawn stopped at the edge of the rail-bed and stared at the crushed locomotive. She headed forward. When she’d boarded the engineer had shown her the controls. He had a girl her age. Then the car she’d been in was shaken by three loud snaps. Her ears were ringing but she could have sworn she heard bees buzz by. Harold stopped shooting. Then there was a bright light and she felt like she was falling.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



“Can you confirm the body?” Meers shouted angrily.



“After that stadium rated flash-bang?” said one of the team as they scowled at him. Meers did not really know anyone but the leader. That worthy was sprawled in the dirt along with two of his men. Andrew was sitting on a rock looking horrified. Meers snarled and entered the train.



There was wreckage and tiny fires were growing everywhere, but he spotted something in the flickering light. He reached down and picked up the silver brush with the initial S on the back. He pulled off a pair of long lustrous brown hairs and placed them carefully in a tiny envelope of his own. Smoke started to fill the compartment. He went out on the downhill side of the wreck carrying the brush with a few hairs left in it and few other small things of Dawn’s. He dropped them on the ground.



“Well?” he asked as the flanking elements walked up.



“Nothing got out my way,” said one shivering figure.



“Nada,” grunted the other.



Meers looked over the edge of the cliff. Below him a river roared on its way to the sea. He knelt down and squinted. He saw the scuffed footprint. He smiled wolfishly and peered over the edge. Below he could make out the churning water by the white water dancing in the moonlight.



“She went over the edge,” he said surely.



“Want us to make sure she’s dead?” one flanker asked reluctantly.



At that two short squeals of a whistle cut through the night. Warren and the rest looked up quickly.



“She’s dead,” he said. “Our ride’s here. Plan C. Tie the bandannas on them and toss the team’s bodies into the train and burn them.”



“NMR doesn’t pay me enough,” grumbled one of men after Meers passed by. “Planets Rights for the people my ass.”



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Three meters below a girl lifted her head slowly. A wave of nausea flowed over her as she picked up her aching head. She looked at the narrow lip as well as she could by the quarter moon’s light.



“Want us to make sure she’s dead?” someone was asking.



“She’s dead,” a male voice said a few thudding heartbeats later. “Our ride’s here. Plan C. Tie the bandannas on them and toss the team’s bodies into the train and burn them.”



“NMR doesn’t pay me enough,” grumbled another voice nearer to the edge. “Planets Rights for the people my ass.”



That’s important, she thought. I’ve got to remember that.



The path seemed to spin. She just put her head down for a moment. There was noise above her.



Want us to make sure she’s dead?



The girl started to stand and for a second wavered on the edge of the goat trail. Then she started downhill unsteadily. There was something to remember. Something important she had to tell someone. She almost walked off the trail again. She whimpered in the dark and leaned against a tree.



“Come on,” she told herself. “Buck up…”



A panicked look washed over her face. Her breath got short. She put a hand to her head where it hurt and then saw her hand marked with black streaks in the moonlight. She looked at the crumpled paper in her other clenched hand. She smoothed it out desperately.



“I’m, I’m…” she held the paper out in as much of the moonlight as she could catch on the grimy surface of the...it had to be a letter.



“I’m Claire,” she said softly. “Claire who?”



Edited by: jixer at: 12/21/02 1:05:21 pm
jixer
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 2

Postby mollyig » Sat Dec 21, 2002 6:28 pm

As usual, there is so much going on. Abigail seems very shrewd, so her choosing Tara for the mission to Europa speaks of her trust in her. The bad guys being established here, Travers et al, already we see how manipulative they are with the targetting of Dawn.



Adding up the total of a love that's true, multiply life by the power of two
Indigo Girls

mollyig
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 2

Postby Grimlock72 » Sun Dec 22, 2002 8:20 am

Heh, Warren stuck on a non-electronic-toys planet :)



Those commando's are awfully sloppy btw. taking just hair as evidence of someone being dead, tsk tsk... Dawn hit her head pretty hard it seems, lets hope she manages to get some help in the middle of bloody nowhere.



I wonder if Beth wants to join the army with Willow ? She sure likes to travel with her. Poor Willow not being able to tell her friends how she feels :( .



Those Planet Rights people seem rather radical, the quote from the book about 'Fall of the empire" confused me a bit. It hasn't fallen yet has it ?? Quoting from future books is kinda cheating :)



And of course Tara thinks she's not worthy citizen-ship, thats typical of her. What did happen at Tanner's crossing ? I could have sworn I've heard about that place before but I can't find it....



As for the big setup, I don't mind.. I like it actually.. so no worries there.



Grimmy

"You hurt Tara," Willow said too calmly. "The last one who tried that was a god. I made her regret it." -- Unexpected Consequences by Lisa of Nine

Grimlock72
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 2

Postby darkmagicwillow » Sun Dec 22, 2002 9:27 am

Now this is why I like your writing--all the intrigue and the complex multiple plotlines like in your Hotel Kilo. One thing I wasn't sure about though: is Dawn the older sister here or is she the heir because of Buffy's uncertain parentage?



--

"Omnia mutantur, nihil interit." -- "Everything changes, but nothing is truly lost."

darkmagicwillow
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 2

Postby yana » Sun Dec 22, 2002 4:29 pm



Ah, part two and already Warren has appeared. When does he die? ;)



Really enjoying the interactions between Warren and Andrew. And Dawn dubbing Beth "Evil One"... heh. Hopefully we get to find out soon what happened at Tanner's Crossing, and Tara's legs. Great chapter! :)



Yana

yana
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 2

Postby jixer » Sun Dec 22, 2002 6:35 pm

Hello Kittens-



Trying to do a better job responding so here goes-



Mollyig-Thank you, as always. Bad guys? Maybe they’re just misunderstood. Okay, no, they’re bad guys. :)





Grimlock72- Sloppy? Well, look at their patron. All will be made clear. Well, I’ll try at least. As for Willow and Beth, the future is so slippery, isn’t it?



I chose Tanner’s Crossing because it sounds similar to several battles, all of which were different in scope and outcome. Sorry, no clues there.





darkmagicwillow- Beth’s succession is being questioned because there’s a certain attractive librarian in the Countess’ employ.



Quote-

“My parentage,” Beth said tightly. “Am I the ‘librarian’s special edition’?”



Attractive librarian, now who could that be? :hmm



Dawn is suffering from being the youngest, as usual.:)





yana- Thank you. Gee, no one likes Warren. Tanner’s Crossing is so big for Tara she’s still coming to grips with it. Hints for now, I’m afraid.





Thank you all. Chapter Three is progressing. I’d be further along if they’d just close the hospital over the holidays like I suggested. Sigh, management just isn’t open to logic. :grin





Thank you all for your time and comments,



Jixer



jixer
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 2

Postby jixer » Thu Jan 02, 2003 3:48 am

Hello Kittens-



My apologies for the lateness of this update. :( I'm afraid I'm going to have to make it an A and B post again as well.



Thank you,



Jixer

jixer
 


Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 3A

Postby jixer » Thu Jan 02, 2003 3:55 am

Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Chapter 3A





While the customs and languages of Europa seem quaint to a visitor they are of earnest importance to the natives of this charming planet. As hard as it is to imagine Europa has had many small wars. The pride and a deep connection to their varied heritages and folkways that give Europa its wonderful variation can also cause friction. The wise traveler will not take up sides in any local disputes.



Fodor’s Guide to Europa, 85th Edition







Rupert Giles stopped in the darkness of the secret passage. He looked in the tiny viewing glass. In her sitting room the Countess of Sussex was wrapped in a long robe. Mercian and Aquitaine troops stood around her chair. An unpleasant looking junior officer, a second lieutenant by the single pip on his epaulet, smiled as he ordered his men out of the room. He winked at the Countess.



“Have a good time with our Aquitaine friends,” he said lightly.



Giles reached into his jacket and pulled out a revolver. His breathing came tightly as he tried to find all of the soldiers before he plunged in. He saw the swarthy sergeant spin a chair into place in front of Joyce and sit in front of her.



“My condolences, Madame,” he said roughly.



“She’s not dead,” Joyce said tightly.



“Of course, Madame,” he said in a gentle tone. “There is always hope.”



Joyce looked at the soldier for a moment and then nodded. Giles eased the grip on his handgun and listened. Against the wall he heard a whisper from an unseen soldier. Giles shuddered to think what would have happened had he leapt out of the narrow door behind the painting.



“Why is the old thief being so nice?” the unknown trooper asked.



“Who’s running this show, enfant?” muttered an older voice.



“Prince Louis and that Mercian Lord Jonathon…oh,” the youngster answered.



“Exactly,” came the grumbled reply. “Mind your manners when the big boys and girls play nasty games. Losers have friends, and may not stay losers.”



Giles turned his attention back to Joyce and the sergeant. The noncom was sitting at attention. Joyce turned to look at the painting on the wall. She took a deep breath.



“What I want is to go check on the search for Dawn and to talk to Beth,” she said clearly. “At the very least Beth should be taken to a place that’s safe.”



“I understand, Madame,” the sergeant said firmly. “But I have my orders. Please excuse me, but you must stay within your chambers until this matter is cleared up.”



“Very well, Sergeant,” Joyce said tiredly. “Do let your men sit down. The night has been bad enough, why add more discomfort?”



“You heard the lady,” the sergeant snapped as he turned in his chair. “Relax. That’s an order.”



As the soldiers moved noisily into chairs, three of them gingerly upon the couch, they mumbled ‘merci’ and rattled in their field gear. Giles stuffed his revolver back into his pocket and hurried away in the muted noise. He was nearly to the stables when he saw a figure sneaking through the gloom ahead of him. It was armed with a rifle. Giles let it go past and then stepped behind it and clamped his hand over its mouth. From his sleeve a sliver of sharp steel came to rest under the struggling form’s chin.



“Softly, please,” Giles said in a whisper that had little to do with books and ink. “The rifle.”



The person he held stopped struggling at the sound of his voice. Giles pulled his captive around to the wall and released him. There was a ragged intake of breath.



“Giles!” Alexander Harris whispered harshly. “They’ve got Joyce-the Countess. We’ve got to rescue h-her!”



“Where did you get the rifle?” Giles asked taking the weapon.



“There’s a crate of them in the stable, along with ammunition and these,” the teenager said pulling out a packet. “They’re maps.”



“Follow me,” Giles ordered the young man. “The Countess is better off here. We need to warn Lady Elizabeth.”



“Oh no,” he whispered in a way that confirmed Giles speculation about Beth’s effect on the young males of the household.



They made their way to the stables. This part of the back passages had seen the most use. Giles looked carefully at the young man as they listened at the panel that opened into the tack room. There were no signs of betrayal on the orphan’s face or in his body language. Giles doubted the odd jobs boy would ever have betrayed the Summers family, but this night had proven more evil than he could have imagined already. Finally they heard no noise and opened the panel.



The tack room’s odor of leather and hay was welcome after the musty secret passages. There was no noise no in the stables beyond the unease of the horses. Giles looked out and saw a dozen unknown horses of quality in stalls. He slid out silently and looked at the tack. It was a mix of Mercian and Aquitaine. He turned to Alexander.



“Where were those rifles?” he asked urgently in a soft voice.



Harris went to the bedding straw pile and pulled off the straw. Giles bent down and looked at the crate.



“Wessex issue and arsenal marked,” Giles muttered. “There was a break in at the Devizes arsenal a month ago. Two guards were killed. And these scarves wrapped around the rope handles here are worn by Prince Etienne’s Royalist Reform Party. Let me see the maps.”



Giles looked at the folded papers for a moment. He turned pale. Outside there was noise. Giles looked around. There was always a fire watch in the stables with lanterns lit. He pulled at the crates.



“Help me get these out of here,” he snapped.



“Where do we put them?” Xander asked worriedly. “What’s going on?”



“Someone wants to play at war,” Giles said tightly. “And they want to use Sussex and the Countess as the ball. We need to get Lady Beth to safety.”



The two struggled to get the unwieldy crates out of the pile of straw. Giles shook his head as he looked at the crates.



“The courier motorized cycle and it’s side car,” Alexander said quickly as he pointed at the vehicle. “You used to ride, didn’t you?”



“It’ll get us to the border at least,” Giles agreed as they lifted the crate. “We’ll dump these into the Blackberry River.”



They roughly secured the crates and pushed the groaning vehicle into the night. Giles held his breath as a party of hastily clad men and women were escorted into the stables by officers in Mercian and Aquitaine uniforms. Giles smiled thinly as he recognized the handful visiting consuls and nobles.



“Queer time for a visit to the stable,” he whispered with a grin as he looked at the frightened young man. “We’ve got to hurry. The borders may already be sealed.”



“There’s the Brandy Route,” Alexander said flatly. “Shouldn’t we get our troops?”



Giles looked towards Hastings. The capitol of East Sussex was filled with lanterns moving in orderly paths. A squad of cavalry sat at the entrance to the estate. In the moonlight he could just make out the squat form of a machine gun on its tripod, the hoses to its water jacket and a belt of ammunition ready for action.



“No,” he whispered sadly. “Let’s move. And hope you remember the route.”



“I know it,” Alex said tightly. “Da loved his brandy.”



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Jonathon Albert Samuel Small shifted in his high collared Mercian Lancer’s uniform. He looked at the man his uncle had told him, in no uncertain terms, to obey. Quentin Travers was angry, and Jonathon hoped he wouldn’t take it out on him again. Still, he was a Mercian noble.



“I’m sorry, Mr. Travers,” he said carefully. “I’m afraid I never saw a box or a map.”



“Maps,” snapped Prince Louis. Then he looked at the gathered witnesses. “They said maps, when they reported.”



“Be that as it may,” Jonathon snapped. “There’s nothing here now.”



“What about tracks?” Travers said quickly as Louis glared at the smaller young man.



“After we’ve tromped around?” an old soldier said harshly. “I doubt my best jaegers could find a track in this mess.”



Travers bit back his comment. Von Pritwitz was a retired colonel from Saxony and a knight in his own right. He was looking around too carefully while he leaned on his cane. The old man smiled grimly at Travers then met Jonathon’s eyes.



“By treaty are not Wessex and Northumberland also to come to Sussex’s aid in the case of a question of sovereignty or succession?” he asked the unhappy young man.



“Err, yes, sir,” Jonathon said tightly.



“Then I shall communicate with my embassy in Oldenberg,” the soldier said evenly. “They shall pass along the word so that your communication will have added weight. You have sent word, of course?”



“I’m sure they have,” an older, horse faced woman said coldly in a faint accent. “And the Kingdom of Dunbar has an interest in preserving our friends on the Peninsula as well.”



“This is a matter for the continent, not islanders or northerners!” Prince Louis snarled.



A silence fell on the group. Travers stepped up and shook his head.



“Please, we’re all tired,” he said with a sigh. “We’ll notify the powers interested in this matter in the morning. Let’s get back to bed and we’ll take a crack at this again in the morning.”



The group grumbled but left the stables. Jonathon escorted them out and did not return. Travers waited until the door had closed.



“You bloody fool!” he roared at Louis. “Maps? Operation Pelican isn’t due to happen for four more days now!”



“Do not yell at me old man!” snarled Louis. “I am going to be king of the Peninsula and then all of the French League!”



“Not if you get us all killed,” Travers said impatiently. “This isn’t a closed deal yet.”



“The little Summers is dead, her mother will pay,” Louis said surely. “Then their partisans, backed by my dear brother Etienne, take hostages in Oldenberg and everyone dies.”



“They didn’t find a body,” Travers snapped. “I just received word from that Meers cretin.”



“She has to be dead,” Louis whispered, his anger turning to cold fear.



“Or we are,” growled Travers.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



In the wee hours of the morning a rider lead a horse away from the Summers estate. He stopped at a sound in the bushes ahead and pulled on his cane. Twenty-four inches of steel slid out of the walking stick.



“Oh, if I wanted you dead I’d have shot you already,” a female voice with a faint burr said in the shadows.



“My pardon, Lady Douglas,” Von Pritwitz said with a short bow that did not take his eyes off her gleaming automatic. “Are you on your way to the border as well?”



“Can you keep up, sir?” she asked archly.



“I’m always ready for a good ride,” the knight answered with a grin.



“We’ll see about that,” she answered with a grin of her own.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



“Get UP!” a voice bellowed in Crown Prince William of Oldenberg’s ear. He came up with a start and a thundering head. He looked around the room and saw a dress over a chair. Then he saw the angry glare of his father.



“Move, boy,” his father snapped.



“Wha’s goin’ on?” Liam asked as he looked up from a couch.



“While you two were out playing the Student Prince someone may have killed Lady Dawn Summers,” growled the king. “I’ve got meetings with ambassadors and Ministry of State about our response and house arrest of the Countess of Sussex.”



“For what?” William asked as he found his trousers.



“Murdering her daughter,” the king replied tightly. “At least that’s what the Aquitaine and Mercian press said in their first editions according to the embassies. And we have two independent confirmations wired from the border.”



“But we’re still hosting the Saxony-Braunschweig-Brunswick talks and the Mercian King arrives in three days to sign the trade agreement with Cambria and Eire,” William said shaking his head. “And she wouldn’t do that. Never.”



“I know,” his father said a bit easier. “I think there’s some common sense in that head, not just cheekbones that will look good in profile on coins.”



“In a hundred years,” the young man answered earnestly.



“That trade mission from Eire, was there a Lord O’Donnell in it?” Liam asked as he ran his hand through his unruly black hair.



“Yes,” the king answered curtly. “And you are?”



“His son,” Liam groaned. “Oh bloody Hell.”



“Get into uniform,” the king said, turning back to William. “You’re taking a Special to the site of the ambush. Take an escort of cavalry. Check it out.”



“If I’m in uniform, it’s official,” William pointed out. “On my own I can still claim rights if needed, but I don’t need to take a bloody cavalry escort and add more tension.”



“Good point,” the king agreed. “But take Finn and some of his toys.”



“I’ll go with you,” Liam interjected.



“What’s your interest, sir?” the king asked pointedly.



“I’ve got to keep an eye on my thousand marks,” Liam said with his most charming smile.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Willow awoke earlier than she had in months. In her dreams frogs had been sneaking around her window and Dawn was wandering aimlessly through the campus. She shook her head and looked at the window suspiciously. She almost screamed when she saw a ragged figure leering in at her. She realized the haggard face was Giles’, covered with dust except around his eyes. Willow rushed to open the window.



“What’s going on?” she whispered.



“Let us in,” Giles said raggedly. “We don’t have much time.”



“What’s wrong?” she asked worriedly as she threw open the window as wide as it could go.



“Where’s Beth?” Giles asked quickly.



Willow pointed to a bundle of bedclothes that rose and fell in time to a gentle snore. Giles walked over and shook what he hoped was a shoulder. Willow looked back to see Alexander Harris looking worse for wear hesitating at the window.



“Come on,” Willow hissed.



“Are you d-decent?” he asked timorously.



“Yes,” Willow said with a yawn. “Someone will see you out there.”



The young man clambered in through the window. Willow closed it just as Beth finally awoke.



“Hunh?” she said blinking. “Giles? Is this real?”



“Very bloody real I’m afraid,” Giles said tiredly. “Are you awake?”



“I am now,” Beth answered in a small, frightened voice. “What’s wrong?”



Giles quickly told her story of the night. Beth didn’t interrupt. She nodded at the end and pulled out her school bag. She went to her dresser and began pulling out clothes. Alex looked at the ceiling. Willow pulled out her bag too.



“You’re not going,” Beth said tersely.



“Oh yes I am,” Willow said quickly. “Resolved and sure and all of that adventuress stuff.”



“She’s not dead,” Beth said softly.



“I know,” Willow said surely. “Don’t ask me how, but I know she’s alive. And we’re going to find her.”



Beth nodded and brushed her eyes. Her hands shook on the straps. Willow took the now stuffed haversack and handed it to Alexander. Then she took Beth in a quick embrace. Beth gave her a weak smile.



“There may be horses,” she warned the redhead. “Especially since these two wrecked five thousand pounds of motorized cycle.”



“Bring it on,” Willow said with a toss of her head.



“Where will w-we look?” Alexander asked quietly.



“The attack took place on the other side of the Breton Tunnel,” Giles pointed out. “There may be a way off the Pass and into Breton itself.”



“She’d go to the coast,” Beth agreed. “Either home or…”



“Exactly,” Giles said with a nod.



“We’d better move then,” Willow said as she picked up the thin local newspaper. “There’s a coaster in port and nothing due for days after that. We sail on the tide in…thirty-four minutes and make for, ah, Brest.”



“What?” Beth asked.



“Nothing,” Willow insisted.



“We need to move,” Giles said urgently. “The telegraph wires are down but they’ll be here soon enough.”



“Right,” Beth said tightly as she threw open the window. “Let’s go.”



Edited by: jixer at: 1/2/03 1:59:11 am
jixer
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 3

Postby yana » Thu Jan 02, 2003 10:29 am



Another lovely update. Can't wait for part B. :)



Of course, Beth & co. are assuming that Dawn remembers who she is. If this isn't a very temporary memory loss, who knows where she might end up?



Poor Joyce... can't wait to see exactly how they're going to blame the train thing on her. Not sure why, but already I like this Xander a LOT better than the one on the show.





Yana

yana
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 3

Postby jixer » Fri Jan 03, 2003 2:13 am

Hello Kittens-



Sorry about the delay. Just got the piece proofed and access to the computer.



yana- Well, memory is a tricky thing.:whistle Thank you for your comments on this Xander.



Next update will be more organized. Really.





Thank you,



Jixer

jixer
 


Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 3B

Postby jixer » Fri Jan 03, 2003 2:21 am

Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of The Terran Empire

Chapter 3B





Tara Maclay looked at the stonework on the small train station. There was some delay with the track ahead. She sketched a rough drawing in her pad and took a photo with the film camera she’d purchased at ‘Aunt’ Abigail’s advice. The bright sunlight this morning made it easy. She looked up the station in her Fodor’s Guide to Europa. Finally the conductor stopped at her compartment.



“Our apologies, Miss Maclay,” the harried-looking man said. “The tracks are still not cleared. We will be going back and transferring passengers to the eastern line.”



“Oh, it was so difficult to pass those places and not s-stop,” Tara said easily. “I don’t know if I can do it again.”



“I cannot recommend striking out here,” he said with a wince. “The Bretons are all smugglers and cutthroats.”



“And if I don’t get off I s-shall be entranced by an Aquitaine village and never leave,” Tara said with a shy smile. “And then I would lose my scholarship.”



“True,” the conductor said with a smile. “Shall I send your baggage on? One should travel light in the spring.”



“Thank you, sir,” she replied gratefully. “I can see why everyone raves about this railroad.”



“You are too kind, mademoiselle,” he beamed. “I shall get your trunk sent on its way.”



Tara gathered her backpack and picked up the straw hat she’d purchased while wondering in the free city of Barcelona on her first day on planet. She picked up the white ash walking staff she’d been given by Moria and Mai Lin. Tara smiled briefly at the memory of her second going away party in a year. The parts she could remember were enjoyable. She made sure her boots were properly laced and ready for walking. There was a gentle rapping on the door. Tara opened it to se the conductor with two paper wrapped small bundles and two bottles of water.



“I cannot let you go off into these hinterlands without something to sustain you,” he said with a shrug.



“Thank you,” Tara said with a broad smile. She reached for her pocket.



“That won’t be necessary,” he said quickly.



“Oh, not for you, but for the lady who has such a gallant man,” Tara explained handing him a two credit coin. “Please, get her something as wonderful as these will be on the trail.”



That I can do,” he said with a tip of hat. “This way please.”



He led her to the exit and waved as the train let go of a soft cloud of steam. Tara waved back briefly, then turned and adjusted the straps on her shoulders just a little. She looked into the tiny ticket booth and office. An elderly man with a great mustache sat smoking a briar pipe next to a silent telegraph. He looked up at her and gave a nod.



“Do you need to see my papers, Monsieur?” she asked hesitantly.



“If you are willing for me to see them, then I do not need to,” he said with a small grin. “You are an Imperial citizen, no? Here for the walking tour?”



“Um, yes I am,” she replied.



“Then have a good voyage,” he said. “You certainly picked a good day, but be inside tonight. My knee tells me there will be rain.”



“Thank you,” Tara said with a smile. “I will be under cover this evening.”



“Bon,” he said with a real smile. “The trail starts just behind the station, between those two pines.”



“Thank you,” she said as she turned for the path.



The elderly man nodded and watched the young lady walk away. He sighed and leaned back with a smile.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



“Nothing could have survived that,” William whispered looking at the still smoking wreckage of the train that had held Lady Summers.



“If it happened all at once, no,” Riley Finn said quietly. “Look at the patterns. This was a two stage hit, and it didn’t go as planned.”



“Because Lady Summers is missing, and we were supposed to find her body?” William asked the mercenary quietly.



Riley nodded as he surveyed the damage. There was still a familiar scent of death and fire around the site. He looked at the killing zone and looked back to the rocks above. He walked to the edge of the drop and glanced over. At first there was nothing but a view of the short river making its way tumultuously to the nearby ocean. He leaned out a bit and caught a glance of a tiny ridge. He looked back to see the tall young man from Eire getting pale as he spoke with the prince.



“She was what, thirteen?” Liam asked with a shudder. “Still traveling with a nurse.”



“And an escort,” William said looking at the wreckage. “A conductor, the engineer and his fireman as well.”



“What business if this of House Lilienthal’s?” a petulant voice asked. “Shouldn’t you be opening a flower show or sitting in the Hall of the Citizen or the Kennel of the Rabble or whatever you call it?”



“Hello Louis,” William said with a bright smile. “How’s the arm?”



Prince Louis glared at the heir to the throne of Oldenberg. Two large men in the uniforms of his personal guard flanked him. They looked at Liam and Riley. Liam smiled. Riley bared his teeth.



“Ahem,” a strong voice interrupted. “Your highnesses, gentlemen. I have been asked by my government to look into this matter.”



“Why is that, Von Pritwitz?” Louis asked archly.



The old man fixed the prince with a glare. Then he bowed very slightly.



“I am an old hunter, and patient, your highness,” he explained. “Besides, it keeps me out of trouble at home. I understand the delightful Lady Douglas of Dunbar will be joining me.”



“Sir,” a reedy voice came from inside the wreck.



“Yes, Jonathon?” Von Pritwitz called out.



“I found these,” the young man said holding out several metal scraps.



“Twelve millimeter Hoffman casings,” the old soldier said nodding. “This is a seven point seven short automatic shell. I do not know what this is.”



“MilTech Maximum Flash actuator,” Riley said looking at the wreckage. “Biggest flash-bang you can throw. What idiot used it on enclosed train car?”



“They were bandits, or worse,” Louis interjected as he glared at Jonathon. “Perhaps terrorists. This would have destroyed the unfortunate girl’s body, no?”



“Burned it, maybe,” Riley said quietly. “Not destroyed it.”



“Then she must have run from her pursuers and fallen over the cliff,” the prince insisted. “Her hairbrush was found here. We shall search the river for her remains from the bay nearby to here.”



“Excellent idea, old boy,” William said with a nod. Louis smiled at him coldly and turned away. Prince William and his associates watched the Aquitaine royal walk away. He stopped and spoke with a young man dressed like an off-worlder. William turned to the old Saxon knight.



“Keep an eye on young Jonathon, would you?” he asked quietly.



“As you wish, your highness,” Von Pritwitz replied in a grave tone.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





“Not possible,” Warren said as he reined in his temper. “She’s a weak little low-tech aristocrat. She survives the fall to that goat path and she just falls off later. She’s got no night vision gear, no fusing pitons, and no auto-tensioners or powered ascenders. She’s jelly on those rocks.”



“You might be surprised at what a weak low-tech aristocrat can do, Mr. Meers,” Louis said evenly. He reminded himself how much he needed this annoying boor.



“Fine, I’ll look around,” Meers groused. “Don’t you have spies with real cloaks and daggers?”



“We must move carefully,” Louis said coldly. “This is the game of princes.”



“What are they doing?” Andrew asked hesitantly.



On the edge of the cliff Prince William stood with the annoying Irishman. The mercenary was nowhere to be seen. Then the Prince climbed over the edge. As Louis and Meers approached, the tall black-haired man also eased over the edge.



“What are you doing, my dear prince?” Louis asked with a chuckle.



“Regretting my decision,” William hollered back. “The way is quite narrow and there is no way back up. I’m afraid we’ll have to follow it.”



“Do keep a lookout for the poor girl’s body smashed on the rocks below you,” Louis requested politely.



“Of course,” William called back.



Louis stood away from the edge and toed a large rock. He looked up to see Von Pritwitz and Jonathon watching him. He smiled and nodded as he stepped away from the ledge and headed to his private train.



“I thought the runt was on our side,” Meers said with a frown.



“I’m afraid Lord Jonathon must go visit his royal uncle when the king of Mercia comes to Oldenberg,” Louis said with a shrug. “Travers will need someone more obedient.”



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Riley steadied Liam as the prince knelt carefully on the narrow track. William ran his hand over the disturbed soil in front of him.



“I must say I’m glad my father insisted on my knowing what the servants did for us,” he said standing up.



“Most of it spent with the gamekeepers?” Liam asked as he leaned back and closed his eyes.



“Afraid so,” William answered. “A small shoe, toes pointed ahead of us. She might have made it to those rocks over there.”



It took them some time to get to the rocks. It was just afternoon by the time they could see the trail slope into an almost invisible cleft in the rock ahead. They hurried across the narrowest point of the trail and sagged in relief once inside the narrow passage. William looked down and pointed. There, in the protected thin dirt over the rock a series of crisp shoe prints went straight ahead. The men hurried forward until the path was barred by a simple gate. One post of the gate rested on a track.



“She made it this far,” William said excitedly as he pulled on the gate. “This was put up after she passed.”



They passed swiftly with Liam closing the gate behind him out of reflex. They stopped suddenly as they turned on the narrow path to find a paddock ahead of them filled with sheep.



“Damn,” William muttered.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



If there is ever a time when you must leave home, you must go to Oldenberg, a worried voice told her urgently. Things may become unsettled. Go to Fourteen Parkstrasse. Tell them you’re my daughter. They’ll know what to do.



“Why Momma?” a tired voice whispered.



She awoke with a start. Ahead of her a tiny form looked at her, grabbed a seedpod, and scampered off. The girl tried to remember what had happened. She was…Claire. Men wanted her dead. Her head ached and she wanted to go back to the dream. She heard rustling in the bushes near her. The girl looked up to see a cute but homely face snuffling her. Her heart froze as she realized this was no domestic swine but the offspring of the wild boar. She heard a grunt.



Girl and piglet exited the bushes in opposite directions at breakneck speed.



When she stopped running the young teenager sagged against a stile. She could smell the wonderful scent of fresh bread. She looked up to see a bag hanging on the top of the stile. She reached for it and stopped. If a herdsman was here her stealing his lunch would mean they went hungry. She turned and walked down the trail. Her stomach rumbled. She paused when she saw movement ahead.



As she crept closer she saw a young woman in a skirt and long sleeve white blouse. She was wearing a straw hat and leaning on a staff. The girl crept closer. Now she could see the motion that had caught her eye. The woman had taken off her jacket and was now cinching it to the rucksack by her feet. The woman had on off-world boots. Claire crept closer and saw the tiny glint of a pin on the jacket. Then the woman pulled out a bottle of water and a wrapped bundle that smelled divine. She put it down and pulled out a book and started to write. Claire decided a rich off-worlder could spare a sandwich.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Tara couldn’t understand why she felt a touch of unease in such a beautiful spot. Still, it did not go away, but neither was it really threatening. She sat and started to write her observations in her travel journal. She wondered how to put the fact that she’d been passed on her way down by a small contingent of Breton militia bearing a machine gun and leading a balky mule back the way she had come. They had barely noted her in passing. She heard a very soft rustle. Quicker than one would imagine she had a thin wrist in her hand.



“It’s polite to ask,” she said raising an eyebrow. She held back her words as she turned and saw a battered girl, streaked with dirt. Her hair was stiff in places from dried blood. The girl swallowed nervously.



“Please, miss?” she said roughly. “I’m very hungry.”



Tara handed her a bottle of water and the other bundle. The girl unwrapped it and made to wolf down the filled croissant. Tara shook her head.



“Sorry,” the girl said and took a small mouthful. She smiled and moaned happily.



Tara took a bite of her flaky pastry and was surprised. Normally she did not eat a lot of meat, but the sharp cheese and the thin slices of ham were almost sensuous in her mouth. Neither pastry lasted very long. Now the girl looked a little less feral, but still very frightened.



“What’s wrong?” Tara asked reaching gingerly for the lump on the girl’s scalp. The long brown hair was stiff around it.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Claire didn’t know why the woman, almost a girl except Imperial citizens were never girls, made her feel safe. She met the kind blue eyes and started to cry.



“I can’t remember,” she sobbed softly. “All I know is someone wants to kill me.” A heartbeat later the woman had the girl’s hands in a surprisingly strong grip.



“You’ll be okay,” the woman said gently.



The girl relaxed, and didn’t know why.





Edited by: jixer at: 1/3/03 12:25:02 am
jixer
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 3

Postby yana » Fri Jan 03, 2003 10:01 am



Gee, what do you know, Dawn found Tara! Okay, I'm not worried anymore. :) Still a bit confused about what Tara's doing there...



Just out of curiousity, do you have an aversion to the name Buffy, or is there some other reason she's named Beth?





Yana

yana
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 3

Postby xita » Fri Jan 03, 2003 2:05 pm

Jixer, another fine effort. Again lots of characters, lots of things going on. Again, me slow, and I'll sit here patiently till things come together for me. I look forward to your updates.

If I had to live my life again, I'd make the same mistakes, only sooner.

Tallulah Bankhead

xita
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 3

Postby Grimlock72 » Sun Jan 05, 2003 9:55 am

I'll have to start taking notes otherwise I'll mix up all those Counts, Lords and god knows what :) The political stuff is hard to follow.



How on earth would anyone expect to be able to pin the murder of Dawn on her mother ? Middle-age europe... maybe it was done back then to secure another throne succesor... still awaiting the evidence though :)



Amazing that Warren is still alive after his failure, that Louis person sure as hell wants to find Dawn's body doesn't he ? Bit obvious that, heh. Dawn found Tara, well thats good to some extent. Tara is good caretaker so it's good for Dawn, it's not that good for Tara though... Dawnie is kind of a trouble-magnet at the moment.



Amusing that Warren can only handle himself if he has all his hightech toys, that will likely be his downfall one day. It must suck to be on the only low-tech planet in the universe though....



And now I have to re-read and figure out why Europe is such an important planet... whoever said reading fic was easy :D



Grimmy

"You hurt Tara," Willow said too calmly. "The last one who tried that was a god. I made her regret it." -- Unexpected Consequences by Lisa of Nine

Grimlock72
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 3

Postby jixer » Mon Jan 13, 2003 2:42 am

Hello Kittens-



Sorry this took a while to get up. Silly real life, interfering with writing! I just don't know what I'm going to do with it. You would think it would be trained by now.





Yana- Okay, okay, I admit I've liked Dawn since she fell asleep next to Tara on the couch.



What Tara is doing here is very much a more "back channel" approach to the basic underpinnings of 'intelligence' work. This would have been much more common in the first part of this century and it would rely on a human talking with other humans and getting to know them while seeing what was happening on the ground in far off places. Most of these travelers were not officials, but people seeking knowledge or adventure. This was before a satellite and computer network could find anything and anyone. Now we're all safe. Brrrr.





About the name, just read :)



Xita- Thank you. Oh yeah, you're slow. Just little old Xita. Suuuure.

:lol



Grimy- I know, the titles get strange. And an English Count and a German Count wouldn't be the same thing. While we think of nobility and succesion as ancient there were tensions raised about it until the beginning of World War II. In a culture without radio, let alone TV, a culture tends to be more isolated and it's leadership more important.



The whole low tech thing is an outgrowth of several thoughts and scenarios. The one that scares me is the question-"What happens to all those supertankers if the GPS satellites fail?" We ARE living in SciFi. It just arrived quietly. I hope it never breaks!



Thank you all for your replies and your time.





Jixer

jixer
 


Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 4

Postby jixer » Mon Jan 13, 2003 3:04 am

One of the most difficult obstacles in publishing this work came from the many who still hold that the fall of the Empire was due to incompetence. Their argument consists mostly of quoting the tonnage of warships the Empire had compared to the Planets Rights forces made up of ‘civilian’ shipping. Had battle in space been the true measure of the war they would be right. It was not. On most planets war came in the form of opinion and economic machinations. No warship can defeat a rumor about a hated foe or a run on a currency.



Fortunately for a few planets, humans can defeat almost anything. Even other humans’ hatred and greed.




The Coming Twilight-Understanding The Fall of the First Empire

Tabitha Summers-McHeath





PREVIOUSLY





“What are they hearing?” Greg asked quickly.



“They’re three weeks away,” Abigail pointed out. “Speed of travel is the speed of communication. And we lost the PR about four weeks ago. Maybe I should say the PR we knew about.”



“Thank you,” Chin replied. “I’m trying not to think about a PR action cell working on Europa. I need more eyes on the ground that won’t short out.”



“There’s a girl,” Abigail sighed. “Her name’s Maclay. Bright, talented and an esper even if she doesn’t want to be. I’m going to see her this afternoon.”









“Are we sure we can trust him?” the young man asked brusquely.



“Of course not,” Travers said easily. “Really Louis, if you’re going to be King of Aquitaine, and then Oldenberg after your victory, you must learn to trust no one who comes to you offering you something for nothing.”



“And Mercia will recognize my claims?” Louis asked quickly.



“As long as you sign the treaty giving us East Sussex, your highness,” the older man said easily. “Everything has its price.”





“She went over the edge,” Meers said surely.



“Want us to make sure she’s dead?” one flanker asked reluctantly.







“Someone wants to play at war,” Giles said tightly. “And they want to use Sussex and the Countess as the ball. We need to get Lady Beth to safety.”





Tara wondered how to put the fact that she’d been passed on her way down by a small contingent of Breton militia bearing a machine gun and leading a balky mule back the way she had come.







“I’m, I’m…” she held the paper out in as much of the moonlight as she could catch on the grimy surface of the...it had to be a letter.



“I’m Claire,” she said softly. “Claire who?”







“You’re not going,” Beth said tersely.



“Oh yes I am,” Willow said quickly. “Resolved and sure and all of that adventuress stuff.”



“She’s not dead,” Beth said softly.



“I know,” Willow said surely. “Don’t ask me how, but I know she’s alive. And we’re going to find her.”







Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire

Chapter 4





Willow looked out at the water. She took a deep breath and leaned a bit further over the rail. The wind caught her hair and she thought she saw the flash of dolphin near the bow. The schooner was making good time if her observations were correct. The day was waning and she turned back to her place on the deck. She opened her knapsack and rummaged for a book on travel.



“I thought you hadn’t traveled much,” Beth said with a smile. “You looked like a pirate queen over there.”



“It’s more exciting than I thought, Beth,” Willow replied. “There’s so much to learn.”



“How much longer is this…”? Alexander asked tightly.



“We’re making about six knots,” Willow said quickly. “That’s assuming an averaged wind velocity of about-“



The young man bolted for the rail and leaned over it with much more urgency and less grace than Willow had.



“He didn’t have to come,” Willow said sadly.



“Yes, he did,” Beth said softly.



“I’m worried about him,” Giles said distantly. “He doesn’t have much formal training.”



“He got you to us before they did,” Willow pointed out. “Whoever ‘they’ are.”



“That information was beaten into him by his father,” Giles replied uncomfortably. “Hardly the same thing.”



Alexander walked unsteadily back the group and sat down heavily. He looked pale and almost green.



“Don’t we have staterooms or something?” he asked softly.



“No,” Beth said with a shrug. “This isn’t a steamship, it’s a coaster. Little ships like this one have to use every inch of space in their holds to make a profit.”



“What we are is ‘deck cargo’,” Willow pointed out. “We’ll be okay given the average temperature and the fact that the barometer is holding steady. The stars are supposed to be really clear at sea.”



“Lady Elizabeth-“ Alexander started.



“No!” Beth said quickly. “If I’m Lady Elizabeth from Sussex there might be something in the works for me too.”



“But who else can travel like a noblewoman?” Alexander said in a confused voice. “If you’re rude and in a hurry without a title or money it will be noticed.”



“He’s quite right, Beth,” Giles said with a nod. “I’d planned on using your title to cover the gaps in our financing. People will extend credit to a known name.”



“But a known name is what may get us into trouble,” Willow said frowning.



“Rude, short of money and in a hurry,” Beth said with a wicked grin. “I’ve got it.”



‘Uh oh,” Willow said with a shake of her head. “I know that look.”



“Hi!” the petite noblewoman said standing up and holding out her hand to Giles. “Buffy Summers, girl reporter to the best damn papers on this planet. Pleased ta meet ya! This is Alex, he does the heavy lifting. Rupert here is my agent and business manager. And this firecracker is Will the wonder research girl. Now how do you spell your name and your company?”



“Buffy?!?” Giles asked in shock. “What a ridiculous derivative of a noble name. No lady of quality would be called Buffy.”



“Giles, I’m not a lady,” she insisted. “I’m a reporter.”



“Oh dear,” Willow said softly. “With your spelling?”



“That’s why I’ve got my crack staff,” Buffy replied with a shrug.



“What about your last name?” Willow asked worriedly.



“I think I can prevent anyone from thinking of me as a noblewoman,” the blonde said with a grin.



“Oh dear,” Willow said again, very softly.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



“Look, pops,” Warren Meers snapped. “I need to get into this vest pocket country today, not tomorrow.”



“You must have a passport or an Imperial identification card,” the old man behind the counter said as he puffed on his pipe.



“Look, I’ve got all these Imperial credits to spend in over that border,” Meers said softly. “Why don’t you take a look at a few up close.”



“Very pretty,” the mustached man said with a shrug, without moving to touch the pile of enhanced plastic banknotes.



“Um…” Andrew said quietly as he pulled on Warren’s sleeve.



“What, short stuff?” Warren hissed.



“Those guys over there just put a rope of bullets into that gun,” Andrew whispered fearfully.



Warren looked over at the machine gun crew as they steadied the belt of ammunition and closed the cover. He rolled his eyes.



“That’s an ancient design machine gun with a belt of cartridges, gunslinger,” he growled.



“And it’s pointed at us,” Andrew said swallowing.



Warren felt his palms get sweaty. The head of the team looked like any other overweight, passed over, nearly retired soldier. But the trigger on the machine gun didn’t need an athlete to pull it. Meers turned back to the quiet old man in the office.



“I’m on the business of a Crown Prince of Aquitaine,” he snarled.



“I’m sure he has a passport,” the man replied with another shrug.



Warren whirled and stalked back to the train with Andrew hurrying behind him. After they were aboard the train Andrew sagged into a seat and gulped down a glass of water. He looked at Meers with a glare.



“I thought you could get in anywhere,” he groused. Meers turned and glared at him.



“You see a data port in the rocks, Sparky?” he asked silkily.



Andrew was quiet for the rest of the trip.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



“Hold still!” Tara commanded as she daubed at the cut on the girl she knew as Claire’s head.



“It stings!” the girl complained. “Why does medicine from a star faring culture have to sting?”



“I think it’s to prove its medicine,” Tara answered easily. “This shouldn’t hurt.”



For a second the girl felt a pulling at her wound. Then it seemed to almost fold closed. She looked at the young woman.



“Was that stitch tape?” she asked with wonder.



“Yes,” Tara replied. “My aunt sent me out with quite a first aid kit.”



“I’m glad,” Claire said as she met Tara’s blue eyes, then she smiled and asked eagerly. “Were you a medic in the Marines? Did you see any action? Are you a hero?”



For a second it seemed to the youngster that Tara went away somewhere for a second. Then she shook her head and gave a weak smile.



“S-Sorry,” Tara said with a shrug. “I just know w-w-what he-heroes do. I w-was a clerk’s assistant who got in over her h-head. I was…hurt, got a medical discharge and a scholarship to the University of Oldenberg.”



“Oh,” Claire said with obvious disappointment.



“Where would we find the nearest policeman?” Tara asked as she reached back for the med kit.



“Policeman?” Claire asked worriedly.



“People are trying to kill you, you said,” Tara explained as she pulled out an injector and carefully readied it. “Roll up your sleeve.”



“But we can’t go to the police!” Claire almost shouted. “I have to-ow! What was that?”



“Single stage regenerator,” Tara said quickly pulling out another tiny ampule. “This a broadband AVB to kill off any bad bugs. Other arm.”



Claire rolled up her sleeve with a frown and winced even before the injector touched her skin. She opened one eye when there was light snap on her skin. She looked at the site and saw a fading pinkness.



“Wow,” she said touching the spot and feeling a hint of chill.



“Why can’t we go to the police?” Tara asked gently.



“I have to go to…Oldenberg,” Claire said quickly. “I think my mother needs me to get there.”



“Who’s your mother?” Tara asked evenly. Claire opened her mouth to speak, but shut it after a few seconds and looked frightened.



“I can’t remember!” she wailed softly. “There was a train and, and somebody shot…and I fell and everything exploded and I, I heard them ask him if he wanted them to make sure I was dead.”



Tara watched the terror build on the girl’s face and almost felt it herself. She reached for the girl and took her in an embrace. Claire trembled, then rallied and pulled away gently.



“I heard one of them say NMR didn’t pay him enough,” Claire said tightly.



“Did you see any of them?” Tara asked as she filed away the initials in her mind.



“No,” the girl answered with a sigh.



“What do you remember about your family?” Tara asked as she stood up and pulled on her pack.



“I have a mother, or maybe it’s her mother,” Claire said as she frowned with concentration. “My friend, the one who wrote me the letter. I think I’ve got the bossiest older sister in the world. I kind of hope she’s my friend’s but I think she’s mine. Then there’s…”



A woman who’d she’d known all her life, with her smile and dark hair and the knitting she was always doing lay turning pale and still as a revolver roared in Dawn’s defense. An old man who’d taught her how to twist and escape tossed her out of a window. He yelled at her to run. He turned back and she heard his gunshots stop coming. They’d died because of Dawn Summers. An engineer with a smile and a daughter of his own was dead because of Lady Summers as well.



Thank goodness she was just Claire, Dawn’s friend.



“Dawn,” she said with a sad smile. “They must have been after Dawn.”



“Dawn is your friend?” Tara asked hopefully as she picked up her staff.



“Yes,” Claire answered quickly. “I must need to get to Oldenberg for her. I’m sure it’s important.”



“Let’s get to the next town at least,” Tara said easily.



The two girls walked through the early afternoon. Claire asked questions about space and Tara’s home world. Tara asked about Europa and found Claire to be very well informed. She told Tara about the nations that made up the Peninsula and Isles of Albion. She knew of the odd conditions on Europa in an almost abstract way since she had never known anything different. To Claire having a telegraph station every twenty-five kilometers was normal, as was radio waves only traveling well over the oceans and seas.



As the path lowered onto the high plain of Breton Tara noticed an unsettling feeling growing very slowly. This time it was hard and cold. She looked around her. In the distance she thought she saw movement. She stopped and took off her pack. She pulled out a pair of small binoculars. As she focused she caught sight of a man on horseback. As she watched his approach her unease rose.



“Let’s get off the trail,” she said firmly. “When he gets out of sight at that next bend we double back.”



Something in Tara’s tone told the girl not to argue. As they lost sight of the horseman they both scrambled off the trail and headed back behind a screen of scrub and trees. After a few minutes Tara froze in place. The horseman rode past their position without slowing. Where they left the trail he slowed briefly and then spurred his sweating mount. In a few more minutes the feeling of unease left Tara.



“How long have you had that?” Claire asked with a touch of a quiver in her voice.



Tara looked down at the small Military Technologies 7.7 millimeter revolver in her hand.



“It’s another present from my aunt,” she said with a tight, worried smile. “I think I may need to get her a nice thank you card.”



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



The rider, who called himself James Tyrrell for now, stopped his mount and looked at the earth of the trail. He could have sworn he'd seen two girls on the trail. What worried him was that he hadn't felt them. Something was blocking his ability and that worried him. He didn't like feeling worried. He did that and more to others. It was almost as if there was an unseen threat in these woodlots and tiny farms. He spurred his horse. It would be good to be away from here.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



“I tell you, we came looking for a lost child,” William said in a tight voice.



“All three of you?” the policeman said with a glare. “A mercenary and a pair of noblemen?”



“I didn’t say we were noblemen,” William said evenly.



“You did not have to,” the policeman snapped.



“Hey, flatfoot, what gives?” a new voice called out. “We’ve got deadlines. Let us out of this rickytick town.”



“Not without authorization!” bellowed the policeman.



William felt Liam pull him back. As the policeman turned and slammed the gate of the town closed there was a collective sigh from the crowd of men and a few women holding briefcases and valises. Then the demands started as the crowd headed toward the small hotel and the bars of the small Breton town. After Liam had pulled him into the doorway of house William turned to the Irish nobleman.



“Before you get ruffled, I may have a way out of here,” Liam said quietly.



“On foot?” William asked wearily. “We need to make speed. Lady Dawn could be out there and hurt. Another night may be fatal, for her and a lot more people.”



Liam simply knocked on the door of the house twice and then twice again. The door opened and a middle-aged woman looked out. When she saw Liam she smiled and opened the door. The two men entered quickly and the woman slammed and barred the door behind them. Then she turned and fondled Liam’s rump.



“A pity, my fine Irish cob,” she said with sigh. “You’re sure you can’t stay?”



“No lass, and that’s the real pity,” Liam said with a quick kiss. “I’m sorry, my manners must have been left on the trail. Madame Bontecou, may I introduce Lord William of Oldenberg.”



“A pleasure, monsieur,” Madame Bontecou said with a wry smile. “You are traveling with this reprobate?”



“He does seem to know the most charming women, at the very least,” William said as he bent over her hand.



“You are a brave young man,” she said with a restrained laugh. “Come, this way.”



She turned and led them to a large grandfather clock that swung away from the wall. The woman took the stub of a candle from a box inside the opening and lit it. A few stairs leading into blackness appeared as she started down. Liam followed the woman without hesitation, and William brought up the rear, only jumping a little when the clock thudded back into place behind him. The stories of Breton smuggling seemed more credible in the light of a single candle.



A few mostly dark moments later the three entered a snug, well-aired stable. The prince saw a winding trail outside the door that seemed to be mostly in shadow. Just inside the stable door a pair of large dogs were tethered. Riley was already cinching a saddle onto a sturdy mare. He stopped and bowed slightly to Madame Bontecou. She smiled at him in a way that made William hope any Monsieur Bontecou did not have a jealous bone in his body.



“Escape the fourth estate?” the mercenary asked as he bent back to saddling the mare. There were two other horses saddled and ready to go.



“Yes, but I don’t understand where all the vultures of the press are coming from,” William replied as he bent to check the cinch on the gelding nearest him.



“There is some excitement on the railroad,” Madame Bontecou said quickly. “They say a girl, a noble, was murdered by bandits. Some say the bandits were all wearing blue scarves. It is some political party’s sign in that nest of vipers called Aquitaine.”



“They’re being awfully indiscreet,” Liam said worriedly.



“That’s the new way of the press,” William said with a frown. “Der Signalhorn has become the most popular paper in Oldenberg. It was failing, just another rag full of scandals and jingoistic ranting. I don’t know how it’s selling for two pennies less an issue now and the owner is riding in a four in hand. The good old Standard is struggling just to stay afloat.”



“Strange,” Liam said with a thoughtful look. “I ran into the same thing at home. The Examiner is shaky but the damn Bugle is everywhere, and nearly half the price. And their reporters have no sense of decorum at all.”



“Tabloid journalism makes it to Europa,” Riley sighed.



“All I know is that with all of these noisy gossip-mongers running about town a poor honest woman can’t make a living,” Madame Bontecou snapped. “Your silver-tongued friend says you may be able to help lead them off if you can get out, so here you are. Leave the horses at the stable in St. Denis.” She let out a small sigh. “What a sad day it is to watch three handsome young men leaving.”



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Tara was only listening with half an ear to the girl beside her as they walked back to the trail. The woman shivered as she remembered the feel of the revolver in her hand. She’d pulled a gun on a feeling. Years of firearm safety violated because of the witchcraft she was damned with. She stopped and shook her head gently.



“What’s wrong?” Claire asked worriedly.



“I w-was thinking s-s-something I promised my aunt I w-wouldn’t think,” Tara said with a shaky but rueful grin.



“I think I understand, kind of,” Claire said after a second. “Were you thinking something bad about yourself?”



Tara just stared at the young teenager for a moment and nodded. Before she could form a question the tall weeds on the trail moved and a large horned head appeared in the midst of the foliage. The cow looked at the two girls and let out a bellow. The beast tossed its head and frayed rope flopped into view. Claire eased forward and then pulled the rope. The animal lumbered out.



“I’d say we weren’t the only wanderers today,” Claire said holding the rope.



“And somebody wants to be milked,” Tara said looking at the cow’s full udder.



“You know about milking cows?” Claire asked in a surprised tone. “But you come from space.”



“Yeah, but some cruel people think raising a huge bunch of kids on a working farm is better than letting them live in an EZ Food world,” Tara said with a smile. “Actually, I didn’t really know about where milk came from until I left home. When I found out how they did it in the olden days I didn’t drink any for a week.”



“You’ve eaten at EZ Food?” Claire asked excitedly. “Of course you have! Were the fried pods really wonderful?”



“Unless you eat too many and never want to see another pod in your life,” Tara laughed.



“I have got to get to a real space station someday,” Claire said wistfully. “Right now we have to get her home. A loose animal means a fine most of the small farmers around here can’t pay very easily.”



“But what about getting to Oldenberg?” Tara asked evenly.



“Not the police?” Claire said turning to her. Tara could see the hope in her eyes.



“No,” the older girl answered with a sigh as she remembered the feeling of unease the rider had given her. “Not until we know more.”



I’m trusting my instincts, Aunt Abigail, Tara thought to herself. Even the one that scares me.



Claire found herself smiling and nodding. She didn’t know why, but she knew Tara was telling her the truth. The cow pulled at the rope. Claire noticed a small plaque on the halter. She squinted at it and saw the pattern of colored bars on the plaque.



“We still have to get her home,” Claire said firmly. “Looks like we head back up the trail a bit.”



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



In an office in the neutral Kingdom of Zenda a young woman bent over the telegram that had come in just moments before. She consulted the sheet of code from the pad in the wall safe and wrote down the message in five letter groups. Then she burned the telegram and the one time use code sheet. Mr. Hoffman’s timid assistant had been sure this was an unbreakable code. She mixed the ashes with those in the ashtray and took the message to the only other occupant of the office.



“This is confirmed?” he said reading it twice.



“It comes from Mr. Hoffman,” she said with an efficient nod. “The sheet number matches and the words are clear.”



The manager of Hoffman Publishing nodded and then dictated a message. The woman left and started working on twenty telegrams. It was not efficient, but Mr. Hoffman had insisted each of the minority owners of his newspapers believe only they were the recipient of a silent partner’s support of their once failing newspapers. None of them had seen Mr. Hoffman, only the manager on visits to their various head offices. The young off worlder had insisted on this. He felt no one would take a young man seriously.



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





“Are you through?” Meers asked as he paced in Prince Louis’ private railcar.



“We’re through,” Andrew almost snapped back.



“What is that?” Louis asked petulantly.



“Something to make your hunters’ jobs a bit easier,” the off worlder said with a smirk.



The Aquitaine nobleman strode across the car and snatched the paper off the desk in front of Andrew. He turned to Meers with a puzzled look.



“A thousand Zendan florins?” Louis asked in a shocked tone. “Just for finding Dawn Summers? Reporters would sell their mothers for a tenth of this. Why would they listen to you anyway?”



“I know the owners of a few papers,” Meers said with a smug grin. “They’ll listen to me, and then their newshounds will be beating the bushes looking for Summers or her body.”



“And when they find her my people will not be gentle,” Louis said with a leer. “Some hounds may fall victim with the quarry.”



“The news business is tough,” Warren said with a chuckle. “Besides, as they say in the media business, ‘if it bleeds, it leads.”



“I can not fathom how rare this ore is your superiors want,” the prince said nonchalantly.



“I’ve never said anything about an ore,” Meers answered innocently.



“Your NMR is after some resource,” Louis replied tersely. “I will find out what it is. I will know the price of my thrones to be.”



The prince turned and left the railcar in what Travers would have called a huff. The Planets Rights man looked out the window at a platform full of young people of Aquitaine waiting for the train that would take them to the Imperial starport. From there they would enter service for an Empire that Meers held responsible for all the things wrong with Miranda and the First Planets.



“Norris Mason Reynolds doesn’t want your resource,” Meers said very softly. “They just want you to spend it closer to home.”



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



“We’ll be in Brest on the morning tide,” Willow said as Beth pulled her favorite long sleeved gym shirt on. The blonde turned to her and tossed a leather jacket a size too big over the shirt.



“What do you think?” Beth asked as she turned around in front of her friend.



“Too polite and, um, I don’t know, missing something?” Willow said worriedly as the daylight faded. Beth burrowed into the packs on deck and pulled out a battered brimmed hat and Willow’s smallest notebook.



“Whadaya say now?” Beth asked as she leaned forward and snapped open the notebook.



“Hi, Buffy,” Willow said with a smile.





Edited by: jixer at: 1/13/03 1:23:04 am
jixer
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 4

Postby CaptMurdock » Mon Jan 13, 2003 7:34 am

jixer, this story is fantastic! I love the triumvirate of William, Liam and Riley, along with our "usual" Scoobies (poor Xander -- seasickness is one of those I don't wish on anybody!) Loved Beth's conversion into "Buffy" -- I've always thought she was an Elizabeth in Buffy clothing on the show.



Ah, Tara. Ex-Marine, citizen of the Empire, starfaring adventurer and still knows about milking cows. What a renaissance woman!



Getting a little impatient for the initial meeting of Willow and Tara!



This story is great!

_________________



"Honey, in case you didn't hear me the first six thousand times: no more teleportation spells."

CaptMurdock
 


Re: Miss Tara Maclay, Citizen of the Terran Empire Chapter 4

Postby jixer » Mon Jan 13, 2003 12:44 pm

Hello Kittens-



CaptMurdock, thank you. They may not be the Three Musketeers, but I'll try to keep them from becoming the Three Stooges.



Tara is many things, including the daughter of a hard scrabble mining colony, but not an ex-Marine. It is typical though, that Dawn would make that assumption. Everyone knows the Navy stays in space, the Marines do all the planet things and the starports and orbital stations just run themselves. Tara's branch of service, General Services, never makes it into an adventure novel.



General Services, the unsung worker bees of the Empire, do get Universal Military Training (UMT) and are organized along a military model. They, like all Imperial forces, are under the control of the Navy in time of emergency. For UMT imagine watered down Air Force basic training, also known by the Empire's Marines as "how not to die until the real soldiers get there".



As for the milking of cows, I think EVERYONE should spend some time on a small farm. If nothing else it will make you love the city all the more!



Yes, they will meet. When? :whistle



Thanks for your response, Captain. I'm looking forward to more Equilibrium.





Jixer

jixer
 

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