Paradox Effect the Reason

In 2554, the World is Coming to its End, unless an impossible mission through 600 years of time travel succeeds.

Maternal instinct knows no boundaries, including the nano-neural-net intravenously installed in Dannia Weston’s mind to repress her identity, allowing her to perform a mission 300 years before her time.

Transported to the year 1954, Dannia becomes a woman with a mid-twentieth century persona, college educated with an aptitude for mechanical invention. Due to her work during the war, she is employed by the U.S. government on a secret project. But what no one knows—including Dannia or those who sent her back to tinker with the mechanical past to reduce future pollution—is what might happen should she become emotionally involved in 1954.

The 2254 science team programmed the nano-net to prevent the possibility of pregnancy, but each person reacts to strong emotional stimuli differently, and using birth control not available in 1954 is out of the question.

When Dannia falls in love with Peter Hersh and becomes pregnant, her hormones erode a small section of the nano-chained network that stabilizes her new identity, triggering a mild memory rebirth…and threatening her mission and the fate of the world.

The Vicar and his Handmaid

Quiet footfalls traced a path up the steps from the downstairs sitting room, along the abbreviated hallway, and into the Vicar’s bedroom. The nearer to the bed they got, the more softly they fell.

Slowly becoming aware of the intruder, he struggled to gather the remnants of his composure. He felt movement on his bed. The vicar sat up violently, tears still wetting his face. He fumbled for the candle on the small table next to the bed. And although only seconds had passed, the vicar felt the dread of one expecting to meet death before the next breath. His hand quaked and he knocked the candle on the floor.

Fingers lightly brushed his arm. He heard himself shout, “No. Not yet.” He held his breath, now afraid exhaling would be the signal, and waited for the end.

The hand on his arm patted him too softly for it to belong to Blutleer. Willington still held his breath. Slowly, he started to black out.

Mary timidly called, “Peter?”

The vicar sucked air noisily. “My God, Mary, you frightened me beyond words.”

“I’m sorry if I did. I felt so alone and heard you moving about. I thought maybe we could talk, or something …”

The vicar kicked off the blanket and swung his legs over the side of the bed as he moved to get the candle from the floor. Before he finished he felt a tug on his nightshirt.

“Do we need candlelight?” Mary whispered. “Isn’t the moon’s light enough, Peter?”

The vicar turned to her, reached out, and touched her warmth. Mary had worn a light cotton nightgown. He watched her rise from the bed, walk to the window and he gasped as she opened the curtain. The moonlight silhouetted her, penetrated the gown, and illuminated a shadow within its embrace. As she walked to him, the gown both hid and revealed her youthful figure.

“Please, Mary. You don’t understand what you’re doing.” His words sounded feeble, and he knew it.

Mary did not immediately respond. She continued to walk to him and stopped when she stood very close, knees touching his knees. Her hands found the edge of her nightdress and very slowly began lifting.

“No,” The vicar said, weakly and too late. His eyes took control and coaxed the rest of him to follow their lead. He felt his heart rate increase. His breathing became shallow. No longer resisting, his hands reached for her as the nightgown cleared her shoulders. His fingers moved and traced the lines of her collarbones then down gently etching her sensitive flesh.

“I want to lay with you.” Mary’s words slid out to caress him. She lifted the cotton sheath over her head and reached to drop it on the mattress. The night air shimmered on her flesh with a gentleness that matched Willington’s touch.

His stare followed her hand as she let the gown fall on the bed and lifted both slender arms overhead. His eyes, fully accustomed to the darkness, examined all the details her movement brought to his attention, the swell of her round breasts, her hips, and the flatness of her stomach and the vee tuft of red hair between her thighs. His hands slid down from her breasts to her hips. Her skin was warm responsive silk.

He groaned as a light caught his eyes.

The gold medallion he had hung on the doorknob sparkled with illumination that seemed to spring from within the Willington coat of arms. He stared, transfixed, as the illumination concentrated into a thin beam, shot across the room, and bounced off the crucifix he had hung above the bed. The thin ray lit only the head of his Savior. Looking over his shoulder, the vicar ignored Mary.

The Messiah cried red tears.

“Oh, good Lord. No.” The vicar pushed Mary from him, his hands on her breasts. “I can’t do this now. God help me, I can’t.” He looked at her and back at the cross. The light had expanded and he saw the droplets run down the tiny body. They dripped from the crossed feet onto the headboard, and then splashed against his pillow.

“I’m sorry, Mary. I cannot just now. It’s too soon.” He lied and leaned sideways. He reached out, extended a forefinger, and prodded the red spot where his head had left an indentation. It felt wet.

Should it be? He wondered, as he sniffed his fingertip.

Mary still stood by the bed, youthful innocence lost in the moment that for him had passed, certain her beauty would be the victor in the end. She climbed onto the bed, ignored the look of surprise that crossed the vicar’s face and lay where he had a moment earlier. She lifted her knees and yelped when he yanked her into a sitting position, and forced her to cover herself with the nightgown he thrust at her.

The vicar examined her head. He had witnessed a drop land squarely in the middle of her forehead and splatter to dot the surrounding area. He touched her, heard her respond as if confused, and then he sighed loudly when his hand came away clean and dry.

“Blutleer! Damn, you to hell again! Leave me alone.” He jumped up, went to the medallion and tore it off the doorknob. It scorched his palm, and he dropped it.

Behind him he heard Mary pleading for him to stop, that she was afraid. He wanted to, but rage was all that remained inside and it controlled him.

Vicar Willington, for the first time in his life accepted anger and savored its strength. He didn’t know if God felt the need to punish him or if Blutleer had again managed to invoke spirits to haunt him. He knew he must find a way to stop the evil, whether that meant killing Blutleer or dying in the attempt. Either will provide relief.

 

Excerpt from “Templars Fire a Gothic Vampire Novel”, copyright 2015 all rights reserved