This is a serial novel by Robert W. Lebling - a 21st-century thriller set in the Empty Quarter, the great sand desert of the Arabian Peninsula.
Friday, December 19, 2014
Wednesday, December 3, 2014
Chapter 30
While
most of the jinn departed the Earth one by one, the leaders and a few others,
including yours truly, boarded a special spacecraft of sorts that had been
prepared for the occasion. A tall, gracefully tapered cone, several hundred
feet high and glowing turquoise blue, had appeared unexpectedly on the plaza. A
doorway had opened at ground level.
It
was the most bittersweet feeling, walking into that spacecraft, holding the
hand of my beloved Mubarak, preparing for the greatest adventure of my life,
but at the same time leaving behind my companions, my life and my planet. Tears
streamed down my cheeks, but I smiled and kept my gaze directed forward. Behind
me, I knew, my every step was being watched by those wonderful people of my
team, whom I would never see again.
Inside,
we glided like feathers up a spiral ramp. The jinn leaders were singing a
melodious but plaintive song in some ancient tongue, which I convinced myself
was a nostalgic tribute to Earth, their home for so many millennia.
Before
I knew what was happening, I was belted into a reclining chair of some soft
leather-like substance that seemed to mold itself to my body as I shifted,
accommodating my every squirming. Mubarak, beside me, pointed at the wall, and
it became a window. I could see the plaza below, and my friends, huddled in a
tight group.
When
all were aboard, the door of the spacecraft closed – shrank? disappeared? – and
the cone rose slowly and silently into the air. I closed my eyes, as I often
did during airplane takeoffs, and said a silent prayer that we would not crash.
We didn’t. When I opened my eyes, we were far above the rusty sands of the
Empty Quarter, and headed toward the inky heavens. There was no acceleration.
We were not plastered to our seats. We just rose – quickly.
I
looked over at Mubarak beside me. He looked at me. He pursed his lips in a
kiss. I kissed him back. We were on our way to our new life.
All
the jinn had left the City of Iram of the Pillars. The expedition members
looked at each other, then glanced around at the immense, abandoned metropolis.
The silence was all-encompassing. Dan Keller cleared his throat, and the sound
echoed through the marble canyons of the city. Vanessa cuddled against him,
waiting for some instructions from anyone.
“So,”
said Keller to Frank Devereaux. “What do we do now?”
Frank
sighed, and looked around him. His sigh took flight like a white bird.
THE END
Tuesday, November 25, 2014
Chapter 29
That
night, Emily and Mubarak told the others that she would be leaving with the
jinn. Devereaux’s jaw dropped. He stuttered in disbelief: “Y-y-you can’t,
Emily! You just can’t!” The team stared at her with wide eyes, their minds
trying to imagine what lay ahead for her.
“I
am convinced this is my destiny,” she said softly. “I love Mubarak. I care
deeply about him and his people, and I want to learn more about them. I can’t do
that here. I’ll be safe. It’ll be the adventure of a lifetime.”
“We
will protect Emily, I promise,” Mubarak said.
Devereaux
paced back and forth, trying to think of some way to change her mind.
“The
President will want to speak with you,” he said. “You have to come back to
Washington!”
“I’ll
send him a postcard,” Emily said with a shy grin.
“You
take care of yourself, girl,” said Vanessa Willis, her arm around Dan Keller’s
waist. “It sounds pretty scary to me, but after all we’ve been through, it’ll
probably turn out to be a cakewalk.”
“Thanks,
Vanessa,” Emily replied. She paused, and looked around at the team. “I’ll miss
you all. I really will.”
“I
almost envy you, heading out into space, exploring the universe,” said Lasser.
“Almost.” He looked around him at the City of Iram. “I guess I’ll stick to what
I know – or think I know – the Great Underground.”
A
few of them laughed. Bakhashaf poked him in the shoulder.
Emily
said to the team: “If I can send you a message, I will. I promise I’ll try. I
will never forget you.”
They
gathered close around her, exchanging embraces and what they knew would be
farewells.
When
dawn came, the jinn exodus began. It started slowly. One after another, the
jinn citizens of Iram stepped out of their homes, took flight and headed up
toward the pearl dome. Before they reached it, they vanished, entering a rift
in spacetime. The opening carried them into a wormhole, and the wormhole led to
their new world. Soon dozens were flying upward, then hundreds, eventually
thousands. At various secret places around the world, the same process was
underway, though not on so great a scale as at Iram. The jinn of Earth were
leaving.
The
expedition members were invited to witness the departure of the jinn
leadership. A farewell ceremony was arranged in the central plaza. A large
glowing, rose-colored sphere sat in the square, awaiting the leaders. There
appeared to be no doorway or portal into the sphere.
The
jinn leaders approached from a nearby building. Frank Devereaux, as expedition
leader, greeted the officials. Emily Goddard, co-leader, stood back, close to
Mubarak Awda. She wore blue expedition coveralls, but Awda had exchanged his
for a gleaming white Saudi thobe. He also wore a red-and-white-checked shemagh, wrapped and tied like a casual
turban. Emily and Mubarak looked frequently at each other, speaking with their
eyes. Dan Keller stood with the Marines, beside Pvt. Willis. The back of his left hand gently touched the
back of her right; otherwise, they gave no sign they even knew each other. Lasser,
Bakhashaf and Semple whispered together, and the psychiatrist kept looking over
at Mubarak Awda.
Earlier,
Dr. Semple had taken Awda aside, and asked him the question.
“Please
tell me,” he said. “Why did your people create the UFO deception? Why did you
torment us for so many years, with saucer sightings, close encounters, abductions
and the like?”
“Your
wife…”
“Yes.”
“I’m
so sorry, Dr. Semple. I truly am.
Sometimes, these strategic decisions can cause pain and suffering. I realize
that. That was not our intention. What my people did was an act of
self-preservation – nothing more. Do you know of Christopher Sarantakos?”
“No,
I’m afraid I – “
“Perhaps
you know him by his stage name, Criss Angel. He’s an American illusionist, who
performs on television, in Las Vegas and similar venues. He’s known for his
amazing magic stunts. Most of these illusions are achieved through
misdirection. The audience looks in one direction, the illusionist acts in
another. This what the jinn have done. We turned your eyes to outer space,
while we lived around you – and indeed beneath you.”
Mubarak
placed a hand on the doctor’s shoulder. “Again, I’m truly sorry your wife
suffered at our hands.”
Semple
could think of nothing to say. He looked Mubarak in the eye and nodded slowly.
Miriam
addressed the humans. Her rich, almost musical voice carried far throughout the
plaza and above, and some of the departing jinn paused to listen to her.
“We
thank you for witnessing our departure. I must say, this is a sad moment for
all of us. We shall miss the dear Earth and its inhabitants. But we have a
destiny to fulfill, and the time has come.”
She
paused, and Devereaux spoke up.
“When
you are gone, what do we do next? How do we make use of your technology, your
City?”
“That’s
up to you, Mr. Devereaux. I’m sure your government will have some ideas.” She
smiled. “Also, when we depart, I think you’ll find your satellite phone works
much better.”
His
hand went automatically to the small black phone holstered on his belt.
“But
meanwhile, we have something for you that may make your task of comprehending
all this…” She waved her hand. “… somewhat easier.”
She
beckoned to one of her assistants, who brought her a book. It was a small,
thick tome in a glistening green cover. Miriam handed the book to Devereaux. He
paged through it.
“It’s
in English,” he said, surprised.
“We
thought you’d like that,” she said. “It’s an instruction manual of sorts. Call
it our scriptures.”
Devereaux
looked up, his eyes wide. “This is – this is so … thank you,” he said.
Friday, November 14, 2014
Chapter 28
Mubarak
took my hand and we rose up in the air, leaving the central plaza quickly
behind as we climbed higher and higher. I gasped, overcome with vertigo, but he
put his other hand over my eyes and suddenly I felt a great calm sweep over me.
When he removed his hand and I opened my eyes, I saw that we were perched on
the capital of an alabaster column at the highest point above the City of Iram,
within a vast, upside-down pyramid far beneath the desert sands, just below the
stunning, flattened pearl dome that capped it all.
Mubarak
wanted privacy, so he could discuss something important with me. I was all
ears, but a bit apprehensive. I wasn’t looking forward to tomorrow, to the
departure of the jinn. That would mean I would never see this amazing – man?
jinni? – again.
The
vertigo was totally gone. I looked out over the City, absorbing all I could
with my wide-open eyes. This might be the last time I ever saw Iram from this
perspective, and I was positively drinking it in.
Mubarak
waited patiently for a while, then took me by the shoulders and turned me
toward him. He kissed me gently and held me close for the longest time. I felt
so safe with him. I wanted the moment to continue forever.
“Emily,”
he said. His brown eyes were so earnest, almost pleading. “I want you to come
with me.”
I
didn’t answer. I just stared at him. I’m sure my jaw had dropped.
Finally,
I said: “I can’t do that.”
He
smiled. He could be very persuasive!
“Yes,
you can.”
He
leaned forward and kissed me again, as if to give me confidence. My lips
tingled, as if I’d tasted some exotic spice.
“Mubarak,
that’s crazy! You and your people are heading out into space, to some far-off
planet, God knows where, and you want me to tag along? It’s totally insane!”
“Not
really, Emily. We’re going to an Earth-like world with water, air, vegetation
and all the rest. We’ll be like the early colonists who settled America, only
with advanced technology!”
“And
what about the ‘Indians’?” I asked.
“Hah!”
Mubarak said, with a semi-laugh. “Yes, there will be ‘Indians,’ as you call
them. We will help them, like we helped you.”
“They
probably look like huge purple lobsters, with clacking claws.”
He
smiled again. “No, they are very much like humans. We have seen them. This galaxy,
what you call the Milky Way, is full of humanoids – or more properly, hominins,
members of your extended family. The planets were seeded long, long ago – maybe
by God.”
I
rested my hand on Mubarak’s arm. His muscles were taut, like a drawn bow. He
was clearly worried I would say no. I was going to say no, really. I gave him
more reasons why I couldn’t leave. I didn’t have any family to speak of, so I
turned elsewhere for excuses.
“Mubarak,
I have my work! I am a professor! I have students back in the USA who are
waiting for me.”
“This
world is full of teachers. Your students will survive. And you can do your work,
your research, wherever you are. You can study the jinn up close and personal,
as they say. Besides….”
“Besides
what?”
I
searched his eyes. They were so deep, and I felt I was being drawn in, like
paper boat in a whirlpool.
“Besides,
I love you, Emily. I have always loved you.”
I guess that’s what you would call a sucker punch. It was hard for me to recover from “I love you.”
I guess that’s what you would call a sucker punch. It was hard for me to recover from “I love you.”
After
I surrendered, Mubarak sat patiently with me and explained all I would need to
know: how jinn technology would enable us to survive the journey through space,
how we would navigate the networks of crisscrossing wormholes that penetrate
the fabric of spacetime, how long it would take to reach our destination, how
we and the rest of Earth’s jinn would settle our new home. There were still
many questions unanswered. But it was a start.
Not
long afterward, he took me out of the subterranean city and into the trackless desert
above. I didn’t exactly see how this happened, because my eyes were screwed
shut in fear. We passed through some sort of opening, and Mubarak had me kneel
forward, and suddenly my knees were in hot sand. I looked around. It was late
afternoon, the orange sun was sinking toward the western horizon and the
ovenlike heat of the Empty Quarter was beginning – ever so slightly – to abate.
Our world was made of nothing but dunes – waves and waves of orangish,
pudding-y dunes – stretching as far as the eye could see. We were at a high
point, and the perspective was wonderful.
Despite
the view, there was something slightly melancholy about it all. Apart from the
two of us, there was no life, none at all – just the plaintive moan of the
wind. As an academic, I knew that this was not completely true. If you looked
carefully, living creatures could be found in the valleys, on the edges of
sabkhas, hiding in holes and among scrawny, gray salt bushes. There were camel
spiders, scorpions, sand snakes, spiny-tailed lizards, even the occasional small
mammal, like a jerboa or fennec fox. But while the sun was out, most life
stayed hidden, waiting patiently under the sand for darkness and dinnertime.
“I
wanted to see this place one more time before we left,” Mubarak said, his arm
around me, as we watched the sun set. “It’s austere, but I will miss it.”
The
sun bulged and glowed like a copper skillet as it descended toward the horizon.
I
held on to him tightly as a light breeze hit us. He was so human, so male, at
moments like this.
“It’s
hard to believe you’re not human,” I murmured, my head against his warm chest.
“What
makes you think I’m not human?” he asked.
I
looked up at him quizzically.
“You’re
a jinni, Mubarak!” I said.
He
smiled and nodded. “Yes. But still….”
“Still?”
“Listen,
Emily,” he said, “I want to share a little secret with you.”
He
sat us down in the sand, face to face, and he told me the truth.
It
was very hard at first for me to accept this, but after all that had happened
in recent days, I was becoming more accepting of new ideas, and as it sank in,
I grew more comfortable with the notion. You know how humans make use of only a
small part of their brains? Well, if we could somehow learn to use more of our precious
gray matter, we would be able to do some amazing things. We would develop
telekinetic and telepathic abilities. We would be able to create visual
illusions and change our shapes. We would be able to see the rips in the fabric
of spacetime, and slip out of our three spatial dimensions and into other
higher ones. In short, we would become jinn….
“There’s
nothing mysterious about this,” said Mubarak. “It’s simple biological
evolution.”
“So
you – the jinn – climbed higher up the evolutionary ladder, and we – the humans
– stayed behind.”
“Well,
that’s an oversimplification. Let’s just say, we got a head start.”
“So
that’s why jinn and humans can marry and have children together.” An image
flashed through my mind, of Mubarak and me, standing in the front yard of some
exotic cottage on another planet, surrounded by a brood of frolicking half-jinn
children, some levitating, some shape-shifting, all just being kids….
“Yes,
our DNA is very similar. We are all members of the hominin family. We jinn are
the lucky ones. We developed first. We feel it is our duty to help others learn
to use their brains more fully, and take the next steps up the ladder. We have
done that with your people. You are on the very verge. When we leave, your
species will learn to expand their brain power from the knowledge we leave
behind. It will help them to become jinn, so to speak.”
“And
me?”
Mubarak
laughed softly. “Yes, you will become one of the jinn – even faster than the others!”
The
sun dipped below the distant dunes. The wind toyed with us. I snuggled up
beside him and hugged him. Maybe I could actually do this, I thought.
Another
thing puzzled me. It was one of those academic questions that most people don’t
think of until later. (Don’t ask me why; my mind works in strange ways.)
“Mubarak,
how do you know where to go next?”
“Sorry?
What do you mean?”
“How
do the jinn decide what planet is their next destination?”
“Oh! We don’t decide. The decision is made for us.”
“Oh! We don’t decide. The decision is made for us.”
“Who
makes the decision, then?”
“Actually,
we don’t know. Again, it could be God. Perhaps a superior species. One day, a
meteorite strikes the planet where we live. The indigenous people find a chunk
of the meteoric rock, and decide it comes from heaven. The meteorite is revered
and protected. Amazing as it sounds, the rock, the meteorite, has invariably
come from our next destination. It was sent to us, as a message. We study it,
and then we know where to go.”
I
put my hand on his forearm.
“The
Black Stone!” I said.
“Yes.”
“The
jinn took it?”
“With
the help of the Qarmatians, yes. Each meteorite that falls from the sky has a
signature, a characteristic mineral structure that tells us where it
originated. We know our galaxy rather well. We are able to tell which
meteorites are deliberately sent. We studied the Stone, and determined the
message – our next destination. The Stone was returned, after the Abbasids paid
a big ransom to the Qarmatians. The Qarmatians thought they were returning a
fake, but it was indeed the real thing.”
“When
they returned it, it was broken into seven pieces.”
“Yes,
but that was not our doing, The Qarmatians were less than respectful in
returning the Stone; they thought they were handling a fake.”
“How
do you know all this?”
“It’s
part of our history. It was a long time ago. But our records go way back.”
“How
about you? Do you go ‘way back’?”
“You
mean, am I old? Not that old!”
“How
long do you jinn live?”
“A
couple hundred years. I’m barely 70.”
He
looked 30. I shook my head in amazement.
“Don’t
worry,” Mubarak said. “When you expand your brain power, you’ll live much
longer too.”
“That’s
a relief,” I responded. “I’ve got so much to do, and so little time to do it.”
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