Finally the promised new part
@all
thanks again for all your feedback, I really appreciate it
and thanks a lot to my beta Trude *hug*
Meanwhile on Adrasc
"And then the butterfly tried to hide in my hair, because he was afraid of the dragon." Girlish giggling followed this babbled words and the small dark-haired boy squeaked, "'fraid of the dragon," and made a very serious face.
"I fight dragon," he exclaimed then and straightened his small body, holding an imaginative sword in his hand and waving it around. “Me too!” His older sister joined him immediately in the battle.
Laughing, Daieâke pulled her two youngest children into a hug. She had given up the fight of trying to follow the story that Aderï and Diaêdo were telling.
"That was very generous of you that you gave this butterfly a place to hide. And you," she ruffled Diaêdo's untamed hair. "I'm sure you'll be the greatest dragonfighter Adrasc has ever seen."
There was a knock and then the door was opened. "Your Majesty?" A young guardsman bowed his head and straightened then, shifting a bit nervous from one foot to the other because he had to disturb his ruler.
Daieâke stood up with a little sigh about the distraction. "Yes, Tarill? What's the matter?"
"A holographic call is waiting in the line," was his reply.
"Thank you, Tarill. I'll answer it here." The guard nodded and stepped back discreetly, closing the door again.
The tall slender woman stepped to the little table where the transmitter stood and passed her hand softly over the surface of the crystal to activate it.
Amarela was expected to call as soon as she had arrived and her mother abided the call this day. So she was rather astonished when the flickering picture - the reception wasn't too good in the children's playroom - showed the face of Zhysk.
Quickly Daieâke gestured to the children’s nursemaid, who sat in a chair and was mending one of Aderïs’ gowns. Immediately Kimana put the gown to the side and stood up. “My sweethearts, how do you feel about going to the kitchen and looking if the cook has some honeybread for you?”
Both kids squealed with glee about this idea and after some seconds Daieâke was alone in the room.
“May the stars bless you and your family, Zhysk,” she started the talk with the other ruler. “I hope you don’t mind my look. It’s just that I really didn’t expect a call from you. I hope everything is all right?”
“Blessings to you, Daieâke.” Zhysk regarded her worried. “I’m afraid my message will bring no joy to your heart.”
Five minutes later the woman paced in front of the hologram, fingers entwined behind her back. “And there was really no message? Not even a fragment?” She stopped abruptly and lifted her gaze again to the man. “But why wasn’t there at least a call for help, if they really had problems?”
Daieâke started her pacing again. “Is it possible that they had an encounter with pirates?”
Zhysk shook his head. “I really don’t know. These pirates had always shown up and then again disappeared so suddenly that one never knew where the dangerous zones were. But no sightings have been reported to me since years, so I always assumed that they were gone for good.”
“We have to scour all the space they came through. Will you help us?” Pleadingly Daieâke stretched her hands out to Zhysk.
The man almost seamed hurt by her assumption that he wouldn’t help. “Of course, Daieâke. How can you doubt about my help for a second? Our offspring is precious. But you’re well aware that the search can take a long time?”
“Yes, I’m aware of that.” The woman’s voice was hushed. “Thank you for your call and your help, Zhysk. My greetings to your wife and your heir.”
After Zhysk had said his own good-bye, she switched off the transmitter and sank down in one of the soft chairs, barely holding it together anymore and closed her eyes.
Her eldest daughter. Her beautiful firstborn. Daieâke could recall the day of Amarela’s birth in mind like it had only been yesterday since the tiny infant, wrapped in a cloth of dark-blue Tirbïtfabric, had been laid in her arms. She had been astonished that someone so small could be so perfect and when the baby had opened it’s eyes and had looked at her with glistening green eyes her heart had melted with love. Sîriol – her always taciturn bonded partner – had crouched beside her and caressed the red curls of their daughter. “She’s lovely, my love. Just like you.” He whispered to her and kissed her then.
Daieâke shook her head. She didn’t have the time now to dwell in memories. She braced herself and left the room.
The young guard sprang to attention when his ruler showed up in the corridor. “Tarill, have you seen my sons somewhere? And do you know if General Kjetil is still in town?” she addressed him.
“My Lady,” he stammered nervously. “I daresay the princes are out in the park to practise archery. And General Kjetil - I’ve seen him just an hour ago in the tavern named “Dragon Claw” and it didn’t look like he wanted to leave soon.”
“Thank you, my dear. I’ll go to the park to fetch my sons. Please send an errant boy to the General. He shall come to the palace immediately.” The queen rushed past him with her words and he could only nod to her back.
Daieâke got a glimpse of her older sons immediately when she left her home – the palace stood in the middle of the generous park.
Adhîldar and Beîfedo were standing side by side, wearing only their track pants, competing their skill with the longbow. A small group of young girls had assembled and were standing in safe distance of the young men, making goo-goo eyes at them. In their fluttering colourful gowns the maidens looked like butterflies.
The younger of the boys, Beîfedo, slender built and still lanky, blushed when a soft breeze carried a frivolous word from the group to his ear and his hands slightly started to tremble.
"Ignore them," hissed his brown-haired brother whose figure showed that he would be broad-shouldered when grown-up, just like his grandfather. "They don't know what they are talking about." With grim determination Adhîldar let his arrow fly and it found its aim in the distance.
Beîfedo’s arrow followed shortly behind, but missed the black mark in the middle of the aim. He laughed out loud about his unhandiness and tapped his brother’s shoulder. “Looks like you win today, brother. Well, I knew before that you’re better than me in archery. But let’s see who of us is the better windrider – do you have time tomorrow for a game in the gorge of the whispered songs?”
“And you think you can beat me therein, little one?” smirked Adhîldar and started to saunter towards the aim to gather the arrows.
Neither of the young men had noticed that the girls had become silent but had fallen in deep curtseys when Daieâke had shown up beside them.
Now their mother’s clear voice crossed the distance. “I don’t think I will allow you to go windriding tomorrow, my sons.”
Beîfedo and Adhîldar stopped and turned towards her. “But mother…,” started the older making a long face, quickly stopping his words when he noticed the trouble in her blue eyes.
She gave them a weak smile, feeling sorry that she had to forbid them one of their favourite leisure activities, although she knew that the younglings wouldn’t be in any danger at all when wind-riding – born to fly with the wind like all the children of the Im’ri. But still – she couldn’t stand the thought of even the slightest risk for them, not with one of her children missing.
“Temporarily you will forgo all the sports that could be regarded just a bit as dangerous,” Daieâke told them.
Beîfedo – not yet too proud to show his feelings in public – wrapped his arms around her. “Mum – what’s wrong? Something is troubling you. Please tell us?” He looked up, tenderness in his brown-green eyes.
Daieâke shook her head. “Not here, Beîfedo. I’ll tell you back at home. Kjetil should join us there shortly.”
Adhîldar left the arrows where they were, following his mother and his younger brother back to the palace.
Shortly afterwards the three of them were sitting in the crystal chamber and waited for the General to show up. Daieâke had informed her sons about their sisters’ disappearance and – impulsive as young men were in that age – they wanted to accompany and help Kjetil on his extensive search.
“I will allow Beîfedo to go,” said she begging for appreciation to her oldest son. “But you know, Adhîldar, that if something happens to me or to Amarela, you will be steward to the throne till Aderï is grown up and can rule by herself.”
He clenched his hands while furrowing his brows, but nodded then. “I know, mother. It’s just that I don’t like to feel so useless,” whispered he hoarsely.
She stretched her hand out, tenderly pushing back one of his brown curls behind his ear and locked her eyes with his blue ones. “I know, Sweetheart.”
When the first lanterns were lit by a silent servant, Kjetil finally showed up, sauntering slowly into the room. He looked exhausted, his eyes were hooded, his clothes crumpled and Daieâke wrinkled her nose when she was smelling his perspiration of too many cheap drinks, mingled with a faint aroma of cheap perfume.
She hid her irritation about the General’s appearance and asked him to sit down, started to tell him the awful news. With each of the woman’s words he became more prick-eared and seemed to be sober when Daieâke finished.
He jumped up, brushed with his hand through his raven-black straight hair. “I’ll take our newest ship,” exclaimed he all of a dither. “With everyone working during the night it should be ready to start in the first light of day. You give me free hand?”
“Yes, Kjetil,” was the ruler’s nodded answer. “But Beîfedo wants to come along with you. I’ll inform Zhysk where and when he can meet you with his own ships.”
Reassuring the man put his hand on the woman’s shoulder. “We’ll find her, Daieâke. We’ll find her, I promise.” She bit her lower lip, nodded again and lifted her gaze up to his austere face, eyes shining of yet unshed tears but showing trust in his words.
“May the stars blessings be with you on your mission,” whispered she clawing for hope before turning away from him, starting to give orders to the gathered guards and servants.
*****
Cougar’s mansion, 19th of May
Late in the night, the young humans awakened by a fearful scream. Without thinking- used to situations like this, as he often had to comfort the younger ones in the previous years when they were mourning about their parent’s death – Raoul shoot out of the bed he was sharing with Audrey and dashed to the room where the yelp had come from.
Amarela was sitting in her bed shivering, pressing the sheets closely to her body, tears running down her cheeks. The young leader wrapped his arms around her.
At first, she seemed comforted by his embrace but then she started to wail again and tried to push him away.
Only then did he realize how she must feel. Waking up from a nightmare or bad memories of the past days in a room she didn’t recognize and then to be held by a man she didn’t know. No wonder she went to pieces.
“I’m sorry,” he whispered and let her out of his arms. She looked at him terrified, her green eyes glistening in the dark thanks to the little light that enlightened the room from the corridor.
“Pat?” Amarela’s voice was shaky under her sobs.
“I go and get him,” Raoul promised with husky voice and stood up to leave the room.
But the wanted one was already standing in the room, took a seat now on the edge of her bed, and while giving a loud sob the young woman noosed her arms around his neck. He held her tight and rubbed her back up and down in a comforting way.
Barely understandable hushed words were spoken under still more tears. “Scared” was to be heard as well as “hurt” and “no”.
The cougar’s leader let hang his head and clenched his hands to fists.
The other man turned a bit towards him while still pressing Amarela’s delicate figure at his chest. “A nightmare,” mumbled he. “She will soon calm down.”
Pat pressed a soft kiss on the crown of her head – a kiss alike the one a mother would give her child or like an older brother comforting a sister - and whispered gently to her. In fact, the young man once had a younger sister – just a shade of a memory these days to him, having died in a car accident along with their mother when he was five years old. He couldn’t even recall her name.
After a short time, he lifted his view again up to Raoul, who stood silently watching beside the bed.
“Maybe better when either I or Andrew sleep in here too. At least for the first days until she knows all of you. She’s used to one of us sleeping on her floor,” Pat added with a little soft smile, regret in his gaze that Amarela was so distressed.
Raoul nodded in agreement. “I go and get a mattress along with Andrew.”
The younger one had just entered the room a minute ago. He and Raoul swivelled and disappeared into the corridor.
Amarela had loosened the grip of her arms around Pat’s neck and her sobbing had ebbed when the two men returned. Gently Pat released himself of her embrace but rested his hands still on her back to support her till she braced herself. He cupped her cheek with his right hand, brushing away the last tears with his thumb. “Okay again?”
She sniffed once more, but nodded and lay down again. The young man pulled the blanket over her shoulders. “If you need me – I’ll sleep just right beside you on the floor.”
Standing up, Pat turned to the cougar’s leader. “Thank you for your understanding, Raoul. I think you can all go now back to sleep.”
“You’re welcome, Pat. I’m really glad you and Andrew joined us. I don’t want to imagine how agitated she would be now if you weren’t here. Amarela really seems to trust you.”
Raoul walked out of the room, followed by the younger brown-haired man, but leaving the door ajar.
Pat lay down on his own mattress, turning on the side so that he faced the young woman. She was already sleeping again, peaceful for now and he hoped that her sleep would stay like this for the rest of the night.
“Pleasant dreams, sweetheart,” he whispered quietly.
******
Holloman Base, Alamogordo, morning of the 20th May
“Thanks for the ride, man!” The young brown-haired man put his sunglasses on and jumped out of the old vehicle, turned then and heaved his heavy-laden backpack down from the car. He was tall and lanky, looking more like a musician than a soldier. But despite his appearance, he was well-trained and had never been fitter in his 23 years of life.
Alex sighed, glad that he at last had reached the end of his journey. His way had led him down from Boston, where he had grown up after the epidemic in a military orphan camp, to this base in New Mexico.
Since three months the young man was on the way –in no hurry he had wanted to see as much of the states he crossed as possible. Who knew when this would be possible for him the next time?
So he had either hitchhiked or walked and really had enjoyed the journey, absorbing all the various impressions that his country could give him, starting with the almost abandoned New York City, where he walked to the top of the Empire State Building.
Alas he couldn’t climb up too to the statue of liberty. There had been too much ice in the water around Liberty Island and the ferry couldn’t cross the floods. So he had just made some charcoal drawing from afar.
In Pennsylvania Alex had lived two weeks with the Amish people and was stunned at their style of living although he knew of it before. But to see it with his own eyes was something completely different and he really admired them.
He had walked beneath the natural bridge of Virginia, had paid visit to the Great Falls National park and had been flabbergasted in the caverns of Luray.
In the Land of waterfalls in North Carolina he had made many sketches, but the young man was the most impressed by the Connestee Falls that looked like out of a fairy tale.
He had visited two more National parks, the Great Smoky in Tennessee and the one with the hot springs in Arkansas.
But Alex’ portfolio had been really filled in Colorado with the impressive monuments in the Garden of the gods and in the canyon of the ancients monuments. He regretted it that there weren’t any helicopters left so that he could have taken a flight over the canyon.
For food he had either hunted or helped now and then the people on a lonesome farm or in a little village with their work in exchange for food and a bed. Some of them had begged him to stay with them, but he had to refuse each time. Alex couldn’t just quit his job this easily.
And now he was here, ready to accede his new job. He had no idea what he would have to do exactly – but it was an offer he had gotten because of an old friend and sure it was a great job.
The vehicle had driven off in a cloud of dust, left him standing alone with his baggage outside the base that stood in a fenced area. A gate opened now in front of him and the soldier standing guard behind gestured him to come in.
Introducing himself Alex said while pulling out the letter with the offer out of his jacket, “Hey, I’m Alex Whitman.”
“Welcome on Holloman Base, Whitman,” answered the other, shaking his hand. “Good to have you here. Please register at the best room – you’ll find it just behind the main door of the building in the middle.”
While Alex walked to path to the main building – a huge complex – the door opened and an older man with a huge grin on his face hurried towards him.
“Alex, I’m so glad you finally arrived! How was your journey? You have to tell me everything.” The man pulled Alex into a bear-hug.
“Jeffrey, it’s really good to see you again,” said Alex’ with a chuckle while patting the other’s back. “And thanks that you pulled strings for me – I really look forward to this job.”
Jeffrey released him. “Come, you have to register and then I show you your room. It will be just small but at least something on your own. The government wants to jolly their soldiers along out here.” He laughed hearty.
“Seems like,” responded the younger man. “But tell me – why all this secrecy? What are we doing here?”
Jeffrey took on an official tone. “I shouldn’t tell you before you have been sworn to secrecy. But we know each other since your childhood, so I can tell you this. Extraterrestrials -and their spaceships. No kidding.”
“Oh please, Jeffrey – Aliens? Are you serious?” Alex laughed a bit nervously.
The other man stopped and turned to him, placing a hand on his shoulder. “Yes, Alex. I’m deadly serious. Here you will see things that you never have dreamt about before. But remember – a violation of the secrecy will be punished hard.”
*************************
Old manor house to the earlier North Atkinson Avenue, Roswell, residence of the cougars 23rd of May
„Everything is all right with your baby, Daphne.” Diane Evans was smiling contently.
“And I have rarely seen a pregnant woman as healthy as you.“ She patted the arm of the young cougar women. “You can dress yourself again.“
Daphne slipped into her slip and buttoned up her dress. The doctor began packing up her equipments, supported by her taciturn fair-haired tall daughter Isabel who always accompanied her mother on her home visits.
“Diane?“ The normally so self-confident black-haired young woman seemed suddenly very shy.
The older blonde woman turned to her and Daphne swallowed nervously.
“We have a protégé since four days and… she is rather ill. Please – do you have the time to take a look at her?” She stammered.
“Certainly, Daphne.“ Diane swivelled to the door that was kept open by Isabel. “Lead me forthwith to her.”
The young woman walked in front of the doctor and her daughter to the half opened door just beside her own room. Diane wanted to step inside but was held back again.
“Please,” Daphne had grabbed the arm of the older woman and regarded her begging. “Don’t’ tell anybody of her.“
Diane exchanged a surprised look with her daughter, who reflected the look just as uncomprehending and shrugged her shoulders. Well, this mystery would surely be solved in an instant.
“Daphne,” said Diane then gently and tried to pass by her, “if your guest really is so ill, you shouldn’t obstruct the passage but rather let me through.”
Somewhat unwilling the young woman stepped to the side and gave to the doctor the precedence.
Inside the chamber, Audrey was sitting at the bedside of a very pale delicate young woman and placed evenly a new damp compress on her forehead.
Audrey lifted her head and regarded Diane with a look for help. “I don’t know further,” said she with tired voice and almost crying. “Whatever I try, her fever continues to rise.“
The doctor hurried at the side of the young woman. “What did you give her up till now?”
„Elder bloom tea as well as chamomile and lady’s mantle. And we even gave her a cold bath, but it was of no use.“
“Lady’s mantle?“ The older woman thought surprised and furrowed then her brows. “Why Lady’s mantle if she has fever?“
She seized the thermometer that Isabel stretched to her and took the temperature of the girl. A part of her registered the size of the closed eyes and the tapered ears. But for questions there would be time enough later.
After a minute the thermometer gave a beep and Diane read the indication.
“43 degrees?! Isabel, please give me the stethoscope.“ Explaining she was turning to Daphne and Audrey. “I want to eavesdrop her heart and the lungs.“
Daphne nodded and opened the top buttons at Amarela’s flannel nightgown that was again wet of sweat. The girl’s heartbeat was fast but strong and no suspicious noise was to be heard on her lungs.
Diane shook her head uncomprehending. Just why did the girl have such a high fever? “Do you have an explanation for her illness? Was she infected by someone?” asked she the two young women.
Daphne and Audrey regarded each other silently.
“I am not certain,“ murmured finally the younger one of them. “She was raped… several times… so far we know along some days. But if this can be the reason?”
With pinched lips the doctor brushed aside the blanket and pushed up the seam of the young woman’s nightgown. Her face became even more serious, the more blue marks her eyes were seeing. .
Hardly a piece of her golden brown skin was visible anymore on Amarela's inner thighs and the area of the hips as well as the rest of the abdomen was in no better condition.
Diane removed the damp - slightly turned red with blood – compress on Amarela’s shame and searched with her eyes then Daphne’s view. “I must examine her – But I fear that it will rankle her.“
The pregnant woman understood - she kneeled down at the top of the bed, held with her left hand comforting Amarela’s left one and wrapped her right arm becalming around the girl, whispering quietly to her.
Diane made the necessary examinations so fast she could, nevertheless pain-fulfilled cries shrilled through the whole house.
******
Downstairs, Andrew shrugged together in his armchair and the book that he had skimmed through dropped out of his hand. Raoul put reassuring his hand on the other man’s shoulder.
“Calmly man,“ the cougar’s leader said appeasing. “Diane knows what she does. Have confidence in her.“
Andrew shook Raoul’s hand off and jumped up. He ran with both hands through his hair, a desperate expression on his face. “You don't understand, Raoul. I promised her that here nobody would hurt her. I must go to her.“ He took the way in long steps and stood shortly thereafter in the door of the sickroom.
One of Diane's sons had accompanied mother and sister and hung out in the fireplace room with those of the cougars, who had nothing else to do in the moment. With the first cry that was heard he took up contact with his sister. “Isabel? What’s the matter? Do you need me up there?”
She shooed the handsome black-haired out of her thoughts. “I have no time for you now, Max.“
Yet he got a glimpse of the screaming girl through his sister’s eyes and whistled low through his teeth. Such a beauty, even if not his fancy. But his small brother could like her. Maybe she was the one who would tear Michael out of his brooding about his broken relationship?
***************
„Her womb as well as the vagina are infected– not a miracle with these injuries,“ determined Diane after she had covered Amarela again. “The fever seems to be a reaction of her body to it. But I do not dare to give her antibiotics when I don't know how she would react to them.
At least she is not pregnant.“
She threw an asking look to her daughter. Isabel nodded hardly noticeably, a gesture only meant for her mother.
Diane cleared her throat with a little cough. “My older son is sitting downstairs. Promise me you won’t tell that to anybody – but he could heal her.“
„Heal her?“ Audrey asked surprised, raising up an eyebrow.
"But he would have to touch her in addition near the spot where she’s hurt,” explained Dian more precisely.
„No,“ snapped Daphne, narrowing her brown eyes. “I do not permit that a man touches her again.“
„But then she can possibly never have children, if she survives the fever at all,” argued the doctor.
“I can’t imagine that she wants to be touched again by a man sometime. And it’s well possible that the physicians of her folk can heal her some day – if she will ever be found by them. Certainly they search their lost daughter.” Daphne fondled Amarela’s curls. The sick girl had closed her lids, exhausted by her own cries.
„Then we must try to fight her fever and the infections with natural medications,” declared Diane. “Daphne, please prepare some cold packs for her calves and her wrists,” ordered she then busy. “Audrey, do you have thyme in the kitchen? Tea made of t fights the fever – and loosens cramps at the same time. Mix it a bit with elderberry blossom, meadowsweet and peppermint. And for the internal curing as well as the infects still more Lady’s mantle, mixed with chamomile and goose finger herb. Do you have all those herbs in the house?” .
Audrey considered briefly the list of the desired herbs and the existing supplies, comparing them silently and nodded then.
She rose but Diane was holding her back still one moment more. “I’ll go home for a short time and will make some suppositories. But after this I will return as fast as I can and will stay here for some days. Our priority at first is to break her fever.”
The doctor rose now too and noticed Andrew, who was leaning with hanging shoulders at the doorframe, looking lost.
“May I enter?“ He asked the women shyly, his eyes fixed on the young woman lying on the bed.
Daphne snorted, but Audrey smiled at him in an effort to cheer him up. “I do not know, whether she recognizes you, Andrew. But perhaps your voice will reach her and give her some comfort.”
Raoul’s girlfriend left the room towards the kitchen, while Diane walked to the main door, followed by her daughter, who called softly the name of her brother. Max appeared a second later and followed the two women out of the house.
Andrew entered the room and sat down beside Amarela on the bed. He seized her right hand that had freed itself from the covers and bedded it between his own rough hands. The young man swallowed empty – she was so terribly pale, looked almost translucent.
“I am so sorry,” he whispered with throaty voice. “I’m so sorry that we didn’t bring you to security much earlier. Please, get well again. Stay with us, small one.” A tiny movement of her hand let him look up, tears shimmering in his brown eyes.
She had opened her eyes a bit and regarded him. A faint smile stole itself toilsome on her lips. “Andrew,“ whispered she weakly, “not… cry…“ She tried to lift her hand to touch his face, but had not the strength to do it so she let if fall back on the blanket again. She distorted her face when a pain attack flooded her body.
The young man felt perfectly helpless. He stroked her hand, until Audrey returned with two jugs of freshly brewed teas on a tablet, putting them down on the small table.
“Can you help me, please?” she asked and tore him in such a way from his cloudy intimateness. He put his arm around Amarela and straightened her up at bit so that Audrey could hold one of the filled cups at her lips.
The maiden swallowed automatically when she felt the hot liquid in her mouth. Raoul’s girlfriend had sweetened the tea strongly with honey, so that the beverage tasted better and would supply Amarela besides with some calories, that were badly needed.
Two hours later Diane was back, again accompanied by Isabel and Max. Isabel wished to help her mother and Max wanted to be present for the case that someone suddenly would wish for his talent.
***************
Nobody in the house of the cougars slept in this night, because Amarela’s fever rose even more in the evening and at the beginning of the night, so that Diane already feared that they would lose the fight for her life. The young woman suffered from hallucinations, whispering incomprehensible words in her language and struggled her blankets repeatedly away in the attempt to resist against the ghosts that tormented her in her mind.
Again and again her nurses covered her determined, for her whole body was shivering although she was bathed in sweat because of the fever.
Doreen took the nightshift from Daphne and when Floris fetched his black-haired darling, the young woman threw herself into his arms and burst into tears. Gently the blond young man led his girlfriend to their room. Audrey too had been replaced, by Floris likewise blond sister Fiona. Like Daphne, the dark-haired leader was fetched from her companion.
Raoul put affectionately his arm around Audrey's shoulders, when they went downstairs together to join the other young people; where they waited the next hours, drinking acorn-coffee and playing cards and discussing low-voiced.
Towards noon, Amarela was relaxing finally and slid slowly in a restorative sleep. Diane took her temperature once more and sighed relieved when the thermometer stopped still at the temperature of 39 degrees.
“I think she rode the fever out,“ said she to the two youngsters, who were with her in the room. “Go to rest, I will stay with her.”
The doctor took place on the armchair in the room and leaned back, sipping at the cup of tea, which she had poured for herself an instant before, and could finally brood over the girl.
She hadn’t believed the stories back at the beginning of May that told of strange lights and of thunder-like noise in a night that was free of any thunderstorm - although she knew some of the eye-witnesses actually for a long time and particularly as credent people.
And although her foster children themselves did not came from this earth. She closed her eyes and called herself in memory this particular day almost 16 years before.
**********************
Philip and she had moved not long ago into their inherited house, turning their backs to the life in the city and were beginning to develop a new lifestyle here just a bit outside of the little town of Roswell.
Philip had accepted the post of the Sheriff and she hade made - only some years out of the university - a name as a doctor for everything.
One morning in July, on a Sunday, she was standing in the kitchen and prepared an extensive breakfast. She held the frying pan in the hand and was just turning a pancake, when suddenly a small dark shock of hair appeared outside on the Veranda and a little boy tried to see through the window. Out of fright she let the pan fall on the floor and this caused a considerable noise. The dark hairs disappeared out of sight and she heard the sound of fast departing running feet.
“Neighbour kids,“ was her first thought – but then it crossed her mind that the Winters, their next neighbours, lived two miles away and that their children were already grown up and had moved away.
Thus she went to the front door and stepped outside on the veranda. Yet there wasn’t anything so see anymore. From the barn she heard now a slight rattle. Carefully she crossed the yard and peeked into the building, in which a strange twilight prevailed at his time of day.
“Hello? Are you here?“ She called gently.
A quiet rustling noise sounded and she moved further into the barn. In the back of the building hay was piled up and from there had come the noise before. A part of the heap of hay trembled slightly. Diane approached it slowly.
“Why don’t you come out of there? I see that you are in there,” said she gently and squat a little bit, stretching out her hand. Hay swished anew and a small black-haired boy emerged from it and regarded her with eyes opened wide and fearfully, yet with hope, dried grass stuck in the uncombed curls.
“Come,“ She lured with soft voice.“ I won’t do anything to you. But I have fresh made pancakes in the kitchen. Would you like some of them?“
A quiet sneezing was to be heard from under the hay. The boy twitched and furrowed his brows distrustfully.
“Do you have company there with you?” Diane asked curious.
He plunged again in his soft hiding place and when he reappeared just seconds later, his right arm was wrapped around a small girl with blond angelic curls which snuffled sniffling.
The woman opened her arms inviting for the two children. The girl regarded her first shyly and looked then questioning at the boy beside her. He tilted his head a bit to the side, eying the woman in front of them considering and nodded then slowly, a gesture that conjured a radiating smile on the face of the small girl.
She climbed from the hay mountain and threw herself into the arms of the woman, who embraced the child affectionately.
Diane threw a look over the blond curls of the girl to the boy. He watched the scene happening in front of him a bit puzzled and still seemed to be irresolute. But then he shrugged his tiny shoulders, reached into the hay and protracted a smaller boy, who was putting instantly a thumb in his mouth to suck on it.
Diane rose, holding the girl that had wrapped her arms around her neck, on her arms. “Come,“ said she inviting and signed the boys gesticulating to her. The older one helped the small one down of the heap of hay and they followed the woman, who carried their sister, inside the house.
Shortly thereafter, the three small children, still naked, sat at the kitchen table and plugged by hand and with pure pleasure pancakes with maple syrup in their mouths.
When she had entered the house with them, she had wanted to shoo them first to the guestroom so she could search them something to wear.
But when the children had smelled the delicious scents that emerged from the kitchen, they had started to cry, hungry as they were and Diane couldn’t refuse them to enter the room.
She estimated their age on three to five years and was slightly bewildered that they were so quiet. Up to now, they still had said not a word.
Now she was standing at the stove for a further load of pancakes. She heard a step creak when Philip came down the stairs. Surprised he stopped in the door of the kitchen.
“What?“
As fast she could she went to her husband and put a finger on his lips.
“Shhh, not so loud,“ said she gently. “They are a bit frightful.“
When she turned again to the table, Diane had to suppress a laughter. The sight was really somewhat weird, three small naked dirty children at the kitchen table, their faces smeared with maple syrup and the smallest one – well, he had even managed to lubricate himself the syrup into he chestnut-brown hair. The three stared curiously to the man who held the attention of the fair-haired woman in the moment.
“Where do they come from?“ Philip asked quietly, trying not to frighten the kids.
“They must have slept outside on the swing,“ answered his wife.“ I fear they were suspended – how else could three small children emerge out of nowhere in such a way.“ She regarded him pleadingly, placing a hand on his arm. “Can they stay here?“
Philip knew how much his woman wished for children of her own – a whish he could never fulfil because of an illness that he had had as a child.
“Dear, first I must inquire whether they are missed by anybody, you know that.” He lifted a hand and caressed her cheek. “But if they really have no family I’ll look that they will stay with us. Promised.”
He entered the room and went to the coffee machine, pouring in a cup of the strong beverage and took a deep breath, already feeling how he became more awake just by the tasty smell of it. Then Philip pulled back a chair and sat down at the table too, putting a pancake on his plate.
“May I have the syrup please?“ He asked the dark-haired and pointed at the jug.
The boy lifted it up carefully and handed it to him. “Thanks.“ „ hanks,“ mimicked him the small one.
The three-year one reached a bit too hastily for his frosted glass and knocked it over. It fell from the table and smashed on the floor. Frightened the boy began to cry but the blond girl put gently her hand on his shoulder.
Diane crouched and started to collect the pieces of broken glass.
“Ouch.“ A particular sharp fragment had bored itself into her hand. She pulled it carefully out of there. The older boy widened his amber-coloured eyes when he saw the blood.
Before Diane could reach for a cloth, he was at her side and put, the forehead wrinkled in concentration, his small hand on the wound. She watched disbelieving how the bleeding stopped and the cut disappeared. Her view met that of her man, who looked just as incredulously.
“I don’t think that I must look for their family,“ stated Philip. “If they are missed by someone, then surely not here.“ He left open what he meant exactly with “here” but to Diane is was rather clear.
Overjoyed that they would keep the children, she disposed the pieces of broken glass and poured a fresh glass of milk for the small boy, this time in a plastic cup to be on the safe side.
After the breakfast, Diane put the children into the bathtub and washed off them the dust of the desert – examining them during the bath in a jiffy for injuries. But except slight sunburn and a bit sore feet they seemed to be in rude health. The small ones splashed diverted in the water and laughed merrily, chattering now in an incomprehensible language with one another.
Philip had climbed meanwhile on the attic and rummaged it to look for kids clothing. His uncle, to whom they owed the house, had led in former times a jumble sale in the city and had collected therefore all kinds of things. And really Philip found some crates with clothing. It wasn’t fitting the children accurately but would suffice for the first days till Diane could go to the next bigger town to buy them new clothes.
They called the oldest Max, after Philip’s uncle, the girl Isabel, after Diane's grandmother and the small Michael, after Philip’s father. The children could speak the English language within short time and understood very fast that they were allowed to use their abilities only if nobody was in the proximity - only when their parents permitted it.
The three had nearly no memories of their time before the Evans, could only tell the fact that they had woken up in a cave together and then had run by the desert, until they discovered the house of the Evans.
Diane and Philip told their neighbours and the public authorities that Philip’s sister and her husband had died in an accident, leaving their children in the welfare of their only relatives. Philip had some colleague that owed him a favour and forged the documents to proof this story, along with birth certificates for the kids. Since the couple didn’t yet live for a long time in this area, nobody knew that Philip had neither brothers nor sisters.
Gradually the children forgot their own language when they acclimatized themselves into their new life.
tbc