The Mandate of Heaven (25 page)

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Authors: Mike Smith

Tags: #Romance, #Science Fiction, #Science Fiction & Fantasy

BOOK: The Mandate of Heaven
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“I hope you’re not currently having any homicidal thoughts?” Alex asked hoarsely, voice still heavily laden with sleep.

“That depends on your explanation,” she said.  “What am I doing here, with this?” she asked, waving the pistol under his throat.

“Careful with that thing,” Alex replied nervously, rearing back in the sofa, trying to make some space between him and the weapon.  “It’s possible you still don’t have full control of it, you certainly didn’t last night, almost took my head off,” he muttered under his breath.

“Explain.  Quickly,” Jessica insisted ominously.

Alex hurriedly recounted the events of the past twelve hours, purposely vague about the lengths he had to go to force her to bond with the weapon.  Hoping she would have been too comatose to remember, or if she did, just writing if off as a strange dream.

“What about you?  Won’t you suffer from these same symptoms?” she asked, obviously sceptical of his explanation.

“You and Abercrombie should get together sometime and compare notes.  You both worry too much.  I’ll be fine.  Now, if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got a lot of work—” He made to rise and make a hasty exit, but was unceremoniously shoved back down into the chaise longue.  He took a quick, indrawn breath, when she suddenly straddled him, continuing to press down against his chest, until he found himself pinned against the back of the couch.  He’d forgotten how strong that she was.  “Uh, what are you doing?” he asked, tilting his head backwards, as she caressed his neck with her lips, then her teeth and tongue.  The sensation made him shudder and writhe against her.  “Are you sure that you’re completely recovered?”

“I’m just testing a theory.  You see, I’ve the strangest recollection of you doing this to me.  But surely that cannot be, you wouldn’t take advantage of a person like that, would you?”

Alex flinched.  Unsure if it was an instinctive reaction to her touch, or words.

“So I thought it would be best to put theory to practice,” Jessica continued on unhurriedly.  “A comparison if you will.  To see if my memory matches reality.”  With that she rose up on her knees until she was looking down at him, achingly slowly she lowered her head until her lips were almost touching his.  “You’ve got no objection, have you?” she breathed.

Alex didn’t know what to say, his senses were overloaded, she seemed to be all encompassing, his defences crumbling against her combined assault.  She moved closer, until he could feel the heat coming off her body.  Then all remaining thought fled his mind as her lips touched his, and he instinctively opened his mouth, permitting her access.  One kiss, then another.  A quick brush of her tongue that left him rigid and painful.  He moaned and arched into her before he could stop himself.  His hand instinctively tightened around her as he thrust against her, and he moaned again.  His heart had begun to pound in his chest and his groin was a giant ache.  He was going to need a long, cold bath.

“Seems I was wrong.”

His heart was hammering so hard it took him a minute to process what she’d just said.  “What?” he gasped in shock.  But she was already pushing away from him, leaving him alone, bereft and hard as a rock on the couch.

“My memory was nothing like that.  Obviously I was wrong, my fault.”  With a wicked smile she swept from the room.

“Wait,” Alex called after her.  “What do you mean, nothing like that?  Better?  Worse?”  But she’d already left, leaving nothing behind but his indignation.

*****

Alex set down the axe, wiping the perspiration from his forehead.  It was turning out to be an incredibly hot and humid day.  Conditions far from ideal to be chopping down trees, but he was left with very little choice.  His fortune had walked out of the door, along with Corporal Rifkin, and he’d been depending on those funds to pay for the repairs to his estate.  Therefore, as the repairs were obviously not going to happen by themselves, he had decided to do it the old fashioned way, by hand.

But when he’d first considered this approach, he hadn’t been expecting to do the task with such an archaic tool as an axe.  He hurt in places that he had not known even existed…

“You’re not going to finish this today, if you keep stopping like this,” a deceptively sweet voice called out from behind.

Alex shut his eyes resignedly.  When he’d considered this course of action, he also hadn’t envisaged any spectators.  “You’re more than welcome to give a helping hand?  Isn’t it you who is always reminding everyone of your superior strength?”

“You would dare even ask such a thing, of a Lady?” the voice replied with mock horror.

“My father always says that hard manual labour is no place for a woman,” a much younger, shrill, voice added helpfully. The eldest son of the tenant farmer, whose roof was in much need of repair had magnanimously volunteered his help.  So far this had mostly consisted of advice, most of it
un
helpful.

“Obviously it’s no place for your father, either.  Otherwise he would be here, helping me,” Alex groused.

The smirk on Jessica’s face clearly showed that she had overheard him, but the boy obviously hadn’t, as he continued on undaunted.

“My father says that the only place for a woman is in the kitchen—”

“Not surprising considering how much he likes her apple pies,” Alex commented.

“—and giving birth.”

“Lucky for you,” Alex said.  “As he passed out during the birth of your last brother, and he wasn’t even in the room at the time.  I take it he only mentions these things out of earshot of your mother?” he enquired.

“Oh yes,” the boy replied with an earnest expression.  “Otherwise mother would box his ears, just like she does with us.”

“Sensible woman,” Alex nodded with a straight face.  “Anyway, take it from me, women are far more useful than for just cooking and child rearing.”

“They are?” the boy sounded doubtful, obviously sorely lacking for sisters in the family.

“Why Lord Greystone,” Jessica interrupted, laughter dancing in her eyes.  “What other possible use could we be?”

Approaching the pair, hidden by the tall grass and reclining against a tree, Alex stared down at them, before offering Jessica his hand.  She hesitated for a moment, but obviously her curiosity piqued, she finally took his hand and he hauled her to her feet, pulling her close.

“I can think of a few things, like where we left off this morning,” he breathed into her ear, making her flush.

“I think not, you stink,” she pushed him away.

“It’s called sweat.  The result of hard, honest, manual labour.  You should give it a try sometime.”

“Chopping down trees seems a bit barbaric to me.”  She glanced at the blade still buried in the ground.  “I think that’s more a job for someone who has at least one Y chromosome, anyway I thought you said you could handle it.”

“Sure, I can handle it,” Alex smirked, “but you want to leave the poor boy with the impression that cooking and cleaning is all women can do?”

“I don’t think that whacking it,” she eyed the tree warily, “With a sharp stick is going to do much to improve his opinion.”

“I agree, so why don’t you instead put on a real demonstration for him?”

“Like what?”

“He’s an adolescent teenager, how do you think?”

“Strip, and run around naked?”

“Perhaps later, when we’re alone,” Alex smiled broadly, “but here, now?  Use my pistol.  Teenagers and ray guns?  It’s in their DNA.”

“You want me to shoot holes in it?” she asked dubiously.  “I doubt it’s going to be much use for a roof then, surely it’ll leak.”

“You asked me once how I shot you, yet you were unharmed, remember?”

“I remember.”

“Well, here is the secret known to none but I—it’s not a gun at all.”

“Of course it is,” Jessica looked at him as if he was a few marbles short of a full set.  “It’s got a muzzle, barrel, breech and a grip. I think, aim, then shoot and it goes
bang
, well, metaphorically speaking at least.”

“No, it just
looks
like a gun and
can
function like a gun, so naturally everybody just assumes it is one.”

“Well, what is it then?”

“A miniaturised, portable, self-contained fusion reactor with focusing crystals; all controlled via a neurological interface.”


What
?”

“Okay, so Professor Alcubierre usually left it up to others to think up names for his inventions.  Just goes to show you can’t be a genius at everything.  It can do anything that you ask of it or, more to the point, anything that you can
think
of.”  At the confused expression on her face, he added, “Perhaps a demonstration is in order.”  Taking her by the shoulders he turned her round until she was facing the tree.  “Take out the pistol and then close your eyes,” he ordered.

“How can I shoot anything, with my eyes closed?” she complained, but followed his instructions, nonetheless.

“Good,” he praised.  “Now, picture the tree in your head.  Imagine what sort of beam you would need to cut through it. The beam would need to be focused, intense and continuous like a sharp blade.  Can you picture it in your mind?”

“Yes, but now what?”

“Now hold that thought and open your eyes.”

Her eyes fluttered open and she glanced at the tree.  Still standing there, broad, tall and unharmed.  “Nothing happened,” she complained.

Smiling enigmatically, Alex leaned forward, while ensuring that he remained firmly behind her and breathed softly in her ear, so quietly that it was barely a whisper.

“Now.”

*****

Now?

Jessica’s nose twitched in bewilderment.
Now what?
  But as soon as the thought had crossed her mind the pistol came alive in her hands, just like a thousand times before, when she’d ordered it to shoot or fire.  As the weapon came to life, so did her comprehension, that from the very beginning it hadn’t been the words that had been important, but the intent.

A mental trigger release.

But unlike in the past the weapon did not fall dormant, for it was functioning just as she had imagined.  Continuously, focused and intense.  She found that as long as she kept the thought, in the forefront of her mind, it continued unimpeded, yet if she let her mind wander, the beam began to wither and die.  A cough from behind reminded her that she still had a task to complete and, tightly focusing her thoughts, the beam grew more intense until it was pencil thin, a fusion knife that could literally cut through anything.  Waving the beam across the breadth of the tree trunk, it sliced cleanly all the way through the tree.

A few seconds to do what would have taken Alex hours.

When certain that she’d cut the entire way through, she dismissed the thought from her mind and once again the weapon fell still.

“Well?  What do you think?” she asked, turning to face Alex with a smile, proud of her accomplishment.

“I think that you’ve gained an admirer for life,” he replied dryly, motioning with his head in the direction of the farmer’s boy, who had risen to his feet and was staring at her, mouth agape, an expression of childlike wonder on his face.  “I guess that means I’ll have to compete for your affections from now on, although I think he’s a little young for you…”

“Uh, Lord Greystone,” the boy called out.

“Why? Jealous?” Jessica laughed, ignoring him.

“Lady Hadley?”

“Not at all,” Alex replied mesmerised, staring into her eyes, still glowing with elation.  “A little bit of hero worship never hurt anyone, however what with your ego—”

“Look out!” the warning was shouted out, followed immediately after by a horrifying
crack
.

Jessica didn’t even have a chance to react, before she was abruptly thrown aside, moments before the massive tree came crashing down on the spot where she had been standing only a split second before.  Shaking her head to clear the shock, she rose to her knees, astonished to see nothing but leaves and branches blocking her vision.  She wondered if Alex could have chosen a smaller tree for his demonstration.

Alex.

She couldn’t see him, but he had been standing right beside her.  She frantically started pushing branches and leaves aside, trying to reach the spot where they’d just been standing.  A moan of pain caused her to momentarily pause and another groan had her moving in the direction of the sound.  Clearing away a pile of twigs and leaves she was relieved to discover Alex’s prostrate form.  Falling down beside him, she started to check him for any sign of injury.

“Timber,” Alex uttered, dazed.  “Full marks for effort, but room for improvement with the execution and direction.”

“I thought that you were dead,” Jessica exclaimed, pounding on his chest in relief.

“How come you’re always on top of me, whenever I awake?”

“Lord Greystone, Lady Hadley,” a high pitched voice called out, accompanied right after by a face, beaming down at them.  “That was so cool.  Are you going to do it again?”

*****

“Right, now that you’ve finally graced us with your presence, Murdoch.  We can get this planning meeting underway.”

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