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The Symbiont
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The Symbiont
A Symbiont Time Travel Adventure
Book One
by
T.L.B. Wood
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ISBN: 978-1-61417-833-0
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This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
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Copyright © 2012, 2016 by Tara Brooks Wood. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions.
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Table of Contents
Cover
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Meet the Author
Dedication
For Lilly Anna
Prologue
The young pup stretched, slowly awakening within the warmth of the den where he lay with his aged mother. Wise one was she, having found this secure location to bear him when she was heavy in her pregnancy. His lupine features stretched in a yawn, and he placed his long muzzle across her flank in a gesture meant both to soothe her and comfort himself. Her life force was waning as she prepared to die. He tried not to concentrate on it, for he needed to stay focused, and grief would overwhelm him, he knew. As his mother took a deep sighing breath, his head jerked up, fearful for a moment, but then she took another breath, and then another. It was not time—yet.
His mother was old, even for one of her species, having seen over nine hundred winters. As they lay there together, he felt her reach out to him with her mind which, despite her infirmity, remained focused and penetrating. She not only knew his thoughts but also could discern his feeling state. He smiled to himself as she told him to not worry. A serious minded one, he could not help but worry a little. Ever since his birth, she had transferred to him her experiences and knowledge—all that he would need to survive in a hostile world—in anticipation of her death. Alone, he would need everything she could pass along just to even the odds he might survive.
As they lay together, she shared memories of a time before his birth. She and other of her species, both beast and the humanoid brothers who were their companions, were gathered around a campfire, sharing the precious warmth. From out of the darkness sprang a group of early humans, intent upon a massacre, fearful of these strange beings—unfamiliar and therefore frightening. The humanoids and canines formed quick parings, and, as they did so, began to vanish from sight. Pop, pop, pop—one after another disappeared, beginning a journey to an uncertain destiny. As the young pup's mother ran towards her humanoid symbiont, he turned to protect another member of their party and, in doing so, was clubbed down. She felt his life spark disappear and knew in that moment that her exit from this place was forever closed. In grave danger, she turned and ran. The primitive humans only pursued a short distance before giving up the chase, no match for her speed.
The young male shared her memories of loss and empathetically experienced the intense sorrow; it was as if half of her had died. Shifting his weight, he burrowed his muzzle deeply in the rufous fur of her neck, trying to distract her from her thoughts. It would not be long now, as he felt her life spark slowly extinguish—like a candle was guttering. What would his future hold, he wondered, alone in this primitive world with no companion? Once again, his mother's gentle and familiar mind reached out to his. "Be good," she reminded him. With that, she took a deep last shuddering breath and was gone. He had no tear ducts but inwardly cried for the loss of his mother, his sole companion in an unforgiving world.
Chapter 1
The sensation of rushing movement forward had ceased; after a moment, I became aware that I was lying on a hard surface with some object digging painfully into my lower back. I could feel the racing of my heart and lay there, with my eyes closed, until the beats normalized. Finally, I hazarded opening one eye to canvass my surroundings. With gratitude and relief, I recognized the familiar pieces of furniture, books, whatnots and all the other things which came together as a part of my household. The gentle chaos was comforting to me. My slight disorientation, as if I were awakening from a deep dream state, was beginning to dissipate.
I managed to slide my hand beneath my back and remove the offending article on which I lay—one of my old sneakers. I felt, as I always did following a time shift, as if I'd been beaten with a stick... no, make that a forest of sticks. I glanced across the small room and saw a ball of collected dust beneath a chest of drawers, a little dirt tumbleweed I'd missed at some point. Well, I never had laid claim to the title of most meticulous housekeeper on the planet—and felt little remorse.
My little house was comfortably situated on a quiet street, tree lined and old enough to still have sidewalks that were cracked by age and use. Though small, my home would have been the favored dwelling of any number of single people or young couples who were starting out on the brave new adventure of a forged life together. When humans looked at my face, they were comforted to believe that a fellow member of their species gazed back with a clear and honest eye. But I am not human—I am a symbiont. And the large creature who lay next to me on the dusty floor was one, too, despite the fact he looked more like a reddish colored wolf with the size and bulk of a mastiff.
I groaned as I sat up, thinking that no hangover on earth quite matched up to the big headed feeling experienced at that moment. As I changed positions, I spied Kipp, lying close nearby. He was still, his back to me, and for a moment, I had a brief dart of anxiety until I saw that his sides were rising evenly as he breathed. Reaching out my hand, I lightly stroked his fur covered shoulder, not wanting to startle him since this was his first experience with time travel. His mind reached out to me, comfortingly, in the easy manner of telepaths.
"Are you okay, Petra?" he asked. His head stirred and he turned to gaze at me with his slanted amber eyes.
"Yes, I think so. How about you?" I asked in return.
He gave the equivalent of a mental head nod.
"Is it always like this?" he asked.
"Well, Kipp, if you feel like you've been down the rapids without a paddle or even a boat, then, yes, you are pretty normal."
Considering his youth and inexperience, I was proud of my new friend. Time shifting was not for the faint of heart and fewer and fewer of our kind even took the challenge. If we weren't by nature such curious little busy bodies, the need to time travel probably would have died off many years ago.
"So, this is your home?" he asked, looking around the room with interest since he had never been inside a modern dwelling—make that any dwelling—before.
I could read his thoughts, of course, and became a little defensive as he started to comment on all the clutter and junk with which I had surrounded myself.
"I admit there is a lot of, well, stuff, here, but I need all these things," I finally said in response.
He widened his eyes and gave me a skeptical gaze. With that, he rose, stretched in a bow, and silently began padding through my small house; I could read his surprise and interest as he wandered from room to room.
"What is this?" he questioned me, his thoughts drifting to me from the rear of the house.
I rose, somewhat shaky in my stance, and wandered back to where he waited. I found him next to a pile of tattered fabric, the remnants of what had once been a wool Hudson Bay blanket. It was tucked in a corner of the small bedroom.
"I smell canine," Kipp observed. "This was Tula's den," he stated.
"Tula could have her choice of anywhere to sleep—she liked this place best of all. She could have stayed in my bed with me, too, but she preferred this old blanket. Tula tended to stretch out and was restless at night." The memory was still painful, and I swallowed hard as I stared at the blanket.
The bond between me and my symbiont was the driving force behind the capacity for time travel. Tula—my other half as it were—had been killed during my recent trip to a chosen time in pre-history where I was dispatched to study a tribe of early humans. Kipp, a contemporary of those ancient times, bonded with me in a moment that still seemed to be the p
roduct of a miraculous spark of energy. Without him, I would have died, some 70,000 years in the past, a prisoner stuck in time with no way home.
But our choice, Kipp's and mine, had not been without consequences. My group of symbionts would, no doubt, strongly disapprove of my decision to interrupt the natural flow of time in such a manner. Had I changed the future by bringing Kipp home with me? Or should I have lived out my life in a cold cave, waiting for starvation to overcome me?
Kipp continued to shift his gaze around the room. Through the slatted plantation shutters, the late afternoon sun played across the taupe walls, stabbing here and there to illuminate the small space. It was a dark room as I had always preferred it to be, tiny and dimly lit. He walked over to a library table and looked at some of the framed pictures grouped there. One was of me as a young child; he recognized the picture and smiled in his thoughts. He turned to look at me.
"Can we sleep like we did in the cave, lying together with my head on your shoulder?" In his appeal there was a plaintive note, just for a moment—a tiny remnant of the orphaned pup.
"Yes, Kipp, I'd like that, too." My knees were still wobbly and I folded myself into the overstuffed chair that had always been my favorite reading nook. Kipp walked to me in concern, resting his muzzle on my forearm.
"I'm okay," I answered his worried inquiry. "You are younger than I and such travel takes less of a toll on your body."
Kipp's head suddenly jerked back and a moment later I felt it, too. Other symbionts were probing us gently, with curiosity towards Kipp and a mixture of welcome and annoyance directed at me. Rapidly following that exchange, Kipp looked at me and his disapprobation of the negative feelings was clearly palpable. Through no great effort on my part, Kipp had become the leading member of the tiny Petra Goodgame fan club. Closing his eyes, he rested his muzzle on my arm again. His ability to concentrate and organize his thoughts, as well as his capacity to marshal his emotions was amazing to me. His telepathic abilities, from my brief time of observation since our first encounter, appeared to be far superior to any living symbiont. His upcoming meeting with the modern version of our kind would be, to say the least, very interesting.
Contemporary symbionts lacked the ability of accurate thought transmission over latitudinal distances, and it was but a short moment later that the silence was broken by the ring of the telephone. Kipp gave a start, never having heard such a noise, but rapidly composed himself as he realized I didn't share his alarm. Picking up the phone, I heard the much loved and familiar voice of Philo, my mentor and friend.
"Petra, glad you are home," he said, hesitating a moment before continuing. "We, of course, realize that Tula is absent; we don't recognize the thoughts of the being that is there with you." His voice trailed off, waiting for me to respond.
"Philo, it's a very long story and I'm exhausted," I began, not wanting to be interrogated at that moment.
"But where is Tula?" he persisted.
With a deep sigh of resignation, I answered him, realizing that his question was appropriate and unavoidable. "Tula didn't make it... there was an accident." My voice drifted off. Philo had been very fond of her.
"So how did you get home?" he resumed, his voice subdued.
"That's quite a story and will take time to unravel. I'll tell all at the debriefing; just let me get some rest first, please?"
Even though Philo's curiosity had to be intense, there was really no objection he could mount, so he grudgingly rang off, leaving Kipp and me to our own devices. Finding a can of chopped chicken in the cupboard, I boiled some rice and mixed that concoction for Kipp. For myself, it was something frozen I managed to pry loose from my freezer. It was gratifying to watch Kipp dig into the food, bolting it down with large mouthfuls. At one point, he looked at me, eyes bright and tail waving like a plume, his thoughts transmitting his intense pleasure. I think he enjoyed his meal more so than I did mine. We would have to feed carefully, I had found from past experience—small amounts and frequently for a while.
After we had finished, I stumbled off to the bedroom, exhausted to the core; with little preparation, I fell onto the sheets, forgoing a bath or any other ablutions. My fatigue was intense and complete. Kipp followed me, and after a few moments considering his approach, he carefully climbed on the bed, confused by the soft, malleable surface, and, after some clumsy attempts to turn around and settle himself, he finally lay down, his head on my shoulder. He hadn't wanted to admit it, but he was at the end of his energy stores, too. It was thus we lay for the next 36 hours.
As Kipp drifted off to sleep, his head on my chest and my hand twisted in his fur, I let my mind revisit the time from which I had just traveled and the events which had taken place. I knew I'd have to give exhausting details upon my interview and debriefing and couldn't stop myself, despite my fatigue, from organizing my impressions.
* * *
The land was harsh and barren, dangerous and remote. Bands of ancient humans had managed to survive there, carving out an existence by becoming as clever and resourceful as the animals they hunted. But I paid the ultimate price in that I lost my beloved Tula, and, with her death, I also lost the ability to time shift back to my century. Even though ours was a shared risk and responsibility, I knew Tula died trying to protect me, and that thought lingered hard and heavy on my soul. Losing a matched symbiont is as profound an event as can occur with our species.
It was fortunate that the group of humans who stumbled upon me, injured and helpless, were as compassionate as they were curious. Even though I differed slightly in appearance, they did not seem to view me as a danger or potentially hostile. Indeed, they were fascinated by me and embraced me to join their small collective. I am slightly embarrassed to say that they viewed me as a good luck charm, a wizard—not exactly a god, but something rather unique.
I was with the tribe of thirty five early humans for about two years, learning their culture, language, and social behavior. That was actually why I had made this journey, what my kind refers to as a time shift. It wasn't for the faint of heart, and many of my species declined the calling, but this exploration of past mysteries was how I made a living. However, I did not anticipate being trapped without a means to return to my century. Being of naturally long life as was usual for one of my species, the two years seemed to pass in a matter of weeks to my perception. During that time, I developed my place in the tribe. The others tended to dote on me, but I stubbornly insisted upon doing my share of work. There was one myth in history that could quickly be dispelled: the men were not just hunters while the women gathered plants, tanned hides and raised the young. The fact was that men and women worked in tandem to bring down large mammals for food. These people were efficient through necessity and used the flesh, fat, bones and every part of the animals they killed.
A mild summer day dawned on the land, which stretched in all directions with low rolling hills to break the vista of green grass and stunted groves of tightly gathered trees. It portended to be a good day for hunting. I tried to linger behind the others as they made preparations to leave the large cave which served as housing for us all. I was not by choice a meat eater but learned to do many things in order to blend into different societies. It would have suited me well to remain at camp while the others engaged in the hunt which, though it might be an unpleasant outing for me, was critical for survival of the people.
Each member of the tribe had a name which was descriptive and action oriented. This was indicative of their language structure, which did not consist of words or letters, but of sounds that encompassed actions and metaphors. In this instance, as all others, my telepathic abilities were a plus in terms of decoding and comprehension. The one I called Leader had early on set the tone towards me that all others respected and followed. Finding me in the snow, exhausted, depleted, and unwilling to leave my dead Tula, Leader gently pulled me away and, sharing his robe for warmth, helped bring me to what would be my home. He named me "She Who Lives with Wolves". Tula was no wolf, but her appearance was understandably deceptive.