stronghold with a red rope. Did you really think that would stop an army?â
âYou do not understand,â he said forcefully. âCho-ocks was a powerful shaman.â
Not powerful enough, she thought, but didnât risk his anger by saying anything. How could she be arguing religious theory with a primitive? With someone who couldnât possibly exist, or be who he said he was? She wanted to look over ather car and assure herself that she hadnât fallen into some kind of a time warp, but would gazing at a hunk of metal make any difference?
âYou do not believe me. You think Cho-ocks was like your leadersâweak. But you are wrong.â
âI didnât sayâwhatâs happening here? Damn it, whatâs going on?â
He laughed at her outburst, the sound hard and filled with something that might be hate, but she thought went further, deeper. Frightened by the intensity of his emotions, she took a backward step with the half-formed thought that she needed to run.
He stopped her by planting himself between her and freedom. Heâd done that before, and she remembered the mix of fear and anticipation that had filled her. The same emotions coursed through her, leaving her without the strength to do anything except fight themâand him.
âWhat are you?â he demanded. âAre you a shaman? Why did you end my forever sleep? Why?â
âForever sleep? What are you talking about?â
Without doing more than shifting his weight from his left hip to his right, he put an end to her outburst. She waited, not wanting to hear what he had to say but sensing that this was why heâd approached her. âI do not belong here. This is not my time. But you walked onto this land, and somehow you reached me.â
âNotâyour time?â
âI do not want to be here. I want back my forever sleep.â
A deep-felt melancholy rode his words. Irrationally, she wanted to fling it away and gift him with something to make him smile. âBut you have destroyed that,â he continued before she could think what she possibly might say. âAnd now I know why.â
âYouâyouâre not saying you were dead? Please donât try to make me believe that.â
âHow little you know! Death or life. That is all your people understand. But there is more. The magic of a great shaman.â
Insane. Insane. But no matter how many times the words echoed inside her, she knew sheâd never say them. Unbelievably aware of his presence, she waited for him to continue. âI was undead but not part of this time. I slept, the endless sleep of one who has taken the midnight medicine. It was what I wanted.â
âMidnight medicine? Whatââ
âAnd then you came.â Although the day was rapidly growing brighter, his eyes seemed to be getting even darker than theyâd been at the beginning. âWith his blood flowing in your veins, you stepped on Maklaks land and robbed me of my peace.â
Heâd been in some kind of suspended animation; was that what he was trying to tell her? The logical part of her mind screamed at her to tell him he was crazy for saying this, but she had no explanation for what and who he wasânone that made any more sense than the explanation heâd just given her. Despite her undiminished fear of him, excitement began building inside her. It left her both weak and unbelievably strong. She was an anthropologist, a trained professional dedicated to unveiling the mysteries of the past.
This morning she stood face-to-face with the past.
She didnât realize her mouth had gaped open until he pressed the flat of his hand against it. âStop! You will not laugh at me!â
âIâm not laughing,â she said around the hard, warm prison. âIâLoka, I donât know what to think. To say.â
He blinked. If heâd done that before, she hadnât been aware of the gesture.
Esther Friesner, Lawrence Watt-Evans