Read The Aebeling Online

Authors: Michael O'Neill

The Aebeling

THE
AEBELING
Michael O'neill
FIRST EDITION DESIGN PUBLISHING

THE AEBELING

 

“The only thing necessary for evil to triumph

is for good men to do nothing”

Edmund Burke

 

First Edition Design Publishing

 

The Aebeling

Copyright ©2014 Michael O’Neill

 

ISBN 978-1622-876-01-3 EBOOK

 

February 2014

 

Published and Distributed by

First Edition Design Publishing, Inc.

P.O. Box 20217, Sarasota, FL 34276-3217

www.firsteditiondesignpublishing.com

 

 

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No part of this book publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means ─ electronic, mechanical, photo-copy, recording, or any other ─ except brief quotation in reviews, without the prior permission of the author or publisher.

Book 1 of “The Casere”

 

By

 

Michael O’Neill

thecasere.wordpress.com

for contact information, maps, family trees and extra ‘stuff’

 

 

© 2014, Michael O’Neill

All rights reserved.

This is a work of fiction. Names, places, businesses, characters and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, actual events or locales is purely coincidental.

 

 

 

Cover art by Darko Tomic.

All rights reserved.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

 

Culture and society are bound into concepts embedded in language and to create something of a framework, the historic language that provided inspiration for words for this world is Anglo-Saxon, and the source of some of the words is the eBook “A Concise Anglo-Saxon Dictionary; For the Use of Students” by J. R. Clark.

People names are Anglo Saxon or Viking in origin, and are inspired by names generated by the website www.gamedecor.com; there are a lot of names in the four books (and the thousand years of genealogy) and I’m truly grateful for its existence.

 

Place names are also inspired by history and positioned into time and space of my own imagination. A wonderful resource is the maps created by Thomas Lessman at www.worldhistorymaps.info. Again, thank you.

DEDICATION

 

 

For Di and Hollie with much love

 

And to those who provided suggestions and encouragement
along the way; you have my sincerest gratitude

CHAPTER 01

The leaves, in their bright autumn colors, fluttered downwards as the wind successfully unseated them from their home of the past months. It was very cool, and then suddenly very quiet, in the ancient forest; as if everything had stopped for something. When something did happen, the animals in the vicinity fled – except for a Green Jay that twittered in the branches of a large tree. Instead of flying away from the humanly unperceivable sound of the tearing of the supposedly indestructible fabric that separates one dimension from another, it stayed, until the event had concluded, and then left for parts unknown.

It saw, with definite interest, the glimmering light that suddenly appeared in mid-air, and then divided, each half glittering as it made its way to the ground. The result was an archway; from which it saw a man appear – tall, athletic, and blonde with a slight reddish beard; and he looked about twenty, in truth he was nearly forty.

It could have noted, if it had been so inclined, that the man was well dressed, black woolen trousers, high leather boots bound with crisscross strapping, a studded purple Brigandine over a chainmail hauberk and a linen gambeson, and was also extremely well-armed – he carried two swords while the warhorse that followed was laden with a circular shield, two bows, a multitude of arrows and another sword; a two handed Claymore in a scabbard hanging on the side of the saddle.

The horse, a buckskin Lusitano stallion was tall, over seventeen hands, with a deep golden hide, and black legs, mane, and tail. The stallion stopped and sniffed the air as soon as he had all four feet on the forest floor, and sensing that he was in no immediate danger, he followed the man. Directly behind, four other animals quickly appeared, burdened with packs. The last to arrive were two large white pregnant Maremma bitches.

With everything through the arch, the blond warrior mounted the stallion and rode around towards the faint shimmering light. He raised his hand to the source of the light, grasping as if it were an apple from a tree; and as he did so, the light flickered and suddenly went out. The rider cursed as watched what appeared to be sand running through his fingers.

Conn MacLeod, late of North America in the year 2056, had hoped that the object that had provided him with his way “in” would also provide the way “out” – but it appeared not to be the case. The eleven gemstones that once sat in the hand carved yew pendant were now scattered all over the ground, and the structure had had held them into place was now dust. He dismounted and collected up the sapphires from the forest floor.

Where he was – he had no idea. All he knew was that this was the end of a thirty year journey to decrypt the notes written in his mother’s notebook. Found in her belongings after her untimely death, the single volume showed a sophisticated level of interest in history, mysticism, and the occult – among other areas of study – that didn’t fit with a life spent as a nightclub singer who had spent her youth in dancing, acting and singing classes. The enormity of the difference between the two personas – the mother he remembered, and the girl that everyone else knew growing up – was the very reason he had dedicated his life to unravelling the notebook. There was also the dedication in the book – written in Latin – “to my beloved son – search and you will find”.

He had yet to find the answer; in fact, he had yet to work out the question.

His mother died when he was ten; his father almost immediately after. Ewan MacLeod was a very different person; a highly decorated elite member of the British Army who had served with distinction in three wars – but not without serious emotional consequence. It was in the mountains of Japan with an old army buddy that he had sought sanctuary – and he even found a semblance of peace after he had rescued a Swedish nightclub singer from certain death.

Together they had a child that they raised in the mountain forests of Kyushu. Living as peaceful recluses, their lives were then destroyed by the tragedy of their deaths – their murders by Yakuza.

The ten year old Conn not only found himself an orphan in a foreign land, but one hunted because he witnessed the murder of his mother. It was his father’s friend who made sure that he was safe, and hidden, until he was ready to face the world.

Today, however, he was all alone again, a very long way from home and now with no way of getting back. Five years of computing power combined with a hundred hand carved and whittled attempts had been made getting the alignment of the gems in the pentacle just right – and it had just dissolved in front of him.

Placing the stones in a leather pouch on his waist, he patted the stallion and spoke aloud, for the first time, in this ‘new world’.

‘We can’t just stand here, can we? Let’s find a spot for the night.’

He walked the stallion back to the four pack animals that waited patiently. Around him peaks showed snow-capped mountains in all directions, indicating that he was in a valley of some kind. To the north and west the land sloped down, and as he had no inclination to head for the snow, he elected to follow the path downhill until the light failed. It was already afternoon, so he doubted that would be far. Interestingly, it was early summer, at dawn, when he had walked into the archway, but it was clearly late autumn here, and late in the afternoon.

The sky was a deep blue, cloudless, and the sun’s waning light flickered through the tall trees to the forest floor. Everything was still remarkably silent – the loudest sounds being the steady stamp of his horses’ hooves through the leaves. An hour later, Conn had found a defendable position beside an extremely dense clump of trees on a small knoll. The trees would form excellent protection against the bitter wind that had arrived as the sun disappeared behind the mountain.

Bamboo was amongst the many plants growing plentifully in the forest that he recognized, and Conn used his machete to cut poles to build pens for the animals. As he worked, he would inadvertently stop and stare at the stand of ancient oaks and elms behind him. They looked out of place in this temperate forest, as did the bamboo, and there was definitely something menacing about it. That said, although he didn’t feel in danger, he felt no inclination to go inside.

The animals secure, he assembled a small yurt for himself. The light was gone as he finished and the temperature had dropped significantly with the wind. Protected by the grove, he would, however, be warm inside the shelter, and when he finally sat at the doorway, the only light in the yet so far moonless night was the flickering of the fire in the iron firebox that cooked his dinner, and he watched it until it went out. Of his two dogs, one sat at outside his door while the other sat with the horses, doing her job. Feeling strangely secure, Conn lay down to sleep.

 

 

Early the next morning Conn, still dressed in armor, saddled the Lusitano, and headed out to investigate the countryside. He had decided to scout the area thoroughly before heading further downhill. All morning he found no indication of human existence – or at least recent existence. He did find remnants of stone walls that indicated significant habitation a long time ago; not castles but certainly stone based communities.

By midday he was eating his lunch of cold meat, cheese and bread, perched on an ancient drywall, and scouring the horizon with his telescope. To his left, a brook babbled its way downhill. He had drunk from the stream; the water was pure, clear and cold; the waters coming from the snow topped hills to his east. From his perch, he could see all the way down the mountain to a huge lake that sat surrounded by dense forests on all side. It seemed to be very large valley, and with mountains in all directions it appeared to be a caldera. Even from so high up, there was no visible sign of humanity; no smoke or roads anywhere. If there was human life here, and it seemed a big if, it had to be near the lake. Tomorrow he would continue his travels downhill.

Animal life was however certainly plentiful – and all animals species he recognized. Conn had studied a herd of deer in the distance for some time, and when a fawn suddenly took fright and scampered to the safety of the herd that as quickly fled, Conn took notice. Conn’s stallion also stopped eating, raised his head and snorted. Moving himself and the stallion back into the shelter of the trees, Conn remounted, and searched for the cause.

His telescope was the most technologically advanced item to make its way through the “portal”. Once the door had been created, Conn had discovered – with some bizarre outcomes – that only handmade items from handmade materials could make it through. A hand forged sword was fine – a machine made pistol would dissolved into the elements that were its construction. Fibreglass bows shattered; the bamboo bow survived. The discovery resulted in delays as he had to remake everything in his travel kit by hand; from his saddle to his medical supplies.

Conn continued to search and was just about to give up when he saw a faint movement. He soon discovered five men creeping down between the trees, over a thousand yards away, until they hid themselves in the grass verge of a bank of a dry creek bed. Unsure if it was prey or victim, Conn scoured the valley below them. Finally, he found three people riding slowly up the same creek bed, their figures dipping in and out of the trees. They seemed to be heading straight for him, and straight past the path of those that lay in wait.

Other books

Shield of Justice by Radclyffe
Daisies for Innocence by Bailey Cattrell
The Investigation by Stanislaw Lem
Mark Griffin by A Hundred or More Hidden Things: The Life, Films of Vincente Minnelli
Jake's Bride by Karen Rose Smith
Another Summer by Sue Lilley
The Bouquet List by Barbara Deleo
Secret Agent Minister by Lenora Worth