From: aa811@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Terri M. Librande) Newsgroups: alt.ql.creative Subject: As It Fell Upon A Day Part 6 Date: 23 Jan 1993 14:08:15 GMT Organization: Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio (USA) Lines: 230 Message-ID: <1jrjgfINNkif@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu> NNTP-Posting-Host: slc5.ins.cwru.edu As it Fell Upon A Day" Terri Librande Part 6 "It's, uh, Sam." "Okay, it's Sam." She waited patiently. "I'm listening." "This can't leave this room, Verbena." Al felt as if Beeks was the only one here, besides Gooshie, that he could trust to keep secrets. "He wasnt to uh, modify history. Kent State history. If the committee finds out, they'll have his head on a platter." "God." Verbena bent her head, face pensive. "He's so sensitive and it's really no wonder." Her chin came up. "If I were in his position, I'd attempt the same thing. Apparently, from the data Ziggy is giving us, it won't work. Gooshie seems to think he has something to do with protecting the students but not changing the occurence of the murders." "This is going to sound a little personal," Al said, his voice low, worried about her reaction. "Did you see people die?" There was the breifest of hesitations. The light left her eyes. "Yes. Sandy Scheuer. She was in an elective art class with me, Monday mornings." Her emotions charged as she recalled the day, the moment, the times. She shut her eyes tight against the memories. "I really don't want to talk about it, Al." Al felt a little distanced from the doctor and usually didn't engage in touching her in any way. Most of the time she was coolly distracted by the 'host' in the Waiting Room, or whatever was going on at the time. With all the gentle grace that he was capable of, Al squeezed her shoulder. her face lifted, and she smiled. "I understand, and it's okay," he said. "She was so bright." Unbidden, the words came to her lips. "She was telling me about this dog she had at the house she lived in. Her name was 'Heavy' because she was pregnant. I think she was trying to pawn puppies. I was living off campus, a fairly nice house, and told her I'd like one, if it was okay with my landlord. Everyone was so psyched about the rally at noon and ... well." She sighed. "It wasn't much of a class that morning. We spent most of the hour talking instead of the usual lectures.' "How is Dr. Barry taking all of this?" "Confused. Sleeping now." Her voice took on a professional tone. "You're worried about Sam, of course." "Naw." Al grimaced at the look she gave him. Verbena could see through every word he said. "Okay, okay, I I'm plenty worried about him." He lifted his eyebrows. "Satisfied?" "There's nothing you can do, but watch and support him through this." She smoothed the wrinkles out of her skirt, picking at the material. "He's very sensitive to other's pain. When he sees what happens, if he remains there that long, he'll need you." "I wish we could retreive him--now." There was no hope in his voice. Wishing for the impossible was definetly out. "He seems hell-bent on saving lives, Verbena." She rose from her seat and turned, smiling on Al. "Maybe he can change things, Admiral. Stranger things have happened. Maybe he'll find out what happens to Dr. Barry." Pouring a cup of coffee she wrinkled her nose at the look Al was giving her. "Oh, he disappeared all right, according to your data." "What happened to him, Verbena?" "No one knew." She sipped her coffee. "I'm having quite a time keeping my name from him. He's already said I look like someone he knows." An impish grin crossed her face. "Now I know what Sam must go through." It was night when Al returned to 1970. The Imaging Chamber door opened upon a scene out of an armed encampment. Blanket Hill, usually a sort of passion pit, was now covered with men in uniform. They were at parade rest, alert to any change in orders, bayonets fixed to the ends of their rifles. Sam was in the middle of the Guardsmen, speaking to a man with 'military' written all over him, though he was wearing no uniform, rank, or indication that he was the man in charge. Sam felt Al's eyes watching and gave him an encouraging grin. General Del Soro was not in a mood to hear what he had to say, but it had to be said. "Why are your men carrying live rounds in their weapons? These are just students, not soldiers." "You're supposed to teach them, not instigate trouble." The man's voice was gruff and no-nonsense. "And this," he said, indicating the crowd of students milling around the foot of the hill, "Dr. Barry, is trouble. Tell them to get their butts off this campus and go to their homes." "That isn't answering my question, Sir." Sam kept his voice businesslike, trying to ignore the look in Al's gaze. "What if someone is killed?" "Then they'll deserve it." The General turned on his heel and retreated, dismissing Sam with his back. "Damn it." "I could've told you that wouldn't work." Al's voice was calm, non- chastising. "Del Soro was a hardliner who defended his men's actions even during the investigation. He was later quoted as saying the same thing he just told you. He's a real nozzle, Sam." "I have a few more choice words for him," Sam growled. It was obviously pointless to follow the military man, and the Guards were making it apparent that he could proceed no further. "It's nearly eight p.m. The curfew. Where have you been?" "Talking to Verbena. She's taking this pretty hard. Where is she, uh, now?" "I sent her home." Sam shoved his hands in his pockets. "It's going to get pretty messy around here fairly soon." "That's where you should go, Sam. Home. Ziggy is saying the same thing. But since that seems impossible because of the crowd, and you can't talk the students out of being stubborn or the Guard out of being pig-headed, we ought to figure out what you can do." "What does Ziggy say, besides brilliant things like I ought to go home?" The sarcasm in Sam's voice was not lost on Al. "You are to help one of teh students. Which one..." Al smacked the link. His face wore the pinched, annoyed expression he got when the hybrid computer wasn't performing to his satisfaction. "He doesn't know. To do what...?" Smack. "He doesn't know, Al. Try the name Artie HALL." Sam glanced down at the crowd below them. The students were stirring as though something was about to happen. "I spent the afternoon with him and Verbena. He's bright, just misdirected." "I'm feeding that name to Ziggy." Moments later, as he and Sam walked away from the troops, a cheshire smile spoke volumes. "Bingo! Artie Hall-- junior here--no major. He goes on to three other colleges after the massacre-- ends up running his parent's pizza business in Akron. That wouldn't be so bad, except Artie lacks the intiative or enthusiasm to keep the place going. We're talking bankruptcy, the works. After that, he moves, drifts around aimlessly. Maybe if he gets steered in another direction here, and with the right encouragement, who knows?" "Great." They had moved far enough from the troops to have a better view of what was occuring. Leaning against a nearby tree, Sam watched as the Guards took their positions across from them. A crowd of students were gathering again, to protest the curfew and to make their demands. So far there had been no negotiations. Obviously, those in command wanted nothing to do with concessions. The crowd was chanting, fists upraised, screaming obscenities at the Guard and throwing anything at them they could find. It was a mob scene of the worst kind and Sam could have predicted what happened next without his holographic oracle. "Those are tear gas cannisters." Al felt his throat constrict, watching the Guards loading their weapons. He wouldn't feel the effects if they fired those things, but Sam would. "I think we should vamoose. Nasty stuff like that and we could..." Before Al could say another word, the air was filled with the sound of weapons being fired and the chemical odor of gas. He watched helplessly as Sam fell to his knees, overcome by the choking fumes. It was difficult breathing without throwing up. Sensing Al's nearness made it easier, but not by much. "Hang in there, buddy." Al hovered anxiously, watching and hoping Sam would be okay. Damn holography anyway! "We gotta get out of here." The crowd around him was retreating quickly. Sam somehow made it to his feet and ran away from the gas and the advancing soldiers. Al was constantly at his side, showing him where to run, where it was safe. Finally, far enough away, Sam fell on the lawn, letting himself recover from the dose he'd received. "You okay?" Al sounded strange and Sam managed to open his eyes to see his face. Al looked as if he were about to be sick, his familiar features ashen. Waht kind of toll was this putting on him? The sounds of the campus were fading around him as people ran for cover and home. He sat up against the stump next to his friend and asked, "Are you all right?" "Me? Fit as a fiddle." Al crounched down by Sam. "You look like hell." "Al, I'm sorry." "It's nothing, kid." He was brushed off as the older man lit a cigar. "If you weren't givng me grief here, you'd be doing it back at the Project." "When did we first meet?" Sam wanted to think of something else besides this, anything but this. "June 13, 1972, at three p.m. exactly." (author note: I wrote this way before Playball, and I still like to think the two of them knew each other before StarBright. I don't go strictly by Don B's universe. Sue me.) Al bit the words out, ignoring the bleeps coming from the link. "So there," he snapped, directing his words at the protesting Ziggy. "I..." Sam frowned, remembering. "I was just coming out of class, and you were taking some extension courses to get a..." "A degree in quantum physics." Al growled around his cigar. "Which I now regret getting since the beginning of this leap." "You don't mean that?" "Aw, of course not." Sam was beginning to remember more than just the friendship he had for Al now, and what he owed him. The date and time had registered a memory, a hole that was rapidly filling with information. "You were like getting Tom back, Al. God wanted me to try to get over his death or something-- had to be. We were...are...so close." "Mush." Al made a face around the cigar. "Hope and Crosby." Doing a little jig, Al began to sing. "We're off on the Road to Morocco.." "...this taxi is rough on the spine," Sam gasped, remembering the lines of the old song. Hope and Crosby, he thought, grinning. More to come! Terri Librande -- "Unscrupulous--but effective!" Al in "Starcrossed" Terri Librande aa811@cleveland.Freenet.edu Assistant Sysop The Science Fiction and Fantasy Sig--Go SCIFI