Read Don't Label Me! Online

Authors: Arwen Jayne

Tags: #scifi, #spiritual, #conspiracy, #angel, #fairy, #bdsm, #metaphysical, #dolphin, #transcendence, #malakim

Don't Label Me! (6 page)

BOOK: Don't Label Me!
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The Valeton council has cut us off.
They’ve gone as far as dumping Tyra and cancelling our rubbish
collection and other services. The national government will
probably want to keep tabs on us as we’re useful to them when it
comes to liaising with the other sentient species on the planet but
I suspect the destitute state government will follow the council’s
lead in ditching us. In which case I think we may as well stop
paying rates and state taxes altogether and set up our own council
to govern us.” He paused and sat back, silent while Adelaide took
in the ramifications.

A grin stretched from nearly ear to ear as
she beamed. “Well I’ll be. What is it you guys say? Thank the
all-spirit, or something like that. We can totally overhaul the
curriculum and the way we teach.” A small worry crossed her mind
though. “There is the matter of what we will pay the teachers.”


It’s will be a totally different
economy Adelaide. It’s going to have to be up to the people of
Boswell how they want to head into the future. The Malakim have
their own ways but there is no saying whether or not they are
appropriate or appealing to the humans here. We might need to
consult with the other sentient species on the planet for ideas on
viable options on how to run our little part of the neighbourhood.
I’m thinking that those with specialised skills like your teachers
will be highly valued within the community but they’ll still need
to grow at least some of their own food, maintain their homes,
things like that. Our engineers and scientists are working on a
free energy solution which could be something we could gift to the
outside world by getting the plans out on their internet,
distributing them widely before the Din can pounce on them. Our
genetics research we’ll also share, where we think there will be
general benefit and where it doesn’t have the potential to be used
against the planet and its occupants. We’re not aiming to make a
dollar out of our advancements so how we position ourselves here
and how we choose to engage the outside world will be critical.
We’re going to need someone highly skilled in administration to do
the hard negotiations for us. That’s where Hideo’s mate will come
in. She graduated from business school and since she’s been in
Australia she’s put herself through part time open university,
completing a master of business administration. I have funds I can
use to tide us over while the important decisions are made but I
can’t promise your teachers a wage beyond that. If they want pay
they’ll need to consider whether they stay in Boswell at all. But
if they enjoy the lifestyle and the freedom to teach in a whole new
way I think it is safe to say the town will make sure their needs
are met.”


So no promises but a lot of a
potential. Leave it with me Simon. I’ll speak to them at the staff
meeting this afternoon and let them know. I’ll get back to you with
their thoughts.”


Good. One other thing. We’ll need one
of you on our proposed town council as our expert on education.
I’ll leave that to you to decide who to nominate but the town will
need to endorse them.”


Wow, no mucking around then? Okay
I’ll put it to them as well. When’s Kit start?”


This afternoon.”


I see.” Normally she’d have to get a
whole heap of clearances and permissions to go through to get
someone like Kit in as a volunteer but like Simon said, they were
now effectively cut off, they could do what they wanted. “Can’t see
a problem.”


Good, if you’ll excuse me then I have
a couple more people to see.” With that he vanished.

Adelaide took a moment to reminisce, a
wistful smile on her face.
Oh well, past
is past
. When she looked back down at the papers on
her desk she noticed a couple of books that hadn’t been there
before. Her eyebrows arched steeply as she viewed their covers. One
looked to be a saucy romance novel if the well built handcuffed man
with feminine hands on his shoulders was anything to go by. The
other work looked to be non fiction, something about family jewels.
She read the back and coughed in shock. “Oh, um.” She fanned
herself with some papers from her desk then carefully hid the books
in her desk drawer and locked it. What had Simon said again? Be
open to opportunities. What was he up to?

  • 4 George’s
    flat, Boswell
  •  

    George finished his car mag over his morning
    cuppa. The sun streamed through the windows that opened onto his
    back deck warming his bare toes. It might be chilly outside this
    morning but it wasn’t too bad in here. He decided he’d do some work
    on his blueprints for the town’s energy system next, finalizing
    them before taking them back to the team this afternoon. Better
    text them to warn them he thought. Too much chance of walking in on
    the three lovebirds doing something that would burn his eyeballs.
    Sheesh. If it wasn’t Ally, Mendal and Upal exploring their new
    relationship it was his friends next door, deepening theirs.
    Loneliness encircled him, looking for a way in but he’d have none
    of its moroseness today. After all Simon had said his turn would
    come and soon. After years of waiting the last two years had been a
    roller coaster of change in their small part of the world.

    A warmth of gratitude welled up in his heart
    and he channeled that wave out to Simon, knowing his boss would
    feel it wherever he was. He owed his friend a lot. Simon had turned
    up just in time to rescue him in the Sudan and gotten him safely to
    a refugee camp. The guy had been furious about George delaying his
    plans. Little did he know at the time the complex jigsaw puzzle of
    people and events that Simon was trying to bring together. Yes he
    knew it wasn’t solely for his benefit. Simon made no secret of the
    fact that he was trying to find a way to rescue his imprisoned
    friends as well as free the world of the yoke of Din, no small
    task. George was more than happy to come on board, to help in
    anyway he could.

    Unfortunately his own rashness in going home
    to bury his parents meant he was effectively trapped in a refugee
    camp until he could get his case heard to come out here. It had
    taken years, literally.

    He’d spent those years as the camp engineer
    and mechanic, helping the camp administrators to improve the lot of
    his fellow internees. They hadn’t been keen to see him go. Indeed
    it had taken Simon’s intervention, again, to bribe a few key
    officials to get him out.

    When he’d finally arrived in Australia he’d
    been destitute. No job, no accommodation. He’d lived in a Salvation
    Army shelter for homeless men for the first few days until Simon
    turned up at his door with a sparkling new Bentley and asked if he
    wanted to be his driver. They’d become firm friends.

     

    Simon had had to put some of his plans on
    hold for even longer as he patiently waited for George to realize
    and accept that the town’s blonde bombshell of an electrical
    engineer and electrician, Ally, wasn’t for him. He’d had to
    reluctantly give up his pursuit of her when he realized that her
    heart belonged to others, his friends and fellow scientists Upal
    and Mendal. She’d not only fallen for the two ex-Din-human hybrids
    but had been radically altered by their DNA the first time she made
    love with them. Like all the townsfolk she was as good as immortal
    but apparently now she was something more, something a lot like
    Upal and Mendal only feminine. He’d heard whispers of the details.
    He couldn’t exactly miss the tangerine eyes which had once been
    blue but really, the rest of it he didn’t want to know. As long as
    she was alright and happy that was all that mattered.

    Simon had said there was another out there
    waiting for him, Thex’s ship’s communication officer, from all
    those millennia ago, her soul and essence still encased in Sama
    crystal. He felt guilty that his lust for Ally had delayed Orea’s
    freedom. He didn’t like to bother Simon but since his boss always
    had schemes on the go no time was really a good time. He’d try and
    corner him when he next caught him on his own for a minute. It was
    time to go and free Orea from her tomb, wherever the hell that
    was.

     

    Deep within a jungle filled sinkhole in
    Borneo, Orea’s consciousness stirred. If she ever got out of her
    shady green prison she planned to make the Din pay for what they
    had done to her and her colleagues. Yet she winced at that thought;
    revenge wasn’t the way of her kind. There was no getting away from
    the fact though that a 100,000 years existing as little more than a
    large, incredibly dense and indestructible crystal was the pits.
    She still had nightmares about having been thrown out into space to
    fall on this patch of ground. At least it was a beautiful and
    pristine patch of ground. Long ago her kind had come to try and
    rescue her but finding no way to release her from the stone they
    had negotiated with the local people to become her guardians. Not
    to worship her but to keep her hidden from the Din. Of late the
    logging companies were encroaching deeper into the limestone karst
    system that surrounded the sinkhole. Soon the jungle would be gone
    and with it the birds,bats and butterflies that were her constant
    companions. She mourned their impending loss. Was this her fate? To
    watch as the Din ravaged the planet. Would she still be here long
    after they left to plunder other planets, long after the sun had
    burned out and the earth was no more than a remote barren rock on
    the outer edge of one of the spiral arms of the galaxy? But she was
    no wuss. She wouldn’t give up hope. She let her consciousness
    radiate out to touch the forest for a bit, caressing it, loving it,
    hiding it from those who would prey on it and when she had had her
    fill she let her mind rest again in the boundless vastness that was
    the all-spirit.

    1. 5 Hideo’s
      house, Boswell

     

    A knock on his door startled Hideo from his
    classroom prep. He put the books down and reached out with his
    mind. Even before opening the door it was Simon. “What brings you
    here Simon-san?”

    Simon looked casually around the book laden
    room, filled with tomes on East Asian history, language and martial
    arts. He found a green velvet covered footstool that was book-free
    and took a seat. His penetrating pale gray eyes gleamed a mixture
    of assessment and mischief as they took Hideo’s measure. “I need to
    send you on a mission. I’ve already seen your boss and arranged for
    Kit to take your classes while you’re away.”


    Kit?”


    She’ll behave. Mostly. No doubt your
    students still manage to get a few juicy historical details out of
    her.”


    Hmm.” Kit was a good friend but her
    views on many things were counter to his. Like martial arts. He
    taught Aikido as a way of peace, defensive techniques that
    immobilised or deterred an enemy who was to be respected. Kit
    however was far more pragmatic and would use any lethal deception
    or technique needed to thoroughly vanquish a foe. They came from
    the same country but they’d been born centuries apart, their
    respective experiences, gender and knowledge giving them entirely
    different slants on the same culture and history. He hoped his
    students were able to discern that for themselves. He’d have to
    make sure of that when he got back but whatever Simon needed he
    knew he wouldn’t hesitate to help. He had a great deal of respect
    for the quiet indomitable visionary who’d changed all their lives.
    “Tell me what you need from me.”


    There’s a woman in Sydney. A friend
    of Kit’s and Helena’s. She doesn’t know it yet but she needs
    you.”


    This is the woman Kit turned immortal
    when they swore a blood oath of friendship to each other. Does she
    even know that she is immortal yet?”


    I doubt it. Would any ordinary person
    consider it a possibility? Yet she’d know there was something that
    had changed. She just wouldn’t know the how or why or even the
    extent of it?”


    So she may be frightened.”


    Worse. She may be starting to attract
    attention from the wrong quarters. We need to bring her
    here.”


    Okay, I’ll go retrieve her but I’m
    not sure why you particularly need me. Anyone who can teleport
    through the non-local could go and get her even you. Not that I
    mind the day off but...”


    Trust me, it has to be you. There’s
    something that complicates things though. Something I did in the
    past to help her. I’m hoping you can forgive me.”


    Simon, whatever it is I’m sure you
    had your reasons. Spit it out.”


    Take too long. I’d best show you but
    I won’t invade your mind without permission. Would you be okay
    doing a partial mind share with me?”


    You won’t overwhelm me with a 100,000
    years of memories?”


    No, just a specific period of time.
    You’ll need it as much to judge me as to have essential background
    information on the woman.”


    I won’t judge you Simon. I give my
    word.”


    I’ll remind you of that when you
    realize what I was to her.”


    You can remind me but it won’t change
    my respect for you. Show me.”


    Very well.” Simon approached and bent
    his forehead forward to touch Hideo’s then let his consciousness
    flow.

    Hideo started to sag as the mental onslaught
    hit him. Despite being contained to a particular point in time the
    vastness of that fraction of Simon’s consciousness still swamped
    him. Simon grabbed him before he could fall. Looking back at the
    man whose mind he’d just touched he gazed in new awe and a certain
    degree of astonishment. “How do you keep all that in your
    head?”

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