Showing posts with label fantasy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fantasy. Show all posts

Tuesday, 27 November 2012

Holy News Stories, Hero! Message straight from the Shambhala Cave to your Shambhalan Transmitter

NOTE: "Vegitables" are digital vegetables for those playing at home.
Beep beep beep...

Shambhala Hero, listen up.  The season final of Don't Shoot the Messenger will be posted in two days time.

Holy Ending, Daniel.  I hear you say.  Which is not only a clever reference to Burt Ward's version of Robin, but also perhaps a little bit sacrilegious considering the content of the story.

But do not fear.  A new story is here...

I have decided to release The Last King of Shambhala, chapter by chapter, every Monday, Wednesday and Friday (starting next week).  In addition to regular programming, stories and insightful ramblings.

Yes, The Last King of Shambhala is the story that has had top reviewers raving, been rated as one of the best independent books of the year, and had been given approval by this guy.

So join us next week, same bat time, same bat channel.

Oh, and The Last King of Shambhala is still available for pocket money on Amazon, if you want to support your favourite writer's hopes and dreams, or you want to find out what happens ASAP.

M62MP76AK6Z6

Thursday, 22 November 2012

The Last King of Shambhala is "an absolute must read" - 5 stars from Critique de Book

Dear Shambhala Hero,

Guess what?!?  If you guessed that I got a five star review from the acclaimed book review bloggers Critique de Book...

Then you were right.  I'll take one of those stars and put it on your hand.  And what the Thule, four of your friends can have one too.

That's right, because I got five stars!  How many stars?  Five!

It even kept the reviewer up at night it was such a page turner.

You can read the review here.  And be sure to explore their website too, because these peeps do a great job reviewing a whole load of books.

And naturally, if you want to check out The Last King of Shambhala, and you "absolutely must" :-) ... here is the Amazon link to that too.

Daniel
Five Star Author and your favourite blogger

Tuesday, 20 November 2012

Don't Shoot the Messenger Official Blog Trailer

Hey Shambhala Hero!


As promised, here is the trailer (with Anabel) for my blog readers.  I have held off from posting this, but now, in celebration of Don't Shoot the Messenger Season One coming to an end next week, I thought it would be the perfect time to share it with you.

And don't be mistaken, this one I am posting here just for YOU - my blog readers - no one else.  So if anyone goes to the Don't Shoot the Messenger website - it won't be there.

Enjoy!

Daniel

Sunday, 23 September 2012

Chpt. 8 - Don't Shoot the Messenger

Here are the previous chapters to the best time travelling science fiction story since (assuming time is linear) Back to the Future, Doctor Who and Looper:



Irene placed the scrolls she had bought that morning on the sandy flooring and pored over the pages.
Jude sat on his bedding and opened the bottle of arak they'd been up-sold.  He took a swig.
“Wow, this stuff is strong,” he bellowed.
Irene's eyes flicked up to Jude, before returning to her reading.
“I wonder what this Yēšûă guy plans to do if he goes through with meeting us,” Jude said out loud, taking another swig of the arak.  “We'll probably have to keep low for a while to avoid trouble with both the Romans and the rebellion sympathisers.”
“Suddenly you’re a talker, hey?” smiled Irene, glancing back at the soldier.  “I got the impression you weren't one for idle chit chat.  God, I know I'm not.”
“Just thinking aloud.”
Irene put her scriptures to the side, and repositioned herself so she was sitting cross-legged and facing Jude.  “Well, if you're in the mood for talking, I can talk.  You did save my life after all.  So although usually I would be quite averse to leaving my work for meaningless social niceties, I will bear this one as a symbol of my gratitude.  Fire away.”
"No, it's fine."
"No, let's talk.  That was my roundabout way of saying I am okay with talking to you."
Jude shrugged.  "What?"
"You can even tell me told you so, at this point, with an extra cheesy grin.  I am grateful for your Van Damme moves."
“Well, I knew I'd have to come to your aid at least once on this mission," he grinned.  "Let's hope now that you've walked into some paid goons you're done with all the trouble.    Mind you, I was impressed with the punch you gave that big guy.  You almost knocked him off his feet.”
“You knew you'd have to come save me?  That's the type of chauvinistic trash I used to expect from soldiers.  You almost had me thinking there was more to you.”  She turned back to her scriptures.  “Okay, psychic hotline, I'll put my five dollars fifty a minute in, when did you decide I would be trouble?  Before or after you stormed out of the meeting I was to be welcomed into the team?”
“From the moment I laid eyes on you I could see you'd be trouble, and I didn't even know you'd be part of the team,” he chuckled.  “I was coming back from quarantine and saw you picking apart the ethics of changing the past, in an emotionless way, not a passionate way like the others, and I thought, 'Who's this woman?  She is trouble'.”
“And so that's why you were unimpressed about my appointment?” she said, raising her eyebrows.
“Truth be known, I would have told you that a stuck-up know-it-all getting in the way of getting the job done is the last thing I would want for a mission.  But maybe Alex isn't as stupid as he pretends to be - you have turned out to be the most useful team member on this mission, and I am even starting to appreciate your dry but terrible sense of humour.  Even the way you think.  As surprising as it is for me to say that."  He shook his head absently at the bottle of arak he was still holding, and had the beginnings of a smile.  "I guess you're just very good at what you do, and even though we are worlds apart, I admire you, in a way.”
“Thanks, it means a lot to have your respect considering the very little you hold for anything outside your tiny world,” she said, meeting his beginnings of a smile with the beginnings of a cheeky grin.  “But I bet you wish you were going back in time to kill a Viking so you could've got a cute blonde Scandinavian chick rather than a dorky Middle-Eastern American girl.”  She laughed and snatched the bottle of arak off Jude.
“No, I'm really glad we got you.  You're growing on me, like I said.  And who said there is anything wrong with dorky Middle-Eastern American girls anyway.  Though, I like your thinking, maybe I’ll suggest we go after a Viking next time.”  He chuckled.  “But don’t get me wrong, you are a little cute … in a quirky way.”
There was an awkward pause.  Irene filled this time up by pushing her glasses further up the bridge of her nose, and fluctuating between smiling and frowning.  Her creamy olive skin even became a shade pinker.  And then she finally decided to respond.
"I am glad my visual appearances give you the impression I would be a good match, based on your cultural reference points and unconscious identification of features that indicate high fertility and strong genes.  I return the favour by saying the neural pathways linked with the animalistic desire to pass on genes and spawn young are firing for me, too."  Irene took a sip of the arak but coughed half of it out.  “That is rocket fuel, excuse the cliched metaphor.  How can you drink that?  No, that's incorrect, I know the mechanics of drinking liquid.  What I meant to say is how can you keep drinking that when you know how it tastes?”
“Stings the back of the throat a little,” he said with a wink.  “You need to take a bigger drink to appreciate it.”  He gave her a little nudge.
Irene tipped the bottle back and took a gulp.  She screwed up her face and squeaked, “Little better I suppose, but I'm not a big drinker.  I have done some very regrettable things in my youth when inhibitions and standards have been lowered by intoxication.”
“In your youth?  You mean like last year?  How old are you?” Jude chuckled and met her glare with unwavering eyes.  He stole the bottle off her as it stood by her side, had a few swigs, and handed it back to her.  “I was actually trained to hold my alcohol.  It's important that I keep a clear head even when I'm drinking shot after shot undercover with the Mafia bosses, drug lords, or Russian special agents, you know?  All very good drinkers.  I think your brain could easily learn the skill to maintain focus during inebriation.”
“I am glad our tax dollars are going into important things like alcohol training for the Special Forces and not dumb things like education or public health.  What a waste health is.”
Jude chuckled.  "Like I said, you have a good sense of humour, doctor.  When you are not calling me prehistoric."
Irene took a few more gulps.  “So, what does a killing robot do when he's not working?  Do you call it working?”
“Train and work out,” he answered.  “Read non-fiction.  But usually every moment of my spare time is used to make sure I am as sharp and adaptable in my job as possible.”
“What about just meeting up with friends and watching a movie in between all the crunches, dumbbells, non-fiction books and killing?”
He grinned.  “I used to.  But these days, I don't keep friends.  Friends and family and well, other types of relationships, are a liability.  Anyone who has anything to do with me is at risk of becoming a target for someone who's wanting to get revenge or manipulate me ... and besides, they’re impossible to keep when you're away for years at a time, are not authorised to contact them, and have a schedule full of crunches, dumbbells and killing people."
"Oh.  Sounds very lonely, even to me… What about your family?"
“I've been an orphan since the age of eight, so I don't really have family to worry about."
"I'm sorry … to hear that."
"There were some boys who were like brothers to me when I was growing up, but one died alongside me when I started out in the forces, and the others I didn't keep in contact with.”  He paused.  “Don't get me wrong, if I'm assigned to a unit, I can become friends with guys during the duration of that assignment.  Just don't get attached to them, or keep in contact when the curtains are pulled.  Even you and I could be friends on our first century tour.”
“So you're what someone might call a textbook loner,” she teased.
“I'll drink to that,” he said.  “Or drink more to that as we've downed quite a bit of this bottle already.”
There was a pause in conversation filled with drinking, glances at each other, and quick smiles.
“Do you remember your parents?” Irene asked, breaking the silence.
 “I try not to think about them too much, because it brings me back to the memory of their death,” Jude shrugged.  He took a deep breath before continuing.  “My father was an engineer in Saigon, and my mother was a military nurse back home.  They met during the Vietnam war.”  His eyes stared past Irene.  “That war took so many lives on both sides.  And yet they survived the war and were killed coming around the corner to pick me up from after-school-care.  A drug-addict driver hit their car clocking about 130km an hour.”
“I'm sorry,” soothed Irene.  “That's horrible.”
“That was one reason I enjoyed making hits of drug dealers.  I felt in some way it was getting back at my parents’ murderer.”  Jude smiled, and his intonation became much lighter.  “So enough about me and my dark past.  What do you do with your time, Doctor Irene Hadar?  Apart from go to the most desolate deserts in the world and concern yourself with people who have been dead for hundreds of years.  Do you go out with friends or...?”
She smirked.  “My social life is as exciting as yours, I guess.  I do a lot of reading, but mainly in my field of expertise.  Occasionally I go to a big city near the site I'm working at to see an independent film, read a trashy romance novel or go shopping to switch my brain off. 
“But I usually go by myself, leave a movie halfway through to get back to work, and only ever end up buying very ordinary work clothes because I don't like the way my body looks.  As for company, my friends and family are hundreds of miles away back in the States, and I don't see them much.”  She raised an eyebrow.  “See what happens when you get me drunk.  I give you an exclusive tell-all.”
“So you’re drunk?”
“Let’s just say the senses are a bit numb.”
The edges of Jude’s mouth curled cheekily.  “Do you have a boyfriend?”
“Of course, I do.  I have a picture of George Clooney in my wallet.”  Irene simpered, opening her wallet to display the magazine cut out, and taking a swig of the arak before handing it back to him.  “I haven't had a real, living one however since second year university.  I broke up with him because he wanted me to put him before my textbooks.  Boyfriends are time vampires, and never as dashing as Edward Cullen.  That and his nitpicking burnt the last of any confidence I had in myself…  How do you get all this out of me?  Is this some sort of interrogation trick or merely alcohol-based truth serum?”
“The latter, but it is proving very interesting.  I mean I am finding out that we do have some similarities, for example,” Jude said.  “We're both reclusive workaholics.”
She raised her eyebrows and tried to look unimpressed, but ended up grinning.  “We're that same obsessive personality, I guess.  Except that you can read about what I do and my life in a few published works.  Granted, works that only particular history nerds would want to read, but works in the public domain.  But ... your background and job on the other hand is much more mysterious, Mr. Jude Stone.  I'd love to read the reports from some of your classified missions.”
“I can tell you about my missions for Alexander, but watching James Bond is much more exciting and family-friendly than the other stuff, doc,” he said with jest. 
"I would like to know, Mr. Stone," she said carefully, attempting not to slur her words.  She took another mouthful of drink.
“I am sorry to disappoint your inquisitive mind, but there's not much to tell that isn't classified.  Unless you are interested in my name, rank and serial number.”
Irene pouted her lips in an exaggerated fashion.
"Oh, the sad look," joked Jude.  "I've never broken, even under weeks of torture – never knowing if I’d ever get out alive, but had they known about the ‘Irene Hadar sad look’ … well, let’s just say that I was never trained for that type of interrogation."
“Well, with that in mind, yesterday at the markets you didn't tell me about why you disappeared from the Special Forces,” Irene started, pausing to steady herself on the flooring with her hands. 
She regained composure.  “This stuff you bought is going straight to my head.  I thought your mission - should you choose to take it, which you did - was to look after me,” she blurted, punching his shoulder as hard as she could.  “My drunkenness and the consequences will be all your fault.  You better not take advantage of me in this compromised state.”
Jude laughed but his eyes were pensive.
“I never talk about it,” Jude said.  He became still, and his eyes gazed at the wall without blinking.  Irene sat still and quiet.  “The one time I broke protocol, I had to go into hiding for it.  And still hiding from it.  That’s why my ‘employment’ with the Special Forces ended.”
There was silence between them.
“You better not just leave it at that, my friend.”  She sipped her drink and lowered her glance.  “You do know that secrets are not worth anything if they aren't shared.  That is what my gossipy Aunt Stacey always says.”
"You are funny."  Jude leaned back grinning.  “Thanks for the heads up, too.  I will remember her the next time I have some disinformation to spread.”
“What do you mean by 'funny'?  Am I ha ha funny, or 'aren't you an adorable little girl, pat pat on your head' funny... or just strange funny?”
“All three, but especially the third category,” he joked.
“Well, I'm offended,” she muttered, trying to stand up but falling into Jude.  “Now you got to tell me,” she yawned.  “Because this alcohol is making an embarrassing mess of a weirdly-funny book nerd.  I told you I do stupid and regrettable things when I am drunk.  I am almost flirting with you, which is stupid, even ridiculous, and the last thing my sober would dream of.”
“I wouldn't say an embarrassing mess,” Jude said, letting a smile come across his face.  “Perhaps just embarrassing with a slight lack of order.”
“I love how out of all I said, that is what you latch onto.”
“Anyway, this story is one you wouldn't want to hear.”
“Come on, tell me.  I'm a big girl last time I checked.  I fill out tax forms and everything,” Irene said sarcastically.  She pushed herself up and steadied herself.  “Who do you think I am going to tell?  And who is going to believe me?”  She held a hand to her head like a phone and pretended to speak into it: “Well, Victoria, you wouldn't believe what top military secrets I learnt whilst on my travel back in time.”
"You could tell your aunt," Jude chuckled.  “It isn't that I can't tell you, it's...  What if it is something I don't want you to know, too?”
"Then I'd say why would you tempt the rabbit with a carrot and then kill it and steal Easter from the children?"
“You are drunk,” he replied.  "Still funny, but wasted."
"So drunk I will not remember anything of tonight let alone a boring war story."
“Okay, I'll tell you on the condition you forget it in the morning.”
She settled herself down and leaned forward.  "Deal.  I have forgotten it already."
There was a pause as Jude realised what he had just agreed to do.
“Well, I guess I start at the very beginning." 
"... a very good place to start.  You've watched Sound of Music too, I'm guessing?"  She tied her hair back and waited.  "Go on then."
"It was a black op mission gone wrong,” he said.  “I did something against orders, and so it was either be hunted by special agents who I had worked alongside up until then, or disappear.”
Jude gazed at the young woman who was now quiet and still, and he took a deep breath and continued.
“I'd been sent to a shanty town just outside Sao Paulo with a fake passport and a fake back story.  My mission was to integrate into the community, become part of the drug ring controlling the village and surrounding villages, and find out as much as I could about the drug lord running the show.  And of course, if I got the chance, discreetly make him have an accident.
“It wasn't long after winning a few street fights I was approached to join the ring, and it was only three months after that that I had become right hand man to the top honcho.
“He was known as the 'White Panther', and was a particularly ruthless boss, despite how charming he could be sometimes. 
"As a way of getting his trust I did some really bad stuff for him.  But as I keep telling you, and what most people don't understand, this is what we do and it's what needs to be done to stop guys like this.
“Anyway, I would've usually killed him to dismantle the order after getting that close, but I discovered he was being funded and armed by three major offshore companies.  One from the United States, one from India and one from somewhere in Europe.  I sent all the information I was finding out back to home base.
“At the same time as climbing the drug ring ladder, I had been living with a local family in return for a small rent.  They were poor, but Christian, and so they took me in with open arms.  Their faith gave them the strength to live in such a dangerous area with so little, and to stop the boys from being dragged into dealing or ruined by drugs.
“It was their faith that also made them very tolerant of me and my very intolerable ways.  Even when I came home stinking of alcohol with cuts from glass bottles that had been broken on my head.  The lady of the house always stayed up waiting for me.  She disapproved of all the fighting, but somehow could still accept and love me like I was family.
“The family never knew I was involved with the White Panther however, because if they did I am sure they would have thrown me out.  Drugs had destroyed that area and their church was active in fighting it - in its own way.
“I started to feel like what it must feel like to have a family.  I grew a little too close to them - something that was completely against my training and orders. 
“The stern dad became my dad, the busy little mum was my mum, and the two boys looked up to me like an older brother.  I even had to bail the older boy, Ricardo, out of trouble when he'd gotten into a street fight copying me, his 'older brother'.
“I used to watch little Ricardo play football.  He was very talented but was told he was too skinny to play professionally.  I took it upon myself to train him, make him faster, stronger, bigger and fitter than any other kid his age.  It was part of a deal I made with him so he wouldn't get back into street fights.
 “Not long after that the family was getting offers from professional football clubs all over the country to trial for their youth teams, including Flamingo, Santos, and the team the family supported, Sao Paulo.
“I spent a year and a half with the family, but distanced myself when the White Panther began to take an interest in my time outside of his service.”
Jude's face lost a little of its colour.
“What happened?” muttered Irene, her brown eyes flicking from one of Jude's eyes to the other.
“The White Panther knew I had spent time with them, and he had kept tabs on them.  When he saw Ricardo out at one of the night clubs he owned, and saw the size the lad had grown to, he was summoned to his office upstairs. 
“He figured if Ricardo was that size and was close with me, perhaps he'd fight like me and be useful in a dispute he was having with a drug lord encroaching on his territory.  Naturally Ricardo denied the request and went home.  I don't know whether he believed that I was part of the ring, but I hear the whole thing shook him up. 
“The White Panther had offered a big wage, but the boy's faith in God and sense of right or wrong … was steadfast.
“Unfortunately, as I said, the White Panther was a ruthless madman.  It was why he'd stayed at the top so long.  No one dared to challenge his leadership.
“To make a statement, he sent his thugs to their place and killed the family.  The thugs then set the home on fire.  The police and neighbours watched on, not daring to get on the wrong side of the White Panther.”
 Irene gasped and put a hand to her mouth.
“I'm sorry, Jude,” she eventually said.
“When I learned about it, I made him pay for what he did,” Jude said, his body stiffening.  “Once he was dead, I didn't know what to do.  The drug lords in the area were now aware of an undercover operation and of my real identity.  I couldn't return to home base because I had exposed the operation in that area, and would've been killed.  And except for my job and this little family… I had nothing.
“So I disappeared, and promised myself never to break that rule again.  Never to get close to anyone again.  That's life, I got to live on after my mistake.  They didn't.”
“And that's when Alexander approached you?”
Jude stared at the wall.  “Alexander didn't approach me.  Agencies and drug barons across the world couldn't even come close, do you really think Alexander could?  Not to mention the agency I worked for who wanted to 'de-program' me because they thought I'd gone haywire.  'De-program' meaning eliminate, not sending me to a shrink or anything.
“Truth is I heard about his secret program and what it entailed, and figured it was the best way to get away from my life and do what I do best.  Kill people.  And so I approached him.  He put a suitcase full of cash on the table, and I signed his contract without even looking at the money.”
There was a drawn out silence.
“Anyway, enough of my bedtime stories,” said Jude walking to the part of the floor where he had set up his bedding.  “I'm off to get some sleep.”
Jude lay down on his side facing away from Irene.  She watched him for a few moments before crawling over to him.
She leaned down and kissed him on the temple.  “Good night,” she whispered.  “Thanks again for saving me tonight.  I just want you to know, that under it all, I think you are a great guy.”
He turned to face her.  Their eyes locked on each other.  They froze.  Their breaths quickening and syncing, and the aroma of the arak filling the narrowing space between them.
Slowly, they leaned in and kissed.  As their lips parted, their eyes opened and instantly widened.
Both were silent.
Irene put a hand to her mouth and stared wide-eyed at Jude.  “I don't know - I'm sorry - I...”  Her voice drifted off.  "Let's not ever mention this ... ever."
Jude watched her make her way back to the other side of the room and pull the covers over her head.




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Friday, 7 September 2012

Chpt. 4 - Don't Shoot the Messenger


Irene pressed the folders and files Alexander had given her to her chest, eyes down at her feet as she scuttled through the corridors towards the briefing room, all the while berating herself for the choice she was about to make.
As she turned the corner, she crashed into someone coming equally fast in the opposite direction, spilling all the folders and files across the floor.  Irene’s line of vision shot up and she caught her breath.
That someone was Jude Stone, the leader of the field team.
“Next time watch where you are going, soldier, and don’t…” she muttered to herself, swallowing hard, her deep brown eyes flicking between his eyes and the files splayed out on the polished timber.
He glared at her, looking her up and down with contempt.
“I guess we both weren't looking where we were going.  Too preoccupied with our thoughts, hey?”  She shone a quick, polite smile before bending down to pick up her files.
Jude Stone didn't respond.  Instead he just peered at her, chewing his gum rhythmically, before pushing past and continuing on his way.
She glanced back at him as he made his way in the opposite direction.
“Idiot,” she muttered under her breath.
Irene picked up her papers and files, and made her way to the briefing room.  As she walked into the small office, one of the security personnel closed and locked the door behind her.
Inside was a solid-wood oval table with Alexander and seven of the soldiers she saw yesterday seated around it.  There were two spare seats.
Irene searched the stone faces of the soldiers.  Jude was the only team member missing.
“Sit anywhere you like,” Alexander sighed, gesturing to the two spare seats.  “I was just introducing you to the team.”
There was a silence, so Alexander spoke again.  “This is the team bar the almighty leader, Mr. Stone, who had to rush out and tend to something.  Do not worry, doctor, he will still be on the mission.”
“I think he didn't like the fact you recruited someone without our okay, Lord Cartwright,” chuckled Spider.  “Especially appointing someone who's not even part of the forces.”
Irene sat on the seat at the end of the table and opened a folder.  Her ears burned.  She took a few deep breaths, and then focused on sifting through her prepared documents with quivering hands.
“In the next mission, you will be very thankful for Doctor Hadar and her expertise,” Alexander swallowed.  “I do not think Mr. Stone understands how respected a researcher she is in her field.  He would treat her much differently if he did.”
Spider leaned forward and pointed a finger at Alexander.  “I don't think you understand what it's like in our field.  Each one of these boys brings something to the table we actually need in completing a mission.  And we rely on each of these parts to keep us alive. 
“This woman is not just going to hold us back, her lack of training, Lord Cartwright, will put each member at risk.  That's why Jude stormed out.  No offence, doctor, but one wrong step and someone could die.”
“Excuse me gentlemen, perhaps I can introduce myself as Lord Cartwright had previously offered.  It is probably appropriate given the partnership we find ourselves in, although I do condition that formality by saying I wish not to form any real relationships with any of you, and have no intention of winning the respect of the ‘boys' club’.  I'll leave that to the yard spitters and booze guzzlers,” Irene interrupted, looking at the two men in between setting out documents on the desk.  “My not wanting to socialise with you all is no  reflection on any of your individual characters, which I am sure sparkle like diamonds and drip with charm.  It is, in truth, rather an unfortunate bias formed by the aggregation of military personnel I have previously encountered.  And had the misfortune to tolerate the company of.  An unfounded bias, no doubt, but a bias all the same.
The men glared back at her in varied states of confusion.
“My name is Doctor Irene Hadar.  The letters after my name won't mean anything to you, as a soldier ... just as the lettered agencies you served under mean nothing to me ... so I'll get straight on to why I am here.  Your next mission is to go back to the year 31 A.D., in what is now modern-day Palestine.  I believe many of you have been posted there before in more modern times.
“There your task will be to take out a revolutionary connected with the Zealots, an underground resistance group.  I believe Mr. Stone was to brief you all, but as he has had some other business to tend to, I'm more than happy to.  It will perhaps be refreshing for you all to have a leader in the field talk to you about your next destination, and I invite you to ask questions regarding the time period at the end if you would like to learn more.
“The revolutionary we are to locate goes by the name of Yēšûă, or what can be anglicised as Joshua. 
"According to the research notes Alexander has provided me, collated by an adequately impressive research team, Yēšûă never raised arms in his time, preferring to travel throughout the region spreading insidious ideas that incited violence and led to countless deaths for centuries to come.  After a failed attempt at killing him by the Roman Empire, he left for Asia and possibly lived out the rest of his life in Kashmir, India. 
"Yēšûă must not be killed in public view as this will create a martyr, which will only fan the fire of his words.  In fact, he may well wish to be made a martyr.”
“Sounds like a standard job for us, babe,” sniggered a marine with a bent nose and bushy eyebrows.  “We don't need any textbooks to tell us how to make someone disappear without a trace.”
“If you did, I wouldn't expect any of you would be here.”  She smiled, satisfied the backhanded compliment would be lost on the men.
“The difficulty with taking out Yēšûă is that his group stay underground most of the time,” continued Irene.  “The only time he can usually be found is during his public lectures when he comes to a town.  These are kept secret until the last moment, as he had a significant amount of Roman gold coins on his head.
“And it seems he used a myriad of underground passages and supporters in every village who helped hide and protect him.
“There is not much accurate information regarding his whereabouts at any point in history, however the researchers have narrowed down one window of opportunity.  A location and time period with an 84% historical probability.”
“Can't that hologram web tell us where he is?” asked Spider.
“Despite Alexander's confidence in his new toy, I spoke with the research team and they revealed they couldn't fully harness its power yet.  They can access likely probabilities, but nothing they glean is 100% foolproof.
“On top of that, they tell me you only have one opportunity.  Once you travel to a specific timeSpider glanced about the room and sniggered.  "Thanks for the history lesson, Doc, but we'll do better without you.  Believe it or not, accomplishing a mission like this needs a lot of high-level training."
Doctor Hadar paused and handed out pages with the basic elements of the mission.  “If you want someone to help you track down a man who will be harder to find than Osama bin Laden and Where's Wally's adopted love child, you might want someone who knows the terrain, knows the customs, and can speak Aramaic, Hebrew, Greek and Latin.  It's your choice, Spider.  Just say the word and I'll get back on my plane out of here, and leave the babysitting of marines to somebody else.  I have a very important dig on the other side of the planet that I'm happy to go back to.”
Everyone looked at Spider.
“You are a feisty one, aren't you?"  He smiled.  "I guess it's up to me then, since that pretty boy Jude ain't here,” he added.  He looked at the document Irene had handed him.  “He ain't going to be happy about it, but I guess we could do with more intel than a few bullet points on a page.  Just do as we say or you'll end up dead.”

Click here for Chapter 5

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