AL CLARK - Avalon -: (Book Two) Read online




  AL CLARK

  -AVALON -

  Copyright

  Al Clark-Avalon (Book Two) Copyright © December 2015 by Jonathan G. Meyer

  Cover Art by Dawne Dominique

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or any other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written consent of the author except for brief quotes used in reviews.

  This book is a work of fiction. Characters, names, places, and incidents are a product of the author’s imagination and are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Dedication

  This book is dedicated to my brothers, one older and one younger, both of which have gone to a better place. Much of my inspiration is a direct result of the adventures we shared. Their influence and support helped mold me into the person I am.

  Table of Contents

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  AL CLARK

  -AVALON -

  Chapter One

  Al Clark woke with a start, and for a moment he was disoriented. Quickly the confusion faded, and he realized the nightmare he just experienced was only a dream, at which point there came a sense of relief. The startling reality of the dream made it difficult to transition to the real world, and before the images floated away, Al tried desperately to implant them into his mind.

  The only thing that stuck was a frantic flight down a dark corridor. What happened before that, or what he was running from, was already lost to his subconscious. Before he came to Avalon, a recurring dream had given him a glimpse into the future that turned out to be true. Because this was the third time this nightmare had invaded his sleep, he thought it wise to take it seriously.

  Elizabeth was still asleep next to him, and the room was dimly lit, with only diffused starlight coming through the curtains covering the windows. Her long blond hair draped her face and seeing her lying there reminded him how lucky he was. Married for almost four years, she had become tolerant of his ways and irregular schedule. He came and went at all hours as the sheriff of the little village of Camelot, and slept when he found the time. Tonight their schedules had meshed, and they slept together like a real couple.

  He got up quietly and leaned down to place a kiss on her cheek. She smiled without opening her eyes and turned over. Elizabeth (Morris) Clark had been with him since he started his second life, and she had become his partner in their endeavor to build a community. His wife knew him better than anyone, and because she insisted there could be no other way, they kept no secrets.

  She was tall for a woman at five foot ten, with confident blue eyes, and a no-nonsense attitude. An electrical engineer by trade, she was smart and independent. It is her son Chris that provided Al, a man that could not have children, a grandson. The first child born on Avalon.

  He slipped his shirt on and went outside to stand on the porch and look out over his domain. A cloudless night lit the little town with starlight and bestowed on it a quiet, peaceful appearance. The Community Center was directly in front of him, with his house being in the inner circle of several circles containing homes that surrounded the large building in the center of the village.

  All the house’s faced the center, and almost all paths led there. His step-son Chris and his wife Tammy lived four houses over, close enough to be handy, but not too close. The homes were a conglomeration of self-erecting habitat modules and imagination. Framed wooden and metal additions jutted out at random, some of them complete with rambling porches for winding down in the evening.

  It was early on a quiet spring morning on Avalon, the planet they called home, and most of the settlers were still sleeping; gathering energy for the next day’s work. For a little more than five years, the colonists from Earth had been working to build a society. The village was a great place to live with almost nine hundred people now calling Camelot home.

  The giant ship that brought them here was still in orbit around the Earth-like planet, providing services from its seed banks, machine shops, 3-D printers, and medical facilities. A portion of the ship had become a manufacturing plant, with the other half of a large ship module utilized as a medical bay. Large sections of the starship were deemed no longer needed and abandoned.

  Al thought that maybe the star-like dot, moving slowly across the sky before him, might be the reflection of their ship—the Excalibur.

  The forty-five-year-old ship spent thirty years getting to Avalon with the passengers in suspended animation. For another ten years, the ship automatically circled the beautiful blue planet, while its occupants slumbered, waiting for the end of their journey and awakening. The automatic systems designed to wake the passengers had malfunctioned, and when Al woke up, he was alone. He found Chris first, trapped in the habitat ring where he lived for almost a year, and together they began the process of waking the survivors. Some passengers did not wake up.

  Five years ago Al woke up in a hibernation pod, with no recollection of where he was, or how he came to be there. A severe case of amnesia left him with no memory of where, why, or who. Two days later he had found Chris, the eighteen-year-old son of the woman he would eventually marry. Along the way, there had been many surprises.

  While settling Avalon, the former chief of security on the Excalibur, now turned sheriff of Camelot, discovered he was not an ordinary man. He could do things most humans could not. Al Clark learned he was not totally human.

  The name Al Clark had been stenciled on the outside of the small room he woke up in; his real name lost when his creator died during the long journey to Avalon. He appeared to be a forty-something-year-old six-foot tall man, with dark brown hair and blue eyes. His experience had taught him he was in truth a cybernetic construct with a human brain.

  When a meteor storm struck the starship, a tiny particle penetrated the hull and entered his skull, landing inside his head and causing Al to wake up from his hibernation pod and begin his new life. The meteorite ultimately saved them all but took with it any memory of the life he had before. The only thing left of his past was a strong belief in right and wrong—and justice.

  His body was a complicated machine with a titanium chassis, Mark Five servos and actuators, and a Tru-Skin body covering that made him almost indistinguishable from normal people.

  He had two modes of operation; a normal mode of operation that was only slightly better than any healthy human and an enhanced mode where he was capable of doing things most people only dreamed of. There was, of course, a catch. His body’s power pack started with a twenty-year lifespan when new, but that was forty-five years ago. Al spent forty years with his body shut down and his brain asleep, but he had expended a considerable amount of energy since arriving at Avalon.

  The bar graph displayed while in the enhanced mode now showed his power levels had dropped to a critical level, forcing him to become more cautious about expending energy. When in enhanced mode, he drained his power pack at many times the normal rate, increas
ing the chance that he could run out of energy before a replacement pack could be manufactured. If that were to happen, his body would stop supplying nutrients to his brain, and he would die. For now, he would have to settle for being in normal mode most of the time.

  Al’s body so resembled a traditional human, that he did not discover its peculiarities until one of the planet’s many predators attacked him and injured his leg. His friend Doctor Jacody Mumbada, a tall black Haitian man that still retained an endearing touch of the Creole accent he grew up around, performed a medical scan. Everything changed for Al after that.

  He had tried to keep his abilities secret, but circumstance intervened. During the trial of Tammy Shoemaker, the saboteur Chris would fall in love with, he had been forced to defeat a rampaging predator in plain sight of the entire colony to save their lives.

  After sharing most of what he had learned about himself with the settlers, the part human, part robotic man, eventually gained their respect and was in time considered a hero. Now, he is well respected by most and feared by only a few. In the end, everybody agreed that Al Clark was made to be the perfect sheriff.

  ****

  His son-in-law Christopher Morris met Al on the path leading to the community center as the sun was coming up.

  Chris was now twenty-three and a respected engineer, with mid-length blond hair, the soft brown eyes of his father, and a thirst for adventure. He was unusually quiet and his six foot two frame was bent in thought as they made their way to meet the rest of the hunting party. Today they would be hunting Avalon’s version of Earths prehistoric predator—the Tyrannosaurus Rex.

  Dinosaurs had never become extinct on Avalon. The event that wiped them from the face of the Earth had never happened, leaving the larger ones to evolve and become dominant species.

  One of the two flying baseball sized surveillance drones called Watchers had detected two large creatures resembling dinosaurs, or what the natives called Riktors, about a mile from the perimeter fence to the south. The colonists had learned the hard way that a single enraged Riktor could wreak havoc on a settlement. What made matters worse is that these territorial predators usually lived in packs and hunted in pairs; attacking from opposite sides simultaneously.

  With more than a little help from Al Clark, the vicious pack that controlled the valley the colonists had settled was wiped out. When new Riktors came within two miles of the village or the local caves of the Sansi, the watchers sent out an alarm, and the beasts were chased away by the settlers or killed. These were very dangerous hunters and to have them this close to their little piece of the valley was inviting trouble.

  “Do you think we’re going to find them?” Chris asked Al.

  “Well, they were just spotted early last evening. I think we might be able to catch up. If we could have left right then, we would have them by now. But…I think it’s a little crazy to hunt them at night. They are way too good in the dark for my taste.”

  “Yeah, my tastes too.”

  The hunting party consisted of two security officers (deputies), Chris, Captain Tobias Effinger, Doctor Cody in case of an injury, paleontologist Sila Patron, and Al. A six man and one woman hunting party. Seven humans versus two Riktors.

  Al raised his voice and said, “All right folks, you all know the rules: we stay together, we keep our eyes open, and we use our inside voices.” Some in the group smiled, amused that Al would have to state something so obvious. Al added, “I’m serious folks, but I think you get the picture. We need to get moving if we’re going to get there and back before dark.”

  It would have been an easy trip in a shuttle, but the little ships were restricted to emergency use only. The small spacecraft were getting old, and the fuel rods to power them were in short supply. Al and the captain decided the invaders were close enough to get there by foot.

  Chris was worried but excited at the same time. He had only been on one hunt before, where the stealthy creatures somehow managed to disappear into the forest. The team had searched until they barely had time to get back to the village by sunset before they gave up and went home. There hadn’t been but a few sightings until the last year or so. Now it appeared the Riktors were becoming restless and desired the valley occupied by the people of Camelot.

  Al used his security pad as a radio and told his second in command the party was leaving. “You are in charge Sal until I get back, keep them safe…and let Robot Nine know he can accompany us next time. I think he might be upset.”

  “Will do sir. You can count on me. I’ll take care of everything.”

  And the sheriff did count on him. His second in command was a good officer, and excellent at his job, leaving Al free to concentrate on the task at hand.

  Al took the lead, and they headed out, with the two deputies at the rear watching their backs. They were all armed except the doctor and paleontologist, with laser rifles that could take out a bug at a hundred yards. Sheriff Clark felt prepared, but he also knew that it paid to be overly cautious.

  The game trail they were following wound through the countryside with occasional patches of tall grass. Clumps of trees with bluish-green leaves bearing orange fruit dotted the path on both sides. The exotic trees helped to hide their movement, so they used them as cover as they passed. The orange fruit of the alien tree was safe to eat and quite tasty, so they grabbed some as they came close and ate them as they walked.

  “How far do you think we have to go?” Chris asked Al.

  “The watcher spotted them about a mile and a half from here. The trees will get thicker the closer we get, and the watcher is having trouble tracking them.

  In a way, Chris hoped they wouldn’t find the Riktors, “Do you think you’re going to have to go to enhanced mode?”

  “No, I don’t believe so. With all this firepower, and the watcher helping us keep track of them, I shouldn’t have to.”

  Five years in this life was not a long time to live, and he wanted to preserve energy and stretch it out as much as possible. They moved on quietly and said little.

  Chris was thinking about when the colony was just beginning, and Al Clark saved both him and his future wife, Tammy, from a creature like the ones they hunted. During the trial, she was unnecessarily handcuffed to the defendant table with Chris sitting by her side when the creature burst through the auditorium doors and attacked. Al saved them, but it was Chris that got the reward.

  That day they learned how precious each and every life was to a fledgling colony. After the trial, Tammy was made to wear a tracking bracelet for a couple of years but was allowed to live. Surviving such an attack tends to make people look differently at their lives, and the majority had decided that she deserved one too. Her bracelet had eventually been removed and forgotten. He married the green eyed girl with the long brown hair and pixie face, and as far as she was concerned—Chris was her savior.

  Tammy, when young, had been adopted by Earth-First radicals, who believed the colony vessels were ships of war filled with the elite from Earth. Starships designed to overwhelm and conquer any race with a planet that humans could inhabit. The fact that the Excalibur was named after a mythical sword did not help.

  She had believed their lies, and in trying to push those beliefs on others, she had poisoned the water supply aboard Excalibur and caused the death of a ten-year-old girl. Her sentence was to work as a settler and be forever seeking forgiveness for her mistakes. Chris was there to help.

  The group walked in silence, with only the sound of the forest and the shuffling of their feet disturbing the quiet. Thirty-five-year-old Doctor Cody was thinking of his wife also. He married her only a year ago, and they were trying to stretch the newlywed feeling as far as possible. She didn’t want him going on this trip and begged him not to go, but he had been with Al since the beginning.

  Cody, a six-foot-four-inch thin black man with short black hair and brown eyes, was an accomplished cardiac and trauma specialist and the first doctor Chris, and Al awoke. Later, he helped to remove
the tiny meteorite from Al’s head that was responsible for Al’s awakening and memory loss. He felt it his duty to assist his friend whenever asked. Plus, it was a way to get out and do something exciting.

  The gray-haired Captain Tobias Effinger was worrying about slowing them down. At fifty-seven, he was the oldest member of the group. Doctor Cody still reminds him from time to time that he experienced a major heart attack when they revived him from his long sleep, and should limit his activities. The captain, of course, ignored that advice. At five foot ten, with gray hair and deep brown eyes, he was neither short nor tall but projected a commanding presence with a strong will.

  The captain stayed busy, as the elected mayor; he was a man that wore many hats. A large part of his time was spent locating and prospecting for the essential minerals needed by the colonists. His search included bauxite, copper, iron ore, phosphorous, and a whole host of essential ingredients for their needs.

  He stayed in shape by hunting all over the surrounding mountains looking for buried elements. Being a pilot, he loved to fly, and the captain/mayor could go where he wanted. He used his freedom to pursue his passion. One goal of his quest was to find the particular materials needed to build a new power pack for Al. It would require him to find some remarkably special prizes and the search combined with all his other duties kept him busy and moving. He did not fall behind as the hunters hurried down the path.

  “Hang on a second, my pad is beeping,” Al said, stopping the people behind him.

  He slid the multi-use datapad from his pocket and turned on the display. “Half a mile ahead…off to the right, the drone is having some trouble tracking and can’t maintain a lock. Wait…I’m getting something.”

  The almost invisible surveillance drone deployed to track the creatures gave Al a bird’s eye view from fifty feet above. Below the drone a large-headed, ten foot tall, two-legged creature with a long tail and a horn above its nose was visible on the monitor. It was of the same kind of monsters that had kept the natives living in caves, afraid of the dark, and caused the fledgling settlement so much trouble.