Op: Marraketh "Remembrance" "Decades gliding by like Indians Time is cheap When they wake up they will find All their personal belongings Have intertwined" --Paul Simon, "Rene and Georgette Magritte" [1] It was the monthly meeting of the members of the MRFG in the third dimension. They had been holding this meeting for twenty years, and for twenty years, there had not been good news. Each month, the meeting broke up with the memory of a land that to which they could not return. They felt out of place on Earth, hiding among the humans, but they had no choice. Staying in their own dimension would have brought the beast to the lands in which they hid... in fact, he had come here, but Mikje wondered if it was really them the Master was seeking. Over the years, the monthly meeting had become a meeting of bitterness. It looked as if they were never going back, that they would be forced to live out the lives they'd built here-- strangers in a strange land, always wondering if they could trust. Mikje looked around the banquet room that he had rented for the meeting and had ordered the staff to stay out while their meeting was in progress. If someone had overheard the conversation, they would be rather shocked to hear people speaking a language that had never been heard on Earth before their arrival. There was about twenty of them. Most of them were Guard memebers, but a few were members of the Marrakethian higher classes that had managed to escape. And then there was Grahm Valkurk. Grahm was a strange fellow. Although he was a Guard member (and one of Mikje's command staff), the things he knew and understood were often beyond Mikje. When he had first arrived in Rhye, he came to Mikje asking for membership in the fabled Guards. When Mikje asked him where he came from, Grahm replied, "Dewpoint." That had startled Mikje. "Dewpoint? But Dewpoint was drowned a long time ago." Grahm had nodded. "I am from a group which holds that the code is immoral to the Man Across the Sea. I have come here to act as the eyes of my people in the charlaten city. Marraketh can be saved, sir. But it is only by eliminating the Code that we will begin to gain our greatness. What Chi-Lin is to technology, we can be to magic. That is what the Ancients and the Man Across the Sea wished. It was not until the merger... and the code... that Marraketh was ruined. Marken Yuvall was right in many ways." Mikje had paced his small office. "But Marken... young man, you do realize I knew Marken?" "Yes sir, he had the right idea, but we do not need to destroy Marraketh in order to rebuild. And if that cannot be done... I will give up my ways and submit. But someday Kyrill will be back, and we will rebuild her empire." Mikje had taken on the spunky young man in the Guards and learned more about what he stood for. And Grahm had been a highly valuable member of the Guards, rising quickly through the ranks to become one of the four people Mikje trusted the most--his officer command staff. Thalin, Tyrene, and Remmick had been the only other people in that group. Of course, Tyrene had submitted to the Master, and Remmick was still in Marraketh, coordinating the underground. That left an incredibly pessimistic Thalin and mysterious Grahm with him. And tonight, he would have to make the toughest decision of his life. Would he go home and face the Master that drove him away so many years ago? The dungeon was dark as Katze lay on her cot and stared at the ceiling. There was not much else to do, Remmick was great at letting her get away with stuff that normal prisoners would never get away with, but Remmick could not be here 24/7 (or whatever the Marraketh time equivalent was, she couldn't tell). So when the other guard came on duty, she usually retired to things that were quiet that she could do in the dark. It usually led to thinking. She had been here four days. In those four days, the only hope of a rescue party had been Mal, and he was doing such a damned good job of playing Lyran that Katze wasn't sure if he was still on her side. But then again, with Mal it could often be hard to tell. At least he was here and there was some hope... but what was taking them so long? She'd been drug in front of Siddy boy a couple of times. Each encounter went the same, he'd offer her the world if she'd just side with the Master. When she refused, he resorted to begging and pleading and threatening her, and each time she refused to make the deal. She could not go through with it and live up to her conscience. But maybe it was the wrong thing, maybe she should have just given up. Nothing made any sense anymore, coming home just created more problems than it solved. She felt so out of place even within herself. It wouldn't be long now before Sid tried to convert her. Let him. About this point, she didn't really care anymore. Everything was all muddled up. Hell, she didn't even know who she was, as it seemed every day she lost a bit more ground to some force inside. And Katze couldn't tell if that force was malevolent or benevolent. She guessed she probably wouldn't know until it had won. She turned over on her cot. She just could not get comfortable, there was way too much to think about. She pondered a couple of ideas of how to escape, but there was too many risks. She couldn't fight her way out, even if she'd wanted to, she'd be dead if she tried to kill the spongie guard. Either that or down for the count. Not worth it. She burrowed deeper into her cot, and reached out to the world around her. She could feel the guard at the edge of her conscious, but otherwise, nothing but static. There had been nothing but static since the beginning, but especially now, it brought tears to her eyes. Why was she brought back to Marraketh? Why? To keep her mind off such unpleasant subjects, she thought of Berkeley. But that subject brought pain as well, as that traitor had lived with her and caused all this grief. She tried not to think of him, but it was hard not to. He was so much a part of her life... and for so long. Tears slid down her cheeks as she wished desperately to be back in Berkeley and to never have heard of any place such as Marraketh. Ever. She rolled over in her cot, and tried to sleep. In another part of the castle, a man was going through the routines of getting ready for bed. First, one pulls the covers down, then one gets in his nightclothes, then one sees a ghost. Wait a second. A ghost? This wasn't right, it was not the way it had been done every time before. The man was more puzzled than anything, it hadn't occurred to him to be scared of a ghost. And somewhere, way back in the threads of memory, he had seen this ghost before. Then again, the Master did say that he'd always been the protector of Marraketh, and that he couldn't trust that dim time that he seemed to remember when Marraketh didn't need a protector. [The Master lies.] The man spun around. The ghost was looking at him. It had seemed almost as if the ghost had spoken. No, not spoken, but projected the words right into his head. He looked at the ghost in fear. "Who are you?" The ghost shimmered, as any ghost would. [I am the ghost of your past. The one that you keep denying.] "There was no past before the Master," the man said, bewildered at this turn of events. [The Master lies. He lied to you, he lied to the children. Do you not remember the children in the square?] "No. The Master has always been kind to children. He loves the children." [Then why did you hide your own child from him?] "I did no such thing!" [Then tell me why the prisoner caused you to twinge?] "I...I had a false memory. The Master is trying to help me not have that problem anymore." The ghost nodded. [And that is why you would deny everything. Who are you? Who are you really?] The man grew ever more confused. "My name is Tyrene. Tyrene Katze, of Rhye." [You are not Tyrene.] "What do you mean?" [Exactly what I say. You are not Tyrene, you are just a shell that uses that name.] "I don't understand." [Your "false" memories are not false at all. They just contradict the Master's "truth."] Tyrene sat down on the bed, holding his head in his hands and whimpering. Mikje looked around the banquet hall. "Fellow citizens of Marraketh, I have news. The reports from the Marrakethian underground are positive. The Master has still not returned and Sid is still in charge of the country. And there is another force in Marraketh at this very moment that will destabilize Sid's government enough that the liberation of Marraketh will work. We attack tonight." There was the sudden silence, and then the room exploded into a cheer. They were going home. As soon as the room had calmed down, Thalin Shalinkurk stood up. "Captain Mrythen, I have a question. Is the sea really down? Or is it just waiting to drown us the second we arrive?" The room grew silent at the question. Everybody understood what Thalin was driving at. Mikje looked at Thalin. "Three months ago, you were urging me to attack, in what would have been a precipitous move. It would have killed us all. What are you, Thalin, a turncoat whom would rather help the Master (may the Man Across the Sea spit on his bones) than your own countrymen?" "No, Mikje, I am just looking out for your own good. Our own good. It is not time. What makes you think this "other force" is going to cause enough destablization?" "Because this other force has gone to rescue a friend who was kidnapped by Sid. A friend who doesn't realize what strength she has. My friends, fellow Marrakethians, imagine a Marrakethian who wasn't raised under the code... and in fact, has never seen Marraketh. Such a person exists. I know that all of you remember Tyrene Katze... he did the bravest thing of us all, placing a child out of the reach of the Master--even though it meant his own destruction. That is sacrifice. And it is this child whom, twenty years later, is the reason we can go home. Do you doubt me now, Thalin?" "I do not think one person can make such a difference." "I do. It has happened many times in the history of Marraketh." Mikje glanced at Grahm, and winked. Grahm began whispering words under his breath. Thalin stood. "I charge the Captian of the MRFG with treason! He is going to kill us all. I also charge him with association with Marken Yuvall, who would have destroyed the code which saved Marraketh from destroying itself!" One of the other Marrakethians at the banquet table looked at Mikje. "These are indeed serious accusations, Mikje. Do you have an answer to them?" Mikje nodded. "My rebuttal will occur in a second, Nyetin." Grahm finished his muttering and nodded. Mikje waited. Slowly, a glow began to come up around the people seated at the table. All of the glows except one were a green much like the grass in Marraketh. The one exception was a sickly looking purple, and the man whom was encased in it widened his eyes. Mikje said quietly. "I think we know who is the treasonous one here." The glows faded, but everybody at the table continued to stare at Thalin Shalinkurk. Suddenly, Thalin bolted from the table and through the banquet room doors. "After him! Don't let him get away!" rose the cries from the banquet room. Quickly, the room cleared out, with the exception of Mikje and Grahm. "Thank you," Mikje said. "I knew somebody was a traitor, but I couldn't figure out how to tell. Now it looks like we'll be off to Marraketh in the morning." Grahm nodded. "Yes. We should be able to do it." "And, do you know what they called Tyrene's daughter in this dimension?" "Mikje... yes, I do. And I think it's gonna be one heck of a surprise." "Well, aren't you going to tell me?" Grahm smiled. "She's a student at the university. And she took linguistics this semester. Your class. And got an A." Mikje ran down the list of people in his class. Suddenly the right name struck him. "Yack, the answer to the puzzle was sitting in linguistics the whole time." Grahm nodded. "Well, we have a Marraketh to liberate." He stood up. "Shall we?" Mikje nodded. "Here goes nothing." Katze glanced around the darkness of the prison ward. It was too dark now to see anything, and all she could hear was the light sleeping sounds of the guard at the door. Solitude was starting to wear her. Things spun in the darkness, pieces of light, and Katze began to think she was going crazy. The guard slept on. The world started to lean crazily to one side, making Katze wonder if she had gone insane. [If I haven't gone insane already,] she thought. She looked out into the darkness. "Who are you?" she called, but got no answer. The guard continued to sleep, making Katze really wonder what the hell was going on. Had they come to rescue her already? Had somebody poisoned the guard? The speckles of light began to form distinct shapes. Finally, three men dressed much like monks and a lady in royal splendor formed their shapes in front of her. Katze sat bolt upright in bed, wondering who these people were. She started to form a question, but found her lips sewn shut. [Think it, child,] came a masculine voice. [You are a Marrakethian. Accept it and begin to put your life together again.] The voice seemed to come from one of the monks. Katze frowned. [Who... are you?] she asked, trying to grasp this idea of talking with phantoms. The second monk nodded. [I am Hyuke. That man *pointing at First monk* is Yrulin, and the silent one is Grem. I will let the lady introduce herself.] The lady acknowledged Hyuke's words with a nod. [I am one of the Hrdeks.] Yrulin spoke. [My lady, you must not be modest, or else Marraketh will be lost. Child, this is Kyrill.] Katze gaped. [...] The lady smiled. [I take it you recognized the name. But Yrulin, Hyuke, and Grem all have an important place in Marraketh history as well. But it is no matter right now.] Hyuke nodded, or what passes as the mentalic equivalent of a nod. [Yes. We are here to warn you in advance of the future. It will be a future which will be very short and unpleasant unless you remember.] Katze was baffled. [Remember what?] Yrulin shook his head. [We can't tell you what you are to remember. But, just remember, you are a Marrakethian. And a nice Marrakethian surname is Katze. Your surname. You figure it out.] Katze blinked. [But I don't know.] Kyrill's voice came through clearly. [You will, child. I was once the head of the D'wani race, which owes our survival to the Man Across the Sea. Those three are part of what the modern day Marrakethians refer to as "the Ancients". Neither of us is pleased with what happened to Marraketh after our two countries were merged together. But there is an opportunity to change it. But it takes somebody who's brave. You are it, be proud.] Katze straightened up slightly. [Okay. I will do it. When the time comes.] Kyrill nodded. [When the time comes. Good luck, child.] The three figures faded into the walls, leaving Katze alone with her thoughts...and a purpose. The next time Siddy boy came along, he was gonna get hit with the shock of his life. Tyrene looked up, in the hopes that the ghost had gone away. But the ghost was still standing there, tormenting him. "Go away!" he screamed, and hurled a glass at the ghost. It went right through the ghost and hit the wall on the other side of the room. He buried his face in the bed. "Why are you doing this to me? Why?" [Because both you and I know the truth, Tyrene. You just refuse to remember it.] Tyrene buried his face in the bed even further. There was something fighting within himself that he could not understand. Suddenly, he remembered a jail cell. He remembered the other figure. He looked up from the bed. "You're me, and I'm you." The ghost nodded. [You have been in captivity by the Master, doing I know not what. I have been watching your daughter, to make sure she returns to this place. She is here.] "The prisoner?" [Yes.] "I... I... I don't know what to say." [There is not much you have to say. Let us just say the gods have taken a special interest. Play Master's crony tomorrow until I return. This will all be resolved... tomorrow.] To be continued in "Transformation" [1] The full title of the song is "Rene and Georgette Magritte With Their Dog After the War", but most Simon fans usually just call it "Rene and Georgette Magritte" or even more simply, "Magritte"