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The Chronicles Of Jenson Quest: The Rise Of Va'kaar
The Chronicles Of Jenson Quest: The Rise Of Va'kaar
The Chronicles Of Jenson Quest: The Rise Of Va'kaar
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The Chronicles Of Jenson Quest: The Rise Of Va'kaar

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Jenson Quest is an ordinary teenager with an extraordinary bloodline.

Jenson Quest lives with his Aunt and helps her out by working in her nursing home, where his grandfather is one of the residents. For years Jenson has heard his granddad's seemingly ridiculous tales of how he and Jenson's father fought along side a friendly alien race and other humans in the defence of the many human 'Realms'. Now, however, it seems that his granddad's ridiculous tales are, in fact, true.

Accepting the choice to step forward in place of his missing father and aging grandfather, and join the ranks of the Great Drak, Jenson joins the Keepers and the batch of new recruits and sets off across the galaxy to stop the Zyll Swarm and their latest Vuron weapon, which is threatening to destroy the Keepers and leave the human realms exposed to a danger that could begin the annihilation of the entire human race.

But while the Keepers, assisted by the Great Drak and the humans of the Fourth Realm hunt down the Zyll Swarm and its new weapon, one Zyll has designs on gathering the whole of the might of the Zyll together and crushing the Keepers and the human realms once and for all using a new method of tracking that will enable the Zyll to find and destroy their target planets far faster than before.

To accomplish his mission, stay alive, and perhaps discover what truly happened to his father, Jenson will have to find friends and allies that he never expected to find, and lead the warriors of the Great Drak into a battle that could end in the destruction of them all.

With action and adventure from start to finish, Jenson Quest opens a new dawn in Sci-fi, with new characters to follow in this and future adventures.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 14, 2012
ISBN9781476312170
The Chronicles Of Jenson Quest: The Rise Of Va'kaar
Author

J Bryden Lloyd

John Bryden Lloyd was born in the village of Llay near Wrexham in North Wales in 1969. Now in his 40's, and married with 6 children and a couple of dogs, he still works as a contracting CAD designer. In 2011, The Rise Of Va'kaar was the first of the series of Chronicles involving Jenson Quest and the Great Drak. It took 18 months to write and although it was originally planned to be a stand-alone novel, the ideas and directions it inspired have spawned a possible 9-book series, the first trilogy of which is already available. Book 2, The Realms Of Jurrii, was published in November 2011 and book 3, The Cause, in June 2012. Along with the Jenson Quest series, he has also written The Zubot Master; a sci-fi series for younger readers. Part 1, Time Slip, was released in January 2012, and the second instalment, The New Age, is due out soon. For those who prefer shorter works, Meet My Shorts! (a Series of Short Stories) was issued in February 2012, and Meet My Other Shorts! (a Series of Short Stories), in March 2012. You can join the author at his blog http://bryvstheworld.blogspot.com/ or on Twitter : @JQChronicles or on Facebook : J Bryden Lloyd (Author) There are more projects on the horizon, including two further Zubot Master books and two further Jenson Quest trilogies.

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    The Chronicles Of Jenson Quest - J Bryden Lloyd

    The Chronicles Of Jenson Quest

    The Rise Of Va’kaar

    by J Bryden Lloyd

    Smashwords Edition

    © J Bryden Lloyd 2011

    Smashwords Edition, License Notes

    This e-book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This e-book may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an addition copy for each recipient. If you are reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    This is a work of fiction. Any similarity to any person, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

    For Uncle Jack.

    1908 – 2011

    Still young.

    You never got to read the finished article.

    Your encouragement will never be forgotten.

    Contents

    Chapter 1 The Zyll Pod

    Chapter 2 The Disc Of The Great Drak

    Chapter 3 The Keeper And The Choice

    Chapter 4 Quarters

    Chapter 5 The Warriors Briefing

    Chapter 6 Yanna

    Chapter 7 Training Partners

    Chapter 8 The Meeting Of The Armada

    Chapter 9 Into The Simulators

    Chapter 10 Va’kaar’s Gamble

    Chapter 11 Mussa’s Revelation

    Chapter 12 Taking Sides

    Chapter 13 The Downside Of Command

    Chapter 14 Battle Of The Zyll

    Chapter 15 Weapons – Drak Style

    Chapter 16 Counting The Cost

    Chapter 17 The Last Lesson

    Chapter 18 Graduation Plus

    Chapter 19 Granddad’s Visit

    Chapter 20 The Briefing Room Again

    Chapter 21 Changing The Plan

    Chapter 22 The Ambush

    Chapter 23 An Officers Trial

    Chapter 24 Feeding The Grebs

    Chapter 25 Shuttle To Greeda

    Chapter 26 In Pursuit Of The Fleet

    Chapter 27 Friend Or Foe

    Chapter 28 The Greeda Facility

    Chapter 29 The Enemy Of My Enemy

    Chapter 30 The Star At Kohkla

    Chapter 31 The Keepers Fleet

    Chapter 32 Talk Of Treason

    Chapter 33 A Quick History Lesson

    Chapter 34 Contact

    Chapter 35 Rendezvous

    Chapter 36 Heading Twelve-Seven-Seven

    Chapter 37 Chase

    Chapter 38 Negotiation Zyll-Style

    Chapter 39 Traitors

    Chapter 40 Enemies Among Us

    Chapter 41 First Arrivals

    Chapter 42 The Battle For Astaccir

    Chapter 43 War And Peace

    Chapter 44 Subterfuge

    Chapter 45 A Ticking Bomb

    Chapter 46 Saving The Day

    Chapter 47 Confession

    Chapter 48 Rescue At Olnar

    Chapter 49 The Golden Room

    Chapter 50 Too Many Goodbyes

    Chapter 51 Key To The Past

    1. The Zyll Pod

    The Grand Ship Zytagg’. Second largest ship in the Zyll fleet – second only to the great Zyll Flagship itself – moved effortlessly towards the smaller moon of the two which orbited the grey-clouded planet. The Zytagg was an utterly massive vessel, over seven duthlok’s in length, carrying a complement of over eight thousand Zyll crew and civilians. The long, wedge-shaped nose jutted out from a strange array of seemingly disjointed structures, attached to the main central structure of the ship via a combination of arms and massive plate-like structures. No two parts of the Zytagg were the same as it had grown over many generations, each addition to the great vessel increasing its military capability.

    On the bridge of the Zytagg, Upper Second Va’kaar observed quietly as the junior ranks piloted the vessel ever closer to the small moon.

    Like all Zyll, Va’kaar was a warrior. He stood four point four trigs tall and his age was displayed proudly through his greying flecks dashed about the golden skin on his head. The remainder of his white skin was entirely unblemished, save for a single, raised deep white scar that ran almost fully the length of his left arm. A fitting reminder to those around him, that he was a most experienced senior officer. His tiny black eyes protruded slightly from his almost perfectly round face, set below an almost invisible straight ridge of bone and just above his single nasal orifice. His wide, down-turned lipless mouth sat at virtually the lowest point on his face. The permanent frown of the Zyll warrior.

    Va’kaar listened intently to the rolling, tutting and shushing sounds of the junior ranks, as they reported speed, position and readiness to him from both sides.

    The base will be visible to us in a few moments, Upper Second, a Mid Sixth reported from the flight controls ahead of him.

    Excellent, Va’kaar responded quietly, Notify the First. Confirm that they are Keepers.

    As you command, my Second, a Lower Sixth responded to his right.

    There were a number of manoeuvres of limbs and digits, as the three piloting warriors used hands and feet to simultaneously turn and flip the giant vessel almost about its foremost point. Thrusters and stabilisers fired all along the Zytagg and it came to a gentle halt above a sprawling moon base.

    Behind Va’kaar, the archway shimmered and vanished as three larger warriors shuffled into the bridge on their short legs. Va’kaar turned and showed his palm in greeting to the new arrivals.

    My First! he addressed the leading warrior, We are above Moon Base Jath-fanna, he reported smoothly.

    Scans are confirming the base is occupied by Keepers, Upper Second, the Lower Sixth reported suddenly, They are mobilising defences.

    All three of the newly arrived warriors appraised the view screen that showed the silent base beneath them. Then all at once, it began!

    From points all across the base, at least a hundred tri-winged spheres blasted silently towards the Zytagg and the base cannons began firing burning balls of agitated vuron gas more than twice the size of the small spherical craft who were now marshalling themselves into squadrons to defend their base.

    The initial volley of lightning green agitated vuron impacted against the many armoured hulls of the Zytagg and scorched the vessel with superheated flames that would have disintegrated a lesser ship. On the bridge, the First surveyed the scene as it unfolded and then spoke in a clear and deliberate undulating groan.

    Annihilate them! We can scan for their world using the same signature that brought us here.

    As you command, My First, Va’kaar acknowledged, Deploy the pod! Three charges! Leave none on the base alive! he said to the bridge crew.

    Pod deployed, came a response just moments later.

    Beneath the Zytagg, a dark, almost flat oval device released itself from the underside of the central fuselage. Gently, it drifted downwards absorbing the impacts of multiple vuron charges from the tiny fighter-planes and the larger base cannons. It stopped at mid distance between the Zytagg and the moon base, then, just as silently, three massive eruptions of vuron gas hurled themselves down onto the base, consuming everything in a few short moments.

    In the sky above, more than eighty of the tiny fighters were obliterated by a hail of cannon fire from the underbelly of the Zytagg. The battle – for what it was worth - was over.

    In a single, fluid motion, the massive vessel turned about and drifted forwards. The smouldering remains of the base left to burn out behind it. The remaining fighters rallied and turned away from the moon towards the dark, gaseous planet below, hoping to shelter in the atmosphere until the Zyll were gone.

    Va’kaar watched them on the tactical display with almost curious interest as he carefully plotted the volley of cannon-fire to intercept them before they reached the haven of the dense atmosphere beneath them. He made a few final adjustments and then activated the cannons himself. A thousand rounds of solid explosive projectiles tore through the group of fighters, splitting their hulls and igniting their fuel cells. Va’kaar allowed himself a guttural growl of content.

    2. The Disc Of The Great Drak

    Summer jobs were crap! That was official. The only problem being, that in this case, the term only really meant that he did more a lot more hours for just a little more pay than he got during school-term time.

    It was easily thirty degrees outside, but here he was, stuck in his aunt’s nursing home serving tea, coffee and biscuits to the twenty five elderly ‘inmates’, as he called them. On the bright side – if you could call it a bright side! – good old Mr Quest, or granddad as he knew him, was definitely on form.

    Granddad Quest had been a test pilot for the RAF, flying experimental stuff. A career his son had followed him into, and which his grandson could now only dream about. Although his aunt encouraged him to follow his dreams, Jenson Quest was the third generation who carried the name his grandfather had made famous in test-pilot circles almost fifty years before. Now seeming far older than his seventy years, he was unable to walk more than a few metres without feeling ill. Many doctors had seen him over the last few years and all had said the same thing. ‘Having spent so long testing planes at high altitudes and ultra-fast speeds, the toll on his body must have been far greater than anticipated’. In effect, granddad was gradually fading away.

    The next Jenson Quest, Jenson’s father, had disappeared on a top secret test flight for a private firm in the Far East, and although neither the plane nor his body had ever been recovered, it was widely accepted that he could not have survived. But when granddad got going, it seemed that he had good reasons to believe he was still somewhere out there… The problem being that granddad had a strange fixation which involved UFO’s. A fixation in which, even Jenson had to admit, from time to time he was very convincing. Either way, Jenson Quest senior had flatly refused to believe his son was dead.

    Jenson, like all his predecessors in the male Quest line, was strong, tall, and strikingly handsome. At seventeen, he had a crop of dark wavy hair that made the majority of the girls in his year weak at the knees. His square jaw line and deep blue eyes made him just that bit more exceptional than the other boys in his high school, and he had a female following on his social networking site, that would have made even his father’s head spin.

    He went to his locker and opened the door to stuff his white jacket inside. He stopped for a moment to look at the old photograph of his parents on their wedding day. He could barely remember his mother now. She had died of a rare illness about eleven years ago, and although Jenson still retained a lot of memories of her, they were often vague and incomplete. She looked proud and happy standing next to his tall, handsome, uniformed father.

    Time to get Granddad out for some fresh air, he said to no-one.

    Jenson stopped outside the plain door and sighed. Aunt Maggie had refused to let Granddad out in the grounds today, after he had started one of his rants during breakfast. She said that she didn’t want him causing a scene and upsetting the other ‘guests’. She always called them guests. However, on a day like this which threatened to be far too hot for anyone to go outside later in the afternoon, Jenson had decided that was a little unfair.

    He reversed into the room quietly, pulling the wheelchair carefully through the doorway. There was Granddad, in his chair, facing the window as he always was.

    Would Mister Quest like to partake of the Summer weather outside? Jenson asked in a sarcastic haughty voice.

    My boy! Granddad beamed over his shoulder, You genius! Hurry, there isn’t much time!

    Huh? Jenson stared at him absently, Time for what?

    "Get me outside, lad! I’ll tell you all you need to know! Too many ears in this place!"

    He rolled his eyes and positioned the wheelchair alongside the armchair where the old man sat. Carefully, he held his arms while he wobbled into a standing position and for a moment, while the old man shifted himself to the side to position himself in front of the wheelchair, their eyes locked.

    His grandfather had typical Quest characteristics, the wavy hair, which still showed traces of brown, despite his age, the deep blue eyes and the long, perfect nose and square jaw. As they stood for that moment, Jenson saw a mischievous glint in the old man’s eyes.

    Ready? he asked.

    Lower away! replied the old man.

    Jenson wheeled the chair over to the old summer house and put it facing the steps, then sat in the warm shade in front of the old man. He looked at the serious face that was staring down at him and wondered whether this was going to be one of those conversations. Within a few seconds, he knew it was!

    "Jenson. Listen to me carefully. They are on their way, maybe to bring your dad home, but if not, if he’s not with them, well there’s no-one else who can help them this time. I’m too old It will have to be you! I know you think I’m a mad old git, but please, believe me, you need to be ready!"

    Granddad. I don’t understand! You know I don’t. It’s like when you were going on about them taking you and Dad to fight! Jenson had not realised there were tears in his eyes. Dad crashed into the sea, or burned up in the atmosphere, or smashed into a remote mountain somewhere. He’s gone!

    No boy, Granddad said, smiling gently, Look, he rolled his sleeve back and pointed exaggeratingly at his wrist. Jenson followed his finger and unblinking gaze. It’s starting to turn red. When it’s red, they will be here.

    Jenson looked at the disc in quiet surprise. It was as though Granddad had stuck a piece of round plastic onto the back of his wrist where a watch face would normally be. It was about two centimetres in diameter, had no strap, or visible means of fixing to his grandfather’s wrist. It just sat, as if glued to his skin. Granddad gave the slightest of pulls on the sides of the disc and the top of it came away. Immediately the second disc left his wrist, it ceased to have the pale orange colour, instead reverting to a dark grey.

    What happened? Is it broken? asked Jenson.

    No boy. Put it on your wrist, Granddad whispered.

    Jenson took the disc and ran his fingers over it. It was perfectly smooth, cool to touch and although his grandfather’s disc seemed to hug the contours of his wrist, the disc Jenson held was remarkably rigid and yet seemed to have no thickness.

    What does it do? he asked, turning the disc over in his palm.

    Many things, Granddad replied, But for now, it will tell you when they arrive, and it will tell them where to find you.

    "Where to find me? What, you mean like a tracking system?" Jenson stared at the old man, who just smiled.

    "It is your time. You will be part of the new ‘Great Drak’," Granddad said quietly.

    "What the hell’s a ‘Great Drak’ meant to be? Jenson sighed and put the disc back into his grandfather’s hand. Granddad. I’m sorry. I really don’t understand why you keep doing this."

    "Like me… Like your father before you… It’s your time! the old man took Jenson’s wrists in his hands and smiled again. I’m not a fruitcake Jenson. All my silly stories. The Keepers, the fighting in space to save humanity. It’s real. It happened to me, and to your father."

    "Okay then, tell me what you think happened to Dad?" Jenson asked, sighing sadly in resignation at the prospect of hearing once again the tale he had heard spun a hundred times.

    He went away to fight again, to protect one of the other realms. Maybe this was one battle too many. But he never returned to say his goodbyes, or to pass on a disc to you. That is the way things usually happen, what I always dreaded, but it never happened. Nothing happened to say that he had died. So maybe, just maybe, he’s alive somewhere out there.

    You think that because he died and didn’t come and say goodbye, or some imaginary alien people didn’t send you a text, dad’s still alive? Jenson snapped. If you want to make me believe you, that really isn’t the way!

    My disc created your father’s disc, just as it has created yours. They are linked inexorably to this world and to each other for the lifetime of the wearer. It is very complicated, and I never truly understood, but when we die, it somehow returns us home to see the next in the bloodline and to pass on the disc, to pass on the responsibility.

    You’re telling me that you have been wearing that thing for years!? That it sends your ghost home when some alien war goes wrong? Why have I never noticed it? Why hasn’t Aunt Maggs ever noticed it?

    For the same reason you haven’t yet noticed your own disc. he looked down at Jenson’s wrist and Jenson, again, followed his eyes to show an orange disc on his wrist. Because I did not want you to see it.

    What the… instinctively, Jenson brushed at the disc, but it did not move. Then (as he had seen his Granddad do minutes before) he tried to gently lift the disc by the edges, but felt no substance there and his fingers passed over the disc as if it was not there. He picked momentarily with his nail at the edge of the disc, but stopped when the skin began to redden with the scratching.

    Jenson stared up at the old man.

    How did you…? Get it off me! he said, frantically. I don’t want to be part of a war.

    So you believe me? the old man smiled a little.

    Yes! No!... I don’t know! Jenson shook his head, But I’m not so sure I want to risk my life on it. How do I get it off? he shook his hand until his fingers were numb, but the disc remained in place.

    The old man sighed and put his hand on his grandson’s shoulder.

    "It is dangerous, boy. That much is certain. But I agreed to go and defend our right to exist, so did your father. The human race as a whole, depends on each planet having a warrior to send."

    "Each planet!?" Jenson looked into the old, blue eyes.

    Of course. You don’t think you’re fighting alone do you? the old man smiled again and looked to the sky, "There were almost thirty members of the Great Drak when I first fought. Your father told me there were almost seventy when he first answered their call, and every time, there were one or two more, he gazed into Jenson’s eyes, Who knows how many there are now."

    You really believe this stuff, don’t you? Jenson stared again at his disc.

    Jenson, Jenson started as his grandfather used his name for the first time in as long as he could remember, "The Zyll Swarm is the enemy we are up against, and it is exactly what it sounds like. They are hugely powerful, perhaps a little behind in technology and analytical know-how, but one day without warriors like your father… warriors like you… they might just be good enough to win a few of these battles. On that day, the human species on every world will be at risk."

    "Okay. Let’s just say I believe you. Why would the Zyll Swarm thing be held back by, like, seventy humans? And how do I end up being the best man for the job? I mean, come on! I’m seventeen! I’m no pilot, or soldier, or whatever they think I am. Surely you don’t want me to go and risk my life like this?"

    "No. I don’t want you to go… and no. You really don’t understand any of this. At least, not yet."

    Then tell me why it has to be me?

    "I volunteered, all those years ago. They took dozens of us, just to find one who would willingly fight for them. I accepted their offer and the rest were brought home with their memories modified. What I didn’t understand back then, was that I had volunteered my blood-line. My ‘noble, selfless gesture’ has had a long and difficult cost to our family. It should be your father going off to join them, not you. Not yet."

    But hang on… You said dad was most likely alive! Maybe they are coming to bring him home. Maybe they aren’t coming for me!

    Yes, it is possible. I can always hope and pray that you are right, the old man sighed and gently rubbed the disc on his wrist. As he did, Jenson felt his own disc tremble slightly. We will know for certain when the disc turns red, he said quietly, Will you wheel me inside, boy. It’s a little hot out here for this old man.

    Slowly, Jenson pushed the wheelchair back up the grounds and into the conservatory entrance. Without speaking, he took the old man into the cooler lounge and helped him out of the wheelchair and into his favourite seat next to the open window.

    How long? he asked finally, Until they get here?

    Not long, boy. Not long at all.

    What if I refuse?

    "Your disc is permanent. It is with you for the rest of your life. But, if no warrior steps forward in defence of this world, it will gradually fade and eventually disappear. If you believe the time is not right for you, I will go in your place. I will do what I can. Then, when I die, you will be called again. If you refuse the calling, if you will not go, when there is no protector the Keepers will no longer be able to protect the Earth. The Zyll Swarm will be able to find the planet and have their revenge on yet another Drak Warrior. As long as a willing protector remains for each planet, that planet is kept as safe as it can be by the Keepers."

    Jenson thought long and hard in his bed that night. He tried to remember all the little stories Granddad had told him as he had grown up. No matter how hard he tried, he could not make it all fit. He vividly remembered Granddad telling him a bedtime story of how his father had been involved in a great space battle that had lasted many months, but Jenson never recalled his father being away for anything more than a few days before he disappeared. Besides, it had been a story.

    Obviously a bit of poetic license in there, he muttered to himself.

    He glanced at the disc, noting that the orange was significantly darker than it had been just an hour ago. The room was dark, other than the disc, but there was no orange ‘glow’. It was as if the disc could be seen, but did not send out its light to the room beyond. Jenson picked up a book from his bedside table and opened it randomly near the centre. He held his wrist against the page to see if it would give him enough light to read by, but there was no difference in the light upon the white page. He replaced the book and lay back into the bed, and flicked his eyes towards the rucksack he had filled a few hours earlier.

    If Granddad was – as Jenson expected – slightly loony and very wrong, he would feel foolish for having actually prepared himself to leave… But if there was a chance that he was right, Jenson could not, would not, allow his frail old grandfather to go to war for him. He wanted to be ready to go.

    3. The Keeper And The Choice

    Daylight had crept around the outside of his curtains and was threatening to fill the room. Jenson rubbed his eyes and stared at the ceiling. He felt far more tired than he should have. He pushed himself to a sitting position and looked around the room. Nothing seemed any different to him, except that mild throb that seemed to be pulsing through everything.

    He glanced at his clock, 4:07am. He looked around the room again, confirming that there was clearly the dull beginning of daylight coming in, just as he supposed there would normally be, then back to the clock, just as it changed to read 4:08am. Slowly he looked down to his wrist, seeing the disc as a solid red circle. Slowly, he got up and crossed to the window. Jenson pushed back the curtains slightly and light flooded in for the slightest moment, then vanished.

    Jenson blinked hard and rubbed his eyes. He looked out to see the merest trace of dawn on the horizon beyond the town. His eyes readjusted to the light quickly and he looked down towards the street outside. There was a tall, very familiar-looking man, in the semi-darkness standing next to a child wearing what looked like a woolly hat.

    Dad? Jenson threw all caution out of his mind and tore across his room, automatically pulling his rucksack out of the doorway with him as he went. He bounced down the stairs and out through the door, into the front garden and straight towards the two figures. Dad! he called as he approached.

    No boy. It’s me, his Granddad said.

    Jenson stopped and stared at the old man… who wasn’t old. He looked at least thirty years younger and fitter than ever. He opened and closed his mouth several times.

    Granddad… you’re… wow! But how?

    They have their ways, he gestured at the child alongside him. This is in case you choose not to go.

    You mean, you could go, and be young again and fight, and protect the Earth…

    No boy. This is only temporary so that I can survive the passway to the Keepers ship. I would soon be myself again, but yes, I could go if you don’t want to.

    Survive the what? Hang on a minute, you mean they would let you fight as an old man who can hardly walk!?

    It is the agreement I made. I would just be honouring that. To them it doesn’t matter who goes, but it has to be willingly. If you refuse, there are no second chances.

    Jenson looked at the child for the first time and stopped dead. Although the features were humanoid, the child’s skin was a pale, creamy colour and its eyes were small and golden in colour. There was no nose or ears on the head and the mouth was wide and full of teeth.

    "Is this one of them?" he asked in a whisper.

    "Yes boy. This is Tooree. He is one of the Keepers."

    Keepers?

    "We keep your planet safe from the Zyll Swarm and other dangers," Tooree said in a wispy, grating voice.

    "Oh, I get it! It’s a joke! Jenson chuckled in relief, Feed me the line, sticky disc-thing that changes colour – that’s pretty clever by the way – and shine a big light at my window, then get me out here with some actor bloke and a kid in a suit!"

    This is no joke, Jenson. It is time to make your choice.

    "HE SPEAKS ENGLISH!!! Jenson prodded at the child, DUH! He’s meant to be an alien!"

    "You hear English! Granddad corrected. Your disc translates, please Jenson, it is not the best time to be shouting like this."

    "Oh, of COURSE it does! he slapped his forehead, Why didn’t I think of that!? So where exactly is my real Granddad?"

    Jenson, please. Remember what I told you. No second chances. If you refuse to go, I will go in your place, but this world will be far safer in your young hands than my old ones.

    Yeah right! What are you, mid-forties? Yeah, real old! GRANDDAD!?!

    Jenson it’s me! You have to trust me.

    "I don’t have to do a damn thing for you!" Jenson picked up his rucksack and turned back towards the garden gate.

    You are refusing your duty? Tooree asked, confused.

    You know what, little guy, you can take your ‘duty’ and…

    JENSON! NO! the man called out to stop him and Jenson turned in time to see him suddenly shudder violently and begin to transform back into the old man that was his grandfather.

    Bloody Hell! Granddad!? Jenson ran back to the old man and helped him lean against the wall. Make him young again! he demanded to Tooree.

    He can’t, boy. The energy would just about kill me this time, the old man gasped.

    Right, I’m taking you back to your room, Jenson grabbed his grandfather and half lifted him in to a standing position. You can wait here! Jenson said to the Keeper.

    One must come! Tooree said, One must choose!

    Let me get some rest, said the old man, I will come.

    As they turned towards the pathway that led the few hundred metres to the nursing home entrance, Jenson saw the familiar wheelchair and made his way towards it.

    Granddad. How can you go? he asked quietly as he put the old man into the chair. And what the hell do I tell Aunty Maggs?

    It is my duty to go, he gasped again, Clearly you aren’t ready. Maybe I can make them understand. Give you another chance, maybe in a few years. As for Maggs, well, tell her anything. Christ, boy, she might even go for the truth.

    Yeah right, and there’ll be pigs flying yer spaceships! Jenson grinned, And anyway, what if they won’t give me another chance?

    "I don’t know, boy. Maybe it will take the Swarm hundreds of years to get here, thousands, who knows."

    "But they will come?"

    "Without a willing protector, the Keepers are not able to hide our world. Yes. They will come!"

    I’m still not sure this is all real, Jenson said quietly.

    I don’t blame you boy, your dad was far worse when I told him! Threatened to have me chucked in the loony bin! they laughed, but there was no joy between the two.

    Twenty minutes later, Jenson was heading back out of the home. Granddad was in bed and fast asleep. As he approached the gate, he saw his rucksack on the ground and bent to pick it up.

    When will your warrior be ready? Tooree asked.

    Jenson spun on the spot, dropping the rucksack and clutching his chest.

    "Jesus Christ! Where did you come from?"

    I await the warrior.

    "He’s sleeping. He needs to rest. He is ill. Are you guys for real?"

    There must be a warrior for this realm. Time is running out, Tooree growled. "The Zyll Swarm threatens the world of the Keepers. We cannot delay them for much longer. Our decoys are almost gone If our world dies, we cannot protect the worlds of the Great Drak! Once they find another few outposts, they will soon be able to find our planet."

    Is that your way of saying yes? How long do we have?

    "We have many of your minutes!"

    "Okay, well that’s not too bad... MINUTES? Did you say minutes?"

    "Yes. We have nineteen thousand!"

    Jenson dropped to the ground, frantically calculating in his head.

    Nineteen thousand, divided by sixty…that’s… three hundred and… come on!... twenty… no! Seventeen… ish… Right, so three-one-seven divided by twenty-four… is… THIRTEEN AND A BIT!!!

    Thirteen days! he whispered, "We only have thirteen days?" he said aloud to Tooree.

    Days, yes, I had forgotten all of your time units. That is approximately correct, but hopefully we will have longer.

    Jenson thought about his grandfather, old and ill, overexerted from his efforts to protect him from what lay waiting out in space.

    Do you know where my father is? he asked the Keeper.

    The Keepers believe there are few places he could be. He still lives, as far as we know, croaked Tooree.

    "So he is alive? Or he might be alive?"

    We only have the certain knowledge that we have no proof of his death. I cannot be certain as to his condition or location.

    If he’s alive, can I get him back?

    I cannot answer, Tooree shook his head.

    "What do you mean, cannot answer?"

    Please, Tooree looked at Jenson and then closed his eyes, Your elders are great warriors and good friends to Tooree. I have tried to find your missing one. I can help you to seek him, but I cannot answer what I do not know.

    "If we find him, can I go and rescue him?" Jenson stood and picked up his rucksack.

    "Do you choose to come as a warrior of the Great Drak?" Tooree stretched himself to his full height, making him only a shade above four feet tall.

    If I choose to come. Granddad stays here, yes?

    "He does. His service will end when

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