The Final Redemption Michael Manning (best motivational books of all time .TXT) đ
- Author: Michael Manning
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âThe âKriteckâ?â questionedMoira.
âThink of them as the guardians andsoldiers of the SheâHar, but theyâre a bit more complicated thanthat. The father-tree can create them in any form necâŠ,â Ibegan.
Gareth interrupted again, âYou justtold us there was only one here.â
I nodded, suppressing my irritation.âThatâs right. The Kriteck arenât considered in the same way thatthe SheâHar and their children are. Theyâre temporary and sterile.They only survive two to three months, and they possess only asmuch intelligence as the father-tree endows them with. Some of themare less intelligent than your average dog, while others may be assmart as you and I. It all depends on what the father-tree has inmind when it creates them.â
âHow many of theseâthings, could therebe?â said Moira.
I shrugged, âI have no wayof knowing. A lot, a few, it depends in part on their size andcomplexity. He could produce legions of tiny ones, a few very largeones, and anything you can imagine in between. The main limitationis how many he can growin a given time span, because they all expirewithin a few months. The bigger the father-tree, the more he canproduce.â
âWhy would it produce small ones?âasked Gareth. âWouldnât they be too small to fighteffectively?â
I grimaced. âTwo thousand years agohumanity was nearly wiped out by very small ones. They were sosmall you almost couldnât see them without a magnifying glass. Asoldier canât fight what he canât find.â
âHow would something that small hurtsomeone?â
âItâs a long story, one we reallydonât have time for today. The important thing to realize is thatthe Kriteck could be anywhere and almost any size. The larger onescan use magic, and there could be a lot of them, so diplomacy isparamount,â I explained.
Gareth grinned, showing a mouth fullof uncomfortably sharp teeth, âSo donât start any pissing matches.Donât worry.â
Moira seemed puzzled. âThereâs onething that bothers me. If this âfather-treeâ you keep talking aboutis that powerful, why didnât it finish the war with humanity? Whyare we still here?â
Her words brought a lot ofuncomfortable memories to the surface, things that were best leftunsaid, at least for now. âThis one is the one that saved us fromthe SheâHar.â
âYouâve left a lot out of your story.Why did he help us, when he should have been our enemy? Surely hehas a name? You havenât mentioned it yet, but with as muchinformation as you seem to have, you must know it.â
Her questions were probingareas I didnât really want to discuss. Aname? I thought to myself,the only one that would mean anything to you isIlleniel, and I certainly donât feel like explaining that rightnow. âIf you need a name you could thinkof him as âTennickâ,â I suggested.
âThatâs a rather human surname,â sheobserved. âI used to know several Tennicks. Why not just call himâSmithâ if youâre going to make things up just to satisfy mycuriosity.â
Plainly she thought I was lying.âWhatever you prefer,â I said noncommittally, âbut his name isTennick.â
We were almost to the shore, a thinstrip of beach overshadowed by a looming jungle of trees and vines,when we got our first sign that the island was inhabited. Lines ofpower shot forth from three locations to grapple with our airship.Our forward progress slowed dramatically, and I didnât botherfighting their efforts. We werenât here to start a war, quite theopposite.
âIs that them?â
That was Gareth, tension written inhis posture. I nodded, âThe Kriteckâyes, they wonât let us near thetree until weâve gotten permission.â They were drawing us in now,and I had given up any pretense of controlling our movement. Ourcraft came slowly down to land on the beach. A delegation emergedfrom the trees to meet us.
The creatures that came forward togreet us looked like something from a lunaticâs worst nightmare.Two of them had the appearance of something like a praying mantis,if praying mantises were seven feet tall. Their bodies were coveredin a black chitin looking substance, layers of hard armor, which ifyou were to examine closely you would discover that it had more incommon with wood than chitin. Another slunk forward on four legslooking much like a massive cat covered in dark spikes rather thanfur, it was at least twice the size of a tiger.
A rough but vaguely human-like voiceissued from one of the mantis-like forms, but the language wasnearly unintelligible.
âWhat was that?â said Gareth. âIcouldnât understand.â
âI think it said âpurposeâ,â suggestedMoira.
The words had brought more memories tothe fore. âIt was our language, but the dialect is very old,â Iexplained. âThey asked us to state our purpose.â Addressing theKriteck I responded, but not with the same tongue. While I couldunderstand the old human dialect, I wasnât sure I could replicateit properly. It was similar to my own language but had a verydifferent system of pronunciation. Instead I used the language ofthe SheâHar, âWe have come to see the father.â
âThat is not possible.â
âI have come to present informationabout the fatherâs kianthi,â I explained.
âPresent your information to us,â theyresponded.
I thought hard for a minute, staringat them. Tennick had become a lot more like the SheâHar than I hadanticipated, and his Kriteck reflected that. With a few words Idisassembled our shield and our airship, then I recreated theenchanted shield, but this time I left myself outside of it. It nowprotected Gareth and Moira.
âWhat are you doing?â askedGareth.
Donât leave theshield, I told them both silently,if you do, they will be able to use you againstme. Normal shields wonât keep their spellweavings out.
You arenât going to fightthem are you? asked Moira with someconcern.
I hope not. If I do I willlose, in which case Gareth must destroy the island before theybreach the shield around you, Iexplained.
What? How? Why?Gareth seemed alarmed.
I gave him my mostcharming wink. The island was created byan archmage, and it can be destroyed in the same fashion.I looked down, indicating the earth beneathus. If they try to take us by force, youmust make sure the father-tree doesnât survive.
Iâm not sure if thatâspossible for me, Gareth relayeduncertainly.
I had already wasted too much time.Returning my attention to the Kriteck I addressed them, âYou musttake me to the
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