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	<title>historical fiction &#8211; Elle Holmes</title>
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	<description>Short Stories and Other Musings</description>
	<lastBuildDate>Fri, 05 Jun 2020 23:35:17 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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	<title>historical fiction &#8211; Elle Holmes</title>
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		<title>Henry&#8217;s Tale: Part One</title>
		<link>https://elleholmes.pub/henrys-tale-part-one/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[eholmeswrites]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 05 Jun 2020 23:35:02 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Short Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[historical fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shortstory]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://elleholmes.pub/?p=155</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[So this one started small and I think it&#8217;s got more story in it than I originally thought. It&#8217;s about&#8230;]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p><em>So this one started small and I think it&#8217;s got more story in it than I originally thought. It&#8217;s about a 17-year-old boy living in the slums of London just outside of Saint Katherine&#8217;s docks in 1838. He does his best to make his way, but when a shiny bit o&#8217; coin distracts him, his day devolves into more than he bargained for.  This Part One, look out for Part Two next week <img src="https://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/17.0.2/72x72/1f642.png" alt="🙂" class="wp-smiley" style="height: 1em; max-height: 1em;" /> </em></p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator"/>



<p>A salty breeze swirled up and around Henry Scott as he sat along the bridge near Saint Katherine’s docks, blowing his wavy brown hair this way and that while filling his head with all the possibilities held across the sea. This was his favorite spot in London. Yes, the smell was something wretched in the docks, but here, just outside along the Thames, the salt air purified his blighted existence if even just for a moment. He envisioned himself on one of those boats.&nbsp;<em>One day,&nbsp;</em>he’d tell himself. Until then he’d dream of adventures in far off lands.</p>



<p>Deckhands trying to navigate the narrow river shouted at each other as seagulls cawed overhead, begging for any scrap of food that might be available. They were only the noisiest beggars in a city filled with a starving, homeless population thanks to the newly finished docks. “Progress,” they said, “is what is needed to move into a new era of revolution!” What they really meant was, “We must purge the slums to make room for more wealth to enter the city.” All the while, the Tower of London presided over the disparity from its lofty throne next door.&nbsp;<em>What did 11,300 poor people mean to a growing empire?</em>&nbsp;Henry thought to himself.&nbsp;<em>One more reason to get out of this hellhole.</em></p>



<p>Henry Scott, at only 17 years of age, found himself among the privileged few whose house wasn’t demolished in the name of progress, instead, he and his older sister Evie lived just north of the docks in the newly overrun slums. Tuberculosis and malnutrition were part of daily life and the rumors of cholera breeding in the docks didn’t bode well for any of them. They did their best though, Evie took jobs where she could find them, although Henry never asked where, and he himself worked at the docks whenever they’d have him.</p>



<p>The call-on bell rang in the distance, the sign that it was time to line up and hope he could find the promise of a day’s pay. He ran through the crowds of dockworkers and merchants already setting up their stalls along the quay. Splashes of red and green caught his attention and caused him to slow his pace. Apples. Henry’s favorite. It’d been years since he’d seen such fresh delicious fruit. He casually walked over to the merchant, inspecting the goods.</p>



<p>“Good morning, young sir,” said the merchant, “can I tempt you with some delicious fruit for breakfast. I’ll give you a first sale of the day price, only one sovereign for five of your choice.” The merchant cocked his head and raised his eyebrow as if to tell Henry that this was the best deal he was going to get. Henry wasn’t buying. Not only did he not have twelve pence to his name, let alone a pound, but he knew that a single sovereign would buy a whole bushel of apples anywhere else.</p>



<p>“Oh, sir, I would love to, but, ya see, me poor sister is sick and I have to send all me monies to pay for her doctor bills.” His sister was in fact not sick, but Henry was always one to con a con. He turned to leave, but his foot caught the leg of the display, sending apples rolling off and down the dock.</p>



<p>“Oh, sir! I’m so sorry. I didn’t mean to.” He meant too.</p>



<p>“That’s alright, son, no harm, no foul,” replied the merchant as the pair of them picked up the few apples that had rolled away. All except the one Henry pocketed in the ruckus.</p>



<p>“Best of luck to ya, sir!”</p>



<p>Henry waited until he was out of sight before indulging in the stolen sphere of sweetness. The snap of the skin, the burst of juices, the flavor of good memories flooded Henry’s senses. That last time he’d had an apple was his 14th birthday, his Mum had saved up to make an apple pie. Evie knitted him a new scarf and even his father had carved two wooden practice swords from driftwood so they could practice together. It was one of the last times his family had all been together.</p>



<p>Henry felt that familiar tightness forming in his throat.&nbsp;<em>Not here</em>. He shook away the thought of his family. He had somewhere to be, the worker line was already growing. A shout curtailed his attention from the line for a second time.</p>



<p>“Hey! Give that back!”</p>



<p>A group of older boys was hassling someone about something, again. It was the same group every day. Henry had known them back in school. That is until his Dad was laid off, when Henry had to quit school to start helping out the family. He never much cared for the lot of them though, ‘ruffians and thugs’ as Evie called them.&nbsp;<em>Now, who are they picking on today,</em>&nbsp;wondered Henry.</p>



<p>The crowds cleared enough to reveal a runt of a lad, five stone if he was one, and at thirteen could hardly reach the top of a horse if his life depended on it. But somehow the young Barnaby had wiggled his way into a soft spot in Henry’s heart and lodged himself there for good.</p>



<p>Henry took one last look at the call-on line, hoping he had time to fix the Barnaby situation and get in line while there was still work to be had.</p>



<p>He raced across the docks, jumping from one post to another, just in time to watch as one of the older boys slammed Barnaby down on the wet concrete.</p>



<p>“Right, well that doesn’t seem like a very fair fight, lads,” called out Henry as he landed at the entrance of the alleyway. “Why not pick on someone a little closer to your own size?”</p>



<p>“If it isn’t the mother robin, himself?” said the leader of the pack. He wasn’t a particularly bright boy, Stephen, but what he lacked in intelligence he made up for in sheer size and strength. He looked as if his father had been part horse, his face didn’t hurt the resemblance either. “Here to protect your little baby robin, are you, Henry?”</p>



<p>Stephen, flanked by his two cohorts, set his eyes squarely on Henry. He’d have to make a good show of force before things escalated too quickly. Henry laughed in the jolliest way he could muster.</p>



<p>“Robin? That’s a good one, Stephen. Could make a stuffed bird laugh, ya could.”</p>



<p>“Huh?” Stephen questioned. “What are you on about then?” Stephen stepped forward as if to attack, but Henry popped him square in the jaw sending the boy flailing backward. His foot tried to find purchase but instead found a freshly dropped dung, further adding insult to injury. Stephen reached for his now bloody nose.</p>



<p>“You’re going to regret this, orphan,” he said running away. “You can count on that!” His two cowardly cohorts quickly followed his lead and scampered off after their not-so-fearless leader.</p>



<p>“Wow, thanks, Henry. You saved me from a right batty-fang, ya did,” Barnaby said as Henry lifted up from the same position he’d been laying in during the whole exchange. “How’d you always manage to be where’s I need you when I needs you?”</p>



<p>“Damfino, ‘Nab. How come you always manage to need me bein’ places, huh? Can’t a man catch a break every once in a while?” Henry patted Barnaby’s hat back on, rustling his ruddy hair in the process. “You good though? I gotta get back in line.”</p>



<p>“Yeah, yeah, I’m good. Oy! Can I come?”</p>



<p>“‘Nab, you can barely lif’ yourself, how you gonna lif’ sacks onto a boat?” Henry asked breaking into a run back towards the line, leaving young Barnaby on his own once again.</p>



<p class="has-text-align-center">• • •</p>



<p>“Sorry, lads, that’s it for the day,” called out the harbormaster. Henry had missed another day’s work. That was the third payday he’d missed in a week, he dreaded to picture the look of reprehension Evie would have waiting for him if he came home empty-handed again.</p>



<p>“Damned this wretched city!” cursed a rather portly man from Henry’s left. “How many days must we delay before departing, Etto? I’m due back in Philadelphia by the first of September. What do they expect me to do, flap my arms like one of these God-forsaken pigeons all the way back to America?”</p>



<p><em>America?</em>&nbsp;That word piqued Henry’s interest. He’d dreamed of being able to visit the newly formed United States of America, but he’d never actually met an American yet. And yet in front of him stood two. The first man, the portly one, looked completely out of place in Saint Katherine’s docks. He had one of the finest coats Henry had ever seen outside the Tower. He had a dark wool tailcoat, almost white trousers without a stain on them, and a bright purple vest that looked like it was straight out of the Queen’s cabinet. Then he even managed to wear the biggest necktie seen this side of the pond, clearly, this man was not at all accustomed to the stifling heat of London in July. His face was so red that it looked to be scaring off his hair as it was silently running away from his face leaving the front of his forehead completely bare.</p>



<p>The other man though, he was a sight. Almost two meters high, easily 15 stone and skin as dark as night. He looked like something right out of a pirate story, a dark leather waistcoat with the sleeves cut clean off. His belt was just a bit of fabric tied thrice over but he carried himself with a dignity and dexterity that proved he probably knew how to handle to two short swords at his belt with ease should the need arise.</p>



<p>“Paperwork always seems to be the folly of punctuality, Mr. Rush, but don’t worry. I think we’ll be well underway before the week is up.”</p>



<p>“Yes, yes, I’m sure you’re right, Etto. You normally are, my friend, with these sorts of things. I’ll just be happy to be back home. Something about being in London makes me weary that the British won&#8217;t just let us leave so easily anymore. Maybe this new Queen will be better.” The man, Mr. Rush as he was called, regarded two small gold coins in his hand. “What say you we go spend a little of this gold on some breakfast?”</p>



<p>“I would normally love to join you, sir, but I have some other matters I need to attend to before we ship out. I shall meet you back at the hotel this evening.”</p>



<p>“Ah, fair enough. And here,” he said tossing one of the coins at him, “at least make sure you eat something today. Can’t have my bodyguard wasting away.”</p>



<p>“Will do, sir.” The man, Etto, placed the coin into a small pocket underneath his cloth belt. That little coin of gold was enough to feed Henry and his sister for at least a week. Henry wanted that coin.</p>



<p>Etto helped his friend into a nearby Hansom cab and then made his way towards the center of town. Henry navigated the small, bustling streets of London, keeping a close eye on the man Etto. He fancied himself a decent enough pickpocket but preferred to wait for the perfect opportunity to present itself.</p>



<p>And present it did.</p>



<p>In one particularly busy intersection, the crowd erupted in screams as an out of control horse and carriage threatened to take out anyone too foolish to move. A woman and her young child stood frozen in the fray.&nbsp;<em>Move, damn you,</em>&nbsp;thought Henry as he watched the scene unfold,&nbsp;<em>bloody move!</em>&nbsp;Henry’s muscles tensed as he prepared to leap into action, but someone beat him to it. Etto was already there and pulling the pair out of the way just seconds before the horse reared its head. The horse slammed its hooves into the exact spot the mother and child had been standing before his master reigned it in.</p>



<p>“Are you okay?” the man questioned. His thick accent coming through with every word, but still, Henry couldn’t quite place it.&nbsp;<em>Is that what Americans sound like now?</em>&nbsp;Henry shook his head in an attempt to bring him back to the present. This was his opportunity.</p>



<p>“I saw the whole thing!” Henry gawked as he ran up to the group, placing his hand ever so subtly on Etto’s shoulder. “You was so fast, sir! Mad as hops it was. Are you’s alright?”</p>



<p>“We’re okay,” responded the mother shakily. “Thanks to this gentlemen.”</p>



<p>“Right hero, he is,” Henry cooed as patted the man on his back, simultaneously grabbing the small coin from the man’s pocket. “I’ll go fetch a doctor, just in case he’s needed.”</p>



<p>Henry slowed to a stroll once he rounded the nearest corner, flipping the coin, lavishing in his success. Henry couldn’t help but imagine all the possibilities that this coin would allow. It wouldn’t get them out of the slum, but they’d have food in their bellies for the week.</p>



<p>“Oy, watch it! Damn dogs,” Henry cursed while nearly tripping over a scurrying pair of mutts.</p>



<p>Henry turned back around and walked straight into the chest of Billy Scamps – the self-proclaimed lord of the slums. At over 16 stone and just shy of two meters, he didn’t have much competition for the title. His loyal following of goons flanked him on either side. Henry was outnumbered five to one. Billy snatched the gold coin midair.</p>



<p>“Well, what ‘ave we here, boys?” He twirled the coin over and around his fingers. “Little Henry’s got a new bit o’ shine.”</p>



<p>“Oy, that’s mine. Give it here, Billy.” Henry tried to jump and grab it before a fist found his gut causing him to double over in pain.</p>



<p>“That’s Mister Scamps to you,” said the owner of the fist – one of Billy’s attack dogs named Joe.</p>



<p>“Whoa, Joe, easy there. Henry’s a friend, ain&#8217;t ya, Henry? And friends like to share, don’t they, chaps? Now, where’d ya get this, boy?” Billy bent over to meet Henry’s pain-stricken face.</p>



<p>Henry tried to stand against the pain in his abdomen. He felt like every ounce of air had been ripped from his body and every inhale stopped short from pain.</p>



<p>“I just found it,” he managed to squeak out between raspy breaths.</p>



<p>“You found it? Don’t sell me a dog, boy!” Billy picked Henry up by the collar one-handed, lifting him off the ground. &#8220;Who’d you knick this off of? Where there’s one coin to be had, there’s probably more.”</p>



<p>Henry may have been a pickpocket, but he wasn’t about to let these thugs go after what seemed like a decent enough fellow. “I swears it, I just found it.”</p>



<p>“Joe.” Billy released his grasp and let Henry tumble to the ground. His body hit the slick stone street – hard. He felt a searing pain in his gut as a boot gained purchase in the same spot as had the fist. Joe continued his assault on Henry as he writhed in pain, the taste of metal filling his mouth, his vision getting fuzzy.</p>



<p>“Stop!” a voice bellowed out of the darkness that was attempting to swallow Henry whole. The next few moments were a blur. Shouts, grunts, and slams were all Henry could hear until there was nothing but quick footsteps. He opened his eyes to see the group of five men, including Billy, scamper off down the alley. A pair of feet stood in front of Henry’s face as he was lifted back to his feet.</p>



<p>“Are you okay, boy?” The thick accent was unmistakable. It had to be Etto. Henry regained his footing and regarded the man who’d just saved him.&nbsp;<em>No wonder he made short work of them</em>, Henry thought to himself.&nbsp;<em>He’s huge.</em></p>



<p>“I’m good. Thanks for that,” Henry responded as he flinched and grabbed for the wall to catch himself.</p>



<p>“Where do you live? We need to get you home so you can rest.”</p>



<p>“I can get there on my own, thanks.” Henry’s knee gave out again almost sending him toppling as Etto reached out and grabbed his arm.</p>



<p>“Just point, son, we’ll get you there.” Etto looked deep into Henry’s eyes as if trying to determine his home by sheer intuition.</p>



<p>“Fine. It’s not far, right up this way.” At least Billy had taken Etto’s coin that Henry knicked, that would’ve been a hard explanation and the walk home even more awkward.</p>



<p class="has-text-align-center">• • •</p>



<p>The pair of men walked up the stairs to Henry’s small hovel of a home. Each step creaked something awful under the combined weight. Shouts filled the hallway – the Smiths were at it again, they fought on the daily and the whole building knew why thanks to the paper-thin walls. The Fitzgerald baby cried from the second floor, it hadn’t stopped for the last few days which was never a good sign, even Henry knew that much. They opened the door to Henry’s apartment.</p>



<p>“Henry, is that you?” shouted Evie from the back room. Henry’s overprotective big sister.&nbsp;<em>Of course, she’d be home now,</em>&nbsp;Henry thought to himself.</p>



<p>“Yea, it’s me, sis,” he called back. “And a friend, so be decent!”</p>



<p>“A friend, what do you mean–” Evie stopped dead in her tracks in the hallway as soon as she laid eyes on the pair. “Henry! What did you get yourself into now?”</p>



<p>“Oh it’s fine, Evie, just a bit o’ cops is all.”</p>



<p>“Henry James Scott. What did I tell you about that accent? You’re not a street thug, don’t talk like one.” Evie was adamant that no matter what station in life they fell to, she wouldn’t let the education her parents had worked so hard for fall to nothing.</p>



<p>“Evie, I told you. If I talk prim and proper on the street I’ll get taken for all we’re worth.”</p>



<p>“And what do you call getting thrashed in the street? What would Mum and Dad say?”</p>



<p>“Well they ain&#8217;t here, are they?” He regretted them the moment the words left his mouth. Evie stood taken aback, Henry knew he’d gone too far.</p>



<p>“No. They aren’t. But what they taught us is, and it’s all we have left so don’t throw it away so casually.”</p>



<p>“I’m sorry, Evie,” Henry said sullenly, feeling suddenly too small for his own clothes.</p>



<p>“Now, who’s your friend?” she questioned, turning her attention to Etto who’d up to this point had remained silent through the sibling exchange. She reached her hand out in greeting, “I’m Evelyn Scott.”</p>



<p>“Etto, ma’am,” he said shaking her hand.</p>



<p>“Well thank you, Mister Etto, for bringing my wooden spoon of a brother back to me.” She turned to Henry, “and I imagine I have him to thank for saving you from getting two black eyes this time?”</p>



<p>“Yes,” Henry responded pathetically. “I could’ve taken ‘em though<em>,”</em>&nbsp;he continued knowing full well that he would’ve been a goner if it weren’t for the man who’s coin he’d appropriated for himself. The same coin that had gotten him into the scuffle in the first place.</p>



<p>“I’m sure you would’ve, son.” Etto turned to Evie, “you’ve got quite the bricky brother, ma’am.”</p>



<p>“That he is,” Evie responded.</p>



<p>“I’ll be on my way then,” Etto said, turning to leave.</p>



<p>“No, please, stay for lunch,” Evie pleaded as she reached out and grabbed his arm. “Feeding you is the least I can do to thank you for saving Henry.”</p>



<p>Henry hoped he’d decline. He wanted this man out of his house, the longer he stayed the more likely it was that the coin would come up in the conversation. Etto looked down at Evie’s hand on his arm, then to Henry before finally meeting Evie’s gaze.</p>



<p>“That would very nice, Miss Scott, thank you.”</p>



<p><em>Damn</em>, Henry thought.</p>



<p>“Oh, please, call me Evie. Everyone else does. Right, I’ll get to lunch then. Henry, try not to get into any more scuffles while I’m not looking.”</p>



<p>“Thanks, Evie, I’ll try.”</p>



<p>Henry found a comfortable spot on the single bed that made up ‘his room’ in the small space. He left the wooden chair for Etto. He tried to recline and close his eyes to detract from any conversation that Etto may want to start.</p>



<p>“So about my coin.”</p>



<p><em>Damn it all</em>, Henry thought.</p>



<p>“Right, you knew about that then?”</p>



<p>“You’re not that good, son. Why do you think I was there in that alley? Felt you knick it, but needed to get that mother and child situated first before following you. I would like it back now.”&nbsp;</p>



<p>“Yea, well I don’t have it anymore. Got this nice shiner instead,” Henry responded pointing to his swollen eye. He hoped that would elicit some sort of sympathy for his case.</p>



<p>“Ah. Then how do you intend to pay me back?”</p>



<p>“Pay you back?” Henry exclaimed before immediately switching to hushed tones. “With what? I have nothing, as you can see.” He showcased the derelict apartment filled with rags for blankets and pillowcases filled with straw. The few trinkets they did have held only sentimental value. Even most of the wooden furniture had been sacrificed to the stove for warmth last winter.</p>



<p>“I have some business I need to attend to this evening. I could use an extra set of eyes and since you don’t seem to have a problem with the gray areas of morality, you could work your debt off and we’ll call it even.”</p>



<p>Henry considered the proposition. What could he say to it, he did owe the man, twice over if you count the alley rescue. And having already proved himself a thief, couldn’t balk at a little gray area business. But there was a difference between a little pickpocketing and true crime.</p>



<p>“I don’t want any trouble, sir. I’m just trying to get through life here.”</p>



<p>“No trouble to be had. I just have some things that I need to bring back to America and there may be some people that aim to prevent that.” Etto leaned forward on his knees, staring down Henry. “I don’t want to cause you or your sister any trouble, but I do need help and if you find yourself in a position to do so, I’d be appreciative. Meet me at the Prospect of Whitby tonight at dusk.”</p>



<p>“I–”</p>



<p>“Lunch is ready, gents.” Evie walked into the room carrying three plates of sandwiches, interrupting the conversation. Her timing was impeccable as always.</p>



<p>The trio enjoyed a quick lunch, Evie and Etto exchanging stories the whole time. Henry could barely get a word in edgewise, not that he wanted to. His mind raced with ideas of what this man could possibly need Henry’s help in. He seemed like a decent enough fellow, saving that mother and child and all. And he did say that Henry would only be an extra set of eyes.&nbsp;<em>How much trouble could you get into for just being a lookout</em>, Henry questioned to himself.</p>



<p>“Thank you so much, Evie. Lunch was a delicious break from the day, but alas I should get back to my business,” Etto said as he made his way to the door.</p>



<p>“The pleasure was all ours, Etto. And thank you again for helping my brother. It means a lot, to both of us,” Evie replied while shoving Henry in the arm.</p>



<p>“Ow. I mean, yes, thank you, Mister Etto.” Henry didn’t particularly care for the way Evie was looking at the man. Her eyes traced his frame like she was looking at a fresh apple pie.</p>



<p>“You’ve a lovely home, Evie. And maybe we’ll see each other around, Mister Henry,” he grasped Henry’s hand and pulled it ever so slightly towards him. Henry could feel the strength of the man as he squeezed just a bit too hard. Henry got the message. He’d be there tonight, fear be damned.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
					
		
		
		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">155</post-id>	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Jim of New York</title>
		<link>https://elleholmes.pub/jim-of-new-york/</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[eholmeswrites]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 22 May 2020 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Short Stories]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[egypt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[historical fiction]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[reedsy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[short story]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http:/?p=1</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Hypatia sat between two colonnades at the Serapeum listening to her father address his countrymen. Her dark wavy hair gently&#8230;]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p>Hypatia sat between two colonnades at the Serapeum listening to her father address his countrymen. Her dark wavy hair gently rustled in the breeze. The smell of horses from the passing chariots mixed with the gentle wafts of salt blowing off the sea. The scent of home comforted her almost as much as the sound of her father’s lessons. Theon was one of the foremost scholars in Alexandria at the time, earning him the title Director of the Library even though the bulk of the Great Library was no longer. The sun was high and the shadow of the stoa barely extended into the agora.</p>



<p>Today’s lecture was on mathematics, one of Hypatia’s favorite subjects, but she’d actually helped her father write this one and found her mind wandering to thoughts of the crowd.&nbsp;<em>How many of these people are actually listening or even comprehending</em>, she thought to herself. The city, which was once the height of human knowledge and scholastic achievement had diminished through the years, brought to its knees by religious intolerance on all sides. She knew she’d have to keep an eye out for her aging father, enemies to knowledge lurked behind every corner.</p>



<p>As Theon reached the crescendo of his lecture, a glint of light caught the corner of Hypatia’s eye. She turned to catch its source, but there was nothing that should’ve caused such a flash. She rose and slipped between colonnades to investigate further. A swaying piece of fabric caught her attention. She quickened her pace.</p>



<p>“Who’s there?” Hypatia called out. No answer.</p>



<p>She wound around the southeast colonnade where she’d seen the movement just in time to catch a lone figure slip into the rear entrance of the Serapeum.&nbsp;<em>Now I’ve got you</em>, she thought. Having grown up spending every waking moment following her father’s footsteps in the daughter library, Hypatia knew better than most the secrets held within the stone temple to knowledge.</p>



<p>She watched as the seedy-looking man slipped conspicuously between rooms. He held a strange torch in his hand, illuminating the shelves of books as if searching for something. She knew eventually he’d land himself in the far-most room with a hidden staircase and conveniently, that same room with a secret gate that few knew existed. Hypatia positioned herself around the corner at the release mechanism, poised to act.</p>



<p>The man entered the small room and with a quick thud found himself behind a retractable series of beams.</p>



<p>“What the-,” he cried out.</p>



<p>Hypatia stayed hidden as she regarded the captured man. He didn’t look much older than Hypatia herself, maybe his late 20s. He had light brown hair the was cut short on the sides, but grew longer on top as if held in position by some solidifying agent. He smelled of salt air and cypress, and not a small amount of sweat. His left eyebrow had a patch of hair missing in the middle, giving him a rugged look that stood in opposition to the kind, amber eyes they guarded.</p>



<p>“What is your purpose here,” Hypatia called out from the darkness.</p>



<p>“Who’s there? Show yourself!” he responded as he quickly extinguished his strange torch.</p>



<p>“You should not be here,” she said, stepping into the light.</p>



<p>The stranger stopped and regarded her for a moment before responding. “I shouldn’t be here, shouldn’t you be outside listening to the old man?”</p>



<p>“That old man is my father and the Director of the Library.” Hypatia immediately felt herself becoming defensive. “I say again, what is your purpose here?”</p>



<div class="wp-block-group"><div class="wp-block-group__inner-container is-layout-flow wp-block-group-is-layout-flow">
<p>“Director of the Library, eh? Okay then, so you probably know your way around this place pretty well? Clearly well enough to know how to get me trapped in here, how about getting me out of here?” He smiled as if he was winning. Hypatia was not one to be charmed so easily.</p>
</div></div>



<p>“Not until you tell me who you are and what you’re doing here.”</p>



<p>“You first.”</p>



<p>“I’m not the one trespassing. Like I said, my father is Theon, the Director of -”</p>



<p>“Yes, yes, Director of the Library. And your name?”</p>



<p>“Hypatia of Alexandria, daughter of Theon,” she replied cautiously.&nbsp;<em>What harm could knowing my name be, after all,</em>&nbsp;she thought. Most Grecians and Egyptians that traveled this area knew of her and her father.</p>



<p>“Hypatia? Really? Well, nice to meet you, Hypatia. I’m Jim.”</p>



<p>“Jim? You mean Jacomus?”</p>



<p>“What? No, just Jim.”</p>



<p>“Just Jim?”</p>



<p>“Yes. Well, no, it’s technically short for Jameson, but that’s immaterial. Hey so now that we’re introduced, why don’t we see about getting me out of here.” Jim, as he called himself, began to shake the bars and move about the room looking for a release button. He came dangerously close to the mechanism hidden within the room that opened the passageway down the stairs.</p>



<p>“You still haven’t told me your purpose here, Jim of, where did you say you were from?”</p>



<p>“I didn’t, but I’m from a place I’m sure you haven’t heard of. It’s a bit away from here.”</p>



<p>“Try me.”</p>



<p>“Okay then. New York. I can assume by the look on your face, you’ve not heard of it.”</p>



<p>Hypatia could feel her own eyebrows furrow at not having heard of the place. She prided herself on knowing much of the physical world as every true Alexandrian did. It was a port city and ships graced her shores from more and more distant places every day. Ptolemy III had even required every vessel to turn over their manuscripts for copying to better fill the knowledge of Alexandria and her libraries. But never, in all of Hypatia’s learning, had she heard of a place called York, let alone New York. Her sense of curiosity piqued, she wanted to know more.</p>



<p>“Tell me of this New York.”</p>



<p>“Nope, sorry. Now it’s your turn. How about getting me out of here?”</p>



<p>“The answer to that question lies behind your answer as to your purpose here.”</p>



<p>“Touché. I’m here for a book-er scroll I mean,” he said glancing around the small room of shelves filled to the brim with ancient scrolls.”</p>



<p>“We have a lot of them, as you can see. Along with books and codices, you’re in Alexandria after all. Which are you after? Perhaps I can help you find it.” She now wanted to know more about this stranger and his home of New York.</p>



<p>Jim looked as if he was pondering his options.</p>



<p>“Look,” Hypatia said, “I know you don’t know how to get out of here. I do. You need to find a scroll. I probably know where it is. You are one girlish scream from me away from being taken away in irons. I want to know more about this New York. I let you out, we work together. Deal?” Hypatia knew how to be succinctly persuasive when she needed to be.</p>



<p>He squinted at the young woman before answering. “Deal.”</p>



<p>Hypatia released the lever that freed Jim. He strode out of the small room with a certain air about him not typical of Alexandria. He came closer to her, uncomfortably close for Hypatia’s liking. Only inches from her face he reached out for her arm and whispered, “thank you.”</p>



<p>Hypatia felt herself being pulled towards the small room that she had just freed Jim from. Nearly stumbling, she caught herself just in time to turn and see the beams fall from the ceiling, sealing her in.</p>



<p>“Hey!” She screamed. “What are you doing?”</p>



<p>“Sorry, but I work alone and can’t really have you following me, but thank you for letting me out. Oh and that was the room I needed after all.” Jim waved a scroll in front of her before placing it in a strange-looking shiny box and into his bag. “So I guess thank you twice.”</p>



<p>With that Jim turned and ran out the same direction from whence they’d entered the building. Hypatia was left alone in the small, confined room with nothing but questions and anger, plenty of anger.</p>



<p>As soon as Jim was out of view, Hypatia pulled the series of levers behind the scrolls to reveal a stone staircase. There were secrets in this building that few, and surely no thieves, knew about.</p>



<p>She reemerged into the light of day outside the agora of the Temple of Serapis. Only minutes had passed and she was sure she could catch the thief before he got too far. The lecture had just ended and a mass exodus of listeners exited the agora at the same time.&nbsp;<em>There’s no way he planned that,</em>&nbsp;Hypatia thought. She jumped up on one of the nearby carts, eliciting a series of screams and shoe-ing from the owner, but it didn’t matter. Hypatia eyed her prey. She caught Jim running through the plateia, almost getting crushed by crossing chariots.</p>



<p>Hypatia jumped into a passing chariot herself, determined to catch the man. As she neared him, a horse and its rider let out a scream from Hypatia’s left.</p>



<p>She turned to find the horse rearing its hoofs only inches from Hypatia’s face. With a scream, she fell off the chariot into the dirt. Another horse appeared to her left. The world seemed to stop. Hypatia could see her situation, the one horse bearing down on her while the chariot she was just on teetered on its axle, threatening to fall in her direction. She could see it all but was unable to make herself move. No amount of learning, no amount of knowledge could muster the strength her muscles needed to move out of the way. She raised her hands in a feeble attempt to protect herself when she felt someone grab her shoulders. As she was pulled out of the way, time caught back up to itself.</p>



<p>“Are you okay?” A breathless voice exclaimed.</p>



<p>“Yes, I…” she turned to find Jim standing behind her, panting from exertion.</p>



<p>“And why didn’t you just stay in your little room nice and safe?”</p>



<p>“You!” Hypatia regained her focus. “I want my scroll back.”</p>



<p>A crowd of guards appeared in the distance, drawn by the commotion. “Okay,” Jim said, “I get that you’re probably going to follow me anyway, so why not come with me? I’ll tell you about New York and you can not give me up to the guards. Deal?”</p>



<p>“Why should I deal with you, you broke our last one.”</p>



<p>“That’s true. But that was then, this time I promise, I won’t leave you behind. Provided you keep up.” He held his hand out to lift Hypatia out of the dirt. Against her better judgment, she wanted to agree. Her curiosity was too powerful to cage in the name of supposed safety. “Any time, lady, they’re getting closer.”</p>



<p>“Fine. I’ll get you out of here. But I’m holding onto the scroll.”</p>



<p>“Whatever, let’s go.”</p>



<p>The pair immediately started winding between the various merchants along the plateia. Most trying to draw the attention of the crowd back to their wares, paying no mind to two individuals that clearly showed no interest in buying.</p>



<p>“In here,” Hypatia said as she grabbed Jim’s arm and led him through a small opening between two colonnades into a bathhouse. Hypatia stayed near the door, watching to spy if the guards had truly been following them. Jim, on the other hand, had already released himself from Hypatia’s grip and wandered the apodyterium.</p>



<p>“Okay, you’re in charge of leading from now on,” he said. Hypatia turned to see him walking up to the few women still remaining from the morning women’s hours. More than a few shot her disgusted looks at having brought a man into the bathhouse at this hour. Hypatia didn’t care. Being the daughter of a philosopher and mathematician that taught her as if she was a son had already branded Hypatia as different. She was no stranger to stares.</p>



<p>“Jameson!” She hissed, “stop bothering them. Once they leave, we should have an hour before the men begin to arrive.” The pair waved at the last few women as they left the bathhouse. Jim tried to follow one of them, but Hypatia pulled him back.</p>



<p>“What? I was just being friendly. Alexandria is a very nice place.”</p>



<p>“Is that what you call it back in New York?”</p>



<p>“Hah, no, in New York it involves spending $28 dollars on an overpriced cocktail just to have it thrown in your face.”</p>



<p>“You come from a very strange place, Jameson of New York.”</p>



<p>“Really, you can call me, Jim,” he said as he grabbed the box from under Hypatia’s arm. He turned to the stone bench along the wall, taking the scroll out of his shiny box.</p>



<p>Hypatia glared at him with incredulity, why would someone want to be called by something other than their name.&nbsp;<em>Unless Jim is a title</em>, she thought. “So what is so important about this scroll that you had to steal it from the Serepeum?”</p>



<p>“It’s a very special one, to me at least.” He rolled it out along the bench and immediately Hypatia knew the scroll. It was one special to her father as well. He’d only showed it to her once when she was very young. It told the story of a girl from the time of the earliest Pharaohs. Her father wouldn’t go into more detail, but she hadn’t seen it since the day her mother died and left it for him.</p>



<p>“That’s my fathers! It belonged to my mother before that. What do you want with it?” She tried to grab the fragile parchment from him.</p>



<p>“Woah, careful. This is an antique,” Jim replied, gently pushing Hypatia away from her family’s scroll. “And you can have it back. I just need to snap a pic of it.”</p>



<p>“Snap a pic?” Hypatia questioned. “What are you talking about?”</p>



<p>“Oh, right. I mean copy it down.” Jim pulled a small box out of his bag and held it above the parchment. His hand continued frozen in that position, hanging his small box just above the scroll as he turned through the various sections of text.</p>



<p>“What… What is that thing?” Hypatia finally questioned.</p>



<p>“It’s a camera. It copies the images on this parchment and saves them for later.”</p>



<p>“I’ve heard rumors of studies coming from the East about optics, but the idea that your small box contains enough parchment for all of this? Impossible.”</p>



<p>“You’re a scientist, you should know better, most impossible things are merely impossible at the moment.”</p>



<p>This took Hypatia back for a moment. This stranger from ‘New York’ was right. The world previously thought the earth was flat, but Eratosthenes proved that it was a circle and measured it. She’d read the codices of Hero and his research into a device that turns steam into work. Even the great lighthouse Pharos was laughed at and heralded as impossible until it was built. Science took time to catch the impossible.</p>



<p>“See, all done,” Jim said as he placed the device back into his bag. He rolled up the scroll, placed it back in the box, and handed it over to Hypatia.</p>



<p>“Thank you!” She grabbed the box from him, perhaps too quickly. “Mind if I take a look at that camera device of yours?”</p>



<p>“I don’t think that would be a good idea. Not sure you’re ready for it just yet.”</p>



<p>“Alexandria is one of the most advanced centers for learning in the modern world, I think I can handle the science of it.” She crossed her arms in protest at the denunciation of her mental abilities. Humility was one thing her father had failed to impress upon her.</p>



<p>“How ‘bout this, maybe one day.” Jim got up and headed for the door. “I’m sure you’re anxious to get that scroll back to your library.”</p>



<p>Hypatia crossed just in front of him, attempting to stare him into submission. “You’re never going to let me have that device. But it’s okay, you keep your secrets and I’ll keep mine.”</p>



<p>“Oh, you have secrets now too?”</p>



<p>“Yes. Plenty. A woman always does.” She smirked as she continued out the door of the bathhouse.</p>



<p>“It’s her!” A voice yelled above the dissonance of the crowd. Hypatia looked up to discover a group of monks pointing at her.</p>



<p>“Oh no. I have to get out of here.” She turned to run, but Jim caught her shoulders.</p>



<p>“Wait, who are those guys?” He held her close as he surveyed the group of men.</p>



<p>“Let’s just say they’re not the biggest fans of me or my father. And especially not of his academy or the library.”</p>



<p>“Come on, this way.”</p>



<p>The pair burst into a run, hoping to lose the men in the crowd. As they ran, the streets got even more crowded. Hypatia felt as if she were running through mud. It was already the peak hour for the market and few cared to move out of the way of a woman. Jameson continued to pull her forward.</p>



<p>She felt a tug at her tunic behind her. She fell to the ground, her head slamming against a nearby rock. The box she held went flying away from her.</p>



<p>“What are you doing so far from your precious academy, witch?” One of the men had caught up to Hypatia and pulled her to the ground. She hated these men. They hated her father for teaching science and hated her even more for being a woman that had learned it. “And what is this?”</p>



<p>The man grabbed the box from the ground, surveying it with curiosity. “Another invention of evil, I assume?”</p>



<p>“Actually it’s mine.” Jameson appeared from the crowd and hit the man in the face hard with a fist. “And it’s none of your business. Let’s go.”</p>



<p>He pulled Hypatia back to her feet and grabbed her hand as they continued their escape. Hypatia’s senses were all heightened, the smell of exotic spices filled the air. The cacophony of merchants selling everything from silk to sheep made her already pounding head hurt even more. She tried to focus on what she could, her feet moving one in front of the other. Her eyes focused on Jim’s feet just inches ahead of her own. The feeling of his strong hand in hers, guiding her to safety. She felt the smooth ring on his finger as they ran. It was smoother than any other ring she’d felt. She’d have to ask to inspect it later.&nbsp;<em>Left foot. Right foot. Left foot. Right foot</em>, she tried to compel her feet to continue moving out of sheer force of will, but her eyelids were getting heavy. Black teased at the corners of her vision. As she collapsed again on the ground, she was left with the image of Jim’s face close to hers.&nbsp;<em>I think you’re attractive too, Jim.</em>&nbsp;Hypatia blacked out.</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator"/>



<p>Hypatia awoke with her father standing over her.</p>



<p>“Thank the gods, you’re alive,” he said. Cradling her head in his arms.</p>



<p>She was back in her room. The smell of incense filled the air. While Hypatia and her father considered themselves learned individuals, they still ascribed to the way of their ancestors, just in case. She glanced around the room, searching for Jim. When she didn’t immediately see him, she began to question whether the afternoon had actually happened as she recalled it.</p>



<p>“How, how did I get here?”</p>



<p>“Because this young man found you and brought you back to me after that horrible mob attack. Don’t think I’m not mad that you went off on your own, young lady. You know better than that.” Her father Theon moved enough to spot Jim leaning against the door.</p>



<p>“Father, please. I’m a grown woman. Can I have a moment to thank my savior privately, please?” She tried to sit up and look as authoritative as she could but having her swollen head pounding didn’t lend itself to any sort of power. Her father Theon begrudgingly left the room, leaving Hypatia alone with Jim of New York.</p>



<p>“Ya know,” he said, “if you wanted to be closer to me you could’ve just asked, you didn’t need to hit your head just for a hug.” He winked at her and she felt a certain attraction to the man that she couldn’t quite place. She knew better than most the thoughts of men and for once, she felt safe around this one.</p>



<p>“Right, because I threw myself down on the ground just to be closer to you.”</p>



<p>“Hey, who am I to judge a woman.” He sat next to her on the frame, causing the reeds to rustle at the added weight. “Seriously though, are you okay?”</p>



<p>“Yes, I’m fine,” Hypatia responded. “Did you save the scroll?” Jim smiled at her. Hypatia knew there was something more to this man. She just couldn’t quite pinpoint it with the pounding causing her focus to dull.</p>



<p>“I did. Safe and sound back with your father as promised.” His arm brushed up against hers and a rush of electricity seemed to travel between the pair. She instinctively grabbed his hand, tracing the lines along his skin until her fingers found the ring on his middle finger.</p>



<p>“That’s right! How did you get a metal so smooth? What metal lends itself to being so smooth, is it still structurally sound?” Her mind erupted in an abundance of questions about such a small thing.</p>



<p>“Oh, this?” He looked at it for a moment, then as if making a decision took it off and gave it to Hypatia. She regarded it closely, there were markings on the inside, but they were worn down and difficult to read.</p>



<p>“Something about balance?” She questioned.</p>



<p>“Yea, old family motto. It means-” Jim was interrupted by a sound coming from his bag. “No! Now? Really, now you decide to work?” A look of concern flashed across his face as he pulled a strange-looking bracelet out of his bag.</p>



<p>“What is that? What’s going on? How many things do you have in the bag?”</p>



<p>“I’m so sorry, Hypatia,” he said, taking his ring back from her. “I have to go. I’m glad you’re okay.”</p>



<p>“Wait, you’re leaving now? But you haven’t held up your end of our deal. What about New York?” She suddenly felt worried that he was being ripped from her life before she was ready to say goodbye.</p>



<p>“I know. I’m sorry. Maybe in another time. I -”</p>



<p>Jim was gone.</p>



<p>Hypatia played the event over in her head. He was talking. There was a flash of light. A strange sound, then gone. He was just gone. She ran out of her room to search for him. Then to the street. Then she climbed up on the boxes outside their house. No sight of him. As quickly as he’d entered her life, he’d left it. Jim of New York was gone.</p>



<p>Years passed, but the memory of Jim of New York never faded. Instead they caused Hypatia to throw herself into her studies even further. She made landmark strides into the fields of science and mathematics until the day her father passed and she once again set her eyes upon the scroll he left for her. The scroll that had brought Jim into her life. As she unrolled the delicate parchment out before her, a familiar glint caught the corner of her eye. The voice that accompanied it filled her soul with excitement.</p>



<p>“So, Hypatia of Alexandria, ready to see New York?”</p>



<hr class="wp-block-separator"/>



<p><em>A shortened version was submitted to Reedsy short story contest:&nbsp;</em><a rel="noreferrer noopener" href="https://blog.reedsy.com/creative-writing-prompts/" target="_blank"><em>https://blog.reedsy.com/creative-writing-prompts/</em></a></p>



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