Author's note: Thanks to everyone for the great comments on part 1. This can't be read as a stand-alone story, so be sure to go back and read part 1 before beginning part 2. The story progression does slow down slightly in this chapter, but it will set everything up for an interesting next installment.
Thanks again to Winter Lotus for her invaluable help with editing and discussing the strange thoughts in my head.
Please comment and vote. Nothing helps me improve as a writer more than getting feedback from readers. I respect all opinions and no comments are ever deleted, even the scathing ones. Thanks again.
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It all began to change in September. The weather began to change too. It wasn't cold yet but the temperature was dipping slowly breaking the heat wave. Jackson finished the upstairs of the barn in record time. He had laid a thick slatted hardwood floor that was polished and sealed. The walls were insulated and covered with sheet rock and now they had a fresh coat of paint on them. He left the thick exposed wood beams across the ceiling and insulated in between them.
The loft now covered the entirety of the second floor. It looked rustic but beautiful. All the furniture was his own creation. The bedroom had its own pot belly stove for heating, and was separated from the rest of the hayloft by a wall with a large, open entryway where the stairs came up. It still needed more work, but the electric and plumbing were installed. Jackson hadn't slept in over two weeks.
Dana had agreed to take Stacy to her house down closer to Albany. She'd fallen asleep and they both knew it would be a long time before she woke. He had wanted her to be somewhere safe away from anyone that might ask questions. Jackson needed the time alone anyway. His thoughts moved almost too quickly and his abilities were strengthening.
It wasn't just knowledge that he had. He knew all kinds of science and technology and history. But he also had abilities that the Ancients harnessed from different races across worlds. He knew occult languages and spells like the whispering words. It made him wonder how they learned to package the information. Most of it couldn't really be taught, he thought. Even he didn't fully understand it yet. New changes and abilities appeared constantly. It stemmed from him now, bound in every piece of him, and he learned to harness it and apply it with every passing day.
Jackson stood in the bedroom of the loft. He was stronger still as he looked at himself in the standing mirror. His muscles were thicker after the second submersion. It had been weeks since he slept with Dana. His balls hung huge and heavy. He pulled on his boxer briefs trapping the fat girth of his cock along his inner thigh. Even it had grown again, and with it his carnal urges. Then he pulled on his jeans and faded t-shirt.
Fudge started barking outside and he sighed heavily. It couldn't be helped, he reminded himself. His mother had been quite excited about the whole thing. She saw it as an honor. But it didn't scare him any longer. Not like before when Josh Callaway was on television and the reporters were covering the story nonstop.
Jackson walked downstairs through his workshop and stepped outside. A black Lincoln town car parked at the end of the driveway. A well-dressed man in a fitted suit stepped out of the driver door and walked around to open the back door. Archbishop Timothy Dormer emerged in his full vestments. He wore a long red cassock that came down to his ankles covered by a shorter white linen rochet that stopped at the knee. His shoulders were covered by a red satin mozzetta, the cape hung around his neck and over his chest and shoulders. And finally a violet zucchetto skull cap that covered the top of his head. Another priest followed closely behind him in a traditional black cassock with thirty-three buttons symbolizing Jesus' age at the time of the crucifixion.
"Ah, Jackson Travers, I presume." Archbishop Dormer said. "Your mother told me I'd find you in the barn. I spoke with her earlier."
Jackson extended his hand. "Your Eminence." He stated using the proper greeting.
"Just Timothy today." He replied. "I want this to be a casual conversation. This is Father Ignatio. He's just here to observe." Jackson chuckled at the comment. "Is something amusing?"
"You brought a devil's advocate." He replied. "That doesn't seem casual. It seems like the Church is certain of a miracle." The Vatican always sent a dissenting voice when they looked to confirm a miracle. It was the job of that priest to discount the miracle at all costs, to play the role of the Devil's Advocate.
Archbishop Dormer gave an easy smile. "A formality. He was already in the country. A stigmata in Texas that turned out to be a hoax." He reached into a pocket and pulled out a pack of cigarettes. "Do you mind? It's a nasty habit. Show me the barn. I hear you're a carpenter. Jesus was a carpenter. It's a noble profession."
Jackson walked him into the barn with Father Ignatio trailing behind them. "Why are you interested in me?"
"Your mother thinks you know something of the Callaway case." He said running his hands down the top of a sanded pine secretary. "Beautiful work. It's so rare to see true craftsmanship. Anyway, I spoke with the boy's mother who didn't say much about you at all. But Josh is quite taken with you. I love charity myself. But I find with children that once you leave, you're quickly forgotten. You met the boy once and he remembers you well."
"And if I did have something to do with it? What then?"
Archbishop Dormer stopped and looked him over. "Well I'd be interested to know more about that."
Jackson smiled. "I grew up going to church. I was raised Catholic with a strict mother. I can tell you that God hasn't spoken to me, nor any saints or disciples or angels. I'm not touched by the Divine Hand. And I'm not the second coming of Christ."
Father Ignatio pulled the Archbishop aside and began speaking to him in Italian.
"Would you prefer to have to have this conversation in Italian?" Jackson asked, speaking the language perfectly. They turned to look at him with surprise. "Perhaps you would like to use the older languages. Aramaic? Hebrew?"
"Very few people speak Aramaic." Archbishop Dormer stated with interest.
"I speak many languages." Jackson replied candidly. "I've recently discovered that I have a knack for learning."
The Archbishop absorbed the comment and then walked around an oak dresser with exceptional detail and inlay work. "I think I might like to commission a few pieces of furniture. Well-made pieces last a lifetime unlike the manufactured junk they sell these days. Do you have any coffee? I hope it's not rude to ask before being offered."
"Upstairs." Jackson nodded toward the staircase. "I'd be happy to build anything you might like. I enjoy woodworking. I just wish I could make more money with it."
"Money." He said disdainfully. "It seems the whole world revolves around money these days."
"Even the Church."
Archbishop Dormer smiled at his boldness. "Yes. Even the church. A sin in itself." They stepped upstairs and walked toward a small table near the kitchenette. "You did all this work yourself?"
"Well, I'm just completing it. I can't expect to live with my mother forever. But I have a responsibility to her. She needs my help with the bills and the house. So, it seemed like a natural solution. Together but separate. And I'm still a good Catholic son."