Later that daylight, Caleb returned with another big catch, half of which was destined for trade. Braden could only smile. He never imagined how trading was going to unfold and be embraced. He had met such resistance at the start.
Mattie and Caleb insisted on keeping the twins while the rest of the companions headed north across the Great Desert. Micah hadn’t contemplated leaving the children behind, but until the last two oases were built, crossing the Great Desert would be dangerous. She wanted Ax and ‘Tesh to learn, but not at the risk of their lives. And although Braden was comfortable with the north, she was not. She didn’t feel good about what they would encounter.
‘I suggest your parents are right in wanting your children to remain behind, all of your children,’ Aadi interjected over the mindlink, nodding toward G-War. Braden and Micah’s life would be much easier without having to worry about what Klytus and Shauna were getting into, but she also didn’t wish that on her parents. The old lady with the broom came to mind.
Once again, the President learned that she had little control over some decisions. With a finger pointed at her father, she warned him, “I know you are going to take them to sea and you better not let them out of your sight! These two will be in the ocean in a heartbeat if they even think they heard a whale. And you take those two as well!” She pointed to the two smaller ‘cats, rolling close to the fire and letting the heat warm their bellies recently filled with fresh fish.
“We’ll be back as quick as we can,” Braden said soothingly, with a quick smile. “When the next trader shows up, send for Bronwyn. She has a way to talk with us, no matter where we are. We like talking with Ax and ‘Tesh while we’re traveling,” he added cryptically.
They were interrupted by a commotion in the courtyard. The sound of cheers told them a trader had arrived. With a grin, Braden almost ran over Ax as he dashed from the hut. The others followed him in a more orderly manner.
Zeller was standing in the front of her wagon, waving at everyone as Arnie easily pulled the full wagon into the village square.
“Wait, wait, wait!” Zeller yelled, pleased at the response from her home village. “I think I have something for everyone, but what do you have for me?” She raised her hands as the cheers continued and people crowded around.
Micah waved until Zeller saw her, then she hopped down and reiterated that everyone needed to wait. The life Zeller had was due to Micah’s efforts. She never took that for granted, always looking for ways to thank Micah for her freedom. Small talk followed until she learned that they were heading north of the Great Desert. Without hesitation, Zeller leaned over her shoulder, made a funnel with her hand that she shouted into, “Unload the wagon and take everything! You can owe me!”
Braden looked at her, confusion gripping him. A Free Trader never gave her trade goods away.
“I’m going. End of discussion,” she said and without further ado, Zeller and Micah, arm in arm, walked back into Caleb and Mattie’s hut.
Braden looked at G-War, who was finally relieved that someone replaced him in the top spot of public humiliation. “Do they teach everyone to talk that way here in Trent?” Braden asked the ‘cat.
His father-in-law answered, “No, we don’t. I think it is passed naturally from mother to daughter. I thought you knew that.” Caleb wrapped his arm around Braden’s shoulders and together they laughed at their good fortune at having partnered with such women.
With a good night’s sleep behind them, they started the process of loading up. They didn’t like leaving the children behind, but their trip would be much easier and safer. They could focus on what had to be done. Patrice and Delavigne leapt into the back of the wagon. Skirill and Zyena stood on the buckboard and waited for the nod so they could fly ahead, where they’d give the companions a view of the land before them until they reached Devaney’s Barren, at which time, they’d ride. The sun and heat was far too brutal for them to fly over the desert and they shied away from flying in the dark.
Aadi floated higher and swam into the back of the wagon after saying his goodbyes with Mattie. She could hear all the companions and they naturally befriended her. Micah and her mother were much alike, probably more than they admitted.
Bounder and Gray Strider had disappeared shortly after they reached the village as they weren’t fans of fish dinners. Skirill had shown them that a herd of deer wasn’t far. They reappeared in the evening for their obligatory ear scratches from Mattie. They slept in a pile with the twins, three ‘cats, and ten or fifteen Rabbits. Micah always shook her head in disbelief when she saw it, but she also knew that there probably wasn’t a safer place for her children.
The second wagon changed things. Brandt wasn’t free to run as fast as he was capable of. Arnie would have to set the pace, unless they changed who pulled which wagon and that could even things out. They’d think on that as Zeller had grown accustomed to her wagon with her friend pulling. Once she rode in the Old Tech wagon, Braden figured they’d never get her to give it up. It was a good problem to have and he hoped they had the pleasure of discussing it after they returned, with everything intact, from the north.
With that small concern placed in the back of their minds, they headed out, thirteen of them on a journey across the Great Desert.
Into Devaney’s Barren
The caravan angled northwest after passing the northern border of the rainforest. It was easy going and with Brandt’s encouragement, Arnie set a strong pace, far quicker than the horses would have been able to manage. Although the Toromont Run Aurochs was little more than half Brandt’s size, he had heart and gave his full effort to pulling Zeller’s wagon. She constantly cooed to him and talked aloud with him, even though she could have used her thought voice.
Aadi and Braden maintained a running conversation about the best way to enter the villages up north. They didn’t decide anything as they mostly kept repeating themselves, each unyielding from their original premise. Micah got bored quickly and took turns running alongside the wagon and riding. The Wolfoids ran a great deal, knowing that they would ride during their time the desert. Even at night, they risked burning the pads of their paws by walking on the hot sand.
After a short break at a small stream in the Plains of Propiscius, they swapped wagons. Zeller and Arnie took the Old Tech wagon while Brandt was hitched to the smaller, “modern” wagon. He grumbled a little as he had gotten used to pulling without feeling any resistance. It didn’t take long before he was feeling the exertion and reveled in working his muscles afresh. Braden and G-War kept him company while the others remained in the Old Tech wagon, enjoying the couch-like padding.
Micah stayed with Zeller in the Old Tech wagon. They hadn’t told her yet about the source of the Old Tech and that they had plenty of it with them.
“What do you think of this wagon?” Micah asked simply.
“This is amazing. I didn’t know Tom produced anything like this! Arnie says he can’t feel its weight at all and this padding is to die for. My poor backside suffers on the run to River Crook. The rocks are rough out that way,” Zeller responded.
“It’s Old Tech,” Micah offered.
“The ancients had wagons?” Zeller turned in her seat and faced Micah. They sat up front, but there were no reins, so they were only observers with good seats as the world passed them by. The Aurochs wouldn’t blindly pull them into trouble.
“Well, no. It was built less than a moon ago using Old Tech to make it look like something we could build ourselves, but it has, let’s say, special features. As do Braden and I,” Micah said. Zeller leaned back to get a better look at her fellow Trent villager.
“You don’t look any different. Wait. Built within the last moon? How is that possible? The ancients are gone…” She drifted off as she realized the truth. The ancients weren’t gone. “Are we going north to make war?” she asked, alarmed.
Micah laughed easily. “No,” she said with a wide smile. “The opposite. We go there to find livestock to help the people in the
south live better lives. We have no intention of going to war.”
Confusion gripped Zeller. Like Micah, she’d been raised under the hostile yoke of Cornwall where Old Tech was used to dominate others. She’d gone on the same journey as Micah to see the ruins of Sanctuary. She was taught to fear Old Tech, and now Micah was telling her, matter-of-factly, that they were using it without reserve.
“How can you embrace the Old Tech? Where are the ancients? How are you different?” Zeller asked in a jumble.
“We embrace it because we have to, but Braden and I share a pact with Holly, the intelligence that the ancients left behind. We use it, but we keep each other honest. Master Aadi and the Golden Warrior have devised a test for people before they are allowed access to the Old Tech. They call it the pure-heart test. It keeps people from getting the Old Tech who would use it for personal gain,” Micah explained.
“The pure-heart test, huh? Did I pass?” Zeller laughed.
‘You most assuredly did, Master Human,’ Aadi said over the mindlink. Zeller recoiled, unused to the menagerie of creatures that could show up in her head. She talked with Arnie constantly over the mindlink, and on rare occasions, G-War, but none of the others. As a member of Braden’s caravan, all the companions shared the mindlink.
‘You’ll be better because of it,’ G-War added.
‘Yes, indeed. We enjoy your conversations immensely,’ Bounder replied. ‘We use our noses and ears far more than humans, so we don’t talk too much, but we’re always listening. You humans are so interesting!’
‘Our human partners have done right by the Aurochs,’ Brandt chimed in in his booming thought voice. ‘Braden has repaired many wounds on my body. I fear that I wouldn’t be here without him and his mate.’ The Aurochs were a male-centric society, so Micah never took offense at how the King of the Aurochs referred to her. He treated her as an equal and that is what mattered most–not what was said, but what was done.
“If it weren’t for us, you wouldn’t have been hurt in the first place, so I can’t accept your gratitude. We dragged you into it and then had to fix you. We were obligated, my big friend,” Braden said from the second wagon.
‘Not so. You made my life worth living and all Aurochs are in a better place because of you.’ Brandt refused to be denied the accolades he wanted to give. Braden nodded graciously.
Skirill and Zyena swooped past, waving their wings at the people in the wagons. ‘Saved my life the first time we met,’ Skirill said simply. ‘I’d had a most unfortunate encounter with a mutie Bear.’
‘And look at us!’ a small thought voice joined the conversation. ‘We live on the planet now!’
“Where else would you live?” Zeller asked as she turned around to face the two fuzzy white Rabbits, their big ears facing her.
‘We lived on the ship, of course. That’s where we were born, but the humans brought us here where there is infinite space and endless fields of vegetables and weeds and grasses,’ Patrice said happily.
“The ship? You lived on the ocean?” Zeller didn’t understand.
‘In space!’ Delavigne added in his dainty Rabbit voice. Zeller continued to look confused.
“The brightest star to the left of the moon. It’s not a star at all. It’s a spaceship. We went there to save a group of ancients on one of the other planets in our solar system.”
“Your lips move and I hear the words, but they don’t mean anything to me,” Zeller said slowly in a soft voice. “There’s a ship in the sky where the Rabbits were born…”
‘Us, too,’ Gray Strider interrupted.
“Where the Rabbits and the Wolfoids were born,” Zeller corrected herself. “And you’ve gone there. Into the sky. To save ancients who were also somewhere else in the sky.”
“Yeah. That’s about right,” Braden replied. “We’ve gone there twice, actually, but that’s beside the point. Neither trip was pleasant, for reference, but we couldn’t be happier that we met the Rabbits and the Wolfoids, although both of them wanted to kill us when they first saw us.”
‘We most assuredly did not!’ Patrice said indignantly.
‘What was with all the bees, then?’ Micah asked over the mindlink.
‘Maybe a little,’ Patrice conceded.
Zeller started to laugh and couldn’t stop. They watched as she looked from face to face. When she finally stopped, gasping for breath, she held up a hand. She’d heard enough.
“I’m honored to be with such a pack of lunatics. You win. Old Tech. Pure-heart. Use it for good and no one beats you to a pulp.”
“Perfect,” Micah chuckled.
Ahead, Devaney’s Barren waited for them. Braden thought of it as the Great Desert. Great it was, made smaller by the discovery of the ancient oases. Kept small by the speed of the Aurochs and the direct route the neural implants allowed. Braden was amazed at how he was able to cross the Great Desert in the first place. The Old Tech reduced the risk to a point where they would be hardly inconvenienced, let alone under threat of imminent death.
The Wagon Exploded
The caravan camped at the northern edge of the plains. The Great Desert lay just ahead. This would be the last fresh water until they reached the oasis. They loaded up everything they had. Two casks from Trent that still smelled of fish and a great number of flasks. Braden expected that as darkness fell, they’d move out and reach Oasis 01 by sunrise. What had been two to three turns with Max and Pack would be a single night with the speed of the Aurochs.
Micah and Zeller practiced sparring. Zeller had no interest in using the bow, so they provided a sword for her. Micah didn’t know why Holly had added an extra sword to their gear, but it seemed he was prescient. She wondered how he knew, so she asked.
She opened her neural implant while the two women, covered in sweat, drank from their flasks. ‘Holly, how did you know we needed an extra sword?’
‘I didn’t, Master President. I estimated that you would not be using your blasters and just in case, I wanted both you and Braden to be armed better than any potential opponents you might have to face.’
‘And that’s it?’ she kept after him.
‘Yes, Master President, that is it. I see you are making good progress. You’ll be leaving tonight?’ Holly asked.
‘A little before sunset, so when darkness falls, we’ll just be entering the heat of the desert. We hope to make the first oasis by sunrise.’
‘I calculate that you will make it, but you cannot take any detours or stop for any length of time. You will need to maintain consistent progress to reach your objective within the desired timeframe.’
‘We understand, Holly. Arnie and Brandt have taken it as a personal challenge and they refuse to lose. When we stop next, it will be at Oasis 01.’ Micah minimized her window and refocused her eyes.
“Holly said the extra sword was for you, Braden,” Micah said skeptically. Braden tapped the hilt of his shortsword. He didn’t use one of the longer swords.
“You never know with Holly what the real truth is until later. He doesn’t lie, but he doesn’t give you the full truth, either.” Braden explained to Zeller. “Although I will readily admit that he has our best interest at heart, whatever his heart looks like, that is.”
“I look forward to meeting this Holly someday.”
“You will. You’ll get a taste when we reach the first oasis. They make these things called ‘brownies’ that could possibly be the best single food on Vii, right after sweetened, smoked pork, of course…” Braden drifted off as he thought of his favorite food.
“Men.” Micah shook her head.
The companions ate lunch in the shade of a struggling tree. The grasses were brown and inedible, according to Arnie and Brandt. There was nothing to hunt. The humans double-checked the provisions and then tried to sleep. It was already hot and still a little humid. Braden encouraged Arnie and Brandt to sleep well and then drink well. They’d be doing all the work come nightfall.
Aadi was anxious. It would be the first time
he’d returned to his home in three cycles after living in the Great Desert for two hundred. He was looking forward to telling the other Tortoids about his adventures. He hoped that one or two might want to tag along.
Braden picked up on Aadi’s anxiety and wanted him to talk about the meeting of the Tortoise Consortium. “How long do you think the meeting will last, A-Dog?”
‘Master Human! You and your names. Remember the times I ran from danger? It’ll take that long,’ Aadi chuckled over the mindlink. The image of Aadi looking like he was standing still as laser beams passed by popped into Braden’s mind. When Aadi tried to swim quickly, he always stretched out his neck as if he were trying to pull his shell and the rest of him. It never worked. The battle was usually over by the time the Tortoid managed to swim a single stride.
“Well now, Master Aadi… I know, don’t call you Master, but if you are going to meet the Tortoise Consortium, you need to resume your place as the First Master.” Aadi conceded the point. “So it will take as long as it takes, you’re saying. Do we leave you behind, then?” Braden asked, suddenly concerned. He enjoyed having the Tortoid with them. He preferred to bounce ideas off Aadi as he handled them the most adeptly. Aadi was a master strategist and negotiator.
Without him, they would be less effective. He refined his assessment. They would simply be less without the aged Tortoid.
No, Braden thought, we’ll wait. The children are in good hands in Trent and would be for as long as we’re gone.
Sleep was hard to come by and before they knew it, it was time to go. Arnie was harnessed to the Old Tech wagon while Brandt was set to pull Zeller’s mostly empty wagon. There was no need to load Brandt down since the other wagon pulled the same whether it was fully loaded or not, thanks to the Old Tech machinery cleverly hidden within the wheel hubs.
Brandt headed out first to set the pace. He walked, then trotted and was soon running, not as fast as he could go, but the pace was brisk. Arnie kept up easily as he felt like he was running free.
Free Trader Complete Omnibus Page 99