In the split second of silence after the noise cut off, there was a clinking rattle and a nut fell down from somewhere underneath and rolled out into the street.
There was a shout of relieved and amused laughter and the car erupted people apparently through and over every door. Meris shrank back a little, still tender in her social contact area. Then calling, “Mark, they’re here,” she opened the door to the babble of happy voices.
All the voices turned out to be female-type voices and she looked around and asked, “But where—?”
“The others?” Karen asked. “Behold!” And she gestured toward the old car, where the only signs of life were three sets of feet protruding from under it, with a patient Jemmy leaning on a brightly black fender above them. “May I present, the feet, Tad, Davy, and Johannan?” Karen laughed. “Johannan is worse than either of the boys. You see, he’d never ever seen a car before he rode in yours!”
Finally everyone was met and greeted and all the faces swam up to familiarity again out of the remoteness of the time Before the Baby.
Lala—forever Lala in spite of translations!—peered at the bundle on Valancy’s lap. “It’s little,” she said.
Meris was startled. Valancy smiled at her. “Did you expect her to un-English forever?” she teased. “Yes, Lala, it’s a girl baby, very new and very little.”
“I’m not little,” said Lala, straightening from where she leaned against Meris and tightening to attention, her tummy rounding out in her effort to assume proportions. “I’m big!” She moved closer to Meris. “I had a birthday.”
“Oh, how nice!” said Meris.
“We don’t know what year to put on it, though,” said Lala solemnly. “I want to put six, but they want to put five.”
“Oh, six, of course!” exclaimed Meris.
Lala launched herself onto Meris and hugged her hair all askew. “Love you, Meris!” she cried. “Six, of course!”
“There has been a little discussion about the matter,” said Valancy. “The time element differs between here and the New Home. And since she is precocious—”
“The New Home,” said Meris thoughtfully. “The New Home. You know, I suspended all my disbelief right at the beginning of this Lala business, but now I feel questions bubbling and frothing—”
“I thought I saw question marks arising in both your eyes,” laughed Valancy. “After church tomorrow, after this cherub receives her name before God and the congregation, we’ll tackle a few of those questions. But now—” she hugged the wide-eyed, moist-mouthed child gently “—now this is the center of our interest.”
~ * ~
The warm Sunday afternoon was slipping into evening. Davy, Tad, and Johannan were—again—three pairs of feet protruding from under the Overland. The three had managed to nurse it along all the way to the University City, but now it stubbornly sat in the driveway and merely rocked, voiceless, no matter how long they cranked it.
The three of them had been having the time of their lives. They had visited the Group’s auto boneyard up-canyon and then, through avid reading of everything relevant that they could put their hands on, had slowly and bedazzledly come to a realization of what a wealth of material they had to work with.
Tad, after a few severe jolts from working with members of the People, such as seeing cars and parts thereof clattering massively unsupported through the air and watching Johannan weld a rip in a fender by tracing it with a fingertip, then concentrating on the task, had managed to compartmentalize the whole car business and shut it off securely from any need to make the methods of the People square with Outsiders’ methods. And his college fund was building beautifully.
So there the three of them were under the Overland that was the current enthusiasm, ostensibly to diagnose the trouble, but also to delight in breathing deeply of sun-warmed metal and to taste the oily fragrance of cup grease and dust.
Mark and Jemmy were perched on the patio wall, immersed in some point from Mark’s book. Lala was wrapped up in the wonder of Alicia’s tiny, flailing fist, that if intercepted, would curl so tightly around a finger or thumb.
Meris smiled at Valancy and shifted the burden of ’Licia to her other arm. “I think I’d better park this bundle somewhere. She’s gained ten pounds in the last five minutes, so I think that a nap is indicated.” With the help of Valancy, Karen, and Bethie, Meris gathered up various odds and ends of equipment and carried the already sleeping ‘Licia into the house.
Later, in the patio, the women gathered again, Lala a warm weight in Valancy’s lap.
“Now,” said Meris, comfortably. “Now’s the time to erase a few of my question marks. What is the Home? Where is the Home? Why is it the New Home?”
“Not so fast—not so fast!” laughed Valancy. “This is Bethie’s little red wagon. Let her drag it!”
“Oh, but—!” Bethie blushed and shook her head. “Why mine? I’d rather—”
“But you have been wanting to Assemble for Shadow, anyway, so that she’d have a verbalized memory of the Crossing. It’s closer through your line.” Her smile softened as she turned to Meris. “My parents were in the Crossing, but they were Called during the landing. Bethie’s mother was in the Crossing and survived. Karen’s grandparents did, too, but that’s a step farther back. And, Bethie, haven’t you already—”
“Yes,” said Bethie softly, “from the Home to the beginning of the Crossing. Oh, how strange! How strange and wonderful! Oh, Valancy! To have lost the Home!”
“Now you’re question-marking my eyes,” laughed Valancy. “I’ve never gone by chapter and verse through that life myself. Jemmy—Mark—we’re ready!”
“It’ll be better, subvocal,” said Bethie shyly. “Karen, you could touch Meris’s hand so she can see, too. And Jemmy, you and Mark.” The group settled comfortably.
“I went back through my mother’s remembrances,” Bethie’s soft voice came through a comfortable dimming and fading of the patio. “Her grandmother before her verbalized a great deal. It was a big help. We can take it from her. We will begin on one happy morning—”
<
~ * ~
Deluge
...and bare up the ark, and it was lift up above the earth.
GEN. 7:17
“The children are up already, Eva-lee?” asked David, lounging back in his chair after his first long, satisfying swallow from his morning cup.
“Foolish question, David, on Gathering Day,” I laughed. “They’ve been up since before it was light. Have you forgotten how you used to feel?”
“Of course not.” My son cradled his cup in his two hands to warm it and watched idly until steam plumed up fragrantly. “I just forgot—oh, momentarily, I assure you—that it was Gathering Day. So far it hasn’t felt much like failova weather.”
“No, it hasn’t,” I answered, puckering my forehead thoughtfully. “It has felt—odd—this year. The green isn’t as— Oh, good morning, ‘Chell,” to my daughter-of-love, “I suppose the little imps waked you first thing?”
“At least half an hour before that,” yawned ‘Chell. “I suppose I used to do it myself. But just wait—they’ll have their yawning time when they’re parents.”
“Mother! Mother! Father! Gramma!”
The door slapped open and the children avalanched in, all talking shrilly at once until David waved his cup at them and lifted one eyebrow. ‘Chell laughed at the sudden silence.
“That’s better,” she said. “What’s all the uproar?”
The children looked at one another and the five-year-old Eve was nudged to the fore, but, as usual, David started talking. “We were out gathering panthus leaves to make our Gathering baskets, and all at once—” He paused and nudged Eve again. “You tell, Eve. After all, it’s you—”
“Oh, no!” cried ‘Chell. “Not my last baby! Not already!”
“Look,” said Eve solemnly. “Look at me.”
She stood tiptoe and wavered a little, her arms outstretched for balance, and then
she lifted slowly and carefully up into her mother’s arms.
We all laughed and applauded and even ‘Chell, after blotting her surprised tears on Eve’s dark curls, laughed with us.
“Bless-a-baby!” she said, hugging her tight. “Lifting all alone already—and on Gathering Day, too! It’s not everyone who can have Gathering Day for her Happy Day!” Then she sobered and pressed the solemn ceremonial kiss on each cheek. “Lift in delight all your life, Eve!” she said.
Eve matched her parents’ solemnity as her father softly completed the ritual. “By the Presence and the Name and the Power, lift to good and the Glory until your Calling.” And we all joined in making the Sign.
“I speak for her next,” I said, holding out my arms. “Think you can lift to Gramma, Eve?”
“Well...” Eve considered the gap between her and me—the chair, the breakfast table—all the obstacles before my waiting arms. And then she smiled. “Look at me,” she said. “Here I come, Gramma.”
She lifted carefully above the table, overarching so high that the crisp girl-frill around the waist of her close-fitting briefs brushed the ceiling. Then she was safe in my arms.
“That’s better than I did,” called Simon through the laughter that followed. “I landed right in the flahmen jam!”
“So you did, son,” laughed David, ruffling Simon’s coppery-red hair. “A full dish of it.”
“Now that that’s taken care of, let’s get organized. Are you all Gathering together—”
“No.” Lytha, our teener, flushed faintly. “I—we—our party will be mostly—well—” She paused and checked her blush, shaking her dark hair back from her face. “Timmy and I are going with Beckie and Andy. We’re going to the Mountain.”
“Well!” David’s brow lifted in mock consternation. “Mother, did you know our daughter was two-ing?”
“Not really, Father!” cried Lytha hastily, unable to resist the bait though she knew he was teasing. “Four-ing, it is, really.”
“Adonday veeah!” he sighed in gigantic relief. “Only half the worry it might be!” He smiled at her. “Enjoy,” he said, “but it ages me so much so fast that a daughter of mine is two—oh, pardon, four-ing already.”
“The rest of us are going together,” said Davie. “We’re going to the Tangle-meadows. The failova were thick there last year. Bet we three get more than Lytha and her two-ing foursome! They’ll be looking mostly for flahmen anyway!” with the enormous scorn of the almost-teen for the activities of the teens.
“Could be,” said David. “But after all, your sole purpose this Gathering Day is merely to Gather.”
“I notice you don’t turn up your nose at the flahmen after they’re made into jam,” said Lytha. “And you just wait, smarty, until the time comes—and it will,” her cheeks pinked up a little, “when you find yourself wanting to share a flahmen with some gaggly giggle of a girl!”
“Flahmen!”muttered Davie. “Girls!”
“They’re both mighty sweet, Son,” laughed David. “You wait and see.”
Ten minutes later, ‘Chell and David and I stood at the window watching the children leave. Lytha, after nervously putting on and taking off, arranging and rearranging her Gathering Day garlands at least a dozen times, was swept up by a giggling group that zoomed in a trio and went out a quartet and disappeared in long, low lifts across the pastureland toward the heavily wooded Mountain.
Davie tried to gather Eve up as in the past, but she stubbornly refused to be trailed, and kept insisting, “I can lift now! Let me do it. I’m big!”
Davie rolled exasperated eyes and then grinned and the three started off for Tangle-meadows in short hopping little lifts, with Eve always just beginning to lift as they landed or just landing as they lifted, her small Gathering basket bobbing along with her. Before they disappeared, however, she was trailing from Davie’s free hand and the lifts were smoothing out long and longer. My thoughts went with them as I remembered the years I had Gathered the lovely luminous flowers that popped into existence in a single night, leafless, almost stemless, as though formed like dew, or falling like concentrated moonlight. No one knows now how the custom of loves sharing a flahmen came into being, but it’s firmly entrenched in the traditions of the People. To share that luminous loveliness, petal by petal, one for me and one for you and all for us—
“How pleasant that Gathering Day brings back our loves,” I sighed dreamily as I stood in the kitchen and snapped my fingers for the breakfast dishes to come to me. “People that might otherwise be completely forgotten come back so vividly every year—”
“Yes,” said ‘Chell, watching the tablecloth swish out the window, huddling the crumbs together to dump them in the feather-pen in back of the house. “And it’s a good anniversary-marker. Most of us meet our loves at the Gathering Festival—or discover them there.” She took the returning cloth and folded it away. “I never dreamed when I used to fuss with David over mud pies and playhouses that one Gathering Day he’d blossom into my love.”
“Me blossom?” David peered around the doorjamb. “Have you forgotten how you looked, preblossom? Knobby knees, straggly hair, toothless grin—!”
“David, put me down!” ‘Chell struggled as she felt herself being lifted to press against the ceiling. “We’re too old for such nonsense!”
“Get yourself down, then, Old One,” he said from the other room. “If I’m too old for nonsense, I’m too old to ‘platt’ you.”
“Never mind, funny fellow,” she said, “I’ll do it myself.” Her down-reaching hand strained toward the window and she managed to gather a handful of the early morning sun. Quickly she platted herself to the floor and tiptoed off into the other room, eyes aglint with mischief, finger hushing to her lips.
I smiled as I heard David’s outcry and ‘Chell’s delighted laugh, but I felt my smile slant down into sadness. I leaned my arms on the windowsill and looked lovingly at all the dear familiarity around me. Before Thann’s Calling, we had known so many happy hours in the meadows and skies and waters of this loved part of the Home.
“And he is still here,” I thought comfortably. “The grass still bends to his feet, the leaves still part to his passing, the waters still ripple to his touch, and my heart still cradles his name.
“Oh, Thann, Thann!” I wouldn’t let tears form in my eyes. I smiled. “I wonder what kind of a grampa you’d have made!” I leaned my forehead on my folded arms briefly, then turned to busy myself with straightening the rooms for the day. I was somewhat diverted from routine by finding six mismated sandals stacked, for some unfathomable reason, above the middle of Simon’s bed, the top one, inches above the rest, bobbing in the breeze from the open window.
~ * ~
The oddness we had felt about the day turned out to be more than a passing uneasiness, and we adults were hardly surprised when the children came straggling back hours before they usually did.
We hailed them from afar, lifting out to them expecting to help with their burdens of brightness, but the children didn’t answer our hails. They plodded on toward the house, dragging slow feet in the abundant grass.
“What do you suppose has happened?” breathed ‘Chell. “Surely not Eve—”
“Adonday veeah!” murmured David, his eyes intent on the children. “Something’s wrong, but I see Eve.”
“Hi, young ones,” he called cheerfully. “How’s the crop this year?”
The children stopped, huddled together, almost fearfully.
“Look.” Davie pushed his basket at them. Four misshapen failova glowed dully in the basket. No flickering, glittering brightness. No flushing and paling of petals. No crisp, edible sweetness of blossom. Only a dull glow, a sullen winking, an unappetizing crumbling.
“That’s all,” said Davie, his voice choking. “That’s all we could find!” He was scared and outraged—outraged that his world dared to be different from what he had expected—had counted on.
Eve cried, “No, no! I have one. Look!” Her single
flower was a hard-clenched flahmen bud with only a smudge of light at the tip.
“No failova?” Chell took Davie’s proffered basket. “No flahmen? But they always bloom on Gathering Day. Maybe the buds—”
“No buds,” said Simon, his face painfully white under the brightness of his hair. I glanced at him quickly. He seldom ever got upset over anything. What was there about this puzzling development that was stirring him?
“David!” ‘Chell’s face turned worriedly to him. “What’s wrong? There have always been failova!”
“I know,” said David, fingering Eve’s bud and watching it crumble in his fingers. “Maybe it’s only in the meadows. Maybe there’s plenty in the hills.”
Ingathering - The Complete People Stories Page 37