This time, at least, the hyenas were too strong.
The Elf-folk troupe backed away sullenly. They found a place in the shade of the trees at the forest edge, staring with undisguised envy at the rich meat being devoured by the dogs.
At last the hyenas started to disperse. They had taken most of the meat, and the antelope was reduced to scattered bones and bits of flesh on a blood-stained patch of ground, as if it had exploded. Again the people came forward, and their stones and sticks drove away the last of the dogs.
There was little meat to be had. But there was still a rich resource here, which hominid tools could reach. The adults took the antelope’s bones and, with brisk, skilful strikes of their shaped stones, they cracked them open. Soon many of the people were sucking marrow greedily. Children fought over scraps of flesh and cartilage.
Huge bats flapped down, their leathery wings black, vulture-like. They pecked at outlying bits of the carcass, bloodying their fur. The people tolerated them. But if the bats came too close they would be greeted by a stick wielded by a hooting hominid.
Shadow came out from behind her rock.
A child came up to her, curious, a bit of gristle dangling from her chin. But as Shadow neared, the child wrinkled her nose and stared hard at Shadow’s face. Then she turned and ran for the security of her mother.
As Shadow approached the group, the people moved their children away from her, or growled, or even threw stones. But they did not try to drive her away.
Shadow saw a big older woman, the hair of her back oddly streaked with silver. This woman — Silverneck — was working assiduously at the remnant of a thigh bone. Shadow sat close to Silverneck, not asking for food, content not to be rejected.
The sun wheeled across the sky, and the people worked at the carcass.
At length Silverneck hurled away the last fragments of bone. She lay on her back, legs crossed, and crooked an arm behind her head. She belched, picked bits of marrow and bone from her teeth, and thrust a finger into one nostril with every sign of contentment.
Cautiously, her baby clinging to her back, Shadow crept closer. She started to groom Silverneck, picking gently through the hairs of Silverneck’s shoulders. The older woman, reclining stiffly, submitted to this in silence, eyes closed as if asleep.
Shadow knew what she must do to win a place here. In her home forest she had watched women seeking favour with their seniors. Still cautious, Shadow moved towards Silverneck’s waist and reached out to stroke the older woman’s genitals, just as she had seen others do before.
A hand grasped her wrist, gentle but strong. Silverneck’s face, worn almost bald by grooming, was a mass of wrinkles. And it showed disgust. She pulled her legs under her, and pushed Shadow away.
Shadow sat still, baffled, disturbed.
After a time Shadow again reached out to groom Silverneck. Again Silverneck submitted. This time Shadow did not try to cross the boundary to sexual contact, and Silverneck did not push her away.
As the shadows lengthened across the plain, the carrion-eating bats clustered closer around the remnants of the carcass. One by one the people started to drift back to the forest. The first roosting calls began to sound from the tree tops.
At last the old woman stretched and yawned loudly, bones popping. Then she got to her feet and ambled back towards the forest’s edge.
Shadow sat where she was, waiting.
Silverneck looked back once, thoughtfully. Then she turned and moved on.
Shadow got to her feet, her baby clinging to her back. Hastily she rummaged through the carcass, but the marrow and meat had been chewed or sucked off every bone. Cramming bits of greasy skin into her mouth, she hurried after Silverneck into the forest.
Manekatopokanemahedo:
With a wave of his hand Babo conjured an image of the Red Moon — but it was not an image, rather a limited injective-recursive Mapping of the Moon into itself. The Moon turned for their benefit, a great hovering globe twice Babo’s height. Manekato gazed at searing red desert-continent and steel ocean.
The little hominid who called herself Nemoto stood close to Manekato, her eyes wide, her smooth face bearing some unreadable expression.
“Your work is proceeding well,” Manekato said to her brother.
“It is a routine application of familiar techniques; merely a question of gathering sufficient data… But already the key to this world’s mysteries is clear.”
“Ah.” Manekato said sombrely. She reached up and pointed at the huge volcano that dominated the western side of the rust-red continent. “You mean that.”
“Yes, the volcanic anomaly,” Babo said. “Which in turn must derive from some magmatic feature, a plume arising deep within the belly of this world.”
“You talk of the Bullseye?” Nemoto was watching them, straining to hear, turning her little head this way and that in order to position her small immobile ears.
Babo watched Nemoto uneasily. “Do you think she can follow us?”
“I have taught her a few words,” said Manekato. “But our speech is too rapid for her to grasp; like all the creatures here on this oxygen-starved world, she is sluggish and slow-witted. I have had more success in decoding her own language. It is a little like the nonsense argots you used to make up for my amusement as a child, Babo.”
Babo was still watching Nemoto. “She imitates your behaviour well. Look how she gazes at the volcano! It’s almost as if she can understand what she is seeing.”
Manekato grunted. “Do not underestimate her, brother. I believe she is intelligent, to a degree. Consider the clothes she wears, her speech with its limited grammar, the tools she deploys — even her writing of symbols into her blocks of bound paper. Why, she claims to have come here, not through the blue portals, but in a spacecraft designed by others of her kind. And that she came to this Moon from curiosity. I found this as hard to believe as you, but she drew sketches which convinced me she is telling the truth.”
“But even the making of clothes may be no more than the outcome of instinct, Mane,” Babo said gently. “There is a kind of aquatic spider that makes diving bells from its webbing, and nobody would argue that it is intelligent. Perhaps some day we will discover a species, utterly without mind, which makes starships. Why not? And nor is symbol-making sufficient to demonstrate intelligence; there are social ants which—”
Manekato raised a hand to quiet him. “I am aware of the dangers of anthropomorphism. You think I have found a pet, here in this dismal place — that I am seeking intelligence where all I see is a reflection of my own self.”
Babo rubbed her back affectionately. “Well, isn’t that true?”
“Perhaps. But I strive to discount it. And meanwhile I have come to the belief that Nemoto and her kind may be — not merely intelligent — but self-aware.”
Babo laughed. “Come now, Mane. Let us show her a mirror, and together we will watch her seek the hominid behind the glass.”
“I already tried that test,” Manekato said. “She was very insulted.”
“If she is too proud to be tested, why does she follow you around?”
“For protection,” Manekato said promptly. “You saw how Without-Name treated her when she first found her. Nemoto shows great fear of her.”
Babo grunted. He crouched down before the hominid, Nemoto; his huge body was like a wall before her slim frame.
Nemoto returned his gaze calmly.
“…Intelligent, Mane? But the size of the cranium, the limited expanse of the frontal lobes — the dullness of those eyes. I do not get a sense of a person looking back out at me.”
Manekato snapped, “And you can assess a creature’s intelligence merely by looking at it?” She said, “Nemoto.”
The hominid looked up at her.
“You remember what I told you of the Mapping.” Manekato strove to slow down her speech, and to pronounce each word of Nemoto’s limited language clearly and distinctly.
Nemoto was frowning, concentrating hard
. “I remember. You defined a mathematical function to map the components of your body to material of the Moon.” Her words, like her actions, were slow, drawn-out. “The domain of this function was yourselves and your equipment, the range a subset of the Moon. When you had defined the Mapping…”
“Yes?”
Nemoto struggled, but failed-to find the words. “/ have much to learn.’1
Babo grunted. “It is impressive that she knows there are limits to her knowledge. Perhaps that indicates some degree of self-awareness after all.”
Manekato said, “Then I am winning the argument.”
Babo grumbled good-naturedly. “Just remember we are here to study the Moon, and those who sent it spinning between the universes — not to converse with these brutish hominids, who were certainly not responsible.”
Manekato studied Nemoto. The little creature was watching her with empty, serious eyes. “Come,” said Manekato, and she held out her hand.
Nemoto took it with some reluctance.
Babo turned back to the refinement of his Mapping.
Manekato led Nemoto across the Mapped-in floor of the compound. They passed between structures that had been conjured out of Adjusted Space to shelter the people. Rounded yellow forms, to Mane’s taste over-ornate, they made the compound look like a plate set before a giant, loaded with exotic shapes — and with insect-like humans, Workers and hominids scuttling across it.
“You must not let my brother upset you,” Manekato said evenly, striving to express herself correctly in the narrow confines of Nemoto’s limited tongue.
“He has no imagination,” said Nemoto.
Manekato barked laughter, and Nemoto flinched. “I’ll tell him you said that!… But he means you no harm.”
“Unlike Without-Name, who does mean harm, and who has far too much imagination.”
“That is insightful, and neatly phrased.” She snapped her fingers and a Worker came scuttling. “Well done, Nemoto. You deserve a banana.”
Nemoto regarded the yellow fruit proffered by the Worker with loathing.
Manekato shrugged. She popped the banana into her mouth and swallowed it whole, skin and all.
Nemoto said cautiously, “I think your world has no Moon — none but this unwanted arrival.”
Manekato, interested, said, “And what of it?”
“Our scientists have speculated how the destiny of my world might have differed if it had been born without a Moon.”
“Really?” Manekato wondered briefly if “scientists” was correctly translated.
Nemoto took a deep breath. “Our Moon was born in a giant impact, in the final stage of the violent formation of the Solar System. The effects on Earth were profound…”
Manekato was fascinated by all this — not so much by the content, which seemed trivially obvious, but by the fact that Nemoto was able to spin together such a coherent statement at all — even if it was delivered in a maddeningly slow drawl. But Nemoto seemed desperate to retain Manekato’s attention, to win her understanding — and perhaps her approval.
“And what difference would all this make to the evolution of life?”
Nemoto said, “You come from a world that spins fast. There must be winds there persistent, strong. Perhaps you were once bipeds, but now you walk on all fours; probably I could not stand upright on your world. Your trees must hug the ground. And so on. Your air, derived from a primordial atmosphere never stripped off by impact, is thicker than mine, richer in carbon dioxide, probably richer in oxygen. You think fast, move fast, fuelled by the oxygen-rich air.” She hesitated. “And perhaps you die fast. Mane, I can expect to live for seventy years — years measured on your Earth, or mine. And you?”
“Twenty-five,” Manekato breathed. “Or less.” She was stunned by Nemoto’s sudden acuity — but then the homimd had been observing her for days now, learning about Manekato as Manekato had learned about her; she had simply saved up her conclusions — as a good scientist should.
“The evolution of life must have been quite different,” Nemoto said now. “With lower tides your oceans must be less enriched of silt washed down from the continents. And there must be less global ocean movement. I would expect a significantly different biota.
“As for humans, I believe that our evolutionary paths diverged at the stage we call the ‘Australopithecine’, Manekato. But the environment was different on our worlds, evoking a different adaptation. I would hazard that hunting is not a viable strategy for homimds on your world. Probably your short days were simply not long enough. You call yourself ‘Farmers’. Perhaps your world encouraged the early development of agriculture.”
“ ‘Australopithecines.’ I don’t know that word.”
“The homimds called Nutcrackers and Elves here seem to be surviving specimens. From that root stock your kind took one path; mine took another.”
“But, Nemoto — why do such divergent worlds have people at all? Why would homimd forms evolve on world after world—”
“Your kind did not originate on your Earth,” Nemoto said bluntly. “Your scientists must have deduced that much.”
Manekato bristled. She tried to put aside her annoyance at being patronized by this monkey-thing. “You are right. That much is evident. People share the same biochemical substrate as other living things, but are linked to no animal alive or of the past by any clear evolutionary path.”
“But on my Earth there is a clear evolutionary path to be traced from humans back into the past.”
“So you are saying my line originated on your Earth? And how did my Australopithecine grandmothers get delivered to ‘my Earth’?”
Nemoto shrugged. “Perhaps by this Red Moon, and its blue-ring scoops.”
It was a startling vision — especially coming from the mouth of this small brained biped — but it had a certain cogency. Manekato was aware her mouth was dangling open; she shut it with a snap of her great teeth. “Who would have devised such a mechanism? And why?”
Nemoto’s face pulled tight in the grimace Manekato had come to recognize as a smile. “The Hams have a legend of the Old Ones, who built the world. I am hoping you will find them.”
Manekato glared at Nemoto: she was profoundly impressed by Nemoto’s acuity, yet she was embarrassed at her own condescension towards the hominid. It was not a comfortable mixture. “We will talk of this further.”
“We must,” said Nemoto.
Reid Malenfant:
Malenfant counted them. Sixteen, seventeen, eighteen Runners: eighteen powerful, languid bodies relaxing on the barren ground. The band seemed to be settling here for the night. The three of them — Julia, Malenfant, Hugh McCann — hunkered down in the dirt. The grass beneath Malenfant’s scuffed boots was sparse, and the Mars-red dust of the world showed through, crimson-bright where it caught the light of the setting sun.
This swathe of scrubby grassland was at the western border of the coastal forest strip NASA cartographers had christened the Beltway. Further west of this point, beyond a range of eroded mountains, there was only the arid, baked interior of the great continent, hundreds of miles of red desert, an Australia in the sky. No doubt it was stocked with its own unique ecology exquisitely evolved to maximize the use of the available resources, Malenfant thought sourly, but it was an unremittingly hostile place for a middle-aged American — and of no interest to him whatsoever, unless it held Emma in its barren heart.
McCann moved closer to Malenfant, his buckskin clothes creaking softly. “How strange these pongids are,” he said. “How very obviously ante-human. See the way they have made their crude camp. They have built a fire, you see, probably from a hot coal carried for tens of miles by some horny-handed wretch. They even have a rudimentary sense of the hearth and home: look at that big buck voiding his bowels, off beyond the group — what an immense straining — everything these fellows do is mighty!
“But that is about the extent of their humanity. They have no tools, save the pebbles they pluck from the ground to be shap
ed; they carry nothing for sentiment — nothing at all, so their nakedness is deeper than ever yours or mine could be. And though they gather in little clusters, of mothers with infants, a few younger siblings, there is no community there.
“If you look into the eyes of a Runner, Malenfant, you see a bright primal presence, you see cleverness — but you do not see a mind. There is only the now, and that is all there will ever be. Whatever dim spark of awareness resides behind those deceptive eyes is trapped forever in a cage of inarticulacy… One must pity them, even as one admires them for their animal grace.”
Malenfant grimaced. “Another lecture, Hugh?”
McCann sighed. “I have been effectively alone here too long, my reflections on the strange lost creatures who inhabit this place rattling around in my head. Would I were as conservative with my words as dear Julia, who, like the rest of her kind, speaks only when necessary!”
Or maybe, Malenfant thought, she just hasn’t got much to say to you, or me. He’d observed the Hams chattering among themselves, when they thought no human was watching them. For all his bush craft, McCann’s understanding of the creatures around him was obviously shallow.
Without a word, Julia stood up and began to walk across the sparse scrub towards the Running-folk. McCann and Malenfant stayed crouched in the dirt.
The Runners turned to watch her approach. They were silent, still, like wary prey animals.
Julia got as far as the Runners” fire. She hunkered down there, making sure she didn’t sit close to the meat. The Runners were still wary — one burly man bared his teeth at Julia, which she calmly ignored — but they didn’t try to drive her away.
After a time an infant came up to her, bright eyes over a lithe little body. Julia reached out her massive hand, but its mother instantly snatched the child back.
Malenfant suppressed a sigh. Sometimes Julia would win the Runners” confidence quickly; other times it took longer. Tonight it looked as if Julia would have to spend the night in the Runners” rough camp before they could make any further progress.
As the days had worn on, Malenfant had lost count of the number of Runner groups they had tracked down. Julia was always given the lead, hoping to establish a basis of trust, and then Malenfant and McCann would follow up. Malenfant would produce his precious South African air force lens, his one indubitable trace of Emma, hoping for some spark of recognition in those bright animal eyes.
Origin m-3 Page 32