by John Norman
About the edge of the camp, followed by Tooth, Ugly Girl had dropped almost to all fours. She bent over, nostrils wide. The knuckles of her long arms, on the thick, short body, brushed the ground. She took scent deeply.
At the river Tree, angrily, examined the near bank. None of the camp were there.
Short Leg had seen that not all was well between Turtle and Tree. Tree was angry with her, many times. This pleased Short Leg, but, to her puzzlement, he continued to feed her. Sometimes, when Turtle suckled the child, or fondled it, and played with it, paying Tree no attention, he was clearly angry. At other times, he seemed fond of the child, inordinately and inappropriately so for so powerful a hunter. Why should he so care about the child Of Turtle? Even if it was his seed, it was not important; it was the son of the mother, and the mother's alone, until the men should want it and take it from her, to make it a hunter. Turtle's son, Short Leg understood, was, for all his irritation, important to Tree. It made Turtle, to him, somehow different from all the other females of the camp. If it were not for the boy, Short Leg reasoned, Turtle would be to him no more than Cloud, or Flower or Antelope. If Tree would feed Short Leg, Short Leg would not object if he took Flower or Cloud, only that she, Short Leg, would be first woman. Flower would be behind her. She would not be first. It would be then as it had been with Spear. Short Leg would be the woman of Tree, but he would have others, too, which he might feed, and use for his pleasure. Stone could have Turtle, or Runner or Fox. Or, she could be traded to the Bear People, or the Horse People, for another girl, a new girl, not knowing the group, who would do as Short Leg told her. Short Leg had seen Tree's anger with Turtle. Why did he continue to feed her? It had to do, somehow, with Turtle's son.
Hamilton, with Cloud and Butterfly, struggled through brush about the camp.
"Cricket!" Hamilton called.
The berries were only stains and pulp in her clenched fist. She could hear others, too, the women, and Tooth, calling out, elsewhere in the brush.
Then she heard Tooth call out to her. "Turtle!" he cried. She, with the others, struggled through the brush, towards him. Ugly Girl, on her hands and knees, looked up at them. She looked frightened, sick.
"What is wrong?" whispered Hamilton.
"She has found the trail," said Tooth.
Ugly Girl could not tell in the language of the Men the mingled scents she had detected, for her mouth and tongue could not make the words. But she did not sign the scents either, in hand talk. Tooth could not look Hamilton in the face.
"What is it!" cried Hamilton.
She saw a broken branch, a crushed leaf. "Cricket!" she cried. "Cricket!"
Ugly Girl, the others, and Tooth, did not follow her.
Hamilton made her way through the brush, pushing aside branches.
32
"He liked berries," said Hamilton.
She placed, in the tiny trough, a dozen berries. They were large, juicy, red. She put in the tiny trough five tiny, pretty shells, and a toy, of stuffed leather, in the shape of a small, four-footed animal. Pod, who was the son of Short Leg, put a shiny pebble in the trough. Tree crouched nearby, but back with the others. He put a tiny bow, with tiny arrows in the trough. The Men put stones over the trough.
Hamilton stood up.
Short Leg, seeing her return, seeing her eyes, and that she knew, had leaped, eyes wild, terrified, to her feet and fled. 'Turtle will kill me!" she cried to Stone. "Cricket is dead," had said Stone. Short Leg fled to the cave where Spear sat, on a rug of fur. "Turtle will kill me!" she cried. "A child of the Men is dead," said Spear. "Protect me!" cried Short Leg. "Are you here, Stone?" asked Spear. From the entrance to the shelter Stone had said, "I am here." "With stones cut off her fingers," said Spear. "With sticks punch out her eyes. Then take her into the forests. Leave her far from the shelters. Leave her far from the shelters at night." "No," cried Short Leg. She scrambled past Stone. On the ledge outside Spear's shelter she saw Hamilton below. Hamilton began to climb toward her. "Turtle will kill me!" cried Short Leg. She picked up a rock and hurled it down toward Hamilton. Hamilton continued to climb toward her. Below, at the foot of the shelters, Short Leg saw Ugly Girl, Tooth, Cloud, the others. They were looking up, watching. "Protect me!" screamed Short Leg. "I am Short Leg!" she cried. "Protect me!"
Then Hamilton was on the ledge.
Short Leg turned to the cliff and, scrambling, hand by hand, feet scraping for holds, began to climb. Hamilton followed her.
Some seventy or eighty feet from the stones below, clinging to the cliff, Short Leg turned her head, looked back, and, fingers scratching, sliding, lost her grip, and, screaming, plunged backward, falling, twisting, until she struck the stones.
At the foot of the cliffs Hamilton saw Pod, the infant of Short Leg. Suddenly screaming with hatred she seized the child and lifted it over her head, to dash its skull open against the cliffs, and then, sobbing, wild, Hamilton stumbled to Nurse, and thrust the child in her arms.
Hamilton rolled on the stones, striking at them, howling, shrieking at the sky in misery. She cut her body with the stones, and her tears and her blood marked the granite. In her right hand were the stains of the berries. Old Woman went alone into the forest and cut her face with rocks. With a flint knife she cut from her left hand two fingers.
Hamilton stood up. She looked down at the stones, covering the trough. All night Hamilton had sat with the child in her arms. By force Old Woman and Nurse had taken it from her arms, and placed it in the trough. Some articles, too, had been placed in the trough, some berries, some shells and a toy of stuffed leather. A child, too, had placed a pebble in the trough and one of the hunters had added a bow, a tiny one, with tiny arrows. Then the men had put stones over the trough.
Then Stone had said, "The meat must be roasted. There are skins to clean."
The Men, followed by the women, and the children, turned away.
Hamilton, and Tree, remained behind.
"He liked berries," Hamilton said.
Tree did not respond to her.
Hamilton took from her throat the necklace of the Men, unknotting it. She handed it to Tree. "I am going away," she told him.
The hunter did not detain her.
33
"You are my daughter," said Herjellsen.
"Do not excite him," said William. "He is dying."
"It has finally caught up with me," said Herjellsen. "My own body. I am to be killed by my own body."
"The child died," said Hamilton. "It died. There is no child."
"We have all failed," said Herjellsen. "All of us have failed."
Gunther, sitting on a wooden chair in the corner of the room, regarded him, not speaking. William sat near the bed, a stethoscope about his neck. In the background stood Herjellsen's two blacks, the large fellow, who was called Chaka, though it was not his true name, but the name of a black king, and the smaller man, his friend. They wore khaki shorts and open shirts.
"Your scheme was a mad one," said Gunther, slowly. "You are insane."
Herjellsen looked at them, peering through the thick lenses of his glasses. He rested his head back. He sat in bed, propped by pillows. He was far thinner now, and whiter than Hamilton remembered him. His body seemed small beneath the sheets. He wore a ragged pair of red-striped pajamas. The neck was open. The first two buttons were opened. His face suddenly tensed, and his body was tight, clenched on a saw's edge of pain.
"You should rest now," said William.
"No," said Herjellsen. Then he looked at Hamilton. "I had hoped," he said, "there would have been a child."
"It died," said Hamilton.
"I am sorry," said Herjellsen. Then he looked at her. "I chose you," he said, "because you are my only daughter, my only child."
Hamilton had not known her parents.
"It was essential to my hopes," he said. "But now we have all failed."
"What was it," demanded Gunther, suddenly, angrily, "that you hoped to accomplish in your madness?"
 
; "To inaugurate the renaissance of man," said Herjellsen. "To touch the stars." He lay back against the pillow, but his eyes were open. "Man," he said, "has within him beasts and gods, and he is only truly man when each may thrive and both are fed."
"On what," asked Gunther, "can gods and beasts feed?"
"On meats and horizons," said Herjellsen.
"The two natures of man?" asked William, smiling.
"No," said Herjellsen, "that is the odd thing, for there is truly only one nature, though there is no name for it in any language I know. If there were to be a word, I suppose it would be the nature of the god-beast or beast-god. The important thing to understand is that it is the beast brain which thinks, which perceives, which acts. There is only one nature, that of the beast which can lift its head and catch the scent of the fires of stars."
"Surely one nature or the other must die," said William.
"No," said Herjellsen, "that is the teaching only of those who have little of either nature." He thrust his head forward. "If the god dies, so, too, does the beast, and if the beast dies, with it expires the god. The heart may not be removed to succor the brain, nor the brain removed from the skull to pacify the heart. It is one system, one glory, one splendor, called Man."
No one spoke. And Herjellsen again rested his head back on the pillows. He seemed scrawny, almost, now, and futile, and silly in the red and white pajamas. He was only a primate with delusions, one who could not understand evident realities. To whom could such a man speak? To the world he despised he could count only as a madman. It could only kill such men, or ridicule them, for he was like a knife to the belly of complacency. "The enemies," said Herjellsen, "lie about us, outside us and within us. They are the little men, the small men, the insects who can dream only the dreams of insects. They cannot know the greatness of man. It cannot register on the compound eye; it eludes the antennae, his strides cannot be understood by the tiny feet to whom a leaf is a country, a weed a continent. Their measurements and scales are not those of men. Comfort, security, softness, too, lie about us, and within us, more deadly than the aging heart, the wretched, brittle valves, the withered tissues." The old man's eyes blazed, and it seemed his weakness, his tortured frailness vanished, and there was only, for the moment, burning within him, flaming, the intellect, the heart, the indomitable will. "Civilization," said he, "is not the end, not the termination, the destiny. It is the vehicle, the path, the instrument. Without it we cannot achieve Man, nor discover him."
"And where," asked Gunther, "shall we achieve man? Where shall we discover him?"
"Among the stars," said Herjellsen. "We will not achieve Man until we, his precursors, stand among the stars. It is then, and then only, that we will discover him. He may be found there, and there only! It will be only in the landscapes of infinity, you see, that he shall rise to his full height, for in what other country could a man stand as high as a man can stand? He will not be fully man until he can see the stars as pebbles at his feet."
"The child died," said Hamilton.
"We have all failed," said Herjellsen, turning ashen, falling back to the pillows.
"What is so important," asked Gunther, "about the child?"
"And how," asked Hamilton, "could you seriously have expected me to turn the eyes of men to the stars?"
"By the child," whispered Herjellsen. "By the child!" He looked at her, sadly, through the thick lenses. "Words will not turn men to the stars, though they may open the eyes of men who have eyes with which to see the stars. Words are little, and futile, a bit of noise, briefly heard, swiftly forgotten, and fatuous, and not enough. I did not expect you to argue with hunters, nor to explain physics to them, nor to instill in them dreams."
"What did you expect me to do?" asked Hamilton.
"Whether a man can see the stars, in his heart as well as in his eyes, like cattle or birds, is a little understood factor locked in his genetic codes. It is much like the factor that permits one man to detect the beauty of music and forever precludes another from its raptures; it is like the factor that permits one man to be strong and denies strength to another; it is like the factor that makes it possible for one man to be touched by love, and forever makes this splendor an enigma, a fiction, to one who might otherwise be his brother."
"The hunters are dead," said Gunther. "They died, and many thousands of years ago."
"What did you expect me to do?" asked Hamilton.
"Bear the child," said Herjellsen. He looked at her. "Civilization totters," said Herjellsen. "It is dying. It is choking on its own filth. Ever more toxic grows the atmosphere. Ever more abundant grow the multitudes, crowding and pressing, hating and sweating and squirming for room to love, to breathe and live, and dying, denied and crushed, gasping in the jungles and sewers of their own garbage. And looming on the brink of this poisoned tank we note, poised, the ultimate purificatory instrument. Insects will survive, and, it is likely, certain forms of reptiles. Little else. Surely not man."
"How would the child make such a difference?" asked Hamilton, puzzled.
"It would be, in its way," said Herjellsen, "not only my ancestor, but my grandson. It would have borne within it my seed, my genetic coding, a part of me, a particle of a protoplasmic, carnal chain which might reach high enough to explode in its fragments of significance among the stars."
"How can it be before you, and after you?" asked William.
"Time," said Herjellsen, "is not understood. It is perhaps a condition of our representations, constituting for us a reality, but not in itself the ultimate reality. The concept of time, as we think of it, is filled with conflicts, and it cannot, as we think of it, correspond to a reality. Our minds are perhaps not equipped to understand the true nature of time. What we experience as time may be something in itself quite different, a color we cannot see, a sound we cannot hear, a reality we can know only under our own consecutive forms of perception."
"Surely, for us," said William, "time is quite real."
"Surely," said Herjellsen. "That is not at issue. What is dubious or problematic is the nature in itself of that which we experience as time. Doubtless time is a real mode in which that reality expresses itself, and in this sense is not unreal, but only is not understood. Color and sound, too, are real, but they are not, surely, identical with vibrations, gross and tenuous, in an atmosphere. Similarly the vibrations themselves may not be ultimate, for in one of their dimensions, they are temporal, and time, as we have suggested, cannot be as we conceive it. Could there be a first moment of time? Or, could there not be a first moment of time? The dilemma, my beloved friends, makes manifest the limitations of our concepts, points clearly to their inadequacy, and hints timidly at what must lie beyond, the different, the mystery, the reality."
"How," asked Hamilton, "could one child make a difference?"
"It could," said Herjellsen, "make all the difference in this world, and in others, because of the hundred geometries of biology. The child begets its children, and each of these begets others in turn, and others." Herjellsen smiled. "All of you," he said, "you, Gunther, you, William, as well as you, my beloved daughter, may be my children."
"I look about the world," said Gunther. "I do not think so. These are not Herjellsen's children."
"The child, Herjellsen," said Hamilton, "died."
"Consider the world," said Gunther. "It is not populated with the children of Herjellsen."
"The hunters are dead," said William.
It was only the Dirt People who, in the long run, survived, thought Hamilton. Victors in the long course had not been the hunters, so vain, so proud, so arrogant, so vital, so cruel, so strong, but the Dirt People, with their seeds, and their sacrifices and their sticks. Horizons and stars had not been victorious; but barley and beer.
"I am sorry, Father," said Hamilton.
"Let him rest now," said William.
Herjellsen laid back against the pillows. He pretended to be asleep. When they had left, he wept.
34
&
nbsp; It was in the neighborhood of ten in the morning, in late June. It was a light, brightly sunny day, cool. The short night preceding had been pleasant, even chilly.
Hamilton sipped her coffee, black, sitting at the small table in the open-air restaurant on the Vester Farimagasade.
From the harbor, more than a kilometer away, there was a breeze, carrying over the city. She could smell fish, and salt.
She liked the city. It was clean, as cities went, and the people calm, industrious. She liked the Danes. She liked the sky over the city, the wind.
Hamilton thought of Herjellsen. Herjellsen had been Finnish. He had had something of their appetites, their stubbornness.
"Have you been long in Copenhagen?" asked the man of the couple, sitting near her, in English.
"No," she responded. She smiled, but she did not want to talk. They returned to their conversation. Hamilton looked again into the small cup of coffee, and then lifted it to her lips and drank. She buttoned the top button on her sweater.
There was no particular reason, as far as she knew, why she had come to Copenhagen. She was now well fixed. Herjellsen, before she had left the compound, had seen to that. William and Gunther, not speaking, had driven her more than two hundred and fifty miles to Salisbury.
"Good-bye," they had said to her.
"Good-bye," she had said, and boarded the plane. They had returned to the compound.
Her eyes had been dry, but inside her body there had been only emptiness and ashes. Herjellsen was dying. He had failed, and William and Gunther had failed and she, too, had failed. She had boarded the plane, and fastened her safety belt, and the runway had slipped away beneath her and in a few moments she saw Rhodesia, whitish and dry in the sun, vanish under the metallic wing.
The adventure, the experiment had ended. Tree was gone. And the child had died.
William and Gunther returned to the compound. 'William did not wish to leave Herjellsen. Both, in that lonely, fenced compound in the bush, with the blacks, would keep the vigil, waiting for the old man to die.