Freedom's Landing

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Freedom's Landing Page 11

by Anne McCaffrey


  “But yours is a tad more educated from watching all those kidvids. I’ll buy it, Bjornsen, I’ll buy it. G’wan now, and you as well, Cumber. We’ve got a sort of bread tonight, soda bread.” He grinned. “One of the chemists found a deposit of sodium bicarbonate. Bread doesn’t taste half bad—if you’re hungry enough and you ignore occasional grits from the grinding.”

  No sooner had Kris reached the main cave, to stand in line for her hunk of bread, than Patti Sue discovered her. The girl threw her arms about Kris’ neck and howled with tears of relief.

  “Hey, now, Patti Sue, I was perfectly all right,” Kris told the girl, trying to calm her down to mere hysterics.

  Sandy came to her rescue. “There now, Patti, I told you Kris can take care of herself.”

  Patti Sue was persuaded to release her death hold on Kris. As she stood back, she looked down at her front, now smeared with what also covered Kris’ garment.

  “Oh, my gawd, what’s that?”

  “Probably blood,” Kris said, for the meat she had lugged back had dribbled down her, attracting the insects.

  “Oh, my gawd!” And Patti Sue backed away from Kris as if she had turned leprous.

  “Guess I need a bath,” Kris said cheerfully and, taking her portion of bread, ate it on the way down to the underground lake to make herself more presentable.

  She wasn’t the only one to want to get clean. There were quite a few white bodies splashing in the water. Someone had added more ropes. Pausing only to add her wrap-on boots, food packet, and blanket to the row of similar belongings awaiting the return of their owners, she grabbed a spare tether and plunged into the water. Twisting the rope about one wrist, she then winkled herself out of the garment and rinsed it thoroughly. The water was invigoratingly cool and somewhat restored her energy level. She got out, drying herself on her blanket and then wrapping it sarong fashion. She squeezed the water from her coverall and then made her way back out of the lake cavern. She was sure she’d sleep that night.

  She did. Until Zainal roused her. It had to be the middle of the long Botany night because everyone around her was fast asleep, especially Patti Sue, who would have had a knicker attack if she’d awakened to see the Catteni so close by.

  There was just enough light supplied by the flickering torch in the passageway for her to see Zainal touch his lips for silence. Groaning involuntarily because she was stiff from yesterday’s exertions, she had trouble rising. Zainal put out a helping hand and—zip—she was on her feet. She grinned up at him as she followed him out. He didn’t release her hand and she was content to let it stay in his strong mitt. She had to entertain the thought that she was definitely attracted to the Catteni, and not just because he was taller than she was. He had conducted himself with such dignity and tact during the past few days that surely even those who hated the Catteni violently couldn’t fault him. Certainly Mitford had made it plain to the motley crew that Zainal was a large and useful entity in their continued survival. Once the euphoria of the past few days settled into boring routine and less exciting uncertainty, she suspected there would be problems.

  “Trouble?” she whispered in Barevian once outside the room. “Don’t you ever sleep?”

  “Not in danger,” he murmured back and led her.

  It was third moonset when they got outside. Kris could see faces lit by the campfire in the ravine; one of them was Mitford’s.

  “Sorry to rouse you, Bjornsen,” he said with a grin and gestured for her to hold up her cup. She didn’t realize until that moment that she had unconsciously gathered up her accoutrements—her blanket, the cup, and her ration bars. “As far as my internal clock is concerned, this is well past dawn.”

  “And you’re a creature of habit?” She grinned at him, accepting the warm liquid. It was some sort of herbal tea, which was an improvement on bare, naked hot water.

  “Pull up a stone,” he added and she sat on the one just to his right. “I want you to go with Zainal, here, and Slav and the Deski Coo, and suss out what other surprises this place has in store for us. No sense in thinking we’re safe in this ravine. One of the eggheads mentioned that there are indications this,” and he waved about the walls of the ravine, “may get flooded in spring. High-water marks and scrapings of trees on the sides, higher up than we can stand, and I ain’t that good at treading water.”

  With a start Kris wondered if he was quoting an old Bill Cosby routine.

  “I want you to circle around,” and he gestured, “as far as you can go in a day’s march, and map. Zainal here says he knows how to map. He’s picking up English real good. Officer material for sure.” This last Mitford said in a lower voice and with a grin meant for Kris alone. “Seeing as how you know him, and seem to be able to charade things to Slav and Coo, you’d be the human in the team. Unless you got any real objections to the duty.”

  “Is there going to be trouble for the…ah…aliens, sarge?”

  “Ain’t there always?” Mitford said in a cynical tone. “I can trust you, Bjornsen,” he added in a dark low tone. “You’ve proved you can hack it, too.”

  “Thanks, sarge,” and Kris felt a good deal taller for that unexpected praise.

  “And with the Catteni along he’ll see you don’t come to harm.”

  “Thanks, sarge,” she said, this time wryly. Build ’em up to knock ’em down, but she grinned to show she had no ill feelings. It was enough that the Sergeant wasn’t as misogynistic as some career soldiers she’d heard about.

  “I want you to draw additional rations from Greene for all of you. Seems like the Deski can’t stomach the red meat and they need somethin’ in their diet, though what it is I haven’t been able to figure out.” He sighed. “That’s another reason I’m sending one along with you. And you’re to eat!” He shot one thick index finger at her so suddenly that she rocked back. “We’ve got enough to supply patrols away from camp. That stuff may be less tasty than field rations even, but it’s got all the nutrional crap you need to march on. Get another issue of blankets and an extra coverall. Got it?”

  “Got it, sarge,” she said, her hand halfway to her brow to salute when she realized that might not be appropriate even if it was an instinctive reaction to his manner.

  “Good,” and he grinned in the firelight, having caught that abortive gesture. “Zainal, get the rations and supplies and move out at your leisure.”

  “Leisure” in army parlance meant right smart. So in next to no time they were making their way in dawn’s early light up the ravine, and into undiscovered country.

  Zainal led at a spanking pace that didn’t seem to alter whatever the terrain they had to traverse. But, like Mitford, he did call a halt when full daylight lit the skies.

  The first thing Zainal did was tie a knot in a thin strip of blanket, of which he had quite a few tucked inside a thigh pocket. A tally rope? Well, they had no writing materials and Zainal, strong as he was, couldn’t exactly carry a sheet of rock with him to chalk up the miles. Or should she say “klicks” since she was on a military operation?

  “What are you counting, Zainal?” she asked.

  “Steps, so I know distance,” he said in Barevi.

  “Oh…” And that steady pace now made sense. “What’s the Catteni word for miles, or kilometers? How do you measure distance?”

  “My…step…” he said tentatively in English.

  “‘Stride’ is the better term,” she said.

  “Stride is one Catteni pleg.”

  “Pleg for the leg,” she said, using her own brand of aide-mémoire. “Make a stride for me, please?”

  “Hmmm,” and he complied.

  Stretching her own long legs to their limit, she could just about make the same length. “Hmmm. Over a meter then. Hmmm. Well, I could almost spell you on a level surface so you could have a break.”

  “Hmmm,” he said again, blinking rapidly as he sifted the meaning of her words.

  So she “charaded” what she’d said and then he understood with a grin
.

  “One pleg is almost dead-on a meter. One pleg, one meter,” she said.

  Slav and the Deski were watching, too, their expressions keen enough to show they were interested in the demonstrations. So she pointed to the Rugarian, gestured for him to take a stride. His was the same length as hers but the Deski’s was much longer since he had spiderlike, long leg bones. Although Kris tried to get Slav to tell her what a pleg was in his language, and attempted to extract the same information from the Deski, she had no success. Both kept saying stolidly, “Pleg, pleg.”

  A plague on it, she thought but smiled and patted each in turn before she sat down again to get the good of the rest period. She wasn’t sure if they didn’t care to have a language lesson or if they had some obscure reason for sticking so perversely to the Barevi words. Both Rugarian and Deski had rather flat, inflectionless voices, but then what she knew of Catteni was flat and inflectionless, too. The lingua Barevi had had more rhythm and tone to it than the languages in which Zainal had spoken to both Slav and Coo.

  As they hiked on, they reached another plateau, where a second break was called: another knot in the tally string. When Zainal told her how many pleg each knot represented, she realized they were traveling at slightly better than four miles an hour…that is, if Zainal was stopping every hour. So, in the next onward push, she counted the minutes while he counted his paces. She thought she might have lost a few minutes because she got sidetracked watching the Deski check the vegetation on the plateau—what there was of it because there were no fields or hedges or much of anything. But just when she felt they had been marching for an hour, Zainal called a halt.

  “Gee, man, you got a clock in your head?” she asked as he made a third knot.

  He raised a querying eyebrow at her. It made his face seem more humanish, less Cattenish.

  “Lordee, how do Catteni tell time?” she muttered to herself, trying to remember if he’d had some sort of digital device on his wrist, like good spacefarers should, when she’d first encountered him.

  “Time.” He picked up on that word and tapped his skull. “Time kept here. Good time.”

  “Now don’t tell me your home world has long days and nights like Botany?”

  The two spent the rest period explaining and understanding that concept.

  “Full turn of planet is not as long as here,” he said in the best English sentence he had so far made.

  “Boy, you sure learn fast.”

  “Is ‘boy’ a good thing to say of me?” Again that quizzical expression.

  “Well, yes,” Kris replied, grinning, delighted with his sense of humor: something she hadn’t thought Catteni possessed. “But you are a man, I am a woman. Boy is a young man. I’m using it in the context of a slang expression, so it doesn’t mean the same thing as the word should.”

  He grinned in such a polite way that she wasn’t sure if he understood her explanation at all before he gestured them to take up their journey again.

  The day grew warm on the plateau, which had no shade at all on its sandy and gritty surface, only the wiry plants with their odd-shaped leaves that didn’t look like anything on any Earth deserts—and Kris had been in the Las Vegas and Salt Lake City scrubland areas. Coo kept tasting plants, and even different-colored patches of soil as they went: usually spitting the samples out so that Kris wasn’t sure what verdict was being rendered. She was becoming so thirsty that her tongue felt swollen, so on what was the midday rest stop she didn’t have the desire to banter with Zainal. The others took out “lunch,” chawing off good hunks from their bars, but she didn’t think she had enough saliva in her mouth to chew, much less swallow.

  “You bite, you chew, be better,” Zainal said kindly and rolled his mouthful about to show that he wasn’t swallowing either.

  She tried a small piece and discovered that something in the bar helped generate some moisture. She didn’t eat as much as the other three but felt better for what she did put in her stomach.

  They traveled on, then; the plateau was gradually sloping down to a lusher sort of terrain. And a stream. She had to restrain herself not to prostrate herself in the stream but carefully reeducate her mouth and throat to wetness.

  “God, what I’d give for a canteen.”

  “What is this ‘god’ so many call on?” Zainal asked. “Another ‘boy’?”

  Coming as the question did in Zainal’s rich guttural voice, it sent Kris into a fit of the giggles. She’d often been told that she had an infectious laugh—and had proved it from time to time by setting a whole classroom off—but it pleased her no end that the effect extended to another species. The Catteni’s chuckle sounded very human. Slav cocked his head at her and frowned while Coo merely looked at her in consternation, as if the Deski thought Kris was having a fit or convulsion.

  “I won’t answer that question now, Zainal,” she said when she had reduced giggle to grin. “‘God’ was never a boy! I will explain another time when we have several years at our disposal.”

  Zainal frowned, not having understood all she said. Which was about par for the course, she thought. And just as well.

  Having drunk sufficient water to revive her, Kris now pulled out the rest of her lunchtime bar and finished it. She was ready to go then, but Zainal did not urge them away from this pleasant spot: as much because there were new varieties of plants along the stream bank which Coo was sampling with great eagerness. He came back with something which he showed to Kris, the first time he had done that.

  “Looks like a kind of watercress to me,” she said, testing one of the stems and a leaf. “Can you eat it?” she asked, gesturing to her mouth with the sample.

  The Deski nodded and popped a stalk into his mouth and chewed with every indication of pleasure. Kris nibbled carefully and, feeling her lips and gums go slightly numb, buried her face in the water and gargled vigorously. She felt Zainal’s hands on her shoulders supporting her. She rinsed and gargled, being careful not to swallow, and rinsed and rinsed until the sensation was washed away.

  “Thanks, Zainal,” she said and then saw how concerned all three of her companions were. “Oh, I’m fine. I didn’t swallow any of it. All yours, Coo, all yours.”

  The Deski nodded vigorously and made a show of clutching the rest of the sample plant to his chest.

  “No more try,” Zainal told her sternly.

  “You bet!”

  His concern altered to a glare of frustration. “More ‘boy’ words?”

  “Well,” and Kris rocked one hand back and forth to indicate neither one nor another. Oh, lord, but she’d never appreciated how complex English was. Or did she mean “idiomatic American”?

  They went on then, until Kris wondered how much longer she could ignore the swelling of her feet which the wraparound boots were not compensating for. And she thought she’d been fit! Ha! She had dropped behind the two aliens…two of her companions, she amended quickly…and found herself watching the rippling of the hairs on the Rugarian’s legs. His feet did look funny in the wrap-around Catteni footware and he didn’t seem to have “muscles” where humans did: but depressions came and went with each stride sort of laterally instead of up and down the way calf muscles did. And in front of him, Coo seemed only to have leg bones, no muscular movement at all, only the tendons—or what passed for tendons on a Deski—on either side of the one leg bone, lifting and lowering it, like the shaft of a crane. She tried to imagine the anatomy of her companions, sans their skins, and failed utterly. Biology had not been one of her stronger subjects. Oh, the gaps in her education. Well, there’s nothing like on-the-job training, she thought, or whatever it was they were now doing.

  Some place and time later, she was able to stop moving her legs and sat down on a rock. There was a small fire enclosed in a circle of rocks and around a cairn of rocks. Odd formation, she thought bemusedly. Then, as the buzz of fatigue allowed it, Kris could hear the babbling of a brook nearby. Water! She half rose and then was pushed back onto the rock and a big leaf pres
ented her.

  “Drink!

  She grasped the leaf, feeling the thickness of it, and found a “lip” from which to drink. The water was ever so cold and tasted ambrosial. Real Adam’s Ale!

  “More?” asked Zainal, looming over her.

  She struggled to rise. “I can get my own water…Ohhh, no,” and her voice came out just this side of a wail. Zainal’s big hand pushed her back onto the stone just as she realized how weak she was.

  She sipped this time and was able to take in more of her surroundings. Someone was chipping rocks?

  She looked around and saw Slav and Coo hammering a hole out of the slab of rock not far from the fire. They were on a slab of rock, an outcropping that edged yet another of the fields, a meter above ground level. Large-leaved plants formed a bit of a canopy over the portion of the cliff, affording them some shade. Beyond this small campsite she saw the spray from a little cataract that spilled off the rock and into a pool, then on down across the field. A crop field, she noticed.

  Looking back, she realized with a start of amazement, the men were making a rock caldron. On the far side of the campfire were the limp carcasses of rocksquatters and some other smallish beasties she hadn’t seen before: six-legged which, she thought idly, would make skinning them tedious. Then Zainal knelt to perform that task. Rather deliberately, she thought, he gathered up the entrails and threw them off, onto the field below.

  “Zainal,” said Slav, and pointed to the now sizable hole they had chipped into the rock.

  “Water,” Zainal said, and Slav and Coo, reaching up to pluck more big leaves from the trees shading them, made several trips each.

  When the hole had been filled to within a handspan of the top, Zainal threw in the dissected joints of the animals and Coo added some roots, similar to the ones already in use at the cave. Then Zainal, deftly using a forked stick, started transferring hot rocks into the improvised stew pot.

  Kris was delighted and clapped her hands that someone was making use of her suggestion. She reached about her and gathered up more stones, which she piled in the center of the fire. They’d probably need a lot to get the stew cooked enough.

 

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