Earthborn (Homecoming)

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Earthborn (Homecoming) Page 21

by Orson Scott Card


  Edhadeya hugged them both and watched them leave the courtyard. Then she lay back on the bench and looked up at the sky. She thought, when the angle of the sun was right, that she could see the star Basilica even in bright sunlight. Today, though, the clouds were blocking everything. It was going to rain.

  “One-Who-Was-Never-Buried,” murmured Edhadeya. “Are you going to do anything about this?”

  Shedemei loaded her supplies into the ship’s launch as the Oversoul murmured one more time inside her mind:

  “Do you think you can’t protect me?” asked Shedemei.

 

  “That’s all I ask.”

 

  “I want to know these people, that’s all,” said Shedemei. “I want to know them for myself.”

 

  “Do I have to say it? Can’t you look inside my mind and see the truth?”

 

  “I can. I’m going down there because I’m lonely. There, is that what you wanted to hear?”

 

  “Well, now you’ve heard it. I want to hear another organic voice. No insult to you, but I actually would like to feel like some other people know me.”

 

  “I know,” said Shedemei. “And I don’t claim to have any great and noble purpose. I’m just ready to come out of this metal shell and bump against some people again.” Then she thought of something. “How old am I? People will ask.”

 

  “Are you suggesting that I should have another child?”

 

  Shedemei curled her lip in disgust. “This is a society with a strong tabu against sex outside of marriage. I’m not going down there to ruin some poor lonely man’s life.”

 

  “Are you sure all these warnings aren’t because you’re just the tiniest bit jealous?”

 

  “I can walk on the face of this planet, and other living creatures will know me as one of them. Have you ever wished . . .”

 

  “That’s a shame, too.”

 

  “That is programmed into me” said Shedemei.

  The hatches were sealed. The launch was flipped away from the starship Basilica and hurtled down into the atmosphere.

  SEVEN

  RASARO’S SCHOOL

  Light streamed through the tall, wide windows of the winter room, reflecting from the bare lime-washed plaster walls until it was hard for Mon to imagine that it could possibly be brighter outside. The reason he and his brothers could gather here to be brow beaten by—no, to have a discussion with—Akma was because no one used the winter room in the summer. It was too hot. It was too bright. It was all Mon could do to keep his eyes open. If it weren’t for the buzzing flies that persisted in trying to drink the sweat dribbling out of his body, he would have dozed off long ago.

  Not that Mon wasn’t committed to Akma’s ideas. It’s just that the two of them had discussed all this before ever bringing Aronha and Ominer and Khimin into it. So it was going over old ground for him. And it was natural for Akma to conduct these sessions, since Mon didn’t have his patience in dealing with Khimin’s questions, which were always off the subject, or Aronha’s stubborn refusal to agree with points that were already proven and more than proven. Only Ominer seemed to grasp at once what Akma was talking about, and even he made the sessions longer and more tedious than they had to be, because when he did understand a point he would then repeat it back to Akma in different words. Between Khimin’s obtuseness, Aronha’s stolidity, and Ominer’s enthusiasm, every tiny advance in the discussion took hours, or so it seemed to Mon. Akma could endure it. Akma could act as though the questions and comments weren’t unbearably stupid.

  A tiny thought crept into Mon’s consciousness: Did Akma deal with me the same way? Are the ideas we worked out “together” really Akma’s alone? How skillful is he, really, at winning people to his point of view?

  Immediately Mon discarded the idea, not because it wasn’t true, but because it would imply that Mon was not Akma’s intellectual equal, and he certainly was. Bego had always made it clear that Mon was the best student he had ever had.

  “Humans and angels can live together,” said Akma, “because the natural habitat of both species is open air and sunlight. Humans cannot fly, it is true, but our bipedal body structure lifts us above the other animals. We conceive ourselves as seeing from above, which makes us in spirit compatible to the sky people. The diggers, however, are creatures of darkness, of caves; their natural posture is with their bellies dragging along the moist underground dirt. What creatures of intelligent and refinement abhor, the diggers love; what the diggers love, creatures of higher sensibility view with disgust.”

  Mon closed his eyes against the white unbearable light of the room. In the back of his mind there throbbed an intense feeling, a certainty that in his childhood he had learned to trust, and in recent years he had learned—a much harder task—to ignore. The feeling was beneath and behind the place in his mind that words came from. But, in the way that the mind supplies words for unexplainable tunes, his mind had also learned the words that went along with this feeling: Wrong. This is wrong. This is wrong. Throb, throb, throb. Closing his eyes didn’t make it go away.

  This doesn’t mean anything, thought Mon. This feeling is just a holdover from my childhood. It’s just the Keeper of Earth trying to get me to disbelieve what Akma is saying.

  What am I thinking? I don’t even believe in the Keeper of Earth, and here I am blaming him for this throbbing meaningless stupid insane chant running over and over through my mind. I can’t get rid of my superstitions even when I’m trying to get rid of my superstitions. He laughed at himself.

  Laughed aloud, or perhaps just breathed as if laughing—it didn’t take much for Akma to pick up on it.

  “But perhaps I’m wrong,” said Akma. “Mon is the one who really understands this. Why were you laughing, Mon?”

  “I wasn’t,” said Mon.

  Wrong, this is wrong, this is wrong.

  “I mean my first thought, Mon, you’ll remember this, my first thought was that all three species should separate, but you’re the one who insisted that humans and angels could live together because of all these affinities between us.”

  “You mean this comes from Mon?” asked Aronha. “Mon, who jumped off a high wall when he was three because he wanted to fly like an angel?”

  “I was just thinking,” said Mon, “that all those things you say about the diggers, the angels could also say about us. Low, bellycrawling creatures. We can’t even hang cleanly from a tree limb. Filthy, squatting in dirt—”

  “But not hairy!” said Khimin.

  “Nobody’s going to listen to us,” said Ominer, “if we start saying that angels are better than humans. And the kingdom would fall apart if we start saying humans and angels should be separate. If we’re going to make this work, we have to exclude diggers and only the diggers.”

  Mon looked at him in surprise. So did Akma.

  “If what’s going to work?” asked Akma.

  “This. This whole thing we’re prepa
ring for,” said Ominer.

  Mon and Akma looked at each other.

  Ominer realized that he had said something wrong. “What?” No one answered.

  Then Aronha, in his measured way, said, “I didn’t know that we had any plan to take these discussions public.”

  “What, we’re going to wait around until you’re the king?” asked Ominer scornfully. “All this urgency, all this secrecy, I just assumed Akma was preparing us to start speaking against Akmaro’s so-called religion. His attempt to control and destroy our society and turn the whole kingdom over to the Elemaki, is more like it. I thought we were going to speak out against it now, before he’s succeeded in getting diggers accepted as true men and women throughout Darakemba. I mean, if we’re not, why are we wasting our time? Let’s go out and make some digger friends so at least we won’t be thrust aside when they take over.”

  Akma chuckled a little. To others, it sounded like easy confidence—but Mon had been with Akma long enough to know that he laughed like that when he was a little bit afraid. “I suppose that has been the goal in the back of our minds,” said Akma, “but I don’t think it had graduated to the status of a plan.”

  Ominer laughed derisively. “You tell us there’s no Keeper, and I think your evidence is conclusive. You tell us that humans never left Earth, that we’re not older than the sky people or the earth people, we just evolved in different places, and that’s fine. You tell us that because of this, all the things your father is teaching are wrong, and in fact the only thing that matters is, what culture will survive and rule? And the way to answer that is to keep diggers out of Darakemba and preserve this civilization that has been jointly created by humans and angels, the civilization of the Nafari. Keep the Elemaki with their filthy alliance between humans and dirt-crawling fat rats confined to the gornaya while we find ways to tame the great floodplains of the Severless, the Vostoiless, the Yugless and multiply our population to such an extent that we can overwhelm the Elemaki—all of these marvelous plans, and you never thought of going out and talking about them in public? Come on, Akma, Mon, we’re not stupid.”

  The look on Khimin’s and Aronha’s faces made it clear that it was the first time they had ever thought of these ideas, but of course, given Ominer’s exasperated tone, they weren’t about to admit their shameful stupidity.

  “Yes,” said Akma. “Eventually we would have started to speak to others.”

  “Masses of others,” said Ominer. “It’s not as if you’re going to change Father’s mind—Akmaro keeps Father’s brain in his traveling bag. And none of the councilors is going to join us in opposing Father’s will. And if we talk about this stuff quietly and secretly, it’ll look like conspiracy and when it gets exposed it will look as though we’re shameful traitors. So the only possible way to stop Akmaro’s destruction of Darakemba is to oppose him openly and publicly. Am I right?”

  Wrong. This is wrong. This is wrong.

  By reflex, Mon almost answered with the message throbbing through his mind. But he knew that this message was a holdover from his childhood faith in the Keeper, that he had to overcome this superstition and reject it in order to have any hope of deserving Akma’s respect. Or Bego’s, or his brothers’, whatever, whoever. Akma’s respect.

  So instead of saying what was in his heart, he answered with his mind alone: “Yes, you’re right, Ominer. And it’s true that Akma and I never discussed this. Akma probably thought about it, but I know I didn’t. Now that you say it, though, I know you’re right.”

  Aronha turned soberly to Mon. “You know he’s right?”

  Mon knew what Aronha was asking. Aronha wanted to have the assurance that Mon’s old gift of discernment was committed to this struggle. But Mon refused to consider those feelings as “knowledge” anymore. Instead knowledge was what reason discovered, what logic defended, what the physical evidence demanded. So even though Aronha was asking one question, Mon could answer honestly using the only meaning of the word know that he believed in anymore. “Yes, Aronha. I know he’s right, and I know Akma’s right, and I know I’m right.”

  Aronha nodded soberly. “We’re the king’s sons. We have no authority except as he gives it to us, but we do have enormous prestige. It would be a crippling blow to Akmaro’s reforms if we came out publicly against them. And if it’s not just the Motiaki but also Akmaro’s own son . . .”

  “People might take notice,” said Akma.

  “Knock them back on their buttocks, that’s what it’ll do,” said Ominer.

  “But that’s treason,” said Khimin.

  “Not a thing we’re saying denies the authority of the king,” said Ominer. “Haven’t you been listening? We affirm the ancient alliance of humans and angels. We affirm our ancestors’ decisions that the descendants of Nafai should be kings over the Nafari. What we reject is this superstitious nonsense about the Keeper loving the diggers as much as he loves the sky people and the middle people.”

  “You know,” said Khimin, “if you think about it, the angels are the sky people, and we humans are the earth people, and the diggers aren’t people at all!”

  “We won’t win much support,” said Akma dryly, “if we start calling human beings ‘earth people.’ ”

  Khimin laughed nervously. “No. I guess not.”

  “Ominer is right,” said Akma, “but I’m also right when I say that we’re not ready. We have to be able to speak on this subject, any one of us, at any time.”

  “Me!” cried Aronha. “I’m not like you and Mon, I can’t just open my mouth and have speech pour out of it for hours.”

  “That’s Akma’s gift,” said Mon.

  Ominer hooted derisively. “Come on, Mon. We always used to joke, Is Mon awake? I don’t know, is he talking? Then he’s awake.”

  The words stung, even though Ominer clearly didn’t mean them to be hurtful. Mon clamped his mouth shut, determined to say nothing else until they begged him to speak.

  “My point,” said Akma, “is that we have to act with perfect solidarity. If all the sons of Motiak and the son of Akmaro are united in opposing this new policy, then it will be clear to everyone that no matter what the present king decides, the next king will have a kingdom in which diggers are not citizens. This will encourage the newly freed diggers to leave and return to Elemaki territory where they belong. And nobody can say we are against freedom, because our plan is to free all the slaves at once—but free them at the border, so we won’t be creating any new free diggers who will want to be made citizens of a nation they don’t belong in. It’s a kind policy, really, to recognize the insurmountable differences between our species and bid a gentle but firm farewell to all those diggers who imagine themselves to be civilized.”

  The others agreed. It was a good program. They were united in support of it.

  “But if one—even one—of the sons of Motiak is perceived as disagreeing with any part of this program, if even one of the sons of Motiak shows that he still believes in that nonsense about the Keeper that Akmaro is trying to get people to believe . . .”

  That our people have always believed in since the days of the Heroes, thought Mon silently.

  “. . . then everyone will assume that Motiak will simply make that son his heir and disinherit the others. The result? A lot of powerful people will oppose us simply for political reasons, in order to be on the obvious winning side. But if they know that there is no possible heir except those of us who repudiate Akmaro’s entire digger-loving conspiracy, then they’ll remember the fact that kings don’t live forever, and they’ll at least keep silent, not wanting to antagonize the future king.”

  “Don’t be modest,” said Mon. “Everyone expects that the high priest’s job will be yours when your father, uh, sheds his spirit like an old cloak.” The others chuckled at the old-fashioned euphemism.

  Aronha, however, seemed to have caught some glint of an idea in Khimin’s face, and so at the end of his chuckle had directed a pointed comment at his father’s youngest son. �
��And in case someone here thinks of breaking ranks with us in order to become the heir, let me assure you that the army won’t respect any heir but me, as long as I’m alive and want the throne after my father is through with it. If your prime motive is a hope of power, the only way you’ll get it in the long run is by staying with me.”

  Mon was shocked. It was the first time he had ever heard Aronha threaten anyone with his future power, or speak so nakedly of what might or might not happen after Father’s death. Mon also didn’t like the way Aronha said “my father” instead of “our father” or even, simply, “Father.”

  Akma suddenly wailed, “No! No, no,” and bent over on his chair, burying his face in his arms.

  “What’s wrong?” They all rushed to him or at least leaned toward him as if they thought he was having some sort of physical crisis.

  Akma sat upright, then rose from his chair. “I’ve done this. I’ve driven a wedge between you. I’ve made Aronha speak unspeakable things. None of this is worth that! If I had never made friends with Mon, if we had never come back to Darakemba, if we had had the dignity to die there under the whips of the diggers and their toady human rulers in Chelem, then Aronha would never have said such a thing.”

  “I’m sorry,” said Aronha, looking truly ashamed of himself.

  “No, I’m sorry,” said Akma. “I came to you as a friend, hoping to win you to the cause of truth to save this people from my father’s insane theories. But instead I’ve turned brother against brother and I can’t bear that.” He fled the room so quickly that he knocked over his chair.

  The four of them sat or stood in silence for a long moment, and then Khimin and Aronha burst into speech at the same time.

  “Aronha, I never would have turned against you! It never even crossed my mind!” cried Khimin, at exactly the same time that Aronha cried out, “Khimin, forgive me for even imagining that you would think of such a thing, I never meant for you to—you’re my brother no matter what you do, and I—”

  Good old inarticulate Aronha. Sweet little lying hypocritical Khimin. Mon almost laughed out loud.

 

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