They went up the stream all day. Gradually, as the miles went by, the sand grew less, and the stream was deeper, better to drink. They filled their waterbags and went on (after drinking deeply and pouring the clean water on their heads). And finally they came to a place where the stream bent to the west and their path went to the east a little.
Billin went to a tree that bore a small cut, and with his knife made the cut deeper and more plain. He turned the mark into an arrow, pointing the way they went. Then he looked ahead until he saw a tree with another small mark, and led them to it, where again he made the mark plainer. “In case others follow.”
They were nearly out of food when they came to the mountains, but already the land was far greener, the trees and undergrowth lusher, water more plentiful. Billin killed a tree squirrel and they ate the meat. And while they camped there, with a fire and water enough to wash all over, two more families joined them.
“We saw your fire,” they said, “and realized you weren’t so far ahead as we had thought.”
So they waited a few more days, killing more squirrels and catching some small freshwater fish in a mountain lake one of them found while exploring the area. And when they finally left, heading downhill this time, there were thirty of them, counting women and childrenhalf of the colony. Billin knew now that he hadn’t dreamedeverything was as he had remembered it, and he couldn’t stop talking about what they would find at the bottom of the mountains.
And after another week they reached the end of the craggy paths and found themselves by a placid bay, with a coldwater river rushing down, and fruit trees and berries so thick around that there was hardly need to plant. Of course they did plant, because one never knew what other seasons might be like in a place like thisbut who needed to bother with watering and tending the fields, when they knew the seeds would grow and the harvest would come without worry?
And Billin’s children stopped wearing clothing as they played in the sun, day after day.
Over the weeks more and more people came down the mountains and into the village, where the only houses were roofsno walls were needed, and the roofs were just to keep a few things dry when the rains fell, and to keep the sun off during the heat of the day.
At last Billin counted who was there and realized that between those who had died and those who were there, only seven people remained unaccounted for: Stipock, Wix, and Hoom and Dilna with their three children.
He told Cirith.
“Will they come, too, do you think?” she asked.
“I don’t think so,” Billin said. “What would they do here? The only way they know how to live is by telling other people what to do.”
“You tell people what to do.”
Billin laughed. “Only when they want to work.
We built a boatso what! Those who wanted to work on it did. The rest just did as they pleased. Next week maybe we’ll go over to that other place across the water. Who knows? Who cares?”
“I see, now. You’re just lazy.” She laughed.
“Of course,” Billin said. “And you’re just fat.”
Cirith looked ruefully at her bulging stomach. “I was hoping I was going to have a baby, but my time of month began yesterday, so it isn’t that.”
“It’s berries. Always when I kiss you you taste like berries,” Billin said.
Then they made love, without particularly caring that their house had no walls and that it was daytime. No one particularly looked. And when they were through, Cirith went naked to the stream to get water.
“Cirith, you forgot your clothes,” Billin said reproachfully when she came back.
“I know,” she said. “But who needs them in this heat? We all know what human bodies look like, don’t we?”
And they laughed, joking about what life was like for all the poor people back in Heaven City who had to wear clothes to stay warm and who had to work in order to eat, who always tried to keep learning things.
“Who cares if you can read and write?” Billin asked. “I never knew anyone who said anything worth writing down.”
And Cirith only belched and then left him, trotting down to swim naked in the bay. Billin joined her and swam for hours, mostly lying on his back in the water looking at the white sky, wondering what Jason would think if he could see them now. Probably tell them that people were only human when they were working to achieve something. Like Stipockhave a goal, have a purpose. Well, to hell with them, Billin thought, and then he laughed so loud that he swallowed seawater and had to paddle in to shore, coughing and sputtering all the way. To hell with them, he thought again as he lay in the warm sand of the shore. And tomorrow I’ll explore that other land. Or the next day, maybe.
14
STIPOCK WOKE early one morning, and because there was no wind he dressed and left his house and walked among the dying houses of the village. He went from door to door, and almost every one was hanging on its hinges, or blown off, and no one was there to make repairs. At last he came to Hoom’s and Dilna’s house, and knocked, and they let him come in and sit on one of the beds as they served the small breakfast they had to Cammar and Bessa and Dallat. The children looked gaunt and old, and no one seemed to have the energy to speak or make a sound.
Wix came a little later, and sat beside Stipock on the bed, and said. “We’re the last.”
Breakfast done, there was little to do worth doing. No one had worked the mine for a month or more, and it was doubtless completely blocked by sand. The pitiful amount of iron they had taken from the hill this year was not enough to encourage them to dig for more. And Hoom voiced all their thoughts when he said, “If only we could eat iron.”
Wix patted his trouser leg and dust rose into the air. Outside there was only a small breeze. The sand lay undisturbed, but the dust rose into the air, seeped through the many cracks in the house. Cammar kept sneezing.
Finally Stipock leaned back on the bed and addressed the ceiling. “We might have done it, you know.”
Yes, yes, of course, if only.
“But you can’t organize rebels to do a damn thing,” Stipock said. And again they agreed.
“Doesn’t matter now,” said Wix. “They’re all gone to where fruits hang on the trees and fish leap up into your hands and the squirrels come over and lie down in the pan for you.” And they managed to laugh.
Without a word they all began to move, taking all the food and putting it in bags. Hoom and Wix took empty waterbags and went to the brook to fill them. Stipock went back to his house and gathered up the record he had kept of the village and the small supply of food he had left.
At noon they were ready to go.
“Where?” asked Dilna as they hid from the sun in her house.
“Home,” said Hoom, and Stipock wondered at the fact that for some reasonor manynone of them suggested going south, to Billin’s group. Pride, because they had refused to take the easy escape route that would lead to savagery, and wouldn’t give in now? Or a longing for Heaven City? It didn’t matter. Stipock was too tired to analyze. Jason had won every round of their duel, and had done it without breaking the bargain, Stipock couldn’t deny it, and now he wanted to go back to Heaven City and surrender.
Satisfied? he could hear Jason saying.
Satisfied, he answered. Whatever the hell you’re doing with this world, you do it better than I can. You know the people better than I do. And so, because it’s the only game, I’ll pay whatever price I have to in order to play. Your rules. But you can bet I’ll play pretty damn well, whatever the rules might be.
“Stipock?” asked Dilna, and Stipock shook his head. “Sorry. Yes. Home. Heaven City.”
They slept in the afternoon, and began their journey just before dark. The sky was cloudless, as always, and the moon was high and full, and the trees looked cool and welcoming as they left the dying village and walked out into the sparse forest. Stipock, Hoom, and Wix carried heavy packs and water bags. Dilna carried Bessa in a sack on her back, and held Da
llat in her arms. Cammar walked, his small legs forced to work hard to keep up with the slow pace the adults took.
They drank copiously from the stream before they left, and began rationing immediately. And as the night grew cool, and then cold, they hurried their pace in order to keep warm.
Stipock brought up the rear, following several paces behind Hoom, who now was carrying a weary Cammar, at least for a kilometer or so. The bodies of the three adults ahead of him were not adult bodies, Stipock remembered. Only Wix was twenty, the others still in their teens. In the Empire they’d be children still, none of them at their majority. Here the weight of the world was on them. And they seemed strong enough to bear it.
Hoom, burdened with Cammar’s weight, slowed down enough that Stipock overtook him. “Let me carry the boy,” Stipock said. And Hoom willingly handed the child to Stipock, who held him to his shoulder. Cammar barely noticedhe was sleepy, and he rested his head. Hoom looked at the boy as they walked, and then said, “A beautiful boy.”
“Yes,” said Stipock. “Like his parents.”
Hoom’s face grew a little sadder, and he said, “I wonder if Wix will ever marry, and have more children.” Not children of his own, Stipock noticed. More children.
“You’re a kinder man than I am,” Stipock said, softly.
Hoom shook his head. “Love and faithfulness can only be given, not demanded. All the same, I would have liked to have them.”
Stipock was surprised at the pain behind the whispered words. After all these years of silence, of pretending not to know, why was Hoom saying it now?
“Dilna loves you,” Stipock said. “And so does Wix.”
“And I forgive them because of that. Or in spite of that. Stipock?”
“Yes?”
“If I die before we return to Heaven City, would you tell them? That I know? And that I forgive them?”
“You won’t die. You’re the strongest of us all, don’t let the darkness and the sand get to you already, or you’ll never stay sane through the desert.”
Hoom only laughed. “Just taking precautions, old man.”
And then they walked in silence for another hour, before Wix called out that they should stop and drink. They drank, a swallow each from one waterbag, and sat and rested for a few minutes. And then they were on their way again, until dawn.
They followed the pattern for days, walking among the trees at night, sleeping in the best shade they could find by day. They refilled the canteens at every stream, and in this area there were many.
But after a week, the trees began to thin, and the ground began to rise, and Stipock told them it was time to move due north. They reached a large river, and followed its course northward, but the water was brackish, and they only filled their bags at the sluggish streams that joined the river. Later, the streams became more rare, and they began to drink the river’s water in order to keep their waterbags full.
They reached the crest of the mountains and left the river behind, descending to a dry plain of rock and sand. A few plants grew, and an occasional small animal moved at the edge of their vision. But no water at all.
And no rest from the heat. There was no shade, except behind rocks, and at noon even the rocks were no shelter, for the sun was directly overhead, and rocks had no shadows at noon. On the eighth day they ran out of water. On the ninth day they piled rocks over Bessa’s corpse and went on, no one shedding tears because they were too tired, and their eyes were too dry.
They found an oasis of sorts on the tenth day in the desert, and drank the foul-tasting water, and filled their waterbags. An hour later all were vomiting, and Dallat died of it. They buried him by the poisoned pool, and weakly walked on, emptying their waterbags before they left to forestall the possibility of their forgetting and drinking again.
They were lucky. The next day they found a clear spring in the side of a hill, and the water was good, and they drank and didn’t get sick. They stayed at the spring for several days, building back their strength. But now their food was getting low, and with full waterbags they set out again.
Two days later they reached the top of a rocky rise, and stopped at the end of a cliff that plunged nearly a kilometer, almost straight down. To the west they saw the sea, and to the east another sea, the water winking blue in the sunlight of early morning. And at the bottom of the cliff, the land funneled into a narrow isthmus between the seas. The isthmus was green with grass, and Stipock wasn’t the only one, he knew, who breathed a great sigh of relief.
“Do you see the green down there, Cammar?” asked Dilna. The boy nodded gravely. “That’s grass, and it means that we’ll find water.”
“Can I have a drink?” Cammar asked.
They found a way down the cliff before noon, and as they descended they realized that it wasn’t nearly as sheer as it seemed. The slope was broken, but there were many possible paths. And that night, exhausted, they spread their blankets in the tall grass. When they woke in the morning, the grass was damp with dew, and their blankets were cold and wet.
At first they laughed, and plucked up grass and threw it at each other, getting soaked in the process. And then Dilna began weeping, and the others also grieved for the two children who had been granted no tears at their burial.
From then on the journey seemed easy enough, and they were hardened and ready to walk many kilometers every day. Even Cammar seemed to thrive on it, and often would run ahead of the others, calling back, “Too slow! Hurry up!”
The farther north they went, the thicker the grass and the larger the bushes became. Soon they were passing many groves of trees, and tiny streams became brooks that they had to take their shoes off for. Eventually the shoes were put in the packs, and they hiked on bare feet, which were already toughened and hard as leather.
Six weeks after they had left the village to the sand and drought, they saw the snow-capped mountains rise ahead of them. “The headwaters of half the rivers in the world rise in these mountains,” Stipock said, and they marched on. A week later they could no longer see the peaks because of the high, steep foothills they were traveling through. They followed the banks of a large river northward, and as it narrowed into a canyon they often had to walk in the river itself. They climbed cliffs to pass waterfalls, and often had to backtrack when seemingly easy paths ended in precipices and narrow defiles. And always the rivers flowed south and east, back in the direction they had come, and always the path ahead was uphill. They passed the last trees, and food became scarce, and they rationed again; but hunger was better then thirst, and it was summer, so that although they were cold, they were in little danger of freezing to death.
And then they noticed that the rivers seemed to flow in the other direction, northwest, and some of their routes were downhill. And one morning as they reached the top of a windswept, grassy hill, they saw what they had hoped to see: between two lower peaks in the distance, a green blanket of dense forest that went on and on, stretching forever into the distance.
“It’s the largest forest in the world,” said Stipock, “according to Jason’s map. But nothing ahead should be as hard as what’s gone on before.” They sat down to rest and look at the hopeful view, and Cammar caught the mood of relief and happiness, and he ran back and forth around the crown of the hill.
“Jason never told us he had a map of the world,” Wix said. “And yet you follow your memory of it as if you trusted it completely.”
“I should,” Stipock said. “I invented the machine that took the geological survey. It’s pretty accurate. The only inaccuracies are in detailand in my memory.”
Hoom was pulling up grass and letting the breezes catch it. “You know, Stipock, you kept telling us, again and again, that Jason wasn’t God. And yet every time it comes to one of the miracles that Jason performs, you say, ‘Of course he can do that.’ And I think I understand it now. To you, what Jason does is commonplace. To you, God would have to be far more extraordinary. But to us, Jason’s abilities are far out of reach.
And that’s enough to make him not at all ordinary, not a common man at all. To us, God. And why not?”
Stipock only leaned back. “I suppose that if a man sets out to manipulate the world in certain ways, and has the wit and the power to do it, then why not play God? I would have stopped Jason if I could. I couldn’t. But does that”
A piercing scream interrupted the conversation, and they all jumped to their feet. “Cammar!” Dilna shouted, and they quickly saw that he wasn’t on the crown of the hill. They ran in different directions, and Stipock called, “Here! Come here!” He was at the northwest slope, the area they hadn’t yet seen, and when they arrived in a group at the edge, they saw that the gentle hill they had climbed gave way to a jagged precipice on the other side. A torn patch in the grass at the edge showed where Cammar had fallen.
Dilna was frantic. “Cammar!” she cried out again and again. And then his answer came from surprisingly close. “Mama, I’m hurt!”
“Don’t move, Cammar!” Hoom called, and Stipock shouted, “Where are you?”
“Here!” Cammar answered.
Hoom ran along the edge of the cliff a little way. “I can see him from here!” he called. “He’s just over the crest of that little cliff, on a ledge!” Then Hoom waved and smiled, and the others knew then that Cammar must be all rightjust out of sight over the edge. Hoom ran back to the others.
“Can we reach him?” Stipock asked.
“He’s not very far,” Hoom answered. “You’ll lower me over the edgeI’m the lightest one who isn’t pregnant,” and he smiled at Dilna. She smiled back, reassured about Cammar’s safety by Hoom’s obvious confidence. “Just hold onto my legs.”
In a few moments Stipock was gripping Hoom’s left leg, and Wix his right, as the young man inched his way out over the edge, his arms reaching downward, out of the others’ sight. “Lower!” Hoom called, and Stipock and Wix slid carefully down a little farther. “Lower!” Hoom called again, and Stipock answered, “We can’t”
But he was cut off by Hoom’s urgent cry, “Don’t jump for me, Cammar! Just stay theredon’t jump!” and then a high-pitched child’s scream, and Hoom lunged downward, desperately, tearing his foot out of Stipock’s grasp. Hoom slid out of control, and only stopped with Wix gripping his right foot, with Wix himself in clear danger of being pulled over the edge. Hoom’s left foot was over the edge and out of sight. Stipock didn’t try for it, just clung to Wix to keep the two younger men from flying off into the chasm. Wix was panting, his fingers slipping on Hoom’s leg. “I can’t hold him,” Wix said. “I can’t hold him alone!”
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