Ron is a sci-fi writer who teaches a
course at the New School. We meet
every Wednesday and Friday, right
before his class at 6. This is not by his
plan or mine. It’s a promise he made to
my mother, I happen to know, right
before she died, but that’s okay with me.
No friends at all would be too few, and
more than one, too many.
“What is this?” he asked, when he
finished reading the printout.
You oughta know, I said, raising my
eyebrows in what I hoped was a
suggestive manner. In accord with my
own promise to my mother, I practice
these displays in front of the mirror,
and for once it seems to have paid off.
“You think I wrote this?”
I nodded, knowingly I hoped, and listed
my reasons: who else knew that I was
studying Neanderthal bones? Who but
he and I had savored the story of the
Utah dude so long ago? Who else wrote
sci-fi?
“Science fiction,” he said grumpily
(having made that correction before).
While we waited for his burger and my
buttered roll, he listed his objections.
“Maybe it’s a mistake, not intended for
you. Lots of people knew about the
Utah dude; it was a national story. And
I am a little insulted that you think that
I wrote this.”
Huh?
“It’s crude,” Ron said. “He, or maybe
she, uses ‘oddly’ twice in one
paragraph; that would never get by
me. And the time line is all wrong. The
escape comes before the danger, which
deflates the suspense.”
You didn’t send this, then?
“No way. Scout’s Honor.”
And that was that. We talked, or rather
he talked, mostly of his girlfriend Melani
and her new job, while the people
walked by on Sixth Avenue, only inches
away. They were hot, and we were
cold. It was like two separate worlds,
separated by the window glass.
Thursday morning I went in eagerly,
anxious to get back to my bones. I
scanned the Foundation’s newsgroup
first (rumors about a top secret new
project) before opening the latest
message.
THURSDAY
Sorry about that. I stopped transmitting yesterday because “my” NT woke up, and I didn’t want to alarm him. Since my last truncated message, we’ve been snowed in. He watched me build a fire with a sort of quiet amazement. God knows what he would think of this thing I’m talking into. Or of the talk itself. He only makes three or four sounds. I wait until he’s asleep to use the com. After the NT freed me, he followed me up the hill. It was clear that he didn’t intend to harm me, although it would have been pretty easy. He is about six feet tall if he stood straight up, which he never does. Maybe 250 lbs. It’s hard to judge his weight since he’s pretty hairy, except for his face and hands. I was in a big hurry to dress my leg, which was bleeding (okay after all). We found the cleft very different from the way I had left it. Something had gotten into my food. A bear? The follow box was smashed and half the KRs were gone. Luckily the space blanket had been left behind. I spread it out, and he laid his stuff beside it: a crude hand axe, a heavy, stiff and incredibly smelly skin robe, and a little sack made of gut, with five stones in it: creek stones, white. He showed them to me as if they were something I should understand. And I do: but of that later. He’s starting to stir.
On Fridays I skip lunch so I will have
an appetite in the restaurant. I wasn’t
surprised to find yet another message,
and I printed both Thurs. and Fri. to
show to Ron. At the least, it would give
him something to talk about. I think
(know) my silences are awkward for him.
FRIDAY
It’s snowing. The stones are his way of counting. I watched him throw one away this morning. There are three left: like me, he’s on some kind of schedule. We’ve been eating grubs. Seems the NTs hide rotten meat under logs and stones and return for the grubs. It’s a kind of farming. They’re not so bad. I try to think of them as little vegetables. Grub “talks” a lot with his hands. I try to reply in kind. When we are not talking, when I do not get his attention, he is as dead, but when I touch his hands or slap his face, he comes alive. It’s as if he’s half asleep the rest of the time. And really asleep the other half; the NT sleep a lot. His hands are very human, and bone white like his face. The rest of him is brown, under thick blond fur. I call him Grub. He doesn’t call me anything. He doesn’t seem to wonder who I am or where I came from. The snatch point is still 2 days away (-46), which means that I get him to myself until then. An unexpected bonus. Meanwhile, the weather, which was already fierce, is getting fiercer, and I worry about the com batteries, with no sun to charge them. More later.
Ron and I always meet at the same
place, which is the booth by the
window in the Burger Beret on Sixth
Ave at Tenth St. Ron shook his head as
he read the messages. That can mean
lots of different things.
He said, “You astonish me.”
Huh?
“Don’t huh me. You wrote it. It’s very
clever, considering.”
I couldn’t say huh again, so I was just
very still.
“The vegetarian business is what tipped
me off. And no one else knows that
much about Neanderthals. Their
counting, the limited speech. It’s what
you told me.”
That was common theory, I said. There
was nothing new in it. Besides, I don’t
make stories. I write reports.
Even I could see that he was
disappointed. “Scout’s Honor?”
Scout’s honor, I said. Ron and I went to
Philmont Scout Ranch together. That
was years ago, before he had entered
the world and I had decided to keep it
at arm’s length. But the vows still hold.
“Well, okay. Then it must be one of your
colleagues playing a joke. I’m not the
only one who knows you do research.
Just the only one you deign to talk to.”
Then he told me that he and Melani
were getting married. The conversation
sort of speeded up and slowed down at
the same time, and when I looked up,
he was gone. I felt a moment’s panic,
but after I paid the bill and went up to
my apartment, it gradually dissipated,
like a gas in an open space. For me a
closed space is like an open space.
The newsgroup was silent for the
weekend, but the scrambled-header
messages kept coming through, one a
day, like the vitamins I promised my
mother I would take.
SATURDAY
The KRs are gone, but Grub drags me with him to look under logs for grubs. He won’t go alone. Third day snowed in. One more to go. I have to conserve our wood, so we stay huddled together against the back wall of the cleft, wrapped in my space blanket and Grub’s smelly robe. We sit and watch the snow and listen to the booming of the icefall—and we talk. Sort of. He gestures with his hands and takes mine in his. He plucks at the hair on my forearms and pulls at my fingers and sometimes even slaps my face. I’m sure he doesn’t understand that I am from the far future; how could he even have a conc
ept of that? But I can understand that he is in exile. There was a dispute, over what, who knows, and he was sent away. The stones are his sentence, that I know: Grub feels that about them. Every morning he gets rid of one, tossing it out the door of the cleft into the snow. His sense of number is pretty crude. Five is many, and two—the number left this morning—is few. I assume that when they are gone, he gets to go “home,” but he’s just as desolate with two as he was with five. Perhaps he can’t think ahead, only back. Even though I’m cold as hell, I wish the snatch point wasn’t so near. I’m learning his language. Things don’t have names, but the feelings about them do.
Saturday and Sunday I spend at the
lab, alone. What else would I do? When
else could I be alone with my bones? I
am the only one who has access to the
Arleville Find, which is two skeletons,
an NT and an HS found side by side,
which proves there was actual contact.
The grubs confirmed my study of the
NT teeth. Of course, this was just a
story, according to Ron. Or was it?
Sunday I found this:
SUNDAY
Change in plans: I want to alter the snatch point, put it back one cycle. I know this is against the protocols, but I have my reasons. Grub is desperate to get rid of the stones and return to the site and his band. These creatures are much more social than we. It’s as if they hardly exist, alone. I’m getting better at communicating. There is much handwork involved, gesture and touch, and I understand more and more. Not by thinking but by feel. It’s like looking at something out of the corner of my eye; if I look directly, it’s gone. But if I don’t, there it is. It’s almost like a dream, and maybe it is, since I am in and out of sleep a lot. My leg is healing okay. Grub is down to one stone, and he’s happy, almost. I am feeling the reverse: the horror he would feel at being separated from his band forever. Are we going to create an Ishi? What desolation. I am convinced we will wind up with a severely damaged NT. So we start our count at 144 again. Some peril here, since the com is getting low. But I have a plan—
Monday is my least favorite day, when
I have to share the lab (but not the
bones) with others. Not that they don’t
leave me alone. I scrolled down past
the newsgroup, looking for the daily
message and found it like an old
acquaintance:
MONDAY
Made it. I am speaking this amid a circle of hominids, not humans, squatting (rather than sitting: they either stand, lie, or squat but never sit) around a big smoky fire. I quit worrying about what they would think of the com; they don’t seem curious. Since I arrived with Grub, they have accepted me without question or interest. Maybe it’s because I have picked up Grub’s smell. They lay or squat silently a lot of the time, and then when one awakens, they all awaken, or most, anyway. There are twenty-two altogether, including Grub: eight adult males, seven females, and five children, two of them still nursing; plus two “Old Ones” of indeterminate sex. The Old Ones are not very mobile. The NTs grab hands and “talk” with a few sounds and a lot of pushing and pulling, plus gestures. Their facial expressions are as simple and crude as their speech. They look either bored or excited, with nothing in between. Lots of grubs and rotten meat get eaten. They put rotten meat under logs and rocks, and then come back for the grubs and maggots. It’s a kind of farming, I guess, but it has all but spoiled my appetite. Perhaps any kind of farming does, seen up close.
All of this was interesting, but none of
it was new. Any of it could have been
written by my colleagues at the lab, but
I knew it wasn’t. They’re in another
world, like the people on Sixth Avenue
on the other side of the glass. Most of
them didn’t even know my name.
TUESDAY
Something is happening tomorrow. A hunt? I sense fear and danger, and lots of work and lots of food. All these imprecise communications I got from the group as a whole. This afternoon they burned a bush of dry leaves and inhaled the smoke, passing it around. It’s some kind of herb that seems to help in NT communication. Certainly it helps me. Between the “burning bush” and the grunts and pulling of hands, I got a picture (not visual but emotional) of a large beast dying. It’s hard to describe. I’m learning not to try and pin things down. It’s as if I were open to the feelings of the event itself instead of the participants. Death, defeat, and victory; terror and hope. A braided feeling, like the smoke. All this was accompanied, I might even say amplified, by one of the Old Ones (more mobile than I thought!) spinning around by the fire, brandishing a burning stick. Later I amused the little ones (more easily amused than their elders) by cooking some grubs on a stick. Like cooking marshmallows. They wouldn’t eat them though, except for one small boy I call “Oliver” who kept smacking his lips and grinning at me as if it were me he wanted to eat. Even the little NTs have a fierce look that belies their gentle nature. The men (Grub, too) have been sharpening sticks and hardening the points in the fire. Now they are asleep in a big pile between the fire and the wall, and I am staying apart, which doesn’t bother them. I can take the smell of Grub, but not of the whole pile; that is, band.
Wednesday was a long day. I printed
out the last four (including Wednesday)
to show Ron. For some reason, I was
eager for a little “conversation.” Maybe
mother was right, and I need to
maintain at least one friend. Mother
was a doctor, after all.
WEDNESDAY
This morning we were awakened by the children pulling at the space blanket. Grub had joined me during the night. Is it me or the space blanket he likes? No matter; I am glad of his company and used to his smell. He was part of the hunt and dragged me along. He understood that I wanted to go. The others ignore me, except for the children. The party consisted of seven men and two women. No leader that I could tell. They carried sharpened sticks and hand axes, but no food or water. I don’t think they know how to carry water. We left the children behind with the Old Ones and the nursing mothers and spent most of the morning climbing up a long slope of scree and over a ridge into a narrow valley where a glacial stream was surrounded by tall grass. There I saw my first mammoth, already dead. It lay beside a pile of brush and leaves, and I “got” that they had baited it into this narrow defile. But something else had killed it. It lay on its side, and for the first time I saw what I thought might be sign of HS, for the beast had already been butchered, very neatly. Even the skull had been split for the brain. Only the skin and entrails were left, with a few shreds of stringy meat. The NTs approached fearfully, sniffing the air and holding hands (mine included). I could feel their alarm. Was it the remnants of the smoke or my own imagination that gave me a terrified sense of the “dark ones” that had killed this beast? Then it was gone before I could be sure. The NTs went to work with their sticks, driving away three hyenalike dogs that were circling the carcass. Their fear was soon forgotten with this victory, and they started carving on the carcass, eating as they went. The kill was new, but pretty smelly. The NTs piled entrails and meat in a huge skin, which we had brought with us. By late afternoon we had a skin full, which we carried and dragged over the ridge and down the long scree slope. We were within a half mile of the site when the sun set, but the NTs hate and fear the dark. So here we are holed up under a rock ledge, in a pile. A long, cold, and smelly night ahead. No fire, of course. They whimper in their sleep. They don’t like being away from their fire. Me neither. I am beginning to worry about the com, which is showing a low power (LP) signal every time I log on. Not as much sunlight here as anticipated. None at all, in fact.
“Scout’s Honor?” Ron asked again after
he had read the printouts, and I
nodded. “It must be one of your
colleagues, then. Who
else knows this
Neanderthal stuff, or calls them NTs.
Did they really eat grubs?”
I shrugged. How would I know?
The Year's Best SF 22 # 2004 Page 31