“Not farmers,” said the one with the flute. “Heart?”
“Pump,” said the other.
“Pump.” The Indian with the flute stood up from the bench at the front of the lab, gestured down. “Put . . . Father here.”
The other one got off the bench, stood aside.
In spite of fear for his father, Joao was caught by the strange look of this pair, the fine, scale-like lines in their skin, the glittering brilliance of their eyes.
“Put Father here,” repeated the one with the flute, pointing at the bench. “Help can be . . .”
“Attained,” said the other one.
“Attained,” said the one with the flute.
Joao focused now on the masses of insects around the walls, the waiting quietude in their ranks. They were like the one in the study.
The old man’s breathing was now very shallow, very rapid.
He’s dying, Joao thought in desperation.
“Help can be attained,” repeated the one with the flute. “If you obey, we will not harm.”
The Indian lifted his flute, pointed it at Joao like a weapon. “Obey.”
There was no mistaking the gesture.
Slowly, Joao advanced, deposited his father gently on the bench.
The other Indian bent over the elder Martinho’s head, raised an eyelid. There was a professional directness about the gesture. The Indian pushed gently on the dying man’s diaphragm, removed the Prefect’s belt, loosened his collar. A stubby brown finger was placed against the artery in the old man’s neck.
“Very weak,” the Indian rasped.
Joao took another, closer look at this Indian, wondering at the sertao backwoodsman who behaved like a doctor.
“We’ve got to get him to a hospital,” Joao said. “And his medicine in . . .”
“Hospital,” the Indian agreed.
“Hospital?” asked the one with the flute.
A low, stridulate hissing came from the other Indian.
“Hospital,” said the one with the flute.
That stridulate hissing! Joao stared at the Indian beside the Prefect. The sound had been reminiscent of the weird call that had echoed across the lawn.
The one with the flute poked him, said: “You will go into front and maneuver this . . .”
“Vehicle,” said the one beside Joao’s father.
“Vehicle,” said the one with the flute.
“Hospital?” Joao pleaded.
“Hospital,” agreed the one with the flute.
Joao looked once more to his father. The other Indian already was strapping the elder Martinho to the bench in preparation for movement. How competent the man appeared in spite of his backwoods look.
“Obey,” said the one with the flute.
Joao opened the door into the front compartment, slipped through, feeling the other one follow. A few drops of rain spattered darkly against the curved windshield. Joao squeezed into the operator’s seat, noted how the Indian crouched behind him, flute pointed and ready.
A dart gun of some kind, Joao guessed.
He punched the igniter button on the dash, strapped himself in while waiting for the turbines to build up speed. The Indian still crouched behind him, vulnerable now if the airtruck were spun sharply. Joao flicked the communications switch on the lower left corner of the dash, looked into the tiny screen there giving him a view of the lab compartment. The rear doors were open. He closed them by hydraulic remote. His father was securely strapped to the bench now, Joao noted, but the other Indian was equally secured.
The turbines reached their whining peak. Joao switched on the lights, engaged the hydrostatic drive. The truck lifted six inches, angled upward as Joao increased pump displacement. He turned left onto the street, lifted another two meters to increase speed, headed toward the lights of a boulevard.
The Indian spoke beside his ear: “You will turn toward the mountain over there.” A hand came forward, pointing to the right.
The Alejandro Clinic is there in the foothills, Joao thought.
He made the indicated turn down the cross street angling toward the boulevard.
Casually, he gave pump displacement another boost, lifted another meter and increased speed once more. In the same motion, he switched on the intercom to the rear compartment, tuned for the spare amplifier and pickup in the compartment beneath the bench where his father lay.
The pickup, capable of making a dropped pin sound like a cannon, gave forth only a distant hissing and rasping. Joao increased amplification. The instrument should have been transmitting the old man’s heartbeats now, sending a noticeable drum-thump into the forward cabin.
There was nothing.
Tears blurred Joao’s eyes, and he shook his head to clear them.
My father is dead, he thought. Killed by these crazy backwoodsmen.
He noted in the dashscreen that the Indian back there had a hand under the elder Martinho’s back. The Indian appeared to be massaging the dead man’s back, and a rhythmic rasping matched the motion.
Anger filled Joao. He felt like diving the airtruck into an abutment, dying himself to kill these crazy men.
They were approaching the outskirts of the city, and ring-girders circled off to the left giving access to the boulevard. This was an area of small gardens and cottages protected by over-fly canopies.
Joao lifted the airtruck above the canopies, headed toward the boulevard.
To the clinic, yes, he thought. But it is too late.
In that instant, he realized there were no heartbeats at all coming from that rear compartment – only that slow, rhythmic grating, a faint susurration and a cicada-like hum up and down scale.
“To the mountains, there,” said the Indian behind him.
Again, the hand came forward to point off to the right.
Joao, with that hand close to his eyes and illuminated by the dash, saw the scale-like parts of a finger shift position slightly. In that shift, he recognized the scale-shapes by their claw fringes.
The beetles!
The finger was composed of linked beetles working in unison!
Joao turned, stared into the Indian’s eyes, seeing now why they glistened so: they were composed of thousands of tiny facets.
“Hospital, there,” the creature beside him said, pointing.
Joao turned back to the controls, fighting to keep from losing composure. They were not Indians . . . they weren’t even human. They were insects – some kind of hive-cluster shaped and organized to mimic a man.
The implications of this discovery raced through his mind. How did they support their weight? How did they feed and breathe?
How did they speak?
Everything had to be subordinated to the urgency of getting this information and proof of it back to one of the big labs where the facts could be explored.
Even the death of his father could not be considered now. He had to capture one of these things, get out with it.
He reached overhead, flicked on the command transmitter, set its beacon for a homing call. Let some of my Irmaos be awake and monitoring their sets, he prayed.
“More to the right,” said the creature behind him.
Again, Joao corrected course.
The moon was high overhead now, illuminating a line of bandeirante towers off to the left. The first barrier.
They would be out of the green area soon and into the gray – then, beyond that, another barrier and the great red that stretched out in reaching fingers through the Goyaz and the Mato Grosso. Joao could see scattered lights of Resettlement Plan farms ahead, and darkness beyond.
The airtruck was going faster than he wanted, but Joao dared not slow it. They might become suspicious.
“You must go higher,” said the creature behind him.
Joao increased pump displacement, raised the nose. He leveled off at three hundred meters.
More bandeirante towers loomed ahead, spaced at closer intervals. Joao picked up the barrier signals on his meters, looked
back at the Indian. The dissembler vibrations seemed not to affect the creature.
Joao looked out his side window and down. No one would challenge him, he knew. This was a bandeirante airtruck headed into the red zone . . . and with its transmitter sending out a homing call. The men down there would assume he was a bandleader headed out on a contract after a successful bid – and calling his men to him for the job ahead.
He could see the moon-silvered snake of the São Francisco winding off to his left, and the lesser waterways like threads raveled out of the foothills.
I must find the nest – where we’re headed, Joao thought. He wondered if he dared turn on his receiver – but if his men started reporting in . . . No. That could make the creatures suspect; they might take violent counter-action.
My men will realize something is wrong when I don’t answer, he thought. They will follow.
If any of them hear my call.
Hours droned past.
Nothing but moonlighted jungle sped beneath them now, and the moon was low on the horizon, near setting. This was the deep red region where broadcast poisons had been used at first with disastrous results. This was where the wild mutations had originated. It was here that Rhin Kelly had been reported missing.
This was the region being saved for the final assault, using a mobile barrier line when that line could be made short enough.
Joao armed the emergency charge that would separate the front and rear compartments of the truck when he fired it. The stub wings of the front compartment and its emergency rocket motors could get him back into bandeirante country.
With the specimen sitting behind him safely subdued, Joao hoped.
He looked up through the canopy, scanned the horizon as far as he could. Was that moonlight glistening on a truck far back to the right? He couldn’t be sure.
“How much farther?” Joao asked.
“Ahead,” the creature rasped.
Now that he was alert for it, Joao heard the modulated stridulation beneath that voice.
“But how long?” Joao asked. “My father . . .”
“Hospital for . . . the father . . . ahead,” said the creature.
It would be dawn soon, Joao realized. He could see the first false line of light along the horizon behind. This night had passed so swiftly. Joao wondered if these creatures had injected some time-distorting drug into him without his knowing. He thought not. He was maintaining himself in the necessities of the moment. There was no time for fatigue or boredom when he had to record every landmark half-visible in the night, sense everything there was to sense about these creatures with him.
How did they coordinate all those separate parts?
Dawn came, revealing the plateau of the Mato Grosso. Joao looked out his windows. This region, he knew, stretched across five degrees of latitude and six degrees of longitude. Once, it had been a region of isolated fazendas farmed by independent blacks and by sertanistos chained to the encomendero plantation system. It was hardwood jungles, narrow rivers with banks overgrown by lush trees and ferns, savannahs, and tangled life.
Even in this age it remained primitive, a fact blamed largely on insects and disease. It was one of the last strongholds of teeming insect life, if the International Ecological Organization’s reports could be believed.
Supplies for the bandeirantes making the assault on this insect stronghold would come by way of São Paulo, by air and by transport on the multi-decked highways, then on antique diesel trains to Itapira, on river runners to Bahus and by airtruck to Registo and Leopoldina on the Araguaya.
This area crawled with insects: wire worms in the roots of the savannahs, grubs digging in the moist black earth, hopping beetles, dart-like angita wasps, chalcis flies, chiggers, sphecidae, braconidae, fierce hornets, white termites, hemipteric crawlers, blood roaches, thrips, ants, lice, mosquitoes, mites, moths, exotic butterflies, mantidae – and countless unnatural mutations of them all.
This would be an expensive fight – unless it were stopped . . . because it already had been lost.
I mustn’t think that way, Joao told himself. Out of respect for my father.
Maps of the IEO showed this region in varied intensities of red. Around the red ran a ring of gray with pink shading where one or two persistent forms of insect life resisted man’s poisons, jelly flames, astringents, sonitoxics – the combination of flamant couroq and supersonics that drove insects from their hiding places into waiting death – and all the mechanical traps and lures in the bandeirante arsenal.
A grid map would be placed over this area and each thousand-acre square offered for bid to the independent bands to deinfest.
We bandeirantes are a kind of ultimate predator, Joao thought. It’s no wonder these creatures mimic us.
But how good, really, was the mimicry? he asked himself. And how deadly to the predators?
“There,” said the creature behind him, and the multipart hand came forward to point toward a black scarp visible ahead in the gray light of morning.
Joao’s foot kicked a trigger on the floor releasing a great cloud of orange dye-fog beneath the truck to mark the ground and forest for a mile around under this spot. As he kicked the trigger, Joao began counting down the five-second delay to the firing of the separation charge.
It came in a roaring blast that Joao knew would smear the creature behind him against the rear bulkhead. He sent the stub wings out, fed power to the rocket motors and back hard around. He saw the detached rear compartment settling slowly earthward above the dye cloud, its fall cushioned as the pumps of the hydrostatic drive automatically compensated.
I will come back, Father, Joao thought. You will be buried among family and friends.
He locked the controls, twisted in the seat to see what had happened to his captive.
A gasp escaped Joao’s lips.
The rear bulkhead crawled with insects clustered around something white and pulsing. The mud-gray shirt and trousers were torn, but insects already were repairing it, spinning out fibers that meshed and sealed on contact. There was a yellow-like extrusion near the pulsing white, and a dark brown skeleton with familiar articulation.
It looked like a human skeleton – but chitinous.
Before his eyes, the thing was reassembling itself, the long, furry antennae burrowing into the structure and interlocking.
The flute-weapon was not visible, and the thing’s leather pouch had been thrown into the rear corner, but its eyes were in place in their brown sockets, staring at him. The mouth was re-forming.
The yellow sac contracted, and a voice issued from the half-formed mouth.
“You must listen,” it rasped.
Joao gulped, whirled back to the controls, unlocked them and sent the cab into a wild, spinning turn.
A high-pitched rattling buzz sounded behind him. The noise seemed to pick up every bone in his body and shake it. Something crawled on his neck. He slapped at it, felt it squash.
All Joao could think of was escape. He stared frantically out at the earth beneath, seeing a blotch of white in a savannah off to his right and, in the same instant, recognizing another airtruck banking beside him, the insignia of his own Irmandades band bright on its side.
The white blotch in the savannah was resolving itself into a cluster of tents with an IEO orange and green banner flying beside them.
Joao dove for the tents, praying the other airtruck would follow.
Something stung his cheek. They were in his hair – biting, stinging. He stabbed the braking rockets, aimed for open ground about fifty meters from the tent. Insects were all over the inside of the glass now, blocking his vision. Joao said a silent prayer, hauled back on the control arm, felt the cab mush out, touch ground, skidding and slewing across the savannah. He kicked the canopy release before the cab stopped, broke the seal on his safety harness and launched himself up and out to land sprawling in grass.
He rolled through the grass, feeling the insect bites like fire over every exposed part of his body. Ha
nds grabbed him and he felt a jelly hood splash across his face to protect it. A voice he recognized as Thome of his own band said: “This way, Johnny! Run!” They ran.
He heard a spraygun fire: “Whooosh!”
And again.
And again.
Arms lifted him and he felt a leap.
They landed in a heap and a voice said: “Mother of God! Would you look at that!”
Joao clawed the jelly hood from his face, sat up to stare across the savannah. The grass seethed and boiled with insects around the uptilted cab and the air-truck that had landed beside it.
Joao looked around him, counted seven of his Irmaos with Thome, his chief sprayman, in command.
Beyond them clustered five other people, a red-haired woman slightly in front, half turned to look at the savannah and at him. He recognized the woman immediately: Dr. Rhin Kelly of the IEO. When they had met in the A’ Chigua nightclub in Bahia, she had seemed exotic and desirable to Joao. Now, she wore a field uniform instead of gown and jewels, and her eyes held no invitation at all.
“I see a certain poetic justice in this . . . traitors,” she said.
Joao lifted himself to his feet, took a cloth proffered by one of his men, wiped off the last of the jelly. He felt hands brushing him, clearing dead insects off his coveralls. The pain of his skin was receding under the medicant jelly, and now he found himself dominated by puzzled questioning as he recognized the mood of the IEO personnel.
They were furious and it was directed at him . . . and at his fellow Irmandades. Joao studied the woman, noting how her green eyes glared at him, the pink flush to her skin.
“Dr. Kelly?” Joao said.
“If it isn’t Joao Martinho, jefe of the Irmandades,” she said, “the traitor of the Piratininga.”
“They are crazy, that is the only thing, I think,” said Thome.
“Your pets turned on you, didn’t they?” she demanded.
“And wasn’t that inevitable?”
“Would you be so kind as to explain,” Joao said.
“I don’t need to explain,” she said. “Let your friends out there explain.” She pointed toward the rim of jungle beyond the savannah.
Joao looked where she pointed, saw a line of men in bandeirante white standing untouched amidst the leaping, boiling insects in the jungle shadow. He took a pair of binoculars from around the neck of one of his men, focused on the figures. Knowing what to look for made the identification easy.
The Mammoth Book of 20th Century SF II Page 53