The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year, Volume 7
Page 40
“That is good. Stay there.”
Nothing happened for a while, though she could tell from the slackened current that the creature was still there, sheltering her from its flow. She assumed it must be doing something concerned with separating itself from Dick’s body, though it was already speaking in its own voice, not his. Then it grunted and she heard the splash of its heaving itself up onto the shelf. It waddled past her with Dick inert in its arms and lowered him into the dinghy.
“Child of my blood, farewell,” it boomed. “I leave you with a choice.”
It leaped neatly into the water and disappeared.
Mari towed the dinghy ashore, somehow heaved Dick out onto the bank, and dragged him on up and into the house. By the time she had got him into the living room she was almost spent. She knelt beside him and felt for his pulse. It was there, faint and slow. She switched on all the heaters, stripped off his sodden clothes, dried him and rolled him into a duvet, flung another one over him, and then dried herself and wriggled in beside him, holding him close, trying to warm him through with her own warmth. Now she could actually feel the movement of his breathing. She slid her hand under him, felt for the cicatrice and stroked it gently. His shoulder stirred and she heard his sigh.
He slept almost till noon next day, but Mari woke at the usual time, slipped out of bed and stole away to her desk. There was a long email from Doctor Tharlsen, with further fragments from the oath-taking passage of the Gelfunsaga. Several of them now slid into place. Likely links emerged. She wrote back briefly:
Take this for the moment as a dream. It was not, but I would rather not tell you in writing, even in runes. I have met Raggir. He took Dick, and I followed and took him back, using the same threat Gelfun used about killing his daughter. I couldn’t have done it without you. This is what Raggir told me about what happened next. It is not the words of the MS, but the gist of the events. You will see where it fits…
When she had finished her account she went to Britannica Online and read up about the mating behavior of the amphibia.
“What happened?” said Dick as he wolfed his way through an enormous breakfast. “Something tipped the dinghy over. That’s the last I remember.”
She had never lied to him, and wouldn’t do so now.
“I’ll tell you this evening,” she said.
She did so in the dusk, sitting at the edge of the tarn, with the stream beside them racing towards the waterfall.
“I suppose you could get a wetsuit and oxygen mask and go down and find the cave,” she said as she finished. “I think I’d have to go first and ask his permission. Otherwise I don’t know what he’d do.”
“I don’t need to,” he said. “I would have believed you in any case, but in fact I saw his arm come out of the water, only I thought I was hallucinating. What did he do it for? Trolls eat people, don’t they?”
“He needed you alive. He is the last of his kind. He told me that. He can’t father any more trolls, but he’s found a way of passing something on. Look at me. I’m human all through, but I still have troll blood. Look how I scorch in the sun. That’s inherited from him. He wanted to come to me in your body—I don’t know how he does that—he made himself into a rock for a moment or two when he came out of the pool at the bottom, but that isn’t the same thing. I don’t think we’re the first ones. I think he looks in through people’s windows at night. He wasn’t at all surprised when I told him about electricity.
“Anyway, he was going to make love to me in your body and we’d have a baby. It would still have been your child—I don’t believe he and I could actually cross-breed, we’re too different—but he’d have passed something on again—troll blood on both sides…”
“You know, I have a sort of dream memory of walking towards you. It was almost dark. You ran to meet me and we hugged each other, and then you suddenly pushed me away.”
“He said you were there too.”
“I’m still believing all this. It’s an act of faith.”
“But you are believing it?”
“I think I have to… there’s something else?”
“Yes… This is… well, see what you think. I read up about frogs and toads and so on this morning. Most of them mate in water. The female releases the eggs and the male fertilizes them. I told you he made me go and fetch the dinghy and take it to the rock shelf. I waited for a bit, and then he popped up close behind me and just stayed there for two or three minutes before he climbed out and put you in the dinghy…”
Her voice had dropped to a shaky whisper with the strain of telling him. He took her hand and looked at her with his characteristic half-tilt of the head.
“Frogs and toads. I’ve seen them at it. They hug each other pretty close, don’t they? And it goes on for hours.”
“It was only a couple of minutes. And no, he didn’t touch me. But…”
“You didn’t release any eggs?”
“I’m due to ovulate in a couple of days”
“And then…?”
“I think it depends on us. He said he left me with a choice. He can’t fertilize me by himself.”
“And you want to have the child?”
Mari had managed to suppress consideration of this. What she, personally, wanted had seemed of no importance beside Dick’s possible reactions. But now that he himself asked the question, she knew the answer, knew it through every cell in her body. It was as if a particular gene somewhere along the tangled DNA in each cell had at the same instant fired in response.
“I don’t know about want… oh, darling… I just don’t know!”
“You feel somehow, as it were, compelled? A moral duty, perhaps?”
His voice was drier, more remote than she had ever heard it.
“Something like that,” she whispered.
He thought for a long while, still holding her hand as he stared out across the motionless tarn.
“I meant what I said about faith,” he said at last. “If you believe you’re right, then I believe too.”
“Oh, my darling…”
“Do you want me to keep your side of the bargain?”
“If you can find a way.”
The birth wasn’t abnormal, except that it was far more difficult and painful than even the midwife expected. She sent for a senior colleague to confirm there was nothing more she might be doing, and the colleague stayed to help. Mari was barely conscious when it was over. Her hand was clenched on Dick’s and wouldn’t let go. Through dark red mists she heard a low-voiced muttering, the younger woman first, doubt and disappointment, and then a reassuring murmur from the older woman. She forced herself to listen and caught the last few words in a strong Scots accent. “… a look you get round here. I’ve seen three or four of them like that, and they’ve turned out just grand.”
They put the still whimpering baby, cleaned and wrapped, into Mari’s arms, and she hugged it to her. The mists cleared, and she looked at the wrinkled face, the unusually wide mouth, the bleary, slightly bulging eyes.
“Spit image of you,” said Dick cheerfully.
“Troll blood,” she whispered.
“Both sides?”
(Gently. Carefully teasing.) She smiled back.
“Just one and a bit,” she whispered. “Wait.”
She slid her hand in under the wrap and explored for what she had already felt through the thin cloth. Yes, there, on the other shoulder from his, and lower down. Delicately with a fingertip she caressed the minuscule bump in the skin. The whimpering stopped. The taut face relaxed. The shoulder moved in a faint half shrug, and the lips parted in an inaudible sigh of pleasure.
The Color Least Used by Nature
Ted Kosmatka
Ted Kosmatka’s [www.tedkosmatka.com] work has been reprinted in numerous Year’s Best anthologies, translated into more than a dozen languages, and performed on stage in Indiana and New York. He has been nominated for both the Nebula Award and Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award, and is co-winner of the 2010 Asimov’
s Readers’ Choice Award. His first novel, The Games, was published in 2012. His second novel, Prophet of Bones, will be published in spring of 2013. During the week he’s a video game writer at Valve, where he’s spent most of the last two years as a member of the Dota 2 team. Weekends though, often find him out on the water, or working on his old sailboat.
The trade winds carried the sound of hooves.
Inside his small boat works, Kuwa’i put down his awl and looked to the window.
“So, it’s time,” he said.
Kuwa’i didn’t mind that the administer’s men had come finally to end him. He had since that morning known himself to be a story in need of an end, and so only smiled softly when the men pulled up their reins in a cloud of red dirt and climbed wearily down from their horses.
They hesitated then, lingering, checking their weapons—five clay men balanced evenly between the hard ride behind them and the hard thing left before them to do. The shortest of them turned, grim-faced, and Kuwa’i shook his head sadly in recognition. Though the other men carried revolvers, this one bore twin knives in his belt.
Kuwa’i had known they would come, of course, these five men, or five others—he’d known since he woke that morning and found his son’s bunk empty. It was natural that it should happen; there could be no other response.
Today his boat works would burn.
He’d closed up early out of respect for the safety of any customers that might come wandering in. The administer’s men would abide no living witnesses, and Kuwa’i saw no reason to risk deepening the tragedy. He’d waited until the sun was high before flipping the sign and taking off his smock for the last time.
He had then put each of his tools carefully in its place: the long saw, the hatchet, the binder, the adze—each on its assigned shelf along the back wall of his work space. The awl, the chisel, the mallet—tools whose only place was amid the clutter of whatever project he was working on—these he placed carefully on the workbench in a neat line. He allowed his fingers to caress the awl, his favorite tool, if a common workman like himself were permitted such a luxury. No other tool, when working with wood, was so much an extension of the hand.
The thought made him look at his hands, which were still strong and steady for all his years, though they now bore the seams and creases of many decades’ work. His father’s prayer sprang to mind: Let my son’s life be a thing of use, Lord. May he be a tool in your hands.
Kuwa’i’s life had grown into just that: a thing of use. In the fifty-eight years leading up to this day on which his story would end, he had become the finest builder of boats there had ever been on the island of Hiwiloa.
It is a mark on a map around which the whole of the Pacific wheels. Mountains rise from glittering blue water—a place found, then lost, then found again, until finally pinned to existence by lines of latitude and longitude. By numbers on a map. Hiwiloa. West of the Marquesas, north of the Cooks. One of a thousand Pacific islands, a thousand miles to anywhere.
Kuwa’i grew up chasing crabs at the lagoon’s edge, playing in the black sands while the tides came and went.
His father was a half-caste woodcutter who harvested the high forest of its specialty timber, a particular tree which his grandmother’s tribe called walking tree, and which the local boat-building industry called peran wood, and which books called nothing at all. It was light and strong, like Kuwa’i’s father, and the boat builders from the harbors were willing to pay for it.
On many afternoons as a child, Kuwa’i followed his father as they trekked the winding beaches to the nearest town, their burden of peran wood balanced between brown shoulders. Near the docks, amid the businesses and the hustle of the island’s traders, they sold their day’s work for paper money and sometimes bought meats, and cheeses, and shiny steel nails that could be bent into fishhooks. Young Kuwa’i would watch the comings and goings of the people and the ships—the men in uniforms who strode down gangplanks from enormous metal steamers. “Hiwiloa is two islands at the same time,” his father liked to say to him as they watched the crowds. “One old and one new.” And then his father would tousle his dark hair. “You can live in both.”
In the evening they walked the beaches back home.
They lived in a place called Wik’wai.
It was not a town so much as a grouping of farmsteads, a collection of families. In truth, it was the valley that was called Wik’wai, which in the old language meant fast water; and should the families have moved away and another people moved in, they likely would have called the place Wik’wai, too, out of sheer fittingness of language to God’s creation. Perhaps it had happened a dozen times in the long history of the island’s habitation.
The Wik’wai of Kuwa’i’s childhood was a place of numerous bantam chickens and occasional spotted pigs, of children seen only in motion. The huts were made of wood and pili grass and were, for the most part, surrounded on three sides by taro patches scratched into the rich volcanic earth. There were no flowers planted among the homes; one had only to venture into the forest for that. Cultivation was saved for breadfruit, and taro and sweet potato of several varieties, planted in neat rows. For beauty you had only to cast your eyes up toward the mountains, or out toward the waterfalls that gave the valley its name, or down to the base of the hills where the land opened to the vast blue-green lagoon that circled the island in a protective embrace.
Wik’wai was not poor or rich because those are terms meaningful only in their relativity to other states of being, and for most of the people from the place called Wik’wai, there was only Wik’wai.
Suffice it to say it was a place in which you could be endangered by starvation, provided you refused to eat. A place where you might face homelessness, provided you chose not to build a house from the materials easily at hand. It was even a place where you could find trouble, and tragedy, if committed to the search.
Kuwa’i was raised in a home at the far edge of the valley, because his half-wild father was uncomfortable with more than one foot out of the forest. On the Sabbath, his mother brought him to the tiny chapel where they taught him the right ways, but the other six days belonged to the island—to its beaches and forests, to its simple rhythms, old beyond old.
When Kuwa’i had finally counted enough years, his father brought him along on expeditions for timber. During these times, they’d travel on foot for many days through the trees, across streams and upward into the mountains to which cool mists clung in a perpetual cloak of fog. And Kuwa’i’s father would remark each time as if it were the first, “They say the top of the mountain is just beyond here, but I do not believe it.” And then he’d ask, “Have you ever wanted to touch a cloud?”
And Kuwa’i would say each time, “Yes,” and they’d laugh as they ran together, knocking aside damp green fronds, arms splayed, fingers raking the gray-white mists that wafted upward along the verdant slope. Kuwa’i learned that clouds felt like nothing at all more than this sensation. Of running. Of damp so small and fine and sharp that it is experienced as icy needles on the bare skin of one’s face. And he learned that here, in the clouds, on a natural terrace at the edge of a cliff, were the trees which books called nothing at all.
They were not tall trees—their bark black and sooty with age, long fronds a silver-gray, drooping almost to the ground. The trees were wide, and gnarled, and, to an individual, ancient. And some part of Kuwa’i recognized that it hurt his father to kill them. Kuwa’i and his father took only one tree each time, chopping a full morning to piece out the core wood, which was the part that the boat builders wanted for their frames.
Around the trunk of each tree was tethered a thin white rope of screw-pine fiber which bound the tree to an anchor of rock some dozen feet away.
“Why are the trees tied to rocks?” Kuwa’i asked.
“To keep them in one place.”
“Are the winds so great?”
“Before people came to the islands, there were only trees to act as people, so the trees wal
ked and spoke. When people came, the trees retreated to the mountains and forgot their speech, but never their travels.”
“That’s just a story,” the boy said.
“No,” his father replied. “It is the old magic.”
“In school they say there’s no such thing.”
“This is the last of it on the island,” his father said. “There used to be more, but that was before I was born.” He gestured for the boy to look closer. “Now there’s just this.”
Kuwa’i bent and inspected the bindings. In the mud beneath the trees could be discerned a well-beaten rut where each tree had walked the limits of its tether in a circular path. The boy nodded to himself, accepting the possibility of his own eyes.
His father continued, “For a long time, the walking trees looked down from the mountain and watched over the island people. Later, when the Kuhiki came with their steel, and their cattle, the trees began throwing themselves off the cliff.”
“Why would they do such a thing?”
His father shrugged. “Who can guess at the ways of trees? When my mother’s people learned of the suicides, her father climbed the mountain and tied all those you see here. Now they are all that remain.”
Kuwa’i put his hand to the bark.
“It’s hot.”
“They burn slowly, from the inside out.”
The boy nodded again. “Why are they all so old?”
“Because they’ve been alive a long time,” his father answered matter-of-factly.
“I mean, I don’t see any young ones. I don’t see the saplings.”
“There are no saplings.”
“Why?”
“Things without book names often vanish from the world.”