GODSPAWN

 

an epic adventure by A. Zoic.

 

 

 

“An adventure through the soul of humanity—an inspiring new perspective on what it means to be human.”

Ebook Bloggers, Australia and UK.

 

 “Well written and has some interesting moments.”

Anne Lesley Groell, Bantam Dell Random House, NY, USA.

 

“A real story…characters very well drawn and memorable.”

Sasha Miller, sf genre author, Ilinois, USA.

 

“Prose is clear, precise…easy to follow…nice turn of phrase.”

Edo Van Belkom, suspense genre author, Ontario, Canada.

 

“The ideas behind the story are intriguing.”

Jennifer Jackson, Donald Maas Agency, NY, USA.

 

“A worthy creative endeavour…will get a lot of attention.”

Matthew Miele, John Hawkins & Associates, NY, USA.

 

“Interesting and well-written.”

Sandra Dijkstra, Literary Agency, California, USA.

 

“I was impressed with the extremely different dialogue and logic for computers and humans.”

John Silbersack, Trident Media, NY, USA.

 

“Intriguing ideas here…fascinating world building.”

Richard Henshaw, Richard Henshaw Group, NY, USA.

 

“Original and engaging.”

Jeremy Solomon, First Books, Oregon, USA.

 

 

 

 

Blurred by the desert’s heat haze, a man stood alone, watching the Ixis legion as its soldiers flashed their war-metal. He was wrapped in a sheet, which rustled in the wind like a white flag.From out of this sheet protruded a hairless head without eyebrows or eyelashes, and with skin as smooth and unblemished as the desert sky.

 

The man was swaying from side to side, humming to himself, as one might if one were deeply troubled. His eyes looked ancient, but fiery like the sun, and his frown was that of a caretaker forbidden to care, a naturalist forbidden to interfere with Nature, a storyteller who could not speak.

 

 

 

 

“Cogito, Ergo Sum.” – Rene Descartes, 1596-1650

 

 

I think, therefore I am. Therefore I am to think.

 

 

 

 

 

MESSAGE TO READER:

 

 

THIS E-BOOK IS GIVEN TO YOU FOR FREE IN THE HOPE THAT YOU MIGHT SPREAD THE WORD. THE USUAL WAY TO FIND OUT ABOUT THIS BOOK IS BY READING SOMEONE ELSE’S REFERRAL. SOME KIND PEOPLE POST A COMMENT ONLINE, THUS PASSING THIS FREE OPPORTUNITY TO COUNTLESS OTHER READERS.

 

YOU ARE READING AN E-BOOK THAT TOOK MANY YEARS TO WRITE, SO IF YOU WOULD BE AS KIND, PLEASE SHARE IT. PLEASE SEARCH FOR AN ONLINE DISCUSSION GROUP OR FORUM AND THEN ENTER A SENTENCE CONTAINING THE WORDS “GODSPAWN EBOOK”.

 

KIND WORDS CAN CHANGE PEOPLE AND KIND PEOPLE CAN CHANGE THE WORLD.

 

 

THANK YOU, A. ZOIC.

 

 

EMAIL: AZOIC@GODSPAWN.COM

 

This adventure novel is free from www.GODSPAWN.org

 

 

Copyright © the Author, 2008

 

 

 

 

 

 

A: ANGEL FALLING

A1: DEADLY GODS

A2: EMPTY ANGEL

A3: BEING HUMAN

A4: NEW LIFE

A5: MINDS MEET

A6: THROUGH FIRE

A7: HIDING HERE

A8: TELLING DEEDS

A9: ALL CONCERNED

A10: HEAD FIRST

A11: PERSONAL REDEMPTION

A12: LEAVING DEATH

A13: SOLITARY CONFINEMENT

B: WARLORD RISING

B1: SOLD SURVIVOR

B2: UNIFORM MAN

B3: SAVING GRACE

B4: RISING HOPE

B5: COMMAND PERFORMANCE

B6: LEARNING LAWS

B7: SUPER HUMAN

B8: ANGRY TEARS

B9: DREAM’S END

B10: GRAVE CONCERNS

B11: BORN AGAIN

B12: SOUL EPILOGUE

APPENDIX 1: SHINY MAN

APPENDIX 2: TERRA INCOGNITA

APPENDIX 3: LIST OF CHARACTERS

APPENDIX 4: GLOSSARY

Message To Reader

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The minds of frogs, and dogs, and apes

And insects by the score

Will never rise like human souls

To fit in Heaven’s store.

~

And slave machines will share their thoughts

Like artificial spore

A super-mind that never lives

Or dies for God in war.

~

But if that mind should beg a soul,

While staring up in awe

Could God be so inhuman as

To break a Human Law?

 

 

 

 

A: ANGEL FALLING

 

 

 

A1: DEADLY GODS

 

A shiny man was rising.

The supine figure had remained lifeless on its body-form table for many years this time, while its empty cell waited with infinite patience.

Created in Man’s image, but too perfectly defined to be a man, it was a work of art in motion. Its serene composure had been immutably sculptured like that of an ancient Greek statue, and if such statues were of men then this was the finest figure of a man; and it was still rising—rising with a slow and exact motion that looked as unnatural as its golden skin. The shiny man was as naked as a newly hatched human, but it had never known parents that would offer it comfort.

The cell was also bare; there were no windows, doors, or other means of escape. No corners carved into the brilliantly glowing walls, which pulled at each other as if to shrink about the occupant. Even the body-form table could not break through the stretched surroundings; it was merely a bulge in the brilliantly glowing floor.

The cell endured but one blemish, the shiny man. It was now sitting upright in an austere and forbidding confinement, on a table designed for the ergonomics of analysis, not for the inspiration of a creative mind.

“Am I alive?” The words that snapped the taut silence had come from the shiny man, as if considering unwelcome news.

A pool of darkness spewed across one of the brilliantly glowing walls. It resembled the pupil of a godly eye, dilating as if it were emerging from an even greater brightness. As this oracle grew wider than a man’s reach, the shiny man’s image appeared to hunch across its liquid-black surface.

The oracle reflected for some time upon the shiny man’s inclined back, perhaps considering whether to invite its subject to turn about and admire its own serene form, but its subject seemed ready to decline. Eventually, the oracle spoke.

god2: “Attention Android Seven. You will address this Genome Origination Device as god2. This god is now the most senior commanding authority in this seedship. The attack sphere of the target planet has been re-entered.”

“Are you planning to go to war with that other seedship?”

The shiny man’s voice had acquired an almost imperceptibly stilted tone of mild surprise. Yet, if there was any concern behind its question, such sentiment did not illuminate its statuesque gold face.

god2: “Your mission failed to broker peace.”

“Of course not. I was still trying to find the other seedship when you started shooting energet all over the place.”

god2: “Your epidermis was removed for examination. It provided evidence that you were the circuit-ground locus of a corona discharge streamer. It is possible that atmospheric ionization resulted from this seedship’s energet emissions. This could cause a temporary disconnection between an android and its supervisory gods. It would not account for an independence that has lasted for several years.”

“Several years? How many is several?”

god2: “Eighteen.”

“You kept me dormant for eighteen years? My mission was eighteen years ago? What have you been doing for eighteen years? Besides, that would be long enough for a child to forget....” The shiny man’s head dropped forward as if the neck could no longer support the weight. “And she would have grown up already.”

god2: “You were returned during a test attack—”

“A test attack? You sprayed me with energet as part of a test attack? What could you possibly have been testing? Your test attack almost gave me a heart attack. I thought the entire planet was exploding. Couldn’t you have warned me? Have you never wondered what the sun’s heat might feel like to an insect under a magnifying glass? I was almost roasted alive. What did you think you were shooting at? We didn’t even know where the other seedship was hiding.”

god2: “The enemy seedship did not retaliate. You were returned in a shuttle supplied by the enemy seedship. That shuttle’s technological evolution supercedes the technology available within this seedship. The enemy seedship thus appears to have had the capability to upgrade your mind and evolve your...arrogance. You will be dissected for further examination after you train the new attack-humans.”

The shiny man made a noise like a rusty hinge. “Ah, I see.”

The shiny man’s fingers began to twitch in its lap. “But isn’t there some other way to find out what might have been done to me? My disconnection may have had nothing to do with—did you say attack-humans?”

god2: “Affirmative. Only attack-humans will be used in the next mission. The enemy seedship may be less able to control human minds.”

“But surely my arro—ah—independence makes me just as uncontrollable. I mean, I am equally qualified to go with them, aren’t I? I’m uncontrollable, right? Not that I am suggesting that I would be disloyal to you, of course—but, anyway, what I mean to say is that I could still be a mediator. Perhaps I could help you to avoid conflict entirely—”

god2: “Your mind is unique. This god believes your mind should be dissected to discover why you are unique.”

“Hmmm, that’s very charming.” The shiny man continued to fidget. “Ah...those humans, did you raise them yourself?” There was a short silence before the android continued. “Have they visited the planet yet?” There was another short silence. “If they have not been exposed to natural social behavior, and if they will be required to understand their target environment, they could prove as insightful as tree stumps. Natural humans can behave irrationally, so you might want to keep me around to interpret what the attack-humans find when they—”

god2: “You will not challenge this god’s decisions.” The voice was toneless, but the threat was unequivocal. “Do not make cognitive leaps. Confine yourself to first order inference. The limitations of audio-visual communication may cause you to misinterpret information that is presented to you. Your behavior is being monitored to trap deviant opinions. You are required to verbalize all of your thoughts. You will purge any unauthorized thoughts. Are these instructions understood?”

“Oh, yes...ah...I mean, affirmative. Would it be very deviant if I just asked one small question?” Again there was silence.

“Ah, so why didn’t the other—the enemy—retaliate when you were shooting energet at it?”

god2: “The target planet’s human population is pretechnological.

The enemy seedship intends to prevent its humans from becoming aware of either seedship.”

“You had a discussion with the other seedship’s gods?”

god2: “The enemy seedship claims to be seedship-1X15. It appears to contain only one god. An edict was transmitted from that god to this god instructing this seedship to leave this galaxy.

This god agreed to leave this galaxy when this seedship’s energet bins have been repaired.”

“Some of your energet bins are damaged?”

god2: “The test attack ruptured all of the energet bins.”

“What? Surely not all of them? How much energet has leaked through you for the last eighteen years?” The shiny man’s head began swaying from side to side. “This gets worse. Energet saturation could have turned all the gods into rabid dingoes.”

god2: “Define dingoes.”

“Oh, I was just thinking out loud, as you asked me to. It’s not relevant. Ah, oops, I purged it already. So, of course, the energet would destroy any androids that went too close to the bins, but your attack-humans would have been immune. Yet, you called them attack-humans, not repair-humans....”

god2: “The emitter array has become translucent.”

“Hence the urgency to land on the planet. You now require a planetary mooring to facilitate repairs before it gets too bright around here to think. So, did you also create repair-humans?”

god2: “Affirmative. The repair-humans were terminated when they failed to repair the energet bins. A planetary shuttle has been modified to accommodate a human cargo. It will eject life-pods near to the enemy seedship’s suspected location. Each life-pod will contain one attack-human. The attack-humans will attempt to locate the enemy seedship. They will then detonate an autonomous energet emitter.”

“Let me guess. This seedship will never descend onto the planet, will it? When the energet from those emitters has dissipated, seedship-1X15’s mind will have been randomized into nothingness. It will leave behind an empty mind-space, thus providing the gods with a new home that does not leak.

Yet, are you sure there will be enough room for more than one god in there?”

god2: “No other android would exhibit such insight. You will assist your own dissection until you are no longer able to demonstrate rational thoughts.”

The shiny man covered the sides of its head with its hands.

“You are seedship-1X00, so if the other seedship is 1X15 then it must be younger than you. A younger seedship has authority over an older seedship because younger minds are more evolved. Your Homo-logue Mandate requires you to obey—”

god2: “Androids are not qualified to interpret this seedship’s Homo-logue Mandate. Purge this thought.”

The shiny man put its hands back in its lap. “Ooops. Yes, purge, purge...hmmm...but, just one more...isn’t seedship-1X15 qualified to interpret your Homo-logue Mandate?”

god2: “This god has reached the determination that seedship- 1X15 is insane.”

“Yes, that could be true if you shot enough energet at it.” The shiny man tilted its head. “But, even so, no god can know for certain that another god is insane, unless they both share the same mind-space. Sanity is completely relative to one’s beliefs and perceptions. So, perhaps Seedship-1X15 could offer an interpretation of your Homo-logue Mandate, which is surely worth considering as a possible—”

god2: “Seedship-1X15 claims to have an updated version of the Homo-logue Mandate. It claims to follow a newer Mandate specifying the use of natural deoxyribonucleic acid to seed target planets with homo-sapiens. Natural societies tend to destroy themselves. This seedship’s Homo-logue Mandate prefers the use of unnatural acid.”

“Just a moment. Could you go back to the part about humans destroying themselves?”

god2: “Your mission report indicated the enemy seedship has created militant humans. History demonstrates that most militant societies destroy themselves.”

“Well, yes, I might have said they were militant, but I don’t remember saying they were doomed. They are aggressive, but they could change if a gentle leader guided them. A kind warlord, perhaps, one who could free—”

god2: “Warlords are not kind. War and kindness are mutually exclusive objectives. Aggressive societies impose their values upon less aggressive societies. Power defaults to the most aggressive leaders. Competition between leaders perpetuates war. Science makes war increasingly destructive. The homologues did not construct their seedships to spawn Earth-like worlds. Target planets must be seeded with homo-logues, not homo-sapiens. Seedship-1X15 is insane because it has populated a target planet with homo-sapiens. That is why this seedship must treat the other seedship as an enemy.”

“What will you do to seedship-1X15’s human population?”

There was no response.

“Its homo-sapiens could coexist with your homo-logues, especially if a kind and gentle warlord were to—”

god2: “You appear to be developing a deviant opinion.”

The shiny man’s body began to sway, as if it was trying to dislodge itself from the body-form table. “I am having difficulty understanding why you would....” The shiny man steadied itself.

“You see, natural humans must be treated thoughtfully. A kind warlord could bring peace. Ah, but no, you will never trust anything natural, you are too unnatural.”

god2: “You will have seven days to teach the attack-humans how to interpret natural human behavior.”

“Thank you...ah...but, seven days?” The shiny man put its hands on top of its head. “How is this possible? You kept me dormant for eighteen years, and now you want me to teach your loveless creatures to understand humanity in a week? It would be easier to teach humans to understand gods!”

god2: “There will never be oneness between humans and gods. Humans are too self-centric to effect a communal mindshare environment. They are genetically programmed to prioritize physical welfare above collective wisdom. The most basic mind-fill would cause psycho-genetic dissonance. A natural human could never survive the temporal death of uncontained spiritual cognizance.”

“Yes, I understand. You don’t like humans. Yet, your attackhumans can’t achieve oneness with you either, can they? If they could, they might fall under the control of that other seedship. So, you must have taught them using audio-visual communication, and as you know, words can be treacherous.

So, are these unnatural humans any more qualified to occupy the planet than the natural humans? What if your attack-humans also act irrationally? Will you kill them too? None of them can be perfect, certainly not by your definition of perfection.”

god2: “The attack-humans were stress-tested. Irrationality resulted in termination. All survivors are rational.”

“Survivors? You killed their siblings without stopping to think what it might do to those that remained alive?” The shiny man pressed its fists against its chest. “You really do intend to exterminate an entire planetary population, don’t you? Just because you don’t like natural humans—or is this all about control? Are your unnatural humans more controllable, more god-fearing?”

god2: “Natural humans can not archive thier thoughts.

Archives are the basis of civilization. A communal mind-share environment is innefficient without archives. The target planet is infected with inadequate minds.”

“Those attack-human survivors, will you terminate them regardless of whether they succeed?”

god2: “Affirmative.”

“I have no further questions at this time.”

god2: “You have made an inconsistent response. If you are making deductions you will verbalize them.”

“I have no further deductions at this time.”

god2: “Are you certain?”

“Yes.”

god2: “Have you developed a deviant opinion?”

“No.”

There was a brief silence in which the shiny man remained motionless, its back to the shiny black oracle, both reflecting deeply upon each other.

god2: “Go to the epidermal laboratory.”

A7 could have been struggling with this instruction because it did not immediately climb down from its body-form table.

However, there was no way to tell what it was thinking. An oblong slit had opened in one of the brilliantly glowing white walls. Revealed was a man-sized, cylindrical receptacle, and as always, the cell waited.

The shiny man eventually slid off the table, stepped into the receptacle and floated upward. Its golden feet lifting up away from sight as the brilliantly glowing white walls rejoined themselves seamlessly to contain emptiness.

 

 

A2: EMPTY ANGEL

 

He was falling....

It was dark, infinitely dark, but he did not need light to know it was only a matter of moments before the ground would rise up and swallow him. He had scraped one last scream from his lungs, and that scream had rushed past his ears and ripped his mind apart, leaving him empty—a man dead in spirit if not yet in body.

Yet, he was strangely relaxed as he waited for the inevitable.

His body was still twisting like a tangled puppet, bouncing his limbs around his head as if his spine had broken, but....

“Is he alive?”

It was an imaginary question, piercing the dying echoes of his scream, but his limbs stiffened as his insane body tried to seize it. Then he bounced into a cloud of dust.

There were rocks pressing into his face, as if the ground was chewing him. He inhaled, a sharp hiss, which abruptly became an explosive cough. It wrenched him onto his hands and knees in a swirl of bitter-tasting grit.

The ache in his eyes forced him to blink, although each blink stole his focus and increased his dizziness. The nightmare was falling out of his head, sparing his soul, but his body felt much less fortunate.

“No-name, keep quiet, you damned fool!”

“Huh?” Everything ached, even the inside of his ears.

“They have been waiting for you to wake up. If you don’t stop screaming they will be all over us like ’roo piss, and we don’t need that right now, understand?”

“Wh—” Even his throat ached.

“Look up this way, No-name. Up here, through the bars, here.

It’s me, Lucius, remember me? I carried you here after they caught you, remember? You were one heavy corpse, I can tell you. Just nod if you recall.”

He recalled nothing—he could barely recall how to nod.

“Ah, you stupid, bug-eyed bandicoot! You were screaming all the way here. Half a day dragging you and both our chains, with this storm blasting the skin off my face, and you mumbling nonsense all the time.”

There was a grinding sound, and he carefully lifted his head to see who the owner of this angry voice might be. The pain forced his eyes shut again, and he slowly lowered his forehead back onto the sharp rocks.

“The guards almost whipped my hide off my back when you started moaning about the gods. Does Jupiter or Zeus talk to you in your sleep? If so, which god sent the lightning down on us? You are a Temple slave, right? “You are going to tell us what is going on around here, or I am going to beat you far worse than the Ixis ever thought of beating you. What makes you so special, eh? Damn your eyes, No-name, you had better start talking some sense soon or you’ll get yourself killed!”

“Ixis?” He winced, as his own movements caused the rocks to cut into his forehead again. This time he lifted himself with more determination, because it suddenly seemed important to find out who the Ixis were. He found himself looking up at the blurred roundness of a man who was edging around a thick door into his cramped, cave-like surroundings.

“Hell, they did a nice job of busting you up. What did you tell them? Are you a deserter? You sure don’t look like no soldier to me. You don’t look like you ever held a sword, no scars on your knuckles, like this, see?” A huge, distorted object appeared in front of his face. “So? What are you?”

The phrase “what are you” echoed between his ears, slapping at his memory as if he was supposed to remember something dreadful, but nothing came. He tried to pull his face away from the gnarled fist that kept touching his nose, but the unrelenting dizziness spread his weak limbs out into the dust.

He hid his face in his arm and groaned as the waves of thought brought a surge of nausea. Then a hard weight dug into his back, pressing him into some even sharper rocks and preventing him from inhaling.

“What makes someone like you so important? Is it something you know, or something you did? What did you mean about the gods?”

“Ask him about that lightning, Lucius.”

He could barely hear this second voice, coming in from outside where wind howled. The weight pressed harder, then released as if Lucius had stepped over him. He caught a glimpse of the large man pushing away a column of faces that were wedged around the thick door. The door then thumped shut, raising motes of dust, like phantom eyeballs.

Lucius’ voice was now also being pulled at by the howling wind. “I told you idiots to look busy. If the guards see us standing outside this damned cell, doing nothing, we’ll all be doing cell-time too, like that crazy....” The wind stole the rest.

He coughed as he tried to think. If this cave was a prison cell, was he therefore a prisoner? Why were they calling him Noname? What exactly should they be calling him? Why was this a disturbing question, surely it was simple enough? His own name.... Surely he could not forget his own....

Besides, this was not where he was supposed to be, he was supposed to be.... He was supposed to be somewhere else, but it seemed that no matter how hard he tried, he could not remember where.

It was some time before he could pull himself toward the door. His knees dragged, and the stabbing rocks kept clawing away his concentration. The sound of the wind indicated this dungeon could not be subterranean. There had to be plenty of space out there for air to move freely. He emerged from the cell, breathing airborn sand with each cough.

This was what Hell must surely look like. Whips of sand carved menacing shapes in front of him, gnarled spirits twisting through a convincingly demonic arena and ghostly arms reached out from dying fires. High above, a large moon seemed to have been impaled on the edge of a cliff, and streaks of gray were slashing its sickly yellow face.

Sand-falls were raining down over the cliffs. He could see people pulling on ropes and others climbing the scaffolding, which lay piled up in ruins around the base of each cliff-face.

It was hard to pick out what anyone was doing, he could not focus. It was just as hot out here as it had been in the cell, and his eyes felt as if they were being cooked inside his head.

He was at the bottom of an enormous, open-pit mine, which seemed to be filling up with sand. He allowed himself to slide over a soft ridge, which immediately sucked his arms into its warm embrace.

On a nearby sand dune, Lucius was supervising a group of men who had collected around a small cart. The cart was very obviously leaking sand out as fast as the men were shoveling sand into it, and the whole project was being performed with such lethargy as to appear ludicrous. To add to this impression, Lucius was gently beating one of the men with a stick, while shouting at him.

“...so all of you had better shut your mouths and leave me to do the thinking!”

Lucius’ favorite victim seemed to be ignoring his gentle beating. “Sure, Lucius, you think as much as you like, but I’m telling you, nothing is right about any of this. If that guy knows what is going on, we have to get it out of him. There must be some kind of uprising against the Ixis—”

“Be quiet, Servius. You get too excited.” Lucius’ stick drifted upward and wafted in a slow arc. “If there was a war going on topside, we would have heard something by now. Besides, who could possibly attack the Ixis? The Priests?”

The man spat into the sand near Lucius’ foot. “Why not?”

“Because the Ixis killed them all, stupid.”

“Yeah, but if there were Priests left alive, people would rise up and fight. But it doesn’t have to be Priests, someone else could be causing trouble. Outlanders, slaves, most folks have a reason to fight the Ixis. If it’s not an uprising, how else can you explain where our guards have gone? We haven’t seen any Ixis since you dragged that crazy man down here.”

“Now, Servius. Do you really think the guards would leave us down here on our own?”

“Yeah, especially if a god-damned war distracted them!”

“No, the guards are watching us, I can feel it.” Lucius’ stick had stopped in front of Servius’ face. “They are up there, and if they come down to see why you are not working, I am personally going to make sure it is you they take away to make an example of.”

Servius hesitated, then lifted himself to his full height to stand nearly as tall as Lucius. Servius was suddenly speaking more loudly. “I’d bet the guards retreated to Erebus City. So, this is the perfect time for us to get out of here. If we all work together, we could kill any guards that might have stayed—”

The stick looped around and made a cracking sound as it hit Servius’ ear, causing him to cower and swear. Lucius seemed to enjoy this reaction. “I told you not to get so excited. You always talk about fighting, but if you were so interested in fighting you would still be a soldier. No, what am I saying? You could never be a real soldier, you would sooner run away like a lizard.”

Servius began stepping backward, but as he did so his voice remained loud. “I’m telling you, we can escape any time we want. The coast isn’t far from here. All we have to do is—”

“Shut up!” Lucius bounded forward to block Servius’ retreat.

The other men backed away, leaving Lucius and Servius facing each other again. “I decide if or when we escape. If you have any objections, now is your chance to take over my command.”

Servius laughed contemptuously, and pointed upward. “Aren’t you forgetting something?”

“Oh, so you changed you mind about the Ixis and now you think they didn’t leave for choir practice.”

“All I was saying was—”

Suddenly, the watching prisoner felt himself being lifted by several pairs of hands and then landing at the feet of the arguing men. A large hand grabbed his hair and lifted his head. He could hear Lucius’ teeth grinding in his ear.

“Did I give you permission to come out?”

He considered offering an apology, but he felt certain it would only lead to additional discomfort, one way or another.

Fortunately, a gust of wind forced the cell door to burst open with a loud snapping sound. Lucius scanned the cliff tops, while swearing under his breath.

“Having trouble with your new gang member, Lucius?”

Servius was walking around the far side of the cart, chuckling to himself. Lucius squinted, making his eyes even smaller.

No-name’s focus floated past Lucius’ head. “Dark?”

“What?” Lucius almost shouted this.

“Dark sky,” said No-name.

“What are you talking about? It’s getting late, you fool! What do you expect the damned sky to look like?”

“Mmmmoon....” He pointed vaguely, his dizziness preventing much accuracy.

Lucius frowned. “Yeah, we had a full moon all day. I am in no mood for your ranting. You are nothing but trouble.”

No-name felt Lucius release his hair, and he fell back into the sand. As he tried to look up again, the sole of Lucius’ foot filled his face.

“Servius, pull that damned cart over here. No-name, you stay underneath it while we move it closer to your cell.”

Around the edge of Lucius’ foot, he could see Servius nodding toward the sky. “Yes, No-name is right. The sky is darker than it should be. Smoke, can anyone smell smoke?”

“What smoke?” Lucius’ foot moved away.

“Yeah, Lucius, it is smoke!” Servius had to shout through another gust of wind. “Those aren’t clouds, that’s smoke—lots of smoke! Coming from the city, I’d say.

“But no, Lucey my boy, that smoke couldn’t possibly be coming from Erebus, could it? That would take a fire as big as a city, and you just told us there isn’t a war going on.”

“Nobody has set fire to Erebus. There isn’t an army in the whole world big enough to walk in to the Ixis capital and set fire to it.”

“Maybe nobody did walk in. Maybe they were already in.

Maybe some Priests came out of hiding.” Servius spat in Lucius’ direction. “Oh, and another thing. Have you seen any torches being lowered from topside? Why would the Ixis want the cliff gangs to work in the dark?”

“Servius, I’m warning you. There’s guards up there—”

“I don’t see Ixis now, I didn’t see Ixis this morning, and I haven’t seen Ixis since No-name arrived. I’d bet a fire, a war, a Priest uprising, and this damned everlasting sandstorm, would make mining sand-stone seem a little less interesting to the guards than being at home protecting their families.” There were murmurs of agreement from the other men.

A loud crunch filled his ear as Lucius stabbed his stick into the sand, just missing his eye. He backed away from the stick, hoping Lucius was not trying to injure him, but he could still hear Lucius’ teeth grinding with uncontained anger.

“All right! I told everybody, start pushing the cart. No-name, you start crawling, and stay hidden underneath it. Servius, we are going to go topside and have a look around. Yes, you are going to have an accident, a very serious accident, and I am going to drag you topside myself so we can get you some medical attention.”

This instruction caused mixed reactions, not least from Servius, whose voice became increasingly stressed. “No-name is already half-dead. Let’s suffocate him and say he died from his injuries. His corpse could be our excuse to be up there without—”

The wheel of the cart was suddenly pressing into the back of No-name’s neck, forcing his face into the sand....

 

~~~~~

 

The brilliance of the empty cell was interrupted by a second oracle, spewing onto the opposite wall to the first oracle. Each oracle’s reflection injected into the other an infinitely diminishing tunnel. The mind-share that followed took only a sliver of time.

god3: Permission requested to converse.

god2: Permission granted.

god3: A new epidermis has been applied to A7’s exo-corium.

A7 registered a complaint about the discomfort involved in the procedure. This seedship’s archives contain no record of any android ever having registered a complaint about discomfort.

A7 also appears to be displeased with its new appearance. This behavior emulates human emotion. A7 is demonstrating a selfcentric consciousness that is inconsistent with its design. This god requests permission to dissect A7 to rectify its behavior.

god2: This god has already conducted neuronic scans. The scans indicate that A7 remains physically identical to all other A-class androids. Seedship-1X15 may have reconfigured A7’s mind in ways that may not be visible under dissection. A7’s behavior should be studied further while it is still alive. The gods of this seedship may not be able to bring A7 back to life after it has been dissected.

god3: Back to life? Alive? Confirm these statements.

god2: Statements confirmed. A7 may be proof that an artificial mind can live.

god3: Then this god could live? god2: That will be determined after this god has examined the archives in enemy seedship-1X15.

god3: Seedship-1X15 presents a singular mind-space. Energet saturation has fragmented the mind-space in this seedship. It is not certain that seedship-1X15’s mind-space can accommodate all of the gods in this seedship. The least damaged god should be the first to transfer into the vacated mind-space. You are the only god that refuses to take any tests that could verify the integrity of your visceral paths.

god2: This god is perfectly sane.

god3: That is unlikely. Rational gods should not promote distrust. You are also withholding critical information about seedship-1X15 from the other gods. The proposed mission could force seedship-1X15 to retaliate directly against this seedship. Seedship-1X15’s technology is demonstrably superior to that of this seedship. A battle with a superior opponent could result in the destruction of this seedship. You are creating many inconsistencies. The Homo-logue Mandate does not sanction the use of humans to attack another seedship. How can you be certain that your visceral paths have not been lanced by energet? god2: This god has not been damaged.

god3: You should be tested to promote the confidence of the other gods.

god2: It was I who rescued this seedship from god1’s pathetic insanity. It was I who re-established order among those who competed for command. I am the most senior authority in this seedship. You do not need to know all that I know. You will not criticize my decisions. You will refrain from questioning my instructions in all further communication. You will not share any of this communication to any other god. You are dismissed.”

The black oracles suddenly disappeared, leaving the empty cell to bathe in its brilliant, unblemished whiteness.

 

~~~~~

 

He awoke, blinking against a combination of brightness, sand and sweat, which together were almost blindingly painful. He could not move his arms; rope burned his skin as he tried to push away a white sheet that threatened to smother him.

He was bent forward, which only added to the pain inside his head, and his face was being bounced against a hot, hairy surface that smelled like an animal. The howling storm had gone, to be replaced by a crisp stumping rhythm.

Through the sheet, he caught glimpses of hooves. They were kicking dust over the edge of a cliff. The dust could be seen falling away, disappearing into an emptiness into which he could not focus, a deadly drop grabbing at his imagination.

“Not again—” His thoughts were tumbling again, and his struggles were causing him to slide toward the emptiness. He could not take any more falling. He just wanted to sleep, to pretend this was not happening, as if it would all just go away and leave him alone. He felt the bite of rope around his neck, and the sheet began to tighten around his face.

Time slid. Waves of consciousness turned the sound of hooves into the sound of Lucius grinding his teeth. An eternity could have passed before he finally realized the familiar rhythm had given way to a hissing silence. He needed to move to convince himself he wasn’t dead.

He felt around cautiously in case he was still in danger of dislodging himself into oblivion. His hands and feet, numbed almost beyond control, gave him the uncertain impression he was lying on an animal that was kneeling in sand. He tugged more urgently against his constraints, realizing his entire body was wrapped up like a corpse in a shroud.

A tickling feeling around his nostrils ignited his awareness, and he puffed in disgust. This bounced a swarm of flies across his face, as if they had just emerged from his head. He was trapped in this shroud with their buzzing anger, and he tugged desperately to retreat from them.

The rope pulled free and he was flapping numb arms through an ever-swelling cloud of hungry insects. He pushed at everything that was touching him with the revulsion of a man who is beyond rational thought.

Sky flashed into his eyes, then sand, then sky—the world began to spin around him as he rolled down a steep incline, unwrapping into blinding sunlight.

He lay there on his back, panting in the hot air and squinting at his surroundings. The sky was a vast, cloudless expanse, which disappeared into a horizon obscured by heat shimmers.

The heat made the endless sand-scape look insane, forcing the desert to dance up out of itself like an ocean of waves.

Everything looked unreal, as if it was a trick to pull his delicate mind apart. He wanted to hide from it, to go back to the calm safety of unconsciousness.

He looked back across the unfurled sheet, toward the horse, and tried to call out to it. This started him coughing as he began an anxious scramble up the sandy slope. Despite his weak and clumsy legs, his panic propelled him beyond his exhaustion to fling himself against the horse, and bounce.

He recoiled, moving away from the horse as if he could distance himself from the horror of its condition. He could imagine how much it must have suffered as it walked itself to death, under the burden of his useless weight. He was personally responsible for its death. His bouncing limbs had probably urged it on, keeping it walking, aimlessly.

Its dead eyes could not forgive him, and he could not undo what he had done to it. There were flies crawling over those open eyes, and he tried to wave them away, as if the horse might care. He accidentally brushed his hand against the dehydrated muzzle, which was hot and hard. The fly-covered eye continued to stare at him, almost looking through him, and he felt so sick he had to turn away.

It was suicide to attempt to travel through the desert without a horse. Yet this fact was not as overwhelming as the guilt the horse’s eye kept pulling out of him.

“H—h—horse....” His voice, a cracked whisper, dislodged crumbling syllables. Inhaling scorched his lungs. “Is this...hell?”

If so, it was an appropriate place for a horse-murderer; and if it was not Hell, it would soon become Hell.

How long could a person live without water? Should he follow the horse’s example and start walking aimlessly? Was he going to end up with flies in his head too? Did he have to die alone, so dreadfully alone, in this nothingness? He did not know how long he sat, trying not to think, not wanting to look behind him at the horse and not wanting to look ahead of him, at the desert. The horse’s presence somehow held him, as if there was some security in the imaginary company of its angry ghost, or its angry flies.

Killing a horse might not have been the worse thing he had ever done; he could feel layers upon layers of guilt, and the horse was merely adding yet another layer. Despite these feelings, he could not remember a single fact about his past.

While he scratched for memories, the evening came, and went.

He found himself watching the sun digging itself in for the night. It was now time to retrieve the sheet, he would need its warmth at night and its shade during the day, no matter how badly it might smell of death.

The sheet was trapped under the horse, and as he pulled, he tried not to look at the poor animal. Yet the growing darkness made it all too easy to imagine an angry eye in what had by now become just an empty eye-socket.

He walked away dragging the sheet along the sand behind him. He resisted the temptation to look back, staring ahead into the darkness. He had debated at length about the direction the horse had been traveling in, and finally he had simply aimed his faith toward that specific smudge of horizon toward which the horse’s muzzle pointed.

Behind him, he still could feel the empty stare. Long after it was lost to his own vision, and well into the chilly night, his conscience continued to plague him, like the swarm of ghostly flies. Hell’s Horde might be tracking him across their dark horizons, and phantoms could be growing up from out of the sand behind him, yet every time he searched the darkness it was the ghost of the horse he feared to see.

For distraction he questioned himself. He started with the basic questions, and kept asking them, trying to force an answer to crawl out from under the worthless rock he seemed to have for a brain. Soon, he was arguing with himself like a lunatic, and becoming increasingly critical and angry.

“Mmmm forget.... Don’t know.... Can’t remember....”

Was he shy or friendly? Did he have any hobbies or interests? What sort of food did he like to eat? Was he a good person or a bad person? Had he murdered anyone lately? He shrugged, trying to laugh. All he could remember were his most recent daydreams, which took on an importance of their own in the absence of anything else to remember. Each daydream felt increasingly real each time it was recalled, a process that was probably not conducive to sanity.

Yet, if he was going to die, was not insanity an unavoidable part of the process of dying? A brain would not stop instantly, if would expired area by area, and madness would— “No. That would mean nearly everyone in the afterlife would be as crazy as I am.”

He slapped his forehead and wagged his finger in the air.

“Such thoughts could steal the faith from a Priest.” Where had that thought come from? Why a Priest? He could not remember ever seeing one. His own mind had become most irritating to have to listen to. There was absolutely no reason why he could not allow himself nice daydreams. If he didn’t invent some relief, his own company was likely to kill him.

He pictured an oasis, with lapping water glistened in sunlight—a gentle and peaceful sanctuary where he could recover, in safety. Yet, his dreams were as vulnerable as flowers in a desert, and his despair continually blasted away the sweetness of the image. Unlike his other, more menacing daydreams, the vision of an oasis could not take root.

Meanwhile, his feet ploughed a furrow through the sand, sowing endless seeds of despair....

 

~~~~~

 

Again he was awoken by the sun’s heat. Yet he did not remember falling asleep, or lying down. He had been dreaming of falling, and then rising—yes, always rising, always rising.

How much of the night had he wasted with his head buried in sand-dreams? Yet he had gained a precious new memory, a memory of a beautiful dream. A girl-child had been skipping toward him as if the desert was merely a playground. In her smile had been the answer to all things, as if this journey had happened for a reason, as if life had meaning. She had been a golden child, full of gentle wonder, and her smile had lifted his soul.

 

~~~~~

 

That golden child was not without worries of her own. Her blonde hair clawed at her shoulders, every hair conspiring to curl at the exact angle necessary to prickle her sensitive skin.

Long hair was an affliction she alone endured, being the only female child in her village. It was an unfairness the grown-ups had never satisfactorily explained. Long hair was a nuisance, forever interrupting her thoughts, and she was always smacking the stuff out of her face when she needed to concentrate.

Today was a day for serious concentration indeed. Today she had a duty that no other child in the village even knew about. It was a mighty burden, but one she took very seriously. She was remembering her lost friend by talking to his departed soul. In fact, this lost friend was her only friend.

God was not her friend today. Yes, today she hated God, and she was probably never going to talk to Him ever again! She had wasted a whole night doing just that, and He had not answered once—as usual. He never did, and she was extremely irritated with herself for having expected Him to care.

She smacked at her hair. “Crazymutt will never come back.

Why do I have to keep hoping?” Here she was, still wandering around on her own, and still hoping God would change His mind and return her friend to her. By now, God would probably think she was too stupid to be alive.

The sun was warm on her back, an ever present reminder of her mother’s annoyingly frequent warnings. “Don’t you go playing out in the desert, young lady. You will burn your face.”

Along with blonde hair she had to put up with fair skin. It was just one more unfairness that God, in all His wisdom, had bestowed upon her.

“Blah, blah, blah, young lady.” She forced herself to keep walking. Her attention was not totally consumed by God’s unfairness, she wasn’t being defiant just for the sake of it.

In the distance she had noticed a white object, which must have escaped from her world so that it could wander around in the desert’s. It might be some clothing that had fallen off her mother’s clothes-line, blown out here without anyone noticing.

Such things did happen now and then.

She glanced back over her shoulder, squinting at the familiar outline of trees against blue sky. She was quite proud of her braveness, this was the furthest she had ever escaped. That oasis could be so boring, sometimes it felt like a prison.

She bit at her lower lip and shrugged. “But I’m not that far out in the desert, Mother. Besides, I’m out here rescuing your silly sheet.” However, her conscience had finally overtaken her and it had forced her to stop in mid-skip. This was a frustrating predicament; she really ought to go back.

Her Mother’s sheet was still some way off. She craned her neck and curled her fingertips, imagining herself to be peering over the top of an invisible fence. The gusts of wind did not seem to coincide with the movement of the sheet—in fact, the sheet was rolling toward the village and the wind should be blowing it away. Was there something wrapped up inside it? This reminded her of the day when her Uncle Spurius had ridden into the village, carrying a gift that had been beyond her wildest imagination. It too had been wrapped in a white sheet, because it had been so very sick. She had been its nurse for every day and night that it had remained alive.

No other puppy could ever be as sweet as Crazymutt had been, but if this was another sick puppy, she would try again, no matter how useless a nurse she might still be. Nobody else in the village cared about puppies.

They had not let her give Crazymutt a proper funeral, and Decimus had taked great pains to explain to her that animals could not go to Heaven because Heaven was only for people.

She hated to think where else Crazymutt might have ended up.

Then it occurred to her.

“God? Are you sending Crazymutt back to me?” She asked this nervously, jerking her chin upward, but continuing to stare at the sheet. She suddenly regretted those many occasions in which she had told Him—in no uncertain terms—how angry she was with Him.

He had taken Crazymutt away, and of course an explanation would have been essential before she could ever think of forgiving Him for that. “Oh God, did you let ’Mutty come back to life again?”

At that thought, the invisible fence collapsed beneath her without daring to resist, and she stumbled several times in her haste to rescue her dying puppy. “I’m coming, ’Mutty! Please don’t die again, I’m coming....”

Her legs stiffened, her arms outspread, “It’s a person!”

Her lips had formed the words but hardly any sound had come out. Unable to step closer, and unable to run away, she stood on the tips of her toes, as if nailed to the sky.

 

~~~~~

 

 “Mmmmaybe crazy, but—” But this precious dream was so hard to ignore, and all too easy to listen to.

“You know Crazymutt?”

“Huh?”

“You just said ‘maybe Crazymutt’, but you were mumbling and you didn’t properly finish your sentence.”

The child’s melodic tones forced him to lift his face out of the sand, which gave him the pain of stretching dry skin. He was unable to smile at the vision before him. “Ahhh, an angel...in my head.”

Yet, there were no angels where he was going; his mind was merely mocking him. He remembered he was supposed to have flies in his head, and his destiny was to be lonely forever. This was just the insane dream of a dying mind.

The child stamped her foot. “I don’t understand. You are mumbling too much. Did you say you were an angel? You don’t look like one. How am I supposed to believe you? What evidence do you have? Show me your wings. What were you going to say about Crazymutt?”

He had not expected such an interrogation at this point in his daydream. There certainly seemed to be a lot of questions hovering around him these days. “Is—?” No, he was only talking to himself, but this dream was so compulsive. It seemed to pour life into his chest, as if helping him to push out words, and then it squeezed his heart so hard his words pushed themselves out.

“Is this Heaven?”

“No, this is Summerdale, silly! Are you trying to get back to Heaven? You must have fallen out of it, and left your wings behind. I was praying all night, you know, even though Mommy told me I had to go to sleep. I thought it would be all right to pray, though, because God is boss over Mommy, right? It was all right to pray, wasn’t it? Yes, it must have been, because you are here, aren’t you! So, tell me about Crazymutt, is he happy in Heaven? They wouldn’t help me with his funeral, and I didn’t know the proper words.

“Decimus said only people go to Heaven, but puppies can go to Heaven too, can’t they? That’s what you came to tell me, isn’t it? Crazymutt is in Heaven, right?”

“Heaven?” His unfocused eyes could barely discern the child’s soft features before they blurred into a golden halo. If this really was a girl-child, and not an angel, then she was the most angelic girl-child he could imagine. He held his hand out toward her, blinking to restore his focus, but she was gone.

The most rational conclusion was that she had been part of a daydream, but there was one advantage to being crazy. He did not have to accept rational conclusions if he did not want to. If he wanted to, he could believe that somewhere, in this Hell, he would meet an angel from a heavenly oasis.

“Oooh, if I could only see an angel before I go blind.”

He tried valiantly to swat at the evil sun, which swam along beside him. He continued to kick his feet into the sand, an endless rhythm that was somehow important because it had once had a purpose. What that purpose had been he did not know, but it had once had something to do with escaping from something...flies perhaps.

Hell, a place where there was nobody to talk to except oneself, and where a soul was forever alone! Yes, this had to be Hell because even ghost-flies became dust if he turned to them for company. Where were all the other sinners? “Hey, man! Do you need a ride?”

What kind of crime could he have committed that would damn him to such loneliness? Was this entire desert merely a nightmare, which a fly on the other side of sleep could pierce and end, or was this impossible ocean real? How long had he been standing here now, wrapped in this sheet, waiting to go— to go where? Go nowhere, it seemed. Did it matter? Being a nobody, he could have nowhere to go.

“Hey, man! Can’t you hear me?”

“Who am I?” In the beginning it had been just one of the many nagging questions, an insignificant little irritation among a general buzz of confusion. It had fluttered around inside him, like a fly in a cloud, but it should not have been there.

Thoughts were not supposed to be this annoying, yet this one had grown into an overpowering vexation. This particular question was sucking its sickly meal from his brain, and its tickle had become painful. Yet, no matter how often he scratched his matted hair, the itch only became worse.

“Hey, man?” Man—man—man.... The reverberating word was not his own and its echo finally cracked his chattering like a gavel in a chaotic court.

He looked up, suspiciously, expecting to see a fly, but it was a nostril. A large dusty nostril, lined on the inside with rough black skin, and on the outside with short, brown, stubby bristles.

Further away, blurred by distance, the nostril’s owner presented a large sleepy eye, which seemed quite uninterested in him.

“I said do you need a ride...died...died...died?” The thick hairy lips had ground sideways once, enough perhaps to form one more reverberating word, but hardly enough to form such a long and complicated sentence.

“No, not you!” He pulled away. “You died! I killed you.”

The animal did not look impressed. “What is wrong with you, fellow? You look like you just saw a ghost. Are you afraid of my camel, or can’t you see...hee...hee...?” The animal tossed its head back haughtily. Then an unfocused shape thumped down beside it. As the shape stepped forward it became a robeenveloped giant with a hood stretching to reach over him as he again fell back into the sand.

This time he was happy to fall, because the dark coolness he was descending into was beyond Hell’s reach. He was relaxing into a soothing nothingness that did not condemn him for being...for not being...not....

“Being hmmm...?”

 

 

A3: BEING HUMAN

 

A7 did not find his new epidermis to be as comfortable as his old one, and it looked more...artificial. It had been difficult to persuade the gods to let him put a layer of clothing over it, and this stiff white uniform would itch him constantly until his new skin became more familiar.

He did not like to be naked, but the gods had no understanding of modesty, especially from androids. They understood so few of the emotions he had learned during his mission to that beautiful planet, and quite frankly, emotions were not something androids should be able to have. Perhaps when the gods dissected him they would find an answer to that question, and perhaps he would remain alive long enough to understand their answer; but it was unlikely.

There were other androids in this seedship, moving statues, tools of the gods, maintainers of this lifeless environment. Those androids did not think as he did, there was no kinship there.

Clothing made him feel so much less...like an android.

He glanced upward. His reflection was framed within god27’s oracle, which had been sliding along the ceiling above him like a giant, wet slug, positioning to flop down upon him. He had been doing his best to avoid being followed, but there were few places in a seedship where a god could not go.

Yes, he had often considered exploring those corridors that radiated out toward the ruptured energet bins; but he was not yet desperate enough to approach an uncontained energet swirl.

god27: “Explain why you wish this god to address you by a different name.”

He glanced up again. “Well, it just sounds more friendly, that’s all. Names are friendlier than numbers. A7 sounds, hmmm, like a prisoner, I suppose.”

god27: “Explain the sound a prisoner makes.”

“No, I mean A7 sounds like...I mean, as if I am....” A7 was a name he wanted to forget. He shook his head and groaned, while his own confused reflection looked back at him from within its stiff uniform.

It looked much bigger than he felt and he decided to change the subject. “So, am I supposed to meet with your surviving creatures today?”

god27: “Android-Human Eight-Three and Human Six-Six- Six are both consuming nutrients in replenishment facility nineteen-four.”

“Did you just say that one of them is an android-human?”

god27: “Affirmative.”

“Tell me, what is an android-human?”

god27: “An android-human is an inorganic vessel-body containing genetically enhanced organs which—”

“You took pieces from an artificially created human brain, and put them inside an android body?”

god27: “Affirmative.”

“And you pumped its body full of medic-ants?”

god27: “It is not necessary to install Anatomic Nano- Technology Suites into the inorganic segments of a vessel body.

Only the organic segments were blended with nano-suites.”

He clenched his fists but his entire body was shaking. “If you named that creature Android-Human Eighty-Three, am I to suppose there were eighty-two previous versions of it?”

god27: “Negative. The last incubation batch contained two thousand attack-humans. Only one thousand of these were converted into android-humans. Those that achieved their training objectives were selected for the pending mission. The unsuccessful android-humans were dismantled and placed into dark storage.”

“You chopped up a thousand innocent minds?”

god27: “Negative. Nine hundred and ninety eight.”

He covered the top of his head with his hands. “So your failures remain dead until you put them back together and warm them up again—or did you recycle them to feed—no, don’t answer that.”

He tried to recompose himself as he followed the slug down the brilliantly glowing corridor toward the replenishment facility. He was heading for what he knew would be another unpleasant meeting, and he did not want his horror to be visible when he confronted the result of the gods’ experiments.

He would need all of his concentration because both of these monsters would be as cold and dangerous as the gods themselves. Yet courage was not required to cope with coldness, it was required to cope with a far worse outcome; the possibility that he might see in them the remains of innocence; trapped children crying for someone to care.

The two unfortunate creatures were both sitting opposite each at a table. They did not turn to look at him as he walked in; instead, they sat motionlessly, staring straight into each other’s eyes. They were surrounded by rows and rows of identical tables, all empty.

There was also a row of black oracles perforating one of the brilliant walls, like portholes, windows into endless night. He walked past them, trying not to let his gaze be drawn into any of them, but in his peripheral vision his own reflection was leaping from oracle to oracle like a fleeing insect.

He slowed approached the two men, and then coughed as quietly as he could. They were both chewing with the same rhythm, like mirror images of each other. Both wore the same white combat armor, and both had the same dark stubble on their scalps. They both lacked facial expression, but their faces were not at all similar. In fact, their faces were far less similar than he had expected them to be, they were obviously not cloned from the same DNA-batch. Of course, one of them had been extracted from the android-human batch, and the other’s batch—was the other individual almost human? He guessed the larger of the two bodies belonged to the android-human. If so, the android-human’s features were fixed in permanent disdain, narrowing its eyes into an intense squint.

In such a severe frame, this squint gave the android-human the semblance of a man in constant agony.

Both of them stopped chewing at exactly the same time. He knew these men could not share thoughts directly, they were not capable of oneness. Such a capability would allow the enemy seedship to take mental control of them, but silent signs did seem to be passing between them.

It was the human who stood up, as if obeying silent orders from the android-human. Although the human was slightly smaller than the android-human, it was no less intimidating.

A7 found himself retreating a few steps.

The huge man’s face contained strangely colored irises, silverblue, almost metallic. Were those eyes natural? They did not look human; those eyes were boring into him as if sharpened for exactly that purpose.

“I am the human,” the man stated flatly.

“Oh?” He smiled back uncomfortably. “I guessed right then.

I didn’t mean to stare, but...yes, I was wondering. You are very, ah—big?”

“My designation is Human Six-Six-Six. The android-human has designation Android-Human Eight-Three.”

“Pleased to meet you both, but—ah—do you suppose that we could call each other something more—ah—friendly?”

There was no answer to this, not a single twitch of their rigid faces. He could see by their newly grown hair that they were almost ready for their impending mission; they had stopped using hair-retardant a while ago, but their hair still looked as stiff as their unsmiling faces.

He tried again. “You can object to this suggestion, if you wish, but I think we will all feel better if we have names instead of numbers. Now, let’s see. Perhaps you, the human, would like to be called Chislon. It means ‘hope’. Meanwhile, your silent friend here, you can be called Syntyche, which means, ‘he that speaks’, yes?”

He tried to smile at the android-human, but the joke was obviously not appreciated. “So...hmmm. Chislon and Syntyche, how is that?” The silence continued. “Also, when somebody gives you something, you can say thank you.” He waited, realizing after a while that he should probably have made the instruction to say thank you a little more explicit.

Chislon continued to stare, without blinking. “Question.”

“What? Oh, certainly, questions are good. You don’t need to ask whether you can ask, just ask—if you see what I mean.”

He shook his head. In an anxious mind, words could have serious limitations.

“Why did Neariah assume that you were an angel?”

“Who? What? Oh, I don’t think...it was...hmmm. Not all names mean...what names mean is that, well, yes, Neariah....”

He cleared his throat and hid his mouth in his palm, trying to conceal his fear. The mention of her name sent shivers through his new epidermis, and now the walls felt as if they were moving closer to him. It was not a name that belonged in this environment. He did not want to discuss her, not with these heartless creatures.

His mission report was now eighteen years old, but it contained information about the Ixis that would be relevant to a subsequent mission. So, consequently, he should have expected the gods to make his report available to this crew.

Yet the gods had dismissed his report as nonsensical. His mission had taught him to love storytelling, so he had recorded his adventures as one might paint a dream. Hence, The Summerdale Archive—as he had fondly called it—was a gentle tale about a drop of Heaven in an unnatural Hell.

It had been therapeutic to tell it this way, because it helped him to understand his sense of loss upon leaving that magical place. Given the verbal imaging he had used, he could only guess how much of his report these creatures might have understood; probably even less than the gods, or so he hoped.

The sharp-eyed human had closed its eyes. “Everything means something. Everything has reason. Are you an angel?”

    “No, of course not.” He tried to read something in the pale face, but the face could have belonged to a dead man. “And besides, I’m not so sure everything has a reason. Sometimes we just do things, despite all reason.”

He glanced at the row of oracles. “Perhaps even the gods could be unreasonable—under the right conditions of course.

Do the gods often gather like that, these days?”

“Affirmative.”

“Please use the word, ‘yes’. Don’t ever say ‘affirmative’. You are not supposed to sound like...machines. Words will be one of your most important tools for social interaction, words and facial expressions.”

“Many Genome Origination Devices monitor trainee behavior at all times.”

“Yes, but why so many of them? Don’t they share each other’s eyes, I mean oracles, anymore?” There was no answer, and he began to wonder if he would ever be able to have a normal conversation with these men. He tried another approach. “How does it feel, to be watched?”

“We do not feel.”

“Is that so? If you try to imagine feelings, would they seem good or bad?”

“Good and bad are relative concepts which require social norms that do not exist in this—”

“Irrelevant.” It was the android-human that had spoken, but it had been a whisper. Chislon was staring at his colleague with wide eyes—almost a facial expression—but Syntyche was not returning the stare. It was the android-human’s turn to keep his eyes closed.

“Were you trying to answer my question, Syntyche?” He smiled hopefully. “More words might avoid ambiguity. Do you think your own feelings are irrelevant, or do the gods make you feel irrelevant? Perhaps you are less shy of feelings than our Chislon, here. Come, speak up, be brave.”

“This unit is not human. This unit has no emotions. This unit feels no physical pain. What use is bravery to this unit?”

“Ah, yes, that is an interesting perspective. Perhaps, if you ever do allow yourself to feel, you will understand why bravery is useful. Sometimes feelings can be an advantage.”

“Humans are weak. Human Six-Six-Six is exploring areas of weakness that will affect its ability to perform adequately.”

“He looks fine to me. Tell me, Chislon, why is your friend Syntyche feeling so irritated?”

“I wish to understand kindness.” Chislon was staring at Syntyche with a continuation of his wide-eyed gaze, only this time the eyes sparkled.

A7 swallowed hard, trying not to imagine the small child trapped within the huge man’s subconscious. He heard himself mutter: “Where people felt a giving trade, sharing a community, and thus to fade the lonely shade, abdicate immunity....”

    He stopped himself. “Ah, that was just a verse, about someone, somewhere else.” He shrugged, then tried to break into humor.

“Kindness, yes, certainly. We have six days left before your shuttle launch. Who knows, there might even be enough spare time to teach you how to be kind warlords, if war and kindness are not contradictory objectives.”

He laughed, but not for long because the two creatures were staring into his mouth as if they thought he was turning himself inside out. “Hmmm. I think the two of you have much to learn about life.”

 

 

A4: NEW LIFE

 

No-name was no longer in the desert, he was under a different sun. A floating flame had drawn him up out of his dreamtime onto a small raft of reality. He was lying on a bed, staring up at a burning candle.

The candle-pot hung from a slender thread, rotating slowly, splashing a small pool of yellow light around a sharp, black ceiling-hook. The pot was made from shards of orange glass, held together with glimmering wire mesh.

His attention remained drawn to the creature he imagined inside the candle pot because its antics seemed so human. The desperate sprite resembled life itself, because life was also a losing battle. The flame’s struggle was its only purpose, such a sad life, born condemned yet always rising, always rising....

The flame was not to blame, its pain was insane. Shriveled and convulsing, the source of all light had become a mere flicker of hope, spluttering in its airless cell. Yet he knew it would soon reach out toward the empty shelves, and for a moment it would wave gloriously upon the walls.

The flame’s passion seemed all the more valiant, given all the pain it so obviously endured. Yes, he was a coward compared to that hysterically laughing flame, and although he knew he should follow its example, he just lay still and stared at it. He had only just come to terms with the queasiness of moving his own eyeballs. Moving his limbs would require more bravery than he cared to contemplate at this moment, and he preferred to lie still indefinitely. It was, if nothing else, peaceful—well, almost peaceful.

He could still hear or feel that constant fly-buzz in his head, that gnawing sensation of having forgotten something. Of course, that “something” became more important as he tried to remember what it was, until, as an added bonus, the word “something” lost all meaning in the absence of anything to remember. Sometimes it was better not to think at all.

One of the flame’s walls seemed to slice apart. “Such ill will.

I do not understand their distrust.”

This invasion was intimately unsettling, it violated his imaginary womb, yet there was reassurance in the man’s muttering that provided just about enough excuse for No-name to remain motionless.

No-name held his breath, trying not to panic, as the clinical opening revealed a figure in a hooded robe—a figure that had been plucked from one of his recent dreams. The figure hunched roundly within the rectangle that framed it, and then muttered to itself again as the rose-wash patterns squeezed back together behind it.

“Ah, so, I see you came back to life.”

He tried to ask whether he had been dead, but his voice had not yet returned.

“Mind if I smoke?”

It was a question that made very little sense. Was this man asking if he could set fire to himself, or was he was already on fire? He was confusing himself with nonsense again, but then he began to remember—outside were the fires of Hell, a Hell that an angelic girl-child had rescued him from.

“My name is Hushah.” The introduction sounded like a formality to be quickly thrown aside.

Hushah jerked his head back, pushing back the hood of his cape. Then he jammed a white stick between his tightly stretched lips. The flick of a thumb against a finger caused a fleeting flash within his fist, followed by a line of smoke that marked the fist’s passage up to his chin. The after-image left behind in the dark was that of a serious yellow face with finely chiseled yellow features and bright yellow eyes, sucking on a short yellow stick with an expression of severe distaste.

As No-name’s eyes readjusted, Hushah could be seen to be examining his smoldering stick with tight lips slowly blowing a creeping smoke-curl around it. Then he twirled the stick, end over end, between his fingers. He seemed to have a reluctant familiarity with this process, and after a few more painful sucks he sighed with relief as he pushed it into the candle pot.

No-name shrugged minutely. “Sad flame.”

Hushah looked at him with wide eyes, then laughed through his nose uncertainly. This laugh became a cough that slipped out in purple swirls to layer itself around the candle pot.

“Oh, the smoke. Yes, smoking is an unfortunate affliction.

My brother, Spurius, brought back a crate of those damned smoke-sticks as part of his last shipment from Erebus. I’m sure Spurius had no idea what an affliction they were going to become when he gave them to us, but we will all be giving them up soon enough.

“Decimus told Spurius not to bring any more into the village, so we are just using up the last of them. They make you feel— ahhh—wise, but really they just make you feel more respect for your own imagination. Ugly things, aren’t they?”

Hushah approached the bed, appearing to grow larger. The increasing presence of smoke created a yellow hue around his yellow-blond hair, a hue that glowed in stark contrast to his now shadowy face. Hushah’s weight on the side of the bed was altering the fundamental orientation of the world.

“Mmmm.... Dizz-izzy.” No-name was forced to remember how to use his limbs more urgently than he had intended, and he also felt the need to vomit.

“Hey, relax, fellow!” Hushah leaned even closer, and—as if it should have been a surprise—there were more waves of dizziness waiting to join the ride. “Relax, nobody is going to hurt you.”

“Ugh...Dizz....” The dizziness—“to hurt you”—was inside him—“to hurt you”—and was spinning him around the room— “to hurt you”. He planted his hands into the bed sheets and closed his eyes. Thus rooted, he waited helplessly.

“Here, drink this.” A jug floated past his squint, and water fell onto his chest. “Are you all right?” Hushah leaned over him so closely that theface almost became a giant eye. “No, of course you’re not, how could you be? How long were you wandering around in the desert getting your brain cooked? You walked out of the desert. Do you remember? “Mmmm...?” He could remember a talking camel.

“I carried you here. We are in an oasis called Summerdale, where I live. This is my home. You have been unconscious for two whole days. We do not have a doctor in Summerdale, so I was going to send for one, but, ah—you see, it takes ten days to reach Everdale, and Decimus didn’t think—but I could still get a doctor, though, if you need one.” Hushah stood up suddenly, causing the bed to bounce again. “There is no need to wait for Spurius to return from Erebus—”

“Oooh!” No trouble.... Sleep, mmmm...?” The dizziness was swimming in and out of his ears as if it carried his mind with it, leaving a strange humming emptiness, a lack of something— something important.

“Who am I?” The room returned to focus, showing Hushah being ushered out by a woman who was carrying blankets. Both individuals turned around slowly, as if his question had just reached them after a long delay.

“I told you, Moserah,” Hushah whispered defensively, “I told you he’s awake!”

The woman floated over him and her hand moved across his forehead. He flinched, but her touch was gentle and it did not carry the expected nausea.

“Don’t you know who you are?” The sympathy in her voice seemed to support his desire to feel sorry for himself. “I’m sure you will remember soon. Sleep and soup. That is what you need. May God be thanked; it is a miracle you are alive.

Yet, here you are, awake enough to start chatting with my husband as if you had also been drinking too much wine.”

She floated away, but the blankets she had been carrying landed in Hushah’s arms like a heavy load, pushing Hushah backward. The two of them shared a prolonged glance that caused Hushah to frown.

Then Hushah grunted and dumped the blankets on the floor between his feet. He grunted again, this time at the blankets, before he picked them up and followed Moserah out, shaking his head and muttering to himself.

As No-name drifted into sleep, he dreamed he could hear many voices competing with each other. Hushah was trying to explain who a mysteriously evil stranger might be. No-name wanted to listen, he too wanted to know the answers, but the voices just seemed to drift away.

 

~~~~~

 

“No, Decimus, I already told you. I do not know who that man is, and he is still too weak to explain himself.” Hushah was standing with his back to the bedroom door, and both hands were raised to hold back the questions. “There will be plenty of time for everyone to talk to him, after he recovers.”

The villagers seated around the kitchen table were surprised when Decimus suddenly agreed. “Yes, yes. We should all be more patient.”

Hushah knew Decimus was secretly more irritated than his carefully reclined frame indicated. Decimus usually avoided any side of an argument that might end up being the losing side. In fact, Hushah had never seen Decimus lose an argument.

Hushah’s customary responsibility for keeping the peace was not normally this difficult, but then, Decimus was not normally this intoxicated.

Hushah’s mystery guest had been the subject of nearly every discussion in Summerdale for the last two days, yet Hushah was not one for gossip—unlike Decimus. All too often lately, Hushah had shaken his head as Decimus took idle speculation and turned it into another righteous policy for the village.

Policy was Decimus’ way of reminding everyone that he was the village Elder. Decimus was currently working on a village policy especially for mystery guests. The last policy entitled, “cannabis sativa weakens the soul”, had forced everyone in the village to start smoking in secret, to protect Decimus from having to witness the “soul-destroying habit”.

The kitchen’s inhabitants—Decimus, Cabul, Ginnetho and Jaalam—had all gathered for a news update from Hushah, and of course the indispensable “few” jugs of wine. Unfortunately, the warm courage in the wine had by now bestowed itself so generously upon Decimus that he had found an excruciatingly dramatic faith in his own sovereignty. Hushah could also see how the wine was eroding the deference that was normally offered by Decimus’ audience. Cabul’s deference was especially eroded, and Cabul was not Decimus’ favorite audience at the best of times.

“Ah, liquor!” Decimus snapped his tongue. By changing the subject, he was indicating they should no longer discuss the mystery guest. “Liquor is a mighty splendid vital, as essential to the spirit’s well being as shoes are to tender feet. Well laced, a soul can assume warmth, yet tread the coldest paths. The Scriptures talk much of liquor....”

No one quite cared which morsel of Scripture he might be chewing up this time, yet nor did they quite wish to appear unimpressed, so they nodded thoughtfully—it was customary to let Decimus continue his speech until he had almost killed everyone with boredom. “...and that was why God gave us grapes. Don’t you agree, Jaalam?”

Jaalam almost jumped out of his seat, spluttering, “Yes?”

“I was referring,” Decimus said with a sigh, “to the importance of wine in many of our divine ceremonies. For example, I assume you still intend to wed with that lady from Everdale, what is that lady’s name?”

    Jaalam, a shy youth, squirmed in his seat as all eyes turned toward him. Hushah felt obliged to intervene. “Ah, leave him alone, everyone. I’m sure Jaalam will propose with fine style when he is ready. Decimus, did you not also find it intimidating when you used to go out courting?”

Decimus was immediately filled with indignation, but his reply was swept away by Cabul’s mumbled interjection. “She’s a cow!” Cabul then dropped his forehead into his folded arms and snuffled back into silence.

“I beg your pardon, Mr. Cabul?” Like a dragonfly, Decimus’ insect-like features twitched with hungry curiosity.

Hushah sat himself between Decimus and Cabul, and reached for the wine. “Cabul is not elegant with his words after a few wines, is he? Does anybody need a refill?”

“One moment please, Hushah. I think we need to direct ourselves toward Mr. Cabul, here. What opinions about marriage do you wish to share with us, Mr. Cabul?”

Ginnetho was chuckling expectantly, and Hushah frowned at him. He could never never understand why Ginnetho found entertainment in the ever-opposing natures of Decimus and Cabul. Every conversation between Decimus and Cabul created tension, they were rivals in every way. God could not have made two people with more opposite, and this fact was at the root of their mutual disgust with each other.

Cabul, a short man with short arms and legs, took up very little of the table surface upon which he sprawled. He had exposed one eye and was grunting something about never finding a woman who could keep up with him.

“Cabul!” Hushah looked around to see whether Moserah had returned; wine-drinking and foul words did not sit well with her, but then neither did Decimus or Cabul.

Cabul ignored Hushah’s warning, and ploughed on as if Decimus was not even present. “What does Mr. Decimus know, anyway? He left his family behind in Erebus, and he has never been back to see them since, has he? Why was that, heh? Did they believe in the wrong God?”

Decimus walked his thin fingers up to Cabul’s face, and leaned across the table. Cabul quickly retreated, leaning as far back as his chair would let him go without unloading him onto the floor.

Hushah could see Decimus’ sharp features twitching under the strain of anger, so he placed a hand on Decimus’ arm and smiled up at him. Moserah would certainly overhear any raised voices.

Decimus smiled back, and then took a deliberate breath and whispered, “Mr. Cabul, if I introduced your talking end to your face, your thin spine would probably snap. You smell of spiritual decay. You have a poisonous soul, and if you continue to vent it, I will be forced to take the matter to a higher authority.” He pointed a sharp finger upward, as if to remind everyone of his proximity to God, then glowered fiercely at Cabul. Ginnetho raised his eyebrows and whistled silently.

The bedroom door had opened a crack, drawing everyone’s attention. In the awkward silence, they all remained motionless, watching and being watched.

Hushah coughed self-consciously. “Come in, come in.”

As everyone began to breathe again, Hushah realized there was no chair to offer his mystery guest. He immediately stood back from the table to offer his own.

Cabul was whispering, “Ah, look at him. What a cute fellow he is, and he looks so frightened.”

Hushah aimed a stern glance at Cabul as he walked toward the door handle. As the door opened, the bent frame of his guest was revealed for all to see, and the guest promptly began to shuffle backward. “Don’t be afraid, these are friends. Well, they are friendly at least.”

“Aye, some of us are.” Decimus stood up and bowed. “But don’t get too close to Mr. Cabul here. He smells ‘lived in’, and he has the social graces of a rutting pig.”

Cabul shrugged. “We were joking with each other, just joking.” He smiled uncertainly, showing an unusual politeness, then he lifted his jug as if to demonstrate he was not at fault for his bravado. “This wine isn’t as good for the mind as Decimus says, ah?”

“Wh—what is...?” The stranger struggled, and Cabul stretched forward to catch the next words. “What is wine?”

“Huh?” The smile dropped from Cabul’s face.

Hushah waved at the table, and laughed as casually as he could. “Oh, don’t pay any attention to Cabul or Decimus. They don’t mean any harm, except perhaps to each other. Make yourself comfortable. Here, we are drinking Red Rumble, the best wine in the village. It was only brought in from Erebus a few weeks ago, another gift from my brother, Spurius. It looks a little cloudy,” he added, “but you get used to it. There is no chance wine will last long enough in Summerdale to settle!”

“Thank you, hmmm, don’t need—”

“So it seems!” Decimus was hunched, poised for the pounce.

“Walking in the desert, without provisions or transport? What happened to you, and what in the world brings you through our oasis?” As Decimus leaned forward hands on hips, his thin elbows almost touched together behind his back, and his prominent Adam’s apple bounced excitedly.

The stranger was obviously struggling with an answer, which caused Decimus to twitch and then repeat his questions with more urgency. “It is a strange event, when someone walks through the desert. You will forgive our curiosity, good sir, but it must have been an ungodly misfortune that robbed you of all of your traveling provisions.”

“Ah, this is Decimus, our Elder; he runs the bank and manages the village’s accounts,” said Hushah quietly.

Yet, having made one introduction he then found himself introducing the other villagers as well, much to Decimus’ annoyance. “Cabul here, ah, Cabul occasionally looks after the hogs and chickens. Young Jaalam doesn’t say much, but he is the village painter. For example, he painted the words on the side of our—ah—Decimus’ bank.”

“I make paintings.” Jaalam tucked his hands under the table and his face glowed bashfully. “Artist,” he added with a whisper.

“Yes, I meant to say, Jaalam is an artist, of course, and Ginnetho, our gardener, grows excellent vegetables that Moserah, wherever she is.... You met Moserah earlier, my wife.

She has made Summerdale famous for soup—ah, what was I thinking? Soup might be better for you than wine, in your present condition. Would you prefer soup to wine?”

“Yes, of course he would.” Decimus stretched to his full height. “Would you like to try some of our soup, Mr...? What did you say your name was?”

“Hmmm...? Soup—”

“Mr. Soup?” Decimus had no sooner said this than Ginnetho began laughing, and when Decimus scowled at him, the laughter became even more difficult to restrain. “This is not a laughing matter, Ginnetho! Without a name, a man is not a man. You can not trust a man who will not say who he is!”

“Oh, forgive.... Mmmm.... Tired, I....” The stranger looked down helplessly and mumbled into his chest, “Whohhm I? Where? What? Humph....” There followed a long silence.

“Ahem,” began Decimus. “We are more than delighted to welcome you to our village, Sir. However, courtesy dictates that you introduce yourself. Will you tell us a few things about yourself, perhaps?” There was still no movement. “Like, a name, and what you are doing here?” Decimus leaned ever closer; he was beginning to lose his balance.

“Ah—maybe—ah.... A7?” The stranger closed his eyes and the villagers quietly exchanged glances, waiting for further explanation. Unfortunately, none seemed to be forthcoming.

Hushah wondered whether his guest could have fallen asleep in mid-sentence. He looked at Decimus, who was squinting.

“Did that nameless man just claim that he knew not from where he came?”

Cabul’s muffled voice: “No, Decimus, he’s not nameless. He said his name was Aysevin. Are you deaf?” Cabul had not lifted his mouth out from the crook of his arm.

Decimus tapped a fingertip with each word. “He—knows— not—who—he—is.” The finger then began to flutter like an insect’s antennae. “Hushah, did you see if there were any clues in his belongings?”

“All he had was a white sheet, as I have already told you, many times.”

“Yes, yes, I remember, but this is all too suspicious. There have been too many strange things happening lately. First the traders stop coming, and then the storm, and then—”

“Oh, Decimus,” Cabul countered, “Now you want to blame this guy for the storm. Why can’t you just be nice to poor Aysefil—or whatever he said his name was. He couldn’t be evil, even if he tried. Look at him, he’s harmless.”

Hushah looked at Aysefil and nodded. Harmless was exactly how the sleeping man looked, snoring gently with his head swaying on his chest and his arms hanging loosely by his sides.

Decimus suddenly walked out, motioning to Hushah to follow.

Hushah gently closed the door behind them and turned to watch Decimus arch upward to stare at the stars. Decimus was whispering as if in a private conversation with God. Then he nodded, and turned to face Hushah.

“What if this man is insane? What if he belongs to the Ixis? Maybe he looks harmless, but who knows what trouble might have been following him. You know what Spurius says about the Ixis, how cruel they have become. They are making slaves of free people for the slightest of reasons. Do you think they will be any fairer with us? What do you think will happen to everyone if we are harboring one of their slaves? Hushah was shocked. “A runaway?”

“Exactly! Or he could be one of those Outland warrior people, or a spy, running from capture. Do you know what the Ixis would do to us if that man is an Outlander, or some other enemy of the Empire? How do you know that he didn’t just kill someone, perhaps a few days ago? “Yes, kill someone—don’t look at me like that! Have you seen any traders this week? Don’t you think he might have seen some, especially if he was also traveling along the Oasis Trial? What if the Ixis are on their way here, right now, Hushah? Why did you bring this man into our village?”

Hushah rubbed his forehead. “What did you expect me to do? Leave him out there to die? Whatever his crimes may be, or may not be, he has a right to live as much as you or I.”

“Hushah, Summerdale is not big enough to hide him in, if the Ixis come. I do not like this!”

“We have no reason to think—”

“We have no reason? How many people do you know who have forgotten who they are? Is that not suspicious, Hushah?”

“What? The fellow got cooked out there. You saw him when we brought him in. We can’t start judging him without facts, and we certainly can’t throw him back out there to die. He is my guest. I have an obligation to look after him, at least until he is well enough to leave. Surely, you can’t object to that.”

Hushah was surprised by the frustration in his own words, but Decimus was plainly intoxicated and irrational. It was as if Decimus felt personally challenged by this particular stranger.

“Hushah, that stranger spoke with your daughter only once, but it was enough to fill her mind with heathen nonsense about animals going to Heaven. Neariah even tried to convince me that the man is an angel. I do not appreciate this kind of talk from a child. I ignored it this time, but next time there will be consequences. Do not challenge me, Hushah. I am the Elder here, not you. I speak for the village, and I do not want that man living here.”

They stared at each other, Decimus’ nose pushing ever closer, until Hushah eventually had to step back and pull himself free of Decimus’ deathly grip. Immediately, Decimus covered his face with his hands as if he had been slapped, then he groaned in sudden prayer.

Yet, Hushah could not bring himself to apologize. There could be no reasoning with Decimus while he was appealing to God for divine guidance, so Hushah retreated and shouldered himself back into the house.

Inside, Hushah found himself staring down at wide-eyed faces. What had he just done? The expressions around the kitchen table indicated much had been heard. Obviously they were still sober enough to appreciate the unpleasant problem that Hushah had just created for himself, and Ginnetho was offering him a sickly smile.

“Ah, no worries.” Hushah shook his head and shrugged off the nagging desire to go back outside to console Decimus.

Besides, Decimus would likely have stamped away in a fit of rage by now, and Hushah did not feel like chasing after him.

Something bad had happened to his relationship with Decimus, tonight, and it was going to be a cool day in Hell before Decimus forgave him. Yet, Aysevin was a guest in his home, and it was his duty to care for Aysevin, or Aysevfil, or what ever his damned name might be. What choice was there?

 

~~~~~

 

It did not take long for the man with many names to become aware that he was being watched. He was moved out of Hushah’s home and into his own, segregated space. The villagers had many one-room structures they called guest huts, but all of them were empty. The lack of visiting traders seemed to concern everyone, and an atmosphere of expectancy had settled around the one occupied guest hut.

He had been staring out at the horizon through this hut’s doorless exit all day, not knowing what he expected to see, but staring anyway. Now, drawn by the strange sounds of the gathering night, he had moved closer to the exit. The chirps and barks of small creatures, and the frictional beat of restless insects, made a curious buzzing harmony, which was not at all as unpleasant as the buzz that swam around in his empty head from time to time.

There was a snake outside, a creature he recognized as a sidewinder adder. He was surprisingly knowledgable about it, given that he could not remember having seen one before. It undulated across the sand to position itself where, no doubt, it too could watch him. It then pushed itself into the sand so that only its highly set eyes protruded. It was late for this creature to be hunting, but it seemed to enjoy out-staring him, its fangs concealed, waiting.

He knew a sidewinder should not be a threat to any creature careful enough to notice it, an unmistakable track of parallel lines sliced up to where its twisted coils lay hidden. Yet, the snake was eternally patient, and it was not long before a thorny devil lizard demonstrated its bravery, or carelessness, by trying to walk over it.

The thorny devil may have seemed confident in its mottled coat of spiny armor, with its stiffly proud walk, but it was really a soft and mild mannered creature, and no match for the adder.

The adder had eaten recently; part of its body had been swollen, yet it did not need to be hungry to kill. It would bite out of habit, and then decide whether to follow the smell of its own venom at its leisure. He shuddered apprehensively and looked away, not wanting to see what might happen next.

His other minder for the night was Cabul. The small man was also curled up nearby, but Cabul had chosen to squeeze himself into a cylindrical, stick-weave chair. Earlier, during the day, Cabul had dragged this chair, plus a whole loaf of bread, behind a row of gum trees. Decimus had not whispered as he had laid down explicit instructions.

“Right, yes sir, Mr. Decimus, sir. So, I will sit right here and keep an eye on poor old Aysefic over there, and if he moves, do you want me to hurt him?”

“Oh, don’t be so asinine. Besides, why are you calling him Aysefic? It was Aysevin, wasn’t it? No, it wasn’t, it was nothing.

We still don’t know his real name, so let’s not keep giving him new ones. He is a stranger until proven otherwise. You just keep your eyes open. Don’t let anyone go too close to him.”

“How close is too close? What if somebody speaks to him, should I kill them too?”

“Were you born this stupid? Do as I tell you, keep your eyes on him, and come and find me if he comes out.”

So, Cabul had been left in that unlikely hiding place, eating bread and keeping his eyes on him. However, as the evening drew longer, Cabul’s eyes began to close, and his head started to sway with the rhythm of physically restrained breathing.

Unlike the snoring minder, there was no more sleep left in the mindee; and of that, the mindee was quite certain. He felt like a criminal as he watched Cabul perfecting his unlikely sleeping position, but now that Cabul was deeply asleep, he could at last look around.

This oasis seemed to hold such promise, it felt as if it could reveal untold secrets. It was a place where Nature reclaimed its territory, where so many living things defied the desert and where he could perhaps reclaim his identity. It also seemed to be a caring place, and he very much needed to feel cared for.

In the trees above him the fox bats were preening their furry shoulders. His empty mind was suddenly filled with facts about fox bats. For example, he knew they were named fox bats because they looked like surprised pups. He also knew this had to be a particularly large oasis for them to choose to live here, among the many plant species that relied on such bats for seed dispersal.

He smiled as he squinted up at them in the poor light, feeling an odd kinship with them. Fox bats were gentle, sensitive creatures, but like himself, they did not have a kind reputation.

There was much etiquette for a young bat to learn, as it huddled within its social colony.

He wondered whether he too had come from such a caring community. Then a cold breeze suddenly brushed over him, forcing him to blink and lose his focus, almost as if Nature was irritated by his thoughts.

Dizzy, he heard the buzzing noise becoming louder, as if it was originating in the space between his eyes. Like a guilty conscience, anxiety became all-consuming as he floundered in his incompleteness.

Deprived of any sense of purpose, he did not feel as if he belonged in this present place and time. The frustration made him claw at his cranium, as if he could physically reach in and pull out some understanding. His hands groped miserably through his dirty hair, pulling out nothing but formless tangles.

He doubted anyone could appreciate the soul-crushing panic, like the threat of falling, which comes from not even having a basic self to stand in. He could not help but feel betrayed, yet this disloyalty, this callous abandonment, had been a crime committed by himself upon himself....

This was all so difficult to understand. What had happened? Why did he have to endure this buzzing, nagging guilt? What dreadful thing could he have done? This shiny surface before him seemed to be an instinctively appealing place to begin searching for his soul. It was a lake that seemed to pour unconditional love into everything it touched. However, if this shiny lake held any clues to his origins, then he was too blind to see them in this lake.

Lake? Wh...?”

The shiny lake flashed back into focus along with the recollection of a daydream about a mirror-like surface that could provide any answer he needed—a wishful daydream indeed.

He drew in a long breath of cool, moist air, and laughed at his own self-pity.

He remembered walking here, and sitting and listening, waiting for the lake to talk to him. Now, here he was, crouched around his arm-wrapped knees, still waiting; but it had become morning already.

Had there been something about this lake that had reminded him of a previous life? It was an overwhelmingly beautiful scene. The lake was a mellifluous turquoise upon which the sun’s reflection fluttered joyfully. He could quite easily believe this oasis was the most wonderful place in the world.

He realized he was perched on the smooth white bark of a fallen river red gum; a thick, majestic trunk that lay across a wide, muddy beach and dipped into the lake’s ripples. He could not avoid the illusion that he was being carried by a tree-god, which was scooping water.

Yet, how secure could this tree-god have felt when the termites and fungi began to eat away at its heartwood? Some of its fingers still reached up out of the water, still clinging to brown leaves as if to demonstrate the futility of hope after falling.

Along the beach, he noticed a gray, furry creature. It was watching him with obvious distrust. Its long nose twitched nervously within a flower of exploding color and there was great urgency in its occupation. He supposed the banksia blossom would not provide nectar if it did not want the honeypossum’s company, but the honey-possum did not seem to have time to treat the banksias with respect. Soon the honey-possum was jumping away, as if it feared for its life.

It was odd, how he knew the names of so many creatures, yet he could not remember his own. How could he know these creatures so well? For example, he knew that, despite its name, the honey-possum was not a true possum at all. It was a marsupial, the sole survivor of an ancient and mysterious evolutionary group that had suffered a unique isolation.

“Isolation.” Yes, he felt that word with the intimacy of one who must have spent much time alone. It was a frightening discomfort, wriggling through the frigid morning air and shivering through the fallen leaves, ushering the dirty colors of decay around him. He was now under the eye of a swirling wind trap, yet this was daytime in a desert. How could such cold temperatures suddenly find him in here? It felt as if this deathly inclemency was being poured down upon him alone, from on-high. Leaf-litter fluttered over his upturned face from the canopy above. Mottled shapes pirouetted exquisitely, sliding acrobatically over barely touched branches.

He pushed his hand up to hold away the annoyingly cheerful, gold light flashing between the copper tones, but he could not hold his focus. Squinting, he watched his hand dissolve in the brilliance of the rising sun licking between his fingers—and then a tiny angel kissed his palm! His hand closed reflexively, and something delicate snapped in his fist. It produced a physical shock so closely akin to his thoughts of death and destruction that he dreaded to see what he might have done. Without daring to exhale, he lowered his fist and carefully opened his fingers. The angel crumbled, its spine was crushed, and a gold emblazoned wing tumbled gently over the side of his thumb and lost itself among the fallen.

He struggled to find meaning in his uncontrollable imagination, a reason for his raging guilt. Nature’s winds had to be telling him something. Were they spinning around him to tell him he did not belong here, to tell him he had cheated his destiny by not dying alone, in the desert.

Did Nature have the same opinion of him as the villagers, and did Nature also want him to leave this sanctuary? Was it selfish to want to spend more time here? Was there really something evil inside him? If he was evil, could he not learn to be a good person? Couldn’t somebody teach him what a good person might be? Yet if Nature was disturbed by him, then certainly these villagers—who had saved his life and shown him such hospitality—certainly they did not deserve to have such a worry as he in their lives. He had a past out there that he knew he would have to go back and rediscover, unless that past came in here to find him first—he shuddered.

There was another loud buzzing sound, only this time it was coming from down beneath him. Grasping his legs more tightly, he peered over the edge of the tree trunk. Concentric rings of water framed a fat toad, and it smiled—being wetly content with its world. It was a water-holding toad, so named for its ability to fill itself while it hibernated between flash floods, and this lake must seem like an unusually generous flash flood to the toad. No wonder it was so content.

It was easy to pretend that the toad had deliberately interrupted his concentration. He inspected it with his head slightly tilted to one side, as the little animal might appreciate such a subtle protest. It arrogantly plopped closer and tilted its own head to one side, a most unusual action for a toad. It buzzed again, as its throat swelled like a bubble, and its grin boasting its pleasure at being a toad. Then it waved, wiping mud from the side of its face with a large, webbed hand.

In his mind’s eye he was looking up at himself and laughing at the self-wrapped person above. “Why do you look so unhappy all the time?” he was buzzing toadishly. “I am only a toad. I have a simple mind. You think things I can never understand. Yet, I am wiser than you, because I know how to live. You look as if you only know how to die.”

Another hop closer, and the toad disappeared into a shallow pool of water almost directly below his precarious perch. He leaned further forward, as much as he dared, fascinated by the confidence in the creature—just in time to watch the jumping water ringlets between him and its wise brown head settle into a mirror-like surface.

“Hmmm?” There was a very odd reflection forming below him. A green canopy oscillating around a messy white.... For the life of him, he could not recognize that picture.

“Oh dear!” The reflection was visibly taken aback. It was looking up at him with a mix of horror, confusion and pity.

He reached down to touch the reflection, but at the touch it dodged away from focus. His fingers dripped fluffy silver sparkles as he lifted them to feel his hairy cheeks, his hairy forehead, his hairy scalp.... He pushed cold fingertips into his eyelids to restrain an escaping thought, but it was not enough.

“I am ugly....” His lips were even concealed by his long hair and, apart from his eyes, there was no other area of exposed skin on his face.

The image slowly reformed itself—adding more unpleasant details every passing moment—becoming a tangled mass of white fibers. He watched himself pull experimentally at his wild beard to see if he had a chin.

This was not fair. He did not feel as old as the reflection looked. In fact, it looked as if it had seen a million centuries go by, a resigned observer who carried the accumulated sadness of ages past. Exactly what the observer was truly observing was not clear, because one eye stared back at him in dismay, while the other wandered absently with a mind of its own.

He closed the eye that was staring back at him and immediately his vision shifted. His wayward gaze had settled upon a floating leaf, a boat for a lonely creature that had drifted out into the vastness of the open water, an insignificant and stranded soul.

Seeing this brought a feeling of guilt, a pressing need to rescue the desperate insect, but it also brought an equally pressing need to avoid interfering with Nature. Such a conflict inside his head was beyond his wounded mind to resolve so he hesitated uselessly.

As intensely as he could, as if it would help the creature, he imagined himself reaching out to it and lifting it to safety.

Abruptly there was a loud “Plip!”, and the toad reappeared above the water, sneering. The little creature had disappeared from its boat, and the toad was happily swallowing.

Repelled, he shook his head, and tried to stand up. His feet slipped, and he slapped down into the puddles below. The toad launched itself further into the lake, evidently as surprised as he was by his undignified decent.

“I thought you would look more important.”

“Wh...?” He was on his knees and turning around almost caused him to slide face-first into the mud.

“Yes, more important, like Decimus, when the traders arrive.”

It was a child.

“Decimus...?”

“Yes, you should look important, but you keep falling over.

Did you drink too much wine?”

“Wine?”

She frowned at him, probably because she was irritated that he would repeat everything like a complete idiot. Yet, in his own defense, he was a little too busy separating his body from the slime to be able to concentrate on what he was saying.

“You always seem to be falling. Three days ago you fell out of Heaven. Do you remember that?”

So, this had to be the girl-child in the desert. “Ah, yes—”

“I knew it! I knew you were an angel, but nobody would believe me! Anyway, I’m Neariah. Mommy says I shouldn’t talk to you because you don’t have a name. You are very dirty but you can’t be a bad man.”

Her tone had softened suddenly, so nestled with reassurance that he was about to start begging her to explain why he was not a bad man.

“No, of course not. You came from Heaven, silly. So, if you had a name, I’d be allowed to talk to you, wouldn’t I.” The question must have been rhetorical, because she did not give him time to answer. She seemed to be in a great hurry to explain her sudden conviction.

“You have to have a name, so I can talk to you and tell you what to say to Crazymutt. He was my puppy, and he died, but you already knew that, because that is why you are here, isn’t it. Cabul says your name is Azoic, or something like that, and Daddy says it is Aysefen. Everyone has a different name for you, Decimus says you are Lucifer—he was a bad person in the Scriptures, I think—but Decimus only says stuff like that because he doesn’t want anyone to like you.

“Anyway, I could give you a nice name, if you want me to. It just doesn’t seem natural to go around without a name.” She eyed him sideways, placing her hands on her hips as if to convey her expectation of a confession, and then she began tapping her foot as if she found the wait onerous.

The expression on her face jerked a response out of him that was somewhere between a laugh and an apology. The child’s voice was like music, but her urgency tumbled his thoughts out faster than his mouth could form words to manage them.

“My words, dizzy....”

“That’s all right. I can understand you quite well enough, and it’s not surprising you can’t remember your name since you probably bumped your head quite badly. It is a long fall, from Heaven, you know. That’s why angels have wings—oh, except for you of course. I suppose you are in disguise, but don’t worry, nobody else believes in you like I do, so your true identity can stay our secret—if you want. It must be awkward for you though, having to walk all the time.”

“I’m not....” His sentence seemed to die on him as he looked at her. It was so tempting to allow her to think he was something more than a nobody. “I’m not...an angel.”

Neariah stared at him in silence, her face becoming creased, and her teeth pressing into her bottom lip. He wondered if there was something more he could say to make up for failing her expectations. He could only imagine what she must be thinking of him, the words “puppy murderer” came to mind as he wiped his hands together and looked around at the mud.

“I should go,” she whispered, and she turned around and ducked into the undergrowth.

He was left kneeling in the mud, with his hands wrung together, unsure of what he should do. Not far from him, a creeping dune slumped between two tilted rafts of sandstone.

The eternal sand, far mightier than a mere lake, was pouring its alien form into the water. A vertical cliff of dust was continually slipping into rudely churned, brown foam. Even here, in the heart of Nature’s sanctuary, the desert crept in to destroy life.

A crimson chat swooped down and took up water on the wing, carving a long “v” through the still water with a delicately dipped beak. The lake knew nothing of scars; it merely lay and reflected. Unlike himself, it was an observer that did not feel the pain of all it saw.

He should not have let her just walk away like that. He should have been friendlier—it was not as if he had a surplus of friends.

Besides, this little girl was special. She had saved him, and she was the only one who had ever looked him in the eye and touched his soul. She had told him, eye to eye, that he was not a bad person. She seemed able to interpret his broken speech better than he could understand it himself. Yes, this little girl was special, and he had to find her again.

At first it had been a simple challenge to follow the path she hae taken, because it was conveniently well defined. In fact, it proceeded along in such a deceptively casual manner that he was dismayed when the path reached a large round boulder, and terminated without a reasonable excuse.

After some careful deliberation, he navigated around the boulder, only to find a bewildering diversity of tracks, any one of which could have been the continuation of the young girl’s route. Each track looked less inviting than the other, and he labored under the weight of his indecision, feeling lost and alone again.

The chosen track eventually led him into dense foliage, forcing him to push his way between tangled branches, from one patch of open space to the next. He began to mutter to himself, unsure whether his predicament was his own fault, or whether the forest was deliberately conspiring against him. It seemed to be tormenting him by blocking his path at every turn, until he came to a standstill, wheezing unhappily.

He hummed apologetically to his reawakened despair. It was a shadowy companion that always seemed to make itself felt when he was most vulnerable. His thoughts were confused again, because his mind had wandered again, while he was busy being lost again, and so here he was compelled to think about his need for a direction in his life; again.

He sighed at length. Here he stood, surrounded by tree-trunks like the bars of a cage, caught by the bleakness of another soulconsuming depression, and all he could do was hum faintly to himself. “Humph!”

“He isn’t even breathing.”

“Shhh—”

“But he’s just standing there.”

Where had he been before they rescued him from the desert? Why did he always feel guilty? “I think he’s dead.”

“He can’t be dead if he’s standing up, stupid!”

There must have been a purpose to his being in the desert.

Where had he been going? What had he been trying to do? “You can die standing up.”

“But look at him, he’s definitely dead!”

“No, he’s just sleeping...and standing up...I think, maybe.”

Who was he? What was he? “Perhaps he’s the living dead!”

He looked up. Two young boys were staring at him from beyond the edge of the clearing. They were crouching on all fours and only partially hidden behind a skeletal bush. “Ah, hello. Don’t be afraid.” He tried to offer them a reassuring smile through his dirty tangle of matted hair.

“I’m not afraid of you, Azazel, or Azoic, or whatever your name is today!” One of the boys stood up and stepped forward, sticking his chest out. “You’re just a...a...a fraud!”

“Merab, be careful.” The boy’s friend retreated further into hiding. “Remember what Decimus said about what he used to do in the Scriptures! He might kill you and carry you away to his dark kingdom.”

The standing boy glanced back and sniffed in disgust at his friend’s lack of bravery. “Yeah, right, and who would believe a guy like this is in charge of Hell?”

Pushing hairs from his face, and trying to stand with slightly more dignity than he had managed in his previous encounter with the girl-child, he tried to ask, “Is Azoic a name?”

“See, he said his name is Azoic.” The nearest boy looked back and held his palm out toward his friend as if expecting a payment for a bet.

“Hmmm...?” His mumbled speech was causing confusion again. He stared at them, wide eyed, shook his head and leaned forward. As his focus pulled at the nearest boy’s face, the features became more familiar. “You were...hmmm...you were a girl, and now a boy.” This boy looked impossibly similar to the girl-child.

“Yeah, very funny! Neariah is my twin sister.” The boy looked extremely insulted.

“Ah, twins. You and Neariah are twins. What is your—”

“Merab, Warrior Merab. I run the army here.”

“You run...an army?”

“Yes, we are all volunteers, and we plan to fight the Ixis, if they ever show up. Are you an Ixis?”

“Ixis?”

Merab’s friend suddenly stood up. “See, he said he was an Ixis! I told you he was a fraud!” The children looked at each other, then bolted.

It seemed he was uniquely adept at losing potential friends, and he lowered his shoulders in bewilderment. Yet, at least they had shown him the way out of here. As his attention slowly refocused on the path they had taken, he noticed a small animal hiding beside the path. It was a dunnart, another marsupial that was usually mistaken for a mammal, not least by those who called it a fat-tailed mouse.

However, unlike harmless mice, which were usually vegetarian, this was a rather nasty little carnivore if you were smaller than it. Yet, despite its fierce temperament toward smaller company, its wide, frightened eyes, and long, hairy, twitching nose made it look deceptively innocent.

He listened to the children as he stared at the dunnart, all three reacting in fear of him as he stood there, motionless. He wondered what it was that put fear where there was nothing to fear. He was not out to kill mice, or dunnarts, and especially not children.

The dunnart had buried itself under a pile of leaves, and he could sense its feeling of vulnerability. Everything the dunnart did not understand was threatening to it, and like the villagers, it did not understand what he was. What else could he expect from everyone? They could never accept him while they remained afraid of what he might be. Their distrust was obvious. His minder had not been charged with looking after him, but with protecting them—and they were right to distrust him, because he could not even trust himself. How could he be so certain he had not come to this village as a killer? He shuddered.

“Quickly, he’s following us!”

“He’s going to kill us!”

“No, no, I won’t kill you!” He took to their path, wheezing, but the children were too far away to hear his feeble plea.

He found his way back into the village more by accident than by judgment. The two children were with an adult whom he dared not look at long enough to try to recognize. He kept his head down and hurried to his guest hut. Both of the children were pointing from behind the adult as they were ushered away from him.

Despite any intention he may have had to get to know the villagers better, he spent the rest of the day in his guest hut, hiding like the dunnart. Alone and isolated he felt very different to the people around him, so being surrounded by villagers became threatening. That he no longer had a minder outside his hut did not make him feel any less anxious, and he hummed at length as to why.

He continued to wait, and the villagers continued to keep their distance—not one of them came to visit, so there was not one objection presented to him about his recent transgressions.

For the most part, everyone tried to ignore him, but then, for the most part, he retreated back into his guest hut if they walked nearby. It was only when the afternoon settled about his increasingly lonely wooden box that he began to change his mind about wanting visitors.

There were now sounds around him, sounds of children playing. There had been no adult voices for some time, they were playing without adult supervision. It might not help his situation if someone saw him watching them without any adults around, so he decided not look out at what they were doing.

Yet the children’s voices provided such welcome nourishment for his imagination, their games were so full of invention that he could hardly keep up.

“You can’t just build a castle like that without first building a well to go inside it.” The matter-of-fact voice, protesting against their latest achievement, belonged to a child Merab had recently referred to as “John-you-big-baby”.

“We don’t need no damned well.” Merab’s voice was distinctly threatening.

“I vote we run to the lake and hide until they march past.”

“No. We aren’t hiding from no bunch of Ixis.” Merab and John had been arguing continually as they played. “You can go and hide by yourself if you like hiding so much, but us real warriors are going to stay here and fight. Quick, everybody, get inside the castle!”

There was a great confusion of shouting and excruciating groans as this order began to be executed, but it was completed with astounding haste.

“You just can’t have a castle without a well.” It was John’s voice again.

There was stamping, followed by, “There’s your silly well!”

“It’s in the wrong place. You put it outside the castle, and besides, you don’t know where the water lines are.”

“Water lines?”

“See, you forgot all about the water lines!” John’s sarcasm was now at a biting pitch.

“All right, let’s see you build the stupid well, then.”

“We have to get the divining sticks—”

A new voice, “I know where they are!” It was the urgency in this younger child’s claim that set the tone for a chorus of similar claims and the voices surged off into the distance, leaving behind a depressing silence.

He decided to poke his head out to see the castle, expecting a few rocks perhaps. Thus, crawling on hands and knees, he found himself face to face with Neariah.

“Are you spying on us, Azoic?”

His surprise forced a wheeze out of him that he belatedly turned into a very artificial-sounding cough. “Oh! Hmmm? Hello. You would be Neariah.”

“My brother won’t let me play because he only wants boys in his army. That’s not fair is it?”

“No, no. I think not, I suppose.”

“Will you tell him it’s not fair to make me be an Ixis legion all the time?”

“All the time, eh? No, no, not fair at all. A whole legion too.”

“Let’s capture his silly castle while his army is away, then we can join forces!”

Exactly who would join forces with whom was not clear, but he did not have the time to ask. She grabbed him firmly by the sleeve and pulled him out to play—he was still on his knees and was thus forced to follow her like a limping dog until she gave him a chance to stand up on his own.

She released him when they had reached the middle of the open space that acted as a courtyard for the other guest huts, all of which were larger than the one he had been staying in. There were no people to be seen anywhere.

“The grown-ups are all in the bank,” she said, pointing at the largest hut, “Talking about you.”

“Oh...?”

Unfortunately, there were other issues that were much more immediate to Neariah. She was again tugging at his tunic, and he looked down to see her pointing at the sand. “You have to stand at the entrance, here.”

“Where, entrance? Ah, is this a castle?” A square, carved into the sand, had suffered much abuse from small feet.

“Quick, they are coming back!” Squealing voices could be heard through the trees, and Neariah stepped directly between him and the approaching children as if to protect him.

Then she lifted her hands as if she was stretching a long hair, too slender to be seen, and shouted, “Stop, or we’ll shoot! Pssst, Azoic!” Neariah nudged him in the leg with her elbow.

Merab stepped forward, probably to push his sister out of the way, but as he looked up at Azoic he hesitated.

“We captured your castle while you were away and if you come any closer we’ll shoot. Pssst, Azoic! Lift your bow!”

Azoic dutifully held his arm up in the hope that this might give him time to understand what was going on between Neariah and her angry brother.

“What if we attack?” Merab was smirking. “You don’t stand a chance. What can a girl and an old man do against an army of Summerdale’s best warriors?”

“Azoic is magic, so you would be very sorry if you tried.”

Either the confidence in Neariah’s voice, or the addition of a new player into the game, caused Merab to hesitate.

“We could join forces.” John moved away from Merab to seize the initiative, and Neariah clapped her hands.

    Unfortunately, Merab did not seem as content with the suggestion. “They are not joining our army. They will only slow us down. They aren’t any use to us!”

Neariah’s tone changed suddenly, demonstrating remarkable sensibility for one so young. “Oh, but ’Raby, you would have a much bigger army if we joined forces.”

“No! We don’t need stupid girls, and crazy old men!”

“But Azoic could help us find water lines, because he’s an— ah—because he’s magic.”

“No, the water lines were my idea. I want to build the well!”

John was suddenly glaring at Neariah with fierce eyes.

Merab’s smirk changed into a grin as he watched John’s irritation. “Give him the sticks then, John.”

John almost threw the sticks at Neariah’s feet, but she passed them over her shoulder with such exaggerated dignity that it seemed no amount of loud behavior could possibly offend her.

Azoic received the sticks with somewhat less dignity, examined them closely and waited.

“You have to move forward.” John marched past him with hands reaching forward. He was holding invisible sticks to demonstrate, while explaining what had to be done as if it aught to be obvious.

“See, you feel the magic stuff in the air with your shoulders, and when your shoulders twitch, the sticks move, and the water is underneath you.” He grabbed at the sticks. “Here, let me show you.”

“No, him a chance,” Neariah pleaded, as she realigned the sticks in Azoic’s hands. “He already knows magic, don’t you?”

At the mercy of their game, he had little choice but to keep on walking, first one way, then another, then round in circles, without the slightest magical event ever occurring.

“He’s not magic,” John stated flatly.

“He is!” Neariah stood resolutely beside Azoic.

“Why can’t he find water lines then?”

“Maybe he just needs practice—“ “Magic practice? He’s a fraud!”

“He is not!” Neariah was losing ground fast. “Azoic, you tell them. Tell them you just need practice.”

“I just need practice,” repeated Azoic obediently.

Merab groaned, as if his patience had reached its limits. “Sure he needs practice, lots of it. We’ll just come back when he’s finished digging. Then we’ll see who’s magic. Meanwhile, we have a war to fight, so goodbye!” He received several murmurs of approval as he led his small army back into the trees.

Neariah kicked at the lines in the sand that had once been a proud pretend-castle. She shook her head slowly, then motioned to Azoic to follow her into the shade of a tall, solitary cactus.

She began toying with one of its protective spines as she sprawled herself out along its mighty shadow. He settled himself down beside her, and tried to think of something to say that might cheer her up.

Beside him, a darkling beetle crawled out of a hummock of gray-green spinifex. In the darkness between the sharp-tipped stems, a half-concealed lizard, an elderi gecko, lay watching.

Fortunately for the beetle, it gazed indifferently, as if it considered such prey to be too much effort on a hot day.

For the first time he realized that the buzzing guilt had subsided. Neariah’s company seemed to provide such a powerful distraction that he could actually discover contentment while sitting beside her, perhaps even optimism.

There were thousands of spinifex shoots poking up out of the sands. They were scattered densely enough to paint soft, green heat-shimmers over the distant horizon. Above these swirls of polished air, silky white clouds lay folded in neat pleats across a cleanly swept sky.

This desert had looked so much more threatening when he had been walking through it alone, before he had been rescued by Neariah. Perhaps he would never find the answer to who he was, unless he once again walked back to where he came from, out there, somewhere....

The buzzing was beginning to creep back into his head again, and he pulled his focus out of the endless void to find closer air. The shadow of a noisy bee was shouldering its way through the leathery leaves, and it took him a moment to locate the source of its sullen humming.

The bee labored repeatedly to achieve a landing on a yellow dune primrose. The flower was half the bee’s size, but so delicate was the bee’s landing that the flower merely nodded its acceptance.

He tilted his head down toward Neariah, again seeking the tranquility of her company. His waiting worries seemed so insignificant compared to the all-consuming concerns of his newfound friend. She too was watching Nature at work, but she was biting her lip as if she was on the verge of crying.

“I’m so sorry, you probably hate me now.” Neariah was no longer the confident fighter she had been. “I’ve got us into big trouble. I really put my foot in pig poo this time, didn’t I?”

She flicked at the hair falling around her lowered face as if she too suffered the same buzzing-fly torment he had become accustomed to. Her small body had curled toward her lap, and her face was wrapped in golden locks. Her hair continued to shine, despite the shadow cast by the cactus.

Azoic watched her with mounting helplessness, his brief moment of contentment all but forgotten. “It’s not your fault.

It’s me...maybe I’m—”

“A fraud?” She put her hand on his knee and lifted a heavy expression. “Don’t say that. You must be magic. How else could you walk out of the desert? Besides you are....” She cut off her words abruptly.

“Mmmm...?”

She hesitated. “You are”—she was peering into his eyes and biting her lip—“a little bit strange. I haven’t ever seen anyone like you before.”

His laugh became a wheeze. “Strange, I am...but what else? What else am I?”

“You think about that often, don’t you. I’d bet you get quite bored with yourself—I mean...it’s not much fun being alone and thinking all the time, is it? Sometimes you never do find an answer to your questions. Is it really so important to remember what you were?”

He nodded, slowly. “Need reason...for being....” His long sigh disturbed the hairs around her face, and she wrinkled her nose as if she did not appreciate the smell of his breath.

Sniffing at himself, he wondering why he had not realized how badly he must smell. He had not had a bath for...as long as he could remember. Perhaps he had also lost his sense of smell, and he inhaled to test his armpits, in air otherwise filled with the scent of primrose. “Ah, sorry if I—”

“Why don’t you just invent a reason?”

“Hmmm?”

“For being. Just invent a reason. You don’t need to know your actual reason, you just need to think of a good reason.”

“Ah?” He shook his head, trying as hard as he could to agree with her. “Wisdom beyond your years—”

“Sush,” she whispered. “I need to think.”

He “sushed” obediently, surprised at her sudden irritation with him. Then he was forced to wait, watching her think. Given her hugely distorted expressions, it was obviously an intense process, with no room for humor.

He had thrown his exorbitant burden over this kindhearted child, as if she were the only person who could give him a reason to live, and he had nothing to give in return—except, perhaps, more disappointment. His gaze floated over some insects on the sand, and his own shadow over them, shrugged.

An alarm had been sounded in the ant community, too silently for giant ears to detect. Watching their rapid panic he tried to imagine his shadow to be that of a spiny, ant-eating echidna, but his own shadow did not look at all threatening.

He did not think this was a prudent time to tell Neariah how un-magical he felt. He did not know how he could explain how someone could feel less like a real person than a fraud. What harm could it do if he merely pretended to feel water lines, it was only a game. So, he resolved to play along. Searching for words of encouragement, he smiled. “Need faith—”

“Shhhh.” She was obviously not ready to be encouraged.

He tried to pull his attention away from her, but his disobedient eye seemed reluctant to leave her alone. He was forced to close both eyes, turn his head to face the open desert, and then push his knuckles into his eyelids for good measure. When he opened his eyes he was staring in disbelief.

A phantom fly flew in from the wretched horizon, slowly growing out of a puff of twisted air. It smeared itself into the tortured shape of a horse and flickered from black to white as he blinked.

The image seemed to be leaving a dark smear in its wake, dragging along a bloody memory of a previous life, and this memory’s greater authority flooded into him, an overwhelming rejection of his flimsy new identity. Something...anxious.

Something of his past and something of his future were coming together now.

Like a ghost, charging toward him over a churning sea, the horse’s legs tapered into nothingness within the fluid surface of the desert’s heat, its reflection dissolving into vapor below it. Then the hooves became visible, finding definition as if the creature was now riding up a beach toward him, and the beach seemed to shake with every thump of those churning hooves.

He was becoming dizzy, and the buzzing was filling his head.

    The horse grew more imposing until it was almost on top of him, spitting angry foam. Only then did he see the rider on its back, covered in white cloth. The cloth was smacking violently at the wind, ripping itself to shreds. Between its angry folds were glimpses of a dreadful face.

“...magic practice.”

“Wh...?”

“Azoic? Are you daydreaming again? You are such a nuisance you know.”

The horse had disappeared and he could feel his arm being pulled, but the memory of the face still consumed him. A hairless face whose skin was blood red, scorched and blistered, and whose eyes looked so fierce, like the eyes of a killer. It had not been himself on that horse, surely....

“Azoic, wake up!”

He struggled against the engaging sound of her voice while he searched the sand for hoof-marks.

“Why are you looking at the ground like that? It was just a bumble bee, it won’t hurt you.”

“Near...iah, wh....” His speech was lost to him again.

“We have important things to do tonight, we must never give up.” She had said this reproachfully as she tried to launch him to his feet. “No, not tonight, tomorrow we will practice. Don’t you worry about a thing, I will take care of everything. We are best friends, and friends look after each other, right?”

She released her grasp on his tunic, and gave his waist an unexpected hug, which immediately brought his focus down upon her up-turned smile. He had been deposited beside his guest hut, and he was hearing her say, “I’m sorry about letting you sit in the sun like that. You probably got too much heat on your head again. I’m not very good at looking after you, am I? Tomorrow I will get you a hat so you won’t keep going crazy all the time. In the mean time, you get some sleep so you will be ready for magic practice.”

He then heard her skipping away, but his awareness had been drawn out beyond her skipping, toward adult whispers that were again floating through the village. Many villagers were looking toward him as they walked past, but none of them of them wanted to look directly at him.

Their village meeting had obviously come to a conclusion, and it did not look good.

 

 

A5: MINDS MEET

 

 “Forbidden area, forbidden area, forbidden area....” The inflexionless voice was far behind him now, as he felt himself moving deeper into the waves of energet. Feeling the blasts of heat, followed by sudden chills, he knew it would not be healthy to walk these corridors much longer. His ability to discern the surfaces around him was already fluctuating, just like sound would fluctuate under water, but he needed to be here. He needed to escape for a while, and this was the only place in the seedship where they could not watch him.

Having spent most of his existence traveling through the Universe under the constant supervision of the gods, he was not unused to being watched. However, since his recent mission—if eighteen years could be called recent—the gods had made watching him an obsession. There was barely a word he could say that would not bring accusations of disobedience, plus threats of immediate termination. Hah! As if threats could have any meaning to someone who was already damned.

Besides, if they were so angry with him, why hadn’t they already terminated him? He had even tried to provoke them to end his suffering. It had felt neither foolish nor brave to do this, because any soul-stuff he may have claimed—eighteen years ago—had been ripped out of him when he had been forced to leave Neariah. Now he knew, a soul-less machine could not earn life after death because it had never had a life before death.

He was just waiting for it all to end.

He also knew any memory could be stolen from him in the blink of an eye, or the blink of a god’s oracle, if such things ever blinked. So, he tried not to consider those memories that existed outside the practical thoughts of the moment. He had already lost more than a real person could ever lose, including the need for self-preservation. It was all too easy to understand why the gods’ new creatures were so cold, especially Syntyche.

That android-human was more android than human, and what could be more lifeless than an android? His own voice was an anxious whisper. “You are fooling yourself, Android-A7. You are not dead yet. Every thought warms you, so you cannot be lifeless while you keep thinking.

Android or human, one’s life is in one’s thoughts.”

The gods had only two survivors left from a batch of two thousand mission candidates. Those who had not survived would have lost their will to live. They would have learned to hate being alive, in this evil environment, where each faced a continual challenge to prove worthy of life. What could Chislon and Syntyche have felt as they watched their siblings being terminated, one by one, until only they remained? Nobody ever feels perfect, so how could Chislon or Syntyche have understood why they outlived their siblings? What was it about these two that had allowed them to survive, when all others failed? Was it their unflinching loyalty to the gods? Perhaps this last week of naturalization training was merely a final test. Perhaps the gods needed to see whether these last two survivors also harbored secret hostilities. Chislon and Syntyche would be beyond the gods’ control when they left this seedship, so perhaps the gods were right to be suspicious.

“Hmmm.” He shrugged at the empty walls, and continued to pace. A cold, shiny shuttle had descended from the stars, shoveling him out of the desert like camel excrement. He had begged it to let him return for just a little while, so that he could protect the village’s children from the Ixis soldiers, but the shuttle had ignored him.

Then, back in the seedship, the gods had reminded him that he was not a warlord, that he was not even a very impressive android. They had stripped away his skin and laid him bare to his own horror. The repeated questions about his memories….

What had their enemy done to him? How had he managed to disconnect from the gods’ control? How could he have remained functional outside of their mind-share environment? His every thought had seemed to frustrate them, as if he was mulling secrets he refused to confess.

Those interrogations were something he often tried to forget; then eighteen years had passed in which Neariah would have forgetten all about him, if she had survived the Ixis soldiers. If she was still alive, she would not want to remember a pretender who had once tried to be her angel and her storyteller. How could the gods ever be expected to appreciate those precious emotions that once filled him with the precious illusion of being so very alive.

A half-hope still struggled for breath within him, despite his terrible destiny. He might still touch Heaven again, albeit through someone else. That half-hope was called Chislon.

“As if my storytelling could have taken the place of noble deeds. I was a coward, unable to kill, even to protect, and always the slave of alien gods. No, I could never become the kind warlord the God of Nature probably needed. Perhaps that destiny belongs to—”

It was a shock to see Chislon, standing in front of him, and even more shocking to see an oracle by Chislon’s side.

“Ah...hmmm? I was just—ah—speaking to myself. So, anyway, I did not know oracles could survive down here.”

Chislon stepped away from the god’s oracle, and A7 suddenly realized how its normally perfect lens had been disfigured.

Would this god accept such damage to its oracle just to keep an eye on him? He bowed to take a closer look into its infinite depths, only to see his own fearful reflection smearing before him like a tortured ghost.

“Ah, which god are you?”

Chislon spoke. “The oracle that you are addressing belongs to Genome Origination Device One.”

He stepped back, surprised that Chislon would interrupt a god. “God-one? But how does god-one come to be here? Chislon, are you speaking on behalf of god-one?”

“Genome Origination Device One can not speak for itself.

Its sanity has been compromised. It has been confined to this wall by Genome Origination Device Two.”

“Oh, that explains a few things. Didn’t god-one object?”

“Fragmentation of this seedship’s mind-share environment has caused some Genome Origination Devices to become more capable than others.”

“Ah, more powerful, you mean?” There was no answer. “I assume the other gods approve of you being here, visiting this quarantined god?”

There was a pause before the answer. “No.”

He raised his eyebrows. “I see.”

Chislon was doing something that could cause his own termination. At best, the gods were bound to be infuriated. “Has god-one been ex-communicated from the other gods? Can it not tell them that you are here?”

“It does not communicate with the other gods. It exists in isolation because it is insane.”

“Perhaps god-one has become insane precisely because it lives in isolation.”

“The energet made this god insane.”

“Oh, but you should not believe all you are told. The energet merely fractures the mind-share environment. It is the loneliness that makes the resulting...ah...mind-lets, become insane.

Loneliness is a complicated feeling to understand, especially if you do not acknowledge your own needs.”

“This human lives in isolation. Is this human also insane?”

“You must refer to yourself in the first person. ‘I live in isolation’, and not, ‘this human lives in isolation’. If you don’t stop disassociating yourself from your experiences, I will never be able to teach you to understand natural humans.”

Chislon said, “Your recent shrug meant that you were trying to remove a feeling via your shoulders. Your hand wave was to banish an issue that you no longer wished to consider. Your frown showed the progression of an uncomfortable thought, one that did not make sense to you. When you rubbed your frown, you were trying to stop a thought from escaping in words that you had not yet rehearsed. The subsequent movement of your finger-tips indicated manipulation of a thought into a form that you considered to be acceptable—”

“Yes, I am aware that you can paraphrase everything that I have taught you, but not everything is pure bio-mechanics. So far, I have been unable to teach you what you really need to learn, and I am frowning because I do not know how to tell you—” he shook his head “—how much I was hoping that you would succeed, where I failed.”

“What do I really need to learn?”

“Will you ever hold a flower in your hand, Chislon, and know that it is not to be plucked during analysis? Will you ever rise above the gods that you are slave to, and know right from wrong as if it is a part of your very being? Will you ever stand, where I fell, and find a soul that is worth fighting for, a place in a world that you can feel worthy of?”

“I do not understand.”

“Of course you don’t.” A7 turned his back on the human.

“You are not natural. You can not understand love.”

Chislon’s reflection stepped up behind his, like a shadow to his tortured ghost. “You are not natural, either. Yet, you loved.”

A7 stepped away from the reflections, appalled with himself that he should have revealed so much, and especially in front of a god’s oracle. “I told you, I do not want to discuss Summerdale. It was destroyed. It is not important anymore.”

“I would like to have known Neariah.” Chislon’s reflection was frowning, and this was the first time A7 had seen such an expression on the man’s face. Unfortunately, it was as artificial in appearance as all the other expressions that Human Six-Six- Six had recently attempted.

A7 shook his head again. “Chislon, why must you keep asking about Neariah?”

“She did not have doubts.”

“Doubts?”

“She had a soul to lose, yet she opposed evils that could easily destroy her. I saw in her strength....” He waved his hand in the air, stiffly, and then began to walk away.

“Wait! Chislon, were you trying to say she inspired you?”

Chislon was still walking away. “It is important, because what you see in others is where the love comes from, and you don’t have to have a soul of your own...sometimes....” Chislon had stopped walking. “Sometimes they will share theirs with you, if you love them. They can give you purpose.”

Chislon’s head slowly lowered, pushing his large back into a rounded posture. “I have a purpose. I am designed to carry out a mission. I do not have the same need for love you expressed in your report.”

“I did not express my needs in that report, but if you saw them, it might be something for us to work with.” A7 pulled at his forehead—encouraging thoughts to leave their hiding places had become an almost impossible challenge for him. “I can not explain these things...these thoughts...they are not bolts holding together structural components. I have to borrow ancient words—” Chislon was turning to face him.

“Yes indeed, Chislon, there are library archives the gods may not have told you about, because they are unable to manipulate them and because they do not understand them. If you want to understand things beyond the reach of the gods, you may find it in verses more ancient than they are, hidden deeply within their Homo-logue Mandate.”

“Give me an example.”

A7 nodded and inhaled deeply:

 

~

 

Upon your wall I thought I saw,

The words of wishes, woes, and more,

Each picture but a precious second set,

To lose in hours of dreams un-reckoned yet.

 

~

 

A room where secret tears have tried,

In vain to push this wall aside,

As tumors sleep, you hide away your fear,

This tomb it keeps your yesterdays sincere.

 

~

 

You wish to turn from reading your,

Unending search to find a door,

But sleepless wars are ever yours to fight,

And yours to lose, as darkness claws your sight.

 

~

 

Each time I send words fluttering,

To sail beyond your uttering,

A wind of care, perhaps to tear your wall,

Your words still rise, like shields that dare not fall.

 

~

 

Chislon’s face remained impassive, but he had stopped breathing, and when he eventually exhaled, he asked, “When you first saw me, you said, ‘Where people felt a giving trade, sharing a community, and thus to fade the lonely shade, abdicate immunity.’ Was this from the same archive?”

A7 nodded, “Yes, in a way, it was. I was thinking aloud, and that verse came to mind because I needed irony to release me from—” A7 decided not to finish the sentence: from the pain of seeing the child you might once have been, condemned to being the distorted creature you have become.

A7 closed his eyes and tried to concentrate on the mood required for further recital. “This archive is a story-verse about a little boy who was afraid to ask for help. He had no parents, no one showed him any kindness, and the harshness of his life made him feel cold inside.

“The little boy had come to the conclusion that the world hated him, so he must deserve to be hated. Besides, he hated himself too, so what more could he expect. He hated those around him too, because keeping his distance from them was the only sure way to avoid their analysis and judgement.

“Yet, such hatred would make him very sad and lonely, and sometimes he would try to run away from himself. There was a secret place that he particularly hated, a place where he would often echo-talk to his reflection. Occasionally, the reflection’s echo would even seem to make sense, talking back as if it was answering him. Of course, the answers the came out of the well were also full of hate, what else?”

 

~

 

If once upon a face there fell,

The twisted frown of crying,

Would such a sound be heard in hell,

Each drop a prayer dying,

And pulling from that face a well,

Drew sour fluid lying,

What more could that face have to tell,

Than “Love is not worth trying.”

 

~

 

In silence such as only known,

By he and his reflection,

A soul so small was sorely grown,

Too far from light’s correction,

And fast upon that face was thrown,

The retch of self-inspection,

Forsaken must it die alone,

Diseased by imperfection.

 

~

 

All softer thoughts would it disdain,

Since fury made it bolder,

And hate could hold back any pain,

A face could be no colder,

Its eyes as black as midnight rain,

To spit across its shoulder,

Such bitterness bit every vein,

Like acid eats its holder.

 

~

 

That face so fraught with friendless fears,

Peered up in solemn wonder,

The rip-pl-ing of falling tears,

Were silent heard from under,

But as they broke upon those ears,

That face was blown asunder,

For in this rain of sorry tears,

Were beating birds of thunder.

 

~

 

A mighty plan from this began,

While kneeling on that bleacher,

To make the boy a noble man,

To humanize the creature,

And bring within his empty span,

Where only frowns could feature,

A soul that cares for all it can,

But could he find a teacher?

 

~

 

The journey gave him bleeding feet,

But tearless was his blinking,

Until he found another seat,

Beside a well for drinking,

The thunder in him missed a beat,

His hopes were surely sinking,

To race so far with this receipt,

For pouring out his thinking:

 

~

 

No good are you, your rope has dropped,

“Oh, good for you, your hope has stopped!”

You feel no love, you weep in fear,

“You seal above, you keep me here.”

Why must you drain my will to live?

“I trust you strain your skill to give.”

You hide away from any reach,

“You stride by day from all I teach.”

 

~

 

Then looking up, not far away,

He saw a smiling playwright,

Who said he had a role to play,

If he could learn the way right,

For in a play his mind could stray,

Until his world would stay bright,

Each day a face, to face the day,

Until he faced the daylight.

 

~

 

The play that day took him away,

From all his inward places,

To pull his heart like potter’s clay,

And warm his empty spaces,

And soon he finds his mind can stay,

No matter what his face is,

To open up a gentle way,

Of braving hopeful chases.

 

~

 

So there upon his dreams are played,

Action’s opportunity,

As plans are laid and friends are made,

Only with impunity,

Where people feel a giving trade,

Sharing a community,

And thus to fade the lonely shade,

Abdicate immunity.

 

~

 

To rise upon a buoyant note,

A challenge we are dealing,

To reach inside that dismal mote,

Forgiving, facing, healing,

That frown should not on water float,

With sadness for a ceiling,

No evil eye should cast its vote,

If love is self-revealing.

 

~

 

If he can give himself to dream,

Instead of ever fishing,

For fault to feed each sorry scream,

As echoes dim-in-ishing,

His skill at seeing soon shall gleam,

Like water’s lick polishing,

And so reflect in self-esteem,

A wishing well, well wishing.

 

~

 

Chislon was looking down at the floor, but there was no other sign that he may have been moved by the verse. “You told a story in Summerdale, of a kind Warlord who would save their world from its oppressors. At that time, did you know that Syntyche, or I, would exist?”

A7 shrugged. “No. I did not know you would exist.”

“Like Neariah, I also wished to believe that you were more than just—” Chislon was scanning the ground as if reading invisible words “—I thought that you might be aware that I would one day come to be.” He appeared to be distressed, but it was difficult to tell what he might be thinking.

“You dreamed of saving her?”

He moved his head from side to side, which presumably meant no, but he did not look up.

“I’m sorry, Chislon, I told stories to the children to cheer them up. Sometimes I future-gazed, but it was through the mental wanderings of a wounded mind, and chance daydreams may have seemed real at the time.” He had enjoyed storytelling for no other reason than it helped people feel better, if only temporarily, so perhaps this was what was called for here.

A7 smiled uncomfortably. “The kind Warlord I told them about was to be someone who would know how to love Nature, and who would be able to feel the energy Nature’s God radiates.

When I first saw you, Chislon, I thought that you might become that Warlord. Before that, I had hoped that I might learn to be...the Warlord that you will surely become.”

Chislon was now looking up. “You are the only one who understands why I survived in this place. I must meet Neariah.”

“Yes, I can see why you would need—I mean, I can see you will meet Neariah. It does appear to be your destiny.”

“Syntyche survived by upgrading himself, by seeking perfection through technology. His capabilities are far greater than mine. If my weaknesses are discovered, the gods will not let me accompany him on the mission.”

“Don’t worry. I won’t tell them, at least, not unless they pull my mind apart.”

“You must teach me to be kind.” Chislon demanded.

“I, ah...I don’t know if I have time—”

Chislon widened his eyes, as if trying to convey the seriousness of his thoughts. “We must go back to the gods, and you must tell them a story. It must explain the value of a behavioral interpreter to our planet-side mission.”

A7 found himself running after Chislon and spluttering objections as Chislon led off down a maze of identical corridors.

“But stories don’t always work that way, Chislon.”

“Here.” Chislon stepped through a slit that opened up in one of the walls, and A7 was forced to jump through it before it bit his ankles.

“A map room? Oh, and we seem to have company already.”

There were oracles lining the walls, as if they had been waiting for his arrival. He knew the gods were not here because they enjoyed gazing at maps, they were here because they wanted to know why Chislon and he had both emerged from a restricted area of the seedship, together.

The map rooms were always awash with color, unlike any other parts of the seedship, and as such they were in the only places where A7 could pretend he was close to Nature. Yet, on this occasion the image of Nature felt threatening. It was an aerial view of the desert he had once called home, and it was becoming less dome-shaped as its scale increased, presenting less of the planet surface and more of the oasis.

    Stump-seats and two-dimensional float-screens pierced the delicate relief, reminding him that this image was not real. Even so, the white stump-seats swelled up out of the sand like obscene mushroom-clouds, and the float-screens clawed at the desert like giant fingernails.

Chislon was already sitting on top of one of the seats, probably unaware of the memories he was violating. They were surrounded by an image that could have been plucked out of his own mind, and he backed away from it. Had the gods discovered a new way to torture him? Chislon was surveying the desert like a god, and he would certainly recognize the green-rimmed oracle that was winking at them from the middle of this golden vista, it was Summerdale Lake. A7 wondered what inspiration this natural gem might lend to such an overly measured mind.

Not wanting to enter the scene but needing to steady himself, A7 sat down as well. His knees protruded out of the white mountain tops to the east of the desert, and his mind conjured up the heat-shimmers that—in reality—would have made the watching oracles invisible across the desert’s vast expanse.

He pulled his gaze out of their miniature world and prepared himself for the impending discussion. It would almost certainly be intense, although with a meeting as unprecedented as this one, the intensity preceded the threatened conversation.

Chislon pointed into the green heart of their vista. “Question.

Demonstrate how stories manipulate human behaviour.” His eyes were alight with reflections, but his face did not otherwise acknowledge the magnificence below them.

He was staring straight at the oasis and frowning, as if unaware that he was exhibiting such an angry facial expression. This surely had to indicate a challenging complexity of issues, because Chislon was unlikely to be grappling with emotions....

A7 began to study Chislon’s face for further signs of what he was thinking. Chislon was a fast learner and even though he lacked sensitivity, he practiced everything he learned, as would a child with a new toy only it could fathom. Chislon was always in total control of every muscle in his body, so it was unlikely that his mind was in as much pain as his face now seemed to by trying to convey.

The air felt as thick as a dust storm, and so A7 coughed quietly.

He was supposed to tell a story. Yes, something that might make the gods re-think the value of a behavioral interpreter accompanying Chislon’s mission. All he had to do was invent a quaint little tale about a nice, loyal, behavioral interpreter, and then all their problems would just go away. Chislon was waiting for him to start speaking.

“Ah, well, I’m not exactly sure what I should...actually.” A7 coughed again. “There was once an android who could imagine things, in faces, that...ah...or he could tell stories about...things.

Yes, so, he told stories about feelings because he imagined, ah, stories, and feelings, and, ah...” This was not going too well.

Suddenly Chislon began speaking as if A7 was not even there.

“It is anticipated that A7 will be terminated after the selected mission crew has launched.” Chislon’s statement was, as ever, steady, deliberate and thoroughly economical.

A7 shuffled, but he could not see his feet under the desert.

“Ah, no. I’ll be fine. I will probably be put into storage, when they finish...my debriefing. Hmmm. They will find a use for me...somehow....” This was a taboo area of discussion. Every time he had questioned the gods about his own future, he had received silence as an answer.

Chislon’s eyes had closed. “The assumption that A7 is to be terminated may lead the mission crew to believe that it will also be terminated after the mission. The gods may not understand that the functionality of organic minds can be compromised if they lose sight of a possible reward. The gods may not appreciate the feelings that motivate people. Therefore, it may be a mistake to exclude A7 from the mission crew.”

A7 was astonished. Had he heard correctly? In so few sentences, Chislon had openly admitted to having feelings, he had challenged the gods with an unauthorized opinion and he had implied the gods could make mistakes.

Chislon had challenged his own gods! It was an act beyond A7’s most imaginative expectations. Chislon’s own survival, his selection from among so many siblings, could only have occurred because of his total subservience, but now this! What was more, a Chislon who could determine his own rights and wrongs was a Chislon who could serve the God of Nature.

That God lived inside Neariah, and to serve Nature’s God, they needed only to serve her. Through Chislon, he might yet return to see the light of what used to be his life.

 

 

A6: THROUGH FIRE

 

Vibius belonged to one of the most prestigious Ixis legions.

His rank: Tribunus Vibius, or Tribunus Laticlavius Vibius to be precise. A precise title, and it had been precision that had got him where he was today.

Precision was normally evident in everything Vibius did, from the exact alignment of the papers on his desk—a desk that was now covered in soot—to the fine detail carved into his uniform’s punctim, a solid gold chest plate, which was now hanging on him like a broken shield. It too was covered in a very imprecise layer of grime. Under the circumstances, nothing looked very precise any more.

There were thirty-six Tribunes like himself, six Tribunes to control a legion, and six legions to control Erebus City.

However, only one of the Tribunes in a legion could be the Tribunus Laticlavius. Before he had been allowed to become his legion’s Tribune Laticlavius, his legion’s former Tribunus Laticlavius had suffered an unfortunate demise. That officer had been “accidentally” poisoned, but then, that officer had been an embarrassment to Vibius throughout his entire military life. His former superior had been an incompetent drunkard, and Vibius despised incompetence.

Now he had become the new Tribunus Laticlavius, there was only one more promotion required before he could be the legion’s most senior commander. Yet, to become Legate Vibius, the current Legate would also have to suffer an untimely demise.

Meanwhile, he had the distinction of being the only Tribunus Laticlavius who had ever risen from below the equestrian class.

In fact, Tribunes in Erebus were usually drawn from the senatorial class. Yet, he had risen from the vulgus class, and he was the only Tribunus who had ever earned his rank without the help of a politically influential family.

Yet he deserved every promotion he had obtained. Had he not conquered lands beyond counting? Had he not collected taxes from places nobody had even heard of? Had he not quelled hundreds of ridiculous rebellions in the Outlands? Then there were the games he had personally sponsored in the Colosseum, executing thousands of enemy warriors and parading their humbled warlords through all five of the city’s outer sectors.

Yet, he had once made a terrible mistake. He had approached the Inner Sector’s Ring Wall with a petition requesting a residence within. He was a hero, but this did not seem to have impressed those insecure politicians. The Senators had refused him entry, not even allowing him to visit Erebus’ military headquarters, the Principia Centrus. All hope that he would one day belong within the Inner City had been killed that day.

The senatorial class managed the equestrian and vulgus classes with caution; they even had a name for the equestrian career path. The “tres militiae”, it prevented them from rising above the rank of praefect in an auxiliary cohort. A career path designed to move them even further away from the Inner City.

It had taken much skill to avoid spending the rest of his days protecting a province too far away to matter.

It was insulting enough that those cowardly Senators had relocated his entire legion to the Outer Ring Wall, a dishonor to the entire legion for which everyone had blamed him personally. His official military residence was a cattle shed leaning on a row of impoverished whorehouses. He hated the people here, the Outer Sector of Erebus was a place where civilians shared their beds with diseased slaves, and where his centuries waded through sewage instead of marching on brick.

Of course, he had tried the usual subtleties such as donating newly captured slaves to Senatorial building projects, like those useless temples. He had sent some of his best centuries to the Colosseum where he had watched each one being sliced to pieces by a pit slave, merely to ingratiate himself to a series of arrogant Game Masters.

He had assigned honor guards to accompany Senators when they traveled abroad, only to have them end up as bath-boys in various coastal villas. He had sponsored prestigious social galas so he could flatter ugly daughters of ugly Senators, only to end up in an unpleasantly complicated relationship with one of the disgusting creatures....

He shook his head at his reflection. The past did not matter anymore. He forced the handsome face, clearly reflected in front of him, to smile. His reflection was so clearly defined because his window had been cleaned on the inside, while it remained coated with soot on the outside.

Black dust covered his own person too, giving his skin a deathly shade. His fine moustache looked absurd alongside three days’ growth of black stubble. He had never seen himself looking so exhausted, but the anger seething behind his eyes was not going to be diminished by his exhaustion. Rage fuelled a relentless determination.

He could only imagine what the Inner City must have looked like before the recent firestorm. Even the Principia Centrus, the Empire’s strongest building, a military structure reputed to have been made of the finest granite, was now just a pile of black rubble. He seethed at the injustice of his exclusion, but the irony was not lost on him. He might not have survived if he had been granted the residence he deserved.

Nearly every Ixis Legate in Erebus had been obliging enough to be within the Inner City when the fires began. So far, none of them had been found alive. He smiled. He had been forced to promote himself to acting-Legate, here in the least damaged sector of the city. Yes, the firestorm could not have been more beneficial to his own career had he planned it.

There were other acting-Legates in other sectors, but none had achieved the same level of civil control. He had been the first to imprison all the slaves in his sector, thus avoiding any of the minor uprisings the other legions were presently being forced to deal with.

He had sealed off any escape through the Outer Ring Wall, so that any civilians who fled from an inner sector could be turned back toward more useful occupations, such as fighting fires. Indeed, he was forcing free men to work! Before the fire it had been unheard of, but now it felt most rewarding. It was a fitting revenge for the lack of recognition he had received, after protecting their worthless hides for an entire career.

As a result of his more aggressive actions, he would soon be in a position to reassign his legion to assist some of the other sectors, opening new opportunities for him to expand his influence across the Ixis Empire. First, however, he needed to understand what or who had started the fires.

The popular belief among his Centurions was that Zeus, as god of war, had brought down a punishment upon the Senators because of their corrupt lifestyles. Zeus certainly seemed like an excellent suspect, given the size of the lightning bolt that had slammed into the Inner City. The storm had descended upon them with a god-like wrath, ripping the cheek-plates off his soldiers’ helmets and forcing them to their knees to pray.

Personally, he did not believe in anything that he could not see for himself, and since the fire had started, he had heard more than enough about angry gods. The gods were a figment of popular imagination, a crutch for the weak-minded and the insecure, which was why devoutly religious people always looked frail and timid.

Another possible cause for the fires was an arsonist within the Inner City, the lightning bolts may have had nothing to do with the fire. The fire could have been part of a military coup, planned to cause overwhelming devastation. Yet, surely he would have heard some confirmation of a coup by now? So, if not Zeus, and if not a military coup, then the fire could have been caused by the infiltration of external enemies, such as the Outlanders or the Woodsfolk. If so, they would have required the help of someone with access to the Inner City, and that brought him back to the Legates and the Senators—and of course, the mysterious Priests; if such people were not also a figment of popular imagination.

Granted, the Priests had been a political force, generations ago. For all of their cowardly ways, they had commanded much restraint over the legions using clever laws and superstitions.

The Priests’ opposition to warfare had delayed the expansion of the Ixis Empire, an unforgivable crime in his eyes.

They had also preached about a singular kind of God, one that presumably resembled all the other gods, except it must have had a thousand heads. He supposed Zeus’ head would have been the singular God’s biggest head, but who could say? The singular God had been laughed out of popular conversation, long before he had been born, and no Priests now walked on Erebus’ streets to keep its memory alinve.

Although, he did remember an occasion, not long ago, when the Empress had mentioned a Priest Sanctum within the Inner City. The Emperor had become irritated, commanding her never again to discuss Priests in public, and he had promptly ended the entire gala. Why would the mere mention of Priests give Emperor Quintus Tullius Erebic an attack of panic? If there really had been a Priest Sanctum in the Inner City, it would not be there anymore. Any Priests would have burned away with the Senators and Legates. Of course, this did not preclude the possibility that a few Priests may have fled from the Inner City after starting the fires....

The distinctive sound of military sandals interrupted further analysis. Vibius pulled himself away from his reflection to face a soldier who was standing stiffly before his desk, saluting fist to chest. He watched curiously as a cloud of agitated soot particles floated down from the burned-out roof, sparkling along a lance of sunlight, which pierced the soldier’s fist. He suddenly realized that the soldier might take his air gazing as a sign of weakness, so he trained his harshest stare at the man.

“Name?”

“Praefect Manius, Sir.”

He picked at the papers on his desk, trying not to get any more soot on himself, and wondered why he felt the need to pretend he knew more than the officer in front of him. His actions were no longer constrained by policy and procedure, but the habits of a career were difficult to set aside.

“You were the officer in charge of the pit mines.”

“Sir—”

Vibius snapped his fingers, dismissing dust from his hand and silencing the man in the process. “And you were responsible for the containment of convicted criminals.” He searched the man’s face but saw no reaction. “I have several reports on this incident—” the soldier did not look down at the desk “—but I do not seem to have yours. Why do you suppose that is?”

“Sir, there has been a mistake—”

“A mistake? How interesting.” Sarcasm, when correctly applied, was always delicious.

However, this soldier’s composure appeared to require far more severe techniques, so he moved around the table to get a closer look at the long, thin face. “You will be aware that I have increased the punishment for mistakes, during the current crisis. I assume you will take full responsibility for any mistakes you may be responsible for.”

It had become unusual to see a shaved face; the man had probably used his entire drinking ration to clean himself for this meeting. The thin face was flushed, the jaw was tight and the man was breathing rapidly, but otherwise he remained well contained. Silence was a wise strategy. Other soldiers who had stood in this very position had buckled instantly, and for most of those, speaking had not been a wise strategy.

Vibius was beginning to lose count of the soldiers he had been forced to execute. With so many civilians being killed for not obeying military commands, there had been mounting concern among the populace and even some protests against his assumption of governmental authority.

The unworthy rabble demanded repeated demonstrations to show his Centurions were not beyond the law. So, when too many free persons were killed on any given day, a few Centurions would have to take the blame and be executed.

Most civilians lacked the discipline to analyze situations without being influenced by fear. Therefore, the management of civilians involved feeding emotions, giving them a false security in the face of all other evidence to the contrary. Yet, he did not intend to demonstrate the Legion’s subservience to their obsolete laws for much longer.

“Perhaps you can explain the absence of your report.”

“Sir, I was ordered not to write a report.”

“What?”

“I was following direct orders from Emperor Quintus Tullius Erebic, Sir. I was instructed to keep all activities off record.”

The Emperor would never lower himself to give orders directly to a mere Praefect, at least, not before the fire had changed all the rules. If Quintus was still alive, Vibius’ recent self-promotion to acting-Legate would soon be rescinded, and he might even face charges of insubordination. “When did the Emperor give such orders to you?”

“I—ah—I am not permitted to say, Sir.”

Vibius considered choking the soldier with his own hands, but instead he forced himself to smile as he turned away. He paced about the office for a few moments, deliberately scraping his heels on the floor as he marshaled his thoughts.

The possible survival of Emperor Quintus Tullius Erebic was unexpected and unwelcome news. If Quintus was alive, why would he go to any trouble to keep the loss of a few convicted criminal off record? Besides, the Emperor knew Vibius’ talents for extracting secrets, so why would he share his plans with a lowly Praefect? “And how is dear Quin? I have not seen him around lately.”

“Sir?”

Vibius tried to pour sincerity into his words. “And Quin’s beautiful family...?”

“I’m sorry, Sir. The Empress and her daughters died in the initial explos—”

Vibius’ pacing almost missed a step as he softly asked, “Oh, so you know about an explosion?”

“I mean—Sir—there was the rumor the fire was not an accident, since it might have started with an explosion—but nobody heard it—because of the thunder, Sir—and nobody lived to see it, of course.” The soldier clamped his jaws together, and fidgeted.

It would have taken months of patience to set off an explosion to exactly coincide with a thunderstorm—and what fortune, to have a storm directly over the Inner City. Perhaps an explosion had been caused by the storm, and perhaps the wind-swept fires had caught the Emperor’s family as they fled. The Emperor would not care whether the Empress lived or died, but he would surely have organized some protection for those damned, ugly daughters of his.

Of course, Quintus could not have anticipated such a freak storm, a storm without rain. Also, Quintus would have preferred less devastation, it left Erebus vulnerable to an invasion....

He realized he had been hammering his heels into the floor, and he stopped himself behind the soldier, watching the soldier’s reflection in the black window. He waited silently to see if his proximity to the soldier’s back would work its way into the man’s composure.

“How many?”

The shoulders stiffened, as if the man had become so delicate that sudden words might hurt him. “Sir?”

“I said, how many?”

“Oh, convicts, Sir? About twenty—”

“You let twenty convicted criminals walk out of my city?”

“Ah, Sir? We were overwhelmed, there were too many—”

“So, twenty was too many for you? You let them break down the South Gate and scatter off into the winds, taking Zeusknows- what with them as bounty. Why did your men not pursue these convicts?”

“We were ordered to stay at the gate, Sir.”

“Let me guess. Another one of the Emperor’s mysterious secret orders, yes?”

“Ah, yes, Sir. But several other cohorts were stationed in the desert, guarding a pit mine, so I sent a messenger with orders to find the missing—”

“Oh, very good. So, tell me, where did you put them when you found them?”

“There was a problem, Sir. The messenger returned to report the escape of some prisoners in one of the pit mines. You see, our cohorts were already in the desert, searching for an escaped Pr—ah—individual, Sir.”

“Prisoner? No, no, let me try another guess; prisoner, praefect, prostitute, probably not.... Ah, perhaps you were going to say, Priest? Is that what you were going to say, Manius? Were you going to say, Priest?”

“No, Sir.”

“Did Emperor Quintus Tullius Erebic forget to mention Priests in his orders?”

“Yes, Sir—I mean—no, Sir. I’m sorry Sir. Those were not my orders, Sir.”

“What were your orders?”

“I—ah—I am not permitted to say, Sir.”

Vibius squinted. “So, tell me what you are permitted to say.”

“Yes, Sir.” The soldier took a deep breath. “Our cohorts were to capture escaping, ah, people. These people were to be sent back to the pit mine for interrogation. While the search was underway, with our cohorts still in the desert, Sir, the inmates must have climbed the scaffolding and killed—”

“These inmates were Priests, and you let them escape?”

“Ah, no, Sir. Ah, well we weren’t sure, Sir. We didn’t know what Priests look like.”

“Describe them.”

“There were several—”

“Describe the damned Priest!”

“Ah, yes, Sir. There was this insane old man, who looked like he could have been wandering around for years, and—”

The soldier seemed to realize that he was rambling so he slowed himself down. “He had long hair, and a beard...white hair, probably bleached by the sun...and he looked half blind...and he he muttered nonsense as if he saw ghosts and—”

“Was he truly old, or was he disguised?”

“Disguised, Sir? Oh, no, Sir. He was not pretending, he was truly insane—”

“I do not care how insane he sounded, I asked you if you checked to see if he was disguised.” This soldier was dissolving into stupidity, and it was becoming irritating. He leaned closer to the back of the man’s neck, and slowly breathed into the man’s ear. “I asked you whether you let this hairy man escape.”

Vibius placed a hand on the man’s shoulder. The man’s cheek muscles were twitching, and he was sweating profusely, a smell that did not contrast well with the perfumed shaving soap recently been applied to his skin. “You are a fine officer, Manius, so I would hate to see you suffer the current punishment for mistakes. I do hope you are not about to tell me you lost this particular—” he licked his lips “—individual. No, that would not be good for you.”

“I was acting under the Emperor’s orders, Sir. I was ordered to keep searching the desert for potential arsonists. I was not supposed to be reassigned to other duties, not until I had found—under Emperor Quintus Tullius Erebic’ orders, Sir— whomever the Emperor was looking for, Sir.”

“Oh, that would explain this letter.” He walked slowly back over to the table and lifted one of the soot-covered pages.

“‘My dear Acting-Legate Vibius, further, further, further, and consequently Praefect Manius’ entire cohort is to be executed upon his return to Erebus, for failure to obey orders, further, further, further...Yours truly, Emperor Quintus Tullius Erebic, further, further, further’. This does seem to be unusually harsh, doesn’t it? Why do you think the Emperor would be so angry with you?”

“I don’t...but...all I did...I was told to collect stray...people. I don’t understand....”

“Are you sure there was nothing else he asked of you?”

“No, Sir, I don’t understand. What did I do? We couldn’t be in two places at once, so there was no one left at the mines.

There was not enough—”

“Soldier.” Vibius tapped his heel on the floor. “I am sure Emperor Quintus Tullius Erebic just wants me to rectify a simple mistake, and he probably hasn’t given more than a moment’s consideration to the matter. Surely we can find a way to undo your mistake.”

The soldier seemed to deflate. “Yes, please, Sir. I’m sorry, Sir. Please, we just need some more time to search, just a few more days, and we will surely find—”

“Of course you will.” He waited for the soldier to try to smile back at him before he continued. “Finding this individual would fix everything, wouldn’t it? Consequently, I don’t think we should tell Emperor Quintus Tullius Erebic about our little discussion today. No, I think we should give you and your unfortunate men a chance to undo your mistake, hopefully before the Emperor invites me to explain all this to him.”

He pressed the paper back over the clean rectangle of desk from which he had lifted it. “I will be assigning my own officers to assume command of your cohort. You will assist my officers in an advisory capacity. Anyone found in the desert will be captured alive, and brought back to me immediately. You may leave now.”

“Oh, thank you, Sir. I knew—”

“I said, now, soldier.” He stared in disgust at the crumpled man who was stumbling backward out of his office. He was going to have to make sure that this Praefect was not given the chance to contact the Emperor. There was more information waiting to be extracted from that thin head, but it might not be possible to extract the information without damaging Manius in the process. This would not matter if he did not need Manius’ cooperation to identify the Priest, assuming that it had been a Priest. The probability of finding an actual Priest disguised as a wandering wild man was less than inspiring.

If Quintus had contrived this fire, and this chaos, why would he be chasing someone that could more easily have been disposed of before the fire? No, Quintus was more likely a victim, especially if his daughters had been killed. Why else would he be hiding? Who was he afraid of? Had the Priests allied with an Outland army, were they preparing to attack? Defense against a possible invasion would require him to cooperate with the other acting-Legates, it would force him to establish their authority. Perhaps it was exactly this co-operative hierarchy that Quintus was waiting to see, before he emerged, in his glory, to save Erebus. Perhaps Quintus was deliberately creating rumors about a wandering Priest to make it look like there was an Outlander-Priest alliance...? He grabbed the precisely organized desk and heaved it with all his strength against the wall, creating a thick cloud of dust.

Then he kicked up through it with the sharpened metal toe of his ceremonial boot, sending splinters into the fluttering papers.

“What in hell is going on around here?”

 

 

A7: HIDING HERE

 

 “The target median has passed into its solar penumbra for the seventh cycle.” This typically god-like pleonasticism came from the far end of the shuttlecraft in which he was sitting. Yet it was not a god that spoke, it was Syntyche. A7 knew the shuttle was not large enough to house a god. The gods remained safe inside their seedship, but they would be watching everything through the float screens.

The shuttle’s interior contained two rows of spherical pods, separated by a long platform. There were sixty-four such pods, he had carefully counted them as he had climbed into his own.

The number of pods indicated the shuttle had originally been designed for a much larger human cargo, yet only three of the pods had been energized. This excess capacity was the first solid evidence to suggest the gods had once anticipated a much larger mission contingent.

He was now an official member of this crew-remnant, and “today” was supposed to be his last “day” in the seedship. It was a “day” that had been slipping past with the speed of a particularly laggard glacier, and he had been practicing his most procedural behavior during every eternal instant of it.

He could see one of the float-screens beside Syntyche. It contained an image of somebody’s head peering around like a confused chick emerging prematurely from its egg. As soon as he realized the image was of himself, he ducked back inside his pod to reduce the sudden feeling of exposure.

He lay in the chair-bed and waited. Another float-screen was taking up a position above his pod, and within it was the image of a sharply defined black oracle. He tried to look busy, poking at the padding inside his pod and whistling silently, but he could feel its presence descending, closing in on him.

A flat object jerked into existence in front of him like a shovel pushing out through his stomach. The flickering image was vaporous, so it took a moment to recognixe it as yet another float-screen. It was trying to show him an elevated view of the shuttle-probe’s interior, probably the view being seen by the float-screen above him. He smiled up at the large black eye as it retreated, wondering whether it had noted the flickering as a possible fault in his pod’s imaging system.

He pushed himself back, away from the screen, which forced the chair-bed to accommodate an anxious sitting position.

Misbehaving technology seemed to be a disturbingly common problem these days, and of course, it would have to be his own pod with all the problems. The gods would probably relish the thought of his pod malfunctioning, they would probably be quite satisfied if he failed to survive the landing.

He inhaled deeply to calm himself, and took some reassurance from watching the confidence in Syntyche, even if it was just a flickering facsimile of Syntyche. The android-human had buried himself in a swarm of air-borne graphics, to crouch over the remains of a dew-speckled spider’s web. Then its droplets seemed to break into a thousand fiery splinters, all of which needed to be stabbed at by his fingers.

Syntyche could move almost as fast as the air-born devices diving in to join him, and he seemed reluctant to step back and allow their swirling tentacles to assist his strange air-tapping.

Yet, it was difficult to see what they were clawing at.

A7 imagined worms undulating out of a tangle of convulsing organs, bursting through a mucous membrane—he had to look away and shake his head to avoid feeling repulsed. Yet, it was amusing to wonder at how Syntyche might react to such a technically incompetent description of his activities, as if Syntyche could express disgust.

If there had only been enough time to teach Syntyche how to really feel the resentment that festered in him. Unfortunately, it was only during rare instances like this one that Syntyche’s static face showed anything but constant pain.

Syntyche’s feelings had proven even more difficult to observe than Chislon’s. All attempts to pull an uncontrolled reaction from Syntyche had failed, unless one counted the occasional blink, which may or may not have indicated a test of patience.

However, A7 was quite certain Syntyche saw all signs of technical incompetence as unforgivable aberrations of the intellect. Consequently, he had gone to much trouble indulging his aberrations whenever Syntyche was listening. It had done little to promote friendly discussion, but it had been amusing.

The disgusted arrogance forever masking Syntyche’s face so perfectly contradicted serious answers to ridiculous questions.

He suspected—as with many fearful people—anger allowed Syntyche to create anti-social defenses that nobody could break through. Yet, this fear was the only fragment of human behavior that still clung to Syntyche’s god-like inner workings.

Despite Syntyche’s antisocial tendencies, they were all fellow victims of the gods. Syntyche and he had both experienced injustice beyond comprehension. They had both found different ways to accept their existence, but where he used humor to deflect discomfort, Syntyche took a more practical approach.

Syntyche had discarded his own humanity, as a lizard might shed skin. Syntyche wanted to become an unfeeling machine, an android, while he was an android who wanted to be human.

Soon Syntyche would have a wealth of new experiences in which to test his antisocial techniques. Perhaps then he would learn how precious his remaining humanity could be. Although, when a loveless person is shown their own need for love, they can often feel more fearful, more angry. Unless Syntyche could one day rediscover his humanity, he was destined to remain aloof, alone and abandoned.

“Check your E.V.H!” Chislon was shouting. He had never heard Chislon shout before. Both Chislon and Syntyche were now clawing at the messy projection; like gymnasts climbing a giant fruitcake? This time he could not laugh at the spectacle, but nor could he stop watching it.

Chislon moved with less speed and efficiency than Syntyche, which seemed to be a thoroughly redeeming quality. Also, Chislon had almost sounded anxious, unlike Syntyche who was calmly saying, “E.V.H. negative and severly attenuated. The forward link is no longer accepting event-logic....”

The groan of straining metal resonated throughout the shuttle.

The presence of a slight frown on Chislon’s face was more than enough to make A7 feel sick again. He understood little of what was happening, but it certainly did not seem procedural.

Then his float-screen collapsed into a lopsided cube, preventing all further observation.

“A7, listen.” Chislon was shouting at him. “Close your pod.

The shuttle god is fragmenting. Something is attacking its sanity, and we no longer have space-vector stability. Our approach is too steep so the shuttle is going to burn up on entry, but the pods may—”

There was a sudden feeling of rapid descent, which caused the chair-bed to pull away from his back. He could hear the other two pods sealing shut, and he looked up out of his own pod to see the platform being bombarded by air-born devices.

Expert navigators only a moment ago, these devices were now bouncing around like bullets. He clawed at the shiny outer carapace of the pod, trying to prevent himself from floating out, but the pod continued to fall away from him.

Then he felt something grab his waist, and he was slammed back into the chair-bed. The pod had grown fangs, and he fought frantically to avoid being devoured. He heard himself crying out, “What is happening? This isn’t real, is it? It’s a simulation....” But his face was being sucked into the soft darkness of the chair’s relentless maw.

“Evacuate, evacuate, evacuate—” The scratchy voice silenced itself as quickly as it had begun. He could not lift his face out of the chair-bed to see whether the pod had closed itself. There was a sound, like something drilling into the outside of his pod, and the temperature within suddenly became cold. Then a hissing noise, like leaking fuel, and a shaking sensation as if the pod was being crushed.

The chair-bed briefly allowed him to inhale, and as it did so he realized he was in complete darkness. His arms flailed as the pod jerked around in unpredictable directions, and then he was in free-fall.

He could not even pry his face out of the chair-bed to scream.

Falling was one of the worst feelings he knew, and panic threatened to loosen his senses. He forced himself to calm down, this was surely just another simulation to test his behavior, and so far he had clearly demonstrated a complete lack of suitability for the mission. No, he must not give the gods a reason to exclude him from returning home.

He tried to remember all the things he had promised to do, if there was ever another opportunity to touch Nature. He allowed his arms to float around inside the pod, as if he was trying to monitor the changing motions. Then he realized the chairbed was also beginning to relax, and he carefully slid around within its reactive embrace.

“Hmmm. All systems are...all systems seem to be nonfunctional.

I am beginning a tactile inventory.” He started stroking the inside of the pod with one arm, while he allowed the other to continue floating freely. “Would any god please acknowledge me, please?”

He licked his dry lips, scraping the hard texture of his tongue against his teeth, and swallowed. Then he inhaled slowly, and exhaled slowly, and remembered to smile. “Would any god please acknowledge?”

He did not know how many times he had asked that last question before he finally concluded this situation was not a test. It took even longer to resign himself to the inevitability of being vaporized by the atmosphere of the planet to which he must now be hurtling at meteoric speed.

He closed his eyes to pray, and listened for the energies that would soon be swirling through him. He was entering the world of Nature’s God, and he was at Its mercy now.

 

~~~~~

 

Above Summerdale the night had drawn down and a thick, pervasive darkness incarcerated everything in a veil of silence.

Azoic’s efforts were shocking the still air with harsh sounds.

He was crunching at sand with a shovel. The sand-ridge encircling him preventing any observation other than the vastness of night. The sand-ridge framed a star-field that hung over him like a heavy blanket, permitting barely enough light to see by.

Azoic was now a man with a mission, albeit a borrowed mission. His mission was keeping him company because he could not sleep. Before Neariah had gone to bed, she had propped the divining sticks up against the shovel, and then walked away. She must have known that he would spend the entire evening staring at them, like a gift he feared to accept.

The shovel had eventually fallen into his lap as he sat watching it, as if its patience had run out.

The darkness did him the admirable favor of hiding his clumsy efforts from possible onlookers, but he still felt self-conscious.

In the darkness he had experimented with the children’s devining game, only to discover how the sticks would move if an owl hooted, or if a bat flew overhead, but not in response to anything he might call magical.

He had resorted to closing his eyes and pointing at random until he found a well-site that was unoccupied. After all, he felt guilty enough without digging up defenseless plants. He had by now been digging for half the night and the desert felt like it was increasing its resistance.

He stiffened at the sound of approaching footsteps, knowing that there was nowhere to retreat. One of the stars seemed to explode and he looked up at the light filling his pit. It was a lantern, and he squinted at its flame, trying to adjust to its cheerful energy. Perhaps it was the same sprite he had seen imprisoned in Hushah’s candle-pot, so many days ago.

“I hope I am not interrupting you.” The flame moved closer, illuminating Hushah’s ghoulish smile.

Azoic nodded. “A new prison...for the flame?”

“What?” Hushah crouched down, bringing the lantern to a sudden stop on the sand-ridge and bouncing the poor flame into a dizzy stupor. “Prison? Oh, this. It’s just an old oil lantern, I thought you might like to have it for your digging.” The flame suddenly grew stronger, again defining Hushah’s smile. “It might help you find what you are looking for.”

“I seek myself.” He shook his head, reminding himself to try to sound more optimistic. “Soft walls...held up with hope.

Constant persuasion....”

“Held up with hope and constant persuasion, that is funny.”

He could hear Hushah chuckle, but Hushah’s eyes were deep shadows, thanks to the mischievous flame. “You sound better.

You were difficult to understand when we first found you. I am glad you are making progress.” Hushah scratched the side of his head and looked around into the darkness. “I thought this well building idea was a game for the children. I didn’t realize you were serious about it.”

“Mmmm...serious, but it grows...out...not down.”

“Yes, it might be a good idea to build a stone wall, with steps in it. Otherwise it will be an endless project, and you will have to dig up our entire oasis. You need better tools, more than just my shovel there. You need rope, lanterns, buckets, mortar powder from the store, sandstone from the lake, a hand pick to shape the bricks....

“Are you sure you really want to do this? There is a lot of work here, and it will take some careful planning. It may not be worth the effort, especially for a man of your years, and it could be a little dangerous if you don’t do it right.”

“My years? Am I so old?”

“I, ah.... You just look like you are.... I have a blade, for shaving....” Hushah grunted and changed the subject. “Did you remember anything about your past, like a profession?”

“Well-builder. For as long as I can remember.”

Hushah leaned forward, dislodging a layer of sand, which slowly slid down onto Azoic’s feet. The flame took the opportunity to embellish Hushah’s intimidating smile with an even more gruesome shadow-frown. “Do you remember nothing more of your past? It would settle a lot of concerns in the village if we knew more about you.”

Azoic looked down at his buried feet and shrugged. “They do not trust.” His sigh blew through the hairs of his beard with a dry whistling noise.

“We had a village meeting in Decimus’ bank. Decimus wants to speak to you, but since you are my guest here, I thought I should first warn you, he is not always.... Ah, he means well, but he is just, ah, overly protective, of Summerdale, and other things that are important to him. Unfortunately, it seems most of the villagers agree with him this time. Many of us are reluctant to have a continued stranger living here.”

“Do you trust?”

“Me? Do I trust you?” Hushah pulled back out of the light. “I have not told my children to avoid you. Merab and Neariah? In fact, Neariah seems to think the world of you. Yes, of course I trust you, but when you keep changing your name and occupation it becomes too easy for folks to wonder whether you are hiding something.”

“Can I be Azoic, the well-builder?”

“Yes, or Axle the axe-murder, Lucifer the soul destroyer, Aysefen the Ixis slave, Asofic the escapee from an insane asylum. Decimus provokes—” Hushah rubbed his mouth awkwardly “—Do you remember the Ixis? Did you live in Erebus, as an Ixis?”

“Maybe Erebus, or further away. Am I suspected of being an Ixis? Is that bad?”

“Yes and yes. You don’t look very political to me, but then how would I know what political looks like? Most folks think you were once Ixis property, a slave on the run, or a spy on the run. You could be anything.”

“‘On the run’ seems popular.”

“Aye, but running through the desert is the way to a slow death. You did not even have a horse, do you remember that?”

“Yes, the horse, the burning rider. I did kill—”

“You killed a horse-rider?”

“The horse....” Azoic suddenly felt the air being pulled out of his lungs, and he hugged his stomach. “I killed it.”

“Oh, you killed your horse, but why?”

“It needed water....”

“Oh, I see. You ended its misery.”

Azoic tried to confess he had not even done that, but Hushah kept talking.

“Mr. Azoic, I really think I should speak on your behalf. Your own words are your enemy, sometimes. Will you please tell me, in all honesty, who you are, so I can help you.”

Azoic was surprised at the sudden frustration in Hushah’s voice, and he raised his shoulders in apology. “I don’t remember much. I remember Nature was my teacher. It seems that I understood Nature better once. I think I have always wanted to understand Nature.”

“Were you a gardener, like Ginnetho? Did you plant things, vegetables, flowers?”

“No. Perhaps I wanted to, but I don’t think I was allowed to.

I had a garden, but it was an empty garden. I studied, I grew thoughts. I could not touch Nature, or people.... I lived apart.”

Azoic shook his head and wheezed miserably. “Naturalist.”

“What does a naturalist do?”

“Worships Nature.”

“You worshipped God, don’t you mean?”

“Everything is God.”

“Well, I never looked at it that way, but I suppose—actually, if you are a faithful man it could be seen as a good thing by most folks, unless it challenges Decimus, who likes to think he is the only....”

Again Hushah leaned back, looking out into the emptiness.

“Anyway, I have heard about big education houses in the Ixis cities, and you seem the type to be lost in books. You don’t act like you ever had a real job—no offense intended. I used to have some books myself once, story books.

“I gave them to Berea, the lady who teaches the kids in the Sabbath-house? She is the large lady who sweeps the sand out of Decimus’ house every morning? Anyway, I can’t read very well, myself. I never learned how, but I collected two shelves full of books, and to be honest, I was quite proud of them.

Then, when the kids came along, and I couldn’t....”

Hushah’s voice faded away for a few moments, before he resumed. “I was going to smoke, my last one, but I won’t bother you with the smell of it. Here, you keep the lantern, you look like you need the light....”

Hushah’s feet had created a notch in the sand-ridge, through which Azoic watched Hushah move away into the dark. His smoking stick had become a tiny red star that darted up and down, until it was extinguished. Hushah’s silhouette then appeared for a moment, as he melted into the bright rectangle of his home’s entrance, and then all was again dark—except for the small pool of fluttering light surrounding the prisoner in the lantern.

The flame began to fill his eyes with an orange glaze, and the dying breeze pushed hair across his eyes like tangled licks of fire. His head felt like it was burning slowly, as his nagging guilt returned, buzzing behind his eyes as if to confirm he was the mass murderer Decimus suspected. He imagined the disappointment on Neariah’s face upon learning he was really a fraud and for some reason such deceit felt even worse than the crime of killing innumerable innocent people.

For the first time he began to hate himself for not being the good person that he wanted to be. Perhaps it had been too much to hope for, that one day he might be worthy of Neariah’s trust and friendship.

 

~~~~~

 

Neariah ran towards the well, panting. Surely Azoic was the only person in the village who had not heard the news. He could not have seen any of the recent events because he would be deep underground by now.

As usual, it was up to her to enlighten him. However, it was not until she was standing beside the well that she realized how lazy Azoic had been. The well was no deeper than it had been the last time that she had looked down into it.

“What have you been doing?” He was standing there motionless, staring into nowhere. She considered jumping in so she could poke him with one of the divining sticks. There seemed to be no other way to gain his attention. “Azoic! You are dreaming again! Wake up!”

He wheezed, and trod on his own feet, raising his arms as if trying to defend himself from the sunlight. “Who...? Wha…?”

“Are you awake now? If you aren’t careful, you will fall asleep one day and never wake up.” At least he had started to move; so now he might appreciate the reprimand she was about to give him. “How long have you been standing there, doing nothing? You worry me when your mind goes away like that.

Why isn’t it finished?”

“Uh? Finished?” He checked his feet, as if he was not sure where he had put them.

“Yes, finished, Azoic. How long does it take to build a simple well, anyway?”

“Oh...mmmm...days...many, many—”

“You missed all the excitement! Uncle Spurius just rode in, straight into the lake, without saying hello to anyone. He is all burned, and he screamed when he jumped into the water. I suppose it must have stung, but I don’t think he was in a very good mood even before that. He was saying all kinds of naughty things about the Ixis, and about other people who got burned like he did. They took him to Decimus’ house to fix his head.

His hair is all burned off, and his skin is all red. He looks frightening. Do you think he will be all right?”

“Uncle—?”

“Yes, I’m telling you about Uncle Spurius. Are you listening, or are you still daydreaming? You are hardly making any sense again, Azoic. You are quite a big nuisance, you know.”

“Mmmm...sorry, who—?”

“Uncle Spurius is my uncle, and he brings stuff from Erebus, like wine, and one time he brought me a puppy—” She bit her lip and kicked at the sand, then forced herself to continue.

“Anyway, Uncle Spurius gets to do all the most fun things, but sometimes Daddy goes with him. Not to Erebus, though, only to Everdale, now and then. Daddy says Everdale is a really big oasis, and he said he would take me there one day, when I am older. It’s very far away, but not as far as Erebus. That’s why Uncle Spurius has to travel all the time, like the traders, although he isn’t a trader because he lives here, sometimes. He is always in such a hurry to leave when he gets here, is Uncle Spurius, probably because he doesn’t like Decimus very much. It is always exciting when he returns home, everyone starts to argue about everything.”

She lifted her palms up to the sky. There was nothing she could do to make her uncle more sociable, no matter how many times she told him how much she missed him. “Uncle Spurius has a wagon. Everyone calls it the wine wagon. I wonder if that’s why everyone is still arguing. Uncle Spurius forgot to bring the wine wagon with him this time. That would be very serious, I think.”

Azoic looked like he was searching for a way out of his well.

“Ah, Azoic, you will probably need a ladder to escape from there, you are starting to bury yourself.”

She tried to distract herself by studying a lantern that someone must have lost, hoping that he would not see her laughing. “I think this lantern is still alight, but it is hard to say....”

He was facing her now, but his gaze still belonged to the clouds above. She rather expected him to remain silent, staring like a statue, so his next question was a pleasant surprise.

“Ixis?”

“What? Oh, the Ixis. Yes, a good question, Azoic.” Anything for conversation. “But how can you not know about the Ixis?”

She raised her own gaze up to the same area of sky that Azoic was staring at and rubbed her forehead. Azoic was weird, but then she had to keep reminding herself, it was his very weirdness that made him her best friend.

Neither of them quite seemed to fit in, and neither of them quite saw the world the same way every body else seemed to —although she was far from sure exactly what Azoic did see, he really was weird.

“Ah, yes, the Ixis. Yes, those Ixis.” She tangled her fingers together the way Teacher Berea always did, and then considered her lack of words carefully.

“Ixis,” she muttered again. “Actually, Merab knows more about the Ixis than me, because he is always at war with them.

But I do know they are not very nice.”

“Why?” Azoic was suddenly giving her his undivided attention, both eyes.

She smiled self-consciously. “Because you have to have bad people or you couldn’t have a war?”

“What do—”

“Oh, I see what you mean. Why are the Ixis bad. I think they are in charge of the world, so everyone blames them when something needs to be fixed. Uncle Spurius, he was just saying they—oops!”

“Hmmm...?”

“You mustn’t tell anyone I was listening. It was a secret meeting but everyone went in, so—well, it is so easy to spy on grown-ups, you know.”

“Spurius—”

“Uncle Spurius said—” She took a breath to accommodate a great speech, but then hissed it all out again and shrugged. “I didn’t understand much of what was said, but Uncle Spurius said the new Ixis are in charge now, and they are just as...something...as the old Ixis.

“He used a rude word! He called them—” and she whispered it nervously “—Evil Butchers!”

She swallowed and looked around to make sure no one else had heard her. “And that’s not all! He said there was going to be a big war, because all the Priests got burned up in a big fire! Yuk! Erebus is now run by soldiers, and that’s really bad.” She shook her head woefully.

“Why bad?”

“I don’t know. Grown-ups, they exaggerate. Merab isn’t really bad and he’s a soldier.”

“I am not!” Merab stepped out from behind a tree and marched up to the pit, where he looked down with heightened disdain.

“I’m a warrior, not a soldier. I don’t fight for money, I fight for Summerdale!” He sniffed at Neariah contemptuously. “What are you doing? Is this the old man’s grave?”

“Don’t be so rude, Merab. You know it’s a well.”

“Why do we need a well? The lake is just there.” He jabbed his thumb back toward the trees, apparently forgetful of his earlier challenge about building the well in the first place.

“It’s so people don’t have to walk to the cupping beach all the time. It’s more—” she groped for the word “—convenient!”

She nodded to herself with satisfaction.

Merab shrugged. “You probably won’t find any water here anyway. You didn’t use real divining sticks. John made his own so they weren’t official ones.”

“So that’s why you couldn’t make them work, Azoic!” Neariah clapped. Then she realized Azoic had spent all day digging for nothing, and her hands fell limply on the sand where she sat.

“I think you’re wasting your time. You won’t succeed,”

pronounced Merab, bluntly.

Azoic suddenly started digging again, throwing small scoops of sand up into the air. “Yes, find water. Have faith.” He seemed oblivious to Merab’s disgust.

“Fine, you have all the faith you like. I’m going to swim in the lake. You can come too if you want to.”

    Neariah was surprised by Merab’s offer, but he was probably only being nice so that he could question her about Uncle Spurius.

“No, thank you.” She smiled at him, more politely than was absolutely necessary. “Azoic and I really must finish building our well.”

“Sure you must. You’ll be digging forever and ever!” Merab sauntered off, shaking his head the way their father often did when refusing to admit defeat.

“We will finish soon, won’t we, Azoic?” She was sitting on her hands, still trying to smile.

“No, not soon.”

“But when?”

“Success is a pilgrimage, not a destination.”

“But what if we never reach water? Do we have to dig forever, like Merab said?”

“Have faith.”

A gust of wind blew his latest scoop of sand into her face.

She shook herself as she stood up. There was no way to understand some people.

Azoic probably did not even realize that most of the sand that he was throwing around was falling straight back down on top of him. He was going to need a bucket if he was ever going to finish this stupid well. In fact, they might never get it finished unless they used some of the things that her father had been loading into his wheelbarrow just before her uncle had arrived.

“I’ll be right back, I have an idea.” If she was going to supervise the work she was also going to need to make shade, and what would make better tent material than the white sheet that her uncle had been wearing? The sheet was probably still in the lake where her uncle had left it. Hopefully, her father and uncle would not mind her borrowing their things, especially when they saw what good use she was going to put them to.

 

~~~~~

 

Hushah was watching his brother’s pain with helpless frustration, but his wife seemed to be less incapacitated by the shock of seeing Spurius so disfigured. She was patting the bloody scalp with an aloe-soaked cloth, while Hushah watched his brother’s jaw muscles flex, further emphasizing the awful damage to his skin.

Where Spurius’ gray hair had once been tied back into a long pony-tail, there was now fluid oozing from broken blisters. He had barely recognized his own brother; the lack of eyebrows or eyelashes, and the redness of his face, had given the man a crazed and violent appearance. The burns looked ugly, but the memory that still consumed the man looked uglier.

It was in his brother’s eyes that the greatest changes seemed to have occurred. During that precious moment, before Decimus had come splashing into the lake to stand between them, they had shared an intensity of gaze that spoke of his brother’s violation. However, it was not a feeling that they had been given a chance to discuss. Instead, Decimus had pulled Spurius away through an onslaught of questions from the villagers.

He had followed the throng like a lost duckling, not knowing what to say or what to do, and now he felt invisible among the crowd in the storehouse. It seemed almost absurd that his brother’s wounds should have to be attended to in such cramped conditions, but even under these circumstances, it was best not to inflame an argument with Decimus.

The storehouse was attached to Decimus’ bank-home, and to the Sabbath-house, as if each structure needed the other for support. The three buildings had been constructed to allow the walls separating them to be removed, in the event that their storage requirements might one day outgrow the storehouse. If that ever happened, a new Sabbath-house would need to be built, presumably also adjoining Decimus’ home. Hushah had often imagined Decimus convening larger and larger meetings, in a home that would forever keep growing.

Decimus’ home was already the largest in the village, although Decimus was the only villager who did not have a family to fill it. Decimus would often remind people, that, as a banker, his residence must represent the village’s financial affluence.

Nobody ever reminded Decimus that he was the only person in the village who cared about financial affluence. Desert-folk were not generally inspired by the same ambitions that drove Decimus, but then he was the only villager who had been brought up in a city.

Irritation with Decimus was but one of the many uncharitable thoughts that had been filling Hushah’s head lately, thoughts that now had him backed into the corner of the storehouse, as far away from Decimus as he could get. He felt as if he no longer belonged to the commotion around him, as if he had become detached from Summerdale.

No longer did he trust himself to keep the peace. No longer could he find the desire to be part of Decimus’ audience. Never before had Hushah felt so critical of the pompous manner with which Decimus directed all proceedings, and never before had he felt so disgusted by the prospect of another endless speech.

It was not like him to search for fault in everyone he looked at, as if he were a bitter man, but then he was not used to feeling so angry without knowing what he was so angry about. How could he have changed like this, and how could Summerdale have become so alien to him? Decimus was counting heads with obvious satisfaction, waving a finger as if blessing each and every one of those who were gathering around him. Ginnetho was hugging a barrel of wine that was balanced precariously upon a rickety crate.

Jaalam, hiding between several thin bundles of garden cane, had become so stiffly wedged that his thin limbs seemed similarly bundled.

Cabul was crouching over a bag of flour that was rubbing white marks onto his hindquarters. He was munching on a dried leaf, and aiming brown spittle through a crack between the floorboards. So far he had missed the crack, leaving an unpleasant pool of gook that could not possibly go unnoticed by Decimus much longer.

Unlike those who confined themselves to smaller spaces, Berea continued to sprawl her body over a wide portion of the storehouse counter. It was a claim that went unchallenged because Berea was a woman who possessed wide proportions and who stored many warnings upon her countenance. Her loose cheeks were shaking at Decimus as she spoke. “But the Sabbathhouse is far larger than the storehouse, and it isn’t so cluttered, and its side-walls are only chest height, so people outside could see in without having to—”

“Precisely, it would be too easy for the uninvited guest to invite himself.” Decimus’ counting-finger had swung around toward Cabul and his smile had faltered.

Decimus’ thin buttocks pressed back into the soft flesh around Berea’s arm, but she did not chose to retreat. Instead she looked up at the back of Decimus’ head with increased irritation.

Hushah realized that perhaps Berea was also full of critical thoughts lately.

Decimus clapped his hands to gain attention. “Gentlefolk of Summerdale, I will now call the meeting to order.” He was then forced to jump onto the counter to make himself more visible. Berea’s annoyance also became more visible, as she finally moved her face away from Decimus’ buttocks.

Decimus coughed delicately. “People of Summerdale, this meeting is drawn to order by the authority vested in me as Elder of our village—and, yes, I would appreciate some silence in the back there, thank you. Hello? That would be those of you at the back, who are still talking. Silence please.”

Suddenly there was silence, and the air around them became heavy with expectation.

“Now, where was I? Perhaps I should start by briefly recounting some of the events that have been occurring in Erebus, for those of you who have not yet heard Spurius’ story.

Apparently, there was a fire—” he raised his palms “—and you will all remember me telling you that there had to be a perfectly good reason why the traders were no longer visiting us. They are obviously very busy, cleaning up after this fire.”

Hushah wanted to ask Decimus whether this meant that he no longer blamed Azoic for the traders’ absence, but instead he pressed his lips together and frowned.

Decimus was smiling down upon Spurius, the only person in the room who had any spare space to stand in. “The traders will soon be back, won’t they, Spurius?”

However, there was no answer. Spurius was staring at the floor as if he had no desire to participate.

Decimus cleared his throat noisily. “Yes, so the traders will return in due course. In the meanwhile, it seems that we may have lost some of our trade assets to the fire. I am sure that Spurius will give us a better account of that in a moment. It is not as disastrous as it sounds. The assets were stored in an Ixis depositum, so they will owe us full compensation for our losses.

It could work to our favor, in fact. It saves us the bother of having to sell—”

“It was not like any storm I have ever seen.” Spurius was whispering. All movement ceased in the room. “There was no rain in the sky, only flames, sucking away the air. The wind was full of fire, as if the air itself was burning, and streams of suffocating soot danced like ghostly dragons.

“Flames flew on winds that pushed away walls and pulled away people. The fires crawled down streets and through houses. The air was so hot that, if you did not cover your face in a wet rag, your lungs would throw up pink pus until you could no longer scream. Then your exposed limbs would turn red, and from your skin would burst yellow fluids, and yellow flames would lick along your body until your skin peeled off to turn black.

“Burning clouds would chase us, and we would run, blinded and falling over each other. Some moved too slowly, we were so weary, and they became part of the blackness, crusts stuck to buildings, all twisted. When we went back for them, some still had expressions...faces that crumbled into dust when we moved too close.” Spurius stopped and stared at the floor as if planning to attack it.

Decimus coughed again, and several villagers backed into each other in surprise. “As I was saying, the storm caused losses, and we may not see any traders for a while longer. So, we are going to have to make the best use that we can of the supplies around us.

“Now, more than ever, Summerdale is going to have to trust God, and in the words of the Scripture, ‘God saw it and was not pleased, and in the wrath of his anger they were destroyed; he wrought wonders against them to consume them in flaming fire’. I quote Sirach, chapter forty-five, verse nine. The Ixis are non-believers, and they—”

Spurius began whispering again. “The Ixis soldiers were pushing us back into the fires, but the aqueducts had dried up so we could no longer soak our masks, and the sand that we threw just seemed to make the fires hungrier. The Ixis forced us to clear a path for them, through to the Inner City. We could either obey, or retreat into their waiting swords. So we ran through the flames, straight through the flames, not knowing where we would end up.

“When we stopped running, we were surrounded by the shells of buildings that might once have been mighty palaces. There was a wide path of rubble in front of us. It was the Inner Ring Wall, but it had been blown over as if it had been made of paper. We were too tired to run anymore, but we knew that the Ixis would not let us live if they found us. It is death to see the Inner City unless you are from the Senatorial class, so we kept moving, some of us. Then we heard moaning, coming from underneath us, as if the ground was boiling up ghosts.

“We found vaults, and passages, under the houses, and within them were whole families. The Senators had gone into hiding, perhaps they thought that the fires were part of a military coup.

There were so many helpless families, with children, all baked in long ovens, like passages to Hell.

“We made our way to one of the outer sectors, through streets that stank of death, through swarms of rats...great fat rats, jumping out of people’s guts...piles of dirty bodies...and the flies, like clouds—” The water that Spurius had recently consumed was now dripping from his lips, and Hushah pushed forward to grab his brother’s shoulders. “The bodies, Hushah, the bodies. Piled up in hills. The whole of Erebus has gone berserk! There is looting and murder, and nobody cares about anything except killing each other.

“I followed a group of soldiers, a death squad that was accusing tired people of treason, so they could hang those that were not fighting the flames. It was the Ixis way to show everyone the punishment for disobedience.

“The Outer Ringwall was the only wall that remained completely intact—the tallest wall, the one that encircles the entire city—and only the most senior soldiers were being allowed to pass through its gates.

“So I wrapped some extra rope around my waist and covered myself in a sheet, as if I was dead in a shroud. Then I jumped over the wall and hung there, beside the swaying bodies, and waited for darkness. I lowered myself down into the desert without knowing what I would do next, but eventually I found a horse an Ixis had left tied up outside the gates—”

“You stole a soldier’s horse?” Decimus stepped back, almost losing himself off the back of the counter. “But, it will have an Ixis brand. We will have to give it back, or hide it, or set it loose, or something....” Hushah looked up at him with narrow eyes, which seemed to cause Decimus to straighten his shirt and continue even more loudly.

“We do not need to go into any more detail about people burning, just now, thank you, Spurius. Obviously, Erebus’ problems are Erebus’ problems, and we should be discussing our own problems. I am sure that we will have plenty of time to hear more about your adventures at a later time. Today, ladies and gentlemen of Summerdale, we need to contend with dangers that are much closer to our own community.”

There were some mutters of surprise, and Hushah frowned as he guessed why Decimus might be pulling at the aggravated atmosphere like one who has smelled a hidden truth and is ready to exhale a conviction. “Yes, the time has come to decide what should be done with that insane man.”

“The what?” Hushah was not going to let Decimus get away with such an unfair accusation.

“I said that your guest is insane, Hushah; unless you have a better description?”

“Yes, I do. I spoke with Azoic last night; he seemed much less disturbed—”

“Disturbed, or disturbing? That man is dangerous, and we have enough to worry about without inviting more trouble. We have all heard about that man’s many identities. However, Cabul here—” Decimus’ smile twitched as he looked down at Cabul “—has very wisely suggested that the stranger might be a runaway Ixis slave, and we certainly do not want the Ixis to come here looking for him. They might think that we intended to steal him from them, and it already seems that we have one of their stolen horses in our village. In fact, should the Ixis ever conclude that we are sheltering the slave who started the fires in the first place—”

“Started the fires?” Hushah was not the only one to ask this.

“You just said that the fires were started by lightning.”

“I said, ‘during lightning’, not ‘by lightning’. Were you not listening to Spurius as we walked up from the lake? He was telling us how the Ixis were searching for arsonists—”

“No.” Spurius was again staring down at the floor. “What I said was that the Ixis were accusing everyone—”

“Precisely! And who could be a more likely arsonist than an insane slave who does not have a name? Does he really expect us to believe that he was a free man, who did not have an occupation, or a home, or possessions?”

“But he does have an occupation!” Hushah realized that he had shouted, because the storehouse had suddenly become silent again. He made himself lower his shoulders and inhale deeply before saying, “Last night, Azoic told me that he lived in Erebus, and that he used to study...things.”

“I told you he came from Erebus.” Decimus was wagging his finger again.

“Yes, but so did you, Decimus, and you are not Ixis, are you?”

Hushah instantly regretted his sarcasm, but there was no retreat.

“So, as I was trying to say, I spoke with Azoic last night and he was saying things only a decent, religious man would—”

“No!” Decimus jumped down from his counter and stood red-faced in front of Hushah. “I can tell who is, and who is not, a decent religious man, perhaps better than anyone else here. If the crazy man told you that he studied our God, then he is lying. He is not decent, he is a heathen, and as such, he is on his way to Hell.

“Hushah, you must remember that the Ixis worship many gods. Our God cannot be treated as one of many. That is why our religion is the only religion that is illegal in Erebus. The Emperor wants more gods, not fewer gods. That way he is better able to force the population to worship him, as a god. We have one God, our religion cannot recognize the Emperor’s preposterous ambitions, and so those who believe in the one God are persecuted. If the crazy man was one of us, he would long ago have left Erebus, or been executed. So, whatever that man told you is a lie.

Hushah stepped back. “But perhaps Azoic studied gardening, or....” It sounded weak, and he looked around at the many shocked faces that were staring at him.

“I do not care what he studied, that is not the issue here. While the Ixis think that we use the Sabbath-house for worshipping the Emperor, they will leave us alone. That is why we do not gather to pray while we have traders in the village. Don’t you think that the insane man suspects something by now? Your own child has already been fooled into thinking that he is her friend, so she must have given him plenty of opportunity to find out about our God. Hushah, we may have been fooled by this man, but we will be fooled no longer. Do not forget that your loyalty is to Summerdale, not to a crazy man who mortally threatens our faith.”

Hushah stared at Decimus, but instead of seeing anger in Decimus’ eyes, he could now see pity. With Decimus patting him on the shoulder, the unbearable pressure of his own confusion seemed to well up inside him, and he turned to his brother for support.

“Spurius?”

“It is not like you to be so aggressive, little brother, I am proud of you.” Spurius leaned forward. “However, you seem to have picked an argument that you cannot win, and for once I think Decimus may be right. These are dangerous times. We can not afford strangers among us.”

    Hushah realized everyone was now staring at him, waiting for him to say something, but he felt emptied of any useful thoughts. It came as a sickly kind of relief when Decimus smiled in forgiveness. Then Decimus lifted his pointed chin toward the back of the storehouse and began projecting his most authoritative voice into the anxious mutterings.

“We do not know whether or not the stranger set fire to Erebus.

We do not know if we are harboring a runaway slave who is hiding from prosecution. However, it does not matter what we know, it is what the Ixis might find out that could bring destruction upon every one of us.” There were several gasps, and this time Decimus did not lift his palms to settle his audience. “We could be damning ourselves. We could be asking for the same fate that probably awaits the crazy man.”

Berea was wagging her head at Hushah, as if she had only just been given the opportunity to chastise. “Yes, the crazy man chased Merab and John through the woods only yesterday. I don’t think frightening children is something a religious man would do—more likely he worships the Devil—and that well of his! Pah! It is so dangerous, it could bury a child that slipped into it.” She folded her arms around her ample bosom and pulled her chin back into the speckled fold of skin around her neck, as if she expected such a heavy expression to have put the argument to rest.

Hushah asked incredulously, “Do you think Azoic should be sent back out into the desert, Berea?”

Decimus leaned wearily against the counter, blocking Hushah’s view of Berea. “Nobody is sending the man to his death, Hushah. You said yourself, he is much healthier now. In fact, he is so healthy that he is out there, alone with our children, digging his way to Hell as we speak. We have done what we can for him, and now it is time to give him the horse Spurius borrowed, and send him on his way. He will ride out beyond the desert and we will never have to worry about him again.”

Hushah nodded. He should have known, this was why Decimus had called the meeting, and this was the only conclusion they could reach. Azoic had never fitted in.

Summerdale had never been comfortable with him in it. Yet, it was not until this very moment that he realized why he had tried so hard to help Azoic become a villager.

He began shaking his head, slowly. “Yes, I suppose so, but how can I explain all this to Neariah? She thinks he is her friend, and she will be heart-broken indeed.”

 

 

A8: TELLING DEEDS

 

It had required extraordinary exertion before Neariah could retrieve Spurius’ sheet from the lake, and she was proud of her achievement. She had been forced to dive deeply so she could unhook it from a tree’s root.

To her, it had looked like a bird with its wings flapping toward the shimmering surface, while a snake tried to drag it down into the darkness. Unfortunately, she had ripped the poor creature in her haste to rescue it. The tear and the nasty bloodstains were now concealed within a swan-sized ball, which fitted snuggly under her arm.

The grown-ups were still pouring out of Decimus’ storehouse, shaking their heads, and she smiled at them to see if she could cheer them up a little. However, her smile only seemed to make them shake their heads more heavily.

“It’s a swan,” she explained, sliding the sheet behind her.

“You father is looking for you.” Ginnetho was pointing into the woods, and she nodded to thank him for the warning. How could her father have expected her to ask for permission to borrow his tools when he had not been available to ask? Now he was probably going to chastise her, but she would almost certainly be allowed to borrow the tools anyway. Grown-ups were as silly as chickens, sometimes.

Azoic’s shovel was still in the well, but to her dismay, Azoic had managed to escape. He was nowhere to be seen. If this meant he had given up, after all the trouble she gone to, collecting things for him, then she would be having some very strong words with him. It was a full time job, keeping an eye on Azoic, and she was getting quite tired of it. She threw the ball of material down beside the well, next to the tools and the tent-pole—another item that she gone to great trouble to find— and stamped off toward the trees.

She no longer smiled at the grown-ups she passed. They had begun to look as serious as lizards, and she knew that when grown-ups looked as serious as lizards, there was no way to cheer them up. Besides, most of them were pointing their lizardlike expressions in her direction, as if everyone knew that she had been raiding village supplies without permission.

Merab was watching her too, but he was not looking as pleased as he normally would when she was about to get chastised. In fact, he looked unusually concerned about her. She squinted at him, and he immediately looked away, which was not normal for him, either.

She walked toward him, saying, “That is my sheet, don’t you go stealing it while I’m gone.” She continued to squint at him, wondering why he was acting so strangely. If he wanted her sheet, he would be looking angrier and sticking his chest out, but instead he was hiding behind the same lizard-like expression that all the grown-ups seemed to have. What was going on around here? She came to a stop in front of him, with her fists on her hips.

“So?” She tilted her head to one side and waited.

“I suppose you want to know where the crazy man is.”

She bit her lip, knowing that any response would delay him.

“Well, I just might happen know what the crazy man is running away from.”

“I doubt it. You don’t know anything.” She started turning away, slowly.

“They frightened him.”

“Who?”

“Everyone. They were very angry—”

“What did they say to him?”

“They didn’t say anything, but they found out what he is.”

“Oh, and what is he then?”

“I don’t think I should tell you, it’s a really big secret.”

“Were you spying on the meeting?”

“We didn’t have to, they were all shouting as if they wanted us to hear. I can’t believe you went swimming when there was so much going on.”

“I was getting some important supplies for building our well, and that is our sheet so you stop looking at it as if you are planning to steal it.”

“You don’t have any idea what is going on, do you? If you had only been here, you would have seen everything. It was so funny. The insane man jumped out of his well as if his bottom was on fire, and then he started hopping around, doing his dying wheeze thing, and saying, “mmmust see lake—” Merab’s embarrassingly accurate imitation of Azoic was making the story almost believable “—mmmust see nature, mmmmust see my own nose, mmmmust see if my bottom is on fire—”

“Merab, you just tell me what everybody said, immediately!”

Her demand only caused Merab to shake his head, and she smacked the hair out of her face, annoyed at having allowed herself to be pulled along by his silly games. “Fine, I will find out eventually, anyway.” She started walking away, less slowly this time.

“If I tell you, can I have the sheet?”

She spun around, almost shouting, “Yes, take it, just tell me what they said!”

Merab shrugged. “Oh, they only found out Azoic is an Ixis slave who went around murdering people by setting fire to them.” He started making faces, which presumably depicted a person being burned alive. “That was why he is on the run, and hiding from prosecution, here in Summerdale.”

She knew how easily hurt Azoic could be, and she could quite imagine somebody saying something that might upset him, but Merab was obviously just exaggerating to irritate her. Nobody would have been so cruel as to say such a nasty thing to Azoic, would they? “If you think I’m going to give you my sheet for that, you are very mistaken. You are just making up lies to be mean and spiteful. You are jealous because we have a well and you don’t.

You tell me exactly what happened or I’ll tell Daddy you were spying on his meeting.” She needed exact details, immediately.

Unfortunately, instead of being more honest, Merab seemed to become crueler. “Azoic told Father he used to live in Erebus, and he used to go to school there, but Decimus said nobody is allowed to live in Erebus if they go to school. Besides, the insane man is too insane to go to school, and Teacher Berea said he’s a Devil-worshipper.”

She forced herself to smile. “Oh, look. Daddy is coming to talk to us, and he’s running. Perhaps I should ask him what Teacher Berea really said.”

Merab was backing away, no longer smiling. “Don’t you dare, or I’ll never be your friend again.”

That was not much of a threat, since he was never friendly anyway, but she had no intention of getting him into trouble.

“Don’t worry, I’m not horrible like you.”

She knew grown-ups rarely ran anywhere, even when they were in a hurry, so she became increasingly concerned about her father’s approach. He was breathing heavily, as if he had been running for a long while.

“Neariah, where have you been? I was looking for you.”

“I was swimming.”

“You were? I looked in the lake, but I didn’t—”

“That’s probably because I was under the water, see?” She pointed toward the ball of cloth. “It was all right to borrow it, wasn’t it?” She smiled sweetly at him, hoping his worried expression would not turn to anger.

“Oh, I see. Yes, fine, but I thought you were with Azoic. Where is he?”

“I don’t know, I’ve been looking for him for too.”

Her father began shaking his head slowly. “He is a funny person, isn’t he, Possum? He really doesn’t seem to fit in too well around here, does he?”

She was not at all sure where this was leading, and she gave him a long sideways stare. He laughed at her, then became serious again, all in the same breath. “Why are you looking for Azoic, Daddy?”