Acts of
Reparation
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T |
he
scream cut through her dreams. She was
trying to reach... someone who needed her.
Someone hurt. Someone dying. Shivering with fear, Selené sat upright,
clutching her blanket to her thumping heart.
Waking up to a young mother’s keening could only mean one thing. Another baby had died, the fourth one this
year. Still shaking, she rose from her
lonely bed and walked to the open door, the night outside only slightly less
dark than her sleeping room. Looking up
to the white moon, she took deep breaths to calm her shattered nerves.
The
death of one, maybe even two newborns in a year, was to be expected, but
four? And this one had been so very
close to its name-day. Selené wrapped
her arms about herself, shuddering. Everyone knew babies were the most precious
of gifts. Only six, perhaps seven, were
born in any given year. Yes, one or two
would always fade and die; the ones whose eyes stayed brown always did. But four in less than a year? Something was dreadfully, horribly
wrong.
Her
thin arms still wrapped around her cold body, Selené’s
looked back up to where the large moon peeked through the leaves of the gymim tree, the leaf-shadows dancing in the fitful
breeze. The large, white moon was unlike
the three small moons. Those bright
bodies held the welcoming colors of greens and blues, the colors of spring; the
white moon hinted at death and sterility.
Still, against all tradition, it was the large, white moon that drew
her. When it waxed full she could almost
feel its living presence, as if a kindly Elder watched over her. She knew a few of the others felt that way,
she had heard the whispers over the night-time fires. Why did they stop speaking when she drew
near?
She
wished she could go to one of her yearmates. Someone she could curl up against and seek
the familiar reassurance of warmth and voice.
Selené looked up at the moon one last time, then turned to head back
into her cohort’s empty home. The crying
outside was softer now, the bereaved family drawing strength from one another.
Soon
this living space would be turned over to the succeeding cohort, the sixteen
children who had been born in the five years following the year of her
birth. They would come to live here and
be taught their life’s duties. Ages nine to thirteen, they would be old enough
to learn, and young enough to form a new kin group, the cohort they could
depend upon as they went through life.
Her cohort, all thirteen of them, had moved out of this familiar
space. A few of the youngest had
returned to their families, but most went to join their new pair-mates, ready
to start the next phase of life with home making and childbearing. All except for her. Alone again, like she hadn’t been since the
death of her mother. Tomorrow she would
select a new home for herself from among those that sat empty.
As
she settled into bed, from behind her, outside the open door where she had just
stood, she heard the sound of a twig snap from the darkness. Selené sighed. It was undoubtedly him. She wished he would
just renounce her and be done with it.
This skulking about with disapproving glances was wearying.
Iain
had made it quite clear to all around that he thought the honored Elder had
made a profound mistake pairing the two of them. That the Elders had not made any such errors
in anyone’s living memory did not sway him in the least.
The Colony was small, never numbering more than two hundred and forty, and
often less, although the current one hundred and sixty was the smallest number
any could recall. It was because there
were so few that the pairings had become so critical. The Elders knew who could have healthy
children, and who would not. How they knew was a mystery, and one
that fascinated Selené to no end.
Sometimes the pairings seemed too close kin-wise, and other times the
ages too far apart. Nonetheless, most pairings were congenial and
successful. One never mated within the
cohort of course; that would be like pairing with a sibling, but other than
that it could be anyone in the cohort older or younger than yours.
Perhaps
it was the age difference that displeased Iain?
He was the eldest in his cohort, she the youngest in hers. That made for almost a ten-year age
difference. He was a man grown at
twenty-four. She was barely a woman at
fourteen. When the honored Elder had
announced their names in the spring two seasons past, Iain had been obviously
dismayed, even angered. He called her a
woman-child, and he was not far from being wrong. Still, if he would only give her a
chance... She had tried to learn his
interests, his skills and attributes, but he had shut her out. Selené wished her mother were still alive to
go to and ask what to do. Isla, wise in
the ways of plants and herbs, had also been very wise in the ways of men; all
the women had said so. It was such a
sadness that she had died in childbed eight years ago.
Another
twig snapped. Selené stopped. She turned around and peered through the
archway. The white moonglow
made it quite easy for her dark-adapted eyes to see no one was there. Then again, he could easily be hiding in the
shadows. Iain was renowned for his
hunting prowess. In fact, the snapping
of twigs made no sense; unless he was doing so to let her know he was
there?
“Iain?”
Out
of seemingly nowhere, a tall, lean shadow filled the archway. Selené stepped back in surprise. The moonglow cast
the man’s face in deep shadows, although she knew who it was, and knew she had
nothing to fear. She held her ground as
Iain silently walked up to her and looked down into her eyes, his wary and
even... accusing?
“You
were in my dreams again.” His voice was
flat. Not angry, not pleased, just a
statement of fact. Though young, Selené
was not unaware of what young men dreamed.
Completely unintentionally, a small smile crossed her face, only to fade
away when she saw Iain’s expression harden.
“I
was hunting for you in a blizzard. I
was...” his expression was unreadable, “terrified you were lost.”
Selené
was surprised at that. Iain had barely
acknowledged her existence until the day the Elder had joined their
futures. Why would her well-being be a
concern to him? Beyond, of course, that
of any adult for a child?
“The
night before, I searched a cave trying to find you, knowing you were in great
danger. And the night before that, I
dreamed of drowning in sea foam, knowing you were just out of reach. Why?”
Selené
was drawn to his piercing blue eyes.
Everyone in the Colony had light-colored eyes, but she suddenly
discovered Iain’s were a shade of blue she had never seen before. Abruptly, he turned and walked away, adroitly
avoiding obstacles even in the near dark.
She remembered to breath.
“This
is absurd. You are a child. I’ll have to wait years before you are old
enough to...” He stopped and looked at her again, though this time it was easy
to read his embarrassment.
Selené smiled again. Like all who had been through the five years
of instruction with her cohort, she knew the details of reproduction. She had even made it her special interest to
study animals and how they functioned, finding that the colonists were not so
very dissimilar to other living creatures.
She prided herself that she knew more than the fundamentals of hygiene
and healing; how certain plants helped cure the common maladies that could make
a person or animal ill. She had even
assisted the midwife at all the births over the past year. And she had helped the healer examine the still,
cold little bodies of the babies who had so mysteriously died. Her smile faded, thinking that she would now
have to help examine another.
“Selené?”
She
almost jumped out of her skin. She had
forgotten Iain was still there, much less that he had again walked right up in
front of her.
“Have
you had any dreams?”
His
voice was again carefully neutral.
Dreams were important. Those who
had the most vivid dreams were often selected to become Elders. One never knew until The Calling, but one
could wonder, and worry.
She
shook her head, realizing at that moment she was wrong. There had been dreams. Dreams that faded the moment she awoke. His question caused an overwhelming rush of
fear, the dark of night robbing her of what she held most dear. Blinded with tears, she reached out her
arms. “Come back!”
The
fear faded, her vision cleared. Now
embarrassed, she found Iain looking at her with wide eyes. The thin, almost woman-like arms reaching
out toward the tall man did not seem to be hers. Selené turned away, wrapping her arms back
about herself. She felt the presence of
the man as he moved up behind her.
‘I
will wait for you.”
A
moment later, she knew herself alone.
|
T |
he
scents on the air warned that false dawn was only a few heartbeats away. It was very dark, darker than usual. It was not often that all four moons averted
their faces on the same night. Not a
good night to hunt, nor to be out and about, everyone knew that. So, then, where was the girl? Iain stepped lightly, even in the near blackness
deftly avoiding that which would make noise if he trod on it.
He
approached Lookout Mount’s cliff edge warily giving the sheer dropoff the respect it was due, especially tonight. What was it about this place that attracted
the girl? She came here often he had
discovered, and since she was not to be found in her new quarters, she was
undoubtedly here, black night not withstanding.
She
was a pretty little thing, that was a given, with her blue-green eyes and very
light brown hair. Her shading was just
fair enough to stand out against the uniform brown hair and brown skin of the
others, as he did in his own way, although he leaned toward the dark. Her lithe grace bided well for the beauty she
would become. All he had to do was wait
three or four years.
The
first hint of light told Iain he was right.
There she was, sitting on the boulder a mere half-pace back from the
edge, arms wrapped around her legs, delicately pointed chin resting on her
knobby knees, and with her long brown braid hanging down her back. Her long woven tunic and leggings undoubtedly
did little to ward off the night’s chill.
His anger at the danger she must have placed herself in to reach this
place warred with admiration of her courage.
He stepped on a twig to warn her of his presence.
“Good
morning, Iain. Join me.”
She
didn’t even bother herself to look around.
She sounded completely calm, as if she knew he would be there. Maybe she did. He approached close enough to see the
chill-bumps on her bare arms. He untied
his felted, lined cloak and draped its heavy warmth around her shoulders and
sat down next to her.
The
sun rose on the small Colony below, the purple shadows cast by the far
mountains quickly dissipating in the bright morning sun. As they watched, the early risers left their
homes and began the morning chores.
Iain could see his home on the far side from where they now sat. It was one of sixty identical small, peaked
roofed dwellings, each accommodating a family of four to six members. The
exteriors were of warm earth colors, dappled to blend into the shadows of trees
long since dead. The dwellings were all
old, having stood from time immemorial, and often passed down from parent to
child, although not always and not recently.
Amidst the small family buildings, were larger communal buildings that
tradition said were once lived in by extended, multigenerational families with
aunts and uncles and cousins all together.
Iain could not imagine that.
He
had chosen a dwelling on the Colony’s outskirts that overlooked the fields and
woods. Such a prime place would normally
never have been available to such a young adult, but with their numbers reduced
there had been little competition. Even
Selené had been able to choose a private dwelling, something their
grandparents’ generation would never have found possible.
“There
will be another death today.”
Iain
turned quickly to look at the woman-child next to him. If she said so, there most likely would
be. Selené had a fey ability to predict
such things.
“Old
Robt.”
Iain
nodded, relieved. Not so fey after
all. The old healer had been failing for
months now. He was almost fifty years
old, after all.
“There
have been more deaths than births for the last thirty years. Dwellings are standing empty for the first
time in living memory, or in any of the Stories that can be recalled.”
Iain
shrugged. Old stories never had
interested him much. He was one who
wanted to see what was over the next hill, to climb the highest tree or bed the
prettiest women. Or he had, until being
paired with this fey woman-child who knew too much and thought too deep.
“Something
has changed, Iain. For as long as we
have known, births have followed deaths, cohorts have always numbered sixteen
or seventeen, and the land has provided for us.”
Iain
looked back down at the Colony. He would
be needed to lead a hunt today or tomorrow.
The migrating herds of grazers were near and the food larders would need
stocking to help feed everyone through the upcoming winter months. The land was plentiful and generous at this
time, but Selené was correct. Although
fewer colonists meant fewer mouths to feed, it also meant fewer hands to
harvest the fields and gather the wild-food they would need to survive the
winter ahead. To help make up the
shortage, for the past few years Iain had led hunts under leaf bare trees or
even in the snows. They had always been
successful, he thought with pride, but in the past they had not been
needed.
There
should be no need to hunt and gather so late in the year. Winter was traditionally a time of drawing
together and telling Stories; for creating objects of usefulness or beauty, not
worrying about starvation. New pairings
often found themselves expecting their first child come spring. Certainly Selené wouldn’t be thinking of
spending those long, cold months alone in her dwelling? He knew she had no near family; well, except
for him now. She was quiet by nature and he had often found her off in the
fields alone, gathering herbs and roots she then used to tend to the ills of
the Colony under the guidance of Old Robt. Still, being off alone in winter would be
hard. He had made it a winter’s habit to
move in with his sister’s family since his cohort had been dispersed. Certainly there would be room for Selené to
join them.
How
sad to be without family, Iain thought; not a problem he had ever
experienced. Although his father had
died in the same unforeseen hunting accident that claimed Selené’s
father ten years prior, he had always had his mother and sister’s family to
look after and look after him.
“We’ll
dwindle away to nothing unless something changes.”
Now
Iain laughed. Change? There had always
been a Colony. For years uncounted they
had lived off the land in this place.
Their dwellings were old, ancient even, very well made and
unalterable. The pattern of life was
well established. Babies were born,
children played in the fields, learned in their cohorts, paired off, had
children of their own, served the community, and then died. Oh, accidents did happen, and the occasional
woman did die in childbirth, but most everyone could expect to see fifty or
fifty-two passages of the seasons. He was the odd, restless one by wishing
to see more of the world. Most were
satisfied to live out their ordained span in quiet contentment.
Her
expression was slightly hurt at his laughter.
He apologized with a smile and, after a quick glance about, picked the
late-fall flower still blooming at his feet and offered it to her with a
flourish. She reached for it with a
smile... then froze. Her eyes widened in
fear and she pushed away the red blossoms.
“No...” She shuddered and leaned away from the peace
offering, struggling to regain her composure.
“I
dreamed last night, Iain.”
That
startled him. Only the occasional slip
of the tongue hinted that she also Dreamed.
He absently placed the rejected flower on the ground next to its
fellows. “Oh?” He wanted to look at her, but he had come to
realize his gaze could intimidate her for some reason. He knew his eyes were bluer than most, but
still, they were only eyes. He asked
mildly, “What did you dream?”
“The
moon.”
Iain
inadvertently glanced up into the dawning sky.
“Which one?”
Selené’s lovely forehead creased as she
turned to answer him. “The moon. You feel it, I know you do. It calls to me, too.” Her blue-green eyes challenged his, the
strength of her conviction a new and fascinating facet of her personality. He was unsure how to reply. He didn’t need to. Leaving his cloak behind, she hopped off
their boulder and started to walk away, for all the world acting embarrassed.
Her
words came to him even though she did not turn around. “I will be in the forest this morning if you
need me. There are roots I need to
gather to ease Old Robt.”
She
was right about the white moon.
|
T |
he
frail old man sat on his padded chair in the large, empty room, his companion
standing immediately behind him and resting her slim hand on his shoulder. The desk in front of them was wide and cool
under his hands. They were alone in the
dim, vaulted space, their voices echoing slightly in the emptiness. He leaned forward, chin resting on now steepled fingers, studying the images of the young couple
on the large overhead screen twenty meters in front of them. He reached up and gently patted the warm hand
on his shoulder, then idly scratched his forehead. He sighed heavily.
“She’s
too young.” He had such hopes.
“Perhaps,
but we need her skills.”
“I
wasn’t at all certain she would be here for us.
I’m still not. This might not be her
turn, after all.”
The
woman laughed gently. “And when has
either of those two not answered the Call?”
“Well,
yes. I can’t dispute you there, my dear.
She is, though, quite young.”
“And
when has age ever been a barrier when one is Called?”
The
old man pursed his lips, then nodded in concession to the woman’s point. “And the age difference between them? Ten years is a fair gap, although, I grant,
not insurmountable.”
The
woman stepped around to the man’s side, spinning the padded chair slightly
toward her to catch the man’s attention, and looked down into the careworn,
tired old eyes. “You sound as if you
wish this not to happen. You have waited
years.”
“Yes, I know I have. And now it is all
but too late... for me.”
The
woman’s blue eyes filled with sadness.
“We do need her, though.”
“I
know.”
Together
they turned back to face the monitor and watch the young couple until it was
time for the blue-eyed woman to leave.
|
T |
he
day that had begun on the rock on top of the cliff now ended outside the home
of Old Robt.
The gentle old healer had finally slipped into his final sleep just
after the noon meal, his family at his side and Selené sitting by the door,
crying quietly. He had been a good
friend to her over the past few years since her interest in plant lore and
healing had blossomed. In truth, he had
been as close to a father as any she could remember. There was another healer, Danl,
a man in his middle years, but he was not as welcoming to a child full of
questions and always underfoot. Selené
knew she would now have to approach him for more training.
“Will
you be the one to hold the torch?”
The
tears on her face warmed by the late afternoon sunlight, Selené
turned around toward Iain’s quiet voice; she had long since stopped being
surprised to find him standing behind her.
In any case, it was a fair question.
No one in Old Robt’s family had the healing
gift, and one’s pyre was usually lit by another who shared a common life’s
work.
“Probably,
but it is Alna’s decision.” Old Robt’s eldest
child would let her know soon if it was indeed to be her. The pyre would be lit at sunset, according to
tradition, to send Old Robt on his way.
“Come
on. You’ve been up since before dawn,
and I know you haven’t eaten or taken a rest in all that time. I have something set aside for you.”
Selené
looked at her tall companion in frankly.
He had been paying that close of attention to her needs? She allowed Iain to cup a hand under her
elbow and guide the way to the far side of the Colony. As tired as she was from her bedside vigil,
her ever-present curiosity ran high. Was
he actually concerned about her?
They
arrived at Iain’s home and he led the way in.
The place was perfectly typical of every other home, consisting of one large
sleeping chamber, two smaller chambers, and a privy facing east, a generous
cooking and eating space facing west and a common room in the middle where they
now stood. Iain’s place looked very
plain to her eyes with unadorned surfaces and colorless walls, and with none of
the small clutter that said a family lived here, which of course, none
did. With only one man living here, it
seemed achingly empty; just like her dwelling.
Iain
nodded his head to the low gymim-wood dining table
and gestured for her to seat herself on the rug-covered ground as he stepped
over to the cooking area. He returned
shortly and seated himself next to her, his long legs folding under the low
table to accommodate the space she took.
On the table in front of her he placed a tightly woven basket filled
with fresh bread, a fired-clay vessel still warm from the stew inside, and a
clear glass of water. Selené sniffed the
air appreciatively, touched at his thoughtfulness. He had somehow obtained her favorite
vegetable stew, which she knew he was not partial to.
She
pulled her carved eating utensils out of her pocket and cleaned them on a piece
of soap weed always left on tables for that purpose. To her surprise, she found herself hungry and
dug into the meal eagerly. Quickly
finishing her stew, she realized Iain was still sitting quietly near her,
resting against the pale, cool rock-wall behind him and watching.
He
noticed her pause, leaned forward and picked up a small fired-clay container
and passed it to her. It was decorated
with tiny blue flowers and filled with a creamy topping made from the pressed
oil of the weaver’s weed. It was her
favorite bread topping and enjoyed by almost everyone in the Colony. She accepted with a small, tired smile.
“Thank
you, Iain, for your care. Where did you
find the stew?”
“I
made it.”
Selené
looked up, again surprised. Iain just
shrugged.
“It’s
what you always eat when you have a choice, and it’s not all that hard to put
together. The bread is from my
mother. She likes you, by the way.”
Selené
blushed. He had paid that much attention
to her?
“Selené,
why did Keli’s baby die?”
She
turned fretful eyes toward Iain, not really surprised at his question but upset
again at her lack of an answer. The
death had been two weeks ago and still she had no idea. She and Danl had
examined the tiny, perfectly shaped body just after its all-too-brief life was
ceremonially recorded and before its cremation.
“I don’t know. Nothing inside was
formed wrong, but the colors were just... off.
I feel like I should understand why, but I just... don’t.”
Iain
nodded. She was certain he understood
from eviscerating his kills what she meant by the colors, inside an animal at
least. The basics were the same, she
knew that from her turns helping with cooking.
She
finished off her much appreciated meal, although the food now sat heavily in
her stomach. Cleaning her utensils
slowly to stall for time as she thought of an answer, she finally returned them
to her tunic’s pocket. She looked at
Iain, trying not to let her fear show.
“I need to find out. We can’t
keep watching babies die. What if one
day it is my child?”
Iain
sat with a hunter’s silence, regarding her with his amazingly blue eyes. “What can I do to help?”
It
took a moment for what he said to sink into her thoughts. She studied his face carefully. Just when she had finally come to accept the
idea that the man she had been paired with did not want her company...
Perhaps
she had been premature.
“Truly?” She thought she now saw a hint of impatience
on his face, and she hastily waved aside her doubt. She’d accept his offer. “Come with me when I ask an Elder for help.”
|
I |
ain
sat perfectly still, shocked to his core at what he’d just heard. Of all the things Selené could have asked,
this was the one thing he never would have expected. The Elders came in harvest season to review
the progress of the cohorts, summon the children just learning how to speak, or
return one of their own for cremation.
They came in the spring to see how all had fared over winter, and in
those years when a cohort completed its training, to announce new pair-bondings. Once in a
great while they came to claim an adult for one of their own; no one ever knew
when that would happen, and those who did leave were regarded as if dead to the
needs of the Colony.
No
one ever asked the Elders for favors;
self-sufficiency was understood by all.
You made do, puzzled things out, or did without. And truly, how often was outside help
needed? Their lives were full and bountiful.
Iain
leaned back against the wall, stared off into the distance and thought. Truly, there was no law against what she
asked. It just wasn’t done. But why not?
That took more reflection, but the answer came quickly. Because it simply wasn’t needful. He looked back at Selené, and his lips
twitched in amusement. Her expression
was a mix of determination, fear, apprehension, and defiance. He was coming to see the wisdom in the
Elder’s selection for his pair-mate. She
would be a handful, this one would, and he enjoyed a challenge. In any case, it would be after winter before
an Elder came to visit. No one knew
where the Elders lived, but all travel through the snow-filled winter months
was difficult, and Elders were human after all.
Perhaps by then they would understand what was happening, and if not,
well, then he would stand by this feisty woman-child’s side as she asked her
questions.
“Yes,
of course I’ll come.”
|
T |
he
fires burned low on the pyre. Selené had
lit the flame and stood with the family as Old Robt
was paid honor for his service to the Colony.
Iain waited in the shadows, watching but not contributing anything more
than the expected oral responses. His
help was not needed for this. Old Robt had never been a hunter and was not close kin, so Iain
had no formal role in this ceremony. He
would wait for Selené to be done and then make sure she got well-deserved
rest. His home was more than large
enough for them both even if they slept in separate rooms as he anticipated;
there was no need for her to be alone.
Selené
was too tired to do anything but take his offered hand as the crowd dispersed
and follow him through the gathering shadows.
Once at Iain’s, she gratefully collapsed on the comfortable ligon fur-covered sleeping mat in one of the small
bedrooms, asleep before he covered her with a warm felted blanket. He returned to the central room and opened
the window to the night sky.
Extinguishing the night candle he had lit upon returning with Selené, he
looked outside.
The
heavens were the usual smooth black, this night sprinkled with a glittering of
tiny bright near-winter stars. He looked
to the east and saw where the faint crescents of two small moons appeared. Later this night the smallest, fleetest, and
brightest moon would fly across the night sky, but he doubted he would still be
awake then. The large white moon would
not appear for two nights. Selené had
been right. The large, white moon was his favorite. He leaned against the window frame to watch
the moons’ path across the black sky, losing himself in his thoughts.
~~~~~~~~~~~
He
awoke with a start.
It
was still dark outside, the Colony silent except for the distant footsteps of Kyl, the night watchman on his rounds looking out for a
wayward carnivore or scavenger. Iain
realized he had all but fallen asleep where he stood. Now straining his senses, his body tense, he
sought to understand what had awoken him.
He was grateful he had extinguished the small candle; his eyes were
fully night adjusted.
“Relax,
Iain. No one is here who will hurt you.”
Iain
whipped around, muscles still taut, ready to respond against need, to face the
soft, feminine voice. Not Selené though. The
voice was that of a mature woman. There,
standing in the shadows by the door to Selené’s room,
stood a slender hooded figure. Iain relaxed.
“I
apologize, Elder. I do not mean any
insult.”
“None
taken. I must apologize to you for
entering uninvited, but I didn’t wish to disturb your meditations. I know your day has been long.”
Iain
blinked. An Elder apologizing to him?
“I
did not realize Robt had died until I arrived. Kyl told me when he
sent me here from Selené’s home. I’m glad to see you and she are together.”
As
the Elder pushed back her finely-made cowl, Iain could see there was a small
smile on the aged but still lovely face.
Iain started to protest he would never take advantage of a child, when
the woman gently waved aside his protest.
“I
understand, and approve. She will be ready
for you in good time.”
Iain
closed his mouth. This was the Elder who
had paired him with Selené, and to whom he had protested so vigorously. Iain simply nodded his head compliantly. There was a rustle from inside Selené’s room, and the Elder turned to look that way. Even obscured by shadow, Iain was surprised
to see a smile of joy on the Elder’s face, quickly returning to the usual calm
politeness.
“Iain?”
“Here.”
The
woman-child walked out, rubbing her eyes.
“I was dreaming... oh.”
Seeing
the Elder, Selené immediately bowed her head,
obviously flustered at the unexpected visit.
Recovering her composure with admirable rapidily,
Selené walked to Iain’s side. He felt her small hand slip into his and
squeezed it gently. “You can ask your
question.”
She
looked up at him, blue-green eyes wide. “Now?”
Iain
had to smile at the crack in her voice.
Not quite so bold when Authority was in person, was she? Iain gestured to the patient woman standing
still and regarding them thoughtfully, her hands clasped casually and
comfortably in front of her grey robe.
“There
is an Elder.”
Selené swallowed hard, took a deep
breath, slipped her hand out of his, and to Iain’s pride walked up to the
Elder, having to look up to see into the older woman’s blue eyes. She bobbed her head in respect, then asked
her question.
“Why
are so many babies dying? What can we do
to make it stop?”
Iain
watched as the woman studied Selené carefully, not in disapproval he thought,
but rather as if she was measuring the younger person against some standard
known only to her. Slowly and without
breaking eye contact, the Elder shook her head.
“We
don’t know.”
Selené’s face fell in
disappointment. Iain moved up to stand
closely behind her, providing what support he could, although he too was profoundly
disconcerted. The Elder reached out a
slender hand and lifted Selené’s chin.
“We
do know much, we Elders, but we do not know everything.” The woman paused, smiling gently at the look
on Selené’s face, but then continued. “There come times when help is needed. You are asking the right questions, and that
is the first step toward learning the answers. Come with me. We will figure it out together.”
Iain
inhaled sharply, instinctively moving to place himself between Selené and the
Elder. Selené
was being Called. Even as he moved, Iain
was appalled by his action, but to have Selené taken from him was wrong.
The Elder looked up at him and smiled, wryly Iain thought. She seemed to know what he was thinking.
“And
you. You are both needed.”
The
Elder turned to leave, raising her hands to pull the cowl back up over her
head. Selené and Iain exchanged startled
looks. Holding even tighter to Iain’s
hand, Selené looked back to the Elder.
Her face showed fear of the unknown warring with... excitement.
“Me,
Elder? I know so little. I have so much to learn.”
“I
know.”
“Iain
can come, too?”
“Iain
must come also. He is needed as much as
you.”
“Now?” Selené asked with the same small squeak as
before.
Not
pausing, the Elder walked away, leaving Iain’s home and stepping into the
night. She did not pause her measured steps, but she did turn her head slightly
to speak over her shoulder as the darkness swallowed her form.
“Now.”
It
was too quick. Iain had not said
good-bye to his family. Who would lead
the hunt?
“Kyl will let your family know. It is time to leave. Now.”
The voice was softer with distance.
And
that was that. They bowed their heads in
acquiescence.
“Yes,
Elder.”
Now
the woman did pause still facing away from the Colony, waiting for them to join
her. As they neared, the Elder turned
and smiled down at Selené, a bit sadly Iain thought.
“My
name is Tanya. I ask that you use
it. Come, follow me.”
The
Elder, Tanya, turned and walked quickly now.
Iain sensed Selené’s eyes on him, but his eyes
were on the woman, trying to understand his role in this. Selené looked toward the Elder, the woman’s
form now obscured by leafy fronds that still waved from her passage. It would be very difficult to honor the
Elder’s request, he thought. It seemed
to lack respect to call her by her name alone, as if she were a fellow colonist. The thought gave him pause. He had never thought of the Elders as regular
people.
What
the woman had said still make little sense, but Iain could somehow tell Selené trusted her. Selené glanced up at Iain briefly catching
his eye, then followed the Elder away from the Colony.
|
T |
anya
led the way through the forest, pushing branches out of her way as the woods became
deeper and thicker. When she had walked
down the mountain earlier today, the sunlight had been tinged with green from
the solid canopy high overhead. Now it
was black, except for the light from the smallest moon crossing swiftly
overhead. Her hand-held torch was left
off until they absolutely needed it; the battery was running low.
Tanya
usually enjoyed her visits to the Colony, seeing how the grandchildren and
great-grandchildren of her cohort fared.
After all these years, the casual friendships of that long ago time were
sadly gone, as were the members of her cohort.
And her pair-mate. And her two
children. Dead, all of them, from old
age. Now, everyone she met, including
her grandchildren, treated with a reverence that remained unsettling even after
all these decades. Still, children will be children no matter what, and she
treasured the quiet times sitting amongst the great-grandchildren of her
generation. This visit had not had the
time for that, however.
Pulling
her attention back to the present, she listened for the expected noises behind
her. Iain moved with the stealth of an
experienced hunter, but Selené, light and careful as she was, still left an
audible trail of noise. Tanya smiled to
herself. She had known that curious and inquisitive
mind could not leave the challenge answered.
|
F |
ollowing
Tanya, they walked into the cave’s entrance and up a darkened incline. Selené reached out for Iain’s hand. Tanya led the way confidently, as if she had
walked this way before, which Selené had to grant she no doubt had. The walk seemed long, although without the
sun or moons to help her judge the passage of time she was uncertain if three
hours had passed, or four. She was tired
and short winded at the pace Tanya had set.
The Elder had ignored repeated requests for rest. The aches in Selené’s
leg muscles told her they had been walking uphill, although so gradually she
couldn’t appreciate the incline in the tunnels they passed. Tanya’s strange light was just bright enough
to lead the way, but not enough to prevent her from stumbling over the
occasional rock or scraping a hand against an outcrop of the roughly rounded
tunnels. It was too dark to make out any
details.
Just
as Selené was willing to risk losing honor in Iain’s eyes and ask Tanya yet
again for a respite, the tunnel finally leveled out and the walking became
easier. Her breathing grew less
labored.
“How
high have we climbed, Elder?” she asked.
“Tanya,
please. As high as the highest mountain
around the Colony.”
“Are
we inside that mountain?” Iain’s voice
was almost directly behind her now as he caught up.
“Yes.”
Selené
thought she picked up a hint of approval in the brief answer. She inhaled more deeply. No wonder she was short winded; she was embarrassed
not to have realized they were inside
a mountain and glad the dimness prevented Iain from seeing her blush. She may not be as woods-wise as the hunters,
but she was no innocent, either. No
Colonist was.
“Come,
we are almost at your new home.” Tanya
turned and walked toward what Selené now appreciated
was a dim light at the tunnel’s end.
Passing into what must be a chamber directly beneath the summit of the
mountain, Tanya finally came to a halt.
Selené gratefully leaned against the wall and rested. She would have sat, except she could hear,
and worse still, feel the small pops
of dried rodent skulls under her feet and shuddered to think what else might be
in the shadows. She crossed her hands
across her chest and tucked her hands in her armpits for warmth. Now that they were no longer exerting
themselves, the chill of the mountain was pervasive. Selené looked around.
The
chamber was vast, and dimly lit.
Realizing that the wall she leaned against did not cause any discomfort
to her much scraped and bruised skin, she felt a twinge of curiosity through
her fatigue. She reached out a hand and
ran it along the surface. The walls were
very smooth and resembled the interiors of the buildings back at the
Colony. Selené watched as Iain reached
out to touch the wall also, running his hand against the unnaturally flat
surface. He did not look tired in the
least. Selené watched as he looked up toward the
ceiling of the cave, and when she followed his gaze she realized, quite to her
surprise, she could actually see the
ceiling of this vast cavern, and that odder still, there were unwavering and
constant shadows tracing unnatural patterns across its arched expanse. Shadows?
Tanya’s unusual torch certainly wasn’t bright enough to cast enough
light to make such distant shadows, much less explain the shadows’ source. In fact, when Selené looked toward the Elder,
she realized the woman had extinguished the light and left it on the ledge by
the entrance. Where was the light coming
from?
“Tanya,
did our ancestors make this place?”
Iain’s
voice had a confidence she sorely lacked just now.
The
woman nodded, then gestured for them to join her.
Selené
wanted to sit and rest. Where was Tanya
leading them next? There was nothing
here and nowhere to go, except for the tunnel though which they had just
arrived. Unless she meant for them to live inside this cave? Surely not.
“How
are you doing?” Selené jumped slightly
when she realized Iain was standing immediately in front of her. He looked concerned.
“Tired.”
Iain
nodded. He gently rubbed her shoulders,
then cupped his hand about her elbow and led the way to where Tanya
waited. The Elder was watching them with
the same non-judgmental look all Elders wore.
She motioned them closer, and when they stood shoulder to shoulder, the
floor beneath them collapsed.
|
T |
anya
sighed. She was glad to be home. The walk back from the Colony grew longer
each time. Then again, a
fifteen-kilometer up-hill walk was brisk exercise when one was almost sixty-five
years old. She studied the two in front
of her as the lift dropped five stories.
They held their understandable fear in check most commendably. Well, all of this would seem familiar soon
enough.
The
platform upon which they stood came to a gentle rest at the bottom of the
shaft, and doors opened into a white corridor lined with standard Alphan panels. The bright light caused all three of them to
blink and squint, and Tanya watched through half closed eyes as Selené sought
safety behind Iain’s lean back. She
carefully repressed a small smile as she watched the young man deliberately
place himself between his companion and the great unknown.
Stepping
out of the lift and gesturing for the two to follow her, she paused at the
storage unit placed conveniently nearby and built flush with the wall. Pushing the button to slide open the panel,
Tanya unbelted and took off her cowled robe, hanging
it on the small hook inside the narrow compartment and exchanging it for her
belt and commlock. Threading the belt
about her waist and absently slipping the commlock into its usual, comfortable
position, she fervently wished for a cup of strong, hot tea, but that would
have to wait. She unobtrusively watched
the two newcomers as they looked about in wonder, Selené
lightly running her fingers over the solid door panel that now covered the
lift’s entrance.
Tanya
tugged her mismatched sleeves, one red, one beige as always, down from where
they had ridden up on her arms, and turned to check the status screen on the adjacent
computer panel. Keying in an info
request provided answers that had her lips thin in worry; there was no time to
waste. She looked at Selené and Iain. The girl was tired, there was no mistaking
the dark circles under her eyes that were still very wide and panicky from the
fright of the descending lift. Iain was
holding up much better, but then again he was in excellent condition and
obviously used to long days and nights hunting and hiking. She looked back to Selené, her gaze softening.
“Come,
you can rest in a little while, but we need to hurry now.”
Iain
looked ready to protest on the girl’s behalf, but Tanya held up her hand for
silence, for once grateful for the reverence accorded Elders, and Iain subsided
respectfully.
“Come.”
She
quickly led the way down the corridor to the residential quarters.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The
status report on Computer worried her.
Too many red tell-tales. Tanya
knew the old man was failing, but his determination to see things through was
legendary. He had insisted he would see
the arrival of the next caretakers, and she had harbored no doubt that he would
do just that; she would never have left his side otherwise. Still, he was almost eighty years old, and
that was the average lifespan for an Elder.
Blinking back tears, she knew she simply didn’t want to face the inevitable.
Deep
in thought and trusting in Selené and Iain to follow, she almost walked past
her quarters. She stopped abruptly, no
doubt surprising the pair behind her.
She glanced quickly over her shoulder and nodded approval to the
patiently waiting pair at their attentiveness in the midst of what to them was
still strange and overwhelming. She
smiled briefly and reassuringly, using her commlock to open the door.
A
tired voice welcomed their arrival.
“Computer said you had come back. I was afraid you wouldn’t make
it.”
The
tears nearly blinded her eyes. It was
true, but Computer’s warning didn’t prepare her for just how much the old man
had withered away in only a day.
Heedless
of Elder dignity, she crossed the room in a rush and knelt by the old man’s
side. From the care shown with his
person, it was obvious that the others had watched over him tenderly in her
absence.
Tanya
leaned over the elderly man, gently brushing back the wispy, grey hair from his
forehead. A smile creased the old face
and startlingly clear, blue eyes opened, looking up to the woman who smiled,
then nodded in the direction of the Colonists.
He turned with effort to look at the new arrivals. He studied the faces of Selené and Iain
carefully, a slow smile spreading across the parchment-thin skin.
“Ah,
so you were correct.” He smiled fondly
at the woman, then turned his piercing gaze back to the newcomers. “We knew to expect someone, but it’s always a
bit of a mystery as to who will show up this time round.”
Iain
and Selené looked at each other, the confusion quite obvious on their faces.
The
old man looked at each of them, settling his gaze on Selené, then clucking his
tongue. “So young. Well, time will take care of that deficiency,
now won’t it? But, do we have that
time?” His breath became short and he
gasped a few times.
Tanya’s
eyes glistened with unshed tears as she attempted to recapture a smooth
demeanor. “Rest now. I’ll do what is needful.” She reached out and smoothed the blue quilt
that covered the frail old body against the chill.
“I
know you will.” The old man reached out
his hand and patted hers. “It’s been a
good run this time, hasn’t it? But, we
need their skills, not mine, and not even yours, my dear. Just make sure Computer is tucked in tightly,
or David will have a snit when he comes back.”
Tanya
leaned over and kissed the man’s forehead.
“I’ll make sure, but that will be several years yet.”
“Yes,
yes, but the time will fly past. It
always does.” The old gentleman reached
out a palsied hand and smoothed the woman’s graying hair. “I’ve enjoyed your company. I rather imagine Paul or Alan might have objected,
though.”
“Well,
they are not here to do so, now are they?”
Her tone had a distinct note of asperity that caused the old man to
chuckle.
“No,
no they aren’t.” There was a sad smile
on the old face. His breaths were
becoming more and more ragged, his color paled and his eyes took on a distant
look as he seemed to gaze beyond the
small room. Tears ran freely down
Tanya’s face. The old man looked up at
her. “Now, now, no call for that. It’s my time, is all.” The old man reached out a hand. It was too weak to reach his goal, and fell
back to the bed. Tanya gasped and went
to her knees. She tenderly picked it up
and held it to her face. She leaned
forward to catch the next words, almost too faint to be heard. “I’ll not say good-bye, my dear, just...
good-night.”
He
exhaled, and was still.
|
I |
ain
didn’t know what to say, or to do. He
would never admit it, but he was confused and nearly overwhelmed. The old one had died. He felt a great loss, but why? He did not recall ever meeting this honorable
Elder before. The ancient one certainly
had enough years so that this was not a tragic death. But still, there was an ache in his heart he
could not explain.
The
two watched solemnly and respectfully as Tanya laid her head on the old man’s
chest and quietly sobbed. They didn’t
know what to do. Usually there were
older adults about who stepped in to comfort the grieving family and prepare
the body for cremation. Selené and Iain
looked at each other. Maybe he should go
back to the Colony while Selené stayed to keep the older woman company?
A
deep, ragged breath drew their attention back to the woman. They watched as she pushed herself up to her
feet and turned to look at them. Her
face was profoundly sad, yet calm. “The
others will look after him. Come, it has
been a very long day. It is time for you
to rest.”
She
paused long enough to place the old man’s hands on his chest, smooth his hair
and kiss his forehead one last time, then, she led the way out.
Iain
followed, but turned at the last moment to see the old one’s face as the
strange door slid shut.
“Tanya,
that old man, who was he?”
Tanya
darted a look at Iain, seemingly startled by the question, but then nodded,
mostly to herself, Iain thought.
“He
was a dear friend. We served here
together for over forty years. He was
the one who helped me discover my place.
My arrival was, in a small measure, a disappointment for him. He so very much wanted it to be you who came,
but it was not to be. At least he saw
you before he died. I am very grateful
for that.”
Iain
opened his mouth, but Tanya held up her hand and shook her head slightly and he
became silent. One did not interrupt an
Elder when she was speaking.
“He
was the man behind Moonbase Alpha, its heart and
soul. Without him there would have been
no Alpha, no survival after Breakaway, and no Colony.” The Elder looked at Selené. “His name was Victor Bergman, and he was your
mother’s grandfather.”
|
S |
elene
stood rigidly still, her exhaustion cushioning the shock. Her mother’s grandfather? Her mother had never mentioned him. She had always simply assumed he had died
like the others. He was an Elder? Her great-grandfather was an Elder?
“Selené?” Iain’s
voice was gentle.
She
looked at the white walls around her, at Tanya standing in front of them in her
strange clothes. The face of the old man
lying motionless under an impossibly bright blue blanket swam back into
view. It was all too much. She flushed, growing very warm in the cool
corridor, her head beginning to swim.
She fell, retreating to the safety of unawareness, Iain’s arms barely
felt as they broke her fall.
|
S |
he was needed in
Medical Center. The trauma cases were
overwhelming the on-duty staff and Mathias was calling in all available hands,
even the ones who had just completed a thirty-six hour shift. The operating theater was being hurriedly
turned over from the last case and should be ready by the time she
arrived. An open, sucking chest wound,
Bob had quickly summarized. Damn. She didn’t have any formal training in
thoracic trauma, but that was irrelevant.
Since Breakaway she had pushed her skills until she was competent in
just about all the major surgical fields.
She rushed into the brightly lit operating suite, scanning the radiographic
images of the broken body awaiting her, the nurse quickly gowning her and
prepping her hands. There was no time to
think, she had to get in there and try her level best to save a life. Her attention narrowed to the open wound in
front of her, the blood flooding the field, the heart throbbing just beneath her
fingertips....
“Shhh, shhh...”
Thrashing
against the restraints holding her down, Selené woke up frantic, panting and
gasping for air.
“I’ve
got to stop the bleeding, I’ve got to...”
The
room was black. Reality seeped in
slowly. It was a dream. Just another dream. She breathed in deeply. Was it still night? Had Old Robt just
been sent on his way?
“Selené? Are you awake?”
Callused
fingers brushed the hair off her face.
She knew the warmth next to her was Iain. She wrapped her arm around his waist and snuggled
in. “I’m so glad you’re here.”
Selené
closed her eyes against the unnatural blackness, missing the faint moonglow that most often lit the nights. It was wonderful to have someone next to her
again; she dreaded being alone. When she
was young there had been her mother, but after Isla’s death, a childless aunt
had reluctantly stepped in to care for her.
Alsie had certainly provided shelter and food,
but the woman had been cool and remote, providing little in the manner of companionship. Warmth and friendship returned after Selené
joined her cohort, and she remembered the joy and happiness that had filled her
days... until the morning two seasons past when her cohort had been disbanded,
as all cohorts inevitably must, to begin the next phase of life. The others had joined their new
life-partners, or had returned to their families. Only she had been alone, although she had
been aware of Iain lurking ever near.
Now he was here.
“Where
are we, Iain?”
“In
my, our, new quarters, Tanya named
them. She said to rest and refresh ourselves.
Remember?” Iain shifted over, reaching
for something in the dark. There were
the sounds of something bumping against a hard surface, and then a pale light
appeared across the room.
Quickly
assuring herself that Iain was not going to leave, Selené
looked around the room. The walls were
as white as the walls in the rest of this strange place, and all harshly
straight and sharp. The tables and
chairs were also an unrelenting white, but had a smooth, rounded look as is
they were once water-like and then frozen into curved shapes. There was no wood to be seen.
A
movement out of the corner of her eye caused Selené
to cease in her assessment of her new quarters,
and she watched as Iain turned back to her and resettled on the bed. He raised an arm to allow her to curl up
against his warm side. His arm wrapped
around her waist was very comforting.
They were still dressed in the clothes they had arrived in, and the
small amount of growth on Iain’s face was enough to say half a day had
passed. She reached out and ran her fingers
across the stubble. It was the first
time she had touched his face.
“Hungry?”
Iain asked, startling Selené out of her tactile
exploration of his face. His blue eyes
did not look particularly rested, Selené thought. No doubt he had stayed awake on watch.
Selené
started to shake her head, but a loud grumble from her stomach put a lie to
that. She grinned apologetically. “Yes.
But I’d like to bathe first.” Iain
smiled down at her. He rolled out of bed
and held a hand out to her. Grinning,
Selené took that hand and was led to a smaller room that held a most marvelous
surprise.
Indoor
showers were something she was familiar with; rainwater was collected on roofs
and on the cliff and fed into showers and privies throughout the Colony. But
the water was cold, tepid at best on a hot day, and limited in the dry season. To have an endless hot shower, well, that was simply an unheard of indulgence.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Once
he heard Selené splashing in the washroom, Iain sat down on the side of the bed
rubbing a hand over his stubbly face, his fatigue rolling over him in
waves. The miraculous shower Tanya had
shown him would have helped, no doubt, but he had not wanted to leave Selené’s side while she slept so fitfully. For once, he was not worried about Selené falling
prey to roving carnivores in the woods, or falling off the cliff. If they were not safe here in the midst of
the Elders’ home, then nowhere was safe. He had
closed his eyes, willing sleep to come, but all that had come was the
familiar dream. Not the ones of recent
since the Elder had announced Selené’s name at the
pair-bonding ceremony, of losing her, but the old dream, the one that had
haunted him since he left his cohort...
... they were
looking at him to make the decision, always to make decisions in things
trivial, and things important. To decide
who lived, or died. To keep the three
hundred and eleven souls looking to him away from the verge of extinction...
...Iain
shook his head. Always the same odd
number, well more than ever had been seen in the Colony. He could barely imagine leading so many
people. He was well used to leading his
hunting team, and to risking his life and those of the hunt, but they never measured
more than five or ten. He knew one day
he might well be the leader of the Colony, hunt leaders often became so after
age robbed them of their reflexes, but to lead so many seemed
overwhelming.
He
could never make out the faces looking to him, just the sense of urgency, of
having to decide now or all would be
lost. And somehow the white moon was
important. The most vivid dreams
occurred when he slept under the full, white moon. He had never told anyone.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The
hot water never did run out. That small
miracle said more than anything else they had seen that their lives were now to
be very, very different. Iain showered
also, and shaved. They dressed in the
clothes left out for them, and it seemed to Selené as if someone had been expecting
them. The larger outfit, plainly cut for
a man, had, like Tanya’s short tunic, one odd colored sleeve. Black.
Her outfit, a white sleeve.
Iain’s clothes fit admirably well, but her skirt dragged on the ground. Since Tanya’s skirt had ended at mid-calf,
she could only assume this was the smallest size they had readily
available. Perhaps she could borrow a
child’s skirt until she gained her final height. The heavy shoes left out for them were very
uncomfortable and they opted to wear their soft, leather moccasins, even if the
colors and style did not match the rest of their new clothes.
Now,
each clean and dressed, they wondered how to find a meal. As if on cue, there was a most usual sound
rather like a chirp of a bird, and then a tapping on the door. After a polite pause, it opened of its own
accord, somehow disappearing into the wall of the doorframe and a young man
with a purple sleeve walked in.
“Welcome! Ready for lunch?”
|
T |
he
food was hot and plentiful, but very different from what they were used
to. There were eighteen people sitting
at the large, oval and very white table, with chairs for seven more. Their guide had led them to a narrow table
set against the far, white wall covered with bowls of food. He had set the example by taking plate and
utensils from a stack of the same and helping himself to various dishes. Selené stayed with what was more or less
familiar... a bowl of porridge, fresh rolls, and some fresh fruit, with a
selection that was impressive and mostly out of season. Iain helped himself to what smelled like a
baked meat pie, more of the fresh fruit, and a cup of a hot, bitter-smelling
brewed drink. Selené passed on the
latter in favor of cold water.
Everything
was different, and yet the people sitting at the table dressed in the same odd
clothing she now wore, appeared just as she expected- slim, brown-skinned,
brown-haired and blue-eyed. The language
they used was comfortably familiar, and yet at the same time incomprehensible;
she simply couldn’t understand many of the words. She knew
these people had come from the Colony, had been Called to serve as Elders, like
her great-grandfather. They were
familiar, and terrifyingly different.
She looked down at her own clothes, and the white sleeve. No one else wore white, but then again, no
one else was wearing black except Iain.
They sat down next to their guide, at the places where commlocks awaited them. The conversations up and down the table did
not pause for their arrival, although a few members present did make eye
contact and nod.
“We’ll
take the Professor back down tomorrow.
That will give Tanya another day to rest before making the hike
again. I told her she didn’t need to go,
but she insists.”
“What
do you expect, Ryan? Of course she’ll
go.” A tall, thin woman looked at the
man, Ryan, with apparent exasperation.
“I
know. It’s just that two hikes in a week
is really hard on someone her age.”
Selené
realized they were making arrangements to take the old one’s body back to the
Colony for honorable cremation. It felt
somehow disrespectful to be sitting here eavesdropping on the conversation,
even if they were discussing her far-kin.
The shock of discovering her great-grandfather had been an Elder was not
so acute after a good rest. The Elders
came from every family, after all, and almost everyone could claim an Elder as
kin within two or three generations. She
glanced at Iain and realized his attention was on the conversation going on at
the other end of the table, one that was apparently growing more heated by the
moment.
“....
their lives are like mayflies. Short,
pretty and useless!”
Selené
wondered what a mayfly was, but by the tone, not something that was held in
high regard. The young orange-sleeved man
speaking was flushed with emotion, obviously upset and angry. He was waving a cup in the air as he gestured
broadly with his right hand. The woman
next to him spoke soothingly, as if to a cranky child.
“Sasha,
they have just arrived. Calm down. We’re all in this together.”
That
seemed to make the man even angrier. He
put his cup down on the table so forcefully that some of the bitter-smelling
brew sloshed out onto the table and splashed the woman. He didn’t seem to notice. “And why should I be here? I was never assigned to Alpha. I was diverted from the Space Dock when Koenig called a condition red and ordered all
available pilots to break up NDA2. I was
right over the bloody area when it blew!
I never had a chance!”
The
man stood and glared at Iain. “I never
even saw Breakaway. I didn’t live long
enough! And now here I am, caught in this...”
The
door to the room opened and everyone fell silent. Tanya walked in, pausing to glance at the
tableau in front of her before walking to the back table and helping herself to
a cup of the bitter brew. She walked to
an empty chair opposite Selené and sat, smiling kindly in her direction. She took a sip of her drink and then turned
to Sasha who by now had sat back down, staring sullenly into his drink.
“Is
it really so very bad, Sasha? Here, we
all have enough to eat, friends, and productive research. There are no wars or genocides. The Colonists’ lives are short, but they live long enough to see their children grown,
and when they do die, it is quickly and for the most part, painlessly.”
Although
Tanya’s voice stayed calm, Selené saw her eyes glitter with tears.
“But
why...”
Tanya
shook her head, and Sasha quieted, although his expression remained stubborn.
“You
are right, Sasha. They are too few,
their lives too brief, too focused on survival.
They are pre-literate with a culture based on oral tradition. We
have made it that way and kept it so.
But, this is a discussion for another time, Sasha. For now, why don’t you go and check on the
progress of the herds over in Theta Valley.
The weather should be good for your hang glider, and if you hurry the
midday winds will favor your trip.”
Selené
watched as Sasha glared at Iain one last time, and then walked out the door,
leaving a plate and cup behind on the table.
She turned back to see Tanya smiling at a baffled Iain.
“I
apologize for Sasha’s poor manners, Iain.
He is still fairly new to us and has yet to settle in. He will, given time.”
Iain
still wore a puzzled look. “That was Brin. He was Called
four years ago. He was a good hunter and
a friend.”
Tanya
nodded. “And will be a friend
again.” She looked at the now empty
plates in front of Iain and Selené. “Are
you done?” The two nodded. “Spend your day exploring your new home. The outside gardens are still blooming, Ken
can show you the airlocks to reach them, or...” Tanya glanced at Selené, “you
might wish to start in Medical Center, it is just around the corner.” She now smiled reassuringly at Iain. “You are welcome everywhere, but for today
please do not go into rooms unaccompanied.
There is nowhere off-limits to anyone here, but there are some areas
where you might accidentally injure yourselves, or inadvertently interfere with
someone’s experiment. We will again meet
after dinner. There are things I must
say to you before I leave for the Colony.”
Tanya
then stood, leaving her own almost untouched cup behind. She touched each person’s shoulder in passing
and with a final nod to Selené and Iain, left.
|
I |
ain
looked back through the window into the strange room of flat, narrow raised
tables with pillows, blinking lights and strange images of people’s
innards. Selené was already deep in
conversation with the Elder who also wore a white sleeve, appearing content
despite her earlier fears. As if she
felt his eyes, Selené glanced up and smiled, her excitement plain to see. He relaxed a little. For all that this place was beyond his
understanding, these were the same Elders that had visited the Colony since his
birth. Everyone he had seen had been
vaguely familiar to him, and they all seemed to know him, although that could
simply be because he was the only new man here. Selené settled for
the moment, Iain turned and walked through the main doors, again taken aback at
how they slid open. That just didn’t
seem natural.
The
corridor stretched in both directions, clean and bright with light coming from
the walls and ceiling. There was a map
of sorts in bright colors immediately outside the door he had just exited. It had the same strange characters he now
knew was called writing, and which he
had been assured would soon make sense.
Iain shook his head. The idea of
permanently marking down what he was used to hearing, memorizing and reciting,
seemed far-fetched; but he could begin to see the wisdom when the numbers of
people here were so few. Tanya had said
there were only twenty-one Elders ‘on-duty’.
He and Selené made twenty-three, or rather twenty-two since the old man
had died.
Alright
then, Tanya had encouraged him to explore his new home, so explore he
would. His hand briefly rested on his
new commlock. Selené could contact him
when needed. Taking a deep breath, he
chose the right hand path and walked on.
|
“G |
loria,
how am I to learn all this? It’s too
much!” Selené’s
head was fit to burst with all the new things she was being shown. She looked at the wise, older woman who had
perhaps forty or so years. Gloria knew
so very much! Selené still felt it rude
to call the Elder by her given name, even if that was what the woman
asked. She did find it helped a little,
and made Gloria seem less intimidating, if she thought of the slim
brown-haired, brown-skinned woman in a proper knee-length colonist’s tunic. The Elder explained that she had been the
medical provider here for the past twenty-four years, but that she had been a nurse and had not the training or skills
to fathom out what was causing the current health problems among the colonists’
newborns. And, in what was rapidly becoming
the most frightening thing of all the strange things to have happened since her
arrival in this strange place, Gloria seemed sure that she, Selené, did.
“Yes,
it seems that way now, I’m sure.” Gloria
smiled, not at all put off by Selené’s unseemly show
of temper. “Why don’t you look around,
I’ll be here if you need me. Everything
here is at your disposal.” She smiled
again and left the room.
Selené
watched Gloria until the door closed behind her, shifting her gaze then to look
through the glazed window into the outer room.
Gloria moved about working on things Selené did not understand, but felt
she should. Gloria had said she, Selené, was a healer, a doctor.
Well, she was in training to become a healer, that was true enough, but
what did her plant lore and meager skills count against what this place could
so clearly do? Tentatively, Selené sat,
perching herself on the edge of a chair, looking in awed bewilderment at the
small manikin on the table in front of her.
She reached out and caressed its cool, smooth ‘skin’, transparent to
show all the inner organs and blood vessels.
She
had so much to learn.
|
I |
ain
was intrigued. The doors in front of him
were much more massive and imposing than any others he had passed, and very,
very red; not unlike the spilled blood of a newly killed hoofbeast
onto fresh fallen snow. Thought of in
those terms, the doors looked somewhat ominous, and yet Tanya had assured him
he was welcome everywhere, save, he presumed, the personal quarters of others.
Iain
smiled a little to himself. After he had
picked up the unconscious Selené from her exhausted collapse, Tanya had shown
him to sleeping rooms that had obviously been set aside. He had reluctantly left a sleeping Selené on
a bed in her own quarters, but he appreciated the small propriety of separate
rooms given Selené’s youth. That she had shown up pale and scared on his
threshold only a short time later, escorted by an older woman with a purple
sleeve, had been understandable. If he
were to admit it to anyone, he was more than a little unnerved by all this,
too. He had ushered Selené into his
rooms and they had spent the rest of the night curled up together, each finding
comfort in the closeness of the other.
She was still too young for a true relationship, but he meant to look
after her in any way she required.
Lost
in thought, he was caught by surprise when the door in front of him slid open
in that unearthly quiet fashion common here.
Peering inside curiously, Iain could make out a large, enclosed space beyond
the doors, the walls covered with more of those monitors he had seen in the Medical Center. Curiosity peaked, he walked through the
doors, only to stop when a very old man appeared in front of him. They both stopped short, looking one at the
other, the old man wearing a short tunic with a brownish sleeve and a growing
look of surprise on his face. Iain bowed
his head, thinking of what to say to apologize to this honored Elder for his
unexpected appearance. He had earned
whatever chastisement the Elder saw fit to administer.
“Commander!
Welcome!”
|
“T |
he
Professor was fairly certain it’d be you and the Doctor showing up next. It seems the people we need tend to turn up
just when we need them. I suppose
whoever or whatever it is that is making us live this crazy way doesn’t want us
to die out just yet.”
Iain
sat in the white chair the older man, Elder Mark Dominix, had offered. Iain was trying hard to understand what was
being said. The man seemed to feel they
knew each other, although Iain was quite certain they had never met.
“Gloria
is a great nurse, but she’s out of her league when it comes to applied
research, and to give her credit, she knows it.
I knew something was up, though, when she came to dinner very excited a
few years back. Well, more than just a
few years, more like twenty-one or twenty-two I suppose it was. She normally doesn’t let on who’s who after
she runs the scans. That’s on a
need-to-know basis, of course, and a good command decision it was, and
is.”
Elder
Mark nodded firmly in Iain’s direction.
“Still,
just because someone is in the Colony certainly doesn’t mean they’ll
Awaken. But when all those babies
started dying, and the population number started to drop down too close to the
viability line, we knew something would happen.
And then when she showed up,
well, we began taking bets. We knew it
was just a matter of time.”
Iain
shook his head; none of this made sense.
He looked around the cavernous space with the huge dull metal circles on
the walls. He had never seen an enclosed
room so large, although the large windows on the sloping roof looking out into
the bright sky were reassuring.
“Yeah,
I know. It’s small compared to the old
Nuclear Generator Areas, but here we deal in solar panels, not atoms, and I’ve
gotten pretty good at keeping the solar cells in tip-top shape. I don’t know why the reactor doors are there,
though, they don’t open, and I can only imagine those reflective surfaces got
toned down pretty quick. You can get
used to seeing everyone else wearing a different face, but when you see
yourself,” and here Elder Mark shuddered dramatically, “well, that’s something
a man just can’t get used to.”
Iain
was overwhelmed, and confused. It seemed
ideas were flitting around in his mind just outside his conscience
understanding, like when he noticed girls were different for the first time, but not why. He looked back to the Elder and saw the man
now sat silently watching him. Iain
stood and politely nodded his head. He
needed time to think.
“Thank
you, sir, for your time. I will leave
you now.”
|
S |
elené
studied the chart in front her, deep in thought. From observing Gloria, she had quickly
figured out how to move the complicated grid up and down on the screen in front
of her. The pattern was complex, and
engrossing... and endless. The dance of
colors and lines was very important; she knew
that, although the meanings behind the patterns seemed just out of reach. Gloria had said that the oval shapes and
letters lit in black were people who had died, those lit in a blue-green color,
still alive. The blue-green ovals were
few. At the very bottom of the complex
chart, in the very last row, Selené traced a blue-green oval with the tip of
her finger. Hers.
Gloria
had pointed out the combination of letters that represented her name, and also
that of Iain’s. Selené followed the
lines and realized that the names above hers had to be her parents, the names
above and next to Iain’s his family. The
line linking her name to Iain’s was echoed in the line joining her mother and
father. She smiled briefly, a warm flush
of pleasure on her face.
Next
to Iain’s name were two black boxes.
Next to her mother’s were three, and next to Iain’s father there was
one. And yes, there was one black box by
her name; the symbols for herself and her stillborn sister. She quickly scanned the last twenty rows or
so. There were many more black boxes in
the last three rows than in the preceding ten rows combined. Selené grew
cold. She felt the key was the black
boxes, and most of those were empty of any letters. She now knew what they meant.
For
each black box there had been a child whose eyes never turned blue.
Selené
slowly scrolled back up the long, long chart.
There were hundreds and thousands of names. Up until the last few generations, only one
in every four was a simple black box.
Now the black boxes numbered many, many more than they should.
She
pressed the button that turned the monitor off.
|
I |
ain
searched the entire compound before he found her. The Computer assured him Selené was alive and
well, but it could not tell him why she would not answer his call. Finally, in a small, cold room with two long,
rectangular tables made of the metal and covered with cloth blankets, he found
her. She stood in the farthest corner,
her thin arms wrapped about her chest, her expression remote and chill, staring
at the still form of a covered body that rested on one of those tables. She looked up to him as he approached.
“Do
you know what happens here?”
Iain
looked around. In a place of
strangeness, this place seemed only slightly stranger. He shook his head.
“This
is where they examine the dead. They
open the bodies and see why they no longer work.”
Iain
looked at the shape on the table. Death
was inevitable, but to have a place dedicated to just opening bodies? Was there so much death here?
She
turned huge, wide blue-green eyes up to his.
“They
know so much here, Iain. About how
bodies work, and what happens when people become ill and die. They understand what happens as a baby grows
inside its mother. They know how to
prevent illness. I need to learn it
all.”
Iain
felt a shiver run down his spine. Selené’s eyes had that fey quality that could scare
him. She was changing.
“I
need to find out why the babies are dying.”
|
I |
ain
took Selené outside, into the verdant gardens that supplied much of the Elders’
diet. The sun near its zenith was warm
and the plants fragrant and still full of life.
Even though it was harvest time everywhere else, somehow here the Elders
had plants producing spring berries.
Over Selené’s laughing protests that they
should ask permission first, he harvested a handful of the pink, sweet berries
he knew she loved and gifted them to her.
It was good to see her smile again.
They
spent the late afternoon wandering in the extensive gardens only to find
themselves totally turned about when they reentered the compound. They crossed paths with the middle-aged woman
with a purple sleeve who guided them back to the cafeteria. Dinner was a much quieter affair, again with
foods that were different but plentiful and tasty. Iain was relieved to see Sasha was not
present. He wanted a few more days to
better understand what was happening to him before facing his old friend Brin again.
|
T |
anya
was tired, so very tired. The rest she
had sought after lunch had not come.
Victor was gone, and with his death the last of her close friends had
died. And Victor had been so much more
than just a friend. She dreaded the long
walk back to the Colony, and the irony of it all was that Victor would no doubt
have chided her for making the trek.
Even so, she needed to say goodbye, and as a proper Colonist, even if
many years removed, that meant the funeral pyre surrounded by the
community. She needed that closure, even
if Victor never had. First though, she
needed to instruct the newest arrivals.
It was her job now as the most senior staff member on duty.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
White
corridors branched off in all directions.
Tanya could still clearly remember her first days here, even now decades
later, and how confusing everything had seemed.
She had been grief stricken to leave behind her children and her bondmate, and yet once she had Awoken she could no more
have stayed in the Colony than Selené.
At least Selené had Iain.
They
approached the travel tube and Tanya summoned a car with her commlock. The car arrived promptly and the three
entered. Tanya sat down and indicated
the others do the same. She smiled slightly
to see Iain’s wide-eyed response to the tug of acceleration. No doubt he would soon be flying in Sasha’s
glider.
The
car stopped and they exited. The walk to
Main Mission was not long, but long enough for Selené to ask the question that
had obviously been bothering her.
“Tanya,
where are the children?”
“There
are none. You are the youngest
here. The youngest that has been Called
in many, many years.”
Selené’s eyes went wide; Tanya could
understand. The records clearly showed the absence of childish laughter had
always bothered Sandra, too; children were ever underfoot in the Colony. Tanya saw the girl flash a stricken look at
Iain.
“I
won’t be able to have children?”
Tanya
felt the girl’s pain and she reached out a hand in sympathetic distress. So much had to be given up after one was
Called.
“Our
children grow up in the Colony. You know
Sylvie’s little girl, of course?”
Selené
nodded. Sylvie’s first two children had
died with brown eyes. The third, a
little girl, was now about six years old, blue-eyed, bright and curious.
“She
is the daughter of Ann and Lee.”
The
remainder of the walk passed in silence.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
She
took them into Main Mission through the Commander’s office, resting her hand
briefly on the back of the chair where Victor had so lately sat. Victor had used Koenig’s desk for decades;
now it would pass to the hands of the next leader.
Tanya
stole a glance to see the expressions on Iain’s and Selené’s
faces. She always enjoyed bringing the
new ones into Main Mission this way, opening the sliding wall beyond the desk,
then leading the way down the shallow stairs into the cavernous room where
Victor would be waiting. It simply made
a grand impression, and it did not fail this time.
Climbing
the stairs back to the large Command desk, Tanya sat in the large, plush chair,
feeling close to Victor for just a moment.
She watched as Iain explored the large room. She wondered how it seemed to him; with the
sunlight streaming in viewports that her memories say should be dark in deep
space. Selené
remained next to her, less adventurous, though from the questing gaze, no less
curious. The girl was the first to ask
her questions.
“What
is this place, Tanya?”
“Main
Mission. This is where we monitor all
the experiments we have running, and watch over the Colony.”
“You
can see the Colony?” Selené asked, awe
in her voice.
“Yes. We have special... tools... up high in the
sky that allow us to look down.” Tanya
pushed a few buttons and the Big Screen changed from its static resting pattern
to one filled with activity. As if from
high on a cliff higher than any imaginable, they could see their friends and
family carrying out the daily chores.
“You
spy on us?” That was Iain, not sounding
at all pleased.
“Well,
spy is too strong a term. Perhaps,
instead, say observed. We do not intrude or interfere, unless we
have no choice.”
“Hmm.”
Tanya
and Selené exchanged grins at the dubious tone in Iain’s voice as the image on
the large, elevated screen again went blank at Tanya’s command.
“Come,
sit with me. We must speak.” Tanya rose and walked back down into Main
Mission proper. She took her old seat
next to Paul’s station, gesturing for the others to collect chairs for
themselves. Iain and Selené followed and
sat opposite her. She studied their
youthful faces. Their Alphan uniforms made them seem
older than the years she knew they held.
Iain already possessed a strength of character and a quality that drew
people to him; Selené still had a hint of child-like trust about her, but her
sharp intelligence was obvious.
“How
do you find your new home?” she asked the two.
She could see the dawning understanding as they registered the simple
fact that this was their home
now.
“Home? We won’t be able to go back to the Colony
anymore, will we?” There were tears in Selené’s eyes. Tanya
well knew the girl was being asked to give up all she had ever known.
“To
visit, but not to stay. You will soon
find being among the Colonists very uncomfortable.”
“Why?” That was Iain
Tanya
chose not to answer directly. They would
not yet believe the truth. Not quite yet.
Not even from an Elder. Tanya purposefully paused, resting her hands in
her lap and assuming the opening phrase and air of an Elder telling a
Story.
“I
ask that you listen carefully to what I have to say.”
Iain
and Selené sat up attentively, pulled by long habit into the learning mode they
had so often assumed as children.
“We
are not from this place, this planet. Our people came from aother
world, one unbelievably far away. It
took years of travel to reach here. We
traveled on a runaway moon, a journey that was not planned but the result of
our people’s pride and arrogance.”
Tanya
could see their avid curiosity. If she had
not already been certain, this in itself would have told her they were ready to
Awaken. Those who were not destined to
spend their lives here among the Elders would by now be disinterested and
bored. It had taken years to understand
that; to understand that the selection of who would remember the past and
continue the work of research and scholarship, even if only in a limited
fashion, was out of Alphan hands.
Victor
had always enjoyed the task explaining how they had come to be here to the
newly Awoken. He would spin the events
of Breakaway and all that followed into a marvelous tale of mystery and
wonder. Tanya might not have that gift,
but she had done it often enough to do a serviceable job. They all had.
“Let
me show you where we used to live after we left the homeworld.” She pushed a small, blinking button on her
desk and then nodded toward the Big Screen.
“This used to be our home on our long jouney. That is a view of what is happening there and
now.”
Iain
looked up, studied the image and frowned.
The screen showed a room just like the one there were in, down to the
blinking button Tanya had just pressed, except it was empty and the viewports
were black with night, unlike the bright sunlight that flooded through the
viewports here. The Big Screen there showed what appeared to be a huge
clear flask over which hung a single minuscule droplet of red fluid. The flask
was barely half full.
“Tanya,
what is that place?”
“That
is the original Main Mission on Moonbase Alpha.”
Iain
and Selené looked at each other, then to her for further explanation.
“This
place,” and Tanya swept her hand to include everything around them, “all of
it... the Medical Center, NGA, the personal quarters... are a copy of Moonbase Alpha.
“When
we arrived in this system, our moon assumed orbit about this planet. We were overjoyed. The tests showed we could live and thrive
here. We felt our very long journey was
finally over. Until we discovered we
couldn’t leave Alpha. The Eagles would
not work. Nothing we did fixed them, and
it took as a while to realize they were not broken.”
Some
of the remembered pain of those days was audible in her voice.
“When
we understood we could not leave Alpha, that we were trapped more thoroughly
than we ever had been, with everything we could have hoped for just within our
reach, many people... just gave up. Some
even suicided.
It was as hard a time as any we experienced.” Tanya fell silent, looking at the images on
the Big Screen that changed in a slow rotation showing dark, empty rooms
throughout Alpha, all in perfect condition like the day they had been first
commissioned, each waiting to be put to use.
Remaining silent, Tanya gave Iain and Selené the time they needed.
“You
said those pictures show what is happening now?” Iain watched in fascination, hearing what Tanya was saying. Knowledge was returning.
“Yes.”
“It’s
on the white moon. That Moonbase Alpha.”
“Yes.” Tanya agreed, hearing Selené
inhale sharply.
“They
could not get from there to here?” Iain
stood and paced to the viewports, and back again, sitting down to face her eye
to eye.
“No.”
“We
are descended from those people?” Selené
interrupted.
Tanya
nodded.
“Then
how did they get from there to here?” Iain demanded, pointing upwards to the
unseen white moon.
She
took a deep breath, the memory still very fresh in her mind. “There was a flash of light so bright that
everyone was blinded, and a.... sound.... that left everyone frozen in their
steps. When sight and movement returned,
we were... here, on the planet, all of us.”
“Where
the Colony is?” Iain asked.
“No,
here.” Tanya gestured to the
surroundings about them. “This complex,
including the orbiting data satellites above and the Colony in the valley, were
waiting for us. Everything was here,
although there are no Eagles.”
Tanya
sat quietly now, her hands resting in her lap again, watching the pair in front
of her. She could almost see their
understanding stretching, almost visibly expanding with the story she
told. Their background had given them no
preparation for this. But then again,
that was the point of the Colony.
“Our
ancestors were sent here? By whom?” Selené struggled for understanding.
“We
don’t know.”
“How
was this all made?”
Tanya
shrugged. “We don’t know.”
“Why
not at least tell us about this? Why not
tell us where we came from?” Selené’s confusion was growing. Tanya smiled sadly, shaking her head
slightly.
“Well
then, what do you know and what can you tell us?” Iain demanded, jumping up and staring down at
her, his frustration with the lack of answers overcoming years of placid
acceptance. Selené gasped, looking up at
Iain, plainly shocked and appalled at the raw emotion being leveled against the
Elder.
Finally,
for the first time since Iain and Selené arrived in this place, the Elder truly
smiled.
Tanya
was pleased. This was the beginning of
understanding. Selené’s
obvious relief and Iain’s blatant surprise at her delighted response made her
smile even broader. No doubt Iain realized
he had crossed the ultimate line of Colonist propriety. Tanya gestured for the young man to sit down
and relax. As he did, Tanya found she
had to turn her face slightly so they would not see her laugh. They were both so relieved, as if they had
just escaped a fate worse than death.
Justice was sweet. How often had
she quaked from Koenig’s temperamental outbursts?
Iain
and Selené were now ready to listen. Soon they would understand why the
Colonists were kept in ignorance, how their collective sanity could be
preserved only if they didn’t know how they were being manipulated and what
they were being denied. For the Alphans
to be able to see the stars and know they would never reach them again, well,
that had been a living hell for the first Colonists.
She
pulled up a copy of the multi-generational chart that had so fascinated Selené
in Medical Center and visually scanned the thousands of entries. Thousands of lifetimes were represented, some
long and some so very brief. Tanya studied Selené, and nodded. Yes, the girl was now realizing what had
eluded her earlier; the pattern she had almost grasped. The same few names repeating again and again
and again.
The
names recorded numbered exactly three hundred ten.
|
A |
n
hour passed swiftly, and Selené was lost in the immensity of what Tanya
explained. She could just about wrap her
imagination around the idea their people had come to this planet on a wayward
moon torn out of its initial orbit and hurled across space. She could accept that, once here, they had
chosen to live a simple, agrarian life.
She could even, possibly, accept the concept of a guiding force that had
overseen that strange journey. But, reincarnation?
“But....
why?”
“We
don’t know,” Tanya cast a wry glance at Iain, “but we have made educated
guesses over the years. The journals we have each kept have allowed us to build
on what has been learned. It is a very
slow process,” she smiled sadly, “but we have had the time.”
Iain
had good manners to look embarrassed at his earlier outburst.
“We
do know that we number only those of us who were on Alpha at Breakaway. All the pilots are here whether or not they
were actually on the lunar surface. It
seems as long as they had been assigned to Alpha, no matter how briefly, they
have been seen as Alphan.”
“Simmonds?” Iain’s
voice was assuming a more confident inflection.
“Yes. He is here.
Not right now, but he has lived both as a Colonist and among the
Awakened.”
Selené’s forehead furrowed. “Why only three hundred ten? Who is missing?” She saw Tanya’s gaze turn inward, her blue
eyes again tired and full of sadness.
“Anton
Zoref.”
“Oh.” The memories of what had happened, the
strange life form that had subsumed Anton, rushed into Selené’s
mind. From the look on Iain’s face, he
was experiencing the same.
“Eva
still suffers from his loss. Her lives
in the Colony are full of pain. She
searches and searches for him, not understanding why she is so very lonely. And when she is here, it is even worse; she
understands why she can never find Anton.”
Selené
studied the generational grid and the familiar repeating names. She noticed that the final three generations
still held the names of colonists, not proper Alphan names. She looked at Tanya who answered her unspoken
question.
“We
do that for our sanity. Only the senior medical person on duty bears
the burden of knowing who is alive right now.”
Selené
raised an eyebrow and considered that.
Yes, that would make sense. Given
how few they were, imagine realizing that your son in one life was your father
in the next. Or your husband.
Iain
shot a glance at Selené, his grin wide.
“Imagine Simmonds for a son.” He became more serious. “And this explains our appearance now?” Iain asked, gesturing to his body.
Memories
of blonds and brunettes, Occidental, Asian and African features, tall and short
bodies, blue, green and brown eyes all whirled like a kaleidoscope in Selené’s awakening memories.
Tanya
nodded, now allowing them to put the facts together on their own.
Selené
now realized she knew the
answer, “Yes, the result of generations
of inbreeding, but...” She thought of
what illnesses the Colonists suffered from.
Very few, she realized, once they survived infancy. They had been bred into a homogeneous population
that appeared to have few bad recessives.
So, all ethical qualms aside, any pairings among the Colonists should
produce viable children. And if that
were the case, then the care shown by the Elders on selecting pairs must be
based on something else. Compatibility,
perhaps? But something still made no
sense...
“What?” Iain asked, looking at her.
“Well,
I suppose genetic drift could explain why we all have blue eyes, but why are we
born with brown eyes that turn blue?
That is exactly backwards. And
why do the infants whose eyes stay brown die?”
Tanya
started to answer, but a yawn interrupted.
Selené realized the older woman was very tired, and that she still had a
long walk to the Colony tomorrow to see Victor’s body returned. Selené no longer thought of Victor as her
lost great-grandfather, but as her dear friend.
A wave of sadness coursed through Selené. She now realized exactly how much that loss
meant.
“It
is the sign of a body unensouled. We used to run bioencephelographic
scans at birth to identify each child.
The children whose eyes failed to turn blue had no higher brain
function, no personality. Knowing that,
we now wait to scan until the children are older.”
“They
are doomed to die?” Selené closed her
eyes, not seeing Tanya’s terse nod of agreement. Suddenly, Selené’s
eyes opened wide, abruptly realizing why she had Awoken. She glanced at the generational grid, at the
last few lines. “But, now we’re losing
too many. More than just the brown-eyed
babies. Too many have been dying. Something is
wrong, and here I can find out what it is, and stop it!”
“Yes!” Tanya’s eyes lit with a fierce joy as she
smiled.
“But
why are so many children born only to die?” demanded Iain in a quiet, intense
voice. He all too clearly recalled the
grief of his mother and sister when their babies had faded and died.
At
the sound of the anger and grief in his voice, Tanya’s smile of triumph
faded. She faced Iain, studying the blue
eyes carefully. Yes, this was the most
fundamental question of all.
“You
might better ask why is this happening to us at all. Why are we being forced to live again and
again, and why is it sometimes we have to be aware of what we must endure? Of what we have lost, who we have lost. To watch our family and friends live their lives
in the Colony and yet not be with them?
To grow old, only to know the cycle will repeat itself again and
again? To see our children taken from
us, so they can grow up happy and healthy in the Colony while we are forced to
stay here to protect our sanity? Why?”
Tanya
closed her eyes against what Selené was coming to realize was an ever-present
grief. Tears started coursing down
Tanya’s cheeks and Selené gathered the suddenly frail woman in her arms,
holding the graying head against her chest.
Her own emotions welled up at the thought of her future children being
taken away, for their sake, and hers. A
lean shadow fell over her and she looked up.
“We
are paying for the deaths we caused.”
The voice was rough and deep in sudden insight, a newfound maturity
present that had not been there just moments before. Helena looked at John in surprise, feeling
Tanya nod her head in silent agreement and then heard her anguished whisper.
“Yes. Whether here or in the Colony, we are all living
lives of quiet penance.”
Slowly,
Helena felt the rightness of what was
said, and she nodded, once, in agreement.
The memories of her life on Alpha, on Earth, were in reach now. It would take some while to fully Awaken, but
now it was only a matter of time.
“Tanya,”
Helena spoke very gently to the woman in her arms, “how much longer do we have
to live this? Does anyone know?”
Tanya
pulled herself slightly apart, dashing the tears from her eyes and turned to
face her console. She pulled back up the
image of the not-quite half-filled flask on the Big Screen in the original Main
Mission. The very, very tiny droplet still appeared poised to fall into the
fluid below.
“That
image appeared when we arrived here and found we could still see Alpha. The cup was empty then.” She took a deep breath, sharing with John and
Helena the saddest fact of all. “A drop
falls each time a life ends.”
No
one spoke. Hanging above the flask, the
tiny droplet had yet to fall. John was
the one to ask the question.
“For
how long, Tanya?”
Composure
regained, acceptance once more on her face, she calmly answered. “Three thousand years.”
Epilogue~ 10
years later
“Status
report. Three thousand four hundred
eight years after leaving Earth orbit.
Doctor Helena Russell recording.
This is the annual summary of the events of the past planetary year, the
tenth year of my eighth tour of duty.
“Tanya
Aleksandr was returned to the Colony at the beginning
of the harvest season. She had served
for fifty-five years after awaking to her Calling in her nineteenth year. Her death at only seventy-four years old came
as a surprise, but she had become very withdrawn over the past few years as
John and I fully assumed our duties.
Victor’s death affected her more profoundly than even she realized.
“There
have been eight births in the Colony over the past year, with only one failing
to become ensouled.
No one has been lost to trauma.
There were three deaths: two Colonist seniors dying of natural deaths–
Michael Baxter and Lew Picard– and Eva Zoref at the
age of thirty-nine, from grief I believe.
“We
welcomed Joan Conway after her Awakening this past summer. She is still overwhelmed at the change in her
life and has not yet totally accommodated herself. I will continue to monitor her closely, but
expect she will soon become functional enough to assume care of the power facilities. Her arrival allows Mark Dominix
to step down, which at age eighty-one is very timely.
“I
am gratified to see the ongoing successful baby boom in the Colony since the
nutritional aberration was identified and remedied seven years ago. The flax plant from which the
butter-substitute is made has been genetically modified and seeded among the
Colonists’ gardens; the unnoticed change has been well received and the
nutritional deficiency and subsequent genetic aberration remedied. The numbers in the Colony are now on the path
to returning to the usual two hundred forty over the next few generations.
“Next
spring will see the graduation of the current cohort. Traditionally, it is the senior ranking
female Elder that is responsible for announcing the pairings among the young
adults, but I will be at the end of my final trimester and John will not allow
me to travel the long walk. I’ll miss
seeing the children. I will make the
trip later in the year, sooner if this pregnancy results in a viable child;
however, I suspect this child’s eyes will stay brown. The law of averages favors that. Our three children are doing well in the
Colony. Iain’s sister and mother are
raising the older two, and the youngest is living with a middle-aged couple
whose children all died before their name-days. In any case, the birth of this
child is important, even if he or she only lives a few days. Understanding the reasons behind the early
deaths does not lessen the pain, but does make it bearable.”
She
paused the recording for a moment to wonder how many times a child of hers had
died in infancy. She had deliberately
never tallied those numbers. She
flicked the recorder back on.
“Interestingly,
while my memories of the time on Alpha are very clear, and even Earth memories
are accessible, the other times I have lived on this planet are not. I can read the journals I kept during those
lifetimes, but it is like reading the diaries of another. Perhaps it’s a small kindness being shown to
us by whatever or whoever is overseeing this life we must lead.”
The
door to Medical Center opened and John walked in. Now in his mid-thirties, he carried his
responsibility with the same dedication she could remember from their time
drifting through space. His appearance
echoed how he had once looked: tall, lean and possessing the most intense blue
eyes. His brown hair and brown
complexion aside, anyone who had known John Koenig at the time of Breakaway
would recognize him again.
She
watched him walk toward her with the familiar quick steps; he still had that
ever-present restless energy. She knew
he accepted the reason why they were here, but still he chafed against their
enforced isolation. He had turned that
same energy to what exploration of their world was possible, expanding their
limited body of knowledge against future need.
She knew he wouldn’t be truly happy until they returned to the stars, or
at least to Alpha... the real one. She
had his faith that one day they would.
Helena closed her eyes, allowing herself to believe she was back on old Alpha.
“I
could always put shoeblack on my hair if that would help.”
Smiling,
Helena gently shook her head. Eyes still
closed, she turned toward the man who was always there for her. She held out her arms and waited until he
walked to her and folded her in an embrace.
His lips nuzzled her ear and she felt his warm breath on her cheek.
“I
need your help,” John said quietly. Even
his voice had assumed the timbre she recalled so well.
Helena
leaned into John’s warmth, her arms wrapping around his waist. She rested her head on his chest enjoying
the steady beat of his heart beneath her cheek.
“Hmm?”
“I’ve
never been much of a matchmaker. That was always your and Sandra’s job. I just officiated at the weddings.”
Helena
chuckled, feeling no desire to open her eyes and destroy her momentary
daydream. “You have months before you
need to make the announcements.”
John
snorted. “Easy for you to say. Alan is in this cohort, and any woman I stick
him with better be up to the challenge.”
Laughing,
Helena opened her eyes. He was taking this so very seriously. Five years ago he could barely be bothered by
the pairings. She had labored over her decisions for months, studying the
records kept for more generations than she could truly comprehend, or wanted to
comprehend. Genetically, any pairing
would work, but emotionally and psychologically an error could condemn their
friends to a lifetime of sorrow and torment.
She looked into his glorious blue eyes.
“Help
me,” he asked, his seriousness taking on a wheedling tone. “I promise to make it worth your while.”
How
lucky she was. Her studies of the
records she had recorded on prior duty shifts, prior lifetimes stretching over
centuries, found the command duty was divided amongst John, Victor, Paul, Alan
and occasionally David. There would be
overlapping, of course, as one passed the baton to the next, but never more
than two of them at a time. Tanya,
Sandra, June and herself were the female command staff who rotated with the
men. Whoever, or whatever, was
supervising their term of penitence evidently had a strong sense of symmetry. Those Awakened for duty always matched male
for female.
She
had scanned many of the logs left behind by the others. It made for fascinating reading. Not so much for the harvest reports, but for
the insights of how the small community of Awakened coped with the knowledge of
their penance. Some took it better than
others, or coped better when certain others were Awake to help them deal with
the interminable sameness of their existence.
Alan was the most restless. The
women usually had their hands full with him.
She
learned back slightly and looked up into John’s face. Of all the possible pairings among the
Alphans, there was only one couple that never varied. Oh, there was a definite pattern of which
couples appeared together or did well together, but in any cohort she could
usually find several ways to pair couples with a fair chance of success. Having over one hundred and seventy
generations of data to pull upon, as well as a certain intuition, helped. Still, only one couple was together in each
lifetime, always appearing together, and always Called together. But why just them?
There
had been an entry in the journals from her fourth tour, a reference to an
article by Dr. Weiss, a respected psychiatrist....
“....people are drawn back to the same group of people between lifetimes.
"The relationships aren't always the same. Someone you love in one
lifetime may be your murderer in another."
So,
was this why she and John were always together?
Had it been so even before Alpha?
She was so profoundly grateful they were always friends and lovers.
Paul
had not been so fortunate. Several
hundred years ago he had been forced to stand aside and watch as a very young
Sandra was blinded in a freak accident in the Colony. The best he could do to help her had been to
see her paired with someone to care for her.
Alan, she seemed to recall. The
pain of watching Sandra struggle in the Colony’s primitive surroundings haunted
him and his journal entries for the rest of that life.
She
reached up and lightly caressed John’s cheek.
“Of course I’ll help you.”
John’s
kiss made it all worthwhile. Eventually
this unending cycle of rebirth, or ‘recycling’ as Alan had once put in his log,
would end. Would they then move on as a
people to fulfill Arra’s prophecy, or would they
simply grow old and truly die here on this planet? One day, they would know. Until then, she and John would be together,
and that wasn’t all that bad, was it?
She linked her arm in his and led the way out to the cafeteria for
dinner.
“Regina
was the youngest in the prior cohort and she’s still available. Alan tends to live longer when Tanya or
Sandra are there to steady him, but he seems to have so much fun with
Regina. She and Alan will do well together...”
MGK
8 May 2008
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