Authors: Octavia E. Butler
Tags: #Fiction, #Alternative History, #Science Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Historical
who had been too warped by their latent years to turn human again. We still got those
kind, but they didn't become heads of houses any more. If we couldn't straighten them
out, or heal them—if healing was what they needed—we killed them. We had no prison,
needed none. A rogue Patternist was too dangerous to be left alive.
That was probably the way Doro felt about me. It went with what he had told Karl. "I
can't afford her unless she can obey me." We were too much alike, Doro and I. What ever
gave him the idea that someone bred to be so similar to him would consent—could
consent—to being controlled by him all her life?
I passed my two new heads of houses, but I told them not to do anything toward
beginning their houses for a week. They didn't like that much, but they were so happy to
be passed that they didn't argue. They were bright and capable. If, by some miracle, the
Pattern still existed in a week, they would be a credit to it in their new positions.
I went with Jesse to see the houses he was opening up in Santa Elena. He asked me to
go. I didn't have to see them. I only checked on the family now and then. And when I did,
I could never find much to complain about. They cared about what we were building.
They always did a good job.
In the car Jesse said, "Listen, you know we're all with you, don't you?"
I looked at him, not really surprised. Karl had told him. No one else could have.
"I just wish we could take him on for you," said Jesse.
"Thanks, Jess."
He glanced at me, then shook his head. "You don't look any more nervous over facing
him than you did over facing me a couple of years ago."
I shrugged. "I don't think I can afford to broadcast my feelings."
"With all of us behind you, I think you can beat him."
"I intend to."
Big talk. I wondered why I bothered.
There were a few other routine duties. I welcomed them, because they kept my mind
off how bad I felt. That night, I didn't feel like eating. I went to my room while everyone
else was at dinner. Let them eat. It might be their last meal.
Karl came up about two hours later and found me looking out my window at nothing,
waiting for him.
"I've got to talk to you," he said—just before I could say it to him.
"Okay." I sat down in the chair by the window. He sprawled on my bed.
"We had a meeting today—just the family. I told them what kind of trouble you were
in, told them that you were going to fight. And I told them they could run if they wanted
to."
"They won't run."
"I know that. I just wanted them to put it into words. I wanted them to hear
themselves say it and know that they were committed."
"Everybody's committed. Every Patternist in the section. And all those who don't
know it are about to find out."
He sat up straight. "What are you going to do?"
"First I'm going to clear the section."
"Clear it? Send everybody away?"
"Yes. Including the family, if they'll go. They won't be deserting me. I can use them
just as effectively if they're a couple of states away."
"They won't go."
I shrugged. "I hope they don't wind up regretting that."
"I assume you're going after Doro in the morning."
"After everybody has had time to get out, yes. I want them to spread out, scatter as
widely as possible, just in case."
"I know. I just hope Doro gives them time to go. If he notices that people are
leaving—if he thinks of someone and that tracking sense of his tells him that that person
is headed for Oregon, he's going to start checking around. He'll think you're sending out
searchers again. Then, when he realizes everybody's going, he'll get the idea pretty
quickly."
"We could see that he's distracted for the night."
He looked at me. I didn't say anything. Obviously this was no night to distract Doro
with a Patternist. Karl gazed down at his hands for a moment, then looked up. "All right;
it's done. Vivian will distract him. And she'll think it's her own idea."
We waited, our perception focused on Doro's room. Vivian knocked at his door, then
went in. Her mind gave us Doro's words, and we knew we were safe. He was glad to see
her. They hadn't been together for a long time.
"Now," said Karl.
"Now," I agreed. I went to the bed and lay down. It was best for me to be completely
relaxed when I used the Pattern this way. I closed my eyes and brought it into focus. Now
I was aware of the contented hum of my people. They were ending their day, resting or
preparing to rest, and unconsciously giving each other calm.
I jerked the Pattern sharply, shattering their calm. It didn't hurt them, or me, but it
startled them to attention. I felt Karl jump beside me, and he had been expecting it.
I could feel their attention on me as though I had walked onto the stage of a crowded
auditorium. It was as easy to reach all 1,538 of them as it had been to reach just the
family two years before. And there was no need for me to identify myself. Nobody else
could have reached them through the Pattern as I did.
The Pattern is in danger, I sent bluntly. It may be destroyed.
I could feel their alarm at that. In the two short years of its existence the Pattern had
given these people a new way of life. A way of life that they valued.
The Pattern may be destroyed, I repeated. If it is, and if you're together when it
happens, you will be in danger. I gave them a short history lesson. A lesson they had
already been exposed to once in orientation classes or through learning blocks. That,
before the Pattern, active telepaths had not been able to survive together in groups. That
they could not tolerate each other, could not accept the mental blending that occurred
automatically without the control of the Pattern.
It might not be true any longer, I told them. But it has been true for thousands of
years. For safety's sake, we have to assume that it's still true. So you are all to get up
tonight, now, and leave the section. Separate. Scatter.
Their dismay was almost a physical force—that many people frightened, agreeing
with each other and disagreeing with me. I put force of my own into my next thought,
amplified it to a mental shout.
Be still!
A lot of them winced as though I had hit them.
I'm sending you away to save your lives, and you will go.
Some of them were upset enough to try to shut me out. But of course they couldn't.
Not as long as I spoke through the Pattern.
You are all powerful people, I sent. You will have no trouble making your ways alone.
And if the Pattern survives, you know that I'll call you all back. 1 want you here as much
as you want to be here. We're one people. But now, for your own sake, you must go.
Leave tonight so that 1 can be sure you're safe.
I let them feel the emotion I felt. Now was the time. I wanted them to see how
important their safety was to me. I wanted them to know that I meant every word I gave
them. But the words that I didn't give them were the ones they were concerned with.
Most of the questions they threw at me were drowned in the confusion of their mental
voices. I could have sorted them out and made sense of them, but I didn't bother. The one
that I didn't have to sort out, though, was the one that was on everyone's mind. What is
the danger? I couldn't miss reading it, but I could ignore it. My people knew Doro from
classes and blocks. Most of them had had no personal contact with him at all. They were
capable of shrugging off what they had learned—all their theoretical knowledge—and
going after him for me. And getting themselves slaughtered. What they didn't know, in
this case, could save them from committing suicide. I addressed them again.
You who are heads of houses—you know your responsibilities to your families. See
that all the members of your families get out, and get out tonight. Help them get out. Take
care of them.
There. I broke contact. Now the strongest people in the section, the most responsible
people, had been charged with seeing that my commands were obeyed. I had faith in my
heads of houses.
I opened my eyes—and knew at once that something was wrong. I turned my head
and save Karl standing beside the bed, his back to me, his body tense. Beyond him, at the
door, stood Doro. It was Doro's expression that made me instantly reestablish contact
with my Patternists. I jerked the Pattern again to get their attention. I felt their confusion,
their fear. Then their surprise as they felt me with them again. I gave them my thoughts
very clearly, but quickly.
Everybody, stop what you're doing. Be still.
They could see what I saw. My eyes were open now, and my mind was open to them.
They could see Doro watching me past Karl. They could know that Doro was the danger.
It was too late for them to make suicidal mistakes.
You won't have time to leave. You'll have to help me fight. Obey me, and we can kill
him.
That thought cut through their confusion, as I had hoped it would. Here was a way to
destroy what threatened them. Here was Doro, whom they had been warned against, but
whom most of them did not really fear.
Sit down, or lie down. Wait. Do nothing. l'm going to need you.
Doro started toward Karl. I sat up, scrambled over close to Karl, and laid a hand on
his shoulder. He glanced at me.
"It's okay," I said. "It's as okay as it's ever going to be. Get out of here."
He relaxed a little, but, instead of going, he sat down on the end of the bed. I didn't
have time to argue with him. I began absorbing strength from my people. Not Karl. He
would have collapsed and given me away. But the others. I had to collect from as many
of them as I could before Doro attacked. Because I had no doubt that he was going to