The Ships of Earth: Homecoming: Volume 3 (29 page)

BOOK: The Ships of Earth: Homecoming: Volume 3
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“Thank God!” cried Vas. “Are you injured?”

“No,” said Nafai. “But I’m on a ledge. I think I can get off to the south. I’m about ten meters below you. Can you move south too? I may need your help. There’s nothing below me but a deadly fall, and I don’t see any obvious way to get up to where you are.”

“Do you have the pulse?” asked Vas.

Of course he had to ask about the pulse. Nafai blushed with shame. “No, I must have dropped it as I fell,” he said. “It’s got to be at the bottom of the cliff, unless you can see it somewhere up there.”

“It’s not here—you had it with you as you fell.”

“Then it’s at the bottom. Move south with me,” said Nafai.

He found, though, that it was easier to talk about moving along the face of the cliff than it was to do it. The fall might not have injured him seriously, but the terror of it had done something to him, oh yes—he could barely bring himself to get to his feet for fear of the edge, for fear of the fall.

I didn’t fall because I lost my balance, thought Nafai. I fell because friction simply wasn’t strong enough to hold me in that dangerous place. This ledge isn’t like that. I can stand securely here.

So he stood, his back to the cliff, breathing deeply, telling himself to move, to sidle south along the ledge, around the corner, because there might be a way to get up. Yet the more he told himself this, the more his eyes focused on the empty space beyond the edge of the cliff, not a meter from his feet. If I lean just a little, I’ll fall. If I fell forward now, I’d plunge over the side.

No, he told himself. I can’t think that way, or I’ll never be good for anything again. I’ve taken ledges like this a hundred times. They’re nothing. They’re easy. And it would help if I faced the cliff instead of facing the empty space leading down to the sea.

He turned and stepped carefully along the ledge, pressing himself rather closer to the cliff than he would have in former times. But his confidence increased with every step he took.

When he rounded the bend in the cliff, he saw that the ledge ended—but now it was only two meters from this ledge to the next one up, and from there it was an easy climb back to where he and Vas had come down less than an hour ago. “Vas!” he called. He continued until he stood directly under the place where the ledge above was
nearest. He could almost reach far enough onto the ledge to lift himself by his own arms, but there was nothing to hold on to, and the edge was crumbly and unreliable. It would be safer if Vas helped him. “Vas, here I am! I need you!”

But he heard nothing from Vas. And then he remembered the thought that had come into his mind as he was starting the dangerous traverse: Don’t go on. Vas is planning to kill you.

Is it possible that that was a warning from the Oversoul?

Absurd.

But Nafai didn’t wait for Vas to answer. Instead he reached his arms as far as they could go onto the ledge above, then dug his fingers into the loose grassy soil. It slipped and came away, but by scrabbling constantly, grabbing more and more, he was able to get enough of a purchase that he could get his shoulders above the edge of the cliff, and then it was a relatively easy matter to swing a leg up onto the ledge and pull himself to safety. He rolled onto his back and lay there, panting in relief. He could hardly believe that he had done such a dangerous thing so soon after falling—if he had slipped at any time while clambering up onto his ledge, he would have had a hard time catching himself on the ledge below. He was risking death—but he had done it.

Vas came now. “Ah,” he said. “You’re already up. Look—this way. Right back to where we were.”

“I’ve got to find the pulse.”

“It’s bound to be broken and useless,” said Vas. “It wasn’t built for a fall like that.”

“I can’t go back and tell them that I don’t have the pulse,” said Nafai. “That I
lost
it. It’s down there, and even if it’s in forty pieces, I’ll bring those pieces home.”

“It’s better to tell them you broke it than to tell them you lost it?” asked Vas.

“Yes,” said Nafai. “It’s better to show them the pieces than have them always wonder whether, if I had only looked, I might have found it. Don’t you understand that this is our families’
meat
supply we’re talking about?”

“Oh, I understand,” said Vas. “And now that you put it that way, of course I see we must search for it. Look, we can come down this way—it’s an easy enough path.”

“I know,” said Nafai. “Right down to the sea.”

“Do you think so?” asked Vas.

“Down that way, and jogging to the left—see?”

“Oh, that
would
probably work.”

It make Nafai faintly ashamed, that
he
had noticed the route to the sea, while Vas had not even thought of it.

Instead of going down to the sea, however, they scrambled down to the brush where the pulse must have fallen. They didn’t have to search long before they found it—split in half, right down the middle. Several small internal components were also scattered here and there in the bushes, and without doubt there were others that they didn’t find. There would be no repairing this pulse.

Still, Nafai put the pieces, large and small, into the sling he had made for carrying the pulse, and tied it closed. Then he and Vas began the long climb up the mountain. Nafai suggested that Vas should lead, since he would do a better job of remembering the way, and Vas agreed at once. Nafai didn’t give the slightest hint that he didn’t dare let Vas walk behind him, where he couldn’t see what he was doing.

Oversoul, was that warning from you?

He didn’t get any answer from the Oversoul, or at least not a direct answer to his question. What he got instead was the clear thought that he should talk to Luet when he got back to camp. And since that was what he would have done anyway, especially after an experience like this, being so close to death, he assumed that it was his own thought, and the Oversoul had not spoken to him at all.

SEVEN
THE BOW

The loss of the pulse was such a blow that neither Volemak nor Elemak made any effort to keep the situation calm—not until it was already almost out of control. There lay the pieces of the pulse, spread out on a cloth; nearby were the two water-damaged pulses that Elemak had saved. Zdorab sat by them, the Index in his lap, reading out the numbers of the broken parts. Almost everyone else stood—few were calm enough to sit—waiting, watching, pacing, grumbling as he tried to find out if one whole pulse could be salvaged from the parts.

“It’s no use,” said Zdorab. “Even if we had all the parts, the Index says that we don’t have the tools that would be needed, and no way of making them without spending fifty years achieving the appropriate level of technology.”

“What a brilliant plan the Oversoul had,” said Elemak. “Keep all of humanity at a low level of technology—so low that even though we can manufacture pulses, we don’t understand how they work and can’t repair them if they break.”

“It wasn’t the Oversoul’s plan,” said Issib.

“Does it matter?” said Mebbekew. “We’re going to die out here now.”

Dol burst into tears, and for once they sounded real.

“I’m sorry,” said Nafai.

“Yes, well, how glad we all are that you’re remorseful,” said Elemak. “What were you doing in a dangerous place like that anyway? You had the sole surviving pulse, and that’s what you do with it?”

“That’s where the animal was,” said Nafai.

“If your quarry had leapt from the cliff, would you have followed?” asked Volemak.

Nafai was devastated that Father had joined in with Elemak’s tongue-lashing. And Elemak himself was far from finished. “Let me put it to you plainly, my dear little brother: If you could have chosen whether you or the pulse would land on the ledge instead of bouncing down to destruction, it would have been more convenient to everybody if you had arranged for it to be the pulse!”

The unfairness of it was almost unbearable. “I’m not the one who lost the first three.”

“But when we lost the first three, we still had a pulse left, so it wasn’t quite as serious,” said Father. “You knew it was the last pulse, and still took such a chance.”

“Enough!” said Rasa. “We all agree, including Nafai, that it was a horrible mistake to put the pulse at risk. But now the pulse is gone, it can’t be repaired, and here we are in this strange place with no way to kill meat. Perhaps one of you has thought of what we’re going to
do
now, besides heaping blame on Nafai’s shoulders.”

Thank you, Mother, said Nafai silently.

“Isn’t it obvious?” said Vas. “The expedition is over.”

“No, it isn’t obvious,” Volemak answered sharply. “The Oversoul’s purpose is nothing less than saving Harmony from the same destruction that came to Earth forty million years ago. Are we going to give that up because we lost a weapon?”

“It’s not the weapon,” said Eiadh. “It’s the meat. We need to find meat.”

“And it isn’t just a matter of having a balanced diet,”
added Shedemei. “Even if we made camp right here and planted crops immediately—and it’s not the season for it, so we couldn’t anyway—but even if we did, we’d have no harvest of basic protein crops until long after we suffered from serious malnutrition.”

“What do you mean by
serious
malnutrition?” asked Volemak.

“Some deaths by starvation, primarily among the children,” said Shedemei.

“That’s awful!” wailed Kokor. “You’ve practically killed my baby!”

Her cry set off a chorus of whining. In the din, Nafai silently spoke to the Oversoul:
Is
there some other way?

〈Do you have a suggestion?〉

Nafai tried to think of a hunting weapon that could be made from materials at hand. He remembered that the Gorayni soldiers had been armed with spears, with bows and arrows. Would either of those do for hunting, or were they only useful in war?

The thought came into his head: 〈Anything that will kill a man will probably kill any other animal. To hunt with a spear requires a group of hunters to drive the prey—otherwise it’s rare to get close enough for the kill, even with an atlatl to extend your throw.〉

Then what about the bow and arrow?

〈A good bow has a range four times that of the pulse. But they’re very hard to make.〉

What about a second-rate bow, with a range only about the
same
as a pulse? Could you teach me how to make one of
those?

〈Yes.〉

And do you think I could find prey with it, or does it take too long to learn the skill?

〈It takes as long as it takes.〉

That was probably as good an answer as he was likely to get from the Oversoul, and it wasn’t a bad answer at that. There was a hope, at least.

When Nafai’s attention returned to the others, they had apparently goaded Volemak beyond his patience. “Do you
think
I
planned all this?” he asked. “Do you think
I
asked the Oversoul to lead us to this hideous place, to have babies in the desert and wander aimlessly through wilderness without enough to eat? Do you think
I
wouldn’t rather be in a house? With a bed?”

Nafai could see that Volemak had surprised everyone by joining his own complaints to theirs. But it hardly reassured them—some looked frightened indeed, to have their pillar of strength show a crack. And Elemak’s face barely concealed his contempt for Father. It was not Volemak’s proudest moment, Nafai could see that—and it was so unnecessary. If he had only asked the Oversoul the questions Nafai had asked, he would have been reassured. There
was
a way.

Vas spoke up again. “I tell you, all of this is completely unnecessary. Nafai and I found a fairly easy way down the mountain. We may not be able to bring the camels, but then, if we’re simply walking around the bay to get to Dorova, all we need to carry is a day’s provisions and water.”

“Abandon the camels?” said Elemak. “The tents?”

“The coldboxes and dryboxes?” asked Shedemei.

“Some of you stay here then,” said Mebbekew, “and lead the camels around the long way. Without the women and babies, it won’t take more than a week, and in the meantime the rest of us will be in the city. Give us a couple of months and we’ll be back in Basilica. Or wherever the rest of you decide to go.”

There was a murmur of assent.

“No,” said Nafai. “This isn’t about
us,
this is about Harmony, about the Oversoul.”

“Nobody asked if I wanted to volunteer for this noble cause,” said Obring, “and I for one am sick of hearing about it.”

“The city’s right over there,” said Sevet. “We could be there so quickly.”

“Fools,” said Elemak. “Just because you can see the city, just because you can see the beach you’d walk along to reach it, that doesn’t mean you could walk it easily. In
a single day? Laughable. You’ve got stronger in the past year, yes, but none of you are in fit condition to walk that far carrying a baby, let alone the liters of water you’d need, and the food. Walking in sand is hard work, and slow, and the more heavily burdened you are, the more slowly you go, which means that you have to carry
more
provisions to last you through the longer journey, which means you’ll be more heavily burdened and travel even more sluggishly.”

“Then we’re trapped here till we
die?”
wailed Kokor.

“Oh, shut up,” said Sevet.

“We’re not trapped here,” said Nafai, “and we don’t have to abandon the expedition. Before there were ever pulses, human beings were able to kill meat. There are other weapons.”

“What, will you strangle them?” asked Mebbekew. “Or use that wire of Gaballufix’s, to cut off their heads?”

Nafai steeled himself to resist his own anger at Mebbekew’s taunting. “A bow. Arrows. The Oversoul knows how they’re made.”

“Then let the Oversoul make them,” said Obring. “That doesn’t mean that any of us know how to
use
them.”

“For once Obring is right,” said Elemak. “It takes years of training to become a good bowman. Why do you think I brought pulses? Bows are better—they have a longer range, they never run out of power, and they do less damage to the meat. But I don’t know how to use one, let alone make one.”

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