Mother of Demons
by
Eric Flint

This is a work of fiction. All
the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any
resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.

Copyright  1997 by Eric Flint

All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or
portions thereof in any form.

A Baen Books Original

Baen Publishing Enterprises P.O. Box 1403 Riverdale, NY 10471

ISBN: 0-671-87800-X

Cover art by Larry Elmore

First printing, September 1997

Distributed by Simon & Schuster 1230 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY
10020

Typeset by Windhaven Press, Auburn, NH Printed in the United States of
America

To my daughter Elizabeth

PART I.

The Threads

Chapter 1.

As a young warrior, Nukurren had heard the demons come. She still
remembered the enormous sound that ripped through the sky above
Shakutulubac, capital of the Ansha Prevalate. She herself had seen
nothing. The sound had awakened her from an exhausted sleep, and by the
time she raced out of the barracks there was nothing to be seen but a
huge red splotch on the eastern horizon. The strange mark on the sky was
terrifying. The Mother-of-Pearl was always a featureless gray. What
could turn it red with fear?

Others in the Warrior's Square claimed to have seen the Great Kraken
itself racing east toward the ocean, spewing molten ink across the sky.
So great had been its terror! They had pointed, with quivering palps, to
the red blotch.

The capital had been gripped with fear. The Paramount Mother had
summoned all her priests to the Divine Shell. For days the soothsayers
had rolled snails, consulting the whorl patterns and the subtleties of
the shellpile. Nukurren had watched them, surreptitiously, from her
position guarding the entrance to the Chamber of Mothers. In the end,
after much quarreling, the soothsayers announced that the great sound
had been a cry of anger from Ypu. The Clam-That-Is-The-World was warning
the Anshac to forego sin and corruption. They concluded by calling for
eight eightdays of fasting. And, inevitably, for increasing the tithes
to the temples.

Looking back on it many eightyweeks later, Nukurren thought it was from
that time that she first began to develop her contempt for the priests.
She did not particularly question their conclusions. But after watching
them from the rare vantage-point of a Motherguard, she had decided their
motivations were far from holy. In truth, a venal and avaricious lot.

As she walked alongside the caravan, she remembered that day long past.

I haven't thought of that in years, she mused. Why now? It must be all
these rumors of demons. Then, with a mental grimace: Or maybe it's that
the rapacity of these slavers brings those priests back to mind.

For a moment, she pondered the question. For a number of eightweeks now,
vague rumors had drifted across the meat of the Clam, telling of new
demons. Not witches, which were feared but understood, but something
else. The stories were vague in all details. But most of them placed the
demons in the vicinity of the Chiton.

Which is probably why the caravan master is so edgy, she thought. Not
that Kjakukun doesn't have enough reason to be fearful, entering Kiktu
territory in search of hunnakaku slaves.

Nukurren looked to the north. The Chiton loomed on the horizon,
dominating the landscape like a behemoth. It was not tall so much as it
was massive. Great canyons carved the slopes. Its shape had given the
great mountain its name.

She whistled derisively. Half of the world's legends belong to the
Chiton. These 'demons" are just the latest.

Although, the night before, Dhowifa hadn't shared her contempt for the
stories.

"It's a fact that folk who've gone to the mountain haven't come back,"
he pointed out. 'For many eightweeks, now."

"It's a big mountain," countered Nukurren. 'Huge. Enough danger in that
to kill off any number of small parties."

But Dhowifa had not been convinced.

"And what about this last party? That wasn't a small group of Pilgrims,
who just vanished. It was a whole slave caravan. They were found dead at
the foot of the Chiton. At the foot, Nukurren, not in the mountain
itself. The slaves were gone without a trace. And the slavers and the
guards were all dead. Great, horrible wounds they had. So people say.
Strange, deep wounds as if they'd been attacked by some kind of giant
uglandine."

"Uglandine?" Nukurren had whistled derision. 'You'd have to be asleep to
be caught by a uglandine! Or crippled."

She stopped and surveyed the caravan.

Not that asleep or crippled doesn't describe this caravan pretty well,
she thought contemptuously.

The caravan had stopped for the day, at midafternoon. The yurts had been
erected in the middle of the trail, for no one had any desire to sleep
amidst the akafa reeds which grew lushly on either side. Akafa was
altogether noisome smelly, and full of slugs.

Kjakukun herself had not wanted to stop before nightfall brought cover
from sharp Kiktu eyes. But the helots who hauled the slave cages were
exhausted. Not surprisingly Kjakukun had driven them mercilessly for
days. The caravan master had attempted to convince the slavers and the
guards to haul the cages, but of course they had refused. It was beneath
their status, and they had seen no Kiktu. They were convinced there were
none in the area. It was Kiktu territory, true. But everyone knew that
the Kiktu were far to the west, organizing themselves and their tribal
allies to meet the Utuku menace.

Nukurren did not share their complacency. The Kiktu might be
preoccupied, but she knew them well. The tribespeople guarded their
territory closely, especially in the vicinity of the Chiton. The area
around the mountain had become a refuge for the hunnakaku, whom the
Kiktu revered. Slavers would not normally even think of coming here. The
Kiktu were ferocious warriors, and they bore a total hatred for slavers.

Still, they were almost out of Kiktu lands. The expedition had been a
great success four slaves captured, when most expeditions nowadays
considered a single hunnakaku worth the effort. Hunnakaku slaves were
much in demand in the great prevalates of the south. Most labor was done
by helots, or gukuy slaves, but it was still a mark of prestige to
possess a hunnakaku. The most powerful rulers even ate the flesh of the
creatures, on occasion, claiming it to be the world's greatest delicacy.

The world is full of evil, thought Nukurren. Evil without end. I think
it must have always been so, despite what the stinking priests say. And
I am certain it will never change.

Gazing upon the caravan, she emitted a soft whistle of contempt. She
wasn't sure what she found more offensive the slovenliness of the
guards, or the brutality of the slavers. She was a mercenary herself
now, of course. Had been for many eightyweeks, ever since she and
Dhowifa fled Shakutulubac. But she still had the training and the
attitudes of an elite warrior, and she had nothing but scorn for the
other mercenaries. She had made no pretense how she felt about them.
They resented her deeply, but naturally they did nothing. Except of this
she had no doubt whisper lurid and disgusting remarks to each other
concerning Nukurren and Dhowifa.

A loud hooting from further down the caravan line drew her attention. A
half-eight of mercenaries were clustered about one of the cages,
whistling with laughter. She moved toward them.

As she drew near, she saw that one of the slavers was amusing herself by
tormenting the hunnakaku in the cage with a blowpipe. The slaver was
shooting practice darts at the mantle of the pitiful creature, who was
cowering against the far side of the cage, hooting loudly, her mantle
brown with misery. The four mercenaries apparently found the sight of
the sub-gukuy's pathetic attempts to fend off the darts vastly amusing.

The darts were not deadly, of course. The blunted tips could do no more
than lightly score the thick mantle of the hunnakaku, and the slaver was
being careful not to shoot at the easily-damaged eyes. But the darts
were painful; and the hunnakaku were by nature timid and easily
frightened.

The gratuitous cruelty of the scene caused a sudden rage to swell within
Nukurren. She shoved aside the mercenary before her. The mercenary began
to protest angrily. Then, seeing who it was who had pushed her, she fell
silent. Ochre uncertainty rippled along the mercenary's mantle, shadowed
by pink undertones of anxiety.

Nukurren ignored the mercenary altogether and advanced upon the slaver.
Feeling her presence, the slaver left off her amusement and glanced
back. Back, and up, for Nukurren was a huge gukuy. At the sight of the
warrior looming above her, the green pleasure tones in the slaver's
mantle were instantly replaced by the same pink-within-ochre.

"What do you want?" demanded the slaver. She eyed Nukurren's mantle,
trying to determine the warrior's mood. But Nukurren had long since
learned to maintain the gray of placid indifference, no matter what she
was feeling within. Partly that was due to her training as an elite
guard, and partly to the male secrets of emotional control she had
learned over the years from Dhowifa. It was very difficult to master
shoroku, as the Anshac called the art of maintaining a gray mantle. As a
rule, shoroku was a skill found only among high-clan gukuy. But Nukurren
had persevered in the study for years. She found some spiritual solace
in the discipline. And, as a warrior, it had the practical virtue that
there is perhaps nothing so intimidating as a gukuy whose emotions can't
be determined.

"What do you want?" demanded the slaver, once again.

Nukurren made the gesture of contemptuous dismissal.

"Go," she said. 'Leave the hunnakaku be."

The slaver slid back two paces on rigid peds. Pink was now predominant
on her mantle, and flashes of red fear were beginning to appear. Without
moving her eyes from the slaver, Nukurren could detect the same colors
on the four mercenaries standing nearby.

A surreptitious motion in the corner of her eye. Once of the mercenaries
had touched her flail. Without looking at her, Nukurren said softly: "If
that flail comes out of its harness, I'll strip the mantle off your body
and feed your guts to the slugs."

Casually, Nukurren drew her own flail. At the sight of it unharnessed,
the mercenaries and the slaver fell back. Nukurren's flail was truly
impressive. Twice the size of a normal warflail, it could only be
wielded by a gukuy of her immense strength. And where most warflails
were armed with flint or obsidian blades, hers gleamed with bronze. The
weapon of an elite soldier. And the mercenaries were well aware that the
warfork harnessed on the right side of her mantle was a twofork the most
difficult variety to master. The forks on their own mantles were mere
sixforks, or even eightforks.

For a moment, all was frozen. Then the tableau was interrupted by the
arrival of Kjakukun.

"What in the name of the Clam is going on?" demanded the caravan master.

Nukurren was silent. The slaver began loudly complaining of her conduct.
The mercenaries said nothing, but began a slow withdrawal from the
scene.

After listening to the slaver, Kjakukun stared at Nukurren.

"So? What's your explanation?" The caravan master's mantle showed only
the dim azure-gray of annoyance.

"Pointless torture offends me. And the hunnakaku are miserable enough."
"What torture?" asked Kjakukun. The slaver's account of the events had
not touched upon the darts. Nukurren gave a brief and dispassionate
sketch of the scene when she arrived.

The caravan master's mantle flashed blue. But the anger was directed at
the slaver.

"Fukoren, I've warned you about this before!"

The slaver cringed back on hunkered peds. Her mantle glowed scarlet.

"But what's the harm?" she whined. 'They're only hunnakaku sub-gukuy!"

Kjakukun's blue did not diminish. If anything, it darkened.

"They're merchandise. Not to be damaged unnecessarily. If they're
frightened too much, they get sick, even die. But that's all beside the
point! I gave you an order, and you disobeyed me!"

The caravan master glared around. The four original mercenaries were now
drawn far back into the small crowd of mercenaries and slavers who had
gathered to watch the scene.

"This trip is dangerous enough," bellowed Kjakukun, 'without
indiscipline and sloppiness! We're still in Kiktu territory, you fools
and now there are these rumors of demons! I won't tolerate disobedience,
do you understand?"

The caravan master was now addressing herself to the assembled crowd.
She paused a moment.

"I've heard you grumble at the wages I'm paying Nukurren. Three times
what you garbage earn. I'm as tight with copper as any, but for this
trip it was worth it. I'll show you why."

The caravan master turned to Nukurren. Kjakakun's mantle flashed black.
Implacable.

"Kill her," she said, waving a palp at the slaver.

Until it was seen, it was hard to believe that a gukuy as huge as
Nukurren could move so fast. Before the crowd could even whistle with
fear, Nukurren drew her fork and slammed it into the slaver's mantle.
Driven by Nukurren's great strength, the two razor-sharp bronze prongs
were driven completely through the ganahide armor and the tough
cartilage of the mantle. With a twist of her palps on the crossbar of
the hook, Nukurren flipped the slaver onto her side. The slaver's two
tentacles clutched at the hook in a hopeless attempt to pry it loose.
The six arms clustered about her beak were knotted in pain.

The killing stroke which followed struck the slaver like a lightning
bolt. The blow drove the flail-blades deep into the unarmored soft
tissue of the slaver's underbelly. With a great jerk, the slaver's
bowels were ripped out and scattered about the ground in a spray of
blood. Pieces of gut spattered the crowd. With another quick twist of
her right tentacle Nukurren tossed the corpse of the slaver aside,
freeing the prongs of her fork.

She squatted down on her peds and began cleaning the fork and the flail
with a sponge. Around her she could hear the crowd whistling loudly. It
was not the death of the slaver which shocked them, she knew. They were
as callous a group of gukuy as you could find anywhere on the Meat of
the Clam. It was the manner of it the incredible display of ferocity,
speed and strength. Many warriors boasted of being able to deal the
kutaku, the single death-blow, but it was rarely accomplished in actual
fact.

"And her gray never wavered," Nukurren heard one mercenary whisper with
awe. She found some consolation in that comment, to counteract the great
wave of revulsion which flowed through her. Not a trace of her feelings
showed in her mantle, but she had to fight not to vomit. She
concentrated on cleaning her weapons, slowly and meticulously.

I'm not even sickened by the killing, she thought wearily. The stinking
slaver deserved it. No, it's the sickness of my whole life. I think
Dhowifa's right. But I just can't find any comfort in his dukuna.

By the time she finished cleaning her weapons, the crowd had
disappeared. The body of the slaver was still lying to one side. The
pool of blood surrounding it had soaked into the soil. Scavengers were
already approaching the corpse. Within a day, the body would be a
festering mass of corruption, filled with slugs, snails, worms and
larvae.

Typical slavers, thought Nukurren with disgust. Well, if they're not
going to bother giving her the rites, I'm certainly not.

She rose and began walking toward her yurt. A soft hoot from the cage
stopped her. Turning back, Nukurren saw that the hunnakaku was now
standing at the front of the cage, staring at her through the bars. The
hunnakaku hooted again.

Long ago, after their escape from Shakutulubac, Nukurren and Dhowifa had
spent many eightweeks living with the Kiktu. Nukurren had gotten along
well with the tribespeople, but Dhowifa's pampered existence in the
Palace had not prepared him for the hardships of barbarian life. So when
the old Paramount Mother died, and the fury of the hunt for her escaped
consort died with her, Dhowifa had insisted on returning to
civilization. Nukurren had not been unwilling, for though she liked the
Kiktu, she found their religious beliefs bizarre. And their dietary
fetishes and restrictions had been annoying.

But while she was among them, Nukurren had been careful to observe the
proprieties. She had even learned some of the strange language spoken by
the hunnakaku. For the Kiktu believed that the sub-gukuy were sacred.
They called the hunnakaku the Old Ones, and believed that they were the
first people created by their goddess Uk when she rained life upon the
Meat. They were favored still in her eyes, the Kiktu believed, and their
language was difficult to understand because it was holy. All Kiktu
learned to speak it at least, as well as was possible for gukuy.

So Nukurren listened. The hunnakaku hooted again.

must not do feed reeds snails beauty

With difficulty, Nukurren translated. The speaking siphon of the
hunnakaku, she knew, was fairly similar to that possessed by gukuy. But
there were important differences. The hunnakaku lacked the flexible lips
and the hard ridges which enabled gukuy to speak their complex
languages. Instead, the hunnakaku produced a hoot which contained a
single thought couched in various permutations. Dhowifa had once told
her it reminded him of a verbal version of the ideograms which the
prevalates in the far south used for writing.

The central concept was 'feed." She understood that immediately. There
was both the positive and the negative imperative which was usually
present in hunnakaku hoots. The negative was at the center a reflection,
she thought, of the timid nature of the sub-gukuy. 'Not feed snails,"
then. The positive would surround the center, as an alternative course
of action. 'Must feed beauty. Do feed reeds."

With sudden understanding, she stared at the body of the slaver.

"But why?" she demanded. 'She was your tormentor."

Another hoot.

death not end give life not life

Strangely, it made sense. The hunnakaku were plant-eaters. They viewed
carnivores, including scavengers, with horror. The horror was not the
product of personal fear. Because of their size, the hunnakaku had few
natural enemies. (Except us, thought Nukurren.) It was due to their
belief that all meat-eaters were parasites, who stole life without
returning it back to what they called the 'Coil of Beauty." To be eaten
as meat was to be denied re-entry into the Coil, to be doomed to eternal
non-existence.

Or so, at least, the Kiktu had explained it to Nukurren. And it was
certainly true that, within the limits available to their fundamentally
carnivorous needs as gukuy, the Kiktu attempted to follow similar
precepts. It was these attempts, of course, that produced the dietary
rules and restrictions which Nukurren and Dhowifa had found so irksome.

Nukurren's tentacles twitched with irritation.

"You can't expect me to bury her!"

She whistled with derision at the idea, and began to march off.

Another hoot:

horror horror horror is horror horror horror

She stopped, arrested by the tone of unmistakable anguish in the voice
of the hunnakaku. After a moment, she made a decision and marched to the
toolkeeper's yurt. The plaintive hoots of the hunnakaku followed her.

"Give me a hoe," she commanded. Without a word, the toolkeeper
disappeared inside and returned a moment later with the tool. Her
mantle, Nukurren noticed with bleak amusement, glowed bright pink with
apprehension.

Taking the hoe, Nukurren stalked back to the cage. She began digging a
trench on one side of the trail, but as soon as she started the hooting
began again.

must not waste root wrong there reeds

She whistled sharply with anger. The hunnakaku withdrew fearfully from
the bars, cowering in the interior of the cage. Her mantle flushed brick
red. Fear, allayed by determination. She continued to hoot the same
plea.

"You're as bad as the Kiktu and their damned fetishes," said Nukurren.
But she abandoned the trench she had begun and waded off into the field
of akafa. There, even though the reeds made the work far more difficult,
she dug a new trench. Finished, she went over and grabbed the slaver's
body. She was tempted to use her fork to drag the body, but she knew it
would upset the hunnakaku. For some reason, the thought of causing
further pain to the gentle giant was repulsive. So, ignoring her disgust
at the snails which were by now crawling all over the corpse, she picked
up the body of the slaver in her two great tentacles and carried it over
to the trench. She lowered the body down. It was short work to hoe the
soil back in.

When she was finished, she stared at the small mound in the reeds.

"You're still garbage," she said softly. 'But for whatever it's worth,
welcome to the Coil of Beauty. Personally, I hope you come back as a
slug."

She left the reeds and went back to the cage. For a long moment, she and
the hunnakaku stared at each other. She saw a creature whose basic shape
was similar to her own. Bigger, of course, despite the fact that
Nukurren was huge for a gukuy. The hunnakaku's peds were very short and
bulky relative to its body. She lacked true tentacles. Instead, she had
eight arms instead of six. The arms were bigger than a gukuy's, and
clumsy-looking they ended in a simple bifurcation, instead of the
delicate triad which made gukuy arms such marvelous instruments for
precise manipulation. The beak which Nukurren could see within the
hunnakaku's arm-cluster was blunt and ridged, suited for chewing tough
plants. Not at all like Nukurren's sharp-edged gukuy beak.

And what does she see? wondered Nukurren. A monster, I imagine.

There was no way to tell. Another wave of world-weariness rolled over
her.

In truth, they are a better folk than we gukuy. But they are timid,
despite their size and strength. And slow, and stupid. So we make them
our slaves, when we do not butcher them outright. And now they are a
dying race. The slavers catch fewer and fewer each year, and they won't
breed in captivity. And if the Kiktu are destroyed by the Utuku, more
slavers will come to this refuge. Kjakukun is just one of many.

She turned away.

And I am Kjakukun's flail. For three wires of copper an eightday.

On her way back to her yurt, she took some satisfaction in the fearful
glances sent her way by those she encountered. As she passed Kjakukun's
yurt, the caravan master stepped from between the hides which served as
an entryway.

"Why did you bury her?" she asked. She seemed genuinely puzzled.

"The hunnakaku asked me to."

Orange astonishment rippled across Kjakakun's mantle.

"Why should you do its bidding? It's nothing but a slave a sub-gukuy."

Anger boiled over, and this time Nukurren made no effort to control her
mantle. Blue blazed. Despite her own impressive self-control, the
caravan master could not prevent a pink flush from entering her own
mantle.

And when Nukurren stepped suddenly near, the pink was replaced by
scarlet terror.

"I work for you, slave-master," said Nukurren softly, 'because I have
to. I need the money, and " She did not complete the thought. Nor, even
though she could have, did the caravan master.

Because only a filthy slaver would hire a pervert.

Nukurren waited, wondering if the caravan master was bold enough to
sneer the words. But Kjakukun was silent.

Very wise, slave master. Very wise.

The blue faded from Nukurren's mantle.

"I work for you, Kjakukun. But I am much closer to the Kiktu in how I
see the Old Ones."

The red faded from the caravan master.

"The Kiktu will kill you as quick as anyone!"

"True. Even quicker, for they would look upon me as a traitor."

Nukurren turned away, then back.

"Do not ever ask me questions, slave-master. I am your bodyguard, no
more."

"I am your employer," protested Kjakukun.

Nukurren allowed a tinge of contempt to yellow her mantle, as she walked
toward her yurt.

Dhowifa was in his usual place, perched on the cushions in a corner.
After Nukurren entered, the two lovers stared at each other in silence.

"It's been a bad day," she said finally.

Dhowifa's mantle rippled with the chromatic complexity of which only
truemales are capable. Sadness. Sympathy. Empathy. And, the undertone
beneath and the sharpest accents, green love.

"I know. I watched from here."

After some silence, he spoke again.

"I have brought much misery into your life."

"Much happiness, also."

An intricate wave of pastel humor washed over him. 'True. True. But
still, I wish " "Wish what?" demanded Nurukken. 'That we hadn't fallen
in love?"

"No never that! But "

"The world is the way it is, Dhowifa. Why should you complain? Isn't
that the heart of your dukuna?"

Dhowifa's arms coiled in a manner suggesting respectful disagreement
leavened by good feeling. Not for the first time, Nukurren was struck by
the truemale's incredible delicacy of expression.

"Not exactly," he demurred. 'The concept of dukuna has a more impersonal
philosophical thrust. It's not really "

"Enough!" barked Nukurren. But the good humor was obvious on her mantle.
And, glowing ever brighter, the white of passion.

"You're insatiable," complained Dhowifa. But his own mantle rippled
ivory, and there was no reluctance in the way the tiny truemale came
toward her, his arms extended.

As he climbed into her mantle cavity, his tentacles gripping her head
firmly while he extended his arms deep inside, Nurukken whistled her
pleasure at his touch.

Yes, she thought, you have brought me anguish, Dhowifa. But I wouldn't
give you up for anything. Joy of my life. My love, who had none.

His arms found what they were seeking. Pleasure turned into ecstasy, and
forgetfulness of all pain.

Chapter 2.

The demons attacked at dawn.

Nukurren was awakened by a shrill hoot of fear and alarm. With a
veteran's instinct, she was instantly awake and scrambling for her
weapons. She hesitated for a moment at the thought of donning her
ganahide armor, but decided she didn't have time.

"Wait here!" she said to Dhowifa, who was stirring to life in his
cushions.

She rushed through the hide flaps of the yurt and onto the ground
beyond. There, she crouched for a moment in battle stance, fork and
flail ready, to gain her bearings.

What she saw, in the faint light of the dawn, was at first more
confusing that anything else.

What are those things?

They were like nothing she had ever seen. Very tall and slender, like
reeds. They moved with blinding speed, in a strange, jerky motion that
she found hard to follow.

Before she could register anything else, she saw one of the demons
spring toward a caravan guard. The guard was crouched, holding up her
fork and flail in trembling palps, whistling with terror. In a movement
faster than anything Nukurren had ever seen, the demon thrust forth some
sort of huge stinger. As the stinger hurtled at the guard, Nukurren saw
a brief gleam from its tip.

Metal! But what kind of metal shines gray?

The stinger plunged deeply into the camp guard's head, right between the
eyes and into the brain. The guard died instantly, without a sound.

The demon planted a a ped? wondered Nukurren; was that long and skinny
thing a ped? onto the dead guard's head and wrenched the stinger loose
with its two tentacles.

Except they're not tentacles. They're like sticks tied together. And
that stinger's a weapon of some kind.

That last thought restored her courage. They might be demons, but if
they needed weapons they had to be vulnerable. Somehow.

She had no more time for thought. From the corner of her eye she caught
a flickering motion. Then the gleam of a weapon coming straight toward
her.

She was totally unprepared for a straight-thrusting weapon. No gukuy
could deliver such a blow. But she instantly raised the shield
protecting her palp on the crossbar of the fork, in the reflex of a
fighter fending off blowpipe darts.

The weapon glanced off the shield and drove along her mantle, gashing a
long but shallow wound. Nukurren ignored the pain. Her mantle was
already criss-crossed with battle scars, and no mantle-wound was serious
so long as the mantle itself wasn't penetrated. But she found time to
regret the absence of her armor.

Nukurren whipped her flail around and struck a terrible blow on the
lower portion of the demon's ped. The flail-tips did not penetrate.
There was some sort of armor there. But she heard a strange cracking
noise, and the demon collapsed to the ground, wailing horribly.

She drew back her flail for the death-stroke, but turned away. Her duty
was elsewhere. The demon seemed incapacitated, and she was responsible
for the safety of the caravan master.

She raced toward Kjakukun's yurt. On the way, she caught glimpses of the
chaos around her. The guards and slavers were no longer attempting to
fight. They were fleeing every which way in utter terror. But the demons
which swarmed everywhere moved much faster than gukuy. Right before her,
she watched as a fleeing slaver was overtaken by two demons. Pitilessly,
the monsters drove their weapons into the slaver's peds, pinning it to
the ground. A third demon flickered around to the front of the shrieking
slaver, and drove its weapon straight into her brain.

How do they do that? wondered Nukurren. She recognized the utterly
deadly nature of the blow. No part of a gukuy's body was more vulnerable
than the soft spot between the eyes, behind which the brain lay
unprotected. But the very nature of a gukuy's tentacles made such a
direct blow impossible. The dart from a blowpipe could strike there, but
very few pipers could drive a dart hard enough to penetrate through the
flesh into the brain. Eyes were a piper's target.

She heard a loud hooting from the cages holding the hunnakaku.

Are the demons slaughtering the pitiful things?

But when she risked a glance, she saw that the demons were smashing the
locks of the cage. They were releasing the sub-gukuy! And now she
recognized that the hoots carried no trace of fear.

Just ahead of her was Kjakukun's yurt. She was almost there. She saw the
caravan master step out through the hides, carrying a flail.

Get back inside, you idiot! I can't protect you out here!

It was too late. From somewhere, a demon flickered into view. It drew
back the stinger in one of its strange tentacles, and then jerked it
forward in a blur. Astonished, Nukurren watched the stinger fly through
the air, like a gigantic dart from a blowpipe. It struck Kjakukun right
between the eyes. The caravan master was dead before her body could
fall.

More than anything else she had seen, in that dawn of terror and chaos,
the sight of the flying stinger shocked Nukurren. Except for blowpipes,
gukuy almost never used missile weapons. Some of the primitive tribes to
the far southwest used slings. The Anshac had experimented with the
awkward devices, before concluding they were well-nigh useless. To be
sure, the stones struck with considerable impact. But gukuy could
withstand a great deal in the way of blunt impacts, and no gukuy had the
tentacular dexterity to use the slings with accuracy. Even the
southwestern primitives used them rarely.

Despair washed over her. How can you fight such terrible creatures?

But she had no time to dwell on it. A demon was racing toward her.
Knowing what to expect, she twisted to one side to avoid the
brain-thrust. The stinger drove into the front of her mantle. The wound
was harmless; hardly even painful. Nowhere on the mantle of a gukuy was
the tissue tougher and thicker than on the edge of the cowl.

She lashed upward with her fork, striking the demon's tentacle. Again,
that strange cracking sound. The demon ululated.

Full of fury and triumph, Nukurren whipped her flail around at the
monster's upper torso. The blow was fast and powerful, but the demon's
uncanny speed enabled it to interpose its other tentacle, which bore
some kind of armor. The armor splintered. She heard another crack; the
demon was hurled to the ground.

They can be broken! came the thought.

Another demon. Another. And another. Twisting like a slug, faster than
she'd ever moved, Nukurren managed to avoid the death-blows. But this
time the stingers penetrated through her mantle, into the flesh of her
body cavity. The pain was intense. Even more intense was the knowledge
of her certain doom. Such wounds invariably caused lingering death, by
horrible diseases.

With no thought now but to wreak havoc, Nukurren hurled herself at her
tormentors. Her fork and flail struck hard. One of the demons fell to
the ground, clasping its side. Nukurren's flail had torn out a great
swath of flesh? A second demon, a huge one, was stripped of its weapon
by a smashing blow of the flail on its tentacle. The third demon
withdrew, moving with an odd gait, hopping on one of its bizarre peds.

A pause. She spun around, feeling agony as the stingers sticking out of
her mantle flapped with her motion.

She was surrounded by demons. They were standing back, however, beyond
reach of her weapons. Peculiar sounds were coming from them. Horrible
sounds, full of spitting and gasping. A language, she realized, but like
no language she'd ever heard. Through the haze of pain, she was finally
able to discern some details of their shape, now that the demons weren't
moving in a constant flicker.

Those are heads, she realized. Those strange growths on the very top of
their bodies. And the sounds are coming from those moving parts in
front. Are they lips? Is that tiny thing a beak? It can't be it only has
one jaw.

Then she saw the eyes. Those, at least, she had no difficulty in
recognizing. They were almost like her own, except that they were so
small.

Why aren't they attacking?

She moved toward one side. The demons there flickered back.

They're afraid of me, she realized. The slavers were butchered like uju.
But I injured several. Some may even die.

But the tiny hope faded. She heard a demon's voice, lower-pitched than
the others. Turning to face the voice, she saw two demons in the circle
surrounding her flicker aside. A new demon appeared, stalking slowly
through the ring.

The new demon was much bigger than the others. Taller, and wider in its
upper torso. It moved slowly, for a demon, but she instantly recognized
the total poise of its stance. As bizarre as the demons were in their
shape and their movement, she had no doubt of what she was seeing.

A great warrior. Demonlord.

The thing began circling her. Faster and faster. She spun around. It
reversed its circle. She spun again. She could feel the stingers in her
body tearing at the flesh. She realized the thing was deliberately
forcing her to wound herself further.

She had no chance in a prolonged battle. Suddenly, she hurtled forward,
whipping her fork around at the monster's head. With triumph, she saw
the demon block the blow with its stinger. She had time to marvel at the
strength and solidity of the creature, before she brought her flail
whipping around at the demon's peds in the same blow which had crippled
the others.

But to her astonishment, the demon avoided the blow by flying? No, he
leapt. Straight up, lifting his peds over the whistling flails, and back
down on the ground. Still perfectly poised.

She knew, then, that these were truly demons. No natural creature on the
Meat of the Clam could do that.

She saw the death-stroke coming. But now she was off-balance from
missing her own strike. She could not avoid the blow. She could only
make a last, futile attempt to twist aside.

The stinger plunged straight into her left eye. Deep, deep, deep.
Bringing an agony so great it left her paralyzed, as well as half-blind.

Dimly, she realized her last twist had avoided the brain-strike. But now
she was doomed. She watched helplessly as the demon champion took a new
stinger from another demon. Watched as it flickered slowly toward her,
the stinger held in strike position. She was even, now, finally able to
analyze the strange motion of its peds.

Like sticks, tied end to end. They don't really flicker, they jerk back
and forth where the knots would be.

Suddenly her vision was occulted. A small body was swarming onto her
maimed head, whistling with fear and anguish.

Dhowifa.

"Go away," she whispered. 'Hide, my love. There's nothing you can do but
save yourself."

But Dhowifa, normally more clever and shrewd than any truemale Nukurren
had ever met, was now utterly lost in a truemale spasm of emotional
frenzy. He clutched at her head, desperately trying to pull the terrible
stinger from her eye.

It was a hopeless task for his puny strength. But, for some unknown
reason, his arrival had caused the demonlord to pull back. The stinger
in its stick-tentacle drooped. There was a rapid exchange of sounds
between the demonlord and the others. Then, the demonlord advanced
again, its stinger held at the ready.

It's going to kill us both, Nukurren realized with despair. Oh, Dhowifa,
you fool.

"Go please!"

A huge shape stepped between Nukurren and the demonlord.

One of the hunnakaku, she realized, even before she heard the hoot.

The concentration necessary to interpret the hunnakaku was beyond her.
She was afloat in a sea of pain.

She heard hoots answered by other, strange hoots. The latter, she dimly
realized, came from the demons. But she could only concentrate on one
thought.

I will not die with these horrible stingers in my flesh.

Gently detaching Dwowifa, she gripped the stinger in her eye. She
inhaled deeply. Then, drawing on every reserve of strength and courage,
she drew the stinger forth. She whistled from the pain, but never
hesitated.

She cast the stinger aside. It rolled toward a demon. The monster stared
at the weapon, then at her. It did not move. None of the demons were
moving, she realized. The hunnakaku was now standing to one side,
silent.

She reached back and gripped the stinger protruding from the left side
of her mantle. Again, she exerted her great strength. The pain this time
was not as intense, but after she drew out the weapon she felt a great
weakness wash over her.

She fought the weakness aside, barely. She reached back and grasped the
last stinger. Again, a heave. But now her strength failed her. She could
barely see out of the eye left to her. The weariness and the agony were
overwhelming.

She felt a touch on her palp. Strange, eerie touch. She twisted slightly
and looked back. The demonlord was next to her side, staring at her with
its strange little eyes. Dawn was now fully upon them, and there was
enough light to see clearly. Much of the demon's body was covered with
armor, and most of the rest was cloaked in hides. And there was
something very strange, she realized, about the armor on its head. But
she could see uncovered stretches of the monster's skin. Black as night.
Implacable.

The touch again. She realized that it was the demonlord. The monster
pulled her palps from the stinger. There was something bizarre about the
shape of its palps, but she was too dazed to make sense of it.

It's very strong, she thought vaguely. But I think, if I were unwounded,
not as strong as I.

She was unable to resist. She let her tentacles fall. The demonlord
seized the stinger and placed one of its peds on her mantle, next to the
wound. A sudden jerk, the sharp pressure of its tiny ped on her body,
and the stinger was out.

She lost all vision, then. And almost, but not quite, her consciousness.
Around her, she could hear the mingled hoots of hunnakaku and demons.
She could feel Dhowifa's warm, trembling little body clutching her head.
Reason, always thinly rooted in truemales, had fled completely.

Poor Dhowifa, was her last thought before sliding into oblivion, you
were so proud of your mind. Now you see what terror can do.

Chapter 3.

Rottu waited in the shadows while the patrol passed. She was not
especially worried. The warriors in the patrol were auxiliaries, not
keen-eyed legionnaires. More concerned with ending their patrol in the
warmth of an ashu-chamber than with finding suspicious persons lurking
in dark alleys.

As they drew alongside the mouth of the alley, the warriors stopped and
made a casual examination of its interior. But Rottu knew they would see
nothing. There was only a single glowmoss pillar at the entrance of the
alley. An old colony, moreover, whose light penetrated not more than a
few steps into the gloom beyond.

Still, Rottu took no chances. Far back in the alley, she pressed herself
more closely against the stones. Then, cursing silently, repressed a
hoot of pain. She had forgotten. The walls of the tenements were crudely
made, with many sharp edges and rough corners. Nothing like the
polished, beautiful walls of the Divine Shell.

I'm getting old and sloppy. Too accustomed to the luxury of the Shell. I
haven't been outside the clan quarters in how many eightweeks?

One of the warriors began to make a perfunctory inspection of the alley.
But she had no sooner taken a few steps forward than she suddenly
recoiled.

Watching, in the darkness beyond, Rottu found it hard not to whistle
derision.

She smells the stench of the corpse.

The corpse lay between Rottu and the mouth of the alley. When she had
seen the warriors approach, she had deliberately hidden herself beyond
the body. If the squad of warriors chose to investigate the alley
closely, they would have to edge their way past the thing. Several days
dead, that corpse. Crawling with scavengers. Putrid.

A nameless corpse, Rottu knew. Dead of hunger, or parasites; or the
wounds inflicted by thieves, themselves desperate enough to rob a
nameless one. A former helot, most likely, escaped from the lands of her
clan mistresses. Seeking, like so many before her, a new life in
Shakutulubac. And finding nothing but death in the slums of the great
city.

There are more and more such, now. Driven by the increasing tyranny in
the land to seek refuge in a city which is itself hooting louder and
louder.

There will be another pogrom soon. The awosha have already given the
order. Many Pilgrims will die. We are too many, now, to find safety in a
few cellars.

The patrol left quickly, as Rottu had known they would. In eightyweeks
gone by, in the time of Rottu's youth, the patrol would have reported
the corpse at the end of their night's work. The following morning, a
gang of slaves would have been sent by the Mistresses of the City to
remove it. But those days were long gone. In the Shakutulubac of Rottu's
old age, corpses rotted in the streets. There were so many of them now.
The life of the poor and low-clanned had always been cheap. Today, it
was worth nothing.

Some time later, when she judged it was safe to do so, Rottu edged past
the corpse and left the alley. Allowing no sign in her mantle of the
repugnance she felt. There were none to see her color, of course. But
Rottu had been a mistress of shoroku for too long to relax her
discipline. A lifetime too long.

Once back in the street, she hurried along. Hurried, but took no
chances. If she were spotted by a patrol, she would certainly be
recognized. The patrol, of course, would not accost her. They would not
dare. But they would talk, and the talk would reach the Tympani of the
Ansha. Then disaster. Rottu herself ranked high in the Tympani. But not
high enough to avoid the chambers in the cellars of the Shell. Not if it
became known that she was seen, late in the night, in that quarter of
the city which was known to be infested with Pilgrims.

Some of the Tympani are already a bit suspicious. I have been careful,
but it is impossible to make no mistakes. I have made very few, or my
mantle would have been stripped long ago. But it has been many
eightyweeks since I entered Ushulubang's service.

She ducked into another alley-mouth and examined the street behind her.
Then, satisfied, continued on.

I would not have taken this chance, except there has perhaps never been
a parcel more precious than the one I carry tonight. And I have not seen
Ushulubang in so long. We must speak together, for all the risk. I must
make certain that she understands the truth of the situation.

This pogrom will be terrible.

Rottu finally reached her destination, and gave the signal. Moments
later, she was following a pashoc through the labyrinth of cellars
beneath the slums. Now that she was in the relative safety of the
underground, she admitted to herself that there had been another reason
she had taken the risk of coming here personally.

I must see Ushulubang myself. It has been so long, and my soul needs
replenishing.

Ushulubang's quarters were, as always, spare and lean. A simple pallet.
A sturdy reading bench. A crudely-trimmed glowmoss colony, which cast
barely enough light for the sage to read by. Barely, but enough. Nothing
more. Even for a former warrior like Ushulubang, the rigor of her life
must sometimes be trying.

But Rottu saw, with relief, that there were no signs of that rigor upon
Ushulubang. The sage was old, of course. But she still seemed as
vigorous as ever.

After they entwined their arms, Ushulubang stepped back and whistled
humorously.

"Why such an air of gloom, Rottu? Your mantle might as well be pure
brown."

"Stop making jokes, you old fool." From the corner of her eye, Rottu saw
the mantle of the pashoc glow orange and pink. The young Pilgrim was
shocked to hear someone speak to the great opoloshuku in such an
unseemly fashion.

Let her be shocked. Someone has to speak the truth to this this saintly
idiot.

The green in Ushulubang's own mantle never wavered, of course.
Ushulubang enjoyed the rare occasions when someone flailed her. It
reminded her, she would say, of the days when she had wandered the world
with Goloku. Days long gone. The most precious of days. The days when
Goloku had flailed her with the truth, and shown her the road of the
Way.

"Always so grim. Always so grim."

Ushulubang made the gesture of rueful acceptance.

"Very well, Rottu. I see I will not be able to avoid your flail. But
first do you have the packet?"

Rottu withdrew the packet from where she had secreted it within her
mantle cavity. With considerable relief. The packet was large and heavy.
She extended it to the sage. Ushulubang's arms made short work of
unwrapping the cloth.

The sage moved closer to the light shed by the glowmoss. Slowly, she
examined the sheets.

"You have seen?"

"Yes, Ushulubang. I have made my own copies of the most important
sheets."

A tinge of pink came into Ushulubang's mantle.

"Isn't that a bit " Rottu  with a rude whistle. The pashoc in the corner
of the chamber glowed azure and orange with indignation.

"Stick to philosophy, Ushulubang. Let me worry about keeping things
secret."

Again, Ushulubang made the gesture of rueful acceptance.

"I am well flailed. I had forgotten how uncouth you are! But, as you
say, you are the mistress of such things."

She gestured to the sheets.

"What do you think?"

"It is perfect. We will never be able to pronounce the language exactly
the way they do, of course. But the Pilgrims on the mountain say that
the demons themselves are changing their manner of speech to fit our
needs."

Ushulubang issued a soft hoot of surprise.

"Truly?"

Rottu made the gesture of affirmation. 'And in every other respect,
Enagulishuc is ideal. Clear and logical. And the written form is very
easy to learn, once one learns the strange method. Even the barbarians
at Fagoshau are learning it. More easily, in fact, than the Anshac."

Ushulubang looked back at the sheets. 'That is not so surprising, Rottu.
The former barbarians do not have their minds cluttered with the arcane
complexities of Anshaku writing."

Rottu accepted the reproof without comment. In principle, she agreed
with Ushulubang. All apashoc are equal on the Way. Still, it was
difficult not to think of barbarians as semi-savage illiterates. Skilled
in war, within their limits; and often surprisingly cunning in their
statecraft. But  "You agree, then?" she asked Ushulubang. 'We will adopt
Enagulishuc?"

Ushulubang made the gesture of hesitation.

"I think so, yes. From a practical point of view, it is ideal. Yet there
is still the deeper question to be resolved. We will be committing
ourselves, Rottu. In a sense, at least. We will become identified with
demons."

Rottu whistled derision. 'And so what? All the better. Let those who
oppress the Pilgrims find red in their mantles, for a change. There is
no longer any doubt on that question, Ushulubang. No Pilgrim has yet
been able to observe the demons in battle, of course. They move much too
quickly for our warriors to accompany them. But they have seen the
results. Entire slave caravans destroyed. With no casualties suffered by
the demons, other than minor wounds." Seeing the continued hesitation,
Rottu pressed on.

"Ushulubang, facts are what they are. It is a world of evil and
violence. We may wish it were not so, and speak against it, but the fact
remains. And we have become too numerous to avoid attack by simply
hiding."

Hesitation.

"Ushulubang, there is a new pogrom coming. It has already been ordered.
It will take the Tympani some time to organize, but not much."

Ushulubang made the gesture of postponement.

"I know, Rottu. But we will speak of that in a moment."

The sage laid the sheets down on the bench.

"You misunderstand my concern, Rottu. Goloku was a warrior herself, you
should remember. She spoke against violence, true. But she was not
reluctant to defend herself when necessary. As you say, if we can learn
the skills of war from the demons, so much the better."

"Then why do you hesitate?"

"Battle is a small thing, Rottu. It is the soul which looms large on the
Way. And these are, after all, demons."

"Demons who eat nothing but owoc ogoto."

"That is certain?"

Rottu made the gesture of affirmation. 'Yes, Ushulubang. It is certain."

She pointed to the sheets on the bench. 'You can read the report
yourself. Many of the Pilgrims on the mountain have been living among
the demons for eightweeks, now. They have watched carefully, as you
instructed. Never not once have they seen a demon eat anything else. The
demons themselves say they cannot."

"Do the demons say why?"

"Yes. They say any other food will kill them."

"Just so. It is fitting. Powerful demons, with the knowledge of great
secrets. Yet they cannot exist without the love of the world's simplest
and most gentle beings."

Ushulubang made the gesture of certainty.

"In the end, that is what guides me. The minds of the owoc can be easily
fooled. But their souls? Never, I think."

The sage turned to the pashoc in the corner.

"Spread the word, Shurren. Enagulishuc is now the language of the Way.
All of the apashoc should begin its study. If they have already begun,
they should intensify their efforts."

"Yes, opoloshuku. And the other matter?"

"That too is settled. Tell the Pilgrims to prepare for the journey."

The pashoc hurried from the chamber.

"What journey?" demanded Rottu. 'What 'other matter'?"

Ushulubang whistled humorously.

"Excellent! Even the all-seeing Rottu remains in the dark. I am pleased.
The secret has been kept. A difficult task, when it involved so many
people."

"What are you talking about?"

"We are leaving Shakulutubac, Rottu. All of us, except for a few friars
who will stay behind to continue the work of recruitment."

Rottu was dumbfounded. It took all of her mastery of shoroku to prevent
her mantle being flooded with orange.

"Leaving? Where are you going?"

"To the Chiton, Rottu. To the mountain of demons."

"But all of you? You too?"

She felt a sharp pain.

I will never see Ushulubang again. My soul will shrivel and die.

Then, drawing on a lifetime of harsh self-discipline, she repressed her
emotions. She stood in silence for a moment, considering the question.

It is a brilliant stroke, actually. I would never have thought of it
myself. The Chiton will provide safety from persecution. Long enough, at
least, for Ushulubang to weave the Pilgrims into a thick cloth. The
coming pogrom will strike at nothing. I can easily provide enough places
of safety in the city for a few friars.

Her cunning mind saw another possibility as well. But she pushed it
aside. There would be time enough to deal with that later. For the
moment  Again, she repressed her emotions.

I will not live much longer, in any event. The steps I will need to take
to enable so many Pilgrims to flee Shakutulubac will certainly come to
the attention of the Tympani. I will be put in the torture cells.

In her mind, she whistled derision.

But they will learn nothing from my corpse. I have carried poison with
me ever since I gave my soul to the Way.

And there is this, to bring comfort. Ushulubang will live. Ushulubang
will live.

The sage interrupted her thoughts.

"Such an idiot."

Rottu stared at her, surprised.

"What does that mean?"

"Do you really think I would leave you behind? To receive the blue fury
of the awosha? You are coming with us, Rottu."

"What? Impossible! I need to "

Ushulubang's mantle flashed black. The sight of that implacable color on
the sage's mantle stopped Rottu in mid-sentence. It was a color she had
almost never seen on the opoloshuku of the Way.

"I command, Rottu. In this, I command. We will need your skills to
assist us in fleeing the city. But only so much as you can do without
throwing yourself into the torture cells."

"I can save "

"You will save enough, Rottu. And you are not thinking clearly. You are
only thinking of the escape. What of the arrival?"

"I don't understand."

"Just so. Just so. I am casting the fate of the Pilgrims into the coil
of demons, Rottu. You may be a fool, but I am not. Do you think I would
do so without the assistance of my other eyes? Without your cunning at
my side? Fool."

Rottu considered the question in this new light. And concluded, as she
had so many times in the past, that Ushulubang was truly a sage.

"You are correct, opoloshuku."

Ushulubang whistled. Rarely did Rottu allow that word of respect to
issue from her siphon.

The two gukuy stared at each other in silence for a moment. They had
known each other for many, many eightyweeks. Ever since a young Tympani
had been assigned as one of Ushulubang's interrogators, following the
first persecution of the Pilgrims. A very young Tympani. Old enough to
be sickened at the cruelty she had seen in the torture cells. Young
enough not to have absorbed the cruelty into her own soul. An
interrogator who had found, looking for answers from Goloku's only
surviving pashoc, a Question to which she had devoted her life.

Mistress of shoroku, Rottu's mantle remained gray. Ushulubang, though
she was an even greater mistress of the art, allowed hers to glow green.

After a moment, Rottu turned away.

"I must be gone, or my absence will be missed."

"A moment, Rottu. I have a last question."

"Yes?"

Ushulubang gestured to the sheets on the bench.

"You have read them. Do the Pilgrims of the mountain continue to claim
that the Answer is known? By the Mother of Demons?"

"Yes."

"Do you believe it?"

Rottu whistled. 'I leave philosophy to you, old sage. I have enough
secrets to keep me busy."

Ushulubang's whistle echoed the amusement.

"Just so. I myself do not believe. I believe the Pilgrims on the
mountain have lapsed into the great error. I believe in the teachings of
Goloku. There is no Answer. There is only the Question."

"As you say, Ushulubang. In this you are always my guide. We will know
soon enough."

She turned and left the chamber.

Back on the streets, Rottu resumed her cautious movements. She thought
of nothing, beyond the immediate needs of the moment, until she was quit
of the slums. Then, however, she allowed her thoughts to flow freely. If
she were seen now, she would be able to explain her whereabouts to the
satisfaction of the Tympani. Awkwardly, and not without being the object
of derision. An old gukuy, seeking pleasure in an unseemly manner.

Let them whistle. They will not whistle long.

Her thoughts raced down well-known corridors. Weaving her stratagems. It
would be a cunning weave the warp and the weft so utterly tangled that
the thugs set loose on the streets would flail themselves. She would see
to it that the names of true Pilgrims were lost. In their place, she
would insert the names of informers. It would be those informers who
would be forked during the pogrom. Their bodies dragged through the
streets by the mob.

Let the Tympani of Ansha whistle.

Once only did Rottu's mind drift from her scheme. Dawn was approaching,
and the sight of it creeping into the Mother-of-Pearl brought back an
old memory.

The same sky, long ago, had once been marked by a strange and terrible
sign. Rottu herself had seen it, and had trembled with fear. But, along
with all other gukuy, the passing of many eightyweeks had faded the
memory.

Until, not so very long ago, word had come to Shakutulubac from the
mountain. The first small party of Pilgrims sent to the Chiton by
Ushulubang, in search of a place of refuge, reported. Astonishing
report. There were demons on the mountain. Demons who said they came
from beyond the world.

Rottu had deciphered the strange numbers of the demons. She would never
forget the thrill of terror which struck her soul like a lightning bolt,
when she realized that the demons had left that mark in the sky, long
ago. The world itself had turned red with fear at their coming.

And now, Ushulubang had decided to embrace this new and mysterious
power. To seek out the Mother of Demons, and her terrible children.

The Mother of Demons. The one being in the world, said the Pilgrims on
the mountain, who knew the secrets of the future. But would not speak of
them. Not even to her own children.

So be it. Let mighty Ansha flush scarlet with fear.

Eightdays later, however, when the truth became known, mighty Ansha did
not glow red with fear. Blue fury was the color which flushed the
mantles of the awosha, when they finally realized how thoroughly they
had been duped.

The Pilgrims had evaded the pogrom. They were gone, all of them. Even
the accursed traitor Ushulubang.

Gone where? None knew.

Executions were ordered.

Who then were the victims of the mob?

Informers. The mob had destroyed most of the Tympani informers.

Blue outrage. Intolerable incompetence.

The ranks of the Tympani were further thinned.

How was such a fiasco possible?

Investigations were ordered. Scarlet-tinged Tympani pursued the trail of
evidence with great zeal. A tangled, twisted trail. But eventually, the
culprit was found. Her name reported to the awosha.

Rottu? The awosha mantles glowed orange astonishment. Rottu?

Yes. It is certain.

Arrest her!

With Tympani officials in the lead, a squad of warriors raced through
the halls of the Divine Shell. In the quarters of the highest-ranked
members of the clan, they found the door to Rottu's quarters. The door
was smashed open by the warriors. Flushed blue with fury and black with
implacable purpose, the Tympani burst within.

And found nothing. No trace of Rottu, beyond a disgusting,
scavenger-covered little pile on the floor.

Rottu's last shit.

Chapter 4.

"The demons will protect the Old Ones," argued Kopporu. 'And even if
they do not, how can the Kiktu save the Old Ones if we ourselves are
destroyed?"

Even before she heard the derisive whistling, Kopporu knew that she had
lost the debate. She was universally recognized as the Kiktu's greatest
battle leader, despite her relative youth. But she was not a clan
leader, and this was not a battle. This was a full meeting of the tribal
leaders, where clan status and venerable age weighed heavily in the
balance.

And our ancient leaders have grown stiff in their minds, she thought
bitterly. They have come to believe in the myth of Kiktu
invulnerability.

Even as the thought came to her, one of the old clan leaders spoke.

"The Kiktu have never been defeated!" orated Taktoko. 'Never!"

Not in living memory, no. But we too were once a small and unknown
tribe, like the Utuku, until our conquests made us famed and feared.
Like the Utuku.

"Does not even the Ansha Prevalate fear our flails?" demanded Taktoko.
'Have not even their mighty legions whistled in fear at our onslaught?"

A chorus of loud hoots echoed her sentiments. Encouraged, Taktoko
continued her peroration.

"The Ansha Prevalate only survives due to our benevolence! Should we
choose, even they would fall before our flails!"

A few, faint hoots greeted this last claim. Most of the leaders present
maintained a discreet silence.

At least they are not totally mad, thought Kopporu. Taktoko is an idiot.
She cannot see the difference between defeating a few invading Anshac
legions and conquering Ansha itself. If the Kiktu ever tried to conquer
Ansha, we would be destroyed. For that matter, if the Anshac ever
seriously attempted to conquer our lands, we would be forced to give
way. Just as we will before the Utuku. Except the Utuku will not be
satisfied with our lands. They will devour us whole.

She ignored the rest of Taktoko's speech. She had heard it all before if
not quite so mindlessly put and there was no purpose to be served in
further argument. She had lost the debate, as she knew she would. The
clan leaders had scoffed at Kopporu's proposal to withdraw southward,
with the aim of defeating the Utuku in the course of a long campaign.
That was the traditional tactic used by weaker tribes faced with
stronger enemies. Some of the battle leaders had been sympathetic, at
the beginning, but the clan leaders had been outraged at the implication
that the Kiktu were no longer the mightiest tribe on the plains. They
had decided to meet the Utuku in the narrow throat in the Papti Plain
between the Lolopopo Swamp and the great bend of the Adkapo. That was
the traditional boundary of Kiktu territory. The clan leaders, full of
pride, were determined to prevent the Utuku from desecrating the tribal
lands.

It was the worst possible position, Kopporu knew, for the Kiktu to face
the greater numbers and heavier forces of the Utuku. But the decision
was now a foregone conclusion. She must look to the future.

Her course of action was clear to her had been for days, since it became
obvious that the Kiktu would attempt to confront the Utuku invaders
directly. The tribe would be destroyed, broken into pieces. The clans
and battle groups would be mangled beyond recognition. Her duty was now
to salvage what she could.

A rush of emotions momentarily threatened to sweep over her. But she
pushed it resolutely aside, maintaining iron control. Not a trace of her
sentiments could show in her mantle, if she was to succeed in her plan.

Kopporu's attention was brought back to the discussion by the sound of
the Great Mother's voice.

The Great Mother, she realized, had spoken her name.

' that the demons will protect the Old Ones. Do these demons even exist?
Has anyone seen them? They are nothing but a tale for new-borns!"

The Great Mother was glaring at Kopporu, her enormous mantle rippling
with blue anger and yellow contempt.

They exist, Great Mother. I have not seen them, but I have seen their
work. An entire slave caravan slaughtered to the last gukuy. Dead of
horrible wounds, like none I have ever seen. And I have spoken to
Pilgrims of the Way, seeking refuge in the Chiton.

But Kopporu maintained her silence. She had already lost much of the
prestige with which she had entered the meeting. What little she
retained would vanish if she engaged in a futile religious debate with
the Great Mother. Most battle leaders believed in the existence of the
demons, but it was a difficult thing to prove. Especially to old clan
leaders, who did not look kindly upon new concepts.

Eventually, the discussion turned to battle stratagems. Kopporu knew
that it would be a distressingly short discussion.

Amass our invincible warriors. Attack.

It was a method of battle which had served the Kiktu well in their
various clashes with neighboring tribes. Not only did they outnumber any
of the other tribes, but even when faced with combinations of tribes the
Kiktu had always been able to rely on the justly famed individual
prowess of their warriors and battlemothers.

It was difficult to argue with success. But Kopporu knew that the
underlying reason for their victories against other tribes was simple:
Because the other tribes fight as we do.

The Kiktu methods had even served, in the past, to defeat invading
Anshac legions. But Kopporu had participated in the last battle with an
Anshac legion, as a young warrior. She had been stunned by the military
effectiveness of the disciplined and organized tactics used by the
legion. True, the Kiktu had won the battle. But they had greatly
outnumbered the legionnaires, and, even so, had suffered three times the
casualties.

In the years which followed, as she rose in status until she became a
battle leader, Kopporu had attempted to adopt Anshac tactics to the
extent possible. She had never been able to use the Anshac methods as
much as she would have liked, of course. The inveterate individualism of
the Kiktu warrior was a constant obstacle, as was their loosely
organized tribal society.

Despite her efforts, the traditional tactics still prevailed. And those
tactics would be disastrous against the Utuku.

They are the most brutal and vicious tribe which has ever existed on the
Meat of the Clam. But they do not fight like savages. Their discipline
is even harsher than that of the Anshac legions. The Utuku tactics are
crude and simple. But what does that matter when the Utuku warriors
fight like mindless clams? And there are so many of them!

As she pondered these thoughts, Kopporu was waiting for the right moment
to speak. It came unexpectedly a gift handed her by the braggart
Taktoko.

"And where does Kopporu wish to muster her warriors? In the rear
guarding the gana?"

Silence fell over the meeting. Only the faint sound of the wind most of
its force reduced by the ganahide walls which surrounded the leaders,
isolating them from the curious tympani of the tribespeople could be
heard.

Kopporu rose slowly to her peds. She said nothing; simply stared at
Taktoko for a long moment. With amusement, she noted the traces of pink
which rippled through Taktoko's mantle.

Taktoko has just remembered that I am the best warrior as well as battle
leader in this group. Not the best in the tribe by a small margin. But
more than good enough to peel her mantle.

Taktoko was nervously watching Kopporu's mantle, but Kopporu let not a
trace of her emotions show.

Taktoko fears blue rage. Ironic what I fear is a trace of green relief.
The arrogant fool has given me exactly what I needed.

When she was certain that she had her emotions under control, Kopporu
allowed black to darken her mantle. Her arms assumed the gesture of
command. She spoke.

"I will lead the right flank. I demand the privilege, since my courage
has been insulted."

As she expected, there was no argument. Several of the clan leaders
spoke sharply on the subject of proper conduct in debate, rebuking
Taktoko. In soft voices still loud enough to be overheard two of the
battle leaders exchanged quips as to the probable position of Taktoko.
(The old leader's high clan status was not accompanied by any comparable
reputation on the battlefield.) The Great Mother even interjected a
remark concerning Kopporu's unquestioned valor.

By Kiktu battle standards, leadership of the flanks was considered the
most prestigious position. There were no tribesmen to guard one's
unprotected side. True, in this coming battle, the small Opoktu tribe
would marshall on the right but the Kiktu did not consider the Opoktu
comparable to themselves as warriors. Kopporu herself did not share that
general assessment. She had found the Opoktu as brave as any gukuy,
within the limits imposed upon them by their small numbers. She even
admired them for their cleverness, and was on good personal terms with
their battle leader Lukpudo.

In the coming battle, moreover, the right flank was considered the most
dangerous position. The Kiktu on the right would be against the Lolopopo
Swamp, with little of the maneuvering room that the warriors preferred.

Uncertain allies, and a swamp at my side. They think me brave because of
that, when it is those two factors that I will need in order to
accomplish  She hesitated, grieved, completed the thought: My treason.

That night, in the yurt she shared with Aktako, she finally told her the
truth. She was hesitant, but knew she had no choice. Aktako was her most
trusted lieutenant, as well as her lover. Without her conscious
assistance, the plan could not succeed.

She had expected resistance, even vehement resistance. But she had
underestimated Aktako. After listening to the plot, the old veteran
simply whistled softly not in fear, but in admiration.

"I knew you were weaving some kind of scheme, but I didn't realize how
big it was. You always did have a better brain than me."

Kopporu began stumbling through an apology, in which the word 'treason"
featured prominently, but Aktado cut her off with a rude hoot.

"That's nothing but shit! It's not your fault the clan leaders are
idiots. You're just trying to save something out of the wreckage."

Ochre indecision mottled Kopporu's mantle.

"But how can you be so sure I'm right? What if we defeat the Utuku?"

"Then we defeat them, and life is simple. No one will ever know what you
were planning except me." A whistle of amusement. 'And maybe those
swampsnails you've been collecting around you for reasons which
mystified me until tonight."

"They will say nothing. And I told the clan leaders those few who asked
that I wanted the swamp-dwellers for scouts. To make sure the Utuku
didn't surprise us by coming through the swamp."

Aktako's whistle combined amazement and humor.

"And they believed you?" "I think so. They give almost no thought to the
nature of the enemy, Aktako. The Utuku would never come through the
swamp. Their tactics are designed for dry land flat, open areas. In the
swamp, they would be at a great disadvantage."

"That's what you're counting on, isn't it?"

"Yes. That and " She paused, brown misery washing over her. 'And the
fact that the Utuku will be wallowing in their victory."

Brown rippled across Aktako's mantle as well. But within a short time,
the brown deepened to black.

"Life is what it is, Kopporu. We do what we must. I have always taught
you that from the first day you joined my battle group."

The veteran stroked Kopporu's arms.

"So bright and fierce you were. And beautiful. I thought for sure you'd
choose one of the younger and better looking veterans."

Kopporu whistled derision. 'I may have been young, but I wasn't stupid.
Much good it does you to have a pretty lover when the forks are
shattering. I knew what I wanted a scarred old warrior, wise in battle."

The two gukuy gazed at each other lovingly. Theirs was an unusual
romance. Most Kiktu warriors went through a succession of lovers, but
Kopporu and Aktako had been together for eightyweeks. At another time,
under other circumstances, their mantles would already be turning white
with passion. But on that night of sorrow, there was only the soft green
of long affection.

They fell asleep sometime later, their arms intertwined. Aktako's last
words were: "You know what the biggest problem's going to be, don't you?
How to keep Guo alive during the battle."

"I'm not worried about that. Guo's going to be a battlemother out of
legend. The real problem will be to keep her from trying to rescue the
Great Mother after the battle's lost."

"How will you do that?"

"I don't know, Aktako. I don't know."

Kopporu may not have been worried about Guo surviving the battle, but
the infanta herself was sleepless that night.

Not worried about her survival, however, but about her conduct during
the battle. She suspected, in the half-cocksure/half-uncertain manner of
youth, that she was probably the greatest battlemother produced by the
Kiktu in generations. But what she knew, on that eve before the clash,
was that she had never been in a real battle before. Her experience was
limited to the practice field, and a few minor skirmishes with other
tribes. But those skirmishes were meaningless not least because the
opponents had fled instantly upon seeing a battlemother.

The Utuku would not flee. It was not the least of their unspeakable
savagery the contempt in which they held all mothers. Guo knew that the
Utuku did not even use the word 'mother" in their own language. They
simply called them 'breeders." Utuku mothers were maimed at birth: the
tendons in their peds slashed, so that the pitiful creatures could not
even walk. Mothers captured from other tribes were treated likewise. And
then condemned to a life of forced breeding.

I shall not be treated so, vowed Guo silently. They will only take my
dead body for meat.

She picked up her mace and hefted it. A club, essentially, with six long
blades protruding from all sides edges out, not points out. It was a
clumsy weapon, for a clumsy mother. But what it lacked in finesse, it
made up for in size and weight. The weapon was huge. A gukuy warrior
could barely lift the mace, much less wield it in combat. The mace was a
weapon for battlemothers designed to compensate for their awkwardness by
using their enormous strength.

Staring at the mace, Guo's mantle turned suddenly yellow. Contempt for
the weapon and herself.

I wanted to use a flail from the time I first began my training. Like a
real warrior, instead of a giant slug.

She winced mentally, remembering the hard lesson Kopporu had given her.
Guo had thought she could use a flail, at first. Was she not quicker and
more nimble than any infanta in memory? She was, in fact. But all things
are relative. A quick and nimble battlemother is still far too clumsy to
properly wield a flail. Guo had not believed it until Kopporu matched
her against Aktako with practice flails and forks. The experience had
been utterly humiliating.

That same night Kopporu had come into Guo's yurt. The infanta had
attempted to fade the brown misery in her mantle, with no success. Like
all mothers and she hated herself for it she was all but incapable of
controlling her color.

Kopporu no sooner saw the brown than she whistled derision.

"Do you wallow in misery because you can't float on the breeze like a
puopoa? Or breathe water like a dikplo?"

Guo was silent.

"Foolish child! You are a mother, Guo."

"I want to be a warrior!" exclaimed the infanta.

"And what is that?"

Guo was silent.

"You think a warrior is grace and speed?"

Another whistle of derision.

"I will tell you what a warrior is, stupid one. A warrior is not agility
and reflexes. Mindless. A warrior is brain, and heart at the service of
the tribe. A warrior faces the truth unflinchingly. Do you understand?"

After a moment, miserably: 'No."

"Still have the brains of a spawn! Listen to me, Guo. Learn to face the
truth, peeled of its shell. The truth is that you are not and cannot be
a warrior. If you still don't believe that, then tomorrow I'll put you
back on the field and let Aktako make a fool out of you again."

Kopporu had let that sink in before continuing.

"If you can learn to face that truth, then perhaps you can learn to face
another truth."

Unwillingly: 'And what is that?"

"It is that if you abandon these foolish fantasies of becoming a
warrior, and apply yourself, you can become the greatest battlemother in
the history of the Kiktu since Dodotpi. Maybe even greater than she."

Orange astonishment flooded Guo's mantle.

"Really?"

A tinge of green entered Kopporu's mantle. The battle leader stretched
out her palp and gently stroked the brow of the infanta.

"Yes, Guo. Really. You are very fast and nimble, for a mother. And you
are incredibly strong. Aktako told me she could feel the earth shake
every time you smote the ground with your flail."

A humorous whistle.

"Fortunately, she was far away by the time the blow landed."

"She would have been just as far away if I'd been using a mace!"
protested Guo.

"True. But only a stupid infanta or a stupid leader thinks a
battlemother can fight like a warrior. Your flankers will keep the foe
from dodging your blows. Your task is to crush the enemy in front of
you. And for crushing, the mace is a better weapon than a flail."

Kopporu fell silent. After a few moments, Guo had said softly: "I will
try to learn. With the mace."

"And the shield. And the visor."

Yellow contempt rippled across Guo's mantle, but she did not voice the
protest. Again, Kopporu whistled amusement.

"You will learn to appreciate the lowly shield and visor, child. When
you become a renowned battlemother, every piper in the enemy's army will
be aiming at you. Would you rather be blind?"

Remembering that conversation, Guo's mantle was suddenly flooded a deep
green. She, like the other two battlemothers and all of the warriors in
the group, adored Kopporu. In part, that was because of Kopporu's
brilliance as a battle leader. But her charisma had deeper roots. There
was a greatness in the battle leader's spirit. Even a young infanta like
Guo could sense it.

Sadly, Guo reflected that Kopporu's potential would never be realized.
Kopporu's clan was small, and Kopporu's own rank within it was
insignificant. Her battle group, of course, was the biggest in the
tribe. Warriors chose their own battle groups. Most chose the battle
groups of their own clan. But many warriors sought acceptance into the
groups of renowned battle leaders, regardless of clan affiliation.
Almost three fourths of the warriors in Kopporu's group were from clans
other than her own an unprecedented figure in Kiktu history, so far as
anyone knew. The clan leaders had complained, but the battle leaders had
supported Kopporu. Many of the battle leaders were jealous of Kopporu's
status among the warriors, but they were united in their determination
to protect their traditional rights.

Guo herself was from a different clan from the dominant clan in the
tribe, in fact. It was unlikely, but not inconceivable, that she herself
might someday become the Great Mother of the Kiktu.

She did not view that prospect with pleasure. She had no desire to
become a mother. She wanted to remain a battlemother, surrounded by
warriors.

Like all infanta, she had her moments of curiosity and interest on the
subject of truemales. Strange, silly creatures. Flighty; given to
emotional excess. But skilled, it was said, in the ways of pleasure.

But such moments were few and fleeting. Had life been as she would have
wanted, Guo would have been born a warrior. A female. She would have
taken a lover from the ranks of the veterans, who would bring her joy in
the yurt and protection on the battlefield.

A sudden image came to her mind of the beautiful Kopporu reaching her
arms into Guo's mantle  She thrust the image away, horrified.
Perversion.

She forced her thoughts to the future. She would probably not survive
the morrow, in any event. The word had already spread throughout the
tribe's warriors, in whispers Kopporu was opposed to the plan of battle,
although she had insisted on the command of the right flank. The
deliberations of the tribe leaders were supposed to be held in
confidence, but such news could not be contained. Kopporu herself had
said nothing, but the word had spread regardless.

The warriors had greeted the news with mixed emotions. Anger at
Kopporu's apparent disdain for the invincibility of the Kiktu warriors.
Disquiet, because all knew of Kopporu's genius on the battlefield.
Determination to prove Kopporu wrong. Fear that Kopporu was right. But,
most of all, admiration for Kopporu's nobility of spirit.

Guo herself had no doubts of her own feelings. Her faith in the battle
leader was absolute. And thus, she knew the tribe was doomed. But she
would follow Kopporu's example.

She grasped the mace in a huge palp. So fiercely that even a kogoclam
would have been crushed within.

The Utuku will never take me alive. I will die with the tribe. And I
will slay the savages in numbers beyond counting.

She stared at the mace. It was a gift. Kopporu had given it to her on
the day the battle leader announced to the tribe that Guo had completed
her training and was accepted into the battle group as a battlemother.
It was a gift worthy of a great clan leader. Guo had no idea how Kopporu
had managed to obtain it. The haft of the club was made of uluwood,
beautifully carved. But the treasure was in the blades made of the
finest bronze, honed to a keen edge. The blades of most maces were
obsidian. Guo, as a young and untested battlemother, had expected a mace
with flint blades.

That night, Guo made a solemn vow. If she and the Kiktu survived the
battle, she would see to it that justice was done. Like many of the
younger warriors and even some of the older ones she was tired of the
stifling regime of the clan leaders. She had no wish to become a mother,
but when the time came she would do so without complaint. She would
devote herself to rising within the complex, intrigue-filled world of
the mothers until she became the Great Mother of the Kiktu.

When that day came, she would see that Kopporu was given her rightful
place in the tribe. Traditions be shat upon.

Let the old clan leaders wail.

PART II.

The Warp

Chapter 5.

Indira Toledo turned the page of the notebook. A passage caught her eye.

It's not as if I hadn't spent years thinking about it. I wanted to be an
exobiologist from as far back as I can remember. Fought like hell to win
a place on the Magellan. But all those years I was convinced the
vertebrate Bauplan or some variation on it was the only suitable
structure for large terrestrial life-forms. That's why I specialized in
vertebrate paleontology.

Well, here I am. My dream come true. A planet full of large terrestrial
life-forms. Including intelligent life forms the first we've ever
encountered. And the joke's on me!

Molluscs. Of all things molluscs!

They're not really molluscs, of course. Hardcore cladists would lynch me
for even thinking it. A totally separate evolutionary history. But the
convergence is uncanny. It makes you wonder if old Arrhenius was right
all life came from spores drifting through interstellar space. That
would make us distant relatives. Very, very, very distant. Even if
Arrhenius was right, we'd be more closely related to algae and bacteria
than we are to anything on Ishtar.

Indira smiled ruefully. She remembered criticizing Julius once for using
the human name for the planet.

"Typical biologist," she'd said to him. 'Arrogant beyond belief."

"But it's a great name!" he'd protested. 'In most pantheons, the goddess
of love and the god of war are separated not only in person but in sex.
Ishtar was both. What could be more suited for this planet? A goddess of
war and love. I should think you, of all people, would approve."

That had made her even angrier.

"I am not one of those feminists who thinks it's an advance for women to
participate in slaughter. Anyway, that's beside the point and you know
it. Throughout history, the first act of aggression on the part of a
more advanced society toward a less advanced one is to rename
everything. Goes all the way back to your damned Bible. The first thing
Adam did was name everything. That gave him the right to do what he
pleased with his beasts. Columbus was just following the program.
Rhodesia, for God's sake!"

Julius had grinned. 'Egad, I'm exposed. Julius Cohen, slavering
imperialist." He rubbed his hands, cackling with glee. 'Wait till I get
these natives into the gold mines! Copper mines, rather. Doesn't seem to
be much gold on this planet, curse the luck. Pizarro'll never forgive
me."

She chuckled, remembering the argument. Julius was the most good-hearted
of men, in all truth. And, in the end, he had been proven right. For
reasons which would have astonished all of the adult colonists at the
time.

Her eyes watered. She and Julius were all that was left, now, of that
small group of adults who had survived the first months after the
disaster.

She raised her head and stared at the kolo-cluster down in the valley.
They were all buried there. Vladimir Koresz. Janet Mbateng. Hector
Quintero. Francis Adams. Following owoc customs, the humans had adopted
the grove as their own cemetery. The owoc had a particular reverence for
the kolo. Indira was not sure why, exactly. The owoc were not good at
explaining things. But she thought it was because of the way the kolo
always grew in dense clusters, the willowy shoots intertwining and
curling about each other like vines. And they were pale green, color of
tranquillity.

The Coil of Beauty. It was when she had finally grasped the meaning of
that owoc concept that her gratitude toward them had crystallized into a
profound love for the gentle creatures. Even Julius, once she had
explained it to him, had been shaken out of his normally linear way of
thinking. Thereafter, to her relief, he had stopped referring to the
owoc as 'dimbulbs."

She shook her head sharply, exorcising the sadness, and resumed reading.

I shouldn't be all that surprised. How long ago was it that Stephen Jay
Gould pointed out how chancy the evolution of vertebrates had been?
There was hardly a trace of chordates in the Burgess Shale, after all.
Even on Earth, the phylum might have easily disappeared during the
Permian extinction, if not sooner. And then what would have happened?

Still, I would have bet on some branch of the arthropods. But perhaps
not. Maybe the very success of the arthropod Bauplan militates against
them ever evolving into forms suitable of filling the ecological niche
of large terrestrial life forms. And why should they? Popular mythology
to the contrary, that niche has always been on the outer edge of
existence. It's amazing, really, how the large size of humans prejudices
our view of life. To this day, biologists talk of mammals dominating the
earth. That's news to bacteria! Not to mention insects and worms. We,
and all our bulky mammal relatives, are just rare clouds drifting over
the teeming landscape of life. So were the dinosaurs.

It reminds me of J.B. S. Haldane's quip, when he was asked what his
life's study of biology indicated about God. 'He has an inordinate
fondness for beetles."

No, not the arthropods. They've always been evolution's biggest winners.
And winners don't evolve, in any major way. Losers do.

Still, it's odd that I haven't seen any signs of an arthropod equivalent
on Ishtar. It's certainly not because of any lack of life! Ishtar's
biomass is as big as Earth's. Bigger, probably, than today's Earth.
About the same, I would guess, as the Earth during the Mesozoic. The
climate's right semi-tropical, no seasons worth talking about. Whereas
the modern Earth is in an unusually frigid period of its existence. Has
been for millions of years.

Indira smiled again. The words in the notebook brought back the first
conversation she'd ever had with Julius. It had taken place shortly
after the Magellan had left Earth orbit, on the start of the first leg
of its voyage. It had taken three months to build up the ship's velocity
to its maximum 13% of light-speed. During those months, the adults had
remained conscious, getting to know each other in order to lay the basis
for forging an effective team once they arrived at Tau Ceti. After the
Magellan had reached its maximum velocity, and the crew was satisfied
that the huge vessel was performing properly, all the adults had joined
the children in coldsleep, there to spend the long years of the voyage
in blissful unconsciousness. Weeks before that time came, she and Julius
had become lovers.

But, she remembered fondly, we began with an argument.

Entering the large equatorial lounge, she had heard a man pontificating
loudly on the stupidity of 'ecofreaks" in general and their wails about
global warming in particular. Mildly curious, and with nothing else to
do, she had joined the small group listening to him.

"The idiots have no sense of the real history of life on earth," the man
had been saying, as she took a seat on the armchair opposite him. 'The
average temperature on earth today is as low as it's ever been at least
since the Cambrian explosion. Probably lower. It's because of the modern
configuration of the continents. It's not been unusual to have one
ice-cap in our history. A continent often gets pushed over one of the
poles by plate tectonics, just like Antarctica is today. But there's
never been two ice-caps before. So far as we can tell, anyway."

Another man sitting around the circle of chairs (Vladimir Koresz, she
later learned, one of the colony's doctors) had spoken up.

"But, Julius, there's no continent today under the north pole."

Julius had leaned forward, gesticulating with great animation (one of
his characteristics, she learned over time).

"I know that's the beauty of the whole thing! Instead, tectonics has
encircled the north pole with most of the great continents. The flow of
warm water which would normally keep the pole from freezing has been
strangled. The result? The formation of a floating ice-cap. Do you have
any idea of the odds against that happening?"

He drank from a cup of coffee sitting on the table before him.

"And that's my whole point. The Earth's climate today is a freak. It's
not 'normal' just the opposite. We live in a freezer. For almost the
entire Phanerozoic Eon " "The what?" asked Koresz.

"Sorry. That's just jargon for the last 700 million years, since the
evolution of multi-cellular life. Anyway, throughout that entire period
700 million years, folks when life spread over the entire planet and
evolved into all its wonderful permutations, the average temperature on
Earth was much higher than it is today ten or fifteen degrees, on the
average. That's the normal temperature for the planet and it's the
optimum temperature for terrestrial life."

He set down his cup and spread his arms wide.

"You see? The real problem life has on earth today isn't global warming.
It's just the opposite! The place is too damned cold. If we really cared
about life, we'd go back to using fossil fuels. Crank up the greenhouse
effect! It'd be great! It's not just that the temperature would be
better, either. What's just as important is that the oceans would rise.
That's another problem we have on Earth today. There aren't enough
shallow seas and continental shelves, which are always the best
environments for life to flourish. Raise the sea level a few hundred
feet and we'd double or triple the area where life thrives the best."
She had  at that point.

"I'd like to butt in, if you don't mind." "Not at all!" said Julius,
waving his hands.

She leaned over, extending her hand.

"I'm Indira Toledo. Historian."

"Julius Cohen. Paleontologist."

Her slender hand had been engulfed in Julius' vigorous handshake. He was
a large man, fat in a healthy-looking sort of way. His complexion was
ruddy, and his features were round and pudgy. Except for the kinky black
hair, and the lack of a beard, he was the spitting image of Santa Claus.

Despite his harmless appearance, she was tense with anger. She tried to
relax, because she knew that her thin, sharp features (normally quite
attractive) were extremely intimidating when she was mad. But she
couldn't help herself.

Arrogant bastard.

"Tell me, something, Mr. Cohen "

"Please, please! Julius!"

"All right, then. Julius. I was born on the Altiplano. My father's Latin
American. But I'm descended from Bengali immigrants, and I still have
lots of relatives living in Calcutta. It's only been in the last
generation or so that the Bengalis have finally been able to pull
themselves out of some of the worst poverty the human race has ever
experienced. They've even managed to limit the destruction during the
monsoon season. But it's still a hard life, for most of them, and
they're still packed together like sardines. What are those millions
millions, Mr. Cohen of people supposed to do after you raise the sea
level? Learn to swim? Or will you take them into all the extra space
you've got in New York City?"

He shook his head ruefully. 'Damn, my accent always gives me away." He
stared at her thoughtfully, and she couldn't help but notice the
intelligence in his eyes. Then, with a warmth that struck her like a
great wave, his eyes had crinkled and a huge grin had spread across his
face.

"Hey, lady, I really don't wanna drown a lot of cute little Bengali
kids. Honest, I don't."

He made a self-deprecating gesture. 'You've got to forgive my big mouth.
I have a bad habit of fixing on a point and taking it to its logical
conclusion. But I'm really not a stupid jackass, honest."

Then, more seriously: 'I know we've got to maintain the earth's
temperature where it is. The human race has only finally barely managed
to carve out a decent enough life for everyone. The last thing we need
to do is shatter all that hard work by upsetting the climatic
apple-cart. It's just oh hell, the thing that irritates me about these
ecofreaks isn't what they call for, it's their goddammed
self-righteousness. For all their claims to being the guardians of life,
the truth is that they're at least as homocentric as anyone else. They
just won't admit it. It's not 'life' they care about, it's the way life
affects humans."

"I think you're being unfair."

He shrugged. 'Maybe. But as a professional biologist I've always found
that people have the screwiest ideas about life. Let me ask you
something. Where would you rather spend a week's vacation next to a
beautiful clear blue lake in the mountains, or next to a swamp?"

She snorted. 'What do you think?"

"Of course at the lake. And while you were there, I'm sure you'd gaze
out over that beautiful stretch of bright blue water and think serene
philosophical thoughts about the glories of nature. But are you aware
that cold mountain lakes are one of the most inhospitable conditions for
life? It's true. That lake is a sterile desert. There are a few
life-forms that have managed to adapt to those conditions trout, for
instance. But the biomass in that lake is a pittance compared to the
life that thrives in a swamp."

He waved his arms about enthusiastically.

"Swamps are great! They're wonderful! Life adores a swamp! You don't
believe me? Try walking around in a swamp sometime without stepping all
over all kinds of juicy life-forms. Really juicy soft, and slimy, and
wriggly, and crawling all over the place."

She couldn't help but laugh. 'Ugh! No thanks."

He grinned. 'See? You're just another bigot. And that's my point. People
will get all worked up over pollution in a mountain lake. Trout are
pretty; tasty, too. But who cares about a swamp?"

He shrugged. 'And that's fine with me, in and of itself. I'd much rather
spend a week by a mountain lake, myself. Hate swamps. Don't know anybody
who doesn't except herpetologists, and they're all a bunch of lunatics."
One of the men nearby snorted. 'But I don't go around preaching about
the sanctity of all life, when what I really care about is life as it
impacts on the human race. I'm opposed to destroying life where it's
needless. But like any biologist certainly any paleontologist I have a
keen sense that eventually all species become extinct. That's the way it
is and has been for eons, long before we humans popped onto the scene.
So, to get back to your point, I care a hell of a lot more about what
happens to people in Bengal than I do about the abstract fact that if we
flooded the lowlands we'd enable millions of new species to come into
existence. I'm just willing to be honest about it."

"That's all very sane and logical, Mr. Coh Julius. But let me ask you a
question. Would you rather have an ocean with whales or without them?"

He frowned. 'What is this, some kind of trick question? With whales, of
course."

"You are pleased, then, at the fact that the Earth's oceans are teeming
with whales?"

"Sure!" "Hmm. Yet it's a fact I'm an historian, as I said that the
whales were only saved from extermination because of the actions of
people who were not driven by logic but by an irrational passion. The
type of people you call 'ecofreaks.' Had it not been for them, the great
cetaceans would have disappeared. For it is also a fact that during the
period of the great whale slaughtering, sane and logical men such as
yourself stood to one side. Clucking their tongues at the barbarity of
it all, of course, and shedding tears over the plight of the poor
whales. But always quick to correct the scientific errors of the
'ecofreaks,' as if genocide and failing a biology quiz were of equal
weight in the judgement of history."

She relaxed, slightly. 'Mind you, I take some pride myself in my own
rationality and logic. But I am an historian by profession. And if there
is one thing that historians know, it's that nothing great was ever
achieved except by those who were filled with passion. Their passion may
have been illogical, even bizarre to modern people. Their understanding
of the world and what they were doing may have been false. It usually
was. But they were not afraid to act, guided by whatever ideas they had
in their possession. Do not sneer at such people. You would not be here
without them."

Silence followed for a moment. Indira was surprised to see that there
was not a trace of irritation in the face of the man opposite her.
Instead, Julius was gazing at her with a strange look. Interest, she
suddenly realized.

Koresz spoke. 'I fear I shall have to exercise my medical skills, lest
Julius bleed to death from the many great wounds inflicted upon him."

Laughter erupted, with Julius joining in.

"If I'd known there was an historian in the vicinity," he chuckled, 'I
would have kept my mouth shut. 'Keep your fat lip buttoned around
historians,' my mother alway told me. 'They're too smart for you.' "

Indira peered at him suspiciously. 'That's a crude attempt at flattery."

He looked surprised. 'What do you mean? It's the simple truth. There's
no subject on earth as complex and intricate as human history. I get
dizzy just thinking about the variables. Makes the double helix look
like a tinker-toy! And there's no comparison to that mindless
one-two-three the physicists putter around in."

"You're just jealous, Julius," laughed a woman sitting to his left.

Julius' rubbery face twisted into an exaggerated sneer.

"Jealous? Of what, Ruth? The money they shower you plumbers with? Sure.
But I wouldn't be a physicist for all the money in the world." He
shuddered. 'God, think of it! Spend your whole life counting the
elementary particles. How many are there, anyway? Bet I can count them
all on my fingers."

He began imitating a toddler.

"Dis widdle piggy is da lepton. An' dis widdle piggy is da quark. Dere's
six a dem! Or is it eight? Such a big number! An' dis widdle piggy oh,
boy, is this fun or what?"

Again, the circle erupted in laughter. When the laughter died down,
Julius was watching Indira. For a long few seconds, they stared at each
other in silence. Then the great warm smile spread across his face, and
Indira felt her heart turn over.

I don't believe this, she thought to herself.

But it was true. Within three days, they were lovers. The weeks which
followed, before they reluctantly entered the coldcells, were the
happiest of her life.

Her reminiscence was interrupted by a commotion in the village below.
No, she reminded herself, looking down into the valley, the 'homeheart."
She sub-vocalized the owoc hoot, trying, as always, to improve her
pronunciation. The sounds produced by the owoc speaking tubes evolved
from ancestral water siphons, Julius had speculated were very difficult
for humans to reproduce. Children, with the plasticity of youth, managed
fairly well. But she could only make herself passably understood. Julius
never managed at all.

The difficulty was not due simply, nor even primarily, to the difference
in sound-producing apparatus. The siphons of the gukuy were generically
similar to those of their owoc cousins. But she had no trouble speaking
any of the gukuy languages which she had encountered. Gukuy
thought-processes, and the languages in which they were expressed, were
much closer to the human norm than the strange gestalt-concepts of the
owoc.

That's because the gukuy approach life the way we do. As a place to
establish control, and mastery. A place to manipulate, to change to our
liking. A place to conquer. A place to kill.

It was mealtime. The humans were gathering at the center of the
homeheart, wearing their khaki-colored feeding scarves. The owoc givers
appeared, moving slowly into the excited crowd of children. The boys and
girls surrounded the huge beings, hooting affection and stroking their
mantles. Their parents themselves not much older than children hung back
with greater dignity. Each human held a bowl, made from the thick outer
integument of awato-plants ('oh, hell," Julius had said, 'let's just
call it 'bark' "; then he'd muttered something to the effect that if he
ran across Willi Hennig in the afterlife he was a dead duck). The owoc
givers began regurtitating into the great tureens located at the center
of the homeheart. When they were done, each human would scoop a bowlful
of the khaki-colored paste and retire to eat it.

Even after all these years, the sight made her queasy. She herself ate
the childfood, of course. She would die without it. But she still
refused to participate directly in the process. Julius or one of the
children would bring her a bowl, which she would eat at a distance.
Trying to pretend it was lukewarm porridge. The children had no such
compunctions at all. They had never eaten anything else, and took it for
granted. Even their parents had only the dimmest memories of a life
without childfood.

Julius had tried to find a substitute. His search had become desperate,
once it became clear that not all of the humans could survive on the
childfood. His daughter, among them.

But he had failed. Completely.

"Goddammit," he had exclaimed once, 'if only Estelle had survived the
crash! She was the biochemist. I'm just a paleontologist. I can tell you
why and how I think every form of life I've seen on this planet evolved,
and how they're related to each other, and where they fit into the
ecological zones and niches. But I can't tell you why we can't eat
anything. Except the childfood."

He rubbed his face wearily. 'I know it's a metabolic problem. It has to
be. Most of the children seem to thrive on the childfood, after an
initial period of adaptation."

A long silence had followed. She hugged him, knowing he was feeling the
loss of his daughter. Ann had been a plump, cheerful five-year-old girl,
who, when she died in her father's arms only a few months after the
crash, had looked like something out of a death camp.

"All the proteins, the amino acids everything humans need to survive are
out there in that alien biosphere. If they weren't, none of us would
still be alive. But there's something about the way they're put together
that the human digestive system can't handle. Except that most of the
children can survive survive well, in fact once the plants have been
broken down in the owoc guts."

He rubbed his face again. 'But I don't know why. After all this time,
all I know is that meat is poisonous and we can only eat vegetation if
the owoc process it." A dry, humorless laugh. 'And we knew that within
two months."

The first two months had been a nightmare, horror piled upon horror.

The confused awakening. Her muddled mind, still sluggish from the long
years in coldsleep, had not been able to register much beyond the
desperate urgency with which members of the crew had hustled her into
one of the landing boats. All she had been able to grasp, as they
strapped her into a seat, was that something had gone terribly wrong on
the Magellan ironically, at the very end of its immense voyage. An
engineering malfunction of some sort, human error she never knew. And
never would. The only thought which had been clear was that Captain
Knudsen had ordered all the children placed into the landing boats,
along with a few adults. The adults, Indira realized later, had been
ruthlessly selected by Knudsen. Those who had skills which the Captain
thought would be most useful for survival (and why me, an historian?
Indira often wondered; until the years brought the answer). The children
could thus be saved or, at least, given the best possible chance while
Captain Knudsen made the desperate attempt to land the Magellan itself.

Half-conscious as she was, the shock had registered.

"That's impossible!" she protested.

The face of the crew member strapping her down had been grim.

"It's a long shot," he admitted. 'But Knudsen's a great pilot. If anyone
can do it, he can."

The Magellan had never been designed to land directly on the planet. It
was supposed to stay in permanent orbit, while the colonists were
shuttled down on the two landing boats. Before he died, the pilot of her
landing boat had told her of the Magellan's end.

"I swear to God," he hissed, 'he almost did it!" He paused, coughed
blood. Indira stared helplessly. She had not been hurt, beyond bruises,
but she was pinned in the wreckage, her hands fluttering helplessly.
There was nothing she could do and, in any event, the pilot's body was a
hopelessly shattered mass of bloody tissue.

"I watched it on the screen," he whispered. 'He got through the
jetstream he almost made it! But then " More coughing blood. 'I don't
know what happened. It blew up. There was nothing left just a huge red
cloud spread over the ocean."

Finally, in a whisper: 'Like like those old pictures of the Challenger."
And he died.

Both of the landing boats had crashed. Although they had been designed
for planetfall, they were carrying far too much weight every cubic
centimeter, it seemed, had been packed with wailing children. The first
boat had landed in the center of a valley atop a huge low mountain, and
in fairly good shape. No fatalities, at least. But in his over-riding
concern to bring the second boat down near to the first one, its pilot
had struck the mountainside, tearing the boat in half.

Indira had suffered little, physically. But the time she had spent
endless hours, it had seemed, although it had only been a few minutes
before she was pried loose were a nightmare.

What had happened to her children?

She had found Juan first. She would not even have known who the mangled
little body was, if she hadn't recognized the shirt he was wearing.

But before the tears had barely started to flow, worse horror came. From
somewhere outside the broken shell of the landing boat, she heard a
piercing shriek.

Ursula!

She raced out of the ship, tripping and falling over pieces of wreckage.
Outside, she cast her head wildly about, oblivious to her surroundings,
trying to locate her daughter.

Again, the shriek.

"That way!" cried a man, whom she vaguely recognized as Doctor Koresz,
pointing down the slope. He raced off, Indira on his heels. They plunged
into some kind of trees (trees? at the time she didn't care),
floundering through the thick growth, desperately trying to pinpoint
Ursula's location.

The child's shriek had become an unending scream of fear and agony.

Koresz found her first.

"Oh God!" he bellowed, lunging forward into a thick patch. A moment
later he was hauling Ursula out.

There was a thing on her neck. Vaguely like a huge snail. With a cry of
fear and rage, Indira grabbed the thing and yanked it off her daughter.
The creature came loose, but she had a glimpse of a horrible sharp
proboscis, covered with blood, and the terrifying wound on her
daughter's neck.

She flung the thing to the ground and grabbed her daughter. Collapsing,
cradling her four-year-old girl's body in her arms, weeping
hysterically. She was only dimly aware of Koresz stamping the
pseudo-snail into pieces.

She had hoped, at first. The wound looked bad, but the girl's carotid
artery hadn't been ruptured. And after a minute or so, Ursula stopped
screaming.

"Mommy," she'd whispered. And then she became rigid, and died within
seconds.

In the time to come, Indira would learn that the creature which killed
her child was a kakapoy. Like many of the snail-like predators on the
planet, it was an ambusher, lurking high in the clusters of idu
thickets. It would drop down on its prey and kill them with a venomous
stinger. The venom was not designed to kill Terran life-forms, of
course, but it was more than toxic enough to do the job.

The owoc had little fear of them. They simply avoided idu thickets,
which were the only habitat of the small predators. But at Indira's
insistence, the adults and then the children, when they were old enough
scoured every idu thicket in the valley, year after year, killing every
kapapoy they found.

She still maintained the patrols, even though no kakapoy had been found
in the valley for years. Usually the most rational of people, Indira
bore an implacable hatred toward the almost-mindless little killers.

She remembered little of what followed. Koresz had carried both her and
her daughter's body back to the wreck of the landing boat. At first, she
lay there dazed, unable to move, while all around her the few adults
rounded up the surviving children. After a time, the sound of children
crying roused her into motion. She did what she could, then, along with
the others. She helped Koresz as the doctor organized the triage. Except
for the unnatural paleness of his face, there was nothing in his
demeanor to indicate the torment he must have been feeling. Professional
relexes, she remembered thinking vaguely. It was only days later that
she learned how Koresz had assigned one of his own sons to the group of
dying children, those whose injuries were too severe to be healed.
Somehow, the moral strength of that act brought her courage, if not
comfort.

Of the rest of that day, she could remember nothing. Only that darkness
came, oddly, in a gray and featureless sky.

The next morning, a party from the other landing boat arrived. Julius
was with them, and his daughter Ann. The sight of them brought the first
ember of restored life back to her soul.

Chapter 6.

For Indira, at least, the terrible time which followed was but a pale
shadow of the nightmare of the first day. For that reason, perhaps, she
became more and more of the central figure in the human colony. Having
been already deprived of her own children, she seemed better able than
the others to withstand the despair which soon enveloped the colony,
when it became obvious that they were doomed to die of starvation.

It had been she who forced the colonists to abandon the landing boats,
which were far too cramped, and establish a camp on the hillside nearby.
It had been she who organized the search for suitable materials with
which to build shelter. It had been she who ordered a halt to all
meat-eating, after the first three adults who attempted it died in
convulsions. It was then she who organized the systematic
experimentation with vegetable food. She used herself as a guinea pig
more ruthlessly than anyone, suffering the vomiting and the cramps
without complaint.

And while no one died from eating plant life, everyone got sick.
Constant nausea became an accepted fact of colony life. Fortunately,
only a few of the plants caused diarrhea, which can be so fatal for
children, and the colony soon learned to avoid those.

For a while, hope was kindled. Nausea, after all, can be lived with.
Only Koresz suspected the truth, from his examination of the colony's
fecal waste. Diarrhea, no. But it was obvious to him that most of the
'food" was being passed right through without use. Soon enough, it
became obvious to everyone that the food was not sustaining them.

The children seemed somewhat more resilient than the adults. That fact,
which Indira at first found reassuring, became another source of
anxiety.

Who will take care of them when the adults are gone?

And the children were all very young. The oldest was only five. Most of
them were three or four years old. That had been the Society's doing.
The planning board had concluded, based on obscure psychological
reasoning which Indira personally found suspect (but wasn't about to
argue with, since she was a beneficiary), that the ideal colonists for
the Magellan's expedition would be professional single parents in their
mid-thirties with young (but not crib-age) children.

When all seemed lost, the owoc had saved them. The owoc, and the quick
mind of Julius Cohen.

The colonists had known the owoc were there, almost from the beginning.
The large creatures were impossible to miss. At first the humans had
been afraid of the things, because of their size. But, in truth, the
creatures seemed very timid. Certainly they never made any threatening
motions, and they soon enough began to avoid the humans, staying on the
southern side of the valley.

Julius had studied them, for several days. He reported that the
creatures seemed to be herbivores, and explained that herbivores are
seldom dangerous, so long as they do not feel threatened. Thereafter,
the colonists made it a point not to venture onto the southern portion
of the valley.

Then a child wandered off, a small boy named Manuel. His absence was not
noticed for some time, partly because it was hard to keep track of each
individual in the swarm of children, and partly because the adults were
now greatly weakened and listless.

Eventually, his absence was noticed. Indira and Julius went in search.
The four other adults who were still alive were too weak to do more than
watch the children in the camp.

After two hours of scouring the immediate vicinity, they began searching
toward the south. After another hour, they heard the faint sounds of a
crying child coming from a grove of tall, vaguely fern-like growths. As
quickly as their weakened condition permitted, they plunged into the
thick foliage. The cries grew louder.

They came to the edge of a small clearing. Through a screen of ferns,
they could see one of the herbivores, staring down at the tiny figure of
the four year old boy. Manuel was sprawled before the huge creature,
crying.

He was wearing, Indira noted absently, a khaki jumpsuit.

She and Julius hesitated, frozen between their fear for the boy and
their uncertainty of how to scare away such a formidable-looking beast.

The creature reached down with four of its arms and lifted the boy. It
drew him toward its beak. The beak gaped open.

Indecision vanished. Indira and Julius began frantically pushing their
way through the last screen of ferns.

Suddenly, a stream of thick paste gushed from the creature's beak. The
paste splattered over the child's head and shoulders.

Manuel's wails were extinguished, as a large portion of the paste went
into his open mouth. The boy coughed and spluttered.

Indira felt a hand on her shoulder. Then, to her astonishment, Julius
forced her to the ground.

"Stop!" he hissed.

She stared back at him. Slowly, Julius lowered himself next to her.

"It's not trying to hurt the boy," he whispered urgently. 'It's trying
to feed him."

"What?"

"It's true. I've watched them that's exactly how they feed their own
young."

She looked back. In truth, the huge creature did not seem to be
threatening the boy. It was simply holding him up, watching Manuel with
its huge eyes (so uncannily like human eyes, except that they were four
times larger).

The expression on the boy's face was almost comical. Utter bewilderment.
His face, head and upper body were covered with paste. It was difficult
to tell how much, for the color of the paste blended almost perfectly
with his clothing.

Manuel's mouth gaped open again. To cry? No one would ever know, because
another stream of paste gushed down his throat. He coughed, gagged. And
swallowed. And then, while Indira watched in stunned silence, the
bewilderment vanished from the child's face. He lifted his head, eyes
closed, and opened his mouth once again.

There was no doubt now what emotion was being expressed by the child.
Feed me.

Another stream of paste.

Indira tried to scramble to her feet.

"It's poison! Animal product!"

Again, Julius forced her down helplessly. (He had the great strength
possessed by many large, fat men. Not all that strength had melted with
the fat.) "No! It's not milk, Indira. It's regurgitated vegetation."
"Are you certain?" she demanded.

He nodded. 'Positive. This is actually quite a common method used by
animals to feed their young. Especially when the food which the animals
use is difficult oh, my God!"

Julius was chewing on his upper lip, as he always did when he was
pondering a problem. It was a slightly disgusting habit, in Indira's
opinion, but she had not tried to break him of it. Her ex-husband had
had no obnoxious personal habits; he'd just been a self-centered,
unfeeling son-of-a-bitch.

She was still filled with anxiety.

"But "

"But what, Indira? What's the worst thing that can happen to the boy?
Die? He's going to die, anyway. Look at him he seems okay."

And it was true enough. In fact, at that very moment Manuel began
laughing, and playing with one of the creature's arms.

Julius frowned. 'There's bound to be some of the critter's fluids mixed
with it saliva, digestive juices, that kind of thing. But not enough, I
think, to hurt the kid. It's worth the chance."

Suddenly, she understood the hope that was dawning in her lover's mind.

"You think ?"

He shrugged. 'Who knows? It's a long shot, like filling an inside
straight. But we're fresh out of full houses. And it's possible, just
maybe. The plant life on this planet isn't deadly to us, the way meat
is. But there's something in the way it's put together that makes it too
tough for our digestive systems to break down. That's exactly the
problem lots of young animals face. Evolution has found several
solutions. The solution mammals use is mother's milk. This is another."

She made a face. 'It's disgusting."

"Not as disgusting as dying."

She shook her head. 'Julius, this is still no good. We can't use a
helpless four-year-old boy as a guinea pig."

He nodded. 'You're right."

And began slowly crawling toward the center of the clearing.

As soon as he broke through the ferns and came into the clearing, he was
spotted. The creature pivoted quickly on its two rail-like fleshy
'feet." Julius stopped moving. He opened his mouth.

Slowly, the creature lowered the child to the ground. And edged back.

Julius crept forward, his mouth open.

The creature edged back. Its mantle was now rippling with alternating
bands of ochre and pinkish-red.

Julius stopped again. He started chewing his upper lip furiously.

The frozen tableau held for a minute, until Julius suddenly grunted.

"Of course!" Indira heard him say. Slowly, Julius turned his head back
to her. His eyes, for some reason, were feverishly scanning her body.

His rubbery upper lip twisted into a grimace of self-deprecation.

"I am so stupid. It's so obvious."

Then: 'Go back to the camp, Indira. Find something khaki-colored as
close a match as you get to the shade of Manuel's jumpsuit. A cloth of
some kind. A big one big enough to cover me, or as much of me as
possible."

Her brows were knitted. 'I don't un "

"Just do it!"

Uncertainty vanished. As she raced back to the camp, Indira felt like
she was floating on air. She had only a vague understanding of what
Julius was trying to do, but she was suddenly filled with total
confidence in her lover.

And hope. And hope. And hope.

Back at the camp, she ignored all the questions hurled at her. She just
cried, over and again  'Manuel's okay, he's okay, he's okay!" while she
rummaged furiously in the broken shell of the lifeboat. Within a minute
(which seemed like a hour), she found the khaki canvas she was looking
for.

Like an antelope, back to the clearing. Then, at the last curtain of
ferns, she screeched to a halt. Knelt, the canvas over her shoulder, and
slowly crawled into the clearing.

Julius was still there, now holding Manuel. The boy was asleep. And, to
her vast relief, the creature had not moved. It was no longer alone,
however. Another had joined it. The two animals were standing side by
side, staring. Their hides, she noticed, were still mottled with ochre.
But the pinkish-reds had faded considerably.

She hoped she knew what that meant.

A look of relief washed over Julius' face when he saw her enter the
clearing. He extended his hand.

"Toss it to me."

She shook her head, and kept crawling toward him. Once at his side, she
unfolded the canvas and draped it over both of them.

They knelt there, clasping each other, facing the monsters, their mouths
open.

After a time, they saw the pinkish-red fade from the hides, replaced by
thin wavering stripes of green. After a time, they saw the green grow
into solid bands still against ochre and the creatures approach. And the
beaks slowly open.

Khaki life washed over them.

Remembering that day, Indira flipped back through the pages of the
notebook, looking for the entry.

I should had gotten it immediately. I knew the creatures were
chromatophoric. It must be the principal method by which they
communicate (outside of the hoots), although I suspect that there's a
lot expressed in the way they curl their tentacles. (No the proper word
is 'arm" ".entacles" are those specialized arms that squids develop, the
long ones that end in palps. Tentacles are arms specialized for mobile
hunters, and these critters ain't hunters of any kind.) Nice, shy,
friendly, giant octopi.

Octopus-heads, I should say.

Okay. Just in case this notebook should someday fall into the hands of
an expedition come to our rescue about a thousand years from now, I
estimate let's try to describe these beautiful nightmares. I don't want
to draw down the curses of the historian, like those dopes in Roanoke
who didn't keep any diaries. No, sirree. Worst cussers in the universe,
historians. I know. I'm in love with one.

Here goes: Imagine a body shaped like the thorax of a lobster. About the
size of a buffalo. Except that a lobster's thorax is the carapace of an
arthropod hard and rigid. The carapace of these creatures is more like
the mantle of a squid, without the flukes. That's it. Mantles. They must
have evolved from something like squids.

But a squid's mantle is too soft to serve for a land creature. These
mantles are much tougher. Cartilaginous inside, I suspect. Squids on
earth still have a vestige of a shell inside their mantles. I suspect
that on this planet the 'molluscs" evolved something that serves the
same purpose as a skeleton. Any large terrestrial animal has to have
some kind of hard structure to support its weight. Probably pieces of
shell-like material, linked together by a network of cartilage and
muscle. Terrestrial analogies can be thought of. Some of the dinosaurs
maintained rigid tails in a similar way. (Okay. Loosely similar. Give me
a break.) I can't be sure, of course, without dissecting one of them.
(Oh boy. I mutter that in my sleep, Indira might cut my throat.) (Come
to think of it, I might cut my own throat.) The body of the creature is
enclosed by the mantle. A hard, but not totally inflexible, carapace. A
thick integument covers the mantle. The integument becomes especially
thick and hard (almost like soft horn), at the front of the mantle. What
I've decided to call the 'cowl."

I call it that because the front edge of the mantle looms over and
protects the head below. Necessary, I suspect, because the head of this
critter has no skull. But we'll get to the head later.

How does this thing get around? Well, here's where the molluscan Bauplan
shows its possibilities. I'd love to know what the ancestor looked like.
Just when you think it must have been a pseudo-cephalopod, you look at
this thing's feet.

A two-legged gastropod. I kid you not. They're not 'legs," of course.
Not the slightest resemblance. Instead, the creature's peds are like
fleshy what can I call them? The closest analogy I can think of is
pontoons. Except pontoons are rigid, and these peds are semi-segmented,
like lumpy treads. Again, without cutting them open (down, boy, down)
there's no way to be sure but I'd bet that there's a complicated
structure in there. Something like what must exist inside the mantle: a
network of 'shell"-slivers, cartilage, and muscle.

Lots of muscle. These beasties are strong. The entire body is held up,
about fifty centimeters off the ground, by the two rail-feet. (Yeck.
Let's stick with 'peds.") It's a clumsy-looking method of locomotion,
but  But nothing. It is clumsy. And slow. It's a marvel that a
'molluscan" Bauplan could provide enough flexibility for these things to
evolve into land animals. Let's not ask for miracles on top of that. The
simple fact is that the vertebrate structure is vastly superior to that
of the what do I call this phylum? Panzerpoda? God, no; ain't the
slightest resemblance between these sweet creatures and the Wehrmacht!

I'll figure out what to call them later. To get back to the subject,
measured by any standard of speed and mobility, vertebrates have it all
over these creatures. That's not chauvinism, it's just a fact. From
everything I can see not just these creatures, but all the life-forms
I've seen humans are at least twice as fast as anything that moves on
Ishtar. And we're slow, compared to most big warm-blooded vertebrates.

(Oh, yeah, before I forget. The critters are warm-blooded. The genuine
article, too homeothermic, endothermic, and tachymetabolic. I admit I
can't prove the last, because I don't have the equipment to precisely
analyze their metabolism. But I'm positive about the homeothermy and the
endothermy.) Back to the point. Compared to the dominant large-bodied
terrestrial phylum on this planet (whatever we wind up calling it),
vertebrates are: a) Much faster.

b) More mobile, by a large margin.

Score one for the home team. (Visiting team, I should say.) BUT any
football team that had one of these guys for a fullback would be
invincible. Here's how the game goes: Kickoff. Ball goes into the end
zone. Start on the twenty. Hand off to Slow-But-Sure. Three minutes
later one play, mind you Slow-But-Sure racks up six points. Guaran-teed.
And introduces the world to a new culinary delight: linebacker pancake.

I kid you not. I can't imagine being able to knock one of these things
down. I'm not sure a rhinoceros could do it.

And they're quicker than you might think. Their reflexes don't seem to
be any slower than ours. It's just that their basic structure is so much
more limiting than that of vertebrates.

Okay. Let's get to the best part. The head.

The head itself looks  Oh God, Thy Name is Convergence.

 like an octopus. Almost to a T. Bulging 'brow" (only here that's for
real more on that later), two gorgeous eyes (almost human looking,
except they're the size of saucer-plates, and the iris takes up more of
the eyeball), and a beak for a mouth surrounded by eight tentacles (OK
arms).

There are some differences from octopi, of course. (If there weren't,
I'd give up my profession and start spinning prayer wheels.) The eyes
are located on the front of the head rather than the sides, giving them
binocular vision. And everything seems harder and tougher than on an
octopus. The skin, the features, everything. Inevitable. The exact
pathway and method was different, but no creature I can imagine could
make the transition from marine life to terrestrial life without
developing a watertight outer membrane. It's fine for octopi in the
ocean deep to have soft, slimy skins. Try that on land and you'll
dessicate.

Then, the arms are only generically octopoid. There are at least two
obvious differences, one of which is major. First, the minor difference:
No suckers. None. Not a trace. Instead the major difference: They've got
fingers. Sort of. The arms brachiate, more than three-quarters of the
way down their length (which, by the way, I estimate at an average of
seventy centimeters). The tips of the arms consist of two
mini-'tentacles," which have the following chief features: 1) They're
flexible, like tentacles; not segmentedly rigid, like fingers.

2) They're flattened unlike the arms above the branch, which are more or
less tubular. (Think of thick fleshy spatulas, about fifteen centimeters
long.) 3) The inner surface of the 'fingers" consists of a roughened
pad, useful for gripping, which makes perfect sense because you guessed
it; give the man a prize  4) The 'fingers" are opposed.

Yup. The critters can manipulate. (So to speak. We'll stretch the
Latin.) A faint glimmer of a possibility is coming to life somewhere
deep in the recesses of your mind, is it not?

Yes.

Yesyesyesyesyesyesyesyesyesyesyesyesyes.

They're intelligent.

Not intelligent like in: 'Isn't he just the smartest little dog?"

No. Intelligent.

Like in: Critter sapiens.

Chapter 7.

Even Indira had been doubtful. The other adults were totally
unconvinced.

"I tell you, they're intelligent," insisted Julius. It was five days
after the discovery of what they would eventually know as 'childfood."
The adults of the colony were sitting around the campfire where they
made a habit of gathering every night, after the children were asleep.
This night, and for two nights past, the sound of hungry weeping was
mercifully absent.

It wasn't much of a fire. They had found no substance on the planet
which burned well. Dry wood, or its equivalent, did not seem to exist.
On the lush, verdant world of Ishtar, everything seemed to be full of
succulence. When vegetation died, it never had time to dry before it was
consumed by 'mosses" and what looked for all the world like toadstools.
(The resemblance was not superficial the colonists had discovered early
on that the pseudo-mushrooms were highly toxic.) The mosses, when
'ripe," burned the best. But it was impossible to sit in the pungent
fumes without gagging, so the colonists were forced to move constantly
about the fire as the soft winds in the mountain valley shifted.

"That's nonsense, Julius!" expounded Dr. Francis Adams. (He insisted on
the title. Indira thought it typical of the man, whom she considered a
pompous ass. To her, 'doctors" were people who healed people. Adams had
a Ph. D. in physics.) Privately, she thought Adams was right. But her
dislike for the man drove her to speak.

"You can't say that. I'm not sure if Julius is right, but you have to
admit that it's striking how these creatures have come to understand our
needs."

Adams waved a dismissive hand. 'Means nothing. Pure instinct. Julius
already explained that these things are chromatophoric. They react to
colors as indications of emotions and needs. Khaki just happens to be
the color of hunger. That's what tipped Julius off he saw that the
child's clothing was almost the same color as the one which the
creatures' young turn when they want to be fed."

He made it sound as if Julius had finally figured out that two plus two
makes four. Indira clenched her teeth. She had no doubt that if Adams
had been the one to have discovered Manuel, he would have been paralyzed
both in mind and body.

"Pure instinct. Not uncommon, you know. Newly-hatched fowl will imprint
on humans, if that's the first thing they see, and " Julius . 'That's
nonsense!"

He overrode Adams' splutter of protest.

"Look, folks, I know you've all heard stories about the marvelous power
of blind instinct. And there's certainly a lot of truth to many of those
stories. But instinct is not magic. It does not derive from some
supernatural power. Every instinctive behavior on the part of an animal
is the product of its evolutionary history.

"It's true, there are many examples in natural history of instincts
being short-circuited. Adams mentioned one. I can give you a better
example. Cuckoos lay their eggs in the nests of other birds. When the
cuckoos hatch they're big chicks they expel the rightful hatchlings out
of the nest. The parent birds instinctively feed whatever chick is in
the nest, and ignore anything outside of it. So the cuckoos get to eat,
while the legitimate heirs die of hunger.

"But the reason the cuckoo's stratagem works is because it fits so
perfectly into the life cycle of the other birds. The parent birds are
expecting a hungry chick to feed. There in the nest. At that time. The
cuckoo hatchling bears a reasonably close physical resemblance to their
own chicks, and it's at the right place and at the right time, acting
the right way. So it gets fed.

"None of those criteria apply to this situation. These will somebody
think up a name, for Chrissake?"

"Lobsterpusses," proposed Hector Quintero, the pilot of the first
landing boat.

Julius glared at him.

"You will burn in the fires of eternal damnation," he predicted.

"How about 'land-squids'?" suggested Janet Mbateng, the chemist.

"Never mind!" Julius exclaimed, throwing up his hands in disgust. 'I
should know better. I will name the critters, drawing upon my vast store
of professional learning."

He winced. 'Even though, in so doing, I will bring down upon my head the
most ancient and feared curse known to Man."

"What's that, Julius?" asked Hector.

' 'Hell hath no fury like an amateur scorned.' "

When the laughter died down, Julius sat erect in a magisterial pose, his
index finger pointed to the sky.

"I pronounce these critters Maiatherium manuelii. We can call them
'maia' for short." "What does it mean?" asked Indira.

"Manuel's good mother beasts."

She had liked the name, as had the others. (Adams had snorted, but even
he adopted the name within two days.) Still, Julius was unable to
convince them of his thesis. As much as the colonists had confidence in
him, there just seemed too many facts about the maia which pointed in
the opposite direction.

First and foremost, the maia used no tools. None. Even Julius was forced
to admit, after carefully studying them for weeks, that he had not
observed even a temporary use of casual tools, such as chimpazees
exhibit when they dig for ants with a stick.

Second, there was the placidity of the creatures. No one for years had
believed in the preposterous concept that humanity evolved from 'killer
apes." Dart's thesis popularized by Ardrey had been exploded two
centuries earlier, when more careful study had shown that the
australopithecenes were prey rather than predator. But still, it was
difficult to imagine a species evolving into intelligence without some
instinct for aggression. And, for all their size and strength, the maia
exhibited not a trace of belligerence.

Adams had explained the phenomenon, in his inimitable style, as being
due to the fact that they were herbivores.

Julius was no longer even pretending to hold Adams in anything but
contempt.

"Is that so, Doctor Adams. Tell me something are you a big game hunter?"

"Certainly not!"

"Didn't think so. Neither am I. But I know my natural history. Are you
aware, Doctor Adams, which of the earth's great animals was most feared
and respected by the old big game hunters?"

Adams sniffed. 'The tiger, I suppose."

Julius sneered. 'No, Doctor Adams. The Cape buffalo. A pure vegetarian."

"Is that a fact, Julius?" asked Hector with interest.

The sneer was replaced with a smile. Julius liked Hector. The pilot's
skills were utterly useless now, but the young Mexican had proved to be
an energetic and resourceful member of the colony.

"Absolutely. It's one of the great myths, this idea that you can
directly derive a creature's temperament from its diet. Absolute
nonsense! 'Carnivores are mean and nasty, herbivores are sweet and
kind.' " He said the words in a childish sing-song.

"You ever seen a bullfight, Hector?"

"Hey, c'mon, Julius. We don't have bullfights in Mexico anymore. Haven't
had for almost a hundred years. Believe it or not, we've even given up
human sacrifice."

Julius grinned. 'I know, Hector. But don't lie to me. I'm sure you've
seen videos. I have. One of the cruelest pastimes our species ever
invented, but you can't deny it's fascinating."

Hector nodded.

"Okay. Does a bull eat meat? Nope. Would that make you feel any better,
climbing into the corrida with just a cape and a sticker?"

"Hell, no!"

"Me neither."

Indira had interjected herself into the discussion.

"But those fighting bulls were bred that way, Julius."

The biologist shrugged. 'True. So what? You can't make a silk purse out
of a sow's ear. Evolution isn't magic. The potentiality has to be there
in the first place. The fighting bulls of Spain were the product of a
breeding program, true. But the program wouldn't have succeeded if bulls
didn't have a capacity for violent aggression in the first place."

He poked the smoldering moss with a stiff reed, stirring it back into
sluggish flame.

"What I wouldn't give for a cord of pine," he muttered. 'Hell, I'd
settle for a bagel. Burn better'n this crap."

Laying the reed down, he continued.

"It's true down the line, folks. Carnivores are aggressive in a
particular way because they have to be to survive. But they have no
monopoly on the trait." "I agree," said Adams firmly. 'It is well known
that human beings are the most aggressive animals known, and we are
omnivores."

Julius couldn't resist.

"We are, are we? Tell me something, Doctor Adams. You're close to forty
years old, I estimate. When was the last time you got in a fist fight?"

"I have never been involved in a violent altercation."

"No kidding? Boy, what a sheltered life you must have had. I myself got
into several fights when I was a teenager. How 'bout you, Hector? You
come from the land of machismo. Bet you've been in more fights than you
can remember."

Hector grinned. He enjoyed helping Julius bait the Doctor.

"You ain't gonna believe it, Julius, but I don't think I've been in a
fight since I was fifteen. My brother."

Julius nodded. 'I'm not surprised. It's probably the oldest myth of all,
this idea that humans are filled with instinctive violence and
aggression. Pure bullshit. We are probably the most peaceful species
among the mammals." He smiled, observing the looks of disbelief around
the campfire.

"Sorry, folks. It's true. The fact is that the vast majority of human
beings go through their entire lives without being involved in violence.
Other than a mild experience as adolescents. Hell, most people nowadays
don't even personally witness an act of violence. Whereas the vast
majority of mammals even rabbits, believe it or not routinely commit
acts of physical aggression against fellow members of their species.
Human beings, on the other hand, are the most social of all animals.
Cooperation, not conflict, has been the key behavioral pattern in our
evolution."

"But Julius," protested Janet, 'think of all the wars we've fought all
through history. Well, not for the last fifty years or so, I admit, but
before then it seems like there was never a time when we weren't
fighting a war. Someplace."

"Yeah, Julius," added Hector. 'I hate to say it, man, but the old
barrios were a rough place to live."

"I don't deny that human beings have a capacity for violence," he
responded. 'And when that capacity is triggered off for social reasons,
not biological ones the violence which results is appalling because of
our intelligence and our technological capability." A laugh. 'I always
got a kick out of those old horror movies. You know Godzilla tramples
Tokyo. What a lot of crap. If Godzilla had ever really wandered into
Tokyo, there would have been a new item on restaurant menus the very
next day. Godzilla soup."

He pointed a finger at Adams. 'There's one thing I do agree with the
Doctor about, however. It is, indeed, true that we are omnivores. But
does that explain anything about our history? Human beings are
omnivores, therefore therefore what? Therefore the Inquisition? And the
conquistadores? Therefore St. Francis of Assisi?"

He snorted. 'Therefore nada. Zilch. When I say the name 'Inuit,' does
that bring visions of slavering killers to your minds?"

People shook their heads.

"And yet they were an almost purely meat-eating people. The most
carnivorous culture ever produced by the human race. Necessary, of
course not too many rice paddies in the Arctic. Now, let me turn the
question around: who, in your estimation, was the most murderous single
human being our species every produced?"

A brief, animated discussion followed. Various candidates were
nominated, but within a short time agreement was reached.

Julius nodded. 'Yeah. Adolf Hitler. A vegetarian."

Indira spoke up.

"I'm puzzled by something, Julius. If I understand you correctly, what
you're saying is that the reason the maia are feeding us has nothing to
do with instinct. Right?"

Julius nodded.

"Then why are they doing it? It's not as if there's anything in it for
them. They give to us, without getting anything in return. How do you
explain that?"

"I don't know, Indira. I'm just a biologist. I've reached the limit of
my understanding. These creatures are not animals. You can't explain
their behavior by pointing to their biology. I know the rest of you
aren't convinced of that, but it's true. What that means is that they
are feeding us because of something in their culture."

Years later, she could still remember the intensity of his stare.

"So you figure it out. You're the historian."

Eight months after that discussion, a maia died. And Julius finally won
the argument.

The humans had begun mixing freely with the maia since they began eating
the 'childfood." (Which Julius persisted in calling upchucksalad, or
pukewurst, or barfburger to the vast irritation of Indira and the other
adults.) The maia had seemed edgy around the adult humans, at first,
even though they continued to feed them. Then Julius ordered everyone to
start wearing as much green-colored clothing as they could find. From
studying the creatures, he had concluded that green was the color of
tranquillity and love, he suspected. Thereafter, the maia seemed to
relax around the adult humans.

Adams argued that their behavior stemmed from pure chromatophoric
instinct. Julius insisted that the reason the color green calmed the
maia was because the creatures realized that the humans understood what
it meant.

"I don't think the maia are actually all that intelligent," he'd said to
Indira in private later. 'Sapient, yes; bright, no. Like
austrolopithecenes. No, more than that say, roughly equivalent to Homo
habilis, or maybe even Homo erectus. But they're sure a lot smarter than
the Doctor. At least they understand that we're intelligent."

The children, once they got over an initial hesitation, fell in love
with the maia. Like giant, walking teddy bears. At first, the adult
humans grew nervous at the sight of swarms of children romping around
the maia especially after crawling under a maia became a popular game.
But it soon became obvious that the creatures were conscious of the
childrens' actions. The maia never harmed a human child, not even
inadvertantly. And they never seemed to become irritated at the
children's antics even after the children invented a new game, which
they called 'ride-the-maia."

The day came when Indira saw a maia pick up a child and gently place the
girl on the cowl of its mantle. And she wondered.

Then the day came when Joseph Adekunle, the son of the Magellan's
electronics officer, came running to her.

She watched him approach with fondness. She would never admit it to
anyone (for she maintained a public stance of being an impartial mother
who loved all her children equally), but the truth was that Joseph was
one of her favorites. He was one of the oldest children in the colony
(six, now), and big for his age. Big, and extraordinarily athletic. Only
Jens Knudsen, among the boys, and Ludmilla Rozkowski, among the girls,
came near to him in physical prowess. But Joseph never abused his
strength, never acted the bully, never boasted or bragged. To the
contrary. He was invariably helpful to the smaller children. And on two
occasions that Indira knew of, when Joseph had witnessed a larger child
abuse a smaller, the boy had taken the perpetrator aside and quietly
informed him that if he thought he was such hot stuff Joseph would be
glad to prove him wrong. He was a charismatic figure, even at the age of
six, and he had become, almost as if it were a law of nature, the
central figure in the children's generation.

He was also it was obvious to Indira, even at his age extraordinarily
intelligent.

You would have been so proud of him, Susan, thought Indira, as she
watched the boy race across the valley floor and begin climbing the
hillside toward the camp. She remembered the electronics officer of the
Magellan, with some sadness, but not much. It had been over a year since
the disaster. She had even finally been able to stop grieving for her
own children.

She had not known Susan Adekunle well, but on the few occasions when
they had met she had taken an immediate liking to her. It was impossible
not to. The Yoruba woman had been invariably witty and cheerful, in her
inimitable big and booming style.

Big. Susan Adekunle had been at least six feet tall, and not at all
slender.

And judging from the evidence, thought Susan, Joseph's father must have
been even bigger.

The boy was now halfway up the hillside.

He certainly inherited his mother's color.

Joseph's skin color was something of a rarity in the modern age, after
two centuries of unparalleled war and migration (and then, blessedly, a
world at peace for the first time in millenia) had thoroughly mixed up
the human gene pool. The majority of the human species had blended into
various shades of brown, usually accompanied by dark hair and, more
often than not, at least a trace of epicanthic fold to the eyes.

Joseph, on the other hand, is going to look like an ancient Ashanti king
when he grows up.

Among the children in the colony, only Jens Knudsen and Karin Schmidt
exhibited the same kind of extreme racial differentiation. They were by
no means the only white children in the colony, but they were the only
two who would grow up looking like Nordic stereotypes yellow hair,
bright blue eyes, skin as white as milk.

Indira's idle musings vanished as Joseph came near. Tears, she suddenly
realized, were pouring from the boy's eyes.

She rose to her feet hastily.

"What's the matter?"

"There's something wrong with one of the maia!" cried Joseph. 'With
Wolugo!"

She had time, before she started hurrying down the hillside, to wonder
at Joseph's use of the name 'Wolugo." Since they began playing with the
maia, the children had begun imitating the creatures' hoots. Over time,
they became adept at producing the strange sounds. They even began
mixing maia hoots into their own conversations.

The children began insisting that the hooting was a language. Excited,
Julius had immediately experimented with his own attempts at hooting.
But he had given up, after a few days, in total frustration.

"There's no way I can do it," he'd grumbled to Indira. 'I had a hard
enough time with Spanish, and if that hooting's a language it's totally
unlike any language on Earth. Although I think it's tonal, like
Chinese."

Then, snarling: 'And if I have to listen to one more snotty little brat
make fun of me, I'll commit mass infanticide."

Indira's interest had been aroused. She herself, unlike Julius, had an
extraordinary aptitude for languages. She was fluent in seven, including
all four of the global tongues (English, Spanish, Arabic and Chinese),
and could make her way fairly well in a number of others.

But when she tried learning 'hoot," she hit a brick wall. It did, in
fact, remind her in a certain way of Chinese. (A very vague, generic,
way.) But she couldn't wrap her mind around any concepts. More than
once, she felt she was on the edge of grasping the inner logic of the
hoots. But, always, the moment slipped away.

In the end, she gave up. Had she been certain that the hoots were really
a conscious language, she would have persevered to her last breath. But
she was still not convinced that Julius was right.

The children, on the other hand, for all that they had teased Julius'
hopeless attempts at hooting, often expressed the opinion that at least
on the subject of the maia Julius was the only adult in the colony who
had any brains.

And for the past three months, the children had started referring to
individual maia with proper names.

Even as she ran through the valley alongside Joseph, Indira could not
help but smile at the memory of a conversation between the boy and
Francis Adams the previous month.

Joseph had casually referred to one of the maia as 'Yuloc." Adams had
smiled, in his condescending way, and remarked: "Is that what you've
decided to call it?"

Joseph had given the man a look which belied his years.

"Yuloc's not an 'it.' She's a she like almost all of the maia are. And I
didn't give her the name. It's her own."

Then: "People don't decide what to call other people. You call them by
their own names."

"Is that so?" mocked Adams.

The next words, coming from a six-year-old, had astonished her.

"Yes, Francis, it is."

Adams shot to his feet like a rocket.

"You will call me Doctor Adams, young man!"

Joseph had said nothing. He had simply stared back, and up, at the man
looming over him. Without a trace of fear or cringing, his face filled
with a dignity she would never have imagined possible in a boy that age.

Gasping for breath, she and Joseph reached the spot in the valley where
the boy was leading her. As she drew near, she saw that a large number
of maia, and what looked like every child in the colony, were clustered
near a grove of tubular, fleshy plants. She recognized the plants. They
were the favorite food of the maia. The humans had called it
'sortasaguaro," until, beginning a few months earlier, the children had
started calling it 'oruc," insisting that that was the proper name for
the plant according to the maia. Julius immediately adopted the name,
with the other adults eventually following suit.

She edged her way through the throng. At the center, she came upon a
pitiable tableau. One of the maia had collapsed. The creature was lying
on its side, hooting softly. Indira immediately knew the position was
unnatural. She had never seen a maia lying on its side before. When the
creatures slept, they simply lowered themselves straight to the ground.

Brown tones rippled through the mantles of the maia observing the scene.
If the children were to be believed and the scene she was watching gave
strong support to their opinion brown was the color of misery. The
stricken maia herself was also dappled with brown hues, although the
predominant color was ochre. Then, as Indira watched, the ochre faded. A
few brown stripes continued to move slowly across the maia's mantle, but
now green rapidly appeared and spread.

The maia surrounding the scene began hooting. There seemed, somehow, a
questioning tone to the hoots.

The stricken maia herself had stopped hooting. Suddenly, to Indira's
astonishment, the color of her mantle deepened first to dark green, and
then to midnight black. She had never seen that color on a maia before.

As if it were a signal, three of the maia moved to the fallen one's
side. Using their cowls like great shovels, they levered the creature
upright. Two other maia moved forward, one on each side of the stricken
one, and leaned into her. Then, most of her weight being carried by the
two helpers  No, realized Indira suddenly, pall-bearers.

 the trio began making their slow way north. Everyone followed, maia and
human, the maia softly hooting and the children sobbing.

On the way, they met Julius and Korecz, who had come to see what the
commotion was about. The biologist and the doctor fell in with Indira.

"What " Julius started to say, but fell silent at the sight of Indira's
sharply upthrust hand.

Slowly, the procession made its way north, until they arrived at a grove
of striking green plants, twisting vine-like things that curled and wove
into each other like an enormous free-standing ball of spaghetti. The
color of the stricken maia's mantle, Indira noted, was now very close to
that of the vine-plants.

The 'bearers" gently set the stricken maia  Wolugo, thought Indira
fiercely. Her name is Wolugo.

 down to the ground. Then, they edged back. Silence followed, for
minutes. Wolugo was motionless, except for a faint movement of the
fleshy flaps deep within the recesses of her mantle cavity, back of the
octopoid head. Julius had often speculated that these were the inhaling
orifices for some kind of lungs (or their equivalent).

The rest of the colony's adults arrived at the scene during the course
of that long wait. Adams was the last to appear. The metallurgist
examined the scene for a moment, then said loudly: "Yes, of course. The
elephant's graveyard."

Indira was shocked at the expression which flooded Julius' face. For a
brief moment, she thought the biologist was actually going to strike the
man with his fist.

She was even more shocked when she discovered that she was hoping he
would.

But the moment passed.

Not long after, Wolugo died. Indira had no doubt of the moment. Deep
within the mantle cavity, she could see the maia's flaps stop moving.
And, in the space of but a few seconds, all color fade from her mantle,
until there was nothing but gray. It seemed, to Indira, the dullest gray
she had ever seen.

She found herself fighting back tears. When she realized what she was
doing, she stopped fighting, and let the tears flow freely. All the
humans, adult and children alike (except Adams), were doing likewise.
And she saw that, across the mantles of the living maia, stately waves
of brown and green were slowly moving.

A few minutes later, the maia began behaving strangely. Several of the
maia left, heading back toward the oruc grove. One of those remaining
began a peculiar movement on a patch of soil next to the vines a kind of
slow side-to-side two-step, dragging its peds.

After a minute or so, Indira saw that two mounds of earth were slowly
piling up on either side of the patch.

Understanding struck her like a bolt of lightning. Her mouth agape, she
turned to Julius.

But Julius was not there. He was already striding up the slope of the
mountainside, heading toward the shell of the shattered landing boat.
The place where the colony stored its tools.

Not long after, she saw him return. He was carrying a shovel in each of
his hands. And over his shoulder were draped strips of various types of
cloth and fabric. Green fabric. Brown fabric.

He smiled at her crookedly, but said nothing. He made a gesture to
Koresz with one of the shovels. Koresz took the shovel without
hesitation. And the doctor did not have to be told to drape strips of
colored fabric over his shoulders.

That done, the two men advanced slowly onto the patch of cleared soil,
facing the maia who was creating it.

The maia stopped, stared. Ochre bands were added to its coloration.
Julius made shoo-ing motions with his hands, which, to a human, would
have signaled: 'Move back."

When he saw that the maia wasn't moving, Julius sighed heavily.

"Ever play football?" he asked Koresz.

"Please! I am not a barbarian."

"Well, rookie, lend me a shoulder anyway."

So saying, Julius stooped and lowered his upper body until his shoulder
was butted gently against the cowl of the maia. Koresz, uncertainly,
followed suit.

Then, slowly but with as much strength as he could muster, Julius
attempted to push the creature back.

It might have moved an inch. Maybe. But the hoot which it emitted
carried a clear tone of surprise.

Julius straightened up, grimacing, rubbing his lower back.

"As I feared," he muttered. 'It's like trying to block Lawrence Taylor."

"Who?" asked Koresz.

"An ancient legend from the dawn of time, Vladimir, whose name is known
only to barbarians like me who happen to be the few football fans left
on Earth in these effete modern days. A hero, from the Golden Past. A
demi-god. Think of Hercules, or Theseus. Or both rolled into one. Sorta
like that."

He stared at the maia, chewing his upper lip.

"I guess we'll just have to try to dig around "

Suddenly, the maia edged back until it was clear of the patch.

"Well. Thank you. Took you long enough, dimbulb."

He started digging. He and Koresz.

It took a long time to dig a grave big enough to accommodate the body of
Wolugo, especially since Julius insisted on what he called 'the
regulation six feet." Indira, when she took her turn with the shovel
(all the adult humans took a turn in the grave, even Adams although he
only lasted fifteen minutes), suggested to Julius that the maia were
probably accustomed to shallow graves. But Julius had been unmoved.

"Yeah, probably so. But I finally found something that humans can do for
them that they can't do very well for themselves, and I'm not about to
do a slipshod job of it."

Despite her aching muscles, she found herself suddenly in agreement with
his point of view.

By the time they were finished, it was late in the day. Indira was not
surprised to see that, while the humans had dug the grave, the maia had
been gathering clumps of oruc.

Food, to sustain the dead in their voyage.

Nor was she surprised to see that Joseph had organized the children to
provide their own gifts. And so it was that when the body of the maia
Wolugo was lowered into her grave, she was accompanied not only by
clumps of oruc but by strips of cloth, small tools (whose use she would
not have understood), toys, trinkets, and several of the small bowls
that the colonists had made to eat the maia-food.

It was those last gifts, more than anything else, which brought tears to
Indira's eyes.

Bowls. So that the gentle giant, if she encountered starving children in
the afterworld, could once again give life to the dead.

The next day, Indira left the human camp and went to live with the maia.
She remained there for months, refusing all contact with adult humans
(even Julius; but he was not hurt, because he understood), and refusing
to speak to the children if they used any Terran language.

When she returned, the adults gathered about the evening campfire. Her
first words were simply: "The name 'maia' is wrong. They are called
owoc."

When she told Joseph, he nodded, and corrected her pronunciation.

Interlude: Nukurren For Nukurren, the first two days after her capture
were a blur. She recovered consciousness briefly, at several intervals.
But beyond a vague awareness of Dhowifa, she recognized nothing before
lapsing again into darkness.

Then, just after dawn on what she would learn was the third day since
the massacre of the caravan, she awoke clear-headed. Very, very weak.
But clear-headed.

The first thing she saw, out of her good eye, was Dhowifa. He was
nestled under her cowl. From his closed eyes, and the way his beak and
arms twitched, she thought he was dreaming.

"You're so cute when you're asleep," she whispered softly.

His eyes popped open, glaring at her balefully.

"I am not asleep. I'm thinking."

She began a retort to the effect that, the last time she remembered, he
was as mindless as a snail. But the look of love in the curl of his
arms, and the green hues which rippled across his mantle, stopped the
words in her sac.

"Where are we?" she asked. Then, feeling a strange motion, she looked
around.

She could only see to one side, but she saw that she and Dhowifa were
being carried on a litter held by two of the hunnakaku. They seemed to
be part of a caravan of demons and hunnakaku, climbing a trail on the
side of a mountain. On the slopes above, she could see three demons
stick-pedding alongside.

Those strange peds are very effective in rough terrain, she thought.
Then, seeing the shades of brown in their skins: But why are they so
miserable?

Her attention was drawn by another demon, who was stick-pedding
alongside the litter. The demon was very large. Not as tall as the
demonlord, but heavier. Nukurren was mostly struck by its color. The
demon's skin was almost pure white, under the strange yellow armor which
covered the top of its head and the rear of its upper torso.

That armor looks too soft to be much good. And this seems a strange time
and place to be consumed by passion.

She voiced the last thought aloud. Hearing the sound, the demon looked
down at her. The bright blue color of its eyes made her instinctively
tighten her muscles. Only pure fury could turn a gukuy's eyes that
color. But the creature did not seem enraged, and the tension brought
pain to her ravaged body. She slowly relaxed.

"I don't think their emotions show on their mantles," said Dhowifa
softly. 'I have been watching them for days. They all looked the same to
me, at first, except the big one. The terrible one who hurt you so
badly. But now I can tell them apart, and their colors never change.
Most of them are brown-colored, of one shade or another. But there is
this big one" he whistled amusement  'who looks like it's in perpetual
heat. Some of the others are like that, although none is as white as
this one. And there is the other big demon, who is always pure black.
Nobody can be that implacable. Not even that monster."

"The demonlord."

Dhowifa glowed ochre.

"I am not sure they are demons, Nukurren."

Nukurren started to whistle amusement, but the rippling in her sac
caused a wave of pain.

"And what do you know about demons?"

Exquisite turquoise irritation, leavened by affection rippled across
Dhowifa.

"Would demons be friends with hunnakaku?" he demanded.

Nukurren pondered the question.

"It does seem unlikely," she admitted.

"And there's more, Nukurren. The demons, whatever they are you won't
believe this, but I've seen it with my own eyes. They eat the hunnakaku
ogoto. In fact, as far as I can tell, that's all they ever eat."

Nukurren was stunned into silence. 'Ogoto" was the Anshaku word. The
Kiktu called it 'putoru." The hunnakaku themselves, in their own
language, called it 'childfood."

Gukuy spawn only lived on ogoto when they were newly born. Within a few
eightdays, they were able to feed on soft meat. But the tough plants
which were the exclusive diet of hunnakaku were much too difficult for
the young sub-gukuy to chew and digest. So they lived on childfood the
regurgitated contents of the adults' stomachs for years. Until they were
half-grown.

"Are you saying these monsters are children?"

"I'm not sure, Nukurren. It would seem so but if there's one thing I've
decided, these past two days, it's that there are too many peculiar
things about these demons to jump to any conclusions. But I'm sure I'm
right about the ogoto. For one thing, there are seven hunnakaku in this
party. They freed the four who were in the cages, but where did the
other three come from? They must have brought the hunnakaku with them.
Why would they do that if not for the ogoto? Hunnakaku can't fight."

A sharp pain stabbed through Nukurren's ruined eye. She reached up an
arm, felt a strange thing covering it.

To her surprise, Dhowifa pulled her arm away.

"Don't touch that!" he cried.

"What is it?"

"I don't know. Some kind of thing made of plants." He hesitated. 'One of
the demons put it there. On the first day. It put similar ones on your
other wounds. I tried to pull the things off, of course, because I
thought it was trying to poison you. But it wouldn't let me, and it's
much stronger than I am. Then, it got this other one " Dhowifa gestured
toward the large white demon who was still stick-pedding alongside the
litter ' to talk to me. It speaks Kiktu. I don't understand Kiktu as
well as you do, and it's got a horrible accent, but as near as I can
make out, it was telling me that the things will help you heal. And I
noticed that it's wearing one too. I think it's one of the ones you
injured."

Nukurren looked again at the white demon. On one of its upper tentacles?
no, they were jointed like its peds its upper limbs, a large poultice
was strapped.

"So I decided to leave them there," continued Dhowifa. 'I think you
should leave them alone."

He doesn't understand, Nukurren realized. Oh, Dhowifa, now I must cause
you more pain. But better that than to lie.

"It doesn't matter, dear one," she said softly. 'I am going to die,
anyway."

She started to explain about the diseases which mantle-rupturing wounds
always brought in their train. Dhowifa, the poor emotional little thing,
tried to interrupt, but Nukurren plowed on. Better that he should face
the truth now than to live in the fairy-tale world that truemales
preferred.

Suddenly, to her astonishment, the truemale started slapping her with
his arms.

"Will you shut up for a moment you, you clamhead!"

Nukurren stared at him. The azure irritation which suffused Dhowifa's
mantle was not, this time, mottled by any affectionate traces of green.

"I know about those diseases," said the truemale angrily. 'Do you think
I haven't been filled with anguish, worrying about it? Self-righteous
fool. Snail!"

He took a deep breath.

"But this big white demon says well, at least, I think that's what it's
been trying to tell me that you can be healed. When we get to where
we're going."

"And where's that?"

Orange surprise. 'Didn't you see it? We've already started up the
slopes."

He stretched out a tentacle, pointing up and ahead.

"The Chiton."

Nukurren twisted, looked where he was pointing. The sight was awesome.

"We're going there? Why?"

"Because that's where the demons live. Or come from, I'm not quite sure.
That's where the ones live who it says can heal you."

After a short silence, Dhowifa added: "And, if I understand it, that's
where the one lives who will decide what to do with us."

"And who is that?" She felt dread at the answer.

"The Mother of Demons."

Suddenly, a voice spoke in Kiktu: 'How do you feel?"

Swiveling her remaining eye, Nukurren saw that it was the large white
demon who had spoken. Its Kiktu was crude, and, as Dhowifa had said, the
accent was horrible harsh, and sibilant. But Nukurren had no difficulty
understanding it.

"Better," she replied. 'Very weak, but my brain is clear." She gestured
at the demon's injured limb.

"And you?"

The demon flexed its limb its right limb, Nukurren saw and examined it.

"It will heal," replied the monster. 'But it is painful. You almost tore
it off."

For a moment, Nukurren and the demon stared at each other in silence.
The bright blue color of its eyes was distracting. Despite Dhowifa's
opinion, Nukurren automatically reacted to that color as if she were
facing an enraged enemy. But, in truth, the whiteness of its hide never
showed the slightest trace of blue fury. And, though the demon's shape
and posture was like nothing Nukurren had ever seen, not even in her
worst nightmares, there seemed something  A memory came to her suddenly.
Long ago, shortly after Dhowifa and she had sought refuge among the
Kiktu, a young Kiktu warrior had challenged her to single combat. The
cause, according to the warrior Kokokda was her name was her outrage at
Nukurren's sexual perversity. But that had been a mere pretext, Nukurren
knew. The truth was that the young warrior could not resist the
challenge of fighting such a fearsome-looking gukuy, especially one who
was reputed to have been a great Anshac warrior.

The combat had been swift and brutal. Kokokda had been quite good, very
fast and strong, but much too full of bravado and incaution. It had not
taken Nukurren long to leave the young Kiktu dazed and bleeding on the
ground, even though she had been handicapped by the need not to kill or
cripple her opponent. (It would have been tactless to slaughter Kokokda,
given that Nukurren and Dhowifa were seeking sanctuary among her tribe.)
Days later, after recovering sufficiently from her wounds, Kokokda had
entered the yurt occupied by Nukurren and Dhowifa. For a long moment,
she had stood there, saying nothing. At first, Nukurren had thought
Kokokda was seeking to renew the conflict, until, from the subtleties of
color and posture, she realized that the young Kiktu was simply seeking
to acknowledge a worthy foe and, in the confused way of youth, to gain
her victor's respect.

Diplomacy had worked well then, and, Nukurren decided, would possibly
work now also, even with a demon.

"You fought well," she said to the white demon.

"I fought like a fool," came the instant reply. 'I'm lucky to be alive.
I wouldn't be if you hadn't been outnumbered."

It was the simple truth, of course, but Nukurren tried again to flatter
the demon with reassurances of its awesome prowess and skill. She had
not gotten far into her peroration when the monster's beak? gaped wide
and began emitting ghastly noises, like a swamp haktu barking in heat.

"I think that's the way the demons whistle when they think something's
funny," whispered Dhowifa. Nukurren swiveled her eye back to examine her
lover. Her arms made the gesture of skepticism. Ochre uncertainty
rippled across Dhowifa's mantle.

"Well, I'm not sure of it, but I think so. As I told you, I've been
watching them. They do it a lot."

Nukurren gazed back at the demon. The monster had ceased the hideous
barking noises, but Nukurren saw that its yes, she decided, it is a beak
was still gaping open. Within, on the top and bottom both, were a row of
strange little white stones?

"You are the biggest and ugliest gukuy I ever saw," announced the demon.
Nukurren heard Dhowifa's hiss of displeasure at the insult to his
beloved, but Nukurren shared none of it. Truth, after all, was the
truth. Nukurren was the biggest and ugliest gukuy she had ever met.

"And you are also the biggest liar." A short, sudden burst of barking.
'I fought like a stupid young fool, and that's the simple truth." More
barking, very brief.

"Do not be offended. I'm the biggest and ugliest" here came a word
Nukurren couldn't quite grasp  'that I know. I'm not the quickest, but
I'm the strongest. I rely too much on it." (A word, again, which
Nukurren couldn't make out, but she thought it was a name) 'is always
warning me that my overconfidence is going to get me killed." The demon
flexed its injured limb, and a strange crunching motion seemed to
briefly flit across the features of its bizarre face. 'And sure enough,
it almost did."

A long silence followed. Nukurren tried to think of something to say,
but she was feeling very weak and her mind was becoming foggy again.

"You were very brave," said the demon suddenly. Then, a moment later,
its harsh accent somehow even harsher: 'Why are you a slaver?"

"I am not," Nukurren replied.

"You were with them, and you fought for them."

"That is true. I was hired by the caravan master as her bodyguard. I did
not like the work, but it was all I could find for Dhowifa and myself."

"Why?"

Nukurren hesitated, then, too tired and weak to think of a clever
answer, responded with the blunt truth: 'We are perverts." She heard
Dhowifa hiss with displeasure, but ignored him. 'We are despised and
outcast because of it," she continued stolidly.

Again, the features on the monster's face crunched, although it seemed
to Nukurren, in some way too subtle for her to grasp clearly, that it
crunched differently. She heard Dhowifa whisper: 'I think that weird
thing it does with its face is the way demons gesture." Nukurren decided
Dhowifa was probably correct. Other than the colors of their mantles,
gukuy used their arms to express sentiments and attitudes. But the faces
of the demons were armless.

The demon spoke. 'I do not understand that word you used." Here the
monster fumbled with the term, trying to reproduce it.

"Pervert," said Nukurren slowly and clearly. Dhowifa hissed again. 'I am
too tired to lie, dear one," said Nukurren softly.

"What does that word mean?" demanded the demon.

Nukurren explained, briefly and bluntly. Dhowifa was hissing like a
kettle.

After hearing Nukurren's explanation, the monster fell silent. Nukurren
examined it closely, but could see no indication of its attitude.

I think Dhowifa's right. Their mantles? never change color.

Suddenly, the monster moved away quickly, stick-pedding ahead toward the
front of the caravan. Soon thereafter, a few loud and sharp commands
were uttered in some utterly strange language and the caravan came to a
halt. Moments later, Nukurren saw a number of demons approaching the
litter. At the forefront was the white demon and she felt Dhowifa flinch
at her side the demonlord. Black as night, implacable.

Seeing them side by side, Nukurren saw that the white demon was larger
than the black one. Not quite as tall, but wider and more massive. The
other demons there were a total of eight in the approaching party were
considerably smaller. Four of them seemed to be flushed brown with
misery. The remaining two were colored a very light brown, almost white,
but not the same pale hue as the biggest demon. And as they came nearer,
Nukurren suddenly realized that the strange attachments on top of their
heads which she had thought to be soft armor were some kind of natural
growths.

Parasites? she wondered. Some kind of skinny worms? No, that doesn't
make sense. They must be part of their bodies.

The color of the growths varied, she saw. The growths on top of the big
white demon were pale yellow, very bright. One of the other whitish
demons also had yellow head growths, although the color was much darker,
almost ochre. The growths on the remaining demons was dark brown, except
for that on the heads of the demonlord and one other. Their growths were
pure black. And there was something different about the shape of the
demonlord's head growths like thousands of tiny slender worms, also, but
worms which were tightly coiled.

The eight demons drew alongside Nukurren's litter. Now that she could
see them together, standing still in clear daylight, Nukurren saw that
there were other subtle differences between the demons as well. The body
shapes of three of them were somehow different, and the front of their
mantles, under the light armor which covered them, seemed misshapen.

"Tell him what you told me," commanded the white demon, gesturing to the
demonlord.

"Him?" thought Nukurren, astonished. This monster was a male?

Not possible. The white demon's Kiktu must be worse than I thought.

But then, again: 'Tell him."

Could it be?

"Are you a male?" Nukurren blurted to the demonlord.

All the demons began that horrible barking noise. Nukurren decided that
Dhowifa was right they were laughing. She was relieved to see that the
demonlord was laughing also, and, when the barking ceased, that its his
beak was gaping open, with those peculiar little stones exposed. The
stones in his beak, she was interested to note, were every bit as white
as the ones in the white demon's beak.

Yes, Dhowifa's right. And that must be their gesture of amusement.

The gesture seemed even more pronounced on the part of the white demon,
and then, as if the creature could read her mind, the demon said: "This"
it gaped its beak wider  'is our gesture of amusement. We call it a "
Here came a bizarre word.

"Gurinu?" asked Nukurren.

"Close enough," replied the white demon. 'And I am also a male. These"
here the demon pointed to the three whose body shapes Nukurren had
thought to be somehow different  'are female."

One of the three females stepped forward. She was light brown in color.
Her eyes, like the black demon and one other, were very dark brown,
almost black. Her head growths, like those of the demonlord, were also
pure black, although hers were very straight and long. Now that she was
close, Nukurren could see that her head growths were tied back behind
her head by a cord. She was almost as tall as the black and white
demons, although much less massive, especially in her upper mantle.

The female demon reached up with her tentacles upper limbs, rather and
untied the cords which bound together the strips of lacquered yopo stems
which made up her body armor. She drew the armor aside, and Nukurren
could see that beneath, protruding from the light brown skin of her
mantle, were two bizarre, soft-looking growths. Looking over at the male
demons, Nukurren saw that no such growths protruded from their mantles.

"There are other differences," said the female demon, in a voice which,
though harsh, was much lighter in tone than that of the male demons. Her
Kiktu was better than that of the black and white demons, with a less
pronounced accent.

The female demon retied her armor. 'But we won't get into that now. Or
else we'll waste half the day while" (here came a strange word, which
Nukurren was sure was a name) 'shows off."

All the demons except the big white one began barking loudly. The big
white one, to Nukurren's amazement, suddenly changed color. It was a
subtle change, but there was no mistaking it the monster was turning
pink!

Apprehension? wondered Nukurren. That doesn't make sense.

It made even less sense when the white demon's beak slowly began to gape
wide open, in the gesture of amusement.

He's embarrassed, Nukurren suddenly realized. But, I think, not
displeased.

The white demon spoke again: 'Tell him what you told me."

To the demonlord, Nukurren repeated the explanation for her presence,
and Dhowifa's, among the slavers.

For a moment, the demonlord was silent. Then he made a peculiar jerking
motion with his head and turned away. He said something to the white
demon in the strange-sounding demon language, and began rapidly
stick-pedding away, barking out commands. Moments later the caravan was
in motion again. All of the demons left the vicinity of the litter,
except the big white one and the female one who had stripped away her
armor.

"I think you just saved your life," said the white demon softly. (Here a
strange word, but Nukurren was sure it was the name of the demonlord)
'was beginning to have second thoughts about not killing you immediately
when we captured you. Now he won't."

Dhowifa began to speak, but Nukurren cut him off.

"Why not?"

The white demon did something odd with its mantle, as if quickly raising
and lowering its upper torso where its cowl would be if it had one.

"You were not entirely with the slavers by choice. He hates slavers. We
all do. And besides, he's curious."

"About us?"

"Yes."

Dhowifa now spoke, very softly, in his broken Kiktu. 'You is are, not by
us, offended?"

"Offended?" asked the white demon. 'Because you are" he struggled with
the unfamiliar word  'perverts?"

Dhowifa made the gesture of assent, and it was obvious to Nukurren that
the demon understood the meaning of the arm-curls.

Again, the two demons gaped wide their beaks.

"It means nothing to us," said the female one. She moved closer to the
white demon, and reached out one of her limbs. Then, with the odd little
stick-tentacles at its tip, she began slowly caressing the back of the
male demon's head, under the long, soft, bright yellow head-growths.

"My name is" here she spoke slowly, carefully enunciating
'Ludumilaroshokavashiki, and this is Dzhenushkunutushen. We have often
been lovers. More and more often, now, in preference to others." Her
beak gaped. 'Soon I think he will ask me to be his mate, if he can
muster the courage."

The male demon's white hide was again suffused with pink.

"And what will you say?" asked Nukurren.

"I will say 'yes,' " replied the female demon, very softly.

Nukurren stared at the big white demon, Dzhenushkunutushen. The demon
stared back at her.

And suddenly, uncertainly, deep within a monster's eyes, eyes the color
of insensate blue fury, Nukurren caught a glimpse of something she had
never thought to find in her bleak and lonely existence.

Chapter 8.

Once the survival of the colony was assured, Indira had began looking
toward the future. Just a few days after the discovery of the maia-food,
she had proposed, and the five other surviving adults had agreed, to
begin a school for the children. They were faced with the fact that the
technological base which they had always assumed would be the
underpinning of the colony was almost gone. One of the landing boats was
a wreck, not good for much beyond storage and scrap metal. The equipment
on the other boat was still functioning (other than the engines, which
were almost out of the complex synthetic chemical which they used for
fuel). But Hector pointed out that the batteries which powered the
equipment would soon be inoperative.

"They're nuclear batteries!" protested Adams.

Hector shook his head. 'No they ain't, Doctor. Sorry. They're just
little temporary units, designed to be recharged on a regular basis on
the Magellan."

Adams began a vigorous denunciation of the incompetence of the
expedition's planners, but Julius cut him off.

"Stow it, Doctor Adams! It's water under the bridge. Spilt milk. Let's
get on with the business at hand."

Adams glared at the biologist, but he kept his mouth shut. Julius
continued: "The way I see it, we've got to completely put out of our
minds any illusions that we can maintain an advanced technological
culture. We've got to face the facts. Every single piece of advanced
equipment on the boat the computers, for instance presupposes a whole
technological support base that just doesn't exist anymore. The problem
with the batteries is just the tip of the iceberg."

A sidelong glare at Adams.

"I happen to know how the temporary batteries in the lifeboats were
chosen. Everybody on the planning board wanted nuclear batteries. But
nuclear batteries are big, and there was nothing as valuable as space.
So the decision was made to have nuclear batteries on the mother ship
alone, and use small temporary batteries on the lifeboats. It's easy to
sneer at that decision now. But it was the logical decision to make at
the time.

"We're going to find the same thing is true over and over again. The
minute any single component of any of the remaining equipment breaks
down, that's it. There aren't any replacement parts, and we've got no
way to make them. Even if we knew how, which we don't."

A shrug. 'It's one of the prices we pay for having such a
technologically advanced culture. We're all specialists, by and large.
Take me, for example. I know how to use the equipment in a biological
lab. But I don't know how to make it. I don't even fully understand how
most of it works. The same's true for all of us." He smiled. 'Except
Indira. The historian's profession hasn't changed much over the last
five thousand years."

"So what do you propose, Julius?" asked Janet. 'Specifically."

"I propose that we concentrate on teaching the children the essential
tools of survival physical and cultural. Reading and writing. Basic
mathematics. Basic medicine. Shelter, and clothing. But most of all,
we've got to teach them which means that we've got to learn it
ourselves, since none of us is a farmer basic agriculture."

"That's nonsense!" expostulated Adams. 'We can't eat the plants. And we
don't need to, anyway we've got the maia."

Julius stared at Adams in silence for over a minute. Indira started to
speak, thought better of it. Everyone else apparently shared her
reticence.

Finally, Julius spoke again.

"Do you believe in magic, Doctor Adams?"

"Of course not! And let me say that I find that remark highly "

"Just shut up!" bellowed the biologist. It was the first time any of
them had ever heard Julius raise his voice. All of them, including
Adams, were shocked into silence.

Julius glared around the campfire.

"Let me explain something to you, people." He pointed to the south. 'The
maia are not your fairy godmothers. It doesn't matter whether you think
they're animals or sapient beings. If they're animals, they're in
ecological balance with their habitat. And if they're sapient, as I
believe them to be, they're at the most primitive possible cultural
level. Do you understand what that means?"

Silence.

"It means they don't have a surplus. They live on the edge of economic
survival. Every ounce of regurgitated food which they provide us is an
ounce which they don't have for themselves or their own young. As it is,
we're lucky that they don't have more than a handful of youngsters
themselves. How many ounces no, tons of food are we going to be
demanding from them? Where's it supposed to come from? The maia don't
grow anything. They forage. There's only so much forage in this valley,
and it's obvious to me that there's not enough when you add us into the
equation.

"So to get back to your point, Doctor Adams while it's true that we
don't need to learn how to cultivate plants for ourselves, we had damn
well better learn how to do it for them. Or we're going to die."

He fell silent, still glaring. After a moment, Koresz spoke.

"I believe Julius' point is irrefutable." The doctor smiled crookedly.
'If we are to survive, we shall have to adopt toward the maia the
classic slogan of the Vulcans. 'Live long, and prosper.' "

Indira took charge, then, proposing a concrete division of labor.

Basic education in literacy and mathematics: Herself and Francis Adams.

Agriculture: Julius, with Hector as his assistant.

('What's this shit?" Hector demanded. 'I fly almost twelve light years
so I can become a bracero?" But he was grinning when he said it.)
Housing, clothing and dyeing: Janet Mbateng.

Medicine: Vladimir Koresz, with Janet as his assistant.

* * * Two weeks later, Julius added another basic skill to the list:
weapons-maker.

"What?" demanded Indira. 'Whatever for? We've seen nothing threatening
to us in the valley except for a few small predators. We can handle
those with shovels."

The expression on the biologist's face was somber.

"Indira, as part of my job I've been systematically studying the maia.
I've gotten to know all of them. In fact, I've catalogued them in my
notebook."

"So?"

"So two of them are scarred. Big scars, too. On their mantles."

Indira had noticed scars on one of the maia herself, but hadn't really
thought much about it.

"An accident "

"Not a chance." Julius was vigorously shaking his head. 'They're not
lacerations, such as might be caused by a fall. The maia never leave
level ground, anyway. They're puncture wounds, Indira. Caused by some
kind of tooth, or claw, or something."

Indira's face was pale. Julius smiled, in his lopsided way, and stroked
her cheek.

"Sorry, sweetheart. There's trouble in paradise."

The other adults except Hector were skeptical. But Julius insisted, and
Hector was released from his former duties in order to design and
construct weapons. The pilot was not unpleased at the change.

"Hey, I've gone from field hand to head of the military-industrial
complex at one fell swoop." He shrugged modestly. 'It's a small step for
a man, but it's a giant step for La Raza."

Then, more seriously: "But, hey, Julius it's a weetle bit hard to figure
out what kind of weapons we need when I've got no idea what we're going
to be using them against. What are we talking about here? Giant snakes?
Super-snails? The creature from the black lagoon?"

Julius squatted and began chewing his upper lip.

"Let me try to apply my biological expertise, such as it is. As far as
I've been able to tell, just about all the terrestrial animals on this
planet fall into two basic phyla pseudo-molluscs and pseudo-worms."

He waved his hand. 'Yeah, yeah, sure, the worms are probably divided
into umpteen different phyla, like they are on Earth. Who cares? A worm
is a worm is a worm is a worm. Most boring critters ever made. A moving
hose food goes in one end, crap comes out the other."

He spit on the ground. 'So fuck the worms."

More lip-chewing.

"As far as the molluscs go, based on what I've seen so far I've
tentatively broken them down into six classes: the pseudo-snails, the
pseudo oh, screw the pseudo business! there's snails, there's these
things that are like land-clams, there's the whole chiton group, there's
a pile of slugs, there's those bizarre little brachiating critters that
have no equivalent on Earth except (so help me!) primitive primates, and
there's the maia. The Ishtarian equivalent of cephalopods."

"There's also those weird floating things, like balloons. I've seen a
few of them pass overhead."

"Yeah, I forgot about them. I'm dying for one of them to land in the
valley so I can cut it open. At a guess, they're probably a whole
separate phylum. Something roughly like what we used to call
coelenterates. But they're all small. And they don't seem to have much
capability for directed movement. From a distance, at least, it looks
like they're just drifting with the breeze. I can't imagine them being
dangerous at least, not to something the size of a maia."

"So what's your conclusion?"

"It has to be something relatively similar to a maia. In the same
general class, at least. Unless there's a phylum or a mollusc class I
haven't seen which is always possible, mind you; we've only seen a tiny
portion of Ishtar's surface it has to be a quasi-cephalopod of some
type. Or types."

"You sure?"

Julius shrugged. 'No, I'm not. But it's a hell of a good bet. If
analogies to Earth mean anything, the cephalopods were the only large,
fast-moving, advanced predators produce by the molluscs. By any of the
invertebrate phyla, as a matter of fact. Well, there were the
eurypterids, but I've never agreed with those people who think the
eurypterids were "

"Julius!"

"Huh? Oh. Sorry. Old habits die hard. All right, Hector, to cut to the
chase yeah, I'm almost sure it has to be something like the maia. More
or less, you understand."

The look Hector gave him was not filled with admiration.

' 'More or less' doesn't cut it, Julius. We're talking mano-a-mano here,
not horseshoes."

Julius threw up his hands with exasperation.

"So I'm not a genius!" He blew out a deep breath. 'All right, Hector.
Try to imagine a mean, bad-tempered maia. With some kind of long
tentacles instead of short arms. The tentacles will have some kind of
cutting or stabbing tip something like a horn, maybe."

"Are they going to be bigger or smaller than the maia?"

Julius pondered the question.

"Hard to say. Among invertebrates, predators are usually bigger than
their prey. The same's generally true for marine predators, including
vertebrates. But the rule doesn't always hold up with advanced land
forms. Quite a few mammalian predators are smaller than their prey."

"That'd be a break."

Julius gave him a sidelong glance. 'Not necessarily, amigo. Predators
who are smaller than their prey usually hunt in packs."

Hector rolled his eyes. 'That's great. Just great."

Julius was chewing his lip fiercely.

"But whether they're bigger or smaller than the maia, the predators will
almost certainly be faster. Course, that's not saying much. That'll be
one of our big advantages, by the way. I can't be positive, but I'm
almost certain that human beings will be able to run a lot faster than
anything on Ishtar."

He pointed a finger at Hector. 'But don't assume that because we can run
faster that our reflexes are any faster. These predators can probably
move their tentacles as fast as we can move our arms. Hell, even the
maia can move their arms pretty quickly when they want to."

"Yeah, I know. I saw one of the kids fall off a maia's cowl the other
day. Damned if the maia didn't catch her before she hit the ground."

The pilot scratched his chin thoughtfully.

"Weelll. I'd kinda been thinking in terms of swords, but "

"No! Swords would be almost useless. If you tried to use it as a
chopping weapon, you'd be trying to cut through that godawful tough
mantle. Take hours. Unless you were El Cid or something, which we ain't.
Same problem with axes. Look, Hector there's one really vulnerable part
on the body of a cephalopod: the head. Unless these critters are
completely different from Terran cephalopods, which is possible but
there's no way to tell for sure without cutting open "

"Don't even think it, Julius."

' I'm surrounded by saints! The point is, they don't have skulls.
There's nothing protecting the brain except a mass of flesh. Which is
probably thinnest right between the eyes."

"Well, you can use a sword to stab. Especially something like an epee."

Julius goggled. 'You want to play matador with something that looks like
a walking version of It Came From Beneath the Sea? Such a hero! Such
cojones! Such a fucking moron!"

The pilot laughed. 'All right, already!"

"Spears, Hector. We want spears. Something we can stab straight in with,
while keeping a distance."

"Sounds good. What kind of spear, do you think?" "You're asking me?"
demanded Julius. 'When we've got Indira? Who's spent a lifetime studying
the wicked ways of times gone by, when men were men and didn't suffer
fools gladly."

Indira proved a reluctant consultant, but Hector was finally able to get
from her what he needed.

"It's basically an assegai," he explained to Julius four days later,
showing him the spear he had made. 'The blade's heavy, shaped like a
narrow leaf, about forty centimeters long. It'll stab real good, and you
can still chop with it if you have to. But instead of a short handle,
like a real assegai, I put a long one on it. What do you think?"

The weapon was certainly ferocious-looking, thought Julius.

"I see you made the handle out of 'sortabamboo.' What's the blade made
out of?"

"Steel. It's a piece of the battery shield."

"Why'd you use that? There can't be much of it. Why not use that stuff
the boat's hull is made out of?"

"How many lifetimes you got? That's stuff's a weird alloy made out of
titanium and God knows what else. Ask Adams, he could probably tell you.
All I know is that they have to use special tooling in factories to work
with it." When asked, Adams confirmed that the metal of boat hulls was
useless for anything except shelter and storage.

"Most refractory metal known to man. Titanium, basically, but "

He began what would have been a long and arcane lecture on the process
by which the metal was made, but Julius cut him short.

"Never mind, never mind. I'll take your word for it. That leaves us with
a problem. We've only got enough of the shielding, and stuff like that,
to make a few hundred steel spears."

"Then what's the problem? There are only a handful of us to begin with."

Julius restrained himself. 'Some day, Doctor Adams, the children will
grow up. And then they will have children. And then do you get the
drift?"

"I still don't see the problem. We'll simply have to find some iron ore
and make our own metal."

A supercilious sniff. 'You do know what iron ore looks like, don't you?"

Julius sighed heavily. 'Of course I know what it looks like.
Paleontologists are just specialized geologists, basically. But I have
no idea how you make steel or even iron out of hematite. Do you?"

Needless to say, he didn't. Nor did Indira.

"But I'll tell you one thing," she said. 'It's not easy. In fact,
Julius, I wouldn't even think about it. Try to make bronze, if you can
find copper and tin."

He frowned. 'How do you know iron's hard to make?"

"Because it was invented so rarely in history. The only case that's
certain is the Hittites. Many historians think that the Hittites were
the only people who ever actually invented iron everybody else got it
through cultural diffusion. Personally, I think there's a strong case
for an independent discovery in West Africa, and the Chinese "

"For God's sake! Does everybody in this place have to play professor?"

She chuckled. 'Sorry. The point is that bronze, unlike iron, was
independently invented any number of times in human history. So it must
be fairly easy to do."

Later, Hector commented: 'Hey, Julius, you'd think all you
super-educated types would know how to do something as basic as make
iron."

"Au contraire, mon ami. Our super-education's the problem. Did you ever
read Jules Verne's Mysterious Island?"

Hector shook his head.

"Well, it's about a small group of men who wind up on a desert island in
the middle of the 19th century. Without anything except a couple of
matches and a pocket watch. But one of them's an engineer, and over the
next few years he invents everything. From scratch."

Julius frowned. 'Actually, I've always suspected that Verne was
stretching the possibilities. But it's barely plausible. And you know
why? Because the hero was a 19th century engineer. A basic kind of guy,
you might say. Whereas we " He sighed. 'As useless a bunch of
over-educated specialists as you could ask for."

He glared at Hector. 'That includes you, pal. Don't give me any of this
simple-Sam-the-sailor-man routine. What do you know how to do? Besides
fly spacecraft? Now, there's a useful skill in the stone age!"

Julius searched, but he found no hematite. Nor did he find any copper.
Nor tin. Eventually, however, he found bronze. But he did not have to
invent it, for it had already been invented on Ishtar. Any number of
times.

Luckily, the discovery of bronze did not come for many years. Years in
which the colony slowly settled into a stable and symbiotic existence
with the owoc. Symbiotic, not parasitic. For although he was never able
to invent metallurgy, the biologist was able to invent agriculture.

Julius had initially concentrated on domesticating the succulent oruc,
whose leaves were the favorite food of the owoc. But he met with little
success, for he soon discovered that it was a finicky plant. It would
only grow in soil patches with just the right composition, and, try as
he might, he was unable to reproduce the composition elsewhere in the
valley.

Eventually, he concentrated on a bushy plant which looked vaguely like a
soft-bodied manzanita (if such a thing can be imagined), which he had
seen the owoc browse upon. Here, he met with almost immediate success.
The plants were rare in the valley itself, although they were profuse on
the hillsides. Since the owoc were poorly equipped by nature to climb
hills, they only fed on those occasional bushes which grew at the
fringes of the valley floor.

When he transplanted the upunu (as the owoc called it) to the valley
floor, the plants flourished. For three weeks, before they began dying
off rapidly.

The cause was obvious: each plant was infested with several
softball-sized snails. They were a type of snail which was common enough
in the valley, but was never seen on the hillsides.

The owoc called the snails 'uduwo." But Julius put his linguistic foot
down. He called them 'cossacks," and that was the name they used when he
led a horde of eager children, armed with spears, to wreak havoc upon
the snails. They began by killing all the snails in the upunu field, and
then scoured the rest of the valley. After two days, they came upon a
swarming nest in the far north end of the valley. Julius pronounced the
nest the root of all evil, whereupon the children gleefully committed
mass gastropodicide.

Thenceforth, Julius would refer to the slaughter as The Day Kishinev Was
Avenged, a phrase the children happily adopted without having the
faintest idea what it meant. Indira knew, of course, but she chose not
to enlighten them.

Within a year, large swathes of the valley floor were covered with upunu
fields. The owoc took to the fields without hesitation, and upunu soon
became the staple of their diet. It was noted, however, that they
continued to browse on the oruc. Adams analyzed this behavior with sage
remarks regarding trace elements and essential dietary supplements.
Julius did not publicly disagree, for the possibility could not be
discounted. Privately, however, he suspected the owoc had a sweet tooth.

Three years later, within a space of just weeks, the valley floor was
suddenly covered with tiny little owoc, and Julius cursed himself for a
fool.

It was not that he was concerned about overpopulation. It quickly became
evident to the distress of the human adults and the absolute horror of
the children that the initial flood of baby owoc would rapidly ebb. For
the tiny creatures died in droves.

Died from disease, many of them; many more fell prey to snails and other
small predators.

No, he was concerned about the emotional state of the human children.
For they were utterly unable to comprehend the reaction of the owoc to
the massacre of their babies.

The reaction was nothing. In an offhand way, the owoc fed the swarm of
tiny creatures. Not individually, as they did with the small number of
owoc tots in the valley (if the word 'tot" can be applied to a creature
about the size of a black bear), but en masse. Adult owoc would
periodically regurgitate great piles of food on the ground, which would
rapidly be surrounded by owoc babies. (And then, within minutes, by
predators.) But other than that, the owoc ignored their offspring as if
they didn't even exist. Time and again, boys and girls would bring owoc
babies, cupped in their hands, to the adults. Begging them to shelter
the babies and protect them. The adult owoc would simply stare,
apparently dumbfounded, and then amble away.

Joseph finally cornered an owoc, and spoke with her for an hour.

When the conversation was over, he came to Julius and said, fighting
tears: "She says it's not very clear to me but I thinks she's saying
that the babies die because they have to. She says it's part of the Coil
of Beauty."

"I know, Joseph," replied Julius sadly. He reached out an arm and hugged
the boy. 'She's right, you know. It's the way it has to be, with the
owoc. It seems unnatural to humans, because we're K-strategists. But the
owoc aren't. They're r-strategists." Joseph demanded to know what that
meant, and Julius explained it to him. The boy did not understand all of
it, but he understood enough. That night, after asking the adults not to
attend, Joseph called a meeting of all the children. (It was the first
time the boy ever assumed that mantle of authority among the younger
generation; it would not be the last.) He explained, in his own terms,
what Julius had taught him. The children discussed the matter
thoroughly, for hours, with a seriousness and gravity far beyond what
one would expect of nine and ten year-olds. At the end, they were
satisfied (if not happy). But Julius noted that each child took an owoc
baby as a personal pet, and kept it free from harm.

He was upset at the situation himself, of course, as were all of the
adult humans. But, for he alone, the emotion of unhappiness was offset
by another.

Awe, and wonder.

I would have sworn (he wrote in his notebook) that no intelligent
species could evolve using the r-strategy. Prejudice, pure prejudice. We
humans have always been Earth's quintessential K-strategists, so
naturally we assume that the reproductive strategy of producing a few
(only one, usually, in our case) offspring and then lavishing care upon
them is the inevitable method for the higher forms of life. It's not
just homo sapiens, after all most of the mammals follow the same
strategy, even if they don't take it to the same extremes that we do.

But the invertebrates have always been r-strategists. The hell with
protecting a few kids. Just have a few thousand. Sure, most of them will
get it in the neck. So what? A few will make it. Everything evens out in
the end.

The owoc don't follow a pure r-strategy, of course. There's always been
a handful of youngsters, ever since we arrived, and they take care of
them well enough. That's one of the reasons I assumed, without thinking
about it, that they were K-strategists. I'm willing to bet that as the
babies get older the few of them that survive a critical point will be
reached when different instincts kick in.

He was right. A year later, the surviving owoc babies began to hoot, and
it was as if the eyes of the adult owoc suddenly focused on them. They
were very surprised, though according to the human children, who were
still the only ones who could readily understand the hoots at how many
young owoc there were. In fact, the adult owoc seemed utterly
bewildered. The reason for the surplus, of course, was the human
children. Julius estimated that 90% of the surviving babies were the
ones the children had taken in as pets. But, bewildered or not, the
adult owoc began taking care of their young. And there was no shortage
of food, because of the upunu fields. There was even an unexpected side
benefit, noted Julius with amusement. The human children, who had
previously complained bitterly about 'field-work" and used every excuse
to avoid it, were now the most assiduous of cultivators.

Of course, if I hadn't been so preoccupied with the immediate
necessities of life in the colony, I would have been able to spend my
time doing what I'd like to do, which is hey, once a prof, always a prof
research. (Yum yum.) Which I've been doing, finally, this past few
weeks. And made some discoveries.

The big news?

The owocs are social animals. Not social, as in: 'Let's throw a party!"
No, social, as in: bees; or ants.

I kid you not. All this time I thought the owoc were more or less like
us. You know, boys and girls. Differences, of course. The sexual
dimorphism among the owoc makes the miniscule differences between human
males and females positively subatomic. The males are tiny, compared to
the females. Tiny, and weak. At least, the bodies are. The heads are
quite well developed. Much smaller, compared to those of the females.
But I'm willing to bet that if you plotted the comparative brain sizes
of the males and females against their relative body sizes, you'd find
that they are just about identical on the EQ scale. So the two sexes are
probably of equivalent intelligence. But other than that, the males are
a shadow of the females, like super-runts. Hell, most of the time I see
one of the few males (oh, yeah note: males are only 6.25% of the
population, by exact count) they're riding inside the females nestled in
the anterior mantle cavity, next to the head. Cozy as can be even got a
cowl over their heads to keep off the semi-constant drizzle.

(Time out for complaint: Is there ever any sunshine on this misbegotten
planet? Day after day, the same solid light-gray sky. Makes Seattle look
like Miami.) Back to the ranch. The peculiar 'riding" position of the
males inside the females is so common that I'm even beginning to think
it explains the (relatively) much longer arms of the males. Although
that might be one of those 'Just So Stories" kind of explanations. I can
see where the males would enjoy it well enough beats working but I can't
really see where there's any adaptive advantage to Julius Cohen. Julius
Cohen. Reproductive organs, dummy. That's why the male arms are so long.
So they can reach way down deep inside the female's mantle, where the
good stuff is. Talk about convergence! That's how male octopi transmit
their sperm to the female one of the arms is specially designed to carry
sperm packets from the male sex organ to the female's. (If I remember
right, that arm's called a hectocotylus.) More logical system than we
have, when you think about it. Why waste valuable biotic energy growing
a separate penis when you can do double duty with an arm?

OK. But why are all the arms long? If the owoc parallel the octopi, only
one of the arms is adapted as a sexual organ. The others are just arms.
So why are they all the same length?

Bingo. That's just the way the genetic switches work with the owoc. The
regulatory DNA (or whatever equivalent exists on Ishtar and would I love
to know! but I'm willing to bet that it's the same trusty old adenine,
guanine, cytosine and thymine, or at least three out of four of them)
has all eight arms linked. You want just one of them long? Sorry, ma'am.
Only comes in the economy eight-pack.

Anyway. To get back to the point, I always knew there were males and
females. What I didn't know is that there are also mothers.

I just thought Kupu, the female who hardly ever moves out of that one
little oruc grove, was the owoc equivalent of the fat lady in the
circus.

Turns out the reason she's four times as big as all the other females is
because she isn't really a female at all, she's a 'mother." This
distinction seems bizarre to humans, because for us 'female-ness" and
'mother-ness" are almost identical. But among the owoc, they're
practically a different sex.

No, that's not the best way to put it. Makes it seems like there's three
sexes. And there aren't. There's only two female and male. But the
females come in variants. Female and mother.

Why not female (meaning mother) and 'neuter." Because it slides around
the question. What's a 'neuter," after all? It's either a neutered
something male or female or it's some kind of bizarre
sex-that-isn't-a-sex.

Fie on it. Let's stick to the ABCs of biology. In all sexed species, the
female is the fundamental sex. Gotta have females. Males the thought
grieves my chauvinist heart, but facts, as the man says, are stubborn
things are unnecessary. Oh, sure, lots of species use males to
reproduce. (Including mine, praise the Lord.) But they can be done away
with, if necessary. Parthenogenesis, for instance. So the basic body
plan of any sexed species is female. Males are just a specialized
adaptation.

Since the infertile females are far and away the most common type of
owoc and the dominant ones, insofar as that aggressive term can be used
with these beings it seems to me most logical to refer to them as the
females, and to call the ones which are specialized to actually
reproduce 'mothers."

I'll stick with that for now. (Note: ask Joseph to talk to the owoc
about it. Be interesting to see what they have to say.) He did, and
Joseph reported that the owoc term for female was, just as Julius
suspected, used to refer to the infertile ones. Kupu was called a term
which translated quite closely as 'mother." Joseph also reported that,
according to the owoc, males came in two variants as well the fertile
ones, which were by far the most common type; and a rare type of male,
which was not fertile. According to the owoc, there was no
representative of that quasi-sex currently living in the valley. There
had been one, some (indefinite the owoc were always vague regarding
questions of time) period ago, but he had died.

Julius tentatively labeled the sterile males 'eumales." And then drove
himself crazy trying to figure out an adaptive reason for the evolution
of infertile males. ('The most useless creatures imaginable!" he
exploded once, in Indira's presence; to his everlasting regret, for she
expanded on the theme, at length.) So there you are just like a colony
of bees. A queen the mother who does all the actual breeding. A small
number of males, to service her. And a host of infertile females, to do
everything else.

Like all analogies, of course, you can't take it too far. For one thing,
the owoc are intelligent (not very, but intelligent nonetheless) whereas
the social insects are as dumb as hey, what do you expect? bugs. For
another, owoc society has none of the 'slavish" characteristics of
insect hives.

But I'd be willing to bet that if the owoc were smarter their
complicated sexual relations would produce all kinds of fascinating
cultural variants. Including, probably, some variants that are savagely
oppressive.

He proved to be right. On both counts.

Chapter 9.

Doctor Koresz was the first adult to die, six years after their arrival
on Ishtar.

It did not come as a surprise, for he had known for months he was dying.

"I do not know why, really," he had told them, lying on his pallet in
the hut which the doctor shared with Janet and Hector. 'I have only been
able to scratch the surface, when it comes to understanding life and
death on Ishtar. I shouldn't be dying, of course. I am only forty-two
years old, and if I had not been in perfect health the Society would
never have approved me for the Magellan. But as Julius never tires of
reminding us facts are stubborn things. And the fact is that I am
dying."

All of the adults were gathered around, except Adams, who had drawn more
and more apart from the colony as time went on. He was the only one of
the adults who still lived in the landing boat. All the others had long
since moved into the huts which Janet had designed from native
vegetation. The children were housed in four large barracks (no, 'long
houses," Indira had named them, after the Iroquois).

Except for Adams, the adults lived in two separate huts: Indira and
Julius in one, the doctor and Janet and Hector in the other. The m nage
trois into which Hector, Koresz and Janet had happily settled, within a
few months after the crash, was a logical enough arrangement under the
circumstances. And sexual mores on Earth in the 22nd century were
characterized by considerable latitude and tolerance.

Julius immediately named their hut 'Sodom and Gomorrah." And he
demonstratively refused to come near it, fearing, or so he claimed, the
wrath of God.

"You don't even believe in God!" Indira had once protested.

Julius chewed his lip. 'No, I don't. But you never know. And if He does
exist, He has two outstanding characteristics. Judging, at least, from
the Old Testament."

"Which are?"

"He's the most hot-tempered, narrow-minded, mean-spirited, intolerant,
anal-compulsive, bigoted redneck who ever lived. And, what's more to the
point, he's a lousy shot."

"It's true!" he insisted, in the face of Indira's laughter. 'Read the
Book yourself. Somebody pisses Him off, does He nail 'em right between
the eyes like Buffalo Bill? Hell, no! He drowns everything. Or He blasts
whole cities, or drops seven lean years on entire nations.
Indiscriminate, that's what He is. The Sawed-off Shotgun In The Sky. So
I ain't getting anywhere near that den of iniquity."

And he hadn't, until he realized that Koresz was really dying.

"But why?" demanded Janet. She wiped away tears. 'If it's a disease,
maybe you can find a cure. You've done miracles, Vladimir! Not just with
us, with the owoc too."

Koresz shook his head weakly.

"It is not a disease, Janet. At least, not in the sense that you are
using the term. It is call it massive systemic shock." "Explain," said
Julius softly.

"I cannot, Julius. Not clearly. There is still an enormous amount we do
not understand about life. Organisms are adapted by evolution to a
particular environment. Some are more finicky about it than others, but
any organism only has a certain tolerance range. Humans do quite well,
in that regard, compared to most animals. But we have long known that
totally new environments place a tremendous stress on organisms. In
unforeseen ways, often. Did you ever read any of those old science
fiction classics, written before humanity actually got into space?"

Julius shook his head.

"It is fascinating, really. The writers all thought that weightlessness
would improve human health. Seemed like a logical idea at the time, I
suppose. Gravity does wear our bodies down. But we are adapted to
gravity. And when we finally got into space, we discovered that we
cannot survive weightlessness. Not for really extended periods of time.
Bone loss; muscle atrophy; eventually, Kabakov's syndrome and death."

He levered himself to a semi-erect position.

"But we can survive weightlessness for quite some time before we
succumb. And that, I think, is a good analogy to what is happening to
me. My body lasted for years, but it is finally just giving up."

Indira gasped. 'Does that mean ?" She swallowed. 'The kids "

Koresz shook his head. 'I believe the children will be fine. Young
animals are more adaptable than adults. The ones who survive, that is to
say. Typically, young animals either survive or they die quickly. But
the ones who make it "

He stopped, turned pink with embarrassment. 'I'm sorry, Julius. Indira.
My big mouth."

The biologist's face was pale, as was Indira's. But Julius smiled his
lopsided smile, and said: "S'okay, Vladimir. It was a long time ago. My
daughter oh, hell, if I'd left the poor kid on Earth she would have been
all right. But here " He sighed heavily. 'Nobody ever said natural
selection was kind."

He shook his head sharply, clearing away the memory.

"But what's important now is that I think you're right. A few of the
kids who died in the first year, like Indira's, died of trauma. But most
of them just died. Nothing we could do to stop it, as hard as we tried.
Lost almost twenty percent, the first year. A few the next year. But
since then, they seem to be doing just fine. And you think they'll be
okay from now on and their kids, too, I assume?"

Koresz nodded. 'Basically. Oh, I expect there will be a high child
mortality rate. But the colony will survive that, especially if the
children follow nature's age-old strategy. Be fecund."

He cleared his throat. 'Which brings up something I have been meaning to
raise. I have not said anything about it before, because it was a moot
point. But the children are just about at the age where they discover a
fascinating new game."

He gave them a hard stare. 'I do not know what cultural prejudices may
still be lurking deep within the recesses of your nasty little minds "

"This from you?" demanded Julius. 'The pervert who's going to fry for
eternity?" When the laughter died down, Koresz continued.

"You must allow the children maximum sexual freedom. More than that. You
must positively encourage promiscuity. This is not the time and place
for the nuclear family and sexual fidelity. The gene pool is small
enough as it is. I believe we have a large enough gene pool barely if
the genes are mixed up constantly. Even then, genetic drift is going to
loom large. I suspect we shall see the resurgence of all sorts of
recessive traits. Hemophilia, that sort of thing."

His face grew harsh. 'Natural selection will do its job, like always.
But we want the genetic mayhem to be as small as possible. That means "

"Swingers' paradise," snorted Julius. 'Rome of the Caesars." Koresz
smiled. 'Not so bad as all that, Julius. At least, I have not seen much
of a sadistic streak among the children."

He looked at Indira. 'Why the big frown, Indira? You never struck me as
the sexually-repressive type." A chuckle. 'Even though you and Julius
have selfishly refused to share your treasures with us sinners."

Indira smiled, faintly. 'It's not that, Vladimir. I have no moral
problems with allowing the kids to develop a sexually permissive
culture. I'm in favor of it, actually. It'll avoid a lot of social
neuroses. No, it's just ..."

She took a deep breath.

"It's just that up until now the boys and the girls have been on a equal
footing. They understand that there's a difference between the sexes, of
course. But they don't think much of it. Their games are completely
integrated, and a number of the girls are emerging as leaders. But if
they start having lots of kids, well ..."

She fell silent. Koresz seemed puzzled.

"I still don't "

"She's worried about the rise of the patriarchy, Vladimir," explained
Julius. 'She's mentioned it to me before, in private. Indira says that
if the colony were to remain in the state of primitive hunters and
gatherers that it wouldn't be a problem. Primitive cultures, she says,
are generally characterized by sexual equality." Indira . 'There's
always a division of labor between the sexes, but it rarely translates
into a relationship of dominance and subjugation. But the point is that
we're not primitive hunters and gatherers. We've already developed
agriculture, of a sort a kind of modified pastoralism, without the
migration and with everything else we've taught the kids they're well on
their way toward civilization, of a basic sort. And throughout human
history, the rise of civilization was always accompanied by a
transformation in the relationship between the sexes. What's called the
patriarchy."

She tightened her jaws. 'Which was always very oppressive to women.
Suttee. Purdah. Kinder, K che, Kirche. You name it."

Janet interrupted. 'But, Indira, that's all in the past. Really, it is.
Oh, yeah, sure, you still run across a few guys with some Neanderthal
notions, but it's never a real problem."

Indira was shaking her head.

"That's beside the point, Janet. You're right today. But the modern
equality between the sexes is only possible because of the vast wealth
of twenty-second century civilization. Even then, it didn't come without
long and bitter struggle. But our kids aren't going to be living in that
kind of world. They'll be living in the Bronze Age "

"If I can find any bronze," muttered Julius.

' and abstract ideas have very little power in the face of social forces
that emerge out of the material circumstances of real life."

She chewed her lip, unconsciously imitating Julius.

"I'll have to give it some thought. We won't have much maneuvering room,
but there'll be some. Socioeconomic forces are the locomotives of
history, but they're not impervious to cultural influence. And there was
always a lot of variation in human history, within a range. I'd have
much rather been a woman among the Iroquois, for instance, than a woman
in ancient India.

"Or " she frowned at Julius ' among the Hebrews."

"Bad enough I catch hell for what I do," complained the biologist. 'Now
I got to catch hell for what my ancestors did three thousand years ago?"

Unexpectedly, Hector intervened in the discussion.

"I think you might be worrying too much, Indira. There's something
you're overlooking. I don't know much about history, but I know for sure
that there's a factor in the equation here that never existed on Earth."

He jerked his head, toward the south.

"The owoc."

Indira was puzzled. 'I don't get it, Hector. The owoc won't be able to
stop oh, hell, I wish Julius would stop calling them 'dimbulbs,' even in
jest, but I can't deny that they aren't exactly mental giants."

Hector was shaking his head.

"You're missing the forest for the trees, Indira. It's not anything that
the owoc would do. It's just the fact that they are."

He gazed at the blank faces staring at him.

"Don't you see? The kids already think they're half-owoc. Hell, they're
even starting to speak in their own dialect English, basically, with a
hefty dose of Spanish, Arabic and Chinese. And lots and lots of hoots.
Sometimes, I can't understand what the kids are saying anymore." He
sighed. They still didn't understand.

"Look, folks. Just three days ago, I saw one of the littler boys Kenny
Wright climb up onto Ludmilla's neck. For all the world like he was a
tiny male owoc looking for his favorite spot. He didn't fit, of course,
and at first I was afraid Ludmilla would beat him into a pulp. But she
just seemed to take it for granted. Even carried Kenny around like that
for half an hour.

"So maybe you're right, Indira. You know human history, I don't. But
what I do know is that our kids aren't they aren't just human, anymore.
They're something a little different. Something new."

Indira was doubtful. But a small hope was born in her heart that day, at
the deathbed of Vladimir Koresz. A small and faint glimmer, under the
growing tidal wave of an historian's fear.

They buried Koresz three days later, near the kolocluster. All the
humans in the colony attended, even Adams. And it seemed that every owoc
in the valley was there also. Several of them owed their wellbeing to
Koresz, who had over the years managed to find cures for a number of the
illnesses which afflicted the creatures. The owoc, of course, did not
understand the means by which Koresz worked his magic. Nor did they seem
to care. They simply called him, in their hooting language, 'the Stroke
of Slow Beauty." (Humans, thought Indira, would have said: 'the Touch of
Long Life.") Fortunately, not all of Koresz's skill went with him into
the grave. Janet would never be his equal as a doctor, of course.
Neither her own keen mind nor his careful tutorship could make up for
the years which the doctor had spent learning his craft. But she was
still very good. Much better much, much better than the medical
practitioners which the human race had possessed for all but the last
three centuries of its existence. And Janet had drawn around her four
children who showed a deep interest in medicine. She believed that at
least one of them, Maria De Los Reyes, had the potentiality for becoming
a great doctor.

It was fortunate, and not a moment too soon. For, just as Koresz had
foreseen, the children soon learned a new and vastly entertaining game.
Less than a year later, the first babies began arriving.

They lost many of the babies, of course. But they lost none of the young
mothers, although it was a close call with Keiko Watanabe. Janet
performed her first Caesarean, and it was a success. Keiko and her child
survived, although the girl would never bear another.

Indira was aghast at the child mortality rate, but Julius was (bleakly)
satisfied.

"Twenty-five percent after one year," he said. 'That's horrible, by
modern Terran standards, I agree. But look, Indira and please don't
accuse me of being a cold-hearted biologist it's better than what the
human race put up with for most of its existence. In fact, a twenty-five
percent child mortality rate is incredibly good, when you consider
they're being born on an alien planet."

Indira knew he was right, but the knowledge didn't help much. Not when
she had to help bury the pitiful little bodies. And then look at the
hurt and bewildered faces of the children who had borne them.

But, over time, the children teenagers, now came to accept the facts of
life. Here, of course, they were helped by the attitude of the owoc.
Over time, Indira would be both appalled and fascinated by the way in
which the inter-penetration of the two species' cultures would produce a
unique hybrid. The humans would never share the owoc indifference toward
new-born babes, of course. That was biologically precluded. They would
care for them, and caress them, and nurse them, and pamper them. But
they would withhold the core of their hearts, until the infants began to
walk.

Eighteen months. That seemed to be the critical point. If a child could
survive that long, and struggle to its uncertain little feet, he or she
stood an excellent chance.

Janet Mbateng was the next to die. She knew it was coming months before
it finally happened, just as Koresz had known.

"It's like something turned off, inside," she explained to them. 'I'm
just going through the motions, now."

She groped for words. 'I can't explain it. It's not that I want to die,
or anything like that. It's just I don't know. Somehow I can just tell
my body's given up."

The final weeks of her life, Janet spent every hour of the day
surrounded by her pupils. (The nights, of course, were given to Hector;
who held her wasted body in his arms, until he cried himself to sleep.)
Hour after hour, passing on to them everything she had learned from
Koresz. Hector tried to convince her to rest, but the little woman no
bigger than a child herself, now adamantly refused.

In the end, she was satisfied she had done all she could. The day before
her death, she administered the Hippocratic Oath to Maria De Los Reyes,
and urged her other students to continue their efforts so that they too
could become Doctors. (And they all did, over time.) The last night, and
day, she gave to Hector.

Hector followed her into the grave soon after. He claimed that he felt
the same sensations that Janet and Koresz had described. Indira believed
him, but Julius knew he was lying. The pilot's muscular physique never
showed more than a trace of the horrible wasting symptoms which Janet
and Koresz had exhibited. True, he grew very thin. But Julius knew that
Hector hardly ate anything.

No, Julius knew the truth. Hector Quintero had become the closest friend
he'd ever had. Over the years, working side by side, he had come to
cherish the man's intelligence, cheerfulness, wit and courage.
Inexhaustible courage, it had seemed.

But courage comes in different ways, to different people. Hector could
face anything, except the empty vision of a future without Janet.

* * * Francis Adams, strangely, seemed indestructible. The physicist was
a total recluse had been since before Koresz's death. And for at least a
year prior to that, he had stopped giving classes to the children.
(Which Indira regretted not at all; Adams had been an unbelievably bad
teacher, totally incapable of explaining things in a way which would be
comprehensible to his students.) He dwelt by himself, as he had for
years, alone in the landing boat. The last time Julius saw the portion
of the boat where Adams lived, the place looked like a pigsty. Adams
himself formerly so fastidious looked like a complete savage. He acted
like one, too. He had screeched at Julius, his voice filled with fear
and rage, ordering him to leave. The physicist had even seized a spear
which he had secreted in his lair, brandishing it in a manner which
would have been frightening if it hadn't been so pitifully awkward.

But Julius obeyed. There was no purpose to be served in doing otherwise.

For years, now, the only time the colonists saw Adams was at mealtimes.
These had become the central institution of daily social life for the
colony a time of festivity and relief from the morning's labor in the
upunu fields and the afternoon's labor in the large longhouse which
served as a school. Twice a day, mid-morning and late afternoon, the
entire colony would gather in the center of the valley. There, in a
cleared space surrounded on three sides by the long houses and the
adults' huts, and on the fourth side by an oruc grove, a line of owoc
would slowly enter. Each in turn would regurgitate her childfood into
six huge basket/tureens, made of ruporeeds coated with dried resin.

The baskets had been Indira's invention. She felt that receiving the
childfood directly into little personal bowls was undignified and
wasteful, since much of it slopped over the sides. (It also made her
nauseous.) Once the childfood was in the tureens, each human would
approach with a bowl and scoop out their own portion. Before retiring to
eat in animated circles, the humans would stand before the watching
owoc, bowing deeply. The gesture of respect had not been taught to the
human young. They had invented it themselves, drawing on some deep pool
of cultural inheritance.

Indira herself never scooped her own bowl. She insisted on having a bowl
brought to her, so that she could put out of her mind (more or less) the
knowledge of where it came from. She was the only member of the human
colony who felt that way, but the others had long since accepted her
wishes.

Almost always, Julius was the one who brought her bowl. She wished it
were otherwise, but she never said so, knowing it would hurt his
feelings. Much as she loved Julius, she would have preferred another
bowl-bringer, one who wouldn't smack his lips in anticipation of the
meal, and make gross remarks such as: 'Hey, the barf's good today!"

Adams would always make his appearance after the owoc left. The
half-crazed physicist would emerge from his lair and scurry down the
hillside. He would stop at the edge of the clearing, hunched, glaring at
nothing in particular, saying not a word.

After a moment, Joseph would arise from whichever circle he was eating
with and scoop out a bowl. He would approach Adams slowly and solemnly,
and extend the bowl. After a moment, Adams would take the bowl and
devour the contents like a wolf. Then, he would return the bowl and
scuttle back to his lair.

The ritual was one of the many ways unconsciously, thought Indira that
Joseph had established his position as the unquestioned leader of the
younger generation. The children were afraid of Adams, she knew. The
fear was not rational. Adams had never been a physically prepossessing
man, even in his prime. Any number of the teenagers, of either sex,
could have easily handled him. Jens Knudsen, who already had the size
and musculature of a heavyweight wrestler, could have broken him with
one hand. Ludmilla might have needed two hands.

No, it was not a physical fear. It was that the teenagers knew there was
something deeply wrong about Adams, something that was utterly unlike
anything else they had encountered. People fear the unknown.

But Joseph did not. He had not feared Adams as a boy. He did not fear
him now.

His fearlessness, like the fear which the other teenagers felt, had
little to do with physique. In that respect, of course, Adams posed no
danger. The time when Adams could loom threateningly over Joseph
Adekunle was long gone. Instead, Joseph towered over the physicist and
would have, even were Adams erect. At the age of seventeen, he was
already almost two hundred centimeters tall. And while Indira thought
that he would not grow much taller, she knew that his frame already
muscular would fill out even further. By the time Joseph was twenty, he
would be as magnificent a physical specimen as the human race had ever
produced. Joseph would never have the sheer brute strength that Jens
Knudsen possessed, but Indira had noted that he beat Jens as often as
Jens beat him whenever they engaged in one of their frequent (and
good-natured) wrestling matches. Joseph's speed, reflexes, and balanced
poise were positively awesome.

But, as she watched the scene, Indira knew that the essence of it was
not physical, but spiritual. The calm, confident serenity that exuded
from Joseph's person as he watched the physicist take and gobble down
his food did not stem from simple confidence in his muscles. They
stemmed from the very soul of the boy.

Indira recognized what she was seeing. It was that vision the human race
had always possessed of youth in its glory. Not arrogant, not callous,
not vainglorious simply the calm certainty of young strength and
courage. Utter fearlessness in the face of danger; total willingness to
stand against it.

The vision was found in all human cultures, expressed in a myriad ways.
But Indira thought it had been completely captured only once, by the
greatest artist the human race perhaps ever produced.

The superficial appearance was, of course, different. Joseph's skin was
black; his hair was kinky; his features were African. But those were
meaningless things. The soul of the boy was the same as that captured by
the artist's genius.

The young shepherd, guarding his flock. Sling in hand. Poised, yet not
tense; calmly gazing forward, secure in his youth, ready to deal with
whatever horrors might come over the horizon. Lions; or bears; or
perhaps even a giant. Whatever. It made no difference, for he would slay
the monster without fail.

She had seen it once, that vision. In Florence.

The David, by Michelangelo.

David had not failed. Nor did Joseph, when the monsters came to his
people, three months after Hector died.

The long years of the colony's peaceful existence ended, and gave way to
the washing of the spears.

Chapter 10.

The first slaver raid caught the colony by surprise.

It shouldn't have, in theory. The colonists had been preparing to defend
themselves, and the owoc, for over ten years. Enough spears had been
produced to arm every single human down to the new-born babies, with a
number left over. The teenagers had been organized into five-person
squads, which, in turn, had been organized into three platoons.

Hector, who was the only adult with any military training at all, had
been selected as the commander of the defense force. The organizational
structure was his idea, and it had been he who had drilled the young
humans in basic tactics.

The other adults had participated in the training, in the first few
years. But once the children became teenagers, all the adults except
Julius stopped engaging in the exercises. And if Hector had had his way,
Julius would have been barred as well.

"It's a young person's game, man."

"You're saying I'm too old and feeble and slow?" demanded Julius.

"Yes. Exactly. Precisely."

But Julius had refused to quit, to Indira's disgust. Indira had never
been an avid supporter of the military exercises in the first place. And
as the years went by without any signs of trouble, she came to the
private conclusion that the training was a waste of time and energy. But
she did not interfere, except in three ways.

First, she made clear to Julius that she considered his insistence on
remaining in the defense guard to be a prime example of delayed
adolescence, of which, to his discomfort, she pointed to numerous other
symptoms.

Secondly, she insisted that if there was going to be a defense guard,
the girls would participate on an equal basis. This had caused no
difficulty, for Hector was quite favorable to the idea. In fact, he had
appointed Ludmilla Rozkowski one of the three platoon leaders (the
others were Joseph Adekunle and Takashi Mizoguchi). After the babies
began arriving, Hector maintained the sexual egalitarianism by
establishing a platoon rotation system. Each month one of the platoons
was assigned the primary duty of rounding up and protecting the children
in the event of a military crisis.

Finally, and most forcefully, Indira refused to accept Hector's proposed
title for his own position.

"What's wrong with it?" he complained.

"Admiral of the Ocean Sea?" demanded Indira.

He pouted. 'It's got a nice ring to it."

"Not a chance. You can be Captain Quintero."

The training had been maintained for several years, but it had slowly
become more and more lackadaisical. After Hector died, the defense guard
essentially disintegrated. Julius assumed the mantle of Captain, but he
was too preoccupied with other matters to pay any real attention to the
task.

In the last weeks prior to the raid, only a handful of the teenagers
continued their training and exercises. They formed themselves into an
informal squad, consisting of the three former platoon leaders, as well
as Jens Knudsen and a few others.

The first sign of trouble was a sudden flurry of hoots coming from the
southernmost end of the valley. When Julius first heard the hooting,
while he was writing in his notebook, he shrugged it off. He was
curious, for the owoc rarely hooted loudly, but he was not alarmed.

As the hoots continued, and seemed to grow nearer, he went to
investigate. Still curious rather than concerned, he walked out of the
hut carrying his notebook.

Seconds later he had dropped the notebook and was racing for the stand
of spears next to the long houses. He still didn't know what was wrong,
but he had no doubt that foul play was afoot.

An owoc stampede has a certain comical air to it, given their slow
speed, but Julius was not in the slightest amused. He had never seen
owoc stampede before, and at least one of the beings was bleeding from a
large wound in its mantle.

Whether driven by fear, instinct, or a conscious understanding that the
humans were protection, the owoc had done exactly the right thing. They
ran (shuffled, it might be better to say) directly into the center of
the human village. Thereby drawing their pursuers into what became an
impromptu trap.

Julius spotted the first invader just before he reached the spears.

His first thought was: Tentacles.

Then, almost simultaneously: Weapons. Armor. Intelligent.

When he reached the stack of spears, Julius was so frantic that he
knocked them over. Then, in his haste to pick up a spear, he tripped and
fell flat on his face.

He observed the ensuing events from his belly.

Joseph was the first to grab a spear from the pile on the ground. The
boy sprang into the center of the village. He was facing the invaders
from a distance of five meters.

Did I call it right, or what? thought Julius. The thing's the spitting
image of an owoc, except that it's smaller and has tentacles. And that
lean and hungry look. The peds are less massive, too. Must be faster but
why isn't it moving?

Later, he realized that the creature must have been frozen with shock.
It had never seen a human before, and humans looked like nothing else on
Ishtar.

They moved like nothing else, too. Julius was amazed at the speed and
ferocity of Joseph's attack. He was even more amazed that the boy never
hesitated.

The spear sank two feet into the invader's head, right between the eyes.
The creature dropped to the ground, instantly slain.

Three more invaders charged into the village. Joseph wrenched the spear
loose from his first victim's head and immediately cast it at one of the
new arrivals. The spear sailed through the air and struck perfectly.

By now, Ludmilla and Jens had arrived. They snatched up spears and took
their position next to Joseph's side. Ludmilla handed him a new spear.

The three teenagers stood poised, facing the two remaining invaders from
a distance of ten meters. Loud and rapid noises came from the invaders'
speaking tubes. A moment later, seven more of the creatures surged into
the center of the village.

Belatedly, Julius scrambled to his feet.

"Bring us more spears!" shouted Joseph.

Julius bent over and grabbed a half a dozen in his hands.

"Throw!" commanded Joseph. The three teenagers hurled their spears.
Joseph and Ludmilla hit squarely, killing their targets. Jens' spear
struck the cowl of his target.

In frustration, Jens raced forward and reached out for the spear
sticking out from the cowl.

The monsters finally reacted. The one toward which Jens was running
whipped its right tentacle around, wielding a weapon that looked
something like a morning star: a wooden shaft about a meter long, from
the end of which protruded eight spikes, each one about 20 centimeters
long and tipped with some kind of sharp stone.

One of the spikes pierced completely through Jens' right calf. The boy
cried out in pain and dropped to one knee. A moment later, another of
the invaders lashed him with a peculiar weapon that looked something
like a cat-o'-nine-tails. Jens threw up his left arm to ward off the
blow. The weapon tore great pieces of flesh from his arm and shoulder.
Anyone less massively built than Jens Knudsen would have been crippled.
As it was, blood gushed all over the left side of the boy's body.

Joseph raced up and killed the one who had lashed Jens with one thrust
of his spear. He timed his charge perfectly, stopping at just the right
time and place to avoid the lash of the weapon.

Ludmilla killed another, using the same tactics. Race in; stop suddenly
when the enemy whips the weapon around; lunge. If anything, the girl's
strike was done even more gracefully than Joseph's. Julius was not
surprised. The girl was not only big, she was possessed of uncanny speed
and reflexes as good as Joseph's, if not better.

As he watched, Julius was struck again by the discrepancy between
Ludmilla's Russian name and her appearance.

She's the spitting image of a Manchu princess no, warrior.

Jens Knudsen roared with rage and jerked his spear from his enemy's
cowl. Still on one knee, the boy threw himself forward and drove the
spear almost completely into the creature's body. He missed the brain
but three feet of spear driven through the eye, the head, and deep into
the body beyond was more than enough.

God, that kid's strong! Got to work on his tactics, though.

A lifetime spent observing nature had left Julius with ineradicable
habits. He wasn't much use in the actual fracas, but he never stopped
observing and taking mental notes.

Julius himself squared off with another invader, but the 'combat" which
followed was almost comical. He skittered back and forth, well beyond
range of the monster's weapons. Well beyond range of spear-thrust as
well. For its part, the invader did likewise.

What a pair of wallflowers! Julius clenched his teeth, and prepared to
lunge. It was not necessary Joseph charged past him and killed his
opponent.

Julius gasped for breath. Looking around wildly, he saw that the village
was a scene of utter confusion. Incoherent human shouts and owoc hoots
filled the air. Except for Joseph, Ludmilla and Jens who was still in
the fray, covered with blood all the other humans were racing about in
total panic.

No, not all. He saw Indira shepherding four little children toward one
of the long houses. Her face was pale and strained, but she seemed
otherwise calm and collected.

There were three invaders left alive. They spun around and began moving
(quite rapidly, thought Julius much faster than owoc) out of the
village, back toward the south.

"Don't let them get away!" he shouted. Joseph and Ludmilla raced off in
pursuit. Jens collapsed. From a distance, Julius saw Takashi Mizoguchi
racing up from the upunu fields where he had been working. The boy was
brandishing his only weapon a useless hoe.

But the sight of him running toward them terrified the fleeing invaders.
(The gukuy had not yet learned to distinguish between human tools and
weapons.) Two of them veered farther to the right, still heading south.
Julius watched with amazement as Joseph and Ludmilla slaughtered them
like hardened veterans.

Joseph never even paused at the first one he caught. He simply drove his
spear through the creature's left ped, pinning it to the ground. The
invader squawled and spun around in a half-circle, whipping its flail.
Joseph avoided the blow by leaping high into the air. When he landed on
the other side, he snatched the spear that Ludmilla tossed him (she was
carrying two) and continued in pursuit of the last enemy while Ludmilla
efficiently butchered the pinned one.

No not the last one! Julius watched in horror as one of the invaders
turned back and raced into the village. It was heading directly toward
Indira and the children.

Everything seemed to happen in slow motion. Julius desperately tried to
interpose himself, but he was too far away. He was a slow runner at the
best of times, and the invader was moving much faster than he would have
believed possible. He saw Indira spin around. Her jaw dropped open. She
pushed the children behind her and faced the onrushing monster. The
creature squawled and drew back its weapons.

Suddenly, from nowhere, Francis Adams appeared. The physicist was
shrieking like a maniac, holding a spear in both hands. His strike was
pitifully clumsy. The spear glanced off the leatherish-looking armor
which covered the creature's mantle. Adams' opponent whipped its flail
around; the weapon practically ripped the physicist's legs off at the
knees. Still shrieking, Adams collapsed onto the monster, grappling it
like a wrestler.

With horror, Julius saw the creature raise its head, clutch the
physicist's body with its tentacles and six small arms, and bite his
chest with its small but sharp beak. Blood spurted everywhere.

A moment later, Julius drove his spear into the monster's mantle. His
own strike was poorly done. The spear didn't glance off. He managed to
drive it through the armor and well into the tough tissue of the mantle.
But it was neither a killing nor even a crippling blow.

He had no time for a second strike. The thing was biting Adams. He
simply threw himself into the spear with the frenzy of desperation.

Luckily, Julius was a strong man. He managed to lever the monster onto
its side, where it lay squirming and writhing.

God, the thing must weigh at least three hundred pounds. But it's let go
of Adams.

At that moment, the rest of the defense guard finally arrived. Three
boys and a girl, brandishing spears, surrounded the stricken monster.
They drew back their weapons.

"No!" shouted Julius. 'Don't kill it! I want to keep one of them alive!"

Hesitantly, they obeyed. For its part, the monster was now lying still.
Its huge eyes seemed filled with terror; its body was colored bright
scarlet.

Julius turned to Adams. He knelt and cradled the physicist. Adams' legs
were a mangled ruin, and his chest was covered with blood. But his eyes
were open and he was conscious.

"Take it easy, Francis, take it easy," crooned the biologist. 'You're
going to be all right. Your legs are a mess, but the wound on your chest
isn't fatal. Looks terrible, but " (He was about to say: 'but I can see
the white bone of your sternum, and it's intact," but decided against
it.) Thankfully, Maria De Los Reyes appeared. She took one look at the
wounds and began bawling orders. Still blessed (cursed?) with his
observer's instincts, Julius saw that a semblance of order and sanity
was returning to the village. From the south, he could see Joseph and
Ludmilla loping back. They were moving quickly, but it was obvious that
all danger had passed. As soon as Ludmilla saw Jens' prostrate form, she
raced over and knelt at his side, crying and crooning.

"Julius " A whisper.

"Don't talk, Francis. You're going to be all right."

He glanced questioningly at Maria. She nodded.

But Adams seemed not to hear.

"Julius I  I'm sorry, Julius."

"Sorry? For what?"

A faint shake of the head. 'I just couldn't I just couldn't be of much
use."

Julius started to say something, but at that moment Adams went into
convulsions. He died thrashing in Julius' arms, in less than two
minutes.

Julius heard the children shouting. He looked over and saw that the
surviving invader was also thrashing about. Within seconds, it too was
dead.

I forgot, he thought vaguely. On earth, octopi have poisonous bites.
Must be true here also.

He looked over at the dead body of Adams' killer.

Well, you bastards figured out one way to kill us. But you have to pay a
hell of a price. It cuts both ways, asshole.

When they buried Adams the next day, Julius erected a marker over the
grave, as had become customary. The marker, carved on a small block of
stone, simply read:

Francis Adams Born Earth, AD 2126 Died Ishtar, CY 12

"CY" stood for 'Colony Year." The colonists no longer knew what year it
was by the Terran calendar, so they had established the day they
crash-landed as the base for their own calendar. They still maintained,
out of habit, the time measurement of years, months, and weeks.
Ironically, the one advanced technological device which still worked was
their well-nigh indestructable watches. So the colonists were able to
keep precise track of time. But on Ishtar, these measurements were
arbitrary and meaningless. The planet had neither seasons nor a moon.
Constellations, which could have enabled them to calculate the year,
couldn't be seen through the ever-present cloud cover. The Ishtarian day
was the only objective criteria. It was slightly over 23 hours long,
divided equally between daylight and darkness.

After a few minutes, as they stared at the grave, Indira heard Julius
mutter something.

"What's the matter?"

Julius looked at her and sighed.

"I'm going to have to make another marker."

"What's wrong with this one?"

Julius shook his head. 'He was a complete jackass the whole time I knew
him, except for the last few minutes of his life. But that made up for
everything."

The next day he erected a new marker. The only change was the name:
Doctor Francis Adams.

The one positive development, thought Julius, was that he would finally
be able to dissect a pseudo-cephalopod. But, again, he was frustrated.

"They want to what?" he demanded.

"They insist on burying them," said Indira. 'And they're upset at the
idea of harming them further."

"The things are already dead!"

Indira shrugged. 'The owoc don't look at it the same way. They're quite
insistent, Julius."

Inevitably, Julius lost the argument.

"I just don't get it," he grumbled, after the mass burial of the
invaders. 'Why should the owoc care what happens to the damn things?
They're hereditary enemies. Carnivores, to boot."

Indira glared at him, fists planted on her hips.

"Is that so? The great biologist Julius Cohen has already analyzed the
situation in every detail. The new creatures are carnivores, therefore
therefore what? I can remember you giving a different speech a few years
ago."

Julius looked uncomfortable. 'Well, I'm not claiming I understand
everything about the watchamacallits. But I know a savage enemy when I
see one!"

"Really? Such a brilliant mind. Let me ask you something, O great one.
What was the relationship between the Amish and the Nazis?"

Julius frowned. 'I don't understand the question."

"Really? How strange. A minute ago you had all the answers. I'll give
you a hint it's obvious."

Julius was still frowning. Indira snorted.

"They were both members of the human race. So, according to your logic,
it would make sense to kill Amish because they belonged to the same
species as the Nazis. Am I right?"

Julius hemmed and hawed, but Indira had him cold and he knew it.

She reinforced her point a few days later, after talking to the owoc.

"They're as unclear as they usually are, but there's no question that
they don't think all of the they're called gukuy, by the way are the
same. The owoc say that many of the gukuy most of them, I get the
impression are dangerous and dreadful. But there are others whom the
owoc seem to think rather highly of."

"Which others? And how can you tell the difference?"

Indira shrugged.

"That's great," muttered Julius. 'That's just great."

* * * Within a few months, the issue was resolved. And it became clear
that the difference between 'good" and 'bad" gukuy was not all that
difficult to determine.

Before that time came, however, the colony went through a major social
transformation.

The transformation occurred on two levels. On one level, the change was
simple the colony readopted Hector's military organization, with a
vengeance. To Julius Cohen's great satisfaction.

The more significant change, however, he greeted with much less
pleasure.

"Do you mean to tell me I'm fired?" he demanded, goggle-eyed.

Indira gazed at him patiently.

"I wouldn't put it that way, dear. I think of it as a necessary and
beneficial transition in leadership."

"They're too young! Immature!" "Really?" demanded Indira. 'Then explain
to me why they were the ones who " She stopped abruptly.

Julius winced; looked away.

"Who saved the day. While yours truly, the great leader, tripped all
over his feet and ran around like a chicken with its head cut off."

Indira's eyes softened. She reached out a hand and stroked his cheek.

"You were very brave, Julius. I was proud of you. And I saw no
resemblance to a chicken whatsoever."

Julius puffed out his cheeks, exhaled noisily. His lopsided grin
appeared.

"Nevertheless, it's true I didn't cut the most glorious martial figure."
He thought it over for a moment, then nodded his head.

"I suppose you're right. Joseph would make a better Captain. Or
Ludmilla."

"Yes, they would. Much better, to be honest with you. But that's not
even my main concern. The heart of the problem isn't military, it's
social. And it doesn't just involve you, it involves me as well. All of
us."

"What do you mean?"

"Julius, the children aren't children any longer. They have children of
their own now, and they have for some time been assuming more and more
responsibility for organizing the colony. As an historian, I can tell
you that the way in which a society handles the transition of leadership
from one generation to another is one of the key aspects of its health.
There are few worse social cancers than an older generation that won't
give way to new blood when the time is right."

"Yeah, I know. I've thought about it myself, now and then. I just
figured oh, I don't know. Later, I guess. I thought I suppose I thought
we still needed to lead things so that the kids would what's the
expression? grow up in the path of righteousness."

She chuckled. 'That's exactly why we have to step down now, Julius.
Nothing gains greater respect for an older generation than initiating
and leading a transition in authority. We won't be in the direct chain
of command, any longer. But I strongly suspect that our moral authority
will, if anything, increase."

The next day, Indira summoned the entire colony to a meeting. There, she
explained that the time had come for the younger generation to assume
the mantle of authority. She was a bit surprised at the matter of fact
way in which the teenagers accepted the change.

I've lagged behind, she realized. They've been ready for this for some
time. What nice, polite kids.

She was even more surprised at the outcome of the colony's deliberation.
Both at the speed in which the decisions were made and the end result.

The teenagers adopted a five-person governing council, to be elected by
direct vote. They ruled that the governing council would select one of
its members to serve as the official leader of the colony whenever the
council was not in session. The title of this post, proposed by Julius
as a joke and immediately adopted, was 'Admiral of the Ocean Sea."

Indira was the only one who voted against the title. But she was not too
upset, for she knew it was a gesture of fondness and respect for Hector
Quintero.

They also formally adopted Hector's military organization, and
established the ranks of one Captain, three Lieutenants, and as many
Sergeants as were needed to lead each squad.

Joseph then proposed that the Captain and the Lieutenants should
automatically become additional members of the governing council, with
voice but no vote. He also proposed that, by law, no one elected to any
of the four major military positions could also be elected as a voting
member of the council.

His proposals were adopted, with almost no discussion. (More accurately,
Indira realized, the discussions had already taken place informally over
a considerable period of time.) The elections also went quickly and
smoothly. Indira and Julius were elected to the governing council. They
both argued against the idea, but they were outvoted. Everybody else to
two.

The other members elected were Maria De Los Reyes, Jack Turrennes, and
Anna Cheng.

Joseph was elected Captain. Ludmilla, Takashi, and a boy named Andrew
Macpherson were elected Lieutenants. There was a bit of awkwardness
around the election of Lieutenants, for there were many who thought that
Jens Knudsen deserved the position. Others felt that while Jens'
strength and courage were unquestioned, he lacked other requirements for
military leadership.

The discussion was frank and open, especially Jens' own comments. (The
boy was recovering well from his wounds. The scars on his arm and
shoulders were horrible, but Maria said he would eventually recover his
full strength.) "I haven't got the temperament," he announced
cheerfully. 'It's that simple."

He waved off the protests.

"I didn't say I was stupid or anything. But you've got to have people
who can stay calm and think on their feet. Like Joseph or Ludmilla. Or
Andrew. Me, I tend to forget everything else except what I'm doing with
my own spear. It won't work."

Julius resolved the problem by proposing the title of Sergeant Major.
His proposal was adopted by acclaim, and Jens was unanimously elected.

In private, after the meeting was over, Julius remarked: "I don't really
understand why Joseph made his proposal. About the Captain and the
Lieutenants not being voting members of the council." "He's very shrewd,
Julius. I hadn't thought of the idea myself, but it's a good one. It
allows the colony to elect the people they feel most confident holding
the military positions, without automatically imposing the military
chain of command onto the colony as a whole."

"Still, I would have thought they'd want Joseph on the council, as a
voting member. As the leader of the council, actually." He chuckled.
"Admiral of the Ocean Sea' Adekunle."

Indira shook her head. 'I'm afraid the youngsters are seeing the picture
more clearly than we are, Julius. They're expecting the military
structure to be the dominant one."

Julius was surprised. 'You mean they think we're going to be another
Sparta?"

Indira shook her head again. 'I doubt if they remember much of what I
taught them about the ancient Greeks. And I mainly concentrated on
Athens, anyway. Besides, the Spartan analogy's inaccurate. The military
structure of Spartan society was shaped by the necessity of holding down
the helot class that did all the actual work. It wasn't just militarist,
it was class-ridden and highly oppressive. Our colony doesn't resemble
that in the slightest. No, the structure's more like that of the Zulus,
except it's democratic. Or the early Romans. That's probably a better
analogy."

"Well, that's a relief." Then, after gazing at her for a few minutes: "I
notice that you don't seem too relieved. Why?"

"What? Oh, sorry. I'm " She paused, heaved a sigh. 'I am afraid,
Julius."

"Of what? That we'll survive?"

"No, not that." A humorless chuckle. 'Human beings have always been
quite good at surviving. No, I'm worried about the future. What'll
become of this little society we've built, after we're gone."

"We seem to be off to a good start. They're nice kids, Indira. Not a
tyrant in the lot. And if there were, the rest of them wouldn't tolerate
it. If I say so myself, we've raised them with good ideas."

Indira shook her head. 'That means nothing, Julius. Or almost nothing.
The forces that shape history have their roots in the most basic
conditions of social and economic life. Good ideas are like the morning
dew in the face of those forces."

"I don't understand."

She stared at him, grim-faced. 'The Zulus were an impressive people, in
many ways. But they were a disaster for their neighbors. So were the
Romans, if you recall. It's easy to admire the culture of the early
Roman republic. But the republic didn't last, Julius. It gave way to the
empire, and all the rest of it. Not immediately, of course. It took
centuries. But historians think in terms of centuries. Sure, our kids
are filled with democratic and egalitarian ideas. How many generations
will that last in a Bronze Age society?"

She stared down the valley.

"What have we set loose upon this world?"

Chapter 11.

Whatever the future might bring, the change in authority set loose an
immediate whirlwind of activity.

The first thing Joseph did, after re-establishing the training program,
was to institute a systematic policy of exploration and reconnaissance.
Despite the fact that it had been twelve years since the humans arrived
on Ishtar, they really knew very little about the planet except the
immediate vicinity of the valley. Julius had often expressed a desire to
explore further, but the press of immediate concerns had always led him
to postpone the task.

The task would no longer be postponed. Nor was there any need to
postpone it. Grudgingly, Julius admitted to himself that he had fallen
into a pattern of inertia and routine. The truth was that the
cultivation of the upunu fields did not require all that much of the
colony's labor. In fact, the fields were producing a surplus well above
what the owoc in the valley needed, even without the colonists engaging
in constant toil. In the first years of upunu agriculture, the colonists
had been kept very busy exterminating the uduwo-snails that proliferated
every few months. But years of systematic slaughter had done their work.
For the past three years, they had only found snails on rare occasions.
And those were obviously recent immigrants from outside the valley which
only emphasized the importance of learning more about the region
surrounding them.

The first exploring expedition was led by Joseph himself. The explorers
were gone for only four days. (The limit was set by the length of time
that childfood would last without spoiling. Julius had once tried to
find a way to prepare the childfood for longer storage  'puke jerky," he
called it but his experiments had not succeeded.) When they returned,
Joseph reported that the valley was nestled on a plateau atop the huge
mountain, near to its southern crest. They had only been able to explore
the southern and western crests of the mountain. According to Joseph,
the western slope of the mountain was very steep and rocky. Humans could
climb it, with difficulty, but the boy doubted that gukuy could manage
to do so.

Nor was the steep slope the only obstacle to potential invaders. A
river, coming somewhere from the north-west, curved around the western
edge of the mountain, before disappearing to the southeast into a
gigantic swampy jungle. The jungle stretched west and south-west almost
to the distant horizon many, many kilometers away.

The danger lay to the south. There, the mountain's slope was much
shallower, and divided by many canyons which from a distance; they had
not gone down into them seemed to provide relatively easy access to the
plateau above. One of those canyons must have been the route followed by
the invaders.

Joseph intended to explore those canyons, and soon. But his next project
was to complete the circumnavigation of the plateau.

After resting for only a day, Joseph and his explorers set forth once
again.

Four days later, they returned with exciting and disturbing news. The
mountain plateau contained three more valleys like the one in which the
colony was situated. Two of those valleys were of approximately the same
size, but the third was much larger. It was located on the eastern side
of the plateau. And there were owoc living in it. And gukuy.

"Gukuy?" demanded Julius. 'Did you ... Was there any fighting?"

Joseph shook his head firmly.

"No, Julius. We first saw them from a distance, while we were still
coming down the slope into the valley. The gukuy were doing some kind of
dance, I guess you could call it. In front of a big hut of some kind, in
a clearing on the floor of the valley. There were some owoc there, too.
The owoc weren't participating in the activity, they were just browsing.
But they didn't seem at all nervous. Their mantles were gray, with even
a touch of green.

"We tried to sneak up and spy on the gukuy, but they spotted us once we
got close."

Julius grunted. That was not surprising. If the gukuy were like owoc and
there seemed no reason not to suppose so; they were obviously cousin
species their vision would be better than that of humans. The beings'
color sensitivity was especially acute, naturally enough. But they were
also even better than humans at detecting movement.

"Then what happened?"

"It was the strangest thing, Julius. The gukuy started whistling, and
they all turned red. But instead of fleeing, they well, I know this
sounds weird, but I'd swear they started trying to herd the owoc into
the fern groves. As if they were trying to hide them, or something. And
then some of the gukuy went into the hut and came back out carrying
those whip-like weapons. But they weren't threatening the owoc with
them. Instead, they started to come toward us. We left at that point. I
didn't want to do anything further without discussing it with the
council."

"It sounds like they were trying to protect the owoc," commented Indira.
'That's a hopeful sign."

Hearing an odd noise coming from Julius, she eyed him quizzically.

"You don't agree?"

"Well, yes and no. Or maybe, yes or no. Oh, hell! The point is this: I
agree that the gukuy were trying to protect the owoc. But I don't
necessarily see that as a good sign." "Why ever not?" demanded Indira.

Julius sighed. 'Am I the only one around here with a dark and evil
imagination? Indira, not everyone who protects someone else does so from
good motives. Ranchers on Earth protect their calves against coyotes. So
that they can eat the meat themselves."

Indira gasped. 'You can't be serious!"

He shrugged. 'I'm not saying that's what's happening here. I'm just
suggesting we not jump to conclusions."

At the council meeting that night, it was decided that another
expedition would be sent to the big valley. A larger expedition a full
platoon, in fact. But the size of the expedition was simply to protect
Indira. Julius was unhappy at the idea of her going. But it was a fact,
which he admitted, that she was still the best linguist in the colony.
Her owoc accent would never be as good as that of the younger
generation, but she was far better trained and equipped than they were
to learn a new language.

It was also agreed that the colonists would attempt to convince one or
two of the owoc to accompany them on their journey. The presence of owoc
would, hopefully, reassure the inhabitants of the other valley. They
would also make it possible to extend the length of the trip. One or
even two owoc could not, of course, feed an entire platoon. (The
colonists had found from experience that one owoc could feed three
humans.) But they could enable the expedition to stay out for a few
extra days.

To Indira's surprise, the owoc agreed readily to the trip. She had
thought the timid beings would be fearful of undertaking such a journey.
But it seemed that they had developed a mystical confidence in the
ability of humans to protect them. It was, as always, difficult to
understand the owoc. But she knew that the beings had, over the years,
woven the existence of humans into their concept of the Coil of Beauty.
The term which the giant creatures used for humans was 'the Shell of
Beauty." The term had not made much sense to her before. But now she
understood.

For a mollusc, a shell is that which protects. So help me, we've become
the guardian angels of their quasi-religion.

The real problem, in fact, turned out to be that all the owoc wanted to
come. Oddly enough, Kupu was particularly adamant. She seemed quite
upset (judging by the mottled blue and brown of her mantle) when Indira
insisted that she could not accompany the expedition. It would be hard
enough for any of the owoc to manage the trek through high country, much
less the huge and bulky mother.

"Why in the world would she want to come?" Indira asked Julius later.
'Kupu usually never leaves her oruc grove. What's so funny?"

Julius was howling.

"Don't you get it?" he gasped. 'The other owoc want to come because they
think it would be nice to pay a social call on their neighbors. But Kupu
"

He stopped speaking, choked with laughter. Indira waited impatiently.

"But Kupu wants to come because " Wheeze, wheeze. 'Because she's a
swinger."

Indira was not amused, until the next morning, when Julius' little joke
came to life. More than anything else, it was the dumbfounded expression
on his face when she told Julius that the owoc were now insisting that
Kupu had to come along.

"You mean ?" His rubbery face twisted into a befuddled scowl. 'It's not
possible! They're primitives. They can't possibly understand the dangers
of inbreeding."

Indira was grinning from ear to ear. As much as she loved Julius, she
often found him excessively opinionated.

"Don't ask me, O great biologist. But the owoc are quite clear on the
matter much clearer than usual, in fact. Kupu has to come along because,
and I quote, 'the clan needs to twine itself further into the Coil."
Sounds like a clear argument for exogamy to me. But what do I know? I'm
just a lowly historian."

Julius' glare was a joy to behold.

The trip was long and difficult. Not arduous, for the humans. Joseph had
found that the mountain valleys were all interconnected by passes and
gullies which posed no more than a mild challenge for humans in as good
a physical condition as the colonists were. But it was hard for the four
owoc who accompanied them, especially Kupu. Seeing how terribly the trip
strained the ungainly mother, Indira was amazed at her stoic
determination to continue.

I never fully realized just how ill-suited the owoc are to live in the
mountains.

She turned and looked to the south. She could not see it, of course, but
Joseph had described the vast, lush, flat plain which stretched south of
the mountain to the distant horizon.

What horror must live on that plain, to drive these poor beings here?

The trip took so much longer than anticipated that Indira began to
wonder if the humans could sustain their activity on the small amount of
childfood they each received every day. When the expedition arrived at
the first of the valleys which Joseph had found, however, the owoc
immediately began gorging themselves on the uroc which grew thickly
there. At first, Indira thought they were just indulging themselves in
their favorite treat. But when she saw the great quantities of childfood
which they produced, she realized that the beings had understood the
problem. Not for the first time, she had underestimated their
intelligence. The owoc were perhaps not as smart as humans they
certainly did not think the same way but they occasionally showed an
uncanny grasp of things.

They stayed in the valley for an entire day. The owoc clearly needed the
rest, and the humans were glad to eat more than rations. The next day,
before they left, the owoc spent most of an hour tearing off succulent
oruc leaves, until they each had as much as they could carry. When the
humans realized what they were doing, they immediately made lashing
material out of various vines which they found in the area. In the end,
the owoc set off with their broad backs piled high with leaves.

Finally, on the seventh day of a trip which the humans alone could have
easily managed in two, the expedition came over the crest of a pass and
onto the slope leading down to the big valley.

God, it is big, thought Indira. Three or four times the size of the one
we live in. So much for my occasional worries about overpopulation.

Then she remembered that this valley was already populated, and felt a
sudden shame.

We are not conquerors, to do with this land and its people what we will.
Let it never be so. Conquistadores are an evil of our past.

(It did not occur to her, then, that humans might not be the only
conquistadores on Ishtar.) As they descended into the valley, Indira
gradually realized that this huge valley was much less thinly populated
than their own. Even before the humans had arrived, the small valley to
the south had been fairly thick with owoc. Twelve years of human
agriculture had produced a bounty of food beyond the owoc's wildest
dreams. That surplus, combined with the high numbers of surviving spawn,
had resulted in a population density which sometimes reminded Indira of
her visits to her mother's Bengali homeland.

Eventually still at a distance of well over a kilometer away she spotted
the 'big hut" Joseph had described. Joseph's description, she now
understood, had been inaccurate.

He's never seen one before, of course. But if that's not a temple, I'm
going to resign in disgrace from the World Historical Association.

The structure was quite large, given the limitations of the bamboo-like
plant which the colonists had found to be the only suitable wood on the
mountain for construction. On Earth it would have been labeled
'three-stories." From what Indira could see at a distance, she doubted
that the building actually had stories, as such. It was built along the
lines of a simple A-frame. A shallow ramp led up to a terrace, which
stretched across the entire width of the building. From a distance, she
could not see into the building itself. The terrace was covered by the
sloping roofs, but she could not tell how far back it ran.

Perhaps it runs all the way through. There might not be any interior
walls at all. The building may just be a place for congregation. In this
warm climate, the only real reason for shelter is to keep off the
drizzle. And personal privacy. We humans have even adopted the dress of
Polynesians. Sarongs.

She smiled wrily. Since Janet died, Indira was the only woman on the
planet who covered her breasts. The young women simply wrapped the
sarongs around their waists.

As they neared the building, Indira began to spot owoc and gukuy moving
about. There were not many of them, and they were not engaged in the
'dance" which Joseph had described. (Which, she now suspected, was some
kind of religious ritual.) The handful of owoc she could see were
scattered about, browsing on patches of oruc. The gukuy she counted
three of them were all clustered in a field of upunu. Now that she was
closer, she could see that the field had a cultivated look about it. Yet
there was something odd about its appearance, which nagged at her memory
until recognition came.

That field's absolutely infested with uduwo snails. Why don't they do
something about them?

(It was not until later that she remembered what Julius had told her.
The beaks of the gukuy were adapted for eating meat, not vegetation. The
gukuy cultivated upunu fields not for the plants themselves but for the
snails which fed on them.) Indira now began rehearsing her speech of
peace and well-wishes. Halfway through the rehearsal, the speech became
a moot point.

The owoc, it turned out, had their own ideas on proper social behavior.

Suddenly, the four owoc with them began hooting loudly. Kupu's hoots
were especially deafening.

Immediately, the owoc and the gukuy in the valley stopped what they were
doing and looked up.

Within a few seconds, hoots were being exchanged back and forth between
the owoc on the slope and the owoc in the valley. Indira understood the
hoots of her owoc companions poetic variations, basically, on the
general theme of 'howdy." She could almost understand the hoots which
came in return.

It's a different dialect. But I don't think a sigh of relief that it's a
separate language.

At first, the gukuy observing the scene showed no reaction but a mild
mottling in their mantles. Green, Indira noted with relief. But then
they spotted the humans; and their mantles turned, in an instant,
scarlet and ochre.

Fear. Indecision. What frightening creatures we must appear to them.
Nothing on this planet looks remotely like human beings.

The owoc in the valley seemed totally unconcerned about the humans (whom
they had certainly spotted, at this distance). The beings were lumbering
toward the interlopers, issuing hoots which Indira could generically
recognize as happy greetings. And their mantles were now solid green,
untouched by even a trace of any other color.

But the three gukuy in the upunu field suddenly broke and raced toward
the 'temple," whistling loudly. A moment later, four other gukuy emerged
from the building. A rapid exchange of sounds and whistles.

Everything seemed to be happening at once. By now, the two groups of
owoc had met and were beginning to intermingle. Formality, Indira noted,
did not seem to be a prominent feature of owoc culture. But her
attention, for the moment, was on the temple.

A moment later, as she had feared, the seven gukuy in the temple
re-emerged and began hurrying toward them.

Bearing weapons. The same type which the raiders had carried those
stone-tipped whips and long-spiked morning stars. (Flails and forks, the
gukuy called them, as she would learn later.) And as they neared, she
saw that blue was beginning to ripple in their mantles. Blue was a color
rarely seen in the mantles of owoc.

Rage.

She saw the other humans in her party grow stiff and tense. Suddenly, at
Joseph's command, the youngsters  They're not youngsters anymore, you
damn fool! They're warriors, and if you don't think fast they're going
to react like warriors.

 reversed their grip on the spears.

Indira sighed with relief. Until she remembered that the grip which
holds a spear in the point-down position of peace is the same one used
to hurl it. And each of the warriors was carrying three spears.

She had not paid much attention to the military exercises, but she knew
enough to know that Joseph had trained his people to start an attack
with a cast of spears.

"Joseph!"

The youth did not look at her; his eyes remained fixed on the
approaching gukuy. But he gestured with his hand, in a manner which
simultaneously conveyed acknowledgement and surety. Then, when the gukuy
were no more than thirty meters away, he hooted loudly:

we not good peace is break are

The gukuy suddenly stopped. The ochre in their mantles strengthened. Red
fear remained, but the blue began to fade.

Joseph hooted again.

we must owoc friends us be are

The owoc from both groups suddenly began hooting back and forth. The
exchange was too rapid for Indira to follow, even if she had been able
to understand the dialect of the new ones. But whatever they were
saying, there was no mistaking the reaction of the gukuy. The blue
disappeared entirely, as did the red. Ochre remained, but it grew slowly
dimmer. And within minutes, faint traces of dappled green began to
appear.

That's one of the great advantages chromatophoric beings have over we
poor humans. Even if they can't speak another's language, they can still
read their emotions. What must they make of us, I wonder?

Incongruously, she snickered.

A bunch of miserable monsters, whose leader is always implacable about
everything and one of whom is always in heat.

She glanced at Jens, and had to suppress an outright laugh.

Not far from the truth, actually. It's amazing how the youngsters adapt
to the owoc. Even though they know that human color means nothing, they
can't help reacting unconsciously to Jens' white skin. I think every
youngster in the colony has shared either Jens or Karin Schmidt's bed.
Or both.

(She'd mentioned that to Julius, once. The biologist had laughed, and
said: 'Yeah, I know. On this planet, the myth is going to be that white
people are hyper-sexual. Give it a few generations and I wouldn't be
surprised to see pale skin make a genetic comeback. I doubt if the Nazis
would be pleased, though, given the circumstances. Unless they decided
the owoc were honorary Aryans.")

Eventually, expressing themselves in owoc hoots which Indira and Joseph
were able to interpret, the gukuy invited the humans into the building
which Indira thought to be a temple. Indira immediately accepted.

The minute she walked up the ramp, and saw the interior of the building
(as she had suspected, it was open all the way through), all doubt
vanished. There was no mistaking the meaning of the huge figurine which
rested at the center of the temple.

It was not a carving, but a construct a wicker-like framework of some
kind, embellished and decorated with shells, precious stones, and carved
horn?

She was deeply impressed by the artistry of the piece. The style was in
no sense naturalistic. It rather reminded her of the exaggerated style
of ancient African carvings. Except for the intricacy of the detail,
which had a vague resemblance to the ornate idols in Hindu temples.

But even more than the stylistic resonances, she was stunned by the
essence of the figurine itself. It was the statue of a gukuy, in repose.
Deep green, in color. She thought that the curl of the arms had meaning,
as well.

But whatever the specific significance of any particular detail of the
statue, the sense of the whole was unmistakable. Light years apart, and
thousands of year later in time, an alien race had produced a being
whose vision could not have been so different from one glimpsed on
Earth.

Staring at the statue, she took a deep breath. Then, for the first time
since entering the valley, felt the tension wash out of her completely.

Siddartha Gautama. The Buddha.

Chapter 12.

"The similarity's only general, of course," she explained to Julius
after she returned. 'Until I learn the gukuy language, I won't be sure.
Owoc is such a difficult language in which to convey precise meaning.
Still, from what I could glean, their faith absolutely resonates with
quasi-Buddhist conceptions."

"And just how did the teachings of the Buddha find their way to Ishtar
interstellar transcendentalism?" demanded Julius. 'Have you become a
mystic yourself now?" Indira smiled. 'No, Julius. I'm still the
hard-boiled rationalist you know and love. But convergence operates on
more than a biological level, my dear. It's not surprising at all,
actually. Most of the great religions on Earth arose within a relatively
short time, you know in cultures scattered all over the planet.
Beginning around a half millenium before the birth of Christ. In China,
you had Confucius and Lao-Tse. In India, Buddha and the founders of
Jainism, and the transformation of the Vedic traditions into Hinduism.
In Greece, the rise of philosophy. For that matter, it was during the
same general period that your Hebrew ancestors were hammering out their
own faith. The last great world religion, Islam, arose not much more
than a millenium later. A short time, really, in terms of the whole
sweep of human history."

Julius was frowning. 'I don't see the point."

"The point, Julius, is that this gukuy religion tells me a great deal
about the general state of current gukuy society. Societies, I should
say. The Earth's great religions and philosophies all arose in response
to the development of civilization. Animism and tribal pantheons are
inadequate to explain a varied and complex world. Intelligent beings
inevitably begin to grope for universal truths. And a universal
morality."

"That sounds like good news."

Indira shrugged. 'Yes and no. All of the great religions created a basic
code of ethics, which were actually quite similar in their principles.
Variations on the Golden Rule, essentially. That represented a gigantic
stride forward in human culture, no matter how often those principles
were later violated in practice. But the great religions also quickly
became a powerful tool for ruling classes to expand and strengthen their
domination. Constantine's conversion to Christianity was accompanied by
the Church's allegiance to the temporal authority of the Roman Empire,
to give just one example."

"There are empires on this planet?"

She nodded. 'At least one, that I know of. They call it 'Ansha.' Most of
the gukuy in the valley are from there, in fact."

"Oh, great. Our next door neighbors are imperialist missionaries."

Indira hesitated, pursing her lips.

"I don't think so. I won't be certain until I learn their own language,
but I'm pretty sure the gukuy in the big valley are refugees."

"Refugees? From what?"

"Religious persecution, I imagine. I don't think their religion is very
old, Julius. A generation or two, at the most. The gukuy say the statue
in the temple is a representation of someone named Goloku."

"Their god?"

She shook her head. 'That's not the sense I get. More like a revered
sage, or a prophet. The founder of their religion. But the point is that
the gukuy talk about Goloku in a familiar sort of way."

Julius stared.

"Yes, Julius. If I'm right, we're not dealing with an old and
well-established universal church."

She smiled. 'We are there with the apostles."

Later, Julius took her to the hut which had been formerly occupied by
Hector. Once inside, she saw that the center of the hut's floor was
dominated by a huge pile of clay, oddly shaped.

"What in the world is that for?"

Julius looked apologetic.

"Hey, I only got started. It's going to be a three-dimensional map of
the mountain. I've already roughed out the western side."

Indira saw that the pile of clay was in the general shape of an oval.
Julius pointed to one of the long sides of the pile.

"That's the southern slope," he explained. 'I've just started there.
That's going to be a lot of work, with all those canyons. But I've got
the time, since it'll be a while before Ludmilla's expedition finishes
exploring the east and north."

"It seems like a lot of work, Julius. It's very interesting, I admit,
but why "

She stopped suddenly, seeing the bleak look on her lover's face.

"It's a military map." Julius nodded. 'Yeah. Andrew suggested the idea,
and Joseph immediately adopted it. Joseph asked me to start the map just
before you left. He wants to have a good picture of possible invasion
routes onto the mountain. And I think he's already thinking in terms of
fortifications."

Indira sighed heavily. 'Do you really think this is necessary, Julius?"

The biologist's voice was harsh. 'Yes, I do. But it really doesn't
matter what I think. Or what you think, Indira. Captain Adekunle wants
it."

She stared at him. Julius shrugged. 'You can't have it both ways,
Indira. If the man's in charge, he's in charge."

She remembered the authority in Joseph's gesture when the gukuy were
approaching, and nodded. And the fear in her heart suddenly flamed
brighter.

Much to Julius' distress, Indira began making plans for an extended
sojourn among the gukuy in the big valley. She would be gone for weeks,
if not months, immersing herself in the gukuy culture and language.

But his unhappiness, and her plans, proved unnecessary. Four days after
her return, a delegation of gukuy arrived from the big valley. Upon
their arrival, they announced that they had come for an extended visit.
So that they could learn from the humans.

"Except they don't call us 'humans,' " Indira explained. 'Gukuy can't
seem to handle hard aspirates at all, and sibilants are difficult for
them. So I made it simple we are now 'ummun.' "

Julius scowled. 'Dirty, rotten linguistic imperialism, if you ask me."
Indira ignored the quip. She was frowning, deep in thought.

"What's on your mind, fair lady?"

"Huh? Oh, nothing. It's just I'm not sure yet. They seemed to agree to
the term 'ummun' readily enough, but I don't think "

She fell silent. Julius prodded her, but the historian refused to
speculate until she felt she understood the gukuy language well enough.

Two months later, she understood.

"They'll call us 'ummun,' out of politeness. But that's not really how
they think of us. We're demons."

"What?"

"You heard me. Demons. Powerful and fearful creatures from beyond the
known world."

"But why demons? We haven't done anything wicked to them. Or to the
owoc, for that matter." Indira smiled, and patted his cheek.

"Poor Julius. So stunted you are by that horrid Judeo-Christian
outlook."

Julius scowled. 'What's my ancestry got to do with this?" he demanded.

"In the rigidly monotheistic religions which shaped your cultural views,
regardless of whether you personally are still a believer all powerful
non-divine creatures are amalgated into devils. Pure evil. But the
original conception of demons doesn't necessarily carry the connotation
of evil. Although evil is always there, lurking below the surface. Not
evil, actually. Power. Tremendous, unbridled, fearful power which can,
of course, often manifest itself in evil ways."

"Why should they think we are powerful? Our technological level's really
no higher than theirs, when you get right down to it. Our theoretical
knowledge is vastly greater, of course. That's even true for the kids,
even though I often think the disrespectful little bastards think most
of what we teach them are fairy tales."

Indira smiled. As much as he carped on the sins of the younger
generation, she knew that the biologist adored them. Much more
uncritically, in fact, than she did.

"It has nothing to do with technology, Julius. At a Bronze Age stage of
historical development, there's really not that much difference between
the technological level of civilized societies and barbarians. The
difference is social."

"So?"

"So these beings are not stupid, dear. They don't understand us, but
they understand that we are very, very different. And then there's the
frightening way we move."

"Huh?"

She frowned. 'Surely you, a biologist, can understand that fear. Other
than size and we're much taller than gukuy, even if they outweigh us
what's the other physical trait that all animals instinctively fear?
Especially intelligent animals?"

Understanding came to him. 'Speed."

"Yes. Especially uncanny speed, produced by unusual forms of motion.
Didn't you tell me once that the reason humans have such an irrational
fear of snakes is because of the way in which they strike?"

"Yeah. A coiled snake can strike like a lightning bolt, so most people
think the reptiles are inhumanly fast. Truth is, a human can outrun any
snake that ever lived." "Have you ever thought of how the way humans
move must look to gukuy? Like nothing they've ever seen. Almost magical,
is the sense I get from them. Even with their excellent eyesight, their
brains have a hard time processing our motion. To them, we we flicker.
Half-seen; half invisible. And so quickly. And we can move easily over
terrain that they have to struggle through. You should have seen how
their mantles were flooded with orange when they saw two of the children
having a race up the mountainside."

"Orange? I've never seen that color on the owoc."

"No, neither have I. I'm certain that it's the color of astonishment.
Owoc are never astonished. Puzzled, often. But then their mantles turn
ochre with indecision and uncertainty. To be astonished amazed requires
more of a rational sense of what is normal in the world. To the owoc the
world simply is what it is. They may not understand it they often don't
but they accept it."

Julius grunted. 'True. They really aren't all that bright."

Indira's stare was stony.

"That's one way to put it. But there's another way to look at it, you
know. The capacity to be amazed presupposes that you believe in your
ability to understand the world. When something then happens which
doesn't fit your conception of reality, you are astonished and amazed."

"So?"

"So you see that as a sign of intelligence. To me, it's also a sign of
arrogance."

"Arrogance?"

"Of course. Only an arrogant creature thinks it understands the
universe. Like a cocky biologist from the streets of Noo Yawk." She
smiled sweetly. 'That's why you're so often astonished and amazed,
dear."

Julius' face twisted into a rueful grimace.

"Skewered again, damme. But what are you trying to say, Indira? You
don't really think the owoc are as intelligent as we are, do you? Or as
intelligent as the gukuy?"

She shrugged. 'What's intelligence? To you, it means the capacity for
rational, linear thought. Problem solving. In that sense, no the owoc
are like retarded children. But if you use the word 'intelligence' in a
broader sense, who's to say? The only thing I do know, after years of
living with them, is that the owoc view reality in a totally different
manner than we do. We think in terms of truth and falsehood. Things are,
or they are not. But with the owoc " She paused, then continued.

"Do you realize, Julius, that there is no equivalent in the owoc
language for the concept of 'falsehood' or 'lying.' "

"Hey, lady, give me a break. I never denied the sweet critters are as
honest as the day is long. I'd trust 'em with my piggybank in a minute,
if I still had one."

She shook her head. 'You're missing my point. Perhaps I put it badly. In
the owoc language, Julius, there is no such idea as the truth."

"What? But how "

She smiled. 'You can't imagine that, can you? The concept of 'truth' is
at the very bedrock of human consciousness. That's why" the smile became
a broad grin  'you are amazed at the idea that another species could
even think at all without the idea of 'truth' at the center of their
thoughts."

The expression on Julius' face caused her to laugh.

"Dear Julius! Did you ever read the poetry of Keats? 'Ode On a Grecian
Urn'?"

He shook his head.

"Beauty is truth, truth beauty, that is all Ye know on earth, and all ye
need to know."

She stared into the distance. 'Perhaps that ancient poet understood the
way of the owoc. We never will. But do not sneer at it, Julius. If I
might quote from another great English poet:

"There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of
in your philosophy."

The next several months were a busy time in Julius' life, however, so he
rarely had time to think about Indira's ideas. In truth, he saw very
little of his lover. Indira, as she had years before with the owoc,
insisted on living with the gukuy. Total immersion, she explained, was
the only efficient way to learn a new language.

He missed her company, of course, but he was engrossed in his own work.
Exploring expeditions were out constantly now, bringing back a steady
stream of reports. The topographic model of the mountain steadily took
shape and detail, until it was finally finished.

"I've decided to call the mountain Mons Ishtar," he announced to Indira
proudly that night.

"That's nice, dear," she replied absently. 'But the mountain already has
a name. The gukuy were here first, and they call it the Chiton."

Julius was disgruntled, but he accepted the change in names. By way of
obscure linguistic revenge, however, he began referring to the map hut
as 'the Pentagon."

The youngsters acquiesced in the name, although they didn't understand
it. In truth, they thought the name was silly the hut was obviously
square, not five-sided. Indira understood the name, of course. She did
not think it was silly; she thought it was grotesque.

But the next morning, when Julius examined the model, he admitted to
himself that the name change was appropriate. Especially from the south,
where all the gukuy seemed to come from, the canyons which were
regularly spaced along the mountain's flank would give it the appearance
of a ridged, flattish shell. Rising from the plain like a gigantic
chiton, moving from east to west.

The view from the north would seem different, of course. There the long
crest of the mountain broke sharply into a talus slope that, for the
uppermost hundred meters, was almost a sheer cliff. From the north, the
mountain would look like an enormous granite iceberg. (If there were
such a thing as an iceberg on Ishtar, which Julius doubted.) But it was
unlikely that many gukuy had ever seen the mountain from that angle.
Beyond the base of the talus slope stretched a vast broken badlands, as
far as the eye could see. By the verdant standards of Ishtar, the region
to the north was a barren wasteland.

From a military point of view, that discovery was relieving. There would
be nothing to fear from the north. The region was probably uninhabited.
And not even humans could ascend the northern cliff, without specialized
mountaineering equipment.

The danger lay south, and east. The eastern flank of the Chiton tapered
down much more gently than did its western flank like a flattened tail.
True, the eastern slope contained the densest vegetation on the mountain
much of it a type of quasi-bramble which Julius suspected any gukuy
would find well-nigh impenetrable. But there were still many open areas,
providing relatively easy access to the entire plateau. When questioned
by Indira, the gukuy confirmed that they themselves had reached the big
valley through that route. (And still did. Over time, Indira realized
that the gukuy in the valley maintained communication with their
co-believers in the south.) Joseph and his lieutenants, after discussing
the question with Julius, decided to ignore the potential danger from
the east, for the moment. The gukuy in the big valley would warn them of
any invaders coming from that direction. It was decided that, after
Indira established good enough communications with the gukuy, the
colonists would request permission to station one of the platoons in the
big valley. But until that time came, they would concentrate on the
immediate problem. The southern slope, and its canyons.

There were six canyons along the southern flank of the mountain. Three
of them veered off into cul-de-sacs, and could be safely ignored. But
the other three led straight toward the summit and one of them, the
largest, reached almost to the crest.

Andrew Macpherson was assigned the task of planning fortifications. The
task was daunting, given the small numbers of the colonists, but Joseph
was determined to create a stone wall barring access through the canyon.

Andrew came to Julius for advice on how to design fortified walls. As he
had years before with Hector, Julius steered him toward Indira. But
Indira refused to discuss the matter. Later, she promised, when she was
done with learning the gukuy language.

"Later" turned out to be much later. Indira had thought it would be
easier to learn the gukuy language than it had been to learn owoc. True,
she assumed the language would be more complex. But, on the positive
side, she thought there would be two big advantages: First, she
suspected that the gukuy mentality was much closer to human than was the
owoc. Second, the fact that both she and the gukuy could speak (at least
to some extent) the hooting language of the owoc gave them a mutual
verbal Rosetta stone.

Both of those assumptions turned out to be correct. But what she hadn't
counted on was two other factors. One: there was no such thing as a
'gukuy language." There were five languages represented among the gukuy
pilgrims. Three of those languages obviously belonged to the same
language group. They were among the languages spoken by the civilized
societies which lived somewhere to the south. Two of them were quite
closely related. (In her own mind, she thought of the relationship
between the three languages as being similar to trying to learn French,
Spanish and Russian at the same time.) Unfortunately, the dominant
language of the three and the language spoken by the majority of the
pilgrims was the 'Russian" oddball. The language in question was called
Anshaku, and she soon learned that it was the principal language of the
largest and most powerful empire in that part of Ishtar known to the
pilgrims.

The two other languages belonged to an entirely different language group
the language group spoken by most of the barbarian tribes which, she
learned, inhabited the great plain south of the Chiton. One of the
languages was Kiktu, the language of the largest and most powerful of
those tribes. The other 'language" was an argot, a Kiktu-based lingua
franca which could apparently be understood by all of the barbarians.

After dithering a bit (as someone who was both adept at languages and
enjoyed learning them), Indira decided that practical considerations
required her to focus her efforts on Anshaku and Kiktu. All of the gukuy
pilgrims from the south could speak Anshaku, at least to some extent.
And while only two of the pilgrims who came from the barbarian tribes
were Kiktu, the other barbarians could speak the language to some
extent.

Even after narrowing it down, she was still faced with a linguistic task
which would be equivalent to learning Russian and Arabic simultaneously.

And then another massive task was dropped upon her.

"They insist that I teach them to speak 'ummun,' " she complained to
Julius.

The biologist shrugged. 'So?"

Indira glared. 'So? This from a man who can barely speak one language?"

Julius shrugged again, grinning. 'Hey, I'm bad at languages. But I don't
need to be good at it. Most biological research is published in English.
You don't really need any other language that much, except Spanish which
I can read well enough."

He chewed his upper lip. 'Unless you want to be a dinosaur specialist.
Then, of course, you have to know Chinese. Fluently." A shudder; another
grin. 'Not the least of the reasons I didn't specialize in dinosaurs."

Indira was still glaring. 'But the whole thing doesn't make sense! There
are only a handful of humans on this planet. Why should they take the
time and trouble to learn our language when we're willing to learn
theirs?"

Julius stared at her. 'A question like that? Coming from an historian?"

He started counting off on thick fingers.

"I can think of three reasons, right off the top of my head. One. They
don't know how many of us there are." He held up a hand, forestalling
her protest. 'Oh, sure, they can see there's only a handful of us here.
Today. But where did we come from? And how many more of us might
follow?"

"I have every intention of explaining where we came from and why there
won't be any more of us. Not for centuries, at the earliest."

"And how will you convince them? The beings on this planet can't have
the faintest conception of astronomical reality. In all the time we've
lived here, not once has the cloud cover broken. Not for even a minute.
The earliest civilizations on Earth even barbarians, for that matter had
a highly advanced empirical knowledge of astronomy. These people can't
have any whatsoever. We came from beyond the sky that's the most they'll
understand."

"But "

"But what, Indira? How can you possibly expect people at this stage of
cultural development to understand the reality and the limits of an
advanced technological culture like our own? You know and I know that
the society was barely able to muster the resources to equip our
expedition. You know and I know that it was a one-shot deal. You know
and I know that humanity is still utterly preoccupied with the gigantic
task of rebuilding our own planet. You know and I know that it'll be
generations centuries, more likely before another interstellar
expedition is sent out. You know and I know that faster-than-light
travel has been proven to be a complete pipe dream, and that space
travel is going to remain limited to slightly above 10% of the speed of
light. You know and I know that means another expedition to Tau Ceti
would take over a century to get here even after it left Earth orbit.
You know and I know that even then the priority would probably be to try
for a new solar system altogether."

He stopped and took a deep breath.

"When we signed up for this trip, love, the Society warned us that we
couldn't expect a follow-up expedition for at least five hundred years.
Minimum. More likely a millenium. But how are you going to even explain
any of that to the gukuy in any way that they could possibly understand?

"So how do you expect them to believe you?" He held up a second finger.
'Which leads me to point two. If I were in their shoes (so to speak), I
would damn well want to learn as much as possible about a bunch of
strange demons who landed in our midst. Sure, right now the demons seem
friendly, and there ain't many of them. But who knows? Best to learn
what we can about them and the best way to do that is to learn how to
speak 'demon.' "

He stopped. Indira was scowling up at him.

"And?"

"And what?"

"What's the third reason, dammit? You said you could think of three,
right off."

"Oh." He grinned, and made an annoying clucking sound with his tongue.

"Such a question from an historian! Indira, what's the language that all
bright young kids all over the world want to learn as soon as they get
to school?"

"English."

"Yes. But why? It's a completely foreign language comes from a small
little island half way around the world from most of them. Originally
spread by rapacious imperialists, in fact." Indira sighed. 'Because it's
one of the global languages. The dominant one, in fact. And because much
of the world, especially Africa and large parts of Asia, are still so
fragmented linguistically that knowing how to speak your own tongue
doesn't get you very far in the big, wide world."

"Exactly. My best friend in college was from Pakistan. His English was
better than mine. So was his accent, according to everybody except Noo
Yawkers. But he barely spoke Urdu. I asked him why, once. He asked me if
insanity ran in my family."

"But none of that's true here, Julius," protested Indira. 'No human
language occupies that position on Ishtar."

"True and not true. I'm interested in something. You just called this
planet 'Ishtar.' Why? You're always chiding me for being a linguistic
chauvinist, Indira. But here you are using a name for this planet which
was adopted on Earth over a century before we even got here. Why not use
the native word?"

Indira took a deep breath. 'Which one? Each language has a different
name for 'the world.' Most of them mean 'the Meat of the Clam,' but "

"But which one should you use? Without offending the others? So you took
the practical course you fell back on a name that's not offensive to any
local foibles because it's so utterly alien."

Indira's eyes widened. 'You think "

"I think you're underestimating these people, Indira. I think you're
dealing with some very intelligent people. Visionaries, in fact. Who are
struggling to forge a universal faith which can be common to gukuy from
all cultures."

He reached out and stroked her cheek. 'So give them the universal
language they need, love. The language brought by demons from beyond the
sky, that all peoples and tribes can learn to speak without fearing
their own culture will be subordinated."

She initially thought to teach the gukuy Spanish, but finally settled on
English. True, English was a notoriously difficult language to learn. In
many ways, Chinese would have been the best choice, since all of the
gukuy languages tended to be tonal. But Chinese was a difficult language
in too many other respects. The Chinese themselves had struggled for
centuries to fit the precise rigidities of technological society into
the amorphous grammar of their language. (The ideogrammatic writing
style had been abandoned completely almost a century earlier, in favor
of a modified version of the Latin alphabet.) In the end, her decision
was not determined by narrow linguistic factors. It was a simple fact of
history that English was well on its way to becoming the universal
language of the human race. At the historic Singapore Convention, where
the world's language practices were finally agreed upon, English had
been listed as simply one of the four accepted 'global languages." The
decision had been a compromise. Even then, English was obviously in a
league of its own as an international language. But there had been no
reason to ruffle the feathers of the Chinese, who were prone to complain
that as many people spoke their language as did English (even though, in
private, their representatives would admit that Chinese had never spread
very far beyond the boundaries of those who were ethnically Han). And
the French, outraged at their own demotion to a 'regional language," had
made clear that they would under no conditions agree to the elevation of
English to the world's sole accepted global language. (For the first
time in centuries, the phrase 'perfidious Albion" had echoed in the
corridors and chambers of diplomacy.) So, wisely, the representatives of
English had cheerfully agreed to the polite fiction that English was
only one of four 'global languages," trusting to the logic of history
and the common sense of the world's population to settle the question in
practice.

Spanish would have been easier to teach to gukuy than English. But
English was the language of the colonists, and many of the younger
generation spoke no other tongue. And, in the back of her mind, Indira
knew that someday contact with Earth would be reestablished. Centuries
in the future, true, but it would happen eventually. Better then for the
gukuy to be fluent in English.

Then, just as she thought she had settled the question, a new (and, to
her, disturbing) twist arose. Joseph approached her, a few days after
her conversation with Julius, and asked which of the four global human
tongues would be the most difficult for gukuy to learn even if they
already knew English.

"Arabic," she replied instantly. 'It's a Semitic language, totally
unlike English. So's Chinese, of course. But gukuy could learn Chinese
easily enough. I'm not sure they could ever really learn Arabic. Not to
speak it, at least the aspirates in Arabic are brutal. They could learn
to read Arabic, I imagine. But Arabic script's totally different from
the Latin alphabet." Joseph nodded thoughtfully, and left. The next day
he instituted classes in basic Arabic (oral and written), taught by six
of the youngsters for whom it was their (still-remembered) native
tongue. All members of the platoons were strongly encouraged to attend
(which meant everyone except Indira and Julius). For officers and
sergeants, attendance was mandatory.

Indira was upset, but she made no protest. 'If the man's in charge, he's
in charge.' She knew what Joseph was doing, of course. She didn't think
she'd ever mentioned it in the history classes she'd given the children
as they grew up. But it hardly mattered. Joseph was extraordinarily
intelligent certainly as intelligent as the officers of the United
States Army during World War II who'd thought of using Navajo soldiers
to send radio messages in a language which was incomprehensible to the
Japanese Empire.

Battle language.

Chapter 13.

The military training which Joseph and his lieutenants had reinstituted
indeed, taken far beyond the level achieved by Hector Quintero was soon
put to use.

A scouting patrol reported the appearance, on the lower southern slope
of the Chiton, of a small party of gukuy slavers. The identity of this
party as slavers was confirmed by the Pilgrims of the Way (as the gukuy
from the big valley called themselves), when they heard the scouts'
report. The gukuy on the slope were bearing large manacle-like devices,
identical to ones discovered on the bodies of the earlier group of
invaders. The Pilgrims informed Joseph that these devices were employed
exclusively by slavers seeking owoc. The devices had no military use
whatsoever.

Two platoons Ludmilla's and Takashi's set forth immediately to destroy
the slaver party, with Joseph in overall command. Joseph chose those two
platoons because Takashi's platoon had been experimenting with the use
of shields, in addition to the light 'sortabamboo" armor with which all
the platoons were equipped. Joseph wanted to learn from practical
experience whether the experiment would bear fruit. If so, he would arm
all three platoons with shields. If not, Takashi's platoon would resume
training with spears only.

The slaver party had moved. It took the human warriors almost another
day to find them. The slavers had apparently chosen to approach the
mountain-top through one of the smaller canyons. (Joseph took note of
the problem; thereafter scouting patrols were instructed to continue
shadowing the enemy, sending back only one individual to report.) During
the middle of that night, the humans surrounded the slaver camp on both
sides of the canyon. Joseph thought that the slavers would not expect an
attack directly down the slopes of the canyon, given the gukuy
difficulty with steep terrain. (In this regard, he proved to be correct;
and took note.) He also thought that by attacking in the middle of the
night the humans would completely surprise the slavers. (In this regard,
he proved to be wrong; and took note.) The attack did not surprise the
slavers. At least, not in the sense that Joseph had intended. As soon as
the first human warrior began moving down the slope, the inhumanly
perceptive eyes of the gukuy camp guard spotted her. The guard instantly
raised the alarm. By the time the first human reached the base of the
canyon (within seconds), all of the gukuy slavers were roused and armed.

Joseph was deeply impressed by the quick reactions of the gukuy; and
took note. Later, in the course of discussions with the Pilgrims of the
Way, he learned that the slavers' reactions had been unusually quick.
The Pilgrims thought that these slavers had been exceptionally edgy no
doubt because they were fearful of Kiktu. He filed the information away;
but ordered the platoons to increase their wind sprints and emphasized
training in rapid movement over rough terrain.

Although Joseph failed to achieve the surprise he had intended, the net
effect was hardly any different. The gukuy simply stared in shock and
amazement at the bizarre shapes flickering down the mountain sides
toward them, at a speed they could barely comprehend. Six of the ten
slavers were butchered before any of them so much as moved. The
remaining four did not survive more than fifteen seconds. Only one of
them put up any kind of effective resistance at all. She managed to
inflict a minor wound on a boy's upper arm before his spear went into
her brain.

The boy was one of Ludmilla's warriors. A girl in Takashi's platoon was
much more seriously injured. The injury resulted not so much from any
skill on the part of her opponent, but from the fact that the large
shield she was carrying had caused her to fall off balance when she
reached the floor of the canyon. She was unable to move back quickly
enough when the last surviving slaver almost accidentally flailed her
leg. The slaver died immediately thereafter from three spear thrusts.
But the girl's leg was horribly mangled. So horribly, in fact, that she
limped for the rest of her life and was unable to remain in the platoon.

(A fact which upset her deeply, until Joseph appointed her to replace
Takashi as the head of the fortification project. The girl threw herself
into the effort, as a result of which the mountain's fortifications took
shape far more quickly than would have happened otherwise. Over the
years, Adrian Harabi would become famed as the shrewdest designer of
fortifications and siege tactics of any being in the known portion of
Ishtar. But she would always take her deepest satisfaction from the
first fortified wall she constructed, across the big canyon of the
Chiton. The wall would ever after be called 'Adrian's Wall," to Indira's
amusement.) Despite the casualties, Joseph considered the ambush a great
success. An entire party of slavers had been exterminated. But more
importantly, he and his warriors had learned much.

The shields were immediately discarded. Nine out of the ten slavers had
been slain by members of Ludmilla's platoon principally because they had
arrived at the canyon floor several seconds before any of the
shield-laden members of the other platoon. It was obvious that the
protection provided by the shields was a poor exchange for lessened
mobility.

Over the next two days, Joseph assessed the results of the battle with
his platoon lieutenants and Jens Knudsen. In the end, they adopted what
would become the central principle of the little human army's military
doctrine. Speed and mobility are the heart of victory. All else is
subordinate.

It was a simple idea, to them; even obvious. When they told Indira of
their conclusion, she said nothing. She could have encouraged them, for
she knew they were right. She could have reinforced their conclusion
with a thousand illustrations from human history, had she so chosen.
Indeed, Joseph waited patiently for long minutes before he walked away,
the stiffness in his face the only indication of the deep hurt at her
silence. Soon thereafter, his lieutenants followed him, their
expressions equally stiff. Only Jens Knudsen remained behind; but he was
silent, and would not look at her.

Some part of Indira wept, as she watched the tall figure of the boy she
loved walk away from her. A breach had occurred, she knew. It would only
widen in the years ahead; and might never be healed.

But she could not speak. Her love of Joseph had, in that moment, been
overwhelmed by dread.

Of him. Barely eighteen, the boy was, with no experience or training to
guide him. Yet, in one battle not even a battle, a minor skirmish he had
grasped the secret which had eluded the vast majority of humanity's
generals throughout the long and bloody history of the species.

The advent of mechanized warfare had made the secret obvious but, even
then, not in time to prevent the ghastly slaughter of the trenches in
World War I. The Nazi blitzkrieg tactics had finally burned the lesson
home, a generation later.

Of course, the secret had been known earlier. Much earlier, and by more
than one general or people. But never, Indira knew, had the secret been
taken closer to heart than by a people whose technology was barely
Neolithic. A people who had created the greatest empire in the history
of the human race.

As she watched Joseph Adekunle walk away, Indira did not see a tall boy
whose ancestors had lived in the rain forest of West Africa. She saw the
much shorter and lighter-skinned ghost of a different man, from a
different continent.

The maneuvers of that man's armies had been measured in degrees of
latitude and longitude, despite the fact that their only vehicles were
horses and camels. His soldiers were reputed by his defeated foes to
have been an innumerable 'horde"; yet, in actual fact, he had been
outnumbered in every battle he won. And he won almost all his battles.
He had developed principles of discipline combined with lower-level
initiative which, to his bewildered and hapless victims, had seemed like
magic on the battlefield. He, and his fellow generals, had incorporated
the systematic use of artillery into warfare, more than half a millenium
before Napoleon. He had, centuries before the invention of electronic
communication, discovered the centrality of what a word-besotted later
culture would call CCCI  'communication, control, command and
intelligence." His armies, which continued his traditions after his
death, shattered every realm which opposed them. China, the most
powerful civilization of the epoch, had fallen to them. The cumbersome
armies of Europe, moving like snails beneath iron shells, had been
slaughtered like lambs. The vastnesses of the Russian forest and people
defeated every invader which came against them, throughout history.
Except once. Except when they were conquered by armies trained and led
by the greatest general the human race ever produced.

Subedei Bat'atur. Born into the Reindeer people, an extremely primitive
and obscure tribe related to another obscure and only slightly less
primitive tribe, called the Mongols.

Subedei Bat'atur. Commander of the tumens, the 10,000 strong divisions
of Genghis Khan's armies.

By his lights, and those of his people, Subedei Bat'atur had been
neither cruel nor sadistic. The Mongols simply approached warfare as a
practical task, to be carried out as efficiently as possible. The nomads
derided as superstitious savages by the civilized peoples who surrounded
them had, in fact, studied warfare with the clear and unblinkered eyes
of a child. They experimented with the tactics and methods of their
enemies, and adopted those which they found useful. For all the
breathtaking scope of their vision which was nothing less than the
conquest of the entire known world they were neither haughty nor
arrogant. Quite unlike the vastly more cultured Chinese mandarins and
the (much less vastly) cultured knights of Europe, who thought there was
nothing to be learned from others.

The Mongols taught them otherwise. Or, at least, taught them to fear
what they could not understand or learn.

In truth, Indira had always had a certain genuine admiration for the
Mongols. The commonly accepted verdict of later history, she thought,
was quite unfair. The Europeans who, at the time, had been able to do
nothing more than pray for deliverance (which they received, simply
because the Mongols, having already conquered half of Europe, decided
the other half wasn't worth it) had taken their scholarly revenge
centuries later. The Mongols had become synonomous with pure and simple
brutality.

How many people knew, Indira wondered, that the Mongols instituted and
enforced a policy of religious toleration which was unheard of in the
Middle Ages? (She even smiled, then, in that moment of heartbreak,
remembering the time that the Great Khan Mongke invited representatives
from all the great religions to come to the imperial capital at
Qarakorum. They had come representatives from Islam, Catholicism,
Orthodox Christianity, Buddhism, Taoism and had debated theology before
the Great Khan and his court. Gritting their teeth, because the holy men
were accustomed to other methods of settling accounts with heretics and
nonbelievers. But the debate had not degenerated into violence. Not with
the Mongol tumens prepared to enforce the law.) How many people knew
that the Mongols fostered the greatest explosion of trade and commerce
that had ever taken place prior to that time between China and the
western lands of Islam and Christendom? That they built, in China,
twenty-seven observatories and then invited the world's greatest
astronomers to come from Persia to help the Chinese learn to use them?
That the Mongols built hospitals and even a medical academy,
institutions which would have mystified the Europeans of the time?

Almost no one, thought Indira, beyond a few professional historians.
Whatever the glories of their later rule, the methods which the Mongols
used to create that rule were all that remained in the common memory of
the human race.

An admirable people, in many ways. But they had approached warfare with
the clear eyes of a young and unfettered people. They had examined war,
and grasped its secret.

Speed above all else. Mobility above all else.

Utter ruthlessness.

Their victims had numbered in the millions.

She watched Joseph walk away, paralyzed between the warm heart of a
mother and the cold brain of an historian.

Julius soon noticed the quiet estrangement between Indira and Joseph,
and was greatly distressed. In his clumsy way, he attempted to
intervene. Indira, at first, denied that there was any such
estrangement. Denied it hotly, in fact; and accused Julius of various
unsavory psychological traits. She was lying, Julius knew perhaps as
much to herself as to him. He knew she was lying because the accusations
had been grotesquely unfair (if not totally groundless). Indira's
criticisms of Julius were normally rather mild but excruciatingly
accurate.

He then approached Joseph. At first, the boy also denied that any
estrangement existed. But he did not throw up a cloud of anger. So
Julius persevered, until he managed to crack, slightly, the shell of
hurt which Joseph had erected.

"She is keeping secrets from me, Julius. Secrets I must learn."

Julius was dumbfounded. 'Secrets? What secrets?"

Joseph groped for words. 'Things she knows. She is wise, Julius. She is
the wisest being that exists. Especially in those matters which are at
the heart of things."

The boy gestured, in a way which encompassed both the village and the
lands beyond.

"How people live, and grow. What roads they must take, and which they
must avoid."

His face grew hard.

"And she also knows the secrets of war. And she will not tell me. My
mother has abandoned me, when I need her most."

He refused to speak further. And Julius did not press him, for he
understood the boy was right.

Yet, he also understood the fear possessing Indira. He did not feel that
fear so deeply, himself. Perhaps it was because he was wiser; or,
perhaps, more foolish. More likely, he thought, it was because he saw
the world through the eyes of a biologist rather than an historian. A
paleontologist, to boot for whom all of life is a grand and glorious
testament to the inevitability of extinction; and to the new life for
which that extinction makes room.

As a human with a good heart, he regretted the suffering of the past.
But he thought it had been a necessary evil, an inescapable part of the
progress of humanity. Indira, ironically, had a considerably cooler
personality than Julius. And she knew, even better than he, that the
anguish of human history had been the inevitable accompaniment of human
advancement. But she also knew far, far better than Julius just how
truly horrible and protracted that anguish had been.

Historical suffering, to Julius as to most people of the early 22nd
century was a pale shadow, an abstraction. He had heard of things, even
read about them. He knew who the Mongols were. And Tamerlane.

But Indira had walked the barren vastnesses of Central Asia, where a
great civilization had flourished while Europe was a land of fur-clad
savages. Before the Mongols came, and Tamerlane. Julius had heard of
those things, and read about them upon occasion. Indira had studied the
chronicles, and looked at the ruins.

And the bones.

To the warm-hearted Julius, bones were the stuff of his trade. To the
cool and distant Indira, each bone had cried out with agony; and horror.

Common bones. Not buried in great sepulchres. The bones of illiterate
peasants, lying where they had been kicked aside by conquerors. The
bones of the ocean of humanity, the uncountable multitudes of unknown
people whose little lives had been the real stuff of history. Without
whose endless toil, suffering and perseverance, nothing else would have
been possible.

It could be said that the end result of human history had been worth the
cost. It was said often, in fact, in the 22nd century. By professional
historians as well as laymen.

Indira did not disagree with that assessment. As an historian certainly
as a woman she had not the slightest romantic illusions about the
realities of human life during the long childhood of the species. That
period, tens of thousands of years in duration, when a relative handful
of hunters and gatherers had been simply a part of the biological
landscape of the planet. Tiny cultures, which had been characterized by
a degree of social egalitarianism which would not be recaptured until
the last century of human history.

Thousands upon thousands upon thousands of years of relative peace and
social tranquillity. And, she knew as well, lives of utter ignorance;
ending at an age when modern humans were barely out of school.

No, modern civilization was worth the price it had cost. Indira had no
doubt of it. Many times, back on Earth, she had closed the book she was
reading; and heaved a sigh of relief that she was fortunate enough not
to have been born in the past. Any part of that past prehistorical or
civilized. She had been blessed with the rare good fortune not to have
been a hunter-gatherer; or a slave; or a peasant toiling in the fields
of her lord; or the victim of a bombing raid.

Indira knew she had been blessed beyond belief. She had been born in the
22nd century. At the only time in the history of the human race when
life was truly all it could be. A time when the daughter of Bengali
peasants and Bolivian tin miners could aspire to anything.

And had. She had aspired to the stars, and reached them.

Until, caught in disaster, a courageous captain had chosen to include an
historian among the handful of adults who would survive the catastrophe.
Plunged, before she was knew what was happening, back into the Bronze
Age.

Years ago, Indira had stopped wondering why Captain Knudsen had included
her among the survivors. She knew. He had known that, if they survived,
his children would need a guide through the terrors of history.

She tried to explain her dilemma to that Captain's son. For, of all the
young leaders of the colony, Jens Knudsen was now the least distant. She
tried to explain that history held no 'secrets"; that there was no guide
through its terrors; that anything she would try would inevitably fail
of its purpose not immediately, but over time, twisted into unforeseen
pathways. Stumblingly, she tried to explain that the personal freedom,
equality and social justice which 22nd century humanity took for granted
was the end product of millenia of struggle and suffering. She tried to
explain that, in the end, the precondition for that progress was the
vast wealth of modern society, which was itself another end product of
the long, tortuous, bitter road of history.

How then could she show them the way forward? In a new Bronze Age, a new
Time of Troubles, on a new planet? All she could see in the future was
an endless vista of pain. Every way forward led nowhere but down,
twisting and winding back into the nightmare coils of ancient history.

Jens had listened patiently to her explanation. When she was done, he
had simply shrugged.

"I don't doubt you," he said, 'but I don't think you really understand.
Joseph is absolutely right, and you are absolutely wrong."

"Why?" she cried.

Jens stood and looked down at her. His face, then, had been as cold as
Joseph's.

"Because history is not something that used to happen. It is happening
now, and we are in it. And things have to be understood, as best we can,
and then things will have to be done, as best we can, and we will have
to do them. Alone."

He began to walk away, and then turned back.

"I was too young when my father died to remember him. I know only that
he tried to do the impossible he tried to land a spaceship that was
never designed for planetfall. He failed, but at least he tried."

* * * For months after that episode, Indira was plunged into a deep
depression. She dealt with it by monomaniacally immersing herself in the
language and culture of the gukuy pilgrims.

During that period, she learned much of their language and culture.
Enough to develop a profound admiration for the gukuy of the big valley
coupled with an equally profound fear.

For Indira also, it was one thing to know a truth in the abstract.
Another to grasp it in all its concrete permutations.

It was, indeed, a Time of Troubles.

She had intended, as her first act, to convene a meeting of the council,
where she would explain the truth to the leaders of the human colony.
But when Adrian Harabi approached her, and hesitantly asked for advice
concerning the fortified wall she was building, Indira changed her
plans.

First things first. She was ruefully amused to see how easily even she
could make that decision. It was indeed true, as Samuel Johnson had once
said, that the prospect of being hanged concentrates the mind
wonderfully.

So she accompanied Adrian to the proposed site of the wall. Soon they
were joined by Joseph and his lieutenants.

Joseph was stiff and distant, at first. But as Indira began explaining
the historical experience of the human race the hard-learned techniques
of fortifications and siege tactics she could see the old warmth
returning to his face.

She was both happy and sad to see it. Happy, for she loved the boy, and
was gladdened to see his love for her returning. And sad, for the means
of its return was his eager apprenticeship in the science of slaughter.

When the meeting convened the next day, Indira began by saying that the
language of the pilgrims should no longer be referred to as 'gukuy." It
would be like calling the languages of Earth 'human." There were five
languages represented among the gukuy on the mountain, she explained to
the council.

"The main language is Anshaku. That's the dominant language of the Ansha
Prevalate, the great empire to the south."

"How far south?" demanded Joseph immediately.

Indira understood his concern.

"I don't think we need to worry about the Anshac, Joseph. At least, not
in the immediate future. Most of the gukuy in the big valley there are
about sixty of them, by the way, and they call themselves the Pilgrims
of the Way are from Ansha. From the helot class, mostly, although there
are several former members of the lesser warrior clans " She paused,
observing their confusion.

"Perhaps I'd better fill you in on the general picture."

A sharp look at Julius.

"If the crotchety member of the council will refrain from sarcastic
remarks on the subject of professorialism."

"We are all ears, Indira," responded Anna Cheng immediately.

"I will silence the old crank, if necessary," added Ludmilla.

Indira repressed a smile, seeing the look of outrage on Julius' face.

"The social structure of the gukuy empires let's call them that, for the
moment has basic parallels to the civilized societies of Earth's Bronze
Age. Unstable empires. Independent principalities and city-states.
Constant warfare and conquest. Dynastic revolts except that the gukuy
don't really have dynasties.

"That's the biggest difference between the gukuy empires and any human
parallel. The reproductive methods of the gukuy don't allow for the
development of dynasties at least, not in the sense that humans use the
term. The King begat a King, who begat a King, and so forth."

"They'd be queens," interjected Anna.

Indira shook her head. 'No, not even that. I made the same mistake, at
first. I assumed that gukuy society would be matriarchal, in the sense
that human societies became patriarchal after the Neolothic revolution.
But the differences between gukuy and humans run deeper than that. True,
the females are dominant. In that sense, you could describe gukuy
society as 'matriarchal.' But the gukuy females are not mothers. The
gukuy don't have a simple two-sex system. Each sex is further divided.
The big majority of gukuy are sterile females. They do most of the work,
and the fighting. And they dominate gukuy society on every level.

"You have to understand what this complex sexual relationship means. The
sterile females dominate gukuy society, but they are not the ones who
produce offspring. So the simple hereditary transmission of power and
wealth which characterized the patriarchal societies of Earth's early
civilizations can't apply here. There's still a transmission of power
and wealth. There has to be, for any ruling class to maintain its
cohesiveness. But it works indirectly, through a sort of clan system.
All gukuy in a given clan are born to a certain generation of mothers.
No one knows which particular mother, because the gukuy like the owoc
are largely indifferent to new-born spawn. Most of the spawn die off
quickly, from disease and "

She couldn't stop herself from grimacing.

' from predating on each other. The ones who survive are adopted into
the clan. The clans trace their lineage through a succession of
generations of mothers, even though the offspring are not the direct
descendants of the sterile females who actually rule.

"The end result is a social structure which has no close parallel on
Earth. Within each clan, among the members of a particular generation,
the relations between the sterile females seem to be relatively
egalitarian. Even rather democratic, apparently, in the barbarian
tribes. Power and prestige seem largely to accrue through personal
achievement.

"But between the clans, and, to a lesser extent, between the
generations, relations are based on strict hierarchic domination. That's
why the proper term for these 'empires' is prevalates. Ansha, for
instance, is that realm in which the Ansha clan prevails over all
others."

"Where do the mothers fit into all this?" asked Maria De Los Reyes.

Indira shrugged. 'They are highly venerated especially the oldest
mothers, who are called the Paramount Mothers. But they do not seem to
have much in the way of real power. I'm reminded of the old Japanese
imperial system. The Emperor was a revered figure a god-like figure,
actually. But his duties were essentially religious. Real power lay in
the hands of the shoguns, the warlords.

"At least, that's the way it seems to be in the southern societies. But
I want to emphasize a point here. Do not assume that all gukuy societies
are the same. Among the barbarian tribes, the mothers seem to possess a
great deal of actual authority despite the fact that they are not
venerated. In fact, the main tribe even has a class of young mothers
whom they call 'battlemothers.' These battlemothers participate in
warfare alongside the warriors until they become old enough to start
producing offspring. The civilized societies seem to view this custom
with disgust."

She took a deep breath.

"And there is a new and powerful tribe rising in the far west, called
the Utuku, in which the pattern of sterile female warrior dominance is
carried to the extreme. All eumales are slaughtered; as well as all
truemales beyond the mininum necessary. The mothers are not venerated,
they are simply slaves. Breeders. The Utuku even cripple them at birth."

Indira shuddered slightly. 'And they eat the owoc."

A gasp swept the hut.

"It's true. Nor are the Utuku simply cannibalistic toward their owoc
cousins. They also practice cannibalism on other gukuy."

"Are all of the barbarian tribes so cruel?" asked Ludmilla.

Indira shook her head. 'No. Quite the opposite, in fact. There are a
number of tribes living to the west. Pastoralists. There is apparently a
type of animal on Ishtar which we've never seen. The gukuy call them
'gana,' and they seem to be the equivalent of cattle. Or sheep."

Julius leaned forward, his ears practically standing out.

"The dominant tribe is called the Kiktu. Barbarians, of course. But the
Kiktu religion venerates the owoc. Some sort of animistic totemism, I
imagine. The end result is that the Kiktu not only do not mistreat the
owoc themselves, but they will not allow others to do so. There has been
at least one tribe massacred by the Kiktu for mistreating owoc,
according to the Pilgrims. And they tell me that the reason the owoc on
the Chiton are so rarely molested is because the region south of the
Chiton is Kiktu territory. The Pilgrims themselves fled to the Chiton
partly because they thought they would be safe here from persecution.
But they had to obtain permission from the Kiktu to pass through their
territory. Slavers never come here, according to the Pilgrims, for fear
of the Kiktu."

"Then why did that slaving party come here not so long ago?" asked
Julius.

Indira's face grew grim. 'It seems the Kiktu have been preoccupied, of
late. They have been marshalling an alliance of other tribes for war
against the invaders."

"What invaders?"

She looked to the southwest, as if she could see through the walls of
the hut and the mountainside beyond.

"The Utuku. The cannibals are on the march."

Interlude: Nukurren During the two days after regaining consciousness,
Nukurren spent much of her time, while awake, observing the demons, and
discussing her observations with Dhowifa. She was not awake for long,
however, and less and less as time passed. Disease had seized her in its
grip, and she felt herself growing weaker.

The white demon Dzhenushkunutushen was frequently to be found walking
alongside Nukurren's litter. On occasion, he was joined by the female
demon Ludumilaroshokavashiki or Ludumila, as the male demon called her.
Nukurren attempted to ask them about themselves, but the demons fended
off all such inquiries. On the third day, to Nukurren's surprise, they
began asking her about her own life.

At first, Nukurren tried to satisfy them with a few short sentences. But
the demons insisted on a full account.

So, in the end, Nukurren obliged.

She had been born a helot in the Ansha Prevalate, clanless and outcast.
Her earliest memories consisted of nothing but drudgery in the fields of
the high clans, endless days waking at dawn and toiling till dusk. Even
the simple pleasures of friendship with other young helots had been
denied her, for she was ugly, and overlarge, and generally silent.

One day, driven beyond endurance by a particularly brutal overseer, she
had turned upon her. The overseer had beaten Nukurren savagely with her
flail, but Nukurren was already though not yet fully grown of unusual
size and strength. She had wrested the flail from the overseer and had
begun repaying her tormentor in kind, before she was overcome by many
overseers drawn to the fracas.

Nukurren herself had almost been beaten to death, then. She still bore
on her mantle the scars of that flailing. She pointed them out to the
demons.

Ludumila ran her hand down the side of Nukurren's mantle. It was the
first time a demon had touched her since the demonlord withdrew the
demon weapons. Nukurren found the touch gentle and tender.

"There are so many scars here," said Ludumila softly.

"And I thought I was bad," said Dzhenushkunutushen. The demon grinned
and took off his armor. His upper torso now exposed, Nukurren could see
that the milky white flesh bore several ugly, puckered marks.

"That was my first wound," said Dzhenushkunutushen, pointing to an
especially large scar on the upper portion of his left arm. 'I got it in
my first battle." "How?" asked Nukurren. Dzhenushkunutushen began to
explain, but was interrupted by Ludumila.

"Being stupid! Using his muscles instead of his brain."

Dzhenushkunutushen grinned again, and made the motion with his upper
torso which Nukurren had learn to interpret as the gesture of bemused
uncertainty. 'I'm prone to that," admitted the demon.

"Yes, you are!" said the female demon forcefully. To Nukurren, her
posture seemed stiff and rigid. After a moment, however, her posture
relaxed. She extended a hand and took the hand of Dzhenushkunutushen.

"You have to stop doing that, Jens," she said softly. Nukurren observed
as the two demons stick-pedded alongside her litter, hand holding hand.
Had they been gukuy, she realized, their mantles would be glowing green,
and it seemed to her the strangest thing she had ever encountered in a
loveless world, that demons could love.

Some time later, Dzhenushkunutushen looked back at Nukurren.

"What happened then?" he asked.

"I was condemned to slavery, and sold to a slavemaster. I spent the next
many eightyweeks chained and yoked, pulling a sledge filled with trade
goods to the market in Shakutulubac. I finished my growth during that
time, and by the end I was very strong."

Dhowifa interrupted. 'Nukurren is the strongest gukuy who ever lived,"
said the truemale proudly. 'Except for a mother, of course." Nukurren
noticed that her lover's Kiktu had improved considerably over the past
few days, even though Dhowifa spoke rarely in the presence of the
demons.

"Is that true?" asked Dzhenushkunutushen.

Nukurren made the gesture of bemused uncertainty.

"Who can know? I am the strongest gukuy that I have ever met."

"She is also the fastest gukuy who ever lived," added Dhowifa. The
little truemale's mantle was rippling with that shade of green which
signified pride and admiration.

"Is that true?" asked Dzhenushkunutushen.

Again, Nukurren made the gesture of bemused uncertainty. 'Who can know?
I am the fastest gukuy that I have ever met. Stop bragging, Dhowifa."
"Why?" demanded her lover. 'It's all true! And that's all that saved you
from the yoke." "What happened?" asked Ludumilla.

"One day, in the market, I was seen by a captain of the Anshac legions.
She was seeking recruits for a new legion, and she bought me from my
owner. I was sent to the training camps to become a warrior."

"Were you freed?" asked Dzhenushkunutushen.

"Not then."

"Did you try to escape?"

"No. To what purpose? Where would I go?" Nukurren made the gesture of
resignation. 'I was not unhappy at the change. The work was much easier.
It is true that I met with no friendship in the ranks of the legion. I
was a slave, and despised even by the lowclan recruits. But I did not
care."

Nukurren fell silent, mastering the lie. She had cared, and cared
deeply, and had spent many nights in the camps filled with aching
loneliness. But her shoroku, as always, allowed no trace of her emotions
to show.

"You are lying," said the demon Dzhenushkunutushen.

Nukurren stared at him, wondering how a monster could see into her soul.
Then she made the gesture of agreement.

"Yes, I am lying. I did care. But I became accustomed to it. Soon enough
the other recruits ceased taunting me. After I was attacked by several
of them, and I killed two."

"Were you punished?"

"For that?" Nukurren made the gesture of dismissal; yellow contempt
rippled briefly in her mantle. 'To the contrary. I was praised by my
captain and promoted. And then I devoted myself to becoming a mistress
of warfare. I was good at it."

Nukurren fell silent. She refused to speak again that day, for reasons
which were not clear, even to her. But on the next day, when
Dzhenushkunutushen pressed her, she resumed her story.

"There is not much to tell about the eightyweeks which followed. There
were many campaigns, and many battles. I acquired many more scars, but I
no longer remember which they were. I was given my freedom after one
battle where I fought well, and promoted again. Had I been highclan, or
midclan, or even lowclan, I would have been promoted very often. Even
though I am ugly, and look stupid, I am not. I always observed things
carefully, and learned from them."

"How did you meet Dhowifa?"

"After a time, I was promoted again, and assigned to the Motherguard."

"What is the Motherguard?"

"That is the elite legion which guards the Divine Shell."

"Nukurren was the only clanless helot ever assigned to the Motherguard,"
interjected Dhowifa. 'Ever. She was famous."

"Stop bragging, Dhowifa."

"It's true! I remember the day you arrived. My bondbrothers and I snuck
out of the Divine Shell to watch."

"And what did you think?" asked Ludumila.

Dhowifa hesitated. Nukurren made the gesture of amusement. 'Don't lie,
Dhowifa!"

The little truemale's mantle shimmered with a complex web of colors,
which suddenly dissolved into green. 'I thought Nukurren was the ugliest
gukuy I had ever seen. I was terrified of her. Everyone was, I think."

"Not Ushulubang," said Nukurren.

"No," agreed Dhowifa. 'Not her."

The demons stopped abruptly, and stared at the two gukuy riding on the
litter. Ludumila hooted a sudden command, and the owoc carrying the
litter stopped also.

"You know Ushulubang?" demanded Dzhenushkunutushen.

Ochre uncertainty and confusion rippled across Dhowifa's mantle. As
always, Nukurren's remained gray.

"Yes," replied Dhowifa.

Instantly, Ludumila began shouting in the harsh demon language. The
entire caravan came to a halt, and within moments the black demon came
racing back to the litter. Watching him approach, Nukurren was struck
again by the astonishing speed of which the demons were capable.

Once he arrived, a rapid exchange took place in the demons' language.
The black demon turned and stared at the gukuy on the litter.

"Explain how you know Ushulubang," he commanded. 'Are you Pilgrims of
the Way?"

"No, I am not," replied Nukurren immediately. Dhowifa's response was
slower in coming. The ochre hues in his mantle were now interlaced with
pink apprehension.

"I am not either," said Dhowifa hesitantly. 'Not really. But I talked
with Ushulubang whenever I could, and she trained me in dukuna." "What
is 'dukuna'?" asked the demon Dzhenushkunutushen. But before Dhowifa
could answer, the black demon interrupted with a sudden burst of
incomprehensible language. Nukurren could not understand it, but she
knew that it was a different language than the one which the demons had
used heretofore. Even harsher, and full of sounds which no gukuy could
ever hope to reproduce.

Within a short time, all the demons in the caravan were gathered about
the litter. After a lengthy exchange in the new language, the black
demon began hooting. At once the caravan resumed its progress, but now
at a more rapid pace than before. Watching the owoc who were carrying
her litter, Nukurren realized that the slow and ungainly creatures were
moving at the fastest pace possible for them on such difficult terrain.

"Why are you interested in Ushulubang?" she asked the demon
Dzhenushkunutushen.

"Because she is " He was  by a few short and sharp words uttered in the
new demon language by Ludumila. Dzhenushkunutushen fell silent. After a
moment, he said curtly: 'I am not to speak of it," and moved away.

Nukurren examined the female demon. She was able, from the experience of
the past few days, to recognize some of the variations in the demons'
features which distinguished one from the other. By now, the difference
in body shape between female and male demons was clear to Nukurren. The
demons also varied in size and color.

But there were other differences, as well, which were much less obvious.
As with gukuy, these differences were mainly in the face. Gukuy
recognized each other primarily from the different configurations of the
arm-clusters and the subtle variations in the eye-orbits. Nukurren had
already learned to distinguish one demon from another with regard to
their eye-orbits. Despite their tiny size, demon eyes were much like
gukuy eyes; and the orbits were generically similar, except that the
demon orbits seemed made of some hard material beneath the flesh.

Some of the demons about half of them, Nukurren estimated had deep
orbits. The orbits of the remainder were shallower, it seemed. The
female demon Ludumila was one of these. Looking at her, Nukurren now
realized that the flatness of her eye-orbits was due to an extension of
the flesh coming from that strange feature in the middle of her face the
beak-above-the-true-beak.

"What is that called?" she suddenly asked Ludumila. 'That feature which
protrudes above your beak?"

It required a bit more of an explanation before the demon understood the
question.

"A ... nosu?" asked Nukurren. Ludumila made the peculiar bobbing motion
of her head which Nukurren had come to recognize as the demon gesture of
affirmation.

That was the key to discerning one human from another, Nukurren now
realized. Ludumila's nosu was shallow and flat, spreading widely across
her face. The black demon's nosu did likewise. Whereas
"Dzhenushkunutushen's nosu is bigger than yours, and it protrudes much
farther forward."

Ludumila began barking in the demon manner of laughter.

"We call it 'The Beak,' " she said, and barked again. Nukurren tried to
understand the humor involved, but could make no sense of it. After a
time, she felt herself growing weaker again and was less and less able
to observe anything coherently. She felt very hot and feverish, and her
mind began to wander. Disease now held her tightly in its arms.

At some point in the vague meanderings of her thoughts, she recalled
Dhowifa's earlier remark. Half-unconsciously, her arms curled in the
gesture of amusement.

I remember the first time I saw Dhowifa. I was not terrified of him. But
I was apprehensive, and tense. He was very high-clan. Ansha royalty.

She had been standing guard at night, alone, by one of the side
entrances to the Divine Shell. It was a shabby entrance, used only by
servants. The stones of the arch were crudely cut and undecorated. The
area was dim, lit only by a small, poorly-fed glowmoss colony.

It had been Nukurren's usual sentry duty. Not for her the prestigious
post of standing guard by the main entrances, in daylight. Not for one
as ugly as she, and helot-born.

She had heard a slight sound behind her, and turned. A small shape stood
in the entryway. As soon as she had turned, the shape a young truemale,
she saw scuttled back into the gloom of the hallway beyond.

"Who are you?" she had demanded, but her voice had been soft and,
Dhowifa later told her, not unpleasant. After a moment, the truemale had
come forward.

"I am Dhowifa," he said. Nukurren recognized him then, one of the
Paramount Mother's recently wed husbands. It was very odd for such a one
to be in that place, in the middle of the night, but Nukurren had not
questioned him. After a moment, she had invited him to come forward, and
had spent some time thereafter in casual conversation with Dhowifa.

On that night, the truemale had not explained his presence there. But he
would reappear again, on many nights in the eightweeks that followed.
After a time, as a strange friendship formed between the royal truemale
and the lowborn warrior, Nukurren would learn of the cruelties of the
Paramount Mother and the misery of Dhowifa.

By what manner, and by what route, the odd friendship turned into
passion, Nukurren could never precisely recall. She could only remember
that one night, with the rain thundering down, when the love and ecstasy
she had only been able to dream of had finally entered her life. That it
was a forbidden love and an unnatural ecstasy had mattered to her not at
all.

Many nights of secret and illicit passion had followed, until the night
when Dhowifa had crawled to her, only half-conscious, his little body a
pulpy mass of bruises from the beating administered by the Paramount
Mother. It seemed his love-making had displeased her.

They had left Shakutulubac that same night. Dhowifa had hesitated, in
despair of leaving his malebond. But, in the end, he had not been able
to bear the thought of returning to the Paramount Mother.

A pursuit had been organized, of course. But Nukurren had gained them a
considerable lead by the simple expedient of slaughtering all the guards
at the northwest gate of the city. Eight butchered guards could only be
the work of a large raiding party from an enemy realm, or a massive
conspiracy, or ... Not for days did the Tympani realize the truth, and
by then it was too late.

Remembering now, her mind a blur of fevered chaos, Nukurren finally fell
asleep. But even in her sleep, her arms remained curled in the gesture
of amusement. The captain of the guard at the northwest gate had often
taunted Nukurren for her ugliness and her base birth. She had taunted
Nukurren again that night, when Nukurren appeared out of the darkness,
and the jibes had been echoed by her guards; until it occurred to them
to demand an explanation for Nukurren's presence. Her drawn flail and
unharnessed fork had provided the answer, though it was not to their
liking.

The harsh sound of demon voices awakened Nukurren. Through her one
remaining eye, she saw that night was falling. She was very, very weak;
her whole body felt aflame. Still, she managed to look about.

They were high up on the Chiton, now, in a steep-walled canyon. Ahead of
them loomed a large, partially-finished wall. A fortification, Nukurren
realized, though it was oddly designed, with unusual projections and
overhangs.

Those would be good for hurling stingers, she thought. Any gukuy below,
trying to force a way through, would find nowhere to hide.

Atop the wall stood several demons, both female and male. A large door
in the middle of the fortification, made of many interwoven and
lacquered strips of yopo, suddenly swung aside. The litter was carried
through the entrance, and the door was swung shut behind them.

That night the caravan rested within the shelter of the wall across the
canyon. Fascinated by the demon methods of fortification, Nukurren tried
to observe as much as she could. But it was soon dark, and, in any
event, she found it difficult to concentrate.

The next morning, she was awakened again by the harsh sound of demons
speaking. She recognized the voices by their distinct tones and timber:
Dzhenushkunutushen and the black demon. And, occasionally, the female
demon Ludumila. The voices were very loud, especially that of
Dzhenushkunutushen.

"Are you awake?" whispered Dhowifa. 'I'm frightened. I think they're
arguing."

Nukurren opened her eye with some reluctance, for the effort caused much
pain to her maimed eye. Before her she saw a fascinating tableau.

The two male demons, one of them as white as the other was black, were
standing very close together, face to face. Despite their bizarre
appearance, it was instantly obvious to Nukurren that Dhowifa was
correct. They were arguing, and, she estimated, arguing very fiercely.
The female demon Ludumila, Nukurren thought, was attempting to arbitrate
or, perhaps, simply to keep the argument from erupting too far.

Suddenly, the demon Dzhenushkunutushen gestured toward the litter, and
Nukurren realized that they were arguing about her.

"The black one wants to kill us," whispered Dhowifa.

Nukurren made the gesture of tentative doubt. 'I don't think so. He is
implacable, that is true "

"His color doesn't mean anything, I keep telling you," interrupted
Dhowifa crossly.

"It does not matter. He would be implacable, whatever his color. It is
in the nature of the monster. But I do not believe he is cruel. And
there is no reason, now, to kill us. They could have done it right after
the battle, or at any time since."

"Then why " Nukurren silenced her lover with a hiss. She was too
engrossed by the interaction among the demons to be distracted.

Suddenly, she understood. The black demon, she had known for days, was
the commander. The female demon Ludumila, she suspected, was his
lieutenant. But she had been unable, before now, to determine the exact
position of the white demon Dzhenushkunutushen.

Yet now, analyzing the exchange between the strangest creatures she had
ever encountered, she knew Dzhenushkunutushen's position. And knew him,
for all that he was a monster.

He was her. Just so, in times past, had Nukurren confronted an officer
in the legions, when an issue had been of such importance as to require
that a leader of warriors make a stand. Officers were to be respected
and obeyed, of course. But, on occasion, it was also necessary to bring
them to heel.

The demon shouting became very loud.

"They're going to start fighting!" hissed Dhowifa with alarm. His mantle
rippled pink and red.

"No," said Nukurren firmly. 'The black demon is a good officer, I think.
And so he will yield."

The black demon made a sudden spreading motion with his limbs. He barked
a sharp sound. Dzhenushkunutushen fell silent, though he remained stiff
and erect. Very tense, Nukurren thought, interpreting the demon's
posture as best she could.

Very tense, but, I think, satisfied.

A moment later, the black demon began barking commands and pointing to
various of the demons gathered about. Almost at once, the litter was
picked up by four of the demons, including the black demon and
Dzhenushkunutushen. Nukurren and Dhowifa suddenly found themselves being
carried up the trail at a much more rapid pace than ever before. Soon
the fortification was left far behind.

Nukurren was deeply impressed by the rapidity of their travel. She
realized that the black demon had selected the four largest demons to
carry the litter. All of them, she noted, were male. Still, Nukurren
thought that she outweighed any one of the demons, even
Dzhenushkunutushen, by a large margin. It would have been difficult for
four large gukuy to carry her at a normal walking pace, much less at the
astonishing speed with which the demons were climbing the trail.

Two other demons accompanied the party, stick-pedding alongside. One of
them was Ludumila. She was the only female demon still present. Ludumila
was large for a female demon, taller than most of the males, if not as
tall as Dzhenushkunutushen and the black one. But she was less massive,
especially in her upper mantle. The female demons, Nukurren concluded,
were capable of the same speed and agility as the males, but lacked the
sheer strength.

Nukurren was surprised, therefore, some time later, when Ludumila
replaced one of the male demons carrying the litter. The transfer took
place with only a moment's interruption, and the litter was soon moving
along as rapidly as before. As time went on, the demons carrying
Nukurren and Dhowifa were regularly replaced by one of those who had
been able to rest for a time, unburdened by the litter.

These are the most terrifying warriors who ever walked the Meat of the
Clam, she thought. If they are numerous, no army could stand against
them. Not even the legions of mighty Ansha.

Soon they reached a crest and entered a plateau. The demons began
traveling faster still. Shortly thereafter, Nukurren lapsed into
semi-consciousness. Dimly, vaguely, she heard Dhowifa conversing with
the demon Ludumila.

Nukurren must rest! She is sick!

Soon. Soon.

She will die if she does not rest!

She will die if we do not get her to (strange human word a name,
Nukurren thought). Soon! That is why we left the owoc behind and are
carrying you ourselves. Dzhenush (the shortened name for
Dzhenushkunutushen, Nukurren knew; odd; few gukuy used diminutive names)
insisted. Short barks laughter. I thought (again, a strange word the
name of the black demon, perhaps) was going to burst a (unknown phrase).
It's not often someone gets in his face like that! Short barks. It's
good for him.

A short silence. Then: That's Dzhenush. Even in her fevered state,
Nukurren could not miss the affection in the bizarre demon voice.

Such strange creatures, with strange customs. Only among the barbarian
tribes do officers mate with common warriors. But I do not think these
are barbarians. I do not know what they are. Can demons be civilized? I
hope not. No Kiktu barbarian was ever as cruel as Ansha.

But her ability to reason was vanishing, splintered by pain. One last,
fleeting thought: The demon Dzhenushkunutushen is a warrior, but not, I
think, a common one. Nor was I. Nor was I.

Everything faded into an incomprehensible blur. All that remained was
the sense of Dhowifa's little body nestled in her mantle, blessedly cool
against the scorching heat of the fever; and the tender stroking of his
arms.

PART III.

The Weft

Chapter 14.

Long before the battle ended, Kopporu knew the Kiktu were defeated. More
than defeated. Crushed.

The outcome would have been certain even if the leader of the left
flank, Ototpo, had not led an insane charge at the very beginning of the
fray. The charge had shattered against the disciplined ranks of the
Utuku. Ototpo herself had been slain, along with most of the main battle
leaders of the left flank. A few of the survivors of the charge had
attempted to make a stand, but they had not lasted long under the weight
of the Utuku counterattack.

From that moment, the Utuku pressed their advantage remorselessly. They
did not move quickly, true. Utuku tactics were designed to maximize
their strengths great numbers and rigid discipline. The Utuku warriors
shuffled forward, mantle to mantle, grinding down everything before
them. There was no room in that press for the clever fork-and-flail work
in which the Kiktu excelled. Forks were useless, and in that style of
combat the Kiktu were at a disadvantage against the heavily armored and
shielded Utuku.

The Utuku ground forward, rolling up the Kiktu from right to left. Under
their peds, the fern-like uyi which covered the entire central plain
from the ocean to the Pokta Mountains was mashed to pulp. By routing the
left wing of the Kiktu at the beginning of the battle, the Utuku insured
that their enemy could not escape the trap created by the stupidity of
its leaders. The route to possible escape led to the south, away from
the Lolopopo swamp. There, in the flat vastness of the Papti Plain, the
Kiktu might have eluded their slower-moving enemy. (The plan which
Kopporu had tried, and failed, to get adopted by her tribe relied
precisely on that vastness and Kiktu mobility for its eventual success.)
But that route was now closed off by the defeat of the left flank. Even
had the war leader of the Kiktu been a quick-thinking realist, Giakta
could not have marshalled her loosely organized army quickly enough to
slip out of the trap that was closing in. The fleeing survivors of the
left flank were spreading confusion and dismay among the warriors of the
center. Even from a distance, Kopporu could see that the center of the
Kiktu host was a swirling mass of chaos.

The Utuku did not fail to close the trap. Their greater numbers allowed
their commanders to continually outflank the Kitku without easing up the
relentless pressure of their front ranks. Slowly, but surely, the
advance elements of the Utuku right curved northeast, until they reached
the edge of the Lolopopo. The Kiktu were surrounded. The enemy on three
sides; the swamp on the fourth.

The disaster was complete. Moved by a sudden impulse, Kopporu looked to
the northeast and gazed at the Chiton. The long, flattish curve of the
huge mountain was visible over the tall cycads of the swamp, even at
that great distance. The mountain dominated the entire landscape of the
northermost reaches of the plain. Mountain of myths and legends. And
demons, it was now said.

She looked away. There would be time later, perhaps, to think of the
Chiton. For the moment, she must bend every thought to the execution of
her secret plan.

In that respect, Kopporu's position was better than she had feared.
Better, even, than she had hoped. Through the course of the battle, she
had badly bruised the Utuku opposing her. Ironically, in this last
battle of the Kiktu, she had been able to impose her tactics to a far
greater degree than hitherto. Partly that was because the forces under
her command were disproportionately made up of battle groups with young
leaders who had been gravitating toward her views for some time. But
mostly, it was because the extreme desperation of the moment reined in
the exuberant individualism of the Kiktu warriors. They were in a fight
to the death, and they knew it. They placed their trust in Kopporu.

She had not failed them. Indeed, had the battlefield consisted solely of
her forces and those immediately facing her, the Kiktu would already be
celebrating a great victory. Time and again, Kopporu's swift maneuvers
feint, retreat, counterattack had utterly befuddled the Utuku. She had
never made the mistake of crashing head-on into the massed ranks of the
enemy. Instead, she had sliced off pieces of the enemy army and
destroyed them.

Eventually, the Utuku had withdrawn into a purely defensive formation.
Orders had come to the leader of the Utuku left, carried by a courier
from the Beak of the Utuku herself: Cease all attacks. Hold the Kiktu on
the north against the swamp, until our entire army can be brought to
bear.

The flank leader had immediately obeyed, even though she knew that the
orders were her death sentence. The Beak of the Utuku was cold and
calculating, never hotheaded. But she was also utterly merciless toward
failure. She would see to the destruction of the Kiktu, in the surest
manner available. Later, in her great command yurt, she would dine on
the disgraced leader of her left flank along with the captives.

So it was that Kopporu was given a desperately needed respite in the
midst of the battle. She had time, now. Time to summon her remaining
battle leaders and explain the necessary course of action. Time,
hopefully, to sway them to her side. If not, time to impose her will.

And there was this added, totally unexpected, benefit: in the chaos at
the center of the Kiktu forces, many of the young herders assigned to
guard the gana had taken it upon themselves to drive the gana toward the
right flank, away from the advancing juggernaut. Hundreds of gana were
now clustered to the rear of Kopporu's warriors, almost into the swamp
itself. From beyond the ganahide walls of her command circle, Kopporu
could hear the terrified whistles of the beasts.

She had not expected to salvage any of the tribe's gana. Not many would
survive the swamp, true. But perhaps enough.

Within the walls of her command circle, all of the remaining battle
leaders were gathered. Aktako was there as well, along with six
handpicked warriors. The battle leaders did not wonder at the presence
of Aktako and the warriors. A battle leader of Kopporu's status was
expected to maintain a personal guard. But they did wonder at the
presence of the eight swamp-dwellers. What were disreputable clanless
outcasts doing in the midst of Kiktu battle-leaders?

When Kopporu explained, the mantles of the seven battle leaders turned
bright orange. Utter astonishment.

The orange she expected. Ochre was inevitable. Pink, even red, would be
acceptable. Who would not hesitate or feel fear at her desperate plan?

But it was the blue of rage say better, outrage for which she watched
vigilantly.

The color first appeared in the mantle of Yaua, as Kopporu had known it
would. The old battle leader was fearless, but stupid; set in her ways
like a clam.

Kopporu allowed Yaua to vent her indignation. As yet, the color of the
remaining battle leaders showed not a trace of blue. But Kopporu was
certain that the sentiments being expressed by Yaua were shared, to one
extent or another, by all of them. The sentiments would have to be
addressed, before further action could be taken.

"We cannot throw ourselves into the center," explained Kopporu
patiently. 'We would simply compound the chaos. No, worsen it for the
Utuku who are now licking the wounds we gave them would quickly follow.
The trap would be complete."

"Your plan will produce the same result," pointed out Gortoku, one of
the young battle leaders. 'Even more quickly and completely."

"True," responded Kopporu immediately. 'But we will not be in the trap."

She rose to her peds. 'Understand. Understand. The Utuku victory is
inevitable. We can do nothing to prevent it. One question remains, and
one only will all the Kiktu perish in the trap?"

"Treason!" bellowed Yaua. 'Treason!"

Kopporu allowed blue rage to flood her own mantle.

"Yes, treason by those fools who led our people to this disaster. Fools
like you." She paused, quickly scanning the other battle leaders. Five,
she thought. Five out of seven. Better than she had expected.

"The penalty for treason is death!" roared Yaua.

"So it is," replied Kopporu. Her mantle flashed black.

Instantly, two of Aktako's warriors slammed the prongs of their forks
into the mantle of Yaua. A moment later, the old battle leader was
flopped onto her side. Aktako herself delivered the death stroke.

"That one also," commanded Kopporu, pointing at the battle leader
Doroto. The murderous scene was repeated.

The five surviving battle leaders were shocked into immobility. Hardened
warriors that they were, the utter ruthlessness of Kopporu's actions had
stunned them scarlet with terror.

Kopporu noted with satisfaction that Gortoku was the first to bring her
emotions under control. She had long thought the young gukuy was the
best of the new battle leaders.

Her satisfaction deepened to pleasure at Gortoku's next words.

"Why not me?" asked Gortoku. Truly, a valiant youth.

"Have I ever punished a warrior for questioning me?" demanded Kopporu.
'Even once?"

The red was rapidly fading from the mantles of all five battle leaders.
Gortoku's was now pure gray.

The five young leaders looked at each other. Almost as one, their arms
curled into the gesture of negation.

"No. Nor will I ever in the future. I am neither all-wise nor
all-seeing. A battle leader who does not listen to the opinions of her
subordinates is a fool."

The black in her mantle was still as hard as obsidian.

"But we do not have time for a long and leisurely discussion. There is
only this much that remains to be said. I do not know what the future
will bring us. It is a desperate course we take. But until we find our
way to some place of safety, I will rule what remains of our tribe with
a palp of bronze. You may always question my decisions. But once I have
given a command, it must be instantly obeyed. To do otherwise is
treason."

She did not feel it necessary to point to the gutted corpses of Yaua and
Doroto.

"The penalty for which is known."

Again, she noted, it was Gortoku who took the initiative.

"What are your commands?"

"Ropou will lead her group in a charge at the Utuku. But before reaching
their ranks, she will call a retreat."

She looked at the battle leader.

"Do you understand?"

Ropou made the gesture of affirmation.

"The Utuku will think we are trying to trick them into another ambush."
The young battle leaders whistled agreement. Three times that day,
Kopporu had mangled overeager detachments of the Utuku by using that
very tactic. Eventually, the Utuku had refused to be drawn into a
charge.

"Under cover of Ropou's maneuver, the remaining battle groups will
retreat into the swamp. Ufta's group will go first, taking the gana with
them."

"The gana will panic," complained Ufta. 'They will not enter the swamp."

Kopporu stared at her. She had almost ordered the execution of Ufta as
well. Perhaps she should have.

Something of her thoughts must have shown, for Ufta suddenly announced
that she would see to the task. At once.

Kopporu ordered one of the swamp-dwellers to accompany Ufta, to provide
her with a guide once her group entered the swamp. The other battle
leaders were likewise provided with guides. She then ordered the five
battle leaders to their posts, after issuing one final command.

"In the event of my death, Gortoku will assume leadership of the tribe."

"What's left of the tribe," said Ufta softly.

"No." The battle leaders stared at Aktako, surprised. Despite her
personal relationship with Kopporu, the old veteran was always a
stickler for protocol. She never spoke at the meetings of the battle
leaders.

Aktako's own mantle was as black as Kopporu's.

"Ufta still does not understand," said Aktako harshly. 'This is the
tribe. From this moment forward, there are no other Kiktu."

The old warrior waved a palp toward the south. In the distance, the
clash of flails and forks could be heard. But above it, swelling, they
could hear the shrieks of the doomed. The Utuku cutters had already
started their work, in anticipation of the great victory feast.

Aktako made the gesture of negation.

"Those are no longer Kitku. They are meat for the conquerors."

As soon as the battle leaders left the command circle, Kopporu summoned
the remaining swamp-dweller to her side. The swamp-dweller was called
O-doddo-ua, and she was what passed for a leader among the swamp
dwellers. Her name seemed strange to Kopporu's ear, but she knew it was
a common one among the helots in the Oukasho Prevalate. O-doddo-ua, like
most of the swamp-dwellers, was an escapee from the southern prevalates.
They had chosen the wretched and dangerous life of the swamp in
preference to a life of ceaseless toil and slavery. There were many
Kiktu warriors the great majority, in truth who despised the
swamp-dwellers for that choice. Kopporu admired them for it.

But whether they despised them or not, all the Kiktu would now be
dependent on the swamp-dwellers. The swamp was a feared place, unclean;
essentially unknown to the Kiktu. Their survival would depend on the
knowledge of the outcasts.

"Do you have any questions, O-doddo-ua?"

The swamp-dweller hesitated. There were traces of pink in the ochre of
her mantle, Kopporu noted. Not with surprise, except, perhaps, at the
absence of red. O-doddo-ua had known, abstractly, that Kopporu was
ruthless in her approach to reality. But abstract knowledge is one
thing; gutted bodies are another.

"You are afraid of what I will do to you, once you have served us,"
stated Kopporu.

A sudden ripple of ochre washed over the swamp-dweller's mantle,
followed by the gesture of affirmation.

"I am not cruel, O-doddo-ua. Treacherous only when I need to be. I
promised that we would reward you if you guided us through the swamp.
The promise will be kept."

O-doddo-ua hesitated; then spoke softly, in the slurring accent of the
southerners.

"We have not agreed on the reward."

"True. I offered you five wires of bronze. I can now promise you a few
gana, as well. But that is all." Kopporu allowed a brief ripple of brown
into her mantle. 'The Kiktu will have nothing more to give. We are now a
poor tribe ourselves."

"Not true, battle leader. You are rich in what the swamp-dwellers
treasure most. Richer now, I think, than ever."

"Indeed? What is that?"

"Knowledge of survival, and its needs." To Kopporu's surprise, the
swamp-dweller's mantle turned black.

"Our reward will be adoption into your tribe. No, more. Into your own
clan, battle leader Kopporu."

Despite her iron self-control, Kopporu was unable to prevent her mantle
from glowing bright orange. Not often, since she was a child, had
Kopporu been so thoroughly astonished.

"What?"

"You heard. Those are our terms, battle leader. We have discussed it
amongst ourselves, and decided."

"But why?"

"We know the swamp, battle leader, but we do not love it. Not at all. We
are tired of being outcasts. And we have long since abandoned the
foolish notions of civilization. It would be good to have a place in the
world. In the greatest clan of its greatest tribe."

Kopporu whistled bitter amusement. 'Greatest tribe? Its greatest clan?
Are you blind, O-doddo-ua? The Kiktu are no longer the world's greatest
tribe, if we ever were. By tomorrow we will be not much more than
outcasts and swamp dwellers ourselves." O-doddo-ua said nothing; but the
black mantle never lightened its shade.

After a moment, Kopporu made the gesture of acceptance.

"So be it, if that is your wish. But, understand this, O-doddo-ua: the
decision is not mine to make. I am a battle leader only. You and your
people cannot be adopted into the Kiktu without the consent of the
entire tribe, in full tribal assembly. My clan is a small one, and the
clan leaders are not "

She stopped abruptly. O-doddo-ua whistled.

"Are not alive," she finished the thought. O-doddo-ua waved her palp to
the south. 'Or not much longer. All the clan leaders are gathered in the
center, with the mothers. You will be the new clan leader, Kopporu. And
your clan will now be the greatest of the Kiktu."

"Still ..." She made the gesture of resignation. 'I will do what I can,
O-doddo-ua. The decision must still be made by the tribe as a whole. I
will speak for you, that I can promise. But that may not be of any use.
I myself will have to stand trial, at the next assembly. For treason and
murder. My words may harm your cause more than they help it."

"We will take our chances. By then, much will have changed. The warriors
will be shocked by your actions, once they understand what has happened
here. Appalled, even. But by then, they will have spent time in the
swamp."

"So?"

"So the swamp has a way of teaching one to distinguish what is important
from what is frivolous. And they will no longer despise we
swamp-dwellers."

O-doddo-ua turned away.

"You will see, battle leader. You will see."

No sooner had O-doddo-ua left the command circle than Lukpudo entered.
The battle leader of the Opoktu was bearing a new wound. But it was a
slight wound, and would soon be lost in the welter of other scars which
crisscrossed her mantle.

Kopporu watched Lukpudo approach with a mixture of fondness and deep
regret. Fondness, for her trust in the Opoktu had not been mislaid the
small tribe had fought well and valiantly. Deep regret, for their
loyalty was now to be repaid by treachery. Kopporu would attempt, at the
last moment, to keep a way open for the Opoktu to follow her into the
swamp, should they so choose. But she had not confided in them, and she
knew that they would be too confused to act quickly enough.

She noticed that Lukpudo gave only the briefest glance at the bodies of
the two murdered battle leaders as she approached. Lukpudo's
indifference puzzled her. It was obvious the two battle leaders had been
slain here, not on the battlefield.

The mystery was resolved at once, and Kopporu found herself astonished
for the second time that day.

"When do we make our retreat into the swamp?" asked Lukpudo.

The Opoktu battle leader whistled amusement at Kopporu's orange.

"The Kiktu leaders may be stupid, Kopporu, but our clan leaders are most
assuredly not. It's one of the advantages, you know, to being a small
tribe. You have to be smarter."

"You knew?"

Another whistle.

"Not exactly. We have been planning the same maneuver ourselves. I
almost raised the subject with you, once. But you're such an upright
sort that I decided it best not to. I could not afford, you understand,
to be denounced. But I began suspecting what you were up to when I saw
the swamp-dwellers you were collecting around. There could only be one
logical explanation for their presence."

Lukpudo made the gesture of derision, coupled with a swift yellow ripple
across her mantle. The combination expressed exactly the same sentiments
that a human would express with a snort.

"Leaving aside that ridiculous spawn's tale you were spreading about the
danger of an Utuku sweep through the swamp. So I started watching you
closely. You and Aktako. I knew that if you were planning something, she
would be in the thick of it. When I saw the hand-picked flails she
assembled, I knew. You have never been one of those battle leaders who
wants to be surrounded by a mob of personal guards. So why now? And why
those guards? all of whom I recognized as one of Aktako's old cronies?
Who may no longer be the swiftest warriors on the field, but who are
certainly the most deadly.

"From then on, I kept an eye on your command circle. Since the battle
started I've had one of my warriors watching, to tell me the moment you
summoned your battle leaders."

Lukpudo turned and gazed back at the corpses.

"Two only?" she asked. 'I expected to see Ufta's body lying there as
well."

"She almost was. But I was not sure. And I have no taste for murder."

"You may regret the decision. Ufta is much smarter than Doroto was.
Certainly than Yaua. But I do not think she has their courage." A quick
flash of brown/green regret swept across Lukpudo's mantle. 'They were
valiant gukuy. But valor is no longer enough, in this new and terrible
world."

She turned back to Kopporu. 'Time presses, battle leader. For the
duration of this struggle, the Opoktu will remain under your command."

"And after?"

Lukpudo whistled. 'After? Why worry about that now, Kopporu? There may
be no 'after.' The swamp, by all reports, is not much less terrible than
the Utuku. If at all. But I would rather be eaten by snails than
cannibals."

Another whistle.

"And besides, the future is not entirely grim for the Opoktu. There is
this much to look forward to we will no longer be the smallest tribe in
the world."

"You have never been small in my eyes, Lukpudo."

For a brief moment, the battle leader of the Opoktu allowed deep green
to suffuse her mantle.

"I know, Kopporu. We have always loved you for it."

The green vanished, replaced by black.

"What are your commands?"

Chapter 15.

When Guo was informed by her battle leader Gortoku to prepare for a
retreat into the swamp, she was too dazed to wonder at the order. Dazed,
and exhausted.

There was no longer any doubt as to her conduct on the field of battle,
although Guo herself had never once considered the question since the
battle began. She did not consider it now. Did not even think of it, in
fact. There was only room in her brain for the necessities of the
retreat. Her place in that retreat would be critical, for it would be
she (and her flankers) who would bear the brunt of the pursuit.
Kopporu's tactics of drawing the enemy into a trap after feigning a
retreat were based upon funneling the charging foe toward the
battlemothers. There, unable to avoid the blows because they were penned
in by the trap, the enemy would be crushed under the maces of the
battlemothers.

The tactics had worked, brilliantly, until the Utuku had finally learned
not to charge after fleeing Kiktu. They had learned, after three
disasters, that the battle leader of the Kiktu right flank was a shrewd
and deadly foe. And the Utuku warriors confronting Kopporu's forces no
longer referred to the battlemother in their enemy's ranks as a breeder.
They called her, simply, the ghaxtak.

"Ghaxtak" was an Utuku word. The Kiktu equivalent was 'kuopto." Every
barbarian language had an equivalent term, and all of them were based on
a derivative of that language's word for fury.

But the word 'fury" does not really capture the essence of the concept.
The emotions experienced by gukuy are, fundamentally, the same as those
experienced by humans. This is, of course, neither surprising nor
coincidental. Human scientists, beginning with Darwin, had long
understood that the emotions of animals and people are the inevitable
by-product of evolution. An animal must know when to flee; when to
fight; when to engage in sexual reproduction; when to hesitate; when to
ignore. A biochemist can explain the exact chemical processes by which
those patterns of behavior are transmitted through the nervous system.
But an animal knows nothing of these formulas. It 'knows" simply: fear;
rage; passion; indecision; indifference. Those animals which evolve
intelligence give these feelings names, and call them 'emotions." And,
as they evolve in a complex interaction with the evolution of their own
intelligence, the emotions themselves become more variegated and subtle.
But it is inevitable that animals evolving on two planets separated by
light years in space would still arrive at the same basic emotions.
There is no mystic truth here; simply the requirements of natural
selection.

And yet, nothing is ever identical. In their broad range, the emotions
of gukuy and humans are the same certainly if the entire gamut of
emotions, which vary considerably between the different cultures of both
species, are taken into account. Still, they are different species; and,
with regard to emotions, the biggest difference is that one is
chromatophoric and the other is not.

There is an expression, among humans, that an individual 'wears his
heart on his sleeve." The cultural subtleties behind that expression,
the product of a species for whom emotional dissemblance is physically
easy, would puzzle a gukuy. All gukuy 'wear their hearts on their
sleeves" on their entire bodies, in fact. Humans, of course, also
express their emotions involuntarily. They burst into tears; they laugh;
those with little melanin in their skins even turn pale; or red. But
these involuntary reactions are a pale reflection of the rich pallette
of a gukuy.

Hence, two significant differences. Gukuy are far more straightforward
than humans in their recognition (including self-recognition) of their
emotions. And they are far more sophisticated in their understanding of
the subtle complexities of those emotions.

Combinations of emotions which, to a human, are a murky blur, are like
crystal to a gukuy. A human warrior, in the midst of battle, experiences
a confused combination of emotions (fear, rage, indecision) which he
does not perceive clearly himself. Not at all at the time, and poorly in
the aftermath.

But to the gukuy, these emotions are not a murky blur. A human observing
a gukuy battle would see a vast and kaleidoscopic rippling of colors
across the serried mantles of the warriors. Blue and red predominate, of
course; for a battle is the epitome of rage and fear. But the ochre hues
of uncertainty and indecision are often seen, as well. Gukuy battle
leaders learn early to gauge the colors of their opponents. A sudden
great surge of ochre across the mantles of the foe signals that the
moment is perhaps right to press home the attack. And always, of course,
the battle leader looks for the wave of scarlet which indicates that the
foe has been beaten into pure terror. The time has come for rout and
destruction.

Red; blue; ochre those, the principal colors of a battlefield. But there
are others as well, seen more rarely.

Gray is one. Gray is the 'natural" color of a gukuy's mantle. A gukuy
whose mantle remains gray in battle is one of those unusual gukuy who
have learned to master their emotions even under extreme stress. It is
an ability which is given a name in every gukuy language. It is always
respected; never more than on the battlefield. Such a warrior is
invariably a veteran, and a mistress of the art of war. On occasion,
tinges of yellow will ripple across such a warrior's mantle. Contempt
for the foe.

Black is another. Black is the color of implacability. Not the absence
of color, as is the gray of self-discipline; but the sudden suffusion of
all color in a ruthless determination to accomplish a task, regardless
of cost.

The color is never seen in pure form on a battlefield. Pure black is the
color of executioners, not warriors amidst the clash of arms. But it is
not uncommonly seen in combination with blue. Never red, or ochre, or
even pink. Such warriors are feared, for they have cast aside all fear
and caution. They may not be skilled in battle, but they will sell their
lives dearly.

And there is another color which is seen on a battlefield, on only the
rarest occasion. It is the most feared of all colors.

Green. Color of love, and tranquillity.

It is never seen alone, nor as the predominant color; but rather as a
gleam beneath the black and blue of implacable fury. The three colors
combine into a hue which has no name in any human language. 'Dark cobalt
green" is the closest approximation in English.

It is the color of those rarest of all warriors, whom the Utuku call
ghaxtak and the Kiktu kuopto. Centuries earlier, on Earth, a culture had
flourished briefly which had a name which was strikingly similar. The
victims of that culture had gathered in places of worship, crying out:
'From the fury of the Norseman, dear God deliver us!"

They were called berserks, and they were the most famed and feared
Vikings of all.

Since the first moments of the battle, that color, which the Kiktu
called kuoptu, had suffused Guo's mantle. It had never wavered since.
Even now, as she rested and waited for the signal to begin the retreat,
the color on Guo's mantle did not even fade slightly.

To an opponent, kuoptu was a frightening enough color to see on the
mantle of an enemy warrior. The sight of the enormous mantle of a
battlemother suffused by the color was utterly terrifying.

Hours after the battle had begun, the Utuku were indeed terrified of
her; and their terror was by no means unreasoning. They had seen
countless warriors smashed into so much jelly beneath the blows of Guo's
mace. The beautiful bronze blades of her mace were now dented and
dulled, but it hardly mattered. The titanic strength of the young
battlemother was such that she could have been using her palps alone and
had, on several occasions, with much the same effect as a human smashing
a mouse.

Guo's flankers, and all the Kiktu warriors within sight, were in awe of
her. Never, in the history of the tribe, was there a record of a kuopto
battlemother. Mothers were, by their nature, not well suited to battle.
Only infanta young, still infertile mothers could be trained as
battlemothers; and few enough of those. And the training was so arduous
and difficult, so opposed to the nature of mothers, that, among the
western tribes, only the Kiktu used battlemothers as a regular practice.
The custom was not the least of the reasons they were derided as uncouth
barbarians by the civilized realms to the south. And hated by the Utuku,
to whose culture of total female supremacy the very concept of
battlemothers was a despised abomination.

It was still an abomination, in the eyes of the Utuku warriors. But it
was no longer despised.

The legend of Guo had begun.

The signal came, in the form of sudden hoots. (The Kiktu, like most of
the tribes, utilized a battle language; unlike the Utuku, who gave their
signals through drums.) Guo and her flankers were the first to move to
the rear, while the other warriors maintained a screen. It would take
the slow battlemother longer to reach her position.

Following the scruffy-looking swamp dweller who had appeared as her
guide, Guo entered the swamp. With disgust, for the swamp was a dank and
noisome place. But she made no complaint. She did not understand the
reason for the order, but she had complete confidence in Kopporu.
Whatever the reason, she was sure it was a good one.

Within meters (a term which Guo, of course, did not use herself she
thought of it as several goa, a rather loose measure based on the length
of a gukuy tentacle), Guo found that she had completely lost sight of
the battlefield. The plains were behind her. All around, on every side
except the pathway ahead, loomed the tall cycads.

Guo felt uncomfortable within the cycads. In part, that was repugnance
at the strange growths which seemed to drip from every branch not to
mention the ubiquitous slugs and snails. But, for the most part, it was
claustrophobia. She was accustomed to the open stretches of the plain,
where the tallest plants (the relatively uncommon fuyu groves) were
barely taller than a gukuy female and much shorter than she.

Soon, to her relief, she entered a large clearing. The ground here
seemed firmer than the soggy path she had just traversed. The clearing
was roughly circular, approximately eighty goa in diameter. Her guide
led her across the clearing and into the thick growth beyond.

"You are to wait here," commanded the guide, 'with your flankers. Stay
behind this screen of cycads, hidden from the clearing, until the signal
is sounded."

Guo felt a slight resentment at taking orders from a clanless one, but
she forebore comment. The orders, she knew, must have come down from
Gortoku perhaps even Kopporu. And, as she took the opportunity to
examine the surroundings, she realized that Kopporu was laying another
clever ambush.

The Utuku will think we are completely routed; stricken with terror. Why
else would we flee into the swamp? They will follow us, into this horrid
place where their close ranks and armor will drag them down. By the time
they reach this clearing, they will be confused and disoriented.

She watched as warriors continued to file into the clearing and were
guided to take their places, hidden in the cycads beyond. Suddenly, the
loud noises coming from somewhere behind her, further into the swamp,
registered on her consciousness.

Gana! Kopporu has driven the tribe's gana into the swamp!

Guo was amazed and awed by the ruthlessness of her battle leader's
actions. Very few of the stupid and ungainly gana would survive long in
the swamp especially since the warriors would be too preoccupied to
guard over them. The young herders would not, without assistance, be
able to prevent the terrified beasts from scattering in fatal confusion.

Guo knew, then, how desperate Kopporu must have been. The gana were the
tribe's most precious possession except the tribe itself. The battle
leader had decided to sacrifice them, in the hopes of drawing the Utuku
into a catastrophic trap. By driving the gana into the swamp, Kopporu
had ensured that the Utuku would follow. Guo herself, on the front
lines, had not seen the gana being driven away. But the Utuku scouts
would not have missed it. The Beak of the Utuku would arrive at no other
conclusion than that the right flank of the Kiktu which had inflicted
more casualties and humiliation upon her army than the rest of the Kiktu
and their allies combined had finally broken. Routed completely. The
Beak would command a major and massive pursuit. She would want to slake
her legendary vengefulness; and, besides, she would want the gana
herself. And the meat of the Kiktu warriors.

A great wave of sadness threatened, momentarily, to wash over Guo. But
she thrust it aside.

Kopporu's stratagem would not, she knew, win the battle. Even as
inexperienced as she was, Guo had seen enough of the disaster on the
Kiktu left and center to know that the tribe was doomed. The most that
would be accomplished would be a complete mangling of the Utuku left,
followed by a last futile charge out of the swamp in the attempt to
rescue the center. Kopporu and her warriors would die in that charge,
Guo knew.

But we will cost them very, very, very dearly. The Utuku will never
forget the terrible Kopporu. And her warriors. And her battlemothers.

The utter ferocity which filled Guo in that moment caused her mantle to
positively glow. For just a second, the green undercolor almost
dominated. Her flankers saw, and were astonished; and made their own
silent grim vows.

Suddenly, the forces of the Opoktu entered the clearing. Not warriors
alone, either Guo was puzzled, at first, to see the two Opoktu mothers
and their consorts in the midst of the allied warriors. Then she
realized their presence was inevitable. The Opoktu would not have agreed
to Kopporu's plan if it meant sacrificing their mothers. Guo watched as
the mothers filed slowly through the clearing and into the depths of the
swamp beyond. They would not last much longer than the Opoktu warriors,
of course. But Guo had come to admire the Opoktu, in the course of that
day. The small tribe was usually spoken of slightingly by the Kiktu
although never, Guo had noticed, by Kopporu or Aktako or Gortoku. But
Guo had seen their valor (and cunning) on the battlefield. None of the
Opoktu mothers, she knew, would fall alive into the hands of the Utuku,
to be made breeding slaves. At the end, the mothers would roll onto
their sides, exposing their great underbellies to the mercy strokes of
the warriors.

After the Opoktu warriors took their place, the clearing was suddenly
filled by the other two battlemothers of the Kiktu right flank, and
their flankers. Loapo, she saw with relief, still seemed relatively
unhurt (her mantle, of course, carried many fresh flail marks but those
were a trifle, to the vast bulk of a battlemother). But then Oroku
entered, and Guo could not prevent herself from hooting with dismay.

The third of the flank's battlemothers was moving slowly, and obviously
in great pain. Her left ped was a maimed ruin some squad of Utuku must
have sacrificed themselves, in the singleminded effort to cripple the
battlemother. They had come close to succeeding. And Oroku's visor was a
tattered wreck. Even by the standards of a battlemother, Oroku was slow
and clumsy. Where Guo had managed to catch most of the darts piped at
her on her shield, Oroku's visor had borne almost the entire brunt of
the missiles. The tough wicker-like visor could only withstand so much
punishment, even from light and flimsy blow-darts.

There are two darts sticking in her eye, realized Guo. She must be
totally blind, now, on her left side.

Suddenly, she heard a great drumming from the plain. The Utuku, watching
their enemy retreat into the swamp, had finally made their decision. Guo
recognized the meaning of the drumroll. She had heard it three times
earlier that day attack.

The last of the Kiktu warriors were now filing through the clearing,
moving past the creeping Oroku, toward their positions of ambush beyond.
Not all of the warriors were being positioned on the edge of the
clearing where there would have been no room for them, in any event.
Many warriors, in small squads, were being led to other places of ambush
by swamp-dweller guides.

Guo suddenly realized that she had seen several eights of
swamp-dwellers.

Kopporu has been preparing this trap for days, she realized. She was
filled with admiration for her leader's cunning.

The last Kiktu to enter the clearing was Kopporu herself, along with
Aktako and her personal guard. As soon as she saw the figure of Oroku
the battlemother was still only halfway through the clearing Kopporu
came to an abrupt halt.

There was no sign in Kopporu's mantle, but Guo knew the emotions that
coursed through her leader's heart. Dismay; uncertainty; what to do?

Guo came to a sudden decision. She laid down her mace and shield and
re-entered the clearing. Kopporu turned and stared, as she lumbered her
way forward.

When Guo reached the center of the clearing, she said simply: "She can
no longer fight, Kopporu. I will take her to safety."

Guo did not even wait for Kopporu's agreement. She simply reached out
her tentacles and picked up the huge form of Oroku.

"Leave your mace here," she commanded. Weakly, Oroku obeyed. Guo turned
and carried the wounded battlemother out of the clearing.

Even had Kopporu opposed her action which she did not she would have
been unable to speak, so great was her astonishment. Not so much at the
action itself, but at the very fact of it. She would never have believed
any being could be strong enough even to pick up a battlemother, much
less carry one.

Yet, when Guo returned to the clearing, after placing Oroku in the
cycads beyond, she was not even breathing heavily. Upon reaching the
center of the clearing, Guo picked up Oroku's mace. It was a common
flint-bladed mace, she saw. But it would do.

"Leave it there," commanded Kopporu. 'When the Utuku see it, they will
be convinced we are routed."

For the first time in her life, Guo defied her battle leader.

"No, Kopporu. They will be convinced, anyway. And I will need the mace."

"Have you lost " Kopporu stopped, realizing the truth. Guo would cast
aside her shield, and wield a mace in both palps.

Guo turned, then stopped. A gukuy had suddenly entered the clearing. A
Kiktu, not an enemy. The carvings on her cowl identified her as one of
the Great Mother's attendants. The gukuy came to a halt before Guo,
breathing heavily. Guo was astonished to see the tiny figures of several
males. Two of the males were riding within the attendant's mantle
cavity. The other four (one of them a eumale, as was Kiktu custom) were
perched atop the attendant's cowl. Somehow, on that strangest day of her
life, Guo was not surprised to see that they were bearing pipes and
darts.

She recognized them, of course, although she did not know their names.
They were the Great Mother's own childcluster the young and
still-infertile males, bonded together, who were destined to be the
Great Mother's most precious bequest to her successor.

After catching her breath, the attendant extended her arms. Held in
their grasp was a small bundle, wrapped in precious layers of oucloth.
She proferred the bundle to Guo.

"The Great Mother bade me give this to you."

Guo had no need to open the bundle to see what was contained within. It
was the Mothershell the beautiful, jewel-encrusted, ceremonial shell of
an orkusnail. Symbol of the Great Mother's guardianship of the tribe.

Stunned, she extended her arms and took the bundle. Dimly, she heard
Kopporu whisper: 'She knew." But the remark did not register on Guo's
consciousness, at the time.

"And these also," said the attendant. Before Guo realized what was
happening, the attendant reached up and grasped Guo's great cowl with
her palps. Across the bridges of flesh thus made, the six males
scampered. By the time Guo was able to gather her thoughts and register
a protest the childcluster was perched atop her own mantle.

"Be silent!" said the attendant sharply. 'The Great Mother bade me tell
you this: I bequeath to you the future of the tribe, daughter. Guard it
better than I have done. Be ruthless toward all folly."

The attendant turned suddenly, back toward the plain beyond the cycads,
and made to leave.

"Stop!" hooted Kopporu. 'The Utuku are already entering the swamp you
can hear them! You cannot do anything now but join us."

The attendant looked back. Suddenly, to Guo's astonishment, blue rage
and yellow contempt flooded the attendant's mantle.

She spoke, her voice filled with hate.

"The Great Mother saw, and made her decision. But I do not forgive you."

A moment later she was gone, brandishing her flail as she re-entered the
cycads.

"Why did she " began Guo, but Kopporu interrupted her.

"Later, Guo! We have no time now!"

As if to punctuate the battle leader's point, Guo heard the sudden very
brief sounds of combat in the cycads beyond the clearing. The attendant
had encountered the advancing Utuku, and sold her life.

Kopporu was right. Hastily, Guo retreated to her place of ambush. By the
time she got there, there was not a trace of Kiktu left in the clearing.

As soon as she had retrieved her own mace, she ordered the males atop
her mantle to climb down and hide in the swamp.

Their reply, transmitted by the eumale, was short and to the point: no.

"I have no time for foolishness!" whispered Guo.

"It is our duty," replied the eumale. 'Besides, with two maces you will
be shieldless. We will protect you from the Utuku pipers."

Again, astonishment. It was Kiktu custom for a mother's consorts to
serve as her personal squad of pipers. But it was an entirely ceremonial
custom. Mothers did not fight in battles, and, in any event, the weak
siphons of males could not expel darts with any force and distance.

She was about to enforce her command physically (or try the agile males
could have easily evaded her clumsy grabs) when the Utuku vanguard began
entering the clearing. All thought fled in a rush of rage. Her every
attention was focused on her tympani, waiting for the signal to spring
the ambush.

The fabled Utuku discipline, she saw, had already become eroded by their
short contact with the swamp. The Utuku warriors lurched into the
clearing in ragged files, swearing, covered with mud and slime up to
their underbellies. Their heavy armor had, indeed, been a liability in
the swamp. And Guo saw that many had lost their shields. (Kiktu
warriors, like those of most tribes, did not use shields; preferring,
instead, the greater finesse of the fork.) The clearing was soon packed
with Utuku. Battle leaders were attempting to bring order and discipline
back to what was now not much more than a mob with only limited success.

And then, before the Utuku leaders could overcome the chaos and
confusion, Kopporu issued the first of her battle hoots. The Utuku were
suddenly attacked from the other side of the clearing, the side nearest
the plain.

It was a suicide mission, Guo realized. Only a handful of Kiktu were
conducting the attack more could not have waited in ambush while the
Utuku passed by them.

They would not survive long, and Guo paid silent homage to their honor.
But they had succeeded in carrying out Kopporu's stratagem. The Utuku
warriors, hearing the sound of unexpected combat to their rear, had all
spun around and were now facing south, away from the mass of the Kiktu
forces who were still lurking in ambush.

The Utuku battle leaders realized almost at once that they had been
duped. But it was too late too late by far. Guo almost whistled with
glee, watching one of the Utuku drummers pound on a mud-splattered drum.
The soggy signal could not even be heard above the hoots of the confused
Utuku warriors.

Kopporu's next signal came. Guo almost lunged out into the clearing,
before she realized that she had not heard the signal for the
battlemothers to advance.

A mass of Kiktu and Opoktu warriors (and swamp-dwellers, Guo noted with
surprise) flooded out of the cycads surrounding the clearing. From
everywhere except the very northern edge of the clearing, where Guo and
the other battlemother still lay in waiting.

Kopporu's plan was flawless, Guo saw. The Utuku had now lost every trace
of rank, order and discipline. They were rapidly being crushed into the
center of the clearing, into a struggling mass of flesh. And toward the
north, toward an innocent looking patch of cycads where there seemed to
be no Kiktu warriors.

They were being forced toward Guo and Loapo, after being compressed into
a formation which was ideal for the simple tactics of battlemothers.

Crush. Crush. Crush. Crush. Crush.

The signal finally came, and Guo surged forward like a titan, two maces
held high.

Chapter 16.

Later, she herself remembered almost nothing of the battle that
followed. Except, oddly, the role of her male companions. Perhaps it was
because of the oddity of this new thing which had come into her life.
Whatever the reason, there was some detached part of her mind which
noted (with great surprise) that the childcluster was quite effective in
protecting her from Utuku pipers.

True, the Utuku pipers were at a great disadvantage squeezed, as they
were, into a struggling mass of warriors. Still, there were many who
managed to free themselves enough to raise blowpipe to siphon. But few
of them were able to fire an effective shot, for they were almost
instantly the target of a volley of small darts blown from the malebond
riding high above the battle, atop Guo's cowl. It was the eumale, Guo
noted, who always called the command for a target.

True, none of the darts carried the same force as a dart blown from a
female piper. But her male preconsorts were amazingly accurate in their
aim and there were always six darts in that counter-volley. Guo saw more
than one Utuku piper hoot with agony, its eyes a sudden ruin.

Nevertheless, she was struck by several darts. Two of them caused
painful wounds within her mantle. But her eyes were never hit and Guo,
fighting without a shield, had fully expected to be blind within a few
minutes. She had not cared, for she thought it was to be her death
battle.

For one of the males atop her cowl, it was. She glimpsed an Utuku dart
sailing above her cowl and heard a sudden hoot of pain. Thereafter,
there were only five darts in the counter-volleys.

One of her unknown future husbands, she realized, was dead or badly
injured.

Of the rest of that battle, Guo remembered nothing to the day of her
death. She heard about it, of course, many times. Within not so many
years, the Battle of the Clearing would become a stock in trade of
chantresses across half a continent. They would tell, in traditional
cadence and meter, of the day the horrible Utuku were hammered into a
mass of slugflesh, until their bodies could not be distinguished from
the muck of the swamp. The chantresses would even claim that, to this
day, the blood of the Utuku still seeps from the soil of that clearing.
Guo's Clearing, as they called it. Or, simply: the Crushing Place.

(It was not true, of course. The scavengers of the swamp are
extraordinarily efficient. Within a few eightdays, there was little
trace of the Utuku disaster in the clearing, beyond a few scraps of
utterly inedible weapons and armor. But who would ever go into the swamp
to see for themselves? The chantresses continued the tale, and were
never challenged.)

When the signal came to disengage, Guo did not hear it. Only the
insistent rapping on her cowl by her malecluster finally brought her
back to consciousness from the mists of her battle fury.

"We have been ordered to withdraw," said the eumale.

Guo stared at the few Utuku survivors who were still in the clearing.
All of them were maimed and crippled. She yearned to end their
suffering, and then charge forth into the plain itself to continue the
slaughter. But Kopporu's stern discipline restrained her. She turned and
entered the cycads to the north.

Now that the battle was over, exhaustion threatened to overcome her.
Exhaustion, and misery. After hours, the kuoptu which had flooded her
mantle faded, replaced by brown grief. The same color, she noted dully,
dappled the mantles of all the warriors within eyesight. The Kiktu had
inflicted a terrible defeat upon the Utuku in the clearing. But they
knew that, even at that moment, their tribe was being butchered and
enslaved on the plain to the south.

Guo was so tired that she did not even wonder where she was going. At
first, her vague supposition was that Kopporu was leading them to the
east, to a part of the swamp from which they could issue forth in a
hopeless attempt to rescue the tribe's mothers.

She held that thought for some time. It was difficult to determine
direction in the gloom beneath the overhanging cycads. And there were
more than enough dangers in the swamp to keep her mind concentrated on
the few goa ahead of her. Patches of bottomless mud; clumps of
dangerous-looking plants, their purple spines glistening with what might
well be poison; predators small predators, for the large ones had fled
the sound of battle but even the small predators of the swamp could be
deadly: she saw the bodies of several gana, and one warrior, covered
with venomous slugs and snails.

Eventually, it dawned on her that they were heading north, not east.
North-ward, she thought for the actual route they were following seemed
to twist and turn in a bewildering manner. Had she and her flankers not
been guided by a swamp-dweller, they would have soon become hopelessly
lost. But, over time, even to her weary mind, it was clear that they
were moving farther and farther away from the battlefield to the south.

Around her, unseen because of the constant screen of cycads, giant
ferns, and other vegetation whose name she did not know, she could hear
the movement of other files of warriors. Kopporu, she realized, had
broken the flank into small groups which, guided by swamp dwellers,
could make reasonably rapid progress through the narrow passageways in
the swamp. Much more rapid, certainly, than the rigidly organized Utuku
who would not, in any event, soon enter the swamp. Not after the
terrible slaughter which Kopporu had inflicted on their left flank.

Occasionally, on the path behind her, Guo saw swamp-dwellers dragging
vegetation across the trail. Confusing their trail, so that by the time
the Utuku did enter the swamp in pursuit, it would be difficult to
determine the exact direction in which the Kiktu survivors   had fled.

She knew, then. Understanding came to her in a flash. Everything fell
into place. Kopporu's strange maneuvers; the words and actions of the
Great Mother's attendant; and of the Great Mother herself.

Kopporu has betrayed the tribe.

That thought had no sooner came to her, however, that the simultaneous
memory of the Great Mother's actions drove it out of her mind.

One of my husbands is hurt. I forgot all about them.

She stopped abruptly. A sharp pang of guilt.

"One of you is hurt. I'm sorry I was so tired. I forgot."

A soft voice came down from the cowl above. By its timbre, Guo
recognized it as the voice of the eumale.

"No. None of us is hurt. Move on. We don't have time to stop now."

After a moment's hesitation, she stopped and laid down her maces. Then
she reached up and grasped her cowl with her palps.

"There are dangerous things in this swamp. Many of them are poisonous,
and even the smaller snails are almost as big as you. Come down, and
inside me."

A moment later, she felt the small bodies of the males rapidly moving
down her tentacles. The last were the eumale and one of the truemales.
Between them, they were bearing the body of another member of the bond.

"You said none of you were hurt!"

"He is not hurt," came the reply from the truemale. An exquisitely
subtle weave of green love and brown misery rippled across his mantle.
'Abka is dead. For long now he was killed in the battle in the
clearing."

"Move on," repeated the eumale. 'There is nothing we can do for him now.
And we cannot hold up the tribe."

Mention of the tribe brought the thought of Kopporu's treason back, in a
rush. Guo set her huge body underway again, consumed with a
kaleidoscopic welter of thoughts and emotions. Vaguely, she was aware of
the fleeting ripples of color in her mantle. Every color: blue, red,
ochre, yellow yes, and green. She had no doubt as to Kopporu's motives.
But treason was still treason. She was now or would become, at the
future ceremony the Great Mother of what was left of the Kiktu. The
tribe would want to hear her voice at Kopporu's trial.

What would she say? What course of action propose?

Or even the thought came to her unbidden command?

She heard faint whispers among the males huddled within her mantle
cavity, but paid no attention. Until, moments later, she felt the
stroking of a multitude of small arms along the great muscles of her
rearhead.

The strokes brought sudden relaxation. And then, almost simultaneously,
embarrassment and anxiety.

No male had ever entered her cavity before, much less stroked her. True,
their arms were far away from the organs at the very rear of her cavity,
but still  "Stop that!"

The strokes ceased. Instantly, the eumale spoke sharply and the stroking
resumed. A moment later, the small figure of the eumale and the truemale
who had assisted him in carrying Abka's body appeared alongside her huge
right eye. (Julius had noted, and been amazed by, the capacity of owoc
and gukuy to focus their eyes at incredibly short ranges. Guo was
staring at her preconsorts at a distance which a human would have
measured in centimeters.) "You are now the Great Mother of the tribe,"
said the eumale firmly. 'And you are obviously confused and distraught.
Over the state of the tribe, of course, but also over what to do about
Kopporu. The tribe cannot afford your thoughts to be a mess. It will be
part of our duty as your consorts to relieve your tension, so that you
can think clearly. Don't be a silly spawn."

Guo couldn't prevent a hoot of surprise. At the impudence of the eumale,
to some degree. But more at his uncanny perception of her thoughts.

"How did "

The eumale whistled. 'What else would you be confused about?" Guo fell
silent. The stroking continued, and, after a while, she admitted that it
was quite relaxing. Very pleasureable, in fact. But from that train of
thought her mind fled quickly.

The eumale and the other male did not leave their perch on her
mantlerim. Guo kept her eyes on the path ahead, for the most part. But,
now and then, her great right eye would swivel and examine her two new
companions. They ignored these peeks, in the excessively dignified
manner of youth. They were, Guo realized, no older than she. Still some
time away from reaching sexual maturity.

(The thought was, simultaneously, the source of relief, anxiety, regret
and vast curiosity.) "What are your names?" she asked suddenly. 'I am
Guo, of the clan of "

The eumale whistled. 'We know who you are! Everyone does. I am
Woddulakotat. This is Yurra. He is probably going to be our alpha." A
quick, incredibly subtle network of green and brown. 'Almost certainly.
We hadn't decided yet, because Abka was also being considered. But now
that Abka is dead "

He fell silent. The green and brown shimmer on his mantle and Yurra's
deepened and glowed. They were lost in grief for their bondmale.

Guo knew little of the complex workings of male society, beyond the
simple basics which every gukuy in the tribe knew. Less, probably, than
any infanta her age, for she had bent all her thoughts to the ways of
the warriors. Males, she knew, bonded together in small groups when they
were new-born spawn the only way they could fend off the predatory
attentions of the much larger female spawn.

Once made, those bonds were lifelong and deep. The males of a bond would
marry a mother as a cluster. Males had few rights, in Kiktu society; but
those which they had, they guarded jealously. The most precious of those
rights was the cluster's control over which male would copulate at any
given time with the mother. Mothers, it was said, usually had their
preferences in sexual partners but the mothers, normally dominant in
their relationship with their husbands, had to accept whichever male had
been selected for the moment by the bond. The alpha male would, as a
rule, obtain more than his share of couplings but not too much more,
lest he be deposed by his co-husbands.

The malebond's rights in this matter were never challenged. The rights
held true even when as was the custom among the Kiktu and most of the
tribes of the plains visiting mothers exchanged a sexual partner with
each other for a night. The choice of the partner to be sent into the
mantle of the visiting mother was entirely the prerogative of the
mothers' respective husband-clusters. From what Guo had heard (in
whispers among infanta), it was a common punishment which males of a
bond visited on those of its members who had fallen afoul of the bond's
good will to be dispatched into the mantle of an especially disliked
visiting mother; there to labor through the night to satisfy an old,
nasty, demanding mother.

Woddulakotat's strange name was normal for a eumale. The oddly truncated
ending of the name signified his lack of sexual organs, his
incompletion. (Normally, all Kiktu names almost all words in their
language, in fact ended in vowels.) The length of the name, on the other
hand, signified that the being's soul made up for his lack in other
ways. The utter misery of a eumale's life, which was the norm in most
gukuy societies, was not allowed among the Kiktu. True, the life of a
eumale was sharply circumscribed by social custom even more sharply than
those of truemales. But within those limits, eumales were accorded a
place of dignity and respect. More often than not, they assumed a
position of leadership within the malebonds, along with the alpha
husband.

Other peoples, Guo was dimly aware, derided the Kiktu for their coddling
of eumales. The Kiktu ignored the derision, since it was (very) rarely
expressed aloud; and because they considered the habits of other peoples
little better than savagery.

Guo's thoughts began to turn again to the question of Kopporu's conduct,
but she pushed it aside. She was much too tired to deal with that now.
From what little she could see of the Mother-of-Pearl through the canopy
of cycad branches, it was almost nightfall. Soon, she was certain, the
leaders would order a rest for the night. On the morrow, when her brain
was clear, she would ponder the problem of Kopporu. For now she had new
realities to deal with.

"You were very good in the battle," she said suddenly. The brown in the
mantles of her two consorts faded slightly. 'I didn't realize males
could pipe so well."

The truemale Yurra whistled derisively. Delicate yellow traceries formed
on Woddulakotat's mantle.

"They can't," announced the eumale. 'The silly old farts wouldn't know
what to do with their pipes if their lives depended on it."

Sudden brown flooded his little mantle.

"Which it did," he said sadly. 'I shouldn't make fun of them. At the
end, all the maleclusters took positions to defend their mates, pipes in
arms. Not that it would do any good, of course, even if they knew how to
use them. But not a one failed in his duty."

"We practiced," added Yurra. 'For many, many eightdays. It was Abka's
idea. He said that if we became accurate enough, and all fired at once
at the same target, that we could make up for our weak siphons." "He was
right," said Guo firmly. 'I think you kept me from being blinded."

"You fought without a shield, with two maces," said Woddulakotat
admiringly. 'You were truly awesome." Yurra hooted vigorous agreement.

For a moment, the gigantic mother and her two consorts-to-be gazed at
each other. Then, simultaneously, tinges of green began to flicker in
their mantles.

Perhaps it will not be so bad, after all, being a mother.

The thought was still too new and unsettling. For the males as well, it
seemed, judging from the speed with which those first, tentative
flickers of green disappeared.

"If you intend to continue fighting in this crazy manner," said Yurra
suddenly, 'we should give some thought to making a kind of shield for
your cowl. So that we can concentrate on piping, instead of dodging
darts."

Guo was relieved, herself, at the change of subject.

"Good idea. I'll talk to my flankers about it."

The three of them began discussing the design and construction of the
shield. Anchoring it, of course, was no problem the thick, hard tissue
of Guo's cowl made a perfect location for attaching a shield. The
problem was in the design. More like a visor than a shield, it would
have to be so that the males atop her cowl, while protected, would still
have gaps through which to pipe.

Shortly thereafter, the signal was passed down from somewhere ahead:
Make camp where you can for the night. We depart at first light
tomorrow.

Guo looked around. They were in a place where the path broadened
slightly. To one side was a large mound of moss. One of Guo's flankers
inspected the mound and announced that it was (relatively) free of
pests. Guo and her flankers moved onto the mound. She noticed the
apprehensive glances which her flankers cast about in the gloom. It was
almost dark. The swamp was horrid enough in daylight. What monsters
crept within it during the dark?

She commanded them to gather closely around her bulk atop her mantle,
even, as many as could fit. The flankers quickly agreed on a system of
rotating guards. (So, Guo noticed with admiration, did the males of her
cluster.) Then, feeling reassured by the proximity of Guo's great
muscles, the flankers not on watch fell quickly asleep. No large
predator would likely approach such a formidable creature as Guo, even
in the dark. If they did, the watch would sound the alarm, and whatever
predator might lurk in the swamp would soon learn the bitter lesson
which Guo had taught, that very day, to the Utuku. Even in sleep, the
great battlemother did not relinguish her grip on the maces.

Guo's last memory, before she fell asleep, was a faint whisper from
Woddulakotat.

"Tomorrow, Guo, we will talk about Kopporu, and what you must do. But
think on this, as you drift into sleep. I was there, at the end, with
the Great Mother. My bondmates and I had taken position on her cowl,
alongside her own cluster, for we knew that her husbands would be
useless. We saw Kopporu's retreat, at the same time as the Great Mother.

"She did not hesitate, Guo. Not for a moment. She commanded an
attendant, and gave her the shell; and ordered us onto the attendant.
Then she gave the attendant the message for you, and bade her leave.

"I looked back, Guo, at the Great Mother. It was my last sight of her.
Her mantle was glowing like the Mother-of-Pearl itself in midday. One
color, Guo one color alone. The deepest green I have ever seen."

Chapter 17.

When Guo awoke the next day, the answer to her dilemma was clear. As she
slept, her mind seemed to have reached a conclusion on its own. A
problem, however, remained: How should she carry out her decision?

Here, she was treading on uncertain ground. By choice, she had spent as
much of her short life as possible in the company of warriors. She knew
little of the customs and traditions which prevailed within the yurts of
the mothers and clan leaders, even though she herself was a high-ranked
member of the tribe's prevalent clan.

She did not think in these terms, but the essence of her problem was
that: she needed a lawyer.

Lawyers, of course, did not exist among the Kiktu. (They had only just
begun emerging, as a distinct subset of the priestly caste, in the
civilized realms of the south.) The Kiktu were barbarians. They had no
written language beyond a crude system of notations which were even more
limited than the runes of Earth's ancient barbarians. Like the tribes of
northern Europe a millenia past, custom and law was maintained by oral
tradition transmitted from one generation of clan leaders to the next.

Had Guo ever read the old Icelandic sagas, she would have found the
scene toward the end of The Saga of Burnt Njal quite familiar. The
tribe, gathered in full assembly, deliberating on a matter of law. Each
old and wise being of the tribe advancing their arguments; only to be
refuted when an older and wiser being remembered a different law which
everyone else had forgotten.

Law and custom was the province of the old clan leaders. What was she to
do? All the clan leaders were dead. There were not even very many old
warriors left alive, Guo suspected. Other than Kopporu's personal guard,
and the members of her own small clan, the vast majority of the warriors
who had filled the ranks of the left flank had been the young and
adventuresome warriors of the tribe who had flocked to Kopporu's
standard.

The word of Kopporu's own clan members would inevitably be suspect in
the tribal assembly which would judge Kopporu's conduct. The word of the
old members of Kopporu's personal guard Aktako and her close friends
would be even more suspect.

The young warriors who made up almost all that was left of the Kiktu
would be torn and confused. On the one hand, their esteem for Kopporu's
prowess in battle once again dramatically confirmed would draw them
toward her. On the other hand, they would be horrified at Kopporu's
actions.

Confusion and uncertainty would be the inevitable result. Chaos would
develop, and grow. Different bands of warriors would advance alternate
and conflicting proposals with all the vigor and hot-headed impetuosity
of youth. Who was to guide the deliberations, and maintain order?
Kopporu? Impossible she was the issue at hand. Gortoku? Or one of the
other battle leaders? Possibly. But it was unlikely that members of
other battle groups would accept the authority of any of the battle
leaders. The battle leaders were all young themselves. Tried in battle,
to be sure, but not in custom and law.

These were the thoughts that filled Guo's brain, as she made her way
that morning along the path. The guide, she noted absently, was still
leading them northward.

After a time, she became aware of Woddulakotat's presence. His little
mantle, she saw with surprise, was suffused with azure irritation.

"Are you really so ignorant?" demanded the eumale.

"What do you mean?" She was too surprised by the question to be angered
by its impudence. (She would learn, very quickly, that the subservient
timidity of males was less fact than fiction; and, over time, would grow
thankful for it.) The azure was suddenly for just a fleeting moment
replaced by green affection.

"Truly, you are a battlemother. Have you spent any time in the yurts of
the mothers?"

"Very little. As little as possible, in fact. I was bored."

"You can no longer afford to be bored, Guo. The responsibility for the
tribe is now in your arms."

Guo's own mantle flooded azure. 'I know that! What do you think I've
been thinking about, ever since we started off this morning?"

Woddulakotat made the gesture of reproof.

"Then why aren't you talking to us?" At that moment, Yurra appeared
alongside him.

Guo was dumbfounded. 'Why would I talk to you?"

Both males were now positively glowing azure no, more! Bright blue.

"Idiot," said Yurra. 'We are your closest advisers. You will have
others, of course. But, always, a mother's closest advisers are her
husbands."

Guo was too interested in the information to take offense at the
truemale's outrageous conduct.

"Really?"

The two males stared at her in silence. Slowly, the blue faded from
their mantles.

"As I said, truly a battlemother." Woddulakotat whistled humorously.
'Guo, the one group of advisers you can always trust are your husbands.
You do not need to take our advice, of course. Males are not always
wise."

"Neither are females," interjected Yurra forcefully.

"But whether our advice is wise or not, you need never fear that it
contains hidden motives. We are your husbands. Not yet, of course but we
will be."

"Did the Great Mother "

"Always," replied Woddulakotat.

"Every night," added Yurra. Another whistle. 'Well, not every night.
Even in her old age, the Great Mother was a lusty "

"Yurra!" Guo was shocked.

But, despite her prudish innocence, Guo was not really a timid
youngster. She had been assured and assertive even before the battle.
Now, with the battle behind her, she was rapidly growing in
self-confidence. It was strange, to her, this idea that one would
discuss important matters with males. But ... And so, as the day wore
on, she began slowly opening her thoughts to her preconsorts.
Tentatively, at first; then with increasing frankness.

Not long after she began her discussion with them, Yurra and
Woddulakotat brought another of their malebond forward. Iyopa, his name
was. Guo discovered that every malebond had at least one member who
specialized in learning the tribe's traditions and laws.

"The mother needs her own memory," explained Iyopa. The gesture of
suspicion. 'You can't always trust a clan leader's memory, no matter how
old they are. Especially when the matter involves relations between the
clans. It's amazing how every old clan leader suddenly remembers the law
differently always, of course, to the benefit of her own clan."

Iyopa was quite small, even for a male. But handsome, thought Guo. Very
handsome, in fact.

Very handsome.

She forced her attention back to the problem at hand. Some part of her
mind, throughout the ensuing day, never lost its awareness of Iyopa's
good looks (and odd, new sensations began tingling in her body); but,
for the most part, she was impressed with the young truemale's knowledge
of Kiktu history. A bit vain, perhaps, and Guo thought that he was not
really as smart as either Yurra or Woddulakotat. But Iyopa had a truly
prodigious memory; and there was no question the truemale had applied
himself to his task.

By midafternoon, Guo and her preconsorts had reached the stage of
conclusions.

"You have to make sure of your flankers," said Yurra softly. 'If they
are not steady, all will be lost."

Guo considered, and agreed. Soon thereafter, upon entering a small
clearing, she halted and gave the hoot which summoned her flankers.
Moments later, the eight warriors stood before her. Their swamp-dweller
guide arrived, as well, wondering at the delay. Firmly, but not
disrespectfully, Guo asked her to leave for a moment, that she might
discuss private matters with her flankers. The guide hesitated briefly;
then moved out of hearing range.

Guo examined the flankers. All of them had survived the battle,
relatively unharmed. A surprising fact in itself. The position of
battlemother's flanker was prestigious among the Kiktu not least,
because it was so dangerous. Unlike the mobile warriors, the flankers
were fixed to their slow battlemother, and without the battlemother's
bulk to protect them.

Flankers carried flails, but they did not normally use them in combat. A
flanker's weapon was the greatfork. The greatfork was a two-tentacle
weapon, a combination of a huge two-fork and axe. (A human specialist
examining the weapon would have immediately recognized it, generically,
as a halberd. In detail, of course, the weapon was different: two
fork-prongs on one side, where a halberd has a single beak; and the
axe-blade on the opposite was longer and shallower than the blade of a
halberd. But the principle was the same.) The greatfork was an ungainly
weapon in combat, quite unlike the graceful flail-and-fork combination
of the normal warrior. But grace was not its function. In battle, the
task of the flankers was crude and simple: either by grasping with the
fork, or by driving with the blade, to hold the enemy in position while
the slow but irresistible power of a battlemother's mace was brought to
bear.

Battlemothers always fought in the thick of the battle. The casualties
around them were usually high for flanker and foe alike.

Guo hesitated, ochre uncertainty rippling across her mantle. Once she
spoke to her flankers, she was committed. But after a moment, the ochre
faded. Her mantle was now gray, with a faint hint of black.

"Tomorrow or soon, anyway there will be a tribal assembly. Kopporu will
have to answer for her actions." The flankers said nothing. It was
obvious from their stance and color, however, that they were not
surprised by her statement. They, too, had drawn their own conclusions
from observing the retreat into the swamp.

"At the assembly, I will enforce the traditions of the Kiktu. It is both
my right and my duty as the Great Mother of the tribe."

Yurra handed her the bundle, which the males had kept in safekeeping.
Guo carefully unwrapped the bundle, and exposed the ceremonial shell
within. The flankers gazed upon it. Their arms made the gesture of
reverence. But Guo noted that there was no trace of orange surprise in
their mantles.

They saw and know. Good.

"Things will be confused at the assembly. We have lost all our clan
leaders. I must it will be necessary that I "

Suddenly, one of her flankers raised her greatfork above her cowl, held
crossways like a horizontal bar. It was the traditional salute of the
flanker to her battlemother. Traditional, but hardly ever seen. The
Kiktu were not, in truth, given to frequent displays of ceremony.

A moment later, the other seven flankers followed suit.

"We are yours to command, Great Mother," spoke the flanker who had first
raised her fork. Her name was Kolkata, and she was the leader of the
squad of flankers. A moment later, the others echoed her words.

The black tinge in Guo's mantle darkened.

"I may be forced to harshness."

This time, the words came as one, loudly: "We are yours to command,
Great Mother."

Guo stared at them. She was surprised. She had thought it would be more
difficult. (For all her unusual capacity for combat, Guo was not really
a warrior, and did not fully understand the minds of warriors. On the
day after the Battle of Lolopopo, Guo's flankers would have stood with
her against the Kraken itself.) The black in her mantle faded. For a
moment, a green wave rippled across. Then Guo turned, and resumed the
march.

Hours later, they entered a huge clearing in the swamp. Many other
warriors were already in the clearing. Still more were trickling in from
several directions all in small groups, led by a swamp-dweller guide.

The word was passed along by couriers: We rest here tonight. Tomorrow
the tribe assembles.

Before they slept, Guo and her preconsorts dug a little grave, into
which they lowered the body of Abka. It was strange, then, the anguish
which she felt, for the loss of a husband she had never known.

Yet she grieved, and deeply; and found, in the pain, a well of courage
and resolve.

The assembly began early in the day, and raggedly. There were no clan
leaders to begin the deliberations with the customary religious rituals.
Those rituals were brief and, in truth, not much more than perfunctory.
But they had always served, in the past, to allow the assembly to come
to order in a set and certain manner.

Guo saw that Kopporu was going to make no attempt to substitute herself
as the leader of the rituals. The infanta thought Kopporu's decision was
wise. Better to begin the assembly by bluntly demonstrating the truth to
all.

Kopporu herself was standing toward the center of the clearing, on its
northern side. She was weaponless, and her personal guard were not
nearby. Guo was relieved. She had been concerned that Kopporu might
attempt to intimidate the tribe. Such an attempt would not have worked;
it would simply have inflamed the hotheads. Instead, by taking her
stance, Kopporu was making clear to one and all that she accepted the
authority of the tribe.

Still, Guo noted that Kopporu had subtly weighted the situation. Her
personal guard was not standing nearby, true. But they were not all that
far away, either.

Guo examined them. As hard-bitten a collection of old warriors as you
could find anywhere on the Meat of the Clam. The scars crisscrossing
their collective mantles were literally beyond counting. There could be
no doubt in any gukuy's mind that Aktako and her group would deal
ruthlessly with anyone who tried to take matters into their own palps.
Not even the rashest young warrior would casually match flails with
them.

But there was more. Guo saw that the Opoktu warriors were gathered not
far from the center of the clearing, on the same side as Kopporu. The
Opoktu were still outnumbered by the surviving Kiktu, by a factor of
four to one. But the Opoktu had saved their entire tribe, except for
those warriors who had fallen in combat. Their own two mothers, and four
clan leaders, were standing prominently to the fore. In every nuance of
the Opoktu stance, a subtle but clear set of messages was being conveyed
to all who observed: We are still a tribe with leaders, united.

We are so, because we chose the course of flight.

We stand with Kopporu.

Then, there were the swamp-dwellers. There were many eights of them,
gathered together some little distance from Kopporu. Again, not near the
battle leader. But near enough to come to Kopporu's aid, if necessary.
And while the swamp-dwellers were not warriors, the still-healing scars
on their own mantles demonstrated that they lacked neither courage nor
willingness to fight. They were clanless outcasts, but their status had
inevitably risen in the eyes of the Kiktu over the past days. Whatever
their prejudices, the Kiktu were warriors for whom courage counted much.

And, there was this: Any Kiktu had but to look about them, to see that
they were in the middle of the Lolopopo Swamp. Lost, without their
guides. And the guides were making clear, without effrontery, that they
too would stand with Kopporu.

There was a last group, whom Guo had not expected. They would not be a
direct factor in the assembly, but their presence was not insignificant.
Scattered around the clearing, in small huddled groups, were refugees
from every tribe which had fought the Utuku on the plain. The refugees
had been found scattered through the swamp, and brought along with the
retreat. Many were Kiktu; but the majority, thought Guo, were members of
the five other tribes (besides the Opoktu) which had joined in alliance
with the Kiktu. Whose clan leaders had also led them to disaster.

All of them were warriors, except for a single young Datga mother and
her consorts. Most of them bore recent battle wounds. Each of them was
silent, their pinkish-brown mantles giving testimony to their own fears
and feelings of guilt. Each of them had chosen, as individuals, to take
the same course that Kopporu had chosen for the left flank as a whole
salvation in the swamp. They, too, bore the burden of treason. Hence
they would not speak at the assembly even those of them who were Kiktu
and had the right to speak. Their own conduct would be examined, and
judgement passed.

Yet their very presence was perhaps the strongest, if most indirect,
reinforcement for Kopporu's position. For Kopporu alone was not on trial
here. So were the ghosts of the clan leaders who had been responsible
for the greatest single calamity in the history of the Kiktu and their
allied tribes. The miserable, huddled shapes of the refugees was silent
testimony to the ghastly scope of that disaster.

The assembly was slow in coming to order. Kopporu stood alone, making no
attempt to impose her authority. She had apparently decided that it was
best to allow the tribespeople to mill about for a time, pondering the
situation.

Guo thought Kopporu's tactic was wise. And it gave her time to settle an
important question. She looked for, and quickly found, the other two
surviving Kiktu battlemothers. Loapo and Oroku were standing together
nearby, with those few of Loapa's flankers who had survived. (Oroku's
flankers, Guo would later learn, had all died in their frenzied efforts
to save their badly wounded battlemother.) Guo lumbered toward them. She
was glad to see that Oroku was present. She had feared that the lamed
infanta would not have been able to keep up with the tribe in its
flight.

She was also relieved to see that Oroku's wounds were healing well
enough, under the circumstances. There seemed to be no sign of the
parasitic infections which so often accompanied bad wounds, especially
eye-wounds.

The reason for the lack of infection was obvious, once Guo came near.
The wounds the entire left eye, in fact had been savagely cauterized by
fire. Guo was deeply impressed with Oroku's courage. The pain of that
cauterization must have been incredible. But the treatment had killed
any parasites even though the infanta would be horribly disfigured for
the rest of her life.

"You are well?" asked Guo.

Loapo made the gesture of affirmation. Oroku whistled amusement.

"As well as could be expected, under the circumstances."

"I had feared you would not manage the march through the swamp."

"I would not have," replied Oroku, 'except for Loapo. And the warriors
whom Kopporu sent to help me."

Mention of Kopporu brought back the necessities of the moment. Yurra, as
prearranged, handed Guo the bundle containing the Mothershell. Guo
showed it to the other two infanta, and recounted the attendant's words.

When she finished, she was relieved to see no trace of blue in their
mantles. She had been especially concerned about Oroku's reaction. Loapa
belonged to a relatively unimportant clan. There would have been no
possibility of her becoming Great Mother, in any event. But Oroku, like
Guo, was a member of the prevalent clan. Furthermore, she was older than
Guo. Insofar as these things could be determined in the rather complex
manner by which the Kiktu mothers chose the Great Mother of the tribe,
Oroku had been a more likely candidate than Guo. She had feared that
Oroku might take offense at Guo's peremptory claim to the title.

Her fears proved groundless. Oroku simply examined the bundle and,
within moments, made the gesture of consent. Loapo immediately followed
suit.

"The Great Mother chose wisely," whispered Oroku. 'I can think of no
better person to become our Great Mother in this darkest of all nights."
A faint, humorous whistle. 'A kuopto Great Mother! I almost wish the
clan leaders were still alive, so I could watch them tremble in fear.
May they rot in the Meat for eternity."

A brown ripple washed across Oroku's mantle. 'And besides, Guo, I will
be spawnless. There are no males left to the tribe, except yours. Even
if there were, what malebond would mate with a mother who looked like
me?" She gestured at her horribly scarred face.

Long after, looking back, Guo would decide that her love for her
husbands was born at that moment.

Yurra did not hesitate.

"I would be honored to serve you, Oroku." There was not a trace of ochre
in his mantle nothing but an exquisite tracery of every shade of green
(with just a hint of white beneath). The little truemale made the
gesture of obedience. 'With my future mate's permission, of course."

"All of our bond will serve you, Oroku," added Woddulakotat. 'I would
myself, if I could, and willingly. Scars are a thing of the flesh. The
tribe will need your soul." He also made the gesture of obedience. 'With
our future mate's permission, of course." Guo was amused, she thought at
first. For all her preconsorts' formal submissiveness, she had come to
know them well enough to be certain that, if she withheld her
permission, the cluster would make her life utterly miserable.

She had no intention of withholding permission, of course, and
immediately made that clear to Loapo as well as Oroku. Jealousy was by
no means an unknown emotion among the Kiktu (and all gukuy), but it was
not closely tied to sexual congress. Not, at least, among mothers.

She realized, suddenly, that her own mantle was flooded with green. Love
for her sisters, of course. But there was more; much more. It had never
occurred to her before that moment that greatness of spirit might dwell
in the little bodies of males. She had a glimpse, then, of the future
she would share with her husbands. Of a romance that would itself become
a legend, recited by chantresses.

But it was a fleeting glimpse, for at that moment she felt a stirring in
the air around her.

As she turned, she heard Oroku say: 'We are as one, Guo. And remember
the Great Mother's words: Be ruthless toward all folly."

Silence was falling over the multitude in the clearing. And it was a
multitude, Guo saw. There were far more survivors than she had at first
realized. The huge clearing itself held over double-eight eighties of
tribespeople and she estimated that there were at least as many packed
into the cycads surrounding the clearing.

Once the silence was complete, Kopporu began to speak. She spoke slowly,
for she had to shout loudly enough to be heard by all. Nevertheless, it
did not take her long to tell her tale.

The battle leader recounted, in a voice devoid of all emotion, her
actions over the past few eightdays. She recounted all of the steps
which she had taken, including the murders of Yaua and Doroto. She also
explained, very briefly, the reasons for her actions. But she made no
effort to justify them, or to advance any argument in her favor. She
simply presented the facts, and a description of her motives.

When Kopporu finished, she allowed a moment's silence to pass before
saying: "Let the trial begin."

"Now," whispered Woddalukotat.

Guo moved forward into the clearing, her flankers on either side. The
murmur which had begun to sweep the crowd after Kopporu's last words
died away. Every eye was upon Guo.

When she reached the center of the clearing, Guo slowly turned and
surveyed the entire crowd in the clearing. Once she was certain that all
attention was riveted upon her, she said in that incredibly loud voice
of which only mothers are capable: "There will be no trial."

She waited for the surprised hoots to fade away.

"There can be no trial," she continued, 'for there are no clan leaders
here."

A voice spoke from the crowd: 'The tribe may act as judge!"

"Who spoke?" demanded Guo.

Immediately a warrior advanced forward, her mantle suffused with blue
that particular shade of blue which, among gukuy, connoted not simply
anger but the outrage of a superior offended by a subordinate. Guo
recognized her at once. She was named Ruako, and she was a high-ranked
member of Guo's own clan.

Good, she thought. The other clans will not think I am playing
favorites.

"Do you know her?" asked Woddulakotat softly.

"Not well."

"I do, for she spent much time in the yurts of the mothers and clan
leaders. Ruako is very full of herself. Ambitious and vain. Exactly what
you need."

Guo spoke again, very loudly. 'How can there be a trial, Ruako, when the
accused are not here to answer the charges?"

The warrior's blue mantle rippled with orange. Confusion; astonishment.

"What do you mean, Guo? The accused is standing right there!" Ruako
pointed with her palp at Kopporu.

"Kopporu?" demanded Guo. 'Who has accused Kopporu of anything? I have
heard no accusation."

Ruako emitted that peculiar spitting hoot which, had she been a human
instead of a gukuy, would have been called 'sputtering."

"What are you saying? Kopporu accused herself!"

"Ridiculous. Kopporu simply presented the tribe with a recitation of
events. All of which lead to an accusation against the clan leaders.
Misconduct." (The Kiktu term which she used carried much heavier
connotations than the English word 'misconduct" gross dereliction of
duty; criminal incompetence; reckless endangerment of the tribe.) "Oh,
that's good," whispered Yurra excitedly. 'That's very good!"

Ruako's mantle was now positively glowing blue and orange. For a moment,
the warrior was speechless. Guo took the opportunity to quickly scan the
crowd. She was pleased to see the signs of relaxation everywhere her
eyes looked. Like most cultures whose tradition is oral rather than
written, the Kiktu took a great delight in debate and discussion. By
immediately stepping forward, Guo had taken temporary command of the
assembly. Then, by drawing out an opponent and focusing the tribe's
attention, she had brought order and logic to what might have rapidly
become a chaotic whirlwind of anger and action. Instead, the members of
the tribe were settling back comfortably on their peds. More than one
warrior, she noted, was showing faint tints of green in their mantles.
Kopporu partisans, perhaps; or simply connoisseurs, enjoying Guo's
display of skill.

"The clan leaders are not murderers!" squalled Ruako.

"How can you say that? That is precisely Kopporu's charge.
Unfortunately, the clan leaders are not here to answer the charge.
Hence, as I said, there can be no trial."

Again, the spitting hoot. 'Ridiculous! Ridiculous! Who are the clan
leaders accused of murdering?" Guo paused, hoping another would answer.
It was important that she maintain as much appearance of neutrality as
possible.

To her relief, Gortoku stepped forward.

"They are accused of murdering those who are not here."

Gortoku spread her tentacles, in a gesture encompassing the entire
crowd.

"Where is the rest of our tribe?"

Ruako started to speak, but Gortoku's loud voice overrode her words.

"I ask again: where is the rest of our tribe?"

The answer came at once, from many siphons: "Dead on the plain!"

"In the bellies of the Utuku!"

"In the Utuku shackles!"

"Just so!" bellowed Gortoku. 'And who is responsible for that Kopporu?
Or the clan leaders?"

Silence. Guo waited a moment, then spoke.

"I have permitted this discussion, in order that the tribe might see the
truth for itself." She paused briefly, allowing everyone to take note of
the word 'permitted." Then, when she gauged the time right, she took the
bundle handed her by Woddulakotat and opened it. She took the
Mothershell in her palp and raised it high in the air, where all could
see it.

"As we retreated into the swamp, the Great Mother sent this to me, along
with her childcluster." Guo then repeated the Great Mother's last words.

"The mothers of the tribe" she gestured to Loapo and Oroku  'have
discussed this amongst ourselves, and have agreed to respect the Great
Mother's wishes. I am now the Great Mother of the Kiktu."

Loapo and Oroku hooted their assent. Very loudly.

Ruako immediately began whistling derision, and uttering various words
of scorn. The gist of which was: these are not mothers, they are mere
infanta; they cannot make such a momentous decision; children should be
seen and not heard; and so forth.

"What an idiot!" whispered Yurra.

"She's perfect," agreed Woddalukotat.

And, indeed, it was so. Many others in the crowd might have, privately,
held similar views. But the manner in which Ruako had expressed them
settled the issue. The authority of mothers in Kiktu society was more
often honored in the breach, rather than in the observance. But it was
always honored. The more so, in this instance, in that the infanta so
ridiculed had played a glorious role in the battle just passed. Much
more glorious as more than one warrior noted, and loudly than had Ruako.
(And more than one warrior, as well, loudly contrasted the terrible
wounds borne by Oroku to the scratches on Ruako's hide.) Ruako was not
so stupid as not to realize, quickly, that she had blundered badly. She
attempted now to shift the question on to the general impropriety of the
entire manner in which the assembly was being held. This was done
through a hurried appeal to Kiktu prejudices.

"Outrage! Bad enough that Opoktu should be allowed at our tribal
assembly! Even worse clanless outcasts have been brought into our
midst!"

For the first time since she finished her opening presentation, Kopporu
spoke.

"It is not against custom for honored members of an allied tribe to be
present at Kiktu assemblies." Then, very loudly: 'Or does Ruako now wish
to slander the valiant Opoktu as well as our own battlemothers?"

By this time, more and more members of the tribe were enjoying the
spectacle of Ruako's embarrassment. Like most arrogant people of high
status, Ruako had made many enemies among the Kiktu. And even those who
had nothing against her personally were becoming irritated at her
conduct.

Again, loud voices were heard. Contrasting the glorious feats of many
Opoktu in the recent battle to the modest role played by Ruako.
Comparing, in puzzled tones, the great wounds which were clearly visible
on many Opoktu to the (Did she fall into a topobush, do you think? Is
that where she got those two little scratches?) almost unblemished
mantle of Ruako.

Kopporu spoke again.

"As for the swamp dwellers, they are here on a matter which concerns my
clan. And the tribe. I will explain when we have finished with the
question before us."

She stepped back.

"Now," said Woddulakotat. 'Yes," added Yurra.

For just a moment, Guo feared that ochre or pink might enter her mantle.
Disaster. She brought the image of her slaughtered people to her mind.

Her mantle flooded black. She rose up slightly, and bellowed: "I invoke
the Motherlaw!"

Utter silence. Utter stillness.

In part, of course, the reaction of the tribe was due to simple,
physical shock. The voice of a mother, unleashed in all its power, bears
a close resemblance to thunder.

But, to a greater degree, the shock was mental. Motherlaw had not been
invoked among the Kiktu in living memory. No, more not for many, many
generations. Guo could practically see the thoughts racing through the
minds of every warrior in the clearing, as they searched back through
the history of the tribe.

They found the answer almost at once, as Iyopa had predicted. It was,
after all, one of the most famous episodes in Kiktu history. That time,
long ago, when the Kiktu were still a small tribe. Reeling from defeat
at the palps of the (now vanished) Laukta. Most of their clan leaders
and mothers dead; half of the warriors wounded, dead, or dying; the ones
who survived having done so only because of the incredible ferocity of
the rear guard which had covered their retreat. At the center of that
rear guard had stood a young infanta; who, after the battle, had
declared herself the new Great Mother and had seized command of the
tribe through invoking the ancient ritual of Motherlaw. She had
maintained the Motherlaw for many, many, many eightweeks. Until the
Kiktu recovered, and took their terrible revenge on the Laukta.

Her name had been Dodotpi. She was revered in the history of the Kiktu.
Partly, of course, because she had saved the tribe. But partly, as well,
because the Kiktu were warriors, and Dodotpi had been the greatest
battlemother who ever walked the Meat of the Clam.

The entire multitude stared at Guo, and remembered the Battle of the
Clearing; and wondered: Or was she?

Motherlaw. A custom whose origins vanished somewhere back in the mists
of time. Almost never invoked. Great Mothers were deeply respected among
the Kiktu, and even enjoyed a definite authority. (Quite unlike, in this
respect, the semi-divine Paramount Mothers of the south, whose actual
power was nil.) But it was still the clan leaders who ruled, except in
battle, where the battle leaders came to the fore.

Motherlaw was not precisely 'mother-rule." On the few occasions when
Motherlaw had been invoked in the past, the Great Mothers had always
appointed leaders from the ranks of the warriors to actually exercise
the power. But their authority derived solely from the Great Mother, and
could be withdrawn by her. And the Great Mother served as the final
arbiter of law and custom. Judge; jury and executioner.

Ruako broke the silence. She began squawling semi-coherent phrases, all
of which indicated her vast displeasure and disagreement with Guo's
person and behavior.

"Fork her," commanded Guo.

Immediately, her eight flankers charged across the clearing. As they
approached, Ruako suddenly fell silent. Turned scarlet; and tried to
flee. But the flankers were upon her. No less than four greatforks
slammed into Ruako's mantle. It was the work of but moments to drag the
whistling warrior back across the clearing. The work of but seconds to
flip Ruako onto her back. (An unnecessary flourish, of course. The mace
which now crushed the life out of Ruako's body would have done so
regardless of which way the warrior was positioned. In truth, it would
have splintered a boulder.) Guo allowed the multitude to gaze upon
Ruako's corpse for a brief moment, before speaking.

"Does the tribe remember our Great Mother's last words to me?"

Silence.

"Answer me!"

Several voices: ' 'Be ruthless toward all folly.' "

"Louder."

"BE RUTHLESS TOWARD ALL FOLLY."

"Just so."

Guo made the gesture of condemnation. Her mantle glowed blue.

"If the clan leaders had survived, their stinking corpses would now be
lying next to Ruako's. They are condemned in the memory of the tribe."

She turned and faced Kopporu. 'Kopporu!"

"Yes, Great Mother."

"You are now the battle leader of the Kiktu."

"Yes, Great Mother. Who do you appoint as the new clan leaders?"

"No one. We do not need clan leaders. We are still in battle and will
be, until the Utuku are destroyed." She paused, letting that thought
penetrate the minds of her warriors. The formula was that proposed by
Iyopa the same, he said, as that adopted by Dodotpi so long ago.

"There will be no new clan leaders chosen until the Utuku are crushed
and our tribe is avenged. Until that time, the Kiktu are an army. Each
warrior will answer to her battle leader and to her alone. Regardless of
clan. The battle leaders will answer to Kopporu and to her alone.
Regardless of clan."

She paused, allowing the tribe to digest the concept.

"Do you understand?"

There was no hesitation this time in the response, which came from many,
many siphons.

Like myself, thought Guo, the warriors have grown weary of clan leaders.

Kopporu spoke.

"Great Mother, I have a difficulty."

"What is that?"

Kopporu gestured to the swamp dwellers. 'The survival of the tribe
depends upon these brave people. They have already aided us beyond
measure, as all here know. Many of them have died in so doing. In
return, they have asked for no reward except adoption into my clan. I
have promised to speak for them. But "

Guo finished the thought. 'But you cannot adopt them without the
permission of the clan leader. Who does not exist. And will not, for
some time."

For ever, came the sudden, shocking thought. A tribe without clan
leaders? Forever?

I must think upon that. Perhaps back to the moment, fool! What am I to
do?

"Put them in the battle groups," whispered Woddulakotat.

"Make one of them an adviser," said Yurra quietly. 'And don't forget the
Opoktu either."

"And the refugees," added Woddulakotat.

Guo pondered their advice for a moment, sorting it out. It made sense,
she thought.

"Do the swamp dw do these brave people have a leader?"

"Yes," replied Kopporu. She pointed to O-doddo-ua, and told Guo her
name.

"Bring her forward."

When O-doddo-ua came up to her, Guo spoke quietly.

"I am sorry, O-doddo-ua, but I cannot allow you to be adopted into
Kopporu's clan. Not now. Perhaps not for a long time. By our customs, I
would have to appoint new clan leaders. And I cannot do that now. It is
because "

"I understand, Great Mother." The swamp dweller made a gesture which
hinted at derision. Guo found herself warming to the gukuy.

"However, when the time comes you will be adopted. If not into Kopporu's
clan, then into my own. I make that promise. In the meantime "

She raised her head, and spoke to the multitude.

"All of the brave people who lived in the swamp will join our battle
groups. They may either choose their own group, or, if they prefer,
Kopporu will assign them to a group."

The black in her mantle returned in full force.

"All of the battle groups will welcome their new members. Do you
understand?"

Her flankers, more or less casually, hefted their greatforks.

"Do you understand?"

"YES, GREAT MOTHER."

"Good." She made the gesture of contentment. 'I am so glad. I detest
folly."

The clearing was suddenly filled with humorous whistles. And a great
green wave washed over the mantles, sweeping all ochre aside.

I have won. I have won. I have won.

"All of the refugees will do likewise. If they wish, they may form their
own battle groups and choose leaders. But I would prefer that they join
the battle groups which exist either those of the Kiktu, or of the
Opoktu. We do not need more confusion. Do you understand?"

There was no need, this time, to repeat the question.

She turned now and faced the Opoktu.

"You have, again, shown the honor of the Opoktu to the world. You have
fulfilled your oath of alliance. You may now go your separate way, if
that is your desire. I will provide you with guides to lead you through
the swamp, wherever you wish to go."

The Opoktu mothers, clan leaders, and battle leaders exchanged opinions
quietly, while Guo and her tribe waited. In much less time than she
would have thought possible, they reached their conclusions. Lukpudo
advanced to the center of the clearing, joining Guo and Kopporu. She
spoke in a voice loud enough to be heard by all.

"We will remain with the Kiktu. Wherever the Kiktu go, we shall go also.
In alliance!"

The clearing was filled with hoots of applause.

Lukpudo's next words were spoken softly.

"But just exactly where are we going?"

Guo looked at Kopporu. Kopporu whistled softly.

"To tell the truth, I never expected I would survive this day. So I
didn't really give much thought to it. But "

The Kiktu battle leader turned and looked to the northeast. Barely
visible over the tops of the cycads surrounding the clearing was the
Chiton. The great mountain was so far away it could hardly be discerned.

"Let us go to the mountain."

"To the Chiton?" A trace of orange rippled through Lukpudo's mantle.
'It's so far. All the way across the swamp."

"I know," replied Kopporu. 'But O-doddo-ua says it can be done."

The swamp dweller spoke up. 'Not easily, you understand. It will be a
heroic trek, and we will suffer casualties. But, yes it can be done."

Ochre tints appeared in Lukpudo's mantle. 'But still why?" "Where else
can we go?" asked Kopporu. 'The plain will be covered with Utuku,
hooting for our blood. They may even try to follow us through the
swamp."

O-doddo-ua whistled derision.

"Perhaps the north?" asked Lukpudo uncertainly.

Kopporu made the gesture which was the gukuy equivalent of a shrug.

"To what purpose? How can our people survive in that wasteland? And I am
certain that the Beak of the Utuku will have scouts watching the north
as well as the plain. Once we emerged from the swamp, the Utuku would be
upon us."

Lukpudo was not yet convinced. She now advanced her final argument.

"But the Chiton is said to be a land of demons now."

Guo spoke.

"The whole world is a land of demons now, Lukpudo. What can demons on
the mountain do to our people that the demons on the plain have not
already done?"

Lukpudo was silent.

Guo stared at the Chiton. So far away. A place of legends, and myths.
And demons.

And pilgrims, she remembered. She turned to Kopporu.

"Have you spoken to the Pilgrims of the Way, Kopporu? The ones who go to
the mountain?"

"Yes. Several times."

"What do they say?"

"They say there are demons on the mountain. Demons from beyond the Clam.
Monsters, who move like the wind and slay like the lightning."

"Why then do they go there?"

Kopporu hesitated, searching for words. 'They say it is hard to
understand. They say the demons are wise, as well as fierce. That they
bring truth along with death. Justice itself, along with the flail of
justice. They say that the battle leader of the demons is the most
implacable punisher of evil which has ever lived in the world. A
terrible creature, black as the night. But there is another demon, they
say, who rules and commands."

"They go there to learn from this demon?"

Kopporu made the gesture of negation.

"No, Guo. They go there to plead with her. She is the wisest being in
the world, they say, the one who knows the secrets of life, and truth,
and justice. But she is silent, and will not speak. Not even to her
children."

"Her children? She is ?"

"Yes, Guo. The Great Mother of demons."

Guo stared at the mountain. Moments later, when she spoke, her voice was
like bronze.

"We will go to the mountain. I would see this Great Mother of demons for
myself. If it is true that she knows these things, I will make her speak
to me."

The battlemother gripped her mace.

"My people cry out for justice. If there is a secret of justice, I will
have it from her. To hold such a thing secret would be evil beyond all
evil."

PART IV.

The Loom

Chapter 18.

"I've got a bad feeling about this," said Julius, watching the
procession approach.

"Why?" asked Indira.

"Because I think we've become famous. And I think we'd have been better
off if we'd just remained a small little bunch of happy-go-lucky,
obscure, inconspicuous, fly-on-the-wall, nobody-type demons."

He chewed his lip. 'Mark my words. I speak from experience. Somehow or
other, we Jews got famous early on in the game. We should have listened
to the Speckites."

"The who?"

"The Speckites. The Hebrews' next-door neighbors. You never heard of
them?"

Indira frowned suspiciously. 'No, I haven't."

"Imagine that! And you an historian. Just goes to illustrate my point.
The Hebrews went for the bright lights of Broadway and the Speckites
stayed anonymous. Guess which one of us caught hell for the next few
thousand years?"

Indira snorted. Privately, she thought Julius was probably right. But
What's done is done.

She couldn't begin to estimate how many gukuy were in the column
approaching them. Hundreds, she thought possibly thousands. The head of
the column was just entering the village; the tail of it was still not
in sight. All down the valley, three or four abreast, marched the
Pilgrims.

On either side of the column, scattered along its length, members of
Takashi's platoon acted as an honor guard. The platoon had been
stationed in Fagoshau (as the gukuy called their settlement in the big
valley) when the huge column of new Pilgrims arrived. After observing
the progress of the column up the eastern slope of the Chiton, Takashi
had sent a runner to the council requesting orders. The council, after a
quick deliberation, had passed on a formal invitation for the newcomers
to come and visit.

And they had all of them.

At that moment, Takashi trotted up. When the young lieutenant drew up
before her, Indira saw that he wasn't even breathing hard despite the
fact that he had just finished running up and down the entire column at
her request. As was so often the case now, she felt a contradictory mix
of emotions. Admiration for the young man's excellent physical
condition; uneasiness because she knew it was the result of Joseph's
relentless military training.

Still, she wished Joseph were there. The Captain had been gone for days
now, leading yet another punitive expedition against a party of slavers
which had been spotted the week before on the southern plain near the
Chiton.

"Punitive expedition," thought Indira. There's a euphemism for you.
'Extermination squad" would be more accurate. Not one of Joseph's
expeditions and there had been many, these past two years has failed to
massacre every slaver they caught.

Indira sighed. And so what? Would you feel better if the owoc were
dragged into slavery?

Takashi interrupted her musings.

"I count almost fifteen hundred of them, Indira. But that's just the
number in the column. There are more Pilgrims, further back. Scattered
groups of stragglers. All told, I'd guess there's around two thousand
new Pilgrims on the mountain."

"Holy shit," muttered Julius.

"Have they told you what they want?" asked Indira.

The gaze which Takashi leveled at her was hard as stone.

"Yes. They want to talk to the Mother of Demons. About the secrets."

Indira uttered a silent curse. She had feared as much. Next to her, out
of the corner of her eye, she saw Julius' face twist into a grimace.

Where did it get started? she wondered. This myth of the secrets and the
mother who holds them back from her children?

When she first heard of it, from one of the gukuy Pilgrims, she had
blamed Joseph. Had gone to him, in fact, and accused him hotly. Joseph
had denied it, with equal heat. After a few minutes of argument, Indira
had become convinced he was telling the truth.

She had never known Joseph to lie to her (or to anyone else, for that
matter). Still, she had been confused and exasperated.

"How did this silly rumor get started, then?" she had demanded. 'If you
didn't start it?"

She would never forget the look on Joseph's face when he gave his
answer. Like an ancient gold mask of Benin.

"It is not a rumor. It is the truth. Everyone knows it gukuy and ummun
alike."

It had not taken long to discover that Joseph was right. At the next
council meeting, Indira had proposed that Anna Cheng replace her as the
Admiral of the Ocean Sea. Anna had immediately refused, and was
supported in her refusal by the entire council except Julius.

"Until you teach us the secrets, Indira," commented Ludmilla, 'there is
none who can take your place."

"There are no secrets!" she had protested angrily. The young members of
the council had simply stared at her in silence. Even Julius had looked
away.

The column was now close enough to examine the individual Pilgrims who
were leading it. At the very front, in the center, marched a small and
elderly gukuy. She was wearing none of the decorative strips of cloth
with which southern gukuy generally adorned themselves. For that reason,
Indira at first assumed she was from one of the barbarian tribes, who
eschewed any clothing except armor. She was puzzled, however. There were
a number of barbarian converts to the Way, many of whom had been
trickling onto the Chiton for the past several months. But the religion
had originated in Ansha and all of its leaders, so far as she knew, were
from the civilized southern prevalates.

Then, when the column drew closer, she saw the elaborate carvings on the
gukuy's cowl. The pigments which would normally have colored the
carvings had been scoured clean. But she recognized the carvings
themselves, from descriptions which she had been given by Anshac
Pilgrims. They were the insignia of the prevalent clan of the Ansha.

Shocked understanding came to her.

"Is that ?"

Takashi nodded. 'Yes, it is. Ushulubang herself."

"Holy shit," muttered Julius.

"Can't you say anything else?" snapped Indira.

Julius eyed her, then looked back at the column. A rueful grin twisted
his face.

"I say it again: holy shit."

The audience which followed, in Julius and Indira's hut, was one of the
most disconcerting episodes in Indira's life. In Julius' life, as well,
he told her later.

Extremely intelligent and well-educated people like Julius and Indira do
not, really, believe there is such a thing as a 'sage." Until they meet
her.

That Ushulubang was extraordinarily intelligent became obvious
immediately. The chief opoloshuku a term which translates loosely as
'disciple/teacher" of the Pilgrims of the Way remained silent until she
entered the hut. Then, she thanked Indira and Julius for their
hospitality. In perfect English.

Indira was too surprised to respond with the customary phrases. Instead,
she blurted out: "You speak English!"

Ushulubang made the gesture of affirmation, with a subtly humorous
twist.

"Certainly. How could I be certain the scribes have captured the true
spirit of Goloku's teachings if I could not read the holy tongue
myself?"

She reads English, too. And her accent's extraordinarily good especially
given that she must have learned from another Pilgrim.

Suddenly, Indira was filled with not anger, exactly, but extreme
exasperation. She had had more than enough of these bizarre new myths
and legends which seemed to be springing up like weeds.

"English is not a holy tongue," she said harshly. 'It is simply a
language like any other. A ummun language, true. But the ummun have many
languages."

The two other gukuy who had entered the hut with Ushulubang registered
ochre/pink confusion/abashment. But Indira was surprised to see an
emerald tint appear on Ushulubang's mantle. Green, Indira had learned,
was a very complex color for the gukuy. The various shades carried
subtle differences in meaning, which, though they all had love and
tranquillity at their base, could express those fundamental emotions in
a multitude of permutations.

Emerald is the color of contentment.

"As I surmised," said Ushulubang. The old gukuy made the gesture of
profound respect. 'I had hoped, but I could not be certain until I came
here and spoke with you myself."

"Be certain of what?" demanded Indira.

The opoloshuku gestured to her two companions. 'My apashoc" the word
meant 'kin of the road"  'had told me that you were the guardian of the
secrets. A jealous guardian, they said, who would not impart the secrets
to the people."

Indira suppressed a sharp retort.

"But I did not believe them. I thought instead " Ushulubang paused for a
moment.

"What have the apashoc told you of Goloku?"

Indira was taken aback by the question. She fumbled an answer: A holy
person; a saint; a sage; possessor of all wisdom; embodiment of
goodness; teacher of  Ushulubang whistled derision.

"What nonsense! Goloku was a crude boor; a rascal; a drunk; a teller of
lewd jokes; and most of all, she was a tyrant, hard as bronze."

Indira's eyes widened. The gukuy on either side of Ushulubang flashed
bright ochre. Ushulubang glanced at them both, and again made the
gesture of derision. (But the subtleties of the arm-curls contained
also, in some manner Indira could not determine, the connotation of
affection.) "They did not know Goloku, as I did." For a moment,
Ushulubang's mantle turned a deep, rich shade of brownish-green.

"I am the only one still alive," said Ushulubang sadly, 'of Goloku's
first apashoc. All that is left of that small band of sisters. There are
not even many still alive of the later apashoc. Very few, of those who
knew Goloku personally, survived Ilishito's persecution."

Indira knew the tale. She had heard it many times from the Pilgrims on
the mountain. During Goloku's lifetime, her disciples had been few in
number. After the founder of the Way died of poison, it was said the
Paramount Mother of the time, Ilishito, had ordered the extermination of
the sect. Guided, according to proclamations of the Anshac officials, by
the divinations of the priests. From what she had been able to learn of
Anshac society, Indira suspected that the decision had actually been
made by the awosha the ruling council of the Ansha females. Although, by
all accounts, the Paramount Mother Ilishito had been more than cruel
enough to have ordered the persecution herself.

Of the inner circle of disciples those who had learned directly from
Goloku herself only Ushulubang had survived. Due, Indira thought, to the
fact that Ushulubang was herself a very high-ranking member of the
dominant clan. She had been officially expelled from the clan, and her
clan markings scoured clean with caustic substances. But her life had
been spared by the priests.

To their everlasting regret, I suspect.

Ushulubang's mantle returned to gray. 'These young apashoc have never
really understood Goloku. I do not criticize them, you understand." The
pinkish tones in her two companions faded. 'They have tried, and tried
very hard. Under the most severe circumstances. But they always lapse
into the great error. The error which Goloku flailed us for committing,
mercilessly, every day of her life."

"What error is that?"

Ushulubang's huge-eyed stare was piercing.

"The belief that Goloku brought us the Answer. When what she really
brought us was a thing much greater. She brought us the Question."

Ushulubang rose. 'And now, with your permission, I will leave you.
Tomorrow, perhaps, we can speak again. But I fear I am old and weak, and
it has been a long journey from Shakutulubac."

Indira nodded. That human expression was now familiar to the gukuy on
the mountain. Ushulubang's reaction to it demonstrated, once again, that
the old sage had prepared well for this meeting.

"I thank you." She turned to go.

"One moment, please," said Indira.

Ushulubang looked back.

"You did not answer my question. What did you mean when you said that
you were not certain until you met me?"

"When I heard that demons had come to us, and that there was one among
them who knew the Answer, I had thought the tale must be wrong. But
until today, I was not sure. Until you denied that Enagulishuc is the
holy tongue, in words as sharp as stone."

"I do not understand."

"Just so did Goloku flail us, when we fell into error. When I heard your
words, I understood why the Coil sent demons to the world, and my soul
was filled with love. I had feared, in the depths of my heart, that we
would lose the Way. Without a flail to lash the error of the Answer, it
is so easy to fall aside."

"I do not understand."

Green ripples marched across Ushulubang's mantle.

"Just so. You have seen the statue of Goloku in the temple at Fagoshau?"

"Yes."

"It is no longer there. I smashed it with my flail when I saw it." A
whistle of derision. 'These spawn" a gesture to her companions  'were
shocked and aghast. That is because they had fallen into the error of
the Answer."

A faint brownish ripple went across Ushulubang's mantle.

"Yet I should not be proud. I too had fallen aside, without realizing
it. Until you flailed me, great mother of demons."

"I do not understand."

The gesture of profound respect. 'Just so. Enagulishuc is indeed not the
holy tongue. It is the tongue that will pave the road of holiness." "I'm
impressed," said Julius softly, after Ushulubang left. When she looked
at him, Indira saw that there was no trace on his face of whimsy.

"So am I," she replied. 'I always wondered what it would be like to meet
the founder of Christianity."

Julius frowned. 'What do you mean? Ushulubang's impressive, but she
hardly seems divine."

Indira shook her head. 'I wasn't talking about the Christ. Jesus
inspired the religion that took his name. But Christianity was founded
by St. Paul."

Julius stared out the doorway at Ushulubang's receding figure.

"You think so?"

Indira shrugged. 'It's an analogy, and like any analogy it's suspect.
For one thing, the Way of the Coil is a totally different doctrine than
Christianity. Insofar as there's a parallel on Earth, it reminds me more
of Taoism than anything else." "You've always said Buddhism was the
closest parallel."

"Yes, I have. But now that I've met Ushulubang, I will no longer say
it."

Julius attempted to pursue the matter further, but Indira was clearly
distracted. More than distracted, Julius eventually realized. She was
completely lost in her own thoughts.

Indira met again with Ushulubang the following day. But the meeting was
brief. Although Indira was burning with the desire to pursue what she
had glimpsed of the sage's philosophy, practical matters had intervened
in their usual, overwhelming manner.

"How long will you stay?" she asked Ushulubang.

The sage made the gesture of completion. 'I will die here, on the
Chiton." A whistle. 'Though not soon, I hope."

Indira shook her head. (Another human gesture which had become familiar
to the gukuy.) "I did not mean you personally. I meant " She waved her
hand, encompassing the huge throng outside the hut.

"We have come to stay," replied Ushulubang. The gesture of respectful
inquiry. 'With your permission, great mother of demons."

"Don't call me that!"

The gesture of obedience. 'As you wish. May I ask why?"

"I am not the ruler of my people." "So I was told. That is why I did not
call you Paramount Mother."

Indira's irritation was replaced by curiosity.

"I do not understand the distinction."

Ushulubang whistled humorously. 'There is, in some ways, no distinction.
The Paramount Mothers of the tashop arren do not rule their peoples, in
all truth, despite the hootings of the awoloshu."

Indira mentally translated Ushulubang's terms. The Anshaku term tashop
arren meant 'the thickness of the meat." All of the gukuy religions
which she had so far encountered, except that of the Pilgrims, based
their cosmological concepts on the analogy between the world and a huge
clam. In all the languages she knew, in fact, the term for 'world" was
actually 'The-Clam-That-Is-The-World." The earth itself, rich and
fecund, was 'the Meat of the Clam." The pearly gray sky above was 'the
mother-of-pearl." The shell of the Clam protected the world from the
unknown terrors which lurked in the Infinite Sea beyond. (When the gukuy
had learned that the humans had come to Ishtar from somewhere in that
Infinite Sea, their nature as 'demons" had been confirmed. Who but
demons could survive such a voyage?) The religion of the Pilgrims did
not seem to be much preoccupied with questions of cosmology and
cosmogony. Like the ancient religions and philosophies of China, the
Pilgrims were far more concerned with questions concerning social life
and ethics. They accepted the basic cosmological concepts of their time
except for a slight twist. Goloku had said, once, that the world was not
a clam but a snail. The distinction, to Indira, captured the essence of
what made the religion of the Pilgrims such a new and revolutionary
factor in gukuy history. Clams are passive. Filter feeders. Whereas
snails far more so on Ishtar than on Earth were active animals who
hunted for their food. To the traditionalists, the world simply was. To
the Pilgrims, the world was going somewhere, in search of something.

Much like the ancient Chinese, the civilized realms of the south viewed
themselves as the center of the world. The Chinese had called their land
'the Middle Kingdom;" the southern gukuy called theirs 'the thickness of
the meat."

She had greater difficulty with awoloshu. The prefix 'a" simply
indicated the plural. 'Wolosh" was the stem of the word. From the
context, she assumed that Ushulubang was referring to the priests of the
southern societies. But, in Anshaku, the term for priest was 'wulush,"
not 'wolosh."

She understood, suddenly. The word used by the sage was a pun. There was
a type of snail on Ishtar, called oloshap. It was a scavenger and, as
such, considered unclean by the gukuy. It also produced, when startled,
a loud and ugly-sounding noise. (The Anshaku word for 'fart," in fact,
was a derivative shapu.) Chuckling, she shook her head. 'I still do not
understand why a paramount mother is different "

"Are you familiar with the customs of the barbarians?"

Indira nodded. 'To some degree. There are a number of former
tribespeople among the Pilgrims."

Ushulubang made the gesture of agreement, which shifted to the gesture
of regret.

"Not so many as I would prefer. The barbarians, despite their crudities,
are a better-souled folk than the dwellers of the tashop arren.
Especially the Kiktu. I raise this matter because the barbarians do not
have the custom of Paramount Mothers."

Indira nodded again. 'No, they call them the Great Mothers. They are not
revered; but, I think, have more real say in the affairs of their
people."

The gesture of respectful disagreement.

"To a degree, that is true. But the difference is much more profound.
The Paramount Mothers of the tashop arren are the source of the people,
the embodiment of the people's life. Among the barbarians, however, the
Great Mothers are also the protectors of the people."

Indira frowned. 'The protection of my people is in the hands of our
Captain, Joseph Adekunle." (She pronounced it in the Anshac manner:
Yoshefadekunula.) "Just so. Yet ... you are called the 'Admiral of the
Ocean Sea.' The term may be translated, I believe, as the 'Leader of the
Journey Through Infinity.' "

Indira gritted her teeth. God damn Hector Quintero and Julius Cohen. Men
and their stupid jokes.

She attempted to explain the actual origin of the term in the colony's
history, but Ushulubang interrupted her with a whistle.

"Males and their stupid jokes. But Goloku taught us that humor is the
palp of wisdom. A rough and heavy palp, at times. But such is often
necessary, to open the valves of truth."

Once again, that piercing huge-eyed stare.

"The title is, I believe, most appropriate. Tell me, gre Inudiratoledo:
what is the principal means by which a being protects itself?"

Indira shrugged. 'It depends on the being. Tentacles, for gukuy. Arms,
for an ummun. And for both, the swiftness of their peds."

Ushulubang made the gesture of negation.

"No. The principal means by which a being protects itself is its eyes.
For you must first see the danger, before you can deal with it."

Indira hesitated. 'That is true. But "

"What is the danger which always faces a people?"

"I it depends."

"No. It does not 'depend.' It is always true at all places; at all
times."

She understood, suddenly. 'The future."

"Just so Admiral of the Ocean Sea Inudiratoledo."

Indira shook her head fiercely.

There is no time for this now.

"We must return to the original subject of our discussion."

"As you wish."

"How will your Pilgrims live on the Chiton? And where?"

"You have not yet given us permission to stay."

Indira frowned. 'You do not need my permission. I do not own this
mountain, nor do my people. If it belongs to anyone, it belongs to the
owoc."

"You misunderstand. The Chiton is vast, with many valleys. There is more
than enough room here for all of us owoc, gukuy, and ummun alike." A
humorous whistle. 'The Pilgrims number among them both civilized and
barbarian people. There is not a skill in the world which they do not
know. Skills which, from what I have seen, you ummun often seem to
lack."

Indira nodded. It could not be denied. In truth, over the past two years
the humans had learned far more from the gukuy, in the way of practical
skills, than the other way around.

"You, on the other hand, possess arts and skills which we lack. Most of
those arts sciences, you call them are not yet of any use to my people.
In truth, we do not even understand them. But I believe those arts will
be necessary for us, in that dangerous place called the future."

The gesture of regretful affirmation. 'And in the meantime, you possess
a great knowledge of that skill which is most necessary of all. In this
perilous place called the present."

"And what is that?" But she already knew the answer.

"The art of war."

* * * "Is that why they came here?" asked Julius later. 'To learn how to
fight their persecutors?"

"Partly. But it's more than that. Ishtarian society has reached the
stage where the old ways are rupturing at the seams. In all societies
civilized and barbarian alike. The emergence of the Way is itself a
symptom of that upheaval. So is the rise of this monstrous tribe from
the far west."

"The Utuku?" He shook his head. 'Well, let's root for the Kiktu."

Indira shook her head. Grimly: 'It's too late for that, Julius. The
Kiktu were utterly destroyed by the Utuku. Months ago, in a great battle
on the other side of that huge jungle southwest of the Chiton. The
Pilgrims learned about it from refugees fleeing the disaster. That's why
they circled the mountain and came in from the east, in fact to avoid
the oncoming army of the Utuku. A number of the refugees are here with
the Pilgrims. I was able to talk to one of them today myself."

Julius was pale. 'The Kiktu were destroyed? Completely?"

Indira nodded. 'Apparently so. Well, the refugee I spoke to said that
some of the Kiktu fled into the swamp. But she seemed to view that as no
more than a protracted death sentence. That aside, yes. And not just the
Kiktu, but all of their tribal allies. They were surrounded and pinned
against the swamp. Crushed. The tribes' mothers would have been crippled
and enslaved. All others butchered for meat, except for young females
conscripted into the Utuku army."

"Conscripted?"

"Yes. It's the Utuku custom to force young warriors and females to join
their army."

Julius shook his head. 'Sounds like a chancy proposition to me. What's
to keep them loyal?"

"They are required to participate in a ceremony which guarantees they
will not go back to their old tribe."

Julius turned even paler. 'I don't think I want to hear this."

"Yes. They are forced to eat their tribespeople in the victory feast."

He looked away. 'I knew I didn't want to hear it."

"You must, Julius. As Ushulubang said, there is the danger of the future
and the peril of the present. The entire Papti Plain is now open to the
Utuku. They will be sweeping across it like army ants. With nothing
between them and us but the slopes of the Chiton. And whatever army we
can build to defend those slopes."

"Maybe they'll turn south."

"Toward the prevalates?" She shook her head. 'I don't think so. Neither
does Ushulubang. The Beak of the Utuku is reputed to be cold and
calculating, as well as vicious. As powerful as the Utuku have become,
they are still not ready to match flails with the Anshac. Not yet. They
will need to consolidate their rule over the Papti first. And in order
to do that, the Beak will see to the elimination of any possible threat
in the vicinity. Such as demons living on the mountain that overlooks
the plain."

She stared out the hut.

"Where are you, Joseph?" she whispered.

Chapter 19.

To her relief, Joseph returned the next day. With, for the first time
since he began the raids, a prisoner.

That is easily the biggest gukuy I have ever seen, except a mother,
thought Indira, gazing at the figure on the litter. Also, if I've
learned to assess gukuy standards of beauty, the ugliest.

Then she noticed the small figure of the male inside the warrior's
mantle cavity.

That's strange. The males usually don't associate closely with warriors.
I wonder what happened to his mate?

The female gukuy was unconscious, and horribly injured. Her left eye was
a ruin, and there were two great puncture wounds on her mantle.

Spear wounds.

Nor was the gukuy the only injured member of the returning expedition.
Jens Knudsen had been hurt as well. But it was merely a flesh wound,
Indira was relieved to see.

"Merely," she thought ruefully. God, how this life has changed us all.

Maria De Los Reyes was examining the wounded gukuy, with a fierce frown
on her face.

"Why didn't you just dismember her completely, while you were at it?"
she demanded crossly.

"Can you save her life?" asked Jens.

Somewhat hesitantly, Maria nodded. 'I think so. Her mantle cavity's
obviously infected, but those poultices you put on the wounds have
probably kept her from dying. It'll be touch and go, but if this
warrior's as tough as she looks, she'll survive." Joseph smiled. 'She's
even tougher. Judging, at least, from the damage she caused four
wounded, two of them with broken bones."

Indira stared at the unconscious gukuy on the litter.

"All those injuries were caused by her? Alone?" She was genuinely
shocked. Since the very first fight with slavers, none of Joseph's
expeditions had suffered more than minor wounds to one or two warriors.

"All. The other slavers died like papakoy. This one was terrible."

Jens winced and held up his right arm, which was heavily bandaged.
'That's where I got this. She damn near tore my arm off. Her name's
Nukurren, by the way, and "

"Why did you let her live, then?" demanded Indira. 'You've never done
that before with any slavers you caught."

For a moment, the faces of the young human warriors assumed an
expression which Indira had not seen on them for a long time.
Uncertainty, hesitation; almost childlike confusion.

"I'm not sure," replied Joseph. 'Partly it was because one of the owoc
slaves insisted."

"What?"

Ludmilla nodded vigorously. 'It's true, Indira. We were astonished. Of
course, the owoc are never " She hesitated.

Bloodthirsty. Like we are.

"But still, I've never seen an owoc show any real concern for a slaver.
As long as we bury the bodies. But the owoc was quite firm about it. She
said this one was different."

Jens was frowning. 'But that's not the only reason we let her live. It
was also ... I don't know. She was so incredibly brave."

Indira sighed. She understood, even if Jens didn't. The culture of the
human colony was rapidly being shaped by its necessities.

A warrior culture. One of whose inevitable features is deep respect for
courage, even the courage of the enemy.

It was an aspect of warrior cultures which many people admired, even in
the 22nd century including professional historians. Romantically
seductive, unless you understood the corollary.

When the Mongols took Kiev they spared the life of the commander of the
garrison, out of admiration for his courage. They did the same, later,
at Aleppo.

Then they slaughtered everyone else.

Her musings were interrupted by the male in the wounded gukuy's mantle.

"Please. Do any of you demons speak my language?" The male was speaking
Anshaku.

"Yes," replied Indira immediately. 'I do."

Ochre and red rippled across the male's mantle, in the delicate, complex
traceries of which only males were capable.

"Are you are you the Mother of Demons?" Indira sighed. It seemed she was
doomed to that title.

"You may call me so, if you wish."

The male a truemale, she now recognized made the gesture of obedience.
Then spoke again.

"Will Nukurren live?"

"She will live, according to our healer. Her recovery will be difficult,
however. And " A quick question to Maria. ' her eye cannot be saved."
"So long as she lives," said the truemale softly. To Indira's
astonishment, the little male began stroking his companion's head. His
mantle was flushed with that shade of green which, for gukuy, was the
sign of romantic attachment.

Now this is something I've never seen. A romantic attachment between a
female and a truemale?

She pondered the situation. Julius had long been puzzled by the active
sex life enjoyed by the gukuy, the vast majority of whom were sterile
females. Sex, he had explained to her, takes up a lot of biological
energy, and he couldn't figure out why a species would evolve such an
orientation when there was no possibility of reproduction between
sterile females. Among the owoc, a cousin species, there was little
sexual activity except between mothers and males. He had eventually
developed an explanation which satisfied him. Though it was based on an
elaborate (to Indira's mind, arcane) web of neurological reasoning and
kin selection game theory, his hypothesis amounted to: 'They're smart,
sex is fun, and how are you gonna keep 'em down on the farm when they've
been to gay Paree?"

Still, the sex life of gukuy followed definite rules. Sterile females
coupled with other sterile females. Truemales with mothers. (Eumales
with no one.) Indira had never observed a romantic relationship between
a truemale and a sterile female. Even among the relatively tolerant
barbarian tribes, such an attachment would be considered unnatural and
perverted. And among the far less tolerant civilized cultures such as
the Ansha from which the truemale obviously came such a coupling would
be anathema, for which the priests would demand the death penalty.

There's a fascinating story here. I must learn it from him.

"What is your name?" she asked. To her surprise, the answer came from
behind her. In the voice of Ushulubang.

"He is called Dhowifa."

She had not heard the sage coming. Ushulubang, she had already learned,
was not given to ceremonious parades. At the moment, she was only
accompanied by one of her pashoc a young gukuy named Shurren, who, like
Ushulubang, came from the Anshac capital of Shakutulubac.

Indira looked back at the truemale. Dhowifa had withdrawn further into
the mantle cavity. Stripes of ochre and orange rippled along his mantle.

"Hello, great-nephew," said Ushulubang softly.

A moment later, the truemale replied: 'Hello, great-aunt Ushulubang."

How many more surprises are there going to be today? wondered Indira.
The two gukuy were not actually 'nephew" and 'aunt," of course not, at
least, in the precise sense of the English words. But those were the
nearest equivalents for the Anshac terms. Closely related members of the
same clan, separated by sex and two generations.

Indira saw that the mantle of Ushulubang's companion was dappled blue
and yellow.

"What is the pervert Dhowifa doing here?" demanded Shurren. The tone of
her voice was extremely hostile.

Ushulubang eyed her companion, then said mildly: 'I should imagine he
and his lover have come to live among the demons. Where their
arrangement would seem natural."

Shurren's mantle turned ochre.

"Or have you forgotten, Shurren, that among the demons the males couple
with the females?"

Shurren's mantle turned bright pink.

Indira felt a sudden surge of affection for the old sage. And the tiny
hope which she had found the day before grew brighter.

Perhaps. Perhaps ... "That is not the same," protested Shurren. 'The
demons are different from gukuy."

Ushulubang made the gesture of respectful submission the traditional
salutation of a student to the master.

"Ah. I am enlightened. Before this moment, I had always thought gukuy
were different from each other as well. But I see now that it is not so.
Truly, the pervert Dhowifa possesses a monstrous soul. Why else would he
have chosen the organs of Ansha's greatest warrior to those of the
Paramount Mother Ilishito?"

"Ilishito?" exclaimed Indira. 'The same "

"Just so. The same Ilishito who tortured the Pilgrims and slew all my
apashoc."

Indira was confused. 'But this truemale does not seem old enough "

Ushulubang made the gesture of negation. 'Dhowifa was born long after
the persecution. Ilishito lived to a great age, Indira. A cruel but
vigorous mother. And much given to replacing old husbands with young
malebonds."

Dhowifa spoke.

"Have you what has happened with my bondbrothers?"

"After you fled with Nukurren, they were disgraced. Almost executed, in
fact, but their lives were spared in the end. I do not know what
happened to them after. I am not myself in the good graces of the clan,
as you know."

The truemale's mantle turned deep brown.

Ushulubang made the gesture of acceptance. 'What did you expect,
nephew?"

"I don't know. I could only leave."

Indira understood, then. Dhowifa had not simply violated accepted
standards of sexual morality and abandoned his lawful mate. He had also
abandoned his malebond.

The anguish must have been incredible. She stared at the huge, scarred
body of Nukurren. There must be something else inside that fearsome
figure, to have won such love and devotion.

"Take good care of her," she said to Maria suddenly. The doctor gave her
an unfriendly sidelong glance. As if I wouldn't?

At Maria's order, four of the warriors picked up the litter and began
carrying it toward her 'hospital," a large hut which the colonists had
recently built next to the long houses. As the litter began to move
away, Ushulubang called out: "Have you continued to practice your
dukuna?"

The truemale's voice came back: "Yes, great-aunt. It has been a comfort
these past eightyweeks. I thank you for instructing me."

Shurren's mantle flashed orange.

"You instructed him?"

"Just so, Shurren. He was perhaps my best student. Of the clan, at
least. He might well have become my best student of all, except that I
was unable to visit him often. I was not welcome in the Divine Shell,
you know. My visits were infrequent and surreptitious."

"But why? Even though he is of your clan, I do not understand why "

"Why I would waste my time instructing a foolish male?"

Ushulubang made the gesture of abject apology.

"I have forgotten. Only females and not even most of them; no, only
those who follow the Way feel sorrow at the evil of the world. The rest
are dumb beasts."

Shurren's mantle rippled pinkish-brown. (A color frequently found upon
Ushulubang's disciples, Indira noted with great satisfaction.) "I have
offended you."

"Nonsense! To the contrary, Shurren, you have brought me sudden joy.
Your words recall to my memory a long forgotten episode from the days I
wandered the streets of Shakutulubac in the company of Goloku. Come, I
will tell you about it."

Ushulubang and Shurren began moving away. Indira heard the sage's voice
drifting back.

"It was a miserable night. The more so because Goloku had gotten drunk.
Again." Indira smiled at the sound of Shurren's shocked hoot. 'Oh, yes
it's quite true. Goloku was excessively fond of ashuweed. Often made a
fool of herself. This night was no different. We encountered a small
pack of eumales in one of the back alleys. Six or seven of the
disgusting creatures. Beggars and thieves. Would you believe that
drunken fool invited them to spend the night in her mantle?"

Shocked hoot.

"Oh, yes it's quite true. I was appalled, of course especially when it
was discovered they couldn't all fit inside Goloku and she insisted that
I accept half of them."

Shocked hoot.

"Oh, yes it's quite true. Then, no sooner ..."

The voices became indistinct. Indira was left alone with Joseph. Joseph
was watching her, with the look he usually held in her presence. Reserve
no, deep anger, held in check.

Suddenly, as she had not done in a long time, Indira smiled at Joseph.
Slowly, a hesitant smile came in return.

Maybe, thought Indira. Maybe.

It was still a faint hope, murky and uncertain. But for a woman who had
felt no hope in years, it was as if a ray of sunshine had broken through
the everlasting clouds of Ishtar.

Chapter 20.

Nukurren regained consciousness the next day, and never lapsed back
thereafter. Under the ministrations of the healer demon
Mariyaduloshruyush and her assistants, the wounds began to heal quickly.
Most of the assistants were demons, but two were gukuy Pilgrims from
Anshac. One of them, a former helot named Ertatu, told Nukurren than she
was healing much more quickly than the demon herself had expected.

"Mariya says you are the toughest gukuy she's ever seen," commented
Ertatu, as she changed Nukurren's poultices.

"You can say that again."

Nukurren swiveled her good eye and saw the figure of Dzhenushkunutushen
standing in the entrance to the hospital. The white demon advanced to
Nukurren's side.

"How are you feeling?" he asked her. To Nukurren's surprise, he spoke in
Anshaku. Very good Anshaku. During the long trek up the Chiton,
Dzhenushkunutushen and the female demon Ludumila had spoken only Kiktu,
and seemed not to comprehend Nukurren and Dhowifa when they spoke to
each other in Anshaku.

Shrewd. The demons are cunning as well as ferocious.

Nukurren made the gesture of acceptance.

"I am alive and it seems I will remain so. That is unexpected."

"I am sorry about your eye," said the demon.

"It does not matter. It is a just punishment for my sins. It is only
right that I should lose an eye, in payment for the Old Ones I helped
enslave."

The demon opened his mouth, Nukurren had learned, was the name for demon
beaks (except the demons claimed their real name was ummun) and began to
speak; then fell silent.

After a pause, he said: 'I would like to talk to you, but I cannot. I
must return to the training field."

"You are a trainer of warriors?"

"I am the " Nukurren made him repeat the term until she could pronounce
it. Sharredzhenutumadzhoru.

She understood the meaning of the title at once. So I suspected. He is a
centurion of the human legion. As was I, before I was sent to the
Motherguard.

(The actual term which Nukurren used, of course, was not 'centurion." It
was gurren otoshoc, which translates roughly as 'chief troop leader."
But the essence was the same as the ancient Roman term, which, over the
centuries, was duplicated in different words in different human
languages. Whatever the word, it referred to the sinew of all great
armies top sergeant.) "You are preparing for war?" asked Nukurren.
Interpreting the strange movement of the demon's face as hesitation,
suspicion, she made the gesture of indifference. Then repeated it in
words, realizing that the demon might not understand the curl of her
arms.

"It does not matter to me, Dzhenushkunutushen. I am no longer a warrior,
nor do I care what happens to any realm on the Meat of the Clam. It is
true that you are demons, but " The gesture of resignation. 'You can be
no crueler than any gukuy."

Dzhenushkunutushen stood. 'There is no reason not to tell you. We will
be fighting the Utuku soon. Very soon, I think, and we are not well
prepared."

"The Kiktu have been defeated, then?"

"Destroyed completely, by all accounts."

Nukurren made the gesture of regret.

"I am grieved to hear it. Of all the peoples I encountered, the Kiktu
were the best. Barbarous and crude, but rarely evil." "So it is said.
But they are gone now. Slain in battle, or food for the Utuku."

"Go then, Sharredzhenutumadzhoru." The gesture of amusement. 'I would
not wish to see you in the bellies of the Utuku."

Dzhenushkunutushen turned away, saying: 'Any Utuku who bites me will die
horribly."

Nukurren appreciated the humor of the remark. Then, after further
thought, wondered if it was a joke.

Two days later, the white demon reappeared in the hospital. He was
accompanied by the female demon who was skilled in the healing arts,
Mariyaduloshruyush.

"Mariya tells me that you are now able to move about," said
Dzhenushkunutushen.

"That is true. Not easily, and not very well. But I am able to walk."

"I would like to ask you " The female demon began rapidly speaking in
the human language. Enagulishuc, it was called. Nukurren thought she was
displeased.

"She is angry with me," explained Dzhenushkunutushen.

"Why?"

"Because what I wish to ask of you will not be good for your health."

"Ask."

The female demon left abruptly, after making that odd motion of
spreading her arms which Nukurren suspected was the demon equivalent of
the gesture of disgruntled acceptance.

"I would like to ask you to come to the training field and observe."

"Why?"

"You are the best gukuy warrior we have ever encountered. I think you
could teach us much. Yoshef he is the" (Nukurren made him repeat the
term until she grasped it) 'kapitanu of our army did not like the idea.
He is suspicious of you. But I insisted."

"Why?" The demon paused. Two small, bright blue demon eyes stared into
one large, iron gray gukuy eye. Then: "You know why
Sharredzhenutumadzhoru."

Three days later, feeling her health returning quickly, Nukurren went to
the training field. She was accompanied by Ertatu, but Nukurren had no
need of her guidance to find the way. The harsh sounds of demon voices
were the only guide she needed. Much harsher sounding than usual. It was
the demon battle language, she knew.

At the edge of the open field, Nukurren squatted and observed the demons
racing back and forth in complex maneuvers. It took her some time to
separate the logic of the actions from the sheer dazzling display of
speed. By now, of course, she had come to understand the demon way of
moving, and so they no longer seemed to flicker. Still, they were so
fast; so agile; so different.

And then, as she watched, not so different. They were practicing
tactical maneuvers, and once Nukurren became accustomed to the blinding
speed of the demons, she was eventually able to discern the basic
patterns of the exercises.

Nukurren's only previous experience with the demons in combat had been
the attack on the slave caravan. That episode had been too chaotic for
her to have made any assessment of the demons' tactical methods. Now,
seeing those methods displayed in training exercises, Nukurren was
puzzled by what she saw.

Eventually, the demons paused in their exercises and made that bizarre
folding motion with their bodies which enabled them to rest on the
ground. The word for that in Enagulishuc, Nukurren had learned, was
sitting. She was fascinated to see water (at least, she thought it was
water) dripping down the faces of the demons, and quickly deduced that
such was the demon method of eliminating excess heat. It seemed bizarre
to her, as well as messy and slightly disgusting. Gukuy expelled excess
heat through increased evaporation in their breath.

Soon, Dzhenushkunutushen approached and sat down facing her.

"What do you think?" he asked.

Nukurren considered her reply. It would be unwise to offend the demon.
He, and to some extent his lover Ludumila, had been the only demons to
show some signs of friendship toward Nukurren and Dhowifa. On the other
hand ... Nukurren decided. Whatever else, Dzhenushkunutushen was gurren
otoshoc, and thus entitled to respect.

"A question. How many of you will mobilize for war with the Utuku?"

The demon hesitated. Then: 'Triple-eighty."

"So few?"

Silence. The demon looked away for a time. It was, Nukurren realized, a
critical moment.

Dzhenushkunutushen turned back. His bright blue eyes were unwavering.

"There are no more ummun than that on this world, Nukurren. Except a
very few too old to fight."

Nukurren made the gesture which, in Anshaku, is called unnudh wap kottu.
The gesture expresses a sentiment which is not readily translatable into
English. A different human culture had an equivalent that particular bow
by which one samurai acknowledges another.

"I am honored by your trust," she said.

Suddenly, the demon rose partly erect. His stick-peds (legs, Nukurren
had learned) were strangely bent, and he rested on the joints. He
clasped together his forelimb extremities (hands) and nodded his head.
Nukurren immediately understood that Dzhenushkunutushen was
reciprocating the unnudh wap kottu. It did not seem a practiced gesture,
and she thought that the demon had invented it on the spot.

Her surmises were confirmed.

They are terrible in war, yet they are not really warriors. They use the
tactics of barbarians, yet they are more civilized than Anshac. Their
arts and crafts are crude, judging from the poorly built hospital, yet
their knowledge seems immense. They are a mystery beyond any I have ever
encountered.

"Your tactics are crude and stupid. That would not matter, if your
numbers were great. Against equal numbers of gukuy warriors, of any
people, you will always win, because you are so much faster. After a
time, however, when gukuy become accustomed to your skills, you will
suffer losses which you cannot afford. Against Kiktu, you will always do
well because the Kiktu fight much as you do. Stupidly. Against a good
Anshac legion, you would be defeated by the third battle. Against an
excellent legion, by the second. You have no chance against the Utuku.
The Utuku tactics are crude, but they always send huge numbers into
battle, and they are highly disciplined. You will break against them."

The white of Dzhenushkunutushen's mantle (no, the demons call it
'skin,") was flushed with pink.

He is embarrassed, interpreted Nukurren, but this time, I think, he is
not pleased.

The demon took a deep breath.

"I guess I asked for that," he said softly, looking down at the ground.
He raised his eyes. As always, Nukurren was struck by their dazzling
color.

"Can our chances be improved?" he asked.

Nukurren made the gesture of uncertainty.

"The question has no simple answer. It depends on many things. Some of
these go far beyond battle methods. But insofar as your question
involves tactics, the answer is: perhaps."

"Perhaps? Why perhaps?"

"Because the true question you must ask of yourself. Are demons willing
to learn? Or are they as full of their pride as most gukuy?"

Suddenly, Dzhenushkunutushen was laughing, and making that side-to-side
motion of his head which Nukurren had learned was the demon gesture of
negation.

"You still do not understand, Nukurren. We are not demons. We are ummun,
and barely beyond childhood. If there is one thing we know how to do
well, it is learn."

Nukurren was unconvinced. 'Of you, that may be true. But I do not think
it is true of your kapitanu, Yoshefadenukunula."

Again, Dzhenushkunutushen made the gesture of negation.

"You do not understand him, Nukurren. It is his color which confuses
you. You think he is implacable. He is actually the most uncertain of us
all, but because we depend on him so, can never show it."

Nukurren was silent, unconvinced.

"You will see," said Dzhenushkunutushen.

That night, in the hospital, Dhowifa prattled happily of the events of
the day. Again, as had been true since they arrived among the ummun,
Dhowifa had spent most of his time in the company of Ushulubang. Only at
night did he return to the hospital.

Nukurren did not begrudge Dhowifa his absences. It had been the worst of
Dhowifa's pain when they fled Shakutulubac, other than losing his
malebond, to lose the company of Ushulubang. And now he had found her
again, and was able to spend entire days in the sage's company, instead
of a few hours snatched from under the watchful eyes of the Ansha.

On this night, however, Nukurren would have preferred it if Dhowifa had
been silent. His incessant chatter was distracting her from her own
thoughts, which were focussed on the problem Dzhenushkunutushen had set
before her.

By what tactics could a few demons defeat the Utuku hordes?

That night, Nukurren found no answer. But she did find many useful
questions.

The next day, and for five days thereafter, she squatted silently by the
training field, watching the demon exercises. She said nothing to
Dzhenushkunutushen, and he, as if guided by some unspoken understanding,
said nothing to her.

On the seventh day, Nukurren decided that her health was sufficiently
restored. She told Dzhenushkunutushen to take her to the armory. Asking
no questions, the ummun led her to a large wooden hut located some
distance away. There, laboring with simple and primitive tools, Nukurren
found several Pilgrims. Most of them were Anshac. To her surprise, she
recognized the leader of the group. Her name was Utguko, and she had
been, long before, the armorer for Nukurren's first legion.

Nukurren turned to Dzhenushkunutushen.

"I will need certain things to be made here." Dzhenushkunutushen made
the gesture of assent and gave instructions to Utguko. Nukurren was
interested to see that they conversed in Enagulishuc instead of Anshaku.
They did so, she knew, not to keep secrets from her but because it was
the wishes of the sage Ushulubang that Enagulishuc become the language
of the Way.

"It will be done," said Dzhenushkunutushen to her, speaking now in
Anshaku.

"Is good," she replied, in Enagulishuc. She interpreted
Dzhenushkunutushen's stillness as surprise that Nukurren was learning
Enagulishuc so quickly. Nukurren herself began to stiffen then, feeling
the old hurt return, that she should be thought stupid simply because
she was big and ugly. Then, after a moment, she relaxed. In truth,
Nukurren was learning more quickly than would most gukuy.

"Tomorrow," she continued, still speaking Enagulishuc, 'at training
field. We see if demon can learn. If will learn."

After Dzhenushkunutushen left, Nukurren explained to Utguko her
requirements. The old armorer was surprised, but she made no objections.

Early in the morning on the following day, when Nukurren returned, the
materials she had requested were ready. Thoughtfully, Utguko had wrapped
them in a reed-bundle, which made the bulky items easier to carry.

Hoisting the bundle onto her mantle, Nukurren made her way toward the
training field. Her route took her through the demon village, past the
longhouses of the warriors and the small huts of the older leaders. As
she passed through the village, many demons emerged from the longhouses
and began following her. To Nukurren's surprise, the Mother of Demons
herself emerged from her hut and joined the crowd.

By the time she reached the training field, it seemed that every demon
was present. On the field, in a small group, were those whom Nukurren
had learned were their battle leaders. The kapitanu, Yoshefadekunula;
the three liyutenanatu, Ludumilaroshokavashiki, Anadurumakfurrushen,
Takashimitodzhugudzhi; and the Sharredzhenutumadzhoru,
Dzhenushkunutushen.

Nukurren advanced to the middle of the field and stopped before the
small group of demons. She unrolled the reed-bundle and selected, from
the pile, a training fork and flail. The instruments were designed much
like actual weapons, but were deliberately blunted and wrapped in
resinous cloth to prevent serious injuries.

For a moment, Nukurren was tempted to speak in Enagulishuc. But she
decided to use Anshaku instead. It was important there be no
misunderstandings.

"First, you must learn you can be defeated. I do not believe you know
this yet. Now you will learn. I do not know if you have such things as
training spears. It would be better to use them. If you use real spears,
I will be forced to move very quickly, and I may not be able to keep
from harming you seriously."

The demons stared down at her. After a moment, the kapitanu called out a
command. Soon thereafter, a male demon came onto the field, bearing
spears which were simply blunted wood instead of metal-tipped.

The five battle leaders each took a spear.

"Your armor also," instructed Nukurren. Seeing the hesitation, she
whistled derision.

"You are fools," she said.

The five demons donned their battle armor.

"Which of us do you wish to practice with?" asked Dzhenushkunutushen.

"All."

"All? That's ridiculous!"

"Great fools." Nukurren fell upon them.

The combat which followed was savage and short. This time, Nukurren had
the advantage of surprise, and she used it ruthlessly. Before the demons
had even begun to react, Anadurumakfurrushen and Takashimitodzhugudzhi
were sprawled half-senseless on the ground. Ludumilaroshokavashiki was
able to avoid Nukurren's first flail-blow by virtue of her incredible
speed, but, as Nukurren had foreseen, she was temporarily off-balance.
Nukurren now pivoted against Dzhenushkunutushen, forcing him against
Yoshefadekunula, and then hammered the white male mercilessly with both
fork and flail. As she had suspected, Dzhenushkunutushen was very
strong, but he was not as strong as Nukurren. He went down under the
blows, entangling the demonlord in his fall.

That allowed Nukurren the time she needed to finish
Ludumilaroshokavashiki. Again, she was impressed by the speed and
dexterity of the female warrior; but it availed Ludumilaroshokavashiki
nothing. She was overconfident, as Nukurren had known she would be. The
demon lunged in with a headthrust of her spear. It was a clever feint,
designed to draw forth a missed fork-stroke. But Nukurren's
battle-experience was by far the greater. Instead of the fork-stroke she
expected, Ludumilaroshokavashiki found her spear entrapped by Nukurren
flair; and then, helpless, came the fork-stroke which spilled her to the
ground, her armor splintering under the impact.

Nukurren spun about and, without even looking, rolled to the side. The
demonlord's spearthrust missed her completely. She lashed with the flail
and then, pleased beyond measure, saw that Yoshefadekunula had again
avoided it by that impossible upward spring.

But I know it now, demonlord.

She could not deny the satisfaction it gave her to swat the demonlord in
midair, with a stroke of the fork which was, perhaps, excessively harsh.

She spun about. Three of the demons were beginning to rise, but Nukurren
stilled them with quick touches of the flail. These were not blows,
simply touches. But they were enough to drive home the lesson. All were
now at her mercy, and there would have been nothing, had they been using
real weapons in a real battle, to prevent her from slaying them.

She stepped back and set down her fork and flail.

"That is the first lesson. There will be no other today. Tomorrow I will
begin teaching you the Utuku way of war, so that you may learn how to
combat them. But today's lesson is the most important lesson of all, and
you must think upon it."

She rolled up her instruments in the reed-bundle and carried them back
to the hospital.

Late that night, Dzhenushkunutushen came to the hospital and sat by
Nukurren's pallet. He said nothing for a time, nor did Nukurren.

At length, Dhowifa spoke.

"Are you hurt?"

Dzhenushkunutushen's face crunched. The ummun crunched their faces many
different ways, but Nukurren thought this was the gesture of ruefulness.

"I hurt all over." "Good," said Nukurren. 'It will prepare you for
tomorrow. Where you will hurt again, but will be wiser."

Again, the crunch. Slightly different.

"Some friend you are!"

Only her long years of shoroku kept Nukurren's mantle gray. For some
time, she did not trust herself to speak. Dzhenushkunutushen rose and
began to leave.

Softly, to his back, Nukurren said: 'I have never had a friend. Except
Dhowifa."

The demon stopped in the doorway. He turned around and came back to
Nukurren's pallet. As always, she was struck by the strangeness of his
colors, the white passion of his skin and the blue fury of his eyes.

"I have never known loneliness," he said. 'I think you have never known
anything else."

"That is true. Except Dhowifa." She felt her lover's soft touch.

Dzhenushkunutushen lay down on the floor next to the pallet. 'Tonight I
will sleep here, Nukurren. There are lessons which you need to learn
also."

Soon, Dzhenushkunutushen fell asleep, as, shortly thereafter, did
Dhowifa. Nukurren remained awake long into the night. Never once did her
shoroku waver. But the time came when one of the great palps which had
brought terror and death to so many over the years reached out. Reached
out, and gently touched the soft yellow hair of the demon lying next to
her.

Chapter 21.

In the days after the shocking defeat which the huge new gukuy had
delivered to Joseph and his lieutenants, Indira found herself, much
against her natural inclination, visiting the training field. She said
nothing to anyone, simply watched as the new arrival Nukurren began
showing the human warriors the Utuku methods of combat.

On the second day of the new training regimen, Ushulubang arrived. She
was accompanied by Dhowifa, riding in her mantle cavity, and a large
number of Pilgrims. Indira immediately knew, by some subtlety in their
bearing, that these Pilgrims were former warriors. They were carrying
reed-bundles laden with unusually designed weapons, including shields.
From descriptions she had heard, Indira realized that these were
replicas of Utuku weapons. After a brief consultation between Ushulubang
and Nukurren, the Pilgrims donned the Utuku armament and began acting as
the mock opponent for the human platoons.

Ushulubang then came to Indira's side. With Ushulubang was one of the
Pilgrim warriors, older than the others. Although Indira could not
interpret specifically the clan carvings on her cowl (which had all the
arcane intricacies of medieval heraldry), Indira was sure that this new
gukuy was of some high-ranked Ansha clan.

Ushulubang immediately confirmed her guess.

"Inudira, this is Ghodha. She is a new Pilgrim. Until our flight from
Shakutulubac, she was a high commander in the Ansha legions. She is the
most experienced war leader amongst the Pilgrims."

Ghodha made the gesture of respect. More properly, since the gesture of
respect was generic, she made that specific version of the gesture of
respect which signified respect by a high subordinate of one realm
toward the august ruler of another.

In return, Indira bowed. Her bow contained none of the subtleties of
Ghodha's gesture, however. Indira had realized that the humans would
have to develop appropriate gestures with which to respond to gukuy, and
so she had instituted the bow. The bow given to gukuy as a gesture of
respect, however, was different from the one given to the owoc at the
time of feeding. Much shallower closer to an exaggerated nod than a deep
bow. And she had insisted that there be no gradations in the bow.

But, as she had known would happen, the gradations were creeping in
regardless. And she had immediately noted the different gesture which
Jens Knudsen was using toward Nukurren, and which was almost immediately
adopted by the other human warriors. The fact that the gesture
resembled, in its outward appearance, the humble hand-clasping of a
medieval monk toward an abbot did not fool her for a moment.

Within a generation, she thought wearily, we'll be a proper bunch of
samurai and mandarins.

"You are distressed, Inudira," commented Ushulubang. 'May I ask why?"

Indira stared. She had already come to recognize that Ushulubang was
easily the most intelligent person human or gukuy that Indira had ever
met in her life. But she was still astonished by the old sage's uncanny
ability to interpret subtle nuances of human body language.

"I it is difficult to explain."

Ushulubang gestured toward the training field.

"Would it ease your spirit if we desisted from this action?"

Indira immediately shook her head. 'No, no. You will be a big help for
my children. I should have thought of it myself." Then why didn't you?
she asked herself. The idea was obvious.

But she knew the answer. Because I cannot bear the future I can see no
matter where I look.

"It is what will come of this that disturbs you," said Ushulubang.

Indira nodded.

"I believe I understand. Some day we must speak on this matter,
Inudira."

Again, she nodded. But her nod contained, in some subtle way, the
implication of hopeless resignation; and she knew the sage recognized
it.

She tried to shake off the black mood.

"What is your opinion?" she asked the war leader Ghodha, pointing to the
training field.

Ghodha hesitated.

"I would prefer to reserve my opinion, for the moment. I am not familiar
with the tactical methods and abilities of dem ummun."

Indira turned and gazed back onto the training field. By now, the human
platoons were fully engaged in maneuvers with the Pilgrims. The Pilgrims
were arrayed in a tightly knit formation. In essence, it was a phalanx.
But Indira saw that the phalanx was much shallower in depth than the
formations of the ancient Greeks and Macedonians. The difference, of
course, was due to the weapons involved. The many-ranked phalanxes of
Hellenic warriors had been designed to take advantage of the great reach
of their long spears and pikes. The Utuku, using flails, were limited to
a three-deep formation.

"Is that how the Utuku fight?" she asked Ghodha.

"Yes. It is very crude and primitive, and allows for no subtlety of
maneuvers. But if the discipline is sufficient and Utuku discipline is
like bronze then their " Ghodha hesitated. 'I do not know the
Enagulishuc word. The Utuku call this formation a kabu buxt. We Ansha
call it arrut kudh pakta."

Arrut kudh pakta. Indira made the translation. Crest of the shell,
essentially.

"We call it a phalanx," she said.

"Falanuksh," repeated Ghodha. 'With their great numbers, and discipline,
the Utuku can be a terrible foe. Many armies have broken against them."

A long silence ensued. For the next four hours, Indira watched as the
young human leaders, consulting frequently with Nukurren, began changing
and adapting their tactics. They were fumbling, at first; grew more
assured as time went by. But still, Indira knew, they were groping for
answers.

The voice of Ghodha interrupted her thoughts.

"You are fortunate to have Nukurren. She was the greatest warrior of the
Anshac legions."

Indira turned and looked at the Pilgrim war leader.

"I did not realize you knew her."

Ghodha made the gesture of negation.

"I did not really know her, Inudira." A faint ochre ripple, with a hint
of brown. 'The caste divisions in Ansha are rigid. I was high caste not
Ansha, like Ushulubang or Rottu, but very high. Nukurren belonged to no
caste, not even a low one. She was born into a helot slave pool.
Clanless and outcast." Another ripple, the brown now predominant. 'As
such, and despite her incredible prowess, she was despised by such as
myself. In my former time, as a high commander."

Ghodha paused, took a deep breath. (In this, humans and gukuy were quite
alike a thing difficult to say was usually prefaced by a full intake of
oxygen.) The brown ripples spread and suffused her entire mantle. That
shade of brown which signified remorse.

"All my life, before I decided to adopt the Way and follow Ushulubang, I
have been trained in arrogance. It comes very easily to me. I have tried
to combat it, but it is often difficult. I shall try harder in the
future. I will not always succeed, I fear, but I will try."

Indira began to speak, but was interrupted by Dhowifa. The little male's
voice was even softer than usual.

"Nukurren thought you were the best of the legions' high commanders," he
said.

An orange ripple broke up the brown of Ghodha's mantle.

"It's true," added Dhowifa. 'She told me several times." The quick,
complex wash of ochre/pink/azure which suddenly colored the little
male's mantle was exquisite in its subtlety. Indira was not certain, but
she thought it was a brilliant emotional exhibition of diffident
apology, leavened by humor (no, not humor good feeling).

"Actually, she thought the best tactical commander was Ashurruk."

"Of course!" exclaimed Ghodha. 'Ashurruk was superb on the battlefield."

"But she thought you were the best thinker. The best I can't remember
the word, I'm not a warrior the best "

"Strategist?" asked Ghodha.

A lightning-quick ripple of greenish color. 'That's the word!" said
Dhowifa.

Ghodha turned and gazed down at the training field.

"So." A whistle. 'I must apologize to her." "Oh, you needn't," said
Dhowifa. 'Nukurren was never offended by you."

"Perhaps not," replied Ghodha. The former Ansha commander's mantle was
suddenly replaced by a dull, matte black. (Stolid determination, Indira
knew, closely related to the ebony sheen of implacable purpose.) 'I hope
not. But my offense is much deeper. Until this very moment, I had never
realized that common warriors thought about their commanders. Assessed
them, even, much as commanders assess their troops." A short silence;
then, a ripple of yellow contempt. 'As if commanders are the only ones
who think. As if warriors are but brainless beasts."

Indira felt a sudden wave of immense affection for Ghodha sweep over
her. In that one moment, she felt a deep regret that she had no way of
showing her feelings on her skin as could a gukuy.

She was born into an Anshac upper caste, and trained as a high commander
of the legions. For such as she haughtiness and condescension and insult
are as natural as breathing. Yet only such a one who also possessed a
great soul would have left it all to follow a despised and outlawed
sage, for no other reason than devotion to some higher purpose.

She turned away and gazed back onto the training field. The tactics
which the young human leaders were developing, working with Nukurren,
were beginning to crystallize. But it was also obvious to Indira that
they were still hesitant, still uncertain, still unsure of themselves.

She watched as Jens Knudsen, passing by Nukurren during a pause in the
action, casually stroked the huge warrior's scarred mantle. She watched
as Ludmilla exchanged banter with the outcaste veteran. She watched as
Joseph stood by the despised pervert, the former helot, the soulless
monster whose mantle never showed any color; stood by her, deep in
conversation, his brow furrowed with thought.

Young humans, barely beyond childhood, of every color; allied to a
soulless monster whose mantle never showed any color; desperately
seeking to forge an instrument which could stave off destruction.

And doing very well, thought Indira, given their handicaps. They are
almost there. They need only the finishing touch. And, most of all, the
confidence that they are right. The confidence which the Mother of
Demons could give them. The Mother of Demons, who knows the secrets.

There are no secrets! she heard her own voice shrieking. But it was a
lie.

This secret I do know. It was discovered long ago, in another time, on
another planet.

A vivid image flashed through her mind, the superimposed vision of a
dark forest in Poland, and the Utuku defeated. No, more than defeated.
Shattered, slaughtered, butchered. Their blood soaking the needles of
pine trees which never existed on Ishtar; their entrails strewn beneath
the branches of an alien growth. Death and destruction in a demon
forest.

At that moment, Indira almost spoke. Almost stepped forward and went
onto the training field.

But other visions came, and paralyzed her. Vision after vision after
vision.

Yes, I know the secret. And all the secrets which come with it.

She saw the horsetail standards of the Mongol tumens, shivering with
triumph in the forest. And the pitiless faces of the horsemen and their
generals. And the cities like hecatombs. And the peasant woman lying in
the doorway of the wretched hovel in which she had toiled her life; her
short life, now ending, as she lay there, naked, violated, bleeding to
death; her last sight the disemboweled bodies of her children. Lives
which had no meaning to the warriors who rode away, toward new triumphs,
beyond the brief pleasure they had taken from ending them. But lives
which had been as precious to their victims as the life of the Great
Khan had been to him, in his grandeur at Qarakorum.

Indira turned and walked away. Her steps were quick, very quick, almost
running; the pace of a mother abandoning her children. She was glad,
then, that she had no way of showing her feelings as could a gukuy. For
her skin would have fairly glowed with brown misery that particular
shade of brown which signified guilt.

* * * As soon as she left, Joseph and his lieutenants broke off the
exercises and trotted over to Ushulubang. Jens Knudsen followed, after a
brief exchange of words with Nukurren. Soon thereafter, all the human
warriors and gukuy Pilgrims came as well, until the old sage was
surrounded by a silent crowd. Only Nukurren remained behind, standing
alone on the training field.

Ushulubang said nothing, until Joseph spoke in a voice filled with
youthful anguish.

"Why will she not tell us?" he demanded.

"How to defeat the Utuku?" asked the sage mildly. Joseph nodded.

"Maybe she doesn't know," said Jens.

Ushulubang made the gesture of negation. 'She knows. It is quite
obvious."

Joseph's face was filled with fury. His body almost shook with rage.

"Then why will she not speak?"

Ushulubang's mantle flashed blue/black the color of furious
condemnation. The color of execution.

"Be silent, spawn!" bellowed the sage. The young humans stepped back,
astonished. They had never seen Ushulubang in this state. The Pilgrims
froze, their mantles flashing red fear. They, as well, had never see
that terrible color on Ushulubang's mantle.

Ushulubang fixed her gaze on Joseph. And now the huge eyes of the sage
had none of their usual gentleness and wisdom. Hers was the pitiless
scrutiny of a prophet.

"Do not judge your mother, spawn. You do not have the right. You demand
from her the Answer, when she is demanding from herself the Question.
You do not understand how terrible that Question is. You do not even
understand that there is a Question."

Ushulubang made the gesture of rejection. 'Go, spawn. All of you. Return
to your training."

Again, the color of execution. 'Go!"

The crowd fled. Except after a few steps, Jens Knudsen stopped. Stopped,
hesitated, then turned. He made his uncertain way back to Ushulubang.

The sage, mistress of shoroku, had to fight hard to maintain control.
Else her mantle would have been flooded with green.

I thought it would be this one. (A mental whistle of amusement.) Whose
soul bears, in truth, the passion of his color.

Jens Knudsen began to speak, could not find the words. Ushulubang made
the gesture of acceptance.

"Tonight," she said. 'I will await you in my hut."

After Jens Knudsen left, and Ushulubang was certain he was beyond
hearing, she made the whistle of amusement she had so long repressed.

"I thought that went quite well," she said to Dhowifa.

The little truemale's mantle rippled with ochre.

"You are so sure, Ushulubang? Things are much as you predicted. But,
still it is so dangerous." "Dangerous?" demanded the sage. 'Of course it
is dangerous! The Way is dangerous, Dhowifa. There is nothing so
dangerous as the Question. The way of safety is the way of the Answer.
Safety and oblivion."

"I know, I know. At least, I think I know."

Dhowifa fell silent. Ushulubang completed the thought.

"But you think it is too perilous. To goad the Mother of Demons until
her soul shatters?"

"Yes."

"There is no other way, Dhowifa. In this, I am right. She must be forced
to tell the secrets."

"Are her secrets really so terrible?"

Ushulubang whistled derision. 'Stupid spawn! Have you learned nothing?
She has no secrets."

Dhowifa's mantle rippled orange surprise.

"But "

"There are no secrets, Dhowifa. That is what she knows, and her children
do not. How can the Question be secret? Only the Answer can be secret.
And that is why she is so terrified, and cannot tell them what answers
she does know. For fear of what questions those answers will bring."

"Then why did you say she must be forced to tell the secrets, if there
are none?"

"It is the telling that is important, Dhowifa, not the thing told. The
answer given is momentary, a vapor dispelled by the wind. But the
telling that is what lies at the center of the Coil."

"I do not understand why that is true."

"Because it is only in telling the answer that the Mother of Demons will
finally accept the Question."

Dhowifa hesitated. 'Is it so wise? To bring demons to the Way?" He
gestured at Jens Knudsen. 'That one, perhaps. He is young, and very
kind. He has meant much to Nukurren, these past days. But the Mother of
Demons? And the black demonlord? Can such fearsome beings really be "

Ushulubang whistled derision.

"Be what, Dhowifa? 'Tamed'? Of course not. I do not wish to tame them.
Quite the contrary. I wish to convert the demons in order to show the
truth to the gukuy. Which is that we too are demons, and must be, and
shall be. Because only demons have the courage to seek the Question."

Again, silence fell. After a moment, Ushulubang gestured at Nukurren.

"Soon, we must heal her."

Dhowifa's mantle rippled orange. 'She is already healed, Ushulubang.
Almost, at least. There will be scars, of course, and she will always be
blind in one eye, but "

"I was not speaking of those recent wounds to her body, Dhowifa. It is
the great open wound in her soul which must be healed. The ancient wound
which has bled all her life."

Dhowifa made the gesture of uncertainty. 'She has seemed happy to me,
these past few days. It has meant much to her, even though she will not
speak of it, to find a friend in the demon Dzhenushkunutushen."

"You are wrong, Dhowifa. The friendship is a blessing, and a boon to
her. As you have always been a boon to her. But there must be more. She
must find the center of her Coil. She must find her life."

That night the demon Dzhenushkunutushen came to the hut of the sage
Ushulubang, and spent many hours there, learning the Way of the Coil.
The next night, he was accompanied by his lover, the demon
Ludumilaroshokavashiki. Two nights thereafter, they were joined by
Yoshefadekunula. The demonlord said nothing, but simply listened to the
sage.

Night after night, Indira watched her children enter the hut. Night
after night, she watched them leave. They did not speak to her, nor she
to them.

And every night, after they were gone, Ushulubang emerged. The sage and
the Mother of Demons would stare at each other for long minutes, saying
nothing. The one, filled with anguish, wishing she too could enter the
hut; the other, filled with love, barring the way.

Soon, Mother of Demons, thought Ushulubang. Soon. Soon you will find the
courage to break your soul.

Chapter 22.

A scout arrived at the village, out of breath despite her excellent
physical condition. She had run all the way from the big canyon with the
news.

Two armies had been spotted approaching the Chiton. Each with thousands
of warriors.

A few minutes later, 'the Pentagon" was packed with all the members of
the council, as well as the scout and Jens Knudsen. They were standing
around the three-dimensional clay model of the Chiton which Julius had
made.

"It's a good thing Joseph insisted on expanding this hut," muttered
Julius. 'We'd never have fit in the old one."

Indira forebore comment. She had opposed Joseph's plan to tear down the
old hut and build a much bigger one in its place, around the clay model.
It had been one of the many, minor clashes between she and Joseph over
the past two years. And, as was usually the case, Joseph's will had
prevailed.

And, as usual, thought Indira, the boy was right.

A rueful little smile came to her face.

Stop thinking of him as a 'boy," Indira. Old fool. The youngsters have
matured rapidly in this new world just as they did in the ancient days
on earth.

None more so than Joseph. How old was Alexander when he defeated the
Persians at Issus?

She looked across the table at Joseph, who was staring down at the map.
There was a frown on the Captain's face. Not a frown of worry, however.
Simply the frown of calm, collected thought.

God, he's impressive. In my entire life, I've never met anyone who
exudes so much sureness.

Except Ushulubang.

The last thought brought a sudden decision.

"Someone go get Ushulubang," she said.

Joseph raised his eyes and stared at her. For a moment, Indira thought
there would be an argument. Joseph's thoughts were obvious: Why
Ushulubang? She's a sage, not a warrior. But then, within seconds,
Joseph looked at Jens and nodded. Jens raced out of the hut.

Joseph looked back at Indira.

"I just have a ... feeling, Joseph," she replied to his unspoken
question. 'Founders of new religions have to be great politicians, in
addition to everything else. And the Way is not a pacifist creed."

Sooner than she expected, Jens returned with Ushulubang. The former
legion commander Ghodha was with her, as well as another Pilgrim whom
Indira had never seen before. As soon as the sage entered the hut,
Indira rapidly sketched the situation for her.

Ushulubang made the gesture of recognition (the one which indicated
'recognition of current reality"; there was a different gesture for
personal recognition).

"I suspected something of the sort was occurring, from the sudden
activity."

Ushulubang gestured toward the gukuy at her side, the one Indira did not
know.

"For that reason, I took the liberty of bringing Rottu with me, as well
as Ghodha. She is my other eyes." A humorous whistle. 'Not, perhaps, the
most subtle of philosophers. But very aware of the world, and uncommonly
shrewd."

Indira stared at Rottu. The gukuy was slightly larger than average. And
much older than most of the Pilgrims, although not as old as Ushulubang.
Like Ushulubang, she bore the cowl-carvings of a high-ranked member of
the Ansha. Rottu's carvings, however, had not been scoured clean. Other
than the bright pigments in the carvings, there was not a trace of any
color on her mantle.

Her shoroku is perfect, thought Indira. Which is what you'd expect of a
spymaster. Spymistress, rather.

Joseph looked at Rottu. 'Can you tell us anything?"

"Describe the appearance of the armies." Indira was not surprised that
Rottu's Enagulishuc, though heavily accented, was excellent.

The scout Jauna Horenstein quickly presented what details of the two
armies had been observed.

Rottu extended her palp and pointed to the little wooden piece which
represented the army approaching directly from the south.

"These are Utuku. From your estimate of their numbers, it is one of
their ogghoxt. Such is the name of the major divisions of their army."
"You are certain?" asked Joseph.

"Absolutely. Only the Utuku, of all the peoples known to me in the
world, equip and organize their armies in that manner. A few other
peoples use shields instead of forks, but none of them could muster such
a great force. And those peoples are far to the southeast, in any event.
Beyond Ansha."

"How many warriors?"

"Approximately eighty-eighty triple-eight eighty. The number varies,
from one ogghoxt to another, but not by much. The Utuku are highly
organized, for barbarians."

Indira translated the numbers in her mind. The gukuy numerical system
was based on the number eight, rather than ten. The term 'eighty" meant
the same thing as the human 'hundred" base multiplied by itself.
Sixty-four. 'Eighty-eighty" meant that multiplied again. Sixty-four
times sixty-four. Plus 'triple-eight eighty:" three times eight times
sixty-four.

Five and half thousand warriors, she thought with a sinking feeling. How
can we possibly face so many? Even behind the protection of Adrian's
Wall? And the fortifications are not finished in the other canyons, in
any event. The Utuku would have only to choose a different route.

Joseph spoke then, with not a trace of despair in his voice.

"And the other army?"

Rottu made the gesture of ironic surprise.

"Now that is what is interesting." She looked at Jauna. 'You are certain
that they are north of the river?"

Jauna nodded vigorously.

Rottu stroked her arms together in that gesture which was the equivalent
of a human scratching her chin. Her next question was addressed at
Joseph.

"Do you maintain scouts on the western side of the Chiton?"

"Yes."

"And they saw nothing?"

"No."

"Thus this other army appeared out of nowhere. Already across the river.
It can only have come from here."

She pointed to the pile of moss on the map which Julius had used to
indicate the huge jungle that stretched southwest of the Chiton.

"From the Lolopopo Swamp."

Anna Cheng gasped. 'But the swamp's impenetrable!"

Rottu again made the gesture of ironic surprise.

"So it is always said. But I know that there have been some gukuy who
have lived in the swamp. Escaped helots from the south. They must have
provided guides for this other army to cross the swamp. After they were
defeated by the Utuku many eightweeks ago."

She made the gesture of profound respect.

"It must have been a heroic trek."

Realization came simultaneously to everyone in the hut. Joseph vocalized
it: "The Kiktu."

"Yes. There is no other possibility. Logic tells us so and then, there
is your scout's description of the one who marches at the front of the
army. That can only be a battlemother."

Joseph's face was impassive. 'All accounts I have heard say the Kiktu
were destroyed in the battle. Those few who survived were scattered
refugees. Yet this is not a horde of refugees. It is a well-organized
army, and big."

He looked at the scout. 'How many again, Jauna?"

"More than two thousand. Probably three."

Joseph began to translate for Rottu, but the gukuy made the gesture of
understanding.

"More than four eight-eighty," mused Rottu, 'Probably six. Incredible."

She made the gesture of profound respect.

"I would not have thought it possible. Even for Kopporu."

"Explain," commanded Joseph.

"It is true that most of the refugees from the battle say the Kiktu were
utterly destroyed. But I have heard a different rumor, from a few. They
say that after the battle was lost, the leader of the right flank led a
retreat of the entire flank into the swamp. An organized retreat, not a
panicky rout. The leader's name was Kopporu, and she was reputed to be
the greatest battle leader of the Kiktu."

Rottu's armstrokes were now rapid and vigorous.

"I discounted the rumor, at first. But recently I have spoken to a new
refugee, who hid in a fuyu grove after the battle. By luck, she was not
discovered, even when the Beak of the Utuku established her command yurt
nearby. The refugee remained hidden in that grove for three days. And
watched, while the Beak of the Utuku ordered the execution of more than
double-eight of her battle leaders."

Rottu whistled with humor. 'The death of Utuku battle leaders is
naturally a blessing. But why? And why so many? True, the Beak is
perhaps the cruelest ruler on the Meat of the Clam. Even so, her army
had just won a great victory for her. One would have expected rewards,
not executions."

Rottu stared at the map. 'There must have been a great disaster in the
middle of that battle. I wonder. Kopporu was, among other things, famous
for her mastery of the art of ambush."

A moment's arm-stroking. Then, with the tone of assurance: "It must be
so. I can think of no other explanation. Several Kiktu refugees have
told me that it was well known that Kopporu was opposed to the Kiktu
clan leaders' plan of battle. She had predicted disaster beforehand, and
then demanded the command of the right flank. She was admired for that
nobility of spirit, it seems. But the truth was different. She hatched a
plot, and carried it out. Led the retreat of her flank into the swamp.
Set a terrible ambush for the Utuku who pursued. And then led the
remainder of her tribe across the Lolopopo Swamp. Seeking refuge, I
expect, in the Chiton." "Treason, you are saying?" asked Joseph.

The gesture of questioning.

"Treason, yes. Or supreme loyalty."

Joseph took command of the meeting then.

"Our options are clear and simple. From what the scouts report, the two
armies will contact each other at the base of the Chiton, before either
can reach any of the canyons. A battle will inevitably ensue in two
days, at the earliest. Probably three."

He stared at the map.

"The Kiktu are outnumbered, but if we throw ourselves on their side, it
may be enough to turn the tide." "And the other option?" asked Takashi.

"We marshall our forces behind Adrian's Wall and wait while the Utuku
and the Kiktu fight it out. The Utuku will probably win, but the Kiktu
will inflict massive casualties upon them. Very massive, I would think
if Rottu is right and they are still under the leadership of this
Kopporu. Massive enough, probably, that the surviving Utuku will not be
able to force their way up the canyon. They will retreat, and return to
the main army for reinforcements. That will take some time, which we can
use to prepare ourselves."

The other Lieutenant in the hut, Andrew Macpherson, spoke for the first
time.

"So. If we join the Kiktu, we risk everything at once. If we wait on the
sides, we give ourselves some breathing room. That, I think, sums it
up."

Joseph nodded.

"Which do you prefer?" asked Takashi.

"It is not for me to decide. The decision is not simply a military one.
It involves the fate of the entire colony and everyone else on the
Chiton, gukuy and owoc alike."

Indira took command.

"Joseph is right. The council must make the decision. And we should "

"No!"

She was stunned into silence. Joseph's voice had been like a
thunderclap.

She stared at him. 'But, Joseph the council is the only "

"No."

"But "

"No."

Silence filled the hut. Indira looked around. The faces of all the young
members of the council mirrored Joseph's even the face of Anna Cheng.
She looked at Julius. After a second, he looked away.

Joseph's voice drew her back to him.

"This" he said, pointing to the map, 'is not a decision like any other.
It is the decision that will change everything. It is the decision that
will make the future. It is a decision which can only be made by that
person who understands the future, and its perils."

His face was like stone.

"And its secrets."

Indira's mind was blank. Like a bird, paralyzed by the gaze of a cobra.

Black as night. Implacable.

Joseph's face softened, slightly.

"I'm sorry, Indira. I am not angry with you, as I was before. I have
been listening to Ushulubang, these past nights, and "

He took a deep breath. 'I know that I terrify you. I even think that I
understand why. Some part of it, at least. This decision " He pointed to
the map ' seems obvious to me. As simple and easy to make as as whether
to cherish the owoc. But you see deeper than I. Than any of us." Joseph
paused, groping for words. He glanced at Ushulubang. Then said: "This
decision is not simply an answer. It is a question. A great question.
Maybe the greatest question of all. The answer may be obvious, but the
question is not. Therefore, only you can make the decision."

She started to protest.

"It is true mother."

Desperately she scanned the room. Every face was like stone even, to her
horror, that of Julius.

No, not every face.

"Leave," she commanded harshly. 'All of you except Ushulubang."

Without hesitation, the young humans filed from the hut, Joseph leading
the way. As Rottu and Ghodha turned to leave, Ushulubang said to them
softly: "Gather the apashoc. Tell them the flails of the Pilgrims are
now under the command of the Mother of Demons."

Julius hesitated at the doorway, and turned back.

"I'm staying," he announced firmly. Seeing Indira's hard gaze, he
shrugged.

"Indira, Joseph's right. For years, we've been able to stay on the
sidelines. A cozy little colony, in a cocoon. But all things come to an
end. Whatever decision you make, we are going to plunge into the
mainstream of history. To sink or swim. And if we sink, we'll pull
others down with us." "Don't you think I know that?" she demanded
angrily. 'But why do I have to be the one to make the decision?"

"Because you're the only one who can, love. Joseph's right about that,
too." "That's nonsense!" shouted Indira. 'The decision is obvious.
Tactically, strategically even morally."

Julius shrugged. 'Then make it."

Indira opened her mouth, then closed it. Desperately, she looked at
Ushulubang.

"How may I be of service?" asked the sage.

Indira whispered, 'Do you understand?"

Ushulubang's mantle flooded brown with grief.

"Yes, Inudira, I understand. You cannot bear taking responsibility for
the future. You cannot bear being the Mother of Demons."

Tears began pouring from her eyes. 'Let me tell you the truth about the
future, Ushulubang, and its secrets. And its agony."

She spoke for three hours, without interruption. Her words were
disjointed, at times. She made no attempt to present her thoughts in an
organized and scholarly manner. Had she done so, it would have made no
difference, in any event. Much of what she spoke were names which were
completely new and unfamiliar to the gukuy who listened.

So many names. So many, many, strange demon names. Names of places, for
the most part.

Places of infinite slaughter: Auschwitz. Dachau. Hiroshima. Tuol Sleng.
Dresden. Nagasaki. Verdun. The Somme. Bokhara. Sammarkhand. Rwanda.

Places where the strong savaged the weak: Rome, and its victims. Rome,
sacked. Jerusalem, sacked, and sacked, and sacked. Magdeburg. The
Mfecane. Amritsar. Wounded Knee. Nanking. Sharpeville. Vietnam.

Places where the rich battened fat on the misery of the poor: The
helotry of Egypt and Sumeria and Sparta. The slavery of Athens and Rome.
The knout of the Tsars and the boyars. The Middle Passage. The
plantations of the Caribbean and the South. The Belgian Congo. The
sweatshops of the industrial revolution. The Irish potato famine. The
coal mines of Appalachia. The German slave labor factories of World War
II. The Gulag. The Great Leap Forward. The International Monetary Fund.

Names of cruelty: Hitler. Stalin. Tamerlane. Ivan the Terrible. Pol Pot.
Nazis. Einsatzgruppen. Ku Klux Klan. Inquisition.

Deeds of cruelty: Kristallnacht. The pogroms of Russia. The lynchings of
the American south. The Albigensian Crusade and all the other crusades.

Name after name after name in a babble, at the end, until she finally
fell silent.

Throughout, Ushulubang had not even moved. Now, she stirred slightly.

"So. Truly, a terrible road. Worse than I had hoped. But not, perhaps,
as much as I have sometimes feared, in the darkest nights of the soul.
You are here, after all. On this world which we call Ishtar, because the
name given to it by demons is one which we can all agree upon."

Indira snorted. 'Demons. It's a good name for us. Who but demons could
be so cruel?"

"Yes. And who but demons could be so courageous?"

The sage stared up at the ceiling of the hut. 'It is such a wonder to
me. To be so brave and powerful. To cross the Infinite Sea."

Indira shrugged. Ushulubang gazed at her for a moment, before speaking
again.

"Tell me, Indira. Is it true, as I have been told, that you did not flee
to our world? That you came here of your own will?"

"Yes."

"What was your purpose, then?" She explained, as best she could. Of an
Earth ravaged, but at peace. Of a humanity which was struggling to
rebuild a planet. Of those few, among the many preoccupied with
immediate necessities, who had yearned for the stars. Who had managed,
after much labor and effort, to equip a single expedition to come to the
one star in the vicinity of Sol which had been determined to possess a
habitable planet.

"Just so. A terrible road but a road of beauty, also."

"I suppose. Yes."

"Another question. Of the many names which you told me, there seemed to
be one name which appeared more often than any other." The gesture of
apology. 'It is difficult for me to pronounce. The Natushishu?"

"Nazis."

"Yes. Truly, a terrible tribe. Worse than the Utuku, even. Or, perhaps,
simply more powerful. You said they swept across the land like a fire,
leaving nothing but death and destruction behind."

"Yes."

"But you did not tell me what happened to them, in the end."

Indira stared out the doorway.

"They came to a place called Stalingrad."

"Another place of horror?" Indira thought of the soldiers of the
Wehrmacht Sixth Army, encircled by the Soviet counterattack. Over three
hundred thousand of them, caught in a maelstrom they had never created.
Years later, a few thousand would return to their families. The rest
part of the unknown multitude washed away into the ocean called History.

"No," she said. 'It was a place of glory, and beauty."

"Did the glory last? And the beauty?" She thought of Stalin's purges. Of
the Gulag.

"No. But "

"It was a place when the road forked. And the right fork was taken.
Horrors along that road, as well. But not so many as along the other."

"Yes. Yes, but "

Ushulubang made the gesture of understanding. 'You are terrified, not by
the agony alone, but by its inevitability. Not by the decision which
fork of the road to take, but by knowledge that all roads must lead
through horror. And that by choosing one fork it will be you yourself
who creates the horror of that road."

She nodded.

"Just so. Do you remember when I smashed the idol at Fagoshau?"

Again, she nodded.

Ushulubang whistled derision. 'Did you think I was so foolish as to
believe I could smash idolatry? Did you think I failed to understand
that, after my death, new idols of Goloku would be erected?" Another
whistle of derision. 'And of me as well, I expect."

Indira stared at the sage. 'I did not ... I don't know."

"Just so. Many years ago, Inudira, I found myself at a fork in the road.
Much like the one which you face here. I saw the fork coming, long
before I reached it. In my confusion and fear, I went to Goloku.

"I told her that the day would come, after her death, when the apashoc
would be savagely persecuted. I thought that because of my position in
the Ansha that I might be able to survive. I alone, perhaps, among my
sisters. If I debased myself, and groveled, and wriggled through the
anger of the clan leaders like a slug.

"The idea was loathsome. But, I thought, perhaps it would be my duty. So
I went to Goloku."

"And what did she say?"

"She told me I had understood nothing of what she had ever said. She
flailed me mercilessly, with words like stone."

Ushulubang's huge eyes were pitiless. Her mantle flashed black as night.
Implacable.

"I shall now flail you with the same words. There is no Answer, fool.
There is only the Question."

Suddenly, Julius spoke.

"Do you remember the first time we met?" he asked Indira.

The question took her completely by surprise.

"What?"

"The first time we met. We had an argument. Do you remember what you
said to me?"

Her mind was like a field of snow. Empty.

"I don't remember. Why?"

His rubbery face twisted into a grin. 'How strange. I have never
forgotten it."

She shook her head, clearing away the confusion caused by Julius' odd
question. Then, suddenly, remembered.

If there is one thing that historians know, it's that nothing great was
ever achieved except by those who were filled with passion. Their
passion may have been illogical, even bizarre to modern people. Their
understanding of the world and what they were doing may have been false.
It usually was. But they were not afraid to act, guided by whatever
ideas they had in their possession. Do not sneer at such people. You
would not be here without them.

Moments later, Indira left the hut and walked into the center of the
village. Joseph was waiting. He stood alone, apart from the others of
the council. Whatever decision Indira had made would now fall upon his
shoulders.

Before speaking, Indira looked around. The village was packed with
people gukuy and ummun alike. Even some of the owoc had come,
understanding, somehow, that a great turn had come in the Coil of
Beauty.

She looked up at the sky. The same sky, years before, had been colored
with a huge red mark. All that was left of a man who had tried the
impossible. Tried, and failed. But not before giving the future to his
children.

She looked down at her boy, and spoke.

The story would be told for generations after, by chantresses across a
continent. Of the day when the Mother of Demons matched flails with her
soul.

So terrible was that soul!

So great a struggle!

Even the Mother of Demons would not have conquered it Without the sage
Ushulubang.

So terrible was that soul!

Its cry of defeat shook the world!

You did not hear?

Listen.

Listen.

It echoes still.

The sound of that cry will never end.

Chapter 23.

Indira watched the battle from the southern slope, standing on a rocky
outcropping which overlooked the plain. Four beings stood there with
her: Julius, Andrew Macpherson, Rottu and Ghodha.

They were the nucleus of what Indira had told them was one of the
secrets of war.

Create a general staff.

She would have preferred to have Joseph himself alongside her. But,
reluctantly, she had agreed with Joseph's argument that his personal
command was necessary in the colony's first full-scale battle. Of the
three lieutenants, Andrew had been selected as the future Chief of
Staff. It was a good choice, thought Indira. Andrew was a quiet and
thoughtful young man. Not flamboyant, but very hard-working. And, while
he had done the job capably, he did not have either Ludmilla or
Takashi's flair as a platoon leader.

Indira watched Ludmilla's platoon racing in a loop around the right
flank of the Utuku army. Ludmilla herself was leading the platoon, and
setting a brutal pace. The ranks of the Utuku were already becoming
ragged, as they tried to reform in the face of this new and utterly
bizarre foe. Their attempts were hopeless, of course. Gukuy were faster
than owoc, but they were still much slower afoot than humans. Any
humans, much less the young warriors trained under Joseph's brutal
regimen.

Not brutal enough.

"Andrew make a note. We must emphasize long distance endurance as well
as wind sprints. The Apaches could run a hundred miles a day. Faster,
over long distances, than the cavalry of the US Army."

"Yes, Indira." He jotted in his notebook.

Still, there's a problem. Food. What good will it do for our warriors to
be able to run a hundred miles a day if they starve at the end of it?
Our army cannot remain tied to the slow owoc.

"Julius make a note. Resume the experiments with puke jerky."

"But ah, yes, Indira." He jotted in his notebook. Muttering, under his
breath. He was not altogether sure what to make of this new Indira. He
had always adored her thin-featured face. Why did that face now remind
him of a sword?

As Indira watched, Ludmilla's platoon suddenly wheeled and raced
directly toward the Utuku right. Even from the distance, she could hear
the drums, transmitting orders from the battle leaders. Raggedly, she
thought. And it was obvious that the Utuku ranks were beginning to
unravel.

Now.

But she had misjudged. Ludmilla had a better grasp of the immediate
tactics. She held the charge for another few seconds, before she
suddenly halted and cast her javelin. A split second later, the rest of
the platoon followed.

The volley sailed over the front rank of the Utuku and fell among the
battle leaders beyond. Like so many lightning bolts. Utuku shieldwork
was designed to protect against looping flail-blows, not spears. And the
wicker-like visors protecting the battle leaders' heads were like
matchsticks when struck by heavy spears instead of blowpipe darts.

"Andrew make a note for general consideration. Most of the great armies
of human history placed a premium on low-echelon initiative and tactical
flexibility."

"Yes, Indira."

Ludmilla's platoon was now racing away from the Utuku. Their assegais
were strapped to their backs. In their hands they carried javelins. Each
warrior in Ludmilla and Takashi's platoons had been given four at the
beginning of the battle.

The javelins had been invented by Joseph, in the course of the new
training which he had developed in consultation with Nukurren and Jens
Knudsen. They were better designed for casting than the heavy-bladed
assegai. And the blades were made of bronze obtained from the Pilgrims
at Fagoshau. The irreplaceable steel-bladed assegai were saved for
close-in work.

"Rottu a question. How much bronze can we make every eightday?"

The gukuy hesitated before responding.

"I am not certain, Inudira. Not much, at Fagoshau. We can expand the
bronze-works, of course. But there is no copper on the Chiton, and very
little tin."

"Make a note, then. We must immediately establish reliable sources for
the two metals. And expand the bronzeworks."

"Yes, Inudira."

Down on the plain, Ludmilla's sudden retreat had achieved its purpose.
Large sections of the Utuku right were lumbering in pursuit. Very
unevenly. Confusion and the sudden killing of many leaders were eroding
the famed Utuku discipline.

And it is very hard to resist the temptation of chasing what appears to
be a foe in flight.

She watched, gauging the moment.

Now.

But, once again, Ludmilla was right. The platoon leader did not order
the counterattack for several more seconds, until the pursuing Utuku
were strung out even further. Suddenly, her platoon divided and curved
sharply right and left, racing back toward the Utuku. The bewildered
barbarians were thrown into utter confusion.

Now.

Once again, Ludmilla was right. Two more seconds elapsed before she gave
the command. The ensuing volley came at pointblank range, ripping
through the Utuku like a scythe.

"Andrew that last note?"

"Yes, Indira?"

"Emphasize it."

Racing off again, the platoon reformed in files and curved back around
to the southeast. Discipline in the Utuku right flank was
disintegrating. The warriors were little more than a mob now, all of
them turning to face these terrible demons who were circling them.
Within moments, they were faced completely away from the center of the
battlefield.

Indira looked to the center. Takashi's platoon was drawn up there,
holding the attention of the Utuku center while Ludmilla harrowed the
right. They had no difficulty in doing so. Takashi's first volley had
had a catastrophic impact on the battle leaders of the Utuku center.
Since then, he had kept the attention of the warriors by trotting his
platoon back and forth across their lines, feinting and lunging.

Her eyes moved to Joseph. The Captain was standing back, on a small
knoll rising slightly above the plain, high enough to give him a view of
the entire battlefield. Twenty young human warriors stood at his side,
Jens Knudsen looming above the others.

Not far from them, off to the side, stood Nukurren. Gazing down at the
huge, scarred figure, Indira felt a sudden sadness. They were deeply in
debt to Nukurren, and had tried to express it. Ushulubang herself had
offered Nukurren the command of the Pilgrim warriors who were even now
approaching the battleground.

But Nukurren had refused. Had even refused to explain her refusal.

Yet, in the end, she had chosen to come to the battleground. The morning
the little human army set off, Jens Knudsen had entered Nukurren's hut.
In his arms he bore the great flail and twofork Nukurren had won years
before in the Anshac legions, and her armor. He had saved them from the
wreckage of the slaver caravan where he and Nukurren had first exchanged
wounds, he explained, and now it was time to return them to her. Saying
nothing else, he had left the hut.

Some minutes later the column of human warriors set off, followed by
more than a thousand Pilgrims. All of the Pilgrims were armed with flail
and fork; some with armor. Most were former warriors. Some were former
helots, fumbling with the unfamiliar weapons in their palps, but
determined to do their duty.

As the column passed Nukurren's hut, she had emerged. In armor, bearing
her great flail and two-fork. To the humans, she had been awesome. To
the gukuy ... The Pilgrims had begun hooting then, in a fierce and
wavering manner which Indira had never heard, but had no difficulty
recognizing. So had the Bedouins ululated, saluting their champions.

But Nukurren had refused to acknowledge the salute. Had returned the
admiration with bleak isolation. Had spoken to none. Had not taken a
place in the column, neither with human nor gukuy. Throughout the long
march which followed, she had remained to one side, parallel but alone.

As the march progressed, the Pilgrims lagged further and further behind,
unable to match the speed of the human warriors. Of all the gukuy
marching to battle, only Nukurren had been able to keep pace. But,
always, she marched to the side. What role, if any, she intended to play
in the coming battle, no one knew.

She least of all, thought Indira now, watching Nukurren standing alone
on the slope.

Indira tore her eyes away, and looked back at Joseph. Stretching on
either side of him were the remnants of Andrew Macpherson's platoon.
Most of the warriors in Andrew's former platoon had been reassigned to
the other two. But a small number had been organized into a new
formation, led by Jens Knudsen. They were to serve as Joseph's reserve,
for the critical moment of the battle.

Gazing down at Jens' new formation, Indira began to feel the old,
paralyzing anguish. She fought it desperately. It had been she herself,
after all, who had commanded its creation.

The warriors in the new formation were more heavily armored than the
other humans. They carried no javelins, only the largest assegai. Theirs
was not the role of Ludmilla and Takashi's platoons, the fluid ravaging
of the opponent. Theirs was the role of shock troops. It was they who
would be thrown into the schwerpunkt. Not for them the rapid maneuvers
of the platoons; not for them, the tactical subtleties; for them the
shattering smash of the hoplite.

They had been selected, as individuals, for that purpose. The emphasis
had been on sheer strength, rather than speed. Upper body strength, in
particular. Only that kind of strength could sustain a warrior in the
savage close-quarter combat for which that formation was designed.

They were all male. For the first time in the history of the human
colony, the sexes had been segregated. Indira herself had commanded it.
She had hated the truth, but would not shy from it. Only Ludmilla, among
the human women, had the strength to serve in Jens' new formation. And
Ludmilla was needed as a platoon commander.

She gazed down at Jens Knudsen. Even covered with heavy armor, his
golden hair and milk-white skin was easy to spot. Indira thought that of
the younger generation of humans, Jens' was perhaps the gentlest and
kindest spirit, for all his brutish size and musculature. Indira herself
had named the new formation the 'shock squad." Jens, with his usual
self-deprecating humor, had called his squad the 'meatheads."

"Too slow to run, and too dumb to figure out anything else," he had
joked. But Indira could not mistake the pride in his stance, and that of
his new squad, as they stood by Joseph's side.

Alexander's Companions.

They would suffer the highest casualties, and they knew it. But they
were not afraid, because a new emotion was insinuating its way into
their souls, like a serpent.

For the first time in the history of the human colony, an elite had been
created. At Indira's own command. She began to look away, then forced
herself to look back.

Not now, no. Not with Jens, never. But Jens will die, and his children,
and their children, and their children and then, someday ... the
Diadochi. And the Praetorian Guard, and the Janissaries, and the knights
who savaged Jerusalem.

Nightmare visions flashed through her mind, ending with the Waffen SS.
She felt her face grow stiff.

Julius gazed at her quizzically. Indira pointed to Jens.

"I was just thinking how the old Waffen SS would have drooled over him."
A rueful grimace; trying to cast off despair with humor. 'He could have
served as the model for their recruitment posters."

Julius looked down.

"Oh, I don't know. He's much too ugly, with that great beak of a nose,
and besides " He looked back at Indira, his expression oddly cold. 'Did
I ever tell you my family's history?"

"Not really."

He shrugged. 'Nothing spectacular. And most of it's long forgotten. But
there's one episode, from two centuries ago, that was passed on from
generation to generation. My family was in Denmark during the Second
World War. They lived in Copenhagen, as a matter of fact, the same city
where Jens was born."

Julius pointed down the slope to the young warrior.

"I stand here today because of his ancestors." His voice suddenly shook
with anger. 'Damn your fears, Indira! Damn them all to hell!"

His words were like a sudden, brilliant ray of sunlight, shattering all
the darkness of the future. The nightmares fled from Indira's mind,
gibbering in terror; and new visions came.

She remembered the small nation which, conquered and occupied, had still
managed to save almost all its Jews from the Nazi butchers; had, through
the unorganized and spontaneous actions of thousands of ordinary Danes,
smuggled the Jews to safety. The blond-haired, blue-eyed people who had
hurled defiance into the face of their racial brethren.

The kindness of that deed, toward a people of a different race, had come
from the common pool of human decency. But the courage had come from
their own history, and their own legends, and their own heritage.

They too had remembered Barbarossa. And if the Germans had chosen to
remember the sword of the conqueror had even named their brutal invasion
of Russia after him the Danes had chosen to remember the shield of the
lawgiver.

The Nazi vision, she knew, had been closer to the truth of the past; but
the Danish vision had been true to the future. If, in reality, kings had
been unjust tyrants, yet, still, it had been within the shell of
kingship that nations forged their justice. The kings were gone, long
gone; but justice remained. And if the kings had been hard as iron, the
justice was harder still. For justice had been long in the making, and
it was not a feeble reed. It was the gleaming steel sword Excalibur,
born of ancient dreams, shaped by myths and legends, forged by human
struggle, and tempered in the blood of centuries.

As Indira watched the battle unfold below her, she felt as if her mind
were split in two. One half observed the present carnage attentively,
coldly, objectively. The other half ranged across the breadth of human
history, like a shaman taking the form of an eagle, spotting all the
possibilities of the future. And, finally, leaving all fear behind,
filled with the joy of flight and the glory of distant vision.

Joseph's powerful baritone suddenly rang above the din of battle.
Refocusing her attention, Indira saw that Joseph had sent Takashi's
platoon plunging into the fray. The Pilgrims had finally arrived, and
were taking their place before the Utuku center. Takashi's platoon made
a sudden lunge. The Utuku drew back, clustering their shield wall. The
feint had succeeded, and Takashi's platoon was now racing across the
enemy's front, toward the east.

As planned, the warriors of the Utuku center were paralyzed. The
Pilgrims surged forward, to keep them immobile. The Utuku center would
be completely out of the action when Takashi fell  Indira looked back to
the southeast.

 on the rear of the Utuku right. Whose attention was completely fixed on
Ludmilla's confusing maneuvers.

Takashi was setting an even more brutal pace than Ludmilla. He and his
warriors seemed to fly across the ground, as if possessed by a
determination to match the exploits of Ludmilla's platoon.

"Andrew, take a note. We must give each platoon a name, or a number.
Some title by which they can be remembered, and to which their soldiers
can identify. In human history, that was called the regimental
tradition. It will help develop the morale of the army."

"Yes, Indira."

A minute later, the slaughter began. Watching the ferocity with which
Takashi's platoon ripped into the Utuku, Indira felt a moment's fear
that they had forgotten what she had told them.

But, again, the commander on the spot had simply gauged the timing
better. When they broke off and raced away, not one of the human
warriors was more than slightly scratched. But they left a mound of
bodies behind them.

"Andrew that note. The one concerning low-echelon tactical control."

"Yes, Indira."

"Carve it in stone. Better yet, cast it in bronze."

Ludmilla's platoon now copied Takashi's maneuver, from the other side.
Lunge in, at a speed which was almost incomprehensible to the gukuy, and
butcher the front ranks. Race away before the ranks behind could
overwhelm you with their numbers.

Working from two sides, Ludmilla and Takashi's platoons were ravaging
the Utuku right. Their javelins were now used up; they were wielding the
assegai. Fifteen hundred gukuy warriors were now nothing more than a
hooting mob, milling about in confusion, their mantles rippling red and
ochre, while less than two hundred and fifty human warriors continued
their systematic slaughter. Only three human casualties had been
suffered so far and Indira had been relieved to see one of them hobbling
off the field under her own power. Winny Mbateng, she thought it was.

Thank God. Even if your daughter's crippled from the injury, Janet,
there will be a place for her. Adrian has been howling for help.

Indira saw an Utuku piper take aim at one of the human warriors. She
caught her breath then released it a moment later, when the piper's aim
was thrown off by the press of the mob around her.

It's ironic. The gukuy consider pipers nothing more than auxiliaries.
But they're what I fear most. Those darts have a range of thirty yards,
blown by a gukuy with a powerful siphon. And they're quite accurate
within half that distance. Light, of course. Even against a thin-skinned
human they can't do much damage unless they strike the eyes or the
throat. The light armor which our warriors wear is probably enough to
turn most darts, as well as absorbing some of the shock of a flail-blow.

But if they ever learn how utterly vulnerable we are to animal product
"Ghodha and Rottu. Do any gukuy armies use poisoned darts?"

Rottu's mantle remained gray, but Ghodha's rippled orange.

"No, Inudira," replied Rottu. 'There are a few small clans of savages in
a swamp far to the southeast who are reputed to use poisoned darts. But
no civilized people does so. Not even the barbarians. Not even the
Utuku. It is a foul abomination in the eyes of Uftu and Kaklo alike. And
the war goddess of the Utuku as well."

Indira was simultaneously relieved and intrigued. Goloku, in her
teachings, had not attempted to deny or undermine the existence of the
old religious pantheons. She had simply absorbed them within a new and
profoundly more philosophical approach to reality.

Like Vedanta Hinduism. Sort of. Oh, stop trying to find an exact
analogy, Indira. There is none. The Way is unique to itself and better,
I think, that any of the great religions of Earth. I can think of no
Terran religion, at least, which from the outset based itself on the
principles of dialectics rather than formalism.

She remembered the schismatic Patriarchs of the later Roman empire. The
persecution of the Arian heretics, and the Nestorians, and the
Monophysites. And the rigid Aristotelean logic of the medieval
churchmen. And the Inquisition; and Bruno burning at the stake. And
Galileo's trial.

Perhaps that much we can avoid. Ushulubang and I, together, can sow much
salt in the ground of future dogma.

Then she remembered the statue at Fagoshau which Ushulubang had
shattered with her flail.

But neither she nor I will live forever. And it is indeed true, as
Goloku said, that beings will always lapse into the error of the Answer.

She straightened her slender shoulders.

But we can try. And, in failing, shorten the road to the future. And its
pain.

And stop day-dreaming about the future! There's enough agony on today's
road.

She forced her eyes back to the plain. The human platoons were
continuing their butchery, like a well-oiled machine of destruction.

God, these kids are good. It's amazing how well they're carrying out my
proposal which they only heard two days ago.

The night she made her decision to throw their strength to the aid of
the Kiktu, Indira had spoken to the little army of human warriors. She
had told them the story of the battle of Liegnitz, in a place called
Poland. There, Subedei's Mongols had met the forces of European chivalry
under the command of Duke Henry of Silesia. Those forces included
knights from all the major militant orders as well as Henry's own troops
Knights Templar, Teutonic Knights, Knights Hospitaler.

She had described the European knights. Heavily armored, dangerous at
close quarters. And very slow; easily confused by any tactics beyond a
simple, direct charge.

She had described Subedei's Mongols. Lightly armored; extremely fast;
extremely disciplined; shrewd and cunning; well coordinated in battle.

Then she described the battle itself. And told them how the Mongols had
cut to pieces the flower of chivalry.

Joseph and his lieutenants had taken over from there. The new tactics
which they had been developing recently, with Nukurren's advice, fit
perfectly into the plan which they developed for the coming battle. The
plan which they were now implementing on the plain below with, it was
obvious to Indira as she watched, the same result that had ensued
centuries before, on a planet light years away.

After another minute, Indira looked away. Even from the distance, it was
impossible not to hear the hoots and whistles of the Utuku being
butchered.

Not a trace of what she was feeling showed on her face.

And what am I feeling, anyway? Joseph and his lieutenants would have
arrived at the same plan on their own. With Nukurren's help, they were
already almost there. My lecture on Mongol cavalry tactics only added
some polish.

No, that's a lie. Don't hide from it, woman. They're not superhuman.
Only the Mother of Demons could have given them the confidence they
needed, in their first real battle.

She took a deep breath.

So be it. There will also be hospitals. And medical academies. And
trade. And religious toleration, enforced by the demons. All that the
Mongols gave and more. We are not, after all, Neolithic barbarians.
Whose cruelty derived, in part, from their naive understanding of the
world.

When she now spoke her voice, for the first time that day, had a trace
of its usual softness.

"Julius make a note. We must found a university. At once regardless of
other things." He smiled. 'Yes, Indira. Does that mean I get to go back
to research?"

Indira looked at him; and reached out and stroked his cheek. But she did
not smile in return.

"Yes, love. But the first thing you must study is the problem of making
puke jerky."

She looked away. 'And the problem of poison darts. Abomination or not,
they will be used soon enough. We must try to find an antidote, if
possible. If not "

Her voice was like iron.

' we will develop our own poisons. Remember the gukuy who killed Adams
and then died herself? As you said at the time: it cuts both ways,
asshole."

She heard Julius sigh, and mutter something. She was not sure, but she
thought she heard the words correctly. She suppressed a laugh.

"Like Damascus steel," he had mumbled. 'No, worse like a damned blade of
Toledo."

Indira turned her eyes to the west. That part of the battle which the
humans were waging was progressing well. She now had time to study the
methods of their new allies? She was not sure of their status, for there
had been no opportunity to establish communication with the Kiktu. By
the time the human platoons had reached the plain, the battle had
already started.

Crude and primitive, was her first thought. The battle on the Utuku left
seemed nothing but a swirl of confusion, so unlike the precision she had
watched on the human side.

Her eyes were almost immediately drawn to the huge figure at the center
of the Kiktu lines.

"Ghodha a question." Indira pointed. 'Is that a battlemother?"

"Yes, Inudira. There is another, as well. Further along the Utuku
lines."

Indira followed Ghodha's gesture.

"Yes, I see her now." A moment later: 'But she seems different from the
other one. The one in the center."

Ghodha's whistle combined, somehow, humor and awe.

"All battlemothers in the world are different from the one in the
center, Inudira. The one in the center is a what is the word, Rottu? The
one the Kiktu use?"

"Kuoptu."

Indira was not familiar with the term. Rottu explained.

She looked back. And felt a certain awe herself. She had seen gukuy
mothers before. There were several of them among the Pilgrims. Huge
beings, as big as elephants. Immensely strong, she imagined. But
extremely slow-moving and awkward.

The battlemother on the plain below bore a certain generic resemblance.
Huge bigger than any gukuy mother Indira had yet seen. Almost as big as
an owoc mother. And, compared to the warriors around her, slow and
awkward.

There the comparison ended. If a normal mother could be likened to a
gigantic St. Bernard, the battlemother on the plain below was like the
Fenris wolf of Nordic mythology. Indira winced, watching an Utuku
warrior smashed into jelly beneath the battlemother's club. And another.
And another.

"She fights with two clubs, I notice. But the other battlemother only
with one."

"Yes, Inudira. The other battlemother is fighting in the usual manner,
with mace and shield. Battlemothers need shields to protect them from
darts. They are always the main target of pipers. The one in the center
is taking a great risk. She seems to be relying on her visor alone and
that odd shield on her cowl."

Indira looked for the Utuku pipers. She spotted one almost immediately.
Sure enough, the piper was taking aim at the battlemother. Indira held
her breath. Suddenly, however, the piper reared back, clawing at her
eyes.

At her side, Indira heard Ghodha's hoot of surprise.

"Look! I did not see them earlier! There are males on the battlemother's
cowl with pipes! Behind that strange shield. They are protecting her
from the pipers."

Indira looked back. A moment later she saw another Utuku piper reel
back.

"Is that common?"

"It is unheard of! True, the Kiktu have the custom that a mother's
consorts are her personal guard of pipers. But it is not taken
seriously, even by the Kiktu. Not even the barbarians, for all their
loose habits regarding males, allow the silly things to participate in
battle. Males are too emotional for battle. They would lose their
heads."

Indira watched another piper blinded. When she spoke, her voice was
harsh.

"Welcome to the new world, Ghodha. Where Answers are falling, and
Questions are being asked."

From the corner of her eye, Indira saw Ghodha's mantle ripple ochre and
pink.

Between Ushulubang and myself, she thought fiercely, I intend to see a
lot of those colors in the future.

A moment later, she relented.

Ghodha is not, after all, one of Ushulubang's close apashoc. A new
Pilgrim, hoping that there may be an end to evil, somewhere. Selected
for her new post not for her profound grasp of the Way, but simply
because she is the most experienced war leader among the Pilgrims.

Do not sneer at such people, Professor Toledo. However often they fumble
the task, they are the creators of the future.

"Explain to me what you are seeing, Ghodha. You are more experienced in
such things than I."

The warrior's scarred mantle became tinged with faint green. She began
pointing with her palps.

"The Kiktu are fighting better than I have ever seen barbarians fight
before. Not as well as the Anshac legions, of course. But better."

The gesture of grudging admission.

"Much better, in fact. You see how they are not simply swarming
mindlessly, as usual?"

Indira looked again. After a moment, she saw what Ghodha was pointing
to. Order began to appear out of chaos.

"They are fighting in organized groups. I can see it now. Sloppy, I
think, but organized."

"Yes. They are very sloppy." A whistle of derision. 'You should see the
Anshac legions!"

Again, pink and ochre rippled.

"What am I saying? Even the Anshac are nothing, compared to your own
ummun apalatunush."

Ghodha turned and looked to the south. Indira's eyes followed. Ludmilla
and Takashi's warriors were racing back and forth, slicing the Utuku
flank to ribbons. The platoons had broken into squads, now, each of
which operated independently but still within the organized control of
their leaders.

Indira turned and pointed back to the west.

"Explain further." Ghodha looked away, slowly. Indira was amused at the
veteran warrior's obvious reluctance to forego the pleasure of watching
master craftsmanship in her trade.

A moment later, Ghodha continued.

"The Kiktu possess three strengths in the art of battle. As individuals,
their warriors are excellent. It cannot be denied. There are none on the
Meat of the Clam who surpass them in the use of fork-and-flail, and few
who can claim to be their equal. Look there! You will see what I mean."

Indira followed Ghodha's pointing palp. She saw, at the edge of the
battle, that a Kiktu had somehow managed to lure a single Utuku away
from the lines. The single combat which followed was horrifyingly
brutal, but illuminating. The Kiktu warrior picked apart the Utuku's
clumsy defenses. Within seconds, the Utuku shield was stripped away by a
flail-blow that was almost too fast for Indira to follow. Seconds later,
the Utuku's right ped was a bloody mass of shredded flesh, and the Utuku
slumped. A split-second later, the Kiktu's fork slammed into the left
side of her opponent's mantle. The Kiktu threw herself to the side,
levering the Utuku onto her back. The four flail-strokes which followed
completely disemboweled the doomed warrior.

More than disemboweled, thought Indira, repressing a sudden taste of
vomit. All the vital organs of a gukuy, except the brain, are located
right under the belly, with no cartilage or shell or thick integument to
protect them. That's not just guts being strewn all over the plain.
That's her heart, her liver, her inner lungs everything.

Somewhat shakily, she asked Julius: 'This is what you were telling me,
isn't it?"

Julius' face was pale, but his gaze was steady.

"Yes, love. Although I won't be so smug about it, anymore. Not after
seeing that."

He took a deep breath.

"The gukuy pay a price for the way their bodies evolved. In their
manipulatory limbs as well as their peds. For reasons I can only guess
at, gukuy evolution put almost all their fine control into their arms.
Wonderfully precise and delicate organs, those are. Maria told me she's
planning to train gukuy surgeons. She thinks they'll make better
surgeons than humans, once they learn the skill.

"But their tentacles lost something in the bargain. They're very strong,
and fast. But they don't begin to have the fine coordination of human
arms and hands. That's why the gukuy can't really use weapons like
spears. Or swords. With spears, they'd miss their targets. And with
swords, they'd be more likely to hit with the flat of the blade rather
than the edge. What results is "

He pointed to the battlefield. Then, suddenly, turned away. Indira could
see him struggling with his own stomach.

When Julius turned back, his face was even paler.

"But, like I said, I won't be so smug about it any more. Never having
seen a gukuy battle, I expected something much more clumsy. I never
dreamed that you could do so much damage with a flail."

Indira turned back to Ghodha.

"Continue, please."

"Their second strength is their speed."

Somehow, watching the battle, Indira no longer found the term 'gukuy
speed" an oxymoron.

"The Kiktu are very swift and agile. Nothing, of course, compared to" a
quick, admiring glance to the south  'ummun, but for gukuy very fast.
Very fast. You see how they lure Utuku after them into little traps?"

Indira watched for a minute or so, and nodded.

Ghodha made the gesture of admiration.

"The Kiktu excel in the art of ambush. Many foolish and arrogant Anshac
legion commanders have led their warriors to disaster, from
underestimating the cleverness of the barbarians."

Ghodha now pointed to the center of the Kiktu lines.

"Finally, they have the battlemothers." Faint ripples of blue and yellow
appeared on the warrior's mantle.

"It is a barbarous custom. But "

The blue and yellow vanished.

' I admit, it is terrible to face a Kiktu battlemother in battle.
Especially one with good flankers." Ghodha paused, examining the battle.

"The flankers of this battlemother are excellent. You see how they force
the enemy to face their battlemother's maces? Leaving them nowhere to
dodge aside?"

Indira nodded.

"Nothing can withstand the strength of a battlemother. The strongest
armor is like paper beneath the blows of her mace."

Indira winced. Just that moment, an Utuku warrior burst like a ripe
tomato under the mace of the battlemother.

"Faced with a battlemother, a warrior can only rely on speed and
agility. That is the purpose of the flankers to nullify the enemy's
maneuvering room."

The sound of Joseph's bellow drew her eyes back to the center. He had
decided, Indira saw, that the climatic moment of the battle was upon
them. Quickly scanning the field, Indira thought his judgement was
correct. The Utuku right had been shredded by the platoons; the left,
forced to fight the Kiktu alone, were on the verge of collapse; there
remained only the huddled center to be smashed.

Joseph was already racing off the knoll, straight toward the Utuku
center. Jens and his squad kept pace with him. A moment later the human
warriors drew even with the Pilgrim line. The Pilgrims immediately
followed the charge.

The drums of the Utuku center began beating frantically.

Ordering what, I wonder? What orders do you give your butchers when the
demons come?

Of the human warriors plunging toward the Utuku center, only Joseph held
a javelin. At the last moment before reaching the enemy line, he cast
his weapon.

Indira watched first with surprise, and then with awe as Joseph's
javelin rose higher and higher into the sky. Higher and higher. Beyond
its flight, far back, stood the figure of the ogghoxt commander.

I don't believe it.

"I don't believe it," whispered Julius. 'That's a gold medal in the
Olympics."

The javelin reached the top of its arc and began sailing down.

"No, Julius," she said.

Straight toward the ogghoxt commander.

I don't think she even sees it coming.

The javelin struck right between the commander's eyes, and sank at least
two feet into her head. She fell like a stone.

"That spear cast belongs to an earlier time. Only Homer could have done
it justice."

Joseph and Jens, side by side, smashed into the Utuku. The other members
of the shock squad formed a wedge behind them. As the ferocity of their
attack split open the Utuku center, the Pilgrims poured in behind,
widening the breach.

On the left, Ludmilla and Takashi now ordered a change in tactics. The
platoons abandoned all subtlety and fell onto the Utuku, assegais
flashing. The Utuku right flank, already demoralized, began to give way
completely.

On the right, Indira heard a sudden burst of gukuy voices, speaking in a
tongue she did not know.

Kiktu battle language, she realized. Far back, perched upon a
battlemother who had remained out of the fray, she spotted the figure of
a gukuy. The new commands were issuing from her, and being passed
forward. Suddenly, the Kiktu warriors abandoned their fluid maneuvers
and smashed directly into the Utuku.

That must be Kopporu. She, too, realizes that the decisive moment is
here.

The Utuku left began to collapse.

"Oh, shit," she heard Julius whisper.

She looked to the center, and held her breath. Joseph, Jens, and their
small squad of shock troops had become isolated. Inexperienced in a
large battle, using combined forces, they had overestimated the ability
of the Pilgrims to keep pace with them. They were surrounded now by
Utuku warriors. Here, in the relatively unblooded center, the Utuku
battle commanders had been able to maintain a semblance of discipline
and control. Now, seeing the demons finally immobilized, the Utuku took
courage and began a frenzied assault.

The Mother of Demons watched her children begin to die. The combat was
furious, the carnage incredible; and for every human boy who fell, a
dozen Utuku were slain. Some strange, new, cold part of her mind took
satisfaction in the fact. But  Indira watched the blood gush from Harry
Jackson's neck, half severed by a flail blow, and knew he would be dead
within seconds; and remembered the time she had held him in her arms,
trying to console a sobbing eight-year-old boy desolated by the death of
the little owoc spawn he had tried to shelter. She watched an Utuku
warrior, with her dying effort, wrestle Esteban Sanchez to the ground.
Watched as the flails of other Utuku rained down upon him. Watched Jens
try to save him, be driven back, then rally. Watched the methodical fury
with which he butchered the Utuku assailing his comrade. Watched his
heroic effort fail of its purpose. For even at that distance Indira
could read the lifelessness in Esteban's body, when Jens finally reached
him. Watched a cluster of Utuku surge over Ahmed Khoury and Ed Kincaid,
stripping flesh from bones. And saw them recoil, their murderous work
done, from Joseph's terrible vengeance.

The Pilgrims pushed forward, trying to break through to the isolated
humans. The shield wall held them back. The Utuku warriors in the center
were regaining courage, seeing the demons finally die. The Utuku flanks
were now caving in completely, and Indira thought the battle would be
won. But not in time to save the handful of boys trapped in the center
pocket.

And now we're learning the oldest secret of war, she thought bitterly.
No battle plan survives contact with the enemy.

Were it not for Joseph and Jens, she knew, the little pocket of human
warriors would have been overrun by now. But those were the two
strongest of the human warriors, the greatest, and they were now in the
fullness of their rage, and their power, and their glory. And while a
part of Indira's mind wept for her dying children, and another part
quailed at the fearsome slaughter Joseph and Jens were wreaking in their
downfall  Some other part, some ancient part, some grim and savage part
she had never known existed, tracing its long and twisted lineage back
to the Incas and the Mahabharata, howled its banshee triumph and
shrieked fierce exultation.

Die, cannibals, die. You face the true demons now. The great ones! The
old ones born anew! The ones from the deepest pits of damnation. You do
not know their names? I will name them for you, cannibals. Tremble!
Wail! The one, you may call Shaka Zulu. The other, Ragnar Lothbrook.

It was only that part of Indira which kept her gaze steady, and her eyes
dry. The Mother of Demons had sent her children into battle, and she
would not flinch at their death.

A sudden movement to the side caught her eye. A figure was racing down
the slope. Was already at the bottom. Was already crossing the plain.
Was already approaching the battle zone.

"No gukuy can move that fast!" protested Julius.

"Watch, ummun," commanded Ghodha. 'We too have legends."

To Indira, what followed seemed a slow-moving dream. Her mind felt
suspended.

To the Pilgrims, Nukurren passed through their lines like a wraith,
sweeping them behind her in sudden hope, hooting renewed confidence and
determination. The Pilgrims poured into the great gaping hole Nukurren
was tearing in the Utuku center, ululating, their mantles blue and
black. Hesitation was cast aside, uncertainty scorned, all fear
abandoned. Of high caste or helot birth, it mattered not at all. They
were the Warriors of the Coil, now, the Flails of the Way, and there
were none who could withstand them, led by their champion.

To Julius Cohen, biologist, Nukurren struck the shield wall like a
charging grizzly bear, scattering warriors like so many leaves. During
the carnage which followed, as Nukurren ripped through the Utuku ranks
with mind-boggling ferocity, Julius found it impossible to think of her
as a gukuy warrior armed with weapons. All his learned theories
vanished. All his professorial estimates of the limitations of the
molluscan Bauplan seemed a mirage. Watching Nukurren now, he could think
of nothing, at first, but some great predator from the Terran past, a
tyrannosaur stalking the earth of an alien planet. Until a different
image came, of that dragon which lives only in the dark imagination of
mankind.

To the Utuku also she was a monster beyond belief, whose fork struck
like a flail and whose flail struck like the very lightning. Under
Nukurren's blows, their shields shattered, their armor splintered, their
tough mantles shredded like jelly, their blood gushed forth like
fountains and their entrails shrouded the earth. Every blow of her
flail, every stroke of her twofork, was kutaku. They could no more
withstand her than they could have withstood the Great Kraken itself,
and, in the mounting terror of her passage, their courage fled with the
wind. Scarlet-mantled, half-paralyzed, they fell like gana beneath the
flails of the Pilgrims who followed.

To Joseph Adekunle, and Jens Knudsen, and the other young men in the
center who still survived, Nukurren came like something out of their
distant past. An alien creature, bringing to life the history which they
had learned, but not really understood; had heard, but not truly
grasped. A misshapen, tentacled, colorless form, who brought them all
the rainbow hues of their ancestry.

Separated from their origins by light-years and centuries, orphaned,
cast adrift save for a handful of adults, the human youth finally came
into their inheritance. All of it. The truths, the myths, the legends;
and, foundation of them all, that bleak, unyielding, boundless courage
which made all myths, all legends, and all truths possible.

They knew, now, the Spartans at Thermopylae; and the sunken road at
Shiloh; and the impis at Isandhlwana; and Chuikov's 62nd Army in the
shattered factories on the Volga. Despair and exhaustion vanished.
Bleeding, bruised, maimed, they hurled themselves upon the shield wall
which surrounded them. And broke it; and then slew, and slew, and slew,
and slew.

The young men, fiery savage children of a gentle civilized mother, slew
with neither ruth nor pity. Because they knew, now, in the freshness of
their youth, what their mother was only beginning to accept, in the
fullness of her wisdom.

Watching Nukurren come, they knew Horatius at the bridge, and heard
Roland's horn at Roncevalles. They hailed Musashi's honor, saluted
Pendragon on his throne; and knelt to Saladin's mercy. And felt, beneath
their feet, shaking the very mountain, the giant Barbarossa, waking from
his sleep.

But all Indira saw, or ever remembered, was floating beauty on a plain
of death. The strange grace of an huge and ugly gukuy, scattering
destruction like seeds of grain. The utter silence of a warrior, in the
bedlam of a battlefield.

Above all, throughout the years to come, she remembered the shoroku of a
helot born to hopelessness. That royal, imperial shoroku. The color of
that scarred mantle, bearing the burden of a new world's hope as if it
were but a feather. That gray, that beautiful gray, that glorious gray,
that impossible gray. That gray which never wavered.

Indira scanned the battlefield. A vast scarlet wave swept across the
mantles of the entire Utuku army, a tsunami of terror. The same color
was everywhere, within seconds. And followed, moments later, by a
cacophony of hoots and whistles. The Utuku ranks dissolved completely
before her eyes. Most of the enemy warriors were still alive, but they
were nothing but a panicky mob. Even as she watched, she saw an Utuku
battle leader trampled underfoot by a mass of warriors seeking nothing
now but their own lives.

Dimly, she heard Ghodha say, with a tone of great satisfaction: 'The
battle is won. And wonderfully! The Utuku have been defeated before, on
occasion. But there is no record of them being routed. Today, we have
done it!"

Wonderful, yes. New legends were forged this day, and will be chanted,
again and again. And will give courage in the future. Courage we will
need.

Courage I need now.

The next voice was the one she dreaded that of Andrew Macpherson. Born
in Scotland, not twenty years ago. Hardly more than a boy. The Chief of
Staff of the Mother of Demons, and her army: "What are your commands?"

She postponed the moment.

"Rottu a question. I have asked it before, but ... I will ask again. The
Utuku warriors who have been recruited from other tribes. They can "

Rottu immediately understood the question.

"Yes, Inudira. Their old clan markings will have been carved off their
mantles. They can be easily recognized by those scars."

Rottu answered her next question before she even asked.

"And, yes, it is easy to determine which are recent recruits. And which
have been long accustomed to the Utuku savagery."

The moment could be delayed no longer.

"Any of the recent recruits who surrender will be taken alive." "And the
others, Indira?" asked Andrew.

She thought of the Sixth Army, dying in the Russian winter. Nazis, some.
Most ordinary workers and farmers, many of them barely beyond childhood.
Each of them a unique universe, never seen before, never to exist again;
in all the eons of the galaxies. Her voice froze in her throat; until,
far below, she saw Nukurren standing over her bleeding children,
guarding them from the swirling chaos; and found the color gray.

"Kill them," she said, in a voice that never wavered. 'Kill them all.
Make certain they are all dead. Spear the wounded. Spear the mortally
injured. Spear any of which there is any doubt at all. There must be no
survivors from this battle, except the captive new recruits. Perhaps
those can be salvaged. If not, we will kill them later."

The eyes which she turned on Andrew were like ice.

"Do you understand, Andrew? Not one survivor. No Utuku who can bring the
tale of this battle back to the Beak. That monster must be kept in
darkness, for as long as possible. We need as much time as we can create
for ourselves, to prepare for the future battles. And if this army
simply disappears, even the most hardened Utuku warriors will be filled
with terror. We will need that terror."

"I understand." A moment later, he was racing down the slope.

Indira turned away and began walking up the slope. After taking a few
steps, she stopped. Julius enfolded her in his arms, and she began
sobbing like a child.

Behind her, Rottu watched. Very carefully. She had never witnessed it
before personally, but she had listened to reports from the Pilgrims who
had spent time among the ummun. She knew she was seeing the ummun
equivalent of brown grief. Dark brown, she judged. Very dark brown.

Satisfied, Rottu turned away. She had learned much, this day. Her report
to Ushulubang would be long and full. And even the old sage would admit
that some questions have answers. Answers, at least, which are good
enough for the perils of the present.

The answer to one question was obvious. The Mother of Demons was,
indeed, as Ushulubang had suspected, the mistress of the art of war.
Rottu had thought the sage was probably correct, in this as in most
things. But she had not been certain until she watched triple-eighty
ummun warriors destroy half an Utuku army.

But that was a small question. Now, she would be able to answer
Ushulubang's big question as well.

She gazed down at the plain. Below her, the massacre was already
underway. The Kiktu and the Pilgrims were methodically butchering the
mass of the enemy, milling in stunned confusion, while the fleet
warriors of the ummun apalatunush relentlessly brought down those Utuku
who tried to flee.

She looked away not from horror, but from the indifference of long
experience. She was an old gukuy. Not as old as Ushulubang, but old
enough. Old enough to have seen more cruelty and brutality than she
could remember. The world had always been so. She had thought it always
would, until she met Ushulubang.

I have your answer, Ushulubang. A good enough answer, at least, to lead
us forward to the questions of the future. And the Way is no longer a
narrow path. It has suddenly broadened into a wide road. Full of pain,
as ever. But also, I think, a glory beyond description.

She looked up at the gray canopy of the sky, trying to imagine the
things which the demons said lay beyond. Trying to imagine the splendor
of that Great Coil of Beauty.

* * * Indira might have found some small comfort, then, in that terrible
moment, had she turned back. For she would have seen Rottu, for the
first time in years, relax her shoroku. And allow rich shades of green
in all of that color's many hues to wash across her mantle, like great
waves in the sea.

Chapter 24.

When it became obvious that they were nearing their destination, Kopporu
approached Guo.

"I believe we are almost there now, Guo. The place where the Mother of
Demons waits for us."

"I hope so," replied the infanta. She was breathing heavily. For any
gukuy, much less a mother, the long climb up the canyon to the top of
the Chiton was tiring. Since they reached the plateau above, the way had
become easier. But it was still an arduous march, even for an army
hardened by many eightweeks in the Swamp.

At least we are done with that, thought Kopporu.

Yet, in some strange way, she felt a regret.

The swamp had been horrible, even beyond her worst dreams. They had lost
many warriors there. Lost in mudholes; lost to predators, big and small;
lost to hideous parasitic infections; and some, lost in ways they would
never know. Warriors who simply disappeared.

The worst time had come crossing the river. Gukuy generally avoided
large bodies of fresh water and almost never ventured upon the ocean.
Terrible predators lurked in water. Small predators in any body of water
beyond the size of a stream or little pool. In larger bodies certainly
in big rivers the predators were huge and fierce.

They had lost almost double-eight warriors crossing the river. Most of
them to poisonous water-slugs.

We would have lost many more, had it not been for Guo.

Of the many legends which would emerge from that incredible trek across
the swamp, Kopporu knew, none would be chanted so often as the day the
battlemother Guo slew the great kraken of the river. Kopporu herself had
been paralyzed with fear, for a moment, when she first saw the monstrous
form of the kraken plowing up the river toward the Kiktu army. Twice the
size of the biggest mother who ever lived the biggest owoc mother who
ever lived with palps as big as a gana and a beak like a cave.

But Guo had not hesitated. She had lunged down the river and battled
with the monster, after ordering her flankers away. For once, Guo fought
something bigger and slower than she, and the young battlemother had
used the advantage shrewdly. Eluding the kraken's palps, luring it back
downstream, she had given the army the time it needed to finish the
crossing.

Kopporu looked up at the five little males who were proudly riding atop
Guo's cowl, behind their shield of battle. Pipes in arms, as always.

Guo's preconsorts had secured their own place in legend, that day. The
Kiktu had had to make another shield afterward. The kraken had made
splinters of the one that had been there before. But Guo's malebond had
remained at their posts. And had managed, finally, to blind the kraken
in one eye.

From that moment, Guo had pressed the fight. In the end, while the
entire army watched from the safety of the riverbank, the kraken had
tried to flee. To no avail. Guo was in full kuoptu, and had pursued,
hammering the monster with her maces, until the great beast was nothing
but a mass of bloody flesh drifting with the current.

No, thought Kopporu, the Swamp was not simply a place of horror. It was
also the place where the people recovered their soul.

She looked back at the long column behind them. Looking, partly, to
reassure herself by its great length that she had saved many people for
whatever lay in their future. But also, and more, looking for the signs
of that new people's strength.

For it was a new people. Kiktu, still, somewhere at its heart. But
Kopporu saw the files of the Opoktu, marching with a dignity they had
never possessed, in the days when they had been merely the smallest
tribe on the Papti Plains. The Opoktu were small in no one's eyes, now.

She saw also many swamp-dwellers former swamp-dwellers scattered here
and there, a part of many different battle groups. A cherished part, not
a despised one. The southern ex-helots might still so much could not be
denied remain less adept at battle than Kiktu or Opoktu. But their
courage was doubted by none. The tribespeople would have perished, many
times over, had it not been for their guides.

Scattered through the battle groups, as well, Kopporu saw many former
members of other tribes. Refugees, once; no longer. Honored and
respected members of   of what? Kopporu asked herself. What are we now?
The tribe called Kiktu? No, no longer. We are not even a tribe, in any
proper sense. No clan leaders, outside the Opoktu. Even the clans
themselves have gotten vague at their edges, with so many new adopted
members.

How many eightdays has it been since I heard a warrior even use the name
'Kiktu"? The Opoktu still, on occasion, call themselves by their own
name. But, even among them, I have noticed that it is only their clan
leaders and old warriors who do so. The rest of the Opoktu simply use
the phrases which have become common to the army as a whole.

Kopporu's army. And, more and more often, the Guoktu.

Guo's people.

Ranging further down the column, Kopporu's eyes fell on still another
group of gukuy. The sight of them removed all fond memories, and brought
the harsh realities of the present back to her mind.

The Utuku captives. And Guo's temper.

If that young fool cannot restrain herself, we will all die.

Guo was not only young, and still given on occasion to childish
tantrums. But what was worse, knew Kopporu, was that she had not
witnessed the demons in battle. Guo herself had been preoccupied
throughout the battle, too busy smashing the Utuku before her to pay
much attention to anything else.

But Kopporu had seen. Kopporu had commanded the entire battle from the
rear, instead of the front lines. It was an unheard of practice among
the tribes, but it was one of the Anshac methods which Kopporu had
finally been able to implement. And there had been no demurral; not even
any whispered private remarks. Aktako would have heard, and told
Kopporu, if there had been. The warriors knew that Kopporu's courage had
been proven many times before, on many battlefields. And the disaster on
the plain had finally taught even the proud Kiktu that courage alone was
not enough.

So Kopporu had watched from atop the mantle of the crippled battlemother
Oroku. That had been Oroku's own proposal. In such a manner, she had
explained to Kopporu, she would still gain honor from the battle, which
her maimed and useless ped prevented her from joining directly.

It had proven to be an excellent idea. From that high perch, Kopporu had
been able to follow the entire course of the battle. She had been able
to send commands to the battle groups, taking advantage of every opening
she saw in the Utuku formations.

And she had also been able to watch the other half of the battle. She
had been able to see everything. From the moment the first demons began
flickering down the slopes of the Chiton and hurled themselves onto the
right flank of the Utuku.

It was like nothing Kopporu had ever seen. Utuku warriors had begun
falling dead, eights at a time. By magic, Kopporu thought at first.
Until she finally realized what the demons were doing with those
strange, huge darts?

Within moments after the demons appeared, the Utuku right flank had been
driven back the Utuku battle line broken in half. From then on, Kopporu
had only to face the Utuku left flank. Even the Utuku center had
remained out of action, paralyzed by a small number of flickering
demons.

At first, Kopporu had been vastly relieved. It had been such a horrible
shock, to come out of the Swamp and run into an Utuku army at the foot
of the Chiton, blocking their access to the mountain's hoped-for
sanctuary. The despair which had swept over Kopporu in that moment had
been the worst she had ever felt in her life. The Utuku army was almost
twice the size of her own, and the terrain favored them. The battle
would take place in the narrow stretch of land between the slope of the
mountain and the river. No way, even, to retreat this time. A river
crossing would take far too long, even if another kraken was not
encountered.

Seeing no choice, she had ordered the battle groups into line. And
prepared to sell their lives dearly.

Until the demons arrived.

Great relief, and gratitude at first. And still, Kopporu admitted to
herself, to this moment.

The demons saved us. Never doubt it.

But, as she watched the demons in battle, another emotion had come to
take its place beside the relief and the gratitude.

A great, growing, terrible fear.

I must make Guo understand! She is still so full of pride, because we
defeated half of an Utuku army. Routed them. Destroyed them.

But we could not have done it without the demons. And what is more, she
must understand that the demons destroyed the other half. A small battle
group of demons turned double-eight their number of Utuku into so much
scavenger-meat.

And suffered only a few casualties in so doing! Most of them in the
center, at the fiercest point of the struggle.

Whereas we lost many warriors.

Kopporu's greatest moment of fear had come when she saw the killing of
the Utuku commander. She had seen a new demon appear, racing down the
mountain like the wind. Black as night. Implacable. Racing toward the
Utuku center. Other demons had surrounded it and followed. Then had come
the dart.

The black demon had hurled? its dart high into the air. So very high. So
very far.

At first, Kopporu thought the demon had simply missed its mark and
missed it badly. Until, watching the dart begin its downward course, she
realized the truth.

It is not possible, she remembered thinking, as she watched. It is not
possible.

But it had been so. The Utuku commander was slain. Struck by lightning
from the sky. Dead, Kopporu knew, without ever realizing what caused her
doom.

She had known, then, that these were truly demons.

Already, Guo's temper had almost caused disaster. After the Utuku were
routed, Kopporu's army had begun slaughtering the survivors. There would
be no mercy for any Utuku especially not for any Utuku with fresh cowl
scars. Recent recruits, those were some of them even former Kiktu, who
had eaten their own people to save their worthless lives.

Kopporu's warriors had been particularly vigilant in their search for
any such. Vigilant, and vengeful.

Until a demon had arrived before Kopporu, where she stood with Guo,
overseeing the massacre. Not the implacable demon, but one which seemed
overcome by misery.

In tribal trade-argot, the demon had ordered Kopporu to halt the killing
of the new Utuku recruits.

"Others must be kill," the monster had said. 'Not new Utuku. New Utuku
take alive. Our mother say so."

Guo's mantle had turned bright blue, then. The battlemother had bellowed
with rage, and raised her maces.

"No one no demon no one will stop my people from avenging themselves
upon those who ate the flesh of their own tribe!"

In a movement too fast for Kopporu to follow, the demon had flickered
back, out of range of Guo's maces. But it had not fled. Nor could
Kopporu see the slightest tinge of pink in the brown misery of its hide.

Guo's words of rage could have been heard all over the battlefield.
Kopporu's eyes scanned the field. And, within a heartbeat, saw the sight
she feared most.

A file of demons was racing toward them. At their head sped the one who
had slain the Utuku commander. The implacable one black as ever.

Sooner than Kopporu would have thought possible, the demons stood before
them. Ranging themselves in a half-circle, their darts held ready.

The implacable demon stepped forward. Its way of walking was still
strange to Kopporu, although she was beginning to see how the demons
moved. But, strange or not, Kopporu could not miss the poise and
sureness of the monster's stance.

The demon spoke in Kiktu, to Kopporu's relief. Trade-argot was a crude
language.

Much too crude for negotiations. And if there was ever a time to
negotiate, Guo you young idiot! it is now.

"Why have you threatened my battle leader?" demanded the black demon.

Before Guo could erupt again, Kopporu explained the situation quickly.
From the corner of her eye, Kopporu saw that Woddulakotat was whispering
rapidly and urgently into his future-mate's tympanus. She felt some
relief, then. The eightweeks in the swamp had taught Kopporu much. Not
least of those lessons had been to remove her prejudices concerning the
wisdom of males. Especially the eumale Woddulakotat, who, young as he
was, had proven to be a shrewd and quick-witted adviser.

The demon pondered Kopporu's words for a moment, and then spoke softly.

"I can understand your emotions. But are you the battle leader Kopporu?"

Kopporu made the gesture of affirmation.

"We had thought it must be so. Let me take the moment to extend my
admiration to you, battle leader Kopporu. And that of my mother, and all
my people. The exploit which you and your people have accomplished in
crossing the Lolopopo will live for ever. And you have proven your worth
again on this field of battle."

Kopporu relaxed slightly. She recognized diplomatic flattery when she
heard it, of course. But that was all to the good. A demon which was
willing to extend some flattery was not, hopefully, given to the same
temper tantrums as the fool Guo.

But flattery, as always, served only to sweeten the sour food which
followed.

"But I must still insist that you stop the killing of the new Utuku."

Kopporu could not restrain Guo in time.

"Why?" roared the battlemother. 'And who is this mother who can give
commands to my people?"

Kopporu emitted the soft whistle which serves gukuy as a sigh of
exasperation.

Who do you think idiot?

The answer came as no surprise.

"Her name is Inudiratoledo. She is my mother and the mother of us all."

The Mother of Demons. Whose children are like bolts of lightning.

The demon's head? turned away. Kopporu saw its little eyes scanning the
field of battle.

"As to your first question why? I do not know the answer. Although," the
demon added slowly, 'I am beginning to understand. This and many things
about my mother which were not so clear to me before."

Strangely, its eyes began to shine. As if there were a sudden film of
water upon them.

But the moment passed, almost before it began. With a quick gesture, the
demon wiped its eyes. Then it stepped forward, and there was no
mistaking the meaning of that motion.

The Law will now be spoken.

"What is your name, battlemother?"

It was not a question, really. It was a command. Spoken in such a tone
that even the fool Guo answered without hesitation.

"Then, listen to me, Guo. Listen carefully, and never doubt what I say.
This "

A quick gesture encompassed the battlefield.

' is how it is for one reason. And one reason only. It is not so because
of the flails of your warriors, nor the power of your own mace. You
fought well. Very well. But you would now be nothing but meat in the
bellies of the Utuku "

Guo began to protest, but the demon's voice overrode even hers.

"Except for one thing, battlemother! Except that our mother told us a
secret. A terrible secret. A secret which destroyed an army."

The blue in Guo's mantle faded, replaced by dappled ochre, pink and
orange.

"It is true, then?" the battlemother asked uncertainly. 'She is the one
we have heard of? The one who knows the secrets?"

The demon hesitated. Kopporu saw something change in the monster's
shape. She was not sure what it was. Something in the way its tentacles?
attached to its upper body. The attachments seemed to move downward
somehow, and the demon suddenly looked smaller.

"Yes," it said softly. 'She is the one. The one who knows the secrets
and what comes with them."

It pointed again to the battlefield.

"This resulted from one of her secrets. But there was another result as
well. This also caused my mother a great and terrible anguish. I know it
is so. I have been told by those of my warriors who saw her leave."

All softness vanished. The demon's next words could have forged the
bronze blades of a flail.

"I will not visit further grief upon my mother, nor allow others to do
so. Do you understand, battlemother? I hope so. I have heard much said
of the Kiktu, and all of it good. I would welcome you as friends and
perhaps more. And so I know this to be true would my mother. But that is
for the possible future. For the present, the matter is simple. If you
do not stop the killing "

The last words struck like the flail itself.

' then the only gukuy who will survive this field of battle will be the
Pilgrims and the new Utuku. You, and all your people, will join the
other corpses."

Kopporu had turned on Guo, then. She herself knew the tones of
authority, and she explained to Guo in the simplest of terms that, Great
Mother or no, Guo was still nothing more than a warrior under her
command. Did she understand?

Even Guo, even the young fool Guo, who had forced the black demon to
declare his authority over them, had finally understood. The
battlemother had remained silent, while Aktako and the rest of Kopporu's
guard carried the word to the warriors.

The warriors had obeyed. Reluctantly, true. But Aktako and her cohorts
knew how to enforce commands, and the slaughter of the new Utuku
stopped. Or, at least, the slaughter of those Utuku whose cowl-scars
were very fresh. 'New" Utuku, after all, is a term which can be
interpreted in different ways; and the warriors were in no mood for any
but the most literal interpretation.

Kopporu suspected that the young demonlord knew how often the Kiktu
warriors were violating the spirit of the command, but the monster said
nothing. After a time, Kopporu decided that the demon was not, in truth,
seeking a confrontation. Simply a lessened pain in his mother's heart.

Do demons have hearts, I wonder?

The Mother of Demons would never know how many Utuku could have been
spared. But she would see captives several eighties of them, in the end
and would perhaps be satisfied.

I hope so. I hope so.

And now the moment had come. At the head of her army, Kopporu entered a
clearing in the center of a small village, she thought. On three sides
of the clearing stood oddly-built, square yurts. On the fourth side was
a grove of those plants which the Old Ones called 'oruc."

And in the grove itself, to Kopporu's amazement, were several owoc.
Feeding on the leaves. Their mantles rippling with green.

The tension in her body eased, slightly.

The Mother of Demons cannot be a cruel monster, then. No owoc would
remain in the vicinity of such. Certainly not with that color on their
mantles.

Then Kopporu saw the Mother of Demons herself, and was unable to prevent
orange from glowing in her mantle.

She is so small! Smaller than any of them!

She had been expecting an enormous creature. As big as as what? How big
would a Mother of Demons be? Like a kraken, Kopporu had thought.

Kopporu did not doubt for a moment what she was seeing, however. There
was no mistaking the stance of the demons in the clearing. The small one
was clearly the center of authority and respect.

There were many demons in the clearing, she saw. Most of them with darts
in their palps, but not all. She saw a number of very small demons,
clutching the peds of the big ones, peeking around at the new arrivals.

Children. Like new-spoken spawn. Shy, but filled with curiosity.

The tension eased further.

Surely not even the Mother of Demons would order a massacre in front of
such.

There were gukuy in the clearing as well. A good number of them. Several
were standing near to the Mother of Demons, one of them an old gukuy at
her very side. Clearly, these gukuy also occupied positions of respect
and authority.

Kopporu was not certain, but she thought most of the gukuy were Pilgrims
of the Way. Perhaps all of them. She had no doubt that the old gukuy
standing next to the Mother was a Pilgrim. It was somehow obvious.

Her tension eased still further. The Kiktu had always approved of the
new religion, since they first became aware of it. Even the old clan
leaders. The ideas of the Pilgrims were strange, of course. Difficult to
grasp. But one thing had always been clear about them. Unlike all other
southerners, the Pilgrims venerated the Old Ones. Not, Kopporu thought,
for the same reasons as the Kiktu. But the veneration itself was enough.
The Kiktu had granted permission for the Pilgrims to pass through their
territory, which many of them had. Seeking refuge, they said, in the
Chiton.

I had not realized there were so many of them.

Over time, a number of the Kiktu themselves had adopted the Way. Young
warriors seemed especially attracted to the new creed. Kopporu knew
that, during the trek through the Swamp, many more had become converted
by their sisters. There were no clan leaders to give them stern lectures
about hallowed tribal ancestors.

Kopporu knew little, herself, of the beliefs of the Pilgrims. She had
been curious, and had felt the desire to investigate. But the
necessities of command had driven all other thought aside.

One thing she did know, however. The Pilgrims would defend themselves,
flails in palps, against attack. But they were not given to violence.
Indeed, they were known to speak against it. Kopporu looked again at the
old gukuy.

A Pilgrim sage. I am certain of it.

Surely the Mother of Demons would not order a massacre in front of such.

Kopporu and Guo were now alone at the head of the column, except for
Guo's preconsorts. Kopporu could see Woddalukotat and Yurra, peering out
from under Guo's cowl.

Advise her, young males. Advise her.

When she was still a few goa from the Mother of Demons, Kopporu halted.
Guo drew to a halt beside her.

The Mother of Demons advanced. Alone, Kopporu saw with surprise. Closer
and closer, until she was standing at tentacle's length away, directly
in front of Kopporu.

"You are Kopporu, the battle leader of your army."

Her voice was odd, and her accent harsh, but her command of Kiktu was
excellent.

Kopporu made the gesture of affirmation.

"I am Inudiratoledo. The being who is sometimes called the Mother of
Demons. You and I will speak at length, battle leader, and soon. But
first, I must speak to another."

Suddenly, in the quick and flickering manner of demons, she was standing
in front of Guo. Very closely, looking up at the huge head of the
battlemother looming above her.

Kopporu felt a moment's fear. Guo's maces were in their halters, of
course not even the young fool was so stupid as to have marched into the
lair of the Mother of Demons with her maces in her palps. But she would
not need maces. Whatever terrible power the Mother of Demons wielded, it
was obviously not a power of the body. The Mother of Demons would be
like a tiny slug in Guo's great palps, her life crushed out of her body
in a moment. With her arms alone, Kopporu thought, Guo could kill the
Mother of Demons.

Then, to both Guo and Kopporu's astonishment, the Mother of Demons
reached up her palps? and stroked Guo's arms. Guo began to flinch, then
at a sharp whisper from Woddulakotat froze.

"And you are the Great Mother Guo. So young. I had not realized how
young. My warriors did not tell me."

The demon continued stroking Guo's arms. After a moment, the arms began
to relax.

"So very young, to have taken such a burden on yourself. So much courage
that must have taken. And much wisdom." Kopporu re a whistle of
derision.

Courage yes. Too much, even. But wisdom?

Kopporu began thinking many unkind thoughts concerning Guo's 'wisdom."
Until she remembered the day, eightweeks before, in the big clearing of
the Swamp. When the young fool Guo had shown more wisdom than the rest
of the people combined. Guo alone and, Kopporu knew, her young
preconsorts.

As long as she keeps her temper. And listens to Woddulakotat, and Yurra.

The Mother of Demons made a strange gesture with her head. Pointing,
Kopporu realized, with that oddly flat, armless face.

"And who are these two? Introduce me, if you please."

Guo's mantle was rippling with many colors, now. Orange and ochre
predominated. Blue Kopporu saw with relief was completely absent.

Guo's voice was hesitant.

"They are named Woddulakotat he is the eumale and Yurra. They are my
preconsorts. And my close advisers."

Petulantly, then: 'My closest advisers, and the dearest to my heart.
Even if some of my people don't approve." Kopporu re a whistle. One of
the old warriors had made the mistake of lecturing Guo, a few days
earlier, on the impropriety of allowing her preconsorts to remain in her
mantle once they were out of the Swamp. The necessity of protecting the
little males could override custom in the swamp, she had allowed,
ponderously, but once they were out of it well. It just wasn't done.
They were not, after all, properly wedded.

Guo's answer had been short, to the point, and very rude.

It really isn't proper, thought Kopporu wrily. But I'm afraid it's too
late, anyway, to save Guo's morals. I've heard the noises she's starting
to make at night. With her preconsorts nowhere in sight. Not even mature
neither she nor they! She'd deny it, of course, but I know the truth.
They're starting to practice.

A strange noise was coming from the Mother of Demons. Her face was
twisted into a bizarre shape.

Humor. That must be the way the demons whistle amusement.

"People are often foolish, Guo. My own husband" the demon gestured
toward a large, roundish-shaped demon nearby  'is my closest adviser
also. And, always, the dearest to my heart."

Guo's mantle was suddenly tinged with green. Slowly, her own arms began
to return the caress of the Mother of Demons.

Kopporu knew, then, that her people would live. And forgave Guo all of
her many, many, many sins.

Chapter 25.

By the end of the first eightweek, Indira knew that the critical moment
had passed. There was still much to be settled, and much, much more to
be done. Her life seemed to have become nothing but an endless round of
meetings and discussions, and she knew that there was no end yet in
sight.

But the details details! she thought were not important, now that the
central concept for which she had battled had been accepted by all
parties.

They would become a single people. United, as one flesh, within the
shell of this strange new idea the Mother of Demons had brought to the
world, from beyond the sky. The nashiyonu, she called it.

Already, Indira knew, in all the valleys of the Chiton, the strange new
word was being spoken, from the siphons of gukuy from many different
tribes and peoples. Many of whom most of whom had barely begun to learn
the Enagulishuc from which the word derived.

A strange demon word, belonging to a strange demon language. What other
word could describe such a strange idea? A people which is not a people.
A tribe which is not a tribe. A prevalate in which no clan prevails.
(Even, it was whispered, in which the clan themselves barely exist.)
Who, then, is a part of this nashiyonu? Anyone who chooses to belong.
Yes, chooses. It has nothing to do with clan status or birth.

Anyone. Even owoc.

Indira repressed a grin. The gukuy who were squatting in the command
circle were all very intelligent beings. Even the recently arrived
tribespeople were rapidly learning to interpret human facial expressions
and body language. Ushulubang and Rottu, she knew, were already
mistresses of the art.

When it came to diplomacy, humans had the great advantage of being
naturally adept at shoroku. Indira had no intention of losing that
advantage, so she allowed no signs of her feelings to show. But it was
difficult not to grin, thinking of the owoc.

In truth, the owoc had not really chosen to become citizens of the new
Nation. The concepts would have meant absolutely nothing to them. Indira
had simply decreed that all owoc were nashiyonuc by nature. All owoc,
everywhere in the World-That-Is-A-Clam, not simply the owoc on the
Chiton.

She had expected some resistance to the idea, especially from the Kiktu.
The tribespeople venerated the owoc, true. But, as Indira had suspected,
the veneration stemmed from ancient totemic concepts. It had nothing to
do with any notion that owoc were equal to gukuy.

But Ushulubang, as she so often did, had immediately supported Indira's
proposal. Very vigorously. The Kiktu had been uncertain, but they had
acceded to the wishes of the old sage and the Mother of Demons.

For a moment, Indira's eyes met those of Ushulubang. The sage was, as
always, squatting across from her in the command circle. The two of them
were careful not to give the impression that they were acting in
collusion. Which, in the narrow sense of the term, they were not. Indira
met privately with Ushulubang, but no more often or for longer stretches
of time than she did with Kopporu, or Guo, or the Opoktu clan leaders.

The fact remained that they were conspirators. The vision toward which
they were each groping was different or, perhaps more accurately, seen
from different angles. But their goals, in some fundamental sense, were
identical.

The question of the owoc illustrated that unity of purpose perfectly.
Goloku, in her teachings, had often spoken of the need to cherish the
owoc, and to oppose their oppression. In this, as in so many things,
most Pilgrims interpreted her words simplistically. As a statement of
ethical principle.

As such, of course, it was an excellent principle one of which Indira
heartily approved. But Goloku's teachings also carried a more subtle and
sophisticated thought, under the simple morality of the precept.

If you allow the weakest to be oppressed, you open the valves to your
own oppression. If you flail one who is weaker than you, you will be
flailed yourself, by one who is stronger. Do not complain then, fool.
Was it not you who blessed the flail in the first place?

Indira had, finally, accepted the awful responsibility which had fallen
on her shoulders. But she took this much grim satisfaction in the taking
whatever else, she would ensure the survival of the owoc. It might well
be true, as Julius often said, that all species were doomed to
extinction. So be it. But the owoc would be granted their rightful time
in the universe, to live out their gentle lives in peace, free of fear.

Indira knew what forces she was unleashing on this planet. Those forces
would do much that was good. But they would also wreak havoc and
destruction. Often, she would wake in the night, trembling. Julius would
hold her in his arms, until she finally fell back asleep. Always, then,
one thought would enable her to face the nightmares.

Soon enough, the word would spread to all the peoples of all the lands
of the world. Abuse the owoc, and you will incur the terrible wrath of
the Nation. For all owoc, it is said, belong to the Nation.

Watching Indira and Ushulubang, Julius made no attempt to restrain his
own grin.

Look at the two schemers. Butter wouldn't melt in their mouths, no
sirree. Ha! Machiavelli's Daughter Meets Cardinal Richelieu. Love at
first sight.

Feeling eyes upon him, Julius turned his head and met the calm gaze of
Rottu.

Oh, yes. Let's not forget 'Tentacles" Borgia.

But, the moment the quip came to him, he dismissed it. Not without a
certain feeling of shame. He had come to know Rottu rather well, over
the past two months. To know her, and to grow to like her. And, as he
learned her history, be somewhat awed by her.

Hard as steel, yes. But never evil. Would you have survived her life,
Julius Cohen? With your soul intact as she did?

He looked away. After the meeting, he would spend the rest of the day in
the company of Rottu. He saw more of Rottu than he did of Indira, now.
Somehow Julius never did understand how Indira had maneuvered him into
it Julius had become Rottu's partner in crime.

"Research," Indira had called it. 'You and Rottu will jointly organize a
research team."

Yeah, right. 'Research team." Such a nice phrase. It brings to mind
starry-eyed visions of Julius Cohen, paleontologist, plumbing the
secrets of the unknown.

Treacherous, sneaky, conniving she-devil. An historian, to boot, who
knows perfectly well what the phrase really means and could have said so
in plain language.

Manhattan Project Marries Peenemunde. Absent-Minded Professor of Death
and Destruction, Meet Your New Associate Her Squidness, the Spy.

Julius grinned again, very widely. Unlike Indira, he had no fear of
having his emotions easily understood by the gukuy. For two reasons.
First, he didn't give a damn. Second, he had a secret weapon whenever
needed. The gukuy possessed, as a rule, very good senses of humor. But
Jewish jokes baffled them completely.

Except, possibly, Rottu. Julius glanced at his partner again.

When I told her I was making her an honorary Jew, she immediately
replied that she was too old to convert and besides, she didn't want to
be circumcised. Now, where the hell did she learn about that? I think
she's getting coached by Indira on the side.

Treacherous, sneaky, conniving she-devils the lot of them.

Rottu met his glance. A second later, the Pilgrim spymistress looked
away, conveying in some subtle manner the message: Stop daydreaming,
Julius. The meeting is about to come to the key point.

Julius snorted. He wasn't in the slightest concerned about that. He
should worry? When Indira, Mistress of the Dark Secrets, was running the
show?

Paying little attention to the meeting, Julius began pondering the real
problem he had on his plate. Wasn't there anything on this miserable
soft-wooded planet that would make a decent bow?

He mimicked Indira in his mind. 'The Mongols made composite bows."
That's great, sweetheart. How? I'm a 22nd century paleontologist, not a
13th century nomadic bowyer.

He dismissed the problem from his mind. Rottu had heard vague rumors of
some kind of sea-monsters whose weird innards might make suitable
material for a bow. She said she would look into it, but it would be a
long time before she discovered anything. Very few gukuy peoples had
anything to do with the ocean, because of its dangers. And those were
far away, and little known.

So forget bows, for the moment. We don't have enough time for long-range
planning. The main armies of the Utuku will be here within a few months,
by Rottu's estimate.

Chemical warfare, by God. There's the thing.

He began chewing his upper lip. By now, he had completely blanked the
proceedings of the session out of his mind.

Greek fire. Or its Ishtarian equivalent. Rottu's already sent an
expedition back into the Swamp. O-doddo-ua says there's a kind of oily
quasi-vine there which burns like nobody's business. She promised to
bring back a pile of the stuff. If we can concentrate whatever the
active substance is, we've got the makings of a nice firebomb. By then,
Adrian should have finished building the catapults no, what's the right
word? Trebuchet, I think. I'll ask Indira. She ought to know. The Wicked
Witch of the Sky designed the damned thing, after all. Like a magician
pulling rabbits from a hat, the way she hauls things out of that chamber
of horrors called History.

Feeling a sudden tension in the air, Julius focused his attention back
on the meeting.

He stared at Indira. He could tell, by subtleties in her posture he
could not begin to analyze consciously, that she was poised to strike.

I love you, she-devil.

"Pay attention, Guo!" whispered Woddulakotat fiercely. 'Stop
daydreaming. They're getting around to the meat of the question." Guo re
a whistle of derision. She adored her preconsorts especially
Woddulakotat and would under no circumstances reprove them publicly. The
fact remained that they were still, in some ways especially Woddulakotat
a bunch of silly males. Fretting over foolishness.

For an eightday, now, since the discussion had finally turned to the
problem of building a new army, her preconsorts had been agitated over
the issue of the army's commander. A wrong decision here, they insisted,
would be disastrous.

Guo must see to it that the right decision is made!

Silly males. The right decision will be made. As always. And I won't
have to do anything.

The Goddess will not fail us.

Her preconsorts, she knew, were much taken by Ushulubang and the
teachings of the Way. Most males were, especially eumales. Had not
Goloku taught that all gukuy are equal within the Coil? Did not
Ushulubang flail his Pilgrims with that precept, every day? In the most
outrageous manner possible? Imagine! Allowing that pervert Dhowifa to
ride about in her mantle, and proclaiming him the best of the new
apashoc.

Guo did not object, actually. She rather liked Dhowifa. The pervert had
begun to spend much time with Guo's preconsorts. He missed, Guo knew,
the company of his own long-lost malebond. After an initial hesitation,
her preconsorts had allowed Dhowifa to become a bondfriend. True,
Dhowifa was an unnatural gukuy. But after the Swamp, and everything
else, it no longer seemed of much importance. And he was close to
Ushulubang, and wise in the Way himself.

Guo did not object to the Way, either. She knew that the new religion
was sweeping through the ranks of the Kiktu, pushing aside the old
tribal beliefs. But she didn't care. She was inclined to the opinion
that beings should believe in whatever they wished. And, even if that
had not been her own inclination, she would not have objected. For the
Goddess herself had decreed that all must respect the beliefs of others,
and their right to advocate that belief.

Guo herself, however, was not moved by the Way. She found its logical
intricacies boring. Her husbands-to-be could chatter all they wanted
about the subtleties of the Question; she would have none of it. Even if
Guo had lost her respect for the clan leaders, she had lost none of her
respect for the old beliefs of the Kiktu.

The truth was simple and straightforward. The Goddess Uk had created the
world, and rained life upon the Meat. She had given all to the gukuy,
and told them to enjoy the bounties of the world. But the gukuy had
fallen into sin, and displeased Uk. So the Goddess had returned to the
world, to set the gukuy back on the road of righteousness.

It was well known, of course, that no gukuy could gaze upon the sight of
the Goddess and live. So the Goddess, in her mercy, had assumed a
different form. She had returned in the guise of a demon. A Mother of
Demons. With her children, and their glistening spears, to enforce her
will.

Let foolish males and others believe in the tales of the demons. The
demons were full of tall tales especially the old fat one, the Mother's
mate. Tales of great coils in the sky, beyond the Mother-of-Pearl. Tales
of a double coil within every living thing, which created it and shaped
it as it grew. Tales and tales and tales.

All nonsense. Guo knew the truth. The Mother of Demons had come to the
world to explain the secrets to the people. The greatest secrets of all
the secrets of the future. She said it was not so, of course. The Mother
of Demons said she had no magic power over the future. Only the
knowledge of the past, of a different world, which enabled her to see
the forks in the road ahead. But Guo knew she was lying. The Goddess
would blind the gukuy if she told them the secrets all at once, as they
really were. So, in her mercy, the Goddess lied, and told only some of
the secrets. And only part of those secrets.

It was enough. Once, Guo had meant to force the truth from the Mother of
Demons. Remembering that time, she almost flushed red. She would have
been destroyed. But the Goddess Uk had loved Guo, and spared her.

"Stop daydreaming!" hissed Woddulakotat.

Guo brought her mind back to the present. The Pilgrim Ghodha was
speaking.

"There remains the question of who will command the new army. I believe
it can only be" she pointed to the implacable demon sitting next to his
mother 'Yoshef. My reasons are as "

"No," said the Mother of Demons. 'It must be Kopporu."

"You see?" whispered Guo. 'Did I not tell you?"

Foolish males. As if the Goddess would fail.

There had been no sign in Kopporu's mantle of her tension. Thus, when
the tension suddenly vanished, there was no sign of her relief.

But Ghodha had little of Kopporu's mastery of shoroku. The Pilgrim
warrior's own mantle rippled with colors. Predominantly ochre.

"I do not agree, Inudira. At least I must be convinced."

Ghodha turned toward Kopporu and made the gesture of respect.

"I have the greatest admiration for Kopporu's capabilities as a warrior,
and a battle leader. But I watched the battle with the Utuku. It is a
simple fact that Yoshef and his apalatunush caused as much destruction
as Kopporu's warriors, despite their much smaller numbers. And suffered
few casualties in so doing whereas the Kiktu suffered many. For a barba
for a gukuy, Kopporu is an excellent battle leader. Even a great one.
But Yoshef is beyond comparison."

Indira leaned forward.

"I will try to convince you, Ghodha. But it would be better, I think, if
Kopporu could convince you herself. Kopporu has said nothing, so far, in
this discussion. Out of not modesty, perhaps, but a desire not to seem
self-serving."

She looked at Kopporu. 'But this is no time for such pretense, Kopporu.
I know full well that you agree with me on this matter. Explain why."

Kopporu hesitated for a moment. What she was about to say would, she
suspected, inflame some mantles. But Indira's will was like bronze, as
she had demonstrated many times over the past eightweek.

"I also watched the battle, Ghodha. And I do not disagree with your
assessment of the relative roles played in it by Yoshef's people and my
own. But the question before us regards the future, not the past. We
must be guided by different considerations." Ghodha . 'If by that you
are referring to the sensitivities of your tribe, I think "

Kopporu whistled derision. She respected the Pilgrim warleader's talent,
but she was becoming more than a little irritated by her
superciliousness toward 'barbarians."

"My people, Ghodha who include far more than Kiktu would have no
difficulty accepting Yoshef as a commander. They would accept it in the
same way that they have accepted Enagulishuc as our common language and
for the same reasons. No, more than accept it. They would feel a great
sense of confidence, knowing they were led by the demon who slew the
Utuku commander with a single cast of his spear."

Kopporu drew a deep breath. Here it is.

"But it would be a false confidence. The army would not be stronger with
Yoshef as its commander rather than me. It would be weaker."

Another deep breath.

"Much weaker."

A small uproar followed. Quickly quelled, however, by Indira's firmness.

"Explain, Kopporu," she commanded.

Kopporu held up an arm.

"One. The incredible success of Yoshef's apalatunush in the recent
battle was due primarily to surprise. The Utuku had never seen dem ummun
before. Suddenly, monsters were upon them, fighting in a manner which
they had never experienced. The ummun had won half the battle before it
even started. But this element of surprise will not last forever. We
will enjoy it in the next battle, because no Utuku survived this one.
Over time, however, the gukuy of all lands will become familiar with
ummun and their battle tactics."

She held up a second arm.

"Two. The ummun are by no means invincible, or indestructible. You,
Ghodha, are impressed by the fact that the ummun suffered few casualties
in the battle. I was impressed by that also. But, since I have spent
some time now with the ummun, I have been impressed by another fact.

"There are very few ummun. Not more than triple-eighty warriors. It is
true, the young ummun will eventually be able to take their place in the
apalatunush. And, over time, their numbers will grow. But there will
always be far more far more gukuy than ummun. Once that fact becomes
known which it will, there is no way to keep it a secret forever our
opponents will understand that they need only kill a few ummun to
cripple the apalatunush."

A third arm. And a fourth.

"Three. And, closely armed, four. Our opponents are powerful in numbers.
Does anyone doubt that the Beak of the Utuku would sacrifice eighty or
more warriors in order to kill a single ummun? Or any of the awosha of
the south? And that is my fifth reason. The Utuku are our immediate
enemy. Soon enough, the Beak will seek to avenge her humiliations upon
us. But the Utuku are, in many ways, the most poorly equipped to fight
ummun. Given their numbers, their tactics have worked well against the
tribes of the plain. But they are very badly designed against the ummun
methods."

A little diplomacy, here. Kopporu made the gesture of respect.

"You yourself, Ghodha, are a former battle leader of the Anshac legions.
Would the legions have fared so badly against Yoshef's apalatunush?"

Ochre. Then, the gesture of grudging admission.

"Probably not. Certainly not in a second battle. Where they understood
what they were facing."

"Exactly. The Anshac discipline is, in all essential regards, as good as
that of the Utuku. But the Anshac are far more flexible and clever."

One of the Opoktu clan leaders spoke.

"But we are not at war with the Ansha," she protested.

"Not yet," replied Kopporu. 'But we will be."

Another uproar, quieted by Indira.

"Explain," she commanded.

Kopporu held up a sixth arm.

"The reason loops back to the question. I have listened carefully to
everything Inudira has said, over the past many days. Most of it has
been strange to me, and new, and difficult to comprehend. But one thing
has become clear. I understand it, because I myself spent a lifetime as
a warrior trying to change my tribe's methods of war. Tried and, for the
most part, failed. Why? Because as Inudira has explained the way in
which a people makes war is ultimately an extension of the way they
live. Tribes will fight like tribes. Prevalates like prevalates. Savages
like savages."

Kopporu groped for words.

"I cannot explain this well. Inudira could explain it much better. This
much I know. The whole world is changing and was, even before the ummun
came. You all know this is so. You especially, Ghodha. Nowhere is change
coming faster than in the south. Why are there so many former helots
among my people? Because the lot of the helots is growing worse in the
south. More and more helots are becoming outright slaves. The prevalates
are going to war with each other more and more often. More and more,
they are encroaching on the plains. And now, a great new cloth is being
woven. We are weaving it here, on the Chiton. The cloth we call the
nashiyonu. The new army we are building is only a single thread in that
cloth and not the most important one. Think of all the other threads we
have decided upon. The new yurts for teaching new skills. The new trade
routes we will seek to uncover. The new arts and crafts we will create.
All of these things, sooner or later, will bring us into battle with the
Ansha and all the southern prevalates."

She fell silent. After a moment, all eyes turned to Indira.

"Is this so, Inudira?" asked Ghodha.

"Yes. Everything Kopporu has said, and more. I will elaborate on her
words, at a later time. But Kopporu has stripped the meat from the
shell."

She looked at Kopporu.

"Your conclusions, battle leader?"

"The army of the nashiyonu must be a gukuy army, in its essence. It must
be built and led according to the best principles that we know, along
with the new things which Inudira will teach us. But those must be
principles which gukuy can use. Principles of the flail, not the spear.
The ummun apalatunush will have a place in that army, for there are
special things which they can do which we cannot. But they will not be
at the center, when the clash of armies comes.

"The army should therefore be commanded by a gukuy. Whether that gukuy
should be myself, or another, is a different question. But it must be a
gukuy. We can, and will, learn much of the art of war from the ummun.
And there will always be ummun in positions of command and advice. But
no ummun could ever understand a gukuy army as well as a gukuy.

"And, it would be a waste. There are so few ummun, and they know so
much. Even the young ones, who remember little of any world than our
own, know far more than any gukuy. I would not see them wasted on a
battlefield, any more than necessary."

She made the gesture of profound respect to Joseph.

"I, too, was awed by Yoshef's cast of the spear. But I would rather see
him cast his thoughts into the sky."

In her mind, Ushulubang also made a gesture of profound respect. Not
toward Joseph, but toward Indira.

Shrewdly done, Mother of Demons. As always. There will be no hesitation,
now, at selecting Kopporu.

With quite a different mental gesture, Ushulubang considered Ghodha.

I believe I shall make a point of talking more often with that one.
Rather too full of the Answer, she is. Answers which would have killed
her, and them, had it been she who tried to lead an entire people
through the Swamp. Even now, she cannot see past Kopporu's crude armor.
It has not yet occurred to her to wonder: how is it that a 'barbarian"
could see things which I could not?

Because the barbarian, whether she knows it or not, follows the Way of
the Question.

But that is for the future. For the moment, there is still a matter to
be resolved. There is, after all, a core of meat at the center of
Ghodha's prejudices.

For the first time since the council began that day, Ushulubang spoke.

"I fully support the proposal to make Kopporu the commander of the army.
But a problem remains, which is the nature of the army itself."

She waited, allowing the council to digest her words.

"Is it to be a Kiktu army? No, clearly not. Kopporu has told us herself
that she seeks to adopt Anshac methods and even more. The methods which
Inudira has begun to explain. But that will require the tribespeople to
learn a whole new way of war. A difficult thing to ask, especially of
warriors who are rightfully proud of their accomplishments in battle."

Another pause.

"Then, there is the problem of the Pilgrims. Many of them will want to
join the army. Some were warriors themselves, in times past. From Ansha,
and other prevalates. But most are helots, with little skill or training
in the craft of war."

Another pause.

"And finally, there is the problem of the former Utuku. Warriors all,
and brave ones. Do not deny it, simply because of your distaste for
their former habits. They have renounced those habits, and they too must
somehow be incorporated into the new army."

A long pause.

"You see the problem? It is not enough to have a commander. She must be
able to command an army an army, a whole and well-knit cloth. But we do
not have such a cloth, today. Nor do we have much time in which to weave
one."

Ushulubang looked at Rottu. 'You estimate that the Beak and the main
army of the Utuku will arrive at the Chiton in three eightweeks, am I
not correct?"

The spymistress made the gesture of tentative affirmation.

"Approximately. The former Utuku whom I interviewed all agreed that the
Beak took the main army south after the battle of the Lolopopo. Leaving
only two ogghoxt to watch the Swamp in case Kopporu emerged. One ogghoxt
we destroyed. The other will remain in its assigned position south and
west of the Swamp. In the meantime, the Beak is preoccupied with
completing the conquest of the Papti Plain. Not all of the tribes joined
with the Kiktu. Several retreated south, and are still opposing the
Utuku."

She made the gesture of certainty.

"They will not succeed in that opposition. But they will keep the Beak
occupied for some time. Enough time barely for us to weave a new army.
And there is an added benefit. Refugees from broken tribes are trickling
north. Some have already reached the Chiton. At my suggestion, Kopporu
has already dispatched small battle groups into the plain to seek for
such refugees. We can add their threads to the cloth."

Rottu fell silent. Seamlessly, Ushulubang continued.

"We have everything we need to weave our army. We have the nashiyonu,
which is our loom. And we have the warp and the weft the ummun, the
tribespeople, the Pilgrims, the former Utuku, the new refugees. But "

"We need a shuttle," said Kopporu. 'Someone it will have to be gukuy who
knows the Anshac methods of war. And the ways of the tribespeople."

"Just so."

Kopporu's mantle turned black.

"And someone who will be able to instill discipline of bronze. A warrior
so feared and respected that none will dare challenge her."

"Just so."

After a moment, one by one, all who were present began staring at
Dhowifa.

PART V.

The Shuttle

Chapter 26.

Dhowifa himself brought the summons. As she watched her little lover
approach their yurt, Nukurren found it hard not to whistle derision.

He's getting fat, the lazy little creature. Look at him waddle along!
Even slower than usual. He's gotten used to riding in Ushulubang, and
working no other muscles than those of his siphon. Which he works
constantly.

But, as always, Nukurren did not begrudge Dhowifa the new life he had
found on the mountain. She did not begrudge him the comfort of his new
friendship with Guo's malebond, nor the joy he found in Ushulubang's
company.

No, not at all. After eightyweeks of misery as an outcast, Dhowifa had
found acceptance. More than that, he had found hope and purpose. He was
well into the Coil, now, learning the Way of the Pilgrim, and learning
it very well. Still shy at times, uncertain, diffident. But Nukurren
knew that if Ushulubang had, at first, called Dhowifa the best of the
new apashoc out of her desire to shake the error of the Answer, she did
so now because it was the simple truth. And many apashoc, especially the
younger ones, were learning to shed their bigotry and seek discourse
with the unnatural truemale whose understanding of the Question was
subtle, supple, and uncanny.

Dhowifa's happiness stemmed from other things he had found on the
mountain, as well. He had spent hours in the company of the Mother of
Demons, during meetings of the council. Returning each time with new awe
and wonder at what he had heard. And a growing adoration for
Inudiratoledo herself, and the new world she was making.

No, Nukurren loved Dhowifa, and was glad for him, and listened,
patiently if not attentively, to everything which Dhowifa told her. But
she herself said nothing. It was not that she disbelieved. Simply that
she didn't care.

She didn't seem to care about anything, anymore. It was as if she had
lost her soul along with her eye. Her heart kept beating, her lungs kept
breathing. Beyond that nothing. She had no need of shoroku to keep her
mantle gray. Her soul itself was gray. All around her, day after day,
she watched a new world being created. A strange new tapestry, woven of
mysterious alien threads, colored in dazzling hues.

With, as always, no place in it for her.

It was not that she was outcast. Not at all. Oh, no, not at all.

She was admired, now. Respected, praised, even adulated. New chants were
being chanted, throughout the Chiton, of the battle which was called
Shatalunungurdu. (Ushulubang had decreed that strange name, for reasons
known to none, save, perhaps, the Mother of Demons.) Glorious,
triumphant chants. (Longwinded ones, too, but none complained.) Chants
which told of the exploits of heroes and champions. Of the sagacity of
Kopporu, and the battlecraft of her warriors, and the might of Guo, and
the honor of her malebond (and none objected to the presence of males in
a battlechant, unheard-of though it was), and the valor of the Pilgrims
against the shield wall, and the ferocity of Ludumilaroshokavashiki and
Takashimidudzhugodzhi, and the fleetness of their apalatunush, and the
spearcast of Yoshefadekunula, and the courage of his Companions (for so,
in fact, they were called in the chants), especially the great warrior
Dzhenushkunutushen.

And, most of all, of Nukurren the Valiant. Many new chants had been
composed, over the past eightweeks, by chantresses of all peoples.
Pilgrim chants and Kiktu chants, and Opoktu chants, and chants by former
swamp-dwellers, and even, in a strange unrhythmic meter, a short chant
by a young demon named Anagushohara. Each chant was somewhat different.
A Kiktu chantress might dwell on the details of the battle on the Utuku
left flank; a Pilgrim chantress, on the fury at the shield wall. But in
one respect, all chants agreed: The height of the battle, the decisive
moment, the turning point, the pivot of history, the opening of the Way
and the salvation of the peoples, had been the Charge of Nukurren. The
Kutaku of the Coil, as many chants called it.

Oh, glory and grandeur and triumph and hope!

Oh, valor and courage and heroism and nobility!

Nukurren the Mighty! Nukurren the Bold!

Nukurren the Champion!

Nukurren had heard the chants. Had been unable not to hear them, for all
that the chants grated on her soul. During the long days after the
battle, she had remained in the hospital at Dzhenushkunutushen's
bedside. Nukurren herself had suffered only minor mantle-wounds during
her charge, quickly healed. But Dzhenushkunutushen had lain near death.
He had not suffered any single great wound. But he had nearly bled to
death, for it seemed as if his entire body had been flailed.

As, indeed, it had been. Most of his wounds had been received at the
very end of the battle, in the last moments before Nukurren reached the
little band of human warriors in the center. For, at the end,
Yoshefadekunula had fallen, knocked down in the press of the fray by the
staggering body of another demon, mortally injured. Unhurt, but
helpless, the demonlord had been the target of all the remaining Utuku.
At last, the cannibals had seen their chance to destroy the implacable
demon who had been the most terrible of them all, and they had fallen
upon him.

Or, had tried. But the cannibals never reached the black monster. Their
flails never touched him. The assault of the Utuku broke against the
demonlord's companion, who stood over his prostrate form, unmoving,
unyielding, accepting each blow of the flail and returning it with a
stroke of the spear. And if Utuku flails tore the demonlord champion's
flesh, his spear split Utuku brains; if their flails spilled his blood,
his spear spilled their lives; and if they gave him pain, he gave them
oblivion.

Then did the cannibals falter, for the spear-strokes were unstoppable.
If the white passion of the demonlord's companion seemed mysterious to
them, they had not the time to wonder at it. For the blue rage of their
mantles was the palest of shades, compared to the color in the monster's
eyes. The demon's white passion quickly vanished, covered with red
blood. But the blue never faded from his glare, and it seemed, to the
Utuku who faced him, to be the color of Fury Itself.

They faltered. And then gray death arrived, for Nukurren was there. The
demonlord's companion finally collapsed. But the demonlord himself had
regained his feet, and took up his spear, and fell upon them. Black as
night, implacable. Endless night, then, to the Utuku who had flailed his
companion.

For days Dzhenushkunutushen lay near death. Indeed, would almost
certainly have died, were it not for the strength of his body. Other
demons in the hospital, weaker than he, did die in those days. Three of
them. Two had been among the human warriors in the center, and they had
died soon after arriving in the hospital, from terrible wounds.

The third was a female demon. Though many of the apalatunush warriors
who had ravaged the Utuku right would bear scars, only two had been
slain. Of those two, only one had survived the battle itself, to be
brought to the hospital.

The female demon lingered for days before she died. Her name, Nukurren
learned, had been Shofiyaburrunushtayn. She learned the name from the
many demons who came to the hospital. All of the demons came, Nukurren
thought, to sit by the side of their wounded and dying. Nukurren found
the demon way of expressing grief, like so much else about them, to be
messy, unsightly and grotesque. But she did not doubt for a moment that
the water which leaked from their eyes, transparent though it was, bore
the essence of brown misery.

The Mother of Demons herself came, many times, to sit with
Shofiyaburrunushtayn and Dzhenushkunutushen. Nukurren was mildly
interested to note that the Mother of Demons, alone among them, never
wept (such, she learned, was the Enagulishuc word for that strange means
of showing grief). She merely sat there, silent, still; her flat,
armless face as rigid as bronze.

In her visits to the hospital, the Mother of Demons spoke rarely, and
never to Nukurren. At first, Nukurren wondered (not caring, simply
curious) if the Mother of Demons was angry at her for some unknown
reason. All the other demons who came to the hospital spoke to Nukurren.
Spoke to her often, in fact, and sometimes at tedious length; expressing
their gratitude and their affection.

Eventually, Nukurren thought she understood. The Mother of Demons never
showed her grief because it was so great that the showing of it would
break her completely. And if she never spoke to Nukurren, it was not out
of anger. It was because to speak to the gukuy warrior who had saved so
many of her children (perhaps, in the end, all of them for battles are
fickle things) would be to acknowledge her own responsibility for
sending them into their death. A responsibility which the Mother of
Demons had taken, and had accepted; but could not yet, thought Nukurren,
call by its own name.

The day came, after Shofiyaburrunushtayn finally died, when the healer
demon Mariyaduloshruyush pronounced Dzhenushkunutushen safe from danger.
Shortly thereafter, the Mother of Demons arrived at the hospital. The
young male demon was conscious now, if still very weak, and he and his
mother exchanged a few words before he fell asleep. For long, then, did
the Mother of Demons remain, holding the huge, deadly hand of her child
in her own tiny and much deadlier one.

The Mother of Demons sat on one side of Dzhenushkunutushen's pallet.
Nukurren, as she had done for many days, squatted on the other. As
always, the Mother of Demons said nothing to Nukurren; did not even look
at her.

Much later, the Mother of Demons arose and made to leave. But at the
doorway, she stopped, motionless for a time, and then turned back. She
came to stand before Nukurren and then, still silent, bowed to the
warrior.

Nukurren recognized the bow. Nukurren was very observant, and had
already learned many of the subtle methods by which the demons expressed
their sentiments. But no subtlety was needed here. The bow which the
Mother of Demons gave to Nukurren was not the bow which ummun gave to
gukuy. This was the great bow, the special bow. The bow which had no
name in Enagulishuc, but which the Kiktu called the gukku tak tu
rottonutu, the 'homage to the Old Ones"; and the Pilgrims, in Anshac,
the purren owoc.

Truly, the Mother of Demons, thought Nukurren, after Inudiratoledo left
the hospital.

She, alone, almost understands.

There was no place for Nukurren in this new world being born, for the
chants were absurd. Grandiose, preposterous, ridiculous lies. That the
chantresses themselves, and those who listened to the chants, thought
them the truth mattered not at all. Lies, believed, are still lies. And
untruth was made even the worse, by the fact it was thought to be true.

For there was no Nukurren the Valiant. That creature did not exist, had
never existed, could never exist. There had been no glory in her charge.
Neither glory, nor grandeur, nor courage, nor valor, nor justice, nor
hope for the future, nor even the thought of triumph.

There had been nothing in it. Nothing.

It had been that nothing which had made her charge truly irresistible.
Nukurren knew, had long known, that she was a great warrior. But not the
greatest warrior in the world could have carried through that charge.
Her charge had been irresistible because it was not a warrior's charge.

To be sure, she had used all her warrior's skill and immense skills they
were. But the soul of that charge had been the shriek of a newborn
spawn, realizing, from the first moment of consciousness, that the
universe was a cannibal. Knowing, always, that there was nothing in the
world; nothing but pain and solitude, which endured, and endured, simply
because the universe was a torturer enjoying its sport. A cannibal,
lingering over the feast.

Nukurren had gone to the battle, but she had not intended to
participate. She had come, simply because she did not know, exactly. A
professional interest, partly, to see how well the demons had learned
the lessons she had taught them. But, mostly, she had gone because
Dzhenushkunutushen had given back her weapons and her armor, and she had
never realized he possessed them. She had been moved, then. She had been
moved, not by the still-new and uncertain friendship embodied in
Dzhenushkunutushen's return of her belongings. No, she had been moved by
her astonishment that a monster could exist in the world who would
salvage the possessions of a creature who, at the time, had done nothing
to him but harm. She had come to the battle, in the end, wondering if
such a capacity for friendship was possible.

Then, at the battle itself, she saw Dzhenushkunutushen die. (He did not
die, as it happened. But Nukurren had been certain he would, and had
been utterly astonished to find him still alive when she broke through).
She watched Dzhenushkunutushen die, and the demonlord he cherished, and
the other demons for whom he was their champion and protector, and knew
they were dying because they were young. The universe had not given them
time. The universe had given them, demons that they were, all the colors
of creation. It had given them all the things which Nukurren had never
had, and never would. It had even given the demons the power to extend
friendship to one whom all others had cast out since birth. And then,
had denied them the time to learn from the friendship. Had cast them, in
the fearlessness of their youth, into a battlefield that needed the
cunning of experience to survive.

The universe, which had tortured Nukurren all her life, would extract
this final, gleeful moment of agony.

Though it never showed on her mantle, Nukurren's shoroku had broken
then. Had shattered into pieces. The one tie which might have held her
back, her love for Dhowifa and concern over his wellbeing, had snapped
like the slenderest thread. Dhowifa was safe, now, with Ushulubang and
the demons, as safe as he could ever be.

Nothing, now, held Nukurren from her revenge.

The Utuku cannibals who died under her flail and fork that day, died
horribly by eights and eights, had simply the misfortune of being the
manifestation, to Nukurren, of that ultimate cannibal. They could not
stand against her any more than they could have withstood Death itself,
Despair itself, Nothing itself.

Nukurren had wreaked her terrible rage on the universe, and had taken
from it the last, full, bitter measure. Her spirit had blazed the
blinding blue of pure fury, and her soul had been filled with the purest
black of the most pitiless executioner. But never, not once, had she
allowed the universe to see the colors of her vengeance.

No, she would repay the universe in the same bleak hue with which it had
always tormented her. She had not expected to survive the charge, but
she had intended, on that last day of her life, to have the grim
satisfaction of casting her death into the beak of creation in the same
color it had first spewed her forth. Nothing.

In the event, to her surprise, she had survived. Had survived, she
realized later, only because she had not expected to, and had not cared
if she did.

She still did not care. She was glad that Dzhenushkunutushen and most of
the other young demons had survived. She was especially glad that the
demon Ludumilaroshokavashiki had survived, to bring comfort and joy to
Dzhenushkunutushen during the many hours she spent in the hospital with
him. (Even, toward the end of Dzhenushkunutushen's convalescence, making
love to her mate; and if the demon way of lovemaking was, like so much
else, messy and wet and grotesque, Nukurren had not minded.) Nukurren
was glad, even, that the demonlord had survived. She did not much care
for Yoshefadekunula, but she knew how much he meant to
Dzhenushkunutushen, and Ludumilaroshokavashiki, and all the demons.

But Nukurren's own survival meant nothing to her. She had survived, but
so had the universe. Cannibals had died, but the cannibal remained. So
it had always been. So it would always be.

When she heard what Dhowifa had to say, she felt a slight curiosity.
Nothing more. Later, in the command circle, after Kopporu explained the
proposal to her, Nukurren felt, if anything, even less.

So. Once again, I am to be a mercenary.

Then, harshly: Be thankful, fool. Not many people would hire a one-eyed,
perverted mercenary. And you have no other skills. And nowhere else to
go.

"I accept," she said, and turned away.

"Stop."

The voice belonged to the Mother of Demons.

Nukurren turned back.

"Yes, Mother of De "

"Call me Inudira."

Nukurren made the gesture of obedience.

"Tell me how you understand our proposal, Nukurren."

"You want to hire my services as a trainer of warriors. It is a common
job for mercenaries. The pay is not as good as battle pay, but " she
gestured to her eye ' I am satisfied. I do not ask as to the pay itself.
So long as Dhowifa and I have food and shelter, I will not complain."

Inudiratoledo made the demon gesture of negation, a peculiar sideways
shaking of the head.

"That is what I thought. You are wrong, Nukurren. We have no use for a
mercenary."

"Those are my only skills."

Again, that odd gesture.

"That is not my point. The skills of a warrior are not the same as the
nature of a mercenary. Your skills we need, and badly. But not if they
come with the soul of a mercenary."

"I do not understand."

"I will try to explain. Has Dhowifa told you what we are hoping to do
here? The nashiyonu we wish to weave?"

"Yes."

"Do you believe it can be done?"

Nukurren hesitated.

"Speak honestly."

There could be no defying that voice.

"No. I do not believe it can be done."

"Why?"

Nukurren made the gesture of resignation.

"The world is a place of evil. It has always been so. Evil cannot be
destroyed."

"On the world from which I came, Nukurren, there was also much evil.
Much evil, and much as you have seen it on this world. There is still
some to this day. But not so much as in the past."

"The demons have conquered evil?"

"You cannot conquer evil, Nukurren. Evil is not a thing from beyond, a
foe to be vanquished. It is a thing which emerges from within the life
of a people. It can only be changed, by changing that life. That is what
we seek to do."

Nukurren considered her words. She had never thought of it in that
manner.

Perhaps I should start paying more attention to what Dhowifa is saying.

"How long will it take, this change?"

"A very long time, Nukurren. It will not happen in your lifetime, or in
mine. Not for many generations to come. We can only begin the change.
And even in that beginning, we will create new evils alongside the ones
we lessen. But we will be on the right road."

"You are certain that it is the right road?"

"Yes, Nukurren. I have spent my life studying that road. The one we
travel will be different, in many ways. No two roads are ever the same.
But there are always certain forks, where certain choices are made. We
are at such a fork today.

"Long ago, in my world, such a fork was reached, and a people made a
decision. They made the right decision. In so doing, they did not
eliminate all evil. By no means. They brought much evil with them, and
created still more. Great wars had to be fought, to change those evils.
But those wars, and those changes, would not have been possible had they
not made the right choice at an earlier fork."

She hesitated.

"I do not have the time now to explain all this. Soon we will be
creating a new kind of school, where I will explain this and much more
at great length. I would be glad if you chose to become a student. But
for the moment  "When that people came to that fork, Nukurren, and made
their choice of road, there were many other peoples who were angry at
the choice. It was a new choice, and one not to their liking. The new
people the new nashiyonu were a small people, surrounded by powerful
enemies. They had to fight for their existence, knowing little of the
art of war. They eventually won their battle, but it was very difficult.

"It would have been even more difficult had they not had the help of a
warrior. A veteran from one of the old and powerful prevalates. A master
of the skills of battle. That veteran came and showed them the ways of
war. He was not a mercenary, Nukurren. He did not come because he had
been paid, he came because he wanted to help create a new road. That is
what we need."

Nukurren was silent, for over a minute. Then, she said: 'I must think."

The Mother of Demons nodded. 'Yes. You must. It is not easy to accept
hope. Hope is the most terrible emotion of all, Nukurren, for it has no
color. It is color itself, and thus we fear it more than any color."

Nukurren pondered these words. She remembered the face of the Mother of
Demons, days past, as she sat in the hospital where her children lay
dying. Unyielding, like bronze, where that of all other demons had been
twisted and contorted; waterless, where all others had been wet. And
Nukurren understood, then, that the words the Mother of Demons had just
spoken were words she had torn from her own soul's despairing grasp.

"I will return," she said. 'First, I must think."

Once outside the command circle, Nukurren found a number of gukuy
waiting. For her, she realized. And one demon.

Most of the gukuy present were barbarian tribespeople, but there were
three Pilgrims, as well, and one she thought was a swamp-dweller. She
recognized one of the Pilgrims, although she did not know her name. Long
ago, the Pilgrim had been a warrior in the Anshac legions, and Nukurren
remembered seeing her from time to time in the Warrior's Square.

She made the gesture of recognition, and apologized for not remembering
the Pilgrim's name.

"I am Rurroc, Nukurren."

"When did you leave the legions?"

"Not until we sought refuge in the Chiton. But I had long been a
follower of Ushulubang. Since shortly after you and Dhowifa fled
Shakutulubac."

"Why did you become a Pilgrim?"

"Because of you."

For a moment, Nukurren's shoroku almost wavered.

"Because of me?"

The gesture of assent. 'Yes, Nukurren. Many warriors joined the Pilgrims
after you fled. At least double-eight that I know of." Sensing
Nukurren's puzzlement, Rurroc continued: 'It was because we thought it
was very unjust."

"Why? I was a deserter. And I stole one of the Paramount Mother's
husbands."

The gesture of dismissal. 'Not that. Everything that went before."

Nukurren was silent for a moment. Finally, she said, 'I had not realized
anyone cared."

"Many cared, Nukurren. But it was impossible to tell you, then. You were
not easy to approach." Nukurren thought back to the past, and,
grudgingly, admitted to herself that Rurroc was possibly right. She had,
perhaps  One of the Kiktu whistled amusement. Nukurren stared at her.
She had recognized the warrior at once, of course.

"What do you find so humorous, Kokokda?" she demanded, speaking in
Kiktu.

"You! There you are, pondering Rurroc's words. 'Perhaps I was a mite
touchy.' 'Possibly I was, just a tiny bit' what is a good Enagulishuc
word, Dzhenushkunutushen?"

The demon laughed. 'How about 'prickly'?" The demon explained the term,
while all the warriors practiced pronouncing it. Their efforts were made
difficult by the fact that most of them were whistling gleefully.

Throughout, of course, Nukurren maintained her shoroku. But, at the end,
she too joined in the humor.

"I suppose I have been, perhaps, just a trace purrikkulai."

She made the gesture of welcome to Kokokda.

"I am pleased to see that you have survived."

"I owe it to you, Nukurren," replied Kokokda. There was no trace of
humor in her tone now. 'Had it not been for the lesson you gave me long
ago, I would also have become as foolish as the clan leaders. It was a
hard lesson, but well worth it." "Hard?" demanded Nukurren. 'Foolish sp
what is the Enagulishuc word for 'spawn'?"

"Child," replied Dzhenushkunutushen. 'The plural is children. Boy, if
male. Girl, if female."

"Foolish dzhiludh. Very stupid gurrul. That lesson was not hard. The
beaks of Utuku at the victory feast are hard. The flail tips of Anshac
legions are hard. Helotry is hard. Slavery is hard. Life is hard. The
universe is hard."

Again, the group of warriors whistled. When the humor died down,
Nukurren scrutinized them carefully. Nukurren knew one of the other
Kiktu personally. She had spent a pleasant afternoon in Ipapo's company,
long ago, during the time when she and Dhowifa lived in exile among the
Kiktu. She made the gesture of recognition, which Ipapo returned.

Nukurren now examined Aktako. She had seen the Kiktu warrior, but had
never spoken to her. Dhowifa said she was Kopporu's lover as well as the
chief of her personal guard. Aktako was the oldest gukuy present, and
not particularly large. But Nukurren sensed instantly that she was a
deadly warrior. Aktako stared back at her, and the two veterans
exchanged an unspoken, ungestured, recognition.

Whether she knew them personally or not, they all had one thing in
common, which was immediately obvious to Nukurren's experienced eye.
They were the toughest veterans at Kopporu's disposal.

Tough enough, I think. Aktako certainly. And, of course, Ipapo. And
Kokokda as well, if she has truly learned her lesson. Which she must
have, or she would not be here. The others? Yes, I believe so.

She was silent, thinking. Those thoughts, at first, moved far away from
the gukuy before her. But, after a time, her thoughts returned and
settled upon them. Throughout her long silence, they had squatted
patiently. Now, returning her gaze, they remained still and motionless.

Nukurren understood, and appreciated, and then accepted, their own
acceptance of her. And she thought that perhaps the Mother of Demons was
right, after all. She was still skeptical, but the eyes were there,
after all, staring back at her unflinchingly. The eyes of outcasts,
refugees, exiles, with nothing in their gaze but confidence and trust.

"Do you think it can be done?" Nukurren asked. She was looking at
Aktako, but it was Kokokda who answered.

"Train a new army? Yes, Nukurren, it can " "That is not the question,"
Aktako. 'She knows the answer to that question."

Aktako made the gesture of bemused uncertainty.

"Who knows, Nukurren? I did not think we could cross the swamp. But I
was determined not to give that muck the satisfaction of my defeat. And,
after a time, we were through the swamp. Then, we met the Utuku ogghoxt.
I did not think we would survive the battle. But I was determined not to
give the cannibals the satisfaction of a meal. Then the demons came, and
destroyed the Utuku. And perhaps that is what you need to ask yourself."

Aktako gestured toward the young demon.

"I think there is more to this world than we know, Nukurren. So I think
we should not assume the world will always defeat us. Did not this same
world allow demons to exist? And who knows what can happen to a world
which has demons in it?"

Nukurren looked away from Aktako's hard stare, and examined the gaze of
a much smaller pair of eyes. Eyes of fury.

"And why are you here?" Nukurren asked.

The demon made that strange facial gesture which served them as a
whistle of amusement.

"You are my friend, Nukurren, and I thought you could use some moral
support. Besides, my wounds are almost healed, and it's my job. I'm the
Sharredzhenutumadzhoru of the apalatunush. We ummun and the gukuy
warriors will need to learn to coordinate our efforts." The armless,
flat-faced gesture of ruefulness. 'We didn't do so well in the last
battle."

"Not true. The Pilgrims did extremely well," said Nukurren forcefully.
'The demons were stupid. Especially the big male demons who led them,
thinking they were invincible. Mindless sp dzhiludhurren. Very stupid
buyush. I shall tell Ludumilaroshokavashiki to seek another mate. Why
waste love on one who is determined to die?"

Nukurren could not misunderstand the meaning of the gesture which the
young demon now made, alien though it was. The slight bow, the clasping
hands.

We were invincible, Nukurren. We had you. And still do. Teacher.

Suddenly, she was filled with love for the young demon. As always, her
mantle remained gray. But she made the gesture of fondness to the boy.
With some difficulty, for it was a gesture she knew but had never made
herself before. Then, to the assembled warriors, she made the gesture of
respect. And finally, to Aktako, she made the unnudh wap kottu.

"I think you are right, Aktako," Nukurren said. 'And, even if you are
not, we should not give the world the satisfaction of our surrender."

"Wait here," she commanded them, and went back into the command circle.

"You spoke of an ancient warrior, who taught a new people the craft of
war," she said to the Mother of Demons. 'What was her his name?"

"Steuben. Baron Friedrich von Steuben."

Nukurren made the gesture of negation.

"That is too long."

She turned to leave. 'I accept, Mother of Demons. I will be your
shutuppen."

The ranks of the future army of the nashiyonu were drawn up in the
center of the valley. In ragged files.

Very ragged, thought Nukurren. But the immediate problem is that they
are still separated. Tribespeople here; Pilgrims there; and the former
Utuku clustered away from everyone else. Avoided by everyone else. We
must put a stop to that. At once.

She was not concerned. She had served as a trainer for the Anshac
legions, whose warriors came from everywhere.

For a moment, she pondered her course of action. In general, she had no
intention of taking charge of the daily training of the warriors. Her
assistants, she thought, were quite capable of that task. Nukurren's
principal responsibility lay elsewhere. It would be she who would shape
and develop the structure and methods of the new army, particularly its
tactics.

To be sure, the new battle leaders would be filled with grand schemes
and ambitious projections. And, in truth, many of these would be
worthwhile and potentially valuable. Nukurren was well aware of Ghodha's
capabilities, and all she had heard regarding Kopporu led her to believe
that she would make an excellent commander for the army.

Still officers were by nature a fanciful folk, much given to
impracticalities and vaporous theory. Nukurren eyed Aktako and the other
members of her cadre.

No, no. Here lies the heart of the new army. They will make excellent
trainers, as well as troop leaders. After today, I will not have to
concern myself much with that task. But today is the first day. So  She
spoke to Aktako. 'I believe it would be wise if I personally led the
training today."

Aktako made the gesture of assent. 'I agree, Nukurren. It is essential
that the warriors see us as a united group. Since you are the leader,
the we do not have a title yet "

"Shutuppen."

Aktako groped for a moment with the unfamiliar word.

' the dzhu shutuppen, then, I think it would be best if the warriors
take your measure immediately."

Nukurren eyed the other cadre. It was obvious by their stance that they
were in agreement. And, she was pleased to note, it was equally obvious
that Aktako was already accepted as Nukurren's second-in-command.

Yes. They will be excellent. Better than any I have ever worked
alongside.

"Do you have practice flails and forks?" she asked. Aktako made the
gesture of affirmation.

"Good. I will need them. Bring several sets. At least four."

A slight tinge of orange entered Rurroc's mantle.

"You are going to start by teaching them weaponry?"

Kokokda whistled. Dzhenushkunutushen laughed.

"No, Rurroc," said Kokokda. 'She is going to start by teaching them the
most important lesson of all. I remember that lesson well." "So do I,"
said the demon. 'And I'm glad, this time, to be on the other side of
it."

The Kiktu veteran and the young demon exchanged, each in their alien
way, the gestures of amusement.

"Trust us, Rurroc," said Dzhenushkunutushen. 'It is a lesson much better
behind you than before you."

"Much better," agreed Kokokda.

The lesson began very quickly. Immediately following Nukurren's first
command, which was that all the battle groups would accept several Utuku
members.

The command stirred up great outrage. All praise of the much-chanted
Nukurren the Valiant vanished. And, though it did not vanish, the
knowledge of Nukurren's prowess was drowned under a wave of indignation.
These were warriors, after all, who loved their chants but did not, at
bottom, take them too seriously.

Three Kiktu warriors were especially vociferous in their displeasure;
exchanging loud quips on the subject of pitiful, decrepit, tired,
over-large, old, ugly, beaten-down, one-eyed sexual deviates. At
Nukurren's command, Aktako gave them practice weapons. The warriors
advanced boldly upon Nukurren, expressing great contempt at the use of
toys.

Very soon thereafter, two of them limped painfully back to their battle
groups. The other did not recover consciousness for some time. Whereupon
she too rejoined her battle group, and took her place alongside a former
Utuku. Maintaining silence throughout.

Soon, Nukurren was comfortably into the routine. It had been many
eightyweeks since she had trained recruits, but it was something one did
not forget.

You are garbage beneath my peds. You are lower than worms. You are shit.
You smell like shit. You look like shit.

As the ranks began to take ragged form, Nukurren considered the
formations she would shape them into.

No, that's a lie! You smell worse than my shit. You look worse than my
shit. And my shit is the smelliest, ugliest shit in the world. Do you
know why? DO YOU KNOW WHY?

She decided she would start with the basic structure of an Anshac
legion, the division of the army into cohorts of triple-eight warriors.

BECAUSE I AM NOT NUKURREN THE VALIANT. I do not know that nukurren. THAT
IS SOME OTHER NUKURREN, the nukurren of your fantasies.

Each cohort would be led by a ... I am the real nukurren.

No. We must use an Enagulishuc term.

I AM NUKURREN THE CRUEL. NUKURREN THE MERCILESS.

She motioned toward Dzhenushkunutushen. The young demon trotted toward
her.

NUKURREN THE VILE.

"What is the Enagulishuc term for cohort leader?"

The demon's face crunched. 'I don't know, Nukurren."

I AM THE shittiest gukuy who ever walked the Meat of the Clam.

"Find out. Discuss it with Yosephadekunula. And with Inudiratoledo, if
necessary. We must have clear ranks and structure."

"Yes, Nuk shutuppen."

You will learn. Oh, yes you will learn.

As Dzhenushkunutushen moved away, Nukurren eyed him fondly.

You will learn to hate me. And that is good.

He has been a good friend.

But you will learn something which is much, much, much more important.

And he will become a truly great warrior, if I can beat some sense into
him.

You will learn to fear me.

Out of the corner of her eye, she caught sight of Aktako. The Kiktu
veteran looked at her, and made a small gesture of amusement.

You will tremble when I fart.

Aktako will be a great help. And, I think, also a friend.

You will turn scarlet when I come near.

For a moment, Nukurren pondered this strange new thing which had come
into her life, this friendship. This wonderful new thing. But her
attention was almost immediately diverted.

You I mean you, snail! What is your name?

Although the Pilgrims, as a rule, were showing themselves more willing
to accept Nukurren's commands than the tribespeople, still there were
some it was important to treat all gukuy equally, after all.

WHAT IS YOUR NAME? You are offended? You dare to turn blue? Aktako the
flails!

She concentrated a bit on the task while she thrashed the unlucky
Pilgrim, but not much.

Are there any more worms who dream of being snails?

Comfortably back and forth, only half her mind on what she was doing.
Routine requires little concentration.

ANY?

To her mild surprise, there was one. A young Opoktu. Quite good, too,
Nukurren thought. After the Opoktu dragged herself back into the ranks,
Nukurren told Aktako to find out her name. In a few eightdays, if she
proved to be as intelligent as she was skillful, they would promote her.

ANY MORE?

She resumed her consideration of the army's structure. It was Anshac
practice to divide the cohorts into eight groups of eighty warriors, but
Nukurren had long thought such groups were awkward. Too large to be
flexible; too small to have much impact.

Any two? Any three?

She decided she would adopt the ummun apalatunush as the first
sub-division of the cohort. She had been impressed by their performance
in the battle.

Any four? ANY FIVE?

The formations had been large enough to operate independently, yet
Ludumilaroshokavashiki and Takashimidudzhugodzhi had been able to
control their maneuvers with no difficulty.

ANY SIX?

The apalatunush numbered eighty and six-eight, approximately  No? No?
Such a pity.

What is the ummun way of counting that?

I was enjoying the exercise.

A 'unnunduredh," I think.

Perhaps at a later time. When you have learned to crawl.

I will have to speak to Ushulubang about this. We must decide if we will
adopt the ummun way of numbering as well as their language.

Now. Let me explain the truth naked; stripped of its shell.

Her thoughts hesitated, stumbling for a moment.

You are no longer Kiktu or Pilgrim or Opoktu or Utuku.

Yes, and I must listen to what she has to say about the Way. And
Dhowifa. I must listen to him more carefully, from now on.

You are simply Nukurren's shit.

I must put all bitterness behind me. I am no longer Nukurren the
mercenary. I can no longer think like Nukurren the outcast. I am the You
will do what I say, when I say, where I say it, how I say it. At once.
No sooner than that!

Shutuppen. Nukurren rolled the name in her mind's arms, examining it
from every side.

Do you understand?

It is a good name, she decided.

DO YOU UNDERSTAND?

For the first time in eightyweeks, she felt life return to her soul, in
all its myriad colors.

But to the scarlet-hued warriors who watched her, pacing back and forth
like a nightmare, there was nothing in her mantle.

Nothing but cold, pitiless, gray.

