Part 17 (1/2)

”Oh, come on, Hsada! A civilized, talking, technologi-cally sophisticated Glathrielian must awaken ancestral nightmares.”

The Ambrezan stared at the little man with its big brown eyes outlined by a slight frown. ”I never know when you are joking.”

Brazil chuckled. ”Don't worry about it. As soon as I can link up with her, I'm out of here. Promise. I have friends that are a very long way from here that I promised I'd see, and I already feel guilty I haven't done it yet.”

The truth was, he didn't reallywant to see either Tony or Anne Marie, even though he wouldn't mind a trip up that way. He really didn't want the burden of getting the two of them together as they were now.

Deep down, he was hop-ing that each, being now healthy and hearty, and both, to his relief, in rather comfortable hexes, would use these months to settle in and build new lives and new attach-ments. It wasn't as if he'd forced either or both into com-ing, after all, or as if they wouldn't be dead by now if they hadn't chosen to come through, but if ever a match of love and devotion had been made in heaven before, he hadn't seen it in all his long life. Hecould, ofcourse, fix them up if he went up to the Well, but he didn't really want to do that just yet. He felt no sense of urgency, and he wanted to stay here a while and enjoy the difference.

The Ambreza had not initially been all that thrilled at his appearance, and he knew it-they hadn't reacted much dif-ferently the last time or two, either. But they were civilized in the extreme, suckers for a good story, and, well, he'd beenuseful to them, working for a few months helping them redesign rather than merely repair and upgrade their failing irrigation system, saving them a lot of investment and foreign involvement. Now he had clothes specially made to his design, some local money, and chits for a de-cent supply of the prime Ambrezan export, tobacco, with which to make his way anywhere he wanted to go.

He lacked only Mavra, and he very much wanted to find her, see her, have things.e.xplained to him. It would be like old times, andthis time he'd teach her the full operational de-tails of the Well-as soon as he got there and could remem-ber them again-so he might not ever have to carry this burden again.

He knew that last was selfish, but d.a.m.n it, it was hard to be all that sentimental toward somebody he could hardly remember and last saw maybe twenty-five hundred years ago.

Maybe now it was time for a reunion.

He walked into the house and back to the communica-tions room. The Ambreza had quite a sophisticated setup, able to call just about anywhere they had people in what was now Ambreza, the high-tech hex that very long ago had been the common ancestral home of the Terran races.

The furniture in an Ambrezan house wasnot made for his anatomy, but he could make do. He sat at the console and dialed in the communications ministry in the capital city of Khor.

”Oh, Solomon-yes. The group that came through. We had the amba.s.sador run a systems check for placements, but it was inconclusive. However, we are certain that the last one, the female who didn't clear entry, came to Glathriel. We registered a surge in section-um-B-14. Yes. Agricultural district up north not far from the border with Glathriel, which is where you'd expect a deposit, matchingexactly the time of Zone entry. It's always easier to track an individual than a group, although this is hardly an everyday thing. In fact, counting you, I can remember no other but this one even in the records.”

”All right. But she made no contact with the locals?”

”Not that we can determine. A search of the area using the local manager's dogs indicated that she went south into Glathriel. Beyond that we can't say, since it's too much of a mess in that district to do decent tracking, and frankly, it's far too much trouble for something that is your business, not ours. As long as she's gone to Glathriel, she's not our problem.”

He frowned. ”Gone to Glathriel . . . Well, I suppose that if she didn't want a lot of immediate attention, she might head for the coast strip there. I don't suppose that there's any word from them.”

The technician was not terribly patient with this imposi-tion. ”Look, Glathriel is a nontech hex. No communication works except the direct kind, and no vehicles work except animal power. The people along there are mostly a religious sect that's antiprogress, and we and they don't talk much to one another except when they come south twice a year to sell their crops. It might be weeks, evenmonths before we hear any news from them. I admit that a talking, civilized, and sophisticated Glathrielian might cause quite a stir, even some sort of religious crisis among them, but it's still not something we'd hear anytime soon.”

Brazil scratched his chin and thought about it. ”I don't know. If she's heading toward them, it'll almost certainly be ones near the border. I suspect we'd hear pretty fast for those very same reasons.” He sighed. ”Okay, that's all you can do now. I'll take it from here. Thank you very much.”

”Very well. Out,” the comm tech responded curtly, and switched off.

Nathan Brazil sat there a moment trying to decide what to do. Finally he got up and went over to a far wall where a map of Ambreza and part of Glathriel was tacked to a cork board.

B-14 . . . There it was. Not that far from the Ambrezan strip in Glathriel. A country road was marked as heading through the district toward that point, so that was the log-ical place to start. It looked to be maybe three, four hours drive if he could b.u.m one or a day on horseback if he couldn't. It was certainly worth getting off his duff and go-ing after her. He had no doubt that it was Mavra Chang; it was inconceivable to him that any of the new entries would wind up Glathrielians. He'd pretty much seen to that long ago.

He turned and saw Hsada standing there looking sternly at him from the doorway.

”No, you cannot borrow the car,” the Ambrezan told him flatly. ”You will be going into Glathriel, and I would have to send somebody down there and lose a day getting it back. However, delivery trucks go through town all the time, and some may have stops at or near there. Iwill get someone to drive you in, and from there you can make your own arrangements.”

Brazil grinned and shrugged. ”Good enough. What can I say?”

”Say good-bye,” responded Hsada. ”And don't forget to settle your rent through today before you leave.”

It turned out that settling the rent was more of a problem than finding a ride to near the border. Hsada was a very hard bargainer and was more creative in finding extra char-ges to spring on him than anybody since that lowland Scotswoman at a bed and breakfast about a hundred years ago. Extra sheet charge, indeed.

There were only five cities plus the capital worth the name in Ambreza, and maybe forty small towns spread all over, but the two basic occupations of those in the country were raising crops for export and truck farming. Over the centuries truck farming had become quite sophisticated, with regular routes and a whole guild of middlemen doing the s.h.i.+pping to and from the markets on a daily basis. To-bacco was grown best in the southeast; the southwest was better suited to longer-growing but high-demand produce like subtropical fruits due not to location but to a strong warm current off the Gulf of Zinjin that came in very close to sh.o.r.e and created a more or less subtropical pocket. This, of course, had been allowed by those who had created the hex; weather and climate were not of the natural sort onthis world, but when they saw that the water hex of Flotish had such currents designed in, they simply made use of them.

By that evening he was within a few kilometers of the plantation nearest the designated spot, and he stayed over with some very surprised and curious farm supervisors that night so he'd have the full next day for the quest. While the field bosses were somewhat taken aback at a glib Glathrielian wearing clothes and speaking like them, they were suckers for a good set of stories and even worse suck-ers at cards and dice.

The next morning he saw the first Glathrielians he'd seen since-well, avery long time ago. He had forgotten their rather exotic ”look,” a unique yet h.o.m.ogenized blend of just about every racial type on Earth. Being of a near uni-formly brown skin, with a variety of Oriental features yet with brown, black, and reddish hair was only the beginning of it. One could look at anyone and see suggestions of somebody one thought was familiar, yet the entire amalgam was something totally unique.

This time, though, they also seemed decidedly, well,odd. There was no other way to explain it. True, their tropical hex didn't really require clothing, but these people worenothing. Not amulets or paint or markings of any kind, nor earrings, nose rings, bracelets, anklets-nothing at all, men or women. They also seemed to let their hair and, on the men, facial hair as well simplygrow. He couldn't under-stand why some of them didn't trip over all that hair or strangle on it. Some of the shorter women seemed to have to wrap it around themselves to keep it from dragging on the ground, and he had never seen men with hair that long. Hair that, oddly, didn't seem to tangle or get matted. Hadhe done that? He didn't remember doing it, but if he'd al-tered them significantly, the computer would have filled in the logical items which he'd left out but which might be re-quired for some reason.

Other things also bothered him. Their remarkable silence for one thing. Watching them, it seemed at times as if there was some kind of communication going on, judging from the gestures, the playful actions, the coordination they ex-hibited, but aside from some grunts and occasional laughter they said nothing.

He wondered if they were at all aware that they now worked the fields that their distant ancestors had once owned. He watched as they seemed to have some kind of silent prayer vigil before starting to work, then they went to it, picking fruit and stacking it in neat piles every few bushes.

”They have an almost unnatural ability to figure out just which fruit is ready to be picked,” one of the Ambrezan su-pervisors commented to him.

”But they don't fill baskets or containers,” Brazil noted. ”They just pile it all neatly.”

”They won't touch them. No Glathrielian will touchany-thing manufactured, even a box. They even make several trips carrying their 'pay,' which is a small percentage of the crop, back to their home in Glathriel in their arms.”

”What about that home? Don't they have some sort of village or whatever with shelter?”

”No, they don't. Not as we understand it, anyway. Theydo have tribal lands that they consider their home, but the few structures are very crude and very basic and formed entirely from gathered dead wood and dropped leaves. They don't build as such. The few crude structures tend to be shelters for the babies and for bad weather. Mostly they sleep either out in the open or in hollow trees, some caves, and shelters formed from fallen logs and the like. They don't even build or keep fires, although if a thunderstorm comes along and sets something off, they might use it until it goes out. They don't kill unless something is trying to kill them and there is no other choice-and whateverthat unfortunate animal is, they then eat it raw that same day.”

”They seem to eat okay from what I can see,” Brazil noted. ”The women seem to range from chubby to fat, and the men are built like bricks.”

”They eat a complex variety of things, some of which we, and perhaps you, would find disgusting, but it seems the perfect balance for them. They make great workers, though. No complaints, virtually no mistakes, and they won't touch, let alone eat, anything they haven't picked themselves. They're always good-humored in a childlike sort of way, and they're so placid, they don't even swat flies that land on them.”

”How'd you ever get them to work for you?”

”It's been this way since long before my time or my grandfather's time, too,” the Ambrezan supervisor replied. ”Only a few tribes will do it, but they've been doing it for-ever on the border plantations and, I think, along the Zinjin Coast strip. The vast majority live way in the interior, which is mostly swamp and jungle with some volcanic areas. We used to try and survey them once upon a time, I'm told, but they can vanish like magic, and it just wasn't worth the time and trouble. The fact is, we know very little about them beyond these border tribes.”

”I know about that,” Brazil told him. ”They asked me to do a report on them if I went in, figuring that since I'm re-lated in a way to them, I might be taken as one of them if I went in.”

”Well, that figures. You gonna go?”

”Looks like it. I'm after another like myself. A female. Very small and very thin-even smaller and thinner than me. You haven't seen or heard much about somebody like that, have you?”

”Heard they was looking for somebody like that down the road apiece, but haven't seen or heard a thing myself, no. Of course, I can't tell any of you apart much, frankly, but I think I'd have noticed a female smaller and thinner than you, that's for sure.” He sighed. ”Well, if you're gonna find her, you got maybe two weeks.”

”Huh? Why's that?”

”Oh, they haven't got any families as such. You can see the same kid with a different parent most any day. It's all communal. That's 'cause, I think, they have one short pe-riod of a couple of days when all the women get fertile all at once and all the men can think of nothing else and they go at it, breaking only for sleep, for up to four days. Then they don't do it anymore until the next month. Lots of an-imals like that, but I know of only a few races here that still have that old mechanism. They say we did back in prehis-toric times or whatever, but not since.”

The idea shook him. Just what did I do to you, people?

It was coming back to him now in bits and pieces. When he'd come through that time off the s.p.a.ces.h.i.+p, he'd discov-ered that the Ambreza had literally reduced the Glathriel-ians to animallike status. When he'd done his work in the Well, he'd fixed that so there'd be a slow but steady gen-erational rise back to normality through providing immunity to the Ambreza gas-but in a nontech hex, which, he'd guessed, wouldn't threaten the Ambreza.

He'd been wrong. The next time through, he'd caught wind that the Glathrielians had gotten to a point where they knew the legends and stories about how they'd been kicked out of their ancestral home and brought low and were get-tingvery curious about Ambrezan technology and doing a lot of work on natural chemicals themselves. The Ambreza leaders.h.i.+p had been getting nervous even then; the seeds of potential genocide were being sown even then as the Ambreza's imaginations started coming up with potential attacks far worse than the Glathrielians could have man-aged on their own.

So while he and Mavra had reset and checked out the system, he'd made other changes to ensure that this would all die down. He'd removed the translation abilities from the Glathrielians so that they could only communicate among themselves, and he'd put a blocker in there so that no other language but theirs could get through. If they couldn't reconnoiter and spy on their hated enemy, they wouldn't be much of a threat. And he'd made what he thought then were some minor physiological changes to en-sure that they adapted nearly perfectly to their present hex and would not be as comfortable in the one that was now Ambreza or l.u.s.t for it so much.