Part 22 (2/2)
”Let me see . . .” The huge eyes dropped down to look at something below the counter. ”They're still finis.h.i.+ng off-loading, and they have a lot to get on. They're scheduled for high tide . . . the day after tomorrow. About nine in the morning local time.”
”That sounds reasonable. I need to book pa.s.sage on that sailing to Hakazit if it's available, with a cabin if possible.”
”Yes, sir. For two?”
He turned and looked at Terry, who was showing her dis-comfort and staring around the office with a queasy look. Still, she was here.
”Yes,” he sighed. ”Might as well. What's the weather supposed to be en route?”
”Possible storms in west Ronbonz, otherwise choppy but not uncomfortable. The winds, however, are unpredictable in this crossing, particularly in storms.”
”I'll still take it. You have anything on the basics of Hakazit or a general hex guide? I want to see if it's feasible to book the horses on as well.”
”Animals are not guaranteed in s.h.i.+pment,” the strange clerk warned him. ”There is a bookshop on Vremzy Street, two blocks in and one left. It's closed by now, but it will be open all day tomorrow. You can get what you need there. Outfitters and suppliers are along that street as well. We can probably add two animals with no problem if you come back here by nine or ten tomorrow night with your prepaid ticket. In the meantime they can be quartered at the livestock area, Warehouse 29 just along this street.
Now, I'll need to know your native hex so that sufficient edible provisions can be laid on for you and the cabin prepared properly.”
Nathan Brazil grinned. ”Glathrielian.”
Those huge eyes seemed to double in size. ”You are jok-ing, of course.”
”No, I'm not. We came through the Well from offworld, and that's what we are. It won't be hard even if your guide doesn't list us. I'll give you a half dozen or more races we're compatible with.”
”Very well. Soyou're what Glathrielians look like.”
”You work here and you've never seen any?”
”I'm actually the purser on theHonza Queen. When we're in port, we take the late s.h.i.+fts in the company of-fices. There isn't much here to interest me, anyway.”
The fare was not cheap, but it was reasonable, and Brazil felt certain he could more than afford this leg.
There would be other times when things would be a lot harder.
Besides, it might be interesting to see how hard the s.h.i.+p's crew and other pa.s.sengers might gamble.
Finally, Brazil asked, ”Is there any outdoor area nearby where we might be able to camp? I suspect that any hotels in this area won't be set up for us, and I have my own food.” There usually were such places around ports, partic-ularly because most of them naturally provided only for the races that were the most common visitors. The Gulf of Zinjin was an arm of the Well World's greatest ocean, and there were far too many possible visitors to economically provide for them all, and particularly not Glathrielians.
”Far northern end, past the last pier,” the clerk informed him. ”Rather nice, although a bit chilly some nights for hairless types. A number of small merchants have local stalls up there from dawn to dusk, too, if you can tolerate the local food.”
”Some of it. Well, it sounds fine to me. Any permits re-quired?”
”Not at the port one. All others, you'd need to report to the police first.”
The clerk made a series of entries with two huge, clawed hands that extended from under the feathers, and the com-puter spit out very neat-looking ticket books. Brazil thanked him, put the tickets away, and went back outside, with Terry following. Just walking back out in the air seemed to lift an enormous burden from her, but she still felt a little shaken and a little sick from the experience. Being enclosed was going to be very, very rough on her indeed, she knew. Brazil decided to take the horses with them rather than pay to have them quartered at the warehouse. The odds of their being in the way at the park were more than out-weighed by the possibilities of selling them to the locals there if transporting them proved to be a problem, and it might. Hakazit and Agon were also high-tech hexes, and any layover in the former would just leave him with even more ravenous mouths to feed, not to mention the problem of horse droppings, which many places, and particularly high-tech places, tended to frown on.
The park wasn't much, just a large area that apparently had been part of a much earlier port and settlement, long abandoned. They'd planted some trees, as much to keep er-osion down as for shelter, and it fronted right on the Gulf, with a small jetty leading out to guide lights warning off any incoming s.h.i.+ps.
If anyone else was using the park right now, he couldn't see them, although with some clouds and only a few elec-tric streetlights he might well have missed them. Still, there was a nice ocean smell coming in on the breeze and the quiet sound of waves lapping at the old pylons.
He picked a spot just inside the trees and set up the small tent and the camping outfit as he had in Glathriel. Thanks to the brevity of his trip, he still had a five-day supply of food and gas canisters, and there was a very nice if some-what elaborate fountain in the middle of the park that, thankfully, had fresh water.
Terry used her new night sense to survey the area and found virtually nothing edible in and around the park. She knew she could wander farther afield, but this was a large and strange city and was unlikely to have any real groves close by. Here one didn't pick one's food, one bought it.
Thus, when Brazil opened up his food supplies and ges-tured an offer to share, she had no choice but to accept, al-though she made it clear with hand signals that it was not to be cooked. Something of an amateur gourmet who fan-cied herself a very good cook, she now found the thought of cooked food thoroughly repulsive.
Brazil did not compromise his own preferences for hers but did find a perverse fascination in watching her eat. Knowing that she must have been a civilized, modern woman, he was fascinated to see her take an open container of preserved fruit, for example, and just scoop it out with her fingers. He was even more surprised when she took and ate the beef he had, both ground and in small filets, also raw. He remembered then the Ambrezan foreman telling him that Glathrielians would eat meat, but only if it was al-ready dead.
Terry, too, was surprised both at her appet.i.te and at the fact that the meat tasted exceptionally good right out of the container. Until now she'd always liked her meat cooked through, and with sauces and all the tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs if available. While he packed up and saw to the horses, she went to the fountain and then to relieve herself, and when she got back, he was getting ready to turn in. It had been a long, tiring day, and both keenly felt it.
Avery chilly sea breeze was developing, and he was concerned for her. He offered her a spot in his tent, limited as it was, or his sleeping bag, but she declined both with a smile. Then she gave him a little hug and a kiss and went off.
Again he'd noticed that odd, almost static electricity feel-ing when they'd touched, but now he noticed another thing as well.
She'd been warm to the touch, with no sign at all of the chill he felt on his face and hands. As warm as summer-time.
Terry didn't notice this because she really didn't feel it. The field around her that she could see, generated somehow by her own body, acted as insulator and even life support system in some odd way.
She felt warm and comfortable, and she picked a tree almost over Brazil's tent and scam-pered up it, then found a comfortable notch and settled in for the night.
Terry awoke the next morning feeling nauseous, and for a moment she was afraid it was the food.
Something inside her, though, told her that it wasn't, that it would pa.s.s, and she trusted her instincts as usual and they proved correct. She still felt a little queasy when Brazil finally got up and found her there waiting for him, but she didn't let on that anything was wrong, and after getting something to eat, the feeling gradually vanished.
Brazil bought breakfast from the promised local merchants, who set up small booths along the waterfront area of the park selling homegrown produce and other things. He discovered that Terry would eat bread, the first cooked item he had seen her accept, but not eggs. In point of fact, she ate two whole home-baked loaves of bread and two large melons, and Brazil began to wonder if he could liter-ally afford to take her with that kind of appet.i.te.
He walked back into the port district; he'd already made a decision that the horses would be far too much of a bur-den until they were needed to be worth the cost and had opened some discussions with a stall merchant who kept a couple of horses at his place outside the city. Terry fol-lowed him through the now-bustling area, and her head be-gan to reel with the number of races and weird sounds and smells that made the whole place come alive. She had al-ready figured, though, that he was leaving by s.h.i.+p, and she no longer felt compelled to enter the buildings he entered.
So many sounds, so many races . . . how did theyunder-stand each other? She found the whole thing bewildering. The Glathrielians whose lives she'd shared had not pre-pared her for this.
Occasionally one or another of the creatures would say something to her, but she was always able to convey by some gesture or expression that she did not understand them. Still, she did feel the irony of being naked and ex-posed in a strange city and yearned for a dark alleyway. Once a particularly smelly and repulsive-looking reptilian creature had actuallytouched her, and she'd reacted in-stantly with a nearly panicky mental push that said ”Go away!” And the creature had frozen, looked puzzled for a moment, then seemed to lose all interest in her and actually had gone away!
Could she reallydo that, or was it a coincidence? One of these times she'd find out.
Brazil emerged from the bookshop with something of what he needed. He had been surprised to find, in the first few weeks after landing in Ambreza, that he was able to figure out the written language almost as if it were some-thing he'd forgotten rather than something he'd never known. It was alittle c.u.mbersome and not all of it read just right, but what he needed to read he had little problem fig-uring out.
The map was the most important thing. When he had the time, he intended to annotate it in Latin, the ”stock” Earth language he'd found the most useful over the long haul, so he wouldn't have to keep looking up and remembering this term or that and figuring out things word by word and sen-tence by sentence. There was a sort of common written lan-guage here, one used for interhex trade and commerce-the ticket was in it-but he foundit less familiar and less use-ful than Ambrezan.
Of course, he knew what had happened. He was remem-bering ancient Ambrezan, which had evolved greatly over the millennia since his last time here, and the common lan-guage he'd known had been entirely replaced, perhaps many times.
He then stopped at the ministry of commerce offices to call in to the capital, reportsomething on his slight obser-vations on Glathrielians-mostly to omit any of the oddities and report a very primitive life-style of no threat or conse-quence to the Ambrezans-and get what information he could on Mavra's group.
There wa.s.some information, but it was incomplete and not guaranteed. Of the two men and two women who came in, one was reported in Erdom, as he'd surmised, another was in Zebede, which did surprise him, a third was in Dahir, and a fourth, clearly Mavra, had shown up in Glathriel, as he already knew.
”But who's this other Glathrielian female I have with me?” he asked them. ”If she didn't come in with me, and she didn't, since I know where mine are, and she didn't come in withthem, she must have come in either alone or with another group.”
”The only group we have other than yours and the larger party is two males about three weeks after you arrived. One of those is a Leeming, and the other-that's odd-also an Erdomite.”
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