Part 1 (1/2)

Homo Inferior Mari Wolf 23770K 2022-07-22

h.o.m.o Inferior.

by Mari Wolf.

[Sidenote: _The world of the new race was peaceful, comfortable, lovely--and completely static. Only Eric knew the haunting loneliness that had carried the old race to the stars, and he couldn't communicate it, even if he had dared to!_]

_The stars.h.i.+p waited. Cylindrical walls enclosed it, and a transparent plastic dome held it back from the sky and the stars. It waited, while night changed to day and back again, while the seasons merged one into another, and the years, and the centuries. It towered as gleaming and as uncorroded as it had when it was first built, long ago, when men had bustled about it and in it, their shouting and their laughter and the sound of their tools ringing against the metallic plates._

_Now few men ever came to it. And those who did come merely looked with quiet faces for a few minutes, and then went away again._

_The generations kaleidoscoped by. The Stars.h.i.+p waited._

Eric met the other children when he was four years old. They were out in the country, and he'd slipped away from his parents and started wading along the edge of a tiny stream, kicking at the water spiders.

His feet were soaked, and his knees were streaked with mud where he'd knelt down to play. His father wouldn't like it later, but right now it didn't matter. It was fun to be off by himself, splas.h.i.+ng along the stream, feeling the sun hot on his back and the water icy against his feet.

A water spider scooted past him, heading for the tangled moss along the bank. He bent down, scooped his hand through the water to catch it. For a moment he had it, then it slipped over his fingers and darted away, out of his reach.

As he stood up, disappointed, he saw them: two boys and a girl, not much older than he. They were standing at the edge of the trees, watching him.

He'd seen children before, but he'd never met any of them. His parents kept him away from them--and from all strangers. He stood still, watching them, waiting for them to say something. He felt excited and uncomfortable at the same time.

They didn't say anything. They just watched him, very intently.

He felt even more uncomfortable.

The bigger boy laughed. He pointed at Eric and laughed again and looked over at his companions. They shook their heads.

Eric waded up out of the water. He didn't know whether to go over to them or run away, back to his mother. He didn't understand the way they were looking at him.

”h.e.l.lo,” he said.

The big boy laughed again. ”See?” he said, pointing at Eric. ”He can't.”

”Can't what?” Eric said.

The three looked at him, not saying anything. Then they all burst out laughing. They pointed at him, jumped up and down and clapped their hands together.

”What's funny?” Eric said, backing away from them, wis.h.i.+ng his mother would come, and yet afraid to turn around and run.

”You,” the girl said. ”You're funny. Funny, funny, funny! You're stu-pid.”

The others took it up. ”Stu-pid, stu-pid. You can't talk to us, you're too stu-pid....”

They skipped down the bank toward him, laughing and calling. They jumped up and down and pointed at him, crowded closer and closer.

”Silly, silly. Can't talk. Silly, silly. Can't talk....”

Eric backed away from them. He tried to run, but he couldn't. His knees shook too much. He could hardly move his legs at all. He began to cry.