From howell_g@kosmos.wcc.govt.nz Thu Jun 8 05:58:59 PDT 1995 THE HUMAN MEMOIRS Part I Section A I, a stranger and afraid In a world I never made -HOUSMAN Running feet pattered and clicked on worn flagstones, the sound echoing hollowly through the Library's cold stone corridors. Of course running in the Citadel was frowned upon, but at this hour the halls were practically deserted; the only ones around to witness such infractions were the rats and mice, and they couldn't care less. The cavernous oval floor of the foyer - packed with students during daylight hours - was as deserted as the rest of the Library. Beyond the antique leaded glass of the high ceiling dome, night-bound clouds scudded across the sky, seemingly just arm's length outside. He blinked up at fat raindrops blatting against the glass and shivered; the heating was turned down for the night, not that it ever made much of a difference in a room this size anyway. Somewhere in the library an old water clock chimed the hour, making him glance at his timepiece for confirmation. He grimaced. Rot it! Late enough already. In the dimness, terminals - a few with green characters flickering up their screen - stared glassily from their cubicles. Beyond the glass partitions, row upon row of ancient shelves stretched off into the shadowy vaults. The soundproofed viewing and study chambers were tucked away in a quiet corner behind a row of wood-panelled doors, one with the 'IN USE' plate glowing. He sighed and took a guess at exactly what she'd say, then opened the door. "You took your time!" He grinned. Close enough. Mas swung her feet off the edge of the desk, spun the chair around and glared up at him as the door hissed shut behind him. One finger was impatiently drumming a tattoo on the well-worn upholstered armrest. "So, did you bring it?" "Love you too," he retorted, flopping into the second chair. She glared at him. "Alright! I got it," he waved the plastic case under her nose. "Why did you have to wait for the last minute anyway?" "I had other business," she growled. He'd heard that one before. "Sure. More important than your finishing grade?" "Yes." "Oh? What? Someone die?" She stared at him, then began to bristle. "None of your business!" "Alright." He shrugged. "Sorry. Forget it. Anyway, you could have booked some of the libraries disks earlier in the year." "I didn't know they'd all be booked out. That festering video they showed; suddenly everyone wants the disks. Great timing," Mas scratched fingers against the wooden countertop, "Just in time for a thesis. Why on earth did they set THIS as the topic?!" "Come on. You know it's customary for every Academy graduate to do it." "Every year?" she asked with a wrinkle of her nose. "You'd think the 'Great Learned Ones' would be filled to the back teeth reading all those recycled essays. Most of the students just load a thesis saved a year ago and rewrite it. If you look through the files you'll see they all seem remarkably similar." "Those files're supposed to be locked!" "Huh!" she snorted. "You of all people should know the locks they use are a joke. There's no way they can keep a dedicated system wanderer out. If you know the right people and right software, you can get access to anything." "You wouldn't!" She just grinned at him. Perhaps she would. That was her style: all take and no give. He didn't know why he'd agreed to help her. A strange one she was: Only recently arrived at the Academy, perhaps not even from the east coast. Intelligent enough - in the Academy that went without saying - probably smarter than he was, but also incredibly aloof and arrogant. Nobody knew anything more about her other than that she kept herself separate from everyone else, never entering into relationships: a frigid bitch to all appearances. He'd never known anyone who had even claimed to have spent a night with her. He had never found her files in the admin system. She seemed to be a nobody, but nevertheless she held some kind of sway over the establishment, that was the only way they'd been able to bend the rules and get into the Library after hours. Her arrival at his dorm had come as a complete surprise and her request. . . no, her demand for help on this project had left him flustered and tongue-tied. Perhaps if he'd been thinking straight he wouldn't have agreed to help. It was his high academic achievements that'd caught her attention and he knew in his gut that when she'd squeezed him for all he was worth, she'd dump him. Somehow, he didn't care. Frigid she may be, but she was also undeniably attractive; any red-blooded male would gladly give a testicle for a chance to be shut in a cubicle with her. A shame she had a tendency to turn it into an experience akin to being shut in refrigerator. A real waste. He sighed. . . Oh well. "If you're going to do it that way, what do you need me for? I'll just let you get on with it." He began to stand but she kicked his feet out so he fell back into the chair. "Sit down! You're a walking encyclopedia when it comes to this kind of thing. And I know you get a rush out of doing it. Already got a career planned out, haven't you? What was it? Historics and Research?" "Uh. . . yes. How'd you know?" "Heard you in the canteen." "Oh." When had that been? He hadn't been to the canteen for. . . "I can't understand why you enjoy this kind of thing," she snorted. "We could be researching something practical, like matrix memory, or the space probes and parallel junction projects." "And where'd those come from?" He waved the disk. "Aren't you forgetting who actually suggested those ideas. We've just developed the capabilities to actually build them." "History!" she muttered. "Shackles of expectations!" "Huh?" "Nothing." She shook her head. "Just forget it." "Forget it? You like riddles?" "No. It's nothing. Just something my father once told me." "Your. . . " "Don't ask!" she snapped. "Now we've got work to do. That video: how accurate was it?" "Uh. . . " her sudden change of tact had thrown him. Her father, that was a fascinating slip. There was more there. . . but later. "I. . . It was fairly well done, but of course you could still tell they were costumes. And they 'cleaned it up' a little: rearranged parts to make it more interesting." He flipped the disk box in the air and caught it again. "This transcription is copied verbatim from the original translation. Well, as close as possible anyway. Everything's there." "Great," she muttered unenthusiastically. "Ah, well. What about the museum? You recommend it?" "Definitely! You haven't seen anything until you've seen them in the flesh, so to speak. Weird!" he chuckled, then added, "And you should look up their mating habits. That's got some interesting titbits." Mas snorted, snatched the case and popped it open, checking the disk's label before dropping it into the drive. The screen flickered, the manufacturer's logo blinking across the top, then the disk's boot sectors took over and a menu appeared, icons arranged in neat rows. Mas selected one, pressed the puck's button and the drive light flickered for a second, then the high-resolution digitised graphic of an ancient, worn leather volume appeared on the screen along with title and dates. Beat his old system back home clear out of the running speedwise, and the graphics were so clear they seemed to jump out of the glass. Another few seconds then the screen cleared and the text of the translation began to scroll down the VDU. "Put it up on the big screen," he suggested, then after a few seconds added, "Who knows, you might even find this interesting." She bared teeth back at him and he smiled to himself. At the touch of a key, the featureless black wall above the monitor flickered, text appeared on it, the lights dimmed. Without another word the pair settled back in their chairs and began to read. THE HUMAN MEMOIRS This ain't no technological breakdown, this is the road to hell. . . Chris Rea's voice faded in a burst of white noise, then pulsed back to full strength again as the transistor radio swung like a electronic pendulum from the dash. The headlamps of the world-weary Deuce n' a Half illuminated the road ahead for fifty meters in the clear night air, the catseyes down the centre glaring back at the truck as the lights swept over and past them. I squirmed on the uncomfortable seat, trying to work some feeling back into my numb tailbone. I think they cut cost in the earlier models: welding the axle directly to the chassis without bothering with suspension. "Will you stop squirming like that!" Tenny Dalton shifted gear and glared at me, his face turned into a cragged monstrosity by the faint green glow of the dash. The stub of cigar jutting from his mouth glowed like a malevolent LED. "You got a rash or something?" "Not yet," I groaned and stretched melodramatically, "but it's only a matter of time. Where are we anyway?" "How should I know? You've got the map." "You don't NEED a map!" I protested, then rubbed my eyes and picked up the flashlight from the dash, illuminating my watch. "Shit. We should have caught up with them an hour ago." "Hey! I've been going where you tell me. You sure it's the right damned road?" I leaned back and flashed the battered old angelhead at the map strapped to the dash. "Uh, what's this road?" "Ah. . . last sign was US29 to Charlottesville." "Uh-huh." I squinted at the map. "Uh. . .Yeah, that's what I've got here. How long ago was that? Half an hour?" "'Bout that." "Well, next stop's. . . " I peered at the confusion of lines, "Lynchburg. . . I think. That's not too far now. Might catch up there." "Shit. Better hope we do," Tenny growled. "Can't you imagine it? Trundling into camp two hours after the others. A truckload of live ammo rolling around the countryside unescorted, SOP out the window. . . Shit, Jefferson'd have a field day." He slapped the wheel in disgust, then reached over to fiddle with the radio as it faded out again. "What the fuck's wrong with this thing?" "You put fresh batteries in it? Try another station. If the coil hadn't died on us back there there. . . " "Oh, yeah. Whose fault was that? You're the mechanical whizkid. You were supposed to overhaul it in the pool. 'Sure,' you said, 'get right on it' you said." He clamped down on the cigar again; the tip glowed furiously as he puffed away on the reeking thing. "And get your feet down." "I did the coil," I snorted, dropped my feet and made a show of dusting off the scratched metal. "It'd take me years to fix everything on this heap." "Heap?" He actually sounded outraged. "Don't criticise a classic piece of machinery. "He patted the worn steering wheel affectionately. "She don't like that kind of abuse, do ya girl?" "Talking to a truck. . . "I shook my head despairingly. "Have you ever thought about professional help? Or at least a long, long vacation?" He laughed and took his right hand off the wheel to flick me the finger. "You're going to eat them words," he grinned. "It's a good truck. I like the way it handles." I stuck my feet up on the dash again, unintimidated. "You're only saying that cause you keep drawing the short straw. It handles like a four ton lump of shit. I mean, hell, even SLEP didn't want anything to do with it." "Really?" he asked lightly and the truck lurched over to the right. I glanced over at him, "You trying to prove. . . OHSHIT!!" I yelled and grabbed for the dash as a car's lights glared from around a corner, the driver hit his horn and Tenny held it to the last second. Tires screamed as the truck lurched back to the left side of the road and a seconds later the vehicle itself flashed past us. "Jesus Christ!" "Might have been," Tenny said with a glance in the mirror. "I didn't see." I shook my head.Join the Army; See interesting places; Meet interesting people. It's a man's life. . . And then there's the Quartermasters Corps. It's a living. It pays more than regular army, and I was scraping for every cent I could. These days college really costs. One of the rules engraved in the rank and files' unofficial handbook is 'never volunteer'. Okay. That's no problem. You don't have to volunteer: they do it for you. You can wake up one morning and find you've pulled a duty riding shotgun on a fifty year old truck on a run from Fort Delvoir out of DC down to Fort Jackson with a couple of tons of outdated military hardware on the bed. And then to cap it all was the driver. . . Tenny Dalton: PFC, old friend. Oh, he could drive all right. In fact the way he handled a truck was downright uncanny, as were some of the other things he did. Everything he did he accomplished well and with a slight air of indifference, as though he really wasn't trying. This applied whether he was overhauling an engine or coming on to one of the noble Ladies in a dive in Jacksonville. Still, they weren't as annoying as his insistence on smoking: cigars of all things. I coughed and tried to fan a streamer of smoke aside. Useless to ask him to chuck it; he'd sooner amputate his right hand. I don't know where the hell he got them from, but he only smoked Havanahs. I just wound the window down a bit further and let cold air whip around my face. When the local FM station vanished completely into the sea of static, Tenny spent only a few seconds fiddling with the dial, then snapped it off. The engine growled and the transmission grated, then settled down again as the truck started up a grade. The shadows of the trees along the roadside blurred past in the darkness and occasionally the bluish-white smear of the cloud-covered moon was visible through the black crests of trees and mounatins. With nothing to see or say, I yawned, then settled back to doze. Well, I meant to doze. Not my fault I dropped off completely. A slap on my shoulder snapped me out of my slumber. "Davies. HEY! Davies!" I yawned, shook my head and roled my shoulders. Damn kink in my neck . "Huh? Wassup?" There was no sign of civilisation outside. Just trees, darkness, trees, and more darkness. "Where are we?" "Somewhere near Roanoke." He was leaning forward, trying to watch the sky. "Oh. . . WHAT?" I grabbed for the map. "Damnation! You decide to take the scenic route did you?" How the hell did I sleep through that? "Why didn't you wake me?" That wasn't a rhetorical question, but he still didn't answer. "Hey! The power was out when we went through Lynchburg. Lights and everything. I took the wrong turnoff. . . Look, there's something weird going on. Check the sky and tell me if you see anything." "Huh? The martians coming?" "Goddammit! Will you look!" What the hell was he on about? I shrugged and wound down the window. "Oh, wow man!" "You see it?" he urged, just about smearing his face across the dusty windshield in his efforts to see upwards. "There's nothing there," I told him. "You were perhaps expecting the Hindenburg? You should check those cigars: anything besides tobacco in there?" I grinned and looked up in time to see a bolt of white- blue lighting arc across the sky. Less than a second later the horizon ahead flashed with a white glare that died just as fast. "Holy shit!" "You see that?" Tenny yelled, his voice too loud in the cab. "You see it?!" "Yeah. Weirdest lightning I ever saw. . . There's another!" "And another!" The bolts had all originated at different places in the sky, but they all seemed to finish at the same spot, out of sight down the road. The sky just over the hill was pulsing like a gigantic strobelight. I stared as more pulses of blue-white light snapped across the night sky. The clouds had cleared, the stars bright. "No clouds," I muttered. Tenny glanced at me, then fixed his attention on the road again. His fingers flexed on the wheel. "Yeah, I noticed. . . What the fuck is it?" "Ball lightning?" "Say what?" "Fireballs. A kind of lightning. . . maybe." I leaned out of the side window, peering ahead. "I can't see anything, I. . . SHIT!" I cursed and ducked as the air above my head was ionized. That time the bolt came from behind us,'bout ten metres above the road and going straight ahead, it disappeared into the darkness ahead. A couple of seconds later, the sharp crack of its passage hit. Tenny hadn't even noticed the near miss, he was staring at something else. SOMETHING was forming in the air ahead. . . no, all around us. No real shape to it, a whirlpool of the deepest blue hanging in the air, like one of those laser light shows. Jagged bolts of cyan and electric blue lighting materialized out of thin air and shot into the vortice, highlighting it and the surrounding landscape in strobing flashes of surreal color. We were heading right for the hub of the thing. The hood of the truck blazed with dazzling corona discharges and St. Elmo's fire coruscated around the headlamps and other metal fixtures. The radio blared to life with a scream of static as electrical sparks flared on the antenna. "STOP!!" I screamed. There was a continuous almost sub-sonic rumble from the mega-high voltage plasma sculpture building in front of us. He snarled something back. Bitten in half, the glowing stub of the cigar dropped into the foot well. He had already floored the brake and clutch. Nothing. He jammed the transmission into reverse: A spectacular shower of sparks gouted from the back wheels and tortured metal under the truck screamed, but we kept going. I grabbed for the dash and yelped as fat blue sparks kicked me back. Whatever it was, we hit it at seventy five. . . And kept going, right through it. Hit something with an impact that almost broke my neck, the front of the truck leaving the ground, superstructure protesting while the engine noise went off into an earsplitting whine. There was a retort that could only be an axle breaking, then the headlights illuminated flashing glimpses of grass, stones, and trees. Pounding and crashing as the crates in the back broke loose. I was thrown against Tenny, then against the door as the truck fishtailed, threatening to roll, then the door broke open and everything was still for long seconds then a giant backhanded me and everything spun, rolling and bouncing against bushes and rocks. Stunned, I didn't have time to do anything but lie there gasping for air as the back of the truck slewed past, just missing my head. It flipped, again and again, rolling and skidding along on its side, sparks flying, canvass flapping and cargo crates tumbling end over end, metal screaming, then something caught and it became a fireball slamming into rocks where it stuck, burning with a vengeance. "Tenny?" The explosion ripped the night apart as cargo cooked off, more fireballs bursting to life. There was a sound like machinegun fire. Thousands of tiny trails of smoke arced and corkscrewed high into the air and fell back to earth as smoking and glowing debris was hurled away from the mass of flames. Tracers whined overhead like mad skyrockets. "TENNY!" I lurched to my feet, then promptly keeled over again. ***** Warmth on my face woke me. I opened my eyes, then closed them nearly immediately, groaning as the morning sun dazzling me. I rolled over onto my hands and knees. The movement startled a family of deer on the edge of the forest. With graceful precision they melted into the trees. I stared after them, then remembered. The road. . . the lightning. . . the crash. . . Tenny. It hadn't been a nightmare. Smoke was still curling up from the wreckage of the truck. Blackened and twisted debris was scattered far and wide over across the gentle slope, like driftwood on a beach. The shattered skeleton was still ticking and pinging as I picked my way around warped pieces of metal, olive crates with blistered paint and contents data stencilled on the sides, small craters gouged in the earth by ordinance cooking off. Gobs of melted lead and objects that were just identifiable as fragments of shell-casings littered the ground. Actually it was surprising that there was this much left of the vehicle. If so much of the cargo hadn't been thrown clear as the bed broke up, the truck would probably have been reduced to pieces to small to find. Now there was just a framework, the cab scored black with carbon, crumpled like an accordion and tipped to one side. The door on the drivers side was still closed, jammed into place and facing the sky. Where the windshield had been was a hole framed by shards of glass: a mouth with jagged black teeth grinning at me. Behind it. . . Tenny hadn't gotten out. I turned away and vomited, hard and violently; heaving until I gagged on bile, felt it running from my nose.Help. Where was help? Surely someone had seen the fire! The road. . . there were cars, trucks. . . I coughed on smoke and puke then ran for the road. A few paces into the forest I stumbled to a halt, leaning against the slender bole of a pine. The road! Where was the fuck was the freeway?! A road isn't something that wanders off by itself. People don't steal them. Still, it wasn't there. For fruitless hours I searched for it; wandering around in circles, climbing hills and trees. All around me, as far as I could see to the east: trees, trees, and trees, finally fading into the horizon. Westwards were The Smokies, seemingly unchanged in the brilliant afternoon sun. There was no, repeat no, road. Numb, not understanding I returned to the clearing to wait.Something else I noticed. The scars the truck had torn into the grass: They ran about forty metres from the wreck before stopping. In the middle of a gently sloping grade, covered with summer-gold grass, the tracks just. . . stopped. ****** The night was chill. I curled up close to the small fire, lying there with my eyes open, watching the flames. Strange to be almost killed by fire, to have friend die by flame, then use fire to keep me alive. I shuddered then closed my eyes and tried not to dream. Something that night woke me. There was movement on the periphery of the light cast from the dying campfire. Shadows, like circling sharks orbiting just beyond the terminator. Many eyes glowed dull red, feet brushed against grass and pine needles. A low rumbling hung in the air. I rolled to my feet, reaching for a knife that wasn't there. Out of the darkness, like a ghost from the shadows, a grey wolf materialized, head low and growling. "Uh, sit boy," I said. It snarled. I yelled as it lunged toward me, teeth bared. It hit me low, tumbling me backwards. I caught handfuls of fur and kicked, sent the animal flying over my head. Sparks exploded into the night and a terrified howling cut the air as the wolf landed in the fire. Coat blazing, it scrambled to its feet and fled. I could see it running across the field like a flare, its fur burning brighter and streaming sparks. There were still more of them out there. I took up a hefty branch, only just smouldering, and fanned it in the air until the glowing end burst into flame. Another wolf lunged towards me and I jammed the brand into its mouth. It yelped and turned tail and ran as fire lapped from its mouth, catching on its facial fur. Waving the burning branch, I yelled and charged the remaining wolves. They retreated before me, but stopped when I stopped. I turned in time to jab another attacking creature in the eye. It leapt backwards and rolled on the ground, yelping in agony, then bolted blindly for the trees. Now they'd had enough. The pack melted away into the night, in search of easier prey. I stood there panting hard. Wolves?! In Virginia! Attacking a human! This was beyond bizarre. For the rest of the night I didn't sleep. Instead sitting by the fire, snapping awake with my heart pounding whenever I began nodding off. ****** I used the piece of spring steel to prise the lid off another case from which the stencilled lettering had been obliterated by heat. The top came off with a screech of nails, revealing neatly stacked rows of olive green 81mm mortar shells. Thank god they still had their handling caps on. If they'd cooked off in the crash, I wouldn't be writing this. In another case I found the fuzes for the shells. Impact fuzes. Another box yielded grenades. Another a trio of M-60 GPMGs, one with its bipod twisted and carry handle snapped off. Three 81mm mortar tubes survived intact, along with five of the Stokes-Brandt bases. Hell, those thing were practically indestructible. Case after case I went through. We'd been hauling a miscellaneous shipment, surplus and outdated equipment, everything from ammunition and weapons to socks to the old cans of C-rations. While some stuff'd been turned to charcoal briquettes, a surprising amount had survived intact. I sorted through the mess of crates and boxes, gathered together some bits and pieces to keep me alive and kicking if I had to walk out of here: food concentrates, canteen, pack, knife, and a few other odds and ends. However the object I had really been seeking I finally found lying under a bush: a case with the legend M- 16A1 GI867503 PROPERTY OF US ARMY stencilled in black on olive green. I tore the box open and hefted one of the black weapons. Inspection revealed no firing pins in the rifle. I had to crack open a case of spares for those. And for the ammunition. . . I knew for a fact that we'd had twenty ammo cases with one thousand twenty four rounds each of the old 5.56 ammunition, about five of the standard IMR NATO 5.56 rounds, another twenty of 7.62mm, and fifteen 12.7mm listed on the inventory. I found twelve metal cases of the smaller caliber rifle ammunition and four catering to the heavier 7.62 GPMG rounds. Although I also found five containers of 12.7mm ammo, they were useless. Even if I did have a weapon of that caliber, I wouldn't be carrying it around with me. However it might have been useful in case I came up against - say - a hostile tank. Not that likely in Virginia. I overloaded on ammo: three hundred and sixty rounds of Armalite ammo, enough to fill twelve thirty round magazines. I scrounged six clips and filled those, the excess rounds I loaded into canvas belt pouches. Obsolete hardware. Surplus. Scorched and dented, but more than enough had come through to ensure that if those crazy canines came back I didn't have to worry about being turned into dog food. So, from the remains of the truck I came away with an M-16 with an Armalon optical sight and three hundred and sixty rounds of 5.56mm ammunition. A silver-anodized survival blanket sealed in its packet, the small anglehead flashlight that'd also survived intact, one canteen, a couple of C-Rations packs, a pizo-electric cigarette lighter (almost full), a digital Casio watch, a small notebook and ballpoint pen. The small medical kit contained antiseptics, antibiotics, a vial and styrettes of morphine, old fashioned gauze bandages, surgical suture and needles, three syringes(Disposable). The small tool kit for the M-16 yielded a set of allen wrenches, a couple of small screwdrivers, some three- in-one oil, and some spare screws, nuts, and firing pins. My sheath knife had the standard Bowie blade with a hollow pommel concealing a spool of approximately ten metres of single-strand nylon fishing line, five hooks, and five needles and thread. A gimbaled compass was built into the pommel. My pack was a canvass job; singed, acceptably waterproof and very tough. My helmet was my own, one of the new kevlar coalscuttle jobs. I'd found it near the ruined cab: slightly scorched, but otherwise fine. For clothing I had what I was wearing on my back as well as a lifetimes supply of oversized shirts and socks. Didn't bother me too much. It wouldn't take me that long to find a house or gas station; somewhere I could use a phone or stop a car. I'd survived basic training so I could live off the land if need be. This wouldn't be too much different. That out of the way I took another two hours to collect the dangerous hardware together and hide it a short distance away in the trees. The branches I cut to cover the pile would die and turn brown eventually, a dead giveaway, but it would keep until someone came for it. Leaving it lying around for some redneck or hillbilly to stumble across wasn't a fantastic idea. Then there was time for a parting look at the blackened mass of twisted metal that was Tenny's impromptu coffin. That one look into the cab had been one look too many. It was hard to believe that what I had seen had once been a good friend. I swallowed hard. "I'll be back," I choked. "Promise. Get you a decent burial." A final informal salute, then I slung my pack over my shoulder, plonked the helmet on my head, and set off eastwards. I looked back several times, until the wreck was hidden by trees. As the day went on I grew more and more disquieted. There was no way that I could have walked that long without seeing SOME sign of man. But I had. It was creepy. I didn't sleep well that night. Several times I awoke abruptly, heart beating a tattoo on my breastbone as I strained to hear something that was no longer there. Something seemed very wrong, but I couldn't place it. I lay back and tried to pinpoint it until I slept again. Next day I started east again. Damnation! I was in the middle of some of the most populated land in the U. S. : there was no way that I could walk for any distance without coming across some sign of civilization: a house, a road, a gas station, even a plane. . . anything. At this rate my next stop would be the Atlantic ocean. I saw more animals: raccoons and red squirrels chittered at me, deer that placidly watched as I passed by. I heard the deep belling of a moose or elk. This far south?! Nothing was right. Was I in the middle of a wildlife park? How? Later that day I did come across a road running north- south. Well. . . not exactly a road, more of a track. Maybe a trail used by rangers. It did seem well used, but the tracks were weird: much too narrow to be car or truck. Perhaps bicycle or trailbike tracks. I shrugged, then decided which way to go. North or south. "Eenie, menie, minie, moe. . . ." South I went. ****** The twin tracks of packed earth in the grass rose over an exposed and eroded crest then slowly turned and dipped into a broad, shallow valley. Lush greenery - huge trees of every description - cloaked the length and breadth of the valley floor while fields of wind-blown grasses grew along the gentle slopes : turning golden from the summer sun that also coaxed heat-shimmers from the ground. And the track simply dipped down to follow the valley, two faint ruts through the long grass before it vanished from sight in the treeline below. Sweating in the midday heat and humidity, my shirt stripped away and used as padding between the straps of the backpack and my chafed collarbone, I shaded my eyes with the blade of my hand and looked around. I was starting to feel desperate. . . and scared! It was impossible, utterly impossible that I could have walked for so long and yet have seen absolutely nobody. Still there was nothing. Not a building or vehicle anywhere. I sighed, spat phlegm, hitched the pack up and started down into the valley. It was like something out of the fucking Twilight Zone: There had to be somebody somewhere! The steady tramp, tramp of my boots was a continuous, monotonous, mindless rhythm that went on and on. Each footstep raised a small cloud of dusty ochre Virginia clay, turning the olive drab of my fatigues a rusty red. At least nearer the river it was cooler, the more luxurious flora offering some shade. Shadows began to stretch out again as noon passed and the afternoon crawled across the countryside. High overhead a hawk circled and hovered before diving upon some unsuspecting rodent. I sighed a deep breath, wiped sweat from my forehead then threw the pack and rifle aside and sprawled out in the grass on the verge. For a few seconds I considered taking my boots off, then thought better of it: I'd never be able to get them on again. The water in the canteen was warm - almost hot - but it was wet. I took a mouthful, swilled it around,then spat out a mixture of water and the grit that I'd accumulated. I raised the canteen again and this time took a deep draught. And froze with the bottle against my lips, water spilling down my chin. The faint sound of metal grating on metal. I lowered the canteen and listened hard.Wind rustled leaves and birdsong was bantered back and forth through the trees. Then it came again; slowly growing louder, more distinct, closer. A faint creaking and the unmistakable rumble of wheels being tested to destruction on the pathetic excuse for a road. It was coming from behind me; back the way I had come. "Alright!" I whooped, then my grin faded: there was no engine sound. No matter. I fumbled the camp back on the canteen and and grabbed my equipment. Tipping my helmet back on my head I stood to wait for them. The day no longer seeming so stifling, a cooling breeze seemed to have sprung up from somewhere. There were a few questions I wanted to ask whoever this was. One that came to mind was: where the hell was I? a private estate of some kind? Abruptly they rounded the corner, shafts of sunlight shining through the canopy above illuminating patches of dust as the breeze wafted it away from wagon wheels and the llamas' hooves. Llamas?! I stumbled to a halt and just stared stupidly as they clattered to an abrupt standstill, bleating and tossing their heads. I stared at them, then at the riders. Is this a joke?! The llamas skittered impatiently and moved forward and I saw it was for real. I bolted. Branches and leaves tore at my face and arms and roots tried to steal my feet from under me as I stumbled and careened blindly through the foliage with yowling cries sounding behind me. Then there was an embankment rising before me: A near-vertical face of dark, crumbling earth, carpeted with multi-fronded ferns and held together by a labyrinth of tree roots. I hardly slowed as I clawed my way to the top, to fall flat on my face and scramble around to see if they'd followed. The road was just visible through the boughs, trunks, and foliage; less than thirty metres away. I wiped sweat from my eyes, liberally smearing myself with dirt at the same time, and saw the riders staring back, gesticulating wildly amongst themselves, pointing towards me. "Oh Christohchristohchrist. . . " I was babbling to myself as I leaned back against a moss-covered boulder, out of sight for the moment. When I looked again, they were still there. One of them had dismounted and come a few paces into the trees. I grabbed for the rifle and snapped the bolt back, safety off, but held my fire. Eyes the green of molten emerald held my disbelieving stare and I shivered at the chill that ran up and down my spine on spider's feet.For an eternity the tableau held; that thing staring at me, our eyes locked. It can't be. . . And I jumped backwards when the creature turned and barked at the others then it caught its llama's reigns and swung back into the saddle, waving the others on past. They left quickly, the single wagon gathering speed and rumbling off after them. For a few moments the single remaining creature on its llama did nothing but watch me, then the furred muzzle wrinkled and sharp teeth grinned at me. My finger tightened on the trigger, but the rider had reigned its llama about and was hurrying to catch the others. The sounds of their passage faded into the distance. Several minutes later, my heart pounding, I climbed back down to the road. There wasn't a sound, not a sign of the creatures. I stepped into one of the dusty ruts with the rifle at the ready. But there were the hoof marks, llama droppings, and thin hard lines like bike tracks gouged into the clay by iron-bound wheels. Perhaps I should have gone the other way. Perhaps it would have been for the better, but hindsight tells me that my fate would almost certainly have been a grisly death. . . or worse. I have spent my time in a cage and do not relish the thought of living my life out in one. "WHAT'S HAPPENING TO ME?!" My scream to the heavens echoed through the trees and hills, scaring birds, but eliciting no other answer. What WAS going on? I couldn't explain it and my brain was threatening to curl up and play peek-a-boo from some remote corner of my cranium. I wanted to head for the hills, anywhere. But then you'll never know what happened. I don't WANT to know! Yes, you do. . . Chalk one up for human curiosity. I followed them. ****** The river - a broad, shallow stream actually - followed its meandering path through the valley an oversized ice cube had gouged millennia ago as it inched its way down from the polar icecaps, then retreated again. Along its banks, the trees cast their branches out over the water to form a leafy corridor that didn't quite meet in the middle. Pines: loblolly pines, longleaf pines, slash pines, overcup oaks. . . My knowledge of botany gave out on me. A cormorant - surprised while drying its wings - took to the air as I approached. It dropped off its perch, skimmed the water and climbed away from the stream that ontinued burbling along its way. The road itself twisted and contorted as much as the river as it dodged through and around clusters of trees and boulders: indigenous and erratics. At times it ran along the river bank, while at others it had climbed halfway back up the side of the valley: always following the easiest route. I followed the track, always keeping an eye peeled on forest around me. The afternoon was beginning to cool off, the shadows growing longer and deeper when I heard the sounds coming from down the road: ringing of metal on metal through the trees. Animal cries and howls wailed through the valley. What the hell?! My heart started to pound as I took my rifle into my hands and cocked it. Keeping to the side of the track I moved forward, carefully, like I was walking on glass. Every damn broken twig sounded like a gunshot, but with the noise from ahead, there was no way anything could have heard me. Then I rounded a tree and saw them, There was a ford here where the track crossed the river. The wagon sat in the middle, tipped crazily to one side, one of the front wheels almost completely sunken beneath the waterline. The driver was a bundle of cloth and limbs lying face down in the water, the current gently butting the corpse against a rock and wafting a trail of red blood away downstream. More corpses lay in the shallow current, some still kicking their life away, turning the water to a pinkish froth. There were others still fighting. They had to be soldiers of a sort, those creatures from the caravan. Wearing stained and battered leather armour, trimmed with blue and silver designs that despite the dirt were still recognisable as a uniform of a kind. They waded knee-deep in the water fighting wildly against others garbed in a hodge-podge assortment of armour. And they were losing. Hampered by the water and the treacherous footing, they didn't stand a chance against their opposition safely entrenched along the banks. Swords whirled and gleamed and grew red, another yowling scream rang out and another of the soldiers fell. Now only four of them left against at least ten assailants. A couple of the soldiers may have made it out as together they overcame an opponent on the riverbank, then they both twisted and went over backwards, falling with stubby feathered shafts embedded in their necks and chests. I ducked as more bandits stalked into view between the trees on my side of the river. Just twenty metres away, their backs to me as they recocked their crossbows. Why were they bothering to get their feet wet assaulting the wagon? They could've just shot them all from a distance. I sank a little lower behind the tree. The last soldier was crouched low and slowly turning to face its opponents as they circled, slowly closing in. Backed up against the wagon there was nowhere for it to run, it had no chance, but it still clutched its sword. I began to move out, leaving the cover of the tree to retreat back down the track. The last thing I wanted here was to be involved in a firefight with. . . with whatever they were. I was out of my league. I didn't know what kind of shit I was in, but whatever it was, I was in it over my head. Two loud cries came at the same time: one a truncated yowl as that last soldier fell, and the other from the archer who spotted me. "Ohshit!" I ducked automatically and a hastily aimed quarrel fired from the hip bisected the space I had occupied a split second earlier. Shit! I ducked behind a pine trunk and there was a sharp Thwok! as a stubby bolt sprouted from the wood near my head. Red feathers, I thought as I stared idiotically at the arrow, spun around wideeyed to see bows being aimed again and started running as another blur hissed past my ear, then a hollow sound and someone hit my pack with a baseball bat and I stumbled, then dove for cover, headlong into the bracken and undergrowth. Ferns and bushes crackled around me as I scrambled on all fours while more quarrels rattled into the thicket over and around me. A fallen log offered some solid protection and I took it, diving over it and hugging the ground. There were no more quarrels. Reloading? Gasping air as quietly as possible, I struggled out of my pack, wincing as leaves and branches rustled. Red feathers were protruding a few centimetres from the canvass. If it hadn't hit something solid, I doubted my backbone would have stopped it. Bastards. Where were they? What were they doing? I listened, hearing wind in the treetops, water burbling, and a faint growling and the crackling of bracken. Again, shit! I risked a peek, then hugged the dirt again, mud and slimy leaves rubbing against me. They were coming after me! Not many options. . . I charged the rifle, checking for a flash of bronze in the breach to make sure a round was seated then gripped the rifle, flexing my fingers against chill metal and feeling the checkered grips grow slippery with sweat. Three of them, with swords, taking it slow. The archers didn't have a good angle on me. Just three of them, a few metres apart. I took a breath, clicked the safety off and swung the M-16 up and over, not aiming, squeezing the trigger, the rifle kicking like a jackhammer in my hands, plants jigging wildly in the muzzle blast. Not three - four of them, one down, the others staring, now starting to react, screaming, skidding and spinning to the dirt as the bursts of slugs buzzsawed into them. First rounds were low and wild, kicking their feet out from under them. I compensated and hit torsos, heads, splintering bone and shredding flesh. They fell, two howling and threshing. Over the log, dodging and firing at the others. They'd frozen, some standing in the middle of the stream, on the wagon, on the far bank, staring wildly. The archers tried to fire, their shots going wide as I hit the deck again and sprayed them with a wild burst. The first one's head split open like an overripe melon and the corpse crumpled like a deflating balloon; Small, red roses sprouted on the others' torsos and they died slower. NOW the others were turning, running. I was on my feet again, staying low as I ran and dodged for the cover of rocks and trees by the stream. One of the creatures I'd first hit was rolling and thrashing in the bracken. I shot it in the head on the way past and it bucked once then was still. A bolt from a crossbow struck glittering sparks from a rock near my head. "Fuck you!" I screamed, firing back, emptying my weapon into the fleeing figures: mowing several down like scythed wheat. When the bolt clicked on an empty chamber I automatically buttoned out the magazine, plucked a fresh one from my belt, and rammed it into the well. I emptied half the magazine at shadows running into the trees, kicking dust and wood chips from the trees, sending rounds ricocheting. I don't think I actually hit any of the bastards. They were fast! Then they were gone. Ten seconds perhaps. Heart still pounding I looked around, clutching the rifle like it was the only solid thing in the world. In the trees, a couple of birds ventured hesitant calls while the stream continued enthusiastically on its way. There was the slow drip drip as the blood from a corpse on the river bank ran down a rock, beaded on the edge as if gathering its courage before dropping into the swirling water. The wagon rocked as the beasts pulling it - bison, I noticed with dull surprise - tugged at their harnesses. The corpses weren't neat, with chunks of meat the size of baseballs ripped out of them. Blood. . . it was red. Red and glistening like wet paint. A cloying, fecund smell hung heavy in the air: the flatulence of death. A coughing, moaning sound from the water. One of the creatures - one of the ones in blue armour - struggled weakly on all fours half in, half out of the water, blood from a gaping slash in its side swirling away with the current. It was dragging itself out of the stream by its hands, kneeling coughing and retching in the mud of the ford. When my shadow fell across it, it stiffened, raised its head to see my boots, then shuddered and collapsed on its side with a grunt: eyes closed, one outstretched hand curled half-shut, chest heaving while blood mingled with the mud. I was standing above a creature that could never be, my rifle levelled at it and staring in mute shock while my credulity took a beating. Putting it bluntly, it was a cat. ****** Well, my transport problem - probably the least of my worries - was solved. . . sort of. The hole the wagon wheel had been trapped in had been deliberately dug, deep enough that the wagon couldn't be pulled out. The axle was a solid iron bar that I sincerely hoped was tough enough to take that kind of treatment. To get the damn thing out I had to drench myself in water that felt like it was runoff from a glacier, digging away one side of the hole with my bare hands until the bison were able to pull the wagon out. They were huge, stupid, reeking beasts, these bison. Not the plains variety every American should be familiar with, but rather Wood Bison: a much rarer breed. So rare in fact, they were an endangered species. Not recommended as beasts of burden. Endangered or not, and despite their problems with personal hygiene, they seemed docile and efficient: hauling the wagon from the water on the southern side of the stream and waiting with moronic patience, chewing and farting. Hmmm. . . and people wonder why I hate horses. I shook my head and tried to wring the last of the water from my shirt, then hesitated and looked back across the stream at where a furry body was still sprawled in the mud; one among many. Water splashed around my ankles, but there wasn't a sign of life as I cautiously approached. Motionless, eyes closed, twisted crippled-looking hand clenched in the mud. The wound was a sodden mess, the blood as thick as the mud it was sprawled in. Liquid bubbled in a nostril. Incredible, it was still breathing. I poked it with my toe. The thing didn't budge. I bent down and touched it cautiously. It didn't respond. The fur was soggy wet, the flesh beneath nearly hot to my fingers. Kill it? Uh-uh. That didn't feel right. It couldn't hurt me. So, do I just leave it lying here? "Damned if I do, damned if I don't," I sighed. Now, how the hell do I do this? Gingerly, awkwardly, I scooped the sodden creature up. The felinoid was a limp weight in my arms, its limbs completely lax and bumping against my own legs as I lifted. Its head lolled and saliva drooled from a corner of the mouth with its thin, black lips. Water washed around my legs again as I crossed the stream; carefully, unsteady with my burden. The thing was surprisingly heavy; I had to struggle to lift it into the back of the cart. This creature was much shorter than my five foot eleven - probably an even foot shorter, maybe more - but it was solid; not fat either. There was already a blue-armoured corpse in the wagon that I hauled out and dumped on the ground to make room for the still-living creature. The upper half of the creature was almost completely encrusted in drying mud while the lower was sopping wet where it'd been lying in the water. Covering its upper legs was a sodden kilt made from wide strips of tooled leather, weighted at the lower ends with brass disks. Blood continued to ooze from a slash high in its left side, seeping through the reinforcing strips of the once-ornate leather cuirass it was wearing. First, get that armour off. That had me scratching my head: there were no zippers, buckles, or buttons; just leather ties securing it up the left side and on the shoulders. The wet leather had swollen; resisted all attempts to untie them. Finally I settled for cutting them and peeling both the cuirass and kilt off in one piece. Judging by the way the plumbing was arranged, it was a she. There were no breasts to speak of, just twin columns of three black teats buried in the fur. The sword had broken through the tough-looking skin and cut into the side at an angle before being deflected by a rib, ripping away one of those teats as it went. There was a non-too-modest flap of flesh dangling loose while a lot of blood had pumped out, covering and matting the fur. Still more had been lost to the earth and the river. What was lying in front of me was way beyond anything I'd ever covered in my basic medical training. Perhaps nothing serious had been hit; then again, perhaps it had. How was it put together? Was its metabolism anything like mine? What medicines could I use? How the hell was I suposed to know? Stuff like simple asprin can kill a cat. Was it worth it? I bit my lip, then swore and reached for my pack. The quarrel was still stuck into it, stopped by a pack of C-rations. I turned the dented tin over in my hands, not quite believing it. Saved by a freeze-dried meal. I knew the stuff was tough, but using it instead of a flak vest..? Of course the med kit had wound up at the bottom. I snapped it open, and selected a small plastic bottle of antiseptic and a roll of gauze. Nothing to lose.I used my knife, methodically cutting away the fur and dirt around the wound, washing away filth: clotted blood, mud, and grass with water from my canteen. That wouldn't be enough. The creature stirred and its jaw spasmed as I prised the wound open with my fingers and squirted antiseptic from the squeeze bottle into it. I swabbed it out, then tore open a large sterilised gauze pad, bandaging it tightly in place even as blood started welling again. Tossing aside the ruined armour, I stripped one of the cleaner cloaks off a corpse and settled that over the cat, again finding I was hesitant to touch it. Its breathing was rapid, almost panting. All the others were as dead as luncheon meat. I avoided the messy body with half a face grinning uselessly at the clouds when I examined the corpses. One of the other archers was sprawled in the middle of a bush, his/her chest punctured where the rounds had smashed through. The shock would have killed faster than the wound. S/he was dressed in rag-tag cloak, but the armour underneath looked well used and functional. Red and black. It looked like a uniform. The crossbow lying nearby wasn't that large or powerful, but that was simply due to the diminutive stature of the user. It was well made: laminated wood and metal, with recurved tines of wood and bone and some kind of twisted fibre. Six quarrels were clamped to the stock; each about twenty centimetres long with a wicked triangular iron tip. I weighed it in my hands. Oh, well. You never know when something like that might come in handy. Then another thought struck me and I frowned at the creature in the back of the wagon. Its armour was in pieces. Would it want clothes? What was I thinking? Clothes?! I shook my head, but still managed to scrounge some stuff from a soldier. It'd been stabbed through the throat, covering the front of the cuirass with blood. Nevertheless, it was in much better condition than the stuff I'd cut off. The creature's sword: a beautifully crafted scimitar. I found it in the middle of the stream where it'd dropped it. I picked it up, shaking and wiping the water and mud off it and holding it up so the sun threw dazzling reflections off the slightly curving blade. Nice piece of metal. I tried a few practice swings and nearly took my own leg off. Hastily I stuck it back in the sheath then tucked it up on the drivers bench, out of reach of furry hands. I looked back over the scene. Like something out of a picture: the stream, lush greenery dappled by light and tall trees, patches of sky and clouds. Then there were the figures tumbled like distorted shop mannequins, blue against green, water running over glittering metal and leather, teeth bared in hopeless snarls at the sun. Shaking my head, I tried to figure the reigns out. How DO you drive bison? To start with, there's no clutch. . . ****** I made camp several klicks further down the river valley. The road split at a junction: one branch continuing eastwards along the river, the other climbing out of the valley, going south. I rubbed my tired eyes then decided not to make a decisioin, not until I could learn more about my passenger and what was going on. It wouldn't hurt to hang around a few days; I doubted that the bandits would be back, and there was a terrible feeling that there wouldn't be any search parties out looking for me. It took a while to find a suitable campsite, but I finally settled on a small, grassy clearing. Close enough to the stream for convenience and far enough from the road that any fire couldn't be seen. Roughly triangular in shape it was, with a pile of huge boulders - broken and whole - in the northernmost apex, small conifers persistently hanging on in small patches of earth between the rocks. I hitched the bison up to a tree, leaving them contentedly cropping away at the grass. Watching them eat set my own stomach to snarling. I didn't have to go too far to find a rabbit that was too curious for its own good. It was the matter of a single round from the M-16 and dinner was laid on. The rest of the daylight was spent skinning and gutting and laying a fire, then while waiting for a bed of coals I turned my attention back to the wagon and the cat lying in the back. The bandages were working. The wound had stopped bleeding, but the fur covering its chest and side was completely matted and plastered with clotted blood and mud. Mud covered its broad face and one of the pointed ears was stuck down against the head. I splashed water onto a rag torn from a cloak and began to sponge away the worst of the blood. Still unconscious she flinched away from my touch, her jaw twitched and she high chittering noise. Her eyes flicked open, focused on me, then widened until the a rim of white circumnavigated the huge pupils: Green, flecked with specks of copper. A small, strangled noise escaped her and she scrambled backwards into the hay until she was backed up against the drivers bench, unable to retreat any further. The face contorted, wrinkles marching up the muzzle as she bared a glistening array of needle teeth, canines, and a curled, pink tongue. Centimetre- long, ivory-colored claws slid from her fingertips. The bandages around her chest and shoulder flexed and shifted. I jumped out of the back of the wagon and held my hands in front of me, trying to look harmless. If she tried to move any more, that wound was gonna reopen. "Hey," I coaxed. "It's okay, I'm not going to hurt you." "Fegar s'sahrorna nieck herasti. . . fe, fe!" Well that's what it sounded like. Not a high yowling as you'd expect a cat to make. They were modulated, sibilant sounds, fairly deep, probably due to length of the throat. It was a langauge, no doubting that. I'd bet her vocal chords were just as sophisticated as mine. You, the reader of this journal will probably already know what I was looking at, but I'll still take the time to describe what I saw. We stared at each other, man to cat, eye to eye. Her head was mounted on her shoulders, she had two ears and eyes, one nose, one mouth, bilaterally symmetrical, but there the resemblance to a human ended. Take the classic feline features and anthropomorphise them; just the slightest touch. Shorten the muzzle a little. Raise the brow and bring more expressive musculature into the features. The result would be something like the visage I was looking at. That face came out into a classic cat's muzzle, complete with a broad, leathery, valentine-shaped nose and hare-lipped mouth with thin black lips. Sharp, triangular furtufted ears were half buried in the mane of fur that grew from the crest of her head and continued on down her neck. One ear was pierced by a single silver earring. Her entire face was covered with the same fawn coloured fur that enveloped the rest of her body, highlighted with lighter gold stripes pushing over between the ears to disperse into that mane. The arms ended in a hand with four short fingers and a thumb. No fingernails. Instead those claws slid into sheaths in the tops of the stubby fingers. Except for the black pads on palms and fingertips, her hands were completely covered in fur. Her feet - especially her feet - were so different from a human's. More like a cat's pads. In fact her feet were all toe, her heel the leg joint above them - digitigrade, not plantigrade. Must have balanced on those clawed toes, walking on toe tips only That sleek, streamlined face was somewhat marred by the mess of blood and clay, but there was no doubting the purpose and intelligence in the being I was staring at. Nor the reality. There was no way that this was some kind of costume; a joke or hallucination. "Rsacen esc na fe sfecer?" she sputtered, then shouted to the surrounding silence: "FARES WHER'R RSE FE! SAE EI! " If she was expecting someone to answer - one of her kind - she was disappointed. The branches of the trees hung heavy in the darkness and the stillness, but there was no other sound. She turned back to me, the iris dilated to turn the eyes to wide pools of black. "Fe," she almost breathed the sound. "Sorry, but I don't speak the lingo," I said with a shrug and a smile. She plastered herself against the end of the wagon and bared her own teeth in a grin that was definitely NOT friendly. My bared teeth she perceived as a threat. I closed my mouth and made placating gestures with my hands. That only served to get her even more agitated. I couldn't speak to her and she was completely vulnerable. "Goddamn it! I'm not going to hurt you!" She hissed. "Look! Hands empty! No weapons. Savvy? Shit, look! Here, take this." She looked as if she would go catatonic when I drew my knife, her eyes riveted on the watery steel blade. Carefully, slowly, I laid the knife on the wagonbed and pushed it towards her - hilt first - and stepped back to once more raise my hands. Just as slowly she leaned forward, then snatched the knife, both hands wrapped around the hilt as if it were a lifeline. "Feel safer?" I asked. She was still panting hard, but those eyes had changed: not so much terror, calculating. I unclipped the canteen from my belt and sloshed it around a couple of times, then unscrewed the lid and took a sip out of it before slowly holding it out to her. She shrank back, shivering and with teeth bared. I continued to hold it out to her, and after a few seconds, she screwed up enough courage to take it, claws clicking on the plastic, she raised it to her nose and sniffed warily, her eyes still on me. She took a careful sip, then tilted it back and gulped greedily, spilling much of it down her front. Her jaw was just the wrong shape. "Hey, watch it. You'll be sick if you drink it like that!" At the sound of my voice she dropped the canteen as though it had suddenly become red-hot. The knife came up again, wavering wildly. Then white membranes slid from the corners of her eyes and her hand flopped heavily to her side. But her chest was moving steadily, breath whistling through her nostrils. I found a pulse in the hollow of her neck and it was strong and regular. She voiced a low growling moan when I moved my hand. Just passed out. I stood and stared at her for a while. Just leave her; let her wake up and find I hadn't touched her. That'd be the best way to tell her I didn't want to hurt her. Shrugging, I set off to put another bit of wood on the fire. It'd been one of those days. ****** It was an amazingly clear night, one of those nights when you can literally see forever. The galaxy was a stream of white dust spilled across the heavens. . . And all of the constellations were there. I must have sat atop the granite crag for an hour in the dark, just staring at those flickering beacons in the sky. They hadn't changed at all. That red dot was Mars. . . That was the sky of Earth in the late 20th century. I must be on Earth. . . so where did THEY come from ? Aliens? Huh, I doubted it. If they had the technology to make it from another star to Earth, why did they wear flimsy leather armour, use antique weapons, and ride around on animal powered vehicles? Why did I feel so out of place? There was something I was missing here. The felinoid was still lying in the back of the wagon, asleep in the warm night air. Nearby, the fire I had started had died down to a glowing bank of coals, the skinned carcasses of the rabbits lying nearby: ready to be spitted and cooked. Soon the smell of roasting rabbit was drifting through the clearing. I turned the meat on the spit and glanced up to see the felid awake and watching me over the side of the wagon, her eyes flicking from me to the fire then back to me again. She licked her lips and a string of spittle dripped from her jaws. Smiling, I reached out to tear a haunch off the browned carcass and then - slowly and carefully, every movement deliberate - I got up and walked to the side of the wagon and offered the meat at arms length. Just as cautiously, she snagged the proffered morsel with a claw and after sniffing it, took a small nibble, looked at me, then started tearing at the meat with dagger- sharp teeth, taking big mouthfuls, chewing noisily, then swallowing hard. So, she had an appetite. Tough little thing. And some appetite too. Whilst she was absorbed in satisfying her hunger I sat down on the tailgate, swinging my legs over the side while watching her. She finished the meat and stared back, her eyes catching the firelight and reflecting it, the rest of her matted coat dull and indistinct in the flickering firelight. Her claws were still at the ready. "Uh. . . hi," I said. She flinched. "I guess I should introduce myself. I'm Kelly," I said. She just stared. "Kelly," I enunciated with exaggerated gestures toward myself and repeated the name twice, three times. She blinked at me. I tried again. "Freh ash an shirai se fe," she hissed. "That's not your name, is it?" "Hers a saf, s'shesaf." I'm no linguist, but that was no language I'd ever heard before. Gutteral, with hisses, growls merging with sibilants. All right, I thought I could manage that: "'Hers a saf. . . uh. . . shesaf' to you too." She jumped as though I'd suddenly grown another head. "Hers a saf, s'shesaf" she repeated slowly, watching me intently. I got the idea. "Hers a saf, s'shesaf," I echoed her, completely oblivious of what I was actually saying. "Sthre ts'ref n'esur s'shesaf, surio saf fe," she hissed slowly. I tried to repeat her, stuttering and stumbling over the sibilants. She repeated herself twice. Finally I managed the sentence with a modicum of accuracy. Her jaw dropped, then closed with a hollow clop. I leaned forward, touched my chest and said, "Kelly." Her eyes went even wider as she twigged. That was my name! I had a language of my own! By gum, what a concept! She stared at me, opened her mouth, and gave a croak, cleared her throat and tried again, "She'ae." The consonants of the kay and ells lost completely, my name turned into what sounded like a steam leak. "No, no, no. Kelly," I repeated. "K'h. . . K'hy." With that mouth, she couldn't get the ells at all. I shrugged then pointed at myself, repeated my name, and then pointed at her and shrugged. She got my point and said something that sounded like: "Tar?" She moved her hand in a gesture that must mean'no': a horizontal slash in the air with the hand open and palm down. "Tahr," she corrected. We went on like this until I got it right. She was willing to let my name slide, but when it came to her's, she wanted it perfect. Afterwards, we tried a few more of her words. With each new one I learned she stared at me; like she couldn't believe it. By now the fire had died down to a few feeble embers; warmer than the moonlight albeit not as bright. I squinted at my watch and decided to call it a night: she needed her sleep. With my pack as a pillow, the smooth, metallic creases of the survival blanket over me and the cold ground below, I watched the stars reeling through the familiar sky overhead until I dropped off. ****** The morning was perfection. I squinted against the glare of sunlight and groaned, finally managing to unwrap myself from the silver folds of the sheet I stood and stretched. My joints popped and crackled, stiff muscles stretched and relaxed again. The felid was still sleeping, half curled up under her cloak. I stared at it for some time, feeling an uneasiness at the very centre of my being. This was the way my distant ancestors would have felt when a sabre-tooth appeared on the skyline. Damnation! I clenched my hand to stop it trembling and abruptly turned away from the blanketed figure. A furred, clawed, twisted foot was poking out from under the cloak, hinting at what lay beneath. I got out of there. For all our civilization we are still primitive at heart I reflected as I crouched by the river. The water was a cold shock against my skin as I dunked my head, then shook it dry. The droplets flew in all directions, glittering in the morning sun. We'd come a long way: we have electrically lit homes, kept warm in winter and cool in summer. We travel thousands of kilometres in hours, move mountains out of the way of our roads without really thinking about it. That's right, we hardly ever think about it. How many people are there in the world who can say they actually know how an electric light works? How a radio works? Who can even light a fire without matches? For most people, all they need to know is how to flip a switch, press a button, turn a dial. Tasks a moronic chimp can carry out. If their transistor radio breaks down through a loose wire or burnt-out resistor, they chuck it out and get a new one: a disposable civilization. We have reached the moon and sent automated probes beyond the farthest corners of our solar system. There are instruments to explore the macroscopic and microscopic worlds: Electromagnetic telescopes that can detect a nebula's fart light years away, microscopes that can give a visual image of xenon atoms we've manipulated to spell IBM. And still there are those who hang crosses and prayer beads in their shiny new cars. It's as if they need someone, like an imaginary friend that children conjure up: someone or something to whom you can attribute the inexplicable. Damnation! I don't consider myself an complete ignoramus. I didn't have to let my emotions and instincts overrule logical thought. But that thing gave me the willies. I cupped my hands and drank. Water ran through my fingers and dribbled back into the river. Several times I dipped my hands into the stream, then opened them to let the water trickle out. Finally I sat back against a rock that hadn't had time to warm in the sun, was still cool from the night. The fingers of my left hand trailing in the stream. I looked at myself. My fatigues were covered with dust and dark stains that could only be dried blood. Not mine. Not even human, but just as red. I stripped off and staked my clothes down in the current then scrubbed at them until my hands were raw. ****** The felid was awake when I returned. In fact she was out of the wagon, leaning heavily on the tailgate with one hand clutched against the bandages. She stared at me when I appeared and her lips parted slightly in a smile that showed the whiteness of her teeth. Returning the smile I took a step forward, then froze when her hand darted into the back of the wagon and came back with a cocked and loaded crossbow wobbling in her unsteady grip. Her eyes wobbled, seeming to lose their focus, then snapping back again. Her grin broadened. I swallowed hard. Remind me to take the string with me next time. "Tahr?" "K'hy," she snarled - literally - and gestured sharply with the bow and I slowly raised my hands, freezing motionless again when her ears went back flat against her skull and she barked something at me. Her ears slowly came up again when she saw I wasn't trying anything. The end of the crossbow jerked and again she snarled something at me: "R'rtsa!" What the hell did that mean? I just stood there. She snorted and wagged the crossbow at the ground, "R'rtsa!" I took a guess and sat down. Her ears flicked and she stood there staring at me. I stared back, noticing her shifting on her feet, as though she was about to collapse. And that crossbow was wobbling dangerously. I licked my lips. "Rtsa," I invited, gesturing slowly at the ground. She blinked at me, then her ears twitched. Slowly, her face contorting in what could have been a wince, she settled until she was sitting cross-legged, facing me across the remains of the fire. Metres away, she glanced down at the bow, then at me again as if she were trying to decide to use it or not. I hadn't hurt her; I'd patched her wounds. Perhaps she just felt the need to take some kind of control. With my hands still in the air, I carefully pointed one finger at the bow and said, "Fe?. . . Tahr." Muscles in her face ticked and pulled and she sputtered something at me. The crossbow stayed targeted upon my guts. "Shit! Look, you can't point that thing at me all day!" She growled. Warily, I lowered my hands. She flinched and snarled. "Okay," I coaxed. "I'm not going to hurt you. Tahr." "K'hy." When I moved again she gasped, head going back and eyes fixed on me. I saw her muscles trembling as I carefully - inch at a time - reached out and plucked a single blade of grass, holding it up. "Grass," I said. Her eyes flicked down to the small green leaf, then she said, "Frwuch," a deep, guttural sound coming from the throat. I repeated it as best I could, then she picked a blade and said a short sentence with her word for grass in it, then pointed at me and said slightly different phrase. I repeated them: [have/hold] I grass. [have/hold] you grass. For a few different items - sticks, pebbles, dirt - we did this. The words were difficult to pronounce. The basic sentence structure was predicate-subject, reversed from english. That threw me several times, but she corrected me. Several minutes later she put the crossbow aside in order to use both hands to get a point across. The weapon lay in the grass, easily within her reach, and both of us stolidly ignored it and concentrated upon the language lesson. ****** Morning dew was beading on the blanket and grass around my head; tiny crystal beads sparkling in the dawn. I closed my eyes and rolled onto my back. Something touched my shoulder. I opened my eyes and looked up into a puma's face, a bobcat's face, eyes like cold jade with a slit of night etched into them. A hand, twisted, furred and clawed, was reaching for my face. With a lurch of terror I tried to scramble backwards, slipped on the wet grass, fell on my back with dew soaking me. The cat kneeled above me, reached for my throat. . . and gently touched, feeling the pulse racing there. "Scre ne fe ther ri seth m'resh," she hissed, fast, too fast, impossible for me to follow. Her head was cocked to one side like a cat regarding a bird in a cage. The rising sun was behind her, still barely a glow over the horizon turning the streamers of clouds above it russet and gold. Seeing that I was as nervous of her as she was of me gave her that touch of confidence. Her hand moved down to touch my chest in the vee of my shirt, touched the sparse gold hair there, then travelled up, stroking my skin. If anything, she looked puzzled. The question she asked I couldn't understand, so she continued examining me in silence, her hands moving to touch my face. I shivered slightly as she pressed a finger against my cheek, rubbing gently. I could feel the almost- leathery pad on her fingertip grating on stubble. Growing bolder, she traced my jaw, tracing the bones. I flinced when she tried to peel my lips back to examine my teeth: she pulled her hand back, then patted my cheek. So I suffered claws tapping against my teeth, fingers touching my canines. Delicately she bent my nose from side to side, then ran a fingertip around my eyes and eyebrows and ears. Finally she stroked my hair for a while, tugging at it curiously, then sat back, still staring at me as if I were a specimen on a lab table. "You [ ]?" she asked. "No understand," I replied. The first phrase I'd learnt, and the one I'd be using for a long time to come. Her ears flicked - as though routing invisible flies - then she touched her chest. "I sathe," she said. Sathe. That could be her species name, family name, job, or just mean she was hungry. Well, I took a gamble on it being her species. "Sathe," at least that word came easily to my lips. "Yes. Right. Good," she approved, then waited. "I human," I hastily provided. "H'man," she tried the word, tasting it. "H'man." I sat up and reached out my hand, to touch her. With a start she pulled away from me. She stood just out of reach, one hand almost unconsciously clutching the bandages over her ribs, that arm cradled in turn by her other. "H'man," she murmured, then turned and limped back to the wagon. ******* Goddamn it! She wanted to leave. With her wound still red, swollen, and threatening to tear itself open, she actually wanted to hit the road! "Damnation! No! I'm not going to help you!" I stormed in frustration, slouched back against a tree and crossed my arms. She hissed something back and threw the bisons' harnesses to the ground in disgust, being unable, in her condition, to lift the wagon tongue. She glared at me, then caught up a crossbow from the wagon. For a second I thought she was considering using it on me, but without another glance my way she started off on her own. "You're cracked!" I watched her limp off into the trees and disappear from my view. "Anyway, the road's THATAWAY!" I yelled at the forest. Christ on a crutch, she's serious! So what? What did I care for her? If she wanted to kill herself, that was her business. Wasn't it? I mean, it wasn't like I owed her anything. Anyway, I wrestled with my conscience for a couple of minutes. What can I tell you: "Shit! GODDAM IT! WAIT!" I found her twenty or so metres into the forest, perched on a sun-warmed rock and obviously waiting for me. "Okay lady," I gritted my teeth and rubbed the bridge of my nose, forcing the words out, "You win." She bared her teeth at me and hissed slowly and clearly, "We go?" "Yeah, sure. . . We go." She looked down and dropped her hand away from her breast: the bandages were stained red with the blood seeping out under them. "Oh, Christ," I shook my head. This was one stubborn and determined bitch. ****** The beast-lady lay quietly in the back of the wagon, staring up at branches and clouds moving past. I glanced back at her, assured myself the new bandages were still in place, then turned to look out over the mountainous shaggy backs of the bison as they plodded along. This Tahr knew where she was going. At the fork in the road she had directed that we should continue eastwards, toward the remote sea. I briefly considered debating this, then shrugged. Why not? I wondered what destination she had in mind and felt the fear again. Were there more of them? How many? Where were we going?Christsake, I didn't have to go along with this! All I had to do was dump her somewhere. I didn't need her. . . did I? I don't know! So we travelled together, strange companions, each trying to come to know the other. Learning her language - Sathe - was hard. English was next to impossible for her. Her mouth, all of her vocal apparatus from her larynx to her tongue to the shape of her jaw weren't as flexible as mine. With effort I was able to imitate the growls, snarls, and sibilant noises that made up the Sathe language, but she could barely manage a coherent english sentence at all. Also there was the fact that she wasn't human. . . or that I wasn't Sathe, whichever way you want to look at it. Language is a means to communicate ideas and impressions, its development influenced by the environment, by physiological and psychological traits. This creature I was learning from was mammalian, bipedal, and bilaterally symmetrical. We seemed to have a fair bit in common. But wereas my distant ancestors were brachiating primates hastily adapted for lives on open plains, her's were dedicated hunters, perhaps forest-dwelling quadrupeds who - God knows how or when - began to use tools. As we'd evolved from such distant and diverse beginnings, so had our languages. There were terms she used to refer to things she could see at night, to sounds I couldn't hear and to things I couldn't smell. Conversely, I was unable to find words for differentiating between certain tints of a color. . . and there were no words to describe things I had grown up with. Different outlook. Different mindsets. How do you describe color to a blind person? Given time I'd eventually come to grips with that language, but for the time I had to live with my questions. And she had to live with her's. So the language lessons continued every day as we made our leisurely way east. The grammar wasn't that hard to pick up, but my vocabulary was extremely rudimentary. I would point things out or have them shown to me, then Tahr would give me her name for them. It was that way I learned the cat. . . Sathe terms for fascinating things like tree, bush, rock, road, bison, wood, bird, and other things that would come in handy if I intended to live the rest of my life in the wilderness. The only man/Sathe made things we had to work from were the things we had with us, the wagon, Tahr's possessions, and my things. My things: the contents of the pack, my rifle and clothing. These fascinated and bemused her. She scrutinized everything from the fabric of my clothes to my gun (a puzzle I quickly confiscated, to her obvious annoyance and indignation). She tapped the aluminium of my canteen, tried to bend the laminated steel of my knife blade, stared and poked at the compass mounted it its perspex bubble in the hilt. Just what I could be doing with such things was confusing and frustrating her. Looking at it from my point of view there wasn't all that much, but I was thankful for what I had, especially the automatic rifle. All Tahr had to call her own was her sword and the tattered remains of her armour. And the days went by. Sometimes the merciless Virginia sun, sometimes rain that brought the bugs and mud. The lessons continued and increased in complexity, graduated to abstracts, there was more confusion and more late nights sitting around a campfire struggling to grasp a concept. How can you describe something that you can't simply hold in your hand; something such as thought, hope, or fear? Miming just didn't work too effectively on a creature who used different body language. Things progressed slowly, at their own speed and as I learned more, I was able to fill in the blanks. But is was so maddeningly slow! There's nothing more frustrating than wanting to ask something but not having the words to do so. Apparently there were also questions that Tahr wanted to ask me, and she did try as best she could. What was I? Where did I come from? Things along those veins. Because of that I was slightly grateful for the barrier between us. Despite my equipment she still sometimes seemed to think of me as little more than a well-trained animal: sit, wait, fetch this, fetch that. I played along. It was easier to go with the flow until I found out more about my situation. Mid-summer. Hot and dusty after days without rain. Insects buzzed in irritating clouds around the bison. Grit from the road hung around in the air before finally settling in hair, mouth, and clothes. I was itching and covered in an irritating coating of dust and sweat. Of course when I had the chance to bathe, I took it. ****** As the sun sank low - a red eye over the hills to the west - the moon was already high in the sky. The temperature was starting to drop. I pulled my head up from underwater and gasped air, shaking water out of my hair in a spray of droplets. Arggh, cold. Goddamn, it was good to be clean, but I was looking forward to getting back to the campsite where I had left Tahr and a hot fire. I rubbed my hair as dry as I could and turned to where my clothes were drying. Sitting among the shadows on the mossy bank with my clothes beside her, Tahr was watching me, one hand pressing lightly against her bandaged ribs. She was regarding me with her head cocked to one side, expression unfathomable. Damnation! How long had she been watching while I was gathering goosebumps in my birthday suit? She continued to watch me as I waded over to collect my clothes. Damnation, she was studying me as. . . as I had studied her. I felt an embarassed flush burning up under my skin, then even more embarrasement at feeling like this in front of something that wasn't even human. I guess she had a right to be curious about something she obviously had never seen before, or perhaps she was feeling hungry. Those greenstone eyes followed my fingers on the closures as I pulled on my damp clothes."So what are you staring at!" I snapped. "Never seen red hair before?" In return she gave me a glistening grin. "Damn peeping tom alien bitch," I muttered as I finished dressing. "Satisfied?" I asked sarcastically. She hissed something in obtuse sibilants, struggled to her feet with a open mouthed gasp, then pointed at the water. "Help me?" she mimed washing herself. "A cat that likes water, eh? You sure? It's getting cold. . . " She hissed and fumbled with her kilt, dropping it at her feet. I had to help her into the pool, where she settled slowly, yelping as her wound went under. I'd have to clean that again later on. Soon I found myself scrubbing her back. Actually it wasn't too much different from washing a dog, but this one cooperated. Caked blood, dust, and mud swirled away downstream. Finally, a soggy arm about my shoulders, I helped her back to the camp and the fire. As we huddled close to the fire I couldn't help but stare at the felid on the far side of the flames. With the wet fur plastered to her skin she took on an appearance somewhere between ludicrous and pathetic. Her inhuman skeleton was accentuated: the long legs and short torso with broad chest. The bones in her legs and arms looked. . . wrong; twisted about each other the wrong way, perhaps a few too many. That ridiculously bedraggled fur slowly dried as she meticulously groomed herself with her claws, puffing out as it did so. By the time a slab of venison was roasting over the coals it was a glowing, glossy tan. Cleaned up she looked much better than before; sleek, warm. . . cuddly? Her pelt was a dark tan with lighter streaks around the ribs and on the stomach. She didn't have whiskers, but there was that mane: actually long fur that began at the crown of her head and along her cheeks and grew in thick strands down her neck. Small was not an accurate description of her size; compact would be much more suitable. As I had noticed when lifting her, she was heavy for her size. There was more muscle tucked away there than her stature revealed. Was her's denser than human muscle tissue? She glanced up from the haunch she was rapidly reducing to bone and saw me studying her: "Thresss n'rethi ai sa fe r'rescast. Fe'si?" I recognised it as a question, but that was all. As I looked away in sudden embarrassment Tahr broke into a shuttering, uncontrolled hiss. Laughter? ****** Tahr seemed certain she knew where we were. With much waving of hands and drawing with sticks in the dirt, she managed to convey the fact that were near a small place- with-[house?]-many called Traders Meet. "Town? Traders. . . Meet?" I asked, struggling over the pronunciation. You try and emulate what sounds like a hybrid catfight-leaking boiler. It would get easier with practice. Strange name. Still, I guess it's no weirder than Los Angeles or Buffalo. But a town. "Where this? Where town is?" I asked. Tahr pointed ahead down the road. "No. Not understand you not. . . " I scratched my head in bewilderment. God, how to ask this? I picked up a stick and began to draw a rough map of the road we had come down, the stream we had just crossed, the river where I had saved her sodden hide. "We here," I scratched out an X about where we were. "Town?" I asked and passed the stick to the felid.She was staring at the map with a strange expression, then she took the stick and put in a triangle for the town. Further down the road. I moved my hand to indicate a much larger area. "Here?" I asked. "Show?" Tahr hesitated, then began drawing, filling in the blanks. She drew a recognisable map of the east coast, Canada, of florida, part of the gulf, the Appalachians, the heartland, the Great Lakes.This was America. The States! But where was everybody, everything? It didn't fit. I opened my mouth to speak, but she wasn't done yet. She was dividing the map up into sections, lines splitting it up into four. . . no, five parts. I stared, perplexed. Tahr pointed to the eastern- most section. "Kerr'sther Hytors," she named it and started adding more details. "Hey! Whoa! Hold it!" Tahr looked up in surprise. "What the fuck's this!" I demanded in English, jabbing my finger at the map. "This! What's going on. . . Oh, shit! What's the point in asking you!" "Kerr'sther Hytors," she repeated; looking confused. I suppose I must've looked just as puzzled, staring at her map without understanding. Finally I nodded. Very well, cat, we shall see. We shall see. "Kerster Hytors," I acknowledged, pointing at that place on the map. ****** There were five Realms - she explained - and the one we were in was named Kerr'sther Hytors: the Eastern Realm; so called because - no prizes here - of its location on the eastern seaboard. The four other Realms she tried to describe, but there the language barrier slammed in our faces. No matter where she thought we were and despite the fact I had seen no sign of civilization for over a week, I was not yet willing to believe that I was anywhere but some obscure backwoods block of Virginia with a town around the next bend. Everything, the flora and the fauna, was absolutely identical. Even the lay of the land was approximately the same: the Appalachians levelling out to the wide coastal plains covered in a mixture of coniferous and semi-deciduous forests. It was just this damned cat! Well, she said we were making for a town. When we got there I would see what was what. As my grasp of the Sathe language progressed, I tried to ask some of the questions that had been bothering me for some time: "Tahr. Who you? Why you attacked?" Her wound was healing well. I had taken the stained bandages off and thrown them away, but that angry red scar would be with her for some time. One of her fingers absently traced it out as she turned to blink at me from where she sat on my right. From what I could read of her expressions,she seemed startled by the question. "I [ ] not you give. Understand?"she said. I frowned, trying to think that one through. Finally I had to give up. "No understand I," I said. "I do not understand," she corrected my grammar to Sathe proper and tried to explain. "I like [ ]. I give you thing; you give me other thing. We [trade]. I do this. I trader, [merchant]." "You give what?" I asked. "You have no. . . give things. You have much. . . Sathe with swords. You no merchant, yes?" Her eyes flickered away from me for a second. "One my [mate, husband?]." Ah. I had trodden upon hallowed ground here. She was trying to change the subject. I got the message. I dropped my questioning about what she was and instead asked about the unknown word.It turned out it meant a prospective mate, she was [courting?] him, a boyfriend. "Tahr. . . " What could I say? "I sorry." It seemed inadequate. She looked at me in brief surprise, then turned away, ears down and subject successfully changed. If she was telling the truth about her friend, I was sorry, but I was itching to find out what she was really doing. A trader with no trade goods or even supplies and a number of guards. I believed her story about as far as I could throw the Washington monument. Well, two could play at that game. If she wasn't being entirely honest with me, then there were a few snipets that I could withhold from her. Not exactly lying, just not offering all the information. The next few days drifted by with monotonous similarity. By now Tahr was able to take her turn driving so we took shifts watching the bison - not that they needed much, they seemed to have a natural autopilot;just point 'em the right way and they keep going - and continued language lessons. In the late afternoon we'd stop and set up camp; a short ceremony where one of us'd start a fire and the other would go and kill some food. Tahr would get a fire going with my cigarette lighter (she fascinated in flicking it and watching the sparks fly). If we had nothing from the night before, I'd set off with the crossbow and go hunting small game. Of course the Sathe weapon wasn't as powerful or accurate as my twentieth century firearm, but it was adequate and spared ammunition for other contingencies. We drifted along following this pattern and slowly, one after the other, the days turned to weeks before we came to Traders Meet. End Part 1 Section A