Green Monkey Dreams

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by Isobelle Carmody




  GREEN MONKEY DREAMS

  Other books by Isobelle Carmody include:

  The Obernewtyn Chronicles

  Obernewtyn

  The Farseekers

  Ashling

  The Keeping Place

  The Stone Key

  The Sending

  The Red Queen (forthcoming)

  The Legendsong

  Darkfall

  Darksong

  Darkbane (forthcoming)

  Scatterlings

  The Gathering

  Greylands

  Alyzon Whitestarr

  Metro Winds

  Tales from the Tower Volume I & II

  (as editor and contributor, with Nan McNab)

  The Wilful Eye

  The Wicked Wood

  ISOBELLE

  CARMODY

  GREEN MONKEY DREAMS

  First published by Penguin Books Australia in 1996

  This edition published 2012

  Copyright © Isobelle Carmody 1996, 2012

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval system, without prior permission in writing from the publisher. The Australian Copyright Act 1968 (the Act) allows a maximum of one chapter or ten per cent of this book, whichever is the greater, to be photocopied by any educational institution for its educational purposes provided that the educational institution (or body that administers it) has given a remuneration notice to Copyright Agency Limited (CAL) under the Act.

  Allen & Unwin

  83 Alexander Street

  Crows Nest NSW 2065

  Australia

  Phone: (61 2) 8425 0100

  Fax: (61 2) 9906 2218

  Email: [email protected]

  Web: www.allenandunwin.com

  A Cataloguing-in-Publication entry is available from the National Library of Australia www.trove.nla.gov.au

  ISBN 978 174237 947 0

  Some of the stories in this collection were first published in a slightly different form: ‘Roaches’ in Into the Future, edited by Toss Gascoigne, Jo Goodman and Margot Tyrell, Viking, 1992; ‘The Monster Game’ in Family, edited by Agnes Nieuwenhuizen, Mammoth, 1994; ‘Corfu’ in Crazy Hearts, edited by Frank Willmott and Robyn Jackson, Hodja Educational Resources Cooperative Limited, 1985; ‘The Witch Seed’ in Bittersweet, edited by Toss Gascoigne, Puffin Books, 1992; ‘Seek No More’ in Goodbye and Hello, edited by Clodagh Corcoran and Margot Tyrell, Viking, 1992; ‘Long Live the Giant’ in The Lottery: Nine science fiction stories, compiled by Lucy Sussex, Omnibus, 1994; ‘The Pumpkin Eater’ in She’s Fantastical, Sybylla Feminist Press, 1995.

  Cover and text design by Zoë Sadokierski

  Set in 11/16 pt Adobe Caslon Pro by Midland Typesetters, Australia

  Printed in Australia by McPherson’s Printing Group

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  For Stephen,

  to whom all of my stories truly aspire

  Contents

  PART I

  THE HIGH PATH

  The Glory Days

  Roaches

  The Beast

  The Lemming Factor

  PART II

  THE WAY OF THE BEAST

  The Monster Game

  Corfu

  The Witch Seed

  Seek No More

  The Phoenix

  PART III

  THE WORLDROAD

  Long Live the Giant

  The Pumpkin Eater

  The Red Shoes

  The Keystone

  Green Monkey Dreams

  ‘Chuangtse dreamed of being a butterfly, and while he was in the dream, he felt he could flutter his wings and everything was real, but on waking up, he realised that he was Chuangtse and Chuangtse was real. Then he thought and wondered which was really real, whether he was really Chuangtse dreaming of being a butterfly, or really a butterfly dreaming of being Chuangtse.’

  Lin Yutang, The Importance of Living

  PART I

  THE HIGH PATH

  ‘There are many sorrows in heaven

  waiting to be sent to us as Angels . . .’

  THE GLORY DAYS

  They ask me to write down all I remember of the Glory days. A hard thing, because there is so much of Sorrow in the telling. My mind shies away from it, looping backwards and forwards in time.

  Last night, I thought of a girl I grew up with in the sister-house who told me that minebirds sing a song just before the deadly gases kill them, to lift their souls to heaven.

  Wakened this morning by the bells that toll the beginning of the solar day in Freedom, I tried to remember her name, and found I could not even recall her face.

  Hearing the bells ring now, for dusk, I realise an entire day has passed like the blink of an eye, and it comes to me that if death is a kind of song that lifts the soul out of the body, sorrow, too, can steal a soul and carry it away.

  Perhaps that is what is wrong with me.

  Yet the story must be told, and there is no other but me to tell it. I must make them understand that there are many Sorrows in heaven, waiting to be sent to us as Angels of death. I have told them, of course, but they nod soothingly and their eyes glide away. They think I am hallucinating or perhaps that I am mad because of all that happened. They think of me as a child, telling themselves I was too young, blaming themselves.

  But if I learned one thing in Glory, it is that flesh is the greatest lie.

  My youth was the main objection when I was proposed as an agent, but my sponsor was Erasemus, Tribune of the body that administers Freedom. He had been a very young man when he became Tribune of Freedom, first of all cities. He was one of the initiators of the plan to establish autonomous self-regulating cities which would have the same rights as a country once had over its citizens, and it is rumoured that it was his decision that bells be rung at dawn and dusk in gratitude that we wake and sleep in freedom.

  Erasemus is also my father – an archaic word. Very few children of Freedom know or care who their progenitor is. Before the nation and country wars that changed the world forever, a woman bearing a child would remain together in one dwelling with that child and any others spawned by her, and the man who impregnated her. The woman was owned by the man, and the children born to them were owned by both. There was even a contract of slavery in which she would vow to love and obey him, before witnesses, as if loving was something that could be commanded. It was all part of the vast greedy possessiveness of those times that people bound themselves together in little nations called families.

  Despite the fact that such conditions were inevitably destructive, and more often than not produced psychologically flawed adults, this custom of families continued right up to the wars. Fortunately the anarchy that followed, while dreadful, broke down the old corrupt and meaningless systems. Now, it is not forbidden to know who one’s mother or father is, just not important.

  We are all now sons and daughters of Freedom, sisters and brothers to one another. A computer tells us when blood is wrong between a male and female, for safe mating, but otherwise there are no divisions. In my mind, Erasemus was an older brother, and I was faintly shocked that he named me daughter. I put it down to his being of the generation that straddles the changes. Though he was one of the initiators of the modern age, he was a son of the old world and it had left its mark on him.

  He saw my discomfort and said, ‘I tell you of the close blood between us because I would ask you to do a thing which is more than I have the right to ask.’ I remember that I thought his eyes very sad and beautiful in his ugly boulder of a face. I had not been so close to him before, having only ever seen him during public add
resses, and the contrast struck me. There was an expression in his eyes I did not understand. I know now it was guilt at the knowledge that his truest daughter was Freedom, and that one daughter may be sacrificed to save another.

  ‘What do you want of me?’ I asked, without the slightest sensible twinge of unease. I had grown up in Freedom and knew that I might say no if I wished to whatever he proposed, though he was the most powerful man in the city. It meant nothing to me that he was my father. I was about to learn that one could be compelled by honour and pride far more easily than by force.

  ‘You know that Freedom sends emissaries to the other cities – to Serenity and Winter?’

  I nodded, I think. ‘Because of trade and to stop inbreeding?’

  He nodded too, but a little impatiently, as if I was behaving like a clever student when something more was wanted of me. ‘Among other things, for trade, yes. Other sorts of emissaries are sent to the frontier cities like Fury.’

  ‘Agents,’ I said, remembering some gossip I had overheard.

  He blinked and, though his expression did not alter, I sensed his appraisal deepen. ‘Do you know why we send agents rather than diplomatic and official emissaries?’

  I didn’t. I had only overheard the word and assumed it was another name for emissary.

  ‘Have you heard of Glory?’ he asked.

  Another piece of gossip surfaced in my mind. ‘It is a frontier city.’

  He smiled then. ‘It is not common knowledge that we have located another city on the very edge of the wastes, but it does not surprise me that you have heard of it, my dear. I have kept an eye on your mentor reports over the years and it has been observed more than once, and not always as a compliment, that you are in the habit of noticing rather more than people generally do.’

  ‘You monitored my progress? Why?’ Embarrassment made me brusque.

  ‘Curiosity. Your mother . . .’ I flinched and he frowned at me, but changed the subject abruptly.

  ‘We needed a child who could . . .’ His voice trailed off, and I remember being startled. One did not think of the articulate brilliant Tribune being lost for words. That did make me feel a quiver of apprehension, but before I could fasten on it, he was going on, telling me that Glory had been visited by Freedom’s emissaries and, as with many of the frontier cities, they were refused entry. Only people wanting to join the city were allowed inside.

  ‘Agents are sent in when emissaries are refused entry,’ Erasemus said.

  I was shocked because this flouted everything that Freedom and the cities represented. Officially a city might close its borders if it chose. Cities were small and could not increase beyond their walls, preventing the need for physical expansion. All cities were the same ground size. Numbers could increase, but only in so far as there was capacity for them. Cities like Winter were built up to house their population. When the population overgrew, another city would be built, and its builders would then design their own inner city matrix and modes of governance in accordance with whatever rules or ideals they had. No city could amalgamate with another, though people might shift between them. No city could interfere with another.

  ‘We need to know what is happening in the new cities that are formed,’ Erasemus said. ‘We send agents in when emissaries are not permitted merely to examine the social matrix to ensure Interference is not part of its mindset. None of the agents sent to Glory returned but we received enough information from them to indicate that Glory has begun stockpiling ancient weaponry.’

  ‘How many agents were sent in?’ I interrupted.

  After a pause, he said: ‘Twenty, but that information is strictly confidential.’

  My mouth fell open. ‘When you say they did not return . . .’

  ‘I mean they were never seen again. It is likely . . . most certainly likely that they died. Were killed to prevent them speaking of what they witnessed. We must know why and what is going on in Glory.’

  I knew then.

  We need a child, he had said. I had been consistently high in lessons with whichever mentor I chose, as he had observed, and I had already taken on the position of mentor to three younger sisters and a brother. One mentor told me I had a mind that leaped ahead of logic and reason which made my work patchy and inconsistent, but occasionally inspired. I had been voted to lead the youth tribunal, but had preferred to sit as an independent and speak when the mood took me. In truth, I had feared boredom.

  Hearing of my refusal, my favourite mentor brother told me that there were three kinds of people: followers, leaders and scouts. Scouts were capable of leadership, but they could not tolerate the responsibility of it. Disinclined to take orders either, they invariably flouted authority and fomented strife. This was why scouts, he said wryly, were the first to be sent into danger. It was half hoped they would be killed.

  ‘I fear you are destined to trouble us as a scout, little sister,’ he said.

  ‘All of the agents lost were adults,’ Erasemus was saying. ‘We now feel that the deepest heart of Glory is . . . too rigid for an adult outsider to infiltrate . . .’

  I was nodding, and so he stopped. He was too clever to overstate. ‘You must think it over,’ he said, but he knew and I knew, that there was no choice. Twenty dead because they had entered one of the closed frontier cities. Dead, why? What had they seen? That was what I was to find out. To seek knowledge was not Interference.

  ‘Have you any information about the city?’ I asked. ‘About its culture and traditions? Its laws?’

  ‘Little enough, I am afraid,’ Erasemus said. ‘Closed and focused around a central religion called the High Path, its people worship a figure known as the Angel.’

  It was to his credit that he did not baulk at the word.

  ‘The Angel?’ I asked. ‘Is their religion another version of ancient Christianity? Do they worship an Angel as a god, or is it an idol?’

  ‘The Angel is a real person with the power of life and death over his followers. As you know, we do not interfere in internal politics or religions so long as citizens are free to leave a city if they choose it. But in this case, agents were prevented from leaving and there is the real possibility that Glory will use its arsenal against other cities. We want to know if they plan to make war on nearby cities or on one city in particular. If possible, we need to know where their arsenal is stored.’

  ‘Information, then?’ I asked crisply, thinking that was not too great a thing to ask; forgetting that what Erasemus wanted and what Glory would demand of me might be two different things.

  The healer, Laurai, visits me, interrupting my memories. I cannot say I regret it.

  ‘You must get up. Go outside. It will do you good to walk about and exercise your limbs, lest they begin to atrophy,’ she says somewhat sternly, as if my inactivity is wilful and stubborn.

  I have a sudden muddied memory of being dragged from rubble, my bones grinding together, my face streaming with blood and tears.

  I had not known, when I first woke, why I wept. The memories of the last day had been crushed out of me by the stone teeth of Glory, lethal even as it fell. A blessed, if fleeting forgetting.

  When I woke the second time from a nightmare of drowning, I was in Freedom and Laurai was leaning over me. I had never met her before and thought I was in Glory still. Then she spoke and I knew I was home. There were no healers in Glory.

  When she realised I could not speak, she pressed a pencil and paper into my fingers. I lay there cradling them, without the strength even to write and ask what had befallen me. The last thing I could remember clearly was running along the main street in Glory. It was Erasemus who told me, when he visited later that day, that Glory was gone, destroyed along with all of its inhabitants.

  ‘What happened?’ he asked. ‘Jack Rose saw the city explode.’

  It took all of my will to write. He looked at me searchingly after reading my scrawl. ‘You don’t remember?’

  I had not strength enough then to shake my head, but he read the
answer in my face. He asked the healer if the lost contents of the rooms in my mind would ever be restored.

  ‘They are not empty,’ Laurai said, her cool eyes blue and watchful. ‘It is only that her mind has suffered a sort of blindness.’ She had looked at me then. ‘You must teach it to see again.’

  She touched the pencil with the tip of her finger. ‘That is the key to the memories locked inside you. Write what you remember and the rest will follow. Go gently, for if you force the memories, they might vanish altogether. Go back to things that you remember well, then move carefully forward in time. You must stalk the thread of memory like a cat stalks a bird.’

  And of course, I did remember.

  Like all frontier cities, Glory was walled, but getting into it was more unpleasant at first than dangerous. Indeed, I thought I might as easily have walked in openly, for the guards on the gate seemed relaxed and inattentive once the entrants swore fealty.

  ‘Do not let them fool you,’ whispered Jack Rose grimly. ‘That is a Venus flytrap. Easy to enter, hard to leave.’

  He had been my mentor and trainer in the art of spying, and he had brought me to Glory. I had thought Rose rather a soft name for a spymaster, but Jack had thorns aplenty, and he did his best to help me develop my own on that long journey. There had been no time for proper training at the little-known agents’ academy, and I was not sure I could have borne it, had there been time. I felt trained agents were a symbol of Interference, and Jack Rose and I argued our way to the frontier.

  ‘We must be safe,’ he said once. ‘We must guard Freedom.’

  ‘Freedom is more than our city. It is an ideal and you are breaking it. You and Erasemus and the academy. You deny the other cities the very freedom you guard in ours. One city is no better than another. No larger, no stronger . . .’

  ‘If Freedom is threatened by another city, it must protect itself.’

  ‘But you don’t know if it is a threat when you send in agents.’

  We could not agree, and yet we became close on that journey. Despite our differences, it was he who would drag me from the ruins though I was a scout and dispensable.

 

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