Me Ma Supial!

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Me Ma Supial! Page 1

by Ged Maybury




  Me Ma Supial!

  Ged Maybury

  Published by Ged Maybury, 2019.

  While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this book, the publisher assumes no responsibility for errors or omissions, or for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein.

  ME MA SUPIAL!

  First edition. July 25, 2019.

  Copyright © 2019 Ged Maybury.

  ISBN: 978-1393970743

  Written by Ged Maybury.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  HEAT

  MISSION

  STIRRINGS

  JOURNEY

  PUNISHMENT

  INVADER!

  SHARK

  REPENTANCE

  FULL MOON

  ANCESTORS

  DEFIANCE

  SHOCK

  OUTRAGE

  FLIGHT

  CROCADILLY

  WAR

  SUCCOUR

  CONNECTION

  REVELATIONS

  RESOLVE

  MEETING

  WESTWARD

  EQUALISER

  WILDERNESS

  GHOSTS

  PRAYERS

  ANSWERED

  MIRACLES

  HOPE

  Further Reading: Edge Town

  Also By Ged Maybury

  About the Author

  This book literally began with a dream. In it I saw the cover of a book, one that I would write - way out in the future.

  That was the whole dream: An image. A title. Not much to go on, but I began anyway, intuitively, trying to answer the question that the cover provoked.

  And you now have it in your (e-)hands! Enjoy!!

  My thanks to Cover Artist APOLLO WONG for perfectly recreating that long-ago dream. Phew! It was a journey!

  DEDICATION (LONG OVERDUE):

  To my beloved Daughter Ascia Maybury - who in a single flash stepped me forward in life like no other moment ever did; from 'Man-Alone' to being a FATHER.

  You sang to me.

  [ Literally, people! She was 5 minutes old, and she was singing. Sweet as, eh? ]

  HEAT

  IT WAS HOT, AS ALWAYS. Kynn Wheeler tugged at the restrictive collar of her starched blouse as she paced the confines of the trading store. She paused at the doorway and looked down the slight slope towards the Supial village. The aliens were moving about with that fluid rolling walk of theirs: greeting, talking, carrying babies, getting on with life. Despite their fur they seemed unaffected by the heat.

  Behind her, from the other end of the colony compound, came the sound of the survey plane warming up for another flight. Kynn glanced at Judkins (Doctor Judkins, properly speaking) who was hunched at the rough-sawn counter, studying a huge lobster shell he had acquired from a Supial some ten minutes earlier.

  “Where’s the plane going today?” she asked conversationally.

  He didn’t reply, didn’t even glance up at her.

  Kynn heard the plane lift vertically on its jets, cross the security fence, and gain speed over the beach. It was turning north, passing. She glimpsed it briefly beyond the Supial village, heading north-west towards the tropical forest that blanketed the hilly land. A faint smell of half-burnt fuel drifted back on the sea breeze.

  Kynn turned to Judkins again. “An interesting specimen then?” she asked to get his attention, then rebuked him piously, “Father has told us to give them only money for samples, not the food cans.”

  Judkins shrugged and waved at the stack of used metal canisters behind him, saying, “They’re more useful than money.” He turned his specimen end-for-end and added, “Anyway, don’t take your father too seriously. He isn’t perfect.” Then Judkins’ tone turned sour, “He does make mistakes.”

  She stiffened. “If you mean our first landing site, well it was no mistake. It was the Will of the Lord.”

  “Whatever,” muttered Judkins without looking up, “but you were there. You saw how he made that decision.”

  Kynn went silent, remembering.

  THE STARSHIP HUMMED around her, so familiar and comforting that it had almost ceased to be noticeable. She was sitting in the background as she often did while the adults talked. Once again they were discussing the latest satellite results, trying to decide where to land.

  “The best location has to be here,” Judkins was saying, touching the tabletop screen, “central to all these mineral deposits.”

  “But isn’t there an issue with the landing pods?” asked Doctor Kei Nam, her dark eyes shifting cautiously toward Pastor Wheeler, “Don’t they need to land on water?”

  Judkins answered, “Not necessarily, but it’s definitely the safest option. We’ll just have to wait till the end of the next wet season. See this green patch?” His finger was on the map again, “That’s the extent of the flooding. There’ll be enough depth, even for a bad landing.”

  The Pastor sighed impatiently and then snapped, “Where is your faith, man!?”

  “With all due respect, Pastor, there are some technical things we cannot...”

  “Stop!” said the Pastor in that loud angry way of his, swelling up to his full height and glaring down at the scientist, “Judkins, you are not in charge here. I am not even in charge. Let us allow the Lord to decide!” Then, as Kynn had seen him do many times, her father thumped his big leather-bound book onto the table and released the clasp. Closing his eyes and murmuring a prayer, he braced his hands then suddenly opened the book at random. His long finger stabbed down with a thud and he bent to read, ‘...and so Saint Curran landed upon the edge of that land, and there he began to seek Believers.’ There! The Lord has chosen! Now go make yourself useful and find out how to make those pod things work!”

  “IT... IT WAS JUST BAD luck,” Kynn finally answered Judkins, “We didn’t know about the leech-worms...” She broke off, trying to suppress a sudden sickening memory. Quickly she looked outside for reassurance. There was no rain, nor any darkness. Just heat and a bright sky.

  And a group of Supials coming purposefully towards her.

  “I think we have visitors,” she announced, glad of any distraction. Then her spirits lifted, “It’s Old Leatherback!”

  “Who?” queried Judkins distractedly.

  “The village elder, the one who taught us their language.”

  “Ah yes,” murmured Judkins without looking up, “a valuable resource.”

  Kynn sighed angrily and went out to greet the approaching aliens.

  “Yo, Dudes!” she called in Supial, making the greeting gesture, “Yo, yo! How’s a-living been?”

  Old Leatherback smiled and waved back, even though he was now only some ten steps away, “Yo, Kynn Wheeler. Is good, is good. How’s a-living, you?”

  “Is good, is good.”

  Kynn looked to the other adult, a very old female covered in sparse silvery fur. There were also about a dozen Supial children, all holding hands, peering curiously at her and past her into the trading store. But this was normal.

  “Who are you bringing me?” It was the best Kynn could manage in her faltering Supial.

  “This is Old Burrawang,” said Leatherback, “Keeper of the Oldbooks from Far End Village. She is visiting, wanting to see you Humans close up.”

  Kynn made the correct touches of greeting to the old female, then asked politely, “Far End Village, a good place I’m sure. Is that in the Outback?’

  The old woman laughed. “Nowhere near! Just three-day walking, north of sunset.”

  Kynn put this into her mental map of the area, “further on from Lower Cliff?”

  “Yes, northaways, walk-a-day from Lower Cliff.” Then the old Supial gazed disconcertingly into Kynn’s eyes till K
ynn glanced modestly away.

  “Leatherback’s been saying you’re a pretty cool dudettie,” rumbled Burrawang, “Yes, I reckon too. You’re welcome any time in my village.”

  Kynn answered shyly, “Thank you. So... so your people do have books?”

  “I keep the Oldbooks, yes. Very special. You have books, Kynn Wheeler? We know the Pastor Wheeler has one, but are there others?”

  It was an innocent question. Kynn knew the alien would hold no judgement if the answer was ‘no’.

  “I will bring you a book,” Kynn promised, glancing around nervously in case the Pastor himself was in earshot, “A very special one.”

  MICA PAUSED ON HIS way across a fallen tree above a narrow river, coiled his tail around a branch and gazed down at the muddy water. Ah, he thought, there’s a croc in there, for sure! Hanging by one hand and his tail he called aloud, “Hey-ya crocadilly, you're looking silly!” It is something all toddlers learn to call.

  Mica sat back smiling to himself, remembering how important he’d felt, how invulnerable, calling this nonsense into every pond and creek he passed. One time his mother simply picked him up and carried him swiftly from the edge. Fast; no explanation! He chuckled at the memory, remembering his mother. Then he sighed and gazed into the tree-tops. A flock of parrots had arrived, screeching and flashing their colours. He thought maybe one of them might be his mother.

  He hoped so. Mica loved parrots.

  Then carefully, lest he should drop it (and of course he never did, never would, for Mica was a dexterous yoodie), he opened his dangle-pouch and took out a single large flake of mica. He gazed at the milky flake of stone, held his fingertips under it and looked through it, marvelling at its simple perfection.

  “I am Mica!” he shouted suddenly at the parrots, “Yee-hee-yoo!”

  They all took off together, screeching back at him.

  Mica chuckled, then slid the mica flake carefully back into the thin flat pouch where the steel plate would keep it from breaking. He wouldn't open it again for a long time. Private, it was. Very personal.

  And now it was time to move on. He was off on a little walkabout, just for a few days, maybe five. He wanted to bring back something really good for Lorikeet.

  Ah, Lorikeet! He remembered her eyes right then, her sleek perfect fur, her lovely tail, the way she moved, her smell... Mica stopped his thoughts abruptly.

  Ayee! No place for this. I’ll get all dizzy off my branch! Ol’ crocadilly would be glad to eat me! Probably grab me right here! Good big handle it would make right now! Yeah, wouldn’t ol’ crocadilly laugh about that!

  Mica sighed. Is being a grown-up always gonna be like this, he wondered, always dizzy off my tree? No wonder the Old Dudes spend all their time on the ground now, no wonder!

  He was just uncurling his tail to move on when a great noise came whooshing across the forest, like thunder mixed with screaming. Ahead of it came a cloud of parrots, all swooping wildly, screaming in terror.

  Mica looked up, frightened. A thing went overhead, big and low, a huge metal thing with wings spread out like the feathers of a hunting bird. The treetops swirled in the sudden hot wind that hit Mica moments later. It smelt bad.

  “Humans,” whispered Mica, relaxing a little as the thing moved on, “just those bloody Humans. Stupid things. What do they want now?”

  THE TWO SUPIAL ELDERS stayed a little while, talking with Kynn. Burrawang came into the trading store for a few moments, peering about suspiciously at the stocks of left-over technology and other oddments available for trade, then moved outside again.

  Kynn made her farewells and the elders strolled slowly away with their whispering entourage. She went back inside and resumed her seat, filled with a secret excitement. So they did have books!

  Should I tell Judkins? No. Not yet. But Dr Kei Nam; yes. Next time I get on the Terminal!

  Then Kynn began wondering if there was an even better message she could write, a message to everybody. Because now she was certain about one thing: her father was wrong about these Supials. Very very wrong.

  MISSION

  THE HUMAN GIRL STEERED the skimmer through the trees, moving slowly to give herself time to glance at the navigation screen now and again. According to the survey maps her target village was about two kilometres ahead. She eased the motorbike-sized vehicle to a stop on the forest floor and dismounted. After checking the screen one last time she shut off the power and quickly pushed the skimmer into the shade of a big loose-leafed plant before the coils lost the last of their lifting effect.

  Now, in the noisy silence of the forest, Kynn felt vulnerable and alone. Even so she half expected a disapproving colonist to suddenly appear, scowling at the boyish shorts and short-sleeved work shirt she had secretly taken from the supply store that morning. Pushing her anxiety aside she hefted up her backpack and began along a broad footpath through the trees. It was a good sign of a village nearby.

  Why am I so jittery? she wondered as she walked, It’s not the first village I’ve been to, nor the first time I’ve taken them gifts

  It’s Father. He’ll be angry if he finds out how much paper I’ve used.

  Then she smiled to herself, a bitter twisted smile.

  Yes, but he’s always angry!

  MICA SAT WITH HIS FRIENDS, carefully working on the skin of the beautiful bronze lizard he had captured on walkabout. They were all gossiping, as men always do, about food, love, and dudetties. But today there was a new subject: Humans.

  “They are so stupid,” his older brother Pumice was saying, “they fly in their metal air-bird all over our sky then go all the way back to their village before they get out to walk. So they never get anywhere!”

  “Yeah,” agreed another young dude, “and I hear they cut down all the trees in their village, so now they have no shade. Crazy!”

  “At least this time we Supials showed them a good place for a village,” added Gumnut Banyan, “Last one right on top of a leech-worm bed! Rains they came and zoompf! Up they all came!”

  “I heard that too!” cried another in amazement, “How stupid could you get! ...”

  And so it went on.

  Mica was happy just to listen. He was the youngest one there, still a yoodie, but his Man-time was due on the next full moon. His big brother Pumice had been a Full Dude for over a year, so it was okay for Mica to hang out with him sometimes.

  “So who’s it for?” asked Pumice suddenly, leaning in to finger Mica’s project, “No, no, let me guess; it’s for Lorikeet, eh?”

  Mica said nothing, just lowered his eyes self-consciously.

  Pumice tugged him about by the fur on his shoulder, “Ayee, you love-struck yoodie! I keep telling you, she’s only interested in her silly old books.” Then a playful glint came into Pumice’s eyes and he added kindly, “Hey little brother, this is what you have to do.” He dipped his finger into Mica’s oil-of-oozewood then dirtied it in the cold remains of the fireplace, “You have to write some words upon your chest, see:” he scribbled backwards and forwards, messing up Mica’s fur, “word-word-word-word-word, now she’ll want to look at your bod, eh?” Pumice and the others laughed.

  “Ayee-ee,” whined Mica, feeling embarrassed, “Quit it already. Hey, hey! But see what else I got her!” He dug into his waist bag and pulled out his other treasures, the five rough gemstones he had gone so far to dig.

  “You been to the Gem Cliffs then?”

  “Yep.”

  “You ain’t supposed to go that far,” growled Pumice, “Not till you’ve had your Man-time.”

  “Magpie took me there,” answered Mica defensively, “He said it was okay.”

  “Yeah, and we all know who Magpie is...” began Platypus. And right about then someone started shouting from the other side of the village.

  “Hey! Hey! There’s a Human coming! A Human! Come see!”

  KYNN SAW SMOKE AHEAD and knew she was getting close. Then she glimpsed the village through the thinning trees. The buildings were up on poles a
nd under them scuffled the domesticated fowl the Supials called ‘chookies’. Supials moved about leisurely, or sat in the shade. Then she was spotted and the usual commotion began: “There’s a Human in our village! Come look! Come see!”

  As dozens of villagers came running to look the chookies ran about in a panic, squawking and flapping.

  Kynn stopped on the edge of the housed area and the Supials stopped running too, that peculiar stand-off that happened every time. She wasn’t quite used to it yet, all this attention. It frightened her a little. Drawing a nervous breath she called out, “Yo, Dudes and Dudetties! How’s a-living been?”

  “Is good,” they replied, eyeing her with suspicion, and amusement too. Had she got it slightly wrong again, or did this village do the greeting differently?

  “My name is Kynn Wheeler,” she continued loudly, “I have come to visit. I have a gift for Old Burrawang. Is she here?”

  Everyone’s eyes seemed to swivel as one, turning up towards one particular building. “Yo, Kynn Wheeler!” called a old voice from the high verandah, dry and husky but full of warmth, “We meet again! Ayee! Is good, is good! Come on up!”

  It was Burrawang herself. What a stroke of luck!

  Kynn clumsily climbed the flexing ladder as children came close to gaze at her, their tails waving in unison. The bigger females scuttled up the poles and hung by their tails from the building’s many timbers, peering at her unashamedly and talking to each other too fast for her to follow. But the young males stayed back and Kynn knew why. This was a Women’s House.

  Inside it was dim and smoky. Meat hung in strips over the low fire, and a few women squatted at some domestic task Kynn didn’t recognise. A baby cried suddenly in fright and scrambled into the safety of his mother’s pouch. After a minute he poked up his little head and stared balefully at her.

 

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