Ingathering - The Complete People Stories

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Ingathering - The Complete People Stories Page 52

by Zenna Henderson


  “Where did it come from?” I asked, wonderingly. “All this water! And there is Baldy, with his feet all awash. What happened?”

  “The rain is raining,” said Thann, his voice choked with laughter, his head rolling on the sharp shale of the bank. “The rain is raining—and don’t go near the water!” His nonsense ended with a small moan that tore my heart.

  “Thann! Thann! Let’s get out of this mess. Come on. Can you lift? Help me—”

  He lifted his head and let it fall back with a thunk against the rocks. His utter stillness panicked me. I sobbed as I reached into my memory for the inanimate lift. It seemed a lifetime before I finally got him up out of the mud and hovered him hand high above the bank. Cautiously I pushed him along, carefully guiding him between the bushes and trees until I found a flat place that crunched with fallen oak leaves. I “platted” him softly to the ground and for a long time I lay there by him, my hand on his sleeve, not even able to think coherently about what had happened.

  The sun was gone when I shivered and roused myself. I was cold and Thann was shaken at intervals by an icy shuddering. I scrambled around in the fading light and gathered wood together and laid a fire. I knelt by the neat stack and gathered myself together for the necessary concentration. Finally, after sweat had gathered on my forehead and trickled into my eyes, I managed to produce a tiny spark that sputtered and hesitated and then took a shining bite out of a dry leaf. I rubbed my hands above the tiny flame and waited for it to grow. Then I lifted Thann’s head to my lap and started the warmth circulating about us.

  When our shivering stopped, I suddenly caught my breath and grimaced wryly. How quickly we forget! I was getting as bad as an Outsider! And I clicked my personal shield on, extending it to include Thann. In the ensuing warmth, I looked down at Thann, touching his mud-stained cheek softly, letting my love flow to him like a river of strength. I heard his breathing change and he stirred under my hands.

  “Are we Home?” he asked.

  “We’re on Earth,” I said.

  “We left Earth years ago,” he chided. “Why do I hurt so much?”

  “We came back.” I kept my voice steady with an effort. “Because of me—and Child Within.”

  “Child Within—” His voice strengthened. “Hippity-hop to the candy shop,” he remembered. “What happened?”

  “The Canyon isn’t here any more,” I said, raising his shoulders carefully into my arms. “We crashed into water. Everything’s gone. We lost everything.” My heart squeezed for the tiny gowns Child Within would never wear.

  “Where are our People?” he asked.

  “I don’t know,” I said. “I don’t know.”

  “When you find them, you’ll be all right,” he said drowsily.

  “We’ll be all right,” I said sharply, my arms tightening around him. “In the morning, we’ll find them and Bethie will find out what’s wrong with you and we’ll mend you.”

  He sat up slowly, haggard and dirty in the upflare of firelight, his hand going to his bandaged head. “I’m broken,” he said. “A lot of places. Bones have gone where bones should never go. I will be Called.”

  “Don’t say it!” I gathered him desperately into my arms. “Don’t say it, Thann! We’ll find the People!” He crumpled down against me, his cheek pressed to the curve of Child Within.

  I screamed then, partly because my heart was being torn shred by shred into an aching mass—partly because my neglected little fire was happily crackling away from me, munching the dry leaves, sampling the brush, roaring softly into the lower branches of the scrub oak. I had set the hillside afire! And the old terror was upon me, the remembered terror of a manzanita slope blazing on Baldy those many forgotten years ago.

  I cradled Thann to me. So far the fire was moving away from us, but soon, soon—

  “No! No!” I cried. “Let’s go home. Thann! I’m sorry! I’m sorry! Let’s go home! I didn’t mean to bring you to death! I hate this world! I hate it! Thann, Thann!”

  I’ve tried to forget it. It comes back sometimes. Sometimes again I’m so shaken that I can’t even protect myself any more and I’m gulping smoke and screaming over Thann. Other times I hear again the rough, disgusted words, “Gol-dinged tenderfoots! Setting fire to the whole gol-dinged mountain. There’s a law!”

  Those were the first words I ever heard from Seth. My first sight of him was of a looming giant, twisted by flaring flames and drifting smoke and my own blurring tears.

  ~ * ~

  It was another day before I thought again. I woke to find myself on a camp cot, a rough khaki blanket itching my chin. My bare arms were clean but scratched. Child Within was rounding the blanket smoothly. I closed my eyes and lay lapped in peace for a moment. Then my eyes flew open and I called, “Thann! Thann!” and struggled with the blanket.

  “Take it easy! Take it easy!” Strong hands pushed me back against the thin musty pillow. “You’re stark, jay-nekkid under that blanket. You can’t go tearing around that way.” And those were the first words I heard from Glory.

  She brought me a faded, crumpled cotton robe and helped me into it. “Them outlandish duds you had on’ll take a fair-sized swatch of fixing ‘fore they’re fit t’ wear.” Her hands were clumsy but careful. She chuckled. “Not sure there’s room for both of yens in this here wrapper.”

  I knelt by the cot in the other room. There were only three rooms in the house. Thann lay, thin and unmoving as paper, under the lumpy comforter.

  “He wants awful bad to go home.” Glory’s voice tried to moderate to a sickroom tone. “He won’t make it,” she said bluntly.

  “Yes, he will. Yes, he will! All we have to do is find The People—”

  “Which people?” asked Glory.

  “The People!” I cried. “The People who live in the Canyon.”

  ‘The Canyon? You mean Cougar Canyon? Been no people there for three-four years. Ever since the dam got finished and the lake started rising.”

  “Where—where did they go?” I whimpered, my hands tightening on the edge of the cot.

  “Dunno.” Glory snapped a match head with her thumbnail and lighted a makin’s cigarette.

  “But if we don’t find them, Thann will die!”

  “He will anyway less’n them folks is magic,” said Glory.

  “They are!” I cried. “They’re magic!”

  “Oh?” said Glory, squinting her eyes against the eddy of smoke. “Oh?”

  Thann’s head moved and his eyes opened. I bent my head to catch any whisper from him, but his voice came loud and clear.

  “All we have to do is fix the craft and we can go back Home.”

  “Yes, Thann.” I hid my eyes against my crossed wrists on the cot. “We’ll leave right away. Child Within will wait till we get Home.” I felt Child Within move to the sound of my words.

  “He shouldn’t oughta talk,” said Glory. “He’s all smashed inside. He’ll be bleeding again in a minute.”

  “Shut up!” I spun on my knees and flared at her. “You don’t know anything about it! You’re nothing but a stupid Outsider. He won’t die! He wont!

  Glory dragged on her cigarette. “I hollered some, too, when my son Davy got caught in a cave-in. He was smashed. He died.” She flicked ashes onto the bare plank floor. “God calls them. They go—”

  “I’m Called!” Thann caught the familiar word. “I’m Called! What will you do, Debbie-my-dear? What about Child—” A sudden bright froth touched the corner of his mouth and he clutched my wrist. “Home is so far away,” he sighed. “Why did we have to leave? Why did we leave?”

  “Thann, Thann!” I buried my face against his quiet side. The pain in my chest got worse and worse and I wished someone would stop that awful babbling and screaming. How could I say good-by to my whole life with that ghastly noise going on? Then my fingers were pried open and I lost the touch of Thann. The black noisy chaos took me completely.

  “He’s dead.” I slumped in the creaky rocker. Where was I? How long had I bee
n here? My words came so easily, so accustomedly, they must be a repetition of a repetition. “He’s dead and I hate you. I hate Seth. I hate Earth. You’re all Outsiders. I hate Child Within. I hate myself.”

  “There,” said Glory as she snipped a thread with her teeth and stuck the needle in the front of her plaid shirt. My words had no impact on her, though they almost shocked me as I listened to them. Why didn’t she notice what I said? Too familiar? “There’s at least one nightgown for Child Within.” She grinned. “When I was your age, folks woulda died of shock to think of calling a baby unborn a name like that. I thought maybe these sugar sacks might come in handy sometime. Didn’t know it’d be for baby clothes.”

  “I hate you,” I said, hurdling past any lingering shock. “No lady wears Levi’s and plaid shirts with buttons that don’t match. Nor cuts her hair like a man and lets her face go all wrinkledy. Oh, well, what does it matter? You’re only a stupid Outsider. You’re not of The People, that’s for sure. You’re not on our level.”

  “For that, thanks be to the Lord.” Glory smoothed the clumsy little gown across her knee. “I was taught people are people, no matter their clothes or hair. I don’t know nothing about your folks or what level they’re on, but I’m glad my arthritis won’t let me stoop as low as—” She shrugged and laid the gown aside. She reached over to the battered dresser and retrieved something she held out to me. “Speaking of looks, take a squint at what Child Inside’s got to put up with.”

  I slapped the mirror out of her hands—and the mad glimpse of rumpled hair, swollen eyes, raddled face, and a particularly horrible half sneer on lax lips—slapped it out of her hands, stopped its flight in midair, spun it up to the sagging plasterboard ceiling, swooped it out with a crash through one of the few remaining whole windowpanes, and let it smash against a pine tree outside the house.

  “Do that!” I cried triumphantly. “Even child’s play like that, you can’t do. You’re stupid!”

  “Could be.” Glory picked up a piece of the shattered window glass. “But today I fed my man and the stranger within my gates. I made a gown for a naked baby. What have you done that’s been so smart? You’ve busted, you’ve ruined, you’ve whined and hated. If that’s being smart, I’ll stay stupid.” She pitched the glass out of the broken window. “And I’ll slap you silly, like I would any spoiled brat, if you break anything else.”

  “Oh, Glory, oh, Glory!” I squeezed my eyes shut. “I killed him! I killed him! I made him come. If we’d stayed Home. If I hadn’t insisted. If—”

  “If,” said Glory heavily, lifting the baby gown. “If Davy hadn’ta died, this’d be for my grandkid, most likely. If-ing is the quickest way I know to get the blue mullygrubs.”

  She folded the gown and put it away in the dresser drawer. “You haven’t told me yet when Child Within is s’posed to come Without.” She reached for the makin’s and started to build a cigarette.

  “I don’t know,” I said, staring down at my tight hands. “I don’t care.” What was Child Within compared to the pain within?

  “You’ll care plenty,” snapped Glory around the smooth curve of the cigarette paper, “if’n you have a hard time and no doctor. You can go ahead and die if you want to, but I’m thinking of Child Within.”

  “It’d be better if he died, too,” I cried. “Better than having to grow up in this stupid, benighted world, among savages—”

  “What’d you want to come back so bad for then?” asked Glory. “You admit it was you wanted to come.”

  “Yes,” I moaned, twisting my hands. “I killed him. If we’d only stayed Home. If I hadn’t—”

  ~ * ~

  I lay in the dusk, my head pillowed on Thann’s grave. Thann’s grave—The words had a horrible bitterness on my tongue. “How can I bear it, Thann?” I whimpered. “I’m lost. I can’t go Home. The People are gone. What’ll I do with Child Within? How can we ever bear it, living with Outsiders? Oh, Call me too, Call me too!” I let the rough gravel of t he grave scratch against my cheek as I cried.

  ~ * ~

  And yet I couldn’t feel that Thann was there. Thann was a part of another life—a life that didn’t end in the mud and misery of a lakeside. He was part of a happy adventure, a glad welcome back to the Earth we had thought was a thing of the past, a tumultuous reunion with all the dear friends we had left behind—the endless hours of vocal and subvocal news exchange—Thann was a part of that. Not a part of this haggard me, this squalid shack teetering on the edge of a dry creek, this bulging, unlovely, ungainly creature muddying her face in the coarse gravel of a barren hillside.

  I roused to the sound of footsteps in the dark, and voices. “—nuttier than a fruitcake,” said Glory. “It takes some girls like that, just getting pregnant, and then this here other shock—”

  “What’s she off on now?” It was Seth’s heavy voice.

  “Oh, more of the same. Being magic. Making things fly. She broke that lookin’ glass Davy gave me the Christmas before the cave-in.” She cleared her throat. “I picked up the pieces. They’re in the drawer.”

  “She oughta have a good hiding!” Anger was thick in Seth’s voice.

  “She’ll get one if’n she does anything like that again! Oh, and some more about the Home and flying through space and wanting them people again.”

  “You know,” said Seth thoughtfully, “I heard stuff about some folks used to live around here. Funny stuff.”

  “All people are funny.” Glory’s voice was nearer. “Better get her back into the house before she catches her death of live-forevers.”

  ~ * ~

  I stared up at the ceiling in the dark. Time was again a word without validity. I had no idea how long I had huddled myself in my sodden misery. How long had I been here with Glory and Seth? Faintly in my consciousness, I felt a slight stirring of wonder about Seth and Glory. What did they live on? What were they doing out here in the unfruitful hills? This shack was some forgotten remnant of an old ghost town—no electricity, no water, four crazy walls held together by, and holding up, a shattered roof. For food—beans, cornbread, potatoes, prunes, coffee.

  I clasped my throbbing temples with both hands, my head rolling from side to side. But what did it matter? What did anything matter any more? Wild grief surged up in my throat and I cried out, “Mother! Mother!” and felt myself drowning in the icy immensity of the lonely space I had drifted across—

  Then there were warm arms around me and a shoulder under my cheek, the soft scratch of hair against my face, a rough hand gently pressing my head to warmth and aliveness.

  “There, there!” Glory’s voice rumbled gruffly soft through her chest to my ear. “It’ll pass. Time and mercy of God will make it bearable. There, there!” She held me and let me blot my tears against her. I didn’t know when she left me and I slept dreamlessly.

  Next morning at breakfast—before which I had washed my face and combed most of the tangles out of my hair—I paused over my oatmeal and canned milk, spoon poised. “What do you do for a living, Seth?” I asked.

  “Living?” Seth stirred another spoonful of sugar into the mush. “We scratch our beans and bacon outa the Skagmore. It’s a played-out mine, but there’s a few two-bittin’ seams left. We work it hard enough, we get by—but it takes both of us. Glory’s as good as a man—better’n some.”

  “How come you aren’t working at the Golden Turkey or the Iron Duke?” I wondered where I had got those names even as I asked.

  “Can’t,” said Glory. “He’s got silicosis and arthritis. Can’t work steady. Times are you’d think he was coughing up his lungs. Hasn’t had a bad time though since you came.”

  “If I were a Healer,” I said, “I could cure your lungs and joints. But I’m not. I’m really not much of anything.” I blinked down at my dish. I’m nothing. I’m nothing without Thann. I gulped. “I’m sorry I broke your window and your mirror, Glory. I shouldn’t have. You can’t help being an Outsider.”

  “Apology accepted.” Glory grinned dourl
y. “But it’s still kinda drafty.”

  “There’s a whole window in that shack down-creek a ways,” said Seth. “When I get the time, I’ll go get it. Begins to look like the Skagmore might last right up into winter, though.”

  “Wish we could get some of that good siding—what’s left of it— and fill in a few of our holes,” said Glory, tipping up the scarred blue and white coffee pot for the last drop of coffee.

  “I’ll get the stuff soon’s this seam pinches out,” promised Seth.

  ~ * ~

  I walked down-creek after breakfast, feeling for the first time the sun on my face, seeing for the first time the untidy tangle and thoughtless profusion of life around me, the dream that had drawn me back to this tragedy. I sat down against a boulder, clasping my knees. My feet had known the path to this rock. My back was familiar with its sun-warmed firmness, but I had no memory of it. I had no idea how long I had been eased of my homesickness.

 

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