The Howling Stones

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The Howling Stones Page 24

by Alan Dean Foster


  On that occasion the purpose of the get‑together had been festive. This time an air of solemnity hung over the proceedings, as the matter they had gathered to discuss was of a far more serious nature.

  This is not to say that the atmosphere within and out­side the meeting house was funereal. Old acquaintances greeted one another warmly, and new friendships were forged. Between discussions there was much ceremonial drinking and feasting, and the younger big persons par­ticipated in bounding and leaping contests. Amorous assig­nations were encouraged, a few were formalized, and in this way relationships between the affiliated islands of Par­ramat were strengthened.

  When other island groupings held similar conclaves, disagreement and fighting was common, and not thought of as unusual. The Parramati had long since dispensed with such familial altercations. It made no sense to fight with a neighbor who might control a stone you would need next month, or next year, to improve your crops or heal a sick relative. Mutual interest preserved the peace.

  Besides, you could share another person's space but never steal it.

  When the last of the representatives had arrived and all introductions and greetings had been exchanged, every­one assembled in Ataap's meeting house. It was crowded, but there was just enough room for all. None could be left out or overlooked, not even the delegate from the smallest island. One might come from a large village or a single family, but everyone was equal in the amount of space they shared.

  Most squatted in positions of formal rest, their flexible tails barely reaching the floor. Those along the walls were compelled to stand in order to be able to see. Stand­ing for long periods of time was no hardship for a seni; not with their huge feet and powerful leg muscles.

  Those designated as speakers waited their turn, and none spoke longer than was fitting. Everyone listened politely even to those elders whose thoughts were less focused and who had a tendency to ramble. Such indi­viduals were viewed with fond amusement rather than dismay.

  The delegates from Torrelau and Mallatyah spoke last, not because they represented the two largest and most densely populated islands of the archipelago but because they were the ones most intimately and immediately af­fected by the events of the previous days. Yet what had happened concerned every Parramati, to the last shell gatherer on the farthest outlying islet.

  Of most immediate concern was the apparent loss of seven stones from Mallatyah.

  "Seven stones!" Old Leuwaramau turned slowly as she spoke. Her body was bent and her vision unpaired, but her voice rang out youthful and strong. Her words rever­berated the length of the longhouse. In the singsong lan­guage of the Parramati it sounded more like an aria than a speech.

  "Can they not be traced?" called out a stone master from Yevaluu.

  The renowned scholar turned toward the questioner's voice. "Seven stones have been used. Not two, as was the case on Torrelau." Squatting nearby, Ascela and Jorana gestured solemn accord. "The users of the seven have gone farther. Finding them and bringing them back may be impossible. It is certainly dangerous."

  "They can take only the stones," someone commented from near the south wall. "Not the space they occupied." A murmur of assent rose from the assembly.

  "But still." The representative big person from Ataap did not try to conceal his distress. "Seven stones!"

  Leuwaramau blew through the end of her long snout. "Two stones open two roads and their permutations. Dif­ficult but not impractical to follow. Seven stones weave a trail far more than seven times tangled. Impossible. Too many roads crossing too many intersections. We must face the fact that these stones are gone. So are those who foolishly made use of them."

  Huril'ila of the island of Rerenik rose. "Stones will be shared. If any need be replaced, Rerenik will share." In response, the longhouse shook to shouted offers of assistance.

  Leuwaramau gestured for silence. "Thanks be to our Rerenik brethren, but this is not necessary. The loss is of course irreplaceable, but we of Mallatyah are rich in stones. We will not suffer." She drew herself up.

  "But this must not be allowed to happen again. If enough stones are taken from us, the links between some roads could be lost forever. We could lose control over our own space."

  Angry voices echoed throughout the meeting place. For all their inner peace and melodious speech, it had not been so very long since the Parramati had fought with their neighbors. Because they chose not to war did not mean they were ignorant of its ways.

  "What are we to do?" a big person from Tassai won­dered aloud. She had a big belly and, for a seni, a boom­ing voice.

  "Kill them all," another delegate suggested. "Soft‑ and shiny‑skinned ones alike. Feed them to the apapanu."

  From the center of the room, Ascela rose to turn and disagree. "That will not work. We know both peoples well enough to know that if these die, snore will come to take their place. They are like kikau weeds in the gar­dens. Better to deal with those who are here now, with those that we know."

  "We are not afraid of the aliens," another insisted. "Let them come as many as will. We will use the war stones against them!" This proposal was greeted with cries of support‑but not many. A larger number of delegates ex­pressed reservations.

  It had been generations since the war stones had been employed to repel a large and especially vicious invasion from another archipelago. If the histories were to be be­lieved, the entire attacking force had been destroyed by means too terrible to relate‑together with nearly all the defenders. The war stones were not like growing stones or fishing stones. Those charged with their care had a greater responsibility than nearly all other stone masters. Such stones were few in number, and as a precaution no more than one was kept on any single island. The old sto­ries warned that bringing them together could pose as great a threat to the users as to the enemy.

  "I do not think that is a good idea. There must be a bet­ter way."

  "Then propose one!" shouted a representative from the far side of the longhouse. This suggestion met with con­siderably more support than its predecessor.

  Ascela was not intimidated. "The humans are intensely curious. Not only about the stones, but about all aspects of Parramati life and of kusum. Kill them, and others will come, curious to learn what happened." A three‑fingered hand gestured toward the longhouse ceiling. "They drop from the sky, and the sky is full of them."

  "Ah‑weh, " old Leuwaramau whispered. "Then our pur­pose should be to keep their numbers among us as few as possible."

  "Can we convince them to go elsewhere?" Huril'ila wondered. "Persuade them somehow to leave us and study the Eolurro? Let them set their strange longhouses among our neighbors instead of here."

  There was an outburst of barking laughter. "More in­teresting to study the dirt than the Eolurro," someone de­clared, provoking welcome amusement.

  Ascela continued to hold the floor. "That is exactly why it will not work. Like that of many other seni, the kusum of the Eolurro has been debased by contact with both humans and AAnn. These humans are so interested in ours because it remains pure."

  "Can we keep it so?" someone asked from near the west wall. "If these aliens are allowed to remain among us, will their influence not begin to dilute traditional kusum? The young in particular are always susceptible to new and interesting ideas."

  Jorana rose to stand alongside Ascela. "There are no stones for seeing into the future. We cannot predict what may happen. But we can try to convince the humans that kusum should not be threatened and that the Parramati should be left alone. There are only two of them, and they insist that they want only what is best for us."

  "The shiny‑skinned ones say the same." Oresivi let his gaze rove through the crowd of attentive big persons. "Perhaps that is part of the problem. These humans and AAnn both want only what is best for us‑provided they are the ones to determine what that is." A surge of univer­sal approval rose from the assembled. "Let us decide what is best for Parramati kusum and tell them."

  "How ca
n we convince those who are so interested in us to leave us alone?" another wondered aloud.

  "Kill them," exclaimed a small but persistent minority. It was a collective voice that was disturbingly persistent. Jorana chose not to acknowledge it.

  "Perhaps we should consult the stones and let them show us the way. The most important stones." He sur­veyed the crowd. "We could have a Goggelai."

  This astonishing and completely unexpected proposal provoked immediate and vehement discussion in every comer of the meeting place. It did not die out completely even when Leuwaramau staggered again to her feet.

  "A Goggelai has not been held in living memory. It opens the road to the unknown. There are great dangers in the unknown."

  "But also answers," Jorana argued. "Do not these visi­tors also bring unknowns full of dangers? These aliens are a big thing that has come among the Parramati. It requires a big thing to counter them." He spread his arms wide.

  "We want no treaties with them, yet without an answer, they will not go away. We do not want war with them, because they will keep coming back. So I say, let us see what the stones show us. Let us see what roads the Goggelai opens and how the humans react to them. Per­haps among all the roads we will find one that leads to understanding."

  General discussion ensued. Those who argued for the use of the war stones to kill the visitors made some head­way and swayed a few opinions. But it wasn't nearly enough to convince the majority, who opted, albeit with reluctance, to convene the Goggelai.

  Debate continued until the small hours of the morning, but in the end Jorana's proposal prevailed. There was un­deniable excitement among the delegates as they filed out of the meeting house. After all, though they knew it well from legend and story, none of them had actually partici­pated in a Goggelai.

  It was decided to hold the ceremony as soon as pos­sible, on the slopes of sacred Mt. Erirota on Torrelau. Without divulging the full significance of the ritual, As­cela and Jorana would invite the humans to attend at the last moment.

  Discussion continued as the big persons drifted off to their assigned sleeping quarters, walking or hopping to buts and longhouses that had been prepared for them by their honored hosts. The ramifications of a Goggelai were many, and not all necessarily benign. But these were por­tentous times for Parramat. Radical problems required radical solutions.

  Stones had been lost. The protection of those that re­mained, and of the roads they guarded, had to be ensured. The roads could not be damaged, of course, but access to them could be lost.

  So they would see what paths the Goggelai opened. Perhaps even, as Leuwaramau pointed out, the road to enlightenment.

  "A multistones ceremony?" Fawn turned to Pulickel, wondering if she'd heard correctly.

  They were standing by the river just above where it poured over the cliff into the shallow inlet lagoon below the village. The noise of the waterfall just downstream was constant but not overwhelming. Nearby, middle and lesser female persons were washing household items and preparing food in the crystal‑clear water.

  Jorana had come up behind them and politely requested a moment of their time. That in itself was unusual. Nor­mally it was the visiting humans who had to interject them­selves into Parramati conversation.

  Pulickel confirmed her translation. "This sounds like something we should see."

  Jorana's slim fingers traced lithe patterns in the air. "Your presence will add to the significance of the Goggelai. "

  Fawn fluffed out her blond tresses. "I've made notes on quite a few Parramati ceremonies, but I don't remem­ber writing down anything about a Goggelai."

  Jorana looked up at her. "One has not been held for a long time. For quite a long time."

  "So why now?" There was something odd in the big person's manner, Pulickel thought. He ran through his mental catalog of seni postures and expressions. Not dis­comfort, not anger or upset, not nervousness. He couldn't quite put a finger on it or a name to it.

  At least he knew that Jorana was not displeased with them. Otherwise he would not be inviting them to attend this special ceremony.

  "The decision to hold the Goggelai is bound up with your corning among us. " Pulickel continued to wonder at the big person's manner, which was at once deferen­tial and demanding. "Important decisions will be made afterward."

  "The treaty," Fawn hinted. .

  Jorana indicated agreement. "About the treaty, yes. And about other things. The Goggelai may tell us if your road and that of the Parramati coincide or diverge. It may tell us all manner of things. No one knows for certain be­cause it has been such a long time since one was held."

  "So if it develops that our roads converge," Pulickel pressed him, "then the Parramati will sign the treaty?"

  "Perhaps." Jorana looked away. "I cannot speak to such matters now."

  Fawn asked the inevitable follow‑up. "And if they diverge?"

  The big person studied her out of long, dark eyes. "Space is vast, F'an, and there are many spaces within it. Each holds different responses to different situations."

  "But even if there are an infinite number of spaces, the number of roads is finite," Pulickel countered.

  Jorana favored him with the seni equivalent of a smile. "You have not been long among us, friend Pu'il, but you have learned much. Everyone hopes that the road fol­lowed is the right one. You are so interested to learn about kusum. Now you will have the opportunity to con­template one of its most sacred foundations.

  "As to which road will be shown, I know no better than you. It is not like the bringing together of growing stones or weather stones. The Goggelai is the biggest thing there is." He turned to depart.

  Both Pulickel and Fawn were reluctant to let him leave. "When you say that this is a multistone ceremony," she queried their visitor, "do you mean that stones from all over the island are brought together in one place?"

  The long skull turned back to her. "Not only from all over Torrelau, but from the length and breadth of the Par­ramat. I said this was a big thing." He turned apologetic. "Remember when you asked me, friend Pu'il, if more than two stones were ever brought together at one time and I said no? I lied. This is the one time when many are gathered. It is a great and important secret, one that you will now share with the Parramati."

  "Sounds like it." Pulickel found himself wondering why the native had lied earlier. Perhaps the infrequency ®f this particular ceremony explained it. Jorana might have been saying that no more than two stones were brought together at any one time under normal condi­tions. Clearly this Goggelai was an exception to the usual rules. That made it only the more intriguing.

  "Are all the stones from all the islands used?"

  The big person eyed him as if perhaps he hadn't learned so very much after all. "Of course not. What would be the point of combining earth and weather stones, or healing and fishing stones? No, the Goggelai requires the bringing together of more stones than any other ceremony, but they are all of one kind. It will take awhile to assemble them because they are used for noth­ing else but the Goggelai and have not been used in such a long time." .

  Fawn hoped that a description of the stones under dis­cussion might offer a clue as to their function. "If they're not healing stones or earth stones or any other kind of stone that we're familiar with, then what are they?"

  Jorana's reply was evocative without being informa­tive. "They are the howling stones."

  "So you bring all these howling stones together from all over the islands," Pulickel noted, "and then what happens?"

  "No one can be sure," the big person replied madden­ingly, "except that roads are opened."

  "How many of these howling stones are there?" Fawn noted that even though the busy villagers could easily overhear, all were studiously ignoring the conversation.

  Pulickel deduced from Jorana's reply that this time the native was being honest with them. "I do not know." Delicate hands fluttered. "I do not think that anyone knows for certain, not even the senior big person
s of the outer islands. The howling stones have been held and watched over and unused for many generations. Only when all have been assembled in one place can they be counted and the answer to your questions known."

  "Well," Fawn told him, "we're flattered that you're do­ing this for us."

  "We are not doing it for you," Jorana corrected her. "We are doing it with you. To try to show you the depth and importance of preserving our kusum untrammeled."

  That didn't sound like someone anxious to sign a treaty of mutual aid and cooperation, Pulickel thought. But he did not comment. Perhaps he was misinterpreting.

  "There could be some danger. Or nothing at all may happen." The big person was watching both of them closely.

  "We'll take our chances." Fawn smiled down at him. "You know that Pu'il and I aren't afraid of a little danger. When is the ceremony to be held?"

  "In five days time, on the westem slope of Mt. Erirota."

  That in itself was interesting, Fawn mused. Normally, the far side of Erirota was off‑limits even to big persons. She hadn't been especially curious about it because re­connaissance vits showed nothing out of the ordinary, nothing but jungle and rocks. They revealed no crum­bling temples, no ancient burial grounds. Obviously the region had great significance to the Torrelauans and to the Parramati in general, but it was not because it was rife with structural antiquities. Certainly it was an honor and a sign of confidence to be invited to attend a gathering there‑especially after the incident involving Pulickel and the "borrowed" stones.

  "May we bring our recording tools along?" she asked.

  Jorana eyed her unblinkingly. "You may bring any­thing you wish, so long as you bring yourselves."

  "And you can't give us an idea of what we might expect to see?" Pulickel was reluctant to let the big per­son go.

  "I have never traveled the road of the howling stones," the native told him. "No one living has. Who knows? Perhaps you will tell me." His lips flowed in the equiva­lent of a grin. "It is told that through the Goggelai lies the road to wonders. Or there may be nothing. We will find out together."

 

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