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Fossil Hunter qa-2

Page 8

by Robert J. Sawyer


  It was she. I was reacting to her.

  She must be coming into receptivity. I’d have thought her too young — she was just sixteen, after all, and estrus normally began in one’s eighteenth kiloday, but, then again, these things were not written in stone.

  My reaction was slight, as if she was not yet fully in heat, but rather was just beginning to be open. Perhaps she herself wasn ’t yet aware of it.

  I didn’t like the effect it had on me. There was something inappropriate about it. Yes, I was eager to mate myself, but, somehow, to mate with my sister seemed wrong.

  Without a word, I got up and hurried from the room, terrified that my dewlap would puff in front of her.

  With Pack Tablo on the outskirts of Edz’toolar

  In the last moments of his life, the irony was not lost on Mek-Lastoon, the bloodpriest of Pack Tablo. Oh, the circumstances were not quite reversed. Here, it was a mob of adults chasing a single other adult — him — instead of him, the purple robe of his priesthood swirling about his body, chasing squealing egglings.

  But the ending would be the same.

  Lastoon’s triple-clawed feet threw up globs of mud as he continued to run, his back held almost parallel to the ground, his thick, muscular tail outstretched behind him.

  He was surprised that he could still think clearly. Surely those pursuing him were now deep in dagamant, the killing rage clouding their thoughts. But all Lastoon felt was fear, naked and raw.

  They’d come for him at the creche shortly after the sun, a sharp white disk not much wider than a point, had risen above the volcanic cones to the east. Lastoon had immediately been wary — their pheromones were all wrong — but had hid his hands in the folds of his robe. A priest should never show outstretched claws to any member of the Pack.

  Eight adults had formed a semi-circle around him, like the crescent shape of one of the many moons. "How are the hatchlings?" Jal-Garsub had asked him abruptly, with no ceremonial bow of greeting. A female of middle age, she was the Pack’s hunt leader. The respect she commanded was equal to that accorded a bloodpriest.

  "Good Garsub," Lastoon had replied, tipping from his waist. "I cast a shadow in your presence." He looked into her solid black eyes, seeking any reason for this rude intrusion. "The hatchlings are fine. They’re eating fresh meat now, instead of regurgitated flesh."

  "And how many are there?" asked Bon-Cartark, standing on Garsub’s right, massive green arms crossed over his torso.

  "How many?" Lastoon repeated. "Why, six — one from each clutch of eggs laid this kiloday."

  "And how many were there?" said hunt leader Garsub.

  "How many were there when?" asked Lastoon.

  "How many were there originally? How many children stumbled out of eggs onto the birthing sands?"

  Lastoon dipped his head in puzzlement. "One does not speak of those who were dispatched, Garsub. The Eighteenth Scroll says…"

  "I know what the scrolls say, priest." Garsub brought her right hand into plain view. Her claws were unsheathed.

  Lastoon was silent for a moment, watching the polished talons glint in the morning sun. "There were six clutches of eight eggs apiece," he said at last. "One of the eggs never hatched; that’s not an uncommon occurrence. So, there were forty-seven hatchlings originally."

  "And now there are six," said Garsub.

  "Now there are six."

  "What happened to the other forty-one?"

  "Why, what always happens," said Lastoon. "I dispatched them."

  "You ate them."

  Lastoon did not like Garsub’s tone. "Good hunter, you use such a harsh turn of phrase. Perhaps next time the chief provincial priest visits our Pack, you can discuss the theology with her. I think she’s due back in less than a kiloday…"

  "You ate them," Garsub said again.

  Lastoon turned his head so that all would know that he was looking away. "That is the prescribed rite, yes."

  "You ate forty-one of the Pack’s children."

  "Hatchlings are not children of the Pack until after the culling; I dispatched the excess spawn." He paused briefly. "It’s my job."

  "You dispatch seven out of every eight hatchlings?" said Garsub.

  "Of course."

  "And in all of the Fifty Packs there are bloodpriests such as yourself."

  "One per Pack, yes, plus one apprentice to take my place when I am gone." Lastoon looked up. "I haven’t seen Cafeed yet this morning. He’s usually not this late."

  "Young Cafeed will not be coming to the creche today," said one of the others, Cat-Madool, his voice soft, almost a hiss.

  "Oh?" said Lastoon.

  "You dispatch seven out of every eight," repeated Garsub.

  "That’s right."

  "Your counterparts do the same elsewhere."

  "Indeed. In each of the Fifty Packs, across all eight provinces of Land."

  "There are no exceptions?" asked Garsub, her voice talon-sharp.

  "Of course not."

  "No exceptions?"

  "Good Garsub, I don’t see what you’re getting at."

  "Who is governor of this province?" asked Garsub.

  "Why, Dy-Rodlox, of course," said Lastoon.

  "And who is his brother?" demanded Garsub.

  Lastoon felt a tingling in his muzzle. "I don’t…"

  "Who is his brother?"

  "Why would I know the answer to such a question?"

  "But you do know," said Garsub. "Answer!"

  "I don’t…"

  "Answer! Answer, or feel my claws!"

  "Good Garsub, surely you wouldn’t strike a member of your own Pack?"

  Garsub surged closer. "Answer! Who is Rodlox’s brother?"

  The bloodpriest was silent.

  Garsub raised his hand. "Answer!"

  Lastoon looked from face to face, seeking a way out. At last, his voice very small indeed, he said, "He doesn’t have a brother."

  Cartark pointed directly at Lastoon, fingerclaw extended. "His muzzle flushes blue."

  "You’re lying," said Garsub.

  "Please, hunt leader, there are some things best left unknown. Surely you appreciate that…"

  "Who is Governor Rodlox’s brother?"

  Lastoon crossed his arms over his chest, robes dangling from them. "I cannot answer that."

  "It is Emperor Dybo," said Garsub. "Isn’t it?"

  "Garsub, please…"

  "If it is not true, bloodpriest, then deny it, here and now. Deny it while the sun shines on your muzzle. Deny it."

  It was pointless, of course. His muzzle would show the liar’s tint if he tried to do as Garsub asked. He looked at the ground, damp soil compacted by his own footprints and swept by his own tail.

  "Forty-one babies killed this kiloday by you," said Garsub. "Perhaps as many last kiloday. And as many again the kiloday before that."

  "It’s necessary," said Lastoon softly. "The population must be kept in check. It is the sacred role of the bloodpriest. My holy order…"

  "Your order is corrupt!" snapped Garsub. "You swallow our children whole, but you all have complicity in a fraud against our entire race. The Emperor’s children live, do they not?"

  "Where did you hear this?"

  "A newsrider from Capital City," said Garsub. "She brought news of governor Rodlox having declared this for all to hear. You bloodpriests deceive us common people. You enshrine the power of The Family. But the truth is out now. Dy-Rodlox here in Edz’toolar, and the apprentice governors in all the other provinces, are brothers and sisters to fat Dybo, who lies in the Capital on the ruling throne, a throne he did not earn, a throne he does not deserve."

  Cartark spoke again: "Why should all the children of The Family live when our own do not?"

  "You’re mistaken, Cartark. It’s just that…"

  "Your muzzle betrays you, priest."

  "No, please, you don’t understand. Mine is a holy duty."

  "Yours is a lie," said Garsub, "an attempt to keep the Fifty Packs under contr
ol, control that dates back to the false prophet Larsk, control that should be in the hands of the people."

  "But the population — it must be kept in check."

  "Then," said Garsub, her voice a hiss, "we shall start by eliminating one worthless mouth to feed."

  It was all a blur. Garsub sprang forward, but Lastoon was already in motion, running as fast as his legs could carry him. He was much older than the hunt leader, perhaps half again her bulk. It was a lot more mass to move, but he had a correspondingly longer stride. Still, Garsub and her hunting parties brought down thunderbeasts and hornfaces and armorbacks and shovelmouths. His greater speed would postpone the inevitable, nothing more.

  The creche was in the center of the tiny town; Lastoon bolted for the town’s northern periphery, hoping to make it into the galamaja forest.

  The others gave chase. They started as a wall of eight Quintaglios, but it was only a matter of heartbeats before they fell into a single file behind Lastoon, arranged in descending order of age/size/stride. Lastoon felt his heart pounding as he ran on.

  It had rained the previous night, and the ground was still dotted with puddles. Lastoon’s feet made great sucking sounds as they pulled out of the mud. Behind him, he could hear the others splashing along. The footing was treacherous. Lastoon’s robe was ruined, sodden at its base, the purple cloth now dappled brown with muck.

  Where were the others? Granted, it was still early, and last night had been odd-night, when most people slept, but some Quintaglios should have been up and about by now. Or had Garsub and the rest kept them away, just as they’d kept his apprentice Cafeed away?

  Lastoon rounded a bend, his thundering, splashing arrival startling a small clutch of wingfingers into flight, their chorus of screams a substitute for the ones Lastoon would have made if he could have caught the breath to do so.

  Footfalls pounding the ground, mud flying everywhere, the trees still fifty paces or so away…

  …and then…

  …stumbling, falling, flailing in the filth, a great splash of water, the underside of his muzzle plowing a swath…

  …a mad scramble to get back to his feet, toeclaws slipping and sliding in the brown ooze, unable to find purchase…

  …at last righting himself, lunging forward.

  But it was too late.

  Pain shot up his spine. Lastoon looked back. Right behind him was Garsub, something big in his mouth.

  The end of Lastoon’s tail.

  Sheared off in one massive bite.

  Lastoon tried to run on, but he felt nauseous, and his stride was thrown off by the change in balance.

  The others were fast approaching.

  Garsub lunged forward again, and again Lastoon found himself sliding headfirst across the mud. The hunt leader was upon him. Lastoon rolled his eyes to look up at her. Garsub’s left arm came swiping down, claws extended. Lastoon felt a sharp pain in his side and then an incredible cold. He struggled to roll her off and in the process saw that his intestines were spilling out onto the mud.

  The others reached him now, great jaws lined with sharp curved teeth snapping shut on his arm, his leg, his tail, his rump. Lastoon watched in a final, almost detached, moment as Cartark’s gullet extended, gulping a hunk out of Lastoon.

  Blood was everywhere, and then, soon, there was darkness.

  As his life ebbed from him, flowing into the muddy water, Lastoon thought his last thought.

  At least I had the decency to swallow the children whole.

  *12*

  Rockscape

  Huffing and puffing, Dybo made his way up the sloping path to Afsan’s rock. Normally the Emperor didn’t like coming out here: the trip made his dewlap waggle in an effort to dissipate heat. But today he welcomed it, for his meeting with Afsan required absolute privacy. No one could approach within a hundred paces without being heard or seen.

  There was Afsan, up ahead, straddling the granite boulder, his tail hanging over the back. Snoozing quietly beside the rock was Afsan’s pet lizard, Cork, its lithe body curved into a crescent shape. Afsan was sometimes accompanied by Cadool, or a scribe, or someone who could read to him from books, or by students who had come to ask him about the moons and planets and the Face of God. But today he was alone, just sitting on his rock.

  Thinking.

  That Afsan thought great thoughts Dybo already knew, though the idea of just staring out into space and thinking for daytenths on end was something he could not fathom. But, of course, that wasn’t right, either. Afsan was not staring out into space. Rather, he was in perpetual darkness, seeing only those images his mind provided. It had been sixteen kilodays since Afsan’s blinding, and, although Det-Yenalb, the one who had actually pierced Afsan’s eyes with an obsidian dagger, was long dead, Dybo still felt guilt each time he saw his friend, each time he realized yet again that his friend could not see him.

  Did Afsan still think in pictures? Still remember the things he’d seen when he’d had eyes? Still cherish, say, the sight of a flower or a marble sculpture? Dybo tried briefly to remember what, for instance, the tapestries that hung in his own ruling room looked like. Colorful, of course, and ornate. But the details? Dybo couldn’t conjure them up. Would Afsan’s memories of vision be like that, only even more attenuated, having faded over time?

  And yet, it was apparent that Afsan’s mind was as sharp as ever, indeed possibly even more keen than it had been when he was sighted. Perhaps the lack of distractions enabled him to more fully concentrate, to give over his thought processes to whatever problem he sought to solve. It staggered Dybo, his friend’s intellect, and sometimes it frightened him a bit. But he also knew that Afsan’s counsel was the sagest and most logical and purest of heart of any that he might receive.

  Dybo saw Afsan’s head snap up. "Who’s approaching?" Afsan said into the air.

  Dybo sang out, "It’s me, Dybo." He was still many paces from Afsan, but, once the gap had narrowed, he said, "I cast a shadow in your presence, Afsan. May I enter your territory?"

  Afsan made a concessional bow without getting up from his rock, and said, "Hahat dan." At his feet, the giant lizard stirred, opened an eye, looked at Dybo, and, apparently recognizing him, closed the lid and went back to sleep.

  Dybo found another rock to sit upon. The stone had warmed nicely in the sun. "It is peaceful here," said Dybo at last, looking around at the grasses, the trees, and the great water visible beyond the cliff’s edge.

  "More peaceful than the palace, I’m sure," Afsan said quietly.

  Dybo nodded, then, remembering Afsan’s condition, said, "Yes."

  Afsan’s muzzle turned toward Dybo. "You’ve come about Rodlox’s challenge, haven’t you?"

  Dybo was quiet for a time. Afsan had known him so long; knew him so well. "Yes," the Emperor said at last.

  "What do you intend to do?" asked Afsan.

  "I don’t know. My constitutional advisor tells me I need not respond at all."

  Afsan’s head turned slowly to follow the sound of a wingfinger making its way across the sky. "What you must do legally and what is wise to do are often different things," he said.

  Dybo sighed, long and loud. "Indeed. My authority is already diminished, they tell me, for the people know that my ancestor, Larsk, was not a divinely inspired prophet." Dybo was surprised at the sudden bitterness he felt toward Afsan. After all, it was through Afsan’s efforts that Larsk had been reduced. But then, he thought, what Afsan did to me and The Family was done without malice. Can I honestly say the same about what I did to him? Dybo pressed on. "I am the first Emperor to not rule by divine right."

  Afsan’s reply came quickly, perhaps too quickly. "You rule because the people respect your judgment." A pat answer, soothing to hear.

  Dybo nodded. "Some of the people do. But there are dissenters." And again he surprised himself with his anger, for it was Afsan who had burdened Dybo with the task of getting the Quintaglios off their world before it disintegrated. "There are many who feel I am pushing u
s in the wrong direction."

  "You are pushing us in the only direction that will ensure the survival of our people. No other choice is possible."

  "You know that. That is, you understand the reasoning. I accept that. That is, I trust your judgment. But there are others who neither understand nor accept the necessity of the exodus."

  Afsan’s turn to sigh. "Yes, there are such people."

  "Those against the exodus oppose not just it, but me personally. Those who believe The Family no longer has a right to rule also oppose me. And Rodlox, who apparently is my brother, he opposes me, too." A pause. "You knew about my brothers and sisters?"

  "I suspected it," said Afsan softly.

  "Why?"

  Afsan said nothing.

  "You suspected it because you could not see how one such as me could be the best of a clutch of hatchlings," Dybo said flatly.

  In the light of day, there was nothing for Afsan to say.

  "I may not be physically strong, Afsan, but I try as best I can. I put the interests of the people before my own interests, and it’s not every leader who can say that when the sun is shining."

  "That is true."

  "But there was a time when even you wished for a different ruler?"

  "There was a time," Afsan said softly, "when I had eyes."

  Dybo was silent awhile. "I’m sorry."

  "I know." The silence between them protracted to an awkward length. Afsan pressed on. "You cannot rule under these conditions. We don’t have time for dissent." He gestured expansively, taking in all of Rockscape and everything beyond. "The world is coming to an end. We must have unchallenged leadership. We must have an Emperor who can take us to the stars."

  "But it’s not just me personally who’s being challenged," said Dybo.

  "Oh?"

  "The newsriders and sailing ships are carrying Rodlox’s story to all points of Land."

  "So I would imagine."

  "Bloodpriests are being banished from their Packs. In some instances, they’re even being killed."

  Afsan’s voice was soft. "That is unfortunate."

 

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