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Desert World Allegiances

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by Lyn Gala




  Copyright

  Published by

  Dreamspinner Press

  382 NE 191st Street #88329

  Miami, FL 33179-3899, USA

  http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Desert World Allegiances

  Copyright © 2011 by Lyn Gala

  Cover Art by Justin James dare.empire@gmail.com

  Cover Design by Mara McKennen

  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 the written permission of the Publisher, except where permitted by law. To request permission and all other inquiries, contact Dreamspinner Press, 382 NE 191st Street #88329, Miami, FL 33179-3899, USA

  http://www.dreamspinnerpress.com/

  ISBN: 978-1-61372-156-8

  Printed in the United States of America

  First Edition

  September 2011

  eBook edition available

  eBook ISBN: 978-1-61372-157-5

  Thanks

  Thank you to Donna, Kelly, Stella,

  and everyone else in my beta group

  who helped me with both this book

  and the logic of this whole universe.

  Chapter 1

  “MAYBE we shouldn’t be doing this,” Temar suggested again. If nothing else, they should not be doing this when both moons threw pale light over the fields. Both he and Cyla were fair and blond, and Temar felt like a white flag raised in the middle of a fire-blackened field. The field wasn’t black, and the tiny green plants stood out in line against the dry ground, but he still felt exposed.

  “Maybe George Young shouldn’t steal water from us,” Cyla answered sharply. She stopped, and Temar flattened himself to the ground and wished that his sister would listen to him, just this once. “He’ll be sorry when we get proof.” The bitterness in Cyla’s voice made Temar’s heart ache. Since their father’s death, she had grown harder. It scared him.

  “We have proof. Sort of. We just need to wait for the council meeting at season-end.”

  “I’m not waiting. Not anymore.” Cyla’s voice was fierce, and Temar was caught between wanting to go home and wanting to keep his sister from doing anything unforgivably stupid. Maybe she saw his indecision because she leaned closer, resting her hand on his arm. “He will be sorry.”

  “Or we’ll be sorry when we’re caught,” Temar warned. He wished he had the right words to convince her that they were making a mistake.

  “Then we don’t get caught.” Cyla looked over her shoulder at him and smiled. He hated it when she got that expression, the one that never failed to get them in trouble. She winked, and then she was dashing across the field. For the length of several breaths, Temar lay on the warm ground, eye level with long rows of tiny plants that swayed gently in the breeze. Their verdant leaves unfurling from stems that were firm with water. Even before their father died, their own farm had turned into a ragged collection of pipe trap weeds and chokeweed. If Cyla was right, and George Young had their water quota, that would explain why his fields produced so much more than their own. If Cyla was wrong…. Temar cringed at the thought of working restitution days for Young, on his farm.

  “Wait,” Temar hissed, and then he ran after Cyla. They were close to the Young farmhouse now. Like all farms on Livre, the buildings were tall and narrow, pushed into the rock cliff wall to avoid taking up any more land than required. Most of the planet was a desert, ruled by shifting dunes and sandrats, and every inch of the sheltered valleys was needed to create life.

  “See anything?” Temar asked. He flattened himself on the dusty path, next to Cyla.

  “Nothing.” Her eyes swept the buildings where Young and his workers lived. “We find the evidence and then we go to the council.”

  “Or we go to the council, show them my water readings, and ask them to investigate and find real evidence for themselves.” Temar’s stomach started to ache. He was no terraformer or soldier who could live on adrenaline. No, give him a glassblowing shop, or at this point, even a farm free from weeds, with a clear water allotment, and he’d happily live his life being remarkably, blissfully boring.

  “They already refused, and this is not the place for a debate.”

  “No, Naite Polli didn’t refuse. He only said we had to wait until season-end, for the regular session.” Temar bit his tongue before he started shouting in frustration. Even though they hadn’t damaged anything, a landowner could demand at least one labor day from any trespasser, so he really didn’t want to get caught. He doubted Cyla had considered that, however. Sometimes she was a little less than logical in how she approached life, and it drove him insane. Maybe if she were younger or just less stubborn it wouldn’t have annoyed him so much, but she had these ideas, and then he couldn’t get her to see reason. She’d tell him that he was too young to understand that adults had to do whatever it took to get the job done, but since she was only three years older than he was, the argument didn’t seem exactly fair. Twenty-one was old enough to know they were both going to be in serious trouble if they were caught on George Young’s land.

  It was like her request for a special council meeting. If Cyla had listened to him before she stormed off to talk to Naite Polli, Temar would have told her that she was making a mistake. Naite represented the unskilled workers of Livre, and he was a hard man who had very little patience for bending the rules. Of course Naite refused to hear them during season, but not all the council members were that inflexible.

  Temar would have gone to Dee’eta Sun. The woman represented the artisans, and Temar had watched her work glass with a skill and patience that he envied, catching the molten sands on the end of her pole and then twirl them into incredible shapes. Dee’eta would understand that sometimes circumstances required you to move faster than you expected. After all, with glass, one second too fast or too slow and the entire piece could warp hopelessly out of shape or shatter into a million pieces. Cyla had thought Naite Polli would side with them because he worked the land, but Temar would have sought out Dee’eta Sun and explained how one more season without water, without hope, and without credit to hire workers, and their land would be as gone as a piece of glass that shattered when the blower moved it to the punty rod.

  Cyla studied him, the light of the blood moon making her hair look pink. “We need evidence so significant that they can’t wait for season-end.” With that, she took off running. The water tanks squatted on tall stilts, the angle of their tilt making them look like giant, white beasts, leaning down to touch the ground. Maybe they were leaning down to eat Cyla. He knew it was a silly child’s nightmare, but the tanks still waited to swallow her up as she threw herself to the ground under the closest one. That one was positioned a good six feet lower than the second one, so the valves and meters should be easier to read.

  “Luck of the stars,” Temar whispered before he went running after her. She was an idiot, but she was his only family. If she was going to be stupid and get sentenced to work days for George Young, at least he could go down with her.

  “So, let’s do the test,” Cyla said. He could hear the excitement coloring her voice while she screwed a drip meter onto the bottom of the release valve.

  “We’re going to be sentenced to a week of workdays if the council hears we tampered with someone’s equipment,” Temar muttered, but he took out his flashlight and put it in his mouth wh
ile he adjusted the tiny gears used to measure the water. If they pulled a cup of water, and the measure on Young’s tank didn’t match their draw, that should be enough to prove to the council that he was stealing water from the common line that ran between their farms.

  “Young is going to be sentenced to slavery for a decade when we have our proof.”

  Temar tightened the connector nut and pulled the flashlight out of his mouth. “No one gets sentenced to that much slavery,” he pointed out.

  “Yeah, but no one has ever stolen this much water before. Twenty years of water theft should mean at least a decade. I’ll have him out digging up pipe traps in the midday sun.”

  Temar looked at Cyla with some concern. There were days that her anger settled under her skin, making her seem ugly. If Young was stealing water, and Temar agreed with his sister on that one, then the man deserved slavery or exile, but Cyla’s joy at the thought made him a little uneasy. Instead of watching her start the test, he wandered back toward the second tank. He’d expected a second set of pipes, leading to the ground watering system, but instead the taller tank led into the first one.

  “Cyla, these are run in series,” Temar said.

  She made an incoherent noise in response.

  “Cyla,” Temar said, a little louder.

  “Shhhh.”

  “Then listen. These are set up different than Dad’s.”

  This time she stopped and looked at him. “Dad’s tanks were set up back when ships were still landing. Literally. I’d be surprised if Young didn’t upgrade. After all, with all the water he stole from us, he can afford the best.” She gestured toward the tall house with the dark windows. Unlike their own house, it wasn’t lopsided from age and gravity. “I just need to get a one-cup measure, and we can go home.”

  “Then get it.” Temar looked around nervously. Under the bright moonlight, the white tanks looked pink, the newly sprouted wheat took on a purplish hue, and the dusty ground between the rows was striped with shadows from the leaves. A breeze pushed all the seedlings to the west, their leaves dipping down to touch the ground. Cyla was taking her time, and the sour fear in Temar’s stomach was solidifying into something hard that made his gut ache. He knelt next to her on the hard-packed dirt.

  “What’s wrong?” he whispered.

  “The valve is stuck.” Cyla grunted as her fingers slipped off the tank, and her knuckles hit one of the struts with a dull thud that reverberated softly through the entire tank.

  “Unlucky stars,” she hissed before sticking her knuckle into her mouth.

  “Let me.” Temar got his fingers around the valve and tried to turn it. Even if it was stuck, years of pulling weeds had given his fingers an advantage. He twisted the piece, feeling the metal groan under his fingers as it started to yield. Then the unthinkable happened. Something snapped with a crack that echoed through the tank, and water gushed over his hands. Warm water, in quantities he’d never seen, poured over his skin, like a smooth fabric sliding over him.

  For a second, Temar was too shocked to even react. He knelt as water—actual running water—spilled over the ground and tumbled over him in unfamiliar patterns. Even when he finally got his hands moving again, he couldn’t find any way to reverse the direction of the valve. Something had snapped, and now the nut spun loosely around the end of the pipe. “It’s broken!” The water pushed against Temar’s fingers as he felt for any mechanical cut off or valve or emergency switch, but there was only the tank and the pipe and water pouring over him in unholy quantity.

  “Shut off. Where’s the shut off?” Cyla shouted in her desperation, and a siren ripped through the air with its high-pitched wail. She ran to the other side, her feet actually kicking up water that had dirt suspended in it. Mud. The unfamiliar word floated to the top of his memory from school. They had it on Earth, where water ran over the face of the planet, but on Livre, where nearly every molecule of water had been harvested from the larger of the two moons, melted, purified, and then carried to Livre, mud didn’t exist. Or it hadn’t. Temar found his knees slowly sinking into the softening field.

  Footsteps pounded the ground, followed by the sound of men and women slipping and cursing and the strange slap of hands and bodies against water. “Where’s the cutoff?” Cyla’s scream carried above the siren, above the chaos of the night. Now Temar had his hand flat against the pipe, the water spraying out like the tail of a peacock from a child’s book.

  Hands caught his arm, pulled him, and Temar slid in the wet earth, falling on his face into mud that pressed itself to his mouth and nose until he pushed back, choking on it. More hands caught him, pulled him, and Temar didn’t fight.

  Chapter 2

  SHAN looked out the thick glass at the twisted trunks of the wind trees and at the barchan dunes. The sand inched south in the wind, and when the afternoon came and the winds changed, the same sand would move back to its original position. More or less. The trunks of the trees were scarred white from the constant attack of weather and wind and sand, but right now, Shan’s attention was focused on the three men and two women behind him. He suspected that he was about to lose the argument, and maybe it was the masochist in him, but he refused to give up. Slavery was evil. He would not participate in enslaving others.

  The eldest member of the council leaned forward, her fingers steepled in front of her face as she stared at them with great concentration. “This is more than a petty crime.” Lilian Freeland’s voice was soft, but full of the authority that came with wealth, or what passed for wealth on such a poor planet as Livre. Her sheep and her crops provided for half the valley, and in such difficult times, that was wealth enough. “This is not a child’s prank, calling for a simple fine.”

  “I doubt either intended so much damage.” Shan didn’t turn around when he addressed the group. Instead, he watched their ghost images in the reflections of the glass. Naite rolled his eyes, but Shan didn’t expect anything else. They were brothers, and some tie in the blood meant that, whatever side Shan took, Naite took his own position opposite.

  Bari Ruiz spoke, his voice slow and careful. “They are both very young. The young make mistakes.”

  “Young people break dishes, not water tanks.” Naite leaned forward, his large hands braced on the polished table. “Look at the water they wasted, the crops they ruined! Do you know how long it will take to repair the tanks? Our supplies of welding materials and metals are limited, and these two idiots risked permanent damage to get revenge for some imagined insult George Young offered their dead father.” His voice rose until it boomed in the small room.

  George Young’s name put a sour look on even Bari’s face, and there was not a more generous and forgiving soul on the planet. Bari had been voted in to represent those who focused on raising children, and his patience was endless… until someone brought up George Young. Clearly, Landholder Young could annoy even the most patient man on the planet.

  For a moment, Bari followed the grain of the wood in the table with his finger. “They grieve their father.”

  “Their grief should not cost the community entire fields,” Naite quickly answered.

  Shan hesitated, not sure how to convince the older members of the council to show a little more forgiveness. Before he could organize his thoughts, Kevin Starwalker cleared his throat. Lilian tilted her head to the side and rested her cheek on her hands as she considered him.

  Kevin stood up, his eyes carefully avoiding all their gazes and his heavily calloused fingers playing with a small carving. Tiny white scars stood out on his dark knuckles, the mark of a carpenter. Shan knew that he would look for a practical solution. Right now, he was pressing his lips together so tightly that they were nearly as white as his hair. “I dislike ordering young people into slavery, but if we don’t, what will happen to these two?” Kevin finally looked at each of them, his dark eyes obviously looking for any other solution—any way to protect the community without condemning two young souls.

  Shan finally turned and stepp
ed forward. “I can take them into the church until they decide where to take employment. Their father’s land can go to Landholder Young, to repay him for the damage.” Shan fervently prayed for them to listen to his words, even if he was the youngest on the council. As the representative of the church, his opinion should carry some weight. Hopefully, it would carry enough weight to keep these two young fools out of slavery. Of course, they would still suffer the loss of their father’s land, but that wouldn’t hurt as much as loss of their freedom.

  “Their father’s land wasn’t worth two tanks of water.” Lilian dismissed the idea with a wave of her hand. Like Kevin, her hair had turned white, but she was pale, with washed-out blue eyes that made her look almost fairy like, as though she had slipped out of some Earth novel and landed on Livre. But he doubted a fairy would choose their poor world—a world so poor that they just could not afford to leave able-bodied workers living in cells and eating the food provided by those who fought Livre’s dunes to carve out fields.

  However, Shan wasn’t ready to give up. “We could enter a judgment and order them to devote half their wages to repaying Landholder Young.”

  Naite’s face left no doubt about his opinion. “They aren’t trained. The work they’ll get will be little more than they need to feed themselves.” Naite crossed his arms, daring Shan to disagree with that. Lilian held up her hand to stop any more debate.

  “They aren’t children,” she said firmly. “They may have only meant to damage the irrigation system, but even that would have killed the seedlings, and as the children of a farmer, they knew it. They are too old to claim the ignorance of youth and too young to offer anything in compensation.”

  “Lilian.” Shan stepped forward, begging her with his gaze not to condemn these young people by taking a position against them. “Slavery is not a system that reflects well on us as a community. Every time we pass judgment on someone, ordering them into bondage for some length of time, we damage ourselves—our own souls.”

 

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