LITTLE FUZZY WAS excited and happy. He always liked to go for
trips, and this was a trip to a new place he had never seen before,
a place called Yellowsand. That meant Rohd-Nasig; it would be a
sandy place, like beside a river. At this place, Pappy Vic and
other Big Ones were digging the top off a mountain and throwing it
down in a deep-place, to get bright-stones out of black hard-rock.
All Big Ones wanted bright-stones because they were pretty, and
Pappy Vic traded them with other Big Ones, and part of what he
traded for was nice things to give to the Fuzzies. Pappy Jack and
Pappy Gerd had found this place, and now it belonged to
Gov’men’; that was why all the Big Ones made their
name-marks on the papers that time at Pappy Ben Place.
Pappy Vic sat in front, making the aircar fly; Little Fuzzy and
Diamond were on the back seat, looking out the windows. They were
high up; they could see everything spread out below, just like the
make-like-country things Pappy Jack had, the maps. He could see
where he and the others of his band had come down from the
sun’s right hand, the north, hunting land-prawns, for
many-many days, between new-leaf time and groundberry-time, before
he found Wonderful Place and got into it and made friends with
Pappy Jack. He saw the river that had been too big to cross, and
remembered how they had gone to sun-downward, west, along it for
many days before it was small enough to go over.
If only they had known how to build the rafts the way Pappy Jack
and Pappy Gerd and Unka Pancho showed them! But now they
didn’t need rafts. The Big Ones would take them in aircars,
high over all the rivers and mountains; why, it had taken more days
than he could count to come south to Wonderful Place, and now they
were flying over it before one could make talk about it.
“Look far-far ahead,” Diamond told him. “See
mountains go from west to east?” Diamond knew the Big One
words; Pappy Vic had taught him. “Yellowsand there. Soon see
everything, then go down, go on ground.”
There was an aircar ahead, a green one; it was one that Pappy
George’s blue-clothes police went about in. Maybe they were
hunting harpies; they killed many harpies with big shootfast guns.
Pappy Vic made talk with whoever was in it, with the talk-far
things, the radio. They passed over a mountain; it was not steep as
they approached, but it dropped sharply on the other side. Then he
knew they were far-far to the north. He remembered this kind of
mountain. There was a river on the other side, and another
mountain, rising gradually and dropping sharply on the other side,
and another mountain beyond that. Beyond the far mountain was a
yellow haze. Diamond saw it and pointed excitedly.
“Is Yellowsand, Pappy Vic digging-place!” he said.
“Is dust. Much dust where Big Ones dig.”
“You kids, look out right window,” Pappy Vic said.
“I go around, so you see from high-up. Then go out over
mountain, come up deep-down place.”
Pappy Vic made the aircar come down a little and go slowly. They
passed over the mountain, with Diamond beside him pointing. There
were two rivers back of this mountain; they ran together, and where
they made one was a split place in the mountain beyond, and they
ran into it. And there was Yellowsand, Pappy Vic’s place; it
was much bigger than Wonderful Place. There were at least a hand of
hands of houses . . . what was the Big One word for that many?
Twenty-five. The Big Ones had names for how many anything was, even
the leaves on a big tree. And he could see the deep place where the
two rivers made one and ran out through the mountain, and beside
this the Big Ones were working, many-many of them, with many-many
machines; digging machines and picking-up machines and
ground-pushing machines and big carry-things aircars.
Pappy Vic must have many-many friends, to come and help him dig
like this, and more were coming, because they were building more
houses. Everybody must like Pappy Vic.
Pappy Vic took the car out over the top of the mountain, and
Little Fuzzy was surprised. He had thought that there would be a
valley and another mountain sloping up beyond, but there was not.
The mountain went almost straight down, very-very far, and beyond
it was flat country, with little hills, and then bigger hills until
he could see no farther. Pappy Vic made the car go down beside the
face of the mountain till they were almost at the bottom, and then
turned and went to where the mountain was split and the river came
out of it. He looked up through the hard see-through stuff on the
top of the car, amazed at how far it was up to the top. If he saw
nothing else, this alone was worth coming to see.
The river came out so fast that it was foaming white; on either
side were beaches of sand, and he could see why the Big Ones called
this place Yellowsand; beyond the beaches trees grew back to where
the mountain started to go up. Nobody could cross this river, not
even Big Ones, not even with rafts.
“Bad place,” Diamond told him. “Not go near.
Get in river, make dead right away.”
“That’s right, Little Fuzzy. Don’t go near
that river at all,” Pappy Vic said. “And look ahead,
there.”
There was a falling-water. He had seen falling-waters before,
but never one so high as this. Even inside the car he could hear
it; it was loud like thunder all the time. And far above, big
carry-things aircars were coming out over the deep place and
dumping loads of rock and ground and even whole trees that had been
dug up by the roots. Pappy Vic made the aircar go straight up so
that they could watch the falling-water until they were up above
the top.
Then they went over the place where all Pappy Vic’s
friends were digging for him, and he looked down, watching all the
work that was going on, until the car came down among the bright
metal houses, in front of one big one, and there was a hand or so
of Big Ones waiting for them. They all wore clothes like Pappy Jack
wore when he was at home at Wonderful Place, except two, whose
names were Chief and Captain, who wore blue police clothes, and
all carried one-hand guns, like the Big Ones at Wonderful Place.
They were all nice.
Pappy Vic showed him where he and Diamond would sleep, and he
left his chopper-digger there, though he kept his shoulder bag.
Then Pappy Vic took him and Diamond out to look at the
digging-place. Diamond had seen it many times before; he explained
all about it, how they had to take the soft yellow rock off the top
of the black hard-rock, and then crack up the hard-rock to find the
shining stones inside. It was interesting to watch how they did it,
and he saw a wonderful thing, a wide moving-strip, like the
moving-strips and the moving steps inside buildings in Big House
Place, only much bigger, which carried the black hard-rock into a
place with strong wire fence all around.
Pappy Vic took him and Diamond into this place. Here the
hard-rock was cracked, and the shining stones gotten out. There
were many-many Big Ones working at this. Also, there were many
police-clothes Big Ones, with one-hand guns on their belts, and
little two-hand shootfast guns, all standing around watching. They
must be afraid that bad Big Ones would come and try to take the
shining stones. And he saw the place where the shining stones were
sorted out. They were very pretty, all bright like fire. No wonder
they had to be careful nobody would take pretty-things like
that.
Then they went back to the big metal house, and it was
lunchtime. They gave him and Diamond estee-fee to eat. For a long
time after lunch Pappy Vic and the others made talk. It was Big One
talk, and Little Fuzzy understood very little of it, but it seemed
to be about the work that was being done here. He and Diamond
played on the floor, and he smoked his pipe. Diamond didn’t
smoke; he didn’t like it.
In the afternoon, Pappy Vic took them up in an aircar to watch
his friends making blast. He knew all about that. The Big Ones put
something in the ground and got far away from it, and it went off
like a gun only much-much louder, and there was smoke and dust and
big rocks flew high up. It made digging easier, but it was
dangerous to be close to it; and, while Big Ones didn’t mind
it, it made bumps in the ground that hurt Fuzzies’ feet. That
was why Pappy Vic took him and Diamond up in the aircar while it
was happening. As soon as the blasts were done, the Big Ones all
moved in again with their machines and started digging.
Pappy Vic took him and Diamond back to the big metal house, and
they ate more estee-fee, and played with Diamond’s things.
And then it was Diamond’s nap-time, and he lay down on his
blankets and went to sleep.
Little Fuzzy lay down beside Diamond and tried to sleep too, but
he couldn’t. He was too excited about all the things he had
seen. He thought about all Pappy Vic’s friends helping him
dig, and all the machines they had to work with, and then he
thought about all the pretty shining-stones he had seen, all the
colors there were, and bright like hot coals in a fire. He wanted a
shining-stone himself, to take back to Wonderful Place and show to
the others there.
He knew that Pappy Vic would give him one if he asked for it,
but Pappy Jack had told him that he must never ask people for
things when he was away from home. Well, maybe he could find one
for himself. Of course, all the shining-stones here belonged to
Pappy Vic, but if he found one himself and asked if he could keep
it, that would be different from asking for one Pappy Vic had
found. He thought of asking Diamond about this, but Diamond was
asleep, and it was never right to bother people who were sleeping
unless something was wrong or there was danger.
So he decided to go out by himself and look for one. He put on
his shoulder bag and picked up his chopper-digger, because he might
find a land-prawn, and went out, going in the direction of the edge
of the deep-place, away from where the Big Ones were working. He
found much black-rock in a place where they had been digging a
little once and had stopped, and looked all around, but he found no
shining-stones. Maybe they had found all the shining-stones that
were here. He went to the edge of the deep place and looked down,
and away down at the bottom he saw more black-rock.
He knew that Pappy Vic and Diamond had both said that he was to
stay out of the deep-place, but this was far away from where the
Big Ones were throwing the top of the mountain down into it; it
would not be dangerous here. He started to climb down.
It was hard climbing, and much farther down than he had thought,
and several times he was tempted to turn back, but he could see
black-rock at the bottom and kept on. He wanted to find a
shining-stone for himself. There was much loose rock, and he had to
be careful where he put his feet. He had to use his chopper-digger
to help him and cling to small bushes that grew on the steep side
of the deep-place, and there were bushes and even trees that had
been dug up and thrown over when the Big Ones had been digging
above. He had to be very careful among them.
Finally, he was down to the very edge of the river; it was fast
and foamed among rocks, and he began to wish he had not come down
here. The black hard-rock he found was all broken into little
pieces, none bigger than his body, and he knew now that there would
be no shining-stones. He knew what the Big Ones did; they broke the
black-rock small and put a thing Pappy Vic called a scanner on the
pieces, and it told if there were shining stones inside.
For a moment he looked at the broken black-rock, and then he
said, “Sunnabish-go-hell-goddamn!” He didn’t know
what these words meant, but Big Ones always said them when things
went wrong. Then he started along the edge of the river, looking
for a less steep place to go up again, farther away from where
Pappy Vic’s friends were throwing rock down. Looking around,
he saw a nice flat rock, and another rock just above it, and a bush
he could hold to above that.
He jumped down from the uprooted tree onto which he had climbed,
onto the flat rock. As soon as his feet touched it, the other rocks
around him were sliding, too. He struggled to regain his balance,
and the chopper-digger flew out of his hand; he heard it fall with
a clink among the rocks above him. Then he was sliding toward the
river, and he was more frightened than he had ever been, even when
a bush-goblin had almost caught him long ago—and then he was in the
water.
Something heavy hit him from behind. He clutched at it . . .
LITTLE FUZZY WAS excited and happy. He always liked to go for
trips, and this was a trip to a new place he had never seen before,
a place called Yellowsand. That meant Rohd-Nasig; it would be a
sandy place, like beside a river. At this place, Pappy Vic and
other Big Ones were digging the top off a mountain and throwing it
down in a deep-place, to get bright-stones out of black hard-rock.
All Big Ones wanted bright-stones because they were pretty, and
Pappy Vic traded them with other Big Ones, and part of what he
traded for was nice things to give to the Fuzzies. Pappy Jack and
Pappy Gerd had found this place, and now it belonged to
Gov’men’; that was why all the Big Ones made their
name-marks on the papers that time at Pappy Ben Place.
Pappy Vic sat in front, making the aircar fly; Little Fuzzy and
Diamond were on the back seat, looking out the windows. They were
high up; they could see everything spread out below, just like the
make-like-country things Pappy Jack had, the maps. He could see
where he and the others of his band had come down from the
sun’s right hand, the north, hunting land-prawns, for
many-many days, between new-leaf time and groundberry-time, before
he found Wonderful Place and got into it and made friends with
Pappy Jack. He saw the river that had been too big to cross, and
remembered how they had gone to sun-downward, west, along it for
many days before it was small enough to go over.
If only they had known how to build the rafts the way Pappy Jack
and Pappy Gerd and Unka Pancho showed them! But now they
didn’t need rafts. The Big Ones would take them in aircars,
high over all the rivers and mountains; why, it had taken more days
than he could count to come south to Wonderful Place, and now they
were flying over it before one could make talk about it.
“Look far-far ahead,” Diamond told him. “See
mountains go from west to east?” Diamond knew the Big One
words; Pappy Vic had taught him. “Yellowsand there. Soon see
everything, then go down, go on ground.”
There was an aircar ahead, a green one; it was one that Pappy
George’s blue-clothes police went about in. Maybe they were
hunting harpies; they killed many harpies with big shootfast guns.
Pappy Vic made talk with whoever was in it, with the talk-far
things, the radio. They passed over a mountain; it was not steep as
they approached, but it dropped sharply on the other side. Then he
knew they were far-far to the north. He remembered this kind of
mountain. There was a river on the other side, and another
mountain, rising gradually and dropping sharply on the other side,
and another mountain beyond that. Beyond the far mountain was a
yellow haze. Diamond saw it and pointed excitedly.
“Is Yellowsand, Pappy Vic digging-place!” he said.
“Is dust. Much dust where Big Ones dig.”
“You kids, look out right window,” Pappy Vic said.
“I go around, so you see from high-up. Then go out over
mountain, come up deep-down place.”
Pappy Vic made the aircar come down a little and go slowly. They
passed over the mountain, with Diamond beside him pointing. There
were two rivers back of this mountain; they ran together, and where
they made one was a split place in the mountain beyond, and they
ran into it. And there was Yellowsand, Pappy Vic’s place; it
was much bigger than Wonderful Place. There were at least a hand of
hands of houses . . . what was the Big One word for that many?
Twenty-five. The Big Ones had names for how many anything was, even
the leaves on a big tree. And he could see the deep place where the
two rivers made one and ran out through the mountain, and beside
this the Big Ones were working, many-many of them, with many-many
machines; digging machines and picking-up machines and
ground-pushing machines and big carry-things aircars.
Pappy Vic must have many-many friends, to come and help him dig
like this, and more were coming, because they were building more
houses. Everybody must like Pappy Vic.
Pappy Vic took the car out over the top of the mountain, and
Little Fuzzy was surprised. He had thought that there would be a
valley and another mountain sloping up beyond, but there was not.
The mountain went almost straight down, very-very far, and beyond
it was flat country, with little hills, and then bigger hills until
he could see no farther. Pappy Vic made the car go down beside the
face of the mountain till they were almost at the bottom, and then
turned and went to where the mountain was split and the river came
out of it. He looked up through the hard see-through stuff on the
top of the car, amazed at how far it was up to the top. If he saw
nothing else, this alone was worth coming to see.
The river came out so fast that it was foaming white; on either
side were beaches of sand, and he could see why the Big Ones called
this place Yellowsand; beyond the beaches trees grew back to where
the mountain started to go up. Nobody could cross this river, not
even Big Ones, not even with rafts.
“Bad place,” Diamond told him. “Not go near.
Get in river, make dead right away.”
“That’s right, Little Fuzzy. Don’t go near
that river at all,” Pappy Vic said. “And look ahead,
there.”
There was a falling-water. He had seen falling-waters before,
but never one so high as this. Even inside the car he could hear
it; it was loud like thunder all the time. And far above, big
carry-things aircars were coming out over the deep place and
dumping loads of rock and ground and even whole trees that had been
dug up by the roots. Pappy Vic made the aircar go straight up so
that they could watch the falling-water until they were up above
the top.
Then they went over the place where all Pappy Vic’s
friends were digging for him, and he looked down, watching all the
work that was going on, until the car came down among the bright
metal houses, in front of one big one, and there was a hand or so
of Big Ones waiting for them. They all wore clothes like Pappy Jack
wore when he was at home at Wonderful Place, except two, whose
names were Chief and Captain, who wore blue police clothes, and
all carried one-hand guns, like the Big Ones at Wonderful Place.
They were all nice.
Pappy Vic showed him where he and Diamond would sleep, and he
left his chopper-digger there, though he kept his shoulder bag.
Then Pappy Vic took him and Diamond out to look at the
digging-place. Diamond had seen it many times before; he explained
all about it, how they had to take the soft yellow rock off the top
of the black hard-rock, and then crack up the hard-rock to find the
shining stones inside. It was interesting to watch how they did it,
and he saw a wonderful thing, a wide moving-strip, like the
moving-strips and the moving steps inside buildings in Big House
Place, only much bigger, which carried the black hard-rock into a
place with strong wire fence all around.
Pappy Vic took him and Diamond into this place. Here the
hard-rock was cracked, and the shining stones gotten out. There
were many-many Big Ones working at this. Also, there were many
police-clothes Big Ones, with one-hand guns on their belts, and
little two-hand shootfast guns, all standing around watching. They
must be afraid that bad Big Ones would come and try to take the
shining stones. And he saw the place where the shining stones were
sorted out. They were very pretty, all bright like fire. No wonder
they had to be careful nobody would take pretty-things like
that.
Then they went back to the big metal house, and it was
lunchtime. They gave him and Diamond estee-fee to eat. For a long
time after lunch Pappy Vic and the others made talk. It was Big One
talk, and Little Fuzzy understood very little of it, but it seemed
to be about the work that was being done here. He and Diamond
played on the floor, and he smoked his pipe. Diamond didn’t
smoke; he didn’t like it.
In the afternoon, Pappy Vic took them up in an aircar to watch
his friends making blast. He knew all about that. The Big Ones put
something in the ground and got far away from it, and it went off
like a gun only much-much louder, and there was smoke and dust and
big rocks flew high up. It made digging easier, but it was
dangerous to be close to it; and, while Big Ones didn’t mind
it, it made bumps in the ground that hurt Fuzzies’ feet. That
was why Pappy Vic took him and Diamond up in the aircar while it
was happening. As soon as the blasts were done, the Big Ones all
moved in again with their machines and started digging.
Pappy Vic took him and Diamond back to the big metal house, and
they ate more estee-fee, and played with Diamond’s things.
And then it was Diamond’s nap-time, and he lay down on his
blankets and went to sleep.
Little Fuzzy lay down beside Diamond and tried to sleep too, but
he couldn’t. He was too excited about all the things he had
seen. He thought about all Pappy Vic’s friends helping him
dig, and all the machines they had to work with, and then he
thought about all the pretty shining-stones he had seen, all the
colors there were, and bright like hot coals in a fire. He wanted a
shining-stone himself, to take back to Wonderful Place and show to
the others there.
He knew that Pappy Vic would give him one if he asked for it,
but Pappy Jack had told him that he must never ask people for
things when he was away from home. Well, maybe he could find one
for himself. Of course, all the shining-stones here belonged to
Pappy Vic, but if he found one himself and asked if he could keep
it, that would be different from asking for one Pappy Vic had
found. He thought of asking Diamond about this, but Diamond was
asleep, and it was never right to bother people who were sleeping
unless something was wrong or there was danger.
So he decided to go out by himself and look for one. He put on
his shoulder bag and picked up his chopper-digger, because he might
find a land-prawn, and went out, going in the direction of the edge
of the deep-place, away from where the Big Ones were working. He
found much black-rock in a place where they had been digging a
little once and had stopped, and looked all around, but he found no
shining-stones. Maybe they had found all the shining-stones that
were here. He went to the edge of the deep place and looked down,
and away down at the bottom he saw more black-rock.
He knew that Pappy Vic and Diamond had both said that he was to
stay out of the deep-place, but this was far away from where the
Big Ones were throwing the top of the mountain down into it; it
would not be dangerous here. He started to climb down.
It was hard climbing, and much farther down than he had thought,
and several times he was tempted to turn back, but he could see
black-rock at the bottom and kept on. He wanted to find a
shining-stone for himself. There was much loose rock, and he had to
be careful where he put his feet. He had to use his chopper-digger
to help him and cling to small bushes that grew on the steep side
of the deep-place, and there were bushes and even trees that had
been dug up and thrown over when the Big Ones had been digging
above. He had to be very careful among them.
Finally, he was down to the very edge of the river; it was fast
and foamed among rocks, and he began to wish he had not come down
here. The black hard-rock he found was all broken into little
pieces, none bigger than his body, and he knew now that there would
be no shining-stones. He knew what the Big Ones did; they broke the
black-rock small and put a thing Pappy Vic called a scanner on the
pieces, and it told if there were shining stones inside.
For a moment he looked at the broken black-rock, and then he
said, “Sunnabish-go-hell-goddamn!” He didn’t know
what these words meant, but Big Ones always said them when things
went wrong. Then he started along the edge of the river, looking
for a less steep place to go up again, farther away from where
Pappy Vic’s friends were throwing rock down. Looking around,
he saw a nice flat rock, and another rock just above it, and a bush
he could hold to above that.
He jumped down from the uprooted tree onto which he had climbed,
onto the flat rock. As soon as his feet touched it, the other rocks
around him were sliding, too. He struggled to regain his balance,
and the chopper-digger flew out of his hand; he heard it fall with
a clink among the rocks above him. Then he was sliding toward the
river, and he was more frightened than he had ever been, even when
a bush-goblin had almost caught him long ago—and then he was in the
water.
Something heavy hit him from behind. He clutched at it . . .