7
THE ISLAND
As we cast off from Striks boat, Seawrack said, That was
nice. I wish we saw more boats. The clear liquor had
brought spots of color to her cheeks, and a dreamy smile I found
enchanting to her lips. I explained (I can never forget it) that the
sea was immense, and that there were only a handful of towns along
the coast from which boats might come.
If you and I were to take this sloop out on Lake Limna on a
day as fine as this, I said, we would rarely be out of sight of a
dozen sails. Lake Limna is a very big lake, but its only a lake just
the same. Its the biggest thing near Viron, but its not the biggest
thing near Palustria, because its not near Palustria at all. The sea
is probably the biggest thing on this entire whorl. Besides, Lake
Limna is close to Viron, which is a very large city. Half the towns
that we talk about here would be called villages if they were near
Viron. I would be astonished if we were to see anyone else before
we sight land.
I was reminded of that little speech this afternoon, when someone
told me I was minor godby which he meant that I had insight
into everything. It would be easy to let myself be misled by
remarks of that kind, which both the speaker and his hearers must
know perfectly well are untrue. They are made out of politeness,
and no one would be more shocked than the people who make
them to learn that they had been accepted like propositions in logic.
Up there I nearly wrote: when I was in the schola. So accustomed
have I become to talking in that fashion, as I must. If I
were to speak of Nettle, and the building of our house and mill, or
tell these good, happy, worshipful people how after failing as farmers
we succeeded as papermakers, they would riot.
They would riot; and if I were not killed a second time, a good
many others would die. I have so much on my conscience already;
I do not believe I could bear that, too.
Nor would the people allow me to leave even if they knew who
I really am. The poor people, I mean. Aside from Hari Mau and a
few others, it is not the chief men who frequent my court who
really need and value me, but the peasant farmers and their families,
their women and their children especially. That, at least, seems the
common perception.
It may not be true. The men are less noisy in their praise, less
emotional, as one would expect. Still they are attached to me, as I
have ample reason to believe. Women and children see me as a
presiding councilor, as a chief man richer and more powerful than
the chief men who oppress them, someone who will help them in
time of trouble. Men see a just judge. Or if not a just judge, a judge
who strives to be just. Silk (I mean the real Silk) valued love very
highly. He was right, certainly. Love is a wonder, a magic potion,
an act of theurgy or even a continuing theophany. No word is too
strong, and in fact no word is really strong enough.
But love is the last need a group has, not the first. If it were
the first, there could be no such groups. Justice is the first need,
the mortar that binds together a village or a town, or even a city.
Or the crew of a boat. No one would take part in any such thing
if he did not believe that he would be treated fairly.
These people cheat one another at every opportunityso it
seems at times, at least. Under the Long Sun, they were ruled by
force and the fear of force. Here on Blue there is no force and no
fear sufficient to rule. There is nothing, really, except our book and
me. In the Long Sun Whorl they believed that their rajan would
take their lives for the least disobedience, and they were right. Here
in their new town they must believe that every word and every
action proceeds from my concern for them and for justice. And they
must be right about that, too.
What will become of them when I leave? For a long time I was
unable to think about it. Now that I have, the answer is obvious.
Just as in New Viron, they will steal, cheat and tyrannize until one
chief man rises above all the rest. Then he will not bully and cheat,
but take whatever he wants and kill all who oppose him. He will
be their new rajan, and their original city will have been transferred
from the Whorl to this beautiful new whorl we call Blue, complete
in every significant detail.
Meanwhile, here I am. They cannot help seeing that I am doing
nothing that one of them could not do. Self-interest is necessary to
every undertaking and to everyoneor that is how it seems to me,
although I am quite sure Maytera Marble would argue passionately.
They must be brought to understand that any action of theirs that
makes their town worse is bound to be against their own interests.
It is better to have no cards in a town in which no one steals than
to have a case of cards in a town full of thieves. I must remember
that, and tell them so as soon as a suitable occasion arises. An honest
person in an honest town can gain a case full of cards by honest
means, and enjoy it when he has it. In a town of thieves, cards must
be guarded night and day; and when the cards are gone, as they
will be sooner or later, the thieves will remain.
*
* *
Looking over what I wrote last night, I see I strayed from my topic,
as I too often do. I meant to say (I believe) that the man who called
me a minor god meant that I am always right, when he ought to
have meant that I always try to do what is right. What else can the
distinction between a minor god and a major devil be?
The lesser gods (as Maytera Mint taught us before Maytera
Rose displaced her, and long before she became General Mint) were
Pass friends. He invited them to board the Whorl with his family
and himself. The devils came aboard by stealth and trickery, like
Krait, who came aboard our sloop that night, proving yet again to
me (if not to Seawrack) that quite often I do not know what I am
talking about.
The near calm that had succeeded the storm had endured
throughout the remainder of the day. What woke me, I think, was
the rattle of Babbies feet on the planks, followed by a sudden still-
ness. I sat up.
The sea was so calm that the sloop seemed as steady as a bed
on shore. Seawrack was sleeping on her side, as she frequently did,
her mouth slightly open. The mainsail, which I had double-reefed
and left set, found no breath of air to flutter in; nor did the mainsail
halyards tap the mast, or move at all. Beyond the shadow of the
little foredeck, the sloop was bathed in the baleful light of Green,
which made it seem almost an illusion, a ghost vessel that would,
when day at last returned, sink into the air.
Aft, I saw a dark mass that seemed too large as well as too
splayed for Babbie, rather as if someone had thrown a cloak or a
blanket over him. I crawled out from under the foredeck, got to
my feet, and drew Sinews hunting knife; and a cold, calm voice
the voice of a boy or young mansaid, You wont need that.
I went aft as far as the mast. To tell the truth, I was afraid that
there might be more than one, and was as frightened as I have ever
been in my life.
Didnt you hear me? I havent come for your blood. The
inhumu must have looked up as he spoke; I saw his eyes gleam in
the ghastly green light.
Seawrack called, What is it? Oh!
If you do not stay where you are, the inhumu said, I will
kill your pet. I will have to, since I dont intend to fight all three
of you together.
Thats nothing to me, I told him, lying consciously and de-
liberately. If you havent come for our blood, go away. I wont
try to stop you, and neither will she. I had stowed my slug gun
in one of the chests; it would not have been less available to me if
it had been back on the Lizard.
Where bound?
I shook my head. I wont tell you.
I could find out.
Then you dont have to learn it from me.
Tell me at once, the inhumu demanded, or Ill kill your
hus.
Go right ahead. I took a step toward him. You said you
didnt want to fight all three of us. The prospect of fighting you
alone doesnt bother me. If I have to fight you, I will. And Ill kill
you.
His wings spread in less than a second and he rose like a kite,
leaving poor Babbie huddled and trembling in front of the steers-
mans seat.
I had to take a little blood to quiet him. The inhumu had
settled on our masthead, from which he grinned down at me like
a very devil.
When I did not reply, he added, You have a most attractive
young woman.
Looking up at him, it struck me that he was a devil in sober fact,
that all the legends of devils found their origins in him and in the vile
race he represented. Yes, I said, glancing at Seawrack, who had left
the shelter of the foredeck. Youre right. She certainly is.
A valuable possession.
Not mine, I told him. Not now and not ever.
Seawrack herself said, But he belongs to me. She joined me
at the foot of the mast, and linked her arm in mine. The Mother
gave him to me. What of it?
Nothing at all, if were friends. I dont prey upon my friends,
or pry into their affairs. Its not our way. Dare I ask where you two
are going?
I said, No.
Seawracks arm tightened. You told that other boat.
But Im not going to tell him. Im not even going to ask why
he wants to know.
As I returned Sinews knife to its sheath, I pointed to the chest.
Theres a slug gun in there. Im going to get it out. If youre still
up there when I do, Im going to kill you. You can fight or run.
Its up to you.
I opened the chest without taking my eyes off him, and he flew
as I reached into it. For a few seconds a great, silent bat fluttered
against the stars before disappearing into the blackness between
them.
That was a... Seawrack hesitated. I dont remember the
names, but you told me about them and I wasnt sure they were
real.
An inhumu. He was male, I believe, so inhumu. Females are
inhuma. Their race is the inhumi. Those words come from another
town, because we didnt know they existed in Viron and had no
name for them but devil. Anyway the inhumi is what everybody
here calls them.
She had dropped to her knees next to Babbie. Hes sick,
isnt he?
Hes lost blood. He needs rest and a great deal of water.
Thats a shame because we havent got much, but if he doesnt get
it hes likely to die. He may die anyway.
They drink blood. You said that. We havewe had worms
that did, too. But you could pull them off, and some fish liked
them.
We call those leeches. I was collecting Babbies pan and a
bottle of water.
He wasnt like that.
No, I agreed, theyre not. Do you know of anything they
are like?
She shook her head.
I knelt beside her and poured water into the pan, then held it
so Babbie could drink from it, which he did slowly but thirstily,
drinking and drinking, and snuffling into the water as if he would
never stop.
Hes very strong, Seawrack said. He was. Iveyou know.
Played with him. He was strong, and he has those big teeth. The
inhumi must be strong too.
I suppose they are. Certainly theyd have to be strong, very
strong indeed, to fly. But they are light, too, and soft, which lets
them reshape themselves the way they do. People say that a strong
man can throw one to the ground and kill it in most cases. Id
guess that this one clung to Babbies back where he couldnt reach
it until it had weakened himbut Ive never fought one myself.
Will it come back?
I shrugged, and went forward to fetch an old sail with which I
hoped to keep Babbie warm. While I was tucking it around him,
Seawrack said, Couldnt another one come, too?
Its possible, I told her. Ive heard that they almost always
return to houses where they have fed. Im not sure its true,
however. Even if it is, an animal on a boat may not count. They generally
leave animals alone.
Your slug gun. Arent you going to get it?
I did, and loaded it. At home, I had grown accustomed to
locking my needier away when the twins were small; plainly, I was
not at home anymore. We built our house on Lizard Island very
solidly for fear of the inhumi, I told Seawrack. Double-log walls
and heavy, solid doors. Very small shuttered windows with iron bars
across them. Its not possible for you and me to protect this sloop
like that, but the better prepared we are for them, the less likely it
will be that well have to put our preparations to use.
She nodded solemnly. Show me how to use your gun.
You cant. It takes two hands to control the recoil and cycle
the action. A needier is what you need, but I gave mine to Sinew,
so we havent got one. I can give you his knife if you want it.
Your sons? She backed away. I wont take it. You love it
too much.
Then get some sleep, I told her. Ill stand guard, and in a
couple of hours you can relieve me.
She edged past me to stroke Babbies massive head. Hes still
cold. Hes shaking.
There are a few other things, I said; I meant the blanket and
another old sail with which we sometimes covered ourselves. I can
get them, but I dont know how much good theyll do.
We could put him between us.
If Babbie had been even a trifle heavier, I doubt that the two
of us could have moved him at all. As it was, we rolled him onto
the cloth with which I had covered him and half lifted and half
dragged him, after bailing the bilge until scarcely a drop remained.
When he lay feet-first under the foredeck, with Seawrack on his
left and me on his right (and my slug gun between me and the
sloops side) and all of us almost too cramped to move, she said,
Ive been trying to remember about the inhumi. You said they
lived in the sky? In that green light? It doesnt seem like anyone
could live in those things.
Most people would tell you that everybody knows that people
live in or on the lights in the sky, but that no human being could
live in the sea. The inhumi are native to Green. Thats what
everyone says. Green is the big green light I showed you when we talked
about them before. Its much larger and brighter than any of the
stars.
I know which one. Weve got fish that shine like that down
where its always dark.
They may look like Green, I said, but they dont shine like
Green. Not really. Green shines because the light from the Short
Sun strikes it.
Its a place, like this boat?
Its a whole whorl. When I was a boy, people talked about
the whorl, as though it were the only whorl there wasas if
nothing could come in or go out. It wasnt true, even if it had been
once. There are three whorls here, really, and I suppose you could
say that as whorls go theyre pretty close together. Theres at least
one other, too, now that I come to think of itthe old Short Sun
Whorl, where my friend Maytera Marble was born.
You have to tell me about the inhumi, Seawrack said urgently.
Babbies head and shoulders blocked my view of her face.
Im trying to. I dont think there were any where Maytera
Marble came from, because she didnt know about them. So the
three whorls that we have to talk about when we consider the inhumi
are the Whorl, which Ill call the Long Sun Whorl to keep
things straight, Blue, which is where we are, and Green, the whorl
that brewed the big storm.
Go on.
Ill try to point out the Long Sun Whorl to you as well sometime,
because youll never find it for yourself. All that you can see
is a faint point of white light among the stars. Im guessing now,
but my guess is that its a good deal farther from both Blue and
Green than Green is from uscertainly its much farther away than
Green is from us right now.
Its where you were born?
Yes. It rose like a ghost in my mind, and I added, In Old
Viron, the city Ive sworn to go back to if I can, but I cannot be
certain that I spoke aloud.
Were there inhumus up there?
We didnt think so, but there was at least one. We thought
that he was one of us.
I dont understand.
I wouldnt expect you to, because the inhumu you just saw
didnt look like a human being. But he did, and I would guess that
the one we saw could have looked like that too, if he chose. I
surprised him when I woke up, and he didnt have time to disguise
himself. If hed had time and had wanted to deceive us, hed have
had a pretty good chance of succeeding. They frequently do.
Seawrack lay silent for a time. At length she said, Babbies
more like people.
I suppose I was resenting Babbies bristling back; in any event
I said, Im the only person that youve ever seen. Me, and the
sailors on Captain Striks boat.
She said nothing.
So you cant know how different people can be. Im about
the same age as
Me. Since Ive been up here Ive seen me. My face, my legs
and my arm, all in the water.
Your reflection, you mean.
And Im like you and the ones on the boat. The inhumi wasnt.
Babbies really more like us. I told you that, and he is.
The inhumis bodies arent like ours. I tried to think
of an enlightening comparison. We think of a crab as rigidits
like a trooper in armor. A trooper in armor can move his arms and legs, and
turn his head. But he cant change the shape of his body.
I cant change the shape of mine either. Seawrack sounded
puzzled.
Yes, you can, a little. You can stand up straight or slump, draw
in your stomach, throw out your chest, and so on. The inhumi can
do much more. They can shape their faces, for instance, much more
than we can by smiling or sucking in our cheeks. But I believe that
a better comparison might be with the Mother, who
I dont want to talk about Mother, Seawrack told me, and
after enlarging upon that with some emphasis she slept, or at least
pretended to sleep.
Whether she actually slept or not, I lay awake. I had been very
tired when we had gone to bed that evening, and had dropped off
to sleep almost at once. Now I had enjoyed three or four hours
sleep, and had been thoroughly awakened. I was still tired, but I
was no longer sleepy. Perhaps I was afraid that the inhumu would
return, although I did not admit that to myself. Whatever the reason,
I relaxed, pillowed my head on my hands by dint of driving
an elbow beneath Babbies thick neck, and thought about all the
things I would have told Seawrack if she had been willing to talk
longer.
The inhumi can fly, as everybody knows. They can even fly
through the airless vastness of the abyss, passing from Green to
Blue, and back to Green, when they are at or near conjunction. I
had never understood how that was possible, but as I lay under the
foredeck that night with my head where my feet ought to have
been, I recalled the batfish. Its wide fins had been a lot like wings,
and I have no doubt that it swam with them in the same way that a bird
flies. As a matter of fact, there are fishing birds that fly
through the water, swimming with the same wings they fly with,
and moving them in pretty much the same way.
From that it would seem possible for an ordinary fish to swim
through the air like the glowing fish that accompanied us almost to
Wichote, although it is not. If such a fish could, I decided, we could
fly ourselves. We can swim, after all. Not as well as fish, certainly
(here I found myself echoing Patera Quetzal, who had in sober fact
been an inhumu); and I could not swim half as well as Seawrack,
who shot through the water like an arrow. But although ordinary
fish cannot swim in air, they can jump into the air, and sometimes
jump quite far. I had seen fish jump many times, and had watched
a fish jump from the water onto a flat stone when I was on the rock
upon which Maytera Marble had built a hut for Mucor.
This, coupled with little need for breath, might explain how
the inhumi could go from one whorl to another, or so it seemed
to me. By an extreme effort, they could jump out of the great
sea of air surrounding the whorl they wished to leave, taking aim
at the whorl to which they wished to go. Their aim would not have
to be precise, since they would begin to fall toward the whorl they
were trying to reach as soon as they neared it. Landers, as I knew
even then, must be built so that they will not overheat when they
arrive at a new whorl. But landers are much larger than the largest
boats, and being constructed almost entirely of metals, they must
be much heavier. The inhumi are no bigger than small men, although
they appear so large when their wings are spread; and even
though they are strong, they are by no means heavy. Light objects
fall much more slowly than heavy ones, something that anyone may
see by dropping a feather as I have just dropped Orebs here at my
desk. The heat that troubles the landers must present no great problem
to the inhumi.
The need to survive for some time without air, as a man does
while swimming underwater, and the need to approach the target
whorl closely enough to be drawn to it explained the observation
that everyone who has looked into the matter has made, namely
that the inhumi cross only when the whorls are at or near conjunction.
All thisas I would have told Seawrack that nightwas not at
all complex, and demanded only that we not think of the inhumi
as men who could stretch their arms into wings. As soon as we
accepted the fact that they differ from us at least as much as snakes
do, it fell into place quite readily. The difficulty was explaining the
presence of the inhumu I had known as Patera Quetzal in the Whorl.
The Whorl is (or at least seems) far more remote from Blue
and Green than they are from each other. As with so many other
riddles, it is easy to speculate but impossible to know which speculation
is correctif any are.
My first, which I then believed the most probable, was that the
Whorl conjoins with either Blue or Green, or both, but only at very
infrequent intervals. We know that conjunctions with Green occur
every sixth year. That interval is determined by the motion of both
about the Short Sun. A third body, the Whorl, having a different
motion, presumably conjoins with one or both at a different interval.
Since we have observed no such conjunction during the twenty
years or so that we have been here on Blue, the interval is presumably
long. For convenience, I assumed an interval ten times as great,
which is to say one of sixty years. We had been on Blue for about
a third of that, and I was quite confident that Patera Quetzal had
been Prolocutor of Viron for thirty-three years prior to his death,
giving a total of fifty-three years and (under our assumption of sixty
years between conjunctions) allowing him seven in which to reach
the Whorl, become an augur, and rise to the highest office in the
Chapter.
That seemed rather short to meI would have imagined that
such a rise would require fifteen years if not more. If the speculation
I am recalling tonight had been correct, in other words if Patera
Quetzal had in fact crossed the abyss to the Whorl in the same way
that other inhumi go from Green to Blue, it followed that it had
been at least sixty-eight years since the last conjunction. It appeared
then, as it still does, that no conjunction is imminent; from which
I concluded that the period between conjunctions had to be considerably
longer, say one hundred years.
Even then, I realized that other explanations were possible and
might be correct. The landers were intended to return to the Whorl
for more colonists. Patera Quetzal could have boarded a much earlier
lander that did so, a lander whose departure was unknown to
the Crew, and perhaps even to Pas, as well as to us in Old Viron.
A third possibility (I thought) was that a group of inhumi had
built a lander of their own, in which they had traveled to the Whorl,
and that after arriving they had separated to hunt.
The fact of the matter, as I would have had to explain to Seawrack,
was that we knew frighteningly little about them. They did
not appear to make weapons for themselves, or to build houses or
boats, or any such thingbut appearances may be deceiving. General
Sabas pterotroopers had refused to fly wearing their packs, and
in fact carried nothing beyond their slug guns and twenty rounds
of ammunition. In the same way, the Fliers carried only their PMs
(which actually helped them fly, rather than burdening them) and
their instruments. It might be, as I thought that night, that the
inhumi were even less willing to weight themselves with equipment.
They flew much faster and much farther than Ranis pterotroopers
had, after all.
Farther even than the fliers had.
*
* *
When I wrote last night I lacked the energy to say all that I had
intended, which was a good deal. Regarding what I set down with
detachment this morning, I can see that most of it was not worth
the labor. My readersshould persons so singular ever existcan
speculate for themselves, and their speculations may be better than
mine. What I came near to saying, and should have said because it
is important and true, was that we on Blue had very little knowledge
of the nature and abilities of the inhumi. Raided, we could not
retaliate, and although they clearly knew a great deal about us, we
knew next to nothing about them. They came from Green. They
could fly, could speak as we did, and could counterfeit us. They
were strong, swam well, drank our blood, and usually (but not always)
fought without weapons, although they preferred stealth and
deception to fighting. Few people on Blue knew more than that,
and many did not know that much.
Even then I knew a bit more, having talked with Quetzal, and
with Silk and the present Prolocutor, who had known Quetzal
much better than I ever did. I knew that the inhumi were able to
counterfeit the whole array of human emotions, and possibly even
felt them just as we did; and that their deceptions were based on a
comprehensive understanding of the myriad ways in which men and
women think and act. I suspected that they were capable of deceiving
the very gods, since Echidna knew the Prolocutor was present
at her theophany, but did not appear to realize that he was an
inhumi. (Of course, she may simply not have cared, or not seen any
significant difference between them and ourselves.)
On the other hand, I felt quite certain that when Mucor had described Patera
Remora as speaking to the one who isnt there
when he was coadjutor, she did not mean that he prayed but rather
that to her roving spirit Patera Quetzal did not exist.
Seawrack and I were soon to become much more familiar with
the inhumi; but I am writing here of what I knew and guessed at
the time, errors and all.
*
* *
My advisors, who are all good, well-intentioned men, are forever
suggesting that I get down to business, although they never phrase
it quite so baldly. If action must be taken, they want it taken now,
immediately. Sinew was like that, too. When I decided that we
ought to build a new boat, he wanted to lay the keel that very day,
and would have been happy, I am sure, if he could have finished it
that day as well. In Sinew this impatience was the effect of youth;
it was something that he would get over, and indeed I believe that
he has largely gotten over it already.
In Rajya Mantri, Hari Mau, and the rest, I think it must come
from a tradition of warfare. Immediate action is the soul of war, as
I learned many years ago by observing General Mint. It is not the
soul of peace.
Last night Alubukhara (who is as round and sweet as the fruit
of that name, and almost as dark) said, If you wish to do a thing
again, you must do it slowly. I do not believe that is a proverb
here; if it were, I would have heard it before this. No doubt it was
a saying of her mothers. But it ought to be a proverb for courts
and for governments of every stripe, for sailors such as I once was,
and for writers. Hard decisions, I have found, become easy ones
when the judge understands the entire case. When a new burden
must be laid upon the people, we should remove two, and look
very carefully, first, at those we have chosen to remove. Those who
sail fast do not sail for long, while what is written with great rapidity
is rarely reador worth reading.
I would like this read, and not by one woman or man alone
(although I am very glad that you are reading it) but by so many
that it reaches the eyes of the men and the woman for whom it is
especially meant. My sons, I loved you so much! Am I really speaking
to you now? Nettle, my hearts delight, do you recall our first
night together in the Caldés Palace? There has never been another
night like that, and there can never be. I hope, and in my whole
life I have never been more serious and sincere, that you have been
unfaithful to me. That you have found a good and honest man to
cast his lot with yours and help you bring up our sons. Nettle, can
you hear my voice in this?
I wanted to write that the rest of the night on which Seawrack and
I first encountered Krait passed uneventfully, and that I sat up for
most of it stroking poor Babbies head. There. It is written.
But I should have said first that Seawrack was quite right in
thinking that I wanted to question her about the sea goddess she
called the Mother. Having found Seawrack exceedingly reluctant to
say much of anything about her, I had been trying to get at the
truth indirectly. At some fraction of the truth, I ought to have
written, and would have if I had not been hurrying ahead. (If
Sinews impatience was the result of youth, what is mine?)
A fraction of the truth, since even Seawrack, who had been
cared for by the goddess since before she could swim, cannot have
known everything.
Who, for that matter, could know the whole truth about Sea-
wrack? Not Seawrack herself, and that is completely certain even if
nothing else is. At the time about which I have been writing, the
time before Krait, I had not yet grasped the real riddle; but I will
give it here so that you who read may weigh things for yourself. I
am not, after all, writing merely to entertain you.
The real riddle concerning Seawrack is this: If the Mother took
care of Seawrack in order that Seawrack might lure others, as fowlers
use a captive bird, did the Mother send her back among her own
kindamong usso that she might lure more or lure them better?
To put it simply, did the Mother suffer a change of heart, or is she
pursuing some deep plan that will culminate in our destruction? It
is very important that we know this.
The wind picked up before noon, and we cracked along in a way
that had me plotting to spread more sail. I was ever a careful,
cautious sailor, as I have implied. But the cautious sailor must avoid
the sunken rock of overcaution, and it was apparent that additional
sail would speed us on our way without endangering us.
After a great deal of squinting at the western horizon, spitting,
and pulling my beard (all of which amused Seawrack in a way that
gladdened my heart, although I did not say so), I contrived an
extension to our mainsail from a stick that I lashed to the boom
and a long, triangular strip of canvas whose top I tied to the gaff.
It worked so well that I contrived another triangular sail, like a jib,
that we set on the forestay in imitation of Gyrfalcons boat,
reassuring myself by assuring Seawrack that we would take both in the
moment the breeze strengthened.
As a result of all this, we sighted the island before sundown.
Or at any rate we sighted an island we assumed was the one at
which Strik and his crew had watered. I have never been entirely
confident that it was in fact the same, although it may have been.
Certainly it fit their description, and we found it by following their
directions, that is, by sailing close-hauled almost due west. Later I
saw that there were many other islands of the same type all along
that coast, mountains covered with lush greenery rising out of the
sea. By favor of the southwest wind, we quickly discovered a small,
sheltered bay on the north side of the island, and a swift, rocky
stream at the end of it.
We anchored there and refilled our water bottles, and I sent
Babbie ashore and let him trot around and explore the steep green
wood. To tell the truth, I was feeling very guilty about having made
him stay on the sloop so often when we were going up the coast,
and was half minded to leave him there to recover his health as well
as his freedom; I felt sure it would be a happier as well as a healthier
place for him than my cramped little boat, and I recalled that Silk
had tried more than once to free Oreb. Throughout my life I have
done my best to imitate Silk (as I am doing here in Gaon), at times
with some success.
Perhaps I am getting better at it. They seem to think so, at least.
But I had better sleep.
*
* *
I should not have stopped last night before mentioning that we lay
at anchor in the bay that night. Seawrack and I slept side by side
under the foredeck, thankfully without Babbie; and that soon after
we lay down she asked whether we would put out again in the
morning. From her tone it was clear that she did not want to.
Neither did I; and so I said that I planned to stay another day
to hunt, and that with luck we would have fresh meat for supper
the next night. To the best of my memory, we had no meat left on
board at that time except the shank of the very salty ham that
Marrow had given me; and I was thoroughly tired of that, and still more
tired of fish.
The following day began bright and clear, and presented me
with what I then considered a serious problem, I having not the
least presentiment of what the island held in store for me. Seawrack
was anxious to go with me, and Babbie was even more anxious, if
that were possibleit would have been sheer cruelty to leave him
behind. Nonetheless, I was very conscious that if anything happened
to the sloop all hope of bringing Silk to New Viron would
be gone.
I considered leaving Babbie on board, as I had there; but how
much protection could a young hus provide? A young hus, I should
have said, who had by no means recovered all his strength? Against
a sudden gale, very little. Against the crew of some other boat that
put in to water as we had, just enough to get him killed.
I also considered asking Seawrack to stay. But if bad weather
struck, the best thing she could possibly do would be to furl the
sails (and they were furled already) and remain at anchor in the
little cove we had found, which the sloop would do by herself. As
for protecting it from the crew of another boat, how much could
one young woman do, without a weapon or a right arm? Against
honest men, the sloop would require no protection. By the other
kind she would be raped, killed, or both.
For a second or two, I even considered remaining behind myself;
but Seawrack could not use the slug gun, and might easily find
herself in danger. In the end, we all went. No doubt it was inevitable.
It was a silent, peaceful, lonesome place whose thickly forested
slopes seemed to be inhabited only by a few birds. Mighty trees
clung to rocks upon which it seemed that no tree could live, or
plunged deep roots into the black soil of little hidden dales. On
Green one finds trees without number, monstrous cannibals ten
times the height of the tallest trees I saw on the island; but they
are forever at war with their own kind, and are troubled all the
while by the trailing, coiling, murderous lianas that have seemed to
me the living embodiment of evil ever since I first beheld them.
There was nothing of Green here save the huge trunks, and bluffs and
rocky outcrops resembling Greens distant, towering escarpments
in about the same way that a housecat resembles a baletiger.
In one, we discovered a deep cave with its feet in clear cold
water, a dry cave with a ceiling high enough for a man to have
ridden a tall horse into it without bowing his head or taking off his
hat; and we spoke, Seawrack and I, of returning there after we had
brought Silk to New Viron. We would build a wall of stout logs to
close the entrance, and live there in peace and privacy all our days,
plant a garden, trap birds and small animals, and fish. Was it really
criminal of us to talk in that fashion? I knew that it could never be,
that Nettle and my sons and the mill would be waiting when I came
back to the Lizard.
And that even if I did not return, it could never be.
Seawrack, I feel sure, did not. So it was wrong of me, was cruel
and cowardly, to share her snug dream and encourage her in it. I
must be honest here. It was, as Silk would say, seriously evil. It was
a crime, and I was (and am) a monster of cruelty. All that is true,
but give me thisI have done worse, and for half an hour we were
as happy as it is possible for two people to be. The Outsider may
condemn me for it, but I cannot regret that half hour.
If it is true that in some sense Silk and Hyacinth remain forever
beside the goldfish pond at Ermines where I sought them, may
not Seawrack and I live in the same sense in a certain dry cave
among towering, moss-draped trees on the island that will always
be The Island to me? I have said that I can be cruel because I
know it for the truth; and I know too that the universe, the whorl
of all whorls, can be much crueler. I hope it is not cruel enough to
deprive even the smallest and most ghostly fragment of my being
of the happiness that Seawrack and I know there.
There came a moment when I wanted to return to the sloop. We
had seen no game and no sign of any; we were all tired, and Babbie,
who had ranged ahead at first sniffing and snuffling here and there,
lagged behind. What was worse (although I did not say it) was that
I was not sure of the way back to the sloop; and I was afraid that
we would have to strike the shore of the island wherever we could
reach it, and try to follow it until we found the little bay to the
north in which we had anchored. We were tired already, as I have
said, and had not yet begun what might be a very long walk. It
seemed more than possible that we would not be able to locate the
sloop before shadelow.
Seawrack pointed to a ridge, not very distant but only just visible
through the trees. You wait here, she said, and let me go
up there and see whats on the other side. You and Babbie rest, and
Ill come right back.
I told her that I would go with her, naturally, and took pains
to lead the way.
Theres so much sunshine, she said as we climbed that final
slope. There cant be any trees there. Not big ones like these.
I told her it was probably a good-sized cliff, that we would see
trees below it, and that we might have a fine view of the island and
the sea around it. What we really saw when we topped the ridge
was less dramatic but a great deal stranger.