With a yell from deep in her gut, Dura threw herself at the whirling animal. She scrabbled at its smooth, slippery hide, feeling her belly and legs brush against its hot flesh. She stabbed at its tough epidermis once, twice, before being hurled clear. She tumbled backwards through the Air, colliding with a trunk hard enough to knock the breath out of her.
One of her two short spears had snapped, she saw, and was now floating harmlessly away. But she had succeeded in ramming the other through the skin of the pig. The wounded animal, with Adda’s spear still protruding from its belly, tried to maintain its rotation; but, distracted by pain, its motion became uneven, and the pig began to precess clumsily, the axis of its rotation dipping as it thrashed in the Air. Poor Adda, now evidently unconscious, was thrown back and forth by the pig, his limp body flopping passively against the animal’s flank.
Philas fell on the pig now and drove another spear into the animal’s hide, widening the wound Dura had made. The animal opened its huge mouth, its circular lip-face pulling back to reveal a green-stained throat, and let out a roar of pain. Adda, his legs freed from the mouth, fell limply away from the pig; Farr hurried to him.
Philas rammed her second spear into the thrashing pig’s mouth, stabbing at the organs exposed within. Dura pushed away from the tree and hurled herself once more at the sow; she was weaponless, but she hauled at the spears already embedded in the pig’s flanks, wrenching open the wounds, while Philas continued to work at the mouth.
It took many minutes. The pig thrashed and tore at the Air to the end, striving to use its residual rotation to throw off its attackers. But it had no escape. At last, leaking jetfarts aimlessly, its cries dying to a murmur, the sow’s struggles petered away.
The two women, exhausted, hung in the Air. The sow was an inert mass, immense, its skin ripped, its mouth gaping loosely. Dura - panting, barely able to see - found it difficult to believe that even now the animal would not erupt to a ghastly, butchered semblance of life.
Dura Waved slowly through the Air to Philas. The two women embraced, their eyes wide with shock at what they had done.
Farr gingerly laid Adda along a tree trunk, relying on the gentle pressure of the Magfield to hold him in place. He stroked the old man’s yellowed hair. He had retrieved Adda’s battered old spear and laid it beside him.
Dura and Philas approached, Dura wiping trembling hands on her thighs. She studied Adda’s injuries cautiously, scared even to touch him.
Adda’s legs, below the knees, were a mangled mess: the long bones were obviously broken in several places, the feet reduced to masses of pulped meat. The surface of Adda’s chest was unbroken but oddly uneven; Dura, fearful even to touch, speculated about broken ribs. His right arm dangled at a strange angle, limp in the Air; perhaps the shoulder had been broken. Adda’s face was a soft, bruised mess. Both eyecups were filled by gummy blood, and his nostrils were dimmed ... And, of course, the Xeelee alone knew about internal injuries. Adda’s penis and scrotum had fallen from their cache between his legs; exposed, they made the old man look still more vulnerable, pathetic. Tenderly, Dura cupped the shrivelled genitalia in her hand and tucked them away in their cache.
‘He’s dying,’ Philas said, her voice uneven. She seemed to be drawing back from the battered body, as if this, for her, was too much to deal with.
Dura shook her head, forcing herself to think. ‘He’ll certainly die up here, in this lousy Air. We’ve got to get him away, back into the Mantle ...’
Philas touched her arm. She looked into Dura’s face, and Dura saw how the woman was struggling to break through her own shock. Philas said, ‘Dura, we have to face it. He’s going to die. There’s no point making plans, or struggling to get him away from here . . . all we can do is make him comfortable.’
Dura shook off the light touch of the widow, unable - yet - to accept that.
Adda’s mouth was phrasing words, feebly shaping the breath that wheezed through his lips. ‘... Dura ...’
Still scared to touch him, she leaned close to his mouth. ‘Adda? You’re conscious?’
A sketch of a laugh came from him, and he turned blind eyecups to her. ‘... I’d ... rather not be.’ He closed his mouth and tried to swallow; then he said, ‘Are you all right? ... The boy?’
‘Yes, Adda. He’s fine. Thanks to you.’
‘ ... And the pigs?’
‘We killed the one that attacked you. The sow. The others ...’ She glanced to the nets which drifted in the Air, tangled and empty. ‘They got away. What a disaster this has been.’
‘No.’ He stirred, as if trying to reach out to her, then fell back. ‘We did our best. Now you must ... try again. Go back ...’
‘Yes. But first we have to work out how to move you.’ She stared at his crushed body, trying to visualize how she might address the worst of the wounds.
Again that sketchy, chilling laugh. ‘Don’t be so ... damned stupid,’ he said. ‘I’m finished. Don’t ... waste your time.’
She opened her mouth, ready to argue, but a great weariness fell upon her, and she subsided. Of course Adda was right. And Philas. Of course he would soon die. But still, she knew, she would have to try to save him. ‘I never saw a pig behave like that. A boar, maybe. But ...’
‘We should have ... expected it,’ he whispered. ‘Stupid of me ... pregnant sow ... it was bound to ... react like that.’ His breath seemed to be slowing; in a strange way, she thought as she studied him, he seemed to be growing more comfortable. More peaceful.
She said softly, ‘You’re not going to die yet, damn you.’
He did not reply.
She turned to Philas. ‘Look, we’ll have to try to bind up his wounds. Cut some strips from the hide of that sow. Perhaps we can strap this damaged arm across his body. And we could tie his legs together, use his spear as a splint.’
Philas stared at her for a long moment, then went to do as Dura had ordered.
Farr asked, ‘What can I do?’
Dura looked around, abstracted. ‘Go and retrieve that net. We’re going to have to make a cradle, somehow, so we can haul him back home ...’
‘All right.’
When Philas returned, the women tried to straighten Adda’s legs in preparation for binding them to the makeshift splint. When she touched his flesh, Dura saw Adda’s face spasm, his mouth open wide in a soundless cry. Unable to proceed, she pulled her hands away from his ruined flesh and stared at Philas helplessly.
Then, behind her, Farr screamed.
Dura whirled, her hands reaching for Adda’s spear.
Farr was still working on the tangled net - or had been; now he was backing away from it, his eyecups wide with shock. With the briefest of glances, Dura assured herself that the boy had not been harmed. Then, as she hurried to his side, she looked past him to discover what was threatening him ...
She slowed to a halt in the Air, her mouth dangling, forgetting even her brother in her amazement.
A box, floating in the Air, approached them. It was a cube about a mansheight on a side made of carefully cut plates of wood. Ropes led to a team of six young Air-pigs which was patiently hauling the box through the forest. And, through a clear panel set into the front of the box, a man’s face peered out at her.
He was frowning.
The box drifted to a halt. Dura raised Adda’s spear.
4
T
oba Mixxax hauled on his reins. The leather ropes sighed through the sealant membranes set in the face of the car, and he could see through the clearwood window - and feel in the rapid slackening of tension in the reins - how eagerly the team of Air-pigs accepted the break.
He stared at the four strangers.
... And how strange they were. Two women, a kid and a busted-up old man - all naked, one of the women waving a crude-looking wooden spear at him.
At first Mixxax had assumed, naturally, that these were just another set of coolies taking a break in the forest, here at the fringe of his ceiling-farm. But that couldn’t be right, of course; even the dimmest of his coolies wouldn’t wander so far without an Air-tank. In fact, he wondered how this little rabble was surviving so high, so badly equipped. All they had were spears, ropes, a net of what looked like untreated leather ...
Besides, he’d recognize his own coolies. Probably, anyway.
He’d been patrolling the woodland just beyond the border of the ceiling-farm when he’d come across this group - or at least, he’d meant to be patrolling; it looked as if, daydreaming, he’d wandered a little further into the upflux forest than he’d meant to. Well, that wasn’t so surprising, he told himself. After all there was plenty on his mind. He was only fifty per cent through his wheat quota, with the financial year more than three-quarters gone. He found his hands straying to the Corestuff Wheel resting against his chest. Any more spin weather like the last lot and he was done for; he, with his wife Ito and son Cris, would be joining the swelling masses in the streets of Parz itself, dependent on the charity of strangers for their very survival. And there was precious little charity in the Parz of Hork IV, he reminded himself with a shudder.
With an effort he brought his focus back to the present. He stared through the car’s window at the vagrants. The woman with the spear - tall, streaks of age-yellow in her hair, strong- looking, square face - stared back at him defiantly. She was naked save for a rope tied around her waist; affixed to the rope was some kind of carrying-pouch that looked as if it was made from uncured pigskin. She was slim, tough-looking, with small, compact breasts; he could see layers of muscles in her shoulders and thighs.
She was, frankly, terrifying.
Who were these people?
Now he thought about it, this far upflux from Parz they couldn’t possibly be stray coolies, even runaways from another ceiling-farm. Toba’s farm was right on the fringe of the wide hinterland around Parz ... just on the edge of cultivation, Toba reminded himself with an echo of old bitterness; not that it allowed him to pay less tax than anyone else. Even the farm of Qos Frenk, his nearest neighbour, was several days’ travel downflux from here without a car.
No, these weren’t coolies. They must be upfluxers ...
wild people.
The first Toba had ever encountered.
Toba’s left hand circled in a rapid, half-involuntary Sign of the Wheel over his chest. Maybe he should just yank on the reins and get out of here, before they had a chance to do anything ...
He chided himself for lack of courage. What could they do, after all? The only man looked old enough to be Toba’s father, and it seemed to be all the poor fellow could do just to keep breathing. And even the two women and the boy working together couldn’t get through the hardened wood walls of a sealed Air-car ... could they?
He frowned. Of course, they could always attack him from the outside. Kill the Air-pigs, for instance. Or just cut the reins.
He lifted the reins. Maybe it would be better to come back with help - get some of the coolies into a posse, and then ...
Fifty per cent of quota.
He dropped the reins, suddenly angry with himself. No, damn it; poor as it was, this was his patch of Crust, and he’d deserve to be Wheel-Broken if he let a gang of weaponless savages drive him away.
Full of a righteous resolve, Toba pulled the mouthpiece of the Speaker towards him and intoned into it, ‘Who are you? What are you doing here?’
The upfluxers startled like frightened Air-pigs, he was gratified to see. They Waved a little further from the car and poked their short spears towards him. Even the old fellow looked up - or tried to; Toba could see how the injured man’s eyecups were sightless, clouded with pus-laced, stale Air.
Toba was filled with a sudden sense of confidence, of command of the situation. He had nothing to fear; he was intimidating to these ignorant savages. They’d probably never even
heard
of Parz City. His anger at their intrusion seemed to swell as his apprehension diminished.
Now the strong-looking woman approached the car - cautiously, he saw, and with her spear extended towards him - but evidently not paralysed by fear ... as, he conceded, he might have been were the positions reversed.
The woman shouted through the clearwood at him now, emphasizing her words with stabs of her spearpoint at his face; the voice was picked up by the Speaker system’s external ear.
‘Who do you think you are, a Xeelee’s grandmother?’
Toba listened carefully. The voice of the upfluxer was distorted by the limitations of the Speaker, of course; but Toba was able to allow for that. He knew how the Speaker system worked, pretty well. Working a ceiling-farm as far from the Pole as Toba’s - so far upflux, in such an inhospitable latitude - the car’s systems kept him alive. The strongest of the coolies could survive for a long time out here and maybe some of them could even complete the trek back to the Pole, to Parz City. But not Toba Mixxax, City-born and bred; he doubted he would last a thousand heartbeats.
So he had assiduously learned how to maintain the systems of the car on which his life depended ... The Speaker system, for instance. The Air he breathed was supplied by reservoirs carved into the thick, heavy wooden walls of the car. The Speaker system was based on fine tubes which pierced the reservoirs; the tubes linked membranes set in the inner and outer walls. The tubes were filled with Air, kept warmed to perfect superfluidity by the reservoirs around them, and so capable of transmitting without loss the small temperature fluctuations which human ears registered as sound.
But the narrowness of the tubes did tend to filter out some lower frequencies. The upfluxer savage’s voice sounded thin and without depth, and the resonances gave her a strange, echoing timbre. Despite that, her words had been well formed - obviously in his own language - and tainted by barely a trace of accent.
He frowned at his own surprise. Was he so startled that the woman could speak? These were upfluxers - but they were people, not animals. The woman’s few words abruptly caused him to see her as an intelligent, independent being, not capable of being cowed quite so easily, perhaps, by his technological advantage.