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They were saying good-bye to friends.
Beyond Tail Town the land narrowed. Unmistakably he was seeing the isthmus and the mainland beyond. It was hidden in distance and mist, but he was seeing the mainland with his own eyes!
And missing an opportunity, too. He'd view Tail Town and the Neck in detail when the caravan drew near. Tim got up and crawled (the sheer drop was getting to him) to the wagon's aft edge, and that was his first sight of the narrow coast of the Crab Peninsula.
Cliffs ran straight to the sea, sheer rock in a sixty- to seventy-degree slope, with glossy runnels where lava had flowed from the peaks.
He was not seeing very much of the hidden coast. The Crest curved a little, and that curve hid everything but. . . hmm.. . forty klicks of beachless coast facing north. If it was all like this, then small wonder that the colony had set Spiral Town on the Crab's fat side. But he was seeing more than any Spiral had seen!
Springs flowed out of the mountainside; a hundred waterfalls merged on their way down. A big, blocky structure intercepted the biggest falls.
At the mountains' base the falls joined in a river that flowed northwest into a tiny perfect circle of blue water, just inland from the bay.
Hal's rock was below. Hal got up. He spoke a few words to the ibnRushd family, then drifted back.
Tim waved ahead. "Hal? That's your home?"
Hal pointed along the sh.o.r.e. "There. They all look alike, but my home is tenth along Baysh.o.r.e Ride from Tucker's Lake."
Tim looked. "The circle."
"Right, where the Last Drink runs."
Tucker's Lake was just the size of the crater across from Baytown: a landing crater left by a hovering Cavorite. The river must have filled it afterward. Tenth along the widest street. . . well, they did all look alike, peaked two-story houses, but they were bigger and finer than the houses of Baytown, with wider streets.
Tim chose his words carefully. "Don't other towns along the Road seem a little, well, crude?"
"Tim, they do. I thought I'd been had. But they're all different, you know, and I knew I'd get home with tales to tell."
"Those are boats, aren't they? Do you fish?"
"Some."
"Are the fish different outside Haunted Bay?" Tim's eyes flicked forward, just for an instant. No merchant was in sight.
"Sure. Cooking style's different too. You've noticed? And we don't get bandits here."
At this aft edge of the wagon he'd be out of earshot. He said, "Or sharks."
"Nope."
Not "The Otterfolk kill them. "So: "How about Otterfolk? No, h.e.l.l, you live with Otterfolk."
"Well. Not live," Hal said, and caught himself.
Worth a try. Now change the subject. "Where do we camp? Who cooks?"
"I'm going home. You, you'll trade off this eye, and you'll eat with the autumn caravan. You go through town and camp on the Neck. We do the cooking, I mean the locals. The merchants, some of them like the restaurants-"
Autumn caravan? Puzzled, Tim looked toward Tail Town again, and then beyond.
The Road crossed the Neck, or became the Neck, and continued inland, following neither sh.o.r.e. Along the Road just beyond the Neck he saw a dark line.
The next caravan.
Tail Town didn't huddle like Haunted Bay. The streets were wide enough for thirteen wagons pulled by more than two hundred chugs, and customers to walk alongside. Along the low ridge that the Crest had become were structures bigger than any house. At the outskirts were big boxes with no windows: storage places. A lot of trading must go on in Tail Town. Nearer the center were public buildings with wide stretches of gra.s.s and gardens around them. Pipes, aquaducts must be fed by the Last Drink River.
Tim had come to expect that the level of civilization would drop with distance from Spiral Town. Tail Town was nearly a match for Spiral Town, and Hal seemed to take it in stride.
Tim didn't notice when Hal disappeared.
The houses ended suddenly, and the wagons were slowing. Inverted boats lay in a line along a beach of fine white sand. Twentytwo boats of the same type he'd seen in Baytown, with handholds at the waterline, and detached wooden fins lying beside them. Tracks ran out of the water into a shed, and the nose of a twenty-third boat poked out.
"We lose you here," Damon said.
Tim jumped, and the merchant laughed. He sat down cross-legged on the roof. "We'll cross the Neck, and the wagons will be repaired, and the chugs will be turned loose. You'll join the autumn caravan and go back.
Tim, a yutz goes around the full cycle. You'll see some of Spiral Town before you turn back, if that's what you want. But you could just go as far as Twerdahl Town."
Tim pretended to think about that. He asked, "What's Spiral Town like?"
"Like they don't want us, but they want speckles," Damon said. "We used to take our wagons deep into Spiral Town. Now they stop us at the first curve, but there's a wonderful inn. You really should see Warkan's Tavern."
"I'll ask Loria." Damon grinned. Tim asked, "We don't cross the Neck? I wanted to do that. It'd be a rite of pa.s.sage."
"Tim, we shoot anyone who crosses the Neck unless he's a merchant."
Tim had guessed as much. "That's one serious rite of pa.s.sage. Now, Hal says the town serves dinner for two caravans. Do we help cook?"
"The locals do a seafood grill. You'll love it. Anything else comes from us, and we serve. Two caravans is one serious cookout. If Tail Town wasn't so big they couldn't do it at all. What have we got?"
"Root veggies. Not much fruit, but some. The boar meat's gone.
Pickings have been skimpy since Baytown. Rabbits-"
"Use it all. Now, tomorrow there'll be a few new yutzes. They'll have to learn."
Jemmy Bloocher had fled from the summer caravan.
In Twerdahl Town he'd stopped, and married, and when the summer caravan caught up, he'd been Tim Hann of Twerdahl Town, cooking in firelight and fading sunset.
Winter came and went, and the spring caravan brought strangers who picked up Tim Bednacourt and carried him the length of the Road.
-But the Road continued an unknown distance into the continent. and Cavorite's trail went with it- And the autumn caravan would carry him back. Should he let Rian give him a gorgeous send-off? Or Senka? Or would they be busy in Tail Town tonight? Or should he wait to meet the women of the autumn caravan?
His mind could see no threat. He'd serve these strangers as he'd served the spring caravan, and live his life out in Twerdahl Town.
His adrenal glands were screaming b.l.o.o.d.y murder.
Senka set him a few errands up and down the caravan while the wagons ran onto the Neck for two klicks and a bit. The wagons stayed on the broad side, the bay side of the midline hump. They were a hundred meters apart when Damon loosed his chugs to join the others, a little early today, with the sun still half up the sky. The autumn caravan had turned theirs loose too. Half a thousand chugs all flowed into Haunted Bay, spreading out so that one long wave entered the water.
Had a chug ever investigated the other ocean?
Haunted Bay continued around, the sh.o.r.e curving into distance and mist. Otterfolk must be out there, all the way around the curve of island and mainland both.
Lines of wagons faced each other across the Neck.
The Neck was Road: softly contoured gray rock crazed with cracks.
Big cracks served for the barbecue fires; little cracks could break an ankle. A frozen lava pool ran from sea to sea. Rounded edges dropped into two oceans. A ridge ran down the middle, the last remnant of mountain range. There was no trace of life save for the wagons.
Cavorite drifted back and forth until the whole of the Neck glowed red and orange, to bar any living thing that might cross from the mainland. Humanity's rule of the Crab was not to be challenged.
Under direction of the chefs, yutzes carried the caravan's stores of fruit and vegetables to the midpoint. Tables were arrayed there, a permanent feature. The chefs laid fires and started root vegetables and pots of beans. Gaudy merchants watched them from the far caravan.
Where were the chugs? They'd been underwater too long.
A woman walked across to join them. She was hefty, formidable, like Marilyn Lyons. Her robes blazed with color: cloth that had not yet felt the dust of the Road.
"I'm Willow Hearst." She had a carrying voice. "Randy and I work Hearst wagon. Hearst and Jabar wagons carry the cooking gear and the chefs. Go back to your wagons and get your possessions. We'll sort you out when you come back. We'll still have plenty of light."
Three more merchants had left the autumn caravan. Would they give further orders? But they were swinging wide of the cookfires, headed for town.
Joker-Joker? Where are the chugs?"
Joker smiled and pointed toward the fog-shrouded mainland. "See, they can't climb back out. They can walk underwater against the current.
There's better forage on the mainland, where fisher boats haven't stirred things up. And then they're home to stay, Tim, with a h.e.l.l of a tale to tell, presuming chugs could talk. The autumn caravan won't take chugs that are marked."
"It's beautiful," Tim told him.
"We've done it this way for two hundred years. The autumn caravan picks three hundred or so. You'll see them straggling in all night. They haven't learned yet. The ones that get here last, they won't be taken."
Willow Hearst had told them to leave, and the yutzes were all going back to the spring caravan. Could they abandon dinner at this stage? Hal wasn't here to tell him. Tim was senior chef. But the vegetables were cooking nicely, the fruits were arrayed and some were stewing, and what remained could wait.
The party of three was close now. They were all older men. Elders of Doheny, Spadoni, and Tucker were coming to meet them. They would dine in Tail Town and talk of things even the younger merchants shouldn't hear. Tim looked again and recognized Master Granger.
He let his placid yutz's face turn gently aside while his eyes followed the old man. Yes, that was his father's sometime friend, Master Sean Granger.
Tim's adrenal glands had known all along. His mind was only just catching up. Not three caravans. Two. In summer it was twenty wagons; in autumn and spring, some were left for repair. The people of the summer caravan, whom he'd eluded once, had come back as the autumn caravan.
Tim mingled with the other yutzes.
Villagers were pa.s.sing the spring caravan, pulling a string of little man-drawn wagons. Tim sniffed great ma.s.ses of sea life. The merchants swung wide; Tim edged close to inspect the fish, pulling other chefs with him. "Good haul," he told one of the men.
"We say good catch," the Tail Towner said.
-And the elder merchants were past, and the yutzes were among the wagons.
Tim climbed into ibn-Rushd wagon and onto the roof. Opened the trapdoor, pushed his head into the dark and set the tea bowl under him, before he let the terror have him. He felt like he might throw up.
Sean Granger was no threat. The old man would remember Jemmy Bloocher as a little boy, and Tim Bednacourt as a Twerdahi Town chef. But younger merchants had seen Jemmy Bloocher kill a man in Warkan's Tavern.
He'd kept his possessions in his carry pack. In a moment he could s.n.a.t.c.h it and run. . . where?
Anyone caught crossing the Neck would be shot.
The far side of the Crab would kill any swimmer.
Tail Town sprawled from Haunted Bay to the other sea. There was no path back that didn't run through Tail Town.
He couldn't join the autumn caravan. He couldn't run, not until dark: there was nowhere to hide. Did he dare to serve them dinner? Yes, with dark falling, but be ready to run at a moment's fright.
Run where?
Fingertips stroked his arm, wrist to elbow.
Tim straightened to kneeling position. He didn't look around and he didn't flinch. He reached back and let his fingers trace a slender neck and jaw and nape. Smooth. He leaned back. Rian~ Good. Senka was just too good at reading minds.
He asked, "Do I get a spendid send-off?"
"Hey, didn't Marilyn Lyons use you up?"
"I d.a.m.n well needed all the help I could get," he admitted.
She laughed. "Tim, there are women in the autumn caravan too."
"I haven't met them." Witnesses. Women who would look straight at a murderer and know him half a year later. "Can I give you a splendid send-off?"
A breathy laugh. "You might not impress a lady if I get to you first."
"Given the choice-" He turned. Their breath mingled. "It's a choice? I'll risk it then." He wasn't just randy, and it wasn't because he'd never see Rian ibn-Rushd again. Never see any woman until he could reach Twerdahl Town and Loria. But he would have done it just to forget the risks he'd face tonight.
It was a splendid send-off she gave him. They'd never made love in the open, or in daylight. Perhaps they were even seen from other roofs. Even now he didn't see Rian naked: they kept most of their clothes on.
As his breath slowed it came to him that this was the lesser risk.
The darker the better when he joined the other caravan, and if he had a decent excuse for delay. . . well, an indecent excuse was better than none.
An unworthy thought.
"Tim," Rian whispered, "time."
He nodded, and kissed her, and reached into the trap for his pack.
"Don't take the gun," she said. "Guns go with the wagons. You'll get a new one."
"What about these clothes?"