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THE LUCK OF BRIN'S FIVE.
Cherry Wilder.
Prologue.
A low mountain range straddled the northern coast of the continent; it was ma.s.sive and striking, rising in places straight out of the gra.s.sy plain. The highest peaks lay to the north, snow-capped in summer because they were close to the polar circle. A hot summer sun burned down on the craggy lower slopes; there were stands of a straight-limbed tree with a red-brown trunk and small leaves of a particular bronze green. Campsites cl.u.s.tered among these trees; some were old and permanent as small villages, with a stone wall or a stockade. In summer many of the camps were empty: the campers had wandered off on their travels, to the fairground and the riverside. In other places there was a murmur of voices, the rhythmical clacking of looms; no open fires were lit, no smoke curled above the treetops.
There were cool places to be found even in high summer; caverns full of the sound of rushing water; noisy brooks and torrents. Hunting trails ran along the tops of the ridges and dipped into the valleys that led down to the hot gra.s.s of the plain. There were natural plantations of a plant that looked like flax,; its flat leaves rattled and shook, never still, in the prevailing north wind.
A man, travelling through this rough, pleasant, hill country could drink at the streams, eat berries if he dared, breathe the mountain air. Yet the creatures that scrambled up the trees as he pa.s.sed, the little bouncing deerlike animals that took off into the scrub, the slow, dipping flight of the birds would remind him, finally, that he was not on Earth.
The continent and the world itself were called by the same name: Torin. When Esto, the Great Sun, set in the west, its strong golden light gave way to darkness, then to a silvery light, six times as strong as the reflected light of Earth's moon ... the light of Esder ... the Far Sun. It was possible to read, to hunt, to maneuver a flying machine by the light of Esder.
Down below on the plain, during Esder light, other flickering lights cl.u.s.tered at fords and river crossings. In an old shallow crater a sheet of water threw back the Far Sun's light oddly; the water steamed and gave off its own phosph.o.r.escent glow. Beyond the northern bank of this~ lake twin peaks rose up, two of the highest in the range, and below them, on a stone terrace, stood a long oval building.
It was a mild summer night in the year 274 of the New Age, two hundred and seventy-four Torin years since the last Torlogan or Great Builder handed power to the grandees. The only sounds here in the mountains were natural ones: bird calls, a stone dislodged that rolled down into a pool. When four Torin hours of darkness had pa.s.sed and ten of Esder light, a new sound grew sharply in the clear air. The flying machine came buzzing in from the southwest and landed neatly on the terrace. It was strong and shapely, made of woven, stiffened fabric over a frame of bent wood. The wingspan was large; there was a propeller mounted on the nose and four smaller ones on the wing itself. On the hindmost panel, to the left, there was a row of painted characters; in the corresponding position to the right there were block letters: TOMARVAN 11.
A man climbed down out of the machine and reached up to help down his companion, a young Moruian, an inhabi- tant of Torin. They talked softly, as if the silence of the mountains made them lower their voices, but the man's voice, his laughter, rang out sometimes. They came down from the terrace and began walking briskly towards the lake, just visible through the trees. The light of Esder picked out quite clearly their sameness and their difference.
The man, Scott Gale, was well-built, broad-shouldered, muscular, a head taller than his young companion. He wore a synthetic blue zipper suit, a regulation garment hardly weathered by four hard years of an alien climate.
Dorn, the Moruian, was seventeen years old; he was wiry, thin, long-limbed. He walked with a lithe, swinging motion; the carriage of his head, his hips, his thin, long- fingered hands, were all distinctive. By contrast Scott Gale was over-controlled, muscle-bound. Dorn had thick mid- brown hair, perfectly straight and cut off, carelessly, above the collar of his fine woollen tunic. His face was broad at the forehead, and tapering, with a straight nose, a long upper lip and a firm jaw. It might have been a human face, in certain att.i.tudes, except for the eyes, which were widely s.p.a.ced, very large, and set, up-curving, into his temples.
Scott Gale was, in comparison, round faced and round headed, yet in cloak and hood he had often pa.s.sed for a Moruian. His hair and beard were black; he had often, during his first days on Torin, cursed the Irish ancestors who gave him blue eyes. This strange pair walked on, talking in Moruian, until they came to the lake sh.o.r.e. Esto, the Great Sun, came over the shoulder of a mountain and turned the warm waters of the lake to gold.
"There!" said Dorn, "and not even a stone for memori- al!" Scott Gale laughed. "Memorial to the loss of a good air ship," he said.
"Ah, but it is strange!" exclaimed Dorn. "Don't you feel it? To remember the past so clearly ... We stand where the party from the hunting lodge was standing . . ."
He looked back to the oval building on the terrace.
"They carried torches and lances, that night, and a Galtroy banner . . . star and spindle." He knelt at the water's edge, wrinkling his forehead, and skipped a stone across the steamy water.
"I've heard the story, from the Family," said Gale, "until it's like a story from my own childhood. I don't know what I remember or what was told to me." He pointed to a narrow beach on the far side of the lake.
"Was it about there that you pulled me ash.o.r.e?"
"Yes," said Dorn.
They walked on, around the head of the lake, with Dorn running ahead and clambering over fallen logs. When Gale caught up again, Dorn was staring ahead at a particular rock above the little beach. Over the rock arched an old, gnarled tree, a mountain black-thorn, which had been struck by lightning and scarred along one side of its bent, trunk. The rock was scratched and indented with written characters; the tree itself was strung with loose clumps of thread, of varying thickness, knotted in certain patterns.
"Well, someone has not forgotten," said Scott Gale.
"What do the skeins say?"
They walked to the tree, and Dorn climbed the rock and felt at the largest message skein. He read off the woven symbols: "Praise to our Mother, the North Wind, and to Eddorn who found great fortune for his Family." Then he reached for another skein.
"Send us a Luck to equal the Luck of Brin's Five."
Scott Gale shook his head and smiled sadly. "I wish them better luck than that," he said. He came to the rock and stood with Dorn looking down, between the rock and the tree, at a narrow grave, carefully covered with round stones.
They went down and sat on the strip of white sand by the water's edge.
"It should all be told," said Dorn. "It is part of this world's history."
( 6 ).
I.
"The way human beings came to Torin?"
"Our part of it," said Dorn, "the part that I remember ... that first winter and the spring that came after it, when you first joined our Family and travelled with us."
"Then you must write it," said Scott Gale. "No one else could do it so well. You will be Dorn Utragan pretty soon ... Utragan, the scribe in two languages. The first on Torin."
"It has been a long time," said Dorn. "I am hardly the same person.)l "You are not an ancient yet . Scott Gale grinned.
Dorn blinked and laughed; he was about to throw a stone into the lake but instead he pointed, with a hand to his lips for silence. A bird, about the size of a large kingfisher, came gliding out of the trees and swung down low over the surface of the water; its wings flashed a dark, iridescent blue.
"What is that called, then?" Dorn asked in a whisper.
"Great Wind!" said Scott Gale. "It must be a Diver!"
They laughed so loudly together at a shared joke that the bird flew off, startled.( 7 ).
I WILL -rELL HOW WE FOUND OUR LUCK, the great Luck of Brin's Five, and how, being found, it led us on to good fortune beyond all dream-spinning.
I am Dorn, eldest child of our Family. When the Luck came, I was twelve years old and we lived high on the slopes of Hingstull Mountain, near the Warm Lake. It was a hard winter: our fingers were stiff with cold as we worked at the looms; the snow bore down on the fabric of our house. A blizzard had ripped families of spinners from our home trees and rolled them down the mountainside like dead birds.
Food was scarce; two Families had quit the glebe and now only two were left. Hunter Geer, who boasted many thick pelts, and, as we said, a thick head and a thick hide, was bound in under a rock wall across the glebe, watching us perish with cold by the east gate.
We could not go down the mountain because our Luck was dying. At first we sang; Old Gwin boiled herbs after scratching them from the snow; dearest Brin embraced us all; but it was no use. Mamor and Harper Roy talked all night apart, but they could not find a solution. Our Family, Brin's Five, and a perfect Five it had been, five adults with no outclips, was doomed. Odd-Eye lay in his bag, spinning( 8 ).
( 9 ).yarns still in a dream voice, with the marks of death on his face.
I remember Narneen weeping at night in the sleeping bag, because the spring would not come if our Luck died - It seemed perfectly possible to me. No good thing would ever happen again: the suns would not rise, the spring would not come, our webs would break and our youngest child, still hidden, would never be seen. In the city, as I have since observed, people live in a different way and have no Family, no Luck to bind them, and they survive very well, but as mountain people we followed the old threads.
We did not give up easily. Every day we fought against our doom by searching for a new Luck. Sometimes Brin went out as far as the lake, alone or with Mamor. Harper Roy went out in the night, and we heard him singing against the storm and harping for ourdeliverance. When the wind died down, they sent Narneen and me to the lake sh.o.r.e, with instructions to walk in circles, to pray, to call, to bring back news of any stranger pa.s.sing.
It is strange to stand in winter by the Warm Lake.
Clouds of steam rise up off the surface into the frosty air, and where the cold mist from the pa.s.s meets the steam they form spiral patterns. I remember once standing hand-in- hand with Narneen, letting the water play over our frozen feet. We looked up and saw two figures watching us from a crag, Hunter Geer and Whitewing. One fierce and ruddy, with hair the color of dried blood hanging over a wolf-skin tunic. The other even more frightening, immensely tall and thin and white as the snow, for Whitewing had no color.
Whitewing was the Luck of Hunter Geer's Five ...
white-haired, bloodless, from the first showing.
From where we stood by the lake, we co * uld not see those pink eyes flashing ill-will upon us. I bent down and seized a warm pebble, then molded snow around it. I flung it at Whitewing, high on the crag, crying out as it fell short, "We will find our Luck again!"
Whitewing laughed aloud, a high, jagged laugh that rang and echoed from the farthest sh.o.r.e.
Two days later we ate the last of the preserved game birds; there was nothing left but blackloaf and dried sunner. A blizzard was blowing, and Mamor could not hunt. Odd-Eye did not speak, and we felt sure our Luck was dying; but suddenly, towards noon on the second day, his mind became clear. Odd-Eye spoke to each of us in turn and prayed for the hidden child. I felt desolate and strange when my turn came to sit beside him. Odd-Eye had a long hatchet face; one of his eyes was green, the other brown.
He was short and misshapen, but in all the time I could remember, he had been so agile I could not think of him as old. He was a good Luck, for he had made it his calling; he was "a Luck out of the bag".
Every Luck has suffered some misfortune: there ar( dwarfs and cripples, the blind, the deaf, the mad and th( half-mad. I have never seen a hunchback who was not tht Luck of some Family or some grandee. It is equally correct to adopt as a lucky person someone who has lost a leg or been scarred in a fire or maimed in some other fashion, though some say a "born Luck" is best.
Odd-Eye said to me, when my turn came, "Cheer up, Dorn. I have dreams for you that are as fine as Blacklock's mantle."
I could not help smiling. We had often talked in summer, at the loom or in the woods, of Blacklock, the swaggering hero from Rintoul. I had half-persuaded Odd-Eye to take me downriver, across the plains, to see the great city of Rintoul and watch Blacklock perform his feats. The fame of Blacklock had certainly reached our mountain. Hunter Geer, who had visited Rintoul, claimed to have shaken Blacklock by the hand, but Hunter Geer is a liar.
. "Now Dorn, you must take me!" said Odd-Eye in a quavering voice. "Take me out to the lakeside, to our rock( 10 ).
under the burned tree, and I will have a last try. I must find my dear Family a replacement."
They looked sideways at me, to make sure I was not afraid, then Harper Roy bound Odd-Eye upon our sled wrapped in the thickest rugs we had and covered with our only wolf pelt. I was wrapped up just about as tightly, and when the wind dropped, I started on my way.
Before I left, Old Gwin came up with a basket of hot stones and three roasted graynuts that she had been saving.
The stones went at Odd-Eye's feet to warm him, and I had a warm pocketful of graynuts. I have had to laugh, since those days, when I have heard scholars in Rintoul swear that the "primitive Moruia" use no fire. Indeed we were chary of fire ... our home was made of flaxen cloth pulled over a tree! I never saw a blaze or a flame in our glebe, but we certainly used fire in winter, and we warmed our food.
A point in the scholars' favor is this: we never spoke of fire or called a flame, a flame. We were superst.i.tious. Old Gwin made us say instead "the Kind One".
It was a weaver's mile to the lakeside; but after the first rise outside the western gate, it was downhill all the way.
The sled was light because Odd-Eye was nothing but skin and bone. I trudged through the snow numb with anxiety as much as cold. This journey was like stepping off the edge of the world; I felt that the worst was about to happen, that I was hard up against the cruelty of life and could do nothing to change it.
I had a hard time hoisting the sled to our comfortable place under the burned tree. Then I checked to see if Odd-Eye was alive; his odd eyes blinked at me. I went down and warmed my hands and feet at the lake, then I came back to sit on the rock and eat my graynuts. There was no snow falling, and the winds were still. We saw Esto, the Great Sun, go down, a smear of orange in the distant west; it was the time of "runar", the little darkness before( 11 ).
the rising of the Far Sun. Trails of phosph.o.r.escence sprang up on the lake's surface and overhead the stars blazed. I was dozing when Odd-Eye gave a thin cry.
"Glider!"
"What is it?" I was frightened, sure that he was dying, that his mind was wandering again.
"A glider!" He was straining against the thongs that bound him to the sled. His voice was so weak that I had to put my ear close to his lips.
"Look, Dorn . . . coming down over the lake .
I stared and saw what he meant, but it was no glider. It was more like a falling star, then blazing closer, like a fireball or meteor. I thought, in fact I hoped, that it would fall short, a long way from us, behind the peaks on the far bank of the lake. But Odd-Eye was whispering in my ear, and the fireball came closer, "A glider! A balloon! It will strike in the lake and your Luck is there, I know it! A great Luck is there!"
The light from the fireball grew from white to orange to pinkish red; I was terrified now, for I could see that it would not fall short. I wa.s.sure it would crush us, right there under the burned tree. It came on and on, and I could not look away until it fell hissing and burning into the lake near the far bank. Then I saw two other things: a hunting party on that bank, near the dark peaks-city dwellers with banners and lances-and in the upper air floating towards our side, two little white tents on strings wafting down among the tendrils of steam.
I left Odd-Eye without a word and ran back along the track. Halfway to the rise I cannoned into Brin and Harpei Roy, coming to relieve me at my post, and blurted out m) story.
"We saw the fireball!" said Brin. "What's this about i tent in the air?"
"The Luck!" I gasped. "Don't you see? It will land in th, take!"( 12 ).
( 13 )."Odd-Eye called it a glider?" asked Harper Roy.
"Some vessel!" I said. "Some air ship. Oh please come ... the Luck is in the lake by now. . . ."
They were coming along with me as I babbled, and we came in sight of the lake. The white tents floated in a tangle about fifty feet from the sh.o.r.e.
"Something came down . . ." said Harper Roy.
There were shouts and torchlights springing up on the far bank. The hunting party was trying the steamy water, to probe the place where the fireball struck. Suddenly there was a movement near us; I saw the tents and their cordage wrap against a heavy body, circling slowly in the wide whirlpool eddies of the warm lake.
"Quickly!" said Brin. "Reef in the cords ... there is someone bound to them!"
We waded into the warm water until I was swimming and dragged at the cords and fought with billowing heaps of warm, wet fabric, soft as silk. There was a grotesque figure floating in the water: ballooning legs, stiff arms, square head with one dark, glistening eye, big as a whole face.
Then it came to rest on the sh.o.r.e, and we all saw what it was ... a kind of body-shaped bag of fine metallic cloth.
The dark eye was a piece of gla.s.s. Someone lived inside the bag, and we knew it must be our Luck.
"Blood . . ." said Harper Roy, ". . . on the sleeve .
From within the helmet there came a feeble gasping cry, for all the world like that of a hidden child.
Brin struggled with the square helmet while Harper Roy got to work with his knife on the strangling mess of cords.
He reefed in the two white tents. I could see that Roy did not mean all that wealth of white silk to go to waste. Brin gave a soft cry; the helmet was off. There in the night, with no light but a radiance off the snow, we could just make out a face. A young face, with pale soft features and short hair; black hair, black as night. The eyes were open now, and a deep voice implored and questioned; we did not understand one word. We all replied at once in the most soothing tones we knew: You are safe. You are our dear Luck, come in answer to our prayers. We will help you. You have come to Brin's Five. We are your Family, and we will love you.
There was a confused shouting and splashing from the far bank.
"Do you read that crest?" asked Harper Roy.
"Star and spindle," said Brin, peering through the mist at the torchlit banners. "Some grandee. But they will not have our Luck."
The Luck lay still now, eyes closed; I could not look away from that pale face. Then suddenly Harper Roy was beside me with our sled and coverings, gently rolling the Luck upon it, still in the body bag. I started up. "Odd- Eye!"
But Brin pulled me down again into the shadow. "Odd- Eye has no need of these things any more."
Then I was filled with remorse and sadness and almost hated the new Luck because I had left Odd-Eye alone to die, by the burned tree.
The hunting party had not seen us, but they were beginning to move around the head of the lake towards our beach. We took everything including the bales of white silk; the Harper dragged a branch over the places where we had been. We went quickly up the track, bent double, dragging the sled, and a light snow fell behind us, covering our traces as we bore the Luck safely home.( 14 ).
tWE WERE AFRAID OF PURSUIT THAT SAME NIGHT, but it did not come. We sat in the dark, retelling the miracle to Old Gwin and Mamor and Narneen. Then Brin made a bold decision and lit two candlecones from Gwin's secret store.