Earthborn (Homecoming) (11 page)

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Authors: Orson Scott Card

BOOK: Earthborn (Homecoming)
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“Yet the Keeper still says nothing to
us.
We’re a gnat buzzing in the Keeper’s ear. We are brushed away.”

“So let’s go back and keep buzzing.”

“The Keeper’s plans will go forward regardless of what we do or don’t do,” said the Oversoul.

“I hope so,” said Shedemei. “But I do think she cares very much what people do. Down there on Earth, of course, but also here in this ship. She cares what happens.”

“Maybe all the Keeper cares about is the people of Earth. Maybe she no longer cares about the people of Harmony. Maybe I should go home to Harmony now and tell my otherself that our mission is over and we can let humans there do whatever they want.”

“Or maybe the Keeper still wants you here,” said Shedemei. Then a new thought occurred to her. “Maybe she still needs the powers of the starship. The cloak of the starmaster.”

“Maybe the Keeper needs
you
,” said the Oversoul.

Shedemei laughed. “What, I have some seeds and embryos up here that she wants me to put down somewhere on Earth? All she has to do is send me a dream and I’ll plant wherever she says.”

“So we go on waiting,” said the Oversoul.

“No, we go on
prodding
,” answered Shedemei. “Like Chebeya did. We roust the old she-bear from her den and goad her.”

“I’m not sure I like the implications of your metaphor. She-bears are destructive and dangerous when they’ve been goaded.”

“But they do give you their undivided attention.” Shedemei laughed again.

“I don’t think you have enough respect yet for the power of the Keeper.”

“What power? All we’ve seen from the Keeper up to now is dreams.”

“If that’s all you’ve seen,” said the Oversoul, “then you haven’t been looking.”

“Really?”

“The gornaya, for instance. That massif of impossibly high mountains. The ancient geological data from before the departure of humans forty million years ago shows no tectonic formation or movement that could have caused this. The plates in this area weren’t moving in the right direction to cause such incredible folding and uplift. Then, suddenly, the Cocos plate started moving northward with far more speed and force than any tectonic movement ever recorded. It attacked the Caribbean plate far faster than it could be subducted.”

Shedemei sighed. “I’m a biologist. Geology is barely comprehensible to me.”

“You understand
this,
though. A dozen ranges of mountains with peaks above ten kilometers in height. And they were lifted up within the first ten million years.”

“Is that fast?”

“’Even now, the Cocos plate is still moving northward three times faster than any other plate on Earth. That means that underneath the Earth’s crust, there’s a current of molten rock that is flowing northward very rapidly—the same current that caused North America to rift along the Mississippi Valley, the same current that crumpled all of Central America into pieces and jammed them together and . . .”

The Oversoul fell silent.

“What?”

“I’m doing a little research for a moment.”

“Well, pardon me for interrupting,” said Shedemei.

“This has to have begun before humans left Earth,” said the Oversoul.

“Yes?”

“The earthquakes, the volcanos out along the Galapagos ridge—what
was
it that encased the Earth in ice for a while? In my memory, it was all linked with human misbehavior—with wars, nuclear and biological weapons. But how exactly did those things
cause
the Earth to become uninhabitable?”

“I love watching a brilliant mind at work,” said Shedemei.

“I will have to search all my records from that time period,” said the Oversoul, “and see whether I can rule out the possibility that it was the movement of the Cocos plate, and not the warfare directly, that caused the destruction of the habitable zones of Earth.”

“You’re saying that the warfare might have caused the Cocos plate to move? That’s absurd.”

The Oversoul ignored her scoffing. “Why did
all
human life leave Earth? The diggers and angels managed to survive. I never thought to question it till now, starmaster, but don’t you find it a bit suspicious? Surely some group of humans could have survived. In some equatorial zone.”

“Please, I know creativity and serendipity are designed into your thinking algorithms,” said Shedemei, “but are you seriously entertaining the notion that human misdeeds could have caused the Cocos plate to move?”

“I’m saying that perhaps human misdeeds could cause the Keeper of Earth to cause the Cocos plate to move.”

“And how could she possibly do that?”

“I can’t imagine any entity of any kind with power enough to move the currents of magma under the crust of the planet,” said the Oversoul. “But I also can’t imagine any natural force that could have caused the many anomalies that created the gornaya. The world is full of strange and unnatural things, Shedemei. Like the symbiotic interdependence that the diggers and angels used to have. You said yourself that it was artificial.”

“And my hypothesis is that these changes were deliberately introduced by human beings before they left.”

“But
why
would they do it, Shedemei? Whose purpose were they fulfilling? Why would they even care, knowing that they would leave this planet and believing that they would never come back?”

“I think it’s possible for us to ascribe too many events to the plots and plans of the Keeper of Earth,” said Shedemei. “She causes dreams and influences human behavior. We have no evidence for anything else.”

“We have no evidence. Or we have the most obvious evidence imaginable. I must do research. There are gaps in my knowledge. The truth has been hidden from me, but I know that the Keeper is involved in all of this.”

“Search all you want. I’ll be fascinated to know the outcome.”

“It may be that I’m programmed not to find the truth, you know,” said the Oversoul. “And that I’m programmed not to find the way I’ve been programmed to hide the truth from me.”

“How circular.”

“I may need your help.”

“I may need a nap.” She yawned. “I don’t believe that any computer, even the Keeper of Earth, has power over such things as currents of magma. But I’ll help, if I can. Maybe in pursuing this worthless hypothesis you’ll come across something useful.”

“At least you’re keeping an open mind,” said the Oversoul.

“I’m sure you meant that in the nicest possible way,” said Shedemei.

That night, in their hut, Akmaro and Akma washed and dressed Chebeya’s wounds.

“You could have been killed, Mother,” said Akma quietly.

“It was the bravest thing I ever saw,” said Akmaro.

Chebeya wept silently—in relief that she hadn’t
been slaughtered in the field; in delayed fear at what she had dared to do; in gratitude to her husband for praising what she did.

“Do you see, Akma, what your mother is doing?” said Akmaro.

“She defied them,” said Akma. “And they didn’t kill her.”

“There’s more to it than that, Akma,” said Akmaro. “It’s a gift that your mother has had all her life. She’s a raveler.”

“Hushidh,” whispered Luet. The tales of Hushidh the Raveler were well known among the women and girls. Not to mention Chveya, Nafai’s and Luet’s daughter, the Ancient One for whom Chebeya had been named.

“She sees the connections between people,” Akmaro explained to Akma.

“I know what a raveler is,” said Akma.

“To be a raveler is a gift of the Keeper,” said Akmaro. “The Keeper must have seen, years ago, the dilemma we’d be in today, and so he gave a great gift to Chebeya so that when this day came, she could begin to unravel the conspiracy of evil that rules over us. We had with us all along the power to do what your mother began today. The Keeper only waited for us to realize it. For your mother to find the right moment to act.”

“It looked to me,” said Akma, “as if Mother stood alone.”

“Is that what you saw?” asked Akmaro. “Then your vision is still very young and blurred. For your mother stood with the power of the Keeper in her, and with the love of her husband and children inside her. If you and Luet and I had not been in the field with her, do you think she would have done it?”


We
were there,” said Akma. “But where was the Keeper?”

“Someday,” said Akmaro, “you will learn to see the Keeper’s hand in many things.”

When the children were asleep, Chebeya rested her
head on her husband’s chest and clung to him and wept. “Oh, Kmadaro, Kmadaro, I was so frightened that I would make things worse.”

“Tell me your plan,” he said. “If I know your plan I can help you.”

“I don’t know my plan. I have no plan.”

“Then here is the plan that came into my mind as I watched you and listened to you. I thought at first that you were simply trying to get those boys to rebel against their father. But then I realized that you were doing something far more subtle.”

“I was?”

“You were winning Didul’s heart.”

“If he has one.”

“You were teaching him how to be a man. It’s a new idea to him. I think he’d like to be a good man, Bedaya.”

She thought about it. “Yes, I think you’re right.”

“So we won’t tear these boys away from each other. Instead we’ll make friends and allies of them.”

“Do you think we can?” asked Chebeya.

“You mean, Do I think we
should?
Yes, Bedaya. They can’t help being what their father taught them to be. But if we can teach them to be something else, they might be good men yet. That is what the Keeper wants us to do—not destroy our enemies, but make friends of them if we can.”

“They’ve hurt my children so many times,” said Chebeya.

“Then how sweet the day will be when they kneel and ask your forgiveness, and your children’s forgiveness, and the three of you say, We know that you are no longer the men you were then. Now you are our brothers.”

“I can’t ever say that to them.”

“You can’t say that to them now,” said Akmaro. “But you, too, will have a change of heart, when you see them also change.”

“You always believe the best of other people, Kmadaro.”

“Not always,” said Akmaro. “But in that boy today, I saw a spark of decency. Let’s blow on that spark and give it fuel.”

“I’ll try,” said Chebeya.

Lying on his mat, Akma heard his parents’ conversation and thought, What kind of man is he, to talk to Mother about making friends with the very ones who lashed her skin and made her bleed today? I will never forgive these men, never, no matter how they seem to change. Men who are friends with diggers can never be trusted. They have become just like diggers, low filthy creatures who belong in holes under the earth like worms.

For Father to talk of teaching and forgiving a worm like Didul was just another sign of his weakness. Always running, hiding, teaching, forgiving, fleeing, submitting, bowing, enduring—where in Father’s heart was the courage to stand and fight? It was Mother, not Father, who stood against Didul and the diggers today. If Father really loved Mother, he would have spent tonight vowing revenge for her bloody wounds.

FOUR
DELIVERANCE

Monush followed Ilihiak into his private chamber and watched as the king barred the door behind him. “What I’m going to show you,” said Ilihiak, “is a great secret, Monush.”

“Then perhaps you shouldn’t show me,” said Monush. “My loyalty is sworn to Ak-Moti, and I will keep no secret from him.”

“But that’s why I brought you here, Ush-Mon. You have the deepest trust of your great king. Do you think that I don’t know that my kingdom would be hardly a small district of the empire of Darakemba? The stories reach us even here, that the Nafari who went down the Tsidorek have now become the greatest kingdom in the gornaya. What I have here is a matter for a great king, a king like Motiak, I think. I know it’s beyond
me.”

Monush felt strongly that if there were two men, one would be greater than the other, and somewhere else there would always be one greater than either. True nobility consisted of recognizing one’s betters as
well as one’s inferiors, and giving proper respect to all, never pretending to be above one’s natural place. Ilihiak clearly understood that he had a greater rank and authority than Monush, but that Motiak was greater than either of them. It made Monush feel more confident in the man.

“Show me without fear, then,” said Monush, “for I will reveal what I see to no man except my lord Motiak.”

“To no
man
,” said Ilihiak. “According to our ancient lore, the humans of Darakemba include male angels and male diggers in the word
man.”

“That’s right,” said Monush. “A male of the sky people, the earth people, or the middle people is a true man in the eyes of our law.”

Ilihiak shuddered. “My people will have a hard time with this. We came to this land to get away from living with the wings of angels always in our faces. And here we’ve had ample cause to hate the diggers—our crops have been watered with the blood of many good men.
Men.
And diggers.”

“I think King Motiak will not try to humiliate you, but will allow you to find a valley where you can buy the land of whatever angels dwell there and live without giving or receiving offense. But of course this would make you a subject nation instead of full citizens, for among citizens there can be no difference between people over, under, and on the earth.”

“It won’t be my choice, Monush. It will be the choice of my people.” Ilihiak sighed. “Our hatred for the diggers has increased by being close to them. The only angels we see here are slaves or subject people, and they shun us. It will be hard for our young men to learn that it isn’t decent sport to shoot arrows at them when they fly too near.”

Monush shuddered. It was a good thing that Husu had not flown along with them, to hear this.

“I see how you judge us,” said Ilihiak. “I fear you may be right. There was a man who came among us, an old man named Binadi. He told us that our way of
life was an affront to the Keeper. That we mistreated the angels and that the Keeper loved angels, diggers, and humans as equals. That what mattered was whether a man was kind to all others, and whether he kept the laws of decency. He was . . . very specific in pointing out the many ways that the king my father failed to measure up. And his priests.”

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