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ight hand—the one not holding the gun—at his eyes, as the Widow had taught them.<br />

Helmsman—the tribe’s best play-actor, Tim surmised—nodded back, then stroked the air below the straggly growth of intermixed stubble and<br />

weed on his chin.<br />

Tim felt a stab of excitement. “A beard? Yes, he has a beard!”<br />

Helmsman next stroked the air above his head, closing his fist as he did so, indicating not just a tall cap but a tall conical cap.<br />

“That’s him!” Tim actually laughed.<br />

Helmsman smiled, but Tim thought it a troubled smile. Several of the others jabbered and twittered. Helmsman motioned them quiet, then turned<br />

back to Tim. Be<strong>for</strong>e he could continue his dumbshow, however, the sore above his nipple burst open in a spray of pus and blood. From it crawled a<br />

spider the size of a robin’s egg. Helmsman grabbed it, crushed it, and tossed it aside. Then, as Tim watched with horrified fascination, he used one<br />

hand to push the wound wide. When the sides gaped like lips, he used his other hand to reach in and scoop out a slick mass of faintly throbbing<br />

eggs. He slatted these casually aside, ridding himself of them as a man might rid himself of a palmful of snot he has blown out of his nose on a cold<br />

morning. None of the others paid <strong>this</strong> any particular attention. They were waiting <strong>for</strong> the show to continue.<br />

With his sore attended to, Helmsman dropped to his hands and knees and began to make a series of predatory lunges <strong>this</strong> way and that,<br />

growling as he did so. He stopped and looked up at Tim, who shook his head. He was also struggling with his stomach. These people had just<br />

saved his life, and he reckoned it would be very impolite to puke in front of them.<br />

“I don’t understand that one, sai. Say sorry.”<br />

Helmsman shrugged and got to his feet. The matted weeds growing from his chest were now beaded with blood. Again he made the beard and<br />

the tall conical cap. Again he dropped to the ground, snarling and making lunges. This time all the others joined him. The tribe briefly became a<br />

pack of dangerous animals, their laughter and obvious good cheer somewhat spoiling the illusion.<br />

Tim once more shook his head, feeling quite stupid.<br />

Helmsman did not look cheerful; he looked worried. He stood <strong>for</strong> a moment, hands on hips, thinking, then beckoned one of his fellow tribesmen<br />

<strong>for</strong>ward. This one was tall, bald, and toothless. The two of them palavered at length. Then the tall man ran off, making great speed even though his<br />

legs were so severely bent that he rocked from side to side like a skiff in a swell. Helmsman beckoned two others <strong>for</strong>ward and spoke to them. They<br />

also ran off.<br />

Helmsman then dropped to his hands and knees and recommenced his fierce-animal imitation. When he was done, he looked up at Tim with an<br />

expression that was close to pleading.<br />

“Is it a dog?” Tim ventured.<br />

At <strong>this</strong>, the remaining tribesmen laughed heartily.<br />

Helmsman got up and patted Tim on the shoulder with a six-fingered hand, as if to tell him not to take it to heart.<br />

“Just tell me one thing,” Tim said. “Maerlyn . . . sai, is he real?”<br />

Helmsman considered <strong>this</strong>, then flung his arms skyward in an exaggerated delah gesture. It was body language any Tree villager would have<br />

recognized: Who knows?<br />

The two tribesmen who had run off together came back carrying a basket of woven reeds and a hemp shoulder strap to carry it with. They<br />

deposited it at Helmsman’s feet, turned to Tim, saluted him, then stood back, grinning. Helmsman hunkered and motioned <strong>for</strong> Tim to do the same.<br />

The boy knew what the basket held even be<strong>for</strong>e Helmsman opened it. He could smell fresh-cooked meat and had to wipe his mouth on his<br />

sleeve to keep from drooling. The two men (or perhaps their women) had packed the Fagonard equivalent of a woodsman’s lunch. Sliced pork had<br />

been layered with rounds of some orange vegetable that looked like squash. These were wrapped in thin green leaves to make breadless popkins.<br />

There were also strawberries and blueberries, fruits long gone by <strong>for</strong> the season in Tree.<br />

“<strong>Thank</strong>ee-sai!” Tim tapped his throat three times. This made them all laugh and tap their own throats.<br />

The tall tribesman returned. From one shoulder hung a waterskin. In his hand he carried a small purse of the finest, smoothest leather Tim had<br />

ever seen. The purse he gave to Helmsman. The waterskin he held out to the boy.<br />

Tim wasn’t aware of how thirsty he was until he felt the skin’s weight and pressed his palms against its plump, gently yielding sides. He pulled the<br />

plug with his teeth, raised it on his elbow as did the men of his village, and drank deep. He expected it to be brackish (and perhaps buggy), but it<br />

was as cool and sweet as that which came from their own spring between the house and the barn.<br />

The tribesmen laughed and applauded. Tim saw a sore on the shoulder of Tallman getting ready to give birth, and was relieved when Helmsman<br />

tapped him on the shoulder, wanting him to look at something.<br />

It was the purse. There was some sort of metal seam running across the middle of it. When Helmsman pulled a tab attached to <strong>this</strong> seam, the<br />

purse opened like magic.<br />

Inside was a brushed metal disc the size of a small plate. There was writing on the top side that Tim couldn’t read. Below the writing were three<br />

buttons. Helmsman pushed one of these, and a short stick emerged from the plate with a low whining sound. The tribesmen, who had gathered<br />

round in a loose semicircle, laughed and applauded some more. They were clearly having a wonderful time. Tim, with his thirst slaked and his feet<br />

on solid (semisolid, at least) ground, decided he was having a pretty good time himself.<br />

“Is that from the Old People, sai?”<br />

Helmsman nodded.<br />

“Such things are held to be dangerous where I come from.”<br />

Helmsman at first didn’t seem to understand <strong>this</strong>, and from their puzzled expressions, none of the other plant-fellas did, either. Then he laughed<br />

and made a sweeping gesture that took in everything: the sky, the water, the oozing land upon which they stood. As if to say everything was<br />

dangerous.<br />

And in <strong>this</strong> place, Tim thought, everything probably is.<br />

Helmsman poked Tim’s chest, then gave an apologetic little shrug: Sorry, but <strong>you</strong> must pay attention.<br />

“All right,” Tim said. “I’m watching.” And <strong>for</strong>ked two fingers at his eyes, which made them all chuckle and elbow each other, as if he had gotten off<br />

an especially good one.<br />

Helmsman pushed a second button. The disc beeped, which made the watchers murmur appreciatively. A red light came on below the buttons.<br />

Helmsman began to turn in a slow circle, holding the metal device out be<strong>for</strong>e him like an offering. Three quarters of the way around the circle, the<br />

device beeped again and the red light turned green. Helmsman pointed one overgrown finger in the direction the device was now pointing. As well<br />

as Tim could ken from the mostly hidden sun, <strong>this</strong> was north. Helmsman looked to see if Tim understood. Tim thought he did, but there was a<br />

problem.<br />

“There’s water that way. I can swim, but . . .” He bared his teeth and chomped them together, pointing toward the tussock where he had almost

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