“You cannot return to the Platform or to the Institute. To them, you all died during the accident on Nine. The official story will be that Melat went insane and used the Raven to destroy the planet.”
“Well, yup, that’s pretty much what happened,” Minns exclaimed.
Etch finished. “And all hands were lost. You were destroyed in the gravitational collapse.”
Realization settled on all of them.
“Then what will become of us?” Gorian asked.
Fen coughed and finished his glass. “Etch, I’d better handle it from here.”
Chapter 43 – Earth
Amy Marksman was born a chubby, bawling baby in a small cottage in the mountains facing the great ocean. Her village was small, populated by only a few hundred people or so. The villagers were mostly merchants, trading with the ocean dwellers to the west and the plains people to the east. Her father was the town blacksmith. He’d travel to the ancient, ruined cities to the north, bringing back carts full of rusted iron and other metals. He could forge just about any tool or device in his shop. His guilty pleasure was crafting blades. Many lawkeepers and hunters would travel long distances to buy or barter his wares.
When she wasn’t engulfed in the smoke and heat of her father’s shop, Amy’s world was pine trees and songbirds. Salt air would drift in during the evening; she’d spend many evenings sitting on the porch, dreaming about ships and far-away places. But traveling the world was not in her stars. She was the village’s prime gardener. Her mother, grandmother, and generations of female ancestors before these women had the same gift as she. Every spring they would conjure berries and vegetables from the rocky dirt. They had a sense of the seasons and the soil, knowing what amendments and additives were needed — when to make the land work and when to let it rest. The village eagerly awaited the rewards of their labor. The best children in the town became her apprentices. A considerable army of assistants was at her disposal.
Since she was a young girl she saw the tiny creatures in the forest beyond the farm fields. They glowed lightly, like little candle flames, always retreating into the dark trees when she approached. She spoke to them often. They only responded in giggles or silence. Of course, Amy wasn’t the first or the only one to see others in the forest. As the world healed after the ancient ones left, the spirits returned. Gods walked among them, swam in the oceans, and commanded the skies. However, rarely did the spirits pay mere humans heed. Amy was lucky to have the little ones there, watching her fields and protecting her when she was alone.
One clear night, Amy sat with her father admiring the stars and the moon. The white orb was dotted with lights that shined brightly even when its surface was clearly in shadow. Many stories existed about the origin of the tiny flickering moonlights. Some old timers said they were fireflies; others believed they were jewels. Her favorite explanation was that they were the houselights of the ancient ones, still living on the moon. But if the ancients were there, why did they never return? Did they orbit the earth revering, worshipping it? Did they fear the gods on its surface?
Her father told her stories of his childhood — hunting, exploring, his time sailing the sea. He told her that he would miss these times together. She was engaged to marry after the fall harvest. Soon she’d be busy raising a family as well as the fields. Hopefully, a daughter would arrive to learn her trade. No more time for these moments with her father. The crickets sang harmonies and the bats fluttered. And then the strange man arrived.
In the dark shadow of the barn, a large figure, taller than any man they had ever seen, appeared. He glowed lightly like the little people in the forest. It was cold, but no cloud of breath appeared from his mouth. Steam curled from his vest. His eyes were deep and coal black — the moonlights sparkled in them like crystals. Behind him appeared six tiny creatures — the same ones that flirted with Amy during her entire life. Her father grabbed her hand. She could feel the calluses and muscle, the warmth of creation in his pulse.
They both stood. Horses whinnied and the dog barked.
The glowing man raised his hand and smiled. “Hello, my friends. I’m Fromer. Your little guardians here told me to visit you. I have wonderful things to show you. Together we’ll travel further than you ever imagined. And some day, many will follow. But before I explain further, do you have any strong tea?”
After an eternity, Amy’s father stirred and nodded. She turned toward the kitchen and prepared the fire in the stove to boil some water. Fromer smiled and sat on the stump of a dead willow tree. It was time for him to embrace his destiny. He was home at last.
BOOK 2: ENDS
Chapter 44 – Amy
The village teacher sits by the fire, yapping as usual. She’s too close. If an ember goes flying, she’ll get burned. She rises, her gnarled hands waving as the story she tells reaches its climax. Her multi-colored robes spin and twirl, while her long, grey hair bobs. The crowd’s pleased with the drama, shouting and clapping. A bottle breaks in the distance. I yawn.
I’ve endured Teacher’s tall stories since I was a little girl. According to her and generations of teachers before her, the world used to belong to the ancient ones who left one day. That part’s true, I think. Someone was here before us and they made a colossal mess of things. Their trash is strewn everywhere, buried right under the surface. When I work the earth for planting I’m always finding trinkets of the past. Some I recognize — coins, buttons, bones, and lots of glass. Most things are mysteries. They served some purpose to those people, but the little boxes with symbols and shiny things with knobs mean nothing. All of us villagers throw the detritus in a pile at the outskirts of town in honor of the ones who were here before us. The mound’s huge, taller than three men, and wide as a field. Some townspeople treat it as a shrine. Maybe someday the old ones will return for their tools in that moldering heap.
The teacher links us to the past — for that I’m grateful. But my skepticism grows the further she goes back. Most towns have a few teachers that pass the stories across generations, with the flavor of the tales being as diverse and unique as the plants on the ground. From the towns I’ve visited, I’ve picked up some common themes, but the adornments and embellishments are sweeping. They do provide entertainment, helping us traverse the time at night when the darkness settles and I swear the shadows are moving out there. Crouching, with wild eyes, the teacher describes how the world formed from the void. Darkness was separated from light by the gods or the ancient ones or someone. This is where I begin to doubt just about everything we know. I’ve met only one god. And once I got to know him, he didn’t seem very godlike to me. And then there are the little ones in the forest who have flirted with me my entire life. They certainly aren’t gods. They can’t even talk.
Teacher’s stories get more interesting when she reaches the part about the demise of the ancient ones. No matter how fantastic her depiction, it’s obvious the end had to be horrific. I’ve never been to the ruins of the cities. Mostly the men, including my father and husband Wenn, have traveled to them. A few of our women are strong, wily, and perhaps daft enough to join the boys on their expeditions. When our explorers and scavengers reach the ruins, they find twisted metal jutting out from brambles and woodlots. Mountains of rock carved into strange shapes and sizes are covered by thin soil and sparse trees. Our explorers scavenge for materials to fabricate into tools and weapons. They occasionally find trinkets that fetch a good price on the market. Some traveler visiting our town is always willing to trade a chicken, smoked fish, or occasionally something special like a horse or a sword for the rings of shiny metal or the extraordinarily hard, clear rocks that father brings back in his satchel — a worn, scarred leather bag that mom made for him. He treasures that thing. When father or Wenn drink too much shine, they talk about the bones. Piles of them are scattered everywhere. Teacher says that the ancient ones were punished by the gods for trying to emulate the gods’ power. If there really are gods, they were obviously not happy with their subjects, given the destruction and death they left behind.