Human stood among them and gestured toward his body, as if it were a weak and feeble thing. “Of us!”
“They're afraid of the same thing you fear, when you look up and see the stars fill up with humans. They're afraid that someday they'll come to a world and find that you have got there first.”
“We don't want to be there first,” said Human. “We want to be there too.”
“Then give me time,” said the Speaker. “Teach me who you are, so that I can teach them.”
“Anything,” said Human. He looked around at the others. “We'll teach you anything.”
Leaf-eater stood up. He spoke in the Males' Language, but Miro understood him. “Some things aren't yours to teach.”
Human answered him sharply, and in Stark. “What Pipo and Libo and Ouanda and Miro taught us wasn't theirs to teach, either. But they taught us.”
“Their foolishness doesn't have to be our foolishness.” Leaf-eater still spoke in Males' Language.
“Nor does their wisdom necessarily apply to us,” Human retorted.
Then Leaf-eater said something in Tree Language that Miro could not understand. Human made no answer, and Leafeater walked away.
As he left, Ouanda returned, her eyes red from crying.
Human turned back to the Speaker. "What do you want to know?" he asked. "We'll tell you, we'll show you, if we can. "
Speaker in turn looked at Miro and Ouanda. “What should I ask them? I know so little that I don't know what we need to know.”
Miro looked to Ouanda.
“You have no stone or metal tools,” she said. “But your house is made of wood, and so are your bows and arrows.”
Human stood, waiting. The silence lengthened. “But what is your question?” Human finally said.
How could he have missed the connection? Miro thought.
"We humans," said Speaker, "use tools of stone or metal to cut down trees, when we want to shape them into houses or arrows or clubs like the ones I see some of you carrying. "
It took a moment for the Speaker's words to sink in. Then, suddenly, all the piggies were on their feet. They began running around madly, purposelessly, sometimes bumping into each other or into trees or the log houses. Most of them were silent, but now and then one of them would wail, exactly as they had cried out a few minutes ago. It was eerie, the almost silent insanity of the piggies, as if they had suddenly lost control of their bodies. All the years of careful noncommunication, refraining from telling the piggies anything, and now Speaker breached that policy and the result was this madness.
Human emerged from the chaos and threw himself to the ground in front of Speaker. “O Speaker!” he cried loudly. “Promise that you'll never let them cut my father Rooter with their stone and metal tools! If you want to murder someone, there are ancient brothers who will give themselves, or I will gladly die, but don't let them kill my father!”
“Or my father!” cried the other piggies. “Or mine!”
“We would never have planted Rooter so close to the fence,” said Mandachuva, “if we had known you werewere varelse.”
Speaker raised his hands again. “Has any human cut a tree in Lusitania? Never. The law here forbids it. You have nothing to fear from us.”
There was a silence as the piggies became still. Finally Human picked himself up from the ground. “You've made us fear humans all the more,” he said to Speaker. “I wish you had never come to our forest.”
Ouanda's voice rang out above his. “How can you say that after the way you murdered my father!”
Human looked at her with astonishment, unable to answer. Miro put his arm around Ouanda's shoulders. And the Speaker for the Dead spoke into the silence. “You promised me that you'd answer all my questions. I ask you now: How do you build a house made of wood, and the bow and arrows that this one carries, and those clubs. We've told you the only way we know; you tell me another way, the way you do it.”
“The brother gives himself,” said Human. “I told you. We tell the ancient brother of our need, and we show him the shape, and he gives himself.”
“Can we see how it's done?” said Ender.
Human looked around at the other piggies. “You want us to ask a brother to give himself, just so you can see it? We don't need a new house, not for years yet, and we have all the arrows we need–”
“Show him!”
Miro turned, as the others also turned, to see Leaf-eater re-emerging from the forest. He walked purposefully into the middle of the clearing; he did not look at them, and he spoke as if he were a herald, a town crier, not caring whether anyone was listening to him or not. He spoke in the Wives' Language, and Miro could understand only bits and pieces.
“What is he saying?” whispered the Speaker.
Miro, still kneeling beside him, translated as best he could. "He went to the wives, apparently, and they said to do whatever you asked. But it isn't that simple, he's telling them that– I don't know these words– something about all of them dying. Something about brothers dying, anyway. Look at them– they aren't afraid, any of them. "
“I don't know what their fear looks like,” said Speaker. “I don't know these people at all.”
“I don't either,” said Miro. “I've got to hand it to you– you've caused more excitement here in half an hour than I've seen in years of coming here.”
“It's a gift I was born with,” said the Speaker. “I'll make you a bargain. I won't tell anybody about your Questionable Activities. And you don't tell anybody who I am.”
“That's easy,” said Miro. “I don't believe it anyway.”
Leaf-eater's speech ended. He immediately padded to the house and went inside.
“We'll ask for the gift of an ancient brother,” said Human. “The wives have said so.”
So it was that Miro stood with his arm around Ouanda, and the Speaker standing at his other side, as the piggies performed a miracle far more convincing than any of the ones that had won old Gusto and Cida their title Os Venerados.
The piggies gathered in a circle around a thick old tree at the clearing's edge. Then, one by one, each piggy shimmied up the tree and began beating on it with a club. Soon they were all in the tree, singing and pounding out complex rhythms. “Tree Language,” Ouanda whispered.
After only a few minutes of this the tree tilted noticeably. Immediately about half the piggies jumped down and began pushing the tree so it would fall into the open ground of the clearing. The rest began beating all the more furiously and singing all the louder.
One by one the great branches of the tree began to fall off. Immediately piggies ran out and picked them up, dragged them away from the area where the tree was meant to fall.
Human carried one to the Speaker, who took it carefully, and showed it to Miro and Ouanda. The raw end, where it had been attached to the tree, was absolutely smooth. It wasn't flat– the surface undulated slightly along an oblique angle. But there was no raggedness to it, no leaking sap, nothing to imply the slightest violence in its separation from the tree. Miro touched his finger to it, and it was cold and smooth as marble.
Finally the tree was a single straight trunk, nude and majestic; the pale patches where branches once had grown were brightly lit by the afternoon sun. The singing reached a climax, then stopped. The tree tilted and then began a smooth and graceful fall to the earth. The ground shook and thundered when it struck, and then all was still.
Human walked to the fallen tree and began to stroke its surface, singing softly. The bark split gradually under his hands; the crack extended itself up and down the length of the tree until the bark was split completely in half. Then many piggies took hold of it and pried it from the trunk; it came away on one side and the other, in two continuous sheets of bark. The bark was carried to the side.
“Have you ever seen them use the bark?” Speaker asked Miro.