1.
The forest was green, and
thick, and endless. Sodden with warm rain which dripped and trickled in a
constant downpour from the canopy a hundred metres above. The air felt like a hot
cloth pressed against skin, and even when it was just after noon the canopy
gloomed all underneath it in dim emerald green light. Ground level was flooded
with an ocean of insect sound almost deafening.
The forest was swollen with life. And yet in recent weeks it had taken five
of Yàk è's men to their deaths. They had each starved and died like fish thrown
on a shoreline. Feeble gasping and staring eyes. After the last had passed
the others had caught a giant gèpà, and things were easier. Yàk è pondered the
grimness of fortune in this alien place.
Now there were but seven of them.
At dusk, as was their ritual, they rested in hammocks
strung above the ground. Spirits were somewhat higher now that food was
regular. Three of the men, the ones from Lamarakh, even sang, in their strange
alveolar language full of 't's and 'd's and 's's. Yàk è's other men, his Yellow
City brothers, lit torches around the circle of their camp. All night these
fires would bring insects - huge beetles, fat moths like birds, and tiny
bloodsucking flies. Their flutterings and clickings would be a constant
low-level torture. But the alternative was darkness, and then the things that
sometimes came in the night, and which needed no light to see, would easily
kill everyone in the camp.
"Who will take the watches?" asked Yàk è. "I
will be first."
"I will be second." Jòh Pò, the others had
learned, had the sharpest ears. He had been with Yàk è on many journeys, all of
them triumphant. Never a big man he was wasted now by hunger and heat. He
volunteered for everything, clearly attempting to disguise his horror at his
own weakness.
The third volunteer was one of the Lamarakhi, the tallest
of the three. The Yellow City men called him U. His real name was an
impossibility for them and he seemed to prefer this abbreviation to the
indignity of mispronunciation.
As darkness surrounded their island of light, they slept.
All except Yàk è, sitting in his hammock with three javelins across his lap. He
thought about the men who had starved, as he often did, and then his mind went
back to the Yellow City and he imagined he was there, in the rooftop garden of
the fourth library, with a pipe and poppy seeds, watching the sun rise over the
ocean.
He woke from that dream with the man called U shaking his
shoulder. Looked around. It was not yet day. The light from the torches was dim
and orange. Flickering. Some mindless winged thing was butting itself
repeatedly into the flames.
The man called U put a finger to his lips, then made the
waving motion with his fingers. So, one of the things had come. Yàk è clenched
his fists and pressed his teeth together. An old and familiar mixture of
excitement and fear.
Together, he and U woke the others. All the men knew not to
make a sound. The hunters could feel the very vibrations of the air. Not that
it greatly mattered - they would be smelled out. But it might buy them some
time.
They fanned out around their little circle of hammocks. The
blades on their javelins glowed in the light from the fires. Since the others
had died, javelins at least had become plentiful. Each man carried three.
The forest was dark, so very dark, beyond the circle of
light. Before he had come to this place Yàk è could scarcely have imagined it.
The canopy was so thick that the moonlight could not penetrate. To look into
the trees at night was to stare into nothing. A black nothing which thronged
with invisible life.
He turned his head this way and that, trying to spot what U
had seen. An endless ululating swell of insect calls washed over them.
It came silently from the vegetation near Hè Lòk.
The Yellow City man had the most fleeting of moments to
survive. At once the blackness before him revealed movement. A velveteen,
slithering body reared. Huge, wet, horribly graceful. Its maw opened beneath
the expressionless, blank, faceless face. Its feelers - long, whip like -
reached for him. To Yàk è they looked for a second like a pair of arms spread
wide in anticipation of a loving embrace. If they touched Hè Lòk he was as good
as dead. But if he moved it would sense him nevertheless.
He was at the mercy of his companions.
Yàk è stepped towards Hè Lòk's position and threw his first
javelin over hand. It thudded into the hunter's exposed side, slicing through
thick skin. An instant later three more javelins hit it from the other flank -
the Lamarakhi. Sharp metal punched through flesh.
Instantly the creature's face began to change. Yàk è saw
the quiver of movement. He raised his second javelin and threw wildly, even as Jòh Pò, Fò Yà and the three Lamarakhi came
bounding in the hunter's direction, hurling another volley.
They were too late. The two openings had already appearing
in the hunter's face. Even as the javelins cut into its flesh it was spraying
twin streams of liquid which coated Hè Lòk in thick ropes. He had flung himself
aside but it did not matter. He did not stand up. As the hunter thrashed itself
back into the forest he lay almost motionless, only a leg twitching.
The others gathered round.
"He is finished," said Fò Yà. The younger man was
a complainer and a fatalist, but for once, Yàk è could not argue. The hunter's
liquid was impossible to dissolve or break.
Hè Lòk gazed up at them. He was glued to the forest floor;
the liquid had even sprayed across his face, coating his mouth closed. Only his
left leg was free.
The Lamarakhi gathered together and held each other's
hands.
Yàk è bent down. "We cannot help you, brother,"
he said.
Hè Lòk merely stared at him. It was impossible to tell
whether forgiveness or anger was in those wide brown eyes.
Yàk è straightened up. "Who will do it?"
The man called U stepped forward and drew his knife.
"Don't let the lozenge touch your skin. Do it
quickly."
U nodded, bent down, and with one quick slice it was done.
Yàk è
looked into Hè Lòk's eyes and saw that he was dead. He saw nothing of the blank
horror that the starved men's eyes had showed, and for that he was grateful.
The hunter would return to claim the body the next night - no other animal
would touch it.
"A quick end, which we might not have," said Fò Yà.
"In a way, he is to be envied?"
"We lost ten javelins and an intelligent man." Yàk
è stepped away from the body. He had not known Hè Lòk well but was saddened. He
felt, not for the first time, the forest's indifference. Whether they lived or
died meant nothing here.
"How many more days?" said Jòh Pò.
"Maybe three."
"Then the return."
"We will never leave this forest. You realise
this?" Fò Yà was studying the corpse with interested eyes.
2.
The next morning Yàk è opened
the journal of Laxmi Guptra Dahl, as was his custom, and pored over the Silaish
script. Like Lamarakhi it was difficult for him to pronounce the words but he
understood their meaning. "The thirty fourth day. As the ground rose we
came to monuments in the forest like the menhirs on the River of Crayfish. Except
smaller and worn away by the heat of this vile place. Clearly they are of the
same or similar makers." Yàk è had never been to the River of Crayfish and
knew it only by its name on a map; it was hundreds of leagues away, in high
mountains distant in every sense of the word.
Not for the first time he felt that reading the journal had
left him more apprehensive and confused than he had been. Though it was easy
enough to be apprehensive and confused that morning. The forest was thick with
mist that seemed a tangible thing. Like grey foam strung between the trees.
"Let's break camp," he said.
The Lamarakhi had gathered around Hè Lòk's body. The tall
one called U was saying something to the others, who Fò Yà had nicknamed The
Chin and The Eyes after their most prominent features. They did not have the
look of men ready to continue.
"We should have moved on as soon as the hunter was
gone," said Yàk è to Jòh Pò. "This way we start the day with
it...fresh in our minds."
The older man shrugged. "We would have all died in the
forest at night."
"You believe that would have been regrettable?"
said Fò Yà, overhearing. His laugh was a derisory cackle.
"Why are you here, Fò Yà?" said Jòh Pò, true
feeling suddenly in his voice for the first time in many days.
"There is no 'why', there only 'is'."
"The hunter worm should have taken you instead," Jòh
Pò muttered.
Yàk è watched them
both, but knew neither had the energy for more than bickering. In any case he
doubted he himself had the energy to say anything to them of value.
"We go," he said.
3.
The mist grew thicker around
them. It was like nothing Yàk è had seen before on earth. As if the very air
itself was slowly coalescing into something grey and solid. It lay on the
forest like a damp cloak, suppressing all sound. He could hear his own
breathing.
None of them talked. This was common enough and they had
often been silent for hours at a time as they travelled. Nevertheless Yàk è
could almost feel the men’s' apprehension. They were only six in number now,
and it could not be doubted that Fò Yà was right - they would never leave the
forest alive. They might reach their destination but the return journey would
destroy them.
He was not even sure any longer why he had come.
At noon, they reached a slope, as Dahl's journal had
predicted. It ran upwards for half a mile, then flattened itself out. When they
reached the top they saw things dark in the mist, among the tree trunks. Tall,
narrow, and made from stone. The menhirs. They looked like termite mounds on
the hills of the aviary's garden where it ran down to the God River; monuments
of earth and stone which seemed nevertheless alive.
There were twelve, arranged in three rows of four.
"Well, there once were people here, then," said Jòh
Pò. "Though I wonder what manner of fools might choose to live in such a
place?"
"The same manner of fool who might choose to come here
and try to find out?" Fò Yà approached the nearest stone and laid his hand
against it.
The Lamarakhi had gathered together, their arms linked.
They reminded Yàk è of women you might see on Temple Row in summer, examining the
incense stalls or buying parasols. Their physical comfort with one another
intrigued and repelled him.
"It is basalt," Fò Yà was saying.
Yàk è went over. "Basalt? There was once a volcano
around here, then."
"Or they brought it." The younger man appeared
already to have lost interest. "There is no way of telling."
Yàk è stood back, wondering what the three
rows signified. Perhaps graves of chiefs or kings. Or monuments to forgotten
gods or heroes. Or perhaps there had been beauty in them in the eyes of their
creators. Their silence and stillness was undoubtedly impressive.
Fò Yà had wandered beyond them and was gazing
up at the high canopy with a bored expression. Yàk è watched him. The young man
was a mystery, all right. He was handsome, strong, intelligent, and his entire
bearing was that of a rich and educated city boy. And yet here he was.
Diffidence could ruin an entire life.
There were plenty of men like that in the Yellow City of
course. Some of them were fixtures in the lounges and atria of the aviary - men
who Yàk è had shared smoke with and held pleasant conversation. They were men
whose laziness had made them like shells. Fò Yà's lack of ambition was
monstrous, however, and that had taken him beyond useless dilettancy to
outright delinquency, and thus here. Yàk è was sure of it.
4.
Reluctant to stay near the
standing stones, they pressed on after making only cursory sketches. Yàk è took
out Laxmi Guptra Dahl's journal again. They were now near the end of the
journey, and the man's writings. Yàk è had read the entries dozens of times,
but he went over the final two once more. They were carefully etched in Dahl's
pedantic hand; nothing about them hinted at any nervousness or fear. The
expedition had spent an uneventful night just beyond the stones, and from there
had reached the Holes unmolested. Their doom had crept up on them unawares.
At least when our
doom creeps up on us, we won't be unawares, Yàk è thought to himself, and
then suddenly found himself chuckling.
"You are laughing about our impending death?"
said Fò Yà.
"How did you guess?"
"What else is there to laugh about?"
Yàk è chuckled again. The Lamarakhi glanced at turned
around and looked at him with uneasy smiles.
"I would kill for some poppy seeds," said Yàk è.
"Poppy seeds," said the man they called U,
showing a rare willingness to use the Yellow City tongue. "When we
return."
"A thousand of them," said Fò Yà.
They camped in a clearing where a tree fall had created a
space in the vegetation. The huge body of the tree lay like some slumbering
rock-hewn being on the ground. Knowing that there might be beetle grubs
burrowed inside they spent some time smoking them out, and then chewing on the
resultant tasteless catch as evening fell.
That's a rare talent you have. I have read widely (even have a degree in it!) but this is as good as any published scribblings I have read of late. More please!
ReplyDeleteThat's very kind of you. I stopped writing around 2010 because I became disillusioned with my ability to sustain a story - I would get hypercritical and start to hate anything I was writing before it was finished. As a result, I never finished anything. Recently I've started writing again with the aim of overcoming that - we'll see what happens.
DeleteJust write fragments. Don't commit yourself to a story. And sometimes you'll feel like writing fragments what connect to extant fragments. And sometimes you won't. Even if you don't get a *story* story out of it, you might. And at the very least you'll learn more about your setting and the people in it (once they start getting names and talking).
ReplyDeleteAnd you might post more of them here, as I selfishly hope.
Thanks very much. I think to be honest I'm at the stage where I ought to do the complete opposite - just try to finish something and then beat it into a shape vaguely resembling a good story.
Delete