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own clothes.
In a moment when Brenda was surely asleep, Curdis spoke in the dark. "I had to turn down an offer
from Loria."
Offer? Ah. "What did you say?"
"I said I'm married and Brenda's too young, but Timmy's not."
Jemmy's ears burned in the dark.
The sun hadn't risen over the mountains yet. The morning was cold. The water was colder for the first
moments; then Jemmy's body stopped noticing. He and Tarzana fought their boards through the waves
and paddled out to where others were sitting six in a row.
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They waited, talking little. Sound carried very well over the water.
Jemmy asked, "Don't you get sharks around here?"
The pause lasted long enough that Jemmy thought nobody had heard him. Then one boy said, "I don't
think they like the taste of the river. Sometimes one comes around. We get a lot of sharks when a
caravan stops and three hundred chugs get their attention."
"Wave," Tarzana said.
The idea was to be moving as fast as the wave when it arrived. Paddle without falling off. When the
board catches the wave, stand up. Jemmy had tried standing up yesterday. Today he didn't. Kneeling on
a board as a wave hurled it toward the beach was tough enough.
Curdis asked the Twerdahl folk for work, and work was found. He and Brenda and Jemmy (make that
Tim, start thinking Tim) knew how to garden, knew how to pull Destiny weeds.
"If we leave about now," Curdis said in midafternoon, "we'll get to the guarded bridge about sunset."
"I think they like us here," Brenda said doubtfully. "Uh-huh. I don't guess Margeiy's worried about us
yet, but, Brenda, I told the merchants we'd be coming back today."
Jemmy held up a hand. Hold it. "Sunset?"
"They saw Thonny around noon. Let's let them see you around sunset."
At noon and sunset, two views of "Tim Hann" could look quite different. Curdis continued, "Sunset,
not dawn. They'd never believe we marched in the dark."
"Did the merchants tell you about Twerdahi Town?"
"Not a word," Curdis said in some irritation.
"Nothing about people living down the Road? Big surprise?"
"Big joke."
"So," said Jemmy, "we found a surprise and stayed an extra day. That's what they'll expect. Give
them another day to forget what Tim Hann looks like."
Curdis grinned. "I like it here too. I didn't have the nerve to try those boards, Tim. How is it?"
Jemmy shook his head. "It's like, I can't tell a Twerdahl how to ride
a bicycle. I can't tell you what surfing is like. Want us to show you? Brenda?"
"Yeah."
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Brenda showed an aptitude for surfing. Curdis gave up early. He didn't like falling off in front of strange
males.
The Bednacourt girls returned to the House of Healing with them that night. When the Bloocher clan
curled into their blankets, the girls didn't leave.
Voices in the dark, men and women talking together. That was Loria:
"You're good people. You have things to teach us. Some of what comes off the Road are parasites."
"We all do farm work," Curdis said. "We learn to look for what needs doing."
Glind: "We don't let anyone stay a minute if he's alone. Any man alone must be running from
something."
"A woman?" Curdis.
"A woman alone might be running from, well, a man." Tarzana's voice.
Loria: "The only women we've ever seen on the Road were merchants. But there was a man called
himself Haines-" And he was a murderer who hid in the swamp. He stole from the truck gardens when he
could, until Destiny food and no speckles turned him into a skeletal zombie, and then they flushed him
out.
"Sounds like Mattoo Haine," Curdis said. "He killed his wife and oldest son when I was little."
Nobody wanted to tell Twerdahls that if criminals could get past where the Road straightened, Spiral
Town let them go. There was a silence Jemmy savored. Then he spoke into the dark. "It must have
started this way."
"Tim?''
"Tarzana, grown men and women don't talk to each other in Spiral Town. When your grandparents
came, maybe they didn't bring lights. They could talk together in the dark where they could be just
voices."
"Mmmm."
He must have fallen asleep soon after.
Jemmy taught bicycle riding all morning.
Cooking over a grill fascinated him. He helped some, but watched more.
In midafternoon they retrieved their bikes from Twerdahl riders. Again Curdis said, "Time to leave."
Jemmy said, "I'm not going."
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"What?"
"Tell the merchants Tim wants to know where Cavorite went. Tim Hann is on the Road."
He saw Curdis studying him and guessed his thoughts. Is Jemmy crazy? How crazy? He didn't know
Jemmy like a brother, and the Jemmy Bloocher he thought he knew wouldn't have killed a merchant. ~
Curdis said, "They'll take a harder look at Tim Hann if Tim comes back alone."
"I don't think I'm coming back, Curdis. I can't run Bloocher Farm. I can't talk down a merchant's
price while I'm hiding my face! And if Spiral Town gets in another face-off with the caravans- You see?"
Curdis did. "They'd have to stand without the Bloochers. You'd stand for the Bloochers, but you'd
be hiding."
"Curdis, it's unacceptable. Give Thonny two years, he'll be fine running Bloocher Farm. Thonny
doesn't have to hide anything."
"That's two years before Margery and I can get our own farm."
"Forgive me."
"Uh-huh." Curdis's eyes were unfocused: still thinking. "Okay, the caravan'll be starting back this way
tomorrow or so. I figured we'd meet them just when they were getting organized, and we'd get you
through that way. If you stay, they'll be here in, oh, four days. Tim, are you staying here or pushing on?"
"I don't know.''
"You could keep ahead of a caravan. Even on foot."
"Sure."
"Or let them catch you in a few weeks, but now you're a Twerdahl with itchy feet."
"Mmm."
"Is this really your choice?"
"Yes."
"Me, too," Brenda said.
Curdis blew his top. Brenda shouted back, then cried.
Jemmy watched them dwindle, pedaling hard, up the Road.
When he returned to the House of Healing that night, Loria came with him.
6
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Oven Ma~er
The northwest coast is mountainous. The southeast coast is wider, and rich in beaches. We'll set clown
at the far end 0f the peninsula and explore.
-Anthony Lyons, Geology
Twerdahl Town didn't seem to know about bread.
There was grain growing along the Road. There were rocks about. Children of all ages found Tim
Hann strange and interesting, and some would do what he suggested.
He showed the younger children how to gather grain. The older helped him carry rocks. Upthrusting
banyan knees had flaked a great flat shelf of lava from the Road. Four were able to move that. It became
the base of Tim Hann's oven.
His first experiments came out scorched, but two days after his sibs left him, Tim Hann served bread
at dinner.
The morning of the third day- The first of the board riders took their boards from where they were
propped against the long wall of the House of Healing. Tim Hann trailed the others, watching them,
trying to balance the board on his shoulder as they did.
The board was a few inches shorter than Tim himself, carved from wood that grew in the swamp. It
was heavy and awkward. Playful gusts of wind kept swinging it about.
Far up the Road toward Spiral Town, there was dust.
Jemmy stopped and squinted. A plume of dust, far off. He thought he knew what it meant.
Wend Bednacourt carried her board like a wand. She wasn't stronger
than he was, but she had the balance. The other riders were running, but Wend trailed back a little. She
said, "My daughters have taken an interest in you, Tim."
"I know. But all the others-" It had taken Jemmy two days to notice that the Bednacourt women [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]

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