"You sing very well," she said, reddening a bit. "I know it. But it isn't all real. When I sing of battle, I know what it means. But love--those are words I don't understand."
"How do you know?" It was as though she were afraid to ask, but was fascinated anyway.
He looked at his bare wrist. "I never gave my--" She held up her own wrist with the heavy gold bracelet clasped about it. "You gave. I accepted. Is that love?" "I don't know." But he was breathing jerkily. "Neq, I don't know either," she admitted. "I don't feel different--I mean I'm still me--but the gold seems to burn, to lead me along, I don't know where. But I want to know. I want to give--everything. I'm trying to. But I'm old, and crazy, and afraid. Afraid I have nothing to give."
"You're beautiful, and warm, and brave. That business with the truck--"
"I hate that! Being a killer, I mean. But I had to do it. I was afraid for you."
"That must be love."
"I like the sound of that. But I know better, Neq. I could hate you and still need you. If anything happens to you, I have no way home."
That was the wonder of it: she was as afraid of him as he was of her. She fought rather than see him hurt--yet she could not come to him in peace. She had to impose practical reasons to justify what needed no justification. As he did, too. "Show me your breast," he said.
"What?" She was not shocked, only uncomprehending.
"Your knife. Your--when you put away your knife, you--"
"I don't understand." But she did.
"Show me your breast."
Slowly, flushing furiously, she unwrapped her shoulder, exposing her right breast.
"It is nineteen," he said. "It excites me. A breast like that--it can't be old, or crazy, or afraid, or have nothing to give. It has to be loved."
She looked at herself. "You make me feel wanton."
"I will sing to your breast," he said.
She blushed again, and her breast blushed too, but she did not cover herself. "Where do you leam these songs?"
"They go around. Some say they come from before the Blast, but I don't believe that." Yet he did believe it as much as he disbelieved it, for so many of the words made no sense in the nomad context.
"The books are that old. The songs might be." Her flush was fading at last.
He sang, contemplating her breast:
"Does it?" She looked hopeful.
"No. I'd like it to fit." After a pause he added: "Neqa."
She couldn't seem to stop blushing. "You make me all confused when you say that. Neqa."
"Because of the bracelet."
"I know. I'm your wife as long as I wear it. But it isn't real."
"Maybe it will be." If only it were that simple!
"You nomads--you just pass the bracelet and that's it. Instant love, for an hour or a lifetime. I don't understand it."
"But you were a nomad once."
"No. I was a wild girl. No family. The crazies took me in, trained me, made me like them, outside. They do that with anyone who needs it. I never was part of the nomad society."
"Maybe that's why you don't understand the bracelet."
"Yes. What about you?"
"I understand it. I just can't do it."
"Maybe that's the trouble with us. You're too gentle and I'm too timid." She laughed nervously. "That's funny, after we killed all those men. Gentle and timid!"
"We could hold each other tonight. It might help."
"What if the outlaws come back?"
He sighed. "I'll stand watch."
"You watched last night. I should do it this time."
"All right."
She laughed again, more easily, so that her breast moved pleasantly. "So matter of fact! What if I said 'take me in your arms, crush me, make love to me!'?"
He considered the prospect. "I could try. If you said it before I got too nervous."
"I can't say it. Even though I want to."
"You want to do it--but you can't ask me?"
"I can't answer that." This time she forgot to blush.
"I want to do it," she said seriously. "But I can't just start. Not unless you say. And even then--"
"It is funny, you know. We know what we want, we know how each feels, but we can't act. We can even speak about speaking, but we can't speak."
"Maybe tomorrow," he said.
"Maybe tomorrow." And the look of longing she gave him as she put away her breast made his heart pause and jump.
Tomorrow was another clear day, and the ruts were hardened, and there seemed to be the first whiff of something from the corpses around the truck, and so they moved out. Nature compensated for the day's delay by providing an excellent route.
That night Neqa joined him in a double sleeping bag in the back of the truck and pressed her breast against him, but she did not ask and he did not do. They both were frustrated, and they talked about it, and they agreed the whole thing was ridiculous, but that was all.
They had to keep alert against possible marauders, so they took turns sleeping even though together, and while she slept he tried to touch her breast with his hand but didn't... but it was against his hand when he woke after her turn awake.
The next night they slept together naked, and he ran his hands over both her fine breasts and her firm buttocks, and she cried when she could not respond, and that was all.
The night after that he sang to her and kissed her, and she ran her hands over his torso and did not avoid what she had avoided before, huge as it was, and she pressed against him and he tried... but she cried out with a pain that might have been physical and might have been emotional, and he stopped, chastened, and she cried quietly for some time.
Meanwhile, they were making much faster progress toward the supplier. Their union unconsummated, they pulled up to a hostel near what Neq recognized with shock as the mountain: the place of nomad suicide. Gaunt rusty girders projected from it, hiding the summit; he knew that no man who had passed that barrier had ever returned... until recently.
Yet Tyl of Two Weapons and the Master had laid siege to this bastion, for there had been living men within it. They had gutted it, and now it was truly dead.
Neqa consulted her map. "Yes, this is it."
"This--your supplier?" he demanded.
"Helicon. But something is wrong."
"We destroyed it," he said. "The Weaponless did, I mean; I was not there. I could have told Dr. Jones, if I'd known he was talking about the mountain!"
"Oh, no!" she cried. "Helicon manufactured all the technical equipment! We cannot do without it!"
"Maybe some are alive, inside." Knowing Tyl's efficiency, he doubted it, but he had to offer her some hope.
She moved around the center column of the hostel, looking for something. This hostel had not been ravaged, but there was no food in it. She opened the shower stall and stepped in.
"You're still dressed," Neq reminded her.
"I know it's here," she said, as though he hadn't spoken. "I memorized the instructions." She counted tiles along the wall, then pressed on one. She counted from another direction and pressed again. And once more. Nothing happened.
"You have to turn the knobs," he said. "One for hot, the other for cold. But you don't need to take a shower right now, just when you're beginning to smell like a true nomad--"
"I must have done it too slowly," she said. "Now I know the tiles, I'll try it faster."
She went through her mysterious ritual again, while Neq watched tolerantly. The crazies were crazy!
Something snapped inside the inner wall. Neqa pushed on yet another tile and it tilted out, revealing a handle. Neq gaped; he had never known there were handles behind the shower wall! If not for hot or cold water, what?