Rocky was taken aback. ‘But we only got here a day ago.’
‘So what? I’m a Next, remember. A quick study. And I learned all I needed to know.’
‘You can’t leave,’ Roberta said now. ‘It’s impossible, unless one of us takes you.’
Stan grinned. ‘You know that’s not true. Not any more. And you always knew I wouldn’t stay here. Like you said, we super-minds can see all the way to the end game, right? So if you’re as smart as you say you are—’
Rocky, ever practical, asked, ‘What about our stuff?’
‘Screw it. I’ll buy you new jockey shorts. You coming or not?’
‘Hell, yes.’ And he grabbed Stan’s hand.
Roberta made to get hold of them. ‘Wait – you can’t—’
But Stan could.
32
EARTH WEST 389,413.
Joshua’s first impression was that this world, towards the outer Western edge of the Corn Belt, was unimpressive. A little drier than most of its neighbours, maybe, the forest more sparse, the grasslands thinner. No animals in sight; he saw none of the big herd beasts that characterized such worlds.
And yet somebody had come here, to this world, to build a home.
Deep in the heart of a stepwise Kansas, by a sluggish river, a sturdy log cabin stood back from the flood plain. Joshua, watching from cover from a couple of hundred yards away, could see how a nearby forest clump had been cut for timber. Fields had been marked out and roughly fenced. There was a wood store, a hen house, what looked like the beginnings of a forge. There was even a garden, contained by a picket fence, where flowers grew this summer’s day. All of this was surrounded by a neat stockade to keep out predators, and to contain any stock animals. Joshua was impressed. Yet it struck him that one couple could have built all this, given time and determination.
But the hen house was broken open now. Whatever animals had been kept here, goats or pigs or sheep, were gone, slaughtered or driven off. The fields were overgrown, the potatoes needed earthing, even the flowers were growing wild.
The house, though, was not empty. And Joshua, peering through his lightweight binoculars, thought he saw a face staring out of one window, a man’s face, roughly shaven, fearful. The face disappeared, the man ducking back.
Whoever he was, it was obvious why he was afraid, and who he was afraid of. For Sally Linsay was here.
It was the spring of 2058. Since his airship tour of beetle-world with Lobsang it had taken Joshua nearly half a year to track her down.
He found her settled on a bluff to the west, overlooking the farmhouse.
Joshua approached her small camp, whistling softly. The tune was called ‘Harpoon of Love’, a fragment of their shared past that she might recognize. Then he walked into her field of view, with his hands up.
At least she didn’t gun him down immediately. When she recognized him she turned her back and returned to her scrutiny of the farmhouse, squatting easily, her rifle of aluminium and bronze and ceramic in her lap.
‘Took me months to find you,’ he called as he walked up.
She shrugged.
When he got to the top of the bluff he found Sally sitting beside a deep-dug hearth laden with ash, a hearth evidently repeatedly used. Bones were heaped neatly, testifying to the many small animals who had given their lives here to keep her alive. And there was a pail of water, presumably fetched from the stream below. Even clothes, washed, spread over the rock, drying in the dusty sunlight.
He said, ‘You’ve been here a while, right? A regular home from home.’
‘What do you want, Joshua?’
‘What the hell are you doing here, Sally?’
‘Tell me what you want. Or just go, I don’t care.’
‘I’m here because of Lobsang.’
She didn’t take her eyes off the farmhouse below. Her hair was brushed back tightly from her lean face, giving her an intense, predatory look; the wrinkles around her eyes were deep. She was over sixty years old now, he reminded himself.
She said, ‘What about Lobsang?’
‘He needs us. You. He said you’d probably be expecting the call.’
‘Would I? Why so?’
‘Because you took him and Agnes to New Springfield in the first place. You set him up. So he says. Now he says you owe him.’
‘I don’t owe anybody anything. I never did.’
Joshua sighed. ‘Well, he’s giving up playing happy families with Agnes. Now he wants us to do something for him. “I need you to go find me,” he said. He wants himself back. The old Lobsang.’
‘Isn’t that impossible? When he “died”, he burned out all his iterations, so I was told. All his backup stores, in space, stepwise. Even those probes he had out in the far solar system, the Oort cloud.’
‘There’s one copy he couldn’t reach. You know the one I mean. From The Journey.’
‘Ah. Yes, of course. The ambulant unit we left behind to converse with First Person Singular, at the shore of a desolate sea, more than two million worlds out … God, that’s nearly thirty years ago.’
‘Maybe even then he was thinking of it as an ultimate backup. And now he wants it back. One more journey, you and me. Just like the old days.’
She grunted. ‘You and I don’t have “old days”, Valienté. How did you find me?’
‘Come on, Sally. You always did leave a breadcrumb trail. You want to be found, just in case … This time I started at Jansson’s grave, in Madison. The flowers you left there—’
‘I don’t need to hear about your brilliant detective work.’
‘Also there have been rumours, of the setup you’ve got yourself trapped in here. This stake-out. You know how it is. Combers spread gossip like a contagion. And you’ve been here a long time.’
‘The bad guys are trapped, in that farmhouse. I’m not trapped.’
He kicked at the heap of animal bones. ‘Oh, really?’ He squatted down beside her, opened his pack and pulled out a plastic bottle of water and a strip of jerky. Sally refused the water but took a bite of jerky. ‘It’s impressive you’ve managed to pin this place down alone like this, for so long. But you need to hunt, collect water. And sleep. Even Sally Linsay needs to sleep.’
She shrugged. ‘I mix up my hours. No set routine, so they never know where I am.’ She lifted the rifle and without warning cracked off a shot; Joshua, looking down, saw splinters fly up from the porch of the farmhouse. ‘Even when I sleep I set up automatic fire, random timing.’ She slapped the rifle. ‘This is one smart gadget. Sure they could rush me. I’d get some of them, but the rest could reach me. They haven’t the guts. If they had any guts they wouldn’t be here in the first place.’
‘Who are they?’
‘What do names matter, out here? It’s what they’ve done that counts.’
‘How many?’
‘Five. All male. I think they’re related, a father with sons, or maybe cousins. A pack of them.’
‘Why don’t they just step out of there?’
‘Because I went in and smashed their Stepper boxes.’
‘Tell me why you’re here. What these guys did.’
‘Look at the place,’ she said bitterly. ‘You can figure it out for yourself.’
‘The pioneers. Just one couple?’
‘Yeah. I found a journal that the bad guys threw out the door, with other trash. They grew up on the Datum, survived Yellowstone, ended up in a Low Earth refugee camp – that’s where they met – and spent the next few years watching their parents cough their lungs up from the ash. When they were free of that they came out here, with all their parents’ savings used up on a twain delivery of the tools they needed, a few chickens, a pregnant sow. They hammered together their farmhouse, planted their crops and their flowers, raised their pigs and their chickens. She got pregnant. They always hoped others might follow, that some kind of township would grow up here.’