The mayor felt better in the morning. Brian had clearly been
up all night beside him, yet he accepted his orders—not exactly cheerfully, for
that was not Brian’s style, but without reservation or resentment.
“Will it leave a scar?” the mayor asked.
“Yes,” Snake said, surprised. “Of course. Several. I took
out quite a lot of dead muscle, and it will never all fill back in. You
probably won’t limp, though.”
“Brian, where’s my tea?” The tone of the mayor’s voice
revealed his annoyance at Snake’s reply.
“It’s coming, sir.” The fragrance of spices drifted into the
room. The mayor drank his tea alone, ignoring Snake while she rebandaged his
leg.
When she left, scowling, Brian followed her to the hall
outside.
“Healer, forgive him. He’s not used to illness. He expects
things to go his way.”
“So I noticed.”
“I mean… he thinks of himself scarred… He feels betrayed by
himself…” Brian spread his hands, unable to find the right words.
It was not that uncommon to find people who did not believe
they could get sick; Snake was used to difficult patients who wanted to get
back to normal too soon, despite the need for recuperation, and who became
querulous when they could not.
“That doesn’t give him the right to treat people the way he
does,” Snake said.
Brian looked at the floor. “He’s a good man, healer.”
Sorry she had let her anger—no, her annoyance and hurt
pride—touch him, Snake spoke again, more gently.
“Are you bound here?”
“No! Oh, no, healer, I’m free. The mayor doesn’t allow
bonding in Mountainside. Drivers who come with bondservants are sent out of the
city, and their people can choose to go with them or give the city a year’s
service. If they stay the mayor buys their papers from the driver.”
“Is that what happened with you?”
He hesitated but finally answered. “Not many know I used to
be bound. I was one of the first to be freed. After one year he tore up my
bonding papers. They were still valid for twenty years, and I’d already served
five. Until then I wasn’t sure I could trust him—or anyone. But I could.” He
shrugged. “I stayed on afterward.”
“I understand why you feel grateful toward him,” Snake said.
“But it still doesn’t give him the right to order you around twenty-four hours
a day.”
“I slept last night.”
“In a chair?”
Brian smiled.
“Get someone else to watch him for a while,” Snake said. “You
come with me.”
“Do you need help, healer?”
“No, I’m going down to the stables. But you can nap while
I’m gone, at least.”
“Thank you, healer. I’d rather stay here.”
“Whatever you say.”
She left the residence and crossed the courtyard. It felt
good to walk in the cool morning, even down the steep hairpin turns of the
cliff trail. The mayor’s pastures spread out below her. The gray mare was alone
in a green field, galloping back and forth with her head and tail high,
bouncing stiff-legged to a halt at the fence, snorting, then wheeling to run in
the opposite direction. If she had decided to keep on running, she could have
cleared the chest-high fence and hardly noticed it, but she was running for no
other reason than play.
Snake walked along the path to the barn. As she neared it
she heard a slap and a cry, then a loud and furious voice.
“Get on with your work!”
Snake ran the last few steps to the stable and pulled open
its doors. The inside was nearly dark. She blinked. She heard the rustling of
straw and smelled the pleasant heavy odor of a clean horsebarn. After a moment
her eyes became more accustomed to the dimness and she could see the wide
straw-carpeted passageway, the two rows of box stalls, and the stablemaster
turning toward her.
“Good morning, healer.” The stablemaster was a tremendous
man, at least two meters tall, and heavily built. His curly hair was bright red
and his beard was blond.
Snake looked up at him. “What was that noise?”
“Noise? I don’t—Oh, I was just countering the pleasures of
laziness.”
His remedy must have been effective, for whoever had been
lazy had disappeared very quickly.
“At this hour of the morning laziness sounds like a good
idea,” Snake said.
“Well, we get started early.” The stablemaster led her
farther into the barn. “I stabled your mounts down here. The mare’s out for a
run, but I’ve kept the pony in.”
“Good,” Snake said. “He needs to be shod as soon as
possible.”
“I’ve sent for the blacksmith to come this afternoon.”
“That’s fine.” She went inside Squirrel’s stall. He nuzzled
her and ate the piece of bread she had brought him. His coat shone, his mane
and tail were combed, and his hooves were even oiled. “Someone’s taken very
good care of him.”
“We try to please the mayor and his guest,” the big man
said. He stayed nearby, solicitously, until she left the stable to bring the
mare inside. Swift and Squirrel had to be reintroduced to pasture slowly, after
so long in the desert, or the rich grass would make them sick.
When she returned, riding Swift bareback and guiding her
with her knees, the stablemaster was busy in another part of the building.
Snake slid off the mare’s back and led her into her stall.
“It was me, mistress, not him.”
Startled, Snake turned, but whoever had whispered to her was
not in the stall, nor in the passageway outside.
“Who’s that?” Snake said. “Where are you?” Back in the stall
she looked up and saw the hole in the ceiling where fodder was thrown down. She
jumped on the manger, grabbed the edge of the hole, and chinned herself up so
she could see into the loft. A small figure jumped back in fright and hid
behind a bale of hay.
“Come out,” Snake said. “I won’t hurt you.” She was in a
ridiculous position, hanging down in the middle of the stall with Swift
nibbling her boot, without the proper leverage to climb the rest of the way
into the loft. “Come on down,” she said, and let herself drop back to the
ground.
She could see the form of the person in the hayloft, but not
the features.
It’s a child, she thought. Just a little kid.
“It’s nothing, mistress,” the child said. “It’s just he
always pretends he does all the work and there’s others do too, is all. Never
mind.”
“Please come down,” Snake said again. “You did a very nice
job on Swift and Squirrel and I’d like to thank you.”
“That’s thanks enough, mistress.”
“Don’t call me that. My name’s Snake. What’s yours?”
But the child was gone.
oOo
People from town, both patients and messengers, already
waited to see her when she reached the top of the cliff, leading Swift. She
would get no leisurely breakfast today.
She saw a good deal of Mountainside before evening. For a
few hours at a stretch she worked hard, busy and hurried but content, and then
as she finished with one patient and went to hear about the next, apprehension
swept over her and she thought that this time she might be asked to help
someone who was dying, someone like Jesse whom she could not help at all.
Today, that did not happen.
In the evening she rode Swift north along the river, passing
the town on her left, as the glow of the sun sank past the clouds and touched
the west mountain peaks. The long shadows crept toward her as she reached the
mayor’s pasture and stables. Seeing no one around, she took Swift into the barn
herself, unsaddled her, and began to brush her smooth dappled coat. She was not
particularly anxious to return to the mayor’s residence and its atmosphere of
dogged loyalty and pain.
“Mistress, that’s not for you to do. Let me. You go on up
the hill.”
“No, you come on down,” Snake said to the disembodied
whispery voice. “You can help. And don’t call me mistress.”
“Go on, now, mistress, please.”
Snake brushed Swift’s shoulder and did not answer. When
nothing happened she thought the child had gone; then she heard a rustling in
the hay above her. On impulse she stroked the brush backwards across Swift’s
flank. An instant later the child was beside her, taking the brush gently from
her hand.
“You see, mistress—”
“ ‘Snake.’”
“—This is no job for you. You know healing, I know
horse-brushing.”
Snake smiled.
The little girl was only nine or ten, small and spare. She
had not looked up at Snake; now she brushed Swift’s ruffled hair straight
again, her face turned down and close to the mare’s side. She had bright red
hair, and dirty, chewed fingernails.
“You’re right,” Snake said. “You are better at that than I
am.”
The child was silent for a moment. “You fooled me,” she said
sullenly, without turning around.
“A little,” Snake admitted. “But I had to or you wouldn’t
let me thank you face to face.”
The child spun around, glaring up. “Then thank me!” she
cried.
The left side of her face was twisted with a terrible scar.
Third-degree burns, Snake thought. The poor child—! And then
she thought: If a healer had been near, the scar would not have been so bad.
But at the same time she noticed the bruise along the right
side of the little girl’s face. Snake knelt and the child shrank back from any
contact, turning so the scar would be less visible. Snake touched the bruise
gently.
“I heard the stablemaster yelling at someone this morning,”
Snake said. “It was you, wasn’t it? He hit you.”
The child turned back and stared at her, her right eye wide,
the left held partly closed by scar tissue.
“I’m all right,” she said. Then she slid out of Snake’s
hands and ran up a ladder into the darkness.
“Please come back,” Snake called. But the child had
disappeared, and even when Snake followed her into the loft she could not find
her.
Snake hiked up the trail to the residence, her shadow pushed
back and forth by the swaying of the lantern she carried. She thought about the
nameless little girl ashamed to come into the light. The bruise was in a bad
spot, just at the temple. But she had not flinched from Snake’s touch—at least
not the touch to the bruise—and she had none of the symptoms of a concussion.
Snake did not have to worry about the child’s immediate health. But in the
future?
Snake wanted to help somehow, but she knew that if she had
the stablemaster reprimanded, the little girl would be left with the
consequences when Snake went away.
oOo
Snake climbed the stairs to the mayor’s room.
Brian looked exhausted, but the mayor was fresh. Most of the
swelling had left his leg. The punctures had scabbed over but Brian was doing a
good job of keeping the main wound open and clean.
“When can I get up?” the mayor asked. “I have work to do.
People to see. Disputes to settle.”
“You can get up any time,” Snake said. “If you don’t mind
having to stay in bed three times as long afterwards.”
“I insist—”
“Just stay in bed,” Snake said tiredly.
She knew he would disobey. Brian, as usual, followed her to
the hall.
“If the wound bleeds in the night, come get me,” she said.
She knew it would, if the mayor got up, and she did not want the old servant to
have to deal with the injury alone.
“He is all right? He will be?”
“Yes, if he doesn’t push himself too hard. He’s mending
fairly well.”
“Thank you, healer.”
“Where’s Gabriel?”
“He does not come up here any more.”
“Brian, what’s the matter between him and his father?”
“I’m sorry, healer, I cannot say.”
You won’t, you mean, Snake thought.
oOo
Snake stood looking out over the dark valley. She did not
feel like going to sleep yet. That was one of the things she did not much like
about her proving year: most of the time, she went to bed alone. Too many
people in the places she had gone knew about healers by reputation only, and
were afraid of her. Even Arevin feared her at the beginning, and by the time
his fear ebbed, and their mutual respect changed to attraction, Snake had to
leave. They had no chance together.
She leaned her forehead against the cool glass.
When Snake first crossed the desert, it was to explore, to
see the places healers had not visited in decades or that they had never
visited before. She had been presumptuous, perhaps, or even foolish, to do what
her teachers no longer did and no longer considered doing. There were not even
enough healers for the people on this side of the desert. If Snake succeeded on
her visit to the city, all that might change. But Jesse’s name was the only
difference between Snake and any other healer to ask Center for knowledge. If
she failed—Her teachers were good people, tolerant of differences and
eccentricities, but how they would react to the errors Snake had made, she did
not know.
The knock at her door came as a relief, for it interrupted
her thoughts.
“Come in.”
Gabriel entered, and she was struck once more by his beauty.
“Brian tells me my father’s doing well.”
“Well enough.”
“Thank you for helping him. I know he can be difficult.‘’ He
hesitated, glanced around, shrugged. “Well… I just came in to see if there’s
anything I can do for you.”
Despite his preoccupation, he seemed gentle and pleasant,
qualities that attracted Snake as much as his physical beauty. And she was
lonely. She decided to accept his well-mannered offer.
“Yes,” she said. “Thanks.” She stopped before him, touched
his cheek, took his hand and led him toward a couch. A flask of wine and some
glasses stood on a low table near the window.
Snake realized that Gabriel was blushing scarlet.
If she did not know all the desert customs, she knew those
of the mountains: she had not overstepped her privileges as a guest, and he had
made the offer. She faced Gabriel and took his arms just above the elbows. Now
he was quite pale.
“Gabriel, what’s the matter?”
“I… I misspoke. I didn’t mean—If you like I can send someone
to you—”
She frowned. “If ‘someone’ was all I wanted I could have
hired them from town. I wanted someone I like.”
He gazed at her, with a quick faint grateful smile. Perhaps
he had decided to stop repressing his beard and grow it out at the same time he
decided to leave his father’s house, for his cheeks showed a trace of fine
red-gold hair.
“Thank you for that,” he said.
She guided him to the couch, made him sit down, and sat
beside him. “What’s wrong?”
He shook his head. His hair fell across his forehead, half
hiding his eyes.
“Gabriel, have you somehow not noticed that you are
beautiful?”
“No.” He managed a rueful grin. “I know that.”
“Do I have to pry this out of you? Is it me? Gods know I
can’t match the looks of Mountainside people. Or if you prefer men, I
understand.” She had not hit on what made him draw away from her yet; he had
not reacted to anything she had suggested. “Are you ill? I’m the first person
you should tell!”
“I’m not ill,” he said softly, not meeting her gaze. “And it
isn’t you. I mean, if I had my choice of anyone… I’m honored you think this
much of me.”
Snake waited for him to continue.
“It wouldn’t be fair to you, if I stayed. I might—”
When he stopped again, Snake said, “This is the trouble
between you and your father. This is why you’re going away.”
Gabriel nodded. “And he’s right to want me to go.”
“Because you haven’t lived up to his expectations?” Snake
shook her head. “Punishment is no help. It’s stupid and self-gratifying. Come
to bed with me, Gabriel. I won’t make any demands on you.”
“You don’t understand,” Gabriel said miserably. He took her
hand and lifted it to his face, rubbing her fingertips across the fine soft
stubble. “I can’t keep my side of the agreement lovers make between them. I
don’t know why. I had a good teacher. But biocontrol is all beyond my reach. I’ve
tried. Gods, I’ve tried.” His blue eyes were bright. He let his hand fall away
from hers, to his side. Snake caressed his cheek once more and put her arm
around his shoulders, hiding her surprise. Impotence she could comprehend, but
lack of control—! She did not know what to say to him, and he had more to tell
her, something he desperately wanted to talk about: she could feel that from
the stark tension of his whole body. His fists were clenched. She did not want
to push him; he had been hurt enough that way already. She found herself
searching for gentle and roundabout ways of saying things she would ordinarily
deal with straightforwardly.
“It’s all right,” Snake said. “I understand what you’re
saying. Be easy. With me it doesn’t matter.”
He looked up at her, as wide-eyed and surprised as the
little girl in the stable had been when Snake looked at the new bruise instead
of the old, ugly scar.
“You can’t mean that. I can’t talk to anyone. They’d be
disgusted, like my father. I don’t blame them.”
“You can talk to me. I won’t judge you.”
He hesitated a moment more, then the words, pent up for
years, rushed out. “I had a friend named Leah,” Gabriel said. “That was three
years ago. The first time she decided to make love with anyone, more than just
playing, you know, she chose me. She hadn’t finished her training yet, of
course, but it shouldn’t have mattered because I’d finished mine. I thought.”
He was leaning against Snake, now, with his head on her
shoulder, gazing with unfocused eyes at the black windows.
“Maybe I should have taken other precautions,” he said. “But
I never even thought I might be fertile. I never heard of anybody who couldn’t
handle biocontrol. Well, maybe not deep trance, but fertility.” He laughed
bitterly. “And whiskers, but I hadn’t started growing any then.” Snake felt him
shrug as the smooth material of his shirt slid across the rough new fabric of
her own. “A few months later we had a party for her, because we thought she’d
learned her biocontrol faster than usual. No one was surprised. Everything
comes quickly to Leah. She’s brilliant.” He stopped for a moment and simply lay
against Snake, breathing slowly and deeply. He glanced up at her. “But it
wasn’t her biocontrol that stopped her menstruation, it was that I had made her
pregnant. She was my friend and she chose me, and I almost ruined her life.”
Now Snake understood everything, Gabriel’s shyness, his
uncertainty, his shame, even why he cloaked his beauty when he went outside: he
did not want to be recognized; even more, he did not want anyone to offer him
their bed.
“You poor children,” Snake said.
“I think we always assumed we’d partner, eventually, when we
both knew what we were going to do. When we were settled. But who’d want an
uncontrolled partner? They’d always know that if their control lapsed just a
little, the other would have none. A partnering couldn’t last that way.” He
shifted his weight. “Even so, she didn’t want to humiliate me. She didn’t tell
anyone. She aborted it, but she was all alone. And her training wasn’t far
enough along for that. She almost bled to death.”
“You shouldn’t treat yourself as if you’d hurt her out of
spite,” Snake said, knowing that nothing as simple as words would be sufficient
to make Gabriel stop despising himself, or to make up for the way his father
treated him. He could not have known he was fertile, if he had not just been
tested, and once one learned the technique it was not usually necessary to
worry. Snake had heard of people incapable of biocontrol, but not very often.
Only a person unable to care for anyone would have come unmarked through what
Gabriel had undergone. And Gabriel quite obviously cared.
“She got well,” Gabriel said. “But I turned what should have
been pleasure into nightmare for her. Leah… I think she wanted to see me again,
but couldn’t make herself. If that makes sense.”
“Yes,” Snake said. Perhaps that had been Leah’s first
realization that other people could influence her life without her control or
even knowledge; it was not a lesson children learned willingly or easily.
“She wants to be a glass-former, and she had an appointment
to assist Ashley.”
Snake whistled softly in admiration. Glass-forming was a
demanding and respected profession. Only the best of its people could build
solar mirrors; it took a long time just to learn to make decent tubed panels,
or curved panes like the ones in the towers. Ashley was not one of the best.
She was the best.
“Did Leah have to give it up?”
“Yes. It could have been permanently. She went the next
year. But that was a year out of her life.” He spoke slowly and carefully but
without emotion, as if he had been through this so many times in his mind that
he had forced some distance between himself and the memory. “Of course I went
back to the teacher, but when they tracked my reactions longer they realized I
could only keep the temperature differential a few hours at a time. Not enough.”
“No,” Snake said thoughtfully, wondering just how good
Gabriel’s teacher really could have been.
Gabriel drew back so he could look into her face. “So, you
see, I can’t stay with you tonight.”
“You can. Please do. We’re both lonely, and we can help each
other.”
He caught his breath and stood abruptly. “Don’t you
understand—” he cried.
“Gabriel.”
He sat down slowly, but did not touch her.
“Don’t fear giving me a child I don’t want. Healers never
have children. We take the responsibility for that ourselves, because we cannot
afford to share it with our partners.”
“You never have children?”
“Never. Women do not bear them and men do not father them.”
He stared at her.
“Do you believe me?”
“You really still want me, even knowing—?”
In answer, Snake stood up and began unbuttoning her shirt.
The newness made the buttonholes stiff, so she stripped the shirt off over her
head and dropped it on the floor. Gabriel stood up slowly, looking at her
shyly. Snake unbuttoned his shirt and his pants as he reached out to hold her.
When his pants slid off his narrow hips he began to blush.
“What’s wrong?”
“I haven’t been naked in front of anyone since I was
fifteen.”
“Well,” Snake said, grinning, “high time.” Gabriel’s body
was as beautiful as his face. Snake unfastened her pants and left them in a
heap on the floor.
Taking Gabriel to her bed, Snake slipped under the sheet
beside him. The soft glow of the lamp highlighted his blond hair and his fair
skin. He was trembling.
“Relax,” Snake whispered. “There’s no hurry, and this is all
for fun.” As she massaged his shoulders the tightness slowly left them. She
realized she too was tense, tense with desire and excitement and need. She
wondered what Arevin was doing.
Gabriel turned on his side and reached for her. They
caressed each other and Snake smiled to herself, thinking that though no single
experience could compensate Gabriel for the last three years, she would do her
best to make a start.
Soon, though, she realized he was not prolonging the
foreplay by intent. He was working to please her, still thinking and worrying
much too much, as if she were Leah, whose first sexual pleasure was his
responsibility. Snake got no joy out of being worked on, out of being someone’s
duty. And, as well, he was trying hard to respond to her, failing, and growing
more embarrassed by the second. Snake touched him gently, brushing his face
with her lips.
Gabriel flung himself away from her with a curse and hunched
over on his side with his back to her.
“I’m sorry,” he said. His voice was so rough Snake knew he
was crying. She sat up beside him and stroked his shoulder.
“I told you I’d make no demands.”
“I keep thinking…”
She kissed the point of his shoulder, letting her breath
tickle him. “Thinking isn’t the idea.”
“I can’t help it. All I can offer anyone is trouble and
pain. And now without even giving them any pleasure first. Maybe it’s just as
well.”
“Gabriel, an impotent man can satisfy another person. You
must know that. What we’re talking about now is your pleasure.”
He did not answer, did not look at her: he had flinched when
she said “impotent,” for that was one difficulty Gabriel had not talked himself
into until now.
“You don’t believe you’re safe with me, do you?”
He rolled over and looked up. “Leah wasn’t safe with me.”
Snake drew her knees up against her breasts and rested her
chin on her fists. She gazed at Gabriel for a long time, sighed, and held out
her hand so he could see the scars and slashes of snakebites.
“Any of those bites would have killed anyone but a healer.
Quickly and unpleasantly or slowly and unpleasantly.”
She paused to let what she had said sink in.
“I spent a lot of time developing immunities to those
venoms,” she said. “And a good deal of discomfort. I never get sick. I never
have infections. I can’t get cancer. My teeth don’t decay. Healers’ immunities
are so active they respond to anything unusual. Most of us are sterile because
we even form antibodies to our own sex cells. Let alone anyone else’s.”
Gabriel pushed himself up on one elbow. “Then… if you can’t
have children, why did you say healers can’t afford to have them? I thought you
meant you didn’t have time. So if I—”
“We raise children!” Snake said. “We adopt them. But the
first healers tried to bear them. Most of them couldn’t. A few could, but the
infants were deformed, and they had no minds.”
Gabriel turned on his back and gazed at the ceiling. He
sighed deeply. “Gods.”
“We learn fertility control very well,” Snake said.
Gabriel did not answer.
“You’re still worried.” Snake leaned on her elbow beside
him, but she did not reach out to touch him yet.
He glanced at her with an ironic and humorless smile, his
face strained with self-doubt. “I’m scared, I guess.”
“I know.”
“Have you ever been afraid? Really frightened?”
“Oh, yes,” Snake said.
She rested her hand on his belly, brushing her fingers
across his smooth skin and the delicate dark-gold hairs. He was not visibly
shaking but Snake could feel his deep, steady, frightened trembling.
“Lie still,” she said. “Don’t move until I tell you.” She
began stroking his belly and thighs, his hips and the sides of his buttocks,
ending each stroke closer to his genitals but not actually touching them.
“What are you doing?”
“Sh-h. Lie still.” She kept stroking him; and she talked to
him, letting her voice slip into a hypnotic, soothing monotone. She could feel
him fighting not to move as she teased him: he fought himself, and the
trembling stopped without his noticing.
“Snake!”
“What?” she asked innocently. “Is something wrong?”
“I can’t—”
“Sh-h.”
He groaned. This time he was not shaking with fear. Snake
smiled, eased herself down beside him, and drew him around to face her.
“Now you can move,” she said.
For whatever reason—because of her teasing, or because Snake
had made herself as vulnerable to him as he was to her, and he could trust her,
or more probably simply because he was young and healthy and eighteen and at
the end of three years’ guilty self-deprivation, he was all right after that.
Snake felt like an observer, not a salacious eavesdropper
but an imperturbable watcher, almost disinterested. And that was strange.
Gabriel was innately gentle, and Snake drew him on to abandonment as well.
Though her own climax was satisfying, a welcome release of emotional tensions
that had been building as long as she had been alone, she was concerned mostly
for Gabriel. Though she returned his passion eagerly, she could not keep from
wondering how sex would be with Arevin.
Snake and Gabriel lay close together, both sweaty and
breathing heavily, their arms around each other. For Snake, the companionship
was as important as the sex itself. More important, for sexual tensions were
easily enough dealt with. Aloneness, and loneliness, were something else
altogether. She leaned over Gabriel and kissed his throat and the edge of his
jaw.
“Thank you,” he whispered. Snake could feel the vibration of
his words against her lips.
“You’re welcome,” she said. “But I didn’t ask you for
selfless reasons.”
He lay silent for a while, his fingers spread along the
curve of her waist. Snake patted his hand. He was a sweet boy. She knew the
thought was condescending, but she could not help it, nor could she help
wishing, with the detached observer part of herself, that Arevin was with her
instead. She wanted someone she could share with, not someone who would be
grateful to her.
Gabriel suddenly held her tight and hid his face against her
shoulder. She stroked the short curls at the back of his neck.
“What am I going to do?” His voice was muffled, his breath
warm on her skin. “Where will I go?”
Snake held him and rocked him. Suddenly she wondered if it
might have been kinder to let him leave her when he had offered to send someone
else, to allow him to continue his life of abstinence unbroken. Yet she could
not believe he was really one of the unfocused pitiful human beings who could
never learn any biocontrol at all.
“Gabriel, what kind of training did you have? When they
tested you, how long could you hold the temperature differential? Didn’t they
give you a token?”
“What kind of token?”
“A little disc with a chemical inside that changes color
with temperature. Most of the ones I’ve seen turn red when a man raises his
genital temperature high enough.” She grinned, remembering an acquaintance who
was rather vain about the intensity of his disc’s color, and had to be talked
into removing it when he went to bed.
But Gabriel was frowning at her. “High enough?”
“Yes, of course, high enough. Isn’t that how you do
it?”
His fair eyebrows drew together, distress and surprise
mixing in his expression. “Our teacher instructs us on keeping the temperature
low.”
The memory of her vain friend and any number of bawdy jokes
came together in Snake’s mind. She wanted to laugh out loud. Somehow she
managed to reply to Gabriel with a perfectly straight face.
“Gabriel, dear friend, how old was your teacher? A hundred?”
“Yes,” Gabriel said. “At least. A very wise old man. He
still is.”
“Wise, I’m sure, but out of touch,” Snake said. “Out of date
by eighty years. Lowering the temperature of your scrotum will make you
infertile. But raising the temperature is much more effective. And it’s
supposed to be a good deal easier to learn.”
“But he said I could never control myself properly—”
Snake frowned but did not say what she thought: that no
teacher should ever say that to a student about anything. “Well, often one
person doesn’t get along well with another and all that’s needed is a different
teacher.”
“Do you think I could learn?”
“Yes.” She restrained another sharp comment about the wisdom
and ability of Gabriel’s first teacher. It would be better if the young man
realized the teacher’s faults himself. Clearly, he still felt too much
admiration and respect; Snake did not want to push him into a defense of the
old man, the person who perhaps had done most to hurt him.
Gabriel grasped Snake’s hand. “What do I do? Where do I go?”
This time he spoke with hope and excitement.
“Anywhere the men’s teacher knows techniques less than a
century old. Which direction are you going when you leave?”
“I… I haven’t decided.” He looked away.
“It’s hard to go,” Snake said. “I know it is. But it’s best.
Spend some time exploring. Decide what will be good for you.”
“Find a new place,” Gabriel said sadly.
“You could go to Middlepath,” Snake said. “The best teachers
I’ve heard of live there. And then when you’ve finished you can come back.
There’ll be no reason not to.”
“I think there will. I think I’ll never be able to come home
again, because even if I do learn what I need, people here will always wonder
about me. The rumors will still be there.” He shrugged. “But I have to go
anyway. I promised. I’ll go to Middlepath.”
“Good.” Snake reached back and turned down the lamp to a
tiny spark. “The new technique has other benefits, I’m told.”
“What do you mean?”
She touched him. “It requires you to increase the
circulation in the genital area. That’s supposed to increase endurance. And
sensitivity.”
“I wonder if I have any endurance now?”
Snake began to answer him seriously, then realized Gabriel
had made his first, tentative, joke about sex.
“Let’s see,” she said.
oOo
A hurried knock on the door woke Snake well before dawn. The
room was gray and ghostly, highlighted in shades of pink and orange from the
lamp’s low flame. Gabriel slept soundly, smiling faintly, his long blond
eyelashes gently brushing his cheeks. He had pushed away the bedclothes and his
long beautiful body lay uncovered to mid-thigh. Snake turned reluctantly toward
the door.
“Come in.”
A stunningly lovely young servant entered hesitantly, and
light from the corridor spilled over the bed.
“Healer, the mayor—” She gasped and stood staring at
Gabriel, the blood on her hands forgotten. “The mayor…”
“I’ll be right there.” Snake got up, slipped into her new
pants and the stiff new shirt, and followed the young woman to the mayor’s
suite.
Blood from the opened wound soaked the bedding, but Brian
had done the proper emergency things: the bleeding had nearly stopped. The
mayor was ghastly pale, and his hands trembled.
“If you didn’t look so sick,” Snake said, “I’d give you the
tongue-lashing you deserve.” She busied herself with the bandages. “You’re
blessed with a superb nurse,” she said when Brian returned with fresh sheets
and was easily within hearing. “I hope you pay him what he’s worth.”
“I thought…”
“Think all you like,” Snake said. “An admirable occupation.
But don’t try to stand up again.”
“All right,” he muttered, and Snake took it as a promise.
She decided she did not need to help change the sheets. When
it was necessary, or when it was for people she liked, she did not mind giving
menial services. But sometimes she could be inordinately prideful. She knew she
had been unforgivably short with the mayor, but she could not help it.
The young servant was taller than Snake, easily stronger
than Brian; Snake expected she could handle her share of lifting the mayor and
most of Brian’s as well. But she watched with a distressed expression as Snake
left the room to go back to bed.
“Mistress—?”
Snake turned. The young servant glanced around as if afraid
someone might see them together.
“What’s your name?”
“Larril.”
“Larril, my name is Snake, and I hate being called
‘mistress.’ All right?”
Larril nodded but did not use Snake’s name.
Snake sighed to herself. “What’s the matter?”
“Healer… in your room I saw… a servant should not see some
things. I don’t want to shame any member of this family.” Her voice was shrill
and strained. “But… but Gabriel—he is—” Her words caught in confusion and
shame. “If I asked Brian what to do he would have to tell his master. That
would be… unpleasant. But you mustn’t be hurt. I never thought the mayor’s son
would—”
“Larril,” Snake said, “Larril, it’s all right. He told me
everything. The responsibility is mine.”
“You know the—the danger?”
“He told me everything,” she said again. “There’s no danger
to me.”
“You’ve done a kind thing,” Larril said abruptly.
“Nonsense. I wanted him. And I have a good deal more
experience at control than a fifteen year old. Or an eighteen year old, for
that matter.”
Larril avoided her gaze. “So do I,” she said. “And I’ve felt
so sorry for him. But I—I was afraid. He is so beautiful, one might think of…
one might lapse, without meaning to. I couldn’t take the chance. I still have
another six months before my life is mine again.”
“You were bonded?”
Larril nodded, “I was born in Mountainside. My parents sold
me. Before the mayor’s new laws, they were allowed to do that.” The tension in
her voice belied her matter-of-fact words. “It was a long time before I heard
the rumors that bonding had been forbidden here, but when I did, I escaped and
came back.” She looked up, almost crying. “I didn’t break my word—” She
straightened and spoke more confidently. “I was a child, and I had no choice in
the bonding. I owed no driver my loyalty. But the city bought my papers. I do
owe loyalty to the mayor.”
Snake realized how much courage it had taken Larril to speak
as she had. “Thank you,” Snake said. “For telling me about Gabriel. None of
this will go any farther. I’m in your debt.”
“Oh, no, healer, I did not mean—”
There was something in Larril’s voice, a sudden shame, that
Snake found disturbing. She wondered if Larril thought her own motives in
speaking to Snake were suspect.
“I did mean it,” Snake said again. “Is there some way I can
help you?”
Larril shook her head, once, quickly, a gesture of denial
that said no to her more than to Snake. “No one can help me, I think.”
“Tell me.”
Larril hesitated, then sat on the floor and angrily jerked
up the cuff of her pants.
Snake sat on her heels beside her.
“Oh, my gods,” Snake said.
Larril’s heel had been pierced, between the bone and the
Achilles tendon. It looked to Snake as if someone had used a hot iron on her.
The scar accommodated a small ring of a gray, crystalline material. Snake took
Larril’s foot in one hand and touched the ring. It showed no visible joining.
Snake frowned. “This was nothing but cruelty.”
“If you disobey them they have the right to mark you,”
Larril said. “I’d tried to escape before and they said they had to make me remember
my place.” Anger overcame the quietness of her voice. Snake shivered.
“Those will always bind me,” Larril said. “If it was just
the scars I wouldn’t mind so much.” She withdrew her foot from Snake’s hands. “You’ve
seen the domes in the mountains? That’s what the rings are made of.”
Snake glanced at her other heel, also scarred, also ringed.
Now she recognized the gray, translucent substance. But she had never before
seen it made into anything except the domes, which lay mysterious and
inviolable in unexpected places.
“The smith tried to cut that one,” Larril said. “When he
didn’t even mark it he was so embarrassed he broke an iron rod with one blow,
just to prove he could.” She touched the fine tough strand of her tendon,
trapped within the delicate ring. “Once the crystal hardens it’s there forever.
Like the domes. Unless you cut the tendon, and then you’re lame. Sometimes I
think I could almost stand that.” She jerked the cuff of her pants down to
cover the ring. “As you see, no one can help. It’s vanity, I know it. Soon I will
be free no matter what those things say.”
“I can’t help you here,” Snake said. “And it would be
dangerous.”
“You mean you could do it?”
“It could be done, it could be tried, at the healers’
station.”
“Oh, healer—”
“Larril, there would be a risk.” On her own ankle she showed
what would have to be done. “We wouldn’t cut the tendon, we’d detach it. Then
the ring could come off. But you’d be in a cast for quite a while. And there’s
no certainty that the tendons would heal properly, your legs might never be as
strong as they are now. The tendons might not even re-attach at all.”
“I see…” Larril said, with hope and joy in her voice,
perhaps not really hearing Snake at all.
“Will you promise me one thing?”
“Yes, healer, of course.”
“Don’t decide what to do yet. Don’t decide right after your
service to Mountainside is over. Wait a few months. Be certain. Once you’re
free you might decide it doesn’t matter to you any more.”
Larril glanced up quizzically and Snake knew she would have
asked how the healer would feel in her position, but thought the question
insolent.
“Will you promise?”
“Yes, healer. I promise.”
They stood up.
“Well, good night,” Snake said.
“Good night, healer.”
Snake started down the corridor.
“Healer?”
“Yes?”
Larril flung her arms around Snake and hugged her. “Thank
you!” Embarrassed, she withdrew. They both turned to go their ways, but Snake
glanced back.
“Larril, where do the drivers get the rings? I never heard
of anyone who could work the dome material.”
“The city people give it to them,” Larril said. “Not enough
to make anything useful. Just the rings.”
“Thank you.”
Snake went back to bed, musing about Center, which gave
chains to slavers but refused to talk to healers.