The little boy was frightened. Gently, Snake touched his hot
forehead. Behind her, three adults stood close together, watching, suspicious,
afraid to show their concern with more than narrow lines around their eyes.
They feared Snake as much as they feared their only child’s death. In the
dimness of the tent, the strange blue glow of the lantern gave no reassurance.
The child watched with eyes so dark the pupils were not
visible, so dull that Snake herself feared for his life. She stroked his hair.
It was long, and very pale, dry and irregular for several inches near the
scalp, a striking color against his dark skin. Had Snake been with these people
months ago, she would have known the child was growing ill.
“Bring my case, please,” Snake said.
The child’s parents started at her soft voice. Perhaps they
had expected the screech of a bright jay, or the hissing of a shining serpent.
This was the first time Snake had spoken in their presence. She had only watched,
when the three of them had come to observe her from a distance and whisper
about her occupation and her youth; she had only listened, and then nodded,
when finally they came to ask her help. Perhaps they had thought she was mute.
The fair-haired younger man lifted her leather case. He held
the satchel away from his body, leaning to hand it to her, breathing shallowly
with nostrils flared against the faint smell of musk in the dry desert air.
Snake had almost accustomed herself to the kind of uneasiness he showed; she
had already seen it often.
When Snake reached out, the young man jerked back and
dropped the case. Snake lunged and barely caught it, gently set it on the felt
floor, and glanced at him with reproach. His partners came forward and touched
him to ease his fear. “He was bitten once,” the dark and handsome woman said. “He
almost died.” Her tone was not of apology, but of justification.
“I’m sorry,” the younger man said. “It’s—” He gestured
toward her; he was trembling, but trying visibly to control himself. Snake
glanced to her shoulder, where she had been unconsciously aware of the slight
weight and movement. A tiny serpent, thin as the finger of a baby, slid himself
around her neck to show his narrow head below her short black curls. He probed
the air with his trident tongue, in a leisurely manner, out, up and down, in,
to savor the taste of the smells. “It’s only Grass,” Snake said. “He can’t hurt
you.” If he were bigger, he might be frightening: his color was pale green, but
the scales around his mouth were red, as if he had just feasted as a mammal
eats, by tearing. He was, in fact, much neater.
The child whimpered. He cut off the sound of pain; perhaps
he had been told that Snake, too, would be offended by crying. She only felt
sorry that his people refused themselves such a simple way of easing fear. She
turned from the adults, regretting their terror of her but unwilling to spend
the time it would take to persuade them to trust her. “It’s all right,” she
said to the little boy. “Grass is smooth, and dry, and soft, and if I left him
to guard you, even death could not reach your bedside.” Grass poured himself
into her narrow, dirty hand, and she extended him toward the child. “Gently.”
He reached out and touched the sleek scales with one fingertip. Snake could
sense the effort of even such a simple motion, yet the boy almost smiled.
“What are you called?”
He looked quickly toward his parents, and finally they
nodded.
“Stavin,” he whispered. He had no breath or strength for
speaking.
“I am Snake, Stavin, and in a little while, in the morning,
I must hurt you. You may feel a quick pain, and your body will ache for several
days, but you’ll be better afterward.”
He stared at her solemnly. Snake saw that though he
understood and feared what she might do, He was less afraid than if she had
lied to him. The pain must have increased greatly as his illness became more
apparent, but it seemed that others had only reassured him, and hoped the
disease would disappear or kill him quickly.
Snake put Grass on the boy’s pillow and pulled her case
nearer. The adults still could only fear her; they had had neither time nor
reason to discover any trust. The woman of the partnership was old enough that
they might never have another child unless they partnered again, and Snake
could tell by their eyes, their covert touching, their concern, that they loved
this one very much. They must, to come to Snake in this country.
Sluggish, Sand slid out of the case, moving his head, moving
his tongue, smelling, tasting, detecting the warmths of bodies.
“Is that—?” The eldest partner’s voice was low and wise, but
terrified, and Sand sensed the fear. He drew back into striking position and
sounded his rattle softly. Snake stroked her hand along the floor, letting the
vibrations distract him, then moved her hand up and extended her arm. The
diamondback relaxed and wrapped his body around and around her wrist to form
black and tan bracelets.
“No,” she said. “Your child is too ill for Sand to help. I
know it’s hard, but please try to be calm. This is a fearful thing for you, but
it is all I can do.”
She had to annoy Mist to make her come out. Snake rapped on
the bag, and finally poked her twice. Snake felt the vibration of sliding
scales, and suddenly the albino cobra flung herself into the tent. She moved
quickly, yet there seemed to be no end to her. She reared back and up. Her
breath rushed out in a hiss. Her head rose well over a meter above the floor.
She flared her wide hood. Behind her, the adults gasped, as if physically
assaulted by the gaze of the tan spectacle design on the back of Mist’s hood.
Snake ignored the people and spoke to the great cobra, focusing her attention
by her words.
“Furious creature, lie down. It’s time to earn thy dinner.
Speak to this child and touch him. He is called Stavin.”
Slowly, Mist relaxed her hood and allowed Snake to touch
her. Snake grasped her firmly behind the head and held her so she looked at
Stavin. The cobra’s silver eyes picked up the blue of the lamplight.
“Stavin,” Snake said, “Mist will only meet you now. I
promise that this time she will touch you gently.”
Still, Stavin shivered when Mist touched his thin chest.
Snake did not release the serpent’s head, but allowed her body to slide against
the boy’s. The cobra was four times longer than Stavin was tall. She curved
herself in stark white loops across his swollen abdomen, extending herself,
forcing her head toward the boy’s face, straining against Snake’s hands. Mist
met Stavin’s frightened stare with the gaze of lidless eyes. Snake allowed her
a little closer.
Mist nicked out her tongue to taste the child.
The younger man made a small, cut-off, frightened sound.
Stavin flinched at it, and Mist drew back, opening her mouth, exposing her
fangs, audibly thrusting her breath through her throat. Snake sat back on her
heels, letting out her own breath. Sometimes, in other places, the kinfolk
could stay while she worked.
“You must leave,” she said gently. “It’s dangerous to
frighten Mist.”
“I won’t—”
“I’m sorry. You must wait outside.”
Perhaps the fair-haired youngest partner, perhaps even
Stavin’s mother, would have made the indefensible objections and asked the
answerable questions, but the white-haired man turned them and took their hands
and led them away.
“I need a small animal,” Snake said as he lifted the tent
flap. “It must have fur, and it must be alive.”
“One will be found,” he said, and the three parents went
into the glowing night. Snake could hear their footsteps in the sand outside.
Snake supported Mist in her lap and soothed her. The cobra
wrapped herself around Snake’s waist, taking in her warmth. Hunger made the
cobra even more nervous than usual, and she was hungry, as was Snake. Coming
across the black-sand desert, they had found sufficient water, but Snake’s
traps had been unsuccessful. The season was summer, the weather was hot, and
many of the furry tidbits Sand and Mist preferred were estivating. Since she
had brought them into the desert, away from home, Snake had begun a fast as
well.
She saw with regret that Stavin was more frightened now. “I’m
sorry to send your parents away,” she said. “They can come back soon.”
His eyes glistened, but he held back the tears. “They said
to do what you told me.”
“I would have you cry, if you are able,” Snake said. “It
isn’t such a terrible thing.” But Stavin seemed not to understand, and Snake
did not press him; she thought his people must teach themselves to resist a
difficult land by refusing to cry, refusing to mourn, refusing to laugh. They
denied themselves grief, and allowed themselves little joy, but they survived.
Mist had calmed to sullenness. Snake unwrapped her from her
waist and placed the serpent on the pallet next to Stavin. As the cobra moved,
Snake guided her head, feeling the tension of the striking-muscles. “She will
touch you with her tongue,” she told Stavin. “It might tickle, but it will not
hurt. She smells with it, as you do with your nose.”
“With her tongue?”
Snake nodded, smiling, and Mist flicked out her tongue to
caress Stavin’s cheek. Stavin did not flinch; he watched, his child’s delight
in knowledge briefly overcoming pain. He lay perfectly still as Mist’s long
tongue brushed his cheeks, his eyes, his mouth. “She tastes the sickness,”
Snake said. Mist stopped fighting the restraint of her grasp, and drew back her
head. Snake sat on her heels and released the cobra, who spiraled up her arm
and laid herself across her shoulders.
“Go to sleep, Stavin,” Snake said. “Try to trust me, and try
not to fear the morning.”
Stavin gazed at her for a few seconds, searching for truth
in Snake’s pale eyes. “Will Grass watch?”
She was startled by the question, or, rather, by the
acceptance behind the question. She brushed his hair from his forehead and
smiled a smile that was tears just beneath the surface. “Of course.” She picked
Grass up. “Watch this child, and guard him.” The dreamsnake lay quiet in her
hand, and his eyes glittered black. She laid him gently on Stavin’s pillow.
“Now sleep.”
Stavin closed his eyes, and the life seemed to flow out of
him. The alteration was so great that Snake reached out to touch him, then saw
that he was breathing, slowly, shallowly. She tucked a blanket around him and
stood up. The abrupt change in position dizzied her; she staggered and caught
herself. Across her shoulder, Mist tensed.
Snake’s eyes stung and her vision was oversharp,
fever-clear. The sound she imagined she heard swooped in closer. She steadied
herself against hunger and exhaustion, bent slowly, and picked up the leather
case. Mist touched her cheek with the tip of her tongue.
She pushed aside the tent flap and felt relief that it was
still night. She could stand the daytime heat, but the brightness of the sun
curled through her, burning. The moon must be full; though the clouds obscured
everything, they diffused the light so the sky appeared gray from horizon to
horizon. Beyond the tents, groups of formless shadows projected from the
ground. Here, near the edge of the desert, enough water existed so clumps and
patches of bush grew, providing shelter and sustenance for all manner of creatures.
The black sand, which sparkled and blinded in the sunlight, at night was like a
layer of soft soot. Snake stepped out of the tent, and the illusion of softness
disappeared; her boots slid crunching into the sharp hard grains.
Stavin’s family waited, sitting close together between the
dark tents that clustered in a patch of sand from which the bushes had been
ripped and burned. They looked at her silently, hoping with their eyes, showing
no expression in their faces. A woman somewhat younger than Stavin’s mother sat
with them. She was dressed, as they were, in long loose desert robes, but she
wore the only adornment Snake had seen among these people: a leader’s circle,
hanging around her neck on a leather thong. She and Stavin’s eldest parent were
marked close kin by their similarities: sharp-cut planes of face, high
cheekbones, his hair white and hers graying early from deep black, their eyes
the dark brown best suited for survival in the sun. On the ground by their feet
a small black animal jerked sporadically against a net, and infrequently gave a
shrill weak cry.
“Stavin is asleep,” Snake said. “Do not disturb him, but go
to him if he wakes.”
Stavin’s mother and the youngest partner rose and went
inside, but the older man stopped before her. “Can you help him?”
“I hope so. The tumor is advanced, but it seems solid.” Her
own voice sounded removed, ringing slightly false, as if she were lying. “Mist
will be ready in the morning.” She still felt the need to give him reassurance,
but she could think of none.
“My sister wished to speak with you,” he said, and left them
alone, without introduction, without elevating himself by saying that the tall
woman was the leader of this group. Snake glanced back, but the tent flap fell
shut. She was feeling her exhaustion more deeply, and across her shoulders Mist
was, for the first time, a weight she thought heavy.
“Are you all right?”
Snake turned. The woman moved toward her with a natural
elegance made slightly awkward by advanced pregnancy. Snake had to look up to
meet her gaze. She had small, fine lines at the corners of her eyes and beside
her mouth, as if she laughed, sometimes, in secret. She smiled, but with
concern. “You seem very tired. Shall I have someone make you a bed?”
“Not now,” Snake said, “not yet. I won’t sleep until
afterward.”
The leader searched her face, and Snake felt a kinship with
her in their shared responsibility.
“I understand, I think. Is there anything we can give you?
Do you need aid with your preparations?”
Snake found herself having to deal with the questions as if
they were complex problems. She turned them in her tired mind, examined them,
dissected them, and finally grasped their meanings. “My pony needs food and
water—”
“It is taken care of.”
“And I need someone to help with Mist. Someone strong. But
it’s more important that they aren’t afraid.”
The leader nodded. “I would help you,” she said, and smiled
again, a little. “But I am a bit clumsy of late. I will find someone.”
“Thank you.”
Somber again, the older woman inclined her head and moved
slowly toward a small group of tents. Snake watched her go, admiring her grace.
She felt small and young and grubby in comparison.
His body tensed to hunt, Sand slid in circles from Snake’s
wrist. She caught him before he could drop to the ground. Sand lifted the upper
half of his body from her hands. He flicked out his tongue, peering toward the
little animal, sensing its body heat, tasting its fear. “I know thou art
hungry,” Snake said. “But that creature is not for thee.” She put Sand in the case,
took Mist from her shoulders, and let the cobra coil herself in her dark
compartment.
The small animal shrieked and struggled again when Snake’s
diffuse shadow passed over it. She bent and picked the creature up. Its rapid
series of terrified cries slowed and diminished and finally stopped as she
stroked it. It lay still, breathing hard, exhausted, staring up at her with
yellow eyes. It had long hind legs and wide pointed ears, and its nose twitched
at the serpent smell. Its soft black fur was marked off in skewed squares by
the cords of the net.
“I am sorry to take your life,” Snake told it. “But there
will be no more fear, and I will not hurt you.” She closed her hand gently
around the animal and, stroking it, grasped its spine at the base of its skull.
She pulled, once, quickly. It seemed to struggle for an instant, but it was
already dead. It convulsed; its legs drew up against its body and its toes
curled and quivered. It seemed to stare up at her, even now. She freed its body
from the net.
Snake chose a small vial from her belt pouch, pried open the
animal’s clenched jaws, and let a single drop of the vial’s cloudy preparation
fall into its mouth. Quickly she opened the satchel again and called Mist out.
The cobra came slowly, slipping over the edge, hood closed, sliding in the
sharp-grained sand. Her milky scales caught the thin light. She smelled the
animal, flowed to it, touched it with her tongue. For a moment Snake was afraid
she would refuse dead meat, but the body was still warm, still twitching, and
she was very hungry. “A tidbit for thee.” Snake spoke to the cobra: a habit of
solitude. “To whet thine appetite.” Mist nosed the beast, reared back, and
struck, sinking her short fixed fangs into the tiny body, biting again, pumping
out her store of poison. She released it, took a better grip, and began to work
her jaws around it. It would hardly distend her throat. When Mist lay quiet,
digesting the small meal, Snake sat beside her and held her, waiting.
She heard footsteps in the sand.
“I’m sent to help you.”
He was a young man, despite a scatter of white in his black
hair. He was taller than Snake, and not unattractive. His eyes were dark, and
the sharp planes of his face were further hardened because his hair was pulled
straight back and tied. His expression was neutral.
“Are you afraid?” Snake asked.
“I will do as you tell me.”
Though his form was obscured by his robe, his long, fine
hands showed strength.
“Then hold her body, and don’t let her surprise you.” Mist
was beginning to twitch, the effect of the drugs Snake had put in the small
animal. The cobra’s eyes stared, unseeing.
“If it bites—”
“Hold, quickly!”
The young man reached, but he had hesitated too long. Mist
writhed, lashing out, striking him in the face with her tail. He staggered back,
at least as surprised as hurt. Snake kept a close grip behind Mist’s jaws, and
struggled to catch the rest of her as well. Mist was no constrictor, but she
was smooth and strong and fast. Thrashing, she forced out her breath in a long
hiss. She would have bitten anything she could reach. As Snake fought with her,
she managed to squeeze the poison glands and force out the last drops of venom.
They hung from Mist’s fangs for a moment, catching light as jewels would; the
force of the serpent’s convulsions flung them away into the darkness. Snake
struggled with the cobra, aided for once by the sand, on which Mist could get
little purchase. Snake felt the young man behind her, grabbing for Mist’s body
and tail. The seizure stopped abruptly, and Mist lay limp in their hands.
“I am sorry—”
“Hold her,” Snake said. “We have the night to go.”
During Mist’s second convulsion, the young man held her
firmly and was of some real help. Afterward, Snake answered his interrupted
question. “If she were making poison and she bit you, you would probably die.
Even now her bite would make you ill. But unless you do something foolish, if
she manages to bite, she’ll bite me.”
“You would benefit my cousin little if you were dead or
dying.”
“You misunderstand. Mist can’t kill me.” Snake held out her
hand so he could see the white scars of slashes and punctures. He stared at
them, and looked into her eyes for a long moment, then looked away.
The bright spot in the clouds from which the light radiated
moved westward in the sky; they held the cobra like a child. Snake nearly
dozed, but Mist moved her head, dully attempting to evade restraint, and Snake
woke herself abruptly. “I mustn’t sleep,” she said to the young man. “Talk to
me. What are you called?”
As Stavin had, the young man hesitated. He seemed afraid of
her, or of something. “My people,” he said, “think it unwise to speak our names
to strangers.”
“If you consider me a witch you should not have asked my
aid. I know no magic, and I claim none.”
“It’s not a superstition,” he said. “Not as you might think.
We’re not afraid of being bewitched.”
“I can’t learn all the customs of all the people on this
earth, so I keep my own. My custom is to address those I work with by name.”
Watching him, Snake tried to decipher his expression in the dim light.
“Our families know our names, and we exchange names with our
partners.”
Snake considered that custom, and thought it would fit badly
on her. “No one else? Ever?”
“Well… a friend might know one’s name.”
“Ah,” Snake said. “I see. I am still a stranger, and perhaps
an enemy.”
“A friend would know my name,” the young man said
again. “I would not offend you, but now you misunderstand. An acquaintance is
not a friend. We value friendship highly.”
“In this land one should be able to tell quickly if a person
is worth calling friend.”
“We take friends seldom. Friendship is a great commitment.”
“It sounds like something to be feared.”
He considered that possibility. “Perhaps it’s the betrayal
of friendship we fear. That is a very painful thing.”
“Has anyone ever betrayed you?”
He glanced at her sharply, as if she had exceeded the limits
of propriety. “No,” he said, and his voice was as hard as his face. “No friend.
I have no one I call friend.”
His reaction startled Snake. “That’s very sad,” she said,
and grew silent, trying to comprehend the deep stresses that could close people
off so far, comparing her loneliness of necessity and theirs of choice. “Call
me Snake,” she said finally, “if you can bring yourself to pronounce it. Saying
my name binds you to nothing.”
The young man seemed about to speak; perhaps he thought
again that he had offended her, perhaps he felt he should further defend his
customs. But Mist began to twist in their hands, and they had to hold her to
keep her from injuring herself. The cobra was slender for her length, but
powerful, and the convulsions she went through were more severe than any she
had ever had before. She thrashed in Snake’s grasp, and almost pulled away. She
tried to spread her hood, but Snake held her too tightly. She opened her mouth
and hissed, but no poison dripped from her fangs.
She wrapped her tail around the young man’s waist. He began
to pull her and turn, to extricate himself from her coils.
“She’s not a constrictor,” Snake said. “She won’t hurt you.
Leave her—”
But it was too late; Mist relaxed suddenly and the young man
lost his balance. Mist whipped herself away and lashed figures in the sand.
Snake wrestled with her alone while the young man tried to hold her, but she
curled herself around Snake and used the grip for leverage. She started to pull
herself from Snake’s hands. Snake threw herself and the serpent backward into
the sand; Mist rose above her, open-mouthed, furious, hissing. The young man
lunged and grabbed her just beneath her hood. Mist struck at him, but Snake,
somehow, held her back. Together they deprived Mist of her hold and regained
control of her. Snake struggled up, but Mist suddenly went quite still and lay
almost rigid between them. They were both sweating; the young man was pale
under his tan, and even Snake was trembling.
“We have a little while to rest,” Snake said. She glanced at
him and noticed the dark line on his cheek where, earlier, Mist’s tail had
slashed him. She reached up and touched it. “You’ll have a bruise,” she said. “But
it will not scar.”
“If it were true, that serpents sting with their tails, you
would be restraining both the fangs and the stinger, and I’d be of little use.”
“Tonight I’d need someone to keep me awake, whether or not
they helped me with Mist. But just now, I would have had trouble holding her
alone.” Fighting the cobra produced adrenalin, but now it ebbed, and her
exhaustion and hunger were returning, stronger.
“Snake…”
“Yes?”
He smiled, quickly, embarrassed. “I was trying the
pronunciation.”
“Good enough.”
“How long did it take you to cross the desert?”
“Not very long. Too long. Six days. I don’t think I went the
best way.”
“How did you live?”
“There’s water. We traveled at night and rested during the
day, wherever we could find shade.”
“You carried all your food?”
She shrugged. “A little.” And wished he would not speak of
food.
“What’s on the other side?”
“Mountains. Streams. Other people. The station I grew up and
took my training in. Then another desert, and a mountain with a city inside.”
“I’d like to see a city. Someday.”
“I’m told the city doesn’t let in people from outside,
people like you and me. But there are many towns in the mountains, and the
desert can be crossed.”
He said nothing, but Snake’s memories of leaving home were
recent enough that she could imagine his thoughts.
oOo
The next set of convulsions came, much sooner than Snake had
expected. By their severity she gauged something of the stage of Stavin’s
illness, and wished it were morning. If she was going to lose the child, she
would have it done, and grieve, and try to forget. The cobra would have
battered herself to death against the sand if Snake and the young man had not
been holding her. She suddenly went completely rigid, with her mouth clamped
shut and her forked tongue dangling.
She stopped breathing.
“Hold her,” Snake said. “Hold her head. Quickly, take her,
and if she gets away, run. Take her! She won’t strike at you now, she could
only slash you by accident.”
He hesitated only a moment, then grasped Mist behind the
head. Snake ran, slipping in the deep sand, from the edge of the circle of
tents to a place where bushes still grew. She broke off dry thorny branches
that tore her scarred hands. Peripherally she noticed a mass of horned vipers,
so ugly they seemed deformed, nesting beneath the clump of desiccated
vegetation. They hissed at her; she ignored them. She found a thin hollow stem
and carried it back. Her hands bled from deep scratches.
Kneeling by Mist’s head, she forced open the cobra’s mouth
and pushed the tube deep into her throat, through the air passage at the base
of the tongue. She bent close, took the tube in her mouth, and breathed gently
into Mist’s lungs.
She noticed: the young man’s hands, holding the cobra as she
had asked; his breathing, first a sharp gasp of surprise, then ragged; the sand
scraping her elbows where she leaned; the cloying smell of the fluid seeping
from Mist’s fangs; her own dizziness, she thought from exhaustion, which she
forced away by necessity and will.
Snake breathed, and breathed again, paused, and repeated,
until Mist caught the rhythm and continued it unaided.
Snake sat back on her heels. “I think she’ll be all right,”
she said. “I hope she will.” She brushed the back of her hand across her
forehead. The touch sparked pain: she jerked her hand down and agony slid along
her bones, up her arm, across her shoulder, through her chest, enveloping her
heart. Her balance turned on its edge. She fell, tried to catch herself but
moved too slowly, fought nausea and vertigo and almost succeeded, until the
pull of the earth seemed to slip away and she was lost in darkness with nothing
to take a bearing by.
She felt sand where it had scraped her cheek and her palms,
but it was soft. “Snake, can I let go?” She thought the question must be for
someone else, while at the same time she knew there was no one else to answer
it, no one else to reply to her name. She felt hands on her, and they were
gentle; she wanted to respond to them, but she was too tired. She needed sleep
more, so she pushed them away. But they held her head and put dry leather to
her lips and poured water into her throat. She coughed and choked and spat it
out.
She pushed herself up on one elbow. As her sight cleared,
she realized she was shaking. She felt the way she had the first time she was
snake-bit, before her immunities had completely developed. The young man knelt
over her, his water flask in his hand. Mist, beyond him, crawled toward the
darkness. Snake forgot the throbbing pain. “Mist!” She slapped the ground.
The young man flinched and turned, frightened; the serpent
reared up, swaying over them, watching, angry, ready to strike, her hood
spread. She formed a wavering white line against black. Snake forced herself to
rise, feeling as though she was fumbling with the control of some unfamiliar
body. She almost fell again, but held herself steady, facing the cobra, whose
eyes were on a level with her own. “Thou must not go to hunt now,” she said. “There
is work for thee to do.” She held out her right hand to the side, a decoy, to
draw Mist if she struck. Her hand was heavy with pain. Snake feared, not being
bitten, but the loss of the contents of Mist’s poison sacs. “Come here,” she
said. “Come here, and stay thine anger.” She noticed blood flowing down between
her fingers, and the fear she felt for Stavin intensified. “Didst thou bite me
already, creature?” But the pain was wrong: poison would numb her, and the new
serum only sting…
“No,” the young man whispered from behind her.
Mist struck. The reflexes of long training took over: Snake’s
right hand jerked away, her left grabbed Mist as the serpent brought her head
back. The cobra writhed a moment, and relaxed. “Devious beast,” Snake said. “For
shame.” She turned and let Mist crawl up her arm and over her shoulder, where
she lay like the outline of an invisible cape and dragged her tail like the
edge of a train.
“She didn’t bite me?”
“No,” the young man said. His contained voice was touched
with awe. “You should be dying. You should be curled around the agony, and your
arm swollen purple. When you came back—” He gestured toward her hand. “It must
have been a sand viper.”
Snake remembered the coil of reptiles beneath the branches,
and touched the blood on her hand. She wiped it away, revealing the double
puncture of a bite among the scratches of the thorns. The wound was slightly
swollen. “It needs cleaning,” she said. “I shame myself by falling to it.” The
pain of it washed in gentle waves up her arm, burning no longer. She stood
looking at the young man, looking around her, watching the landscape shift and
change as her tired eyes tried to cope with the low light of setting moon and
false dawn. “You held Mist well, and bravely,” she said to the young man. “I
thank you.”
He lowered his gaze, almost bowing to her. He rose and
approached her. Snake put her hand on Mist’s neck so she would not be alarmed.
“I would be honored,” the young man said, “if you would call
me Arevin.”
“I would be pleased to.”
Snake knelt down and held the winding white loops as Mist
crawled slowly into her compartment. In a little while, when Mist had
stabilized, by dawn, they could go to Stavin.
The tip of Mist’s white tail slid out of sight. Snake closed
the case and would have risen, but she could not stand. She had not quite
shaken off the effects of the new venom. The flesh around the wound was red and
tender, but the hemorrhaging would not spread. She stayed where she was,
slumped, staring at her hand, creeping slowly in her mind toward what she
needed to do, this time for herself.
“Let me help you. Please.”
He touched her shoulder and helped her stand. “I’m sorry,”
she said. “I’m so in need of rest…”
“Let me wash your hand,” Arevin said. “And then you can
sleep. Tell me when to awaken you—”
“I can’t sleep yet.” She collected herself, straightened,
tossed the damp curls of her short hair off her forehead. “I’m all right now.
Have you any water?”
Arevin loosened his outer robe. Beneath it he wore a
loincloth and a leather belt that carried several leather flasks and pouches.
His body was lean and well built, his legs long and muscular. The color of his
skin was slightly lighter than the sun-darkened brown of his face. He brought
out his water flask and reached for Snake’s hand.
“No, Arevin. If the poison gets in any small scratch you
might have, it could infect.”
She sat down and sluiced lukewarm water over her hand. The
water dripped pink to the ground and disappeared, leaving not even a damp spot
visible. The wound bled a little more, but now it only ached. The poison was
almost inactivated.
“I don’t understand,” Arevin said, “how it is that you’re
unhurt. My younger sister was bitten by a sand viper.” He could not speak as
uncaringly as he might have wished. “We could do nothing to save her—nothing we
have would even lessen her pain.”
Snake gave him his flask and rubbed salve from a vial in her
belt pouch across the closing punctures. “It’s a part of our preparation,” she
said. “We work with many kinds of serpents, so we must be immune to as many as
possible.” She shrugged. “The process is tedious and somewhat painful.” She
clenched her fist; the film held, and she was steady. She leaned toward Arevin
and touched his abraded cheek again. “Yes…” She spread a thin layer of the
salve across it. “That will help it heal.”
“If you cannot sleep,” Arevin said, “can you at least rest?”
“Yes,” she said. “For a little while.”
Snake sat next to Arevin, leaning against him, and they
watched the sun turn the clouds to gold and flame and amber. The simple
physical contact with another human being gave Snake pleasure, though she found
it unsatisfying. Another time, another place, she might do something more, but
not here, not now.
When the lower edge of the sun’s bright smear rose above the
horizon, Snake got up and teased Mist out of the case. She came slowly, weakly,
and crawled across Snake’s shoulders. Snake picked up the satchel, and she and
Arevin walked together back to the small group of tents.
oOo
Stavin’s parents waited, watching for her, just outside the
entrance of their tent. They stood in a tight, defensive, silent group. For a
moment Snake thought they had decided to send her away. Then, with regret and
fear like hot iron in her mouth, she asked if Stavin had died. They shook their
heads, and allowed her to enter.
Stavin lay as she had left him, still asleep. The adults
followed her with their stares. Mist flicked out her tongue, growing nervous
from the smell of fear.
“I know you would stay,” Snake said. “I know you would help,
if you could, but there is nothing to be done by any person but me. Please go
back outside.”
They glanced at each other, and at Arevin, and she thought
for a moment that they would refuse. Snake wanted to fall into the silence and
sleep. “Come, cousins,” Arevin said. “We are in her hands.” He opened the tent
flap and motioned them out. Snake thanked him with nothing more than a glance,
and he might almost have smiled. She turned toward Stavin and knelt beside him.
“Stavin—” She touched his forehead; it was very hot. She noticed that her hand
was less steady than before. The slight touch awakened the child. “It’s time,”
Snake said.
He blinked, coming out of some child’s dream, seeing her,
slowly recognizing her. He did not look frightened. For that Snake was glad;
for some other reason she could not identify, she was uneasy.
“Will it hurt?”
“Does it hurt now?”
He hesitated, looked away, looked back. “Yes.”
“It might hurt a little more. I hope not. Are you ready?”
“Can Grass stay?”
“Of course,” she said.
And realized what was wrong.
“I’ll come back in a moment.” Her voice had changed so much,
she had pulled it so tight, that she could not help but frighten him. She left
the tent, walking slowly, calmly, restraining herself. Outside, the parents
told her by their faces what they feared.
“Where is Grass?” Arevin, his back to her, started at her
tone. The fair-haired man made a small grieving sound, and could look at her no
longer.
“We were afraid,” the eldest partner said. “We thought it
would bite the child.”
“I thought it would. It was I. It crawled over his face. I
could see its fangs—” The wife put her hands on her younger partner’s
shoulders, and he said no more.
“Where is he?” She wanted to scream; she did not.
They brought her a small open box. Snake took it and looked
inside.
Grass lay cut almost in two, his entrails oozing from his
body, half-turned over, and as she watched, shaking, he writhed once, flicked
his tongue out once, and in. Snake made some sound, too low in her throat to be
a cry. She hoped his motions were only reflex, but she picked him up as gently
as she could. She leaned down and touched her lips to the smooth green scales
behind his head. She bit him quickly, sharply, at the base of his skull. His
blood flowed cool and salty in her mouth. If he was not already dead, she had
killed him instantly.
She looked at the parents, and at Arevin; they were all
pale, but she had no sympathy for their fear, and cared nothing for shared
grief. “Such a small creature,” she said. “Such a small creature, who could
only give pleasure and dreams.” She watched them for a moment more, then turned
toward the tent again.
“Wait—” She heard the eldest partner move up close behind
her. He touched her shoulder; she shrugged away his hand. “We will give you
anything you want,” he said, “but leave the child alone.”
She spun on him in a fury. “Should I kill Stavin for your
stupidity?” He seemed about to try to hold her back. She jammed her shoulder
hard into his stomach, and flung herself past the tent flap. Inside, she kicked
over the satchel. Abruptly awakened, and angry, Sand crawled out and coiled
himself. When someone tried to enter, Sand hissed and rattled with a violence
Snake had never heard him use before. She did not even bother to look behind
her. She ducked her head and wiped her tears on her sleeve before Stavin could
see them. She knelt beside him.
“What’s the matter?” He could not help but hear the voices
outside the tent, and the running.
“Nothing, Stavin,” Snake said. “Did you know we came across
the desert?”
“No,” he said with wonder.
“It was very hot, and none of us had anything to eat. Grass
is hunting now. He was very hungry. Will you forgive him and let me begin? I’ll
be here all the time.”
He seemed so tired; he was disappointed, but he had no
strength for arguing. “All right.” His voice rustled like sand slipping through
the fingers.
Snake lifted Mist from her shoulders, and pulled the blanket
from Stavin’s small body. The tumor pressed up beneath his rib cage, distorting
his form, squeezing his vital organs, sucking nourishment from him for its own
growth, poisoning him with its wastes. Holding Mist’s head, Snake let her flow
across him, touching and tasting him. She had to restrain the cobra to keep her
from striking; the excitement had agitated her. When Sand used his rattle, the
vibrations made her flinch. Snake stroked her, soothing her; trained and
bred-in responses began to return, overcoming the natural instincts. Mist
paused when her tongue flicked the skin above the tumor, and Snake released
her.
The cobra reared and struck, biting as cobras bite, sinking
her fangs their short length once, releasing, instantly biting again for a
better purchase, holding on, chewing at her prey. Stavin cried out, but he did
not move against Snake’s restraining hands.
Mist expended the contents of her venom sacs into the child,
and released him. She reared up, peered around, folded her hood, and slid
across the floor in a perfectly straight line toward her dark, close
compartment.
“It’s done, Stavin.”
“Will I die now?”
“No,” Snake said. “Not now. Not for many years, I hope.” She
took a vial of powder from her belt pouch. “Open your mouth.” He complied, and
she sprinkled the powder across his tongue. “That will help the ache.” She
spread a pad of cloth across the series of shallow puncture wounds without
wiping off the blood.
She turned from him.
“Snake? Are you going away?”
“I won’t leave without saying good-bye. I promise.”
The child lay back, closed his eyes, and let the drug take
him.
Sand coiled quietly on the dark felt. Snake patted the floor
to call him. He moved toward her, and suffered himself to be replaced in the
satchel. Snake closed it, and lifted it, and it still felt empty. She heard
noises outside the tent. Stavin’s parents and the people who had come to help
them pulled open the tent flap and peered inside, thrusting sticks in even
before they looked.
Snake set down her leather case. “It’s done.”
They entered. Arevin was with them too; only he was
empty-handed. “Snake—” He spoke through grief, pity, confusion, and Snake could
not tell what he believed. He looked back. Stavin’s mother was just behind him.
He took her by the shoulder. “He would have died without her. Whatever happens
now, he would have died.”
She shook his hand away. “He might have lived. It might have
gone away. We—” She could speak no more for hiding tears.
Snake felt the people moving, surrounding her. Arevin took
one step toward her and stopped, and she could see he wanted her to defend
herself. “Can any of you cry?” she said. “Can any of you cry for me and my
despair, or for them and their guilt, or for small things and their pain?” She
felt tears slip down her cheeks.
They did not understand her; they were offended by her
crying. They stood back, still afraid of her, but gathering themselves. She no
longer needed the pose of calmness she had used to deceive the child. “Ah, you
fools.” Her voice sounded brittle. “Stavin—”
Light from the entrance struck them. “Let me pass.” The
people in front of Snake moved aside for their leader. She stopped in front of
Snake, ignoring the satchel her foot almost touched. “Will Stavin live?” Her
voice was quiet, calm, gentle.
“I cannot be certain,” Snake said, “but I feel that he will.”
“Leave us.” The people understood Snake’s words before they
did their leader’s; they looked around and lowered their weapons, and finally,
one by one, they moved out of the tent. Arevin remained with Snake. The
strength that came from danger seeped from her, and her knees collapsed. She
bent over the satchel with her face in her hands. The older woman knelt in
front of her, before Snake could notice or prevent her. “Thank you,” the leader
said. “Thank you. I am so sorry… “ She put her arms around Snake, and drew her
toward her, and Arevin knelt beside them, and he embraced Snake too. Snake
began to tremble again, and they held her while she cried.
oOo
Later she slept, exhausted, alone in the tent with Stavin,
holding his hand. The people had caught small animals for Sand and Mist. They
had given her food and supplies; they had even given her sufficient water to
bathe, though that must have strained their resources.
When she awakened, Arevin lay sleeping nearby, his robe open
in the heat, a sheen of sweat across his chest and stomach. The sternness in
his expression vanished when he slept; he looked exhausted and vulnerable.
Snake almost woke him, but stopped, shook her head, and turned to Stavin.
She felt the tumor, and found that it had begun to dissolve
and shrivel, dying, as Mist’s changed poison affected it. Through her grief
Snake felt a little joy. She smoothed Stavin’s pale hair back from his face. “I
would not lie to you again, little one,” she whispered, “but I must leave soon.
I cannot stay here.” She wanted another three days’ sleep, to finish fighting
off the effects of the sand viper’s poison, but she would sleep somewhere else.
“Stavin?”
He half woke, slowly. “It doesn’t hurt any more,” he said.
“I’m glad.”
“Thank you…”
“Good-bye, Stavin. Will you remember later on that you woke
up, and that I did stay to say good-bye?”
“Good-bye,” he said, drifting off again. “Good-bye, Snake.
Good-bye, Grass.” He closed his eyes.
Snake picked up the satchel and stood gazing down at Arevin.
He did not stir. Both grateful and sorry, she left the tent.
Dusk approached with long, indistinct shadows; the camp was
hot and quiet. She found her tiger-striped pony, tethered with food and water.
New, full waterskins bulged on the ground next to the saddle, and desert robes
lay across the pommel, though Snake had refused any payment. The tiger-pony
whickered at her. She scratched his striped ears, saddled him, and strapped her
gear on his back. Leading him, she started east, the way she had come.
“Snake—”
She took a breath, and turned back to Arevin. His back was
to the sun, and it outlined him in scarlet. His streaked hair flowed loose to
his shoulders, gentling his face. “You must leave?”
“Yes.”
“I hoped you would not leave before… I hoped you would stay,
for a time… There are other clans, and other people you could help—”
“If things were different, I might have stayed. There’s work
for a healer. But…”
“They were frightened—”
“I told them Grass couldn’t hurt them, but they saw his
fangs and they didn’t know he could only give dreams and ease dying.”
“But can’t you forgive them?”
“I can’t face their guilt. What they did was my fault,
Arevin. I didn’t understand them until too late.”
“You said it yourself, you can’t know all the customs and
all the fears.”
“I’m crippled,” she said. “Without Grass, if I can’t heal a
person, I can’t help at all. We don’t have many dreamsnakes. I have to go home
and tell my teachers I’ve lost one, and hope they can forgive my stupidity.
They seldom give the name I bear, but they gave it to me, and they’ll be
disappointed.”
“Let me come with you.”
She wanted to; she hesitated, and cursed herself for that
weakness. “They may take Mist and Sand and cast me out, and you would be cast
out too. Stay here, Arevin.”
“It wouldn’t matter.”
“It would. After a while, we would hate each other. I don’t
know you, and you don’t know me. We need calmness, and quiet, and time to
understand each other well.”
He came toward her, and put his arms around her, and they
stood embracing for a moment. When he raised his head, there were tears on his
cheeks. “Please come back,” he said. “Whatever happens, please come back.”
“I will try,” Snake said. “Next spring, when the winds stop,
look for me. The spring after that, if I haven’t returned, forget me. Wherever
I am, if I live, I will forget you.”
“I will look for you,” Arevin said, and he would promise no
more.
Snake picked up her pony’s lead, and started across the
desert.