The policewoman let out a snort. “Well, now you know. So. Are we calmer? Yes? Let’s backtrack, then, to where you say you first saw this bottle of blue powder.”
In the end, Maia realized she hadn’t a whole lot to offer.
Her fantasies had ranged from disaster—her story proving to be trivial or stupid—all the way to miraculous.
The truth seemed to lie somewhere in between. The official, who called herself Research Agent Foster, promised Maia a small but worthwhile fee to come to Grange Head in fourteen days, and tell her story in detail to a magistrate who was scheduled to pass through about then. Her expenses would also be covered, so long as they were modest. Agent Foster did not volunteer any explanations for the events Maia had seen, but from her demeanor of attentive but unbothered interest, Maia got the impression this was one of many leads in a case already long under way.
The agent gave her a number to use if she ever had to call again, then signed off, leaving on the screen something else Maia hadn’t heard of before, a requisition on Jopland Clan for one night’s guest lodgings and a meal, at Colony expense.
When she went to the door, Maia found the matriarch standing there, wearing a broad smile. “Did you finish your consultation, daughter?” she asked eagerly.
“Yes. I’m finished now.”
“Good. I’ll have one of the servants show you a pallet in the barn. In the morn we’ll discuss how you’ll work off your debt.”
For the first time in weeks Maia felt a sense of relish, of anticipation. Leie would have loved this.
“Your pardon, Revered Mother, but the barn won’t do. In the morning, after a good breakfast, I’ll be happy to discuss your, um, lending me transportation back to town.”
The Jopland elder blanched, then flushed crimson in a reversal that was surprising, given her dark complexion. She pushed Maia aside and hurriedly read the screen, gargling in rage. “How did you do this! I warn you, if this is some city trick—”
“Lysos, I don’t think so. You’re welcome to call Planetary Equilibrium Security, if you want to verify it.”
Maia did not even know what the words meant, but they had dramatic effect. The old woman swayed as if she had been struck. Only after visible effort did she manage to speak in a harsh whisper. “I’ll take you to your room.”
Out in the hallway, Maia heard distant sounds of music and laughter. Apparently, a decent party had gotten under way, after all. As a var, she was used to not being invited to such affairs, and was unsurprised when the crone led her in the other direction. It was a bit disturbing, though, when they descended steps into the farmyard.
Two dogs came to growl briefly at Maia before sidling away at a sharp command from her host.
“It’s not the barn I’m taking you to, don’t worry. But we’re goin’ around the house. I don’t want you disturbing our guests.”
Through front-facing windows, Maia heard hearty male laughter. Farther along, they passed before several dimly lit rooms from which came breathy, hoarse sounds unmistakable as anything but passion.
At the far end of the southern wing stood several small apartments, each with its own door and plank porch. There were no keys or locks. The matriarch pushed into the last one and stood on tiptoe in order to tighten a bare bulb. Only wan illumination spilled forth, explaining why there was no switch. That bulb would never get too hot to touch. Over in one corner, a pair of folded blankets lay atop a packed-straw mattress. Maia shrugged. She had slept worse.
“Cockcrow for breakfast, or none,” her reluctant host said, departing without another word. Maia closed the door, then set to laying out the bedclothes. Finding a pitcher of water on a rickety table, she washed her face, took a long drink from the spout, and reached up to turn out the light.
Elsewhere in the rambling farm complex, people were vigorously occupied making strong, atonal harmonies.
Of course, there were different rhythms for each time of year. In summer it was men who eagerly sought, while skeptical women sometimes let themselves be convinced. These were patterns Maia had known all her life. Nature’s way.
Maia had thought about sex—two willing partners coming together, whether by wooing or after being wooingly pursued. It seemed an act partly sublime, but also filled with all the frenetic, damp, clasping after life that came from certain knowledge of it slipping away. A fusion aimed at immortality, some called it.
As a young virgin, Maia would not feel that hormonal rush of desire, if at all, until winter’s deepest nadir. Still, for as much as a year before departing Port Sanger she had begun experiencing sensations she felt must surely be related. A faint longing, a void. She vaguely suspected sex might have a role in filling it. A partial role.
Sighs and murmured cries. The sounds were fascinating, yet again Maia wondered if there wasn’t something more to it than a mere rubbing, release, and a mixing of fluids. A union that enhanced and magnified what each party brought separately.
It took an hour or two. Then matters settled down, allowing the prairie wind to win by default, rustling the tall cane fields beyond the house and yard. Still, Maia couldn’t sleep. Her feelings were a churn from all that had occurred today. Finally, with a sigh, she threw off the thin blankets, went to the door, and stepped out to inhale the night.
The scents were heavier than she was used to, growing up in the icy north. Yet one musty-pleasant aroma she identified quickly. It accompanied a low, humming rumble, emanating from the open-sided lugar barracks, where those shaggy, obsessively gentle creatures huddled at night, whatever the temperature. Their piquant scent, she had once read, was one of countless features programmed by the founders, who gave the beasts great physical strength to serve womankind, breaking one link of dependency that used to bind females to males.
Certainly the aroma was less pungent than the sweat tang given off by sailors back on Wotan, whenever hard labor brought on that glistening, other-species sheen. Did men also perspire so while making love? The thought added to Maia’s heavy ambivalence of attraction-revulsion.
Walking under the stars, she greeted with a smile her friends Eagle and Hammer. The familiar constellations winked at her. On impulse, Maia snapped two leather catches, opening the brass sextant at her wrist. Unfolding the alignment arms, she took angle sightings on the horizon, on Ophir, the polestar, and the planet Amaterasu. Now, if only she had a decent chronometer…
Dogs barked at some neighboring clanstead. Something winged and swift fluttered a few meters overhead. Wind rustled the trees by the river, where glow beetles were still busy at their mating display, more persistently