The man who had been her fellow prisoner laughed appreciatively. “When you put it that way, I guess it’s the same for everybody. The only game in town.”
Maia recalled the night before, the way shifting winds would bring his aroma as she slept fitfully, waking once to find that she was using his chest as a pillow, and he asleep with one arm over her shoulders. This morning, he seemed a different person. Somehow he had found a way to clean up. His stubble had been scraped away, in places, transforming it into the beginnings of a neat beard. Right now she could smell herself more than him.
Moving to place herself downwind, she asked, “Then you aren’t here to invade us?”
She had meant it as a joke, to make fun of the rumors spread by fearmongers ever since his ship appeared in the sky, one long year ago. But Renna smiled thinly, answering, “In a manner of speaking, that’s exactly what I’m here for … to prepare you for an invasion.”
Maia swallowed. It wasn’t the answer she’d expected. “But you—”
She didn’t finish. Thalla called, leading a pair of horses, “Off your bottoms, you two! Daylight riding’s hard and fast, so let’s get at it!”
“Yes, ma’am!” Renna replied with a friendly, only-slightly-mocking salute. He left his archaeological samples where they lay and stood up, folding the game board. Maia hurried to tie her bedroll to her saddlebag, and glanced back to see Renna bending over to check the cinch buckle of his mount.
While Maia was looking at the man, Kiel crossed between them and smoothly, blithely, reached out to
Baltha snorted. “Silly rads,” she muttered. “Making a fuss like that, trying to talk to a man, even when it won’t get ’em anywhere. As if those two could handle a sparking if they got one now.”
“You don’t think they’re trying to—”
“Naw. Just flirting, prob’ly. Pretty damn pointless. You know the saying—
“Still makes plenty sense to me,” she finished.
“Mm,” Maia answered noncommittally. “What’s a … rad?”
Baltha glanced at her, sidelong. “Pretty innocent, ain’t you, virgie? Do you know anything at all?”
Maia felt her face flush.
“Rad stands for ‘radical’—which means a bunch of overeducated young city varlings with dimwitted ideas about changing the world. Think they’re all smarter than Lysos. Idiots.”
Maia recalled now, listening to the tinny radio in the cottage at Lerner Hold. The clandestine station used the word to represent women calling for a rethinking of Stratoin society, from the ground up. In many ways, rads were polar opposites to Perkinites, pushing for empowerment of the var underclass through restructuring all of the rules, political and biological.
“You’re talking about my friends,” Maia told Baltha, in what she hoped was a severe tone.
Baltha returned a sarcastic moue. “Am I? Now there’s a thought. Yer
“Not a whole lot. Just shake it up a little. Knock down some deadwood to make room in the forest, so t’speak. Let in enough light for a new tree or two.”
“With you being a founding root, I suppose.” “Why not? Don’t I look like a foundin’ mother to you? Can’t you jus’ picture this mug on a big painting, hangin’ over th’ fireplace of some fancy hall, someday?” She held her head high, chin outthrust.
Trouble was, Maia
“Policy? That’ll be simple.” Baltha laughed. “Spread our branches an’ cut off th’ light!”
“Don’t others also deserve a place in the sun?”
Baltha squinted at Maia, as if amazed by such naivete. “Let ’em fight for it, like I’m fight’n right now. It’s the only fair way. Lysos was wise.” The last was intoned solemnly, and Baltha drew the circle sign over her breast. Maia recognized a look of true religion in the other woman’s eyes. A version and interpretation that conveniently justified what had already been decided.
Lasting silence settled after that. They rode on and the afternoon waned. Baltha consulted her compass, correcting their southwestward path several times. At intervals, she would rise in the stirrups and play her telescope across the horizon, searching for signs of pursuit, but only twisted shrubs with gnarled limbs broke the monotony, reminding Maia of legendary women, frozen in place after encountering the Medusa-man.
When the party of fugitives stopped, it was only to stretch the kinks out of their legs and to eat standing up. There were no more jokes about Renna’s wincing accommodation to his saddle. By now they were all hobbling. Dusk fell and Maia expected a call to set camp, but apparently the plan was to keep riding.
Two hours after nightfall, with tiny, silvery Aglaia just rising in the constellation Ladle, Baltha called a sudden halt, motioning for silence. She peered ahead into the darkness, then cupped her hands around her mouth and trilled a soft birdcall.
Seconds passed.
A reply hooted from the gloom, then a pause, and another hoot. A spark flashed, followed by a lantern’s gleam, barely revealing a bulky form, like a rounded hillock, several hundred meters ahead. As they rode forward, shadows coalesced and separated. The object appeared to be squared off at one end, bulbous at the other. Hissing softly, it stood where a pair of straight lines crossed from the far left horizon on an arrow-straight journey to the right. The blurry form resolved, and Maia abruptly recognized a small maintenance engine for the solar railway, sitting on a spur track, surrounded by tethered horses and murmuring women.
There were cries of joyful reunion as Baltha galloped to greet her friends. Thalla and Kiel embraced Kau. Renna dismounted and held Maia’s gelding while she descended, heavy with fatigue. Leading their tired beasts around the dark engine they handed the reins to a stocky woman wearing Musseli Clan livery. Another Musseli gave Renna a folded bundle that proved to be a uniform of one of the male rail-runner guilds.
So, the Musseli weren’t in cahoots with the Perkinite farmer clans. It figured, given their close relationships with guildsmen, some of whom were their own brothers and sons.
Apparently, the cabal were going to try getting Renna out the fast way, in one quick dash by rail. Without