Part II
Chapter XXI
It seems they've been talking about it for years.
From beneath the vaulted "V" shapes of the pavilion buildings, I listen without comment to the public meetings--young recruiters once again urging emigration to the desert colonies.
I want to go to sea again just to get away from the propaganda.
"But isn't it terribly dry and hot?"
"The seasons are mild," the promoter says. "That is all. No fierce storms."
"No agriculture!" someone shouts from the back of the crowd.
"Who has need of it, when the sea produces all we will need?" they always answer. They fill the people's heads with visions of fish leaping willingly into baskets so they can be taken in and fried up. They pitch dreams of silver mines and houses made of marble. Most listeners shake their heads and go on--life is perfectly pleasant here, after all--but some listen.
Enough have already sailed that there will be a proper city to the east in a generation or two. All my fault, of course. I marked the spot for them. Said, "This place would be good." We buried Ariki there and I sailed back, letting others press on and explore.
"West," I mumble.
"What's that?" I have no attendants. No official trappings of power this time. Still, some of them hover over me, listening carefully. It is through them that I nudge their whole civilization one way or another. One man may shape a nation with suggestions alone if he lives long enough.
"I want to go west."
"Just as everyone is going east?"
"Or north."
"But there is nothing to the north. It's only open ocean.
"Yes," I say. "Exactly."
The late afternoon crowd is starting to dissipate, to drift off to their huts nearer the coast or into the grand wooden houses the wealthier have taken to building closer to the edge of the swollen river valley. A daily exhalation through which the city stretches and looks lazily at its own idyllic girth.
But something is amiss. There's a stirring spreading through the crowd. I hear gasps. Rapid, nervous talk.
So of course, they come to me.
The whole throng converge around me and becomes grave and silent.
"Have you heard this news?"
"What news?" I ask plainly.
"French warriors," they say. "in the hills."
"They want the silver."
"Yes, you said it was valuable--that we should claim the hills and begin mining it! That must be why they're coming."
"Are we sure they're hostile?" I ask, swiping dust off my clothes as I rise.
"The messengers from the warriors in the inland hills say yes, that they are marching for war."
Their wide eyes lock, unblinking and needy. I've raised a flock of sheep. Little babes of Eden, crowd around me and ask your lord for protection.
Like a God again.
"You will know what to do," one says firmly. "What must we do?"
I look at him, at his entreating eyes. How will this be any different? If I answer this question for you, someday your great great grandchildren will rub their knees raw in worshipping me.
"March against them?" a spindly man with over-large ears offers when I say nothing.
"Flee? Abandon the settlement," whines a woman near to soaking her pregnant belly with tears while gripping her husband's arm.
"Offer them the silver for peace!" another says.
"No," I say and they fall silent again.
"What then?"
"Let us make our preparations," I answer. "Pull back our warriors and let them come."
Some gasp.
"Draw them in, stretch their supply lines."
Men nod to each other, tightening their faces.
"Smash them in the valley. Force them to accept peace."
Chants go up. Men break into war dances. The town will not sleep. The children will stay up late, listening to men chewing thick roots of courage and women weeping over the men's great strength.
And I will watch, firelight on my face beneath the clear sky, thinking forward, thinking past each of their lives, to what will come...