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Journal Entry 00100 202 000 Geographic The Ranch

Geographic: The Ranch

Journal Entry 202 / 00100

Seren, Yavar 07, 00100

September 09, 1984

Alka sighed and stretched out on the floor of her cabin, lying on the

traditional Uncia bed she had come to prefer to the elevated platforms

many Pendorians used, even Felinzi. She had learned from her trip to

Terra that the bed she used was more like that of a group of people known

as Asian, and she had come to wonder how much of the Uncia mindset had

been programmed by conceptions and perhaps misconceptions of that mindset.

This had led to her current assignment. Care of the human called Xing

Kanorak, the chinese representative of the Geographic expedition to

Pendor. She had counted on an interesting assignment and had hoped to

learn something from Xing about China and its ways. She had been reading

Confucius recently in a chinese edition, and had moved on to Meng Tzu

and Mo Tzu, one the inheritor of Confucius's teachings and the other his

rival. Lao Tzu was fascinating; Chuang Tzu, on the other hand, was a mess.

She had learned a lot from all them.

From Xing, though, she had learned very little. He was a quiet man, she

had learned. He also carried with him a profound sadness that hung on

his shoulders like an unwanted coat to be carried home even after the

day had grown hot. She could not understand him, try as she might to

talk with him. She knew that he woke up at night, sometimes screaming,

but he would not talk about it. Jamie, the ship's AI, would not tell

her more than that.

She had decided to try another route after talking to Trellin, Ms.

Suttprathana's guide. She still felt as unsure of herself as a tliel

out of the tanks. Steeling herself against his reproachful eye and his

intimate barriers, she waved her hand in front of the doorplate.

The door opened. "Hello," he said politely. He was significantly shorter

than she, with thin black hair that fell about his face like unruly wire.

He wore an unremarkable ensemble of a collared pullover and denim pants.

He even wore socks, although he had learned from the crew not to wear

shoes. In the low-gravity portions of the ship one needed her toes.

"Jamie says you wanted to see me," she began. That in itself had been

remarkable. After three months on board Xing rarely, if ever, expressed

an interest in her visiting him for any length of time. He was dismissive

towards her, always wrapped in his melancholy. Wolf had described Xing

as a 'wet blanket,' the weight of which dragged at whomever was around.

He blinked up at her. For the first time in many visits he seemed lively.

He actually smiled. "Jamie says we're stopping to transfer fresh meats and

vegetables on board from another ship. I'd like to see this other ship.

Can you arrange it?"

Jamie? Can I?

Captain says it's fine. The Ranch is clear already so you can go over

if you like. You're free to use the disks.

She returned to where he was and said, "If you like, we can go now."

"Allow me to get my camera, then." He turned around and grabbed a black,

rectangular bag. She watched as he carefully checked his equipment. It

seemed to her that here was a pleasure he was ready to indulge in, one

that seemed at odds with the dark clouds that pursued him. He looked

up at her, anticipation on his face, and she felt an honest smile creep

into her muzzle. "I am ready."

"Let's go, then." She led him around the corridor, up a spire, and into

a room that previously had been off-limits to the Terrans. They hadn't

intended on revealing this technology to the Terrans at quite this stage,

but there was little helping it. If Xing was going to get to see the

axolotl ranch they were going to have to use the SDisks.

As he walked in, he eyed the single white disk inlaid on the floor

with suspicion. She grinned and gestured for him to join her. He did so

cautiously. "Is this what I think it is?" he asked.

"Jamie, we're ready."

The room blinked. The room they ended up in was different only in color

from the room they had left. She was grateful to Hahpi for equalizing the

pressure in the two rooms before they had left. Xing was staring at her,

his eyes wide. "Teleportation?"

"Transposition is what the techies call it. Two objects of equal volume

can be transposed between locations. I don't understand a word of how it

works, and apparently the energy it takes is massive, but we use them

for almost everything. They transport fluids very efficiently, though,

which makes them very useful for some systems." She grinned. "But you

need two of them to make it work."

"So you can't just send someone somewhere?"

"No, you need a pair to do the tranposing."

Xing nodded.. He pulled out his camera and began snapping pictures of

the room, even if it was little more than a nondescript cube with an an

emergency life support closet. She led him towards the door.

It opened onto what looked like a long room that disappeared into the

distance for the curvature of the spacecraft. The ceiling was very low,

barely enough for her to stand up straight, and neither of them nearly

approached two meters in height. But for a single, narrow walkway the

floor was covered with plant beds, now empty and dark. It was apparent

from the low lighting and empty beds that no growing was underway in here.

Alka knew a little about gardening. "I think this soil has been exhausted

and we don't have the proper seeds to do rotation. So this is the last

phase before we land on Pendor. When we get there, the contents of this

ship will be scattered over a mid-intensity forest where it'll go into

being seedbed for future generations."

She watched with amusement as he depleted a roll of film just taking

pictures of what was, to her, an empty room. She tried to appreciate it

from his point of view. It was probably not a new idea to Terrans that for

long voyages into space they would have to bring their own crops and grow

them, but they had probably never before seen it put into practice before.

She supposed that it would sell magazines when he got home.

She led him along the walkway to a ladder that ran up into the core of

the ship. "Follow me," she said.

She started up the ladder, assuming confidently that he would follow. She

had worn a skirt today with no underthings and wondered if he would

take the opportunity she had presented him. She hoped so. Anything to

get him out of that funk he carried with him.

She reached the intersection. The apparent acceleration here was about a

third of Pendorian normal. "This is where we grow the meat, on this floor.

You're not squeamish, are you, Xing?"

She watched his eyes as he considered her question. He seemed to be

trying to remember something, but finally he just shook his head and said,

"No, I am not."

"Good. Because the room I'm about to show you could be found in some of

your horror movies." She opened the door and led him in.

Inside, four rows of plexiglass tubes stood empty and silent. The rows

stretched down the hallway, again disappearing from sight against the

curvature of the vessel. Each tube was large enough to hold a full-size

cow carcass, although at the moment all they appeared to have within them

was a plastic replica of a bovine skeleton. "You grow the meat in those?"

he said even as he again primed the camera flash.

"That's right. That's why I said the meat isn't the best. It's not

naturally grown, but directed by an advancement of the healing growth

process. So it all tastes the same and it's all under-exercised. Some

people claim that makes the meat more tender, but I think it's missing

some of the flavor of the meat with all that." She grinned. "And I

should know."

He snapped more pictures, going down the rows. "I take it an AI runs this?

It is very clean in here."

"Of course. Hahpi, are you there?"

"Always. Hello, Alka. You are looking well."

She looked up at the ceiling. "You don't even know who I am."

"No," the AI agreed, "but I know what Jamie thinks of you, and I trust

her opinions usually."

Xing followed her lead and looked up at the ceiling. "Hahpi. Is that a

Pendorian name?"

There was a chuckle from nowhere. "Pendorian names are all fictional

constructs," the AI replied mysteriously. "AI names especially so. No,

my name comes from an Egyptian fertility god, one who made the waters

of the Nile rise and bring life to the surrounding cities. Since that is

the role' I am playing in this mission, it is the name I have taken for

the time being. I do not keep a permanent name, an unusual thing for a

Pendorian, but AIs in general are unusual beings."

"Thank you for explaining it to me," he said. He was so earnest at the

non-explanation that Alka couldn't help but laugh. The sound apparently

alarmed him and she tamped down on it as quickly as she could.

"What else is there to see?" he asked.

"Well, there's the sewage system. It's still running, cleaning up the

last of the waste products. It's a highly efficient system; we don't

use any complex artificial chemicals in these farms and the amount of

power we have available allows us to render our waste material sterile. I

imagine it stinks in there right now."

"It does," Hahpi confirmed. "And it's hot. I would not recommend the

visit."

"We could show you the seed storage and materials cargo areas. Some

are accessible."

"I would like that. Does this ship have a bridge or is it intended to

be fully automated?"

Hahpi answered. "It does not have a bridge. That was removed after

its construction. I am an independent entity, the first of my kind I

understand, a spacefaring robot."

"I didn't know that," Alka said, surprised. "Congratulations!"

"Thank you!" Hahpi responded. "I don't imagine I will do this for long. I

wish to return to Pendor and my Nixie shell."

"Nixie?" Xing asked.

"Underwater version of, well, this. A robotic shell. She's a construction

unit."

"Independent, loner, and proud of it." Hahpi's pride came through with

every syllable. "That's why I was asked to do this job. But I'm not a

spacer. I can do it, but I don't enjoy it enough to come back to it soon."

"I see," Xing said.

"Come on," Alka said. "I'll show you the cargo holds."

----------------------------------------------------------------------

"You came," Alka said, looking up at Xing. He was dressed in better

clothes than usual, and he had shaved. "Thank you."

"After the tour you gave me this afternoon, it is all I could do to return

the favor." He took the seat she indicated. A male Tindal approached

out of nowhere, deposited two glasses of water, and disappeared. "What

is this place?"

"The best restaurant in three light years," Alka replied.

Xing glanced at the room. There were but four tables, each large enough

only for two people, tightly packed into a small room. A single door

led off to what he assumed to be the kitchen. "It is probably the only

restaurant in three light years," Xing observed.

"I think one of the other ships has one. But I assure you that this

is the best one in three light years. The alternative is that it's the

worst one." She gestured for him to sit down. "I wouldn't invite you to

the worst one. So, have you told your friends about the other ship? And

the SDisk system?"

Xing nodded. "They were surprised by the transportation system, but

they seemed more impressed by the fact that I had managed to get into

the other ship." He glanced around. "But you didn't invite me here to

talk about work."

"In a way, I did. I wanted you to sample some of the fare that we cook

using the fresh slaughter from Hahpi's ship, and I wanted to talk about

work. My work." The waiter brought soup.

"May I ask you a question, Alka? How do these people, the ones who run

this 'restaurant,' get paid?"

"They don't. Not in the sense that you think, Xing. They get paid

simply by having something to do. When you live as long as we do,

having something to do is an important thing to have. Besides, it's

embedded in our instincts to contribute to the society around us. Your

instincts program you to be both a social creature and a loner, to be

part of a successful community and to look out for your own interests

within it. Our instincts allow us to get much more pleasure in just being

seen doing right by the community. And unlike your culture, we have to

see it and be seen doing it. We can't accumulate symbols of success,

like money or power; they don't work for us. They literally do not

register. We understand how they work for Terrans, and we've even begun

to understand why they work. But we could never be like that. What you

think of as retirement would just be agony for us."

"I will try to understand you better, then," he said. "So these people

are being paid in, what?"

"Respect," Alka replied. "Even if none of us ever encounter any of

them again, the AIs remember who they are, and can communicate that

to others who may want to work with them." Alka ate her soup with an

oversize spoon, and Xing followed along. Although he didn't recognize

the particular recipe, he did recognize hints of coriander, ginger,

anise, and especially cilantro.

Their empty bowls were removed, and their water glasses filled. "You

said you wanted to talk about your job?"

"I know you think that I'm here to keep you from seeing things that we

don't want you to see, but that's really not the case, Xing. I'll take

you anywhere you want to go, and if you insist, I'll let you get yourself

irradiated, evacuated, and other unpleasant ways to end your life. It's my

job to be your guide, not your handler. We are not in China." She paused

to marshal her thoughts. "But I'm also here to help you if you're having

other problems. To be your friend, if you'll let me. Jamie told me that

you're having trouble sleeping, that you wake up at night screaming. If

you'll let me, I'd like to help you. Or, at least, understand you. Jack

thinks there's something very wrong with you; a member of the Geographic

should be enthusiastic about his tasks, especially one as significant

as this. But you're not. You mope around, you don't talk to anyone else,

you barely get up the interest to take pictures."

Dinner plates were placed in front of them, helping him to avoid

the conversation. "We must eat," he said. Alka tried to hide her

disappointment as they ate. The main meal was as excellent as the soup,

and she noted that Xing's plate was slightly more sparse than her own,

a nod to his more efficient metabolism.

When they were done and dinner cleared away, the waiter poured two

glasses of wine and left them alone in the quiet room. They were the

only two people there that evening. Xing picked his up and tasted it,

smiled, and took a mouthful. It was one of the first smiles Alka had

seen since they had left Earth orbit. "My offer?"

"Alka, what happens if you fail me? If you fail to be a good guide and

we have a falling out over something and you end up going back to Pendor

without your assignment?"

Alka was taken back by the question. "I don't really know. We've never had

an issue like this before. I was asked to go by the staff because they

had assessed that I was most qualified for this work with you. Anyone

else assigned would be second-best, I guess, but it might reflect on me

that I couldn't adapt. Why?"

Xing nodded his head to one side in a sort of shrug. "I just wanted to

make sure I was not indebted to you if you were to lose your job. It

would seem that your people understand honor the way we once did in our

golden ages."

"Xing, this is about being practical."

"Indeed," he said. He rose from the table. "Excuse me." He left in what

seemed to Alka to be a great hurry, leaving her behind.

She tried to fight the tears forming in her eyes. She didn't succeed.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

"Alka?"

Jamie's voice cut through her sleep like a knife, waking her instantly.

"Lights," she said as she sat up, looking around bewilderedly at her room.

"What time is it?"

"Eleven twenty," the AI announced calmly. "I know. It is very late. But

Xing is at your door."

Alka glanced around the room, suddenly wide awake. It was passable for

visitors. "Give me a minute." She grabbed a simple robe and tied it

about her body. "Let him in."

The door opened. Xing stood there, looking across at her, his eyes

red-rimmed with a lack of sleep. Or was it tears? Whatever it was, he had

come to her for a reason and she was determined not to fail him. "Come

in," she said, stifling a yawn.

"Thank you. I was afraid you would not want to see me at this hour. Not

after I stood you up like that."

"It's what I do," she said. She had a small cabin without chairs or

tables. She indicated a place on the floor, and he took a seat. She

recovered a hot pot of tea and two cups, and offered him one.

He accepted. "No, it is what you want to do. But I know that I hurt you

by leaving you. I do not mean to hurt you, Alka. But..." He paused. "I

feel I cannot work with you if I do not tell you the truth."

"The truth?" she asked. Suddenly she wondered if Xing was less

photographer and more government official, sent to ferret out the "state

secrets" of Pendor, whatever those were.

He was a long time before speaking. Finally, he said, "Four months before

I agreed to this assignment, my wife called me to tell me that she was

pregnant. I thought that was wonderful, that we would have a family soon.

But then my wife told me that she had already scheduled an abortion. The

child was going to be a girl."

Alka gasped. Pregnancy termination was permitted on Pendor but it was also

terribly rare. There were so few people to begin with, and contraception

was so effective, that the concept of an "unwanted pregnancy" was almost

unheard of. Even when the mother realized after the birth that she was

ill-prepared to deal with a child, something which happened surprisingly

often on Pendor, there were enough people who wanted to raise children

that the Gift Child system ensured they were all wanted one way or

another. Horrified, she finally managed to rasp out, "I had heard that

that happens. In your country."

Xing merely looked down. "I did not think it would happen to me. Yodo

was a very strong woman who often got her way. Her ambition was to be

the head of a strong and prosperous household. She could not do that

if she did not have a son. If we were lucky enough, or rich enough,

to afford the taxes the state would put on us for a second child, she

might have let a girl live. But not as firstborn. I did not want her to

kill the child. I loved Yodo too much; I could not bear the thought of

her killing anything that came from her.

"Yodo went to the hospital despite my pleading and my angry words. On the

way home, however, she and fourteen others were killed in an accident. The

bus they were in lost a tire when going over a bridge. They fell into the

river and drowned. It was a bus she rode often. It could have happened

on any day. But now she is gone, and our last words were hateful to each

other." He sat, his knees drown up to his chest, and began to cry. "And

now I have no family, no wife, and no daughter. That is why I agreed to

this trip. I wanted to get away from Earth."

"From your hurt," Alka said.

"Yes, that too," Xing replied. "But I have carried Yodo and Ping with me."

"Ping? Is that what you wanted to name your little girl?"

Xing nodded. "I do not know what she would have been like, but it would

have been wonderful to have a family. I wanted that family. And now it

is all gone." He sobbed again. "All gone."

Alka reached out and touched him on his shoulder. Xing reacted with a

shrug. She ignored him, instead crawling around behind him, hugging him

to her. Finally, he capitulated to her persuasion and cried against her

shoulders. She held him through the night, even as he cried himself to

sleep. Jamie lowered the lights even as Alka laid him out on the sleeping

mat. She tossed her blanket over him. As silently as possible she pulled

out another mat and curled up next to her charge.

----------------------------------------------------------------------

In the morning, she awoke to find Xing sitting beside her, one leg

drawn up to his chest. He was watching her intently. "How long have you

been awake?"

"Only a short time," he assured her. "I wanted thank you for the place

to sleep last night. I did not have the dream, which is a first for

me. Thank you."

"You're welcome, I guess. I'm not sure I did anything."

"You did enough," he replied. "You listened. I had not told anyone about

Yodo since the accident. The news about her came to me by telegram from

some officials. Now someone else knows and understands."

"'Knows,' yes. But I might never really understand the depth of your

pain, Xing. Death, and abortion are rare on my world. I may not know

what you're going through until I lose a loved one." She looked up. "I

may not ever know."

"Just that same, you have some knowledge now." He reached out and touched

her hand. "And I would like you to stay on as my guide."

She grinned. "Thanks."

"Thank you," he said. "Let us see if we can make this adventure

interesting."

"I'm sure we will."

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The Journal Entries of Kennet R'yal Shardik, et. al., and Related Tales

are Copyright (c) 1989-2000 Elf Mathieu Sternberg. Distribution limited

to electronic media not-for-profit use only. All other rights are reserved

to the author.