<p>His parents hadn't been of the left-wing
Adelaide clique. His mother
had been a biochemist; his father a
roving news correspondent who had
drifted into trading with the natives<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></SPAN></span>
and made a fortune in keffa-gum before
the chemists on Terra had found
out how to synthesize hopkinsine.</p>
<p>"When the biocrystals were discovered
and the plantations started, the
Government attitude was set. <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Biocrysal'">Biocrystal</ins>
culture is just sordid money
grubbing. The real business of the
Colony is to promote the betterment
of the natives, as defined in University
of Adelaide terms. That's to say,
convert them into ersatz Terrans. You
know why General Maith ordered
these shoonoon rounded up?"</p>
<p>Travis made a face. "Governor general
Kovac insisted on it; General
Maith thought that a few minor concessions
would help him on his main
objective, which was keeping a
swarming from starting out here."</p>
<p>"Yes. The Commissioner of Native
Welfare wanted that done, mainly at
the urging of the Director of Economic,
Educational and Technical Assistance.
The EETA crowd don't like
shoonoon. They have been trying, ever
since their agency was set up, to undermine
and destroy their influence
with the natives. This looked like a
good chance to get rid of some of
them."</p>
<p>Travis nodded. "Yes. And as soon
as the disturbances in Bluelake started,
the Constabulary started rounding
them up there, too, and at the evacuee
cantonments. They got about fifty of
them, mostly from the cantonments
east of the city—the natives brought
in from the flooded tidewater area.
They just dumped the lot of them
onto us. We have them penned up in
a lorry-hangar on the military reservation
now." He turned to Gonzales.
"How many do you think you'll gather
up out here, general?" he asked.</p>
<p>"I'd say about a hundred and fifty,
when we have them all."</p>
<p>Travis groaned. "We can't keep all
of them in that hangar, and we don't
have anywhere else—"</p>
<p>Sometimes a new idea sneaked up
on Miles, rubbing against him and
purring like a cat. Sometimes one hit
him like a sledgehammer. This one
just seemed to grow inside him.</p>
<p>"Foxx, you know I have the top
three floors of the Suzikami Building;
about five hundred hours ago, I leased
the fourth and fifth floors, directly below.
I haven't done anything with
them, yet; they're just as they were
when <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'Trans-Sapce'">Trans-Space</ins> Imports moved
out. There are ample water, light,
power, air-conditioning and toilet
facilities, and they can be sealed off
completely from the rest of the building.
If General Maith's agreeable, I'll
take his shoonoon off his hands."</p>
<p>"What in blazes will you do with
them?"</p>
<p>"Try a little experiment in psychological
warfare. At minimum, we may
get a little better insight into why
these natives think the Last Hot Time
is coming. At best, we may be able to
stop the whole thing and get them
quieted down again."</p>
<p>"Even the minimum's worth trying
for," Travis said. "What do you have
in mind, Miles? I mean, what procedure?"</p>
<p>"Well, I'm not quite sure, yet."
That was a lie; he was very sure. He
didn't think it was quite time to be<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></SPAN></span>
specific, though. "I'll have to size up
my material a little, before I decide
on what to do with it. Whatever happens,
it won't hurt the shoonoon, and
it won't make any more trouble than
arresting them has made already. I'm
sure we can learn something from
them, at least."</p>
<p>Travis nodded. "General Maith is
very much impressed with your grasp
of native psychology," he said. "What
happened out here this morning was
exactly as you predicted. Whatever
my recommendation's worth, you
have it. Can you trust your native
driver to take your car back to Bluelake
alone?"</p>
<p>"Yes, of course."</p>
<p>"Then suppose you ride in with me
in my car. We'll talk about it on the
way in, and go see General Maith at
once."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Bluelake was peaceful as they flew
in over it, but it was an uneasy peace.
They began running into military
contragravity twenty miles beyond the
open farmlands—they were the chlorophyll
green of Terran vegetation—and
the natives at work in the fields
were being watched by more military
and police vehicles. The carniculture
plants, where Terran-type animal
tissue was grown in nutrient-vats,
were even more heavily guarded, and
the native city was being patroled
from above and the streets were empty,
even of the hordes of native children
who usually played in them.</p>
<p>The Terran city had no streets. Its
dwellers moved about on contragravity,
and tall buildings rose, singly or
in clumps, among the landing-staged
residences and the green transplanted
trees. There was a triple wire fence
around it, the inner one masked by
vines and the middle one electrified,
with warning lights on. Even a government
dedicated to the betterment
of the natives and unwilling to order
military action against them was, it
appeared, unwilling to take too many
chances.</p>
<p>Major General Denis Maith, the
Federation Army commander on
Kwannon, was considerably more
than willing to find a temporary
home for his witch doctors, now numbering
close to two hundred. He did
insist that they be kept under military
guard, and on assigning his aide,
Captain Travis, to co-operate on the
project. Beyond that, he gave Miles a
free hand.</p>
<p>Miles and Travis got very little rest
in the next ten hours. A half-company
of engineer troops was also
kept busy, as were a number of
Kwannon Planetwide News technicians
and some Terran and native
mechanics borrowed from different
private business concerns in the city.
Even the most guarded hints of what
he had in mind were enough to get
this last co-operation; he had been
running a news-service in Bluelake
long enough to have the confidence
of the business people.</p>
<p>He tried, as far as possible, to keep
any intimation of what was going on
from Government House. That, unfortunately,
hadn't been far enough.
He found that out when General
Maith was on his screen, in the middle<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></SPAN></span>
of the work on the fourth and fifth
floors of the Suzikami Building.</p>
<p>"The governor general just screened
me," Maith said. "He's in a tizzy about
our shoonoon. Claims that keeping
them in the Suzikami Building will
endanger the whole Terran city."</p>
<p>"Is that the best he can do? Well,
that's rubbish, and he knows it. There
are less than two hundred of them, I
have them on the fifth floor, twenty
stories above the ground, and the
floor's completely sealed off from the
floor below. They can't get out, and
I have tanks of sleep-gas all over the
place which can be opened either individually
or all together from a
switch on the fourth floor, where your
sepoys are quartered."</p>
<p>"I know, Mr. Gilbert; I screen-viewed
the whole installation. I've
seen regular maximum-security prisons
that would be easier to get out
of."</p>
<p>"Governor general Kovac is not
objecting personally. He has been
pressured into it by this Native Welfare
government-within-the-Government.
They don't know what I'm doing
with those shoonoon, but whatever
it is, they're afraid of it."</p>
<p>"Well, for the present," Maith said,
"I think I'm holding them off. The
Civil Government doesn't want the
responsibility of keeping them in
custody, I refused to assume responsibility
for them if they were kept
anywhere else, and Kovac simply
won't consider releasing them, so that
leaves things as they are. I did have
to make one compromise, though."
That didn't sound good. It sounded
less so when Maith continued: "They
insisted on having one of their people
at the Suzikami Building as an observer.
I had to grant that."</p>
<p>"That's going to mean trouble."</p>
<p>"Oh, I shouldn't think so. This observer
will observe, and nothing else.
She will take no part in anything
you're doing, will voice no objections,
and will not interrupt anything you
are saying to the shoonoon. I was
quite firm on that, and the governor
general agreed completely."</p>
<p>"She?"</p>
<p>"Yes. A Miss Edith Shaw; do you
know anything about her?"</p>
<p>"I've met her a few times; cocktail
parties and so on." She was young
enough, and new enough to Kwannon,
not to have a completely indurated
mind. On the other hand,
she was EETA which was bad, and
had a master's in sociography from
Adelaide, which was worse. "When
can I look for her?"</p>
<p>"Well, the governor general's going
to screen me and find out when
you'll have the shoonoon on hand."</p>
<p>Doesn't want to talk to me at all,
Miles thought. Afraid he might say
something and get quoted.</p>
<p>"For your information, they'll be
here inside an hour. They will have to
eat, and they're all tired and sleepy.
I should say 'bout oh-eight-hundred.
Oh, and will you tell the governor
general to tell Miss Shaw to bring an
overnight kit with her. She's going to
need it."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>He was up at 0400, just a little after
Beta-rise. He might be a civilian<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></SPAN></span>
big-wheel in an Army psychological
warfare project, but he still had four
newscasts a day to produce. He spent
a couple of hours checking the 0600
'cast and briefing Harry Walsh for the
indeterminate period in which he
would be acting chief editor and producer.
At 0700, Foxx Travis put in an
appearance. They went down to the
fourth floor, to the little room they
had fitted out as command-post, control
room and office for Operation
Shoonoo.</p>
<p>There was a rectangular black traveling-case,
initialed E. S., beside the
open office door. Travis nodded at it,
and they grinned at one another;
she'd come early, possibly hoping to
catch them hiding something they
didn't want her to see. Entering the
office quietly, they found her seated
facing the big viewscreen, smoking
and watching a couple of enlisted
men of the First Kwannon Native Infantry
at work in another room where
the pickup was. There were close to
a dozen lipstick-tinted cigarette butts
in the ashtray beside her. Her private
face wasn't particularly happy. Maybe
she was being earnest and concerned
about the betterment of the
underpriviledged, or the satanic maneuvers
of the selfish planters.</p>
<p>Then she realized that somebody
had entered; with a slight start, she
turned, then rose. She was about the
height of Foxx Travis, a few inches
shorter than Miles, and slender. Light
blond; green suit costume. She
ditched her private face and got on
her public one, a pleasant and deferential
smile, with a trace of uncertainty
behind it. Miles introduced
Travis, and they sat down again facing
the screen.</p>
<p>It gave a view, from one of the
long sides and near the ceiling, of a
big room. In the center, a number of
seats—the drum-shaped cushions the
natives had adopted in place of the
seats carved from sections of tree
trunk that they had been using when
the Terrans had come to Kwannon—were
arranged in a semicircle, one in
the middle slightly in advance of the
others. Facing them were three armchairs,
a remote-control box beside
one and another Kwann cushion behind
and between the other two.
There was a large globe of Kwannon,
and on the wall behind the chairs an
array of viewscreens.</p>
<p>"There'll be an interpreter, a native
Army sergeant, between you and
Captain Travis," he said. "I don't
know how good you are with native
languages, Miss Shaw; the captain is
not very fluent."</p>
<p>"Cushions for them, I see, and
chairs for the lordly Terrans," she
commented. "Never miss a chance to
rub our superiority in, do you?"</p>
<p>"I never deliberately force them to
adopt our ways," he replied. "Our
chairs are as uncomfortable for them
as their low seats are for us. Difference,
you know, doesn't mean inferiority
or superiority. It just means
difference."</p>
<p>"Well, what are you trying to do,
here?"</p>
<p>"I'm trying to find out a little more
about the psychology back of these
frenzies and swarmings."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"It hasn't occurred to you to look
for them in the economic wrongs
these people are suffering at the hands
of the planters and traders, I suppose."</p>
<p>"So they're committing suicide, and
that's all you can call these swarmings,
and the fire-frenzies in the
south, from economic motives," Travis
said. "How does one better oneself
economically by dying?"</p>
<p>She ignored the question, which
was easier than trying to answer it.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>"And why are you bothering to talk
to these witch doctors? They aren't
representative of the native people.
They're a lot of cynical charlatans,
with a vested interest in ignorance
and superstition—"</p>
<p>"Miss Shaw, for the past eight centuries,
earnest souls have been bewailing
the fact that progress in the
social sciences has always lagged behind
progress in the physical sciences.
I would suggest that the explanation
might be in difference of approach.
The physical scientist works <i>with</i>
physical forces, even when he is trying,
as in the case of contragravity, to
nullify them. The social scientist
works <i>against</i> social forces."</p>
<p>"And the result's usually a miserable
failure, even on the physical-accomplishment
level," Foxx Travis
added. "This storm shelter project
that was set up ten years ago and got
nowhere, for instance. Ramón Gonzales
set up a shelter project of his
own seventy-five hours ago, and he's
half through with it now."</p>
<p>"Yes, by forced labor!"</p>
<p>"Field surgery's brutal, too, especially
when the anaesthetics run out.
It's better than letting your wounded
die, though."</p>
<p>"Well, we were talking about these
shoonoon. They are a force among the
natives; that can't be denied. So, since
we want to influence the natives,
why not use them?"</p>
<p>"Mr. Gilbert, these shoonoon are
blocking everything we are trying to
do for the natives. If you use them
for propaganda work in the villages,
you will only increase their prestige
and make it that much harder for us
to better the natives' condition, both
economically and culturally—"</p>
<p>"That's it, Miles," Travis said. "She
isn't interested in facts about specific
humanoid people on Kwannon.
She has a lot of high-order abstractions
she got in a classroom at Adelaide
on Terra."</p>
<p>"No. Her idea of bettering the natives'
condition is to rope in a lot of
young Kwanns, put them in Government
schools, overload them with information
they aren't prepared to digest,
teach them to despise their own
people, and then send them out to the
villages, where they behave with such
insufferable arrogance that the wonder
is that so few of them stop an
arrow or a charge of buckshot, instead
of so many. And when that
happens, as it does occasionally, Welfare
says they're murdered at the <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'institigation'">instigation</ins>
of the shoonoon."</p>
<p>"You know, Miss Shaw, this isn't
just the roughneck's scorn for the
egghead," Travis said. "Miles went to
school on Terra, and majored in extraterrestrial<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></SPAN></span>
sociography, and got a
master's, just like you did. At Montevideo,"
he added. "And he spent two
more years traveling on a Paula von
Schlicten Fellowship."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Edith Shaw didn't say anything.
She even tried desperately not to look
impressed. It occurred to him that
he'd never mentioned that fellowship
to Travis. Army Intelligence must
have a pretty good <i>dossier</i> on him.
Before anybody could say anything
further, a Terran captain and a native
sergeant of the First K.N.I. came in.
In the screen, the four sepoys who
had been fussing around straightening
things picked up auto-carbines
and posted themselves two on either
side of a door across from the pickup,
taking positions that would permit
them to fire into whatever came
through without hitting each other.</p>
<p>What came through was one hundred
and eighty-four shoonoon. Some
wore robes of loose gauze strips, and
some wore fire-dance cloaks of red
and yellow and orange ribbons. Many
were almost completely naked, but
they were all amulet-ed to the teeth.
There must have been a couple of
miles of brass and bright-alloy wire
among them, and half a ton of bright
scrap-metal, and the skulls, bones,
claws, teeth, tails and other components
of most of the native fauna. They
debouched into the big room, stopped,
and stood looking around them. A native
sergeant and a couple more sepoys
followed. They got the shoonoon
over to the semicircle of cushions,
having to chase a couple of them
away from the single seat at front and
center, and induced them to sit down.</p>
<p>The native sergeant in the little
room said something under his
breath; the captain laughed. Edith
Shaw gaped for an instant and said,
"<i>Muggawsh</i>!" Travis simply remarked
that he'd be damned.</p>
<p>"They do look kind of unusual, don't
they?" Miles said. "I wouldn't doubt
that this is the biggest assemblage of
shoonoon in history. They aren't exactly
a gregarious lot."</p>
<p>"Maybe this is the beginning of a
new era. First meeting of the Kwannon
Thaumaturgical Society."</p>
<p>A couple more K.N.I. privates
came in with serving-tables on contragravity
floats and began passing
bowls of a frozen native-food delicacy
of which all Kwanns had become
passionately fond since its introduction
by the Terrans. He let them finish,
and then, after they had been relieved
of the empty bowls, he nodded
to the K.N.I. sergeant, who opened a
door on the left. They all went
through into the room they had been
seeing in the screen. There was a stir
when the shoonoon saw him, and he
heard his name, in its usual native
mispronunciation, repeated back and
forth.</p>
<p>"You all know me," he said, after
they were seated. "Have I ever been
an enemy to you or to the People?"</p>
<p>"No," one of them said. "He speaks
for us to the other Terrans. When we
are wronged, he tries to get the
wrongs righted. In times of famine
he has spoken of our troubles, and
gifts of food have come while the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></SPAN></span>
Government argued about what to
do."</p>
<div class="center"><div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/illus-020.png" width-obs="500" height-obs="298" alt="" title="" /> </div>
</div>
<p>He wished he could see Edith
Shaw's face.</p>
<p>"There was a sickness in our village,
and my magic could not cure
it," another said. "Mailsh Heelbare
gave me oomphel to cure it, and told
me how to use it. He did this privately,
so that I would not be made to
look small to the people of the village."</p>
<p>And that had infuriated EETA; it
was a question whether unofficial help
to the natives or support of the prestige
of a shoonoo had angered them
more.</p>
<p>"His father was a trader; he gave
good oomphel, and did not cheat.
Mailsh Heelbare grew up among us;
he took the Manhood Test with the
boys of the village," another oldster
said. "He listened with respect to the
grandfather-stories. No, Mailsh Heelbare
is not our enemy. He is our
friend."</p>
<p>"And so I will prove myself now,"
he told them. "The Government is
angry with the People, but I will try
to take their anger away, and in the
meantime I am permitted to come
here and talk with you. Here is a chief
of soldiers, and one of the Government
people, and your words will be
heard by the oomphel machine that
remembers and repeats, for the Governor
and the Great Soldier Chief."</p>
<p>They all brightened. To make a
voice recording was a wonderful honor.
Then one of them said:</p>
<p>"But what good will that do now?
The Last Hot Time is here. Let us
be permitted to return to our villages,
where our people need us."</p>
<p>"It is of that that I wish to speak.
But first of all, I must hear your
words, and know what is in your
minds. Who is the eldest among you?<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></SPAN></span>
Let him come forth and sit in the
front, where I may speak with him."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Then he relaxed while they argued
in respectfully subdued voices. Finally
one decrepit oldster, wearing a
cloak of yellow ribbons and carrying
a highly obscene and ineffably sacred
wooden image, was brought forward
and installed on the front-and-center
cushion. He'd come from some village
to the west that hadn't gotten the
word of the swarming; Gonzales' men
had snagged him while he was making
crop-fertility magic.</p>
<p>Miles showed him the respect due
his advanced age and obviously great
magical powers, displaying, as he did,
an understanding of the regalia.</p>
<p>"I have indeed lived long," the old
shoonoo replied. "I saw the Hot Time
before; I was a child of so high." He
measured about two and a half feet
off the floor; that would make him
ninety-five or thereabouts. "I remember it."</p>
<p>"Speak to us, then. Tell us of the
Gone Ones, and of the Sky Fire, and
of the Last Hot Time. Speak as though
you alone knew these things, and as
though you were teaching me."</p>
<p>Delighted, the oldster whooshed a
couple of times to clear his outlets
and began:</p>
<p>"In the long-ago time, there was
only the Great Spirit. The Great
Spirit made the World, and he made
the People. In that time, there were
no more People in the World <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'then'">than</ins>
would be in one village, now. The
Gone Ones dwelt among them, and
spoke to them as I speak to you. Then,
as more People were born, and died
and went to join the Gone Ones, the
Gone Ones became many, and they
went away and build a place for themselves,
and built the Sky Fire around
it, and in the Place of the Gone Ones,
at the middle of the Sky Fire, it is cool.
From their place in the Sky Fire, the
Gone Ones send wisdom to the people
in dreams.</p>
<p>"The Sky Fire passes across the sky,
from east to west, as the Always-Same
does, but it is farther away than the
Always-Same, because sometimes the
Always Same passes in front of it,
but the Sky Fire never passes in front
of the Always-Same. None of the
grandfather-stories, not even the oldest,
tell of a time when this happened.</p>
<p>"Sometimes the Sky Fire is big and
bright; that is when the Gone Ones
feast and dance. Sometimes it is smaller
and dimmer; then the Gone Ones
rest and sleep. Sometimes it is close,
and there is a Hot Time; sometimes it
goes far away, and then there is a
Cool Time.</p>
<p>"Now, the Last Hot Time has come.
The Sky Fire will come closer and
closer, and it will pass the Always-Same,
and then it will burn up the
World. Then will be a new World,
and the Gone Ones will return, and
the People will be given new bodies.
When this happens, the Sky Fire will
go out, and the Gone Ones will live in
the World again with the People; the
Gone Ones will make great magic
and teach wisdom as I teach to you,
and will no longer have to send
dreams. In that time the crops will
grow without planting or tending or<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></SPAN></span>
the work of women; in that time, the
game will come into the villages to
be killed in the gathering-places.
There will be no more hunger and no
more hard work, and no more of the
People will die or be slain. And that
time is now here," he finished. "All
the People know this."</p>
<p>"Tell me, Grandfather; how is this
known? There have been many Hot
Times before. Why should this one
be the Last Hot Time?"</p>
<p>"The Terrans have come, and
brought oomphel into the World,"
the old shoonoo said. "It is a sign."</p>
<p>"It was not prophesied beforetime.
None of the People had prophesies of
the coming of the Terrans. I ask you,
who were the father of children and
the grandfather of children's children
when the Terrans came; was there
any such prophesy?"</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The old shoonoo was silent, turning
his pornographic ikon in his hands
and looked at it.</p>
<p>"No," he admitted, at length. "Before
the Terrans came, there were no
prophesies among the People of their
coming. Afterward, of course, there
were many such prophesies, but there
were none before."</p>
<p>"That is strange. When a happening
is a sign of something to come,
it is prophesied beforetime." He left
that seed of doubt alone to grow, and
continued: "Now, Grandfather, speak
to us about what the People believe
concerning the Terrans."</p>
<p>"The Terrans came to the World
when my eldest daughter bore her
first child," the old shoonoo said.
"They came in great round ships, such
as come often now, but which had
never before been seen. They said
that they came from another world
like the World of People, but so far
away that even the Sky Fire could not
be seen from it. They still say this,
and many of the People believe it,
but it is not real.</p>
<p>"At first, it was thought that the
Terrans were great shoonoon who
made powerful magic, but this is not
real either. The Terrans have no magic
and no wisdom of their own. All
they have is the oomphel, and the
oomphel works magic for them and
teaches them their wisdom. Even in
the schools which the Terrans have
made for the People, it is the oomphel
which teaches." He went on to describe,
not too incorrectly, the reading-screens
and viewscreens and audio-visual
equipment. "Nor do the
Terrans make the oomphel, as they
say. The oomphel makes more oomphel
for them."</p>
<p>"Then where did the Terrans get
the first oomphel?"</p>
<p>"They stole it from the Gone Ones,"
the old shoonoo replied. "The Gone
Ones make it in their place in the
middle of the Sky Fire, for themselves
and to give to the People when they
return. The Terrans stole it from
them. For this reason, there is much
hatred of the Terrans among the
People. The Terrans live in the Dark
Place, under the World, where the
Sky Fire and the Always-Same go
when they are not in the sky. It is
there that the Terrans get the oomphel
from the Gone Ones, and now<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></SPAN></span>
they have come to the World, and
they are using oomphel to hold back
the Sky-Fire and keep it beyond the
Always-Same so that the Last Hot
Time will not come and the Gone
Ones will not return. For this reason,
too, there is much hatred of the Terrans
among the People."</p>
<p>"Grandfather, if this were real there
would be good reason for such hatred,
and I would be ashamed for what
my people had done and were doing.
But it is not real." He had to rise and
hold up his hands to quell the indignant
outcry "Have any of you known
me to tell not-real things and try to
make the People act as though they
were real? Then trust me in this. I
will show you real things, which you
will all see, and I will give you great
secrets, which it is now time for you
to have and use for the good of the
People. Even the greatest secret," he
added.</p>
<p>There was a pause of a few seconds.
Then they burst out, in a hundred
and eighty-four—no, three hundred
and sixty eight—voices:</p>
<p><i>"The Oomphel Secret, Mailsh Heelbare?"</i></p>
<p>He nodded slowly. "Yes. The Oomphel
Secret will be given."</p>
<p>He leaned back and relaxed again
while they were getting over the excitement.
Foxx Travis looked at him
apprehensively.</p>
<p>"Rushing things, aren't you? What
are you going to tell them?"</p>
<p>"Oh, a big pack of lies, I suppose,"
Edith Shaw said scornfully.</p>
<p>Behind her and Travis, the native
noncom interpreter was muttering
something in his own language that
translated roughly as: "This better be
good!"</p>
<p>The shoonoon had quieted, now,
and were waiting breathlessly.</p>
<p>"But if the Oomphel Secret is given,
what will become of the shoonoon?"
he asked. "You, yourselves,
say that we Terrans have no need for
magic, because the oomphel works
magic for us. This is real. If the People
get the Oomphel Secret, how
much need will they have for you
shoonoon?"</p>
<p>Evidently that hadn't occurred to
them before. There was a brief flurry
of whispered—whooshed, rather—conversation,
and then they were silent
again. The eldest shoonoo said:</p>
<p>"We trust you, Mailsh Heelbare.
You will do what is best for the People,
and you will not let us be thrown
out like broken pots, either."</p>
<p>"No, I will not," he promised. "The
Oomphel Secret will be given to you
shoonoon." He thought for a moment
of Foxx Travis' joking remark about
the Kwannon Thaumaturgical Society.
"You have been jealous of one
another, each keeping his own secrets,"
he said. "This must be put
away. You will all receive the Oomphel
Secret equally, for the good of
all the People. You must all swear
brotherhood, one with another, and
later if any other shoonoo comes to
you for the secret, you must swear
brotherhood with him and teach it to
him. Do you agree to this?"</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>The eldest shoonoo rose to his feet,
begged leave, and then led the others<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></SPAN></span>
to the rear of the room, where they
went into a huddle. They didn't stay
huddled long; inside of ten minutes
they came back and took their seats.</p>
<p>"We are agreed, Mailsh Heelbare,"
the spokesman said.</p>
<p>Edith Shaw was impressed, more
than by anything else she had seen.
"Well, that was a quick decision!" she
whispered.</p>
<p>"You have done well, Grandfathers.
You will not be thrown out by the
People like broken pots; you will be
greater among them than ever. I will
show you how this will be.</p>
<p>"But first, I must speak around the
Oomphel Secret." He groped briefly
for a comprehensible analogy, and
thought of a native vegetable, layered
like an onion, with a hard kernel in
the middle. "The Oomphel Secret is
like a fooshkoot. There are many lesser
secrets around it, each of which
must be peeled off like the skins of a
fooshkoot and eaten. Then you will
find the nut in the middle."</p>
<p>"But the nut of the fooshkoot is
bitter," somebody said.</p>
<p>He nodded, slowly and solemnly.
"The nut of the fooshkoot is bitter,"
he agreed.</p>
<p>They looked at one another, disquieted
by his words. Before anybody
could comment, he was continuing:</p>
<p>"Before this secret is given, there
are things to be learned. You would
not understand it if I gave it to you
now. You believe many not-real
things which must be chased out of
your minds, otherwise they would
spoil your understanding."</p>
<p>That was verbatim what they told
adolescents before giving them the
Manhood Secret. Some of them
huffed a little; most of them laughed.
Then one called out: "Speak on,
Grandfather of Grandfathers," and
they all laughed. That was fine, it had
been about time for teacher to crack
his little joke. Now he became serious
again.</p>
<p>"The first of these not-real things
you must chase from your mind is this
which you believe about the home of
the Terrans. It is not real that they
come from the Dark Place under the
World. There is no Dark Place under
the World."</p>
<p>Bedlam for a few seconds; that was
a pretty stiff jolt. No Dark Place; who
ever heard of such a thing? The eldest
shoonoo rose, cradling his graven
image in his arms, and the noise
quieted.</p>
<p>"Mailsh Heelbare, if there is no
Dark Place where do the Sky Fire
and the Always-Same go when they
are not in the sky?"</p>
<p>"They never leave the sky; the
World is round, and there is sky
everywhere around it."</p>
<p>They knew that, or had at least
heard it, since the Terrans had come.
They just couldn't believe it. It was
against common sense. The oldest
shoonoo said as much, and more:</p>
<p>"These young ones who have gone
to the Terran schools have come to
the villages with such tales, but who
listens to them? They show disrespect
for the chiefs and the elders,
and even for the shoonoon. They
mock at the Grandfather-stories. They
say men should do women's work and<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></SPAN></span>
women do no work at all. They break
taboos, and cause trouble. They are
fools."</p>
<p>"Am I a fool, Grandfather? Do I
mock at the old stories, or show disrespect
to elders and shoonoon? Yet I,
Mailsh Heelbare, tell you this. The
World is indeed round, and I will
show you."</p>
<p>The shoonoo looked contemptuously
at the globe. "I have seen those
things," he said. "That is not the
World; that is only a make-like." He
held up his <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'phalic'">phallic</ins> wood-carving. "I
could say that this is a make-like of
the World, but that would not make
it so."</p>
<p>"I will show you for real. We will
all go in a ship." He looked at his
watch. "The Sky Fire is about to set.
We will follow it all around the world
to the west, and come back here from
the east, and the Sky Fire will still be
setting when we return. If I show you
that, will you believe me?"</p>
<p>"If you show us for real, and it is <ins class="corr" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'no'">not</ins>
a trick, we will have to believe you."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />