This had seemed such a lovely, romantic idea when they
set out. Now, several hours later, it was starting to feel a little less
enchanting. Walking up a narrow path that wound right around a mountain
getting steeper and steeper by the minute was hard work. The path was
mostly loose soil with little stones that worked
their way into even the stoutest of walking boots. Those earnest young
people who chose to go barefoot must have started suffering before the
first official resting place.
“Let’s stop for a while here,” Kristoph said as they
reached one of those places. Marion was grateful for that. She hadn’t
said anything, but he had known that she was tiring.
She had tried not to be the weakest of their party. But after all, she
was the only one who wasn’t Gallifreyan. She had only one heart
and her lungs were not so well developed as those of her friends around
her.
Nobody said anything, of course. They never did. Among her circle of close
friends nobody ever treated her as less than them, as an invalid who had
to be accommodated in their arrangements. Even though they DID accommodate
her in many ways. When she was with her lady friends at the Conservatory
or at luncheons or teas in their homes, she knew they spoke orally much
more than they would if she wasn’t there. And when they were three
quarters of a mile up a mountain and she needed to stop, those who could
have gone on a bit longer were happy to take a break.
“So… remind me. Who’s idea was this, anyway?”
Remonte de Lœngbærrow asked as they accepted cool glasses of water
from the robed acolytes who catered for those who took the pilgrim trail
of Gassib Bau. The water wasn’t merely for refreshment. It was drawn
from the spring at the very head of the great river Bau, and it was supposed
to cleanse the soul and free the mind from impure thoughts.
At the first resting place, Kristoph had carefully tasted a mouthful of
the water without swallowing. He said it contained some unusual minerals,
but none of them harmful. The water was stored in great earthenware jars
that kept it as cool as it was when it sprang from the ground.
There was food, too. A kind of flat cakes made of some kind of grain.
They tasted quite nice, though they were starting to get a little tedious
by now. Again, there was a solemn purpose about cleansing the soul and
purifying the mind and body.
“Do you think it really does that?” Marion asked as she nibbled
at a cake and sipped the water while sitting gratefully on a cloth spread
on the ground. “Cleanses the soul, purifies the mind and body…”
“No,” Jarod Hadandrox said quickly. “It’s just
grain and water. It couldn’t do any of those things.”
Calliope giggled and blushed. She had not had a telepathic message from
her husband, because there was a naturally occuring element in the rocks
that suppressed such abilities. But the expression on his face was unmistakeable.
“It isn’t working on you, anyway,” Remonte de Lœngbærrow
told him. “You’ve still got plenty of impure thoughts in your
mind.”
“I’m not the only one, I’m sure!” Jarod protested.
“Don’t tell me you don’t think your wife is the most
lovely being on the planet?”
Since all three women were dressed in pale yellow blouses and long skirts
that came down to their feet along with shawls that covered their heads,
loveliness was a moot point. All the women on the pilgrimage trail looked
like sisters of Contemplation who had eschewed physical pleasures.
“I don’t think it is impure when we’re legally married,”
Rika pointed out. “I mean… before… when Remonte and
I… but now…”
She broke off awkwardly, but they all understood what she meant. She and
Remonte had been a scandal in the making when he had taken her as his
mistress while still legally married to Idell. But now she was legally
and properly Madame de Lœngbærrow, wife of the Gallifreyan vice-consul
to Ventura and any thoughts her husband might have about her were his
own business.
“I think we should regard this as a purifying ritual just like those
we practice in our meditation rooms,” Kristoph said. “The
taking of the food and water is symbolic of the cleansing of the mind.
And it certainly won’t do our bodies any harm to eat ascetic food
like this for a day.”
The other two men nodded, accepting his wisdom as the senior Time Lord
of their party. They ate the food and drank the water and rested their
feet at the last stage of the pilgrimage before reaching the plateau of
the Great Guardian.
“Oh, let’s not move on just yet,” Rika said with a long
sigh. “Marion is not the only one who is suffering from sore feet.
And we’ll have the sun in our eyes once we get around the next section.
Let’s wait a little longer.”
Marion wondered if she said that just to give her a bit more of a rest.
If so, that was kind of her.
“Let’s have a look at all these sore feet,” Kristoph
said. “Jarod, you’ve done your share of route marching. I’m
sure you learnt the same tricks I did for when you made camp in the evening.”
“Yes,” Jarod responded. He knelt and reached to take his wife’s
shoes off. Kristoph did the same for Marion. Remonte, the only one of
them who hadn’t been in the Gallifreyan military corps, watched
uncertainly before copying what his brother was doing.
It was a kind of massage combined with knowledge of pressure points as
employed in Chinese acupuncture. Marion sighed happily as Kristoph gently
manipulated her feet and the aching tiredness, the heat of walking, and
even the soreness from treading on so many loose stones all day, dissipated.
It was obviously working for Rika and Calliope, too.
“So…” she said. “When you two were soldiers, marching
all day on some strange, alien world, and you stopped and made camp for
the night… it was considered perfectly normal and natural, and MANLY
to do this to each other?”
“You think this is something comrades in arms shouldn’t be
doing?” Kristoph asked with an expression on his face best described
as ‘inscrutable.’
“It seems more like something that should happen in the privacy
of the bedroom between two lovers… as a prelude to… what I
shouldn’t be thinking of around here in case it’s considered
impure thoughts.”
Kristoph laughed. So did Jarod. They looked at each other and even without
telepathy something passed between them – something that only old
soldiers could possibly share.
“I can assure you,” Kristoph continued. “That the Gallifreyan
Military Corps is made up of one hundred per cent celibate men who have
no inappropriate feelings towards one another. Giving each other foot
massages before making camp at night is a bond of trust and comradeship
and nothing more.”
“I believe you,” Marion replied. She and the other two women
laughed softly. Kristoph and Jarod feigned outrage at what was being impugned
towards them as old soldiers, but not for long. Soon they joined in the
laughter.
“That looks very pleasant,” said a deep masculine voice. “Any
chance you could do it for me, old man!”
Kristoph looked around and smiled as he recognised his friend and colleague
in the diplomatic circles of the galaxy, Hillary Dey Barr. He was dressed
in the darker yellow robe that the men wore on the pilgrimage trail. Beside
him was a woman who Marion didn’t recognise until she let the shawl
down from her hair.
“Claudia Jean!” she exclaimed, forgetting that she was shoeless
and not minding the rough ground beneath her feet at all as she hugged
her Haolstromnian friend. “Oh, then you and Hillary have become…
Oh, I am glad.”
“So am I, old man,” Kristoph said, kissing Hillary on his
cheek before reaching to shake hands with Claudia Jean. She smiled warmly
and reached to kiss him instead.
“Are you on the trail, too?” Marion asked as they came to
sit and take water and cakes. “Do you really want to prove your
true love?”
“It was my idea,” Claudia Jean said. “I heard about
it from our mutual friend, Bertin Lassiter. He and Grady came here for
a weekend and he said that passing through the portal was the most inspiring
thing he had ever done.”
“Did he indeed?” Kristoph knelt in front of Hillary and gave
him the same foot massage he had done for Marion. Hillary looked as if
he was enjoying that thoroughly, and Marion thought it was a good thing
that Haolstromnians never joined Gallifreyans in military campaigns or
Kristoph’s claim that it was not a sensual experience when between
comrades would be seriously compromised. When he was done, he did the
same for Claudia Jean who enjoyed it just as much. Marion remembered that
Haolstromnian gendermorphs, as part of their reputation as passionate
lovers, exuded powerful pheromones that enhanced their enjoyment of sensual
pleasures.
She also remembered that Gallifreyans were supposed to be immune to such
charms. She wasn’t sure that was true, looking at Kristoph’s
smile, but she was willing to forgive him. She loved Hillary and Claudia
Jean, too. She was delighted to learn that they had become partners.
“I’m surprised that Bertin and Grady came here,” Remonte
said. “I didn’t think the Portal worked for couples of their
orientation. I’ve only seen male-female pairings on the pilgrimage
up to now.”
“As I understand it,” Kristoph answered. “The ‘Guardian’
recognises true love in whatever form it takes. Male-female pairings are
the most common among humanoid races, but that doesn’t make that
the ‘norm’. You might as well say that those humanoids who
have haemoglobin in their blood are the ‘norm’ and those of
us who don’t are a deviancy from it. Bertin and Grady Lassiter are
a life pair bond. Nobody and nothing could come between them.”
“What about Hillary and Claudia Jean, then?” Calliope asked.
“Haolstromnians DON’T pair for life. Will the Portal reject
them?”
Everyone looked at each other as if considering that question. Then Rika
asked the question aloud that had occurred to them all.
“What happens to them if it does reject them?”
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