There was reason to hope, but when they landed and approached the camp
it was obviously empty.
“They weren’t attacked,” Kristoph confirmed. “There
is nothing damaged. They appear to have taken their food and water supplies
and continued on foot.”
Braxietel confirmed that guess, pointing out still visible footprints
in the sand.
“There are more than five sets of prints here,” he added.
“They were met by two people wearing soft coverings on their feet.”
Braxietel himself had pieces of soft leather tied around his feet as protection
against the burning sand.
“Do you mean they met some of your people?” Malika Dúccesci
asked. “Even so, why would they go with them?”
“To see the Northern Oracle?” Gynnell suggested. He was looking
northwards. He put his hand to his forehead to shield his eyes and squinted.
“Sir… I think… I think I can see….”
“Sweet mother of chaos,” his older brother swore as he looked
where he was looking. They all looked. They blinked and stared, unable
to believe what they were seeing.
“It’s the Oracle,” Gynnell said. “That’s
what Lord Glasson said it looked like – a gateway in the desert.
We’ve found it.”
“That wasn’t there before,” Malika said with complete
conviction in his voice. The others agreed. The landscape had been empty
until a few moments ago.
“A mirage?” Kristoph suggested. “But is it possible
for us all to see the same image if that is so?”
“I have heard of such things,” Braxietel said. “We have
stories told around the camp fire, or to amuse the children. But I have
never seen such a thing with my own eyes before.”
The pilot said nothing. He turned and went back to the shuttle. The others
looked around in surprise as it took off vertically ten metres or so and
then shot forward towards the mirage. They watched it set down on the
desert in front of the great castellated gateway that had appeared out
of nowhere.
Then the gateway was gone. The shuttle was standing on an empty desert
against a clear red-orange horizon. The best sighted of them all could
make out the pilot next to the craft and then he got back in and it took
off again, reversing in mid-air and returning to the camp.
Gynnell Dúccesci was the first to find a voice when his four school
friends spilled out of the shuttle door. He ran to greet them and there
was a moment of sheer joy as they hugged each other.
“I’ve contacted the other search parties,” the pilot
said. “They’re heading back to the school.”
“We’ll do the same,” Kristoph answered. “Once
the boys have had something to eat and drink and we’ve had something
of an explanation for their appearance.”
It WAS the four missing boys. There was no doubt about that. But they
looked more like Braxietel’s desert-dwellers, their hair long and
tangled, the early signs of adolescent beards on their chins. They were
dressed in animal skins and with tattoos of red all over their bodies.
Despite their appearance Hadric Poll, Benic Allassi, Merrick Karn and
Westley Vern remembered their manners and all bowed formally when they
recognised the Lord High President amongst their rescuers. Kristoph reminded
them that they did not need to bow when he was not wearing the Sash of
Rassilon and invited them to sit in the largest of the tents where their
own food supplies awaited them. They fell upon the rehydrated food joyfully
and with a surprising appetite.
“It is so long since we had processed food,” Westley explained.
“We’ve been eating wild game for eight years.”
“Eight years?” Gynnell queried. “But you’ve only
been missing for eight days.”
“It was eight years where we were,” Merrick explained.
“Where is Lord Glasson?” Kristoph asked, wondering why he
had not thought to ask that question before. They had called off the search
with a man still missing.
“He is well,” Hadric assured him. “But he chose to stay.
We wanted to come home.”
“That is commendable,” Kristoph told them. “But I think
we had better have the story from the beginning.”
“Lord Glasson led us to this campsite,” Merrick explained.
“He said it was the place where the Oracle would appear. He said
it would appear at daybreak on the next morning. We really didn’t
believe him, but we rose before dawn and waited and….”
“And it appeared,” Benic said, the first words he had spoken
since their reunion.
“It really did,” Hadric continued. “The gateway in the
sand, as he promised. He said we should go to it.”
“Lord Glasson said that?” Malika Dúccesci asked in
confirmation. “It was all his idea?” He glanced at Kristoph.
They were both thinking the same thing. Why had their teacher led the
boys towards something so strange and potentially dangerous.
Because it WAS strange and potentially dangerous, Kristoph thought. As
a young man he would have done the same. As a boy, a herd of Pazithi wolves
wouldn’t have stopped him from finding out more about something
so amazing. Even if Glasson had told the boys to stay in camp, he couldn’t
imagine them doing so. The spirit of adventure would have taken them over.
“We weren’t sure,” Hadric added. “Then we saw
something else. Two men came out of the gate. They looked like….”
He glanced at Braxietel. “They looked like him, only the tattoos
were red, not blue. They spoke to Lord Glasson in a strange dialect. We
only understood a few words of it. Most of it was garble. But Lord Glasson
talked to them easily. Then he told us we were going to the gate with
these men. He said we had to walk, because it wasn’t right to bring
technology close to something ancient. So we walked, and the closer we
got the more wonderful and the more real the gate looked. The towers were
so tall and the archway between them so strong, so very solid. It looked
as if it had stood for a thousand years. But we had seen it appear out
of nowhere.”
“I didn’t want to go through,” Benic said. “But
Lord Glasson insisted. And the others were interested. I didn’t
want to be left behind. So I went with them. We all went through the gateway.”
“And on the other side….” Merric began, then stopped.
“On the other side… it was still Gallifrey,” Benic explained.
“But it wasn’t OUR Gallifrey. I think it was a very long time
ago. It was before the red moon broke up. It was night on the other side,
though it was just after dawn when we saw the Oracle appear. Pazithi Gallifreya
was in the sky, just as we’ve always known her, in her silver aspect.
But there was the red moon, too. And the constellations were… I
thought I recognised some of them… The Boatman, The Hunter, The
Great Leonate, but they weren’t quite right. The Hunter had four
extra stars across his swordbelt and The Boatman was stretched out more
than I had seen before.”
“And there was grass beneath our feet,” Westley added. “We
were standing on a fertile plain. There were trees on the horizon. Yet
I am sure we were still in the same part of the planet – still on
the Red Desert.”
“If we accept that the boys passed through an unknown time portal,”
Malika Dúccesci proposed. “Then it is possible they emerged
in a time long before the red moon was destroyed. Some of our historians
have suggested that there was a time when the Red Desert was a well watered
place where plants could grow. They have taken core samples and found
ancient seeds deep beneath the sand.”
“We were scared,” Westley admitted. “We wanted to go
back to the camp. But when we turned back, there was no gate. Lord Glasson
was angry. He told us we were weak cowards who couldn’t face up
to adventure. He told us we had to have more courage if we were to survive.
Then he and the two men who met us… they brought us to a settlement,
a camp… full of Outlanders.”
“I don’t think they WERE Outlanders the way we understand
them,” Hadric corrected his friend. “If we were SO far back
in time, then EVERYONE must have been Outlanders. There wouldn’t
BE any cities, any civilisation as we know it. We knew there was no point
trying to run away. All we would find is other tribes like that one.”
“Lord Glasson was known to them. He had been there before. He spoke
to the elders in that same language. Then he told us that we might as
well get used to it, because this was going to be our home from now on.
We protested. We said we wanted to go back, but he was angry again. He
said he had listened to us all talking in our dorms about Outlanders,
wanting to meet them. He said this was what we wanted. But… we didn’t
mean we wanted to live as Outlanders. We just wanted to….”
Again the four boys looked at Braxietel. Their expressions were something
between awe and fear. He moved closer to them, touching Westley on the
forearm.
“You have the marks of the Arrachii,” he said. “The
lost tribe. There are legends among my people, about a group of Outlanders
who travelled further and longer than any others. One season, four generations
ago, they vanished altogether. They were last known to have ventured northwards,
but other tribes who came from the tundra lands down into the desert saw
nothing of them.”
“They found the Northern Oracle and went through,” Hadric
said. “They talked of it… later, when we had learnt enough
of the dialect to talk to the other in the tribe, we found out that –
for them – the Oracle appears once every eight years, on the winter
solstice day. Lord Glasson said that years on that side count as only
days on this. He told us he had been visiting for a century, staying with
the tribe through eight seasons but only being gone from his home in our
time for a short time.”
“We realised we had no choice,” Merric said. “We couldn’t
go home until the Oracle appeared again. We learnt to fit in with the
tribe. We hunted for our food. We had to learn how to eat fresh meat cooked
on a fire. At first it made us retch, but we got used to it. We worked,
we ate, we slept with the tribe. They called us the ‘praurie’,
the newcomers. We were still newcomers after eight years living through
the seasons with them. And we knew we would never really belong. Besides,
we never gave up hope that we would come home. We told Lord Glasson –
Gavacoi as he was known to the tribe – that we would leave on the
solstice.”
“He tried to talk us out of it. He said we had learnt well, that
we were ready to be men of the tribe. We could take wives… there
were girls, some of them beautiful. We could choose from them and live
as men. If we went back, we would still be boys, still living in the camp
under the Lord President’s penance. He offered us freedom.”
“No,” Benic said. “He offered us a different sort of
prison, where we would never see our families, never go back to school,
never get a chance to be Time Lords….”
“Never be boys again,” Merric added. “He thought being
a man was the greatest thing we could hope for – that he was offering
us something wonderful. But he wasn’t. We thought about it, talked
about it between ourselves. But we’re not READY to be men, yet.
We still WANT to be boys.”
“We’re not ready for the responsibilities of manhood,”
Westley confirmed. “We want… to have nothing else to worry
about except doing our homework to the standard Lord Artemus expects of
us.”
“And so you should,” Kristoph assured them. “Glasson
let you go willingly? He didn’t threaten to send men after you or
anything of the sort?”
“He was disappointed. He thought we would have accepted his offer.
But he didn’t stop us leaving.”
“Very well. You did the right thing, boys. I’m proud of you
for making the choice intelligently. Rest a little more and then we’ll
see about getting you back to your school. I am afraid you’re going
to need long hard ion showers to remove those tattoos. And I am going
to ask you to swear a solemn oath, in the name of Rassilon, never to share
this story with any of your school friends. You, too, Gynnell. We will
say that you were lost, and that Lord Glasson was badly injured and flown
straight back to the Capitol. He won’t be returning to the school
in the foreseeable future. Is that understood?”
The boys nodded. Kristoph made them swear the oath. He knew they would
hold to it. He let them drink cool rehydrated juice a little longer before
they helped to strike the camp and load everything into the shuttle.
On the way back, Kristoph put the same oath of secrecy upon the adults
who had been on the rescue mission.
“We must do two things,” Kristoph said. “First, the
region of the desert where the Oracle appeared must be declared a prohibited
zone. I don’t want anyone else discovering its secret. There are
good, sound reasons why we don’t allow time travel within Gallifrey’s
own past. Secondly, Glasson must be arrested if he ever comes back through
the Gateway. He especially cannot be allowed to lead any more boys astray.
If he goes near the school camp I want him clapped in irons.”
“You don’t intend to pursue him through the Oracle?”
Malika Dúccesci asked. “After all, he HAS broken the protocols
against time travel on numerous occasions according to the witness the
boys gave.”
“As long as he remains there, I am satisfied to leave him be,”
Kristoph answered. “It is the easiest way to ensure the incident
is forgotten. For now, let us make sure these boys are safely back in
their camp among their friends, then we may return to our own homes and
families. Marion has been very understanding in the circumstances, but
I don’t wish to push my luck.”
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