Gynnell Dúccesci was nominally in charge of the
group of boys who set out in the early hours of dawn on their orienteering
adventure weekend, but only because he was a prefect within the Desert
Camp school. Once they had travelled beyond sight of the camp and were
using the position of the sun to mark their direction, he readily gave
way to Benic Allassi and Merrick Karn. They had far more experience than
he did of living in the wild – eight years of it when they had been
a part of the lost tribe of Arrachii, living in an earlier era of Gallifrey’s
history beyond the gateway of the Northern Oracle.
They weren’t going anywhere near the Oracle on this trip, or any
other. That part of the desert was a forbidden zone controlled by invisible
but very real sensors monitored by the Celestial Intervention Agency.
The boys all knew that very real penalties awaited anyone who tried to
enter what they called, in hushed conversations, ‘The Zone’.
Perhaps any other boys of that rebellious age when rules and restrictions
chafed would have found a way to disobey. But the young Arcalians had
already had the most serious brush with authority possible. They were
in the desert because the Lord High President himself had decided that
it was the kindest way of punishing them for an act of High Treason. And
it was the Lord High President himself who had made them swear a solemn
oath not to go near the Northern Oracle ever again.
Disobeying a man such as Lord de Lœngbærrow would be worse than Treason.
It would be a mark on their very souls.
Besides, they had an example to set. Along with the experienced Arcalians
were three youngsters who hadn’t been sent to the camp as punishment,
but as a reward. The school in the desert was no longer regarded as a
place of confinement for troublemakers, but a centre of excellence where
callow youths became young men worthy to be called Sons of Gallifrey.
The patriarchs of highly regarded Oldblood houses were pressing to have
their sons educated there.
But the first students to be sent to the desert by choice were not Oldbloods,
or even Newbloods. They were a group of ambitious young Caretakers. And
in the desert where airy ideas about bloodlines were meaningless they
had fitted in better than anyone expected. They had made friends with
the Arcalian renegades. They had settled into their academic work.
And now they were taking part in their first long trek in the desert,
without adult supervision. They were enthusiastic for the adventure, quick
to learn the techniques of desert survival from their more experienced
friends.
But there was always one question on their minds, one that Gynnell wished
they would just ask and be done with it.
Will we meet any Outlanders?
“We’re going north-north-east, well away from dark territory,”
he had told them. “The Outlanders mostly live in that zone where
modern technology doesn’t work. We’re planning to reach Dravian
Bluff by tomorrow, camping tonight at an oasis roughly halfway there.
The Celestial Intervention Agency had a remote base at the Bluff in the
old days. There are still supply dumps underground, though we’re
well equipped and have no need to touch anything. The Bluff is a moderately
difficult cliff, just the thing for you newbies to cut your teeth on.”
Jase Wandell, Shill Kale and Ari Sorren looked at Gynnell Dúccesci
with something like awe. He was the one who planned all these outward
bound trips and got the activities approved by Lord Artemus. He chose
the groups that would go on the trips. He maintained the solar-powered
hover-trikes that allowed them to travel for hundreds of miles a day across
the desert, two boys to a trike, taking it in turns to drive and to ride
pillion.
“We’ll stop for lunch in a few minutes,” he told the
group telepathically. “There’s shade up against that rock
formation against the mid-day heat.”
“What rock formation?” Shill asked, following Gynnell’s
pointing finger but seeing nothing. A few minutes later, as the hover-trikes
skimmed six inches above the hard-packed and baked red sand, the lone
outcrop of red bedrock became more obvious. It was the size of a house
– a Caretaker house, at least, not the mansions the highborn boys
were used to. The geological term for it was an ‘erratic’,
meaning that it had been deposited there millennia ago by a retreating
glacier The wind had weathered it over those intervening millennia, in
some parts carving passages all the way through so that the same wind
now whistled through it, creating an eerie and constant ‘music’.
“It’s a bit of a monotonous tune,” Merrick pointed out
as they sat in the shade of an overhanging piece of rock. It was still
hot but they were out of the full glare of the sun at its zenith. They
ate rehydrated food from numbered boxes carried in their packs and washed
it down with rehydrated fruit juice that started out ice cold but ended
up lukewarm by the end of the cup, such was the searing temperature in
the desert at mid-day.
“Downright annoying, in my humble opinion,” Benic commented
about the music. “It’s a pity it can’t be tuned.”
“Maybe it can.” The other boys watched as Ari climbed nimbly
up the side of the rockface and examined the holes where the wind was
creating the sounds. He put his hand over one and then another and the
tone of the whistle changed. He experimented for a few minutes before
actually producing a little tune by blocking one then the other of the
holes. The boys laughed and cheered his efforts.
“Fantastic,” Gynnell proclaimed. “I think this rock
will have to have an official name on the maps in future – Ari’s
Pipes.”
The boys agreed with his proposal wholeheartedly. Ari sat down again quietly.
Outside of the unique community of the Desert Camp he could not have drawn
that much attention to himself. He came from a people who did their work
quietly and unobtrusively, cleaning offices, serving their masters in
the great houses. Showing his natural talent for music to a group of friends
who included the sons of High Councillors was only possible because he
had been given the opportunity to call those boys friends and to stand
out in their crowd.
“We don’t have much music in the camp,” Benic said.
“Perhaps it’s time to start an orchestra. We have Ari for
the wind section.”
“I’ll ask my father if we might have some instruments,”
Merrick suggested. “Gynnell, your brother has already contributed
the hover-trikes. Our House can make its donation to the school this time.
A fine silver flute for Ari, I think.”
“We’d need a music teacher,” Gynnell pointed out. “I
can’t imagine anyone with those skills wanting to work in the desert.”
“We’ll put it to Lord Artemus when we get back. He always
listens to good ideas.”
That decided they settled down to rest quietly for a while. Between the
thirteenth hour and at least three in the afternoon desert travel was
both unwise and unpalatable. It was just too hot with the sun directly
overhead. They talked a little more, mostly of trivial matters, gradually
falling quiet and dozing lightly in the shade, lulled by the natural music
of ‘Ari’s Pipes’.
When they woke they drank more rehydrated juice and ate energy bars before
clearing any sign of their refreshments and setting off again on their
scheduled trek. The hover-trikes had been left in the sunlight. The solar
batteries were primed, but there was a slight drawback in that the saddles
were now uncomfortably hot to sit on. That one complaint aside the renewed
journey was a pleasant one. Ari proved that he could hold a tune telepathically,
too, and amused them all with a selection of folk songs of the Yardages.
“We need a song for our school – an Anthem of the Desert,”
Gynnell suggested. “Ari, give it some thought.”
“You mean, compose a song?” Ari was a little doubtful about
that. “I can do tunes in my head, but I’m not so good at making
up words.”
“I can do that,” Jase volunteered. For a little while he tuned
out of the telepathic chatter. His thoughts when his friends touched on
them were a collection of disjoined words and phrases. Then he called
them all to attention.
Erei asagoi desortu rou
progeni prima aron dou
faro se inarun swaee, astari inarun chiie
Insu tateu inarun laee.
----
Oh asagaoi desortu charo
Oh asagaoi desortu fratiu
Asagaoi desertu achi incho
Ii duno o unfraee.
So the low Gallifreyan verse and chorus ran.
The desert sun burns hot and red
Warming the blood of its sons.
With strength in our limbs and truth on our tongues
And courage in our hearts.
----
Oh, my desert-sun friends
Oh, my desert-sun brothers
Desert-sun warms our hearts
In darkness or despair.
“There you go, Ari, fit a tune to that,” Gynnell said. “While
Jase composes a couple of extra verses extolling the virtues of strength,
truth and courage that the Desert Arcalians hold true to.”
Ari did just that. Before they had travelled another fifty miles he had
taught them the tune telepathically. When they were all confident enough
about it they sang out loud, their voices, ranging from Gynnell’s
manly bass baritone to Shill’s high, clear tenor harmonised surprisingly
well and the sound must have carried a long way across the empty desert
above the hum of the solar powered hover-trike engines.
“A pity there is nobody out there to appreciate our efforts,”
Benic commented when they stopped singing for a while.
“I hope there isn’t, anyway,” Merrick added. “Are
you sure there are no Outlanders in this area, Gyn? I’d hate to
think what they would make of it all.”
“I couldn’t be sure of anything as far as Outlanders are concerned.
“They don’t follow any rules and nor do they have any set
routes that they travel. But Braxietel told me his tribe don’t go
this far south-west until later in the year.”
“How many tribes are there?” Jase asked. “Maybe we will
come across some of the others.”
“I hope not,” Benic said with a fervour that surprised his
friends. “I really don’t want to get involved with them again.
I had enough of them with the Arrachii.”
“They won’t approach us,” Gynnell assured his friend.
“Outlanders don’t want contact with us. I have a sort of ‘understanding’
with Braxietel. I show him my plans for treks, and he tells me if there
is anything I ought to know about – animal herds or dangerous plants
around the oases. But Braxietel isn’t a born Outlander. He’s
a Time Lord who renounced our society. The others, those born to it, don’t
want to get involved with us, in case we interfere with their life.”
“Why would we? There’s only six of us.”
“I don’t mean us,” Gynnell corrected. “I mean…
us… as in Time Lords, the people WE come from. In the camp we are
between the two worlds in a way. We still belong to the Capitol with the
High Council passing laws and maintaining control over our lives. But
we also know a little bit about their world, too, about living in the
desert. We have it easy with lightweight tents and trikes, and rehydrated
food packs, of course. They eat the flesh of animals they kill and make
their clothes and tents of the skins.”
Merrick and Benic both nodded. They had lived that way for eight years.
They had learnt not to mind the smell of untreated leonate fur clothes
and to hunt and kill, to prepare and eat meat cut from the bones of the
same animal. They understood completely what Gynnell meant about the two
worlds.
“How could our society interfere with theirs?” Shill asked.
“You have to understand,” Gynnell answered. “The High
Council don’t even officially acknowledge that anyone lives on Gallifrey
outside of their law. And as long as the Outlanders keep their distance
they are content to go on that way. Of course, we have stories, but they
are mostly no more factual than tales of the Toclafane. Should things
change, should there be a closer contact between Outlanders and Time Lords,
then I think the Time Lords might well seek to curtail their freedom,
bring them under our law.”
“That wouldn’t be a bad thing,” Benic said. “Our
laws are fair.”
“Our laws are fair to us. But not to the Outlanders. Our laws are
nothing to do with them,” Merrick argued. “And they WOULD
be affected in all of the wrong ways. Their lives would change for the
worse.”
“How?” Jase asked.
“When we were ‘recovering’ from our experience with
the Arrachii,” Merrick continued. “The Lord High President
talked to us quite a lot. He was concerned that we should be able to ‘integrate’
into the school again after living as ‘men’ in the tribe.
One afternoon, he told me some things about the world his lady wife comes
from. On Earth, he said, there were once many tribes in different parts
of that planet where people lived much as our Outlanders did. In a place
called America they roamed great plains hunting animals called ‘buffalo’.
Then men with laws like ours came. They drew maps and said that the lands
belonged to their government. They forced the tribes into places called
‘reservations’ and to keep them there they killed all the
buffalo. It happened in a place called Australia, too, and in a land called
Africa the tribes-people were taken away and made to be slaves of the
lawmaking people. Much further back in their history, a tribe called Aztecs
were simply massacred and their whole society destroyed in order to make
way for those with ‘laws’ and maps.”
“It is true that Braxietel is the only one who knows about maps
drawn on paper,” Gynnell said. “The others keep the topography
in their heads. But I never thought of a map as a way of curtailing freedom
before.”
“Then you ought to ask Lord de Lœngbærrow to take you with
him to Earth,” Merrick told him. “There you need something
called a ‘passport’ to travel across water separating two
parts just like the straits that separate our northern and southern continents.
But those kinds of changes, even if they have never heard of Americans
or Australians or Aztecs, are just what the Outlanders fear. That is why
they won’t cross our paths knowingly and we should try not to come
into contact with them.”
The point was solemnly made. For a while all six boys travelled quietly,
thinking about the fate of the American natives and their plains buffalo
as outlined by Merrick. Then Ari started to sing again. They had become
too solemn. They lightened their mood once more as the afternoon turned
to evening and they drew near the oasis marked on Gynnell’s paper
map where they planned to camp for the night.
The oasis was in a hollow and nearly impossible to see until they were
right upon it. Even the boys with experience of tribal life were in awe
of Gynnell’s pathfinding skills. They dismounted the trikes and
wheeled them down through the trees bearing fruits that would supplement
their evening diet, towards the cool, tempting pool of water in the lowest
part of the depression.
Then their cheerful mood and their boyish adventure was plunged into horror.
There were two men there by the water – one dying, one possibly
already dead.
“Come on,” Merrick said. “We have to help them.”
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