Apiath Traga was as close to the Human ideal of paradise
as Marion had yet seen in her travels around the universe. It had a balmy
temperature all year round and more miles of unspoilt coastline than inland
territory due to the way the continents had split along several fault
lines to create long, narrow islands in the blue ocean.
The chief industry of the planet was tourism, and its public beaches were
always crowded with sunseekers of every possible skintype – dark,
light, oily, multi-hued, flesh, hide and scales, claiming a portion of
sand to spread out on for the day.
The VIP guests from Gallifrey didn’t have to fight for a spot on
a public beach. They used a private one that belonged to the hereditary
president of Traga and her family.
Tragans were people who enjoyed the sun. Although they had lost their
scales over millennia of evolution, they were descended from reptiles
and cold-blooded. Spending a day basking in the sunshine was their favourite
leisure occupation. It was for that reason they rose at two o’clock
in the morning and conducted all of their business in solar-heated rooms
when it was still dark. That gave them the maximum hours of daylight to
enjoy.
Kristoph had been up that early to attend a meeting with his fellow president
and her aides. That was his excuse for being asleep on a deckchair under
a sunshade for most of the day. Since he was a Time Lord and didn’t
need so much sleep as other species, Marion strongly suspected he was
just being lazy and enjoying the sunshine.
The Tragan president was asleep, too, though in full sunlight that warmed
her blood. She wore the tiniest bikini that modesty permitted. Marion
was more comfortable in a one piece swimsuit. So was Rodan who was learning
to surf with the children of the Tragan President and other ministers.
The other remarkable thing about the Tragans was that they were amphibious.
They had gills behind their ears that allowed them to swim underwater.
Rodan was Gallifreyan. She had the ability to close off her lungs and
recycle her breathing for up to fifteen minutes at a time, so she was
able to enjoy almost as much underwater fun as her friends.
As much as being under the surface they all loved being on top of the
water on their boards. When they came ashore for refreshments, Rodan had
explained how joyful it was to ride inside a ‘tube’. This
meant being under a wave as it crashed over on itself and surfing inside
the tube of air that was formed before it hit the shore and broke up.
Marion didn’t quite understand what she meant until Rodan put a
cool hand on her cheek and mentally described the unique feeling of being
inside a wave tube. It was amazingly quiet, the sounds of the ocean cut
off by the water. Only a faint hissing of the surf roiling towards the
shore could be heard.
“Amazing,” Marion agreed. “Do be careful, though, won’t
you? I’m sure it must be a little bit dangerous.”
But it wasn’t. Not to Rodan. She had mastered so many skills –
horse-riding, scuba diving, sea-horse riding. Surfing on a board was easy
to her. She had picked it up straight away.
Kristoph listened to the conversation between his wife and foster-child
in his dreams. He could do all those sort of things, too. His travels
as a Celestial Intervention Agency man had brought him to many exotic
locations and he had picked up all sorts of skills in order to look as
if he fitted in. But he didn’t want to do it without Marion and
he felt it wasn’t quite the right thing for her to be doing. Her
heart was fully recovered from the operation she had needed a few years
ago, but anything as strenuous as surfing was hardly recommended.
She had no ambitions to try, he noted. She was quite happy to sit in the
shade of a sail-shaped diffuser that she had purchased on Saintal Pluca
as a souvenir of that planet. There was a selection of Tragan fruits for
refreshment and if she wanted it, music on an amazing portable system
called ‘air tune’. It worked by placing an almost invisible
bubble behind her head like a cushion and the music of her choice would
play directly into her ears at the chosen volume. She had tried it this
morning and found it very comfortable, but it was just as nice listening
to the waves on the shore and the sounds of birds in the sky.
Kristoph was enjoying the same simple pleasures himself. He knew he could
sit by the sea any time he wanted at home on Gallifrey. There was a beautiful
stretch of coastline along the southern edge of the Northern Continent.
Many of his friends owned beachside villas there.
But if he did, there would be several dozen Presidential Guards watching
him and the next time he was in the Panopticon, some fool would table
a question about why the Lord High President had time to lounge by the
beach. And besides, Gold Usher would think that swimming trunks were quite
an unseemly choice of clothing for him, unbefitting the Office of President.
Gold Usher could do with a bit of sun on his own face. But the thought
of that venerable man in swimming trunks was impossible.
The Tragans had no such trouble. The outfit the President was wearing
would be considered over-dressing on the beaches favoured by the indigenous
people. Their own skins were the proper and natural covering. They had
only adopted the concept of clothing to coincide with their offworld contact.
The government took to wearing robes of office when they met with representatives
of other worlds and the people began to clothe themselves when mixing
with the tourists who visited them.
It was a strange world for Gallifrey to have dominion over. The only reason
they did was that the Tragans were telepathic and the Time Lords sought
to keep close ties with any species with those skills.
The Tragans could only communicate with each other telepathically. Attempts
to make contact with other species that way proved fruitless. They didn’t
worry about it. They didn’t think other people wanted to hear what
they thought, anyway.
They were probably right. A government that sat for only three hours,
during the night hours, in order to maximize sun-bathing time during the
day, would scandalise Gold Usher, who believed that the business of government
was the most important business of all.
Gold Usher was probably right. This lifestyle was nice for a short break,
but it wouldn’t do for a people who loved to argue fruitlessly as
much as Time Lords did.
Everyone roused for tea at what would be three o’clock by Marion’s
Earth time, but a little earlier on Gallifrey with its twenty-six hour
day. Tragan had twenty-two hours in their planetary revolution, four of
them in full darkness, and three hours each end of the day of balmy, fragrant
twilight.
This was a light tea to bolster them for another few hours of sun-bathing
before the sun began to drop low over the southern horizon and lose some
of its intensity
It was then that the Tragans were at their most awake and their most playful.
As the sun dropped ever lower the quiet beach became a party place. A
band came down onto the sand to play something like Tragan Calypso-Reggae.
That was how Marion had described it when she heard it and Kristoph thought
she had identified it very well. It was music to dance to barefoot, kicking
up sand joyfully. Rodan and the other youngsters put away their boards
but danced at the water’s edge, kicking up water instead of sand.
The adults danced in pairs or in concentric circles, depending on the
tune – the faster ones for group dancing and the slower ones for
couples.
The Tragans danced in the same minimal clothing they wore all day. Marion
put a sheer sarong around her waist and Kristoph wore a loose shirt in
a colourful pattern that would still give Gold Usher cause to doubt his
fitness for Office. When the sun set completely torches on long poles
were lit around the ad hoc dance arena and a fire pit was filled with
combustible material in order to roast the carcass of a huge animal. The
aroma of meat cooking filled the air along with the salty sea smell and
the scent of night opening flowers that grew along the edge of the beach.
The dancing stopped when the meat was cooked and everyone filled their
plates with mouth-watering slices covered with fruity sauce and accompanied
by something much like a sweet potato.
Rodan succumbed to weariness after she had eaten and settled down on the
deckchair under the sun diffuser which now served to keep the sea breeze
off her.
Kristoph and Marion carried on dancing until long after the midnight hour.
They enjoyed the music and the free and easy way of the Tragans in their
natural environment – by the sea.
“Their distant ancestors were a bit like the Gallapagos iguanas,”
Kristoph said when they stopped dancing for a while and walked on the
wet sand from the retreating tide. “Even when they had taken on
a more humanoid form they still liked nothing better than basking on the
sun-warmed rocks and diving into the water to swim when the fancy took
them.”
“Sounds like a good life,” Marion agreed. “But then
they got sophisticated and built houses, drove cars….”
“The houses, of course, all have sun-roofs and swimming pools. No
Tragan day is complete without three or four hours of basking.”
“I enjoyed it today,” Marion agreed. “I think I could
enjoy some of it tomorrow, too. After that… I think I’ll start
to feel lazy.”
“There is no such concept on this world. It’s just their way
of life.”
“Are you going back to the Parliament House again tonight?”
Marion asked.
Kristoph had more to discuss with the Tragans, but he didn’t, in
fact, return to the Parliament in the small city that was the administrative
capital of the planet. Instead, Parliament came to the beach. As the dancing
came to an end and the fire pit was doused, the Tragan ministers settled
themselves in a rough circle on the sand. Kristoph joined them. Marion
watched for a while as they talked politics in the most laid back way
she could imagine.
She tried to imagine it, but failed. The idea of the High Council of Gallifrey
eating cold roast meat in sandwiches of flat bread and drinking fruit
juice while they talked over some weighty matter of government was impossible.
She couldn’t even picture the British government that she had been
used to all her life giving up their seats in Westminster. It was just
impossible.
And yet, the trade deals that Kristoph was negotiating were just as important
as anything that went on in the Panopticon. The Tragans took their work
as seriously as any other politician. They just chose to enjoy the warm
breezes and the stars in the sky above them as they worked.
Marion retreated to the sun diffuser and settled down on a deckchair with
a soft blanket over her more out of habit than anything else. She used
the air tune cushion as a pillow and listened to soft jazz as she fell
asleep under those same stars.
She woke a little before dawn to the smell of coffee. Kristoph pressed
a cup into her hands and invited her to walk while they drank their early
morning drink.
“Everyone else is asleep,” he whispered. “The Parliament
broke up an hour ago. I put myself into a deep level trance for a while
to refresh the mind and body. I won’t need to sleep now until mid-afternoon.
I might have a go at the surfing with the youngsters in a bit.”
“Too much for me,” Marion admitted. “I’ll be happy
with a good book for the morning. “I’ve got my electronic
reader with me for just that purpose.”
They walked in the surf as the sun came up over the island, striking the
beach and turning it golden. When it struck the sea it turned that a silvery-blue
colour.
Soon the surfers rose from where they had spent the night. Rodan was with
them. She had slept as much as any active child could possibly sleep when
her bedroom was on a beach on Apiath Traga. Her foster parents watched
her ride the waves with the other children before everyone was called
to a breakfast of cold meat, bread and as much fruit as they desired and
another gloriously simple day of contentment began.
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