Chapter Eight: An Answer to a Prayer
A
shorter trip to a community further north took them most of a week.
Kasumi found herself wondering when the high speed rail that they’d
seen at the Expo would be implemented, but shook the thought off.
She’d used every form of transport that was left over the years,
from Airships to bicycles. There was no hurry. Part of her wanted to
get through the whole working holiday quickly, but she told herself
that she was okay with it, and she had better act like it.
There
was a fair sized community on what used to be a border checkpoint.
Roads and buildings were still there, and the brothers had moved in
and re-purposed it, turning it into a large hostel, big enough to
handle a thousand people a night. The old countries may not have
existed any longer, but there were still people on the move, and that
meant the large roads were still in use. This community was on the
way to a lot of places.
Which
meant it had detailed maps readily visible. Hugh traced the lines on
the map, explaining their route, and destination.
“The
largest forest in the world is here, in what used to be called
Siberia.” Hugh explained. “A lot of the place got torched in the
lead-up to A-Day, or so I’m told, but the trees and the ecosystem
is still more resilient here than most other forests in the world.”
Kasumi
nodded. “I’m told that people are taking cuttings and saplings
from the trees in those woods and taking them all around the world,
for restoration purposes.”
“They
are, and that’s where we come in.” Hugh explained. “We hitch a
ride to the edge of the woods and go along the Trade Routes. There’s
a Lumber Camp there. We collect some saplings, and we take them back
south to help with restoring forests in Central China.”
Kasumi
let out a low whistle. “Long trip. You got transport organized?”
“Arrived
this morning.” Hugh pointed. She looked, and saw a horse drawn
cart, but it was much larger than a carriage. This was a wagon, with
a domed roof, and two of the biggest draft-horses that Kasumi had
ever seen were hitched to it.
A
familiar face stepped down from the back of the wagon and waved.
“Hello!”
Kasumi
wasn’t even surprised. She had been expecting it. “Isobel!” She
greeted warmly. “Good to see you again!” Kasumi hadn’t seen
Isobel in the decades since the day she had left to go home to her
family, but as Hugh and Isobel quickly picked up the conversation,
leading the way towards the wagon, Kasumi realized suddenly that Hugh
had kept in touch after all, and not just when he’d been in Europe
the year before. When the horse nuzzled into him in a very familiar
gesture, she knew for sure.
“Griegor
outdid himself with these ones.” Hugh observed. “They grow fast,
they were only regular horse size last time I saw them.”
Isobel
smiled with affection. “I brought these two along, figured they’d
like to see you again too.”
Kasumi
came over to the other horse. Draft-horses were always big, but these
ones were easily a few hands taller than others she’d seen.
Isobel
noticed her attention on the size and piped up. “We named him
Goliath. He’s part of a relatively new breed.” She smiled. “I’ve
met people from Ancient days. The plow-horses we have now make their
warhorses look like ponies. Centuries of careful breeding created
whole new animals. Our horses are a huge part of our lifestyle, so…”
“He’s
really impressive.” Hugh agreed. The horse nuzzled into his side,
the head alone almost bigger than his whole torso. “You remember
me, dont’cha big guy?”
Isobel
helped Kasumi with the bags, though they both traveled light. “So,
you know the plan?”
“I
know we’re heading to the forest…” Kasumi offered. “More than
that, he hasn’t told me.”
Isobel
nodded. “The Caravan is going to camp on the edge of the forest.
It’s a spot we’ve used plenty of times before, and every year,
the edge is in a different place. We handle a lot of people and trade
from the woodlands. Lumberjacks, timber, or in your case, cuttings
and seedlings. Even reintroduced some animals once or twice.” She
smiled. “You haven’t met my family yet, Kas. I’m glad Hugh was
able to bring you along.”
Kasumi
twitched. “That was your idea?”
“He
asked, I agreed.”
~~/*\~~
The
wagon was actually a small home, neatly arranged and equipped. It
didn’t have a kitchen, and the bed was a hammock slung between the
ribs of the wagon cover, but it looked quite cozy. Hugh seemed to be
taking to it certainly, and Kasumi had to admit that she wished she
had one for her own travels.
The
seat up front was wide enough for all three of them, but usually it
was Isobel and Hugh holding the reins. Kasumi watched them together.
On the surface, it was just friendly, identical to the way she was
with Hugh herself, but the memory of the engagement ring wasn’t far
from her thoughts, and she stayed back, not intruding.
But
soon after, Hugh traded places with Kasumi, stretching out in the
hammock and letting them talk.
“Here.”
Isobel pulled up a Insulated Flask from beside her seat and poured
her a mug of something that smelled sweet. “Spiced cocoa. My gran’s
recipe.”
Kasumi
took a sip. It was spicy and sweet and tingled in her mouth. “Ooh.
I like that.”
Isobel
grinned. “Mama has to keep a whole kettle drum of the stuff on low
heat. The rest of the Caravan treat it like a basic food group. Hugh
found out that it was a family secret and swore he’d do whatever it
took to learn. Mama said he'd have to kill her or marry me.”
Kasumi
almost swallowed her tongue as she burst out laughing.
“It’s
not that funny, is it?”
Kasumi
sipped again, waving that off.
Isobel
let it go. “Hugh tells me that you were the reason his brother came
on board.”
“He
came on board because he’s humble enough to recognize what he’s
looking at, and intelligent enough to know when he couldn’t
rationalize away the facts.” Kasumi waved it off. “I helped, but
mostly I helped him get to the right place.”
“Doesn’t
matter, it was something nobody else thought of.” Isobel insisted.
“Hugh considers you a direct answer to prayer.”
Kasumi
had no idea how to answer. “I… He was an answer to mine, too.”
~~/*\~~
The
Caravan was camped in a semi-circle on the edge of the forest. The
trees were thinner here, and younger, but well established. Kasumi
saw people in the trees, some with hand tools, some pulling a trolley
full of saplings.
Isobel
followed her gaze. “The men with the tools are lumberjacks. Not
part of the Caravan. They’re here for lumber, and to learn.”
“Learn
what?”
“You’ll
find out.” Isobel promised. “I’ll introduce you. In the
meantime, brace yourself.”
“What
for?”
“Unca
Hugh!” Three voices called eagerly.
Kasumi
turned just in time to see three kids, slamming into Hugh hard enough
to bring him down. Two boys, one girl, all so happy to see him that
they had tackled him flat.
Isobel
laughed delightedly. “They haven’t seen him for a year.” She
told Kasumi. “Remember when that was a long time?”
Kasumi
laughed. ‘Not really.” She admitted ruefully.
The
kids were all talking over each other quickly. “I lost a tooth!”
“I mem-rised three scrip’ureth!” “I hit the baseball!”
“Where did you go!?” “Did you bring presents?!” “I got a
pet fox! Come see!”
“Alright,
let the man up!” A woman’s voice called sharply, and the three
kids immediately jumped up and practically came to attention.
Kasumi
looked, and saw a woman with generous curves and hair down past her
waist come strolling up. She was a near-mirror image of Isobel, only
somehow more-so. She was dressed in the same Romani style dress and
peasant blouse that Isobel wore, and Kasumi knew who she was, even
before introductions were made.
“Kasumi,
this is Moira, my mother.” Isobel said. “I tell you this first,
because she likes to tell new people that we are twins.”
Moira
smirked. “One must enjoy the benefits of eternal youth, surely?”
She embraced Kasumi like they were long lost relatives and then did
the same with Hugh. “You made good time. We were just getting ready
for dinner.”
“Great.
I’m cooking!” Hugh said brightly.
“Ohh,
no you’re not.” Moira told him off with a cold smirk. “You get
within three feet of my pot, and I take fingers! Two feet and you
lose a whole hand!”
Isobel
smiled winningly. “They were like this the entire trip last year.”
Kasumi
laughed at the thought. “You ever meet his mom?”
Isobel
shook her head.
“She’s…
less fun.” Kasumi told her. “Just to give you fair warning. When
Hugh's mom says to get out of the kitchen or she takes a finger, she
means it.”
Isobel
chuckled. “Mama says to never let go of an attractive man that can
cook.”
Kasumi
smiled tightly. “So does my sister.”
~~/*\~~
Kasumi
was grateful for the improved capacity of her memory since A-Day.
She’d had a lot of names thrown at her in a short time. A dozen
wagons, each with their own little homes inside. The only concession
to modern technology that Kasumi saw was the hotplate that sat under
Moira’s large iron pot, really more a cauldron, which never went
off the heat the entire time Kasumi and Hugh were there. In fact, she
would be willing to bet that they’d lift the whole thing into one
of the wagons, still simmering.
Dinner
was relaxed. Nobody lined up at tables. They brought their bowls and
utensils to the cauldron and Moira would ladle them each a serve.
Kasumi could feel her stomach roar when she got close enough to smell
the incredibly rich flavors.
Isobel
whispered in her ear. “Mama believes that the flavor improves as
time goes on. She adds new ingredients daily, and the flavor is never
the same twice, but you wouldn’t believe how… rich and decadent
the simplest meal becomes. She calls it ‘Pot-Luck Stew’. You’re
lucky. We only have it as the main meal once a week or so. Everyone
takes their turn cooking for the Caravan.”
Kasumi
didn’t even notice who did it, but fresh bread was put in her hand,
then fruit, then cheese… There were several campfires, and people
were gathered around all of them. Lots of laughter, lots of music…
It was like a camping trip, but Kasumi knew it wasn’t a holiday. It
was just their life.
Hugh
hadn’t been left alone for five minutes by the kids. And once he
had introduced her, the kids had pounced on Kasumi too, insisting on
showing her each and every part of their caravans, their home, their
pets, their play…
Hugh
was a lot more easy going about it than she was. She wondered if it
was just that he had met them all before, or if perhaps he was just
more at home among these people.
“What
are you thinking?” Moira asked her gently. Kasumi jumped. Moira had
snuck up on her and she hadn't even noticed.
Kasumi
shook off the thought. “The kids.” She said quietly. “I’ve
seen couples having kids, but… much less often than the old days.
Hugh, with those kids…”
“He’s
the one that taught them to play baseball. Its a game that travels
well. They don’t have a lot of experience with new people who are
eager to have them around.” Moira said with affection. “And just
so you know, those kids aren’t newborn. Times were hard for people
like us. Until the 1960’s, things like flu season were often fatal
to littl’uns. A lot of them have no idea how things have changed.
They fall asleep to their mothers weeping over them, wake up to those
same mothers weeping again, only they’re healthy.”
Kasumi
shivered. “I can’t imagine losing a kid. I still was
one
when I… Well.”
Moira
nodded. “The Conventions say that generations will fast become
irrelevant. I was there when half those kids were born. Small coffins
are so… heavy. Now I can’t take my eyes off them.”
“It
sounds clingy, but if you want my advice? Trust that instinct.”
Kasumi said with a smile. “Once they hit twenty five, their faces
will never change again. Can you imagine how fast they seem to grow
in ten years when you’ve lived for centuries?”
“And
they always grow up much too fast.” Moira smiled at them with
affection. “I think that’s why Hugh came back so soon. These kids
adopted him. Not many people want to travel with our caravans for
longer than one trip.”
“Hugh’s
a explorer.” Kasumi said, smiling. “Whereas I’m a wanderer.”
~~/*\~~
They
spent the night with the Caravan, Kasumi with Isobel, Hugh in a
hammock slung by the bonfire. The next morning they worked. The work
was done in the morning, and the afternoons were for other matters,
such as play, and teaching.
Hugh,
Kasumi and Romani’s weren’t the only ones on the edge of the
forest. Moira was playing host to some newly resurrected ones that
had volunteered to come back to the woods.
“Not
everyone who lived in OS suffered for it.” Moira told the most
experienced Christians in the Caravan. “These men lived wild, more
than Nomads ever did. These guys had no trouble believing things had
changed. They knew it the moment they saw the woods and the wilds.
But they had little regard for the rest of the world, because they’ve
seen almost none of it.” She smirked at her guests. “If I’m
honest, then I’m glad you’re here, because you have more
experience with this than the rest of the Caravan put together.”
Isobel
nodded. “She’s right about that, Flyboy. Having you here was an
answer to a prayer.”
~~/*\~~
Hugh
strolled into the woods with a hatchet and sat with the Lumberjacks.
“We haven’t met. Hugh Alman.”
The
man shook his hand in a powerful grip that made Hugh check and see if
his fingers were broken. “Martin Dawson.” He gestured to the
hatchet. “You here to chop firewood?”
“Actually,
I’m here to get some cuttings from these trees.” Hugh nodded.
“Ones that will travel well and sprout roots when planted
somewhere.”
Martin
hummed. “You’d probably have a better time of it uprooting some
saplings. You have to pick the right age. Too young, they won’t
survive, too old, they won’t travel.”
Hugh
nodded agreeably. “I’m here with Kasumi to collect some future
trees. We need to restore forests a long way from here.” He gave
Martin a look. “You’d probably be a big help with that sort of
work.”
Martin
nodded. “It’d be nice to have something useful to do. Me and the
others… we weren’t really made for sitting around. And the
Gypsies keep telling-”
“Romani.”
Hugh interrupted. “They probably haven’t mentioned it because
they’re used to it; but that’s an impolite term.”
“Really?”
Martin blinked. “Well, I’ll take your word for it. I’ve never
met any before now.” He glanced over. “They had a reputation
where I come from. The kind of reputation that makes it hard to
believe their more… fantastic ideas.”
Hugh
nodded. “They’re all true. The things they’ve been telling you?
It’s the truth.”
Martin
shrugged, unconcerned. “Well. I woke one morning last week with a
timberwolf curled up next to me. I get that things have changed. And
all the stuff about God? No atheists in the wilderness.”
“But
you still don't want to be part of it?” Hugh commented.
“It’s
not that. It’s that I don’t have a bloody clue what my ‘part’
is!” Martin nearly exploded. “I can’t study with your people,
because I can’t read. I lived and loved the woods, but… I’m not
allowed to cut them down, Alman. I can’t even build my cabin, or
hunt my dinner. I don’t… How am I supposed to make any kind of a
life?!”
Hugh
nodded patiently. “When were you?”
“I
was born in the Year of our Lord 1778.” Martin told him
matter-of-factly. “I was born in my father’s cabin, and when the
mountain finally swallowed him, it was my cabin. Now, not only is
that cabin gone, I can’t even build a new one. What do I tell my
wife? Does she even come back?!”
“You
know that you don't have to build another one.” Hugh pointed out.
“The lumber industry is completely changed now. And homes are
provided for newcomers-”
“I’m
told that homes and land are allotted.” Martin put in. “The
‘pre-fabs’ are all in town, right? And then I get sent somewhere
in the world? Why? I have everything I need in the woods, except that
I’m not allowed to make my own way any more. And why? Because the
Gy- The Romani tell me that God won’t allow it. I’m supposed to
just take their word for it? Or yours, come to that?”
Hugh
had already pulled his phone out. “Those rules about protecting the
wilderness? I’d like to show you why we have them.”
Martin
didn’t seem as stunned by the phone as others from his century had
been. But the clip that was playing had him stunned silent. As part
of the education work, there were plenty of archived clips showing
the Last Days, and everything that they involved. For all the people
alive then, the majority of humanity had missed the worst of it;
including Hugh and Martin.
The
video showed the huge earth-movers chewing up woods, tearing through
rainforests. The clips lingered on the naked, scorched earth left
behind. Trucks taking hundreds of logs along burnt out, clear-cut
roads every day. A montage of the same places; of animals crushed and
dead, of fires raging against the roots, of smoke billowing into the
sky…
Then
came the high altitude shots, where the line between empty land and
healthy forest was blatantly clear, drawn in dozens of huge
earthmovers that rolled into the trees like an unstoppable wave.
Hugh
never took his eyes off Martin. The woodsman was staring, jaw hanging
open, eyes bulging.
The
video ended and Hugh put it away. “In the last fifty years before
A-Day, more than half the natural resources of the earth were
consumed. Centuries to grow, a single lifetime to suck dry. They ate
the world, Martin.” Hugh let that sink in. “We’re still putting
it back, restoring what was lost. So. You want to help us out?”
Martin
looked up at him like he’d seen a ghost. “Y-yes. Yes, please. I
want to put them back.”
Hugh
nodded, and slung his hatchet. “So. Saplings are better than
cuttings, you say? The wagons have room. I can take some of both.”
~~/*\~~
They
worked silently for almost an hour. Martin showed him how to sling
the cuttings so that they’d be easier to carry, and then showed him
how to dig up saplings so that the roots would be safe for travel.
Kasumi was over with the next group, doing the same. Martin had gone
over to the men with her and had a brief conference. Whatever he'd
told them, they were asking Kasumi for details.
Even
when he'd returned to help Hugh, it was clear that Martin’s mind
was on something else entirely. Something terrible. Hugh felt like
he’d told the man a horror story.
“Can
I see it again, please?” Martin said finally. “I want to show the
others.”
Hugh
agreed, and they went to meet with the others. There were four other
woodsmen. Some of them had been back for years, and had only just
been located, having spent most of their time in the New World in the
woods, as they had spent their lives before.
~~/*\~~
The
video sent the same shockwaves through all of them. They refused to
believe it at first. Moira loaned them a wagon, and Hugh and Kasumi
took them a few hours away from the camp. Far enough from the trees
that they could see the torn up ground, with dead tree stumps just
starting to sprout back to life. They’d never seen clearings so…
massive, or wanton.
“Believe
it or not, we don’t have to do anything here.” Kasumi told them.
“These roots are sprouting again. The trees know how to grow on
their own. They’ll sprout and grow back on their own again, just
takes time.”
Hugh
sighed. “Most places? The roots were torn up too. Nothing to grow
back.”
The
men were openly weeping at the sight.
“When
I was last… around.” Martin said finally. “We did it
differently. A lumberjack lived in the woods. We walked into the
trees and we considered each one. Size, age, branches… We chose our
lumber so carefully, because we knew that if we cut down the wrong
one, there’d be less animals to feed us the next week, there’d be
less water or shade or protection from storms. But if we picked trees
that were too small, we’d lose out on our profits, and that’d be
food off our tables, or clothes off our backs… When we found a
young tree, one that would grow taller and wider and stronger, we
would try and figure out if it was worth leaving for the next team…
because sometimes the next team was your own kids…”
Kasumi
waved her hand at the scars left by the old world. “This is
different.”
“It’s
obscene.” The timber man said decisively. “I mean… what did
they plan to do the next day?”
“They
didn’t.” Kasumi said grimly. “That’s why it went wrong.”
~~/*\~~
“Two
hours.” Isobel snorted. “We’ve been trying to convince them to
come in and listen for days, and you two make the breakthrough in
less than two hours.”
Moira
chuckled. “An answer to a prayer I didn’t think to say.” She
clapped her hands together loud enough that Kasumi jumped. “Tonight,
we celebrate!
~~/*\~~
Kasumi
wasn’t sure what ‘celebrate’ meant to them, but she hadn’t
expected the bonfire. Or the sparklers. Or the tambourines. Or the
fire jugglers.
Moira
leaned in and explained. “A lot of our forefathers made their
living as traveling carnies. For a lot of history, we weren’t
allowed to settle anywhere, so we made a living at it. Times changed,
even before A-Day, or so I am told, but there are no small number of
people in my family tree that like their lives the way they are, even
if they are welcome now.”
Kasumi
shrugged. “I guess anywhere you live is home.” She gestured over
at the jugglers, and their spinning flames. “Still, we’re kind of
close to the woods, aren’t we?”
Isobel
laughed and picked up a tambourine. “Come dance with me.”
Kasumi
had begged off, but Isobel hauled her up anyway. Guitars and
harmonicas and pan-flutes and tambourines and even a few drums played
a merry jig, and Isobel showed her the steps. Everyone who wasn’t
dancing or playing was clapping along, some with food and drink;
enjoying the show. Isobel was so… light on her feet, twirling and
spinning. She was so graceful and attractive that Kasumi felt like a
lumbering tree next to her. There were almost a dozen of them doing
the same dance around the bonfire, and none of them laughed at her
efforts, but Kasumi felt completely out of place.
Moira
waved Kasumi over and patted for the woman to sit beside her. “Three
hundred years and you never learned how to dance?”
“Or
swim. Or cook, really. I just haven’t got around to it yet.”
Kasumi gave a self-deprecating grin. “And frankly, compared to the
others… Well, next to Isobel at least… Not really my kind of
thing.”
“Little
too… suggestive for you, Miss Mori?” Moira smiled a bit.
Kasumi
flushed, looking down. “I don’t mean to cast aspersions…”
“This
kind of dancing? It’s tribal, more than exotic. It’s a folk dance
that people like me have danced for centuries. Back in the days, they
called us immoral, but nobody’s wearing anything particularly
revealing, or inviting anything inappropriate. Many of the woman
dancing now are married, and their husbands appreciate having
beautiful wives. And if we were crossing a line, surely the Authority
would have mentioned it.” Moira glanced upward, to make it clear
who she meant.
“That’s
true, I suppose.” Kasumi chuckled. “Can’t claim ignorance.”
“Nothing
in The Law that says a woman cannot be sensual without being
indecent, or what did God create beauty for?” Moira ladled a cup of
spiced cocoa for her. “In a world where everyone will be perfect, I
won’t make them ashamed of being lovely now. I taught my girls to
be happy with their own skin, and to look men in the eye. Why pretend
that you don’t know yourself?”
Kasumi
couldn’t help but agree with that. “History has rarely been kind
to women.”
Moira
gave her a knowing look. “Besides, you don’t really think Isobel
is particularly salacious, do you?”
“What
do you mean?”
“I
mean, your problem is a little less… biblical. More personal.”
Moira sent a glance over to Hugh, then back to her. He was clapping
along with the music like everyone else.
Kasumi
flushed and shrank into her seat. “Maybe.” She hesitated. “What
do you think of Hugh?” She asked. “Because he and Isobel…”
“My
daughter is a flirt. It’s how she puts people at ease.” Moira
told her. “In OS, I warned her not to lead people on. Back in OS, a
woman had to hide her appeal. Women taught to stop being attractive,
rather than having men be taught not to pounce violently on a woman
who wasn’t interested. Imagine a world where a woman got blamed for
such evil, because she was deemed attractive enough that men couldn’t
possibly be expected to act like human beings.” She toasted. “I
won’t be shamed for other people’s weakness; and neither will my
daughters. God promised us that no harm would come to them at the
hands of others, and speaking as a mother, that’s what Paradise is
all about.” She sipped her hot chocolate. “But I admit, I’d
like to see her settle with someone who actually deserves her.”
“I
probably shouldn’t be telling you this, but I think Hugh’s
planning to ask.” Kasumi said quietly.
“You
wouldn’t be gossiping, would you?”
“Certainly
not.” Kasumi smothered her grin.
“Then
I’m certainly not joining in when I tell you that I know about the
ring.” Moira added. “He got it from me.”
Kasumi
felt the words hit her. In her mind, that was the final proof. Her
mother’s ring. The awkward feeling in her guts evaporated. Hugh had
made his choice and was being a real romantic about it. She had
wondered why she had been invited along, but between her own
connections to Isobel, and the need for experienced teachers with
Martin; Kasumi suddenly realized she had been dramatically
over-thinking it.
~~/*\~~
Jehovah
God,
She prayed to herself. I
had wondered why he wanted me here for this. But now I’ve seen the
way these people live, and I get it: It’s so I can see where he’s
going. So we can say goodbye.
Kasumi
spent some time wandering about the Caravan, making conversation,
seeing how they lived. There were few communications devices, few
technological marvels at all. After the World’s Fair, she felt like
she’d stepped into a time machine, but the technology wasn’t
present because it wasn’t needed. And anything that wasn’t needed
wasn’t kept on hand.
Including
people. She
prayed. No
wonder Hugh has to marry into this family. A whole community that’s
already set up. People of the World’s Fair are constantly tinkering
with what they have. To an extent, so is everyone else; but not these
people. It’s not because they aren’t welcome any more. It’s
because they don’t need us in their lives. Father, if Hugh goes
with them… will I ever see him again?
As
if to answer her, she suddenly saw Hugh. He was softly strumming a
guitar, sitting against Goliath. The horse was nestled in for the
night, and Hugh was leaning against him, playing a soft tune for the
kids, who were starting to wear out at last. Kasumi watched him for a
while, smiling softly. Patience was an art form, and when Hugh smiled
back, they knew without speaking that they would wait to have their
conversation. Ten minutes, twenty… Time was on their side, and
moments of peaceful stillness were still few and far between with so
much to do.
But
for tonight, there was nothing left for them to do. The work would
come with the morning. Kasumi sat with the kids and listened to the
guitar lullaby, on the edge of ancient woods, under the starbright
sky.
Hugh
didn’t love music the way others did, but a century of small
practice sessions here and there had given him skill enough to keep
improvising a melody until each of the three children fell asleep,
two curled up together, and one on Kasumi’s knee. Without having to
exchange a word, the two old friends quietly gathered them up and
carried them back to the caravan; tucking them in for sleep.
Isobel
sent Hugh a look from the bonfire, where the adults were still
singing, dancing and talking in turn. Hugh gave her a nod, and she
smiled softly.
The
two of them headed back over to Goliath, still without exchanging a
word. Hugh collected the guitar, and Kasumi collected the blankets
they had sat on. “You in a hurry?” She asked impulsively. He
shook his head and she spread the blanket back out.
“Are
you mad at me?” Hugh asked finally, once they were settled.
“No.”
Kasumi sighed. She understood why he thought so. He was perceptive
now. So much more so that when they were all young. So was she. A
tiny comment, a brief hesitation… Age and time had taught them all
patience and discretion and respect. It made them harder to read, but
more perceptive to match.
Hugh
waited, letting her decide whether or not to say it.
“You
just… You seem so content with these people.” Kasumi confessed.
“More content than I’ve ever known you to be. And I know we never
talked about it, but I have to admit, I wish you felt that content
with just me.” She hadn’t really meant to add that last part, but
she didn’t regret it; since it was the truth.
Hugh
was stunned at the admission. “Kasumi, I-”
“No,
let me get this out.” She help up a hand. “We’ve known each
other for decades. And I haven’t been carrying a torch all that
time. I never had to. Because when we first met, you were still
caught up in OS thinking, and the most I ever hoped for was that
you’d get your mind straight and we’d be part of the same
brotherhood. But after the first twenty years or so, when we became
friends… I just couldn’t picture a world where we wouldn’t be
talking every day, keeping up with each others lives. Even when we
were on different continents, I knew we’d never be more than a
conversation away.”
“We
never will be.”
“Yes
we will.” Kasumi snorted. “These people don’t have the same
connections to… anything. They’re happy being insular. When they
want to connect to people, they send letters. Written letters. And I
love to get mail, but it’s still… You can’t carry a Holo on a
horse drawn wagon. One day they’ll figure out how to miniaturize
it, but look at their lifestyle. Do you think these people are going
to make international communication part of their lives? Who would
they call? Hugh… This is goodbye.”
The
word hit him harder than he thought it would. “You know something?”
He said quietly. “I haven’t noticed it until just now, but it’s
been years since I've actually said goodbye to someone.”
“Me
too.” Kasumi admitted. “I must say, I didn’t care for it.”
“Me
neither.”
Kasumi
leaned in and kissed his cheek. “They like you here. More than they
do most outsiders. You’ll be happy here.” It wasn’t a promise,
it was a direct instruction. “Now go talk to Isobel.”
~~/*\~~
Isobel
was still at the bonfire, roasting herself a snack, humming a tune
when she noticed Kasumi and Hugh on their way back. Kasumi gave him a
hug and split off to go back to her own bunk. Isobel blinked, because
it looked an awful lot like a goodbye.
“You
struck out, huh?” Isobel said with sympathy when Hugh came over to
join her.
Hugh
walked slowly. “Isobel. Can we talk?”
The
dark haired woman nodded. “Always.”
Kasumi
watched them head off to the far side of the wagon together. She felt
sad, but not in a heartbroken way. She had never felt particularly
possessive of any of her friends. She would see him again. He’d
been right. There was no such thing as a real goodbye any more.
Hearing him say it had made her feel lighter.
“Are
you alright, dear?” Moira crooned. “Because it seems like you
just let go of something you wanted to keep.”
“I
did.” Kasumi admitted. “Moira, the whole world is based on the
idea that we all love each other. We eat and breathe love and
friendship and compassion and family. I haven’t lost that.”
Moira
nodded sagely. “That, chile; is the right answer. I have been back
in the world only twelve years. I can quite easily remember a time
when I would have taken this opportunity to read your palms and tea
leaves and tell you that a tall and handsome stranger was on the
way.”
Kasumi
chuckled at that.
“But
today, I cannot offer you talismans. Perhaps some mementos?” She
led the way over to her Wagon, including her workshop. “Something
to give you a story to tell in your future travels?”
‘I’d
settle for some more of that spiced cocoa.” Kasumi smiled.
Moira
gave her a half hug. “Coming right up.”
~~/*\~~
The
music came again at the bonfire. A single pan-flute warbling a
haunting, sweet melody. Kasumi said a silent prayer of thanks for her
now-photographic memory. She knew she’d never get this tune
recorded, and she would miss it when it was gone. She took the whole
moment in.
The
smell of the smoke in the air. The taste of the spices on her tongue.
The smoothness of the silk wrap around her arms. The rough bark of
the bench she sat on. The chill of night mist in the air. The play of
light and dark between the fire, and the moonlight. The motion of the
dancers casting shadows...
Father,
I love it.
Kasumi thought to herself in prayer. I
love it all. Thank you for this moment. I ask You let me remember it
always as it is. Let me keep it forever, safe in my memory. Let me
hoard these moments as treasure, so that a million years from now, I
can take them out and look at them like pictures in my albums…
She
felt a tap on her shoulder. It was Hugh.
“Hello.”
She was surprised. “Forget something?”
Hugh
leaned closer and put a soft kiss on her forehead. “Everything you
said was exactly true. I can’t imagine not talking to you every day
either.”
“Really?”
She heard a note of hope in her voice, and it surprised her. She
hadn’t expected it to come so strongly.
“You
know why I like traveling with these people? It’s because they’re
totally different from the way everyone else travels. I like that
these things exist side by side in the world. Holographic terminals
and hand written letters. Solar trains and horse drawn carts. Airship
farms and backyard orchards. Mobile computers and carved hand tools.
The whole spectrum of the human race is in harmony here. I like being
welcome in both worlds.”
“I
like that too.”
“The
world isn’t static. The people are, but the world isn’t. For all
our long lives, we keep changing things. I think that we keep trying
new variations until we hit the one that works. Soothy, he keeps
experimenting, keeps trying… You watch his work over the course of
decades, and it grows, literally as trees do. Decades of patient
time, just to see if what he’s made is what he wanted to make.
Construction, architecture… They put up towers, and redesign them,
reimagine them… One day we’ll have reached the point where we are
convinced that we got it right, and the world will slow down
dramatically. And when that happens, a new generation will come along
to add their own vision. That’s why I like these people, Kas.
They’re all here because they feel like they’ve found the winning
balance already. A hundred years from now, a thousand, a million; and
Greigor will still be breeding that same bloodline of horses and
towing his caravans.”
“I
just bet he will.” Kasumi nodded. “But I keep looking. Nana
thinks I travel too much, but I’m not running away from anything.
I’m trying to catch it all. Just now, when I was looking at the
bonfire, I wanted to capture that moment and keep it forever. But
there’s a whole planet full of moments, and even if we live
forever, those trees in your front yard won’t. And those mountains
that we’re climbing will not. And those rivers will wear into
canyons and those houses will keep being redone. I have to keep
going, because-”
“-because
you know that eventually the world will slow down, and eternity will
stop being a word and start being a memory.” Hugh finished. “I
like the idea, Kas. I like that I can go west and meet people who are
aiming for the far side of the galaxy. I like that I can go east and
find people living in caravans and tents. Humanity is a mosaic of
everything it could possibly be, and I want to see as much of it as I
can before I finish making my piece of it.”
“Well,
I understand that, but you-”
“No,
my turn to finish a thought now.” He shushed her. “What you said,
about how you wished I was that content with you? What you didn’t
realize is… I am. We talk all the time, even when we’re on
different continents, and I don’t feel like I’ve finished my day
until I’ve spoken to you about it. When you take one of these world
tours and see how things have changed while you were looking at
everything else, I finished my tour and went home to improve my
little piece. In another century, I will do it again. And a century
after that, because sooner or later, everyone will figure out what
they want of it… And I know that I want you to see what I come up
with.”
Kasumi
reached out and hugged him tightly. “Then we’re not saying
goodbye? Because when I saw that ring, I figured you’d found your
place, and when I found out you got the ring from Isobel’s Mother,
I sort of assumed that-”
“You
saw that?” Hugh almost laughed. “That explains a few things. But
you made one mistake… It's not a family heirloom. Moira made it for
me last time I was here. The ring wasn’t for Izzy.”
Kasumi
blinked. “Then who was it… for…”
He
smiled at her.
Kasumi
felt her jaw drop as her heart sped up. “Hugh, we haven’t even
been on an actual date! If you were interested, then why didn’t you
just say so?!”
“I
didn’t get that ring for today,
Kas.” Hugh shushed her. “But I wanted to have it handy, because I
was planning to…” He flushed a little, but got the worlds out
without any further hesitation. “I was planning to tell you how I
felt about you.” He barked out a brief laugh. “I didn’t expect
you to do the honorable thing before I got the chance.”
Kasumi
froze, then reached forward and pulled him into an embrace, kissing
him gently. He returned it instantly, and the world went away for
several moments. “I love you, Hugh.” She said softly.
“I
love you too. We’ve known each other for so many years, but we’ve
never…” Hugh began, then changed his mind. “We’re not just
friends, Kas. Not any more.”
She
nodded. “I don’t think we have been for a long time.” They
still hadn’t stepped away from each other. “Listen,
Hugh… You wanted me to come along. This wasn’t the destination,
was it?”
“I
had the whole thing planned out.” Hugh laughed. “The trip was a
sneaky way for me to meet your family and win them over, and then a
stop up north for you to meet my mom, and then on the return trip I
was going to take us back to the place where we met, dinner on a
beach…”
“You
were hoping to win me over.” Kasumi summed up, pleased.
“I
had no idea that you felt like I did.” Hugh almost laughed.
She
smiled. “Well, we can still do all those things you had planned. I
haven’t seen your mom in a while, and we should probably tell her
this has happened...”
He
smiled back. “I’d like that.”
They
were about to kiss again, when they looked back at the Caravan and
saw Isobel, and Moira, and Martin, all looking at them, blatantly
staring with big goofy grins on their faces.
“Oh,
please!” Isobel said brightly. “Don’t mind us.”
~~/*\~~
Months
passed. Hugh and Kasumi continued their work with the Restoration,
traveling with the Caravan to take the gathered saplings back to
other parts of the country for planting.
The
trip gave the new arrivals a chance to ease their way into the New
World, having conversations with people in small groups along the
way, and by the time they reached Europe again, there were five
people ready for baptism.
The
Caravan had no high-speed communications, as Kasumi pointed out, but
communications had been an important part of the early
reconstruction, and Hugh had been able to send mail back and forth to
his brother. Nick's breakthrough had been the only missing piece in
his studies; and his quick mind had taken to the new ideas like a
fish to water. The future was now a fixed thing in Nick's mind, and
he was eager to make his mark on it.
The
Caravan kept in touch with other communities via posted letters, and
since they were part of the trade and mail network, it was relatively
easy for them to do so. Kasumi had sent a letter back to her family,
detailing what had happened between her and Hugh, and how happy they
were about it.
“Why
not just phone them?” Hugh had asked her.
“I'm
giving you a head start.” Kasumi had told him with a grin. “You've
never seen my sister when someone she knows is dating. She gets...
involved.”
The
'working holiday' had settled into a new routine. The Caravan had a
morning and an evening shift. The roads were now safe and the weather
more temperate at night, and the horses were tireless. The Caravan
made most of its distance during the night, and the people got to
work during the day. They journeyed with their cargo and collected
more or planted what they had as they went, making a careful study of
the forests with the help of their newly returned Woodsmen, who had
never seen so few trees in that part of the world.
They
met with several other groups making the same journey with the same
cargo, trading stories of the rest of the world as they went.
Not
all the news was good. Groups of people determined to keep to their
old beliefs or their old values were springing up all over the place.
Missionary journeys were restarting, going to each of these
communities in an effort to reach out to the Undecided.
It
was becoming clear that the world was taking sides, and while God's
people had the majority, and facts on their side; the number of
people coming back was increasing steadily as more brothers filled
the convention halls across the world, ready to bear witness to them
all.
But
Hugh would always remember that time as being about Kasumi. The two
of them worked together tirelessly, getting to know each other in a
whole new way. Making the transition from close friends to a couple
presented a few moments of awkwardness, but much less than either of
them had worried about.
The
Caravan was made up of people who had been a fairly insular group,
and they knew all about courting with people they'd known their whole
lives. Mama-Moira took both of them under her wing, and her watchful
eye; much to the amusement of Isobel, who was happy for the two first
friends she had made in her New Life.
~~/*\~~
“So,
am I invited to the wedding?”
Kasumi
looked up from her work and was suddenly aware of her surroundings.
Isobel had somehow come over without her noticing, and she realized
everyone else was far enough away that they could speak privately.
“I’m sorry about how I was before.” Kasumi said quietly. “I
honestly didn’t realize I was jealous. I’m still not sure that’s
the word.”
“Funny,
isn’t it?” Isobel grinned. “You’ve been in this world a lot
longer than I have, but I can see that people are different now. That
was harder for me to accept than the idea of A-Day. My entire life,
people had treated me a certain way, and my mother, and her
mother, going back and back and back. I was jealous all the time. Not
of the kids with their homes and their things. I never wanted them. I
was jealous of how they were with each other. I spent my life with a
sign hanging over my head telling the world I was different, and
should be treated as such. The few times I was with other kids, they
found out I was a ‘gypsy’ and thought I’d steal stuff, or that
I could put a curse on them. You and Hugh were the first people I met
with none of that. Jealousy is an emotion. And emotions usually have
a cause. But here in Neverland, it just never seems to take root. Not
like I was used to. Jealousy was so familiar that I actually felt
like something was wrong when I didn’t have it any more.”
Kasumi
reached out and took her hand. “I’m sorry if I made you feel that
way again.”
“Nah,
I’m fine.” Isobel shook her head. “I had a thick skin in OS,
and this world is so much kinder than anything else I’ve ever
known.”
“Thank
you for being… gracious about this.”
“Well
that’s the thing, Kas. We were never competing. He came with us a
few years ago, but he wasn't looking to stay.” She smiled. “Mama
offered. Did he tell you that?”
“He
did.”
“It
would have been a good life, with him. But I could never leave the
Caravan. And if he came with me, then he’d enjoy the life, but he’d
have to give up everything else, so it was never really an option,
and I knew it ever since I saw you two together all those years ago.”
She gave Kasumi a look. “And you were the one that helped him bring
his brother into the family. Nothing we could say or do that would
stack up against that. I know, because he told me he loved you then.”
Kasumi
looked down, a little embarrassed. “I had no idea.”
“I
asked him what he was waiting for, and he said that he didn’t think
you’d say yes. I'm glad he got past that point.”
“Why
did he think I’d turn him down?”
“Well,
you’d have to ask him that, but based on our conversations, I think
he was embarrassed about the way he reacted to you when you first
met. Plus, you studied with him, which made you off-limits that way
for a while…”
“Time.
That was all in the past.” Kasumi commented. “Time conquers all.”
Isobel
nodded. “I think he believed that you wouldn’t ever settle, stay
in one place with one person. Hugh’s halfway like us. He likes to
explore, but he likes coming home more. People like me? We never
leave home, because we take it with us.”
Kasumi
smiled softly. “Hugh and I talked about it yesterday… I like
coming home too, I just don't feel like I belong there… But
traveling with Hugh? I always feel like that.”
“I
figured. Hugh said that if you were still on your own after two
centuries, then it meant you didn’t want to settle down. But Mama
said that if you hadn’t settled, it would be because you were
waiting for something. Hugh decided to take a chance and hope that
the something was him.”
Kasumi
smiled a little, then paused. “Wait. That night, when I thought he
was saying goodbye… He went over to talk to you right away. If he’d
been planning this for that long-”
“-then
what did he need to talk to me about?” Isobel grinned. “You’re
gonna love this. Your little speech about how content and happy he
was with us? He wanted to make sure I wasn't thinking the same thing.
He had been working up to telling you for months, and he paused to
make sure he wasn’t breaking my heart.”
Kasumi
winced, not knowing how to ask.
Isobel
swatted her. “Oh, honestly you two. You guys were the first ones I
met when I came back. You were the first ones to tell me that me and
my family would never be suspect, or unwanted or unwelcome ever
again. And then you proved it by treating me like part of the family.
You think there's anything you could say or do that would make me
unhappy about you two getting a happily ever after?”
Kasumi
smiled warmly and gave her a tight hug. “Happily ever after. That
was a fairy tale once, wasn't it?”
Isobel
chuckled. “Now, come on. Finish up here. We have more important
things to do.”
“Such
as?”
“I'm
going to teach you how to dance. Three hundred years is far too long
to put it off, especially if there's going to be Nuptials one day in
your future.”
~~/*\~~
The
routine continued, with Kasumi and Hugh making plans. Everyone
looking to eternity had to make one plan or another, and as the two
of them had been so close, most of their plans had involved each
other already.
The
'working holiday' ended in Europe, where Hugh's mother had moved in
with her own family. She had met Kasumi, of course, and they all
caught up on recent events. She was thrilled to learn Nick had joined
the brotherhood, and that her elder son had found love. Hugh was
still awkward about bringing up the subject with his mother, who had
not chosen to resume her marriage to his father, but it wasn't the
time for that conversation; and they still had all the time in the
world.
Almost
a year after declaring their feelings for each other, Hugh sent Nick
a message, asking him to go to Hugh's house, find the ring, and send
it to them quickly.
~~/*\~~
Nick
looked at his face in the mirror carefully. The graying hair had
vanished, and the lines in his face were receding. His eyes hadn’t
changed, only the face around it. He had made the right decision, and
the proof was in his mirror every morning.
His
phone chimed, and he went to answer it quickly. The newer phones had
gone beyond visual communications and now projected an image of the
other person when set to ‘speaker’.
Hugh
and Kasumi were both visible in the projection, and Nick waved. “Hey,
you two. What time is it there?”
“Late.”
Hugh told him.
“Or
very early, depending on your point of view.” Kasumi put in. “Nick,
you’re looking good.”
“Better
than I have in years.” Nick returned with a smile. “I’m glad
you called. I’m finished with the questions. I’m to be baptized
at the next opportunity. It’s scheduled for next weekend.”
“You’re
having your convention that soon? I thought that still a few months
away.”
“It
is.” Nick nodded. “But so many people are coming back now,
they’re expanding baptismal opportunities to beyond conventions.
Every week, we meet at the river. Prayers, the Dedication Talk,
songs, and then a hundred people wade into the water.”
Hugh
winced. “Which means we might not get there in time.”
Kasumi
wasn't even surprised. It wasn't the first time she'd been there for
someone making a decision, but missed the baptism. “Take pictures?”
“The
whole thing is being recorded as a standard now, for ones that can't
make it or haven't returned yet. And Rachel's using the opportunity
to test some new type of camera, one with a 360 angle.”
“Rachel?”
Hugh observed blandly. “That's nice.”
Nick
winced a little at the teasing tone. “I can tell them I want to put
it off until you can be here…”
“No,
it’s okay. This isn’t something that you do according to other
people’s schedules.” Hugh said immediately.
“I’m
very glad you think so, because as it happens, I’m putting together
a missionary tour of my own. I leave as soon as-”
“Wait.
What?!” Kasumi sqwaked. “You’re not even dunked yet, and you’re
planning your ministry?”
Nick
chuckled. “Those people I told you about? The ones that are setting
up their own community? They sought me out because they thought I
was... like them. I have to go and tell them what I decided, and why.
I have to try and convince them.” He sighed. “What I said, about
how the Great Return is accelerating? There is a downside to that.
It’s not just that we’re busy…”
Hugh
nodded. “The ones that aren’t accepting the New Deal are able to
meet up and get organized.”
“Right.”
Nick nodded. “That Island is actually a small town compared to
what’s building. Missionary Tours are starting again all over the
place.” He spread his hands wide. “It’s one of the few places
in the world that still needs a graveyard. I can’t stay here and
congratulate myself for looking young again.”
“Other
than that, how’s things back in Brooklyn?”
“You
know how things are in Brooklyn. Tours come through, we're helping
identify people for the Tree. I went back to school; Alec tore his
place apart again… Mom called.”
Hugh
nodded. “She was glad to hear you'd made a decision.”
Nick
rubbed his eyes a bit. “Just between us, I don't think she expected
me to make the right choice. I think that's why I heard so little
from her. She was preparing for the bad news that she'd outlived her
kid...”
“Again.”
Hugh put in grimly.
“Let's
see, what else... There's been a call for volunteers to build a
Concert Hall.” Nick told them. “Some of the Music Greats out of
history have been Returned, and they put their heads together to
create a concert hall that was 'acoustically perfect' or so the
notice said. I'm not sure who's backing it, but it sounds like
they're pulling out all the stops.” Nick ran out of news. “How
are things for you? Kasumi, you come to your senses and drop him
yet?”
Kasumi
and Hugh traded a secret smile. “You tell me.” She said and held
up her hand, including the glimmering ring.
~~/*\~~
“And
she said yes?” Alec blurted.
“Of
course she did!” Nick snorted. “They both seemed pretty happy
about it too.” He looked up at Alec. “You think it’s too soon?
They’ve only been together for...”
“Nick,
they’ve been together a hundred years.” Alec told him honestly.
“Take it from someone who was there the day they met, if not in the
room.” He paused. “Why? You don’t approve?”
“I
like Kas a lot. And it’s clear how important she is to my brother,
but… I don’t know, it feels strange that they went from admitting
feelings to engagement in one trip.”
“You
said yourself that casual dating is a thing of the past. They aren’t
strangers who had a whirlwind holiday, they’ve been close for
centuries. Literally, known each other in two different centuries
now.”
“I
guess.” Nick admitted. “I don’t really… I mean, I’m new to
the brotherhood; I grant you, but is this how it works now?”
“How
it works is as varied as people are.” Alec grinned. “A lot of the
best bible examples of a good marriage were arranged, or at least
decided quickly. And that’s not even counting the millions of
married couples in history that didn’t even meet until their
wedding day. Political alliances, financial motives… Some cultures
in history wouldn’t even consider marrying without a dowry, or
without approval of the local leaders.” Alec smiled. “Your
brother and Kasumi have decided that in a world that will keep
evolving forever, they refuse to let anything come between them
again. I’ve heard a lot worse reasons than that.”
“My
brother wasn’t exactly a ladies man, which was unusual for a flyboy
‘Over There’.” Nick commented. “Forever is such an incredibly
long time, Alec.”
“Not
so long as you think.” Alec chuckled. “Look at the time-line of
your life, and you’ll find several moments that are ‘before’
and ‘after’. Hugh’s looked at all the ‘before’ moments and
wished he had Kasumi there for them. He’s looking at the ‘after’
moments and decided that they’re better when she’s around.
Forever doesn’t change the fact that we only deal with one day of
our lives at a time, and they want the other there.”
Nick
pulled out his device and started tapping at the screen.
“What
are you doing?”
“Taking
notes. I’m going to have to give a speech at some point, being
brother of the groom.”
Alec
laughed happily.
“Come
to think of it, I haven’t been to a wedding since I came back.”
Nick suddenly thought aloud. “How does it work now? We don’t need
a celebrant to perform ceremonies if we have actual angels… What
does a Japanese/American wedding even look like? Do we still bother
with any of these cultural things? All the old laws are void… Do we
have Certificates now?”
Alec
waved him down. “Slow down, brother. One thing that hasn’t
changed, the bride decides all these things. As a future in law, your
job is to show up to the wedding and wear what her mother picks out
for you.” He settled. “But to answer your question: Even in OS,
where these things weren’t ‘just known’; The Bible had specific
things to say on how a husband and wife were to be, and very little
to say on the ceremonies involved. A lot of the things you found in
the typical weddings back in OS had pagan origins, but that’s not a
problem any more.”
“My
brother’s getting married.” Nick said, as though trying out the
words. “I’m gonna have a sister-in-law… Yikes! I’m gonna be
‘Uncle Nick’ to someone!”
Alec
laughed.
Nick
settled back in his chair. “You know, back in OS, when I was in
Sunday School? I asked how it was possible that the whole human race
came from one pair. The priest didn’t know, and told me if it
wasn’t in the Catechism, then it was a mystery that wasn’t of
importance. When I got old enough to understand such things, I
assumed it was just one of the ways that God didn't make sense.”
“The
reason it was possible was because that First Pair were perfect, or
pretty close to it when they started making babies. It’s why people
in bible times lived so long, but less so when it got toward the
end.” Alec answered automatically. “Laws about inter-marrying
didn’t get put in place until much later, once the gene pool had
spread out a bit.”
“Here’s
an unsettling question.” Nick observed. “If our genes are all
perfect again, does that mean that particular commandment is
rescinded now?”
Alec
chuckled. “Interesting thought.”
Easy
silence.
“My
brother’s getting married.” Nick said with a grin.
~~/*\~~
Kasumi
logged onto the Collective. The transport ship that was taking them
home had room for passengers, their bags, and even some of the trees
that they had collected for the Restoration. Like almost everywhere
else, there was a link to the Databases of the world, and Kasumi
started searching.
“What
are you looking up?” Hugh asked when he brought her lunch in from
the Galley. “Hoping to set a date?”
Kasumi
grinned. “In the old days we could have had the captain do it.”
Kasumi grinned. “No such thing as unclaimed waters now, given that
we don't have any governments left.” She shook her head. “Actually,
I'm looking up land allotments.”
“We've
already gotten ours. Admittedly, we'll have to figure out what we'll
do with them when we're married, but that's not a unique problem...”
“Everyone
is assigned a piece of land for themselves.” Kasumi explained. “But
we both know that a lot of people make use of their allotment for
purposes other than self-support. There are no small number of people
who actually trade their homes back and forth.”
“Really?”
“I
met one of them many years ago. There’s a co-op of sorts. They all
have their own allotments across the world, and they sort of… trade
them back and forth. Want to live in another land for a century or
two? Someone over there is thinking the same thing; and so you just
switch. Think of it like a timeshare that lasts for years instead of
weeks. Plus, we aren’t the only couple marrying. If two people want
to merge their allotments, then it stands to reason that other people
do too. Some use them for work-spaces, others for growing, others as
halfway or holiday homes...”
He
came over. “You’re looking for a double?”
“Why
not?”
“No,
I agree.” He nodded. “I’m just wondering where we’ll end up.”
“You
don’t want to stay in Brooklyn? I traveled a lot more than you
have, and if you’re in love with this side of the world, it makes
sense that I be the one to move, since you’re more established with
the Cong, with the district... You’ve got trees and orchards. I
don’t.”
“Yeah,
but with everyone speaking the same language now, and money less of
an issue… I’m a pilot and flight instructor. I’m used to doing
my job wherever I am, and it’s a profession that travels well.”
Hugh thought briefly of his home, almost nostalgic. “You know, I
never did half as much with this place as I could have.”
“It
shows.” Kasumi commented. “Those pre-fabs were meant as temporary
housing until everyone found a place of their own. I can hear the
floors creaking every time you walk on them.” She looked over. “Why
didn’t you make your dream house, like everyone else?”
“Because
I had no idea what to do with it.” Hugh confessed. “All the years
you spend figuring out what you like, what your favorite music is,
the kind of art you’d hang on the walls… I was military. Until I
got here, I lived in my parents house, and then the base. I never had
a home that I could hang a picture in, so I just… Never bothered.”
“That
would have been fine a century ago, but I daresay there’s a reason
other than ‘not bothering’.”
“True.
I think I was waiting for something.”
“Like
what?”
Hugh
smiled softly as the ship took them home. “You.”
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