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STILL MORE SYNOPSIS!
I had
originally thought of beginning this series 'in media res', (as Horace
recommends!) and allowing Readers to discover the odd practices of this strange
society for themselves as the tale unfolds. On second thoughts, I concluded
that this might be a little too much of an imposition, and this further
synopsis is intended to give those Readers who have persisted so far a basic
introduction to my imaginary world.
This is a planet much the same as Earth, but
far older. Its mountains have been worn down, its great rivers wind and twist
placidly across its continents on their way to the quiet oceans, and the
temperature gradients across its latitudes are now too gentle to provide the
energy for the storms of younger planets. Climactically quiescent, its temperatures
varied from averages of eighty degrees on its Equator to forty at the poles,
though its ice caps still return in the Winters.
Its species of flora and fauna, pitifully few
and lacking in variety by the teeming standards of Earth, cover the normal
range: marine life forms in the seas; trees, bushes and grasses, worms and
insects, birds and animals on land, but in only a very few varieties of type.
The sole large mammal on the planet is a two-legged creature whose possession
of a ludicrously large brain and opposable thumbs has won it the chief place
amongst its few would-be competitors. This creature terms itself Man or human
beings, and its species Mankind or humanity. But it is only the males of this
species who reserve for themselves this description, the far more numerous
females they call Women,* and they are so different as to be almost a different
life-form. They are bigger and stronger than the males, though with life-spans
a mere fraction of theirs at about seven years as opposed to about eighty.
There are other, more significant differences between the sexes. The brains of
the females, although as large or larger than those of Men, are severely
limited. Unlike human beings they cannot converse either by telepathy or simple
speech, lacking the mental capacity to do so even if their primitive
voice-boxes could cope. They have no opposable thumbs, nor, indeed, digits of
any description on their blunt fore paws upon which they walk by preference, although they can and do
stand upright upon their hind-legs at need.
*Or beasts, or animals. The word is the same
in both their (single) spoken language and their mental one.
The men, or human beings, of this planet are
uneasily aware that, despite their manifest superiority over these animals,
they are essentially parasitic upon them, for they rely on them for a constant
supply of new human beings i.e. male babies. But, for reasons they can only
speculate about, the vast majority of births are those of foals, female animals.
During the yearly birthing season they must search amongst the scattered herds
of wild women which roam their continents for the precious male babies. The
superficially easier method of breeding from domesticated women was long ago
found not to work; no human being has ever been born to tamed women, and even
the females born to them deteriorate physically over two generations. (Indeed,
it is for this reason that periodic raids are made upon the herds to replace
the stock of domestic animals.)
And now I must mention a subject the human
beings of this planet found uncomfortable; that is, their essential part in the
propagation of their species. No longer are they physically obliged to carry
this out on each individual animal (fortunately a woman, once impregnated,
continued to give birth for the few years of its breeding period; it would
continously produce milk, too) as less inconvenient means had been discovered.
But they must make sperm donations at regular periods, and all of them had
experienced sexual intercourse with women as a youthful experiment, always with
a young and reasonably attractive animal once she'd been cleaned up. And some
of them continued this practice -- which was regarded as vaguely perverse --
long into middle age.
Human beings are equally dependent upon their
animals for meat, for clothing which they make from their pelts and woven hair,
and for their milk from which they manufacture plastics and pharmaceuticals
along with many other useful things. On a planet so metal-poor as theirs, women
are used as draught animals, to pull their carts and ploughs, to pump their
water and to generate their electricity; in short, to perform all the tasks
motors are employed to do on Earth.
This is not to say that the men of this planet
are ignorant of such machines. On the contrary, they discovered their
mechanical principles long ago and only the paucity of sufficient metals and
the non-existence of any sort of industrial base prevent their widespread use.
They do have personal, portable computers cum mobile message senders, but they
are crudely constructed and somewhat unreliable; necessarily the case when each
man must assemble and programme his own machine. They have ships, powered by
the wind and by great paddle wheels turned by teams of women trudging around
deep in the holds, and they have airships too, though they are few and rarely
seen. They have a, more or less, efficient (by their own happy-go-lucky
standards) land transport network for both goods and people, the former bring
powered by great teams of the biggest and strongest animals and the latter by
smaller teams of swifter animals (the so-called 'pacers'). Passenger travel
operates on a rough and ready timetable, honoured more in the breach than the
observance, and is the subject of universal complaint. But no-one ever does
anything about it: this is, after all, a purely male society; ramshackle,
slovenly and badly organised, relying on solving its problems at the very last
moment by feats of brilliant improvisation rather than taking the obvious steps
to resolve them by timely and obvious action. Their chief advantage over the
human beings of Earth is their telepathic ability and their general mental
powers. Together, enough of them can generate enough power to move objects
physically over great distances, although the after-effects are physically and
mentally debilitating. For the last few years they have been operating a series
of mental probes deep into time and space. This they call the 'Dimension Gate';
it allows them to view creatures and events on other planets, and even to bring
back small objects for further study. The whole operation takes but little
power, and there are nearly always enough men sufficiently interested to
volunteer their mental efforts on a regular basis.
Another invention as yet unknown on Earth was
their mechanical servants whom they collectively called 'Androids'; robots of
human shape, hand-assembled and programmed at home by each individual man and
as cranky and dubiously efficient as their computers. It was to these whom they
deputed the disagreeable task of artificially impregnated the women in the
short period each year when the animals came onto heat. They helped in other
ways too, cleaning their houses, looking after their animals and helping around
their farms, but all in a somewhat slipshod fashion. But this was, after all, a
solely male society in which what was near enough was good enough!
It was the Dimension Gate which provided the
hero, 'Gershon', of my tale's official position in his society. In between
farming his land and caring for his animals -- as nearly all men must -- he was
second in seniority at the grandly entitled 'Faculty of XenoAnthropology' at
the prestigeous 'Institute', the oldest Higher Education facility on the planet,
rivalled only by the newer Eastern and Western Universities on the neighbouring
continents. His Faculty was a newcomer, founded by Sisath, his older superior,
who had argued for its essential existence for the study of intelligent life,
if and when it was ever found, which some doubted. Despite the heated
objections of the already existing Faculty of XenoBiology, who argued that
their own remit adequately covered such an eventuality, Sisath, an elderly,
irascible and energetic man, got his way, and Gershon, who had been one his
students, had immediately been co-opted as second in command of the new and
tiny Faculty. Alas! No such intelligence had yet been found on any of the
twenty planets the Dimension Gate had scanned, but the new Faculty attracted
its students none the less. The whole thing was, all agreed, jolly good fun;
and Sisath gave good Dinners and was generous with the contents of his
excellent cellar. And so matters proceeded on this planet where the ratio of
the sexes had long been stabilised at one million widely scattered human beings
to five hundred million women.
My tale opens with an account of the final
days of one of Gershon's obligatory annual expeditions into the interior of the
continent in search of bands of wild women. Each year they must be tracked
down, the new foals collared, and the ones nearing puberty given their adult
collars in exchange. This signalled that the women had been seen and inspected
by a human being, and ensured that any early indications of disease were learnt
of well in advance of its possible spread. Also, of course, it enabled those
men unfortunate enough to have to undergo these tedious tours to compensate
themselves with taking away with them any of the animals they thought might be
useful, either for use on their farms or to barter for accommodation on their
long return journeys.
I hope to develop this theme further, and
would be most grateful for any comments or suggestions.
"PASTORAL
CARE."
CHAPTER ONE
Gershon pulled back on the reins and halted
his cart downwind of the little herd of wild women he'd been tracking for the
last two days. Dismounting, he closed the blinkers over the eyes of the two
women between the shafts and tied their reins to an iron-wood stake he thrust
firmly into the thick turf of the steppe. Satisfied that the animals were
secured, he took his bag and stick and walked away, his nostrils following the
pungent woman-reek emanating from the nearby herd.
He found them two hundred yards away, in one of the innumerable folds on the otherwise
featureless landscape, feeding on the patch of fodder plants usually to be
found in such places. They had been there some days and would soon have to move
on in search of more food; they would have to move for another reason, too, for
Gershon could now smell the distinctive metallic odour of a band of termagants.
These huge, semi-intelligent, carnivorous insects preyed exclusively on women,
but then, Gershon thought, so did a great many creatures, from the flies who
laid their eggs and hatched their larvae under the skin of their backs, up to
the little carrion-eating rodents who devoured what the termagants left,
through the huge insects themselves, to Men, who enslaved these creatures for
their muscles and the products of their bodies; their meat, their pelts, their
hair, and their milk. It had always been so, and always would.
Standing on the crest of the little rise
beyond which was the shallow fold in the ground, Gerson looked down on the
grazing beasts below. As was usual, the women had trampled and fouled as many
of the plants as they'd eaten, though several of the weaker ones were grubbing
about amongst the wreckage, their short muzzles probing the filthy churned-up
soil for any broken fragments they could find. With a practised eye, Gershon
estimated the herd's numbers at about fifty, along with some twenty foals
feeding by their mother's sides. That would be about right, he thought; thirty
or so of the women were of breeding age; all would have dropped their yearly
foal over the last two or three months, and about ten of the foals would have
died in their first month or so of life from one cause or another. The vast
majority of those living were now old enough to take care of themselves, and
most of them would breed at least once after their first and only impregnation;
all of them dropping a foal yearly for their full breeding term of four years.
There were, of course, no human babies amongst them, but he didn't expect any;
such births were rare despite their vital necessity.
Since a human being had last visited the herd
some six of the women had reached puberty and were ready for their adult
collars. But first he would collar the youngest animals, and he walked slowly
down the gentle slope towards the herd, his bag of collars in readiness in one
hand and his stick in the other.
The cattle, as was the way with women, took
little notice of him, continuing to graze on all-fours and only lumbering to
their hind legs in alarm if he came within less than six feet from them. They
would stand and stare down at him with their dull, brown eyes, trying to decide
if he was a threat to them or their offspring. Then a gentle prod with the
pointed end of his stick would persuade even the largest of them to shift from
his path. The mares with the youngest foals were the most nervous; in a typical
defensive mechanism of their kind, they would stand protectively over their
foals and freeze motionless, hoping that their hairless skins, striped and
mottled brown, black and purple under their thick coating of dirt, would enable
them to pass unnoticed by a predator.
But Gershon was well used to dealing with
women. He would stroke their thick bodies gently, talking nonsense words to
them, until they were calm, then allow them to sniff and nuzzle his hand. Then
he would gently push them away and collar their perplexed foal. He would leave
the mare to sniff its daughter's collar suspiciously for the few moments before
all recollection of the event faded from her dull brain.
The last foal he collared was the youngest; a
tiny creature of little more than a month old, no larger than a human baby of
three years. Gershon sighed; so helpless at her age; too heavy for her mother
to carry her to safety and too small and weak to run along beside her in flight
when the nearing termagants struck. Her mother too was unlikely to survive; she
was badly infested by parasites and she had an unhealed gash on her leg. It was
scarcely worth collaring her tiny foal, but he did so anyway; the collar could
always be recovered later.
Then it was the turn of the older beasts. They
were a more difficult proposition, skittish and unpredictable. But they were
impulsively inquisitive at their age, and he only had to pick up a a length of
battered foliage from the mud and they would come to him on all-fours. Then,
while they chewed on his gift, he would remove their first collars and put on
their permanent, adult ones, oddly bulky around their still slender necks. Two
of them were outstanding for their height and strength; they would make good
pacers, fast and enduring between the shafts once they'd been broken to
harness, and those he leashed, intending to take them with him and barter them
on his long journey back for his food and lodging. As an after thought, he also
leashed one of the bigger foals, at three months old as tall as a six year old
human being. She he intended to cover the price of his stay at the first Inn he
came to. It was nicely plump, and it would make good eating when she was slaughtered.
He left the herd, climbing the slope with the
three women leashed behind him. After their normal brief resistance, more
puzzled at not being able to wander wherever they wanted than anything else,
they followed docilely enough; women were easy to tame. Even when they crested
the rise and cought the scent of the termagants they came on trustingly, as if
knowing as well as he did that their predators would not -- dare not! -- harm a
human being, nor even approach him.
Once back at his cart, he tethered his three
recent acquisitions to the wooden stake and lowered the rear ramp of his cart.
Down it he wheeled a small, wire-mesh cage, its floor thickly carpeted with the
pulped fodder plants stalled animals were fed upon. Taking up the little woman's
leash, he took her over to the cage and ushered her gently inside. Then he
detached her leash, shut and latched the door, and pushed the cage back up the
sloping ramp. He secured the cage in position on the load-bed of the cart and
closed up the tail-gate, leaving the little animal staring around her and
butting her head tentatively against the bars of her prison, puzzled by her
inability to pass their obstruction, before lowering her blunt snout into her
bedding and beginning to graze, fouling herself as she did.. After leashing the
two younger animals to the rear of the cart, he untethered the women between
the shafts, flipped open their blinkers to the straight-ahead position, and
took his seat behind them, carrying the precious metal stake in his hand. Laying
it safely aside, he whipped his beasts into a slow walk, then into a fast trot.
About a hundred yards on his path, Gershon
decided to return to the scene of his recent exertions to watch the impending
attack by of the termagants upon the herd. Tugging hard on their bits, he urged
his animals round in a big semi-circle and whipped them back in the direction
they'd just come from.
He found himself just in time to observe the
massacre, being able to see the predators take up their positions along the
sides of the little vale where they hid amonst the scattered boulders. The wind
was blowing from him towards them, and they paid him no attention. Then the
carefully prepared trap was sprung.
The first termagant sauntered out into plain
view at the head of the valley; its demeanour casual, almost insolent, as it
walked slowly towards the grazing women on its six legs, its shiny black
carapace gleaming ominously in the sunlight. The women nearest to it caught its
scent and rose to their hind legs in sudden alarm, their foals huddling against
their mothers' legs for protection. At the giant insect's inexorable approach,
their fright spread to the rest of the herd. All the animals were standing
now,and at a further pace from their Nemesis they broke and ran in panic. As
they passed the line of hidden predators, the termagents sprang out at them in
turn, each choosing its prey and leaping at her thighs. A quick slash with a
razor-sharp mandible and the woman was hamstrung. She stumbled and fell;
another leap and the deadly mandibles tore out her throat. Then came the
feasting.
Gershon watched dispassionately as the little
foal and her lame mother were dispatched in the same coldly efficient manner.
The limping woman was carrying her foal; doubly handicapped she was easy prey.
An insect crippled her, and her daughter fell from her arms. Pausing to rip out
the foal's throat in passing, their hunter leapt upon its prostrate mother.
Then the mare's own throat spurted blood; lying on the ground she kicked spasmodically
and died even as her killer was tearing off the first portion of her flesh.
Despite the attack's suddenness, and despite
the efficiency of their hunters, only fourteen corpses remained when the last
of the fleeing women had vanished into the hazy distance. Eleven of them were
of beasts too old or too young to keep pace with the younger and stronger
women; two of the remainder were those of the little foal and its mother. The
skirmish had not been completely one-sided; the fourteenth body was that of an
attacker.Though it had killed its victim, her last, frantic, dying kick had
sent its surprisingly light body somersaulting away to crack its carapace upon
a rock. The green ichor the insects used for blood would not coagulate, and it
had bled to death still tearing at the flesh of its dying prey. The casualties
amongst the cattle were normal, as was their escaping further attacks from this
band of predators. Twelve termagants; twelve victims: the foal's death was by
the way. The insects were much slower than a running woman, nor did they have a
woman's stamina; the only way they could succeed was by ambush, stealth and
guile.
Gershon slapped down the reins on the
shoulders of his pair of patient animals, laid his whip across their broad and
muscular haunches, and drove off on the first stage of his long return journey.