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Flytrap Page 5


  Mona was overwhelmed with gratitude. “Oh, Elasa--”

  “As if we need a pretext. Let's go.”

  They took a commercial flight, being associates rather than the main figures of this event. As far as the media knew, Mona had visited briefly with her friend while Brian and the animals got on with the key business.

  The media were full of it already. The receiver above their seat on the plane was tuned to the breaking news and commentary. “The exchangees are at it again. Shepherd and Elen are the ones who communed with the sheep of Colony Planet Jones and announced that two newsworthy items would appear: the discovery of an air-breathing squid, and a volcano in the Everglades. We all know how that turned out.” The newscaster smiled ruefully; he had been among the skeptics. “Now they are back with another publicity ploy: they say they will rescue the child lost in the Everglades. Because they were sent by those same sheep.” He paused meaningfully. “Can they be correct? Or are they simply cashing in on the publicity, to get more money for the Colony?”

  “The nerve!” Mona exclaimed. “None of this is for money!”

  Other passengers overheard her. “The woman and the robot!” one said.

  Damn! Now they were in for it. She and Elasa had to smile and nod as if they appreciated the sudden cynosure. Next they would be asked for autographs.

  The stewardess murmured into her mike.

  “We are encountering turbulence,” the pilot announced on the speaker system as the plane swerved. “Passengers secure their seat belts and put away loose items.”

  “Bless him!” Elasa murmured. She caught the eye of the stewardess and smiled, silently thanking her.

  The plane went into sharp maneuvers that were enough to distract the other passengers. By the time those cleared they were in the descent for landing. The passengers had to remain in their seats.

  Meanwhile the news continued. “And it's some show they are putting on. They have a python, a vulture, and a little lamb, all taken from a local sanctuary. They claim that the lamb is one of the precognizant sheep. Really? That lamb was birthed right here on Earth. And the man, said to be exchanged from Jones but in the body of Amber Shepherd, also of Earth, is setting up to play some weird musical instrument based on the kazoo. How can that relate to the rescue mission?”

  The mirliton, which was actually a far cry from a kazoo. Brian could play it like a flute. Mona was smarting from the implication of incompetence.

  They went on to remark on the folly of wasting money supporting such antics, when there were so many better uses for it. And of course there were the instant jokes. “A vulture, a python, and a lamb walk into a bar...” Mona turned it off. But she wondered. Was Brian really about to play the mirliton? Why? Bunky must be guiding him, but it still did not seem to relate.

  They landed, and were whisked to the scene of the lost child. Sure enough, not only was Brian standing in the street playing the mirliton, a media man had a mike and amplifier, and it was being broadcast throughout the area. He was playing Grieg again, “Hall of the Mountain King.” It was vibrant and moving and absolutely beautiful. Neighbors were coming out to listen. But why?

  Mona and Elasa approached Brian, not interrupting his serenade. They did not see Python. Then Vulture took wing and flew down the street. Bunky skipped along after the big bird, Brian followed the lamb, and the media folk followed him. It was like a weird parade.

  They could imagine the fun the media commentators were having with this spectacle. How long would this farce continue? The media were always happy to facilitate celebrities making fools of themselves, but attention spans were short and other spectacles would be beckoning.

  Vulture landed beside a manhole cover. Bunky joined him, pawing at it with a hoof. A workman appeared and hauled up the heavy lid.

  “Get a light down there,” Mona called.

  A man lowered a bright lantern. There was a cry from the recesses, as of a child.

  Mona was there before she realized, agile because she was no longer pregnant. She found the rungs of a metal ladder and descended into the illuminated hole. There to the side was the child, a muddy little boy. She reached forth and took him in. In moments she had him on the street, and the cameras surrounded them. They had recovered the lost child.

  “You better see this!” the man with the light called. A camera detached to go to him, and soon there was a holo projection above, of the scene below. A python and an alligator were locked in mortal combat.

  Mona had the wit to get the boy's statement while the cameras were on them. “What happened?”

  “I got lost,” the little boy said. “It was dark but I could see. The gator came after me. Then I heard the music and knew I would be found. The snake tackled the gator and I got away.”

  Brian put his head down into the hole. “Python! Let it go. Come up here. The job's done.” The Lamb bleated, as if translating.

  “There you have it,” Mona told the cameras in her trial-summation voice. “The boy crawled into the sewer system, not the Everglades. He couldn't find his way out. That's why he was not being located by the search party. But the alligator found him. Python saved him from that, and Vulture led us to them. All because of the Lamb's precognition; he knew where the boy would be found. That's why we had to bring them to Earth, in a hurry. We knew there was no time to argue with doubting media folk.”

  Python emerged from the manhole. Mona set the boy down, reassuring him, and he went to pet the big snake. He knew Python had saved his life. The cameras took it all in.

  That's how the child's parents found them, as they rushed back from the everglades. It was an international incident, but a positive one. Thanks to the Lamb.

  “One thing I don't understand,” Mona murmured when they had a private moment. “Why the music?”

  “This is Earth. Bunky no longer has the telepathic support of his dam. The lamb is a foreign host, one not naturally telepathic. He needed an assist.”

  “The Ewe was bolstering him on Jones!” Mona said. “I never thought of that.”

  “Neither did I, until I saw him falter. Then I caught on. Music has power, especially when there's telepathy; Elen told me that. They used music to fend off the vampires, as well as the shielding. So I made music, and it extended his range. Then Python and Vulture could go out; as long as they heard the music, they were in touch with Bunky. That made it work.”

  “The boy said when he heard the music, he knew he would be found. Bunky reached him too!”

  “Yes. The Lamb was the center of the operation. But he's young yet.”

  “He'll get better as he grows.”

  The evening news was filled with pictures of the rescue, with dramatic background music: Grieg, “Hall of the mountain King,” which had become abruptly popular, and with interviews with Mona and Brian. The skeptics had to eat dirt, again, and financing of Colony Jones administration was assured, as was the continuing administration of Amber Shepherd. There was just nothing like the peril and rescue of a child to compel public attention.

  But the best was the cartoonist who had been there for Elasa, and for Elen and the sheep. It was a picture of a happy little boy posed with a lamb, a huge python on one side, an ugly vulture on the other, like deadly guardians. Beneath it were the words WASTED MONEY. The irony was huge.

  Chapter 5:

  Ogre

  Elasa opened her eyes and looked around. “It worked!” she exclaimed, relieved. She was in an unfamiliar office, along with a pregnant young woman, an amiable young man, and the three animals.

  “Elasa?” Mona asked. She had exchanged at the same time, and now was back in Elen's pregnant body.

  “Yes. I thought it should work, since it is consciousness and memory that is exchanged, but it's never been done on a machine before, so I had a nagging doubt.”

  “You remember the personhood hearing?”

  “How could I ever forget it. You made it possible, Mona.” Of course Mona was trying to verify that Elasa's exchange really ha
d occurred. “Also my baby. You would have married my man to take care of Bela, if I hadn't come back.” That was something that was not in the public record.

  Satisfied, Mona turned to the unfamiliar man before them, evidently a naval officer. “Your witness, Mike.”

  “Indeed,” the man agreed. “Elasa, you are now hosted by the body of one of our ship fembots. That machine answers to me. Show me that you are independent of it. That you actually are conscious.”

  “Readily,” Elasa said, smiling. “Give your machine an order.”

  “Fembot, return to your storage closet in the ship. Now.”

  “Forget it, Mike. I haven't obeyed any such order since I achieved my personhood back on Earth. I'm a civilian, not subject to military discipline, regardless of my host.”

  He acted affronted. “You can't talk to me that way!”

  “The hell I can't, Mike. Get lost.”

  Mike smiled. “That's definitely not our robot. She is incapable of any such responses.”

  “You bet,” Mona agreed. “Elasa is conscious and self-willed, the only machine known to be so. Thank you, Mike; we'll take good care of the body.”

  “I am sure you will.”

  They released the three animals from their cages, which were of course no longer required, and departed his office. Elasa blinked as she viewed the planet outside. It was really quite different from Earth.

  “Now comes the hard part,” Mona said. “Abolishing the male vampires. I understand that the journey there is hazardous.”

  “How do we even find it?” Brian asked. “Only the sheep know the safe way. Elen was listed as guide, but she depended on the sheep to prevent them from getting killed.”

  Then the Ewe appeared. They paused while Bunky nursed.

  “And there's the answer,” Brian said. “The Ewe will lead us. She has to come along anyway, to nurse Bunky.”

  “Obvious in retrospect,” Mona agreed.

  But Elasa was not quite satisfied. “You have filled me in on the general gist,” she said. “But there remain things I don't understand.”

  “Such as?”

  “Why do the sheep always take along a human couple? They could travel more readily by themselves, or just with selected animals like Vulture and Python. Or an ape to peddle the boat across the water.”

  Mona considered. “I don't know. Maybe the villagers do. We can ask the village elder.”

  “Let's do that. We need to know exactly what we are getting into.”

  Bunky finished nursing. The Ewe did not depart immediately instead she faced Elasa. And made a bow.

  Surprised, Elasa bowed back. Then the Ewe left.

  “She bowed to you!” Brian said.

  “It's not a common courtesy to welcome a newcomer?”

  “It is not,” Mona said. “She bowed to me, before. I learned that that was only the second time a sheep had done that, ever. You must be special too.”

  “Well, I'm the only conscious robot.”

  “I don't think the sheep care about that,” Brian said. “They care only about themselves. I think this means that just as Mona has a significant role to play in the welfare of the sheep, so do you.”

  “So this mission must be really important to the sheep,” Elasa said. “As we already know.”

  Mona shook her head. “I think it must be more than that. I'm picking up indications from Bunky. There's something larger going on, that only the sheep know about.”

  Elasa nodded. “What would your father say?”

  Mona smiled. Moncho always got straight to the point. “Find out what, first.”

  “Let's ask the village elder about that, too.”

  They trekked to the center of the village. The elder was seated outside his house, as before.

  “This is Elasa, of Earth,” Mona said. She did not mention the machine aspect, as they did not want to advertise it. “She has questions, if you care to answer.”

  The elder smiled. Elasa was a beautiful woman, and not pregnant. “A pleasure.”

  “I just met a grown sheep, a ewe,” Elasa said. “For is, the Ewe. She bowed to me. I understand that's unusual.”

  “It is,” the elder said. “It is almost unheard of. It may be a mark of respect for some future association. They are precognitive.”

  “But I am here only for a week. Then I will exchange back to Earth, and probably not visit this world again.”

  “They know. They are sheep, not smart, but they know. Your future commands their respect.”

  “Thank you. My other question relates to the ram's island. I understand the ewes go there once a year to breed, and that they normally recruit a human couple to accompany them. But why? They don't seem to need humans for anything else; why bother with them for that?”

  “That is one of their mysteries,” the elder said. “Normally when the trip is done, the humans and animals separate from the sheep and have no further interaction with them. The several species leave each other entirely alone the rest of the time. Their bringing a lamb to be with a human is a remarkable divergence from that pattern; these are interesting times. I can only conjecture that something extraordinary is in the making. What it is, only the sheep know, if they know.”

  “If they know?”

  “An I said, they're not smart, but they are remarkably savvy. I think they follow trails through the jungle, knowing that they go to desirable places. To them the future is a jungle, and they follow a trail. They may not know exactly where it goes, just that it's the right trail. We will surely learn where it leads in due course.”

  “That's sensible,” Elasa said, smiling prettily. “Thank you.”

  The elder shook his head. “You are lovely. I would never have taken you for a machine.”

  “You know?” Elasa asked, not thrilled.

  “I did the supply ship captain a favor, once long ago. He returned it by sending a fembot for a night. I know that body well. But I also know the difference between a program and a conscious person. You're a person.”

  Elasa laughed, relieved. “Thank you.”

  “I will not mention this aspect elsewhere.”

  “Thank you,” she repeated. Then she kissed him. He did not react, but she knew he really liked it.

  They moved on. Elasa remained troubled. What could be in her future that the sheep found so significant?

  “So it seems we'll have to work out the rationale for the human participation ourselves,” Mona said.

  “Yes, I think we'd better. Mysteries are unsafe. Meanwhile I will need a supply of flesh blood, pheromones, and poison.”

  “The local butcher should be able to help.”

  They went to the butcher, and he agreed to sell them some blood. He also had pheromones and poison, which he used to doctor bits of meat for thieving animals to find. He would have a fresh batch in the morning.

  At their house they made the animals comfortable, then settled down for a serious three way discussion. Why did the sheep require human beings along on their breeding trip? There had to be a solid reason. What could it be?

  “Something else I don't properly understand,” Elasa said. “Colony Jones has breathable atmosphere and edible plants and animals, albeit with some highly significant differences from those of Earth. Did they somehow interbreed with native species to produce things like the remarkable sheep?”

  “There are no native species,” Brian said. “Jones was colonized by Earth fifty years ago. They called the ship that brought all the animals, plants, and bacteria Noah's Ark.”

  Now Mona was surprised. “How did they diverge so widely, then? The sheep may look like Earth sheep, but they have defensive knives and precognition. And the people, Elves, for example.”

  “Humans, Elves, Ogres, Fairies, Goblins, that we know of,” Brian said. “They can all interbreed, but they are quite different.”

  “Natural evolution can hardly account for that,” Mona said. “Not in fifty years.”

  “Well, there was ExplEvo.”


  “There was what?”

  “I forgot you're not native. That's Explosion Evolution. It comes and goes like HiLo, only less often. There was one about five years after the colonization. That's when the present diversity occurred.”

  “That's interesting,” Elasa said. “Before I exchanged I downloaded the files on Colony Jones. There was nothing of that nature therein. In fact there seemed to be missing files relating to its early history.”

  “I don't think Earth even knew about Jones until the last decade,” Brian said. “It wasn't considered a colony.”

  “What was it, then?” Mona asked sharply.

  “A scientific or military experiment. I think they wanted to see what happened if an assortment of plants and animals was settled on an Earth-like planet and then left alone. But finally they had to recognize it as a colony, thanks to the influence of the sheep, and now we even get exchange students.” He smiled at Mona.

  “Who are studying precognition,” Elasa said.

  “I'm surprised the military didn't clamp down on that,” Mona said. “If ever a discovery had military significance, it's precognition.”

  “Well, I don't think they took it seriously,” Brian said. “Not until the sheep predicted those discoveries on Earth. Now it's too late; the cat's out.”

  “Let's get back to the original question,” Elasa said. “Why do the sheep require human beings along on their breeding excursions?”

  “Well, there's a peddle-raft they use to cross to the island,” Brian said. “The sheep can't work it. Humans can.”

  “Or an ape, as I said. Or a regular hireling. Or a robot.”

  The others shrugged, not knowing.

  Elasa remained unsatisfied. “Couldn't they make a bridge, or a sheep handle-able craft?”

  “No. Then the rams would cross, and be after the ewes full-time. So it has to be something the sheep can't do alone.”

  “So back to the question: why a human couple? Couldn't two women do the job?”

  The others looked at her, startled. “Two women?” Mona said. “I suppose they could. But the sheep insist on a man.”

  “Why?”

  “We don't know,” Brian said. “It's just always been that way.”