Author's note:
This is chapter four of my series Lost Colony. Most readers should start with chapter one, but if you want to scroll down to the steamy parts, be my guest!
This is a work of (science) fiction. All characters are over age eighteen. Thanks for reading!
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Lost Colony: Chapter 04
***
"I'm telling you, less than fifteen minutes."
"No one knows when exactly, Alain. You're just guessing, making up stories. Like when you told me you were from Earth."
Sparr, Silla, and Efreem were sitting on the temple roof, the night sky spread over them, sprinkled with unfamiliar stars. All three were wrapped in blankets to chase off the breeze slipping down from the surrounding hills.
"I'll bet you," Sparr said. He took a sip from the bottle of spirits and passed it back to Silla. "Less than fifteen."
"Bet what?" Silla asked.
"The rest of the bottle," Sparr said. "If I'm right, I get to finish it. If I'm wrong, I've taken my last sip."
"You know this is my bottle, right?"
"Yeah, but we've been sharing it, so..." Sparr was smiling.
Silla eyed the bottle. "It's more than half gone anyway," she said, shaking her head. "Okay, here." She handed the bottle to Efreem. "You can decide the winner. Just remember, I make your breakfast every morning."
Efreem quietly took the bottle. His health had improved dramatically since Sparr had slipped him the antibiotic just one day earlier. His fever had subsided, and although he was still weakened, the dusky skinned man had been strong enough to climb the ladder to the roof. Like Sparr, he was happy for the respite from the temple's gloomy chambers.
"How do you know when Cheddar will rise?" Efreem asked.
Sparr suppressed a chuckle. Kaybe had two moons, which had been nicknamed Feta and Cheddar, by the teams studying the exoplanet. The names had stuck with Sparr, and he had continued to use them in conversation. That Efreem had taken up the names made them even funnier.
"Let me guess," Silla said. "The all-knowing cube told you."
That was in fact true. Sparr's communicator had been pre-loaded with a subset of mission data, including lunar cycles. Feta circled Kaybe swiftly, much like Earth's moon. The pale, marbled satellite was close and bright. Cheddar, on the other hand, had an achingly slow journey around the planet. The distant, yellow globe was absent for weeks at a time, then upon returning, hung in the sky for weeks more. It was too distant to noticeably affect the tides, but was considered an omen. Only once Cheddar rose would the Origin make their pilgrimage.
"Why wait for Cheddar to rise?" asked Sparr. "The Origin teachings I've heard don't make any reference to the moon or stars."
Efreem spoke up. "Not the Origin. It's older than that. From the Precipice."
"The what? Precipice?"
"Yes. The Origin borrowed from the Precipice."
"It's an older religion," Silla said. "Their teachings are radical, difficult. The Origin picked up on the importance of Cheddar, probably to gain early acceptance."
"I guess it worked," mused Sparr. "I've only ever heard of the Origin."
Silla traded glances with Efreem, who merely shrugged. "Alain, honestly," she said, "the list of things you
have
heard of is pretty short. Maybe you do come from Earth."
Sparr just smiled in what he hoped was an affable expression. Silla, when Sparr first met her, had seemed prickly and confrontational, but gradually had warmed to him. He was short of friends on Kaybe, short on those he could trust. A friend who could help him decipher temple politics, and who could so expertly broil poultry, was one he didn't want to lose. That she was more than passably attractive, was a bonus.
Poultry. Sparr's idle train of thought took him once more to the diversity of species on the colony planet. The bird that had so satisfyingly filled his stomach the night before could never be mistaken for a chicken. Green plumage flecked with orange and black provided excellent camouflage among the local flora. Fat, powerful legs provided for a quick escape for the flightless animal. The creatures were fascinating to Sparr, perfect examples of evolutionary adaptation. And yet, it was impossible to look at them and not see an Earth bird, perhaps one which had thrived only fleetingly, without leaving a fossil record. Was it biological destiny that drove species on two such similar planets down similar paths? Gravity, water, sunlight, and the seasons were close enough. Was that all it took? Sparr yearned to study the planet's species more closely, but cruelly had been separated from his gear.
"There!" Efreem's call broke Sparr's reverie. Just over the tip of the ridgeline the first, paper-thin, halo of Cheddar was breaking the horizon.
"You're fucking kidding me!" Silla's jaw hung open comically.
"I'll take that bottle now," Sparr said.
***
Sparr's budding friendship with Silla had advantages beyond sharing the occasional drink. Knowing he itched to escape the confines of the temple, the chef did her best to find errands in Vonde. His size and strength provided an excellent justification.
"Twenty cases of wine," Silla said. "The vendor will meet you at the auction, but you'll have to load them onto the wagon yourself. Actually, I take that back. One of the cases is spirits. Be sure to check it!"
"Nineteen cases of wine, one of spirits," Sparr repeated. His implant would store the information.
"Ten sacks of root vegetables, twenty of coarse-ground grain."
Again, Sparr repeated for the benefit of his implant.
"Do you want my notes?"
"Notes?" Sparr had observed Silla with a scrap of parchment, but hadn't made out the script. "Okay."
The chef handed him the parchment. Sparr peered at it. Instead of script, Silla had documented the shipment by drawing tiny pictures. She had drawn a bottle of wine accompanied by nineteen hash marks. The root vegetables were denoted by an exaggerated carrot, and ten hash marks. With a shock, Sparr realized that Silla was illiterate.
It slowly dawned on Sparr that since landing on Kaybe he had seen no written language at all. The signs on shops were elaborately drawn images of carpet, wine, pottery, or tools. There had been no books in evidence at the gladiator compound, and none at the temple. Symbols had been etched on the ridiculous wheel used at temple ceremonies, but they gave no evidence of being part of an alphabet. Sparr cursed himself for not seeing it earlier. Reading and writing had been lost on Kaybe.
"Uh... okay, thanks." Sparr stumbled over his words. Silla raised her eyebrows at him, but turned back to her work. "Oh," she said "and don't forget to meet Liette to escort the talent back from the auction."
Sparr headed to the outer courtyard in a daze. What had happened here? Not for the first time, he considered how completely society had fallen apart on Kaybe. Slavery, combat to the death, thinly-veiled prostitution, and illiteracy. The popular religion was a sham. Whatever had transpired had thrown the colonists back a thousand years.
"You coming?" The guard glared at him from the waiting wagon. Sparr wanted to punch the man, punch anyone who helped make Kaybe what it was.
"Just drive, you slug!" Sparr said, hopping in back.
The guard turned, incredulous. He moved to say something, but perhaps seeing the anger in Sparr's eyes, thought better of it. He muttered a soft curse but flicked the whip at the draybeast. The card rumbled forward.
Not twenty minutes later, the wine vendor also received a taste of Sparr's wrath. Fawning and bowing, the man gestured at the stack of wine crates. Sparr checked each as he loaded them. "Where are the spirits?" he demanded.
The man was younger than most of the other merchants, and in good shape, possibly from a life lugging crates. Still, like the guard, he shrank back from Sparr. "It's all there, ah... twenty cases!" he sputtered.
"One was to be spirits!" shouted Sparr. "Do you think to cheat the temple?"
Gasping, the man fled toward his own wagon. Before Sparr could pursue him, the merchant reappeared, hoisting a new crate. "Here, here!" the man said, loading the crate himself. "A simple mistake, I promise!" Again he fled, forgetting to take back one of the wine crates.
"Keep watch," Sparr grunted toward the guard. "I need to find Liette." He received no objection.
The auction was still in progress. Sparr had gathered from Silla's 'talent' comment that Liette had gone to acquire more slaves for the temple. As much as it revolted him, he had little choice but to endure the local custom for a bit longer. Sparr swore that once he had made the pilgrimage he would choose his own path.
After working his way around to the side of the square, Sparr found a place from which to observe. Unlike the auction at which he, Kess, and Efreem had been sold, no platform had been set up. Instead, young men and women had been herded into a pen taking up almost the entire square. Each stood alone, separated from their neighbor by at least a meter. None looked about them, but rather cast their eyes to the ground, despondently. Through this pitiful assembly, prospective buyers walked, examining the wares.