Brought up by the Folk in their hidden African crater-realm, Rantza must seek her own kind in the strangeness of the Outer World beyond...
Rantza howls at the blood moon. She was bleeding. She draws her lips back from her sharp white teeth, tilts her face to the sky, and howls like a beast of the forest. The night valley is still and vibrant around her. She wears a necklace of shells, there are white stripes smeared down her cheeks and across her forehead. She wears nothing else. Turok stirs beside her. He reaches out his huge paw of a hand to reassure her. Shooting stars rip the night sky above them. Like the seeds of alien children falling to Earth.
His touch is warm and strong. She looks down at him and smiles. She feels safe with him. She'd always felt safe with him. She reaches down over the bristly fur of his well-muscled chest and stomach, to touch his fuck-stick and draw her finger along its length. The expression on his big flat face shifts from concern, to pleasure. They roll together. He mounts her from behind, their mating is the coming together of rutting beasts, she braces to receive him, snarling out her pleasure, caught up in the primal urgency of the sky fucking the earth, flooding her with seed as the rain fertilises the soil to bring forth new life, shaking the mountains with their raw lust...
As he finally withdraws from her aching core, she sees the trace of her blood on the fat head of his cock. They both know it is good. It is right. They fold into each other, coiling into a sleep of tangled limbs, beneath the blood moon.
With morning they follow the river as it eventually broadens into a wide wetland lake where giant turtles bask on glistening mudflats, barely raising their huge heads to watch the interlopers pace past. By noon they reach the wrecked fuselage of the plane. Masked in living green, it had been slowly infested by creeping plants over the years, as though submerging into its slow inexorable decay. She looks at it with no trace of recognition. If she expected an inrush of memories, there were none. If she expected a vague familiarity, she feels nothing. She looks questioningly across at Turok's hulking form. He simply shrugs his huge shoulders and scratches his forehead in a deliberately comical fashion intended to make her smile.
She thinks back to the village, the huts aglow with night fires on the broad curve of the slow river. She'd gone seeking advice and guidance, to ask why the moon is red. Inside the head-woman's domicile, she asked the wise earth-mother. The words the crone spoke run around inside her head. They're abrupt, as if cruel, telling her 'You are not of the folk.' Hurtful words. But things she'd always suspected, always half known. Her breasts are high and rounded, while the others have down-hung, almost pendulous dugs. Rantza has less body hair too, a scut of auburn in the nook of her groin, at her armpits. She'd often wished she wasn't different. But it was inescapable. Now she was being told why. She was of age. There would come a time for mating. She blushed, her eyes downcast. It was time for her to leave the land of the Folk, and return to what she'd been told was 'her own people'. She feels confusion and resentment. As if she was being rejected by those she loves, exiled from everything she'd ever known.
'Here' said the earth-mother, draping a bright ruby pendant around her neck. 'This is a talking-stone which enables you to understand the speech of others. It will aid you.' But Turok was also there to guide and protect her on the long journey. Turok, who was always there for her when she needs him most. She smiles at the memory of how she'd once woven a chain of flowers, and draped it around his proud fuck-stick. She'd been claiming him. As he had claimed her.
She carries a shoulder-sack woven from reeds strengthened with straps of beaten leather, it contains her knives, tinder-flints, salted fish wrapped in leaves, and a coil of rope. He carries a crude stone-tipped spear. He uses it to dislodge rusted sections of the wrecked plane. This was supposedly how she'd arrived here in the valley, as a baby. Or so the head-woman had told her. The other two occupants of the craft -- her natural parents, had not survived. In accordance with the traditions of the Folk, they'd been burned and returned to the cycle of natural energy. And she'd been raised and cared for and loved. But now was the time for her to discover her own truths.
Beyond the twisted structure that had fallen from the sky they trek for two days, resting beneath shady trees, drinking from sparkling streams of water that cascade from high in the ring-mountains, eating succulent fruit that hangs low from the trees where gaudy birds shriek and apes play. They hide in tall reeds as a group of riders pass, astride heavy-footed ostrich-birds, she couldn't be sure if the rider's faceted insect-eyes were part of a helmet, or not. Turok is solid, a reliable presence by her side. Herds of antelope flee across the grassland, disturbed by the lazy wandering of a glyptodon, its armadillo-scales catching the sun's colours, its heavy club-tail leaving a furrow through the ground. A sky-boat chugs erratically above them, an unwieldy assemblage of sails and rotors, dishes and moving panels, leaving a trail of coal-fire smoke in its wake. She'd been told they were hunting cloud-whales, although she'd never seen any such creatures. A drone of human-sized bees cluster in a forest of tree-tall sunflowers.
Following guidance given by the head-woman, using the plane-wreck as an orientation point aligned to a triple-peak mountain formation ahead, they approach the lost city at the foot of the towering rim. Cliffs so steep, so black, so pitted with scars, rising to buttresses so far above their heads that they dwarf everything and seem to cast a gloom over this corner of the world. She throws her head back, squints her eyes against the shimmery purplish brightness of sky, and gazes upwards towards the towering crest. Clouds scud across the rim of the great wall, making it appear as if the upper ramparts are frozen in the act of eternally toppling down to crush them.
It's as though the ruins of the city grow organically out from living rock, grotesque with basalt spires, fuzzed between prickle-bushes. Turok was scared. A superstitious fear of the ancient peoples who'd abandoned their city here. There are giant columns and towers of stone, crumbling and dense with liana creepers, tiers of monstrous steps designed for a race of giants, smothered in cascades of gaudy yellow blossoms, and dark temples that tunnel into the solid rock-face of the mountain in treacherous mouths toothed with needles of stone. The stories say the ruins remain intact across ten-thousand years. Since the deluge that sank and drowned the ancient's mother-continent, leaving far-flung colonies such as this abandoned to dust and decay. There are still symbols of monstrous winged entities and beasts that are only part-mythical carved into the walls. The travellers feel a huge unease, as if the stone gaze of a million unseen eyes are watching them.
'Let us not seek danger when danger is eager enough to seek us out,' cautions Turok, his eyes searching the hidden places above them.
His words also speak to her own secret fears. 'Yet I must pass through here, as the earth-mother says. But Turok, you are free to return to the village if that is your wish.' The breeze stirs her russet hair playfully across her shoulders and breasts, momentarily veiling her proud nipples, then thoughtlessly flicks it away in a game of conceal and reveal.
'I fear for myself' grunts Turok, his eyes suddenly downcast. 'But I fear for you even more. We are mated, despite what the earth-mother forbids.' Rantza smiles up at him. Yes, the village head-woman feared the miscegenation their copulation would bring, but they're already way too late for that.