I set out on foot across the last stretch of grassland and prairie and arrived at midday on the trash-heaped outskirts of the city.
Marontik, located at the confluence of two great rivers, was hardly a city at al by Forerunner standards. Wooden shacks and mud huts, some three or four stories tal , were arranged on either side of al eys branching into other al eys, winding in no particular direction. This crowded col ection of primitive hovels spread over dozens of square kilometers. It would have been easy for a young Forerunner to become lost, but my ancil a guided me with unerring skil .
I wandered the streets for several hours, a minor curiosity to the inhabitants but no more. I passed a doorway opening to underground passages from which rose noxious smel s. Urchins in rags poured up through the door and surrounded me, chanting, “There are parts of Marontik only for the eyes of such a one … The dead in review! Ancient queens and kings preserved in rum and honey! They have waited centuries for you!”
Though that gave me a vague tingle, I ignored the urchins. They went away after a time, and never did I feel in danger. It seemed these rudely dressed, unkempt, shambling beings had some experience of Forerunners but little respect. This did not bother my ancil a. Here, she said, the genetical y impressed rules of the Librarian included docility toward Forerunners, wariness toward strangers, and discretion in al else.
The sky over Marontik was frequented by primitive airships of al sizes and colors, some truly horrendous in their pretension—dozens of corded red, green, and blue hot-air bal oons tied together, from which hung great platforms of woven river reed, crowded with merchants, travelers, and spectators as wel as lower beasts destined, I assumed, to become food. Humans ate meat.
The bal oon platforms provided a regular, dizzying means of conveyance—and so, of course, my ancil a instructed me to pay for passage to the center of the city.
When I pointed out I had no scrip, she guided me to a stash hidden in a nearby substation, hundreds of years old but unmolested by the humans.
I waited at an elevated platform and paid the fare to a skeptical agent, who looked over the ancient scrip with disdain. His narrow face and darting, beady eyes were overshadowed by a tal cylindrical hat made of fur. Only after chattering with a col eague hidden in a wicker cage did he accept my payment and al ow me to board the next creaking, swaying, lighter-than-air conveyance.
The trip took an hour. The bal oon platform arrived at city center as night fel .
Lanterns were lit throughout the devious streets. Long shadows loomed. I was surrounded by anthropoid rankness.
In Marontik’s largest market, my ancil a informed me, there had in years past been a col ective of human guides, some of whom might stil know the routes to the centers of local legend. Soon, the humans would al be asleep—a condition with which I had had little experience—so we had to hurry. “If it’s adventure you seek,”
she said, “here is where you are most likely to find it—yet most likely to survive the experience.”
In a rambling sloven of al eys, which served both as walkways and gutters, I found the ancient river-stone storefront of the matriarch of guides. Half-hidden in shadows, il uminated by a single candle dangling from a hook in the wattle, an enormously fat female, tented in a loose robe of white fabric, embarrassingly sheer, regarded me with open suspicion. After making a few offers I found offensive, including a tour of underground catacombs fil ed with human dead, she took the last of my scrip and passed me through a rag-hung arch to a young member of the guild who, she said, might be able to help.
“There is treasure on Erde-Tyrene, young Forerunner,” she added in a dulcet baritone, “as you have no doubt deduced through careful research. And I have just the boy for you.”
It was here, in the humid shadows of a reed shack, that I met Chakas. My first impression of the bronze-skinned, half-naked human, with his greasy shock of black hair, was not favorable. He kept looking at me, as if we had met before—or perhaps he was seeking a weak spot in my armor. “I love solving mysteries,”
Chakas said. “I, too, seek lost treasure. It is my passion! We wil be friends, no?”
I knew that humans, as lower beings, were deceitful and tricky. Stil , I had few choices. My resources were at their limit. A few hours later, he led me through pitch-black streets to another neighborhood, fil ed with ha manune, and introduced me to his partner, a gray-muzzled Florian. Surrounded by a mob of diminutive youngsters and two stooped, elderly females—I think—the Florian was cheek- stuffing the last of a supper of fruit and plates of pounded, shapeless raw meat.
The Florian said that his ancestors had once frequented a ring-shaped island at the center of a great, flooded crater. They cal ed it Djamonkin Augh—Big Man’s Water. There, he said, a marvelous site stil hid many antiquities.
“From the Precursors?” I asked.
“Who are they?”
“Ancient masters,” I said. “Before the Forerunners.”
“Maybe. Very old.” The Florian looked me over shrewdly, then patted his lips with the furry back of his hand.
“The Organon?” I asked.
Neither Chakas nor the Florian were familiar with that name, but did not dismiss the possibility.
* * *
The crew separated and opened the hatch on the cal iope’s box. The ha manune— his head barely level with my waist—waggled his raised hands. With the help of his smal , dexterous fingers, they inserted a different wooden placket set with tiny horn pegs, then reset the mechanism of plucked and bowed gut strings, cranked out the horn that broadcast the music into the water, attached the steam tube, and rewound the spring that powered it al .
Chakas walked aft, stil worried. “Music soothes the savage flowers,” the cha manune said, cal used finger to lip. “We wait now and watch.”
The Florian ran back to squat beside us. He looped a hand around his friend’s bare ankles. The little man’s braincase held less than a third the volume of young Chakas’s, and yet I had trouble deciding who was more clever—or more truthful.
* * *
In my quest for treasure, I had focused my studies on old Forerunner records, and what little I had learned about human history I did not feel comfortable revealing to my guides.
Ten thousand years ago, humans had fought a war against Forerunners—and lost. The centers of human civilization had been dismantled and the humans themselves devolved and shattered into many forms, some said as punishment— but more likely because they were a natural y violent species.
The Librarian, for some reason, had espoused the human cause. My ancil a explained that either as a form of penance, or at the Librarian’s request—the records were vague—the Council had given her charge of Erde-Tyrene and she had moved the last humans there. Under her care, some of the humans had stubbornly reevolved. I couldn’t tel whether that might be true or not. They al looked degraded to me.