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Dancers at the End of Time - The Hollow Lands

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Ñåðèÿ: Dancers at the End of Time

 

 


      "You saw the body — after?"
      "No, sir. In fac', sir, there was a bit of a rumour went rahnd — well … No, sir — 'e looks sort o' different — shorter — different colour 'air an' complexion…"
      "I've changed them, since you —" began Jherek helpfully, but Inspector Springer said: "Quiet, you!" He seemed satisfied. "Thank you, constable."
      "Thank you, sir." The constable left the cell.
      Inspector Springer approached Mr. Underwood. "Feelin' calmer now, eh?"
      "A little," agreed Mr. Underwood warily. "I hope, I mean, you don't think I…"
      "I think you wos mistaken, that's all. 'Aving 'ad a chance ter — well — see you in different circumstances — I would say — well — that you wos a bit 'ighly-strung — not quite right in the — um —" He began again, almost kindly. "With your missus runnin' off, an' all that. Besides, I'm grateful to yer, Mr. Underwood. Not knowing, like, you 'elped me unmask this vicious gang. We've bin 'earing abaht a plan to assassinate 'Er Majesty, but the clews 'ave bin a bit thin on the ground — now we've got somefin' ter work on, see?"
      "You mean, these people…? Amelia — were you aware…?"
      "Harold!" She gestured imploringly to Jherek. "We have told you the truth. I am sure that nobody here knows anything about such a terrible plot. They are all from the future!"
      Again Inspector Springer shook his head. "The problem will be," he said to Sergeant Sherwood, "in sortin' the out an' out loonies from the conscious criminals."
      The Iron Orchid yawned. "I must say, my dear," she murmured to Jherek, "that you have your dull moments as well as your amusing ones in the Dawn Age."
      "It's not often like this," he apologized.
      "Therefore, sir," said Inspector Springer to Mr. Underwood, "you can go. We'll need you as a witness, of course, but I don't think, as things stand, we want to keep you up any longer."
      "And my wife?"
      "She must stay, I'm afraid."
      Mr. Underwood allowed Sergeant Sherwood to lead him from the cell. "Goodbye, my dear," he said.
      "Goodbye, Harold." She did not seem very moved now.
      The Duke of Queens drew off his magnificent hunting hat and brushed at its plumes. "What is this stuff?" he asked Mr. Jackson.
      "Dust," said Jackson. "Grime."
      "How interesting. How do you make it?"
      "There are many ways of manufacturing it in the Dawn Age," Mr. Jackson told him.
      "You must tell me some of them, Jherek." The Duke of Queens replaced his hat on his head. His voice dropped to a whisper. "And what are we waiting for now?" he enquired eagerly.
      "I am not quite sure," Jherek said. "But you're bound to enjoy it. I enjoy everything here."
      "Who could fail to, O banisher of boredom!" The Duke of Queens beamed benignly upon Inspector Springer. "And I do love your characters, Jherek. They are in perfect key."
      Sergeant Sherwood returned with a stately-looking middle-aged man in a black tailcoat and a tall black hat. Recognizing him, Inspector Springer saluted. " 'Ere they are for you, sir. I don't mind admitting it took some doing to nab 'em, but nabbed they are!"
      The stately man nodded and cast a cold eye, on Lat, on Jherek, heaving a sigh. He allowed no expression to come to his face as he inspected the Iron Orchid, the Duke of Queens, Bishop Castle, My Lady Charlotina, Donna Isobella and Mrs. Underwood. It was only when he took a close glance at Mr. Jackson's face that he breathed a barely heard: "Good heavens!"
      "Good evening, Munroe — or is it morning, yet?" Jagged seemed amused. "How's the Minister?"
      "Is it you, Jagger?"
      "I'm afraid so."
      "But, how —?"
      "Ask the inspector here, my dear chap."
      "Inspector?"
      "A friend of yours, sir?"
      "You do not recognize Lord Charles Jagger?"
      "But…" said Inspector Springer.
      "I told you it was," said Jherek in triumph to Mrs. Underwood, but she silenced him.
      "Did you explain anything to the inspector, Jagger?"
      "It's not really his fault, but he was so convinced we were all mixed up in this business that there was no point in trying to get through to him. I thought it best to wait."
      Munroe smiled sourly. "And got me from my bed."
      "There's the Latvians, sir," said Inspector Springer eagerly, "at least."
      Munroe made a stately turn and looked sternly at the Lat. "Ah, yes. Not friends of yours, are they Jagger?"
      "Not at all. Inspector Springer has done a good job there. The rest of us — all my guests — were dining at the Cafe Royale. As you know, I take an interest in the arts…"
      "Of course. There is no more to be said."
      "So you're not even a bloomin' anarchist?" complained Inspector Springer moodily to Jherek. "Just a well-connected loony." And he uttered a deep sigh.
      "Inspector!" admonished the stately gentleman.
      "Sorry, sir."
      "Ferkit!" said Captain Mubbers from his corner. He seemed to be addressing Munroe. "Gloo, mibix?"
      "Ugh," said Munroe.
      None of the Lat seemed to have taken their imprisonment well. They sat in a sad little group on the floor of the cell, picking their huge noses, scratching their oddly shaped heads.
      "Did you have any reason to suspect Lord Jagger and his friends, inspector?" asked Munroe distantly.
      "Well, no, sir, except — well, even that wasn't … these green and blue women, sir —" Inspector Springer subsided. "No, sir."
      "They have not been charged?"
      "Not yet — er, no, sir."
      "They can go?"
      "Yes, sir."
      "There you are, Jagger."
      "Thank you, Munroe."
      "This other business," said Munroe, waving his stick at the disconsolate aliens, "can wait until morning. I hope you have plenty of evidence for me, inspector."
      "Oh, yes, sir," said Inspector Springer. In his eyes there was no light of pleasurable anticipation in the future. He stared hopelessly at the Lat. "They're definitely forrin', sir, for a start."
      As they all entered the wide avenue of Whitehall, Lord Jagger's friend Munroe lifted his hat to the ladies. "My compliments on your costumes," he said. "It must have been a marvellous ball if they were all as fine. See you at the club, perhaps, Jagger?"
      "Perhaps tomorrow," said Jagged.
      Munroe made his stately way up Whitehall.
      Light began to touch the tall buildings.
      "Oh, look!" cried My Lady Charlotina. "It's a proper old-fashioned dawn. A real one!"
      The Duke of Queens clapped Jherek on the shoulder. "Beautiful!"
      Jherek still felt he had earned the Duke's esteem rather cheaply, considering that he had done nothing at all to produce the sunrise, but he could not help indulging an immensely satisfying sense of identification with the wonders of the 19th century world, so again he shook his head modestly, but allowed the Duke to continue with his praise.
      "Smell that air!" exclaimed the Duke of Queens. "A thousand rich scents mingle in it! Ah!" He strode ahead of the others who followed him as he turned along the embankment, admiring the river with its flotsam, its barges, its sheen of oil, all grey in the early dawn.
      Jherek said to Mrs. Underwood. "Will you now admit that you love me, Mrs. Underwood? I gather that your connection with Mr. Underwood is at an end?"
      "He seems to think so." She sighed. "I did my best."
      "Your singing was marvellous."
      "He must have been fairly unstable to begin with," she said. "However, I must blame myself for what happened."
      She seemed unwilling to speak further and, tactfully, Jherek shared her silence.
      A tug-boat hooted from the river. Some gulls flapped upwards into a sky of soft and glowing gold, the trees lining the embankment rustled as if awakening to the new day. The others, some distance in front of Jherek and Mrs. Underwood, commented on this aspect and that of the city.
      "What a perfect ending to our picnic," said the Iron Orchid to Lord Jagged. "When shall we be going back, do you know?"
      "Soon," he said, "I would think."
      Eventually, they left the embankment and turned into a street Jherek knew. He touched Mrs. Underwood's arm. "Do you recognize the building?"
      "Yes," she murmured, her mind evidently on other things, "it is the Old Bailey, where they tried you."
      "Look, Jagged!" called Jherek. "Remember?"
      Lord Jagged, too, seemed abstracted. He nodded.
      Laughing and chattering, the party passed the Old Bailey and paused to wonder at the next aspect of the period which had caught their fancy.
      "St. Paul's Cathedral," said Donna Isobella, clinging to Bishop Castle's arm. "Haven't you seen it before?"
      "Oh, we must go in!"
      It was then that Lord Jagged lifted his sensitive head and paused, like a fox catching wind of its hunters. He raised a hand, and Jherek and Mrs. Underwood hesitated, watching as the others ran up the steps.
      "A remarkable —" Bishop Castle vanished. The Iron Orchid began to laugh and then she, too, vanished. My Lady Charlotina took a step backward, and vanished. And then the Duke of Queens, his expression amused and expectant, vanished.
      Donna Isobella sat down on the steps and screamed.
 
      They could hear Donna Isobella's screams from several streets away as Lord Jagged led them hurriedly into a maze of little cobbled alleys. "We'll be next, if we're not lucky," he said. "Morphail Effect bound to manifest itself. My own fault — absolutely my own fault. Quickly…"
      "Where are we going, Jagged?"
      "Time machine. The one you originally came in. Repaired. Ready to go. But the fluctuations caused by recent comings and goings could have produced serious consequences. Brannart knew what he was talking about. Hurry!"
      "I am not sure," said Mrs. Underwood, "that I wish to accompany either of you. You have caused me considerable pain, you know, not to mention…"
      "Mrs. Underwood," said Lord Jagged of Canaria softly, "you have no choice. The alternative is dreadful, I assure you."
      Convinced by his tone, she said nothing further for the moment.
      They came to an alley full of bleak, festering buildings close to the river. At the far end of the alley, a few men were beginning to move boxes onto a cart. They could see the glint of the dirty Thames water.
      "I feel faint," complained Mrs. Underwood. "I cannot keep us this pace, Mr. Jackson. I have had no sleep to speak of in two nights."
      "We are there," he said. He took a key from his pocket and inserted it into the lock of a door of mouldering oak. The door creaked as he pushed it inward. Lord Jagged closed the door, reached up to take an oil lamp from a hook. He struck a match and lit the lamp.
      As the light grew brighter, Jherek saw that they stood in quite a large room. The floor was stone and the whole place smelled of mildew. He saw rats running swiftly along the beams in the roof.
      Jagged had crossed to a great pile of rags and debris and began to pull them to the ground. He had lost some of his composure in his haste.
      "What is your part in this, Mr. Jackson?" said Mrs. Underwood, averting her eyes from the rats. "I am right, am I not, in believing that you have to an extent manipulated the destinies of myself and Mr. Carnelian?"
      "Subtly, I hope, madam," said Jagged, still tugging at the heap. "For so abstract a thing, Time keeps a severe eye upon our activities. I had to be careful. It is why I adopted two main disguises in this world. I have travelled in Time a great deal, as you have probably guessed. Both to the past — and the future, such as it exists at all in my world. I knew about the 'End of Time' before ever Yusharisp brought the news to our planet. I also discovered that there are certain people who are, by virtue of a particular arrangement of genes, not so prone to the Morphail Effect as are others. I conceived a means of averting disaster for some of us…"
      "Disaster, Jagged?"
      "The end of all of us, dear Jherek. I could not bear to think that, having achieved such balance, we should perish. We had learned, you see, how to live. And it was for nothing. Such an irony was unbearable to me, the lover of ironies. I spent many, many years in this century — the furthest back I could go in my own machine — running complicated checks, taking a variety of people into the future, seeing how, as it were, they 'took' when returned to their own time. None did. I regret their fate. Only Mrs. Underwood stayed, apparently virtually immune to the Morphail Effect!"
      "So you, sir, were my abductor!" she cried.
      "I am afraid so. There!" He pulled the last of the coverings free, revealing the spherical time machine which Brannart Morphail had loaned to Jherek on his first trip to the Dawn Age.
      "I am hoping," he continued, "that some of us will survive the End of Time. And you can help me. This time machine can be controlled. It will take you back to our own age, Jherek, where we can continue with our experiments. At least," he added, "it should. The instability of the megaflow at present is worrying. But we must hope. We must hope. Now, the two of you, enter the machine. There are breathing masks for both."
      "Mr. Jackson," said Mrs. Underwood. "I will not be bullied any further." She folded her arms across her bosom. "Neither will I allow myself to be mesmerized by your quasi-scientific lecturings!"
      "I think he is right, Mrs. Underwood," said Jherek hesitantly. "And the reason I came to find you was because you are prone to the Morphail Effect. At least in a time machine we stand a chance of going to an age of our choice."
      "Remember how Jherek escaped hanging," said Lord Jagged. He had by now opened the circular outer door of the time machine. "That was the Morphail Effect. It would have been a paradox if he had died in that particular way in this age. I knew it. That was why I lent myself to what appeared to you, Mrs. Underwood, to be his destruction. There is proof of my good-will. He is not dead."
      Reluctantly, she began to move with Jherek towards the time machine. "I shall be able to return?" she asked.
      "Almost certainly. But I am hoping that you will not wish to when you have heard me out."
      "You will accompany us?"
      "My own machine is not a quarter of a mile from here. I must use it, for I cannot afford to abandon it. It is a very sophisticated model. It does not even register on Brannart's instruments. As soon as you are on your way, I will go to it and follow you. I promise you, Mrs. Underwood, that I am not deceiving you. I will reveal all I know upon our return to the 'End of Time.' "
      "Very well."
      "You will not find the interior of the machine pleasant," Jherek told her as he helped her into the airlock. "You must hold your breath for a moment." They crouched together in the cylinder. He handed her a breathing mask. "Fit this over your head, like so…"
      He smiled as he heard her muffled complaints.
      "Fear not, Mrs. Underwood. Our great adventure is almost ended. Soon we shall be back in our own dear villa, with roses climbing round the door, with our pipes and our slippers and our water closets! King Darby and Queen Joan in Camelot!" The rest of his effusion was muffled, even to his own ears, by the necessity of putting on his mask as the airlock began to fill with milky fluid. Jherek wished that there had been rubber suits of the kind normally used in the machine, for the stuff felt unpleasant and was soaking rapidly through their clothes. There was a look of outraged disgust, in fact, in Mrs. Underwood's eyes.
      The machine filled rapidly and they drifted into the main chamber. Here certain instruments were already flashing green and red alternately, swimming about his head. They floated, unable to control their movements, in the thick liquid. As his body turned slowly, he saw that Mrs. Underwood had shut her eyes. Blue and yellow lights began to flash. The liquid became increasingly cloudy.
      Figures, which he could not read, began to register on the display panels. A white light throbbed and he knew that the machine was on the very brink of beginning its journey into the future. He relaxed. Happiness filled him. Soon he would be home.
      The white light burned his eyes. He became dizzy. Pain began to nag at his nerves and he stopped himself from screaming, for fear that she would hear him and be troubled.
      The liquid grew dark until it was the colour of blood. His senses fled him.
      He woke up knowing that the journey must be over. He tried to turn himself round so that he could see if Mrs. Underwood were awake. He could feel her body resting against his leg.
      But then, surprisingly, the process began again. The green lights gave way to red, to blue and to yellow. The white light shrieked. The pain increased, the liquid became dark again.
      And again he fainted.
      He woke up. This time he stared directly into Mrs. Underwood's pale, unconscious face. He tried to reach out to take her hand and, as if this action were enough to begin it, the process started again. The green and red alternating lights, the blue and yellow lights, the blinding whiteness, the pain, the loss of his awareness. He woke up. The machine was shuddering. From somewhere there came a grating whine.
      This time he screamed, in spite of himself, and he thought that Mrs. Underwood was also screaming. The white light throbbed. Suddenly it was totally black. Then a green light flickered. It went out. A red light flickered and went out. Blue and yellow lights flashed.
      And then Jherek Carnelian knew that Lord Jagged's fears had been realized. There had been too many attempts at once to manipulate Time — and Time was refusing further manipulation. They were adrift. They were shifting back and forth at random on the timeflow. They were as much victims of the Morphail Effect as if they had never entered the time machine. Time was taking its vengeance on those who had sought to conquer it.
      Jherek's one consolation, as he fainted again, was that at least he and Mrs. Underwood were together.

19. In Which Jherek Carnelian and Mrs. Amelia Underwood Debate Certain Moral Problems

      "Mr. Carnelian! Please, Mr. Carnelian, try to wake up!"
      "I am awake," he groaned, but he did not open his eyes. His skin felt pleasantly warm. There was a delicious smell in his nostrils. There was silence.
      "Then open your eyes, please, Mr. Carnelian," she demanded. "I need your advice."
      He obeyed her. He blinked. "What an extraordinarily deep blue," he said of the sky. "So we are back, after all. I became a trifle pessimistic, I must admit, when the machine seemed to be malfunctioning. How did we get out?"
      "I pulled you out, and it was as well I did." She made a gesture. He looked and saw that the time machine was in even worse condition than when he had landed in the 19th century. Mrs. Underwood was brushing sand from her tattered dress of maroon velvet. "That awful stuff," she said. "Even when it dries it makes everything stiff."
      He sat up, smiling. "It will be the work of a moment to supply you with fresh clothes. I still have most of my power rings. I wonder who made this. It is ravishing!"
      The scenery stretched for miles, all waving fern-like plants of a variety of sizes, from the small ones carpeting the ground to very large ones as big as poplars; and not far from the beach on which they lay was a lazy sea stretching to the horizon. In the far distance behind them was a line of low, gentle hills.
      "It is a remarkable reproduction," she agreed. "Rather better in detail than most of those made by your people."
      "You know the original?"
      "I studied such things once. My father was of the modern school. He did not reject Darwin out of hand."
      "Darwin loved him?" Jherek's thoughts had returned to his favourite subject.
      "Darwin was a scientist, Mr. Carnelian," she said impatiently.
      "And he made a world like this?"
      "No, no. It isn't anything really to do with him. A figure of speech."
      "What is a 'figure of speech?' "
      "I will explain that later. My point was that this landscape resembles the world at a very early age of its geological development. It is tropical and typical ferns and plants are in evidence. It is probably the Ordovician period of the Paleozoic, possibly the Silurian. If this were a perfect reproduction those seas you observe would team with edible life. There would be clams and so on, but no large beasts. Everything possible to sustain life, and nothing very much to threaten it!"
      "I can't imagine who could have made it," said Jherek. "Unless it was Lady Voiceless. She built a series of early worlds a while ago — the Egyptian was her best."
      "Such a world as this would have flourished millions of years before Egypt," said Mrs. Underwood, becoming lyrical. "Millions of years before Man — before the dinosaurs, even. Ah, it is paradise! You see, there are no signs at all of animal life as we know it."
      "There hasn't actually been any animal life, as such for a good while," said Jherek. "Only that which we make for ourselves."
      "You aren't following me very closely, Mr. Carnelian."
      "I am sorry. I will try. I want my moral education to begin as soon as possible. There are all sorts of things you can teach me."
      "I regard that ," she said, "as my duty. I could not justify being here otherwise." She smiled to herself. "After all, I come from a long line of missionaries."
      "A new dress?" he said.
      "If you please."
      He touched a power ring; the emerald.
      Nothing happened.
      He touched the diamond and then the amethyst. And nothing at all happened. He was puzzled. "I have never known my power rings to fail me," he said.
      Mrs. Underwood cleared her throat. "It is becoming increasingly hot. Suppose we stroll into the shade of those ferns?"
      He agreed. As they walked, he tried his power rings again, shaking his head in surprise.
      "Strange. Perhaps when the time machine began to go awry…"
      "It went wrong, the time machine?"
      "Yes. Plainly shifting back and forth in time at random. I had completely despaired of returning here."
      "Here?"
      "Oh, dear," he said.
      "So," she said, seating herself upon a reddish-coloured rock and staring around her at the mile upon mile of Silurian ferns, "we could have travelled backwards, could we, Mr. Carnelian?"
      "I would say that we could have, yes."
      "So much for your friend Lord Jagged's assurances," she said.
      "Yes." He sucked his lower lip. "But he was afraid we had left things too late, if you recall."
      "He was correct." Again she cleared her throat.
      Jherek cleared his. "If this is the age you think it is, am I to gather there are no people to be found here at all."
      "Not one. Not a primate."
      "We are at the beginning of Time?"
      "For want of a better description, yes." Her lovely fingers drummed rapidly against the rock. She did not seem pleased.
      "Oh dear," he said, "we shall never see the Iron Orchid again!"
      She brightened a little at this. "We'll have to make the best of it, I suppose, and hope that we are rescued in due course."
      "The chances are slight, Mrs. Underwood. Nobody has ever gone this far back. You heard Lord Jagged say that your age was the furthest he could reach into the past."
      She straightened her shoulders rather as she had done that time when they stood upon the bank of the river. "We must build a hut, of course — preferably two huts — and we must test which of the life, such as it is, is edible. We must make a fire and keep it lit. We must see what the time machine will give us that is useable. Not much I would assume."
      "You are certain that this is the period…?"
      "Mr. Carnelian! Your power rings do not work. We have no other evidence. We must assume that we are marooned in the Silurian."
      "The Morphail Effect is supposed to send us into the future," he said, "not the past."
      "This is certainly no future we might expect from 1896, Mr. Carnelian."
      "No." A thought came to him. "I was discussing the possibility of the cyclic nature of Time with Brannart Morphail and Lord Jagged quite recently. Could we have plunged so far into the future that we are, as it were, at the start again?"
      "Such theories cannot mean a great deal to us," she told him "in our present circumstances."
      "I agree. But it would explain why we are in them, Mrs. Underwood."
      She plucked a frond from over her head and began to fan herself, deliberately ignoring him.
      He drew a deep breath of the rich Silurian (or possibly Ordivician) air. He stretched himself out luxuriously upon the ground. "You yourself described this world as Paradise, Mrs. Underwood. In what better place could two lovers find themselves?"
      "Another abstract idea, Mr. Carnelian? You surely do not refer to yourself and myself?"
      "Oh, but I do!" he said dreamily. "We could begin the human race all over again! A whole new cycle. This time we shall flourish before the dinosaurs. This is Paradise and we are Adolf and Eva! Or do I mean Alan and Edna?"
      "I think you refer to Adam and Eve, Mr. Carnelian. If you do, then you blaspheme and I wish to hear no more!"
      "Blas-what?"
      "Pheme."
      "Is that also to do with Morality?"
      "I suppose it is, yes."
      "Could you explain, perhaps, a little further," he asked enticingly.
      "You offend against the Deity. It is a profanity to identify yourself with Adam in that way."
      "What about Eve?"
      "Eve, too."
      "I am sorry."
      "You weren't to know." She continued to fan herself with the frond. "I suppose we had best start looking for food. Aren't you hungry?"
      "I am hungry for your kisses," he said romantically, and he stood up.
      "Mr. Carnelian!"
      "Well," he said, "we can 'marry' now, can't we? Mr. Underwood said as much."
      "We are not divorced. Besides, even if I were divorced from Mr. Underwood, there is no reason to assume that I should wish to give myself in marriage to you. Moreover, Mr. Carnelian, there is nobody in the Silurian Age to marry us." She seemed to think she had produced the final argument, but he had not really understood her.
      "If we were to complete my moral education," he said, "would you marry me then?"
      "Perhaps — if everything else was properly settled — which seems unlikely now."
      He walked slowly back to the beach again and stared out over the sluggish sea, deep in thought. At his feet a small mollusc began to crawl through the sand. He watched it for a while and then, hearing a movement behind him, turned. She was standing there. She had made herself a hat of sorts from fern-leaves. She looked extremely pretty.
      "I am sorry if I upset you, Mr. Carnelian," she said kindly. "You are rather more direct than I have been used to, you see. I know that your manner is not deliberately offensive, that you are, in some ways, more innocent than I. But you have a way of saying the wrong thing — or sometimes the right thing in the wrong way."
      He shrugged. "That is why I am so desperate for my moral education to begin. I love you, Mrs. Amelia Underwood. Perhaps it was Lord Jagged who encouraged me to affect the emotion in the first place, but since then it has taken hold of me. I am its slave. I can console myself, of course, but I cannot stop loving you."
      "I am flattered."
      "And you have said that you loved me, but now you try to deny it."
      "I am still Mrs . Underwood," she pointed out gently.
      The small mollusc began, tentatively, to crawl onto his foot. "And I am still Jherek Carnelian," he replied.
      She noticed the mollusc. "Aha! Perhaps this one is edible."
      As she reached down to inspect it, he stopped her with his hand on her shoulder. "No," he said. "Let it go."
      She straightened up, smiling gently at him. "We cannot afford to be sentimental, Mr. Carnelian."
      His hand remained for an instant on her shoulder. The worn, stiffened velvet was beginning to grow soft again. "We cannot afford not to be, I think."
      Her grey eyes were serious; then she laughed. "Oh, very well. Let us wait, then, until we are extremely hungry." Gaily, with her black buttoned boots kicking at the fine sand of that primordial shore, she began to stride along beside the thick and salty sea.
 
"All things bright and beautiful,"
 
      she sang,
 
"all creatures great and small.
All things wise and wonderful:
The Lord God made them all!"
 
      There was a certain defiance in her manner, a certain spirited challenge to the inevitable, which made Jherek gasp with devotion.
      "Self-denial, after all," she called back over her shoulder, "is good for the soul!'
      "Ah!" He began to run after her and then slowed before he had caught up. He stared around him at the calm, Silurian world, struck suddenly by the freshness of it all, by the growing understanding that they really were the only two mammals on this whole planet. He looked up at the huge, golden sun and he blinked in its benign glare. He was full of wonder.
      A little later, panting, sweating, laughing, he fell in beside her. He noticed that her expression was almost tender as she turned to look at him.
      He offered her his arm.
      After a second's hesitation, she took it.
      They strolled together through the hot, Silurian afternoon.
      "Now, Mrs. Underwood," he said contentedly, "what is 'self-denial'?"

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