The Caryatids - Bruce Sterling [118]
Lucky brightened to see her making a joke, as if he hadn’t given her a beating. “Today I wish I had seen that mammoth, and not just its stinking dung.”
“There will be other mammoths to walk the Earth. Something always breaks the walls and stampedes out of the bubbles … I don’t like this. The state does not allow this. This should not be happening. This is bad.”
“A big herd of sheep, eighty, ninety,” he told her, “with a boy on a pony, and the guts of his horse were the same way.” Lucky shifted his sniper rifle from one camouflaged shoulder to another. “We ride with greater care now, and we watch the skies always.”
It was a comfort to closely follow the sheep tracks. The busy feet of a flock that size would clear the earth of land mines.
Horse tracks appeared, the unshod hooves of Mongolian ponies, and then the signs of tents. These had been big round tents, Mongolian “ger” tents, which were portable yurts of crisscrossed sticks and woolly felt.
There were dead fires in the abandoned camp, with a host of human footprints.
This was not some minor group of fanatics skittering across the desert to launch one bomb their way. These were clear signs of families of people, a clan, with women, many children … Gathering grass. These Disorder nomads seemed to have an industrial obsession with grass. They had been cutting tufts of grass with hand sickles, and mincing that grass up into a kind of crude silage, and baking water out of the grass somehow, maybe with solar distilleries.
The whole village was methodically grazing on the grass. They even left behind an industrial grass dung, dry, fermented wads of the stuff mashed up like dirty oatmeal or dry beer lees.
“I’m surprised that we lack intelligence about these people,” she said, “for it’s clear they’ve heard of us and what we are doing.”
“These people made the airplanes that attacked us. I thought there would be maybe two men, three bad men, a raiding team, my enemies,” said the Badaulet thoughtfully. “Yet I don’t know these people. They are many and well organized. We will have trouble, you and I alone, killing so many.”
“No we won’t. Not really. No.”
“You didn’t even bring a gun, woman.”
“Give me a clear line of sight at them. I will put Red Sonja’s evil eye on these bandit cult sons of bitches, and I have no care for their numbers.
“They swore to sweep the foe away with no care for their own lives;
Five thousand rode out in their sables and brocades.
Their piteous bones litter the banks of dry ravines,
Five thousand ghosts dreamt of in ladies’ bedchambers.”
The Badaulet mulled this recitation over. “They gave you the Assassin’s Mace.”
“Yes. No. Not that. Something else like that. There are many things like that in China.”
“So you truly killed the ‘five great generals,’ Sonja? And you killed all their troops as well?”
“It never works the way it gets told in those stories.”
The people of the tent village had no vehicles. They seemed to have knocked their camp down, thrown it on horseback, and instantly thundered off in all directions.
Yet their scattered swarm must surely have regrouped somewhere, somehow … With radios, telephones … or maybe with nothing more technical than drums, bugles, and tall flags on sticks. Genghis Khan had never gotten lost, and he’d ridden over the biggest empire on Earth.
The Badaulet removed his face net, pulled his visored cap over his eyes, and stared at the barren soil. He scowled.
“I can see a track,” she offered.
“That thing is not a track, woman. That is a hole in the ground.”
“Well, I saw another hole much like it. Back there.”
The strange holes were violent gouges in the desert soil, spaced ten meters, eleven meters apart. Pierced holes, like the jabbing of javelins.
Some two-legged thing was running across the steppe, bounding with tremendous strides. And not just one of them, either. Suddenly there were many more such holes. A herd of the violent jumping things, a rambling horde of them.
“These are not the grass people of the camp,” he told her, “these are running machines.”
Sonja