st very long. And men didn't have multiple orgasms. They just weren't as sexually capable as women." "That's horrible," Brenda said. I looked at her; she was genuinely shocked. "That's an improvement, I'll have to admit," Walter said. "And there's the entire phenomenon of menstruation," I added. "What's menstruation?" We both looked at her. She wasn't joking. Walter and I looked at each other and I could read his thoughts. "Anyway," I said, "you just pointed out the challenge. Lots of people get altered in one way or another. Some, like you, stay almost natural. Some of the alterations aren't compatible with others. Not all of them involve penetration of one person by another, for instance. What these newsex people are saying is, if we're going to tamper, why not come up with a system that is so much better than the others that everyone will want to be that way? Why should the sensations we associate with 'sexual pleasure' be always and forever the result of friction between mucous membranes? It's the same sort of urge people had about languages back on Earth, back when there were hundreds of languages, or about weights and measures. The metric system caught on, but Esperanto didn't. Today we have a few dozen languages still in use, and more types of sexual orientation than that." I settled back in my chair, feeling foolish. But I'd done my part. Now Walter could get on with whatever he had in mind. I glanced at Brenda, and she was staring at me with the wideeyed look of an acolyte to a guru. Walter took another drag on his cheroot, exhaled, and leaned back in his chair, fingers laced behind his head. "You know what today is?" he asked. "Thursday," Brenda supplied. Walter glanced at her, but didn't bother to reply. He took another drag. "It's the one hundred and ninety-ninth anniversary of the Invasion and Occupation of the Planet Earth." "Remind me to light a candle and say a novena." "You think it's funny." "Nothing funny about it," I said. "I just wonder what it has to do with me." Walter nodded, and put his feet down on the floor. "How many stories have you seen on the Invasion in the last week? The week leading up to this anniversary?" I was willing to play along. "Let's see. Counting the stuff in the Straight Shit, the items in the Lunarian and the K.C. News, that incisive series in Lunatime, and of course our own voluminous coverage . . . none. Not a single story." "That's right. I think it's time somebody did something about that." "While we're at it, let's do a big spread on the Battle of Agincourt, and the first manned landing on Mars." "You do think it's funny." "I'm merely applying a lesson somebody taught me when I started here. If it happened yesterday, it ain't news. And the News Nipple reports the news." "This isn't strictly for the Nipple," Walter admitted. "Uh-oh." He ignored my expression, which I hoped was sufficiently sour, and plowed ahead. "We'll use cuts from your stories in the Nipple. Most of 'em, anyway. You'll have Brenda to do most of the leg work." "What are you talking about?" Brenda asked Walter. When that didn't work, she turned to me. "What's he talking about?" "I'm talking about the supplement." "He's talking about the old reporters' graveyard." "Just one story a week. Will you let me explain?" I settled back in my chair and tried to turn off my brain. Oh, I'd fight it hard enough, but I knew I didn't have much choice when Walter got that look in his eye. The News Nipple Corporation publishes three pads. The first is the Nipple itself, updated hourly, full of what Walter Editor liked to think of as "lively" stories: the celebrity scandal, the pseudo-scientific breakthrough, psychic predictions, lovingly bloody coverage of disasters. We covered the rougher and more proletarian sports, and a certain amount of politics, if the proposition involved could be expressed in a short sentence. The Nipple had so many pictures you hardly needed to read the words. Like the other padloids, it would not have bothered with any copy but for the government literacy grants that often provided the financial margin between success and failure. A daily quota of words was needed to qualify for the grants. That exact number of words appeared in each of our issues, including "a," "an," "and," and "the." The Daily Cream was the intellectual appendix to the swollen intestine of the Nipple. It came free to every subscriber of the pad--those government grants again--and was read by about one in ten, according to our more optimistic surveys. It published thousands of times more words per hour, and included most of our political coverage. Somewhere between those two was the electronic equivalent of the Sunday supplement, published weekly, called Sundae. "Here's what I want," Walter went on. "You'll go out and cover your regular beats. But I want you to be thinking Sundae while you do that. Whatever you're covering, think about how it would have been different two hundred years ago, back on Earth. It can be anything at all. Like today, sex. There's a topic for you. Write about what sex was like back on Earth, and contrast it to what it's like now. You could even throw in stuff about what people think it's gonna be like in another twenty years, or a century." "Walter, I don't deserve this." "Hildy, you're the only man for it. I want one article per week for the entire year leading up to the bicentennial. I'm giving you a free hand as to what they're about. You can editorialize. You can personalize, make it like a column. You've always wanted a column; here's your chance at a byline. You want expensive consultants, advisors, research? You name it, you got it. You need to travel? I'm good for the money. I want only the best for this series." I didn't know what to say to that. It was a good offer. Nothing in life is ever exactly what you asked for, but I had wanted a column, and this seemed like a reasonable shot at it. "Hildy, during the twentieth century there was a time like no other time humans have seen before or since. My grandfather's great-grandfather was born in the year the Wright brothers made the first powered flight. By the time he died, there was a permanent base on Luna. My grandfather was ten when the old man died, and he's told me many times how he used to talk about the old days. It was amazing just how much change that old man had seen in his lifetime. "In that century they started talking about a 'generation gap.' So much happened, so many things changed so fast, how was a seventy-year-old supposed to talk to a fifteen-year-old in terms they both could understand? "Well, things don't change quite that fast anymore. I wonder if they ever will again? But we've got something in common with those people. We've got kids like Brenda here who hardly remember anything beyond last year, and they're living side by side with people who were born and grew up on the Earth. People who remember what a one-gee gravity field was like, what it was to walk around outside and breathe free, un-metered air. Who were raised when people were born, grew up, and died in the same sex. People who fought in wars. Our oldest citizens are almost three hundred now. Surely there's fifty-two stories in that. "This is a story that's been waiting two hundred years to be told. We've had our heads in the sand. We've been beaten, humiliated, suffered a racial set-back that I'm afraid . . . " It was as if he suddenly had heard what he was saying. He sputtered to a stop, not looking me in the eye. I was not used to speeches from Walter. It made me uneasy. The assignment made me uneasy. I don't think about the Invasion much--which was precisely his point, of course--and I think that's just as well. But I could see his passion, and knew I'd better not fight it. I was used to rage, to being chewed out for this or that. Being appealed to was something brand new. I felt it was time to lighten the atmosphere a little. "So how big a raise are we talking about here?" I asked. He settled back in his chair and smiled, back on familiar ground. "You know I never discuss that. It'll be in your next paycheck. If you don't like it, gripe to me then." "And I have to use the kid on all this stuff?" "Hey! I'm right here," Brenda protested. "The kid is vital to the whole thing. She's your sounding board. If a fact from the old days sounds weird to her, you know you're onto something. She's contemporary as your last breath, she's eager to learn and fairly bright, and she knows nothing. You'll be the middle man. You're about the right age for it, and history's your hobby. You know more about old Earth than any man your age I've ever met." "If I'm in the middle . . . " "You might want to interview my grandfather," Walter suggested. "But there'll be a third member of your team. Somebody Earth-born. I haven't decided yet who that'll be. "Now get out of here, both of you." I could see Brenda had a thousand questions she still wanted to ask. I warned her off with my eyes, and followed her to the door. "And Hildy," Walter said. I looked back. "If you put words like abnegation and infibulation in these stories, I'll personally caponize you." =*= =*= =*= =*= CHAPTER THREE I pulled the tarp off my pile of precious lumber and watched the scorpions scuttle away in the sunlight. Say what you want about the sanctity of life; I like to crush 'em. Deeper in the pile I'd disturbed a rattlesnake. I didn't see him, but could hear him warning me away. Handling them from the ends, I selected a plank and pulled it out. I shouldered it and carried it to my half-finished cabin. It was evening, the best time to work in West Texas. The temperature had dropped to ninety-five in the oldstyle scale they used there. During the day it had been well over a hundred. I positioned the plank on two sawhorses near what would be the front porch when I was finished. I squatted and looked down its length. This was a one-by-ten--inches, not centimeters--which meant it actually measured about nine by seven eighths, for reasons no one had ever explained to me. Thinking in inches was difficult enough, without dealing in those odd ratios called fractions. What was wrong with decimals, and what was wrong with a one-by-ten actually being one inch by ten inches? Why twelve inches in a foot? Maybe there was a story in it for the bicentennial series. The plank had been advertised as ten feet long, and that measurement was accurate. It was also supposed to be straight, but if it was they had used a noodle for a straightedge. Texas was the second of what was to be three disneylands devoted to the eighteenth century. Out here west of the Pecos we reckoned it to be 1845, the last year of the Texas Republic, though you could use technology as recent as 1899 without running afoul of the anachronism regulations. Pennsylvania had been the first of the triad, and my plank, complete with two big bulges in the width and a depressing sag when held by one end, had been milled there by "Amish" sawyers using the old methods. A little oval stamp in a corner guaranteed this: "Approved, Lunar Antiquities Reproduction Board." Either the methods of the 1800's couldn't reliably produce straight and true lumber, or those damn Dutchmen were still learning their craft. So I did what the carpenters of the Texas Republic had done. I got out my plane (also certified by the L.A.R.B.), removed the primitive blade, sharpened it against a home-made whetstone, re-attached the blade, and began shaving away the irregularities. I'm not complaining. I was lucky to get the lumber. Most of the cabin was made of rough-hewn logs notched together at the ends, chinked with adobe. The board had turned gray in the heat and sun, but after a few strokes I was down to the yellow pine interior. The wood curled up around the blade and the chips dropped around my bare feet. It smelled fresh and new and I found myself smiling as the sweat dripped off my nose. It would be good to be a carpenter, I thought. Maybe I'd quit the newspaper business. Then the blade broke and jammed into the wood. My palm slipped off the knob in front and tried to skate across the fresh-planed surface, driving long splinters into my skin. The plane clattered off the board and went for my toe with the hellish accuracy of a pain-guided missile. I shouted a few words rarely heard in 1845, and some uncommon even in the 23rd century. I hopped around on one foot. Another lost art, hopping. "It could have been worse," a voice said in my ear. It was either incipient schizophrenia, or the Central Computer. I bet on the CC. "How? By hitting both feet?" "Gravity. Consider the momentum such a massive object could have attained, had this really been West Texas, which lies at the bottom of a spacetime depression twenty-five thousand miles per hour deep." Definitely the CC. I examined my hand. Blood was oozing from it, running down my forearm and dripping from the elbow. But there was no arterial pumping. The foot, though it still hurt like fire, was not damaged. "You see now why laborers in 1845 wore work boots." "Is that why you called, CC? To give me a lecture about safety in the work place?" "No. I was going to announce a visitor. The colorful language lesson was an unexpected bonus of my tuning in on--" "Shut up, will you?" The Central Computer did so. The end of a splinter protruded from my palm, so I pulled on it. I got some, but a lot was still buried in there. Others had broken off below skin level. All in all, a wonderful day's work. A visitor? I looked around and saw no one, though a whole tribe of Apaches could have been hiding in the clumps of mesquite. I had not expected to see any sign of the CC. It uses the circuitry in my own head to produce its voice. And it wasn't supposed to manifest itself in Texas. As is often the case, there was more to the CC than it was telling. "CC, on-line, please." "I hear and obey." "Who's the visitor?" "Tall, young, ignorant of tampons, with a certain puppy-like charm--" "Oh, Jesus." "I know I'm not supposed to intrude on these antique environments, but she was quite insistent on learning your location, and I thought it better for you to have some forewarning than to--" "Okay. Now shut up." I sat in the rickety chair which had been my first carpentry project. Being careful of the injured hand, I pulled on the work boots I should have been wearing all along. The reason I hadn't was simple: I hated them. There was another story for Walter. Shoes. If Lunarians wear them, they tend to be the soft kind, like moccasins, or socks. Reason: in a crowded urban environment of perfectly smooth floors and carpets and a majority of bare-foot people, hard shoes are anti-social. You could break someone else's toes. Once I had my feet jammed into the smelly things I had to search for the buttonhook. Buttons, on shoes! It was outrageous. How had people ever tolerated such things? To add insult to inutility, the damn things had cost me a fortune. I stood and was about to head into town when the CC spoke again. "If you leave those tools out and it rains, they will combine with the oxygen in the air in a slow combustion reaction." "Rust is too poor a word for you, right? It rains out here . . . what? Once every hundred days?" But my heart wasn't in it. The CC was right. If button-up torture devices were expensive, period tools were worth a king's ransom. My plane, saw, hammer and chisel had cost a year's salary. The good news was I could re-sell them for more than I paid . . . if they weren't rusted. I wrapped them in an oiled cloth and stowed them carefully in my toolbox, then headed down the trail toward town. # I was in sight of New Austin before I spied Brenda, looking like an albino flamingo. She was standing on one leg while the other was turned around so the foot was at waist level, sole upward. To do it she had twisted at hip and knee in ways I hadn't thought humanly possible. She was nude, her skin a uniform creamy white. She had no pubic hair. "Hi, there, seven foot two, eyes of blue." She glanced at me, then pointed at her foot, indignantly. "They don't keep these paths very tidy. Look what it did to my foot. There was a stone, with a sharp point on it." "They specialize in sharp points around here," I said. "It's a natural environment. You've probably never seen one before." "My class went to Amazon three years ago." "Sure, on the moving walkway. While I'm at it, I'd better tell you the plants have sharp points, too. That big thing there is a prickly pear. Don't walk through it. That thing behind you is a cactus, too. Don't step on it. This bush has thorns. Over there is cenizo. It blooms after a rain; real pretty." She looked around, possibly realizing for the first time that there was more than one kind of plant, and that they all had names. "You know what they're all called?" "Not all. I know the big ones. Those spiky ones are yucca. The tall ones, like whips, those are ocotillo. Most of those short bushes are creosote. That tree is mesquite." "Not much of a tree." "It's not much of an environment. Things here have to struggle to stay alive. Not like Amazon, where the plants fight each other. Here they work too hard conserving water." She looked around again, wincing as her injured foot touched the ground. "No animals?" "They're all around you. Insects, reptiles, mostly. Some antelope. Buffalo further east. I could show you a cougar lair." I doubted she had any idea what a cougar was, or antelope and buffalo, for that matter. This was a city girl through and through. About like me before I moved to Texas, three years ago. I relented and went down on one knee. "Let me see that foot." There was a ragged gash on the heel, painful but not serious. "Hey, your hand is hurt," she said. "What happened?" "Just a stupid accident." I noticed as I said it that she not only lacked pubic hair, she had no genitals. That used to be popular sixty or seventy years ago, for children, as part of a theory of the time concerning something called "delayed adolescence." I hadn't seen it in at least twenty years, though I'd heard there were religious sects that still practiced it. I wondered if her family belonged to one, but it was much too personal to ask about. "I don't like this place," she said "It's dangerous." She made it sound like an obscenity. The whole idea offended her, as well it should, coming as she did from the most benign environment ever created by humans. "It's not so bad. Can you walk on that?" "Oh, sure." She put her foot down and walked along beside me, on her toes. As if she weren't tall enough already. "What was that remark about seven feet? I've got two feet, just like everyone else." "Actually, you're closer to seven-four, I'd guess." I had to give her a brief explanation of the English system of weights and measures as used in the West Texas disneyland. I'm not sure she understood it, but I didn't hold it against her, because I didn't, either. We had arrived in the middle of New Austin. This was no great feat of walking; the middle is about a hundred yards from the edge. New Austin consists of two streets: Old Spanish Trail and Congress Street. The intersection is defined by four buildings: The Travis Hotel, the Alamo Saloon, a general store and a livery stable. The hotel and saloon each have a second story. At the far end of Congress is a white clapboard Baptist church. That, and a few dozen other ramshackle buildings strung out between the church and Four Corners, is New Austin. "They took all my clothes," she said. "Naturally." "They were perfectly good clothes." "I'm sure they were. But only contemporary things are allowed in here." "What for?" "Think of it as a living museum." I'd been headed for the doctor's office. Considering the time of day, I thought better of it and mounted the steps to the saloon. We entered through the swinging doors. It was dark inside, and a little cooler. Behind me, Brenda had to duck to get through the doorway. A player piano tinkled in the background, just like an old western movie. I spotted the doctor sitting at the far end of the bar. "Say, young lady," the bartender shouted. "You can't come in here dressed like that." I looked around, saw her looking down at herself in complete confusion. "What's the matter with you people?" she shouted. "The lady outside made me leave all my clothes with her." "Amanda," the bartender said, "you have anything she could wear?" He turned to Brenda again. "I don't care what you wear out in the bush. You come into my establishment, you'll be decently dressed. What they told you outside is no concern of mine." One of the bar girls approached Brenda, holding a pink robe. I turned away. Let them sort it out. Ever since moving to Texas, I'd played their games of authenticity. I didn't have an accent, but I'd picked up a smattering of words. Now I groped for one, a particularly colorful one, and came up with it. "I hear tell you're the sawbones around these parts," I said. The doctor chuckled and extended his hand. "Ned Pepper," he said, "at your service, sir." When I didn't shake his hand he frowned, and noticed the dirty bandage wrapped around it. "Looks like you threw a shoe, son. Let me take a look at that." He carefully unwrapped the bandage, and winced when he saw the splinters. I could smell the sourness of his breath, and his clothes. Doc was one of the permanent residents, like the bartender and the rest of the hotel staff. He was an alcoholic who had found a perfect niche for himself. In Texas he had status and could spend most of the day swilling whiskey at the Alamo. The drunken physician was a cliche' from a thousand horse operas of the twentieth century, but so what? All we have in reconstructing these past environments is books and movies. The movies are much more helpful, one picture being equal to a kilo-word. "Can you do anything with it?" I asked. He looked up in surprise, and swallowed queasily. "I guess I could dig 'em out. Couple quarts of rye--maybe one for you, too--though I freely admit the idea makes me want to puke." He squinted at my hand again, and shook his head. "You really want me to do it?" "I don't see why not. You're a doctor, aren't you?" "Sure, by 1845 standards. The Board trained me. Took about a week. I got a bag full of steel tools and a cabinet full of patent elixirs. What I don't have is an anaesthetic. I suppose those splinters hurt going in." "They still hurt." "It's nothing to how it'd hurt if I took the case. Let me . . . Hildy? Is that your name? That's right, I remember now. Newspaperman. Last time I talked to you you seemed to know a few things about Texas. More than most weekenders." "I'm not a weekender," I protested. "I've been building a cabin." "No offense meant, son, but it started out as an investment, didn't it?" I admitted it. The most valuable real estate in Luna is in the less-developed disneylands. I'd quadrupled my money so far and there were no signs the boom was slowing. "It's funny how much people will pay for hardship," he said. "They warn you up front but they don't spend a lot of time talking about medical care. People come here to live, and they tell themselves they'll live authentic. Then they get a taste of my medicine and run to the real world. Pain ain't funny, Hildy. Mostly I deliver babies, and any reasonably competent woman could do that herself." "Then what are you good for?" I regretted it as soon as I said it, but he didn't seem to take offense. "I'm mostly window dressing," he admitted. "I don't mind it. There's worse ways of earning your daily oxygen." Brenda had drifted over to catch the last of our conversation. She was wrapped in a ridiculous pink robe, still favoring one foot. "You fixed up yet?" she asked me. "I think I'll wait," I said. "Another lame mare?" the doctor asked. "Toss that hoof up here, little lady, and let me take a look at it." When he had examined the cut he grinned and rubbed his hands together. "Here's an injury within my realm of expertise," he said. "You want me to treat it?" "Sure, why not?" The doctor opened his black bag and Brenda watched him innocently. He removed several bottles, cotton swabs, bandages, laid it all out carefully on the bar. "A little tincture of iodine to cleanse the wound," he muttered, and touched a purplish wad of cotton to Brenda's foot. She howled, and jumped four feet straight up, using only the un-injured foot. If I hadn't grabbed her ankle she would have hit the ceiling. "What the hell is he doing?" she yelled at me. "Hush, now," I soothed her. "But it hurts." I gave her my best determined-reporter look, grabbing her hand to intensify the effect. "There's a story in here, Brenda. Medicine then and now. Think how pleased Walter will be." "Well, why doesn't he work on you, too?" she pouted. "It would have involved amputation," I said. And it would have, too; I'd have cut off his hand if he laid it on me. "I don't know if I want to--" "Just hold still and I'll be through in a minute." She howled, she cried, but she held still enough for him to finish cleaning the wound. She'd make a hell of a reporter one day. The doctor took out a needle and thread. "What's that for?" she asked, suspiciously. "I have to suture the wound now," he said. "If suture means sew up, you can suture yourself, you bastard." He glared at her, but saw the determination in her eyes. He put the needle and thread away and prepared a bandage. "Yes sir, it was hard times, 1845," he said. "You know what caused people the most trouble? Teeth. If a tooth goes bad here, what you do is you go to the barber down the street, or the one over in Lonesome Dove, who's said to be quicker. Barbers used to handle it all; teeth, surgery, and hair cutting. But the thing about teeth, usually you could do something. Yank it right out. Most things that happened to people, you couldn't do anything. A little cut like this, it could get infected and kill you. There was a million ways to die and mostly the doctors just tried to keep you warm." Brenda was listening with such fascination she almost forgot to protest when he put the bandage over the wound. Then she frowned and touched his hand as he was about to knot it around her ankle. "Wait a minute," she said. "You're not finished." "I sure as hell am." "You mean that's it?" "What else do you suggest?" "I still have a hole in me, you idiot. It's not fixed." "It'll heal in about a week. All by itself." It was clear from her look that she thought this was a very dangerous man. She started to say something, changed her mind, and glared at the bartender. "Give me some of that brown stuff," she said, pointing. He filled a shot glass with whiskey and set it in front of her. She sipped it, made a face, and sipped again. "That's the idea, little lady," the doctor said. "Take two of those every morning if symptoms persist." "What do we owe you, doc?" I asked "Oh, I don't think I could rightly charge you . . . " His eyes strayed to the bottles behind the bar. "A drink for the doctor, landlord," I said. I looked around, and smiled at myself. What the hell. "A drink for the house. On me." People started drifting toward the bar. "What'll it be, doc?" the bartender asked. "Grain alcohol?" "Some of that clear stuff," the doctor agreed. # We were a quarter mile out of town before Brenda spoke to me again. "This business about covering up," she ventured. "That's a cultural thing, right? Something they did in this place?" "Not the place so much as the time. Out here in the country no one cares whether you cover up or not. But in town, they try to stick to the old rules. They stretched a point for you, actually. You really should have been wearing a dress that reached your ankles, your wrists, and covered most of your neck, too. Hell, a young lady really shouldn't have been allowed in a saloon at all." "Those other girls weren't wearing all that much." "Different rule. They're 'Fallen flowers.'" She was giving me a blank look again. "Whores." "Oh, sure," she said. "I read an article that said it used to be illegal. How could they make that illegal?" "Brenda, they can make anything illegal. Prostitution has been illegal more often than not. Don't ask me to explain it; I don't understand, either." "So they make a law in here, and then they let you break it?" "Why not? Most of those girls don't sell sex, anyway. They're here for the tourists. Get your picture taken with the B-girls in the Alamo Saloon. The idea of Texas is to duplicate what it was really like in 1845, as near as we can determine. Prostitution was illegal but tolerated in a place like New Austin. Hell, the Sheriff would most likely be one of the regular customers. Or take the bar. They shouldn't have served you, because this culture didn't approve of giving alcoholic drinks to people as young as you. But on the frontier, there was the feeling that if you were big enough to reach up and take the drink off the bar, you were big enough to drink it." I looked at her frowning intently down at the ground, and knew most of this was not getting through to her. "I don't suppose you can ever really understand a culture unless you grew up in it," I said. "These people were sure screwed up." "Probably so." We were climbing the trail that led toward my apartment. Brenda kept her eyes firmly on the ground, her mind obviously elsewhere, no doubt chewing over the half-dozen crazy things I'd told her in the past hour. By not looking around she was missing a sunset spectacular even by the lavish standards of West Texas. The air had turned salmon pink when the sun dipped below the horizon, streaked by wispy curls of gold. Somehow the waning light made the surrounding rocky hills a pale purple. I wondered if that was authentic. A quarter of a million miles from where I stood, the real sun was setting on the real Texas. Were the colors as spectacular there? Here, of course, the "sun" was sitting in its track just below the forced-perspective "hills." A fusion tech was seeing to the shut-down process, after which the sun would be trucked through a tunnel and attached to the eastern end of the track, ready to be lit again in a few hours. Somewhere behind the hills another technician was manipulating colored mirrors and lenses to diffuse the light over the dome of the sky. Call him an artist; I won't argue with you. They've been charging admission to see the sunsets in Pennsylvania and Amazon for several years now. There's talk of doing that here, too. It seemed unlikely to me that nature, acting at random, could produce the incredible complexity and subtlety of a disneyland sunset. # It was almost dark by the time we reached the Rio Grande. The entrance to my condo was on the south, "Mexican" side of the river. West Texas is compressed, to display as wide a range of terrain and biome as possible. The variety of geographical features that, on Earth, spread over five hundred miles and included parts of New Mexico and Old Mexico here had been made to fit within a sub-lunar bubble forty miles in diameter. One edge duplicated the rolling hills and grassland around the real Austin, while the far edge had the barren rocky plateaus to be found around El Paso. The part of the Rio Grande we had reached mimicked the land east of the Big Bend in the real river, an area of steep gorges where the water ran deep and swift. Or at least it did in the brief rainy season. Now, in the middle of summer, it was no trick to wade across. Brenda followed me down the forty-foot cliff on the Texas side, then watched me splash through the river. She had said nothing for the last few miles, and she said nothing now, though it was clear she thought someone should have stopped this massive water leak, or at least provided a bridge, boat, or helicopter. But she sloshed her way over to me and stood waiting as I located the length of rope that would take us to the top. "Aren't you curious about why I'm here?" she asked. "No. I know why you're here." I tugged on the rope. It was dark enough now that I couldn't see the ledge, fifty feet up, where I had secured it. "Wait till I call down to you," I told her. I set one booted foot on the cliff face. "Walter's been pretty angry," she said. "The deadline is just--" "I know when the deadline is." I started up the rope, hand over hand, feet on the dark rocks. "What are we going to write about?" she called up at me. "I told you. Medicine." I had knocked out the introductory article on the Invasion Bicentennial the night after Brenda and I got the assignment. I thought it had been some of my best work, and Walter had agreed. He'd given us a big spread, the cover, personality profiles of both of us that were--in my case, at least--irresistibly flattering. Brenda and I had then sat down and generated a list of twenty topics just off the tops of our heads. We didn't anticipate any trouble finding more when the time came. But since that first day, every time I tried to write one of Walter's damnable articles . . . nothing happened. Result: the cabin was coming along nicely, ahead of schedule. Another few weeks like the past one and I'd have it finished. And be out of a job. I crested the top of the cliff and looked down. I could just see the white blob that was Brenda. I called down to her and she swarmed up like a monkey. "Nicely done," I said, as I coiled the rope. "Did you ever think what that would have been like if you weighed six times what you weigh now?" "Oddly enough, I have," she said. "I keep trying to tell you, I'm not completely ignorant." "Sorry." "I'm willing to learn. I've been reading a lot. But there's just so much, and so much of it is so foreign . . . " She ran a hand through her hair. "Anyway, I know how hard it must have been to live on the Earth. My arms wouldn't be strong enough to support my weight down there." She looked down at herself, and I thought I could see a smile. "Hell, I'm so lunified I wonder if my legs could support my weight." "Probably not, at first." "I got five friends together and we took turns trying to walk with all the others on our shoulders. I managed three steps before I collapsed." "You're really getting into this, aren't you?" I was leading the way down the narrow ledge to the cave entrance. "Of course I am. I take this very seriously. But I'm beginning to wonder if you do." I didn't have an answer to that. We had reached the cave, and I started to lead her in when she pulled back violently on my hand. "What is that?" She didn't need to elaborate; I came through the cave twice a day, and I still wasn't used to the smell. Not that it seemed as bad now as it had at first. It was a combination of rotting meat, feces, ammonia, and something else much more disturbing that I had taken to calling "predator smell." "Be quiet," I whispered. "This is a cougar den. She's not really dangerous, but she had a litter of cubs last week and she's gotten touchy since then. Don't let go of my hand; there's no light till we get to the door." I didn't give her a chance to argue. I just pulled on her hand, and we were inside. The smell was even stronger in the cave. The mother cougar was fairly fastidious, for an animal. She cleaned up her cubs' messes, and she made her own outside the cave. But she wasn't so careful about disposing of the remains of her prey before they started to get ripe. I think she had a different definition of "ripe." Her own fur had a rank mustiness that was probably sweet perfume to a male cougar, but was enough to stun the unprepared human. I couldn't see her, but I sensed her in a way beyond sight or hearing. I knew she wouldn't attack. Like all the large predators in disneylands, she had been conditioned to leave humans alone. But the conditioning set up a certain amount of mental conflict. She didn't like us, and wasn't shy about letting us know. When I was halfway through the cave, she let fly with a sound I can only describe as hellish. It started as a low growl, and quickly rose to a snarling screech. Every hair on my body stood at attention. It's sort of a bracing feeling, once you get used to it; your skin feels thick and tough as leather. My scrotum grew very small and hard as it tried its best to get certain treasures out of harm's way. As for Brenda . . . she tried to run straight up the backs of my legs and over the top of my head. Without some fancy footwork on my part we both would have gone sprawling. But I'd been ready for that reaction, and hurried along until the inner door got out of our way with a blast of light from the far side. Brenda didn't stop running for another twenty meters. Then she stopped, a sheepish grin on her face, breathing shallowly. We were in the long, utilitarian hallway that led to the back door of my condo. "I don't know what got into me," she said. "Don't worry," I said. "Apparently that's one of the sounds that is part of the human brain's hard wiring. It's a reflex, like when you stick your finger in a flame, you don't think about it, you instantly draw it back." "And you hear that sound, your bowels turn to oatmeal." "Close enough." "I'd like to go back and see the thing that made that sound." "It's worth seeing," I agreed. "But you'll have to wait for daylight. The cubs are cute. It's hard to believe they'll turn into monsters like their mother." # I hesitated at the door. In my day, and up until fairly recently, you just didn't let someone enter your home lightly. Luna is a crowded society. There are people wherever you turn, tripping over your feet, elbowing you, millions of intrusive, sweaty bodies. You have to have a small place of privacy. After you'd known someone five or ten years you might, if you really liked the person, invite her over for drinks or sex in your own bed. But most socializing took place on neutral ground. The younger generation wasn't like that. They thought nothing of dropping by just to say hello. I could make a big thing of it, driving yet another wedge between the two of us, or I could let it go. What the hell. We'd have to learn to work together sooner or later. I opened the door with my palm print and stepped aside to let her enter. Sh