The Totems of Abydos

CHAPTER 42


And so, from time to time, Pons, and others, came to gather at the platform, to gaze upward at a shaggy beast who, at times, was silent, letting its presence be its message, and, at other times, when so moved, would speak to them. Beside this beast, usually recumbent, was another. And, here and there, upon occasion, there were other beasts about, too, sometimes on the platform, sometimes playing behind it. Some of these beasts would accompany the Pons, and the others, back to the village. The string remained where it was but, after a time, the Pons, and the others, did not pay so much attention to it. With their small weapons, made by themselves, the string, and even the guardianship, and the pact, was not so important. Indeed, sometimes, some of them, over the years, left the string altogether, and went away, to various places in the woods, to make their own villages. Often these were accompanied by a beast or two. These sorts of things were little noted at Company Station, where the lighters continued to lift off from, and later return to, their launching pads, servicing the freighters, and, later, sometimes, the liners, paused above the station, so high as to be invisible. A thousand years later an expedition to the Pons was disappointed to learn that they were no longer totemistic, but had rather, it seemed, moved to a different cultural level, perhaps that of gods and heroes. One of these gods, or heroes, as the case might be, had the unlikely name ‘Rodriguez’. To be sure, the Pons were an interesting life form in various ways. For one thing they appeared to have become involved in an interesting symbiotic development, an unusual relationship with beasts. This was not investigated in any detail because of the dangers of doing so. It was mostly remarked upon from a distance. As it was said, the children of the Pons walked with beasts, and had become, in some ways, like unto their brothers, the lions. In another thousand years some of these unusual groupings, those of Pons and beasts, departed from Abydos, to settle upon and, some said, even to claim, far-flung worlds.

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