Around the circle, several somethings were being passed hand to hand, apparently food. People nibbled as they came around.

  The first was dried, salted liver. It might have been salted in blood or urine; there was a sharp tang to it.

  The second was very dry, very tough, very chewy. He didn’t have the jaws these people did, and had to work and twist to tear off a bit. After five chews he was pretty sure it was dried gut. He kept chewing, made a surreptitious pass with his hand and got rid of it. Gah. They ate anything here.

  Then the entertainment got interesting.

  Regina Alexander used her camera as a shield. Behind it, she could observe anything calmly, even enemy fire or death. The locals had no clue about technology at all, and as long as she didn’t use flash or view screen, she could shoot as she pleased. She’d slapped a band-aid over the LED and not had the problems Oglesby had with his flashlight.

  This was the cursed work, though, shooting through an IR lens with the fire and a hand held illuminator for light. Her husband had given her the light with the IR filter, and it was far too hot a spot for any photography, but it might be useful for searching or whatever, so she’d brought it. Now she needed it. She’d rather have him.

  She blinked tears again. There was nothing to be done about that, and other issues that were critical. Back to photos.

  “Caswell, can you hold this for me? Point it where I say.”

  “Sure, hon,” Caswell said, and took the light. She had nothing against Caswell, but they weren’t likely to be friends, but she was glad not to be the only woman. “Hon” wasn’t really appropriate from a subordinate, but Caswell was an SP and Gina had originally been airborne intel in the USAF. As the only two females, with similar background, she didn’t really mind and didn’t see a need for formality.

  “Getting good shots?” Caswell asked.

  “I think so,” she replied. “I can’t tell until I can look at them.”

  “Old school.”

  “Almost.”

  She wanted to see these photos on the screen, but that would have to wait. She thought that was a good shot of the chief and Barker.

  Caswell did okay, following the camera lens and lighting whatever seemed to be the subject.

  Then she paused. Two of the women had stepped out, but were starting to dance. They wore wrapped skirts, draped half-ponchos and beaded headbands that looked to be made of shells and bone. “Headdresses,” she said, and zoomed in for a shot.

  It was an odd dance. It had tempo and beat, with both claps and stomps, and some percussion with sticks and sections of bark.

  Then the singing started, and it was a slow chant, not very melodic, but oddly resonant. Then it sounded like a bullroarer.

  “Oh, throat singing!” Caswell said.

  “Dammit,” Gina swore, and fumbled with the camera. She was a still photographer, not a videographer but . . . dammit.

  She pulled her coat around and over her head, ducked down, and flicked the screen on. Options, settings, there, video. She closed the screen.

  Now the two women were singing, too, holding hands and stamping feet while echoing deep sounds from their throats, almost like didgeridoos.

  They moved into an arm-to-arm embrace, and Caswell said, “That’s almost like the Inuit. Even to the headbands.”

  The others were also chanting, softer, somewhat harmonically, and the percussion softened to background, but still palpable.

  The Paleo people had much smaller personal spaces than modern people. But even so, these two had to be close friends or relatives.

  Or . . .

  She kept videoing, and around her, she could almost hear the held breaths.

  The two women danced arm in arm, face to face, cheek to cheek. There was a harmonic resonance with their voices that close together that added shimmery sounds to the echoey resonance.

  Their eyes were closed and they were in trance, like some club dancers or meditationists.

  Then they were supporting each other, one leg raised, wrapped around the other, in a remarkably stable and almost erotic stance. She wished she could get some stills, too. The symmetry was striking.

  They hit a harmony and kept the chant going in stereo. They were very close to each others’ notes, but there was a faint warble, like tuning an instrument. Phase cancellations? Yes. Ethereal. And they were more than close, they had hands on each other and inside their minimal clothing.

  Devereaux muttered, “Goddamn.”

  She always felt embarrassed watching people make out, but she kept rolling. She could put about twelve minutes on each of these cards, and she had ten cards with her, but she had already filled three. She might be able to load some to her phone.

  Caswell said, “That’s a new one to me. Sensual touch between close associates or sister-mates is not unusual, but I’ve never heard of sexual contact. But it seems more for feedback than sex.”

  Gina wasn’t sure. Their breathing turned to panting a couple of times. Their hands writhed all over, not just on erogenous zones, but there was definite masturbation involved.

  “Given the casual way they touch here, it’s not that shocking.” Talking about it clinically was the only way not to be embarrassed.

  “No, but I haven’t heard of anything like it.”

  Then the women flowed apart again, the deep singing continuing, but the intensity and volume slackened slightly.

  That wasn’t all. Someone had a curl of bark stuffed with some kind of leaf. They applied a glowing stick, waved it to flame, blew it to char, and inhaled deeply of the thick, oily smoke emanating from it.

  Oglesby said, “Uh, yeah, what do we do, LT?”

  The LT hesitated, and Spencer said, “Under the circumstances, have a polite whiff and pass it on. Fake it if you need to.”

  Oglesby was first, and accepted the scroll gravely. He held it up, drew at it with his mouth, and almost coughed.

  “Strong,” he said, as he passed it to Devereaux. “I don’t know if it’s weed or what.”

  Devereaux did cough, and seeing as how she was allergic to smoking and found it disgusting, Gina made a token show of waving it under her nose, arched so it looked like she expanded her chest, and passed it.

  Caswell inhaled a sip through her nose, as Oglesby said, “Oh, shit, whatever it is, I got a buzz.”

  Caswell sniffed a bit deeper, coughed. Her hands shook as she passed it, and as soon as Barker had hold of it, she sneezed.

  “Oh, that was nasty.”

  Barker took a deep drag and didn’t seem at all bothered.

  “Not quite pot. I wonder if it’s some fungus on a leaf?”

  Spencer didn’t seem fazed. Ortiz and Trinidad passed it quickly, and Dalton faked it very badly. The LT lingered over it, not inhaling but making a good show, before passing it to the shaman, who took it with a flourish and grin.

  There was more chanting and drumming, and two couples wandered away from the fire circle. Then another.

  “Looks like they’re breaking up, LT,” she said.

  “Yeah, we’ll stick around a bit. Watch out for anyone trying to pair up with us.”

  Spencer said, “The Sun Lemur would not approve.”

  Devereaux said, “Sister over there has a nice shape to her. I’d be happy to help with some diplomacy.”

  Elliott said, “I’m sure you would, but there are a lot of reasons why it’s a really bad idea at this point.”

  “Yeah. Including diseases we have no idea about.”

  “Did everyone hear that?” Spencer noted.

  There was zero chance she was going to involve herself with any of these men. They were aesthetically pleasing, but socially disturbing, and she was married. The idea of strange, Stone Age STIs made them even less appealing.

  The barkajoint came round again, and she waved it past her face. Oglesby looked disoriented, and Barker was almost out of focus.

  “Yup, I’m betting on some form of ditchweed with some mushroom sprinkles,” he said. “Wh
eee.”

  It was hilarious to see him stoned.

  Caswell said, “Maybe morning glory, too. Mild hallucinogen.”

  Gina was still recording.

  She ducked under her coat, switched back to still, swapped memory cards, placing the one very carefully in a case in a dedicated sealed pouch on her gear. She could swap cards under fire in seconds. Then she got a shot of Barker standing, staring at his hand.

  Looking around, she realized all the Paleos had gone to their huts, and it was a bit cool.

  Spencer said, “Goodnight, everybody. Alexander, we’re on first watch.”

  “Yes, Sergeant.”

  Sitting by their dim inside fire, she wished she had a real video camera, and the ability to check all the images here. She had her laptop and the solar charger, but was reluctant to let the Paleos see anything that wasn’t just a chunk of material. They were at the truck anyway. It would have to wait.

  Spencer said, “We’ll have Oglesby and Barker on last, so they have time to sober up.”

  “Are they in trouble?” she asked.

  He shook his head. “No, we needed to be social with our hosts. They had two hits each. But that stuff must be strong. I had one toke and I felt it for about twenty minutes.”

  “So we’re leaving tomorrow?” She was of mixed feelings.

  “If we can. We’ll see if they can recommend a place for us. And we’ve learned a bit here.”

  She said, “We have. I’ve learned I don’t want to live with them. They’re very nice neighbors, and good fences make good neighbors.”

  “Indeed. I’m also worried about the younger males wanting to shack up.”

  “Only the younger ones?”

  He raised an eyebrow. “There’s nothing like the personal habits and the physiques of the thirty-year-olds to make me appreciate the simple beauty of my right hand,” he said. “They age fast.”

  “They do, but they don’t seem to age past that. From twenty-five on, they all look the same.”

  “Yeah, but their twenty-five is a well-worn fifty for us.”

  She raised a hand at a noise, but it was a voice, and sounded as if someone was well impassioned.

  Spencer caught it, too.

  “People who live in grass houses shouldn’t throe moans,” he said. “Throe with an E.”

  She tried not to choke and failed.

  “I shouldn’t be laughing,” she said through a sore throat and leaking eyes. “We can’t get home.”

  “It doesn’t seem like it. So we need to deal with it.” His eyes were wet, too, much as he was trying to hide it.

  “I’ll swap bad jokes for a bar of dark chocolate.” She missed chocolate, and was going to miss it a lot more. Even Hershey would be welcome now. As for Ghirardelli . . .

  “Yeah. Coffee. Oglesby and Barker want smokes, I want coffee. Goddamn I want coffee.”

  They wanted their families, but weren’t going to say that. So . . .

  “There is coffee. All you have to do is reach the ocean and paddle five thousand miles.”

  “I’ve thought about it. But our home isn’t there yet. It would be all raw wilderness and no more familiar than this.”

  She said, “And I don’t know the history of coffee in South America.”

  “Ethiopia, actually. We could walk there, in theory.”

  “Oh, right.”

  Either way, it didn’t matter. They were in the middle of Central Asia, with no guidebook for the trip, and no way home.

  They stared silently at the skin door.

  In the near distance, they could hear dogs or wolves growling and fighting over the offal from the hunt. It had been tossed into the woods.

  CHAPTER 7

  Sean Elliott felt a lot stronger mentally than he had last week. They were still lost, with almost no resources, but he had an idea on the environment now, and at least a summary plan. That didn’t make it easier to pack up and leave the native village. The huts, fire and people made it a home of sorts, and now he was taking his element off to create their own camp. There were over a hundred people in this village. He had ten.

  But, those ten had skills. They had a translator, a medic, a vet tech who could be another medic, two people with SERE training, who were both reenactors of different historical eras. Barker knew a bunch of Native American primitive skills. They had someone who knew sociology, and a couple of skilled hunters. Then, Trinidad had grown up in a remote village and knew about wells and animals also. Sean was an engineer. Between them, they had the brains to make it work. He wasn’t sure if they had enough muscle.

  There was nothing to be gained by remaining, though. This wasn’t their culture and hopefully never would be. He needed to jump now before he chickened out.

  “Ready, Oglesby?” he asked.

  “Ready, sir,” the man said, and held up his notebook. He’d done an impressive job with the language in only three days. Hopefully, they could make their point known.

  “Caswell?”

  “Got it, sir.” Caswell had suggested donating some plain wooden pencils. They were biodegradable, would wear out quickly, and were gimmicky. They didn’t do anything charcoal wouldn’t do for these people, but they’d hopefully be appreciated.

  Outside, he sought the chief, hoping the man was up, even though it was early. There wasn’t any real schedule here. The natives hunted, trapped fish, played, lazed about, had sex, and ate as they wished.

  But the chief was awake, and responded to Oglesby’s greeting, along with the shaman. A couple of others loitered nearby, and moved in closer. They weren’t quite too close this time.

  Caswell stepped forward and held up a pencil. She had a small piece of rawhide and a stick, peeled to clean wood. She took out a sharp rock flake and scraped a point on the pencil, then marked on the stick, then the leather.

  There were oohs and ahhs. She gave them the one to play with, and there was much giggling and pointing, waving and excitement.

  Then she handed over the rest of the dozen, unsharpened.

  This time there were cheers. The visitors had finally given them something neat.

  She stood stoically with a panicked look on her face as the chief grabbed her shoulder, tried to cup her through her armor, and patted her ass. She took his shoulder, slapped his buttock lightly, and stepped back.

  It took a few moments to get their attention back from the pencils, while Oglesby stepped forward with his notebook.

  He used a combination of pantomime and native words. “We (gesture) ugyi (point at hut) build (gesture of piling sticks). Va!se (point at river) runs west (point) from the east (point). Where should we (gesture) go (arms forward and out) to build (gesture) ugyi (shrug)?”

  There was a modern sounding exclamation of “Ah!” and a huddle. It sounded like a flock of birds throwing nuts at trees, but in only a few moments, three people stepped forth, one woman and two men. They were from the party that found them, and hunted the antelope.

  “Rish,” one of the men said, pointing east. He ran to his hooch, emerged with a small wrapped bundle and a spear, and started walking.

  “Crap. Folks, grab your gear fast, we’re marching!”

  Luckily their three guides moved at a leisurely walk, and waited a few yards out for the troops to catch up. They looked bemused. As soon as they saw the last troop out of the lodge—Alexander—they turned and resumed trudging.

  Their pace was not brisk, but steady. They stayed above the wood line of the river, along the high steppe. Occasionally, game would leap away, and once a large wildcat.

  “Damn,” Alexander said, from behind her camera.

  “Alexander?”

  “Lions, sir. A pride of four females and a male. Up the hill that way.”

  “I see, barely.” Lions. Yet another animal that would eat them.

  That rise right there was where the trucks were. He didn’t want to try to answer questions about them, even though they’d likely been seen by some party or other. He lagged down toward the tr
ees, and it worked. The hunters didn’t stray far up, and kept walking.

  It was another two miles across hummocky terrain above the river and the forest that edged it before they came to a wood line running south and uphill. It grew low and rugged, with some straight trees right along the edge.

  The lead hunter chattered something, and Oglesby said, “He says, ‘good camp here.’ It seems pretty good to me, sir, and well away from them.”

  “It’s workable. Thank them, and tell them we’ll meet again soon.”

  Oglesby spoke back, clutching hands with each of them, and they departed.

  They were such a simple people, and he meant that in a good way.

  Elliott said, “I want to look uphill before we pick a spot, and we may bivouac for a day or so before finalizing.”

  “Final.” That word. They were choosing their homestead in a place that would be Afghanistan in about 12,000 years.

  They strung out in patrol formation and worked their way uphill. The slope was gentle. The terrain was prairieish with knotty trees here and there, bushes, clumps of heavier grass.

  “Looky there,” Elliott said as he crossed a rise.

  Ahead was a merging smaller stream and a line of small trees.

  “Good?”

  “It means there’s enough water. We don’t want to be on the river because of floods, and we don’t want to be too far from it—we need water and sanitation.”

  They moved up, a bit closer together, but always looking around and feeling that creepy wrongness.

  The line of trees was on a watercourse that was more a ditch than a side stream, though it likely held water during wet season. It was spongy and full of moss and small trees, birch or something like it, along with brush and thorns.

  Alexander said, “Thorns mean it stays wet.”

  “Good,” Elliott nodded. “So let’s move downhill just a bit, a hundred meters or so.”

  Gina Alexander watched as he led the way, with that zoned expression again, though it wasn’t panicked this time. He just looked lost in thought. That was good. He seemed to be taking charge. Even if he wasn’t a great leader, he needed to be some kind of leader, or step aside and let Spencer do it.