Pathfinder (Pathfinder 1)
“No,” said Loaf. “What would they do even if they were baby cannibals, though? Come to the Wall in order to show us their picnic? The Wall would bother them as much as it bothers us. And it affects us for a long way before we’re even close to it. It steers people away. You have to really fight the thing to get within a mile or two of the center of it.”
“How do you know when you’re within a mile of it?” asked Rigg.
“There’s a shimmering in the air,” said Loaf. “Like heat waves, only more sharply defined and kind of sparky. You have to look close and steady for a while, but you can see it.”
“So . . . I think it’s worth a try,” said Rigg. “And I need all of us.”
“I had a hard time with the two of you,” said Umbo. “Add in your mother and sister—”
“Not to mention your extremely trustworthy guard,” said Loaf.
“And then put a whole army right behind us, with arrows and really loud and nasty insults,” said Rigg. “I know. It’ll be hard. It was hard for me, too—not that I have any power to drag you along with me, that’s all you, Umbo—but I could feel the inertia, like dead weight. It was harder for me to concentrate, to stay with the path I was following. And it might be even harder when I’m walking at the same time.”
“I didn’t even think of that,” said Umbo.
“But you can practice, right?” said Rigg. “Between now and the escape.”
“How? Just . . . pick arbitrary strangers and take them back in time?”
“Why not?” asked Rigg. “They won’t know who’s doing it, or even what’s happening. If they try to tell anybody, they’ll just get branded as crazy.”
“That’s right,” said Umbo, “and that’s not a nice thing to do.”
“So don’t practice then,” said Rigg.
“And I could only take them back a few days or weeks, not like what we just did.”
“More noodles?” The bargirl was standing there, waiting for an answer. Umbo hadn’t noticed her walk up. From the look on Rigg’s and Loaf’s faces, they hadn’t either. So much for vigilance.
“No,” said Loaf.
“Then please give my other customers a place to sit,” she said.
Umbo looked and saw a line out the door.
“Sorry,” said Rigg. “We didn’t notice.”
“You looked like you were plotting to overthrow the Council,” said the bargirl with a smile.
“Well, we weren’t, you know,” said Umbo.
“She was joking,” said Loaf.
“Maybe,” whispered Rigg.
They filed out of the place, sidling past the glaring customers who had waited so long in line.
“I’ve got to get back,” said Rigg, once they were out on the street.
“I still don’t know what we’re waiting for,” said Loaf. “Go back, get your sister and your mother and let’s get out of Aressa Sessamo before there’s any emergency or anyone chasing us.”
Rigg looked embarrassed. “I can’t.”
“Why not?” said Loaf.
“Because they won’t come,” said Rigg. “Not until there’s actual danger instead of just my warnings.”
“They don’t trust you yet,” said Loaf.