“That ought to be obvious,” Chavez said with such a lack of rancor that the disbelief I had been entertaining disappeared. “Commissioner”—Chavez’s grave eyes met mine—”can you give me another reason why every city has similarly fenced lots, all placed to catch full daily sun? Why the velvet fields with that central dominant Tree symbol appear to be the reverent focus of the aliens—excuse me—the indigenous species?”
“But they’re humanoid,” Dunlapil said in protest.
“Their culture is agrarian.
That was when I truly began to be afraid.
“There are no grazing beasts,” Chavez went on inexorably, “because they have been eliminated to protect the velvet fields and whatever is growing in them now.”
“You mean, when those fields bloom with whatever it is they bloom with, the aliens will return?” Dunlapil asked.
Chavez nodded. “If we haven’t irreparably altered the growth cycle.”
“But that’s fantastic! An entire civilization can’t be dependent on a crazy who-knows-how-long cycle of plant life.” Dunlapil was sputtering with indignation.
“Nothing is impossible,” replied Chavez at his most didactic.
“Your research has been sufficiently comprehensive?” I asked him, although I was sick with the sense of impending disaster.
“As comprehensive as my limited equipment and xenobotanical experience allow. I would welcome a chance to submit my findings to a board of specialists with greater experience in esoteric plant-life forms. And I respectfully request that you have Colonial Central send us a team at once. I’m afraid that we’ve already done incalculable damage to the—” He paused and, with a grim smile, corrected himself. “—
The semantic nicety jarred me. If Chavez was even remotely correct, we would require not only xenobotanists and xenobiologists but an entire investigation team from Worlds Federated to examine our intrusion into a domain that had not, after all, been abandoned by its occupants like a
As Chavez, Dunlapil, and I walked from my office toward the Comtower, I remember now that I felt a little foolish and very scared, like a child reluctant to report an accident to his parents but dutifully conscientious about admitting his misdemeanor. The plastisteel tower had never looked so out of place, so alien, so sacrilegious as it did now.
“Hey, wait a minute, you two,” Dulapil protested. “You know what an investigation team means . . . ”
“Anything and everything must be done to mitigate our offense as soon as possible,” Chavez said, interrupting nervously.
“Dammit!” Dunlapil stopped in his tracks. “We’ve done nothing wrong.”
“Indeed we have. We may have crippled an entire generation.” Chavez spoke with an expression of ineffable sorrow.
“There are plenty of fields we never touched. The aliens—natives—can use them for food.”
Chavez’s sad smile deepened and he gently removed Dunlapil’s hand from his arm. “‘From dust ye came, to dust ye shall return, and from dust shall ye spring again.’“
It was then that Dunlapil understood the enormity of our crime.
“You mean, the plants are the
“What else have I been saying? They are born from the Trees.”
We did what we could even as we waited for the specialists and investigation team to arrive.
First we cleared the animals and crops from every one of the velvet fields. We removed every sign of our colonial occupation from the cities. The team, composed of five nonhuman and three humanoid species, arrived with menacing expedition well before the initial flood of xenospecialists. The team members did not comment on our preliminary efforts to repair our error, nor did they protest their quarters in the hastily erected dwellings on the bare, dusty plain and the subsequent roaring activity of the spaceport close by. All they did was observe with portentous intensity.
Of course, except for vacating the cities—and occupying them was apparently the least of our cumulative crimes—everything we did to remedy our trespass proved horribly inept in the final analysis. We would have been less destructive had we kept the cattle on the velvet fields and not slaughtered them for food. We ought to have let the crops ripen, die, and return to the special soils that had nourished them. For the fields we stripped produced the worst horrors. But how were we to know?