rang out again. Poto looked at her, and at others; pTo looked around and saw that four others had come into the-what, the nest? The tunnel? Whatever this place was. He recognized one of them-the male he had seen that fateful night, just as he touched the tower. "That's the one who saw me," said pTo. "That's the one who saw I stole the grasses and must have given the alarm."
"But he's not the angry one?" asked Poto.
"He's not angry now," said pTo. "Not like the other one. Oh, let me never see the angry Old One again!"
"Finally," said Oykib. "Something like a prayer. Half of what the diggers say is at least partly directed toward their gods. It'd be easier for me if the angels were as pious."
"But what did they say?" asked Shedemei.
"He wanted never to see the angry one again. The angry Old One." He laughed. "We're Old Ones, of course. The ancients come back."
"That's not to laugh about," said Shedemei. "That's very important. Luet or Nafai, can you go and get Hushidh and Issib? They need to be here, to meet them-if they're going to be liaison with the angels."
"Yes, I'll go," said Nafai.
"No, Nafai, that's silly, I'll go," said Luet.
"I'll go," said Oykib.
"We need you here," said Shedemei. "In case you can understand anything more."
Nafai left.
"The language is all pops and song, isn't it?" said Luet. "Like bubbles in a stream. Like... ."
"Yes, Mother?" said Chveya.
"Like the music of the Lake of Women, when I floated on it at the edges of a true dream."
"Maybe the Keeper of Earth was able to send their songs to you," said Chveya.
"Hush," said Shedemei. "These two are twins, I think. Look how perfectly identical they are."
"Each calls the other his otherself" said Oykib. "It's much more than a brother."
"My twins might feel that way about each other," said Luet, "if only babies their age could articulate their feelings."
"Hush," said Shedemei. "Listen, Oykib. Watch, all of you."
But Chveya had to say this one last thing; "There's no love I've ever seen among humans like the love that binds these two."
"You are without doubt the stupidest of all men," said Poto.
"I accept the honor," said pTo. "And you are the truest of all. May some woman now see the strength and power in you, and take you as her husband."
Oykib spoke. "The injured one prays that some female will admire how strong the healthy one is and mate with him. No, bind with him,"
"Marry him," suggested Chveya.
"Well, it could be. The word has overtones of twining and knotting."
"I know about twining," said Chveya. "He means marriage. The injured one is married, and the healthy one is not-because the injured one has a strong tie to someone not here, someone up the canyon."
"Do they have names?" asked Shedemei.
"You expect me to produce those sounds?" asked Oykib.
"We'll have to, someday. You might as well try."
"The name of the healthy one is oh-oh, with quick little consonants in there. To-to. Po-to."
"And the other one?"
Oykib laughed in frustration. "The same. The same name."
"Otherself," murmured Shedemei.
"No, it's different. Like, Po-ta, and the healthy one is Po-to."
"Quiet," said pTo. "Listen."
"To what?"
"The Old Ones. They just said your name."
They listened.
"Poto," said Oykib. "Poto." Then he babbled some more, and then the name stuck out again. "Poto. Poto."
"They want you," said pTo.
Poto immediately leapt down to the ground, out of pTo's field of vision. But pTo could hear him say, "I am Poto, Old One, if it is truly me you seek. Let no more harm come to my otherself! If you have more punishment, I will bear it."
"He's praying to us" said Oykib.
"Oh, good," said Shedemei. "Maybe we can be gods to everyone now."
"If we're going to tear the wings again, he wants us to tear his and not the wings of his otherself."
"What brought that up?" asked Chveya. "Does he think we're angry?"
"How can he know what to think?" said Luet. "Let me try to show him."
They watched as Luet sank to her knees, then, still on her knees, shuffled forward to the healthy one. "Poto," she said, pointing to him.
He turned his back to her and spread out his wings, not fully wide, but enough that the leather of the wings hung loose and open before her.
"Touch them," suggested Shedemei. "Very gently. They're strong, but I don't know whether they're sensitive to pain or not."
Luet reached out her hand and gently stroked the skin of his wing. It was hairless and smooth, like shoe leather,