34

The grave was filled and mounded and the five of them stood for a moment more, listening to the restless wind that stirred in the moon-drenched apple orchard, while from far away, down in the hollows above the river valley, the whippoorwills talked back and forth through the silver night.

In the moonlight Enoch tried to read the graven line upon the rough-hewn tombstone, but there was not light enough. Although there was no need to read it; it was in his mind:

Here lies one from a distant star, but the soil is not alien to him, for in death he belongs to the universe.

When you wrote that, the Hazer diplomat had told him, just the night before, you wrote as one of us. And he had not said so, but the Vegan had been wrong. For it was not a Vegan sentiment alone; it was human, too.

The words were chiseled awkwardly and there was a mistake or two in spelling, for the Hazer language was not an easy one to master. The stone was softer than the marble or the granite most commonly used for gravestones and the lettering would not last. In a few more years the weathering of sun and rain and frost would blur the characters, and in some years after that they would be entirely gone, with no more than the roughness of the stone remaining to show that words had once been written there. But it did not matter, Enoch thought, for the words were graven on more than stone alone.

He looked across the grave at Lucy. The Talisman was in its bag once more and the glow was softer. She still held it clasped tight against herself and her face was still exalted and unnoticing—as if she no longer lived in the present world, but had entered into some other place, some other far dimension where she dwelled alone and was forgetful of all past.

“Do you think,” Ulysses asked, “that she will go with us? Do you think that we can have her? Will the Earth …”

“The Earth,” said Enoch, “has not a thing to say. We Earth people are free agents. It is up to her.”

“You think that she will go?”

“I think so,” Enoch said. “I think maybe this has been the moment she had sought for all her life. I wonder if she might not have sensed it, even with no Talisman.”

For she always had been in touch with something outside of human ken. She had something in her no other human had. You sensed it, but you could not name it, for there was no name for this thing she had. And she had fumbled with it, trying to use it, not knowing how to use it, charming off the warts and healing poor hurt butterflies and only God knew what other acts that she performed unseen.

“Her parent?” Ulysses asked. “The howling one that ran away from us?”

“I’ll handle him,” said Lewis. “I’ll have a talk with him. I know him fairly well.”

“You want her to go back with you to Galactic Central?” Enoch asked.

“If she will,” Ulysses said. “Central must be told at once.”

“And from there throughout the galaxy?”

“Yes,” Ulysses said. “We need her very badly.”

“Could we, I wonder, borrow her for a day or two.”

“Borrow her?”

“Yes,” said Enoch. “For we need her, too. We need her worst of all.”

“Of course,” Ulysses said. “But I don’t …”

“Lewis,” Enoch asked, “do you think our government—the Secretary of State, perhaps—might be persuaded to appoint one Lucy Fisher as a member of our peace conference delegation?”

Lewis stammered, made a full stop, then began again: “I think it could possibly be managed.”

“Can you imagine,” Enoch asked, “the impact of this girl and the Talisman at the conference table?”

“I think I can,” said Lewis. “But the Secretary undoubtedly would want to talk with you before he arrived at his decision.”

Enoch half turned toward Ulysses, but he did not need to phrase his question.

“By all means,” Ulysses said to Lewis. “Let me know and I’ll sit in on the meeting. And you might tell the good Secretary, too, that it would not be a bad idea to begin the formation of a world committee.”

“A world committee?”

“To arrange,” Ulysses said, “for the Earth becoming one of us. We cannot accept a custodian, can we, from an outside planet?”