“And — ” The Scoutmaster got no further; he was hailed by the boss of the scavenger gang. “Mr. Qu’an! Squint’s got a screwbug!”
The man said something bitter under his breath, started to run. The two boys followed. The scavengers had been moving a large branch, freshly flamed down. Now they were clustered around one boy, who was gripping his forearm. Mr. Qu’ an burst into the group, grabbed the kid by that arm without saying a word, and examined it. — He shifted his grip so that the skin was drawn tight at one spot, reached for his belt and drew a knife — dug the point into skin, and, as if he were cutting a bad spot out of an apple, excised a small chunk of flesh. Squint screwed up his face and tears came into his eyes, but he did not cry out.
The scavenger boss had his first-aid kit open. As the Scoutmaster handed his knife to a boy near him, the gang boss placed a shaker bottle in Mr. Qu’ari’s hand. The Scoutmaster squirted powder into the wound, accepted a pressure patch and plastered it over the cut.
Then he turned sternly to the gang boss. “Pete, why didn’t you do it?”
“Squint wanted you.”
“So? Squint, you know better. Next time, let the boy closest to you get it — or cut it out yourself. It could have gone in another half inch while I was getting to you. And next time be more careful where you put your hands!”
The column had halted. — Point. looking back, saw Mr. Qu’an’s wave, lifted his own arm and brought it down smartly. They moved on. Charlie said to Hans, “What’s a screwbug?”
“Little thing, bright red. Cling underneath leaves.”
“What do they do to you?”
“Burrow in. Abscess. Don’t get ’em out, maybe lose an arm.”
“Oh.” Charlie added, “Could they get on Nixie?”
“Doubt it. ‘Cept maybe his nose. Ought to check him over every chance we get. Other things, too.”
They were on higher and drier ground now; the bush around them did not go up so high. was not quite as dense. Charlie peered into it, trying to sort out details, while Hans kept up what he probably felt was a lively discourse — usually one word at a time, such as: “Poison,” “Physic,” or “Eat those.”
“Eat what?” Charlie asked, when Hans had made the last comment. He looked where Hans pointed, saw nothing looking like fruit, berries or nuts.
“That stuff. Sugar stick.” Hans thrust cautiously into the brush with his staff, pushed aside a Venus nettle, and broke off a foot of brown twig. “Nixie! Get out of there! Heel!”
— Charlie accepted half of it, bit cautiously when he saw Hans do so.
It chewed easily. Yes, it did have a sweetish taste, about like corn syrup. Not bad!
Hans spat out pulp. “Don’t swallow the cud — give you trouble.”
“I wouldn’t’ve guessed you could eat this.”
“Never go hungry in the bush.”
“Hans? What do you do for water? If you haven’t got any?”
“Huh? Water all around you.”
“Yeah, but good water.”
All water is good water…if you clean it.” Hans’ eyes darted around. “Find a filter ball. Chop off top and bottom. Run water through. I’ll spot one, show you.”
Hans found one shortly, a gross and poisonouslooking fungus. But it was some distance off the clearing and when Hans started after it, he was told gruffly by the flamer on that flank to get back from the edge and stay there. Hans shrugged. “Later.”
The procession stopped in the road clearing, lunched from duffel bags. Nixie was allowed to run free, with strict instructions to stay away from the trees. Nixie didn’t mind. He sampled every lunch. After a rest they went on. Occasionally they all gaye way to let some plantation — family, mounted on high trucks with great, low-pressure bolster wheels, roll past on the way to a Saturday night in town. The main road led past narrow tunnels cut into the bush, side roads to plantations. Late in the afternoon they passed one such; Hans hooked a thumb at it. “Home.”