The State of the Art by Iain M. Banks

Fropome watched them go, then – with a rustling noise very like a sigh – returned to looking at the bright orange sky.He forgot about the grazers and the prairie and thought again about his love.

His lady-love, his darling, the One for whom he would gladly climb any hillock, wade any lakelet; all that sort of thing.His love; his cruel, cold, heartless, uncaring love.

He felt crushed, dried-up inside whenever he thought of her.She seemed so unfeeling, so unconcerned.How could she be so dismissive?Even if she didn’t love him in return, you’d have thought at least she’d be flattered to have somebody express their undying love for her.Was he so unattractive?Did she actually feel insulted that he worshipped her?If she did, why did she ignore him?If his attentions were unwelcome, why didn’t she say so?

But she said nothing.She acted as though all he’d said, everything he’d tried to express to her was just some embarrassing slip, a gaffe best ignored.

He didn’t understand it.Did she think he would say such things lightly?Did she imagine he hadn’t worried over what to say and how to say it, and where and when?He’d stopped eating!He hadn’t slept for nights!He was starting to turn brown and curl up at the edges!Food-birds were setting up roosts in his nestraps!

A grazer cub nuzzled his side.He picked the furry little animal up in a vine, lifted it up to his head, stared at it with his four front eyes, sprayed it with irritant and flung it whimpering into a nearby bush.

The bush shook itself and made a grumbling noise.Fropome apologized to it as the grazer cub disentangled itself and scuttled off, scratching furiously.

Fropome would rather have been alone with his melancholy, but he had to watch over the grazer herd, keeping them out of acidcloys, pitplants and digastids, sheltering them from the foodbirds’ stupespittle and keeping them away from the ponderously poised boulderbeasts.

Everything was so predatory.Couldn’t love be different?Fropome shook his withered foliage.

Surely she must feel something. They’d been friends for seasons now; they got on well together, they found the same things amusing, they held similar opinions if they were so alike in these respects, how could he feel such desperate, feverish passion for her and she feel nothing for him?Could this most basic root of the soul be so different when everything else seemed so in accord?

She must feel something for him.It was absurd to think she could feel nothing.She just didn’t want to appear too forward.Her reticence was only caution; understandable, even commendable.She didn’t want to commit herself too quickly that was all.She was innocent as an unopened bud, shy as a moonbloom, modest as a leaf-wrapped heart

and pure as; a star in the sky, Fropome thought.As pure, and as remote.He gazed at a bright, new star in the sky, trying to convince himself she might return his love.

The star moved.

Fropome watched it.

The star twinkled, moved slowly across the sky, gradually brightening.Fropome made a wish on it: Be an omen, be the sign that she loves me !Perhaps it was a lucky star.He’d never been superstitious before, but love had strange effects on the vegetable heart.

If only he could be sure of her, he thought, gazing at the slowly falling star.He wasn’t impatient; he would gladly wait for ever if he only knew she cared.It was the uncertainty that tormented him and left his hopes and fears toing-and-froing in such an agonizing way.

He looked almost affectionately at the grazers as they plodded their way around him, looking for a nice patch of uneaten grass or a yukscrub to defecate into.

Poor, simple creatures.And yet lucky, in a way; their life revolved around eating and sleeping, with no room in their low-browed little heads for anguish, no space in their furry chests for a ruptured capillary system.

Ah, what it must be, to have a simple, muscle heart!

He looked back to the sky.The evening stars seemed cool and calm, like dispassionate eyes, watching him.All except the falling star he’d wished on earlier.

He reflected briefly on the wisdom of wishing on such a transitory thing as a falling star even one falling as slowly as this one seemed to be.

Oh, such disturbing, bud-like emotions!Such sapling gullibility and nervousness!Such cuttingish confusion and uncertainty!

The star still fell.It became brighter and brighter in the evening sky, lowering slowly and changing colour too; from sun-white to moon-yellow to sky-orange to sunset-red.Fropome could hear its noise now; a dull roaring, like a strong wind disturbing short-tempered tree tops.The falling red star was no longer a single point of light; it had taken on a shape now, like a big seed pod.

It occurred to Fropome that this might indeed be a sign.Whatever it was had come from the stars, after all, and weren’t stars the seeds of the Ancestors, shot so high they left the Earth and rooted in the celestial spheres of cold fire, all-seeing and all-knowing?Maybe the old stories were true after all, and the gods had come to tell him something momentous.A thrill of excitement rose within him.His limbs shook and his leaves beaded with moisture.

The pod was close now.It dipped and seemed to hesitate in the dark-orange sky.The pod’s colour continued to deepen all the time, and Fropome realized it was hot; he could feel its warmth even from half a dozen reaches away.

It was an ellipsoid, a little smaller than he was.It flexed glittering roots from its bottom end, and glided through the air to land on the meadow with a sort of tentative deliberation, a couple of reaches away.

Fropome watched, thoroughly entranced.He didn’t dare move.This might be important.A sign.

Everything was still; him, the grumbling bushes, the whispering grass, even the grazers looked puzzled.

The pod moved.Part of its casing fell back inside itself, producing a hole in the smooth exterior.

And something came out.

It was small and silver, and it walked on what might have been hind legs, or a pair of over-developed roots.It crossed to one of the grazers and started making noises at it.The grazer was so surprised it fell over.It lay staring up at the strange silver creature, blinking.Cubs ran, terrified, for their mothers.Other grazers looked at each other, or at Fropome, who still wasn’t sure what to do.

The silver seedlet moved to another grazer and made noises at it.Confused, the grazer broke wind.The seedlet went to the animal’s rear end and started speaking loudly there.

Fropome clapped a couple of vines together to request respectfully the silver creature’s attention, and made to spread the same two leaf-palms on the ground before the seedlet, in a gesture of supplication.

The creature leapt back, detached a bit of its middle with one of its stubby upper limbs, and pointed it at Fropome’s vines.There was a flash of light and Fropome felt pain as his leaf-palms crisped and smoked.Instinctively, he lashed out at the creature, knocking it to the ground.The detached bit flew away across the meadow and hit a grazer cub on the flank.

Fropome was shocked, then angry.He held the struggling creature down with one undamaged vine while he inspected his injuries.The leaves would probably fall off and take days to re-grow.He used another limb to grasp the silver seedlet and bring it up to his eye cluster.He shook it, then up-ended it and stuck its top down at the leaves it had burned, and shook it again.

He brought it back up to inspect it more closely.

Damn funny thing to have come out of a seed pod, he thought, twisting the object this way and that.It looked a little like a grazer except it was thinner and silvery and the head was just a smooth reflective sphere.Fropome could not work out how it stayed upright.The over-large top made it look especially unbalanced.Possibly it wasn’t meant to totter around for long; those pointed leg-like parts were probably roots.The thing wriggled in his grasp.

He tore off a little of the silvery outer bark and tasted it in a nestrap.He spat it out again.Not animal or vegetable; more like mineral.Very odd.

Root-pink tendrils squirmed at the end of the stubby upper limb, where Fropome had torn the outer covering off.Fropome looked at them, and wondered.

He took hold of one of the little pink filaments and pulled.

It came off with a faint ‘pop’.Another, muffled-sounding noise came from the silvery top of the creature.

She loves me

Fropome pulled off another tendril.Pop.Sap the colour of the setting sun dribbled out.

She loves me not

Pop pop pop.He completed that set of tendrils:

She loves me

Excited, Fropome pulled the covering off the end of the other upper limb.More tendrilsShe loves me not.

A grazer cub came up and pulled at one of Fropome’s lower branches.In its mouth it held the silvery creature’s burner device, which had hit it on the flank.Fropome ignored it.

She loves me

The grazer cub gave up pulling at Fropome’s branch.It squatted down on the meadow, dropping the burner on the grass and prodding inquisitively at it with one paw.

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