Authors: Katharine Kerr
excitement. Overactive imagination. Go lie down in your tent."
She staggered off, still sobbing.
Ketton's hand tightened on Angle's; he pulled her away.
"Angie," he said softly into her ear, "she's right."
"What do you know, Kel? Why didn't you tell me?"
"I didn't believe what I saw-1 couldn't tell you—let alone Dr.
Stoker—that I saw Malcolm and David turn into trees."
"But Ket...."
"Angie." Dr. Stoker beckoned her over. "I admit we need
help. I don't want to send out search parties if they come back
with stories like that. But I need you here. Could Kelton... ?"
"I'm not leaving Angie." Kelton had that stubborn look on his
face. No one had ever changed his mind when he got stubborn.
"Then what can we do?" Dr. Stoker grabbed her shoulders. "I
92 Julia and Brook West
could lose my career over this mess! We've got to think of some-
thing."
Angie pulled away from Dr. Stoker, stepped back to put
Kelton between them. "Is that all you're worried about—your
career? There are eight people missing!" She turned to go.
"Come on, Kel, let's get the last search party." She started into
the forest.
"Angie, wait!" Kelton took her arm. "I've got an idea." He led
her to the tent, pulled her inside. They faced each other cross-
legged on the rumpled sleeping bags. "Do you believe we saw
people turn into trees?"
"I .., I don't know. I know you both saw something awfully
disturbing."
"Anj, we've got the minicam! We can record this whatever-
it-is. ..."
"And turn into trees ourselves?" She couldn't help herself.
"Listen, Angie. People are seeing something. And it's the
seeing that does ... whatever it does. Remember the myth of
Perseus and Medusa? He looked into his shield—used it like a
mirror—so he wouldn't get turned to stone."
"So you think the minicam... ?"
"Through the minicam you're looking at an image, not the
thing itself. And I'll use one of our metal survival mirrors. That
way we'll be safe."
"Kel, at this point I'll try anything. Because ..," her lips
started to tremble, and she caught her lower one between her
teeth, "because dammit, I'm terrified."
The forest was still in the midday heat; occasional insect
noises made Angie jump. She turned on the video camera, pat-
ting her pocket to assure herself the extra battery pack was there.
"Got your mirror?" she asked Kelton.
"Yeah- Wish I had a bigger one. I'm gonna fall over my feet
trying to look into this thing as I walk."
"I'll trade you."
"No."
Angie looked at him out of the comer of her eye; he had that
stubborn look on his face.
They walked over the sparse grass under the trees for a long
time. Angie swung the camera from a clump of Oregon grape to
an oddly twisted aspen, trying to still her trembling hands. Her
stomach knotted with fear. What if this doesn't work? What if
something really is turning people into trees?
WEEDS 93
Kelton made a strange, choked noise in his throat, and she
swung the camera to focus on him. He stared into his mirror, an
intent look, half surprise, on his face. "Those eyes!" he said.
Even as he spoke, his mouth twisted, his face lengthened. The
mirror dropped from lingers that elongated, sprouted twigs,
leaves.
"No, oh no, oh please." Angie didn't lower me minicam even
as tears dripped down her cheeks. She recorded her beloved's en-
tire metamorphosis; roots digging into the soft earth, branches
tearing through his clothing and rising from his brown hair. Her
stomach lurched and her knees shook with anguish—but she kept
the camera focused-
It was over. An aspen swayed slightly without benefit of
breeze, torn clothing half buried beneath its roots. Thousands of
coin-shaped leaves winked like semaphores sending a message in
an unknown language. "Ketton, Kelton, no," she sobbed. She
slowly turned, camera running, panned past every tree, wild-
flower and low-growing bush. Somewhere on this tape should
be the answer. If not ... She couldn't finish the thought. Life
without Kelton?
Angie huddled in her tent, watching the minicam's tiny black-
and-white screen. She rewound the tape again, began the se-
quence. Kelton's face, intent and surprised, his mouth moving,
then twisting. Nothing there. He was looting at it, she was tap-
ing him. Whatever it was, she hadn't taped it.
No, wait. The thing was behind him—he saw it in the mirror!
She rewound, watched slender trees bob through the field of
view. The picture shifted to Kelton's face. And behind him—a
flash of movement. A bush stirring in the breeze? But there was
no breeze.
Rewind again, switch to slow motion, move frame by frame.
Not a bush behind Kelton. A thing, as if a pile of autumn leaves
had humped into vaguely human shape, with twiggy teem, and
bleached branch homs rising from its temples. Its eyes glittered
even in the tiny black and white replay. "Those eyes,' he had
said. It was real, a monster that turned people into trees.
Angie wanted to close her eyes and scream and scream. Her
hands trembled as she switched the minicam off and laid it on
her sleeping bag. What now? Hunt the thing down? What would
kill it—fire? Chase it with a torch, like a villager in a Franken-
stein movie?
"Angie?"
94 Julia and Brook West
Oh, please, not now. Dr. Stoker. "Yes?" She was pleased that
her voice was steady.
"Where's Kelton?"
/ can't tell him. He won't believe me. He'll laugh. I have proof,
but 1 don't want to show it to him.... "He decided to go for help
after all."
"Can I come in?"
Every fiber of her being screamed no, but she had to be polite.
And after her He, she could hardly tell him she was mourning her
lost husband. "Sure."
He slid through the zippered door-slit, settled on Kelton's
sleeping bag. His presence made the hot, close air even more op-
pressive. Angie bit her lips to keep herself from ordering him
out.
"I'm glad Kelton decided to go for help. I Just don't know
what to make of all this. There's no sign of violence or
struggle—just torn clothing to hint at what's happening." He
leaned forward and patted her knee. "I know you've done your
best—I'm sorry I barked at you earlier."
"Yeah."
"Listen, Angie, I know you're a newlywed, and Kelton is a
very attractive man, but I could help you a lot if you'd just be
a little more ... friendly."
Angie couldn't believe it. To come seeking sexual favors at a
time like this! The nerve of him.
"I've never been unfriendly," she answered, struggling in-
wardly. If I slap him, he'll be my enemy forever.
"Don't play naive, Angie. You know what I mean. You won't
even call me by my first name." He reached forward, stroked one
finger down her arm.
"Sir, I am, as you mentioned, a married woman. I don't feel
any need for other ... companionship." She looked him straight
in the eye.
"I can make it very pleasant for you." He smiled, smoothed
his hair, and reached for her breast.
This had gone beyond nerve. Something snapped inside her.
"Listen, you ... bastard! All the grad students know about you.
Can't keep your hands off the women! Well, this is one student
you'll not touch again."
"Why you...."
"And don't threaten me about my dissertation. I'll finish, with
or without you. There's a law against sexual harassment, and I'm
not too shy to engage a lawyer."
WEEDS 95
"If you ever get out of this valley." His smile turned ugly, and
she felt a twinge of purely physical fear. He was much bigger
than she.
"You try anything, and I'll squash you like ... like a weed."
Light burst in her mind. A weed. That thing had looked like a
heap of leaves—would the herbicide harm it, kill it? She scram-
bled past Stoker, avoiding his reaching arms, and rolled out of
the tent.
Herbicide, that was it. The cans lay in the boulder heap where
Kelton had dropped them yesterday afternoon. First lose Stoker.
She ran behind a tree, crouching in the low-lying brush. He'll
probably think I'm so upset I'll run blindly into the woods.
Stoker surged out of the tent, glanced around, then stalked
through camp, looking into tents. Angie's heart pounded. The
camp was deserted. Were they the only two left?
When he disappeared behind a tree she wasted no time. Keep-
ing under cover as best she could, she ran for the west end of the
valley. There, the herbicide. She checked the little backpack
sprayer, heavy, sloshing—Stoker didn't want to miss a chance to
exterminate his noxious weeds. She pumped the handle to pres-
surize it. Now, back to where she had left... Kelton. That's the
last place she had seen the creature.
Where had they been? There, that's the low-lying mountain-
ash, and that clump of columbine. I taped them. Then what?
Landmark by landmark, she wandered through the forest.
Then, a group of trees, familiar from her replays on the minicam.
A tremor ran through the Kelton-tree when she walked past. /
didn't bring the minicam. It's back in the tent—where Stoker
might be waiting for me. What should she do? She dared not go
back.
I'll have to be very, very careful. I know what it looks like.
Glory, a motile plant. If only she could study it! How in the
world did it turn people into trees—and why? She would love to
get it into a lab, find out where it got the energy to move so
quickly. It can't be just "solar-powered"—maybe another source
of nourishment? There are carnivorous plants.... No birds or
small animals in the valley. She shivered.
Something crashed through the brush. The creature made little
or no noise—so this had to be Stoker.
"What are you doing out here?" he called as he approached
her. "You know it's dangerous."
"Doing your job," she said. "Trying to kill the thing that's
been trapping our students."
96 Julia and Brook West
"What?" His mouth stayed open, his eyes bulged. Angie heard
it this time, a sweet, seductive sound, compounded of wind
through leaves, cricket chirrs, and the endless buzz of cicadas.
It's behind me.
Stoker raised his arms, tried to take a step. Again, she saw it,
watched in horror as his fingers elongated, grew leaves, his body
slimmed and elongated, roots grew through his shoes, burying
them, to seek the nutrients beneath the soil....
She turned, ready to spray, eyes averted. If it gets me, I'll only
have a few seconds, she told herself. Don't hit the trees, just the
creature.
Where? She saw something move, sprayed it—and met its
eyes, golden-green and very alive, like flame. Music swelled
around her, soothing, welcoming. Then the creature faltered,
drenched with herbicide, and the sprayer fell from her length-
ening fingers.
Dizzy, disoriented, looking down at something very small and
odd from a great height. Rush of wind through leaves—like
voices.
There were voices. *So many people this time,* one of the old
aspens sighed.
Not really words, but emotions—thoughts. They moved
slowly, while clouds sped by; dark, then light again. Rush of en-
ergy from sunlight on leaves.
Much emotion from the next tree—no, not tree—Kelton!
*Why? Why? Angie should have run!*
Her thousand eyes, looking up, down, around. Don't think
about it all at once—too much, too much! Focus on that
tree—no, it's Stoker. As handsome a tree as he was a man—the
bastard—but Kelton was more attractive ... slender, graceful,
his leaves a distinctive silver-green.
*Angie has the loveliest bark—smooth, white,* Kelton
thought at her.
Nearby, other emotions pulled at her. *Lust,* its thoughts in-
sinuated into her being. *Submit to me. Pleasure me.*
She trembled in horror, hunching her branches away from the
Stoker-tree.
Something moved—a flicker, she should know what. Yes—the
creature. As the sun sank quickly toward the close horizon of
the valley's edge, the creature crawled toward the grove, drawn
by lust. It embraced the Stoker-tree's base, and lay quiescent,
pulsing.
*No! Leave me! Rape!*
WEEDS 97
The stars wheeled overhead, day came, and the creature
stirred, moving quickly away from the professor's trunk.
*I didn't kill it.* A wave of regret, horror, anger from Angie.
*It ... hard . . . kill.* A huge old aspen; she could just
glimpse its crown across the valley. *I ... make it. Guard valley
... years long past. I seek ... knowledge. It too ... strong.
Changed me.*
*You not-tree that time?* Another old, thick-trunked tree, its
thoughts almost as foreign as the ancient creature-maker.
*I ... man ... then.*
The conversation lasted all day. As darkness fell, the creature
crawled back to the professor-tree, who moaned. *It is poisoned.