light did not outline him. There were both advantages and disadvantages in such light. It tended to throw some details of the farm into reliefâthe fencelines, the paths on the opposite hillside, the weathered boards on the barnâs western face.
There still had not been one sign of human activity outside the buildings and no sure indication of humans within them. The irritating hum continued to issue from the barn and Depeaux had exhausted his speculations on what it might be. He had opted tentatively for air conditioning and wished he could enjoy that relief from the hot afternoon in the dusty grass.
A long, cold drink, thatâs what I need, he told himself.
The fact that the farm fitted all of the reports and the descriptions (including Porterâs) did not really say anything for it.
Depeaux scanned the valley once more through his binoculars. There was a peculiar waiting air to the emptiness of the place, as though forces were being marshaled to fill the farm with life.
Depeaux wondered what Hellstrom did with his farmâs products. Why was the entire area so devoid of human activity? Thereâd been no vacationers or picnickers on the dirt road to the valleyâalthough the area seemed attractive enough. Why were the Fosterville residents so closemouthed about Hellstromâs farm? Porter had been intrigued by this, too. This was a hunting area, but Depeaux had seen no deer sign and not one hunter. The stream obviously held no attraction for fishermen, but stillâ¦
A Stellerâs jay flapped into the tree behind Depeaux, called once with its raucous voice, then flew across the valley into the trees of the far slope.
Depeaux watched the birdâs flight with peculiar interest,realizing it was the first higher life form heâd seen in Hellstromâs valley. One damned jay! That was some record for a dayâs work. But he was supposed to be a bird watcher, wasnât he? Just a simple little old vacationer, a traveling salesman for the Blue Devil Fireworks Corporation of Baltimore, Maryland. He sighed, worked his way back to the oakâs shade. He had studied the maps, the aerial photographs, Porterâs descriptions, all of the accumulated reports. Every detail had been committed to memory. He scanned his back trail with the binoculars. Nothing moved in the tall grass of the open area or in the trees beyond it. Nothing. The oddity of this became increasingly demanding of his attention.
One damned jay?
It had been a thing long inserting itself into his awareness, but now he focused on it to the exclusion of all other considerations. One bird. It was as though animal life had been swept away from the region around Guarded Valley. Why hadnât Porter mentioned that? And the grazing cattle down there to the north toward Fosterville. No fence kept them from approaching the farm, but they kept their distance.
Why?
In that instant, Depeaux recognized what it was that had made the farmâs fields appear so strange to him.
They were clean.
Those fields had not been harvested. They had been swept clean of every stalk, every leaf, every twig. An orchard occupied the upper reaches of the valley and Depeaux crawled back to study it through the binoculars. There were no bits of rotten fruit on the ground, no culls, no leaves or limbsânothing.
Clean.
But the tall grass remained all around on the perimeter hills.
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Hellstromâs own addenda to the dietary notes. The key workers must, of course, take the supplemental leader foods withoutfail, but it is equally important that they keep up their intake from the vats. It is here that we get the markers that maintain our awareness of mutual identity. Without the chemical sameness provided by the vats, we will become like those Outside: isolated, alone, drifting without purpose.
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By late afternoon, Depeaux had become almost obsessed with the desire to find something animal and alive in the valley. But nothing stirred