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discards somewhere and repair it. Almost all the clothes they wear are used items sent
to them from somewhere else.
Some members of the community, unable to adapt to this pure but difficult life,
eventually leave the Gathering, but others come to join it. New members outnumber
those who leave, and so the Gathering’s population gradually increases. This is a
welcome trend. The abandoned village in which they make their life has many homes
that can be lived in with a few repairs, and many fields remaining that can be farmed.
The community is delighted to have new workers.
The number of children in the community varies between eight and ten. Most of
the children were born in the Gathering. The eldest child is the
heroine of the story,
the girl. The children attend a local elementary school, walking together to and from
the school each day. They are required by law to attend a school in the district, and
the Gathering’s founders believe that preserving good relations with the people of the
district is indispensable to the survival of the community. The local children,
however, are unnerved by the children of the Gathering, and they either avoid them or
bully them, as a result of which the Gathering children move as one. They stay
together to protect themselves, both from physical harm and from “po-loo-shun” of
the mind.
Quite separate from the district public school, the Gathering has its own school,
and members take turns teaching the children. This is not a great burden, since most
of the
members are highly educated, and several of them hold teaching certificates.
They make their own textbooks and teach the children basic reading, writing, and
arithmetic. They also teach the basics of chemistry, physics, physiology, biology, and
the workings of the outside world. The world has two systems, “cap-i-tal-izum” and
“com-yoon-izum,” that hate each other. Both systems, though, have big problems, so
the world is generally moving in a direction that is not good. “Com-yoon-izum” was
originally an outstanding ideology with high ideals, but it was twisted out of shape by
“self-serving politicians.” The girl was shown a photograph of one of the “self-
serving politicians.” With his big nose and big, black beard, the man made her think
of the king of the devils.
There is no television in the Gathering, and listening to
the radio is not allowed
except on special occasions. Newspapers and magazines are also limited. News that is
considered necessary is reported orally during dinner at the Assembly Hall. The
people respond to each item of news with cheers or groans—far more often with
groans. This is the girl’s only experience of media. She has never seen a movie. She
has never read a cartoon. She is only allowed to listen to classical music. There is a
stereo set in the Assembly Hall and lots of records that someone probably brought in
as a single collection. During free moments, it is possible to listen to a Brahms
symphony or a Schumann piano piece or Bach keyboard music or religious music.
These are precious times for the girl and virtually her only entertainment.
Then one day something happens that makes it necessary for the girl to be punished.
She has been ordered that week to take care of the Gathering’s small herd of goats
each morning and night, but, overwhelmed with her homework and other daily
chores, one night it slips her mind. The next morning, the oldest animal, a
blind goat,
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is found cold and dead. As her punishment, the girl is to be isolated from the rest of
the Gathering for ten days.
That particular goat was thought by the community to have a special significance,
but it was quite old, and some kind of illness had sunk its talons into the goat’s wasted
body, so whether anyone took care of it or not, there was no hope it would recover.
Still, that does not lessen the severity of the girl’s crime in any way. She is blamed not
only for the death of the goat itself but for the dereliction of her duties. Isolation is
one of the most serious punishments that the Gathering can impose.
The girl is locked in a small, old earthen storehouse with the dead blind goat. The
storehouse is called the Room for Reflection. Anyone who has broken the Gathering’s
rules goes there in order to reflect upon his or her offense.
No one speaks to the girl
while she is in isolation. She must endure ten full days of total silence. A minimal
amount of water and food is brought to her, but the storehouse is dark, cold, and
damp, and it smells of the dead goat. The door is locked from the outside. In one
corner of the room is a bucket where she can relieve herself. High on one wall is a
small window that admits the light of the sun and the moon. A few stars can also be
seen through it when the sky is not clouded over. There is no other light. She stretches
out on the hard mattress on top of the board floor, wraps herself in two old blankets,
and spends the night shivering. It is April, but the nights are cold in the mountains.
When darkness falls, the dead goat’s eye sparkles in the starlight. Afraid,
the girl can
hardly sleep.
On the third night, the goat’s mouth opens wide. It has been pushed open from the
inside, and out of the mouth comes a number of tiny people, six in all. They are only
four inches high when they first emerge, but as soon as they set foot on the ground,
they begin to grow like mushrooms sprouting after the rain. Even so, they are no more
than two feet tall. They tell the girl that they are called the Little People.
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