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- Planet of Adventure
- TABLE Of CONTENTS
- Book One CITY OF THE CHASCH
- Book Two SERVANTS OF THE WANKH
- Book Three THE DIRDIR
- Book Four THE PNUME
- CITY OF THE CHASCH
- TO ONE SIDE of the Explorator IV flared a dim and aging star, Carina 4269; to
- the other hung a single planet, gray-brown under a heavy blanket of atmosphere.
- The star was distinguished only by a curious amber cast to its light. The planet
- was somewhat larger than Earth, attended by a pair of small moons with rapid
- periods of orbit. An almost typical K2 star, an unremarkable planet, but for the
- men aboard the Explorator IV the system was a source of wonder and fascination.
- In the forward control pod stood Commander Marin, Chief Officer Deale, Second
- Officer Walgrave: three men similarly trim, erect, brisk of movement, wearing
- the same neat white uniforms, and so much in each other's company that the wry,
- offhand intonations in which they spoke, the half-sarcastic, half-facetious
- manner in which they phrased their thoughts, were almost identical. With
- scanscopes-hand-held binocular photomultiphers, capable of enormous
- magnification and amplification-they looked across to the planet.
- Walgrave commented, "At casual observation, a habitable planet. Those clouds are
- surely water-vapor."
- "If signals emanate from a world," said Chief Officer Deale, "we almost
- automatically assume it to be inhabited. Habitability follows as a natural
- consequence of habitation."
- Commander Marin gave a dry chuckle. "Your logic, usually irrefutable, is at
- fault. We are presently two hundred and twelve light-years from Earth. We
- received the signals twelve light-years out; hence they were broadcast two
- hundred years ago. If you recall, they halted abruptly. This world may be
- habitable; it may be inhabited; it may be both. But not necessarily either."
- Deale gave his head a doleful shake. "On this basis, we can't even be sure that
- Earth is inhabited. The tenuous evidence available to us-"
- Beep beep went the communicator. "Speak!" called Commander Marin.
- The voice of Dant, the communications engineer, came into the pod: "I'm picking
- up a fluctuating field; I think it's artificial but I can't tune it in. It just
- might be some sort of radar."
- Marin frowned, rubbed his nose with his knuckle. "I'll send down the scouts,
- then we'll back away, out of range."
- Marin spoke a code-word, gave orders to the scouts Adam Reith and Paul Waunder.
- "Fast as possible; we're being detected. Rendezvous at System axis, up, Point D
- as in Deneb."
- "Right, sir. System axis, up, Point D as in Deneb. Give us three minutes."
- Commander Marin went to the macroscope and began an anxious search of the
- planet's surface, clicking through a dozen wavelengths. "There's a window at
- about 3000 angstroms, nothing good. The scouts will have to do all of it."
- "I'm glad I never trained as a scout," remarked Second Officer Walgrave.
- "Otherwise I also might be sent down upon strange and quite possibly horrid
- planets."
- "A scout isn't trained," Deale told him. "He exists: half acrobat, half mad
- scientist, half cat burglar, half-"
- "That's several halves too many."
- "Just barely adequate. A scout is a man who likes a change."
- The scouts aboard the Explorator IV were Adam Reith and Paul Waunder. Both were
- men of resource and stamina; each was master of many skills; there the
- resemblance ended. Reith was an inch or two over average height, dark-haired,
- with a broad forehead, prominent cheekbones, rather gaunt cheeks where showed an
- occasional twitch of muscle. Waunder was compact, balding, blond, with features
- too ordinary for description. Waunder was older by a year or two; Reith however,
- held senior rank, and was in nominal command of the scout-boat: a miniature
- spaceship thirty feet long, carried in a clamp under the Explorator's stern.
- In something over two minutes they were aboard the scoutboat. Waunder went to
- the controls; Reith sealed the hatch, pushed the detach-button. The scout-boat
- eased away from the great black hull. Reith took his seat, and as he did so a
- flicker of movement registered at the corner of his vision. He glimpsed a gray
- projectile darting up from the direction of the planet, then his eyes were
- battered by a tremendous purple-white dazzle.
- There was rending and wrenching, violent acceleration as Waunder clutched
- convulsively upon the throttle, and the scout-boat went careening down toward
- the planet.
- Where the Explorator IV had ridden space now drifted a curious object: the nose
- and stern of a spaceship, joined by a few shreds of metal, with a great void
- between, through which burnt the old yellow sun Carina 4269. Along with crew and
- technicians, Commander Marin, Chief Officer Deale, Second Officer Walgrave had
- become fleeting atoms of carbon, oxygen and hydrogen, their personalities, brisk
- mannerisms, and jocularity now only memories.
- CHAPTER ONE
- THE SCOUT-BOAT, STRUCK rather than propelled by the shockwave, tumbled bow over
- stern down toward the gray and brown planet, with Adam Reith and Paul Waunder
- bumping from bulkhead to bulkhead in the control cabin.
- Reith, only half-conscious, managed to seize a stanchion. Pulling himself to the
- panel, he struck down the stabilization switch. Instead of a smooth hum there
- was hissing and thumping; nevertheless the wild windmilling motion gradually was
- damped.
- Reith and Waunder dragged themselves to their seats, made themselves fast. Reith
- asked, "Did you see what I saw?"
- "A torpedo."
- Reith nodded. "The planet is inhabited."
- "The inhabitants are far from cordial. That was a rough reception."
- "We're a long way from home." Reith looked along the line of non-signifying
- dials and dead indicator lights. "Nothing seems to be functioning. We're going
- to crash, unless I can make some swift repairs." He limped aft to the engine
- room, to discover that a spare energy-cell, improperly stowed, had crushed a
- connection box, creating a chaotic tangle of melted leads, broken crystals,
- fused composites.
- "I can fix it," Reith told Waunder, who had come aft to inspect the mess. "In
- about two months with luck. Providing the spares are intact."
- "Two months is somewhat too long," said Waunder. "I'd say we have two hours
- before we hit atmosphere."
- "Let's get to work."
- An hour and a half later they stood back, eyeing the jury-rig with doubt and
- dissatisfaction. "With luck we can land in one piece," said Reith gloomily. "You
- go forward, put some power into the lifts; I'll see what happens."
- A minute passed. The propulsors hummed; Reith felt the pressure of deceleration.
- Hoping that the improvisations were at least temporarily sound, he went forward
- and resumed his seat. "What's it look like?"
- "Short range, not too bad. We'll hit atmosphere in about half an hour, somewhat
- under critical velocity. We can come down to a soft landing-I hope. The
- long-range prognosis-not so good. Whoever hit the ship with a torpedo can follow
- us down with radar. Then what?"
- "Nothing good," said Reith.
- The planet below broadened under their view: a world dimmer and darker than
- Earth, bathed in tawny golden light. They now could see continents and oceans,
- clouds, storms: the landscape of a mature world.
- The atmosphere whined around the car; the temperature gauge rose sharply toward
- the red mark. Reith cautiously fed more power through the makeshift circuits.
- The boat slowed, the needle quivered, sank back toward a comfortable level.
- There came a soft report from the engine room and the boat began to fall free
- once more.
- "Here we go again," said Reith. "Well, it's up to the airfoils now. Better get
- into ejection harness." He swung out the sideflaps, extended the elevators and
- rudder and the boat hissed down at a slant. He asked, "How does the atmosphere
- check out?"
- Waunder read the various indices of the analyzer. "Breathable. Close to Earth
- normal."
- "That's one small favor."
- Looking through scanscopes, they could now observe detail. Below spread a wide
- plain or a steppe, marked here and there with low relief and vegetation. "No
- sign of civilization," said Waunder. "Not below, at any rate. Maybe up there, by
- the horizon-those gray spots ..."
- "If we can land the boat, if no one disturbs us while we rebuild the control
- system, we'll be in good shape ... But these airfoils aren't intended for a fast
- landing in the rough. We'd better try to stall her down and eject at the last
- instant."
- "Right," said Waunder. He pointed. "That looks like a forest-vegetation of some
- sort. The ideal spot for a crash."
- "Down we go."
- The boat slanted down; the landscape expanded. The fronds of a dank black forest
- reached into the air ahead of them.
- "On the count of three: eject," said Reith. He pulled the boat up into a stall,
- braking its motion. "One-two-three. Eject!"
- The ejection ports opened; the seats thrust; out into the air snapped Reith. But
- where was Waunder? His harness had fouled, or the seat had failed to eject
- properly; and he dangled helplessly outside the boat. Reith's parachute opened,
- swung him up pendulum-wise. On the way down he struck a glossy black limb of a
- tree. The blow dazed him; he swung at the end of his parachute shrouds. The boat
- careened through the trees, plowed into a bog, Paul Waunder hung motionless in
- his harness.
- There was silence except for the creaking of hot metal, a faint hiss from
- somewhere under the boat.
- Reith stirred, kicked feebly. The motion sent pain tearing through his shoulders
- and chest; he desisted and hung limp.
- The ground was fifty feet below. The sunlight, as he had noted before, seemed
- rather more dim and yellow than the sunlight of Earth, and the shadows held an
- amber overtone. The air was aromatic with the scent of unfamiliar resins and
- oils; he was caught in a tree with glossy black limbs and brittle black foliage
- which made a rattling sound when he moved. He could look along the broken swath
- to the bog, where the boat sat almost on an even keel, Waunder hanging head-down
- from the ejection hatch, his face only inches from the muck. If the boat should
- settle, he would smother-if he was still alive even now. Reith struggled
- frantically to untangle himself from his harness. The pain made him dizzy and
- sick; there was no strength in his hands, and when he raised his arms there were
- clicking sounds in his shoulders. He was helpless to free himself, let alone
- assist Waunder. Was he dead? Reith could not be sure. Waunder, he thought, had
- twitched feebly.
- Reith watched intently. Waunder was slipping slowly into the mire. In the
- ejection seat was a survival kit with weapons and tools. With his broken bones
- he could not raise his arms to reach the clasp. If he detached himself from the
- shrouds he would fall and kill himself... No help for it. Broken shoulder,
- broken collarbone or not, he must open the ejection seat, bring forth the knife
- and the coil of rope.
- There was a sound, not too far distant, of wood striking wood. Reith desisted in
- his efforts, hung quietly. A troop of men armed with fancifully long rapiers and
- heavy hand-catapults marched quietly, almost furtively, below.
- Reith stared dumbfounded, suspecting hallucination. The cosmos seemed partial to
- biped races, more or less anthropoid; but these were true men: people with
- harsh, strong features, honey-colored skin, blond, blond-brown, blond-gray hair
- and bushy drooping mustaches. They wore complicated garments: loose trousers of
- striped brown and black cloth, dark blue or dark red shirts, vests of woven
- metal strips, short black capes. Their hats were black leather, folded and
- creased with out-turned earflaps, each with a silver emblem four inches across
- at the front of a tall crown. Reith watched in amazement. Barbarian warriors, a
- wandering band of cutthroats: but true men, nonetheless, here on this unknown
- world over two hundred light-years from Earth!
- The warriors passed quietly below, stealthy and furtive. They paused in the
- shadows to survey the boat, then the leader, a warrior younger than the rest, no
- more than a youth and lacking a mustache, stepped out into the open and examined
- the sky. He was joined by three older men, wearing globes of pink and blue glass
- on their helmets, who also searched the sky with great care. Then the youth
- signaled to the others, and all approached the boat.
- Paul Waunder raised his hand in the feeblest of salutes. One of the men with the
- glass globes snatched up his catapult, but the youth yelled an angry order and
- the man sullenly turned away. One of the warriors cut the parachute shrouds, let
- Waunder fall to the ground.
- The youth gave other orders; Waunder was picked up and carried to a dry area.
- The youth now turned to investigate the space-boat. Boldly he clambered up on
- the hull and looked in through the ejection ports.
- The older men with the pink and blue globes stood back in the shadows, muttering
- dourly through their drooping whiskers and glowering toward Waunder. One of them
- clapped his hand to the emblem on his hat as if the object had jerked or made a
- sound. Then, at once, as if stimulated by the contact, he stalked upon Waunder,
- drew his rapier, brought it flickering down. To Reith's horror Paul Waunder's
- head rolled free of his torso, and his blood gushed forth to soak into the black
- soil.
- The youth seemed to sense the act and swung about. He cried out in fury, leaped
- to the ground, marched over to the murderer. The youth snatched forth his own
- rapier, flicked it and the flexible end slashed in to cut away the emblem from
- the man's hat. The youth picked it up, and pulling a knife from his boot hacked
- savagely at the soft silver, then cast it down at the murderer's feet with a
- spate of bitter words. The murderer, cowed, picked up the emblem and moved
- sullenly off to the side.
- From a great distance came a throb of sound. The warriors set up a soft hooting,
- either as a ceremonial response or in fear and mutual admonition, and quickly
- retreated into the forest.
- Low in the sky appeared an aircraft, which first hovered, then settled: a
- sky-raft fifty feet long, twenty feet wide, controlled from an ornate belvedere
- at the stern. Forward and aft great lanterns dangled from convolute standards;
- the bulwarks were guarded by a squat balustrade. Leaning over the balustrade,
- pushing and jostling, were two dozen passengers, in imminent danger, so it
- seemed, of falling to the ground.
- Reith watched in numb fascination as the craft landed beside the scout-boat. The
- passengers jumped quickly off: individuals of two sorts, non-human and human,
- though this distinction was not instantly obvious. The non-human creatures-Blue
- Chasch, as Reith was to learn-walked on short heavy legs, moving with a
- stiff-legged strut. The typical individual was massive and powerful, scaled like
- a pangolin with blue pointed tablets. The torso was wedge-shaped, with
- exoskeletal epaulettes of chitin curving over into a dorsal carapace. The skull
- rose to a bony point; a heavy brow jutted over the ocular holes, glittering
- metallic eyes and the complicated nasal orifice. The men were as similar to the
- Blue Chasch as breeding, artifice and mannerism allowed. They were short,
- stocky, with bandy-legs; their faces were blunt and almost chinless, with the
- features compressed. They wore what appeared to be false craniums which rose to
- a point and beetled over their foreheads; and their jerkins and trousers were
- worked with scales.
- Chasch and Chaschmen ran to the scout-boat, communicating in fluting glottal
- cries. Some clambered up the hull, peered into the interior, others investigated
- the head and torso of Paul Waunder, which they picked up and carried aboard the
- raft.
- From the control belvedere came a bawled alarm. Blue Chasch and Chaschmen looked
- up into the sky, then hurriedly pushed the raft under the trees and out of
- sight. Once again the little clearing was deserted.
- Minutes passed. Reith closed his eyes and considered the evil nightmare from
- which he hoped to wake, secure aboard the Explorator.
- &npsb: A thudding of engines aroused him from torpor. Down from the sky sank
- still another vehicle: an airship which, like the raft, had been built with
- small regard for aerodynamic efficiency. There were three decks, a central
- rotunda, balconies of black wood and copper, a scrolled prow, observation
- cupolas, weapon ports, a vertical fin displaying a gold and black insignia. The
- ship hovered while those on the decks gave the space-boat a fastidious
- inspection. Some of these were not human, but tall attenuated creatures,
- hairless, pale as parchment, with austere countenances, languid and elegant
- attitudes. Others, apparently subordinates, were men, though they displayed the
- same attenuated arms, legs and torso, the sheep-like mannerisms. Both races wore
- elaborate costumes of ribbons, flounces, sashes. Later Reith would know the
- non-human folk as Dirdir and their human subordinates as Dirdirmen. At the
- moment, dazed by the immensity of his disaster, he noted the splendid Dirdir
- airship only with disinterested wonder. The thought, however, seeped into his
- mind that either these tall pale folk or their predecessors at the scene had
- destroyed the Explorator IV, and both had evidently tracked the arrival of the
- scout-boat.
- Dirdir and Dirdirmen scrutinized the space-boat with keen interest. One of them
- called attention to the print left by the Chasch raft, and the discovery created
- an instant atmosphere of emergency. Instantly from the forest came stabs of
- purple-white energy; Dirdir and Dirdirmen fell writhing. Chasch and Chaschmen
- charged forth, Chasch firing hand-weapons, Chaschmen running to throw grapples
- at the ship.
- The Dirdir discharged their own hand-weapons, which exuded a violet flare and
- whorls of orange plasma; Chasch and Chaschmen were consumed in a purple and
- orange blaze. The Dirdir ship lifted, to be constrained by grapples. The
- Dirdirmen hacked with knives, burnt with energy pistols; the ship broke free, to
- fluting cries of disappointment from the Chasch.
- A hundred feet above the bog the Dirdir turned heavy plasma-beams upon the
- forest and burnt a series of reeking avenues, but failed to destroy the raft,
- from which the Chasch were now aiming their own great mortars. The first Chasch
- projectile missed. The second struck the ship under the hull; it slewed around
- under the impact, then gave a great dart off into the sky, flitting, lurching,
- jerking like a wounded insect, upside-down, then right-side up, with Dirdir and
- Dirdirmen falling off, black specks drifting down the slate-colored sky. The
- ship veered south, then east and presently was lost to sight.
- Chasch and Chaschmen came forth to gaze after the Dirdir ship. The raft slid
- forth from the forest, hovered over the scoutboat. Grapples were dropped; the
- boat was lifted from the mire. Chasch and Chaschmen climbed aboard the raft; it
- slanted up into the air and moved off to the northeast, with the space-boat
- slung below.
- Time passed. Reith hung in his harness, barely conscious. The sun settled behind
- the trees; dimness began to drift over the landscape.
- The barbarians reappeared. They went to the clearing, made a desultory
- inspection, looked up into the sky, then turned away.
- Reith gave a hoarse call. The warriors snatched out their catapults, but the
- youth made a furious gesture to restrain them. He gave orders; two men climbed
- the tree, cut the parachute shrouds to leave the ejection seat and Reith's
- survival gear swinging in the branches.
- Reith was lowered to the ground, none too gently, and his senses went dim at the
- grating of bones in his shoulder. Forms loomed above him, speaking in harsh
- consonants and broad vowels. he was lifted, placed in a litter; he felt the thud
- and swing of footsteps; then he either fainted or fell asleep.
- CHAPTER TWO
- REITH AWOKE To the flicker of firelight, the murmur of voices. Above was a dark
- canopy, to either side a sky full of strange stars. The nightmare was real.
- Aspect by aspect, sensation by sensation, Reith took stock of himself and his
- condition. He lay on a pallet of woven reeds which exuded a sourish odor,
- half-vegetable, half-human. His shirt had been removed; a harness of withe
- constricted his shoulders and provided support for his broken bones. Painfully
- he raised his head and looked around. He lay in an open-sided shelter of metal
- poles covered with fabric. Another paradox, thought Reith. The metal poles
- indicated a high level of technology; the weapons and manners of the people were
- purely barbaric. Reith tried to look toward the fire, but the effort pained him
- and he lay back.
- The camp was in the open country; the forest had been left behind; so much was
- evident from the stars. He wondered about his ejection seat and the attached
- survival pack. Seat and pack had been left dangling, so he recalled to his
- regret. He had only himself and his innate resources to depend upon-a quality
- somewhat augmented by the training forced upon a scout, some of which Reith had
- considered pedantic over-elaboration. He had assimilated vast quantities of
- basic science, linguistic and communication theory, astronautics, space and
- energy technology, biometrics, meteorology, geology, toxicology. So much was
- theory; additionally he had trained in practical survival techniques of every
- description: weaponry, attack and defense, emergency nutrition, rigging and
- hoisting, space-drive mechanics, electronic repair and improvisation. If he was
- not killed out of hand, as had been Paul Waunder, he would live-but to what
- purpose? His chances of returning to Earth must be considered infinitesimal,
- which made the intrinsic interest of the planet less stimulating.
- A shadow fell across his face; Reith saw the youth who had saved his life. After
- peering through the dark the youth kneeled down, proffered a bowl of coarse
- gruel.
- "Thanks very much," said Reith. "But I don't think I can eat; I'm constricted by
- the splints."
- The youth leaned forward, speaking in a rather curt voice. Reith thought his
- face strangely stern and intense for a boy who could not be more than sixteen
- years old.
- With great exertion Reith pulled himself up on his elbow and took the gruel. The
- youth rose, moved a few paces back, stood watching as Reith tried to feed
- himself. Then he turned and called a gruff summons. A small girl came running
- forward. She bowed, took the bowl and began to feed Reith with earnest care.
- The boy watched a moment, evidently mystified by Reith, and Reith was perplexed
- no less. Men and women, on a world two hundred and twelve light-years from
- Earth! Parallel evolution? Incredible! Spoonful by spoonful the gruel was placed
- in his mouth. The girl, about eight years old, wore a ragged pajama-like
- garment, not too clean. A half-dozen men of the tribe came to watch; there was a
- growl of conversation which the youth ignored.
- The bowl was empty; the girl held a mug of sour beer to Reith's mouth. Reith
- drank because it was expected of him, though the brew puckered his lips. "Thank
- you," he told the girl, who returned a diffident smile and quickly departed.
- Reith lay back on the pallet. The youth spoke to him in a brusque voice:
- evidently a question.
- "Sorry," said Reith. "I don't understand. But don't be irritated; I need every
- friend I can get."
- The youth spoke no more and presently departed. Reith leaned back on his pallet
- and tried to sleep. The firelight flickered low; activity in the camp dwindled.
- From far off came a faint call, half howl, half quavering hoot, which was
- presently answered by another, and another, to become an almost identical
- chanting of hundreds of voices. Raising up on his elbow once more, Reith saw
- that the two moons, of equal apparent diameter, one pink, the other pale blue,
- had appeared in the east.
- A moment later a new voice, nearer at hand, joined the far ululation. Reith
- listened in wonder; surely this was the voice of a woman? Other voices joined
- the first, wailing a wordless dirge, which, joined to the far hooting, produced
- a colloquy of vast woe.
- The chant at last halted; the camp became quiet. Reith became drowsy and fell
- asleep.
- In the morning Reith saw more of the camp. It lay in a swale between a pair of
- broad low hills, among multitudes rolling off to the east. Here for reasons not
- immediately apparent to Reith the tribesmen elected to sojourn. Each morning
- four young warriors wearing long brown cloaks mounted small electric motorcycles
- and set off in different directions across the steppe. Each evening they
- returned, to make detailed reports to Traz Onmale the boyruler. Every morning a
- great kite was paid out, hoisting aloft a boy of eight or nine, whose function
- was evidently that of a lookout. Late in the afternoon the wind tended to die,
- dropping the kite more or less easily. The boy usually escaped with no more than
- a bump, though the men handling the lines seemed to worry more for the safety of
- the kite; a four-winged contraption of black membrane stretched over wooden
- splints.
- Each morning, from beyond the hill to the east, sounded a fearful squealing,
- which persisted for almost half an hour. The tumult, Reith presently learned,
- arose from the herd of multilegged animals from which the tribe derived meat.
- Each morning the tribe butcher, a woman six feet tall and brawny to match, went
- through the herd with a knife and a cleaver, to excise three or four legs for
- the needs of the day. Occasionally she cut flesh from a beast's back, or reached
- through a wound to carve chunks from an internal organ. The beasts made little
- protest at the excision of their legs, which soon renewed themselves, but
- performed prodigies of complaint when their bodies were entered.
- While Reith's bones mended his only contacts were with women, a spiritless
- group, and with Traz Onmale, who spent the greater part of each morning with
- Reith, talking, inspecting Reith's habiliments, teaching the Kruthe language.
- This was syntactically regular but rendered difficult by scores of tenses, moods
- and aspects. Long after Reith was able to express himself, Traz Onmale, in the
- stern manner so much at odds with his years, would correct him and indicate
- still another intricacy of usage.
- The world was Tschai, so Reith learned; the moons were Az and Braz. The
- tribesmen were Kruthe or "Emblem Men," after the devices of silver, copper,
- stone and wood which they wore on their hats. A man's status was established by
- his emblem, which was reckoned a semidivine entity in itself, with a name,
- detailed history, idiosyncrasies and rank. It was not too much to say that
- rather than the man carrying the emblem, the emblem controlled the man, as it
- gave him his name and reputation, and defined his tribal role. The most exalted
- emblem was Onmale, carried by Traz, who prior to assuming the emblem had been an
- ordinary lad of the tribe. Onmale was the embodiment of wisdom, craft,
- resolution and the indefinable Kruthe virtu. A man might inherit an emblem, take
- possession after killing its owner, or fabricate a new emblem for himself. In
- the latter case, the new emblem held no personality or virtu until it had
- participated in noteworthy feats and so acquired status. When an emblem changed
- hands the new owner willy-nilly assumed the personality of the emblem. Certain
- emblems were mutually antagonistic, and a man coming into possession of one of
- these at once became the enemy of the holder of the other. Certain emblems were
- thousands of years old, with complex histories; some were fey and carried a
- weight of doom; others impelled the wearer to hardihood or some specific sort of
- berserker elan. Reith was sure that his perception of the symbolic personalities
- was pale and gray compared to the intensity of the Kruthe's own comprehensions.
- Without his emblem the tribesman was a man without a face, without prestige or
- function. He was in fact what Reith presently learned himself to be; a helot, or
- a woman, the words in the Kruthe language being the same.
- Curiously, or so it seemed to Reith, the Emblem Men believed him to be a man
- from a remote region of Tschai. Far from respecting him for his presence aboard
- the space-boat, they thought him a subordinate to some non-human race unknown to
- them, as the Chaschmen were subordinate to the Blue Chasch, or the Dirdirmen to
- the Dirdir.
- When Reith first heard Traz Onmale express this point of view, he refuted the
- idea indignantly. "I am from Earth, a far planet; we are not ruled by anyone."
- "Who built the space-boat then?" Traz Onmale asked in a skeptical voice.
- "Men, naturally. Men of Earth."
- Traz Onmale gave his head a dubious shake. "How could there be men so far from
- Tschai?"
- Reith gave a laugh of bitter amusement. "I've been asking myself the same
- question: How did men come to Tschai?"
- "The origin of men is well-known," said Traz Onmale in a frigid voice. "We are
- taught this as soon as we can speak. Did you not receive the same instruction?"
- "On Earth we believe that men evolved from a protohominid, which in turn derived
- from an ancient mammal; and so on back to the first cells."
- Traz Onmale looked askance at the women who worked nearby. He gave them a
- brusque signal. "Be off, we are discussing men's matters."
- The women departed with clacking tongues, and Traz Onmale looked after them in
- disgust. "The foolishness will be all over camp. The magicians will be annoyed.
- I must explain to you the true source of men. You have seen the moons. The pink
- moon is Az, abode of the blessed. The blue moon is Braz, a place of torment,
- where evil folk and kruthsh' geir* are sent after death. Long ago the moons
- collided; thousands of folk were dislodged and fell to Tschai. All now seek to
- return to Az, good and evil alike. But the Judgers, who derive wisdom from the
- globes they wear, separate good men from the bad and send them to appropriate
- destinations.
- "Interesting," said Reith. "What of the Chasch and the Dirdir?"
- "They are not men. They came to Tschai from beyond the stars, as did the Wankh;
- Chaschmen and Dirdirmen are unclean hybrids. Pnume and Phung are spew of the
- northern caves. We kill all with zeal." He regarded Reith sidelong, brows knit
- severely. "If you derive from a world other than Tschai, you cannot be a man,
- and I should order you killed."
- "That seems overly harsh," said Reith. "After all, I have done you no harm."
- Traz Onmale made a gesture to indicate that the argument had no relevance. "I
- will defer judgment."
- Reith exercised his stiff limbs, and diligently studied the language. The
- Kruthe, he learned, held to no fixed range, but wandered the vast Aman Steppe,
- which spread across the south of the continent known as Kotan. They had no great
- knowledge of conditions elsewhere on Tschai. There were other
- continents--Kislovan to the south; Charchan, Kachan, Rakh on the other side of
- the world. Other nomad tribes roamed the steppe; in the marshes and forests to
- the south lived ogres and cannibals, with a variety of supernatural powers. The
- Blue Chasch were established to the far west of Kotan; the Dirdir, who preferred
- a cold climate, lived on Haulk, a peninsula reached south and west of Kislovan,
- and on the northeast coast of Charchan.
- Another alien race, the Wankh, were also established on Tschai, but the Emblem
- Men knew little of these folk. Native to Tschai was an eerie race known as the
- Pnume, also their mad relatives, the Phung, regarding whom the Kruthe were
- reluctant to speak, lowering their voices and looking over their shoulders when
- they did so.
- Time passed: days of bizarre events, nights of despair and longing for Earth.
- Reith's bones began to knit and he unobtrusively explored the camp.
- About fifty sheds had been erected in the lee of the hill, the roofs butted end
- to end to form what from the air would seem a fold or declivity on the hillside.
- Beyond the sheds was a cluster of enormous six-wheeled motor drays, camouflaged
- under tarpaulins. Reith was awed by the bulk of the vehicles and would have
- examined them more closely were it not for the band of sallow urchins which
- followed him about, attentive to his every move. Intuitively they sensed his
- strangeness and were fascinated. The warriors, however, ignored him; a man
- without an emblem was little more than a ghost.
- At the far end of camp Reith found an enormous machine mounted on a truck: a
- giant catapult with a thrust-arm fifty feet long. A siege engine? On one side
- was painted a pink disc, on the other a blue disc: reference, so Reith assumed,
- to the moons Az and Braz.
- Days passed, weeks, a month. Reith could not understand the inactivity of the
- tribe. They were nomads; why did they keep so long to this particular camp?
- Every day the four scouts rode forth, while overhead swung the black kite,
- veering and dipping while the rider's legs swung doll-like back and forth. The
- warriors were clearly restive, and occupied themselves practicing the use of
- their weapons. These were of three sorts: a long flexible rapier with a cutting
- and stabbing tip, like the tail of a ray: a catapult, which used the energy of
- elastic cables to shoot short feathered bolts; a triangular shield, a foot in
- length, nine inches across the base, with sharp elongated corners and
- razor-sharp side-edges serving additionally as a thrusting and hacking weapon.
- Reith was tended first by the eight-year-old urchin, then by a small hunched
- crone with a face like a raisin, then by a girl who, were it not for her
- joylessness, might have been attractive. She was perhaps eighteen years old,
- with regular features, fine blonde hair typically tangled with twigs and bits of
- fodder. She went barefoot, wearing only a smock of coarse gray homespun.
- One day, as Reith sat on a bench, the girl came past. Reith caught her around
- the waist, pulled her down upon his knee. She smelled of furze and bracken, and
- the moss of the steppes, and a faintly sour scent of wool. She asked in a husky
- alarmed voice, "What do you want of me?" And she tried half-heartedly to rise.
- Reith found her warm weight comforting. "First, I'll comb the twigs from your
- hair ... Sit still now." She relaxed, eyes turned sidelong at Reith; puzzled,
- submissive, uneasy. Reith combed her hair, first with his fingers, then with a
- chip of broken wood. The girl sat quietly.
- "There," said Reith presently. "You look nice."
- The girl sat as in a dream. Presently she stirred, rose to her feet. "I must
- go," she said in a hurried voice. "Someone might see." But she lingered. Reith
- started to pull her back, then thought better of the impulse and let her hurry
- away.
- The next day she chanced past again, and this time her hair was combed and
- clean. She paused to look over her shoulder, and Reith could remember the same
- glance, the same attitude from a hundred occasions on Earth; and the thought
- made him sick with melancholy. At home the girl would be reckoned beautiful;
- here on Aman Steppe, she had no more than a dim awareness of such matters ... He
- held out his hand to her; she approached, as if drawn against her will, which
- was undoubtedly the case, for she knew the ways of her tribe. Reith put his
- hands on her shoulders, then around her waist, kissed her. She seemed puzzled.
- Reith asked, smiling, "Hasn't anyone done that before?"
- "No. But it's nice. Do it again."
- Reith heaved a deep sigh. Well, why not? ... A step behind him: a buffet sent
- him sprawling to the ground, accompanied by a spate of words too fast for his
- understanding. A booted foot struck into his ribs, sending shivers of pain
- through his mending shoulder.
- The man advanced on the cringing girl, who stood with fists pressed to her
- mouth. He struck her, kicked her, pushed her out into the compound, cursing and
- bawling insults: "disgusting intimacy with an outland slave; is this your regard
- for the purity of the race?"
- "Slave?" Reith picked himself up from the floor of the shed. The word rang in
- his mind. Slave?
- The girl ran off to huddle under one of the towering wagons. Traz Onmale came to
- look into the uproar. The warrior, a stalwart buck of about Reith's own age,
- pointed a quivering finger toward Reith. "He is a curse, a dark omen! Was not
- all this foretold? Intolerable that he should spawn among our women! He must be
- killed, or gelded!"
- Traz Onmale looked dubiously toward Reith. "It seems that he did small damage."
- "Small damage indeed! But only because I happened past! With so much energy for
- ardor, why is he not put out to work? Must we pamper his belly while he sits on
- pillows? Geld him and set him to toil with the women!"
- Traz Onmale gave a reluctant assent, and Reith, with a sinking heart, thought of
- his survival kit dangling from the tree, with its drugs, transcom, spanscope,
- energy pack, and, most especially, weapons. For all their present benefit to him
- they might as well be with the Explorator IV.
- Traz Onmale had summoned the butcher-woman. "Bring a sharp knife. The slave must
- be made placid."
- "Wait!" gasped Reith. "Is this any way to treat a stranger? Have you no
- tradition of hospitality?"
- "No," said Traz Onmale. "We do not. We are the Kruthe, driven by the force of
- our Emblems."
- "This man struck me," protested Reith. "Is he a coward? Will he fight? What if I
- took his emblem from him? Would I not then be entitled to his place in the
- tribe?"
- "The emblem itself is the place," Traz Onmale admitted. "This man Osom is the
- vehicle for the emblem Vaduz. Without Vaduz he would be no better than you. But
- if Vaduz is content with Osom, as must be so, you could never take Vaduz."
- "I can try."
- "Conceivably. But you are too late; here is the butcherwoman. Be good enough to
- disrobe."
- Reith turned a horrified glance upon the woman, whose shoulders were broader
- than his own and inches thicker, and who advanced upon him wearing a
- face-splitting grin.
- "There is still time," muttered Reith. "Ample time." He turned upon Osom Vaduz,
- who snatched forth his rapier with a shrill whine of steel against hard leather.
- But Reith had stepped in close, within the six-foot reach of the blade. Osom
- Vaduz tried to leap back; Reith caught his arm, which was hard as steel; in his
- present condition Osom Vaduz was by far the stronger man. Osom Vaduz gave his
- arm a mighty jerk to fling Reith to the ground. Reith pulled in the same
- direction, swung around to drag Osom Vaduz reeling off-balance. Reith thrust up
- his shoulder, Osom Vaduz rolled across his hip and crashed to the ground. Reith
- kicked him in the head, grounding his heel into Osom Vaduz's throat, to crush
- the windpipe. As Osom Vaduz lay twitching and croaking his hat rolled off; Reith
- reached for it but the Chief Magician snatched it away.
- "No, by no means!" cried the magician in a passion. "This is not our law. You
- are a slave; a slave you remain!"
- "Must I kill you too?" asked Reith, edging ominously forward.
- "Enough!" cried Traz Onmale peremptorily. "There has been enough killing. No
- more!"
- "What of the emblem?" asked Reith. "Do you not agree it is mine?"
- "I must consider," declared the youth. "In the meanwhile, no more.
- Butcher-woman, take the body to the pyre. Where are the Judgers? Let them come
- forth and judge this Osom who carried Vaduz. Emblems, bring forth the engine!"
- Reith moved off to the side. A few minutes later he approached Traz Onmale. "If
- you wish, I will leave the tribe and go off by myself."
- "You will know my wishes when they are formulated," declared the lad, with the
- absolute decisiveness conferred upon him by the Onmale. "Remember, you are my
- slave; I ordered back the blades which would have killed you. If you try to
- escape, you will be tracked, taken, flogged. Meanwhile you must gather fodder."
- It seemed to Reith as if Traz Onmale were straining for severity, perhaps to
- divert attention-his own as well as everyone else's-from the unpleasant order he
- had given to the butcherwoman and which, by implication, he had rescinded.
- For a day the dismembered body of Osom, who once had carried the emblem Vaduz,
- smoldered within a special metal kiln, and the wind blew a vile stench through
- the camp. The warriors uncovered the monstrous catapult, started the engine and
- brought it into the center of the compound.
- The sun sank behind a bank of graphite-purple clouds; sunset was an angry welter
- of crimson and brown. Osom's corpse had been consumed; the fire was ashes. With
- all the tribe crouching in murmurous ranks, the Chief Magician kneaded the ashes
- with beast-blood to form a cake, which was then packed into a box and lashed to
- the head of a great shaft.
- The magicians looked into the east, where now rose Az the pink moon, almost at
- the full. The Chief Magician called in a great belling voice: "Az! The Judgers
- have judged a man and found him good! He is Osom; he carried Vaduz. Make ready,
- Az! We send you Osom!"
- The warriors on the catapult engaged a gear. The great arm swung across the sky;
- the elastic cables ground with tension. The shaft with Osom's ashes was laid in
- the channel; the arm was aimed toward Az. The tribe set up a moan, rising to a
- throaty wail. The magician cried: "Away to Az!"
- The catapult gave a heavy twunggg-thwack! The shaft sped away too swiftly to be
- seen. A moment later, high in the sky, appeared a burst of white fire; and the
- watchers gave a sigh of exaltation.
- For another half-hour the folk of the tribe stood looking up toward Az. Did they
- envy Osom, Reith wondered, presumably now rejoicing in the Vaduz palace on Az?
- He sought among the dark shapes, lingering before going to his pallet, until,
- with a smile of grim amusement for his own weakness, he realized that he was
- hoping to locate the girl who had occasioned the entire affair.
- On the following day Reith was sent forth to gather fodder, a coarse leaf
- terminating in a drop of dark-red wax. Far from resenting the work, Reith was
- happy to escape the monotony of the camp.
- The rolling hills extended as far as the eye could reach, alternate cusps of
- amber and black under the windy sky of Tschai. Reith looked south, to the black
- line of forest, where his ejection seat still hung in a tree, or so he hoped. In
- the near-future he would ask Traz Onmale to conduct him to the spot ... Someone
- was watching him. Reith swung around, but saw nothing.
- Wary, watching from the corner of his eyes he went about his task, plucking
- leaves, filling the two baskets he carried on a shoulder-pole. He started down
- into a swale, where grew a copse of low bushes, with leaves like red and blue
- flame. He saw the flutter of a gray smock. It was the girl, pretending not to
- see him. Reith descended to meet her and they stood face to face, she
- half-smiling, half-cringing, awkwardly twisting her fingers together.
- Reith reached forth, took her hands. "If we meet, if we are friends, we'll get
- in trouble."
- The girl nodded. "I know ... Is it true that you are from another world?"
- "Yes."
- "What is it like?"
- "It's hard to describe."
- "The magicians are foolish, aren't they? Dead people don't go to Az."
- "I hardly think so."
- She came closer. "Do that again."
- Reith kissed her. Then he took her by the shoulders and held her back. "We can't
- be lovers. You'd be made unhappy, and get more beatings..."
- She shrugged. "I don't care. I wish I could go with you back to Earth."
- "I wish you could too," said Reith.
- "Do that again," said the girl. Just once more..." She gave a sudden gasp,
- looking over Reith's shoulder. He jerked around, to see a flicker of movement.
- There was a hiss, a thud, a heartrending sob of pain. The girl sagged to her
- knees, fell over on her side, clutching at the feathered bolt buried in her
- chest. Reith gave a hoarse call, looked wildly here and there.
- The skyline was clear; no one could be seen. Reith bent over the girl. Her lips
- moved, but he could not hear the words. She sighed and relaxed.
- Reith stood looking down at the body, rage crowding all rational thought from
- his mind. He bent, lifted her-she weighed less than he expected-and carried her
- back to camp, reeling and straining. He took her to the shed of Traz Onmale.
- The boy sat on a stool, holding a rapier which he glumly twitched back and
- forth. Reith lay down the body of the girl as gently as he was able. Traz Onmale
- looked from the body to Reith with a flinty stare. Reith said, "I met the girl
- picking fodder. We were talking-and the bolt hit her. It was murder. The bolt
- might have been meant for me."
- Traz Onmale glanced down at the bolt, touched the feathers. Already warriors
- were sauntering close. Traz Onmale looked from face to face. "Where is Jad
- Piluna?"
- There were mutters, a hoarse voice, a summons. Jad Piluna approached: one whom
- Reith had noticed on previous occasions: a man of dash and flair, with a keen
- high-colored face, a curious V-shaped mouth, conveying, perhaps unintentionally,
- a continual insolent mirth. Reith stared at him in a fascination of loathing.
- Here was the murderer.
- Traz Onmale held out his hand. "Show me your catapult."
- Jad Piluna tossed it, an act of casual disrespect, and Traz Onmale turned up a
- glittering glance. He looked at the catapult, checked the claw release and the
- film of grease customarily applied by the warriors after using their weapons. He
- said: "The grease is disturbed; you have fired this catapult today. The bolt"-he
- pointed down at the corpse-"has the three black bands of Piluna. You killed the
- girl."
- Jad Piluna's mouth twitched, the V broadened and narrowed. "I meant to kill the
- man. He is a slave and a heretic. She was no better."
- "Who are you to decide? Do you carry Onmale?"
- "No. But I maintain that the act was accidental. It is no crime to kill a
- heretic."
- The Chief Magician stepped forward. "The matter of intentional heresy is
- crucial. This person"-he pointed toward Reith" is clearly a hybrid; I would
- suppose Dirdirman and Pnumekin. For reasons unknown he has joined the Emblem Men
- and now circulates heresy. Does he think we are too stupid to notice? How wrong
- he is! He suborned the young woman; he led her astray; she became worthless.
- Hence when-"
- Traz Onmale, again displaying the decisiveness so astonishing in a lad so young,
- cut him short. "Enough. You talk nonsense. The Piluna is notoriously an emblem
- of dark deeds. Jad, the carrier, must be brought to account, and Piluna curbed."
- "I claim innocence," said Jad Piluna indifferently. "I give myself to the
- justice of the moons."
- Traz Onmale squinted in anger. "Never mind the justice of the moons. I will give
- you justice."
- Jad Piluna gazed at him without concern. "The Onmale is not permitted to fight."
- Traz Onmale looked around the group. "Is there no noble emblem to subdue the
- murderous Piluna?"
- None of the warriors responded. Jad Piluna nodded in satisfaction. "The emblems
- stand aloof. Your call has no effect. But you have laid a slur on Piluna; you
- have used the word 'murderer.' I demand vindication from the moons."
- In a controlled voice Traz Onmale said, "Bring forth the disc."
- The Chief Magician departed, to return with a box carved from a single huge
- bone. He turned to Jad Piluna. "To which moon do you call for justice?"
- "I demand vindication from Az, moon of virtue and peace; I ask Az to demonstrate
- my right."
- "Very well," said Traz Onmale. "I beseech Braz, the Hellmoon, to claim you for
- her own."
- The Chief Magician reached into the box, brought forth a disc, on one side pink,
- on the other blue. "Stand clear, all!" He spun the disc into the air. It tilted,
- wobbled, seemed to float and glide, and landed with the pink side on top. "Az,
- moon of virtue, has decided innocence!" called the magician. "Braz has seen no
- cause to act."
- Reith gave a snort of sour amusement. He turned to Traz Onmale. "I call upon the
- moons for judgment."
- "Judgment in regard to what?" demanded the Chief Magician. "Certainly not your
- heresy! That is demonstrable!"
- "I ask that the moon Az concede me the emblem Vaduz, so that I may punish the
- murderer Jad."
- Traz Onmale gave Reith a startled glance.
- The Chief Magician cried out in indignation. "Impossible; how can a slave carry
- an emblem?"
- Traz Onmale looked down at the pathetic corpse and gave a curt sign to the
- magician. "I release him from bondage. Throw the disc to the moons."
- The Chief Magician stood curiously stiff and reluctant. "Is this wise? The
- emblem Vaduz-"
- "-is hardly the most noble of emblems. Throw."
- The magician glanced askance at Jad Piluna. "Throw," said Jad Piluna. "Should
- the moons give him to the emblem I will cut him into small strips. I have always
- despised the Vaduz trait."
- The magician hesitated, considering first the tall hard-muscled figure of Jad
- Piluna, then Reith, equally tall but thinner and looser, and still lacking his
- full vigor.
- The Chief Magician, a cautious man, thought to temporize. "The disc is drained
- of its force; we can have no more judgments."
- "Nonsense," said Reith. "The disc is controlled, so you claim, by the power of
- the moons. How can the disc be drained? Throw the disc!"
- "Throw the disc!" ordered Traz Onmale.
- "Then you must take Braz, for you are evil and a heretic."
- "I have called on Az, which can reject me if it chooses."
- The magician shrugged. "As you wish. I will use a fresh disc."
- "No!" exclaimed Reith. "The same disc."
- Traz Onmale sat erect and leaned forward, his attention once again engaged. "Use
- the same disc. Throw!"
- With an angry gesture the Chief Magician snatched up the disc, spun it high and
- twinkling into the air. As before, it wobbled, seemed to float, drifted down
- with the pink face up.
- "Az favors the stranger!" declared Traz Onmale. "Fetch the emblem Vaduz!"
- The Chief Magician stalked to his shed and brought it forth. Traz Onmale handed
- it to Reith. "You now carry Vaduz: you are an Emblem Man. Do you then challenge
- Jad Piluna?"
- "I do."
- Traz Onmale turned to Jad Piluna. "Are you prepared to defend your emblem?"
- "At once." Jad Piluna whipped forth his rapier, flourished it whistling around
- his head.
- "A sword and hand-foil for the new Vaduz," said Traz Onmale.
- Reith took the rapier which presently was tendered him. He hefted it, whipped
- the blade back and forth. Never had he handled so supple a sword, and he had
- handled many, for swordsmanship was an element of his training. An awkward
- weapon, in some respects, useless for close-range fighting. The warriors at
- practice held their distance from each other, swinging, slashing, lunging,
- swerving the blade down and up, in and out, but using relatively little
- footwork. The triangular knife-foil for the left hand was also strange. He swung
- the blade back and forth, watching Jad Piluna from the corner of his eyes, who
- stood contemptuously at ease.
- To attempt to fight the man in his own style was equivalent to suicide, thought
- Reith.
- "Attention!" called Traz Onmale. "Vaduz challenges Piluna. Forty-one such
- encounters have occurred previously. Piluna has humiliated Vaduz on thirty-four
- occasions. Emblems, address yourselves."
- Jad Piluna instantly lunged; Reith parried without difficulty, hacked down with
- his own blade: a blow which Jad Piluna glossed off with his knife-shield. As he
- did so Reith jumped forward, struck with the point of the knife-shield, to
- puncture Jad Piluna's chest: a trifling wound, but sufficient to destroy
- Piluna's complacence. Eyes bulging in wrath, the red in his face almost
- feverish, he leaped back, then launched a furious attack, overwhelming Reith by
- sheer strength and technical brilliance. Reith was extended to the utmost even
- to fend away the whistling blade, without thought for counterattack. His
- shoulder gave a sudden ominous twinge and began to burn; he panted for breath.
- The blade slashed into his thigh, then his left bicep; confident, gloating, Jad
- Piluna pressed the attack, expecting Reith to fall back, to be carved into
- tatters. But Reith lurched forward, knocked aside the blade with his
- knife-shield, slashed at Jad Piluna's head and struck the black hat askew. Jad
- Piluna stepped back to set his hat straight but Reith jumped forward again,
- inside comfortable fighting distance with the rapier. He struck with the
- knife-shield, batted again at Jad Piluna's hat, knocked it off, and with it the
- emblem Piluna. Reith dropped the knife-shield, seized the hat. Jad, bereft of
- Piluna, stood back aghast, his face ringed by brown curls. He lunged; Reith
- swung the hat, caught the rapier in the ear-flaps. He stabbed with his own
- rapier, piercing Jad's shoulder.
- Jad frantically disengaged his rapier, gave ground, anxious to gain more room,
- but Reith, panting and sweating, pressed him.
- Reith spoke: "I hold the emblem Piluna, which has rejected you in disgust. You,
- the murderer, are about to die."
- Jad gave an inarticulate call, lunged to the attack. Again Reith swung the hat,
- to catch the rapier in the flaps. He thrust and ran Jad, one-time carrier of
- Piluna, through the abdomen. Jad struck down with his foil, knocked the rapier
- from Reith's grip. A grotesque moment he stood looking at Reith in horror and
- accusation, the blade protruding from his body. He tore it out, flung it aside,
- advanced on Reith who groped for his dropped knifeshield. As Jad lunged Reith
- picked up the foil, hurled it point first into Jad's face. The point struck into
- Jad's open mouth and became fixed, like a fantastic metal tongue. Jad's knees
- buckled; he collapsed to the ground, and lay with fingers twitching.
- Reith, breath rasping in his throat, dropped the hat with proud Piluna into the
- dirt and went to lean on the pole of a shed.
- There was no sound throughout the camp.
- Finally Traz Onmale said, "Vaduz has overcome Piluna. The emblem takes on
- luster. Where are the Judgers? Let them come to judge Jad Piluna."
- The three magicians came forward, glowering first at the new corpse, at Traz
- Onmale and sidelong at Reith.
- "Judge," ordered Traz Onmale in his harsh, old-man's voice. "Be sure to judge
- correctly!"
- The magicians consulted in a mutter; then the Chief Magician spoke. "Judgment is
- difficult. Jad lived a hero's life. He served Piluna with distinction."
- "He murdered a girl."
- "For good cause: the taint of heresy, traffic with an unclean hybrid! What other
- religious man might not do the same?"
- "He acted beyond his competence. I instruct you to judge him evil. Put him on
- the pyre. When Braz appears, shoot the evil ashes to hell."
- "So be it," muttered the Chief Magician.
- Traz Onmale went off into his shed.
- Reith stood alone at the center of the compound. In uneasy groups the warriors
- spoke together, glancing toward Reith with distaste. The time was late
- afternoon; a bank of heavy clouds obscured the sun. There were flickers and
- twitches of purple lightning, a hoarse mutter of thunder. Women scurried here
- and there, covering bundles of fodder and jars of food-pod. The warriors
- bestirred themselves to tighten the lines holding the tarpaulins down over the
- great wagons.
- Reith looked down at the girl's corpse, which no one seemed interested in
- carrying away. To allow the body to lie out all night in the rain and wind was
- unthinkable. Already the pyre was alight, ready to receive the hulk of Jad.
- Reith lifted the girl's body, carried it to the pyre and, ignoring the
- complaints of the old women who tended the flames, laid the body into the kiln
- with as much composure and grace as he could manage.
- With the first spatters of rain, Reith went to that storage shed which had been
- given over to his use.
- Outside the rain pelted down. Sodden women built a rude shelter over the pyre
- and continued to feed the flames with brush.
- Someone came into the shed. Reith backed into the shadows, then the firelight
- shone on the face of Traz Onmale. He seemed somber, dejected. "Reith Vaduz,
- where are you?"
- Reith came forth. Traz Onmale looked at him, gave his head a glum shake. "Since
- you have been with the tribe, everything has gone wrong! Dissension, anger,
- death. The scouts return with news only of empty steppe. Piluna has been
- tainted. The magicians are at odds with the Onmale. Who are you, why do you
- bring us such woe?"
- "I am what I told you I am," said Reith: "a man from Earth."
- "Heresy," said Traz Onmale, without heat. "Emblem Men are the spill of Az. So
- say the magicians, at least."
- Reith pondered a moment, then said, "When ideas are in contradiction, as here,
- the more powerful ideas usually win. Sometimes this is bad, sometimes good. The
- society of the Emblems seems bad to me. A change would be for the better. You
- are ruled by priests who-"
- "No," said the boy decisively. "Onmale rules the tribe. I carry that emblem; it
- speaks through my mouth."
- "To some extent. The priests are clever enough to have their own way."
- "What do you intend? Do you wish to destroy us?"
- "Of course not. I want to destroy no one-unless it becomes necessary to my own
- survival."
- The boy heaved a heavy sigh. "I am confused. You are wrong-or the magicians are
- wrong."
- "The magicians are wrong. Human history on Earth goes back ten thousand years."
- Traz Onmale laughed. "Once, before I carried Onmale, the tribe entered the ruins
- of old Carcegus and there captured a Pnumekin. The magicians tortured him to
- gain knowledge, but he spoke only to curse each minute of the fifty-two thousand
- years that men had lived on Tschai ... Fifty-two thousand years against your ten
- thousand years. It is all very strange."
- "Very strange indeed."
- Traz Onmale rose to his feet, looked up into the sky, where wind-driven wrack
- flew across the night sky. "I have been watching the moons," he said in a thin
- voice. "The magicians are watching likewise. The portents are poor; I believe
- that there is about to be a conjunction. If Az covers Braz, all is well. If Braz
- covers Az, then someone new will carry Onmale."
- "And you?"
- "I must carry aloft the wisdom of Onmale, and set matters right." And Traz
- Onmale departed the shed.
- The tempest roared across the steppe: a night, a day, a second night. On the
- morning of the second day the sun rose into a clear windy sky. The scouts rode
- forth as usual, to return pellmell at noon. There was an instant explosion of
- activity. Tarpaulins were folded, sheds were struck, packed into bundles. Women
- loaded the drays; warriors rubbed their leap-horses with oil, threw on saddles,
- attached reins to the sensitive frontal palps. Reith approached Traz Onmale.
- "What goes on?"
- "A caravan from the east has been sighted at long last. We shall attack along
- the Ioba River. As Vaduz you may ride with us and take a share of plunder."
- He ordered a leap-horse; Reith mounted the ill-smelling beast with trepidation.
- It jerked to the unfamiliar weight, thrashing up its knob of a tail. Reith
- yanked at the reins; the leap-horse crouched and sprang off across the steppe
- while Reith held on for dear life. From behind came a roar of laughter: the
- hooting and jeering of experts for the tribulations of a tenderfoot.
- Reith finally brought the leap-horse under control and came plunging back. A few
- moments later the group swept off to the northeast, the black long-necked brutes
- lunging and foaming, the warriors leaning forward on the saddleplats, knees
- drawn up, black leather hats flapping; Reith could not help but feel an archaic
- thrill at riding in the savage cavalcade.
- For an hour the Emblem Men pounded across the steppe, bending low when they
- crossed over skylines. The rolling hills flattened; ahead lay a vast expanse
- streaked with shadows and dull colors. The troop halted on a hill while the
- warriors pointed here and there. Traz Onmale now gave orders. Reith pulled his
- mount up close and strained to listen. "-the south track to the ford. We wait in
- Bellbird Covert. The Ilanths will make the ford first; they will scout Zad Woods
- and White Hill. Then we sweep upon the center and make off with the treasure
- vans. Is all clear? So onward, to Bellbird Covert!"
- Down the long slope rushed the Emblems, toward a far line of tall trees and a
- group of isolated bluffs overlooking Ioba River. In the shelter of a deep forest
- the Emblem warriors concealed themselves.
- Time passed. From afar sounded a faint rumble, and the caravan appeared. Several
- hundred yards in advance rode three splendid yellow-skinned warriors, wearing
- black caps surmounted by jawless human skulls. Their beasts were similar to, but
- larger and rather more bland than the leap-horses; they carried sidearms and
- short swords, with short rifles laid across their laps.
- Now, from the standpoint of the Emblems, everything went awry. The Ilanths
- failed to plunge across the river but waited watchfully for the caravan. To the
- river-bank lumbered motordrays with six-foot wheels, piled to astonishing
- heights with bales, parcels and in certain cases, cages in which huddled men and
- women.
- The caravan commander was a cautious man. Before the drays attempted the ford,
- he stationed gun-carts to command all the approaches, then sent Ilanths to scout
- the opposite bank.
- In Bellbird Covert the Emblem warriors cursed and fumed. "Wealth, wealth! Goods
- galore! Sixty prime wagons! But suicide to attempt an attack."
- "True. The sand-blasts would strike us down like birds!"
- "Is it this for which we waited three tedious months in the Walgram Rolls? Is
- our luck then so vile?"
- "The omens were wrong; last night I looked up at blessed Az; I saw it jib and
- careen through the clouds: a definite admonition."
- "Nothing goes right, all our ventures are thwarted! We are under the influence
- of Braz."
- "Braz-or the work of the black-haired sorcerer who slew Jad Piluna."
- "True! And he has come to scathe the raid, where we have always enjoyed
- success!"
- And sour looks began to be turned toward Reith, who made himself inconspicuous.
- The war leaders conferred. "We can achieve nothing; we would strew the field
- with dead warriors and drown our Emblems in Ioba River."
- "Well, then-shall we follow and attack at night?"
- "No. They are too well-guarded. The commander is Baojian; he takes no risks! His
- soul to Braz!"
- "So, then-three months dawdling for naught!"
- "Better for naught than for disaster! Back to camp. The women will have all
- packed, and so east to Meraghan."
- "East, more destitute than when we came west! What abominable luck."
- "The omens, the omens! All are at odds!"
- "Back to camp, then; nothing for us here."
- The warriors swung about and without a backward look sent the leap-horses
- plunging south across the steppe.
- During the early evening, surly and glum, the troop arrived back at the
- campsite. The women, who had all packed, were cursed for neglect; why were not
- cauldrons bubbling? pots of beer ready to hand?
- The women bawled and cursed in return, only to be drubbed. All hands finally
- pulled gear and food helter-skelter from the drays.
- Traz Onmale stood brooding apart, while Reith was pointedly ignored. The
- warriors ate hugely, grumbling all the while, then, seated and exhausted, lay
- back beside the fire.
- Az had already risen, but now up into the sky sailed the blue moon Braz, angling
- athwart the course of Az. The magicians were first to notice and stood with arms
- pointing in awe and premonition.
- The moons converged; it seemed as if they would collide. The warriors gave
- guttural sounds of dread. But Braz moved before the pink disc, eclipsing it
- utterly. The Chief Magician gave a wild bellow to the sky: "So be it! So be it!"
- Traz Onmale turned and went slowly off to the shadows where by chance stood
- Reith. "What is all the tumult?" Reith asked.
- "Did you not see? Braz overpowered Az. Tomorrow night I must go to Az to expiate
- our wrongs. No doubt you will go as well to Braz."
- "You mean, by way of fire and catapult?"
- "Yes. I am lucky to have carried Omnale as long as I have. The bearer before me
- was not much more than half my age when he was sent to Az."
- "Do you think this ritual has any practical value?"
- Traz Onmale hesitated. Then: "It is what they expect; they will demand that I
- cut my throat into the fire. So I must obey."
- "Better that we leave now," said Reith. "They will sleep like logs. When they
- awake we will be far from here."
- "What? The two of us? Where would we fare?"
- "I don't know. Is there no land where folk live without murder?"
- "Perhaps such places exist. But not on Aman Steppe."
- "If we could take possession of the scout-boat, and if I were given time to
- repair it, we could leave Tschai and return to Earth."
- "Impossible. The Chasch took the ship. It is lost to you forever."
- "So I fear. In any case, we'd do better to depart now than wait to be killed
- tomorrow."
- Traz Onmale stood staring up at the moons. "Onmale orders me to stay. I cannot
- pervert the Onmale. It has never fled; it has always pursued duty to the death."
- "Duty doesn't include futile suicide," said Reith. He made a sudden motion,
- seized Traz Onmale's hat, wrenched loose the emblem. Traz gave a croak of almost
- physical pain, then stood staring at Reith. "What do you do? It is death to
- touch the Onmale!"
- "You are no longer Traz Onmale; you are Traz."
- The boy seemed to shrink, to lessen in stature. "Very well," he said in a
- subdued voice. "I do not care to die." He looked around the camp. "We must go
- afoot. If we try to harness leap-horses they will scream and gnash their horns.
- You wait here. I will fetch cloaks and a parcel of food." He departed, leaving
- Reith with the emblem of Onmale.
- In the light of the moons he looked at it and it seemed to stare back at him,
- issuing orders of baleful import. Reith dug a hole in the ground, dropped in
- Onmale. It seemed to shiver, give a soundless shriek of anguish; he covered the
- gleaming emblem, feeling haunted and guilty, and when he rose to his feet his
- hands were shaking and clammy, and sweat trickled down his back.
- Time passed: an hour? Two hours? Reith was unable to estimate. Since arriving on
- Tschai his time sense had gone awry.
- The moons slid down the sky; midnight approached, passed; night sounds came in
- off the steppe; a faint high-pitched yelping of nighthounds, a great muffled
- belch. In the camp the fires dwindled to embers; the mutter of voices ceased.
- The boy came silently up behind him. "I'm ready. Here is your cloak and a pack
- of food."
- Reith was aware that he spoke in a new voice, less certain, less brusque. His
- black hat seemed strangely plain. He looked at Reith's hands and briefly around
- the shed, but made no inquiry concerning the Onmale.
- They slipped off to the north, climbed the hillside so as to walk along the
- ridge. "We'll be easier for the night-hounds to see," muttered Traz, "but the.
- attanders keep to the shadows of the swales."
- "If we can reach the forest, and the tree where I hope my harness still hangs,
- we'll be considerably safer. Then..." He paused. The future was a blank expanse.
- They gained the crest of the hill and halted a moment to rest. The high moons
- cast a wan light across the steppes, filling the hollows with darkness. From not
- too far to the north came a series of low wails. "Down," hissed Traz. "Lie flat.
- The hounds are running."
- They lay without moving for fifteen minutes. The eerie cries sounded again,
- toward the east. "Come," said Traz. "They're circling the camp, hoping for a
- staked child."
- They struck off to the south, up and down, avoiding the dark swales as much as
- possible. "The night is old," said Traz. "When light comes the Emblems will
- trail us. If we reach the river we can lose them. If the marshmen take us, we'll
- fare as badly, or worse."
- For two hours they walked. The eastern sky began to show a watery yellow light,
- barred by streaks of black cloud, and ahead rose the loom of the forest. Traz
- looked back the way they had come. "The camp will be astir. The women will be
- fire-building. Presently the magicians will come to seek out the Onmale. That
- would have been me. Since I am gone the camp will be in turmoil. There will be
- curses and shouts: high anger. The Emblems will run to their leap-horses, and be
- off pellmell!" Once more Traz searched the horizons. "They'll be along soon."
- The two walked, and reached the edge of the forest, still dark and dank and
- pooled with night shadows. Traz hesitated, looking into the forest, then back
- across the steppes.
- "How far to the bog?" asked Reith.
- "Not far. A mile or two. But I smell a berl."
- Reith tested the air and detected an acrid fetor.
- "It might be only the spoor," said Traz in a husky voice. "The Emblems will be
- here in a very few minutes. We'd best try to reach the river."
- "First the ejection harness!"
- Traz gave a fatalistic shrug, plunged into the forest. Reith turned a last look
- over his shoulder. At the far dim edge of vision a set of hurrying black specks
- had appeared. He hurried after Traz, who moved with great care, stopping to
- listen and smell the air. In a fever of impatience Reith pressed at his back.
- Traz speeded his pace, and presently they were almost running over the sodden
- leaf-mold. From far behind Reith thought to hear a set of savage boots.
- Traz stopped short. "Here is the tree." He pointed up. "Is that what you want?"
- "Yes," said Reith with heartfelt relief. "I was afraid it might be gone."
- Traz climbed the tree, lowered the seat. Reith snapped open the flap, with drew
- his hand-gun, kissed it in rapture, thrust it in his belt.
- "Hurry," said Traz anxiously. "I hear the Emblems; they're not far behind."
- Reith pulled forth the survival pack, buckled it on his back. "Let's go. Now
- they follow at their own risk."
- Traz led the way around the bog, taking pains to conceal the signs of their
- passage, doubling back, swinging across a twenty-foot finger of black muck on a
- hanging branch, climbing another tree, letting it bend beneath his weight to
- carry him sixty feet away to the opposite side of a dense clump of reeds. Reith
- followed each of his ploys. The voices of the Emblem warriors were now clearly
- audible.
- Traz and Reith reached the edge of the river, a slow-flowing flood of
- black-brown water. Traz found a raft of driftwood, dead lianas, humus, held
- together by living reeds. He pushed it off into the stream. Then he and Reith
- hid in a nearby clump of reeds. Five minutes passed; four of the Emblem Men came
- crashing through the bog along their trail, followed by a dozen more, with
- catapults at the ready. They ran to the river's edge, pointed to the marks where
- Traz had dislodged the raft, searched the face of the river. The mass of
- floating vegetation had drifted almost two hundred yards downstream and was
- being carried by a swirl in the current to the other bank. The Emblems gave
- cries of fury, turned and raced at top speed through the murk and tangle, along
- the bank toward the drifting raft.
- "Quick," whispered Traz. "They won't be fooled long. We'll go back along their
- tracks."
- Back away from the river, across the bog and once more into the forest, Traz and
- Reith ran, the calls and shouts at first receding to the side, then becoming
- silent, then once again raised in a sound of furious exultation. "They've picked
- up our trail once again," gasped Traz. "They'll be coming on leap-horses; we'll
- never-" He stopped short, held up his hand, and Reith became aware of the acrid
- half-sweet fetor once again. "The berl," whispered Traz. "Through here ... Up
- this tree."
- With the survival pack dangling at his back Reith followed the boy up the oily
- green branches of a tree. "Higher," said Traz. "The beast can lunge high."
- The berl appeared: a lithe brown monster with a wicked boar's-head split by a
- vast mouth. From its neck protruded a pair of long arms terminating in great
- horny hands which it held above its head. It seemed to be intent on the calls of
- the warriors and paid no heed to Traz and Reith other than a single swift glance
- up toward them. Reith thought he had never seen such evil in a face before.
- "Ridiculous. It's only a beast..."
- The creature disappeared through the forest; a moment later the sound of pursuit
- halted abruptly. "They smell the berl," said Traz. "Let's be off."
- They climbed down from the tree, fled to the north. From behind them came yells
- of horror, a guttural gnashing roar.
- "We're safe from the Emblems," said Traz in a hollow voice. "Those who live will
- depart." He turned Reith a troubled glance. "When they go back to the camp there
- will be no Onmale. What will happen? Will the tribe die?"
- "I don't think so," said Reith. "The magicians will see to that."
- Presently they emerged from the forest. The steppe spread flat and empty,
- drenched in an aromatic honey-colored light. Reith asked, "What is to the west
- of us?"
- "The West Aman and the country of the Old Chasch. Then the Jang Pinnacles.
- Beyond are the Blue Chasch and the Aesedra Bight."
- "To the south?"
- "The marshes. The marsh men live there, on rafts. They are different from us:
- little yellow people with white eyes. Cruel and cunning as Blue Chasch."
- "They have no cities?"
- "No. There are cities there"-Traz made a gesture generally toward the north-"all
- ruined. There are old cities everywhere along the steppes. They are haunted, and
- there are Phung, as well, who live among the ruins."
- Reith asked further questions regarding the geography and life of Tschai, to
- find Traz's knowledge spotty. The Dirdir and Dirdirmen lived beyond the sea;
- where, he was uncertain. There were three types of Chasch: the Old Chasch, a
- decadent remnant of a once-powerful race, now concentrated around the Jang
- Pinnacles; the Green Chasch, nomads of the Dead Steppe; and the Blue Chasch.
- Traz detested all the Chasch indiscriminately, though he had never seen Old
- Chasch. "The Green are terrible: demons! They keep to the Dead Steppe. The
- Emblems stay to the south, except for raids and caravan pillage. The caravan we
- failed to loot skirted far south to avoid the Greens."
- "Where was it bound?"
- "Probably Pera, or maybe to Jalkh on the Lesmatic Sea. Most likely Pera.
- North-South caravans trade between Jalkh and Mazuun. EastWest caravans move
- between Pera and Coad."
- "These are cities where men live?"
- Traz shrugged. "Hardly cities. Settled places. But I know little, only what I
- have heard the magicians say. Are you hungry? I am. Let us eat."
- On a fallen log they sat and ate chunks of caked porridge and drank from leather
- flasks of beer. Traz pointed to a low weed on which grew small white globules.
- "We'll never starve so long as pilgrim plant grows ... And see yonder black
- clumps? That is watak. The roots store a gallon of sap. If you drink nothing but
- watak you become deaf, but for short periods there is no harm."
- Reith opened his survival pack: "I can draw water from the ground with this
- sheet of film, or convert sea-water with this purifier ... These are food pills,
- enough for a month .... This is an energy cell ... A medical kit ... Knife,
- compass, scanscope ... . Transcom ..." Reith examined the transcom with a sudden
- thrill of interest.
- "What is that device?" asked Traz.
- "Half of a communication system. There was another in Paul Waunder's pack, which
- went with the space-boat. I can broadcast a signal which will bring an automatic
- response from the other set and give the other set's location." Reith pushed the
- Find button. A compass arrow swung to the northwest; a counter flashed a white
- 6.2 and a red 2. "The other set-and presumably the space-boat-is 6.2 times 10 to
- the second, or 620 miles northwest."
- "That would be in the country of the Blue Chasch. We knew that already."
- Reith looked off to the northwest, ruminating. "We don't want to go south into
- the marshes, or back into the forest. What lies to the east, beyond the
- steppes?"
- "I don't know. I think the Draschade Ocean. It is far away."
- "Is that where the caravans come from?"
- "Coad is on a gulf which connects to the Draschade. Between is all of Aman
- Steppe, the Emblem Men and other tribes as well: the Kite-fighters, the Mad
- Axes, the Berl Totems, the Yellow Blacks and others beyond my knowledge."
- Reith considered. His space-boat had been taken by the Blue Chasch into the
- northwest. Northwest therefore seemed the most reasonable direction in which to
- fare.
- Traz sat dozing, chin on his chest. Wearing Onmale he had demonstrated a bleak
- unrelenting nature; now, with the soul of the emblem lifted from his own, he had
- become forlorn and wistful, though still far more reserved than Reith thought
- natural.
- Reith's own eyelids were drooping with fatigue: the sunlight was warm; the spot
- seemed secure ... What if the berl should return? Reith forced himself to
- wakefulness. While Traz slept he repacked his gear.
- CHAPTER THREE
- TRAZ AWOKE. HE turned Reith a sheepish look and rose quickly to his feet.
- Reith arose; they set forth: by some unspoken understanding into the northwest.
- The time was middle morning, the sun a tarnished brass disc in the slate sky.
- The air was pleasantly cool, and for the first time since his arrival on Tschai
- Reith felt a lifting of the spirits. His body was mended, he had recovered his
- equipment, he knew the general location of the scout-boat: immeasurable
- improvement over his previous situation.
- They trudged steadily across the steppe. The forest became a dark blur behind
- them: elsewhere the horizons were empty. After their midday meal they slept for
- a period; then, awakening in the late afternoon, they went on into the
- northwest.
- The sun dropped into a bank of low clouds, casting an embroidery of dull copper
- over the top. There was no shelter on the open steppe; with nothing better to do
- they walked on.
- The right was quiet and still; far to the east they heard the wailing of
- night-hounds but were not molested.
- The following day they finished the food and water from the packs which Traz had
- supplied and began to subsist on the pods of pilgrim plant and sap from watak
- roots: the first bland, the second acrid.
- On the morning of the third day they saw a fleck of white drifting across the
- western sky. Traz flung himself flat behind a low shrub and motioned Reith to do
- likewise. "Dirdir! They hunt!"
- Reith brought forth his scanscope, sighted on the object. With elbows on the
- ground he zoomed the magnification to fifty diameters, when air vibration began
- to confuse the image. He saw a long flat boat-like hull, riding the air on
- rakish cusps and odd half-crescents: an aesthetic style, apparently, rather than
- utilitarian design. Crouched on the hull were four pale shapes, unidentifiable
- as Dirdir or Dirdirmen. The flyer traveled a course roughly parallel to their
- own, passing several miles to the west. Reith wondered at Traz's tension. He
- asked, "What do they hunt?"
- "Men."
- "For sport?"
- "For sport. For food, as well. They eat man-meat."
- "I'd like to have that flyer," mused Reith. He rose to his feet, ignoring Traz's
- frantic protests. But the Dirdir flyer disappeared into the north. Traz relaxed,
- but searched the sky. "Sometimes they fly high and look down until they spot a
- lone warrior. Then they drop like perriaults, to noose the man, or engage him
- with electric swords."
- They walked on, always north and west. Toward sunset Traz once again became
- uneasy, for reasons Reith could not discern, though there was a particularly
- eerie quality to the landscape. The sun, obscured by a mist, was small and dim
- and cast a light as wan as lymph over the vastness of the steppe. There was
- nothing to be seen save their own long shadows behind them, but as Traz walked
- he looked this way and that, pausing at times to search the way they had come.
- Reith finally asked, "What are you looking for?"
- "Something is following us."
- "Oh?" Reith turned to look back across the steppe. "How do you know?"
- "It is a feeling I have."
- "What would it be?"
- "Pnumekin, who travel unseen. Or it might be nighthounds."
- "Pnumekin: they are men, are they not?"
- "Men in a sense. They are the spies, the couriers of the Pnume. Some say that
- tunnels run beneath the steppe, with secret entrance traps, perhaps under that
- very bush!"
- Reith examined the bush toward which Traz had directed his attention, but it
- seemed ordinary enough. "Would they harm us?"
- "Not unless the Pnume wanted us dead. Who knows what the Pnume want? ... More
- likely the night-hounds are out early."
- Reith brought forth his scanscope. He searched the steppe, but discovered
- nothing.
- "Tonight," said Traz, "we had best build a fire."
- The sun sank in a sad display of purple and mauve and brown. Traz and Reith
- collected a pile of brush and set a fire.
- Traz's instinct had been accurate. As dusk deepened to dark a soft wailing
- sounded to the east, to be answered by a cry to the north and another to the
- south. Traz cocked his catapult. "They're not afraid of fire," he told Reith.
- "But they avoid the light, from cleverness ... Some say they are a kind of
- animal Pnume."
- The night-hounds surrounded them, moving just beyond range of the firelight,
- showing as dark shapes, with an occasional flash of lambent white eye-discs.
- Traz kept his catapult ready. Reith brought forth his gun and his energy cell.
- The first fired tiny explosive needles, and was accurate to a distance of fifty
- yards. The cell was a multiple-purpose device. At one end a crystal emitted
- either a beam or a flood of light at the touch of a switch. A socket allowed the
- recharging of the scanscope and the transcom. At the other end a trigger
- released a gush of raw energy, but seriously depleted the energy available for
- future use, and Reith regarded the energy cell as an emergency weapon only.
- With night-hounds circling the fire he kept both weapons ready, determined not
- to waste a charge unless it was absolutely necessary. A shape came close; Traz
- fired his catapult. The bolt struck home; the black shape bounded high, giving a
- contralto call of woe.
- Traz re-cocked the catapult, and put more brush on the fire. The shapes moved
- uneasily, then began to run in circles.
- Traz said gloomily, "Soon they will lunge. We are as good as dead. A troop of
- six men can hold off night-hounds; five men are almost always killed."
- Reith reluctantly took up his energy-cell. He waited. Closer, in from the
- shadows danced and spun the night-hounds. Reith aimed, pulled the trigger,
- turned the beam halfway around the circle. The surviving night-hounds screamed
- in horror. Reith stepped around the fire to complete the job, but the
- night-hounds were gone and presently could be heard grieving in the distance.
- Traz and Reith took turns sleeping. Each thought he kept sharp lookout, but in
- the morning, when they went to look for corpses, all had been dragged away.
- "Crafty creatures!" said Traz in a marveling voice. "Some say they talk to the
- Pnume, and report all the events of the steppe."
- "What then? Do the Pnume act on the information?"
- Traz shrugged doubtfully. "When something terrible happens it is safe to assume
- that the Pnume have been at work."
- Reith looked all around, wondering where Pnume or Pnumekin, or even
- night-hounds, could hide. In all directions lay the open steppe, dim in the
- sepia dawn gloom.
- For breakfast they ate pilgrim pod and drank watak sap. Then once more they
- began their march northwest.
- Late in the afternoon they saw ahead an extensive tumble of gray rubble which
- Traz identified as a ruined city, where safety from the night-hounds could be
- had at the risk of encountering bandits, Green Chasch or Phung. At Reith's
- question, Traz described these latter: a weird solitary species similar to the
- Pnume, only larger and characterized by an insane craft which made them terrible
- even to the Green Chasch.
- As they approached the ruins Traz told gloomy tales of the Phung and their
- macabre habits. "Still, the ruins may be empty. We must approach with caution."
- "Who built these old cities?" asked Reith.
- Traz shrugged. "No one knows. Perhaps the Old Chasch; perhaps the Blue Chasch.
- Perhaps the Gray Men, though no one really believes this."
- Reith sorted over what he knew of the Tschai races and their human associates.
- There were Dirdir and Dirdirmen; Old Chasch, Green Chasch, Blue Chasch and
- Chaschmen; Pnume and the human-derived Pnumekin; the yellow marsh-men, the
- various tribes of nomads, the fabulous "Golds," and now the "Gray Men."
- "There are Wankh and Wankhmen as well," said Traz. "On the other side of
- Tschai."
- "What brought all these races to Tschai?" Reith asked-a rhetorical question, for
- he knew that Traz would have no answer; and Traz gave only a shrug in reply.
- They came to mounds of silted-over rubble, slabs of tip-tilted concrete, shards
- of glass: the outskirts of the city.
- Traz stopped short, listened, craned his neck uneasily, brought his catapult to
- the ready. Reith, looking about, could see nothing threatening; slowly they
- moved on, into the heart of the ruins. The old structures, once lofty halls and
- grand palaces, were toppled, decayed, with only a few white pillars, posts,
- pedestals lifting into the dark Tschai sky. Between were platforms and piazzas
- of wind-scoured stone and concrete.
- In the central plaza a fountain bubbled up from an underground spring or
- aquifer. Traz approached with great circumspection. "How can there fail to be
- Phung?" he muttered. "Even now-" and he scrutinized the tumbled masonry around
- the plaza with great care. Reith tasted the water, then drank. Traz, however,
- hung back. "A Phung has been here."
- Reith could see no evidence of the fact. "How do you know?"
- Traz gave a half-diffident shrug, reluctant to expatiate upon a matter so
- obvious. His attention was diverted to another more urgent matter; he looked
- apprehensively around the sky, sensing something below the threshold of Reith's
- perceptions. Suddenly he pointed. "The Dirdir boat!" They took shelter under an
- overhanging slab of concrete; a moment later the flyer skimmed so close above
- that they could hear the swish of air from the repulsors.
- The flyer swung in a great circle, returned to hover over the plaza at a height
- of two hundred yards.
- "Strange," whispered Traz. "It's almost as if they know we're here."
- "They may be searching the ground with an infrared screen," whispered Reith. "On
- Earth we can track a man by the warmth of his footprints."
- The flyer floated off to the west, then gathered speed and disappeared. Traz and
- Reith went back out upon the plaza. Reith drank more water, relishing the cold
- clarity after three days of watak sap. Traz preferred to hunt the large
- roach-like insects which lived among the rubble. These he skinned with a quick
- jerk of the fingers and ate with relish. Reith was not sufficiently hungry to
- join him.
- The sun sank behind broken columns and shattered arches; a peach-colored haze
- hung over the steppe which Traz thought to be a portent of changing weather. For
- fear of rain, Reith wished to take shelter under a slab, but Traz would not hear
- of it. "The Phung! They would sniff us out!" He selected a pedestal rising
- thirty feet above a crumbled staircase as a secure place to pass the night.
- Reith looked glumly at a bank of clouds coming up from the south but made no
- further protest. The two carried up armloads of twigs and fronds for a bed.
- The sun sank; the ancient city became dim. Into the plaza wandered a man,
- reeling with fatigue. He rushed to the fountain and drank greedily.
- Reith brought out his scanscope. The man was tall, slender, with long legs and
- arms, a long sallow head quite bald, round eyes, a small button nose, minute
- ears. He wore the tatters of a once-elegant garment of pink and blue and black;
- on his head was an extravagant confection of pink puffs and black ribbons.
- "Dirdirman," whispered Traz, and bringing forth his catapult, took aim.
- "Wait!" protested Reith. "What do you do?"
- "Kill him, of course."
- "He is not harming us! Why not give the poor devil his life?"
- "He only lacks the opportunity," grumbled Traz, but he put aside the catapult.
- The Dirdirman, turning away from the fountain, looked carefully around the
- plaza.
- "He seems to be lost," muttered Reith. "I wonder if the Dirdir boat was seeking
- him. Could he be a fugitive?"
- Traz shrugged. "Perhaps; who knows?"
- The Dirdirman came wearily across the plaza and took shelter only a few yards
- from the foot of the pedestal, where he wrapped himself in his tattered garments
- and bedded himself down. Traz grumbled under his breath and lay back into the
- twigs and seemed to go instantly to sleep. Reith looked out across the old city
- and mused upon his extraordinary destiny ... Az appeared in the east, glowing
- pale pink through the haze to send a strange light along the ancient avenues.
- The vista was one of eerie fascination: a scene unreal, the stuff of strange
- dreams. Now Braz lifted into the sky; the broken columns and toppled structures
- cast double shadows. One particular shape at the end of an avenue resembled a
- brooding statue. Reith wondered why he had not noticed it previously. It was a
- gaunt-man-shaped figure seven or eight feet tall, legs somewhat apart, head
- bowed as if in intense concentration, one hand under the chin, the other behind
- the back. The head was covered by a soft hat with a drooping brim; a cloak hung
- from the shoulders; the legs seemed encased in boots. Reith looked more
- intently. A statue? Why did it not move?
- Reith brought forth his scanscope. The creature's visage was in dark shadow;
- but, adjusting focus, zoom and gain, Reith was able to glimpse a long, gaunt
- countenance. The gnarled halfhuman, half-insect features were set in a frozen
- grimace; as Reith watched, the mouth-parts worked slowly, moving in and out ...
- The creature moved, taking a single long stealthy step forward, again freezing
- into position. It held a long arm aloft in a minatory gesture, for no purpose
- comprehensible to Reith. Traz had awakened; he followed Reith's gaze. "Phung!"
- The creature whirled about as if it had heard the sound and danced two great
- strides to the side.
- "They are insane," whispered Traz. "Mad demons."
- The Dirdirman was not yet aware of the Phung. He fretfully moved his cloak,
- trying to make himself comfortable. The Phung made a gesture of gleeful
- surprise, and gave three bounds which took him to a spot only six feet from the
- Dirdirman, who still fidgeted with his cloak. The Phung stood looking down,
- again nonmoving. It stooped, picked up several small bits of gravel. Holding its
- long arm over the Dirdirman, it dropped one of the pebbles.
- The Dirdirman gave a fretful jerk, but, still not seeing the Phung, settled
- himself again. Reith winced and called out: "Hey!
- Traz hissed in consternation. The effect upon the Phung was comical. It gave a
- great leap back, turned to stare toward the pedestal, arms outspread in
- extravagant surprise. The Dirdirman, on his knees, discovered the Phung, and
- could not move for horror.
- "Why did you do that?" cried Traz. "It would have been content with the
- Dirdirman."
- "Shoot it with your catapult," Reith told him.
- "Bolts won't touch it, swords won't cut it."
- "Shoot at its head."
- Traz gave a despairing sound, but bringing forth his catapult, he aimed and
- snapped the release. The bolt sped toward the pallid face. At the last second,
- the head jerked aside, the bolt clashed against a stone buttress.
- The Phung picked up a chunk of rock, swung back its long arm, hurled the rock
- with tremendous force. Traz and Reith fell flat; the stone splintered behind
- them. Reith wasted no further time and aimed his gun at the creature. He touched
- the button; there was a click, a hiss; the needle struck into the Phung's
- thorax, exploded. The Phung leapt into the air, uttered a croak of dismay and
- came down in a heap.
- Traz clutched Reith's shoulder. "Kill the Dirdirman, quick! Before he flees."
- Reith descended from the pedestal. The Dirdirman snatched forth his sword;
- apparently the only weapon he carried. Reith put his gun in his belt, held up
- his hand. "Put up your sword; we have no reason to fight."
- The Dirdirman, puzzled, moved back a step. "Why did you kill the Phung?"
- "It was about to kill you; why else?"
- "But we are strangers! And you"-the Dirdirman peered through the gloom-"are
- sub-men. Do you think to kill me yourself? If so-"
- "No," said Reith. "I only want information; then, so far as I am concerned, you
- may go on your way."
- The Dirdirman grimaced. "You are as mad as the Phung. Still, why should I
- persuade you differently?" He came a step or two forward, to inspect Reith and
- Traz at closer range. "Do you inhabit this place?"
- "No; we are travelers."
- "Then you would not know of a place suitable for me to spend the night?"
- Reith pointed to a pedestal. "Climb to the top, as we have done."
- The Dirdirman gave his fingers a petulant flicker. "That is not to my taste, not
- at all. And there may well be rain." He looked back to the slab of concrete
- under which he had taken shelter, then to the corpse of the Phung. "You are an
- obliging pair: docile and intelligent. As you see, I am tired and must be
- allowed to rest. You are at hand; I would like you to stand guard while I
- sleep."
- "Kill the nauseous brute!" muttered Traz in a passion.
- The Dirdirman laughed: a queer gasping chuckle. "That's more the way of a
- sub-man!" He spoke to Reith. "Now you are a queer one. I can't place your type.
- Some strange hybrid? Where, then, is your home region?"
- Reith had decided that the less attention drawn to himself the better; he would
- say no more of his terrestrial origin. But Traz, stung by the Dirdirman's
- condescension, cried out: "Not a region! He is from Earth, a far world! The home
- of true men like myself! You are a freak!"
- The Dirdirman wagged his head reproachfully. "Of madfolk, a pair. Well, then,
- what can one expect?"
- Reith, uncomfortable at Traz's disclosures, quickly changed the subject. "What
- do you do here? Was the Dirdir flyer searching for you?"
- "Yes, I fear so. They did not find me, I took good care to ensure."
- "You are a fugitive?"
- "Precisely."
- "What is your crime?"
- "No matter; you would hardly understand; it is beyond your capabilities."
- Reith, more amused than annoyed, turned back to the pedestal. "I plan to sleep.
- If you intend to live till morning, I suggest that you climb high, out of reach
- of the Phung."
- "I am puzzled by your solicitude," was the Dirdirman's wry remark.
- Reith made no reply. He and Traz returned to their pedestal and the Dirdirman
- gingerly climbed another nearby.
- The night passed. The clouds pressed heavily upon them, but produced no rain.
- Dawn came imperceptibly; and presently brought light the color of dirty water.
- The Dirdirman's pedestal was bare. Reith assumed that he had gone his way. He
- and Traz descended to the plaza, built a small fire to dispel the chill. Across
- the plaza the Dirdirman appeared.
- Observing no signs of hostility, he approached step by step, at last to stand a
- wistful fifty feet away, a long loose-limbed harlequin with garments much the
- worse for wear. Traz scowled and prodded the fire, but Reith gave him a civil
- greeting: "Join us, if you're of a mind."
- Traz muttered, "A mistake! The creature will do us harm! Such as he are
- smooth-tongued and supercilious; and man-eaters to boot."
- Reith had forgotten this latter characteristic and gave the Dirdirman a frowning
- inspection.
- For a period there was silence. Then the Dirdirman said tentatively, "The longer
- I consider your conduct, your garments, your gear, the more puzzled I become.
- Whence did you claim to originate?"
- "I made no claims," said Reith. "What of yourself?"
- "No secret there. I am Ankhe at afram Anacho; I was born a man at Zumberwal in
- the Fourteenth Province. Now, having been declared a criminal and a fugitive, I
- am of no greater consequence than yourselves, and I will make no pretensions
- otherwise. So here we are, three unkempt wanderers huddled around a fire."
- Traz growled under his breath. Reith, however, found the Dirdirman's frivolity,
- if such it was, refreshing. He asked, "What was your crime?"
- "You would find it difficult to understand. Essentially, I disregarded the
- perquisites of a certain Enze Edo Ezdowirram, who brought me to the attention of
- the First Race. I trusted to ingenuity and refused to be chastened. I compounded
- my original offense; I exacerbated the situation a dozen times over. At last in
- a spasm of irritation, I dislodged Enze Edo from his seat a mile above the
- steppe." Ankhe at afram Anacho made a gesture of whimsical fatalism. "By one
- means or another I evaded the Derogators; so now I am here, without plans and no
- resources other than my-" Here he used an untranslatable word, comprising the
- ideas of intrinsic superiority, intellectual elan, the inevitability of good
- fortune deriving from these qualities.
- Traz gave a snort and went off to hunt his breakfast. Anacho watched with covert
- interest and presently sauntered after him. The two ran here and there through
- the rubble, catching and eating insects with relish. Reith contented himself
- with a handful of pilgrim pods.
- The Dirdirman, hunger appeased, returned to examine Reith's clothes and
- equipment. "I believe the boy said 'Earth, a far planet.' " He tapped his
- button-nose with a long white finger. "I could almost believe it, were you not
- shaped precisely like a sub-man, which renders the idea absurd."
- Traz said in a somewhat lordly tone, "Earth is the original home of men. We are
- true men. You are a freak."
- Anacho gave Traz a quizzical glance. "What is this, the creed of a new sub-man
- cult? Well then, it is all the same to me."
- "Enlighten us," requested Reith in a silky voice. "How did men come to Tschai?"
- Anacho made an airy gesture. "The history is well-known and perfectly
- straightforward. On Sibot the home-world the Great Fish produced an egg. It
- floated to the shore of Remura and up the beach. One half rolled into the
- sunlight and became the Dirdir. The other rolled into the shade and became
- Dirdirmen."
- "Interesting," said Reith. "But what of the Chaschmen? What of Traz? What of
- myself?"
- "The explanation is hardly mysterious; I am surprised that you ask. Fifty
- thousand years ago the Dirdir drove from Sibol to Tschai. During the ensuing
- wars Old Chasch captured Dirdirmen. Others were taken by the Pnume; and later by
- the Wankh. These became Chaschmen, Pnumekin, Wankhmen. Fugitives, criminals,
- recalcitrants and biological sports hiding in the marshes interbred to produce
- the sub-men. And there you have it.
- Traz looked to Reith. "Tell the fool of Earth; explain his ignorance to him."
- Reith only laughed.
- Anacho gave him a puzzled appraisal. "Beyond question you are a unique sort.
- Where are you bound?"
- Reith pointed to the northwest. "Pera."
- "The City of Lost Souls, beyond the Dead Steppe ... You will never arrive. Green
- Chasch range the Dead Steppe."
- "There is no way to avoid them?"
- Anacho shrugged. "Caravans cross to Pera."
- "Where is the caravan route?"
- "To the north, at no great distance."
- "We will travel with a caravan, then."
- "You might be taken and sold for a slave. Caravan-masters are notoriously
- without scruple. Why are you so anxious to reach Pera?"
- "Reasons sufficient. What are your own plans?"
- "I have none. I am a vagabond no less than yourself. If you do not object, I
- will travel in your company."
- "As you wish," said Reith, ignoring Traz's hiss of disgust.
- They set forth into the north, the Dirdirmen maintaining an inconsequential
- chatter which Reith found amusing and occasionally edifying, and which Traz
- pretended to ignore. At noon they came to a range of low hills. Traz shot a
- skate-shaped ruminant with his catapult. They built a fire, broiled the animal
- on a spit and made a good meal. Reith asked the Dirdirman, "Is it true that you
- eat human flesh?"
- "Certainly. It can be the most tender of meats. But you need not fear, unlike
- the Chasch, Dirdir and Dirdirmen are not compulsive gourmands."
- They climbed up through the hills, under low trees with soft blue and gray
- foliage, trees laden with plump red fruits which Traz declared poisonous.
- Finally they breasted the ridge, to look out over the Dead Steppe: a flat, gray
- waste, lifeless except for tufts of gorse and pilgrim plant. Below, almost at
- their feet, ran a track of two wide ruts. It came up from the southeast, skirted
- the base of the hills, passed below, then three miles northwest turned among a
- cluster of rock towers, or outcrops, which rose near the base of the hills like
- dolmens. The track continued to the northwest, dwindled away across the steppe.
- Another track led south through a pass in the hills, another swung away to the
- north-east.
- Traz squinted down at the outcrops, then pointed. "Look yonder through your
- instrument."
- Reith brought forth his scanscope, scrutinized the outcrops.
- "What do you see?" asked Traz.
- "Buildings. Not many-not even a village. On the rocks, gun emplacements."
- "This must be Kazabir Depot," mused Traz, "where caravans transfer cargo. The
- guns protect against Green Chasch."
- The Dirdirman made an excited gesture. "There may even be an inn of sorts. Come!
- I am anxious to bathe. Never in my life have I known such filth!"
- "How will we pay?" asked Reith. "We have no coin, no trade-goods."
- "No fear," declared the Dirdirman. "I carry sequins sufficient for us all. We of
- the Second Race are not ingrates and you have served me well. Even the boy shall
- eat a civilized supper, probably for the first time."
- Traz scowled and prepared a prideful retort; then, noticing Reith's amusement,
- managed a sour grin of his own. "We had best depart; this is a dangerous place,
- a vantage for the Green Chasch. See the spoor? They come up here to watch for
- caravans." He pointed to the south, where the horizon was marked by an irregular
- gray line. "Even now a caravan approaches."
- "In that case," said Anacho, "we had best hurry to the inn, to take
- accommodation before the caravan arrives. I have no wish for another night on
- the gorse."
- The clear Tschai air, the extent of the horizons, made distances hard to judge;
- by the time the three had descended the hills the caravan was already passing
- along the track: a line of sixty or seventy great vehicles, so tall as to seem
- top-heavy, swaying and heaving on six ten-foot wheels. Some were propelled by
- engines, others by hulking gray beasts with small heads which seemed all eyes
- and snout.
- The three stood to the side and watched the caravan trundle past. In the van
- three Ilanths scouts, proud as kings, rode on leaphorses: tall men,
- wide-shouldered, narrow of hip, with keen sharp features. Their skins were
- radiant yellow; their raven-black hair, tied into stiff plumes, glistened with
- varnish. They wore long-billed black caps crowned by jawless human skulls, and
- the plume of hair rose jauntily just behind the skull. They carried a long
- supple sword like that of the Emblems, a pair of hand-guns at their belts, two
- daggers in their right boot. Riding past on their massive leap-horses they
- turned uninterested glances down at the three wayfarers, but deigned no more.
- Great drays rumbled past. Some were top-heavy with bales and parcels; others
- carried tiers of cages, in which blank-faced children, young men, young women,
- were mixed indiscriminately. Every sixth vehicle was a gun-cart, manned by
- grayskinned men in black jerkins and black leather helmets. The guns were short
- wide-mouthed tubes for the discharge, apparently by propulsor-field, of
- projectiles. Others, longer, narrow of muzzle, were hung with tanks, and Reith
- presumed them flame-ejectors.
- Reith said to Traz, "This is the caravan we met at lobu Ford."
- Traz gave a gloomy nod. "Had we taken it I might yet have carried Onmale ... But
- I am not sorry. There was never such a weight as Onmale. At night it would
- whisper to me."
- A dozen of the drays carried three-story lodges of blackstained timber, with
- cupolas, decks and shaded verandahs. Reith looked at them with envy. Here was
- the comfortable way to travel the steppes of Tschai! A particularly massive dray
- carried a house with barred windows and iron-bound doors. The front deck was
- enclosed by heavy wire mesh: in effect, a cage. Looking forth was a young woman,
- with a beauty so extraordinary that it seemed to have a vitality of its own,
- like the Onmale emblem. She was rather slight, with skin the color of dune sand.
- Dark hair brushed her shoulders; her eyes were the clear browngold of topaz. She
- wore a small rose-red skull-cap, a dull red tunic, trousers of white linen,
- rumpled and somewhat soiled. As the dray lurched past she looked down at the
- three wayfarers. For an instant Reith met her eyes, and was shocked by the
- melancholy of her expression. The dray rolled past. In an open doorway at the
- rear stood a tall woman, bleak-featured, with glittering eyes, an inch-long
- bristle of brown-gray hair. In vast curiosity Reith applied to Anacho for
- information, but to no avail. The Dirdirman had neither knowledge nor opinion.
- The three followed the caravan past the fortified rock-juts, into a wide sandy
- compound. The caravan master, a small intensely active old man, ranged the
- vehicles in three ranks: the cargo wagons next to the depot warehouse, then the
- slave-carriers' houses and barracks, and finally the gun-carts with the weapons
- directed toward the steppe.
- Across the compound stood the caravansary, a slope-sided two-storied structure
- of compacted earth. The tavern, kitchen and common-room occupied the lower
- floor; on the second was a row of small chambers opening upon a porch. The three
- wayfarers found the innkeeper in the common-room: a burly man in black boots and
- a brown apron, with skin as gray as wood-ash. With raised eyebrows he looked
- from Traz in nomad costume to Anacho and his once-elegant Dirdir garments to
- Reith, in Earthstyle whipcord breeches and jacket, but made no difficulty about
- providing accommodation and agreed to provide new garments as well.
- The chambers were eight feet wide, ten feet long. There was a bed of leathern
- thongs across a wooden frame, with a thin pallet of straw, a table with basin
- and ewer of water. After the journey across the steppe, the accommodations
- seemed almost luxurious. Reith bathed, shaved with the razor from his survival
- kit, donned his new garments in which he hoped to be less conspicuous: loose
- trousers of brown-gray canvas, a shirt of rough white homespun, a black
- short-sleeved vest. Stepping out on the porch, he looked down into the compound.
- His old life on Earth: how remote it seemed! Compared to the bizarre
- multiplicity of Tschai, the old existence was drab and colorless-though not the
- less desirable for all that. Reith was forced to admit that his initial
- desolation had become somewhat less poignant. His new life, for all its
- precariousness, held zest and adventure. Reith looked across the compound toward
- the dray with the iron-bound house. The girl was a prisoner: so much was
- evident. What was her destiny that she should display such anguish?
- Reith tried to identify the dray, but among so many humped, peaked and angular
- shapes it could not be found. Just as well, he told himself. He had troubles
- enough without investigating the woe of a slave girl, glimpsed for five seconds
- in all. Reith went back into his room.
- Certain items from his survival kit he thrust into his pockets; the rest he
- concealed under the ewer. Descending to the common-room, he found Traz sitting
- stiffly on a bench to the side. In response to Reith's question, he admitted
- that he had never before been in such a place and did not wish to make a fool of
- himself. Reith laughed and clapped him on the shoulder, and Traz managed a
- painful grin.
- Anacho appeared, less obviously a Dirdirman in his steppedweller's garments. The
- three went to the refectory, where they were served a meal of bread and thick
- dark soup, the ingredients of which Reith did not inquire.
- After the meal Anacho regarded Reith through eyes heavy-lidded with speculation.
- "From here you fare to Pera?"
- "Yes."
- "This is known as the City of Lost Souls."
- "So I understand."
- "Hyperbole, of course," Anacho remarked airily. "'Soul' is a concept susceptible
- to challenge. The Dirdir theologies are subtle; I will not discuss them, except
- to remark that-no, best not to confuse you. But back to Pera, the 'City of Lost
- Souls,' as it were, and the destination of the caravan. Rather than walk, I
- prefer to ride; I suggest then that we engage the best and most comfortable
- transport the caravan-master can provide."
- "An excellent idea," said Reith. "However, I-"
- Anacho fluttered his finger in the air. "Do not concern yourself; I am, for the
- moment at least, disposed kindly toward you and the boy; you are mild and
- respectful; you do not overstep your status; hence-"
- Traz, breathing hard, rose to his feet. "I carried Onmale! Can you understand
- that? When I left camp do you think that I neglected to take sequins?" He
- thumped a long bag down upon the table. "We do not depend on your indulgence,
- Dirdirman!"
- "As you wish," said Anacho with a quizzical glance toward Reith.
- Reith said, "Since I have no sequins, I gladly accept whatever is offered to me,
- from either of you."
- The common-room had gradually filled with folk from the caravan: drivers and
- weaponeers, the three swaggering Ilanths, the caravan-master, others. All called
- for food and drink. As soon as the caravan-master had eaten, Anacho, Traz and
- Reith approached him and solicited transportation to Pera. "So long as you are
- in no hurry," said the caravan-master. "We wait here until the Aig-Hedajha
- caravan comes down from the North, then we travel by way of Golsse; if you are
- in haste you must make other arrangements."
- Reith would have preferred to travel rapidly: what would be happening to his
- space-boat? But with no swifter form of transport available, he curbed his
- impatience.
- Others also were impatient. Up to the table marched two women in long black
- gowns with red shoes. One of these Reith had seen previously, looking from the
- back of the dray. The other was thinner, but taller, with a skin even more
- leaden, almost cadaverous. The tall woman spoke in a voice crackling with
- restrained anger, or perhaps chronic antagonism: "Sir Baojian, how long do we
- wait here? The driver says it may be five days."
- "Five days is a fair estimate."
- "But this is impossible! We will be overdue at the seminary!"
- Baojian the caravan-master spoke in a professionally toneless voice: "We wait
- for the southbound caravan, to exchange articles for transshipment. We proceed
- immediately thereafter."
- "We cannot wait so long! We must be at Fasm for business of great importance."
- "I assure you, old mother, that I will deliver you to your seminary with all the
- expedition possible."
- "Not fast enough! You must take us on at once!" This was the hoarse
- expostulation of the other, the burly slab-cheeked woman Reith had seen
- previously.
- "Impossible, I fear," said Baojian briskly. "Was there anything else you wished
- to discuss?"
- The women swung away without response and went to a table beside the wall.
- Reith could not restrain his curiosity. "Who are they?"
- "Priestesses of the Female Mystery. Do you not know the cult? They are
- ubiquitous. What part of Tschai is your home?"
- "A place far away," said Reith. "Who is the young woman they keep in a cage?
- Likewise a priestess?"
- Baojian rose to his feet. "She is a slave, from Charchan, or so I suppose. They
- take her to Fasm for their triennial rites. It is nothing to me. I am a
- caravaneer; I ply between Coad on the Dwan to Tosthanag on the Schanizade Ocean.
- Whom I convoy, where, to what purpose-" He gave a shrug, a purse of the lips.
- "Priestess or slave, Dirdirman, nomad or unclassified hybrid: it's all the same
- to me." He gave them a cool grin and departed.
- The three returned to their table.
- Anacho inspected Reith with a thoughtful frown. "Curious, curious indeed."
- "What is curious?"
- "Your strange equipment, as fine as Dirdir stuff. Your garments, of a cut
- unknown on Tschai. Your peculiar ignorance and your equally peculiar competence.
- It almost might seem that you are what you claim to be: a man from a far world.
- Absurd, of course."
- "I made no such claim," said Reith.
- "The boy did."
- "The question, then, is between you and him." Reith turned to watch the
- priestesses, who brooded over bowls of soup. Now they were joined by two more
- priestesses, with the captive girl between them. The first two reported their
- conversation with the caravan-master with many grunts, jerks of the arms, sour
- glances over the shoulder. The girl sat dispiritedly, hands in her lap, until
- one of the priestesses prodded her and pointed to a bowl of soup, whereupon she
- listlessly began to eat. Reith could not take his eyes from her. She was a
- slave, he thought in sudden excitement; would the priestess sell? Almost
- certainly not. The girl of extraordinary beauty was destined for some
- extraordinary purpose. Reith sighed, turned his gaze elsewhere, and noticed that
- others-namely the Ilanths-were no less fascinated than himself. He saw them
- staring, tugging at their mustaches, muttering and laughing, with such
- lascivious jocularity that Reith became annoyed. Were they not aware that the
- girl faced a tragic destiny?
- The priestesses rose to their feet. They stared truculently in all directions
- and led the girl from the room. For a time they marched back and forth across
- the compound, the girl walking to the side, occasionally being jerked into a
- trot when her steps lagged. The Ilanth scouts, coming out of the common-room,
- squatted on their heels by the wall of the caravansary. They had exchanged their
- war-hats with the human skulls for square berets of soft brown velvet, and each
- had pasted a vermilion beauty disc on his lemon-yellow cheek. They chewed on
- nuts, spitting the shells into the dirt and never taking their eyes from the
- girl. There was badinage between them, a sly challenge, and one rose to his
- feet. He sauntered across the compound and, accelerating his steps, came up
- behind the marching priestesses. He spoke to the girl, who looked at him
- blankly. The priestesses halted, swung about. The tall one raised her arm,
- forefinger pointed at the sky, and called out an angry reprimand. The Ilanth,
- grinning insolently, held his ground. He failed to notice the burly priestess
- who came up from the side and dealt him a vicious blow on the side of the head.
- The Ranth tumbled to the compound, but leapt to his feet instantly, spitting
- curses. The priestess, grinning, moved forward; the Ilanth tried to strike her
- with his fist. She caught him in a bear hug, banged his head with her own,
- lifted him, bumped out her belly, propelled him away. Advancing, she kicked him,
- and the others joined her. The Ilanth, surrounded by priestesses, finally
- managed to crawl away and regain his feet. He shouted invective, spat in the
- first priestess's face, then, retreating swiftly, rejoined his hooting comrades.
- The priestesses, with occasional glances toward the Ilanths, continued their
- pacing. The sun sank low, sending long shadows across the compound. Down from
- the hills came a group of ragged folk, somewhat undersized, with white skins,
- yellow-brown hair, clear sharp profiles, small slanting eyes. The men began to
- play on gongs, while the women performed a curious hopping dance, darting back
- and forth with the rapidity of insects. Wizened children, wearing only shawls,
- moved among the travelers with bowls, soliciting coins. Across the compound the
- travelers were airing blankets and shawls, hanging the squares of orange,
- yellow, rust and brown out to flap in the airs drifting down from the hills. The
- priestesses and the slave girl retired to their ironbound dray-house.
- The sun set behind the hills. Dusk settled over the caravansary; the compound
- became quiet. Pale lights flickered from the dray-houses of the caravan. The
- steppes beyond the outcrops were dim, rimmed by plum-colored afterglow.
- Reith ate a bowl of pungent goulash, a slab of coarse bread and a dish of
- preserves for his supper. Traz went to watch a gambling game; Anacho was nowhere
- to be seen. Reith went out into the compound, looked up at the stars. Somewhere
- among the unfamiliar constellations would be a faint and minuscule Cepheus,
- across the Sun from his present outlook. Cepheus, an undistinguished
- constellation, could never be identified by the naked eye. The Sun at 212
- light-years would be invisible: a star of perhaps the tenth or twelfth
- magnitude. Somewhat depressed, Reith brought his gaze down from the sky.
- The priestesses sat outside their dray, muttering together. Within the cage
- stood the slave girl. Drawn almost beyond his will, Reith circled the compound,
- came up behind the dray, looked into the cage. "Girl," he said. "Girl."
- She turned and looked at him, but said nothing.
- "Come over here," said Reith, "so that I can speak to you."
- Slowly she crossed the cage to peer down at him.
- "What do they do with you?" Reith asked.
- "I don't know." Her voice was husky and soft. "They stole me from my home in
- Cath; they took me to the ship and put me in a cage."
- "Why?"
- "Because I am beautiful. Or so they say... Hush. They hear us talking. Hide."
- Reith, feeling craven, dropped to his knees. The girl stood holding to the bars,
- looking from the cage. One of the priestesses came to look in the cage and,
- seeing nothing amiss, returned to her sisters.
- The girl called softly down to Reith. "She is gone."
- Reith rose to his feet, feeling somewhat foolish. "Do you want to be free of
- this cage?"
- "Of course!" Her voice was almost indignant. "I don't want to be part of their
- rite! They hate me! Because they are so ugly!" She peered down at Reith, studied
- him in the flicker from a nearby window, "I saw you today," she said, "standing
- beside the track."
- "Yes. I noticed you too."
- She turned her head. "They come again. You had better go."
- Reith moved away. From across the compound he watched the priestesses thrust the
- girl into the dray-house. Then he went into the common-room. For a period he
- watched the games. There was chess, played on a board of forty-nine squares with
- seven pieces to a side; a game played with a disc and small numbered chips, of
- great complication; several card games. A flask of beer stood by every hand;
- women of the hill tribes wandered through the room soliciting; there were
- several brawls of no great consequence. A man from the caravan brought forth a
- flute, another a lute, another drew sonorous bass tones from a long glass tube;
- the three played music which Reith found fascinating if only for the strangeness
- of its melodic structure. Traz and the Dirdirman had long gone to their
- chambers; Reith presently followed.
- CHAPTER FOUR
- Reith Awoke with a sense of imminence which for a space he could not comprehend.
- Then he understood its source: it derived from the girl and the Priestesses of
- the Female Mystery. He lay scowling at the plaster ceiling. Utter folly to
- concern himself with matters beyond his comprehension! What, after all, could he
- achieve?
- Descending to the common-room, he ate a dish of porridge served by one of the
- innkeeper's slatternly daughters, then went out to sit on a bench, aching for a
- glimpse of the captive girl.
- The priestesses appeared, proceeded to the caravansary with the girl in their
- midst, looking neither right nor left.
- Half an hour later they returned to the compound, and went to talk to one of the
- small men from the hills, who grinned and nodded obsequiously, eyes glittering
- in a fascination of awe.
- The Ilanths trooped from the common-room. With sidelong glances toward the
- priestesses and leers at the girl, they crossed the compound, brought forth
- their leap-horses and began to pare the horny growths which gathered on the
- gray-green hides.
- The priestesses ended their discussion with the mountainman and went to walk out
- on the steppe, back and forth in front of the outcrops, the girl lagging a few
- steps behind, to the exasperation of the priestesses. The Ilanths looked after,
- muttering to themselves.
- Traz came out to sit by Reith. He pointed across the steppe. "Green Chasch are
- near: a large party."
- Reith could see nothing. "How do you know?"
- "I smell the smoke of their fires."
- "I smell nothing," said Reith.
- Traz shrugged. "It is a party of three or four hundred."
- "Mmmf. How do you know that?"
- "By the strength of the wind, the smell of the smoke. A small group makes less
- smoke than a large group. This is the smoke of about three hundred Green
- Chasch."
- Reith threw up his hands in defeat.
- The Ilanths, mounting their leap-horses, bounded off into the outcrops, where
- they halted. Anacho, standing by, gave a dry laugh. "They go to plague the
- priestesses."
- Reith jumped to his feet, went out to watch. The Ilanths waited till the
- priestesses strode by, then bounded forth. The priestesses sprang back in alarm;
- the Ilanths, cawing and hooting, snatched up the girl, threw her over a saddle
- and carried her off toward the hills. The priestesses stared aghast; then,
- screaming hoarsely, they all ran back to the compound. Seizing upon Baojian the
- caravan-master, they pointed trembling fingers. "The yellow beasts have stolen
- the maid of Cath!"
- "Just for a bit of sport," said Baojian soothingly. "They'll bring her back when
- they're through with her."
- "Useless for our purposes! When we have journeyed so far and borne so much! It
- is utter tragedy! I am a Grand Mother of the Fasm Seminary! And you will not
- even help!"
- The caravan-master spat into the dirt. "I help no one. I maintain order in the
- caravan. I steer my wagons, I have time for nothing else."
- "Vile man! Are these not your underlings? Control them!"
- "I control only my caravan. The event occurred upon the steppe."
- "Oh, what shall we do? We are bereft! There will be no Rite of Clarification!"
- Reith found himself in the saddle of a leap-horse, bounding across the steppe.
- He had been activated by an impulse far below the level of his conscious mind;
- even while the leap-horse took him on prodigious bounds across the steppe he
- marveled at the reflexes which had sent him springing away from the
- caravan-master and up onto the leaphorse. "What's done is done," he consoled
- himself, with somewhat bitter satisfaction; it seemed that the plight of a
- beautiful slave-girl had taken precedence over his own woes.
- The Ilanths had not ridden far; up a little valley to a small flat sandy area
- under a beetling boulder. The girl stood bewildered and cowering against the
- stone; the Ranths had only just finished tying their leaphorses when Reith
- arrived. "What do you want?" asked one without friendliness. "Away with you; we
- are about to test the quality of this Cath girl."
- Another one gave a coarse laugh. "She will need instruction for the Female
- Mysteries!"
- Reith displayed his gun. "I'll kill any or all of you, with pleasure." He
- motioned to the girl. "Come."
- She looked wildly around the landscape, as if not knowing in which direction to
- run.
- The Ilanths stood silently, black mustaches a droop. The girl slowly clambered
- up on the horse in front of Reith; he turned it about and rode off down the
- valley. She looked at him with an unreadable expression, started to speak, then
- became silent. Behind, the Ilanths mounted their own horses and bounded off
- past, yipping, hooting, cursing.
- The priestesses stood by the entry to the compound, gazing across the steppe.
- Reith halted the horse and considered the four black-clad shapes, who at once
- began to make peremptory signals.
- The girl spoke frantically: "How much did they pay you?"
- "Nothing," said Reith. "I came of my own accord."
- "Take me home," begged the girl. "Take me to Cath! My father will pay you far
- more-whatever you ask of him!"
- Reith pointed to a moving black line at the horizon. "I suspect those are Green
- Chasch. We'd best go back to the inn."
- "The women will take me! They will put me in the cage!" The girl's voice
- quavered; her composure-or perhaps it was apathy-began to disintegrate. "They
- hate me, they want to do their worst!" She pointed. "They come now! Let me go!"
- "Alone? Out on the steppe?"
- "I prefer it!"
- "I won't let them take you," said Reith. He rode slowly toward the caravansary.
- The priestesses stood waiting at the passage between the rock juts. "Oh noble
- man!" called the Grand Mother. "You have done a fine deed! She has not been
- defiled?"
- "It is no concern of yours," said Reith.
- "What's this? Not our concern? How can you say so?"
- "She is my property. I took her from the three warriors. Go to them for
- restitution, not to me. What I have taken, I keep."
- The priestesses laughed hugely. "You ridiculous cockbird of a man! Give us our
- property, or it will go poorly with you! We are Priestesses of the Female
- Mystery."
- "You will be dead priestesses if you interfere with me or my property," said
- Reith. He rode past, into the compound, leaving the priestesses staring after.
- Reith dismounted, helped the girl to the ground, and now he understood why his
- instinct had sent him in pursuit of the Ilanths, all the urging of good judgment
- to the contrary.
- "What is your name?" he asked.
- She reflected, as if Reith had asked the most perplexing of riddles, and
- answered with diffidence. "My father is lord of Blue Jade Palace." Then she
- said, "We are of the Aegis caste. Sometimes I am announced as Blue Jade Flower,
- at lesser functions Beauty Flower, or Flower of Cath ... My flower-name is
- Ylin-Ylan."
- "That is all somewhat complicated," stated Reith, to which the girl nodded, as
- if she too found the matter overly profound. "What do your friends call you?"
- "That depends on their caste. Are you high-born?"
- "Yes, indeed," said Reith, seeing no reason to claim otherwise.
- "Do you intend me to be your slave? If so, it would not be proper to use my
- friend-name."
- "I've never owned a slave," said Reith. "The temptation is great-but I think I'd
- rather use your friend-name."
- "You may call me the Flower of Cath, which is a formal friend-name, or, if you
- wish, my flower-name, Ylin-Ylan."
- "That should do, temporarily at least." He surveyed the compound, then, taking
- the girl's arm, led her into the common-room of the caravansary, and to a table
- at the back wall. Here he studied the girl, Ylin-Ylan, the Beauty Flower, the
- Flower of Cath. "I don't quite know what to do with you."
- Out in the compound the priestesses were expostulating with the caravan-master,
- who listened with gravity and politeness.
- Reith said, "The problem may be taken out of my hands. I'm not sure of my legal
- footing."
- "There are no laws here on the steppe," the girl said. "Fear alone rules."
- Traz came to join them. He appraised the girl with disapproval. "What do you
- intend with her?"
- "I'd see her home, if I could."
- "You would want for nothing, if you did so," the girl told him earnestly. "I am
- the daughter of a notable house. My father would build you a palace."
- At this Traz showed less disapprobation, and looked off to the east as if
- envisioning the journey. "It is not impossible."
- "For me it is," said Reith. "I must go to find my space-boat. If you want to
- conduct her to Cath, by all means do so, and make a new life for yourself."
- Traz looked dubiously out at the priestesses. "Without warriors or weapons, how
- could I convey one like her across the steppes? We'd be enslaved or killed out
- of hand."
- Baojian the caravan-master entered the room, approached. He spoke in an even
- voice: "The priestesses demand that I enforce their claims, which I will not do,
- since the transfer of property occurred away from my caravan. However, I agreed
- to put the question: what are your intentions in regard to the girl?"
- "It is no concern of theirs," said Reith. "The girl has become my property. If
- they want compensation, they must approach the Ilanths. I have no business with
- them."
- "This is a reasonable statement," remarked Baojian. "The priestesses understand
- as much, although they protest their misfortunes. I am inclined to agree that
- they have been victimized."
- Reith looked to see if the caravan-master was keeping a straight face. "Are you
- serious?"
- "I think only in terms of property rights and security of transfer," declared
- Baojian. "The priestesses have suffered a great loss. A certain sort of girl is
- necessary for their rite; they strove inordinately to procure a suitable
- participant, only to lose her at the last minute. What if they paid a salvage
- fee-let us say, half the price of a comparable female?"
- Reith shook his head. "They suffered loss, but I feel no concern whatever. After
- all, they have not come to rejoice with the girl for having regained her
- freedom."
- "I suspect that they are in no mood for merrymaking, even at so happy an
- occasion," remarked Baojian. "Well, I will communicate your remarks. Doubtless
- they will make other arrangements."
- "I hope the situation will not affect the convenience of our travel?"
- "Naturally not," declared the caravan-master emphatically. "I enforce total ban
- upon thieving and violence. Security is my stock in trade." He bowed and
- departed.
- Reith turned to Traz and Anacho, who had come to join the group. "Well, what
- now?"
- "You are as good as dead," said Traz gloomily. "The priestesses are witch-women.
- We had several such among the Emblems. We killed them and events went for the
- better."
- Anacho inspected the Flower of Cath with the cool detachment he might have used
- for an animal. "She's a Golden Yao, an extremely old stock: hybrids of the First
- Tans and the First Whites. A hundred and fifty years ago they became arrogant
- and contrived to build certain advanced mechanisms. The Dirdir taught them a
- sharp lesson."
- "A hundred and fifty years ago? How long is the Tschai year?"
- "Four hundred and eighty-eight days, though I see no relevance to the
- discussion."
- Reith calculated. A hundred and fifty Tschai years was equivalent to about two
- hundred and twelve Earth years. Coincidence? Or had the Flower's ancestors
- dispatched that radio beam which had brought him to Tschai?
- The Flower of Cath was regarding Anacho with detestation. She said in a husky
- voice, "You are a Dirdirman!"
- "Of the Sixth Estate: by no means an Immaculate."
- The girl turned to Reith. "They torpedoed Settra and Balisidre; they wanted to
- destroy us, from envy!"
- "'Envy' is not the proper word," said Anacho. "Your people were playing with
- forbidden forces, matters beyond your comprehension."
- "What happened after?" asked Reith.
- "Nothing," said Ylin-Ylan. "Our cities were destroyed, and the receptories and
- the Palace of Arts, and the Golden Webs-the treasures of thousands of years. Is
- it any wonder we hate the Dirdir? More than the Pnume, more than the Chasch,
- more than the Wankh!"
- Anacho shrugged. "Expunging the Yao was not my doing."
- "But you defend the deed! This is the same!"
- "Let us talk of something else," suggested Reith. "After all, the happening is
- two hundred and twelve years gone."
- "Only a hundred and fifty!" the Flower of Cath corrected him.
- "True. Well, then, what of you? Would you like a change of clothes?"
- "Yes. I have worn these since the unspeakable women took me from my garden. I
- would like to bathe. They allowed me water only enough to drink..."
- Reith stood guard while the girl scrubbed herself, then handed in
- steppe-travelers' garments which made no distinction between male and female.
- Presently she emerged, still half-damp, wearing the gray breeches and tan tunic,
- and they once more went down to the common-room, and out upon the compound, to
- discover an atmosphere of urgency, occasioned by the Green Chasch, who had
- approached to within a mile of the caravansary. The gun emplacements on the rock
- juts had been manned; Baojian was driving his gun-carts up into the openings
- where they commanded all avenues of approach.
- The Green Chasch showed no immediate disposition to attack. They brought up
- their own wagons, ranged them in a long line, erected a hundred tall black
- tents.
- Baojian pulled at his chin in vexation. "The North-South train will never join
- us with nomads so near. When their scouts see the camp they'll back away and
- wait. I foresee delay."
- The Grand Mother set up an indignant outcry. "The Rite will proceed without us!
- Must we be thwarted in every particular?"
- Baojian held out his hands to implore reason. "Can't you see the impossibility
- of leaving the compound? We would be forced to fight! We may have to do so in
- any event!"
- Someone called, "Send the priestesses forth to dance their 'Rite' with the
- Chasch!"
- "Spare the unfortunate Chasch; " spoke another impudent voice. The priestesses
- retreated in a fury.
- Dusk settled over the steppe. The Green Chasch started up a line of fires,
- across which their tall shapes could be seen to pass. From time to time they
- seemed to halt and stare toward the caravansary.
- Traz told Reith, "They are a telepathic race; they know each other's minds.
- Sometimes they seem to read the thoughts of men ... I myself doubt that they do.
- Still-who knows?"
- A scratch meal of soup and lentils was served in the common room, with dim
- lights to prevent the Chasch from silhouetting those on guard. A few quiet games
- were played to the side. The Ilanths drank distillation, and presently became
- loud and harsh, until the innkeeper warned them that he maintained as stringent
- a policy as did the caravan-master, and that if they wished to brawl they must
- go forth on the steppe. The three hunched forward over their table, hats pulled
- thwartwise across their yellow faces.
- The common-room began to empty. Reith took Ylin-Ylan the Beauty Flower to a
- cubicle beside his own. "Bolt your door," he told her. "Do not come out until
- morning. If anyone tries the door, pound on the wall to wake me."
- She looked at him through the doorway with an unreadable expression and Reith
- thought never had he seen more appealing a sight. She asked, "Then you really do
- not intend me to be a slave?"
- "No."
- The door closed, the bolt struck home. Reith went to his own cubicle.
- The night passed. On the following day, with the Green Chasch still camped
- before the caravansary, there was nothing to do but wait.
- Reith, with the Flower of Cath close by his side, inspected the caravan guns-the
- so-called "sand blasts"-with interest. He learned that the weapons indeed fired
- sand, charging each grain electrostatically, accelerating it violently almost to
- light speed, augmenting the mass of each grain a thousandfold. Such driven
- sand-grains, striking a solid object, penetrated, then gave up their energy in
- an explosion. The weapons, Reith learned, were obsolete Wankh equipment, and
- were engraved with Wankh writing: rows of rectangles of different sizes and
- shapes.
- Returning to the caravansary, he found Traz and Anacho arguing as to the nature
- of the Phung. Traz declared them to be creatures generated by Pnumekin upon the
- corpses of Pnume. "Have you ever seen a pair of Phung? Or an infant Phung? No.
- They go singly. They are too mad, too desperate, to breed."
- Anacho waved his fingers indulgently. "Pnume go singly as well, and reproduce in
- a peculiar manner. Peculiar to men and sub-men, I should say, for the system
- seems to suit the Pnume admirably. They are a persistent race. Do you know that
- they have records across a million years?"
- "So I have heard," said Traz sourly.
- "Before the Chasch came," said Anacho, "the Pnume ruled everywhere. They lived
- in villages of little domes, but all trace of these are gone. Now they keep to
- caves and passages under the old cities, and their lives are a mystery. Even the
- Dirdir consider it bad luck to molest a Pnume."
- "The Chasch then came to Tschai before the Dirdir?" Reith inquired.
- "This is well-known," said Anacho. "Only a man from an isolated province-or a
- far world-could be ignorant to the fact." He gave Reith a quizzical glance. "But
- the first invaders indeed were the Old Chasch, a hundred thousand years ago. Ten
- thousand years later the Blue Chasch arrived, from a planet colonized an era
- previously by Chasch spacefarers. The two Chasch races fought for Tschai, and
- brought in Green Chasch for shock-troops.
- "Sixty thousand years ago the Dirdir arrived. The Chasch suffered great losses
- until the Dirdir arrived in large numbers and so became vulnerable, whereupon a
- stalemate went into effect. The races are still enemies, with little traffic
- between them.
- "Comparatively recently, ten thousand years ago, space-war broke out between the
- Dirdir and the Wankh, and extended to Tschai when the Wankh built forts on Rakh
- and South Kachan. But now there is little fighting, other than skirmishes and
- ambushes. Each race fears the other two and bides its time until it can expunge
- all but itself. The Pnume are neutral and take no part in the wars, though they
- watch with interest and take notes for their history."
- "What of men?" asked Reith guardedly. "When did they arrive on Tschai?"
- Anacho's side-glance was sardonic. "Since you claim to know the world where men
- originated, this information should be in your possession."
- Reith refused to be provoked and made no comment.
- "Men originated," said the Dirdirman in his most didactic manner, "on Sibol and
- came to Tschai with the Dirdir. Men are as plastic as wax, and some
- metamorphosed, first into marsh-men, then, twenty thousand years ago, into this
- sort." He pointed toward Traz. "Others, enslaved, became Chaschmen, Pnumekin,
- even Wankhmen. There are dozens of hybrids and freakish races. Variety exists
- even among the Dirdirmen. The Immaculates are almost pure Dirdir. Others exhibit
- less refinement. This is the background for my own disaffection: I demanded
- prerogatives which were denied me, but which I adopted in any event..."
- Anacho spoke on, describing his difficulties, but Reith's attention wandered. It
- was clear, to Reith at least, how men had come to Tschai. The Dirdir had known
- space-travel for more than seventy thousand years. During this time they
- evidently had visited Earth, twice at the very least. On the first occasion they
- had captured a tribe of photo-Mongoloids; on the second occasion, twenty
- thousand years ago, according to Anacho-they had collected a cargo of
- proto-Caucasoids. These two groups, under the special conditions of Tschai, had
- mutated, specialized, remutated, respecialized to produce the bewildering
- diversity of human types to be found on the planet.
- So then: the Dirdir undoubtedly knew of Earth and its human population, but
- perhaps reckoned it still a savage planet. Nothing could be gained by
- advertising the fact that Earth was now a spacefaring world; indeed Reith could
- envision calamity arising from the knowledge. There were no clues aboard the
- space-boat to point to Earth, except possibly the corpse of Paul Waunder. In any
- event the Dirdir had lost possession of the space-boat to the Blue Chasch.
- Still unanswered was the question: who had fired the torpedo that destroyed the
- Explorator IV?
- Two hours before sundown the Green Chasch broke camp. The high-wheeled wagons
- milled in a circle; the warriors mounted on monstrous leap-horses, lunged and
- bounded; then at some imperceptible signal-perhaps telepathic, reflected
- Reith-the band formed a long line and moved off toward the east. The Ilanth
- scouts set forth and followed at a discreet distance. In the morning they
- returned to report that the band seemed to be veering to the north.
- Late in the afternoon the Aig-Hedajha caravan arrived, laden with leather,
- aromatic logs and mosses, tubs of pickles and condiments.
- Baojian the caravan-master took his wagons and drays out upon the steppe, to
- effect exchanges and transshipments. Derricks rolled between the two caravans,
- swinging goods back and forth; porters and drivers toiled and strained, sweat
- rolling down their naked backs and into their loose brown breeches.
- An hour before sunset the transfer of goods had been effected and a call came
- into the common-room for all passengers. Reith, Traz, Anacho and the Flower of
- Cath started across the compound. The priestesses were nowhere to be seen; Reith
- assumed that they were aboard their house.
- They walked out under the rock juts toward the caravan. There was a sudden
- jostle; arms gripped Reith in a bear-hug and he was pressed against a soft
- wheezing body. He struggled; the two toppled to the ground. The Grand Mother
- gripped him in her massive legs. Another priestess seized the Flower of Cath and
- dragged her at an awkward lope out to the caravan. Reith lay enfolded in masses
- of flesh and muscle. A hand squeezed his throat; blood surged through his
- arteries and his eyes began to start. He managed to free an arm, drove stiff
- fingers up into the Grand Mother's face, into something moist. She gasped and
- wheezed; Reith found her nostrils, clenched, twisted; she cried out and kicked;
- Reith rolled free.
- An Ilanth was rummaging through his pack; Traz lay limp on the ground; Anacho
- was coolly defending himself against the swordplay of the remaining two Ilanths.
- The Grand Mother grabbed for Reith's legs; Reith kicked furiously, won free,
- lurched aside as the Ilanth investigating his pack looked up and flicked a knife
- at him. Reith struck up at the lemon-yellow chin with his fist; the man went
- down. Reith leapt on the back of one of the Ilanths who were attacking the
- Dirdirman, bore him down, and Anacho deftly stabbed him. Reith side-stepped a
- thrust from the third Ilanth, seized the outstretched arm, threw the man
- cartwheeling over his shoulder. The Dirdirman, standing by, struck down with his
- sword, nearly cutting through the yellow neck. The remaining Ilanth took to his
- heels.
- Traz, tottering to his feet, stood holding his head. The Grand Mother was at
- this moment mounting the steps into the drayhouse.
- Reith in all his existence had never been so angry. He picked up his pack,
- marched to where Baojian the caravan-master stood directing the passengers to
- their compartments.
- "I was attacked!" stormed Reith. "You must have noticed! The priestesses have
- dragged the Cath girl into their house and hold her prisoner!"
- "Yes," said Baojian. "I saw something of the sort."
- "Well, then, assert your authority! Enforce your ban on violence!"
- Baojian gave his head a prim shake. "The affair occurred on that strip of the
- steppe between the compound and the caravan, where I make no effort to maintain
- order. It appears that the priestesses have recovered their property in the same
- manner by which they lost it. You have no cause for complaint."
- "What?" roared Reith. "You'll let them inflict an innocent person with their
- Female Mystery?"
- Baojian held out his hands. "I have no choice. I cannot police the steppe; I do
- not care to try."
- Reith burnt him with a stare of fury and contempt, then turned to examine the
- priestesses' dray-house.
- Baojian said, "I must caution you against disorderly conduct while you are a
- passenger. I meticulously enforce caravan discipline."
- Reith for a space could find no words. At last he stuttered, "Have you no
- concern for evil deeds?"
- "'Evil'?" Baojian laughed sadly. "On Tschai the word has no meaning. Events
- exist-or they do not exist. If a person adheres to some other system of conduct
- he himself will swiftly cease to exist-or else becomes mad as a Phung. So now,
- permit me to show you your compartment, as we set forth at once. I want to put
- leagues behind us this night, before the Green Chasch return. It seems that now
- I have only a single scout."
- CHAPTER FIVE
- REITH, TRAZ AND Anacho were assigned compartments on one of the barrack drays,
- each containing a hammock and a small locker. Four wagons ahead was the
- dray-house of the priestesses. All night it rolled on its great wheels, showing
- no lights.
- Unable to contrive any feasible rescue scheme, Reith went to his hammock, and
- was sent into a sleep almost hypnotic by the motion of the wagon.
- Shortly after the wan sun rose from the murk, the caravan halted. The folk of
- the caravan filed past a commissary wagon and each was handed a pancake heaped
- with hot meat, a mug of hot beer. Low mist hung in wisps and drifts; the small
- noises of the caravan only seemed to accentuate the vast silence of the steppe.
- Color was forgotten; there was only the slate of the sky, drab gray-brown of
- steppe, watered milk of the mist. From the dray-house came no sign of life; the
- priestesses did not appear, nor was the Flower of Cath permitted on the caged
- foredeck.
- Reith sought out the caravan master. "How far is the way to the seminary? When
- will we arrive?"
- The caravan-master munched his pancake while he considered. "We camp tonight by
- Slugah Knoll. Another day to Zadno's Depot, then the next morning to Fasm
- Junction. None too soon for the priestesses; they fear that they will be late
- for their Rite."
- "What is this 'Rite'? What goes on?"
- Baojian shrugged. "I can only report rumor. They are a select group, the
- priestesses, and they hate men, so I am told, with abnormal fervor. The feeling
- extends to every aspect of the ordinary male-female relationship, and includes
- such women who stimulate erotic conduct. The Rite seems to purge these intense
- emotions; and I am told the priestesses become afflicted with a frenzy during
- the solemnities."
- "Two and a half days, then."
- "Two and a half days to Fasm Junction."
- The caravan moved across the steppe, on a course parallel to the hills which
- heaved up, now high, now low, to the south. Occasionally clefts or chasms led
- away into the hills; occasionally there were copses and groves of spindly
- vegetation. Reith, sweeping the landscape with his spanscope, glimpsed creatures
- watching from the shadows; he guessed them to be Phung, or possibly Pnume.
- For the most part his attention was fixed on the dray-house. It evinced no life
- or motion by day, and the dimmest of flickering lamplight by night. Occasionally
- Reith jumped down from the great wagon on which he rode to walk beside the
- caravan. Whenever he approached the dray-house a weaponeer in a nearby guncart
- quickly swiveled around his weapon. Baojian clearly had given orders that the
- priestesses were not to be molested.
- Anacho tried to divert him. "Why concern yourself for this isolated female? You
- have spared not a glance for the three slave troupes forward. Everywhere people
- live and die: you are oblivious. What of the victims of the Old Chasch and their
- games? What of the cannibal nomads who herd men and women through the Kislovan
- mid-region as other tribes herd fat-humps? What of the Dirdir and Dirdirmen in
- Blue Chasch dungeons? All these you ignore; you are bemused by moth-dust: a
- fascination with this one female and her grotesque tribulations!"
- Reith managed a grin. "One man can't do everything. I'll make a start, saving
- the girl from the Rite ... if I can."
- An hour later Traz made a similar protest. "What of your space-boat? Are you
- abandoning your plans? If you interfere with the priestesses, they will have you
- killed or maimed."
- To which Reith gave a series of patient nods, admitting the justice of Traz's
- remarks, but not allowing himself to be persuaded by them.
- Towards the end of the second day the hills became stony and abrupt, and at
- times cliffs loomed over the steppe.
- At sunset the caravan came to Zadno's Depot, a small caravansary dug into the
- face of one of the cliffs, where it halted to discharge parcels of goods and to
- take on rock crystals and slabs of malachite. Baojian marshaled his wagons close
- up under the cliff, with the gun-carts facing the steppe. Reith, passing the
- priestesses' dray-house, was galvanized by a low wail, the poignant call a
- person might give while dreaming. Traz, almost in a panic, seized his arm.
- "Don't you see that you are watched every instant? The master expects you to
- make a disturbance!"
- Reith turned a wolfish grin around the caravan. "I'll make a disturbance, no
- fear as to that! Mind you, I want you to stay clear! Whatever happens to me, go
- on your way!"
- Traz gave him a glance of reproach and indignation. "Do you think I would stand
- aside? Are we not comrades?"
- "Yes. Still-"
- "There is no more to be said," stated Traz, with more than a trace of the Onmale
- crispness.
- Reith threw up his hands, walked away from the dray-house, out upon the steppe.
- Time was growing short. He must act but when? During the night? During the trip
- to Fasm Junction? After the priestesses left the caravan?
- To act now was to bring instant disaster upon himself.
- Likewise during the night, or on the morrow, when the priestesses, realizing his
- desperation, would be at their most vigilant.
- At Fasm junction, after they had left the protection of the caravan-master, what
- then? This was the unknown quantity. Presumably they would take steps to guard
- themselves well.
- Twilight gave way to night; menacing sounds came from the steppe. Reith went to
- his compartment, lay in his hammock. He could not sleep; he did not wish to
- sleep. He jumped to the ground.
- The moons were in the sky. Az hung halfway down the west and presently
- disappeared behind a cliff. Braz, low in the east, threw a melancholy glimmer
- across the landscape. The depot was- almost completely dark, except for a few
- guard-lights: no roisterous common-room here. Within the dray-house lights still
- flickered, as the occupants moved here and there, more active than usual, or so
- it seemed. Suddenly the lights were extinguished; the house went dark.
- Reith, restless and uneasy, circled back around the dray. A sound? He stopped
- short, peering into the dark. Something was afoot. The sound came again: the
- scrape of a moving vehicle. Abandoning caution, Reith ran forward. He stopped
- short. Near at hand came the sound of low voices. Someone stood even nearer, a
- black bulk in the shadows. There was sudden vicious motion, something struck
- Reith's head. Lights danced in his brain, the world turned over-
- He recovered consciousness to the same scraping sound that he had heard before:
- creak-scrape, creak-scrape. From a subconscious reservoir of memory came the
- knowledge that he had been handled, lifted, dealt with... He felt constricted;
- he could not move his arms and legs. Under him was a hard surface which thudded
- and jarred: the cargo deck of a small wagon. Above was the night sky, with crags
- and ridges bulking up at either hand. The wagon evidently proceeded by a rough
- track up through the hills. Reith strained to move his arms. They were tied with
- coarse twine; the effort caused him agonizing cramps. He relaxed, clenching his
- teeth. From the front came gruff conversation; someone looked back at him. Reith
- lay still, feigning insensibility; the dark shape turned away. Priestesses,
- almost certainly. Why was he bound, why had they not killed him out of hand?
- Reith thought that he knew.
- He strained at his bonds but again succeeded only in causing himself pain.
- Whoever had bound him had been in great haste. Only his sword had been taken
- from him; at his belt was still his pouch.
- The wagon gave a great thump; Reith bounced, which gave him an idea. He
- squirmed, inched himself toward the rear of the wagon, sweating for fear that
- someone would turn to look at him. He reached the edge of the deck; again the
- wagon lurched and Reith dropped off. The wagon rumbled on, into the dark.
- Ignoring his bruises, Reith twisted, turned, rolled himself off the track, down
- a rocky slope into deep shade. He lay still, fearful that his fall from the
- wagon had been noticed. The squeak-scrape of the wagon had receded; the night
- was quiet except for a hoarse whisper of wind.
- Reith heaved, lurched, raised to his knees. Groping through the dark, he found a
- rough edge of rock and began to grind at his bonds. The process was
- interminable. His wrists became raw and bloody; his head throbbed; a curious
- feeling of unreality overcame him, a nightmarish identification with the dark
- and the rocks, as if all shared the same elemental consciousness. He cleared his
- mind, sawed at his bonds. The cords finally parted; his arms came free.
- For a moment he sat back, flexing his fingers, easing his muscles. Then he bent
- to free his legs, an operation maddeningly tedious in the dark.
- At last he rose to his feet, to stand swaying, holding to a rock for support.
- Over the highest ridge of mountainside came Braz to fill the valley with the
- palest of illuminations. Reith painfully climbed up the slope and at last gained
- the road. He looked up and down the track. Behind lay Zadno's Depot; ahead at
- some unknown distance rolled the wagon, going creak-scrape, creak-scrape,
- perhaps more rapidly now that the priestesses had discovered his absence. Aboard
- the wagon, almost certainly, was Ylin-Ylan. Reith set out in pursuit, limping,
- hobbling, at as rapid a pace as he could manage. According to Baojian, Fasm
- junction was another half a day by caravan, the Seminary at an unknown distance
- from the junction. This mountain track was evidently a shorter and more direct
- route.
- The way began to climb, angling up to a gap through the hills. Reith stumbled
- doggedly forward, gasping for breath. He had no hope of overtaking the wagon,
- which moved at that unvarying pace established by the pad pad pad of the
- pull-beast's eight soft feet. He reached the gap and paused to rest, then set
- off once more, descending toward a forested upland, indistinct in the inkblue
- light of Braz. The trees were wonderful and strange, with trunks of glimmering
- white rising as spirals, winding round and round, sometimes engaging the spirals
- of near trees. The foliage was tattered black floss, and each tree terminated in
- a rough pitted ball, vaguely luminescent.
- From the forest came sounds: croaks, groans laden with such human woe that Reith
- paused often in his stride, hand in his pouch on the comforting shape of his
- energy cell.
- Braz sank into the forest; wisps of foliage glinted, zones of shimmer moved
- through the trees to keep pace as Reith passed.
- He walked, trotted, loped, slowed to a walk once more. A large pallid creature
- glided quietly through the air above him. It seemed as frail as a moth, with
- huge soft wings and a round baby's head. Another time Reith thought to hear
- grave voices speaking, at not too far a distance. When he stopped to listen,
- there was nothing to hear. He continued, fighting the conviction that he moved
- in a dream, through an endless mental landscape, his legs carrying him back
- rather than forward.
- The road rose sharply, angled through a narrow gorge. At one time a high stone
- wall had barred the gap; now it lay in ruins. A tall arched portal remained
- standing, under which passed the road. Reith stopped short, disturbed by a
- prickling beneath the surface of his mind. The situation was too blandly
- innocent, or so it seemed.
- Reith tossed a rock through the gap. No response, no reaction. He left the road
- and with great care picked his way across the ruined wall, pressing close
- against the side of the gorge. After a hundred feet he returned to the road. He
- looked back, but if danger actually existed at the portal it could not be
- detected in the dark.
- Reith pushed forward. Every few minutes he stopped to listen. The walls of the
- gorge fell apart and dwindled in height, the sky came closer, the Tschai
- constellations lit the gray rock of the hillsides.
- Ahead: a glow in the sky? A murmur, a sound half-strident, half-harsh. Reith
- went forward at a stumbling run. The road raised, twisted over a knoll, Reith
- stopped, looking down on a scene as weird and wild as Tschai itself.
- The Seminary of the Female Mystery occupied an irregular flat area surrounded by
- crags and cliffs. A massive four-story edifice of stone was built in a ravine,
- to straddle a pair of crags. Elsewhere were sheds of timber and wattle, animal
- pens and hutches, outbuildings, cribs and racks. Directly below Reith a platform
- projected from the hill, with a two-story building to the sides and the rear.
- Gala events were in progress. Flames from dozens of flambeaux cast red,
- vermilion and orange light upon two hundred women who moved back and forth,
- half-dancing, half-lurching, in a state of entranced frenzy. They wore black
- pantaloons, black boots and were elsewhere naked, with even the hair shaved from
- their heads. Many were without breasts, displaying a pair of angry red scars:
- these women, the most active, marched and trooped, bodies glistening with sweat
- and oil. Others sat on benches slack and dull, resting, or exalted beyond mere
- frenzy. Below the platform, in a row of low cages, a dozen naked men stood
- crouched. These men produced the harsh chant Reith had heard from the hills.
- When one faltered, jets of flame spurted up from the floor beneath him, and he
- once more screamed his loudest. The flames were controlled from a keyboard in
- the front; here sat a woman dressed completely in black, and it was she who
- orchestrated the demoniac uproar. There, thought Reith, but for the bump of a
- wagon-there sing I.
- A singer collapsed. Jets of flame only caused him to twitch. He was dragged
- forth; a bag of transparent membrane was pulled over his head and tied at the
- neck; he was tossed into a rack at the side. Into the cage was thrust another
- singer: a strong young man, glaring in hatred. He refused to sing, and suffered
- the jets in furious silence. A priestess came forward, blew a waft of smoke into
- his face; presently he sang with the rest.
- How they hated men! thought Reith. A troupe of entertainers appeared on the
- stage-tall emaciated clown-men with skins bleached white, eyebrows painted high
- and black. In horrified fascination Reith watched them cavort and caper and with
- earnest zest defile themselves, while the priestesses called out in delight.
- When the clown-men retired a mime appeared: he wore a wig of long blonde hair, a
- mask with wide eyes and a smiling red mouth, to simulate a beautiful woman.
- Reith thought, They hate not only men, but love and youth and beauty!
- As the mime expatiated his shocking message, a curtain to the back of the
- platform drew back revealing a huge naked cretin, hairy of body and limb, in a
- state of intense erotic excitement. He worked to gain entry into a cage of thin
- glass rods, but could not puzzle out the working of the latch. In the cage
- cowered a girl wearing a gown of thin gauze: the Flower of Cath.
- The androgynous mime finished his curious performance. The singers were
- instructed to a new chant, a soft hoarse baying, and the priestesses crowded
- close around the platform, intent on the efforts of the fumbling brute.
- Reith already had departed from his vantage. Keeping to the shadows, he circled
- down around toward the rear of the platform. He passed a shed where the
- clown-men rested. Nearby, a set of pens held two dozen young men, apparently
- destined to sing. They were guarded by a wizened old woman with a gun almost as
- large as herself.
- From the front came a sudden avid murmur. The brute apparently had fumbled open
- the latch to the cage. Giving no thought to gallantry, Reith dropped down behind
- the old woman, felled her with a blow, ran along the line of pens, throwing open
- the doors. The men thrust pell-mell out into the corridor, while the troupe of
- clown-men watched in consternation.
- "Take the gun," Reith told the freed men. "Free the singers."
- He jumped up into the wings of the platform. The brute had entered the cage and
- was ripping the girl's gauze gown. Reith aimed his gun, sent an explosive needle
- into the bulging back. A thwump!--the brute jerked, seemed to puff. He raised on
- tiptoes, twisted about and fell dead. Ylin-Ylan the Flower of Cath, looking
- around with dazed eyes, saw Reith. He motioned; she stumbled from the cage,
- across the platform.
- The priestesses cried out first in fury, then in fear, for certain of the free
- men, bringing the gun out on the stage, fired again and again into the audience.
- Others released the singers. The young man most recently caged charged for the
- priestess at the console. He seized her, dragged her to the vacated box, locked
- her within; then returning to the console, pressed home the firevalve, and the
- priestess sang an ululating contralto. Another of the erstwhile captives seized
- a torch, fired one of the sheds; others took clubs and began to bludgeon the
- wailing celebrants.
- Reith led the sobbing girl down around the outskirts of the tumult, and was able
- to snatch up a cape which he drew about the shoulders of the girl.
- Priestesses were trying to flee the area-up the hillside, down the east road.
- Some tried to wriggle their half-naked bodies under sheds, only to be dragged
- back by the heels and clubbed.
- Reith led the girl down the main road toward the east. From the stable came
- rushing a wagon frantically urged by four priestesses. Tall and dominant bulked
- the Grand Mother. As Reith watched, a man vaulted up on the bed of the wagon,
- seized the Grand Mother and sought to strangle her with his bare hands. She
- reached up with her massive arms, drew him down, cast him on the deck and
- started to stamp on his head. Reith leapt up behind her, gave her a push; she
- fell off the wagon. Reith turned to the other priestesses: the three who had
- traveled with the caravan. "Off! To the ground!"
- "We'll be killed! The men are mad things! They are killing the Grand Mother!"
- Reith turned to look; four men had surrounded the Grand Mother, who stood at
- bay, roaring like a bear. One of the priestesses, taking advantage of Reith's
- distraction, tried to knife him. Reith threw her to the ground, and the other
- two as well. He pulled the girl up beside him and drove down the east road
- toward Fasm Junction.
- Ylin-Ylan the Flower of Cath huddled against him, exhausted, apathetic. Reith
- battered, bruised, dry of emotion, hunched in the seat. The sky behind them
- reddened; flames licked up into the black sky.
- CHAPTER SIX
- AN HOUR AFTER dawn they reached Fasm junction: three bleak structures of earthen
- brick on the edge of the steppe, the tall walls punctuated by the smallest and
- narrowest of black windows, a stockade of timber surrounding. The gate was
- closed; Reith halted the wagon, pounded and called, to no effect. The two,
- comatose from fatigue and the dullness following extreme emotion, settled
- themselves to wait until the folk in the junction saw fit to open the gates.
- Investigating the back of the wagon Reith found, among other effects, two small
- satchels containing sequins, to a number Reith could not even estimate.
- "So now we have the priestesses' wealth," he told the Flower of Cath. "Enough, I
- should think, to buy you safe passage home."
- The girl spoke in a puzzled voice: "You would give me the sequins and send me
- home and you demand nothing in return?"
- "Nothing," said Reith with a sigh.
- "The Dirdirman's joke seems real," said the girl sternly. "You act as if you
- were indeed from a distant world." And she turned half away from him.
- Reith looked off across the steppe, smiling somewhat sadly. Assuming the
- unlikely, that he were able to return to Earth, would he then be content to
- remain, to live his life out and never return to Tschai? No, probably not, mused
- Reith. Impossible to predict official Earth policy, but he himself could never
- be content while the Dirdir, the Chasch and the Wankh exploited men and used
- them as despised subordinates. The situation was a personal affront. Somewhat
- absently he asked Ylin-Ylan, "What do your people think of the Dirdirmen, the
- Chaschmen, the others?"
- She frowned in perplexity, and seemed, for some reason obscure to Reith,
- annoyed. "What is there to think? They exist. When they do not disturb us, we
- ignore them. Why do you speak of Dirdirmen? We were speaking of you and me!"
- Reith looked at her. She watched him with passive expectancy. Reith drew a deep
- breath, started to move closer to her, when the gate into the depot raised and a
- man looked forth. He was squat, with thick legs, long arms; his face was
- big-nosed and askew, with skin and hair the color of lead: evidently a Gray.
- "Who are you? That's a Seminary wagon. Last night flames burnt the sky. Was that
- the Rite? The priestesses are as eerie as potlinks during the Rite."
- Reith gave him an evasive answer and drove the wagon into the enclosure.
- They breakfasted on tea, stewed herbs, hard bread and went back out to the wagon
- to await the arrival of the caravan. The early morning mood had passed; both
- felt heavy and uncommunicative. Reith relinquished the seat to Ylin-Ylan and
- stretched out in the bed of the wagon. In the warm sunlight both became drowsy
- and slept.
- At noon the caravan was sighted: a heaving line of gray and black. The surviving
- Ilanth scout-and a scowling round-faced youth promoted to the position from
- gunner arrived at the junction first, then, wheeling their leap-horses, bounded
- back to the caravan. The tall wagons drawn by soft-footed beasts arrived, the
- drivers hunched in voluminous cloaks, faces thin under long-billed hats. Then
- came barrack-wagons with passengers sitting in the openings to their cubicles.
- Traz greeted Reith with obvious pleasure; Anacho the Dirdirman gave an airy
- flutter of the fingers which might have meant anything. "We were sure that you
- had been killed or kidnapped," Traz told Reith. "We searched the hills, we went
- out on the steppe, but found nothing. Today we were going to seek you at the
- Seminary."
- "We?" asked Reith.
- "The Dirdirman and myself. He's not such a bad sort as one might think."
- "The Seminary no longer exists," said Reith.
- Baojian appeared, stopped short at the sight of Reith and Ylin-Ylan but asked no
- questions. Reith, who half-suspected Baojian of facilitating the priestesses'
- departure from Zadno's Depot, volunteered no information. Baojian assigned them
- to compartments, and accepted the priestesses' wagon as passage payment to Pera.
- Bundles were discharged at the Junction, others were loaded aboard the wagons,
- and the caravan proceeded to the northeast.
- Days passed: easy idle days of trundling across the steppe. For a period they
- skirted a wide shallow lake of brackish water, then with great caution crossed a
- marsh overgrown with jointed white reeds. The scout discovered an ambush laid by
- a dwarfish tribe of marshmen, who at once fled into the reeds before the caravan
- guns could be brought to bear.
- On three occasions Dirdir aircraft swooped low to inspect the caravan, on which
- occasions Anacho concealed himself in his compartment. Another time a Blue
- Chasch platform slid overhead.
- Reith would have enjoyed the journey had he not been anxious in regard to his
- space-boat. There was also the problem of Ylin-Ylan, the Flower of Cath. Upon
- reaching Pera, the caravan would return to Coad on the Dwan Zher, where the girl
- could take passage aboard a ship for Cath. Reith assumed this to be her plan,
- though she said nothing of the matter and in fact had become somewhat cool, to
- Reith's puzzlement.
- So went the days, and the caravan crept northward, under the slate-dark skies of
- Tschai. Twice thunderstorms shattered the afternoon, but for the most part the
- weather was even. They passed through a dark forest, and the next day followed
- an ancient causeway across a vast black quagmire covered with bubble-plants and
- bubble-insects simulating the bubble-plants. The quagmire was the habitat of
- many fascinating creatures: wingless frog-sized things which propelled
- themselves through the air by a vibration of fan-like tails; larger creatures,
- half-spider, half-bat, which, anchoring by means of an exuded thread, rode the
- breeze on extended wings like a kite.
- At Wind Mountain Depot they met a caravan bound for Malagash, south behind the
- hills on the Hedajha Gulf. Twice small bands of Green Chasch were sighted, but
- on neither occasion did they attack. The caravan-master declared them to be
- mating groups en route to a procreation area north of the Dead Steppe. On
- another occasion a troop of nomads halted to watch them pass: tall men and tall
- women with faces painted blue. Traz identified them as cannibals and stated that
- the women fought in battle on an even footing with the men. Twice the caravan
- passed close to ruined cities; once it swung south to deliver aromatics,
- essences and amphire wood to an Old Chasch city which Reith found peculiarly
- fascinating. There were myriads of low white domes half-hidden under foliage,
- with gardens everywhere. The air held a peculiar freshness, exuded by tall
- yellow-green trees, not unlike poplars, known as adarak. These, so Reith
- learned, were cultivated by Old Chasch and Blue Chasch alike for the clarity
- which they gave the air.
- The caravan halted on an oval area covered with thick short grass, and Baojian
- immediately called all the personnel of the caravan about him. "This is Golsse,
- an Old Chasch city. Do not leave the immediate area, or you may be subject to
- Old Chasch tricks. These can be mere mischiefs' such as trapping you in a maze
- or dosing you with an essence that will cause you to exude a frightful odor for
- weeks. But if they become excited, or feel particularly humorous, the tricks may
- be cruel or fatal. On one occasion they stupefied one of my drivers with
- essence, grafted new features on his face and a great gray beard as well.
- Remember, then: do not under any circumstances stray from this oval, even though
- the Chasch may tease or tempt you. They are an old and decayed race; they are
- without pity and think only of their odors and essences, and their fanciful
- jokes. So be warned: keep to the oval, do not wander off in the gardens, no
- matter what the beguilement, and if you value your life and sanity, do not enter
- the Old Chasch domes."
- He said no more.
- Goods were loaded upon the low Chasch motor-drays, operated by a few dispirited
- Chaschmen: smaller and perhaps not so evolved as the Blue Chaschmen Reith had
- seen before. They were slight and stooped, with gray wrinkled faces, bulging
- foreheads, mouths puckered into little buds above nonexistent chins. Like the
- Blue Chaschmen they wore a false scalp which butted over their eyes and rose to
- a point. Their demeanor was furtive and hurried, they spoke to none of the
- caravan personnel, and had eyes only for their work. Four Old Chasch presently
- appeared. They walked directly below the barrack car; Reith saw them close at
- hand and was reminded of large silverfish grotesquely endowed with semi-human
- legs and arms. Their skin was like ivory satin, almost imperceptibly scaled;
- they seemed fragile, almost desiccated; they had eyes like small silver pellets,
- independently swiveling and in constant motion. Reith watched them with great
- interest; they felt his gaze and paused to look up to where he sat. They nodded
- and gave him affable gestures, to which Reith replied in kind. For a moment
- longer they inspected him with their bright silver eyes, and then passed on.
- Baojian wasted no time at Golsse. As soon as he had reloaded his drays with
- cases of drugs and tinctures, bales of lacy cloth, dried fruit in cakes and
- packs, he marshaled the wagons and set off once more to the north, preferring to
- pass the night on the open steppe rather than risk the caprices of the Old
- Chasch.
- The steppe was empty grassland, flat as a table. Standing on the barrack-wagon
- Reith could see twenty miles through his scope, and so spied a large band of
- Green Chasch even before the scouts. He notified Baojian, who immediately
- ordered the caravan into a defensive ring with the guns commanding the entire
- surrounding area. The Green Chasch loped up on their massive beasts, holding
- yellow and black flags afloat on their lances, signifying truculence and
- bellicosity. "They have just come down from the north," Traz told Reith. "This
- is the meaning of the flags. They gorge on fluke-fish and angbut; their blood
- becomes rich and thick, which makes them irritable. When they fly yellow and
- black even the Emblems retire rather than face them in battle."
- Yellow and black flags regardless, the Green warriors did not molest the caravan
- but halted a mile distant. Reith studied them through his scope, to see
- creatures vastly different from the Old Chasch. These were seven and eight feet
- tall, massive and thick-limbed, their scales clearly defined and of a glistening
- metallic green. Their faces were small, brooding, wickedly ugly under the
- massive jut of their scalps. They wore rude leather aprons and shoulder harness,
- in which hung swords, battle-picks and catapults similar to those of the
- Emblems. Troublesome creatures to encounter in close combat, thought Reith. They
- sat on their beasts studying the caravan for a full five minutes, then swung
- away and bounded off to the east.
- The caravan re-formed itself and continued along the track. Traz was puzzled by
- the diffidence of the Green Chasch. "When they carry yellow and black, they are
- insensate. Perhaps they prepare an ambush from behind a forest."
- Baojian suspected a similar stratagem and kept his scouts far forward for the
- next few days. At night there were no special precautions taken, inasmuch as the
- Green Chasch became torpid in the dark and huddled in groaning grunting masses
- until daybreak.
- Pera lay ahead: the caravan terminus. Reith's transcom specified a vector of
- sixty miles west to the mate transcom. He made inquiry of the caravan-master,
- who informed him that the Blue Chasch city Dadiche was situated at this
- location. "Avoid them; a wicked lot they are, subtle as the Old Chasch, savage
- as the Greens."
- "They have no commerce with men?"
- "There is considerable trade; in fact, Pera is a depot for trade with the Blue
- Chasch, which is carried on by a caste of draymen operating out of Pera; only
- these draymen gain access to Dadiche. Of all the Chasch I find the Blues most
- detestable. The Old Chasch are not a friendly folk, but they are malicious,
- rather than harsh. Sometimes of course, the effect is the same, just as the
- storm"-he pointed toward the west where great masses of black cloud filled the
- sky-"will wet us no less than submersion in the ocean."
- "You will turn directly about at Pera and return to Coad on the Dwan Zher?"
- "Within three days."
- "In all likelihood the Princess Ylin-Ylan will return with you and take ship for
- Cath."
- "All very well; can she pay?"
- "Certainly."
- "Then there is no difficulty. What of you? Do you wish to go to Cath likewise?"
- "No. I'll probably remain at Pera."
- Baojian, with a darting glint of a glance for Reith, gave his head a wry shake.
- "The Golden Yao of Cath are estimable folk. But then, nothing of Tschai is
- predictable except trouble. The Green Chasch are dogging us. A miracle that they
- have not attacked. I begin to hope that we may reach Pera without incident."
- Baojian was to be denied. With Pera already in view-a city of ruined halls and
- toppled monuments surrounding a central citadel, much like those others they had
- passed-the Green Chasch bounded in from the east. Coincidentally the storm
- broke. Lightning crashed down upon the steppe; to the south black brooms of rain
- swept down upon the land.
- Baojian decided that Pera offered no refuge and ordered the caravan into its
- defensive circle. Barely soon enough: this time the Green Chasch showed neither
- indecision nor diffidence. Bent low on their great beasts, they came charging
- forward, intent only on penetrating the ring of wagons.
- The caravan guns gave their curious gurgling belch, barely heard through the
- thunder, and the rain made efficient weapon handling difficult. The Green
- Chasch, coordinated perhaps telepathically, bounded forward; some were struck by
- the sand blast and killed; some were crushed under their toppling beasts. For a
- space there was sheer confusion, then new ranks sprang over the thrashing
- bodies. Again the gunners fired frantically through the rain, with the lightning
- and thunder providing a mind jarring accompaniment to the battle.
- The Green Chasch fell faster than they could advance, and changed their tactics.
- Those who had been dismounted, crouched behind leaphorse hulks, brought their
- catapults to bear; the first shower of bolts killed three gunners. The mounted
- warriors charged again, hoping to gain the circle by sheer momentum. Again, they
- were thrown back, the vacated guns having been manned by drivers, and again
- there was a shower of bolts and more gunners dropped from the gun platforms.
- The Green Chasch lunged forward a third time, their mounts bounding and
- capering. Behind them, lightning fractured the black sky, with the thunder an
- incessant background to the cries and screams of the battle. The Green Chasch
- were taking terrible losses, the ground heaved with groaning shapes, but others
- leapt forward and at last the guns were in range of Green Chasch swords.
- The result of the battle was no longer in doubt. Reith took the Flower of Cath's
- hand, beckoned to Traz. The three struck out for the city, joining a line of
- panic-stricken fugitives from the barrack-wagons, which now was joined by the
- drivers and surviving gunners. The caravan was abandoned.
- Screaming in triumph, the Green Chasch bounded among the fugitives, hacking off
- heads, chopping down through necks and shoulders. A flaming-eyed warrior lunged
- at Reith, Ylin-Ylan and Traz. Reith had his gun ready, but hesitated to waste
- the precious pellets and dodged under the hissing sword-stroke. The leap-horse,
- swerving, skidded on the wet turf; the warrior was flung bellowing sidewise.
- Reith ran forward, raised his Emblem cutlass high, hacked at the thick neck, cut
- through cords, filaments and tubes. The warrior kicked and thrashed in appalling
- reluctance to die; the three did not wait. Reith took up the sword, which was
- somewhat crudely forged from a single bar of steel as tall as himself and wide
- as his arm. It was too heavy and long to be wieldy; he cast it down. The three
- proceeded through the rain, now falling in such heavy sheets as to obscure
- vision. The Green Chasch occasionally were glimpsed as bounding phantoms;
- occasionally the wraith-like shapes of fugitives could be seen, bending forward,
- crouched to the rain, hurrying with all speed for the ruins of Pera.
- In sodden clothes, with the ground streaming beneath their feet, the three
- finally reached a tumble of concrete slabs marking the outskirts of Pera, and
- considered themselves somewhat safer from the Green Chasch. They took shelter
- under an overhanging jut of concrete, to stand shivering and miserable while the
- rain thrashed down in front of their faces. Traz said philosophically, "At least
- we are at Pera, where we intended to come."
- "Ingloriously," said Reith, "but alive."
- "Now what do you think to do?"
- Reith reached into his pouch, brought forth the transcom, checked the vector
- indicator. "It points to Dadiche, twenty miles west. I suppose I'll go there."
- Traz gave a disapproving sniff. "The Blue Chasch will deal severely with you."
- The girl of Cath suddenly leaned against the wall, put her face in her hands and
- began to weep: the first time Reith had seen her give way to emotion. Somewhat
- tentatively he patted her shoulder. "What's the trouble? Other than being cold,
- wet, hungry and scared?"
- "I'll never be home to Cath. Never! I know this."
- "Of course you will! There will be other caravans!"
- The girl, clearly unconvinced, wiped her eyes and stood looking out across the
- dismal landscape. The rain now began to slacken. The lightning flickered off to
- the east; the thunder became a sullen rumble. A few minutes later the clouds
- broke and sunlight slanted through the rain to glisten on wet stone and puddles.
- The three, still somewhat damp, emerged from their refuge, almost to collide
- with a small man in an ancient leather cloak, carrying a bundle of faggots. He
- jumped back in alarm, dropped his bundle, darted back to snatch it up and was
- about to race away when Reith caught hold of his cloak. "Wait! Not so fast! Tell
- us where we can find food and shelter!"
- The man's face slowly relaxed. Warily, under bushy eyebrows, he looked from one
- to the other, then with great dignity jerked his cloak from Reith's grasp. "Food
- and shelter: these be hard to come by; only by toil. Can you pay?"
- "Yes, we can pay."
- The man considered. "Now, I have a comfortable dwelling, of three apertures..."
- Reluctantly he shook his head. "But best that you go to the Dead Steppe Inn. If
- I took you in, the Gnashters would gain my profit, and I would have naught."
- "The Dead Steppe Inn is the best of Pera?"
- "Yes, a fine hostelry indeed. The Gnashters will tax your wealth, but this is
- what we must pay for our security. In Pera no one may rob or rape but Naga Goho
- and the Gnashters; and this is a boon. What if everyone enjoyed this license?"
- "Naga Goho is the ruler of Pera, then?"
- "Yes, one might say so." He pointed to a massive structure of blocks and slabs
- on the central eminence of the city. "There is his palace, on the citadel, and
- there he lives with his Gnashters. But I will say no more; after all, they have
- worried the Phung out to North Pera; there is trade with Dadiche; bandits avoid
- the city; affairs could be the worse."
- "I see," said Reith. "Well then, where do we find the inn?"
- "Yonder, at the foot of the hill: at the caravan's end."
- CHAPTER SEVEN
- THE DEAD STEPPE INN was the most grandiose structure Reith had yet seen in a
- ruined city: a long building with a complicated set of roofs and gables built
- against the central hill of Pera. As in all the inns of Tschai, there was a
- large common-room with trestle-tables, but rather than rude benches, the Dead
- Steppe Inn boasted fine high-backed chairs of carved black wood. Three
- chandeliers of colored glass and black iron illuminated the room; on the walls
- hung a number of very old terra-cotta masks: visages of some fanciful half-human
- folk.
- The tables were crowded with fugitives from the caravan; a savory odor of food
- hung in the air. Reith began to feel somewhat more cheerful. Here, at least,
- were a small few concessions to comfort and style.
- The innkeeper was a small plump man with a neat red beard, protuberant red-brown
- eyes. His hands were in ceaseless motion and his feet shifted back and forth as
- if haste dominated his life. At Reith's request for accommodation he waved his
- hands in despair. "Have you not heard? The green demons destroyed Baojian's
- train. Here are the survivors, and I must find room. Some cannot pay; what of
- that? I am ordered by Naga Goho to extend shelter."
- "We were also with the caravan," said Reith. "However, we can pay."
- The innkeeper became more optimistic. "I'll find you a single room; you must
- make the best of this. A word of advice." Here he looked swiftly over his
- shoulder. "Be discreet. There have been changes at Pera."
- The three were shown to a cubicle of adequate cleanliness; three pallets were
- brought in. The inn could provide no dry clothing; with garments still damp the
- three descended to the common-room, where now they discovered Anacho the
- Dirdirman, who had arrived an hour before. Off to the side, staring thoughtfully
- into the fire, was Baojian.
- For supper they were served ample bowls of stew, wafers of hard bread. While
- they were eating seven men entered the room to stand looking truculently this
- way and that. All were strong big-boned men, a trifle fleshy with ease, florid
- with good living. Six wore dull red gowns, stylish black leather slippers,
- rakish caps hung with baubles. Gnashters, thought Reith. The seventh, wearing an
- embroidered surcoat, was evidently Naga Goho: a man tall and thin, with a
- peculiarly large vulpine head. He spoke to a room which had become hushed:
- "Welcome all, welcome all to Pera! We have a happy orderly city, as you will
- notice. Laws are sternly enforced. A sojourn tax is collected as well. If anyone
- lacks funds he must contribute his labor for the common benefit. So, then-are
- there questions or complaints?" He looked about the room, but no one spoke. The
- Gnashters circulated through the room, collecting coins. Reith grudgingly paid a
- tax of nine sequins for himself, Traz and the Flower of Cath. None of the folk
- present seemed to find the exaction unreasonable. So pervasive was the lack of
- social discipline, Reith decided, that exploitation of advantage was taken for
- granted.
- Naga Goho noticed the Flower of Cath and stood erect, preening his mustache. He
- signaled to the innkeeper, who hastened to present himself. The two held a
- muttered colloquy, Naga Goho never taking his eyes from Ylin-Ylan.
- The innkeeper crossed the room, muttered in Reith's ear. "Naga Goho has taken
- note of the woman." He indicated the Flower. "He wants to know her status: is
- she slave? daughter? wife?"
- Reith glanced sidewise at Ylin-Ylan, at a loss for immediate response; already
- he saw the girl stiffening. If he declared her to be alone and independent he
- put her at the mercy of Naga Goho. If he claimed her as his own he would no
- doubt provoke her indignant disclaimer. He said, "I am her escort, she is under
- my protection."
- The innkeeper pursed his lips, shrugged and went to report to Naga Goho, who
- made a small curt gesture and turned his attention elsewhere. Not long after he
- departed.
- In the small room Reith found himself in a state of disturbing propinquity with
- the Flower of Cath. She sat on her pallet, clasping her knees disconsolately.
- "Cheer up," said Reith. "Things aren't all that bad."
- She gave her head a mournful shake. "I am lost among barbarians: a pebble
- dropped in Tembara Deep, gone from mind."
- "Nonsense," scoffed Reith. "You'll be traveling home with the next caravan to
- leave Pera."
- Ylin-Ylan was unconvinced. "At home they will name another the Flower of Cath;
- she will take my flower at the Banquet of the Season. The princess will beseech
- the girls to name their names, and I will not be there. No one will ask me and
- no one will know my names."
- "Tell me your names then," said Reith. "I'd like to hear."
- The Flower turned to look at him. "Do you mean this? Do you mean what you ask?"
- Reith was puzzled by her intensity. "Certainly."
- The girl turned a swift glance toward Traz, who was occupied in arranging his
- pallet. "Come outside," she whispered in Reith's ear and jumped to her feet.
- Reith followed her to the balcony. For a period they leaned together, elbows
- touching, looking out over the ruined city. Az rode high among broken clouds;
- below were a few dismal lights; from somewhere came a reedy chant, the twang of
- a plectrum. The Flower spoke in a quick hushed voice: "My flower is the
- Ylin-Ylan, and this you know; my Flower name. But that is a name used only at
- demonstrations and pageants." She looked toward him breathlessly, leaning so
- close that Reith could smell the clean tart-sweet scent of her person.
- Reith asked in a husky voice, "You have other names too?"
- "Yes." Sighing, she edged closer to Reith, who began to feel out of his depth.
- "Why have you not asked before? You must have known I would tell."
- "Well, then," asked Reith, "what are your names?"
- Demurely, she said, "My court name is Shar Zarin." She hesitated then, leaning
- her head on his shoulder (for Reith's arm was around her waist), she said, "My
- child name was Zozi, but only my father calls me that."
- "Flower name, court name, child name ... What other names do you have?"
- "My friend-name, my secret name, and-one other. My friend-name, would you hear
- it? If I tell you, then we are friends, and you must tell me your friend-name."
- "Certainly," croaked Reith. "Of course."
- "Derl."
- Reith kissed her upturned face. "My first name is Adam."
- "Is that your friend-name?"
- "Yes ... I suppose you'd call it that."
- "Do you have a secret name?"
- "No. Not that I know of."
- She gave a small nervous laugh. "Perhaps it is just as well. For if I asked you,
- and you told me, then I would know your secret soul, and then-" Breathlessly she
- looked up at Reith. "You must have a secret name; one that only you know. I
- have."
- Intoxicated, Reith tossed caution to the winds. "What is yours?"
- She raised her mouth to his ear. "L'lae. She is a nymph who lives in clouds over
- Mount Daramthissa, and loves the star-god Ktan." She looked toward him, melting,
- expectant, and Reith kissed her fervently. She sighed. "When we are alone, you
- shall call me L'lae and I will call you Ktan and that shall be your secret
- name."
- Reith laughed. "If you like."
- "We shall wait here, and soon there will be a caravan east: back across the
- steppe to Coad, then by cog across the Draschade, to Vervode in Cath."
- Reith put his hand on her mouth. "I must go to Dadiche."
- "Dadiche? The city of the Blue Chasch? Are you still so obsessed? But why?"
- Reith raised his eyes, looked off into the night-sky, as if to draw strength
- from the stars, though none of those visible could possibly be the Sun ... What
- could he say? If he told the truth she would think him insane, even though her
- ancestors had beamed signals to Earth.
- So he hesitated, disgusted by his own softness of spirit. The Flower of
- Cath--Ylin-Ylan, Shar Zarin, Zozi, Derl, L'lae, according to the social
- circumstances-put her hands on his shoulders and peered up into his face. "Since
- I know you for Ktan and you know me for L'lae, your mind is my mind; your
- pleasure is my pleasure. So-what prompts you for Dadiche?"
- Reith drew a deep breath. "I came to Kotan in a space-boat. The Blue Chasch
- almost killed me, and conveyed the space-boat to Dadiche, or so I suppose. I
- must recover it."
- The Flower was bewildered. "But where did you learn to fly a spaceboat? You are
- no Dirdirman or Wankhmen ... Or are you?"
- "No, of course not. No more than you. I was instructed."
- "It is all such a mystery." Her arms twitched on his shoulders. "And were you
- able to recover the space-boat, what would you do?"
- "First, take you to Cath."
- The fingers now gripped his shoulders, the eyes searched his through the
- darkness. "Then what? You would return to your own land?"
- "Yes."
- "You have a woman-a wife?"
- "Oh no. No indeed."
- "Someone who knows your secret name?"
- "I had no secret name until you gave me one."
- The girl took her hands from his shoulders, and, leaning on the rail, stared
- moodily out across old Pera. "If you go to Dadiche, they will smell you and kill
- you."
- "'Smell me? How do you mean?"
- She turned him a quick look. "You are a puzzle! So much you know, and so little!
- One would think you from the farthest island of Tschai! The Blue Chasch smell as
- accurately as we can see!"
- "I still must make the trial."
- "I don't understand," she said in a dull voice. "I have told you my name; I have
- given what is most precious to me; and you are unmoved. You do not alter your
- way."
- Reith took her in his arms. She was stiff, then gradually yielded. "I am not
- unmoved," said Reith. "Far from it. But I must go to Dadiche--for your sake as
- well as mine."
- "How my sake? To be carried back to Cath?"
- "That, and more. Are you happy to be dominated by Dirdir and Chasch and Wankh,
- not to mention the Pnume?"
- "I don't know ... I had never thought of it. Men are freaks, afterthoughts, so
- they tell us. Though Mad King Hopsin insisted that men came from a far planet.
- He called to them for help, which of course never came. That was a hundred and
- fifty years ago."
- "It's a long time to wait," said Reith. He kissed her once more; she submitted
- listlessly. The fervor was gone.
- "I feel-strange," she mumbled. "I don't know how I feel."
- They stood by the rail, listening to the sounds of the inn: soft hoots of
- laughter from the pot-room; complaints of children, the scolding of their
- mothers. The Flower of Cath said, "I think I will go to bed now."
- Reith held her back. "Derl."
- "Yes?"
- "When I come back from Dadiche-"
- "You will never come back from Dadiche. The Blue Chasch will take you for their
- games ... Now I will try to sleep, and forget that I am alive."
- She went back into the cubicle. Reith remained out on the balcony, first cursing
- himself, then wondering how he could have acted differently, unless he were
- composed of something other than flesh and blood.
- Tomorrow, then: Dadiche, to learn once and for all the shape of his future.
- CHAPTER EIGHT
- THE NIGHT PASSED; morning came: first a wash of sepia light, then a wan yellow
- glare, then the appearance of Carina 4269. From the kitchens rose the smoke of
- fires, the rattle of pans. Reith descended to the common-room, where he found
- Anacho the Dirdirman before him, sitting over a bowl of tea. Reith joined him
- and was likewise brought tea by a kitchen-wench. He asked, "What do you know of
- Dadiche?"
- Anacho warmed his long pale fingers around the bowl. "The city is relatively
- old: twenty thousand years or so. It is the main Chasch spaceport, though they
- have little communication with their homeworld Godag. South of Dadiche are
- factories and technical plants, and there is even some small trade between
- Dirdir and Chasch, though both parties pretend to the contrary. What do you seek
- at Dadiche?" And he fixed Reith with his owlish water-gray eyes.
- Reith reflected. He gained nothing by confiding in Anacho, whom he still
- regarded as something of an unknown quantity. Finally he said, "The Chasch took
- something of value from me. I want to get it back, if possible."
- "Interesting," said Anacho with a sardonic overtone to his voice. "I am piqued.
- What could the Chasch take from a sub-man that he would travel a thousand
- leagues to recover? And how could he expect to recover it, or even find it?"
- "I can find it. What happens next is the problem."
- "You intrigue me," said the Dirdirman. "What do you propose to do first?"
- "I need information. I want to learn if persons such as you and I can enter
- Dadiche and depart without hindrance."
- "Not I," said Anacho. "They would smell me for a Dirdirman. They have noses of
- astonishing particularity. The food you eat delivers essences to your skin; the
- Chasch can identify these, and separate Dirdir from Wankh, marsh-dwellers from
- steppe-men, rich from the poor; not to mention the variations caused by disease,
- uncleanliness, unguents, waters, a dozen other conditions. They can smell salt
- air in a man's lungs if he has been near the ocean; they can detect ozone on a
- man coming down from the heights. They sense if you are hungry, or angry, or
- afraid; they can define your age, your sex, the color of your skin. Their noses
- provide them an entire dimension of perception."
- Reith sat reflecting.
- Anacho arose, went to a nearby table where sat three men in rough garments: men
- with waxy white-gray skins, light-brown hair, mild large eyes. To Anacho's
- questions they gave deferent responses; Anacho ambled back to Reith.
- "Those three are drovers; they visit Dadiche regularly. The country is safe to
- the west of Pera; the Green Chasch avoid the city guns. No one will molest us
- along the road-"
- "'Us'? You are coming?"
- "Why not? I have never seen Dadiche or its outlying gardens. We can hire a pair
- of leap-horses and approach Dadiche within a mile or so. The Chasch seldom leave
- the city, so the drovers tell me."
- "Good," said Reith. "I'll have a word with Traz; he can keep the girl company."
- At a corral to the rear of the inn Reith and the Dirdirman hired leap-horses of
- a tall rubber-legged breed strange to Reith. The ostler threw on the saddles,
- shoved guide-bars through holes in the creatures' brains, at which they screamed
- and whipped the air with their palps. The reins were attached, Reith and Anacho
- vaulted up into the saddles; the beasts made angry sidling leaps, then sprang
- off down the road.
- They passed through the center of Pera, where, over a considerable area, folk
- had built all manner of dwellings from the rubble and slabs of concrete. There
- was a greater population than Reith had expected, numbering perhaps four or five
- thousand. And up on top of the old citadel, brooding over all, was the crude
- mansion in which lived Naga Goho and his retinue of Ghashters.
- Coming into the central plaza Reith and Anacho stopped short before a display of
- horrid objects. Beside a massive gibbet were flaying-stocks stained with blood.
- Poles held aloft a pair of impaled men. From a derrick swung a small cage;
- inside crouched a naked sun-blackened creature, barely recognizable as a man. A
- Gnashter lounged nearby, a heavy-jowled young man wearing a maroon vest and a
- knee-length black kilt: the Gnashter uniform. Reith reined up the leap-horse
- and, indicating the cage, addressed the Gnashter. "What was his crime?"
- "Recalcitrance, when Naga Goho called his daughter to service."
- "What then? How long does he swing thus?"
- The Gnashter glanced up indifferently. "Another three days he'll last. The rain
- freshened him up; he's full of water."
- "What of those?" Reith pointed to the impaled corpses.
- "Defaulters. Certain graceless folk begrudge a tithe of their wealth to Naga
- Goho."
- Anacho touched Reith's arm. "Come."
- Reith slowly turned away; impossible to right all the wrongs of this dreadful
- planet. But looking back toward the wretch in the cage, he felt a flush of
- shame. Still-what options were open to him? To embroil himself with Naga Goho
- could easily mean the loss of his life, with no benefit to anyone. If he were
- able to regain his space-boat and return to Earth, the lot of all men on Tschai
- must be improved. So Reith told himself, and tried to put the dismal scene out
- of his mind.
- Beyond Pera were large numbers of irregular plots, where women and girls
- cultivated all manner of crops. Drays loaded with food and farm produce moved
- westward along the road toward Dadiche: a commerce surprising to Reith, who had
- expected no such formalized trade.
- The two rode ten miles, toward a low range of gray hills. Where the road rose
- into a steep-walled ravine a gate barred the way and they were forced to wait
- while a pair of Gnashters inspected a dray piled with crates of cabbage-like
- pulps, then levied a toll upon the drayman. Reith and Anacho, passing the gate,
- paid a sequin each.
- "Naga Goho misses few chances to profit," Reith grumbled. "What does he do with
- his wealth?"
- The Dirdirman shrugged. "What does anyone do with wealth?"
- The road wound up, passed through a notch. Beyond lay the land of the Blue
- Chasch: a wooded countryside meshed by dozens of little rivers, easing in and
- out of innumerable ponds. There were a hundred sorts of trees: red feather-palm,
- green conifer-like growths, black trunks and branches hung with white globes;
- and many groves of adarak. The entire landscape was a single garden, tended with
- meticulous care.
- Below was Dadiche: low flat domes and curving white surfaces, half-submerged in
- foliage. The size and population of the city was impossible to estimate; there
- was no differentiation between city and park. Reith was forced to admit that the
- Blue Chasch lived in pleasant circumstances.
- The Dirdirman, conditioned to other aesthetic precepts, spoke with
- condescension. "Typical of the Chasch mentality: formless, chaotic, devious. You
- have seen a Dirdir city? Truly noble! a sight to stop the heart! This
- half-bucolic botchery"--Anacho made a scornful gesture "reflects the caprice of
- the Blue Chasch. Not as flaccid and decadent as the Old Chasch of
- course-remember Golsse? but then the Old Church have been moribund for twenty
- thousand years ... What do you do? What is that instrument?"
- For Reith, unable to contrive a method to read his transcom dials discreetly,
- had brought it forth. "This," said Reith, "is a device which indicates the
- direction and distance of three and a half miles." He sighted along the needle.
- "The line passes through that large structure with the high dome." He pointed.
- "The distance is about right."
- Anacho was looking at the transcom with gloomy fascination. "Where did you get
- this instrument? It is of a workmanship I have never seen before. And those
- markings: neither Dirdir nor Chasch nor Wankh! Is there some far corner of
- Tschai where submen make goods of this quality? I am astounded! I have believed
- the sub-men incapable of any activity more complicated than agriculture!"
- "Anacho, my friend," said Reith, "you have a great deal to learn. The process
- will come as an appalling shock to you."
- Anacho massaged his undershot jaw, pulled the soft black cap down over his
- forehead. "You are as mysterious as a Pnume."
- Reith brought the scanscope from his pouch, inspected the landscape. He traced
- the course of the road, down the hill, through a grove of flame-shaped trees
- with enormous green and purple leaves, thence to a wall which he had not
- previously noticed and which evidently guarded Dadiche from the Green Chasch.
- The road passed through a portal in this wall and into the city. At intervals
- along the road were drays entering Dadiche loaded with comestibles, leaving with
- crates of manufactured goods.
- Anacho, inspecting the scanscope, made a clicking sound of irritated puzzlement,
- but restrained his comments.
- Reith said, "No point in going further down the road; however, if we rode along
- the ridge a mile or two, I could take another sight on that big building."
- Anacho made no objection; they rode south almost two miles, then Reith took a
- new reading of the transcom. The line of sight passed through the same large
- domed structure. Reith gave a nod of certainty. "In that building are articles
- which at one time were mine, and which I want to recover."
- The Dirdirman's lips twitched in a grin. "All very well-but how? You can't ride
- into Dadiche, pound on the door and cry 'Bring out my object!' You will be
- disappointed. I doubt if you are a thief sufficiently deft to fool the Chasch.
- What will you do?"
- Reith looked longingly down at the great white dome. "First, closer
- reconnaissance. I need to look inside that building. Because what I want most
- might not be there at all."
- Anacho shook his head in mild reproach. "You talk in riddles. First you declare
- that your articles are there, then that they may not be there after all."
- Reith merely laughed, far more confidently than he felt. Now that he was close
- to Dadiche, and presumably to the space-boat, the task of regaining possession
- seemed overwhelming. "Enough for today, at any rate. Let's be back to Pera."
- They rode, swaying and lurching on the leap-horses, and returned to the road,
- where they halted for a space watching the drays rumble past. Some were
- propelled by engines, others by slow-going pull-beasts. Those to Dadiche carried
- foodstuffs: melons, stacks of dead reed-walkers, bales of dingy white floss spun
- by swamp insects, nets bulging with purple bladders. "These drays go into
- Dadiche," said Reith. "I'll go with them. Why should there be difficulty?"
- The Dirdirman gave his head a lugubrious shake. "The Blue Chasch are
- unpredictable. You might find yourself performing tricks for their amusement.
- Such as walking rods over pits full of filth or white-eyed scorpions. As you
- gain equilibrium, the Chasch heat the rods, or send electricity through, so that
- you bound back and forth and perform desperate antics. Or perhaps you will find
- yourself in a glass maze with a tormented Phung. Or you might be blindfolded and
- set in an amphitheater with a cyclodon, also blindfolded. Or-were you Dirdir or
- Dirdirman, you might be set to solving logical problems to avoid unpleasant
- penalties. Their ingenuity is endless."
- Reith scowled down at the city. "The draymen risk all this?"
- "They are licensed and go and come unmolested, unless they violate an
- ordinance."
- "Then I will go as a drayman."
- Anacho nodded. "The obvious stratagem. I suggest that tonight you strip off your
- clothes, rub yourself with damp soil, stand in the smoke of burning bones, walk
- in pull-beast dung, eat panibals, ramp and smudgers, all of which permeate the
- body with odor, and wipe the grease into your skin. Then dress from skin outward
- in drayman's garments. As a last precaution, never pass upwind of a Blue Chasch
- and never exhale where one might detect the odor of your teeth or your breath."
- Reith managed a wry grin. "The scheme sounds less feasible every minute. But I
- don't care to die. I have too many responsibilities. Such as returning the girl
- to Cath."
- "Bah!" snorted Anacho. "You are a victim of sentimentality. She is a
- troublemaker, vain and self-willed. Leave her to her destiny
- "If she were not vain I'd suspect her of stupidity," declared Reith with
- feeling.
- Anacho kissed his fingertips: a gesture of Mediterranean fervor. "When you say
- 'beauty,' you must mean the women of my race! Ah! Elegant creatures, pale as
- snow, with pates naked and glossy as mirrors! So near to Dirdir that the Dirdir
- themselves are beguiled ... Each to his own taste. The Cath girl can never be
- other than a source of tribulation. Such women trail disaster as a cloud trails
- rain; think of the times she has led you into contention!"
- Reith shrugged, and kicked the leap-horse into motion; they bounded east along
- the road, back down upon the steppe, off toward the mound of gray-white rubble
- which was Pera.
- Late in the afternoon they entered the ruined city. They returned the
- leap-horses to the stables, crossed the plaza to the long half-subterranean inn,
- with the low sun shining on their backs.
- The common-room was half-full of folk consuming an early supper. Neither Traz
- nor the Flower of Cath was here, nor were they in the sleeping cubicles on the
- second floor. Reith returned downstairs and found the innkeeper. "Where are my
- friends: the boy and the Cath girl? They are nowhere on the premises."
- The innkeeper drew a sour face, looked everywhere but into Reith's eyes. "You
- must know where she is; how could she be elsewhere? As for the lad, he went into
- an unreasonable fury when they came to take her. The Gnashters broke his head
- and dragged him off to be hanged."
- In a voice precise and controlled Reith asked, "How long ago did this occur?"
- "Not long. He'll still be kicking. The lad was a fool. A girl like that is
- flagrant enticement; he had no right to defend her."
- "They took the girl to the tower?"
- "So I suppose. What's it to me? Naga Goho does as he pleases; he wields power in
- Pera."
- Reith turned to Anacho, handed over his pouch, retaining only his weapons. "Take
- care of my belongings. If I don't return, keep them."
- "You plan to risk yourself again?" asked Anacho in wonder and disapproval. "What
- about your 'object'?"
- "It can wait." Reith ran off toward the citadel.
- CHAPTER NINE
- THE LIGHT OF the setting sun shone full on the stone platforms and mounting
- blocks surrounding the gibbet. Colors held the curious fullness of all the
- Tschai colors: even the browns and grays, mustards, dull ochers, earthen colors
- in the garments of those who had come to watch the hanging imparted a sense of
- rich essence. The dull-red jackets of the Gnashters glowed rich and ripe; there
- were six of these. Two stood by the gibbet rope; two supported Traz, who stood
- on limp legs, head bowed, a trickle of blood down his forehead. One leaned
- negligently by a post, hand by his slung catapult; the last spoke to the
- apathetic herd before the gibbet.
- "By order of Naga Goho, this furious criminal who dared use violence upon the
- Gnashters must be hanged!"
- The noose was ceremoniously dropped around Traz's neck. He raised his head,
- turned a glassy look around the crowd. If he noticed Reith he gave no sign. "May
- the incident and its consequences teach obedience to all!"
- Reith walked around to the side of the gibbet. No time now for delicacy or
- squeamishness-if, in fact, such occasions ever occurred on Tschai. The Gnashters
- at the hoist-rope saw him approach, but his demeanor was so casual that they
- gave him no heed and turned to watch for their signal. Reith slid his knife into
- the heart of the first, who croaked in surprise. The second looked about; Reith
- cut his throat with a back-hand stroke, then threw the knife to split the
- forehead of the Gnashter who stood by the gibbet-pole. In an instant the six had
- become three. Reith stepped forward with his sword and cut down the man who had
- uttered the proclamation, but now the two holding Traz, drawing blades, rushed
- at Reith, jostling each other in outrage. Reith jumped back, aimed his Emblem
- catapult, shot the foremost; the second, now the sole survivor of the six,
- stopped short, Reith attacked him, struck the sword from his hand, felled him
- with a blow to the side of the head. He freed the noose, yanked it tight around
- the neck of the fallen Gnashter, pointed to two men at the front of the
- fascinated onlookers. "Heave now; heave on the rope. We'll hang the Gnashter,
- not the boy." When the men hesitated, Reith cried: "Heave on the rope; do my
- bidding! We'll show Naga Goho who rules Pera! Up with the Gnashter!"
- The men sprang to the rope: high into the air swung the Gnashter, kicking and
- flailing. Reith ran over to the derrick. He loosed the rope which held the cage
- aloft, lowered it to the ground, threw open the top. The wretch within, crouched
- and cramped, looked up in fearful expectation, then an impossible hope. He tried
- to raise himself, but he was too weak. Reith reached down, helped him forth. He
- signaled to the men who had hoisted on the rope. "Take this man and the lad to
- the inn; see that they are cared for. You need fear the Gnashters no more. Take
- weapons from the dead men; if Gnashters appear, kill them! Do you understand?
- There are to be no more Gnashters in Pera, no more taxes, no more hangings, no
- more Naga Goho!"
- Diffidently men took the weapons, then turned to look up toward the citadel.
- Reith waited only long enough to see Traz and the man from the cage helped
- toward the inn, then he turned and ran up the hill toward Naga Goho's makeshift
- palace.
- A wall of piled rubble lay across the path, enclosing a courtyard. A dozen
- Gnashters lounged at long tables, drinking beer and munching strips of pickled
- reed-walker. Reith looked right and left, slid along the wall.
- The hill fell away below to become a precipice; Reith pressed closer to the
- wall, clung to the corners and crevices of the blocks. He came to an aperture: a
- window crisscrossed by iron bars. Cautiously Reith looked within, to see only
- darkness. Ahead was a larger window, but the way was perilous, sheer over a
- seventy-foot drop. Reith hesitated, then proceeded, moving with painful
- slowness, hanging to the rough edges and crevices by his fingertips. In the
- gathering dusk he was inconspicuous, a blot on the wall. Below spread old Pera,
- with yellow lights beginning to flicker among the ruins. Reith reached the
- window, which was screened by a grille of woven reeds. He looked through, into a
- bed-chamber. On a couch was the outline of someone sleeping-a woman. Sleeping?
- Reith peered through the gloom. The hands were raised in supplication, the legs
- were gracelessly sprawled. The body lay very still. The woman was dead.
- Reith tore open the grille, climbed into the room. The woman had been beaten
- about the head and strangled; her mouth was open, her tongue protruded
- foolishly. Alive she had been not uncomely, or so Reith conjectured. Dead, she
- was a sad sight.
- Reith took three long strides to the door, looked out into a garden courtyard.
- From an archway opposite came a murmur of voices.
- Reith slipped across the courtyard, looked through the archway, into a dining
- hall hung with rugs patterned in yellow, black, red. Other rugs muffled the
- floor; the furnishings were heavy chairs, a table of age-blackened wood. Under a
- great candelabra flaring with yellow lights sat Naga Goho at his evening meal, a
- splendid fur cloak thrown back from his shoulders. Across the room sat the
- Flower of Cath, head downcast, hair hanging past her face. Her hands were
- clasped in her lap; Reith saw that her wrists were bound with thongs. Naga Goho
- ate with exaggerated delicacy, conveying morsels to his mouth with mincing
- twitches of finger and thumb. As he ate he spoke, and as he spoke he flourished
- a short-handled whip in a mood of sinister playfulness.
- The Flower sat with a still countenance, never raising her eyes from her lap.
- Reith watched and listened for a moment, one part of him as single-minded as a
- shark, another disgusted and horrified, still another sardonically amused for
- the grotesque surprise awaiting Naga Goho.
- He stepped quietly into the room. Ylin-Ylan looked up, face blank. Reith
- signaled her to silence, but Naga Goho perceived the focus of her eyes and swung
- around in his chair. He jumped to his feet, the fur cloak falling to the floor.
- "Ha ho!" he cried out, startled. "A rat in the palace!" He ran to seize his
- sword from the scabbard over the back of the chair; Reith was there first, and,
- not deigning to draw his own blade, struck Naga Goho with his fist and sent him
- sprawling across the table. Naga Goho, a strong active man, turned an agile
- somersault, came up on his feet. Reith leapt after him, and now it developed
- that Naga Goho was as skilled in Tschai hand-fighting as Reith in the intricate
- techniques of Earth. To confuse Naga Goho, Reith began to throw left jabs into
- his face. When Naga Goho grasped for Reith's left arm, to attempt a throw or a
- bone-break, Reith stepped in and hacked at Naga Goho's neck and face. Naga Goho,
- desperate, attempted a terrible sweeping kick, but Reith was ready; seizing the
- foot, he yanked, twisted, heaved, to break Naga Goho's ankle. Naga Goho fell on
- his back. Reith kicked his head and a moment later Naga Goho lay with arms
- triced up behind him, a gag in his mouth.
- Reith liberated Ylin-Ylan, who closed her eyes. So pale was she, so drawn, that
- Reith thought that she would faint. But she stood up, to stand weeping against
- Reith's chest. For a moment or two he held her, stroking her head; then he said,
- "Let's be out of here. So far we've had good luck; it may not last. There are a
- dozen or more of his men below."
- Reith tied a length of thong around Naga Goho's neck, yanked. "To your feet,
- quick now."
- Naga Goho lay back, glaring, making angry sounds through his gag. Reith picked
- up the whip, flicked the side of Naga Goho's face. "Up." He hauled on the thong;
- the erstwhile chieftain rose to his feet.
- With Naga Goho hobbling in great pain, they passed along a hall lit with a
- reeking cresset, entered the courtyard where the Gnashters sat over tankards of
- beer.
- Reith gave the thong to the Flower. "Walk on through; don't hurry. Pay no heed
- to the men. Lead the Goho on down the road."
- Ylin-Ylan, taking the thong, walked through the courtyard leading Naga Goho. The
- Gnashters swung around on their benches, staring in wonder. Naga Goho made
- hoarse urgent noises; the Gnashters rose irresolutely to their feet. One of them
- came slowly forward. Reith stepped into the courtyard holding the catapult.
- "Back; into your seats."
- While they stood, he slipped across the courtyard. Ylin-Ylan and Naga Goho were
- starting down the hill. Reith told the Gnashters, "Naga Goho is finished. So are
- you. When you come down the hill, you had better leave your weapons behind." He
- backed out into the dark. "Don't any come after us." He waited. From within came
- a furious babble of talk. Two of the Gnashters strode toward the opening. Reith
- appeared in the gap, shot the foremost with his catapult, stepped back into the
- dark once more. Within the courtyard, while Reith dropped a new bolt into the
- slot, was utter silence. Reith looked back in. All stood at the far side of the
- courtyard, staring at the corpse. Reith turned, ran down the path, where the
- Flower struggled to control Naga Goho, who jerked at the neck thong, trying to
- pull her close so that he might fall upon her, perhaps knock her down. Reith
- took the thong, dragged Naga Goho stumbling and hopping at a smart pace to the
- foot of the hill.
- Az and Braz both rode the eastern sky; the white blocks of old Pera seemed to
- glow with a wan intrinsic light.
- In the plaza stood a crowd of people, brought forth by rumors and wild reports,
- ready to slink off among the ruins should the Gnashters come marching down from
- the palace. Seeing only Reith, the girl and the stumbling Naga Goho, they called
- out in soft surprise and came step by step closer.
- Reith halted, looked around the circle of faces, pallid in the moonlight. He
- gave a yank on the thong, grinned at the crowd. "Well, here is Naga Goho. He is
- chieftain no more. He committed one crime too many. What shall we do with him?"
- The crowd moved uneasily, eyes shifting up to the palace, then back to Reith and
- Naga Goho, who stood glaring from face to face, promising dire vengeance. A
- woman's voice low, husky, throbbing with hate, said: "Flay him, flay the beast!"
- "Impalement," muttered an old man. "He impaled my son; let him feel the pole!"
- "The flame!" shrilled another voice. "Burn him with slow fire!"
- "No one counsels mercy," Reith observed. He turned to Naga Goho. "Your time has
- come." He pulled off the gag. "Do you have anything to say?"
- Naga Goho could find no words, but made only strange noises at the back of his
- mouth.
- Reith said to the crowd. "Let's make a quick end to him, though he probably
- deserves worse. You-you-you." He pointed. "Lower the Gnashter. It's the rope for
- Naga Goho."
- Five minutes later, with the dark form kicking in the moonlight, Reith spoke to
- the crowd. "I am a newcomer to Pera. But it's clear to me, as it must be to you,
- that the city needs a responsible government. Look how Naga Goho and a few thugs
- brutalized the entire city! You are men! Why act like animals? Tomorrow you must
- meet together, to select five experienced men for your Council of Elders. Let
- them pick a chieftain to rule for, say, a year, subject to the approval of the
- Council, who should also judge criminals and impose penalties. Then you should
- organize a militia, a troop of armed warriors to fight off Green Chasch, perhaps
- hunt them down and destroy them. We are men! Never forget this!" He looked back
- up toward the citadel. "Ten or eleven Gnashters still hold the palace. Tomorrow
- your Council can decide what to do about them. They may try to escape. I suggest
- that a guard be posted: twenty men up along the path should be ample." Reith
- pointed to a tall man with a black beard. "You look to be a stalwart man. Take
- the job in hand. You are captain. Pick two dozen men, or more, and mount guard.
- Now I must go to see my friend."
- Reith and the Flower started back to the Dead Steppe Inn. As they moved away
- they heard the black-bearded man say, "Very well, then; for many months we have
- performed as poltroons. We'll do better now. Twenty men with weapons; who'll
- step forward? Naga Goho escaped with simple hanging; let's give the Gnashters
- something better..."
- Ylin-Ylan took Reith's hand, kissed it. "I thank you, Adam Reith."
- Reith put his arm around her waist; she stopped, leaned against him and once
- again fell to sobbing, from sheer fatigue and nervous exhaustion. Reith kissed
- her forehead; then, as she turned up her face, her mouth, in spite of all his
- good intentions.
- Presently they returned to the inn. Traz lay asleep in a chamber off the
- common-room. Beside him sat Anacho the Dirdirman. Reith asked, "How is he?"
- Anacho said in a gruff voice, "Well enough, I bathed his head. A bruise, no
- fracture. He'll be on his feet tomorrow."
- Reith went back to the common-room. The Flower of Cath was nowhere to be seen.
- Reith thoughtfully ate a bowl of stew and went up to the room on the second
- floor, where he found her waiting for him.
- She said, "I have still my last name, my most secret name, to tell my lover
- alone. If you come close-"
- Reith bent forward and she whispered the name in his ear.
- CHAPTER TEN
- ON THE FOLLOWING morning Reith visited the drayage depot at the extreme south of
- town: a place of platforms and bins piled with the produce of the region. The
- drays rumbled up to the loading areas, the teamsters cursing and sweating,
- jockeying for position, oblivious to dust, smell, protest of beast, complaints
- of the hunters and growers, whose merchandise was constantly threatened by the
- jostling wagons.
- Some of the wagons carried a pair of teamsters, or a draymaster and a helper;
- others were managed by a single man. Reith approached one of these latter. "You
- haul to Dadiche today?"
- The draymaster, a small thin man with black eyes in a face which seemed all nose
- and narrow forehead, gave a suspicious jerk of the head. "Aye."
- "When you arrive in Dadiche, what is the procedure?"
- "I'll never arrive to begin with, if I waste my time talking."
- "Don't worry; I'll make it worth your while. What do you do?"
- "I drive to the unloading dock; the porters sweep me clean; the clerk gives me
- my receipt; I pass the wicket and take either sequins or vouchers, depending on
- whether I have an order for return cargo. If I have return cargo I take my
- voucher to the proper factory or warehouse, load and then start back for Pera."
- "So, then-there are no restrictions to where you drive in Dadiche?"
- "Certainly there are restrictions. They don't like drays along the river-side
- among their gardens. They don't want folk to the south of the city near the
- race-course, where teams of Dirdir pull the chariots, or so it is said."
- "Elsewhere, no regulations?"
- The draymaster squinted at Reith across the impressive beak of his nose. "Why do
- you ask such questions?"
- "I want to ride with you, to Dadiche and back."
- "Impossible. You have no license."
- "You will provide the license."
- "I see. No doubt you are prepared to pay?"
- "A reasonable sum. How much will you demand?"
- "Ten sequins. Another five sequins for the license."
- "Too much! Ten sequins for everything, or twelve if you drive where I bid you."
- "Bah! Do you take me for a fool? You might bid me drive you out Fargon
- Peninsula."
- "No risk of that. A short distance into Dadiche, to look at something which
- interests me."
- "Done for fifteen sequins, no iota less."
- "Oh, very well," said Reith. "But I'll expect you to provide me drayer's
- clothes."
- "Very well, and I'll give you further instructions: carry none of your old
- metal; this retains a scent to alarm them. Throw off all your clothes, rub
- yourself in mire, and dry yourself with annel leaves, and chew annel to disguise
- your breath. And you must do this at once, for I load and leave in half an
- hour."
- Reith did as he was bid, though his skin crawled at the clammy feel of the
- drayer's old garments, and the loose-brimmed old hat of wicker and felt. Emmink,
- as the drayer called himself, checked to make sure Reith carried no weapons,
- which were forbidden within the city. He pinned a plaque of white glass on
- Reith's shoulder. "This is the license. When you pass the gate, call out your
- number, like this: 'Eighty-six!' Then say no more and do not get down from the
- dray. If they smell you out for a stranger, I can do nothing to help, so do not
- look to me."
- Reith, already uneasy, was not encouraged by the remarks.
- The dray rumbled west toward the crumble of gray hills, carrying a cargo of
- reed-walker corpses, the yellow bills and staring dead eyes alternating with
- rows of yellow feet to form a macabre pattern.
- Emmink was surly and uncommunicative, he showed no interest in the motive for
- Reith's visit and Reith, after several attempts at conversation, fell silent.
- The dray ground up the road, the torque generators at each wheel spinning and
- groaning. They entered the pass which Emmink named Belbal Gap, and before them
- spread Dadiche: a scene of bizarre and somewhat menacing beauty. Reith's
- uneasiness became keener. Despite his soiled garments, he did not feel that he
- resembled the other drayers and could only hope that he smelled like a drayer.
- What of Emmink? Would he prove dependable? Reith considered him surreptitiously:
- a dry wisp of a man, with skin the color of boiled leather, all nose and narrow
- forehead, his little mouth pinched together. A man like Anacho, like Traz, like
- himself, ultimately derived from the soil of Earth, mused Reith. How dilute now,
- how tenuous, was the terrestrial essence! Emmink had become a man of Tschai, his
- soul conditioned by the Tschai landscape, the amber sunlight, the gunmetal sky,
- the quiet rich colors. Reith cared to trust the loyalty of Emmink no farther
- than the length of his arm, if as far. Looking out over the extent of Dadiche,
- he asked, "Where do you discharge your cargo?"
- Emmink delayed before answering, as if searching for a plausible reason to
- decline response. Grudgingly he said, "Wherever I get the best price. It might
- be North Market or River Market. It might be Bonte Bazaar."
- "I see," said Reith. He pointed to the great white structure he had located the
- day before. "That building there: what is that?"
- Emmink gave his narrow shoulders a twitch of disinterest. "It is none of my
- affair. I buy, transport, and sell; beyond that, I care nothing."
- "I see ... Well, I want to drive past that building."
- Emmink grunted. "It is to the side of my usual route."
- "I don't care if it is. That's what I'm paying you for."
- Emmink grunted again, and for a moment was silent. Then he said: "First to the
- North Market, to secure a quote on my corpses, then to the Bonte Bazaar. On the
- way I will pass the building."
- They rolled down the hill, across a strip of barrens strewn with junk and
- refuse, then into a garden of feathery green shrubs and mottled black and green
- cycads. Ahead rose the wall surrounding Dadiche, a structure thirty feet high
- built of a brown glossy synthetic material. Through a gate passed drays from
- Pera submitting to scrutiny from a group of Chaschmen in purple pantaloons, gray
- shirts and tall conical hats of black felt. They carried sidearms and long thin
- rods, with which they prodded the loads of incoming drays. "What's the reason
- for that?" Reith asked, as the Chaschmen somewhat lackadaisically stabbed
- through the heaped cargo of the dray ahead.
- "They prevent Green Chasch from stealing into the city. Forty years ago a
- hundred Green Chasch entered Dadiche hidden in cargo; there was a great
- slaughter before all the Green Chasch were killed. Oh, Blue Chasch and Green
- Chasch are bitter enemies! They love to see the other's blood!"
- Reith asked, "What do I say if they ask me questions?"
- Emmink shrugged. "That's your affair. If they ask me, I'll tell them you paid
- for transportation into Dadiche. Is it not the truth? Then you must tell your
- truth, if you dare ... Shout your number when I shout mine."
- Reith gave a sour grin but said nothing.
- The way was clear; Emmink drove up through the portal and stopped upon a red
- rectangle. "Forty-five," he bawled. "Eighty-six," yelled Reith. The Chaschmen
- stepped forward, thrust rods into the stack of reed-walker corpses while another
- walked around the dray: a stocky man with bandy legs, features crowded together
- at the bottom of his face, as chinless as Emmink but with a small snub nose, a
- lowering forehead rendered grotesque by the false scalp which rose into a cone
- six inches or more above his normal skull. His skin was leaden, tinged with blue
- which might have been cosmetic. His fingers were short and stubby, his feet
- broad. In Reith's opinion he deviated from the human form, as Reith knew it,
- considerably further than did Anacho the Dirdirman. The man glanced
- indifferently at Emmink and Reith, stepped back with a wave of his arm. Emmink
- pushed forward the power-arm and the dray lurched ahead into a wide avenue.
- Emmink turned to Reith with a sour grin. "You're lucky none of the Blue Chasch
- captains were on hand. They'd have smelled you sweating. I could almost smell
- you. When a man is afraid he sweats. If you want to pass as a drayman, you'll
- need a cold-blooded disposition."
- "That's asking a lot," said Reith. "I'll do my best."
- Into Dadiche rolled the dray. Blue Chasch could be seen in their gardens,
- tending arbors, stirring stone troughs, moving quietly in the shadows
- surrounding their round-roofed villas. Occasionally Reith sensed odors from a
- garden or a trough: wafts tart, pungent, spicy, reeks of burnt amber, candied
- musk, anomalous ferments, disturbing by their uncertainty: were they repulsive
- or exquisitely delightful?
- The road continued among the villas for a mile or two. The Blue Chasch put no
- store by what Reith considered a normal regard for privacy; and their villas
- seemed spaced without any concern for the road. Occasionally Chaschmen and
- Chaschwomen could be seen at menial or laborious tasks; seldom did Reith notice
- Chaschmen in the company of the Blue Chasch; always they worked separately, and
- when they were by chance in physical contiguity, each ignored the other as if he
- did not exist.
- Emmink made no comments or observations. Reith expressed wonder at the apparent
- obliviousness of the Blue Chasch to the drays. Emmink gave a snort of bitter
- amusement. "Don't be fooled! If you think them vague, only try to slip off the
- dray and walk into one of the villas! You'd be pinned down in a trice, and
- conveyed to the gymnasium to demonstrate at their games. Ah, cunning, cunning,
- cunning! As cruel as they are ludicrous! Pitiless and sly! Have you heard of
- their trick with poor Phosfer Ajan the drayer? He stepped down from his dray to
- answer a call of nature: mad folly, of course. What could he expect but
- resentment? So Phosfer Ajan, with feet tied, was placed in a vat, with putrid
- foulness up to his chin. At the bottom was a valve. When the slime became too
- hot, Phosfer Ajan must dive to the bottom, turn the valve, whereupon the stink
- would become bitter cold, and Phosfer must dive and grope again, while slime
- singed and froze him by turns. Still, he persevered; he dived and groped
- stoically, and on the fourth day they allowed him to his dray, so that he might
- bear his tale back to Pera. As may be adduced, they fit the game to the
- occasion, and a more resourceful set of humorists has never been known." Emmink
- turned to Reith his calculating glance. "What offense do you plan against them?
- I can predict to some degree of accuracy how they will respond."
- "No offense," said Reith. "I am curious, no more, and wish to see how the Blue
- Chasch live."
- "They live like facetious maniacs, from the standpoint of all who annoy them. I
- have heard that they especially enjoy pranks with a bull Green Chasch and a
- fledged Phung, together of course. Next, should they be lucky enough to capture
- a Dirdir and Pnume, these are urged through laughable antics. All in a spirit of
- fun, of course; the Blue Chasch above all dislike boredom."
- "I wonder why there is not a great war to the finish," pondered Reith. "Are not
- the Dirdir more powerful than the Blue Chasch?"
- "They are indeed; and their cities are grand, or so I have heard. But the Chasch
- have torpedoes and mines ready to destroy all the Dirdir cities in case of
- attack. It is a common situation: each is sufficiently strong to obliterate the
- other; hence neither dares more than minor unpleasantness ... Ah well, so long
- as they ignore me, I shall do the same for them ... There ahead is North Market.
- Notice, the Blue Chasch are everywhere at hand. They love to bargain, though
- they prefer to cheat. You must be silent. Make no sign, give no nod or shake!
- Otherwise they will claim that I have sold at some ruinous price."
- Emmink turned his dray into an open area protected by an enormous parasol. Now
- began the most frantic bargaining Reith had ever seen. A Blue Chasch,
- approaching, examining the reed-walker corpses, would croak a proffer which
- Emmink would decline in a scream of outrage. For minutes the two would heap
- abuse on each other, sparing no aspect of the other, until suddenly the Blue
- Chasch would make a furious gesture of disgust and go to seek his reed-walkers
- at another dray.
- Emmink gave Reith a malicious wink. "Once in a while I hold the price up, just
- to excite the Blues. Also I find out what the selling prices are about to be.
- Now we'll try Bonte Bazaar."
- Reith started to remind Emmink of the wide oval building, then thought better of
- it. Crafty Emmink had forgotten nothing. He swung around the dray, drove it out
- along a road running south a quarter mile inland from the river, with gardens
- and villas intervening. On the left were small domes and sheds among
- sparse-foliaged trees, areas of dirt where naked children played: the homes of
- the Chaschmen. Emmink said with a leer: "There's the start of the Blue Chasch
- themselves; so it was explained to me by one of the Chaschmen in loving detail."
- "How so?"
- "The Chaschmen believe that in each grows a homunculus which develops throughout
- life and is liberated after death, to become a full Chasch. So the Blue Chasch
- teach; is it not ludicrous?"
- "So I would say," replied Reith. "Haven't the Chaschmen ever seen human corpses?
- Or Blue Chasch infants?"
- "No doubt. But they supply explanations for every discord and discrepancy. This
- is what they want to believe: how else can they justify their servitude to the
- Chasch?"
- Emmink was perhaps a more profound individual than his appearance suggested,
- thought Reith. "Do they think the Dirdir originate in the Dirdirmen? Or Wankh in
- the Wankhmen?"
- "As to that," Emmink shrugged, "perhaps they do ... Look now; yonder is your
- building."
- The cluster of Chaschmen huts was behind, concealed by a bank of pale green
- trees with huge brown flowers. The dray skirted the central node of the city.
- Beside an avenue were public or administrative buildings, supported on shallow
- arches, with roof-lines of variously curved surfaces. Opposite rose the great
- structure which contained the space-boat, or so Reith believed. It was as long
- as a football field and as wide, with low walls and a vast half-ellipsoidal
- roof: an architectural tour de force by any standards.
- The function of the building was not apparent. There were few entrances, and no
- large openings nor facilities for heavy transport. Reith finally decided that
- they were traveling along the building's back elevation.
- At Bonte Bazaar Emmink sold his corpses to the tune of furious haggling, while
- Reith kept to the side and downwind from Blue Chasch buyers.
- Emmink was not totally pleased with the transaction. Returning to the dray after
- unloading, he grumbled, "I should have had another twenty sequins; the corpses
- were prime .... How could I make this clear to the Blue? He was watching you and
- trying to catch your air; the way you dodged and ducked would have aroused
- suspicion in an old Chaschwoman. By all standards of justice you should
- reimburse me for my loss."
- "I hardly think he got the better of you," said Reith. "Come; let's drive back."
- "What of my lost twenty sequins?"
- "Forget them; they are imaginary. Look; the Blues are watching us."
- Emmink hastily jumped into the driver's seat and started up the dray. Apparently
- from sheer perversity, he began to return by the same road he had come. Reith
- spoke sternly: "Drive by the east road, to the front of the big building; let's
- have no more tricks!"
- "I always drive to the west," whined Emmink. "Why should I change now?"
- "If you know what's best for you-"
- "Ha, threats? In the middle of Dadiche? When all I need do is signal a Blue-"
- "It would be the last signal of your life."
- "What of my twenty sequins?"
- "You've already had fifteen from me, plus your profit. No more of your
- complaints! Drive as I tell you or I'll wring your neck."
- Wheezing, protesting, casting spiteful glances from the side of his face, Emmink
- obeyed.
- The white building loomed ahead. The road ran parallel to the front at a
- distance of seventy-five yards, with a strip of garden intervening. An access
- road turned off from the main avenue, to run in front of the building. To drive
- along the access road would have rendered them highly conspicuous, and they
- continued along the main avenue in the company of other drays and wagons, and a
- few small cars driven by Blue Chasch. Reith gazed anxiously at the facade. Three
- large portals broke the front wall. Those to the left and center were shut; the
- far right portal was open. As they passed Reith looked in, to see the loom of
- machinery, the glow of hot metal, the hull of a platform similar to that which
- had lifted the space-boat away from the swamp.
- Reith turned to Emmink. "This building is a factory where airships and
- spacecraft are built!"
- "Yes, of course," grunted Emmink.
- "I asked you as much; why did you not tell me?"
- "You weren't paying for information. I give nothing away."
- "Drive around the building again."
- "I must charge you an additional five sequins."
- "Two. And no complaints, or I'll rattle your teeth."
- Cursing under his breath, Emmink swung the dray around the factory. Reith asked,
- "Have you ever looked into the center or the left of the building?"
- "Oh yes; several times."
- "What is there?"
- "How much is the information worth?"
- "Not very much. I'd have to see for myself."
- "A sequin?"
- Reith nodded shortly.
- "Sometimes the other portals are ajar. In the center they construct sections of
- spaceships, which are then rolled out and carried away for assembly elsewhere.
- In the left they build smaller spaceships, when such are needed. Recently there
- has been little work; the Blue Chasch do not like to travel space."
- "Have you seen them bring spaceships or space-boats here for repair? Several
- months ago?"
- "No. Why do you ask?"
- "The information will cost you money," said Reith. Emmink showed great yellow
- teeth in a grin of sardonic appreciation and said no more.
- They started along the front a second time. "Slow," Reith ordered, for Emmink
- had pushed the power-arm hard over and the old dray rattled at full speed along
- the avenue.
- Emmink grudgingly obliged. "If we go too slow they'll think us curious, and ask
- us why we peer and crane our necks."
- Reith looked along the road adjacent to the building, along which walked a few
- Blue Chasch, a somewhat larger number of Chaschmen.
- Reith said to Emmink, "Pull off the road; stop the dray for a minute or two."
- Emmink began his usual protest, but Reith pulled back the power-lever and the
- dray wheezed to a halt. Emmink stared at Reith, speechless with fury.
- "Get out; fix your wheels, or look at your energy cell," said Reith. "Do
- something to keep occupied." He jumped to the ground, stood looking at the great
- factory, for such seemed to be the nature of the building. The portal on the
- right was tantalizingly open. So near yet so far ... If only he dared cross the
- seventy-five yards to the portal, and look inside!
- What then? Suppose he saw the space-boat. It certainly would not be in operative
- condition; chances were good that Blue Chasch technicians had at least partially
- disassembled the mechanism. They would be a puzzled group, thought Reith. The
- technology, the engineering, the entire rationale of design would seem strange
- and unfamiliar. The presence of a human body would only puzzle them the more.
- The situation was by no means encouraging. The boat was possibly within, in a
- dismantled and non-usable condition. Or it was not. If it should be there he had
- not the remotest idea of how to gain possession of it. If it was not in the
- building, if only Paul Waunder's transcom was there, then he must revise his
- thinking and make new plans ... But at the moment the first step was to look
- inside the factory. It seemed easy. He needed only to walk seventy-five yards
- and look ... but he did not dare. If only he were in some disguise to deceive
- the Blue Chasch-which could only mean the guise of a Chaschman. Far-fetched,
- thought Reith. With his well-marked features, he resembled a Chaschman not at
- all.
- The reflections had occupied him a very short time: hardly a minute, but Emmink
- clearly was becoming restive. Reith decided to seek his counsel.
- "Emmink," said Reith, "suppose you wanted to learn if a certain object-for
- instance, a small spaceship-was inside that building, how would you go about
- it?"
- Emmink snorted. "I would consider no such folly. I would resume my place on the
- dray and depart while I still had health and sanity."
- "You can think of no errand to take us into the building?"
- "None whatever. A fantasy!"
- "Or close past that open portal?"
- "No, no! Of course not!"
- Reith longingly considered the building and the open portal. So near and yet so
- far ... He became furious with himself, at the intolerable circumstances, at the
- Blue Chasch, Emmink, the planet Tschai. Seventy-five yards: the work of half a
- minute. He said curtly to Emmink: "Wait here." And he started walking with long
- strides across the planted area.
- Emmink gave a hoarse call. "Come here, come back! Are you insane?"
- But Reith only hastened his steps. On the walk beside the building were a few
- Chaschmen, apparently laborers, who paid him no heed. Reith gained the walk. The
- open portal was ten steps ahead. Three Blue Chasch stepped forth. Reith's heart
- pounded; his palms were damp. The Blue Chasch must smell his sweat; would they
- know it for the odor of fear? It seemed as if, engrossed in their own affairs,
- they might not notice him. Head bowed, loose-brimmed hat in front of his face,
- Reith hurried past. Then, with only twenty feet to the portal, the three swung
- around as if activated by the same stimulus. One of the Blue Chasch spoke in a
- gobbling mincing voice, the words formed by organs other than vocal chords.
- "Man! Where go you?"
- Reith halted and responded with the explanation he had formed as he had crossed
- from the main avenue. "I came for scrap metal."
- "What scrap metal?"
- "By the portal, in a box; so they told me."
- "Ah!-" a blowing gasping sound, which Reith was unable to interpret. "No scrap
- metal!"
- One of the others muttered something quietly, and all three emitted a hiss, the
- Blue Chasch analogue of human laughter.
- "Scrap metal, so? Not at the factory. There: notice that building yonder? Scrap
- metal yonder!"
- "Thank you!" called Reith. "I'll but look." He went the last few steps to the
- open portal, looked into a great space murmurous with machinery, smelling of oil
- and metal and ozone. Nearby were platform components in the process of
- fabrication. Blue Chasch and Chaschmen alike worked, without obvious caste
- distinction. Around the walls, as in any Earthly factory or machine shop, were
- benches, racks and bins. In the center were a cylindrical section of what
- apparently would be a medium sized spaceship. Beyond, barely visible, was a
- familiar shape: the space-boat on which Reith had come down to Tschai.
- He could detect no damage to the hull. If the machinery had been dismantled, no
- evidence was apparent. But a good deal of distance intervened between himself
- and the boat, and he had time only for a single glimpse. Behind him the three
- Blue Chasch stood staring at him, massive blue-scaled heads half-inclined as if
- listening. They were, so Reith realized, smelling him. They seemed suddenly
- intent, suddenly interested and began to walk slowly back toward him.
- One spoke, in his thick queer voice: "Man! Attention! Return here. There is no
- scrap metal."
- "You smell of man-fear," said another. "You smell of odd substances."
- "A disease," replied Reith.
- Another spoke. "You smell like a strangely dressed man we found in a strange
- spaceship; there is about you a factitious quality.
- "Why are you here?" demanded the third of the group. "For whom do you spy?"
- "No one; I am a drayer, and I must return to Pera."
- "Pera is a hive of spies; time perhaps that we sifted the population."
- "Where is your dray? You did not arrive on foot?"
- Reith started to move away. "My dray is out on the avenue." He pointed, then
- stared in consternation. Emmink and the dray were no longer to be seen. He
- called back to the three Blue Chasch, "My dray! Stolen! Who has taken it!" And
- with a gesture of hasty farewell for the puzzled Chasch, he darted off into the
- planted area separating the two roads. Behind a hedge of white wool and
- gray-green plumes he paused to look back and was by no means reassured. One of
- the Blue Chasch had run a few steps after him and was pointing some sort of
- instrument here and there through the planting. A second was speaking with great
- urgency into a hand microphone. The third had gone to the portal and was peering
- toward the space-boat, as if to verify its presence.
- "I've done it for sure," Reith muttered to himself. "I've pulled the whole
- business down around my ears." He started to turn away, but paused an instant
- longer to watch as a squad of Chaschmen, wearing uniforms of purple and gray,
- drove up the factory road on long low slung motorcycles. The Blue Chasch gave
- terse instructions, pointing toward the planted area. Reith waited no longer. He
- ran to the avenue, and as a dray loaded with empty baskets rolled smartly by, he
- sprang out, caught hold of the tailgate, pulled himself up on the bed and
- crawled behind a stack of baskets, without arousing the attention of the
- draymaster.
- Behind came half a dozen motorcycles at great speed. They passed the dray with
- an angry whir of electric propulsion. To set up a roadblock? Or to reinforce the
- guards at the main gates?
- Possibly both, thought Reith. The venture, as Emmink had predicted, was about to
- end in fiasco. Reith doubted that the Blue Chasch would involve him in their
- infamous games; they would prefer to extract information from him. And then? At
- best, Reith's freedom of action would be curtailed. At worst-but this bore
- little thinking about. The dray was rattling along at a good pace, but Reith
- knew he had no chance of passing through the gate. Close to the North Market
- Reith dropped to the ground and at once took cover behind a long low structure
- of porous white concrete: a warehouse or a storage shed. Finding his view
- constricted, he climbed upon a wall, thence to the roof of the shed. He could
- see down the main avenue to the gate, and his fears were amply justified: a
- number of purple and gray-uniformed security police stood beside the portal
- inspecting traffic with great care. If Reith was going to leave the city he must
- choose some other route. The river? Conceivably he could wait till night and
- float down the river unseen. But Dadiche extended a score or more miles along
- the riverbank, with other Blue Chasch villas and gardens beyond. Additionally,
- Reith had no knowledge of the creatures inhabiting the river. If they were as
- noxious as other forms of Tschai life, he wanted nothing to do with them.
- A faint hum attracted Reith's attention. He looked up, startled to see an
- air-sled, not a hundred yards distant, sliding quietly by. The passengers were
- Blue Chasch, wearing peculiar headgear like enormous moth antennae. Reith was
- initially sure that he had been seen; then he was sure that the antennae were
- some sort of olfactory amplifiers: equipment being used to track him down.
- The air-sled proceeded without change of course. Reith released his pent breath.
- His apprehension apparently had been unfounded. What were the tall antennae?
- Ceremonial vestments? Adornments? "I may never know," Reith told himself. He
- searched the sky for other skysleds, but none could be seen. Raising to his
- knees, he once again looked all around. Somewhat to the left, behind a screen of
- the everpresent adarak trees, was North Market: white concrete parasols,
- suspended discs, glass screens; moving figures wearing black, dull blue, dull
- red; scales glinting gunmetal blue. The breeze, blowing from the north, carried
- a complicated reek of spice; of sour vegetable matter; of meat cooked,
- fermented, pickled; of yeasts and mycelium cake.
- To the right were the huts of Chaschmen, scattered through the gardens. Beyond,
- pressed up against the wall, was a large building screened by tall black trees.
- If Reith could climb to the top of this building he might possibly cross the
- wall. He looked at the sky. Dusk was the best time for such a venture, a matter
- of two or three hours.
- Reith descended from the roof, and stood a moment thinking. The Blue Chasch, so
- sensitive to odors; would they not be able to track him by scent, like
- bloodhounds? It was not an unreasonable theory, and if so, he had no time to
- spare.
- He found two short lengths of wood, tied them to his shoes, and, taking long
- steps, stalked carefully away through the garden.
- He had traveled only fifty yards when he heard sounds behind him, and instantly
- took cover. Peering back through the shrubbery, he saw that his hunch had not
- only been accurate, but timely. By the shed stood three Chaschmen security
- guards in purple and gray uniforms, with a pair of Blue Chasch, one of whom
- carried a detector-wand connected to a pack and thence to a mask across his
- nasal orifice. The Blue Chasch, waving the wand across the ground, sniffed out
- Reith's tracks without difficulty. At the back of the building the creature
- became confused, but presently discerned evidence of Reith's sojourn on the
- roof. All drew back warily, apparently believing Reith still on top.
- From his vantage point fifty yards distant Reith chuckled, wondering what the
- Blue Chasch would think when they found no Reith on the roof and no perceptible
- trace of his departure. Then, still on his wooden clogs, he continued through
- the gardens toward the wall.
- With a great caution he approached the large building and halted behind a tall
- tree to take stock of the situation. The building was dark and gloomy,
- apparently unoccupied. As Reith had supposed, the roof was very close to the top
- of the wall.
- Reith looked back over the city. More sky-sleds were visible, at least a dozen.
- They flew low over the area he had just crossed, trailing black cylinders on
- wire: almost certainly olfactory pickups. If one passed overhead or downwind,
- whatever distinctive odor Reith exuded must be detected. It was obviously
- important that he take cover swiftly, and the somber building against the wall
- seemed the only practical cover: if it was unoccupied.
- Reith watched another few minutes. He could discern no stir of movement within.
- He listened but heard no sounds; still he dared not approach. On the other hand,
- glancing over his shoulder at the air-sleds, he dared not remain. Discarding the
- clogs, he took a tentative step forward-then, hearing sounds behind him, sprang
- back into concealment.
- There were measured tones of a gong. Up the road came a procession of Chaschmen
- muffled in gray and white. In the van, four carried a white-draped corpse on a
- bier; behind marched Chaschmen and Chaschwomen sighing and keening. The building
- was a mausoleum or mortuary, thought Reith; the somber aspect was no deception.
- The gong strokes slowed. The group halted below the portico of the building. The
- gong became still. In utter silence the bier was brought forward and placed upon
- the porch. The mourners drew back and waited. The gong struck a single tone.
- A door slowly opened, a gap which seemed to extend into an infinite void. An
- intense golden ray slanted down upon the corpse. From right and left came a pair
- of Blue Chasch, wearing a ceremonial harness of straps, tabs, golden whorls and
- tassels. They approached the corpse, drew down the pall to expose the face and
- the beetling false skull, then stepped aside. A curtain descended to hide the
- corpse.
- A moment passed. The ray of golden light became a glare; there was sudden
- plangent sound, as of a broken harpstring. The curtain lifted. The corpse lay as
- before, but the false skull was split and the cranium as well. In the cold brain
- sat a Blue Chasch imp, staring forth at the mourners.
- The gong struck eleven jubilant strokes; the Blue Chasch cried out, "The
- elevation has occurred! A man has transcended his first life! Partake of
- beatitude! Inhale the jubilant odor! The man, Zugel Edgz, has given soul to this
- delightful imp! Could there be greater felicity? Through diligence, by
- application of approved principle, the same glory may come to all! In first life
- I was the man Sagaza Oso-" spoke one. "I was the woman Diseun Furwg," spoke the
- other. "-So with all the others. Depart then in joy! The imp Zugel Edgz must be
- anointed with healthful salve; the empty man-hulk will return to the soil. In
- two weeks you may visit your beloved Zugel Edgz!"
- The mourners, no longer dejected, returned down the path to quick strokes of the
- gong, and were lost to sight. The bier with corpse and staring imp slid into the
- building. The Blue Chasch followed, and the door closed.
- Reith gave a quiet laugh, which he quickly stifled as a skysled drifted
- alarmingly close. Creeping through the foliage, he approached the mortuary. No
- one, Chasch or Chaschman, was in sight; he slipped around to the rear of the
- building, which almost abutted the wall.
- Low to the ground was an arched opening. Reith sidled close, listened, to hear a
- muffled grind of machinery, and he winced at the thought of the grisly work
- being done. He peered into the dimness to see what appeared to be a storeroom, a
- repository for discarded objects. On racks and shelves were pots, jars, heaps of
- old garments, a clutter of dusty mechanisms for purposes unimaginable. The room
- was untenanted, apparently little used. Reith took a final look at the sky and
- slipped into the building.
- The room communicated with another, through a wide low arch. Another room lay
- beyond, and another, and another, all illuminated by a sickly glow from ceiling
- panels. Reith was content to crouch behind a rack and wait.
- An hour passed, two hours. Reith became restless and made a cautious
- exploration. In a side chamber he found a bin containing false craniums, each
- with a label and a series of characters. He picked one up, tried it on. It
- seemed to fit; Reith detached and discarded the label. From a pile of garments
- he selected an old cloak and drew it up under his chin. From a distance, at a
- casual glance, he might conceivably be taken for a Chaschman.
- There was a fading of light at the window; looking forth Reith saw that the sun
- had settled into a wrack of clouds. The adarak trees moved against a background
- of watery light. Reith climbed forth, scrutinized the sky; no sky-sleds were
- immediately evident. Reith went to a convenient tree and started to climb. The
- bark was a slippery pulp, which made the project more difficult than he had
- anticipated. At last, sticky with aromatic sap, sweating under his ill-smelling
- garments, he gained the roof of the mortuary.
- He crouched, looked out over Dadiche. The sky-sleds had disappeared; the sky was
- brown-gray with oncoming dusk.
- Reith went to the back edge of the roof, looked across at the wall. The top
- surface was about six feet distant, flat, with foothigh prongs at fifty-foot
- intervals. Warring devices? Reith could imagine no other purpose. On the other
- side was a drop of thirty feet-twenty-five feet, if he hung by his hands before
- he let himself fall. Reith appraised the chances of landing without broken bones
- or sprained joints: about two in three, depending upon the ground beneath. With
- a rope, the descent would be effortless. In the basement of the mortuary he had
- seen no ropes, but there were quantities of old garments to be knotted together.
- First: what would happen if he reached the top of the wall?
- To learn, Reith doffed his cloak. Moving along the rooftop until he was opposite
- one of the prongs, he swung the cloak out and over the prong.
- The result was instant and startling. From the prongs to either side lances of
- white fire darted forth, piercing the cloak, setting it aflame. Reith snatched
- it back, stamped out the blaze, looked hurriedly back and forth along the wall.
- Undoubtedly an alarm had been set off. Should he risk leaping the wall, fleeing
- across the waste? The chances, very bad in any case, would be nonexistent if he
- should become caught in the open. He ran to the tree, descended far more rapidly
- than he had mounted. Over the city sky-sleds were already appearing. Reith heard
- a far weird whistling which set his nerves on edge ... He ran, cloak flapping,
- back under the trees. A gleam of water attracted his attention: a small pond,
- overgrown with pallid white water-plants. Throwing off his cloak and false
- cranium, Reith jumped into the water, submerged himself up to his nose, and
- waited.
- Minutes passed. A squad of security guards on electric motorcycles dashed past.
- Two sky-sleds trailing scent-detectors drifted overhead, one to his right, the
- other to his left. They disappeared to the east; clearly the Blue Chasch thought
- he had crossed the wall, that he was at large outside the city. If this was the
- case, if they presently decided that he had escaped into the mountains, his
- chances would be thereby much improved ... He became aware of something moving
- along the bottom of the pond. It felt muscular, purposeful. An eel? a
- watersnake? A tentacle? Reith jumped out of the pond. Ten feet away something
- broke the surface and made a sound like a snort of disgust.
- Reith seized up the cloak and the false cranium and trudged dripping back down
- away from the mortuary.
- He came upon a small lane winding among the Chaschmen bungalows. By night they
- seemed close, secretive, locked-in. The windows were small and none lower than
- eight feet from the ground. Some exuded a wavering yellow light, as if from a
- lamp, which puzzled Reith. Surely a race as technically capable as the Blue
- Chasch could provide their underlings electric or nucleonic illumination ...
- Another paradox of Tschai.
- The wet clothes not only chafed but smelled abominably-a situation which might
- camouflage his own scent, thought Reith. He pulled the false cranium over his
- skull, threw the cloak around his shoulders. Walking slow and stiff-legged, he
- continued toward the gate.
- The sky was dark; neither Az nor Braz was in the sky, and the byways of Dadiche
- knew only the most casual illumination. Two Chaschmen came into view. Reith
- pulled down his chin, hunched his shoulders, walked stolidly forward. The two
- passed with no more than a glance.
- Somewhat encouraged, Reith reached the central boulevard with the gate two
- hundred yards ahead. High lamps cast a yellow glare into the portal. Three
- guards in purple and gray were still in evidence, but they seemed slack and
- uninterested, and Reith was reinforced in his belief that the Blue Chasch
- thought him gone from the city.
- Unfortunately, thought Reith, the Blue Chasch were wrong.
- He considered the feasibility of sauntering up to the portal, dashing through
- and away into the darkness. The sky-sleds would instantly be after him, as well
- as platoons of guards on electric motorcycles. What with his reeking clothes, he
- would have no place to hide-unless he discarded all his garments and ran naked
- through the night.
- Reith gave a soft grunt of disapproval ... His attention was attracted by a
- tavern in the basement of a tall building. From the low windows came flickering
- red and yellow light, hoarse conversation, an occasional gust of bellowing
- laughter. Three Chaschmen came lurching forth; Reith turned his back and looked
- through the window down into a murky taproom, lit by firelight and the
- ubiquitous yellow lamps. A dozen Chaschmen, faces pinched and twisted under the
- grotesque false crania, sat hunched over stone pots of liquor, exchanging lewd
- banter with a small group of Chaschwomen. These wore gowns of black and green;
- bits of tinsel and ribbon bedizened their false scalps; their pug-noses were
- painted bright red. A dismal scene, thought Reith; still, it pointed up the
- essential humanity of the Chaschmen. Here were the universal ingredients of
- celebration: invigorating drink, gay women, camaraderie. The Chaschman version
- seemed somewhat leaden and dour ... Another pair of Chaschmen passed close to
- Reith without remark. So far the disguise had been effective, though whether it
- would pass a more detailed examination Reith was uncertain. He walked slowly
- toward the gate, until he was barely fifty yards distant. He dared approach no
- further. He slid into a niche between two buildings and settled himself to watch
- the gate.
- The night went on. The air became still and cold and Reith became aware of odors
- from the Dadiche gardens.
- He dozed. When he awoke Az had appeared behind a line of sentinel adarak. Reith
- shifted his position, groaned, massaged his neck, recoiling at the odor of the
- still damp garments.
- At the gate two of the security guards had disappeared. The third stood
- torpidly, half-asleep. In the booths the attendants sat looking morosely out
- over the empty spaces. Reith settled back into his niche.
- The east became bright with dawn; the city came alive. New personnel arrived at
- the portal. Reith watched the incoming and outgoing groups exchange information.
- An hour later drays began to arrive from Pera. The first, drawn by a pair of
- great draft beasts, brought casks of pickles and fermented meat, and stank with
- a fervor that put Reith to shame. On the driver's bench sat two persons: Emmink,
- more sour, sulky and dire than ever, and Traz. "Forty-three," shouted Emmink. "A
- hundred and one," called Traz. The guards came out, counted barrels, inspected
- the wagon, then ordered Emmink to proceed.
- As the wagon passed, Reith emerged from his niche, walked close beside. "Traz.'
- Traz looked down and made a small exclamation of satisfaction. "I knew you'd
- still be alive."
- "Just barely. Do I look like a Chaschman?"
- "Not too much. Keep the cloak over your chin and nose .... When we come back
- from market, up under the right foreleg of the right beast."
- Reith turned aside into a secluded little nook behind a shed and watched the
- wagon move off toward the market.
- An hour later it returned, moving slowly. Emmink guided it along the right side
- of the road. It passed Reith; he emerged from his hiding place. The wagon
- stopped; Traz jumped down as if to lash the barrels more securely, but blocking
- off the view from the rear.
- Reith ran forward, ducked under the draft beast. Between the first and second
- right-hand legs hung a great leathery flap of skin. Between the belly and the
- skin five thongs had been tied to make a tight cramped hammock, into which Reith
- inserted himself. The wagon started forward; Reith could see nothing but the
- gray belly, the dangling flap, the first two legs.
- The wagon paused at the gate. He heard voices, saw the pointed red sandals of
- the security guards. After a suspenseful wait, the wagon started forward,
- rumbled out toward the surrounding hills. Reith could see the gravel of the
- road, an occasional bit of vegetation, the ponderous legs, the dangling flap
- which at every step clamped in upon him.
- At last the dray halted. Traz peered under the beast. "Out, no one is watching."
- With almost insane relief Reith pulled himself from under the beast. He ripped
- off the false cranium, flung it in a ditch, threw off the cloak, the stinking
- jacket, the shirt, clambered up on the bed of the dray, where he slumped back
- against a barrel.
- Traz resumed his seat beside Emmink, and the dray started forward. Traz looked
- back with concern. "Are you ill? Or wounded?"
- "No. Tired. But alive-thanks to you. And Emmink, as well, or so it appears."
- Traz gave Emmink a frowning glance. "Emmink has been no great help. It was
- necessary to make threats, to inflict a bruise or two.
- "I see," said Reith. He turned a critical glance upon the draymaster's hunched
- shoulders. "I've had one or two harsh thoughts in connection with Emmink
- myself."
- The shoulders quivered. Emmink swung around in his seat, thin face split in a
- yellow-toothed grin. "You'll recall, sir, that I conveyed you and instructed
- you, even before I knew your lordship's high rank."
- "'High rank'?" asked Reith. "What 'high rank'?'
- "The council at Pera has appointed you chief executive," said Traz. And he
- added, in a disparaging tone: "High rank of a sort, I suppose."
- CHAPTER ELEVEN
- REITH HAD No inclination to rule Pera. The occupation would exhaust his energy,
- destroy his patience, restrict his scope of action and bring him no personal
- advantage. Perforce, he would tend to govern in terms of Earth social
- philosophy. He considered the population of Pera: a motley group. Fugitives,
- criminals, bandits, freaks, hybrids, nondescripts, nonesuchs: what would these
- poor wretches know of equity, juridical procedure, human dignity, the ideal of
- progress?
- A challenge, to say the least.
- What of the space-boat, what of his hopes of returning to Earth? His adventures
- in Dadiche had verified only the location of the space-boat. The Blue Chasch
- would doubtless be amused and interested should he demand the return of his
- property.
- &nbs; Inducements? Reith could hardly promise Earth military assistance against
- the Dirdir or the Wankh-whichever were the current adversaries of the Blue
- Chasch. Compulsion? He had no leverage, no force to apply.
- Another matter: the Blue Chasch were now aware of his existence. Undoubtedly
- they wondered as to his identity, his homeland. Tschai was vast, with remote
- regions where men might have produced almost anything. The Blue Chasch must even
- now be anxiously consulting their maps.
- As Reith reflected, the dray ground up the hill, passed through Belbal Gap,
- rumbled down toward the steppe. Sunlight warmed Reith's skin; the steppe wind
- blew away the stench. He became drowsy and presently fell asleep.
- He awoke to find the dray trundling over the ancient pavements of Pera. They
- entered the central plaza at the base of the citadel. As they passed the gibbets
- Reith saw swinging eight new bodies: Gnashters, the rakish swagger of their
- garments now a bedraggled and pathetic joke. Traz explained the circumstances,
- in the most casual of voices. "They decided to come down from the citadel, and
- so they did, waving their hands and laughing, as if the whole affair were a
- farce. How indignant they became when the militia seized them and hoisted them
- aloft! They were dead before they had ceased complaining!"
- "So now the palace is empty," said Reith, looking up at the mass of slabs and
- stones.
- "So far as I know. I suppose you will choose to live there?"
- Traz's voice held a faint note of disapprobation. Reith grinned. The influence
- of Onmale persisted and occasionally manifested itself.
- "No," said Reith. "Naga Goho lived there. If we moved in, people would think we
- were a new set of Gohos."
- "It is a fine palace," said Traz, dubious now. "It contains many interesting
- objects ..." He turned a quizzical glance toward Reith. "Apparently you have
- decided to rule Pera."
- "Yes," said Reith. "Apparently I have."
- At the Dead Steppe Inn Reith rubbed himself in oil, soft sand, sifted ashes. He
- rinsed himself in clean water and repeated the process, thinking that soap would
- be one of the first innovations he would bring to the people of Pera, and Tschai
- at large. Was it possible that a substance so relatively simple as soap was
- unknown on Tschai? He would ask Derl, Ylin-Ylan, whatever her name, if soap was
- known in Cath.
- Scrubbed, shaved, in fresh linen and new sandals of soft leather, Reith ate a
- meal of porridge and stew in the common room. A change in the atmosphere was
- apparent. The personnel of the inn treated him with exaggerated respect; others
- in the room spoke in quiet voices, watching him from the side of their faces.
- Reith noticed a group of men standing in the compound, muttering together and
- peering into the inn from time to time. When he had finished his meal they
- entered and came to stand in a line in front of him.
- Reith looked them over, recognizing some who had been present at Naga Goho's
- execution. One was thin and yellow, with burning black eyes: a marsh-man, Reith
- guessed. Another appeared to be a mixture of Chaschman and Gray. Another was
- typical Gray, of medium height, bald with putty-colored skin, a fleshy lump of a
- nose, glossy protuberant eyes. The fourth was an old man from one of the nomad
- tribes, handsome in a haggard, wind-driven fashion; the fifth was short and
- barrel-shaped, with arms dangling almost to his knees, of derivation impossible
- to calculate. The old man of the steppes had been designated spokesman. He spoke
- in a husky voice. "We are the Committee of Five, formed according to your
- recommendation. We have held a long discussion. Inasmuch as you have been of
- assistance in destroying Naga Goho and the Gnashters, we wish to appoint you
- headman of Pera."
- "Subject to our restraint and advice," appended the Chaschman-Gray.
- Reith had still not come to a definite, irrevocable decision. Leaning back in
- his chair he surveyed the committee, and thought that seldom, if ever, had he
- seen a more heterogeneous group.
- "It's not quite so easy," he said at last. "You might not be willing to
- cooperate with me. I wouldn't take on the job unless I was guaranteed that
- cooperation."
- "Cooperation toward what?" the Gray asked.
- "Toward changes. Extreme, far-reaching changes."
- The committeemen examined him cautiously. "We are conservative folk," the
- Chaschman--Gray muttered. "Life is hard; we cannot afford risky experiments."
- The old nomad gave a harsh crackling laugh. "'Experiments'! We should welcome
- them! Any change can only be for the better! Let us hear what the man proposes!"
- "Very well!" acceded the Chaschman--Gray. "It does no harm to listen; we are not
- committed."
- Reith said, "I am of this man's opinion." He indicated the old nomad. "Pera is a
- tumble of ruins. The people here are little better than fugitives. They have no
- pride or self-respect; they live in holes, they are dirty and ignorant, they
- wear rags. What's worse, they don't seem to care."
- The committee blinked in surprise. The old nomad gave a hoarse jeering laugh;
- the Chaschman---Gray scowled. The others looked doubtful. Retiring a few paces,
- they muttered among themselves, then turned back to Reith. "Can you explain in
- detail what you propose to do?"
- Reith shook his head. "I haven't given the matter any thought. To be blunt, I am
- a civilized man; I was educated and trained in civilized circumstances. I know
- what men can achieve. It is a great deal-more perhaps than you can imagine. The
- folk of Pera are men; I would insist that they live like men."
- "Yes, yes," cried the marsh-man, "but how? In what particular?"
- "Well, in the first place, I would want a militia, disciplined, and well
- trained, to maintain order, to protect the city and caravans from the Green
- Chasch. I would organize schools and a hospital; later a foundry, warehouses, a
- market. Meanwhile I would encourage people to build houses, in clean
- surroundings."
- The committeemen fidgeted uneasily, looking askance at one another and at Reith.
- The old nomad grunted. "We are men, of course; who has denied it? And since we
- are men, we must live carefully. We do not desire to be Dirdir. Suffice that we
- survive."
- The Gray said, "The Blue Chasch would never allow such pretensions. They
- tolerate us at Pera only because we are inconspicuous."
- "But also because we supply certain of their wants," stated the short man. "They
- buy our produce cheap."
- "It is never wise to irritate those in power," argued the Gray. Reith held up
- his hand. "You've heard my program. If you won't cooperate wholeheartedly-select
- another chief."
- The old nomad turned a searching glance at Reith, then drew the others apart.
- There was heated argument. Finally they returned. "We agree to your terms. You
- will be our chief."
- Reith, who had been hoping that the committee would decide otherwise, heaved a
- small sigh. "Very well, so be it. I warn you, I'll demand a great deal from you.
- You'll work harder than ever before in your lives-for your own ultimate good. Or
- at least I hope so."
- He spoke to the committee for an hour, explaining what he hoped to achieve, and
- succeeded in arousing interest, even guarded enthusiasm.
- Late in the afternoon, Reith, with Anacho and three of the committee members,
- went to explore the erstwhile palace of Naga Goho.
- Up the winding path they walked, with the grim pile of masonry looming overhead.
- They passed through the dank courtyard, into the main hall. Naga Goho's
- cherished possessions: the heavy benches and table, the rugs, wall-hangings,
- tripod lamps, the platters and urns were already filmed over with dust.
- Adjoining the hall were sleeping chambers, smelling of soiled clothing and
- aromatic unguents. The corpse of Naga Goho's concubine lay as Reith had first
- discovered it. The group hastily drew back.
- On the other side of the hall were storerooms stacked with great quantities of
- loot: bales of cloth, crates of leather, parcels of rare wood, tools, weapons,
- implements, ingots of raw metal, flasks of essence, books written in brown and
- gray dots upon black paper, which Anacho identified as Wankh production manuals.
- An alcove held a chest half-full of sequins. Two smaller coffers contained
- jewels, ornaments, trinkets, trifles: a magpie's hoard. The committeemen
- selected steel swords with filigree pommels and guards for themselves; Traz and
- Anacho did likewise. Traz, after a diffident glance at Reith, arrayed himself in
- a fine golden ocher cloak, boots of soft black leather, a beautifully wrought
- casque of thin steel, drooping and splaying to protect the nape of the neck.
- Reith located several dozen energy pistols with spent powercells. These,
- according to Anacho, could be recharged from the power-cells which drove the
- drays: a fact evidently unknown to Naga Goho.
- The sun was low in the west when they departed the gloomy palace. Crossing the
- courtyard Reith noticed a squat door set back in a niche. He heaved it open, to
- reveal a flight of steep stone stairs. Up wafted a dismal draft, reeking of
- mold, organic decay, filth-and something else: a musky dank stench which
- stiffened the hairs at the back of Reith's neck.
- "Dungeons," said Anacho laconically. "Listen."
- A feeble croaking murmur came up from below. Inside the door Reith found a lamp,
- but was unable to evoke light. Anacho tapped the top of the bulb, to produce a
- white radiance. "A Dirdir device."
- The group descended the steps, ready for anything, and stepped forth into a
- high-vaulted chamber. Traz, seizing at Reith's arm, pointed; Reith saw a black
- shape gliding quietly off into the far shadows. "Pnume," muttered Anacho,
- hunching his shoulders. "They infest the ruined places of Tschai, like worms in
- old wood."
- A high lamp cast a feeble light, revealing cages around the periphery of the
- room. In certain of these were bones, in others heaps of putrefying flesh, in
- others living creatures, from whom issued the sounds which the group had heard.
- "Water, water," moaned the shambling figures. "Give us water!"
- Reith held the lamp close. "Chaschmen."
- From a tank to the side of the room he filled pannikins of water and brought
- them to the cages.
- The Chaschmen drank avidly and clamored for more, which Reith brought to them.
- Heavy cages at the far end of the room held a pair of massive motionless figures
- with towering conical scalps.
- "Green Chasch," whispered Traz. "What did Naga Goho do with these?"
- Anacho said, "Notice: they peer in a single direction only, the direction of
- their horde. They are telepathic."
- Reith dipped up two more pans of water, thrust them into the cages of the Green
- Chasch. The creatures reached ponderously, sucked the pans dry.
- Reith returned to the Chaschmen. "How long have you been here?"
- "A long, long time," croaked one of the captives. "I cannot say how long."
- "Why were you caged?"
- "Cruelty! Because we were Chaschmen!"
- Reith returned to the committeemen. "Did you know they were here?"
- "No! Naga Goho did as he pleased."
- Reith moved the linch-pins, opened the doors. "Come forth; you are free. The men
- who captured you are dead."
- The Chaschmen timorously crept forth. They went to the tank and drank more
- water. Reith turned back to examine the Green Chasch. "Very strange, strange
- indeed."
- "Perhaps Goho used them as indicators," Anacho suggested. "He would know at all
- times the direction of their horde."
- "No one can talk to them?"
- "They do not talk; they transfer thoughts."
- Reith turned to the committeemen. "Send up a dozen men, to carry the cages down
- to the plaza."
- "Bah," muttered Bruntego the Gray. "Best kill the ugly beasts! Kill the
- Chaschmen as well!"
- Reith turned him a quick glare. "We are not Gnashters! We kill from necessity
- only! As for the Chaschmen, let them go back to their servitude, or stay here as
- free men, whatever they wish."
- Bruntego gave a sour grunt. "If we do not kill them, they will kill us."
- Reith, making no answer, turned the lamp toward the remote parts of the dungeon,
- to find only dank stone walls. He could not learn how the Pnume had departed the
- chamber, nor could the Chaschmen give any coherent information. "They would
- come, silent as devils, to look at us, with never a word, nor would they bring
- us water!"
- "Odd creatures," ruminated Reith.
- "They are the weirds of Tschai!" cried the Chaschmen, trembling to the emotion
- of their new freedom. "They should be purged from the planet!"
- "As well as the Dirdir, the Wankh and the Chasch," said Reith, grinning.
- "No, not the Chasch. We are Chasch, did you not know?"
- "You are men."
- "No, we are Chasch in the larval stage; this is prime verity!"
- "Bah!" said Reith, suddenly angry. "Take off those ridiculous false heads." He
- stepped forward, jerked away the conical headpieces. "You are men, you are
- nothing else! Why do you allow the Chasch to victimize you?"
- The Chaschmen fell silent, glancing fearfully at the cages as if they expected a
- new incarceration.
- "Come," said Reith brusquely. "Let's get out of here."
- A week passed. With nothing better to do, Reith flung himself into his job. He
- selected a group of the most obviously intelligent young men and women, whom he
- would teach and who would teach others. He formed a civic militia, delegating
- authority in this case to Baojian, the erstwhile caravan-master. With the help
- of Anacho and Tostig the old Nomad, he drew up a tentative legal code. Over and
- over he explained the benefits to be derived from his innovations, arousing a
- variety of responses: interest, apprehension, dubious sneers, enthusiasm, as
- often as not blank incomprehension. He learned that there was more to organizing
- a government than merely giving orders; he was required to be everywhere at
- once. And always at the back of his mind was apprehension: what were the Blue
- Chasch planning? He could not believe that they had so easily abandoned their
- efforts to capture him. Beyond doubt they employed spies. They would therefore
- be informed of events in Pera, and hence be in no great haste. But sooner or
- later they would come to take him. A man of ordinary prudence would flee Pera
- instantly. Reith, for a variety of reasons, was disinclined to flight.
- The Chaschmen from the dungeons displayed no eagerness to return to Dadiche;
- Reith assumed that they were fugitives from Chasch justice. The Green Chasch
- warriors were a problem. Reith could not bring himself to kill them, but popular
- opinion would have been outraged had he released them outright. As a compromise
- the cages stood in the plaza, and the creatures served as a spectacle for the
- people of Pera. The Green Chasch ignored the attention, facing steadily to the
- north, telepathically linked-so stated Anacho-to the parent horde.
- Reith's principal solace was the Flower of Cath, although the girl mystified
- him. He could not read her mood. During the long caravan journey she had been
- melancholy, distrait, somewhat haughty. She had become gentle and loving, if at
- times absentminded. Reich found her more alluring than ever, full of a hundred
- sweet surprises. But her melancholy persisted.
- Homesickness, decided Reith; almost certainly she longed for her home in Cath.
- With a dozen other preoccupations, Reith postponed the day when he must reckon
- with Derl's yearnings.
- The three Chaschmen, so Reith presently learned, were not citizens of Dadiche,
- but hailed from Saaba, a city to the south. One evening in the common-room they
- took Reith to task for what they characterized as "extravagant ambitions." "You
- wish to ape the higher races; you will only come to grief! Sub-men are incapable
- of civilization."
- "You don't know what you're talking about," said Reith, amused by their
- earnestness.
- "Of course we do; are we not Chaschmen, the larval stage of the Blue Chasch? Who
- would know better?"
- "Anyone with a smattering of biology."
- The Chaschmen made fretful gestures. "A sub-man, you; and jealous of the
- advanced race."
- Reith said, "In Dadiche I saw the mortuary or death-house-whatever you call it.
- I saw the Blue Chasch split a dead Chaschman s skull and put a Blue Chasch imp
- into the cold brains. They play games with you; they trick you to ensure your
- servitude. The Dirdir no doubt use a parallel technique upon the Dirdirmen,
- though I doubt if the Dirdirmen expect to become Dirdir." He looked down the
- table to Anacho. "What of that?"
- Anacho's voice trembled slightly. "The Dirdirmen do not expect to become Dirdir;
- this is superstition. They are Sun, we are Shade; but both from the Primeval
- Egg. Dirdir are the highest form of cosmic life; Dirdirmen can only emulate, and
- this we do, with pride. What other race has produced such glory, achieved such
- magnificence?"
- "The race of men," said Reith.
- Anacho's face twitched in a sneer. "In Cath? Lotus-eaters. The Merribs? Vagrant
- artisans. The Dirdir stand alone on Tschai."
- "No, no, no!" bawled the Chaschmen simultaneously. "Submen are the culls and
- dross of Chaschmen. Some become clients of the Dirdir. True men come from Zoor,
- the Chasch world."
- Anacho turned away in disgust. Reith said, "This is not the case, though I don't
- expect you to believe me. You are both wrong."
- Anacho the Dirdirman spoke in a voice carefully casual. "You are so definite;
- you puzzle me. Perhaps you can enlighten us further."
- "Perhaps I can," said Reith. "At the moment I don't care to do so."
- "Why not?" Anacho persisted. "Such enlightenment would be useful to all of us."
- "The facts are as well-known to you as they are to me," said Reith. "Draw your
- own deductions."
- "Which facts?" blurted the Chaschmen. "What deductions?"
- "Aren't they plain? The Chaschmen are in servitude, precisely as are the
- Dirdirmen. Men are not biologically compatible with either of these races, nor
- with the Wankh nor the Pnume. Men certainly did not originate on Tschai. The
- deduction is that they were brought here as slaves, long ages ago, from the
- world of men."
- The Chaschmen grunted; Anacho raised his eyes and studied the ceiling. The men
- of Pera sitting at the table sighed in wonder.
- There was further talk, which became excited and vehement as the evening wore
- on. The Chaschmen went off to a corner and argued among themselves, two
- disputing with one.
- On the following morning the three Chaschmen departed Pera for Dadiche, riding,
- so it happened, Emmink's dray. Reith watched them go with misgiving. They would
- undoubtedly report upon his activities and radical doctrines. The Blue Chasch
- would not approve. Existence, Reith reflected, had become extremely complex. The
- future seemed murky, even grim. Once again he considered hasty departure into
- the wilderness. But the prospect still had no appeal.
- During the afternoon Reith watched the first draft of the militia at drill: six
- platoons of fifty men each, armed diversely with catapults, swords, short
- cutlasses, in striking variety of garments: pantaloons, smocks, burnouses,
- flared jackets with short skirts, rags and strips of fur. Some wore beards,
- others varnished topknots; the hair of others hung to their shoulders. Reith
- thought that never had he seen so sad a spectacle. He watched in mingled
- amusement and despair as they stumbled and slouched, with grumbling bad grace,
- through the exercises he had ordained. The six lieutenants, who showed no great
- enthusiasm, perspired and swore, gave orders more or less at random, while
- Baojian's aplomb was sorely taxed.
- Reith finally demoted two lieutenants on the spot and appointed two new men from
- the ranks. He climbed up on a wagon, called the men in about him. "You are not
- performing well! Don't you understand what you are here for? To learn to protect
- yourselves!" He looked from one sullen face to another then pointed down to a
- man who had been muttering to his fellow. "You! What are you saying? Speak up!"
- "I said that this prancing and marching is foolishness, a waste of energy; what
- benefit can arise from such antics?"
- "The benefit is this. You learn to obey orders, quickly and decisively. You
- learn to function as a corps. Twenty men acting together are stronger than a
- hundred men at odds with each other. In a battle situation the leader makes
- plans; the disciplined warriors carry out these plans. Without discipline, plans
- are useless and battles are lost. Now do you understand?"
- "Bah. How can men win battles? The Blue Chasch have energetics and battle-rafts.
- We have a few sand-blasts. The Green Chasch are indomitable; they would kill us
- like emmets. It is easier to hide among the ruins. This is how men have always
- lived in Pera."
- "Conditions are different," said Reith. "If you don't want to do a man's work,
- you can do a woman's work and wear woman's clothes. Take your choice." He waited
- but the dissident only glowered and shuffled his feet.
- Reith came down from the wagon and gave a series of orders. Certain men were
- sent up to the citadel to fetch bolts of cloth and leather. Others brought
- shears and razors; the men of the militia, despite protests, were shorn clean.
- Meanwhile the women of the city had gathered and were put to work cutting out
- and sewing uniforms: long sleeveless smocks of white cloth with black
- lightning-bolts appliqud to the chest. Corporals and sergeants wore black
- shoulder tabs; the lieutenants had short red sleeves to their uniforms.
- On the following day the militia, wearing the new garments, drilled again, and
- on this occasion were noticeably smarter-indeed, thought Reith, almost jaunty.
- On the morning of the third day after the Chaschmen's departure Reith's doubts
- were resolved. A large raft, sixty feet long and thirty feet wide, came gliding
- over the steppe. It flew in a single slow circle over Pera, then settled into
- the plaza directly before the Dead Steppe Inn. A dozen burly Chaschmen-Security
- Guards in gray pantaloons and purple jackets-jumped out and stood with hands at
- their weapons. Six Blue Chasch stood on the deck of the raft staring around the
- plaza from under overhanging brows. These Blue Chasch appeared to be special
- personages; they wore tight suits of silver filigree, tall silver morions,
- silver caps at the joints of their arms and legs.
- The Blue Chasch spoke briefly to the Chaschmen; two marched to the door of the
- inn, and spoke to the innkeeper. "A man calling himself Reith has established
- himself as your chief. Fetch him forth, to the attention of the Lord Chasch."
- The innkeeper, half-awed, half-truculent, was prompted to a snarling
- obsequiousness. "He is somewhere at hand; you will have to wait till he
- arrives."
- "Notify him! Be quick!"
- Reith received the summons gloomily, but without surprise. He sat thinking a
- moment or two; then, heaving a deep sigh, he came to a decision, which, for
- better or worse, must alter the lives of all the men of Pera, and perhaps all
- the men of Tschai. He turned to Traz, gave a set of orders, then slowly went
- into the common-room of the inn. "Tell the Chasch that I'll speak to them in
- here."
- The innkeeper relayed the message to the Chaschmen, who in turn spoke to the
- Blue Chasch.
- The response was a set of glottal sounds. The Blue Chasch descended to the
- ground, approached the inn, to stand in a silver-glittering line. The Chaschmen
- entered the inn. One bawled, "Which is the man who is chief? Which is he? Let
- him hold up his hand!"
- Reith thrust past them and stepped out into the compound. He faced the Blue
- Chasch, who stared back at him portentously. Reith examined the alien visages
- with fascination: the eyes like small metal balls glistening under the shadow of
- the cephalic overhang, the complex nasal processes, the silver morion and
- filigree armor. At the moment they seemed neither crafty, whimsical, capricious,
- nor given to cruel facetiousness; their mien rather was menacing.
- Reith confronted them, arms folded across his chest. He waited, exchanging stare
- for stare.
- One of the Blue Chasch wore a morion with a higher spine than the others. He
- spoke, in the strangled glottal voice typical of the race. "What do you do here
- in Pera?"
- "I am the chosen chief."
- "You are the man who made an unauthorized visit to Dadiche, who visited the
- District Technical Center."
- Reith made no reply.
- "Well then," called the Blue Chasch, "what do you say? Do not deny the charge;
- your scent is individual. In some fashion you entered and departed Dadiche; and
- made furtive investigations. Why?"
- "Because I had never visited Dadiche before," said Reith. "You are now visiting
- Pera without express authorization; however, you are welcome, so long as you
- obey our laws. I would like to think that the men of Pera could visit Dadiche on
- the same basis."
- The Chaschmen gave hoarse chuckles; the Blue Chasch stared in gloomy shock. The
- spokesman said, "You have been espousing a false doctrine, and persuading the
- men of Pera to folly. Where do you derive these ideas?"
- "The ideas are neither 'false doctrine' nor 'folly.' They are self-evident."
- "You must come with us to Dadiche," said the Blue Chasch, "and clarify a number
- of peculiar circumstances. Go aboard the sky-raft."
- Reith smilingly shook his head. "If you have questions, ask them now. Then I
- will ask you my questions."
- The Blue Chasch made a signal to the Chaschmen guards. They moved forward to
- seize Reith. He took a step back, looked up at the upper windows. Down came a
- fusillade of catapult bolts, piercing the Chaschmen's foreheads and necks. But
- those bolts aimed at the Blue Chasch swerved aside, diverted by a force-field,
- and the Blue Chasch stood unscathed. They seized their own weapons, but before
- they could aim and fire, Reith unfolded his arms. He held his energy cell. In a
- quick sweep of his arm he burnt off the heads and shoulders of the six Blue
- Chasch. The bodies sprang into the air by some peculiar reflex, then sprawled to
- the ground with a multiple thud, where they lay covered by globules of molten
- silver.
- The silence was complete. The onlookers seemed to be holding their breaths. All
- turned to look from the corpses to Reith; then, as if by single presentiment,
- all turned to look toward Dadiche.
- "What will we do now?" whispered Bruntego the Gray. "We are doomed. They will
- feed us to their red flowers."
- "Precisely," said Reith, "unless we take steps to prevent them." He signaled to
- Traz; they collected weapons and other gear from the headless Blue Chasch and
- the Chaschmen; then Reith ordered the bodies carried away and buried.
- He went to the sky-raft, climbed aboard. The controls--clusters of pedals, knobs
- and flexible arms-were beyond his comprehension. Anacho the Dirdirman came up to
- look casually into the raft. Reith asked, "Do you understand the working of this
- thing?
- Anacho gave a contemptuous grunt. "Of course. It is the old Daidne System."
- Reith looked back along the length of the raft. "What are those tubes? Chasch
- energetics?"
- "Yes. Obsolete, of course, compared to Dirdir weapons."
- "What is the range?"
- "No great distance. These are low-power tubes."
- "Suppose we mounted four or five sand-blasts on the raft. We'd have considerable
- fire-power."
- Anacho gave a curt nod. "Crude and makeshift, but feasible."
- On the afternoon of the following day a pair of rafts drifted high above Pera
- and returned to Dadiche without landing. The next morning a column of wagons
- came down from Belbal Gap, conveying two hundred Chaschmen and a hundred Blue
- Chasch officers. Overhead slid four rafts, carrying Blue Chasch gun-crews.
- The wagons halted a half-mile from Pera; the troops deployed into four
- companies, which separated and approached Pera from all four sides, while the
- rafts floated overhead.
- Reith divided the militia into two squads, and sent them sidling through the
- ruins, to the outskirts of the city on the south and west sides, where the
- Chasch troops would make first contact.
- The militia waited until the Chaschmen and the Blue Chasch, moving warily, had
- penetrated a hundred yards into the city. Suddenly appearing from concealment,
- all fired weapons: catapults, sand-blasts, hand-guns from the Goho arsenal,
- those taken from the Chasch corpses.
- Fire was concentrated on the Blue Chasch, and of these two-thirds died in the
- first five minutes, as well as half the Chaschmen. The remainder faltered, then
- fled back out onto the open steppe.
- The rafts overhead swooped low and began to sweep the ruins with slay-beams. The
- militia now took shelter while the rafts descended even lower.
- High above appeared another raft: that which Reith had armed with sand-blasts,
- then had taken five miles out on the steppe and hidden under brush. It dropped
- quietly upon the Chasch rafts, lower, lower, lower ... The men at the
- sand-blasts and at the energetic beams opened fire. The four rafts dropped like
- stones. The raft then crossed the city and opened fire on the two companies
- which were entering the north and east sectors of the city, while the militia
- opened fire from the flanks. The Chasch troops drew back with heavy losses.
- Harassed by the bombardment from the air, they broke ranks and streamed off
- across the steppe in total disorder, pursued by the Peran militia.
- CHAPTER TWELVE
- REITH CONFERRED WITH his victory-flushed lieutenants. "We won today because they
- took us light. They still can bring overwhelming force against us. My guess is
- that tonight they will organize a strong war party: all their rafts, all their
- troops. Then tomorrow they will come forth to punish us. Does this sound
- reasonable?"
- No one made dissent.
- "Since we are committed to hostilities, best that we take the initiative, and
- try to arrange a few surprises for the Chasch. They have a poor opinion of men,
- and we might be able to do them some harm. This means taking our limited
- fire-power to where it can do the most damage."
- Bruntego the Gray shuddered and clasped his hands to his face. "They have a
- thousand Chaschmen soldiers, and more. They have sky-rafts and energetic
- weapons-whereas we are only men, armed for the most part with catapults."
- "Catapults kill a man just as dead as energy beams," Reith commented.
- "But the rafts, the projectiles, the power and intelligence of the Blue Chasch!
- They will destroy us totally and reduce Pera to a crater."
- Tostig the old nomad demurred. "We have served too well, too cheaply in the
- past. Why should they rob themselves for the sake of sheer drama?"
- "Because that is the Blue Chasch way!"
- Tostig shook his head. "Old Chasch perhaps. Blue Chasch no. They will prefer to
- besiege us, starve us, and take the leaders back to Dadiche for punishment."
- "Reasonable," agreed Anacho, "but can we expect even Blue Chasch to behave
- reasonably? All Chasch are half-mad."
- "For this reason," said Reith, "we must match them caprice for caprice!"
- Bruntego the Gray said with a sniff, "Caprice is the only quality in which we
- can match the Blue Chasch."
- The discussion continued; proposals were set forth and debated and at last
- agreement was grudgingly reached. Messengers were sent forth to arouse the
- population. Amid some small protest and wailing, women, children, the aged and
- the uncooperative were marshaled aboard drays and sent off through the night, to
- a dismal gorge twenty miles south, where they would establish a temporary camp.
- The militia assembled with all its weapons, then marched off through the night
- toward Belbal Gap.
- Reith, Traz and Anacho remained in Pera. The cage containing the Green Chasch
- warriors had been swathed in cloth and loaded aboard the raft. At sunrise Anacho
- took the raft aloft and sent it sliding in that direction toward which the Green
- Chasch sat staring: north by east. Twenty miles passed beneath, and another
- twenty; then Traz, who sat watching the Green Chasch through a peephole, cried
- out, "They are turning, twisting about-toward the west!"
- Anacho swung the raft toward the west, and a few moments later a Green Chasch
- encampment was discovered in a grove of grass-trees beside a swamp. "Don't
- approach too closely," said Reith, examining the camp through his scanscope.
- "It's enough to know that they are here. Back to Belbal Gap."
- The raft returned south, skimming the palisades which faced west toward the
- Schanizade Ocean. Passing over Belbal Gap, they settled upon a vantage point
- overlooking both Dadiche and Pera.
- Two hours passed. Reith became increasingly fretful. His plans were based upon
- hypothesis and rational supposition; the Chasch were a notoriously capricious
- race. Then from Dadiche, to Reith's vast relief, came a long dark column.
- Looking through his scanscope Reith saw a hundred drays loaded with Blue Chasch
- and Chaschmen, as many others carrying weapons and crates of equipment.
- "This time," said Reith, they take us seriously." He scanned the sky. "No rafts
- visible. Undoubtedly they'll send something up for reconnaissance, at the very
- least ... Time to be moving. They'll be coming through Belbal Gap in a
- half-hour."
- They took the raft down to the steppe and landed several miles south of the
- road. They rolled the cage to the ground, pulled away the covering cloth. The
- monstrous green warriors sprang forward to peer out across the landscape.
- Reith unlocked the door, slipped back the bolt and retreated to the raft, which
- Anacho at once took into the air. The Green Chasch sprang forth with
- ear-splitting yells of triumph, to stand like giants. They rolled their metallic
- eyes up at the raft, raised their arms in gestures of detestation. Turning
- swiftly north, they set off across the steppe, at the stiff-legged Green Chasch
- jog.
- Over Belbal Gap came the drays from Dadiche. The Green Chasch stopped short,
- stared in wonder, then jogged forward to a clump of Bart-furze and stood
- immobile, almost invisible.
- Down the track came the great days, until the line of vehicles stretched a mile
- across the waste.
- Anacho slid the raft up a dark gully, almost to the ridge, and landed. Reith
- searched the sky for rafts, then looked out across the panorama to the east. The
- Green Chasch, among the gartfurze copses, could not be seen. The war force from
- Dadiche was a menacing dark caterpillar crawling toward the ruins of old Pera.
- Forty miles north the Green Chasch were camped.
- Reith returned to the raft. "We've done what we can. Now, we wait."
- The Blue Chasch expedition approached Pera, broke into four companies as before
- and surrounded the deserted ruins. Energetic beams were aimed at suspected
- strong-points; scouts ran forward under cover of the weapons. They gained the
- first tumble of concrete blocks, then, drawing no fire, paused to regroup and to
- select new objectives.
- Half an hour later the scouts emerged from the city, herding before them those
- folk who, from obstreperousness or simple inertia, had elected to remain in
- Pera.
- Another fifteen minutes passed while these persons were interrogated. There was
- a period of indecision as the Blue Chasch leadership took counsel among
- themselves. Clearly the empty city was an unexpected development, and posed a
- perplexing dilemma.
- The companies which had circled the city returned to the main force; presently
- all started back toward Dadiche, disconsolate and grim.
- Reith searched the northern waste for movement. If there was validity in the
- theory of telepathic communication between the Green Chasch, if they hated the
- Blue Chasch as furiously as reported, they should now be appearing on the scene.
- But the steppe spread away into the northern murk empty and devoid of movement.
- Back toward Belbal Gap moved the Blue Chasch war-force. From the dark green
- gart-furze, from copses of laggard bush, from salt-grass clumps, apparently from
- nowhere, erupted a horde of Green Chasch. Reith could not comprehend how so many
- warriors, riding gigantic leap-horses, had approached so inconspicuously. They
- hurled themselves upon the column, striking ten-foot arcs with their swords. The
- heavy weapons on the drays could not be brought to bear; the Green Chasch raged
- up and down the line doing carnage.
- Reith turned away, half-sickened. He climbed aboard the raft. "Back across the
- mountains, to our own men."
- The raft joined the militia at the agreed rendezvous, a gully half a mile south
- of Belbal Gap. The militia set off down the hill, keeping to the cover of trees
- and moss-hedge. Reith remained with the raft, searching the sky through the
- scanscope, apprehensive of Blue Chasch reconnaissance rafts. As he watched, a
- score of rafts rose from Dadiche to fly at full speed to the east: apparently
- reinforcement for the beleaguered war-party. Reith watched them disappear over
- Belbal Gap. Turning the scanscope back toward Dadiche, he glimpsed a sparkle of
- white uniforms up under the walls. "Now," he told Anacho. "As good a time as
- any."
- The raft slid down toward the main portal into Dadiche: closer and closer. The
- guards, conceiving the raft to be one of their own, craned their necks in
- perplexity. Reith, steeling himself, pulled the trigger of the forward
- sand-blast. The way into Dadiche was open. The Pera militia surged into the
- city.
- Jumping down from the raft, Reith sent two platoons to seize the raft depot.
- Another platoon remained at the portal with the greater part of the sand-blasts
- and energetics. Two platoons were sent to patrol the city and enforce the
- occupation.
- These last two platoons, as fierce and unrelenting as any other inhabitants of
- Tschai, ranged through the half-deserted avenues, killing Blue Chasch and
- Chaschmen, and any Chaschwomen who offered resistance. The discipline of two
- days swiftly evaporated; a thousand generations of resentment exploded into
- blood-lust and massacre.
- Reith, with Anacho, Traz and six others, rode the raft to the District Technical
- Center. The doors were closed; the building seemed vacant. The raft dropped
- beside the center portal; sandblasts broke down the doors. Reith, unable to
- contain his anxiety, ran into the building.
- There, as before: the familiar shape of the space-boat.
- Reith approached with heart thumping in his throat. The hull was cut open; the
- drive-mechanisms, the accumulators, the converter: all had been removed. The
- boat was a hulk.
- The prospect of finding the boat in near-operative condition had been an
- impossible dream. Reith had known as much. But irrational optimism had
- persisted.
- Now, irrational optimism and all hope of return to Earth must be put aside. The
- boat had been gutted. The engines had been dismantled, the drive-tank opened,
- the exquisite balance of forces disrupted.
- Reith became aware of Anacho standing at his shoulder. "This is not a Blue
- Chasch space-boat," said Anacho reflectively. "Nor is it Dirdir, nor Wankh."
- Reith leaned back against a bench, his mind drained of vigor. "True."
- "It is built with great skill; it shows refined design," mused Anacho. "Where
- was it built?"
- "On Earth," said Reith.
- "'Earth'?"
- "The planet of men."
- Anacho turned away, his bald harlequin-face pinched and drawn, the axioms of his
- own existence shattered. "An interesting concept," he murmured over his
- shoulder.
- Reith looked somberly through the space-boat but found little to interest him.
- Presently he returned outside, where he received a report from the platoon
- guarding the portal. Remnants of the Blue Chasch army had been sighted coming
- down the mountainside, in sufficient numbers to suggest that they had finally
- beaten off the Green Chasch.
- Those platoons which had been sent to patrol the city were completely out of
- control and could not be recalled. Two platoons held the landing field, leaving
- only a single platoon at the portal-something over a hundred men.
- An ambush was prepared. The portal was returned to the similitude of normalcy.
- Three men disguised as Chaschmen stood inside the wicket.
- The remnants of the war-force approached the portal. They noticed nothing amiss
- and started to enter the city. Sand-blasts and energetics opened fire; the
- column withered, dissipated. The survivors were too stunned to resist. A few
- tottered wildly back into the parkland, pursued by yelling men in white
- uniforms; others stood in a stupid huddle to be passively slaughtered.
- The battle-rafts were luckier. Observing the debacle, they swooped back up into
- the sky. The militia-men, unfamiliar with the Blue Chasch ground guns, fired as
- best they could and, more by luck than by skill, destroyed four rafts. The
- others swung in high bewildered circles for five minutes, then bore south,
- toward Saaba, Dkekme, Audsch.
- Spasms of fighting occurred throughout the rest of the afternoon, wherever the
- Peran militia encountered Blue Chasch who sought to defend themselves. The
- remainder-aged, females, imps alike-were slaughtered. Reith interceded with some
- success on behalf of the Chaschmen and Chaschwomen, saving all but the purple
- and gray-clad security guards, who shared the fate of their masters.
- The remaining Chaschmen and Chaschwomen, throwing aside their false crania,
- gathered in a sullen crowd on the main avenue.
- At sunset the militia, sated with killing, burdened with loot and unwilling to
- prowl the dead city after dark, assembled near the portal. Fires were built,
- food prepared and eaten.
- Reith, taking pity on the miserable Chaschmen, whose world had suddenly
- collapsed, went to where they sat in a dispirited group, the women keening
- softly for those who were dead.
- One burly individual spoke up truculently. "What do you propose to do with us?"
- "Nothing," said Reith. "We destroyed the Blue Chasch because they attacked us.
- You are men; so long as you do us no harm, we shall do you none."
- The Chaschman grunted. "Already you have harmed many of us."
- "Because you chose to fight with the Chasch against men, which is unnatural."
- The Chaschman scowled. "What is unnatural about that? We are Chaschmen, the
- first phase of the great cycle."
- "Utter nonsense," said Reith. "You are no more Chasch than the Dirdirman yonder
- is Dirdir. Both of you are men. The Chasch and the Dirdir have enslaved you,
- plundered your lives. High time that you knew the truth!"
- The Chaschwomen halted their keening, the Chaschmen turned blank faces toward
- Reith.
- "So far as I am concerned," said Reith, "you can live as you like. The city of
- Dadiche is yours-so long as the Blue Chasch do not return."
- "What do you mean by that?" quavered the Chaschmen
- "Precisely what I said. Tomorrow we return to Pera. Dadiche is yours."
- "All very well-but what if the Blue Chasch come back, from Saaba, from Dkekme,
- from the Lizizaudre, as they surely will?"
- "Kill them, chase them away! Dadiche is now a city of men! And if you don't
- believe that the Blue Chasch victimized you, go look into the death-house under
- the wall. You are told that you are larva, that the imp germinates in your
- brain. Go examine the brains of dead Chaschmen. You will find no imps, only the
- brains of men.
- "So far as we are concerned, you can return to your homes. The only proscription
- I put upon you are the false heads. If you wear them we will consider you not
- men but Blue Chasch and deal with you accordingly."
- Reith returned to his own camp; diffidently, as if they could not believe
- Reith's statement, the erstwhile Chaschmen slipped off through the dusk for
- their homes.
- Anacho spoke to Reith. "I listened to what you said. You know nothing about the
- Dirdir and the Dirdirmen! Even were your theories valid, we would still remain
- Dirdirmen! We recognize excellence, superlativity; we aspire to emulate the
- ineffable-an impossible ideal, since Shade can never out-glow Sun, and men can
- never surpass Dirdir."
- "For an intelligent man," snapped Reith, "you are extremely obstinate and
- unimaginative. Someday I am sure you will recognize your error; until then,
- believe whatever you care to believe."
- CHAPTER THIRTEEN
- BEFORE DAWN THE camp was astir. Drays laden with loot moved off westward, black
- against the ale-colored sky.
- In Dadiche, the Chaschmen, peculiarly bald and gnomish without their false
- skulls, collected corpses, carried them to a great pit and buried them. A score
- of Blue Chasch had been flushed from hiding. The killing lust of the Perans
- having subsided, they were confined in a stockade, from which they stared in
- stone-eyed bewilderment at the coming and going of the men.
- Reith was concerned over the possibility of counterattack from the Blue Chasch
- cities to the south. Anacho made light of the matter. "They have no stomach for
- fighting. They menace the Dirdir cities with torpedoes, but only to avoid war.
- They never challenge, they are content to live in their gardens. They might send
- Chaschmen to harass us, but I suspect they will do nothing whatever, unless we
- threaten them directly."
- "Perhaps so." Reith released the captive Blue Chasch. "Go to the cities of the
- south," he told them. "Inform the Blue Chasch of Saaba and Dkekme that if they
- molest us we will destroy them."
- "It is a long march," croaked the Blue Chasch. "Must we go on foot? Give us one
- of the rafts!"
- "Walk! We owe you nothing!"
- The Blue Chasch departed.
- Still not wholly convinced that the Blue Chasch would refrain from seeking
- vengeance, Reith ordered weapons mounted on those nine rafts captured at the
- Dadiche depot and flew them to secluded areas on the hills.
- On the following day, in the company of Traz, Anacho and Derl, he explored
- Dadiche in a more leisurely fashion. At the Technical Center he once more
- examined the hulk of his spaceboat, with an eye to its ultimate repair. "If I
- had the full use of this workshop," he said, "and if I had the help of twenty
- expert technicians, I might be able to build a new drive system. It might be
- more practical to try to adapt the Chasch drive to the boat but then there would
- be control problems ... Better to build a whole new boat."
- Derl frowned at the quiet space-boat. "You are so intent, then, on departing
- Tschai? You have not yet visited Cath. You might wish never to depart."
- "Possibly," said Reith. "But you have never visited Earth. You might not want to
- return to Tschai."
- "It must be a very strange world," mused the Flower of Cath. "Are the women of
- Earth beautiful?"
- "Some of them," Reith replied. He took her hand. "There are beautiful women on
- Tschai, as well. The name of one of them is-" And he whispered a name in her
- ear.
- Blushing, she put her hand to his mouth. "The others might hear!"
- SERVANTS OF THE WANKH
- CHAPTER ONE
- Two THOUSAND MILES east of Pera, over the heart of the Dead Steppe, the sky-raft
- faltered, flew smoothly for a moment, then jerked and bucked in a most ominous
- fashion. Adam Reith looked aft in dismay, then ran to the control belvedere.
- Lifting the voluted bronze housing, he peered here and there among the scrolls,
- floral hatchings, grinning imp faces which almost mischievously camouflaged the
- engine.* He was joined by the Dirdirman Ankhe at afram Anacho.
- Reith asked, "Do you know what's wrong?"
- Anacho pinched up his pale nostrils, muttered something about an "antiquated
- Chasch farrago" and "insane expedition to begin with." Reith, accustomed to the
- Dirdirman's foibles, realized that he was too vain to admit ignorance, too
- disdainful to avow knowledge so crass.
- The raft shuddered again. Simultaneously from a four-pronged case of black wood
- to the side of the engine compartment came small rasping noises. Anacho gave it
- a lordly rap with his knuckles. The groaning and shuddering ceased. "Corrosion,"
- said Anacho. "Electromorphic action across a hundred years or longer. I believe
- this to be a copy of the unsuccessful Heizakim Bursa, which the Dirdir abandoned
- two hundred years ago."
- "Can we make repairs?"
- "How should I know such things? I would hardly dare touch it.
- They stood listening. The engine sighed on without further pause. At last Reith
- lowered the housing. The two returned forward.
- Traz lay curled on a settee after standing a night watch. On the green
- crush-cushioned seat under the ornate bow lantern sat the Flower of Cath, one
- leg tucked beneath the other, head on her forearms, staring eastward toward
- Cath. So had she huddled for hours, hair blowing in the wind, speaking no word
- to anyone. Reith found her conduct perplexing. At Pera she had yearned for Cath;
- she could talk of nothing else but the ease and grace of Blue Jade Palace, of
- her father's gratitude if Reith would only bring her home. She had described
- wonderful balls, extravaganzas, water-parties, masques according to the turn of
- the "round." ("Round? What did she mean by 'round'?" asked Reith. Ylin-Ylan, the
- Flower of Cath, laughed excitedly. "It's just the way things are, and how they
- become! Everybody must know and the clever ones anticipate; that's why they're
- clever! It's all such fun!") Now that the journey to Cath was actually underway
- the Flower's mood had altered. She had become pensive, remote, and evaded all
- questions as to the source of her abstraction. Reith shrugged and turned away.
- Their intimacy was at an end: all for the best, or so he told himself. Still,
- the question nagged at him: why? His purpose in flying to Cath was twofold:
- first, to fulfill his promise to the girl; secondly, to find, or so he hoped, a
- technical basis to permit the construction of a spaceboat, no matter how small
- or crude. If he could rely upon the cooperation of the Blue Jade Lord, so much
- the better. Indeed, such sponsorship was a necessity.
- The route to Cath lay across the Dead Steppe, south under the Ojzanalai
- Mountains, northeast along the Lok Lu Steppe, across the Zhaarken or the Wild
- Waste, over Achenkin Strait to the city Nerv, then south down the coast of
- Charchan to Cath. For the raft to fail at any stage of the journey short of Nerv
- meant disaster. As if to emphasize the point, the raft gave a single small jerk,
- then once more flew smoothly.
- The day passed. Below rolled the Dead Steppe, dun and gray in the wan light of
- Carina 4269. At sunset they crossed the great Yatl River and all night flew
- under the pink moon Az and the blue moon Braz. In the morning low hills showed
- to the north, which ultimately would swell and thrust high to become the
- Ojzanalais.
- At midmorning they landed at a small lake to refill water tanks. Traz was
- uneasy. "Green Chasch are near." He pointed to a forest a mile south. "They hide
- there, watching us."
- Before the tanks were full, a band of forty Green Chasch on leap-horses lunged
- from the forest. Ylin-Ylan was perversely slow in boarding the raft. Reith
- hustled her aboard; Anacho thrust over the lift-arm-perhaps too hurriedly. The
- engine sputtered; the raft pitched and lurched.
- Reith ran aft, flung up the housing, pounded the black case. The sputtering
- stopped; the raft lifted only yards ahead of the bounding warriors and their
- ten-foot swords. The leap-horses slid to a halt, the warriors aimed catapults
- and the air streamed with long iron bolts. But the raft was five hundred feet
- high; one or two of the bolts bumped into the hull at the height of their
- trajectory and fell away.
- The raft, shuddering spasmodically, moved off to the east. The Green Chasch set
- off in pursuit; the raft, sputtering, pitching, yawing, and occasionally
- dropping its bow in a sickening fashion gradually left them behind.
- The motion became intolerable. Reith jarred the black case again and again
- without significant effect. "We've got to make repairs," he told Anacho.
- "We can try. First we must land."
- "On the steppe? With the Green Chasch behind us?"
- "We can't stay aloft."
- Traz pointed north, to a spine of hills terminating in a set of isolated buttes.
- "Best that we land on one of those flat-topped peaks."
- Anacho nudged the raft around to the north, provoking an even more alarming
- wobble; the bow began to gyrate like an eccentric toy.
- "Hang on!" Reith cried out.
- "I doubt if we can reach that first hill," muttered Anacho.
- "Try for the next one!" yelled Traz. Reith saw that the second of the buttes,
- with sheer vertical walls, was clearly superior to the first-if the raft would
- stay in the air that long.
- Anacho cut speed to a mere drift. The raft wallowed across the intervening space
- to the second butte, and grounded. The absence of motion was like silence after
- noise.
- The travelers descended from the raft, muscles stiff from tension. Reith looked
- around the horizon in disgust: hard to imagine a more desolate spot than this,
- four hundred feet above the center of the Dead Steppe. So much for his hope of
- an easy passage to Cath.
- Traz, going to the edge of the butte, peered over the cliff. "We may not even be
- able to get down."
- The survival kit which Reith had salvaged from the wrecked scout boat included a
- pellet gun, an energy cell, an electronic telescope, a knife, antiseptics, a
- mirror, a thousand feet of strong cord. "We can get down," said Reith. "I'd
- prefer to fly." He turned to Anacho, who stood glumly considering the sky-raft.
- "Do you think we can make repairs?"
- Anacho rubbed his long white hands together in distaste. "You must realize that
- I have no such training in these matters."
- "Show me what's wrong," said Reith. "I can probably fix it."
- Anacho's droll face grew even longer. Reith was the living refutation of his
- most cherished axioms. According to orthodox Dirdir doctrine, Dirdir and
- Dirdirmen had evolved together in a primeval egg on the Dirdir homeworld Sibol;
- the only true men were Dirdirmen; all others were freaks. Anacho found it hard
- to reconcile Reith's competence with his preconceptions, and his attitude was a
- curious composite of envious disapproval, grudging admiration, unwilling
- loyalty. Now, rather than allow Reith to excel him in yet another aspect, he
- hurried to the stern of the skyraft and thrust his long pale clown's face under
- the housing.
- The surface of the butte was scoured clean of vegetation, with here and there
- little channels half-full of coarse sand. Ylin-Ylan wandered moodily across the
- butte. She wore the gray steppe dwellers' trousers and blouse, with a black
- velvet vest; her black slippers were probably the first to walk the rough gray
- rock, thought Reith ... Traz stood looking to the west. Reith joined him at the
- edge of the butte. He studied the dismal steppe, but saw nothing.
- "The Green Chasch," said Traz. "They know we're here."
- Reith once more scanned the steppe, from the low black hills in the north to the
- haze of the south. He could see no flicker of movement, no plume of dust. He
- brought out his scanscope, a binocular photo-multiplier, and probed the
- gray-brown murk. Presently he saw bounding black specks, like fleas. "They're
- out there, for a fact."
- Traz nodded without great interest. Reith grinned, amused as always by the boy's
- somber wisdom. He went to the sky-raft. "How go the repairs?"
- Anacho's response was an irritated motion of arms and shoulders. "Look for
- yourself."
- Reith came forward, peered down at the black case, which Anacho had opened, to
- reveal an intricacy of small components. "Corrosion and sheer age are at fault,"
- said Anacho. "I hope to introduce new metal here and here." He pointed. "It is a
- notable problem without tools and proper facilities."
- "We won't leave tonight then?"
- "Perhaps by tomorrow noon."
- Reith walked around the periphery of the butte, a distance of three or four
- hundred yards, and was somewhat reassured. Everywhere the walls were vertical,
- with fins of rock at the base creating crevices, and grottos. There seemed no
- easy method to scale the walls, and he doubted if the Green Chasch would go to
- vast trouble for the trivial pleasure of slaughtering a few men.
- The old brown sun hung low in the west; the shadows of Reith and Traz and
- Ylin-Ylan stretched long across the top of the butte. The girl turned away from
- her contemplation of the east. She watched Traz and Reith for a moment, then
- slowly, almost reluctantly, crossed the sandstone surface and joined them. "What
- are you looking at?"
- Reith pointed. The Green Chasch on their leap-horses were visible now to the
- naked eye: dark motes hopping and bounding in bone-jarring leaps.
- Ylin-Ylan drew her breath. "Are they coming for us?"
- "I imagine so."
- "Can we fight them off? What of our weapons?"
- "We have sandblasts* on the raft. If they climbed the cliffs after dark they
- might do some damage. During daylight we don't need to worry."
- Ylin-Ylan's lips quivered. She spoke in an almost inaudible voice. "If I return
- to Cath, I will hide in the farthest grotto of the Blue Jade garden and never
- again appear. If ever I return."
- Reith put his arm around her waist; she was stiff and unyielding. "Of course
- you'll return, and pick up your life where it left off."
- "No. Someone else may be Flower of Cath; she is welcome ... So long as she
- chooses other than Ylin-Ylan for her bouquet."
- The girl's pessimism puzzled Reith. Her previous trials she had borne with
- stoicism; now, with fair prospects of returning home, she had become morose.
- Reith heaved a deep sigh and turned away.
- The Green Chasch were no more than a mile distant. Reith and Traz drew back to
- attract no notice in the event that the Chasch were unaware of their presence.
- The hope was soon dispelled. The Green Chasch bounded up to the base of the
- butte, then, dismounting from their horses, stood looking up the cliff face.
- Reith, peering over the side, counted forty of the creatures. They were seven
- and eight feet tall, massive and thick-limbed, with pangolin-scales of metallic
- green. Under the jut of their crania their faces were small, and, to Reith's
- eyes, like the magnified visage of a feral insect. They wore leather aprons and
- shoulder harness; their weapons were swords which, like all the swords of the
- Tschai, seemed long and unwieldy, and these, eight and ten feet long, even more
- so. Some of them armed their catapults; Reith ducked back to avoid the flight of
- bolts. He looked around the butte for boulders to drop over the side, but found
- none.
- Certain of the Chasch rode around the butte, examining the walls. Traz ran
- around the periphery, keeping watch.
- All returned to the main group, where they muttered and grumbled together. Reith
- thought that they showed no great zest for the business of scaling the wall.
- Setting up camp, they tethered their leap-horses, thrust chunks of a dark sticky
- substance into the pale maws. They built three fires, over which they boiled
- chunks of the same substance they had fed the leap-horses, and at last hulking
- down into toad-shaped mounds, joylessly devoured the contents of their
- cauldrons. The sun dimmed behind the western haze and disappeared. Umber
- twilight fell over the steppe. Anacho came away from the raft and peered down at
- the Green Chasch. "Lesser Zants," he pronounced. "Notice the protuberances to
- each side of the head? They are thus distinguished from the Great Zants and
- other hordes. These are of no great consequence."
- "They look consequential enough to me," said Reith.
- Traz made a sudden motion, pointed. In one of the crevices, between two vanes of
- rock, stood a tall dark shadow. "Phung!"
- Reith looked through the scanscope and saw the shadow to be a Phung indeed. From
- where it had come he could not guess.
- It was over eight feet in height, in its soft black hat and black cloak, like a
- giant grasshopper in magisterial vestments.
- Reith studied the face, watching the slow working of chitinous plates around the
- blunt lower section of the face. It watched the Green Chasch with brooding
- detachment, though they crouched over their pots not ten yards away.
- "A mad thing," whispered Traz, his eyes glittering. "Look, now it plays tricks!"
- The Phung reached down its long thin arms, raised a small boulder which it
- heaved high into the air. The rock dropped among the Chasch, falling squarely
- upon a hulking back.
- The Green Chasch sprang up, to glare toward the top of the butte. The Phung
- stood quietly, lost among the shadows. The Chasch which had been struck lay flat
- on its face, making convulsive swimming motions with arms and legs.
- The Phung craftily lifted another great rock, once more heaved it high, but this
- time the Chasch saw the movement. Venting squeals of fury they seized their
- swords and flung themselves forward. The Phung took a stately step aside, then
- leaping in a great flutter of cloak snatched a sword, which it wielded as if it
- were a toothpick, hacking, dancing, whirling, cutting wildly, apparently without
- aim or direction. The Chasch scattered; some lay on the ground, and the Phung
- jumped here and there, slashing and slicing, without discrimination, the Green
- Chasch, the fire, the air, like a mechanical toy running out of control.
- Crouching and shifting, the Green Chasch hulked forward. They chopped, cut; the
- Phung threw away the sword as if it were hot, and was hacked into pieces. The
- head spun off the torso, landed on the ground ten feet from one of the fires,
- with the soft black hat still in place. Reith watched it through the scanscope.
- The head seemed conscious, untroubled. The eyes watched the fire; the mouth
- parts worked slowly.
- "It will live for days, until it dries out," said Traz huskily. "Gradually it
- will go stiff."
- The Chasch paid the creature no further heed, but at once made ready their
- leap-horses. They loaded their gear and five minutes later had trooped off into
- the darkness. The head of the Phung mused upon the play of the flames.
- For a period the men squatted by the edge of the precipice, looking across the
- steppe. Traz and Anacho fell into an argument regarding the nature of the Phung,
- Traz declaring them to be products of unnatural union between Pnumekin and the
- corpses of Pnume. "The seed waxes in the decay like a barkworm, and finally
- breaks out through the skin as a young Phung, not greatly different from a bald
- night-hound."
- "Sheer idiocy, lad!" said Anacho with easy condescension. "They surely breed
- like Pnume: a startling process itself, if what I hear is correct."
- Traz, no less proud than the Dirdirman, became taut. "How do you speak with such
- assurance? Have you observed the process? Have you seen a Phung with others, or
- guarding a cub?" He lowered his lip in a sneer. "No! They go singly, too mad to
- breed!"
- Anacho made a finger-fluttering gesture of fastidious didacticism. "Rarely are
- Pnume seen in groups; rarely do we see a Pnume alone, for that matter. Yet they
- flourish in their peculiar fashion. Brash generalizations are suspect. The truth
- is that after many long years on Tschai we still know little of either Phung or
- Pnume."
- Traz gave an inarticulate growl, too wise not to concede the conviction of
- Anacho's logic, too proud to abandon abjectly his point of view. And Anacho, in
- his turn, made no attempt to push a superficial advantage home. In time, thought
- Reith, the two might even learn to respect each other.
- In the morning Anacho again tinkered with the engine, while the others shivered
- in the cold airs seeping down from the north. Traz gloomily predicted rain, and
- presently a high overcast began to form, and fog eased over the tops of the
- hills to the north.
- Anacho finally threw down the tools in boredom and disgust. "I have done what I
- can. The raft will fly, but not far."
- "How far, in your opinion?" asked Reith, aware that Ylin-Ylan had turned to
- listen. "To Cath?"
- Anacho flapped up his hands, fluttering his fingers in an unknowable Dirdir
- gesticulation. "To Cath, by your projected route: impossible. The engine is
- falling to dust."
- Ylin-Ylan looked away, studied her clenched hands.
- "Flying south, we might reach Coad on the Dawn Zher," Anacho went on, "and there
- take passage across the Draschade. Such a route is longer and slower-but
- conceivably we will arrive in Cath."
- "It seems that we have no choice," said Reith.
- CHAPTER TWO
- FOR A PERIOD they followed the southward course of the vast Nabiga River,
- traveling only a few feet above the surface, where the repulsion plates suffered
- the least strain. The Nabiga swept off to the west, demarcating the Dead Steppe
- from the Aman Steppe, and the raft continued south across an inhospitable region
- of dim forests, bogs, and morasses; and a day later returned to the steppe. On
- one occasion they saw a caravan in the distance: a line of high-wheeled carts
- and trundling house-wagons; another time they came upon a band of nomads wearing
- red feather fetishes on their shoulders, who bounded frantically across the
- steppe to intercept them, and were only gradually outdistanced.
- Late in the afternoon they painfully climbed above a huddle of brown and black
- hills. The raft jerked and yawed; the black case emitted ominous rasping sounds.
- Reith flew low, sometimes brushing through the tops of black tree-ferns. Sliding
- across the ridge the raft blundered at head-height through an encampment of
- capering creatures in voluminous white robes, apparently men. They dodged and
- fell to the ground, then screaming in outrage fired muskets after the raft, the
- erratic course of which presented a shifting target.
- All night they flew over dense forest, and morning revealed more of the same: a
- black, green, and brown carpet cloaking the Aman Steppe to the limit of vision,
- though Traz declared the steppe ended at the hills, that below them now was the
- Great Daduz Forest. Anacho condescendingly took issue, and displaying a chart
- tapped various topographic indications with his long white fingers to prove his
- point.
- Traz's square face became stubborn and sullen. "This is Great Daduz Forest;
- twice when I carried Onmale among the Emblems,* I led the tribe here for herbs
- and dyes."
- Anacho put away the chart. "It is all one," he remarked. "Steppe or forest, it
- must be traversed." At a sound from the engine he looked critically aft. "I
- believe that we will reach the outskirts of Coad, not a mile farther, and when
- we raise the housing we shall find only a heap of rust."
- "But we will reach Coad?" Ylin-Ylan asked in a colorless voice.
- "So I believe. Only two hundred miles remain."
- Ylin-Ylan seemed momentarily cheerful. "How different than before," she said.
- "When I came to Coad a captive of the priestesses!" The thought seemed to
- depress her and once more she became pensive.
- Night approached. Coad still lay a hundred miles distant. The forest had thinned
- to a stand of immense black and gold trees, with intervening areas of turf, on
- which grazed squat six-legged beasts, bristling with bony tusks and horns.
- Landing for the night was hardly feasible and Reith did not care to arrive at
- Coad until morning, in which opinion Anacho concurred. They halted the motion of
- the raft, tied to the top of a tree and hovered on the repulsors through the
- night.
- After the evening meal the Flower of Cath went to her cabin behind the saloon;
- Traz, after studying the sky and listening to the sounds of beasts below,
- wrapped himself in his robe and stretched out on one of the settees.
- Reith leaned against the rail watching the pink moon Az reach the zenith just as
- the blue moon Braz rose behind the foliage of a far tall tree.
- Anacho came to join him. "So then, what are your thoughts as to the morrow?"
- "I know nothing of Coad. I suppose we inquire as to transportation across the
- Draschade."
- "You still intend to accompany the woman to Cath?"
- "Certainly," said Reith, mildly surprised.
- Anacho hissed through his teeth. "You need only put the Cath woman on a ship;
- you need not go yourself."
- "True. But I don't care to remain in Coad."
- "Why not? It is a city which even Dirdirmen visit from time to time. If you have
- money anything is for sale in Coad."
- "A spaceship?"
- "Hardly ... It seems that you persist in your obsession."
- Reith laughed. "Call it whatever you like."
- "I admit to perplexity," Anacho went on. "The likeliest explanation, and one
- which I urge you to accept, is that you are amnesiac, and have subconsciously
- fabricated a fable to account for your own existence. Which of course you
- fervently believe to be true."
- "Reasonable," Reith agreed.
- "One or two odd circumstances remain," Anacho continued thoughtfully. "The
- remarkable devices you carry: your electronic telescope, your energy-weapon,
- other oddments. I cannot identify the workmanship, though it is equivalent to
- that of good Dirdir equipment. I suppose it to be home-planet Wankh; am I
- correct?"
- "As an amnesiac, how would I know?"
- Anacho gave a wry chuckle. "And you still intend to go to Cath?"
- "Of course. What about you?"
- Anacho shrugged. "One place is as good as another, from my point of view. But I
- doubt if you realize what awaits you in Cath."
- "I know nothing of Cath," said Reith, "other than what I have heard. The people
- are apparently civilized."
- Anacho gave a patronizing shrug. "They are Yao: a fervent race addicted to
- ritual and extravaganza, prone to excesses of temperament. You may find the
- intricacies of Cath society difficult to cope with."
- Reith frowned. "I hope it won't be necessary. The girl has vouched for her
- father's gratitude, which should simplify matters."
- "Formally the gratitude will exist. I am sure of this."
- "'Formally'? Not actually?"
- "The fact that you and the girl have formed an erotic accommodation is of course
- a complication."
- Reith smiled sourly. "The 'erotic accommodation' has long since run its course."
- He looked back toward the deck-house. "Frankly, I don't understand the girl. She
- actually seems disturbed by the prospect of returning home."
- Anacho peered through the dark. "Are you so naive? Clearly she dreads the moment
- when she must sponsor the three of us before the society of Cath. She would be
- overjoyed if you sent her home alone."
- Reith gave a bitter laugh. "At Pera she sang a different tune. She begged that
- we return to Cath."
- "Then the possibility was remote. Now she must deal with reality."
- "But this is absurdity! Traz is as he is. You are a Dirdirman, for which you are
- not to blame-"
- "No difficulties in either of these cases," stated the Dirdirman with an elegant
- flourish of the fingers. "Our roles are immutable. Your case is different; and
- it might be best for all if you sent the girl home on a cog."
- Reith stood looking out over the sea of moonlit treetops. The opinion, assuming
- its validity, was far from lucid, and also presented a dilemma. To avoid Cath
- was to relinquish his best possibility of building a spaceboat. The only
- alternative then would be to steal a spaceship, from the Dirdir, or Wankh, or,
- least appealing of all, from the Blue Chasch: all in all, a nerve-tingling
- prospect. Reith asked, "Why should I be less acceptable than you or Traz?
- Because of the 'erotic accommodation'?"
- "Naturally not. The Yao concern themselves with systematics rather than deeds. I
- am surprised to find you so undiscerning."
- "Blame it on my amnesia," said Reith.
- Anacho shrugged. "In the first place-possibly due to your 'amnesia' you have no
- quality, no role, no place in the Cath 'round.' As a nondescript, you constitute
- a distraction, a zizylbeast in a ballroom. Secondly, and more poignant, is your
- point of view, which is not fashionable in contemporary Cath."
- "By this you mean my 'obsession'?"
- "Unfortunately," said Anacho, "it is similar to an hysteria which distinguished
- a previous cycle of the 'round.' A hundred and fifty years* ago, a coterie of
- Dirdirmen were expelled from the academies at Eliasir and Anismna for the crime
- of promulgating fantasy. They brought their espousements to Cath, and stimulated
- a tendentious vogue: the Society of Yearning Refluxives, or the 'cult.' The
- articles of faith defied established fact. It was asserted that all men,
- Dirdirmen and sub-men alike, were immigrants from a far planet in the
- constellation Clari: a paradise where the hopes of humanity have been realized.
- Enthusiasm for the 'cult' galvanized Cath; a radio transmitter was constructed
- and signals were projected toward Clari. Somewhere, the activity was resented;
- someone launched torpedoes which devastated Settra and Ballisidre. The Dirdir
- are commonly held responsible, but this is absurd; why should they trouble
- themselves? I assure you that they are much too distant, too uninterested.
- "Regardless of agency, the deed was done. Settra and Ballisidre were laid low,
- the 'cult' was discredited; the Dirdirmen were expelled; the 'round' swung back
- to orthodoxy. Now even to mention the 'cult' is considered vulgarity, and so we
- arrive at your case. Clearly you have encountered and assimilated 'cult' dogma;
- it now manifests itself in your attitudes, your acts, your goals. You seem
- unable to distinguish fact from fancy. To speak bluntly, you are so disoriented
- in this regard as to suggest psychic disorder."
- Reith closed his mouth on a wild laugh; it would only reinforce Anacho's doubts
- as to his sanity. A dozen remarks rose to his tongue; he restrained them all. At
- last he said, "All else aside, I appreciate your candor."
- "Not at all," said the Dirdirman serenely. "I imagine that I have clarified the
- nature of the girl's apprehension."
- The Dirdirman blinked up at the pink moon Az. "So long as she was outside the
- 'round' at Pera and elsewhere, she made sympathetic allowances. But now return
- to Cath is imminent..." He said no more, and presently went to his couch in the
- saloon.
- Reith went to the forward pulpit under the great bow lantern. A cool draft of
- air fanned his face; the raft drifted idly about the treetop. From the ground
- came a furtive crackle of footsteps. Reith listened; they halted, then resumed
- and diminished off under the trees. Reith looked up into the sky where pink Az,
- blue Braz careened. He looked back at the deck-house where slept his comrades: a
- boy of the Emblem nomads, a clown-faced man evolved toward a race of gaunt
- aliens; a beautiful girl of the Yao, who thought him mad. Below sounded a new
- pad of footsteps. Perhaps he was mad indeed ...
- By morning Reith had recovered his equanimity, and was even able to find
- grotesque humor in the situation. No good reason to change his plans suggested
- itself, and the sky-raft limped south as before. The forest dwindled to scrub,
- and gave way to isolated plantings and cattle-runs, field huts, lookout towers
- against the approach of nomads, an occasional rutted road. The raft displayed an
- ever more aggravated instability, with an annoying tendency for the stern to
- sag. At mid-morning a range of low hills loomed ahead, and the raft refused to
- climb the few hundred feet necessary to clear the ridge. By the sheerest luck a
- cleft appeared through which the raft wobbled with ten feet to spare.
- Ahead lay the Dwan Zher and Coad: a compact town with a look of settled
- antiquity. The houses were built of weathered timber, with enormous high-peaked
- roofs and a multitude of skew gables, eccentric ridges, dormers, tall chimneys.
- A dozen ships rode to moorings; as many more were docked across from a row of
- factors' offices. At the north of town was the caravan terminus, beside a large
- compound surrounded by hostelries, taverns, warehouses. The compound seemed a
- convenient spot to set down the raft; Reith doubted if it could have held itself
- in the air another ten miles.
- The raft dropped stern first; the repulsors gave a labored whine and went silent
- with a meaningful finality. "That's that," said Reith. "I'm glad we've arrived."
- The group took up their meager luggage, alighted and left the raft where it had
- landed.
- At the edge of the compound Anacho made inquiries of a dung merchant and
- received directions to the Grand Continental, the best of the town's hostelries.
- Coad was a busy town. Along the crooked streets, in and out of the ale-colored
- sunlight, moved men and women of many casts and colors: Yellow Islanders and
- Black Islanders, Horasin bark-merchants muffled in gray robes; Caucasoids such
- as Traz from the Aman Steppe; Dirdirmen and Dirdirmen hybrids; dwarfish Sieps
- from the eastern slopes of the Ozanalai who played music in the streets; a few
- flat-faced white men from the far south of Kislovan. The natives, or Tans, were
- an affable fox faced people, with wide polished cheekbones, pointed chins,
- russet or dark brown hair cut in a ledge across the ears and foreheads. Their
- usual garments were knee-length breeches, embroidered vest, a round black
- pie-plate hat. Palanquins were numerous, carried by short gnarled men with oddly
- long noses and stringy black hair: apparently a race to themselves; Reith saw
- them in no other occupation. Later he learned them to be natives of Grenie at
- the head of the Dwan Zher.
- On a balcony Reith thought he glimpsed a Dirdir, but he could not be certain.
- Once Traz grabbed his elbow and pointed to a pair of thin men in loose black
- trousers, black capes with tall collars all but enveloping their faces, soft
- cylindrical black hats with wide brims: caricatures of mystery and intrigue.
- "Pnumekin!" hissed Traz in a something between shock and outrage. "Look at them!
- They walk among other men without a look aside, and their minds full of strange
- thinking!"
- They arrived at the hostelry, a rambling edifice of three stories, with a cafe
- on the front veranda, a restaurant in a great tall covered arbor to the rear and
- balconies overlooking the street. A clerk at a wicket took their money,
- distributed fanciful keys of black iron as large as their hands and instructed
- them to their rooms.
- "We have traveled a great dusty distance," said Anacho. "We require baths, with
- good quality unguents, fresh linen, and then we will dine."
- "It shall be as you order."
- An hour later, clean and refreshed, the four met in the downstairs lobby. Here
- they were accosted by a black-haired blackeyed man with a pinched melancholy
- face. He spoke in a gentle voice. "You are newly arrived at Coad?"
- Anacho, instantly suspicious, drew himself back. "Not altogether. We are
- well-known and have no needs."
- "I represent the Slave-taker's Guild, and this is my fair appraisal of your
- group. The girl is valuable, the boy less so. Dirdirmen are generally considered
- worthless except in clerical or administrative servitude, for which we have no
- demand. You would be rated a winkle-gatherer or a nut-huller, of no great value.
- This man, whatever he is, appears capable of toil, and would sell for the
- standard rate. Considering all, your insurance will be ten sequins a week."
- "Insurance against what?" demanded Reith.
- "Against being taken and sold," murmured the agent. "There is a heavy demand for
- competent workers. But for ten sequins a week," he declared triumphantly, "you
- may walk the streets of Coad night and day, secure as though the demon Harasthy
- rode your shoulders! Should you be sequestered by an unauthorized dealer the
- Guild will instantly order your free release."
- Reith stood back, half-amused, half-disgusted. Anacho spoke in his most nasal
- voice: "Show me your credentials."
- " 'Credentials'?" asked the man, his chin sagging.
- "Show us a document, a blazon, a patent. What? You have none? Do you take us for
- fools? Be off with you!"
- The man walked somberly away. Reith asked, "Was he in truth a fraud?"
- "One never knows, but the line must be drawn somewhere. Let us eat; I have a
- good appetite after weeks of steamed pulses and pilgrim plant."
- They took seats in the dining room: actually a vast airy arbor with a glass
- ceiling admitting a pale ivory light. Black vines climbed the walls; in the
- corners were purple and pale-blue ferns. The day was mild; the end of the room
- opened to a view of the Dwan Zher and a wind curled bank of cumulus at the
- horizon.
- The room was half-full; perhaps two dozen people dined from platters and bowls
- of black wood and red earthenware, talking in low voices, watching the folk at
- other tables with covert curiosity. Traz looked uneasily here and there,
- eyebrows raised in disapproval of so much luxury: undoubtedly his first
- encounter with what must seem a set of faddish and overcomplicated niceties,
- reflected Reith.
- He noticed Ylin-Ylan staring across the room, as if astonished by what she saw.
- Almost immediately she averted her eyes, as if uncomfortable or embarrassed.
- Reith followed her gaze, but saw nothing out of the ordinary. He thought better
- of inquiring the cause of her perturbation, not wishing to risk a cool stare.
- And Reith grinned uncomfortably. What a situation: almost as if she were
- cultivating an active dislike for him! Perfectly comprehensible, of course, if
- Anacho's explanations were correct. His puzzlement regarding the girl's
- agitation was now resolved by the sardonic Dirdirman.
- "Observe the fellow at the far table," murmured Anacho. "He in the green and
- purple coat."
- Turning his head, Reith saw a handsome young bravo with carefully arranged hair
- and a rich mustache of a startling gold. He wore elegant garments, somewhat
- rumpled and well-used: a jacket of soft leather strips, dyed alternately green
- and purple, breeches of pleated yellow cloth, buckled at knee and ankle with
- brooches in the shape of fantastic insects. A square cap of soft fur, fringed
- with two-inch pendants of gold beads, slanted across his head; an extravagant
- garde-nez of gold filigree clung to the ridge of his nose. Anacho muttered,
- "Watch him now. He will notice us, he will see the girl."
- "But who is he?"
- Anacho gave his fingertips an irritated twitch. "His name? I do not know. His
- status: high, in his own opinion at least. He is a Yao cavalier."
- Reith turned his attention to Ylin-Ylan, who watched the young man from the
- corner of her eye. Miraculous how her mood had altered! She had become alive and
- aware, though obviously twitching with nervousness and uncertainty. She flicked
- a glance toward Reith, and flushed to find his eyes on her. Bending her head she
- busied herself with the appetizers: dishes of gray grapes, biscuits, smoked
- sea-insects, pickled fern-pod. Reith watched the cavalier, who was
- unenthusiastically dining upon a black seed-bun and a dish of pickles, his gaze
- off across the sea. He gave a sad shrug, as if discouraged by his thoughts, and
- shifted his position. He saw the Flower of Cath, who feigned the most artless
- absorption in her food. The cavalier leaned forward in astonishment. He jumped
- to his feet with such exuberance as nearly to overturn the table. In three long
- strides he was across the room and down on one knee with a sweeping salute which
- brushed his cap across Traz's face. "Blue Jade Princess! Your servant Dordolio.
- My goals are won."
- The Flower bowed her head with an exact modicum of restraint and pleased
- surprise. Reith admired her aplomb. "Pleasant," she murmured, "in a far land to
- chance upon a cavalier of Cath."
- "'Chance' is not the word! I am one of a dozen who went forth to seek you, to
- win the boon proclaimed by your father and for the honor of both our palaces. By
- the wattles of the Pnume's First Devil, it has been given to me to find you!"
- Anacho spoke in his blandest voice. "You have searched extensively, then?"
- Dordolio stood erect, made a cursory inspection of Anacho, Reith, and Traz, and
- performed three precise nods. The Flower made a gay little motion, as if the
- three were casual companions at a picnic. "My loyal henchmen; all have been of
- incalculable help to me. But for them I doubt if I would be alive."
- "In that case," declared the cavalier, "they may ever rely upon the patronage of
- Dordolio, Gold, and Carnelian. They shall use my fieldname Alutrin Stargold." He
- performed a salute which included all three, then snapped his finger at the
- serving woman. "A chair, if you please. I will dine at this table."
- The serving woman somewhat unceremoniously pushed a chair into place; Dordolio
- seated himself and gave his attention to the Flower. "But what of your
- adventures? I assume them to be harrowing. Still you appear as fresh as
- ever-decidedly unharrowed."
- The Flower laughed. "In these steppe-dweller's garments? I have not yet been
- able to change. I must buy dozens of sheer necessities before I dare let you
- look at me."
- Dordolio, glancing at her gray garments, made a negligent gesture. "I had
- noticed nothing. You are as ever. But, if you wish, we will shop together; the
- bazaars of Coad are fascinating."
- "Of course! Tell me of yourself. My father issued a behest, you say?"
- "He did indeed, and swore a boon. The most gallant responded. We followed your
- trail to Spang where we learned who had taken you: Priestesses of the Female
- Mystery. Many gave you up for lost, but not I. My perseverance has been
- rewarded! In triumph we will return to Settra!"
- Ylin-Ylan turned a somewhat cryptic smile toward Reith. "I am of course anxious
- to return home. What luck to find you here in Coad!"
- "Remarkable luck," said Reith dryly. "We arrived only an hour ago from Pera."
- "Pera? I do not know the place."
- "It lies at the far west of the Dead Steppe."
- Dordolio gave an opaque stare, then once more he addressed himself to the
- Flower. "What hardships you must have suffered! But now you walk under the aegis
- of Dordolio! We return at once to Settra."
- The meal proceeded, Dordolio and Ylin-Ylan conversing with great vivacity. Traz,
- preoccupied with the unfamiliar table implements, turned them dour glances, as
- if he suspected their ridicule. Anacho paid them no heed; Reith ate in silence.
- Finally Dordolio sat back in his chair. "Now, as to the practicalities: the
- packet Yazilissa is at mooring, and shortly departs for Vervodei. A melancholy
- task to take leave of your comrades, good fellows all, I'm sure, but we must
- arrange our passage home."
- Reith spoke in an even voice. "All of us, so it happens, are bound for Cath."
- Dordolio presented his blank questioning stare, as if Reith spoke an
- incomprehensible language.
- He rose, helped Ylin-Ylan to her feet; the two went to saunter on the terrace
- beyond the arbour. The serving woman brought the score. "Five sequins, if you
- please, for five meals."
- "Five?"
- "The Yao ate at your table."
- Reith paid over five sequins from his wallet. Anacho watched in amusement. "The
- Yao's presence is actually an advantage; you will avoid attention upon your
- arrival at Settra."
- "Perhaps," said Reith. "On the other hand, I had hoped for the gratitude of the
- girl's father. I need all the friends I can find."
- "Events sometimes display a vitality of their own," observed Anacho. "The Dirdir
- teleologists have interesting remarks to make on the subject. I recall an
- analysis of coincidences-this, incidentally, not by a Dirdir but by a Dirdirman
- Immaculate..." As Anacho spoke on, Traz went out on the terrace to survey the
- roofs of Coad; Dordolio and Ylin-Ylan walked slowly past, ignoring his presence.
- Seething with indignation Traz returned to Reith and Anacho. "The Yao dandy
- urges her to dismiss us. She refers to us as nomads-rude but honest and
- dependable."
- "No matter," said Reith. "Her destiny is not ours."
- "But you have practically made it so! We might have remained in Pera, or taken
- ourselves to the Fortunate Isles; instead-" He threw up his arms in disgust.
- "Events are not occurring as I expected," Reith admitted. "Still, who knows? It
- may be for the best. Anacho thinks so, at any rate. Would you please ask her to
- step over here?"
- Traz went off on his errand, to return at once. "She and the Yao are off to buy
- what they call suitable garments! What a farce! I have worn steppe-dwellers'
- clothes all my life! The garments are suitable and useful."
- "Of course," said Reith. "Well, let them do as they wish. Perhaps we also might
- make a change in our appearance."
- Toward the dock area was the bazaar; here Reith, Anacho and Traz fitted
- themselves out in garments of somewhat less crude cut and material: shirts of
- soft light linen, short-sleeved vests, loose black breeches buckling at the
- ankle; shoes of supple gray leather.
- The docks were but a few steps away; they continued on to inspect the shipping,
- and the Yazilissa immediately engaged their attention: a three masted ship over
- a hundred feet long, with passenger accommodations in a tall many-windowed
- after-house, and in a row of 'tween-decks cabins along the waist. Cargo booms
- hung over the docks; bales of goods were hoisted aloft, swung up, over and into
- the holds.
- Climbing the gangplank, they found the supercargo who verified that the
- Yazilissa sailed in three days, touching at ports in Grenie and Horasin, then
- faring by way of Pag Choda, the Islands of Cloud, Tusa Tula at Cape Gaiz on the
- western thrust of Kachan, to Vervodei in Cath: a voyage of sixty or seventy
- days.
- Inquiring as to accommodations, Reith learned that all first class staterooms
- were booked as far as Tusa Tula, and all but one of the 'tween-decks cabins.
- There was, however, unlimited deckclass accommodation, which according to the
- supercargo was not uncomfortable except during the equatorial rains. He admitted
- these to be frequent.
- "Not satisfactory," said Reith. "At the minimum we would want four second-class
- cabins."
- "Unfortunately I can't oblige you unless cancellations come in, which is always
- possible."
- "Very well; I am Adam Reith. You may reach me at the Grand Continental Hotel."
- The supercargo stared at him in surprise. "'Adam Reith'? You and your group are
- already on the passenger list."
- "I'm afraid not," said Reith. "We only arrived in Coad this morning."
- "But only an hour ago, perhaps less, a pair of Yao came aboard, a cavalier and a
- noblewoman. They took accommodation in the name of 'Adam Reith'; the grand suite
- in the after-house-that is to say, two staterooms with a private saloon-and deck
- passage for three. I requested a deposit; they stated that Adam Reith would come
- aboard to pay the passage fee, which is two thousand three hundred sequins. Are
- you Adam Reith?"
- "I am Adam Reith, but I plan to pay no two thousand three hundred sequins. So
- far as I am concerned, cancel the booking."
- "What sort of tomfoolery is this?" demanded the supercargo. "I have no
- inclination for such frivolity."
- "I have even less desire to cross the Draschade Ocean in the rain," said Reith.
- "If you want recourse, seek out the Yao."
- "A pointless exercise," growled the supercargo. "Well then, so be it. If you
- will be happy with something less than luxury, try aboard the Vargaz: the cog
- yonder. She's departing in a day or so for Cath, and no doubt can find room for
- you."
- "Thank you for your help." Reith and his companions walked down the dock to the
- Vargaz: a short high-pooped round-hulled ship with a long bowsprit, sharply
- aslant. The two masts supported a pair of lateen yards with sails hanging limp
- while crewmen sewed on patches of new canvas.
- Reith inspected the cog dubiously, then shrugged and went aboard. In the shadow
- of the after-house two men sat at a table littered with papers, ink-sticks,
- seals, ribbons and a jug of wine. The most imposing of these was a burly man,
- naked from the waist up, save for a heavy growth of coarse black hair on his
- chest. His skin was brown, his features small and hard in a round immobile face.
- The other man was thin, almost frail, wearing a loose gown of white and a yellow
- vest the color of his skin. A long mustache drooped sadly beside his mouth; he
- wore a scimitar at his waist. Ostensibly a pair of sinister ruffians, thought
- Reith. "Yes, sir, what do you wish?" asked the burly man.
- "Transportation to Cath in as much comfort as possible," said Reith.
- "Little enough to ask." The man heaved himself to his feet. "I will show you
- what is available."
- Reith eventually paid a deposit on two small cabins for Anacho and Ylin-Ylan, a
- larger stateroom which he would share with Traz. The quarters were neither airy,
- spacious nor over-clean, but Reith thought that they might have been worse.
- "When do you sail?" he asked the burly man.
- "Tomorrow noon on the flood. By preference, be aboard by midmorning; I run a
- punctual ship."
- The three returned through the crooked streets of Coad to the hotel. Neither the
- Flower nor Dordolio were on the premises. Late in the afternoon they returned in
- a palanquin, followed by three porters laden with bundles. Dordolio alighted,
- helped Ylin-Ylan forth; they entered the hotel followed by the porters and the
- chief bearer of the palanquin.
- Ylin-Ylan wore a graceful gown of dark green silk, with a dark blue bodice. A
- charming little cap of crystal-frosted net constrained her hair. Seeing Reith
- she hesitated, turned to Dordolio and spoke a few words. Dordolio pulled at his
- extraordinary gold mustache, sauntered to where Reith sat with Anacho and Traz.
- "All is well," said Dordolio. "I have taken passage for all aboard the
- Yazilissa, a ship of excellent reputation."
- "I fear you have incurred an unnecessary expense," said Reith politely. "I have
- made other arrangements."
- Dordolio stood back, nonplussed. "But you should have consulted me!"
- "I can't imagine why," said Reith.
- "On what ship do you sail?" demanded Dordolio.
- "The cog Vargaz."
- "The Vargaz? Bah! A floating pigpen. I would not wish to sail on the Vargaz."
- "You do not need to do so, if you are sailing on the Yazilissa."
- Dordolio tugged at his mustache. "The Blue Jade Princess likewise prefers to
- travel aboard the Yazilissa, the best accommodation available."
- "You are a bountiful man," said Reith, "to take luxurious passage for so large a
- group."
- "In point of fact, I did only what I could," admitted Dordolio. "Since you are
- in charge of the group's funds the supercargo will render an account to you."
- "By no means," said Reith. "I remind you that I have already taken passage
- aboard the Vargaz."
- Dordolio hissed petulantly through his teeth. "This is an insufferable
- situation."
- The porters and the palanquin carrier drew near, and bowed before Reith. "Permit
- us to tender our accounts."
- Reith raised his eyebrows. Was there no limit to Dordolio's insouciance? "Of
- course, why should you not? Naturally to those who commanded your services." He
- rose to his feet. He went to Ylin-Ylan's room, knocked on the rattan door. There
- was the sound of movement within; she looked forth through a peep lens. The
- upper panel of the door slid back a trifle.
- Reith asked, "May I come in?"
- "But I'm dressing."
- "This has made no difference before."
- The door opened; Ylin-Ylan stood somewhat sullenly aside. Reith entered. Bundles
- were everywhere, some opened to reveal garments and leathers, gauze slippers,
- embroidered bodices, filigree headwear. Reith looked around in astonishment.
- "Your friend is extravagantly generous."
- The Flower started to speak, then bit her lips. "These few things are
- necessities for the voyage home. I do not care to arrive at Vervodei like a
- scullery maid." She spoke with a haughtiness Reith had never before heard. "They
- are to be reckoned as traveling expenses. Please keep an account and my father
- will settle affairs to your satisfaction."
- "You put me in a hard position," said Reith, "where inevitably I lose my
- dignity. If I pay, I'm a lout and a fool; if I don't, I'm a heartless
- pinchpenny. It seems that you might have handled the situation more tactfully."
- "The question of tact did not arise," said the Flower. "I desired the articles.
- I ordered them to be brought here."
- Reith grimaced. "I won't argue the subject. I came to tell you this: I have
- engaged passage to Cath aboard the cog Vargaz, which leaves tomorrow. It is a
- plain simple ship; you will need plain simple garments."
- The Flower stared at him in puzzlement. "But the Noble Gold and Carnelian took
- passage aboard the Yazilissa!"
- "If he chooses to travel aboard the Yazilissa, he of course may do so, if he can
- settle for his passage. I have just notified him that I will pay neither for his
- palanquin rides, nor his passage to Cath, nor "-Reith gestured toward the
- parcels-"for the finery which he evidently urged you to select."
- Ylin-Ylan flushed angrily. "I had never expected to find you niggardly."
- "The alternative is worse. Dordolio-"
- "That is his friend name," said Ylin-Ylan in an undertone. "Best that you use
- his field name, or the formal address: Noble Gold and Carnelian."
- "Whatever the situation, the cog Vargaz sails tomorrow. You may be aboard or
- remain in Coad as you choose."
- Reith returned to the foyer. The porters and palanquin carrier had departed.
- Dordolio stood on the front veranda. The jeweled ornaments which had buckled his
- breeches at the knees were no longer to be seen.
- CHAPTER THREE
- THE COG VARGAZ, broad of beam, with high narrow prow, a cutaway midships, a
- lofty stern-castle, wallowed comfortably at its mooring against the dock. Like
- all else of Tschai, the cog's aspects were exaggerated, with every quality
- dramatized. The curve of the hull was florid, the bowsprit prodded at the sky,
- the sails were raffishly patched.
- The Flower of Cath silently accompanied Reith, Traz and Anacho the Dirdirman
- aboard the Vargaz, with a porter bringing her luggage on a hand-truck.
- Half an hour later Dordolio appeared on the dock. He appraised the Vargaz a
- moment or two, then strolled up the gangplank. He spoke briefly with the
- captain, tossed a purse upon the table. The captain frowned up sidewise from
- under bushy black eyebrows, thinking his own thoughts. He opened the purse,
- counted the sequins and found an insufficiency, which he pointed out. Dordolio
- wearily reached into his pouch, found the required sum, and the captain jerked
- his thumb toward the sterncastle.
- Dordolio pulled at his mustache, raised his eyes toward the sky. He went to the
- gangplank, signaled a pair of porters who conveyed aboard his luggage. Then,
- with a formal bow toward the Flower of Cath, he went to stand at the far rail,
- looking moodily off across the Dwan Zher.
- Five other passengers came aboard: a small fat merchant in a somber gray caftan
- and tall cylindrical hat; a man of the Isle of Cloud, with his spouse and two
- daughters: fresh fragile girls with pale skins and orange hair.
- An hour before noon the Vargaz hoisted sails, cast off lines, and sheered away
- from the dock. The roofs of Coad became dark brown prisms laid along the
- hillside. The crew trimmed sails, coiled down lines, then unshipped a clumsy
- blast-cannon, which they dragged up to the foredeck.
- Reith asked Anacho, "Who do they fear? Pirates?"
- "A precaution. So long as a cannon is seen, pirates keep their distance. We have
- nothing to fear; they are seldom seen on the Draschade. A greater hazard is the
- victualing. The captain appears a man accustomed to good living, an optimistic
- sign."
- The cog moved easily through the hazy afternoon. The Dawn Zher was calm and
- showed a pearly luster. The coastline faded away to the north; there were no
- ships to be seen. Sunset came: a wan display of dove-brown and umber, and with
- it a cool breeze which sent the water chuckling around the bluff bow.
- The evening meal was simple but palatable: slices of dry spiced meat, a salad of
- raw vegetables, insect paste, pickles, soft white wine from a green glass
- demijohn. The passengers ate in wary silence; on Tschai strangers were objects
- of instinctive suspicion. The captain had no such inhibitions. He ate and drank
- with gusto and regaled the company with witticisms, reminiscences of previous
- voyages, jocular guesses regarding each passenger's purpose in making the
- voyage: a performance which gradually thawed the atmosphere. Ylin-Ylan ate
- little. She appraised the two orange-haired girls and became gloomily aware of
- their appealing fragility. Dordolio sat somewhat apart, paying little heed to
- the captain's conversation, but from time to time looking sidewise toward the
- two girls and preening his mustache. After the meal he conducted Ylin-Ylan
- forward to the bow where they watched phosphorescent sea-eels streaking away
- from the oncoming bow. The others sat on benches along the high quarterdeck,
- conducting guarded conversations while pink Az and blue Braz rose, one
- immediately behind the other, to send a pair of trails across the water.
- One by one the passengers drifted off to their cabins, and presently the ship
- was left to the helmsman and the lookout.
- Days drifted past: cool mornings with a pearly smoke clinging to the sea; noons
- with Carina 4269 burning at the zenith; ale-colored afternoons; quiet nights.
- The Vargaz touched briefly at two small ports along the coast of Horasin:
- villages submerged in the foliage of giant gray-green trees. The Vargaz
- discharged hides and metal implements, took aboard bales of nuts, lumps of
- jellied fruit, butts of a beautiful rose and black timber.
- Departing Horasin the Vargaz veered out into the Draschade Ocean, steering dead
- east along the equator both to take advantage of the counter-current and to
- avoid unfavorable weather patterns to north and south.
- Winds were fickle; the Vargaz wallowed lazily across almost imperceptible
- swells.
- The passengers amused themselves in their various ways. The orange-haired girls
- Heizari and Edwe played quoits, and teased Traz until he also joined the game.
- Reith introduced the group to shuffleboard, which was taken up with enthusiasm.
- Palo Barba, the father of the girls, declared himself an instructor of
- swordsmanship; he and Dordolio fenced an hour or so each day, Dordolio stripped
- to the waist, a black ribbon confining his hair. Dordolio performed with
- foot-stamping bravura and staccato exclamations. Palo Barba fenced less
- flamboyantly, but with great emphasis upon traditional postures. Reith
- occasionally watched the two at their bouts, and on one occasion accepted Palo
- Barba's invitation to fence. Reith found the foils somewhat long and
- over-flexible, but conducted himself without discredit. He noticed Dordolio
- making critical observations to Ylin-Ylan, and later Traz, who had overhead,
- informed him that Dordolio had pronounced his technique naive and eccentric.
- Reith shrugged and grinned. Dordolio was a man Reith found impossible to take
- seriously.
- Twice other sails were spied in the distance; on one occasion a long black
- motor-galley changed course in a sinister fashion.
- Reith inspected the vessel through his scanscope. A dozen tall yellow skinned
- men wearing complicated black turbans stood looking toward the Vargaz. Reith
- reported as much to the captain, who made a casual glance. "Pirates. They won't
- bother us: too much risk."
- The galley passed a mile to the south, then turned and disappeared into the
- southwest.
- Two days later an island appeared ahead: a mountainous hump with foreshore
- cloaked under tall trees. "Gozed," said the captain, in response to Reith's
- inquiry. "We'll put in for a day or so. You've never touched at Gozed?"
- "Never."
- "You have a surprise in store. Or then, on the other hand" here the captain gave
- Reith a careful inspection-"perhaps you don't. I can't say, since the customs of
- your own land are unknown to me. And unknown to yourself perhaps? I understand
- you to be an amnesiac."
- Reith made a deprecatory gesture. "I never dispute other people's opinions of
- myself."
- "In itself, a bizarre custom," declared the captain. "Try as I may, I cannot
- decide the land of your birth. You are a sort strange to me."
- "I am a wanderer," said Reith. "A nomad, if you like."
- "For a wanderer, you are at times strangely ignorant. Well then, ahead lies
- Gozed."
- The island bulked large against the sky. Looking through the scanscope Reith
- could see an area along the foreshore where the trees had been defoliated and
- trimmed to the condition of crooked poles, each supporting one, two or three
- round huts. The ground below was barren gray sand, clear of refuse and raked
- smooth. Anacho the Dirdirman inspected the village through the scanscope. "About
- what I expected."
- "You are acquainted with Gozed? The captain made quite a mystery of the place."
- "No mystery. The folk of the island are highly religious; they worship the
- sea-scorpions native to the waters around the island. They are as large or
- larger than a man, or so I am told."
- "Why then are the huts so high in the air?"
- "At night the scorpions come up from the sea to spawn, which they accomplish by
- stinging eggs into a host animal, often a woman left down on the beach for that
- purpose. The eggs hatch, the 'Mother of the Gods' is devoured by the larvae. In
- the last stages, when pain and religious ecstasy produce a curious psychological
- state in the 'Mother; she runs down the beach and flings herself into the sea."
- "An unsettling religion."
- The Dirdirman admitted as much. "Still it appears to suit the folk of Gozed.
- They could change anytime they chose. Sub-men are notoriously susceptible to
- aberrations of this sort."
- Reith could not restrain a grin, and Anacho examined him with surprise. "May I
- inquire the source of your amusement?"
- "It occurs to me that the relationship of Dirdirmen to Dirdir is not unlike that
- of the Gozed toward their scorpions."
- "I fail to see the analogy," Anacho declared rather stiffly.
- "Simplicity itself: both are victims to non-human beings who use men for their
- particular needs."
- "Bah!" muttered Anacho. "In many ways you are the most wrongheaded man alive."
- He walked abruptly aft, to stand staring out over the sea. Pressures were
- working in Anacho's subconscious, thought Reith, causing him uneasiness.
- The Vargaz nosed cautiously in toward the beach, swung behind a jut of
- barnacle-encrusted rock and dropped anchor. The captain went ashore in a
- pinnace; the passengers saw him talking to a group of sternfaced men,
- white-skinned, totally naked save for sandals and fillets holding down their
- long iron-colored hair.
- Agreement was reached; the captain returned to the Vargaz. A half hour later a
- pair of lighters came out to the boat. A boom was rigged; bales of fiber and
- coils of rope were brought aboard, other bales and crates were lowered to the
- lighters. Two hours after arriving at Gozed the Vargaz backed sail, hoisted
- anchor and set off across the Draschade.
- After the evening meal the passengers sat on the deck forward of the sterncastle
- with a lantern swinging overhead, and the talk veered to the people of Gozed and
- their religion. Val Dal Barba, wife of Palo Barba, mother of Heizari and Edwe,
- thought the ritual unjust.
- "Why are there only 'Mothers of Gods'? Why shouldn't those flintfaced men go
- down on the beach and become 'Fathers of Gods'?"
- The captain chuckled. "It seems as if the honors are reserved for the ladies."
- "It would never be thus in Murgen," declared the merchant warmly. "We pay
- sizable tithes to the priests; they take all responsibility for appeasing Bisme;
- we have no further inconvenience."
- "A system as sensible as any," agreed Pal Barba. "This year we subscribe to the
- Pansogmatic Gnosis, and the religion has much virtue to it."
- "I like it much better than Tutelanics," said Edwe. "You merely recite the
- litany and then you are done for the day."
- "Tutelanics was a dreadful bore," Heizari concurred. "All that memorizing! And
- remember that dreadful Convocation of Souls, where the priests were so familiar?
- I like Pansogmatic Gnosis much better."
- Dordolio gave an indulgent laugh. "You prefer not to become intense. I myself
- incline in this direction. Yao doctrine, of course, is to some extent a
- syncresis; or, better to say, in the course of the 'round' all aspects of the
- Ineffable are given opportunity to manifest themselves, so that, as we move with
- the cycle, we experience all theopathy."
- Anacho, still smarting from Reith's comparisons, looked across the deck. "Well
- then, what of Adam Reith, the erudite ethnologist? What theosophical insights
- can he contribute?"
- "None," said Reith. "Very few, at any rate. It occurs to me that the man and his
- religion are one and the same thing. The unknown exists. Each man projects on
- the blankness the shape of his own particular world-view. He endows his creation
- with his personal volitions and attitudes. The religious man stating his case is
- in essence explaining himself. When a fanatic is contradicted he feels a threat
- to his own existence; he reacts violently."
- "Interesting!" declared the fat merchant. "And the atheist?"
- "He projects no image upon the blank whatever. The cosmic mysteries he accepts
- as things in themselves; he feels no need to hang a more or less human mask upon
- them. Otherwise, the correlation between a man and the shape into which he molds
- the unknown for greater ease of manipulation is exact."
- The captain raised his goblet of wine against the light of the lantern, tossed
- it down his throat. "Perhaps you're right, but no one will ever change himself
- on this account. I have known a multitude of peoples. I have walked under Dirdir
- spires, through Blue Chasch gardens and Wankh castles. I know these folk and
- their changeling men. I have traveled to six continents of Tschai; I have
- befriended a thousand men, caressed a thousand women, killed a thousand enemies;
- I know the Yao, the Binth, the Walalukians, the Shemolei on one hand; on the
- other the steppe nomads, the marshmen, the islanders, the cannibals of Rakh and
- Kislovan; I see differences; I see identities. All try to extract a maximum
- advantage from existence, and finally all die. None seems the better for it. My
- own god? Good old Vargaz! Of course! As Adam Reith insists, it is myself. When
- Vargaz groans through the storm waves, I shudder and grind my teeth. When we
- glide the dark water under the pink and blue moons, I play the lute, I wear a
- red ribbon around my forehead, I drink wine. I and Vargaz serve each other and
- the day Vargaz sinks into the deep, I sink with her."
- "Bravo!" cried Palo Barba, the swordsman, who had also drunk much wine. "Do you
- know, this is my creed as well?" He snatched up a sword, held it high so that
- lantern-light played up and down its spine. "What the Vargaz is to the captain,
- the sword is to me!"
- "Father!" cried his orange-haired daughter Edwe. "And all the time we thought
- you a sensible Pansogmatist!"
- "Please put down the steel," urged Val Dal Barba, "before you become excited and
- cut someone's ear off."
- "What? Me? A veteran swordsman? How can you imagine such a thing? Well then, as
- you wish. I'll trade the steel for another goblet of wine."
- The talk proceeded. Dordolio swaggered across the deck to stand near Reith.
- Presently he said, in a voice of facetious condescension, "A surprise to find a
- nomad so accomplished in disquisition, so apt in subtle distinctions."
- Reith grinned at Traz. "Nomads are not necessarily buffoons."
- "You perplex me," Dordolio declared. "Exactly which is your native steppe? What
- was your tribe?"
- "My steppe is far away; my tribe is scattered in every direction."
- Dordolio pulled thoughtfully at his mustache. "The Dirdirman believes you to be
- an amnesiac. According to the Blue Jade Princess you have implied yourself to be
- a man from another world. The nomad boy, who knows you best, says nothing. I
- admit to what may be an obtrusive curiosity."
- "The quality signifies an active mind," said Reith.
- "Yes, Yes. Let me put what I freely acknowledge to be an absurd question."
- Dordolio examined Reith cautiously sidewise. "Do you consider yourself to be the
- native of another world?"
- Reith laughed and groped for an answer. He said: "Four possible conditions
- exist. If I were indeed from another world I could answer either yes or no. If I
- were not from another world I could answer yes or no. The first case leads to
- inconvenience. The second diminishes my self-respect. The third case is
- insanity. The fourth represents the only situation you would not consider an
- abnormality. The question, hence, as you admit it, is absurd."
- Dordolio tugged angrily at his mustache. "Are you, by any farfetched chance, a
- member of the 'cult'?"
- "Probably not. Which 'cult' is this?"
- "The Yearning Refluxives who rode up the cycle to destroy our two gorgeous
- cities."
- "But I understood that an unknown agency torpedoed the cities."
- "No matter; the 'cult' instigated the attack; they are the cause."
- Reith shook his head. "Incomprehensible! An enemy destroys your cities; your
- bitterness is directed not against the cruel enemy but against a possibly
- sincere and thoughtful group of your own people. A displaced emotion, or so it
- seems."
- Dordolio gave Reith a cold inspection. "Your analyses at times border upon the
- mordant."
- Reith laughed. "Let it pass. I know nothing of your 'cult.' As for my place of
- origin, I prefer to be amnesiac."
- "A curious lapse, when otherwise you seem so emphatic in your opinions."
- "I wonder why you trouble to press the point," Reith mused. "For instance, what
- would you say if I claimed origin from a far world?"
- Dordolio pursed his lips, blinked up at the lantern. "I had not taken my
- thoughts quite so far. Well, we will not pursue the subject. A frightening idea,
- to begin with: an ancient world of men!"
- "'Frightening'? How so?"
- Dordolio gave an uneasy laugh. "There is a dark side to humanity, which is like
- a stone pressed into the mold. The upper side, exposed to sun and air, is clean;
- tilt it and look below, at the muck and scurrying insects ... We of Yao know
- this well; nothing will put an end to awaile. But enough of such talk!" Dordolio
- gave his shoulders a jerk and a shake, and resumed his somewhat condescending
- tone of voice. "You are resolved to come to Cath; what will you do there?"
- "I don't know. I must exist somewhere; why not in Cath?"
- "Not too simple for a stranger," said Dordolio. "Affiliation with a palace is
- difficult."
- "Odd that you should say that! The Flower of Cath declares that her father will
- welcome us to Blue Jade Palace."
- "He would necessarily show formal courtesy, but you could no more take up
- residence at the Blue Jade Palace than you could on the bottom of the Draschade,
- merely because a fish invited you to swim."
- "What would prevent me?"
- Dordolio shrugged. "No man cares to make a fool of himself. Deportment is the
- definition of life. What does a nomad know of deportment?"
- Reith had nothing to say to this. "A thousand details go into the conduct of a
- cavalier," stated Dordolio. "At the academy we learn degrees of address,
- signals, language configuration, in which I admit a deficiency. We take
- instruction in sword address and principles of dueling, genealogy, heraldry; we
- learn the niceties of costume and a hundred other details. Perhaps you consider
- these matters over-arbitrary?"
- Anacho the Dirdirman, standing nearby, chose to reply. "'Trivial' is a word more
- apt."
- Reith expected an icy retort, at the least a glare, but Dordolio gave only an
- indifferent shrug. "Well, then, is your life more significant? Or that of the
- merchant, or the swordsman? Never forget the Yao are a pessimistic race! Awaile
- is always a threat; we are perhaps more somber than we seem. Recognizing the
- essential pointlessness of existence, we exalt the small flicker of vitality at
- our command; we extract the fullest and most distinctive flavor from every
- incident, by insisting upon an appropriate formality. Trivality? Decadence? Who
- can do better?"
- "All very well," said Reith. "But why be satisfied with pessimism? Why not
- expand your horizons? Further, it seems that you accept the destruction of your
- cities with a surprising nonchalance. Vengeance is not the most noble activity,
- but submissiveness is worse."
- "Bah," muttered Dordolio. "How could a barbarian understand the disaster and its
- aftermath? The Refluxives in vast numbers took refuge in awaile; the acts and
- the expiations kept our land in a ferment. There was no energy for anything
- else. Were you of good caste, I would cut your heart out for daring so gross an
- imputation."
- Reith laughed. "Since my low caste protects me from retribution, let me ask
- another question: what is awaile?"
- Dordolio threw his hands in the air. "An amnesiac as well as a barbarian! I have
- no conversation for such as you! Ask the Dirdirman; he is glib enough." And
- Dordolio strode off in a rage.
- "An unreasonable display of emotion," mused Reith. "I wonder what my imputation
- was?"
- "Shame," said Anacho. "The Yao are as sensitive to shame as an eyeball to grit.
- Mysterious enemies destroy their cities; they suspect the Dirdir but dare no
- recourse, and must cope with helpless rage and shame. It is their typical
- attribute and predisposes them to awaile."
- "And this is?"
- "Murder. The afflicted person-one who feels shame-kills as many persons as he is
- able, of any sex, age or degree of relationship. Then, when he is able to kill
- no more, he submits and becomes apathetic. His punishment is dreadful and highly
- dramatic, and enlightens the entire population, who crowd the place of
- punishment. Each execution has its particular flavor and style and is
- essentially a dramatic pageant of pain, possibly enjoyed even by the victim. The
- institution permeates the life of Cath. The Dirdir on this basis consider all
- sub-men mad."
- Reith grunted. "So then, if we visit Cath, we risk insensate murder."
- "Small risk. After all, the acts are not ordinary events." Anacho looked around
- the deck. "But it seems that the hour is late." He bade Reith goodnight and
- stalked off to his bunk.
- Reith remained by the rail, looking out over the water. After the bloodletting
- at Pera, Cath had seemed a haven, a civilized environment where just possibly he
- might contrive to patch together a spaceboat. The prospect seemed ever more
- remote.
- Someone came to stand beside him: Heizari, the older of Palo Barbar's
- orange-haired daughters. "You seem so melancholy. What troubles you?"
- Reith looked down into the pale oval of the girl's face: an arch impudent face,
- at this moment alive with innocent-or not so innocent? coquetry. Reith
- restrained the first words that rose to his lips. The girl was unquestionably
- appealing. "How is it you are not in bed with your sister Edwe?"
- "Oh, simple! She is not in bed either. She sits with your friend Traz on the
- quarterdeck, beguiling and provoking, teasing and tormenting. She is much more
- of a flirt than I"
- Poor Traz, thought Reith. He asked, "What of your father and mother? Are they
- not concerned?"
- "What's it to them? When they were young, they dallied as ardently as any; is
- that not their right?"
- "I suppose so. Customs vary, as you know."
- "What of you? What are the customs of your people?"
- "Ambiguous and rather complicated," said Reith. "There's a great deal of
- variation."
- "This is the case with Cloud Islanders," said Heizari, leaning somewhat closer.
- "We are by no means automatically amorous. But on occasions a certain mood comes
- over a person, which I believe to be the consequence of natural law."
- "No argument there," Reith obeyed his impulse and kissed the piquant face.
- "Still, I don't care to antagonize your father, natural law or not. He is an
- expert swordsman."
- "Have no fears on that score. If you require assurance, doubtless he is still
- awake."
- "I don't know quite what I'd ask him," said Reith. "Well then, all things
- considered..." The two strolled forward and climbed the carved steps to the
- forepeak, and stood looking south across the sea. Az hung low in the west laying
- a line of amethyst prisms along the water. An orange haired girl, a purple moon,
- a fairytale cog on a remote ocean: would he trade it all to be back on Earth?
- The answer had to be yes. And yet, why deny the attractions of the moment? Reith
- kissed the girl somewhat more fervently than before and now from the shadow of
- the anchor windlass, a person hitherto invisible jumped erect and departed in
- desperate haste. In the slanting moonlight Reith recognized Ylin-Ylan, the
- Flower of Cath ... His ardor was quenched; he looked miserably aft. And yet, why
- feel guilt? She had long since made it clear that the one-time relationship was
- at an end. Reith turned back to the orange-haired Heizari.
- CHAPTER FOUR
- THE MORNING DAWNED without wind. The sun rose into a bird's egg sky: beige and
- dove-gray around the horizon, pale gray-blue at the zenith.
- The morning meal, as usual, was coarse bread, salt fish, preserved fruit, and
- acrid tea. The company sat in silence, each occupied with morning thoughts.
- The Flower of Cath was late. She slipped quietly into the saloon and took her
- place with a polite smile to left and right, and ate in a kind of reverie.
- Dordolio watched her with perplexity.
- The captain looked in from the deck. "A day of calm. Tonight clouds and thunder.
- Tomorrow? No way of knowing. Unusual weather!"
- Reith irritably forced himself to his usual conduct. No cause for misgivings: he
- had not changed; Ylin-Ylan had changed. Even at the most intense stage of their
- relationship she had at all times kept part of herself secret: a persona
- represented by another of her many names? Reith forced her from his mind.
- Ylin-Ylan wasted no time in the saloon, but went out on deck, where she was
- joined by Dordolio. They leaned on the rail, Ylin-Ylan speaking with great
- urgency, Dordolio pulling his mustache and occasionally interposing a word or
- two.
- A seaman on the quarterdeck gave a sudden call and pointed across the water.
- Jumping up on the hatch Reith saw a dark floating shape, with a head and narrow
- shoulders, disturbingly manlike; the creature surged, disappeared below the
- surface. Reith turned to Anacho. "What was that?"
- "A Pnume."
- "So far from land?"
- "Why not? They are the same sort as the Phung. Who holds a Phung to account for
- his deeds?"
- "But what does it do out here, in mid-ocean?"
- "Perhaps it floats by night on the surface, watching the moons swing by."
- The morning passed. Traz and the two girls played quoits. The merchant mused
- through a leather-bound book. Palo Barba and Dordolio fenced for a period.
- Dordolio was as usual flamboyant, whistling his steel through the air, stamping
- his feet, flourishing his arms.
- Palo Barba presently tired of the sport. Dordolio stood twitching his blade.
- Ylin-Ylan came to sit on the hatch. Dordolio turned to Reith. "Come, nomad, take
- up the foil; show me the skills of your native steppe."
- Reith instantly became wary. "They are very few; additionally I am out of
- practice. Perhaps another day."
- "Come, come," cried Dordolio, eyes glittering. "I have heard reports of your
- adroitness. You must not refuse to demonstrate your technique."
- "You must excuse me; I am disinclined."
- "Yes, Adam Reith!" called Ylin-Ylan. "Fence! You will disappoint us all!"
- Reith turned his head, examined the Flower for a long moment. Her face, pinched
- and wan and quivering with emotion, was not the face of the girl he had known in
- Pera. In some fashion, change had come; he looked into the face of a stranger.
- Reith turned his attention to Dordolio, who evidently had been incited by the
- Flower of Cath. Whatever they planned was not to his advantage.
- Palo Barba intervened. "Come," he told Dordolio. "Let the man rest, I will play
- another set of passes, and give you all the exercise you require."
- "But I wish to engage this fellow," declared Dordolio. "His attitudes are
- exasperating; I feel that he needs to be chastened."
- "If you intend to pick a quarrel," said Palo Barba coldly, "that of course is
- your affair."
- "No quarrel," declared Dordolio in a brassy, somewhat nasal voice. "A
- demonstration, let us say. The fellow seems to equate the caste of Cath with
- common ruck. A significant difference exists, as I wish to make clear."
- Reith wearily rose to his feet. "Very well. What do you have in mind for your
- demonstration?"
- "Foils, swords, as you wish. Since you are ignorant of chivalrous address, there
- shall be none; a simple 'go' must suffice."
- "And 'stop'?"
- Dordolio grinned through his mustache. "As circumstances dictate."
- "Very well." He turned to Palo Barba. "Allow me to look over your weapons, if
- you please."
- Palo Barba opened his box. Reith selected a pair of short light blades.
- Dordolio stared, eyebrows arched high in distaste. "Child's weapons, for the
- training of boys!"
- Reith hefted one of the blades, twitched it through the air. "This suits me well
- enough. If you are dissatisfied, use whatever blade you like."
- Dordolio grudgingly took up the light blade. "It has no life; it is without
- movement or backsnap--"
- Reith lifted his sword, tilted Dordolio's hat down over his eyes. "But
- responsive and serviceable, as you see."
- Dordolio removed the hat without comment, shot the cuffs of his white silk
- blouse. "Are you ready?"
- "Whenever you are."
- Dordolio raised his sword in a preposterous salute, bowed right and left to the
- spectators. Reith drew back. "I thought you planned to forgo the ceremonies."
- Dordolio merely drew back the corners of his mouth, to show his teeth, and
- performed one of his foot-stamping assaults. Reith parried without difficulty,
- feinted Dordolio out of position and swung down at one of the clasps which
- supported Dordolio's breeches.
- Dordolio jumped back, then attacked once more, the snarl replaced by a sinister
- grin. He stormed Reith's defense, picking here and there, resting, probing;
- Reith reacted sluggishly. Dordolio feinted, drew Reith's blade aside, lunged.
- Reith had already jumped away; Dordolio's blade met empty air. Reith hacked down
- hard at the clasp, breaking it loose.
- Dordolio drew back with a frown. Reith stepped forward, struck down at the other
- clasp, and Dordolio's breeches grew loose about the waist.
- Dordolio retreated, red in the face. He cast down the sword. "These ridiculous
- playthings! Take up a real sword!"
- "Use any sword you prefer. I will remain with this one. But, first, I suggest
- that you take steps to support your trousers; you will embarrass both of us."
- Dordolio bowed, with icy good grace. He went somewhat apart, tied his breeches
- to his belt with thongs. "I am ready. Since you insist, and since my purposes
- are punitive, I will use the weapon with which I am familiar."
- "As you like."
- Dordolio took up his long supple blade, flourished it around his head so that it
- sang in the air, then, nodding to Reith, came to the attack. The flexible tip
- swung in from right and left; Reith slid it away, and casually, almost as if by
- accident, tapped Dordolio's cheek with the flat of his blade.
- Dordolio blinked, and launched a furious prancing attack. Reith gave ground;
- Dordolio followed, stamping, lunging, cutting, striking from all sides. Reith
- parried, and tapped Dordolio's other cheek. He then drew back. "I find myself
- winded; perhaps you have had enough exercise for the day?"
- Dordolio stood glaring, nostrils distended, chest rising and falling. He turned
- away, gazed out to sea. He heaved a deep sigh, and turned back. "Yes," he said
- in a dull voice. "We have exercised enough." He looked down at his jeweled
- rapier, and for a moment appeared ready to cast it into the sea. Instead, he
- thrust it into his sheath, bowed to Reith. "Your swordplay is excellent. I am
- indebted for the demonstration."
- Palo Barba came forward. "Well spoken, a true cavalier of Cath! Enough of blades
- and metal; let us take a goblet of morning wine."
- Dordolio bowed. "Presently." He went off to his cabin. The Flower of Cath sat as
- if carved from stone.
- Heizari brought Reith a goblet of wine. "I have a wonderful idea."
- "Which is?"
- "You must leave the ship at Wyness, come to Orchard Hill and assist my father's
- fencing academy. An easy life, without worries or fear."
- "The prospect is pleasant," said Reith. "I wish I could ... but I have other
- responsibilities."
- "Put them aside! Are responsibilities so important when one has a single life to
- live? But don't answer." She put her hand on Reith's mouth. "I know what you
- will say. You are a strange man, Adam Reith, so grim and so easy all at once."
- "I don't seem strange to myself. Tschai is strange; I'm quite ordinary."
- "Of course not!" laughed Heizari. "Tschai is-" She made a vague gesture.
- "Sometimes it is terrible ... but strange? I know no other place." She rose to
- her feet. "Well then, I will pour you more wine and perhaps I will drink as
- well. On so quiet a day what else is there to do?"
- The captain passing near, halted. "Enjoy the calm while you can; winds are
- coming. Look to the north."
- On the horizon a bank of black clouds; the sea below glimmered like copper. Even
- as they watched a breath of air came across the sea, a curiously cool waft. The
- sails of the Vargaz flapped; the rigging creaked.
- From the cabin came Dordolio. He had changed his garments; now he wore a suit of
- somber maroon, black velvet shoes, a billed hat of black velvet. He looked for
- Ylin-Ylan; where was she? Far forward on the forepeak, she leaned on the rail,
- looking off to sea. Dordolio hesitated, then slowly turned away. Palo Barba
- handed him a goblet of wine; Dordolio silently took a seat under the great brass
- lantern.
- The bank of clouds rolled south, giving off flashes of purple light, and
- presently the low grumble of thunder reached the Vargaz.
- The lateen sails were furled; the cog moved sluggishly on a small square storm
- sail.
- Sunset was an eerie scene, the dark brown sun shining under the black clouds.
- The Flower of Cath came from the stern-castle: stark naked she stood, looking up
- and down the decks, into the amazed faces of the passengers.
- She held a dart pistol in one hand, a dagger in the other. Her face was set in a
- peculiar fixed smile; Reith, who had known the face under a host of
- circumstances, would never have recognized it. Dordolio, giving an inarticulate
- bellow, ran forward.
- The Flower of Cath aimed the pistol at him; Dordolio dodged; the dart sang past
- his head. She searched the deck; she spied Heizari, and stepped forward, pistol
- at the ready; Heizari cried out in fear, ran behind the mainmast. Lightning
- sprang from cloud to cloud; in the purple glare Dordolio sprang upon the Flower;
- she slashed him with the dagger; Dordolio staggered back with blood squirting
- from his neck. The Flower aimed the dart-gun, Dordolio rolled over behind the
- hatch. Heizari ran forward to the forecastle; the Flower pursued. A crewman
- emerged from the forecastle-to stand petrified. The Flower stabbed up into his
- astounded face; the man tumbled backward, down the companionway.
- Heizari stood behind the foremast. Lightning spattered across the sky; thunder
- came almost at once.
- The Flower stabbed deftly around the mast; the orange-haired girl clutched her
- side, tottered forth with a wondering face. The Flower aimed the dart gun but
- Palo Barba was there to knock it clattering to the deck. The Flower cut at him,
- cut at Reith who was trying to seize her, ran up the ladder to the forepeak,
- climbed out on the sprit.
- The cog rose to the waves; the sprit reared and plunged. The sun sank into the
- ocean; the Flower turned to watch it, hanging to the forestay with one arm.
- Reith called to her, "Come back, come back!"
- She turned, looked at him, her face remote. "Derl!" called Reith. "Ylin-Ylan!"
- The girl gave no signal she had heard. Reith called her other names: "Blue Jade
- Flower!" Then her court name: "Shar Zarin!"
- She only gave him a regretful smile.
- Reith sought to coax her. He used her child name: "Zozi ... Zozi ... come back
- here."
- The girl's face changed. She pulled herself closer to the stay, hugging it.
- "Zozi! Won't you talk to me? Come here, there's a good girl."
- But her mind was far away, off where the sun was setting.
- Reith called her secret name: "L'lae! Come, come here! Ktan calls you, L'lae!"
- Again she shook her head, never taking her eyes from the sea.
- Reith called the final name though it felt strange to his lips: her love name.
- He called, but thunder drowned the sound of his voice, and the girl did not
- hear. The sun was a small segment, swimming with antique colors. The Flower
- stepped from the sprit, and dropped into a hissing surge of spume. For an
- instant Reith thought he saw the spiral of her dark hair, and then she was gone.
- Later, in the evening, with the Vargaz pitching up the great slopes and
- wallowing in a rush down into the troughs, Reith put a question to Ankhe at
- afram Anacho, the Dirdirman. "Had she simply lost her reason? Or was that
- awaile?"
- "It was awaile. The refuge from shame."
- "But-" Reith started to speak, but could only make an inarticulate gesture.
- "You gave attendance to the Cloud Isle girl. Her champion made a fool of
- himself. Humiliation lay across the future. She would have killed us all had she
- been able."
- "I find it incomprehensible," muttered Reith.
- "Naturally. You are not Yao. For the Blue Jade Princess, the pressure was too
- great. She is lucky. In Settra she would have been punished at a dramatic public
- torturing."
- Reith groped his way out on deck. The brass lantern creaked as it swung. Reith
- looked out over the blowing sea. Somewhere far away and deep, a white body
- floated in the dark.
- CHAPTER FIVE
- FREAKISH WINDS BLEW throughout the night: gusts, breaths, blasts, whispers. Dawn
- brought an abrupt calm, and the sun found the Vargaz wallowing in a confused
- sea.
- At noon a terrible squall sent the ship scudding south like a toy, the bluff bow
- battering the sea to froth. The passengers kept to the saloon, or to the trunk
- deck. Heizari, bandaged and pale, kept to the cabin she shared with Edwe. Reith
- sat with her for an hour. She could speak of nothing but her terrible
- experience. "But why should she do so dreadful a deed?"
- "Apparently the Yao are prone to such acts."
- "I have heard as much; but even insanity has a reason."
- "The Dirdirman says she was overwhelmed by shame."
- "What folly! A person as beautiful as she? What could she have done to affect
- her so?"
- "I wouldn't care to speculate," muttered Reith.
- The squalls became gigantic hills lofting the Vargaz high, heaving the round
- hull bubbling and singing down the long slopes. Finally one morning the sun
- shone down from a dove-brown sky clean of clouds. The seas persisted a day
- longer, then gradually lessened, and the cog set all sail before a fair breeze
- from the west.
- Three days later a dim black island loomed in the south, which the captain
- declared to be the haunt of corsairs; he kept a sharp lookout from the masthead
- until the island had merged into the murk of evening.
- The days passed without distinguishing characteristic: curiously antiseptic days
- overshadowed by the uncertainty of the future. Reith became edgy and nervous.
- How long ago had been the events at Pera: a time so innocent and uncomplicated!
- At that time, Cath had seemed a haven of civilized security, with Reith certain
- that the Blue Jade Lord through gratitude would facilitate his plans. What a
- callow hope!
- The cog approached the coast of Kachan, where the captain hoped to ride
- north-flowing currents up into the Parapan.
- One morning, coming on deck, Reith found a remarkable island standing off the
- starboard beam: a place of no great extent, less than a quarter-mile in
- diameter, surrounded at the water's edge by a wall of black glass a hundred feet
- high. Beyond rose a dozen massive buildings of various heights and graceless
- proportion.
- Anacho the Dirdirman came to stand beside him, narrow shoulders hunched, long
- face dour. "There you see the stronghold of an evil race: the Wankh."
- "'Evil'? Because they are at war with the Dirdir?"
- "Because they will not end the war. What benefit to either Dirdir or Wankh is
- such a confrontation? The Dirdir offer disengagement; the Wankh refuse. A harsh
- inscrutable people!"
- "Naturally, I know nothing of the issues," said Reith. "Why the wall around the
- island?"
- "To daunt the Pnume, who infest Tschai like rats. The Wankh are not a
- companionable folk. In fact-look down yonder below the surface."
- Reith, peering into the water, saw gliding beside the ship at a depth of ten or
- fifteen feet a dark man-like shape, with a metal structure fixed across its
- mid-body, moving without motion of its own. The figure twisted, slanted away and
- vanished into the murk.
- "An amphibious race, the Wankh, with electric jets for their underwater sport."
- Reith once more raised the scanscope. The Wankh towers, like the walls, were
- black glass. Round windows were discs blacker than black; balconies of frail
- twisted crystal became walkways to far structures. Reith spied movement: a pair
- of Wankh? Looking more closely he saw the creatures to be men-Wankhmen, beyond
- all doubt, with flour-white skins and black pelts close to somewhat flat scalps.
- Their faces seemed smooth, with still, saturnine features; they wore what
- appeared to be one-piece black garments, with wide black leather belts, on which
- hung small implements, tools, instruments. As they moved into the building, they
- looked out at the Vargaz and for an instant Reith saw full into their faces. He
- jerked the scanscope from his eyes.
- Anacho eyed him askance. "What is the trouble?"
- "I saw two Wankhmen ... Even you, weird mutated freak that you are, seem
- ordinary by comparison."
- Anacho gave a sardonic chuckle. "They are in fact not dissimilar to the typical
- sub-man."
- Reith made no argument; in the first place he could not define the exact quality
- he had seen behind the still white faces. He looked again, but the Wankhmen had
- disappeared. Dordolio had come out on deck and now stared in fascination at the
- scanscope. "What instrument is that?"
- "An electronic optical device," said Reith without emphasis.
- "I've never seen its like." He looked at Anacho. "Is it a Dirdir machine?"
- Anacho made a quizzical dissent. "I think not."
- Dordolio gave Reith a puzzled glance. "Is it Chasch or Wankh?" He veered at the
- engraved escutcheon. "What writing is this?"
- Anacho shrugged. "Nothing I can read."
- Dordolio asked Reith: "Can you read it?"
- "Yes, I believe so." Impelled by a sudden mischievous urge, Reith read:
- "Federal Space Agency
- Tool and Instrument Division
- Mark XI Photomultiplying Binocular Telescope
- 1x-1000x
- Nonprojective, inoperable in total darkness. BAF-1303-K-29023 Use Type D5 energy
- slug only. In poor light, engage color compensator switch. Do not look at sun or
- high-intensity illumination; if automatic light-gate fails, damage to the eyes
- may result."
- Dordolio stared. "What language is that?"
- "One of the many human dialects," said Reith.
- "But from what region? Men everywhere on Tschai, to my understanding, speak the
- same language."
- "Rather than embarrass you both," said Reith. "I prefer to say nothing. Continue
- to think of me as an amnesiac."
- "Do you take us for fools?" growled Dordolio. "Are we children to have our
- questions answered with flippant evasions?"
- "Sometimes," said Anacho, speaking into the air, "it is the part of wisdom to
- maintain a myth. Too much knowledge can become a burden."
- Dordolio gnawed at his mustache. From the corner of his eye he glanced at the
- scanscope, then swung abruptly away.
- Ahead three more islands had appeared, rising sharply from the sea, each with
- its wall and core of eccentric black buildings. A shadow lay on the horizon
- beyond: the mainland of Kachan.
- During the afternoon the shadow took on density and detail, to become a hulk of
- mountains rising from the sea. The Vargaz coasted north, almost in the shadow of
- the mountains, with black dip-winged kites swooping around the masts, emitting
- mournful hoots and clashing their mandibles. Late in the afternoon the mountains
- fell away to reveal a landlocked bay. A nondescript town occupied the south
- shore; from a promontory to the north rose a Wankh fortress, like a growth of
- undisciplined black crystals. A spaceport occupied the flat land to the east,
- where a number of spaceships of various styles and sizes were visible.
- Through the scanscope, Reith studied the landscape and the mountainside sloping
- down to the spacefield from the east. Interesting, mused Reith, interesting
- indeed.
- The captain, coming past, identified the port as Ao Hidis, one of the important
- Wankh centers. "I had no intent of faring south so far, but since we're here,
- I'll try to sell my leathers and the Grenie woods; then I'll take on Wankh
- chemicals for Cath. A word of warning for those of you who intend to roister
- ashore. There are two towns here: Ao Hidis proper, which is Man-town, and an
- unpronounceable sound which is Wankh-town. In Man-town are several kinds of
- people, including Lokhars, but mainly Blacks and Purples. They do not mingle;
- they recognize their own kind only. In the streets you may walk without fear,
- you may buy at any shop or booth with an open front. Do not enter any closed
- shop or tavern, either Black or Purple; you'll likely not come out.
- There are no public brothels. If you buy from a Black booth, do not stop at a
- Purple booth with your goods; you will be resented and perhaps insulted, or, in
- certain cases, attacked. The opposite holds true. As for Wankh-town, there is
- nothing to do except stare at the Wankh, to which you are welcome, for they do
- not seem to object. All considered, a dull port, with little amusement ashore."
- The Vargaz eased alongside a wharf flying a small purple pennon. "I patronized
- Purple on my last visit," the captain told Reith who had come up to the
- quarterdeck. "They gave good service at a fair price; I see no reason to
- change."
- The Vargaz was moored by Purple longshoremen: roundfaced, roundheaded men with a
- plum-colored cast to their complexion. From the neighboring Black dock Blacks
- looked on with aloof hostility. These were physiognomically similar to the
- Purples, but with gray skins oddly mottled with black.
- "No one knows the cause," the Captain said, in regard to the color disparity.
- "The same mother may produce one Purple child and one Black. Some blame diet;
- others drugs; others hold that disease attacks a color-gland in the mother's
- egg. But Black and Purple they are born; and each calls the other pariah. When
- Black and Purple breed, the union is sterile, or so it is said. The notion
- horrifies each race; they would as soon couple with nighthounds."
- "What of the Dirdirman?" asked Reith. "Is he likely to be molested?"
- "Bah. The Wankh take no notice of such trivia. The Blue Chasch are known for
- sadistic malice. Dirdir stringencies are unpredictable. But in my experience the
- Wankh are the most indifferent and remote people of Tschai, and seldom trouble
- with men. Perhaps they do their evil in secret like Pnume; no one knows. The
- Wankhmen are a different sort, cold as ghouls, and it is not wise to cross them.
- Well then, we are docked. Are you going ashore? Remember my warnings; Ao Hidis
- is a harsh city. Ignore both Black and Purple; talk to no one; interfere with
- nothing. Last visit I lost a seaman who bought a shawl at a Black shop, then
- drank wine at a Purple booth. He staggered aboard the ship with foam coming from
- his nose."
- Anacho chose to remain aboard the Vargaz. Reith went ashore with Traz. Crossing
- the dock they found themselves on a wide street paved with slabs of mica-schist.
- To either side were houses built crudely of stone and timber, surrounded by
- rubbish. A few motor vehicles of a type Reith had not previously seen moved
- along the street; Reith assumed them to be of Wankh manufacture.
- Around the shore to the north rose the Wankh towers. In this direction also lay
- the spaceport.
- There seemed to be no public conveyances; Reith and Traz set off on foot. The
- huts gave way to somewhat more pretentious dwellings, and then they came to a
- square surrounded on all sides by shops and booths. Half of the folk were Black,
- half Purple; neither took notice of the other. Blacks patronized Blacks; Purple
- shops and booths served Purples. Blacks and Purples jostled each other, without
- acknowledgment or apology. Detestation hung in the air like a reek.
- Reith and Traz crossed the square, continued north along a road paved with
- concrete, and presently came to a fence of tall glass rods surrounding the
- spacefield. Reith halted, surveyed the lie of the land.
- "I am not naturally a thief," he told Traz. "But notice the little spaceboat! I
- would gladly confiscate that from its present owner."
- "It is a Wankh boat," Traz pointed out pessimistically. "You would not know how
- to control it."
- Reith nodded. "True. But if I had time-a week or so-I could learn. Spacecraft
- are necessarily similar."
- "Think of the practicalities!" Traz admonished him.
- Reith concealed a grin. Traz occasionally reverted to the stern personality of
- Onmale, the near-vital emblem which Traz had worn at the time of their first
- meeting. Traz shook his head dubiously. "Are valuable vehicles left unattended,
- ready to fly off into the sky? Unlikely!"
- "No one seems to be aboard the small ship," argued Reith. "Even the freighters
- seem to be empty. Why should there be vigilance? Who would wish to steal them,
- except a person like myself?"
- "Well then, what if you managed to enter the ship?" Traz demanded. "Before you
- could understand how to operate the machinery, you would be found and killed."
- "No question but that the project is risky," agreed Reith.
- They returned to the port, and the Vargaz, when once more they were aboard,
- seemed a haven of normalcy.
- Cargo was discharged and loaded all during the night. In the morning with all
- passengers and crew members aboard, the Vargaz threw off moorings, hoisted sail
- and glided back out into the Draschade Ocean.
- The Vargaz sailed north under the bleak Kachan coast. On the first day a dozen
- Wankh keeps appeared ahead, passed abeam and were left in the haze astern. On
- the second day the Vargaz passed in front of three great fjords. From the last
- of these a motor galley plunged forth, wake churning up astern. The captain
- immediately sent two men to man the blast-cannon. The galley cut through the
- swells to pass behind the cog; the captain instantly put about and brought the
- cannon to bear once more. The galley swung away and off to sea, with the jeers
- and hoots from the men aboard coming faintly across the water.
- A week later Dragan, first of the Isles of Cloud, appeared on the port beam. On
- the following day the cog put into Wyness; here Palo Barba, his spouse, and his
- orange-haired daughters disembarked. Traz looked wistfully after them. Edwe
- turned and waved; then the family was lost to sight among the yellow silks and
- white linen cloaks of the dockside crowd.
- Two days the cog lay at Wyness, unloading cargo, taking on stores and fitting
- new sails; then the lines were thrown off and the cog put to sea.
- With a brisk wind from the west the Vargaz drove through the chop of the
- Parapan. A day passed and a night and another day, and the atmosphere aboard the
- Vargaz became suspenseful, with all hands looking east, trying to locate the
- loom of Charchan. Evening came; the sun sank into a sad welter of brown and gray
- and murky orange. The evening meal was a platter of dried fruit and pickled
- fish, which no one ate, preferring to stand by the rail. The night drew on; the
- wind lessened; one by one the passengers retired to their cabins. Reith remained
- on deck, musing upon the circumstances of his life. Time passed. From the
- quarterdeck came a grumble of orders; the main yard creaked down the mast and
- the Vargaz lost way. Reith went back to the rail. Through the dark glimmered a
- shine of far lights: the coast of Cath.
- CHAPTER SIX
- DAWN REVEALED A low-lying shore, black against the sepia sky. The mainsail was
- hoisted to the morning breeze; the Vargaz moved into the harbor of Vervodei.
- The sun rose to reveal the face of the sleeping city. To the north tall
- flatfaced buildings overlooked the harbor, to the south were wharves and
- warehouses.
- The Vargaz dropped anchor; the sails rattled down the mast. A pinnace rowed out
- with lines and the Vargaz was heaved sternfirst against a dock. Port officials
- came aboard, consulted with the captain, exchanged salutes with Dordolio and
- departed. The voyage was at an end.
- Reith bade the captain goodbye and with Traz and Anacho went ashore. As they
- stood on the dock Dordolio approached. He spoke in an offhand voice. "I now take
- my leave of you, since I depart immediately for Settra."
- Wary and wondering as to Dordolio's motives, Reith asked: "The Blue Jade Palace
- is at Settra?"
- "Yes, of course." Dordolio pulled at his mustache. "You need not concern
- yourself in this regard; I will convey all necessary news to the Blue Jade
- Lord."
- "Still, there is much that you do not know," said Reith. "In fact, nearly
- everything."
- "Your information will be of no great consolation," said Dordolio stiffly.
- "Perhaps not. But surely he will be interested."
- Dordolio shook his head in sad exasperation. "Quixotic! You know nothing of the
- ceremonies! Do you expect simply to walk up to the Lord and blurt out your tale?
- Crassness. And your clothes: unsuitable! Not to mention the marmoreal Dirdirman
- and the nomad lad."
- "We must trust to the courtesy and tolerance of the Blue Jade Lord," said Reith.
- "Bah," muttered Dordolio. "You have no shame." But still he delayed, frowning
- off up the street. He said, "You definitely plan to visit Settra then?"
- "Yes, of course."
- "Accept my advice. Tonight stop at one of the local inns-the Dulvan yonder is
- adequate-then tomorrow or the next day visit a reputable haberdasher and put
- yourself into his hands. Then, suitably clothed, come to Settra. The Travelers'
- Inn on the Oval will furnish you suitable accommodation. Under these
- circumstances, perhaps you will do me a service. I seem to have misplaced my
- funds, and I would be obliged to you for the loan of a hundred sequins to take
- me to Settra."
- "Certainly," said Reith. "But let us all go to Settra together."
- Dordolio made a petulant gesture. "I am in haste. Your preparations will consume
- time."
- "Not at all," said Reith. "We are ready at this moment. Lead the way."
- Dordolio scanned Reith from head to toe, in vast distaste. "The least I can do,
- for our mutual comfort, is to see you into respectable clothes. Come along
- then." He set off along the esplanade toward the center of town. Reith, Traz and
- Anacho followed, Traz seething with indignation. "Why do we suffer his
- arrogance?"
- "The Yao are mercurial folk," said Anacho. "Pointless to become disturbed."
- Away from the docks the city took on its own character. Wide, somewhat stark,
- streets ran between flat-faced buildings of glazed brick under steep roofs of
- brown tile. Everywhere a state of genteel dilapidation was evident. The activity
- of Coad was absent; the few folk abroad carried themselves with self-effacing
- reserve. Some wore complicated suits, white linen shirts, cravats tied in
- complex knots and bows. Others, apparently of lesser status, wore loose breeches
- of green or tan, jackets and blouses of various subdued colors.
- Dordolio led the way to a large open-fronted shop, in which several dozen men
- and women sat sewing garments. Signaling to the three following him, Dordolio
- entered the shop. Reith, Anacho, and Traz entered and waited while Dordolio
- spoke energetically to the bald old proprietor.
- Dordolio came to confer with Reith. "I have described your needs; the clothier
- will fit you from his stock, at no large expense."
- Three pale young men appeared, wheeling racks of finished garments. The
- proprietor made swift selection, laid them before Reith, Traz, and Anacho.
- "These I believe will suit the gentlemen. If they would care to change
- immediately, the dressing rooms are at hand "
- Reith inspected the garments critically. The cloth seemed a trifle coarse; the
- colors were somewhat raw. Reith glanced at Anacho, whose reflective smile
- reinforced his own assumptions. Reith said to Dordolio: "Your own clothes are
- the worse for wear. Why not try on this suit?"
- Dordolio stood back with eyebrows raised high. "I am satisfied with what I
- wear."
- Reith put down the garments. "These are not suitable," he told the clothier.
- "Show me your catalog, or whatever you work from."
- "As you wish, sir."
- Reith, with Anacho watching gravely, looked through a hundred or so color
- sketches. He pointed to a conservatively cut suit of dark blue. "What of this?"
- Dordolio made an impatient sound. "The garments a wealthy vegetable grower might
- wear to an intimate funeral."
- Reith indicated another costume. "What of this?"
- "Even less appropriate: the lounge clothes of an elderly philosopher at his
- country estate."
- "Hm. Well then," Reith told the clothier, "show me the clothes a somewhat
- younger philosopher of impeccable good taste would wear on a casual visit to the
- city."
- Dordolio gave a snort. He started to speak but thought better of it and turned
- away. The clothier gave order to his assistants. Reith looked at Anacho with an
- appraising frown. "For this gentleman, the traveling costume of a high-caste
- dignitary." And for Traz: "A young gentleman's casual dress."
- New garments appeared, conspicuously different from those ordered out by
- Dordolio. The three changed; the clothier made small adjustments while Dordolio
- stood to the side, pulling at his mustache. At last he could no longer restrain
- a comment. "Handsome garments, of course. But are they appropriate? You will
- puzzle folk when your conduct belies your appearance."
- Anacho spoke scornfully. "Would you have us visit Settra dressed like bumpkins?
- The clothes you selected hardly carried a flattering association."
- "What does it matter?" cried Dordolio in a brassy voice. "A fugitive Dirdirman,
- a nomad boy, a mysterious nonesuch: is it not absurd to trick such folk out in
- noblemen's costume?"
- Reith laughed; Anacho fluttered his fingers; Traz turned Dordolio a glance of
- infinite disgust. Reith paid the account.
- "Now then," muttered Dordolio, "to the airport. Since you demand the best, we
- shall charter an air-car."
- "Not so fast," said Reith. "As usual you miscalculate. There must be another,
- less ostentatious, means to reach Settra."
- "Naturally," said Dordolio with a sneer. "But folk who dress like lords should
- act like lords."
- "We are modest lords," said Reith. He spoke to the clothier. "How do you usually
- travel to Settra?"
- "I am a man with no great regard or 'place' ;* I ride the public wheelway."
- Reith turned back to Dordolio. "If you plan to travel by private air-car, this
- is where we part."
- "Gladly; if you will advance me five hundred sequins."
- Reith shook his head. "I think not."
- "Then I also must travel by wheelway."
- As they strode up the street Dordolio became somewhat more cordial. "You will
- find that the Yao set great store by consistency, and a harmony of attributes.
- You are dressed as persons of quality, no doubt you will conduct yourselves in
- consonance. Affairs will adjust themselves."
- At the wheelway depot Dordolio bespoke first class accommodation from the clerk;
- a short while later a long car trundled up to the platform, riding a
- wedge-shaped concrete slot on two great wheels. The four entered a compartment,
- seated themselves on red plush chairs. With a lurch and a grind, the car left
- the station and trundled off into the Cath countryside.
- Reith found the car intriguing and somewhat of a puzzle. The motors were small,
- powerful, of sophisticated design; why was the car itself so awkwardly built?
- The wheels-when the car reached top speed, perhaps seventy miles an hour-rode on
- cushions of trapped air, at times with silken smoothness, until the wheels came
- to breaks in the slot, whereupon the car jerked and vibrated abominably. The
- Yao, reflected Reith, seemed to be good theoreticians but poor engineers.
- The car rumbled across an ancient cultivated countryside, more civilized than
- any Reith had yet seen on Tschai. A haze hung in the air, tinting the sunlight
- antique yellow; shadows were blacker than black. In and out of forests rolled
- the car, beside orchards of gnarled black-leaved trees, past parks and manors,
- ruined stone walls, villages in which only half the houses seemed tenanted.
- After climbing to an upland moor, the car struck east over marshes and bogs, to
- outcrops of rotting limestone. No human being was in sight, though several times
- Reith thought to discern ruined castles in the distance.
- "Ghost country," said Dordolio. "This is Audan Moor; have you heard of it?"
- "Never," said Reith.
- "A desolate region, as you can see. The haunt of outlaws, even an occasional
- Phung. After dark the night-hounds bell..."
- Down from Audan Moor rolled the wheelway car, into a countryside of great charm.
- Everywhere were ponds and watercourses, overlooked by towering black, brown and
- rust-colored trees. On small islands stood tall houses with high-pitched gables
- and elaborate balconies. Dordolio pointed off to the east. "See yonder, the
- great manse in front of the forest? Gold and Carnelian: the palace of my
- connections. Behind but you cannot see-is Halmeur, an outer district of Settra."
- The car swung through a forest and came out into a region of scattered
- farmsteads with the domes and spires of Settra on the sky ahead. A few minutes
- later the car entered a depot and rolled to a halt. The passengers alighted, and
- walked to a terrace. Here Dordolio said: "Now I must leave you. Across the Oval
- you will find the Travelers' Inn, to which I recommend you and where I will send
- a messenger with the sum of my debt." He paused and cleared his throat. "If a
- freak of destiny brings us together in another setting-for instance, you have
- evinced a somewhat unrealistic ambition to make yourself acquainted with the
- Blue Jade Lord-it might serve our mutual purposes were we not to recognize each
- other."
- "I can think of no reason for wanting to do so," said Reith politely.
- Dordolio glanced at him sharply, then made a formal salute. "I wish you good
- fortune." He walked off across the square, his strides lengthening as he went.
- Reith turned to Traz and Anacho. "You two go to the Travelers' Inn, arrange for
- accommodations. I'm off to the Blue jade Palace. With any luck I'll arrive
- before Dordolio, who seems in a peculiar state of haste."
- He walked to a line of motorized tricycles, climbed aboard the first in line.
- "The Blue Jade Palace, with all speed," he told the driver.
- The mechanism spun off to the south, past buildings of glazed brick and dim
- glass panes, then into a district of small timber cottages, then past a great
- outdoor market, a scene as brisk and variegated as any Reith had observed in
- Cath. Turning aside, the motor-buggy nosed across an ancient stone bridge,
- through a portal in a stone wall into a large circular plaza. Around the
- periphery were booths, for the most part unoccupied and barren of goods; at the
- center a short ramp led up to a circular platform, at the back of which rose a
- bank of seats. A rectangular frame occupied the front of the platform, of
- dimensions which Reith found morbidly suggestive.
- "What is this place?" he asked the driver, who gave him a glance of mild wonder.
- "The Circle, site of Pathetic Communion, as you can see. You are a stranger in
- Settra?"
- "Yes."
- The driver consulted a yellow cardboard schedule. "The next event is Ivensday,
- when a nineteen-score comes to clarify his horrible desperation. Nineteen! The
- most since the twenty-two of Agate Crystal's Lord Wis."
- "You mean he killed nineteen?"
- "Of course; what else? Four were children, but still a feat these days when folk
- are wary of awaile. All Settra will come to the expiation. If you're still in
- town you could hardly do more for your own soul's profit."
- "Probably so. How far to Blue Jade Palace?"
- "Through Dalmere and we're almost there."
- "I'm in a hurry," said Reith. "As fast as possible."
- "Indeed sir, but if I wreck or injure, I'll feel extraordinary shame, to my
- soul's sickness, and I would not care to risk despondency."
- "Understandable."
- The motor-buggy spun along a wide boulevard, dodging and veering to avoid
- potholes. Enormous trees, black-trunked with brown and purple-green foliage,
- overhung the way; to either side, shrouded in dark gardens, were mansions of the
- most extraordinary architecture. The driver pointed. "Yonder on the hill: Blue
- Jade Palace. Which entrance do you favor, sir?" He inspected Reith quizzically.
- "Drive to the front," said Reith. "Where else?"
- "As you say, your lordship. Although most of the fronters don't arrive in
- three-wheel motor-buggies."
- Up the driveway rolled the vehicle, and under a porte cochere the buggy halted.
- Paying the fare, Reith alighted upon a silken cloth laid under his feet by a
- pair of bowing footmen. Reith walked briskly through an open arch into a room
- paneled with mirrors. A myriad prisms of crystal hung tinkling on silver chains.
- A majordomo wearing russet velvet livery bowed deeply. "Your lordship is at
- home. Will you rest or take a cordial, though my Lord Cizante impatiently awaits
- the privilege of greeting you."
- "I will see him at once; I am Adam Reith."
- "Lord of which realm?"
- "Tell Lord Cizante that I bring important information."
- The majordomo looked at Reith uncertainly, his face twisting through a dozen
- subtle emotions. Reith understood that already he had committed gaucheries. No
- matter, he thought, the Blue Jade Lord will have to make allowance.
- The majordomo signaled, a trifle less obsequiously than before. "Be good enough
- to come this way."
- Reith was taken into a small court murmuring to a waterfall of luminous green
- liquid.
- Two minutes passed. A young man in green knickers and an elegant waistcoat
- appeared. His face was wax pale, as if he never saw sunlight; his eyes were
- somber and brooding; under a loose four-corner cap of soft green velvet his hair
- was jet black: a man richly handsome, by some extraordinary means contriving to
- seem both effete and competent. He examined Reith with critical interest, and
- spoke in a dry voice. "Sir, you claim to have information for the Blue Jade
- Lord?"
- "Yes. Are you he?"
- "I am his aide. You may impart your information to me with assurance."
- "I have news relating to the fate of his daughter," said Reith. "I prefer to
- speak to the Blue Jade Lord directly."
- The aide made a curious mincing motion and disappeared. Presently he returned.
- "Your name, sir?"
- "Adam Reith."
- "Follow me, if you will."
- He took Reith into a wainscoted room enameled a brownish ivory, lit by a dozen
- luminous prisms. At the far end stood a frail frowning man in an extravagant
- eight-piece suit of black and purple silk. His face was round, dark hair grew
- down his forehead in an elflock; his eyes were dark, far apart, and his tendency
- was to glance sidelong. The face, thought Reith, of a secretive suspicious man.
- He examined Reith with a compression of the lips.
- "Lord Cizante," said the aide, "I bring you the gentleman Adam Reith, heretofore
- unknown, who, chancing past, was pleased to learn that you were in the
- vicinity."
- There was an expectant silence. Reith understood that the circumstances demanded
- a ritual response. He said, "I am pleased, naturally, to find Lord Cizante in
- residence. I have only this hour arrived from Kotan."
- Cizante's mouth tightened, and Reith knew that once again he had made a
- graceless remark.
- Cizante spoke in a crisp voice. "Indeed. You have news regarding the Lady Shar
- Zarin?"
- This was the Flower's court name. Reith responded in a voice as cool as
- Cizante's own. "Yes. I can give you a detailed account of her experiences, and
- her unfortunate death."
- The Blue Jade Lord looked toward the ceiling and spoke without lowering his
- eyes. "You evidently claim the boon?"
- The majordomo entered the room, whispered to the aide, who discreetly murmured
- to Lord Cizante.
- "Curious!" declared Cizante. "One of the Gold and Carnelian scions, a certain
- Dordolio, likewise comes to claim the boon."
- "Send him away," said Reith. "His knowledge of the matter is superficial, as you
- will learn."
- "My daughter is dead?"
- "I am sorry to say that she drowned herself, after an attack of psychic
- malaise."
- The Lord's eyebrows rose more sharply than before. "She gave way to awaile?"
- "I would suppose so."
- "When and where did this take place?"
- "Three weeks ago, aboard the cog Vargaz, halfway across the Draschade."
- Lord Cizante dropped into a chair. Reith waited for an invitation to do
- likewise, but thought better of seating himself. Lord Cizante spoke in a dry
- voice: "Evidently she had suffered deep humiliation."
- "I couldn't say. I helped her escape from the Priestesses of the Female Mystery;
- thereafter she was secure and under my protection. She was anxious to return to
- Cath and urged me to accompany her, assuring me of your friendship and
- gratitude. But as soon as we started eastward she became gloomy, and, as I say,
- halfway across the Draschade she threw herself overboard."
- While Reith spoke Cizante's face had shifted through phases and degrees of
- various emotions. "So now," he said in a clipped voice, "with my daughter dead,
- after circumstances I do not care to imagine, you come hurrying here to claim
- the boon."
- Reith said coldly, "I knew then and know nothing now of this 'boon.' I came to
- Cath for several reasons, the least important of which was to make myself known
- to you. I find you indisposed to what I consider civilized standards of courtesy
- and I will now leave." Reith gave a curt nod and started for the door. He turned
- back. "If you wish to learn further details regarding your daughter, consult
- Dordolio, whom we found stranded at Coad."
- Reith left the room. The Lord's sibilant murmur reached his ears: "You are an
- uncouth fellow."
- In the hall waited the majordomo, who greeted Reith with the faintest of smiles.
- He indicated a rather dim passageway painted red and blue. "This way, sir."
- Reith paid him no heed. Crossing into the grand foyer, he left the way he had
- come.
- CHAPTER SEVEN
- REITH WALKED BACK toward the Oval, pondering the city Settra and the curious
- temperament of its people. He was forced to admit that the scheme to build a
- small spaceboat, which in far-off Pera had appeared at least feasible, now
- seemed impractical. He had expected gratitude and friendship from the Blue Jade
- Lord; he had encountered hostility. As to the technical abilities of the Yao, he
- was inclined to pessimism, and he fell to appraising the vehicles which passed
- along the street. They appeared to function satisfactorily, though giving the
- impression that flair and elegance, rather than efficiency, had been first in
- the minds of the designers. Energy derived from the ubiquitious power cells
- produced by the Dirdir; the coupling was not altogether quiet: an indication, so
- Reith considered, of careless or incompetent engineering. No two were alike;
- each seemed an individual construction.
- Almost certainly, reflected Reith, the Yao technology was inadequate to his
- purposes. Without access to standard components, maxima-minima sets, integrated
- circuit blocks, structural forms, computers, Fourier analyzers, macro-gauss
- generators, a thousand other instruments, tools, gauges, standards, not to
- mention clever and dedicated technical personnel, the construction of even the
- crudest spaceboat became a stupendous task, impossible in a single lifetime ...
- He came to a small circular park, shadowed under tall psillas with shaggy black
- bark and leaves of russet paper. At the center rose a massive monument. A dozen
- male figures, each carrying an instrument or tool, danced in a dreadful ritual
- grace around a female form, who stood with arms raised high, upturned face
- twisted in some overpowering emotion. Reith could not identify her expression.
- Exultation? Agony? Grief? Beatification? Whatever the case, the monument was
- disturbing, and rasped at a dark corner of his mind like a mouse in the
- woodwork. The monument seemed very old, thousands of years? Reith could not be
- sure. A small girl and a somewhat younger boy came past. They paused first to
- study Reith; then gave fascinated attention to the gliding figures and their
- macabre instruments. Reith, in a somber mood, continued on his way and presently
- came to the Travelers' Inn. Neither Traz nor the Dirdirman were on the premises.
- They had, however, hired accommodations: a suite of four rooms overlooking the
- Oval.
- Reith bathed, changed his linen. When he went down to the foyer, twilight had
- come to the Oval, which was now lit by a ring of great luminous globes in a
- variety of pastel colors. Traz and Anacho appeared on the other side of the
- Oval. Reith watched them with a wry grin. They were basically alien, like cat
- and dog; yet, when circumstances threw them together, they conducted themselves
- with cautious good-fellowship.
- Anacho and Traz, so it developed, had chanced upon an area known as "the Mall,"
- where cavaliers settled affairs of honor. In the course of the afternoon the two
- had watched three bouts: near-bloodless affairs, Traz reported with a sniff of
- scorn. "The ceremonies exhaust their energy," said Anacho. "After the addresses
- and the punctilio there is little time for fighting."
- "The Yao, if anything, are more peculiar than the Dirdirman," said Reith.
- "Ha ha! I dispute that! You know a single Dirdirman. I can show you a thousand
- and confuse you totally. But come; the refectory is around the corner. If
- nothing else, the Yao cuisine is satisfactory."
- The three dined in a wide room hung with tapestries. As usual Reith could not
- identify what he ate, and did not care to learn. There was yellow broth, faintly
- sweet, with floating flakes of pickled bark; slices of pale meat layered with
- flower petals; a celery-like vegetable crusted with crumbs of a fiery-hot spice;
- cakes flavored with musk and resin; black berries with a flavor of the swamp;
- clear white wine which tingled the mouth.
- In an adjacent tavern the three took after-dinner liquors. The clientele
- included many non-Yao folk, who seemed to use the place as a rendezvous. One of
- these, a tall old man in a leather bonnet, somewhat the worse for drink, peered
- into Reith's face. "But I'm wrong, for a fact. I thought you a Vect of Holangar;
- then I asked myself, where are his tongs? And I said, no, it is just another of
- the anomes who creep into Travelers' Inn for a sight of their own kind."
- "I'd like a sight of my own kind," said Reith. "Nothing would please me more."
- "Yes, isn't this the case? What sort are you, then? I can't put a name to your
- face."
- "A wanderer from far lands."
- "No farther than mine, which is the far coast of Vord, where Cape Dread holds
- back the Schanizade. I have seen sights, I tell you! Raids on Arkady! Battles
- with sea-folk! I remember an occasion when we drove into the mountains and
- destroyed the bandits ... I was a young man then and a great soldier; now I toil
- for the ease of the Yao, and earn my own ease thereby, and it is not so hard a
- life."
- "I should suppose not. You are a technician?"
- "Nothing so grand. I inspect wheels at the car yard."
- "Many foreign technicians are at work in Settra?"
- "True. Cath is comfortable enough, if you can overlook the vagaries of the Yao."
- "What about Wankhmen? Are there any such in Settra?"
- "At work? Never. When I sojourned at Ao Zalil, to the east of Lake Falas, I saw
- how it went. The Wankhmen will not even work for the Wankh; they have sufficient
- exertion pronouncing the Wankh chimes. Though usually they play the chords on
- remarkable little instruments."
- "Who works in the Wankh shops? Blacks and Purples?"
- "Bah! One might be forced to handle an article the other had touched.
- Back-country Lokhars for the most part work in the shops. For ten or twenty
- years, or longer, they toil, then they return to their villages rich men.
- Wankhmen at work in the shops? What a joke! They are as proud as Dirdirman
- Immaculates! I see a Dirdirman beside you tonight."
- "Yes, he is my comrade."
- "Odd to find a Dirdirman so common!" marveled the old man. "I have seen only
- three previously and all treated me like dirt." He drained his goblet, set it
- down with a rap. "Now I must leave; I bid all good evening, Dirdirman as well."
- The old man departed. With almost the same swing of the door a pale black-haired
- young man dressed unobtrusively in dark blue broadcloth entered the tavern.
- Somewhere, thought Reith, he had seen this young man, and recently.. . Where?
- The man walked slowly, almost absentmindedly, along the passage beside the wall.
- He went to the serving counter, was poured a goblet of sharp syrup. As he turned
- away his gaze met that of Reith's. He nodded politely and after a moment's
- hesitation approached. Reith now recognized him for Cizante's pallid young aide.
- "Good evening," said the young man. "Perhaps you recognize me? I am Helsse of
- Isan, a Blue jade connection. I believe that we met today."
- "I had a few words with your master, true enough."
- Helsse sipped from his goblet, made a fastidious grimace, placed the goblet on
- the bar. "Let's move to a more secluded place, where we can talk."
- Reith spoke to Traz and Anacho, then turned back to Helsse. "Lead the way."
- Helsse glanced casually toward the front entrance but chose to leave through the
- restaurant. As they departed Reith glimpsed a man thrusting into the tavern, to
- glare wildly around the room: Dordolio.
- Helsse appeared not to notice. "Nearby is a little cabaret, not overly genteel,
- but as good as anywhere else for our talk."
- The cabaret was a low-ceilinged room, lit by red and blue lamps with
- blue-painted booths around the periphery. A number of musicians sat on a
- platform, two of whom played small gongs and drum, while a male dancer strode
- sinuously this way and that. Helsse selected a booth near the door, as far as
- possible from the musicians; the two seated themselves on blue cushions. Helsse
- ordered two drams of "Wildwood Tincture" which were presently brought to the
- table.
- The dancer departed, the musicians undertook a new selection, with instruments
- similar to oboe, flute, cello, and a kettledrum. Reith listened for a moment,
- puzzled by the plaintive scraping, the thumps of the kettledrum, the sudden
- excited trills of the flute.
- Helsse leaned solicitously forward. "You are unfamiliar with Yao music? I
- thought as much. This is one of the traditional forms: a lament."
- "It could never be mistaken for a cheerful composition."
- "A question of degree." Helsse went on to list a series of musical forms, of
- decreasing optimism. "I do not mean to imply that the Yao are a dour folk; you
- need only attend one of the season balls to appreciate this."
- "I doubt if I will be invited," said Reith.
- The orchestra embarked upon another selection, a series of passionate phrases,
- taken up by each instrument at varying instants, to terminate in a wild
- sustained quaver. By some cross sensoral stimulus, Reith thought of the monument
- in the circular park. "The music bears some connection with your ritual of
- expiation?"
- Helsse smiled distantly. "I have heard it said that the spirit of Pathetic
- Communion permeates the Yao psyche."
- "Interesting." Reith waited. Helsse had not brought him here to discuss music.
- "I trust that the events of this afternoon caused you no inconvenience?" asked
- Helsse.
- "None whatever, other than irritation."
- "You did not expect the boon?"
- "I knew nothing of it. I expected ordinary courtesy, certainly. My reception by
- Lord Cizante, in retrospect, seems remarkable."
- Helsse nodded sagely. "He is a remarkable man. But now he finds himself in an
- awkward position. Immediately upon your departure the cavalier Dordolio
- presented himself to denounce you as an interloper, and to demand the boon for
- himself. To be quite candid, such a proceeding, on Dordolio's terms, would
- embarrass Lord Cizante, when one takes all into consideration. You perhaps would
- not be aware that Blue Jade and Gold-Carnelian are rival houses. Lord Cizante
- suspects that Dordolio would use the boon to humiliate Blue Jade, with what
- consequences no one can foresee."
- Reith asked: "Exactly what was the boon promised by Cizante?"
- "Emotion overcame his reserve," said Helsse. "He declared: 'Whoever returns me
- my daughter or so much as brings me news, let him ask and I will fulfill as best
- I can.' Strong language, as you see, uttered only for the ears of Blue Jade, but
- the news circulated."
- "It appears," said Reith, "that I do Cizante a favor by accepting his bounty."
- "This is what we wish to ascertain," said Helsse carefully. "Dordolio has made a
- number of scurrilous statements in regard to you. He declares you a
- superstitious barbarian intent on reviving the 'cult.' If you demanded that Lord
- Cizante convert his palace into a temple and himself join the 'cult,' he might
- well prefer Dordolio's terms."
- "Even though I appeared first on the scene?"
- "Dordolio claims trickery, and is violently angry. But all this to the side,
- what might you demand of Lord Cizante, in light of the circumstances?"
- Reith considered. Unfortunately, he could not afford the prideful luxury of
- refusal. "I'm not sure. I could use some unprejudiced advice, but I don't know
- where to find it."
- "Try me," suggested Helsse.
- "You are hardly unprejudiced."
- "Much more than you might think."
- Reith studied the pale handsome face, the still black eyes. A puzzling man was
- Helsse, the more so for his impersonality, neither cordial nor cold. He spoke
- with ostensible candor but permitted no inadvertent or unconscious signals to
- advertise the state of his inner self.
- The orchestra had dispersed. To the platform came a somewhat obese man in a long
- maroon robe. Behind him sat a woman with long black hair plucking a lute. The
- man produced an ululating wail: half-words which Reith was unable to comprehend.
- "Another traditional melody?" he inquired.
- Helsse shrugged. "A special mode of singing. It is not altogether without value.
- If everyone belabored themselves thusly, there would be far less awaile.'
- Reith listened. "Judge me harshly, all," moaned the singer. "I have performed a
- terrible crime; it is because of my despair."
- "Offhand," said Reith, "it seems absurd to discuss my best advantage over Lord
- Cizante with Cizante's aide."
- "Ah, but your best advantage is not necessarily Lord Cizante's disadvantage,"
- said Helsse. "With Dordolio the case is different."
- "Lord Cizante showed me no great courtesy," mused Reith. "I am not anxious to do
- him a favor. On the other hand, I do not care to assist Dordolio, who calls me a
- superstitious barbarian."
- "Lord Cizante was perhaps shocked by your news," suggested Helsse. "As for
- Dordolio's charge, it is obviously inaccurate and need no longer be considered."
- Reith grinned. "Dordolio has known me a month; can you dispute him on the basis
- of such short acquaintance?"
- If he had hoped to discomfit Helsse, he was unsuccessful. Helsse's smile was
- bland. "I am usually correct in my appraisals."
- "Suppose that I were to make a set of apparently wild assertions: that Tschai
- was flat, that the tenets of the 'cult' were correct, that men could live
- underwater-what would become of your opinion?"
- Helsse considered soberly. "Each case is different. If you told me Tschai was
- flat, I would certainly revise my judgment. If you argued the creed of the
- 'cult,' I would suspend a decision and listen to your remarks, for here is a
- matter of opinion and no evidence exists, at least to my knowledge. If you
- insisted that men could live underwater I might be inclined to accept the
- statement as a working premise. After all, the Pnume submerge, as do the Wankh;
- why not men, perhaps with special equipment?"
- "Tschai is not flat," said Reith. "Men are able to live underwater for short
- periods using artificial gills. I know nothing of the 'cult' or its doctrines."
- Helsse sipped from his goblet of essence. The singer had departed; a dance
- troupe now came forth: men in black leggings and sleeves, nude from upper thigh
- to rib cage. Reith stared in fascination for a moment or two, then looked away.
- "Traditional dances," explained Helsse, "relating to Pathetic Communion. This is
- 'Precursory Movement of the Ministrants toward the Expiator."'
- "The 'ministrants' are torturers?"
- "They are those who provide latitude for absolute expiation. Many become popular
- heroes because of their passionate techniques." Helsse rose to his feet. "Come.
- You have implied at least a mild interest in the 'cult.' As it happens, I know
- the location of their meeting place, which is not far from here. If you are
- interested, I will take you there."
- "If the visit is not contrary to the laws of Cath."
- "No fear of that. Cath has no laws, only customs, which seems to suit the Yao
- well enough."
- "Peculiar," said Reith. "Killing is not proscribed?"
- "It offends custom, at least under certain circumstances. However, the
- professional assassins of the Guild and the Service Company work without public
- reproach. In general the folk of Cath do what they see fit and suffer more or
- less opprobrium. So you may visit the 'cult' and incur, at the worse,
- invective."
- Reith rose to his feet. "Very well; lead the way."
- They walked across the Oval, through a winding alley into a dim avenue. The
- eccentric silhouettes of the houses opposite leaned across the sky, where Az and
- Braz both ranged. Helsse rapped at a door displaying a pale blue phosphor. The
- two men waited in silence. The door opened a crack; a long-nosed face peered
- forth.
- "Visitors," said Helsse. "May we come in?"
- "You are associates? I must inform you that here is the district center for the
- Society of Yearning Refluxives."
- "We are not associates. This gentleman is an outlander who wishes to learn
- something of the 'cult."'
- "He is welcome and yourself as well, since you seem to have no concern for
- 'place.' "
- "None whatever."
- "Which marks you either the highest of the high or the lowest of the low. Enter
- then. We have little entertainment to offer-convictions, a few theories, fewer
- facts." The Refluxive swept aside a curtain. "Enter."
- Helsse and Reith stepped into a large low room. To one side, forlorn in so much
- vacant space, two men and two women sat drinking tea from iron pots.
- The Refluxive made a half-obsequious, half-sardonic gesture. "Here we are; stare
- yourself full at the dreadful 'cult.' Have you ever seen anything less
- obstreperous?"
- "The 'cult,"' said Helsse, somewhat sententiously, "is despised not for the look
- of its meeting halls, but for its provocative assumptions."
- "'Assumptions' bah!" declared the Refluxive in a voice of peevish complaint.
- "The others persecute us but we are the chosen in knowledge."
- Reith asked: "What, precisely, do you know?"
- "We know that men are strangers to Tschai."
- "How can you know this?" demanded Helsse. "Human history fades into murk."
- "It is an intuitive Truth. We are equally certain that someday the Human Magi
- will call their seed back Home! And then what joy! Home is a world of bounty,
- with air that rejoices in the lungs, like the sweetest Iphthal wine! On Home are
- golden mountains crowned with opals and forests of dreams! Death is a strange
- accident, not a fate; all men wander with joy and peace for company, with
- delicious viands everywhere for the eating!"
- "A delightful vision," said Helsse, "but do you not consider it somewhat
- conjectural? Or more properly, institutional dogma?"
- "Possibly so," declared the stubborn Refluxive. "Still, dogma is not necessarily
- falsehood. These are revealed truths, and behold: the revealed image of Home!"
- He pointed to a world globe three feet in diameter hanging at eye-level.
- Reith went to inspect the globe, tilting his head this way and that, trying to
- identify outline of sea and shore, finding here a haunting familiarity, there
- utter disparity. Helsse came to stand beside him. "What does it look like to
- you?" His voice was light and careless.
- "Nothing in particular."
- Helsse gave a soft grunt of mingled relief and perhaps disappointment, or so it
- seemed to Reith.
- One of the women lifted her obese body from the bench and came forward. "Why not
- join the Society?" she wheedled. "We need new faces, new blood, to augment the
- vast new tide. Won't you help us make contact with Home?"
- Reith laughed. "Is there a practical method?"
- "To be sure! Telepathy! Indeed, we have no other recourse."
- "Why not a spaceship?"
- The woman seemed bewildered, and looked sharply to see if Reith was serious.
- "Where could we lay our hands on a spaceship?"
- "They are nowhere to be bought? Even a small one?"
- "I have never heard of such a case."
- "Nor I," was Helsse's dry comment.
- "Where would we fare?" demanded the woman, half truculently. "Home is situated
- in the constellation Clari, but space is vast; we would drift forever."
- "The problems are large," Reith agreed. "Still, assuming that your premise is
- correct-"
- " 'Assume'? 'Premise'?" demanded the fat woman in a shocked voice. 'Revelation,'
- rather."
- "Possibly so. But mysticism is not a practical approach to space travel. Let us
- suppose that by one means or another, you find yourself in command of a
- spaceship, then you might very easily verify the basis of your belief. Simply
- fly into the constellation Clari, halting at appropriate intervals to monitor
- the area for radio signals. Sooner or later, if the world Home exists, a
- suitable instrument will detect the signals."
- "Interesting," said Helsse. "You assume that such a world, if it exists, is
- sufficiently advanced to propagate these signals?"
- Reith shrugged. "Since we're assuming the world, why not assume the signals?"
- Helsse had nothing to say. The Refluxive declared, "Ingenious but superficial!
- How, for instance, would we obtain a spaceship?"
- "With sufficient funds and technical competence you could build a small vessel."
- "To begin with," said the Refluxive, "we have no such funds."
- "The least of the difficulties, or so I would think," murmured Helsse.
- "The second possibility is to buy a small boat from one of the spacefaring
- peoples: the Dirdir, the Wankh, or perhaps even the Blue Chasch."
- "Again a question of sequins," said the Refluxive. "How much would a spaceboat
- cost?"
- Reith looked at Helsse, who pursed his lips. "Half a million sequins, should
- anyone be willing to sell, which I doubt."
- "The third possibility is the most direct," said Reith. "Confiscation, pure and
- simple."
- "Confiscation? From whom? Though members of the 'cult' we are not yet lunatics."
- The fat woman gave a sniff of disapproval. "The man is a wild romantic."
- The Refluxive said gently, "We would gladly accept you as an associate, but you
- must discover orthodox methodology. Classes in thought control and projective
- telepathy are offered twice a week, on Ilsday and Azday. If you care to attend-"
- "I'm afraid that this is impossible," said Reith. "But your program is
- interesting and I hope it brings fruitful returns."
- Helsse made a courteous sign; the two departed.
- They walked along the quiet avenue in silence. Then Helsse inquired: "What is
- your opinion now?"
- "The situation speaks for itself," said Reith.
- "You are convinced then that their doctrine is implausible?"
- "I would not go quite so far. Scientists have undoubtedly found biological links
- between Pnume, Phung, night-hounds, and other indigenous creatures. Blue Chasch,
- Green Chasch, and Old Chasch are similarly related, as are all the races of man.
- But Pnume, Wankh, Chasch, Dirdir, and Man are biologically distinct. What does
- this suggest to you?"
- "I agree that the circumstances are puzzling. Have you any explanation?"
- "I feel that more facts are needed. Perhaps the Refluxives will become adept
- telepathists, and surprise us all."
- Helsse walked along in silence. They turned a corner. Reith pulled Helsse to a
- halt. "Quiet!" He waited.
- The shuffle of footsteps sounded; a dark shape rounded the corner. Reith seized
- the figure, spun it around, applied an arm and neck lock. Helsse made one or two
- tentative motions; Reith, trusting no one, kept him in his field of vision.
- "Make a light," said Reith. "Let's see whom we have. Or what."
- Helsse brought forth a glow-bulb, held it up. The captive squirmed, kicked,
- lurched; Reith tightened his grip and felt the snap of a bone, but the figure,
- sagging, toppled Reith off balance. From the unseen face came a hiss of triumph;
- it snatched itself free. Then, to a flicker of metal, it gave a gasp of pain.
- Helsse held up his glow-bulb, disengaged his dagger from the back of the
- twitching shape, while Reith stood by, mouth twisted in disapproval. "You are
- quick with your blade."
- Helsse shrugged. "His kind carry stings." He turned the body over with his foot;
- a small tinkle sounded as a glass sliver fell against the stone.
- The two peered curiously into the white face, half-shrouded under the brim of an
- extravagantly wide black hat.
- "He hats himself like a Pnumekin," said Helsse, "and he is pale as a ghost."
- "Or a Wankhman," said Reith.
- "But I think he is something different from either; what, I could not say.
- Perhaps a hybrid, a mingling, which, so it is said, makes the best personnel for
- spy work."
- Reith dislodged the hat, to reveal a stark bald pate. The face was fine-boned,
- somewhat loosely-muscled; the nose was thin and limber and terminated in a lump.
- The eyes, half-open, seemed to be black. Bending close, Reith thought that the
- scalp had been shaven.
- Helsse looked uneasily up and down the street. "Come, we must hurry away, before
- the patrol finds us and issues an information."
- "Not so fast," said Reith. "No one is near. Hold the light; stand yonder, where
- you can see along the street." Helsse reluctantly obeyed and Reith was able to
- watch him sidelong as he searched the corpse. The garments had a queer musky
- odor; Reith's stomach jerked as he felt here and there. From an inner pocket of
- the cloak he took a clip of paper. At the belt hung a soft leather pouch, which
- he detached.
- "Come!" hissed Helsse. "We must not be discovered, we would lose all 'place."'
- They proceeded back to the Oval and across to the Travelers' Inn. In the arcade
- before the entrance they paused. "The evening was interesting," said Reith. "I
- learned a great deal."
- "I wish I could say the same," said Helsse. "What did you take from the dead
- man?"
- Reith displayed the pouch, which contained a handful of sequins. He brought
- forth the clip of paper, and the two examined it in the light streaming out of
- the inn, to find rows of a peculiar writing: a series of rectangles, variously
- shaded and marked.
- Helsse looked at Reith. "Do you recognize this script?"
- "No."
- Helsse gave a short sharp bark of laughter. "It is Wankh."
- "Hm. What would be the significance of this?"
- "Simply more mystery. Settra is a hive of intrigue. Spies are everywhere."
- "And spy devices? Microphones? Eye-cells?"
- "It is safe to assume as much."
- "Then it would be safe to assume that the Refluxive's hall is monitored ...
- Perhaps I was too free with advice."
- "If the dead man were the monitor, your words are now lost. But allow me to take
- custody of the notes. I will have them translated; there is a colony of Lokhars
- nearby and some of them have a smattering of Wankh."
- "We will go together," said Reith. "Will tomorrow suit you?"
- "Well enough," said Helsse glumly. He looked off across the Oval. "Finally then:
- what must I tell Lord Cizante as to the boon?"
- "I don't know," said Reith. "I'll have an answer tomorrow."
- "The situation may be clarified even sooner," said Helsse. "Here is Dordolio."
- Reith swung around, to find Dordolio striding toward him, followed by two suave
- cavaliers. Dordolio was clearly in a fury. He halted a yard in front of Reith
- and, thrusting forth his head, blurted: "With your vicious tricks, you have
- ruined me! Have you no shame?" He took off his hat, hurled it into Reith's face.
- Reith stepped aside, the hat went wheeling off into the Oval.
- Dordolio shook his finger in Reith's face; Reith backed away a step. "Your death
- is assured," bellowed Dordolio. "But not by the honor of my sword! Low-caste
- assassins will drown you in cattle excrement! Twenty pariahs will drub your
- corpse! A cur will drag your head along the street by the tongue!"
- Reith managed a painful grin. "Cizante will arrange the same for you, at my
- request. It's as good a boon as any."
- "Cizante, bah! A wicked parvenu, a moping invert. Blue Jade shall be nothing;
- the fall of that palace will culminate the 'round'!"
- Helsse came slightly forward. "Before you enlarge upon your remarkable
- assertions, be advised that I represent the House of Blue Jade, and that I will
- be impelled to report to his Excellency Lord Cizante the substance of your
- comments."
- "Do not bore me with triviality!" stormed Dordolio. He furiously motioned to
- Reith. "Fetch my hat, or tomorrow expect the first of the Twelve Touches!"
- "A small concession," said Reith, "if it ensures your departure." He picked up
- Dordolio's hat, shook it once or twice, handed it to him. "Your hat, which you
- threw across the square." He stepped around Dordolio, entered the foyer of the
- inn. Dordolio gave a somewhat subdued caw of laughter, slapped his hat against
- his thigh, and, signaling his comrades, walked away.
- In the foyer of the inn Reith asked Helsse, "What are the 'Twelve Touches'?"
- "At intervals-perhaps a day, perhaps two days-an assassin will tap the victim
- with a twig. The twelfth touch is fatal; the man dies. By accumulated poison, by
- a single final dose, or by morbid suggestion, only the Assassins' Guild knows.
- And now I must return to Blue Jade. Lord Cizante will be interested in my
- report."
- "What do you intend to tell him?"
- Helsse only laughed. "You, the most secretive of men, asking me that! Still,
- Cizante will hear that you have agreed to accept a boon, that you probably will
- soon be departing Cath-"
- "I said nothing of this!"
- "It will still be an element of my report."
- CHAPTER EIGHT
- REITH AWOKE TO Wan sunlight shining through the heavy amber panes of the
- windows. He lay on the unfamiliar couch, collecting the threads of his
- existence. It was difficult not to feel a profound gloom. Cath, where he had
- hoped to find flexibility, enlightenment, and perhaps cooperation, was hardly
- less harsh an environment than the Aman Steppe. It was obvious folly to dream of
- building a spaceboat in Settra.
- Reith sat up on the couch. He had known horror, grief, disillusionment, but
- there had been corresponding moments of triumph and hope, even a few spasmodic
- instants of joy. If he were to die tomorrow-or in twelve days after twelve
- "touches"-he had already lived a miraculous life. Very well then, he would put
- his destiny to the test. Helsse had predicted his departure from Cath; Helsse
- had read the future, or Reith's own personality, more accurately than Reith
- himself.
- Breakfasting with Traz and Anacho he described his adventures of the previous
- evening. Anacho found the circumstances perturbing. "This is an insane society,
- constrained by punctilio as a rotten egg is held by its shell. Whatever your
- aims-and sometimes I think that you are the most flamboyant lunatic of all--they
- will not be achieved here."
- "I agree."
- "Well then," said Traz, "what next?"
- "What I plan is dangerous, perhaps rash folly. But I see no other alternative. I
- intend to ask Cizante for money; this we shall share. Then I think it best that
- we separate. You, Traz, might do worse than to return to Wyness, and there make
- a life for yourself. Perhaps Anacho will do the same. Neither of you can profit
- by coming with me; in fact, I guarantee the reverse."
- Anacho looked off across the square. "Until now you have managed to survive, if
- precariously. I find myself curious as to what you hope to achieve. With your
- permission, I will join your expedition, which I suspect is by no means as
- desperate as you make it out to be."
- "I intend to confiscate a Wankh spaceship from the Ao Hidis spaceport, or
- elsewhere, if it seems more convenient."
- Anacho threw his hands in the air. "I feared no less." He proceeded to state a
- hundred objections which Reith did not trouble to contradict. "All very true; I
- will end my days in a Wankh dungeon or a nighthound's belly; still this is what
- I intend to attempt. I strongly urge that you and Traz make your way to the
- Isles of Cloud and live as best you may."
- "Bah," snorted Anacho. "Why won't you attempt some reasonable exploit, like
- exterminating the Pnume, or teaching the Chasch to sing?"
- "I have other ambitions."
- "Yes, yes, your faraway planet, the home of man. I am tempted to help you, if
- only to demonstrate your lunacy."
- "As for me," said Traz, "I would like to see this far world. I know it exists,
- because I saw the spaceboat in which Adam Reith arrived."
- Anacho inspected the youth with eyebrows raised. "You have not mentioned this
- previously."
- "You never asked."
- "How might such an absurdity enter my mind?"
- "A person who calls facts absurdities will often be surprised," said Traz.
- "But at least he has organized the cosmic relationship into categories, which
- sets him apart from animals and sub-men."
- Reith intervened. "Come now; let's put our energies to work, since you both seem
- bent on suicide. Today we seek information. And here is Helsse, bringing us
- important news, or so it appears from his aspect."
- Helsse approached and gave a polite greeting. "Last night, as you may imagine, I
- had much to report to Lord Cizante. He urges that you make some reasonable
- request, which he will be glad to fulfill. He recommends that we destroy the
- papers taken from the spy and I am inclined to agree. If you acquiesce, Lord
- Cizante may grant further concessions."
- "Of what nature?"
- "He does not specify, but I suspect he has in mind a certain slackening of
- protocol in regard to your presence in Blue Jade Palace."
- "I am more interested in the documents than in Lord Cizante. If he wants to see
- me he can come here to the inn."
- Helsse gave a brittle chuckle. "Your response is no surprise. If you are ready I
- will conduct you to South Ebron where we will find a Lokhar."
- "There are no Yao scholars who read the Wankh language?"
- "Such facility would seem pointless expertise."
- "Until someone wanted a document translated."
- Helsse gave an indifferent twitch. "At this play of the 'round,' Utilitarianism
- is an alien philosophy. Lord Cizante, for instance, would find your arguments
- not only incomprehensible but disgusting."
- "We shall never argue the matter," said Reith equably.
- Helsse had come in an extremely elegant equipage: a blue carriage with six
- scarlet wheels and a profusion of golden festoons. The interior was like a
- luxurious drawing room, with gray-green wainscoting, a pale gray carpet, an
- arched ceiling covered with green silk. The chairs were deeply upholstered; to
- the side, under the windows of pale green glass, a buffet offered trays of
- sweetmeats. Helsse ushered his guests into the car with the utmost politeness;
- today he wore a suit of pale green and gray, as if to blend himself into the
- decor of the carriage.
- When all were seated, he touched a button to close the door and retract the
- steps. Reith observed, "Lord Cizante, while deriding utilitarianism as a
- doctrine, apparently does not flout its applications."
- "You refer to the door-closing mechanism? He is not aware that it exists.
- Someone is always at hand to touch the button for him. Like others of his class
- he touches objects only in play or pleasure. You find this odd? No matter. You
- must accept the Yao gentry as you find them."
- "Evidently you do not regard yourself as a member of the Yao gentry."
- Helsse laughed. "More tactful might be the conjecture that I enjoy what I am
- doing." He spoke into a mesh. "To the South Ebron Mercade."
- The carriage eased into motion. Helsse poured goblets of syrup and proffered
- sweetmeats. "You are about to visit our commercial district; the source of our
- wealth, in fact, though it is considered vulgar to discuss it."
- "Strange," mused Anacho. "Dirdir, at the highest level, are never so
- hoity-toity."
- "They are a different race," said Helsse. "Superior? I am not convinced. The
- Wankh would never agree, should they trouble to examine the concept."
- Anacho gave a contemptuous shrug but said no more.
- The carriage rolled through a market area: the Mercade, then into a district of
- small dwellings, in a wonderful diversity of style. At a cluster of squat brick
- towers the carriage halted. Helsse pointed to a nearby garden where sat a dozen
- men of spectacular appearance. They wore white shirts and trousers, their hair,
- long and abundant, was also white; in striking contrast to the lusterless black
- of their skins. "Lokhars," said Helsse. "Migrating mechanics from the highlands
- north of Lake Falas in Central Kislovan. That is not their natural coloration;
- they bleach their hair and dye their skin. Some say the Wankh enforced the
- custom upon them thousands of years ago to differentiate them from Wankhmen, who
- of course are white-skinned and black-haired. In any event, they come and go,
- working where they gain the highest return, for they are a remarkably avaricious
- folk. Some, after laboring in the Wankh shops, have migrated north to Cath; a
- few of these know a chime or two of Wankh-talk and occasionally can puzzle out
- the sense of Wankh documents. Notice the old man yonder playing with the child;
- he is reckoned as adept in Wankh as any. He will demand a large sum for his
- efforts, and in order to forestall even more exorbitant demands in the future I
- must haggle with him. If you will be good enough to wait, I will go to make the
- arrangements."
- "A moment," said Reith. "At a conscious level I am convinced of your integrity,
- but I can't control my instinctive suspicions. Let us make the arrangement
- together."
- "As you wish," said Helsse graciously. "I will send the chauffeur for the man."
- He spoke into the mesh.
- Anacho murmured, "If the arrangements were already made, the qualms of a
- trusting person might easily be drugged."
- Helsse nodded judiciously. "I believe I can assuage your anxieties."
- A moment later the old man sauntered up to the carriage.
- "Inside, if you please," said Helsse.
- The old man poked his white-maned face through the door. "My time is valuable;
- what do you want of me?"
- "A matter for your profit."
- "Profit, eh? I can at least listen." He entered the carriage, and seated himself
- with a comfortable grunt. The air took on the odor of a spicy, slightly rancid
- pomade. Helsse stood in front of him. With a side glance toward Reith he said,
- "Our arrangement is canceled. Do not heed my instructions."
- " 'Arrangement'? 'Instructions'? What are you talking about? You must mistake me
- for another. I am Zarfo Detwiler."
- Helsse made an easy gesture. "It's all one. We want you to translate a Wankh
- document for us, the guide to a treasure hoard. Translate correctly, you shall
- share the booty."
- "No, no, none of that." Zarfo Detwiler waved a black finger. "I'll share the
- booty with pleasure; additionally I want a hundred sequins, and no
- recriminations if I fail to satisfy you."
- "No recriminations, agreed. But a hundred sequins for possibly nothing?
- Ridiculous. Here: five sequins and eat your fill of the expensive sweetmeats."
- "That last I'll do anyway; am I not your invited guest?" Zarfo Detwiler popped a
- handful of dainties into his mouth. "You must think me a moon-calf to offer but
- five sequins. Only three persons in Settra can so much as tell you which side of
- a Wankh ideogram is up. I alone can read meaning, by virtue of thirty toilsome
- years in the Ao Hidis machine shops."
- The haggling proceeded; Zarfo Detwiler eventually agreed to fifty sequins and a
- tenth share of the assumptive spoils. Helsse signaled Reith, who produced the
- documents.
- Zarfo Detwiler took the papers, squinted, frowned, ran his fingers through his
- white mane. He looked up and spoke somewhat ponderously: "I will instruct you in
- Wankh communication at no charge. The Wankh are a peculiar folk, totally unique.
- Their brain works in pulses. They see in pulses and think in pulses. Their
- speech comes in a pulse, a chime of many vibrations which carries all the
- meaning of a sentence. Each ideogram is equivalent to a chime, which is to say,
- a whole unit of meaning. For this reason, to read Wankh is as much a matter of
- divination as logic; one must enunciate an entire meaning with each ideogram.
- Even the Wankhmen are not always accurate. Now this matter you have here-let me
- see. This first chimehm. Notice this comb? It usually signifies an equivalence,
- an identity. A square of this texture shading off to the right sometimes means
- 'truth' or 'verified perception' or 'situation' or perhaps 'present condition of
- the cosmos.' These marks-I don't know. This bit of shading-I think it's a person
- talking. Since it's at the bottom, the base tone in the chord, it would seem
- that-yes, this trifle here indicates positive volition. These marks--hm. Yes,
- these are organizers, which specify the order and emphasis of the other
- elements. I can't understand them; I can only guess at the total sense.
- Something like 'I wish to report that conditions are identical or unchanged' or
- 'A person is anxious to specify that the cosmos is stable.' Something of the
- sort. Are you sure that this is information regarding treasure?"
- "It was sold to us on this basis."
- "Hm." Zarfo pulled at his long black nose. "Let me see. This second symbol:
- notice this shading and this bit of an angle? One is 'vision'; the other is
- 'negation.' I can't read the organizers, but it might mean 'blindness' or
- 'invisibility...' "
- Zarfo continued his lucubrations, poring over each ideogram, occasionally
- tracing out a fragment of meaning, more often confessing failure, and becoming
- ever more restive. "You have been gulled," he said at last. "I'm certain there
- is no mention of money or treasure. I believe this is no more than a commercial
- report. It seems to say, as close as I can fathom: 'I wish to state that
- conditions are the same.' Something about peculiar wishes, or hopes, or
- volitions. 'I will presently see the dominant man, the leader of our group.'
- Something unknown. 'The leader is not helpful,' or perhaps 'stays aloof.' 'The
- leader slowly changes, or metamorphoses, to the enemy.' Or perhaps, 'The leader
- slowly changes to become like the enemy.' Change of some sort-I can't
- understand. 'I request more money.' Something about arrival of a newcomer or
- stranger 'of utmost importance.' That's about all."
- Reith thought to sense an almost imperceptible relaxation in Helsse's manner.
- "No great illumination," said Helsse briskly. "Well, you have done your best.
- Here is your twenty sequins."
- "'Twenty sequins'!" roared Zarfo Detwiler. "The price agreed was fifty! How can
- I buy my bit of meadowland if I am constantly cheated?"
- "Oh very well, if you choose to be niggardly."
- "Niggardly, indeed! Next time read the message yourself."
- "I could do as well, for all the help you've given us."
- "You were duped. That is no guide to treasure."
- "Apparently not. Well then, good day to you."
- Reith followed Zarfo from the carriage. He looked back in at Helsse. "I'll
- remain here, for a word or two with this gentleman."
- Helsse was not pleased. "We must discuss another matter. It is necessary that
- the Blue Jade Lord receives information."
- "This afternoon I will have a definite answer for you."
- Helsse gave a curt nod. "As you wish."
- The carriage departed, leaving Reith and the Lokhar standing in the street.
- Reith said, "Is there a tavern nearby? Perhaps we can chat over a bottle."
- "I am a Lokhar," snorted the black-skinned old man. "I do not addle my brains
- and drain my pockets with drink; not before noon, at any rate. However you may
- buy me a fine Zam sausage, or a clut of headcheese."
- "With pleasure."
- Zarfo led the way to a food shop; the two men took their purchases to a table on
- the street.
- "I am amazed by your ability to read the ideograms," said Reith. "Where did you
- learn?"
- "At Ao Hidis. I worked as a die cutter beside an old Lokhar who was a true
- genius. He taught me to recognize a few chimes, and showed me where the shadings
- matched intensity vibrations, where sonority equated with shape, where the
- various chord components matched texture and gradation. Both the chimes and the
- ideograms are regular and rational, once the eye and the ear are tuned. But the
- tuning is difficult." Zarfo took a great bite of sausage. "Needless to say, the
- Wankhmen discourage such learning; if they suspect a Lokhar of diligent study,
- he is discharged. Oh, they are a crafty lot! They jealously guard their role as
- intercessors between the Wankh and the world of men. A devious folk! The women
- are strangely beautiful, like black pearls, but cruel and cold, and not prone to
- dalliance."
- "The Wankh pay well?"
- "Like everyone else, as little as possible. But we are forced to concede. If
- labor costs rose, they would take slaves, or train Blacks and Purples, one or
- the other. We would then lose employment and perhaps our freedom as well. So we
- strive without too much complaint, and seek more profitable employment elsewhere
- once we are skilled."
- "It is highly likely," said Reith, "that the Yao Helsse, in the gray and green
- suit, will ask what we discussed. He may even offer you money."
- Zarfo bit off a chunk of sausage. "I shall naturally tell all, if I am paid
- enough."
- "In that case," said Reith, "our conversation must deal in pleasantries,
- profitless to both of us."
- Zarfo chewed thoughtfully. "How much profit had you in mind?"
- "I don't care to specify, since you would only ask Helsse for more, or try to
- extract the same from both of us."
- Zarfo sighed dismally. "You have a sorry opinion of the Lokhar. Our word is our
- bond; once we strike a bargain we do not deviate."
- The haggling continued on a more or less cordial level until for the sum of
- twenty sequins Zarfo agreed to guard the privacy of the conversation as fiercely
- as he might the hiding place of his money, and the sum was paid over.
- "Back to the Wankh message for a moment," said Reith. "There were references to
- a 'leader.' Were there hints or clues by which to identify him?"
- Zarfo pursed his lips. "A wolf-tone indicating high-level gentry; another
- honorific brevet which might signify something like 'a person of the excellent
- sort' or 'in your own image,' 'of your sort.' It is very difficult. A Wankh
- reading the ideogram would understand a chime, which then would stimulate a
- visual image complete in essential details. The Wankh would be furnished a
- mental image of the person, but for someone like myself there are only crude
- outlines. I can tell no more."
- "You work in Settra?"
- "Alas. A man of my years and impoverished: isn't it a pity?
- But I near my goal, and then back to Smargash, in Lokhara, for a bit of meadow,
- a young wife, a comfortable chair by the hearth."
- "You worked in the space shops at Ao Hidis?"
- "Yes, indeed; I transferred from the tool works to the space shops, where I
- repaired and installed air purifiers."
- "Lokhar mechanics must be very skillful, then."
- "Oh, indeed."
- "Certain mechanics specialize upon the installation of, say, controls and
- instruments?"
- "Naturally. Complex trades, both."
- "Have such mechanics immigrated to Settra?"
- Zarfo gave Reith a calculating glance. "How much is the information worth to
- you?"
- "Control your avarice," said Reith. "No more money today. Another sausage, if
- you like."
- "Later, perhaps. Now as to the mechanics: in Smargash are dozens, hundreds,
- retired after lifetimes of toil."
- "Could they be tempted to join in a dangerous venture?"
- "No doubt, if the danger were scant and the profit high. What do you propose?"
- Reith threw caution to the winds. "Assume that someone wished to confiscate a
- Wankh spaceship and fly it to an unspecified destination: how many specialists
- would be required, and how much would it cost to hire them?"
- Zarfo, to Reith's relief, did not stare in bewilderment or shock. He gnawed for
- a moment at the last of the sausage. Then, after a belch, he said, "I believe
- that you are asking if I consider the exploit feasible. It has often been
- discussed in a jocular manner, and for a fact the ships are not stringently
- guarded. The project is feasible. But why should you want a spaceship? ,I do not
- care to visit the Dirdir on Sibol or test the infinity of the universe."
- "I can't discuss the destination."
- "Well then, how much money do you offer?"
- "My plans have not progressed to that stage. What do you consider a suitable
- fee?"
- "To risk life and freedom? I would not stir for less than fifty thousand
- sequins."
- Reith rose to his feet. "You have your fifty sequins; I have my information. I
- trust you to keep my secret."
- Zarfo sat sprawled back in his chair. "Now then, not so fast. After all I am old
- and my life is not worth so much after all. Thirty thousand? Twenty? Ten?"
- "The figure starts to become practical. How much of a crew will we need?"
- "Four or five more, possibly six. You envision a long voyage?"
- "As soon as we are in space, I will reveal our destination. Ten thousand sequins
- is only a preliminary payment. Those who go with me will return with wealth
- beyond their dreams."
- Zarfo rose to his feet. "When do you propose to leave?"
- "As soon as possible. Another matter: Settra is overrun with spies; it's
- important that we attract no attention."
- Zarfo gave a hoarse laugh. "So this morning you approach me in a vast carriage,
- worth thousands of sequins. A man watches us even now."
- "I've been noticing him. But he seems too obvious to be a spy. Well, then, where
- shall we meet, and when?"
- "Upon the stroke of midmorning tomorrow, at the stall of Upas the spice merchant
- in the Cercade. Be certain you are not followed ... That fellow yonder I believe
- to be an assassin, from the style of his garments."
- The man at this moment approached their table. "You are Adam Reith?"
- "Yes."
- "I regret to say that the Security Assassination Company has accepted a contract
- made out in your name: the Death of the Twelve Touches. I will now administer
- the first inoculation. Will you be so good as to bare your arm? I will merely
- prick you with this splint."
- Reith backed away. "I'll do nothing of the sort."
- "Depart!" Zarfo Detwiler told the assassin. "This man is worth ten thousand
- sequins to me alive; dead, nothing."
- The assassin ignored Zarfo. To Reith he said, "Please do not make an undignified
- display. The process then becomes protracted and painful for us all. So then-"
- Zarfo roared: "Stand away; have I not warned you?" He snatched up a chair and
- struck the assassin to the ground. Zarfo was not yet satisfied. He picked up the
- splint, jabbed it into the back of the man's thigh, through the rust-ocher
- corduroy of his trousers. "Halt!" wailed the assassin. "That is Inoculation
- Number One!"
- Zarfo seized a handful of splints from the splayed-open wallet. "And here," he
- roared, "are numbers Two to Twelve!" And with a foot on the man's neck he thrust
- the handful into the twitching buttocks. "There you are, you knave! Do you want
- the next episode, Numbers Thirteen to Twenty-four?"
- "No, no, let me be; I am a dead man now!"
- "If not, you're a cheat as well as an assassin!"
- Passersby had halted to watch. A portly woman in pink silk rushed forward. "You
- hairy black villain, what are you doing to that poor assassin? He is only a
- workman at his trade!"
- Zarfo picked up the assassin's work sheet, looked down the list. "Hm. It appears
- that your husband is next on his list."
- The woman looked with startled eyes after the assassin now tottering off down
- the street.
- "Time we were leaving," said Reith.
- They walked through back alleys to a small shed, screened from the street by a
- lattice of woven withe. "It is the neighborhood corpsehouse," said Zarfo. "No
- one will bother us here."
- Reith entered, looked gingerly around the black benches on one of which lay the
- hulk of a small animal.
- "Now then," said Zarfo, "who is your enemy?"
- "I suspect a certain Dordolio," said Reith. "I can't be sure."
- Zarfo scrutinized the work sheet. "Well, we shall see. 'Adam Reith, the
- Travelers' Inn-Contract Number Two-three-o-five, Style Eighteen; prepaid.' Dated
- today, surcharged 'Rush.' Prepaid, eh? Well then, let us try a ruse. Back to my
- cottage."
- He took Reith to one of the brick towers, entered by an arched doorway. On a
- table rested a telephone. Zarfo lifted the instrument with cautious fingers.
- "Connect me with the Security Assassination Company."
- A grave voice spoke. "We are here to serve your needs."
- "I refer to Contract Number Two-three-o-five," said Zarfo, "relating to a
- certain Adam Reith. I can't find the estimate and I wish to pay the charges."
- "A moment, my lord."
- The voice presently returned. "The contract was prepaid, my lord; and was
- scheduled for execution this morning."
- "Prepaid? Impossible. I did not prepay. What is the name on the receipt?"
- "The name is Helsse Izam. I'm sure there is no mistake, sir."
- "Perhaps not. I'll discuss the matter with the person involved."
- "Thank you, sir, for your custom."
- CHAPTER NINE
- REITH RETURNED TO the Travelers' Inn, and with a certain trepidation, entered
- the foyer where he found Traz. "What has occurred, if anything?"
- Traz, the most lucid and decisive of individuals, was less deft when it came to
- communicating a mood. "The Yao-Helsse, is that his name? became silent after you
- left the carriage. Perhaps he found us strange company. He told us that tonight
- we would dine with the Blue Jade Lord, that he would come early to instruct us
- in decorum. Then he drove off in the carriage."
- A perplexing sequence of events, reflected Reith. An interesting point: the
- contract had specified Twelve Touches. If his death were urgently required, a
- knife, a bullet, an energy bolt would serve the purpose. But the first of twelve
- injections? A device to stimulate haste?
- "Many things are happening," he told Traz. "Events I don't pretend to
- understand."
- "The sooner we leave Settra the better," gloomed Traz.
- "Agreed."
- Anacho the Dirdirman appeared, freshly barbered and splendid in a new
- high-collared black jacket, pale blue trousers, scarlet ankle-high slippers with
- modish upturned toes. Reith took the two to a secluded alcove and described the
- events of the day. "So now we need only money, which I hope to extract from
- Cizante tonight."
- The hours of the afternoon passed slowly. At last Helsse appeared, wearing a
- modish suit of canary yellow velvet. He gave polite greetings to the group. "You
- are enjoying your visit to Cath?"
- "Indeed yes," said Reith. "I have never felt so relaxed."
- Helsse maintained his aplomb. "Excellent. Now, in regard to this evening, Lord
- Cizante suspects that you and your friends might find a formal dinner somewhat
- tedious. He recommends rather a casual and unstructured tiffin, at a time to
- suit your convenience: now, if you so desire."
- "We are ready," said Reith. "But, to anticipate any misunderstanding, please
- remember that we insist upon a dignified reception. We do not intend to slink
- into the palace by a back entrance."
- Helsse made an easy gesture. "For a casual occasion, casual protocol. That's our
- rule."
- "I will be specific," said Reith. "Our 'place' demands that we use the front
- entrance. If Lord Cizante objects, then he must meet us elsewhere: perhaps at
- the tavern around the Oval."
- Helsse uttered an incredulous laugh. "He would as soon don a buffoon's cap and
- cut capers in Merrymaker's Round!" He shook his head dolefully. "To avoid
- difficulties we will use the front entrance; after all what difference does it
- make?"
- Reith laughed. "Especially since Cizante has ordered us brought in by the
- scullery and will assume that this is how we entered ... Well, it's a fair
- compromise. Let's go."
- The trip to Blue Jade Palace was made in a sleek black landau. At Helsse's
- instructions it drove up to the formal portal. Helsse alighted, and with a
- thoughtful glance along the faade of the palace, conducted the three outlanders
- through the main portal and into the great foyer. He muttered a few words to a
- footman, then ushered the three up a flight of shallow stairs, into a small
- green and gold salon overlooking the courtyard.
- Lord Cizante was nowhere to be seen.
- "Please be seated," said Helsse affably. "Lord Cizante will be with you
- shortly." He gave a jerk of the head and departed the chamber.
- Several minutes passed, then Lord Cizante appeared. He wore a long white gown,
- white slippers, a black skullcap. His face was petulant and brooding; he looked
- from face to face. "Which is the man to whom I spoke before?"
- Helsse muttered in his ear; he turned to face Reith. "I see. Well then, make
- yourself easy. Helsse, you have ordered a suitable refreshment?"
- "Indeed, your Excellency."
- A footman rolled in a buffet and offered trays of sweet wafers, saltbarks, cubes
- of spiced meat, decanters of wine, flagons of essence. Reith accepted wine; Traz
- a goblet of syrup. Anacho took green essences; Lord Cizante selected a stick of
- incense and walked back and forth, jerking it through the air. "I have negative
- news for you," he said abruptly. "I have decided to withdraw all proffers and
- undertakings. In short, you may expect no boon."
- Reith sipped the wine and gave himself time to think. "You are honoring
- Dordolio's claim?"
- "I cannot elaborate upon the matter. The statement may be interpreted in its
- most general sense."
- "I have no claim upon you," said Reith. "I came here yesterday only to convey
- the news of your daughter."
- Lord Cizante held the incense stick under his nostrils. "The circumstances no
- longer interest me."
- Anacho emitted a somewhat startling caw of laughter. "Understandable! To
- acknowledge them would force you to honor your pledge!"
- "Not at all," said Lord Cizante. "I spoke only for the attention of Blue Jade
- personnel."
- "Ha ha! Who will believe that, now that you have hired assassins against my
- friend?"
- Lord Cizante held the incense still and poised. "Assassins? What of this?"
- "Your aide"-Reith indicated Helsse--"took out a Type Eighteen contract against
- me. I intend to warn Dordolio; your penury carries a vicious sting."
- Lord Cizante turned a frowning glance upon Helsse. "What of this?"
- Helsse stood with black eyebrows fretfully raised. "I endeavored only to fulfill
- my function."
- "Misplaced zeal! Would you make Blue Jade a laughing stock? If this sordid tale
- gains circulation..." His voice suddenly trailed off. Helsse gave a shrug, and
- poured himself a goblet of wine.
- Reith rose to his feet. "Our business appears to be at an end."
- "A moment," said Lord Cizante curtly. "Let me consider ... You realize that this
- so-called assassination is a mare's-nest?"
- Reith slowly shook his head. "You have blown hot and cold too often; I am
- totally skeptical."
- Lord Cizante swung on his heel. The incense stick fell to the rug, where it
- began to smolder. Reith picked it up, placed it on the tray. "Why do you do
- that?" asked Helsse in sardonic wonder.
- "You must supply your own answer."
- Lord Cizante strode back into the room. He gestured to Helsse, took him into the
- corner, muttered a moment, and once again departed.
- Helsse turned to Reith. "Lord Cizante has empowered me to pay over to you a sum
- of ten thousand sequins on condition that you depart Cath instantly, returning
- to Kotan by the first cog out of Vervodei."
- "Lord Cizante's impertinence is amazing," said Reith.
- Anacho asked casually, "How high will he go?"
- "He specified no precise sum," Helsse admitted. "He is interested only in your
- departure, which he will facilitate in every detail."
- "A million sequins, then," said Anacho. "If we must acquiesce to this
- undignified scheme, we might as well sell ourselves dear."
- "Much too dear," said Helsse. "Twenty thousand sequins is more reasonable."
- "Not reasonable enough," said Reith. "We need more, much more."
- Helsse surveyed the three in silence. He said at last: "To avoid wasting time I
- will announce the maximum sum Lord Cizante cares to pay. It is fifty thousand
- sequins, which I personally consider generous, and transportation to Vervodei."
- "We accept," said Reith. "Needless to say, you must cancel the contract with the
- Security Company."
- Helsse smiled a small tremulous smile. "I have already received my instructions
- in this regard. And when will you depart Settra?"
- "In a day or so."
- With fifty strips of purple-celled sequins, the three left Blue Jade Palace, and
- climbed into the waiting black landau. Helsse did not accompany them.
- The landau wheeled east through the cinnamon dusk, under luminants which as yet
- cast no illumination. Off in the parks, palaces and town houses showed clusters
- of blurred lights, and in one great garden a fete was in progress.
- The landau rumbled across a carved wooden bridge hung with lanterns, to enter a
- district of crowded timber buildings, with tearooms and cafes jutting over the
- street. They passed through an area of bleak half-deserted tenements, and at
- last came into the Oval.
- Reith descended from the landau. Traz sprang past and threw himself on a dark
- silent figure. At the glint of metal Reith ducked to the ground, but failed to
- escape a violent purple-white flash. A hot blow pounded his head; he lay
- half-stunned, while Traz struggled with the assailant. Anacho stepped forward,
- pointed his sting. Out sprang the thin shaft, piercing the man's shoulder. The
- gun clattered to the cobbles.
- Reith picked himself up, stood weaving. The side of his head smarted as if by a
- scald; the smell of ozone and burnt hair filled his nostrils. He tottered over
- to where Traz held the hooded figure in an armlock while Anacho removed his
- wallet and dagger. The man wore a half-hood; Reith raised it, revealing, to his
- astonishment, the face of the Yearning Refluxive to whom he had spoken the night
- before.
- People here and there about the Oval, at first cautious of the struggle, now
- started to approach. There came the shrill hoot of the patrol whistle. The
- Refluxive struggled to free himself. "Release me; they'll make me a terrible
- example!"
- "Why did you try to kill me?" demanded Reith.
- "Need you ask? Let me go, I beg you!"
- "Why should I? You just tried to murder me! Let them take you."
- "No! The association will suffer!"
- "Well then-why did you try to kill me?"
- "Because you are dangerous! You would divide us! Already there is dissension! A
- few weak souls have no faith; they want to find a spaceship and go off on a
- journey! Folly! The only way is the orthodox way! You are a danger; I thought it
- best to expunge your dissidence."
- Reith took a deep breath of exasperation. The patrol was almost upon them. He
- said: "Tomorrow we leave Settra; you've had your trouble for nothing." He gave
- the man a shove which sent him staggering and crying for the pain in his
- shoulder. "Be thankful we are merciful men!"
- The Refluxive disappeared in the darkness. The patrol ran up: tall men in
- striped suits of red and black holding staffs terminating in incandescent tips.
- "What is the trouble?"
- "A thief," said Reith. "He tried to rob us, then ran off behind the buildings."
- The patrol departed; Reith, Anacho, and Traz went into the inn. As they supped
- Reith told of his arrangements with Zarfo Detwiler. "Tomorrow, if all goes well,
- we depart Settra."
- "By no means too soon," remarked Anacho sourly.
- "True. Already I've been spied on by the Wankh, persecuted by the gentry, shot
- at by the 'cult.' My nerves won't allow much more."
- A boy wearing dark red livery came up to their table. "Adam Reith?"
- "Who wants him?" Reith asked warily.
- "I have a message."
- "Give it here." Reith tore apart the folded paper, puzzled out the sense of the
- florid symbols:
- The Security Company sends greetings. Be it known that, since you, Adam Reith,
- have attacked an authorized employee in the innocent pursuit of his duties,
- spoiling his equipment and inflicting pain and inconvenience, we demand a
- retributive fee of eighteen thousand sequins. If the sum is not immediately paid
- at our main office, you will be killed by a combination of several processes.
- Your prompt cooperation will be appreciated. Please do not depart Settra or seek
- to deny us in any way, as in that case the penalties must be amplified.
- Reith flung the letter down on the table. "Dordolio, the Wankh, Lord Cizante,
- and Helsse, the 'cult,' the Security Company: who is left?"
- Traz commented: "Tomorrow may hardly be soon enough."
- CHAPTER TEN
- THE FOLLOWING MORNING Reith communicated with Blue Jade Palace by means of the
- queer Yao telephones, and was allowed to speak to Helsse. "You have naturally
- canceled the contract with the Security Company?"
- "The contract has been canceled. I understand that they have decided to take
- independent action, which of course you must deal with as you see fit."
- "Exactly," said Reith. "We are leaving Settra at once and we accept Lord
- Cizante's offer of assistance."
- Helsse made a noncommittal sound. "What are your plans?"
- "Essentially, to escape Settra with our lives."
- "I will arrive shortly and take you to an outlying wheelway station. At Vervodei
- ships leave daily for all quarters and no doubt you will be able to make a
- convenient departure."
- "We will be ready at noon, or before."
- Reith set out on foot for the Cercade, taking all precautions, and arrived at
- the rendezvous with fair assurance that he had not been followed. Zarfo stood
- waiting, his white hair confined in a bonnet as black as his face. He
- immediately led the way to the cellar of an ale house. They sat at a stone
- table; Zarfo signaled the pot-boy and they were presently served heavy stone
- mugs of a bitter earthy ale.
- Zarfo came quickly to business. "Before I disrupt my life by so much as a
- twitch, show me the color of your money."
- Without words Reith threw down ten strips of winking purple sequins.
- "Aha!" gloated Zarfo Detwiler. "This is true beauty! Is it to be mine? I will
- take custody of it at once, and guard it from all harm."
- "Who will guard you?" asked Reith.
- "Tish, tush, lad," scoffed Zarfo. "If comrades can't trust comrades in a cool
- ale-cellar, how will it go under adversity?"
- Reith returned the money to his wallet. "Adversity is here now. The assassins
- are disturbed by the affair of yesterday. Instead of taking revenge upon you,
- they have threatened me."
- "Yes, they are an unreasonable lot. If they demand money, defy them. A man can
- always fight for his life."
- "I've been warned not to leave Settra until such a time as they choose to kill
- me. Nevertheless, I propose to depart, and as soon as possible."
- "Shrewd." Zarfo quaffed ale and set the mug down with a thud. "But how will you
- evade the assassins? Naturally they ponder your every move."
- Reith jerked around at a noise, only to find the pot-boy at hand to refill
- Zarfo's mug. Zarfo pulled at his long black nose to conceal a grin. "The
- assassins are pertinacious, but we shall outwit them, one way or another. Return
- to your hotel and make all ready. At noon I will join you and we shall see what
- we shall see."
- "Noon? So late?"
- "What difference an hour or two? I must wind up my affairs."
- Reith returned to the inn, where Helsse had already arrived in the black landau.
- The atmosphere was strained and taut; at the sight of Reith, Helsse jumped to
- his feet. "Time is short; we have been waiting! Come; we have only enough time
- to catch the first afternoon car for Vervodei!"
- Reith asked: "Won't the assassins be expecting just this? It seems an
- unimaginative plan."
- Helsse gave an irritable shrug. "Do you have a better idea?"
- "I'd like to work one out."
- Anacho asked, "Does Lord Cizante keep an air-car?"
- "It is not in operation."
- "Are any others available?"
- "For a purpose of this sort? I should think not."
- Five minutes passed. Helsse said mildly, "The longer we wait, the less time
- remains to you." He pointed out of the window. "See the two men in the round
- hats? They wait for you to come forth. Now we cannot even use the car."
- "Go out and tell them to go away," suggested Reith.
- Helsse laughed. "Not I."
- Another half an hour went by. Zarfo swaggered into the foyer. He saluted the
- group with a wave of the hand. "Are all ready?"
- Reith pointed to the assassins standing to the side of the Oval. "They are
- waiting for us."
- "Detestable creatures," said Zarfo. "Only in Cath would they be tolerated." He
- looked sidelong at Helsse. "Why is he here?"
- Reith explained the circumstances; Zarfo looked out upon the Oval. "The black
- car with the silver and blue crest-is that the vehicle in question? If so,
- nothing is simpler. We shall ride off in the car."
- "Not feasible," said Helsse.
- "Why not?" asked Reith.
- "Lord Cizante does not care to become involved in this matter, nor do I. At the
- very least, the Company would include me in the contract."
- Reith laughed bitterly. "When you contracted with them in the first place? Out
- to the car, and drive us away from this city of madmen!"
- After a moment of incredulous disdain, Helsse gave a curt nod. "As you wish."
- The group left the inn and walked to the car. The assassins came forward. "I
- believe that you, sir, are Adam Reith?"
- "What of it?"
- "May we inquire your destination?"
- "The Blue Jade Palace."
- "Correct," said Helsse tonelessly.
- "You understand our regulations and schedule of penalties?"
- "Yes, of course."
- The assassins muttered together, then one said: "In this case we think it
- advisable to accompany you."
- "There is no room," said Helsse in a cool voice.
- The assassins paid no heed. One started to enter the landau. Zarfo pulled him
- back. The assassin looked over his shoulder. "Have a care; I am a guildsman."
- "And I am a Lokhar." Zarfo struck him a great clout, sending him sprawling. The
- second assassin stood astounded, then snatched forth a gun. Anacho's sting
- snapped forth, to penetrate his chest. The first assassin tried to crawl away;
- Zarfo gave him a tremendous kick under the chin; he fell flat and limp. "Into
- the car," said Zarfo. "It is time to leave."
- "What a fiasco," whispered Helsse. "I am ruined."
- "Away from Settra!" cried Zarfo. "By the least obvious route!"
- The landau rolled along narrow streets, into a narrow lane, and presently out
- into the countryside.
- "Where are you taking us?" demanded Reith.
- "Vervodei."
- "Ridiculous!" snorted Zarfo. "Drive east into the back country. We must make our
- way to the Jinga River and fare downstream to Kabasas on the Parapan."
- Helsse tried a voice of calm reason. "To the east is wilderness. The car will
- stop. We have no spare energy cells."
- "No difference!"
- "Not to you. But how will I return to Settra?"
- "Is this your plan, after what has happened?"
- Helsse muttered something under his breath. "I am a marked man. They will demand
- fifty thousand sequins, which I cannot pay-all through your insane
- manipulations."
- "Whatever you like. But continue east, until the car stops or the road gives
- out-whichever first."
- Helsse made a gesture of fateful despair.
- The road led through a weirdly beautiful flatland with slow streams and ponds to
- either side. Trees with drooping black limbs trailed tobacco-brown foliage into
- the water. Reith kept a lookout to the rear, but discovered no sign of pursuit.
- Settra became one with the murk of distance.
- Helsse no longer seemed to be sulking, but watched the road ahead with an
- expression that almost seemed anticipation. Reith became suddenly suspicious.
- "Stop a moment."
- Helsse looked around. "Stop? Why?"
- "What lies ahead?"
- "The mountains."
- "Why is the road in such good repair? There seems to be no great traffic."
- "Ho!" crowed Zarfo. "The mountain camp for insane folk! It must lie ahead!"
- Helsse contrived a sickly grin. "You told me to drive you to the end of the
- road; you did not stipulate that I should avoid taking you to the asylum."
- "I do so now," said Reith. "Please, no more innocent errors of this sort."
- Helsse compressed his lips and once more began to brood. At a crossroad he swung
- south. The ground began to rise. Reith asked, "Where does the road lead?"
- "To the old quicksilver mines, to mountain retreats, a few peasant holdings."
- Into a forest hung with black moss rolled the car, and the road slanted up even
- more steeply. The sun passed behind a cloud, the forest became dark and dank,
- then gave way to a foggy meadow.
- Helsse glanced at an indicator. "An hour more of energy."
- Reith indicated the thrust of mountains ahead. "What lies beyond?"
- "Wilderness. The Hoch Har tribes. Black Mountain Lake, source of the Jinga. The
- route is neither safe nor convenient. It is, however, an exit from Cath."
- Across the meadow they drove. Thick-trunked trees rose at intervals with leaves
- like shelves of yellow fungus.
- The road began to fail, and in places was blocked by fallen boughs. The ridge
- loomed above, a great rocky jut.
- At an abandoned mine the road ended. Simultaneously the power index reached
- zero. The car halted with a thud and a bump; there was silence except for a sigh
- of wind.
- The group alighted with their meager possessions. The fog had dissipated; the
- sun shone cool through a high overcast, washing the landscape in honey-colored
- light.
- Reith surveyed the mountainside, tracing a path to the ridge. He turned to
- Helsse. "Well, which is it to be? Kabasas, or back to Settra?"
- "Settra, naturally." He looked disconsolately at the car.
- "Afoot?"
- "Better than afoot to Kabasas."
- "What of the assassins?"
- "I must take my chances."
- Reith brought out his scanscope and studied the way they had come. "There seems
- no sign of pursuit; you-" He halted, surprised by the expression on Helsse's
- face.
- "What is that object?" demanded Helsse.
- Reith explained.
- "Dordolio spoke accurately," said Helsse in a wondering voice. "He was telling
- the truth!"
- Half-amused, half-annoyed, Reith said, "I don't know what Dordolio told you,
- other than that we were barbarians. Goodbye, then, and my regards to Lord
- Cizante."
- "Wait a moment," said Helsse, staring indecisively west toward Settra. "Kabasas
- may be safer, after all. The assassins would be sure to consider me an auxiliary
- to your offense." He turned, assessed the bulk of the mountain, heaved a gloomy
- sigh. "Total insanity, of course."
- "Needless to say, we are not here by our own volition," returned Reith. "Well,
- we might as well start."
- They climbed the tailings dump in front of the mine, peered into the tunnel,
- from which issued an ooze of reddish slime. A set of footprints led into the
- tunnel. They were about human size, the shape of a bowling pin or a gourd; two
- inches ahead of the narrow forward end were three indentations as of toes.
- Looking down at the marks Reith felt the hairs rise at the nape of his neck. He
- listened, but no sounds came from the tunnel. He asked Traz, "What sort of
- prints are these?"
- "An unshod Phung, possibly-a small one. More likely a Pnume. The prints are
- fresh. It watched our approach."
- "Come along; let's leave," muttered Reith.
- An hour later they reached the ridge and halted to gaze out over the panorama.
- The land to the west lay drowned in late afternoon murk, with Settra showing as
- a discolored spot, like a bruise. Far to the east glimmered Black Mountain Lake.
- The travelers spent an eerie night at the edge of the forest, starting up at far
- noises; a thin uncanny screaming, a rap-rap-rap, like blows against a block of
- hard wood, the crafty hooting of nighthounds.
- Dawn came at last. The group made a glum breakfast on pods from a pilgrim plant,
- then proceeded down over a basalt palisade to the floor of a wooded valley.
- Ahead lay the Black Mountain Lake, calm and still. A fishing boat inched across
- the water and presently disappeared behind a jut of rock. "Hoch Har," said
- Helsse. "Ancient enemies of the Yao. Now they remain behind the mountains."
- Traz pointed. "A path."
- Reith looked. "I see no path."
- "Nevertheless it is there, and I smell wood smoke, from a distance of three
- miles."
- Five minutes later Traz made a sudden gesture. "Several men are approaching."
- Reith listened; he could hear nothing. But presently three men appeared on the
- trail ahead: very tall men with thick waists, thin arms and legs, wearing skirts
- of a dirty white fiber and short capes of the same stuff. They stopped short at
- the sight of the travelers, then turned and retreated along the trail, looking
- anxiously back over their shoulders.
- After a quarter-mile the trail left the jungle, and angled off across the swampy
- foreshore of the lake. The Hoch Har village stood on stilts over the water,
- terminating in a float to which a dozen plank boats were tied. On the shore a
- score of men stood in attitudes of nervous truculence, striding back and forth,
- bushknives and long spring-bows at the ready.
- The travelers approached.
- The tallest and heaviest of Hoch Hars called out in a ridiculously shrill voice:
- "Who are you?"
- "Travelers on the way to Kabasas."
- The Hoch Hars stared incredulously, then peered back up the trail toward the
- mountains. "Where is the rest of your band?"
- "There is no band; we are alone. Can you sell us a boat and some food?"
- The Hoch Hars put aside their weapons. "Food is hard to come by," groaned the
- first man. "Boats are our dearest possessions. What can you offer us in
- exchange?"
- "Only a few sequins."
- "What good are sequins when we must visit Cath to spend them?"
- Helsse muttered in Reith's ear. Reith said to the Hoch Hars, "Very well then, we
- shall continue. I understand that there are other villages around the lake."
- "What? Would you deal with petty thieves and cheats? It is all those folks are.
- Well, to save you from your own folly, we will strain ourselves to work out some
- sort of arrangement."
- In the end Reith paid two hundred sequins for a boat in fair condition and what
- the Hoch Har chief gruffly claimed to be sufficient provisions to take them all
- the way to Kabasas: crates of dried fish, sacks of tubers, rolls of pepper-bark,
- fresh and preserved fruit. Another thirty sequins secured the services, as a
- guide, of a certain Tsutso, a moon-faced young man somewhat portly, with an
- affable big-toothed smile. Tsutso declared the first stages of their journey to
- be the most precarious: "First, the rapids; then the Great Slant, after which
- the voyage becomes no more than drifting downstream to Kabasas."
- At noon, with the small sail set, the boat departed the Hoch Har village, and
- through the long afternoon sailed the dark water south toward a pair of bluffs
- which marked the outlet of the lake and the head of the Jinga River. At sunset
- the boat passed between the bluffs, each crowned by a tumble of ruins, black on
- the brown-ash sky. Under the bluff to the right was a small cove with a beach;
- here Reith wanted to camp for the night but Tsutso would not hear of it. "The
- castles are haunted. At midnight the ghosts of old Tschai walk the pavings. Do
- you want us all put under a taint?"
- "So long as the ghosts keep to the castle, what's to prevent us from using the
- cove?"
- Tsutso gave Reith a wondering look, and held the boat to midstream between the
- opposing ruins. A mile downstream the Jinga split around a rocky islet, to which
- Tsutso took the boat. "Here nothing from the forest can molest us."
- The travelers supped, laid themselves down around the campfire and were troubled
- by no more than soft whistles and trills from the forest, and once, far in the
- distance, the mournful call of the night-hounds.
- On the next day they passed across ten miles of violent rapids, during which
- Tsutso ten times over earned his fee, in Reith's estimation. Meanwhile the
- forest dwindled to clumps of thorn; the banks became barren, and presently a
- strange sound made itself heard from ahead: a sibilant all-pervading roar. "The
- Slant," explained Tsutso. The river disappeared at a brink a hundred yards
- ahead. Before Reith or the others could protest, the boat had pitched over the
- verge.
- Tsutso said, "Everyone alert; here is the Slant. Hold to the middle!"
- The roar of water almost overwhelmed his voice. The boat was sliding into a dark
- gorge; with amazing velocity the rock walls passed astern. The river itself was
- a trembling black surface, lined with foam static in relation to the boat. The
- travelers crouched as low as possible, ignoring Tsutso's condescending grin. For
- minutes they dashed down the race, finally plunged into a field of foam and
- froth, then floated smoothly out into still water.
- The walls rose sheer a thousand feet: brown sandstone pocked with balls of black
- starbush. Tsutso steered the boat to a fringe of shingle. "Here I leave you."
- "Here? At the bottom of this canyon?" Reith asked in wonder.
- Tsutso pointed to a trail winding up the slope. "Five miles away is the
- village."
- "In that case," said Reith, "goodbye and many thanks."
- Tsutso made an indulgent gesture. "It is nothing in particular. Hoch Hars are
- generous folk, except where the Yao are concerned. Had you been Yao, all might
- not have gone so well."
- Reith looked toward Helsse, who said nothing. "The Yao are your enemies?"
- "Our ancient persecutors, who destroyed the Hoch Har empire. Now they keep to
- their side of the mountain, which is well for them, as we can smell out a Yao
- like a bad fish." He jumped nimbly ashore. "The swamps lie ahead. Unless you
- lose yourselves or arouse the swamp people you are as good as at Kabasas." With
- a final wave he started up the path.
- The boat drifted through sepia gloom, the sky a watered silk ribbon high above.
- The afternoon passed, with the walls of the chasm gradually opening out. At
- sunset the travelers camped on a small beach, to pass a night in eerie silence.
- The next day the river emerged into a wide valley overgrown with tall yellow
- grass. The hills retreated; the vegetation along the shore became thick and
- dense, and alive with small creatures, half-spider, half-monkey, which whined
- and yelped and spurted jets of noxious fluid toward the boat. Other streams made
- confluence; the Jinga became broad and placid. On the following day trees of
- remarkable stature appeared along the shore, raising a variety of silhouettes
- against the smoke-brown sky, and by noon the boat floated with jungle to either
- side. The sail hung limp; the air was dank with odors of wet wood and decay. The
- hopping tree-creatures kept to the high branches; through the dimness below
- drifted gauze-moths, insects hanging on pale bubbles, bird-like creatures which
- seemed to swim on four soft wings. Once the travelers heard heavy groaning and
- trampling sounds, another time a ferocious hissing and again a set of strident
- shrieks, from sources invisible.
- By slow degrees the Jinga broadened to become a placid flood, flowing around
- dozens of small islands, each overgrown with fronds, plumes, fan-shaped
- dendrons. Once, from the corner of his eye, Reith glimpsed what seemed to be a
- canoe carrying three youths wearing peacock-tail headdresses, but when he turned
- to look he saw only an island, and was never sure what in fact he had seen.
- Later in the day a sinuous twenty-foot beast swam after them, but fifty feet
- from the boat it seemed to lose interest and submerged.
- At sundown the travelers made camp on the beach of a small island. Half an hour
- later Traz became uneasy and, nudging Reith, pointed to the underbrush. They
- heard a stealthy rustling and presently sensed a clammy odor. An instant later
- the beast which had swum after them lunged forth screaming. Reith fired one of
- his explosive pellets into the very maw of the beast; with its head blown off it
- careened in a circle, using a peculiar prancing gait, finally floundering in the
- water to sink.
- The group gingerly resumed their seats around the campfire. Helsse watched Reith
- return the handgun to his pouch, and could no longer restrain his curiosity.
- "Where, may I ask, did you obtain your weapon?"
- "I have learned," said Reith, "that candor makes problems. Your friend Dordolio
- thinks me a lunatic; Anacho the Dirdirman prefers the term 'amnesiac.' So-think
- whatever you like."
- Helsse murmured, as if for his own ears: "What strange tales we all could tell,
- if candor indeed were the rule."
- Zarfo guffawed. "Candor? Who needs it? I'll tell strange tales as long as
- someone will listen."
- "No doubt," said Helsse, "but persons with desperate goals must hold their
- secrets close."
- Traz, who disliked Helsse, looked sideways with something like a sneer. "Who
- could this be? I have neither secrets nor desperate goals."
- "It must be the Dirdirman," said Zarfo with a sly wink.
- Anacho shook his head. "Secrets? No. Only reticences. Desperate goals? I travel
- with Adam Reith since I have nothing better to do. I am an outcast among the
- sub-men. I have no goals whatever, except survival."
- Zarfo said, "I have a secret: the location of my poor hoard of sequins. My
- goals? Equally modest: an acre or two of river meadow south of Smargash, a cabin
- under the tayberry trees, a polite maiden to boil my tea. I recommend them to
- you."
- Helsse, looking into the campfire, smiled faintly. "My every thought,
- willy-nilly, is a secret. As for my goals-if I return to Settra and somehow can
- appease the Security Company, I'll be well content."
- Reith looked up to where clouds were clotting out the stars. "I'll be content to
- stay dry tonight."
- The group carried the boat ashore, turned it over and, with the sail, made a
- shelter. Rain began to fall, extinguishing the campfire and sending puddles of
- water under the boat.
- Dawn finally arrived: a blear of rain and umber gloom. At noon, with the clouds
- breaking apart, the travelers once more floated the boat, loaded the provisions
- and set off to the south.
- The Jinga widened until the shores were no more than dark marks. The afternoon
- passed; sunset was a vast chaos of black, gold, and brown. Drifting through the
- gloom, the travelers sought for a place to land. Mud flats lined the shore, but
- at last, as purple-brown dusk became night, a sandy bluff appeared under which
- the travelers landed for the night.
- On the following day they entered the swamps. The Jinga, dividing into a dozen
- channels, moved sluggishly among islands of reeds, and the travelers passed a
- cramped night in the boat. Toward evening of the day following they came upon a
- canted dyke of gray schist which, rising and falling, created a chain of rocky
- islands across the swamp. At some immensely remote time, one or another people
- of old Tschai had used the islands to support a causeway, long toppled to a
- crumble of black concrete. On the largest of the islands the travelers camped,
- dining on the dried fish and musty lentils provided by the Hoch Hars.
- Traz was restless. He made a circuit of the island, clambered to the highest
- jut, looked back and forth along the line of the ancient bridge. Reith,
- disturbed by Traz's apprehension, joined him. "What do you see?"
- "Nothing."
- Reith looked all around. The water reflected the dusky mauve of the sky, the
- hulks of the nearby islands. They returned to the campfire, and Reith set sentry
- watches. He awoke at dawn and instantly wondered why he had not been called.
- Then he noticed that the boat was gone. He shook Traz, who had stood the first
- watch. "Last night, whom did you call?"
- "Helsse."
- "He did not call me. And the boat is missing."
- "And Helsse as well," said Traz.
- Reith saw this to be the case.
- Traz pointed to the next island, forty yards across the water. "There is the
- boat. Helsse went for a midnight row."
- Going down to the water's edge Reith called: "Helsse! Helsse!"
- No response. Helsse was not visible.
- Reith considered the distance to the boat. The water was smooth and opaque as
- slate. Reith shook his head. The boat so near, so obvious: bait? From his pouch
- he took the hank of cord, originally a component of his survival kit, and tied a
- stone to one end. He heaved the stone at the boat. It fell short. Reith dragged
- it back through the water. For an instant the line went taut and quivered to the
- presence of something strong and vital.
- Reith grimaced. He heaved the stone again, and now it wedged inside the boat. He
- pulled; the boat came back across the water.
- With Traz, Reith returned to the neighboring island, to find no trace of Helsse.
- But under a jut of rock they found a hole slanting down into the island. Traz
- put his head close to the opening, listened, sniffed, and motioned Reith to do
- the same. Reith caught a faint clammy odor, like that of earthworms. In a
- subdued voice he called down into the hole: "Helsse!" and once again, louder:
- "Helsse!" To no effect.
- They returned to their companions. "It seems that the Pnume play jokes," said
- Reith in a subdued voice.
- They ate a silent breakfast, waited an indecisive fidgeting hour. Then slowly
- they loaded the boat and departed the island. Reith looked back through the
- scanscope until the island no longer could be seen.
- CHAPTER ELEVEN
- THE CHANNELS OF the Jinga came together; the swamp became a jungle. Fronds and
- tendrils hung over the black water; giant moths floated like ghosts. The upper
- strata of the forest were a distinct environment: pink and pale yellow ribbons
- writhed through the air like eels; black-furred globes with six long white arms
- swung nimbly from branch to branch. Once, far off along an avenue of vision,
- Reith saw a cluster of large woven huts high in the branches and a little later
- the boat passed under a bridge of sticks and coarse ropes. Three naked people
- came to cross the bridge as the boat drifted close: frail thin-bodied folk with
- parchment-colored skin. Observing the boat, they halted in shock, then raced
- across the bridge and disappeared into the foliage.
- For a week they sailed and paddled uneventfully, the Jinga growing ever wider.
- One day they passed a canoe from which an old man netted fish; the next day they
- saw a village on the banks; the day after a power-boat throbbed past. On the
- night following they halted at a town and spent the night in a riverside inn,
- standing on stilts over the water.
- Two more days they sailed downstream, to a brisk wind from astern. The Jinga was
- now wide and deep and the wind raised sizable waves. Navigation began to be a
- problem. Coming to another town they saw a river packet headed downstream;
- abandoning the boat they took passage for Kabasas on the Parapan.
- Three days they rode the packet, enjoying the comfort of hammocks and fresh
- food. At noon on the fourth day, with the Jinga so broad that the far shore
- could not be seen, the blue domes of Kabasas appeared on rising land to the
- west.
- Kabasas, like Coad, served as a commercial depot for extensive hinterlands and
- like Coad seemed to seethe with intrigue. Warehouses and sheds faced the docks;
- behind, ranks of arched and colonnaded buildings, of beige, gray, white and dark
- blue plaster, mounted the hills. A wall of each building, for reasons never
- clear to Reith, leaned either inward or out, giving the city a curiously
- irregular appearance by no means dissonant with the conduct of the inhabitants.
- These were a slender alert people, with flowing brown hair, wide cheekbones,
- burning black eyes. The woman were notably handsome and Zarfo cautioned all: "If
- you value your lives, pay no heed to the women! Do not so much as look after
- them, even though they provoke and tease! They play a strange game here in
- Kabasas. At any hint of admiration they set up furious outcry and a hundred
- other women, screaming and cursing, rush up to knife the miscreant."
- "Hmmf," said Reith. "And the men?"
- "They'll save you if they can, and beat the women off, which suits all parties
- very well. Indeed this is the way of courtship. A man desiring a girl will set
- upon her and beat her black and blue. No one would think to interfere. If the
- girl approves, she comes the same way again. When he rushes forth to pummel her,
- she throws herself on his mercy. Such is the painful wooing of the Kabs."
- "It seems somewhat awkward," said Reith.
- "Exactly. Awkward and perverse. Such are affairs in Kabasas. During our stay you
- had best rely on my counsel. First, I nominate the Sea Dragon Inn as a base of
- operations."
- "We'll hardly be here that long. Why not go directly to the dock and find a ship
- to take us across the Parapan?"
- Zarfo pulled at his long black nose. "Things are never so easy! And why cheat
- ourselves of a sojourn at the Sea Dragon Inn? ... Perhaps a week or two."
- "You naturally intend to pay for your own accommodations?"
- Zarfo's white eyebrows dipped sharply. "I am as you know a poor man. My every
- sequin represents toil. On a joint venture of this sort openhanded generosity
- should certainly be the rule."
- "Tonight," said Reith, "we stay at the Sea Dragon Inn. Tomorrow we leave
- Kabasas."
- Zarfo gave a dismal grunt. "It is not my place to dispute your wishes. Hmmf. As
- I understand the matter, you plan to arrive at Smargash, recruit a team of
- technicians, then continue to Ao Hidis?"
- "Correct."
- "Discretion then! I suggest that we take ship to Zara across the Parapan and up
- the Ish River. You have not lost your money?"
- "Definitely not."
- "Take good care of it. The thieves of Kabasas are deft; they use thongs which
- reach out thirty feet." Zarfo pointed. "Observe that structure just above the
- beach? The Sea Dragon Inn!"
- The Sea Dragon Inn was indeed a grand establishment, with wide public rooms and
- pleasant sleeping cubicles. The restaurant was decorated to suggest a submarine
- garden, even to the dark grottos where members of a local sect, who would not
- publicly perform the act of deglutition, were served.
- Reith ordered fresh linen from the staff haberdashery and descended to the great
- bath on the low terrace. He scrubbed himself and was sprayed with tonic and
- massaged with handfuls of fragrant moss. Wrapping himself in a gown of white
- linen he returned to his chamber.
- On the couch sat a man in a soiled dark blue suit. Reith stared. Helsse looked
- back at him with an unfathomable expression. He made no move and uttered no
- sound.
- The silence was intense.
- Reith slowly backed from the room, to stand uncertainly on the balcony, heart
- pounding as if he had seen a ghost. Zarfo appeared, swaggering back to his room
- with white hair billowing.
- Reith signaled to him. "Come, I want to show you something." He took Zarfo to
- the door, thrust it ajar, half-expecting to find the room unoccupied. Helsse sat
- as before. Zarfo whispered: "Is he mad? He sits and stares and mocks us but does
- not speak."
- "Helsse," said Reith. "What are you doing here? What happened to you?"
- Helsse rose to his feet. Reith and Zarfo moved involuntarily back. Helsse looked
- at them with the faintest of smiles. He stepped out on the balcony, walked
- slowly to the stairs. He turned his head; Reith and Zarfo saw the pale oval of
- his face; then, like an apparition, he was gone.
- "What is the meaning of all this?" Reith asked in a husky voice.
- Zarfo shook his head, for once subdued. "The Pnume love their pranks."
- "Should we have held him?"
- "He could have stayed, had he wished."
- "But-I doubt if he is sane."
- Zarfo's only response was a hunch-shouldered shrug.
- Reith went to the edge of the balcony, looked out over the town. "The Pnume know
- the very rooms in which we sleep!"
- "A person floating down the Jinga ends up at Kabasas," said Zarfo testily. "If
- he is able, he patronizes the Sea Dragon Inn. This is not an intricate
- deduction. So much for Pnume omniscience."
- On the following day Zarfo went off by himself and presently returned with a
- short man with skin the color of mahogany, walking with a sore-footed swagger as
- if his shoes were too tight. His face was seamed and crooked; small nervous eyes
- looked slantwise past the beak of his nose. "And here," declared Zarfo grandly,
- "I give you Sealord Dobagq Hrostilfe, a person of sagacity, who will arrange
- everything."
- Reith thought that he had never seen a more obvious rascal.
- "Hrostilfe commands the Pibar," explained Zarfo. "For a most reasonable sum he
- will deliver us to our destination, be it the far coast of Vord."
- "How much across the Parapan?" Reith asked.
- "Only five thousand sequins, would you believe it?" exclaimed Zarfo.
- Reith laughed scornfully. He turned to Zarfo: "I need your help no longer. You
- and your friend Hrostilfe can try to swindle someone else."
- "What?" cried Zarfo. "After I risked my life in that infernal chute and endured
- all manner of hardship?"
- But Reith had walked away. Zarfo came after him, somewhat crestfallen. "Adam
- Reith, you have made a serious mistake."
- Reith nodded grimly. "Instead of an honest man I hired you."
- Zarfo swelled up indignantly. "Who dares name me other than honest?"
- "I do. Hrostilfe would rent his boat for a hundred sequins. He gave you a price
- of five hundred. You told him: 'Why should we not both profit? Adam Reith is
- credulous. I'll name a price and anything over a thousand sequins is mine.' So,
- be off with you."
- Zarfo pulled ruefully at his black nose. "You do me vast wrong. I have only just
- come from chiding Hrostilfe, who admitted knavery. He now offers his boat
- at"-Zarfo cleared his throat-"twelve hundred sequins."
- "Not a bice more than three hundred."
- Zarfo threw his hands into the air and stalked away. Not long after Hrostilfe
- himself appeared with the plea that Reith inspect his ship. Reith followed him
- to the Pibar: a jaunty craft forty feet long, powered by electrostatic jet.
- Hrostilfe kept up a halfhectoring, halfplaintive commentary. "A fast seaworthy
- vessel! Your price is absurd. What of my skills, my sea-lore? Do you appreciate
- the cost of energy? The voyage will exhaust a power cell: a hundred sequins
- which I cannot afford. You must pay for energy and additionally for provisions.
- I am a generous man but I cannot subsidize you."
- Reith agreed to pay for energy and a reasonable amount for provisions, but not
- the installation of new water tanks, extra foul-weather gear, good-luck fetishes
- for the prow; furthermore he insisted on departure the following day, at which
- Hrostilfe gave a sour chuckle. "There's one in the eye for the old Lokhar. He
- had counted on swanking it a week or more at the Sea Dragon."
- "He can stay as long as he likes," said Reith, "provided that he pays."
- "Small chance of that," chuckled Hrostilfe. "Well then, what about provisions?"
- "Buy them. Show me an itemized tally, which I will check in detail."
- "I need an advance: a hundred sequins."
- "Do you take me for a fool? Remember, tomorrow noon we leave."
- "The Pibar will be ready," said Hrostilfe in a sullen voice.
- Returning to the Sea Dragon Inn, Reith found Anacho on the terrace. Anacho
- pointed to a black-haired shape leaning against the seawall. "There he stands:
- Helsse. I called him by name. It was as if he never heard."
- Helsse turned his head; his face seemed deathly white. For a moment or two he
- watched them, then turned and walked slowly away.
- At noon the travelers embarked on the Pibar. Hrostilfe gave his passengers a
- brisk welcome. Reith looked skeptically here and there, wondering in what
- fashion Hrostilfe thought he had won advantage for himself. "Where are the
- provisions?"
- "In the main saloon."
- Reith examined boxes and crates, checked them against Hrostilfe's tally sheet,
- and was forced to admit that Hrostilfe had secured good merchandise at no great
- price. But why, he wondered, were they not stored forward in the lazaret? He
- tried the door, and found it locked.
- Interesting, thought Reith. He called Hrostilfe: "Best to stow the stores
- forward in the lazaret, before we start pitching to the waves."
- "All in good time!" declared Hrostilfe. "First things first! Now it's important
- that we make the most of the morning current!"
- "But it will only require a moment. Here, open the door; I will do it myself."
- Hrostilfe made a waggish gesture. "I am the most finicky of seamen. Everything
- must be done just so."
- Zarfo, who had come into the saloon, gave the lazaret door a speculative frown.
- Reith said, "Very well then, just as you like." Zarfo started to speak but
- catching Reith's gaze, shrugged and held his tongue.
- Hrostilfe nimbly hopped here and there, casting off lines, starting the jet, and
- finally jumping into the control pulpit. The boat surged out to sea.
- Reith spoke to Traz, who went to stand behind Hrostilfe. Bringing forth his
- catapult Traz checked its action, dropped a bolt into the slot, cocked it and
- hung it loosely at his belt.
- Hrostilfe grimaced. "Careful, boy! A foolhardy way to carry your catapult!"
- Traz seemed not to hear.
- Reith, after a word or two with Zarfo and Anacho, went to the foredeck. Setting
- fire to some old rags, he held them in the forward ventilator, so that smoke
- poured down into the lazaret.
- Hrostilfe cried out in anger: "What nonsense is this? Are you trying to set us
- afire?"
- Reith set more rags burning and dropped them into the ventilator. From below
- came a choked cough, then a mutter of voices and a stamping of feet. Hrostilfe
- jerked his hand toward his pouch, but noticed Traz's intent gaze and his ready
- catapult.
- Reith sauntered aft. Traz said, "His weapon is in his pouch."
- Hrostilfe stood rigid with dismay. He made a sudden move but stopped short as
- Traz jerked up the catapult. Reith detached the pouch, handed it to Traz, took
- two daggers and a poniard from various parts of Hrostilfe's person. "Go below,"
- said Reith. "Open the door to the lazaret. Instruct your friends to come forth
- one at a time."
- Hrostilfe, gray-faced with fury, hopped below and, after an exchange of threats
- with Reith, opened the door. Six ruffians came forth, to be disarmed by Anacho
- and Zarfo and sent up to the deck where Reith thrust them over the side.
- The lazaret at last was empty of all but smoke. Hrostilfe was hustled up on
- deck, where he became unctuous and over reasonable. "All can be explained! A
- ridiculous misunderstanding!" But Reith refused to listen and Hrostilfe joined
- his fellows over the side, where, after shaking his fist and bellowing
- obscenities at the grinning faces aboard the Pibar, he struck out for the shore.
- "It appears," said Reith, "that we now lack a navigator. In what direction lies
- Zara?"
- Zarfo's manner was very subdued. He pointed a gnarled black finger. "That should
- be our heading." He turned to look aft toward the seven bobbing heads.
- "Incomprehensible to me, the greed of men for money! See to what disasters it
- leads!" And Zarfo gave a sanctimonious cluck of the tongue. "Well then, an
- unfortunate incident, happily in the past. And now we command the Pibar! Ahead:
- Zara, the Ish River, and Smargash!"
- CHAPTER TWELVE
- ALL DURING THE first day the Parapan was serene. The second day was brisk with
- the Pibar pitching up and over a short chop. On the third day a black-brown
- cloud loomed out of the west, stabbing the sea with lightning. Wind came in
- massive gusts; for two hours the Pibar heaved and tossed; then the storm passed
- over, and the Pibar drove into clement weather.
- On the fourth day Kachan loomed ahead. Reith steered the Pibar alongside a
- fishing craft and Zarfo asked the direction of Zara. The fisherman, a swarthy
- old man with steel rings in his ears, pointed wordlessly. The Pibar surged
- forward, entering the Ish estuary at sunset. The lights of Zara flickered along
- the western shore, but now, with no reason to put into port, the Pibar continued
- south up the Ish.
- The pink moon Az shone on the water; all night the Pibar drove. Morning found
- them in a rich country with rows of stately keel trees along the banks. Then the
- land began to grow barren, and for a space the river wound through a cluster of
- obsidian spires. On the next day a band of tall men in black cloaks were seen on
- the riverbank. Zarfo identified them as Niss tribesmen. They stood motionless,
- watching the Pibar surge upstream. "Give them a wide berth! They live in holes
- like night-hounds and some say the night-hounds are kinder."
- Late in the afternoon sand dunes closed in upon the river and Zarfo insisted
- that the Pibar be anchored in deep water for the night. "Ahead are sandbars and
- shallows. We would be certain to run aground and undoubtedly the Niss have
- followed. They would grapple the boat and swarm aboard."
- "Won't they attack us if we lay at anchor?"
- "No, they fear deep water and never use boats. At anchor we are as safe as if we
- were already at Smargash."
- The night was clear with both Az and Braz wheeling through the sky of old
- Tschai. On the riverbank the Niss boldly lit their fires and boiled their pots,
- and later started up a wild music of fiddles and drums. For hours the travelers
- sat watching the agile shapes in black cloaks dancing around the fires, kicking,
- jumping, heads up, heads low; swinging, whirling, prancing with arms akimbo.
- In the morning the Niss were nowhere to be seen. The Pibar passed through the
- shallows without incident. Late in the afternoon the travelers came to a
- village, guarded from the Niss by a line of posts to each of which was chained a
- skeleton in a rotting black cloak. Zarfo declared the village to be the feasible
- limit of navigation with Smargash yet three hundred miles south, across a land
- of deserts, mountain pinnacles and chasms. "Now we must travel by caravan, over
- the old Sarsazm Road, to Hamil Zut under the Lokhara Uplands. Tonight I'll make
- inquiry and learn what's to our advantage."
- Zarfo stayed ashore overnight, returning in the morning with the news that by
- dint of the most furious bargaining he had exchanged the Pibar for first class
- passage by caravan to Hamil Zut.
- Reith calculated. Three hundred miles? Two hundred sequins a person, at maximum:
- eight hundred for the four. The Pibar was worth ten thousand, even at a
- sacrifice price. He looked at Zarfo, who ingenuously returned the gaze. "You
- will recall," said Reith, "the ill feeling and dissension at Kabasas?"
- "Of course," declared Zarfo. "To this day I become anguished by the injustice of
- your hints."
- "Here is another hint. How much extra did you demand for the Pibar and receive?"
- Zarfo gave an uneasy grimace. "Naturally, I was saving the news to be a glad
- surprise."
- "How much?"
- "Three thousand sequins," muttered Zarfo. "No more, no less. I consider it a
- fair price up here, far from wealth."
- Reith allowed the figure to pass without challenge. "Where is the money?"
- "It will be paid when we go ashore."
- "And when does the caravan leave?"
- "Soon-a day or so. There is a passable inn; we can spend the night ashore."
- "Very well; let us all go now and collect the money."
- Somewhat to Reith's surprise the sack which Zarfo received from the innkeeper
- contained exactly three thousand sequins, and Zarfo gave a sour sneer and, going
- into the tavern, called for a pot of ale.
- Three days later the caravan started south: a file of twelve power wagons, four
- mounted with sandblasts. Sarsazm Road led through awesome scenery: gorges and
- great precipices, the bed of an ancient sea, vistas of distant mountains,
- sighing forests of keel and blackfern. Occasionally Niss were sighted but they
- kept their distance and on the evening of the third day the caravan pulled into
- Hamil Zut, a squalid little town of a hundred mud huts and a dozen taverns.
- In the morning Zarfo engaged pack-beasts, equipment and a pair of guides, and
- the travelers set forth up the trail into the Lokharan highlands.
- "This is wild country," Zarfo warned them. "Dangerous beasts are occasionally
- seen, so be ready with your weapons."
- The trail was steep, the terrain indeed wild. On several occasions they sighted
- Kar Yan, subtle gray beasts slinking through the rocks, sometimes erect on two
- legs, sometimes dropping to all six. Another time they encountered a
- tiger-headed reptile gorging upon a carcass, and were able to pass unmolested.
- On the third day after leaving Hamil Zut, the travelers entered Lokhara, a great
- upland plain; and in the mid-afternoon Smargash appeared ahead. Zarfo now told
- Reith: "It occurs to me, as it must have to you, that yours is a very ticklish
- venture."
- "Agreed."
- "Folk here are not indifferent to the Wankh, and a stranger might easily talk to
- the wrong people."
- So.
- "It might be better for me to select the personnel."
- "Certainly. But leave the question of payment to me."
- "As you wish," growled Zarfo.
- The countryside was now a prosperous well-watered land, populated by peasant
- farms. The men, like Zarfo, were tattooed or dyed black, with a mane of white
- hair. The skins of the women, in contradistinction, were chalky white, and their
- hair was black. Urchins showed white or black hair according to their sex, but
- their skins were uniformly the color of the dirt in which they played.
- A road ran on a riverbank, under majestic old keels. To either side were small
- bungalows, each in its bower of vines and shrubs. Zarfo sighed with vast
- feeling. "Observe me, the transient worker returning to his home. But where is
- my fortune? How may I buy my cottage by the river? Poverty has forced me to
- strange ways; I am thrown in with a stone-hearted zealot, who takes his joy
- thwarting the hopes of a kind old man!"
- Reith paid no heed, and presently they entered Smargash.
- CHAPTER THIRTEEN
- REITH SAT IN the parlor of the squat cylindrical cottage he had rented,
- overlooking the Smargash common, where the young folk spent much time dancing.
- Across from him, in wicker chairs, sat five white-haired men of Smargash, a
- group screened from the twenty Zarfo originally had approached. The time was
- middle afternoon; out on the common, dancers skipped and kicked to music of
- concertina, bells and drums.
- Reith explained as much of his program as he dared: not a great deal. "You men
- are here because you can help me in a certain venture. Zarfo Detwiler has
- informed you that a large sum of money is involved; this is true, even if we
- fail. If we succeed, and I believe the chances are favorable, you will earn
- wealth sufficient to satisfy any of you. There is danger, as might be expected,
- but we shall hold it to a minimum. If anyone does not care to consider such a
- venture, now is the time to leave."
- The oldest of the group, one Jag Jaganig, an expert in the overhaul and
- installation of control systems, said, "So far we can't say yes or no. None of
- us would refuse to drag home a sack of sequins, but neither would we care to
- challenge impossibility for a chancy bice."
- "You want more information?" Reith looked from face to face. "This is natural
- enough. But I don't want to take the merely curious into my confidence. If any
- of you are definitely not disposed for a dangerous but by no means desperate
- venture, please identify yourself now."
- There was a slight stir of uneasiness, but no one spoke out.
- Reith waited a moment. "Very well; you must bind yourselves to secrecy."
- The group bound themselves by awful Lokhar oaths. Zarfo, plucking a hair from
- each head, twisted a fiber which he set alight. Each inhaled the smoke. "So we
- are bound, one to all; if one proves false, the others as one will strike him
- down."
- Reith, impressed by the ritual, had no more qualms about speaking to the point.
- "I know the exact location of a source of wealth, at a place not on the planet
- Tschai. We need a spaceship and a crew to operate it. I propose to commandeer a
- spaceship from the Ao Hidis field; you men shall be the crew. To demonstrate my
- sanity and good faith, I will pay to each man on the day of departure five
- thousand sequins. If we try but fail, each man receives another five thousand
- sequins."
- "Each surviving man," grumbled Jag Jaganig.
- Reith went on: "If we succeed, ten thousand sequins will seem like ten bice.
- Essentially, this is the scope of the venture."
- The Lokhars shuffled dubiously in their chairs. Jag Jaganig spoke. "We obviously
- have the basis for an adequate crew here, at least for a Zeno, or a Kud, or even
- one of the small Kadants. But it is no small matter to so affront the Wankh."
- "Or worse, the Wankhmen," muttered Zorofim.
- "As I recall," mused Thadzei, "no great vigilance prevailed. The scheme, while
- startling, seems feasible-provided that the ship we board is in operative
- condition."
- "Aha!" exclaimed Belje. "That' provided that' is the key to the entire exploit!"
- Zarfo jeered: "Naturally there is risk. Do you expect money for nothing?"
- "I can hope."
- Jag Jaganig inquired: "Assume that the ship is ours. Is further risk entailed?"
- "None."
- "Who will navigate?"
- "I will."
- "In what form is this 'wealth'?" demanded Zorofim. "Gems? Sequins? Precious
- metal? Antiques? Essences?"
- "I don't care to go any further into detail, except to guarantee that you will
- not be disappointed."
- The discussion proceeded, with every aspect of the venture subjected to attack
- and analysis. Alternative proposals were considered, argued, rejected. No one
- seemed to regard the risk as overwhelming, nor did anyone doubt the group's
- ability to handle the ship. But none evinced enthusiasm. Jag Jaganig put the
- situation into focus. "We are puzzled," he told Reith. "We do not understand
- your purposes. We are skeptical of boundless treasures."
- Zarfo said, "Here I must speak. Adam Reith has his faults which I won't deny. He
- is stubborn and unwieldy; he is crafty as a zut; he is ruthless when opposed.
- But he is a man of his word. If he declares a treasure to exist for our taking,
- that aspect of the matter is closed."
- After a moment Belje muttered: "Desperate, desperate! Who wants to learn the
- truth of the black boxes?"
- "Desperate, no," countered Thadzei. "Risky, yes, and may demons runoff with the
- black boxes!"
- "I'll take the chance," said Zorofim.
- "I as well," said jag Jaganig. "Who lives forever?"
- Belje finally capitulated and declared himself committed. "When shall we leave?"
- "As soon as possible," said Reith. "The longer I wait, the more nervous I get."
- "And more the chance of someone else running off with our treasure, hey?"
- exclaimed Zarfo. "That would be a sad case!"
- "Give us three days to arrange our affairs," said Jag Jaganig.
- "And what of the five thousand sequins?" demanded Thadzei. "Why not distribute
- the money now, so that we may have the use of it?"
- Reith hesitated no longer than a tenth of a second. "Since you must trust me, I
- must trust you." He paid to each of the marveling Lokhars fifty purple sequins,
- worth a hundred white sequins each.
- "Excellent!" declared jag Jaganig. "Remember all! Utter discretion! Spies are
- everywhere. In particular I distrust that peculiar stranger at the inn who
- dresses like a Yao."
- "What?" cried Reith. "A young man, black-haired, very elegant.
- "The person precisely. He stares out over the dancing field with never a word to
- say."
- Reith, Zarfo, Anacho and Traz went to the inn. In the dim taproom sat Helsse,
- long legs in tight black twill breeches stretched under the heavy table.
- Brooding, he looked straight ahead and out the doorway to where black-skinned
- white-haired boys and white-skinned blackhaired girls skipped and caracoled in
- the tawny sunlight.
- Reith said: "Helsse!"
- Helsse never shifted his gaze.
- Reith came closer. "Helsse!"
- Helsse slowly turned his head; Reith looked into eyes like lenses of black
- glass.
- "Speak to me," urged Reith. "Helsse! Speak!"
- Helsse opened his mouth, uttered a mournful croak. Reith drew back. Helsse
- watched him incuriously, then returned to his inspection of the dancing field
- and the dim hills beyond.
- Reith joined his comrades to the side where Zarfo poured him a pot of ale. "What
- of the Yao? Is he mad?"
- "I don't know. He might be feigning. Or under hypnotic control. Or drugged."
- Zarfo took a long draft from his pot, wiped the foam from his nose. "The Yao
- might think it a favor were we to cure him."
- "No doubt," said Reith, "but how?"
- "Why not call in a Dugbo practitioner?"
- "What might that be?"
- Zarfo jerked his thumb to the east. "The Dugbo have a camp back of town:
- shiftless folk in rags and tatters, given to thieving and vice, and musicians to
- boot. They worship demons, and their practitioners perform miracles."
- "So you think the Dugbo can cure Helsse?"
- Zarfo drained his pot. "If he is feigning, I assure you he won't feign long."
- Reith shrugged. "We have no better occupation for a day or two.
- "Exactly my way of thinking," said Zarfo.
- The Dugbo practitioner was a spindly little man dressed in brown rags and boots
- of uncured leather. His eyes were a luminous hazel, his russet hair was confined
- in three greasy knobs. On his cheek pale cicatrices worked and jumped as he
- spoke. He did not appear to consider Reith's requirements surprising and with
- clinical curiosity studied Helsse, who sat sardonically indifferent in one of
- the wicker chairs.
- The practitioner approached Helsse, looked into his eyes, inspected his ears,
- and nodded as if a suspicion had been verified. He signaled the fat youth who
- assisted him, then ducking behind Helsse touched him here and there while the
- youth held a bottle of black essence under Helsse's nose. Helsse presently
- became passive and relaxed into the chair. The practitioner set heaps of incense
- alight and fanned the fumes into Helsse's face. Then, while the youth played a
- nose flute the practitioner sang: secret words, close to Helsse's ears. He put a
- wad of clay into Helsse's hand; Helsse furiously began to mold the clay and
- presently set up a mutter.
- The practitioner signaled to Reith. "A simple case of possession. Notice: the
- evil flows from the fingers into the clay. Talk to him if you like. Be gentle
- but command, and he will answer you." "Helsse," said Reith, "describe your
- association with Adam Reith."
- In a clear voice Helsse spoke. "Adam Reith came to Settra. There had been rumor
- and speculation, but when he arrived, all was different. By strange chance he
- came to Blue Jade, my personal vantage, and there I saw him first. Dordolio came
- after and in his rage maligned Reith as one of the 'cult': a man who fancied
- himself from the far world Home. I spoke with Adam Reith but learned only
- confusion. To clarify by acquiescence, third of the Ten Techniques, I took him
- to the headquarters of the 'cult' and received contradictions. A courier new to
- Settra followed us. I could not dramatically divert, sixth of the Techniques.
- Adam Reith killed the courier and took a message of unknown importance; he would
- not allow me inspection; I could not comfortably insist. I referred him to a
- Lokhar, again 'clarifying by acquiescence': as it eventuated, the wrong
- technique. The Lokhar read far into the message. I ordered Reith assassinated.
- The attempt was bungled. Reith and his band fled south. I received instructions
- to accompany him and penetrate his motivations. We journeyed east to the Jinga
- River and downstream by boat. On an island-" Helsse gave a gasping cry and sank
- back, rigid and trembling.
- The practitioner waved smoke into Helsse's face and pinched his nose. "Return to
- the 'calm' state, and henceforth, when your nose is pinched, return; this shall
- be an absolute injunction. Now then, answer such questions as are put to you."
- Reith asked, "Why do you spy on Adam Reith?"
- "I am obligated to do so; furthermore I enjoy such work."
- "Why are you obligated?"
- "All Wankhmen must serve Destiny."
- "Oho. You are a Wankhman?"
- "Yes."
- And Reith wondered how he could ever have thought otherwise. Tsutso and the Hoch
- Hars had not been deceived: "Had you been Yao, all would not have gone so well,"
- so had said Tsutso.
- Reith glanced ruefully at his comrades, then turned back to Helsse. "Why do the
- Wankhmen keep spies in Cath?"
- "They watch the turn of the 'round'; they guard against a renascence of the
- 'cult.' "
- "Why?"
- "It is a matter of stasis. Conditions now are optimum. Any change can only be
- for the worse."
- "You accompanied Adam Reith from Settra to an island in the swamps. What
- happened there?"
- Helsse once more croaked and became catatonic. The practitioner tweaked his
- nose.
- Reith asked, "How did you travel to Kabasas?"
- Again Helsse became inert. Reith tweaked his nose. "Tell us why you cannot
- answer the questions?"
- Helsse said nothing. He appeared to be conscious. The practitioner fanned smoke
- in his face; Reith tweaked his nose and, doing so, saw that Helsse's eyes looked
- in separate directions. The practitioner rose to his feet, and began to put away
- his equipment. "That's all. He's dead."
- Reith stared from the practitioner to Helsse and back. "Because of the
- questioning?"
- "The smoke permeates the head. Sometimes the subjects live: often, in fact. This
- one died swiftly; your questions ruptured his sensorium."
- The following evening was clear and windy with puffs of dust racing over the
- vacant dancing field. Through the dusk men in gray cloaks came to the rented
- cottage. Within, lamps were low and windows shrouded; conversations were
- conducted in quiet voices. Zarfo spread an old map out on the table, and pointed
- with a thick black finger. "We can travel to the coast and down, but this is all
- Niss country. We can fare east around the Sharf to Lake Falas: a long route. Or
- we can move south, through the Lost Counties, over the Infnets and down to Ao
- Hidis: the direct and logical route."
- Reith asked, "Sky-rafts aren't available?"
- Belje, the least enthusiastic of the adventurers, shook his head. "Conditions
- are no longer as they were when I was a youth. Then you might have selected
- among half a dozen. Now there are none. Sequins and sky-rafts are both hard to
- come by. So now, in pursuit of the one, we lack the use of the other."
- "How will we travel?"
- "To Blalag we ride by power wagon, where perhaps we can hire some sort of
- conveyance as far as the Infnets. Thereafter, we must go afoot; the old roads
- south have been destroyed and forgotten."
- CHAPTER FOURTEEN
- FROM SMARGASH TO the old Lokhar capital, Blalag, was a three-day journey across
- a windy wasteland. At Blalag the adventurers took shelter at a dingy inn, where
- they were able to arrange transportation by motorcart to the mountain-settlement
- Derduk, far into the Infnets. The journey occupied the better part of two days
- under uncomfortable conditions. At Derduk the only accommodation was a
- ramshackle cabin which provoked grumbling among the Lokhars. But the owner, a
- garrulous old man, stewed a great cauldron of game and wild berries, and the
- peevishness subsided.
- At Derduk the road south became a disused track. At dawn the now somewhat
- cheerless group of adventurers set forth on foot. All day they traveled through
- a land of rock pinnacles, fields of rubble and scree. At sundown with a chill
- wind sighing through the rocks they came upon a small black tam where they
- passed the night. The next day brought them to the brink of a vast chasm and
- another day was spent finding a route to the bottom. On the sandy floor beside
- the river Desidea, on its way east to Lake Falas, the group camped, to be
- disturbed for much of the night by uncanny hoots and near-human yells, echoing
- and reechoing through the rocks.
- In the morning, rather than attempt the south face of the precipice, they
- followed the Desidea and presently found a cleft which brought them out upon a
- high savannah rolling off into the murk.
- Two days the adventurers marched south, reaching the extreme ramparts of the
- Infnets by twilight of the second day, with a tremendous vista across the lands
- to the south. When night came a sparkle of far lights appeared. "Ao Hidis!"
- cried the Lokhars in mingled relief and apprehension.
- Over the minuscule campfire that night there was much talk of Wankh and
- Wankhmen. The Lokhars were unanimous in their detestation of the Wankhmen: "Even
- the Dirdirmen, for all their erudition and preening, are never so jealous of
- their prerogatives," declared jag Jaganig.
- Anacho gave an airy laugh. "From the Dirdirman point of view Wankhmen are
- scarcely superior to any of the other subraces."
- "Give the rascals credit," said Zarfo, "they understand the Wankh chimes. I
- myself am resourceful and perceptive; still, in twenty-five years, I learned
- only pidgin chords for 'yes,' 'no; 'stop,' 'go; 'right; 'wrong,' 'good,' 'bad.'
- I must admit to their achievement."
- "Bah," muttered Zorofim. "They are born to it; they hear chimes from the first
- instant of their lives; it is no great achievement."
- "One that they make the most of, however," said Belje with something like envy
- in his voice. "Think; they work at nothing, they have no responsibilities, but
- to stand between the Wankh and the world of Tschai, and they live in refinement
- and ease."
- Reith spoke in a puzzled voice. "A man like Helsse now: he was a Wankhman who
- lived as a spy. What did he hope to achieve? What Wankh interests did he
- safeguard in Cath?"
- "Wankh interests-none. But remember, the Wankhmen are opposed to change, since
- any alteration of circumstances can only be to their disadvantage. When a Lokhar
- begins to understand chimes he is sent away. In Cath-who knows what they fear?"
- And Zarfo warmed his hands at the campfire.
- The night passed slowly. At dawn Reith looked toward Ao Hidis through his
- scanscope, but could see little for the mist.
- Surly with tension and lack of sleep the group once more set off to the south,
- keeping to such cover as offered itself.
- The city slowly became distinct; Reith located the dock where the Vargaz had
- discharged-how long ago it seemed! He traced the road which led through the
- market and north past the spacefield. From the heights the city seemed placid,
- lifeless; the black towers of the Wankhmen brooded over the water. On the
- spacefield, plain to be seen, were five spaceships.
- By noon the party reached the ridge above the city. With great care Reith
- studied the spacefield, now directly below, through his scanscope. To the left
- were the repair shops, and nearby a bulk-cargo vessel in a state of obvious
- disrepair, with scaffolds raised beside exposed machinery. Another ship, this
- the closest, at the back of the field, seemed to be an abandoned hulk. The
- condition of the other three vessels was not obvious, but the Lokhars declared
- them all operable. "It is a matter of routine," said Zorofim. "When a ship is
- down for overhaul, it is moved close to the shops. The ships in transit dock
- yonder, in the 'Load Zone."'
- "It would seem then that three ships are potentially suitable for our purposes?"
- The Lokhars would not go quite so far.
- "Sometimes minor repairs are done in the 'Load Zone,"' said Belje.
- "Notice," said Thadzei, "the repair cart by the access ramp. It carries
- components, cases, and they must come from one of the three ships in the 'Load
- Zone.' "
- These were two small cargo ships and a passenger vessel. The Lokhars favored the
- cargo ships, with which they felt familiar. In regard to the passenger vessel,
- which Reith considered the most suitable, the Lokhars were in disagreement,
- Zorofim and Thadzei declaring it to be a standard ship in a specialized hull;
- Jag Jaganig and Belje equally certain that this was either a new design or an
- elaborate modification, in either case certain to present difficulties.
- All day the group studied the spacefield, watching the activity of the workshop
- and the traffic along the road. During the middle afternoon a black air-car
- drifted down to land beside the passenger vessel, which now obscured the view,
- but it appeared that there was a transfer between ship and air-car. Somewhat
- later Lokhar mechanics brought a case of energy tubes to the ship, which
- according to Zarfo was a sure signal that the ship was preparing for departure.
- The sun sank toward the ocean. The men fell silent, studying the ships which,
- hardly more than a quarter-mile distant, seemed tantalizingly accessible. Still
- the question lingered: Which of the three ships in the "Load Zone" offered the
- maximum opportunity for a successful departure? The consensus favored one of the
- cargo ships, only Jag Jaganig preferring the passenger ship.
- Reith's nerves began to crawl. The next few hours would shape his future, and
- far too many variables lay beyond his control. Strange that the ships should be
- guarded so lightly! On the other hand who was apt to attempt the theft of a
- spaceship? Probably not in the last thousand years had such an act occurred, if
- ever.
- Dusk fell over the landscape; the group began to descend the mountainside.
- Floodlights illuminated the ground beside the warehouses, the repair shop, the
- depot in back of the loading zone. The remainder of the field remained in
- greater or less darkness, the ships casting long shadows away from the lights.
- The men scrambled the last few feet down to the base of the hill, crossed a path
- of dank marshland, and came to the edge of the field, and here they waited five
- minutes, watching and listening. The warehouses showed no activity; in the shops
- a few men still worked.
- Reith, Zarfo and Thadzei went forth to reconnoiter. Crouching they ran to the
- abandoned hulk, where they stood in the shadows.
- From the machine shop came the whine of machinery; from the depot a voice called
- something unintelligible. The three waited ten minutes. In the town at the back
- of the spacefield long skeins of light had come into being; across the harbor
- the Wankh towers showed a few glimmers of yellow.
- The machine shop became quiet; the workers appeared to be leaving. Reith, Zarfo
- and Thadzei moved across the field keeping to the long shadows. They reached the
- first of the small cargo ships, where again they halted to look and listen:
- there were no sounds, no alarms. Zarfo and Thadzei went to the entry hatch,
- heaved it open and entered, while Reith with beating heart stood guard outside.
- Ten interminable minutes passed. From within came furtive sounds and once or
- twice a glimmer of light, which aroused in Reith an intense nervousness.
- Finally the two Lokhars returned. "No good," grunted Zarfo. "No air, no energy.
- Let's try the other."
- They stole quickly across the bands of light and shadow to the second cargo
- ship; as before Zarfo and Thadzei entered while Reith stood at the port. The
- Lokhars returned almost immediately. "Under repair," Zarfo reported glumly.
- "This is where the component cases come from."
- They turned to look at the passenger vessel. "It's not a standard design," Zarfo
- grumbled. "Still, the instruments and layout may be familiar to us."
- "Let's go aboard and look," said Reith. But now a light flared across the field.
- Reith's first thought was that they had been discovered. But the light played
- toward the passenger vessel. From the direction of the gate came a low
- easy-moving shape. The vehicle stopped beside the passenger vessel; a number of
- dark figures alighted-how many could not be ascertained in the glare. With a
- curiously abrupt and heavy motion, the figures entered the ship.
- "Wankh," muttered Zarfo. "They're going aboard."
- "It would mean that the ship is ready for departure," said Reith. "A chance we
- can't afford to miss!"
- Zarfo demurred. "It's one thing to steal an empty ship, another coping with a
- half dozen Wankh, and Wankhmen as well."
- "How do you know Wankhmen are aboard?"
- "Because of the lights. Wankh project pulses of radiation and observe the
- reflections."
- Behind them came a faint sound. Reith whirled to find Traz. "We became worried;
- you were gone so long."
- "Go back; bring everyone here. If we have opportunity, we'll board the passenger
- ship. It's the only one available."
- Traz vanished into the darkness. Five minutes later the entire group stood in
- the shadow of the cargo ship.
- Half an hour went by. In the passenger ship shapes moved across the lights,
- performing activities beyond the comprehension of the nervous men. In husky
- whispers they debated possible courses of action. Should they try to storm the
- ship now? Almost certainly departure was in the offing. Such action was
- obviously reckless. The group decided to pursue a conservative course and return
- into the mountains to await a more propitious occasion. As they started back, a
- number of Wankh issued from the vessel and lurched to the vehicle, which almost
- immediately left the field. Within the ship lights still glowed. No further
- activity was evident.
- "I'm going to give it a look," said Reith. He ran across the field, followed by
- the others. They mounted the ramp, passed through an embarkation port into the
- ship's main saloon, which was unoccupied. "Everybody to his station," said
- Reith. "Let's take it up!"
- "If we can," grumbled Zorofim.
- Traz cried out a warning: turning, Reith saw that a single Wankh had entered the
- saloon, watching in nonplussed disapproval. It was a black creature somewhat
- larger than a man, with a heavy torso, a squat head from which two black lenses
- flickered at half-second intervals. The legs were short; the feet were played
- webs; it carried no weapons or implements; in fact wore no garment or harness of
- any sort. From a sound organ at the base of the skull came four reverberating
- chimes, which, considering the circumstances, seemed measured and unexcited.
- Reith stepped forward, pointed to a settee, to indicate that it should sit down.
- The Wankh stood motionless, looking after the Lokhars who had gone their various
- ways, checking engines, energy, supplies, oxygen. The Wankh at last seemed to
- understand the events which were taking place. It took a step toward the exit
- port, but Reith barred the way and once again pointed to the settee. The Wankh
- loomed in front of him, the glassy eyes flickering. Once again the chimes
- sounded, more peremptory than before.
- Zarfo returned to the saloon. "The ship is in order. But it's an unfamiliar
- model, as I feared."
- "Can we take it up?"
- "We'll have to make sure we know what we are doing. It may be minutes or hours."
- "Then we can't let the Wankh go."
- "Awkward," said Zarfo.
- The Wankh thrust forward; Reith pushed it back and displayed his handgun. The
- Wankh uttered a loud chime. Zarfo made a chirping sound. The Wankh drew back.
- Reith asked: "What did you say?"
- "I just gave the pidgin sound for 'danger.' It seems to understand well enough."
- "I wish it would sit down; it makes me nervous standing there."
- "Wankh almost never sit," said Zarfo and went to seal the entrance port.
- Time passed. From various locations about the ship came calls and exclamations
- from the Lokhars. At Reith's direction, Traz stood in the observation dome,
- watching over the field. The Wankh stood stolidly, apparently at a loss for
- action.
- The ship shuddered; the lights flickered, went dim, came on bright once more.
- Zarfo looked into the saloon. "We've got the engines pumping. Now if Thadzei can
- figure out the control configurations-"
- Traz called down: "The car is coming back. The floodlight has just gone on, to
- light the field."
- Thadzei ran through the saloon, jumped up to the control console. He peered this
- way and that, while Zarfo stood by his side urging him to haste. Reith set
- Anacho to guarding the Wankh, Joined Traz in the observation dome. The car was
- slowing to a stop beside the ship.
- Zarfo pointed here and there across the control panel; Thadzei nodded
- doubtfully, thrust at a set of pressure pads. The ship shuddered and heaved;
- Reith felt acceleration underfoot. He was departing Tschai! Thadzei made
- adjustments; the ship pitched. Reith reached for a stanchion; the Wankh stumbled
- and fell upon the settee, where it remained. From elsewhere about the ship came
- full-throated Lokhar curses.
- Reith made his way to the bridge, to stand beside Thadzei, who desperately
- worked the controls, testing first one pad, then another. Reith asked: "Is there
- an automatic pilot?"
- "Bound to be, somewhere. I can't locate the engagement. These are by no means
- standard controls."
- "Do you know what you are doing?"
- "No."
- Reith looked down at the dark face of Tschai. "So long as we are going up and
- not down, we're in good shape."
- "If I had an hour, a single hour," moaned Thadzei, "I could trace out the
- circuits."
- Jag Jaganig came into the saloon to make a querulous protest. Thadzei called
- back: "I'm doing the best I can!"
- "It's not good enough! We'll crash!"
- "Not yet," said Thadzei grimly. "I see a lever I haven't tried." He pulled the
- lever; the ship skidded alarmingly and thrust off at great speed to the east.
- Once more the Lokhars gave a series of anguished cries. Thadzei moved the lever
- back to its original position. The ship came to a trembling stasis. Thadzei gave
- a great tremulous sigh, peering back and forth across the panel. "Like none I
- have ever seen!"
- Reith looked out the port but saw nothing but darkness. Zarfo spoke in a calm
- voice: "Our altitude is not quite a thousand feet ... Now it is nine hundred..."
- Thadzei desperately worked the controls. Once again the ship lurched and fled
- eastward. "Up, up!" screamed Zarfo. "We're diving into the ground!"
- Thadzei brought the ship back to a halt. "Well then, this toggle will surely
- activate the repulsors." He gave it a twitch. From aft came a sinister crackle,
- a muffled explosion. The Lokhars yelled mournfully. Zarfo read the altimeter.
- "Five hundred ... Four hundred ... Three ... Two ... One..."
- Contact: a splash, a bobbing and pitching, then silence. The ship was afloat,
- apparently undamaged, in an unknown body of water. The Parapan? The Schanizade?
- Reith threw up his hands in fatalistic despair. Back once more in Tschai.
- Reith jumped down to the saloon. The Wankh stood like a statue. Whatever its
- emotions, none were evident.
- Reith went aft to the engine room, where Jag Jaganig and Belje looked
- disconsolately at a smoldering panel. "An overload," said Belje. "Circuits and
- nodes are certainly melted."
- "Can we make repairs?"
- Belje made a glum sound. "If tools and parts are aboard."
- "If time is given to us," said Jag Jaganig.
- Reith returned to the saloon. He threw himself down upon a settee and stared
- bleakly at the Wankh. The plan had succeeded ... almost. He leaned back, sodden
- with fatigue. The others must be feeling the same. No useful purpose could be
- served by going longer without rest. He got to his feet, called the group
- together. Two-man watches were set; the others slumped upon settees to sleep as
- best they could.
- The night passed. Az raced across the sky, followed by Braz. Dawn revealed a
- placid expanse which Zarfo identified as Lake Falas. "And never has it served a
- more useful purpose!"
- Reith went out on the top surface of the hull, and searched the horizons through
- his scanscope. Hazy water stretched to south, east and west. To the north was a
- low shore toward which the ship was drifting, propelled by a gentle breeze from
- the south. Reith went back into the ship. The Lokhars had detached a panel and
- were unenthusiastically discussing the damage. Their attitudes gave Reith all
- the information he needed.
- In the saloon he found Anacho and Traz gnawing on spheres of black paste encased
- in a hard white rind which they had taken from a locker. Reith offered one of
- the spheres to the Wankh, who paid no heed. Reith ate the sphere himself,
- finding it similar to cheese. Zarfo presently joined him and verified what Reith
- already had guessed. "Repairs are not feasible. A whole bank of crystals is
- destroyed. There are no spares aboard."
- Reith gave a gloomy nod. "As I expected."
- "What next?" demanded Zarfo.
- "As soon as the wind blows us ashore we disembark and return to Ao Hidis for
- another try."
- Zargo grunted. "What of the Wankh?"
- "We'll have to let him go his own way. I certainly don't plan to murder him."
- "A mistake," sniffed Anacho. "Best kill the repulsive beast."
- "For your information," said Zarfo, "the main Wankh citadel Ao Khaha is situated
- on Lake Falas. It will not be far distant."
- Reith went back out on the foredeck. The first tussocks of the shore were only
- half a mile distant; beyond lay quagmire. To ground at the edge of such a morass
- would be highly inconvenient, and Reith was glad to see that the wind, shifting
- to the east, seemed to be moving the ship slowly to the west, perhaps aided by a
- sluggish current. Turning the scanscope along the shore Reith was able to
- distinguish a set of irregular juts and promontories far to the west.
- From within came the sound of expostulation, followed by the thud of heavy
- footsteps. Out on the foredeck came the Wankh, followed by Anacho and Traz. The
- Wankh fixed Reith for half a second with its flicking vision, long enough to
- register an image, then turned by slow degrees to look around the horizon.
- Before Reith could prevent it, even were he able to do so, the Wankh stepped
- forward, ran with its peculiar lurching gait down the side of the ship and
- plunged into the water. Reith caught a glimpse of wet black hide, then the
- creature was gone into the depths.
- Reith searched the surface for a period but saw no more of the Wankh. An hour
- later, checking the progress of the vessel, he once more turned the scanscope on
- the western shore. To his cold dismay he saw that the shapes he had thought to
- be crags were the black glass towers of an extensive Wankh fortress city.
- Wordlessly Reith examined the swamp to the north with a new interest born of
- desperation.
- Tussocks of white grass protruded like hairy wens from fields of black slime and
- stagnant ponds. Reith went below to seek material for a raft, but found nothing.
- The padding of the settee was welded to the structure and came away in shreds
- and chunks. There was no lifeboat aboard. Reith returned to the deck and
- wondered what his next move should be. The Lokhars joined him: disconsolate
- figures in wheatcolored smocks, wind blowing the white hair back from their
- craggy black faces.
- Reith spoke to Zarfo: "Do you know the place yonder?"
- "It must be Ao Khaha."
- "If we are taken, what can we expect?"
- "Death."
- The morning passed; the sun climbing toward noon dissolved the haze which
- shrouded the horizons, and the towers of Ao Khaha stood distinct.
- The ship was noted. On the water under the city appeared a barge, which surged
- across the water leaving a ribbon of white wake. Reith studied it through the
- scanscope. Wankhmen stood on the deck, perhaps a dozen, curiously alike; slender
- men with death-pale skins, saturnine or, in some instances, ascetic features.
- Reith considered resistance: perhaps a desperate attempt to seize the barge? He
- decided against such a trial, which almost certainly could not succeed.
- The Wankhmen scrambled aboard the ship. Ignoring Reith, Traz and Anacho, they
- addressed the Lokhars. "All down to the barge. Do you carry weapons?"
- "No," grunted Zarfo.
- "Quick then." Now they noticed Anacho. "What is this? A Dirdirman?" And they
- gave chuckles of soft surprise. They inspected Reith. "And what sort is that
- one? A motley crew, to be sure! Now then, all down to the barge!"
- The Lokhars went first, hulk-shouldered, knowing what lay ahead. Reith, Traz and
- Anacho followed.
- "All! Stand on the deck, at the gunwales, in a neat line. Turn your backs." And
- the Wankhman brought out their handguns.
- The Lokhars started to obey. Reith had not expected such casual and perfunctory
- slaughter. Furious that he had not resisted from the first he cried out: "Should
- we let them kill us so easily? Let's make a fight of it!"
- The Wankhmen gave sharp orders: "Unless you wish worse, quick! To the gunwales!"
- Near the barge the water roiled. A black shape floated lazily to the surface and
- produced four plangent chimes. The Wankhmen stiffened; their faces sagged into
- sneers of annoyance. They waved at their captives. "Back then, into the
- cockpit."
- The barge returned to the great black fortress, the Wankhmen muttering among
- themselves. It passed behind a breakwater, magnetically clamped itself to a
- pier. The prisoners were marshaled ashore and through a portal, into Ao Khaha.
- CHAPTER FIFTEEN
- SURFACES OF BLACK glass, stark walls and areas of black concrete, angles,
- blocks, masses: a negation of organic shape. Reith wondered at the architecture;
- it seemed remarkably abstract and severe. Into a cul-de-sac, walled on three
- sides with dark concrete, the captives were taken. "Halt! Remain in place!" came
- the command.
- The prisoners, with no choice, halted and stood in a surly line.
- "Water yourselves at that spigot. Perform evacuation into that trough. Make no
- noise or disturbance." The Wankhmen departed, leaving the prisoners unguarded.
- Reith said in a wondering voice, "We haven't even been searched! I still have my
- weapons."
- "It's not far to the portal," said Traz. "Why should we wait here to be killed?"
- "We'd never reach the portal," growled Zarfo.
- "So we must stand here like docile animals?"
- "That's what I plan to do," said Belje, with a bitter glance toward Reith. "I'll
- never see Smargash more, but I may escape with my life."
- Zorofim gave a rude laugh. "In the mines?"
- "I know only rumor of the mines."
- "Once a man goes underground he never emerges. There are ambushes and terrible
- tricks by Pnume and Pnumekin. If we are not executed out of hand we will go to
- the mines."
- "All for avarice and mad folly!" lamented Belje. "Adam Reith, you have much to
- answer for!"
- "Quiet, poltroon," said Zarfo without heat. "No one forced you to come. The
- fault is your own. We should abase ourselves before Reith; he trusted our
- knowledge; we showed him ineptitude."
- "All of us did our best," said Reith. "The operation was risky; we failed; it's
- as simple as that ... As for trying to escape from here-I can't believe that
- they'd leave us alone, unguarded, free to walk away."
- Jag Jaganig snorted sadly. "Don't be too sure; to the Wankhmen we are animals."
- Reith turned to Traz, whose perceptions at times bewildered him. "Could you find
- your way to the portal?"
- "I don't know. Not directly. There were many turns. The buildings confuse me."
- "Then we had best remain here ... There's a bare chance that we can talk our way
- out of the situation."
- The afternoon passed, then the long night, with Az and Braz creating fantasies
- of shapes and shadows. In the chill morning, cantankerous with stiff joints and
- hunger, and increasingly restless because of their captors' inattention, even
- the most fearful of the Lokhars were peering out of the cul-de-sac and
- speculating as to the whereabouts of the portal through the black glass wall.
- Reith still counseled patience. "We'd never make it. Our only hope as I see it
- is that the Wankh may decide to be lenient with us."
- "Why should they be lenient?" sneered Thadzei. "Their justice is forthright: the
- same justice we use toward pests."
- Jag Jaganig was no less pessimistic. "We will never see the Wankh. Why else do
- they maintain the Wankhmen, except to stand between themselves and Tschai?"
- "We shall see," said Reith.
- The morning passed. The Lokhars slumped torpidly against a wall. Traz, as usual,
- maintained his equanimity. Contemplating the boy, Reith could not help but
- wonder as to the source of his fortitude. Innate character? Fatalism? Did the
- personality of Onmale, the emblem he had worn so long, still shape his soul?
- But other problems were more immediate. "This delay can't be accidental," Reith
- fretted to Anacho. "There must be a reason. Are they trying to demoralize us?"
- Anacho, as peevish as any of the others, said, "There are better ways than
- this."
- "Are they waiting for something to happen? What?"
- Anacho could supply no answers.
- Late in the afternoon three Wankhmen appeared. One of these, wearing thin silver
- greaves and a silver medallion on a chain around his neck, appeared to be a
- person of importance. He surveyed the group with eyebrows lofted in mingled
- disapproval and amusement, as if at naughty children. "Well then," he said
- briskly, "which among you is the leader of this group?"
- Reith came forward with as much dignity as he could summon. "I am."
- "You? Not one of the Lokhars? What did you hope to achieve?"
- "May I ask who adjudicates our offense?" Reith asked.
- The Wankhman was taken aback. "'Adjudication'? What needs to be adjudicated? The
- only point at issue, and a minor one, is your motive."
- "I can't agree with you," said Reith in a reasonable voice. "Our transgression
- was a simple theft; only by sheer accident did we take aloft a Wankh."
- "A Wankh! Do you realize his identity? No, of course not. He is a savant of the
- highest level, an Original Master."
- "And he wants to know why we took his spaceship?"
- "What then? It is no concern of yours. You need only transmit the information on
- through me; that is my function."
- "I'll be glad to do so, in his presence, and, I hope, in surroundings more
- appropriate than a back alley."
- "Zff, but you are a cool one. Do you answer to the name of Adam Reith?"
- "I am Adam Reith."
- "And you recently visited Settra in Cath, where you associated with the
- so-called 'Yearning Refluxives'?"
- "Your information is at fault."
- "Be that as it may, we want your reason for stealing a spaceship."
- "Be on hand when I communicate with the Original Master. The matter is complex
- and I am certain he will have questions which cannot be answered casually."
- The Wankhman swung away in disgust.
- Zarfo muttered, "You are a cool one indeed! But what do you gain by talking to
- the Wankh?"
- "I don't know. It's worth trying. I suspect that the Wankhmen report only as
- much as suits their purposes."
- "That's understood by everyone but the Wankh."
- "How can it be? Are they innocent? Or remote?"
- "Neither. They have no other sources of information. The Wankhmen make sure the
- situation remains that way. The Wankh have small interest in the affairs of
- Tschai; they're only here to counter the Dirdir threat."
- "Bah," said Anacho. "The Dirdir threat' is a myth; the Expansionists are gone
- thousands of years."
- "Then why are they still feared by the Wankh?" demanded Zarfo.
- "Mutual distrust; what else?"
- "Natural antipathy. The Dirdir are an insufferable race."
- Anacho walked away in a huff. Zarfo laughed. Reith shook his head in mild
- disapproval.
- Zarfo now said, "Take my advice, Adam Reith: don't antagonize the Wankhmen,
- because you can't win but through them. Ingratiate, truckle, fawn-and at least
- they'll bear you no malice."
- "I'm not too proud to truckle," said Reith, "if it would do any good-which it
- won't. Our only hope is to push ahead .... And I've come up with an idea or two
- which may help our case, if we get a chance to talk with the Wankh."
- "You won't defeat the Wankhmen that way," gloomed Zarfo. "They'll tell the Wankh
- only as much as they see fit, and you'll never know the difference."
- "What I'd like to do," said Reith, "is work up to a situation where only the
- truth makes sense and where every other statement is an obvious falsity."
- Zarfo shook his head in puzzlement and walked to the spigot to drink. Reith
- remembered that none of the group had eaten for almost two days; small wonder
- they were listless and irritable.
- Three Wankhmen appeared. The official who previously had spoken to Reith was not
- among them. "Come along. Look sharp, now; form a neat line."
- "Where are we going?" Reith asked, but received no reply.
- The group walked five minutes, through odd-angled streets and irregular courts,
- by acute and obtuse angles, past unexpected juts and occasional clear vistas,
- through deep shadow and the wan shine of Carina 4269. They entered the ground
- floor of a tower, entered an elevator which took them up a hundred feet and
- opened upon a large octagonal hall.
- The chamber was dim; a great lenticular bulge in the roof held water; windblown
- ripples modulated light from the sky and sent it dancing around the hall.
- Tremors of sound were barely audible, sighing chords, complex dissonances; sound
- both more and less than music. The walls were stained and discolored, a fact
- which Reith found peculiar, until looking closer he recognized Wankh ideograms,
- immense and intricately detailed, one to each wall. Each ideogram, thought
- Reith, represented a chime; each chime was the sonic equivalent of a visual
- image. Here, reflected Reith, were highly abstract pictures.
- The chamber was empty. The group waited in silence while the almost unheard
- chords drifted in and out of consciousness, and amber sunlight, refracted and
- broken into shimmers, swam through the room.
- Reith heard Traz gasp in surprise: a rare event. He turned. Traz pointed. "Look
- yonder!"
- Standing in an alcove was Helsse, head bent in an attitude of brooding reverie.
- His guise was new and strange. He wore black Wankhman garments; his hair was
- close-cropped; he looked a person worlds apart from the suave young man Reith
- had encountered in Blue Jade Palace. Reith looked at Zarfo. "You told me he was
- dead!"
- "So he seemed to me! We put him out in the corpse shed, and in the morning he
- was gone. We thought the night-hounds had come for him."
- Reith called: "Helsse! Over here! It's Adam Reith."
- Helsse turned his head, looked at him and Reith wondered how he ever could have
- taken Helsse for anything but a Wankhman. Helsse came slowly across the chamber,
- a half-smile on his face. "So here: the sorry outcome to your exploits."
- "The situation is discouraging," Reith agreed. "Can you help us?"
- Helsse raised his eyebrows. "Why should I? I find you personally offensive,
- without humility or ease. You have subjected me to a hundred indignities; your
- pro-'cult' bias is repulsive; the theft of a space vessel with an Original
- aboard makes your request absurd."
- Reith considered him a moment. "May I ask why you are here?"
- "Certainly. To supply information in regard to you and your activities."
- Reith mulled the matter over. "Are we so important?"
- "So it would seem," said Helsse indifferently.
- Four Wankh entered the chamber, and stood by the far wall: four massive black
- shadows. Helsse stood straighter; the other Wankhmen became silent. It was
- apparent, thought Reith, that whatever the total attitude of the Wankhmen toward
- the Wankh might be, that attitude included a great deal of respect.
- The prisoners were urged forward, and ranged in a line before the Wankh. A
- minute passed, during which nothing happened. Then the Wankh exchanged chimes:
- soft muffled sounds at half-second intervals, apparently unintelligible to the
- Wankhmen. Another silence ensued, then the Wankh addressed the Wankhmen,
- producing triads of three quick notes, like xylophone trills, in what seemed to
- be a simplified or elemental usage.
- The oldest Wankhman stepped forward, listened, turned to the prisoners. "Which
- of you is the pirate-master?"
- "None of us," said Reith. "We are not pirates."
- One of the Wankh uttered interrogatory chimes. Reith thought he recognized the
- Original Master. The Wankhman, somewhat grudgingly, brought forth a small keyed
- instrument which he manipulated with astonishing deftness.
- "Tell him further," said Reith, "that we regret the inconvenience we caused him.
- Circumstances compelled us to take him aloft."
- "You are not here to argue," said the Wankhman, "but to render information,
- after which the usual processes will occur."
- Again the Master uttered chimes and was answered. Reith asked: "What is he
- saying, and what did you tell him?"
- The senior Wankhman said, "Speak only when you are directly addressed."
- Helsse came forward, and producing his own instrument, played chimes at length.
- Reith began to feel uneasy and frustrated. Events were ranging far beyond his
- control. "What is Helsse saying?"
- "Silence."
- "At least inform the Wankh that we have a case which we want to present."
- "You will be notified if it becomes necessary for you to testify. The hearing is
- almost at an end."
- "But we haven't had a chance to speak!"
- "Silence! Your persistence is offensive!"
- Reith turned to Zarfo. "Tell the Wankh something! Anything!"
- Zarfo blew out his cheeks. Pointing at the Wankhmen he made chirping sounds. The
- senior Wankhman said sternly: "Quiet, you are interrupting."
- "What did you tell him?" asked Reith.
- "I said, 'Wrong, wrong, wrong.' That's all I know."
- The Master spoke chimes, indicating Reith and Zarfo. The senior Wankhman,
- visibly exasperated, said: "The Wankh want to know where you planned to commit
- your piracies, or, rather, where you planned to take the spaceship."
- "You are not translating correctly," protested Reith. "Did you tell him that we
- are not pirates?"
- Zarfo again made sounds for "Wrong, wrong, wrong!"
- The Wankhman said, "You are obviously pirates, or lunatics." Turning back to the
- Wankh, he played his instrument, misrepresenting, so Reith was sure, what had
- been said. Reith turned to Helsse. "What is he telling them? That we are not
- pirates?"
- Helsse ignored him.
- Zarfo guffawed, to everyone's astonishment. He muttered in Reith's ear:
- "Remember the Dugbo? Pinch Helsse's nose."
- Reith said, "Helsse."
- Helsse turned him an austere gaze. Reith stepped forward, tweaked his nose.
- Helsse seemed to become rigid. "Tell the Wankh that I am a man of Earth, the
- world of human origin," said Reith, "that I took the spaceship only in order to
- return home."
- Helsse woodenly played a set of trills and runs. The other Wankhmen became
- instantly agitated-sufficient proof that Helsse had translated accurately. They
- began to protest, to press forward, to drown out Helsse's chimes, only to be
- brought up short by a great belling sound from the Master.
- Helsse continued, and at last came to an end.
- "Tell them further," said Reith, "that the Wankhmen falsified my remarks, that
- they consistently do so to further their private purposes."
- Helsse played. The other Wankhmen again started a great protest, and again were
- rebuked.
- Reith warmed to his task. He voiced one of his surmises, striking boldly into
- the unknown: "Tell them that the Wankhmen destroyed my spaceship, killing all
- aboard except myself. Tell them that our mission was innocent, that we came
- investigating radio signals broadcast a hundred and fifty Tschai-years ago. At
- this time the Wankhmen destroyed the cities Settra and Ballisidre from which the
- signals emanated, with great loss of life, and all for the same reason: to
- prevent a new situation which might disturb the Wankh-Dirdir stalemate."
- The instant uproar among the Wankhmen convinced Reith that his accusations had
- struck home. Again they were silenced.
- Helsse played the instrument with the air of a man astounded by his own actions.
- "Tell them," said Reith, "that the Wankhmen have systematically distorted truth.
- They undoubtedly have prolonged the Dirdir war. Remember, if the war ended, the
- Wankh would return to their home world, and the Wankhmen would be thrown upon
- their own resources."
- Helsse, gray-faced, struggled to drop the instrument, but his fingers refused to
- do his bidding. He played. The other Wankhmen stood in dead silence. This was
- the most telling accusation of all. The senior Wankhman shouted: "The interview
- is at an end! Prisoners, form your line! March!"
- Reith told Helsse: "Request that the Wankh order all the other Wankhmen to
- depart, so that we may communicate without interruption."
- Helsse's face twitched; sweat poured down his face.
- "Translate my message," said Reith.
- Helsse obeyed.
- Silence held the chamber, with the Wankhmen gazing in apprehension toward the
- Wankh.
- The Master uttered two chimes.
- The Wankhmen muttered among themselves. They came to a terrible decision. Out
- came their weapons; they turned them, not upon the prisoners, but upon the four
- Wankh. Reith and Traz sprang forward, followed by the Lokhars. The weapons were
- wrested away.
- The Master uttered two quiet chimes.
- Helsse listened, then slowly turned to Reith. "He commands that you give me the
- weapon you hold."
- Reith relinquished the gun. Helsse turned toward the other three Wankhmen,
- pushed the trigger-button. The three fell dead, their heads shattered.
- The Wankh stood a moment in silence, assessing the situation. Then they departed
- the hall. The erstwhile prisoners remained with Helsse and the corpses. Reith
- took the gun from Helsse's cold fingers, before he thought to use it again.
- The chamber began to grow murky with the coming of dusk. Reith studied Helsse,
- wondering how long the hypnotic state would persist. He said, "Take us outside
- the walls."
- "Come."
- Through the black and gray city Helsse took the group, finally to a small steel
- door. Helsse touched a latch; the door swung aside. Beyond, a spine of rock led
- through the dusk to the mainland.
- The group filed through the gap into the open air. Reith turned to Helsse. "Ten
- minutes after I touch your shoulder, resume your normal condition. You will
- remember nothing of what has happened during the last hour. Do you understand?"
- "Yes."
- Reith touched Helsse's shoulder; the group hurried away through the twilight.
- Before a jut of rock hid them from sight Reith looked back. Helsse stood where
- they had left him, looking somewhat wistfully after them.
- CHAPTER SIXTEEN
- IN A PATCH of rough forestland the group slumped down in total fatigue, their
- stomachs crawling with hunger. By the light of the two moons Traz searched
- through the undergrowth and found a clump of pilgrim plant, and the group made
- their first meal in two days. Somewhat refreshed, they moved on through the
- night, up a long slope. At the top of the ridge, they turned to look back,
- toward the gloomy silhouette of Ao Khaha on the moonlit sky. For a few minutes
- they stood, each man thinking his own thoughts, then they continued north.
- In the morning over a breakfast of toasted fungus, Reith opened his pouch. "The
- expedition has been a failure. As I promised, each man receives another five
- thousand sequins. Take them now, with my gratitude for your loyalty."
- Zarfo took the purple-glowing pellets gingerly, weighed them in his fingers.
- "Above all I am an honest man, and since this was the structure of the contract,
- I will accept the money."
- Jag Jaganig said: "Let me ask you a question, Adam Reith. You told the Wankh
- that you were a man from a far world, the home of man. Is this correct?"
- "It is what I told the Wankh."
- "You are such a man, from such a planet?"
- "Yes. Even though Anacho the Dirdirman makes a wry face."
- "Tell us something of this planet."
- Reith spoke for an hour, while his comrades sat staring into the fire.
- Anacho at last cleared his throat. "I do not doubt your sincerity. But, as you
- say, the history of Earth is short compared to the history of Tschai. It is
- obvious that far in the past the Dirdir visited Earth and left a colony from
- which all Earthmen are descended."
- "I could prove otherwise," said Reith, "if our venture had been successful and
- we had all journeyed to Earth."
- Anacho poked the fire with a stick. "Interesting ... The Dirdir of course would
- not sell or transfer a spaceship. Such a theft as we perpetrated upon the Wankh
- would be impossible. Still-at the Great Sivishe Spaceyards almost any component
- can be acquired, by purchase or discreet arrangement. One only needs sequins, a
- considerable sum, true."
- "How much?" asked Reith.
- "A hundred thousand sequins would work wonders."
- "No doubt. At the moment I have barely the hundredth part of that."
- Zarfo threw over his five thousand sequins. "Here. It pains me like the loss of
- a leg. But let these be the first coins in the pot."
- Reith returned the money. "At the moment they would only make a forlorn rattling
- sound."
- Thirteen days later the group came down out of the Ifnets to Blalag, where they
- boarded a power wagon and so returned to Smargash.
- For three days Reith, Anacho and Traz ate, slept and watched the young folk at
- their dancing.
- On the evening of the third day Zarfo joined them in the taproom. "All look
- sleek and lazy. Have you heard the news?"
- "What news?"
- "First, I have acquired a delightful property on a bend of the Whisfer River,
- with five fine keels, three psillas and an asponistra, not to mention the
- tayberries. Here I shall end my days-unless you tempt me forth on another mad
- venture. Secondly, two technicians this morning returned to Smargash from Ao
- Hidis. Vast changes are in the wind! The Wankhmen are departing the fortresses;
- they have been driven out and now live in huts with the Blacks and Purples. It
- appears that the Wankh will no longer tolerate their presence."
- Reith chuckled. "At Dadiche we found an alien race exploiting men. At Ao Hidis
- we found men exploiting an alien race. Both conditions are now changed. Anacho,
- would you care to be liberated from your enervating philosophy and become a sane
- man?"
- "I want demonstration, not words. Take me to Earth." "We can hardly walk there."
- "At the Great Sivishe Spaceyards are a dozen spaceboats, needing only
- procurement and assembly."
- "Yes, but where are the sequins?"
- "I don't know," said Anacho.
- "Nor I," said Traz.
- THE DIRDIR
- CHAPTER ONE
- THE SUN CARINA 4269 had passed into the constellation Tartusz, to mark the onset
- of Balul Zac Ag, the "unnatural dream time," when slaughter, slave-taking,
- pillage and arson came to a halt across the Lokhar Highlands. Balul Zac Ag was
- the occasion for the Great Fair at Smargash, or perhaps the Great Fair had come
- first, eventually to generate Balul Zac Ag after unknown hundreds of years. From
- across the Lokhar Highlands and the regions surrounding Xar, Zhurveg, Seraf,
- Niss and others came to Smargash to mingle and trade, to resolve stale feuds, to
- gather intelligence. Hatred hung in the air like a stench; covert glances and
- whispered curses, in-drawn hisses of detestation accented the color and
- confusion of the bazaar. Only the Lokhars (the men black-skinned and
- white-haired, the women whiteskinned and black-haired) maintained faces of
- placid unconcern.
- On the second day of Balul Zac Ag, as Adam Reith wandered through the bazaar, he
- became aware that he was being watched. The knowledge came as a dismal shock; on
- Tschai, surveillance always led to a grim conclusion.
- Perhaps he was mistaken, Reith told himself. He had dozens of enemies; to many
- others he represented ideological disaster; but how could any of these have
- traced him to Smargash? Reith continued along the crowded lanes of the bazaar,
- pausing at the booths to look back the way he had come. But his follower, if in
- fact he existed, was lost in the confusion. There were Niss in black robes,
- seven feet tall, striding like rapacious birds: Xars; Serafs; Dugbo nomads
- squatting over their fires; Human Things expressionless behind pottery
- faceplates; Zhurvegs in coffee-brown caftans; the black and white Lokhars of
- Smargash themselves. There was odd staccato noise: the clank of iron, squeak of
- leather, harsh voices, shrill calls, the whine, rasp and jangle of Dugbo music.
- There were odors: fern-spice, gland-oil, submusk, dust rising and settling, the
- reek of pickled nuts, smoke from grilled meats, the perfume of the Serafs. There
- were colors: black, dull brown, orange, old scarlet, dark blue, dark gold.
- Leaving the bazaar Reith crossed the dancing field. He stopped short, and from
- the corner of his eye glimpsed a figure sliding behind a tent.
- Thoughtfully Reith returned to the inn. Traz and the Dirdirman, Ankhe at afram
- Anacho, sat in the refectory making a meal of bread and meat. They ate in
- silence; disparate beings, each found the other incomprehensible. Anacho, tall,
- thin and pallid like all Dirdirmen, was completely hairless, a quality he now
- tended to minimize under a soft tasseled cap after the style of the Yao. His
- personality was unpredictable; he inclined toward garrulity, freakish jokes,
- sudden petulances. Traz, square, somber and sturdy, was in most respects
- Anacho's obverse. Traz considered Anacho vain, over-subtle, over-civilized;
- Anacho thought Traz tactless, severe and over-literal. How the two managed to
- travel in comparative amity was a mystery to Reith.
- Reith seated himself at the table. "I think I'm being watched," he announced.
- Anacho leaned back in dismay. "Then we must prepare for disaster-or flight."
- "I prefer flight," said Reith. He poured himself ale from a stone jug.
- "You still intend to travel space to this mythical planet of yours?" Anacho
- spoke in the voice of one who reasons with an obstinate child.
- "I want to return to Earth, certainly."
- "Bah," muttered Anacho. "You are the victim of a hoax, or an obsession. Can you
- not cure yourself? The project is easier to discuss than to effectuate.
- Spaceships are not wart-scissors, to be picked up at any bazaar booth."
- Reith said sadly, "I know this only too well."
- Anacho spoke in an offhand manner: "I suggest that you apply at the Grand
- Sivishe Spaceyards. Almost anything can be procured, if one has enough sequins."
- "I suspect that I don't," said Reith.
- "Go to the Carabas. Sequins can be had by the bucketful."
- Traz gave a short snort of derision. "Do you take us for maniacs?"
- "Where is the Carabas?" asked Reith.
- "The Carabas is in the Dirdir Hunting Preserve, at the north of Kislovan. Men
- with luck and strong nerves sometimes prosper."
- "Fools, gamblers and murderers, rather," muttered Traz.
- Reith asked, "How do these men, whatever their nature, gain the sequins?"
- Anacho's voice was flippant and airy. "By the usual method: they dig up nodes of
- chrysospine."
- Reith rubbed his chin. "Is this the source of sequins? I thought that the Dirdir
- or some such folk minted them."
- "Your ignorance is that of another planet indeed!" declared Anacho.
- The muscles around Reith's mouth gave a rueful twitch. "It could hardly be
- otherwise."
- "The chrysospine," said Anacho, "grows only in the Black Zone, which is to say,
- the Carabas, where uranium compounds occur in the soil. A full node yields two
- hundred and eighty-two sequins, of one or another color. A purple sequin is
- worth a hundred clears; a scarlet is fifty, and down through the emeralds,
- blues, sards and milks. Even Traz knows as much."
- Traz looked at Anacho with a curled lip. "'Even Traz'?"
- Anacho paid him no heed. "All this to the side; we have no certain evidence of
- surveillance. Adam Reith may well be mistaken."
- "Adam Reith is not mistaken," said Traz. "'Even Traz,' as you put it, knows
- better than this."
- Anacho raised his hairless eyebrows. "How so?"
- "Notice the man who just entered the room."
- "A Lokhar; what about him?"
- "He is no Lokhar. He watches our every move."
- Anacho's jaw fell a trifle slack.
- Reith studied the man surreptitiously; he seemed less burly, less direct and
- abrupt than the typical Lokhar. Anacho spoke in a subdued voice: "The lad is
- right. Notice how he drinks his ale, head down instead of back ... Disturbing."
- Reith muttered, "Who would be interested in us?"
- Anacho gave a bark of caustic laughter. "Do you think that our exploits have
- gone unnoticed? The events at Ao Hidis have aroused attention everywhere."
- "So this man-whom would he serve?"
- Anacho shrugged. "With his skin dyed black I can't even guess his breed."
- "We'd better get some information," said Reith. He considered a moment. "I'll
- walk out through the bazaar, then around into the Old Town. If the man yonder
- follows, give him a start and come behind. If he stays, one of you stay, the
- other come after me."
- Reith went out into the bazaar. At a Zhurveg pavilion he paused to examine a
- display of rugs, woven, according to rumor, by legless children, kidnapped and
- maimed by the Zhurvegs themselves. He glanced back the way he had come. No one
- appeared to be following. He went on a little way, and paused by the racks where
- hideous Niss women sold coils of braided leather rope, leap-horse harness,
- crudely beautiful silver goblets. Still no one behind. He crossed the passage to
- examine a Dugbo display of musical instruments. If he could take a cargo of
- Zhurveg rugs, Niss silver, Dugbo musical instruments back to Earth, thought
- Reith, his fortune would be made. He looked over his shoulder, and now he
- observed Anacho dawdling fifty yards behind. Anacho clearly had learned nothing.
- Reith sauntered on. He paused to watch a Dugbo necromancer: a twisted old man
- squatting behind trays of misshapen bottles, jugs of salve, junction-stones to
- facilitate telepathy, love-sticks, sheafs of curses indited on red and green
- paper. Above flew a dozen fantastic kites, which the old Dugbo manipulated to
- produce a wan wailing music. He proffered Reith an amulet, which Reith refused
- to buy. The necromancer spat epithets and caused his kites to dart and shriek
- discords.
- Reith moved on, into the Dugbo encampment proper. Girls wearing scarves and
- flounced skirts of black, old rose and ocher solicited Zhurvegs, Lokhars,
- Serafs, but taunted the prudish Niss who stalked silently past, heads
- out-thrust, noses like scythes of polished bone. Beyond the encampment lay the
- open plain and the far hills, black and gold in the light of Carina 4269.
- A Dugbo girl approached Reith, jangling the silver ornaments at her waist,
- smiling a gap-toothed grin. "What do you seek out here, my friend? Are you
- weary? This is my tent; enter, refresh yourself."
- Reith declined the invitation and stepped back before her fingers or those of
- her younger sister could flutter near his pouch.
- "Why are you reluctant?" sang the girl. "Look at me! Am I not graceful? I have
- polished my limbs with Seraf wax; I am scented with haze-water; you could do far
- worse!"
- "No doubt whatever," said Reith. "Still..."
- "We will talk together, Adam Reith. We will tell each other of many strange
- matters."
- "How do you know my name?" demanded Reith.
- The girl waved her scarf at the younger girls, as if at insects. "Who at
- Smargash does not know Adam Reith, who strides abroad like an Ilanth prince, and
- his mind always full of thoughts?"
- "I am notorious then?"
- "Oh, indeed. Must you go?"
- "Yes. I have an engagement." Reith continued on his way. The girl watched after
- him with an odd half-smile, which Reith, looking over his shoulder, found
- disconcerting.
- A few hundred yards further along, Anacho approached from a side-lane. "The man
- dyed like a Lokhar remained at the inn. For a period you were followed by a
- young woman dressed as a Dugbo. In the encampment she accosted you, then
- followed no more."
- "Strange," muttered Reith. He looked up and down the street. "No one follows us
- now?"
- "No one is visible. We might well be under observation. Turn about, if you
- will."
- Anacho ran his long white fingers over the fabric of Reith's jacket. "So I
- suspected." He displayed a small black button. "And now we know who tracks you.
- Do you recognize this?"
- "No. But I can guess. A tell-tale."
- "A Dirdir adjunct for hunting, used by the very young or the very old to guide
- them after their quarry."
- "So the Dirdir are interested in me."
- Anacho's face became long and pinched, as if he tasted something acrid. "The
- events at Ao Khaha have naturally attracted their attention."
- "What should they want with me?"
- "Dirdir motives are seldom subtle. They want to ask a few questions and then
- kill you."
- "The time has come to move on."
- Anacho glanced toward the sky. "That time has come and gone. I suspect that a
- Dirdir sky-car approaches at this very moment ... Give me the button."
- A Niss approached, black robes flapping to the stride of his legs. Anacho
- stepped forth, made a swift movement toward the black gown. The Niss sprang
- around with a grunt of menace, and for a moment seemed ready to abandon the
- unnatural restraints of Balul Zac Ag. Then he wheeled and continued along his
- way.
- Anacho gave his thin fluting chuckle. "The Dirdir will be puzzled when Adam
- Reith proves to be a Niss."
- "Before they learn differently, we had best be gone."
- "Agreed, but how?"
- "I suggest that we consult old Zarfo Detwiler."
- "Luckily we know where to find him."
- Skirting the bazaar, the two approached the ale-house, a ramshackle structure of
- stone and weather-beaten planks. Today Zarfo sat within, to escape the dust and
- confusion of the bazaar. A stone crock of ale almost hid his black-dyed face. He
- was dressed in unaccustomed elegance: polished black boots, a maroon cape, a
- black tricorn hat pulled down over his flowing white hair. He was somewhat drunk
- and even more garrulous than usual. With difficulty Reith made him aware of his
- problem. Zarfo at last became exercised. "So, the Dirdir now! Infamous, and
- during Balul Zac Ag! They had better control their arrogance, or know the wrath
- of the Lokhars!"
- "All this to the side," said Reith, "how can we most quickly leave Smargash?"
- Zarfo blinked and dipped another ladle of ale from the crock. "First I must
- learn where you wish to go."
- "The Isles of Cloud, or perhaps the Carabas."
- Zarfo let the ladle sag in shock. "The Lokhars are the most avaricious of
- people, yet how many attempt the Carabas? Few! And how many return with wealth?
- Have you noticed the great manor house to the east, with the chain of carved
- ivory around the bower?"
- "I have seen the manor."
- "There are no other such manors near Smargash," said Zarfo portentously. "Do you
- get my meaning?" He rapped on the bench. "Pot-boy! More ale."
- "I mentioned the Isles of Cloud as well," said Reith.
- "Tusa Tala on the Draschade is more convenient for the Isles. How to reach Tusa
- Tala? The motor-wagon fares only to Siadz at the edge of the highlands; I know
- of no route down the chasms to the Draschade. The caravan to Zara is two months
- gone. A skyraft is the only sensible conveyance."
- "Well, then, where can we obtain a sky-raft?"
- "Not from the Lokhars; we have none. Look yonder: a skyraft and a party of rich
- Xars! They are about to depart. Maybe their destination is Tusa Tala. Let us
- inquire."
- "A moment. We must get word to Traz." Reith called the potboy, sent him running
- to the inn.
- Zarfo strode out across the compound with Reith and Anacho behind. Five Xars
- stood by their old sky-raft: short bullshouldered men with congested
- complexions. They wore rich robes of gray and green; their black hair rose in
- rigid varnished columns, flaring slightly outward and sheared off flat.
- "Leaving Smargash so soon, friend Xars?" Zarfo called out in a cheerful voice.
- The Xars muttered together and turned away.
- Zarfo ignored the lack of affability. "Where then are you bound?"
- "Lake Falas; where else?" declared the oldest Xar. "Our business is done; as
- usual we were cheated. We are anxious to return to the swamps."
- "Excellent. This gentleman and his two friends need transportation to a point in
- your general direction. They asked me whether they should offer to pay; I said,
- 'Nonsense! The Xars are princes of generosity-' "
- "Hold!" the Xar called sharply. "I have at least three remarks to make. First,
- our raft is crowded. Second, we are generous unless we lose sequins in the
- process. Third, these two nondescripts have a reckless and desperate air about
- them, not at all reassuring. Is this the third?" The reference was to Traz, who
- had arrived on the scene. "A mere lad but no less dubious for all that."
- Another Xar spoke. "Two further questions: How much can they pay? Where do they
- wish to go?"
- Reith, considering the uncomfortably scant supply of sequins in his pouch, said,
- "A hundred sequins is all we can offer; and we want to be taken to Tusa Tala."
- The Xars threw up their hands in outrage. "Tusa Tala? A thousand miles
- northwest! We head southeast to Lake Falas! A hundred sequins? Is this a joke?
- Mountebanks! Off with all of you,
- Zarfo swaggered threateningly forward. "A mountebank, you call me? Were it not
- Balul Zac Ag, the 'unnatural dream time,' I would tweak all of your ludicrously
- long noses!"
- The Xars made spitting sounds between their teeth, climbed aboard the raft and
- departed.
- Zarfo stared after the departing raft. He heaved a sigh. "In this case, failure
- ... Well, all may not prove so churlish. In the sky comes another craft; we
- shall put the proposal to those aboard, or at an extremity, render them drunk
- and borrow the vehicle. A handsome craft, that. Surely-"
- Anacho gave a startled outcry. "A Dirdir sky-car! Already they are here! Away to
- concealment, for our very lives!"
- He started to dart away. Reith seized his arm. "Don't run; do you want them to
- identify us so quickly?" To Zarfo: "Where shall we hide?"
- "In the ale-house storeroom but never forget that this is Balul Zac Ag! The
- Dirdir would never dare violence!"
- "Bah," sneered Anacho. "What do they know of your customs, or care?"
- "I will explain to them," declared Zarfo. He led the three to a shed beside the
- alehouse, ushered them within. Through a crack in the plank Reith watched the
- Dirdir sky-car settle into the compound. On sudden thought he turned to Traz,
- felt over his garments, and in vast dismay discovered a black disc.
- "Quick," said Anacho. "Give it here." He left the shed, went into the ale-house.
- A minute later he returned. "An old Lokhar departing for his cottage now carries
- the tell-tale." He went to a crack, peered out toward the field. "Dirdir, sure
- enough! As always when sport is to be had!"
- The sky-car lay quiet: a craft different from any Reith had seen heretofore, the
- product of a sure and sophisticated technology. Five Dirdir stepped to the
- ground: impressive creatures, harsh, mercurial, decisive. They stood
- approximately at human height, and moved with sinister quickness, like lizards
- on a hot day. Their dermal surfaces suggested polished bone; their crania raised
- into sharp blade-like crests, with incandescent antennae streaming back at
- either side. The contours of the faces were oddly human, with deep eye-sockets,
- the scalp crests descending to suggest nasal ridges. They half-hopped,
- half-loped, like leopards walking erect; it was not hard to see in them the wild
- creatures which had hunted the hot plains of Sibol.
- Three persons approached the Dirdir: the false Lokhar, the Dugbo girl, a man in
- nondescript gray garments. The Dirdir spoke with the three for several minutes,
- then brought forth instruments, which they pointed in different directions.
- Anacho hissed: "They locate their tell-tales. And the old Lokhar in the alehouse
- still dawdles over his pot!"
- "No matter," said Reith. "As well in the ale-house as anywhere else."
- The Dirdir approached the ale-house, moving with their curious half-loping
- stride. Behind came the three spies.
- The old Lokhar chose this moment to lurch from the alehouse. The Dirdir
- inspected him in puzzlement, and approached by great leaps. The Lokhar drew back
- in alarm. "What have we here? Dirdir? Don't interfere with me!"
- The Dirdir spoke in sibilant lisping voices which suggested the absence of a
- larynx. "Do you know a man called Adam Reith?"
- "Indeed not! Stand aside!"
- Zarfo thrust himself forward. "Adam Reith, you say? What of him?"
- "Where is he?"
- "Why do you ask?"
- The false Lokhar stepped forward, muttered to the Dirdir. The Dirdir said. "You
- know Adam Reith well?"
- "Not well. If you have money for him, leave it with me; he would have wanted it
- so."
- "Where is he?"
- Zarfo looked out across the sky. "You saw the sky-raft which departed as you
- arrived?"
- "Yes."
- "It might be that he and his friends were aboard."
- "Who claims this to be true?"
- "Not I," said Zarfo. "I offer only the suggestion."
- "Nor I," said the old Lokhar who had carried the telltale.
- "What is the direction?"
- "Pah! You are the great trackers," sneered Zarfo. "Why ask us poor innocents?"
- The Dirdir retreated across the compound in long strides. The skycar darted off
- into the air.
- Zarfo confronted the three Dirdir agents, his big face twisted into a malevolent
- grin. "So here you are in Smargash, violating our laws. Do you not know this is
- Balul Zac Ag?"
- "We committed no violence," stated the false Lokhar, "but merely did our work."
- "Dirty work, conducive to violence! You shall all be flogged. Where are the
- constables? I give these three into custody!"
- The three agents were hustled away, protesting and crying and making demands.
- Zarfo came to the shed. "Best that you leave at once. The Dirdir will not delay
- long." He pointed across the compound. "The wagon to the west is ready to
- depart."
- "Where does it take us?"
- "Out to the highland rim. Beyond lie the chasms! A grim territory. But if you
- remain here, you will be taken by the Dirdir. Balul Zac Ag or no."
- Reith looked around the compound, at the dusty stone and timber structures of
- Smargash, at the black and white Lokhars, at the shabby old inn. Here had been
- the single interim of peace and security he had known on Tschai; now events were
- forcing him once more into the unknown. In a hollow voice he said, "We need
- fifteen minutes to collect our gear."
- Anacho said in a dismal voice, "The situation does not accord with my hopes ...
- But I must make the best of it. Tschai is a world of anguish."
- CHAPTER TWO
- ZARFO CAME TO the inn with white Seraf robes and spine helmets. "Wear these;
- conceivably you may win an additional hour or two. Hurry-the wagon is at the
- point of departure."
- "One moment." Reith surveyed the compound. "There may be other spies, watching
- our every move."
- "Well, then, by the back lane. After all, we cannot anticipate every
- contingency."
- Reith made no further comments; Zarfo was becoming peevish and anxious to get
- them out of Smargash, no matter in what direction.
- Silently, each man thinking his own thoughts, they went to the motorwagon
- terminus. Zarfo told them: "Say nothing to anyone; pretend to meditate: that is
- the way of the Serafs. At sundown face the east and utter a loud cry:
- 'Ah-oo-cha!' No one knows what it means but that is the Seraf way. If pressed,
- state that you come to buy essences. So then: aboard the wagon! May you avoid
- the Dirdir and succeed in all your future undertakings. And if not, remember
- that death comes only once!"
- "Thank you for the consolation," said Reith.
- The motor-wagon trundled off on its eight tall wheels: away from Smargash, out
- over the plain toward the west. Reith, Anacho and Traz sat alone in the aft
- passenger cubicle.
- Anacho was pessimistic in regard to their chances. "The Dirdir will not be
- confused for long. The difficulties will only make them keen. Do you know that
- the Dirdir young are like beasts? They must be tamed, then trained and educated.
- The Dirdir spirit remains feral; hunting is a lust."
- "Self-preservation is no less a lust with me," Reith stated.
- The sun sank behind the rim; gray-brown dust settled over the landscape. The
- wagon paused at a dismal little village; the passengers stretched their legs,
- drank brackish water raised from a well, haggled for buns with a withered old
- crone who asked outrageous prices and laughed wildly at counter-proposals.
- The wagon proceeded, leaving the old woman muttering beside her tray of buns.
- The dusk faded through umber into darkness. From across the wasteland came a
- weird hooting: the call of night-hounds. In the east rose the pink moon Az,
- followed presently by blue Braz. Ahead loomed a jut of rock: an ancient volcanic
- neck, so Reith surmised. From the summit glowed three wan yellow lights. Looking
- up through his scanscope* Reith saw the ruins of a castle ... He dozed for an
- hour and awoke to find the wagon rolling through soft sand beside a river. On
- the opposite bank psillas stood outlined against the moonlit sky. Presently they
- passed a many-cupolaed manor-house, apparently uninhabited and in the process of
- decay.
- Half an hour later, at midnight, the wagon rumbled into the compound of a large
- village, to halt for the right. The passengers composed themselves to sleep on
- their benches or on top of the wagon.
- Carina 4269 finally rose: a cool amber disc only gradually dispelling the
- morning mist. Vendors brought trays of pickled meats, pastes, strips of boiled
- bark, toasted pilgrim pod, from which the passengers made a breakfast.
- The wagon proceeded to the west toward the Rim Mountains, now jutting high into
- the sky. Reith occasionally swept the sky with his scanscope but discovered no
- signs of pursuit.
- "Too early yet," said Anacho cheerlessly. "Never fear; it will come."
- At noon the wagon reached Siadz, the terminus: a dozen stone huts surrounding a
- cistern.
- To Reith's intense disgust, no transportation, neither motorwagon nor
- leap-horse, could be hired for transportation onward across the rim.
- "Do you know what lies beyond?" demanded the elder of the village. "The chasms."
- "Is there no trail, no trade-route?"
- "Who would enter the chasms, for trade or otherwise? What sort of folk are you?"
- "Serafs," said Anacho. "We explore for asofa root."
- "Ah, the Serafs and their perfumes. I have heard tales. Well, don't play your
- immortal antics on us; we are a simple people. In any event, there is no asofa
- among the chasms; only cripthorn, spumet and rack-belly."
- "Nevertheless, we will go forth to search."
- "Go then. There is said to be an ancient road somewhere to the north, but I know
- of none who have seen it."
- "What people inhabit the chasms? Are they friendly?"
- "'People'? A joke. A few pysantillas, red cors under every rock, bodebirds. If
- you are extremely unlucky you might meet a fere."
- "It seems a dire region."
- "Aye, a thousand miles of cataclysm. Still, who knows? Where cowards never
- venture, heroes find splendor. So it may be with your perfume. Strike out to the
- north and seek the ancient road to the coast. It will be no more than a mark, a
- crumble. When darkness comes, make yourself secure: night-hounds range the
- wastes!"
- Reith said, "You have dissuaded us; we will return east with the motorwagon."
- "Wise, wise! Why, after all, throw away your lives, Seraf or no?"
- Reith and his companions rode the motor-wagon a mile back down the road, then
- inconspicuously slid to the ground. The wagon lumbered east and presently
- disappeared into the amber murk.
- There was silence about them. They stood on coarse gray soil, with here and
- there wisps of salmon-colored thorn and at even greater intervals a coarse
- tangle of pilgrim plant, which Reith saw with a certain glum satisfaction. "So
- long as we find pilgrim plant we won't starve."
- Traz gave a dubious grunt. "We had best reach the mountains before dark. On the
- flat night-hounds have advantage over three men."
- "I know an even better reason for haste," said Anacho. "The Dirdir won't be
- puzzled long."
- Reith searched the empty sky, the bleak landscape. "They might conceivably
- become discouraged."
- "Never! When thwarted they grow excited, furious with zeal."
- "We're not far from the mountains. We can hide in the shadow of the boulders, or
- in one of the ravines."
- An hour's travel brought them under the crumbling basalt palisade. Traz suddenly
- halted, sniffed the air. Reith could smell nothing, but long since had learned
- to defer to Traz's perceptions.
- "Phung* droppings," said Traz. "About two days old."
- Reith nervously checked the availability of his handgun. Eight explosive pellets
- remained. When these were gone the gun became useless. It might be, thought
- Reith, that his luck was running out. He asked Traz, "Is it likely to be close
- at hand?"
- Traz shrugged. "The Phung are mad things. For all I know, one stands behind that
- boulder."
- Reith and Anacho looked uneasily about. Anacho finally said, "Our first concern
- must be the Dirdir. The critical period has begun. They will have traced us
- aboard the motor-wagon; they can easily follow us to Siadz. Still, we are not
- completely without advantage, especially if they lack game-finding instruments."
- "What instruments are these?" asked Reith.
- "Detectors of human odor or heat radiation. Some trace footprints by residual
- warmth, others observe exhalations of carbon dioxide and locate a man from a
- distance of five miles."
- "And when they catch their game?"
- "The Dirdir are conservative. They do not recognize change," said Anacho. "They
- need not hunt but are driven by inner forces. They consider themselves beasts of
- prey, and impose no restraint upon themselves."
- "In other words," said Traz, "they will eat us."
- Reith was gloomily silent. At last he said, "Well, we must not be captured."
- "As Zarfo the Lokhar said, 'Death comes but once.' "
- Traz pointed. "Notice the break into the palisade. If ever a road existed, there
- it must go."
- Across barren hummocks of compacted gray soil, around tangles of thorn and
- tumbled beds of rubble, the three hurried, perspiring and constantly watching
- the sky. At last they reached the shadow of the notch, but could find no trace
- of the road. If ever it existed, detritus and erosion had long ago expunged it
- from view.
- Anacho suddenly gave a low sad call. "The sky-car. It comes. We are hunted."
- Reith forced back a panicky urge to run. He looked up the notch. A small stream
- trickled down the center, to terminate in a stagnant tarn. To the right rose a
- steep slope; to the left, a massive buttress overhung an area of deep shade, at
- the back of which was an even deeper shadow: the mouth of a cave.
- The three crouched behind the tumble which choked half the ravine. Out over the
- plain the Dirdir boat, with chilling deliberation, slid toward Siadz.
- Reith said in a neutral voice, "They can't detect our radiation through the
- rocks. Our carbon dioxide blows up the notch." He turned to look up the valley.
- "No point in running," said Anacho. "There's no sanctuary. If they follow us
- this far they will chase us forever."
- Five minutes later the sky-car returned from Siadz, following the road east, at
- an altitude of two or three hundred yards. Suddenly it swerved and circled.
- Anacho said in a fateful voice, "They have found our tracks."
- The sky-car came across the plain, directly toward the notch. Reith brought
- forth his handgun. "Eight pellets left. Enough to explode eight Dirdir."
- "Not enough to explode one. They carry shields against such missiles."
- In another half-minute the sky-car would be overhead. "Best that we take to the
- cave," said Traz.
- "Obviously the haunt of Phung," muttered Anacho. "Or an adit of the Pnume. Let
- us die cleanly, in the open air."
- "We can walk through the pond," said Traz, "and stand below the overhang. Our
- trail is then broken; they may follow the stream up the valley."
- "If we stand here," said Reith, "we're finished for sure."
- The three ran through the shallow fringes of the pond, Anacho gingerly bringing
- up the rear. They huddled under the loom of the cliff. The odor of Phung was
- strong and rich.
- Over the shoulder of the mountain opposite came the skyboat. "They'll see us!"
- said Anacho in a hollow voice. "We're in plain sight!"
- "Into the cave," hissed Reith. "Back, further back!"
- "The Phung-"
- "There may be no Phung. The Dirdir are certain!" Reith groped back into the
- dark, followed by Traz and finally Anacho. The shadow of the sky-car passed over
- the pond, flitted on up the valley.
- Reith flashed his light here and there. They stood in a large chamber of
- irregular shape, the far end obscured in murk. Light brown nodules and flakes
- covered the floor ankle-deep; the walls were crusted over with horny
- hemispheres, each the size of a man's fist.
- "Night-hound larvae," muttered Traz.
- Anacho stole to the cave-mouth, looked cautiously forth. He jerked back.
- "They've missed our trail; they're circling."
- Reith extinguished the light and looked cautiously from the cave-mouth. A
- hundred yards away the sky-car descended to the ground, silent as a falling
- leaf. Five Dirdir alighted. For a moment they stood in consultation; then, each
- carrying a long transparent shield, they advanced into the notch. As if at a
- signal, two leaped forward like silver leopards, peering along the ground. Two
- others came behind at a slow lope, weapons ready; the fifth remained to the
- rear.
- The pair in the lead stopped short, communicating in odd squeaks and grunts.
- "The hunting language," Anacho muttered, "from the time they were yet beasts."
- "They look no different now."
- The Dirdir halted at the far shore of the pond. They looked, listened, smelled
- the air, obviously aware their prey was close at hand.
- Reith sighted along his handgun, but the Dirdir continually twitched their
- shields, frustrating his aim.
- One of the leading Dirdir searched the valley through binoculars; the other held
- a black instrument before his eyes. At once he found something of interest. A
- great bound took him to the spot where Reith, Traz and Anacho had halted before
- crossing to the cave. Sighting through the black instrument, the Dirdir followed
- the tracks to the pond, then searched the space below the overhang. He gave a
- series of grunts and squeaks; the shields jerked about.
- Anacho muttered, "They see the cave. They know we're here."
- Reith peered into the back reaches of the cave.
- Traz said in a matter-of-fact voice, "There is a Phung back there. Or it has not
- long departed."
- "How do you know?"
- "I smell it. I feel the pressure."
- Reith turned to the Dirdir. Step by step they came, effulgences sparkling up
- from their heads. Reith spoke in a fateful croak: "Back, into the cave. Perhaps
- we can set up some kind of ambush."
- Anacho gave a stifled groan; Traz said nothing. The three retreated through the
- dark, across the carpet of brittle granules. Traz touched Reith's arm. He
- whispered, "Notice the light behind us. The Phung is close at hand."
- Reith halted, to strain his eyes into the dark. He saw no light. Silence pressed
- upon them.
- Reith now thought to hear the faintest of scraping sounds. Cautiously he crept
- back through the dark, gun ready. And now he sensed yellow light: a wavering
- glimmer reflecting against the cave-wall. The scrape-scrape-scrape was somewhat
- louder. With the utmost caution Reith peered around a jut of rock, into a
- chamber. A Phung sat, back half-turned, burnishing its brachial plates with a
- file. An oil lamp emitted a yellow glow; to the side a broad-brimmed black hat
- and a cloak hung from a peg.
- Four Dirdir stood in the mouth of the cave, shields in front, weapons ready;
- their effulgences, standing high, furnished their only light.
- Traz plucked one of the horny hemispheres from the wall. He threw it at the
- Phung, which gave a startled cluck. Traz pressed Anacho and Reith back behind
- the jut of rock.
- The Phung came forth; they could see its shadow against the glimmer of
- lamp-light. It returned into its chamber, once more came forth, and now it wore
- its hat and cloak.
- For a moment it stood silent, not four feet from Reith, who thought the creature
- must surely hear the thud-thud-thud of his heart.
- The Dirdir came three bounds forward, effulgences casting a wan white glow
- around the chamber. The Phung stood like an eight-foot statue, shrouded in its
- cloak. It gave a cluck or two of chagrin, then a sudden series of whirling hops
- took it among the Dirdir. For a taut instant, Dirdir and Phung surveyed each
- other. The Phung swung out its arms, swept two Dirdir together, squeezing and
- crushing both. The remaining Dirdir, backing silently away, swung up their
- weapons. The Phung leaped on them, dashing the weapons aside. It tore the head
- from one; the other fled, with the Dirdir who had stood guard outside. They ran
- through the pond; the Phung danced a queer circular jig, sprang forth, leaped
- ahead of them, kicking water into a spray. It pushed one under the surface and
- stood on him, while the other ran up the valley. The Phung presently stalked in
- pursuit.
- Reith, Traz and Anacho darted from the cave and made for the sky-car. The
- surviving Dirdir saw them and gave a despairing scream. The Phung was
- momentarily distracted; the Dirdir dodged behind a rock, then with desperate
- speed dashed past the Phung. He seized one of the weapons which had previously
- been knocked from his hand, and burned off one of the Phung's legs. The Phung
- fell in a sprawling heap.
- Reith, Traz and Anacho were now scrambling into the skycar; Anacho settled to
- the controls. The Dirdir screamed a wild admonition, and ran forward. The Phung
- made a prodigious hop, to alight on the Dirdir with a great flapping of the
- cloak. With the Dirdir at last a tangle of bones and skin, the Phung hopped to
- the center of the pond where it stood like a stork, ruefully considering its
- single leg.
- CHAPTER THREE
- BELOW LAY THE chasms, separated by knife-edged ridges of stone. Black gash
- paralleled black gash; looking down Reith wondered whether he and his party
- could possibly have survived to reach the Draschade. Almost certainly not. He
- speculated: Did the chasms tolerate life of any sort? The old man at Siadz had
- mentioned pysantillas and fere; who knows what other creatures inhabited the
- gulches far below? He now noticed, wedged in a crevice high between two peaks, a
- crumble of angular shapes like an efflorescence from the mother rock: a village,
- apparently of men, though none could be seen. Where did they find water? In the
- depths of the chasm? How did they provide themselves with food? Why did they
- choose so remote an aerie for their home? There were no answers to his
- questions; the aerie was left behind in the murk.
- A voice broke into Reith's musings: a sighing, rasping, sibilant voice, which
- Reith could not understand.
- Anacho touched a button; the voice cut off. Anacho showed no concern; Reith
- forbore to ask questions.
- The afternoon waned; the chasms spread to become flatbottomed gorges full of
- darkness, while the intervening ridges showed fringes of dark gold. A region as
- grim and hopeless as the grave, thought Reith. He recalled the village, now far
- behind, and became melancholy.
- The peaks and ridges ended abruptly to form the front of a gigantic scarp; the
- floors of the gorges extended and joined. Ahead lay the Draschade. Carina 4269,
- sinking, laid a topaz trail across the leaden water.
- A promontory jutted into the sea, sheltering a dozen fishing craft, high at bow
- and stern. A village struggled along the foreshore, lights already glimmering
- into the dusk.
- Anacho circled slowly above the village. He pointed. "Notice the stone building
- with the two cupolas and the blue lamps? A tavern, or perhaps an inn. I suggest
- that we put down to refresh ourselves. We have had a most tiring day."
- "True, but can the Dirdir trace us?"
- "Small risk. They have no means to do so. I long since isolated the identity
- crystal. And in any event, that is not their way."
- Traz peered suspiciously down at the village. Born to the inland steppes, he
- distrusted the sea and sea-people, considering both uncontrollable and
- enigmatic. "The villagers may well be hostile, and set upon us."
- "I think not," said Anacho in the lofty voice which invariably irritated Traz.
- "First, we are at the edge of the Wankh realm; these folk will be accustomed to
- strangers. Secondly, so large an inn implies hospitality. Thirdly, sooner or
- later we must descend in order to eat and drink. Why not here? The risk can be
- no greater than at any other inn upon the face of Tschai. Fourthly, we have no
- plans, no destination. I consider it foolish to fly aimlessly through the
- night."
- Reith laughed. "You have convinced me. Let's go down."
- Traz gave his head a sour shake, but put forward no further objections.
- Anacho landed the sky-car in a field beside the inn, close under a row of tall
- black chymax trees which tossed and sighed to a cold wind off the sea. The three
- alighted warily, but their arrival had attracted no great attention. Two men,
- hunching along the lane with capes gripped close against the wind, paused a
- moment to survey the sky-car, then continued with only an idle mutter of
- comment.
- Reassured, the three proceeded to the front of the inn and pushed through a
- heavy timber door into a great hall. A halfdozen men with sparse sandy hair and
- pale bland faces stood by the fireplace nursing pewter mugs. They wore rough
- garments of gray and brown fustian, knee-high boots of well-oiled leather; Reith
- took them for fishermen. Conversation halted. All turned narrow gazes toward the
- newcomers. After a moment they reverted to the fire, their mugs, their terse
- conversations.
- A strapping woman in a black gown appeared from a back chamber. "Who be you?"
- "Travelers. Can you give us meals and lodging for the night?"
- "What's your nature? Are you fjord men? Or Rab?"
- "Neither."
- "Travelers often be folk who do evil in their own lands and are sent away."
- "This is often the case, I agree."
- "Mmf. What will you eat?"
- "What is to be had?"
- "Bread and steamed eel with hilks."
- "This then must be our fare."
- The woman grunted once more and turned away, but served additionally a salad of
- sweet lichen and a tray of condiments. The inn, so she informed them, had
- originally been the residence of the Foglar pirate kings. Treasure was reputedly
- buried below the dungeons. "But digging only uncovers bones and more bones, some
- broken, some scorched. Stern men, the Foglars. Well, then, do you wish tea?"
- The three went to sit by the fire. Outside the wind roared past the eaves. The
- landlady came to stoke the blaze. "The chambers are down the hall. If you need
- women, I must send out; I myself can't serve owing to my sore back, and there
- will be additional charge."
- "Don't trouble in this regard," Reith told her. "So long as the couches are
- clean we will be content."
- "Strange travelers that come in so grand a sky-car. You"-she pointed a finger
- toward Anacho-- "might well be a Dirdirman. Is that a Dirdir sky-car?"
- "I might be a Dirdirman and it might be a Dirdir sky-car. And we might be
- engaged upon important work where absolute discretion is necessary."
- "Aha, indeed!" The woman's jaw slacked. "Something to do with the Wankh, no
- doubt! Do you know, there's been great changes to the south? The Wankhmen and
- the Wankh are all at odds!"
- "We are so informed."
- The woman leaned forward. "What of the Wankh? Are they in withdrawal? So it is
- rumored."
- "I think not," said Anacho. "While the Dirdir inhabit Haulk, so long will the
- Wankh hold their Kislovan forts, and the Blue Chasch keep their torpedo pits
- ready."
- The woman cried, "And we, poor miserable humans: pawns of the great folk, never
- knowing which way to jump! I say Bevol take 'em all, and welcome!"
- She shook her fist to south, to southwest and northwest, the directions in which
- she located her principal antagonists; then she departed the chamber.
- Anacho, Traz and Reith sat in the ancient stone hall, watching the fire flicker.
- "Well, then," asked Anacho. "What of tomorrow?"
- "My plans remain the same," said Reith. "I intend to return to Earth. Somewhere,
- somehow, I must gain possession of a spaceship. This program is meaningless for
- you two; you should go where you feel secure: the Isles of Cloud, or perhaps
- back to Smargash. Wherever you decide, we will go; then perhaps you will allow
- me to continue in the sky-car."
- Anacho's long harlequin face assumed an expression almost prim. "And where will
- you take yourself?"
- "You mentioned the spaceyards at Sivishe; this will be my destination."
- "What of money? You will need a great deal, as well as subtlety and, most of
- all, luck."
- "For money there is always the Carabas."
- Anacho nodded. "Every desperado of Tschai will tell you the same. But wealth
- does not come without extreme risk. The Carabas lies within the Dirdir Hunting
- Preserve; trespassers are fair game. If you evade the Dirdir, there is Buszli
- the Bandit, the Blue Band, the vampire women, the gamblers, the hook-men. For
- every man who gains a handful of sequins, another three leave their bones, or
- fill Dirdir guts."
- Reith gave an uneasy grimace. "I'll have to take my chances."
- The three sat looking into the fire. Traz stirred. "Once long ago I wore Onmale
- and never am I entirely free of the weight. Sometimes I feel it calling from
- under the soil. In the beginning it ordained life for Adam Reith; now, even if I
- wished, I would not desert Adam Reith for fear of Onmale."
- "I am a fugitive," said Anacho. "I have no life of my own. We have destroyed the
- first Initiative,* but sooner or later there will be a second Initiative. The
- Dirdir are pertinacious. Do you know where we might find the most security? At
- Sivishe, close under the Dirdir city Hei. As for the Carabas ..." Anacho gave a
- doleful sigh. "Adam Reith seems to have a knack for survival. I have nothing
- better to do. I will take my chances."
- "I'll say no more," said Reith. "I'm grateful for your company."
- For a space the three looked into the flames. Outside the wind whistled and
- blustered. "Our destination, then, is the Carabas," said Reith. "Why should not
- the sky-car give us an advantage?"
- Anacho fluttered his fingers. "Not in the Black Zone. The Dirdir would take note
- and instantly be upon us."
- "There must be tactics of some sort to lessen the danger," said Reith.
- Anacho gave a grim chuckle. "Everyone who visits the Zone has his private
- theories. Some enter by night; others wear camouflage and puff boots to muffle
- their tracks. Some organize brigades and march as a unit; others feel more
- secure alone. Some enter from Zimle; others come down from Maust. The
- eventualities are usually the same."
- Reith rubbed his chin reflectively. "Do Dirdirmen join the hunt?"
- Anacho smiled into the flames. "The Immaculates have been known to hunt. But
- your concept has no value. Neither you nor Traz nor I could successfully
- impersonate an Immaculate."
- The fire became coals; the three went to their tall dim chambers and slept on
- hard couches under linens smelling of the sea. In the morning they ate a
- breakfast of salt biscuit and tea, then settled their tariff and departed the
- inn.
- The day was dreary. Cold tendrils of fog sifted through the chymax trees. The
- three boarded the sky-car. Up they rose through the overcast, and finally broke
- out into the wan amber sunlight. Westward they flew, over the Draschade Ocean.
- CHAPTER FOUR
- THE GRAY DRASCHADE rolled below: the ocean which Reith-it seemed an eon ago-had
- crossed aboard the cog Vargaz. Anacho flew close above the surface, to minimize
- the risk of detection by Dirdir search-screens. "We have important decisions to
- make," he announced. "The Dirdir are hunters; we have become prey. In principle,
- a hunt once initiated must be consummated, but the Dirdir are not a cohesive
- folk like the Wankh; their programs result from individual initiatives, the so
- called zhna-dih. This means a great dashing leap, trailing lightning-like
- sparks. The zeal expended upon finding us depends upon whether the
- hunt-chief--he who performed the original zhna-dih-was aboard the skycar and is
- now dead. If so, there is a considerable diminution of risk, unless another
- Dirdir wishes to assert h'so-a word meaning 'marvelous dominance'-and organizes
- another tsau'gsh, whereupon conditions are as before. If the hunt-chief is
- alive, he becomes our mortal enemy."
- Reith asked in wonder, "What was he before?"
- Anacho ignored the remark. "The hunt-chief has the force of the community at his
- disposal, though he asserts his h'so more emphatically by zhna-dih. However, if
- he suspects that we fly the sky-car, he might well order up search-screens."
- Anacho offhandedly indicated a disk of gray glass to the side of the instrument
- panel. "If we touch a search-screen you'll see a mesh of orange lines."
- The hours went by. Anacho somewhat condescendingly explained the operation of
- the sky-car; both Traz and Reith familiarized themselves with the controls.
- Carina 4269 swung across the sky, overtaking the skycar and dropping into the
- west. The Draschade rolled below, an enigmatic gray-brown waste, blurring and
- merging into the sky.
- Anacho began to talk of the Carabas: "Most sequin-takers enter at Maust, fifty
- miles south of the First Sea. At Maust are the most complete outfitters' shops,
- the finest charts and handbooks, and other services. I consider it as good a
- destination as any."
- "Where are the nodes usually found?"
- "Anywhere within the Carabas. There is no rule, no system of discovery. Where
- many folk seek, nodes are naturally few."
- "Then why not choose a less popular entry?"
- "Maust is popular because it is most convenient."
- Reith looked ahead toward the yet unseen coast of Kislovan and the unknown
- future. "What if we use none of these entries, but some point in between?"
- "What is there to gain? The Zone is the same from any direction."
- "There must be some way to minimize risks and maximize gains."
- Anacho shook his head in disparagement. "You are a strange and obstinate man!
- Isn't this attitude a form of arrogance?"
- "No," said Reith. "I don't think so."
- "How," argued Anacho, "should you succeed with such facility where others have
- failed?"
- Reith grinned. "It's not arrogant to wonder why they failed."
- "One of the Dirdir virtues is zs'hanh," said Anacho. "It means 'contemptuous
- indifference to the activity of others.' There are twenty-eight castes of
- Dirdir, which I will not enumerate, and four castes of Dirdirmen: the
- Immaculates, the Intensives, the Estranes, the Cluts. Zs'hanh is reckoned an
- attribute of the fourth through the thirteenth Dirdir grades. The Immaculates
- also practice zs'hanh. It is a noble doctrine."
- Reith shook his head in wonder. "How have the Dirdir managed to create and
- coordinate a technical civilization? In such a welter of conflicting wills-"
- "You misunderstand," said Anacho in his most nasal voice. "The situation is more
- complex. To rise in caste a Dirdir must be accepted into the next highest group.
- He wins acceptance by his achievements, not by causing conflicts. Zs'hanh is not
- always appropriate to the lower castes, nor for the very highest, which use the
- doctrine of pn'hanh: 'corrosive or metal-bursting sagacity.' "
- "I must belong in a high caste," said Reith. "I intend to use pn'hanh rather
- than zs'hanh. I want to exploit every possible advantage and avoid every risk."
- Reith, looking sidewise at the long sour face, chuckled to himself. He wants to
- point out that my caste is too low for such affectations, thought Reith, but he
- knows that I'll laugh at him.
- The sun sank with unnatural deliberation, its rate of decline slowed by the
- westward progress of the sky-car. Toward the end of the afternoon a gray-violet
- bulk rose above the horizon, to meet the disc of the pale brown sun. This was
- the island, Leume, close under the continent of Kislovan.
- Anacho turned the sky-car somewhat to the north and landed at a dingy village on
- the sandy north cape. The three spent the night at the Glass Blower's Inn, a
- structure contrived of bottles and jugs discarded by the shops at the sand-pits
- behind the town. The inn was dank and permeated with a peculiar acrid odor; the
- evening meal of soup, served in heavy green glass tureens, evinced something of
- the same flavor. Reith remarked on the similarity to Anacho, who summoned the
- Gray* servant and put a haughty question. The servant indicated a large black
- insect darting across the floor. "The skarats do indeed be pungent creatures,
- and exhale a chife. Bevol made a plague on us, until we put them to use and
- found them nutritious. Now we hardly capture enough."
- Reith long had been careful never to make inquiry regarding foods set before
- him, but now he looked askance into the tureen. "You mean ... the soup?"
- "Indeed," declared the servant. "The soup, the bread, the pickles: all be
- skarat-flavored, and if we did not use them of purpose, they'd infest us to the
- same effect, so we make a virtue of convenience, and think to enjoy the taste."
- Reith drew back from the soup. Traz ate stolidly. Anacho gave a petulant sniff
- and also ate. It occurred to Reith that never on Tschai had he noticed
- squeamishness. He heaved a deep sigh, and since no other food was forthcoming,
- swallowed the rancid soup.
- In the dim brown morning breakfast was again soup, with a garnish of sea
- vegetables. The three departed immediately after, flying northwest across Leume
- Gulf and the stony wastes of Kislovan.
- Anacho, usually nerveless, now became edgy, searching the sky, peering down at
- the ground, scrutinizing the knobs and bubbles, the patches of brown fur and
- vermilion velvet, the quivering mirrors which served as instruments. "We
- approach the Dirdir realm," he said. "We will veer north to the First Sea, then
- bear west to Khorai, where we must leave the sky-car and travel the Zoga'ar zum
- Fulkash am* to Maust. Then ... the Carabas."
- CHAPTER FIVE
- OVER THE GREAT Stone Desert flew the sky-car, parallel to the black and red
- peaks of the Zopal Range, over parched dust-flats, fields of broken rock, dunes
- of dark pink sand, a single oasis surrounded by plumes of white smoke-tree.
- Late in the afternoon a windstorm drove lion-colored rolls of dust across the
- landscape, submerging Carina 4269 in murk. Anacho swung the sky-car north.
- Presently a black-blue line on the horizon indicated the First Sea.
- Anacho immediately landed the sky-car upon the barrens, some ten miles short of
- the sea.
- "Khorai is yet hours ahead; best not to arrive after dark. The Khors are a
- suspicious folk, and flourish their knives at a harsh word. At night they strike
- without provocation."
- "These are the folk who will guard our sky-car?"
- "What thief would be mad enough to trouble the Khors?"
- Reith looked around the waste. "I prefer supper at the Glass Blower's Inn to
- nothing whatever."
- "Ha!" said Anacho. "In the Carabas you will recall the silence and peace of this
- night with longing."
- The three bedded themselves down into the sand. The night was dark and
- brilliantly clear. Directly overhead burned the constellation Clari, within
- which, unseen to the eye, glimmered the Sun. Would he ever again see Earth?
- Reith wondered. How often then would he lie under the night sky looking up into
- Argo Navis for the invisible brown sun Carina 4269 and its dim planet Tschai?
- A flicker inside the sky-car attracted his attention: he went to look and found
- a mesh of orange lines wavering across the radar screen.
- Five minutes later it disappeared, leaving Reith with a sense of chill and
- desolation.
- In the morning the sun rose at the edge of the flat plain in a sky
- uncharacteristically clear and transparent, so that each small irregularity,
- each pebble, left a long black shadow. Taking the sky-car into the air, Anacho
- flew low to the ground; he too had noticed the orange flicker of the night
- before. The waste became less forbidding: clumps of stunted smoke-tree appeared,
- and presently black dendron and bladderbush.
- They reached the First Sea and swung west, following the shoreline. They passed
- over villages: huddles of dull brown brick with conical roofs of black iron,
- beside copses of enormous dyan trees, which Anacho declared to be sacred groves.
- Rickety piers like dead centipedes sprawled out into the dark water;
- double-ended boats of black wood were drawn up the beach. Looking through the
- scanscope Reith noted men and women with mustard-yellow skins. They wore black
- gowns and tall black hats; as the sky-car passed over they looked up without
- friendliness.
- "Khors," stated Anacho. "Strange folk with secret ways. They are different by
- day and by night-at least this is the report. Each individual owns two souls
- which come and go with dawn and sunset, so that each is two different persons.
- Peculiar tales are told." He pointed ahead. "Notice the shore, where it draws
- back into a funnel."
- Reith, looking in the direction indicated, saw one of the now familiar dyan
- copses and a huddle of dull brown huts with black iron roofs. From a small
- compound a road led south over the rolling hills toward the Carabas.
- Anacho said, "Behold the sacred grove of the Khors, in which, so it is said,
- souls are exchanged. Yonder you see the caravan terminus and the road to Maust.
- I dare not take the sky-car further; hence we must land and make our way to
- Maust as ordinary sequin-takers, which is not necessarily a disadvantage."
- "And when we return will the sky-car still be here?"
- Anacho pointed down to the harbor. "Notice the boats at anchor."
- Looking through his scanscope Reith observed three or four dozen boats of every
- description.
- "Those boats," said Anacho, "brought sequin-takers to Khorai--from Coad,
- Hedaijha, the Low Isles, from the Second Sea and the Third Sea. If the owners
- return within a year, they sail from Khorai and to their homes. If within the
- year they do not return, the boat becomes the property of the harbor-master. No
- doubt we can arrange the same contract."
- Reith made no arguments against the scheme, and Anacho dropped the sky-car
- toward the beach.
- "Remember," Anacho warned, "the Khors are a sensitive people. Do not speak to
- them; pay them no heed except from necessity, in which case you must use the
- fewest possible words. They consider garrulity a crime against nature. Do not
- stand upwind of a Khor, nor if possible downwind; such acts are symbolic of
- antagonism. Never acknowledge the presence of a woman; do not look toward their
- children-they will suspect you of laying a curse; and above all ignore the
- sacred grove. Their weapon is the iron dart which they throw with astonishing
- accuracy; they are a dangerous people."
- "I hope I remember everything," said Reith.
- The sky-car landed upon the dry shingle; seconds later a great gaunt
- brown-skinned man, with deep-sunk eyes, concave cheeks, a crag of a nose, came
- running forward, his coarse brown smock flapping. "Are you for the Carabas, the
- dreadful Carabas?"
- Reith gave a cautious assent: "This is our design."
- "Sell me your sky-car! Four times I have entered the Zone, creeping from rock to
- rock; now I have my sequins. Sell me your sky-car, so that I may return to
- Holangar."
- "Unfortunately we will need the sky-car upon our return," said Reith.
- "I offer you sequins, purple sequins!"
- "They mean nothing to us; we go to find sequins of our own."
- The gaunt man gave a gesture of emotion too wild to be expressed in words and
- lunged off down the beach. A pair of Khors now approached: men somewhat slender
- and delicate of physique, wearing black gowns and cylindrical black hats which
- gave the illusion of height. The mustard-yellow faces were grave and still, the
- noses thin and small, the ears fragile shells. Fine black hair grew up rather
- than down, to be contained within the tall hat. They seemed to Reith a stream of
- humanity as divergent as the Chaschmen-perhaps a distinct species.
- The older of the two spoke in a thin soft voice: "Why are you here?"
- "We go to take sequins," said Anacho. "We hope to leave the sky-car in your
- care."
- "You must pay. The sky-car is a valuable device."
- "So much the better for you should we fail to return. We can pay nothing."
- "If you return, you must pay."
- "No, no payment. Do not insist or we will fly directly to Maust."
- The mustard-yellow faces showed no quiver of emotion. "Very well, but we allow
- you only to the month Temas."
- "Only three months? Too short a period! Give us until the end of Meumas, or
- better Azaimas."
- "Until Meumas. Your sky-car will be secure against all but those from whom you
- stole it."
- "It will be totally secure; we are not thieves."
- "So be it. Until the first day of Meumas, on the precise instant."
- The three took their possessions and walked through Khorai, to the caravan
- terminus. Under an open shed a motor-wagon was being prepared for a journey,
- with a dozen men of as many races standing by. The three made arrangements for
- passage, and an hour later departed Khorai, along the road south to Maust.
- Over barren hills and dry swales rolled the motor-wagon, halting for the night
- at a hostel operated by an order of white-faced women. They were either members
- of an orgiastic religious sect or simple prostitutes; long after Reith, Anacho
- and Traz had stretched out upon the benches which served as beds, drunken shouts
- and wild laughter came from the smoky common room.
- In the morning the common room was dim and quiet, reeking with spilled wine and
- the smoke of dead lamps. Men huddled face-down over tables, or sprawled along
- benches, their faces the color of ash. The women of the place entered, now
- harsh-voiced and peremptory, with cauldrons of thin yellow goulash. The men
- stirred and groaned, somberly ate from earthenware bowls and staggered out to
- the motorwagon, which presently set forth to the south.
- By noon Maust appeared in the distance: a jumble of tall narrow buildings with
- high gables and crooked roof-lines, built of dark timber and age-blackened tile.
- Beyond, a barren plain extended to the dim Hills of Recall. Running boys came
- out to meet the motor-wagon. They shouted slogans and held up signs and banners:
- "Sequin-takers attention! Kobo Hux will sell one of his excellent
- sequin-detectors." "Formulate your plans at the Inn of Purple Lights." "Weapons,
- puffpads, maps, digging implements from Sag the Mercantilist are eminently
- useful." "Do not grope at random; the Seer Garzu divines the location of large
- purple nodes." "Flee the Dirdir with all possible agility; use supple boots
- provided by Awalko." "Your last thoughts will be pleasant if, before death, you
- first consume the euphoric tablets formulated by Laus the Thaumaturge." "Enjoy a
- jolly respite, before entering the Zone, at the Platform of Merriment."
- The motor-wagon halted in a compound at the edge of Maust. The passengers
- alighted into a crowd of bawling men, urgent boys, grimacing girls, each with a
- new proffer. Reith, Traz and Anacho pushed through the throng, avoiding as best
- they could the hands which reached to grasp them and their possessions.
- They entered a narrow street running between tall, age darkened structures, the
- beer-colored sunlight barely penetrating to the street. Certain of the houses
- sold gear and implements conceivably useful to the sequin-taker: grading kits,
- camouflage, spoor eliminators, tongs, forks, bars, monoculars, maps, guides,
- talismans and prayer powders. From other houses came the clash of cymbals, a
- raucous honking of oboes, accompanied by calls of drunken exaltation. Certain of
- the buildings catered to gamblers; others functioned as inns, with restaurants
- occupying the ground floor. Everywhere lay the weight of antiquity, even to the
- dry aromatic odor of the air. Stones had been polished by the casual touch of
- hands; interior timbers were dark and waxy; the old brown tiles showed a subtle
- luster to glancing light.
- At the back of the central plaza stood a spacious hostelry, which appeared to
- offer comfortable accommodation and which Anacho favored, though Traz grumbled
- at what he considered excessive and unnecessary luxury. "Must we pay the price
- of a leap-horse merely to sleep the night?" he complained. "We have passed a
- dozen inns more to my taste."
- "In due course you will learn to appreciate the civilized niceties," said Anacho
- indulgently. "Come, let us see what is offered within."
- Through a portal of carved wood they entered the foyer. Chandeliers fashioned to
- represent sequin-clusters hung from the ceiling; a magnificent rug, black of
- field with a taupe border and five starbursts of scarlet and ocher, cushioned
- the tile floor.
- A majordomo approached to inquire their needs. Anacho spoke for three chambers,
- clean linen, baths and unguents. "And what do you demand in the way of tariff?"
- "For such accommodation each must pay a hundred sequins* per day," replied the
- majordomo.
- Traz gave an exclamation of shock; even Anacho was moved to protest. "What?" he
- exclaimed. "For three modest chambers, you demand three hundred sequins? Have
- you no sense of proportion? The charges are outrageous."
- The majordomo gave his head a curt inclination. "Sir, this is the famous Alawan
- Inn, at the threshold of the Carabas. Our patrons never begrudge themselves;
- they go forth either for wealth or the experience of a Dirdir intestine. What
- then a few sequins more or less? If you are unable to pay our fees I suggest the
- Den of Restful Repose or the Black Zone Inn. Notice, however, that the tariff
- includes access to a buffet of good-quality victuals as well as a library of
- charts, guides and technical advice, not to mention the services of an expert
- consultant."
- "All very well," said Reith. "First we will look into the Black Zone Inn, and
- one or two other establishments."
- The Black Zone Inn occupied the loft above a gambling establishment. The Den of
- Restful Repose was a cold barracks a hundred yards north of town, beside a
- refuse dump.
- After inspecting several other hospices the three returned to the Alawan, where
- by dint of furious haggling they managed to secure a somewhat lower rate, which
- they were forced to pay in advance.
- After a meal of stewed hackrod and mealcake, the three repaired to the library,
- at the back of the second floor. The side wall displayed a great map of the
- Zone; shelves held pamphlets, portfolios, compilations. The consultant, a small
- sad-eyed man, sat to the side and responded to questions in a confidential
- whisper. The three passed the afternoon studying the physiography of the Zone,
- the tracks of successful and unsuccessful ventures, the statistical distribution
- of Dirdir kills. Of those who entered the Zone, something under two-thirds
- returned, with an average gain of sequins to the value of about six hundred.
- "The figures here are somewhat misleading," Anacho stated. "They include the
- fringe-runners who never venture more than half a mile into the Zone. The takers
- who work the hills and the far slopes account for most of the deaths and most of
- the wealth."
- There were a thousand aspects to the science of sequin-taking, with arrays of
- statistics to illuminate every possible inquiry. Upon sighting a Dirdir band a
- sequin-taker might run, hide or fight with chances of clean escape calculated in
- terms of physiography, the time of day, proximity to the Portal of Gleams.
- Takers organized into bands for self-protection attracted an overcompensating
- number of Dirdir and their chances of survival decreased. Nodes were found in
- all parts of the Zone, most being found in the Hills of Recall and upon the
- South Stage, the savanna at the far side of the hills. The Carabas was reckoned
- no-man's-land, takers occasionally ambushing each other; such acts were reckoned
- as eleven percent of the risk.
- Dusk approached, and the library became filled with gloom. The three went down
- to the refectory, where under the light of three great chandeliers, servitors in
- black silk livery had already laid out the evening meal. Reith was moved to
- remark at so much elegance, to which Anacho gave a bark of sardonic amusement.
- "How else to justify such exorbitant tariffs?" He went off to the buffet and
- returned with three cups of spiced wine.
- The three, leaning back in the ancient settees, observed the other sojourners,
- most of whom sat alone. A few were in pairs, and a single group of four huddled
- at a far table, in dark cloaks and hoods which revealed only long ivory noses.
- Anacho spoke: "Eighteen men in the room, with ourselves. Nine will find sequins,
- nine will find none. Two may locate a node of high value, purple or scarlet.
- Ten, perhaps twelve, will pass through Dirdir guts. Six, or perhaps eight, will
- return to Maust. Those ranging the farthest to find the choicest nodes run the
- most risk; the six or eight will show no great profit."
- Traz said dourly, "Every day in the Zone a man faces one chance in four of
- death. His average gain is about four hundred sequins: it would seem that these
- men, and ourselves as well, value life at only sixteen hundred sequins."
- "Somehow we've got to change the odds," said Reith.
- "Everyone who comes to the Zone makes similar plans," said Anacho dryly. "Not
- all succeed."
- "Then we must try something no one else has considered."
- Anacho made a skeptical sound.
- The three went forth to explore the town. The music houses showed red and green
- lights; on the balconies frozen-faced girls twitched and postured and sang
- strange soft songs. The gambling houses showed brighter lights and more fervent
- activity. Each seemed to specialize in a particular game, as simple as the throw
- of fourteen-faced dice, as complex as chess played against the house
- professionals.
- They stopped to watch a game call Locate the Prime Purple Node. A board thirty
- feet long by ten feet wide represented the Carabas. The Forelands, the Hills of
- Recall, the South Stage, the gorges and valleys, the savannas, the streams and
- forests were faithfully depicted. Blue, red and purple lights indicated the
- location of nodes, sparse along the Forelands, more plentiful in the Hills of
- Recall and on the South Stage. Khusz, the Dirdir hunting camp, was a white
- block, with purple prongs rising from each corner. A numbered grid was
- superimposed upon all. A dozen players overlooked the board, each controlling a
- manikin. Also on the board were the effigies of four lunging Dirdir hunters. The
- players in turn cast fourteen-sided dice to determine the movement of all the
- manikins across the grid, as each player elected. The Dirdir hunters, moving to
- the same numbers, endeavored to cross an intersection on which rested a manikin,
- whereupon the manikin was declared destroyed and removed from the game.
- Each manikin sought to cross the lights representing sequin nodes, thus
- augmenting his score. Whenever he chose, he left the Zone by the Portal of
- Gleams and was paid his winnings. More often, prompted by greed, the player held
- his manikin on the board until a Dirdir struck it down, by which he lost the
- totality of his gain. Reith watched the game in fascination. The players sat
- clenching the rails of their booths. They stared and fidgeted, calling hoarse
- orders to the operators, yelling in exultation when they won a node, groaning at
- the approach of the Dirdir, leaning back with sick faces when their manikins
- were destroyed and their winnings lost.
- The game ended. No further manikins roamed the Carabas.
- No Dirdir hunted an empty Zone. The players stiffly descended from their booths;
- those who had won free of the Zone took their winnings. The Dirdir returned to
- Khusz beyond the South Stage. New players bought manikins, climbed into the
- booths and the game began once more.
- Reith, Traz and Anacho continued along the street. Reith paused at a booth to
- scan packets of folded paper on display. Placards read:
- Meticulously annotated across seventeen years: the chart of Sabour Yan, for a
- mere 1000 sequins, guaranteed to be unexploited.
- "and"
- The chart of Goragonso the Mysterious, who lived in the Zone like a shadow,
- nurturing his secret nodes like children, at a mere 3500 sequins. Never
- exploited.
- Reith looked to Anacho for explanation.
- "Simple enough. Such folk as Sabour Yan and Goragonso the Mysterious over the
- years explore the safer regions of the Carabas, seeking out low-grade nodes, the
- waters and milks, the pale blues which are known as sards, the pale greens. When
- they locate such nodes they carefully note their position and conceal them as
- best they may, under heaps of gravel or slabs of shale, thinking to return in
- later years after the nodes mature. If they find purple nodes so much the
- better, but in the near regions which for safety's sake they frequent, purple
- nodes are few save those which as 'waters' or 'milks' or 'sands,' were
- discovered and concealed a generation before. When such men are killed, their
- charts become valuable documents. Unfortunately, buying such a chart can be
- risky. The first person to come into possession of the chart might 'exploit' it,
- removing the choicest nodes, and then putting the chart up for sale as
- 'unexploited.' Who can prove otherwise?"
- The three returned to the Alawan. In the foyer a single chandelier exuded the
- light of a hundred sullen jewels, which lost itself in the shadows, with only a
- colored gleam here and there on the dark wood. The refectory was also dim,
- occupied by a few murmuring groups. From an urn they drew bowls of pepper-tea
- and settled themselves in a booth.
- Traz spoke in a disgruntled voice: "This place is insane: Maust and the Carabas
- together. We should leave and seek wealth in some normal manner."
- Anacho gave an airy wave of white fingers and spoke in a didactic and fluting
- voice: "Maust is merely an aspect of the interplay between men and money, and
- must be viewed on this basis."
- "Must you always talk gibberish?" demanded Traz. "To gain sequins either in
- Maust or in the Zone is a gamble, at poor odds. I do not care to gamble."
- "As far as I am concerned," said Reith, "I plan to gain sequins, but I do not
- intend to gamble."
- "Impossible!" Anacho declared. "In Maust you gamble with sequins; in the Zone
- you gamble with your life. How can you avoid doing so?"
- "I can try to reduce the odds to a tolerable level."
- "Everyone hopes to do the same. But Dirdir fires burn nightly across the
- Carabas, and at Maust the shopkeepers earn more than most sequin-takers."
- "Taking sequins is uncertain and slow," said Reith. "I prefer sequins already
- gathered."
- Anacho pursed his lips in quizzical calculation. "You plan to rob the
- sequin-gatherers? The process is risky."
- Reith looked up at the ceiling. How could Anacho still misread the processes of
- his mind? "I plan to rob no sequin-takers."
- "Then I am puzzled," said Anacho. "Whom do you intend to rob?"
- Reith spoke with care. "While we watched the hunting game,
- I began to wonder: when Dirdir kill a taker, what happens to his sequins?"
- Anacho gave his fingers a bored flutter. "The sequins are booty; what else?"
- "Consider a typical Dirdir hunt-party: how long will it remain in the Zone?"
- "Three to six days. Grand hunts and commemoratives are longer; competition hunts
- are somewhat less extended."
- "And, in a day, how many kills will a typical party make?"
- Anacho considered. "Each hunter naturally hopes for a trophy each day out. The
- usual well-seasoned party kills two or three times each day, sometimes more.
- They waste much meat, necessarily."
- "So that the typical hunting party returns to Khusz with sequins from as many as
- twenty takers."
- Anacho said curtly, "So it might be."
- "The average taker carries sequins to the value of, let us say, five hundred.
- Hence each hunting party returns with a value of ten thousand sequins."
- "Don't allow the calculation to excite you," Anacho remarked in the driest of
- voices. "The Dirdir are not a generous folk."
- "The game-board, I take it, is an accurate representation of the Zone?"
- Anacho gave a dour nod. "Reasonably so. Why do you ask?"
- "Tomorrow I want to trace the hunt routes out from Khusz and back again. If the
- Dirdir come to the Carabas to hunt men, they can hardly protest if men hunt
- Dirdir."
- "Who can imagine men hunting the Effulgents?" croaked Anacho.
- "It's never been done before?"
- "Never! Do gekkos hunt smur?"
- "In this case we gain the benefit of surprise."
- "No doubt of that!" declared Anacho. "But you must proceed without me; I will
- have none of it."
- Traz choked back a guffaw; Anacho swung about. "What amuses you?"
- "Your fear."
- Anacho leaned back in his seat. "If you knew the Dirdir as I do, you would fear
- too."
- "They are alive. Kill, they die."
- "They are hard to kill. When they hunt, they use a separate region of their
- mind, what they call the 'Old State.' No man can stand against them. Reith's
- concept verges upon insanity."
- "Tomorrow we'll study the hunt board again," said Reith in a soothing voice.
- "Something may suggest itself."
- CHAPTER SIX
- THREE DAYS LATER, an hour before dawn, Reith, Traz and Anacho departed Maust.
- Passing through the Portal of Gleams, they set out across the Foreland toward
- the Hills of Recall, black on the mottled dark brown and violet sky, ten miles
- to the south. Ahead and behind, a dozen other shapes ran half-crouched through
- the cool gloom. Some had burdened themselves with equipment: digging implements,
- graders, weapons, deodorizing ointment, face-stains, camouflage; others had no
- more than a sack, a knife, a wad of alimentary paste.
- Carina 4269 shouldered up through the murk, and some of the takers, crawling
- into patches of scrub, concealed themselves under camouflage cloth, to await the
- coming of dusk before proceeding further. Others plunged ahead, anxious to reach
- the Boulder Patch, accepting the risk of interception. Stimulated by evidence of
- this riskashes mingled with burned bones and scraps of leather-Reith, Traz and
- Anacho accelerated their pace. Half-trotting, half-running they gained the haven
- of the Boulder Path, where Dirdir did not care to hunt, without untoward
- incident.
- They put down their packs and stretched out to rest. Almost at once a pair of
- hulking figures drew near: men of no race identifiable to Reith, brown of skin
- with long tangled black hair and curly beards. They wore rags; they stank
- abominably and inspected the three with truculent assurance. "We are in command
- of these premises," groaned one in a guttural voice. "Your cost for respite is
- five sequins each; if you refuse we will thrust you into the open, and notice!
- Dirdir stalk the northern ridge."
- Anacho instantly leapt to his feet and with his shovel struck the speaker a
- great blow on the head. The second man swung his cudgel; Anacho cut up with his
- shovel blade, catching the man a maiming blow under the wrists. The cudgel flew
- aside; the man tottered back, looking in horror at his hands. They flapped under
- his wrists like a pair of empty gloves. Anacho said, "Go forth yourself to face
- the Dirdir." He jumped forward with shovel raised; the two shambled off into the
- rocks. Anacho watched them go. "We had better move."
- The three took their packs and started away; almost as they did so a great chunk
- of rock flew down to smash into the ground. Traz jumped up on a boulder and
- fired his catapult, evoking a wail of distress.
- The three took themselves a hundred yards south, somewhat up the slope from the
- Boulder Patch, where they commanded a view across the Forelands and yet could
- not easily be approached from the rear.
- Settling back, Reith brought out his scanscope and studied the landscape. He
- discerned half a dozen furtive takers, and a band of Dirdir on a promontory to
- the east. For ten minutes the Dirdir stood immobile, then suddenly disappeared.
- A moment later he picked them out again, moving with long lunging strides down
- the slope and out upon the Forelands.
- During the afternoon, with no Dirdir in view, takers began to venture from the
- Boulder Patch. Reith, Traz and Anacho climbed the slope, making for the ridge as
- directly as caution permitted. They were alone now. Not a sound could be heard.
- What with the need for stealth, progress was slow; sunset found them toiling up
- a gulch just below the ridge, and they came forth just in time to see the last
- corroded sliver of Carina 4269 fade from sight. To the south the ground sloped
- in long rolls and swales down to the Stage: rich ground for sequins, but highly
- dangerous owing to the proximity of Khusz, about ten miles to the south.
- With twilight a curious mood, mixed of melancholy and horror, settled over the
- Carabas. In all directions, winking fires appeared, each with its macabre
- implication. Amazing, thought Reith, that men, for any inducement whatever,
- would enter such a place. No more than a quarter-mile distant a fire sprang into
- existence, and the three quickly crouched into the shadows. The pale shapes of
- the Dirdir were clear to the naked eye.
- Reith studied them through the scanscope. They stalked back and forth, their
- effulgences streaming like long phosphorescent antennae, and they seemed to be
- emitting sounds too soft to be heard.
- Anacho whispered, "They use the 'Old State' of their brains; they are truly wild
- beasts, just as on the Sibol plains a million years ago."
- "Why do they walk back and forth?"
- "It is their custom; they ready themselves for their feeding frenzy."
- Reith scrutinized the ground around the fire. In the shadows lay two heaving
- shapes. "They're alive!" whispered Reith in dismay.
- Anacho grunted. "The Dirdir don't care to carry burdens. The prey must run
- alongside, hopping and leaping like the Dirdir all day if need be. If the prey
- flags, they sting him with nerve-fire and he runs with greater agility."
- Reith put down the scanscope.
- Anacho spoke in a voice carefully toneless: "You see them now in the 'Old
- State,' as wild beasts, which is their elemental nature. They are magnificent.
- In other cases they show magnificence of a different sort. Men cannot judge
- them, but merely stand back in awe."
- "What of the elite Dirdirmen?"
- "The Immaculates? What of them?"
- "Do they imitate the Dirdir at hunting?"
- Anacho looked off over the dark Zone. In the east a pink flush heralded the
- rising of the moon Az. "The Immaculates hunt. Naturally they cannot match Dirdir
- fervor and they are not privileged to hunt the Zone." He glanced toward the
- nearby fire. "In the morning the wind will blow from us to them. Best that we
- move on through the dark."
- Az, low in the sky, cast a pink sheen over the landscape; Reith could think only
- of watered blood. They moved east and south, picking a painful way across the
- rocky bones of old Tschai. The Dirdir fire receded and passed from sight behind
- a bluff. For a period the three descended toward the Stage. They halted to sleep
- a fitful few hours, then once more continued down through the alls of Recall. Az
- now hung low in the west, while Braz lifted into the east. The night was clear;
- every object showed a double pink and blue shadow.
- Traz went into the lead, watching, listening, testing each step. Two hours
- before dawn he stopped short and motioned his comrades to stillness. "Dead
- smoke," he whispered. "A camp ahead ... something is stirring."
- The three listened. The landscape gave back only silence.
- Moving with utmost stealth, Traz angled away on a new route, up over a ridge,
- down through a copse of feather-fronds. Once more halting to listen, Traz
- suddenly gestured the other two back into deep shade. From concealment they saw
- on the brow of the hill a pair of pale shapes, which stood silent and alert for
- ten minutes, then abruptly vanished.
- Reith whispered, "Did they know we were near?"
- "I don't think so," Traz muttered. "Still, they might have picked up our scent."
- Half an hour later they went cautiously forward, keeping to the shadows. Dawn
- colored the east; Az was gone, followed by Braz. The three hurried through
- plum-colored gloom, and finally took shelter in a dense clump of torquil. At
- sunrise, among the litter of twigs and curled black leaves, Traz found a node
- the size of his two fists. When cracked loose from its brittle stem and split,
- hundreds of sequins spilled forth, each glowing with a point of scarlet fire.
- "Beautiful!" whispered Anacho. "Enough to excite avidity! A few more finds like
- this and we could abandon Adam Reith's insane plan."
- They searched further through the copse, but found nothing more.
- Daylight revealed the South Stage savanna stretching east and west into the haze
- of distance. Reith studied his map, comparing the mountain behind with the
- depicted relief. "Here we are." He touched down his finger. "The Dirdir
- returning to Khusz pass yonder, west of the Boundary Woods, which is our
- destination."
- "No doubt our destiny as well," remarked Anacho with a pessimistic sniff.
- "I would as soon die killing Dirdir as any other way," said Traz.
- "One does not die killing Dirdir," Anacho corrected him delicately. "They do not
- permit it. Should someone make the attempt they prickle him with nerve-fire."
- "We'll do our best," said Reith. Lifting the scanscope he searched the landscape
- and along the ridge discovered three Dirdir hunting parties, scanning the slopes
- for game. A wonder, thought Reith, that any men whatever survived to return to
- Maust.
- The day passed slowly. Traz and Anacho searched under the scrub for nodes,
- without success. During the middle afternoon a hunt crossed the slope not half a
- mile distant. First came a man bounding like a deer, his legs extending mightily
- forward and back. Fifty yards behind ran three Dirdir without exertion. The
- fugitive, despairing, halted with his back to a rock and prepared to fight; he
- was swarmed upon and overwhelmed. The Dirdir crouched over the prostrate form,
- performed some sort of manipulation, then stood erect. The man lay twitching and
- thrashing. "Nerve-fire," said Anacho. "Somehow he annoyed them, perhaps by
- carrying an energy weapon." The Dirdir trooped away. The victim, by a series of
- grotesque efforts, gained his feet, and started a lurching flight toward the
- hills. The Dirdir paused, looked after him. The man halted and gave a great cry
- of anguish. He turned and followed the Dirdir. They began to run, bounding in
- feral exuberance. Behind, running with crazy abandon, came their captive. The
- group disappeared to the north.
- Anacho said to Reith, "You intend to pursue your plans?"
- Reith felt a sudden yearning to be out of the Carabas, as far away as possible.
- "I understand why the plan hasn't been tried before."
- Afternoon faded into a sad and gentle evening. As soon as fires appeared along
- the hillsides, the three departed their covert and set off to the north.
- At midnight they reached the Boundary Wood. Traz, fearing the sinuous
- half-reptilian beast known as the smur, was reluctant to enter. Reith made no
- argument and the three kept to the fringe of the forest until dawn.
- With the coming of light they performed a cautious exploration, and found
- nothing more noxious than fluke lizards. From the western edge of the woods
- Khusz was clearly visible, only three miles south; entering and leaving the Zone
- the Dirdir skirted the forest.
- In the afternoon, after careful assessment of all the potentialities of the
- woods, the three set to work. Traz dug, Anacho and Reith worked to fabricate a
- great rectangular net, using twigs, branches and the cord they had brought in
- their packs.
- On the evening of the following day the apparatus was complete. Surveying the
- system Reith alternated between hope and despair. Would the Dirdir react as he
- hoped they might? Anacho seemed to think so, though he spoke much of nerve-fire
- and exhibited intense pessimism.
- Middle morning and early afternoon, when the hunts returned to Khusz, were
- theoretically the productive periods. Earlier and later the Dirdir tended to go
- forth; the attention of these groups the three did not care to attract.
- The night passed and the sun rose on a day which one way or another must prove
- to be fateful. For a time it seemed that rain would fall, but by midmorning the
- clouds had drifted south; in the suddenly clear air the light of Carina 4269 was
- like an antique tincture.
- Reith waited at the edge of the woods, sweeping the landscape through his
- scanscope. To the north appeared a party of four Dirdir loping easily along the
- trail of Khusz. "Here they come," said Reith. "This is it."
- The Dirdir came bounding down the trail, giving occasional whistles of
- exuberance. Hunting had been good; they had enjoyed themselves. But look! What
- was there? A man-beast at the edge of the forest! What did the fool do here so
- close to Khusz? The Dirdir sprang in happy pursuit.
- The man-beast ran for his life, as did all such creatures. It faltered early and
- stood at bay, back to a tree. Venting their horrifying death-cry the Dirdir
- lunged forward. Under the feet of the foremost the ground gave way; he dropped
- out of sight. The remaining three halted in amazement. A sound: a crackle, a
- thrash; on top of them fell a mat of twigs, under which they were trapped. And
- here came men, unspeakably triumphant! A ruse, a ploy! With rage tearing their
- viscera, they struggled vainly against the mat, desperately intent to win free,
- to submerge the wicked men in hate and horror ...
- The Dirdir were killed, by stabbing, hewing and blows of the shovel.
- The mat was raised, the bodies stripped of sequins and dragged away, the
- deadfall repaired.
- A second group came down from the north: only three, but creatures resplendent
- in casques, with effulgences like incandescent wires. Anacho spoke in awe:
- "These are Hundred-Trophy Excellences!"
- "So much the better," Reith signaled to Traz. "Bring them in; we'll teach them
- excellence."
- Traz behaved as before, showing himself, then fleeing as if in panic. The
- Excellences pursued without vehemence; they had enjoyed a fruitful hunt. The way
- under the dendrons had been trodden before, perhaps by other hunters. The
- quarry, curiously enough, showed little of the frantic agility which added zest
- to the hunt; in fact, he had turned to face them, his back to an enormous
- gnarled torquil. Fantastic! He waved a blade. Did he challenge them, the
- Excellences? Launch forward, leap on him, rend him to the ground, with the
- trophy to the first to touch him! But! shock!-the ground collapsing, the forest
- falling; a delirium of confusion! And look: submen coming forth with blades, to
- hack, to stab! Mind-bursting rage, a frenzy of struggle, hissing and
- screaming-then the blade.
- There were four slaughters that day, four on the next, five on the third day, by
- which time the process had become an efficient routine. During mornings and
- evenings the bodies were buried and the gear repaired. The business seemed as
- passionless as fishing-until Reith recalled the hunts he had witnessed and so
- restored his zeal.
- The decision to halt the operation derived not from the diminution of
- profit-each party of hunters carried booty to a value of as much as twenty
- thousand sequins-or any lessening of fervor on the part of the three. But even
- after sorting out the clears, milks and sards the booty was an almost
- unmanageable bulk, and Anacho's pessimism had become apprehension. "Sooner or
- later the parties will be missed. There will be a search; how could we escape?"
- "One more kill," said Traz. "Here now comes a group, rich from their hunting."
- "But why? We have all the sequins we can carry!"
- "We can discard our sards and some emeralds, and carry only reds and purples."
- Anacho looked at Reith, who shrugged. "One more band."
- Traz went to the edge of the forest and performed his now well-schooled
- simulation of panic. The Dirdir failed to react. Had they seen him? They
- advanced with no acceleration of pace. Traz hesitated a moment, then once again
- showed himself. The Dirdir saw him; apparently they had also seen him on the
- first occasion, for instead of leaping into immediate pursuit, they continued
- their easy jog. Watching from the shadows, Reith tried to decide whether they
- were suspicious or merely sated with hunting.
- The Dirdir halted to examine the track into the forest. They came into the wood
- slowly, one in the lead, another behind, two holding up the rear. Reith faded
- back to his post.
- "Trouble," he told Anacho. "We may have to fight our way out."
- " 'Fight'?" cried Anacho. "Four Dirdir, three men?"
- Traz, a hundred yards down the trail, decided to stimulate the Dirdir. Stepping
- into the open, he aimed his catapult at the foremost and fired a bolt into the
- creature's chest. It gave a whistle of outrage and sprang forward, effulgences
- stiff and furiously bright.
- Traz dodged back, went to stand in his usual spot, a grin of irrational pleasure
- on his face. He brandished his blade. The wounded Dirdir charged, and crashed
- into the pitfall. Its yells became a weird keening of shock and pain. The
- remaining three stopped short, then came balefully forward, step by step. Reith
- pulled the net release; it dropped, capturing two; one danced back.
- Reith came forth. He yelled to Anacho and Traz. "Kill those under the net!" He
- jumped through the tangle to confront the remaining Dirdir. Under no
- circumstances must it escape.
- Escape was remote from its mind. It sprang upon Reith like a leopard, ripping
- with its talons. Traz ran forward brandishing his dagger and threw himself on
- the Dirdir's back. The Dirdir rolled over backward, and tearing Traz's legs
- loose, made play with his own dagger. Anacho leaped forward; with one mighty
- swordstroke he hacked apart the Dirdir's arm; with a second blow he clove the
- creature's head. Staggering and tottering, cursing and panting, the three
- finished off the remaining Dirdir, then stood in vast relief that they had fared
- so well. Blood pumped from Traz's leg. Reith applied a tourniquet, opened the
- first-aid kit he had brought with him to Tschai. He disinfected the wound,
- applied a toner, pressed the wound together, sprayed on a film of synthetic
- skin, and eased off the tourniquet. Traz grimaced, but made no complaint. Reith
- brought forth a pill. "Swallow this. Can you stand?"
- Traz rose stiffly to his feet.
- "Can you walk?"
- "Not too well."
- "Try to keep moving, to prevent the leg from going stiff."
- Reith and Anacho searched the corpses for booty, to their enormous profit: a
- purple node, two scarlets, a deep blue, three pale greens and two pale blues.
- Reith shook his head in marvel and vexation. "Wealth! But useless unless we get
- it back to Maust."
- He watched Traz limping back and forth with obvious effort. "We can't carry it
- all."
- The corpses they rolled into the pitfall, and covered them over. The net they
- hauled off into the underbrush. Then they sorted out the sequins, making three
- packs, two heavy and one light. There still remained a fortune in clears, milks,
- sards, deep blues and greens. These they wrapped into a fourth parcel, which
- they secreted under the roots of the great torquil.
- Two hours remained until dusk. They took up their packs, went to the eastern
- edge of the forest, accommodating their gait to Traz. Here they argued the
- feasibility of camping until Traz's leg had healed. Traz would hear none of it.
- "I can keep up, so long as we don't have to run."
- "Running won't help us in any case," said Reith.
- "If they catch us," said Anacho, "then we must run. With nerve-fire at our
- necks."
- The afternoon light deepened through gold and dark gold; Carina 4269 disappeared
- and sepia murk fell over the landscape. The hills showed minuscule flickers of
- flame. The three set forth, and so the dismal journey began: across the Stage
- from one black clump of dendron to another. At last they came to the slopes, and
- doggedly began to climb.
- Dawn found them under the ridge, with both hunters and hunted already astir.
- Shelter was nowhere in sight; the three descended into a gulch and contrived a
- covert of dry brush.
- The day advanced. Anacho and Reith dozed while Traz lay staring at the sky; the
- enforced idleness had caused his leg to stiffen. At noon a hunt of four proud
- Dirdir, resplendent in glittering casques, crossed the ravine. For a moment they
- paused, apparently sensing the near-presence of quarry, but other affairs
- attracted their attention and they continued off to the north.
- The sun declined, illuminating the eastern wall of the gulch. Anacho gave an
- uncharacteristic snort of laughter. "Look there." He pointed. Not twenty feet
- distant the ground had broken, revealing the wrinkled dome of a large mature
- node. "Scarlets at least. Maybe purples."
- Reith made a gesture of sad resignation. "We can hardly carry the fortune we
- already have. It is sufficient."
- "You underestimate the rapacity and greed of Sivishe," grumbled Anacho. "To do
- what you propose will require two fortunes, or more." He dug up the node. "A
- purple. We can't leave it behind."
- "Very well," said Reith. "I'll carry it."
- "No," said Traz. "I'll carry it. You two already have most of the load."
- "We'll divide it into three parts," said Reith. "It won't be all that much
- more."
- Night came at last; the three shouldered their packs and continued. Traz
- hopping, hobbling, grimacing in pain. Down the north slope they moved, and the
- closer they approached the Portal of Gleams, the more ghastly and detestable
- seemed the Zone.
- Dawn found them at the base of the hills, with the Portal yet ten miles north.
- As they rested in a shadowed fissure, Reith swept the landscape through his
- scanscope. The Forelands seemed quiet and almost devoid of life. Far to the
- northwest a dozen shapes made for the Portal of Gleams, hoping to reach safety
- before full daylight. They ran with the peculiar scuttling gait that men
- instinctively used within the Zone, as if they thereby made themselves
- inconspicuous. A band of hunters stood on a relatively nearby crag, still and
- alert as eagles. They watched the fleeing men with regret. Reith put aside all
- hope of reaching the Portal before dark. The three passed another dreary day
- behind a boulder, with camouflage cloth overhead.
- During the middle morning a sky-car drifted overhead. "They're looking for the
- missing hunts," said Anacho in a hushed voice. "Undoubtedly there will be a
- tsau'gsh ... We are in great danger."
- Reith looked after the sky-car, then gauged the miles to the Portal. "By
- midnight we should be safe."
- "We may not last till midnight, if the Dirdir close off the Forelands, as well
- they may do."
- "We can't set out now; they'd take us for sure."
- Anacho gave a dour nod. "Agreed."
- Towards middle afternoon another sky-car came to hover over the Forelands.
- Anacho hissed between his teeth. "We are trapped." But after half an hour the
- sky-car once more drifted south beyond the hills.
- Reith made a careful scrutiny of the landscape. "I see no hunts. Ten miles means
- at least two hours. Shall we make a run for it?"
- Traz looked down at his leg with a wistful expression. "You two go on. I'll
- follow when the sun goes down."
- "Too late by then," said Anacho. "Already it is too late."
- Once more Reith searched the ridges. He helped Traz to his feet. "It's all of us
- or none."
- They started out across the barrens, feeling naked and vulnerable. Any hunt
- which chanced to look down from the ridge into this particular sector could not
- fail to notice them.
- They proceeded for half an hour, scuttling half-crouched like the others. From
- time to time Reith paused to sweep the landscape to the rear with his scanscope,
- dreading lest he see the dire shapes in pursuit. But the miles fell behind, and
- hope correspondingly began to rise. Traz's face was gray with pain and
- exhaustion; nevertheless he forced the pace, tottering at a half-run, until
- Reith suspected that he ran from sheer hysteria.
- But suddenly Traz stopped. He looked back at the ridges. "They are watching us."
- Reith scrutinized the ridges, slopes and dark gulches, but saw nothing. Traz had
- already set off at an erratic lope, with Anacho hunching along behind. Reith
- followed. A few hundred yards further north he paused again, and this time
- thought he saw a flicker of light reflecting from metal. Dirdir? Reith gauged
- the distance ahead. They had come roughly halfway across the barrens. Reith drew
- a deep breath and ran off after Traz and Anacho. Conceivably the Dirdir might
- not choose to pursue so far across the Forelands.
- A second time he halted and looked back. All uncertainty was gone: four shapes
- bounded down the slopes. There could be no doubt as to their intent.
- Reith caught up with Traz and Anacho. Traz ran with glaring eyes, mouth open so
- that his teeth showed. Reith took the heaviest bag from the lad's shoulder,
- threw it over his own. If anything, Traz slowed his pace a trifle. Anacho gauged
- the distance ahead, studied the pursuing Dirdir. "We have a chance."
- The three ran, hearts pounding, lungs burning. Traz's face was like a skull.
- Anacho relieved him of the remaining parcel.
- The Portal of Gleams was visible: a haven of wonderful security. Behind came the
- hunters, by prodigious leaps.
- Traz was faltering, with the Portal yet a half-mile ahead. "Onmale!" called
- Reith.
- The effect was startling. Traz seemed to expand, to grow tall. He stopped short
- and swung about to face the pursuers. His face was that of a stranger: a person
- sagacious, fierce and dominant, the personification in fact of the emblem
- Onmale.
- Onmale was too proud to flee.
- "Run!" cried Reith in a panic. "If we must fight, let's fight on our own terms!"
- Traz, or Onmale-the two were confused-seized a pack from Reith and one from
- Anacho and sprang ahead toward the Portal.
- Reith wasted a half-second gauging the distance to the first Dirdir, then
- continued his flight. Traz soared across the barrens. Anacho, his face pink and
- distorted, pounded behind.
- Traz gained the Portal. He turned and waited, catapult in one hand, sword in the
- other. Anacho passed through, then Reith, not fifty feet in advance of the
- foremost Dirdir. Traz backed to stand just beyond the boundary, challenging the
- Dirdir to attack. The Dirdir gave a shrill scream of fury. It shook its head,
- and its effulgences, standing high, vibrated. Then, curvetting, it loped south,
- after its comrades, already on their way back to the hills.
- Anacho leaned panting against the Portal of Gleams. Reith stood with the breath
- rasping in his throat. Traz's face was vacant and gray. His knees buckled; he
- fell to the ground and lay quiet, giving not so much as a twitch.
- Reith staggered forward, turned him over. Traz seemed not to breathe. Reith
- straddled his body and applied artificial respiration. Traz gave a
- throat-wrenching gasp. Presently he began to breathe evenly.
- The solicitors, touts and beggars who normally kept station by the Portal of
- Gleams had scattered, aghast at the approach of the Dirdir. First to return was
- a young man in a long maroon gown, who now stood making gracious movements of
- concern. "An outrage," he lamented. "The conduct of the Dirdir! Never should
- they chase so close to the gate! They have almost killed this poor young man!"
- "Quiet," snapped Anacho. "You disturb us."
- The young man stood aside. Reith and Anacho lifted Traz to his feet, where he
- stood in something of a stupor.
- The young man once again came forward, his soft brown eyes all-seeing,
- all-knowing. "Allow me to assist. I am Issam the Thang; I represent the Hopeful
- Venture Inn, which promises a restful atmosphere. Allow me to assist you with
- your parcels." Picking up Traz's pack he turned a startled gaze toward Reith and
- Anacho. "Sequins?"
- Anacho seized his pack. "Be off with you! Our plans are established!"
- "As you will," said Issam the Thang, "but the Hopeful Venture Inn is near at
- hand, and something apart from the tumult and gaming. While comfortable, the
- expense does not approach the exorbitant fees of the Alawan."
- "Very well," said Reith. "Take us to the Hopeful Venture."
- Anacho muttered under his breath; to which Issam the Thang made a delicate
- gesture of reproach. "This way, if you will."
- They trudged toward Maust, Traz hobbling on his lame leg.
- "My memory is a jumble," he muttered. "I recall crossing the Forelands; I
- remember that someone shouted into my ear-"
- "It was I," said Reith.
- "--then after, nothing real, and next I lay beside the Portal." And a moment
- later he mused: "I heard roaring voices. A thousand faces looked past me,
- warriors' faces, raging. I have seen such things in dreams." His voice dwindled;
- he said no more.
- CHAPTER SEVEN
- THE HOPEFUL VENTURE Inn stood at the back of a narrow alley, a brooding,
- age-blackened structure, doing no great business, to judge from the common room,
- which was dark and still. Issam, it now appeared, was the proprietor. He made an
- effusive show of hospitality, ordering water, lamps and linen up to the "grand
- suite," which orders were effected by a surly servant with enormous red hands
- and a shock of coarse red hair. The three mounted a twisting stairway to the
- suite, which comprised a sitting-room, a wash-room, several irregular alcoves
- furnished with sour-smelling couches. The servant arranged the lamps, brought
- flasks of wine and departed. Anacho examined the lead and wax stoppers, then put
- the flasks aside. "Too much risk of drugs or poison. When the man awakes-if he
- awakes-his sequins are gone and he is bereft. I am dissatisfied; we would have
- done better at the Alawan."
- "Tomorrow is time enough," said Reith, sinking into a chair with a groan of
- fatigue.
- "Tomorrow we must be gone from Maust," said Anacho. "If we are not marked men
- now, we soon will be." He went forth and presently returned with bread, meat and
- wine.
- They ate and drank; then Anacho checked the bars and bolts. "Who knows what
- transpires in these old piles? A knife in the dark, a single sound, and who is
- the wiser save Issam the Thang?"
- Again checking the locks, the three prepared themselves for sleep. Anacho,
- declaring himself to be easily aroused, put the sequins between himself and the
- wall. Except for a single wavering night light the lamps were extinguished. A
- few moments later Anacho slipped noiselessly across the room to Reith's couch.
- "I suspect peepholes and listening pipes," he whispered. "Here are the sequins.
- Put them beside you. Let us sit quietly and watch for a period."
- Reith forced himself into a state of alertness. Fatigue defeated him; his
- eyelids drooped. He slept.
- Time passed. Reith was aroused by a prod from Anacho's elbow; he sat up with a
- jerk of guilt. "Quiet," said Anacho in the ghost of a whisper. "Look yonder."
- Reith peered through the darkness. A scrape, a movement in the shadows, a dark
- shape-a light suddenly flared up. Traz stood, crouched and glaring, arms
- concealed in the shadow of his body.
- The two men by Anacho's couch turned to face the lamp, faces blank and startled.
- One was Issam the Thang; the second was the burly servant who had been groping
- with his enormous hands for the neck of Anacho, presumably asleep on the couch.
- The servant emitted a curious whisper of excitement and hopped across the room,
- hands clutching. Traz fired his catapult into the twisted face. The man fell
- silently, going to oblivion without apprehension or regret. Issam sprang for an
- opening in the wall. Reith bore him to the floor. Issam fought desperately; for
- all his slenderness and delicacy he was as strong and quick as a serpent. Reith
- seized him in an arm-lock and jerked him erect, squeaking in pain.
- Anacho flipped a cord around Issam's neck and prepared to tighten the noose.
- Reith grimaced but made no protest. This was the justice of Maust; it was only
- fitting that here, in the flaring lamplight, Issam should go to his doom.
- Issam fervently cried out: "No! I am only a miserable Thang! Don't kill me! I'll
- help you, I swear! I'll help you escape!"
- "Wait," said Reith. To Issam: "How do you mean, help us escape? Are we in
- danger?"
- "Yes, of course. What should you expect?"
- "Tell me of this danger."
- Sensing reprieve, Issam drew himself up, indignantly shrugged away Anacho's
- hands. "The information is valuable. How much will you pay?"
- Reith nodded to Anacho. "Proceed."
- Issam gave a heart-rending wail. "No, no! Trade me my life for your three
- lives-is that not enough?"
- "If such be the case."
- "It is the case. Stand back, then; remove the noose."
- "Not until we know the kind of bargain we are making."
- Issam looked from face to face and saw nothing to encourage him. "Well, then,
- secret word has come to me. The Dirdir are in a state of frothing fury. Someone
- has destroyed an unlikely number of hunting parties, and stolen the booty-as
- much as two hundred thousands' worth of sequins. Special agents are on
- watch-here and elsewhere. Whoever submits any information will derive great
- benefit. If you are the person of the case, as I suspect, you will never leave
- Maust except in prickle-collars-unless I help you."
- Reith asked cautiously, "Help us how?"
- "I can and will save you-for a price."
- Reith looked toward Anacho, who drew taut the cord. Issam clawed at the
- constriction, eyes bulging in the lamplight. The noose loosened. Issam croaked,
- "My life for yours, that is our bargain."
- "Then talk no more of 'price.' Needless to say, don't try to trick us."
- "Never, never!" croaked Issam. "I live or die with you! Your life is my life! We
- must leave now. Morning will be too late."
- "Leave how? Afoot?"
- "It may not be necessary. Make yourselves ready. Do those bags and parcels
- actually contain sequins?"
- "Scarlets and purples," said Anacho with sadistic relish. "If you want the same,
- go into the Zone and kill Dirdir."
- Issam shuddered. "Are you ready?" He waited impatiently while the three resumed
- their garments. On sudden thought he dropped down to rifle the corpse of the
- servant and clucked with satisfaction at the handful of clears and milks he
- found in the pouch.
- The three were ready. In spite of Issam's protest Anacho maintained the noose
- around his neck. "So that you will not misunderstand our intentions."
- "Must I always be cursed with suspicious associates?"
- The main avenue of Maust vibrated with movement, the shift of faces, colored
- lights; from the taverns came wailing music, drunken belches of laughter, an
- occasional angry outcry. By furtive shortcuts and dark detours Issam took them
- to a stable at the north of town, where a scowling attendant finally responded
- to Issam's pounding. Five minutes of surly haggling resulted in the saddling of
- four leap-horses; ten minutes later, as the moons of Az and Braz simultaneously
- rolled up the eastern sky, Reith, Anacho, Traz and Issam bounded north on the
- gaunt white leaphorses of Kachan, and left Maust behind.
- Through the night they rode and at dawn entered Khorai. Smoke trickling up from
- iron chimneys drifted north over the First Sea, which by some trick of light
- appeared as black as a sea of pitch, with the plum-colored northern sky for a
- backdrop.
- Through Khorai they pounded and down to the harbor where they dismounted. Issam,
- wearing the most modest of smiles, bowed to Reith, hands folded behind his dark
- red gown. "I have achieved my goal; my friends have been delivered safe to
- Khorai."
- "The friends you hoped to strangle a few hours ago."
- Issam's smile became tremulous. "That was Maust! One's behavior in Maust must be
- tolerated."
- "As far as I am concerned, you may return."
- Issam bowed low once more. "May nine-headed Sagorio maim your enemies! So now,
- farewell!" Issam took the pale leaphorses back through Khorai and disappeared to
- the south.
- The sky-car rested where they had left it. As they climbed aboard, the
- harbormaster looked on with a saturnine sneer, but made no comment. Mindful of
- Khor truculence the three took pains to ignore his presence.
- The sky-car rose into the morning sky, curved along the shore of the First Sea.
- So began the first stage of the journey to Sivishe.
- CHAPTER EIGHT
- THE SKY-CAR FLEW west. To the south spread a vast dusty desert; to the north lay
- the First Sea. Below and ahead mudflats alternated with promontories of
- sandstone in a monotonous succession, one beyond the other, into the haze at the
- limit of vision.
- Traz slept the sleep of sheer exhaustion. Anacho, to the contrary, sat
- unconcerned and careless, as if fear and emergency were foreign to his
- experience. Reith, though he ached with fatigue, could not wrench his gaze away
- from the radar-screen, except to search the sky. Anacho's carefree manner at
- last became exasperating. Reith glared at him through red-rimmed eyes and spoke
- in a dour voice: "For a fugitive you show surprisingly little apprehension. I
- admire your composure."
- Anacho made an easy gesture. "What you call composure is childlike faith. I have
- become superstitious. Consider: we have entered the Carabas, killed dozens of
- First Folk and carried off their sequins. So now, how can I take seriously the
- prospect of casual interception?"
- "Your faith is greater than mine," growled Reith. "I expect the whole force of
- the Dirdir system to be scouring the skies for us."
- Anacho gave an indulgent laugh. "That is not the Dirdir way! You project your
- own concepts into the Dirdir mind. Remember, they do not look upon organization
- as an end in itself; this is a human attribute. The Dirdir exists only as
- himself, a creature responsible only to his pride. He cooperates with his
- fellows when the prospect suits him."
- Reith shook his head skeptically, and went back to studying the radar-screen.
- "There must be more to it than that. How does the society hold together? How can
- the Dirdir sustain long-term projects?"
- "Very simple. One Dirdir is much like another; there are racial forces which
- compel all alike. In great dilution, the submen know these forces as
- 'tradition,' 'caste authority,' 'zest to overachieve'; in the Dirdir society
- they become compulsions. The individual is bound to customs of the race. Should
- a Dirdir need assistance he need only cry out hs'ai hs'ai, hs'ai and he is
- helped. If a Dirdir is wronged, he calls dr'ssa dr'ssa, dr'ssa and commands
- arbitration. If the arbitration fails to suit him he can challenge the
- arbitrator, who is usually an Excellence; if he defeats the arbitrator, he is
- vindicated. More often he himself is defeated; his effulgences are plucked out
- and he becomes a pariah ... There are few challenges of arbitration."
- "Under such conditions, the society would seem to be highly conservative."
- "This is the case, until there is need for change, and then the Dirdir applies
- himself to the problem with 'zest to over-achieve.' He is capable of creative
- thinking; his brain is supple and responsive; he wastes no energy upon
- mannerism. Multiple sexuality and the 'secrets' of course are a distraction, but
- like the hunt they are a source of violent passion beyond human comprehension."
- "All this to the side, why should they give up the search for us so easily?"
- "Is it not clear?" demanded Anacho testily. "How could even the Dirdir suspect
- that we fly toward Sivishe in a sky-car? Nothing identifies the men sought at
- Smargash with the men who destroy Dirdir in the Carabas. Perhaps in time a
- connection will be made, if, for example, Issam the Thang is questioned. Until
- then they are ignorant that we fly a sky-car. So why put up search-screens?"
- "I hope you're right," said Reith.
- "We shall see. Meanwhile-we are alive. We fly a sky-car in comfort. We carry
- better than two hundred thousand sequins. Notice ahead: Cape Braize! Beyond lies
- the Schanizade. We will now alter course and come down upon Haulk from above.
- Who will notice a single sky-car among a hundred? At Sivishe we will mingle with
- the multitude, while the Dirdir seek us across the Zhaarken, or at Jalkh, or out
- on the Hunghus tundra."
- Ten miles passed below the sky-car with Reith pondering the soul of the Dirdir
- race. He asked. "Suppose you or I were in trouble and cried dr'ssa dr'ssa,
- dr'ssa?"
- "That is the call for arbitration. Hs'ai hs'ai, hs'ai is the cry for help."
- "Very well, hsai hsai, hsai-would a Dirdir be impelled to help?"
- "Yes; by the force of tradition. This is automatic, a reflexive act: the
- connective tissue which binds an otherwise wild and mercurial race."
- Two hours before sunset a storm blew in from the Schanizade. Carina 4269 became
- a brown wraith, then disappeared as black clouds tumbled up the sky. Surf like
- dirty beer-foam swept across the beach, close to the boles of the black dendrons
- which shrouded the foreshore. The upper fronds twisted to gusts of wind, turning
- up glossy gray undersides; roiling patterns moved across the black upper
- surfaces.
- The sky-car fled south through the umber dusk, then, with the last glimmer of
- light, landed in the lee of a basalt jut. The three, huddling upon the settees
- and ignoring the odor of Dirdir bodies, slept while the storm hissed through the
- rocks.
- Dawn brought a strange illumination, like light shining through brown
- bottle-glass. There was neither food nor drink in the sky-car, but pilgrim pod
- grew out on the barrens and a brackish river flowed nearby. Traz went quietly
- along the bank, craning his neck to peer through the reflections. He stopped
- short, crouched, plunged into the water to emerge with a yellow creature, all
- thrashing tentacles and jointed legs, which he and Anacho devoured raw. Reith
- stolidly ate pilgrim pod.
- With the meal finished they leaned back against the sky-car, basking in the
- honey-colored sunlight and enjoying the morning calm. "Tomorrow," said Anacho,
- "we arrive in Sivishe. Our life once more changes. We are no longer thieves and
- desperadoes, but men of substance, or so we must let it appear."
- "Very well," said Reith. "What next?"
- "We must be subtle. We do not simply apply at the spaceyards with our money."
- "Hardly," said Reith. "On Tschai whatever seems reasonable is wrong."
- "It is impossible," said Anacho, "to function without the support of an
- influential person. This will be our first concern."
- "A Dirdir? Or a Dirdirman?"
- "Sivishe is a city of sub-men; the Dirdir and Dirdirmen keep to Hei on the
- mainland. You will see."
- CHAPTER NINE
- HAULK HUNG LIKE a cramped and distorted appendix from the distended belly of
- Kislovan, with the Schanizade Ocean to the west and the Gulf of Ajzan to the
- east. At the head of the gulf was the island Sivishe, with an untidy industrial
- jumble at the northern end. A causeway led to the mainland and Hei, the Dirdir
- city. At the center of Hei and dominating the entire landscape stood a box of
- gray glass five miles long, three miles wide, a thousand feet high: a structure
- so large that the perspectives seemed distorted. A forest of spires surrounded
- the box, a tenth as high, scarlet and purple, then mauve, gray and white toward
- the periphery.
- Anacho indicated the towers. "Each house a clan. Someday I will describe the
- life of Hei: the promenades, the secrets of multiple sex, the castes and class.
- But of more immediate interest, yonder lie the spaceyards."
- Reith saw an area at the center of the island surrounded by shops, warehouses,
- depots and hangars. Six large spaceships and three smaller craft occupied bays
- to one side. Anacho's voice broke into his speculations.
- "The spaceships are well secured. The Dirdir are far more stringent than the
- Wankh-by instinct rather than by reason, for no one in history has stolen a
- spaceship."
- "No one in history has come with two hundred thousand sequins. Such money will
- grease a lot of palms."
- "What good are sequins in the Glass Box?"
- Reith said no more. Anacho took the sky-car down to a paved area beside the
- spaceyards.
- "Now," said Anacho in a calm voice, "we shall learn our destiny."
- Reith took instant alarm. "What do you mean by that?"
- "If we have been traced, if we are expected, then we will be taken; and soon
- there will be an end to us. But the car yard seems as usual; I expect no
- disaster. Remember now, this is Sivishe, I am the Dirdirman, you are the
- sub-men; act accordingly."
- Reith dubiously searched the yard. As Anacho had stated there seemed no untoward
- activity.
- The sky-car landed. The three alighted. Anacho stood austerely aside while Reith
- and Traz removed the packs.
- A power-wagon approached and fixed clamps to the sky-car. The operator, a hybrid
- of Dirdirman and another race unknown, inspected Anacho with impersonal
- curiosity, ignoring Reith and Traz. "What is to be the disposition?"
- "Temporary deposit, on call," said Anacho.
- "To what charge?"
- "Special. I'll take the token."
- "Number sixty-four." The clerk gave Anacho a brass disc. "I require twenty
- sequins."
- "Twenty, and five for yourself."
- The lift-wagon conveyed the sky-car to a numbered slot. Anacho led the way to a
- slide-way, with Reith and Traz trudging behind with the packs. They stepped
- aboard and were conveyed out to a wide avenue, along which ran a considerable
- traffic of power-wagons, passenger cars, drays.
- Here Anacho paused to reflect. "I have been gone so long, I have traveled so
- far, that Sivishe is somewhat strange. First, of course, we need lodgings.
- Across the avenue, as I recall, is a suitable inn."
- At the Ancient Realm Inn the three were led down a white and black-tiled
- corridor to a suite overlooking the central court, where a dozen women sat on
- benches watching the windows for a signal.
- Two seemed to be Dirdirwomen: thin sharp-faced creatures, pallid as snow, with a
- sparse fuzz of gray hair at the back of their scalps. Anacho surveyed them
- thoughtfully for a moment or so, then turned away. "We are fugitives, of
- course," he said, "and we must be wary. Nevertheless, here in Sivishe where many
- people come and go, we are as safe as we might be anywhere. The Dirdir do not
- concern themselves with Sivishe unless circumstances fail to suit them, in which
- case the Administrator goes to the Glass Box. Otherwise, the Administrator has a
- free hand; he taxes, polices, judges, punishes, appropriates as he sees fit and
- is therefore the least corruptible man in Sivishe. For influential assistance we
- must seek elsewhere; tomorrow I will make an inquiry. Next we will need a
- structure of suitable dimensions, close by the spaceyards, yet inconspicuous.
- Again, a matter requiring discreet inquiry. Then-most sensitive of all-we must
- hire technical personnel to assemble the components and perform the necessary
- tuning and phasing. If we pay high wages we can no doubt secure the right men. I
- will represent myself as a Dirdirman Superior-in fact, my former status-and hint
- of Dirdir reprisals against loose-mouthed men. There is no reason why the
- project should not go easily and smoothly, except for the innate perversity of
- circumstances."
- "In other words," said Reith, "the chances are against us."
- Anacho ignored the remark. "A warning: the city seethes with intrigue. Folk come
- to Sivishe for a single purpose: to win advantage. The city is a turmoil of
- illicit activity, robbery, extortion, vice, gambling, gluttony, extravagant
- display, swindling. These are endemic, and the victim has small hope of
- recourse. The Dirdir are unconcerned; the antics and maneuvers of the submen are
- nothing to them. The Administrator is interested only in maintaining order. So:
- caution! Trust no one; answer no questions! Identify yourselves as steppe-men
- seeking employment; profess stupidity. By such means we minimize risk."
- CHAPTER TEN
- IN THE MORNING Anacho went forth to make his inquiries. Reith and Traz descended
- to the street cafe and sat watching the passersby. Traz was displeased with
- everything he saw. "All cities are vile," he grumbled. "This is the worst: a
- detestable place. Do you notice the stink? Chemicals, smoke, disease, rotting
- stone. The smell has infected the folk; observe their faces."
- Reith could not deny that the inhabitants of Sivishe were an unprepossessing
- lot. Their complexions ranged from muddy brown to Dirdirman white; their
- physiognomies reflected thousands of years of half-purposeful mutation. Never
- had Reith seen so wary and self-contained a people. Living in contiguity with an
- alien race had fostered no fellowship: in Sivishe each man was a stranger. As a
- positive consequence, Reith and Traz were inconspicuous: no one looked twice in
- their direction.
- Reith sat musing over his bowl of pale wine, relaxed and almost at peace. As he
- pondered old Tschai, it occurred to him the single homogenizing force was the
- language, the same across the entire planet. Perhaps because communication often
- represented the difference between life and death, because those who failed to
- communicate died, the language had retained its universality. Presumably the
- language had its roots on ancient Earth. It resembled no language with which he
- was familiar. He considered key words. Vam was "mother"; tatap was "father";
- issir was "sword." The cardinal numbers were aine, sei, dros, enser, nif, hisz,
- yaga, managa, nuwai, tix. No significant parallels, but somehow, a hunting echo
- of Earth sounds ...
- In general, reflected Reith, life on Tschai ranged a wider gamut than did life
- on Earth. Passions were more intense: grief more poignant, joy more exalted.
- Personalities were more decisive. By contrast the folk of Earth seemed pensive,
- conditional, sedate. Laughter on Earth was less boisterous; still, there were
- fewer gasps of horror.
- As he often did, Reith wondered: Suppose I return to Earth, what then? Can I
- adjust to an existence so placid and staid? Or all my life will I long for the
- steppes and seas of Tschai? Reith gave a sad chuckle. A problem he would be glad
- to confront.
- Anacho returned. After a quick glance to left and right he settled himself at
- the table. His manner was subdued. "I've been optimistic," he muttered. "I've
- trusted too much to my memories."
- "How so?" Reith demanded.
- "Nothing immediate. It seems, merely, that I have underestimated our impact on
- the times. Twice this morning I heard talk of the madmen who invaded the Carabas
- and slaughtered Dirdir as if they were lippets. Hei throbs with agitation and
- anger, or so it is said. Various tsaugsh are in progress; all would regret to be
- the madmen once they are captured."
- Traz was outraged. "The Dirdir go to the Carabas to kill men," he stormed. "Why
- should they resent the case when they themselves are killed?"
- "Hist!" exclaimed Anacho. "Not so loud! Do you wish to attract attention? In
- Sivishe no one blurts forth his thoughts; it is unwholesome!"
- "Another black mark against this squalid city!" declared Traz, but in a more
- restrained voice.
- "Come now," said Anacho nervously. "It is not so disheartening after all. Think
- of it! While Dirdir range the continents, we three rest in Sivishe, at the
- Ancient Realm Inn."
- "A precarious satisfaction," said Reith. "What else did you learn?"
- "The Administrator is Clodo Erlius. He has just assumed office-not necessarily
- advantageous from our point of view since a new official is apt to stringency. I
- have made guarded inquiries, and since I am a Dirdirman Superior, I did not
- encounter total frankness. However a certain name has been mentioned twice. That
- name is Aila Woudiver. His ostensible occupation is the supply and transport of
- structural materials. He is a notable gourmand and voluptuary, with tastes at
- once so refined, so gross and so inordinate as to cost him vast sums. This
- information was given freely, in a tone of envious admiration. Woudiver's
- illicit capabilities were merely implied."
- "Woudiver would appear to be an unsavory colleague," said Reith.
- Anacho snorted in derision. "You demand that I find someone proficient at
- conniving, chicanery, theft; when I produce this man, you look down your nose at
- him."
- Reith grinned. "No other names were mentioned?"
- "Another source explained, in a carefully facetious manner, that any
- extraordinary activity must surely attract the attention of Woudiver. It would
- seem that he is the man with whom we must deal. In a certain sense, his
- reputation is reassuring; he is necessarily competent."
- Traz entered the conversation. "What if this Woudiver refuses to help us? Are we
- not then at his mercy? Could he not extort our sequins from us?"
- Anacho pursed his lips, shrugged: "No scheme of this sort is absolutely
- reliable. Aila Woudiver would seem to be a sound choice, from our point of view.
- He has access to the sources of supply, he controls transport vehicles, and
- possibly he can provide a suitable building in which to assemble a space-boat."
- Reith said reluctantly, "We want the most competent man, and if we get him I
- suppose we can't cavil at his personal attributes. Still, on the other hand ...
- Oh, well. What pretext should we use?"
- "The tale you gave the Lokhars-that we need a spaceship to take possession of a
- treasure-is as good as any. Woudiver will discredit all he is told; he will
- expect duplicity, so one tale is as good as another."
- Traz muttered: "Attention! Dirdir are approaching."
- There were three, striding with a portentous gait. Cages of silver mesh clung to
- the back of their bone-white heads; the effulgences splayed down to either side
- of their shoulders. Flaps of soft pale leather hung from their arms, almost to
- the ground.
- Other strips hung down front and back, indited with vertical rows of red and
- black circular symbols.
- "Inspectors," muttered Anacho through down-drooping lips. "Not once a year do
- they come to Sivishe-unless complaints are made."
- "Will they know you for a Dirdirman?"
- "Of course. I hope they do not know me for Ankhe at afram Anacho, the fugitive."
- The Dirdir passed; Reith glanced at them indifferently, though his flesh crept
- at their proximity. They ignored the three and continued along the avenue, pale
- leather flaps swinging to their stride.
- Anacho's face relaxed from its glare of tension. In a subdued voice, Reith said,
- "The sooner we leave Sivishe the better."
- Anacho drummed his fingers on the table and gave a final decisive rap. "Very
- well. I will telephone Aila Woudiver and arrange an exploratory meeting." He
- stepped into the inn and presently returned. "A car will arrive shortly to pick
- us up."
- Reith had not been ready for so swift a response. "What did you tell him?" he
- asked uneasily.
- "That we wanted to consult him in regard to a business matter."
- "Hmf." Reith leaned back in his chair. "Too much haste is as bad as too little."
- Anacho threw up his hands in vexation and defeat. "What reason to delay?"
- "No real one. I feel strange to Sivishe and unsure of my responses, hence
- worried."
- "No worry there. With familiarity Sivishe becomes even less reassuring."
- Reith said no more. Fifteen minutes later an antique black vehicle, which at one
- time had been a grand saloon, halted in front of the hotel. A middle-aged man,
- harsh and grim, looked forth. He jerked his head toward Anacho. "You await a
- car?"
- "To Woudiver?"
- "Get in."
- The three climbed into the vehicle, seated themselves on benches. The car rolled
- at no great speed down the avenue, then, turning off toward the south, entered a
- district of slatternly apartment houses: buildings erected with neither judgment
- nor precision. No two doorways were a like; windows of irregular shape and size
- opened at random in the thick walls. Wan-faced folk stood in alcoves or peered
- down into the streets; all turned to watch the passage of the car. "Laborers,"
- said Anacho with a sniff of distaste. "Kherman, Thangs, Sad Islanders. They come
- from all Kislovan and lands beyond, as well."
- The car continued across a littered plaza, into a street of small shops, all
- fitted with heavy metal shutters. Anacho asked the driver, "How far to
- Woudiver's?"
- "Not far." The reply was uttered with hardly a motion of the lips.
- "Where does he live? Out on the Heights?"
- "On Zamia Rise."
- Reith considered the hooked nose, the dour cords of muscle around the colorless
- mouth: the face of an executioner.
- The way led up a low hill. The houses became abandoned gardens. The car halted
- at the end of a lane. The driver with a curt gesture signaled the three to
- alight, then silently led them along a shadowy passage smelling of dankness and
- mold, through an archway, across a courtyard, up a shallow flight of stairs into
- a room with walls of mustard-colored tile.
- "Wait here." He passed through a door of black psilla bound with iron, and a
- moment later looked forth. He crooked his finger. "Come."
- The three filed into a large white-walled chamber. A scarlet and maroon rug
- muffled the floor; for furniture there were settees padded with pink, red and
- yellow plush, a heavy table of carved wax-wood, a censer exuding wisps of heavy
- smoke. Behind the table stood an enormous yellow-skinned man in robes of red,
- black and ivory. His face was round as a melon; a few strands of sandy hair lay
- across his mottled pate. He was a man vast in every dimension and motivated, so
- it seemed to Reith, by a grandiose and cynical intelligence. He spoke: "I am
- Aila Woudiver." His voice was under exquisite control; now it was soft and
- fluting. "I see a Dirdirman of the First-"
- "Superior!" Anacho corrected.
- "-a youth of a rough unknown race, a man of even more doubtful extraction. Why
- does such an ill-matched trio seek me out?"
- "To discuss a matter possibly of mutual interest," said Reith.
- The lower third of Woudiver's face trembled in a grin. "Continue."
- Reith looked around the room, then turned back to Woudiver. "I suggest that we
- move to another location, out of doors, by preference."
- Woudiver's thin, almost-nonexistent eyebrows lofted high in surprise. "I fail to
- understand. Will you explain?"
- "Certainly, if we can move to another area."
- Woudiver frowned in sudden petulance, but marched forward. The three followed
- him through an archway, up a ramp and out on a deck which overlooked a vast hazy
- distance to the west. Woudiver spoke in a voice now carefully resonant: "Does
- this situation seem suitable?"
- "Better," said Reith.
- "You puzzle me," said Woudiver, settling into a massive chair. "What noxious
- influence do you so dread?"
- Reith looked meaningfully across the panorama, toward the colored towers and
- cloud-gray Glass Box of far Hei. "You are an important man. Your activities
- conceivably interest certain folk to the extent that they monitor your
- conversations."
- Woudiver made a jovial gesture. "Your business appears highly confidential, or
- even illicit."
- "Does this alarm you?"
- Woudiver pursed his lips into a fountain of gray-pink gristle. "Let us get down
- to affairs."
- "Certainly. Are you interested in gaining wealth?"
- "Poof," said Woudiver. "I have enough for all my small needs. But anyone can use
- more money."
- "In essence, the situation is this: we know where and how to obtain a
- considerable treasure at no risk."
- "You are the most fortunate of men!"
- "Certain preparations are necessary. We believe that you, a man of known
- resource, will be able to provide assistance in return for a share of the gain.
- I do not, of course, refer to financial assistance."
- "I cannot say yes or no until I am apprised of all details," said Woudiver in
- the most suave of voices. "Naturally, you may speak without reserve; my
- reputation for discretion is a byword."
- "First we need a clear indication of your interest. Why waste time for nothing?"
- Woudiver blinked. "I am as interested as is possible in a factual vacuum."
- "Very well, then. Our problem is this: we must procure a small spaceship."
- Woudiver sat motionless, his eyes boring into Reith's face. He glanced swiftly
- at Traz and Anacho, then gave a short brisk laugh. "You credit me with
- remarkable powers! Not to say reckless audacity! How can I possibly provide a
- spaceship, large or small? Either you are madmen or you take me for one!"
- Reith smiled at Woudiver's vehemence, which he diagnosed as a tactical device.
- "We have considered the situation carefully," said Reith. "The project is not
- impossible with the help of a person such as yourself."
- Woudiver gave his great lemon-colored head a peevish shake. "So I merely point
- my finger toward the Grand Spaceyards and produce a ship? Is this your belief?
- You would have me bounding through the Glass Cage before the day was out."
- "Remember," said Reith, "a large vessel is not necessary. Conceivably we could
- acquire an obsolete craft and put it into workable condition. Or we might obtain
- components from persons who could be induced to sell, and assemble them in a
- makeshift hull."
- Woudiver sat pulling at his chin. "The Dirdir certainly would oppose such a
- project."
- "I mentioned the need for discretion," said Reith.
- Woudiver puffed out his cheeks. "How much wealth is involved? What is the nature
- of this wealth? Where is it located?"
- "These are details which at the moment can have no real interest for you," said
- Reith.
- Woudiver tapped his chin with a yellow forefinger. "Let us discuss the matter as
- an abstraction. First, the practicalities. A large sum of money would be
- required: for inducements, technical help, a suitable place of assembly, and of
- course for the components you mention. Where would this money come from?" His
- voice took on a sardonic resonance. "You did not expect financing from Aila
- Woudiver?"
- "Financing is no problem," said Reith. "We have ample funds."
- "Indeed!" Woudiver was impressed. "How much, may I ask, are you prepared to
- spend?"
- "Oh, fifty to a hundred thousand sequins."
- Woudiver gave his head a shake of indulgent amusement. "A hundred thousand would
- be barely adequate." He turned a glance toward Hei. "I could never concern
- myself in any illicit or forbidden enterprise."
- "Naturally not."
- "I might be able to advise you, on a friendly and informal basis, for say, a
- fixed fee, or perhaps a percentage of outlay, and a small share in any eventual
- rewards."
- "Something of the sort might suit our needs," said Reith. "How long, at an
- estimate, would such a project require?"
- "Who knows? Who can prophesy such things? A month? Two months? Information is
- essential, which we now lack. A knowledgeable person from the Grand Spaceyards
- must be consulted."
- "Knowledgeable, competent, and trustworthy," amended Reith.
- "That goes without saying. I know the very man, a person for whom I have done
- several favors. In the course of a day or two I will see him and bring up the
- matter."
- "Why not now?" asked Reith. "The sooner the better."
- Woudiver raised a hand. "Haste leads to miscalculation. Come back in two days; I
- may have news for you. But first the matter of finance. I cannot invest my time
- without a retainer. I will need a small sum-say five thousand sequins-as earnest
- money."
- Reith shook his head. "I'll show you five thousand." He produced a card of
- purple sequins. "In fact here is twenty thousand. But we can't afford to spend a
- sequin except on actual costs."
- Woudiver's face was one vast hurt. "What of my fee, then? Must I toil for joy
- alone?"
- "Of course not. If all goes well, you will be rewarded to your satisfaction."
- "This must serve for the moment," declared Woudiver in sudden heartiness. "In
- two days I will send Artilo for you. Discuss the matter with no one! Secrecy is
- absolutely essential!"
- "This we well understand. In two days then."
- CHAPTER ELEVEN
- SIVISHE WAS A dull city, gray and subdued, as if oppressed by the proximity of
- Hei. The great homes of Prospect Heights and Zamia Rise were pretentious enough,
- but lacked style and finesse. The folk of Sivishe were no less dull: a somber,
- humorless race, grayskinned and tending toward overweight. At their meals they
- consumed great bowls of clabber, platters of boiled tuber, meat and fish
- seasoned with a rancid black sauce that numbed Reith's palate, though Anacho
- declared that the sauce occurred in numerous variants and was in fact a
- cultivated taste. For organized entertainment there were daily races, run not by
- animals but by men. On the day after the meeting with Woudiver, the three
- watched one of the races. Eight men participated, wearing garments of different
- colors and carrying a pole topped with a fragile glass globe. The runners not
- only sought to outrun their opponents but also to trip them by agile side-kicks,
- so that they fell and broke their glass globes, and were hence disqualified. The
- spectators numbered twenty thousand and maintained a low guttural howl during
- the duration of each race. Reith noticed a number of Dirdirmen among the
- spectators. They bet with as much verve as anyone, but kept themselves
- fastidiously apart. Reith wondered that Anacho would risk recognition by some
- previous acquaintance, to which Anacho gave a bitter laugh.
- "Wearing these clothes I am safe. They will never see me. If I wore Dirdirmen
- clothes I would be recognized at once and reported to the Castigators. Already I
- have seen half a dozen former acquaintances. None have so much as glanced at
- me."
- The three visited the Grand Sivishe Spaceyards, where they strolled around the
- periphery observing the activity within. The spaceships were long,
- spindle-shaped, with intricate fins and sponsons--totally different from the
- bulky Wankh vessels and the flamboyant craft of the Blue Chasch, just as these
- differed from the starships of Earth.
- The yards appeared to operate at less than top efficiency and far below
- capacity; even so, a respectable volume of work was in progress. Two cargo
- vessels were in the process of overhaul; a passenger ship seemed to be under
- construction. Elsewhere they noted three smaller ships, apparently
- uncommissioned warcraft, five or six space-boats in various stages of repair, a
- clutter of hulks on a junk heap to the rear of the shops. At the opposite end of
- the spaceyard three ships in commission rested on large black circles.
- "They fare occasionally to Sibol," said Anacho. "There is no great traffic. Long
- ago when the Expansionists held sway Dirdir ships went out to many worlds. No
- longer. The Dirdir are quiescent. They would like to force the Wankh off of
- Tschai and slaughter the Blue Chasch, but they do not marshal their energies. It
- is somehow frightening. They are a terrible and active race and cannot lie quiet
- too long. One of these days they must explode, and go forth again."
- "What of the Pnume?" Reith asked.
- "There is no established pattern.." Anacho pointed to the palisades behind Hei.
- "Through your electric telescope you might see Pnume warehouses, where they
- store metals for trade with the Dirdir. Pnumekin occasionally come out into
- Sivishe for one purpose or another. There are tunnels through all the hills and
- out into the country beyond. The Pnume observe every move the Dirdir make. They
- never come forth, however, for fear of the Dirdir, who kill them for vermin. On
- the other hand a Dirdir who goes hunting alone may never return. The Pnume have
- taken him down into their tunnels, so it is believed."
- "It could only happen on Tschai," said Reith. "The folk trade in mutual
- detestation and kill each other on sight."
- Anacho gave a sour snort. "I see nothing remarkable in the fact. The trading
- conduces to mutual profit; the killing gratifies the mutual detestation. The
- institutions have no common ground."
- "What of the Pnumekin? Do the Dirdir or Dirdirmen molest them?"
- "Not in Sivishe. A truce is observed. Elsewhere they too are destroyed, though
- rarely do they show themselves. There are, after all, relatively few Pnumekin,
- who must be the strangest and most remarkable folk of Tschai ... We must depart
- before we attract the attention of the yard police."
- "Too late," said Traz in a dreary voice. "We are being watched at this moment."
- "By whom?"
- "Behind us, along the way, stand two men. One wears a brown jacket and a loose
- black hat; the other a dark blue cloak and the head-shroud."
- Anacho glanced along the avenue. "They are not police-at least not yard guards."
- The three turned back to the dingy jumble of concrete which marked the center of
- Sivishe. Carina 4269, glowing through a high layer of haze, cast cool brown
- light over the landscape. Full in the light came the two men, and something in
- their noiseless gait sent a pang of panic through Reith. "Who can they be?" he
- muttered.
- "I don't know." Anacho turned a quick glance over his shoulder, but the men were
- no more than silhouettes against the light. "I don't think they are Dirdirmen.
- We have been in contact with Aila Woudiver; it may be that he is watched.
- Woudiver's own men conceivably. Or a criminal gang? After all, we might have
- been noticed coming down in the sky-car, or taking sequins to the vaults-Worse!
- Our descriptions from Maust may have been circulated. We are not undistinctive."
- Reith said grimly, "We'll have to find out, one way or another. Notice where the
- street passes closes to that broken building-"
- "Suitable."
- The three strolled past a crumbling buttress of concrete, then, once out of
- sight, jumped to the side and waited. The two men came running past on long
- noiseless strides. As they passed the buttress, Reith tackled one, Anacho and
- Traz seized the other. With a sudden exclamation Anacho and Traz released their
- grip. For an instant Reith sensed a curious rancid odor, like camphor and sour
- milk. Then a bone-racking shudder of electricity sent him lurching back. He gave
- a croak of dismay. The two men fled.
- "I saw them," said Anacho in a subdued voice. "They were Pnumekin, or perhaps
- Gzhindra. Did they wear boots? Pnumekin walk with bare feet."
- Reith went to look after the pair, but in some miraculous fashion they had
- disappeared. "What are Gzhindra?"
- "Pnumekin outcasts."
- The three trudged back through the dank streets of Sivishe.
- Anacho presently said, "It might have been worse."
- "But why should Pnumekin follow us?"
- Traz muttered, "They have been following us since we departed Settra. And maybe
- before."
- "The Pnume think strange thoughts," said Anacho in a heavy voice. "Their actions
- seldom admit of sensible explanation; they are the stuff of Tschai itself."
- CHAPTER TWELVE
- THE THREE SAT at a table outside the Ancient Realm Inn, sipping soft wine and
- watching the passing folk of Sivishe. Music was the key to a people's genius,
- thought Reith. This morning, passing a tavern, he had listened to the music of
- Sivishe. The orchestra consisted of four instruments. The first was a bronze box
- studded with vellum-wrapped cones which when rubbed produced a sound like a
- cornet played at the lowest possible range. The second, a vertical wooden tube a
- foot in diameter, with twelve strings across twelve slots, emitted resonant
- twanging arpeggios. The third, a battery of forty-two drums, contributed a
- complex muffled rhythm. The fourth, a wooden slidehorn, bleated, honked and
- produced wonderful squealing glissandos as well.
- The music performed by the ensemble seemed to Reith peculiarly simple and
- limited: a repetition of simple melody, played with only the smallest variation.
- A few folk danced: men and women, face to face, hands at sides, hopping
- carefully from one leg to the other. Dull! thought Reith. Yet, at the end of the
- tune the couples separated with expressions of triumph, and recommenced their
- exertions as soon as the music started again. As minutes passed, Reith began to
- sense complexities, almost imperceptible variations. Like the rancid black sauce
- which drowned the food, the music required an intensive effort even to ingest;
- appreciation and pleasure must remain forever beyond the reach of a stranger.
- Perhaps, thought Reith, these almost-unheard quavers and hesitations were the
- elements of virtuosity; perhaps the folk of Sivishe enjoyed hints and
- suggestions, fugitive lusters, almost unnoticeable inflections: their reaction
- to the Dirdir city so close at hand.
- No less an index to the thought-processes of a people was their religion. The
- Dirdir, so Reith knew from conversations with Anacho, were irreligious. The
- Dirdirmen, to the contrary, had evolved an elaborate theology, based on a
- creation myth which derived Man and Dirdir from a single primordial egg. The
- submen of Sivishe patronized a dozen different temples. The observances, as far
- as Reith could see, followed the more or less universal pattern-abasement,
- followed by a request for favors, as often as not foreknowledge regarding the
- outcome of the daily races. Certain cults had refined and complicated their
- doctrines; their doxology was a metaphysical jargon subtle and ambiguous enough
- to please even the folk of Sivishe. Other creeds serving different needs had
- simplified procedures so that the worshipers merely made a sacred sign, threw
- sequins into the priest's bowl, received a benediction and were off about their
- affairs.
- The arrival of Woudiver's black car interrupted Reith's musing. Artilo, leaning
- forth with a leer, made a peremptory gesture, then sat crouched over the wheel
- staring off down the avenue.
- The three entered the car, which lurched off across Sivishe. Artilo drove in a
- southeast direction, generally toward the spaceyards. At the edge of Sivishe,
- where a last few shacks dwindled out across the salt flats, a cluster of
- ramshackle warehouses surrounded piles of sand, gravel, bricks, sintered marl.
- The car rolled across the central compound and halted by a small office built of
- broken brick and black slag.
- Woudiver stood in the doorway. Today he wore a vast brown jacket, blue
- pantaloons, and a blue hat. His expression was bland and unrevealing; his
- eyelids hung halfway across his eyes. He raised his arm in a gesture of measured
- welcome, then backed into the dimness of the hut. The three alighted and went
- within. Artilo, coming behind, drew himself a mug of tea from a great black urn,
- then, hissing irritably, went to sit in a corner.
- Woudiver indicated a bench; the three seated themselves. Woudiver paced back and
- forth. He raised his face to the ceiling and spoke. "I have made a few casual
- inquiries. I fear that I find your project impractical. There is no difficulty
- as to work-space, the south warehouse yonder would suit admirably and you could
- have it at a reasonable rent. One of my trusted associates, the assistant
- superintendent of supply at the spaceyards, states that the necessary components
- are available ... at a price. No doubt we could salvage a hull from the
- junkyard; you would hardly require luxury, and a crew of competent technicians
- would respond to a sufficiently attractive wage."
- Reith began to suspect that Woudiver was leading up to something. "So, then, why
- is the project impractical?"
- Woudiver smiled with innocent simplicity. "For me, the profit is inadequate to
- the risks involved."
- Reith nodded somberly and rose to his feet. "I'm sorry then to have occupied so
- much of your time. Thank you very much for the information."
- "Not at all," said Woudiver graciously. "I wish you the best of luck in your
- endeavor. Perhaps when you return with your treasure, you will want to build a
- fine palace; then I hope you will remember me."
- "Quite possibly," said Reith. "So now..."
- Woudiver seemed in no hurry to have them go. He settled into a chair with an
- unctuous grunt. "Another dear friend deals in gems. He will efficiently convert
- your treasure into sequins, if the treasure is gems, as I presume? No? Rare
- metal, then? No? Aha! Precious essences?"
- "It might be any or none," said Reith. "I think it best, at this stage, to
- remain indefinite."
- Woudiver twisted his face into a mask of whimsical vexation. "It is precisely
- this indefiniteness which gives me pause! If I knew better what I might expect-"
- "Whoever helps me," said Reith, "or whoever accompanies me, can expect wealth."
- Woudiver pursed his lips. "So now I must join this piratical expedition in order
- to share the booty?"
- "I'll pay a reasonable percentage before we leave. If you come with us" Reith
- rolled his eyes toward the ceiling at the thought "or when we return, you'll get
- more."
- "How much more, precisely?"
- "I don't like to say. You'd suspect me of irresponsibility. But you wouldn't be
- disappointed."
- From the corner Artilo gave a skeptical croak, which Woudiver ignored. He spoke
- in a voice of great dignity. "As a practical man I can't operate on speculation.
- I would require a retaining fee of ten thousand sequins." He blew out his cheeks
- and glanced toward Reith. "Upon receipt of this sum, I would immediately exert
- my influence to set your scheme into motion."
- "All very well," said Reith. "But, as a ridiculous supposition, let us assume
- that, rather than a man of honor, you were a scoundrel, a knave, a cheat. You
- might take my money, then find the project impossible for one reason or another,
- and I would have no recourse. Hence I can pay only for actual work
- accomplished."
- A spasm of annoyance crossed Woudiver's face, but his voice was blandness
- itself. "Then pay me rent for yonder warehouse. It is a superb location,
- unobtrusive, close to the spaceyards, with every convenience. Furthermore, I can
- obtain an old hull from the junkyards, purportedly for use as a storage bin. I
- will charge but a nominal rent, ten thousand sequins a year, payable in
- advance."
- Reith nodded sagely. "An interesting proposition. But since we won't need the
- premises for more than a few months, why should we inconvenience you? We can
- rent more cheaply elsewhere, in even better circumstances."
- Woudiver's eyes narrowed; the flaps of skin surrounding his mouth trembled. "Let
- us deal openly with each other. Our interests run together, as long as I gain
- sequins. I will not work on the cheap. Either pay earnest-money, or our business
- is at an end."
- "Very well," said Reith. "We will use your warehouse, and I will pay a thousand
- sequins for three months' rent on the day a suitable hull arrives on the
- premises and a crew starts to work."
- "Hmf. That could be tomorrow."
- "Excellent!"
- "I will need funds to secure the hull. It has worth as scrap metal. Drayage will
- be a charge."
- "Very well. Here is a thousand sequins." Reith counted the sum upon the desk.
- Woudiver slapped down his great slab of a hand. "Insufficient! Inadequate!
- Paltry!"
- Reith spoke sharply. "Evidently you do not trust me. This does not predispose me
- to trust you. But you risk nothing but an hour or two of your time whereas I
- risk thousands of sequins."
- Woudiver turned to Artilo. "What would you do?"
- "Walk away from the mess."
- Woudiver turned back to Reith, spread wide his arms. "There you have it."
- Reith briskly picked up the thousand sequins. "Good day, then. It is a pleasure
- to have known you."
- Neither Woudiver nor Artilo stirred.
- The three returned to the hotel by public passenger wagon.
- A day later Artilo appeared at the Ancient Realm Inn. "Aila Woudiver wants to
- see you."
- "What for?"
- "He's got you a hull. It's in the old warehouse. A gang is stripping and
- cleaning it. He wants money. What else?"
- CHAPTER THIRTEEN
- THE HULL was satisfactory, and of adequate dimensions. The metal was sound; the
- observation ports were clouded and stained but well seated and sealed.
- Woudiver stood to the side as Reith inspected the hull, an expression of lofty
- tolerance on his face. Every day, so it seemed, he wore a new and more
- extravagant garment, today a black and yellow suit, a black hat with a scarlet
- panache. The clasp securing his cape was a silver and black oval, bisected along
- the minor axis. From one end protruded the stylized head of a Dirdir, from the
- other the head of a man. Woudiver, noticing Reith's gaze, gave a profound nod.
- "You would never suspect as much from my physique, but my father was
- Immaculate."
- "Indeed! And your mother?"
- Woudiver's mouth twitched. "A noblewoman of the north."
- Artilo spoke from the entry port: "A tavern wench of Thang, marshwoman by
- blood."
- Woudiver sighed. "In the presence of Artilo, romantic delusion is impossible. In
- any event, but for the accidental interposition of an incorrect womb, here would
- stand Aila Woudiver, Dirdirman Immaculate of the Violet Degree, rather than Aila
- Woudiver, dealer in sand and gravel, and gallant prosecutor of lost causes."
- "Illogical," murmured Anacho. "In fact, improbable. Not one Immaculate in a
- thousand retains Primitive Paraphernalia."
- Woudiver's face instantly became a peculiar magenta color. Whirling with
- astounding swiftness, he pointed a thick finger. "Who dares talk of logic and
- probability? The renegade Ankhe at afram Anacho! Who wore Blue and Pink without
- undergoing the Anguish? Who disappeared coincidentally with the Excellent
- Azarvim issit Dardo, who has never been seen again? A proud Dirdirman, this
- Ankhe at afram!"
- "I no longer consider myself a Dirdirman," said Anacho in a level voice. "I
- definitely have no ambition for the Blue and Pink, nor even the trophies of my
- lineage."
- "In this case kindly do not comment upon the plight of one who is unluckily
- barred from his rightful caste!"
- Anacho turned away, fuming with anger, but obviously deeming it wise to hold his
- tongue. It appeared that Aila Woudiver had not been idle, and Reith wondered how
- far his researches had extended.
- Woudiver gradually regained his composure. His mouth twitched, his cheeks puffed
- in and out. He made a scornful noise. "To more profitable matters. What is your
- opinion of this hulk?"
- "Favorable," said Reith. "We could expect no better from the scrap-heap."
- "This is my opinion as well," said Woudiver. "The next phase of course will be
- somewhat more difficult. My friend at the spaceyards is by no means anxious to
- run the Glass Box, no more I. But an adequacy of sequins works wonders. Which
- brings us to the subject of money. My out-of-pocket expenses are eight hundred
- and ninety sequins for the hull, which I consider good value. Drayage charge:
- three hundred sequins. Shop rental for one month: one thousand sequins. Total:
- twenty-one hundred and ninety sequins. My commission or personal profit I reckon
- at ten percent, or two hundred and nineteen sequins, to a total of twenty-four
- hundred and nine sequins."
- "Wait, wait, wait!" cried Reith. "Not a thousand sequins a month, a thousand for
- three months; that was my offer."
- "It is too little."
- "I'll pay five hundred, not a clear more. Now in the matter of your commission,
- let us be reasonable. You provide drayage at a profit; I pay a large rent on
- your warehouse; I see no reason to hand over an additional ten percent on these
- items."
- "Why not?" inquired Woudiver in a reasonable voice. "It is a convenience to you
- that I can offer these services. I wear two hats, so to speak: that of the
- expediter and that of the supplier. Why, merely because the expediter finds a
- certain supplier convenient, inexpensive and efficient, should he be denied his
- fee? If the drayage were performed elsewhere, the charges would be no less, and
- I would receive my fee without complaint."
- Reith could not deny the logic of the presentation, nor did he try. He said, "I
- don't intend to pay more than five hundred sequins for a ramshackle old shed
- you'd be happy renting for two hundred."
- Woudiver held up a yellow finger. "Consider the risk! We are about to suborn the
- thievery of valuable property! I am rewarded, please understand, partly for
- services rendered and partly to allay my fear of the Glass Box."
- "This is a reasonable statement, from your point of view," said Reith. "As far
- as I am concerned, I want to complete the spaceship before the money runs out.
- After the ship is complete, fueled and provisioned, you can take every sequin
- remaining, for all I care."
- "Indeed!" Woudiver scratched his chin. "How many sequins do you have then, so
- that we can plan accordingly?"
- "Something over a hundred thousand."
- "Mmf. I wonder if the job can be done at all-let alone allow for surplus."
- "My point exactly. I want to keep non-construction expenses to the minimum."
- Woudiver turned his face toward Artilo. "See how I am reduced. All prosper but
- Woudiver. As usual, he suffers for his generosity."
- Artilo gave a noncommittal grunt.
- Reith counted out sequins. "Five hundred-exorbitant rent for this ramshackle
- shed. Drayage: three hundred. The hull: eight hundred and ninety. I'll pay ten
- percent on the hull. Another eighty-nine. A total of seventeen hundred and
- seventy-nine."
- Woudiver's broad yellow face mirrored a succession of emotions. At last he said,
- "I must remind you that a policy of parsimony is often the most expensive in the
- end."
- "If the work goes efficiently," said Reith, "you won't find me parsimonious.
- You'll see more sequins than you ever dreamed existed. But I intend to pay only
- for results. It is to your interest to expedite the space-boat as best you can.
- If the money runs out we're all the losers."
- For once Woudiver had nothing to say. He stared dolefully at the glittering heap
- on the table, then, separating purples, scarlets, dark greens, he counted. "You
- drive a hard bargain."
- "To our mutual benefit, ultimately."
- Woudiver dropped the sequins into his pouch. "If I must I must." He drummed his
- fingers against his thigh. "Well, as to the components, what do you require
- first?"
- "I know nothing about Dirdir machinery. We need the advice of an expert
- technician. Such a man should be here now."
- Woudiver squinted sidelong. "Without knowledge, how do you expect to fly?"
- "I am acquainted with Wankh space-boats."
- "Hmmf. Artilo, go fetch Deine Zarre from the Technical Club."
- Woudiver stalked off to his office, leaving Reith, Anacho and Traz alone in the
- shed.
- Anacho surveyed the hull. "The old hulk has done well. This is the Ispra, a
- series now obsolete, in favor of the Concax Screamer. We must obtain Ispra
- components, to simplify the work."
- "Are these available?"
- "Undoubtedly. I believe you got the better of the yellow beast. His father an
- Immaculate-what a joke! His mother a marsh-woman-that I can believe! He's
- evidently gone to pains to learn our secrets."
- "I hope he doesn't learn too much."
- "As long as we can pay, we're safe. We have a sound hull at a fair price, and
- even the rental is not too exorbitant. But we must be careful: normal profits
- won't suit him."
- "No doubt he'll swindle us," said Reith. "If we end up with a functioning
- space-boat, I don't really care." He walked around the hull, occasionally
- reaching out to touch it, in a kind of wonder. Here, solid and definite, the
- basis of a vessel to take him home! Reith felt a surge of affection for the cold
- metal, in spite of its alien Dirdir look.
- Traz and Anacho went outside to sit in the wan afternoon sunlight, and Reith
- presently joined them. With images of Earth in his mind, the landscape became
- suddenly strange, as if he were viewing it for the first time. The crumbling
- gray city Sivishe, the spires of Hei, the Glass Box reflecting a dark bronze
- shine from Carina 4269, the loom of the palisades through the murk: this was
- Tschai. He looked at Traz and Anacho: these were men of Tschai.
- Reith sat down on the bench. He asked, "What's inside the Glass Box?"
- Anacho seemed surprised at his ignorance. "It is a park, a simulation of old
- Sibol. Young Dirdir learn to hunt; others take exercise and relaxation. There
- are galleries for onlookers. Criminals are the prey. There are rocks, Sibol
- vegetation, cliffs, caves; sometimes a man avoids the hunt for days."
- Reith looked across to the Glass Box. "The Dirdir hunt in there now?"
- "So I suppose."
- "What of the Dirdirmen Immaculates?"
- "They are sometimes allowed to hunt."
- "They devour their prey?"
- "Of course."
- Along the rutted road came the black car. It splashed through a puddle of oily
- slime, halted before the office. Woudiver came to stand in the doorway, a
- grotesque lump in black and yellow finery. Artilo stepped down from the driver's
- bench; from the cab came an old man. His face was haggard and his body seemed
- distorted or twisted; he moved slowly, as if every effort cost him pain.
- Woudiver strutted forward, spoke a word or two, then conducted the old man to
- the shed.
- Woudiver spoke: "This is Deine Zarre, who will supervise our project. Deine
- Zarre, I introduce to you this man of no distinguishable race. He calls himself
- Adam Reith. Behind you see a defalcate Dirdirman: a certain Anacho; and a youth
- who appears to derive from the Kotan steppes. These are the folk with whom you
- must deal. I am no more than an adjunct; make all your arrangements with Adam
- Reith."
- Deine Zarre gave his attention to Reith. His eyes were clear gray, and in
- contrast to the black of the pupils seemed almost luminous. "What is the
- project?"
- Another man to know the secret, thought Reith. Already with Aila Woudiver and
- Artilo, the list was overlong. But no help for it. "In the shed is the hull of a
- space-boat. We want to put it into operative condition."
- Deine Zarre's expression changed little. He searched Reith's face a moment, then
- turned and limped into the shed. Presently he reappeared. "The project is
- possible. Anything is possible. But feasible? I don't know." His gaze once more
- searched Reith's face. "There are risks."
- "Woudiver shows no great alarm. Of all of us he is the most sensitive to
- danger."
- Deine Zarre gave Woudiver a dispassionate glance. "He is also the most supple
- and resourceful. For myself, I fear nothing. If the Dirdir come to take me, I
- shall kill as many as possible."
- "Come, come," chided Woudiver. "The Dirdir are as they are: folk of fantastic
- skills and courage. Are we not all Brothers of the Egg?
- Deine Zarre gave a dismal grunt. "Who is to supply machinery, tools,
- components?"
- "The spaceyards," said Woudiver dryly. "Who else?"
- "We will need technicians: at least six men, of absolute discretion."
- "A chancy matter," Woudiver admitted. "But the chance can be minimized by
- inducements. If Reith pays them well, the inducement of money. If Artilo
- counsels them, the inducement of reason. If I indicate the consequences of a
- loose tongue, the inducement of fear. Never forget, Sivishe is a city of
- secrets! As witness we who stand here."
- "True," said Deine Zarre. Again he searched Reith with his remarkable eyes.
- "Where do you wish to go in your spaceship?"
- Woudiver spoke with overtones either of mockery or malice: "He goes to claim a
- fabulous treasure, which we all will share."
- Deine Zarre smiled. "I want no treasure. Pay me a hundred sequins a week; it is
- all I require."
- "So little?" demanded Woudiver. "You reduce my commission."
- Deine Zarre gave him no heed. "You intend to start work at once?" he asked
- Reith.
- "The sooner the better."
- "I will list immediate needs." To Woudiver: "When can you arrange delivery?"
- "As soon as Adam Reith provides the wherewithal."
- "Put through the order tonight," said Reith. "I'll bring money tomorrow."
- "What of the honorarium for my friend?" demanded Woudiver testily. "Does he work
- for nothing? What of the fee for the warehouse guards? Do they look sideways for
- their health?"
- "How much?" asked Reith.
- Woudiver hesitated, then said in a dull voice, "Let us avoid a tiresome quarrel.
- I will present the minimum price first. Two thousand sequins."
- "So much? Incredible. How many men must be bribed?"
- "Three. The assistant supervisor, two guards."
- Deine Zarre said, "Give it to him. I dislike haggling. If you must economize,
- pay me less."
- Reith started to complain, then shrugged, managed a painful grin. "Very well.
- Two thousand sequins."
- "Remember," said Woudiver, "you must bear the inventory cost of the merchandise;
- it is difficult to steal outright."
- During the evening four power-wagons unloaded at the shed. Reith, Traz, Anacho
- and Artilo trundled the crates into the shed, as Deine Zarre checked them off
- his master list. Woudiver appeared on the scene at midnight. "All is well?"
- Deine Zarre said, "As far as I can tell, the basic needs are here."
- "Good." Woudiver turned to Reith, handed him a sheet of paper. "The invoice.
- Notice that it is itemized, and bluster will serve no purpose."
- Reith read the total in a weak whisper "Eighty-two thousand sequins."
- "Did you expect less?" Woudiver asked jauntily. "My fee is not included. Ninety
- thousand two hundred sequins in all."
- Reith asked Deine Zarre, "Is there everything we need?"
- "By no means."
- "How much time will be required?"
- "Two or three months. Longer if the components are seriously out of phase."
- "What must I pay the technicians?"
- "Two hundred sequins a week. Unlike myself, they are motivated by the need for
- money."
- On the screen of Reith's imagination appeared a picture of the Carabas: the dun
- hills, the gray outcrops, the thickets of thorn, the horrid fires by night. He
- remembered the furtive passage across the Forelands, the Dirdir-trap in Boundary
- Forest, the race back to the Portal of Gleams. Ninety thousand sequins
- represented almost half of this ... If the money dwindled too fast, if Woudiver
- became too brazenly corrupt, what then? Reith could not bear to think the
- thought. "Tomorrow I will bring the money."
- Woudiver gave a fateful nod. "Good. Or tomorrow night the goods return to the
- warehouse."
- CHAPTER FOURTEEN
- WITHIN THE SHED the old Ispra began to come alive. The propulsors were raised
- into their sockets, bolted and welded. Up through the stern access panel the
- generator and converter were hoisted, then slid forward and secured. The Ispra
- was no longer a hulk. Reith, Anacho and Traz wire-brushed, ground, polished,
- removed rotten padding, sour-smelling old settees. They cleaned the observation
- ports, reamed air conduits, installed new seals around the entry hatch.
- Deine Zarre did no work. He hobbled here and there, his gray eyes missing no
- details. Artilo occasionally looked into the shed, a sneering droop to his gray
- mouth. Woudiver was seldom to be seen. During his rare appearances he was cold
- and businesslike, all trace of his first jocundity gone.
- For an entire month Woudiver did not show himself. Artilo, in a confiding mood,
- spat down at the ground and said, "Big Yellow's out at his country place."
- "Oh? What's he do out there?"
- Artilo twisted his head sidewise, showing Reith a lopsided grin. "Thinks he's a
- Dirdirman, that's what. That's where his money goes, on his fences and scenery
- and hunts, wicked old beast."
- Reith stood stock-still staring at Artilo. "You mean he hunts men?"
- "For sure. He and his cronies. Yellow has two thousand acres to his place,
- almost as big as the Glass Box. Walls aren't so good, but he's got them circled
- by electric wires and sting snaps. Don't go to sleep on Yellow's wine; you'll
- wake up to find yourself in the hunt."
- Reith forbore to inquire the disposition of the victims; it was information he
- did not want.
- Another of the ten-day Tschai weeks passed, and Woudiver appeared, in a surly
- mood. His upper lip was stiff as a shingle, totally concealing his mouth; his
- eyes darted truculently right and left. He strutted close to Reith; the great
- hulk of his torso blotted out half the landscape. He held out his hand. "Rent."
- His voice was flat and cold.
- Reith brought forth five hundred sequins and placed them on a shelf. He did not
- care to touch the yellow hand.
- Woudiver, in a spasm of petulance, struck out with the back of his hand,
- knocking Reith head over heels. Reith picked himself up in astonishment. His
- skin began to prickle, signaling the onset of fury. From the corner of his eye
- he noticed Artilo lounging against the wall. Artilo would shoot him as calmly as
- he might crush an insect, this he knew. Nearby stood Traz, watching Artilo
- intently. Artilo was neutralized.
- Woudiver stood looking at him, eyes cold and expressionless. Reith heaved a deep
- sigh, choked back his wrath. To strike back at Woudiver would gain none of his
- respect, but only stimulate the whole of his rancor. Inevitably something
- dreadful would occur. Reith slowly turned away. "Bring me my rent!" barked
- Woudiver. "Do you take me for a mendicant? I have been sufficiently wounded by
- your arrogance. In the future extend me the respect due to my caste!"
- Again Reith hesitated. How much easier to attack the monstrous Woudiver and
- accept the consequences! Which would be wreckage of the program. Again Reith
- sighed. If it were necessary to eat crow, a mouthful was no worse than a taste.
- In cold and austere silence he handed the sequins to Woudiver, who only glared
- and made a waggling motion of the hips. "It is insufficient! Why should I
- subsidize your undertaking! Pay me my due! The rent is one thousand sequins a
- month!"
- "Here is another five hundred sequins," said Reith. "Please do not demand more,
- because it will not be forthcoming."
- Woudiver made a contemptuous sound, wheeled and stalked away. Artilo looked
- after him and spat in the dust. Then he gave Reith a speculative glance.
- Reith went inside the shed. Deine Zarre, who had observed the episode, made no
- comment. Reith tried to soothe his humiliation in work.
- Two days later Woudiver reappeared, wearing his gaudy black and yellow outfit.
- His truculence of the previous occasion had vanished; he was blandly polite.
- "Well, then, and what is the current state of your project?"
- Reith responded in a flat voice. "There have been no major problems. The heavy
- components are in place and connected. The instruments have been installed, but
- are not operative. Deine Zarre is preparing another list: the magnetic
- justification system, navigation sensors, the environment conditioners. Perhaps
- we should also purchase fuel cells at this time."
- Woudiver pursed his lips. "Just so. Again the sad occasion arises, of parting
- with your hard-gained sequins. How, may I ask, did you garner so large a sum? It
- is a fortune in itself. With so much in hand I wonder that you risk all on a
- wild-goose chase."
- Reith managed a wintry smile. "Evidently I do not regard the expedition as a
- wild-goose chase."
- "Extraordinary. When will Deine Zarre have his list in hand?"
- "Perhaps -it is finished now."
- Deine Zarre had not finished his list but did so while Woudiver waited.
- Scanning the list with head thrown back and eyes half-closed, Woudiver said, "I
- fear that the expense will be in excess of your reserves."
- "I hope not," said Reith. "How much do you reckon?"
- "I can't say for certain; I do not know. But with rent, labor costs, your
- original investments, you cannot have too much money left." He looked at Reith
- questioningly.
- The last thing Reith planned to do was confide in Woudiver. "It is essential
- then that we keep costs to a minimum."
- "Three basic costs must be met without fail," intoned Woudiver. "The rent, my
- fees, honorariums to my associates. What remains may be spent as you will. This
- is my point of view. And now be so good as to tender me two thousand sequins,
- for the honorariums. The materials, should you be unable to pay, can be returned
- without prejudice and at no cost other than drayage fees."
- Gloomily Reith handed over two thousand sequins. He made a mental calculation:
- of something like two hundred and twenty thousand sequins brought from the
- Carabas, less than half remained.
- Somewhat later a smaller wagon arrived, with eight canisters of fuel. Traz and
- Anacho started to unload these, but Reith stopped them. "One moment." He went
- into the shed where Deine Zarre checked items off his list. "Did you order
- fuel?"
- "Yes."
- Deine Zarre seemed pensive, thought Reith, as if his mind wandered afield.
- "How long will a canister of fuel drive the ship?"
- "Two are needed, one for each cell. These will give about two months' service."
- "Eight canisters have been delivered."
- "I ordered four, to ensure two spares."
- Reith returned to the dray. "Take off four," he told Traz and Anacho. The driver
- sat in the shadow of the cab. Reith leaned in to address him, and to his
- surprise saw Artilo, apparently in no anxiety to identify himself. Reith said,
- "You brought eight cans of fuel; we ordered four."
- "Yellow said to bring eight."
- "We only need four. Take four back."
- "Can't be done. Talk to Big Yellow."
- "I need only four cans. That's all I'm taking. Do what you like with the
- others."
- Artilo, whistling between his teeth, jumped from the cab, unloaded the four
- extra canisters, carried them over to the shed. Then he climbed back into the
- dray and drove off.
- The three stood looking after him. Anacho said in a toneless voice, "Trouble is
- on its way."
- "I expect so," said Reith.
- "The fuel cells," said Anacho, "are no doubt Woudiver's own property. Perhaps he
- stole them, perhaps he bought them on the cheap. Here is an excellent chance to
- dispose of them at a profit."
- Traz made a growling sound in his throat. "Woudiver should be made to carry away
- the cells on his back."
- Reith gave an uneasy laugh. "If I only knew how to make him.
- "He fears for his life, like anyone else."
- "True. But we can't cut off our nose to spite our face."
- In the morning Woudiver did not arrive to hear the statements which Reith had
- brooded upon a large part of the night. Reith drove himself to work, with the
- thought of Woudiver pressing on him like the weight of doom.
- On this morning Deine Zarre was not on hand either, and the technicians muttered
- among themselves more freely than they dared in Deine Zarre's presence. Reith
- presently desisted from his work and made a survey of the project. There were,
- he thought, good grounds for optimism. The major components were installed; the
- delicate job of tuning proceeded at a satisfactory rate. At these jobs Reith,
- though acquainted with Earth space-drive systems, was helpless. He was not even
- certain that the drives functioned by the same principles.
- About noon a line of black clouds broke over the palisades like a scud of surf.
- Carina 4269 went wan, faded through tones of brown, and disappeared; moments
- later rain swept the eerie landscape, blotting Hei from sight, and now plodding
- through the rain came Deine Zarre, followed by a pair of thin children: a boy of
- twelve, a girl three or four years older. The three trudged into the shed, where
- they stood shivering. Deine Zarre seemed drained of energy; the children were
- numb.
- Reith broke up some crates, lit a fire in the middle of the shed. He found some
- coarse cloth and tore it into towels. "Dry yourselves. Take off your jackets and
- get warm."
- Deine Zarre looked at him uncomprehendingly, then slowly obeyed. The children
- followed suit. They were evidently brother and sister, quite possibly Deine
- Zarre's grandchildren. The boy's eyes were blue; those of the girl were a
- beautiful slate gray.
- Reith brought forth hot tea and at last Deine Zarre spoke. "Thank you. We are
- almost dry." And a moment later: "The children are in my care; they will be with
- me. If you find the prospect inconvenient, I must give up my employment."
- "Of course not," said Reith. "They are welcome here, as long as they understand
- the need for silence."
- "They will say nothing." Deine Zarre looked at the two. "Do you understand?
- Whatever you see must not be mentioned elsewhere."
- The three were in no mood for conversation. Reith, sensing desolation and
- misery, lingered. The children watched him warily. "I can't offer you dry
- clothes," said Reith. "But are you hungry? We have food on hand."
- The boy shook his head with dignity; the girl smiled and became suddenly
- charming. "We have had no breakfast."
- Traz, who had been standing to the side, ran to the larder and presently
- returned with seed-bread and soup. Reith watched gravely. It appeared that
- Traz's emotions had been affected. The girl was appealing, if somewhat peaked
- and miserable.
- Deine Zarre finally stirred himself. He pulled his steaming garments taut and
- went to inspect the work done in his absence.
- Reith tried to make conversation with the children. "Are you becoming dry?"
- "Yes, thank you."
- "Define Zarre is your grandfather?"
- "Our uncle."
- "I see. And now you are to live with him?"
- "Yes."
- Reith could find nothing more to say. Traz was more direct. "What happened to
- your father and mother?"
- "They were killed, by Fairos; " said the girl softly. The boy blinked.
- Anacho said, "You must be from the Eastern Skyrise."
- "Yes."
- "How did you get from there to here?"
- "We walked."
- "It is a long way, and dangerous."
- "We were lucky." The two stared into the fire. The girl winced, recalling the
- circumstances of their flight.
- Reith went off to find Deine Zarre. "You have new responsibilities."
- Deine Zarre darted Reith a sharp look. "That is correct."
- "You work here for less than you deserve to be paid, and I want to increase your
- salary."
- Deine Zarre gave a gruff nod. "I can put the money to use."
- Reith returned to the floor of the shed, to find Woudiver standing in the
- doorway, a vast bulbous silhouette. His attitude was one of shocked disapproval.
- Today he wore another of his grand outfits: black plush breeches tight around
- his massive legs, a coat of purple and brown with a dull yellow sash. He marched
- forward to stare fixedly down at the boy and girl, one to the other. "Who built
- this fire? What do you do here?"
- The girl quavered: "We were wet; the gentleman warmed us before the fire."
- "Aha. And who is this gentleman?"
- Reith came forward. "I am the gentleman. These are relations of Deine Zarre. I
- built the fire to dry them."
- "What of my property? A single spark and all goes up in flames!"
- "In the rain I conceived the danger to be slight."
- Woudiver made an easy gesture. "I accept your reassurances. How does all
- proceed?"
- "Well enough," said Reith.
- Woudiver reached into his sleeve and brought forth a paper. "I have here an
- account for the deliveries of last night. The total, you will notice, is
- extremely low, because I was given an inclusive lot price."
- Reith unfolded the paper. Black sprawling characters spelled out: Merchandise,
- as supplied: Sequins 106,800.
- Woudiver was saying: "-appears we are proceeding in really wonderful luck. I
- hope it will last. Only yesterday the Dirdir trapped two thieves working out of
- the export warehouse and took them instantly to the Glass Box. So, you see, our
- present security is fragile."
- "Woudiver," said Reith, "this bill is too high. Far too high. Further, I don't
- intend to pay for extra energy-cans."
- "The price, as I noted," said Woudiver, "is an inclusive one. The extra cans
- come at no extra cost. In a sense, they are free."
- "This is not the case, and I refuse to pay five times what is reasonable. In
- fact, I don't have enough money."
- "Then you must get some more," said Woudiver softly.
- Reith snorted. "You make the task sound so easy."
- "It is for some," said Woudiver airily. "A most remarkable rumor circulates the
- city. It appears that three men, entering the Carabas, slaughtered an
- astonishing number of Dirdir, subsequently robbing the bodies. The men are
- described as a youth, fair, like a Kotan steppe-dweller; a renegade Dirdirman;
- and a dark quiet man of no distinguishable race. The Dirdir are anxious to hunt
- down these three. Another rumor purports to concern the same three men. The dark
- man reportedly states his origin to be a far-off world from which he insists all
- men derive: in my opinion a blasphemy. What do you think of all this?"
- "Interesting," said Reith, trying to conceal his despair.
- Woudiver permitted himself to smirk. "We are in a vulnerable position. There is
- danger to myself, grave danger. Should I expose myself for nothing? I assist you
- from motives of comradeship and altruism of course, but I must receive my
- recompense."
- "I cannot pay so much," said Reith. "You knew approximately the extent of my
- capital; now you attempt to extort more."
- "Why not?" Woudiver could no longer restrain a grin. "Assume that the rumors I
- cited are accurate; assume that by some wild accident you and your henchmen were
- the persons in question: then is it not true that you have shamefully deceived
- me?"
- "Assuming as much-not at all."
- "What of the wonderful treasure?"
- "It is real. Assist me to the best of your abilities. In one month we can depart
- Tschai. In another month you will be repaid beyond your dreams."
- "Where? How?" Woudiver hitched himself forward; he loomed over Reith and his
- voice came deep and rich from the far caverns of his chest. "Let me ask
- outright: did you promulgate a tale that the original home of man is a far
- world? Or even more to the point: do you believe this hideous fantasy?"
- Reith, with spirits plunging even deeper, tried to sidestep the quagmire. "We
- are dealing with side issues. Our arrangement was clear; the rumors you mention
- have no relevance."
- Woudiver slowly, deliberately, shook his head.
- "When the spaceship leaves," said Reith, "you shall have every sequin in my
- possession. I can do no better than that. If you make unreasonable demands..."
- He searched for a convincing threat.
- Woudiver tilted up the great expanse of his face, chuckled. "What can you do?
- You are helpless. One word from me and you are instantly taken to the Glass Box.
- What are your options? None. You must do as I demand."
- Reith looked around the shed. In the doorway stood Artilo, applying ash-gray
- snuff to his nostrils. At his belt hung a handgun.
- Deine Zarre approached. Ignoring Woudiver he spoke to Reith. "The energy-cans
- are not to my order. They are a nonstandard size and appear to have been used
- for an indeterminate period. They must be rejected."
- Woudiver's eyes narrowed, his mouth jerked. "What? They are excellent
- canisters."
- Deine Zarre said in a toneless but utterly definite voice, "For our purposes
- they are useless." He departed. The boy and the girl looked after him wistfully.
- Woudiver turned to examine them, with what appeared to Reith a peculiar
- intensity.
- Reith waited. Woudiver swung about. For a moment he regarded Reith through
- narrow-lidded eyes. "Well, then," said Woudiver, "it seems that different
- energy-cans are needed. How do you propose to pay for them?"
- "In the usual way. Take back those eight cans of junk; provide four fresh cans
- and submit an itemized bill. A fair account I am able to pay just barely. Don't
- forget, I must meet labor costs."
- Woudiver considered. Deine Zarre crossed the shed to speak to the boy and girl
- and Woudiver was distracted. He strutted over to join the group. Reith, limp
- with fatigue, went to the workbench and poured himself a mug of tea, which he
- drank with a shaking hand.
- Woudiver had become extremely affable, and went so far as to pat the boy on the
- head. Deine Zarre stood stiff, his face the color of wax.
- Woudiver at last turned away. He crossed the shed to Artilo, spoke a moment or
- two. Artilo went outside, where blasts of wind sent ripples scurrying across the
- puddles.
- Woudiver signaled Reith with one hand, Deine Zarre with the other. The two
- approached. Woudiver sighed with vast melancholy. "You two are dedicated to my
- poverty. You insist on the most exquisite refinements but refuse to pay. So be
- it. Artilo is taking away the canisters you so condemn. Zarre, come with me now
- and select cells to suit your needs."
- "At this moment? I must take care of the two children."
- "Now. At once. Tonight I visit my little property. I will not return for a
- period. It is evident that my help is undervalued here."
- Deine Zarre acquiesced with poor grace. He spoke to the boy and girl, then
- departed with Woudiver.
- Two hours passed. The sun, breaking through the clouds, sent a single ray down
- upon Hei, so that the scarlet and purple towers glittered against the black sky.
- Down the road came Woudiver's black car. It rolled to a halt in front of the
- shed; Artilo alighted. He sauntered into the shed. Reith watched him, wondering
- as to his air of purposefulness. Artilo approached the boy and girl, stood
- looking down at them, and they in turn looked up, eyes wide in their pale faces.
- Artilo spoke a few terse words; Reith could see the corded muscles at the back
- of his jaw jerk as he spoke. The children looked dubiously across the room at
- Reith, then reluctantly started to move toward the door. Traz spoke to Reith in
- a low urgent voice: "Something is wrong. What does he want with them?"
- Reith moved forward. He asked, "Where are you taking these two?"
- "No affair of yours."
- Reith turned to the children. "Don't go with this man. Wait until your uncle
- returns."
- The girl said, "He says he is taking us to our uncle."
- "He can't be believed. Something is wrong."
- Artilo turned to face Reith, an act as sinister as the coiling of a snake. He
- spoke in a soft voice. "I have my orders. Stand away."
- "Who gave you the orders? Woudiver?"
- "It is no concern of yours." He motioned to the two children. "Come." His hand
- went under his old gray jacket and he watched Reith sidelong.
- The girl said, "We are not going with you."
- "You must. I'll carry you."
- "Touch them and I'll kill you," said Reith in a flat voice.
- Artilo gave him a cool stare. Reith braced himself, muscles creaking with
- tension. Artilo brought forth his hand; Reith saw the dark shape of a weapon. He
- lunged, chopped down at the cold hard arm. Artilo had been expecting this; from
- the sleeve of his other hand sprang a long blade, which he thrust at Reith's
- side, so swiftly that Reith, whirling away, felt the sting of the edge. Artilo
- sprang back, knife poised, though he had lost the handgun. Reith, intoxicated
- with fury and the sudden release of tension, edged forward, eyes fixed on the
- unblinking Artilo. Reith feinted. Artilo reacted by not so much as a quiver.
- Reith struck with his left hand; Artilo cut up; Reith seized his wrist, whirled,
- bent, heaved, threw him far across the room where he lay in a crumpled heap.
- Reith dragged him to the door, threw him outside into a puddle of slime.
- Artilo painfully hoisted himself to his feet and limped over to the black car.
- In a passionless matter-of-fact fashion, never looking toward the shed, he
- scraped the mud from his garments, entered the car and departed.
- Anacho said in a disapproving voice, "You should have killed him. Matters will
- be worse than ever."
- Reith had no reply to make. He became conscious of the blood oozing down his
- side. Pulling up his shirt he found a long thin slash. Traz and Anacho applied a
- dressing; the girl somewhat timidly approached and tried to help. She seemed
- deft and capable; Anacho moved aside. Traz and the girl completed the job.
- "Thank you," said Reith.
- The girl looked up at him, her face full of a hundred different meanings. But
- she could not bring herself to speak.
- The afternoon waned. The girl and boy stood in the doorway looking up the road.
- The technicians departed; the shed was silent.
- The black car returned. Deine Zarre stepped stiffly forth, followed by Woudiver.
- Artilo, going to the luggage compartment, brought forth four energy cells, which
- he carried at a painful hobble into the shed. His manner, as far as Reith could
- see, was no different from usual: dour, impersonal, silent.
- Woudiver turned a single glance toward the girl and the boy, who shrank back
- into the shadows. Then he approached Reith. "The energy canisters are here. They
- are approved by Zarre. They cost a great deal of money. Here is my statement for
- next month's rent and Artilo's salary-"
- "Artilo's salary?" demanded Reith. "You must be joking."
- "-the total, as you see, is exactly one hundred thousand sequins. The sum is not
- subject to diminution. You must pay at once or I will evict you from the
- premises." And Woudiver pursed his lips in a cold smile.
- Reith's eyes misted with hate. "I can't afford this amount of money."
- "Then you must go. Further, since you are no longer my client, I will be
- obligated to make a report of your activities to the Dirdir."
- Reith nodded. "One hundred thousand sequins. And after that, how much more?"
- "Whatever sums you require me to lay out."
- "No further blackmail?"
- Woudiver drew himself up. "The word is capricious and vulgar. I warn you, Adam
- Reith, that I expect the same courtesy that I accord."
- Reith managed a sad laugh. "You'll have your money in five or six days. I don't
- have it now."
- Woudiver cocked his great head skeptically sidewise. "Where do you propose to
- secure this money?"
- "I have money waiting for me in Coad."
- Woudiver snorted, wheeled and marched to his car. Artilo hobbled after him. They
- departed.
- Traz and Anacho came to watch after the car.
- In a wondering voice Traz asked, "Where will you get a hundred thousand
- sequins?"
- "We left as much buried in the Carabas," said Reith. "The only problem is
- bringing it back-and perhaps it won't be so much of a problem after all."
- Anacho's lank white jaw dropped. "I've always suspected you of insane optimism
- ..."
- Reith held up his hand. "Listen. I will fly north by the same route the Dirdir
- themselves use. They will take no notice, even should a search-screen be
- operating, which is doubtful. I will land after dark, to the east of the forest.
- In the morning I will dig up the sequins and take them back to the sky-car and
- at dusk I will fly back to Sivishe like a party of Dirdir returning from the
- hunt."
- Anacho gave a derogatory grunt. "You make it sound so simple."
- "As probably it will be, if all goes well."
- Reith looked wistfully back toward the shed and the half-complete spaceship. "I
- might as well start now."
- "I'll go with you," said Traz. "You'll need help."
- Anacho made a dreary sound. "I had better go as well."
- Reith shook his head. "One can do the job as well as three. You two remain here
- and keep our affairs moving."
- "And if you don't return?"
- "There are sixty or seventy thousand sequins still in the pouch. Take the money
- and leave Sivishe ... But I'll be back. I can't doubt this. It's not possible
- that we should toil and suffer so greatly only to fail."
- "Hardly a rational assessment," Anacho said dryly: "I expect never to see you
- again."
- "Nonsense," said Reith. "Well, I'll get started. The sooner I leave, the sooner
- I return."
- CHAPTER FIFTEEN
- THE SKY-CAR SAILED quietly through the night of old Tschai, over landscape
- ghostly in the light of the blue moon. Reith felt like a man drifting through a
- strange dream. He mused over the events of his life, his childhood, his years of
- training, his missions among the stars and finally his assignment to the
- Explorator IV. Then Tschai: destruction and disaster, his time with the Emblem
- nomads, the journey across Aman Steppe and the Dead Steppe to Pera; the sack of
- Dadiche; the subsequent journey to Cath and his adventures at Ao Hidis. Then the
- journey to Carabas, the slaughter of the Dirdir, the construction of the
- spaceship in Sivishe. And Woudiver! On Tschai both virtue and vice were
- exaggerated; Reith had known many evil men, among whom Woudiver ranked high.
- The night advanced; the forests of central Kislovan gave way to barren uplands
- and silent wasteland. In all the circle of vision, no light, no fire, no sign of
- human activity was visible. Reith consulted the course monitor, adjusted the
- automatic pilot. The Carabas lay only an hour ahead. The blue moon hung low;
- when it set the landscape would be dark until dawn.
- The hour passed. Braz sank behind the horizon; in the east appeared a sepia
- glimmer announcing the nearness of dawn. Reith, dividing his attention between
- the course monitor and the ground below, finally thought to glimpse the shape of
- Khusz. At once, he dropped the car low to the ground and veered to the east,
- swinging behind the Boundary Forest. As Carina 4269 thrust a first cool brown
- sliver over the edge of the horizon Reith landed, close under the first great
- torquils of the forest.
- For a period he sat watching and listening. Carina 4269 rose into the sky and
- the low light shone directly upon the sky-car. Reith gathered broken fronds and
- branches, which he laid against the car, camouflaging it to some extent.
- The time had come when he must venture into the forest. He could delay no
- longer. Taking a sack and a shovel, tucking weapons into his belt, Reith set
- forth.
- The trail was familiar. Reith recognized each bole, every dark sheaf of fungus,
- every hummock of lichen. As he passed through the forest he became aware of a
- sickening odor: the reek of carrion. This was to be expected. He halted. Voices?
- Reith jumped off the trail, listened.
- Voices indeed. Reith hesitated, then stole forward through the heavy foliage.
- Ahead lay the site of the trap. Reith approached with the most extreme caution,
- creeping on his hands and knees, finally crawling on his elbows ... He looked
- forth upon an eerie sight. To one side, in front of a great torquil, stood five
- Dirdir in hunting regalia. A dozen gray-faced men stood in a great hole, digging
- with shovels and buckets: this was the hole, greatly enlarged, in which Reith,
- Traz and Anacho had buried the Dirdir corpses. From the splendid rotting carrion
- came an odious stench ... Reith stared. One of these men was surely familiar-it
- was Issam the Thang. And next to him worked the hostler, and next, the porter at
- the Alawan. The others Reith could not positively identify, but all seemed
- somehow familiar, and he assumed them to be folk with whom he had dealings at
- Maust.
- Reith turned to inspect the five Dirdir. They stood stiff and attentive,
- effulgences flaring out behind. If they felt emotion, or disgust, none was
- evident.
- Reith did not allow himself to reason, to weigh, to calculate. He brought forth
- his hand-gun; he aimed, he fired. Once, twice, three times. Three Dirdir fell
- dead; the other two sprang around in questioning fury. Four times, five times:
- two glancing hits. Emerging from his cover Reith fired twice more down into the
- thrashing white bodies before they became still.
- The men in the pit stood frozen in wonder. "Up!" cried Reith. "Out of there!"
- Issam the Thang yelled hoarsely, "It is you, the murderer! Your crimes brought
- us here!"
- "Never mind that," said Reith. "Get up out of that hole and fly for your life!"
- "What good is that? The Dirdir will track us! They will kill us in some
- abominable fashion-"
- The hostler was already out of the hole. He went to the Dirdir corpses, availed
- himself of a weapon, and turned back to Issam the Thang. "Don't bother to climb
- from the hole." He fired; the Thang's yell was cut short; his body rolled down
- among the decaying Dirdir.
- The hostler said to Reith, "He betrayed us all, hoping for gain; he gained only
- what you saw; they took him with the rest of us."
- "These five Dirdir-were there more?"
- "Two Excellences who have gone back to Khusz."
- "Take the weapons and go your way."
- The men fled toward the Hills of Recall. Reith dug under the roots of the
- torquil. There, the sack of sequins. To the value of a hundred thousand? He
- could not be sure.
- Shouldering the pouch, looking for a last time on the scene of carnage and the
- pitiful corpse of Issam the Thang, he departed the scene.
- Back at the sky-car he loaded the sequins into the cabin and set himself to
- wait, anxiety gnawing at his stomach. He dared not depart. If he flew low he
- might be seen by hunt parties; if he flew high the screen across the Carabas
- would detect him.
- The day passed. Carina 4269 dropped behind the far hills. Sad brown twilight
- fell over the Zone. Along the hills the hateful flickers sprang into existence.
- Reith could wait no longer. He took the sky-car into the air.
- Low over the ground he skimmed until he was clear of the Zone, then rising high
- drove south for Sivishe.
- CHAPTER SIXTEEN
- THE DARK LAND passed astern. Reith sat staring ahead, visions flitting across
- his inner eye: faces, twisted in passion, horror, pain. The shapes of Blue
- Chasch, Wankh, Pnume, Phung, Green Chasch, Dirdir, all leaped upon the stage of
- his imagination, to stand, turn, perform a gesture and leap away.
- The night passed. The sky-car slid south and when Carina 4269 rose into the east
- the spires of Hei glistened far ahead.
- Without incident Reith landed the sky-car, though it seemed that a passing party
- of Dirdirmen scrutinized him with suspicious intensity as he departed the field
- with his sack of sequins.
- Reith went first to his room at the Ancient Realm. Neither Traz nor Anacho were
- on the premises, but Reith thought nothing of this; they often passed the nights
- at the shed.
- Reith stumbled to his couch, threw the bag of sequins against the wall,
- stretched out and almost immediately slept.
- He awoke to a hand on his shoulder. He rolled over to find Traz standing above
- him.
- Traz spoke in a husky voice: "I was afraid you'd come here. Hurry, we must
- leave. The apartment is now dangerous."
- Reith, still torpid, swung himself to a sitting position. The time was early
- afternoon, or so he judged by the shadows outside the window.
- "What's the trouble?"
- "The Dirdir took Anacho into custody. I was out buying food, or they would have
- taken me as well."
- Reith was now fully awake. "When did this happen?"
- "Yesterday. It was Woudiver's doing. He came to the shed, and asked questions
- about you. He wanted to know if you claimed to come from another world; he
- persisted and would not accept evasion. I refused to speak, as did Anacho.
- Woudiver began to reproach Anacho as a renegade. 'You, a former Dirdirman, how
- can you live like a subman among sub-men?"' Anacho became provoked and said that
- Bifold Genesis was a myth. Woudiver went away. Yesterday morning the Dirdir came
- here to the rooms and took Anacho. If they force him to talk, we are not safe
- and the ship is not safe."
- Reith's fingers were numb as he pulled on his boots. All at once the structure
- of his life, contrived at such cost, had collapsed. Woudiver, always Woudiver.
- Traz touched his arm. "Come; best that we leave! The rooms may be watched."
- Reith picked up the bundle of sequins. They departed the building. Through the
- alleys of Sivishe they walked, ignoring the pale faces looking forth from
- doorways and odd-shaped windows.
- Reith became aware that he was ravenously hungry; at a small restaurant they ate
- boiled sea-thrush and spore-cake. Reith began to think more clearly. Anacho was
- in Dirdir custody; Woudiver would certainly be expecting some sort of reaction
- from him. Or would he be so assured of Reith's essential helplessness that he
- would expect matters to go on as before? Reith grinned a ghastly grin. If
- Woudiver reckoned as much, he would be right. Unthinkable to jeopardize the ship
- for any circumstance whatever! Reith's hate for Woudiver was like a tumor in his
- brain, and he must ignore it; he must make the best of an agonizing dilemma.
- Reith asked Traz, "You have not seen Woudiver?"
- "I saw him this morning. I went to the shed; I thought you might have gone
- there. Woudiver arrived and went into his office."
- "Let's see if he's still there."
- "What do you intend to do?"
- Reith gave a strangled laugh, "I could kill him but it would do no good. We need
- information. Woudiver is the only source."
- Traz said nothing; as usual Reith was unable to read his thoughts.
- They rode the creaking six-wheeled public carrier out to the construction yard,
- and every turn of the wheels wound the tension tighter. When Reith arrived at
- the yard and saw Woudiver's black car the blood surged through his brain and he
- felt lightheaded. He stood still, drew a deep breath and became quite calm.
- He thrust the pouch of sequins upon Traz. "Take it into the shed and hide it."
- Traz took the sack dubiously. "Don't go alone. Wait for me."
- "I expect no trouble. We can't afford the luxury, as Woudiver well knows. Wait
- for me by the shed."
- Reith went to Woudiver's eccentric stone office and entered. With his back to
- the charcoal brazier stood Artilo, legs splayed, arms behind his back. He
- examined Reith without change of expression.
- "Tell Woudiver I want to see him," said Reith.
- Artilo sauntered to the inner door, thrust his head in, spoke. He backed away.
- The door swung aside with a wrench that almost tore it from its hinges. Woudiver
- expanded into the room: a glaring-eyed Woudiver with great upper lip folded down
- over his mouth. He looked across the room with the unfocused all-seeing glare of
- a wrathful god, then seemed to catch sight of Reith, and his malevolence
- concentrated itself.
- "Adam Reith," spoke Woudiver in a voice like a bell. "You have returned. Where
- are my sequins?"
- "Never mind your sequins," said Reith. "Where is the Dirdirman?"
- Woudiver hunched his shoulders. For a moment Reith thought he was about to
- strike out. If so Reith knew that his selfcontrol would dissolve, for better or
- worse.
- Woudiver spoke in a throbbing voice: "Do you think to fatigue me with wrangling?
- Think again! Give me my money and depart."
- "You shall have your money," said Reith, "as soon as I see Ankhe at afram
- Anacho."
- "You wish to see the blasphemer, the renegade?" roared Woudiver. "Go to the
- Glass Box, you will see him clearly enough."
- "He is in the Glass Box?"
- "Where else?"
- "You are certain?"
- Woudiver leaned back against the wall. "Why do you wish to know?"
- "Because he is my friend. You betrayed him to the Dirdir; you must answer to
- me."
- Woudiver began to swell, but Reith said in a weary voice, "No more drama, no
- more shouting. You gave Anacho to the Dirdir; now I want you to save him."
- "Impossible," said Woudiver. "Even if I wished I could do nothing. He is in the
- Glass Box, do you hear?"
- "How can you be sure?"
- "Where else should he be sent? He was taken for his old crimes; the Dirdir will
- learn nothing of your project, if that is your worry." And Woudiver showed his
- mouth in a gigantic sneer. "Unless, of course, he himself reveals your secrets."
- "In which case," said Reith, "you would likewise find yourself in difficulties."
- Woudiver had no comment to make.
- Reith asked in a gentle voice, "Can money buy Anacho's escape?"
- "No," intoned Woudiver. "He is in the Glass Box."
- "So you say. How can I be sure?"
- "As I informed you-go look."
- "Anyone who wishes can watch?"
- "Certainly. The Box holds no secrets."
- "What is the procedure?"
- "You cross to Hei, you walk to the Box, you climb to the upper gallery which
- overlooks the fields."
- "Could a person lower a rope, or a ladder?"
- "Certainly, but he could not hope for long life; he would be thrust at once down
- upon the field ... If you plan anything of this nature I myself will come to
- watch."
- "Suppose I were to offer you a million sequins," said Reith, "could you arrange
- that Anacho escape?"
- Woudiver darted his great head forward. "A million sequins? And you have been
- crying poverty to me for three months? I have been deceived!"
- "Could you arrange the escape for a million sequins?"
- Woudiver showed a dainty pink tip of tongue. "No, I fear not ... a million
- sequins ... I fear not. There is nothing to be done. Nothing. So you have gained
- a million sequins?"
- "No," said Reith. "I only wanted to learn if Anacho's escape was possible."
- "It is not possible," said Woudiver crossly. "Where is my money?"
- "In due course," said Reith. "You betrayed my friend; you can wait."
- Again Woudiver seemed on the verge of swinging his great arm. But he said, "You
- misuse language. I did not 'betray': I exposed a criminal to his just deserts.
- What loyalty do I owe you or yours? You have given none to me, and would do
- worse if opportunity offered. Bear in mind, Adam Reith, that friendship must
- work in two directions. Do not expect what you are unwilling to give. If you
- find my attributes distasteful, remember that I feel the same about yours. Which
- of us is correct? By the standards of this time and this place, it is certainly
- I. You are the interloper; your protests are ludicrous and unrealistic. You
- blame me for inordinacy. Do not forget, Adam Reith, that you chose me as a man
- who would perform illegal acts for pay. This is your expectation of me; you care
- nothing for my security or prospects. You came here to exploit me, to urge me to
- dangerous acts for trifling sums; you must not complain if my conduct seems
- merely a mirror of your own."
- Reith could find no answer. He turned and left the office.
- In the shed, work was proceeding at its usual pace: a haven of normalcy after
- the Carabas and the mind-twisting colloquy with Woudiver. Traz waited just
- inside the portal. "What did he say?"
- "He said Anacho was a criminal, that I came here to exploit him. How can I
- argue?"
- Traz curled his lip. "And Anacho?"
- "In the Glass Box. Woudiver says it's easy to get in but impossible to get out."
- Reith walked back and forth across the shed. Halting in the doorway, he looked
- across the water toward the great gray shape. He spoke to Traz: "Will you ask
- Deine Zarre to step out here?"
- Deine Zarre appeared. Reith asked, "Have you ever visited the Glass Box?"
- "Long ago."
- "Woudiver tells me that a man might lower a rope from the upper gallery."
- "Should he care so little for his life."
- "I want two quantities of high-potency battarache-enough, say, to destroy this
- shed ten times over. Where can I get it in a hurry?"
- Deine Zarre reflected a moment, then gave a slow fateful nod. "Wait here."
- He returned in something over an hour with two clay pots. "Here is battarache;
- here are fuses. It is contraband material; please do not reveal where you
- obtained it."
- "The subject will never arise," said Reith. "Or so I hope."
- CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
- SHROUDED IN GRAY cloaks Reith and Traz crossed the causeway to the mainland. By
- a fine wide avenue, surfaced with a rough white substance that rasped underfoot,
- they entered the Dirdir city Hei. To either hand rose spires, purple and
- scarlet; those of gray metal and silver stood far to the north behind the Glass
- Box. The avenue led close beside a hundred-foot shaft of scarlet. Surrounding
- this was an expanse of clean white sand upon which rested a dozen peculiar
- objects of polished stone. Art-things? Fetishes? Trophies? There was no way of
- knowing. In front of the spire, on a circular plat of white marble, stood three
- Dirdir. For the first time Reith saw a Dirdir female. The creature was shorter
- and seemed less resilient, less flexible, than the male; her head was wider at
- the scalp and pointed at the area corresponding to a chin; she was somewhat
- darker in color: a pallid gray subtly shaded with mauve. The two stood
- contemplating the third, a male Dirdir whelp, half the size of the adult. From
- time to time the effulgences of the three twitched to point to one or another of
- the polished rock-pieces, an activity which Reith made no effort to understand.
- Reith watched them in a mingling of revulsion and reluctant admiration, and he
- could not avoid thinking of the "mysteries."
- Some time previously Anacho had explained the Dirdir sexual processes.
- "Essentially, the facts are these: there are twelve styles of male sexual
- organs, fourteen of the female. Only certain pairings are possible. For
- instance, the Type One Male is compatible only with Types Five and Nine Female.
- Type Five Female adjusts only to Type One Male, but Type Nine Female has a more
- general organ and is compatible with Types One, Eleven and Twelve Male.
- "The matter becomes fantastically complex. Each male and female style has its
- specific and theoretical attributes, which are very seldom realized-as long as
- an individual's type is secret! These are the Dirdir 'mysteries'! Should an
- individual's type become known, he is expected to conform to the theoretical
- attributes of the type, regardless of inclination; he rarely does so, and is
- constantly embarrassed on this account.
- "As you can imagine, a matter so complicated absorbs a great deal of attention
- and energy and, perhaps, by keeping the Dirdir fragmented, obsessed and
- secretive, has prevented them from overrunning the world of space."
- "Amazing," said Reith. "But if the types are secret and generally incompatible,
- how do they mate? How do they reproduce?"
- "There are several systems: trial marriage, the so-called 'dark gatherings,'
- anonymous notices. The difficulties are transcended." Anacho paused a moment,
- then proceeded delicately. "I need hardly point out that low-caste Dirdirmen and
- Dirdirwomen, lacking the 'noble divinity' and without 'secrets,' are thus held
- to be deficient and somewhat clownish."
- "Hmm," said Reith. "Why do you specify 'low-caste Dirdirmen'? What of the
- Immaculates?"
- Anacho cleared his throat. "The Immaculates obviate shame by elaborate surgical
- methods. They are allowed to alter themselves in accordance with one of eight
- styles; thus they are conceded 'secrets' as well, and may wear Blue and Pink."
- "What about mating?"
- "It is more difficult, and in fact becomes an ingenious analogue of the Dirdir
- system. Each style will match at most two styles of the other sex."
- Reith could no longer restrain his mirth. Anacho listened with an expression,
- half-grim, half-rueful. "What of yourself?" asked Reith. "How far did you
- involve yourself?"
- "Not far enough," said Anacho. "For certain reasons I wore Blue and Pink without
- providing myself the requisite 'secret.' I was declared an outlaw and an
- atavism: this was my situation at our first meeting."
- "A curious crime," said Reith.
- Now Anacho darted for his life across the simulated landscape of Sibol.
- The avenue leading to the Glass Box became even broader, as if in some attempt
- to keep it in scale with the vast bulk. Those who walked the rasping white
- surface-Dirdir, Dirdirmen, common laborers in gray cloaks-seemed artificial and
- unreal, like figures in classical perspective exercises. As they walked they
- looked neither right nor left, passing Reith and Traz as if they were invisible.
- Scarlet and purple spires reared to all sides; ahead stood the Glass Box,
- dwarfing all else. Reith began to suffer oppression of the spirit; Dirdir
- artifacts and the human psyche were in discord. To tolerate such surroundings, a
- man eventually must deny his heritage and submit to the Dirdir world-view. In
- short, he must become a Dirdirman.
- They came up beside two other men, like themselves muffled in hooded gray
- cloaks. Reith spoke: "Perhaps you will inform us. We want to visit the Glass Box
- but we do not understand the procedure."
- The two men gave him an uncertain appraisal. They were father and son, both
- short, round-faced, with round little paunches, thin arms and legs. The older
- man said in a reedy voice, "One merely mounts by the gray ramps; there is no
- more to know."
- "You yourselves go to the Glass Box?"
- "Yes. There is a special hunt at noon, for a great Dirdirman villain, and there
- may well be a tossing."
- "We had heard nothing of this. Who is this Dirdirman villain?"
- The two again examined him dubiously, apparently from a condition of innate
- uncertainty. "A renegade, a blasphemer. We are scourers at the Number Four
- Fabrication Plant; we received information from the Dirdirmen themselves."
- "You go often to the Glass Box?"
- "Often enough." The father spoke rather tersely. The son amplified: "It is
- authorized and endorsed by the Dirdirmen; there is no expense."
- "Come," said the father. "We must hurry."
- "If you have no objection," said Reith, "we will follow you and take advantage
- of your familiarity with the procedures."
- The father agreed with no great enthusiasm. "We do not care to be delayed." The
- two set off up the avenue, heads crouched upon their shoulders, a gait
- characteristic to the Sivishe laborers. Imitating the sag-necked slouch Reith
- and Traz followed. The glass walls reared overhead like vitreous cliffs, showing
- spots of a red-magenta glow where the illumination from within penetrated the
- glass. Angling along the sides were ramps and escalators coded by color; purple,
- scarlet, mauve, white and gray, each rising to different levels. The gray ramps
- led to a balcony only a hundred feet from the ground, evidently the lowest.
- Reith and Traz, joining a stream of men, women and children, climbed the ramp,
- passed through an ill-smelling passage which twisted forward and back and
- suddenly emerged upon a bright bleak expanse, illuminated by ten miniature suns.
- There were low crags and rolling hills, thickets of harsh vegetation: ocher,
- tan, yellow, bone-white, pale whitish brown. Below was a brackish pond, a
- thicket of hard white cactus-like growths; in the near distance stood a forest
- of bone-white spires identical in shape and size to the Dirdir residential
- towers. The similarity, thought Reith, could not be coincidental; on Sibol the
- Dirdir evidently inhabited hollow trees.
- Somewhere among the hills and thickets wandered Anacho, in fear of his life,
- bitterly regretting the impulse which had brought him to Sivishe. But Anacho was
- not to be seen; in fact nowhere was there sign of either man or Dirdir. Reith
- turned to the two laborers for explanation.
- "It is a quiet period," stated the father. "Notice the hill yonder? And its
- equal at the far north? These are base camps. During a quiet period the game
- takes refuge at one or the other of the camps. Let me see; where is my
- schedule?"
- "I carry it," said the son. "Quiet continues yet an hour; the game is at this
- close hill."
- "We are in good time. According to rules of this particular cycle, there will be
- darkness in one hour, for a period of fourteen minutes. Then South Hill becomes
- fair territory and the game must vacate to North Hill, which in its turn becomes
- refuge. I am surprised that with so notorious a criminal, they do not allow
- Competition rules."
- "The schedule was established last week," replied the son. "The criminal was
- taken only a day or so ago."
- "We still may see good techniques, and perhaps a tossing or two.
- "In one hour, then, the field goes dark?"
- "For fourteen minutes, during which the hunt begins."
- Reith and Traz returned to the outside balcony and the suddenly dim landscape of
- Tschai. Pulling their hoods close, hunching their necks, they sidled down the
- ramp to the ground.
- Reith looked in all directions. Cloaked laborers marched stolidly up the gray
- ramp. Dirdirmen used the white ramps; Dirdir rode mauve, scarlet and purple
- escalators to the high balconies.
- Reith went to the gray glass wall. He sat down and pretended to adjust his shoe.
- Traz stood in front of him. From his pouch Reith brought forth a pot of
- battarache and an attached timer. He carefully adjusted a dial, pulled a lever,
- laid it beside a shrub, against the glass wall.
- No one heeded. He adjusted the timer on the second pot of battarache, gave
- pouch, battarache and timer to Traz. "You know what to do."
- Traz reluctantly took the pouch. "The plan may succeed, but you and Anacho will
- both certainly be killed."
- Reith pretended that Traz was wrong for once, for the encouragement of them
- both. "Drop off the battarache-you'll have to hurry. Remember, just opposite to
- here. There isn't much time. And I'll see you at the construction shed."
- Traz turned away, concealing his face in the folds of his hood. "Very well, Adam
- Reith."
- "But just in case something goes wrong: take the money and leave as fast as you
- can."
- "Goodbye."
- "Hurry now."
- Reith watched the gray shape diminish along the base of the Glass Box. He drew a
- deep breath. There was little time. He must commit himself at once; if darkness
- arrived before he had located Anacho, all the effort and risk were in vain.
- He returned back up the gray ramp, passed through the portal into the Sibol
- glare.
- He scanned the field, taking careful note of landmarks and directions, then
- moved south around the deck, toward South Hill. The spectators became less
- numerous, most tending toward the middle or the north.
- Reith selected a spot near a stanchion. He looked right and left. No one stood
- within two hundred feet of him. The decks above were empty. He brought out a
- coil of light rope, parted it, passed it around the stanchion, threw the parts
- down. With a look to right and left he swung himself over the rail, lowered
- himself to the hunting ground.
- He did not go unnoticed. Pallid faces peered down in wonder. Reith paid them no
- heed. He no longer shared their world; he was game. He pulled the rope down and
- ran off toward South Hill, coiling the rope as he ran through forests of
- bristle, over limestone juts and coffee-colored chert.
- He neared the first slopes of South Hill, sighting neither hunters nor game. The
- hunters would now be taking such positions as tactics dictated; the game would
- be lurking at the base of South Hill, wondering how best to reach the sanctuary
- of North Hill. Reith suddenly came upon a young Gray, crouched in the shadow of
- a white bamboo-like growth. He wore sandals and a breech-clout; he carried a
- club and a cactus-prong dagger. Reith asked him, "Where is the Dirdirman, the
- one just put out on the field?"
- The Gray gave his head an indifferent jerk. "There might be one such around the
- hill. Leave me; you create a flurry of darkness with your cloak. Drop it off;
- your skin is the best camouflage. Don't you know the Dirdir observe your every
- move?"
- Reith ran on. He saw two elderly men, stark naked, with stringy muscles and
- white hair, standing poised like specters. Reith called out, "Have you seen the
- Dirdirman anywhere near?"
- "Up beyond, or so it may be. Take yourself off, with your dark cloak."
- Reith scrambled up a jut of sandstone. He called out: "Anacho."
- No response. Reith looked at his watch. In ten minutes the field would go dark.
- He searched the side of South Hill. A little distance away he glimpsed movement:
- persons running off through the thicket. His cloak seemed to arouse antagonism;
- he removed it, threw it over his arm.
- In a hollow Reith found four men and a woman. They showed him the faces of
- hunted animals, and would not reply to his question. Reith labored up the hill,
- to gain a better view. "Anacho!" he called. A figure in a white smock swung
- around. Reith felt engulfed in relief; his knees felt weak; tears came to his
- eyes. "Anacho!"
- "What do you do here!"
- "Hurry. This way. We're about to escape."
- Anacho looked at him in stupefaction. "No one escapes the Glass Box."
- "Come along! You'll see!"
- "Not that way," cried Anacho hoarsely. "Safety lies to the north, on North Hill!
- When the darkness comes the hunt starts!"
- "I know, I know! We don't have much time. Come this way. We must take cover
- somewhere over yonder; we must be ready."
- Anacho threw his hands in the air. "You must know something I don't know."
- They ran back the way Reith had come, to the western face of South Hill. As they
- ran Reith gasped out the details of the plan.
- Anacho asked in a hollow voice, "You did all this ... for me? You came down here
- on the field?"
- "No matter about that. Now-we want to be close to that tall clump of white
- bristles. Where shall we take cover?"
- "Within the clump-as good as any. Notice the hunters! They take their positions.
- They must keep off half a mile until the darkness comes. We are just barely
- within the sanctuary. Those four are marking us!"
- "Darkness will be coining in seconds. Our plan is this: we run due west, toward
- that mound. From there we work to that bank of brown cactus and around the
- southern edge. Most important: we must not become separated!"
- Anacho made a plaintive gesture. "How can we avoid it? We can't call out; the
- hunters will hear us."
- Reith gave him an end of the rope. "Hold to that. And if we are separated we
- meet on the west edge of that yellow clump."
- They waited for darkness. Out on the field the young Dirdir took up their
- positions, with here and there more experienced hunters. Reith looked to the
- east. By some trick of light and atmosphere the fields seemed to be open and to
- extend to far horizons; only by dint of concentration could Reith make out the
- east wall.
- Darkness came. The lights dulled to red, flickered out. Far to the north glowed
- a single purple light, to indicate direction. It cast no illumination. Darkness
- was complete. The hunt had begun. From the north came Dirdir hunting calls:
- chilling hoots and ululations.
- Reith and Anacho moved west. From time to time they halted to listen through the
- dark. To their right came a sinister jingling. They stood stock-still. The
- jingling and a pad-pad-pad faded off to the rear.
- They arrived at their landmark hummock, and continued toward the clump of
- cactus. Something was near. They halted to listen. It seemed to their straining
- ears, or nerves, that something else paused as well.
- From high, high above came a many-voiced cry, ranging up and down the sonic
- range, then another and another. "The huntcalls of all the septs," Anacho
- whispered. "A traditional ritual. Now from the field, all the sept-members
- present must give voice." The calls from above halted; from all parts of the
- hunting field, eerie out of the dark, came the responses. Anacho nudged Reith.
- "While the responses sound, we are free to move. Come."
- They set out with long strides, their feet sensitive as eyes. The hunt-slogans
- dwindled away into the distance; again there was silence. Reith struck a loose
- rock with his feet, to cause a distressing rattle. They froze, teeth gritted.
- There was no reaction. On they walked, on and on, feeling out with their feet
- for the cactus clump, but encountering only air and harsh soil. Reith began to
- fear that they had passed it by, that the lights would go on to expose them to
- all the hunters, all the spectators.
- Seven minutes of darkness had elapsed, or so he estimated. In another minute, at
- the latest, they should find the outskirts of the clump ... A sound! Running
- feet, apparently human, passed not thirty feet distant. A moment later a jogging
- thud, shrill whispers, a jingle of hunting gear. The sounds passed, dwindled.
- Silence returned.
- Seconds later they came to the cactus. "Around to the southern side," Reith
- whispered. "Then on hands and knees into the center."
- The two pushed through the coarse stalks, meeting sharp side-prongs.
- "Light! Here it comes!"
- The dark began to dissipate in the style of a Sibol sunrise: up through gray,
- pallid white, into the full glare of day.
- Reith and Anacho looked about them. The cactus provided fair concealment; they
- seemed in no imminent peril, though not a hundred yards distant three Dirdir
- scions bounded across the field, heads high, searching in all directions for
- fleeing game. Reith consulted his watch. Fifteen minutes remained-if Traz had
- suffered no mishap, if he had been able to reach the opposite wall of the Glass
- Box.
- The forest of white bristle lay a quarter of a mile ahead, across somewhat open
- ground. It might, thought Reith, be the longest quarter-mile he had ever
- traversed.
- The two wormed through the cactus to the northern verge. "The hunters keep to
- middle ground for an hour or so," said Anacho. "They restrain quick penetration
- to the north, then they work to the south."
- Reith handed Anacho a power-gun, tucked his own into his waistband. He raised to
- his knees. A mile distant he glimpsed movement, Dirdir or game he could not be
- sure. Anacho suddenly pulled him down into concealment. From behind the cactus
- bush trotted a group of Immaculates, hands sheathed in artificial talons,
- simulated effulgences trailing over their shining white pates. Reith's stomach
- twisted; he stifled the impulse to confront the creatures, to shoot them.
- The Dirdirmen loped past, and it seemed that they missed seeing the fugitives
- only through the sheerest chance. They angled away to the east, and, sighting
- game, bounded off at full speed.
- Reith checked his watch; time was growing short. Rising to his knees, he looked
- in all directions. "Let's go."
- They jumped erect, ran off for the white forest.
- They paused halfway, crouched behind a little thicket. By South Hill a hot hunt
- was in progress; two bands of hunters converged on game which had taken cover on
- South Hill itself. Reith checked his watch. Nine minutes. The white forest was
- only a minute or two away. The lone spire which he had established as a landmark
- could now be seen, a few hundred yards west of the forest. They set forth again.
- Four hunters stepped from the forest, where they had stationed themselves to spy
- out the game. Reith's heart sank into his boots. "Keep going," he said to
- Anacho. "We'll fight them."
- Anacho looked dubiously at the power-gun. "If they take us with guns, they'll
- toss us for days ... but I was to be tossed in any event."
- The Dirdir watched in fascination as Reith and Anacho approached. "We must take
- them into the forest," muttered Anacho. "The judges will intervene if they see
- our guns."
- "Around to the left then, and behind that clump of yellow grass."
- The Dirdir did not advance to meet them, but moved to the side. With a final
- burst Reith and Anacho gained the edge of the forest. The Dirdir screamed their
- hunt slogans and sprang forward, while Reith and Anacho retreated.
- "Now," said Reith. They brought forth their guns. The Dirdir gave a croak of
- dismay. Four quick shots: four dead Dirdir. Instantly from high above came a
- great howl: a mind-jarring ululation. Anacho shouted out in sheer frustration,
- "The judges saw. They'll watch us now, and direct the hunt. We are lost."
- "We have a chance," Reith insisted. He wiped the sweat from his face, squinting
- against the glare. "In three minutes-if all goes well-the explosion. Let's go on
- to the long spire."
- They ran through the forest, and as they emerged they saw hunt-teams loping in
- their direction. The howling overhead rose and fell, then stopped.
- They reached the single spire, with the glass wall only a hundred yards distant.
- Above, obscured by glare and reflections, ran the observation decks; Reith was
- barely able to make out the gaping spectators.
- He checked his watch.
- Now.
- An interval, to be expected: the Box was three miles across. Seconds passed,
- then came a great puff of shock and a thunderous reverberation. Lights
- flickered; far to the east they were extinguished. Reith peered but could not
- see the effect of the blast. From overhead, up and down the length of the field,
- came a frantic baying, expressing rage so savage and stupendous that Reith's
- knees became weak.
- Anacho was more matter-of-fact. "They direct all hunts east to the rupture, to
- prevent the escape of game."
- The hunts which had been converging upon Reith and Anacho turned and raced off
- to the east.
- "Get ready," said Reith. He looked at his watch. "To the ground."
- A second explosion: a tremendous shatter to gladden Reith's heart, to lift him
- into a state of near religious exaltation. Shards and chunks of gray glass
- whistled overhead; the lights dimmed, went dark. Before them appeared a gap,
- like an opening into a new dimension, a hundred feet wide, almost as high as the
- first observation deck.
- Reith and Anacho jumped to their feet. Without difficulty they reached the wall
- and sprang through-away from the arid Sibol, out into the dim Tschai afternoon.
- Down the broad white avenue they ran, then at Anacho's direction turned off to
- the north, toward the factories and the white Dirdirman spires, then to the
- waterfront, and across the causeway into Sivishe.
- They halted to catch their breath. "Best that you go direct to the sky-car,"
- said Reith. "Take it and leave. You won't be safe in Sivishe."
- "Woudiver issued the information against me; he'll do the same for you," said
- Anacho.
- "I can't leave Sivishe now, with the spaceship so near to completion. Woudiver
- and I must have an understanding."
- "Never," said Anacho bleakly. "He is a great wad of malice."
- "He can't betray the spaceship without endangering himself," argued Reith. "He
- is our accomplice; we work in his shed."
- "He'd explain it away somehow."
- "Perhaps, perhaps not. In any event, you must leave Sivishe. We'll share the
- money-then you must go. The sky-car is no more use to me."
- Anacho's white face became mulish. "Not so fast, I am not the goal of a tsaugsh,
- remember this. Who will take the initiative to seek me out?"
- Reith looked back toward the Glass Cage. "You don't think they'll seek you in
- Sivishe?"
- "They are unpredictable. But I'm as safe in Sivishe as anywhere else. I can't go
- back to the Ancient Realm. They won't seek me at the shed unless Woudiver
- betrays the project."
- "Woudiver must be controlled," said Reith.
- Anacho only grunted. They set off once more, through the mean alleys of Sivishe.
- The sun passed behind the spires of Hei and dimness seeped into the already
- shadowed streets. Reith and Anacho rode by public powerwagon to the shed.
- Woudiver's office was dark; within the shed dim lights glimmered. The mechanics
- had gone home; there seemed to be no one on the premises ... In the shadows a
- figure moved. "Traz!" cried Reith.
- The lad came forward. "I knew that you would come here, if you won free."
- Neither the nomads nor the Dirdirmen were given to demonstration; Anacho and
- Traz merely took note of each other.
- "Best that we leave this place," said Traz. "And quickly."
- "I said to Anacho, I say to you: take the sky-car and go. There is no reason for
- you to risk another day in Sivishe."
- "And what about you?"
- "I must take my chances here."
- "The chances are very small, what with Woudiver and his vindictiveness."
- "I will control Woudiver."
- "An impossibility!" Anacho cried out. "Who can control such perversity, so much
- monstrous passion? He is beyond reason."
- Reith nodded somberly. "There is only one certain way, and it may be difficult."
- "How do you intend this miracle?" Anacho demanded.
- "I intend simply to take him at gunpoint, and bring him here. If he will not
- come, I will kill him. If he comes, he will be my captive, under constant guard.
- I can think of nothing better."
- Anacho grunted. "I would not object to guarding Big Yellow."
- "The time to act is now," said Traz. "Before he knows of the escape."
- "For you two, no!" Reith declared. "If I get killed ... too bad but unavoidable.
- It is a risk I have to take. Not so for you. Take the skycar and money, leave
- now while you are able!"
- "I remain," said Traz.
- "And I as well," said Anacho.
- Reith made a gesture of defeat. "Let's go after Woudiver."
- CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
- THE THREE STOOD in the dark court outside Woudiver's apartments, judging how
- best to open the postern. "We don't dare force the lock," muttered Anacho.
- "Woudiver undoubtedly guards himself with alarms and death-traps."
- "We'll have to go over the top," said Reith. "It shouldn't be too hard to reach
- the roof." He studied the wall, the cracked tile, a twisted old psilla. "Nothing
- to it." He pointed. "Up there, across to there-then there and over."
- Anacho shook his head gloomily. "I'm surprised to find you still so innocent.
- Why do you think the route appears so simple! Because Woudiver is convinced no
- one can climb? You'd find strings, traps and jangle-buttons every place you put
- your hand."
- Reith chewed his lip in mortification. "Well, then, how do you propose we get
- in?"
- "Not through here," said Anacho. "We must defeat Woudiver's craft with
- cleverness of our own."
- Traz made a sudden motion, and drew the other two back into the deep shadows of
- an area-way.
- Along the alley came a shuffle of footsteps. A tall thin shape limped past them
- and went to stand by the postern. Traz whispered: "Deine Zarre! He's in a bitter
- state."
- Deine Zarre stood motionless; he brought forth a tool and worked on the lock.
- The postern swung open; he walked through, his pace inexorable as doom. Reith
- sprang forward and held the gate ajar. Deine Zarre limped on unseeing. Traz and
- Anacho passed through the postern; Reith let the gate rest against the lock.
- They now stood in a paved loggia, with a dimly lit passage leading to the main
- bulk of the house. "For the moment," said Reith, "you two wait here; let me
- confront Woudiver alone."
- "You'll be in great danger," said Anacho. "It's obvious that you came for no
- good!"
- "Not necessarily!" said Reith. "He will be suspicious, certainly. But he can't
- know that I've seen you. If he sees the three of us he'll be on his guard.
- Alone, I have a better chance of outwitting him."
- "Very well," said Anacho. "We'll wait here, for a certain period, at any rate.
- Then we'll come in after you."
- "Give me fifteen minutes." Reith set off down the passage, which opened into a
- courtyard. Across, in front of a brassbound door, stood Deine Zarre, plying his
- tool. Light suddenly flooded the courtyard. Deine Zarre had apparently tripped
- an alarm.
- Into the courtyard stepped Artilo. "Zarre," he said.
- Deine Zarre turned about.
- "What do you do here?" Artilo asked in a gentle voice.
- "It is no concern of yours," said Deine Zarre tonelessly. "Leave me be."
- With an uncharacteristic flourish, Artilo brought forth a power-gun. "I have
- been so ordered. Prepare to die."
- Reith stepped quickly forward, but the motion of Deine Zarre's eyes gave warning
- to Artilo; he started to look about. With two long strides, Reith was on him. He
- struck a terrible blow at the base of Artilo's skull, and Artilo collapsed dead.
- Reith took up the power-gun, rolled Artilo to the side. Deine Zarre was already
- turning away, as if the circumstances held no interest.
- Reith said, "Wait!"
- Deine Zarre turned around once more. Reith came forward. Deine Zarre's gray eyes
- were astonishingly clear. Reith asked, "Why are you here?"
- "To kill Woudiver. He has savaged my children." Deine Zarre's voice was calm and
- expository. "They are dead, both dead, and gone from this sad world Tschai."
- Reith's voice sounded muffled and distant to his own ears.
- "Woudiver must be destroyed ... but not until the ship is complete."
- "He will never let you complete the ship."
- "That is why I am here."
- "What can you do?" Deine Zarre spoke contemptuously.
- "I intend to take him captive, and keep him until the ship is finished. Then you
- may kill him."
- "Very well," said Deine Zarre in a dull voice. "Why not? I will make him
- suffer."
- "As you please. You go ahead, I will come close behind, as before. When we find
- Woudiver, upbraid him, but offer no violence. We don't want to drive him to
- desperate action."
- Deine Zarre turned without a word. He worked open the door, to reveal a room
- furnished in scarlet and yellow. Deine Zarre entered, and after a quick look
- over his shoulder Reith followed. A dwarfish, dark-skinned servant in an
- enormous white turban stood startled.
- "Where is Aila Woudiver?" asked Deine Zarre in his most gentle voice.
- The servant became haughty. "He is importantly busy. He has great dealings. He
- cannot be disturbed."
- Seizing the servant by the scruff of the neck Reith half raised him off the
- ground, dislodging the turban. The servant keened in pain and wounded dignity.
- "What are you doing? Take your hands away or I will summon my master!"
- "Precisely what we want you to do," said Reith.
- The servant stood back, rubbing his neck and glaring at Reith. "Leave the house
- at once!"
- "Take us to Woudiver, if you want to avoid trouble!"
- The servant began to whine. "I may not do so. He'll have me whipped!"
- "Look yonder in the courtyard," said Deine Zarre. "You'll see Artilo's dead
- body. Do you wish to join him?"
- The servant began to shake and fell on his knees. Reith hoisted him erect.
- "Quick now! To Woudiver!"
- "You must tell him I was forced, on threat of my life!" cried the servant with
- chattering teeth. "Then you must swear-"
- The portiere at the far end of the room parted. The great face of Aila Woudiver
- peered through. "What is this disturbance?"
- Reith pushed the servant away. "Your man refused to summon you."
- Woudiver examined him with the cleverest and most suspicious gaze imaginable.
- "For good reason, I am occupied with important affairs."
- "None so important as mine," said Reith.
- "A moment," said Woudiver. He turned, spoke a word or two to his visitors,
- swaggered back into the scarlet and yellow salon. "You have the money?"
- "Yes, of course. Would I be here otherwise?"
- For another long moment Woudiver surveyed Reith. "Where is the money?"
- "In a safe place."
- Woudiver chewed at his pendulous lower lip. "Do not use that tone with me. To be
- candid, I suspect you of contriving an infamy, that which today allowed the
- escape of numerous criminals from the Glass Box."
- Reith chuckled. "Tell me, if you please, how I could be two places at once?"
- "If you were in a single place, that is enough to damn you. A man corresponding
- to your description lowered himself to the field only an hour before the event.
- He would not have done so had he not been sure of escape. It is noteworthy that
- the renegade Dirdirman seemed to be among those missing."
- Deine Zarre spoke: "The battarache came from your store; you will be held
- responsible if I should utter a word."
- Woudiver seemed to notice Deine Zarre for the first time. In simulated surprise
- he spoke. "What do you do here, old man? Better be off about your business."
- "I came to kill you," said Deine Zarre. "Reith asked that I wait."
- "Come along, Woudiver," said Reith. "The game is over." He displayed his weapon.
- "Quickly, or I'll burn some of your hide."
- Woudiver looked from one to the other without apparent concern. "Do the mice
- bare their teeth?"
- Reith, from long experience, knew enough to expect wrangling, obstinacy, and
- generally perverse behavior. In a resigned voice he said, "Come along,
- Woudiver."
- Woudiver smiled. "Two ridiculous little sub-men." He raised his voice a trifle.
- "Artilo!"
- "Artilo is dead," said Deine Zarre. He looked right and left in something like
- puzzlement. Woudiver watched him blandly. "You seek something?"
- Deine Zarre, ignoring Woudiver, muttered to Reith, "He is too easy, even for
- Woudiver. Take care."
- Reith said in a sharp voice, "On the count of five, I'll burn you."
- "First, a question," said Woudiver. "Where do we go?"
- Reith ignored him. "One ... two..."
- Woudiver sighed hugely. "You fail to amuse me."
- "... three..."
- "Somehow I must protect myself ..."
- "... four ..."
- ". . . so much is clear." Woudiver backed against the wall. The velvet canopy
- instantly slumped on Reith and Deine Zarre.
- Reith fired the gun but the folds struck down his arm, and the ray scarred only
- the black and white tiles of the floor.
- Woudiver's chuckle sounded muffled but rich and unctuous. The floor vibrated to
- his ominous tread. A vast weight suffocated Reith; Woudiver had flung himself
- down upon his body. Reith lay halfdazed. Woudiver's voice sounded close. "So the
- jackanapes thought to trouble Aila Woudiver? See how he is now!" The weight
- lifted. "And Deine Zarre, who courteously refrained from assassination. Well
- then, farewell, Deine Zarre. I am more decisive."
- A sound, a sad sodden gurgle and then a scraping of fingernails upon the tiles.
- "Adam Reith," said the voice. "You are a peculiar mad case. I am interested in
- your intentions. Drop the gun, put your arms to the front and do not move. Do
- you feel the weight on your neck? That is my foot. Quick then, arms forward, and
- no sudden motions. Hisziu, make ready."
- The folds were pulled back, away from Reith's extended arms. Nimble dark fingers
- bound his wrists with silk ribbon.
- The velvet was further drawn back. Reith, still somewhat dazed, looked up at the
- spraddle-legged bulk. Hisziu the servant skipped back and forth, around and
- under, like a puppy.
- Woudiver hoisted Reith erect. "Walk, if you will." He sent Reith stumbling with
- a shove.
- CHAPTER NINETEEN
- IN A DARK room, against a metal rack, stood Reith. His outstretched arms were
- taped to a transverse bar; his ankles were likewise secured. No light entered
- the room save the glimmer of a few stars through a narrow window. Hisziu the
- servant crouched four feet in front of him, with a light whip of braided silk,
- little more than a length of supple cord attached to a short handle. He seemed
- able to see in the dark and amused himself by snapping the tip of the whip, at
- unpredictable intervals, upon Reith's wrists, knees and chin. He spoke only
- once. "Your two friends have been taken. They are no better than you: worse,
- indeed. Woudiver works with them."
- Reith stood limp, his thoughts sluggish and dismal. Disaster was complete; he
- was conscious of nothing else. The malicious little snaps of Hisziu's whip
- barely brushed the edge of his awareness. His existence was coming to an end, to
- be no more remarked than the fall of a raindrop into one of Tschai's sullen
- oceans. Somewhere out of sight the blue moon rose, casting a sheen across the
- sky. The slow waxing and equally slow waning of moonlight told the passing of
- the night.
- Hisziu fell into a drowse and snored softly. Reith was indifferent. He raised
- his head, looked out of the window. The shimmer of moonlight was gone; a muddy
- color towards the east signaled the coming of Carina 4269. Hisziu awoke with a
- start, and flicked the whip petulantly at Reith's cheeks, raising instant
- bloodblisters. He left the chamber and a moment later returned with a mug of hot
- tea, which he sipped by the window. Reith croaked: "I'll pay you ten thousand
- sequins to cut me loose."
- Hisziu paid him no heed.
- Reith said, "And another ten thousand if you help me free my friends."
- The servant sipped the tea as if Reith had never spoken.
- The sky glowed dark gold; Carina 4269 had appeared. Steps sounded; Woudiver's
- bulk filled the doorway. A moment he stood quietly, assessing the situation,
- then, seizing the whip, he gestured Hisziu from the room.
- Woudiver seemed exalted, as if drugged or drunk. He slapped the whip against his
- thigh. "I can't find the money, Adam Reith. Where is it?"
- Reith attempted to speak in a casual voice. "What are your plans?"
- Woudiver raised his hairless eyebrows. "I have no plans. Events proceed; I exist
- as well as I may."
- "Why do you keep me tied here?"
- Aila Woudiver slapped the whip against his leg. "I have naturally notified my
- kinsmen of your apprehension."
- "The Dirdir?"
- "Of course." Woudiver gave his thigh a rap with the whip.
- Reith spoke with great earnestness. "The Dirdir are no kinsmen of yours! Dirdir
- and men are not even remotely connected; they come from different stars."
- Woudiver leaned indolently against the wall. "Where do you learn such idiocy?"
- Reith licked his lips, wondering where lay his best hope of succor. Woudiver was
- not a rational man; he was motivated by instinct and intuition. Reith tried to
- project utter certainty as he spoke. "Men originated on the planet Earth. The
- Dirdir know this as well as I. They prefer that Dirdirmen deceive themselves."
- Woudiver nodded thoughtfully. "You intend to seek out this 'Earth' with your
- spaceship?"
- "I don't need to seek it out. It lies two hundred light-years distant, in the
- constellation Clari."
- Woudiver pranced forward. With his yellow face a foot from Reith's he bellowed,
- "And what of the treasure you promised me? You misled, you deceived!"
- "No," said Reith. "I did not. I am an Earthman. I was shipwrecked here on
- Tschai. Help me back to Earth; you will receive whatever treasure you care to
- name."
- Woudiver backed slowly away. "You are one of the Yao redemptionist cult,
- whatever it calls itself."
- "No. I am telling the truth. Your best interest lies in helping me."
- Woudiver nodded sagely. "Perhaps this is the case. But first things first. You
- can easily demonstrate your good faith. Where is my money?"
- "Your money? It is not your money. It is my money."
- "A sterile distinction. Where is, shall we say, our money?"
- "You'll never see it unless you perform your obligations."
- "This is utter obstinacy!" stormed Woudiver. "You are captured, you are done,
- and your henchmen as well. The Dirdirman must return to the Glass Cage. The
- steppe-boy will be sold into slavery-unless you care to buy his life with the
- money."
- Reith sagged and became listless. Woudiver strutted back and forth across the
- room, darting glances at Reith. He came close and prodded Reith in the stomach
- with the whip. "Where is the money?"
- "I don't trust you," said Reith in a dreary voice. "You never keep your
- promises." With a great effort, he lifted himself erect and tried to speak in a
- calm voice. "If you want the money, let me go free. The spaceship is almost
- finished. You may come along to Earth."
- Woudiver's face was inscrutable. "And then?"
- "A space-yacht, a palace-whatever you want. You shall have it.
- "And how shall I return to Sivishe?" demanded Woudiver scornfully. "What of my
- affairs? It is plain that you are mad; why do you waste my time? Where is the
- money? The Dirdirman and the steppe-lad have declared with conviction that they
- do not know."
- "I don't know either. I gave it to Deine Zarre and told him to hide it. You
- killed him."
- Woudiver stifled a groan of dismay. "My money?"
- "Tell me," said Reith, "do you intend that I finish the spaceship?"
- "It has never been my intention!"
- "You defrauded me?"
- "Why not? You tried the same. The man that beats Aila Woudiver is cunning
- indeed."
- "No question as to that."
- Hisziu entered the room and, standing on tiptoe, whispered into Woudiver's ear.
- Woudiver stamped with rage. "So soon? They are early! I have not even started."
- He turned to Reith, his face seething like water in a boiling pot. "Quick then,
- the money, or I sell the lad. Quick!"
- "Let us go! Help us finish the spaceship. Then you shall have your money!"
- "You unreasonable ingrate!" hissed Woudiver. Footsteps sounded. "I am thwarted!"
- he groaned. "What a sad life is mine. Vermin!" Woudiver spat into Reith's face
- and beat him furiously with the whip.
- Into the room, proudly conducted by Hisziu, came a tall Dirdirman, the most
- splendid and strange Reith had yet seen: by all odds an Immaculate. Woudiver
- muttered to Hisziu from the side of his mouth; Reith's bonds were cut. The
- Dirdirman attached a chain to Reith's neck, clasped the other end to his belt.
- Without a word he walked away, shaking his fingers in fastidious disdain.
- Reith stumbled after.
- CHAPTER TWENTY
- BEFORE WOUDIVER'S HOUSE stood a white-enameled car. The Immaculate snapped
- Reith's chain to a ring at the rear. Reith watched in dreary wonder. The
- Immaculate stood almost seven feet tall, with artificial effulgences attached to
- wens at either side of his peaked scalp. His skin gleamed white as the enamel of
- the car; his head was totally hairless; his nose was a ridged beak. For all his
- strange appearance and undoubtedly altered sexuality, he was a man, ruminated
- Reith, derived from the same soil as himself. From the house, at a quick
- stumble, as if shoved, came Anacho and Traz. Chains encircled their necks;
- behind, jerking the loose ends, ran Hisziu. Two Dirdirman Elites followed. They
- shackled the chains to the back of the car. The Immaculate spoke a few sibilant
- words to Anacho and indicated a shelf running across the rear of the car.
- Without looking back, he stepped into the car, where the two Elites already sat.
- Anacho muttered, "Climb aboard, otherwise we'll be dragged."
- The three crawled up on the rear shelf, clutched the rings to which their neck
- chains were shackled. In such undignified fashion they departed Woudiver's
- residence. Woudiver's black saloon trundled fifty yards behind, with Woudiver's
- huge bulk crouched over the steering apparatus.
- "He wants recognition," said Anacho. "He has assisted at an important hunt; he
- wants a share of the status."
- "I made the mistake," said Reith in a thick voice, "of dealing with Woudiver as
- if he were a man. If I had treated him as an animal we might be better off."
- "We could hardly be worse."
- "Where are we going?"
- "To the Glass Box; where else?"
- "We are to have no hearing, no opportunity to speak for ourselves?"
- "Naturally not," said Anacho curtly. "You are sub-men. I am a renegade."
- The white car veered into a plaza and halted. The Dirdirmen alighted and stood
- stiffly apart, watching the sky. A plump, middle-aged man in a rich dark brown
- suit came forward: a person of status and evident vanity, with his hair
- elaborately curled and jeweled. He addressed the Dirdirmen in an easy manner;
- they replied after a moment's meaningful silence.
- "That is Erlius, Administrator of Sivishe," grunted Anacho. "He wants to be in
- at the kill too. It seems that we are important game."
- Attracted by the activity, the folk of Sivishe began to gather around the white
- car. They formed a wide respectful circle, eyeing the captives with macabre
- speculation, crouching back whenever the glance of a Dirdirman drifted in their
- direction.
- Woudiver remained in his car, at a distance of fifty yards or so, apparently
- arranging his thoughts. At last he alighted and seemed to concern himself with
- the matter indited on a fold of paper. Erlius, noticing, quickly turned his
- back.
- "Look at the two of them," growled Anacho. "Each hates the other: Woudiver
- ridicules Erlius for lacking Dirdirman blood; Erlius would like to see Woudiver
- in the Glass Box."
- "So would I," said Reith. "Speaking of the Glass Box, why are we waiting?"
- "For the leaders of the tsaugsh. You will see the Glass Box soon enough."
- Reith fretfully wrenched at the chain. The Dirdirmen turned him glances of
- admonition. "Ridiculous," muttered Reith. "There must be something we can do.
- What of the Dirdir traditions? What if I cried h'sai h'sai, h'sai, or whatever
- the call for arbitration?"
- "The call is dr'ssa dr'ssa, dr'ssa!"
- "What would happen if I called for arbitration?"
- "You would be no better than before. The arbitrator would find you guilty and,
- as before: the Glass Box."
- "And if I challenged the arbitration?"
- "You'd be forced to fight, and killed all the sooner."
- "And no one can be taken unless he is accused?"
- "In theory," said Anacho curtly, "that is the custom. Who do you plan to
- challenge? Woudiver? It will do no good. He has not accused you, but only
- cooperated with the hunt."
- "We will see."
- Traz pointed into the sky. "Here come the Dirdir."
- Anacho studied the descending sky-car. "The Thisz crest. If the Thisz are
- involved, we can expect brisk treatment indeed. They may even issue a
- proscription, that none but Thisz can hunt us."
- Traz strained against the chain shackle without avail. He gave a hiss of
- frustration and turned to watch the descending sky-car. The grayhooded crowd
- drew back from underneath; the sky-car landed not fifty feet from the white
- vehicle. Five Dirdir alighted: an Excellent and four of lower caste.
- The Immaculate Dirdirman stepped grandly forward, but the Dirdir ignored him
- with the same indifference he had shown Erhus.
- For a moment or two the Dirdir appraised Reith, Anacho and Traz. Then they made
- a signal to the Immaculate and uttered a few brief sounds.
- Erlius stepped forward to pay his respects, knees bent, head bobbing. Before he
- could speak Woudiver marched forward and thrust his vast yellow bulk in front of
- Erlius, who was forced to stumble aside.
- Woudiver spoke in a high-pitched voice: "Here, Thisz dignitaries, are the
- criminals sought by the hunt. I have participated to no small degree; let this
- be noted upon my scroll of honors!"
- The Dirdir gave him only cursory attention. Woudiver, apparently expecting no
- more, bowed his head, swung his arms in an elaborate flourish.
- The Immaculate approached the captives and unsnapped the chains. Reith snatched
- his chain free. The Immaculate looked up in slackjawed surprise, the false
- effulgences drooping to the side of his white face. Reith walked forward, heart
- pounding in his throat. He felt the pressure of every eye; with great effort he
- held his gait to a steady, deliberate step. Six feet in front of the Dirdir he
- halted, so close that he could smell their body odor. They regarded him without
- display of any kind.
- Reith raised his voice in order to speak clearly: "Dr'ssa! Dr'ssa! Dr'ssa!"
- The Dirdir made small movements of surprise.
- "Dr'ssa! Dr'ssa! Dr'ssa!" Reith called once more.
- The Excellent spoke in a nasal, oboe-sounding voice. "Why do you cry dr'ssa? You
- are a sub-man, incapable of discrimination."
- "I am a man, your superior. Hence I cry dr'ssa."
- Woudiver pushed forward with a self-important huffing and heaving. "Bah! He is
- mad!"
- The Dirdir seemed somewhat perplexed. Reith called out, "Who accuses me? Of what
- crime? Let him come forward and let the case be judged by an arbitrator."
- The Excellent spoke: "You invoke a traditional force stronger than contempt or
- disgust. You may not be denied. Who accuses this subman?"
- Woudiver spoke. "I accuse Adam Reith of blasphemy, of disputing the Doctrine of
- Double Genesis, of claiming status equal to the Dirdir. He has stated that
- Dirdirmen are not the pure line of the Second Yolk; he has called them a race of
- mutated freaks. He insists that men derive from a planet other than Sibol. This
- is not in accord with orthodox doctrine, and is repugnant. He is a
- mischief-maker, a liar, a provocator." Woudiver accented each of his accusations
- with a stab of his massive forefinger. "Such are my charges!" He favored the
- Dirdir with a companionable smirk, then turned and roared at the crowd. "Stand
- back! Do not press so close upon the dignitaries!"
- The Dirdir fluted to Reith. "You claim this accusation to be false?"
- Reith stood in perplexity. He faced a dilemma. To deny the charge was to endorse
- Dirdirman orthodoxy. He asked cautiously, "Essentially, I am accused of
- unorthodox views. Is this a crime?"
- "Certainly, if the arbitrator declares it so."
- "What if these views are accurate?"
- "Then you must hold the arbitrator to account. Ridiculous as such an eventuality
- may be, it is tradition and wields its own force."
- "Who is the arbitrator?"
- The polished bone countenance of the Excellent showed no change, nor did his
- voice. "In this instance I appoint the Immaculate yonder."
- The Immaculate stepped forward. In plangent mock-Dirdir tones he spoke: "I will
- be expeditious; the ordinary ceremonies are inappropriate." He spoke to Reith.
- "Do you deny the charges?"
- "I neither confirm nor deny them; they are ridiculous."
- "It is my opinion that your statement is evasive. It signifies guilt.
- Additionally your attitudes are disrespectful. You are guilty."
- "I refuse to accept your verdict," said Reith, "unless you can enforce it. I
- hold you to account."
- The Immaculate regarded Reith with scorn and revulsion. "You challenge me, an
- Immaculate?"
- "It seems to be the only way I can prove my innocence."
- The Immaculate looked at the Dirdir Excellent. "Am I so obligated?"
- "You are so obligated."
- The Immaculate measured Reith. "I will kill you with my hands and teeth as
- befits a Dirdirman."
- "As you please. First, remove this chain from my neck."
- "Remove the chain," said the Dirdir Excellent.
- The Immaculate said fretfully, "Vulgarity! I lose dignity performing before a
- gaggle of sub-men."
- "Do not complain," said the Excellent. "It is I, Captain of the Hunt, who loses
- a trophy. Continue; enforce your arbitration."
- The chain was removed. Reith stretched, relaxed, stretched, relaxed, hoping to
- restore tone to his muscles. He had hung all night by his wrists, his body felt
- heavy with fatigue. The Dirdirman stepped forward. Reith became a trifle
- light-headed.
- "What are the rules of combat?" asked Reith. "I do not wish to commit any fouls
- upon you."
- "There are no fouls," said the Immaculate. "We use hunt rules: you are the
- game!" He uttered a wild screech and launched himself upon Reith, in what seemed
- an ineffectual sprawl, until Reith touched the creature's white body and found
- it all tense muscle and gristle. Reith fended aside the rush, but was ripped by
- artificial talons. He attempted an armlock, but could not secure a leverage. He
- struck the Immaculate a blow under the ear, tried to hack the larynx and missed.
- The Immaculate stood back in annoyance. The spectators gasped in excitement. The
- Immaculate again launched himself upon Reith, who caught the long forearm and
- sent the Dirdirman staggering. Woudiver could not contain himself; he rushed out
- and struck Reith a buffet across the side of his head. Traz yelled in protest
- and whipped his chain across Woudiver's face. Woudiver screamed in agony and sat
- squashily upon the ground. Anacho wrapped his chain around Woudiver's neck and
- yanked it tight. The Elite Dirdirman leaped forward, snatched away the chain.
- Woudiver lay gasping, his face the color of mud.
- The Immaculate had taken advantage of Woudiver's attack to seize Reith and bear
- him to the ground. The wire-tense arms clasped Reith's body; sharp long teeth
- tore at his neck. Reith freed his arms. With all his force he clapped his cupped
- hands upon the white ears. The Immaculate emitted a strangled squeal and rolled
- his head in agony. Momentarily he went limp. Reith straddled the thin body, as
- if he rode a white eel. He began to work at the bald head. He tore away the
- false effulgences, teased the head this way and that, then gave a great twist.
- The Immaculate's head hung askew; his body thrashed and floundered, then lay
- still.
- Reith rose to his feet. He stood shaking and panting. "I am vindicated," he
- said.
- "The charges of the fat sub-man are invalid," intoned the Excellent. "He may
- therefore be held to account."
- Reith turned away. "Halt!" said the Excellent, its voice taking on a throaty
- vibrato. "Are there further charges?"
- A Dirdir of the Elite caste, effulgences rigid and sparkling with crystal
- coruscations, spoke: "Does the beast still call dr'ssa?"
- Reith swung around, half-intoxicated by fatigue and the aftermath of struggle.
- "I am a man, you are the beast."
- "Do you demand arbitration?" the Excellent asked. "If not, let us be away."
- Reith's heart sank. "What are the new charges?"
- The Elite stepped forward. "I charge that you and your henchmen trespassed upon
- the Dirdir Hunting Preserve and there treacherously slaughtered members of the
- Thisz Sept."
- "I deny the charge," said Reith in a hoarse voice.
- The Elite turned to the Excellent. "I request that you arbitrate. I request that
- you give me this beast and his henchmen and mark him exclusive quarry of the
- Thisz."
- "I accept the onus of arbitration," fluted the Excellent. To Reith, in a tone
- nasal and coarse: "You trespassed in the Carabas, this is true."
- "I entered the Carabas. No one ordered me not to do so."
- "The proscription is general knowledge. You furtively assaulted several Dirdir;
- this is true."
- "I assaulted no one who did not attack me first. If the Dirdir wish to act like
- wild beasts then they must suffer the consequences."
- From the crowd came a murmur of wonder and what seemed muted approval. The
- Excellent turned to glance around the plaza. Instantly the sound was muted.
- "It is Dirdir tradition to hunt. It is sub-man tradition and his essential
- character to serve as quarry."
- "I am no sub-man," said Reith. "I am a man and quarry to no one. If a wild beast
- attacks me I will kill it."
- The bone-white face of the Excellent showed no quiver of feeling. But the
- effulgences began to glow, and to become rigid. "The verdict must adhere to
- tradition," the creature intoned. "I find against the sub-man. This farrago is
- now at an end. You must be taken to the Glass Cage."
- "I challenge the arbitration!" cried Reith. Stepping forward, he buffeted the
- Excellent on the side of the head. The skin was cold and somewhat flexible, like
- tortoiseshell; Reith's hand stung from the blow. The Excellent's effulgences
- stood like hot wires; it vented a thin whistle. The crowd stood in unbelieving
- silence.
- The Excellent reached its great arms to the front in a clutching, ripping
- gesture. It vented a gurgling scream and poised to leap.
- "A moment," said Reith, stepping back. "What are the rules of combat?"
- "There are no rules. I kill as I choose."
- "And if I kill you, I am vindicated, and my friends as well?"
- "That is the case."
- "Let us fight with swords."
- "We will fight as we stand."
- "Very well," said Reith.
- The fight was no contest. The Excellent came forward, swift and massive as a
- tiger. Reith took two quick steps back; the Excellent launched itself. Reith
- seized the horny wrist, planted a foot in the torso; falling backwards he threw
- the creature in a sprawling somersault. It landed on its neck, to lie in a daze.
- Instantly Reith was upon it, locking the taloned arms. The Excellent writhed and
- thrashed; Reith banged its head against the pavement until the bone cracked and
- whitish-green ichor began to exude. He panted: "What of the arbitration? Was it
- right or wrong?"
- The Excellent keened-a weird wailing sound, expressing no emotion known to human
- experience. Reith banged down the harsh white head again and again. "What of the
- arbitration?" He slammed the head against the pavement. The Dirdir made a great
- effort to dislodge Reith and failed. "You are the victor. My arbitration is
- refuted."
- "And I, with my friends, are now held guiltless? We may pursue our activities
- without persecution?"
- "This is the case."
- Reith called to Anacho, "Can I trust it?"
- Anacho said, "Yes, it is tradition. If you want a trophy, pluck out his
- effulgences."
- "I want no trophy." Reith rose to his feet and stood swaying.
- The crowd regarded him with awe. Erlius turned on his heel and strode hastily
- away. Aila Woudiver backed slowly toward his black car.
- Reith pointed a finger: "Woudiver-your charges were false and you now must
- answer to me."
- Woudiver snatched out his power-gun: Traz leaped forward, hung on the vast
- wrist. The gun discharged, scorching Woudiver's leg. He bawled in agony and fell
- to the ground. Anacho took the gun; Reith tied one of the chains around
- Woudiver's neck and gave it a harsh tug. "Come, Woudiver." He led the way to the
- black car, through the hastily retreating onlookers.
- Woudiver hulked himself within and lay groaning in a heap. Anacho started the
- vehicle and they departed the oval plaza.
- CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE
- THEY DROVE TO the shed. The technicians, in the absence of Deine Zarre, had not
- reported for work. The shed felt dead and abandoned; the space-boat, which had
- seemed on the verge of coming alive, lay desolate on its chocks.
- The three marshaled Woudiver within, as they might lead a cantankerous bull, and
- tied him between two posts, Woudiver making a continual moaning complaint.
- Reith watched him a moment. Woudiver was not yet expendable. Certainly he was
- still dangerous. For all his display and expostulation, he watched Reith with a
- clever and hard gaze.
- "Woudiver," said Reith, "you have worked great harm upon me and my friends."
- Woudiver's great body became racked with sobbing; he seemed a monstrous and ugly
- baby. "You plan to torment me, and kill me."
- "The thought has presented itself," Reith admitted. "But I have more urgent
- desires. To finish the ship and return to Earth with news of this hellish planet
- I would even forgo the pleasure of your death."
- "In that case," said Woudiver, suddenly businesslike, "all is as before. Pay
- over the money, and we will proceed."
- Reith's jaw hung in disbelief. He laughed in admiration for Woudiver's wonderful
- insouciance.
- Anacho and Traz were less amused. Anacho poked the great belly with a stick.
- "What of last night?" he demanded in a suave voice. "Do you recall your conduct?
- What of the electric probes, and the wicked harness?"
- "What of Deine Zarre, the two children?" spoke Traz.
- Woudiver looked appealingly toward Reith. "Whose words carry weight?"
- Reith chose his words carefully. "All of us have cause for resentment. You would
- be a fool to expect ease and conviviality."
- "Indeed, he shall suffer," said Traz through gritted teeth.
- "You shall live," said Reith, "but only to serve our interests. I don't care a
- bice for your life unless you make yourself useful."
- Again in Woudiver's eyes Reith discerned a cold and crafty glint. "So it shall
- be," said Woudiver.
- "I want you to hire a competent replacement for Deine Zarre, at once."
- "Expensive, expensive," said Woudiver. "We were lucky in Zarre."
- "The responsibility for his absence is yours," said Reith.
- "No one goes through life without making mistakes," Woudiver admitted. "This was
- one of mine. But I know just the man. He will come high, I warn you."
- "Money is no object," said Reith. "We want the best. Secondly, I want you to
- summon the technicians back to work. All by telephone, of course."
- "No difficulties whatever," declared Woudiver heartily. "The work will proceed
- with dispatch."
- "You must arrange immediate delivery of the materials and supplies yet needed.
- And you must pay all costs and salaries incurred henceforth."
- "What?" roared Woudiver.
- "Further," said Reith, "you will remain tied between those posts. For your
- sustenance you must pay a thousand-or better, two thousand sequins each day."
- "What!" cried Woudiver. "Do you think to cheat and bewilder poor Woudiver?"
- "Do you agree to the conditions?" Reith asked. "If not I will ask Anacho and
- Traz to kill you, and both of them bear you grudges."
- Woudiver drew himself to his full height. "I agree," he said in a stately voice.
- "And now, since it seems that I must sponsor your hallucinations and suffer the
- backbreaking expense in the bargain, let us instantly get to work. The moment I
- see you vanish into space will be a happy one, I assure you! Now then, release
- these chains so that I may go to the telephone."
- "Stay where you are," said Reith. "We will bring the telephone to you. And now,
- where is your money!"
- "You can't be serious," Woudiver exclaimed.
- THE PHUME
- CHAPTER ONE
- IN THE WAREHOUSE at the edge of the Sivishe salt flats, Aila Woudiver sat
- perched on a stool. A chain connected the iron collar around his neck to a high
- cable; he could walk from his table to the closet against the wall where he
- slept, the chain sliding behind him.
- Aila Woudiver was a prisoner on his own premises, insult added to injury, which
- by all accounts should have provoked him to spasms of tooth-chattering fury. But
- he sat placidly on the stool, great buttocks sagging to either side like
- saddlebags, wearing an absurd smile of saintly forbearance.
- Beside the spaceship which occupied the greater part of the warehouse Adam Reith
- stood watching. Woudiver's abnegation was more unsettling than rage. Reith hoped
- that whatever schemes Woudiver was hatching would not mature too quickly. The
- spaceship was nearly operative; in a week, more or less, Reith hoped to depart
- old Tschai.
- Woudiver occupied himself with tat-work, now and then holding it up to admire
- the pattern-the very essence of patient affability. Traz, coming into the
- warehouse, scowled toward Woudiver and asserted the philosophy of the Emblem
- nomads, his forebears: "Kill him this moment; kill him and have an end!"
- Reith gave an equivocal grunt. "He's chained by the neck; he does us no harm."
- "He'll find a means. Have you forgotten his tricks?"
- "I can't kill him in cold blood."
- Traz gave a croak of disgust and stamped from the warehouse. Anacho the
- Dirdirman declared, "For once I agree with the young steppe-runner: kill the
- great beast!"
- Woudiver, divining the substance of the conversation, displayed his gentle
- smile. He had lost weight, so Reith noticed. The once-bloated cheeks hung in
- wattles; the great upper lip drooped like a beak over the pointed little chin.
- "See him smirk!" hissed Anacho. "If he could he'd boil us in nerve-fire! Kill
- him now!"
- Reith made another sound of moderation. "In a week we'll be gone. What can he
- do, chained and helpless?"
- "He is Woudiver!"
- "Even so, we can't slaughter him like an animal."
- Anacho threw up his hands and followed Traz outside the warehouse. Reith went
- into the ship and for a few minutes watched the technicians. They worked at the
- exquisitely delicate job of balancing the power pumps. Reith could offer no
- assistance. Dirdir technology, like the Dirdir psyche, was beyond his
- comprehension. Both derived from intuitive certainties, or so he suspected;
- there was little evidence of purposeful rationality in any aspect of Dirdir
- existence.
- Long shafts of brown light slanted through the high windows; the time was almost
- sunset. Woudiver thoughtfully put aside his fancy-work. He gave Reith a
- companionable nod and went off to his little room against the wall, the chain
- dragging behind him in a rattling halfcatenary.
- The technicians emerged from the ship as did Fio Haro the master mechanic. All
- went off to their supper. Reith touched the unlovely hull, pressing his hands
- against the steel, as if he could not credit its reality. A week-then space and
- return to Earth! The prospect seemed a dream; Earth had become the world remote
- and bizarre.
- Reith went to the larder for a chunk of black sausage, which he took to the
- doorway. Carina 4269, low in the sky, bathed the salt flats in ale colored
- light, projecting long shadows behind every tussock.
- The two black figures which of late had appeared at sunset were nowhere to be
- seen.
- The view held a certain mournful beauty. To the north the city of Sivishe was a
- crumble of old masonry tinted tawny by the slanting sunlight. West across Ajzan
- Sound stood the spires of the Dirdir city Hei and, looming above all, the Glass
- Box.
- Reith went to join Traz and Anacho. They sat on a bench tossing pebbles into a
- puddle: Traz, blunted-featured, taciturn, solid of bone and muscle, Anacho, thin
- as an eel, six inches taller than Reith, pallid of skin, long and keen of
- feature, as loquacious as Traz was terse. Traz disapproved of Anacho's airs;
- Anacho considered Traz crass and undiscriminating. Occasionally, however, they
- agreed-as now, on the need to destroy Aila Woudiver. Reith, for his own part,
- felt more concern for the Dirdir. From their spires they could almost look
- through the portals of the warehouse at the work within. The Dirdir inactivity
- seemed as unnatural as Aila Woudiver's smile, and to Reith implied a dreadful
- stealth.
- "Why don't they do something?" Reith complained, gnawing at the black sausage.
- "They must know we're here."
- "Impossible to predict Dirdir conduct," Anacho replied. "They have lost interest
- in you. What are men to them but vermin? They prefer to chivy the Pnume from
- their burrows. You are no longer the subject of tsaugsh: this is my
- supposition."
- Reith was not wholly reassured. "What of the Phung or Pnume, whatever they are,
- that come to watch us? They aren't there for their health." He referred to the
- two black shapes which had been appearing of late on the salt flats. Always they
- came to stand against the sunset, gaunt figures wearing black cloaks and
- wide-brimmed black hats.
- "Phung go alone; they are not Phung," said Traz. "Pnume never appear by
- daylight."
- "And never so close to Hei, for fear of the Dirdir," Anacho said. "So, then-they
- are Pnumekin, or more likely Gzhindra."
- On the occasion of their first appearance the creatures stood gazing toward the
- warehouse until Carina 4269 fell behind the palisades; then they vanished into
- the gloom. Their interest seemed more than casual; Reith was disturbed by the
- surveillance but could conceive of no remedy for it.
- The next day was blurred by mist and drizzle; the salt flats remained vacant. On
- the day following, the sun shone once more, and at sundown the dark shapes came
- to stare toward the shed, again afflicting Reith with disquietude. Surveillance
- portended unpleasant events: this on Tschai was an axiom of existence.
- Carina 4269 hung low. "If they're coming," said Anacho, "now is the time."
- Reith searched the salt flats through his scanscope.* "There's nothing out there
- but tussocks and swamp-bush. Not even a lizard."
- Traz pointed over his shoulder. "There they are."
- "Hmrnf," said Reith. "I just looked there!" He raised the magnification of the
- scanscope until the jump of his pulse caused the figures to jerk and bounce. The
- faces, back-lit, could not be distinguished. "They have hands," said Reith.
- "They are Pnumekin."
- Anacho took the instrument. After a moment he said: "They are Gzhindra: Pnumekin
- expelled from the tunnels. To trade with the Pnume you must deal through the
- Gzhindra; the Pnume will never dicker for themselves."
- "Why should they come here? We want no dealings with the Pnume."
- "But they want dealings with us, or so it seems."
- "Perhaps they're waiting for Woudiver to appear," Traz suggested.
- "At sunset and sunset alone?"
- To Traz came a sudden thought. He moved away from the warehouse and somewhat
- past Woudiver's old office, an eccentric little shack of broken brick and
- flints, and looked back toward the warehouse. He walked a hundred yards further,
- out upon the salt flats, and again looked back. He gestured to Reith and Anacho,
- who went out to join him. "Observe the warehouse," said Traz. "You'll now see
- who deals with the Gzhindra."
- From the black timber wall a glint of golden light jumped and flickered.
- "Behind that light," said Traz, "is Aila Woudiver's room."
- "The fat yellow shulk is signaling!" declared Anacho in a fervent whisper.
- Reith drew a deep breath and controlled his fury: foolish to expect anything
- else from Woudiver, who lived with intrigue as a fish lives with water. In a
- measured voice he spoke to Anacho: "Can you read the signals?"
- "Yes; ordinary stop-and-go code. '... Suitable ... compensation ... for ...
- services ... time ... is ... now ... at ... hand..."
- The flickering light vanished. "That's all."
- "He's seen us through the crack," Reith muttered.
- "Or he has no more light," said Traz, for Carina 4269 had dropped behind the
- palisades. Looking across the salt flats, Reith found that the Gzhindra had gone
- as mysteriously as they had come.
- "We had better go talk to Woudiver," said Reith.
- "He'll tell anything but the truth," said Anacho.
- "I expect as much," said Reith. "We may be informed by what he doesn't tell us."
- They went into the shed. Woudiver, once again busy with his tat-work, showed the
- three his affable smile. "It must be close to suppertime."
- "Not for you," said Reith.
- "What?" exclaimed Woudiver. "No food? Come now; let us not carry our little joke
- too far."
- "Why do you signal the Gzhindra?"
- Beyond a lifting of the hairless eyebrows, Woudiver evinced neither surprise nor
- guilt. "A business affair. I occasionally deal with the under-folk."
- "What sort of dealings?"
- "This and that, one thing and another. Tonight I apologized for failing to meet
- certain commitments. Do you begrudge me my good reputation?"
- "What commitments did you fail to meet?"
- "Come now," chided Woudiver. "You must allow my few little secrets."
- "I allow you nothing," said Reith. "I'm well aware that you plot mischief."
- "Bah! What a canard! How should I plot anything trussed up by a chain? I assure
- you that I do not regard my present condition as dignified."
- "If anything goes wrong," said Reith, "you'll be hoisted six feet off the ground
- by the same chain. You'll have no dignity whatever."
- Woudiver made a gesture of waggish distaste and looked off across the room.
- "Excellent progress seems to have been made."
- "No thanks to you."
- "Ah! You minimize my aid! Who provided the hull, at great pains and small
- profit? Who arranged and organized, who supplied invaluable acumen?"
- "The same man that took all our money and betrayed us into the Glass Box," said
- Reith. He went to sit across the room. Traz and Anacho joined him. The three
- watched Woudiver, now sulking in the absence of his supper.
- "We should kill him," Traz said flatly. "He plans evil for all of us."
- "I don't doubt that," said Reith, "but why should he deal with the Pnume? The
- Dirdir would seem the parties most concerned. They know I'm an Earthman; they
- may or may not be aware of the spaceship."
- "If they know they don't care," said Anacho. "They have no interest in other
- folk. The Pnume: another matter. They would know everything, and they are most
- curious regarding the Dirdir. The Dirdir in turn discover the Pnume tunnels and
- flood them with gas."
- Woudiver called out: "You have forgotten my supper."
- "I've forgotten nothing," said Reith.
- "Well, then, bring forth my food. Tonight I wish a whiteroot salad, a stew of
- lentils, gargan-flesh and slue, a plate of good black cheese, and my usual
- wine."
- Traz gave a bark of scornful laughter. Reith inquired, "Why should we coddle
- your gut when you plot against us? Order your meals from the Gzhindra."
- Woudiver's face sagged; he beat his hands upon his knees. "So now they torture
- poor Aila Woudiver, who was only constant to his faith! What a miserable destiny
- to live and suffer on this terrible planet!"
- Reith turned away in disgust. By birth half-Dirdirman, Woudiver vigorously
- affirmed the Doctrine of Bifold Genesis, which traced the origin of Dirdir and
- Dirdirman to twin cells in a Primeval Egg on the planet Sibol. From such a
- viewpoint Reith must seem an irresponsible iconoclast, to be thwarted at all
- costs.
- On the other hand, Woudiver's crimes could not all be ascribed to doctrinal
- ardor. Recalling certain instances of lechery and self-indulgence, Reith's
- twinges of pity disappeared.
- For five minutes longer Woudiver groaned and complained, and then became
- suddenly quiet. For a period he watched Reith and his companions. He spoke and
- Reith thought to detect a secret glee. "Your project approaches
- completion-thanks to Aila Woudiver, his craft, and his poor store of sequins,
- unfeelingly sequestered."
- "I agree that the project approaches completion," said Reith.
- "When do you propose to depart Tschai?"
- "As soon as possible."
- "Remarkable!" declared Woudiver with unctuous fervor. Reith thought that his
- eyes sparkled with amusement. "But then, you are a remarkable man." Woudiver's
- voice took on a sudden resonance, as if he could no longer restrain his inner
- mirth. "Still, on occasion it is better to be modest and ordinary! What do you
- think of that?"
- "I don't know what you're talking about."
- "True," said Woudiver. "That is correct."
- "Since you feel disposed for conversation," said Reith, "why not tell me
- something about the Gzhindra."
- "What is there to tell? They are sad creatures, doomed to trudge the surface,
- though they stand in fear of the open. Have you ever wondered why Pnume,
- Pnumekin, Phung and Gzhindra all wear hats with broad brims?"
- "I suppose that it is their habit of dress."
- "True. But the deeper reason is: the brims hide the sky."
- "What impels these particular Gzhindra out under the sky which oppresses them?"
- "Like all men," said Woudiver, somewhat pompously, "they hope, they yearn."
- "In what precise regard?"
- "In any absolute or ultimate sense," said Woudiver, "I am of course ignorant;
- all men are mysteries. Even you perplex me, Adam Reith! You harry me with
- capricious cruelty; you pour my money into an insane scheme; you ignore every
- protest, every plea of moderation! Why? I ask myself, why? Why? If it were not
- all so preposterous, I could indeed believe you a man of another world."
- "You still haven't told me what the Gzhindra want," said Reith.
- With vast dignity Woudiver rose to his feet; the chain from the iron collar
- swung and jangled. "You had best take up this matter with the Gzhindra
- themselves."
- He went to his table and after a final cryptic glance toward Reith took up his
- tatting.
- CHAPTER TWO
- REITH TWITCHED AND trembled in a nightmare. He dreamt that he lay on his usual
- couch in Woudiver's old office. The room was pervaded by a curious yellow-green
- glow. Woudiver stood across the room chatting with a pair of motionless men in
- black capes and broad-brimmed black hats. Reith strained to move, but his
- muscles were limp. The yellow-green light waxed and waned; Woudiver was now
- frosted with an uncanny silver-blue incandescence. The typical nightmare of
- helplessness and futility, thought Reith. He made desperate efforts to awake but
- only started a clammy sweat.
- Woudiver and the Gzhindra gazed down at him. Woudiver surprisingly wore his iron
- collar, but the chain had been broken or melted a foot from his neck. He seemed
- complacent and unconcerned: the Woudiver of old. The Gzhindra showed no
- expression other than intentness. Their features were long, narrow and very
- regular; their skin, pallid ivory, shone with the luster of silk. One carried a
- folded cloth; the other stood with hands behind his back.
- Woudiver suddenly loomed enormous. He called out: "Adam Reith, Adam Reith: where
- is your home?"
- Reith struggled against his impotence. A weird and desolate dream, one that he
- would long remember. "The planet Earth," he croaked. "The planet Earth."
- Woudiver's face expanded and contracted. "Are other Earthmen on Tschai?"
- "Yes."
- The Gzhindra jerked forward; Woudiver called in a horn-like voice: "Where? Where
- are the Earthmen?"
- "All men are Earthmen."
- Woudiver stood back, mouth drooping in saturnine disgust. "You were born on the
- planet Earth."
- "Yes."
- Woudiver floated back in triumph. He gestured largely to the Gzhindra. "A
- rarity, a nonesuch!"
- "We will take him." The Gzhindra unfolded the cloth, which Reith, to his
- helpless horror, saw to be a sack. Without ceremony the Gzhindra pulled it up
- over his legs, tucked him within until only his head protruded. Then, with
- astonishing ease, one of the Gzhindra threw the sack over his back, while the
- other tossed a pouch to Woudiver.
- The dream began to fade; the yellow-green light became spotty and blurred. The
- door flew suddenly open, to reveal Traz. Woudiver jumped back in horror; Traz
- raised his catapult and fired into Woudiver's face. An astonishing gush of blood
- spewed forth-green blood, and wherever droplets fell they glistened yellow ...
- The dream went dim; Reith slept.
- Reith awoke in a state of extreme discomfort. His legs were cramped; a vile
- arsenical reek pervaded his head. He sensed pressure and motion; groping, he
- felt coarse cloth. Dismal knowledge came upon him; the dream was real; he indeed
- rode in a sack. Ah, the resourceful Woudiver! Reith became weak with emotion.
- Woudiver had negotiated with the Gzhindra; he had arranged that Reith be
- drugged, probably through a seepage of narcotic gas. The Gzhindra were now
- carrying him off to unknown places, for unknown purposes.
- For a period Reith sagged in the sack numb and sick. Woudiver, even while
- chained by the neck, had worked his mischief! Reith collected the final
- fragments of his dream. He had seen Woudiver with his face split apart, pumping
- green blood. Woudiver had paid for his trick.
- Reith found it hard to think. The sack swung and he felt a rhythmic thud;
- apparently the sack was being carried on a pole. By sheer luck he wore his
- clothes; the night previously he had flung himself down on his cot fully
- dressed. Was it possible that he still carried his knife? His pouch was gone;
- the pocket of his jacket seemed to be empty, and he dared not grope lest he
- signal the fact of his consciousness to the Gzhindra.
- He pressed his face close to the sack hoping to see through the coarse weave,
- unsuccessfully. The time was yet night; he thought that they traveled uneven
- terrain.
- An indeterminate time went by, with Reith as helpless as a baby in the womb. How
- many strange events the nights of old Tschai had known! And now another, with
- himself a participant. He felt ashamed and demeaned; he quivered with rage. If
- he could get his hands on his captors, what a vengeance he would take!
- The Gzhindra halted, and for a moment stood perfectly quiet. Then the sack was
- lowered to the ground. Reith listened but heard no voices, no whispers, no
- footsteps. It seemed as if he were alone. He reached to his pocket, hoping to
- find a knife, a tool, an edge. He found nothing. He tested the fabric with his
- fingernails: the wave was coarse and harsh, and would not rip.
- An intimation told him that the Gzhindra had returned. He lay quiet. The
- Gzhindra stood nearby, and he thought that he heard whispering.
- The sack moved; it was lifted and carried. Reith began to sweat. Something was
- about to happen.
- The sack swung. He dangled from a rope. He felt the sensation of descent: down,
- down, down, how far he could not estimate. He halted with a jerk, to swing
- slowly back and forth. From high above came the reverberation of a gong: a low
- melancholy sound.
- Reith kicked and pushed. He became frantic, victim to a claustrophobic spasm. He
- panted and sweated and could hardly catch his breath; this was how it felt to go
- crazy. Sobbing and hissing, he took command of himself. He searched his jacket,
- to no avail: no metal, no cutting edge. He clenched his mind, forced himself to
- think. The gong was a signal; someone or something had been summoned. He groped
- around the sack, hoping to find a break. No success. He needed metal, sharpness,
- a blade, an edge! From head to toe he took stock. His belt! With vast difficulty
- he pulled it loose, and used the sharp pin on the buckle to score the fabric. He
- achieved a tear; thrusting and straining he ripped the material and finally
- thrust forth his head and shoulders. Never in his life had he known such
- exultation! If he died within the moment, at least he had defeated the sack!
- Conceivably he might score other victories. He looked along a rude, rough cavern
- dimly illuminated by a few blue-white buttons of light. The floor almost brushed
- the bottom of the bag; Reith recalled the descent and final jerk with a qualm.
- He heaved himself out of the sack, to stand trembling with cramp and fatigue.
- Listening to dead underground silence, he thought to hear a far sound.
- Something, someone, was astir.
- Above him the cavern rose in a chimney, the rope merging with the darkness.
- Somewhere up there must be an opening into the outer world-but how far? In the
- bag he had swung with a cycle of ten or twelve seconds, which by rough
- calculation gave a figure of considerably more than a hundred feet.
- Reith looked down the cavern and listened. Someone would be coming in answer to
- the gong. He looked up the rope. At the top was the outer world. He took hold of
- the rope, started to climb. Up he went, into the dark, heaving and clinging: up,
- up, up. The sack and the cavern became part of a lost world; he was enveloped in
- darkness.
- His hands burned; his shoulders grew warm and weak; then he reached the top of
- the rope. Groping, fumbling, he discovered that it passed through a slot in a
- metal plate, which rested upon a pair of heavy metal beams. The plate seemed a
- kind of trapdoor, which clearly could not be opened while his weight hung on the
- rope ... His strength was failing. He wrapped the rope around his legs and
- reached out with an arm. To one side he felt a metal shelf; it was the web of
- the beam supporting the trapdoor, a foot or more wide. He rested a moment-time
- was growing short, then lurched out with his leg, and tried to heave himself
- across. For a sickening instant he felt himself falling. He strained
- desperately; with his heart thumping he dragged himself across to the web of the
- beam. Here, sick and miserable, he lay panting.
- A minute passed, hardly long enough for the rope to become still. Below four
- bobbing lights approached. Reith balanced himself and heaved up at the metal
- plate. It was solid and heavy; he might as well have been shoving at the
- mountainside. Once again! He thrust with all his might, without the slightest
- effect. The lights were below, carried by four dark shapes. Reith pressed back
- against the vertical section of the beam.
- The four below moved slowly in eerie silence, like creatures underwater. They
- went to examine the sack and found it empty. Reith could hear whispers and
- mutters. They looked all around, the lights blinking and flickering. By some
- kind of mutual impulse all stared up. Reith pressed himself flat against the
- metal and hid the pallid blotch of his face. The glow of the lights played past
- him, upon the trapdoor, which he saw to be locked by four twist-latches
- controlled from above. The lights, veering away, searched the sides of the
- shaft. The folk below stood in puzzled consultation. After a final inspection of
- the cavern, a last flicker of light up the shaft, they returned the way they had
- come, flashing their lights from side to side.
- Reith huddled high in the dark, wondering whether he might not still be
- dreaming. But the sad desolate circumstances were real enough. He was trapped.
- He could not raise the door above him; it might not be opened again for weeks.
- Unthinkable to crouch bat-like, waiting. For better or worse, Reith made up his
- mind. He looked down the passage; the lights, bobbing will-o'-the-wisps, were
- already far and dim. He slid down the rope and set off in pursuit, running with
- long gliding steps. He had a single notion, a desperate hope rather than a plan:
- to isolate one of the dark figures and somehow force him to lead the way to the
- surface. Above burned the first of the dim blue buttons, casting a glow dimmer
- than moonlight, but sufficient to show a way winding between rock buttresses
- advancing alternately from either side.
- Reith presently caught up with the four, who moved slowly, investigating the
- passage to either side in a hesitant, perplexed fashion. Reith began to feel an
- insane exhilaration, as if he were already dead and invulnerable. He thought to
- pick up a pebble and toss it at the dark figures ... Hysteria! The notion
- instantly sobered him. If he wanted to survive he must take a grip on himself.
- The four moved with uneasy deliberation, whispering and muttering among
- themselves. Dodging from one pocket of shadow to another Reith approached as
- closely as he dared, to be ready in case one should detach himself. Except for a
- fleeting glimpse in the dungeons at Pera, he had never seen a Pnume. These, from
- what Reith could observe of their posture and gait, seemed human.
- The passage opened into a cavern with almost purposeful roughnessor perhaps the
- rudeness concealed a delicacy beyond Reith's understanding, as in the case of a
- shoulder of quartz thrusting forth to display a coruscation of pyrite crystals.
- The area seemed to be a junction, a node, a place of importance, with three
- other passages leading away. An area at the center had been floored with smooth
- stone slabs; light somewhat stronger than that in the cavern issued from
- luminous grains in the overhead rock.
- A fifth individual stood to the side; like the others he wore a black cloak and
- wide-brimmed black hat. Reith, flat as a cockroach, slid forward into a pocket
- of dense shadow close by the chamber. The fifth individual was also a Pnumekin;
- Reith could see his long visage, dismal, white and bleak. For an interval he
- took no notice of the first four and they appeared not to see him, a curious
- ritual of mutual disregard which aroused Reith's interest.
- Gradually the five seemed to wander together, none looking directly at the
- others.
- There came a hushed murmur of voices. Reith strained to listen. They spoke the
- universal tongue of Tschai; so much he could understand from the intonations.
- The four reported the circumstances attendant upon finding the empty sack; the
- fifth, an official or monitor, made the smallest possible indication of dismay.
- It seemed that restraint, unobtrusiveness, delicacy of allusion were key aspects
- of sub-Tschai existence.
- They wandered across the chamber and into the cavern close by Reith, who pressed
- himself against the wall. The group halted not ten feet distant, and Reith could
- now hear the conversation.
- One spoke in a careful, even voice: "... Delivery. This is not known; nothing
- was found."
- Another said: "The passage was empty. If defalcation occurred before the bag was
- lowered, here would be an explanation."
- "Imprecision," said the monitor. "The bag would not then have been lowered."
- "Imprecision exists in either case. The passage was clear and empty."
- "He must still be there," said the tunnel monitor; "he cannot be anywhere else."
- "Unless a secret adit enters the passage, of which he knows."
- The monitor stood straight, arms at his sides. "The presence of such an adit is
- not known to me. The explanation is remotely conceivable. You must make a new
- and absolutely thorough search; I will inquire as to the possibility of such a
- secret adit."
- The passage-tenders returned slowly along the cavern, lights flickering up and
- down, back and forth. The monitor stood looking after them. Reith tensed
- himself: a critical moment. Turning in one direction the monitor must certainly
- see Reith, not six feet away. If he turned in the other direction Reith was
- temporarily secure ... Reith considered an attack upon the man. But the four
- were still close at hand; a cry, a sound, a scuffle would attract their
- attention. Reith contained himself.
- The monitor turned away from Reith. Walking softly he crossed the chamber and
- entered one of the side passages. Reith followed, running on the balls of his
- feet. He peered down the passage. Each wall was a ledge of pyroxilite.
- Remarkable crystals thrust forth from either side, some a foot in diameter,
- faceted like brilliants: russet-brown, black-brown, greenish-black. They had
- been artfully cleaned and polished, to show to best advantage: enormous effort
- had been spent in this corridor. The crystals offered convenient objects behind
- which to take concealment; Reith set off at a soundless lope after the gliding
- Pnumekin, hoping to take him unawares and put him in fear of his life: a
- primitive and desperate plan, but Reith could think of nothing better ... The
- Pnumekin halted, and Reith jumped nervously behind a shoulder of glossy olive
- crystals. The Pnumekin, after a glance up and down the passage, reached to the
- wall, pushed at a small crystal, touched another. A segment of the wall fell
- aside. The Pnumekin stepped through; the portal closed. The passage was empty.
- Reith was now angry with himself. Why had he paused? When the Pnumekin had
- halted Reith should have been upon him.
- He looked up and down the corridor. No one in sight. He went on at a fast trot
- and after a hundred yards came abruptly upon the rim of a great shaft. Far below
- gleamed dim yellow lights and a motion of bulky objects which Reith could not
- identify.
- Reith returned to the door through which the Pnumekin had disappeared. He
- paused, his mind racing with angry schemes. For a desperate wretch like himself
- any course of action was risky, but the sure way to disaster was inaction. Reith
- reached out and worked at the rock as he had seen the Pnumekin do. The door fell
- aside. Reith drew back, ready for anything. He looked into a chamber thirty feet
- in diameter: a conference room, or so Reith deduced from the round central
- table, the benches, the shelves and cabinets.
- He stepped through the opening and the door closed behind him. He looked around
- the chamber. Light-grains powdered the ceiling; the walls had been meticulously
- chipped and ground to enhance the crystalline structure of the rock. To the
- right an arched corridor, plastered in white, led away; to the left were
- shelves, cabinets, a closet.
- From the corridor came a dull staccato knocking, a sound which carried a message
- of urgency. Reith, already as taut as a burglar, looked around in a panic for a
- place to hide. He ran to the closet, slid the door ajar, pushed aside the black
- cloaks hanging from hooks, and squeezed within. The cloaks and the black hats at
- the back gave off a musty odor. Reith's stomach gave a jerk. He huddled back and
- slid the door shut. Putting his eye to a crack, he looked out into the room.
- Time stood still. Reith's stomach began to jerk with tension. The Pnumekin
- monitor returned to the chamber, to stand as if in deep thought. The queer
- wide-brimmed hat shadowed his austere features, which, Reith noted, were almost
- classically regular. Reith thought of the other man-composites of Tschai, all
- more or less mutated toward their host-race: the Dirdirmen-sinister absurdities;
- the stupid and brutish Chaschmen; the venal overcivilized Wankhmen. The
- essential humanity of all these, except perhaps in the case of the Dirdirman
- Immaculates, remained intact. The Pnumekin, on the other hand, had undergone no
- perceptible physical evolvement, but their psyches had altered; they seemed as
- remote as specters.
- The creature across the room-Reith could not think of him as a man, stood quiet
- without a twitch to his features, just inconveniently too distant for a lurch
- and a lunge out of the closet.
- Reith began to feel cramped. He shifted his position, producing a small sound.
- In a cold sweat he pressed his eye to the crack. The Pnumekin stood absorbed in
- reverie. Reith willed him to approach, urged him closer, closer, closer ... A
- thought came to disturb him: suppose the creature refused to heed a threat
- against his life? Perhaps it lacked the ability to feel fear ... The portal
- swung ajar; another Pnumekin entered: one of the passage-tenders. The two looked
- aside, ignoring each other. The newcomer spoke in a soft voice, as if musing
- aloud: "The delivery cannot be found. The passage and shaft have been
- scrutinized."
- The tunnel monitor made no response. Silence, of an eerie dream-like quality,
- ensued.
- The passage-tender spoke again. "He could not have passed us. Delivery was not
- made, or else he escaped by an adit unknown to us. These are the alternative
- possibilities."
- The monitor spoke. "The information is noted. Transit control should be
- instituted at Ziad Level, Zud-Dan-Ziad, at Ferstan Node Six, at Lullil Node and
- at Foreverness Station."
- "Such will be the situation."
- A Pnume came into the chamber, using an aperture beyond Reith's range of vision.
- The Pnumekin paid no heed, not so much as glancing aside. Reith studied the
- oddly jointed creature: the first Pnume he had seen, except for a darkling
- glimpse in the dungeons of Pera. It stood about the height of a man and within
- its voluminous black cloak seemed slight, even frail. A black hat shaded its
- eye-sockets; its visage, the cast and color of a horse's skull, was
- expressionless; under the lower edge a complicated set of rasping and chewing
- parts surrounded a near-invisible mouth. The articulation of the creature's legs
- worked in reverse to that of the human: it moved forward with the motion of a
- man walking backwards. The narrow feet were bare and mottled, dark red and
- black; three arched toes tapped the ground as a nervous man might tap his
- fingers.
- The Pnumekin tunnel monitor spoke softly into the air. "An abnormal situation,
- when an item of delivery is no more than an empty sack. The passage and the
- shaft have been scrutinized; the item either was not delivered, or it made
- evasion by using a secret adit of Quality Seven or higher."
- Silence. From the Pnume, in a husky muffled murmur, came words. "Verification of
- delivery cannot be made. The possibility of a classified adit exists, above
- Quality Ten, and beyond the scope of my secrets.* We may properly solicit
- information from the Section Warden."
- The tunnel monitor spoke in a voice of tentative inquiry. "The delivery, then,
- is an item of interest?"
- The Pnume's toes drummed the floor with the delicacy of a pianist's fingers. "It
- is for Foreverness: a creature from contemporary Man-planet. Decision was made
- to take it."
- Reith, cramped in the locker, wondered why the decision had been delayed so
- long. He eased his position, gritting his teeth against the possibility of a
- sound. When once again he put his eye to the crack the Pnume had departed. The
- monitor and the passage-tender stood quietly, taking no notice of each other.
- Time passed, how long Reith could not judge. His muscles throbbed and ached, and
- now he feared to shift his position. He took a long slow breath and composed
- himself to patience.
- At odd intervals the Pnumekin spoke in murmurs, looking aside all the while as
- if they addressed the air. Reith distinguished a phrase or two: "... The
- condition of Man-planet; there is no knowing ..." "... Barbarians, surface
- dwellers, mad as Gzhindra ..." "... Valuable item, invisible ..."
- The Pnume reappeared, followed by another: a creature tall and gaunt, stepping
- with the soft tread of a fox. It carried a rectangular case, which it placed
- with delicate precision upon a bench three feet in front of Reith; then it
- seemed to lose itself in reverie. A moment passed. The passage-tender of lowest
- status spoke first. "When a delivery is signaled by the gong, the bag is usually
- heavy. An empty bag is cause for perplexity. Delivery evidently was not made, or
- the item gained access to a secret adit, over Ten in Quality."
- The Warden turned aside and, spreading wide its black cloak, touched the locks
- of the leather case. The two Pnumekin and the first Pnume interested themselves
- in the crystals of the wall.
- Opening the case, the Warden brought forth a portfolio bound in limp blue
- leather. The Warden spread it apart with reverent care, turned pages, studied a
- tangle of colored lines. The Warden closed the portfolio, replaced it in the
- case. After a moment of musing, he spoke in a voice so breathy and soft that
- Reith had difficulty understanding him. "An ancient adit of Quality Fourteen
- exists. It courses nine hundred yards northward, descends, and enters the jha
- Nu."
- The Pnumekin were silent. The first Pnume spoke. "If the item came into the jha
- Nu, he might traverse the balcony, descend by Oma-Five into the Upper Great
- Lateral. He could then turn aside into Blue Rise, or even Zhu Overlook, and so
- reach the ghaun."
- The Warden spoke. "All this only if the item has knowledge of the secrets. If we
- assume his use of a Quality Fourteen adit, then we can assume the rest. The
- manner by which our secrets have been disseminated-if this is the case-is not
- clear."
- "Perplexing," murmured the passage-tender.
- The monitor said, "If a ghiant knows Quality Fourteen secrets, how can these be
- safe from the Dirdir?"
- The toes of both Pnume arched and tapped the stone floor.
- "The circumstances are not yet clear," remarked the Warden. "A study of the adit
- will provide exact information."
- The low-status passage-tenders were first to leave the room. The monitor,
- apparently lost in reflection, sidled after them, leaving the two Pnume standing
- still and rigid as a pair of insects. The first Pnume went off, padding on soft,
- forward-kicking strides. The Warden remained. Reith wondered if he should not
- burst forth and attempt to overpower the Warden. He restrained himself. If the
- Pnume shared the fantastic strength of the Phung, Reith would be at a terrible
- disadvantage. Another consideration: would the Pnume become pliant with
- pressure? Reith could not know. He suspected not.
- The Warden took up the leather case and turned a deliberate stare to all
- quarters of the chamber. It appeared to listen. Moving with uncharacteristic
- abruptness, it carried the case to an expanse of blank wall. Reith watched in
- fascination. The Warden slid forward its foot, delicately touched three knobs of
- rock with its toes. A section of wall fell back, revealing a cavity into which
- the Warden tucked the case. The rock slid back; the wall was solid. The Warden
- went off after the others.
- CHAPTER THREE
- THE ROOM was empty. Reith stumbled forth from the closet. He hobbled across the
- room. The wall showed no crack, no seam. The workmanship was of microscopic
- accuracy.
- Reith bent low, touched the three protuberances. The rock moved back and aside.
- Reith brought forth the case. After the briefest of hesitations, he opened the
- case, removed the portfolio. From the closet he brought a carton of small dark
- bottles, approximately the same weight as the portfolio which he closed into the
- case, and replaced all into the cavity. He touched the knobs; the cavity closed;
- the wall was solid rock.
- Reith stood in the center of the room, holding the portfolio, obviously a
- valuable article. If he were able to evade detection and capture, if he were
- able to decipher the Pnume cartography--all of which seemed intrinsically
- unlikely--he might conceivably discover a route to the surface.
- From the closet he brought a cloak, which he draped about himself, and a hat,
- somewhat too small, but which by dint of twisting and stretching he managed to
- pull low over his head.
- The Pnumekin habit of furtive unobtrusiveness would serve him well; no one would
- attempt greater furtiveness, less obtrusiveness, than himself. Now he must leave
- the immediate area, and find some secluded spot where he might examine the
- portfolio at his leisure. He tucked the portfolio into his jacket and set off
- along the white plastered corridor, putting one foot softly in front of the
- other as he had seen the Pnumekin do.
- The corridor stretched long and empty ahead, at last opening upon a balcony
- which overlooked a long room, from which came a hum and shuffle of activity.
- The floor of the chamber was twenty feet below. On the walls were charts and
- ideograms; in the center Pnumekin children took instruction. Reith had come upon
- a Pnumekin school.
- Standing back in the shadows Reith was able to look down without fear of
- detection. He saw three groups of children, both male and female, twenty to each
- group. Like their elders they wore black cloaks and hats with flattened crowns.
- The small white faces were peaked and pinched, and almost laughably earnest.
- None spoke; staring into empty air they marched softly and solemnly through a
- drill or exercise. They were attended by three Pnumekin women of indefinite age,
- cloaked like the males and distinguishable only by lesser stature and somewhat
- less harshness of feature.
- The children padded on and on through the exercise, the silence broken only by
- the shuffle of their feet. Nothing could be learned here, thought Reith. He
- looked in both directions, then set off to the left. An arched tunnel gave upon
- another balcony, which overlooked a chamber even larger than the first: a
- refectory. Tables and benches were ranked down the middle, but the chamber was
- vacant except for two Pnumekin, who sat widely separated, crouched low over
- bowls of gruel. Reith became aware of his own hunger.
- He heard a sound. Along the balcony came a pair of Pnumekin, one behind the
- other. Reith's heart began to thump so loudly he feared they would surely hear
- the sound as they approached. He pulled down his head, hunched his shoulders,
- moved forward in what he hoped to be the typical Pnumekin gait. The two passed
- by, eyes averted, thoughts on matters far removed.
- With somewhat more assurance Reith continued along the passage, which almost
- immediately expanded to become a roughly circular node, the junction for three
- corridors. A staircase cut from the natural gray rock curved down to the level
- below.
- The corridors were desolate and dim; Reith thought them unpromising. He
- hesitated, feeling tired and futile. The charts, he decided, were of no great
- help; he needed the assistance, willing or otherwise, of a Pnumekin. He was also
- very hungry. Gingerly he went to the staircase and, after ten seconds of
- indecision, descended, begrudging every step which took him farther from the
- surface. He came out into a small anteroom beside the refectory. A portal nearby
- gave upon what appeared to be a kitchen. Reith looked in cautiously. A number of
- Pnumekin worked at counters, presumably preparing food for the children in the
- exercise room.
- Reith backed regretfully away, and went off down a side passage. This was dim
- and quiet, with only a few light-grains in the high ceiling. After a hundred
- feet the passage jogged to the side and came to an abrupt end at the brink of a
- drop-off. From below the sound of running water: more than likely a
- disposal-place for waste and garbage, Reith reflected. He halted, wondering
- where to go and what to do, then returned to the anteroom. Here he discovered a
- small storage chamber in which were stacked bags, sacks and cartons. Food,
- thought Reith. He hesitated; the chamber must frequently be used by the cooks.
- From the exercise room came the children, walking in single file, eyes fixed
- drearily on the floor. Reith backed into the storage room: the children would
- discern his strangeness far more readily than adults. He crouched at the back of
- the room, behind a pile of stacked cartons: by no means the most secure of
- hiding places, but not altogether precarious. Even if someone entered the
- chamber he stood a good chance of evading attention. Reith relaxed somewhat. He
- brought forth the portfolio and folded back the limp blue leather cover. The
- pages were a beautiful soft vellum; the cartography was printed with most
- meticulous care in black, red, brown, green and pale blue. But the patterns and
- lines conveyed no information; the legend was set forth in undecipherable
- characters. Regretfully Reith folded the portfolio and tucked it into his
- jacket.
- From a counter in front of the kitchen the children took bowls and carried them
- into the refectory.
- Reith watched through a cranny between the cartons, more than ever aware of
- hunger and thirst. He investigated the contents of a sack, to find dried
- pilgrim-pod, a leathery wafer highly nutritious but not particularly appetizing.
- The cartons beside him contained tubes of a greasy black paste, rancid and sharp
- to the taste: apparently a condiment. Reith turned his attention to the serving
- counter. The last of the children had carried their bowls into the refectory.
- The serving area was vacant, but on the counter remained half a dozen bowls and
- flasks. Reith acted without conscious calculation. He emerged from the storage
- room, hunched his shoulders, went to the counter, took a bowl and a flask and
- retreated hurriedly to his hiding place. The bowl contained pilgrim-pod gruel
- cooked with raisin-like nubbins, slivers of pale meat, two stalks of a
- celery-like vegetable. The flask held a pint of faintly effervescent beer, with
- a pleasantly astringent bite. To the flask was clipped a packet of six round
- wafers, which Reith tasted but found unpalatable. He ate the gruel and drank the
- beer and congratulated himself on his decisiveness.
- To the serving area came six older children: slender young people, detached and
- broodingly self-sufficient. Peering between the cartons, Reith decided that all
- were female. Five passed by the counter taking bowls and flasks. The last to
- come by, finding nothing to eat, stood in puzzlement. Reith watched with the
- guilty awareness that he had stolen and devoured her supper. The first five went
- into the refectory, leaving the one girl waiting uncertainly by the counter.
- Five minutes passed; she spoke no word, standing with her eyes fixed on the
- floor. At last unseen hands set another bowl and flask down on the counter. The
- Pnumekin girl took the food and went slowly into the refectory.
- Reith became uneasy. He decided to return up the stairs, to select one of the
- passages and hope to meet some lone knowledgeable Pnumekin who could be
- overpowered and put in fear for his life. He rose to his feet, but now the
- children began to leave the refectory, and Reith stood back. One by one, on
- noiseless feet, they filed into the exercise room. Once more Reith looked forth
- and once more retreated as now the five older girls issued from the refectory.
- They were alike as mannequins from the factory: slender and straight, with skins
- as pale and thin as paper, arched coal-black eyebrows, and regular, if somewhat
- peaked, features. They wore the usual black cloaks and black hats, which
- accentuated the quaint and eerie non-earthliness of the earthly bodies. They
- might have been five versions of the same person, although Reith, even as the
- idea crossed his mind, knew that each made sure distinctions, too subtle for his
- knowing, between herself and the others; each felt her personal existence to be
- the central movement of the cosmos.
- The serving area was empty. Reith stepped forth and on long quick strides
- crossed to the stairs. Only just in time: from the kitchen came one of the
- cooks, to go to the storage room. Had Reith delayed another moment he would have
- been discovered. Heart beating fast, he started up the stairs ... He stopped
- short and stood holding his breath. From above came a soft sound: the
- pad-pad-pad of footsteps. Reith froze in his tracks. The sounds became louder.
- Down the stairs came the mottled red and black feet of a Pnume, then the flutter
- of black cloth. Reith hurriedly retreated, to stand indecisively at the foot of
- the stairs. Where to go? He looked about frantically. In the storage room the
- cook ladled pilgrim-pod from a sack. The children occupied the exercise-chamber.
- Reith had a single choice. He hunched his shoulders and stalked softly into the
- refectory. At a middle table sat a Pnumekin girl, she whose supper he had
- commandeered. Reith took what he considered the most inconspicuous seat and sat
- sweating. His disguise was makeshift; a single direct glance would reveal his
- identity.
- Silent minutes passed. The Pnumekin girl lingered over the packet of wafers
- which she seemed especially to enjoy. At last she rose to her feet and started
- to leave the chamber. Reith lowered his head: too sharply, too abruptly-a
- discordant movement. The girl turned a startled glance in his direction and even
- now habit was strong; she looked past him without directly focusing her eyes.
- But she saw, she knew. For an instant she remained frozen, her face loose and
- incredulous; then she uttered a soft cry of terror, and started to run from the
- room. Reith was instantly upon her, to stifle her with his hand and thrust her
- against the wall.
- "Be quiet!" Reith muttered. "Don't make any noise! Do you understand?"
- She stared at him in a kind of horrified daze. Reith gave her a shake. "Don't
- make a sound! Do you understand? Nod your head!"
- She managed to jerk her head. Reith took away his hand. "Listen!" he whispered.
- "Listen carefully! I am a man of the surface. I was kidnapped and brought down
- here. I escaped, and now I want to return to the surface. Do you hear me?" She
- made no response. "Do you understand? Answer!" He gave the thin shoulders
- another shake.
- "Yes."
- "Do you know how to reach the surface?"
- She shifted her gaze, to stare at the floor. Reith darted a glance toward the
- serving area; if one of the cooks should happen to look into the refectory, all
- was lost. And the Pnume who had descended the stairs, what of him? And the
- balcony! Reith had forgotten the balcony! With a sick thrill of fear he searched
- the high shadows. No one stood watching. But they could remain here no longer,
- not another minute. He grasped the girl by the arm. "Come along. Not a sound,
- remember! Or I'll have to hurt you!"
- He pulled her along the wall to the entrance. The serving area was empty. From
- the kitchen came a grinding sound and a clatter of metal. Of the Pnume there was
- no sign.
- "Up the stairs," whispered Reith.
- She made a sound of protest; Reith clapped his hand over her mouth and dragged
- her to the staircase. "Up! Do as I say and you won't be harmed!"
- She spoke in a soft even voice: "Go away."
- "I want to go away," Reith declared in a passionate mutter. "I don't know where
- to go!"
- "I can't help you."
- "You've got to help me. Up the stairs. Quick now!"
- Suddenly she turned and ran up the stairs, so light on her feet that she seemed
- to float. Reith was taken by surprise. He sprang after her, but she outdistanced
- him and sped down one of the corridors. In desperation she fled; in equal
- desperation Reith pursued, and after fifty feet caught her. He thrust her
- against the wall, where she stood panting. Reith looked up and down the
- corridor: no one was in sight, to his vast relief. "Do you want to die?" he
- hissed in her ear.
- "No!"
- "Then do exactly what I tell you!" growled Reith. He hoped that the threat
- convinced her; and indeed her face sagged; her eyes became wide and dark. She
- tried to speak, and finally asked: "What do you want me to do?"
- "First, lead the way to a quiet place, where no one comes."
- With sagging shoulders she turned away, and proceeded along the corridor. Reith
- asked suspiciously, "Where are you taking me?"
- "To the punishment place."
- A moment later she turned into a side corridor which almost at once ended in a
- round chamber. The girl went to a pair of black flint cabochons; looking over
- her shoulder like a fairy-tale witch, she pushed the black bulbs. A portal
- opened upon black space; the girl stepped through with Reith close behind. She
- touched a switch; from a light-panel came a wan illumination.
- They stood on a ledge at the edge of a brink. A crazy insect-leg derrick tilted
- over profound darkness; from the end hung a rope.
- Reith looked at the girl; she looked silently back at him with a kind of
- half-frightened, half-sullen indifference. Holding to the derrick, Reith looked
- gingerly over the brink. A cold draft blew up into his face, and he turned away.
- The girl stood motionless. Reith suspected that the sudden convulsion of events
- had put her into a state of shock. The tight hat constricted his head; he pulled
- it off. The girl shrank back against the wall. "Why do you take off the hat?"
- "It hurts my head," said Reith.
- The girl flicked her glance past him and away into the darkness. She asked in a
- soft muffled voice, "What do you want me to do?"
- "Take me to the surface, as fast as you can."
- The girl made no answer. Reith wondered if she had heard him. He tried to look
- into her face; she turned away. Reith twitched off her hat. A strange eerie face
- looked at him, the bloodless mouth quivering in panic. She was older than her
- underdeveloped figure suggested, though Reith could not accurately have
- estimated her age. Her features were wan and dreary, so regular as to be
- nondescript; her hair, a short black mat, clung to her scalp like a cap of felt.
- Reith thought that she seemed anemic and neurasthenic, at once human and
- non-human, female and sexless.
- "Why do you do that?" she asked in a hushed murmur,
- "For no particular reason. Curiosity, perhaps."
- "It is intimate," she muttered, and put her hands up to her thin cheeks. Reith
- shrugged, uninterested in her modesty. "I want you to take me to the surface."
- "I can't."
- "Why not?"
- She made no answer.
- "Aren't you afraid of me?" Reith asked gently.
- "Not as much as the pit."
- "The pit is yonder, and convenient."
- She gave him a startled glance. "Would you throw me into the pit?"
- Reith spoke in what he hoped to be a menacing voice. "I am a fugitive; I intend
- to reach the surface."
- "I don't dare help you." Her voice was soft and matter-of-fact. "The zuzhma
- kastchai would punish me." She looked at the derrick. "The dark is terrible; we
- are afraid of the dark. Sometimes the rope is cut and the person is never heard
- again."
- Reith stood baffled. The girl, reading a dire meaning into his silence, said in
- a meek voice: "Even if I wished to help you, how could I? I know only the way to
- the Blue Rise pop-out, where I would not be allowed, unless," she added as an
- afterthought, "I declared myself a Gzhindra. You of course would be taken."
- Reith's scheme began to topple around his head. "Then take me to some other
- exit."
- "I know of none. Those are secrets not taught at my level."
- "Come over here, under the light," said Reith. "Look at this."
- He brought forth the portfolio, opened it and set it before her. "Show me where
- we are now."
- The girl looked. She made a choking sound and began to tremble. "What is this?"
- "Something I took from a Pnume."
- "These are the Master Charts! My life is done. I will be thrown into the pit!"
- "Please don't complicate such a simple matter," said Reith. "Look at the charts,
- find a route to the surface, take me there. Then do as you like. No one will
- know the difference."
- The girl stared with a wild, unreasoning gaze. Reith gave her thin shoulder a
- shake. "What's wrong with you?"
- Her voice came in a toneless mutter. "I have seen secrets."
- Reith was in no mood to commiserate with troubles so abstract and unreal. "Very
- well; you've seen the charts. The damage is done. Now look again and find a way
- to the surface!"
- A strange expression came over the thin face. Reith wondered if she had gone mad
- for a fact. Of all the Pnumekin walking the corridors, what wry providence had
- directed him to an emotionally unstable girl? ... She was looking at him, for
- the first time directly and searchingly. "You are a ghian."
- "I live on the surface, certainly."
- "What is it like? Is it terrible?"
- "The surface of Tschai? It has its deficiencies."
- "I now must be a Gzhindra."
- "It's better than living down here in the dark."
- The girl said in her dull voice, "I must go to the ghaun."
- "The sooner the better," said Reith. "Look at this map again. Show me where we
- are."
- "I can't look!" moaned the girl. "I dare not look!"
- "Come now!" snapped Reith. "It's only paper."
- "Only paper! It crawls with secrets, Class Twenty secrets. My mind is too
- small!"
- Reith suspected incipient hysteria, although her voice had remained a soft
- monotone. "To become a Gzhindra you must reach the surface. To reach the surface
- we must find an exit, the more secret the better. Here we have secret charts. We
- are in luck."
- She became quiet and even glanced from the corner of her eyes toward the
- portfolio. "How did you get this?"
- "I took it from a Pnume." He pushed the portfolio toward her. "Can you read the
- symbols?"
- "I am trained to read." Gingerly she leaned over the portfolio, to jerk
- instantly back in fear and revulsion.
- Reith forced himself to patience. "You have never seen a map before?"
- "I have a level of Four; I know Class Four secrets; I have seen Class Four maps.
- This is Class Twenty."
- "But you can read this map."
- "Yes." The word came with sour distaste. "But I dare not. Only a ghian would
- think to examine such a powerful document ..." Her voice trailed away to a
- murmur. "Let alone steal it..."
- "What will the Pnume do when they find it is gone?"
- The girl looked off over the gulf. "Dark, dark, dark. I will fall forever
- through the dark."
- Reith began to grow restive. The girl seemed able to concentrate only on those
- ideas rising from her own mind. He directed her attention to the map. "What do
- the colors signify?"
- "The levels and stages."
- "And these symbols?"
- "Doors, portals, secret ways. Touch-plates. Communication stations. Rises,
- pop-outs, observation posts."
- "Show me where we are now."
- Reluctantly she focused her eyes. "Not this sheet. Turn back ... Back ... Back
- ... Here."' She pointed, her finger a cautious two inches from the paper.
- "There. The black mark is the pit. The pink line is the ledge."
- "Show me the nearest route to the surface."
- "That would be-let me look."
- Reith managed a distant and reflective smile: once diverted from her woes, which
- were real enough, Reith admitted, the girl became instantly intense, and even
- forgot the exposure of her face.
- "Blue-Rise pop-out is here. To get there one would go by this lateral, then up
- this pale orange ramp. But it is a crowded area, with administrative wickets.
- You would be taken and I likewise, now that I have seen the secrets."
- The question of responsibility and guilt flickered through Reith's mind, but he
- put it aside. Cataclysm had come to his life; like the plague it had infected
- her as well. Perhaps similar ideas circulated in her mind.
- She darted a quick sidelong glance again. "How did you come in from the ghaun?"
- "The Gzhindra let me down in a sack. I cut my way out before the Pnumekin came.
- I hope they decide that the Gzhindra lowered an empty sack."
- "With one of the Great Charts missing? No person of the Shelters would touch it.
- The zuzhma kastchai will never rest until both you and I are dead."
- "I become ever more anxious to escape," said Reith.
- "I also," remarked the girl with ingenuous simplicity. "I do not wish to fall."
- Reith watched her a moment or two, wondering that she appeared to bear him no
- rancor; it was as if he had come to her as an elemental calamity-a storm, a
- lightning-bolt, a flood-against which resentment, argument, entreaty would have
- been equally useless. Already, he thought, a subtle change had come over her
- attitude; she bent to inspect the chart somewhat less gingerly than before. She
- pointed to a pale brown Y. "There's the Palisades exit, where trading is done
- with the ghian. I have never been so far."
- "Could we go up at this point?"
- "Never. The zuzhma kastchai guard against the Dirdir. There is continual
- vigilance."
- Reith pointed to the other pale brown Y's. "These are other openings to the
- surface?"
- "Yes. But if they believe you to be at large, they will block off here and here
- and here"-she pointed-"and all these openings are barred, and these in Exa
- section as well."
- "Then we must go somewhere else: to other sectors."
- The girl's face twitched. "I know nothing of such places."
- "Look at the map."
- She did his bidding, running her finger close above the mesh of colored lines,
- but not yet daring to touch the paper itself. "I see here a secret way, Quality
- Eighteen. It runs from the passage out yonder to Parallel Twelve, and it
- shortens the way by a half. Then we might go along any of these adits to the
- freight docks."
- Reith rose to his feet. He pulled the hat over his face. "Do I look like a
- Pnumekin?"
- She gave him a brief unsympathetic inspection. "Your face is strange. Your skin
- is dark from the ghaun weather. Take some dust and wipe it on your face."
- Reith did as he was bid; the girl watched with an expressionless gaze; Reith
- wondered what went on in her mind. She had declared herself an outcast, a
- Gzhindra, without overmuch agony of the spirit. Or did she contrive a subtle
- betrayal? "Betrayal" was perhaps unfair, Reith reflected. She had pledged him no
- faith, she owed him no loyalty, indeed, something considerably the reverse. So
- how could he control her after they set forth through the passages? Reith
- pondered and studied her, while she became increasingly agitated. "Why do you
- look at me like that?"
- Reith held out the blue portfolio to her. "Carry this under your cloak, where it
- won't be seen."
- The girl swayed back aghast. "No."
- "You must."
- "I don't dare. The zuzhma kastchai-"
- "Conceal the charts under your cloak," said Reith in a measured voice. "I'm a
- desperate man, and I'll stop at nothing to return to the surface."
- With limp fingers she took the portfolio. Turning her back, and glancing warily
- over her shoulder at Reith, she tucked the portfolio out of sight under her
- cloak. "Come then," she croaked. "If we are taken, it is how life must go. Never
- in my dreaming did I expect to be a Gzhindra."
- She opened the portal and looked out into the round chamber. "The way is clear.
- Remember, walk softly, do not lean forward. We must pass through Fer junction,
- and there will be persons at their affairs. The zuzhma kastchai wander
- everywhere; if we meet one of these, halt, step into the shadows or face the
- wall; this is the respectful way. Do not move quickly; do not jerk your arms."
- She stepped out into the round room and set off along the passage. Reith
- followed five or six paces behind, trying to simulate the Pnumekin gait. He had
- forced the girl to carry the charts; even so, he was at her mercy. She could run
- screaming to the first Pnumekin they came upon, and hope for mercy from the
- Pnume ... The situation was unpredictable.
- They walked half a mile, up a ramp, down another and into a main adit. At
- twenty-foot intervals the narrow doorways opened into the rock; beside each was
- a fluted pedestal with a flat polished upper surface, the function of which
- Reith could not calculate. The passage widened and they entered Fer Junction, a
- large hexagonal hall with a dozen polished marble pillars supporting the
- ceiling. In dim little booths around the periphery sat Pnumekin writing in
- ledgers, or occasionally holding vague and seemingly indecisive colloquies with
- other Pnumekin who had come to seek them out.
- The girl wandered to the side and halted. Reith stopped as well.
- She glanced at him, then looked thoughtfully toward a Pnumekin in the center of
- the room: a tall haggard man with an unusually alert posture. Reith stepped into
- the shadow of a pillar and watched the girl. Her face was blank as a plate but
- Reith knew her to be reviewing the circumstances which had overwhelmed her pale
- existence, and his life depended on the balance of her fears: the bottomless
- gulf against the windy brown skies of the surface.
- Slowly she moved toward Reith and joined him in the shadow of the pillar. For
- the moment at least she had made her decision.
- "The tall man yonder: he is a Listening Monitor. Notice how he observes all?
- Nothing escapes him."
- For a period Reith stood watching the Listening Monitor, becoming each minute
- more disinclined to cross the chamber. He muttered to the girl, "Do you know
- another route to the freight docks?"
- She pondered the matter. Having committed herself to flight, her personality had
- become somewhat more focused, as if danger had drawn her up out of the dreaming
- inversion of her former existence.
- "I think," she said dubiously, "that another route passes by way of the work
- halls; but it is a long way and other Listening Monitors are on hand."
- "Hmmf." Reith turned to watch the Listening Monitor of Fer Junction.
- "Notice," he said presently, "he turns to look this way and that. When his back
- is toward us, I'll move to the next pillar, and you come after me."
- A moment later the Monitor swung around. Reith stepped out into the chamber,
- sauntered to the nearest of the marble pillars. The girl came slowly after him,
- still somewhat indecisively, or so it seemed to Reith.
- Reith could not now peer around the pillar without the risk of attracting the
- Monitor's attention. "Tell me when he looks away," he muttered to the girl.
- "Now."
- Reith gained the next pillar and, using a file of slow-moving Pnumekin as a
- screen, continued on to the next. Now a single open area remained. The Monitor
- swung about abruptly, and Reith ducked back behind the pillar: a deadly game of
- peek-a-boo. From a passage to the side a Pnume entered the chamber, coming
- softly on forward-padding legs.
- The girl hissed under her breath, "The Silent Critic ... take care." she drifted
- away, head downcast, as if in an abstraction. The Pnume halted, not fifty feet
- from Reith, who turned his back. Only a few strides remained to the north of the
- passage. Reith's shoulder blades twitched. He could bear to stand by the pillar
- no longer. Feeling every eye in the chamber pressing upon him he crossed the
- open area. With each step he expected a cry of outrage, an alarm. The silence
- became oppressive; only by great effort could he control the urge to look over
- his shoulder. He reached the mouth of the passage and turned a cautious glance
- over his shoulder-to stare full into the eye sockets of the Pnume. With pounding
- heart Reith turned slowly and proceeded. The girl had gone ahead. He called to
- her in a soft voice, "Run ahead; find the Class Eighteen passage."
- She turned back a startled glance. "The Silent Critic is close at hand. I may
- not run; if he saw he would think it boisterous conduct."
- "Never mind the decorum," said Reith. "Find the opening as fast as possible."
- She quickened her step, with Reith coming behind. After fifty yards he risked a
- glance to the rear. No one followed.
- The corridor branched; the girl stopped short. "I think we go to the left, but I
- am not sure."
- "Look at the chart."
- With vast distaste, she turned her back and brought the portfolio from under her
- cloak. She could not bring herself to handle it and gave it to Reith as if it
- were hot. He turned the pages till she said, "Stop." While she studied the
- colored lines, Reith kept his gaze to the rear. Far back, where the passage met
- Fer junction, a dark shape appeared in the opening. Reith, every nerve jerking,
- willed the girl to haste.
- "To the left, then at Mark Two-one-two, a blue tile. Style Twenty-four--I must
- consult the legend. Here it is: four press points. Three-one-four-two."
- "Hurry," Reith said, through gritted teeth.
- She turned a startled look back down the passage. "Zuzhma kastchai!"
- Reith also looked back, trying to simulate the Pnumekin gait. The Pnume padded
- slowly forward, but with no particular sense of purpose, or so it seemed to
- Reith. He moved off along the passage and overtook the girl. As she walked she
- counted the number marks at the base of the wall: "Seventy-five ... eighty ...
- eighty-five ..." Reith looked back. There were now two black shapes in the
- corridor; from somewhere a second Pnume had appeared. "One hundred ninety-five
- ... two hundred ... two hundred and five..."
- The blue tile, filmed with an antique red-purple luster, was only a foot from
- the floor. The girl found press-points and touched them; the outline of a door
- appeared; the door slid open.
- The girl began to shake. "It is Quality Eighteen. I should not enter."
- "The Silent Critic is following us," said Reith.
- She gasped and stepped into the passage. It was narrow and dim and haunted by a
- faintly rancid odor Reith had come to associate with the Pnume.
- The door slid shut. The girl pushed up a shutter and put her eye to the lens of
- a peephole. "The Silent Critic is coming. It suspects boisterous conduct, and
- wants to issue a punishment ... No! There are two! He has summoned a Warden!"
- She stood rigid, eye pressed to the peephole. Reith waited on tenterhooks. "What
- are they doing?"
- "They look along the corridor. They wonder why we are not in view."
- "Let's get moving," said Reith. "We can't stand here waiting.
- "The Warden will know this passage ... If they come in..."
- "Never mind that." Reith set out along the passage and the girl came behind him.
- A queer sight they made, thought Reith, loping through the dark in the flapping
- black cloaks and low-crowned hats. The girl quickly became tired and further
- diminished her speed by looking over her shoulder. She gave a croak of
- resignation and halted. "They have entered the passage."
- Reith looked behind. The door stood ajar. In the gap the two Pnume were
- silhouetted. For an instant they stood rigid, like queer black dolls, then they
- jerked into motion. "They see us," said the girl, and stood with her head
- hanging. "It will be the pit ... Well, then, let us go to meet them in all
- meekness."
- "Stand against the wall," said Reith. "Don't move. They must come to us. There
- are only two."
- "You will be helpless."
- Reith made no comment. He picked up a fist-size rock which had fallen from the
- ceiling and stood waiting.
- "You can do nothing," moaned the girl. "Use meekness, placid conduct..."
- The Pnume came quickly by forward-kicking steps, the white undershot jaws
- twitching. Ten feet away they halted, to contemplate the two who stood against
- the wall. For a half-minute none of the group moved or made a sound. The Silent
- Critic slowly raised its thin arm, to point with two bony fingers. "Go back."
- Reith made no move. The girl stood with eyes glazed and mouth sagging.
- The Pnume spoke again, in a husky fluting voice. "Go back."
- The girl started to stumble off along the passage; Reith made no motion.
- The Pnume watched him nonplussed. They exchanged a sibilant whisper, then the
- Silent Critic spoke again. "Go."
- The Warden said in an almost inaudible murmur, "You are the item which escaped
- delivery."
- The Silent Critic, padding forward, reached forth its arm. Reith hurled the rock
- with all his strength; it struck full in the creature's bone-white face. A
- crunch, and the creature tottered back to the wall, to stand jerking and raising
- one leg up and down in a most eccentric manner. The Warden, making a throaty
- gasping sound, bounded forward.
- Reith jumped back, snatched off his cloak, and in an insane flourish threw it
- over the Pnume's head. For a moment the creature seemed not to notice and came
- forward, arms outspread; then it began to dance and stamp. Reith moved
- cautiously in and away, looking for an instant of advantage, and the two in
- their soundless gyrations performed a peculiar and grotesque ballet. While the
- Silent Critic watched indifferently Reith seized the Warden's arm; it felt like
- an iron pipe. The other arm swung about; two harsh finger-ends tore across
- Reith's face. Reith felt nothing. He heaved, swung the Warden into the wall. It
- rebounded and moved quickly upon Reith. Reith slapped tentatively at the long
- pale face; it felt cool and hard. The strength of the creature was inhuman; he
- must evade its grip, which put him in something of a quandary. If he struck the
- creature with his fists he would only break his hands.
- Step by step the Warden padded forward, legs bending forward. Reith threw
- himself to the ground, kicked out at the creature's feet, to topple it off
- balance; it fell. Reith jumped up to evade the expected attack of the Silent
- Critic, but it remained leaning gravely against the wall, viewing the battle
- with the detachment of a bystander. Reith was puzzled and distracted by its
- attitude; as a result the Warden seized his ankle with the toes of one foot and
- with an amazing extension reached the other foot toward Reith's neck. Reith
- kicked the creature in the crotch; it was like kicking the crotch of a tree;
- Reith sprained his foot. The toes gripped his neck; Reith seized the leg,
- twisted, applied leverage. The Pnume was forced around on its face. Reith
- scrambled down upon its back. Seizing the head, he gave it a sudden terrible
- jerk backward. A bone or stiff membrane gave elastically, then snapped. The
- Warden thrashed here and there in wild palpitations. By chance it gained its
- feet and with its head dangling backward bounded across the tunnel. It struck
- the Silent Critic, who slumped to the ground. Dead? Reith's eyes bulged. Dead.
- Reith leaned against the wall, gasping for breath. Wherever the Pnume had
- touched him was a bruise. Blood flowed down his face; his elbow was wrenched;
- his foot was sprained ... but two Pnume lay dead. A little distance away the
- girl crouched in a shock-induced trance. Reith stumbled forward, touched her
- shoulder. "I'm alive. You're alive."
- "Your face bleeds!"
- Reith wiped his face with the hem of his cloak. He went to look down at the
- corpses. Drawing back his lips, he searched the bodies, but found nothing to
- interest him.
- "I suppose we'd better keep on going," said Reith.
- The girl turned and set off down the tunnel. Reith followed. The Pnume corpses
- remained to lie in the dimness.
- The girl's steps began to lag. "Are you tired?" asked Reith.
- His solicitude puzzled her; she looked at him warily. "No."
- "Well, I am. Let's rest for a while." He lowered himself to the floor, groaning
- and complaining. After a moment's hesitation she settled herself primly across
- the passage. Reith studied her with perplexity. She had put the struggle with
- the Pnume completely out of her mind, or so it seemed. Her shadowed face was
- composed. Astonishing, thought Reith. Her life had come apart; her future must
- seem a succession of terrifying question marks; yet here she sat, her face blank
- as that of a marionette, with no apparent distress.
- She spoke softly: "Why do you look at me like that?"
- "I was thinking," he said, "that, considering the circumstances, you appear
- remarkably unconcerned."
- She made no immediate reply. There was a heavy silence in the dim passage. Then
- she said, "I float upon the current of life; how should I question where it
- carries me? It would be impudent to think of preferences; existence, after all,
- is a privilege given a very few."
- Reith leaned back against the wall. "A very few? How so?"
- The girl became uneasy; her white fingers twisted. "How it goes on the ghaun I
- don't know; perhaps you do things differently. In the Shelters* the mother-women
- spawn twelve times and no more than half, sometimes less-survive ..." She
- continued in a voice of didactic reflection: "I have heard that all the women of
- the ghaun are motherwomen. Is this true? I can't believe it. If each spawned
- twelve times, and even if six went to the pit, the ghaun would boil with living
- flesh. It seems unreasonable." She added, as a possibly disconnected
- afterthought, "I am glad that I will never be a mother-woman."
- Again Reith was puzzled. "How can you be sure? You're young yet."
- The girl's face twitched with what might have been embarrassment. "Can't you
- see? Do I look to be a mother-woman?"
- "I don't know what your mother-women look like."
- "They bulge at the chest and hips. Aren't ghian mothers the same? Some say the
- Pnume decide who will be mother-women and take them to the creche. There they
- lie in the dark and spawn."
- "Alone?"
- "They and the other mothers."
- "What of the fathers?"
- "No need for fathers. In the Shelters all is secure; protection is not needed."
- Reith began to entertain an old suspicion. "On the surface," he said, "affairs
- go somewhat differently."
- She leaned forward, and her face displayed as much animation as Reith had yet
- noticed. "I have always wondered about life on the ghaun. Who chooses the
- mother-women? Where do they spawn?"
- Reith evaded the question. "It's a complicated situation. In due course I
- suppose you'll learn something about it, if you live long enough. Meanwhile, I
- am Adam Reith. What is your name?"
- "'Name'? I am a female."
- "Yes, but what is your personal name?"
- The girl considered. "On the invoices persons are listed by group, area and
- zone. My group is Zith, of Athan Area, in the Pagaz Zone; my ranking is 210."
- "Zith Athan Pagaz, 210. Zap 210. It's not much of a name. Still, it suits you."
- At Reith's jocularity the girl looked blank. "Tell me how the Gzhindra live."
- "I saw them standing out on the wastelands. They pumped narcotic gas into the
- room where I slept. I woke up in a sack. They lowered me into a shaft. That's
- all I know of the Gzhindra. There must be better ways to live."
- Zap 210, as Reith now thought of her, evinced disapproval. "They are persons,
- after all, and not wild things."
- Reith had no comment to make. Her innocence was so vast that any information
- whatever could only cause her shock and confusion. "You'll find many kinds of
- people on the surface."
- "It is very strange," the girl said in a vague soft voice. "Suddenly all is
- changed." She sat looking off into the darkness. "The others will wonder where I
- have gone. Someone will do my work."
- "What was your work?"
- "I instructed children in decorum."
- "What of your spare time?"
- "I grew crystals in the new East Fourth Range."
- "Do you talk with your friends?"
- "Sometimes, in the dormitory."
- "Do you have friends among the men?"
- Under the shadow of the hat the black eyebrows rose in displeasure. "It's
- boisterous to talk to men."
- "Sitting here with me is boisterous?"
- She said nothing. The idea probably had not yet occurred to her, thought Reith;
- now she considered herself a fallen woman. "On the surface," he said, "life goes
- differently, and sometimes becomes very boisterous indeed. Assuming that we
- survive to reach the surface."
- He brought out the blue portfolio. As if by reflex Zap 210 drew herself back.
- Reith paid no heed. Squinting through the dim light he studied the tangle of
- colored lines. He put his finger down, somewhat tentatively. "Here, it seems to
- me, is where we are now." No response from Zap 210. Reith, aching, nervous and
- exhausted, started to reprimand her for disinterest, then caught his tongue. She
- was not here of her own volition, he reminded himself; she deserved neither
- reprimands nor resentment; by his actions he had made himself responsible for
- her. Reith gave a grunt of annoyance. He drew a deep breath and said in his most
- polite voice, "If I recall correctly, this passage leads over here" he
- pointed-"and comes out into this pink avenue. Am I right?"
- Zap 210 looked down askance. "Yes. This is a most secret way. Notice, it
- connects Athan with Zaltra; otherwise one must go far around, by way of Fei'erj
- Node." Grudgingly she came closer and brought her finger to within inches of the
- vellum. "This gray mark is where we want to go: to the freight-dock, at the end
- of the supply arterial. By Fei'erj it would be impossible, since the route leads
- through the dormitories and the metalspinning areas."
- Reith looked wistfully at the little red circles which marked the popouts. "They
- seem so close, so easy."
- "They will certainly be guarded."
- "What is this long black line?"
- "That is the freight canal, and is the best route away from Pagaz Zone."
- "And this bright green spot?"
- She peered and drew a quick breath. "It is the way to Foreverness: a Class
- Twenty secret!" She sat back and huddled her chin into her knees. Reith returned
- to the charts. He felt her gaze and looked up to find her studying him intently.
- She licked her colorless mouth. "Why are you such an important item?"
- "I don't know why I'm an 'item' at all." Though this was not precisely true.
- "They want you for Foreverness. Are you of some strange race?"
- "In a way," said Reith. He heaved himself painfully to his feet. "Are you ready?
- We might as well be going."
- She rose without comment and they set off along the dim passage. They walked a
- mile and came to a white wall with a black iron door at the center. Zap 210 put
- her eye to the peep-lens. "A dray is passing ... persons are near." She looked
- back at Reith. "Hold your head down," she said in a critical voice. "Pull the
- hat lower. Walk quietly, with your feet pointed straight." She turned back to
- the peephole. Her hand went to the door-catch. She pressed, and the door opened.
- "Quick, before we are seen."
- Blinking and furtive, they entered a wide arched passage. The pegmatite walls
- were studded with enormous tourmalines which, excited to fluorescence by some
- means unknown, glowed pink and blue.
- Zap 210 set off along the passage; Reith followed at a discreet distance. Fifty
- yards ahead a low dray loaded with sacks rolled on heavy black wheels. From
- somewhere behind them came the sound of hammers tapping at metal and a scraping
- noise, the source of which Reith never learned.
- For ten minutes they plodded along the corridor. On four occasions Pnumekin
- passed, shadowed faces averted, thoughts exploring areas beyond Reith's
- imagination.
- The polished pegmatite altered abruptly to black hornblende, polished back from
- veins of white quartz which seemed to grow like veins over the black matrix, the
- end-product of unknown centuries of toil. Far ahead, the passage dwindled to a
- minute black half-oval, which by insensible degrees grew larger. Beyond was
- black vacancy.
- The aperture expanded and surrounded them; they came out on a ledge overlooking
- a void as black and empty as space. Fifty yards to the right a barge, moored
- against the dock, seemed to float in midair; Reith perceived the black void to
- be the surface of a subterranean lake.
- A half dozen Pnumekin worked listlessly upon the dock, loading the barge with
- bales.
- Zap 210 sidled into a pocket of shadow. Reith joined her, standing somewhat too
- close for her liking; she moved a few fastidious inches away. "What now?" asked
- Reith.
- "Follow me aboard the barge. Say no word to anyone."
- "No one objects? They won't put us off?"
- The girl gave him a blank look. "Persons ride the barges. This is how they see
- the far tunnels."
- "Ah," said Reith, "wanderlust among the Pnumekin; they go to look at a tunnel."
- The girl gave him another blank look.
- Reith asked, "Have you ever traveled on a barge before?"
- "No."
- "How do you know where this barge goes?"
- "It goes north, to the Areas; it can go nowhere else." She peered through the
- gloom. "Follow me, and walk with decorum."
- She set off along the dock, eyes downcast, moving as if in a reverie. Reith
- waited a moment, then went after her.
- She paused beside the barge, looked vacantly across the black void; then, as if
- absentmindedly, she stepped across to the barge. She walked to the outboard side
- and merged with the shadow of the bales.
- Reith imitated her demeanor. The Pnumekin on the dock, immersed in their private
- thoughts, paid him no heed. Reith stepped aboard the barge and then could not
- control the acceleration of his pace as he slipped into the shade of the cargo.
- Zap 210, tense as wire, peered at the dock-workers. Gradually she relaxed. "They
- are disconsolate; otherwise they would have noticed. Do the ghian always lurch
- and lope when they move about?"
- "I wouldn't be surprised," said Reith. "But no harm done. Next time-" He stopped
- short. At the far end of the dock stood a dark shape. It stirred, came slowly
- toward the barge, and entered the zone of illumination. "Pnume," whispered
- Reith. Zap 210 stood soundless.
- The creature padded forward, oblivious to the dock-workers, who never so much as
- glanced aside. It stepped softly along the dock, and halted near the barge.
- "It saw us," whispered the girl.
- Reith stood heavy-hearted, bruises aching, legs and arms nerveless and dull. He
- could not survive another fight. In a husky whisper he asked, "Can you swim?"
- A horrified gasp and a glance across the black void. "No!"
- Reith searched for a weapon: a club, a hook, a rope; he found nothing.
- The Pnume passed beyond the range of vision. A moment later they felt the barge
- tremble under its weight.
- "Take off your cloak," said Reith. He slipped out of his own and, wrapping up
- the portfolio, shoved both into a crevice of the cargo. Zap 210 stood
- motionless.
- "Take off your cloak!"
- She began to whimper. Reith clapped his hand over her mouth. "Quiet!" He pulled
- the neck laces and, touching her fragile chin, found it trembling. He jerked off
- her cloak, put it with his own. She stood half-crouching in a knee-length shift.
- Reith, for all the urgency of the moment, resisted an insane desire to laugh at
- the thin adolescent figure under the black hat. "Listen," he said hoarsely. "I
- can tell you only once. I am going over the side. You must follow immediately.
- Put your hands on my shoulders. Hold your head from the water. Above all, do not
- splash or flounder. You will be safe."
- Not waiting for her acknowledgment, he lowered himself over the side of the
- barge. The frigid water rose up his body like a ring of icy fire. Zap 210
- hesitated only for an instant, then went over the side, probably only because
- she feared the Pnume more than the wet void. She gasped when her legs hit the
- water. "Quiet!" hissed Reith. Her hands went to his shoulders; she lowered
- herself into the water, and in a panic threw her arms around his neck. "Easy!"
- whispered Reith. "Keep your face down." He drifted in under the gunwale, and
- gripped a bracket. Unless someone or something peered over the side of the
- barge, they were virtually invisible.
- A half-minute passed. Reith's legs began to grow numb. Zap 210 clung to his
- back, chin at his ear; he could hear her teeth chattering. Her thin body pressed
- against him, trapping warm pockets of water which pulsed away when one or the
- other moved. Once, as a boy, Reith had rescued a drowning cat; like Zap 210 it
- had clung to him with desperate urgency, arousing in Reith a peculiarly intense
- pang of protectiveness. The bodies, both frightened and wet, projected the same
- elemental craving for life ... Silence, darkness, cold. The two in the water
- listened ... Along the deck of the barge came a quiet sound: the click of horny
- toes. It stopped, cautiously started, then stopped once more, directly overhead.
- Looking up, Reith saw toes gripping the edge of the gunwale. He took one of Zap
- 210's hands, guided it to the bracket, then the other. Once free, he turned to
- face outward from the barge.
- Unctuous ripples moved away from him; lenses of quince-colored light formed and
- vanished.
- The toes over Reith's head clicked on the gunwale. They shifted their position.
- Reith, lips drawn away from his teeth in a ghastly grimace, lunged up with his
- right arm. He caught a thin hard ankle, pulled. The Pnume croaked in dismal
- consternation. It teetered forward and for a moment leaned at an incredible
- angle, almost horizontal, supported only by the grip of its toes. Then it fell
- into the water.
- Zap 210 clutched at Reith. "Don't let it touch you; it will pull you apart."
- "Can it swim?"
- "No," she said through chattering teeth. "It is heavy; it will sink."
- Reith said, "Climb up on my back, take hold of the gunwale, pull yourself aboard
- the barge."
- Gingerly she swung behind him. Her feet pushed against his back; she stood on
- his shoulder, then clambered aboard the barge. Reith laboriously heaved himself
- up after her to lie on the deck, totally spent.
- Presently he gained his feet, to peer toward the dock. The Pnumekin worked as
- before.
- Reith moved back into the shadows. Zap 210 had not moved. The shift clung to her
- underdeveloped body. She was not ungraceful, reflected Reith.
- She noticed his attention and huddled back against the cargo.
- "Take off your undergown and put on your cloak," Reith suggested. "You'll be
- warmer."
- She stared at him miserably. Reith pulled off his own sodden garments. In horror
- almost as intense as she had shown toward the Pnume, she jerked herself around.
- Reith found the energy for a sour grin. With her back turned she draped the
- cloak over her shoulders and by some means unknown divested herself of her
- undergarments.
- The barge vibrated, lurched. Reith looked past the cargo to see the dock
- receding. It became an oasis of light in the heavy blackness. Far ahead showed a
- wan blue glimmer toward which the barge silently moved.
- They were underway. Behind lay Pagaz Zone and the way to Foreverness. Ahead was
- darkness and the Northern Areas.
- CHAPTER FOUR
- THE BARGE CARRIED a crew of two, who kept to the apron at the bow of the barge.
- Here was a small pantry, a cook-bench, an island of dim yellow illumination.
- There seemed to be at least two other passengers aboard, perhaps as many as
- three or four, who were even less obtrusive than the crew, and manifested
- themselves only at the pantry and the cook-bench. The food seemed to be free to
- the use of all. Zap 210 would not allow Reith to go forward for food. When the
- pantry and cook-bench were not in use Zap 210 procured food for both: cakes of
- pilgrim-pod meal, candied plum-shaped objects which might have been fruit or
- possibly leech-like insects, bars of meat-paste, sweet and salty wafers of a
- delicate crisp white substance which Zap 210 considered a delicacy, but which
- left an unpleasant aftertaste in Reith's mouth.
- Time passed: how long Reith had no way of knowing. The lake became a river which
- in turn became an underground canal fifty or sixty feet wide. The barge moved
- without a sound, propelled, so Reith guessed, by electric fields cycling along
- the keel. Ahead gleamed a dim blue light serving as a fix for the barge's
- steering sensor; when one blue light passed overhead, another always shone far
- ahead. At long intervals the barge passed lonesome little piers and docks, with
- passages leading away into unknown fastnesses.
- Reith ate and slept; how many times he lost count. His cosmos was the barge, the
- dark, the unseen water, the presence of Zap 210. With nothing but time and
- boredom, Reith set himself to the task of exploring her personality. Zap 210, on
- her part, treated Reith with suspicion, as if begrudging even the intimacy of
- conversation: a skittishness and prim reserve peculiar in a person who, to the
- best of his knowledge, had not even a distorted understanding of ordinary sexual
- processes. Primordial instinct at work, Reith surmised. But how in good
- conscience could he turn her loose on the surface in such a condition of
- innocence? On the other hand the prospect of explaining human biology to Zap 210
- was not a comfortable one.
- Zap 210 herself never seemed to become bored with the passage of time; she slept
- or sat looking off into the darkness as if she watched passing vistas of great
- fascination. Vexed with her self-sufficiency, Reith would occasionally join her,
- taking no notice of her slight shift of fastidious withdrawal. Conversation with
- Zap 210 was never exhilarating. She had unalterable preconceptions regarding the
- surface: she feared the sky, the wind, the space of the horizons, the pale brown
- sunlight. Her anticipations were melancholy: she foresaw death under the club of
- a yelling barbarian. Reith tried to modify her views but encountered distrust.
- "Do you think that we are ignorant of the surface?" she asked in calm scorn.
- "The zuzhma kastchai know more than anyone; they know everything. Knowledge is
- their existence. They are the brain-life of Tschai; Tschai is body and bones to
- the zuzhma kastchai."
- "And the Pnumekin: how do they fit into the picture?"
- "The 'persons'? Long ago the zuzhma kastchai gave refuge to certain men from the
- surface, with some females and some mother-women. The 'persons' proved their
- diligence by polishing stones and perfecting crystals. The zuzhma kastchai
- provided peace, and so it has been, for all the ages."
- "And where did men come from originally, do you know this?"
- Zap 210 was uninterested. "From the ghian, where else?"
- "Do they teach you of the sun and the stars and the other worlds of space?"
- "They teach what we most want to learn, which is decorum and good conduct." She
- heaved a small sigh. "That is all behind me and gone; how the others would
- marvel at me now!"
- So far as Reith could comprehend, Zap 210's principal emotion appeared to be for
- her own indecorous conduct.
- The barge moved on. Blue glimmer appeared ahead, waxed to become a glare and
- pass overhead, with a new blue glimmer far in the distance. Reith became stale
- and restless. Darkness was almost complete, relieved only by a vague glow from
- the bow apron forward. The feminine voice of Zap 210, herself only a blur, began
- to work upon his imagination; certain of her mannerisms took on the semblance of
- erotic provocations. Only by conscious rational effort could he maintain his
- impersonality. How, he would ask himself, could she provoke or tease when she
- was totally unaware of the male-female relationship? Any urgings from her
- subconscious must seem a peculiar perversion, the most exaggerated form of
- "boisterous conduct." He remembered the vitality of her body when she had clung
- to him in the water; he thought of the look of her soaked body; he began to
- wonder if his instincts might not be more accurate than his reason. Zap 210, if
- she felt anything other than glumness and foreboding, gave no evidence, except a
- somewhat greater willingness to talk. For hours she spoke in a low monotone, of
- everything she knew. She had lived a remarkably drab life, thought Reith,
- without experience of gaiety, excitement, frivolity. He wondered as to the
- content of her imaginings, but of this she said nothing. She recognized
- differences in the personalities of her fellows: subtle variations of decorum
- and discretion which to her assumed the same significance as the more vehement
- personality traits of the surface. She was aware of biological differences
- between male and female, but apparently had never wondered as to their
- justification. All very strange, mused Reith. The Shelters would seem to be an
- incubator for a whole congeries of neuroses. Reith dared venture no inquiries;
- whenever the conversation skirted such matters, she became instantly taciturn.
- Had the Pnume bred sex drive out of the Pnumekin? Did they administer
- depressants, drugs, hormones, to eliminate a troublesome tendency to
- over-reproduce? Reith asked a few cautious questions, to which Zap 210 gave such
- irrelevant and unapposite replies that Reith was sure she didn't know what he
- was talking about. From time to time, Zap 210 admitted, certain persons found
- the Shelters too staid; they were sent up to the surface, into the glare, the
- blowing winds, the empty nights with all the universe exposed, and never allowed
- to return below. "I wonder that I am not more fearful," she said. "Is it
- possible that I have always had Gzhindra tendencies? I have heard that so much
- space creates a distraction; I do not wish to be so affected."
- "We're not on the surface yet," said Reith, to which Zap 210 gave a faint shrug,
- as if the matter were of no great importance.
- Regarding the reproductive mechanisms of the Pnume she had no sure knowledge;
- she was uncertain whether or not the Pnume regarded the matter as secret, though
- she suspected as much. As to the relative number of Pnume and Pnumekin she was
- also uncertain. "There are probably more zuzhma kastchai. But many are never
- seen; they keep to the Deep Places, where the precious things are kept."
- "What precious things?"
- Again Zap 210 was vague. "The history of Tschai goes back beyond thought; just
- so far back go the records. The zuzhma kastchai are meticulous; they know
- everything that has ever happened. They consider Tschai to be a great
- conservatory, where every item, every tree, every rock is a cherished curio. Now
- there are off-world folk on the ghian: three different sorts, who have come to
- leave their artifacts."
- "Three?"
- "The Dirdir, the Chasch, the Wankh."
- "What of men?"
- "'Men'?" Her voice took on a dubious tone. "I don't know. Perhaps men too are
- off-world. If so, four peoples sojourn in Tschai. But this has happened before;
- many times have strange folk come down to Old Tschai. The zuzhma kastchai
- neither welcome nor repel; they observe, they watch. They expand their
- collections; they fill the museums of Foreverness; they compile their archives."
- Reith began to see the Pnume in a new light. It seemed that they regarded the
- surface of Tschai as a vast theater, on which wonderful millennium-long dramas
- were played out: the Old Chasch-Blue Chasch wars; the Dirdir invasion, followed
- by the Wankh counter-invasion; the various campaigns, battles, routs, and
- exterminations; the building of cities, the subsidence of ruins, the coming and
- going of peoples-all of which explained the acquiescence of the Pnume to the
- presence of alien races: from the Pnume point of view, they embellished the
- history of Tschai. As for Zap 210 herself, Reith asked if she had the same
- regard for Tschai. The girl made one of her small apathetic gestures: no, it
- meant nothing; she cared little one way or the other. Reith had a sudden insight
- into the processes of her psyche. Life for Zap 210 was a somewhat insipid
- experience to be tolerated. Fear was reserved for the unfamiliar; joy was beyond
- conjecture. He saw his own personality as it must appear to her: abrupt, brutal,
- crafty, harsh and unpredictable, in whom the worst excesses of boisterous
- conduct must always be feared ... A sad creature, thought Reith, inoffensive and
- colorless. Still, remembering the feel of her clinging to his neck, he wondered.
- Still waters ran deep. In the dark, with nothing to occupy his mind, imaginings
- came to stimulate him and arouse his fervor, whereupon Zap 210, somehow sensing
- his turmoil, moved uneasily off into the shadows, leaving Reith sourly amused by
- the situation. What could be going on in her mind?
- Reith invented a new game. He tried to amuse her. He invented grotesque
- incidents, extravagant situations, but Zap 210 was the fairy-tale princess who
- could not laugh. Her single pleasure, insofar as Reith could detect, was the
- sweet-salt wafer which served as a relish to the otherwise bland food;
- unfortunately, the supply of these delicacies was quickly exhausted, a day or
- two after they had boarded the barge. Zap 210 was taken aback by the deficiency.
- "There is always diko in our diet-always! Someone has made a foolish mistake!"
- Reith had never seen her quite so emphatic. She became morose, then listless,
- and refused to eat anything whatever. Then she became nervous and irritable, and
- Reith wondered if perhaps the diko contained a habit-forming drug to arouse so
- pronounced a craving.
- For a period which might have been three or four days she spoke almost not at
- all, and kept as far from Reith as was practicable, as if she held Reith
- responsible for her deprivation, which was actually the case, reflected Reith.
- Had he not blundered rudely into her cool gray existence, she would be
- conducting her ordinary routine, nibbling diko whenever she was of a mind. Her
- sulkiness waned; she became almost talkative; she seemed to want reassurance, or
- attention, or-could it be--affection. So it appeared to Reith, who found the
- situation as absurd as any he had known.
- On and on through the dark moved the barge, from blue light to blue light to
- blue light. They passed along a chain of underground lakes, through still
- caverns draped with stalactites, then for a long period, perhaps three
- days-along a precisely straight bore, with the blue lights spaced ten miles
- apart. The bore gave into another set of caverns, where they once again saw a
- few lonesome docks: islands of dim yellow lights. Then once again the barge rode
- a straight canal. The voyage was approaching its end-the feeling was in the air.
- The crew moved with a somewhat less deliberate gait, and the passengers on the
- starboard side went to stand on the forward apron. Zap 210, returning from the
- pantry with food, announced in a dolorous mutter: "We have almost come to
- Bazhan-Gahai."
- "And where is this?"
- "At the far side of the Area. We have come a long way." She added in a soft
- voice, "It has been a peaceful time."
- Reith thought that she spoke with regret. "Is this place near the surface?"
- "It is a trade center for goods from the Stang Islands and Hedaijha."
- Reith was surprised. "We are far to the north."
- "Yes. But the zuzhma kastchai may be waiting for us."
- Reith looked anxiously ahead, at the far blue guide-light. "Why should they be?"
- "I don't know. Perhaps they won't."
- Blue lights, one after the other: Reith saw them pass with growing tension. He
- became tired, and slept; when he awoke, Zap 210 pointed ahead. "Bazhan-Gahai."
- Reith rose to his feet. Ahead the gloom had lightened; the water showed a far
- luminous reflection. With dramatic majesty the tunnel widened; the barge moved
- forward, ponderous as fate. The cloaked shapes at the bow stood in silhouette
- against a great golden space. Reith felt a lifting of the spirit, a mysterious
- exaltation. The voyage which had started in cold and misery was at its end. The
- sides of the tunnel-fluted buttresses of raw rock-began to be visible,
- illuminated on one side, in black shadow on the other. The golden light was a
- blur; beyond, across calm water, white crags rose to a great height. Zap 210
- came slowly forward, to stare into the light with a rapt expression. Reith had
- almost forgotten what she looked like. The thin face, the pallor, the fragile
- bones of jaw and forehead, the straight nose and pale mouth were as he recalled;
- additionally he saw an expression to which he could put no name: sadness,
- melancholy, haunted foreboding. She felt his gaze and looked at him. Reith
- wondered what she saw.
- The passage opened and widened. A lake lay ahead, long and twisting. The barge
- proceeded along vistas of uncanny beauty. Small islands broke the black surface;
- great gnarled columns of white and gray rose to the vaulted ceiling far above.
- Half a mile ahead, under a beetling overhang, a dock became visible. From an
- unseen opening a shaft of golden light slanted into the cavern.
- Reith could hardly speak for emotion. "Sunlight!" he finally croaked.
- The barge eased forward, toward the dock. Reith searched the cavern walls,
- trying to trace out a route to the gap. Zap 210 said in a soft voice, "You will
- attract attention."
- Reith moved back against the bales, and again studied the side of the cavern. He
- pointed. "A trail leads up to the gap."
- "Of course."
- Reith traced the trail along the wall. It seemed to terminate at the dock, now
- only a quarter of a mile distant. Reith noticed several shapes in black cloaks:
- Pnume or Pnumekin, he could not be sure. They stood waiting in what he
- considered sinister attitudes; he became highly uneasy.
- Going to the stern of the barge, Reith looked right and left. He returned to Zap
- 210. "In a minute or so we'll pass close to that island. That's where we better
- leave the barge. I don't care to land at that dock."
- Zap 210 gave a fatalistic shrug. They went to the stern of the barge. The
- island, a twisted knob of limestone, came abeam. Reith said, "Lower yourself
- into the water. Don't kick or flounder; I'll keep you afloat."
- She gave him one unreadable side-glance and did as he bid. Holding the blue
- leather portfolio high in one hand he slid into the water beside her. The barge
- moved away, toward whoever or whatever waited on the dock. "Put your hands on my
- shoulders," said Reith. "Hold your face just above the water."
- The ground rose under their feet; they clambered up on the island. The barge had
- almost reached the dock. The black shapes came forward. By their gait Reith knew
- them for Pnume.
- From the island they waded to the shore, keeping to areas of shadow, where they
- were invisible to those on the dock, or so Reith hoped. A hundred feet above ran
- the trail to the gap. Reith made a careful reconnaissance, and they started to
- climb, scrambling over detritus, clinging to knobs of agate, crawling over humps
- and buttresses. A mournful hooting sound drifted across the water. Zap 210
- became rigid.
- "What does that mean?" Reith asked in a hushed voice.
- "It must be a summons, or a call ... like nothing I have heard in Pagaz."
- They continued up the slope, sodden cloaks clinging to their bodies, and at last
- heaved themselves up on the trail. Reith looked ahead and back; no living
- creature could be seen. The gap into the outer world was only fifty yards
- distant. Once again the hooting sounded, conveying a mournful urgency.
- Panting, stumbling, they ran up the trail. The gap opened before them; they saw
- the golden-gray sky of Tschai, where a tumbled group of black clouds floated. He
- took a last look down the trail. With the light of outdoors in his face, with
- tears blurring his vision, he could distinguish only shadows and dim rockshapes.
- The underground was again a world remote and unknown. He took Zap 210's hand,
- pulled her out into the open. Slowly she stepped forward and looked across the
- surface. They stood halfway up the slope of a rocky hill overlooking a wide
- valley. In the distance spread a calm gray surface: the sea.
- Reith took a final look over his shoulder at the gap, and started down the hill.
- Zap 210, with a dubious glance toward the sun, followed. Reith halted. He
- removed the hated black hat and sailed it off over the rocks. Then he took Zap
- 210's hat and did the same despite her startled protest.
- CHAPTER FIVE
- FOR REITH THE walk down the wide valley in the brown-gold light of afternoon was
- euphoric. He felt light-headed; his torpor had vanished; he felt strong and
- agile and full of hope; he even felt a new and tolerant affection for Zap 210.
- An odd wry creature, he thought, watching her surreptitiously, and pale as a
- ghost. She clearly felt uneasy in this sudden wilderness of space. Her gaze
- moved from the sky, along the sweep of hills to either side, out to the horizon
- of what Reith had decided must be the First Sea.
- They reached the floor of the valley. A sluggish stream wandered between banks
- of dark red reeds. Nearby grew pilgrim plant, the pods of which formed the
- indispensable staple food of Tschai. Zap 210 looked at the gray-green pods
- skeptically, failing to recognize the shriveled dry yellow tablets imported into
- the Shelters. She ate with fatalistic disinterest.
- Reith saw her looking back the way they had come, somewhat wistfully, he
- thought. "Do you miss the Shelters?" he asked.
- Zap 210 considered her reply. "I am afraid. We can be seen from all directions.
- Perhaps the zuzhma kastchai watch us from the gap. They may send night-hounds
- after us."
- Reith looked up toward the gap: a shadow, almost invisible from where they sat.
- He could detect no evidence of scrutiny; they seemed alone in the open valley.
- But he could not be sure. Eyes could be watching from the gap; the black cloaks
- made them conspicuous. He looked toward Zap 210. Almost certainly she would
- refuse to remove the garment ... Reith rose to his feet. "It's growing late;
- perhaps we can find a village along the shore."
- Two miles downstream the river spread wide to become a swamp. Along the opposite
- shore grew a dense forest of enormous dyans, the trunks on the periphery
- slanting somewhat outward. Reith had seen such a forest before; it was, so he
- suspected, a sacred grove of the Khors, a truculent folk living along the south
- shore of the First Sea.
- The presence of the sacred grove, if such it was, gave Reith pause. An encounter
- with the Khors might immediately validate Zap 210's fears regarding the ghaun,
- and the unpleasant habits of those who lived there.
- At the moment there were no Khors in sight. Proceeding along the verge of the
- swamp they came out on a knoll overlooking a hundred yards of mud flat, with the
- sluggish First Sea beyond. Far to right and left were crumbling gray headlands,
- almost lost in the afternoon murk. Somewhere to the southeast, perhaps not too
- far, must lie the Carabas, where men sought sequins and where the Dirdir came to
- hunt.
- Reith looked up and down the coast, trying to locate himself by sheer instinct.
- Zap 210 stared glumly off to sea, wondering what the future held. A mile or so
- along the shore to the southeast Reith noticed the crazy stilts of a pier
- extending across the mud flats, out into the sea; at the end half a dozen boats
- were moored. A swelling of ground beyond the swamp concealed the village which
- must lie at the head of the pier.
- The Khors, while not automatically hostile, lived by a complicated etiquette,
- transgressions of which were not tolerated. A stranger's ignorance received no
- sympathy; the rules were explicit. A visit with the Khors thus became a chancy
- occasion.
- "I don't dare risk the Khors," said Reith. He turned to look back over the
- desolate hills. "Sivishe is a long way south. We'll have to make for Cape
- Braise. If we get there we can take passage by ship down the west coast,
- although at the moment I don't know what we'll use for money."
- Zap 210 looked at him in slack-mouthed surprise. "You want me to come with you?"
- So here was the explanation for her melancholy inspection of the landscape,
- thought Reith. He asked, "Did you have other plans?"
- She pursed her lips sullenly. "I thought that you would want to go your way
- alone."
- "And leave you by yourself? You might not fare too well."
- She looked at him with sardonic speculation, wondering at the reason for his
- concern.
- "There's a good deal of 'boisterous conduct' up here on the surface," said
- Reith. "I don't think you'd like it."
- "Oh."
- "We'll have to go warily. These cloaks-we'd better take them off."
- Zap 210 looked at him aghast. "And go without clothing?"
- "No, just without the cloaks. They attract attention and hostility. We don't
- want to be taken for Gzhindra."
- "But that is what I must be!"
- "At Sivishe you may decide otherwise. If we arrive, of course. We don't help
- ourselves going as Gzhindra." He pulled off his cloak. With her face angrily
- turned away she removed her cloak and stood in her gray undergown.
- Reith rolled the cloaks into a bundle. "It may be cold at night; I'll take them
- with us."
- He picked up the blue portfolio, which now represented excess baggage. He
- wavered a moment and at last slid the portfolio between the inner and outer
- layers of his jacket.
- They set off to the northwest along the shore. Behind them the Khor grove became
- a dark blur; the far headland grew bulky and dark. Carina 4269 moved down the
- sky and the sunlight took on a late afternoon richness. To the north, however, a
- bank of purple-black clouds threatened one of the sudden Tschai thunderstorms.
- The clouds moved inexorably south, muffling, half-concealing spasms of electric
- light. The sea below shone with the sallow luster of graphite. Ahead, close
- underneath the headland, appeared another grove of dyan trees. A sacred grove?
- Reith searched the landscape but saw no Khor town.
- The grove loomed above them, the exterior boles leaning outward, the fronds
- hanging down in a great parasol. The headland conceivably concealed a village,
- but at the moment they were the only animate creatures under the half-black,
- half-golden-brown sky.
- Reith imparted none of his misgivings to Zap 210, who was sufficiently occupied
- with her own. Exposure to the sunlight had flushed her face. In the rather
- flimsy and clinging gray undergown, with the black hair beginning to curl down
- on her forehead and her ears, she seemed a somewhat different person than the
- pallid wretch Reith had met in the Pagaz refectory ... Was his imagination at
- fault? Or had her body become fuller and rounder? She noticed his gaze and gave
- him a glare of shame and defiance. "Why do you stare at me?"
- "No particular reason. Except that you look rather different now than when I
- first saw you. Different and better."
- "I don't know what you mean," she snapped. "You're talking foolishness."
- "I suppose so ... One of these days-not just now-I'll explain how life is on the
- surface. Customs and habits are more complicated-more intimate, even more
- 'boisterous'-than in the Shelters."
- "Hmmf," sniffed Zap 210. "Why are you heading toward the forest? Isn't it
- another secret place?"
- "I don't know." Reith pointed to the clouds. "See the black trails hanging
- below? That's rain. Under the trees we might stay dry. Then, night is coming
- soon, and the night-hounds. We have no weapons. If we climb a tree we'll be
- safe."
- Zap 210 made no further comment; they approached the grove.
- The dyans reared high overhead. At the first lines of boles they stopped to
- listen, but heard only a breath of wind from the oncoming storm.
- Step by step they entered the grove. The sunlight shining past the clouds
- projected a hundred shafts and beams of dark golden light; Reith and Zap 210
- walked in and out of shadow. The nearest branches were a hundred feet above; the
- trees could not be climbed; the grove offered little more security from
- night-hounds than did the open downs ... Zap 210 stopped short and seemed to
- listen. Reith could hear nothing. "What do you hear?"
- "Nothing." But she still listened, and peered in all directions. Reith became
- highly uneasy, wondering what Zap 210 sensed that he did not.
- They proceeded, wary as cats, keeping to the shadows. A clearing free of boles
- opened before them, shrouded by a continuous roof of foliage. They looked forth
- into a circular area containing four huts, a low central platform. The
- surrounding boles had been carved to the semblance of men and women, a pair at
- each tree. The men were represented with long nutcracker chins, narrow
- foreheads, bulging cheeks and eyes; the females displayed long noses and lips
- parted in wide grins. Neither resembled the typical Khor man or woman, who, as
- Reith recollected, almost exactly resembled one another in stature, physiognomy
- and dress. The poses, conventionalized and rigid, depicted the act of
- copulation. Reith looked askance at Zap 210, who seemed blankly puzzled. Reith
- decided that she interpreted the not-too-explicit attitudes as representations
- of sheer sportiveness, or simple "boisterous conduct."
- The clouds submerged the sun. Gloom came to the glade; drops of rain touched
- their faces. Reith scrutinized the huts. They were built in the usual Khor
- style, of dull brown brick with conical black iron roofs. There were four,
- facing each other at quadrants around the clearing. They appeared to be empty.
- Reith wondered what the huts contained. "Wait here," he whispered to Zap 210,
- and ran crouching to the nearest hut. He listened: no sound. He tried the door,
- which swung back easily. The interior exhaled a heavy odor, almost a stink, of
- poorly cured leather, resin, musk. On a rack hung several dozen masks of
- sculptured wood, identical to the male faces of the carved trees. Two benches
- occupied the center of the room; no weapons, no garments, no articles of value
- were to be seen. Reith returned to Zap 210 to find her inspecting the carved
- tree trunks, eyebrows lifted in distaste.
- A purple dazzle struck the sky, followed immediately by a clap of thunder; down
- came rain in a torrent. Reith led the girl at a run to the hut. They entered and
- stood with rain drumming upon the iron roof. "The Khors are an unpredictable
- people," said Reith, "but I can't imagine them visiting their grove on a night
- like this."
- "Why would they come at any time?" demanded Zap 210 peevishly. "There is nothing
- here but those grotesque dancers. Do the Khor look like that?"
- Reith understood that she referred to the figures carved upon the tree trunks.
- "Not at all," he said. "They are a yellow-skinned folk, very neat and precise.
- The men and women are exactly alike in appearance, and disposition as well." He
- tried to recall what Anacho had told him: "A strange secret folk with secret
- ways, different by day and by night, or at least this is the report. Each
- individual owns two souls which come and go with dawn and sunset; the body
- comprises two different persons." Later, Anacho had warned: "The Khor are
- sensitive as spice-snakes! Do not speak to them; pay them no heed except from
- necessity, in which case you must use the fewest possible words. They consider
- garrulity a crime against nature ... Never acknowledge the presence of a woman,
- do not look toward their children: they will suspect you of laying a curse.
- Above all ignore the sacred grove! Their weapon is the iron dart which they
- throw with accuracy. They are a dangerous people."
- Reith paraphrased the remarks to the best of his recollection; Zap 210 went to
- sit on one of the benches.
- "Lie down," said Reith. "Try to sleep."
- "In the noise of the storm, and this vile smell to all sides? Are all the houses
- of the ghaun so?"
- "Not all of them," muttered Reith. He went to look out the door. The alternation
- of lightning glare and dying twilight upon the tree-statues presented the
- illusion of a frantic erotic jerking. Zap 210 might soon begin to ask questions
- to which Reith did not care to respond ... Upon the roof came a sudden clatter
- of hail; abruptly the storm passed over, and nothing could be heard but wind
- sighing in the dyan trees.
- Reith returned into the room. He spoke in a voice which rang false even to his
- own ears: "Now you can rest; at least the sound is gone."
- She made a soft sound which Reith could not interpret, and went herself to stand
- in the doorway. She looked back at Reith. "Someone is coming."
- Reith hurried to the doorway and looked forth. Across the clearing stood a
- figure in Khor garments: male or female Reith could not determine. It went into
- the hut directly opposite their own. Reith said to Zap 210: "We'd better leave
- while we have a chance."
- She held him back. "No, no! There's another one."
- The second Khor, entering the clearing, looked up at the sky. The first came
- from the hut with a flaring cresset on a pole, and the second ran quickly to the
- hut in which Reith and Zap 210 were concealed. The first took no notice. As the
- Khor entered Reith struck hard, ignoring all precepts of gallantry; in this case
- male and female were all the same. The Khor fell and lay limp. Reith jumped
- forward; the Khor was male. Reith stripped off his cape, tied his hands and feet
- with sandal thongs and gagged him with the sleeve of his black coat. With Zap
- 210's help he dragged the man behind the rack of masks. Here Reith made a quick
- search of the limp body, finding a pair of iron darts, a dagger and a soft
- leather pouch containing sequins, which Reith somewhat guiltily appropriated.
- Zap 210 stood by the door gazing out in fascination. The first to come had been
- a woman. Wearing a woman-mask and a white frock, she stood by the cresset which
- she had thrust into a socket near the central platform. If she were perplexed by
- the disappearance of the man who had entered the hut she gave no sign.
- Reith looked forth. "Now: while there's only one woman-"
- "No! More come."
- Three persons slipped separately into the clearing, going to the other three
- huts. One, in a woman-mask and white gown, emerged with another cresset which
- she placed in a socket and stood quietly like the first. The other two now came
- forth, wearing man-masks and white gowns like those of the women. They went to
- the central platform and stood near the women, who made no movement.
- Reith began to understand something of the purpose of the sacred grove. Zap 210
- stared forth in fascination.
- Reith became highly uneasy. If events proceeded as he suspected, she would be
- shocked and horrified.
- Three more persons appeared. One came to the but where Reith and Zap 210 waited;
- Reith tried to deal with him as he had the other; but this time the blow was
- glancing and the man fell with a startled grunt. Reith was instantly upon him
- and shut off his breath until he fainted. Using sandal thongs and cape as before
- he tied and gagged the Khor and again robbed the man of his pouch. "I regret
- becoming a thief," said Reith, "but my need is far greater than yours."
- Zap 210, standing by the door, gave a startled gasp. Reith went to look. The
- women-now there were three-had disrobed to stand nude. They began to sing, a
- wordless chant, sweet, soft, insistent. The three in the man-masks began a slow
- gyration around the platform.
- Zap 210 muttered under her breath: "What are they doing? Why do they reveal
- their bodies? Never have I seen such a thing!"
- "It is only religion," said Reith nervously. "Don't watch. Go lie down. You must
- be very tired."
- She gave him a lambent look of wonder and distrust. "You don't answer my
- question. I am very embarrassed. I have never seen a naked person. Are all the
- folk of the ghaun so-so boisterous? It is shocking. And the singing: most
- disturbing. What are they planning to do?"
- Reith tried to stand in front of her. "Hadn't you better sleep? The rites will
- only bore you."
- "They don't bore me! I am astounded that people can be so bold! And look! The
- men!"
- Reith took a deep breath and came to a desperate decision. "Come back here." He
- gave her a female mask. "Put that on."
- She jerked back aghast. "What for?"
- Reith took a man-mask and fitted it over his face. "We're leaving.
- "But-" She turned a fascinated look toward the platform.
- Reith pulled her back around, fitted one of the Khor hats on her head, arranged
- the other on his own.
- "They'll certainly see us," said Zap 210. "They'll chase us and kill us."
- "Perhaps so," said Reith. "Nevertheless we'd better go." He looked around the
- clearing. "You go first. Walk behind the hut. I'll come after you."
- Zap 210 departed the hut. The women at the platform chanted with the most
- compelling urgency; the men stood nude.
- Reith joined Zap 210 behind the hut. Had they been noticed? The chanting
- continued, rising and falling. "Walk out into the grove. Don't look back."
- "Ridiculous," muttered Zap 210. "Why shouldn't I look back?" She marched toward
- the forest, with Reith twenty feet behind her. From the but came a wild scream
- of fury. The chanting stopped short. There was stunned silence.
- "Run," said Reith. Through the sacred grove they fled, throwing away the hats
- and masks. From behind came calls of passionate fury, but deterred perhaps by
- their nudity, the Khor offered no pursuit.*
- Reith and Zap 210 came to the edge of the grove. They paused to catch their
- breath. Halfway up the sky the blue moon shone through a few ragged clouds;
- elsewhere the sky was clear.
- Zap 210 looked up. "What are those little lights?"
- "Those are stars," said Reith. "Far suns. Most control a family of planets. From
- a world called Earth, men came: your ancestors, mine, even the ancestors of the
- Khor. Earth is the world of men."
- "How do you know all this?" demanded Zap 210.
- "Sometime I'll tell you. Not tonight."
- They set off across the downs, walking through the starry night, and something
- about the circumstances put Reith in a strange frame of mind. It was as if he
- were young and roaming a starlit meadow of Earth with a slim girl with whom he
- had become infatuated. So strong became the dream, or the hallucination, or
- whatever the nature of his mood, that he groped out for Zap 210's hand, where
- she trudged beside him. She turned him a wan uncomplaining glance, but made no
- protest: here was another incomprehensible aspect of the astounding ghaun.
- So they went on for a period. Reith gradually recovered his senses. He walked
- the surface of Tschai; his companion- He left the thought incomplete, for a
- variety of reasons. As if she had sensed the alteration of his mood Zap 210
- angrily snatched away her hand; perhaps for a space of time she had been
- dreaming as well.
- They marched on in silence. At last, with the blue moon hanging directly above,
- they reached the sandstone promontory, and found a protected niche at the base.
- Wrapping themselves in their cloaks, they huddled upon a drift of sand ... Reith
- could not sleep. He lay looking up at the sky and listening to the sound of the
- girl's breathing. Like himself, she lay awake. Why had he felt so urgently
- compelled to flee the Khor grove at the risk of pursuit and death? To protect
- the girl's innocence? Ridiculous. He looked to find her face, a pale blotch in
- the moonlight, turned in his direction.
- "I can't sleep," she said in a soft voice. "I am too tired. The surface
- frightens me."
- "Sometimes it frightens me," said Reith. "Still, would you rather be back in the
- Shelters?"
- As always she made a tangential response. "I can't understand what I see; I
- can't understand myself ... Never have I heard such singing."
- "They sang songs which never change," said Reith. "Songs perhaps from old
- Earth."
- "They showed themselves without clothes! Is this how the surface people act?"
- "Not all of them," said Reith.
- "But why do they act that way?"
- Sooner or later, thought Reith, she must learn the processes of human biology.
- Not tonight, not tonight! "Nakedness doesn't mean much," he mumbled. "Everyone
- has a body much like everyone else's."
- "But why should they wish to show themselves? In the Shelters we remain covered,
- and try to avoid 'boisterous conduct.' "
- "Just what is this 'boisterous conduct'?"
- "Vulgar intimacy. People touch other people and play with them. It's all quite
- ridiculous."
- Reith chose his words with care. "This is probably normal human conduct-like
- becoming hungry, or something of the sort. You've never been 'boisterous'?"
- "Of course not!"
- "You've never even thought about it?"
- "One can't help thinking."
- "Hasn't there ever been a young man with whom you've especially wanted to be
- friendly?"
- "Never!" Zap 210 was scandalized.
- "Well, you're on the surface and things may be different .... Now you'd better
- go to sleep. Tomorrow there may be a townful of Khors chasing us."
- Reith finally slept. He awoke once to find the blue moon gone, the sky dark
- except for constellations. From far across the downs came the sad hooting of a
- night-hound. When he settled back into his cloak Zap 210 said in a drowsy
- whisper: "The sky frightens me.
- Reith moved close beside her; involuntarily, or so it seemed, he reached out and
- stroked her head, where the hair was now soft and thick. She sighed and relaxed,
- arousing in Reith an embarrassed protectiveness.
- The night passed. A russet glow appeared in the east, waxing to become a lilac
- and honey-colored dawn. While Zap 210 sat huddled in her cloak, Reith
- investigated the pouches he had taken from the Khors. He was pleased to find
- sequins to the value of ninety-five: more than he had expected. He discarded the
- darts, needle-sharp iron bolts eight inches long with a leather tail; the dagger
- he tucked into his belt.
- They set out up the slopes of the promontory, and presently gained the ridge.
- Carina 4269, rising at their backs, shone along the shore, revealing another
- sweep of low beach and mud flats, with far off another promontory like the one
- on which they stood. The Khor town occupied a hillside slope a mile to the left.
- Almost at their feet a pier zigzagged across the mud flats and out into the sea:
- a precarious construction of poles, rope and planks, vibrating to the current
- which swirled around the base of the promontory. Half a dozen boats were moored
- to the spindly piles: double-ended craft, high at bow and stern like swaybacked
- dories fitted with masts. Reith looked toward the town. A few plumes of smoke
- rose from the black iron roofs; otherwise no activity was perceptible. Reith
- turned back to his inspection of the boats.
- "It's easier to sail than to walk," Reith told Zap 210. "And there seems to be a
- fair wind up the coast."
- Zap 210 spoke in consternation: "Out across so much emptiness?"
- "The emptier the better," said Reith. "The sea gives me no worry; it's the folk
- who sail there ... The same is just as true of the land, of course." He set off
- down the slope; Zap 210 scrambled after him. They reached the end of the pier
- and started along the rickety walkway. From somewhere nearby came a shriek of
- anger. They saw a half-grown boy racing toward the village.
- Reith broke into a run. "Come along, hurry! We won't have much time."
- Zap 210 came panting behind him. The two reached the end of the pier. "We won't
- be able to escape! They'll follow us in the boats."
- "No," said Reith. "I think not." He looked from boat to boat, and chose that
- which seemed the most staunch. In front of the village excited black shapes had
- gathered; a dozen started at a run for the pier, followed by as many more.
- "Jump down into the boat," said Reith. "Hoist the sail!"
- "It is too late," cried Zap 210. "We will never escape."
- "It's not too late. Hoist the sail!"
- "I don't know how."
- "Pull the rope that goes up over the mast."
- Zap 210 clambered down into the boat and tried to follow Reith's instruction.
- Reith meanwhile ran along the pier cutting loose the other boats. Riding the
- current, pushed by the offshore breeze, they drifted away from the dock.
- Reith returned to where Zap 210 fumbled desperately with the halyard. She
- strained with all her might and succeeded in fouling the long yard under the
- forestay. Reith took a last look toward the screaming villagers, then jumped
- down into the boat and cast off.
- No time to sort out halyards or clear the yard; Reith took up the sweeps, fitted
- them between the thole pins and put way on the boat. Along the trembling pier
- surged the screaming Khors. Halting, they whirled their darts; up and out flew a
- volley of iron, to strike into the water an uncomfortable ten or twenty feet
- short of the boat. With renewed energy Reith worked the sweeps, then went to
- hoist the sail. The yard swung free, creaked aloft; the gray sail billowed; the
- boat heeled and churned through the water. The Khors stood silent on the pier,
- watching after their departing boats.
- Reith sailed directly out to sea. Zap 210 sat huddled in the center of the boat.
- Finally she made a dispirited protest. "Is it wise to go so far from the land?"
- "Very wise. Otherwise the Khors might follow along the shore and kill us when we
- put into land."
- "I have never known such openness. It is exposed-frightfully so."
- "On the other hand, our condition is better than it was yesterday at this time.
- Are you hungry?"
- "Yes."
- "See what's in that caddy yonder. We may be in luck."
- Zap 210 climbed forward to the locker in the bow, where among scraps of rope and
- gear, spare sails, a lantern, she found a jug of water and a sack of dry
- pilgrim-pod cakes.
- With the shore at last a blur, Reith swung the boat into the northwest, trimming
- the ungainly sail to the wind.
- All day the fair wind blew. Reith held a course ten miles offshore, well beyond
- the scope of Khor vision. Headlands appeared in the murk of distance, loomed off
- the beam, slowly dwindled and disappeared.
- As the afternoon waned the wind increased, sending whitecaps chasing over the
- dark sea. The rigging creaked, the sails bulged, the boat threw up a bow-wave,
- the wake gurgled, and Reith rejoiced at every mile so swiftly put astern.
- Carina 4269 sank behind the mainland hills; the wind died and the boat lost way.
- Darkness came; Zap 210 crouched fearfully on the center seat, oppressed by the
- expanse of the sky. Reith lost patience with her fears. He lowered the yard
- halfway down the mast, lashed the rudder, made himself as comfortable as
- possible and slept.
- A cool early morning breeze awoke him. Stumbling about in the pre-dawn gloom he
- managed to hoist the yard; then went aft to the tiller, where he steered
- half-dozing until the sun arose.
- About noon a finger of land thrust forth into the sea; Reith landed the boat on
- a dismal gray beach and went out foraging. He found a brackish stream, a thicket
- of dark red dragon berries, a supply of the ubiquitous pilgrim-pod. In the
- stream he noticed a number of crustacean-like creatures, but could not bring
- himself to catch them.
- During the middle afternoon they once again put out to sea, Reith using the
- sweeps to pull the boat away from the beach. They rounded the headland to find a
- changed landscape shoreward. The gray beaches and mud flats had become a narrow
- fringe of shingle; beyond were barren red cliffs, and Reith, wary of the lee
- shore, put well out to sea.
- An hour before sunset a long low vessel appeared over the northeast horizon,
- faring on a course parallel to their own. With the sun low in the northwest
- Reith hoped to evade the attention of those aboard the ship, which held a
- sinister resemblance to the pirate galleys of the Draschade. Hoping to draw
- away, he altered course to the south. The ship likewise altered course,
- coincidentally or not Reith could not be sure. He swung the boat directly toward
- the shore, now about ten miles distant; the ship again seemed to alter course.
- With a sinking heart Reith saw that they must surely be overtaken. Zap 210
- watched with sagging shoulders; Reith wondered what he should do if the galley
- in fact overtook them. She had no knowledge of what to expect: now was hardly
- the time to explain to her. Reith decided that he would kill her in the event
- that capture became certain. Then he changed his mind: they would plunge over
- the side of the boat and drown together ... Equally impractical; while there was
- life there was hope.
- The sun settled upon the horizon; the wind, as on the previous evening,
- lessened. Sunset brought a dead calm with the boats rolling helplessly on the
- waves.
- Reith shipped the sweeps. As twilight settled over the ocean he pulled away from
- the becalmed pirate ship toward shore. He rowed on through the night. The pink
- moon rose and then the blue moon, to project tremulous trails across the water.
- Ahead, one of the trails ended at a mass of dead black: the shore. Reith stopped
- his rowing. Far to the west he saw a flickering light; to sea all was dark. He
- threw out the anchor and lowered the sail. The two made a meal on berries and
- pilgrim-pod, then lay down to sleep on the sails in the bottom of the boat.
- With morning came a breeze from the east. The boat lay at anchor a hundred yards
- offshore, in water barely three feet deep. The pirate galley, if such it was,
- could no longer be seen. Reith pulled up the anchor and hoisted the sail; the
- boat moved jauntily off through the water.
- Made cautious by the events of the previous afternoon, Reith sailed only a
- quarter of a mile offshore, until the wind died, halfway through the afternoon.
- In the north a bank of clouds gave portent of a storm; taking up the sweeps,
- Reith worked the boat into a lagoon at the mouth of a sluggish river. To the
- side of the lagoon floated a raft of dried reeds, upon which two boys sat
- fishing. After an initial stir they watched the approach of the boat in
- attitudes of indifference.
- Reith paused in his rowing to consider the situation. The unconcern of the boys
- seemed unnatural. On Tschai unusual events almost always presaged danger. Reith
- cautiously rowed the boat to within conversational distance. A hundred feet
- distant on the bank sat three men, also fishing. They seemed to be Grays: a
- people short and stocky, with strongly-featured faces, sparse brownish hair and
- grayish skin. At least, thought Reith, they were not Khors, and not
- automatically hostile.
- Reith let the boat drift forward. He called out: "Is there a town nearby?"
- One of the boys pointed across the reeds to a grove of purple ouinga trees.
- "Yonder."
- "What town is it?"
- "Zsafathra."
- "Is there an inn or a tavern where we can find accommodation?"
- "Speak to the men ashore."
- Reith urged the boat toward the bank. One of the men called out in irritation:
- "Easy with the tumult! You'll drive off every gobbulch in the lagoon."
- "Sorry," said Reith. "Can we find accommodation in your town?"
- The men regarded him with impersonal curiosity. "What do you here, along this
- coast?"
- "We are travelers, from the south of Kislovan, now returning home."
- "You have traveled a remarkable distance in so small a craft," remarked one of
- the men in a mildly skeptical voice.
- "One which strongly resembles the craft of the Khors," noted another
- "For a fact," Reith agreed, "it does look like a Khor boat. But all this aside,
- what of lodging?"
- "Anything is available to folk with sequins."
- "We can pay reasonable charges."
- The oldest of the men on the bank rose to his feet. "If nothing else," he
- stated, "we are reasonable people." He signaled Reith to approach. As the boat
- nosed into the reeds he jumped aboard. "So, then: you claim to be Khors?"
- "Quite the reverse. We claim not to be Khors."
- "What of the boat, then?"
- Reith made an ambiguous gesture. "It is not as good as some, but better than
- others; it has brought us this far."
- A wintry grin crossed the man's face. "Proceed through the channel yonder. Bear
- to the right."
- For half an hour Reith rowed this way and that through a maze of channels with
- the ouinga trees always behind islands of black reeds. Reich presently
- understood that the Zsafathran either was having a joke or sought to confuse
- him. He said, "I am tired; you row the rest of the way."
- "No, no," declared the old man. "We are now there, just left through yonder
- channel, and toward the ouingas."
- "Odd," said Reith. "We have gone back and forth past that channel a dozen
- times."
- "One channel looks much like another. And here we are."
- The boat floated into a placid pond, surrounded by reed-thatched cottages on
- stilts under the ouinga trees. At the far end of the pond stood a larger, more
- elaborate structure. The poles were purple ouinga wood; the thatch was woven in
- a complicated pattern of black, brown and gray.
- "Our community free-house," explained the Zsafathran. "We are not so isolated as
- you might think. Thangs come by with their troupes and carts, or Bihasu
- peddlers, or wandering dignitaries like yourselves. All these we entertain at
- our free-house."
- "Thangs? We must be close upon Cape Braise!"
- "Is three hundred miles close? The Thangs are as pervasive as sandflies; they
- appear everywhere, more often than not when they are not wanted. Not too far is
- the great Thang town of Urmank ... You and your woman both are of a race strange
- to me. If the concept were not inherently ludicrous-but no, to postulate
- nonsense is to lose my dignity; I will hazard nothing."
- "We are from a remote place," said Reith. "You have never heard of it."
- The old man made a sign of indifference. "Whatever you like; provided that you
- observe the ceremonies, and pay your score."
- "Two questions," said Reith. "What are the 'ceremonies,' and how much must we
- expect to pay as a daily charge?"
- "The ceremonies are simple," said the Zsafathran. "An exchange of pleasantries,
- so to speak. The charges will be perhaps four or five sequins a day. Go ashore
- at the dock, if you will; then we must take your boat away, to discourage
- speculation should a Thang or a Bihasu pass by."
- Reith decided to make no objection. He worked the boat to the dock, a
- construction of withe and reeds lashed to piles of ouingawood. The Zsafathran
- jumped from the boat, and gallantly helped Zap 210 to the dock, inspecting her
- closely as he did so.
- Reith jumped ashore with a mooring line, which the Zsafathran took and passed on
- to a lad with a set of muttered instructions. He led Reith and Zap 210 through
- the white pavilion and into the great freehouse. "So here you are, take your
- ease. The cubicle yonder is at your service. Food and wine will be served in due
- course."
- "We want to bathe," said Reith, "and we would appreciate a change of clothes if
- any such are available."
- "The bathhouse is yonder. Fresh garments after the Zsafathran style can be
- furnished at a price."
- "And the price?"
- "Ordinary suits of gray furze for withe-cutting or tillage are ten sequins each.
- Since your present garments are little better than rags, I recommend the
- expense."
- "Under-linen is included in this price?"
- "Upon a surcharge of two sequins apiece under-linen is furnished, and should you
- wish new sandals, each must pay five sequins additionally."
- "Very well," said Reith. "Bring everything. We'll go first class while the
- sequins last."
- CHAPTER SIX
- WEARING THE SIMPLE gray smock and trousers of the Zsafathrans, Zap 210 looked
- somewhat less peculiar and conspicuous. Her black hair had begun to curl;
- exposure to wind and sun had darkened her skin; only her perfectly regular
- features and her brooding absorption with secret ideas now set her apart. Reith
- doubted, however, if a stranger would notice in her conduct anything more
- unusual than shyness.
- But Cauch, the old Zsafathran, noticed. Taking Reith aside, he muttered in a
- confidential voice, "Your woman: perhaps she is ill? If you require herbs,
- sweat-baths or homeopathy, these are available, at no great cost."
- "Everything at Zsafathra is a bargain," said Reith. "Before we leave we might
- owe more sequins than we carry. In this case, what would be your attitude?"
- "Sorrowful resignation, nothing more. We know ourselves for a destiny-blasted
- race, doomed to a succession of disappointments. But I trust this is not to be
- the case?"
- "Not unless we enjoy your hospitality longer than I presently plan."
- "No doubt you will carefully gauge your resources. But again, what of the
- woman's condition?" He subjected Zap 210 to a critical scrutiny. "I have had
- some experience in these matters; I deem her peaked and listless, and somewhat
- morose. Beyond this, I am puzzled."
- "She is an unfathomable person," Reith agreed.
- "The description, if I may say so, applies to you both," said Cauch. He turned
- his owlish gaze upon Reith. "Well, the woman's morbidity is your affair, of
- course ... A collation has been served on the pavilion, which you are invited to
- join."
- "At a small charge, presumably?"
- "How can it be otherwise? In this exacting world only the air we breathe is
- free. Are you the sort to go hungry because you begrudge the outlay of a few
- bice? I think not. Come." And Cauch, urging them out upon the pavilion, seated
- them in withe chairs before a wicker table, then went off to instruct the girls
- who served from the buffet.
- Cool tea, spice-cakes, stalks of a crisp red water-vegetable were set before
- them as a first course. The food was palatable, the chairs were comfortable;
- after the vicissitudes of the previous weeks the situation seemed unreal, and
- Reith was unable to subdue a nervous mannerism of looking warily this way and
- that. Gradually he relaxed. The pavilion seemed an idyll of peace. Gauzy fronds
- of the purple ouinga trailed low, exhaling an aromatic scent. Carina 4269
- sprinkled dancing spots of dark gold light across the water. From somewhere
- beyond the free-house came the music of water-gongs. Zap 210 gazed across the
- pond in a reverie, nibbling at the food as if it lacked flavor. Becoming aware
- of Reith's attention she straightened primly in the chair.
- "Shall I serve more of this tea?" asked Reith.
- "If you like."
- Reith poured from the bubble-glass jug. "You don't seem particularly hungry," he
- observed.
- "I suppose not. I wonder if they have any diko."
- "I'm sure that they have no diko," said Reith.
- Zap 210 gave her fingers a petulant twitch.
- Reith asked, "Do you like this place?"
- "It is better than the vastness of the sea."
- For a period Reith sipped his tea in silence. The table was cleared; new dishes
- were set before them: croquettes in sweet jelly; toasted sticks of white pith;
- nubbins of gray sea-flesh. As before Zap 210 showed no great appetite. Reith
- said politely, "You've seen something of the surface now. Is it different from
- your expectations?"
- Zap 210 reflected. "I never thought to see so many motherwomen," she murmured,
- as if talking to herself.
- "'Mother-women' ? Do you mean women with children?"
- She flushed. "I mean the women with prominent breasts and hips. There are so
- many! Some of them seem very young: no more than girls."
- "It's quite normal," said Reith. "As girls grow out of childhood, they develop
- breasts and hips."
- "I am not a child," Zap 210 declared in an unusually haughty voice. "And I ..."
- Her voice dwindled away.
- Reith poured another mug of tea and settled back into his chair. "It's time," he
- said, "that I explained certain matters to you. I suppose I should have done so
- before. All women are mother-women."
- Zap 210 stared at him incredulously. "This isn't the case at all!"
- "Yes, it is," said Reith. "The Pnume fed you drugs to keep you immature: the
- diko, or so I imagine. You aren't drugged now and you're becoming normal-more or
- less. Haven't you noticed changes in yourself?"
- Zap 210 sank back in her chair, dumbfounded by his knowledge of her embarrassing
- secret. "Such things are not to be talked about."
- "So long as you know what's happening."
- Zap 210 sat looking out over the water. In a diffident voice she asked, "You
- have noticed changes in me?"
- "Well, yes. First of all, you no longer look like the ghost of a sick boy."
- Zap 210 whispered, "I don't want to be a fat animal, wallowing in the dark. Must
- I be a mother?"
- "All mothers are women," Reith explained, "but not all women are mothers. Not
- all mothers become fat animals."
- "Strange, strange! Why are some women mothers and not others? Is it evil
- destiny?"
- "Men are involved in the process," said Reith. "Look yonder, on the deck of that
- cottage: two children, a woman, a man. The woman is a mother. She is young and
- looks healthy. The man is the father. Without fathers, there are no children."
- Before Reith could proceed with his explanation, old Cauch returned to the table
- and seated himself.
- "All is satisfactory?"
- "Very much so," said Reith. "We will regret leaving your village."
- Cauch nodded complacently. "In a few poor ways we are a fortunate folk, neither
- rigorous like the Khors, nor obsessively flexible like the Thangs to the west.
- What of yourselves? I admit to curiosity regarding your provenance and your
- destination, for I regard you as unusual folk."
- Reith ruminated a moment or two, then said: "I don't mind satisfying your
- curiosity if you are willing to pay my not, unreasonable fee. In fact I can
- offer you various grades of enlightenment. For a hundred sequins I guarantee
- amazement and awe."
- Cauch drew back, hands raised in protest. "Tell me nothing upon which you place
- a value! But any oddments of small talk you can spare at no charge will find in
- me an attentive listener."
- Reith laughed. "Triviality is a luxury I can't afford. Tomorrow we depart
- Zsafathra. Our few sequins must take us to Sivishe-in what fashion I don't
- know."
- "As to this I can't advise you," said Cauch, "not even for a fee. My experience
- extends only so far as Urmank. Here you must go carefully. The Thangs will take
- all your sequins without a qualm. Useless to feel anger or injury! This is the
- Thang temperament. Rather than work they prefer to connive; Zsafathrans are very
- much on their guard when they visit Urmank, as you will see should you choose to
- go in our company to the Urmank bazaar."
- "Hmm." Reith rubbed his chin. "What of our boat, in this case?"
- Cauch shrugged, somewhat too casually or so it seemed to Reith. "What is a boat?
- A floating shell of wood."
- "We had planned to sell this valuable boat at Urmank," said Reith. "Still, to
- save myself the effort of navigation, I will let it go here for less than its
- full value."
- With a quiet laugh Cauch shook his head. "I have no need for so clumsy and
- awkward a craft. The rigging is frayed, the sails are by no means the best;
- there is only a poor assortment of gear and rope in the forward caddy."
- After an hour and a half of proposals and counter-proposals Reith disposed of
- the boat for forty-two sequins, together with all costs of accommodation at
- Zsafathra, and transportation to Urmank on the morrow. As they bargained they
- consumed quantities of the pepper tea, a mild intoxicant. Reith's mood became
- loose and easy. The present seemed none too bad. The future? It would be met on
- its own terms. At the moment the failing afternoon light seeped through the
- enormous ouinga trees, pervading the air with dusty violet, and the pond
- mirrored the sky.
- Cauch went off about his affairs; Reith leaned back in his chair. He considered
- Zap 210, who also had drunk a considerable quantity of the pepper tea. Some
- alteration of his mood caused him to see her not as a Pnumekin and a freak but
- as a personable young woman sitting quietly in the dusk. Her attention was fixed
- on something across the pavilion; what she saw astonished her and she turned to
- Reith in wonder. Reith noticed how large and dark were her eyes. She spoke in a
- shocked whisper. "Did you see ... that?.
- "What?"
- "A young man and a young woman-they stood close and put their faces together!"
- "Really!"
- "Yes!"
- "I can't believe it. Just what did they do?"
- "Well-I can't quite describe it."
- "Was it like this?" Reith put his hands on her shoulders, looked deep into the
- startled eyes.
- "No ... not quite. They were closer."
- "Like this?"
- Reith put his arms around her. He remembered the cold water of the Pagaz lake,
- the desperate animal vitality of her body as she had clung to him. "Was it like
- this?"
- She pushed back at his shoulders. "Yes ... Let me go; someone might think us
- boisterous."
- "Did they do this?" Reith kissed her. She looked at him in astonishment and
- alarm, and put her hand to her mouth. "No ... Why did you do that?"
- "Did you mind?"
- "Well, no. I don't think so. But please don't do it again; it makes me feel very
- strangely."
- "That," said Reith, "is the effects of the diko wearing off." He drew back and
- sat with his head spinning. She looked at him uncertainly. "I can't understand
- why you did that."
- Reith took a deep breath. "It's natural for men and women to be attracted to
- each other. This is called the reproductive instinct, and sometimes it results
- in children."
- Zap 210 became alarmed. "Will I now be a mother-woman?"
- "No," said Reith. "We'd have to become far friendlier."
- "You're sure?"
- Reith thought that she leaned toward him. "I'm sure." He kissed her again, and
- this time, after a first nervous motion, she made no resistance ... then she
- gasped. "Don't move. They won't notice us if we sit like this; they'll be
- ashamed to look."
- Reith froze, his face close to hers. "Who won't notice us?" he muttered.
- "Look-now."
- Reith glanced over his shoulder. Across the pavilion stood two dark shapes
- wearing black cloaks and wide-brimmed black hats.
- "Gzhindra," she whispered.
- Cauch came into the pavilion, and went to talk with the Gzhindra. After a moment
- he led them out into the road.
- Dusk became night. Across the pavilion the serving girls hung up lamps with
- yellow and green shades, and brought new trays and tureens to the buffet table.
- Reith and Zap 210 sat somberly back in the shadows.
- Cauch, returning to the pavilion, joined them. "Tomorrow at dawn we will depart
- for Urmank, and no doubt arrive by noon. You know the reputation of the Thangs?"
- "To some extent."
- "The reputation is deserved," said Cauch. "They cheat in preference to keeping
- faith; their favorite money is stolen money. So be on your guard."
- Reith asked casually, "Who were the two men in black with whom you spoke half an
- hour ago?"
- Cauch nodded as if he had been awaiting the question. "Those were Gzhindra, or
- Ground-men as we call them, who sometimes act as agents for the Pnume. Their
- business tonight was different. They have taken a commission from the Khors to
- locate a man and a woman who desecrated a sacred place and stole a boat near the
- town of Fauzh. The description, by a peculiar coincidence, matched your own,
- though certain discrepancies enabled me to state with accuracy that no such
- persons had been seen at Zsafathra. Still, they may discuss the matter with
- people who do not know you as well as I; to avoid any possible confusion of
- identities, I suggest that you alter your appearance as dramatically as
- possible."
- "That is easier said than done," said Reith.
- "Not altogether." Cauch put his fingers into his mouth, producing a shrill
- whistle. Without surprise or haste one of the serving girls approached: a
- pleasant creature, broad in hips, shoulders, cheekbones and mouth, with
- nondescript brown hair worn in a wildly coquettish array of ringlets. "Well,
- then, you desire something?"
- "Bring a pair of turbans," said Cauch. "The orange and white, with black
- bangles."
- The girl procured the articles. Going to Zap 210, she wound the orange and white
- cloth around the black cap of hair, tied it so that the tasseled ends hung
- behind the left ear, then affixed black bangles to swing somewhat in front of
- the right ear. Reith marveled at the transformation. Zap 210 now seemed daring
- and mischievous, a gay young girl costumed as a pirate.
- Reith was next fitted with the turban; Zap 210 seemed to find the transformation
- amusing; she opened her mouth and laughed: the first occasion Reith had heard
- her do so.
- Cauch appraised them both. "A remarkable difference. You have become a pair of
- Hedaijhans. Tomorrow I will provide you with shawls. Your very mothers would not
- know you."
- "What do you charge for this service?" demanded Reith. "A reasonable sum, I
- hope?"
- "A total of eight sequins, to include the articles themselves, fitting, and
- training in the postures of the Hedaijhans. Essentially, you must walk with a
- swagger, swinging your arms-so." Cauch demonstrated a mincing lurching gait.
- "With your hands-so. Now, lady, you first. Remember, your knees must be bent.
- Swing, swagger..."
- Zap 210 followed the instructions with great earnestness, looking toward Reith
- to see if he laughed.
- The practice went on into the night, while the pink moon sailed behind the
- ouinga trees, and the blue moon rose in the east. Finally Cauch pronounced
- himself satisfied. "You would deceive almost anyone. So then, to the couch.
- Tomorrow we journey to Urmank."
- The sleeping cubicle was dim, cracks in the rattan wall admitting slits of green
- and yellow light from the pavilion lamps, as many more from the pink and blue
- moons shining from different directions to make a multicolored mesh on the
- floor.
- Zap 210 went to the wall and peered through the cracks out toward the avenue
- which ran under the ouingas. She looked for several minutes. Reith came to join
- her. "What do you see?"
- "Nothing. They would not let themselves be seen so easily." She turned away and
- with an inscrutable glance toward Reith went to sit on one of the wicker
- couches. Presently she said, "You are a very strange man."
- Reith had no reply to make.
- "There is so much you don't tell me. Sometimes I feel as if I know nothing
- whatever."
- "What do you want to know?"
- "How people of the surface act, how they feel ... why they do the things they
- do..."
- Reith went to where she sat and stood looking down at her. "Do you want to learn
- all these things tonight?"
- She sat looking down at her hands. "No. I'm afraid ... Not now."
- Reith reached out and touched her head. He was suddenly wildly tempted to sit
- down beside her and tell her the tale of his remarkable past ... He wanted to
- feel her eyes on him; to see her pale face attentive and marveling ... In fact,
- thought Reith, he had begun to find this strange girl with her secret thoughts
- stimulating.
- He turned away. As he crossed to his own couch he felt her eyes on his back.
- CHAPTER SEVEN
- THE MORNING SUNLIGHT entered the cubicle, strained by the withes of the wall.
- Going out upon the pavilion, Reith and Zap 210 found Cauch making a breakfast of
- pilgrim-pod cakes and a hot broth redolent of the shore. He inspected Reith and
- Zap 210 narrowly, paying particular attention to the turbans and their gait.
- "Not too bad. But you tend to forget. More swagger, lady, more shrug to your
- shoulders. Remember when you leave the pavilion you are Hedaijhans, in case
- suspicions have been aroused, in case someone waits and watches."
- After breakfast, the three went out upon the avenue which led northward under
- the ouinga trees, Reith and Zap 210 as thoroughly Hedaijhan as turban, shawl and
- mincing gait could make them, to a pair of carts drawn by a type of animal Reith
- had not previously seen: a gray-skinned beast which pranced elegantly and
- precisely on eight long legs.
- Cauch climbed aboard the first cart; Reith and Zap 210 joined him. The carts
- departed Zsafathra.
- The road led out upon a damp land of reeds, water-plants, isolated black stumps
- trailing lime-green tendrils. Cauch gave a great deal of his attention to the
- sky, as did the Zsafathrans in the cart behind. Reith finally asked: "What are
- you watching for?"
- "Occasionally," said Cauch, "we are molested by a tribe of predatory birds from
- the hills yonder. In fact, there you see one of their sentinels." He pointed to
- a black speck flapping across the southern sky; it appeared the size of a large
- buzzard. Cauch went on in a voice of resignation. "Presently they will fly out
- to attack us.
- "You show no great alarm," said Reith.
- "We have learned how to deal with them." Cauch turned and gestured to the cart
- behind, then accelerated the pace of his own cart, to open up a gap of a hundred
- yards between the two. Out of the southern skies came a flock of fifty or sixty
- flapping birdcreatures. As they drew near Reith saw that each carried two chunks
- of stone half the size of his head. He looked uneasily toward Cauch. "What do
- they do with the rocks?"
- "They drop them, with remarkable accuracy. Assume that you stood in the road,
- and that thirty creatures flew above you at their customary height of five
- hundred feet. Thirty stones would strike you and crush you to the ground."
- "Evidently you have learned how to frighten them off."
- "No, nothing of the sort."
- "You disturb their accuracy?"
- "To the contrary. We are essentially a passive people and we try to deal with
- our enemies so that they disconcert or defeat themselves. Have you wondered why
- the Khors do not attack us?"
- "The thought has occurred to me."
- "When the Khors attack-and they have not done so for six hundred years-we evade
- them and by one means or another penetrate their sacred groves. Here we perform
- acts of defilement, of the most simple, natural and ordinary sort. They no
- longer can use the grove for procreation and must either migrate or perish. Our
- weapons, I agree, are indelicate, but typify our philosophy of warfare."
- "And these birds?" Reith dubiously watched the approach of the flock. "Surely
- the same weapons are ineffectual?"
- "I would presume so," Cauch agreed, "though for a fact we have never tested
- them. In this case we do nothing whatever."
- The birds soared overhead; Cauch urged the dray-beast into a sinuous lope. One
- by one the birds dropped their stones, which fell to strike the road behind the
- cart.
- "The birds, you must understand, can only compute the position of a stationary
- target; in this case their accuracy is their undoing.
- The stones were all dropped; with croaks of frustration the birds flew back to
- the mountains. "They will more than likely return with another load of stones,"
- said Cauch. "Do you notice how this road is elevated some four feet above the
- surrounding marsh? The toil has been accomplished by the birds over many
- centuries. They are dangerous only if you stand to watch."
- The carts moved through a forest of wax-brown trees, seething with hordes of
- small white fuzz-balls, half-spider, halfmonkey, which bounded from branch to
- branch, venting raucous little screams and hurling twigs at the travelers. The
- road then led twenty miles across a plain littered with boulders of
- honey-colored tuff, toward a pair of tall volcanic necks, each growing into an
- ancient weathered castle, in ages past the headquarters of hermetic cults but
- now, according to Cauch, the abode of ghouls. "By day they are never seen, but
- by night they come down to prowl the outskirts of Urmank. Sometimes the Thangs
- catch them in traps for use at the carnival."
- The road passed between the peaks and Urmank came into view: a disorderly
- straggle of high, narrow houses of black timber, brown tile and stone. A quay
- bordered the waterfront, where half a dozen ships floated placidly at moorages.
- Behind the quay was the marketplace and bazaar, to which a flutter of orange and
- green banners gave a festive air. A long wall of crumbling brick bounded the
- bazaar; a clutter of mud huts beyond seemed to indicate a caste of pariahs.
- "Behold Urmank!" said Cauch. "The town of the Thangs. They are not fastidious as
- to who comes and who goes, provided only that they take away fewer sequins than
- they brought."
- "In my case they will be disappointed," said Reith. "I hope to gain sequins, by
- one means or another."
- Cauch gave him a marveling side-glance. "You intend to take sequins from the
- Thangs? If you control such a miraculous power please share it with me. The
- Thangs have cheated us so regularly that now they regard the process as their
- birthright. Oh, I tell you, in Urmank you must be wary!"
- "If you are cheated, why do you deal with them?"
- "It seems an absurdity," Cauch admitted. "After all, we could bring a ship and
- sail it to Hedaijha, the Green Erges, Coad-but we are a wry people; it amuses us
- to come to Urmank where the Thang provide entertainments. Look yonder; see the
- area wrapped around with brown and orange canvas? There is the site of the
- stilting. Beyond are the games of chance, where the visitor invariably loses
- more than he gains. Urmank is a challenge to Zsafathra; always we hope to outwit
- the Thangs."
- "Our joint efforts may yield a profit," said Reith. "At least I can bring a
- fresh outlook to bear."
- Cauch gave an indifferent shrug. "Zsafathrans have tried to outdo the Thangs
- from beyond the brink of memory. They deal with us by formula. First we are
- enticed by the prospect of quick gain; then after we have put down our sequins
- the prospects recede ... Well, first we will refresh ourselves. The Inn of the
- Lucky Mariner has proved satisfactory in the past. As my associate you are safe
- from thuggery, kidnap and slave-taking. However, you must guard your own money;
- the Thangs can be coerced only so far and no further."
- The common room at the Inn of the Lucky Mariner was furnished in a style Reith
- had not seen previously on Tschai. Angular chairs of wooden posts and poles
- lined the walls, which were whitewashed brick. In alcoves glass pots displayed
- the movement of iridescent seaworms. The chief functionary wore a brown caftan
- buttoned down the front, a black skullcap, black slippers and black
- finger-guards. His face was bland, his manners suave; he proffered for Reith's
- inspection a pair of adjoining cubicles furnished with couch, nightstand and
- lamp, which, with fresh body linen and foot ointment, rented for the inclusive
- sum of three sequins. Reith thought the figure reasonable and said as much to
- Cauch.
- "Yes," said Cauch. "Three sequins is no great amount, but I recommend that you
- make no use of the foot ointment. As a new amenity, it arouses suspicion. It may
- stain the woodwork, whereupon you will be levied an extra charge. Or it may
- contain a pulsing vescient, the balm for which sells at five sequins the dram."
- Cauch spoke in full earshot of the functionary, who laughed quietly and without
- offense. "Old Zsafathran, you are overskeptical for once. Recently we were
- required to accept a large stock of tonics and ointments in lieu of payment, and
- we have merely put these substances at the disposal of our guests. Do you
- require a diuretic or a vermifuge? We supply these at only a nominal charge."
- "At the moment, nothing," said Cauch.
- "What of your Hedaijhan friends? Everyone is the better for an occasional purge,
- which we offer at ten bice. No? Well then, for your evening meal let me
- recommend The Choicest Offerings of Land and Sea a few steps to the right along
- the quay."
- "I have dined there on a previous occasion," said Cauch. "The substances set
- before me would have quelled the appetite of a High-castle ghoul. We will buy
- bread and fruit in the market."
- "In that case, be so good as to patronize the booth of my nephew, opposite the
- depilatorium!"
- "We will inspect his produce." Cauch led the way out upon the quay. "The Lucky
- Mariner's comparatively scrupulous; still, as you see, one must be alert. On my
- last visit, a troupe of musicians played in the common room. I stopped for a
- moment to listen and on my reckoning discovered a charge of four sequins. As far
- as the offer of purgative at little or no charge"-here Cauch coughed-"this is
- all very well. On a previous visit to Urmank a similar offer was put to my
- grandfather, who accepted and thereafter discovered a lock on the door to the
- convenience, and consequent usage charge. The medication, in the long run, cost
- him dearly. It is wise in one's dealings with the Thangs to examine every aspect
- of a situation."
- The three strolled along the quay, Reith examining the ships with interest.
- These were all fat-bellied little cogs, with high poops and foredecks, propelled
- by sails when the wind was fair and an electric jet-pump otherwise. In front of
- each a board announced the name of the ship, the port of destination and the
- date of sailing.
- Cauch touched Reith's arm. "It might be imprudent to evince too great an
- interest in the ships."
- "Why?"
- "At Urmank it is always the part of wisdom to dissemble."
- Reith looked back up the quay. "No one appears to be heeding us. If they are,
- they will take it for granted that I dissemble and actually plan a journey
- overland."
- Cauch sighed. "At Urmank life has many surprises for the unwary."
- Reith halted by a board. "The ship Nhiahar. Destination: Ching, the Murky Isles,
- the South Schanizade Coast, Kazain. A moment." Reith climbed a gangplank and
- approached a thin and somber man in a leather apron.
- "Where is the captain, if you please?"
- "I am he."
- "In connection with a voyage to Kazain: what fare would you demand for two
- persons?"
- "For the Class A cabin I require four sequins per person per diem, which
- includes nutrition. The passage to Kazain is generally thirty-two days; hence
- the total fee for two persons is, let us say, two hundred and sixty sequins."
- Reith expressed surprise at the magnitude of the amount, but the captain
- maintained an indifferent attitude.
- Reith returned to the dock. "I need something over two hundred and fifty
- sequins."
- "Not an impossible sum," said Cauch. "A diligent laborer can earn four or even
- five sequins a day. Porters are always in demand along the docks."
- "What of the gambling booths?"
- "The district is yonder, beside the bazaar. Needless to say, you are unlikely to
- overcome the Thang gamesters on their own premises."
- They walked into a plaza paved with squares of salmon-pink stone. "A thousand
- years ago the tyrant Przelius built a great rotunda here. Only a floor remains.
- There: food-stalls. There: garments and sandals. There: ointments and
- extracts..." As Cauch spoke he pointed toward various quarters of the plaza,
- where the booths offered a great variety of goods: foodstuffs, cloth, leather;
- an earth-colored melange of spices; tinware and copper; black iron slabs, pads,
- rods and bars; glassware and lamps; paper charms and fetishes. Beyond the floor
- of the rotunda and the more or less orderly array of booths were the
- entertainments: orange tents with rugs in front where girls danced to
- nose-flutes and snap-blocks. Some wore garments of gauze; others danced bare to
- the waist; a few no more than a year or two from childhood wore only sandals.
- Zap 210 watched these and their postures with amazement. Then, with a shrug and
- a numb expression, she turned away.
- Muffled chanting attracted Reith's attention. A canvas wall enclosed a small
- stadium, from which now came a sudden chorus of hoots and groans. "The stilt
- contests," Cauch explained. "It appears that one of the champions has been
- downed, and many wagers have gone by the boards."
- As they passed the stadium Reith caught a view of four men on ten-foot stilts
- stalking warily around each other. One kicked forth with his stilt; another
- struck a blow with a pillow-headed club; a third caught unaware careened away,
- preserving his balance by a miracle, while the others hopped after him like
- grotesque carrion-birds.
- "The stilt-fighters are mostly Black Mountain mica-cutters," said Cauch. "The
- outsider who wagers on the bouts might as well drop his money into a hole."
- Cauch gave his head a rueful jerk. "Still, we always hope. My brother's
- name-father won forty-two sequins at the eel-race some years ago. I must admit
- that for two days previously he burnt incense and implored divine intervention."
- "Let's watch an eel-race," said Reith. "If divine intervention earns a profit of
- forty-two sequins, our own intelligence should produce at least as much and
- hopefully more."
- "This way then, past the brat-house."
- Reith was about to inquire what a brat-house might be, when a grinning urchin
- ran dose and kicked Reith on the shins then, dodging back, made an ugly face and
- ran into the brat-house. Reith looked after the child in wrathful puzzlement.
- "What's the reason for that?"
- "Come," said Cauch. "I'll show you."
- He led the way into the brat-house. On a stage thirty feet distant stood the
- child, who upon their entrance emitted a hideous taunting squeal. Behind the
- counter stood a suave middle-aged Thang with a silky brown mustache. "Nasty
- tyke, don't you think? Here, give him a good pelting. These mud-balls come ten
- bice apiece. The dung-packets are six to the sequin and these prickle-burrs are
- five to the sequin."
- "Yah, yah, yah!" screamed the urchin. "Why worry? He couldn't heave a rock this
- far!"
- "Go ahead, sir, give it to him," suggested the operator. "Which will it be? The
- mud-balls? The dung-packets make a hideous reek; the brat despises them. And the
- thorn-balls! He'll rue the day he attacked you."
- "You get up there," said Reith. "Let me throw at you."
- "Prices double, sir."
- Reith departed the brat-house with the taunts of both urchin and operator
- accompanying him to the reach of earshot.
- "Wise restraint," said Cauch. "No sequins, to be earned in such a place."
- "One can't live by bread alone ... but no matter. Show me the eel races."
- "Only a few steps further."
- They walked toward the sagging old wall which separated the bazaar from Urmank
- Old Town. At the very edge of the open area, almost in the shadow of the wall,
- they came to a U-shaped counter surrounded by two-score men and women, many
- wearing outland garments. A few feet beyond the open end of the U a wooden
- reservoir stood on a concrete platform. The reservoir, six feet in diameter and
- two feet high, was equipped with a hinged cover and emptied into a covered flume
- which ran between the arms of the U, to empty into a glass basin at the far
- bend. The attention of the players was riveted upon the glass basin; as Reith
- watched a green eel darted forth from the chute and into the basin, followed
- after a moment or two by eels of various other colors.
- "Green wins again!" cried out the eel-master in a voice of anguish. "Lucky lucky
- green! Hands behind the screen, please, until I pay the winners! I am sorely
- hit! Twenty sequins for this Jadarak gentleman, who risked a mere two sequins.
- Ten sequins for this green-hatted lady of the Azote Coast, who chanced a sequin
- on the color of her hat! ... What? No more? Is this all? I have not been struck
- so sorely as first I feared." The operator cleared the boards of sequins laid
- down upon the other colors. "A new race will now occur; arrange your bets.
- Sequins must be placed squarely upon the chosen color, if you please, to avoid
- misunderstanding. I set no limit; bet as high as you please, up to a limit of a
- thousand sequins, since my total wealth and reserve is only ten thousand. Five
- times already I have been bankrupted; always I have climbed back from poverty to
- serve the gambling folk of Urmank; is this not true dedication?"' As he spoke,
- he gathered the eels into a basket and carried them to the upper end of the
- chute. He hauled on a rope which, passing over a frame, lifted the lid of the
- reservoir. Reith edged close and peered down into the pool of water contained
- within. The eel-master made no objection. "Look your fill, my man; the only
- mysteries here are the eels themselves. If I could read their secrets I would be
- a rich man today!" Within the reservoir Reith saw a baffle which defined a
- spiral channel originating at a center well and twisting out to the chute, with
- a gate to the center well which the eel-master now snapped shut. In the center
- well he placed the eels and closed down the lid. "You have witnessed," he called
- out. "The eels move at random, as free as though they traveled the depths of
- their native streams. They whirl, they race, they seek a ray of light; when I
- raise the gate all will dash forth. Which will win the race to the basin? Ah,
- who knows? The last winner was Green; will Green win again? Place your bets, all
- bets down! Aha! A grandee here wagers generously upon Gray and Mauve, ten
- sequins on each! What's this? A purple sequin upon Purple! Behold all! A
- noblewoman of the Bashai backlands wagers a hundred value on Purple! Will she
- win a thousand? Only the eels know."
- "I know too," Cauch muttered to Reith. "She will not win. Purple eel will loiter
- along the way. I predict a win for White or Pale Blue."
- "Why do you say that?"
- "No one has bet on Pale Blue. Only three sequins are down on White."
- "True, but how do the eels know?"
- "Herein, as the eel-master avers, lies the mystery."
- Reith asked Zap 210: "Can you understand how the operator controls the eels to
- his profit?"
- "I don't understand anything."
- "We'll have to give this matter some thought," said Reith. "Let's watch another
- race. In the interests of research I'll put a sequin down upon Pale Blue."
- "Are all bets made?" called out the eel-master. "Please be meticulous! Sequins
- overlapping two colors are reckoned to fall on the losing color. No more bets?
- Very well then, please keep hands behind the screen. No more bets, please! The
- race is about to begin!"
- Stepping to the reservoir, he pulled a lever which presumably lifted the gate in
- front of the spiral baffle. "The race is in progress! Eels vie for light; they
- cavort and wheel in their joy! Down the chute they come! Which is to win?"
- The gamblers craned their necks to watch; into the basin streaked the White eel.
- "Ah," groaned the operator. "How can I profit with such uncooperative eels?
- Twenty sequins to this already wealthy Gray; you are a mariner, sir? And ten to
- this noble young slave-taker from Cape Braise. I pay, I pay; where is my
- profit?" He came past, flipping Reith's sequin into his tray. "So then, everyone
- alert for the next race."
- Reith turned to Cauch with a shake of his head. "Perplexing, perplexing indeed.
- We had better go on."
- They wandered the bazaar until Carina 4269 went down the sky. They watched a
- wheel of fortune; they studied a game where the participants bought a bag of
- irregular colored tablets and sought to fit them together into a checkerboard; a
- half-dozen other games, more or less ordinary. Sunset arrived; the three went to
- a small restaurant near the Inn of the Lucky Mariner, where they dined upon fish
- in red sauce, pilgrim-pod bread, a salad of sea-greens and a great black flask
- of wine. "In only one phase of existence," said Cauch, "can the Thang be
- trusted: their cuisine, to which they are loyal. The reason for this
- particularity escapes me."
- "It goes to demonstrate," said Reith, "that you can't judge a man by the table
- he sets."
- Cauch asked shrewdly, "How then can a man judge his fellows? For example, what
- is the basis of your calculation?"
- "Only one thing I know for certain," said Reith. "First thoughts are always
- wrong."
- Cauch, sitting back, inspected Reith under quizzical eyebrows. "True, quite
- possibly true. For instance, you probably are not the cool desperado you appear
- on first meeting."
- "I have been judged even more harshly," said Reith. "One of my friends declares
- that I seem like a man from another world."
- "Odd that you should say that," remarked Cauch. "A strange rumor has recently
- reached Zsafathra, to the effect that all men originated on a far planet, much
- as the Redeemers of Yao aver, and not from a union of the sacred xyxyl bird and
- the sea-demon Rhadamth. Furthermore, it was told that certain folk from this far
- planet now wander Old Tschai, performing the most remarkable deeds: defying the
- Dirdir, defeating the Chasch, persuading the Wankh. A new feeling is abroad
- across Tschai: the sense that change is on its way. What do you think of all
- this?"
- "I suppose the rumor is not inherently absurd," said Reith.
- Zap 210 said in a subdued voice: "A planet of men: it would be more strange and
- wild than Tschai!"
- "That of course is problematical," remarked Cauch in a voice of didactic
- analysis, "and no doubt irrelevant to our present case. The secrets of
- personality are mystifying. For instance, consider the three of us. One honest
- Zsafathran and two brooding vagabonds driven like leaves before the winds of
- fate. What prompts such desperate journeys? What is to be gained? I myself in
- all my lifetime have not gone so far as Cape Braise; yet I feel none the worse,
- a trifle dull perhaps. I look at you and ponder. The girl is frightened; the man
- is harsh; goals beyond her understanding propel him; he takes her where she
- fears to go. Still, would she go back if she could?" Cauch looked into Zap 210's
- face; she turned away.
- Reith managed a painful grin. "Without money we won't go anywhere."
- "Bah," said Cauch bluffly, "if money is all you lack, I have the remedy. Once a
- week, each Ivensday, combat trials are arranged. In point of fact, Otwile the
- champion sits yonder." He nodded toward a totally bald man almost seven feet
- tall, massive in the shoulders and thighs, narrow at the hips. He sat alone
- sipping wine, staring morosely out upon the quay. "Otwile is a great fighter,"
- said Cauch. "He once grappled a Green Chasch buck and held his own; at least he
- escaped with his life."
- "What are the prizes?" Reith inquired.
- "The man who remains five minutes within the circle wins a hundred sequins; he
- is paid a further twenty sequins for each broken bone. Otwile sometimes provides
- a hundred-worth within the minute."
- "And what if the challenger throws Otwile away?"
- Cauch pursed his lips. "No prize is posted; the feat is considered impossible.
- Why do you ask? Do you plan to make the trial?"
- "Not I," said Reith. "I need three hundred sequins. Assume that I remained five
- minutes in the ring to gain a hundred sequins ... I would then need ten broken
- bones to earn a further two hundred."
- Cauch seemed disappointed. "You have an alternative scheme?"
- "My mind reverts to the eel-race. How can the operator control eleven eels from
- a distance of ten feet while they swim down a covered chute? It seems
- extraordinary."
- "It does indeed," declared Cauch. "For years folk of Zsafathra have put down
- their sequins on the presumption that such control is impossible."
- "Might the eels alter color to suit the circumstances? Impractical, unthinkable.
- Does the operator stimulate the eels telepathically? I consider this unlikely."
- "I have no better theories," said Cauch.
- Reith reviewed the eel-master's procedure. "He raises the lid of the reservoir;
- the interior is open and visible; the water is no more than a foot deep. The
- eels are placed into the center well and the lid is closed down: this before
- betting is curtailed. Yet the eel-master appears to control the motion of the
- eels."
- Cauch gave a sardonic chuckle. "Do you still think you can profit from the
- eel-races?"
- "I would like to examine the premises a second time." Reith rose to his feet.
- "Now? The races are over for the day."
- "Still, let us examine the ground; it is only five minutes' walk."
- "As you wish."
- The area surrounding the eel-race layout was deserted and lit dimly by the glow
- of distant bazaar lamps. After the animation of the daytime hours, the table,
- reservoir and chute seemed peculiarly silent.
- Reith indicated the wall which limited the compound. "What lies to the other
- side?"
- "The Old Town and, beyond, the mausoleums, where the Thangs take their dead-not
- a place to visit by night."
- Reith examined the chute and reservoir, the lid to which was locked down for the
- night. He turned to Cauch. "What time do the races begin?"
- "At noon, precisely."
- "Tomorrow morning I'd like to look around some more."
- "Indeed," mused Cauch. He looked at Reith sidewise. "You have a theory?"
- "A suspicion. If-" He looked around as Zap 210 grasped his arm. She pointed.
- "Over there."
- Across the compound walked two figures in black cloaks and wide black hats.
- "Gzhindra," said Zap 210.
- Cauch said nervously, "Let us return to the inn. It is not wise to walk the dark
- places of Urmank."
- At the inn Cauch retired to his chamber. Reith took Zap 210 to her cubicle. She
- was reluctant to enter. "What's the matter?" asked Reith.
- "I am afraid."
- "Of what?"
- "The Gzhindra are following us."
- "That's not necessarily true. Those might have been any two Gzhindra."
- "But perhaps they weren't."
- "In any event they can't get at you in the room."
- The girl was still dubious.
- "I'm right next door," said Reith. "If anyone bothers you, scream."
- "What if someone kills you first?"
- "I can't think that far ahead," said Reith. "If I'm dead in the morning, don't
- pay the score."
- She wanted further reassurance. Reith patted the soft black curls. "Good night."
- He closed the door and waited until the bolt shot home. Then he went into his
- own cubicle and, despite Cauch's reassurances, made a careful examination of
- floor, walls and ceiling. At last, feeling secure, he turned the light down to a
- glimmer and lay himself upon the couch.
- CHAPTER EIGHT
- THE NIGHT PASSED without alarm or disturbance. In the morning Reith and Zap 210
- breakfasted alone at the cafe on the quay. The sky was cloudless; the smoky
- sunlight left crisp black shadows behind the tall houses and glinted on the
- water of the harbor. Zap 210 seemed less pessimistic than usual, and watched the
- porters, the hawkers, the seamen and outlanders with interest. "What do you
- think of the ghian now?" asked Reith.
- Zap 210 at once became grave. "The folk act differently from what I expected.
- They don't run back and forth; they don't seem maddened by the sun-glare. Of
- course"-she hesitated-"one sees a great deal of boisterous conduct, but no one
- seems to mind. I marvel at the garments of the girls; they are so bold, as if
- they want to provoke attention. And again, no one objects."
- "Quite the reverse," said Reith.
- "I could never act like that," Zap 210 said primly. "That girl coming toward us:
- see how she walks! Why does she act that way?"
- "That's how she's put together. Also, she wants men to notice her. These are the
- instincts that the diko suppressed in you."
- Zap 210 protested with unusual fervor: "I eat no diko now; I feel no such
- instincts!"
- Reith looked smiling off across the quay. The girl to whom Zap 210 had drawn
- attention slowed her step, hitched at the orange sash around her waist, smiled
- at Reith, stared curiously at Zap 210, and sauntered on.
- Zap 210 looked sidelong at Reith. She started to speak, then held her tongue. A
- moment later she blurted: "I don't understand anything of the ghian. I don't
- understand you. Just now you smiled at that odious girl. You never-" Here she
- stopped short, then continued in a low voice: "I suppose you blame 'instinct'
- for your conduct."
- Reith became impatient. "The time has come," he said, "to explain the facts of
- life. Instincts are part of our biological baggage and cannot be avoided. Men
- and women are different." He went on to explain the processes of reproduction.
- Zap 210 sat rigid, looking across the water. "So," said Reith, "it's not
- unnatural that people indulge in this kind of conduct."
- Zap 210 said nothing. Her hands, so Reith noticed, were clenched and her
- knuckles shone white.
- She said in a low voice, "The Khors in the sacred grove-is that what they were
- doing?"
- "So I suppose."
- "And you took me away so I wouldn't see."
- "Well, yes. I thought you might be confused."
- Zap 210 was silent a moment. "We might have been killed."
- Reith shrugged. "I suppose there was a chance."
- "And those girls dancing without clothes-they wanted to do that?"
- "If someone gave them money."
- "And everyone on the surface feels this way?"
- "Most of them, I should say."
- "Do you?"
- "Certainly. Sometimes, anyway. Not all the time."
- "Then why-" she stuttered. "Then why-" She could not finish. Reith reached out
- to pat her hand; she snatched it away. "Don't touch me!"
- "Sorry ... But don't be angry."
- "You brought me to this horrible place; you deprived me of life; you pretended
- to be kind but all the time you've been planning-that!"
- "No, no!" cried Reith. "Nothing of the sort! You're quite wrong!"
- Zap 210 looked at him with eyebrows coolly raised. "You find me repulsive then?"
- Reith threw his hands up in the air. "Of course I don't find you repulsive! In
- fact-"
- "In fact, what?"
- Cauch, arriving at the table, provided, for Reith, a welcome interruption. "You
- spent a comfortable night?"
- "Yes," said Reith.
- Zap 210 rose to her feet and walked away. Cauch drew a long face. "How have I
- offended her?"
- "She's angry with me," said Reith. "Why-I don't know."
- "Isn't this always the case? But soon, for reasons equally unknown, she will
- again become benign. Meanwhile, I am interested in hearing your ideas in regard
- to the eel-races."
- Reith looked dubiously after Zap 210, who had returned to the Inn of the Lucky
- Mariner. "Is it safe to leave her alone?"
- "Have no fear," said Cauch. "At the inn you and she are known to be under my
- sponsorship."
- "Well, then, to the eel-races."
- "You understand that they are not yet in operation? The races do not start till
- noon."
- "So much the better."
- Zap 210 had never been so angry. She half-walked half-ran to the inn, through
- the dim common room to the cubicle where she had spent the night. She entered,
- furiously shot the bolt and went to sit on the couch. For ten minutes she let
- her thoughts rage without control. Then she began to cry, silently, tears of
- frustration and disillusionment welling down her cheeks. She thought of the
- Shelters: the quiet corridors with the black-robed figures drifting past. In the
- Shelters no one would provoke her to anger or excitement or any of the other
- strange emotions which from time to time colored her brain. They would give her
- diko once more ... She frowned, trying to recall the flavor of the crisp little
- wafers. On sudden impulse she rose to her feet, examined herself in the mirror
- which hung on the side wall. The previous evening she had looked at herself with
- no great interest; the face which looked back seemed just a face: eyes, nose,
- mouth, chin. Now she studied herself earnestly. She touched the black hair
- curling down her forehead, combed it with her fingers, studied the effect. The
- face which looked back was that of a stranger. She thought of the lithe girl who
- had regarded Reith with such insolence. She had worn a garment of blue cloth
- which clung to the figure, different from the shapeless gray smock which Zap 210
- now wore. She pulled it off, stood in her white undergown. She turned, studied
- herself from all angles. A stranger now for certain. What if Reith could see her
- now: what would he think? ... The idea of Reith made her furiously angry. He
- considered her a child, or something even more ignoble: she had no word for the
- concept. She felt herself with her hands and, staring in the mirror, marveled at
- the changes which had come over her ... Her original scheme of returning to the
- Shelters dwindled. The zuzhma kastchai would give her to the darkness. If by
- chance she were allowed to keep her life, they would feed her diko again. Her
- lips twitched. No more diko.
- Well, then, what of Adam Reith, who considered her so repulsive that-her mind
- refused to complete the train of thought. What was to become of her? She studied
- herself in the mirror and felt very sorry for the dark-haired girl with thin
- cheeks and sad eyes who looked back at her. If she ran away from Adam Reith how
- could she survive? ... She slipped into her gray smock, but decided against
- tying the orange cloth around her head. Instead she tied it around her waist as
- a sash, as she had noticed other girls of Urmank doing. She examined herself in
- the mirror again and rather liked the effect. What would Adam Reith think?
- She opened the door, looked up and down the corridor and ventured forth. The
- common-room was empty but for a squat old woman who scrubbed the stone floor
- with a brush and looked up with a sneer. Zap 210 hastened her pace and went out
- into the street. Here she hesitated. She had never been alone before, and the
- sensation was frightening, if thrilling. Crossing to the quay, she watched
- porters unloading a cog. Neither her vocabulary nor her stock of ideas contained
- the equivalent of "quaint" or "picturesque"; nevertheless, she was charmed by
- the bluff-brown craft moving gently to the heave of the water. She drew a deep
- breath. Freak or not, repulsive or not, she had never felt so alive before. The
- ghaun was a wild cruel place-here the zuzhma kastchai had not dissembled-but
- after living in the golden-brown sunlight, how could anyone choose to return to
- the Shelters?
- She walked along the quay to the cafe, where somewhat diffidently she looked for
- Reith. What she would say to him she had not yet formulated; perhaps she would
- sweep to her seat with only a haughty glance to let him know what she thought of
- his opinions ... Reith was nowhere to be seen. A sudden terrible fear came over
- her. Had he taken the opportunity to escape, to be rid of her? Impulses urged
- upon her; she wanted to cry out: "Adam Reith! Adam Reith!" She could not believe
- that the reassuring form, so taut and economical of motion, was nowhere to be
- seen ... She turned to leave and stepped full into the advancing body of a tall
- massive man, wearing pantaloons of dove brown leather, a loose white shirt and a
- vest of maroon brocade. A small brimless cap clung to the side of his bald head;
- he gave a soft grunt as she walked into him and held her away with two hands on
- her shoulders. "Where do you go in such haste?"
- "Nowhere," stammered Zap 210. "I was looking for someone."
- "You have found me, which is not the worst of luck. Come along; I have not yet
- had my morning wine. Then we will discuss our affairs."
- Zap 210 stood paralyzed by indecision. She tentatively tried to shrink away from
- the man's grasp, which only tightened. Zap 210 winced. "Come," said the man. She
- stumbled with him to a nearby booth.
- The man signaled; a jug of white wine and a platter of fried fishcakes was set
- before them. "Eat," the man told her. "Drink. I stint no one, either in bounty
- or hard knocks." He poured her a liberal goblet of wine. "Now, before we
- proceed, what are your fees? Certain of your number, knowing me for Otwile, have
- attempted nothing less than larceny-to their dissatisfaction, I may say. So
- then: your price?"
- "Price for what?" whispered Zap 210.
- Otwile's blue eyes widened in surprise. "You are an odd one. What is your race?
- You are too pale for a Thang, too slender for a Gray."
- Zap 210 lowered her eyes. She tasted the wine, then searched desperately over
- her shoulder for Reith.
- "Ah, but you are shy!" declared Otwile. "And delicate of manner as well!"
- He began to eat. Zap 210 tried to slip away. "Sit!" snapped Otwile. She hastily
- returned to her seat. "Drink!" She sipped at the wine, which was stronger than
- any she had yet tasted.
- "That is better," said Otwile. "Now we understand each other."
- "No," said Zap 210 in her soft voice. "We don't! I don't want to be here! What
- do you want of me?"
- Otwile again stared at her in disbelief. "You don't know?"
- "Of course not. Unless-you don't mean that?"
- Otwile grinned, "I mean precisely that, and more."
- "But-I don't know anything about such things! I don't want to learn."
- Otwile put down his fishcakes. He said incredulously, "A virgin, wearing a sash.
- Is that how you represent yourself?"
- "I don't know what such a thing is ... I must go, to find Adam Reith."
- "You have found me, which is somewhat better. Drink wine, to relax yourself.
- Today is to be that particular day you will remember to the end of your time."
- Otwile poured full the goblets. "Indeed, I will join you, to relax myself. Truth
- to tell, I myself have become somewhat excited!"
- Reith and Cauch walked through the bazaar, where the fish and produce vendors
- called attention to their merchandise by means of peculiar ululations.
- "Are they singing?" asked Reith.
- "No," said Cauch, the cries were no more than devices to attract attention. "The
- Thang have no great feeling for music. The selling-screams of the fish-wives are
- inventive and emotional, true; listen and you will hear how they try to outdo
- each other!"
- Reith conceded that certain of the advertisements were remarkably intricate. "In
- due course the social anthropologists will record and codify these calls. But
- for the moment I am more interested in the eel-races."
- "To be sure," said Cauch. 'Though, as you will notice, they are not yet in
- operation."
- They crossed the compound and stood appraising the vacant tables, the reservoir
- and the chute. Looking across the wall, Reith noticed the fronds of a gnarled
- old psilla. "I want to look on the other side of the wall," he said.
- "Just so," said Cauch, "and I have the fullest sympathy with your curiosity. But
- are we not at the moment directing our energies to the eel-races?"
- "We are," said Reith. "I see a portal through the wall, opposite that vendor of
- amulets. Do you care to accompany me?"
- "Certainly," said Cauch. "I am always alert to learn."
- They walked along beside the old wall, which in the remote past had been faced
- with brown and white tiles, most of which had fallen away, revealing patches of
- dark brown brick. Passing through the portal, they entered Urmank Old Town: a
- district of huts built of broken tile, brick, fragments of stone, and odd
- lengths of timber. Some were abandoned ruins, others were in the process of
- construction: a continuing cycle of decay and regeneration, in which every
- shard, every stick, every fragment of stone had been used a hundred times over
- twice as many generations. Low-caste Thangs and a squat, big-headed variety of
- Gray peered forth from the doorways as Reith and Cauch went past; stench
- thickened the air.
- Beyond the huts lay an area of rubble, puddles of slime, a few clumps of angry
- red bristle-bush. Reith located the psilla of which he had taken note: it stood
- close beside the wall, overhanging a shed built of well-laid bricks. The door
- was solid timber bound with iron, secured with a heavy iron lock. The shed
- backed firmly up against the wall.
- Reith looked around the landscape, which was vacant except for a group of naked
- children paddling in a rivulet of yellow slime. He approached the shed. The
- lock, the hasp, the hinges were sound and solid. There was no window to the
- shed, nor any opening other than the door. Reith backed away. "We've seen all we
- need to see."
- "Indeed?" Cauch dubiously inspected the shed, the wall, the psilla tree. "I see
- nothing significant. Are you still referring to the eel-races?"
- "Of course." They went back through the dismal huddle of huts. Reith said: "Very
- likely we could make all our arrangements alone; still, the help of two
- trustworthy men might prove convenient."
- Cauch eyed him with awe and incredulity. "You seriously hope to take money from
- the eel-race?"
- "If the eel-master pays all winning bets, I do."
- "No fear of that," said Cauch. "He will pay, assuming that there are winnings.
- And on this supposition, how do you propose to share?"
- "Half for me, half for you and your two men."
- Cauch pursed his lips. "I perceive something of an inequity. From a mutual
- project, one man should not derive three times the share of the others."
- "I believe that he should," said Reith, "when otherwise the other three gain
- nothing whatever."
- "The point is well-taken," Cauch admitted. "The affair shall go as you
- recommend."
- They returned to the cafe. Reith looked for Zap 210, who was nowhere to be seen.
- "I must find my companion," he told Cauch. "No doubt she waits at the inn."
- Cauch made an affable gesture; Reith went to the inn, but found Zap 210 nowhere.
- Making inquiries of the clerk he learned that she had come and gone, leaving no
- intimation as to her destination.
- Reith went to the doorway and looked up and down the quay. To the right porters
- in faded red kirtles and leather shoulderpads unloaded a cog; to the left was
- the bustle of the bazaar.
- He never should have left her alone, he told himself, especially in her mood of
- the morning. He had taken her stability for granted, never troubling to divine
- the state of her mind. Reith cursed himself for callousness and egocentricity.
- The girl had been undergoing the most intense and dramatic emotional strains:
- all the fundamental processes of life at once. Reith strode back to the cafe.
- Cauch eyed him with calm benevolence. "You appear concerned."
- "The girl who accompanies me-I can't find her."
- "Pah," said Cauch. "They are all alike. She has gone to the bazaar, to buy a
- trinket."
- "No. She has no money. She is utterly inexperienced; she would go nowhere-except
- ..." Reith turned to look toward the hills, the way which lay between the
- ghoul-castles. Would she seriously consider going down into the Shelters? ... A
- new idea came to turn his bones to ice. The Gzhindra. Reith summoned the Thang
- servant-boy. "I breakfasted this morning with a young woman. Do you recall her?"
- "Yes, indeed; she wore an orange turban, like a Hedaijhan, at least on that
- occasion."
- "You saw her another time?"
- "I did. She sat yonder, wearing the sash of solicitation and consorting with
- Otwile the champion. They drank wine for a period, then went off."
- "She went of her own free will?" asked Reith in wonder.
- The servant gave a shrug of indifference, covertly insolent. "She wore the sash,
- she uttered no outcry, she leaned on his arm, perhaps to steady herself, for I
- believe her to have been somewhat drunk."
- "Where did they go?"
- Again the shrug. "Otwile's chambers are not too far distant; perhaps this was
- their resort."
- "Show me the way."
- "No no." The servant shook his head. "I am at my duties. Also I would not care
- to vex Otwile."
- Reith jumped at him; the servant stumbled back in a panic. "Quick!" hissed
- Reith.
- "This way then, but hurry; I am not supposed to leave the cafe."
- They ran through the dank back alleys of Urmank, in and out of the brown light
- of Carina 4269, which occasionally slanted down past the crooked gables of the
- tall houses. The servant halted, pointed along a walkway leading into a garden
- of green and purple foliage. "At the back of the shrubbery are Otwile's rooms."
- He scuttled back the way he had come. Reith ran along the walkway, through the
- garden. At the back stood a cottage of carved timber and panels of translucent
- fiber. As Reith approached he heard a sudden wordless cry of outrage from
- within. "Unclean!" Then there was the sound of a blow, and a whimper. Reith's
- knees shook, he tottered forward, thrust open the door. On the floor crouched
- Zap 210, glassy-eyed and nude; above her stood Otwile. Zap 210 stared at Reith;
- he saw a red welt on her cheek.
- Otwile spoke in a voice of hushed outrage. "Who are you to intrude in my house?"
- Reith ignored him. He picked up Zap 210's undergown, a torn tangle of cloth. He
- turned to look at Otwile. Cauch spoke from the doorway. "Come, Adam Reith; fetch
- the girl. Do not trouble yourself."
- Reith paid no heed. He moved slowly toward Otwile, who waited, smiling coldly,
- hands on hips. Reith approached to within three feet. Otwile, six inches taller,
- smiled down at him.
- Zap 210 said in a husky croak: "It wasn't his fault. I wore an orange sash ... I
- didn't know..."
- Reith turned slowly away. He found Zap 210's gray gown, pulled it over her
- slender body. He saw what had outraged Otwile; he could hardly control a great
- cry to express sorrow and pity and terrible grim amusement. He put his arm
- around Zap 210 and started to lead her from the room.
- Otwile was dissatisfied. He had been awaiting a touch, a motion, even a word, to
- serve as a trigger for his muscles. Was he to be denied even the gratification
- of beating the man who had invaded his chambers? The bubble of his rage burst.
- He bounced forward and swung his leg in a kick.
- Reith was pleased to find Otwile active. Twisting, he caught Otwile's ankle,
- pulled, dragged the champion hopping out into the garden, and sent him careening
- into a thicket of scarlet bamboo. Otwile sprang forth like a leopard. He halted,
- stood with arms out, grimacing hideously, clenching and unclenching his hands.
- Reith punched him in the face. Otwile seemed not to notice. He reached for
- Reith, who backed away, hacking at the heavy wrists. Otwile came forward,
- crowding Reith against the side-wall. Reith feinted, punched with his left hand
- and rapped his knuckles into Otwile's face. Otwile gave a small flat-footed jump
- forward, and another, then he gave a hideous rasping scream, and swung his great
- arm in an open-handed slap. Reith ducked below, hit Otwile full in the belly,
- and as Otwile jerked up his knee, seized the crooked leg, heaved up, and sent
- Otwile down flat on his back with a thud like a falling tree. For a moment
- Otwile lay dazed, then he slowly struggled to a sitting position. With a single
- backward glance Reith led Zap 210 from the garden. Cauch bowed politely toward
- Otwile and followed.
- Reith took Zap 210 to the inn. She sat on the couch in her cubicle, clutching
- the gray gown about herself, limp and miserable. Reith sat down beside her.
- "What happened?"
- Tears dripped down her cheeks; she held her hands to her face. Reith stroked her
- head. Presently she wiped her eyes. "I don't know what I did wrong-unless it was
- the sash. He made me drink wine until I became dizzy. He took me through the
- streets ... I felt very strange. I could hardly walk. In the house I wouldn't
- take off my clothes and he became angry. Then he saw me and he became even
- angrier. He said I was unclean ... I don't know what to do with myself. I'm
- sick, I'm dying."
- Reith said, "No, you're not sick or dying. Your body has started to function
- normally. There's nothing whatever wrong with you."
- "I'm not unclean?"
- "Of course not." Reith rose to his feet. "I'll send in a maid to take care of
- you. Then just lie quietly and sleep until I return-I hope with enough money to
- put us aboard a ship."
- Zap 210 nodded listlessly; Reith departed the cubicle.
- At the cafe Reith found Cauch and two young Zsafathrans who had come to Urmank
- aboard the second cart. "This is Schazar; this is Widisch," said Cauch. "Both
- are reckoned competent; I have no doubt but that they will fulfill any
- reasonable requirements."
- "In that case," said Reith, "let's be off about our business. We haven't too
- much time to spare, or so I should judge."
- The four sauntered off down the quay. Reith explained his theories: "-which now
- we must put to the test. Mind you, I may be wrong, in which case the project
- will fail."
- "No," said Cauch. "You have employed an extraordinary mental process to adduce
- what I now see to be limpid truth."
- "The process is called logic," said Reith. "It is not always dependable. But we
- shall see."
- They passed the eel-race table, where a few folk had already settled at the
- benches, ready for the day's gambling. Reith hurried his steps: under the
- portal, through the dismal byways of Urmank Old Town, toward the shed under the
- psilla tree. They halted fifty yards away and took cover in a ruined hut at the
- edge of the wastelands.
- Ten minutes passed. Reith began to fidget. "I can't believe that we've come too
- late."
- The young man Schazar pointed across the wastes, to the far end of the wall.
- "Two men."
- The men strolled closer. One affected the flowing white robes and square white
- hat of an Erze Island Sage: "The eel-master," muttered Cauch. The other, a young
- man, wore a pink skullcap and a light pink cape. The two walked casually and
- confidently along the trail and parted company near the shed. The eel-master
- continued toward the portal. Widisch said: "Easier merely to waylay the old
- charlatan and divest him of his pouch; the effect, after all, is the same."
- "Unfortunately," said Cauch, "he carries no sequins on his person, and makes the
- fact well known. His funds are brought to the eel-races daily by four armed
- slaves under the supervision of his chief wife."
- The young man in pink strolled to the shed. He fitted a key in the lock, turned
- it three times, opened the ponderous door and entered the shed. He turned with
- surprise to find that Reith and Schazar had also pushed into the shed beside
- him. He attempted to bluster. "What is the meaning of this?"
- "I will speak one time only," said Reith. "We want your unstinting cooperation;
- otherwise we will hang you by the toes to yonder psilla. Is that clear?"
- "I understand perfectly," said the young man with a quaver.
- "Describe the routine."
- The young man hesitated. Reith nodded to Schazar, who brought forth a coil of
- hard cord. The young man said quickly, "The routine is quite simple. I undress
- and step into the tank." He indicated a cylindrical pool four feet in diameter
- at the back of the shed. "A tube communicates with the reservoir; the level in
- the tank and that in the reservoir are the same. I swim through the tube to the
- reservoir and come up into a space in the peripheral frame. As soon as the lid
- is lowered, I open a partition. I reach into the reservoir and move the
- specified eel to the edge of the chute."
- "And how is the color specified?"
- "By the eel-master's finger-taps on the top of the lid."
- Reith turned to Cauch. "Schazar and I are now in control. I suggest that you now
- take your places at the table." He spoke to the young man in pink: "Is there
- sufficient space for two under the reservoir?"
- "Yes," said the young man grudgingly. "Just barely. But tell me: if I cooperate
- with you, how will I protect myself from the eel-master?"
- "Be frank with him," said Reith. "State that you value your life more than his
- sequins."
- "He will say that as far as he is concerned, affairs are reversed."
- "Too bad," said Reith. "The hazard of your trade. How soon should we be in
- position?"
- "Within a minute or so."
- Reith removed his outer garments. "If by some ineptness we are detected ...
- surely the consequences are as plain to you as to me."
- The apprentice merely grunted. He doffed his pink robe. "Follow me." He stepped
- into the tank. "The way is dark but straight."
- Reith joined him in the tank. The young man drew a deep breath and submerged;
- Reith did the same. At the bottom, finding a horizontal tube about three feet in
- diameter, he pulled himself through, staying close behind the apprentice.
- They surfaced in a space about four feet long, a foot and a half high, a foot
- wide. Light entered through artfully arranged crevices, which also allowed a
- view over the gaming tables; Reith thus could see that both Cauch and Widisch
- had found places along the counter.
- From near at hand came the eel-master's voice. "Welcome all to another day of
- exciting races. Who will win? Who will lose? No one knows. It may be me, it may
- be you. But we all will enjoy the fun of the races. For those who are new to our
- little game, you will notice that the board before you is marked with eleven
- colors. You may bet any amount on any of the colors. If your color wins, you are
- paid ten times the amount of your bet. Note these eels and their colors: white,
- gray, tawny, light blue, brown, dark red, vermilion, blue, green, violet, black.
- Are there any questions?"
- "Yes," called Cauch. "Is there any limit on the betting?"
- "The case now being delivered contains ten thousand sequins. This is my limit; I
- pay no more. Please place your bets."
- With a practiced eye the eel-master appraised the table. He lifted the lid, set
- the eels into the center of the reservoir. "No more betting, please." On the lid
- sounded tap-tap tap-tap.
- "Two-two," whispered the apprentice. "That's green." He pushed aside a panel and
- reaching into the reservoir, seized the green eel and set it into the mouth of
- the chute. Then he drew back and closed the panel.
- "Green wins!" called the eel-master. "So then--I pay! Twenty sequins to this
- sturdy seafarer ... Make your bets, please."
- Tap tap-tap-tap sounded on the lid. "Vermilion," whispered the apprentice. He
- performed as before.
- "Vermilion wins!" called the eel-master.
- Reith kept his eye to the crack. On each occasion Cauch and Widisch had risked a
- pair of sequins. On the third betting round each placed thirty sequins on white.
- "Bets are now made," came the eel-master's voice. The lid came down. Tap tap
- came the sounds.
- "Brown," whispered the apprentice.
- "White," said Reith. "The white eel wins."
- The apprentice groaned in muted distress. He put the white eel into the chute.
- "Another contest between these baffling little creatures," came the complacent
- voice of the eel-master. "On this occasion the winning color is-brown ... Brown?
- White. Yes, white it is! Ha! In my old age I become color-blind. Tribulation for
- a poor old man! ... A pair of handsome winners here! Three hundred sequins for
- you, three hundred sequins for you ... Take your winnings, gentlemen. What? You
- are betting the entire sum, both of you?"
- "Yes, luck appears to be with us today."
- "Both on dark red?"
- "Yes; notice the flight of yonder blood-birds! This is a portent."
- The eel-master smiled off into the sky. "Who can divine the ways of nature? I
- pray that you are incorrect. Well, then, all bets are made? Then in with the
- eels, down with the lid, and let the most determined eel issue forth the
- winner." His hand rested a moment on the lid; his fingernail struck the surface
- a single time. "They twist, they search, the light beckons; we should soon have
- a winner ... Here comes-is it blue?" He gave an involuntary groan. "Dark red."
- He peered into the faces of the Zsafathrans. "Your presages, astonishingly, were
- correct."
- "Yes," said Cauch. "Did I not tell you as much? Pay over our winnings."
- Slowly the eel-master counted out three thousand-worth of sequins to each.
- "Astonishing." He glanced thoughtfully toward the reservoir. "Do you observe any
- further portents?"
- "Nothing significant. But I will bet nonetheless. A hundred sequins on black."
- "I bet the same," declared Widisch.
- The eel-master hesitated. He rubbed his chin, looked around the counter.
- "Extraordinary." He put the eels into the reservoir. "Are all bets laid?" His
- hand rested on the lid; as if by nervous mannerism he brought his fingernails
- down in two sharp raps.
- "Very well; I open the gate." He pulled the lever and strode up to the end of
- the chute. "And here comes-what color? Black!"
- "Excellent!" declared Cauch. "We reap a return after years of squandering money
- upon perverse eels! Pay over our gains, if you please!"
- "Certainly," croaked the eel-master. "But I can work no more. I suffer from an
- aching of the joints; the eel-racing is at an end."
- Reith and the apprentice immediately returned to the shed. The apprentice donned
- his pink cape and hat and took to his heels.
- Reith and Schazar returned through the Old Town to the portal, where they
- encountered the eel-master, who strode past in a great flapping of his white
- gown. The normally benign face was mottled red; he carried a stout stave, which
- he swung in short ominous jerks.
- Cauch and Widisch awaited them on the quay. Cauch handed Reith a pleasantly
- plump pouch. "Your share of the winnings: four thousand sequins. The day has
- been edifying."
- "We have done well," said Reith. "Our association has been mutually helpful,
- which is a rare thing for Tschai!"
- "For our part we return instantly to Zsafathra," said Cauch. "What of you?"
- "Urgent business calls me onward. Like yourselves, my companion and I depart as
- soon as possible."
- "In that case, farewell." The three Zsafathrans went their way. Reith turned
- into the bazaar, where he made a variety of purchases. Back at the hotel he went
- to Zap 210's cubicle and rapped on the door, his heart pounding with
- anticipation.
- "Who is it?" came a soft voice.
- "It is I, Adam Reith."
- "A moment." The door opened. Zap 210 stood facing him, face flushed and drowsy.
- She wore the gray smock which she had only just pulled over her head.
- Reith took his bundles to the couch. "This-and this-and this-and this-for you."
- "For me? What are they?"
- "Look and see."
- With a diffident side-glance toward Reith, she opened the bundles, then for a
- period stood looking down at the articles they contained.
- Reith asked uneasily, "Do you like them?"
- She turned to him a hurt gaze. "Is this how you want me to be--like the others?"
- Reith stood nonplussed. It was not the reaction he had expected. He said
- carefully, "We will be traveling. It is best that we go as inconspicuously as
- possible. Remember the Gzhindra? We must dress like the folk we travel among."
- "I see."
- "Which do you like best?"
- Zap 210 lifted the dark green gown, laid it down, took up the blood-orange smock
- and dull white pantaloons, then the rather jaunty light brown suit with the
- black vest and short black cape. "I don't know whether I like any of them."
- "Try one on."
- "Now?"
- "Certainly!"
- Zap 210 held up first one of the garments, then another. She looked at Reith; he
- grinned. "Very well, I'll go."
- In his own cubicle he changed into the fresh garments he had bought for himself:
- gray breeches, a dark-blue jacket. The gray furze smock he decided to discard.
- As he threw it aside he felt the outline of the portfolio, which after a
- moment's hesitation he transferred to the inner lining of his new jacket. Such a
- set of documents, if for no other reason, had value as a curio. He went to the
- common room. Presently Zap 210 appeared. She wore the dark green gown. "Why do
- you stare at me?" she asked.
- Reith could not tell her the truth, that he was recalling the first time he had
- seen her: a neurasthenic waif shrouded in a black cloak, pallid and bone-thin.
- She retained something of her dreaming wistful look, but her pallor had become a
- smooth sunshadowed ivory; her black hair curled in ringlets over her forehead
- and ears.
- "I was thinking," said Reith, "that the gown suits you very well."
- She made a faint grimace: a twitch of the lips approaching a smile.
- They walked out upon the quay, to the cog Nhiahar. They found the taciturn
- master in the saloon, working over his accounts. "You desire passage to Kazain?
- There is only the grand cabin to be had at seven hundred sequins, or I can give
- you two berths in the dormitory, at two hundred."
- CHAPTER NINE
- A DEAD CALM held the Second Sea. The Nhiahar slid out of the inlet, propelled by
- its field engine; by degrees Urmank faded into the murk of distance.
- The Nhiahar moved in silence except for the gurgle of water under the bow. The
- only other passengers were a pair of waxen-faced old women swathed in gray gauze
- who appeared briefly on deck, then crept to their dark little cabin.
- Reith was well-satisfied with the grand cabin. It ranged the entire width of the
- ship, with three great windows overlooking the sea astern. In alcoves to port
- and starboard were well-cushioned beds as soft as any Reith had felt on Tschai,
- if a trifle musty. In the center stood a massive table of carved black wood,
- with a pair of equally massive chairs at either end. Zap 210 made a sulky
- appraisal of the room. Today she wore the dull white trousers with the orange
- blouse; she seemed keyed up and tense, and moved with nervous abruptness in
- jerks and halts and fidgeting twitches of the fingers.
- Reith watched her covertly, trying to calculate the exact nature of her mood.
- She refused to look toward him or meet his gaze. At last he asked: "Do you like
- the ship?"
- She gave a sullen shrug. "I have never seen anything like it before." She went
- to the door, where she turned him a sour twitch of a smile-a derisive
- grimace-and went out on deck.
- Reith looked up at the overhead, shrugged, and after a final glance around the
- room, followed her.
- She had climbed the companionway to the quarterdeck, where she stood leaning on
- the taffrail, looking back the way they had come. Reith seated himself on a
- bench nearby and pretended to bask in the wan brown sunlight while he puzzled
- over her behavior. She was female and inherently irrational-but her conduct
- seemed to exceed this elemental fact. Certain of her attitudes had been formed
- in the Shelters, but these seemed to be waning; upon reaching the surface she
- had abandoned the old life and discarded its points of view, as an insect molts
- a skin. In the process, Reith ruminated, she had discarded her old personality,
- but had not yet discovered a new one ... The thought gave Reith a qualm. Part of
- the girl's charm or fascination, or whatever it was, lay in her innocence, her
- transparency ... transparency?
- Reith made a skeptical sound. Not altogether. He went to join her. "What are you
- pondering so deeply?"
- She gave him a cool side-glance. "I was thinking of myself and the wide ghaun. I
- remember my time in the dark. I know now that below the world I was not yet
- born. All those years, while I moved quietly below, the folk of the surface
- lived in color and change and air."
- "So this is why you've been acting so strangely!"
- "No!" she cried in sudden passion. "It is not! The reason is you and your
- secrecy! You tell me nothing. I don't know where we are going, or what you are
- going to do with me."
- Reith frowned down at the black boil of the wake. "I'm not sure of these things
- myself."
- "But you must know something!"
- "Yes ... When I get to Sivishe I want to return to my home, which is far and
- remote."
- "And what of me?"
- And what of Zap 210? wondered Reith. A question he had avoided asking himself.
- "I'm not sure you'd want to come with me," he replied, somewhat lamely.
- Tears glinted in her eyes. "Where else can I go? Should I become a drudge? Or a
- Gzhindra? Or wear an orange sash at Urmank? Or should I die?" She swung away and
- marched forward to the bow, past a group of the spade-faced seamen, who watched
- her from the side of their pale eyes.
- Reith returned to the bench ... The afternoon passed. Black clouds to the north
- generated a cool wind. The sails were shaken out, and the cog drove forward. Zap
- 210 presently came aft with a strange expression on her face. She gave Reith a
- look of sad accusation and went down to the cabin.
- Reith followed and found her lying on one of the couches. "Don't you feel well?"
- "No."
- "Come outside. You'll be worse in here."
- She staggered out upon the deck.
- "Keep your eyes on the horizon," said Reith. "When the ship moves, keep your
- head level. Do that for a while and you'll feel better."
- Zap 210 stood by the rail. The clouds loomed overhead and the wind died; the
- Nhiahar lay wallowing with slatting sails ... From the sky came a purple dazzle,
- slanting and slashing at the sea-once, twice, three times, all in the flicker of
- an eye-blink. Zap 210 gave a small scream and jerked back in terror. Reith
- caught her and held her as the thunder rumbled down. She moved uneasily; Reith
- kissed her forehead, her face, her mouth.
- The sun settled into a tattered panoply of gold and black and brown; with the
- dusk came rain. Reith and Zap 210 retreated to their cabin, where the steward
- served supper: mincemeat, seafruit, biscuits. They ate, looking out through the
- great windows at the sea and rain and lightning, and afterwards, with lightning
- sparking the dark, they became lovers.
- At midnight the clouds departed; stars burnt down from the sky. "Look up there!"
- said Reith. "Among the stars are other worlds of men. One of them is called
- Earth." He paused. Zap 210 lay listening, but Reith for some obscure reason
- could say no more, and presently she fell asleep.
- The Nhiahar, driven by fair winds, plunged down the Second Sea, crashing through
- great white billows of foam. Cape Braise reared up ahead; the ship put into the
- ancient stone city of Stheine to take on water, then fared forth into the
- Schanizade.
- Twenty miles down the coast a tongue of land hooked out to the west. Along the
- foreshore a forest of dark blue trees shrouded a city of flat domes, cambered
- cusps, sweeping colonnades. Reith thought to recognize the architecture, and put
- a question to the captain: "Is that a Chasch city?"
- "It is Songh, most southerly of the Blue Chasch places. I have taken cargoes
- into Songh, but it is risky business. You must know the games of the Chasch:
- antics of a dying race. I have seen ruins on the Kotan steppes: a hundred places
- where Old Chasch or Blue Chasch once lived, and who goes there now? Only the
- Phung."
- The city receded into the distance and disappeared from view as the ship passed
- south beyond the peninsula. Not long after a cry from one of the crew brought
- everyone out on deck. In the sky a pair of airships fought. One was a gleaming
- contrivance of blue and white metal, shaped to a set of splendid curves. A
- balustrade contained the deck, on which lay a dozen creatures in glistening
- casques. The other craft was austere and bleak: a vessel sinister, ugly, gray,
- built with only its function in mind. It was slightly smaller than the Blue
- Chasch ship and somewhat more agile; in the dorsal bubble crouched the Dirdir
- crew, intent at the work of destroying the Chasch ship. The vessels circled and
- swung, now high, now low, careening around each other like venomous insects.
- From time to time, as circumstances offered, the ships exchanged volleys of
- sandblast fire, without noticeable effect. Far up into the gray-brown sky spun
- the sparkling shapes, to spiral giddily down, one after the other, veering only
- yards above the ocean's surface.
- The whole company of the Nhiahar came on deck to watch the battle, even the two
- old women who had not previously shown themselves. As they scanned the sky the
- hood fell back from the head of one of them to reveal a keen pale countenance.
- Zap 210, standing beside Reith, uttered a soft gasp, and quickly turned away her
- gaze.
- The Blue Chasch ship slid suddenly down; the bow guns struck under the counter
- of the Dirdir ship, knocking it up, tumbling it over and down into the sea,
- where it struck with a soundless splash. The Blue Chasch vessel swung in a
- single grand circle, then cruised back toward Songh.
- The old women had disappeared below. Zap 210 spoke in a tremulous whisper: "Did
- you notice?"
- "Yes. I noticed."
- "They are Gzhindra."
- "Are you sure?"
- "Yes, I am sure."
- "I suppose Gzhindra make voyages like other folk," said Reith, somewhat
- hollowly. "So far at least they've done nothing to bother us."
- "But they are here, aboard the ship! They do nothing without purpose!"
- Reith made another skeptical sound. "Perhaps so-but what can we do about it?"
- "We can kill them!"
- Zap 210, for all the strictures of her upbringing, was still a creature of
- Tschai, thought Reith. He said: "We'll keep close watch on them. Now that we
- know who they are, and they don't know that we know, the advantage is ours."
- It was Zap 210's turn to make a skeptical sound. Reith nevertheless refused to
- waylay the old women in the dark and strangle them.
- The voyage proceeded, southwest toward the Saschan Islands. Days passed without
- event more noteworthy than the turn of the heavens. Each morning Carina 4269
- broke through the horizon into a dull bronze and old rose dawn. By noon a high
- haze had formed, to filter the sunlight and lay a sheen like antique silk on the
- water. The afternoons were long; sunsets were sad glories; allegorical wars
- between dark heroes and the lords of light. After nightfall the moons appeared:
- sometimes pink Az, sometimes blue Braz, and sometimes the Nhiahar rode under the
- stars.
- For Reith the days and nights would have been as pleasant as any he had known on
- Tschai except for the worry which nagged him: what was happening at Sivishe?
- Would he find the spaceboat intact or destroyed? What of crafty Aila Woudiver;
- what of the Dirdir in their horrid city across the water? And what of the two
- old women, who might be Gzhindra? They never appeared except in the deep of
- night, to walk the foredeck. One dark evening Reith watched them, the hair
- prickling at the nape of his neck. Either they were Gzhindra or they were not,
- but lacking information Reith felt obliged to assume the worst-and the
- implications were cause for the most dismal foreboding.
- One pale umber morning the Saschan Islands loomed out of the sea: three ancient
- volcanic necks surrounded by shelves of detritus where grew groves of psilla,
- kianthus, candlenut, lethipod. On each island a town climbed the central crag,
- beehive huts stacked one on the other like the cells of a wasp-nest. Black
- openings stared out to sea; wisps of smoke rose into the air.
- The Nhiahar entered the inner bay and, swerving to avoid a ferry, approached the
- south island. On the dock waited bowlegged Saschanese longshoremen in black
- breech-clouts and black roll-toed ankle-boots. They took the hawsers; the
- Nhiahar was warped alongside. As soon as the gangplank settled into place the
- longshoremen swarmed aboard. Hatches were opened; bales of leather, sacks of
- pilgrim-pod meal, crated tools were taken to the dock.
- Reith and Zap 210 went ashore. The captain called dourly after them: "I make
- departure at noon exactly, aboard or not."
- The two walked along the esplanade, the crag and its unnatural encrustation of
- huts rearing above them. Zap 210 glanced over her shoulder. "They are following
- us."
- "The Gzhindra?"
- "Yes."
- Reith grunted in disgust. "It's definite then. They have orders not to let us
- out of their sight."
- "And we are as good as dead." Zap 210 spoke in a colorless voice. "At Kazain
- they will report to the Pnume and then nothing can help us; we'll be taken down
- into the dark."
- Reith could think of nothing to say. They came to a small harbor protected from
- the sea by a pair of jetties, which narrowed to become a ferry slip. Reith and
- Zap 210 paused to watch the ferry arrive from the outer islands: a wide scow
- with control cabins at either end, carrying two hundred Saschanese of all ages
- and qualities. It nosed into the slip; the passengers debarked. As many more
- paid toll to a fat man sitting before a booth and surged aboard; immediately the
- ferry departed. Reith watched it cross the water, then led Zap 210 to a waiting
- area set with benches and tables beside the ferry slip. Reith ordered sweet wine
- and biscuits from a serving boy, then went to confer with the fat
- fare-collector. Zap 210 looked nervously here and there. In the shadow of a
- flight of steps she thought to glimpse two shapes robed in gray. They wonder
- what we're doing, Zap 210 told herself.
- Reith returned. "The next ferry leaves in something over an hour-a few minutes
- before noon. I've already paid our fares."
- Zap 210 gave him a puzzled inspection. "But we must be aboard the Nhiahar at
- noon!"
- "True. Are the Gzhindra nearby?"
- "They've just taken seats at the far table."
- Reith managed a grim chuckle. "We're giving them something to think about."
- "What should they think about? That we might take the ferry?"
- "Something of the sort."
- "But why should they think that? It seems so strange!"
- "Not altogether. There might be a ship at one of the other islands to take us
- somewhere beyond their knowledge."
- "Is there such a ship?"
- "None that I know of."
- "But if we take the ferry the Gzhindra will follow, and the Nhiahar will leave
- without all of us!"
- "I expect so. The captain would have no qualms whatever."
- The minutes passed. Zap 210 began to fidget. "Noon is very close." She studied
- Reith, wondering what went on in his mind.
- No other man of Tschai-at least none she had yet seen-resembled him; he was of a
- different sort.
- "Here comes the ferry," said Reith. "Let's go down to the slip. We want to be
- the first in line."
- Zap 210 rose to her feet. Never would she understand Reith! She followed him
- down to the waiting sea. Others came to join them, to push and squirm and
- mutter. Reith asked: "What of the Gzhindra?"
- Zap 210 glanced over her shoulder. "They're standing at the back of the crowd."
- The ferry entered the slip; the barriers opened and the passengers surged
- ashore.
- Reith spoke in Zap 210's ear. "Walk close by the collector's hut. As we pass,
- duck inside."
- "Oh."
- The gate opened. Reith and Zap 210 half-walked, half-ran down the way. At the
- collector's hut, Reith lowered his head and slipped within; Zap 210 followed.
- The embarking passengers pushing past, handed their fares to the collector and
- marched down to the ferry. Near the end of the line came the Gzhindra, trying to
- peer through the surge ahead of them. They moved with the crowd, down the ramp,
- aboard the ferry.
- The barrier closed; the ferry moved out. Reith and Zap 210 emerged from the hut.
- "It's almost noon," said Reith. "Time to return aboard the Nhiahar."
- CHAPTER TEN
- SOUTHEAST TOWARD KISLOVAN gusty winds drove the Nhiahar. The sea was almost
- black. The swells which rolled up and under the ship spilled rushes of white
- foam ahead.
- One blustery morning Zap 210 joined Reith where he stood at the bow. For a
- moment they stood looking ahead across the heaving water to where Carina 4269
- dropped prisms and fractured shards of golden light.
- Zap 210 asked, "What lies ahead?"
- Reith shook his head. "I don't know. I wish I did."
- "But you worry. Are you afraid?"
- "I'm afraid of a man named Aila Woudiver. I don't know whether he's alive or
- dead."
- "Who is Aila Woudiver, that you fear him so?"
- "A man of Sivishe, a man to fear ... I think he must be dead. I was kidnapped
- out of a dream. In the dream I saw Aila Woudiver's head split open."
- "So why do you worry?"
- Sooner or later, thought Reith, he must make all clear. Perhaps now was the
- time. "Remember the night I told you of other worlds among the stars?"
- "I remember."
- "One of these worlds is Earth. At Sivishe I built a spaceship, with Aila
- Woudiver's help. I want to go to Earth."
- Zap 210 stared ahead across the water. "Why do you want to go to Earth?"
- "I was born there. It is my home."
- "Oh." She spoke in a colorless voice. After a reflective silence of fifteen
- seconds, she turned him a sidelong glance.
- Reith said ruefully, "You wonder if I am insane."
- "I've wondered many times. Many, many times."
- Though Reith himself had put the suggestion, he was nonetheless taken aback.
- "Indeed?"
- She smiled her sad grimace of a smile. "Consider what you have done. In the
- Shelters. At the Khor grove. When you changed eels at Urmank."
- "Acts of desperation, acts of a frantic Earthman."
- Zap 210 brooded across the windy ocean. "If you are an Earthman, what do you do
- here on Tschai?"
- "On the Kotan steppes my spaceship was wrecked. At Sivishe I've built another."
- "Hmmf ... Is Earth such a paradise?"
- "The people of Earth know nothing of Tschai. It's important that they do know."
- "Why?"
- "A dozen reasons. Most important, the Dirdir raided Earth once; they might
- decide to return."
- She gave him her swift side-glance. "You have friends on Earth?"
- "Of course."
- "You lived there in a house?"
- "In a manner of speaking."
- "With a woman? And your children?"
- "No woman, no children. I've been a spaceman all my life."
- "And when you return-what then?"
- "I'm not thinking past Sivishe right now."
- "You will take me with you?"
- Reith put his arm around her. "Yes. I will take you with me."
- She heaved a sigh of relief. Presently she pointed ahead. "Beyond where the sun
- glints-an island."
- The island, a great crag of barren black basalt, was the first of a myriad, to
- scarify the surface of the sea. The area was home to a host of sea-foragers, of
- a sort beyond Reith's previous experience. Four oscillating wings supported a
- cluster of dangling pink tentacles and a central tube ending in a bulbous eye.
- The creatures drifted high and low, dipping suddenly to seize some small
- wriggling sea-thing. A few drifted toward the Nhiahar; the crewmen lurched back
- in dread and took shelter in the forecastle.
- The captain, who had come up on the foredeck, sneered in disgust. "They consider
- these the guts and eyes of drowned seamen. We sail the Channel of Death; these
- rocks are the Channel Teeth."
- "How do you navigate by night?"
- "I don't know," said the captain, "for I have never tried. It is risky enough by
- day. Around each of those rocks lies a hundred hulks and heaped white bones. Do
- you notice, far ahead, the loom? There is Kislovan! Tomorrow will find us docked
- at Kazain."
- As evening approached long strands of clouds raced across the sky and the wind
- began to moan. The captain took the Nhiahar into the lee of one of the larger
- black rocks, nosing close, close, close, until the sprit almost scraped the wet
- black stone. Here the anchor was dropped and the Nhiahar rode in relative safety
- as the wind became a screaming gale. Great swells drove through the black crags;
- foam crashed high up and fell slowly back. The sea boiled and surged; the
- Nhiahar wallowed, jerking at the anchor line, then floating suddenly loose and
- free.
- With the coming of darkness the wind died. For a long period the sea rose and
- fell in fretful recollection, but dawn found the Charnel Teeth standing like
- archaic monuments on a sea of brown glass. Beyond lay the bulk of the continent.
- Proceeding through the Charnel Teeth under power, the Nhiahar at noon nosed into
- a long narrow bay and by late afternoon drew alongside the pier at Kazain.
- On the dock two Dirdirmen paused to watch the Nhiahar.
- Their caste was high, perhaps Immaculate; they were young and vain; they wore
- their false effulgences aslant and glittering. Reith's heart rose in his throat
- for fear that they had been sent to take him into custody. For such a
- contingency he had no plans; he sweated until the two sauntered off toward the
- Dirdir settlement at the head of the bay.
- There were no formalities at the dock; Reith and Zap 210 carried their
- belongings ashore and without interference made their way to the motor-wagon
- depot. An eight-wheeled vehicle stood on the verge of departure across the neck
- of Kislovan; Reith commissioned the most luxurious accommodation available: a
- cubicle of two hammocks on the third tier with access to the rear deck.
- An hour later the motor-wagon trundled forth from Kazain. For a space the road
- climbed into the coastal uplands, affording a view over the Channel of Death and
- the Charnel Teeth. Five miles north the road swung inland. For the rest of the
- day the motor-wagon lumbered beside bean-vine fields, forests of white
- ghost-apple, an occasional little village.
- In the early evening the motor-wagon halted at an isolated inn, where the
- forty-three passengers took supper. About half seemed to be Grays; the rest were
- people Reith could not identify. A pair might have been steppe-men of Kotan;
- several conceivably were Saschanese. Two yellow-skinned women in gowns of black
- scales almost certainly were Marsh-folk from the north shore of the Second Sea.
- The various groups took the least possible notice of each other, eating and
- returning at once to board the power-wagon. The indifference Reith knew to be
- feigned; each had gauged the exact quality of all the others with a precision
- beyond any Reith could muster.
- Early in the morning the power-wagon once more set forth and met the dawn
- climbing over the edge of the central plateau. Carina 4269 rose to illuminate a
- vast savanna, clumped with alumes, gallow-trees, bundle-fungus, patches of
- thorn-grass.
- So passed the day, and four more: a journey which Reith hardly noticed for his
- mounting tension. In the Shelters, on the great subterranean canal, along the
- shores of the Second Sea, at Urmank, even aboard the Nhiahar, he had been calm
- with the patience of despair. The stakes were once again high. He hoped, he
- dreaded, he strained for the power-wagon to go faster, he shrank from the
- thought of what he might find in the warehouse on the Sivishe salt flats. Zap
- 210, reacting to Reith's tension, or perhaps beset with premonitions of her own,
- retired into herself, and took small interest in the passing landscape.
- Over the central plateau, down through a badlands of eroded granite, out upon a
- landscape farmed by clans of sullen Grays, went the powerwagon. Signs of the
- Dirdir presence appeared: a grey butte bristling with purple and scarlet towers,
- overlooking a rift valley, walled by sheer cliffs, which served the Dirdir as a
- hunting range. On the sixth day a range of mountains rose ahead: the back of the
- palisades overlooking Hei and Sivishe. The journey was almost at an end. All
- night the motor-wagon lumbered along a dusty road by the light of the pink and
- blue moons.
- The moons set; the eastern sky took on the color of dried blood. Dawn came as a
- skyburst of dark scarlet, orange-brown, sepia. Ahead appeared the Ajzan Gulf and
- the clutter of Sivishe. Two hours later the motor-wagon lumbered into Sivishe
- Depot beside the bridge.
- CHAPTER ELEVEN
- REITH AND ZAP 210 crossed the bridge amid the usual crowd of Grays trudging to
- and from their work in the Hei factories.
- Sivishe was achingly familiar: the background for so much passion and grief that
- Reith found his heart pounding. If, by fantastic luck, he returned to Earth,
- could he ever forget those events which had befallen him at Sivishe? "Come," he
- muttered. "Over here, aboard the transit dray."
- The dray creaked and groaned; the dingy districts of Sivishe fell behind; they
- reached the southernmost stop, where the wagon turned east, toward the Ajzan
- shore. Ahead lay the salt flats, with a road winding out of Aila Woudiver's
- construction depot.
- All seemed as before: mounds of gravel, sand, slag; stacks of brick and rubble.
- To the side stood Woudiver's eccentric little office, beyond the warehouse.
- There was no activity; no moving figures, no drays. The great doors to the
- warehouse were closed; the walls leaned more noticeably than ever. Reith
- accelerated his pace; he strode down the road, with Zap 210 walking, then
- running, then walking.
- Reith reached the yard. He looked all around. Desolation. Not a sound, not a
- step. Silence. The warehouse seemed on the verge of collapse, as if it had been
- damaged by an explosion. Reith went to the side entrance, looked within. The
- premises were vacant. The spaceship was gone. The roof had been torn away and
- hung in shreds. The workshop and supply racks were a shambles.
- Reith turned away. He stood looking over the salt flats. What now?
- He had no ideas. His mind was empty. He backed slowly away from the warehouse.
- Over the main entrance someone had scrawled ONMALE. This was the name of the
- chief-emblem worn by Traz when Reith had first encountered him on the Kotan
- steppes. The word prodded at Reith's numbed consciousness. Where were Traz and
- Anacho?
- He went to the office and looked within. Here, while he lay sleeping, gas had
- stupefied him; Gzhindra had tucked him into a sack and carried him away. Someone
- else now lay on the couchan old man asleep. Reith knocked on the wall. The old
- man awoke, opening first one rheumy eye, then the other. Pulling his gray cloak
- about his shoulders, he heaved himself erect. "Who is there?" he cried out.
- Reith discarded the caution he normally would have used. "Where are the men who
- worked here?"
- The door slid ajar; the old man came forth, to look Reith up and down. 'Some
- went here, some went there. One went ... yonder." He jerked a crooked thumb
- toward the Glass Box.
- "Who was that?"
- Again the cautious scrutiny. "Who would you be that doesn't know the news of
- Sivishe?"
- "I'm a traveler," said Reith, trying to hold his voice calm. "What's happened
- here?"
- "You look like a man named Adam Reith," said the caretaker. "At least that's how
- the description went. But Adam Reith could give me the name of a Lokhar and the
- name of a Thang that only he would know."
- "Zarfo Detwiler is a Lokhar; I once knew Issam the Thang."
- The caretaker looked furtively around the landscape. His gaze rested
- suspiciously on Zap 210. "And who is this?"
- "A friend. She knows me for Adam Reith; she can be trusted."
- "I have instructions to trust no one, only Adam Reith."
- "I am Adam Reith. Tell me what you have to tell me."
- "Come here. I will ask a final question." He drew Reith aside and wheezed in his
- ear: "At Coad Adam Reith met a Yao nobleman."
- "His name was Dordolio. Now what is your message?"
- "I have no message."
- Reith's impatience almost burst through his restraint. "Then why do you ask such
- questions?"
- "Because Adam Reith has a friend who wants to see him. I am to take Adam Reith
- to his friend, at my own discretion."
- "Who is this friend?"
- The old man waved his finger. "Tut! I answer no questions. I obey instructions,
- no more, and thus I earn my fee."
- "Well, then, what are your instructions?"
- "I am to conduct Adam Reith to a certain place. Then I am done."
- "Very well. Let's go."
- "Whenever you are ready."
- "Now."
- "Come then." The old man started down the road, with Reith and Zap 210
- following. The old man halted. "Not her. Just you."
- "She must come as well."
- "Then we cannot go, and I know nothing."
- Reith argued, stormed and coaxed, to no avail. "How far is this place?" he
- demanded at last.
- "Not far."
- "A mile? Two miles?"
- "Not far. We can be back shortly. Why cavil? The woman will not run away. If she
- does, find another. So was my style when I was a buck."
- Reith searched the landscape: the road, the scattering of huts at the edge of
- the salt flats, the salt flats themselves. No living creature could be seen: a
- negative reassurance at best. Reith looked at Zap 210. She looked back with an
- uncertain smile. A detached part of Reith's brain noted that here, for the first
- time, Zap 210 had smiled-a tremulous, uncomprehending smile, but nonetheless a
- true smile. Reith said in a somber voice: "Get in the cabin; bolt the door.
- Don't open it for anyone. I'll be back as soon as I can."
- Zap 210 went into the cabin. The door closed; the bolt shot home. Reith said to
- the old man: "Hurry then. Take me to my friend."
- "This way."
- The old man hobbled silently along the road, and presently turned aside along a
- path which led across the salt flats toward the straggle of huts at the edge of
- Sivishe. Reith began to feel nervous and insecure. He called out: "Where are we
- going?"
- The old man made a vague gesture ahead.
- Reith demanded, "Who is the man we are to see?"
- "A friend of Adam Reith's."
- "Is it ... Aila Woudiver?"
- "I am allowed to name no names. I can tell you nothing."
- "Hurry."
- The old man hobbled on, toward a hut somewhat apart from the others, an ancient
- structure of moldering gray bricks. The old man went up to the door, pounded,
- then stood back.
- From within came a stir. Behind the single window was the flicker of movement.
- The door opened. Ankhe at afram Anacho looked forth. Reith exhaled a great gusty
- breath. The old man shrilled: "Is this the man?"
- Anacho said, "Yes. This is Adam Reith."
- "Give me my money then; I am anxious to have done with this line of work."
- Anacho went within and returned with a pouch rattling with sequins. "Here is
- your money. In a month come back. There will be another waiting for you if you
- have held your tongue meanwhile."
- The old man took the pouch and departed.
- Reith asked: "Where is Traz? Where is the ship?"
- Anacho shook his long pale head. "I don't know."
- "What!"
- "This is what happened. You were taken by the Gzhindra. Aila Woudiver was
- wounded but he did not die. Three days after the event the Dirdirmen came for
- Aila Woudiver, and dragged him off to the Glass Box. He complained, he implored,
- he screamed, but they took him away. I heard later that he provided a
- spectacular hunt, running in a frenzy like a bull marmont, braying at the top of
- his lungs ... The Dirdirmen saw the ship when they came to take Aila Woudiver;
- we feared that they would return. The ship was ready to fly, so we decided to
- move the ship from Sivishe. I said that I would stay, to wait for you. In the
- middle of the night Traz and the technicians took the ship up, and flew it to a
- place that Traz said you would know."
- "Where?" Reith demanded.
- "I don't know. If I was taken, I wanted no knowledge, so that I could not be
- forced into betrayal. Traz wrote 'Onmale' on the shed. He said that you would
- know where to come."
- "Let's go back to the warehouse. I left a friend there."
- Anacho asked: "Do you know what he means by 'Onmale'?"
- "I think so. I can't be sure."
- They returned along the trail. Reith asked, "Is the sky-car still available for
- our use?"
- "I carry the call-token. I see no reason why there should be difficulty."
- "The situation isn't as bad as it might be then ... I've had an interesting set
- of experiences." He told Anacho something of his adventures. "I escaped the
- Shelters. But along the shore of the Second Sea Gzhindra began to follow.
- Perhaps they were hired by the Khors; perhaps the Pnume sent them after us. We
- saw Gzhindra in Urmank; probably these same Gzhindra boarded the Nhiahar. They
- are still on the Saschanese Islands, for all I know. Since then we apparently
- haven't been followed, and I'd like to leave Sivishe before they pick us up
- again."
- "I'm ready to leave now," said Anacho. "At any instant we may lose our luck."
- They turned down the road leading to Woudiver's old warehouse. Reith stopped
- short. It was as he had feared, in the deepest darkest layer of his
- subconscious. The door to the office stood ajar. Reith broke into a run, with
- Anacho coming after.
- Zap 210 was nowhere in the office, nor in the ruined warehouse. She was nowhere
- to be seen.
- Directly before the office the ground was damp; the prints of narrow, bare feet
- were plain. "Gzhindra," said Anacho. "Or Pnumekin. No one else."
- Reith gazed across the salt flats, calm in the amber light of afternoon.
- Impossible to search, impossible to run across salt marsh and flat, looking and
- calling. What could he do? Unthinkable to do nothing ... What of Traz, the
- spaceship, the return to Earth which now was feasible? The idea sank from his
- mind like a waterlogged timber, with only the umbral shape, the afterimage,
- remaining. Reith sat down upon an old crate. Anacho watched a moment, his long
- white face drawn and melancholy, like that of a sick clown. Finally, in a
- somewhat hollow voice, he said, "Best that we be on our way."
- Reith rubbed his forehead. "I can't go just yet. I've got to think."
- "What is there to think about? If the Gzhindra have taken her, she is gone."
- "I realize that."
- "In such a case, you can do nothing."
- Reith looked toward the palisades. "She will be taken back underground. They
- will swing her out over a dark gulf and after a time drop her."
- Anacho hunched his shoulders in a shrug. "You cannot alter this regrettable fact
- so put it out of your mind. Traz awaits us with the spaceship."
- "But I can do something," said Reith. "I can go after her."
- "Into the underground places? Insanity! You will never return!"
- "I returned before."
- "By a freak of fate."
- Reith rose to his feet.
- Anacho went on desperately: "You will never return. What of Traz? He will wait
- for you forever. I can't tell him you have sacrificed everything because I do
- not know where he is."
- "I don't intend to sacrifice everything," said Reith. "I intend to return."
- "Indeed!" declared Anacho with a sneer of vast scorn. "This time the Pnume will
- make sure. You will swing out over the gulf beside the girl."
- "No," said Reith. "They will not swing me. They want me for Foreverness."
- Anacho threw up his arms in bafflement. "I will never understand you, the most
- obstinate of men! Go underground! Ignore your faithful friends! Do your worst!
- When do you go below? Now?"
- "Tomorrow," said Reith.
- "Tomorrow? Why delay? Why deprive the Pnume of your society a single instant?"
- "Because this afternoon I have preparations to make. Come along: let's go into
- town."
- CHAPTER TWELVE
- AT DAWN REITH went to stand at the edge of the salt flats. Here, months before,
- he and his friends had detected Aila Woudiver's signals to the Gzhindra. Reith
- also held a mirror; as Carina 4269 lifted into the sky, he swept the reflection
- back and forth across the salt flats.
- An hour passed. Reith methodically flashed the mirror, apparently to no avail.
- Then from nowhere, or so it seemed, came a pair of dark figures. They stood half
- a mile away, looking toward Reith. He flashed the mirror. Step by step they
- approached, as if fascinated. Reith went to meet them. Gradually the three came
- together, and at last stood fifty feet apart.
- A minute passed. The three appraised each other. The faces of the Gzhindra were
- shaded under low-crowned black hats; both were pale and somewhat vulpine, with
- long thin noses and bright black eyes. Presently they came closer. In a quiet
- voice one spoke: "You are Adam Reith."
- "I am Adam Reith."
- "Why did you signal us?"
- "Yesterday you came to take my companion."
- The Gzhindra made no remark.
- "This is true, is it not?" Reith demanded.
- "It is true."
- "Why did you do this?"
- "We hold such a commission."
- "What did you do with her?"
- "We delivered her to such a place as we were bid."
- "Where is this place?"
- "Yonder."
- "You have a commission to take me?"
- "Yes."
- "Very well; " said Reith. "You go first. I will follow."
- The Gzhindra consulted in whispers. One said: "This is not feasible. We do not
- care to walk with others coming at our backs."
- "For once you can tolerate the sensation," said Reith. "After all, you will
- thereby be fulfilling your commission."
- "True, if all goes well. But what if you elect to burn us with a weapon?"
- "I would have done so before," said Reith. "At the moment I only want to find my
- companion and bring her back to the surface."
- The Gzhindra surveyed him with impersonal curiosity. "Why will you not walk
- first?"
- "I don't know where to go."
- "We will direct you."
- Reith spoke so harshly that his voice cracked. "Go first. This is easier than
- carrying me in a sack."
- The Gzhindra whispered to each other, moving the corners of their thin mouths
- without taking their eyes off Reith. Then they turned and walked slowly off
- across the salt flats.
- Reith came after, remaining about fifty feet to the rear. They followed the
- faintest of trails, which at times disappeared utterly. A mile, two miles, they
- walked. The warehouse and the office diminished to small rectangular marks;
- Sivishe was a blurred gray crumble at the northern horizon.
- The Gzhindra halted and turned to Reith, who thought to detect a fugitive
- flicker of glee. "Come closer," said one of the Gzhindra. "You must stand here
- with us."
- Reith gingerly came forward. He brought out the energy gun which he had only
- just purchased, and displayed it. "This is precautionary. I do not wish to be
- killed, or drugged. I want to go alive down into the Shelters."
- "No fear there, no fear there!" "Have no doubts on that score!" said the
- Gzhindra, speaking together. "Put away your gun; it is without significance."
- Reith held the gun in his hand as he approached the Gzhindra.
- "Closer, closer!" they urged. "Stand within the outline of the black soil."
- Reith stepped on the patch of soil designated, which at once settled into the
- ground. The Gzhindra stood quietly, so close now that Reith could see the minute
- creases in the skin of their faces. If they felt alarm for his weapon they
- showed none.
- The camouflaged elevator descended fifteen feet; the Gzhindra stepped off into a
- concrete-walled passage. Looking over their shoulders they beckoned. "Hurry."
- They set off at a swinging trot, cloaks flapping from side to side. Reith came
- behind. The passage slanted downward; running was without sensible effort. The
- passage became level, then suddenly ended at a brink; beyond stretched a
- waterway. The Gzhindra motioned Reith down into a boat and themselves took
- seats. The boat slid along the surface, guided automatically along the center of
- the channel.
- For half an hour they traveled, Reith looking dourly ahead, the Gzhindra sitting
- stiff and silent as carved black images.
- The channel entered a larger waterway; the boat drifted up to a dock. Reith
- stepped ashore; the Gzhindra came behind, and Reith ignored the near-transparent
- glee with as much dignity as he could muster. They signaled him to wait;
- presently from the shadows a Pnumekin appeared. The Gzhindra muttered a few
- words into the air, which the Pnumekin seemed to ignore, then they stepped back
- into their boat and slid away, with pale backward glances. Reith stood alone on
- the dock with the Pnumekin, who now said: "Come, Adam Reith. We have been
- awaiting you."
- Reith said, "The young woman who was brought down yesterday: where is she?"
- "Come."
- "Where?"
- "The zuzhma kastchai wait for you."
- A sensation like a draft of cold air prickled the skin of Reith's back. Into his
- mind crept furtive little misgivings, which he tried to put aside. He had taken
- all precautions available to him; their effectiveness was yet to be tested.
- The Pnumekin beckoned. "Come."
- Reith followed, resentful and shamed. They went down a zigzag corridor walled
- with panes of polished black flint, accompanied by reflections and moving
- shadows. Reith began to feel dazed. The corridor widened into a hall of black
- mirrors; Reith now moved in a state of bewilderment. He followed the Pnumekin to
- a central column, where they slid back a portal. "You must go onward alone, to
- Foreverness."
- Reith looked through the portal, into a small cell lined with a substance like
- silver fleece. "What is this?"
- "You must enter."
- "Where is the young woman who was brought here yesterday?"
- "Enter through the portal."
- Reith spoke in anger and apprehension: "I want to talk to the Pnume. It is
- important that I do so."
- "Step into the cell. When the portal opens, follow, follow the trace, to
- Foreverness."
- In a state of sick fury Reith glared at the Pnumekin. The pale face looked back
- with fish-like detachment. Demands, threats, rose up in Reith's throat only to
- dwindle and die. Delay, any loss of time, might result in terrible consequences,
- the thought of which caused his stomach to jerk and quiver. He stalked into the
- cell.
- The portal closed. Down slid the cell, dropping at a rapid but controlled rate.
- A minute passed. The cell halted. A portal flew open. Reith stepped forth into
- black glossy darkness. From his feet a trail of luminous yellow dots wound off
- into the gloom. Reith looked in all directions. He listened. Nothing, no sound,
- no pressure of any living presence. Burdened with a sense of destiny, he set off
- along the trace.
- The line of luminous spots swung this way and that. Reith followed them with
- exactitude, fearing what might lie to either side. On one occasion he thought to
- hear a far hushed roar, as of air rising from some great depth.
- The dark lightened, almost imperceptibly, to a glow from some unseen source.
- Without warning he came to a brink; he stood at the edge of a darkling
- landscape, a place of objects faintly outlined in gold and silver luminosity. At
- his feet a flight of stone steps led down; Reith descended, step after step.
- He reached the bottom and halted in an uncontrollable pang of terror; in front
- of him stood a Pnume.
- Reith pulled together the elements of his will. He said in as firm a voice as he
- could muster: "I am Adam Reith. I have come here for the young woman, my
- companion, whom you took away yesterday. Bring her here immediately."
- From the shape came the husky Pnume whisper: "You are Adam Reith?"
- "Yes. Where is the woman?"
- "You came here from Earth?"
- "What of the woman? Tell me!"
- "Why did you come to Old Tschai?"
- A roar of desperation rose in Reith's throat. "Answer my question!"
- The dark shape slid quietly away. Reith stood a moment, undecided whether to
- stand or follow.
- The gold and silver luminosities seemed to become brighter; or perhaps Reith had
- begun to cast order upon the seemingly unrelated shapes. He began to see
- outlines and tracts, pagoda-like frameworks, a range of columns. Beyond appeared
- silhouettes with gold and silver fringes, as yet unstructured by his mind.
- The Pnume stalked slowly away. Reith's frustration reached an intensity where he
- felt almost faint; then he experienced a rage which sent him bounding after the
- Pnume. He seized the harsh shoulder-element and jerked; to his utter
- astonishment the Pnume dropped as if falling over backward, the arms swinging
- down to serve as forelegs. It stood ventral surface upmost, head swiveling
- strangely down and over, so that the Pnume took on the aspect of a night-hound.
- While Reith gaped in awe and embarrassment the Pnume flipped itself upright, to
- regard Reith with chilling disfavour.
- Reith found his voice. "I must talk to responsible folk among you and quickly.
- What I have to say is urgent-to you and to me!"
- "This is Foreverness," came the husky voice. "Such words have no meaning."
- "You will think differently, when you hear me."
- "Come to your place in Foreverness. You are awaited." Once more the creature set
- off. Tears brimmed in Reith's eyes; vast outrage rose up behind his teeth. If
- anything had happened to Zap 210, they would pay, how they would pay! regardless
- of consequence.
- For a space they walked and presently passed through a columned portal into a
- new underground realm: a place which Reith associated with some elegant memorial
- garden of old Earth.
- Away and along the gold- and silver-fringed prospect stood brooding shapes.
- Reith had no opportunity for speculation. Certain shapes moved forward; he saw
- them to be Pnume, and advanced to meet them. There were at least twenty; by
- their extreme diffidence and unobtrusiveness Reith understood them to be of the
- highest status. Facing the twenty shadows in this shadow-haunted corner of
- Foreverness he could not help but wonder as to the state of his mind. Was he
- wholly sane? In such surroundings orderly mental processes were inapplicable. By
- sheer brutal energy he must impose his personal will-to-order upon the devious
- environment of the Pnume.
- He looked around the shadowed group. "I am Adam Reith," he said. "I am an
- Earthman. What do you want of me?"
- "Your presence in Foreverness."
- "I'm here," said Reith, "but I intend to go. I came of my own volition; are you
- aware of this?"
- "You would have come in any event."
- "Wrong. I would not have come. You kidnapped my friend, a young woman. I came to
- fetch her away and take her back to the surface."
- The Pnume, as if by signal, all took a simultaneous slow step forward: a
- sinister movement, the stuff of nightmare. "How did you expect to effect so
- much? This is Foreverness."
- Reith thought for a moment. "You Pnume have lived long on Tschai."
- "Long, long: we are the soul of Tschai. We are the world itself."
- "Other races live on Tschai; they are people more powerful than yourselves."
- "They come and go: colored shadows to entertain us. We expel them as we choose."
- "You do not fear the Dirdir?"
- "They cannot reach us. They know none of our precious secrets."
- "What if they did?"
- The dark shapes approached another slow pace.
- Reith called out in a harsh voice: "What if the Dirdir know all your secrets:
- all your tunnels and passages and pop-outs?"
- "A grotesque situation which can never be real."
- "But it can be real. I can make it real." Reith brought forth a folder bound in
- blue leather. "Examine this."
- The Pnume gingerly accepted the portfolio. "It is the lost master-set!"
- "Wrong again," said Reith. "It is a copy."
- The Pnume set up a low whimpering sound, and Reith once again thought of the
- night-hounds; he had often heard just such soft calls out on the Kotan steppes.
- The sad half-whispered wails subsided. The Pnume stood in a rigid semicircle.
- Reith could feel their emotion; it was almost palpable, a crazy, irresponsible
- ferocity he heretofore had associated only with the Phung.
- "Be calm," said Reith. "The danger is not imminent. The charts are hostage to my
- safety; you are secure unless I do not return to the surface. In this case the
- charts will be given over to the Blue Chasch and the Dirdir."
- "Intolerable. The charts must be secured. There is no alternative."
- "That is what I hoped you would say." Reith looked around the half-circle. "You
- agree to my conditions?"
- "We have not heard them."
- "I want the woman whom you brought down yesterday. If she is dead, I plan to
- exact a terrible penalty from you. You will long remember me; you will long
- curse the name Adam Reith."
- The Pnume stood in silence.
- "Where is she?" demanded Reith in a rasping voice.
- "She is in Foreverness, to be crystallized."
- "Is she alive? Or is she dead?"
- "She is not yet dead."
- "Where is she?"
- "Across the Field of Monuments, awaiting preparation."
- "You say that she is not yet dead-but is she alive and well?"
- "She lives."
- "Then you are fortunate."
- The Pnume surveyed him with incomprehension, and certain of the group gave
- near-human shrugs.
- Reith said: "Bring her here, or let us go to her, whichever is faster."
- "Come."
- They set out across the Field of Monuments: statues or simulacra representing
- folk of a hundred various races. Reith could not avoid pausing to stare in
- fascination. "Who or what are all these creatures?"
- "Episodes in the life of Tschai, which is to say, our own lives. There: the
- Shivvan who came to Tschai seven million years ago. This is an early crystal,
- one of the oldest: the memento of a far time. Beyond: the Gjee, who founded
- eight empires and were expunged by the Fesa, who in turn fled the light of the
- red star Hsi. Yonder: others who have dropped by along their way to oblivion."
- Along the avenues the group moved. The monuments were black, fringed with
- luminous gold and silver: creatures quadruped, triped, biped; with heads,
- cerebral bags, nerve-nets; with eyes, optical bands, flexible sensors, prisms.
- Here towered a massive bulk with a heavy cranium; it brandished a seven-foot
- sword. The creature Reith saw to be a Green Chasch bull. Nearby a Blue Chasch
- chastened a group of crouching Old Chasch, while three Chaschmen glowered from
- the side. Beyond were Dirdir and Dirdirmen, attended by two men and two women of
- a race Reith failed to recognize. To the side a single Wankh, alone and austere,
- surveyed a gang of toiling men. Beyond these groups, except for a single empty
- pedestal, the avenue led away, down a black slope to a slow black river, the
- surface marked by drifting silver swirls. Beside the river stood a cage of
- silver bars; huddled in the cage was Zap 210. She watched the group approach
- with an impassive face. She saw Reith; her face crumpled into opposed emotions;
- grief and joy, relief and dismay. She had been stripped of her surface clothes;
- she wore only a white shift.
- Reith took pains to control his voice; still he spoke thickly. "What have you
- done to her?"
- "She has been treated with Liquid One. It invigorates and tones, and opens the
- passages for Liquid Two."
- "Bring her forth."
- Zap 210 emerged from the cage. Reith took her hand, stroked her head. "You are
- safe. We're going back to the surface." He stood for a few minutes quietly
- waiting while she wept in relief and nervous exhaustion on his shoulder.
- The Pnume came close. One said: "The return of all charts is demanded."
- Reith managed a thick laugh. "Not yet. I have other demands to make of you-but
- elsewhere. Let us leave this place. Foreverness oppresses me."
- In a hall of polished gray marble Reith faced the Pnume Elders. "I am a man; I
- am disturbed to see men of my own kind living the unnatural lives of Pnumekin.
- You must breed no more human children, and the children now underground must be
- transferred to the surface and there maintained until they are able to fend for
- themselves."
- "But this means the end of the Pnumekin!"
- "So it does, and why not? Your race is seven million years old or more. Only in
- the last twenty or thirty thousand years have you had Pnumekin to serve you.
- Their loss will be no great hardship."
- "If we agree-what of the charts?"
- "I will destroy all but a very few copies. None will be delivered to your
- enemies."
- "This is unsatisfactory! We would then live in constant dread!"
- "I can't worry as to this. I must retain control over you, to guarantee that my
- demands have been met. In due course I may return all the charts to you-sometime
- in the future."
- The Pnume muttered disconsolately together a few moments. One said in a flat
- whisper: "Your demands will be met."
- "In this case, conduct us back to the Sivishe salt flats."
- At sunset the salt flats were quiet. Carina 4269 hung in a smoky haze behind the
- palisades, glinting upon the Dirdir towers. Reith and Zap 210 approached the old
- warehouse. From the office came Anacho's spare form. He stepped forward to meet
- them. "The sky-car is here. There is nothing to keep us."
- "Let's hurry then. I can't believe that we're free."
- The sky-car lifted from behind the warehouse and swept north. Anacho asked:
- "Where do we go?"
- "To the Kotan steppes, south of where you and I first met."
- All night they flew, over the barren center of Kislovan, then over the First Sea
- and the Kotan marshlands.
- At dawn they drifted over the edge of the Steppes while Reith studied the
- landscape below. They crossed a forest; Reith pointed to a clearing. "There:
- where I came down to Tschai. The Emblem camp lay to the east. There, by that
- grove of feather-bush: there we buried Onmale. Drop down there."
- The sky-car landed. Reith alighted and walked slowly toward the woods. He saw
- the glint of metal. Traz came forth. He stood quietly as Reith approached. "I
- knew that you would come."
- Traz had changed. He had become a man: something more than a man. On his
- shoulder he wore a medallion of metal, stone and wood. Reith said: "You dug up
- the emblem."
- "Yes. It called to me. Wherever I walked upon the steppe I heard voices, all the
- voices of all the Omnale chieftains, calling to be taken up from the dark. I
- brought forth the emblem; the voices are now silent."
- "And the ship?"
- "It is ready. Four of the technicians are here. One stayed at Sivishe, two lost
- heart and set off across the steppes for Hedaijha."
- "The sooner we depart the better. When we're actually out in space I'll believe
- that we've escaped."
- "We are ready."
- Anacho, Traz and Zap 210 entered the spaceship. Reith took a last look around
- the sky. He bent, touched the soil of Tschai, crumbled a handful of mold between
- his fingers. Then he too entered the unlovely hulk. The port was closed and
- sealed. The generators hummed. The ship lifted toward the sky. The face of
- Tschai receded; the planet exhibited rotundity, became a graybrown ball, and
- presently was gone.
|