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Quester’s Endgame
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Quester’s Endgame
Diadem, Book 9
Jo Clayton
1986
“WELL,
WELL, IT’S MUD-FACE. SO YOU SQUIRMED YOUR WAY HERE.”
Aleytys turned slowly, trying
to control the surge of fear and anger that shook her when she heard that deep
fluid voice, a voice she’d heard only one time waking, a thousand times since
in nightmare.
“Mud,” he said. “Look at
that, all of you. Look at what you want to call Vryhh. I will not, I will not
have that slime call itself Vryhh. I will NOT.” Silence from all the Vrya in
the dome. “To the death, Mud,” Kell said into that silence. “I declare war
between us. I declare that you and any who try to help you, Mud, will die at
the hands of me and mine.”
Mastering her own rage,
Aleytys sucked in a breath, let it out. “To the death, cousin,” she said at
last ....
Jo Clayton has written:
The Diadem Saga
Diadem From The Stars
Lamarchos
Irsud
Maeve
Star Hunters
The Nowhere Hunt
Ghosthunt
The Snares Of Ibex
Quester’s Endgame
The Duel Of Sorcery Series
Moongather
Moonscatter
Changer’s Moon
Others
A Bait Of Dreams
Drinker Of Souls
Who’s Who And What’s What
For old readers of the series who are obviously folk of
intelligence and taste but alas not Mento-the-Marvels capable of memorizing
telephone books and regurgitating the contents on cue, for new readers who are
courageously plunging into the ninth (and last) book about Aleytys and the
diadem, here’s a combination orientation and memory jogger.
ALEYTYS: Born
in a mountain valley called the vadi Raqsidan on a world called Jaydugar,
raised in an agrarian, preindustrial culture. Psi-empath and translator,
healer, flamethrower and worrier. She’s had one child, a son, had him stolen
from her before he was a year old, gave him up again when he was about four.
She acquired the diadem after she ran from a barbecue where she was going to be
the roastee. In her travels from world to world, while she was searching for
her mother, she was (among other things) sold as a slave to provide meat for a
wasp queen’s egg, then she rode a smuggler’s ship as his bedmate and translator.
Finally she got a steady job with Hunters Inc on Wolff. In the bits of time
left over from her struggles to survive and go on with her search for her
mother, she got to know more about the diadem and the entities trapped within
it, acquiring three live-in friends and critics. Sometimes it got very crowded
inside her skull.
DIADEM, the: An artifact from an ancient extinct civilization.
Both a trap and an instrument of great flexibility and power. A focus for
psi-forces, a prison for the self-aware part of the wearer once the wearer’s
body is dead. Gold-wire lilies with jewel hearts set on a chain of flat gold
links. Once it’s on someone’s head it can’t be removed until that person’s dead
or until it’s temporarily deactivated. It swims easily from reality to reality,
invisible until its powers are called on. When Aleytys first acquired it, she
had almost no control over it; as she learned to know those within it, her
control increased but was never complete.
HARSKARI: The first to be caught. Jealous of her skills,
angry at the breakup of their relationship, an ex-lover constructed the diadem
and gave it to Harskari saying it was a peace offering. As soon as she put it
on, he killed her and threw her body into a volcano, where it burned to ash.
The diadem with her consciousness trapped within was untouched. Her lover’s revenge.
In the course of time, the diadem was ejected from the volcano during an
eruption, and lay sealed inside a clump of lava for eons until the working of
wind and water eroded it loose. All this time Harskari was awake and aware of
the nothing around her, hanging on to her sanity by the fingernails she didn’t
have. Civilizations rose and fell around her. The sun went nova and ashed the
life off the world. And still she was awake, aware. More time passed. A
wandering singer happened by, landed to do some repair work on the rusty
cobbled-together wreck she was flying world to world. She found the diadem,
dusted it off, was enchanted by its loveliness and set it on her head. And
Harskari finally had some company.
SHADITH: Singer and poet, the last of her kind. The
second trapped and the second freed. In the early days when Aleytys was still
ignorant of any technology more complicated than a water mill, Shadith provided
instruction and information and occasionally took control of Aleytys’s body and
talents to deal with things that were dangerous mysteries to the mountain girl.
Shadith is now installed in the body of a young girl, a hawk rider killed in a
skirmish on Ibex. Shadith prodded Aleytys into repairing the body and sliding
her into it, stabilizing her in the emptied flesh. She looks about fourteen, a
slight energetic girl with cafe-au-lait skin, chocolate eyes, brown-gold hair a
riot of tiny curls. In her original body—different appearance, different
species—she crashed on a primitive world and lay moldering in the ruins of her
ship for several millennia until one of the natives happened on her ship and
took the diadem from her crumbling skull.
SWARDHELD: The third of the trapped entities. Raised in his
father’s smithy, meant to follow his father’s trade as swordsmith and armorer.
Driven from that by his restless, rebellious nature (a repellent brat, he told
Aleytys), he joined a mercenary band so he could eat, rose to be companion and
war leader to a shrewd and devious man who managed to put together a small but
thriving empire, had to flee when the man was poisoned, discovered the diadem,
came back out of the mountains to avenge his friend and commander, became an
emperor of sorts himself with the help of the diadem, was poisoned in his turn
and joined the other trapped spirits. On a world called Nowhere he was sucked
out of the diadem by a floating ghost (a creature that preyed on life force),
but when the ghost was distracted by an attack from Aleytys, he broke free of
it and slipped into the body of a man just stripped of life. Supported by
Aleytys and the others, he managed to spark new life in the abandoned flesh and
found himself embodied for the first time in millennia. This accident and its
outcome showed Aleytys that it was possible for Harskari and Shadith to acquire
bodies of their own if they wanted them and found suitable ones.
RMOAHL, the: The diadem lay in their treasure vault for
generations until it was stolen by Miks Stavver. They are intelligent,
un-aggressive, communal, hierarchical, spiderish beings. And very very patient.
They are fanatical about their treasures; what they have, they intend to keep.
They will go to just about any lengths to regain what is lost, though they avoid
causing pain or injury almost as fanatically; their fearsome appearance is to
some degree deceptive; though they will fight effectively if driven to it.
STAVVER, MIKS: According to him, he’s the best thief in
known space. A compulsive gambler. Challenged by impossibilities. The only way
to steal anything from the RMoahl and make a profit on it was to get rid of it
very quickly indeed; the RMoahl hounds would go after the object and forget the
thief. His plans went seriously awry, he crashed on Jaydugar, lost the diadem
to a trio of local witches who passed it to Aleytys, collected Aleytys and got
them both offworld. He was her lover for a while and later, after they parted,
played surrogate father to her son when the boy ran away from home. Gambling
fever eventually did him in when he wagered money he didn’t have with beings
who had no sense of humor.
SHAREEM: A Vryhh. Aleytys’s mother. Caught in the delirium
of a swamp fever, she crashed on Jaydugar; too sick to defend herself, she was
enslaved and sold to the Azdar, Aleytys’s father. She recovered from the fever
to find herself pregnant. As soon as Aleytys was able to manage without her,
she left a letter telling her daughter about her and how to find her, then
wangled her way offworld, back to the life she was leading before the disastrous
days on Jaydugar.
KELL: A Vryhh. He loathes the thought of a
half-breed Vryhh and has tried before to destroy Aleytys. He maneuvered reactionary,
power-seeking Watukuu into secretly rebelling and trying to take over a colony
world in order to use it as a base to attack the government of the homeworld;
then he maneuvered that homeworld government into hiring Hunters Inc to deal
with the rebellion. He played games with the mind of Canyli Heldeen, the director
of Hunters Inc, so that she assigned Aleytys to the Hunt. He captured Aleytys
and started to torment her, but with the backing of the Three, she defeated
him, then let her need to heal dictate her actions, something she was sorry for
almost as soon as it was done.
LINFYAR: Aleytys went to Ibex to find Kenton Esgard;
according to the instructions her mother left in that letter, he could put the
two of them in touch. When Aleytys arrived, she found his daughter Hana in
charge of his house and business while he was roaming over Ibex, driven by his
need to extend his life, hunting a place called Sil Evareen where men were
supposed to live forever. In her search for him, shortly after Shadith acquired
her body, Aleytys came across a small boy running away from home and
castration. He had an extraordinarily beautiful soprano voice and his owner
wanted to keep it unchanged. He is about nine years old, covered head to toe
with short, very soft mottled brown fur. He was born without eyes, only faint
furry hollows where they would have been. His mobile pointed faun’s ears can
hear sounds far beyond the normal range of mammal ears; he has assorted
proximity senses that serve him almost as well as sight, and echo location for
more distant objects. He learned very early the arts of surviving in a place
where children born visibly mutant were put outside the gates once they were
weaned and left to the whims of weather and the hunger of predators. Aleytys
means to send him to University where he can get an education and further training
in music. He is not enthusiastic about this idea and keeps poking about for
some ways to postpone (preferably forever) such a dreary outcome to his
adventures.
Wolff
warning bell
distance and direction obscure
Aleytys stepped from the cradle lift and shivered in the raw
wind. She’d returned to spring mud and damp spring bluster, winter having come
and gone while she walked across Ibex. Behind her she heard Linfyar’s
complaining chatter as he felt that wind in spite of his fur and the blanket he
had wrapped about him, heard Shadith’s impatient replies. Smiling a little, she
started for the terminal building across the stained and cracking metacrete.
Wolff’s starport was kept deliberately crude and unwelcoming, only a rough
field with a few battered cradles for ships and shuttles, a squat mud-colored
terminal whose sole grace was a steep roof where dark red tiles rose to a peak;
the Wolfflan wanted no outsiders tempted to stay and put pressure on scarce
resources.
When she rounded the corner of the terminal, Aleytys saw
Canyli and Tamris Heldeen standing beside a flitter, the icy wind blowing their
coats and scarves into a shapeless flurry about them. Grey wasn’t there. Is
he still furious with me? She shortened her stride, excitement and
anticipation beginning to drain out of her.
Head’s smile was wide and warm. “There’s a prance in your
walk. You found what you wanted.” She held the back door open, stood watching
with quiet interest as Shadith herded Linfyar inside and settled beside him.
Tamris followed them in and sat beside Shadith.
Aleytys slipped into the forward seat, wriggled around and
sighed as Head took her place at the console. “I hope this doesn’t mean you’ve
got another Hunt I can’t refuse,” she said, an amiable weariness in her voice.
“I’ve got a visitor coming.”
“No ... um ... not a Hunt ...”
Aleytys turned to stare at Head, surprised by the hesitation
and uncertainty in the words.
“You were gone longer than I expected.”
“Ibex was complicated. Where’s Grey?”
“Hunt.”
Aleytys made a soft annoyed sound. “I thought he was done
with all that.”
“He was restless, needed a distraction. And Hagan was needling
him. He thought he’d better get out before he lost his temper and made things
worse for us.”
“Hardheaded idiot.” Aleytys moved restlessly. “When is he
due back?”
“Seven months ago.”
“What?”
“He’s disappeared.”
“Disappeared?” It came out scratchy. Her throat was suddenly
dry.
“Wait till we get to your house. The reports are there.”
“Right.” She looked at her hands, expecting to see them tremble,
surprised that they lay still on her thighs. She pressed down hard on the long
muscles. “Is he dead?”
“I don’t know.”
Aleytys slid down in the seat. She couldn’t comprehend it. Seven
months. Grey .... She stirred restlessly. “What’s doing with my home share?”
“Hanging fire.” Head went silent as she edged the flier
between two peaks of the angular and austerely beautiful mountains ringing the
cup that held the port, mocking the mud and ugliness of the field. “We’ve just
finished a fight over Dristig’s seat in the Forsaemal. I wanted Grey on the
Hunters board with me and Hagan knew it. He and his toadies started a nasty campaign
against Grey. And you.” Head chuckled. “Backfired on him. You weren’t here.”
Another chuckle. “Maybe the best thing you ever did for me. Wolfflan don’t like
backbiting. He did drive Grey into taking the Hunt, thought he’d won, but we
ran Sybille instead. He could handle Grey, make him explode and say things he
wouldn’t otherwise, but Sybille tied him in knots, made that snerp Lukkit he was
pushing look like a halfwit, couldn’t chew and walk at the same time. She took
Dristig’s seat in a sweep.” She was almost cheerful now, talking with an ease
missing at the beginning of the flight. “Hagan’s the next to go to the Wolfflan
for confirmation.” Her nose twitched. “I’d appreciate it if you were on Hunt
when that happens. It’s going to be a bastard of a fight.”
“Grey?”
“If he’s back by then. I know I promised not to push you,
Lee ....” She took the flitter up over a skim of clouds, shot a questioning
half-smile at Aleytys, her thick pewter brows raised over rounded eyes. With a
self-mocking shake of her head, she punched in the course for Aleytys’s house.
“We’ll have your home share put through by then. Sybille’s working on it.”
“Thanks.” Aleytys settled her head against the rest and
stared up at the flitter’s roof, seeing instead the leggy black orb of the
RMoahl ship waiting out beyond Teegah’s limit with that cursed patience, that
not quite threat. Wanting their diadem. Stavver was luckier than he knew,
getting rid of the thing. She wondered briefly what he and Snarl were doing,
expecting to feel the familiar loss and longing as she thought of her son.
Nothing. Still numb. She was as detached as if she were a ghost riding her own
shoulders watching her body perform, pulling its strings.
The snow had melted around her house, though droppings of
dirty white remained where shade was deepest under the trees. The gardens were
mud slopping about struggling plants, and in the field by the stream her horses
grazed at withered grass just pushing up new green shoots. Head set the flitter
down in the paved patio on the south side of the house.
A fire crackled briskly, driving the unused chill from the
sitting room; a pot of cha waited on a table beside a comfortable leather
chair. Aleytys felt the numbness break inside her, pain at loss and pleasure at
being home mixing uneasily in her. She dropped into the chair and stared into
the flames, quivering all over, fighting to keep control. Tamris poured the tea
and passed the cups around. She tapped Aleytys on the shoulder. “Lee?”
Aleytys sucked in a breath, let it out in a ragged sigh.
“Please.” She gulped at the cha, and the warmth spreading through her eased
some of the shaking. Tamris filled the cup for her again, and she emptied it as
quickly as she had the first, then she set the cup aside and turned to face
Canyli Heldeen. “Tell me about it.”
Head touched the fax sheets in her lap, lifted the top
sheet, put it back. “He left three weeks after you did. Told me he’d been a
fool, that his head was so scrambled he wasn’t up to dealing with Hagan, so he
was going to clear out awhile. A clutch of Pajunggs was here, looking for you,
as usual, but willing to settle for any Hunter they could get.” She fingered
the fax sheets and sighed. “Simple Hunt, a find-and-snatch. Should have taken
Grey a couple of weeks, a month at the outside.” She cleared her throat, held
out her cup for her daughter to fill, using the time to examine Aleytys, her
shrewd light eyes flicking from face to hands and back.
Aleytys said nothing, sat gazing at the fire, waiting for
her to go on.
Head cleared her throat again, set the cup down. “I didn’t
start worrying about him when he was gone a month—sometimes the simple ones
turn wild on you. After three months, it wasn’t a question of worrying. The
Pajunggs were getting nervous too; they wanted to know what was happening. I
sent Ticutt over to Avosing to find out what Grey was up to. First thing he
reported was that Grey had got to Keama Dusta—that’s the only city; it’s a
colony planet, sparsely settled, just a part of one continent. Anyway, Grey got
that far, spent a few days nosing about, then he vanished. Went into the forest
and didn’t come out. You know Ticutt; Methodical’s his middle name. He set up a
satellite drop, Grey’s ship, sent coded reports to it every night, and a
squealer pulsed them over to us. Then he went into the forest as Grey had. And
the reports stopped. That was three months ago. Pajunggs been on my back. Very
unhappy. But I waited for you. Hagan’s been exercising his tongue, or was until
Sybille asked if he was volunteering.”
“Ah.” Aleytys sat up. “And you want me to do the volunteering.”
“If you will.”
A strained silence settled over the room. The fire crackled
noisily, snapping and hissing; tendrils of adoradee vine tapped at the tall
narrow windows, a jittery slithery noise. The leather creaked under Aleytys as
she shifted position. “He’d really hate it, you know. Me running after him like
an overprotective mother after a half-wit child. Madar, Canyli!” She slapped
her hand down on the chair arm, the sound loud and abrupt. Linfyar spilled cha
on his leg, yipped and began rubbing at his fur with a napkin Shadith pushed
into his hand.
Shadith watched Aleytys, worried. She knew too much about
the ups and downs of the relationship between Grey and Aleytys and too much
about the bitter strength of the bond between them. She switched her gaze to
Head and thought about what the woman had just said: I waited for
you. TRAP. The word popped to the front of her mind and quivered there in
big black letters. She bit her lip, wondering if she should wait or say
something, but kept quiet when Aleytys spoke again.
“What a choice you give me,” she said. “In a few weeks my
mother will be here to take me to Vrithian. You know how long I’ve waited for
that.” Absently she brushed at her hair. Her hand shook a little; she brought
it quickly down and clasped it with the other. “But what if I am the only one
who can pull him out of that hole? Him and Ticutt? If they aren’t dead already.”
She bent forward, her hair falling forward to hide her face. Shudders moved in
waves through her body. Shadith got up from the floor where she was sitting
beside Linfyar and went to kneel by Aleytys, cradling Lee’s shaking hands in
hers.
“I’ve thought of that,” Head said softly. “I’ve also thought
about another time when someone came to us with a Hunt that was something else.
Grey sucked in might be an accident; Ticutt makes it a habit. A habit we have
to break, Lee. We’re in the bind we kept putting you in—we can’t afford to fail.
Our reputation is only as good as its last manifestation. We’ll have to send in
another Hunter to finish the job, but we can’t go on dropping drachs down that
hole. Two of the top four left, Sybille and Taggert, but I don’t think the
outcome would be different. Eventually we have to come to you. Interesting,
isn’t it? We have to come to you.”
Shadith felt a jolt pass through Aleytys, nodded to herself.
“Trap,” she said, “because you’re close to reaching Vrithian.”
Aleytys freed her hands, pressed the heels of the palms
against her eyes, pulled the hands down her face. “Kell.”
“One of Ticutt’s last reports.” Head ruffled through the fax
sheets, pulled one out, put it on the top. “He said he picked up a smell of an
alien mixed up with the Sikin Ajin, a master designer who built some things for
him that impressed the hell out of everyone around him. Just a wisp of a wisp,
but after Sybille he’s the best ferret we’ve got.”
“Lee.” Shadith caught hold of Aleytys’s hand and shook it
side to side. “Listen. Go to Vrithian. He’ll come after you, he can’t help it.
Send me to Avosing. You know what I can do. And he won’t be expecting anything
like me, if he’s hanging around there still. Linfy and me working together,
we’ll sniff out that trap and spring Grey loose before anyone knows what’s
happening. And Ticutt. You could probably do it better and faster, but look at
it this way—you there on Vrithian, me on Avosing, we’ll be coming at the same
problem from different directions.” She jumped to her feet. “You’ll be facing
Kell; you’ll have the hard part. Linfy and me, well, it’ll be a walk-over.”
“Linfyar? No.”
“Don’t fuss, Lee. He’s tough. Aren’t you, imp?”
“Uh-huh.” Linfyar flicked his pointed ears forward, then
back. “I want to go, dama, I do. It’s better than school.” Vast contempt in the
last word.
“No doubt, Linfy, but ...”
“Lee.” Shadith bent down and patted her arm. “Look, I’ll
take care of him. This is the best way, really it is.” She straightened, turned
to Head. “Want to bet Kell’s had a long look at all the escrow flakes? Want to
bet he’s even found a way into Hunters records, knows everything about all your
Hunters, down to the way they breathe? Send Aleytys to Avosing and you maybe
win, maybe lose. Send anyone else alone without backing and you lose for sure.
Send a Hunter, Taggert maybe, and me, not together, working on our own, while
Aleytys tackles the other end. You’ve got a better chance that way than any
other.” She spread her arms, then sketched a bow. “Aleytys isn’t so good on the
courtesies—she hasn’t introduced me. I’m Shadith. Singer and poet. We’ve met
but I was in another body then. Uh-huh, you got it.”
Head put her hand over her mouth; her eyes danced with the
laughter she couldn’t quite suppress. After a minute she said, “You look about
fourteen.”
“So? The body is, I’m not.” Shadith slanted a quick anxious
glance at Aleytys, who sat stone-faced not looking at either of them, then
fixed her eyes on Head. “I’m your wild card. Play me.”
“You think a lot of yourself.” Head’s voice was dryly
skeptical, the amusement gone from her eyes.
“Yeah.”
“Aleytys?”
“Lee’s going to Vrithian.” Shadith stepped back so she could
see both the women. “You have to, Lee, you know that. He wants to distract you,
keep you and Shareem apart. Use that against him. Go with your mother, distract
him with his own distraction, draw him off from Avosing so Taggert and I won’t
have to fight him, just what he’s left behind.” She started pacing back and
forth along the hearth. “Listen to me. He knows you too well. Remember what
happened the last time. He almost took you. If the three of us hadn’t been mere
to back you, where’d you be now? He’s had time to plan this. If you do what he
expects, he’s got you. Don’t go after Grey. Shake Kell up, disappoint him,
confuse him. Let me take care of the Avosing end. He’ll come after you—he’s got
to. Vrithian is his ground, well, I know that, but it’s not the ground he’s got
ready for you. Are you listening? Do you understand what I’m saying?”
“Is letting you get yourself killed the biggest favor I can
do for you?”
“Hunh, I like your faith in me.” Shadith clicked her tongue
with disgust, then looked more closely at the woman sitting crouched in the big
chair. “Stop trying to manipulate me. I know you, remember? I’ve lived in that
head of yours far too long.”
Aleytys sighed, straightened her back. “You don’t have to
beat the point to death, Shadow. I agree.” She stretched her legs out, lay back
in the chair, eyes closed, her face looking hollowed out. Her hands rested limp
and motionless on the chair arms. “Give us everything you’ve got on this, will
you, Canyli? Ticutt’s reports, the Pajunggs’ spiel. Anything else you can dig
up.” She lay still for several moments, then tightened her hands on the chair
arms and got suddenly to her feet, a quick twisting movement so full of violence
it was as if her body shouted, as if the grief, fear and fury she was holding
under taut control were close to escaping her grip. “I’m going north to make a
wild trek. It’s something I have to do.” She walked swiftly across the room,
turned in the doorway. “Shadow, if Shareem comes ... if she comes asking for me
before I get back, you tell her ... ask her ... you know.” She wheeled, knocked
her shoulder against the doorframe, caught herself, then sped off down the
hall, the click of her heels fading into silence.
“Ibex was difficult,” Shadith said when Head turned to her,
brows raised. “Painful.”
Head smoothed a square hand over the short thick helmet of
pewter-gray hair, the cabochon sapphire set in a heavy silver band catching
light from the fire and gleaming suddenly bluer than the blue of her pale eyes.
Those eyes were troubled. “She has only one of you left now.”
“Yeah.” Shadith rubbed her back against the edge of the fireplace.
“But her mother’s going to be with her. A full Vryhh. What about Taggert and me
going to Avosing? Are you going to do it?”
“Have I a choice?”
“Sure. Sit on your hands. “It’s me that’s got no choice. To
get Grey loose, it looks like I’ll have to finish your Hunt for you.” She
sniffed with delicate disgust, then grinned at Head. “Don’t you think you’d
better tell me what the Hunt is?”
“It’s in the data sheets.” Head spoke absently, looking out one
of the long narrow windows, seeing visions that disturbed her deeply. “No point
in making mysteries. Avosing is a Pajungg colony, the Sikin Ajin is a Pajungg
from the homeworld, was high up in the shadow government, what they call the
criminal side, made enemies and skipped out, ended up on Avosing, where he
stirred up a rebellion and has been a thorn in the official side. Grey was
supposed to hand him over to the Colonial Authority.” She rose from her chair,
crossed the shadow-filled room and stood beside the window, looking out at the
sunset reddening the glaciers on the mountain peaks. “They never spent much
time together, one or the other off on a Hunt or testifying on Helvetia. And
they had some spectacular fights. I never understood why they stayed together.”
She hitched a hip on the sill, leaned against the frame. “This hit her harder
than I expected.”
Shadith looked from Tamris to Linfyar and said nothing.
“The boy speaks interlingue quite well.”
“He’s a quick learner. And he sings like the angel he
certainly isn’t, and he has the appetite of a herd of caterpillars.”
“I hear you. Tamris, take Linfyar into the kitchen and see
what you can find to feed him.”
Tamris wrinkled her nose, but left holding Linfyar’s hand.
The boy whistled a scornful trill but made no other protest about being shunted
away; he was determined he was going with Shadith and didn’t want to annoy her.
After the door shut behind them, Shadith said, “Some things
I can’t talk about, too private, but ... The bond between them is, well, it’s
complicated, but it’s not going away. She came out of Ibex determined to make
peace with him, maybe start a baby—all that. She was excited and happy when we
landed. It was a long way to fall.” She wound a curl about her finger, frowned
at the floor. With a sigh she raised her head. “You think he’s dead.”
“Why would any sane man keep him alive? Grey dead and Grey
alive are equally good as bait. And Grey dead is easier to control.”
“Kell’s not exactly sane.”
“I wouldn’t count on him being as stupid as he is crazy.”
“Not count on it exactly, but there’s a sliver of
possibility he’s keeping Grey alive. Kell likes hurting things, and he knows
what Grey means to Lee. I’m hoping Grey makes an acceptable substitute until he
has Lee to play with.” Shadith shuddered. “Weren’t for Lee, I’d be hoping Grey
is dead.”
Head slid off the sill and began walking about the room, a
sturdy squarish figure, solid as the furniture. “It’s all guessing,” she said.
“Likely there’s no trap, no devious plan, no mad plotter. Just Grey tripping
over his feet.” She stopped by the cha pot, lifted the lid, let it clink back
down, moved on. “Just the Sikin Ajin being cleverer and more powerful than the
reports make him.” She stopped by the window again. “Clouding over. Be sleeting
before morning. The Pajunggs lying their collective heads off, more or less
normal for our clients. They all lie about something. Ticutt, getting past his
prime and careless for once.” She stopped in front of Shadith. “It could be
just that, a series of coincidences.”
“Could be.” Shadith traced a fingertip along the brand on
her cheek, the acid-etched outline of a hawk’s head. “Happens all the time. I
don’t believe it. Not a word. It’s Kell.”
“Yes.” Head swung around to look at the door. “Vrithian.
Will she come back?”
“Depends.”
“On Grey?”
“Some. And Vrithian.” Shadith stepped away from the bricks,
stretched and patted a yawn. “Oh-ah, I’m tired. All this emotion. Look, Canyli,
legends have a way of turning sour when you track them down. And this house,
the land, the horses, they mean a lot to Lee. And she likes the work; forget
how she bitches about it. And you’re the best friend she’s had in years.
Pulling up is going to be harder than she thinks. Even if Grey is dead.”
“I suppose it doesn’t matter. We’re committed whatever she
decides. A matter of survival. You hungry?”
“I could eat a raving silvercoat.” Shadith started for the
door.
“Reminds me, you should talk Lee out of the trek. It’s the
worst time of the year.” She opened the door and waved
Shadith through. “The silvercoats are coming out of their winter
holes hungry and mean.’’
“Good.” Shadith chuckled at the expression on Canyli’s face.
“She needs the toughening.” They walked together in a companionable silence
down the high-ceilinged hall with carved eiksjo panels and tapestries from a
dozen worlds, boot heels clicking a double rhythm on the intricate parquet,
heading for the stairs that led to the kitchen. “If you’re worried it’s a death
wish, forget it. I’ve been with her the other times. She’ll come out of it with
a lot of rubbish cleared out of her system.” A sigh, then a rueful short laugh.
“I rather wish I were going with her.”
“Why don’t you?”
“No. Not this time.”
Head was silent until they started down the stairs. She
glanced several times at Shadith, amusement at her own hesitations and
puzzlement on her face. Finally she said, “What does it feel like? Coming out
after so long? I get the weirdest double impression when I look at you, ancient
child.” She shook her head, laughing a little. “I get the feeling I ought to
mother you, and at the same time the thought appalls me.”
“God! so it should.”
“You had a kind of immortality. Now you could be dead and
gone tomorrow.”
“A short life, but a merry one.” She sniffed the air. “Haa,
that smells good.” A flash of a grin at Head and Shadith was clattering down
the last few stairs and pushing into the kitchen.
The Wildlands.
Mist and cold and fatigue.
Thicker than she remembered, the mist swirled around her, distorted
what she could see of the ground so that footing was never certain, and would
have disoriented her if the compass in her head hadn’t kept her on the line
she’d chosen. She ran through mud and slush, over ground still frozen, through
patches of ghostly desiccated weeds, forcing herself on and on until she was
stumbling along hardly able to lift her feet. She ran until the sun set and the
darkness magnified the sounds of stealthy movement thickening around her. She
spent the night in the crude shelter the Wolfflan provided for the first night
of a trek taken in this season.
In the morning she had the aches and uncertainties of her
body to cope with along with the harshness of the land and the brutal cold. She
began the struggle to relax into these things, to meld them into a smoothly
articulated whole, knowing this would have to be done morning after morning
when the night’s disturbed sleep with its surges of fear and anger and grief
would jar her out of that oneness of land and self. But, little by little, as
the days passed and the outer world sloughed away, the days and nights would
merge.
For a while her body and her memories distracted her, kept
her from the center she was trying to find. Grey’s ghost ran beside her in the
fog, along with memories of the time she’d come here to set aside the dream of
reclaiming her son. This time she came to Wolff with a dream that meant even
more to her, a dream perhaps as illusory as the other.
By the fourth day she’d collected a following of
silvercoats, gaunt shadows in the eternal mist, tagging her from cold camp to
cold camp. There was no fuel left in this stony wilderness; whatever there had
been was stripped out and used up by the first men and women coming to build
the cairns and make the wild trek in pursuit of the oneness with the
worldspirit that only exhaustion of mind and body would produce, that beating.
down of barriers between spirit and substance. Some came here driven by pride
and fear and shame; most of those died, the rest of them came back empty, pride
satisfied, shame and fear defeated for the moment. Nothing more. Other Wolfflan
came out centered, filled, changed—enough to keep the Wild Trek from
degenerating into a sterile game whose rules were only game rules that could be
broken without recoil if the player chose to win no matter what. After a
thousand years the Wild Trek was hammered into the flesh of the Wolfflan, into
the mythology of this narrow hardy people. They seemed to know by instinct that
if they gave up on this, they would start an inward spiral to destruction. Like
the immortals of Ibex, she thought, and wondered if those feeble, trapped
creatures had used her
blood and cells to free themselves from their machines. Wondered
if Kenton Esgard had begun to regret what he’d done to himself. Wondered if
Hana had worked her way into the Vryhh data and got her hands on her father’s
business.
But those things touched her only fleetingly, phantoms in
the mists, distractions from mind sores and body aches, from an anger so
all-encompassing it had no focus, or rather many foci. Kell. Fate. Grey. Her
own stupidities. Head. Hunters Inc. Harskari. Shadith. Shareem. Hagan. In turn
and all together, she raged at them for forgetting what they were, what she
was, raged at her powerlessness. No way to change the past. You could go over
and over and over what had happened, what you’d done, what other people had
done, you could see where you’d gone wrong, you could see what you might have
done, by force of will you could make yourself believe for a few seconds that
it had not happened, but you couldn’t change any of it, not really, and if you
lied to yourself, willfully blinded yourself, well, that was madness, a common
enough madness and one that had its good points. Some things were too horrible
to live with.
No fuel to fight the cold, no shelters after the first to
keep off the silvercoats and that cold. After a long day’s run she had to spend
a racking time gathering stones and building a rough shelter so she could
snatch a few hours of sleep with a degree of safety. Custom demanded that she
scatter the stones, but she had to come back this way and she’d do the
scattering then.
The first cairn.
She took a water-worn pebble from the pouch at her bell,
stood holding it a moment. She wondered what she should say, then shrugged and
tossed the pebble onto the cairn and went on loping through the fog.
Grey’s ghost ran beside her through the long gray days.
Neither spoke, but settled into the busy silences of snow and mist, hearing and
not hearing the rhythmic body sounds, the grunts and hoarse breathing, the
shish-shish of ghostly snow-shoes on snow that wasn’t there.
At least the snow is gone today, she thought. Grey’s
baby from his frozen sperm. Something to keep him alive, a part of him. No. Not
now. If he was alive, if he’d be there to share the joys and irritations of
raising a child, yes, oh yes, oh a hundred times yes. Without him—she’d had
enough of fatherless children. No and no and no, the harsh explosive denials
came with the thudding of her bootsoles. If Grey lived, if he lived, if Shadith
brought him out of the trap, if he came out of Kell’s torment not hating her,
oh yes. Having Grey’s baby now not knowing if he was alive or dead, that would
be a sickly smarmy necrophilia. As she ran, she wept, slow tears that were as
much grief for the child who might never be as for the man who was most likely dead.
Remembering that other run. The silence was deep between
them. A shared silence. In the night camps that other time, they were sometimes
lovers, sometimes just held each other. A good rich time.
Her mind was too busy. Her body had adjusted easily enough,
but she was thinking and suffering, grieving and filled with anger. The second
cairn.
She stood a long time by the pile before she tossed the
stone onto the sloping side, remembering all too vividly the bitter quarrel
with Grey before she left for Ibex. She’d come back expecting to retrieve the
relationship, to patch up once again the wounds they tore into each other. But
there was no time, no chance to repair the damage. That sat like fire in her
belly. No chance. Or if there was a chance, it depended on Kell’s madness and
his need to torment. She looked at the stone in the hollow of her gloved palm
and wondered. Should she hope he was alive if it meant torment of a kind she
couldn’t begin to imagine? Was any life at all better than being dead? Shadith
had deliberately opted for a finite life with death at the end of it, though
she was guaranteed immortality. What did that say? She tossed the stone and
started on.
Remembering the bad time after the second cairn, running
with Grey ... they moved in separate solitudes, turned in on themselves in the
grim struggle to maintain sanity as they moved over endless white snow through
endless white fog. An ice storm came suddenly on them and they were forced into
shelter. The days passed dark and dreary. They grated on each other until both
were at the point of screaming. They began treating each other with an exaggerated
courtesy that was bitter as the worst insult. When the storm passed over and
they emerged into the eternal mist, it was with such a feeling of relief that
the mere freedom of movement and the explosion of space sparked a surge of joy
in both.
Rain began falling, a steady sluggish rain, not icy but cold
enough to soak in to the bone and steady enough to turn the hard earth to a
treacherous slop. Clay soil, fine-grained and a good approximation of a
frictionless material when saturated, slowed her to a lurching walk. Strangely
enough, though the world wept drearily around her, though she was cold and
soaked, inhaling air thick with water, though her muscles strained because
walking in these conditions was a series of controlled falls, in spite of all
these things, the pain and rage inside her grew paler and began to flow away.
The pack of silvercoats was bigger now, and bolder. She
could smell the rank odor streaming off them. She could hear them clearly, that
coughing, yipping call of theirs. Late that afternoon she had to shoot two of
them to back them off her. Leaving the pack tearing hungrily at the bodies of
their mates, she ran on into the gray misery of the day.
The third cairn.
Gaunt and haggard, splattered with mud, she took out the pebble,
tossed it onto the smaller heap, then went wearily on. Too much still needed
working out. It wasn’t time to turn back yet.
Her long struggle was over; she was drifting, rudderless.
From the time she’d left her first home, she’d had the quest for her mother to
give a meaning to her life, something to work toward even when she had to
divert from the direct road because something demanded immediate attention. But
the goal was always there in the back of her mind, not urgent, not smothering
anything else, her own pale pole star. The quest was over. No more need to
search. Over. First deal with my mother, then settle down with Grey, keep on
Hunting, maybe raise a child or two, work my way into the ordinary life of
Wolff. For a while, at least, for as long as I can manage.
That’s what I planned. Madar knows what’ll happen now. Though
she couldn’t extinguish a faint spark of hope, Grey was most likely dead. And
if he is, what keeps me here? She brooded over the question as she ran,
half her attention on the silvercoats slinking after her. She enjoyed being a
Hunter. She even enjoyed having a name that meant something, though she found
it irritating at times. Canyli Heldeen was a good friend. The best. Sybille was
abrasive and a vicious infighter when her defenses were triggered, but after
their bad beginning, she’d turned into a cranky and half-unwilling friend,
defending Aleytys as much because she despised those who attacked her as from
respect and liking. Most of that fractious collection of individualists
assembled under the aegis of Hunters Inc. had grown into friends she valued.
And there was Tamris. She had a tendency to stand in awe now; later she’d make
a friend, much like her mother. Her life was what Aleytys had wanted for Sharl,
cherished, with a warm haven to return to from her forays into life. Canyli had
even managed to extend that carefully unsmothering care to her daughter’s first
Hunt, sending her with Aleytys, knowing Aleytys would let nothing harm her.
Tamris was so unscarred by life, so ... Aleytys shook her head, then regretted
her absence of mind as she lost balance and slid into the muck, crashing onto
hands and knees, bruising herself and bringing the silvercoats at her, feral
snarling shapes flashing from the rain, their pads better adapted than her
booted feet to the treacherous ground. No time for the darter, no time to get
to her feet. She crouched in the mud and burned. She threw flame from her hands;
her clothing ashed around her glowing body.
Silvercoats howled and died as the rain sizzled about them,
leaving them soggy black corpses with chalk-white bones showing through brittle
skin and burned flesh. Silvercoats fled howling into the rain, rushing in blind
panic from the fire horror.
As the howling diminished, Aleytys scowled down at herself.
Her clothing, her boots, her gear were smears of ash on her body, streaks of
ash running out from her feet; the darter was a blob of plastic and ashy metal
warped out of shape, half buried in the mud by her knee. She spat a few curses
into the drearily falling rain, but broke off. All that did was take the edge
off the fury that still churned in her. It did nothing at all for her embarrassment
at her stupidity.
She got to her feet and stood letting the rain chill the
heat out of her. Naked and shivering, she began to wonder if she would get out
of the Wildlands or leave her bones and flesh to mingle with the bones of the
ancient dead.
And discovered she had no intention of going back yet and
even less intention of dying. She tapped her symbolic power river and brought
her body heat to normal, healing her scrapes and bruises with an absent ease
that startled her later when she thought of it. She lifted her arms as high as
they would go, stretched her spine, rising onto her toes, letting her heels
slam back into the mud, realizing suddenly that she felt very good indeed.
Energized, vital, looking forward to the next day, looking forward to taking up
Kell’s challenge.
After a moment’s thought she kicked about in the mud until
she found the last pebble. She stood holding it a moment staring into the rain.
It seemed to her Grey stood out there seen and unseen, hidden then revealed by
the swaying curtains of rain. He lifted a hand in that way he had, amused and
affectionate, the way he was in the best of times, then the ghost image faded
into the rain.
Pebble in her mouth, she loped easily through the rain, her
bare feet finding an easier purchase on the slick clay soil than her boots ever
had. Why didn’t I think of this before? Hunh, tunnel vision, conditioned by
other folks’ expectations. Better watch that. Kell won’t honor my blind spots.
As the days passed she settled into the run, growing gaunter
since she had to stop and hunt her food, but she didn’t bother gathering rocks
for shelters now, simply set out intangible alarms to wake her if danger came
too near. Twice she woke to slice warning fire before the muzzles of hungry
silvercoats. She killed no more of them; it seemed both unnecessary and somehow
stupid, a distraction from the truth she was trying to find.
The fourth cairn.
Grey’s cairn, a small heap of stones three spans high.
Remembering what he told her. At the foot of a
thirty-meter cliff swept clean by icy winds, he built his cairn and carved his
name into the cliff side. He stepped back, examined the crude letters and
thought he should add something to tell the next one here what he’d learned in
the silence of the shelter, then he shook his head. Grey. It was enough.
Whoever came here would have found his own peace. Anyway, there were no words
for what he wanted to say.
Aleytys flipped the pebble on the cairn and traced the
letters still visible in the stone of the cliff after more than a dozen years
of weathering. The rain had stopped and the mists were temporarily burned away.
The day was clear and bright, deceptively warm where a bulge in the cliff
shunted the wind aside. She sat in the quiet warmth, her back close to the hard
gray granite but not touching it. She sat letting whatever would bubble through
her mind, holding on to nothing, letting all go, the hardest of all
disciplines, letting everything come and go as it would until the turmoil in
her stilled, until the grief and rage and self-dislike flowed out of her, until
even her joys stilled into quiet acceptance, until she was sitting in sunshine,
then starshine, then rain, then eddying fog, emptied of all things, emptied of
wanting and fear, until she was stone and wind and mist herself, her pulse slowed
until her body beat with the great slow beat of Wolff.
She blinked. Moved a hand. Spat hair from her mouth. Rocked
on her buttocks in a slow sway to break free of the trance she’d been caught in
for ... how long? She didn’t know; her body clock said it was more than a day,
and she accepted that. She was hungry. The problem of her future could wait.
There was time for that, time for all the momentous decisions she had to make.
Besides, experience had taught her long ago that most of those decisions would
make themselves when the time was right.
She got stiffly to her feet, looked down at her gaunt naked
body and chuckled at the thought of strolling into her house like that. Shake
them up a bit. Then she sighed and shook her head. In the vadi Raqsidan, where
she had been born and had lived for longer than the years she’d spent
wandering, nakedness was reserved for sexual intimacies. Wolff was like that
too. I’ll have to wander a lot longer before I shake that feeling.
Certain and uncertain, centered yet drifting, she moved
along the cliff and touched the letters of Grey’s name. If you live, my
love, if you live, Shadith will find you. If you’re dead ... so stupidly dead,
snuffed by a madman’s whim ... but what do you care if your dying had
significance or not? Dead is dead. If you are dead, my love, nothing matters to
you now. If I could be sure you lived, if I could be sure my presence wouldn’t
precipitate your death, if I could be sure, I would come for you forgetting
everything else, my mother, Vrithian, everything, nothing Kell could do would
keep me from you. I can’t be sure of anything. Ay-Madar, for a clear-cut
choice, something comfortably black and white. Doesn’t work that way, does it,
my love .... I want it to be me, but oh no it can’t be me, she’ll come for you,
child out of my head born into a new body. Like Swardheld. I didn’t tell you
who and what Swardheld was, I was too angry at you, I never let you know that
much of me, and oh my dear, oh my love, I’m sorry for that. Can’t change it
now, can’t change any of it ....
“Ahhh ...” She brushed her fingers over the chill stone,
then turned to begin the run back to the flitter.
Wolff
getting set
Aleytys walked into the sitting room and found Shadith
stretched out on her stomach on the rug in front of the fire, absorbed in the
slide of her stylo across a sheet of paper laid on a book, the flying angular
lines of her native script like bird tracks on the creamy white. Warmed by a
surge of affection for that ancient child, she leaned against the door-jamb
watching as Shadith stopped writing and began reading what she’d set on paper.
With an exclamation of disgust she wadded it up and flipped it away to join
similar wads scattered near the hearth.
Aleytys chuckled. Chuckled again as Shadith leaped up, twisting
to face the sound as she moved, wary and lethal as one of the silvercoats.
“Which is it? You bankrupt me paying for paper or you burn my house down?”
Shadith straightened, relaxed, ran inky fingers through her
tangled thornbush of brown-gold curls. “You look better. When did you get in? I
didn’t hear anything.”
“I wasn’t noisy about it.” She crossed the room, lowered herself
into a chair, propped her feet on a hassock and sighed with the pleasure of
being home again. “Anything interesting turn up?”
“Don’t know how interesting.” Shadith dropped into the other
chair near the fire and brought her legs up. “I went through the stuff Head
sent over, made some notes. Like to know what you think about them.” She laced
her fingers behind her head, gazed drowsily at Aleytys. “Unless you’ve changed
your mind about sending me.”
“No.” Aleytys frowned at the fire. “If I want to draw Kell off
Grey, I go to Vrithian and stake myself out as bait. I hate that, Shadow, you
don’t know-how much.” A half-smile, a glance at Shadith. “Well, maybe you do.”
“Mmm. What’s Harskari doing?”
“Brooding, I suppose. I haven’t heard from her since Ibex.”
“She’ll come out of that when she’s ready.”
“You said that before.”
“Yeah, and got my head chewed off. By proxy. At least she
can’t do it in person anymore.”
“More than time I found her a body. Maybe on Vrithian.” She
slid farther down in the chair, watched her bare toes wriggle. “Damn all
screw-ups,” she said. “I was settling in here.”
“You can hang on.”
“Think so?”
Silence stretched out, filled with small noises. The fire
snapped, popped and hissed, threw out a fan of warmth invaded by wandering
drafts. Wolfflan houses were built to minimize drafts, but during the
in-between times, the short autumns and shorter springs when the houses were
adjusting to rapidly changing temperatures, the chill crept about everywhere,
touched everything. A whisper of air curled around Aleytys’s legs, slid along
her body and tickled at the short hairs at her forehead, passed on to rustle
through the wadded papers on the hearth.
Aleytys stirred. “Kell! May his teeth fall out and his gut
have holes like a colander and may all he have to eat be bone and gristle and
hot pepper sauce. May everything he touches rot under his fingers. May he be a
hissing and a bad smell to everyone who knows him.” She sighed. “For all that’s
worth.”
“Yeah. There are worse places than this to come home to. I always
enjoyed getting back.” Shadith slanted a glance at Aleytys, chocolate eyes
curious and searching. “Don’t scorch the earth behind you.”
“I’m all right,” Aleytys said, answering the look rather man
the words. “I don’t know. I’m still not used to having him gone. I don’t know
how I’ll feel later. When I was flying back from the trek, I found myself
thinking when Grey gets back, then pulling myself up reminding myself
that it’s too damn likely he won’t be coming back ever. I’ve a feeling I’m
going to keep doing that, and it’s like getting kicked in the belly. But I’ve
got good friends here.” She closed her eyes. “Would you like living here,
Shadow?”
“Never in winter. Nice to come and visit for a week or
so—it’s a cushy little world, this.”
“Wolff?” Aleytys opened her eyes wide, stared at Shadith.
“Uh-huh. Everyone the same, lots of space, good living
thanks to the home shares in Hunters. Tell you what I think, I like my worlds
gaudier. Rougher. Full of life and anger and energy. Always something
happening, a soup of species and races and cultures, boiling over. Wolff is too
bland, people look alike, think alike. Live here all the time? No way.”
Aleytys closed her eyes. “Still ...”
“AH right, all right, you need this. That’s what I’m saying.
Leave yourself a way back. You want a resting place.” She pulled her hands
down, let them lie limp on the chair’s arms, grinned briefly at Aleytys.
“Wolff’s a great place for hibernating.” She wriggled in the chair. “Your mum’s
running late.”
“Said she’d be here.” Aleytys brooded at the fire. “She
will.”
“Aleytys.” The face in the comscreen was solemn and
strained.
“Shareem.” Aleytys felt a little strained herself.
“I’m stationary over the field. Come up for a while. I’ll
send a shuttle for you.”
“Right. Will you be down?”
“We’ll leave that for later if you don’t mind.”
“I hear you. Take about twenty minutes to get there.” She
hesitated, but there didn’t seem to be anything else to say and she didn’t know
how to break off. She and Shareem stared at each other for a long moment, then
each started to speak. Shareem grimaced, lifted a hand, let it fall; the screen
went blank.
The doll-like android bowed with liquid grace and left.
Aleytys stood in the middle of the oval room and looked around. Grass and
growing things, an impossible little waterfall making impossible music in the
heart of a starship. Light coming from nowhere with the pearly tinge of a
cloudy spring morning. Smell of damp earth and green growing things, elusive
flower scents. Muted by distance, a bird singing intermittently. Not quite
familiar but haunting, suggesting a dozen birds on a dozen worlds she’d
visited. A room in her mother’s ship, thick with her mother’s presence, though
Shareem was not there yet. Aleytys marveled at the quiet charm of the place and
felt exceedingly uncomfortable, as if somehow, at this late date, she’d
returned to her mother’s womb. Little prickles like the brush of electric hairs
ran over her body. Come on, she thought, enough’s enough. I’m as
unarmed as I’ll ever be.
“Aleytys.”
The sound came from behind her. She turned slowly, her stomach
knotting, a tightness under her ribs that hurt when she breathed. Her mother
stood under the graceful arch of an aphnyta limb, the dangling spear-head
leaves fluttering about her head and shoulders.
Shareem’s green eyes widened; Aleytys felt alternating snippets
of fear and longing, quickly suppressed. Fear? Breath caught in her throat as
she remembered suddenly (she didn’t quite know why) leaning tensely toward the
vidscreen in her ship pleading with Stavver to let her see her son. And being
refused. Because her son hated her so intently he would not even look at her. Something
deep inside her broke, something hard and cold she hadn’t known was there. Her
eyes blurred. She held out her hands. “Mother?”
Shareem’s hands closed on hers, strong and warm and shaking
more than a little, then they were hugging each other, laughing and crying.
They lay stretched out on long comfortable chairs that
shaped themselves to the contours of their bodies, black chairs in a small
black room with one wall that seemed open to space but was in truth a curved
transparent substance mat magnified what lay outside. Meditation room, Shareem
said, for times when the years got too heavy. They lay in the chairs with the
flaccidity that comes after great tension is suddenly relaxed, not quite at
ease with each other yet, groping toward an understanding of their likenesses
and differences.
Someone floating invisible above the two women, looking for
nonphysical signs of maturity (something rather different from age but too
often confused with it), would have thought Aleytys the mother and Shareem the
child. Shareem’s emotions ran more facilely across her face, through her body,
but there was more depth and passion in Aleytys. More confidence and
self-esteem. She had been forced by circumstances and a comparative lack of
mobility to live with the results of her actions, to pay (sometimes heavily)
for unconsidered acts. With few exceptions, one of them being the series of
events that led to Aleytys’s birth and the struggle afterward, Shareem had been
insulated from problems by Vryhh wealth and her Vryhh ship. If a situation
became uncomfortable, she simply went away and forgot what happened as quickly
as she could. It was a measure of her feeling for her daughter that she didn’t
do that, didn’t dismiss the child as an unfortunate accident, but fought to
guarantee Aleytys a place on Vrithian, took pains to make sure she wouldn’t
stay in the stifling culture of the Raqsidan. The outcome of that plotting,
what Aleytys was now, she found rather disconcerting; she felt dominated by her
daughter and didn’t quite know how she liked that, yet she was filled with
pride in her child and felt vindicated by her success.
Aleytys saw some of this. In spite of her wariness, she
found herself unfolding under the warmth of her mother’s approval—Was startled
by the ease and promptness of her capitulation.
“I’m glad you were a girl,” Shareem said after a long
silence. “Male Vryhh can be ... difficult.”
“Mmm.” Aleytys turned to look at her. “How many Vrya are
there?”
Shareem stirred, uncomfortable; the chair whispered as it
changed to accommodate her change. “Not many,” she said. The words were clipped
as if she found them difficult to say. “Maybe three hundred.” She stirred
again. “There never were very many. We were an experiment that got out of hand.”
She tried a smile, gave up on it. “The eldest, they don’t talk much about it.
Ummm. About a thousand when Hyaroll found the way to Vrithian. Most we ever
were was three thousand. We dwindle, Aleytys.”
“Lee.”
“Reem. That’s why I was able to get you acknowledged. I suppose
you’re not going to like this. Three of the Tetrad wanted to know where you
were, wanted you brought to Vrithian at once if not sooner. I squashed that
idea fast; Hyaroll backed me up. We thought you should grow up in a healthier
place than Vrithian.”
Aleytys waited awhile before she tried to answer, filled
first with anger, then resignation. A healthier place than Vrithian. Hard to
swallow Shareem’s easy passing off of those years of pain and struggle. “I
hated you for leaving me,” she said finally. “I hated you for a long time.”
“Hated. Not hate. What changed your mind?”
“I found out how helpless a woman could be ... lost my son before
he could walk ... lost him again, left him with his father because ...” She
closed her eyes, the pain with her again, unchanged, it never really changed.
“That didn’t work out—nothing I did for him worked out the way I wanted. I was
going to be the mother you weren’t, I was going to raise him with love and care
and never leave him until he grew old enough to leave me.” She lay silent for a
moment, then rubbed her hand across her face, opened her eyes and turned her
head so she could see Shareem. “Dwindle? Three thousand to three hundred,
that’s not a dwindle, it’s extinction. Except ... how long ...” She chewed on
her lip for a moment. “What about the longlife? Was that a lie? One man I ...
know believes in it.”
More silence. A shuddering sigh from Shareem. “The day you
were born, as far as I could figure it later, no way of being really sure, I
passed into my nine hundredth year.” She smiled. “Odd coincidence, whether it’s
exactly true or not, our sharing the same birthday. I had ... small
celebrations ... for us each year.” She cleared her throat. “I’m fourth
generation on Vrithian. You’re about it for the fifth. If we’re a
mistake, it’s self-correcting. Taking a long time, but we’re going to get
there. No more Vrya. All Vrya males after Hyaroll’s generation are sterile.
Except for two or three, and they all fathered short-lived sports. Damaged.
Distorted. And most Vryhh females are barren. Happened I wasn’t one of them.”
Aleytys chuckled, apologized when she saw Shareem frown. “I
wasn’t laughing at what you said, but something else. Kell and his obsession
with pure Vryhh blood. He one of the sterile ones?”
“Kell?” Shareem shuddered all over; the chair shuddered with
her as it tried to accommodate her movement. “Where’d you come across him! He
never said he knew you.”
“One of my Hunts and one of his projects crashed into each
other a few years back. Reem, he implied damn hard he was my ancestor and
yours.”
“Hunh! The only way would be cloning, and that doesn’t work
worth spit. What happened?”
Aleytys snuggled lower in the chair and sketched the events
of the Hunt on Sunguralingu, the eerie hare-weapon, the battle with Kell.
“That’s it,” she said. “I thought it was the disease warping him, so I healed
him. I was really wrong that time, wasn’t I?”
“You fought him, handicapped, you beat him flat, then had
the gall to take pity on him? Lee, he might forgive you by the next big bang,
but don’t count on it.”
“Yes. I know.”
“What did he do?”
Aleytys pushed up, swung her legs off the chair, sat with
shoulders hunched, hands curled over the rounded edge. She missed Grey with a
deep misery, felt like crying but lacked the energy to press out tears. “He tried
to destroy my son,” she said, her voice muted. “He’s going after Hunters now,
attacking my friends, trying to trap me.”
Shareem moved uneasily but didn’t sit up; instead she stared
at the curve of Wolff hanging over them. “I wish I could say he’s the exception,
but it wouldn’t be true. He’s just an exaggeration of the ordinary Vryhh
attitude toward the lesser species.”
“Lesser species?”
“His choice of words, not ... ah, I can’t say that.” Her
hands fluttered in small shapeless movements. “I might not say the words, but
... I act ... I treat people ... oh, I suppose as carelessly, as thoughtlessly
as he does. Not as meanly, I hope. I ... I can’t let myself get involved with
them ... they die so fast. Time, Lee, we’ve got so much, and it does funny
things to us. The Eldest, a lot of them anyway, spent centuries in labs ...
well, not exactly ... an umbrella word for all kinds of ... of fiddling around
with things ... projects. Think about having ages and ages at your disposal to
investigate anything at all that intrigues you ... and a secret world to maul
about ... its natives ... you can take from them anything you want, make them
do anything you want ... they’re born and they die between one breath and the
next. Think of it, Lee, even a single mind ... working on a problem for
centuries, turning it over and over ... hidden away ... coming out of hiding to
see what other mayflies, other worlds, had done with it ... stealing the best
ideas ... brooding over them. Think what that one mind could produce.” More shapeless
groping gestures. “But ...”
“But?” It was a whispered sound, drawn out, a soft
enticement to continue. Aleytys watched her mother struggling with an openness
alien to her nature, a painful honesty that the child Leyta inside Aleytys
thirsted to hear, evidence of something she’d desired without knowing it for
all the years of her life, a need almost as deep as the need for food or
breath, a need to know her mother really did love her. What Shareem was saying
was interesting in itself, but the feeling behind the words was what Aleytys
listened to.
“But they got bored, Lee, most of them. Bored! Sounds funny,
doesn’t it? The disease that kills us. Absurd, isn’t it? One by one most of the
Eldest took a dive into a sun somewhere. Or touched off the cores in their
domes. Or died in boredom-related accidents, too tired to take care. A lot of
the younger ones, we don’t go back to Vrithian much. I wander and trade and
amuse myself ... do a project here and there ... when I need something to make
me feel like I’m ... I’m not just a parasite sucking the life out of ... I like
the long ones ... the ones that take generations ... they make the time go ...
but they’re rare ... mayfly folk don’t have the patience. It’s a long time yet
before I hunt a sun ... but it’ll come. Everything wears out in time.” Another
gesture of her mother’s hand; she did have lovely hands, slender and shapely,
but she didn’t take care of them. She chews her nails, Aleytys thought,
and felt a surge of protective love for her mother; she wanted to scold her for
neglecting herself, wanted to cuddle and comfort her as if she were the mother
and Shareem her child. It was confusing and disturbing; she turned it over and
over in her mind, almost missing her mother’s next words.
“It’s a mess, Lee. The Vrya who stay on Vrithian are ...
well, we’re all dead ends, it’s a failed experiment, but they ... aah, it’s a
mess. You sure you want anything to do with it?” Shareem nodded at Wolff
swimming serenely over them. “That seems a beautiful world in its chilly way.”
“Come see my home.” Aleytys stood, held out her hand.
“Why not?” Shareem took the hand, let Aleytys pull her up.
“Any problems getting off the field? Wolff isn’t a Company world, but I’ve
heard they don’t like visitors.”
“They don’t.” Aleytys grinned. “But I’ve got pull.” The grin
became a chuckle. “Well, truth is I’ve got a couple friends with pull; all that
fuss and red tape is taken care of, you don’t have to bother with it, just hop
in my flitter and come see my house.” She followed Shareem from the room. “And
my horses. Um ...I’ve got a couple of people staying with me, but you don’t
need to see them if you don’t want to, not to talk to anyway.”
Shareem swung around. “What?”
“I’ll explain on the way down. If you still want to come.”
“Yes.” Shareem looked wary, withdrawn, setting aside emotion
and involvement with an abruptness that startled Aleytys and turned her wary
too. “Yes, daughter, it’s time you did a little explaining.”
Shareem stood by a window in the sitting room, her back to
the fire burning briskly on a huge open hearth; it made her a little nervous,
for she wasn’t accustomed to open fires inside living space. The whole house
made her nervous. Her daughter’s house. Even the ancient stone walls seemed to
hold something of Aleytys. When she’d gotten out of the flitter and looked at
it, she’d had the feeling it had grown in that spot like some gnarled old tree.
A narrow structure at least four stories high, almost a lopped-off tower,
plain, even ugly, massive. She felt the weight of it and wondered how Aleytys
could endure that weight pressing down on her. A few steps out of the flitter,
Aleytys stopped, closed her eyes, breathed in the rich soup of smells, raw
green, wet dirt, horse manure, damp fur, something dead upwind of them, all
carried undiluted on a wind that cut into Shareem like knives. She fidgeted,
not so enchanted with all this nature; the smells were getting to her stomach
and the wind was turning her into an icicle. Now, with the fire’s heat licking
at her back, with that wind kept firmly outside the double-paned windows, she
could watch with appreciation and pleasure the spring foals chasing each other,
the mares and stallion grazing in the greening pasture. Its yellow round
flattening and flushing to red, the sun started to pass behind sawtooth peaks,
their ancient massive glaciers chiseled by time and weather into intricate
folds and falls. The air outside had a clarity that gave everything a luminous
magical quality, hard-edged and immediate; the intensity of the colors scarcely
seemed to diminish as the light began to die. Shareem wrinkled her nose at the
display and thought, I’m not going to get any fonder of this world than I am
right now. She sighed and turned to face her daughter. “What are you going
to do?”
Aleytys was stretched out in one of the chairs near the
fire, her ankles crossed, a heel sunk in the padded leather of a hassock. She
held a long-stemmed glass about a third filled with a dark gold wine that had
gone even richer and darker as the light outside faded. The room was filled
with shadows; the only light inside came from the fire. “Vrithian,” she said.
“Shadith was right. Make him come after me.” She lifted her head, sipped at the
wine, let her head fall back. “Aschla skewer his liver, he couldn’t have picked
a worse time. Over two years since my last Hunt, I’m about cleaned out, enough
credit left to pay the taxes on this place and maintain the power tap while I’m
gone. If I’m not gone too long. And there’s fuel and overhauling and
maintenance on the ship. And Shadith. And Linfyar. No way around it, I’m going
to have to borrow on the house and land.” She took another sip of the wine, lay
back and gloomed at the ceiling. “Damn. Damn. Damn. I just last year worked
everything clear of debt.”
Shareem moved her shoulders impatiently. She’d never bothered
herself with such idiocies and didn’t intend to start.
Aleytys felt her discomfort and let the subject drop; which
didn’t help all that much because every time she did something like that
Shareem was forcibly reminded that her daughter was an empath and capable of
sensing every fleeting feeling, and some of those feelings she’d rather keep to
herself, nothing to be proud of, nothing she wanted anyone else to know about. Empath.
She didn’t get that from, me; who’d have thought that crazy clod who fathered
her might have something so wild in his genes.
Aleytys touched a sensor. The chair hummed around until she
faced the windows; another sensor and a second chair moved up beside it. “Come
sit down, Reem. We get spectacular sunsets this time of year.”
Shareem settled into the empty chair, though she wasn’t that
interested in sunsets and had already seen as much as she cared to of this
particular specimen. She watched her daughter instead. As the display continued
outside, the faintly stem set of Aleytys’s face softened, her eyes opened
wider; she looked almost happy, absorbed in the play of light before her, accepting,
vulnerable; she was responding to that miserable sunset with a passionate
intensity that Shareem knew she could never share. She tried to laugh at
herself—jealous of a sunset; what next?—but she could not bear to look at her
daughter’s face any longer.
When the colors had faded and the sky had darkened to indigo
with a few silver spangles, Shareem glanced at her daughter and was startled to
see tears silent and unforced sliding down her face. Aleytys wasn’t trying to
stop them or wipe them away. Her mouth was pressed into a thin line; she’d set
the wineglass on the floor beside the chair and her hands were knotted together
so hard her fingers were white about the knuckles and red at the ends.
Shareem must have made a sound, though she wasn’t conscious
of it, because Aleytys broke the grip of her hands, sat up, scrubbed at her
eyes. “Sorry,” she said. She groped beside the chair, found a bit of tissue and
blew her nose, tossed the tissue at the fire. She took a few deep breaths.
“Just as well I’m getting away from here. For a while, anyway.” She drew the
back of her hands across her eyes, managed a smile. “Grey and I used to sit
here like this whenever our times home coincided.” She groped for another
tissue, blew her nose again. “It keeps catching me by surprise, that he might
not ... never mind.”
She flipped up the top to the chair arm, danced her fingers
over the panel there, then settled back as the chair switched around again to
face the fire, a soft indirect lighting chased the shadows from the room, and
exterior shields hummed quietly down over the windows. A hesitation, then she
brought Shareem’s chair back to where it had been; she raised her brows, then
matched Shareem’s smile with her own.
“I’m not asking you to help,” she said. Shareem suppressed
an appreciative chuckle at the care in the choice of those words. Aleytys was
groping through a minefield that didn’t exist, but she couldn’t know that.
“Just get me to Vrithian and—” the same uninsistent quiet tones, the same
slightly hesitant speech—“and back off, and ... keep silence.” A lift and fall
of her hand. “I don’t want him more prepared for me than he is already. You
know Kell, I don’t. I don’t know what your loyalties are, Reem. If you’re
against me in this, please tell me. I won’t mind; after all, you’ve known him a
lot longer than you’ve known me. All I ask is, don’t get in my way. I don’t want
to have to go through you.” She shook herself, made a groping helpless gesture.
“I will, you know. He’s left me no choice. I have ... hostages, he’ll strike
against them, they can’t fight him. I think ... I think he’ll put off facing me
directly as long as he can keep me running ... and hurting. Swardheld, Shadith,
though they can take care of themselves better than most. Linfyar. Canyli
Heldeen and the other Hunters. Grey ... ah!” She looked down, then up, eyes
shining with a film of tears. “I know I just said back off, Reem, but I can’t
... I need you, Reem. Will you help me?”
I need you. Simple words, but they cut deep
and made Shareem feel like crying. Her arms ached to hold her daughter as
they’d ached before. More than once she’d taken her ship cautiously into the
mess around Jaydugar and hovered watching the world turn under her, had seen it
frozen in the depths of winter, burning in the long, long summer, yet she’d
never dared land and claim her daughter. So many reasons for not doing what she
half wanted, half feared to do. And all of those reasons seemed empty now, as
foolish as her urge to take a grown woman into her arms as if she were a
hurting child, rock her, soothe her, tell her mother would make things right.
Absurd, of course, and too painful to dwell, on, so she pushed the thought
aside.
“Help? Of course I’ll help. When he knows we’ve met, which
will be soon, I’ll be a target too.” She looked down at her hands, opened and
closed them, ran her thumb over her wrist where scars would have been except
for Kell’s autodoc; her stomach knotted and her throat closed up as she brought
up buried memories she’d never been able to wipe away, memories that surfaced
in dreams though she’d never let them up in the daytime.
“Lee ...” Her throat closed again; she swallowed and forced
herself to a measure of calm—what else was time useful for but to teach you how
to deal with your crises? “Lee, I don’t know how much use I’d be if this thing
gets sticky. He’s got a—I don’t know what to call it—if he gets close enough to
me, I’ll do just about anything he tells me no matter how I hate it. When I was
very young, a child really ... just out of basic training, ready to fight the
world ... you know—no, maybe you don’t—I ... he got hold of me and took me into
his dome. He was young too, same generation, born about a hundred years before
I was. And he’d just found out about the sterility thing. It was a shock; he
should have learned it before when he was younger and more flexible, but the
way chance turned, he didn’t. Too bad. And too bad he learned it in the way he
did, in bed with one of the more unstable Vryhh, a second-generation bitch
named Nallis.
“Where was I? I was as foolish as I was young. He was
healthy and handsome and had charm coming out his ears when he wanted to use
it.” She looked up, pushed the hair out of her eyes, a smile for her daughter,
filled with wry recognition of the difference in their experience. “You
wouldn’t know about that—I don’t blame you, Lee, if you don’t believe me, but
...” She spread her hands, clasped them together. “It’s hard to tell you what I
saw ... all the things that make up what we call brilliance. He shone for me,
glowed, burned, I can’t find the right word, Lee ... and a vulnerability, an
agony inside I could make him forget; I didn’t understand, and maybe that was
what he needed. We played over the face of Vrithian, running with the sun, with
the moons, seven-league boots on our feet, wings .... It could have been
different if I’d known what was wrong with him, but if I had ... I don’t know
... I didn’t know how to help him later.
“My mother warned me not to go with him the time he came to
take me to his dome, but I wouldn’t listen. She said no one can help you there.
I still wouldn’t listen. Years had ‘slid by while we were playing. I think you
don’t know what it’s like, being young and knowing you have immense stretches
of time ahead, there is no hurry for anything, you savor things, make them
last, they have to last. Years slid by and he was changing but I didn’t see it;
there were long intervals when I didn’t see him at all. Then he came for me.”
She dug around, found a crumpled old tissue and mopped at her face, sat tearing
it into shreds as she went on.
“I found out what he was doing when he wasn’t with me. Found
out fast and hard. He had herds of women in that dome, Vrithli, even reptiloid
females, though I don’t know what he expected from them. Women of all sorts
from outside the cloud, it was like a zoo in there, yes in more ways than one;
he kept them in cages of a sort. Some he lay with, some he just used in experiments.
I suppose he thought he might find some miraculous conjunction that would make
him whole, yes, whole; he saw himself as maimed, deformed. Nothing I said or
did ever changed that, even after I finally understood what was happening to
him. I tried to leave ... wanted no part of that mess. He wouldn’t let me go.
He’d sired no children on any of the women there, Warned them, either they were
barren or tricking him or sabotaging his experiments ... how they could do that
was something I never understood, because they were confined to those small
cells, but he was beyond being rational about it by then.
“All the time I was there he watched me, had spy eyes on me
when he was somewhere else, made me watch the tapes and tell him everything I
was thinking. Sometimes he couldn’t get it up with me, then he’d beat me ... on
the body where it wouldn’t show. He was always careful before visitors ... none
of them saw the women ... made me reassure my mother ... pretend I was content
... still in love with him, healthy, happy. More than once he almost killed me
... ruptured spleen, internal bleeding, you name it ... wouldn’t let me die,
though I’d have been glad to by then ... shoved me in the autodoc ... toward
the end I was deliberately driving him into rages ... either he’d kill me and
I’d be free of his torment or he’d injure me enough he had to put in the
autodoc ... addicted me to that machine.”
She passed her thumb over her wrist again, sighed. “Finally
I looked so bad he wouldn’t let anyone see me ... told everyone I was pregnant
... by him, of course ... having a hard time ... prone to miscarriage, so he
didn’t want me bothered. My mother didn’t believe him, but she couldn’t do
anything until she figured a way into his dome past his defenses. She got
Hyaroll to tease Kell away for a few hours ... got to me ... got me to open for
her ... got me out ... she and Hyaroll, she told me he was my father, but he
never said anything. They put my head together again ... though the seams show
if you know where to look ... and when they were done with that, I started
running. Been running ever since. I couldn’t bring you to Vrithian ... not a
baby ... you have to see that. I wish you’d killed him when you had the chance,
Lee. You should have killed him.”
Aleytys came out of her chair with an urgent suddenness that
startled Shareem, knelt beside her, put a hand on her
arm. “Forget what I said, Reem, just get me to Vrithian.
Then you take off, scoot as far away as you can.”
Shareem blinked. “Seven hundred years.” She patted her
daughter’s hand with absentminded affection. “A long time to run. But I had a
lot to run from. He didn’t give up on me, not even then. I wouldn’t go back to
the dome, but ... anything else, all he had to do was whistle and I’d come ...
nice little bitch, trained to heel. By that time he didn’t really want me, just
... he killed my mother, destroyed everything she was fond of ... but me ...
lay back for years, apparently resigned to defeat ... then he went to the
Mesochthon, registered a death challenge ... next day he ... he meant to get us
both, I think, but Hyaroll ... he discovered something ... I don’t remember
much about that time ... something about collapsed matter, I think ... I don’t
know ... he wanted Mother to come and help him celebrate, she was always his
favorite Vryhh, he was fond of me too ... in his way ... Mother ... one of her
damakin was about to foal, that was what she was playing with then, she liked
working with animals, this one was so gentle and trusting it was near extinct
on its home world, this damakin was about to foal and having a hard time so she
wouldn’t come ... and I went instead of her ... and Kell got a bomb through her
defenses somehow, turned everything to slag.”
She lifted Aleytys’s hand, held it briefly against her
cheek, put it with gentle precision on the chair arm. “How could he get away
with something like that? We Vrya never acknowledged the right of anyone to
judge our acts; we’re all sovereign nations, Lee, with a population of one.
Nations declare war on each other, don’t they? We call our wars death duels.
Kell did all the proper things, he issued a formal challenge at the Mesochthon,
then killed my mother. Too bad, but she wasn’t lucky or smart enough. Anyone
who thought different could challenge him. But there was no one. Hyaroll
wouldn’t, and I’d rather have jumped into the sun naked. I think Hyaroll must
have said something to him, though, because after that he more or less left me
alone. Oh, he’d play ... sick games with me, mock at me ... after a while he
got bored with baiting me and left me alone ... until I came to Vrithian with
news of a daughter, something he took as a personal affront. Do you understand
a bit more what’s waiting for you? Lee, what I’m trying to say ...”
“I know.” Aleytys got to her feet, went to stand with her
hands gripping the mantel, her eyes on the floor, her back to Shareem. “I think
you underestimate yourself,” she said quietly. “I think you’re a lot tougher
than you know. But what’s the point trying to prove anything like that? Reem, I
can’t find Vrithian without you, there’s no getting around that, but once I’m
there ... well, there’s no real reason for you to stay.”
“Lee ...”
“I mean it.”
“I know, but don’t you think abandoning you once is enough?”
“You won’t be abandoning me. Don’t be absurd, Reem. I’m a
grown woman; I’ve been taking care of myself for years in some very tricky
situations.”
“Yes, I hear you. Please hear me, daughter. Please, I’m done
with rationalizing my failures. I can’t do it anymore.” She forced a chuckle
that quickly turned real as her sense of the ridiculous woke from its coma.
“Stop mothering me, Lee. Don’t you feel a little silly trying to protect a
nine-hundred-year-old baby from her better impulses?”
Aleytys swung around, set her shoulders against the bricks.
“Habits. You make them without thought and spend years thinking how to break
them.” She closed her eyes. “I hate this, Reem. I loathe it. Hunting a man
down, killing him. While he lies helpless looking up at you ... me ... eyes
filled with terror and resignation. Ay-Madar, why can’t I heal crooked minds?
Oh yes, I’ve killed men and beasts before. With my hands, with my fire, with
weapons of one kind and another. And felt them die. Felt their fear and pain
and urgency and the nothing that’s suddenly there. I can block some of that.
When I’m fighting for my life, I’m too ... concentrated ... too busy ... to
feel—no, mat’s not quite right, feeling’s shunted aside, I shut off the meaning
of it. But slaughtering a helpless man ... you said I should have killed him
before ... you were right in a way ... I would have saved a lot of misery ...
my baby ... Grey ... Ticutt, who’s my friend ... you were right, I should have
killed him. I couldn’t, Reem, I couldn’t make myself do it. If the same thing
comes up again, I don’t know ....”
“If you want an honest answer. Lee, I have to tell you I
don’t understand a word of all that. Kell’s not a man anymore, he’s a thing; he
should be grateful to you for ending him.”
Aleytys drew the back of her hand across her eyes, pushed at
the hair by her face, tucked it behind her ears, looked at her hand, let it
fall. “A thing. “No.” She slapped her hand against the bricks. “No! I can’t
start thinking like that.” Her arms held straight out before her, she turned
her palms up. Her face went quiet and remote, but held no hint of effort, or
none Shareem could see. Tongues of flame hotter than the fire behind her shot
up from the hollows of her palms, swayed and shimmered for a short time, then
sank back into her daughter’s flesh. “If I start thinking like that, I’ll soon
be no better or saner than Kell. No. I’ll do this thing. He’s left me no
choice. Better or saner than Kell. No. I’ll do this thing. He’s left me no
choice. But not gladly. And I won’t let myself forget that what I’m Hunting is
a man, a wanting feeling intelligence.” She rubbed her hands along the bricks,
frowning at nothing, looking past Shareem at something only she could see.
Shareem sat silent. There was nothing she could say. She
found her daughter’s scruples absurd; as far as she could see they were
self-inflicted miseries Aleytys would do better without. She’d made her mild
protest; look what that had brought. Anything more and she could drive her
daughter away.
Aleytys dropped her gaze, smiled suddenly. “You kept truth
at arm’s length most of the time you were on Jaydugar, didn’t you? And that
letter, ah, that lovely misleading letter,”
“You know my reasons.” A small protest Shareem couldn’t help
making.
“The truth shall make you free.” Aleytys spoke softly,
sadly. “It doesn’t always, does it?” She slid down until she was sitting on the
hearth, legs crossed, back against the warm bricks. “But I prefer truth when it
won’t kill me outright. Makes life just a little simpler. And being able to
tell the truth—with a small t, Reem, always a small t—that’s so ... so ... I
don’t know ... so comfortable. No straining the brain to pretend I am what I’m
not, what you see is what you get, like it or no.”
“No doubt.”
Aleytys laughed, unfolded with a bounce, stretched her arms
over her head, snapped them down. “I’m hungry. You want some Wolfflan food?”
“What’s that?”
“Mostly meat and pastries, sweet glazes on the vegetables.
But there’s a place I know where the chef is accommodating and will spare the
sauces and singe a steak to your taste. I’m not much on domesticity—Grey did
all the cooking whence was home.” She went still, her face blanked, then she
shook herself and stepped away from the fireplace. “So you see, if you’re
hungry, it’s eat out or go back to your ship, or, I don’t know, not exactly
polite to work a guest, but the kitchen’s yours if you want.”
“No autochef? Me in the kitchen on my own—that would be a
disaster.” Shareem tried for a light tone, something to lessen the squeeze on
her heart as she saw her daughter grieving. “On Vrithian—and on my ship, I’ll
have you know—androids take care of that sort of thing. We’ll try your
accommodating chef. I’m sure I’ve eaten and enjoyed meals a lot stranger than
his.”
Aleytys nodded, started for the door. Over her shoulder she
said, “You know where the fresher is if you want a wash or anything. I’ll be
rounding up Shadith and Linfyar.” She saw Shareem’s grimace and grinned. “He
has private rooms, Reem—we won’t be putting on a show for the public. What
public there is.” With a wave of her hand she vanished into the hall; Shareem
listened to the diminishing clicks of her bootheels, leaned back in her chair
and rubbed at her forehead. Exhausting, this meeting a daughter she knew only
from record flakes and rumor. She had a feeling she was going to be worn to a
nub before this thing was over.
Aleytys sat in Head’s office in the chair where she’d been
presented with so many reluctantly offered and accepted ultimatums. She smiled
at Canyli Heldeen. “I expect to be back,” she said. “This is only a leave of
absence.” She scrawled her signature on the sheet and passed it across to Head,
took a sealed envelope from her shoulder bag, skimmed it after the leave
agreement. “These are the papers leasing my ship to Shadith for three years, a
drach a year. No use letting it sit around collecting dust and dock fees. At
the end of three years, if I haven’t returned to claim it, the ship’s to be
transferred to her name.”
“There could be problems about that, Lee—she’s a child.”
“Hardly.”
“Nonetheless, the way she looks is going to make trouble for
her.”
Aleytys rubbed at her eyes. “She’ll just have to deal with
that, Nyl. If it comes up. To tell you the truth, I wouldn’t want to make
anyone responsible for her actions—she’s too likely to do something off the
wall just for the holy hell of it and embarrass me and her guardian too.” She
shrugged. “If you run into problems with her looks, say her species matures ...
no, better let Shadow handle that and you just stare down anyone who objects.”
She settled back into the chair, sat with her hands resting lightly on the
arms. “Deed to my house and land, that’s in there too. If I don’t come back in
three years, or you don’t hear from me, house and land are yours, your personal
property.”
“Lee.”
“I said if.” She chuckled. “Not a very big if, my friend.
When are you sending Taggert off?”
“Three days after you leave.”
“Good. Shadith’s off tonight. She’ll have time to worm
herself into cover before he arrives. Is he going straight in like the others?”
“No.”
“Ah. Clever man. I won’t ask more.” She got to her feet.
Canyli Heldeen came around the desk, hugged Aleytys vigorously,
then walked with her through the outer offices and went down the lift shaft with
her, all this in a companionable silence. She knew what Aleytys wouldn’t say
aloud—that at the end of those three years there was a very good chance she
would own a house and horses, Shadith would own a ship. In the roofed flitter
yard, Canyli put her hand on Aleytys’s shoulder. “Take care,” she said, then
she turned and walked briskly toward the lift shaft, a square sturdy woman with
her mind already turning to a dozen more urgent problems.
“Right,” Aleytys said. She ran a hand through her hair,
tried to push away the thought that she wasn’t ready for anything, then she got
into the flitter, eased it out of the yard and started home, going over
everything that had to be done before she left, a very short list, half a dozen
items; she tried to think of anything she’d forgotten, but couldn’t dredge up a
thing, everything turned off that had to be turned off, the “girl who tended
the livestock warned she’d be in charge starting tomorrow and she should call
Head in any emergency, the loans finalized, credit in the bank with Canyli deputized
to handle it, gear packed and waiting. She looked out at the empty landscape
passing below her, bleak but with an austere beauty she appreciated more each
year. “Tomorrow. The Dance begins tomorrow.”
gameboard (first of two)
VRITHIAN IN THE MISTS
Second of five planets orbiting the star AVENAR which exists
in a slowly enlarging cavity within a cloud of faintly glowing gases and dust
DAY: 28.003 hours-standard YEAR: 585.001 days
Oblate spheroid, mean diameter 12,892 km Density 5.72 times
that of water Rotational axis tilted 24°
Four major continents (GYNNOR, BREPHOR, SAKKOR, ASKALOR)
Two large islands (LOPPEN, FOSPOR) Two major island chains
(SULING LALLER, FATTAHX-EDRA)
Bodies of water:
oceans: NORSTOR FISTAVEY, SUSTOR FISTAVEY, ISTENGER,
VATACHAVAR, RABAHAR
other: Seas of JUVELHAV, PAPUGAY
Gulfs of MACADAO, PEFAXO
Straits of TAVAKAY Lake SERZHAIR
Indigenes—two intelligent species with separate evolutionary
histories
ORPETZH: Warm-blooded reptiloids, tri-sexual (female,
male, neuter; though the neuter does not participate in sexual transactions,
conception is possible only when it is present; there is some indication that
even copulation does not occur in the absence of a neuter), oviparous (only
marginally so; the infant is born inside a translucent flexible shell,
continues to grow and develop for another thirty-five to forty days before
hatching), average adult height: female 160 cm, male 150 cm, neuter 120 cm,
average life span 50 years standard (approx. 31 years-local)
GALAPHORZE: Mammalian, bi-sexual, viviparous, average adult
height: female 155 cm, male 175 cm, average life span roughly equal to that of
the ORPETZH
Moons:
MINHA: mean distance 154,000 km, mean diameter 1,775
km. MINACHRON: phase cycle full moon to full moon, 12.04 days.
ARAXOS: mean distance 244,020 km, mean diameter 3,
462 km. ARACHRON: phase cycle, full moon to full moon, 26 days. A JUBILEE is
called whenever an ARACHRON ends with the Vrithian year, a minor festival
occurs each time MINHA and ARAXOS are full at the same time.
Vrithian: The Continents Gynnor And Brephor
_files/image002.jpg)
Vrithian: The Continents Sakkor And Askalor
_files/image003.jpg)
Vrithian
action on the periphery [1]
The Song of the Sorrows of Agishag
sung to the children of Agishag as they are initiated into
the rights and responsibilities of adulthood
the drums whisper
the hollow is dark
the torches wait for fire
listen
(listen, listen, listen: the word goes round and round the drumroom,
old ones hissing, hissing with anger and fear in the sibilant hot darkness, the
manai listening, the tokon listening, the naidisa listening, all listening with
fear and trembling)
once the Conoch’hi went where they willed
once the world was where the wind went and only that
touch the patterns of the line-Mother’s life weave
feel the wind in the life-Mother’s weave
(the mana Amaiki touches the narrow strip of her own life weave,
the knots and spaces that record the events she thinks worthy of memory and
telling, the sun in her eyes when she burst the shell, the first bean sprout
she coaxed from seed, little things and perhaps too many of them, her mother
calls her hoarder, but her fingers slide over the story of her short life and
bring her pleasure)
feel the pattern change
Hyaroll came
the Undying came and took the winds from the Conoch’hi
he set his hard hand on the Mother-of-All
the earth that feeds and sustains us
like a wild tedo he tamed her
like a herd of tedo he tamed us
the old he laid aside and would have slain
the life-Mother of the Conoch’hi rose up to him
the life-Mother sang him the worth of the old, the need of the young
he stayed his hand
for two hands of days and two more the old sang to him
by their song they bought their lives from him
but the sick and the crippled and the weak he took
the sick and the crippled he tormented, he changed
he sent them back to the Conoch’hi
strangeness came to the Conoch’hi
our ways were changed
our children were changed
we looked at them and could not understand them
through them came the dreams, the throwing of lots
through them came the ways of far-seeing, the knowing of tomorrow
and tomorrow
three decrees he gave to the life-Mother of the Conoch’hi
to the Hundred Families he gave these decrees
I will give you peace, I will protect you from the zuilders and
lallers
the shiburri, the shevorate, the stovasha and all others
I will heal the sick and send the rain and teach you what you need
to know
in return you will do these things for me
five manai and five tokon and five naidisa you will send to my
dome
to do my will and serve me in all ways
for five years they will serve within the dome
at the end of the five years they will return
at the end of the five years you shall choose five and five and
five again
thus he decreed and thus it was done
this was the second decree
the Conoch’hi will cease to follow wind and water
the Conoch’hi will cease to follow the tedo herds
the Conoch’hi will live in villages and learn the heart of bulb
and seed
of stone wood and iron
this was the third decree
the Conoch’hi will limit their numbers
for every six will seven only be born
any over that will be taken
any over will be sent away
then Hyaroll said
the Undying he said
live on the land as I have told you
live on the land within the borders I have set for you
live in peace and learn what you must
thus he decreed and thus it was done
Conoch’hi heard
Conoch’hi feared
Conoch’hi sorrowed for the lost ways
Conoch’hi obeyed
weep for your children, oh line-Mothers, life-Fathers, your children
are gone
you have sent away your naidisa that the numbers might be kept
you have sent away your daughters that the numbers might be kept
you have sent your sons away that the numbers might be kept
weep, Conoch’hi, your children are taken
rejoice, Conoch’hi, they are taken not lost
of our flesh and our bone far-speakers were made
out of pity and play the undying he made them
the far-speakers give the taken back to us
none is lost
new families and old
none is lost
save only one line
hear the song of the lost
(the singer’s voice stills with a dying hiss, the drums keep
beating; Amaiki trembles and strains to listen. To this point all
has been a repetition of things commonly known. What is coming is one of the
secret things that adults know but never tell children. Amaiki straightens her
back, touches her life weave another time, knowing she will not knot this song
into it. This is too secret, too sacred, altogether too terrible)
these are the names of the lost
Children of Agishag must not bear these names
forget nothing
say nothing
hear the ancient anguish of the Conoch’hi
hear the sorrow of the Conoch’hi
hear the names of the lost
Tahere oc cuji
Oojitay oc cuji ,
Marai oc cuji
Mriize oc cuji
Yonikti oc cuji
Je-mawi oc cuji
line cuji is no more
line cuji cast off that name
weep for cuji who were, hayal who are
praise hayal who cast off their cions and their name
praise hayal and remember what they’ve seen
these are the names of the children of the lost
you will not name a child from these names
forget nothing
say nothing
Kurim, Kiraz, Shakati
Fonnim, Fanasi, Fukati
Misi, Miji, Achavai
Nunnin, Chacai, Alvanai
Shijun, Shaki, Nugavai
Hyaroll cast fire at them
you have seen the black ash of them
loom and lot, Hyaroll burned them
hatchling and dartling, Hyaroll burned them
the air stank of them
the earth stank of them
the stench of their burning lay on us for two hands of days
six days and six the smell lay on us
this is how that came to be
six and six they left cuji,
adults and children they left secretly
they went out from cuji
Dum Cuji, the village of their line
in the night they went out
into the hills they went where the air smelled free to them
following a tedo herd they went
the summer passed.
they danced the tedo dance and waited the winter through
Hyaroll said nothing did nothing
nine hatched with the coming of the sun, six they had already
they danced the birth-blessing
then they waited
Hyaroll said nothing did nothing
the summer passed
they followed the herd south through the hills,
north through the hills
they hunted and danced and mocked the not-free
the Conoch’hi waited and watched
desire and hope and fear sang in them
Conoch’hi not-free watched the free and hoped
the summer passed and with the cold of winter
came the voice of Hyaroll
cull your numbers said the voice of Hyaroll
cull your numbers and send the excess to me
the Conoch’hi waited
the Six did not listen
the free would not send their children away
Hyaroll spoke again
cull your numbers
cease following the herds
go back to your village and live as I bade you
the free laughed and danced and would not hear the voice
the Conoch’hi waited
three days they waited
five days they waited
on the sixth day, the day of the thumb, the day of power and blessing
on the sixth day Hyaroll spoke a last time
so be it, Hyaroll said
fire came from air and clothed the free
they burned, their children burned, manai and naidisa and tokon
all burned
the hatchlings cried out and ran from the tents
fire leaped around them and they burned
when the Conoch’hi went to the hills
they found black ash and that only
the tedo had fled
the tents were ash
the free were ash
we showed you the black circle, Manai, Tokon, Naidisa
we showed you the circle of black rocks
no newa makes her nest there
no grass grows there
the water is bitter and no beasts come to drink
you have tasted the bitter water, the tears of the Conoch’hi
when you were children you were Conoshim’hi
the beloved of the earth
but you have tasted the bitter water, the tears of the earth
from this night you are children of sorrow
from this night you are Conoch’hi
oh weh, weh, the bitter water
oh weh, weh, the sorrow.
(Amaiki mana-that-was caresses the strip of her own life weave,
knots the sorrow knot into the cords, sings weh-weh with the others, but there
is no sorrow in her heart, only a savoring of knots and spaces to come, the
pattern of her life-to-be)
Agishag on Gynnor
_files/image004.jpg)
Vrithian
second bell
Hyaroll scowled at the woman standing before him. She
claimed to be one of his daughters when she came yelling to be let in. Might
well be, nothing against it. Reminded him of her mother, haranguing him like
that. A stupid acid-tongued bitch with a clever body and little else to
recommend her. Eybolli, her name was. This one whose name he didn’t know and
didn’t care to know seemed a faded copy of her, tongue and all. If he’d had any
part in making her he could see no evidence of it. At least she was running
down a little.
“We don’t want her here?”
“We?”
“The true Vrya on Vrithian.” “Ah. What of the true Vrya off
Vrithian?”
“They aren’t here.”
“A profound insight.”
She looked startled, then offended. It was faintly and
briefly amusing to watch her struggle with her spleen, but he was growing bored
and beginning to wonder what senile whim had made him let her into the dome.
She forced a smile, put her hand on his arm. He thought of slapping her silly,
pitching her into her flier and sending her off, but couldn’t raise the energy.
“Listen,” she cooed at him, “it isn’t so much of a thing, all you have to do is
change your vote. The others will follow your lead.”
“Oh?”
“So, maybe not Loguisse, but she doesn’t count if the rest
agree.” She patted his arm. “Come on, Daddy dear, do it, hmmm? You don’ even
know what she’s like. All you have to do is say nay instead of aye.”
“Go away.”
“What?”
“Go away.”
“I won’t. I won’t go until I have your answer.”
“You got it, same as it was the first time. The Tetrad will
recognize Shareem’s daughter as Vryhh.” He shook off her hand, spoke to the
android standing a pace behind him. “Megathen, get her away from me.”
She glared into the abstract planes of the android’s face.
“Don’t touch me. I’ll go.” She switched the glare to Hyaroll. “That dirty
half-breed won’t last a year. You wait. You’ll see.”
Vrithian
players moving on an oblique file [1]
Willow sat cross-legged, pricking blue lines into the skin
of her thigh. Her head down, she pretended indifference to what was happening
around her, but she was listening intently to Hyaroll and the female Vryhh.
He stood with his hands clasped behind his back, his feet apart,
planted like a boulder in the grass of the small lawn. Old Stone Vryhh, he
won’t listen, you wasting you breath, woman. Old Stone Vryhh, stealer of life
to fill the hollow in him. Go away, woman, leave him be. If that bitch stirred
him up, chances are he’d dump his collection back in the stasis boxes before
getting busy helping her or fighting her.
For several hundred years Willow had taken her life in small
discrete bites as Hyaroll rotated his vast collection of life forms, giving
them conscious existence until he grew bored with them. A few of them were
always waked together for their brief hours of life, but others in the group
came and vanished as ephemerally as mayflies. It was hard, this making friends
and losing them to Hyaroll’s whim; after the third waking she kept herself
apart from most of them, spending her time with two beings who seemed linked to
her, risking the hurt of losing them because she could not live without
affection and touch; she would rather be dead, finally dead, dead with no hope
of waking, than live like Hyaroll, unloving and unloved.
“Half-breed! A caricature. Pitiful. You voted against it at
first. Say something, Har. Why did you change your mind? No, I won’t believe
you changed, you let her maul you into it.” She went on with her rant, giving
him no chance to speak. “Mongrel bitch. Knows nothing of our ways. Why should
we have to ...” The bitter voice went on and on, laying epithet on epithet, all
washing against the stone of Hyaroll’s indifference.
Bodri and Sunchild. Friends. The only bridge Willow had
across the little deaths of the stasis box.
Bodri was grubbing about in the flower beds, singing his
grumbling songs to the worms and bees and the good bugs, zapping the pests and
parasites with stinging hairs that grew on several of his many fingers,
trundling happily about the garden on his six short stubby legs. With his heavy
high-domed carapace planted with vines and shrubs and flowering plants, feeding
him sun-strength for the blood-strength they took from him, he looked like a
many-times-enlarged beetle, but instead of mandibles and compound eyes, he had
a leathery black face rather like that of a wise old sheep and luminous brown
eyes that usually smiled with affectionate amusement at the world’s
absurdities. His snout was shorter and blunter than that of a sheep, his lips
and tongue more flexible, able to shape with ease the words he loved almost as
much as his plants. Four tentacles branched from his front shoulders, each of
these split into six delicate fingers of surprising strength—Willow blinked and
stared the first time she saw him at his most determined weeding, plucking
diseased shrubs bigger than he was from the stubborn earth. Antennae like fern
fronds sprouted behind little round ears; they extended his senses of hearing,
smell and touch far beyond anything his ears, nose or fingers could tell him.
They were lightly rolled now, curled up on themselves to escape the scratching
of the Vryhh woman’s shrill voice, but he was listening, Willow knew; he shared
the anxiety growing in her.
He’d been here longer man any of the other beings, at least
the ones Willow had met and spoken with; he was one of the first life forms
Hyaroll had collected. The last of his kind and he knew it. One day when he was
in a mood of gentle melancholy, he told Willow his folk were dying out even
before Hyaroll took him; the species had gone on too long unchanged while their
world changed about them. She squatted beside him, rubbing the tough supple
skin of a tentacle, saying nothing, letting him ramble on. Around the fifth
awakening, some four hundred years after his taking, he thought about joining
them, dying with his dying folk. Settling down in a corner of the garden and
stopping. Not eating, not sleeping, gradually shutting down mind and body. But
Hyaroll had learned too much about him and wasn’t ready to let him go; he
wasn’t sure just what the Vryhh had done to him, his memory was spotty about
those events, but his body was turned against him, would not obey him if that
obedience might put it in danger. After a short while he grew content with the
bits of life he had and seldom yearned for more.
Sunchild drifted in slow circles overhead, a shifting golden
shape invisible against the sun, hard to see even when he slipped down to brush
against treetops or hover over the ornamental lake. He came and went, came and
went, like Willow and Bodri pretending no interest in the two Vrya and what was
happening between them. Like Willow and Bodri he listened carefully to what was
said and not said, watched the woman move with angular energy about the sunny
patch of lawn, back and forth before stolidly standing Hyaroll, her voice
rising to a screech then disciplined back to calm, watched Hyaroll resisting
her with his silence, his stone face. Willow finished pricking in the design
and set the needle aside. Sunchild came floating down to squat beside her, shaping
as always into Otter’s form. The first time that happened, she was furious and
cursed him for mocking her grief, then listened skeptically as he explained he
could not help it, he caught that image from her too strongly for him to resist
it. She watched him trying to change and saw Otter’s face melting like hot
butter, reforming as soon as it melted. Go away, she said to him. I believe
you, go away for a while. She put her hand across her eyes, dropped it to cover
nose and mouth, then reached out to Sunchild’s slippery shine. Are you ghost?
she said. No, he said, nor demon. Just me. Yes, go away, she said, let me think
on this, let me make a song. Let me sing it with you, he said, I am a child
“alone, let me sing with you. Not yet, she said, my mourning is not done, give
me time to mourn my man, give me time to mourn my children, give me seven days,
Sunchild, then I’ll teach you to sing with me.
Now he squatted beside her and looked gravely down at the
blue lines she’d pricked into her hide, the double spiral sunheart and the
slanting wavelines, the water of mourning, the sun of joy. He pressed Otter’s
strong square hands on the reddened flesh (she felt only the lightest of
tingles) and smiled Otter’s lookatme smile as the redness went away.
Behind Sunchild the Vryhh woman changed her tactics, moved
close to Hyaroll, patted his arm, spoke coaxingly cooingly to him. “Come on,
Daddy dear, do it, hmmm? You don’t even know what she’s like. All you have to
do is say nay instead of aye.”
“Go away.”
“What?”
“Go away.”
“I won’t. I won’t go until I have your answer.”
“You got it, same as it was the first time. The Tetrad will
recognize Shareem’s daughter as Vryhh.”
During this last bit the iron man who served Hyaroll came
out of the house to stand beside him. Willow rubbed at her thigh and wondered
if Old Stone Vryhh had called him. Maybe he’d have that ironhead snatch up the
woman and carry her off kicking and screaming and cursing; be a sight if he did
and serve her right. Make a song I will to set ol’ Bodri giggling. If he
does it. Come on, Old Vryhh, I’m tired o’ her fussin.
Hyaroll shook off the woman’s hand, spoke to ironhead.
“Megathen, get her away from me.”
Willow leaned forward, biting back a grin, waiting.
The woman glared into the angles of ironhead’s not-face.
“Don’t touch me. I’ll go.” She switched the glare to Hyaroll. “That dirty
half-breed won’t last a year. You wait. You’ll see.” She whipped around and
stalked off toward the shaggy kadraesh trees and the wide white plates behind
them where the fliers landed.
Willow grimaced and turned away so Sunchild wouldn’t see the
disappointment in her face and ask about it.
Hyaroll stumped off toward the house, followed by the silent
ironhead, who moved as if he were made of flesh, not stiff metal; the iron men
that served the Vryhh fascinated and frightened and occasionally infuriated
Willow. She had talked enough about them to Bodri and Sunchild to grasp that
they were neither demons nor conjurations and she didn’t need to be afraid of
them, but sometimes she had the feeling that Old Vryhh was looking at her out
of their eyes. She didn’t like it and avoided them when she could.
“He looks old.” Sunchild sounded surprised and
shocked.
“Old Stone Vryhh, pretty soon he get so hard set he don’t
move no more.” Willow wiped the needle on a bit of leather and put it in the
case Hyaroll had given her a couple of wakenings ago. “He old like this dirt.”
She patted the ground beside her. “Always been old.”
“Not like this.” He turned the butter shimmer of his eyes on
her, blank eyeshapes blind as those in the ancient statues moldering back into
the dirt they came from that Hyaroll had set up in another part of the garden
so long ago he’d forgotten he had them. How Sunchild really saw was something
she didn’t understand, though he’d explained it a dozen times or more. She
passed her hand across her eyes, her mouth, ran the tip of her tongue along her
upper lip and lower. He was a golden god sculpted from sunlight as he knelt
beside her, his beauty hitting her like a blow. Every waking it did that at
least once, astonishing her anew until she became accustomed to seeing him and
forgot the form in the friend. He caught a bit of seed fluff floating past,
watched it dance on his palm, then shook it off. “Have you thought what’s going
to happen to us if Hyaroll dies? Seeing how he was today, well, the fear sort
of forced itself on me.”
She stroked her forefinger lightly over the new design on
her thigh, then clucked her tongue and slapped her thighs, beginning one
rhythm, then another and another, and finding no hope in any of them, let her
hands lie limply on her thighs. “I see this and that and it a burn in the
belly, a bad smell in the nose. Can’t make a song of a bellyache and a bad
smell.”
A rumbling chuckle and Bodri came trundling around, settling
himself on grass beside Willow with flirt of his carapace and a rustling sigh.
“Succinctly put, Whisper in my heart. Can’t reason without data, try it and
your brain rots, thus the bad smell.”
Sunchild blurred a little, developing delicate antennae in response
to Bodri’s emanations; Willow was the stronger sender, so he kept Otter’s form.
“Then we’d better start gathering some, hadn’t we?”
“Have.” Bodri’s antennae flared to full stretch, curled back
into their resting mode. “And I’ve been thinking.” He swung his big head back
and forth between them, the laughter gone out of him. “Three things. Maybe he
lets kephalos keep on running things after he’s dead. If we’re waking then, we
live out our lives here and that’s it. If we’re in our boxes, well, we won’t
know anything about it, we’ll just stay there till the power runs out and we
rot. A throw of the dice which it is when the time comes. That’s two possibilities.
The third one puts kinks in my entrails. He doesn’t like letting loose of
anything that’s his. What if he’s arranged that when he dies, kephalos opens
all the boxes and has one grand funeral fire with us for fuel? It would be
quite like the man to make sure no one else enjoys his possessions.” He looked
around, lowered his voice to a whisper. “I have been thinking it is time we
found a way out of being put back in the boxes.”
Willow nodded, then she frowned and looked suspiciously
about.
Sunchild watched her a moment, puzzled, then his mouth moved
into the archaic smile that curled the lips and missed the eyes and hinted at
mystery beyond mystery but right now only meant that he understood what was
itching at her. He moved away until he could shed form, then he began flowing
about the lawn, a flittering streak of light. He arced overhead and whipped
about them, darted down, slid into the earth, came up under the stone bench
were Hyaroll had been sitting before the woman came to destroy his peace,
flowed through it, went soaring into the sky, extending his substance down and
down and down until he was a faint gold stain on the air, one edge almost
touching the grass, the other almost touching the dome web. He quivered there a
moment, then snapped back together, came to squat beside Willow and Bodri, a meld
of beetle and boy, Otter’s face and body and Bodri’s fern-frond antennae.
“There are ears and eyes,” he said, “but no one’s listening; kephalos is busy
with other things, and Hyaroll, he’s sitting in a chair staring at nothing. For
what it’s worth, O source of all wisdom, I think you’re right, I think our end
is fire.”
Willow stared at him. “Little burning won’t do you much.”
“Leave it to Hyaroll, Willow, he’ll find a way.”
“Hmmp.” She pulled loose a blade of grass, chewed awhile on
the tender end. Holding the green strip between her teeth, she looked at
Sunchild, fluttered her hand like a bird in flight, moved it from near the
ground to as high as she could reach, then let it drop onto her thigh. “No cage
keepin you, Sunchild. How come you stay?”
“Is a cage. The dome. I can’t pass the barrier shields. The
forces that make it would tease me apart so thoroughly I’d never be coherent
again.” He laughed. “Like dropping an ice cube in that lake; it’d melt and
you’d never ever get it back again.”
“Hmmp. Is over everywhere? I walk five days that way and
that and that”—forefinger pointing, she moved her hand in a wide sweep—“and I
get to a wall. Over all that?”
“Like a lid on a pot.”
She patted the ground beside her. “Go down.”
“The pot’s the same as the lid, Willow in my heart. Hyaroll
likes to keep what he has.”
“Hmmp.” She turned to Bodri. “Eh Old Bug, you been thinkin
maybe how we catch Old Stone Vryhh and thump him good so he let us loose?”
“I fear not, little Willow.” Bodri curled his antennae tight
against his bulging skull and settled himself more solidly on the grass until
he seemed little more than a mound of rock and vegetation. He half-closed his
eyes and sighed noisily, ruffling the grass in front of him. “My folk were
never hunters, my Willow. Plants don’t run away or chase you to eat you. I have
tried to think of traps and ambushes and stratagems like that, but nothing
works right. I’m back to theorizing without hard data, and it’s a sorry ground
to stand on when your life depends on standing.”
Willow drew her legs up and wrapped her arms about them,
then sat glooming over all she knew about the dome and what it contained.
Sunchild watched them awhile, then jumped to his feet and began
dancing about the grassy oval, playing with the butterflies, chasing seed fluff
blown about by the erratic breeze. Though considerably older in actual years
than Willow and Bodri, he was very young for his kind and easily bored with
sitting still. And it was a late spring day of surpassing perfection and life
was strong and new about him. The smell of death coming off Hyaroll had
startled the what-if reflex in his mind and he’d spoken the thought as naturally
and easily as he absorbed and stored energy from the sun. And with the same
ease, he set the problem aside. He did not hunker down like Bodri and worry at
problems until he understood every facet and managed to tease out a number of
solutions whose choice depended on the effect desired. Nor did he find answers
like Willow in the concrete patterning of song and dance. He absorbed
everything around him, then let his cells rub up against each other until they
produced a collection of nonserial gestalts, an almost random flow of metaphor
into which he dipped a languid hand and came up with the answer or image or
poem or equation or whatever it might be that something in him felt was needed,
a zigzag sort of thinking that had many strengths and nothing at all to do with
rigorous analysis of a problem or the development of a line of action step by
hard-won step. So while Bodri scratched at old ground to see if he could find
something he’d missed, while Willow clicked her tongue and tapped her fingers
and worked her memory, Sunchild flowed from shape to shape to no-shape and
enjoyed the day.
“Sunchild talk to kephalos.” Willow smoothed her thumbnail
along a short thin eyebrow, drew it slowly down the side of her face. “Hmmmp.”
She looked into her palms, closed her hands into fists, opened them, rippled
her fingers. “Maybe he tickle kepha into openin a hole, we steal Old Vryhh’s
flier, go.” She flung one hand in an arc sweeping up. “Away-away.”
Bodri grunted. Tentacle fingers wandered through the garden
on his back, pinching and prodding, tending the plants like a girl lost in the
delight of brushing long thick hair. He wrinkled his black snout, yawned,
showing broad chisel teeth and massive grinders. “What’s the point of going out
of the dome? Where would we go? What would the other Vrya do to us?” He opened
his eyes wide. “And how long would it take for him to hunt us down? Day and a
half maybe, probably less.”
“Ummmp.” Willow gazed through the transparent dome at the
ancient hills, the worn-out old mountains reaching a few tough snaggles toward
the sky, the sun glittering on glaciers as ancient as the stone. She sighed.
“Can’t kill Old Vryhh. Catch him?”
“How?”
“Ummp.” She got to her feet, began wandering aimlessly about
the patch of grass, feet and body shifting into a few seconds of one dance,
then another and another, staying with nothing longer than a breath or two.
Bodri closed his eyes again. She was making him dizzy.
Sunchild came sliding down shifting into the fronded boy,
shimmering with excitement, losing his edges to no-shape. “Stasis box,” he sang
to them, his voice gone high and ethereal. “Push Old Vryhh in and forget him.”
gameboard (second of two)
AVOSING
Third of seven planets circling the green star ADIL-BADU
(Eye of the Jester) in the Pajungg constellation TAH BADU (God’s Fool), fourth
Pajungg-colonized world.
TAH BADU (God’s Fool): appears low on the horizon in
early spring (point of observation being DJIVAKIL, the planetary capital) in
the north temperate zone of Pajungg; it is a grouping of nine stars that the
Pajunggs see as a dancer kicking his feet in an extravagant caper. The Tah Badu
is an important figure in Pajungg myth, making an appearance in almost all the
hero tales, sometimes only mentioned, sometimes as a major force. He is the disrupter,
the trickster, the puncturer of pomposity; he can be very subversive to the established
order, and songs featuring him tend to be both obscene and dangerous, the
singer sometimes losing his tongue if not his head.
DAY: 32.111 hours-Pajungg The settlers could have produced
clocks that eliminated the extra seconds but clung instead to the best of home.
Every ninth day there is an extra hour added to keep the timing right, the
AMUN-BAR. The nine-day cycle suited them, the AMUN-BAR suited them. After several
decades it took on a mystical quality for the Avosingers. Life seemed brighter,
sharper, somehow more electric, more exhilarating than during the mundane
hours. The AMUN-BAR became their intimate connection with this new world,
something that separated them from homeworlders and outsiders. It was something
that could not be explained, only experienced.
YEAR: 367.001 days
Oblate spheroid, mean diameter 14,312 km
Density 4.06 times that of water
Rotational axis tilted 16°
No moons
Two major continents
BADICHAYAL (Jester’s Fantasy): lightly explored, sparsely
settled
ANGACHI (Nothing Much): officially unexplored; known from
orbital photographs to be mostly desert beyond the coastal fringes
Seventeen major island groups: officially unexplored; positions
known from orbital photographs
KEAMA DUSTA: Sole settlement large enough to qualify as a
city. Settlement and development of Avosing has been unusually slow for several
reasons. Few heavy metals, those present hard to get at. Pajungg reluctance to
disturb the home-world and the Colonial Authority further by permitting more
emigration. Pajungg refusal to grant permanent residence permits to
non-Pajunggs. Avosinger reluctance to take in outsiders. And the POLLEN.
POLLEN: Avosing is a pollen-saturated world with few
seasonal changes in the intensity of the phenomenon, though the mix of pollens
does change; the heaviest saturation is in the forest area and around its
fringes. These pollens are nontoxic but all are hallucinogenic to some degree;
the coarser grains must be breathed in or absorbed by the blood through
unprotected cuts to have any effect on an organism, but the finer grains can be
absorbed through the skin. The effect varies with the individual and the
particular mix of pollens he takes in. For most of the Avosingers, the most
important effect seems to be visions of the dead; it is as if the spirits of
the dead had migrated with the living to Avosing; it is not uncommon even in
the heart of Keama Dusta to see someone conversing animatedly with scented air
and shadows. This particular reaction is apparently determined by culture,
since smugglers and other visitors interviewed don’t share it. The Avosingers
have developed ways of coping with the pollen effect and have incorporated
these into their daily lives; they have become quite sensitive to their rhythms
and make sure they aren’t doing something vital when they’re due to tune out
the world. They have also developed several native counters to the pollens for
use during emergencies. These are kept secret and are sold to traders and other
outsiders for exorbitant prices, Avosingers being as practical as they are
mystically inclined.
SWEETAMBER: Avosing’s major resource The resinous
semifossilized substance produced by a dying Kekar-Otar tree, usually one with
a girth approaching a thousand meters, in conjunction with colonies of
jarbuatin, arthropods about the size of a man’s big toe. The jarbuatin consume
certain layers of wood within the tree and excrete a gelatinous substance that
over a handful of centuries, under the proper conditions, crystallizes into the
substance generally called SWEETAMBER. The crystals are quite hard when they’re
ripe, closely resemble black opal; when warmed against bare skin they interact
with natural oils to produce a delicate perfume that is attractive in all
senses of that word.
AMBERMINER: Any person, male or female, successful at finding
SWEETAMBER and staying alive to bring it out.
AMBERJACKS: gangs of men who keep to the fringes of the forest,
preying on amberminers. The forest usually gets them if the miners don’t.
INTELLIGENT INDIGENOUS LIFE: None known.
The Inhabited Regions Of Avosing
_files/image005.jpg)
Conversation with more information
about Pajungg and Avosing
a short reading with interpolations
Aleytys’s sitting room without Aleytys, late at night, a few
days before the departure of Taggert and Shadith, eventual destination Avosing.
Present: HEAD, SHADITH, TAGGERT
HEAD: Ortizhao pulsed this over from
University. Background on Pajunggs. (she ruffles through a pile of fax sheets,
draws out a small stack held together with a paperclip, passes it to Taggert,
locates another, gives that one to Shadith) You can read all that later. Let me
give you the more interesting parts, then if you’ve got questions I can’t
answer, I’ll toss them back to him and see what he says, (she lifts the top sheet,
runs her eyes down it, begins reading phrases from it) Pajungg is a theocracy.
Very stable. Lasted more than a thousand years standard. Very very slow progress
in basic science. Every little thing had to be passed through a church board to
see if it had the correct theological implications. Before Trader Madaskin
found them, they’d reached mid-industrial technology, inching into subatomic
physics.
TAGGERT: (scowling at his bundle of sheets) I’ve had
to deal with theocracies before. Touchy. You have to be born into something
like that to know how to survive the traps, (pause, slow tapping of fingertips
on the sheets) But we won’t be operating on Pajungg, Luck be blessed. Hmm.
Colonies. They can be more rigid than the homeworld, or looser, depending on who’s
doing the colonizing, fanatics or rebels.
HEAD: Breathe easier, Tag, you got the rebels.
It’s still going to be tricky, (looks at the sheet, reads) On Pajungg, the
ordinary believer measures his favor with his god by how lucky he is. The
hierarchy exploits this, rakes in a hefty percentage of most incomes; the
churches are essentially gambling casinos, (she looks up, laughs) Curb
yourself, Tag. Gambling’s a religion with them, (she laughs again as Shadith
grimaces at the half-pun, then reads some more) No taxes. Don’t need them. And
the richer you are, the holier. Closer to god. Chosen. More or less: Stealing
is blasphemy; thieves can be killed by anyone who catches them. Doesn’t rid Pajungg
of thieves, just the stupid ones. With that sort of selection, what’s left is
very slick indeed. Thieves don’t opt out of the system. Got their own
government. The shadow side, as they call it, runs very much like the licit
side. They’re heretics, not unbelievers. The Ajin got too close too fast to the
top men on the shadow side. Ajin. That’s an earned honorific meaning something
like the man with the nimblest of feet and fingers, or super-thief. He left
Pajungg for his health, but didn’t leave his ambition behind, (she looks up)
Slickest thief on Pajungg, that’s your target.
TAGGERT: But we’re hunting him on Avosing. Different
place, different mix of people, different rules.
SHADITH: How’d they ever manage to get offworld? Like
Taggert, I’ve seen a few theocracies. Stagnant is too mild a world.
HEAD: (switches sheets, glances at the new
page, looks up) Dropped in their laps, (reads) A free trader happened on them,
(smiles) Poor dumb son thought he’d found himself a rich new field to plunder,
(reads) The Grand Doawai wanted new worlds to rule. He had Madaskin brought before
him and questioned about his ship: when the Doawai wasn’t satisfied with the
answers he got, he handed Madaskin over to the engiaja-tah, the whips of god.
(looks up, no laughter this time, eyes move from Shadith to Taggert and back)
There are engiaja on Avosing too—do your best to keep away from them, (a short
pause while she reads to the end of the page, slips it onto the bottom of the
pile; she reads aloud from the new page) Can’t get answers if you don’t know
the right questions. The engiaja are very good at getting answers, they have a
lot of experience in the field, but they didn’t know the right questions. He
convinced them he had only the dimmest notion how his ship worked, that he knew
how to fly it and that was all he bothered to learn, why should he stuff his
head with more. They asked what was left of him where they could get ships like
his and the training to fly them, the knowledge how to build their own. He told
them. Told them how to summon another free-trader. Then they let him die. (new page)
Because they knew too much about the malice of the dying, they did not trust
his information. Pajungg lifespan averages three hundred years-standard. They
are patient. They waited for another trader to show up. Took a hundred years,
but one came. Him they treated politely. He sold them computers and software,
stole programs for them, kidnapped technicians and sold them as slaves to teach
the Pajunggs how to use the technology. And when they’d got all he could give
them, the Grand Doawai gave him to the engiaja with instructions to learn all
they could about the out-there. Then he sent ships scouting for suitable
worlds. Kept starflight technology tight in the church fist. Only engiaja and
fanatics fly the starships. (new page) Found four marginally useful worlds, set
up colonies on these, then panicked. Pajunggs willing to leave comfortable
familiar surroundings for danger and uncertainty were definitely not your
ordinary citizen. And once they got settled into the new world, well, a world’s
a big place and they were a long long way from home. The problems were different
on each world and pulled the colonists in different directions, but always away
from the hard hand of the church. About fifty years-standard ago the Grand
Doawai shut down all exploration and emigration and began sending out legions
of enforcers to impose tight church control on the colonies. He did fairly
well—even restless Pajunggs are a pretty calm bunch—then the Ajin showed up on
Avosing and started aggravating the itches in the body politic. They couldn’t
catch him and they couldn’t stop him; he wasn’t about to sweep the Avosingers
into kicking the home-worlders back home; they weren’t going to get excited
about any outsider, but they were willing to be amused by his antics and there was
enough disaffection for him to collect a sizable following and keep the
situation in a slow boil. Avosing’s a peculiar world anyway. Lot of smuggling,
the pollen, something fairly odd developing among the born-Avosingers. (she
looks up, smiling) Ortizhao has several students there, observing. Smuggled
them in, Pajunggs doesn’t know about them, the Avosingers don’t mind them, find
their questions funny most of the time. He thinks the Avosingers will kick both
the Colonial Authority and the Ajin offworld when they’re ready to act. That’s
the general situation you’ll be dropping into Questions?
SHADITH: Yeah. Colonial Authority’s a joke. Who
really runs the place?
HEAD: Good question. Hard to answer. The
grasslanders have developed a loose confederation between the villages,
communal sort of thing, no one obviously in authority, but a few men and women
who act as judges in disputes, settle questions of property value, act as
advisers especially in deals with smugglers. Only consensus to back them, but
everyone accepts their pronouncements. Why they’re chosen, how they’re chosen
(a shrug), Ortizhao’s students haven’t been able to figure that out, everyone
just seems to know who to ask for help. In the forest area—this includes Keama
Dusta—amber miners, especially the retired ones, play the same role as the
grassland judges. Just about everyone, whatever they do, if they live in or
around the forest, they give lip service to the Colonial Authority but go to
the nearest miner with their real problems. Ortizhao says he’s beginning to get
a glimmer of some organizing force behind all this but doesn’t want to talk
about it yet. And there’s always the pollen. That complicates everything.
There’s some kind of potion the Avosingers make that’s fairly safe to take in
small quantities that seems to nullify some of the worst effects of the pollen,
enough to let you move around without falling over your feet. The Pajunggs
provided us with some when we insisted. University has been working on it,
trying to duplicate it, but it’s an enormously complicated organic. Partly from
the liver of a fish the Avosingers won’t identify, partly from an herb mix they
say even less about. Doawai’s engiaja have never managed to catch anyone who
knew the ingredients, or they wouldn’t talk if they did get caught. Anyway,
right now we can’t make it or analyze it, so we do what everyone else does and
go by rule of thumb, one gram for every fifty kilos bodyweight every three
days. And hope you aren’t allergic to it.
SHADITH: Uh-huh. Given there’s Kell’s trap waiting
for the next Hunter, the Ajin’s probable paranoia about strangers, church
enforcers looking for anything they can stomp, a population that doesn’t care a
whole helluva for either side and is leery of strangers, and that invisible
government, I’d say we go in very carefully and very quietly ....
TAGGERT: And separately.
SHADITH: Right. And hope we meet in the middle with
our hands around the Ajin’s throat.
Avosing
developing a second line of attack
Shadith brought the lander down about two hours before the
local sunset; the globular little ship looked like a giant boulder and had some
very sneaky shields. Swardheld was noncommittal about where and from whom he’d
purchased that lander and even less forthcoming about why—though Shadith had some
well-developed theories about that. When she finally located him, he groused
about being left out of the game, but didn’t complain all that much, let her
have the flier and looked relieved when she left; he was nosing into something
that interested him rather more than Aleytys’s difficulties. Is that what’s
coming to us, Shadith wondered, do we drift apart and finally have
nothing to say to each other after so many years together?
She landed on a tiny island, little more than a volcanic
peak with touches of green, a few vines crawling up out of the sea, testing out
the land, their roots still deep submerged. The pebbly shore was alive with
small crustaceans that followed the vines out of the water, noisy with their
cricks and clatters. With Linfyar helping her, she carried smaller stones and
piled them haphazard about the lander until it looked as much a part of the
island as they did, then she and Linfy juggled the shell and its bubble-seal
across the groaning shifting vines, launched the shell and spent the straggles
of daylight locking the plastic bubble in place, getting wet and battered,
giggling and staggering about, beyond all expectation enjoying this misery
perhaps because it was the beginning of danger and excitement, perhaps because
they were young and healthy and simmering with unused energy.
Shadith pushed Linfy in through the hatch, tumbled in after
him, checked to see the gear was properly tied down, then stretched out on the
padded cot and started the motors driving the waterjets. As they eased away
from the shore, Linfyar curled up on the other cot, more subdued inside the
bubble: it shut off his major sense like a blindfold on a sighted boy. He
dabbed at his arms and legs with a spongy towel, leaving for Shadith all worry
about where they were going and how they were going to get there.
The shell ran low in the water, half the time almost
submerged, the Lokattor holding them on course. It was a rough jolting ride,
the shell tossed up by the wave it was mounting, slammed back down, over and over
and over, without respite. The motor that powered the jets was nearly silent,
any small sounds it made lost in the scramble of wind and water, but that silence
cost them speed—the shell forged steadily ahead, swept up and slammed down, cutting
across the long waves as it moved toward the mainland, but it moved no faster
than a man’s quick walk. A touch of insurance, perhaps not needed, but Shadith
took chances only where there some possibility of payoff. Not far to the north
was the large island that held the world’s sole spaceport and most of the
on-planet detection equipment, along with a garrison of church enforcers meant
to discourage illegal landings such as the one she’d just made. According to
Head’s notes, the Pajunggs were dickering with several Companies for satellites
and emission sniffers, hoping to cut into the hordes of smugglers hitting the
surface of Avosing, drawn like flies by the sweetamber and the drugs distilled
by the foresters from local plants, but they wanted the Avosingers to pay for
the scanners. The colonists got a good portion of their income from dealing
with those smugglers, and a lot of technology the church didn’t want them to
have; they weren’t about to put themselves out of business, though they were
too wary of the homeworld to be blunt about it; they just dragged their feet,
studied the proposed systems with skeptical intensity, made reasonable
objections and went on dealing with the smugglers, who had no more difficulty
than Shadith evading the limited resources of the Authority. Up the Avosingers,
she thought, may their shadows ever increase.
For four long hours the shell jolted across the ocean, then
Shadith brought it nosing into an inlet about a day’s march south of Keama
Dusta, found a place where the land sloped to a flat sandy beach and drove the
shell up onto the sand.
Standing in the hatch, she used a flamer on low power to
sweep a section of the beach clean of vine and the scurrying life swarming
there; with Linfyar perched on top of the bubble, ears twitching, pulsing out
exploring whistles, she set up a tingler fence to keep the sand clean and
discourage anything hungry that might come out of the forest tempted by the
scent of warm meat. I’ll keep my meat on my bones, thank you. She
wrinkled her nose at the huge dark trees that came to the edge of the low wall
of earth at the back of the beach, brooding in a silence filled with creaks,
crackles, rustling leaves, long wavering cries. “Definitely not in the dark,”
she said.
“What?” Linfy slid off the bubble and came to stand beside
her.
“We’ll spend the rest of the night here.”
“Sure. I’m hungry.”
“Well, help me unload the shell and hide it. Then we’ll eat.
Shadith spread her blanket close to the fence and sat
looking out across the water. She felt extraordinarily alive. Free. On her own
again, in her own body. Operating a scam of sorts, living by her wits and her
talents. Speaking of talents, wonder if mind-riding works on arthropods, the
big ones making all that noise. She reached into the forest and sought out
the most organized mind, meaning to slip into it and see what she could learn. Ah,
here we go. She started in, gulped in surprise, wrenched herself loose before
she was controlled by something operating in that mind, a mind that was so
close to true self-awareness, so close to true intelligence, she hadn’t a hope
of controlling it even without that other thing. Shaken but fascinated—no
hostility in that touch, just curiosity and a cheerful interest—she reached
again, more cautiously. *Who?*
*Who you?*
A giggle tickled through her. *Singer, poet, friend.*
Another giggle.
*Wanting?*
*Knowing. Hunting. Lots and lots and lots of things.*
*Patience, small voice.*
*Why?*
*Why not?* The presence withdrew.
“Now that’s a thing.” She pulled her legs up and clasped her
arms about them. “Did that really happen or am I zonked in spite of that liver
juice?” She giggled and dug at the wet sand with her bare toes. “Me with voices
in my head. Funny, uh-huh.”
In a half-dream, deeply relaxed, she drifted for several
hours until, toward dawn, mist rose from the waves and danced for her, silver
streamers that shaped themselves into forms she remembered from so long ago she
couldn’t count the years, her six sisters, Weavers of Shayalin.
She gazed at the graceful swaying images, black-and-silver
similitudes of Naya, Zayalla, Annethi, Itsaya, Talitt and Sullan. Six sisters,
weaving dreams and selling them to anyone who’d buy; from alien eyes, she gazed
and could not quite believe in them. Weavers of Shayalin, dancing dreams.
She watched the figures spin threads from themselves to
shape shifting images, icons out of memory, dreams she’d learned too well in
that long ago, that time long past.
But the dance was silent, it lacked the play of the blended
voices, was painful in that lack; when she could bear the silence no longer,
she began to sing the ancient croon that mated with that dance, faltering at
first because the human larynx could not produce all the overtones the Shayalin
throat could hold; almost of their own volition her fingers sought out pebbles
on the beach; she cupped them in a closed hand and clicked them together. Deep
within her she was aware it was all illusion, a creation of her mind and the
ambient pollen, but she was willing, more than willing, to accept the show and
enjoy this projection of memory outside her head.
As she worked herself into the croon, shaking the three water-smoothed
stones, the images of her sisters grew more detailed; eventually she thought
she saw Itsaya wink at her, saw Naya smile, Zaya shake her hips and grin over
her shoulder, saw each of the sisters acknowledging her with some
characteristic gesture. She let herself sink into the experience, her whole
body responding with both joy and sorrow.
Linfyar slept, hearing nothing.
The song went on. She moved in the dream dance with her sisters
as she had before, odd one out, half the age of the others, the link to store
the dance patterns, the shaping words, and pass them on to her children, her
six and then one, six sterile daughters and one fertile hatchling that could be
either male or female.
When the dawn was a faint red line on the horizon, when her
voice had grown hoarse, her arm weary, she stopped her song and watched the
similitudes dissolve into shapeless shreds of mist. As her concentration lapsed,
she felt the presence behind her, listening and responding. Laughter and
applause flooded over her. The presence retreated. She wondered again if it was
just a twist of her imagination, then shook her head. Something different
there, an alien quality she could almost taste, yes that was it, a different flavor
on the tongue. She watched water and sky redden, then fade to an icy gray with
the dawning.
When the sun was fully up, she woke a reluctant, grumbling
Linfyar, handed him a meal pack and began rolling up the blankets, buckling
them into the shoulder straps so Linfy could carry them. She collapsed the
tingler fence and tucked it in her pack, smoothed her hand down the outside of
the harp case, tapped her fingers on the leather, snapped it open, touched the
loosened strings, sighed at the dull toneless tunks she produced. “Well, that
can wait.”
“What?”
“Bury that when you’re finished with it.”
“Sure.”
“I mean it, imp.”
“I hear you.”
“Hunh.” She tied the case onto the backpack, slid her arms
into the straps of the packframe and rocked onto her feet. “We don’t want
anyone knowing where and when we came ashore.”
He whistled a short sassy trill, modulated it into a
breathy, cheery tune, kicked a groove in the sand, set the pack in it with exaggerated
deliberation. In an almost dance, he used his feet to scrape sand over the
pack, listening to the sounds the grains made so he’d know when the job was
finished, squatted and patted the loose soil down with finicky little touches,
smoothing it and smoothing it, passing his fingertips over the patch, smoothing
it again.
She watched a minute, shook her head. “Stop fooling, imp.
You’ve made your point. Here. Take this.” She tapped the blanket roll against
his arm. “I’m set. Let’s go.”
After she scrambled over the edge of the earth wall and
pushed onto her feet, she eyed the great trees uneasily. Not so long ago a
carnivorous collection of monsters very much like these had come close to
sucking her dry. She moved cautiously after Linfyar, relieved when she passed
through the margin of brush and fern to find no skirts of blood-drinking air
roots on the trunks. She stayed wary. You never knew what trees could get up
to, no matter how safe and rooted they looked.
The presence was suddenly there, laughing.
“It’s all right for you,” she said aloud, indignation
quivering in her voice. “You know this place.”
“What?” Linfyar turned his head, one ear quivering at her.
“Never mind.” She caught up with him, glared at the trees
around them, walked close beside him. Soft amused laughter sounded in her head.
She ignored it, but after a tense sweaty kilometer or so, she saw the humor in
the situation and grinned into the dappled shadow as she walked beneath the
trees. After all those years as a voice in someone else’s head,
who was she to object to a voice walking through her own?
* * *
They walked north, keeping to the fringes of the forest. Now
and then Linfyar would stumble, turn his head side to side, his pointed fawn’s
ears twitching. For the first time she thought to wonder what hallucination was
like for someone born without eyes. Imagined sound? What kind? Memories from
his old home? She started to ask, but changed her mind; she didn’t want to be a
part of the illusions, didn’t know whether he would hear what she said or distort
it into something else, perhaps something frightening. After several of these
episodes, she saw him shake his head and then his whole body, grin and begin a
lilting whistle, a raunchy trader’s song she’d taught him on Ibex when Aleytys
was off somewhere. She smiled. Aleytys fussed too much. Worried over things. In
a way Ibex was good for her, all those dreary little enclaves obsessed with
killing off everyone who was different and unless she wanted to spend a Vryhh
lifetime there she couldn’t change any of it; with all her power she couldn’t
boot them into righteousness. Still, just as well she grew up with that
uncomfortable conscience firmly installed—what would she be like without it?
Shadith shivered. I should be glad she worries—I wouldn’t
be taking this walk otherwise.
Halfway through the morning the presence came tickling back,
didn’t say anything, just hung around watching. She glanced at Linfyar to see
if he felt anything. Neither she nor Aleytys knew much about the limits of his
perceptions; he kept surprising them. He showed no signs of noticing anything
strange floating about. He was whistling, more softly now, spaced bursts of
sound, as if he were trying out his hallucinations, working on them, playing
with the tricks his mind was throwing him. She laughed. He swung around and
began to walk backward, grinning at her, his ears shivering and shifting about.
“I think you like this crazy world,” she said.
“Ay-yeh, Shadow.” He waited for her, turned around and
jigged along beside her. “Crazy-crazy.” He liked the sound of the doubled word,
said it again, “Crazy-crazy,” began chanting it over and over under his breath.
She worried for a moment about how he was going to find his way without his
locator pulses, but his proximity sense and whatever else he
had was working well enough, because he negotiated the
tangle of roots more nimbly than she, avoided patches of brush and low-hanging
tree limbs, all the while continuing the sotto-voce chant, changing words to
try out different combinations of sounds.
The world blurred suddenly, it warped and flowed into
strange shapes about her, images dripping down, melting into each other, color
melting into color, shapes ballooning, dissipating like smoke, shapes doubling
and redoubling. She stumbled to a stop, lost in this chaos, flung her hands out
groping for something solid. Anything. A small warm hand-closed on hers, held
it with a strength, that vaguely surprised her; she heard a gush of words but
understood none of them, their sounds as distorted as the colors and shapes,
understood only that it was Linfyar who spoke. Trembling with relief, she clung
to those anchor points, Linfy’s hand and Linfy’s voice, and let him lead her
until the confusion faded.
When the sun was close to directly overhead, they stopped to
eat and rest awhile; in a thirty-two-hour day it was a long time between dawn
and noon. As they ate they talked about things unconnected with this
disconcerting world, things back on Wolff, horses and colts, the vagaries of
the house cats, the song of birds that lived in the grove of trees behind the
house, the necessity or not for Linfyar to spend some years in school; they
tried out a few songs, blending their voices at times, at times Shadith singing
to Linfy’s whistle, at times he singing while she beat the rhythm with her
palms on the leather of her harp case. The listener in the forest drifted in
closer sometimes, sometimes retreated until Shadith almost couldn’t feel him,
but never quite went away.
Shortly after they started on, Linfyar staggered, then began
running. Shadith ran after him, caught him before he could hurt himself, hugged
him tight against her, remembering how much comfort she’d found in his touch
when she suffered chaos. Disoriented and frightened, he clung to her,
whimpering and shuddering. She looked about, found a knot of roots high enough
to make a seat, lifted him into her lap and rocked him like a baby, stifling
her urge to sing to him; it might make his horrors worse. Finally she heard a
long shuddering sigh and he relaxed against her. She risked a word. “Over?”
“Uh-huh, Shadow.” For a moment longer he nestled against
her, then he pushed away with nervous strength and stood on the bed of leaves
with feet apart, his body a shout of defiance; whistling as loud as he could,
he flung a scornful trill at the forest. “Hunh,” he said. “Stupid trees.”
Shadith laughed and rocked back onto her feet, the pack a
weight that grew heavier with each hour. A lot of hours ahead before they got
to the end of Linfy’s stupid trees. She thought of making camp here and going
on in the morning, then sighed and began walking. Might as well keep going. God
knew what prowled here in the dark.
Episodes of confusion came steadily after that, none of them
quite as bad as the first. Linfyar and she helped each other and kept moving;
their metabolisms differed enough for one to be clear-headed when the other was
muzzy. Irritated and a little afraid, she was tempted to take more of the
counteractant, but Head had warned her against that. “We’re running on guess
and hope,” she’d said, “and the fact that this glop has never killed anyone,
though a lot of different types have taken it. Both you and the boy are mutated
stock, no knowing what it’ll do to you; the only reason for chancing it is that
going in without it would probably be worse.” Shadith endured and Linfyar
endured and both kept moving. The exercise seemed to help. By midafternoon the
severity of the hallucinations had diminished so much that for Shadith it was
like looking at the world about her though a distorting screen. Shapes and
colors changed, sometimes did the melting trick, but she knew where she was and
what was around her no matter how wild the contortions got. Her mind and body
were adjusting to the world, a wrenching experience but one that seemed about
over. Linfyar was experimenting with sound, playing with what had terrified him
just a short while before, so she knew he’d passed his crisis and was enjoying
himself again; she watched him strutting along and chuckled softly. I told
Lee you were a tough little imp, she thought, and so you are, oh yes you
are.
When the sun was a hand’s breadth above the horizon and
shadows were swallowing the expanse of three-lobed ground-cover plant thick and
soft as moss that stretched from the forest to the outskirts of the city,
Shadith and Linfyar walked from under the trees and stopped after a few steps
onto the clovermoss, enjoying the sudden sweep of a brisk cool wind.
Linfyar bounced on the springy growth, bent and broke off a
stem, crushed the leaves and sniffed at them. “Walking on a mattress,” he said.
“Smells good.” He rubbed the sap off his fingers, drooped all over, put on a
pathetic little smile, turned himself into an image of extreme debility. “I’m
tired, Shadow. I’m hungry. Let’s stop.”
“We’re almost there, Linfy.”
“You said that before.” He dropped into a squat, looked stubborn.
“You’ve been saying that for the longest.”
“Well, it’s really true now, we’ve got maybe half a
kilometer to go. I can see it, Linfy, and if you listen, you can probably hear
something. Besides, do you want to spend the night around the forest? Remember
what we ran into on Ibex.”
He crouched where he was without responding, his fingers
wandering across the clovermoss, but his ears twitched, then swiveled in the
direction of the city. A minute more and he got wearily to his feet, no
play-acting this time. He really is tired, she thought. Poor baby. He
sighed. “When can we stop?”
“Soon as we find a place to stay.”
The inner city, the center of government on Avosing with its
tall sealed buildings and covered ways, where the homeworlders of the Colonial
Authority lived and worked, that city sat inside a high wall that was as
unnecessary as it was massive, serving as a visual symbol of the distrust all
of those inside it had for the world they were supposed to govern. The wall had
only two gates—airlocks fitted with baffles and filters and everything else
Pajunggs could think of to keep out Avosing ,air and the confusion it carried.
One gate led to the great cathedral casino, the other into the city proper.
Avosingers seldom used that one, for the city made them uncomfortable; they
went into it when they had unavoidable business with the Authority and
otherwise stayed away. The rest of Keama Dusta, the greater part, was a vast
sprawl of homes and businesses, huts and factories, taverns and warehouses,
shops and showplaces, a clotted rambling conglomeration without apparent
pattern to it.
Shadith walked into the fringes of the city, past crude
shacks that could have been eyesores but weren’t, structures thrown together
from scrap wood, nothing painted, bits of this sort of wood and that fitted
together into curving natural shapes, aged by time and weather into soft grays
and umbers, vines of the blooming sort twisting about the timbers until the
distinction between outside and in was lost. The strong slanting light from the
setting sun intensified the textures, adding strong blacks and reddish
highlights to the more muted colors. I think I’m going to like these
people, anyone with such a feeling for beauty. She wrinkled her nose as the
presence laughed in her head. Giggling fool, she thought at it. There
were no streets, no straight lines anywhere, just the irregular spaces between
the houses, some long and thin, some like roundish bulbs on a vine, all covered
with the vigorous clovermoss. Spaces filled with a ferment of life, children
running everywhere, food vendors with steaming everything on skewers over coals
and under heat lights, taverns with clusters of tables out on the moss, with men
and women sitting over beer and wine talking, laughing, men and women standing
about talking with the air.
A lean woman with gray-streaked hair sat on the clovermoss
in one of the nodes, legs crossed, back straight, hands resting on her knees, a
vague smile lifting thin lips, lost in some ancient memory, watching it move
before her, something cherished by the look on her lined leathery face. Playing
shouting wrestling slapping at each other, children ran and tumbled about her,
giving her a polite space to herself. When one of them dropped out of the game
to stare at a patch of air, the others left that same sort of space about him
or her and went on their games and he or she rejoined the action a little later
without comment on either side.
All this was very interesting, but she was tired and Linfyar
was stumbling along, clinging to her. She worked her way to one of the larger
nodes, found an unoccupied patch of clovermoss, settled her pack beside her
with Linfyar to guard it, unsnapped the harp case and sat tuning the harp until
she had it right.
She didn’t know what the local custom was for street performers—don’t
even have streets here—or what bureaucratic rites she was skipping, though
Head had said the Authority rarely stuck its collective nose outside the walls;
it was the invisible government she’d have to placate. Setting up and
performing should bring quick action on that; street people, even without
streets, protected their privileges. She got interested looks as she finished
the tuning and began a ramble across the strings searching for something that
felt right for the people and the place. More Avosingers drifted up and settled
onto the clovermoss waiting for her to begin.
Perhaps because of the long dreamvision the night before,
what finally felt right was the music of her people. She slid into the croon,
using the harp to amplify her range and provide the sounds her voice could not.
Almost at once her sisters were dancing again, frail ghosts swaying through the
sundown shadows and the gathering crowd.
Beside her Linfyar straightened his narrow shoulders and began
weaving his whistle into her wordless song, deepening and broadening the sound
as if he tied into her memories as deeply as she did.
The Avosingers listened like ancient clients, eyes wide and
dreaming.
And she was doing what she’d never thought to do, singing a
dream for others. She was the link who learned and passed on but never
performed except for her mother, her trainer, a link as she was. Before the
Kanzedor raid that killed her mother and cast her aside, that took her sisters
and her aunts, one of the many slave raids that stripped Shayalin of its weavers
and destroyed a culture that had lasted for millennia, before she was wrenched
from all she knew, sold as trash at the first bid, thrown on her own, her kin
vanishing forever, her world irretrievably out of reach (by the time she worked
herself loose, it had vanished as thoroughly as her family), before all that,
her duty was to store in her brain what could not be recorded or written down,
what her grandfather passed to her mother, her mother to her.
And as she made her music, it came to her that the weavers
of Shayalin might be reborn—not as they were, there were no more Shallal, but
something ... something might be done. Maybe there were people she could teach,
maybe a piece of that long-forgotten culture could live again. Hope throbbed in
her voice, and joy ....
When the croon was finished, she settled the harp against
her thigh and gave herself over to feeling good, smiling wearily as Linfyar
jumped to his feet and began moving through the wakening crowd, shaking the
collecting bowl, whistling a cheery coaxing tune, adding his charm to their
appreciation to milk a handsome coinflow from the Avosingers.
One of her listeners got to his feet, shook his head and
scuffed over to her, hands in the pockets of his shorts, a boy who couldn’t be
much older than Linfyar. “That’s Sojohl’s spot.”
“Any objection to my using it when he’s not around?”
The boy rubbed a bare foot over the clovermoss, wiggled his
thick reddish brows, worked his mouth, stared vaguely over her head as he
thought over his answer, scratched beside his nose, grinned suddenly, an
electric beam as effective as any of Linfyar’s. “Nah,” he said. “But you got to
move when he comes.”
“How far?”
“‘Nother k’shun over.”
K’shun, she thought. Emptiness. Right. This node is Sojohl’s
territory, whoever he is, and I move to the next empty node if he shows up.
“Thanks,” she said aloud. “I’m new here.”
“Yeah, I thought.”
She looked around. Linfyar was about finished; most of the
crowd was drifting off. She turned back to the boy. “You know a place I can
stay cheap? My friend and me, we need a roof and supper, been a long day, we’re
worn out.”
He looked her over, turned to watch Linfyar. She didn’t try
rushing him, feeling no urge to rush, though the sun was beginning to play
color tricks on the clouds overhead and the drifts of pollen that caught the
light and glittered through the thick air, making round rainbows that shifted
with the slow shift of the light.
“My mam,” the boy said, startling her out of her drift. “She
got a vacancy. You want, I could take you there.”
“Yeah, why not?” She clamped her teeth together to shut in a
yawn, snapped the harp back in its case. With a sigh of weariness and a feeling
she was bruised to the bone by them, she slid her arms into the packframe
straps, smiled her pleasure as the boy pulled her to her feet. “Mind if we wait
till Linfy’s finished? Your mother, however kind, will want to be paid.”
“Yeah.” He turned to watch Linfyar. His face was a little weasel’s,
all pointed, nose and mouth with almost no chin, close-clipped red hair like a
weasel’s fur; though he was as grubby as any boy would be at the end of an
active day, it was only a single day’s accumulation of dirt, no patina of
neglect about him; she’d seen the signs often enough in her wanderings. He
reached out, touched the harp case; pulled his hand back though she hadn’t said
anything. “You sing good.”
“Thanks.”
“That hard to learn?”
“Depends.” She untied her belt pouch and watched Linfyar
drifting back. “I’m Shadith,” she said. “Friends call me Shadow. You can.”
“Me, I’m Tjepa. Mam’s Perolat.”
“Well, Tjepa-si, I thank you.”
Grinning again, he sketched a bow, pleased with her and with
himself.
“How come you’re the only one come to talk to me, Tjepa-si?
Linfy’s getting a good take, so they must have liked us.”
“You sure don’t know much.”
“Tjepa, my friend, I have been here not so very long.”
He jerked a thumb at the darkening sky. “Is it really so
differnt up there?”
“All kinds of differnt.”
He eyed her skeptically. “I bet you don’t really know. I bet
you run away from home to here and don’t know nothing about nothing.”
“Hanh. Maybe you would, young Tjepa, and maybe you’d lose.
Different kinds, different times. I’m a lot older’n I look to you. So why no
talking?”
“Leavin it to me.”
She raised her brows but said nothing as she opened the
pouch and let Linfyar scoop the coins into it. After she tied the pouch back to
the belt, she said, “Tjepa, this is Linfyar, my friend. Linfy, this is Tjepa.
He says his mam can maybe rent us a room.”
Tjepa stared at Linfyar, fascinated. “You got no eyes,” he
said. “How do you know where you’re going?”
“Ears,” Linfyar said and wriggled his. He pursed his lips
and pulsed a rapid series of inaudible whistles at Tjepa. Shadith watched,
amused. Showing off, she thought. Wonder what other senses he’s using
and not saying. “You ‘bout this much taller’n me”—he measured off about an
inch between thumb and forefinger—“and you’re wearing shorts and a shirt made
outta some slippery stuff, don’t know what, and you got nothing on your feet
and you got a gap in your front teeth that shows when you talk.”
“Hey wild, Linfy, how you do that?”
Shadith tapped him on the shoulder. “Hey yourself, Tjepa-si.
Let’s go. It’s getting dark and we’re plenty hungry.”
He nodded and started off one of the side spaces, a snake
crawl that wriggled even deeper into the city, with Linfyar strutting beside
him, forgetting his fatigue as he played his tricks for his new acquaintance,
bouncing silent whistles off buildings around them or folk walking along, then
describing what he learned. Shadith followed the two boys, amused by their
antics and interest in each other. She worried briefly about Linfyar’s chatter,
wondering if he’d say too much about why they were here, but he’d learned survival
in a hard school; playing a role was as natural to him as breathing. He was
enjoying himself without giving Tjepa anything but the story they’d worked out.
She relaxed and drifted along, the edges melting about her now and then but
only small almost homey bits of disorientation. Rather pleasant, a floating
bouncy feeling. She came out of it with something like regret. A few turns
later she saw Linfy shiver and stop walking. Tjepa quieted, led Linfyar on
until he recovered, then plunged again into animated exchange.
Tjepa led them to a large rambling inn built close to the
city wall, a ragged circle of small independent apartments joined by a raised
wooden walk with a vaulted roof resting on irregular arches that looked grown
in place rather than shaped by any hand. Winding in and around the arches and
over the roofs of the apartment, luxuriant vines put out sprays of crimson or
saffron blooms or elaborate lacy leaves. The apartment-cabins had tall thin
windows with dark glass set in graceful lead tracery; they were built of woods
that had weathered to a silver gray, roofed with rough-cut shingles of the same
silken gray. The inn had a graceful unstudied ease; it sang to her of folk who
liked to touch and stroke, who had an eye for form and line, who had an
aversion for symmetry and repeating themselves, liking rather to take a theme
through subtly differing variations. It sang to her, We are a proud and
independent folk, we prize harmony with earth and air and each other. She
felt comfortable here; as she followed Tjepa through one of the wider arches,
she thought, I’m coming back here someday when I’ve got nothing on my mind
but enjoying myself.
Inside the ring of cabins and the covered walks there were
neat kitchen gardens where vegetables and herbs native to this world mixed with
those from the home world, both sorts growing with a vigor that reinforced the
feeling of kinship with earth and green growing things. She followed Tjepa and
Linfyar along the spoke-walk to the tower in the center. Roughly circular, it
looked like the lopped-off trunk of one of the giant Kekar-Otar trees, rising
three times as high as the cabins, the same kind of long narrow windows
scattered in a haphazard way that made it difficult to tell how the inside was
arranged, but suggested it followed the freeform flow of the covered walk. I
do like this place, she thought once again, and smiled at Tjepa’s back.
Tjepa’s mother, Perolat, was a tall lanky woman who looked
like a sister of the Avosinger in the meditative trance in one of the outer
k’saha, as much a kinship of spirit as it was of form. She’d seen a number of
men and women with that calm competent look, that detachment, that lack of
hurry, seen them sitting at tables over glasses of wine, seen them ambling
along talking quietly together, seen them in the crowd that gathered to listen
to her. Perolat sat stretched out in a comfortable chair with a glass of wine
at her elbow, watching pot lids bumping on the stove, wreathed in smells that
started Shadith’s mouth watering and her stomach cramping, reminding her how
hungry she was. Linfyar whistled a lilting trill full of happy anticipation,
but minded his manners and waited for Perolat to speak.
Perolat’s left leg was propped on a stool, metal and wood
and circuitry below her knee. She wore shorts and shirt like her son, making no
effort to conceal the prosthesis, She looked lazy and contented and wholly
unsurprised to see her son dragging strangers into her kitchen. She sat up,
smiled a welcome, raised heavy pepper-and-salt eyebrows.
“Mam, this is Shadith and Linfyar. They new in Dusta and
needing a place to say. She says call her Shadow. She play f-i-i-ine music.”
Perolat pushed a strand of soft gray hair off her face. “Musician?”
Shadith nodded, turned so Perolat could see the harp case
lashed to the pack.
“New here.”
“Uh-huh. This morning.”
“No ships down today.”
Shadith smiled. “How interesting.”
“Right. Your business. Hmm. Some rules we have here. I don’t
know how you pay your way, girl, and don’t get shook by what I say. You a
thief, that’s all right long as you touch nothing in the bebamp’n. That’s us
here outside the walls. Authority and cathedral’s fair game. Out here I don’t
care if you see sweetamber heaped high, you don’t touch. Not saying you are a
thief, you understand, but seems to me it takes more’n a few songs to buy passage
even on a smuggler’s ship, and you don’t look old enough, or—forgive me—lush
enough to whore your way here, though there are some clowns who like ‘em young.
Hmm. You plan to labor horizontal, do it outside the bebamp’n, don’t mess in
your nest. No offense meant.”
“None taken. How much for a roof and meals?”
“Five piah silver the nineday, food extra.”
Shadith frowned, then nodded; should have enough from the
collection to handle that. “I’ll take it a nineday at a time, if that’s all
right.” She sniffed and smiled. “And supper when it’s ready.”
“Good enough. Tjee, take your friends over to Gourd.” She
turned to Shadith. “I named them for local plants. Supper’s ten piah copper,
pay when you get back here. You can give Tjee the rent once you get settled in.
Supper will be ready in a half hour; come back here, I’ll show you where we
eat.”
Tjepa led them away from the kitchen along a covered spoke.
“Mam was the best amberminer on Avosing before she stepped into a senget nest
and got stung so bad. Me, when I’m old enough, I’m gonna be better.”
“Your mam, she had to quit because of her leg?”
“The leg she don’t have, uh-huh. There some baad burks out
there just waiting for you if you holdin amber. Got no nose, them, forest don’t
like ‘em, they hang around the outside waitin for miners to come by. You got to
be fast and tough for findin the lodes, then you got to be faster and tougher
to get th’ amber back. And the forest got to like you and you got to have a
nose to find it in the first place.”
“The amberjacks, they don’t bother you here?”
“Better not.” He waved a hand. “This part o’ the bebamp’n,
it’s all miners and their fam’lies. Ol’ jack he down to bones ‘fore he get
more’n two steps, and he know it. Like Mam said, what folk do outside is their
business, here’s home.” He stopped before a cabin, slapped his hand against a
metal plate set into the door. It slid swiftly, silently into the wall. Inside,
lights came on. He crossed the room, stopped by metal panels etched and stained
into a pleasant abstract of twisty vines, touched a sensor in one corner; one
panel slid aside, uncovering a bank of sensor squares and a small viewscreen with
a silver-blue shimmer. He ran a sequence on the squares, looked over his
shoulder. “Shadow, you and Linfy put your hands flat on here, then it’s you who
can make things work. Door too.” He waited until Shadith guided Linfyar’s hands
to the screen, then put her own there, then he said, “All right, you need
anything else?”
Shadith looked around. A comfortable room, all earth colors,
broad comfortable chairs, small tables, pleasant indirect lighting; a welcoming
room and more for the money than she’d expected. She touched the border of the
console. Almost a gift. I wonder why. She lifted her head, startled, as she
felt a familiar tickling nudge from the presence in the forest. Busy old
ghost, aren’t you? She clicked her nail against the metal. “This isn’t Pajungg
make.”
“For sure no. Mam got this stuff off a smuggler.”
“Should you be talking like that to strangers?”
“Ahh, you’re a right ‘un. Mam knows.”
“Hmmm. What will Linfy’s whistles to do this equipment? He needs
to find his way around but we can’t afford to pay for replacements.”
Tjepa frowned, shook his head. “Don’t know; maybe he better
hold off till I ask Mam.” He scowled at the screen. “I can work it, that’s
about all. Mam wants to send me to school offworld so I can learn stuff like
that.” He wrinkled his nose, shoved his hands into his pockets. “I don’t need
to know all that brakka to mine amber.”
“Maybe your mam doesn’t want you losing a piece of your leg like
her.”
“Hunh, Mam don’t worry about brakka like that; she just
don’t want to pay outsiders if she don’t have to.”
“See, Shadow”—Linfy’s ears were flicking about, he was almost
bouncing in place—“school’s a waste of time for Tjee. He knows what he wants.
Me too.”
“Hunh, you! What do you know? Tjepa-si, ask your mam about
up to ninety thousand per. About there. And before you go ...” She settled
herself in the nearest chair, pulled up a table. She scooped a handful of coins
from her belt pouch, spread them on the table so she could get a look at them. Copper
and silver, no gold. Octagonal coins with milled edges.
Keeping his hands pushed down in his pockets Tjepa sauntered
across to the table. “Hey, you did good, Shadow, that’s not even half, is it?”
“No.”
He glanced at her, turned very serious. “That big ‘un,
that’s a ten-piah silver. Musta been a miner—more’n some folk make a whole
week. The little silver ones, they’re piahs, one silver each. You give me five
o’ those, you’re set. Copper’s same as silver. Big ‘uns are ten-piah coppers,
little ‘uns are one-piahs. One hundred copper piahs make a silver.”
She slid five of the silver piahs off the table into her
hand, held them out. “Thanks, Tjee.”
“‘S nothin, Shadow.” He turned to go, turned back. “You
think you could teach me, maybe a little bit, get me started like, playin
something like ... like your harp?” He cleared his throat. “I can pay. A
little. I get an allowance, earn me a copper or two sometimes runnin for folk.”
She heard the wistful longing he was trying to suppress and
couldn’t withstand its appeal. “A little maybe, but Linfy and me we don’t stay
anywhere very long. It wouldn’t be much. Maybe a copper a nineday?”
He nodded. “I could go that.”
“Well, if you find out you like it, maybe your mam could
find you a real teacher. I have to tell you, Tjee, it’s work.”
“‘S all right.” With a quick wave he trotted from the room.
Linfyar was silent; she could feel him sulking. She ignored
him, emptied the pouch on the table and began sorting the coins out, counting
them and slipping them back into the pouch. Half hidden in a pile of coppers
she saw a small dark blob shaped like a teardrop. She held it to the light and
watched blue and green and red fires play in its heart. Flawed but still
sweetamber, and worth more than all the coins she’d collected. She closed her
fingers over the drop, warmed it, then brought it close to her nose and smelled
for the first time the fugitive sweet bite of amberscent.
“What’s that?” Sulks forgotten, Linfyar knelt beside her,
nose twitching.
“You cut deep enough, it’s why we’re here, Linfy.” She held
out her hand, let him take the drop. “Why everyone’s here.”
“Mmmmmh.” A long blissful sigh.
“I see you like it.” She chuckled, finished counting the
coins and sliding them back in the pouch. “Forty-three piahs silver, plus the
five I gave Tjepa makes forty-eight. Two hundred six piahs copper. Not bad for
an unadvertised improvised effort. Lovely friendly place, isn’t it, Linfy?”
“Mmmm.”
She looked around, frowning. He was sniffing at the amber,
his nose nudging at the drop, his ears laid back flat against his head, his
mouth drooping open. “Getting ‘high, are you?” She wrapped her hand around one
thin wrist, doing nothing right then but letting him feel her hold. “This isn’t
going to be a problem, is it, imp?”
He said nothing, just shrugged and set the amber drop on the
table. She took her hand away and got to her feet.
“We’d better start over for supper. I’m hungry enough to eat
my way there.”
Linfyar yawned and stretched, then got to his feet. He
stretched again, wiggled all over, patted his stomach. “Me too. And tired
enough to fall asleep in the soup.” He giggled at the thought, mimed swimming
motions as he followed her from the room.
The dining area was a long narrow room next to the kitchen,
one wall a shallow curve with tall windows that let in the starlight. The air
was scrubbed and just cool enough to milk an extra touch of pleasure from the
fragrant steaming dishes marching down the center of a long table made from a
dark glowing wood hand-rubbed to a high gloss. A dozen others looked up as
Perolat ushered them in, seven women, five men, all of them spirit-kin to Perolat.
Step into my parlor, Shadith thought. Seems like the invisible
government wants to look me over; is this luck or what?
“This is Shadith called Shadow, maker of f-i-i-ine music according
to my son, and her companion Linfyar,” Perolat said, then led them to vacant
chairs at the table.
The meal was a gentle but exhaustive inquisition. Perolat
saw to the serving while the others probed Shadith’s past, her attitudes, her
plans for her time on this world. The food was superb. Linfyar ate quickly,
fastidiously, using his proximity senses (mind fingers that didn’t get greasy)
to tell him where the food was, his nose to tell him what it was. A few
questions came his way, but he handled them deftly enough; the miners
concentrated on Shadith, courteous but persistent. She gave a thought now and
then to blessing her misleading appearance, something that otherwise was
growing into an irritating problem when she had to deal with strangers. Right
now, though, it was helping her. The miners were satisfied with her answers,
she could feel it, where they might have dug deeper if she’d looked older.
RASHADA: (tall lanky woman with skin tanned so dark it
was almost the color of the table, pale-yellow eyes, cool and assessing, not
hostile, merely wary) That was a remarkable performance this afternoon. You are
a gifted musician, young Shadith, but I think you were surprised by the effect
you had on your listeners.
SHADITH: (chewing on a bit of meat, swallowing, taking
her time) Surprised isn’t quite the word. Astonished. Staggered. Flabbergasted.
Same thing was happening to me.
MARAH: (plumpish woman, shorter than the others,
bland round face and deep-set eyes lost in shadows except for a glint now and
then) Then that dream-effect is something new. It didn’t happen on other worlds
you’ve visited?
SHADITH: (tearing open a warm flaky roll and buttering
it carefully, using the time to think about her answer) I have seen something
similar, but not of my making. A long way from here. A long time ago.
HALAMO: (tall lanky man, like Rashada’s twin, matching
her feature for feature, the same cool yellow eyes, the same long rather bony
fingers, , almost the same voice when he spoke) A long time ago? You look like
you’ve barely hit puberty. No offense. How old are you, Shadith?
SHADITH: Older than I look. Old enough I’ve touched a
hundred worlds and brought away a little of each. Old enough to leave my home
and people far behind. Actual years? I don’t really know. Easy for travelers to
lose track.
DIHANN: (a woman of stern and rather frightening
beauty, exotic cheekbones and cat eyes, reddish tinge to her hair, wide full
mouth, a way of moving, even sitting still and simply breathing, that made
Shadith think of tigers and leopards lolling in the sun; her voice was deep and
purring; she was the oldest of the women, lines in the velvety skin and the
beginnings of collapse in her muscles, but she was still powerful and vividly
attractive) Who are your people, ancient child, those folk you left behind?
SHADITH: You wouldn’t know them. The Shallal of Shayalin,
a world so poor and hard everyone left who could. My family is long dead. I
escaped by chance, and I travel because one keeps on living and new places have
new delights and there are always new places to see.
RANGAR: (oldest of the men, bald, hazel eyes, wide
thin-lipped mouth, deep lines at the corners, corrugated forehead, heavy
eyebrows) Shayalin. I don’t know the name.
SHADITH: Why should you? It was dead before you were
born. The last of the Shallal were exiles depending on their talents to
survive. And it’s a long long way from here.
GERADA: (a quiet, heavy-faced woman, thick dark hair
lightly streaked With gray, smoothed—into a meticulously neat knot at the back
of her head; she ate with precise small movements, a delicacy almost absurd in
the shift of large powerful hands; she interested Shadith because she did not
seem to belong among the more flamboyant members of this inquisition; there had
to be more to her than the silent uninteresting facade) What brought you here?
SHADITH: I could say chance, but who’d believe that?
I came for my own reasons. I came for the sweetamber like everyone else. I came
because this is a wild world and a strange one and I collect strange worlds. I
came because this is where the ship I was riding brought me. All of the above,
or any, or none. Take your choice.
MELOHAN: (small, slight, hardly taller than Shadith,
with fragile bones that looked as if they’d break in a high wind, perhaps the
youngest of the twelve, hair black as tar worn in a long braid that draped
gracefully forward over her left shoulder) What will you do here?
SHADITH: Sing, earn my way. Look about Keama Dusta
for a while, visit other parts of the world, leave when I’ve seen all I care
to.
KULIT: (tall lean woman with a short nose and
short hair that curled tight to her narrow head, large, rather prominent quite
lovely hazel eyes, eyebrows thin but strongly marked, flaring like wings so she
looked permanently alert, a voice like kaffeh smelled, deep, dark, rich) We
have a rebellion trying to gather force out there, guerrillas in the hills.
SHADITH: (giggle, flirt of her hand) Meaning, stay
out of the back country?
BERGEN: (small neat man, hairline mustache rather
unfortunately emphasizing very full red lips that tended to pout, hairline
brows to match, those wisps of hair dominating a soft-looking face) Unless you
think you’d be amused by the Ajin’s antics.
SHADITH: I don’t get any fun out of pain. If your
Ajin is like other rebels I’ve run into from time to time, he’ll land hard on
strangers in his territory. Too bad.
PEROLAT: Quite like other rebels, young Shadith. You’d
better stick to Keama Dusta until you leave us.
Perolat touched Shadith’s arm. “Wait a little and share some
belas with a few of us, you and Linfy.”
Shadith nodded, amused and a little irritated; she’d gone beyond
her second wind and was working on the third. Seventeen hours since a sleepless
night. But begging off wasn’t an option. What was coming, like the dinner
inquisition, would be a test, she had no illusions about that. For some reason,
probably that enigmatic presence in the forest and its unexpected interest in
her, she had a lot more attention focused on her than she wanted, maybe more
interest than her story could stand. As most of the miners strolled out,
clumped in small groups talking about minor events of the day, and a number of
quiet girls came in to clear off the table, Perolat swept Shadith and Linfyar
down a short hall and into a high-ceilinged room where three others sat about a
hooded fire. The windows were cranked open to let in the cool night air. Trial
by pollen, she thought, wearily amused. The dining room was air-conditioned
so Perolat wouldn’t waste her work cooking for dreamers and the smells and
flavors of her food would be appreciated without distraction. Perolat took her
to a plump cushion, murmured welcome to Linfyar as he sank down beside her. The
rustle of the vine leaves outside the windows, the stir of draperies, the
crackle of the fire that was the room’s sole illumination, a snatch of music
from a distant inn blown in on the night wind, shut off abruptly with the
closing of a door—these unobtrusive sounds gave the room a dreamy unreality
that Shadith found disastrously enticing, combining with her body’s more and
more imperative demands for sleep to give the feeling that events were slipping
rapidly out of control, even her own body was leaving her control. She tried to
focus, but her mind felt like mush and the food she’d enjoyed so much so short
a time before sat like a lump in her stomach, weighing down body and mind.
Perolat wheeled a serving table from one corner of the room,
on it a large glass pitcher and big-bellied glasses whose flatly rounded
bottoms fit comfortably in the hollow of a palm, a solid weight to them; good
to sit by that fire holding those heavy elegant glasses. The belas she poured
out for her guests was a lightly fermented fruit juice, heated and spiced with
something local that was tart with a pleasant afterbite. Shadith sipped at hers
and felt the fog draining from her head, some of the lethargy slipping out of
her body. This part of the test was going to be harder than dinner. She’d had a
lot of practice keeping her lies consistent. Now all she could do was be
herself and hope they liked that self well enough to accept her as an amiable
acquaintance so they’d leave her loose enough to go nosing after the Ajin. Her
mind drifted to Taggert. Wonder if he’s made his way here yet ... have to be
in position to spring him if he hit the trap and tripped ... wary, wily
man ... but so was Grey ... Grey was angry, maybe that’s what did him in ...
but it swallowed Ticutt, he wasn’t blinded by anger ... calm, deliberate,
precise ... cautious as a coyote around poison bait ... Taggert coming in at
some kind of slant ... good luck to him .... She sipped at the hot belas,
watched Perolat finish passing out the glasses and take her own back to a
chair, her mechanical leg making it difficult to get down to the floor.
The silence filled with night sounds stretched on and on. Linfyar
fidgeted awhile, finished his drink, curled up beside Shadith, his head on her
thigh, and went to sleep.
After a while Perolat stumped around refilling the glasses.
She settled back in her chair, her half-leg propped on a small hassock. “Know
any Pajungg music?”
Shadith yawned, blinked. “Never been to Pajungg.”
“Ah.”
More silence.
Ticha groped beside her pillow, brought up three curved,
crooked pieces of hard wood like fossilized rib bones, began slapping them
against her thigh.
Derek took up a long pipe made of a wood like Ticha’s
sticks. It had six holes cut into it and no valves. He tried a few notes, then
began playing a simple tune, repeating it over and over, winding through the
separate but related music from the sticks.
Awas left the room and came back with a huge gourd, strings
stretched across a hole cut in the belly. She settled herself and began
slapping a thrumming boom from the gourd, at the same time plucking the
strings, producing a third tune, different from the other two but blending with
them to produce a complex polyphonic music.
Shadith listened for a while, then began improvising a
wordless song, like and not like her ancient croons, feeling her way into the
music.
A flow passed around the circle, lapping her inside it. The
music went on and on, expanding, developing, returning to earlier themes, the
gourd player the leader if there was any real leader, the first to turn into
new lines; Shadith was content to follow where she led, singing softly in her middle
ranges most of the time, highs and lows when she was sure of herself.
Eventually Perolat began to sing, a rough untrained
contralto that seemed to hold all the pain and wanting in the world, and joy,
but a fleeting joy that touched a moment and went away, laughter in it too, the
kind that celebrated but had a hint of pain in it like the drop of black that
made white paint whiter.
Shadith stopped caring anymore if she passed the test, whatever
it was; she forgot there was a test. Never mind age, culture, species; these
were her kind.
Derek’s pipe went up and up and up, ending in a high
screech.
They collapsed in laughter, then sat up wiping eyes, while Perolat
went around again with the hot spiced juice, adding this time small saucers
with cheese-filled pastries and candied fruits that Shadith found a, bit too
sweet. Startled out of sleep by the pipe’s shriek and the jolting of Shadith’s
thigh, Linfyar sat up muttering, rubbed his nose. “What ...” He sniffed, his
ears pricked forward.
Shadith chuckled, handed him the saucer. “Here, I expect
you’ll like these.”
Awas leaned forward, arms clasped loosely about the gourd.
“I was there. At the k’shun this afternoon.”
“Ummm?”
“You and Linfyar shaped our visions so we all shared the
same one. Did you know that?”
Shadith straightened her back, rubbed at the nape of her
neck, wishing she felt a bit more alert. “You saw the same thing?”
“No ...” The word was a drawn out whisper. “That’s not exactly
what I said. Each person I talked to saw something that might be an
interpretation of a single theme. As you intended?”
“I didn’t know.” She moved her shoulders impatiently,
pressed the back of her hand against her mouth, pulled it down. The lie was
harder to get out than she’d expected; she liked them too well, these Avosingers.
Still, she hadn’t much choice, and she wasn’t working against them; from what
Head said and the impressions she picked up at dinner they weren’t that
enthused about the Ajin and his cause. “Maybe it was a freak thing; maybe I
can’t do it again.” She looked around at the quiet faces. “What dream would you
like me to try?”
Perolat smiled. “Something simple, something you know as
well as we do.” A chuckle. “Forest walking?”
“Hah. You’ve got a loudmouth forest.”
Soft laughter from all four.
“Mmmh, I should have the harp. Awas, would you let me borrow
that?” She pointed at the large gourd.
“Why not?” Awas hefted the gourd. “Watch out, it’s heavier
than it looks.” She tossed it to Shadith, who grunted with surprise when she
caught it, then watched in interested silence as Shadith plucked at the
strings, listening to the various sounds she could elicit, tapped and slapped
at the belly to produce assorted tunks and booms, gradually putting what she
learned together until she got a complex music going using about every
possibility for sound the gourd possessed, a feat not as remarkable as it
looked, since she’d done this sort of thing again and again on one world or
another in that first part of her life when she was still in her original body.
She let the music die, looked at the expectant Avosinger faces, then closed her
eyes and sought through her memory of Shayalin patterns and finally chose one
that seemed to fit the things she’d felt during her lucid periods as she walked
through the fringes of the forest. She drew her hand over her face. “Right,
walking through the forest.” She looked down at Linfyar. “Come in when you feel
it’s right, Linfy.”
She began with a muted strumming, clicking her nails against
the varnished surface of the gourd, humming almost inaudibly, gathering up the
stillness of the room, the night sounds drifting in, watching the flickers of
the dying fire; she let the humming expand into the pattern song, the word
sounds twisting and turning through the rhythms her hands were coaxing from the
strings and body of the gourd; she stared at the flames and did not see them,
saw instead her sisters in a circle swaying beneath the giant tress of Avosing.
Giant trees stretching out before her, away and away and away and away,
canceling wall and window, caught in an elusive balance between stillness and
motion, there in all their thereness, their extension into time-was and
time-will-be, grazing the sky and sounding the underworld. Her sisters dancing
in their shadows, singing polyphonic patterns, singing tranquillity in power,
singing forest heart and forest folk and how they twine together, strong in
serenity, quiet in deed, gentle in their power, singing the miners of the
amber, the fragrance of the amber, the shine and shimmer of the fires in amber
heart. Her sisters dancing in light and shadow, life surging up through them
like sap rising. The energy of the croon built and built, Linfyar weaving his
liquid lilting whistle through her voice and hand-music, then it broke off. Linfyar
broke off at the same moment, leaving the room to a shattering silence.
Shadith sat blinking, holding the gourd with trembling
hands, her mouth dry, her throat a little sore, her body drained of energy.
Perolat was lost in dream still, staring at nothing, tears
drifting unchecked down her angular face, a slight smile curling her lips.
Ticha and Derek swayed together, faces slack and quiet, lost
utterly to a dream it seemed they shared, her hand resting in his, her lips
moving with his in brief smiles that lifted the slack muscles of each face at
the same time in much the same way. Shadith was startled. Two clients linked in
a common dream—that she couldn’t remember ever happening even when her mother’s
sisters, master weavers, wove the dreams; similar, yes, variations on a single
theme, never the exact same dream. Well, she wasn’t truly a weaver, and her
family had never visited a world like this. She blinked, startled by a sudden
thought—or worn the body of a mindrider. Could she possibly do this without the
pervasive pollens of Avosing? Was her dream back in the k’shun not just wishful
thinking but a real possibility? Did she even want it to be?
As Shadith sat silently watching, Awas came swimming up out
of dream. She looked around, dazed incomprehension on her face for the first
few breaths, fixed her eyes on Shadith, wariness and a little fear in them,
then she grinned, her dark eyes disappearing into nests of laugh wrinkles, her
nose and cheekbones suddenly prominent. “I’ll be humbler next time I play
that,” she said, half amused, half serious, nodding at the gourd.
Shadith flushed. “That’s silly and you know it. What you
heard was part suggestion and part funny-dust.”
Perolat blinked slowly, looked around, raised her brows at
Derek and Ticha, turned to Awas. “I didn’t really believe it.”
“The Po’ Annutj.”
“You too? You think them?” Perolat nodded at the
still-dreaming pair. “I expect so.”
Perolat switched her gaze to Shadith. “And you don’t know
what you did, I’m fairly sure of that.”
“Did?”
“Showed us the Po’ Annutj.”
“I know what the words mean. Forest Heart. But ...”
“Loudmouth forest.” Perolat chuckled.
“Hunh.”
Ticha and Derek began to blink, eyelids clicking to a
different rhythm, their eerie synchronization lost.
Perolat looked relieved. “Where did you learn that music?”
“Part of it from my mother, part of it’s improvisation,
things I’ve learned in my wanderings.”
“Shayalin. That’s what you called your homeworld, isn’t it?
I have not heard of it.”
“It doesn’t exist any longer. I’m a double orphan. Lost my
family, lost my world.” She yawned, almost not getting her hand up to cover the
gape. “I said that before, didn’t I?”
“You’re tired,” Perolat said.
Shadith grinned sleepily at her. “Understatement.”
“Go home and get some rest. Your meals are on me tomorrow.
Thanks for tonight.”
Shadith swallowed a second yawn, her eyes watering. “If you
could tell me where it’d be all right to perform, I’d appreciate that.” The
words were clear enough in her head, but slurred and slowed when they came out.
Perolat looked around at the others. They nodded. “Any
k’shun that’s not being used.” She hesitated. “But you won’t be in the k’saha
long—the doawai will be calling you into the cathedral soon as he hears about
you. Inside the walls.”
“Walls?” Shadith shook her head. “No.”
“You’ll take in more coin.”
“Depends. I know those places—lot of strings on your take.
At least, that’s what I’ve seen before, and I don’t expect it’s different here.
I could have had lots of berths like that otherwise. Un-uuh.”
“You might not have much choice.”
“Warning?”
“Too strong. Just be careful. City”—she jerked her head toward
the north where the walls were—“and doawai, he’ll invite you first. Turn him
down, he’ll make your life a misery. Keep turning him down, he’ll send his
engiaja after you.”
Shadith yawned a third time, got heavily to her feet. “Then
I’ll move on.” She stirred Linfyar with her toe. “Wake up, Linfy, time we got
to bed. Too bad if that happens, Perolat. I like it here, like to stay awhile.”
She patted Linfyar as he got groggily to his feet and stumbled against her. “No
use inviting trouble.” She yawned a fourth time, surprising herself.
“And you’re asleep on your feet, child—no don’t tell me
again you’re older than you look. Derek, carry the boy. Ticha, give young
Shadow your arm. Sleep as long as you need to, child, then come see me and I’ll
fry you up some breakfast.”
A nineday passed.
Shadith lounged about, getting to know the place, saying
little, listening much, picking up threads here and there, finding nothing that
would get her to the Ajin without him suspecting what she was after. Hints of
rebellion, yes, whispered gossip, harangues by rebels sneaking into the
bebamp’n trying to stir up excitement and anger and recruit Dusters into their
cause. Nothing enough to give her a line on him.
Church spies snooping along the talishi, the wandering ways
that were the local streets, and through the k’saha; church enforcers stumping
arrogantly through the bebamp’n hunting down the negligent. These men wore
respirators and protective clothing; even so, one of them would slide into a
trance now and then and whoever he was harassing would take off before the rest
of the troop could react. Enforcers never walked alone. Too many disappeared
the time they tried that. Avosingers yielded before these troops, fading into
the narrow talishi, vanishing into houses, shops, factories, taverns, whatever;
vendors who couldn’t wheel their carts away tuned out on the world. Behind the
troop, life took up its ordinary ways, a touch of wariness in the most casual
conversations.
A pervasive resentment of all church and Authority forces, outright
hatred in some quarters. The amberminers and their kin standing aloof—except
when they helped the kin of those that disappeared or provided escape routes
for those the enforcers were after.
As the days passed, she confirmed what she’d suspected that
first night. Perolat and the twelve were the invisible government in Keama
Dusta. They took care of order in the bebamp’n, sentenced thieves to tending
the local gardens, repairing the water system, doing just about anything that
needed work to keep the community life flowing smoothly, they warned
wifebeaters, took rapists into the forest and left them (these weren’t seen
again, not hide hair or bone), warned merchants who were cheating customers,
especially folk in from the grasslands with money to spend, and if they didn’t
listen, they disappeared; they settled boundary disputes and quarrels about
goods and kinship problems with nothing but moral force to back their
decisions, moral force and community consensus, an elaborate system of
obligations, a web of services that bound man to man, woman to woman, built up
wholly outside the oppressive Colonial Authority and the officials the Pajunggs
appointed to uphold homeworld law.
Sing us a sad song, Shadow, they called to her, make us
weep, Shadow, sing of thwarted lovers and heroes dying young, sing us a sad
song, Shadow, oh Shadow.
Nineday. Market day. Farmers and ranchers in from the grasslands
to the north, flying in with produce to supplement the kitchen gardens, red
meat and fowl; fishermen with loads of fish, foresters in with herbs and tonics
and flasks of fancy liqueurs, loads of fine woods, new flowers and plants.
Shadith is mobbed, they won’t let her stop singing, won’t let her sing anything
but the Shayalin patterns, mobs of listeners filling the k’shun and overflowing
into the talishi.
Sing us a mad song, Shadow, Shadow, sing a nonsense to make
us laugh, sing us silly, oh Shadow, oh Shadow.
A miner came in from the forest with a pack full of amber.
Tjepa confided to Shadith that he’d cached ten times what he brought in to
spend with smugglers after he’d fixed up his family and sated Pajungg greed.
Everyone knew about it, no one said anything.
Sing us of triumph, oh Shadow, oh Shadow, sing to us songs
of silk and sweet ease, sing of our dreams, oh Shadow, wise Shadow, sing us of
triumph, oh Shadow, our Shadow.
An emissary came from the doawai, a minor hiepler in the cathedral
hierarchy accompanied by a decat of enforcers. He pushed through the listeners
and stopped in front of her. “Singer,” he said, “this is korbeday. On sukanday
you will sing for doawai.”
“Fine,” she said. “On sukanday I sing in Sebela k’shun.
Harm’s tavern edges it. If your doawai wants to sit and see, he can rent one of
Harin’s balconies.”
“No, no,” the hiepler said hastily, “you will sing in the
cathedral.”
“No, no,” she said, “I most certainly will not.”
“What?”
“I don’t like walls. The doawai wants to hear me, he comes
outside.”
“The doawai doesn’t come to people, they come to him.”
“Too bad. He must miss a lot that way. He’s going to miss
hearing me sing.”
“It’s an honor to be summoned.”
“It’s an honor I’ll live without.”
“You refuse?”
“Good, it’s finally sunk in.” She ran her hand across the
harpstrings, the sweep of sound a period to the discussion. “Now go away and
let me sing to these good folk.”
He looked around him, saw the numbers, felt the hostility
there. With a jerk of his head in a parody of a polite bow, he stalked off,
pointedly ignoring the crowd that parted before him and the silent enforcers
stumping along behind him.
Sing us a song, oh Shadow, sing us a dream of owning our
world, sing us, oh sing us of freedom, oh Shadow, of living the lives that we
want to have, sing us, oh sing us out of our apathy, sing us, oh sing us out of
our fear.
It was the excuse she needed, almost the excuse, anyway. The
next time the hiepler came, Perolat warned her, he’d bring a summons to a
hearing before a heresy judge and the offer to avoid it by coming with him
then. But he wouldn’t arrest her; that would come later when she didn’t show up
for the hearing. If she fled Keama Dusta, well, wasn’t that what everyone did?
If she ran into the outback and did her singing in forest and grassland
villages, who could say it was all a plot? From the bits and pieces she’d
picked up, she knew the area where the Ajin was most active; if she voiced her
resentment and her fondness for the world, if she sang provocative songs and
moved on before the Authority could land on her, chances were she’d be
recruited by the Ajin’s men. He might even order her brought to him directly.
She grinned into the darkness. Why not? What a propaganda artist I’d make. She
slipped out of bed, careful not to disturb Linfyar, and padded into the other
room, thumbed on the light, found the book she’d been reading and settled down
to wait the coming of the dawn. For one accustomed to four or five hours of
sleep, these sixteen-hour nights were a penance to be suffered far from gladly.
She curled up in a chair, opened the book and lost herself in the extravagant
fantasy, amused by the way the writer toyed with treason in the guise of
literature; the book had the church’s imprimatur—probably a lazy or stupid
censor passed it for publication, someone whose mind was on other things. Or
maybe he was a sympathizer; odder things had happened. She relaxed and let the
words carry her along. Four hours till dawn. No more thinking, just go with the
flow.
Early morning in the smugglers’ market.
A k’shun larger than most, within the miners’ quarter where
enforcers never came and even spies were rare. Pember k’shun, deep in a maze of
crooked talishi. You had to know
where it was before you could find it. If a church spy dared
show up there—they were ail known, even the youngest miner child knew faces and
names—groups of men and women and children began nudging and shoving him toward
the edge of the k’shun, working him away from the tables, never acting directly
against him, all done with the blandest innocence—but he was out of the market
within minutes of his arrival, and if he was too persistent at trying to get
back in, he was gently clipped on the head and removed, waking up later in some
other part of the city, usually drenched with one of the more odorous liqueurs.
Leaving Linfyar to running about with Tjepa and his friends,
Shadith wandered among the tables, astonished by the amount and variety of the
offerings, most of them forbidden by the church. She wasn’t much worried about
Linfy getting into trouble; like most young animals, Tjepa was a trifle wild
and could be thoughtless, but he knew from much painful experience that
anything too bad he did would be reported with copious incriminating detail to
his mother. Minor irritations the Avosingers would let slide, but there was a
line he knew better than to cross. It was a fuzzy, ill-defined line, and
sometimes he misjudged it—to his sorrow and sore behind. He came to their
morning practice session a few days ago, fidgeted a bit and wouldn’t sit down,
then rushed out an explanation; seems he’d tied two jinkas’ tails together and
dropped them in old Kaus’s chicken coop—an unrepentant grin, you should have
seen the feathers fly and the noise was loud enough to wake a wino after a wet
night—but the jinkas were Dihann’s pets and she didn’t think the joke was funny
at all and old Kaus was foaming at the mouth. “Mam, she tore up my
behind and I got to work a nineday doing whatever old Kaus tells me. And go
comb the jinkas’ fur and take care of them for Dihann.” He sighed. “All day.
Except Mam says I can still come for my lessons. If you don’t mind.” His
friends were much like him, three miners’ sons and a lone wild girl who was all
legs and hair and audacity, a version of what Perolat must have been at that
age. She almost envied that girl’s freedom; her own childhood had been strictly
disciplined, little play allowed, no one to play with; her sisters were almost
adults by the time she hatched.
She wandered among the tables, bought some books and a sack
to carry them in, thought about a silver filigree headband set with moonstones,
but it was too fragile to last through the turbulent times ahead. Enjoying the
bustle and color, she worked her way to the section where the bolts of silk and
avrishum, brocades and broideries were, loving the sheen and shimmer of them.
She rounded a high pile and stopped, her mouth dropping open. I don’t
believe it. Arel and his pet killer Joran. Vannik must be guarding the ship.
She strolled by the table, suppressing a smile. Here and
there among the offerings she spotted a bit of the old Queen’s jewelry. She
looked at the delicate gauzes and rolls of brocade, sneaked another look at
Arel. His bony sardonic face was much the same in spite of the years that had
passed since he left Aleytys on Maeve. I’ll have to tell her I saw
him. He’s looking prosperous. Not really so strange he’s here—this is
smugglers’ heaven. Wonder what he’d think of her now. She’s changed from that
naive mountain girl he bedded so sweetly those days. Shadith felt a heat
growing in her and quickly shifted her thoughts. Joran hadn’t changed much either.
Those cat ears still twitched all the time, some streaks of gray in the black
hair, no lessening in the aura of deadliness that clung to him. Funny to think
she knew so much about them and they wouldn’t have a clue about her. She
sighed. They’ll be gone in a day or two. Maybe after this job is done I can
hunt him up and say hello. Be interesting if ... Hah! Shadow, get your mind on
your business. Grey comes first.
She ambled on, picking up more about the Ajin in snatches of
conversation about her ... a jaktar robbed of revenues from the church casinos
in Windsweep and Sapulake ... a flier vanished over the forest somewhere north
of the Ular River ... a customs boat sunk in Moster Bay ... enforcers dropping
on Kotican just two hours after the Ajin cleared out ... a truck convoy of
enforcers and their gear vanishing between two checkpoints .... Every day I
linger here, she thought, that’s another day of torment for Grey. But if
I rush around like a fool, what good does that do anyone? I need my cover, my
excuse to get the hell out. She glared up at the administration towers. Come
on, you, I’ve defied you, do something! Come at me. Give me an excuse to cut
out of here. I have to go slow, I have to be covered all the way, I have to
keep out of Kell’s trap, or all this is wasted. Grey’s wasted, I’m wasted, do I
have to kick you in the gut? Do something ....
Shadith’s second nineday. She has just finished a
performance, is getting ready to join the celebration of the Amun-Bar. The hiepler
pushes through the stirring crowd around her, stops in front of her, reads from
a paper that she is required to present herself in the court of the Impor
Melangg to defend herself against charges of heresy and suspect activity; if
she agrees to come with him and perform in the cathedral while she listens to
the wise and benign teachings of the doawai, the hearing will not be necessary.
“I have said to you I will not come behind walls.”
“If you refuse again, your chattels are subject to
confiscation. That instrument”—pointing at the harp—“your pet, the singing
beast”—pointing at Linfyar—“everything you own.” The hiepler stared at her,
face set, eyes hostile. “Perhaps we should take them now.” He lifted his hand.
“No.” She leaped to her feet, thrust Linfyar behind her.
“You will not.”
Before the hiepler could react, the crowd started pressing
in on him and his escort, a low angry growl coming from a thousand throats, a
thousand pairs of cold angry eyes fixed on him and his entourage.
He knew Dusters well enough to understand what was not said,
so he contented himself with the pronouncement that the church considered all
minor children without adult relatives, Pajungg or not, as wards of the state,
under its authority and protection. Then he swung around and stalked off, his
escort scrambling after him, losing a good portion of their dignity in the
speed with which they departed.
Shadith grinned and dropped back down, began a comic song
she’d translated into Avosinger Pajunggeesh, the tale of an extraordinarily
maladroit but lucky spaceman. With Linfyar whistling and clapping in
accompaniment, she sang the Saga of Jigalong Jon until well into the Amun-Bar,
the miners and their friends clapping and shouting out the refrain while she
caught her breath and got ready for the next verse.
That night, after supper, she took Perolat aside. “Whatever
you all do about this,” she said, “don’t do it for me but for yourselves. I
don’t want to seem ungrateful, but I just as much don’t want that kind of
responsibility on my head.” To herself she thought, All those years of
living in Lee’s head, some of her fussing has rubbed off on me. She tried
to mock herself into her usual easy glide through life, but she couldn’t manage
the trick anymore. “Don’t push too hard, you miners, you’ll drive the church
into crushing you. I’ve seen it happen before. I won’t be even a proximate
cause of such a disaster.’’
Smiling, Perolat drew the tips of long fingers across
Shadith’s brow. “Such a serious child. We keep our freedom day by day, act by
act. If we don’t exert ourselves now and then, we certainly will be swallowed
up. We don’t allow our friends or our own to be harassed within the bebamp’n.
Outside, you’re fair game to the predators. Remember that.”
“I will. If I leave, you’ll know I’ve gone freely and will
take the consequences.”
“May they be small and light. The blessing of Po’ Annutj on
you and your reason for coming here.”
“Pero ...”
“No, no, what we don’t know, we can’t spoil. You mean us no
harm, that’s good enough.”
“You’re sure of that?”
Perolat laughed. “Come back sometime when you’re not tied
into fancy games.”
Shadith watched her go back into the kitchen, shook her
head. “Loudmouth Forest,” she muttered to herself, and started walking back to
her cabin. Another day of singing to satisfy pride and make the Pajunggs
think I’m going to hang around defying them. Tomorrow night, late, steal a
flitter from the Flying Man and hit for the back country. Have to leave the
flitter’s price with Perolat; don’t mess your nest, she says. Umm, better leave
most of the take with her, she’ll keep it safe until I can pick it up, god
knows what thieves they’ve got out there. Damn you, Kell, I hope Aleytys takes
your skin off an inch at a time. This is a good place; why’d you have to ruin
it? Tjepa, you crazy little jinka, I’m going to miss our sessions. You’ve got a
gift, don’t waste it, make your mam find you another teacher. This is going to
get tricky. Wonder where I should head. Kotican? Don’t think so, spies there,
called the enforcers when the Ajin showed up. Still, he did show up. Cabin’s
dark. Linfy must be asleep already. Maybe Windsweep. Nice name. Hey you out
there, you in the forest, give me a clue, huh? Chuckling, she palmed open the
door.
Dull crunch ... exploding pain ... nothing ....
Shiburr On Gynnor
_files/image006.jpg)
Vrithian
WITNESS [1]
A MISTRESS IN SHIBURR
My name is Xanca. I am not young. I am not pretty. I have
found being neither pretty nor ugly something of an advantage. Rich men marry
beautiful women to show the world their virility and their power, then they
fill houses in back streets with women like me. I work hard to learn my
patron’s needs and satisfy them. Half the time he doesn’t know himself what he
wants. How stupid these powerful men can be. Yes, I have great contempt for all
my patrons. How ...oh, you can tell from the tone of my voice. Most days I am
more careful how I speak. It’s the puatar, I usually don’t indulge when I have
company, it makes me careless. Your company too, and the funeral. Yes, my last
longtime patron died. With what he left me and with what I’ve saved the past
years, I am finally free. Like the undying. I have seen how their women walk,
arrogant as any man, not even their own men ruling them. I want to walk like
that. Me. Xanca. Well, I won’t, I’m not foolish. Free to be myself but not that
free.
The undying. They rub the gloss off everything. One thing I
noticed, whatever my patron said, whatever he did not say, the undying were
always in his mind, the demon mistress in that dome up there on the mountain.
He boasted to me of his wife. The most beautiful woman in Chiudu, a frail
creature with the prized fire in her hair. A most unpleasant woman if I believed
what he said about her, and I did. Some of it. Pour me another drink from that
bottle; being honest like this is cold, like I was stripping myself bare in an
ice-wind. Where was I, oh yes. I believed some of it, though not like he wanted
me to. I believed his tales because in her place I would have done much the
same. There. You see? Isn’t that honest? Cold, greedy and arrogant. I used to
dream of being her after I had to spend a long time with him being soft and
submissive, using every trick I knew to make his flabby member hard, cooing at
him, lending a soft accepting ear to his whining. She was supposed to have
demon blood in her. Now and then the undying have taken women from Chiudu, but
I’ve never heard there was issue from any of those couplings. None of the women
came back with child, the few that did come back. Still, the brightheads are
rare enough among us to raise the possibility and they’ve played that card to
lift themselves high, oh yes.
He had another mistress, the one he showed off when he was
with the other big men in the city. A beautiful child, fourteen at most. He
showed me her photo. They envied him, those hungry greedy friends of his, that
was the point of his having her. She is truly quite lovely, being kept by one
of his closest friends now. He told me she was like a beautiful beast, soft of
skin, very alive, filled with an energy that exhausted him almost beyond
bearing. Except that she was always at him to buy her things, he said he
wouldn’t know she could speak, hadn’t an idea in her head. Animal. That’s what
he thought of her. I tell you he knew nothing. He understood nothing. Not me.
Not himself. He would change nothing in his life even though the way things
were made him ill. Killed him too, I suppose. He bragged to me once how he and
his friends had sniffed out and secretly executed every member of a plot to
sneak up the mountain and attack the demon mistress there, drive her and her
kind from Shiburr. He feared the undying, but that was not the reason he was so
adamant against the plotters. He feared more losing his place, his wealth, his
position, in the shaking out if the demon fell. If he could, he would not drive
the demon from the mountain. If he could. Hah!
You say if I know all these things, if I despise my patrons
so much, why do I submit? I survive, my friend. I live as I must. If you seek
to lay blame on me for the way I live, if you seek to shame me for growing
comfortable with the humiliations I have endured, then I say to you that you
are no different. If the demon on the hill says to you lick the dust off her
feet, you will fall on your belly and lick.
I have little more to say and your bottle is almost empty.
But there are those among us who try to cast off the foot of the demon, who
have tried before and will try again. Me? Don’t be stupid. You know what I am.
Who would trust me with such things? I speak of rumor and tales you hear in the
street, and out of my most secret dreams, no more. I dream and I wait, my
friend, I dream and I wait.
Vrithian
on the oblique file [2]
Willow ran along the edge of the lake, her long thin
dawn-shadow jerking and gesticulating like a stick parody of a person, her feet
kicking up flirts of rain-wet sand, pounding a rhythm up through her body to
the top of her head, her breath coming in easy pants. She ran through ragged
patches of shorebirds scratching about for grubs and worms, startling them into
raucous, whumping flight, hardly higher man her head before they settled back
behind her. A freshening breeze tickled the water into pointed, tight-packed
ripples that whispered to the sand beside her beating feet; armadas of kimkim
cousins twisted in dark funnels out over the shallow lake, their high singing
hum floating above the water noise; fish leaping for the kimkim cousins beat
the water into a continual boil under these dark tourbillons.
She joyed in the dawning, in the sheen of sweat on her skin,
the drive of her small body, in the smells around her, wet earth, rock and
sand, the clumps of cattails in the shallows, old stems and leaves rotting into
silt, the sweet-sweet-sweet yunyiun flowers growing where rocks sprayed into
the water, stiff white, pink and crimson stars on rope-wide spongy stems,
arrowpoint leaves as thick around them as spines on a nagri’s back. Rotten
fish, bird dung, wet feathers, rich strong smells she sucked in with the clean
clear morning air.
She stopped running when she saw dimpled sand ahead of her,
and began kicking it up, searching for kimkim grubs. Hyaroll provided ample
meals for his zoo, but Willow sometimes preferred to find her own breakfast. In
a way it was a reassurance that however much she’d lost to time and distance,
she could still keep herself. And sometimes she simply had a craving for the
kinds of food he would never think of providing. She found a heaping handful of
the grubs, rinsed them in the lake and strolled along, cracking their shells,
stripping out the plump white flesh and crunching it with relish between strong
square teeth. When she finished the grubs and brushed away the fragments of
shell, she kicked up a flake of stone and hacked out a long piece of tuber from
among the yunyiun plants. She washed off the tuber in the lake, scrubbing away
the silt, the fine white rootlets, the papery outer skin. When she was
satisfied, she moved a few paces down where the water was clear, knelt again,
drank deeply, washing away the aftertaste of the grubs and the last bits of
flesh stuck in her teeth. Then she got to her feet, shook off as much of the
water as she could, scowled at the sun, pale and remote as if it wasn’t ripe
enough to let the warmth loose.
Holding the tuber in her left hand, she began running back
the way she’d come. The sand was a little drier now and the edge was off her
enthusiasm, she didn’t push herself but loped easily along, the weight of the
tuber adding an odd tic she rather enjoyed into the rhythm of her going.
When she dried off and warmed up, she slowed to a walk, took
out the folding knife Hyaroll had given her and began peeling away the fibrous
inner bark of the tuber, working with meticulous care and the attention she
gave every physical act. Hand-thinking, Hyaroll called it in the long-ago times
when he still bothered to talk to his zoo. The pale tan skin came away in long
strips, exposing the creamy inside little by little. When she peeled away the
last strip, she started to toss it aside as she had the others, but checked her
hand, caught , by a sudden thought, stopped and stared at the length of skin.
Then she tucked it over her waistrope, winding it several times about the rope
to make sure it wouldn’t work loose, started walking again, slicing off slivers
of the sweet crisp tuber and eating them as she went back around the lake
toward the sheltered oval lawn where Sunchild and Bodri would meet her later in
the day.
She sat on the grass, passing the rootskin from hand to
hand, rolling it between her palms, chewing at it, gently, so she wouldn’t
break the fibers. By the time Bodri came poking along, she had separated out
most of the long tough hairs and was examining them with satisfaction,
regretting that she’d taken a less than active interest in the hodgepodge of
plants and trees Hyaroll had collected along with his mobile specimens and set
out where the whim had taken him, leaving them to the care of the ironheads and
the lizard people who lived here already. At her first waking she thought these
folk were more specimens in the zoo, but when she’d followed her need to know
the land and traveled to the edge of the dome, exploring along it until she
circled the park, she saw them all around outside, working in fields, passing
to and from a clutch of low houses just visible on the top of a hill some
distance away. Not specimens, just slaves for ol’ Stone Vryhh, who made them do
whatever he wanted.
“What are you fussing at now, Willow?” Bodri came stumping
around a bush, settled himself with a thump on the grass. She stared at him,
startled. He never called her by just her name without adding a bit of fond
embellishment. There were dead and yellowing leaves on the miniature bushes in
his back-garden, and a flowerstalk held several withered blooms, a sure sign he
had sunk, into one of his rare melancholies.
She held out her hand so he could see the fibers. “I gonna
make me a cord,” she said.
His mouth worked, settled into an almost smile, and some of
the dullness left his eyes. “A very short one.”
“Seein if I could. Seein if these’ll hang together.” She
began teasing the fibers with her thumbnail. “Old Stone Vryhh, he got poison
plants around here too?”
“Why?”
She shrugged, began rolling some of the fibers against her
thigh, twisting them into a thin tight thread. Fiber by fiber she added length
to the thread, holding it up now and then to see how well it was bonding
together, how tight the twist was, how firmly it was set. She continued
working, clicking her tongue in a work song, deeply satisfied with how her
experiment was turning out.
“A noose for old Vryhh?” Drawn out of his gloom, Bodri had
edged closer to her and was watching with an intentness he usually gave only to
his plants.
“Mmmp. Maybe. Maybe bowstring.”
“Ah.” He unfurled his antennae to their full length, waved
them in slow graceful arcs, curled them back again. “Better not say any more.”
Absently, still watching her, his tentacle arms came from under his shell and
the thin strong fingers at the end of each began to prod among the garden
rooted into his back, nipping off the dead leaves and gently stripping away the
withered flowers.
She watched that from the corner of her eyes as she rolled
and twisted, rolled and twisted, happy that she’d roused him from his sorrows.
Though she hadn’t expected much from them, seeing the fibers in the rootskin
had started her thinking and remembering. Hands going quiet, she looked full at
him, frowning a little, then turned her head to look over her shoulder at the
house rising behind the treetops. She finished adding the last of the fibers
and wound the thread about her left hand, feeling a strength in it that was
changing her mind about its possibilities. “Old Vryhh,” she said, “he like
watchin you me makin plots. Like my folk laugh and clap hands at a song-dance.
He won’t do nothin long as we workin. He tell hisself I stop the funny ol’
things come time they ready to take me.” She fiddled with the thread, feeling
the hard twists. Fishnet maybe if the water don’t loosen it too much.
Somethin to do, anyway. “I thinkin, “ she said, “all kind plants here. I
thinkin you know how makin them grow, maybe you know what ones make poison.
Otter, other men back-back when ...” She fluttered her hand in a broken wing
drift meant to say long-ago, far-away, lost to me, oh lost to me. “When rains
come, they hunt papkush and dofuffay. Dry time they sit around makin bow,
arrow, chippin stone for point. Little arrow. So big”—she held her hands about
the length of her forearm apart—“and dofuffay he make two Bodri, some left
over.” She laughed. “So women we boil kakoya root till it sticky glop in the
bottom of the pot, poosha for the arrow. Poosha not for killin but for makin
sleep. Dofuffay hit, he run and run, then he fall over.” She flicked her
fingers out and up like a beast rearing, then made her fingers legs that ran
and ran, then she slapped her hand flat on the grass. “Then the men blood him,
cut him up. I thinkin we make poosha for Old Stone Vryhh.”
“Be ready for you, now he’s heard you say it.” Willow
wrapped the ends of the cord about her thumbs and tugged sharply at it, grunted
as it cut into her flesh. “Let ‘im watch. Take a while to make poosha right,
try it on Vryhh-size beast. Then we figure somethin.” She canted her head,
grinned at him. “Sunchild and me, we makin one piece here one piece there, now
you make your piece, eh-huh?”
Vrithian
action on the periphery [2]
Amaiki came to the garden early that morning, riding her skimsled
from the small neat house in the workers’ quarter tucked up next to the
downcurve of the dome, a delicate lacertine figure standing on the small round
platform, five long long fingers (narrow crooked thumb tucked neatly under)
resting lightly on the squeeze controls at the ends of quarter-circle arcs
coming from a narrow column rising before her, a smooth pebbly skin, mottled
gray-green, long soft folds of loose skin draping gracefully about her neck and
along her sides, those delicate seductive vertical folds seen and not seen
through the openings between the front and back of the brown-black tabard she
wore, a tabard with no decoration but subtle patterns woven into the cloth,
patterns that shifted with each movement she made, each push of the wind
against the cloth, a silent music in the play of light and shadow.
She came to the garden early intending to work on the circle
of tazukli bushes, coaxing them to grow in the candalabrum form that gave
maximum scope for the flitter-blooms that were even now budding on the side
branches. It was sensitive, demanding work that the androids simply could not
do, requiring the deftness of Conoch’hi fingers and Conoch’hi aesthetic
intuition, it was work she liked, the kind of work she needed after the dreams
that plagued her last night; three times she dreamed of fire and death and each
time woke not knowing if what she’d heard the odd ones saying had seeded the
dreams in her or if they were tomorrow dreams. If her family were here, she’d
know, through the lots and the echoes. She thought of calling them to the
corn-kiosk near the workers’ quarter. I will tonight; maybe the
dreams won’t come again. She maneuvered the skimsled into a rough shed
built next to the wall of Hyaroll’s house, took the toolbag from the shelf at
the back of the shed and went walking slowly through the clean clear morning to
the tazukli ring.
After she’d been working for around half an hour, on her
knees before a single tazukli, softening the strongest branches, straightening
them, curling them up at the ends, painting on the porous hardener that would
hold in place the curves she wanted, she heard the pat of the little woman’s
feet, the tongue-clicking rhythm of her walking song. She was always singing or
dancing, even when she sat she danced, except when she was absorbed in some bit
of handwork. One of the odd ones, but not so odd as some. Amaiki finished the
shaping with the click song in her ears, lending her some of the happy calm of
the woman on the far side of the shrubbery, began carefully pinching off buds
the wrong shape or in the wrong place. Death and fire, a bad time coming for
the Conoch’hi, if her triply repeated dream was true, but one cone’s dream had
little validity, it took a consensus of family, then line, then the whole to
reach reliably into tomorrow, to send the whole acting as one. In the life
weave of her line mother, the patterning of the whole was rare, once twice no
more. A single dream was nothing, born perhaps of a bellyache, a quarrel with a
co-wife or the naish of the love group, of fears or shame or a thousand other
things. She kept telling herself that, her mind knew it was truth, but the cold
knot in her belly would not go away.
She moved on her knees to another tazukli, deliberately choosing
a bush near where the odd one sat on the other side of the bushes. She’d heard
the three talking here some days ago when she came to assess the tazukli and
see how ready these were for shaping. Now she both wished and feared hearing
more. Her pointed leaf-shaped ears shivered; there was a strain in her neck as
she worked with the bush, cutting away the side shoots and sealing the cuts
with the graft tool. The beetleman was right, the sunthing was right, Hyaroll
was sinking into a lethargy that threatened them all whether he died or not.
The year she left Shiosa the upland rain was late and thin; this winter and last,
there was no rain at all. Wells were drying up, especially close to the dome,
where Hyaroll’s pumps sucked away every spare drop. For the first time in
memory, for the first time noted in the life weaves of the upland Conoch’hi,
the Vryhh Hyaroll broke the Covenant and did not bring the winter rains. Her
folk were beginning to leave the land; whole villages would be emptying soon
when all their wells ran dry. The line mother of the Yumoru in Dum Ymori came
to the caller kiosk, but Hyaroll would not talk to her. Old Stone Vryhh, the
little woman had called him. She was right. Heard nothing, saw nothing, wanted
nothing. Last year and this, Naish Ha-erdai, speaker of the fifteen, went to
him at the double full of the moons, saying it is in the covenant, O Vryhh,
give us rain or let us go. No rain came. They could not go. Amaiki tended the
tazukli with gentle care, listening to the exchange between the odd folk,
hearing the seriousness behind the words. With Hyaroll watching over their
shoulders they were going on with their preparations to attack him, working
slowly, meticulously, feeling their way along toward their final plan, knowing
it might be futile because nothing they could do would be secret from him, Old
Stone Vryhh watching their twists and turns with a rusty amusement, letting
them go on because their energetic activity filled the emptiness in him.
Amaiki let her hand fall onto her thighs as anger flushed
through her; the tazukli had not harmed her, though it was taking water that
her people needed. She closed her eyes and sat very still until her trembling
stopped. Though the beetleman and the little woman continued to talk, chewing
over what they’d said already, she no longer listened, concentrating all her
attention on the tazukli, working calmly, steadily; she had to finish what
she’d begun or harm the plant, and she would not do that; she curbed her impatience,
shut a mind-door on frustration and shaped the plant to the pattern in her
mind, sealing the cuts, stabilizing the curves, pinching away buds growing in
the wrong places. Again she dropped her hands on her thighs, closed her eyes.
Again she trembled all over as the rigid controls came off her emotions; rage
and fear flashed through her, strangling her, shaking her until she thought she
was going to fly to bits. She dropped her head onto her knees, whimpering
softly, until the spasm passed. She stayed folded up like that for several
breaths, then straightened her back in time to see a patch of golden light
slipping behind the trees, Sunchild joining his companions, whose voices still
sounded beyond the leafy screen. For a moment she thought of listening to see
if this creature would have anything to add, then she shook her head; no point
in it. Besides, she wanted rather desperately to reach out to her family, to
feel the gentle soothing mind-touch of the naish Se-passhi, who was their
far-speaker and the tie that bound each to each and all to all. Moving with
silence and precision, she collected her tools, cleaned them, inspected them,
then set them neatly back into their loops in the bag. She knelt listening a
moment to the noisy argument between the three odd ones, smiling, thinking that
they’d given over caring anything about what they said or who heard them,
knowing that he heard everything. They were trying to find a way to trap
Hyaroll, each punching holes in the plots of the others, everyone getting
nowhere. She stood, looked around at the ring of tazukli, the two plants shaped
stark and elegant next to the fussy prolixity of the others, a sigh her sole
farewell to a project that would have given her much pleasure.
Amaiki sat on the hykaros jewel rug, a gift from one of her
mothers, meant to help her feel back into family warmth while she was exiled
inside the dome. It made it easier for her to reach out to the far-speaker of
her own mate-meld. She crossed her legs at the ankle and looked slowly around
at the room with its muted earth colors, the intricately knotted grass mats,
the cushions, their covers weaving of her own and gifts from Kimpri, the panels
carved in low relief that Kimpri and Keran had made, the bubble glass in the
round windows, the scattered lamps, no two alike, giving off a soft golden
glow, making as many shadows as patches of light, perfuming the room with their
scented oils. It was becoming her place finally, after nearly two years of
nesting there. She sighed, closed her eyes. One by one, she brought the faces
of her mate-meld to her mind, dwelt lovingly on each: Keran, long and narrow,
eyes like amber fire, tinkerer extraordinary, builder of anything; Betaki,
round and chubby, sleepy-eyed and sensual, nurse and nurturer; Muri, tiny but
strong, fast enough to catch lightning on the leap, handler of the family
finances; Kimpri, dreamy and intense, a shaper of form and texture, weaver and
carver; Se-passhi, tinier even than Muri, the naish of the meld, deeply loving,
the bond in flesh.
Se-passhi touched her, folded round her, drawing in the
others, she knew them, whispered their names, felt behind them the ghost
touches of the hatchlings, one two three four—four?—a new hatchling, she poured
out her joy to them, absorbed their joy ... she sighed and opened her sorrow to
them and her need .... “Come,” she whispered, “come to me, I need to speak to
you ....” Whispering the words knowing what they received was not exactly words
.... “Come, I need you, I need you all ....” Se-passhi’s whisper came to her,
not words exactly, but when the murmuring was done, she knew with certainty
that the mate-meld would be at the corn-kiosk two days from this at noon, knew
also that they needed to see her almost as urgently as she needed them ... she
sent them love and a sigh of loneliness, caught the return then felt the
touches fade, felt the ache of loss that never lessened.
She opened her eyes, sighed again, her need for them as
strong as it was on the first days in the dome. More than three years of duty
left before she could hold them and be held. She drew her knees up, draped her
arms over them, rested her head on her arms. Two days. I will see them and
hear them. Can’t touch them, but at least I’ll hear their voices, see their
faces. Two days. How can I wait? Two days. She closed her eyes and let the
longing take her and pass away, sitting on the silky rug until she was empty
and calm again. Then she got to her feet and went into the small kitchen to fix
her evening meal.
The Island Chain Suling Laller
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Vrithian
WITNESS [2]
THE BLINDNESS OF TRUTH IN SULING LALLER
My name is Binaram Kay. Please, it is the only thing my own.
I am a reader of truth, rather what someone thinks is truth, this is the curse born
in me, yes, curse. You are skeptical, that is easily read, you think this is a
great power, to know when others are truly saying what they feel or lying to
you, I tell you there are as many reasons for lies as there are lies, no I am
wrong, at least twice as many reasons, and many of them are kind, many of them
come from a need to defend oneself from someone more powerful, someone who can
hurt mind or body. I am old, this is a thing I have come to understand after
many trials, many mistakes that hurt more than me. Blind? Yes. Not born blind.
I was just discovering the pleasures of babbling about anything and everything,
just able to run without tripping over my own feet, able to climb on things
without help, but not old enough to understand discretion, that lying by silence.
My mother was beginning to suspect my curse and tried to teach me to keep quiet
in the presence of my elders. Ah yes, I have to admit she had little success in
this, Juntar was a small village in the mountain spine of Rabikka and every
third person was an uncle, aunt or cousin. But you know the truth of this, some
cousins are closer than others. I made the mistake of telling a cousin he lied
when he denied sleeping with another cousin and getting her pregnant, then
proving it with the truth that lay behind his face. Therissa’s men came for me
that night and took me to Obbatar. They tested me for days. After the first few
days I began to enjoy all the attention. I knew they were truly interested in
me, I was petted and cosseted and let show off
in ways I found very pleasing, I was much too young to understand
what lay behind that interest. Ah well, I cried myself to sleep often enough
from missing my mother and my goat and my brothers and sisters, my uncles and
aunts and cousins, and everything I’d known in my short life, but that too
happened more and more rarely as I settled in to life at the Center. After
three months of testing they put me to sleep and gently blinded me to be sure I
wasn’t merely a muscle reader. Therissa was not interested in those. Oh it was
done quite painlessly and humanely, if that word can be used about such a
procedure, I was anesthetized and the optic nerve surgically severed, I was
kept half unconscious till the wounds healed. I can remember no pain, but you
must see I am very far from that child. Therissa? No, I’ve never met her. Of
course I have not, think about it, my friend. Are you truly comfortable this
close to me? Yes, I mean you to ask yourself that question knowing I don’t need
the answer. You see the value of a lie? If I had kept silent, you wouldn’t feel
this uneasiness. So you understand why she doesn’t come near her pets, only
watches us. Yes, yes, I am blind, but there are things I don’t need eyes to
know. Pets? Yes. What else are we? Kept in luxury. Look about you. Is not this
a pleasant world for an ancient blind man? How delicately they decorate for us,
such marvelous textures, such intricate but undemanding sounds, the falling water,
the wind chimes, the rock hollows that sing in storms and are silent when the
wind is gone. Close your eyes and use your ears, your fingers, and find how
pleasantly we are housed. Kept in luxury and bred at our keeper’s command. As
soon as I reached puberty they started bringing women to me. It’s quite
laughable how gullible I was then. I was far from the first truth-reader Therissa
put in her zoo; she knew better than to send the women unprepared. They loved
me passionately, all of them, I read the truth of that and responded, how could
I not? Each time one of them became pregnant, she was taken away and replaced
by another equally in love with me. How many children? I have no idea. After
the first dozen or so were removed, the wrench of parting became too painful,
so I stopped trying to see them with my fingers, stopped trying to keep the
voices straight, stopped learning their names, they were shadows, vessels of my
pleasure, they came and went like shadows. And after a while even that became
too painful, my body rebelled and would no longer perform the act. Ah well,
that too was a long time ago. My duties? Simple enough. A good watchdog
sniffing out weaknesses in my owner’s defenses, bringing her profit from
renting me out. Do two merchants conclude their deals, I am there to assure
both that both intend to live up to the bargain. Is there a question of theft
or wrongful death, then I am there to read the truth behind the faces. Is there
trouble on any of the sablas, I am led through the streets, my nose twitching,
to point out the plotters. No more. These old legs have too little spring in
them. But there are many to take my place, my own sons and daughters among
them. How many? Look about you. This place grows every year. Why? I have
thought about that often these past years. A whim. Nothing more than that.
Something to pass the endless years. And when she is finally bored with us, no
more velvet mosses and wind chimes, no more fine wines and fine food, no more
shelter from the malice of those whose lies we’ve ripped apart. A whim. A
playtoy to pass the time. That’s what we are, my friend. And all I can hope is
that I die before Therissa’s interest does.
Vrithian
opening moves in the primary attack
Shareem clicked her fingernail against the glass of the
screen. “That’s Loppen, that crab-shaped island there. The Mesochthon is on the
south coast, by the bay that’s rather like an old-time keyhole. Middleground.
Only spot on Vrithian where Vrya can meet without worrying that one will try to
kill the other.”
Aleytys glanced at the screen, but she was more interested
in watching Shareem. Her mother was babbling, throwing out snippets of
information as if they were chunks of meat churning to the surface of the stew
in her head. During the fifteen days out from Wolff, she’d been calm and sure
of herself, showing off her ship, reminiscing about the happier times in her
past, but as soon as she saw the gas cloud around Vrithian, she started getting
jittery about their reception. Aleytys listened to her with a sudden intense
surge of affection. Shareem clearly preferred not to look ahead more than she
absolutely had to, yet against her nature she had worked long and hard to set
up the arrangements that were giving her fits right now, forcing her to confront
anxieties she’d refused to think about before.
The lander circled down through the thin scumble of clouds
toward a force dome like a dewdrop shimmering on the chalk cliffs above the
water. Aleytys watched the ground come surging closer and was herself uneasy
about what waited down there. She’d tried schooling herself to expect very
little. Ibex had taught her about the grubbiness and trivia that could lie
beneath the golden glow of myth; Shareem’s jitters were wiping out any
lingering hopes she might find a home here.
Home. She thought of her house on Wolff, then of Grey. What
am I doing here, not ... no, I won’t think about that. She tightened her
lips in a brief unhappy smile. Shareem’s daughter. Oh yes.
The dome flickered. The lander passed smoothly through, settling
on a white ceramic target that looked absurdly like a giant porcelain dinner
plate laid carelessly on the grass.
A gleaming white tube snaked from the gleaming white cube
whose polished faces (two hundred meters on a side) were opaline with pale
images of everything around them, even the clouds flowing raggedly by overhead.
From the exterior sensors, a soft sucking sound, the tube mouth fastening over
the lock.
Shareem straightened her back. For a moment she looked
bleak. Then she stood, shook herself, pasted a smile on her face, willed a
gleam into her eyes and in a breath or two was the feckless ebullient creature
she showed to Head and Shadith, though never to Aleytys. “Come on, Lee,” she
said, laughing. “Time to meet your loving kin.”
A cavernous room. All white and black. All shape and springing
form, arch on arch, falls of frozen white laces, twists of thready black lace,
breaking the interior cube into irregular space. Spare white chairs scattered
on an asymmetric spiral of black and white tiles. Elegant backdrop for what
Aleytys saw at first as a horde of identical faces and forms, the same shade of
red hair, the same translucent pallor, the same green stares. A fantasy fugue
of peacock colors in their robes and tunics and trousers, this single difference
emphasizing how alike they were, male and female, sibling and non.
All those pale faces turned toward her. Some scowling and
hostile, others blank, waiting. No sign of welcome, no acceptance there.
As Aleytys followed Shareem into that intimidating silence,
the sense of clotted numbers dissipated. Maybe fifty Vrya, no more than sixty.
Her kind, all right, though her skin was shades darker, her eyes bluer. She
lifted the corner of her mouth in a half-smile, mocking the dreams and hopes
that had lingered after all in spite of her deliberate lowering of expectation,
stared back at them with those bluer eyes, throwing a silent challenge into
their silences.
The Vrya turned away as she moved passed them, took up the
conversations interrupted by her arrival. She caught snatches as she walked
behind Shareem.
“... local shamans had a witch-smelling last week. Nallis
and I got together and played a joke on them, dumped a load of phosphors on the
head boneshaker, he was getting uppity anyway, you should have seen it, how
they turned on him and ...”
“... Dromms crowned a new king. Went, of course, can’t let
them think they can do that sort of thing without one of us. Tedious, you don’t
know ...”
“... there was this idiot preaching against us all up and
down The Sheng, and believe it or not he was starting to get a following;
turned him into a torch, that stopped ...”
“... the Fospori they’ve developed this marvelous batik
process, it takes an age to make a meter square of it, I’ve set a couple thousand
working on ...”
“... Poyeska, Zeia and I, we came out of the clouds over a
shevorate herd, startled them, should have seen those idiot beasts run, went
for stadia without stopping, trampled a plavine camp, turned it into mush ...”
“... boring, Lally, you wouldn’t believe how boring my
Vrithli are, lumps that grunt at you, I tried to get them working on something
simple as woodcarving but they ...” Shareem stopped at the elbow of a man who
looked appreciably older than the rest of the Vrya. He was a head taller than
most, with heavy shoulders, powerful arms and legs, a lined, ravaged face,
expressionless now except for a hint of impatience as he listened to a woman
with a fanatical intensity to face, eyes, voice.
“... you must admit, Har, my breeding programs are more effective
than your neglect. What have you produced in your orpetzh but a vague sort of
foreseeing that takes statistical analysis of large samples to produce anything
reliable? Now I’ve got six lines of truth-readers and ten of dowsers and three
PK specials, though I have to admit I’ve got inbreeding problems with the PK
bunch, but I’ve had the last cadre of infants collected, put my best surgeons
to work on them. Thing is, gensurgery is such a chancy thing and the talent is
so elusive and androids are so limited. Har, I wonder if you ...”
“No.” He turned so abruptly he brushed into Shareem, shoving
her into a stagger backward. He caught her arm, held her up until she had her
balance again, then looked beyond her at Aleytys, his eyes intent, momentarily
bright with interest. The brightness dulled again in a breath or two. “Chasing
dreams,” he said, dismissal in his hoarse voice. “You’re a fool to come here,
girl. Give me your hand so I can play my fool’s part in this.”
He took her hand, bowed over it, straightened, spoke loudly.
“Welcome to Vrithian, granddaughter. So that you have a seat here, Synkatta’s
dome and domain is yours, my gift. The transfer is logged, Synkatta’s androids
and Vrithli await your arrival.” He dropped her hand, muttered, “Much good it’ll
do you, but I’ve kept watch there, purged the place for you. Kell and his herd
can’t get past my security. Call me when you’re ready to move in. My advice, if
you want it, is to get out and don’t come back. It’s a trap, girl, and the
bait’s not worth a handful of shit.” He stalked away before she could get a
word out, leaving her with her mouth hanging open, feeling foolish.
“Well, that went better than I expected.” Shareem sounded almost
complacent.
“Better!”
Shareem fluttered a hand. “Listen, Lee, he never bothered to
acknowledge me as his daughter even after he took me in, but look what he’s
doing for an offworld brat.”
“Reem ...”
“Oh, I don’t mind. He was fond of me before he got so
strange, he helped me when I needed help ... never mind, we shouldn’t talk
about such things here. Come, let’s get the rest of this over with.”
They wound through silent staring Vrya toward another corner
of the room, moving in a cold and hostile atmosphere meant to be intimidating;
it only made Aleytys angry enough to burn away any trepidation she’d been
feeling. She no longer cared whether these people accepted her or not; she’d
get her birthright confirmed, deal with Kell, then do what she wanted, Aschla
take the lot of them. Well, not Shareem. She smiled at her mother’s back.
Filiannis waited near the wall, seated in one of the
free-form chairs, a pair of identical Vrya silent at her shoulders. The twins
watched her quietly, their faces impassive, lowering their eyes as she came
closer. Don’t they realize they reek hostility and jealousy? Aleytys
wondered suddenly whether any of the fifty or so swirling around her ever
connected in any way less superficial than casual sex. The predators she’d come
across in the roundabout course that brought her here—deadly little Joran; wonder
what made me think of him?—the scavs on Nowhere, assorted company reps,
whatever, all of them had about as much feeling for others as a pack of hungry
silvercoats, yet even they knew more about reading nonverbal clues than this
bunch. She examined the twins thoughtfully. Her mother’s hand dropped onto her
arm. “Don’t say anything about them,” Shareem whispered. “Don’t talk to them,
don’t even seem to see them. They’re clones. Not very successful ones,
short-lives, limited minds, she just does them over when they fade.” Aleytys
nodded; I’ve seen worse, she told herself. Shareem smiled. “We’ll talk
later.”
Filiannis the poet, or so Shareem said. Hadn’t written
anything new for centuries. But I could have missed something, she admitted,
seeing her as I did only every hundred years or so. And I’ve never been much
interested in poetry anyway.
Filiannis leaned forward with considerable eagerness as
Shareem and Aleytys stopped in front of her. She didn’t wait for Shareem to
speak, but stood and held out her hand. When Aleytys clasped it, Filiannis said
(speaking so fast she was almost jabbering): “Welcome to Vrithian, Vryhh
daughter, Vryhh born to the Vrya.” Her hand was dry and smooth; the skin felt
like fine paper. She dropped back onto the chair, the twins retreating to stand
once more at her shoulders. Aleytys found herself thinking of them as children
in spite of their developed forms; they had an unfinished feel to them as if
they weren’t whole persons. Unsuccessful clones and aware of it, forced to stand
before her, the whole-person Vryhh-daughter they could never be. She fought
back a sharp stab of anger; it was unnecessarily cruel to create these
half-persons, even crueler to bring them here.
Shareem glanced at her, stepped quickly forward. “Hello, Filiannis.
Fia and Lia are looking especially well today. The blue suits them.” Aleytys
was startled and annoyed to find Shareem doing what she’d forbidden Aleytys to
do. I’m still an outsider until this business is over, she thought.
Filiannis smiled, but the energy with which she’d greeted
Aleytys was draining out of her. “They are well. We are well. Your absence this
time was short, Reem.”
“I had a good reason for returning.” She put her hand on
Aleytys’s shoulder.
Filiannis looked vague, then alert again. “Ah yes.” She
turned to Aleytys. “Yes. Karos and Agriotis were here a year or two ago. They
told us some exciting tales about your adventures, Vryhh-daughter.”
“Rumor, anassa. Don’t believe all you hear.” Aleytys lifted
a hand, let it fall. “Most of the time I was hungry, filthy, confused, bored
and frightened half to death. It wasn’t anything like exciting.”
“No. No.” Filiannis closed a hand about Aleytys’s arm,
closed it so tightly her nails cut into Aleytys’s skin, a naked greed in her
face and voice that astonished and repelled Aleytys. As if the Vryhh woman was
a leech getting ready to suck her dry. She stood without moving, waiting for
the woman to collect herself. “No.” Filiannis straightened out her fingers, letting
go of the arm, and with the falling hand seemed to lose most of her energy. She
stared past Aleytys at something, perhaps only a fragment of some ancient
memory, or a brush of suddenly recalled emotion. Her crumpled lips stretched
slightly; she turned her head, seemed startled to see Aleytys and Shareem still
near her. “You come and visit me, Vryhh-daughter, you be sure and do that.”
“Yes of course, thank you, anassa.”
Filiannis got to her feet. “My dome’s in Beyinne. Shareem
can tell you how to find it.” She walked off with Fia and Lia trailing silently
behind.
A cold knot in her stomach, Aleytys watched her walk off. Filiannis
looked almost as young as Shareem, time had left her shell intact, but the
inside was rotted out. When Shareem had told her of the suicides that thinned
Vrya numbers, Aleytys hadn’t understood, in a sense hadn’t quite believed her,
but she began to understand them now. If chance or nature didn’t kill her
first, she promised herself as she watched Filiannis vanish among the other
Vrya, if she ever came to such emptiness, she’d dive her ship into the nearest
sun. She turned to Shareem, started to say something. “Not here,” Shareem said.
Aleytys looked around, sighed.
Hrigis was another ancient spirit within a preserved shell,
the youthful elasticity of her body wrapped oddly about the ancient spirit
sitting like a shriveled nutmeat inside it. Though Hrigis was brighter and
sharper, more energetic than Filiannis, her green Vryhh eyes had all the warmth
and welcome of polished jade; perhaps she’d used up her whole store of emotion
so long ago she couldn’t even remember how feeling felt. Her voice was a rather
musical soprano, practiced and precise, counterfeiting the life she lacked.
“Welcome to Vrithian, Aleytys Shareem’s daughter, daughter of the line of
Tennanth, kin and kind.” She took Aleytys’s hand briefly, dropped it. “Go
warily, Aleytys, you have enemies here. Once Kell issues his challenge and you
leave the Mesochthon, you’ll be a target. I expect he’ll show up as soon as
this tedious little ceremony is completed. Do be careful. You’re more interesting
and I’m sure far pleasanter to have about than he is.”
Shareem caught hold of Aleytys’s arm and led her away. Her
hand was shaking; she looked frightened. “I thought we’d have more time,” she
murmured, “I should have known someone would get word to him I was bringing
you.”
“It had to come sooner or later,” Aleytys said quietly.
“Better now while we’re expecting him. Besides, it gets him away from Grey and
Shadith.”
“You don’t know what you’re talking about. At least he can’t
attack you until he announces his challenge, but I thought we’d have more time
to get dug in before he got here.” She pulled her hand down her face, wiping
away the worry with it, the effort concealed behind the smile evident in the
rigid set of her shoulders.
Aleytys looked around. “We’re more than slightly outnumbered.”
Shareem sniffed. “These? They’re terrific when they’re
beating up on unarmed Vrithli, but show them a real fight and they’ll dive for
cover.”
“Even mice are bad when they’ve got numbers on their side.”
“They won’t touch either of us here. Now shut up, one more
to go.” She raised up on her toes. “Right, follow me.”
Loguisse was the last of the Tetrad, the same mix of age and
youth, she was smaller than the other two women, with sharp but delicate
features, and (according to Shareem) a tendency to retreat into the intricacies
of her own mind. She was a mathematician working in realms so esoteric no one
else on Vrithian could come close to understanding what she did. Unlike the
other three Tetrarchs, she continued to work in her field, even left Vrithian
to attend conferences with other mathematicians. She maintained a steady
contact with a web of her peers across known space, using Ibex as a transfer
node for com-calls, since she could not speak directly from Vrithian without
revealing its location, something she was not about to do. Of the four
Tetrarchs, Loguisse was the one most fully committed to accepting her. Among
other reasons, she preferred Aleytys to Kell because he was too turbulent and
too unpredictable, too apt to destroy Vrithian and all the Vrya in his attempt
to fill the holes in his soul. Her hand was cool and dry, her fingerbones like
birdbones; they felt so fragile Aleytys was afraid of crushing them and glad
when Loguisse took her hand back. “Welcome, Aleytys Atennanthan, daughter of
Vrithian.” She smiled a little vaguely, then drifted away.
“Well, that’s it, Lee. You’re now a Vryhh of Vrithian.”
“Any reason to stay here longer? If I’m the excuse for this
party, I’m certainly not its shining light.”
“Let’s find Hyaroll and get him to let us in Synkatta’s.
Forget this bunch. I didn’t expect much from them, though I did hope Aglao and
Ruth and a couple others would be here.
They sort of promised ...” She looked around. “And Rodyom,
rats gnaw his toes, he probably forgot what century he’s in.” She wrinkled her
nose. “That’s one thing you’re going to have to live with, Lee—the best of us
isn’t all that reliable when it conies to remembering engagements.”
Aleytys chuckled. “Poor Mama—stood up by how many?”
“Hah, respect for your elders, child.” She began scanning
the crowd for the massive figure of the Tetrarch; with his size and width he
should have been easy enough to locate, but there was no sign of him. Absently,
Shareem said, “I didn’t want to give you a total disgust of your kind; I
thought I’d pull in some of the Strays, add some flavor to the mix.” She chewed
on a knuckle a moment, then started moving. “Help me find him, Lee. We’ve got
to get you installed in your new property.”
Aleytys followed her mother as she went quickly from divider
to divider, circling the huge room in her search, growing more and more anxious
as it became clear that Hyaroll had already left. “I didn’t expect a house
given to me,” she said. “Thought I’d have to buy one. As on Wolff.”
“Har’s head of Tennanth-line, Lee. Never mind what Kell told
you. Synkatta’s dome came to him when Kata climbed onto his funeral pyre and
lit the match. Hyaroll shut it down. Wasn’t anyone around he liked well enough
to bestow it on. Damn his thick head, he’s left us floating.”
“Well, well, it’s mud-face. So you squirmed your way here.”
Aleytys turned slowly, trying to control the surge of fear
and anger that shook her when she heard that deep fluid voice, a voice she’d
heard only the one time waking, a thousand times since in nightmare.
He was still thin, but it was a healthy leanness, not the
papery skin over chalk bones she’d seen on Sunguralingu. When she cured him of
the disease that was eating his life. His smile became a grimace as she took
her time examining him, that assessing gaze reminding him too vividly what he’d
been and what she’d done. She felt the fever in him, the need to wipe away the
memory of his weakness, but she wasn’t ready to deal with his rage. Or her own.
Not yet.
“As you see,” she said temperately. She heard Shareem’s
breath catch, felt her mother’s fingers closing warm on her shoulder; she
covered the hand with her own, grateful for the silent support.
“Mud,” he said, snapped his mouth shut. A moment’s tense silence.
“Look at that, all of you.” His voice was hoarse, slipping out of his control;
again he clamped his mouth shut. Another silence. Soft scuffle of feet as the
Vrya came closer. “Look at what you want to call Vryhh. Wash it till the sun’s
a cinder, you won’t get it white.” Another exploding silence. “I will not, I
will not have that slime call itself Vryhh. I will not.” Silence. “To
the death, Mud.” Silence. “I declare war between us. I declare that you and any
who try to help you, Mud, will die at the hands of me and mine.”
Aleytys sucked in a breath, let it out. “To the death,
cousin,” she said quietly, flatly.
His face went taut, his head back; she thought he was going
to explode and attack her, but he swung around and strode away, vanishing into
the nearest exit.
For several breaths after he left, there was total silence,
then a murmur of comment growing louder and more excited as the room began to
clear.
Aleytys felt chilled to the bone, anger gone ash inside her;
she was suddenly tired to death of all this, the sheer stupidity of it like
stones crushing her. “Looks like the party’s over.”
“I knew it would be bad, but he’s ...”
“He is that.”
Shareem opened her mouth, closed it, looked helplessly
around.
Aleytys moved her shoulders, shook her arms, straightened
her back. “What comes next? What do I do?”
“The ship, I suppose.” Shareem took a few steps toward an
exit, hesitated, came back. “My dome’s in Guldafel, but ... there’s almost
nothing, no defenses ... couldn’t stop a hungry mouse ... I’m almost never
there. I thought ... I don’t know ... I thought Hyaroll might take us in. But
that’s ... he’s not here. I’m sorry, Lee.”
“He gave me Synkatta’s dome. Why not go there?”
“We can’t get in until he unpeels it for us. That
maggot-head, what good does it do to give you the place if he doesn’t ...”
“I’ll put you up until you can get old Stone Ear’s
attention.” Loguisse. She’d come up behind them shadow-silent. “He’ll talk to
me most times even when he shuts out everyone else. I wouldn’t mind guests for
a few days, and Kell knows better than to worm about in my domain.
Besides”—eyes alight with silent laugher—“my androids will love having someone
to do for. They complain I need so little that half their circuits are rotting
from disuse.” She strolled away, leaving them to follow if they wanted.
Shareem brightened and started after her. “Thank whatever
gods there are, Lee, we’ll make it through the next two three days.” She was
almost dancing, her spirits soaring out of the mucky swamp they’d been plodding
through for the past several minutes. Aleytys followed, smiling, unable to
resist her mother’s pleasure. They stepped into the tunnel a pace or two behind
Loguisse.
“I’ve forgotten too much, Lee, tried to forget it, I
suppose. I’ll do better after this, I promise.”
“Forget that too. We should talk soon. I need to know how
this war works. What about the lander?”
“Best to leave it right here. He’s probably got in and
trapped it already.”
“But you said ...”
“Huh? Oh. The Mesochthon truce ground is just the hall
floor.”
“Aschla’s hells.” Aleytys caught hold of Shareem’s arm and
threw her back down the tube, ran ahead, flung a startled Loguisse after
Shareem. “Harskari,” she cried, “help me.”
The amber eyes come open and alert.
A weight about her head. The diadem begins chiming.
The air thickens about her.
A few steps ahead the floor cracks open; pieces
of the tube start to fly up and out, then they slow, freeze in place.
She struggles against the intractable weight of the air,
kneels and pushes the pieces of the floor aside; they resist her briefly, but
her strength is augmented in this state. She reaches into the hole, gets her
hands around the bomb, a black egg with narrow jagged cracks in the heavy
casing, the heat inside glowing a murky red. The bomb is small, about the size
of her two fists, but its mass almost defeats her. With Harskari urging her to
a cautious haste, she manages to pry the bomb loose and stagger to her feet,
cradling it against her stomach.
She lurches along an endless white tunnel until, with a
relief that almost undoes her, she sees daylight ahead and the green of grass.
Kell or his minions had pried the tube loose from the airlock when they
introduced the bomb. Wondering how she is going to dispose of it, she staggers
into the sunlight, Harskari warning her she is running out of time and
strength. She keeps moving. Past the landing saucer. Across the grass. She
bumps into something that feels like the skin on old gelatin, pops through it,
realizes that the skin must be the force dome. She slows, stops, remembering
that the dome is very close to the cliff edge. She blinks the blurring sweat
out of her eyes and finds that the third step on would have been a very long
one indeed.
Throw it,* Harskari says. *I can hold the stasis a few minutes
longer.*
Arms shaking, she takes another step and heaves the bomb
over the cliff edge, wheels and races for the dome, pops through it a breath
before Harskari lets go. The explosion finishes itself partway down the cliff
but is shunted away from her and the others by the force dome.
Feeling like a watery pudding, she crashed to her knees and
gasped in mouthfuls of shivering air.
Shareem came running to her, Loguisse following more sedately.
Aleytys looked up, smiled wearily at her mother. “I wish
you’d mentioned a bit earlier that the neutral ground stopped at the hall’s
edge.”
“What a thing ...” Shareem pulled Aleytys onto her feet.
“You look whipped.” She steadied Aleytys, pulled her daughter’s arm around her
shoulders and started walking with her toward Loguisse’s flier. “What did you
do?”
“Time for that later.” Loguisse’s cool, calm voice. She moved
past them, stepped onto the landing saucer. “You live up to your reputation.
Hunter.” She touched the lock. Over her shoulder, she said, “Wait there a minute.”
Aleytys clasped her hands behind her head, swayed back and
forth, stretching her muscles, feeling a treacherous euphoria flooding her.
She’d just been a hairline away from death. Cloud shadows swam in lyrical
silence across the shining white face of the cube, but nothing else moved,
there wasn’t a stray sound. “I’d have thought there’d be more fuss, Reem. A
bomb just exploded, but no one seems to have noticed that.”
“Oh, they did. They went the other way fast.”
“That’s how it’s going to be?”
“Till this is over.”
“Mmm. Why pick this tube?”
“Chance, maybe; or they mined all the tubes and only touched
off the one you went into. Does it matter?”
“I suppose not.”
Loguisse reappeared in the lock. “Come in now.”
Water from horizon to horizon, bright glittering blue, small
tight bumpy wrinkles packed close like pleats in a fan.
Three black midges come leaping at them from three directions.
Loguisse does nothing. They sizzle and phutt out before they come near the
flier. Other fliers dip in and out of clouds, so far away they are guesses on
the viewscreen; they don’t try to get closer. More missiles. Loguisse sits
quietly before the console, a bored look on her still face; the flier handles
whatever is thrown at it; nothing comes close enough to shake the air about
them.
As soon at the flier moved over the land, Loguisse woke from
her dream; a slight smile on her face, she bent over the console, reading the
flood of data, responding with a swift dance of her fingers over the sensor
panel. Apparently she guarded her domain as rightly as her dome. The flier
lifted, dropped, turned in a complex saraband across the dry harsh land of
Yashouk.
Loguisse’s dome was in the high uplands of Yashouk, in bleak
but austerely beautiful canyonlands. Wind-sculpted stone and narrow tortuous
canyons with water glinting silver at the bottom of a few. The dome spread over
the whole of a broad mesa whose precipitous walls were being gradually eaten
away by wind and water and time. Loguisse had lived there most of her ten thousand
years; in another ten thousand she might have to move if she didn’t do
something to stop that infinitesimal erosion.
The flier hovered over the dome while she did a final
glissade over the sensors, then it dropped slowly, merged with the dome,
dropped further into a hole uncovered as a pool slid to one side, dropped down
and down the stone shaft, falling into thick darkness, down and down until it
feathered to a halt in a vast cavern deep inside the mesa. Light bloomed about
them as it settled onto an oval platform some meters above the stone floor.
Loguisse spoke a single word. “Krasis.” Without bothering
with explanation or instruction, she swung her chair around, stood and walked
toward the lock, which opened smoothly as she approached, stayed open behind
her. She stepped onto nothing with a calm assurance that was immediately
justified as a white ceramic disk materialized under her feet and began
lowering her to the floor of the cavern. Rather impressed, Aleytys smiled and
relaxed. Kell hadn’t a hope of getting in here. A step ahead of Shareem she
went to stand in the lock, watching what was happening below.
As Loguisse drifted downward, a tall golden metal man came
with feline grace from a side tunnel and stood waiting. Another of the
fantastic androids of Vrithian. It was delighted to have its mistress back, she
could feel that—but how could a thing of circuits and crystals feel so
intensely about anything, how could it feel at all?
Loguisse stepped off the disk and sent it back to the lock
with a flutter of her fingers. “Kell,” she said. “You know his tricks. Keep him
out.” The android walked away, vanishing into the darkness from which it had
come.
Shareem brushed past Aleytys and stepped onto the disk, letting
it take her down. Aleytys gazed after the android, puzzled by the relationship
between Loguisse and her constructs. She certainly didn’t fuss about ceremony.
Robots, androids—not so complex and, well, beautiful as these—existed
otherwhere than Vrithian, but most folk who built or owned them demanded servant
manners from servants shaped like men. She rather liked the absence of that
mindset in Loguisse, but it made her uneasy, made the Tetrarch more enigmatic.
She stepped onto the disk Shareem had sent back for her and floated down. It
begins, she thought. I’m learning the possibilities wired into me. She
stepped off the disk, started to speak, then decided she had nothing she wanted
to say. Loguisse looked around, nodded, then started walking up the tunnel the
android had taken.
“Rest as long as you need.” Loguisse tapped a sensor by the
door. “If you want anything, this will call your attendant. ‘‘ She smiled
vaguely and left.
Aleytys poked about the small bare room. Perfect order, pleasant
enough, but it looked as if it had been wrapped in plastic for a long time and
someone had only just broken the seal. She nodded. This only confirmed what
she’d felt about Loguisse. The Tetrarch preferred her androids to people; they
went quietly about their tasks and left her undisturbed. She didn’t want
visitors. Aleytys and Shareem were unwelcome as fleas infesting her extended
body no matter what she said; they’d better find a way to leave soon if they
wanted to keep her friendly. Aleytys yawned. The long day had left her exhausted.
She stripped and showered, then climbed into the narrow bed and dropped into a
heavy sleep.
Glass strips tinkling in the wind, chimes sliding into her
sleep.
She began to wake.
Soft female voice replacing the chimes: Aleytys, Aleytys,
join us for dinner. Aleytys, Aleytys, you’ve slept long enough. Aleytys,
Aleytys, let Korray bring you to us. Touch the caller when you want her.
Aleytys turned over, murmuring drowsily, rubbed at her eyes.
The voice shut off. Muttering a little, she got out of bed. While she slept,
someone—presumably Korray—had brought a selection of long dresses to the room
and hung them on the air at the foot of the bed. She ran her hands through her
tangled hair and stared at them. One was blue-green, the color close to
matching her eyes, a soft clinging silk, cut to skim the curves of her body,
one side slit to the thigh for ease of movement, a scoop neck, long loose
sleeves. She wrinkled her nose at it. The second was so dark a green it was almost
black; it glowed with the sheen of fine wool. A looser fit; the skirt flared to
flow like water about her as she walked. The third was white, a stola made of a
supple silky material she didn’t recognize, heavy enough to hang in graceful
folds from the round gold brooches that held back to front at the shoulders.
Nice to have a choice. She looked about for the comfortably familiar shipsuit,
but whoever had brought the dresses had gone off with it, presumably to give it
a good cleaning. Lovely service, but I want the suit back. I damn well
couldn’t do much fighting or running in any of those.
She got to her feet, stretched, did a few breathing
exercises that woke her body up but did nothing much to clear the cotton wadding
out of her head. Rubbing her eyes, massaging the back of her neck, she walked
to the snug fresher and stood for a dreamy while with the shower beating down
on her.
I won’t stay here.
Amber eyes blinked open. *Certainly not here,* Harskari
said, acerbic amusement in her voice.
Aleytys shut the water off, stepped from the cubicle, began
scrubbing one of the blanket-sized towels over her body. “I meant Vrithian.”
*Going to run? He’ll be after you.*
“I know.” She dropped the towel on the floor and went to
make faces at herself in the steamy mirror. “Afterward.” She began dragging a
comb through her soggy hair.
*Leave afterward until you’re finished with now.*
“Oh, profound.”
*Mock how you want, you’re still running. It’s time to face
about and attack.*
“How? Where? Give me time to get my head organized.”
*No time left.*
“Loguisse bought me some. A day or two. I’ve bought time for
Grey. And Ticutt. Kell’s here.”
*Shadith should be on Avosing by now—the distances from
Wolff are roughly the same.*
“I know.” She pulled the comb a last time through her hair,
looked at the snarls of wet red caught in it, threw it at the tiled wall across
the room, watched it bounce. “Attack, hah! Attack what? Pin him down? Where? A
world’s a big place. And it’s his world. Only advantage I have is that I know
sooner or later he’s coming after me.” She edged a hip onto the sink, closed
her eyes. “Got to let him do that and hope to catch him hopping. Got to switch
his ground to mine. How? I can’t just go out and say here I am, hit me. Either
he says no thanks or he squashes me; too likely he puts his thumb on me and
turns me to a smear on the stone if It give him an opening like that. Leave me
alone. I’m trying to work it out.”
*Touchy.*
“Yes. I am.”
*If you don’t want me around ...*
“Now who’s touchy?” She smoothed her hair back, looked
around for something to tie round the queue she circled with her fingers,
shrugged and let it go, walked back into the bedroom. “What about our canceling
out the bomb? Think that jarred him any?”
*The missiles were a weak follow-up ... could have been deliberate,
make you underestimate him, maybe point you away from where the attack’s really
coming. In any case, he’ll be regrouping and planning something worse.*
“I know.” She walked around the robes, felt the material,
then pulled the dark green dress off its invisible hanger, gathered up the
skirt into loose folds and tossed it over her head. A wriggle or two and it
slid down over her body as if it had been made for her, which it probably had.
“Send a prayer to your gods whoever they are that Loguisse can give . me the
data I need.” She smoothed the closures shut. “Data we need.”
*Thanks for remembering.*
“Sarcasm is not at all attractive.”
*Remind yourself of that, Lee. Remember, I’m here until you
get around to finding me a body.*
“How can I forget?” She slid her feet into the heelless
slippers that matched the dress. “Keep your eyes open, oh wisest of mentors.
Once this war gets moving there should be a wide choice. Pinch me fast when you
see one you fancy. As Shadith did. I wonder what she’s doing now.”
*Up to her ears in a mess of her own making, no doubt.*
“I suppose so, but I’d a lot rather be there than here.”
*Really?*
“Aschla’s hells, I don’t know. Leave me alone.”
Korray took her to a room that was an elegant but chilly concoction
of glass and stainless steel with a floor that repeated the design of the
walls, white cloisonnй filling brushed steel outlines. Vines with heart-shaped
leaves the palest of greens wove through open spaces and took some of the
visual coldness from all that white and silver, but not much. Through an unglassed
arch came the sound of water playing lazily through the lobes of an angular
steel sculpture, dropping musically into a cylindrical basin, its bricks glazed
a bright blood red, their mirror surfaces a shout and a shock in all that
glassy glitter and washed-out green.
Shareem and Loguisse sat in separate silences at a
glass-and-steel table with three place settings laid out on it. Loguisse was
gazing abstractedly at the fountain, putting some problem through its paces;
Shareem was silent also, the lightness gone out of her face. She looked drawn
and tired as she folded and refolded a bright red napkin. If that is an
example of Vryhh homelife, no wonder she prefers to stay away. As she
walked toward them, Aleytys found herself wondering what Shareem’s childhood
had been like, the time before Kell, long before the death of her mother.
Sudden thought (sparked by the sight of the fragile-seeming silver-metal Korray
moving ahead of her): Were all Vryhh children raised by androids? That would
explain a lot. The elegant little android pulled the third chair out from the
table and waited to help her sit. She settled herself, then looked up through
the dome at the sky. Cloudless, pale blue, no sign of the sun. Was that east?
It was hard to say; she wasn’t adjusted to this world yet. She tried a tentative
smile.
Shareem winked at her, startling her. For an instant, just
an instant, her mother was the lighthearted laughing woman she’d been on Wolff.
Loguisse continued to look abstracted.
“I’m still half asleep.” An apologetic turn of her hand.
“What time is it?”
Loguisse blinked, slid round to face her. “Six hours after
noon. A twenty-eight-hour day.”
“Then it’s supper you’re offering.”
“More or less, though my staff can provide anything you feel
like eating.”
“I was a time coming. You’ve eaten?”
“We waited for you. Tell Korray what you’d like.”
“Oh. Umm, meat of some sort, green vegetable, bread. Local
produce. I’m not fussy about how it’s fixed. Cha if you have it.”
Korray shifted slightly; the new angle, altering the
patterns of light on the angular planes of its face, made it seem as if it was
smiling. It walked away with a delicate grace, a fluid almost fleshly flow. And
it was quietly happy; like Krasis it centered its happiness on Loguisse’s
return. Aleytys gazed at her hands. Programmed into them? Or something that had
slowly, slowly developed over the millennia androids and maker had lived
together. She hoped it happened that way; the other made her rather sick.
“Korray and Krasis were both designed by Synkatta; he had an
elegant touch with androids.” Loguisse was smiling at her, amused.
“Synkatta. If he could do that, why ...”
Loguisse shrugged. “He ran into the limits of his gift.”
“Oh. Where can I find Kell?”
“You don’t waste time.”
“I’ve wasted too much. I need information, anassa, I can’t fight
in the dark or sit around on the defensive too long. Fight him on his terms,
well, that’s not a good idea, I’ve got to shift the war onto my own ground.”
Loguisse nodded. “I’ll set Krasis to making extracts for
you, what I know of Kell and his resources. Will that do?”
“How can I say until I’ve seen what comes up? Is it too late
to try reaching Hyaroll?”
“You’re in a hurry to leave. Should I be insulted?” Cool
voice, spark in the greenstone eyes, irritation a fog rolling out of her. A
jolting reminder that Aleytys was taking too much for granted the great favor
Loguisse was doing her.
Aleytys opened her mouth to explain that she knew Loguisse
was uncomfortable with them there, but swallowed the words after another look
at the Vryhh woman. After a moment’s thought, she said, “I’m a danger to you,
Loguisse anassa. As long as I’m here. You’ve been very kind taking us in
despite that danger, nearly got blown to dust for it. How can I repay you by
putting your life more at risk?”
Loguisse said nothing for a long moment, her face
unreadable, her mind and emotions so controlled that Aleytys caught almost
nothing from her but a general skepticism. And a touch of relief. “I’ve been
trying to reach Hyaroll,” she said finally. “He won’t answer my calls.” She
leaned back as a trio of androids came in with a serving cart. “I’ll try him
again after we eat.”
Loguisse had no luck that night; it was midmorning the next
day before she got a response. Hyaroll looked as if he’d bitten into something
sour and couldn’t get the taste out of his mouth. “What do you want, Loguisse?”
“You present Aleytys with dome and domain and forget to key
her in,” Loguisse said calmly. “Kell could ignore those defenses you boast of
and take her while she is scratching about trying to get in.”
An impatient grunt. A crabbed gesture with one hand. “So
keep her there.”
“I’m willing. She’s not.”
“Take a pattern, flip it over to me.”
“Don’t be absurd.”
He scowled at her, chewed on his lip. “You know where it is.
Meet me there. Two hours. Local time. Got it?”
“Got it.”
The screen blanked. Loguisse swung around. “We’ll get you
keyed in, then we’ll come back here, Aleytys. You need to learn more than
Shareem can tell you about how to manage a kephalos.”
Shareem laughed, spread her hands. “I’ve spent too much time
offworld. Listen to the woman, Lee.”
Loguisse slid from the chair. “Come,” she said. “You don’t
need anything beyond what you’re wearing. Kell will keep his head down while
Hyaroll and I are around.” She walked briskly to the door and the bubble within
a bubble that protected this room, the heart of her dome, the point where
kephalos and Vryhh had closest contact, then turned and stood fidgeting
impatiently until they reached her.
They passed through the double membrane into the smothering
darkness of the maze. Aleytys took Shareem’s hand, reached for Loguisse’s and
let her lead them through the twists and turns ahead.
They emerged into the cavern close to the shrouded
machinery, the silent sealed workshop, nearly halfway around from the place
where they entered the maze. Apparently the maze changed shape and entrance at
established intervals following some principle known only to Loguisse; she’d
suspected it was changing again even as they passed through it, she had had a
feeling of movement, of oppression in that thick stifling blackness as if walls
were pushing at her, even though she saw and heard nothing.
She followed Loguisse toward the bulkiest flier, Shareem
trailing silent and unhappy behind her. Shareem wanted to be away, out of this
delicate steel paradise made for one. More than anything else, she wanted to
take Aleytys away and go back to the universe outside the cloud where things
were confused and perilous, but less hurting and certainly less confining; out
there she had space to move, she had her ship and her talents, and if things
got sticky or boring she could pick up and go somewhere else. Vrithian oppressed
her and Kell terrified her. Aleytys knew all that, was thinking about it as she
rode the disk up to the lock, and when she looked down she saw Shareem looking
down also, her shoulders slumped, her body radiating unhappiness. When Shareem
came up, she put her arm about her mother’s shoulders, hugged her hard, then
moved quickly to the passenger chairs. Shareem looked startled, then smiled and
followed without comment.
Synkatta’s dome was on the southern coast of Kebelzuild,
high on granite cliffs above a narrow beach where surf pounded endlessly, white
foam about black rocks, the bright blue sea stretching out to the horizon. This
ocean had a wider, wilder feel to it than the one they’d crossed to reach
Loguisse’s dome; perhaps because she was closer to it, perhaps because the dome
was farther north, the ocean here seemed to have more energy, more anger to it.
And I’m using this nonsense to avoid thinking about what could happen to us
if he doesn’t come. She glanced at Loguisse. The Tetrarch was silently
fuming as she kept the flier circling above the dome. Fifteen minutes passed.
Twenty. Thirty.
Aleytys squirmed in her seat. Ay-Madar, here I am,
helpless again. Hanging on one protector’s arm while I wait for another. Like
with Slower and Maissa on Lamarchos. Hauled here, dragged there. Kicked about
by the whim of others. Even Arel took me where he wanted to go, dumped me when
I wanted something else. The last few years she’d been making her own
decisions and running her own life; right now she was seeing more clearly than
she had when she was immersed in it how much control she’d had in spite of the
Hunts more or less forced on her, Hunts she had to admit, if she was really
honest with herself, that she’d enjoyed, dangerous and dubious as they were.
She fidgeted as quietly and inconspicuously as she could. Where in Aschla’s
stinking hells was Hyaroll?
Loguisse leaned forward. Hyaroll’s scowling face filled the
screen. “Gnats,” he grumbled. “Had to swat ‘em. You ready to follow me down?”
“Ready. Go.”
The face vanished; the image was a lumpy armored flier that
darted down at the dome,” a dark streak moving so fast it dropped off the screen
before Loguisse could move. She dropped her flier after him, followed him
through the dome. Then both fliers were sitting on landing saucers not far from
an odd whimsical structure it was difficult to call a house and a series of
gardens as disconcerting and prankish and lovely as the house.
Hyaroll walked stiffly the few steps to join Loguisse,
Aleytys and Shareem. He pointed at Aleytys. “Come.” Without waiting for a
response from her, he started for the house. Over his shoulder he said, “You
two wait here. She can do what she wants when the thing’s finished.”
Loguisse tapped Aleytys on the shoulder. “Go. No use trying
to argue with him. We’ll be over there by the fountain.” Shareem nodded
agreement and strolled away toward the fountain, a fantasy in twisting looping
bronze tubes spitting up spurts of water in a comical lilting strongly
rhythmical dance. Loguisse dropped beside Shareem on a bronze bench and sank
into the intricacies of some problem. Aleytys ran after Hyaroll, caught up with
him and walked along beside him. What she got from him was a feeling of
terrible weariness. It smothered almost everything else about him. Somewhere
inside that weariness was a hint of irritation, but even that was hollow and
without force. She walked beside her grandfather, saying nothing because there
was nothing he wanted to hear from her. She had the feeling that the slightest
obstacle, even a wrinkle in a rug, might stop him and he’d just stand there and
turn slowly slowly into stone. Yet he’d bothered to acknowledge her as his
granddaughter and fit up this dome for her. She found it hard to understand why
he’d stirred himself, what given when she felt in him. She thought of asking,
but that might be the metaphorical wrinkle in the rug.
He led her through flow-spaces, past doors and open rooms
maintained by the house androids, who were nowhere in sight right now; she
couldn’t even feel them ticking away around her, they must tuck themselves away
in closets somewhere after finishing the eternally repeated cleaning chores
about this house of ghosts. They wound deeper into the house through those
empty, echoing ... well, halls, slipping down and down into the stone of the
cliffs. A brief darkness, a sense of waiting around her, a maze of her
own once it was activated and deployed. A brief double tingle as he took her through
the inner pair of membranes and into a brightly lit all-white room similar to
the heart of Loguisse’s dome, though the instrumentation was less complex here.
Which was natural enough, given the differences between Loguisse and Synkatta.
Hyaroll put his big hand on her shoulder and guided her to
the command seat, a heavy black swivel chair fixed before the console. Without
letting go of her, he used his free hand to drag the dust cover off that chair.
“Sit there and don’t fight what happens.” He urged her toward the seat with
small pushes that made her feel like a bit of rag caught in the jaws of a large
angry dog. Annoyed, she resisted, tilted her head up and around. “Fight what?”
He dropped his hand. “Probes. Need to read you, get your patterns
into kephalos. Sit.”
“I don’t like things messing with my head.”
“Sit or forget it. Up to you.”
“Hunh.” She settled herself in the chair, felt it come to
life around her as Hyaroll began moving his fingers stiffly over the sensors.
The back moved, flexing and bulging, rising like a cobra hood over her head,
coming over and down, shaping itself to her skull. She tried to relax. Not the
time to wake the diadem. No danger, she thought at the thing, stay
quiet, I need this. The diadem did not manifest. She relaxed some more. The
hood closed over her face, shutting off light and air so suddenly she almost panicked,
caught herself just in time. She sat still, breathing as deeply, slowly,
steadily as she could. Probes came slipping into her head, tickling and
stinging, wriggling around. An obscene feeling. As if some repulsive stranger
had tied her so she couldn’t move and was feeling her up and she couldn’t do
anything to stop him. After those first ugly moments, though, she learned as
much from kephalos as it learned from her and she knew with a comfortable certainty
that she could destroy chair, console probes, everything, the whole of
kephalos—if she wanted to. This certainty gave her sufficient sense of control
that she didn’t need to destroy anything. All this was happening because she
let it happen. It was enough. She sat still and let kephalos read her. Time
passed. Finally the hood retreated, collapsing into the chair. She moved her
shoulders, straightened her back, swung around so she could see Hyaroll.
“Not yet. Stay there.” Hyaroll was frowning at a screen.
“Odd readings. Very odd.” He continued to work over the sensors, stopping
occasionally to stare blankly at nothing as if his memory had halted on him and
he had to dig deep to find what he needed. As he worked, she felt the room and
the house coming alive about her. More and more of the console lit up; numbers
and symbols began to flow across the screens. She didn’t attempt to read them,
though she did wonder if her translator trick would work with numbers and
number codes as well as it did with words and language. She didn’t especially
want to find out right now; her head ached enough already.
Hyaroll took the metal strip that slid out of a slot under
the sensor panel, stepped back. “It’s yours now. Or will be once I’m outside
the dome.” He gave her the finger-length strip of bluish metal. “Hang onto
this. It’s your key if you have to leave the dome. Come.” He started for the
membrane, waited for her without trying to pass through it. “Up to you now,” he
said. “Order kephalos to let me through.”
“How?”
“Say the words.”
“Aloud?”
“If you want. Or subvocalize.”
“I hear you.”
He put his hand out, tested the membrane, started off at a
much faster pace than he’d used coming here. Swearing under her breath, she ran
after him.
In the baronial great hall with its massive door, its
playful windows that were abstract patterns in crimson-and-sapphire stained
glass, its rugged ceiling beams and huge fireplaces, its rows of chandeliers,
Aleytys, feeling like the heroine in some ancient melodrama, caught his arm.
“Wait.”
He walked three steps more, dragging her along, then turned
to scowl down at her. “What?”
“Why are you doing all this?”
“Finishing something.”
“What?”
“My business.”
“Mine as well since it involves me. This isn’t idle
curiosity, anaks. I’ve a hard fight ahead. The more I know the better I fight.
I don’t understand you. I need to.”
He stared at her a moment, then shifted his gaze to look
past her at one of the bright windows. To her surprise, he smiled—a twist of
his large mouth, a glint in narrowed green eyes. The glint faded, his face
sagged, there was nothing left. “Blood,” he said. “Promised her mother I’d take
care of Shareem. Ianna, her name was, Shareem’s mother. Promised her that after
she pried Reem loose from Kell. Knew he’d go after her, wanted her to stay with
me. She wouldn’t. You’re a lot like her, Lee; saw that soon’s I saw you. Did
the best I could for Shareem after Ianna was killed. Reem’ll never amount to
much. No, no, don’t argue, girl. She’s not the worst, cares a lot about you,
that’s something.” He put his hand under her chin, tilted her face into the
red-and-blue light. “You’re a good child, Aleytys; you hurt when you see hurt.
Shareem showed us. Proud you’re my kin.” The words were fine, made her glow,
but there was so little feeling behind them that she ached for him. He must
have seen something of this, because he backed away a step, hand dropping to
his side. “Say it one more time. You shouldn’t have come, this world is too
small to fit you. I wind down to nothing, entropy embodied, soon unbodied.”
Another step away from her. He caught hold of the door’s latch. “You’re too
full of life, girl. Like sandpaper on an ulcer. Don’t call me again.” He tripped
the latch, pulled the door open and stalked outside.
By the time she followed he was halfway to his flier. She
stood in the doorway watching until the lock closed behind him, then walked
across to join Shareem and Loguisse by the fountain, the rising whine from the
flier drowning the water’s laughter. The flier rose and hovered just below the
apex of the dome, waiting.
Aleytys looked at the strip of metal in her hand. “What do I
do now?”
Loguisse blinked, squinted up at the flier, shading her eyes
with both hands. “Tell kephalos to open the dome.”
“Then whoever is out there waiting lobs an egg through and
boom.”
“Warn kephalos that you expect trouble, that the defenses
are to be at maximum alert. They should be adequate—Har set them up.”
“Thanks.” She thought a moment, getting the phrasing right,
then reached for kephalos as she had when she let Hyaroll out of house-heart,
gave the order.
Hyaroll’s flier shot up and darted away, taking out a
missile that pounced on it the moment it left the protection of the dome, and
kephalos ashed a pair that streaked for the hole. Then the flier was gone, the
dome was intact, and the fountain was playing its comic song loudly enough to
be heard over the wandering breeze and the very faint popping noises as the
remnants of the missiles hit the dome and sizzled down its sides.
Aleytys ran her thumb across the featureless strip of blue
metal. “Will this work for anyone who holds it?”
“No. Your brain and body patterns are coded into it. Holder
has to match those. As long as you’re alive. Once you’re dead, anyone can use
it.”
“Right. If I lose it when I’m outside, I can’t get back in?”
Loguisse looked thoughtfully at her. “You?” Her eyes
crinkled with her silent laugh. “The rest of us would have to find someone we
trusted to make a duplicate, not something especially easy on this world.” She
sobered. “If you lose it, come see me. I’ll make the duplicate.”
“That’s a relief.” She looked up at the last faint sparks of
the debris. “That was rather obvious of him.”
“Don’t disdain the obvious.”
“But don’t employ it.” She reached out a hand to Shareem.
“Let’s go back now, if you don’t mind. The sooner I learn all there is to know
about this dome, the sooner we’ll stop making a target of you.”
She stood alone in one of Loguisse’s gardens, a fantasy of
crystal and steel, three tall spindly trees with whippy limbs and diamond-shaped
leaves, a small crystalline fountain in the center, the water making spare,
simple music as it fell onto crystal leaves and ultimately into a shallow crystal
basin. The late-afternoon sun was low in the west, the tree shadows were long
scrawls across the short grass, dark wavery bars across the fountain.
Stuffed into her head, outlined on a handful of flakes in
her belt pouch, she had all that Loguisse saw fit to tell her of the general
functions of the kephalos in each dome and instructions about how she could
probe her own kephalos to find out its idiosyncrasies, since the kephaloi were
programmed according to the whim of their masters and creators, so that they
all had surprises set up to trap the wariest of intruders. Loguisse was terse
about this, and Aleytys didn’t push her. Her head ached already with the heavy
dose of Vrithian’s history, sketchy though it was, covering the ten millennia
Loguisse and the other Vrya had lived here, even sketchier when it came to the
hapless Vrithli used by the undying as toys to enliven the endless march of
days. She’d been given a skip-stone look at the two species native to this
world, their various cultures, and how those cultures had been distorted by the
presence and interference of the Vrya. It wasn’t a pretty story. It infuriated
her, though she said nothing of her feelings to Loguisse. Because the
Tetrarch’s interests were so detached from experimentation and ordinary life,
she allowed the Yashoukim within the boundaries of her domain to develop as
they chose, only emerging from her retreat when the intrusions of neighboring
domains grew too blatant, too annoying. Other Vrya, with less to occupy hands
and minds, kneaded their Vrithli like clay, punching and pulling them into the
shape they chose by whim or curiosity or obscure internal needs, ruthlessly
squashing or lopping off any attempt of those Vrithli to grow in forbidden
directions.
After watching the water for a while as it shot up and fell
back on the crystal leaves, a pleasant soothing sound, she dropped to the grass
and sat dreaming for a while more, listening to the water and the breezes
teasing the pale green leaves at the end of threadlike black stems. Kell first,
no choice there, then .... She yawned and smiled. Just as well Loguisse didn’t
know about her plans or she might change her mind about who’d disrupt Vrithian
most, she or Kell. She watched the water falling, changing color with the sky
about the setting sun, and felt a relaxing, pervasive relief, a sense that an
immense weight had rolled off her shoulders; she had discovered a task
important enough to keep her working for those uncounted years that lay ahead
of her, something to keep back the tides of entropy that had eaten Filiannis
and Hrigis empty, that was turning Hyaroll to dead stone. Prying Vryhh fingers
loose from Vrithli lives. She had no illusions about the transcendent joys of
such freedom; most Vrithli were probably quite satisfied with their lot and
would be extremely unhappy if they were forced to think for themselves. Too
bad. They’d just have to learn. Let them make a few tyrants of their own and
learn how to pull those down. I’ll be taking away their certainties and their
security. Not kind. Not even doing it out of moral outrage. Using them like the
rest of my folk have used them, entertainment. She smiled drowsily. Not so
bad as it might be. Maybe just as well I’m not going at this filled with
moral outrage and sure my way is right. Results of that kind of mind-set aren’t
so good. Some outrage, yes. Can’t get calloused or complacent. Long hard job,
and isn’t that nice. She stretched and yawned, looked around, oppressed by
the lack of color. Even the varied greens after a while lost vitality and might
have been only shades of gray. Everything in the dome was exquisite, and after
the first glance boring. Aphorism, she thought, unrelieved elegance
is ultimately boring. Loguisse wouldn’t notice; when she was here she evidently
spent most of her time talking with kephalos, going endlessly though esoteric
concepts Aleytys found incomprehensible and as boring as the landscaping. More
boring. When Loguisse tried to describe one of her current obsessions, Aleytys
waved her to silence. You lost me with the second word, don’t bother going on,
she said. Loguisse sighed, her momentary vivacity fading. Pity, she said.
Aleytys nodded, understanding well enough. There must be very few people she
could talk with about the things that interested her most. She bent over,
pulled loose a blade of grass and began tearing it into thin strips. Loguisse
misses conversation, I miss Wolff. Her friends there, her house, her
horses, she missed most of all unplanned accidental color, bright and dark,
pale and saturated, and the ebb and flow of people with all their ragged edges.
Maybe if she lived as long as Loguisse, she’d change her tastes, but she
doubted that. Maybe Loguisse had started out like her, relishing the variety of
life. She doubted that too. Ten thousand years. Impossible to say what a world
would be like after such a time, even more impossible to tell how a person
would change after that much time, though that person was yourself.
She sat awhile longer, listening to the water and the
leaves, curbing her impatience to be on her own again. That meant she’d be
hauling Shareem about—no big problem; she liked her mother and was occasionally
amazed at her flashes of courage, staying here when she could so easily by
somewhere else. Aleytys sighed, feeling guilty because she was irritated by
that courage, that effort. Everything would be so much simpler if Shareem would
just take off and let her get on with the fight. Unfortunately that sensible
course would destroy Shareem. Destroy. Melodramatic word, but I can’t think
of another that would fit. Well, once this is over, she’ll go her way, maybe
visit me now and again. The world will weigh lighter on both of us.
She got to her feet, brushed herself off and went inside for
the last uncomfortable meal in Loguisse’s dome.
While Aleytys spent hours down in the heart room, plugged
into kephalos, Shareem moved about the whimsical house of Synkatta. Bedrooms
sitting like oranges impaled on thick stalks, reached by clear glass tubes
extruded from the greater mass of the house; an infirmary like a soap bubble
painted with mirrors, filled with light inside, the outside reflecting
everything that fluttered past; and when you were tired of whimsy, sedate and
comfortable rooms of stone and wood and leather: a reading room filled with
books from a thousand worlds, a fieldstone fireplace, a sturdy desk of some
light tan wood with a tight grain; a music room; a kitchen filled with
stainless steel, more practical than aesthetic; that baronial great hall with
its rough-hewn beams and colored windows; a house that was an absurdity of
allusion and metaphor and with all that, comfortable. Shareem explored it,
happy to have something to do, opening the sealed rooms, bringing life back
into the emptiness, activating the androids, designing the meals (when she
could pry Aleytys loose from Kephalos long enough to eat anything besides sandwiches
and cha), feeling cozily domestic, content to do this minor bit of mothering.
She knew she was playing games with herself, but she was also happier than
she’d been in a long time.
Each day the flying bombs struck at them, others came
digging at them from beneath, but kephalos ashed the fliers and melted the
diggers, filtered out clouds of corrosive gas. At Aleytys’s instructions,
kephalos had warned the local Vrithli that absence was the safest defense in
this war between two undying. The fishing village was deserted, the farms were
left with their crops going to weed, the livestock was gone with the farmers.
All the Vrithli left without argument; they’d heard too many grisly tales about
those caught up in a death duel.
On the fourth day after their second arrival Shareem lay
stretched out on the grass staring up at the cloudless sky, hands clasped
behind her head. She winced as the daily missile whipped down at the dome,
dissolving as always before it came close enough to bother anything. Same time
as yesterday, same two prongs air and earth, same everything. Every day she
expected Kell to try something more complex, more inventive, expected him to
use the pattern he was establishing to catch them off guard, but each
afternoon, the same time, the same spot, the diggers came digging, the missiles
came arching in; each afternoon both prongs were as routinely destroyed. She
frowned. Loguisse could say don’t condemn the obvious, but it wasn’t like Kell
to be that obvious. He could be patient, that was certainly true; he’d waited
ten years to go after her mother. He might be counting on using up their
supplies, then overwhelming them with an all-out attack. But that would take
years, and Aleytys wouldn’t give him those years, he had to know that; besides,
the Tetrad would resupply her if she asked. There had to be something else he
was after.
She grimaced and forced herself to think carefully and seriously
about her mother’s death. All these years she’d fled from taking a close look
at it, reacting to grief, to guilt for being the survivor, to a fear that
thinking about it too much would force her to challenge him or forfeit her last
shreds of self-respect. Ianna and she had been closer than most Vrya and their
children, Ianna had carried her to term, though most Vryhh females decanted
their fetuses into android wombs and left the children’s care and education in
the cold capable hands of their androids. Ianna had given birth to her in the
old old way, had suckled her and kept her close until she was old enough to go
into intensive training in the labs and automated factories that turned out the
starships and other equipment the Strays needed and the Stayers coveted. Close.
They fought a lot and laughed a lot. And that day she stood with Hyaroll
looking down on the desolation that had been her home, feeling ... well, it was
certainly a good thing Hyaroll was there with her.
She didn’t remember much after that. There was a time, part
of it in the autodoc, part being coddled by androids, when she was only loosely
connected with her body, a time after that when Hyaroll put her to work in his
manufactury. She was better at model-making than he was, neater-fingered. The work
helped her regain her confidence. Later he took her out on his collecting runs,
got her fascinated with the cultures he inspected, the people he snatched. Took
a long time ... she was startled by how long. Nearly two hundred years until
she could stand on her own. She gradually drifted away from him, understanding
finally how relieved he was to see her go, though he’d never said anything
about her leaving. That still hurt. Her father. He’d never said it. Never. Even
now he said nothing to her, though he’d named Aleytys his granddaughter. For a
shaming moment she was jealous of her daughter, hated her a little, then she
pushed the feeling aside and scratched irritably at her arm. She didn’t like
feeling uncomfortable. No help for it. Ianna’s death. It made her queasy to
think about it. Abruptly she knew as surely as if he’d flashed the diagrammed
plan in front of her eyes, that he’d set a trap for Ianna, a trap in her
homeheart where she’d be most off her guard, set that trap in those quiet years
before she knew he was coming after her. He hid the bomb or whatever it was years
before he called challenge to a death duel. It wasn’t supposed to happen that
way, it wasn’t supposed to be so unfair a fight, but Kell was ... was
contemptuous of any rules he hadn’t made. I ought to know, she
thought, I ought to have seen this centuries ago. I didn’t think ....
She sat up, sick with sudden fear. All those stupid missiles
banging away that couldn’t hope to get through, all those diggers slagged,
those gas clouds rendered harmless ... misdirection. The magician’s stock. Look
over here so you don’t see what I’m doing over there. Distractions from a
danger already planted within the dome. To be activated when they were lulled
by the futility of his attacks. Thirty years, more, time when he knew Aleytys
would be accepted, time to watch Hyaroll. She knew how Hyaroll worked; who
could know him better? A putterer. Off and on, as his interest waxed and waned.
How many years to put Synkatta’s dome in order for Aleytys? How many years was
it vulnerable before Hyaroll did his final checks? Twelve years, and more, when
Kell knew what Aleytys was and was becoming, time enough to learn to fear her.
To learn her weaknesses as well as her strengths. A dozen years to make his
final plans. Probably discounting Shareem. He knows me too, he knows how
futile I’d be in this fight. She sat up, her skin crawling, shrinking from
the lightest touch. If she could have floated in midair, she’d have felt
marginally safer. What was waiting for them? Bomb? Most likely. Disease? Fire?
Poison? He had a universe to draw on. She got to her feet, moving as slowly and
delicately as she could. She couldn’t float, that was dreamwork, she had to
walk, her feet had to come down on the ground, had to bear her weight. She had
to breathe, though each warm ragged exhalation might be the key to set the
thing off. Whatever it was. Whatever gods there be, please please please
don’t force me to be the one who kills my child. She walked slowly stiffly
impossibly into the house, hesitating for an agonizing time before she worked
the latch; she had to get to Aleytys, had to warn her, warn her of what? Kell,
Kell, always Kell. She left the door open, but that might be the cue, closing
it might be the cue, who could tell, walked across the shining parquet floor—which
one of those inlaid bits of wood might be the trigger? where did I walk before?
should I pass that way again, is it safe, or should I take another way? She
crept along the flow-way to the reading room, remembering pain, remembering the
hard, bard birth, remembering the baby dark against her breast, her tiny golden
baby with a mass of bright red curls, stubborn even then, even when she was a
few days old, demanding, small fists kneading her breast as the baby sucked with
such unconquerable determination—all the memories she’d shut away so many years
ago. She reached for the sensor plate to open the door of the reading room, a
comlink in there tied to the heartroom. She hesitated—is this the one?—palmed
the plate and walked inside with that same slow stiff eggshell walk.
The desk. The link at one end, a tilted screen set into the
wood, a sensor panel. She reached out. Stopped her hand above the sensors
without touching any. A dozen times before, more than a dozen, she’d talked to
Aleytys on this link, scolding her into coming up for a hot meal. What if this
was the call that triggered the thing? She started shaking. If she called ...
and if she didn’t ... and the thing activated and killed Aleytys ...
Whatever she did or failed to do could trigger the thing. Anything
at all. Action or omission. She nearly screamed with frustration. And even
that, noise, that could be the trigger. The sound of her voice. She sighed, cut
the sigh short, froze a moment not breathing, then gazed down at the comscreen.
If action and inaction were equal risks, then it was easier to act than to
refrain, better to do something than just sit waiting. She tapped the code into
the link, sweat rolling down her face, sweat oozing from her palms, making her
fingers clumsy, slippery. Very slowly, very carefully she tapped the code into
the link, waited without breathing, didn’t relax appreciably when her
daughter’s face appeared.
“What is it?” Aleytys looked tired and irritable.
Shareem licked her lips. For a moment she couldn’t talk
around the lump in her throat. She worked her tongue, tried to swallow, gave a
short dry cough. “Lee.” It was a squeak that broke in half. “Lee, come up here,
it’s important.”
Aleytys looked at something out of range of the viewer, then
she leaned forward and shut down what she was doing. “Be there in a little,
Reem.” The screen emptied.
Hand shaking again, coated with sweat, Shareem tapped the
link off, then stood where she was a moment, hugging her arms across her
breasts, hands closed tight on her upper arms. Nothing happened. She walked to
the door, stepping as lightly as she could, afraid to put a foot down once
she’d raised it, but she had to and did, afraid to lift it again, afraid to
stir the air with her breath. Anything could be the trigger, anything at all.
Yet she could no more stay in that pleasant room than she could stop the
neurons discharging in her brain. She stood waiting in the great hall until she
heard Aleytys calling her.
“Here,” she said. It came out a whisper; she had to clear
her throat and repeat herself. “Here, Lee. In the hall.” She waited tensely
until she saw Aleytys coming toward her, then she moved in that stiff-legged
reluctant walk to the front door, reached for the latch, forced herself to grasp
it, then shove the door open with a single smooth push. Then she was outside,
wiping sweat from her face. They should be marginally safer outside.
“What is it, Reem? You look terrible.” Shareem looked nervously
at the door, then took another step away from it. “Lee, I ... I ...” Startling
herself and Aleytys, she began sobbing, caught Aleytys in her arms and held her
daughter tight against her, her face in her daughter’s hair, the daughter who
was taller and stronger than she was, stronger and more alive, so wonderfully
against all odds alive and back with her.
But it wasn’t a baby she held, only a woman she didn’t know
all that well, and when the first helpless reaction had passed, she stepped
back from Aleytys, flushed with embarrassment. “I ... I’m ...” She looked
frantically about, saw the patch of grass where she’d been lying. “... sorry,
Lee. It was just ...” She started toward the grass, and Aleytys followed
without saying anything.
Shareem dropped to her knees, swung her legs around until
she was sitting cross-legged, knee to knee with her daughter. “I was afraid
...”
“I saw that. What is it?” Aleytys leaned forward, took her hand
and held it between her own. “You’re still shaking. And sweating rivers.”
“I’m a fool.”
“No.”
She pulled her hand free, laced her fingers together. “Don’t
talk about what you don’t understand.” She looked at her hands, then past
Aleytys at the house. “I told you Kell challenged my mother to a death duel and
killed her.”
“Yes. So?”
“I run away from things. I ran away from that, never thought
about how my mother died. Until now, just now. I was stretched out here. The
missile came. Third hour after noon. Like yesterday, day before, day before
that. Kephalos took it out. Like yesterday, day before, day before that. Four
days, Lee. How long does it take me to get the point? But I finally started
thinking.” A small tight movement of her mouth, more a grimace than a smile. “I
do think. Now and then. Kell is never obvious. So what is all this for? Every
day I’ve been expecting some devious attack that takes everything we’ve got to
stop it. If we can. But nothing happens. Just those idiot missiles, and a few
frills to keep kephalos honest. But he got into my mother’s dome. Ten hours
after the challenge she was dead, the place was molten rock and miscellaneous
debris.” Her stomach was churning, and there was bile burning her throat. “I
always assumed he got through her defenses somehow.” She drew her hand across
her mouth, then scrubbed it along her forehead, scraping away the sweat, pushing
her hair off her face. “Ten years, I thought, so Ianna would forget how he
hated her, so she’d get interested in other things. A distraction. And I
thought, these stupid attacks, it’s the same thing, really. A distraction. And
I thought, why? And I thought, it’s obvious, if you look at it the right way.
He’s got something planted here waiting for us or him to trigger it. Could be a
bomb. Doesn’t have to be. Disease. Poison. Anything. And we’ve been here four
days. Anything could trigger it. Anything. Maybe time triggers it. So many
days, boom. Or whatever. Maybe the missiles trigger it—kephalos wakes his
defense nodes, and boom. Tomorrow? Any day after that? No way of knowing,
except it’s probably not today’s, though it could be on a delay circuit. You can’t
know how I felt, Lee. Lying there thinking all this, thinking I’ve got to warn
you, but anything I did might be the trigger, or anything I didn’t do. I was
about falling apart.” She looked down at shaking hands. “I still am. The
thought of going back in there ...”
“Ukh.” Aleytys closed her eyes. “Worms eat his festered
soul, I think you’re right, Reem. It feels right. It feels like something the
man I met would do. Hah! sitting out there somewhere gloating. Ay-Aschla, what
a time for Shadith to be on her own. I could use her instincts and training.”
She smiled at Shareem’s frown. “She’s not the child she looks, you know.” She
closed her eyes, and her lips moved. Talking to the other one, Shareem
thought, abruptly and absurdly jealous of that sketchy bundle of nothing.
Aleytys opened her eyes. “Reem, your flier. It’s armored, isn’t it?”
“But we left it sitting for a couple of days at the
Mesochthon. I know Loguisse went over it, and she’s the best there is after
Hyaroll, but Kell’s ... well ... Kell.”
“And I am Aleytys.” She blinked, smiled. “That sounds ...”
She got to her feet, took Shareem’s hand and pulled her up. “I don’t care how
it sounds, I’ve got more resources than he knows.” She frowned. “On second
thought, he knows I have the diadem, but he doesn’t know its uses, even I’m
still surprised by ... Never mind. Come on.”
Shareem sighed for what she’d lost. Aleytys liked her well
enough, that was comforting, but she could remember too vividly the child who
had filled her arms. She knew none of the vague dreams that flitted through her
head had many ties with reality. Babies grew up and as often as not left
wreckage in their wake; she could remember all too well the times when she’d
choked even under Ianna’s loose restraints, choked and kicked and said things
she nearly always wished unsaid. And there was this diadem thing, a reminder of
all the ties Aleytys had with other people, people she knew nothing about. But ...
Forget that, Reem, she told herself. Futility lies down that street.
You did what you did for Aleytys’s health of mind and body. And, she told
herself, whipping herself with it, because this so dearly loved baby was a
drag on you. You could have kept her. You could have gone back for her
anytime. You could have raised her on the ship, kept her away from Vrithian.
You didn’t do any of that. It’s over. You can’t go back. Live with it. She
looked at the house, shuddered. Out here in the garden, the summer sun beating
down on them, she could put her fears aside and almost forget them. She glanced
at her daughter. Whatever Aleytys feared, it wasn’t physical danger, physical
damage. Her daughter walked with that alert serenity Shareem had seen now and
then in the faces of the short-lives she moved among out beyond the cloud, men,
most of them, though there was a woman or two that came to mind when she
thought hard, a look that said without boasting they could handle just about
anything that came up. Not courage, not exactly physical competence, more a
state of mind. She didn’t know precisely what it was, but Aleytys had it.
Nothing Kell could do to her now would frighten her. Shareem felt a touch of
envy, even resentment. She pushed them away hastily—no no don’t think about
that, no no too upsetting.
The flier sat in the landing dish, squat and angular and
ugly without fuss or pretension.
“Wait here,” Aleytys said. Her eyes were fixed on the flier,
her hand warm, her touch hasty, rather rough as she stopped Shareem. She
approached the flier with taut, wary interest, vanished around the flier’s far
side, came back around the tail. Shareem knew she was forgotten, that Aleytys
was wholly concentrated on the flier. Aleytys dropped to a squat, went very
still, hands on thighs, eyes closed. Shareem sighed and dropped to the grass to
wait.
Time passed slowly, the afternoon filled with the mewls of
sea birds, the brush-crash of the surf, the sound of the crazy fountain, wind
chimes somewhere behind the house, and a low breathy booming sound from the
house itself. Aleytys didn’t move. Shareem was content not to move. Her eyelids
drooped, she dropped into a half-doze. And started, nearly falling over, when
Aleytys got suddenly to her feet and climbed into the flier. She stayed inside
a few breaths, then came back out with a small black ovoid carefully cradled in
her hands. Her face intent, she carried the ovoid to the cliff edge close to
the shimmer of the dome field. She stopped a moment. Opening a hole, Shareem
thought. She gazed at her daughter’s back, chewed on a knuckle as she waited.
Aleytys flung the black egg through the hole, stood
watching. Nothing happened for what felt to Shareem like an age, then there was
an explosion that shook the cliffs. Nothing came through the screen, and the
earth settled rapidly back to stability. Silence. Then the patter of water
hitting the screen and rolling down it, flowing back to the sea.
Aleytys came slowly back, her face thoughtful. “That wasn’t
it,” she said, “if there is an it. That’s another distraction.” She stood with
her hands on her hips, frowning at the house. “Hard to know where to start.”
She flashed a grin at Shareem. “I can understand your dithers. ‘S going to take
some doing walking back in there.”
Shareem returned the smile. She stayed where she was,
sitting on the grass, watching her daughter, contented and at ease now,
trusting Aleytys to take care of this threat—as empty a threat now as the bomb
that had blown a hole in the ocean. Aleytys was her shield, like the dome that
kept out missiles and gas, but more flexible and even more effective.
Aleytys moved her shoulders, slumped a little. “Can’t find
it from out here.”
“What are you going to do?”
“Think. Got a feeling looking for the thing is the best way
to set it off.”
“Depends on how you look.”
“Mmm, tell me something. Vrya aren’t empathic, that’s obvious.
Any PK, manipulation at a distance?”
“No. For sure, no.” Shareem chuckled. “That you get from
your father’s side. What a thought, that I should ever be pleased by anything
that man had.”
Aleytys ignored the last part of that. “Good. Limits the
places Kell can put things.”
“He knows what you can do?”
“He’s had painful personal experience with what I can do.
Mmm, it won’t be shielded, just hidden. I wouldn’t have to go looking for
shielding, it’d be shouting at me here I am. Hiding’s better—then if his
misdirection fails and I go looking, he could use that to trigger the thing.
Plenty of psi detectors about, easy enough to tie them into the detonator.
Kell, worms eat your liver, why wait so long? Why four days?” She started
pacing back and forth. “Reem, what am I missing? If it’d been me, I’d have
blown the thing no later than the second day. Why give us this much time to
think about what’s happening?”
“Something you haven’t done, something I haven’t.” She
pulled a blade of grass, used the stiff, pointed end to scratch along her nose.
“Hyaroll’s really the best, Lee. He’d spot anything too complicated, even a
timer, anything that took energy. Has to be something activated from outside,
probably mechanical. Like your psi detectors. No psi about, the detectors play
dead. Hah! That damn silly missile shower. Activates the same portion of
kephalos every day, say it advances a ratchet one notch each day until boom. If
we leave, he stops the missiles—logical, isn’t it?—and the trap’s set for next
time we’re here. Could be the fifth day, the sixth, the tenth, who knows but
that spider? Him sitting out there gloating. Pfahh!”
Aleytys said nothing, gazed past Shareem at nothing. “Nice
problem,” she said finally.
“Why don’t we just leave? Even if he doesn’t stop the count,
we’re safe.”
“Where do we go?”
“Hyaroll? Loguisse? Filiannis said to visit her.”
“Filiannis?” Aleytys chuckled at the expression on
Sha-reem’s face. “Right. And Hyaroll won’t let us in.” She tilted her head
back, gazed at the faint shimmer of the dome. “You know, I’ve got a feeling
we’d better not try leaving again. Maybe you’re right. Maybe he’d shut down the
count until we got back. Have to activate kephalos to get out. Want to take the
chance? No, me either.” She dropped to the grass beside Shareem. “If I can’t
come up with something between tomorrow and noon, I’ll get us both out without
opening the dome. Funny, in a way it was Kell who showed me how to do
that—well, made it necessary to learn. Thing is, though, that would leave us on
foot and more or less unarmed on ground he knows better than the both of us. I
like the odds a bit more even. Mmm, let me think ....”
*Harskari,* Aleytys subvocalized, *we’ve got a problem.*
Amber eyes opened. Voice dryly amused, Harskari said,
*Interesting. If you could find the bomb, you could disarm it, but to find it,
you’ll have to probe for it, and if you probe for it, you’ll set it off. If
it’s a bomb, it will come close to being a planet buster. To make sure he gets
you.*
*Could you hold something that powerful? Just in case?*
*Don’t know. If I’m close enough, if you can feed me enough
power.*
*Can’t stay. Can’t leave. Can’t do nothing. Can’t do something.
So what do we do?*
*Getting to be suppertime. A pleasant warm evening. Have
your androids serve a hot meal out here.*
*What? I couldn’t eat.*
*You have to, Lee. High-energy food. Much as you can. Force
it down if you must. Nothing is going to happen for a while. I have a
glimmering of an idea. I need time, Lee. I need to consider the resources of my
craft and the possibilities of the diadem. No reason for you to sit around
moaning.*
*I’m glad one of us sees some light.* She stretched, opened
her eyes, spoke aloud to Shareem, who was sitting and watching her. “Reem, my
head’s going around in circles for now. Anyway, I’m hungry. Get the Ikanom out
here and have it arrange an alfresco supper for us. Steaks, I think, a big
salad, anything else you’d like. You do that kind of thing better than I do.
I’m going to start thinking on my feet for a while—maybe that will be more profitable.”
Aleytys emptied her cup. “I was hungry.” She set her cup beside
her and lay back on the grass. “Walking help?”
“Not much. Reem?”
“No.”
“What no?”
“You can’t sent me off without you.”
“Reem, if I have to waste energy protecting you ...”
“No. If I’m here, you’ll be a lot more careful.”
“I’m not about to get myself killed.”
“But you’ll be that little bit warier if you’ve got me to
worry about.”
“Reem ...”
“No.”
Aleytys got to her feet and began pacing about the lawn,
saying nothing more, turned inward, brooding as she walked. Shareem dipped a
leaf of crisp green thrix into a pool of coldsauce and crunched it down,
drowsily content. She’d made her statement, put her foot down, and that was
over. She chewed and swallowed, feeling like one of the more placid ruminants.
Aleytys came back to the remnants of the meal, dropped into
a squat and scowled at Shareem. “At least you’ll spend the night in the flier.”
Shareem fished another bit of thrix from the salad bowl, grimaced
at it. “My aching back.”
“Please.”
“You’re trying something tonight.”
“I have to, don’t I?”
“Oh, all right. I can throw some blankets in the back, and I
suppose Ikanom can find some sort of padding so I don’t wake up with bruises on
my rear.”
“Thanks.” Aleytys got to her feet and went back to drifting
about this section of the garden, automatically avoiding obstacles, back in her
somber brood.
Shareem looked at the thrix again, popped it into her mouth.
She wasn’t worried. Aleytys would come up with something. She looked around her
at the debris of the meal, then tapped the caller, summoning the Ikanom to
clear up the mess. She wiped her mouth on a napkin, dropped it, drew her legs
up and sat with her back against one of the boulders scattered about the wild
garden, watching Aleytys wander about. What’s she going to do after this is
over? Stay here? Not likely. She’d be bored to stone here. Wolff? Probably. If
young Shadith—how good was she?—found Grey and got him loose from Kell’s trap. Grey.
She winced. But he was a short-life, a mayfly, nothing to worry about. She
watched her daughter fondly, dreaming of times to come when they could be
together, passing the decades, the centuries together, as she and Ianna might
have done if Kell had given them the chance. A long gentle dance of friendship,
visiting each other, going their ways, coming together again. Aleytys was a
shadow drifting through shadows. I should be terrified, Shareem
thought, but I’m not. Not anymore. Funny. Me and that dirt-grubber—what
did he call himself?—that Azdar. We produced her. It doesn’t seem
possible. She settled back against the boulder while Ikanom directed
kitchen androids that were clearing the grass of the supper leavings, a tall silent
graceful male figure, burnished bronze, the light of Minhas sliding along the
wonderfully crafted face whose shifting planes and hollows could be remarkably
expressive. I never knew Synkatta. Wish I had. The man who built
those androids and that house ... She made a mental note to ask Ikanom
about him when there was time.
Minhas swam full overhead through cottony clouds while Araxos
was a fat crescent low in the east. The house was a complex burr-edged blotch
in the darkness, silent and drowsy in the cooling night. Aleytys sat slumped on
a wooden bench by a small rambling stream, rubbing bare feet over the grass,
waiting with a mixture of impatience and reluctance for Harskari to come out of
her retreat. Nothing Aleytys could think of stood up to critical evaluation, developing
large uncomfortable holes as she tried playing out the line of action. She
stirred restlessly on the bench. “What am I doing here?” she said aloud. “I
should be getting Grey loose.”
Harskari’s eyes came open. *Shadith is quite competent,
Aleytys. You can’t do everything.*
*I could try.* She laughed, but quit that when it started
getting out of hand. *Sure Shadith is competent, but she’s not me. I know what
I can do, I need to get my hands on things ....* She opened and closed her
hands, wanting Kell in those hands right now; she wanted to pound Grey’s
location out of him. She gripped the edge of the bench. *Did you come up with
something?*
*Yes.*
*Well?*
The amber eyes slitted, Harskari projected an intense reluctance.
*Well?* Aleytys knew Harskari wouldn’t be hurried, but she
couldn’t help prodding a little.
*You’ve thought about passive detection.*
*You know I have, but ...*
*You couldn’t see a way to make it work without first
knowing what you’d be using it to find out.*
*Yes.*
*The diadem phases in and out of this reality depending on
the pressures you put on it. There’s no way anyone these days can detect it
when it’s phased out—*
Aleytys interrupted her. *The RMoahl. They’ve never had the
least difficulty keeping track of me.*
*Innate sense, I think.* Harskari made an impatient sound.
*Kell’s no RMoahl. Where was I? Oh, yes, no one but the Rmoahl can detect the
diadem when it’s phased out, yet Swardheld, Shadith and I are able to touch
you, use you in spite of being an inseparable part of that concatenation of
forces. I’ve had a long time to study it and intimate knowledge of it; it was
constructed by one of my people, a product of our common skills and the
uncommon skills of Traivenn. I think I know a way to tie your body temporarily
to the diadem so you can phase out with it. In a sense you join me in this
parody of existence. You should be able to pass through ordinary matter without
disturbing it. I’ve considered all the possibilities I can think of. Seems to
me the one place he could put the bomb—I think it’s probably a bomb—where
kephalos couldn’t detect it is inside kephalos. Out of phase, you should be
able to pass into kephalos without registering on any of its sensors or alerting
the psi detectors. Once we find the thing, I can half-phase you and hold it in
stasis until you can disarm it. That’s why I wanted you to eat and rest. Isn’t
going to be easy on either of us.*
Aleytys wrinkled her nose. *Pass through matter. Hunh. What
happens if I start sinking slowly and inexorably into the center of the world
and stay there as ash for eternity when our strength gives out?* She thought a
moment. *Or go floating off and end up an icicle in the gas cloud up there?*
She waved a hand at the silver mist making shimmery background for the moons.
*Aleytys, don’t be silly.*
*I feel silly.* She sighed and reached for the symbolic
power river, tapped into it and drew as much of the energy into herself as she
could hold without burning to the ash she’d mentioned a moment before. *I’m
ready. Let’s try it.*
The diadem chimed. She felt the familiar weight on her head,
then a strange chill passing through her body, starting at her feet, going up
through a suddenly tight throat; it made the back of her eyes itch and shivered
the roots of the hair at the crown of her head. An odd fluttery feeling like
wings beating inside her. The garden and the house fluttered like the wings
within. The air got darker as if the gas cloud were quenched and the two moons
had gone dark. Then it seemed she pushed through a membrane like that of the
field that guarded the househeart and found Harskari standing beside her, a
tall and slender woman with white hair and dark skin, wearing a slim dark robe
embroidered in jewel colors with designs that seemed oddly, disturbingly
familiar, though Aleytys knew she’d never seen them before. She knew she was seeing
Harskari’s memory of her former self, yet the figure seemed real. Solid. There
was a sourceless thick light around her. There was color, rich color darker and
more saturated than the colors she remembered in the garden; the foliage was
green ultramarine, stone and earth and wood were dove-gray, russet and tawny,
the textures about her mostly visual but no less rich for that, like those in a
brocade print made from forty blocks. No smells. And after a short while longer
in that eerie state, she was startled to find she wasn’t breathing. Or perhaps
it would be more accurate to say the shadow she cast in this other reality
wasn’t breathing. The relation between the sensing shadow and the body she
could no longer feel was something she didn’t understand and only made her head
ache—her shadow head—when she tried to work it out. Weird, she thought. Weird.
Harskari controlled her impatience and waited for Aleytys to
grow accustomed to this state.
Aleytys turned her head. Her shadow head turned and she supposed
her body’s head turned too. She saw, somehow, the garden around that body, the
house, and grew confused about just who or what was doing the seeing. I’m
here ... whole ... inside my own head. She willed herself to stand and
sensed that she was moving. Felt as if she was operating something made of
marshmallows and gristle. Enough body-sense left to let her move. Frightening
not to know exactly where her real hands and feet were. Frightening to have so
little sense of her own reality. Do ghosts feel like this? If so, I’d rather
never be one. So I’d better get busy. She willed herself to walk. Felt
herself bouncing on ground that was rather like good-quality foam rubber.
Harskari beckoned to her, turned and glided away.
For a moment Aleytys felt like a centipede deciding what
foot to start off on, then she was gliding after Harskari, not precisely
walking; it felt rather like the times in the fall before the worst of the
snows when the children in the vadi Raqsidan made ice slides and wore the
bottoms off their boots.
The house looked solid. Dauntingly so. The texture of the
stones was powerful before her.
Harskari—or her dream form—walked into that wall. As if it
were no more solid than a heavy fog.
Aleytys followed, found herself struggling to breath; she scolded
herself, telling herself she hadn’t been breathing for ... how long? Impossible
to say. The wall had the rubbery feel of the earth, it made little resistance
to her passing, but she was very glad when she emerged into the book room. The
things in the room had a strong presence, unreal, yet at the same time their
surfaces were energized, solid. As if they were finely made holographic images
that were perfect and at the same time obviously what they were. She was
gliding through a hologram, gliding through the dreams that the floor and the
walls and the furniture were dreaming.
She followed Harskari along the flow-ways as she’d followed
Hyaroll, down and down through the cellars with their racks of wine bottles,
jars of preserves, past the shrouded machines in the workshop that seemed to
exist beneath every Vryhh house. None of these dusty, nothing ever seemed to get
dusty in these domes, pity the poor android with its endless dustmop rounds.
Down yet further through the open maze—she found the fuss of threading through
the thing so annoying she left it undeployed, though Shareem scolded her about
that. Through the membranes without the membranes noticing her.
Through the face of kephalos.
Into another sort of maze. Snapping neurons of woven wire
and silica flakes and painted panels and a shimmer of continuous happenings,
almost visible thoughts. Kephalos dreamed too, hummed and sang conundrums to
itself, needing to use the parts of its enormous capacity that defense and the
care of the house and grounds left unused.
During the past four days she’d gotten used to the aspect of
kephalos that communicated with her, but what she perceived now was so much
greater that she faltered, disoriented, almost lost herself. Harskari came back
to her, touched her arm. Calmness and assurance flowed hand to arm. She looked
at Harskari and thought: I love her. This is my true mother, the
mother of my soul.
On and on. Growing astonishment at the sheer size of kephalos;
Growing sense of personhood about her. Kephalos as something far beyond
machine. Not it, yet not him not her. Kephalos thinking, dreaming. Then ...
Darkness thick, massive, ugly.
Tumor on the brain.
Death embodied in darkness, waiting.
She felt it before she saw it.
She knew it before she saw it.
When she saw it, it flooded her with fear.
Harskari moved to it, stood beside it, her hand on it.
Aleytys shuddered. Felt herself shudder. Like touching suddenly
and without warning a slug, feeling it pulse alive under your fingers.
Harskari’s voice came like another shock. “Hurry, Lee. Look
at it. Know it. Time runs away.”
She had to force herself to move closer to the thing. She
put her hand on it. Holograph hand, hollow and insubstantial. Hand sliding over
it. It was heavy, dark and solid even in this reality. Warm and vibrating,
purring along, not a real sound, but something slipping through the whole of
the body she was beginning to feel again as if the bomb was so powerfully
present in both realms that it gave a sort of reality to her dreamform, though
she also knew that was Harskari bringing her up to half-phase so she could
handle materials in the outside world. Harskari’s hand warm on her shoulder,
she touched and traced, found the psi alarms and pulled their sensor flakes,
found the electromagnetic sensors and pinched them free to hang dangling down
the sides of the bomb, found the tremblers, the scaly patches of the other
alarms, and peeled them loose, felt out the internal mechanisms of the bomb and
found what she thought was the ultimate detonator. Once again she began the
slow tracing of connections. Heat gathered in her. At first she didn’t notice
it, then she ignored it, then it was an agony that she couldn’t ignore, but she
kept on with her slow, thorough trace. Harskari drained off some of the heat
accumulating in her, but couldn’t do that much.
The bomb began to change. The heat seemed to be forcing her
into phase with it, or maybe the weight and malevolence of it was changing her
angle to reality. She muttered a quick warning to Harskari, not knowing if the old
one heard her, then began untangling and undoing all the traps, concentrating
fiercely, little strength in her hands and a clumsiness that gave her fits. The
bomb was reacting to her while she worked, arming itself, her work was a race
against that, a race where she had a slipping edge. Her fingers fumbled on, she
sobbed, felt rather than heard herself, drew on the remnants of her strength, removed
a section of the bomb’s skin, set the plug on the floor by her feet, then began
pulling flakes in the sequence she’d determined. Hands trembling, no feeling in
her fingers, every movement guided only by the sense that was not sight. Until
she finally bared the detonator and pulled it with an ease that seemed to make
a mockery of her pain and terror.
The bomb died.
She felt it die under her shaking hands.
She felt a great numbing release; her body quit on her as
her will quit. Harskari slapped her, shouting: “Quitting, are you? Lying down
on me. Letting Shareem down. Finish or it’s all for nothing. Finish. On your
feet or kephalos dies too. Take the detonator farther away from the bomb. I
can’t do it. I’m a phantom even here. Your hands are the only ones can do it.
Move, Lee. Move!” The last word was a shriek, Harskari’s eternal irritating
calm shattered at last. It broke Aleytys out of her lethargy, prodding her to
one last effort.
She pushed onto hands and knees, felt about for the
detonator, twisted some broken wires tight about her wrist. She stayed there
awhile, her mind drifting off whenever she tried to focus on anything.
Harskari’s hand came warm on her shoulder, guiding her, comforting her.
Dragging the detonator, she crawled under the maze of kephalos, nothing in her
mind but slide her knees, move her arms, slide-slide the knees, pat-pat the
hands, hear the detonator scraping, tumbling along beside her. On and on. No
sense of time passing. Slide-slide the knees. Pat-pat the hands. One-two.
One-two. A warmth on her forehead, a pressure halting her. “Lee. Lee. Lee.” For
a moment she couldn’t make sense of the sounds. Lee? Oh. My name. Yes. My
name. She lifted her head. “Lee, you can rest now. I’m phasing you back.
It’s over. You’ve done the job. Rest now.”
A wrenching and a twisting of her body, a flash of fire over
her skin, a pain more intense than any she’d known before. She was briefly
aware of a small dusty room. Dust? A cold stone floor. Real darkness. Thick.
Almost tangible. Weariness swept in waves over her. She plunged into a deep
dreamless sleep.
Loppen Var On Sakkor
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Vrithian
WITNESS [3]
A SHEPHERD IN EXILE/LOPPEN VAR
My name is Hattra lu Laraynne. As you see I am reduced to
the company of beasts. Look at them. My gettesau. More hair than wits, like a
lot of people I know. The scars on my face? Brands. Oncath on the right, Path
on the left. They stand for Oporlisha Faerenos (rebel traitor). Well, I was no
beauty to begin with. I sound bitter? I’m not, you know, just without hope for
my people and my land. Our undying has proclaimed that change will not happen.
The Matriarch leans on that; she will continue to rule and pass that rule to
the daughter who’s deft enough to poison her and disappear the other claimants.
The T’nink Intel (Temple of Nothingness) will not loose its hold. Our religion,
you see. We worship Nothing with great fervor. If you knew it, you would
realize I have just blasphemed sufficiently to get my tongue torn out. The
god-concept is Nothingness. You see the importance of the—ness, the vast difference
between Nothing and Nothingness? Ah, how blissful is the unknowing mind, what
joy to be ignorant of itchy slippery letters. Do you know what brought me these
brands? Stupidity. No, I didn’t do anything drastic or even particularly
courageous; I taught my son to read. Yes, that’s all. Well, you see, that’s
anathema here. As a matter of policy only certain people can learn to read, the
priests for the t’ninks around the country, the scribes for the Matriarch and
the trader families. Right. If you run a business, you must have a
t’nink-taught scribe to keep your records and write your contracts and you live
in an often vain hope that he won’t sell you down the drain accepting bribes
from everyone about. But the lu Laraynnes have always been rebels. Oh, not
overt rebels—that trait vanished quickly from Loppen Var. Anyone who stuck her
head up was killed. Among other things we did, mother taught daughter to read,
this from way back in the mists of forgotten times. Because of this lu Laraynne
prospered, though we let ourselves be cheated now and then for the look of it;
word got around we were lucky. I don’t mind telling you all this; the line is
wiped out. Cousins, aunts, grandmothers, mothers, all gone. Our undying, our
living god Avagrunn, she saw to that. She wants no changes in the rules she set
down for us. For longer than anyone can remember, she comes down from her dome
when there is unrest and adjusts the folk to suit her pleasure, slaying the
intransigent, punishing the others. Why am I alive? I don’t know. A sign
perhaps of the consequences of rebellion. Not much of a sign. I seldom go near
other folk, only go into the village when I need something I can’t make for
myself. Don’t talk to anyone, no one talks to me. Why did I do it? Ah, if you’d
seen him, you’d know. My firstborn, a beautiful loving boy, gentle and kind,
but with a hunger in him to know things. His father? You really don’t understand
how things work here, do you? Nothingness. He came out of nothingness, a gift
of the Great Nothing. What that means is pubescent girls go to the t’nink in
their town when they are ready for children and their mother allows it. They
spend thirty days there doing t’nink service in the day and lying with whoever
comes to their rooms at night. The priests? Didn’t I make it clear the priests
and scribes are always women? No. Every thirty days a levy is made of village
men in the middle range of ages, they do heavy work for the t’nink in the day
and go to the rooms appointed them at night, a different room each night so no
one, not even the priests, knows who sired what child. Afterward? Well, associations
do form between men and women, though they are not supposed to. As long as
there are no children of that association, no one says anything. My son, my
Juranot. I tried to keep him on one of the family farms, gave up my place on
the ruling board to stay with him. He didn’t mind, he had a deep and abiding
love for wild plants and animals, he made sketches of them in a little book I
had bound for him. And kept notes in that book about their habits. It was
dangerous, but I could not deny him that gift. Then priests came and took him
away, took him to do his service in the village t’nink. I warned him to say
nothing about the reading when I taught him. I had just time to warn him again
when they took him away. I wasn’t terribly afraid for him; he was quick and
wary when he had to be. But ah, he was beautiful.
That was the thing I feared. That was the trap that snared
him.
The undying came through the village when he was in the
t’nink.
Avagrunn saw him and desired him. Took him.
I had friends then. One of them saw what happened and came
to tell me, comfort me as much as she could.
He betrayed his teaching. How could he not—he was only a boy
and she is ages old in treachery and terror. He didn’t tell her anything, I’m
sure of that, but somehow he let her see he knew his letters. That was all
she’d need. They brought his head to me, priests and a squad of harriers. They
branded me and drove me from my home. They burned everything, killed my kin,
everyone except me. Me they left alive to remember and grieve over what I had
done. Oh yes, they sterilized me first to make sure none of my tainted blood
would be passed on. What can I do? Avagrunn won’t change. As long as she is
there, as long as her power supports the Matriarch, nothing will change. You
must understand, hope’s the only pain I couldn’t endure. I have no hope. I will
walk my quiet rounds the rest of my days. I will shear my gettesau each spring
and trade the fleeces for what I need to keep me for the year. When the time
comes I will die up here and rot and finally I will be some use again,
fertilizing the trees and feeding the scavengers. Regrets? I regret nothing.
What I did before I would do again. My beautiful boy, how could I cripple him
with unnecessary ignorance? Would I break his leg to make him limp, would I
pluck out an eye to destroy the lovely symmetry of his face? How much less
could I stop the reach of his mind? I accept no guilt for what I did; the guilt
lies with the undying, with Avagrunn. If I could get my hands around her
throat, I would test how undying she really is. But there is no hope of that,
so I have no hope. Ah, I’m tired of talking about this, it’s all foolishness
and futility. Go away. I’ve nothing more to say to you. Go!
Vrithian
action on the periphery [3]
Amaiki touched the screen to life, clasped her hands to stop
them trembling as she saw the loved faces: little Muri up front; Kimpri leaning
over his shoulder; Keran towering over all of them, a half-smile on her narrow
face; Betaki leaning against her, amusement warm in his slitted eyes;
Se-Passhi, their naish, in the curve of Muri’s arm. Dear, most dear, all of
them. Seeing them like this, unable to touch or smell them, was almost more
than she could bear. Then Betaki held up the newest hatchling, a tiny gold
naish, the blessing of blessings to a mate-meld. She gasped and bent closer to
the screen, her hand up to touch the little blind face, her heart so full that
she couldn’t speak. She made the blessing signs, the joy signs that should have
been made touching the soft soft skin, aching because she could not feel their
naishlet, could not smell the sweet-sour scent of the infant.
Muri cleared his throat, tapped his skinny forefinger
against the screen, finally catching her notice. “Haven’t named our naish yet,
Ammi-sim. Waiting for you.”
“Ah why? Muri-sim, I’m stuck here three more years.”
“We want you to tell the undying to let you go. He’s broken
his side of the covenant, two winters with no rain. Why should we keep our
side?” His high tenor roughened to a low growl; there was a general murmur of
agreement from the others.
Amaiki closed her eyes and breathed slowly until she had control
of herself; she hated fusses, hated getting into a flutter. Keeping her voice
low and quiet, she said, “It will be difficult. He does not listen to our
speaker here—why should he listen to me? I’ll try to make him hear me. Muri
meldbrother, have there been dreams in the Dums around here, dreams of fire and
death that could be reaches into tomorrow?”
Muri smoothed his hand over his lacy crest. “No one but us
left in Shiosa, Ammi. We had dreams, but who can say what they mean?”
“No one left?”
“The deepest well in Shiosa is sucking mud. We could drill
deeper yet, but what’s the point?”
“Ah. The meld dreams?”
Kimpri leaned over Muri, ignoring his disgruntled snort.
“Blood and death, Ammi. You remember Tamakis in Dum Hayash? Who was my
nest-sister?”
“Kimp-sim, I’ve only been gone a year and a half, not half a
life.”
“Feels like a life—the flavor of the meld needs your Spice,
love-sister. Anyway, she called me before her mate-meld left, a pretty good
far-speaker she is too, says she felt blood dreams all over the uplands.” She
straightened, brushed affectionately at Muri’s crest, flicked a finger against
the tip of an ear. “All right, all right, little cricket.”
Amaiki swallowed. “How long can you wait?” she said, her
voice hardly louder than a whisper.
Muri looked uncomfortable. “We thought we could stay out
your time, Ammi, but we can’t do it alone. Wolves prowling. Four-legged and
otherwise. The other night we talked things over and called line-mother in Shim
Shupat. She’s got space we can have on a ship for Bygga Modig. It leaves with
the tide Minha-new-moon. That’s seven days from today.” He fell silent, drooped
sadly, his quicksilver spirits gone suddenly dull.
Keran made an impatient sound, leaned forward, taller and
more angular than any of the others; she wasn’t a talker, was far more
expressive with her hands. “Am, uplands’re empty. Pinbo m’ cousin Likut’s line,
taken the year after I hatched, she a far-speaker, touched our Se-passhi, says
come and be welcome. Guldafel. Lot of taken there.” She raised a long hand,
signed love and retreated.
Amaiki signed back, then stroked the folds of skin about her
neck. “Nothing else you can do. I agree. Give me three days. If I’m not out by
then, Hyaroll won’t let me go. That gives you four to make the coast.” She
smiled at Keran, reached out touched the glass where her meld-sister was. “My
love, no one can convince me you’ve let our flier go out of shape, so you all
can spare me three days.”
Keran smiled gratification, nodded.
Muri erected his crest, opened his eyes wide. “We’ll be
early and wait the whole day.” He spread his hands, long fingers flickering
with signs for amplitude and good living. “A grand last picnic to say farewell
to the uplands. The hatchlings will love it.” He sobered. “And if the undying
won’t let go?”
Amiki moved restlessly, shifting her feet on the
beaten-earth floor of the com-kiosk. Nothing here was secret from the undying.
Nothing at all. But what did it matter? She had to do what her fate decreed, so
let him hear. Let me be as bold as the odd folk. “If he will not let me
go, I will get free somehow and come after you, my loves. Leave signs behind to
tell me where you are and I’ll find you no matter what. No matter how long or
hard the journey, I will find you.” That last was a promise she meant to keep,
a promise implicit in the formality of the words. She backed half a step from
the screen, fighting to control the emotion erupting in her; she was turning
into a stranger she didn’t quite like.
The meld made the love signs, the waiting and faithful
signs, then the farewell signs; Betaki held up the hatchling and moved the
little naish’s hand in a fluid farewell sign, the baby cooing and making small
sucking sounds. Amaiki gave the signs back, her eyes blurring, her control
deserting her again. She brushed at her eyes, blinked to clear them, unwilling
to miss a second of seeing them. Understanding this, Muri broke the connection
and all that was left was darkness.
Amaiki moved quickly out of the kiosk and went to stand by
the wall. She watched her family move out of the other side and climb into the
flier, stood leaning on the top stones while the flier lifted vertically and
turned toward Shiosa. It hovered a moment. She waved. It dipped a stubby wing
at her, a quick precarious move that could have been a disaster with anyone but
Keran at the console.
She stood watching until she could see the black speck no
longer, then trudged wearily to her dwelling to eat a light meal and gather her
courage before she tried to reach Hyaroll.
Vrithian
on the oblique file [3]
Willow sang: “This and this and this and this and this and
this,” scraping carefully at a shaft a little greater around than her biggest
finger, smoothing it, gradually tapering a portion at one end to the girth of
the tapestry needle set in that end.
Days ago, after she left Bodri brooding over the properties
of roots and how they could possibly get at a man who knew exactly what they
were doing, she rambled about the whole of the domed enclave hunting out and
collecting branches of the proper tight grain, girth, strength and
straightness. She brought these back to the hillside where she had her camp,
cut them into roughly equal lengths, then dried them on a frame over a smoky
fire. When they were ready for working, she sent Sunchild foraging for her. In
the lizard folk’s village he found a dozen tapestry needles, in Hyaroll’s
long-unused workshop he found glue, hones and an assortment of cutting tools.
He was limited in the weights he could manage, but he absorbed patience from
Willow and found what he considered a perverse satisfaction in the task.
She took the hone and began sharpening the blunt needles;
Sunchild squatted beside her, the squeaks and squeals of the hone affecting him
as catnip did a cat.
When the needles were sharp enough to prick a thought, Willow
chose twelve shafts from among the cured branches, reamed holes in one end of
each, then glued the needles into them.
Willow sang: “This and this and this and this and this,” and
handed the finished shaft to Sunchild. He heated up one hand and rubbed gently
along the shaft until it was polished smooth and hard as stone. He set it on a
cloth beside him and waited contentedly for the next.
Bodri was burming along to himself, a low rumbling tuneless
hum, working as intently as Willow, borrowing her worksongs to pass the time in
his tedious experiments. He was cutting up several different kinds of roots and
pods, tossing the chunks into the pot hanging over a small hot fire. While
Willow was hunting her arrow shafts, he’d been prospecting among the plants,
sniffing and tasting, bringing back samples to the camp, making decoctions of
them and testing these on birds and fish. He wasn’t satisfied yet with the
toxicity of his mixes or the speed with which they acted. The decoctions that
acted quickly enough killed just as fast in very small doses; the ones that
only stunned took too long to do it. They certainly didn’t want to kill the man—that
would ruin everything.
Willow’s camp was a dirt flat on the hill behind Hyaroll’s
house, trees thick on three sides, large boulders sprayed in an arc about the
downhill side. A small stream sang through the trees, ran between two of the
boulders down the long gentle slope to the lake. Beside that stream was a small
hut built of bark and wattle where Willow slept at night, where she kept her
tools and anything else she didn’t want rained on.
She handed a finished shaft to Sunchild, reached for
another, glancing downhill as she did so. Hyaroll was walking toward the
landing saucers. She held the shaft across her thighs, frowning. The back of a
flier was just visible over the kadraesh trees. “Old Vryhh, he going
somewhere.”
Sunchild set the shaft with the other finished ones. “Kepha
said he would. To meet that woman. You know, the one the Vryhh bitch was
yelling about.”
“Hmmp. Yelling.” She clicked her tongue, danced her fingers
on her thighs, over and around the shaft. “Singing her into the clan, huh?”
“In their way.”
She lifted the shaft, then set it aside and climbed onto one
of the larger boulders, waiting to see the flier jump up and dart away. One of
the lizard folk stepped from behind a bush and put a hand on his arm, stopping
him. Willow could hear their voices, but couldn’t make out the words. The slim
lacertine figure was filled with passion, talking fast, demanding something. He
listened briefly to it, then brushed it out of the way, more roughly—maybe—than
he intended, went on to his flier. The slight figure lay crumpled on the grass.
A moment later the flier passed through the dome, then
darted away to the northwest.
Willow stood on the boulder, looking from the vanishing
flier to the creature below. It stirred and sat up. She hummed the paka cat song,
moved her feet on the rock, curiosity growing in her. An impatient snort. A
quick jump from boulder onto grass. She ran downhill to the shuddering shape.
The creature was trembling all over, incapable of speech, unable
to stand. Willow moved cautiously closer, touched its shoulder. It jumped as if
her touch stung, then collapsed again and struggled for control of the emotions
wracking it. It wasn’t hurt as far as she could tell, just filled with a
seething mess of anger and frustration and fear. She remembered seeing this one
working here and there in the garden all summer, handling the plants with a delicate
touch that reminded her of Bodri. She squatted beside the creature, frowning,
humming snatches of song, trying to find a way to comprehend the hurt and help
it. Finally she began one of the go-’way-hurt songs she used to sing to her
children, faltering at first because these were songs she hadn’t sung since Old
Stone Vryhh ripped her from her family—but something about the pain in this
creature struck deep into her and drew from her responses she’d denied till now
to save her sanity. Singing that string of magic meaningless sounds, she
ignored the creature’s feeble attempts to push her away and gathered it into
her arms, across her legs, and patted its back and rocked it as she would have
rocked her babies. After that first resistance it went limp against her and
began sobbing, something that startled a tiny part of Willow because she didn’t
know lizards could weep. She continued to sing her go-hurt song, continued to
comfort the creature. No no, folk not lizards, no no, folk can cry, no no, folk
have ears not lizards. The sunlight shone a light leaf green through the
creature’s large pointed ears, the skin as fine and thin as the newest spring
leaf. Man or woman? she thought suddenly. Which is this? Cries like
me when I hurt. Can’t just look with folk, not like run-about beasts. Have to
ask. Yes, I ask. She let her song die and loosened her arms as the
creature’s shuddering diminished, then stopped.
The man? woman? pulled back, stiff with embarrassment. At
least that was what it looked like to Willow. Its face was a light olive green
with a smooth pebbly texture; ordinary eyes except they were shiny like melted
gold; a nose like a knife blade with wide flared nostrils, a long mouth, thin
flexible lips delicately curved; high cheekbones, rather hollow cheeks. Almost
no chin, but that didn’t make the face look weak. Mobile pointed ears much
larger than Willow’s. She watched the sun shine through them and reminded
herself again, this was another place and these were real folk, not spirit
creatures with animal forms. She shifted around so she was sitting on her
heels, her knees spread, her hands resting on her thighs, palaver stance among
her people. “You man or woman?”
The creature looked startled, then offended, then faintly
amused. “I am female,” she said. Her voice was clear, its sound very pure.
Willow sighed with pleasure hearing it. “My name is Amaiki,” the other went on.
“I am a conc of the Conoch’hi.”
Willow bowed her head, snapped her name sound on her fingers,
then said it in the common tongue Hyaroll’s teaching box had given her.
“Willow,” she said. “Old Stone Vryhh, what he doing to you?’’
A film slid over Amaiki’s gold-foil eyes. Her impossibly
long thin hands closed into knotted fists. She bowed her head, the trembling
back again, but only for a moment this time. She smoothed her tabard about her
narrow body, pulling out the wrinkles, tucked her legs under her, set opened
hands neatly on her thighs. For several heartbeats longer she was silent, staring
past Willow at the wind-teased grass on the hillside. When she spoke again, she
was outwardly composed, but in her voice was an angry helplessness that found a
powerful echo within Willow’s breast. “For many and many generations have
Conoch’hi served Hyaroll, for many and many generations has he shaped our lives
and made us depend on him, has he taken our children from us and changed them
or sent them away. He gave us peace, he gave us rain, he took our naidisa from
us. Look around you, Willow from far far away. How green and lovely it is in
here. But go to the dome’s edge and look out, then you will see dust and death
and a sun without pity. He does not call the rain for us, he sucks the ground dry
to feed his trees. Our children grow hungry, our children thirst, our plants
and beasts they die. Six days ago, oh Willow, my mate-meld came to the caller
kiosk. They are leaving the uplands, Willow, leaving me behind. They are taking
our newest child and our other four and they are going to the far side of the
world. They cannot stay and starve. I went to Hyaroll and asked him to let me
go with my mates-in-meld. He would not. I begged him to let me go. He would
not. I asked again and again until he would not see me, until he would not come
out of the house for fear of seeing me. I asked again today and you saw his
answer.” She stopped speaking, calmed herself, went on in a low quiet voice.
“If I could leave the dome, I could follow them still. They must be deep into
Istenger Ocean by now, but I could follow them. They promised to leave word for
me as many places as they could, so I could find them if only I could leave the
dome. I must ... I must ... I ...” Her throat fluttered as she fought for
control; her fingers moved in small gestures Willow read as distaste for her
own excesses—or what she saw as excesses. Willow scowled at the dome, its faint
flicker close to invisible against the cloudless sky. “He gone, but he leave
ears behind.” She lowered her eyes to Amaiki’s face, her hands touching her own
ears, dropping, clutching hard at each other; she hissed and pulled her hands
apart. “Time was once, I have a man, my Otter; time was once, I birth my Sparrow
my daughter who sing before she talk; time was once, I birth my Mouse, my
son-baby, my hurry-about baby. Before he walking good, hah!” She hugged herself,
rocking on her toes. “Before he walking, he still on tit, Hyaroll snatch me
away. Ay be-be, ay-yii, my Mouse. No more. No more.” She straightened her back,
dropped her arms. “Can’t go back, me. But you, hah!” She lifted a hand, made a
blade of it, chopped the blade down. “Him! He don’t do it again. I get you
out.” She spread her hands. “Don’t know how. Not now.” She got to her feet.
“You come, huh?”
Willow told the tale with hands, feet and body while Amaiki
sat primly on one of the boulders. Bodri was dour, resisting her passion and
insistence with his own; again and again he said, if we help her, Whisper in
the wind, we could wake Old Vryhh to work against us, let her wait, time is
coming when we’re ready to go against Old Vryhh, when we win, we’ll get her
out, wait, wait, he said, don’t kick up dust for Hyaroll to see, it’s safer
when the thing is over, it’s safer and more sure.
Willow only grew hotter and more determined. In a sense all
that they were doing now, the shafts she was fashioning, the bow she’d make
later, Bodri’s boiled messes, Sunchild’s erratic poking and prodding and his
small but useful thefts, all these things were games they were playing with
themselves, busying their hands and minds with what they could do so they could
hide from themselves their helplessness and futility. This was different, this
was something they could do here and now to frustrate the plans of the man
who’d stolen their lives from them for his amusement. She danced all this with
body and hands and the oblique allusions of her songs. “Now,” she sang. “It
must be now.”
Sunchild watched the battle unperturbed; he’d seen others,
though none so deeply felt. He had several things to say when the time came,
but there was no point in saying anything until Bodri stopped arguing, either
agreeing to help or refusing to listen to Willow any longer. While the argument
raged on, he amused himself trying out the shapes swimming so powerfully in
Amaiki’s mind. He felt her distress as he shifted from Keran to Muri to Kimpri
to Betaki to Se-Passhi and finally to the infant naish, running them off like
beads on a worrystring, but that distress didn’t bother him. His folk made very
powerful emotional bonds but also very few. His family was three now and
forever. Willow. Bodri. Kephalos. And the deepest, most intimate of those bonds
was with the awakening kephalos; in its way it about matched his mind age and
shared many of his interests, though its way of thinking was very unlike his.
Beyond those three who he loved without reservation and forever, no one existed
for him, not in any meaningful way. He could be confused and irritated with
them; he would play with them one way or another, but as soon as his interest
waned, he’d be gone; he felt no responsibility for them; they were images in
dreamland.
The debate was calming down. Bodri nodded reluctantly, Willow
smiled, turned to Amaiki. And saw her distress and saw Sunchild shifting. She gasped.
Jumped the short distance to him and slapped her hand through his substance,
not hurting him but startling him into cringing away from her, the flare of her
anger washing over him, whipping him with its nettle stings. He cried out, a
high keening whine like the sound the kimkim flies made late in the evening.
Her anger died. Willow knelt beside the quivering shapeless
lump of light and for the second time that day sang her go-’way-hurt song. She
stroked his outline, careful to keep her hand from breaking through the fragile
membrane of his surface tension, controlling her own shock and momentary
revulsion as he was first Sparrow, then Mouse, then Otter curled up on the
ground beside her. She softened the song to a crooning whisper, “Ah-weh, be-be,
ah weh.” She gave him a last gentle pat, then got to her feet. “He only
teasing,” she told Amaiki. “He don’t understand much about the way mamas feel.”
She nudged Sunchild with her toe. “I see you peeking, little sneak. Up. Tell
this mama you sorry for fussing her.”
Sunchild got warily to his feet, his form melting at the
edges, caught in the contrary urges pulling from the two women. He sneaked a
look at Willow, saw her hands moving in a scold-song, saw her smiling at him in
spite of that. He straightened himself out and firmed up, then he did a
graceful Conoch’hi bow with Conoch’hi signs expressing shame and repentance,
then looked at Amaiki slantwise from those blank beautiful eyes.
Amaiki had seen Sunchild before as he drifted about the gardens,
a butter smear of light half the time shapeless as any cloud; now, for the
first time, she saw his beauty and was startled by it. And deeply moved by it,
though it came in so strange a form. She saw him grin at her and take on hints
of Conoch’hi, just enough to drive home the effect of his grace. Understanding
then how little real feeling lay behind his charm, she grinned back. “Well
done, kushi-su, I have never seen a more graceful apology.”
Bodri snorted, then laughed, a papery rustle that sounded
like dried leaves rubbing against each other, but he said nothing, only moved
back to his fire and began stirring the mixture in the pot, his back turned to
them, disassociating himself from what was happening.
Willow traced the blue lines of a design pricked into the
dark brown skin of her side, then spread her hands, fluttering the fingers.
“Me, I don’t know nothing about getting out of here. Sunchild, he the one can
talk to kepha.” She turned to him. “So what do kepha say?”
Sunchild sidled up to her, pressed himself against her as
hard as his lack of mass would permit. She stroked the golden semblance of her
Otter and gave him the affection and acceptance he craved. Satisfied, he
retreated a little, keeping close enough to her so his form could stabilize
into the single shape. “Kepha knows he’ll die with Hyaroll. He doesn’t want to
die, Willow. He’ll do about anything he can to stop that. There’s not a whole
lot of things open to him. He can’t do anything that will hurt Hyaroll, not
anything. He can fiddle that some, make limits to what hurt means to
him. We been working on that. I figure maybe letting this Amaiki get away is
something he could decide won’t hurt Old Vryhh; so unless Hyaroll has given him
direct orders to keep her and the other Conochi’hi sitting in that village,
maybe kepha can open the way for her. And maybe not.” He scowled at Amaiki,
showing his resentment at her being the cause of his scolding, but he smoothed
out his face when he turned back to Willow. “Now Old Vryhh’s gone, I’d better
go have a talk with kepha, find out what he can do and what he’s willing to do.
Might not be the same thing.”
Willow nodded, looked at the sun, then at him. “Good thing
if this be drone before Old Vryhh get back. How long he going be gone?”
“Till he gets back”
“Hah, you. Not finny.”
“I don’t know, Willow, and kepha doesn’t either. Nothing
like this has happened before.”
“So go now.” She flapped her hands at him. “Go!”
He drifted into the air, flowed out of shape into a streak
of light, and as a streak of butterlight raced downhill and merged with a wall
of the house.
Willow folded her arms, rocked them. “No big badness in him,
he just a baby.”
Amaiki dipped her head in graceful acknowledgment, but said
nothing; she’d felt the bite of Sunchild’s malice and knew what he did, he did
for Willow, not her. There was a strong bond of fondness between these
disparate beings, almost a mother-child link, and she would put no stain on
that. And she would not stain her own being by speaking a lie she knew was a
lie.
Willow sighed. Trying to help this one was like fighting
against a haru-wind bringing in a spring storm. Not for you, stranger, ‘s
not for you I doing this, not just for you. She snapped thumbs
against fingers, looked at her hands. I sticking pins in Old Stone
Vryhh, hunh, he won’t feel them, him, but I know they there. I know. Good
‘nough. She said, “Ev’ry time I see Old Vryhh go out, it up there.” She
pointed at the top of the dome. “You fly one of those things?”
Amaiki shivered, then came out of her withdrawal.
Willow watched her shuck her shell. If she hadn’t seen and
felt that outpouring of rage and fear and hate down the hill, she’d have
thought Amaiki was as cold and unfeeling as the reptile she vaguely resembled.
Not so. Despite the surface, not so. She and Bodri had a lot the same feel to
them: neatness of hand and body—Bodri might look clumsy and sound like rocks
banging down a hillside, but he got about the garden with a surprising deftness
and never bruised a plant or even an insect he wanted to keep alive; precision
of thought and motion—Bodri was looser about this than Amaiki, but the effect
was the same, the control similar; dislike of fuss in all forms—which was why
Willow almost always won arguments with him; she didn’t mind noise and
messy emotions and turmoil and tears, she rather liked them. And she had more
staying power. She could keep on long after he was exhausted. Like today. He
wasn’t really convinced, he just didn’t want to go on arguing.
“A flier,” Amaiki said thoughtfully, then shook her head. “I
can fly one, of course, but two things about taking a flier. One, kephalos
might be willing to let me go, but I don’t believe he’d let me take off with
Hyaroll’s property. Two, I suspect the controls of those fliers only respond to
Hyaroll’s touch. Hmm. Maybe one of the larger skimsleds. That’s property too,
but nothing like the cost of an armored flier. I could bypass the level control
and hype the drivers to give me enough power for a jump through the dome. Hmm.
Tricky. Might turn the sled into junk. If I set in a cut-off switch maybe I
could save it ... use heavy-duty batteries, switch them for solar ... I could
travel at night, lay up during the day, let them charge ... less power, but a
longer range ... lot better than going on foot.” She nodded. “That’s what I’ll
do. I’ve been packed and ready to go for days. I’ll shift my things to the sled
garage.” She stood, pointed downhill at a low blocky structure separated from
the house by a thick planting of kadraesh trees. “I’d better be moving, Willow.
No matter what answer your friend brings back, it’s as well to be prepared.”
She hesitated, then gave an angular, formal bow with graceful hand gestures
that Willow watched with interest, liking the fluidity of the movements. “You
have fought hard for me, sister-friend, my line is deep in your debt. I shall
knot you with pride into my life weave and your story and your kindness will be
remembered through all generations that will be.”
Willow inclined her torso, touched head and heart, straightened.
“I have borne and lost, sister-friend. It pleases me to give a mother back to
her children.” She flung out her arms, laughed fiercely, smacked fist against
palm. “And do Old Stone Vryhh a mischief where it’d hurt if he had any feeling
left.”
With a laugh and a last farewell sign, Amaiki moved through
the line of boulders and started down the slope with that deceptively
unhurried, gliding stride that took her quickly toward the sled garage.
“You weren’t just arguing to be arguing.”
Willow looked over her shoulder. Bodri had taken his mixture
from the fire and was prodding at it with a limber twig from a murkka tree,
putting a tiny fraction of its paralyzing poison into the mess. He poked at the
decoction twice more and threw the twig into the fire. “I thought you were
getting restless,” he said. “But it means a lot to you.”
“Yes, old beetle, it really do.”
“You don’t talk much about your children.”
“No.”
He gazed at her a moment longer, then heaved a huge sigh
that set his back-garden swaying. “All right, Willow. Whatever I can do, that’s
yours.”
She smiled and went to squat beside him and scratch up where
his stumpy legs joined his body, her fingers working among fold on fold of soft
silky skin. He sighed with pleasure, his tentacle arm looped around her
shoulders and playing in the springy curls at the nape of her neck.
Willow was scraping with finicking care on the last of the
shafts, Bodri was ladling the cooled decoction into test tubes and sealing
them, when Sunchild came back. “This kephalos is almost as old as Old Vryhh,” he
said. Hands going still, Willow looked up. “So?”
“So Hyaroll has been working on it, adding to it, changing
it, multiplying its purposes, all that, for a long long time.” He glanced at
Willow, saw her scowl. “Like taking, um ...” He looked up. Several of the many
raptors inside the dome were riding thermals, coiling about each other as if
for the game of it and nothing more. “Like taking a vekvem up there and putting
more brains in his head, making him smarter and smarter and smarter until maybe
he’s smart as a person. Till he is a kind of person. You see?”
Willow shaded her eyes and looked up at the gliding circling
vekvem. “Can’t,” she said.
“But if you could?”
“Magic?”
“Something like that.”
“So. Kepha smart now and like a person, not a ... a ... an
ironhead know-nothing.”
“You got it. Different too. You, me, Bodri, we can move
around; kepha has to sit where he is—and well, Hyaroll keeps chains on him so
he can’t do much except what Old Vryhh wants.”
“Cut the chains.”
“Magic chains.”
“Thump Old Vryhh, make him take ‘em off.”
“Kepha can’t do that.”
“Us.”
“Kepha won’t let us. He can’t.”
“Magic, hah.” She spat.
“Way it is.”
“We can’t do nothing?”
“Didn’t say that.”
“Well, say what!”
“Well, kepha’s getting smarter all the time, doing it to
himself now; he was just a baby, but he’s growing up fast and he doesn’t like
being a slave.”
“Ummp. Big surprise.”
“You the one in the hurry. Listen. I’ve been talking with
kepha since we started this.” He waved a hand at the pile of shafts, swung it
around to include Bodri and his labors. “I figure what’s the harm, Hyaroll
knows what we’re doing anyway. Kepha can’t come right out and tell me what Old
Vryhh is planning, but he lets me know when I guess right. So, for sure, it’s a
funeral pyre with us all following Old Vryhh down to hell. Kepha is not not not
happy with that, but he can’t stop it, not just him. Thing is, he is
programmed, umm, he has to do whatever Hyaroll tells him to do. Old Vryhh’s got
careless. Doesn’t think much of us either. He just told kepha to make a summary
of anything we do he might find interesting. Might find. Hear that? Leaves the
choice up to kepha. Lot of things he can do with that. Like what we’re saying
now. Or the time I talk with him. He just tells himself it’s all too boring,
that Hyaroll wouldn’t be interested in it, so he doesn’t have to report it.
He’d stop us hard if we tried to hurt Old Vryhh, but as long as we don’t touch
him, we’ll be all right.”
Willow made a hissing impatient sound.
“Thought you’d like to know.”
She leaned closer to him, said very slowly, “He help Amaiki
go?”
“Hurry-hurry. This is what he says. He can’t open the dome
when Hyaroll is gone. He can’t open the dome anytime unless Hyaroll orders it.”
Sunchild paused a moment, touched her nose with a forefinger, danced back from
her, teasing her, his silent laughter pulsing waves of light through his body.
“But he can keep the hole open a short while after Hyaroll’s through. Long
enough to let the lizard lady hop out. If she can get up there. Kepha says if
she waits until he’s almost down on the landing saucer and jumps out fast, he
won’t notice anything’s happened. So you go tell her to be ready fast. Old
Vryhh’s on his way home, be here in about a half hour.” He bounced away,
perched on top a boulder. “I’d better get back to kepha. He’s nervous and
lonesome. It’s hard to be nervous and lonesome.”
Amaiki looked cool as morning, standing erect but relaxed on
the skimsled, a heavy dark cloak bound closely around her so it wouldn’t get in
her way, her long hands resting lightly on the steering bars. Willow squatted
in the shade of a hairy lod-bush watching her, watching the dome.
A dark dot came darting over the mountains, grew into the
flier, which hovered briefly over the dome, then sank through it, dropped for
the saucer. The skimsled hummed. The hum rose to an urgent whine. The moment
the flier slowed for the last meter before it touched down, Amaiki moved her
thumb. The sled shot straight up for a kilometer, then slanted south and passed
through the dome. For a breath or two she flew on a level, then arched down and
was on the ground again before the flier finished its settling. Willow crouched
where she was and watched Hyaroll step down from the lock. Grim-faced, but
without hurry, he walked away from the saucer, heading for the house. She tried
to read his face, but he looked more or less how he always looked. When he
vanished inside, she got to her feet and trudged uphill to her camp.
Sunchild came drifting down, squatted beside her, watching
her cut vanes from stiff feathers. “She got away,” he said.
“Hmp.”
“He didn’t notice anything.”
“Good.” She set the feather down. “I need more glue.”
“I’ll look about.”
She reached out, touched his face with her fingertips. “You
did good.”
“Me and Kephalos.”
“Hmp. All of us.” She grinned at Sunchild. “We whip his
tail, Old Stone Vryhh.”
Borbhal On Sakkor
_files/image009.jpg)
Vrithian
WITNESS [4]
A SHOPKEEPER IN CRASA DOR
My name is Tensio alte Nariozh. My mother came from one of
the best families in Borbhal, but her father was a gambler and lost most of the
estate, so she had to marry beneath her. My father was a good man in his way
but he had no polish and used to grate on her nerves with his loudness and his
crudeness; he never could learn to appreciate the gracious style of living she
found more natural. Though I shouldn’t say it, I know how it sounds, but really
just coming into a room he could make me wince. She wanted to send me to
Cabozh, to the University at Inchacobesh outside the capital, but my father
wouldn’t hear of it, I had to go into the business and learn it from floor to
attic, and I do mean floor. He had me pushing a broom with the slaves brought
up from Cobarzh. Tempestao, you wouldn’t believe how they stank, those turezh.
And lazy, good for nothing .... I won’t have one of them in my shop, not to
work and not to buy. It makes me sick to my stomach to think of them putting
their filthy hands on my silks and laces and velvets. You see how fine my goods
are—look at the light coming through that window and playing on the colors and
the delicate textures; you won’t find such goods anywhere else in all of
Borbhal. Perhaps across the Fistavey in Cabozh, but nowhere closer. Demons? Ah,
you must mean the undying. Please, I must ask you not to use that awful term in
my presence. They come in here several times during the year to look at my
goods, no I am not boasting, it is true, that’s the noble Algozar’s sign right
there, he had it etched in my window. You must have seen his dome on the cliffs
across the bay. He knows beautiful things when he sees them, oh yes. He talks
to me as if I’m one of the great ones, oh yes. The undying know, you
understand, they feel the good blood in my veins. I’ve done all I can to rid
myself of my father’s crudeness and pattern myself on my mother’s side of the
family, and I flatter myself that I know the courtly ways the undying expect.
In my circle they say I could go on very well at court back home. Why don’t I
go? There are jealous men, officials at court, who just won’t let any colonials
near the King. And my mother’s family, who could intercede for me if they
wanted, well, they live off the money I send them, but they won’t acknowledge
me. Bitter? No, no, of course not, just a little disappointed. I take comfort
in remembering I am the one with the noble mind and heart, the true scion of
our ancient line. Listen, the Governor himself comes to my shop when he wants
something especially fine. And his wife sends her dressmaker to me. His
mistress? I don’t talk about the private affairs of my patrons. I’m sorry you
asked, I thought you were another kind. I have said all I want to say. Please
leave.
Avosing
action on the second line [1]
Shadith woke to a throbbing in her head that blanked out everything
else. She drifted in and out of consciousness, aware of little beyond a thick
darkness around her and noises she heard and forgot immediately. Disoriented
and nauseated, she was too absorbed by pain to wonder who she was and what had
happened to her.
Gradually she grew aware of something outside the pain. Her
wrists were tied together, a smooth pole passed between them. Her legs were
tied at the knees and ankles to that same pole. He head hung loosely, bumping
back and forth with the swaying of her body. She was being carried like a pig
to a roast. Eyes slitted, fighting to ignore a headache that beat the worst
hangover she could remember, she used the motion of her body to shift her head
about and gain the widest field of vision she could manage without informing
her captors she was awake and aware.
The darkness was gone. She was being carried through a thin
greenish twilight. Forest. On the edge, as before. A man ahead of her, pole on
his shoulder, looked like an amber miner. That couldn’t be right ... they
wouldn’t ... no ... forester of some kind. More likely. Man behind her, much
the same. Big men, keeping up a smooth steady lope, used to being in the
forest. More of them behind her carriers. She took a chance when they went
around a slight bend, swayed out farther, fell back. Another pole. Probably
Linfyar. Poor Linfy. Her stomach was turning flip-flops. She kept from
vomiting by force of will alone. The nausea came and went in waves; once the
worst was over, it retreated for a while.
When the last crisis was over, she tried thinking again. Looks
like I won’t have to bother laying a trail to show I’m no provocateur. This has
to be the Ajin’s men, and isn’t that a giggle. All my fussing for nothing.
Wonder if old loudmouth is watching. Keeping his head down if he is. If I had
anything to bet with, I’d give good odds these bastards found my stash and my
hard-earned coin is sitting in their pockets. Shadow, my girl, this is a
promise, if that’s so I’ll take it out of their stinking hides. Hunh, I’ll take
this damn pole and make ‘em eat it, first chance I get. Lousy way to travel.
She relaxed as much as she could, putting herself into a shallow
trance so the bobbing of her head and the chafing of her arms and legs wouldn’t
drive her into trying something foolish. After a while the pollen took her and
everything melted about her; she drifted in a dull throbbing state where nausea
mixed with distant pain and a low-grade fever. By the time her bearers dumped
her in the dust before a weathered building, she didn’t much care who had her
or what happened to her. Her arms and legs were rubbed raw from the ropes and
the pole; her shoulders felt as if her weight had wrenched her arms from their
sockets. Her mouth was dry and sour. Her head pounded with each beat of her
heart. She wanted water desperately but knew she’d never keep it down. Just
give me something to wash my mouth out, that’s all. Cool water, rolling in
her mouth, cool water to splash over her face and head. Somewhere, not too far
away, men were talking; she could hear the different voices but they were too
broken and blurred for her to make out the sounds. Whoever you are, whoever
did this to me, whatever you want, you aren’t getting it. I don’t care what
happens. Anger built in her, the heat of it energizing her, chasing away
the depression of her spirits, driving off a good part of the fog in her head.
She pursed cracking lips and whistled, just a thread of sound.
A whistle came back to her a moment later, cautious, brief,
but familiar enough. She relaxed. He sounded all right, not too happy, but
intact.
Footsteps behind her. She closed her eyes, lay without
moving. A hand lifted her head. Pain took her so suddenly and completely she
couldn’t suppress a short sharp gasp.
“Jambi, you git, you hit her too hard. He’ll skin you if she
dies on him.” There was disgust in the voice and a rough gentleness in the
hands that soaked the crusted blood from her hair and scalp and applied a salve
that spread cool comfort over her head, even seemed to soothe the pain inside
her skull, though she knew that was nonsense. He dragged a pack of some kind
around, put her head down on it, shifted his position. As he cut away the ropes
around her wrists, she cracked her eyes so she could see him. A big man, with
shaggy gray hair, a lined impatient face. Could be one of the Sendir. Tjepa had
told her about them when he pointed out a Senda wandering through the market.
They didn’t like people much, came to Dusta maybe once a year to pick up things
they couldn’t make for themselves, to say hello to relatives, a friend or two,
then go back to their jealously hidden nests deep in the forest. He scowled as
he examined her bloody wrists, set them neatly on her body so the dust wouldn’t
get in the wounds, began working on her leg ropes. He went away when he had
them off her, but came back a moment later, lifted her head and shoulders and
braced them against a knee. He bathed her face, let her drink from a gourd
dipper. She swished the first mouthful about, spat it out, took another few
swallows, sighed with pleasure as the coolness bathed away the bitter dryness of
her mouth and washed dust and phlegm from her burning throat. He only let her
have a little, then peeled a hard candy and slipped it between her lips. “Give
you energy,” he said, “you need the sugar.”
She didn’t trust him all that much, but there was no point
in spitting it out. She sucked at the candy. Sugar and a bit of mint for
flavor. Maybe to cover what else was in the candy. That’s stupid. My head’s
not working. Why would he do that? And if he did, what does it matter? She
closed her eyes. I wouldn’t mind a short blackout right now, say
about three days long. He bathed her wrists, smoothed on more of the salve
and wrapped bandages around the raw spots. I should get the formula
of that gunk. No more Lee to heal the hurts—that’s one talent I wish I’d
yanked along with me when I jumped into this body. The Senda washed her
legs, put salve on them, bandaged them, then got to his feet with a smooth effortless
lift of his big body. A moment later she heard Linfyar squeal and go silent.
Thanks, man; poor little Linfy, maybe he’ll change his mind about adventures
after this. He dealt with Linfyar’s abrasions in that calm silence she found almost
as soothing as the salve, came back a moment later, dropped a canteen beside
her and went off, leaving her to care for herself now that she could. His
nurturance apparently had severe limits to it.
She lay still a few moments longer, reluctant to break into
her comfortable lassitude, but curiosity was almost as great a prod as thirst.
She rolled onto her stomach, got carefully onto her hands and knees, pushed up
until she was sitting on her heels, her hands resting on her thighs. No
double vision—at least I’m not concussed.
Some sort of abandoned settlement. The building beside her
looked like a trading post or storehouse and was well on its way to rotting
back into the earth. A stubby, shaky pier jutted into the water, a number of
planks gone, several of the piles listing at precarious angles. Water stretched
away from the shore in a vast gray sheet, rippling a little as the breeze
freshened, then dropped again. Ocean? Can’t see the other shore. If there is
one. No, not the ocean. Probably one of the lobes of Tah Badu bay. She glanced
at the pack her head had been resting on, grimaced. Mine. Harp case about a
step away from the pack. They scooped the lot. She scowled at the scars in
the leather, the thick coat of fine red dust. The shore here was mostly a heavy
reddish soil whose top layers had been baked and blown into dust as fine and
slippery as a graphite lubricant. What her harp would look like when they finally
got wherever it was they were going was something she didn’t want to think
about. Linfyar was curled up in the middle of the rest of their gear, looking
miserably unhappy; there was a rope about his neck, the other end tied to a
stake pounded into the dirt. Tethered like an animal. She closed her hands into
fists, bit down hard on her lip to keep her fury in. Like an animal. Someone
was going to pay for that.
Small groups of men stood about talking in mutters, looking
repeatedly out across the water. One man stood guard at the corner of the
building, a projectile weapon hugged under his arm. She saw the bore and
shivered at the thought of that lump of lead making hash of her insides. The
rest of the men had similar weapons, several wore laser pistols on their belts,
most had belt knives, one—hunkered alone out at the end of the rickety pier—had
something that looked like a meat cleaver with elephantiasis. His arms were
thicker around than her thighs, his shoulders bulged under the sleeveless tunic
that was all he wore on his upper half, he looked as if he could crash that
cleaver through one of the forest giants with a single swing. No regimentation
about this bunch of men, but a military patina on them that was enough to
confirm her suspicion about who had her. She’d seen soldiers wait like this
before with the endless irritable patience that had been drilled into them. Well,
he’s done himself a mischief with this even if he’s done me a favor solving my
problems about locating him. She looked at Linfyar tethered to the stake,
breathed hard for some minutes, tears of anger and frustration prickling behind
her eyes.
When she had control back, she drank from the canteen, then
smiled to herself at the contrast between her angry ambitions and her present
helplessness. With a wary eye on the sentry, she crossed to Linfyar, squatted
beside him. Using his home tongue, she muttered, “How you doing, Linfy?”
He lifted his elbow, flashed a grin at her.
“Want me to get that rope off you?”
“Not now,” he whispered. “I can get loose anytime I want,
Shadow. Creeps didn’t find the blade in my belt. I figure the more helpless
they think I am, the looser I’ll be.” He rolled over, put his hand on her knee.
“Don’t fuss, Shadow. Let them act stupid as they want—makes it easier to
clobber them later.’’
She caught hold of his big toe, shook his foot. “I might
have known,” she said.
A hastily muffled giggle. “Yeah, you shoulda.”
She’d forgotten what his life had been like, threatened with
death from the moment of birth when he made the mistake of being born visibly
mutant. He’d learned to scramble and connive almost before he could talk. And
when she and Aleytys had found him on Ibex, he’d been running from a gelding
meant to keep his voice from changing, leaping into the unknown with an
unquenchable zest and a shrewd trust in his ability to survive anything that
life threw at him, nine years of faun charm and deviousness. He didn’t waste
time on pride or worrying whether other people respected him, he concentrated
on surviving. “How’d they get you?” she said. “Dropped a sack over me. Used my
hand to open the cabin’s door. Brought you in a bit later. Cleared the place
out. Took off with us. Boat first, couple hours in that, then they walked, us on
those ... those poles.” He snorted his disgust. “I thought about yelling when
they took us through the city, but they were a bit too efficient and you were
limp as a dead cony, so I thought better wait till they got where they were
going and relaxed some. And till you woke up.” He hesitated. “Maybe I shoulda
yelled.”
“Glad you didn’t. Look, Linfy, I think these’re the Ajin’s
men.” She chuckled. “We spent all that time nosing about for a way to get to
him and here he’s fetching us right where we want to go.”
Linfyar touched her hand. “‘S all right with me as long as
they don’t put me back on that dumb pole.” His lips fluttered as he limned her
with the echoes from his silent whistles. “Shadow?” He sounded anxious, was
suddenly more of a small worried boy. “You sound a little funny. You all right?
You were out a long time.”
“A roaring headache, but I’ll survive, imp. It’s already
starting to go away.”
He sighed and straightened his legs. “I’m hungry, Shadow.”
“When aren’t you? Well, I’ll see what I can dig up.” She got
to her feet, feeling as creaky as the ragged building before her. The Senda was
nowhere in sight. She started for the sentry, stopped as his face went slack.
He stared at nothing, mouthed soundless words at that nothing. A second sentry
was immediately there, taking the rifle from the slackened grasp. He strolled
to the storehouse, leaned with elaborate casualness against the cornerpost,
watching her without seeming to. She walked over to him. “We’re hungry,” she
said. “You planning to starve us too?”
He ran dull eyes over her, produced a grunt. When she didn’t
go away, he said, “You eat when we do.”
“And when, O Jewel of Eloquence, will that be?”
“When we get where we’re going.”
“Oh joy. Any objection to me getting out some trailbars? I
see you brought my gear.” She waved at the heap beside Linfyar. “And you may
recall I haven’t had anything to eat for quite a while.”
“Don’t try nothing.”
“How could I, O Jewel of Wit? I don’t even know where the
hell I am.”
He grunted again and shifted the rifle to a more secure
hold, the barrel swinging around to point at her.
She decided to take his silence as assent, walked cautiously
away from him, keeping her movements open and slow, knelt beside the pile of
gear and went through it until she came up with the fruit-honey-nut confection
Linfy liked so much. She peeled it, then squatted beside him. “We seem to be
headed somewhere else before we settle for the night.’’
Linfyar nodded. “Heard,” he said, the word muffled by the
mouthful of bar.
Shadith looked over her shoulder at the empty water of the
bay. “Hurry up and wait,” she muttered. “Military mind never changes, I don’t
care what the species.”
“Huh?”
“Never mind. Hot air, that’s all.”
She sat on her heels and brooded. Taggert, where are you
now? How are you coming in? I suppose it’s just as well I don’t know,
considering where I am right now. Wonder if he’s already snuggling up to the
Ajin; probably he’ll even get Grey and Ticutt loose before I get anywhere
close. Just my luck, the Ajin won’t want me for propaganda, probably wants me
to sing lullabies to his harem or something just as vital.
The long day trickled endlessly on.
Shortly after sundown the soft splutter of a motor broke the
silence; not long afterward a broad-beamed boat nosed up to the dock and a big
man jumped onto the planks with a careless physical competence meant to impress
anyone watching. Shadith swallowed a giggle. Enter the Ajin. Lovely.
He strode up to her, stood looking down at her. How much he
could see was questionable; the sky was overcast, there were no lights, not
even a campfire. She looked up, nodded at him, looked away.
He bent closer, caught hold of her hair, turned her face up,
looked startled, let her loose and stepped away. “Manjestau.” A smallish wiry
man came out of the shadows. She made out a lined harsh face, one she hadn’t
seen before. “You sure this is the one?”
“I watched her do it.”
“This child?”
“Her and the freak.”
The Ajin moved over to Linfyar. “Why the rope?”
“So it wouldn’t run off. We figured the girl wouldn’t run
without her pet.”
“How good is she?”
“Good enough. Did it to me, and I was ready.”
“Interesting.” He walked around Linfyar and Shadith. “How
long does it take to put a crowd under?”
“Three-four minutes.”
“That fast?”
“I’d say.”
“And they all more or less see the same thing?”
“From what I hear. Didn’t want to ask too many questions.
Miners hanging about. Perolat. She doesn’t like us a whole helluva lot, and she
knows me. Didn’t want her thinking we were interested in the girl. Hiepler came
while I was there, wanted her for the church, threatened her. I figured this
was a good time to take her. Perolat would figure the kid ran to get away from
the engiaja.”
The Ajin came back and stood looking down at Shadith. “We’ll
burn honeyfat to the Lady tonight, Manjestau. Luck smiles on us today.” They
walked off together exuding satisfaction.
Hunh, pair of self-inflated prickheads. She dug at
the dust with her heel, stirring up a cloud of dust that made her cough. For
the moment there wasn’t much she could do except go along meekly with what they
had in mind for her. Thank whatever gods there be, there didn’t seem to be any
pedophiles among them. She didn’t feel up to coping with that sort of
complication. If they want me enough, maybe they’ll coddle me a little. Have
to wait and see what develops.
The men on the shore broke up into a number of different
squads; some vanished into the shadow under the trees, others moved swiftly to
haul boxes out of the storehouse and load them onto the boat, taking Shadith’s
gear aboard in the process, walking around her, brushing against her, ignoring
her and Linfyar, not quite stepping on them.
The Ajin himself cut the rope from Linfyar’s neck, lifted
the boy to his feet. For the first time he saw the shallow hollows where
Linfyar’s eyes would have been if he’d been born with eyes. Distaste strong
enough to smell rolled out of him, though he controlled it immediately and
patted Linfyar on his sleekly furred shoulder. “Sorry about that, boy,” he
said, a smile in his voice. A deep warm flexible voice he could manipulate with
an actor’s skill. “Some of my people are too scary for good manners.”
Thinking, Get your bigoted hands off him, you bastard, biting
her tongue so she wouldn’t say it, Shadith jumped to her feet and pushed
between them, trembling with the resurgent fury that threatened to burst out of
her control. There was a sick twisted loathing in the man that ran along her
nerves like vomit; he hid it well enough from everyone but her, but it was
foul. Linfyar put his hand on her arm. “Oh Shadow,” he wailed, doing his
pitiful act so well that for a heartbeat she was almost fooled, then had to
restrain herself from slapping him so violent was her relief. “Oh Shadow,” he
repeated in a trembly, die-away voice, “What’s happening? What is he doing?”
She sucked in a breath, let it trickle out, patted his hand
in silent gratitude. “Nothing bad, Linfy,” she said, injecting into her voice
the cooing condescension she felt the Ajin would expect from her, a semi-adult
calming the fears of a deformed child. “He’s going to take us someplace where
we can be more comfortable and have a hot meal and a bath.”
The Ajin smiled, a broad, charming almost-grin, his eyes twinkling
at her with an intent warmth that would have been more convincing if there had been
anything behind it but calculation. Her mind-riding gift was developing rapidly
into a full-blown empathic sense; Shadith wasn’t too sure she liked that. There
were things she absolutely didn’t want to know, and she resented other people’s
emotions—or lack of them—making demands on her. She didn’t want to know about
the Ajin’s xenophobia. Know about it! Feel it was more like the truth; it was
spreading its slime all over her. Have to remember to ask Lee how she blocks
out this kind of thing. God! What’s she doing now? The Ajin put his
hand on her shoulder. She stiffened a little, couldn’t help it, but he seemed
to find that reaction quite natural. Conceited slime. “Come, child,” he said,
wooing her with that voice like dark suede burnishing her senses; he turned her
toward the boat, walked beside her while Linfyar was left to follow behind.
“I’m sorry about this.” He touched her bandaged wrist. “Once you understand
why, I’m sure you’ll forgive us.”
She gave him an awkward little nod, her equivalent of Linfyar’s
pathetic act. Oh yes, O mighty conqueror, I’m just a pore little singsong
girl flustered by your attentions.
He was very good, kind and solicitous, settling her and
Linfyar on cushions in front of the wheelhouse, tucking blankets about them,
bringing them cups of hot spiced cha. She suspected there were drugs in it
meant to put her out so she’d not see where the boat was going. His prime base,
if her luck hadn’t run completely out. She drank. The cha was hot and clean and
refreshing. With a slight undertaste that told her she was right. Hah! Play
your games; I wouldn’t spend a rotten eyelash to find out where we’re going, I
just want to get there. Linfyar sniffed at his tea; she saw his ears
twitch, then he emptied the cup with innocent gusto, set the cup down beside
him and began singing softly, a plaintive lovesong from his home city; he sang
just loud enough to blend his clear pure voice with the sounds of wind, water
and the boat’s motor. When he began interrupting himself with yawns, he curled
up with his head in Shadith’s lap and went peacefully to sleep.
Shadith finished her cha and set her cup down; she leaned back
against the wheelhouse and felt the motor’s vibrations the length of her spine
and across her sore shoulders. It seemed to crawl into her bones and was as
soothing as whatever that drug was in the cha. Aleytys was suddenly on the bow
rail smiling at her, then the figure melted into a fragment of mist. Half
asleep, she saw the Ajin take up the cup Linfyar had used and toss it over the side,
but didn’t bother getting angry again. He was a nothing. He didn’t matter
anymore. Hollow man. Hollow. Hollow. Hollow man. Aleytys on the bow made out
of mist, she’s realer than you. Real, oh real, what’s real, am I real? A voice
in Lee’s head, a knot of forces in an ancient trap. Got a body now. That’s
real. Gonna have fun with this body, won’t lay it down till it’s old old old,
you hear that, body? Old old old.
*Hello, oddity.*
*Hello yourself.* She giggled. *Who you talking about odd?*
*You’re plotting something.*
*Plot, plot, got no plot.*
*Sounds more like got no brain.*
*You’re messing in it, you ought to know.*
*Ah. Sobering up a bit.*
*Sleepering up a bit.* She yawned. *Noble knight up there
drugged me.*
*You didn’t have to drink the cha.*
*Ah well, keep your illusions. I thought I’d be polite.*
*What do you intend?*
*My business.*
*My world.*
*So?*
*Be more respectful of your elders, infant.*
*Why?*
(chuckle)
*That’s no answer.*
*You first.*
*Why?*
*I was here first.*
*Can’t argue that.*
*Well?*
*My business.*
*We’ve been around that way once. Once is enough.*
*He your boy? I don’t think so.*
*You’re right.*
*Two great minds beating as one. How can I bear it?*
*You, ancient child, are a saucy snip.*
*Yeah.* She giggled. *A needle in the ass of authority.*
*The Pomp of pomposity.*
*Soulmate.*
*Not likely. I sigh with delight that you don’t know the location
of my hindquarters.*
*Oh, you have ‘em then?*
*In a manner of speaking. I don’t offer them for your prodding.*
*Keep it clean, I’m underage.*
*Under what age?*
*Fourteen. Fourteen thousand. Take your pick.*
*Why are you here?*
*Ah. Now that’s a question I’ve never heard answered satisfactorily.
Why am I? Why is anything? Or is all this a dream? Are you a dream, O loudmouth
forest, O Po’ Annutj?*
(an indescribable sound like solidified irritation)
*Tell me why you want to know.*
(sigh, long and long, with prickles of annoyance in it) *
Enough of this nonsense. Because, ancient child, I want the Ajin off this
world, I want him either dead or stopped. My friends suffer now, will suffer
more, and in the end, this world will burn if he has his way. Parts of me will
die beyond my power to repair and replace them. What grows between me and the
soft folk here will die. I think that would be a shame, a loss of richness in
the All.*
*Yes.* (a long pause while Shadith struggled with the sluggishness
of her .brain, the drug tightening its hold on her) *I came to pry two friends
out of his claws.* (pause) *Hunters. They came to get him.* (pause) *He ... no,
not him ... Kell ... the Vryhh ... set a trap, caught them.* (pause) *Going
after ... no ... that’s it. I get them, they get him.*
*The Senda who tended you is mine.*
*I wondered ... I didn’t ... why?*
*Liaison. Spy.*
(sleepy laughter) *That’s good gunk he has. One I owe you.*
*There are others like him. They’ll know about you, help
when they can.*
*Know? No.*
*Only that you’re mine.*
*Not yours. Not anyone’s.*
*Quibble. Friend, then.*
*All right.*
(feel of almost-maternal amusement and affection) *Go to
sleep. That’s a good child.*
*Up yours.*
*Keep it clean, ancient child. Remember my age.*
*What age is that?*
*Not half yours. Sleep. Sleep.*
*How can I with you yelling in my head?*
*Sleep. Sleep.*
*Good night, Po’. Go away, Po’.*
(laughter fading into silence)
Interesting, she thought, and drifted deeper into the
drugged sleep.
She woke to darkness and thought at first she’d slept
through the day and into night again, then realized the boat was burbling along
inside a cavern, plowing heavily against a powerful but sluggish current. She
sat up, looked around, then shook Linfyar awake. Bending down to him, she
whispered, “How big is this wormhole?”
Linfyar rubbed at his nose, yawned. His ears quivered. He
rolled out of his blankets and squatted beside her, listening intently. After a
minute he said, “They’re using radar to find their way; I’m trying to read
their beeps.” Another short silence. “Roof comes down close to the water
ahead,” he murmured. “About twenty meters. Boat’ll just scrape by.” He wriggled
uneasily. “Shadow, there’s things in the water.”
“What things?”
“Don’t know. Big things. Talking and making my ears hurt.”
“Come here, imp. Don’t listen to them.”
He curled his ears shut and climbed into her lap, sat with
his face pressed into the shallow valley between her small breasts. She pulled
a blanket up around them, then reached out and touched the things. Raw hunger.
Fury. A force too primitive and diffuse for her to control. Far too deadly to
challenge. “We sure don’t swim out of here, Linfy,” she murmured.
Some shapeless sounds from him, a sleepy shift of arms and
legs, then he was heavy against her, wholly relaxed, asleep again. The
blackness closed down tighter. The boat slowed until it was making little
headway against the current; she heard creaks and rasps where it was scraping
against the rock.
Then there was light ahead, blooming green and gold in water
smooth as glass. She rubbed watering eyes and sighed with relief as the weight
of stone lifted away.
They drifted into a round lake inside high craggy walls.
There were patches of lush greenery, but the cone of the ancient volcano was
mostly heaps of mottled stone, slides of scree slanting from the precipitous
walls. One of those slides jutted into the deep black water; after a moment she
saw it was a camouflaged wharf with a slot where the boat could slip in and
rest unseen from above. Beyond the wharf were more structures, massive stone
buildings built up against the wall, camouflaged like the wharf by the sweeps
of scree.
The Ajin helped her to her feet and with smiling courtesy
lifted her onto the dock, then stepped after her, leaving Linfyar to scramble
up how he could. Poor old bigot, no use getting mod at you anymore, silly
old fool, escorting your enemy into the heart of your power. He put his
hand on her shoulder and guided her along the wharf and into the largest of the
structures. The walls were not as thick as she’d expected, but these buildings
weren’t meant to live through a bombing; that was the meaning of the
camouflage. If the Pajunggs found this base, they’d flatten it, but a world was
a huge place, even so small a part of it as a continent, and they didn’t have
the tracers to locate him. Not yet. And they were terrified of the forest. No
native intelligence here. Hah. What they told themselves so they wouldn’t have
to go into the forest hunting it. She wondered about the other worlds the
Pajunggs had colonized, what they’d found there and quietly destroyed. Respect
for life and the rights of natives, all that was the luxury of settled peaceful
lands long after those natives had either been assimilated or destroyed. Unless
they had the power to resist cooptation. In the end that was what it came down
to, the possession of power in one form or another. Where law didn’t exist, the
survivors were those strong and smart enough to prevail. Kell and Aleytys, it
was the same thing. Po’ Anuutj, the miners against the Pajunggs and, yes, the
Ajin.
The hand on her shoulder turned her away from the main corridor
down the building and urged her down a side way that went out of the house into
the living stone of the mountain. She thought about his loathing of Linfyar,
who was recognizably of kindred stock, a handsome little faun with more charm
than was good for him. What would the Ajin be like once he had complete
authority over this world and came against the Po’ Annutj? They went back and
back into the mountain until she had the feeling she walked on a surface
precariously spread over a seething sink of molten stone; with a shrug of its
shoulders the mountain could drop them into its heart. She shivered.
The Ajin patted her shoulder. “Not much farther,” he said.
“I want to keep you close to me, make sure you’re safe.”
She did her awkward childish nod, but said nothing. Treating
me like a kid, she thought, being the tough but gentle father. Hunh. I
want a father like I want another head. She’d lived with Harskari far too
long to relish acquiring another mentor, especially this condescending bag of
air planning to use her and her gifts for his own purposes. I said it
right, out there on the bay. Hollow man, only his needs to drive him, no real
contact with anyone else. The rest of us are shadows cast on his desires. She
thought about Perolat and Tjepa! She thought about the Ajin selling himself to
Kell in return for support in his ambitions. I’d bet anything Kell built
this place for him and stocked it too. Wonder where the trap is? Wonder
what it is? Taggert, she told herself, I hope you know what you’re
doing. Another Hunter in the trap. Would that bring Kell running? God, I hope
not. I know when I’m out of my weight.
The Ajin palmed open a door, urged her inside. A huge false
window took up most of one wall, a viewscreen showing the mountainside with its
immense trees, the solemn silent beauty of the forest, the sunlight streaming
through occasional breaks in the canopy, bat-winged birds soaring and singing;
forest sounds came through subdued and faintly magical. Bright hangings broke
the chill of the black stone walls. The floor was dull metacrete, but a silk
rug hid its ugliness, echoing the abstract patterns in the hangings. A black
glass table with food steaming on black glass plates, cha in a pot covered by a
quilted cozy. Steel-framed chairs with black leather seats and backs. A black
velvet divan piled with brilliantly colored silk cushions. A cheerfully
inelegant room decorated by someone with a liking for color and no pretensions
to taste. The Ajin stepped aside to let Linfyar in, moved to the center of the
room. “These will be your quarters, singer. Bedroom and fresher through there.”
He gestured at a black velvet curtain between two of the hangings. “Rest and
take care of your body’s needs. I will return to talk with you tomorrow. No
need to worry about anything. No one will hurt you here. Just relax. I’ll
explain everything soon.” He smiled at her, a warm beaming smile, his brown
eyes twinkling with goodwill and appreciation, then made a rueful face, lifted
a hand in an apologetic gesture. “The door will be locked—I’m afraid it’s
necessary. For your protection, child, I promise you, that’s all. Some of the
men here aren’t as gentle with women and children as I’d like.” A last smile
and he left, the door closing behind him with a slight pneumatic hiss.
Shadith looked around, raised her brows. Their gear was
piled against the wall at the end of the divan. “Looks like we took the scenic
route.”
“Huh?”
“Never mind. Private joke.”
Linfyar twitched his ears, turned in a slow circle. In his
home-tongue he said, “Busy-busy, crawling with bugs.”
“Man wouldn’t trust his own mother. Better not count too
much on talking this way, my young furry friend. Your language is a variant out
of a large family; might not know it, but you come from the cousin races and if
their computer has translating capability, it won’t take them all that long to
get a good idea what we’re saying. Besides, if they get curious enough and
decide to stop being polite, all they really have to do is hook one of us to a
psychprobe.”
Linfyar shrugged, began moving about the room, his lips fluttering
to read what was around him, his nose twitching, all his senses operating as he
explored this new place. He followed his nose to the table, slid into one of
the chairs. Switching languages, he said, “Not going to starve us, anyway. Mmm.
I’m hungry.”
Shadith chuckled. “Me too, imp. Be with you in a minute.”
She left him sniffing at the dishes and pushed past the curtain.
A bedroom with another screen tuned to the same image. She
was grateful for those screens; they made the stone more bearable, though she
suspected they were two-way viewers. She dragged her hand hard across the
screen, made the glass squeal, grinned at the trees and birds she couldn’t
touch. Voyeur, she thought, but didn’t say it. She circled the wide bed
and went into the fresher. It was small and neat, with a flush toilet and a
shower cabinet, a large mirror over a basin. She took care of the ache in her
bladder, stripped to use the shower, annoyed that there was some fool somewhere
watching her. She started to step into the shower, then frowned at the bandages
on her arms and legs; she stripped them off and inspected the abraded flesh.
Most of the red was gone. Cautiously she touched her head. No swelling, no
soreness. Great gunk. Yeah, I owe you one, old Po’. Hate to wash it off, but
I’m too grungy to stand myself any longer. She found a cake of soap with a
pleasant herbal scent in a niche in the shower, laughed as she turned the water
on and adjusted the temperature. VIP treatment. Looovely. But you walk
eggshell-light. Shadow, you’re frosting on his cake; he can get along quite
well without you if he has to.
The water came hot and hard. She found herself singing, enjoying
the feel of the spray, then of the soap as she spread lather over her body. She
lingered awhile after the soap was rinsed off, letting the hot water beat
against her back, but she was hungry, so she finally shut it off and stepped
out.
She scrubbed one of the thick nubbly towels over her body until
she glowed, then wrapped herself in the toweling robe that hung on a hook
beside the cabinet. She tied the belt and went strolling back into the sitting
room, rubbing at her hair, humming the song she’d been singing.
Linfyar was eating neatly but steadily from a plate heaped
high with bits of meat and vegetables, washing down every other bite with a
gulp of heavily sweetened cha. “You sound happy,” he said. He sniffed. “And you
smell good.”
“A change for the better, huh?” She filled her plate,
settled into a chair across the table from him.
Linfyar stopped chewing, put his fork down and rubbed at his
nose. “You think maybe ... um ...” He shifted languages but was still careful
in his choice of words. “What we’re looking for, you know ... maybe it’s right
here. Funny if that’s right, don’t you think?”
“I think that’s something we don’t talk about, you hear?”
“I expect you’re right.”
“Funny or not, I expect you’re right too, Linfy.”
He picked up his fork, tapped a bouncy rhythm on the edge of
the plate, then started reducing the mound of food on it.
Shadith sat in the middle of the wide bed and began going
over her things, checking to see what the Ajin’s men had brought along,
harvesting a small collection of metal burrs from various parts of the clothing
wadded into the bags. She set them aside, continued with her inventory and came
across her hoard of coins. “Hunh, honest kidnappers.” All her possessions were
here, even an old polish rag she’d meant to throw away. She looked at the
clothing with distaste. All of them, underthings and everything, handled by
those creeps and invaded by a horde of bugs, worms eat his liver. Wonder who
does the laundry around here. I can wash a few things in the fresher basin, but
I want this whole mess cleaned before I wear any of it. She wrinkled her
nose at the small pile of burrs. Sneaky, yeah, and don’t he think he’s
clever. I’m supposed to find you and feel oh so confident. Happy to oblige. She
scooped the bugs up and flushed them down the toilet, then went back to the bed
and unsnapped the harp case. Someone had wiped the dust off the outside, but
more than enough had managed to ooze inside. With a grunt of disgust, she
lifted the harp out and set it down carefully, then slid to the edge of the
bed, flipped the case over and shook it out on the rug. She set the case down. Have
to go over it later with a damp cloth. She dug into the pile of clothing,
found that decrepit polish rag and began to wipe the harp, working very
carefully so she wouldn’t scratch it. When she was finished with the frame, she
wiped the strings, then plucked each of them to get the last grains of dust
off. And found another bug tucked up high on the inside of the frame where she
wasn’t likely to see it. She went to the sitting room to fetch a fork, detoured
to check on Linfyar. He had squirreled deep into the pile of silk pillows on
the divan and was asleep, snoring a little, almost like a loud purring. She
smiled at him, shook her head and went back into the bedroom.
Harp on her lap, she probed for the flat little patch and
finally managed to scrape it loose. It looked a bit battered, but she suspected
it was still in fair working order; they built those things to take a lot of
knocks. She held it close to one of the strings and made that string shriek at
it. Hunh, you bastard, hope that wrings your ears for you. She took the
bug into the fresher and flushed it after the others.
The Ajin came back the middle of the next morning. Shadith
sat on the floor gazing at the image on the screen, hands moving idly across
the strings, making a portrait in sound of her restlessness. She looked around
as she heard the door open, scowled and turned back to the screen, putting an
acid jangle into what she was playing.
He laughed, strode over to her, plucked the harp from her
hands, tossed it onto the divan, pulled her to her feet.
For a moment Shadith could not speak. She was so furious her
throat closed up on her, so furious she could only stand there shaking. She
stared at him blankly; when she could move, she marched to the divan, picked up
the harp, ran her hand over the frame, then the strings. She squatted, set it
on the floor and came slowly back up, turning to face him as she rose. “Don’t
ever ever do that again,” she said flatly. “Touch it again and I’ll kill you.”
“Watch your mouth, girl.” She stared at him, said nothing.
“Sweet little girls don’t go around killing people. Didn’t
your parents teach you that?”
She kept staring, still furious, though she’d calmed enough
to start thinking again. The little girl act—she could go on with it, but was
it worth it? She looked into that handsome smiling face and decided it wasn’t. Might
as well test just how much he thinks he needs me; let him start walking over me
and he’ll keep on tramping. “They taught me a lot of things,” she said, her
voice still flat and as cold as she could make it. “They taught me it’s both
stupid and discourteous to handle other people’s belongings without permission,”
She rushed on, drowning his attempt to speak. “They taught me that kidnappers
are thugs and men who steal girls are perverts or pimps and a pimp is lower
than a pervert. They taught me that real men treat other men and women, and
children, with the respect they expect for themselves and those who act
otherwise are only cheap imitations.”
He took a step toward her, hand raised, then checked
himself. As clearly as if she read the words on a tape issuing from his head,
she knew what he was thinking: Look, never mind what she says, she’s only a
silly little girl who doesn’t know what she’s talking about; anyway, there’s no
one to hear it. His eyes narrowed. She read the codicil in his face: But
be damn sure she’s not going to say such things in public. “Come, child,”
he said, “not so much heat. I’m sorry about the harp. Let me be honest and
confess it, I didn’t understand how important it was to you.” He patted her
shoulder, quite unaware of the effort she made not to knock his hand away. “Sit
down, please. I promised you an explanation today, and I’ve come to give it.
Ah. Good.” He smiled at her as she slipped from under his hand and seated
herself on the divan. “We aren’t kidnappers, child. Or pimps. We fight for
Avosing’s future, child, we fight to drive the tyrant from our world. We need
you, child, we need your gifts. I want to show you some of the things the
Pajunggs are doing to us. They aren’t pretty, and if this were the world I
dream of, you wouldn’t have to see these things, but I want you to understand
us. You saw for yourself what the Pajunggs wanted to do to you in Keama Dusta,
you know how the hiepler threatened you. We saved you from some of the horrors
I’m going to show you.” His voice was low and gently persuasive, a seductive
murmur caressing her ears, but she took no pleasure from it, was too aware of
the deep dislike he felt for her. Shit on this talent, she thought. I
can’t even enjoy my illusions anymore. No fun to be courted by someone you
know despises you. He sat beside her, careful not to touch her, providing a
low-voiced narration for the succession of images he cued into the screen.
The forest scene vanished.
Shaky, grainy pictures took its place, images captured by hidden
cameras under difficult conditions.
“This is where you would have performed.” The church casino,
great and noble room, low-relief sculptures ten times life size, the pantheon
of Pajungg gods, overlooking the games of chance; intent worshipers bending
over boards or watching lights flicker, playing their games in reverent
anxiety; hooded and robed croupiers; white-robed serving maids; hum of recited
prayers rising above the assorted clicks and clacks and slaps and rustles of
the games. “And this.” Whoever carried the camera followed an attendant through
the players and past the private rooms and out the back of the church. After
winding through a dizzying series of turns and twists he stepped into a cozier
milieu where child whores of both sexes dressed in filmy short robes displayed
themselves to men with a shared patina of wealth and power. A few of the
children were her apparent age, but most were younger, even a number barely walking.
“Slaves, all of them, sold by their parents.”
Another scene. A house burning, dark-clad enforcers standing
about, two of them holding the arms of a weeping man, others keeping the man’s
wife and children herded together.
“He never went to church, had several warnings; a bad
season, wilt in his gancha grain, disease in his stock, got into debt; next
year, prices were low, couldn’t pay his creditors; church seized the land and
goods; he’s the one set the fire, wouldn’t let them have his house. See what
happened to his sons and daughters.” Scene change. A slave auction, the children
going one by one to the highest bidder.
New scene. Twisted, savaged bodies barely recognizable as
something that might once have been human. “Some are men who joined our fight;
they were captured by enforcers. Some are men denounced to the church for
heresy.”
A miner who’d been caught hoarding amber, his body jerking
as massive jolts of electricity hit him.
More images documenting the cruelty of man to man.
Meant to evoke horror and disgust in her. Meant to convince
her to serve the Ajin and his cause. If she’d told him he was not so different
from the men he wanted to replace, he would have been angry, perhaps a little
hurt, but he wouldn’t have understood what she was saying. Because of his
background, Head and Taggert and even the Pajunggs had seen him as a cynical
manipulator only after power, but he was more than that. She remembered Head
saying the thieves are heretics, not unbelievers. He believed in what he was
doing, and like most true believers he was willing to use any means no matter
how repulsive to achieve his goal.
He grasped her shoulders, turned her to face him. “You see
how the Pajunggs corrupt and oppress us. We have to change that, child, and to
do that we have to convince all the Avosingers that change is possible.”
Bending closer, he went into a short harangue about morality, the sacredness of
home and tradition, sketching out a world where men and women knew their place
and stayed in it, where there was no disruptive change, where life went on in calm
comfortable channels. All very lovely, she thought, if you happen to
be a man. Perolat wouldn’t like it much, and Dihann, well ... She lowered
her eyes and swallowed a giggle at the thought of Dihann’s reaction to being
told she ought to subordinate herself to any man no matter how forceful and
dynamic he was. She listened and kept her eyes down, resigned to playing the
role he kept insisting on. It’s not for that long, she told herself, just
until I find Grey and get him loose. It made her feel like vomiting, but
she told herself she’d done worse things before this and survived them, she’d
survive this.
The Ajin led them back to the outer building, into a
glare-free white-tiled space, filled with banks of computers and viewscreens
relaying images from satellites even her lander’s sensitive detectors hadn’t
noticed. Kell, worms eat your liver, by god, you really want Aleytys, you’re
paying high for the chance of catching her. Men working with stone-faced
dedication at consoles, looking up to nod a quick greeting at the Ajin as he
moved past them, Shadith at his heels, Linfyar trailing behind.
They passed through into a darker quieter hall and finally
turned into a side room equipped as an infirmary, more gleaming white tile,
white-enameled machines and other instruments, many of them new-made antiques
in her eyes; like a lot of Avosing, a confusing mixture of late industrial and
contemporary technologies. It was a large room with uncertain echoes, the
bounding sounds making her itchy. It was a lot worse for Linfyar; he nudged
closer to her, trembling. She dropped her arm around his shoulder, hugged him.
“Roll ‘em up, Linfy, and hang on to me.” She looked from the Ajin to the small
dumpy man he was talking to, made a small hissing sound, cut it off as it started
to echo. “Hey,” she yelled. “I don’t like it here. I’m leaving.”
The little man turned spectacled eyes to her, the harsh
light glinting off the lenses making him look more machine than flesh. He
stepped to the bank of black rubbery switches, clicked one over, and the echoes
hushed so suddenly she almost stumbled as if she’d been pushing against some
force removed without warning. He came around the examination table and stood
in front of her, peering at her through those thick glasses, the pale yellow of
his eyes intermittently visible, the thin almost white lashes. “This child?”
“Apparently.”
“Mmm.” He stumped around her, his hands folded over I his
tight little paunch, high for a man, so high he looked pregnant. “Collar her?”
“No. Nothing showing.”
“Hm.” He took hold of her shoulder, started prodding at her
back.
She tried jerking away, but he held her too tightly, his
fingers digging into her muscle. With a grunt of effort, she caught hold of his
little finger, twisted it, then twisted away as he yelped with pain. “Keep your
hands to yourself, fool.”
“You ... you ... you ...” He raised a fist.
“Try it,” she flung at him.
The Ajin got a grip on her hair and jerked her back, snapped
to the other two men standing quietly in the background, “Take care of him.”
After the melee was sorted out, the man’s finger restored to
its joint, the Ajin swung her around, pushed her against the bank of switches.
“I’m getting very tired of your insolence, girl.”
She glared at him, all resolutions forgotten. “Biiig man, oh
I’m so scared. Ask me,” she yelled at him, turned it into a chant. “Ask me ask
me ask me. If you want something, ask me, don’t maul me about, ask me. I’m not
stupid, or deaf—don’t treat me like I am. Easy little words, ask me.” She grew
a bit calmer. “You didn’t like it when those creeps were fooling with the kid
whores—how come you’re treating me like a whore? Like you can do anything you
want with me and I shouldn’t complain? Huh?”
He stared at her, pulled his hand away from her hair and
rubbed it absently down his side. She’d hit something in him, she could feel
that, but she wasn’t quite sure what it was, and she was more than a little
startled and ashamed of her reactions. Lee’d told her a number of times she was
letting this body make her forget what the years had taught her; for the first
time Shadith was ready to concede she might be right. She’d gone through this
sort of scene more than once with her mother in those difficult days around her
first puberty, and here it was again. Oh god, do I really have to go through
all that misery again? She pulled her mind back to her present predicament
and waited for what he’d say.
“You are a child and female,” he said. His voice was cold
and flat, devoid of emotion. “You will do as you are told and create no more
disturbances or you will be punished. You will behave as a proper young girl
should behave; you will speak when you are spoken to and remain silent at other
times. You will be modest and quiet in your manner. And you will understand
that you are less than dust when compared to the great dream you are privileged
to play a part in. Do you understand me?”
Come on, Shadow, take a lesson from Linfy. She
sneaked a glance at the boy crouched out of the way under the examining table,
silent and inconspicuous as a small furry ghost. It took a minute, but she
swallowed her loathing and said, meekly, “I hear.”
They poked at her and prodded at her and sampled every fluid
they could think of (the yellow-eyed doctor watching her with angry spite, his
left hand bandaged, the little finger in a brace), recorded brain emissions
while she was silent and while she was running off scales and a song or two,
they fed her drugs and watched the results, put her under various sorts of
stress. For her own pride’s sake she made the results as meaningless as she
could, her mind and body control sufficient to let her duplicate results when
necessary, but it was a strain trying to keep the readings logical and remember
what she’d done before. A strain, yes, but also healing to her self-respect.
For the most part they ignored Linfyar; these were technicians, not real
researchers, and she was glad of it for his sake, since they had little of the
explorer’s driving curiosity and were willing enough to leave him alone as long
as they had her to play with.
Those tests lasted all that long day and most of the next
morning, then they announced that they were finished for the moment; it was
time to evaluate their accumulated data. She went back to her rooms and let
herself be locked in. Linfyar was asleep again on the divan. She scowled down
at him, wondering if she should be worried about the amount of time he was
spending in sleep, not certain her itchiness was anxiety about him or just
jealousy that he found such a satisfactory way to pass the endless days. She
was about ready to shriek from boredom. She’d already read through her handful
of books twice, she didn’t feel like sleeping, and she certainly wasn’t up to
fooling around with music, not in the mood. She went into the fresher and made
faces at herself in the mirror until she got tired of looking at herself, then
stripped and stood in the shower letting water as hot as she could stand it
beat down on her body, first her front, then her back. After a while she shut
the water off, wrapped the robe around her and ambled into the bedroom. She
threw herself onto the bed and lay with her head on her arms, breathing in the
dry dusty smell of the velvet bedspread. Body. Body. Body. Oh god, it’s so
easy to forget when you don’t have one what happens in the body. Easier to
dream when you’re a knot of nothing in a bit of sorcerous headgear gathering
dust somewhere. She went back to her earliest memories and began reliving
them, struggling to recall the smallest and most insignificant details,
drifting gradually into a heavy, nightmare-ridden sleep.
The doctor laced his hands over his paunch and blinked his
weak yellow eyes at her while his acolytes attached sensors about her head and
body, careful not to interfere with her ease of movement, making her rock and
sway, reach and fold. Other silent white-clad men were setting up microphones
about the chair. She watched all this without protest; even if she sang a real
croon, nothing much was going to happen in this sterile room with its scrubbed
air and literal-minded technicians. No pollen. No Linfyar to broaden the range
of the sound. But she wasn’t going to take any chances, she was going to give
them something that sounded similar to her ancient songs, but it would be
enough off, enough of the harmonics and overtones missing, that even with the
pollen it wouldn’t work the way they wanted. You’re not going to replace me
with a flake player. When one of the men signaled they were finished, she
looked around, straightened her back and resettled the harp. “Nothing’s going
to happen, you know. I’ve been about more than you think, and this is the only
world where I sing dreams. Must be the pollen.” She drew her hand across the
strings, making a soft drift of sound. “This air.” She shrugged. “And the
acoustics here are foul.”
“Play.” The light glinted off the doctor’s glasses and
showed the silver stopples in his ears as he adjusted them to shut off yet more
of the sound in the room.
Frowning, she plucked a series of single notes from the
harp, then what she could do patterned itself in her mind and she slid into the
almost-croon and sang it through. There was no trance effect even among the
acolytes; with the echo killer on, the song dropped dead into the sterile air.
She stilled the last sounds and sat with her arms curled about the harp, saying
nothing, waiting for the Ajin to show up, wondering just what he’d say to her.
If he said anything to her. He’d been conspicuously absent the last several
days.
The doctor opened out his ear stopples and darted busily
from dial to drum, muttering with his assistants, chattering into a flake
recorder, ignoring Shadith, who was quite happy to be left alone, though she’d
have been happier with something to occupy her mind and keep her from wondering
how much she’d given away that she’d rather keep to herself. She knew well
enough how much information a skilled researcher could tease out of a pile of
apparently unpromising data; her first owner had been an itinerant trouble-shooter
with a genius for spotting weak links. He had little use for women in any sense
of that word, but a passionate love of all forms of music. He bought her for
her small deft fingers and because he’d heard her playing a tin whistle she’d
sneaked into her cell. She traveled with him, getting from him everything he
could teach her, winning from him a reluctant affection and a generous
admiration for her tenacity and the speed with which she learned. She grieved
when he died, killed in a quarrel with a lover, not just because now she’d be
sold again, but because she was deeply fond of him and for the second time in
her life she was losing all she had of family.
The Ajin came in and stood frowning at her. “Why?”
She dropped her eyes to her hands. “I played what I’ve
played before.”
He took a step to one side. Behind him was his skinny aide,
Manjestau. “Well?” he said.
“Sounds like it.” Manjestau came closer, looked at the harp,
looked around at the room. “Probably right. Probably needs the pollen.” He
looked at her again. “And the freak.” The Ajin walked over to her, smiled down
at her, his eyes twinkling, his good humor apparently returned. “It looks like
we should have listened to you, child.”
She moved a little, stiffened as he started to frown. “My
name is Shadith,” she said quietly.
“Well, Shadith, I still need to be convinced you can do what
the reports say. Hmm. Tomorrow, I think. Outside somewhere.”
She plucked at a string, waited until the note died. “We
need to talk deal, Sikin Ajin. I don’t play this thing out of the goodness of
my heart. It’s my profession. My skills are for sale, I don’t give them away.”
“Right now I wouldn’t take them as a gift. Persuade me.”
“All right. Tomorrow. A free sample. After that, pay me.”
“If you’re worth it, we’ll work something out. Right now
there’s something I want you to see.”
“Shall I bring the harp?”
“No need.”
“Allow me time to put it in the case, please.” He inclined
his head.
She began stripping away the sensors. With muttered imprecations
one of the assistants hurried to her, collected the ones she’d removed and slapped
her hands away as she reached for another. She sat quietly letting him peel
them off with slow care, watching the Ajin move about the room, stopping a
moment to speak to the doctor, looking at the readouts, killing time, she was
sure of it, until she was ready, looking grave all the while as if he knew what
he was seeing. Apparently he’d forgotten the laws he’d laid on her the last
time they’d met—at least he seemed willing to allow her a certain degree of independence
as long as she didn’t push too hard. All right. She knew now she wasn’t
Linfyar; body aside, she wasn’t that young or that flexible; she knew too much
about what she’d turn into if she let her self-respect corrode too badly. The
assistant went away, cuddling his sensors to his bosom as if they were favored
children. She slipped out of the chair, snapped the harp into its case and left
it leaning against a chair leg.
He took her to the end of the corridor and into the mountain
again, only a short way this rime, and stopped before a heavy steel door. He
palmed it open, then stood aside until she walked in, following her, closing
the door behind them.
It was a high domed room with tool marks still on the walls.
Naked stone, exposed wiring, complex flake boards that looked as if they’d been
painted by an ancient ink master, a rough but powerful scrawl, compulsion
worked so intimately into the pattern that it drew her eyes and would not turn
them loose. She made an effort and turned to face him. “What’s that?” Even with
her back to the thing it was burned so deeply into her memory she saw the webbing
of darks and lights shadow-cast across his face and form. It made her dizzy and
uncertain.
He wasn’t looking at her, he was gazing at the thing with a
proprietorial satisfaction that told her he hadn’t the slightest idea what he
was seeing.
She glanced at it again, forced herself to look away. It was
disturbingly like the diadem—not its innocuous outside, but the way she’d seen
it from inside. Anyway, the closest any construct of this age had come to that
ancient trap. Kell. Worms eat his liver, why does he have to be such a
... god knows ... when he can make things like this? “Well?” she said.
“Have you heard of the Hunters of Wolff?”
“Who hasn’t?”
“My enemies sent them after me,” he said, a blend of triumph
and relish in his voice. “They didn’t know I have a patron greater than any
Hunter, a man who supports our cause without counting the cost in time or
goods. A Vryhh master designer made this, young Shadith, set it here as a trap
for my enemies. If I had to pay him for his time and work, it would have cost
me the total income of this world for a year. He gave it freely.”
“That’s his choice. You left me none. Me, I want to be
paid.”
He ignored that. “A trap for my enemies, young Shadith.
Look at it.”
“No. Makes me dizzy.”
He laughed, pleased by what he thought of as her weakness,
just one more proof, if he needed it, of the power of his mind. “Never mind,
then, look at this instead.” He put his hand on a bluish oval sensor, and a
viewscreen lit up at the back of the chamber. “There they are, the great and
indomitable Hunters of Wolff.” Two men hung in grayness, turning, writhing, horror
and pain graven into their faces. “There they hang, young Shadith, my enemies.
Hunters. In a nothing where they are neither dead nor alive, but fully aware of
what has happened to them. Where they listen to whispers from their most secret
fears. And it goes on and on, child, it never stops. That’s where anyone who
betrays me will find himself. Or herself. Do you understand?”
Shadith nodded, still staring at Grey. Alive. She shuddered,
but horror wasn’t a luxury she could afford right now. “Umm ... is that
permanent or could you bring them back? Say someone wanted to ransom them. Or
you maybe wanted to put them on trial to embarrass the Pajunggs, once you take
over here.”
“An interesting thought, child. You have a devious mind.
I’ll have to remember that.” He contemplated the two forms, smiling with quiet
satisfaction. “I could. Yes, I could. And I’m the only one who could. You might
think on that during the long nights, young Shadith. Right now, I feel better
with them in there where I know they won’t try spoiling my plans.” His hand on
her shoulder, he turned her to the door. “And there’s plenty of room for more
in there, that’s another thing to think about.” He touched the door open,
followed her out, took her back to her rooms.
Inside, he swung around one of the chairs from the table,
sat with his arms crossed along the back, facing the divan. He waved a muscular
arm. “Sit, child. Do you still want to bargain with me?”
She settled herself among the pillows. “I won’t do you much
good in that place, Ajin. And let me be candid. I will be even less use if you
try forcing me. I’m stubborn. You’re not a fool; don’t act one. Consider me a
mercenary and ply me with gold. Or the local equivalent. I don’t give a
mouthful of spit about your noble cause, but I do appreciate hard coin. Nice
cool rounds that rest heavy in the hand. That’s a cause I can put my heart
into. Slide a few my way and you’ll see fervor like you wouldn’t believe.”
“You’re young to be so cynical.”
“Not so young as I look; all species don’t mature at the
same rate.”
“Is there anything you believe in?”
“A full belly and a warm secure bed. That today will end and
tomorrow come whether I live to see it or not. I prefer being alive to being
dead, being rich to being poor. That’s about it.”
“You know what I want you to do?”
“I got a pretty good idea.”
“Can you?”
“All right. Honest again. I think so.”
“I won’t haggle. Conditional on the success of your performance
tomorrow, five kilos sweetamber, passage offworld, your word not to return with
the understanding that if you break it you join my pets in that pocket of
nowhere.”
“The price is right. Name the terms of service.”
“Five Avosinger years. You sing where, when and what I tell
you.”
“Three.”
“I told you, no haggling. Take it or leave it.”
“If I leave it?”
“Do I need to say it?”
“No. One small change, if I may. It’s for your benefit as
well as mine. Where and when is your business. What is
mine. Tell me the effect you want and let me decide how I’m going to get it.”
“That makes sense. You understand, I’ll have observers in
the audience.”
“I never expected anything different.”
“Deal?”
“Deal.” She smiled at him, knowing full well that even if
she did serve him faithfully and fervently for the next several years, all
she’d get out of it was a berth beside Grey. Honor was between men; breaking a
promise to a woman was as heinous a sin as farting in public. He got to his
feet. “Tomorrow, second hour after the noon meal,” he said. “That suit you?”
“Suits me fine.”
He nodded and left. After the door slid closed behind him,
she sat for some time without moving,—eyes shut, hands pressed hard on her
thighs, using breathing exercises to calm her mind and sort out the whirl of
joy and fear and hate and rage roaring through her. Finally she sighed and let
herself fall back among the cushions. Taggert, where the hell are you?
Grey’s alive, he’s really alive, but oh god, I’ve got to get him out of
there. Ticutt, poor old Ticutt, what a hell that must be for you. What am I
going to do? Never thought I’d miss witchface’s scolds, ah, Harskari, I wish
you were here, I’ll never tell you, I suppose, oh god, I wish you were here.
They were waiting for her, restless and close to hostile,
routed from card games and sleep, taken away from their screens and scanners,
their leave time, mercenaries that were the Ajin’s personal guard, the core of
his army, and the better part of the technicians that lived and worked in the
camouflaged buildings. Taken from whatever pleasure they were immersed in and
forced into the treacherous outer air to listen to some flat-chested halfling
sing at them.
The Ajin looked at them and smiled. “If you can get them,
you’re better than good, young Shadith. Look at them—won’t even sit together.”
He frowned. “Mercenaries. Tough men. Good fighters. But they’ll always retreat
just that fraction sooner than men fighting for something they believe in.
They’re here for coin, and coin is no good to a dead man.”
“My kind of people,” she murmured.
He was not amused. “Make them love Avosing,” he said. “Make
them cheer me. Make them ready to follow me into fire.”
“It won’t last.”
“You can do it?”
“I can but try.”
“Remember what you’re working for. Remember the five kilos
sweetamber.”
“I hear you.” She shifted the harp, got ready to play, then
lifted her head. “Don’t forget I told you. The effect wears off fast.”
“Play.”
“Linfy, you ready?”
“Yah, Shadow.”
She nudged him with her toe. “This one has to be good.”
“Gotcha.”
She sneaked a last glance at the Ajin and saw that he
believed in her enough to have filters in his nostrils and distorting plugs in
his ears. Cheer him, she thought, damned if I do, damned if I don’t. She
discarded what she’d planned and riffled through her stock of song patterns. All
right, sing a song of fierceness and glory, weave it around the Ajin, that
should do what he wants.
She began to play on the harp, the sound thin and swallowed
by the wind, then ripening into richness as Linfyar caught the mood and added
his whistle. She could feel the men resisting her, still resenting her,
determined to punish her with their indifference. She smiled to herself and
began the croon, the ancient words ringing out with all the power she could put
into them. And her sisters were finally there for her, spinning the dream out
of their ghostly substance as they made her voice theirs. She sang first
yearning for home, not the real home but the dream home men made for themselves
when they were far from that home in every way that counted, in years, miles, a
multiplicity of sins and sorrows. She watched the hard faces soften, shallow
eyes mist over with tears, not surprised by this; the mercenaries she’d known
had been easily sentimental when it cost them nothing. She teased them from
that sentimentality into dreams of glory and honor, all the things they wanted
to be or thought they were, fierce bold men of matchless skill, loyal to their
brothers and to a stem code no outsider could understand. A dream even the most
cynical and treacherous among them cherished deep in some comer of his
shriveled soul, though he knew in mind and gut that it had very little to do
with the real order of things. At first she’d been bothered by her complicity
in this manipulation of men for purposes other than pleasure, but by the time
she finished the croon and stilled the sound of the harp, she felt better about
what she was doing. At least, with this bunch. They lived quite comfortably
with the chasm between the ideals they professed and the things they did to
outsiders and each other.
The Ajin leaped onto the rock beside her and began a rousing
speech; after a few words he had them on their feet cheering. She stopped
listening and frowned at her hands. One thing to play on these men, but what
about the Avosingers? One time wouldn’t make that much difference—what if he
made her do it over and over again? I want out of this now. I can’t ...
But she had to. Until she could figure a way to break Grey and Ticutt loose,
she was stuck here, she had to compromise, had to do things that were hard to
live with. The Ajin squatted beside her, whispered, “Sing them quiet and reinforce
what we’ve done.”
We, she thought and felt her stomach curl into a knot. She
settled the harp and began a rousing song Swardheld had taught her, one he’d
picked up in his wandering since he’d acquired Quayle’s body; she had them
clapping with the beat and shouting out the chorus, then she cut it off and
sang a gentle, sentimental song of home, ending where she began, ignoring the
calls for more when she finished., sitting slumped and weary over her harp as
the Ajin sent them back to what they were doing before he’d ordered them out
here.
When they were gone, he came back to Shadith. “No more ‘conditional’—you’ve
shown me something I wouldn’t have believed. Would that work with any crowd,
one with women and children in it? More of a mix?”
She straightened, forced herself out of her gloom. “Once I
get the feel of the crowd, I think so.”
“Then you can’t just push button A and get result A.”
“No. People change. If you brought that bunch out again, I’d
have to sing something different. Slightly different. It’s nuances that make
the effect work. Or fail.”
He gazed at her skeptically. He didn’t want to believe her,
but he was out of his depth with music and didn’t know how to question what she
was telling him. She kept her face calm, smiling a little, tried to project
passivity and lack of interest in what he was thinking, though she read all too
clearly that he was a little afraid of her now and his dislike and distrust of
all women was working on that fear. I’d never last the whole five years even
if I meant to stay. When his fear gets too strong, I go into the trap with
Grey. Something to think about—how long have I got? How long before my
value is outweighed by the danger I represent?
He nodded, held out his hand. “Right. Come. There’s one more
thing we have to do, then you can get some rest. You look tired.”
“I am.” She let him pull her onto her feet, then followed
him back into the building, Linfyar trailing silent and forgotten behind them.
In the infirmary again. He stopped her beside the examining
table, stood looking thoughtfully down at her.
“Mess with my head and I can’t do that anymore.”
He nodded. “I believe you. Nuances.”
“Well?”
“You worry me. I haven’t got a handle on you.”
“The sweetamber. I stay bought.”
“Easy enough to say that here. Out there you might change
your mind.” He shook his head. “I don’t leave loose ends, Shadith. That’s why
I’m alive now and not bones in a crypt.” He made no apparent signal, but a
tangler wrapped around her. She heard Linfyar squeal with outrage and fear,
forgot her own fear as she screamed curses at the Ajin and fought to tear free
from the strangling bonds. A sting on her shoulder. Darkness knotted about her;
she heard a last whimper from Linfyar, then nothing ....
She woke lying on her stomach on the table, the Ajin looming
over her. He stepped back as she spat at him, so filled by rage she wasn’t
thinking, only reacting. Looking past her at someone on the other side of the
table. “Turn her loose.”
“She’s knotted up, ready to attack.”
He laughed. “That child? Am I so weak? Turn her loose.”
She felt the straps loosen over her back and legs, then fall
away. The interval had given her time to remember where she was and why she was
there. She sat up, winced as she felt a sharp twinge between her shoulder
blades. A tall thin man came round the table and held out her tunic. She pulled
it on with angry jerks, smoothed it down, then slipped off the table. “What did
you do to me?”
“Come over here.”
She followed him across the room to a tilted screen a meter
above her head. He touched a sensor and she saw herself stretched on her
stomach on the table. She saw the thin man make an incision in her back and
insert a small oval object among the bared muscles, sew it in place with a few
knots. He pulled the flap of skin over it and sewed that down, slathered on
some greasy liquid, covered it with a gauze pad held in place with adhesive
tape, an antique procedure that appalled her. The Ajin tapped the screen dark.
“Miniature thermit grenade,” he said, “tied to this.” He
held up a blob of back plastic threaded on a chain, let it dangle in front of
her a minute, then dropped the chain over his head. “You’re safe as long as you
stay less than a kilometer from me. And as long as I’m alive. If I’m killed
while that’s still in you, too bad. I won’t be worrying about anything or
anyone after I’m dead.”
She pressed her lips together, hugged her arms across her
chest.
He smiled lazily at her, calmly content with what he’d accomplished.
“It’ll come out as easy as it went in when your time’s up.”
“Oh, thanks,” she murmured. “How kind.”
His smile escalated into a chuckle. He was very pleased with
himself. “Come along, singer. You’ve had a hard day. Time to rest.”
She started after him, then remembered Linfyar. She stopped,
looked around. “Where’s Linfy?”
“What?” He stopped in the door, turned his head, impatience
limned in face and body.
“The boy. My companion. He was here. Where is he?”
“Oh. The freak. He started acting up, so I had him hauled
out. He’s back in your rooms.” He didn’t wait for an answer but strolled out,
knowing she’d follow.
She closed her hands into fists, looked around at the
carefully blank faces of the surgeon and his assistants. Then she followed him.
There was nothing else she could do.
Linfyar charged her and wrapped his arms about her in a desperate
hug, nearly squeezing her in half. She freed herself, laughing, surprised and
touched by the fervor of his greeting, glad the Ajin had delivered her to the
door and left without coming inside, though not without locking her in.
After he satisfied himself she was intact, Linfyar backed
off, still vibrating with a harrowing mix of emotions. “What’d he do, Shadow?
What’d he do?”
“Creep was making sure I have to stick close to him.” She
hesitated, uncertain about what to say; he’d better know, for it colored
everything she’d do from now on. She sighed and told him what the Ajin had done
to her.
He went very quiet. Then he screamed, a harsh tearing yell
whose only sense was in its sound, and started racing about the room in a
frenzy, banging himself against the walls, the floor, anything that got in his
way, shrieking obscenities and threats. She finally managed to catch and hold
him, shocked by the strength of his slight body and the fury churning in it; it
was as if all the things he’d let be done to him, all the tricks and little
betrayals he’d used to stay alive, all the humiliations he’d suffered had come
to a head at that moment, all that poison came spurting out of him. After a
short struggle, he collapsed against her, muffling soft wails against her
breasts, shaking all over, so hot he almost burned her arms as she held him tight
to her, rocked him gently, until the shaking and the whimpering stopped. She
held him awhile longer, held him until he pushed against her, wanting free.
When she saw his face she was startled in a way she hadn’t expected.
No tears. No signs left of his distress. Easy enough equation—no eyes meant no
tearducts. Obvious. But she’d never thought of it, accepting him with as little
understanding, almost, as the Ajin. She wrinkled her nose, watching him as he
dug among the pillows on the divan and settled himself, hysteria passing like a
summer storm, leaving little behind but a touch of weariness. He yawned,
stretched, wriggled about, then demanded more details about the insert. “Let me
feel it,” he said. “I want to feel it.”
Shadith stripped off her tunic and let him feel the bandage,
but stopped him quickly when he wanted to peel off the gauze and dig out the
bomb. “You’ll blow us both up, imp. Besides, it hurts. I don’t want you messing
with it.”
He darted around behind her and began feeling the bandage again.
“I can do it, I know I can.”
She scrambled away from him, caught up her tunic and pulled
it over her head. “Hai-ya, imp, calm down, will you? I mean it—you try anything
like that, and ka-boom, kid.”
“But I want to help, Shadow.”
“You are helping, Linfy.”
“But I mean ...” He broke off as she laid her hand gently on
his mouth.
She took the hand away. “I know, Linfy. It’s hard sitting
around waiting like this with nothing to do but fret.”
“What do you want me to do, Shadow?”
“Pay them no mind and sing when it’s time.” She switched
languages, sang the next words as if they were a snatch of song: “I’ve got a
plan, I think it can work, you know what I told you, he’s alive and he’s here.
But it’s gonna take time, my friend, and it’s gonna take thinking and it’s
gonna take remembering we can’t talk at all.” She added a few more sounds,
meaningless noises, and stopped singing.
Grinning, ears twitching, hands beating time on the pillows,
Linfyar sang back to her: “Oh yes, we’ll do it, we’ll fool them like silly fish,
oh yes, we’ll do it, I understand now.”
She held out her hand, smiled when he took it, said in
common Avosinger, “Besides, we’re getting good pay. Think about it, Linfy—five
kilos of sweetamber and our passage to wherever we choose. Not bad, eh? Better
than we usually get. So what’s a little glitch in the working conditions? Like
the man said, it’ll come out as easy as it went in.”
“Oh yeah,” Linfyar said; he slid off the divan, yawned and
groaned as he worked his small body. He stuck his tongue out at her, danced
away. “Not like that other time when we got stranded and if we didn’t stow away
on that half-wit’s half-dead ship we’d be there still.” He giggled and dived
past the velvet curtain into the bedroom.
Brows raised, she stared at the swaying curtain. Wonder
where he picked that up? Nine going on ninety, so help me. She yawned. Ai-iy,
I’m beat. Linfy’s right. Might as well sleep—there’s nothing else to do.
He was already asleep when she reached the bed, curled up in
a small furry tangle of legs and arms. She nudged him over, stretched out
beside him, lying on her stomach, her head on her arms. The anesthetic was
wearing off and the middle of her back felt like a sore tooth; as the thought
drifted through her mind, she giggled softly, drowsily. Odd place for a tooth.
The giggle made her back muscles move and stirred the wound, so she stopped
that and lay very still. A few breaths more and she was drifting into a dozing
dream state.
*Well, ancient child, you’ve landed yourself in a mess.*
*Old Po’, what you know?*
That you’ve got a bomb in your back. What are you going to
do about that?*
*Get rid of it when I’m ready to.*
*How?*
*Why don’t I leave that up to you? One of those spies you
were talking about.*
*When?*
*Not for a while yet. Don’t want to make our conquering hero
feel insecure.*
*You saw your friends.*
*You knew about that obscenity?*
*How could I not?*
*You know about Kell?*
“How could I not?* (feel of amusement) * Besides, you told
me about the Hunters and the Vryhh the last time we spoke.*
*My memory’s a bit hazy, but I don’t recall your saying anything
about any of this then.*
*You went to sleep on me.*
*Plenty of time before. Well, it’s done, no use wearing a
rut in my head. Why don’t you talk to me other times? When I’m awake.*
*Good question, oddling.*
*Which means you aren’t going to answer it.*
*You got it.*
*What I’m getting is rotten jokes.*
*Hard to do good ones in someone else’s language.*
*What are you?*
*What?*
*Should I say who?*
*It would be courteous of you to assume a who rather than a
what.*
*You’re the one invading a stranger’s head. Not me.*
*Not because you didn’t try.*
*One eensy time.*
*Mmm. Do you trust the Ajin to keep his word and take the
bomb out?*
*Course not. What I expect he’ll do, if he doesn’t put me in
that glop with Grey, he’ll take me someplace, Angachi maybe, and shove me out
when the flier’s over two three kilometers off the sand so he can see me
splatter when the bomb goes boom. Like he said, he’s a careful man.*
*Ah, you softsiders, you busy little murderers. You’ll be
the death of me, ah weh, you will. Unless, unless you’re part of me. Help me,
ancient child, help me live, help Perolat and Tjepa, Awas and all the rest,
stop this Sikin Ajin before he brings the bombs on us, the fire from the skies.
Did you know, only a dozen others can talk with me like this—the rest hear me
as siren song, a dream they long to find. Are there more like you out there, on
those worlds beyond my reach?* (sleepy chuckle) *Not hardly, Old Po’, but yes,
a lot of folks with gifts like mine.*
*You give me hope, ancient child, hope someday I can talk
with all of my soft sides. If I have the time. Give me the time, little
oddling.*
*Time for what? Are you any better than the Ajin, driving
these folk for your needs not theirs, playing with them, breeding them like
pets, sucking them into you?*
*The Ajin wants stasis, my oddling; what good would that do
me? The Ajin wants slaves worshiping him; what good would slaves do me?
Worship, what foolishness. I want friends to talk to, ancient child, my oddity.
Is Perolat a slave? Dihann? Awas? Any of them? Not likely. What I want is time
to bloom the latent powers budded in them. Make them more themselves, not
less.*
(sigh) *Don’t sell so hard, Old Po’. Me, I’ve got no choice.
But I sure wouldn’t turn down a bit of help now and then.*
(vast relief) *I like you, ancient child. Before you leave
perhaps you can find time to come visit me and we can talk without the pressure
of time and need.*
*I’d like that. And, hey, call me Shadow. Oddity and ancient
child, huh, I’m getting very tired of those.*
(warm amusement) *Go to sleep, little Shadow; I’ll find you
a surgeon, just call Old Po’ when you’re ready.*
Tikumul.
Grasslands stretching away on three sides, a low bank of
clouds beyond the low coast range, white fleece against the blue of a vast sky
soaring above a flat featureless land, a sky that filled the eyes and left
little space for the endless shimmer of the grass.
The k’shun in the center of the village.
Dust everywhere, no clovermoss to keep it down.
Families, single men, shifting restlessly about, talking in
small groups, killing time until the Ajin arrived. Children running about,
shouting, chasing each other. Trucks ringing the k’shun, women setting out
earthenware bowls on braced tailgates, chewy yellow gancha grain, meaty stews,
fowl bits fried in batter, crisp stir-fried vegetables, steaming pitchers of
spicy belas. Under the trucks, tubs of ice with kegs of beer, ale, and hard
cider.
The women working at the trucks took time off now and then
to gossip with friends they hadn’t seen face to face for months, only on the
com circuits, friends they wouldn’t see again for more months.
A hay wagon in the middle of the k’shun. Someone had hung a
painted tarp about the sides and set a truss of straw at one end. It waited.
The grasslanders waited with the same stolid patience.
The grasswinds blew golden whorls of pollen into the sky and
let it fall again, covering everything and everyone with a misting of yellow
that the sun turned to glittering gilt.
The Ajin arrived an hour late, greeted with shouts and
laughter and much excitement. As he passed through the crowd to the wagon,
mothers and fathers lifted their younger children to their shoulders so they
could see the man who dared to rebel against the government. Shadith walked
behind him with Linfyar trotting half a step ahead of her; she felt battered by
the exuberance around her and wondered how much they were committed to him and
how much he was simply entertainment, an excuse for this get-together. They
took the minor risk of coming to hear him—would they take the major risk of
fighting under his leadership? She began to understand more clearly the reason
he’d spent so much time and effort on her. She was there to find the fervor in
them and heat it up, to wake the anger in them and turn it to the Ajin’s
benefit. That thought was a sour taste in her mouth. She watched Linfyar scramble
up onto the wagon bed, followed him, stepping from hub to tire to flat. I
can’t do it ... ah, no, why bother trying to fool myself? I’m here. I’m
going to do what he tells me and hope I can finesse a little self-respect out
of this mess. A little forlornly she listened as the Ajin began speaking.
He was different out here, his weakness gilded over like the
farmers’ faces. He was a powerful speaker with an instinctive grasp of things
that reached deep and moved his listeners. He spoke to them of home and
children, of hard work, of savoring the fruits from that work. He spoke quietly
at first, but built to passion, and for that moment at least he believed fervently
in everything he said. Truth was raw in every word, and the grasslanders felt
it; she felt them responding. It was almost funny—the slickest thief on Pajungg
praising the virtues of hard work and meaning what he said with every fiber in
his body. Like the mercenaries, he knew what he knew, but exempted himself from
his strictures. She hunched her shoulders, hugged herself and felt miserable.
He roused that crowd until they were cheering, whistling,
stamping, then quieted them, introduced Shadith and brought her forward. She
settled herself on the straw and began playing the harp, starting quietly, as
the Ajin had. There was a spark of recognition somewhere in the crowd; one or
more had been in Dusta and heard her sing. Linfyar settled at her feet and
eased his whistle into the flow of the music. She began singing, using a
pattern poem she’d written during the week the Ajin gave her to let the
incision heal, a song like the other croons in the ancient Shallal tongue. She
was nervous; this was the first time she’d departed from memorized patterns,
and she didn’t know if it would work. For her soul’s sake, she was trying in a
subtle way to undercut what he was doing to these people.
Laughing with her, sharing her daring, her sisters danced
among the golden whorls of pollen. The new song brought them even more
intensely alive. She let herself relax and threw herself into the pattern,
singing love of land and home, love for everything that ran on that land and
flew in the air above it, love for their families and their neighbors, singing
love of freedom and need for self-respect, reinforcing everything in them that
made them sturdy, stubbornly independent, walking a tightrope as she struggled
to satisfy herself and confuse the Ajin about what she was doing. Yet when she
finished the pattern poem and saw the rapt faces, she was afraid of what she
had done; she had tried to insulate them against him, but there was nothing
precise about the patterns, not before and not now when she hadn’t sufficient
data to judge the responses. She settled back and watched the Ajin take them in
his hands and work them back into a frenzy with hatred of the Colonial
Authority and the fumbling ignorant homeworlders who tried to run Avosinger
lives, then he switched keys and painted a warm golden picture of life after
independence, finishing with a low-key call to follow him when the time was
right. His flier swooped down, hovered a handbreadth above the wagon bed until
the Ajin and the rest of his party were inside, then it darted away.
Half an hour later church enforcers descended on the
village, scuttled futilely about, irritating the folk there and winning more
converts to the Ajin’s cause than his speech and Shadith’s croon.
In the days that followed, they zigzagged across the
grasslands and the coastal savannas, touching down at town after small town.
Seteramb. Simbelas. Debaua-ben. Perkunta. Winds weep. Sulata. Tobermin.
Hatti-hti. Dubelas. Dabatang. Even Rhul and Rel just across the bay’s mouth from
Dusta. Stirring up the locals, skipping out ahead of angry and frustrated
enforcers, sometimes with hours to spare, sometimes in a desperate scramble
into the treetops where the enforcers feared to follow. Several times they
returned to base, where the Ajin saw reports of the rising anger in the
villages, the hardening opposition to the Colonial Authority. For the first
time he was keeping hold of more than a tiny core of supporters. He began
working harder, going farther and faster, pushing Shadith and Linfyar close to
exhaustion, riding a stronger and stronger high. And by some peculiar twist of
his psyche, he began seeing Shadith as a talisman, his good-luck charm. “You’re
my luck,” he told her and stroked her head, missing the flare of anger in her eyes.
“Soon, yes soon, the time comes soon.”
She was afraid he was right and wondered how she could reconcile
herself to her part in it. Toward the end of the third nineday, she’d had
enough of exhaustion and self-loathing. She waved her hands in his face,
showing him her battered fingertips. “No more,” she said. “Listen to me, I’m
croaking worse than an arthritic frog.”
He smiled at her, patted her hands. “Magic little hands.
Would a nineday do you, Fortune’s Child?”
“It would help.”
“It’s yours.” He chuckled. “I’ve work waiting for me that
will more than fill the time. And it would be as well to let the church calm
down. Don’t want them yelling for help from home.”
Shadith wandered unchecked through the base, speaking to no
one, only waving and passing on when a technician or a mercenary called her
name. She was Ajin’s luck; none of them would dare touch her or stop her from
going where she wanted. She stayed away from the Ajin as much as she could,
though he liked to have her near so he could touch her. Nothing sexual in it,
there was that small blessing, but she hated those careless pats and strokes. I’ll
have a dozen ulcers before I’m through, she thought, but kept a firm
hold on her temper and said nothing. A thumbstone, that’s what I am, a bunch
of worry-beads, a wela’s foot to rub for luck. Bad enough, but, ah, if only
he’d keep his fuckin mouth shut. He talks to me much more like I’m a half-witted
infant, I’m going to ... oh god, I don’t know. Damn. Damn. Damn. Grey’s so
close and there’s no way I can think of to get to him.
She thought up plan after plan, but nothing had a hope of
working. Time pressed in on her. She had only these nine days to do something;
after that he’d have her on campaign with him, then fighting his idiot war, and
no way she’d have enough free time to think of some way to break this
stalemate. Three out of the nine gone already, and her head felt like solid
bone. Ear to ear. Linfyar kept out of her way. Slept most of the time. That
irritated her, though she tried not to take her irritation out on him; it
wasn’t his fault she had a billiard ball for a head. Then there was the
ultimate frustration. She could see half a hundred lines of attack—if she had
still been inside the diadem and had the use of Aleytys’s body and her talents.
For a dozen years she’d helped Lee develop and hone those talents, and had had
the use of them when her knowledge and training were needed. No more. Never
again. I boasted about my wits and my long training in survival.
Hunh. Maybe the Ajin’s right to treat me like a feeble-minded twit. Fourteen
thousand years’ experience. Still, most of that was spent gathering dust in
that stinking RMoahl vault.
The Ajin could get Grey and Ticutt out.
No one else.
I don’t know what the trap is. He won’t talk about
that. (She’d tried getting him to show it to her, playing the pretty child
for him, but he’d only laughed at her and told her not to bother her little
head about such things; that day he was very close to dying, but she bit her
tongue and let him walk away.) It’s instinct. It has to be. He’s not that
smart. And I’m not that stupid. I’m not. And I’d feel it if he was suspicious.
He’s not. But he just slides away.
How can I make him bring them back? I can’t. No lever. Torture?
Doubt if I could do it enough to make him talk. And he wouldn’t give in to a
child no matter how much he hurt. To a girl child. Taggert. Worms eat your pea
brain, where are you? Drugs? Maybe Old Po’ could help with that. What do I
want? Something that would make him babble, get past his defenses. Damn, I’m no
biotech, even if I got enough blood and cells to run tests on. High up in the
shadow government on Pajungg, hunh, he’s probably protected every way possible
from folks trying to make him talk. Still, it’s a thought. And the only one
that has any chance of working.
By the time the fourth day neared its end she was ready to explode
from frustration. He wouldn’t let her out of his sight, even made her sleep in
his quarters. “Tomorrow’s an important day,” he said and passed a caressing
hand over her wild tangle of brown-gold curls, then touched her nose and pulled
an ear. “I want my luck close to me.”
She paced the room he put her in (“I’m locking you in,” he
said, “it’s for your protection, child of fortune, there are traps and alarms
all about this place, I don’t want you hurting yourself”); for one hour then
another she charged about that room trying to work off the jags of anger and
fear and frustration that wouldn’t let her relax enough to sleep. The more she
tried the angrier she got; the Po’ Annutj couldn’t talk to her when her mind
was tense, she had to be tired, and it was best when she was half asleep. But
she couldn’t sleep. When her body was exhausted, she lay down on the bed and
spent more hours staring at the ceiling she couldn’t see in the thick darkness
that came when she turned the lights out. Finally she crawled under the covers
and tried blanking out her mind. She concentrated fiercely on it, so fiercely
that before she knew it, she was fathoms deep in sleep.
A hand touched her shoulder, shook her gently. She came
swimming back to awareness, lay blinking up at the beautiful empty face of the
woman bending over her. One of the Ajin’s concubines; her brain was too stuffed
at the moment to remember the woman’s name. Didn’t matter. What mattered was
getting in touch with Old Po’. When she saw Shadith was awake, the woman bowed
slightly, then left.
Shadith pushed up, feeling as tired as she had when she lay
down last night. She scrubbed a hand across her face, rubbed at her eyes. A
breakfast tray on the bedtable. The smell of eggs and toast nauseated her. She
got up and stumbled to the fresher, splashed cold water on her face, then spent
some minutes staring numbly at her reflection in the mirror. Dark blotches
under her eyes, teeth like moldy tombstones. She inspected her tongue. Finest
thing in fur coats. At least with a hangover she’d have had some fun to remember,
but this ... With a groan filled with weariness and more than a little
self-pity, she pushed away from the basin and stumbled into the shower. With
hot water beating on her back and steam cleaning out her head she began to feel
like just maybe she wanted to live.
She rubbed herself dry and wandered back into the bedroom.
Her tunic and trousers were gone, in their place one of the soft white robes
the Ajin kept trying to make her wear. Which she kept tossing out, wearing her
own clothes instead. Wanted to make sure of me today, she thought. Prickheaded
idiot, I bet that’s why he kept me here. Making sure I’d have nothing else to wear
this once. She pulled on the robe, went and looked at herself in the door
mirror. Isn’t that too too sweet. She hesitated, thought about making a
fuss and insisting once again on her own clothes, but she simply didn’t have
the energy. She went back to the bedtable, took the covers off the food and
stood staring at it, then she sighed again, pulled up a low stool and began
eating her breakfast.
“Three men are coming to try selling me their goods. I want
you to tell me which of them I should trust. And which might be spies hired by
the Pajunggs or junk dealers who sell rotten wares.”
“What makes you think I’d
know?” She asked that with a cold knot tightening in her stomach.
“You’ve got a good ear for
sham and fakery—you saw through mine soon enough.”
“Well, why do you think I’d
tell you if I spotted something wrong? I’m not exactly fond of you, you know
that.”
“Ah, but you’re my luck, you
can’t help yourself. Besides”—he smiled that lazy complacent smile that always
made her want to bite him—“you have a strong interest in keeping me alive.”
“So I do.”
“Well then, keep your eyes
and ears busy, Fortune’s Child.” he wrapped one of her curls about a finger,
then slid it off again, a gesture that could have been intimate and
affectionate but wasn’t; she was the thumbstone again, the talisman whose touch
brought luck. She pulled away and settled herself on the hassock by his desk.
He laughed and tapped a
sensor. “Send Harmon in.” Harmon was a little wizened man, a few strands of
no-colored hair combed across a freckled dome. He fingered his sleeve cuffs
after he settled himself in the client chair. Plastic slivers in his cuffs with
compressed-air bulbs to spit them out. Some fairly potent poison on them, no
doubt. That went with the cold malice pouring out of him. He wouldn’t go
anywhere completely unarmed; he had to have his poison sting. He slipped a
flake from a slit in his cuff, tossed it onto the desk. “A summary of what I
can offer that is immediately available. Numbers and quality of all items are
indicated, along with the possibilities of resupply in case of need. More
exotic weapons are available on special order. They will, of course, take
longer to procure.”
Gunrunners, Shadith thought. My god, he’s ready to go. She
watched as the Ajin slipped the flake into a player and projected it against
the wall. A catalogue of hand weapons, energy and projectile. Tactical nuclear
weapons and delivery systems. Conventional explosives. More delivery systems.
An assortment of poisons, disease vectors, gases, mechanical traps, mines, implants
for personnel control, illustration of the use of a human bomb, tangler fields,
plasticuffs, a wearying list of similar items with an exhaustive description of
uses and capabilities. A final section with costs and delivery times.
The Ajin withdrew the flake
and set it on the desk in front of him. “Most impressive. I’ll let you have my
decision by tomorrow noon. If that’s agreeable?”
Harmon got to his feet. “No
later, if you please. You’ll understand I do not like to linger away from my
ship.” With a short jerky bow he left.
The Ajin picked up the flake,
ran his forefinger around the outside, a dreamy look on his face. He set it
down again, turned to Shadith. “Well?”
“What can I tell you that you
didn’t see for yourself?” She moved her shoulders impatiently. “A weasel.
Running just a bit scared. Probably won’t last much longer in this game. I’d
say his goods would be as advertised, though not prime quality of their kind,
and you might have trouble with resupply. Against that, you can probably get
more from him for a lower price than you could from a more secure dealer.
Depends on what you want.”
He laughed and ruffled her
hair. “Ajin’s luck,” he said, touched the sensor again. “Send in Sapato.”
Sapato was a genial golden
man, a deep smooth tan, laugh lines radiating from the corners of soft
chocolate-brown eyes. Easy laughter, the motions of gregarious fellowship, but
everything he said or did was just a little off. After he’d chatted with the
Ajin for a short while, she decided she didn’t need to be an empath to be
careful of this one. With a smile just a trifle too confident he tossed his
flake onto the desk and sat back as the Ajin inserted it in the player.
Shadith watched it for a few
beats, then went back to studying the man; there was something about him, she
couldn’t quite put her finger on it ... until she glanced from him to the Ajin
and back. She nodded to herself. Didn’t matter what she said, this one had lost
his sale. The two men were too much alike to tolerate each other. A lot of
repressed hostility behind those easy smiles. Sapato was a less successful
version of the Ajin, something he picked up as a subliminal message that left
him angry and nervous, though he worked hard to keep it from showing. And the
Ajin saw the man he might have been if circumstances had been only
slightly different; like the runner he wasn’t conscious of that. She watched
them both, nodded to herself. In a way Sapato was also a forecast of what the
future held for the Ajin if his revolution failed and he survived it. She
glanced at the screen, listened as a taped voice described the use of the
weapon pictured, a multishot rifle with exploding pellets, then presented
demonstrations of the rifle’s speed and accuracy and stopping power on
everything from a charging man to an angry changrain hombeast. Sapato’s was a
far more thorough and effective presentation than Harmon’s, showing the weapons
in action as well as describing their specs. Gunrunners had the most dangerous
profession in known space; instant death if any government caught them. No
trial, not even a farcical one. Worse if they were caught inside Company
territory. Profits were enormous, of course, but the field was a small one, its
members constantly changing as luck ran out for old ones and newcomers took
their places. It was a tribute to the rarity and worth of sweetamber that the
Ajin had attracted three of them and managed to get them bidding against each
other. She glanced at the screen, shuddered. A reenactment of an actual battle,
the fighters and eventual corpses provided by con tract-labor bosses, according
to the narration. I’d like to turn Lee loose on those, she thought, then
suppressed a sigh. Just like the runners, take one boss out and a dozen more
would pop up fighting to replace him.
The Ajin slipped the flake out and set it on the desk. “Most
impressive,” he said. “I’ll let you have my decision by tomorrow noon. If
that’s agreeable?”
Sapato got to his feet, waved a hand in an airy dismissing
gesture. “Take what time you need. You won’t find better than that.” He
sauntered out.
The Ajin scowled at the flake, pushed it away from him with
the tip of his finger. “Well?”
“Full of himself, isn’t he?”
“Very.”
“I’d say he runs a tight business, you’d get prime goods for
your coin, resupply’s probably fast and accurate. It’ll cost you top price and
maybe more. And he’ll have enemies. That could complicate everything, might
even have repercussions back here. A dangerous man, a little unstable, a very
bad enemy. Definitely what he says he is—that’s no Pajungg spy or tricky
swindler.”
“Right.” He touched the sensor. “Send in Colgar.”
Taggert! She caught back a gasp, concentrated on
breathing steadily, her eyes on the floor. So that’s where he’s been.
Setting up background. It’ll be deep and solid. She chanced another look
that made her wonder how she’d recognized him so swiftly. The thick head of
white hair was gone, his skull polished to a high gleam. He looked hard and
gray and mean, a statue cast from metacrete. Nothing left of the smiling man
who liked children and could sit for hours with his own, making up fantastic
tales to amuse them. This man was dangerous as an ancient blade quenched in the
blood of thousands. Dangerous to her too, though he didn’t know it. He’d have
to act fast, taking the Ajin out at the first opportunity. His time here was
strictly limited. Damn! If only I knew where and what that trap was, I could
warn him about it. Maybe he’ll be lucky. Hunh. His good luck is my bad. If
he killed the Ajin or hauled him off to Dusta, that meant a very messy and
altogether premature end to her tenure in this body, an appalling waste of
healthy flesh. While she was resigned to dying eventually as this body wore
out, she wanted to put that eventuality off as long as possible, meaning to celebrate
a lively old age. What a bind. She glanced at the projection. First cousin to
Sapato’s, same slick presentation, same blood and gore. Gah, Taggert, how
could you. Don’t be silly. Shadow, he’s doing his job. Time you did yours.
The flake finished its run; the Ajin slipped it from the
player and set it beside the other two. “Most impressive. I’ll let you have my
decision by noon tomorrow. If that’s agreeable?”
Colgar/Taggert got to his feet, gave the Ajin a grudging nod
and walked out with the lithe, noiseless stalk of a hunting cat.
The Ajin leaned back in his chair, smiling. “Well, Fortune’s
Child, what do you think of that one?”
“If you cut at him, he’d dull the knife. Got the charisma of
a rock, probably as efficient as they come, good merchandise, top price, no
bargaining, take his offer or leave it and goodbye to you. Not a man to like or
dislike, use him like a machine, won’t trick you, won’t give you a speck of
dust you don’t pay for. What else he is, god knows, I don’t.” She waited to see
how he’d react, feeling reasonably secure; he’d shown no signs before that he
was particularly adept at reading behind her smiles.
He played with the flakes, pushing them about. “Which one,
Child of Fortune, which one shall I buy from?”
She was suddenly confronted by temptation almost too powerful
to resist. Tell him to stay away from Taggert, send him away immediately,
save my life. No, I can’t. Might be a death sentence for him. God! She
gazed up at Ajin. Worms eat your miserable soul. Aloud, she said, “I can’t tell
you that.” She sucked in a long breath, let it explode out. “I won’t.”
He bent over and stroked her head. “Little luck ...” She
jerked away, got to her feet with some difficulty, cursing under her breath at
the narrow robe that hobbled her movements. “Look,” she said when she was
steady again, beyond the reach of his hand, “I’m a singer, that’s what I know.
I don’t know shit about that stuff.” She waved her hand at the desk and the
flakes.
He stiffened. “You will not use that kind of language, child.”
It was an order, his heavy teasing banished as he moved around the desk and
came to loom over him. “Do you hear me?”
She shivered, forced herself to lower her eyes. “I hear
you.”
He cupped his hand under her chin, lifted her head. He was
smiling again, the stern father banished. “Little luck, you have to be perfect,
don’t you see?” He drew the back of his hand along the side of her face, then
stroked the tip of his forefinger along her mouth. “You have a great destiny,
dreamsinger.” He took hold of her shoulders, turned her around, guided her to
the door. “Go back to your quarters, Fortune’s Child, and think about what I
said.”
She palmed her door open and went inside. Linfyar was curled
up on the divan, sleeping again. She sighed, ripped off the white robe and
threw it on the floor, strode through the bedroom into the fresher. With barely
controlled violence, she twisted on the water, yelped as she scalded her arm
and hastily adjusted the temperature. She stepped in, folded her arms on the
tiles, rested her forehead on them and let the water beat on her back. My
god. She banged her head against her arms. My god. What a mess. That
creep. That curreep. You have to be perfect. My god. Little luck. I’m going to
throw up if he doesn’t stop that. You have a destiny. Yeeuch. She shivered
all over, shut the water off and started soaping her body, scrubbing at herself
vigorously until she began to feel clean again. She rinsed the soap off, stood
letting the water beat down on her some more until the heat melted the tension
in her muscles and left her feeling limp. She rubbed herself dry, wrapped the
toweling robe about her, went into the bedroom and threw herself on the bed;
the hard night finally catching up with her, she drifted into a doze.
*Well, Shadow, interesting developments.*
*Hello, Old Po’. Tried to get through to you last night.*
*Beat yourself, didn’t you?*
*I know. Too well, I know. Listen, what I need from you,
it’s even more urgent now, I need something that’ll knock out the Ajin’s
defenses, make him babble, or maybe make him suggestible enough that he’ll do
what I tell him even though he knows it’s dangerous for him. Can you do that? I
mean, do you have some sort of juice that will do that?
*No, Shadow. I’m sorry, but ... no.*
*Shit. All that funny dust and there’s nothing like
what I want?*
*Shadow, remember, the Avosingers have been here only a few
hundred years. There’s been no systematic study of the plants here; the
foresters have stumbled on a few things, the grasslanders, but it’s been trial
and error and mostly error.* .
*But you ...*
*Me? I have capacity but almost no experience. Shadow, I
didn’t even know what writing was before you soft sides came. Have you any idea
how strange and marvelous and exciting I find that controlled and directed curiosity
of your kind? I’m sorry (sad and rueful self-mockery), come back in a few
hundred years and I’ll supply you with whatever you need. Now ... (sense of massive
shoulders shrugging)*
*Hunh. That about sinks my only plan. Taggert’s here.*
*Your friend.*
*One of them.*
*He’ll act against the Ajin.*
*Right.*
*Then you’d better get that thing out of your back.*
*I had thought of that. Yes.*
*Best not wait any longer than you have to. You’ve been fidgety
as a nervous flea the past few days. No one would take much notice if you went
wandering around the lake.*
“Haven’t before. Ummm. Might be a new problem. Ajin’s got
plans for me; they might include notions of keeping me pure. So to speak.*
*And he knows you’re virgin.*
*Huh?*
*He had the surgeon examine you after he tucked that
grenade in your back.*
*Creepy bastard. Eckh. If I bit him, I’d probably poison myself.
*
*No doubt. He’s quite pleased at how you keep yourself apart
from the other men here. One of the reasons you’ve had so much freedom this
time. You don’t have to worry about him for a while yet.*
*That’s comforting. All right. I can probably get loose and
stay loose for a while. What then?*
*There’s a sourberry vine by a stand of jemara trees on the
south side of the lake, near where it comes to a point. You brought in a spray
of its flowers two days ago.*
*Yes. I know the one you mean. Flowers didn’t last.* *Isn’t
a house plant. Inside the grove you’ll find a small glade, clovermoss growing
thick there. By the time you get there it should be mostly sunny, very
pleasant. Quite private. Parrak will be waiting for you.* *Parrak?* *He tended
you before.*
*Oh. Him. Good enough. He’ll do the cutting?*
*Yes. You can trust him—he trained as a doctor before he
came to me.*
*Nice to know. Ah, what a load off, getting that thing out
of me. But it means I go after the Ajin tonight, (shudder passing along her
body) You never said—have you any idea how that trap works?*
*None, I’m afraid. Shadow, be careful. I’ve gotten quite
fond of you and I’d hate to see you hurt.*
*That’s two of us. Umm. If everything falls apart and
Taggert and me, we have to run, swat anything that comes after us, will you?*
*With all I’ve got. You’d better start waking now, Shadow.*
*Yes. See you later, Old Po’.*
*Later ....*
She came out the door, sauntered casually past the squatting
guard and made her way to the water’s edge; she climbed over a flow of rocks,
circled another tumble of detritus, stopped as she heard voices. Manjestau and
the Ajin. She dropped onto a boulder and sat listening.
“... had to cut off the input; those vibrators scrambled
everything so badly the receptors were heating up, going to burn out if I left
them in circuit much longer. Luck knows what they’re getting up to in here.”
“I need them, Manjau, can’t rub them wrong until the bargain’s
made. Look, it’s only till tomorrow, then they’ll be gone. Once they’re settled
in for the night, put guards on the fliers and on the door to the guesthouse.
Only one way in or out, and no windows; that should keep them honest.”
“Talto’s in from Rhul, he says the Authority has put a squad
of enforcers in the Rumjat, says the pollen scares them into staying half drunk
and they’re starting to mess with the women, but you’d better talk with him
yourself, it might be worth taking a chance ....” Manjestau’s voice began to
fade as the two men walked off, heading back to the main building.
Shadith kicked at the boulder and grinned at the bright blue
water smooth and glassy as a mirror on this warm quiet afternoon. Clouds were
beginning to gather overhead, but as yet they blocked very little of the hot
glare of the sun. What a giggle. The only place in this whole damn base
where I can talk without the Ajin’s voyeurs watching me is the room of the man
who’s come to kill or kidnap him. Well, Old Po’. hope you’re enjoying that
little irony as much as I am. She slid off the rock and began rambling
toward southpoint.
Perrak spread a white cloth on the clovermoss and began setting
out his instruments. “Get that tunic off and stretch out on the moss.” He
bathed his hands in a liquid from a rubbery gourd, spread some on her back and
felt about with quick light touches of his fingertips. “Going to give you a
local,” he said. “The thing’s not in deep—I can feel the lump under the skin.
You must sleep on your stomach these days.”
“Umm.”
“This won’t hurt.” She felt a small sting, then for the
first time in days lost her awareness of the lump in her back. She almost went
to sleep as he worked, tension she hadn’t been aware of draining from her.
Death coming out of her body, control of her life coming into her own hands
once again. Never again, she thought, never again will I let someone
do something like this to me. Never. Never. Nev ... Perrak interrupted the
flow of thought. “It’s out. I’m going to put some stitches in your back. Don’t
worry about having them out later. There’s a plant in the forest that provides
a tough fiber I’ve used before in things like this. It’ll gradually be absorbed
into the body without marking it.” A low chuckle. “I’m sure you remember the
salve I used on you before. I’ve got a tin of it for you. Have your furry
friend put more on each morning.” He picked up a rectangle of flesh-colored
plastic and pressed it down on her back. “Don’t take a shower for a day or two.
This is going to hurt some when the local wears off; the salve will help a
little, but it won’t kill all the pain, you’ll just have to live with it until
you heal. If you can avoid it, don’t go jumping about much the next few
days—don’t want to tear the stitches loose. The wound’s in a nice place,
though. Not too many pulls there unless you try weight-lifting. Where’s your
tunic? Ah. Here. Put it on. Appreciate it if you amble about more before you go
in, give me time to get this stuff packed and hid and take myself somewhere
else. Mind?”
She smoothed the runic down, laughed as he helped her to her
feet. “Say hello to Old Po’. It’s a grand day for a walk, isn’t it? Did I thank
you, no, well I do. Believe me, I do.”
He looked at the bloody grenade resting in a shallow dish.
“Like to make him eat it.”
“A lovely thought. See you.” She waved and went into the
shadow under the trees, feeling light-headed and rubber-kneed and altogether
delighted with the day.
Around midnight.
Shadith woke from a heavy sleep, sat up, winced as the movement
pulled at the stitches Perrak had put in her back. She moved her shoulders. No
big problem. She knew the cut was there, but it wouldn’t slow her down if she
had to run or fight. She frowned at Linfyar, limply asleep beside her. Better
not get separated. If we have to run, I want no hostages left behind. She
shook him awake, whispered in his hometongue, “Get up and get dressed, Linfy,
we’re going visiting.”
She glanced at the night-forest image on the screen, sniffed
with contempt and slid off the bed; she was taking a chance that whoever was
supposed to be watching them had gotten so bored he didn’t bother anymore.
Wasn’t much of a chance; except under the Ajin’s eye, discipline in the base
was a joke. Besides, all the time she’d been here, she’d done nothing in these
rooms but eat and sleep, read and fool about with her harp. She dressed quickly
in the black sweater, vest and trousers Aleytys had found for her, checked the
pockets in the vest. Lockpicks, a couple of hollowed-out coins that fit together
and made a rapid-play probe for electronic locks, a long plastic blade with an
edge that could cut a thought in half, a harpstring with wooden grips at each
end. She found the tin of salve that Perrak had given her, slipped it in the
pocket with the garrote, dropped to her knees and pulled her backpack from
under the bed. Its stiffening ribs were thin but strong metal tubes about as
big around as her little finger. One was nothing but a tube with one end finely
threaded; two others came apart into compressed-air cylinders that screwed onto
the tube to make a simple but efficient airgun; the fourth held a dozen small
darts, crystallized sova that dissolved into the target’s flesh and put him to
sleep. It worked slowly, took ten to fifteen minutes to put the target under,
but it left no trace in the blood and the slow action meant that the victims of
the darts usually didn’t connect the tiny sting they made with what happened
later. She slid the tubes into the vest pockets constructed to hold them, got
to her feet and looked around. Unless her luck turned really sour, this was the
last time she’d see this room. She regretted having to leave the harp behind,
but a harp was a lot easier to replace than a friend or her life.
The guard at the entrance to the main building was taking a
leak against the wall and staring dreamily at nothing. They slipped into the
dark, overcast night without disturbing him and worked their way silently among
the rockfalls to the isolated guesthouse.
The guard at the guesthouse was more alert; if the runners
got out and made mischief, it was his skin and he knew it. He walked back and
forth in front of the door with a dedication that made her grimace. She moved
her head close to Linfyar’s ear, breathed, “Wait here; should be about time for
a guard change.” She pushed on his shoulder, went down with him. “Keep flat
till I get back. Might be a while.” She assembled the airgun, slipped in one of
the darts, then crawled carefully forward until she had a clear view of the
guard. With the patience of a cat, she watched him pace back and forth, back
and forth, dull steady trudging. Got the brains of a slug, tell him to do
it, he does it till you tell him go away. Ah for a nice imaginative man,
someone with intelligence enough to get bored, someone convinced of the
stupidity of all this. Time dragged by on feet as leaden as the guard’s. Back
and forth, back and forth.
Footsteps, quick and crisp, coming along the path. The
sentry lifted his rifle, waited.
“‘S me, Bigo, Jambi the goat, got to crawl out of a warm bed
and warmer arms to watch a rock grow.”
Bigo grunted and went stumping off.
Jambi shifted restlessly about. After a minute he shrugged,
yawned, started swinging his arms.
The airgun made the faintest chuff. A second later Jambi
winced, slapped at his neck; she was close enough to hear him curse the lake
midges. She smiled and settled herself to wait some more.
A soft brushing sound. Shadith lifted her head.
The guard lay crumpled in a heap in front of the door. She
scowled at him. First you bang me on the head, fool, now you haven’t the
sense to get out of my way. She eased another dart into the gun, went back
for Linfyar.
The corridor inside the guesthouse was dimly lit and deathly
quiet. She stopped at the first door, reached in and felt at the sleeper
inside. Harmon. Next door. Taggert. Awake and alert. She tapped the announcer.
A growly voice thick with sleep answered her. “Who is it and
what you want?”
She grinned into the shadows. “An old acquaintance come to
talk.”
The door slid open. Taggert bowed her in. “You show up in
the strangest places, young Shadow.” He looked past her, shut the door behind
Linfyar. “You and your friend.”
“Don’t we all. Got some things to tell you.”
“Thought you might.” He settled in one of the chairs, waved at
the divan.
“Grey and Ticutt are alive. I’ve seen them.”
“Ah.”
“It’s tricky. They’re hanging in some kind of bubble
universe, no way to get to them unless we get sucked in too.” She smiled at the
look on his face. “Don’t need to go that far. Ajin can get them back. He told
me. Just needs persuading.” She grimaced. “By a man. I could take the skin off
him a strip at a time and he wouldn’t say boo.”
“Any idea what the trap is?”
“He wouldn’t tell me, the slippery fool. Here’s a giggle, Tag—I’m
his talisman, his lucky charm. He rubs my head and expects the world to drop in
his lap.”
“From what I hear, it is.”
“He’s riding high, all right. Tag, can you move tonight?
Look, I’m pretty sure he’s going to buy from you; he was after me to pick his
supplier, but I wouldn’t then. I can let him push me into doing it in the
morning if you want, give you a way back in. So you don’t have to jump tonight,
but, Tag, I have to tell you, you’ll not get a better chance.”
He got to his feet, went into the bedroom, came out with a
slim metal case. “Take a look.” He touched his thumb to the lock, turned back
the top. “Figured I might have to ask some hard questions.”
She touched the woven metal cap, wiped her hand down her
side. “A psychprobe. They’re really getting the size down. I suppose it
operates from local power. Hunh. I thought Wei-Chu and Co kept those close to
home.”
“One of the advantages of being a runner, Shadow. You get access
to all sorts of interesting things.” He smiled. “And no need to explain them to
anyone. Salesman’s samples.”
“Devious. Hmmm. One of the Chus used something like that on
Aleytys once. A lot bigger, though. She blew it to blue smoke and cinders.”
“Ajin’s not Aleytys.”
“Not even close. Tonight then?”
“No use sitting around watching the walls erode.” He set a
tablet and a stylus on the table. “Give me some idea how this place is set up.”
She pulled a chair to the table, bent over the tablet.
“Landing pad here. They stick the fliers in under the trees. Camouflaged sheds
there and there. Manjestau, number two boy, he’s put guards on the sheds, but I
know about where they’ll be—we shouldn’t have any trouble with them. Here.
Here. And here. Won’t be changing again until dawn. Here’s where we are. Guard
here. Got him with the airgun and a sova dart. He’s out for at least four
hours. I snugged him against the wall with his rifle on his knees. He’ll be
more concerned with covering his ass when he wakes than he will be with what
he’s supposed to be guarding. Main building here, you were there this morning,
no, I suppose it was yesterday morning. Guard here. Have to take him out. If
he’s not already curled up sleeping. Here’s the command center. Got some
kreopine and detonators in those samples of yours? The more confusion we can
leave behind us ... right, I’m teaching a silvercoat to smell blood. That’s the
barracks, but we don’t have to worry about that, it’s shut off from the
offices, has a separate entrance. There are the technicians’ quarters. The
brothel. Down the other end, here, that’s where the mountain starts; so many
wormholes in it, it’d look like goat cheese if you cut it open. I don’t know
where half of them lead; I expect the Ajin doesn’t either. This is where he put
me. Around this twist and up a little higher, that’s where he has his cozy
little hole. No guards anywhere around there. He likes his privacy. During the
day he brings in one of his women to clean the place and cook for him ... umm.”
She tore the page off, pushed it along the table to him, began on the second.
“Kitchen here, study here. I’m the only one he’s ever taken in there, not even
Manjestau. He tells me his plans, strokes my head like I’m some fuckin dog—hah!
Forget that; I get a little hostile when I think about how ... Anyway, he likes
to boast of trapping two Wolff Hunters, I don’t know how many times he’s told
me he’d do the same to anyone who crossed him, and how he’s like brothers with
a Vryhh master designer who built all this for him and comes when he waggles a
finger. Where was I? Right. This is the room where his woman sleeps if he keeps
her overnight. Locks her in when he leaves her, I expect. Did it to me when I
stayed there. Sitting room. And that’s his bedroom. Nobody but him goes in
there. Ever. That’s where this gets sticky. The portal to the pocket universe
has got to be in there. Nowhere else it could be. One way or another, I’ve got
in just about everywhere. No sign of any funny business. Umm. I forgot. Here’s
where he goes when he wants to see Grey and Ticutt or show them off as sorry
warnings to anyone who might want to jump him. Ordinary sort of lock on the
door. I got in without any fuss.”
“Risky.”
She put the stylus down, rubbed at the back of her neck.
“Not really, Tag. Technicians were used to me snooping about, Ajin thought I
was just being female, so that was covered. A chance I might get sucked in, but
I figured it wasn’t likely. Seems to me either he keeps the portal’s trigger on
him, say it’s small enough, or like I said, it’s set up in his bedroom.” She
leaned over and tapped the sketch in front of him. “The machinery that works
the thing, that’s here.” She straightened. “I thought about lifting kreopine or
something like it from the arsenal ... um ... forgot about that, that’s around
on the other side of the lake. Anyway, I thought about blowing up that bit of
engineering, but there was too much chance that would strand Grey and Ticutt
where they were. Which doesn’t look like a very good place to spend eternity.
Or whatever.” She tapped her fingers on the table. “Our problem tonight is
getting at the Ajin. I don’t feel happy about going into that bedroom.” She
shivered, scratched at the back of her hand, the side of her neck. “Makes my
skin itch.”
She sat frowning at the spidery sketches with the scrawled
words dotted over them; after a minute he smoothed a big hand over his polished
head, pushed his chair back and went into the bedroom. She heard him moving
about in there, heard some scrapes and squeals, a thump or two, then he pushed
past the drape carrying two heavy cases. He set them on the table, thumbed the
locks open and lifted the lids. “Come take a look.”
What a relief it was just to be herself without the
complications of sex and rigid gender roles. With a rush of pleasure and
gratitude, she went to stand beside him, looking down at the neatly racked weapons
in the cases, rifles of several sorts, handguns, a dozen dark small grenades.
Understanding finally just how cramping the Ajin’s mindset had been. Except for
a few times when he was particularly obtuse and offensive she’d gotten so used
to being annoyed it was like having a low-grade fever. As with a fever, she
made allowances and lived at a lower rate, forgetting what being healthy felt
like. Until Taggert blew in and blew away her blinders, reminding her what it
was to be treated as a reasoning and responsible adult.
Taggert unclipped a fat-butted laser pistol. “Waste of time,
all this. Didn’t even make me open the cases.” He twisted the gun apart. A
shell. With fiber packing. He stripped the packing away, set the items on the
table beside the case. “Tanglers. Shock grenades. Sleep gas.” He popped one of
the rifles, cleaned off two thick rods about the length of his forearm. “Extensible
claws. Hunch to bring them paid off. I like that bedroom about as much as you.”
He lifted one of the rods, tapped the end. It expanded in half a breath until
it was stretching across the room. Another tap and curved claws spread from the
end. He clicked them against the door, twisted the end. The pole collapsed as
rapidly as it’d expanded. “What do you think? Stand in the doorway, don’t set
foot in that room, toss in one of the sleep-gas canisters, pull the covers off
him with a claw, make sure of him with a tangler, use a couple of the claws to
haul him out of there. Doesn’t matter if we damage him a bit—Pajunggs won’t
mind. Me either, as long as he can still talk.” His pale blue eyes narrowed to
slits, his long, off-center nose twitched, he grinned at her.
“I think you’re absolutely wonderful, oh man.” Giggling, she
dropped into a deep curtsy. “I worship at your shrine.”
“Snip.”
“Hush, you.” She looked at the case. “What else you got in
there?”
With a rumbling chuckle, big hands moving swiftly and
surely, he assembled a multiphasic probe and lockpick, assorted alarm sensors
and overrides. The Compleat Burglar Kit guaranteed to get the possessor into
most places he had no business being.
Taggert glanced at the readout cupped in his palm, thrust
out his other hand. Shadith stopped Linfyar, shifted her grip on the
psychprobe’s case, watched Taggert dig out one of the overrides. He set the
squat cylinder in the center of the tunnel, eased back and stood waiting, his
eyes on the readout.
Linfyar curled up his ears and pressed himself against
Shadith.
Taggert began pacing back and forth, watching the light bead
hop about on the face of the readout. After a tense few minutes, he walked back
to Shadith. “Too much,” he muttered. “Ajin’s got that hole covered like an
arkoutch expecting a cold winter.
“What’s the problem?”
“Field isn’t wide enough.”
“Two?”
“Can’t. They’d cancel. Maybe we’d better.”
“Cancel? No.” She went silent, frowning at the cylinder,
trying to remember all she knew about that sort of override. Pulsed subsonics.
Supposed to overwhelm the alarm, confuse it, keep it too occupied with what was
happening to its own circuits to notice the sound patterns it was supposed to
listen for. Obsolete alarm system, too easily countered. Couldn’t be Kell’s
work. Must be something the Ajin had bought for himself. Got cheated too. Or
maybe not. “All this stone?”
“Could be.”
“Mmm. Linfy.”
He stirred against her.
“I know it hurts your ears, but do you think you can listen
to that thing, then make the same kind of pulses, only louder? Well, louder to
you—we don’t hear them.”
His mouth shifted through many shapes, his ears unfurled a little.
He moved few steps away from her and stood poised like a deer on the verge of
flight. He stood like that, ears full out, body quivering, one moment, two.
Then he flashed a grin at her. He nodded, opened his mouth. His throat began to
quiver like a bird in full song.
Taggert glanced at the bead, lifted his brows, then nodded
to Shadith and started walking down the tunnel.
Shadith followed slowly, supporting Linfyar with one arm,
clutching the probe case with the other, slowly slowly along the dark tunnel
diving into the mountain’s rock, moist with seepage, thick with cold musty
smells, slowly slowly, every scrape a thunder in her ears, slowly slowly,
Linfyar straining, shaking, draining himself into the pulsing subsonics, slowly
slowly, Taggert stalking ahead of them, his eyes on the light bead, laying
another override, Linfyar struggling to hold the match, fitting himself into
the pulses as subtly as he fit his whistles into her croons.
The door to the Ajin’s room. Ponderous. Laminated plasmeta.
Complex internal lock. Shadith stretched out her mind-rider senses, felt for
the Ajin, found him, a ghostly touch, just enough to recognize him. As far as
she could tell (he was at the limit of her perceptions), he was sleeping, sunk
in the slough between dream states. Taggert knelt by the lock, examined its
external parts without touching them, then eased the electronic lockpick over
it. He sat on his heels and waited.
The pick flashed through families of settings.
Linfyar’s fingers dug into Shadith’s arm, and he sagged
heavily against her, but he kept the pulses surging out of his reedy throat.
The door started sliding open.
Taggert snatched off his pick and stepped inside, alert,
ready to counter anything set to jump him, though Shadith had told him the Ajin
didn’t trust any of his men enough to leave them loose in those rooms,
preferring to guard himself with more incorruptible mechanicals.
Shadith half-lifted Linfyar into the room as the door began
sliding shut. When she let go, he coughed and dropped in a heap; she set the
probe case down, knelt beside him, rested his head and shoulders against her
thigh. “You all right?”
He massaged his throat, managed a weak grin, amplified it
with a nod that made a soft brushing sound on the black cloth of her trousers.
He didn’t try to speak. She could feel his fierce pride. They wouldn’t be here
without him, and he knew it.
Shadith tapped his nose. “Yeah, you’re doing fine, eh, imp?”
He nodded again, pushed away from her, using her shoulder as
a prop to help him get back on his feet. With a little shake of his body he
brushed away fatigue and stood with ears twitching, waiting for what happened
next with the exuberant anticipation he maintained in spite of all hardship.
She laughed softly, got to her feet. “Wait here if you want,
Linfy. This shouldn’t take long now.”
He produced a faint scornful hiss and moved to join Taggert,
who’d been prowling about the room watching the bead dance in his readout. When
Shadith came over to him he murmured, “Dampers in the wall. No hand weapons
will work in here.” He smiled at her, his pale blue eyes shining with a gentle
amusement. “Just as well we didn’t bring any. He always leave the lights on?”
“Not in the bedrooms, but out here?” She shrugged. “I
suppose. The one night I spent here, I didn’t go exploring.”
“Right. Which way to the bedroom?” Shadith started past him,
but he caught her shoulder, stopped her. “Together. In case of surprises.”
With Taggert keeping a close eye on the readout and Linfyar
coming close behind, Shadith led them to the door into the Ajin’s bedroom. No
alarms, more dampers in the walls, some weapons, but they lay quiet; whatever
the three of them were doing, it wasn’t enough to trip their triggers. Behind
his locked door the Ajin slept the sleep of the just man he knew himself to be,
serenely trusting in the gadgets he’d installed to ensure his security,
undisturbed by what was happening around him. Shadith found she was looking
forward to seeing his consternation when he discovered he’d been trapped by the
girl child he thought he had cowed; she savored every moment of his quiet
sleep. When Taggert knelt before the lock, she stepped aside laughing to
herself; if he was the Ajin, he wouldn’t trust her with such delicate work, but
because he was Tag, she knew he was only indulging himself in one of his
favorite activities, teasing a lock open, not thinking of her at all. At
least the Ajin’s paranoia isn’t rubbing off on me.
He stood, touched the latch and waited until the door was completely
open, then moved the readout along the posts and lintel, being careful not to
move into the doorspace. No reaction. He slipped the readout into his pocket,
turned to Shadith, raised his brows. She shook her head vigorously, moved to
stand beside him looking into the bedroom.
It was dark but the darkness was not complete. Glow strips
stuck low on the walls provided a bluish light that was sufficient to show
shapes without detail. The Ajin lay on his back, his arms flung out, his chest
bare, blankets pushed into a crumpled roll across his waist. He was profoundly
asleep. Taggert handed her one of the extensible claws, took out a sleep-gas
canister and the tangler, transferred the tangler to his left hand, lobbed the
canister onto the bed, tensing as it passed through the doorway. Nothing
happened. The canister plopped down beside the Ajin’s shoulder and popped open.
Taggert slapped Shadith’s shoulder lightly, grinned at her. She squeezed his
hand, then listened to the Ajin’s mind, felt the rhythms change from sleep into
unconsciousness. Taggert held up the tangler. She nodded. Holding her breath
but not as tense as she’d been before he’d thrown the canister, she pointed the
rod at the Ajin, touched the trigger. The rod shivered against her hand; the
end shot out and out until the knob was bouncing lightly up and down above the
sleeper’s stomach. She twisted the base. The claws sprang out, opening like the
segments of an orange. Working with extreme care, she lowered them until they
were nearly touching the blanket; she eased the needle points into the blanket,
twisted the claws shut and drew the blanket off the bed, moving slowly because
she didn’t want to touch his flesh, she didn’t know why, but she listened to
the impulses and kept the pole clear of him. She opened the claw, dropped the blanket
on the floor, retracted the pole.
“What’s that around his neck?” Taggert’s voice was low, but
he’d given up whispering.
“Nothing to do with the trap. At least I think it isn’t.
It’s supposed to be a control; he planted a thermit grenade in my back that he
said would explode if I went farther than a kilometer from him. Or he died. No
problem. Friend of mine cut the grenade out yesterday.”
“Nice timing.”
“Meant to be.”
“I don’t see anything else on him. Not even a ring. He was
wearing one yesterday.”
“On the table by the bed, I think—at least, there’s
something small there.”
“Careless, if that’s it.”
“Maybe.”
“Better get on with the fishing.” He transferred the tangler
to his right hand, narrowed his eyes, swung his arm a few times to get the
feel, then tossed the tangler onto the Ajin’s chest. The sticky translucent
threads whipped out and bound themselves around his arms, his neck, winding
down around his pelvis and legs. Taggert sighed and took out another extensible
claw. “You get a wrist, I’ll go for an ankle, then we reel him in.”
Shadith nodded. The feeling came again stronger than before.
Don’t touch. She ignored it, extended the pole and positioned the claw
over the Ajin’s wrist. A click of Taggert’s tongue told her he was ready. She
lowered her claw as he lowered his, edged the prongs under and over the wrist,
then twisted them tight, the needle points sinking into the Ajin’s flesh.
“Right.” The word was an explosion in her ear. “Pull!”
Together she and Taggert began hauling the unconscious man along
the bed.
There was an odd humming in her ears. The faint blue light
seemed to waver. One moment she could feel the butt of the pole pressed against
her hand, then there was nothing. Nothing there. No light either. She shouted
and could not hear her voice. A horrible sucking feeling. Then she was drifting
in grayness, nothing but grayness, no smells, nothing to touch, no sounds not
even the sounds of her own body, nothing ....
Cobarzh On Askalor
_files/image010.jpg)
Vrithian
WITNESS [5]
A CLERK IN THE CUSTOMS HOUSE IN COBARZH (A COLONY OF CABOZH)
My name is Peixen. I work in the customs office. I have a
very important position with five men under my direction. Yes, it is a very
interesting position, there are always things happening about me, my hand is on
the nerves of government, I am like a doctor protecting the body of the state,
keeping out of it those things that will make the body ill. Oh thank you, I
have always thought I could be a writer if I had the time, a poet even. You
should hear the stories that come through my office. Why, just a day ago—ah-ah,
no, my friend, that is a secret, you can’t entice it from me; I am loyal to the
Governor and too sharp for you. Oh, that’s all right. Why yes, I’ll have
another. A quechax this time, since you’re buying. What’s the strangest thing
I’ve seen? Well, let me think. Yes, I can tell this one. There was this turezxh
from somewhere way back in the forest, didn’t even know what shoes were, hadn’t
had a bath since he was hatched, yes, a native, one of the orpetzh that infest this
place, with a head thicker than his stink. Get them all the time, just make
trouble, no more than beasts mat can walk about like men, that’s what they are,
don’t see why the government doesn’t treat them like beasts, sterilize the
males and set the females and the others to doing something useful, no, no,
that’s not a criticism of the government, certainly not, who am I to tell the
exalted what to do, they must have their reasons, no no, never say I criticize.
Oh yes, thank you, I will have another. A warm apology for sure. Another
quechax, crizhao, and don’t take so long about h this time or I’ll complain to
your employer. Where was I? Oh, yes, thank you. This turezxh. He wanted to go
to Fospor, at least that was what we got out of him. He had this big wicker
basket and he didn’t want to open it. In the end we had to call the guard to
hold him. Turned out in the basket was the biggest snake you ever saw. Big
around as a man’s thigh, and heavy! You wouldn’t believe how heavy that obresh
was, all wrapped up in coils until it filled the whole basket. Well, I ask him
why is he taking that thing to Fospor and he says a cousin of his has a circus
there and wants the snake to make the Fospri gape. That sounds reasonable
enough, doesn’t it? But I didn’t like all the fuss he made about opening the
basket. I said to myself he’s hiding something. So I made him take the creature
out of the basket and stretch it on the floor. You would have laughed to see
how nervous my underclerks were, backing away, looking over the counter with
just their eyes showing. Even the guards backed off. I’m sure they felt foolish
a bit later, because the snake was sleepy as a raw recruit back from his first
leave. Thank you. I think the comparison is very apt. There was nothing in the
basket but some leaves and grasses, I had them emptied onto the floor and went
through them with a stick, you never can tell what vermin these dirty turezxh
will bring with them. Nothing there. Even the captain of the guards wanted to
let the mushhead go with his torpid beast, but I smelled something wrong. Yes,
I’ve got a good nose for that sort of thing. There was a lump about halfway
along the obresh’s body. I ask the turezxh about the lump, he says it was a
porzao he fed the snake so it would stay quiet. And that seems reasonable,
doesn’t it? Wouldn’t you believe that? No, you’re right. I didn’t. My nose was
telling me there was something there, something more. The guard captain
wouldn’t touch the obrezh, but I take his sword and slice open the snake and
there’s this porzao inside all right, and inside the porzao there’s a sack with
fifteen emeralds in it, big enough to choke a man. Well, the turezxh he tried
to run off when he saw that, but the guards jumped him. I did it to serve my
country, it was simply my duty, you know, but to show you what splendid types
they are who rule us, they awarded me a bonus and an extra day off when they
didn’t have to do any such thing. The turezxh? The governor was more merciful
than I would have been, just cut his thieving hands off and let him go find a
living how he could. Just goes to show I was right a while back, should clean
them all out of the jungle, get rid of them, worthless beasts. Some softheads
say those beasts, nothings like that, they got rights, some of those traitors
in the ‘versity, sitting there with their books and salaries paid by the
government, paid out of taxes folk like you and me pay, traitors got no
gratitude, no feel for real life, looking down their stupid noses at an honest
working man who could be a poet or writer if he wanted to, anytime he wanted
to, if he could take the time from his work, and it’s important work too,
keeping out the filth that would corrupt sosh ... sozheety ... you know. Better
poet even so than them, a man, you bet, not a gutlesh ol’ woman .... Got to go?
Sh ... sorry ‘bout that ... good company’s h ... hard to fin’ ... Tempestao ble
... blesh you ‘n y’r f mly.
Vrithian
action on the periphery [4]
Dum Ymori. One hour from the dome. Silent, deserted, a
mourning wind blowing dead leaves into broken dead houses. Looted houses. Muri
said it, wolves on two legs prowling. Amaiki tried to grieve for the lost life
of the Dum as she guided the skimsled past the empty houses, but all she could
feel now was her own fear. The last time she reached to touch her mate-meld,
she’d sensed anger and frustration and alarm overlaying their welcome-warmth;
then she thought that blend was aimed at Hyaroll, now she realized how blind
she’d been; this was what they’d been living with, this desolation and danger.
That they’d waited as long as they had was a measure of their love for her. She
felt shamed by how lightly she’d held that love, by the anger she’d felt when
they went off without her. Sitting comfortable and well fed—and safe—in
Hyaroll’s dome, she hadn’t the least notion what was happening outside, what
the little less than two years she’d been away had done to the uplands and the
people living there.
She left Ymori behind and moved off the produce road into
the fields, but there were too many fences; they slowed her badly and she was
afraid of getting lost. She dug into the toolkit and found the graft tool,
adjusted the cutting beam until it reached out a body length from her, then she
took the sled back to the road, the tool ready for use if anything came after
her.
The rest of the day she rode stiffly alert along the gradual
sweep of the road, circling wide about two more deserted villages, seeing no
living thing except a few raptors gliding high overhead. Death and desolation.
How could he let it happen? It must have been coming for years; all this
couldn’t happen overnight. Could it? She could remember water getting short,
the planted acreage shrinking gradually, year by year, but the families were
still comfortable, everyone had enough to eat and hope that next year would be
better. The rains came, though they were shorter and lighter each year. Life
had diminished a little when the lot chose her to be one of the fifteen
servers, but with a bit of care there was enough to go around for everyone,
sometimes more than enough.
The day darkened swiftly once the sun went down; because of
her late start she’d planned to travel all night, but after she’d gone off the
road twice and nearly wrecked the sled, she crept along until she came to an
abandoned farm. Afraid to sleep in the house, since that seemed the most
obvious point of attack, she found an empty shed (it smelled like a tedo cote,
though her flashlight showed her walls and floor swept carefully clean; not a
wisp of straw or a tangle of fleece left behind) whose walls were tight enough
to keep any light from getting out and betraying her presence. She ate a cold
meal, heated water for tea on the portastove, sat in the doorway sipping at the
tea, watching a waxing Araxos swim across the faint glow of the skymist. The
difficulty, she thought, doesn’t lie in the amount of light, but in how
it is focused. I hadn’t noticed before how much I depend on shadows to judge
distances. She wrapped her hands about the cup, the warmth sliding down her
arms to join the warmth in her belly. In the distance one edinga howled at the
moon, then others joined the chorus. She shivered and gulped at the tea,
emptying the cup, desperately glad she needn’t force herself farther into that
half-dark with its deceptive shadows. She felt her alone-ness in her bones and
wanted to howl like the edinga; she’d never been so alone in her life, not
ever; even in the dome there was a naish to curl against when the ache of
apartness bit too deep. No naish here. If I stay like this any longer, I
certainly will start howling. She pushed onto her feet, feeling every ache
in every weary muscle of her body. I wonder if Hyaroll will bother
looking for me ... who’s to remind him ... not the odd folk. She patted the
earth with her foot, a reverent caress. Earth mother bless them and what
they are trying. She pulled the door shut; there was no catch on the
inside, but she pushed the sled across the opening and scattered metal tools
along it so she’d have their rattle to warn her if something or someone tried
to get inside. In the light of the flash she snapped her sleep-pad out of its
roll, wound a quilt around her and lay down clutching the graft tool. With
weary patience she disciplined her whirling thoughts, and once the quilt warmed
the chill out of her aching body, she dropped into a heavy sleep.
She woke shortly after dawn. The morning air was cold and
dry, though the sun was beginning to warm the chill away. Something brushed
against the boards near her head, there were other furtive rustles and
slithers; she lay stiff and frightened until she identified the noises: tikin,
ti-besh, mikimiki and others, small furry nibblers pattering about the business
of finding food. As she rolled out of the quilt she saw a flash of pale green,
a jiji darting under the skimsled, tail thrashing, skinny hairless legs working
frantically. A moment later it backed out with a thimble-sized t’ki pup in its
mouth. Holding the pup down with its slim, six-fingered forepaws, ignoring
Amaiki with the casual indifference she remembered with affection from the
jejin in her childhood home, it proceeded to swallow the pup, then grunted
itself in a comfortable sprawl on the end of the sleep-pad, a film descending
over its golden eyes as it began digesting its breakfast. Chuckling, her loneliness
temporarily assuaged, she tugged an end of the quilt from under the jiji,
laughed aloud at its squealing protest; she rolled and strapped the quilt,
packed the scattered tools away, turned the cock on one of the water cans to
draw water for her morning tea. Jejin had lived on Conoch’hi farms from the
time Hyaroll stopped the clans’ wandering, moving unhindered through the houses
and barns, the cotes and sheds, shaping nests in haystacks and cornbins, eating
insect eggs and larvae, chasing snakes away, keeping down the population of
various sorts of nibblers. Amaiki hummed contentedly as she checked the
monitors on the batteries. Left the dome midafternoon, quit traveling two hours
after sundown. She was surprised to see how little of the power she’d used, pleased
too. Still humming, she moved the sled aside and pulled the door open. Bright
cloudless sky. I might as well stay here awhile, she told herself
and felt an immediate relief. The thought of plunging into that unknown ahead
turned her stomach sour; she liked things to stay the way she knew them;
strangeness intimidated her. It was pleasant to have a viable excuse for
clinging to familiar things and places. She eased the sled outside and unfolded
the collector films.
After breakfast, she checked the monitors, sighed when she
saw the charging almost complete. There was still a hint of chill in the air,
so she tied on her cloak, then went wandering about the stead. A barn built of
wood and fieldstone, several corrals, a stripped kitchen garden where even the
weedgrass was dry and dead. She lifted the well cap, dropped a pebble down; it
rattled against the sides of the hole and stopped with a dull thud. Not even
mud left. The house was locked up, but the shutters had been pulled off and the
windows were smashed; what she could see of the inside was a mess. The wolves
had been here, cleaned out anything worth taking, spoiled the rest. In the
whole long span of the Conoch’hi life weave, the only thing that came close to
this sort of destruction was the hints and fragments of stories before the coming
of the undying, stories about raids by shevorate galaphorze, hairy tribes
living around Lake Serzhair. Maybe, after these thousands of years of peace and
safety, they were raiding again. No stink of galaphorze about, but this place
had been empty for a long time, and scent didn’t linger in air as dry as this.
Might have been Conoch’hi gone wild. It happened. She didn’t like to think
about that. Everything she knew was breaking apart.
She went back to the shed, her enjoyment of the morning
gone. Instead of the comforting familiarity she’d felt before, there was
nightmare, an edge of ugliness to everything about her. She eased an annoyed
jiji off the sleep-pad, rolled it into a tight cylinder and tied it to the
sled; she folded up the collector and guided it back into its slot, checked the
packs and cubbies, the water cans, made sure the taps were covered. From the
look of things the water would have to last her until she reached the river.
She took a last look around, saw the marks of her sandals in the dust. The wind
was beginning to rise, coming out of the southwest with that low keening-howl
she knew too well, the zimral that leached the soul and maddened the brain;
that hot persistent wind would blow away those tracks before night fell, she
knew that, but leaving them behind, there for anyone to see who came in time,
was like leaving bits of herself lying about. She found a long-stemmed weed and
went about the stead brushing away old footmarks and new; when she reached the
sled she stepped up on it, brushed out the last mark, broke the weed into small
bits and cast them away. She pulled her cloak around her, laced the front
together, drew the hood up and snapped the dust veil in place, then started the
sled and left the farm without looking back.
All that long day she saw no one, though she passed more
abandoned steads, more empty villages. Overhead a few raptors rode the zimral,
but any tedo or other large animals left in the uplands were hiding from the
wind and the sun. After all the millennia the Conoch’hi had lived here and
turned the soil and left, their bones to make it richer, the uplands were going
back to wilderness, dusty, dry and secret. She passed orchards where dead
leaves rattled before the zimral and dead limbs creaked a dirge for the dying
of the land. She passed vineyards where dead vines were a calligraphy of
despair. The uplands had come to life on the rains Hyaroll brought to them,
stayed alive because he continued to bring them, year on year, steady as the
ticking of a clock, year on year without fail, the centuries piling up, one,
two, three, ten, fifty, one hundred centuries of winter rains coming without
fail; what wonder no one thought to study the natural seasons of the land or
build reservoirs against the time when the rains might fail to come. Who could
remember what the natural seasons were? Not even the life weave went back that
far. We planted what we wanted and forced the land to shape itself to our
needs. What had been would always be. As long as the undying lived in the dome
there would be peace and plenty. Sometimes we railed against the hardness of
his hand when he took our sons, our daughters and most of all our naidisa, but
no one dreamed of doing without him. We were pampered pets, Hyaroll’s jejin,
charming in our way and useful, and like the jejin on that farm, we are left to
make our own lives when he nears the end of his. At least the jejin have
instinct to guide them. What do we have? The land takes back its original face.
So fast it takes it back. And we fly away from it as fast, hunting for another
master to make all right again. It was a bitter lesson she read that day in
the writing of dead vines and the rattle of dead leaves.
Two hours before sundown she came across another abandoned
steading. She stopped the sled and checked the monitors. Down by two-thirds.
She looked around. Clouds low on the horizon ahead, just a few ravelings but
more than she’d seen since she left the dome. The grass was sun-dried and
parched but not dead yet, and the orchard stretching away behind the house had
a faint flush of green to it; the tree limbs bent with a lively spring before
the push of the zimral; more than guess or elapsed time, these things told her
she was nearing the edge of the high plateau. Graft tool ready in her hand,
senses as alert as she could force them, she sent the sled humming down the
driveway toward the house.
She felt the emptiness of the place before she came to a
stop. Heavy shutters were closed over the windows in front, three rows of them;
the house was asleep, it wouldn’t wake till the line families came back. She
started the sled around to the back, easing it along at a creep. No sign of a
break-in; the wolves never left such neatness behind them. That made her
nervous; they hadn’t come here yet—was tonight the night they hit? There were
several barns and a silo. Well built and well maintained. The Conoch’hi who
held this land worked hard and were proud of their home and loved their land.
She looked about and mourned with them the need to leave what generations of
their line had built. It hurt because she was cone and sister to all Conoch’hi
and because it reminded her all too sharply of the home her meld and line had
left to wind and sun and filthy wolves who’d break and mess what they could not
use. She looked about, wondering what shelter would be best. Not the house.
Silo? No; if they rode kedoa—which seemed likely, not many sleds or trucks left
up here—they’d be looking for any bits of grain left. Sheds? No. They’d try
every door looking for what they could find. A shed was too confining, and even
if she could latch it somehow from the inside, the fact that it was closed
against them would make them all the more eager to get inside. She took the sled
over to the largest of the barns; it had double doors on the upper story, a
heavy beam jutting out from the roofpeak and a hayfork swinging from a pulley
screwed into that beam. She stepped off the sled, hesitated, then unfolded the
film. Be safest to go to ground immediately, but the batteries needed charging,
and for that the sled had to be out in the sunlight. She looked around. Trees
and a pair of small neat sheds between the barn and the house; it wasn’t
exactly hidden, but someone would have to get within a few meters of it before
he saw it. She pushed up the hook on the smallest of the barn’s doors and went
inside, leaving the door open so she’d have light enough to see what the inside
was like.
More light came in through airholes high up the sides of the
loft. The side where she walked was paved with heavy stone flags, worn down by
centuries of tedo hooves. Milking barn? Probably not; more likely shelter
during winter storms. The air had a dry musty smell, old hay and worms in the
wood; dust motes danced in the light beams streaming down from high above. She
pushed apart one of the stanchions, stepped into the old stone manger, stepped
over the lip onto ancient flooring that creaked and groaned under her sandal
soles. The center of the barn was a huge empty space with a thin scatter of rotting
straw spread out over the floorboards. As she’d hoped, the loft floor came
about two thirds of the way to the front of the barn, then stopped. She could
jump the sled into the loft and leave no sign anyone was about. If the loft
floor was strong enough to hold the weight. She walked under it and scowled up
into the dim twilight; the floorbeams looked strong enough to hold a flier. She
came back from under the floor, went quickly up the ladder and swung out onto the
planks. Stamping and hopping about, suddenly more cheerful because of the sheer
silliness of what she was doing, she started dancing with the sunbeams, kicking
up swirls of strawdust, until she slipped and landed on her coccyx with a thud
that jarred her brain. “Motherlost planks are hard enough,” she said. Groaning
and rubbing at her tailbone, she got to her feet and managed to reach the barn
floor without falling, though the tumble she’d taken had shaken her more than
she liked to admit. “What now? Take a look around, I suppose, then fix some
supper. It’s a cold meal for you tonight, Ammi-sim, no hot tea to chase away
the sorrows of the soul.”
She stopped by the sled and checked the monitors. The line
had crept up a little, how much was hard to tell, but there was still a long
way to go before the batteries were topped off. She did a few loosening-up
exercises, but they didn’t help much; she was bone-sore and getting sorer by
the minute. Stupid. Stupid. Stupid. Motherlife, I’d love to soak in a hot
tub for hours and hours and hours. Maybe I can fiddle some sort of hot compress
with the portastove. Maybe all this is useless pother, no looter coming, no
danger closing in on me. Can’t take the chance, Ammi-sim, you know that. The
least they’d do would be take away the sled. With it you’re reasonably sure to
make Shim Shupat, without it who knows ....
There was an elaborate garden behind the house; generations
of love had gone into its shaping. A small stream had run through it, falling
down a miniature mountain vista to murmur in meandering calm through a series
of pools where waterflowers had grown. Fed from the well, water had been pumped
into a mossy wooden tank; a small weir could be opened to let a constant stream
run down the tiny exquisite vista to the stream and the pools and finally
around to the troughs where the tedo herds had drunk. No water now, of course;
the waterflowers were gone, other flowerbeds had been dug up and replaced by
mossy rocks in a desperate attempt to hold on to some semblance of garden; most
of the shrubbery had been cut back or removed, a few ancient trees remained,
their leaves a withered green, small and dying. They held out as long as they
could. How much they must have loved this place. She was suddenly happy she
hadn’t seen her home again. I have good memories, she thought, better
memories than any of my line can have; I am blessed. Her own life-strip was
packed away in the sled, but she knotted the thought into her mind for working
later into the weave.
In that gray light that comes when most of dawn’s colors
have faded, she woke from a chaotic, terrifying nightmare, filled with jagged
flashes of fire and dark, with blood and mangled flesh, with screams and
crashes, with shouts and curses, opened her eyes into that cold grayness,
unsure whether she was awake or still dreaming, listened to sounds that seemed
to belong to that nightmare: high, hooting squeals from kedoa, shouted curses
and whinnying laughter, thudding scuffles of split hooves, shriek and squeal of
tortured wood, dull thumps, crash of breaking glass. As the sounds clarified
and she oriented herself, she began to understand what she was hearing. The
looters had come.
She drew her legs up, pulled the quilt more tightly about
her. Sour fluid flooded her mouth; she swallowed several times, drew her tongue
across dry lips as she sat listening to the sounds the wolf pack made as they
swarmed over the stead. Even worse than the fear that paralyzed her was the
sick understanding that these ravaging beasts were Conoch’hi, unmelded manai. Motherlost
females like me. Oh-ah, how? How? What happened to them that they could do such
things? The big doors rolled open suddenly; she shuddered and clutched at
the graft tool, sat without moving, almost without breathing.
“Mother-cursed leeches, they licked the place clean.” A
hoarse wild voice that brought her rudimentary crest erect and flooded her with
an equally wild hate that appalled her when she realized what was happening. As
fast as the land, she thought, we go back to what we were. Ah-weh, ah
mother of us all, help me.
“What about the loft, Napann? Want me to take a look?” A
lighter, easier voice, not so troubling, but the words brought Amaiki onto her
knees, the graft tool lifted and ready.
“No, anything worthwhile was in the house. This place is too
open—look at it, not even fresh straw left.” Footsteps going away. “Some good
stuff in the cellar, we’ll feast today ...” The voice faded with the steps,
though the mana kept on talking.
Amaiki sank back on her heels. After a minute she pulled the
quilt up around her, clutched it tight to her, but the shivering that shook
her, jammed her teeth together, blurred her sight, it wouldn’t go away. The air
warmed about her, grew brighter as the sun rose higher, but the chill still
lingered in her bones. A simple thing. Just follow her meld to the coast.
Getting out of the dome would be the hard part, the rest ... with a little
caution and the proper preparation, how hard could it be? Wild manai ... how
soon before they begin raiding for naidisa and tokon? Everything she knew and
cherished was falling apart around her, even what she knew of herself. Rotting,
she thought, dead and rotting. Mother-of-all, what will happen to us? She
sat without moving for a timeless time—until her stomach growled and reminded
her to eat. Throughout that interminable day she heard the wolf pack moving
about. They tore a shed down and set it on fire to roast something. The sickly
stench of half-burned meat drifted into the barn; she would not think about
what it might be. As the sun sank lower and lower, she began to wonder if they
meant to settle in for several days. She couldn’t survive that; already her
bladder had proved a problem. She’d pushed a pile of straw ends into one of the
back corners of the loft and voided on it, but her urine was thick from two
days of keeping her water intake to a minimum. The smell of it was strong and
lingering; anyone with half a nose coming into the barn would know someone was
there. If they ever settled down and went to sleep ... no no no, they’d have
sentries out, they’d chase her down, the sled wasn’t fast enough to outrun even
a runty kedoa. Go away, she thought, go away, this is too close to
the lowland, it’s not safe to sleep here, go go go. She loathed being
afraid, being filthy and stinking; her sense of her own worth shredded away as
the hours passed until she despised herself as much as she did those beasts
outside, but most of all she was terrified by that fierce animal part of
herself that was drawn to them. It was not only fear she felt that time the
mana Napann spoke. Go away, leave me alone, let me get on unhindered, go.
The interminable day finally ended. She voided her bladder
once more and was sick with the stench of herself and terrified someone would
come into the barn and smell it. The wolf pack rioted about some more, making
noises that sounded as if they were celebrating the moonrise, then grew quiet
as the night deepened. In the long silence that followed, Amaiki wrestled with
herself, finding in that silence and the night’s shadowed darkness the strength
to face her needs and fears, her new and unwelcome knowledge of herself. This
is what I am, she thought into the darkness, these possibilities are
truly within me; in the years of my life so far I have not had to find out so
much about myself as I have discovered this single day. Tonight (and probably
only tonight) I have a choice of paths. I can forget what I have seen within me
and confine myself to that Amaiki who was gentle and loving, with—all
right, admit it—a sometimes acid tongue, and a true gift for shaping and
growing the green world. I can be that woman but not limited to her; I can put
out other possibilities as a plant puts out sports, living with the good in me
and using the bad to energize me. I can join this pack, run free and wild
beneath the moons, answering to no one but my pack sisters, sloughing all those
responsibilities that tug and twist at me and will not let me alone.
Part of the choice was easy. The Amaiki of two days ago was
dead; it would be like living in a rotting corpse if she tried going back to
that one and denying what had happened. But the choice between the other two
was far more difficult. Now—especially now—the call of the pack was terrible
and powerful; even in the stillness she could hear their shouts and careless
laughter, and feel the communion they shared.
In the end—she laughed at herself when she realized just
what had made her choice for her, had to stuff the corner of the quilt in her
mouth to muffle that delivering laughter—she put the pack aside also. No noble
gesture, no reaching toward the rational, civilized self, no urge to duty
convinced her. It was the stink of her body and her yearning for a hot soapy
bath. She detested being dirty; her mothers used to tease her about her
compulsion to neatness, saying even her diapers had been models of decorum. No
long hot baths if she went running under the moons, no crisp fresh tabards
every day, no cool clean sheets to slide between each night. As things were
right now, it might be days, even as long as a year, before she had all those
things again, but she would one day, that she promised herself. She’d never
ever have them if she joined the pack. Toward dawn, at peace with herself
again, she smiled into the thick darkness and thought of Reran’s sardonic
laughter when she told them all of this night, of Muri’s vocal bewilderment, Betaki’s
understanding smiles, Kimpri’s snorts and Se-Passhi pressed warm and pliant
against her. Her breath came more quickly and raggedly; how could she ever
entertain the thought of never seeing them again? It was all this mess around
her, she was light-headed from not eating or drinking enough, that had to
explain it, but she was honest enough now to admit to herself that there was a
part of her that wanted everything the pack offered, that resented the others
of the meld even though she loved them all and was bound to them with ties she
would not and could not break.
In the gray light of early morning the wolf pack rode away
from the farm without discovering Amaiki or even suspecting she was there. She
stayed hidden a full hour after the last sounds faded, then jumped the sled
down and set it in the sun so the batteries could finish charging. She got out
a clean tabard, then used some of her too rapidly diminishing water supply to
scrub her body clean. She climbed to the top pole of the nearest corral fence
and sat there letting the sun scour away the last feeling of contamination as
it dried her body.
By the time she’d fixed a hearty breakfast and downed it
with several cups of herb tea, she was feeling better than she had in days, not
only prepared, but relishing the challenge of dealing with the greedy, thievish
and altogether detestable lowlanders between her and Shim Shupat.
Two days later, with no more shocks to her system, but her
opinion of lowlanders thoroughly confirmed, she hummed into the port city, sold
the skimsled to a dealer as furtive as he was miserly, and went looking for the
hall of the line-mothers and news of her kin.
Cobarzh On Askalor
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Vrithian
WITNESS [6]
SHAMAN ON THE STREET (ROSARO/COBARZH)
My name is Heomchi Kangavie, but folk here call me Aveyish.
Ah yes, that’s local street talk, means “old man” and is suitable enough; as
you see I am antique, not to say rotting in place. My father’s name was
Kugapolush-je Omudda-popakush, which is a mouthful in any language and means,
more or less, he who sees around corners no one else knows is there. A
mouthful, yes. When the Ujihadda—a salimsaram word for the hurry-hurry folk—came
down the river in their ships with roars in them like that in the belly of a
hungry akko-yo, he moved out of the mawlihip, that is to say out of his house
and away from wife and other, and sat beneath the Uyaggung tree. To most of the
salimsaram he said nothing, but to me he said: Before you are a man, Heomchi,
the Kwichi-jai will go away from the forest, the Kwichi-jai will go away from
the salimsaram. And after he said that, he said nothing at all. He sat for a
day, a night, a day, and sometime in the second night he died. It is so. I
swear it. He saw what I would be, what the forest would be, and would have
nothing to do with any of that. He couldn’t stop it coming so he stopped
himself.
Me? Oh, awhile I was a student in a church school, then the
daughters sent me across the sea to the hurry-hurry men’s homeplace. Awhile I
was a student in the university at Inchacobesh outside the capital. Awhile I
was a teacher. Awhile I was an author and a lion in the parlors, and the
Cabozhi damazelas used to stroke my scales and marvel that a beast could talk
like a man and so entertainingly too. But I had no kwi. I was like a tree
flood-ripped from the soil that fed me. I went one way wrong, another way
wrong, and turn and turn and it was all gone and I was a fat old fool dangling
from the fringes of the hurry-hurry world.
So with one thing and another, here I am.
It is to laugh, my friend, it is the world’s joke. The hurry
men stomped the kwi out of the forest, and turned their back on the devastation
they made, and kwi came to dance in the streets with the poor folk, hurry-hurry
poor and salimsaram poor and other sorts of poor. The Ujihadda chased it from
the forest and it ran here to live beneath their noses.
That’s one thing.
The Ujihadda came with their storm-god boasting his dominion,
I bow my empty head to him and go out of the forest. Now I sit here and see the
undying flying about their mountain, the undying who make small the storm-god
who makes nothing of hurry-hurry waitings and all their hurry this way, hurry
that. I see the Ujihadda crawl to lick the toes of the undying and remember a
forest boy not-quite-crawling to lick hurry-hurry toes and I see the Kwichi-jai
dance in the street come rain-blow or bluest sky.
The undying? They walk like gods among the peoples of all
lands. They even look like people, but they never change, never age; when they
come strolling among us they put on light like a body suit and who touches them
dies. They never bother to warn, what do they care? They care for nothing, we
entertain them by our needs and our striving, then they go away again. They
prick the bubble of hurry-hurry pride. You see? You see? And kwi lives in the
street and laughs.
Vrithian
action on the primary line
Shareem slept restlessly on her pallet in the flier, woke
with an aching head, soreness in her hips and shoulders where her weight had
pushed them against the thinly padded floor, a stuffy nose from the dust. Muzzy
and irritable, annoyed with Aleytys and Kell, she groaned up onto her knees,
massaged her temples, patted a yawn, then crawled out of the flier feeling
grubby and melancholy and wholly disgruntled with the fate that had brought her
to this pass. She straightened and looked around. “Whatever you did, we’re
still in one piece.” She stretched, ran her hands through her hair, rubbed bare
feet on the cool wiry grass. “Lee,” she called out. “Hoop hoop hoop, hey Lee,
breakfast time. Up, my girl, your mama’s hungry.”
The mewls of the sea birds, the distant mutter of the sea,
the drip of water in the fountains, that was all she heard. The house was
silent, the gardens quiet, nothing moving, shadows stark in the early sun.
Patches of frost lingered in the long shadows, and there was the smell of frost
to come in the air, a hint that the short summer was nearing its end. Shareem
pulled her toe across the powdery white, feeling the chill of it bite into her
flesh, watching the black line her toe drew lengthen and fade as the frost
patch faded. Abruptly she felt thrust back into time, into the primitive time
where nothing changed with any permanence, where everything recurred again and
again. In the seasons of her life it was Kell’s time again, a time of flight
and terror, but—or so she told herself and tried to believe it—the old theme
was turned on its back, this time Kell would be the driven one. She stared at
the silent house, suddenly frightened. “Lee,” she called, urgency in her voice.
‘“Lee!’’
No answer. Shareem fought panic. Dead? Fled? What ... She
forced herself to walk slowly toward the house. Slow and calm, she
thought, slow and calm, slow and calm, but she was breathing hard and
almost running by the time she reached the door. She tore it open, slammed it
back against the stone, but she didn’t care, she didn’t care if the noise
triggered the menace, she didn’t care about anything but Aleytys. In the middle
of the great hall she scrambled to a stop and screamed her daughter’s name.
No answer but the echoes.
She tried to control her terror, tried to think. Told
herself: Remember, you can precipitate the thing you want to avoid, you can
kill Aleytys, kill yourself, reduce house and hold to slag, let Kell win. She
hugged her arms across her breasts and tried to calm herself, dragging up the
ways she’d learned to shunt aside uncomfortable thoughts and shaming memories.
“Ikanom,” she called, her voice still ragged but settling into control.
“Ikanom.”
The android came from the back of the house, moving into the
hall with that liquid grace that all of Synkatta’s designs possessed. “You
desire, anassa?”
She cleared her throat. “Where is Aleytys?”
Ikanom went quiet, consulting the kephalos, at first
listening calmly, then turning its head so the planes of its face made a pattern
of puzzlement, then it faced Shareem once more. “It is difficult to say,
anassa. Within the dome, yes, somewhere, but precisely where is not at all
clear.”
Shareem swallowed, fought to control her fear. “Is she
alive?”
Ikanom went still. Shareem’s throat closed up. Its face made
a pattern of puzzlement again. “Kephalos is confused, anassa.”
Shareem waited, unable to speak.
“Aleytys archira is living but dormant.”
Shareem swallowed again, stiffened back and knees. “It is certain?”
“It is certain, anassa.”
“Then find her, Ikanom, bring her to me. It’s important.
It’s more important than anything kephalos has ever done. Find her. Bring her
to me.” She looked around. “Here. I think here. When I see her I’ll know better
what to do.”
“Kephalos searches, anassa. Would you care to eat while you
wait?”
She stared at the shifting planes of the android’s face. How
can I eat? She pressed her hand against her middle. I should. I
don’t know, yes I’d better. “Yes,” she said. “Bring me ... bring me an
omelet, toast ... um ... some shalla juice ... um ... a pot of cha. Over
there.” A small table and two chairs, in a deep alcove whose windows opened
onto one of the gardens.
“In twenty minutes, anassa. If that suits you?”
“It suits.” ,
Ikanom left. She walked with slow careful steps across the
elaborate parquetry of the hall floor and sat in one of the chairs, her back to
the hall so she needn’t see how empty it was, her shakes changing into
numbness, fear and anger blunting into passivity. If Aleytys failed last night,
this afternoon’s missile could trigger the tumor at the house’s heart. Or
tomorrow’s. Or a thousand other things. She didn’t care. Couldn’t care. All she
wanted was for this torment to be over, one way or another. If Kell walked in
the next moment with a knife to cut her throat, she’d lift her chin to make his
task easier.
Time dragged, each second an eternity. A few eternities
later one of the house serviteurs rolled up and began setting out her meal.
She stared at the food. At first her stomach rebelled, but
she forced herself to nibble at a piece of toast and sip at the fruit juice. In
a few minutes her revulsion vanished, and her hunger returned so fiercely she
had to discipline herself into eating more slowly.
Cradled by the quiet of the great hall, the hot meal scaring
away the worst of her anxieties, she began to recover her composure and back
away from that lethargy that was a kind of suicide. She sat a little longer at
the table, watching the day brighten outside, expecting to hear at any moment
that the kephalos had located Aleytys. After half an hour had slipped away, she
got to her feet and began wandering through the house, room to room, kicking
along the flow spaces, into closets and storage niches, prying into chests, not
admitting to herself she was searching for her daughter’s comatose body, just
looking. She poked her nose into every crazy corner of that crazy house and
found nothing. I’ll get close enough to her, I’ll feel her, I know I
will, she told herself; whether that was true or not, she felt nothing.
Midafternoon. She was in the bookroom passing a window when
she saw the flare of light that meant another missile had been destroyed. She
glanced at her ringchron. Right on time. Eyes closed, she listened. Nothing
happened. Either it wasn’t supposed to or Aleytys had pulled the thing’s teeth.
She dropped into the chair by the desk and sat with her head propped on her
hands, thinking. One place left. And I can’t get in there. Househeart. Tumor
on the heart. Yes.
Charged with sudden irrational certainty, she pushed way
from the desk and ran from the room. Along the flow-way, down and down, through
the cellars, across the vast manufactury with its shrouded machines and stores
of raw materials, past the undeployed maze, down down until she bounced off the
resilient membrane that protected the househeart. She pressed herself against
it; she could see the edge of the control chair—empty—a portion of the floor
and console, nothing there. For the first time she felt that Aleytys was truly
somewhere nearby; maybe it was imagination, maybe it was her need convincing
her to feel what she so desperately wanted to feel, but she knew Aleytys
was there. She had to be there. Nowhere else she could be.
Shareem pushed harder against the membrane. “Kephalos,” she
cried, “have you looked within yourself? She is here. I know she is.”
No response. In a way that was comforting; as long as
Aleytys was alive, kephalos’s programming held and it would permit no one else
into the house heart, would speak directly to no one but Aleytys. Calmed by the
continuing silence, Shareem backed away from the membrane and began the long
climb up to the living spaces. Shareem was pacing restlessly about the great
hall when Ikanom brought Aleytys up from the cellars. She heard the sound of
the door sliding, swung around, caught her breath when she saw what the android
held cradled in his arms. She hurried to meet him, touched her daughter’s
clammy skin, made a soft distressed sound when she saw her daughter’s drawn
face. “Infirmary,” she said, then rushed ahead of him along the flow spaces to
the bubble room.
Ikanom laid Aleytys on the broad couch of the autodoc and
stepped back, stood by the door watching as Shareem stripped the stained,
filthy clothing off Aleytys, stared in shock at the skeletal body, clicked her
tongue at the raw groove in her daughter’s left wrist. “You look like the tail
end of a seven-year famine,” she said aloud. Whatever had happened during the
night, it had cost Aleytys more than a third of her body weight. Her hair was
coming out in handfuls, her skin was roughened and reddened, large patches of
dead skin peeled up and fell away at the lightest touch. Her pulse was strong
but frighteningly slow; the readouts said she was sunk in a sleep so profound
it approached coma. Over her shoulder, Shareem said, “Ikanom, a sponge and warm
water.”
While the android was gone, Shareem looked more closely at
the readouts. Extreme fatigue and starvation. No serious cell damage. What
there was, Aleytys was repairing as she slept. The autodoc was monitoring this
and didn’t seem inclined to interfere. It recommended frequent small meals of
thick broth and hot sweetened fruit juices. Hold Aleytys up and let the
swallowing reflex take the food down, don’t try to wake her. Keep her clean and
comfortable. Nothing else was necessary. She’d wake when she was ready. The
autodoc was almost purring as it contemplated its mistress. In spite of her
distress, Shareem was amused by the proprietorial pride the machine took in
Aleytys. Autodocs were like that. Even Kell’s. She shivered, jumped as Ikanom
spoke softly behind her. “The water, anassa.” She took the basin and sponge and
began washing the dead skin and dirt from her daughter’s
skin.
* * *
The days that followed were the happiest in all her long
life. In this strange way she had her baby back, a very large baby to be sure,
but that didn’t matter. She washed and fed the sleeping woman, cuddled her,
sang to her, told her stories she didn’t hear, gave rein to the deep and
possessive joy she took in her daughter. When Aleytys woke, their relationship
would return to what it was before, a slowly developing friendship and
undemanding affection, but for now she had her baby back, and she reveled in
it.
The missiles kept coming, day after day, six seven eight
nine. Same time, right on schedule. And right on schedule kephalos destroyed
them. Aleytys stirred and almost woke each time, but Shareem took her
daughter’s hand and held it tight, singing softly to her, calming her back into
that revivifying sleep.
On the eleventh day there was no missile, so Aleytys must
have done whatever was needed. After feeding Aleytys her fifth cup of broth for
the day, she called Ikanom to the infirmary. “There was no missile today,” she
said.
“No, anassa.”
“There is a bomb or something similar inside kephalos.
Aleytys has defused it. I know this because there was no missile today; I know
also that Kell understands Aleytys thwarted his plan. Kephalos should be wary
these next days before Aleytys wakes.”
“A bomb?” Ikanom sounded startled. “Kephalos knows of no
bomb within.”
“So I assumed. So Aleytys assumed. There must be something
there, something dangerous, or Aleytys wouldn’t be in such bad shape. Kephalos
might police its innards, using the space where Aleytys was found as a starting
point. Most of all kephalos should use all the tricks bequeathed by Hyaroll and
Synkatta to guard against another penetration of its defenses. Kell would
destroy us all to reach her. Are there questions?”
Ikanom shifted its head slightly; the sculpted facets of its
abstract face seemed to smile at her. “Kephalos will be watchful,” it said, “and
kephalos will search within. This is a very disturbing thing. It must not
happen again.”
Amused, but careful to keep that from showing, taking
pleasure in its grace, Shareem watched Ikanom walk out. I say it
again, Synkatta must have been a fascinating man. Hyaroll could tell me about
him; they were friends. She frowned. From what Aleytys had said after he
left them, he wouldn’t be around much anymore. Aloof as he’d been the past
several centuries, she’d still miss him if he went. It was vaguely comforting
to know Hyaroll was there if she needed him. He wouldn’t like her bothering
him, would most likely make her life a misery while she was with him, but he
would take her in and protect her. At least, until now. She felt a touch of
panic at the thought, then she shook off her malaise. His growls must be a
temporary aberration; he had them now and then when he got fed up with people
and shut himself in his dome refusing to talk to anyone for a decade or so. He
got over those, he’d get over this. Aleytys mumbled something in her sleep.
Shareem bent over her, then climbed onto the couch and sat holding her
daughter’s head on her thigh while she wiped away the sweat beading the
sleeping face, then passed her palm over the stubble of regrowing hair; drawing
the back of her hand in a gentle caress down the side of her daughter’s face,
she began a soft crooning lullaby.
Through the long quiet days Aleytys regained the flesh she’d
lost; her skin regained its dark cream color; her new hair was as silky and red
as before, an inch long already, long enough to fall in loose curls after
Shareem shampooed and dried it and ran a comb through it. She worried off and
on about the length of the sleep, but the autodoc continued to tick contentedly
along and tell her not to fuss when she expressed her misgivings, so she
relaxed into the dreamy pleasures of tending her daughter.
Kell called several times, but she refused to talk to him, instructed
Ikanom to say nothing except that neither Aleytys nor Shareem wished to speak
to him. There were other calls, but Shareem took none of them either—except the
one from Loguisse. Even to Loguisse she said only that Aleytys was busy working
with kephalos, getting her defenses in order. Loguisse nodded, then warned
Shareem that they had better deal with Kell soon, since he was making
considerable progress among the Stayers, turning them against Aleytys, and his
converts were trying to pressure the Tetrad to revoke her acceptance. It was
all extremely annoying.
On the twelfth day of her sleep, about midmorning, Aleytys
stirred, opened her eyes.
Shareem felt a pang of loss, a rush of joy, sighed and
patted her daughter’s hand. “Welcome back.”
Aleytys sat up, put her hand to her head, felt the short
feathery curls. “What ...”
“When Ikanom found you, you were a wraith, hair coming out,
skin sloughing off. What happened?”
Aleytys looked down at herself, frowned at her wrists when
she saw how thin they were. “How long?”
“Twelve days.”
Aleytys swung her legs around, slid them off the autodoc’s
couch.
Hastily Shareem put her hand on her daughter’s arm. “Careful.”
Aleytys looked startled, then smiled. “I hear. Twelve days.
Huh. Missiles still coming?”
“Stopped with the tenth. Kell’s been calling, some of the
other Stayers. I haven’t talked to them. Except Loguisse. She says things are
getting difficult out there, pressure on her and the others to revoke. So far
the Tetrad seems to be holding. Harder Kell pushes, the stubborner they get.”
“Good.” She jabbed a thumb into a thigh muscle. “Mush.
Twelve days on my back. Time I was getting into shape. Give me a hand, will
you?” She wriggled toward the edge of the couch.
“You sure you should do this?” Shareem sighed as her daughter’s
hand closed about hers. “Shouldn’t you rest some more?”
“Rested a dozen days already.” Aleytys stood swaying.
“Madar! I’m weaker than a just-born foal.”
“Lee, you were almost dead.”
Aleytys laughed, a grim sound with little humor in it. “With
me, Reem, almost doesn’t count.” She closed her eyes and stood without
moving for a moment, then seemed to shake herself as if she were shaking off
the weakness that troubled Shareem; opening her eyes and letting go of
Shareem’s hand, she started for the door. Over her shoulder she said, “Tell me
everything that’s been happening while I slept. Loguisse is right—it’s time I
thought up some way to hit back at him.”
Shareem followed quietly, wanting to cry a little. Her time
was up, and it would never come again. She moved more quickly to catch up with
Aleytys, then walked beside her, telling her what had passed since Ikanom
brought her up from the heartroom.
The next day Kell called again.
After Ikanom told her, Aleytys turned to Shareem. “How do I
locate him?”
“Set kephalos after him. And ... um ... unless he’s changed
things more than I thought, if he’s in his dome, I should be able to tell from
what’s around him. Won’t take much.”
“Worth talking to him, I suppose.” She swung around to face
Ikanom. “Try to find out where he is, but keep it from him if you can. Transfer
the call here, but give us a few minutes first.” She settled in the chair,
watched the android leave, then smiled at Shareem. “Maybe you’d better stand
where he can’t see you—he might be a bit looser.”
“He’ll know I’m here.”
“Could be yes, could be no. Let’s give it a try.”
Shareem nodded, stepped to one side where she could see the
screen but be out of the pickup’s range.
Kell’s face appeared on the screen, calm, smiling a little,
the easy, confident, secretly assessing look of a. salesman about to go into
his spiel. “A new way of doing your hair.”
“It’s cool. What do you want?”
“To congratulate you.”
Aleytys chuckled. “And make sure I survived your little
joke.”
“I knew that when the last missile blew.”
“You were too slow, cousin.”
“Not cousin, Mud, I won’t have you call me cousin.” he lost
a fraction of his calm, then forced the smile back to his face.
Ignoring the interruption, she went on with what she was saying.
“You were enjoying yourself too much, cousin, gloating over my end. You gave
Reem time to remember how her mother died.” She shook her head. “But I won’t
count on more stupid self-indulgence like that; I expect better of you, cousin.
Or is that another mistake?”
“You made the worst mistake of your life, Mud, when you came
here.”
“Oh no, cousin, my worst mistake was threatening you like a
human being. I really should have killed you then like the viper you are.”
“Get out of here. Leave Vrithian. There’s no place for you
here, mongrel. You don’t belong here.”
“You get more boring each time I see you. Are you finally finished?”
The screen went abruptly dark, but not before both of them
saw the fury in his face. Aleytys swung the chair around. “Well?”
“He’s in his dome.”
“For the moment, anyway.” Aleytys frowned. “Something’s
bothering me. Why did he make that call?”
“I don’t know. Not just to rant at you. To make sure you’re
alive?”
“Hmmm. The little I know of him, everything you’ve told me
about him says he never aims where he’s going to strike. He’s so Aschla-cursed
devious I don’t see why he doesn’t bite himself and die of the poison.” She
tapped her fingers on the chair arm. “I wonder if this whole damn world isn’t
riddled with traps he’s set for me. Hunh. You said he called up two days after
the last missile?”
“That’s what Ikanom said.”
“And you warned kephalos before that to be very careful not
to trust him?”
“Uh-huh.”
“Then it’s a trigger. Problem is, for what?” She got to her
feet, began pacing restlessly about the room. “What? What? What?” She ran her
hand through her short curls until they were standing in twisted spikes about
her head. “I was being so damn sassy, Reem, crowing at him like a fool. It was
a mistake to talk to him. I hope ...” She stopped by the door. “I don’t feel
comfortable in here, Reem. Come outside with me?”
Aleytys walked restlessly through the gardens scowling at
nothing, forgetting Shareem, who moved quietly beside her, saying nothing,
content to wait until her daughter was ready to speak. Aleytys scowled at the
meticulously tended shrubbery. *Harskari,* she subvocalized, *what in Aschla’s
nine fancy hells is that man up to?* *Nothing Hyaroll could detect.*
*May his teeth rot and his tongue swell and strangle him, I
will not believe he’s got a whole string of bombs planted in here.*
*No. Not an attack this time. Information. Something that
will let him plan a confrontation on his own terms.* *Ah. A tap into kephalos.*
*Latent, like the bomb. Triggered from outside. A configuration
of forces that wouldn’t exist until it was triggered.* *Harskari, Hyaroll
checked the place.* *He missed the bomb.* *Yes, but ...*
*He’s ossifying, Lee; I’m surprised he can still make
coherent sentences.* *I don’t know ....*
*You don’t want to. Listen to me, dau ... Lee, it doesn’t
have to be that way. For some reason—and don’t ask me what it is—Hyaroll’s
running down; he wants to die and he’s going to do it, but it doesn’t have to
be that way. Look at Loguisse—I don’t say you’ll be like that either, but at
least she’s sharp and very much alive. Kept her contacts with the outside, has
an interest that keeps her brain exercised and excited. You could do worse.*
Aleytys said nothing for several steps, startled by the
small break in that impassioned speech. Harskari was jealous of Shareem. That
sudden realization was so painful she shied away from thinking about it. *How
much does Kell hear? Maybe I’ve said too much already.*
*Depends on how much of kephalos he’s gained access to. If
you continue to make a fuss about your worries and make some really wild
speculations, he’d probably discount your suspicions for a while. You told him
it was Shareem who suspected the bomb and warned you about it. If I had to
guess, I’d say you have a day or two to play the fool. And I wouldn’t count
anywhere inside the dome safe from observation.*
*Stinking voyeur.*
*Bothers you that much, look for the tap and pull it.*
*I could do that.* Aleytys scowled at a flowerbed, seeing
nothing of it. *I’d rather set some kind of trap for him ... ummm ... or go
after him. Look. If he didn’t know I’d left the dome ... remember, you took me
through the dome at the Mesochthon without having it opened for us.* She
grinned, suddenly, fiercely. *As long as he doesn’t know I’m out and roving,
and he doesn’t know we can pop right through his strongest defenses ...
ay-Madar, Harskari, do you know what he’s done with this tap? He’s located
himself for us, tied himself to his dome. Not a chance he’s going to be far
away from the other end of the tap. I said it, ay-yiii, I said it, silly
viper’s gotten so devious he bit himself.* She laughed aloud, danced around in
a circle clapping her hands, caught the startled look on her mother’s face and
settled down to a more sedate walk. “I’ve had me an idea,” she said aloud. “Let
me think about it for a bit, then I’ll tell you.” *Harskari,* she subvocalized,
*we’ve got to do something with Shareem. I can’t leave her here, she’s too vulnerable.
And I certainly can’t take her with us.*
*Loguisse. Would she help?*
*Splendid idea. Marvelous idea. Loguisse. of course. Even
Hyaroll treats her with respect. Shareem will be safe with her. Got to have a
good reason to send her, though. Mmm, if I could be sure Kell wasn’t listening,
I’d tell her about the tap and ask her if Loguisse might know how to root it
out. That’s a convincing reason for Shareem to go there, isn’t it?*
*Quite convincing. It could even be true. Does it matter if
Kell knows you know?*
*Good question. As a matter of fact ... um ... might even be
a good idea to let him know. Convince him I’m focusing still on defense rather
than attack. We could sit by the silly fountain and talk in low voices. I’m
sure he’s perfectly capable of filtering out that bit of interference, but it
would look as if I’m trying to keep the plan a secret.*
*Sounds good to me.* A brief silence. *lf you’re going to do
it, do it now.* The amber eyes closed and the feel of the ancient sorceress
vanished.
It’s going to be lonely, Aleytys thought. When the
last soul’s gone. When the diadem’s gone. Ah, now, what’s that going to mean to
me, when the diadem’s gone? She realized suddenly that she could lose more
than her last indweller when she shook the diadem off. Trap though it was, it
was also an instrument of power, a focus for her own talents. Would they grow
more diffuse, less accessible, when the focus was gone? How much of what she
could do did she owe to the diadem, how much was her birthright? I’ll find
out soon. I owe Harskari her body. She missed Swardheld and Shadith very
much, but she didn’t grudge them their bodies, their separate lives. Harskari
deserved as much or more from her. She thought of Shadith and smiled, but her
smile faded as she remembered where Shadith was now and what she was trying to
do. Suddenly irritated by all this devious convoluted maneuvering, she made a
small angry hissing sound.
“What is it, Lee?” Shareem’s hand on her arm drew her back
to the unsatisfactory here and now.
“Just throwing a small snit, Reem, because of all the foolishness
Kell is putting us through.” She looked around. In her blind wanderings she’d
brought them back to the smooth broad lawn spreading out in front of the house.
She pointed at the fountain of absurdities. “Let’s sit down over there; I’ve
got some things I want to tell you.”
“Yes, the water makes a pleasant noise. What is it, Lee?”
“I think I’ve figured out what that phone call meant. I
think Kell’s tapping into my kephalos.”
“He couldn’t, Lee. Hyaroll ...”
“Guaranteed the place clean. I know. But he missed a bomb
bigger than he is, and I think he missed this because the way Kell set it up,
it didn’t exist until he triggered it. A key word or maybe just completing the
call.”
“Sounds like something he’d do.”
“I’ve had an idea. Does Kell know more about kephalos than
Loguisse?”
“No one does.” Shareem sighed. “Not me, that’s sure.”
“I can’t leave here—he’d be on my back the minute I passed
the dome. Comlink, well, he’ll be listening to every word, and I don’t think
Loguisse would play, you heard what she told Hyaroll. You’ve got to go for me,
Reem. It’s dangerous, but he’s not so obsessive about you. He’ll know you’re
leaving, but not why, and I’ll have kephalos keep an eye on you as far as it
can. Will you do it?”
“You won’t do anything rash while I’m gone?”
“How can I? I’ve got to keep close to kephalos and hope that
snake doesn’t figure out a way to take control and lower the dome.”
“He couldn’t ... I don’t know ... it doesn’t stop, damn him,
why ... all right, Lee, I’ll go talk to Loguisse. And right now, if you don’t
mind.” She got to her feet with a quick nervous push, started away, came back,
touched her daughter’s face. “Be careful, will you?” Without waiting for an
answer, she swung around and ran for the flier.
Aleytys watched the flier leave, cold with a loneliness that
surprised her. The dome seemed empty with Shareem gone. She hadn’t expected it,
but she’d found a friend. Not a mother. A friend. She’d expected to feel hate
and rage when she saw her mother, but from the moment they met she simply liked
Shareem. She enjoyed her mother’s company. Shareem brought out the frivolous
side of her, helped her slough the gloom-and-doom feelings that only made bad
times worse.
She wandered restlessly through the gardens after kephalos reported
that Shareem had reached the limit of its sensors unmolested. She was unable to
settle to the planning she needed to do, even when prodded by a jealous
Harskari. The old one didn’t like seeing herself replaced in Aleytys’s
affections by her blood mother. That wasn’t exactly true, but Aleytys knew
Harskari had some cause for her bitterness. She realized after a while that
she’d stopped calling Harskari “Mother” while Shareem was about. Though she
seldom called Shareem “Mother,” though Shareem couldn’t hear or be hurt by the
conversations inside Aleytys’s head, though the old one had been her nurturer
for longer and in ways Shareem would never be, in spite of all these things she
could not call Harskari “Mother” any longer. And Harskari had noted the change;
the old one noticed everything about her. She was hurt by the change and all
that it meant. Aleytys was sorry for that; she owed Harskari too much, she was
deeply fond of that stem old spirit and distressed now as she saw the growing
disintegration of the strength that had sustained Harskari through the
countless ages since her first so inconclusive death. Harskari needed a body,
needed it soon.
Aleytys cursed Kell for thwarting any attempt to take care
of that need now that she was aware how imperative it was, cursed herself for
her complacency and blindness. Energized by that flare of anger, she stopped
her aimless wandering and moved swiftly around the house to the landing disk.
“Kephalos, bring up Synkatta’s flier.”
The disk sank into the ground. While she was waiting she
tilted her head and frowned at the dome. *Harskari, when you’re working that
stasis trick, I can keep moving though everything else slows down or stops.
What about a flier? Will its propulsors work inside that field?”
Slitted amber eyes, Harskari’s frowning face sketched around
them. *We had better try it on the ground first; I have no experience with
that.*
The flier came smoothly up, its shrouds stripped away by Ikanom’s
surrogate hands; there was a blue-black sheen to its sleek sides, a grace and
fluidity of line that was close cousin to the grace and fluidity of the
androids. *Lovely, isn’t it? Should be a dream to fly.*
Harskari wasn’t willing to be distracted by aesthetics. ‘If
you can fly it. You can’t ask kephalos to instruct you in its capabilities.*
*No, obviously not. I suppose we’d better get busy finding
out what I can do with it and what happens when you turn the diadem loose on
it.*
The flier was as responsive as a well-schooled horse,
stopping, turning, dropping, darting, maneuvering through the treetops. There
were no attack missiles; Aleytys could almost feel Synkatta shuddering at the
thought. There was a strong defensive screen and a laser that seemed more
suited to slicing stone samples to study in the laboratory than to defending
the flier. Harskari held the stasis about it and they found it could make a
creeping progress, enough to take it through the dome without alerting
kephalos. They tried tuning it to the diadem; the propulsors didn’t work at
all, but Aleytys found she could move the flier a short distance by willing it
forward. When they phased back into the original reality, she sat with eyes
closed, shaking with exhaustion, almost unable to move body or brain. Roused by
acerbic prodding from Harskari, she reached for her power river and drew in
energy to replace what she had expended. After a careful look at herself, she
was content to find she hadn’t lost significant flesh this time. As she stepped
off the landing disk onto the grass, she said, “A very pretty ship, yes. I
wonder what Hyaroll did with the starship.”
*Kephalos might know. If you care to ask.* *I think I might
be expected to ask. Aschla curse all this fiddling around; as soon as I leave
the dome kephalos is going to know something funny is happening.* *Leave the
key strip here.*
*Ah.* She chuckled as she started for the house. *Tucked in
my bed with a blanket dummy. Makes me wonder what you were like when you were a
kid.*
*None of your business. I was a very proper child.* *Hmm.
That’s open to some interesting interpretations.* *Hahh! go play your game with
kephalos.* *Seriously, when do you think we should leave?* *It would be a good
idea to reach him about an hour or so before the local dawn; his dawn is about
thirteen hours ahead of ours. What’s the local time? Fourth hour after noon,
plus a handful of minutes. Traveling time, giving ourselves some play for
emergencies, five hours ... I’d say we should leave here no later than the
first hour after noon.*
*Tomorrow? Aschla’s stinking hells, Harskari, you mean I
have to wait a whole damn day?*
*Up to you. We could leave earlier, get there earlier. Or
leave now get there around first or second hour after dawn. For more precise
timing you’d have to check with kephalos.*
*And wouldn’t that be a great idea. Hunh.* She leaned
against the door, frowning up at the faint shimmer of the dome. *I’m hungry.
Let’s make it tomorrow noon—that’d give us an hour to play with. I think we’ll
need to get past the outer rim of his defenses without tripping alarms.* ,
*Good.* The amber eyes closed.
Aleytys laughed and pushed open the door. “Ikanom,” she
called, “I’m hungry.”
The rest of the day crept along as she sought for ways to
make the time pass. She had a long rambling chat with kephalos about Synkatta’s
starship and found that Hyaroll had indeed taken it somewhere, but kephalos had
no idea where that was; moved on to ways of strengthening the dome where
everything she came up with either had already been done or was unworkable;
went from that to talking about ways of pinning Kell down so she could do some
attacking of her own rather than spending all her time and energy defending
herself. “Think you can do that? It doesn’t have to be precise, just give me
the general area.’’ That ought to stir his juices, she thought.
She left kephalos humming contentedly to itself; she could
feel a strong glow of pleasure from it as it sank metaphorical teeth into the
first hard problem it had had in years. Remembering her impressions as she
drifted through it when she was searching for the bomb, she decided that the
kephaloi could end up being the true immortals of Vrithian. Long after the last
Vryhh succumbed to the crushing weight of the ages, kephaloi in empty domes
would be talking to each other and forming a society that could last as long as
the world itself. She thought about that awhile, speculating on the nature of
that society, until her meanderings became so absurd she laughed at herself and
went looking for a book to read among the many shelved in Synkatta’s library.
About an hour after midnight she closed the book, a novel by
a writer exiled from Shiburr. The Vrya were a darkly threatening thread through
the narration, though they were seldom mentioned directly. The native Shiburri
went about their lives in the shadow of the domes, always conscious of the
undying, a consciousness that seemed to intensify all emotions, all struggles,
all relationships. The characters in the novel could not escape from that
awareness, though some tried to deny it; others shriveled into futility; a few
retreated so far they denied the world as well as the Vrya; some laced
themselves to the Vrya, letting the undying use them in return for power over
their own kind; the strongest concentrated resolutely on getting the most out
of their day-to-day lives, treating the Vyra like a storm or earthquake or any
other force of nature they couldn’t control but had to cope with. The main character
was one of these last. It was a depressing novel, a catalogue of the disasters
a good man could suffer, and it ended without hope, Shiburr unchanged and
without possibility of changing. She pushed the book off the bed and turned on
her back, lay staring into the darkness. After some minutes of chaotic thinking
that led only to knots in her stomach, she began the calming exercises Vajd had
taught her an eternity ago, cleared her mind and bludgeoned herself into a
heavy sleep.
Aleytys ... leytys ... eytys ... tys ... tys ... Aleytys ...
tys ... tys ... tys. She woke with Ikanom’s slender hand shaking her, its voice
echoing hollowly in her head. The nightmare-ridden sleep still clogging her
thoughts, she pushed its hand away and sat up, scrubbed at her eyes, then
emptied the cup of cha it handed her. “What time is it?”
Ikanom took the cup and refilled it. “Almost the ninth hour
of the day, Archira. Five hours till noon.”
Aleytys sipped at the cha, feeling some of the haziness warming
out of her head. “Ninth hour? Why’d you wake me before the time I set?”
“Shareem anassa waits outside the dome, Archira.”
“What? Let her ... no ... ahh.” She rubbed at her temple.
“No, let me talk to her first. Take this.” She handed him the cup and tossed
the covers aside, threw on one of the houserobes and padded across the room to
the comscreen. “Reem?”
Shareem’s face filled the screen. She looked weary and
strained; her eyes had gone dull. “Loguisse came through,” she said. Her voice
was as lifeless as her eyes. “Lee, don’t leave me out here ....”
“You look tired.”
“I haven’t slept ....”
“Just a minute.” She blanked the screen. “Ikanom, is there
anyone in the flier with her?”
“No other brain patterns register, Archira.”
“Good enough. Let her through and fix us some breakfast, you
decide what. We’ll eat in the bookroom, um, yes, a fire, please, and get a bath
ready for her.”
She touched the image back on. “Come on in, breakfast’s waiting,
a bath and bed.”
Shareem said nothing, just nodded and cut the contact.
Aleytys shook her head, pulled the robe tighter about her
and tied the belt. What miserable luck. Why couldn’t she stay with Loguisse
one more day? She ran down the flow-way and into the hall. Good thing
she’s so tired, she’ll be sleeping when we go, I suppose it won’t matter
leaving her alone, Kell will be too busy ... ay, Madar, I wanted her
with Loguisse just in case ... hah, better not think of that, I just have to
win, that’s all. She pulled the door open and stepped out. The flier was
quiet on the landing disk. Shareem hadn’t come out yet. Aleytys ran a few
steps, then walked more slowly, frowning. The lock iris began folding open.
*Harskari,* she said, *I think I’ve done something really stupid this time.*
Harskari’s eyes open, the diadem begins singing.
Shareem appears in the lock, a massive dark shape behind
her; she moves like an automaton. Aleytys remembers what her mother said an
eternity ago: “If he gets close to me, I’ll do just about anything he tells me
no matter how I hate it.” And I sent you out to him, she thinks, I
was being so clever .... The thoughts pass across her mind in a blinding
instant, then she is screaming and running at the flier in a nightmare of slow
motion, Shareem has come awake, suddenly, terribly, as the dark form’s arm
lifts she folds herself around it, fire explodes through her. No. No. No. The
words scream in Aleytys’s head, her mouth is open but no sound comes out, she
runs and runs through the eerie outphase world as the fire burning through her
mother’s body passes through her without touching her. She runs up the flame as
if it were a rope and drives her arms into that massive black form. It is like
trying to feel about in cold bottom-of-the-barrel molasses, he has protected
himself against her gift, the batteries are welded into their slots, if her
tractor fields would work in this outphase world, she still would not have the
strength to break the welds, the connecting wires are etched into the substance
of the armor, paint on high-density metal like that used for the outer walls of
starships, her hands scrabble about in him, there is nothing she can get hold
of, she starts to panic, remembers the shattered body of her mother, cannot let
him win, cannot, never, no, she finds the tiny drivers that power the joints,
Harskari half-phases her hands, she snatches anything she can, breaks it, pulls
it out, destroys those drivers, shoulders, elbows, wrists, down, hips, knees,
ankles, oh Kell oh Kell oh cousin, I can do this to you because you forced
me to learn it, up again, destroy the weapons, pull their packs, you
weren’t so careful here. Harskari there beside her, white hair whipping
about her dark worried face, Lee, she calls, Lee, enough, tend Shareem, Lee,
get away from him, I’m taking you back, Lee do you hear me. Harskari’s voice
finally is more than a mosquito whine in her ears, she finally comprehends what
those words mean, she backs away, out the lock onto the landing disk and
falls on her knees when the world moves at normal time about
her.
Shareem’s body completes its fall, splatting down beside
her. The weight of her flesh is back on her bones, so heavy she almost cannot
bear it. The stink of her mother’s flesh is in her mouth and nose, she reaches
for the power, fumbles and cannot find it, this has happened before, calm,
calm, be calm, reach slowly and carefully, you’re just tired, let the
water come in, let it pool deeper and deeper in you, this is taking seconds,
that’s all, it’s not wasting time, you can do nothing without the black water
.... She moves on her knees to her mother’s body, reaches out. Shareem seems to
see her, or feel her, the residue of life in her flinches away from the hands
that want to heal her, flinches, then flows away and there is nothing Aleytys
can do to stop it. She wants to die, she refused to let me make her live.
She is dead. My mother is dead.
Harskari was shouting at her. Something. For what seemed an
eternity she couldn’t take in what the old one was saying, then she did and was
appalled. “No! You can’t expect me to ... No! it’s grotesque, I won’t ... I
can’t ... you can’t be serious. No. Never. I won’t do it.”
*Why?*
“This is my mother, it isn’t stray meat.”
*Is it?*
“What?” Aleytys looked down at the cooling body; already it
had the empty flattened look the dead acquire. “No,” she said, “no, not any
longer, never again.” She began crying. For the second time her mother had
abandoned her, and this time was far worse than before, this time she knew her.
*I want that body, Aleytys. You swore you’d give me the body
I chose. Keep your word, it isn’t that much I’m asking ....* On and on Harskari
kept yammering at her; for some ghoulish reason she had to have Shareem’s
discarded flesh. On and on until Aleytys felt like screaming, until she knew if
she didn’t do this, she’d never again have a moment’s peace. And there wasn’t
time for her to grow accustomed to the idea, already the brain was decaying and
there was massive damage to the chest cavity that would have to be repaired.
Either she acted in the next few breaths or it would be too late. Let it be
done, she thought, let me be.
She bent over her mother and laid her hands on the chilling body.
Ignoring everything about her, she poured into it that power she’d been born to
use, brought the body to a pseudo-life that halted the decay. Harskari gathered
herself into a compact ball, wadding up the web of forces that was all the life
she had. Aleytys caught hold of it and flung it into the empty envelope as she
had done on Ibex with Shadith; no one to steady her this time, she had to do it
alone, weary and unhappy. When what was empty was filled, what was on hold an
instant before began to change. Stirred by the touch of Aleytys and the lapping
flow of Harskari’s minute fields, bones began to knit, seared flesh sloughed
away to be replaced by new healthy flesh, organs began to rebuild themselves,
the gaping wound closed swiftly, healed from the inside out, new skin spread
across the muscle, alabaster-white like the rest of her, other cuts and bruises
and burns healed, hidden by the remnant of the robe Shareem had worn. Harskari
was dimly aware of these, though Aleytys wasn’t, she was focused on rebuilding
the damaged brain, a long and tedious task with no allowances for error. Minutes
drifted by, an hour passed. The brain was more complex than the one Shadith had
inherited, the damage was more comprehensive. There were places where there was
so little left intact Aleytys had to use her own brain as a template, patching
the new in with the old, working with hope and a prayer the new sections would
meld with the old. When there was no more damage that she could find, she
flooded the body with her power water, kicking it over from death into life,
then she sat back on her heels and waited, ready to help if Harskari ran into
difficulties. The blaze of the old one’s spirit grew stronger as she slid more
deeply into the body. She blinked the eyes, moved the mouth, sucked in a long
breath and let it trickle out. She lifted a hand, wriggled the fingers, let it
fall back onto the grass, bent the knees, straightened them out, twisted both
feet from side to side. The mouth curled into a small smile. She braced the
hands against the grass and pushed herself up, straightened her back, squared
her shoulders, lifted her head. The small smile broadened into a grin. “You’ve
done it again, daughter.” The voice was a little mushy and held to a deeper
register than Shareem was accustomed to using, but there were enough
similarities to make Aleytys wince.
“Don’t,” she said.
“What? Oh. Sorry, Habit, I suppose.” With every word Harskari’s
control improved. She began a series of pulling, twisting, stretching
exercises.
Aleytys watched for a breath or two, then was aware of a
weight circling her head. She reached up, touched it, traced her finger about
the delicate cool wires of a flower petal. The diadem, gone inert when the last
of its captive souls escaped. She lifted it off, held it in front of her,
draped over her hands, flexible, fragile, lovely; a circlet of jewel-hearted
lilies spun from gold wire. She touched one of the jewels and felt somewhere
deep within her a single shimmering note. Jewel flowerhearts catching the
sunlight and splintering it into a thousand tiny gleams, it began to sing to
her, weaving a spell of longing about her; it was waking again, calling out for
new victims. With a cry half of pain, half of desire, she flung the diadem away
from her. It landed in a heap on the grass, gone inert again when it no longer
fed off the heat of her hands.
A pall settled over her mind. Hard to think. Her eyes
blurred. What ... Her symbolic black water seethed within her; she
flushed the fatigue poisons out of herself, but that didn’t help, the pall grew
heavier, pressing in on her; her head felt like a pumpkin someone was stepping
on. Someone ... she slid around, frowned at the inert lump of armor blocking
most of the lock ... squeezing her brain ... Kell ... trapped in the metal that
was meant to protect him ... memory: Kell, wasted from disease, sprawling in
the heavy embrace of his exoskeleton ... she could feel him now, feel the
malevolence pouring out of him, he’d tripped a switch, one she’d missed, and
cut out his mind shields, the shields that convinced kephalos there was no one
in the flier with Shareem, he’d cut them out and was attacking her. His body
was prisoner but his mind wasn’t. A massive blow shook her. She was pinned, she
couldn’t answer it. She wrestled with the hold he had on her. Stupid, stupid to
forget him, to concentrate so completely on Shareem’s body and Harskari’s
transference. She fought him, managed to move her arms, hugged them across her
breasts, bowed her head. She knelt in a silvery bubble, fragile as smoke,
inside swirling battering forces ... no escape ... no escape ... no ... no ...
creeping in like oil smoke ... hate ... anger ... tendrils of noisome smoke
brushing against the bubble ... it sagged ... she pushed against the weak spot ...
she was slow ... heavy ... without the diadem, weaker, sluggish ... the bubble
began to crumple as fear distracted her ... no ... no! Fighting the pressure
meant to snuff her like a candle flame, she raised onto her knees, brought one
leg up, put the weight on the foot, leaned forward, laid one hand on top of the
other on the knee, pressed down, brought the other foot forward, pushed slowly
up until she was standing, leaning a little forward. Step by step, driving
herself against the hurricane wind of his will, she moved toward him. He took
the pressure suddenly away. She stumbled, nearly fell, ran on two steps,
whimpering; instead of steady pressure, he was pummeling at her, punishing
blows that kept her off balance, staggering. She tripped over the rim of the
landing saucer, jarred onto her knees; she could feel his triumph as he drove
in, smashing her defenses down, squeezing her smaller and smaller. She curled
up, knees to chest, strength draining from her as he bore in and in.
Abruptly the pressure was gone. Only for a second. Something
had distracted him. She didn’t care about that; she built her bubble back,
struggled onto her feet and started for him again, seeing nothing but him, that
black beetle carapace crouching inert and broken in the lock. A flash of red.
His head and shoulders were free. Another streak of red. Harskari in Shareem’s
body kicking at his head from behind. Aleytys ran three steps closer, plowed
into the hate wind, leaned into it, fighting toward him, one foot sliding
forward, then the other, closing faster whenever Harskari could break through
the wind and jar him with a kick or a slap before she was flung back again,
disappearing into the interior of the flier. Anger turning to desperation, Kell
writhed about, fighting to trip the half-destroyed latches manually so he could
free himself from the armor, slamming brute mind-blows at her as he worked. She
staggered, crashed to her knees, fought back onto her feet; she was on the disk,
only two long strides from the flier, but she couldn’t cross that tiny space.
Couldn’t. Driven by hate, using a skill he had honed through centuries of
killing, he was stronger, harder, faster; without Harskari’s intervention,
she’d already be dead. He drove her back, knocked her feet from under her; she
crawled toward him, he flung her back, she floundered, blood trickling from the
corner of her mouth. Harskari dragged herself to him and slapped hard at his
head; he struck at her, knocking her into a sprawl. While he was distracted,
Aleytys surged onto her feet and dived at him, landing splayed out across the
massive legs of the battlesuit. Mind-fire seared her nerve ends, she screamed,
wept, clawed herself along. Behind him, Harskari pulled herself onto her feet,
stood leaning against the side of the lock, a hand pressed to her stomach,
breathing rapidly and shallowly; she lifted her foot, pressed it against the
wall. Her face went blank with the intensity of her concentration, then she
uncoiled from the wall, one stride into a leap, a kick to the head; in almost
the same breath Aleytys was up and surging forward; the kick drove his head
forward and to the right; Harskari twisted away, slamming into the side of the
lock before she could stop herself; the heel of Aleytys’s hand hit his jaw,
drove his head back the other way; he was tough, it only dazed him, he shook
his head slightly trying to clear it, but for the first time she was free
enough to use her talent, the talent muted by the discarding of the diadem; she
reached, put pressure on nerves until he stopped struggling, until he
almost stopped breathing.
She slid off the carapace, stood looking down at him a moment.
He’d changed so much after she’d healed him that other time; if she hadn’t seen
him at the Mesochthon, if he hadn’t identified himself there with his words and
manner, she would not have recognized him. I don’t know you, she
thought, not at all. We’ve come within a breath of killing each other and
we’re still strangers. A groan distracted her, and she went to kneel beside
Harskari. The old one was having trouble holding herself in Shareem’s body; the
breathing was harsh and uncertain, the eyes dull, the hands groping without
purpose, the mouth was making shapeless animal sounds. The body was injured
again, not quite so badly as before, only some cracked ribs and organ damage.
Sighing, Aleytys reached, poured more energy into the envelope,
supported Harskari as she tightened her hold, then closed her eyes and set the
body to healing its hurts. That was just as easy as before and just as hard. At
least healing is my own gift, not something I got from the diadem. Behind
her she felt Kell begin to waken; with automatic speed and skill she tweaked
the nerves again and put him back under, then was surprised at what she’d done.
Wonder if it’ll all come back, once I’ve practiced enough.
Harskari pulled away from her, moved her shoulders experimentally,
took a deep breath, expanding her ribs as far as she could, let the air explode
out. She got to her feet and bent over Kell. “He’s alive.”
“Yes.”
“You should have finished him.”
“Well, I didn’t.” She pulled her hand across his face.
“Things were happening too fast.” His hands were plunged beneath the chest
piece of the armor. “I need to know what he’s done to Grey. I need ...” She
dropped to her knees beside him, tugged out one of his hands and began fumbling
about inside that massive carapace for the latches that had resisted his fingers.
“Help me get this off him.”
“He’s not going to tell you anything. What do you want me to
do?’’
“Maybe he will if he feels helpless enough. See if you can
reach the latch for this front section—I think your side and mine have to be
tripped at the same time.”
“Right.” Harskari began groping about under the carapace.
“He knows you can’t ... ungh, I think I’ve got it. You ready?”
They unlocked the intricate pieces of the armor and laid
them beside Kell. Aleytys wrinkled her nose. “Must have taken him an hour to
get this on. Poor pathetic stupid wretch.”
“Lee, he’s dangerous.”
“He’s a better killer—you think that’s strength?”
“It’s the only kind he understands.”
“How do you know?”
“I know his kind.”
“What kind is that? Never mind, I was just thinking how
little he and I really know about each other.”
“You know all you need to know—what he did to you before,
what he’ll do to you afterward if you’re silly enough to let him go again.”
“Yes, yes, of course you’re right, but it ... it’s sad,
don’t you think? No, I see you don’t.” He started to surface, and she put him
under again. “Hunt up something to tie him with. Please?”
Harskari nodded. She got to her feet, hesitated. “Be
careful.”
Aleytys looked up, smiled. “Yes.”
Alert to signs of stirring, she hauled him from the lock and
stretched him out on the grass. She knelt at his shoulder looking down at him.
After a few moments she bent over him and brushed away the hair straggling
across his eyelids. She felt strange, uncertain ... a lot of anger, but it was
diffuse, hanging about her like the dust cloud about Avenar ... as if all these
years what she’d cursed and hated was an idea, not a man, and now she was
having trouble fitting that idea onto Kell ... at least while he was lying
there with the tantalizing vulnerability most sleepers have. Not that he was
asleep ... she felt the first stirrings in his brain and put him under again.
Again she was tempted to twitch just a little harder, it would be so easy,
painless for him and painless for her. She looked away, suddenly afraid. Easy.
Harskari came: back with a coil of coated wire, pliers and a
pair of shears. Aleytys got up to give her working room and wandered aimlessly
about, kicking at the grass, trying not to think about what was coming.
Harskari wrapped the wire about ankles, knees and wrists, then rolled him onto
his face and wired his elbows together. He wore a soft knitted silk shipsuit, a
dark blue-green that made his hands and face an icy white, his hair a shout in
the brilliant morning light. Harskari tightened the last twist, rolled him
back. “Package all wrapped, Lee, neat and waiting.”
Aleytys came back. She felt the stirring in him. “It won’t
be long now,” she said, reluctance and distaste in the slow words. She opened
and closed her hands, watching and feeling him swim up out of the darkness she
had nearly drowned him in, hoping that when his eyes opened and she saw and
felt the strong hate there, she could lose this helplessness before his vulnerability,
could lose this image of him as a beautiful battered boy and see the man who’d
done his best to kill her, who’d killed her mother. She tightened her mouth
into a thin line as the pain of that moment came back to her and the frustration
of it, the uselessness of that gesture. But she died of it, my mother died
to save my life; yes, one could look at it that way—one could hope she
did. That it wasn’t her version of the Vryhh sun dives. Futile act, stupid,
useless. Useless. What a snake hiss of a word. She tried to help me, but she
died. Tried and died.
Stand by Kell’s right shoulder. Smile. Harskari stands by
his left shoulder. Twin pillars of vengeance we are. Furies we are, with
retribution written on our brows. Oh yes.
How harmless you look, my enemy, flat out on the grass,
trussed up with that silly purple wire. Purple for a king. King Cobra.
Flattened by a pair of quick-foot mongooses. Purple, what a hideous color.
Wonder where Harskari found it? Silly, silly. King cobra wound in cheap taffy,
one of those poisonous colors they use for glop like that. Harskari, Harskari,
it’s lonesome in here without you.
Kell opened his eyes.
Her ambivalence vanished.
Enemy as implacable as time.
She recognized the finality of this encounter. It was rather
a comfort to know she had no choice. Gratitude was an odd bond between them,
but there it was. Hunter and hunted, bound in a kind of complicity until the
end of the hunt.
His eyes on her face, he moved his body in a rapid ripple
that put sufficient pressure on those wires to tell him there was no way he
could break them or break loose from them. He shifted his gaze to Harskari,
wasn’t quick enough to hide the flicker of fear when he met her serene green
gaze. There was already a change in Shareem’s body. A new persona wore it and
shone through it. He looked away.
As he turned toward her again, she felt a darkness
tightening to a knot, reached into him and tweaked those nerves again, putting
him under. There was no way he could stop that, as long as she acted in time.
As long as she didn’t let him distract her.
Harskari set her hands on her hips. “Do you think that’s
going to change?”
Aleytys moved a hand, dropped it back to her side, her eyes
fixed on Kell as she waited for him to surface again.
Kell’s eyelids flickered, opened.
“I can put you under faster than you can strike,” she said
quickly, hand lifted again, held as if she meant to push away whatever he threw
at her. “Don’t think you can fool me, cousin—I’m aware of every twitch in that
twisted brain.”
“What do you want?”
“Grey.”
“Haven’t got him.”
“He’s in your trap. Tell me how to release him.”
“You’re dreaming. What trap?”
“You’re lying. Do you think I can’t tell?”
“You want me to think you can.”
“Psi-empath, Kell. Among other things. How do I release
Grey?”
“Go suck a sun.”
“That’s your answer?”
“Only one you’ll get.”
“I see.” She sighed and stepped back. “Harskari, another
favor. Fetch me a knife from the kitchen. Make sure it’s sharp.”
“Let me do this for you, Lee.” Harskari scowled down at
Kell.
“No. Get the knife.”
“Why a knife? Wouldn’t it be easier ...”
“I don’t want it easier.”
Harskari pursed her lips, looked as if she wanted to argue
some more, but she finally nodded. “Watch him.” She swung around and trotted
toward the house.
“Don’t try it, Kell.”
He relaxed. “Deal?”
“Terms?”
“The answers you want. Peace between us. My life.”
“I wish I could believe ...” She dropped into a squat,
frowned at him. After a long silence, she sighed again. “I wish ... I was never
your enemy, Kell. I never went after you .... I’m afraid there’ll never be
peace between us as long as you’re alive. That’s the truth of it.”
“I’ll swear peace at the Mesochthon on forfeit of my place.”
“Why don’t I find that reassuring?” She turned her head,
spat on the grass. “Your word is worth that.”
His mouth pinched into a hard straight line. She watched him
struggle to control himself, a pinpoint hope beginning to burn in her in spite
of her skepticism, a hope that he was trying to deal with the madness that
drove him. Harskari came from the house, walking slowly, almost hesitantly. The
blued-steel blade of the knife caught the sun and gleamed with a dark deadliness
that Aleytys knew was mostly in her head, not in the knife. Pressing her hand
against her stomach as it lurched, momentarily distracted by the knife and what
it meant, she watched that blue-black sheen and forgot about watching Kell.
Fire and dark exploded over her
she fell down down down, shrinking as she fell
tiny twisting whirling fluff caught in a huffing wind
enormous pressure on her, squeezing her smaller and smaller
squeezing her to a point presence toward nothing nothingness
nada.
But the pressure faltered before nada, before the endpoint
when the point itself would vanish. It returned an instant later, strong as
before, but she’d had a breath to anchor herself, she’d had chance to fling up
walls about herself, then time to throw a tap into her black river, time to
understand that Harskari had thrown herself into this struggle; as before they
would whipsaw him, break his timing, his concentration. She sucked the dark
energy into herself and blew it out at him. Another break in the pressure;
laughter bubbled in her, and she stabbed out and tweaked those nerves he could
not protect from her. Turned him off as easily as she turned out a light when
she left a room.
Harskari laid the knife on his chest. “Listen to me next
time.”
“Thanks.” Aleytys pushed up off the grass where she’d curled
up under his attack, knelt close to Kell’s head. She swallowed as she saw the
bloody socket, the eye leaking its fluids, and understood how Harskari had
managed the distraction. She brushed the straggles of sweaty hair off his
forehead, sighed for what seemed the hundredth time. “I had to ask,” she said,
very softly, almost tenderly. “There was a chance he’d be reasonable.” Her hand
started shaking. She held it out, gazed at it a moment, then reached for the
knife.
“Lee, if you won’t put him down the easy way ...”
“Easy!”
“... then let me do it.”
“No.” She laughed, an ugly sound. “Aversion therapy, old
friend.” She looked at the knife, then at the unconscious man. “I could do it
so gently, you know, a twist and a pull and he’d be dead so fast he wouldn’t
feel a thing. I wouldn’t feel a thing beyond perhaps a tiny absence, a gap
where something used to be. And the next time, I wouldn’t bother fussing. Bad
man, crazy woman, pop! pop! angel of death sitting judgment pop! pop! and where
would it end? Old friend, I warned Shadith about the pull of her body and how
it would distort her reactions. I think it’s time to warn you about that same
thing. When you rode along as my resident conscience, you taught me well, my
best of teachers; don’t back off now.”
Harskari passed a hand across her face, looked bewildered
for a moment, then grim. She nodded, but said nothing.
Aleytys knelt without moving until she felt consciousness
stir in him, waited until he groaned with the pain in his mutilated eye, then
she pushed the sleeves of her robe up past her elbows, slashed the knife hard
and fast across his neck, hot blood splashing over her hands and wrists.
She felt him die, suddenly and hard. She died with him, but
unlike him, she came to life again a few breaths later. Shuddering, her hand
shaking so badly she nearly cut her leg, she bent to the side, set the knife on
the grass. She hugged her arms across her breasts, leaving bloody handprints on
the grass-stained white of her sleeves, and began to cry, gulping tearing sobs
that jarred her body but gave her little relief from the ache that seized on
her, the cold spreading inside her.
Arms closed about her. Someone who seemed an uneasy amalgam
of Shareem and Harskari held her and rocked her and sang softly to her until
the shock passed off.
With a last pat Harskari let go of her and moved on her
knees to Kell’s body. She began prodding at his torso with her fingertips,
avoiding for the moment the splotch of drying blood.
Aleytys started to rub her eyes, stopped, grimaced at the
sticky, browning stains on her hands. She wiped her nose on her sleeve,
avoiding the bloody handprint, sniffed, scrubbed her hands on the grass, then
on the skirt of her robe, turned up a part of that skirt, wiped her eyes on it,
blew her nose into it. She knelt watching Harskari a moment. “What are you
doing?”
“Kell’s key strip. His dome and ship should be yours now.”
Harskari began poking her fingertips into the glutinous mess at the neck,
clicked her tongue as she discovered the catch and popped it loose. She pulled
the front of the shipsuit open. “I thought so.” A wide soft belt about Kell’s
waist. She used her nails to dig under the overlapping end and pried it loose.
“Remember what Loguisse said. Seems to me if you’re the first to touch it after
he’s dead, that transfers some sort of control to you.” Wrapping the end around
her left hand, she jerked hard. Kell’s body flopped about, it groaned as the
air in his lungs was expelled, his arms and legs flailed briefly at the grass,
then went still as the body settled back. Harskari got to her feet, held out
the belt. “Here. Take it.”
“I couldn’t ...” Her revulsion faded quickly; there were too
many reasons why she must. Kell wasn’t her only enemy on Vrithian. She needed a
ship. Shareem’s wasn’t ... she couldn’t use it, not for a long long time.
Harskari might as well have that; no doubt she counted on it. War, Kell,
your war, and to the victor the spoils. Oh-ah-Madar! Spoils. She quelled a
rising hysteria and got shakily to her feet. “All right. I agree. I’ll claim
the things. No. You carry the belt. I don’t want to touch it, not yet.” She
looked down at herself.
“I want a bath.” The words came out sounding plaintive, like
a child calling for something she wasn’t sure she was supposed to have. She
closed her eyes. Madar! I’m falling apart. Giggles erupted from her
throat, surprising her. “All ye all ye out’s in free. Game’s over. I won. Won. Look,
at what I won ...”
Harskari mmphed at her, then led her back to the house.
“Bath and breakfast, that’ll shut off this nonsense.”
LOGUISSE: Take the body to the Mesochthon. Not pretty? Doesn’t
matter. Dump it in the middle of the floor. Declare the war over and yourself
the winner (chuckle), though that would seem rather obvious considering the
condition of your opponent. You’re supposed to hold yourself ready to answer
challenges. I wouldn’t worry much about that. There’s not a Stayer on Vrithian
who’d dare come near you.
The dome and the ship. Dome first. You’ve got his key strip?
good. Shareem tell you ... not Shareem anymore? That will take some explaining.
Right. This isn’t the time or method for explanations. Once you’ve made the
announcement, go directly to Kell’s dome. Yes, leave the body. Not your
responsibility after delivery. Where was I? Go directly to Kell’s dome. All
kephaloi are linked to the Mesochthon. Kell’s will be waiting for you. You
could have trouble with it; he was a very complex man. I suggest you tie Kell’s
kephalos into yours, use it to help you overlay Kell’s persona with your own.
If you run into something peculiar, give me a call.
The ship. Don’t—I repeat do not—try anything with the ship
until you’ve pacified kephalos. A loyal ship won’t kill you even inadvertently.
How long will this take? Optimally, three to four days. Probably
triple that. Congratulations. Come see me when you have a little time. We’ll
whip up some sort of celebration. And you can tell me about Kell’s downfall and
why Shareem isn’t Shareem any more.
Shareem’s Dome
Hastily erected shacks on a dusty rutted flat outside the
ground entrance to the dome. A few children, both kinds, orpetzh and galaphorze,
played together in the dust, watched over by a galaphorze female and an orpetzh
naish, sitting side by side on low chairs, chatting together as Aleytys flew
over, working on something too small for her to see.
Inside the dome: noise and bustle compounded as Harskari directed
the work, reshaping house and gardens to suit her tastes. Aleytys landed on a
dusty saucer, the dome opening automatically as she approached to let her
through.
She stood in the lock feeling battered by the indescribable
cacophony, the whiny rasp of saws; syncopated hammer raps; shouts from the
galaphorze swarming over the house, the orpetzh teeming across the land;
earthmoving juggernauts growling, grunting, clattering as they reshaped the
surface; drills biting into the earth; backhoes laying pipe. Energy and excitement
were thick as the noise—as if some huge beast long dormant had suddenly waked
to vigorous life.
Aleytys smiled. It begins, she thought. Vrithian
is changing. She stepped from the lock and began walking toward the small
section of Shareem’s house that Harskari had left intact, circling around an
orpetzh spading a flowerbed, then a squad planting an irregular line of small
bushes with smoky blue-gray leaves, jumped aside at the squawk of a horn and
the cheerfully obscene shout of the galaphorze driving a lumber sled toward a
knot of carpenters just visible behind three huge old trees Harskari had
exempted from destruction when the rest of the garden was swept away. When she
finally reached the door, she flattened her hand on the call plate and smiled
with relief as the door slid open. As she had a handful of times before, she
said, “Ah, Lampos, how goes the transformation?”
The damascened android bowed, the movement making his
tracery shimmer. “With noise and verve, anassa,” he answered as he always did.
“Where is she?”
“In the bookroom, anassa. Loguisse also.”
“Well ...” She was both irritated and amused. “That will
save me some traipsing.”
She stood in the doorway watching them. They were too engrossed
in what they were doing to notice her. Loguisse had finally found someone to
talk to. Once she’d gotten over her shock and skepticism, she was excited by
Harskari’s history and fascinated with that ancient science she impatiently
refused to call sorcery. Harskari’s people had worked more by instinct and
intuition than by any rigorous development of theory, and Loguisse was immersed
in an attempt to provide what she considered proper mathematical descriptions
of the forces and conditions Harskari described and illustrated. The two women
argued endlessly and with much passion over things Aleytys acknowledged to
herself she’d never comprehend. And Loguisse threw herself into the remodeling
of the house and gardens with a ferocity nearly equaling Harskari’s.
The closeness between Harskari and Aleytys might never have
existed. Aleytys was still uneasy when she saw her mother’s body walking about;
she found it disturbing, rather like watching a zombie prance on its coffin.
Shareem’s spirit ... soul ... persona ... whatever ... was gone. There was
nothing of her mother left, yet when she saw her mother’s flesh vibrant with
life, she could not come to terms with her mother’s death. She could not
grieve. That loss, that pain, was sealed up inside her until she was bloated
with it, about to explode if she couldn’t find relief. She drew her hand across
her brow, then smiled. “Looks like you’ve got half of Guldafel working here,”
she said.
The two women broke off what they were doing, looked around
at her, startled. Harskari set her stylus down, wiped her palms with a
handkerchief she pulled from the cuff of her sleeve. “Lunchtime already? Or are
you early?”
“Lunchtime. And more than time. I see I’ll have to tell
Lampos to make sure you eat something now and then.”
Harskari laughed. “Yes, Mama.”
Loguisse gave Aleytys a quick welcoming smile. “Just as well
we hire them. There’s been an influx of refugees from Agishag the last several
years, and Guldafel’s economy is showing the strain. Apparently Hyaroll has
cancelled all contact with the outside. The uplands of Agishag are reverting to
desert.”
Change, Aleytys thought. Ah well, it was never
going to be all sweetness and laughing. “He said don’t call him again the
last time I saw him.”
Loguisse looked austere. “All this interference with Vrithli
lives, it’s nonsense. Harskari agrees with me. We’ll guard our borders and
leave the rest.”
“I thought you simply weren’t interested in your Vrithli.”
Loguisse grinned. “That too.”
Lampos came to the door. “Archira, lunch is served. In the
hall where you wished.”
Harskari shoved her chair back and got to her feet. “Now
that I think about it, I’m starved. Did we eat breakfast?”
“Not that I remember.” Loguisse followed Harskari across the
room. “We started to, I think, but we got into the similarity equations and
...”
“No wonder I’ve got this hole in my middle. The tribulations
of a bo ...” She glanced at Aleytys, broke off. “Coming, Lee?”
“That’s what I’m here for.”
“Seems to me you invited yourself.”
“So I did.”
Aleytys angled the knife across her plate, set the fork
beside it. “I had a reason for inviting myself.”
“And we’re supposed to ask what it is?”
“No need to stir yourselves. I’m off.”
“What?”
“This evening. Ship’s tested enough and I... I can’t wait
any longer.”
“Avosing.” Harskari sighed. “Don’t hope too much, Lee.”
“I don’t, but I’ve got to know.” She lifted her glass,
tilted and rotated it so the last half inch of the golden wine slid across the
bowl, leaving a faint film behind. “I’m taking some of Kell’s nastier warbots.
Them and me ...” She managed a brief smile. “We can take on anything.”
“And if Grey’s dead?”
“I don’t know. Yes I do. I’ll go back to Wolff for a while
no matter what I find on Avosing. I ... I need it ... I need the people there.
And maybe Canyli can find a really horrendous Hunt for me. Take my mind off.”
“Coming back here?”
“In a while. When doesn’t matter, does it? The one thing
I’ve got plenty of is time.”
Arkadj On Brephor
_files/image012.jpg)
Vrithian
WITNESS [7]
A SHIPMASTER FROM ARKADJ
My name is Polado Barrega. My ship is the Marespa. home
port Veikro, part sail, part steam. My crew are all Arkadjonk. I won’t have
slaves on a seagoing ship; it brings more trouble than it’s worth, and if you
think I’d take on a Fosporat or a Yashoukki, let me tell you I wouldn’t trust
one of them within a cable of my ship. I used to have a Fospor linguist, but I
found he took bribes and screwed me bad a couple times, so the next time we go
out, he don’t come back; some haddyronk are thanking me for fresh meat. Since
then I have learned enough of this and that to do my own bargaining, though Yashoukkim
are all over the place like fleas and the Suling Lallers are getting hard to
figure. The undying there are drawing in, trying to shut honest merchants out
of Suling waters. You can still get into the harbor at Obattar, though you get
more stares than offers and you got to have the patience of a sneglok and you
got to have connections, and that I got. But it’s getting hard, yah, I tell
you, it’s enough to turn an honest man crook. Don’t know what’s happening, but
seems to me the undying are getting touchier than ever, and it’s making the
randts that run things so itchy you can’t tell where they’ll jump. Slangstra,
it’s hard enough in ordinary times to keep my ship fueled and make a stinking
little profit so I can feed my kids and lay aside for my old age. Yashouk
traders and Fospor merchants everywhere these days undercutting you; those
rotten little luggers can’t carry a load of spit but there they are, promising,
promising, half the time they’re pirates on the side, a land-trader’s lucky
they don’t take his skin and sell that. Then you get home and find some Fospor
naftiko anchored in your own port skimming off the cream while you get tangled
up in paperwork until it cost you a fortune in silver to cut through it and he
gone before you finish and half the time he kill the market for your best
goods. Slanstro-damned Fospor, weren’t for the undying, I’d get together with
Toricas and Gestang and lay a hard hand on Tropagora and put the fear of
Salanggor into those godless squeeze-pennies and sneaking cheats. Days like
this, I think I’m going to burn to ash from the inside when I think about Yashoukkim
and Fosporain and what they’re doing to me. Salanggor curse them, those
undying. I know they been here since my granda’s granda was a nit, and his
granda too, but anytime some hardworking merchant makes a change here and there
just to make things a little easier, they stomp him. Hasn’t never been a war,
no matter how bad things get. Smash an honest man but don’t give shit about
pirates; they can burn villages and sink ships and who gives one holy damn
about it? They just don’t want men feeling free, that’s all, they don’t want
men ignoring them, the shitheads; they want to play with us like dolls, that’s
it, they look down here and watch us and laugh. They don’t care what we think.
They don’t care how much we try. But if we start doing what we want to do, it’s
foot on the neck, face in the mud and breathe how you can. I could go up to one
of them and say I want to kill you, I could go up to haddyr-face Hrigis and say
I want to peel your skin off a strip at a time and feed it to you, I want to
chop you into bait and catch a hold full of fish with you. And she’d laugh in
my face and tell me to lick her feet and I’d be on my belly licking. Yah, I
tell you. And the bloodsuckers who run us, they’re worse, the Vennor and Vannish
and the leeches in the government sucking us dry and eating the meat off our
bones. No, I’d never talk this way to their faces, not them, those vipers are
too poisonous and too scared, they’d have me dead between one breath and the
next. And I can’t do one thing about it, no one can, because those parasites
are backed by the undying, yah, the undying prop them up and let them go on
draining us, stealing the breath out of our throats. But what can a man do?
Live by his wits and scrape around the tangle of paperwork. Smuggle what he can
and get what he can for the rest. I think of the undying and there’s a fire in
my belly. I think of them watching, they’ve come strolling by and betrayed me
with a grin more than once, I think of them watching and I wonder what it would
be like to live where there were no undying, to go about your days without some
demigod peering over your shoulder. I wonder. Oh yah, I wonder.
Vrithian
on the oblique file [4]
KEPHALOS TO SUNCHILD: Kell is dead. Hours, no more,
before Hyaroll goes.
SUNCHILD TO WILLOW: Kell is dead. Time is now. Now the bow,
now the anointed arrows.
SUNCHILD TO BODRI: Kell is dead. The time is now. Now
the herds, the helpers. Fetch them.
Sunchild flitted away to wind in an elaborate gavotte with
kephalos, a dance around the strictures that bound it. Kephalos was not to
notice what it knew was happening.
Willow watched Sunchild streak down the hillside. For a moment
she sat very still, then she got onto her feet with a swift surge of her small
body. “Otter hunts,” she sang. “Otter hunts in me. Watch, my children, watch,
Otter hunts.” Still singing, she dropped to her hands and knees and crawled
into her hut. The bow and arrows were wrapped in a fine cloth Sunchild had
brought her, the stoppered gourd of poosha sat beside the bundle. She gathered
these and backed out, clicking her tongue in the rhythm of her song.
Bodri came trundling into the camp. Humming her song, Willow
straightened, stared. She hadn’t seen ol’ beetle for more than half a
Minachron. He’d changed. The garden on his back was gone, replaced by a mosaic
of mosses. “What what?” she said.
“I will start a new garden when the effort seems
worthwhile,” he said.
“Your piece part, ol’ Bug. You get us in?”
“Had better, hadn’t I? Ah Willow, sweet Willow, trust me, I
have indeed worked out a way. While Sunchild keeps kephalos occupied, with its
consent, of course, we enter through the kitchen.”
Willow looked skeptically at him. “You climb wall, bang door
down?”
“No, Whisper in my heart, I walk through both doors.”
“And what do ironheads be doing?”
“You’ll see. It’s time we went.”
They went quickly down the mountainside, down the footpath
they’d used many times to reach the gardens or the lake, left the path and
circled to the back of the house where a high stone wall shut in the kitchen
garden. Bodri stopped Willow and drew her into the shade of a lod-bush, making
a grating, gnashing sound of pure irritation.
“What? what?”
“Lazy skelos, they were supposed to have the herd waiting
... ah! There. Look.”
A small herd of girilk came trickling out of the trees, coaxed
along by a pair of six-legs who trotted about them and touched them with
stinging feelers if they showed inclination to move in the wrong direction.
Moving at a lumbering gallop, Bodri crossed the grass to the
door in the wall. One of the long thin fingers at the end of a fore-right
tentacle slipped through the hole he’d bored through the hard tough wood and
touched the latch button. He drew it swiftly back as the gate began to swing
open. With a high warbling call he went through the opening, shoving the door
as far back as it would go. Willow followed him through, looked back. The
girilk were trotting toward her, driven into a honking run by the skelos. She
grinned. Sneaky ol’ beetle.
The kitchen garden was a half acre of cultivated land
protected from roaming beasts by a high wall a good three times Willow’s
height. Bodri settled himself into a crouch between two rows of peach—trees,
waiting for the herd to pass.
Willow broke away, ran between vine rows and crouched by the
trunk of an espaliered pear. She unwrapped the bow and strung it, slipped the
strap of the arrow pouch over her shoulder. She thought about nocking an arrow
but changed her mind. Keep the hands free until you get close to what you’re
tracking, Otter sang in her. Be loose and ready to ride the winds of
chance. Bodri and she were creeping up on Hyaroll, down the kephalos wind
from him. And kephalos would keep the wind blowing to them as long as they did
not harm Hyaroll. When Bodri had finished mixing the right poosha, Willow had
proved how benign it was by pricking herself with the point of an anointed
arrow, had gone down deep and come swimming out of sleep unhurt. Kephalos would
not betray them as long as they were true.
Bodri came rushing through the vines as silent as thought.
She grinned at him, excited and nervous and at the back of her mind weaving a
song of this hunt.
The girilk were munching briskly at some rows of thrix.
Bodri settled beside her, a mossy hump, head drawn inside
his carapace though his antennae curled up and out, quivering in a wind that
didn’t exist. She waited, Otter’s ghost watching over her shoulder, his
patience entering her, possessing her who had seldom been able to keep still
from one minute to the next. She was warm with his presence and quiet now with
a hunter’s unending stillness, waiting, waiting, waiting, for the door to open.
The girilk snorted and crunched placidly down the rows, leaving
a swath of kicked-up earth behind them. The skelos were nowhere about.
The door hissed into the wall and an ironhead came out, a
smaller one, more fragile than most she’d seen. It rushed at the girilk, who
snorted and shook their heads, danced away from it and began eating in another
section of the garden.
As soon as the door hissed, Bodri’s head came out, and he
surged onto his six feet, tentacles held in ready loops before him. While the
ironhead was busy with the recalcitrant herd, he moved with a swift and
powerful silence up the steps and into the house, charging the other one
waiting inside. It stopped what it was doing and stared, then three of Bodri’s
tentacles closed around it and the fourth searched over its torso, slid open a
panel and twitched a plug loose, killing it for that moment.
Willow followed him more sedately. While he was struggling
with the ironhead, she dipped the needle points of two arrows in the gourd of
poosha, nocked one of them and held the second between two fingers of her
bowstave hand.
A tiny patch of gold light flitted into the kitchen, bobbed
up and down in front of Bodri, then darted away. Bodri rushed after it, Willow
ran after him. They went up and up along a lazily spiraling ramp to a small
round room domed with colored glass where the sun came in hot and thick and
gold.
Hyaroll lay face down on a padded table. The ironhead
Megathen was kneading his shoulders and back, talking to him quietly. The room
was filled with small sounds, distant running water, the hum of insects from
some ancient summer evening, the lazy rustle of leaves.
Willow stepped past Bodri, lifted her bow and loosed the arrow,
smiled as it lodged in Old Vryhh’s rump, two fingerwidths buried in the mound
of muscle.
Megathen cried out and reached for the arrow. Hyaroll yelled
and started to swing around. Bodri brushed past Willow, almost knocking her off
her feet, charged at Megathen, wrapped his tentacles around the ironhead and
pulled it away from the table. Willow set herself again, nocked the second
arrow, then put it in Old Vryhh’s shoulder, high up in the muscle, taking care
to hit a spot where the point wouldn’t do serious damage.
A moment of stillness as Hyaroll stared at her, fighting off
the poosha longer than she’d thought possible, Old Stone Vryhh. To her
astonishment he smiled, began to lift a hand in salute. Before he could finish
the gesture, the poosha took him and he collapsed in a heap on the table.
Bodri held Megathen in a strangling grip, though the
ironhead stopped struggling the moment Hyaroll lost consciousness. Willow
danced across to the table. “Sleep long, no dream, sleep long, Old Vryhh, no
dream, Old Vryhh,” she sang to Old Vryhh, and shut his eyes for him. She pulled
the arrows out of him and tossed them aside, dipped into the pouch on her belt
and smeared some styptic paste on the wounds to stop the bleeding. No need to
worry about evil demons crawling into those wounds, though puncture wounds were
the worst. In the stasis boxes even demons slept.
Sunchild came drifting in, collecting the piece of himself
as he passed it. “Bodri, you can let Megathen go; I need his arms.” He hovered
over Hyaroll. “Willow-Willow, kephalos sends compliments on your aim.” He
drifted back to the door. “Megathen, bring Hyaroll down to the Reserve. Willow,
you and Bodri better stay here awhile. This next bit’s, urn, kind of touchy.”
Willow nodded. She had no desire to see that dread array
again, tiers on tiers of boxes marching into the darkness, meat lockers filled
with stopped lives.
Megathen picked up Hyaroll and followed Sunchild from the
room.
Willow unstrung her bow and set it aside, slipped off the
arrow pouch, checked to see if the cork was tight in the poosha gourd and put
that down too. Otter’s spirit slipped away from her, and she felt a sudden
grief. She squatted on the mossy rug. It was too warm and breathless in here
for her tastes, but she set that aside and began hunting among her song dances.
Her people didn’t fight wars, but now and then a feud started up between two
clans and went too far for the pa’tanish to reconcile them; then it lasted
until one clan or the other ran out of folk. Yes, she thought, yes, I
the lost living and my enemy he gone. It was a song that needed nothing but
the singer. It was a song that had no dance, no triumph, nothing but sadness.
She squatted by the padded table and sang against the small sounds the song of
the last alive.
Sunchild returned while she was singing. When she finished,
he came and squatted beside her. Otter to the eye. “Kephalos says thank you for
the song.”
Bodri’s antennae quivered; Willow said nothing.
“It’s done. He’s tucked away in a stasis box. He won’t die
now, so we won’t either.”
Bodri stirred after a while, shook himself, his carapace
swaying like a bell. “I’m hungry.” He started for the door. Still saying nothing,
even her body subdued. Willow gathered bow, arrows, the poosha gourd and
started out after him.
“Wait. The house is ours now. Everything. What do we do with
it?”
Bodri stopped at the door, backed around so he could see
Sunchild. “Not mine. Don’t like walls. If this place belongs to anyone now, I
would say kephalos has it. Maybe the two of you. Willow?”
“
“No.”
“You sure?”
She stroked her throat, drew her shoulders up, hugged her
arms across her breasts. “Can’t breathe this place.”
“You see?”
Sunchild quivered. “We see. Yes. Bodri?”
“Yes?”
“Kephalos gets lonesome.”
“Let me think.” Bodri curled up his antennae, closed his
eyes, swayed his big head back and forth. “Ah. Let kephalos make ironheads that
are just talkers, it can send them out and talk to everyone, so we’re
comfortable and it’s not lonesome.” Bodri chuckled, his carapace swinging side
to side in time with his laughter. “Not so different, after all—old Vryhh
wasn’t doing that much these last years.”
Sunchild lost his slightly forlorn look. “Yes yes, let it be
as it was, kephalos working everything and us outside. We’ll have to think what
to do with the sleepers, but there’s no hurry now, is there?”
Willow giggled, clapped her hand against her side and went
dancing out the door. “No hurry, no hurry, no hurry, none no more.”
Vrithian
action on the periphery [5]
Bygga Modig
Weary, aching, layered with grime, Amaiki hefted her bag of
belongings and joined the dispirited line of refugees filing off the ship.
Never enough water, food that would choke a varka, the stench of too many cones
in too small a space, day on day on day in a shuddering juddering sickening
slide and roll. And beyond the body’s suffering there was the raveling of the
spirit. Elbow to elbow with alien cones whose lines she didn’t know and didn’t
want to know. Elbow to elbow with galaphorze seamen whose stench nauseated her,
on a battered rust-bucket whose owner had the instinctive greed of all Arkadjonk.
The Marespa. She’d never forget it. Never. Its grime was ground into her
skin, its creaks and thumps and squeals and hisses had carved themselves into
her brain. Even now Barrega harried his men into prodding the weary line along
so he could wash his ship of them and rush back across the Istenger to cram
another load on board. The crowds were thinning on the wharves of Shim Shupat.
If he dawdled here he might even have to put out with a normal cargo rather
than this jammed mass of stinking life.
The wharf they tied to was at the far end of a busy crowded
port, the noise, the crowds, the smell, all worse than those on the ship, but
there was a different feel here, something freer and bolder that crept inside
Amaiki’s insulating coat of grime and gloom. Something wild ... it was hard to
say just what it was, but it called to that part of her which had responded so
disturbingly to the laughter and shouts and songs of the manai-gone-wild. She
breathed in a great lungful of the air, expelled it, sucked in more. She wanted
no trace of the Marispa’s miasma left in her lungs. She walked off the
ship with a straighter back, her ears up and forward.
With a growling impatience she worked her way through the
swarm of confused passengers that clotted the wharf, shoved herself to the gate
and the U-shaped counter where a bored galaphorze male sat questioning each
cone before he or she or na could leave the wharf, punching the answers into a
datarec, turning a few back, passing the others on, stamping some hands,
leaving the others bare.
NAME: Amaiki-manetai line Jallis meld Sinyas
PURPOSE IN COMING TO GULDAFEL: To join the rest of my
mate-meld who are already here.
THEIR NAMES: Keran-manetai
line Sinyas meld Sinyas
Betaki-tokontai line Yarimm meld Sinyas
Muri-tokontai line Sinyas meld Sinyas
Kimpri-manetai line Hussou meld Sinyas
Se-Passhi naish Sinyas
The galaphorze glanced at the readout, grunted, then waved
her through the gate. She walked down the crudely built chute that shuddered
and bounced under her feet. At the other end of the chute a tall conc female
halted her. “Hands,” she said.
Amaiki held out her hands, palm up.
“Over.”
Irritated but too weary to argue, feeling like a naughty
child hauled before the line mother, she turned her palms down.
With a grunt much like the galaphorze the cone motioned to
the left. “That way.”
The chute split into two arms beyond the counter where the
cone sat. Amaiki started down the left branch, looked over her shoulder. A
mate-meld was being directed down the right. A singling like her was the next,
hands inspected, waved after the meld. Another singling, hands held out, sent
after her. She shrugged and went on. No telling what criteria they were using,
and she was too tired to bother speculating.
The chute opened onto a noisy street. She stepped out, moved
aside to give those following room to go by while she decided what to do. None
of those passing along the street paid much attention to her, a glance or two
from the galaphorze and conoch’hi and other orpetzh moving briskly both ways
along the street, mixing with sleds piled high with boxes and bales. Horns
blatting constantly, shouts, laughter, voice raised in a sudden explosion of anger;
the noise was extravagant and bewildering, the colors were as raw and
confusing. She blinked; it was impossible to focus on anything; there were no
patterns anywhere she could find to give her a place to start as she tried to
make some sense out of the chaos around her. It was ugly and loud and strange
and she should have hated it—and she did hate it, but there was also something
seductive about the vigor and aliveness of the scene, something that energized
her.
“Ami-sim. Ami-sim.” Muri came running across the street, elbowing
his way through the walkers, darting around the sleds, exchanging unserious
curses with one of the drivers who came close to running over him. He slammed
into Amaiki, nearly broke her in half with the urgency of his hug.
Amaiki laughed and stroked his weedy crest. “Oh it is good
good to touch you again, sim-sim, my Muri, my sweeting, my jintii.”
He caught her hand and tugged her away from the wall. Frightened
and excited, she followed him into the confusion in the street, trying to
ignore the nudges and shoves from galaphorze and orpetzh alike. Orpetzh. Not
just Conoch’hi from Agishag, but cousins from all over the world, strangers
whose manners and smells and voices and languages were almost as alien as those
of the galaphorze.
Muri didn’t try to talk to her, but led her at a trot
through a maze of streets, deeper and deeper into the city, away from the waterfront.
Gradually the noise and confusion died to a manageable level. There was still a
disturbing strangeness about the place, and the thick lowland air was hard for
her to handle even after the months on the ship.
Muri slowed a little and turned into a narrow street with
high walls on both sides. Over his shoulder he said, “Not much further,
Ami-sim.”
She nodded, though he didn’t wait for her response. Muri
too-quick. Laughing inside for the first time in days, she hurried after
him.
He stopped before a door set deep in the wall, tapped the
caller plate and stood waiting.
In a moment the door hummed into the wall. Muri caught her
wrist and pulled her inside with him.
A garden like her own. Not exactly, the plants were strange,
but the patterns were as familiar as breathing, so wonderful, so comforting.
She tried to linger, but Muri hurried her on. “Pinbo has done well for herself
over here, Ami. This is her meld-house. Meld Likut-Dassha runs a trading
company and has shops in just about every Dum and galaphorze Garat in Guldafel.”
He pushed open a gate, in an archway, moved into another garden, this one not
quite so familiar. “Things are crazy here, Ami-sim. No work, the price of
everything, well, you wouldn’t believe what folk have to pay for a week-old
egg. Hadn’t been for Pinbo and her meld, we’d’ve had a miserable time. She’s
even found work for us. The undying here is rebuilding everything in her dome;
we’re going north soon as you’ve rested a bit. Good thing about that is the
undying is paying us in land. We’ll have a place for ourselves again, Ami-sim.
One year’s labor for the undying and that’s all.”
Amaiki jerked loose, cold and fearing and angry, all
pleasure lost. Undying. I forgot, ay mother, I forgot what I knew
coming across the uplands. The undying. Here too. Everywhere. Back to the
same futile dependence. She felt helpless and furious. Muri was staring at her,
surprised by the turn in her. “Undying,” she whispered, then spat. “Not again.
How could you, Muri, how could any of you ...”
“It’s different here,” Muri said, speaking slowly for once.
“I know, I understand, but you’ll see. This undying is hardly ever here, she
doesn’t want anything from us except what she pays for. It’s always been like
that, Ami. No one here depends on her for anything; they wouldn’t get it if
they tried. This is our chance to make a new life, a real life, sim-sim.” He
patted her arm. “I know, we all know. Come. You’re just worn to a nub, that’s
all. Whew! after that trip we could hardly move an ear.”
Struggling to deal with the anger knotting her insides,
Amaiki walked silently beside him.
“The one thing you’ll really have to get used to,” he said
as he led her into a court behind the main house, “is all the galaphorze about.
But they’re not so bad when you get to know them. It’s the other orpetzh that,
well, the way they act, ahhhgh, Ami ...” His ears flickered, his hands flailed
the air. She was startled into laughter, and after that the tension drained
quickly out of her.
Then they were in the guesthouse, touching and hugging, a
confusion of talk, everyone at once, no one bothering to listen, no one minding
that no one heard what they were saying.
Then Betaki brought in the new hatchling and gave na to
Amaiki. She held the small soft body close to her, felt the little mouth
sucking at the side of her neck, tasting her flavor, adding it to the other
flavors na knew as na’s own. She blinked away tears and couldn’t speak.
Se-Passhi pressed against her, the others made a circle about her, lapping her
in their warmth. All the aches and sorrows and the bitterness she brought
across the sea with her washed out of her. They’d be back, she knew that well
enough, but now there was no room for anything but a joy beyond words.
About midmorning the next day, they carried children and
gear aboard a Pel river barge and started north into their new life.
Cabozh On Gynnor
_files/image013.jpg)
Vrithian
WITNESS [8]
A MAID SERVANT IN DEIXCIDAO
My name is Meni Peraroz. What you see is what you get. Ma
was a servant and Grandma and they both married servants. I’m not married yet,
but if I can’t get away from here, that’s my fate too. One of those half-assed
would-be wolves out there prowling the halls. Then a kid a year until I die of
it or he gets bored and walks. Me? You got any idea what happens to women who
walk out on their men? Don’t be a fool, you. I got to get away before I get
stuck, yeh, yeh, forget it, wasn’t making no pun, you show where your head is.
Do I really think I’ll be better off in Borbhal or Cobarzh? Oh yeh I do. This
place is dead. Frozen. It’s a little looser out there, or so I hear. Do I
believe it? Sure. I have to, don’t I? Am I scared? You do ask stupid questions.
Sure I’m scared, but look what I’ve got here. Creepy old Zergo around the bay
in his dome, he likes things staying the way they are. He makes sure they do.
Every time someone here tries to do something different, the undying stomps on
him. Anyone with any push, he gets out young. Me? I’m going on for nine [about
sixteen standard]. Ma’s all right but my aunts and everybody else, they’re
pushing me to get married before I’m so old no man’ll want me. Even Her, she’s
pushing her fat nose in my business. Who? Her. The Mistress, who else? So what?
So I signed my name on the Agencharosh’s list. Course I can write, my ma saw to
that. I know most of us can’t, but she saved out some of her tips, hid it where
Dado couldn’t get to it and drink it up, and she hired a Tempestao half-priest
to teach me and my sister. She left last year, my sister did. We haven’t got
word one from her, but I figure maybe where she is it’s rough getting the coin
to send a message. Where was I, ah yeh, I signed my name on the Agencharosh’s
list, the bride list. Lot of those men who left want old-country wives. What if
I don’t like mine? Tell you. I run, that’s what. I figure there’s probably
someone I’m gonna like better. Yeh, I’ll get married. What else can a girl do?
But my kids will have it better. There’s always a way. Ma showed me that. But
you got to fight hard and you got to fight smart and you got to know you can’t
do much for yourself, but your kids will have it better’n you, or what’s the
use of living? Cobarzh. They say it’s wild and dangerous, but there’s land for
the taking. Fight smart and hold hard to what you got. I’m gonna make something
of myself. You’ll see.
Avosing
action on the second line [2]
Sucked through a too-small hole. Pain scraping along her
body. Disorientation. Terror. Anger. A smashing blow. Something stopped her
like slamming against a brick wall, then punted her into a vast nothingness
where she lost ail sense contact, even the feel of her own body.
More confusion. She never quite lost awareness, but for a
while all she had was an assurance that she still lived. Until she came to
rest, a quivering shivering nothing.
She couldn’t feel her body.
Rush of fear and rage that almost tore her apart. Fear she’d
been wrenched loose from her hard-won body, condemned to that tenuous existence
she’d known as a prisoner of the diadem.
After the first shock dissipated, she understood what had happened.
Attacking the Ajin’s body with those claws had triggered Kell’s trap.
Remembering Grey and Ticutt turning and twisting in the screen, bodies intact, she
clutched at hope and calmed herself further. She wasn’t as helpless as the
others would be, she knew this state (or one too like it for her comfort), had
learned to deal with it, circumventing its restrictions. What she’d done
before, she could do again.
Using her adopted gift and old experience, she reached, probing
through the nothing about her.
Linfyar. Screaming with his whole body, terrified, doubly
blinded now.
*Linfy, Linfy,* she sent to him, his name over and over, nothing
more, until her mind-voice punctured his panic and quieted him.
*Shadow?* Voice echoing like a shout in her mind, sense of
floundering.
*Hang on, Linfy, I’m going to try moving over to you.* Keeping
her hold tight on him, she willed herself toward him, the ache in her head this
brought on paradoxically welcome because at least she was feeling something.
Then she was touching something, though she still couldn’t feel her own body.
Not much. It was a blurred, dull stimulus that crept like a slow fuse along
her, slow currents stirring in a body almost turned off, but there, thank whatever
gods there be, there. Linfyar clung desperately to her, trembling all
over in agonizingly slow shudders.
*Linfy, Linfy, it’s all right, it is. We’re in the trap,
that’s all, but I’m going to get us out. Trust me, Linfy, trust me, haven’t I
got us loose before? Don’t worry, don’t fuss, I’ll get us out.* She rubbed her
hand up and down his back, pressing hard so she could feel what she was doing,
so he could feel it. Finally he lay quiet against her; some of his heat crossed
into her and she began to feel herself somewhat more. She started to pull away,
but he butted into her, clutched frantically at her. *Easy, easy, Linfy,* she
said. *You’re hurting me, imp, ease off or I’ll have bruises in places I wouldn’t
want to explain. Ah, that’s better. I know you’re sorry, imp. Listen to me. Let
me go. Grey’s in here too. And Ticutt and Taggert. I’ve got to find them,
Linfy. Umm. There’s something you can do. I can’t say anything or hear anything
through my ears, but your range is way wider than mine. You can help me hunt.
Try your top and bottom and see if you get any echoes, huh?* She thought a moment.
*If it doesn’t work, don’t worry, I’ll keep touch with you, you won’t get lost.
All right?*
She felt curiosity and a growing excitement in him, an excitement
that swamped his panic; turning his focus off his helplessness and setting him
to doing something about it made an immediate difference. He let himself swing
away from her, though he did keep one hand closed painfully tight about her
arm. She felt him get set, then felt the effort he was putting into throwing
out the sound, felt his disappointment when there was no return. Then he
started pulsing again, long slow beats that she didn’t actually hear but felt as
tickles across her skin. She stiffened, nearly choked on her excitement. I’m
feeling that. *I feel that,* she mind-yelled at Linfyar. *I feel that.*
Linfyar radiated glee, then pressed harder, delighted with the tickling thrum.
A sound that was a physical presence here, as solid as their flesh.
He let go of her, began turning in a slow circle, throwing
out the subsonics. He burned with excitement when he located another three echo
points evenly spaced about him.
*I did it, Shadow,* he sang to her. *I did it, way way down,
‘bout as far as I can go. Three and you, Shadow. Three and you.*
This was the final evidence that her body was here with her,
not just a hope and a prayer and self-delusion. *Splendid, Linfy. I’m going to
try reaching them. This one on my left first. Keep track of me, will you, and
tell me if I’m going wrong, huh?*
*Sure, Shadow.* He was a little trembly at the prospect of
her going away from him, but he had enough information coming in so he didn’t
feel wholly lost and could regain that stubborn independence circumstances had
built in him.
She pushed, ignoring the ache in her head, knew she
was drifting away from Linfyar because she lost the body-sense of his presence.
*Who?* she thrust at the faint warmth that drew her. *Who?*
After several repetitions and a slow drift closer, she got a
startled response from the presence ahead. *Who?* came back at her.
*Shadith. Friend of Aleytys. You?*
*Grey. Shadith?*
*You’ve met me.*
*No ....*
*When I sang through Lee’s body.*
*What?*
*Shadith the singer. From the diadem.*
*Lee!* More energy in the mind voice, then pain, then a sudden
fear and anguish. * Another dream.*
*No. Lee’s nowhere near here, and you’re not dreaming.* She
willed herself to drift closer to him; she couldn’t think talk and shift positions
at the same time, so she gave herself successive pushes between fragments of
speech. *Head ... sent me and ... Taggert ... after Ticutt dropped ... out of
... no, you wouldn’t know ...* In each of the pauses she surged closer. *When
she didn’t ... hear from you ... after four months ... Head sent Ticutt ... to
see ... what he could ... find out ... when he stopped ... reporting ... Head
waited ... for Aleytys, but we ... figured ... it was a trap for ... her, so
she went ... somewhere else ... suck Kell off ... so we wouldn’t have to ...
fight him off ... while we looked for ... you! Uh!* She wrapped herself around
him. *Grey?*
*Real?*
*Feel that.* She pinched his arm hard, pushing back her dismay
at how wasted it felt.
He shuddered, the contact closer to breaking him than those
eternities of nothingness. She held him and let him sob and struggle into calm,
knowing it was good that she was here instead of Aleytys to see his weakness
and help him deal with it. For his pride’s sake and Lee’s place in his life.
He’d dealt with Aleytys taking over his position as premier Hunter. After all,
he’d been expecting that to happen; he was aging and it was the natural order
of things for him to pass on into other aspects of Hunters as he withdrew from
active field service. That this had come before he was ready to retire and it
was his lover who replaced him, that had been difficult to swallow, but he was
strong enough in himself to accept that, and her special heritage had in a way
eased the transition. And he’d seen her grieve for her son, he’d comforted her
and helped her through it. This was different. Not something he wanted between
himself and Aleytys. Shadith was a stranger to him, a name, an acquaintance he
could trust enough to fall apart in front of without shame or a sense he’d have
to live with the memory of his breakdown every time he saw her. She waited in
silence, holding him, saying nothing, letting him wear through the reaction and
come shuddering back into control.
*Where’s Lee?* he said finally.
*Vrithian. Look, if you concentrate and will yourself along,
you can move. A minute, I can show you .... Linfy?*
*Uh-huh?*
*Got us located?*
*Yah.*
*Who’s closest to us? What direction?*
She felt the brushing tickle of his subsonics, then it moved
on. A moment later, sounding more confident than before, with more than a touch
of cockiness, he said, *Go left and ease back toward me, like you’re coming
down a lazy hill.*
*Gotcha. You hear that, Grey? No? Hmmm. Well, listen.* She
repeated what Linfyar had said, altering directions to fit his orientation. “I
think all of us ought to get together. I’m getting glimmerings of maybe a
plan.*
She felt the straining of his body, the hard knots of what
muscle he had left as he struggled to do something he didn’t know how to do,
powered by desire and will. They were moving faster, she was sure of it, she
could actually sense the medium, it felt like half-set gelatin. His will
blended with hers was more effective than hers alone. Her optimism increased.
If they could build up enough momentum in here, maybe she could jump them all
out. After all, she was experienced in this sort of leap, popping from the
diadem matrix into the body she was wearing now. Of course, she had Aleytys
powering that jump and guiding her, but maybe, just maybe ...
They slammed into another form. Grey grabbed at it; Shadith
wrapped herself around them both and did her best to steady their tumble. When
they were quieted, she touched the other. Ticutt. Cautious Ticutt, who
went into nothing without thinking it through three times and then again.
*Ticutt,* she said. *Shadith. A friend of Aleytys. Grey’s here with me.*
Ticutt went stiff. Even in his mind there was almost no response.
*You got that? I come to get you out of this, (chuckle) I suppose
I mean get us out now.*
Silence a moment longer, then quiet slow words, no emotion
in them, “spoken” with the mild precision of his ordinary speech. *A good
trick. If you can do it.* The mindvoice shook a little on the last words, but
he wouldn’t allow himself to show more of the terrors that haunted him,
couldn’t allow anyone to know how shattering his relief was. Grey could weep
and shiver and purge his self-created demons because Shadith was the only
witness. Precise and prideful, jealous of the reputation he had for his calm
assessment of possibilities in the most unnerving circumstances—and with Grey
there to see him falter—Ticutt could not allow himself to show any of the
demons working on him.
*Well,* she said, *I hadn’t planned on being in here with
you when I started this. But I’ve got an idea or two. Come on. Let’s go find
Taggert.*
*He’s here too?* Grey spoke more slowly than before; he was
running on the dregs of his strength, and there was nothing here to replenish
it.
*A little way off. Point us, Linfy.*
*Uh-huh.* Tickle of subsonics passing over them, moving on.
“Left again. Turn. Turn. Turn. Stop! Go on in that direction.*
*Got it. And you come over to us, Linfy. Then we start working
on busting out of here.*
*Got it.*
*Ticutt, if you put your mind to it, you can move yourself.
Keep hold of us and shove.*
This time she rode a power that woke in her a wild
excitement, like the times she’d handled Lee’s talent and felt that surge of
strength that was only barely within her control. They cannoned into Taggert
and went spinning into nowhere, finally steadied, rocked as Linfyar landed on
them, steadied again.
*Hi, Tag. That old acquaintance again.*
*Shadow. What the hell.*
*Me and Grey and Ticutt and Linfyar.*
*Grey! You all right, man?*
*He can’t hear you, Tag. Looks like I’m the only one who can
talk in here. Umm. Maybe not. Maybe I can be a kind of switchboard. Focus on
me, Tag. Focus on me, Ticutt. Focus on me, Linfy. Can you all hear me now?*
*Yes.* *Yes.* *Yes.* *Yes.*
Echoes bounced about inside her skull. She waited till the
worst was over, then she said, “Tag, keep the focus on me and see if you can
talk to the others.”
*Right. Grey, can you hear this?*
*Coming through. Sorry to hear you, old friend.*
*Sorrier to be here. What did it to you?*
*Got a chance to put my hands on the Ajin. Looked good, fast
snatch and out. No oppos worth mentioning. Got a handful of Ajin—and here I
am.”
*Uh ... huh! Ticutt, you listening?*
*I hear you both. Same with me. I got what looked like a
safe shot. I took it. Here I am.*
*Uh ... huh! Shadow, you still hearing this?*
*Yes. Looks like we tripped the trigger when we put the
claws in. Linfy, you listening?*
*Uh ... huh! Shadow.*
*Right. (chuckle) Listen, everyone. I said I had had a few
ideas. Grey, did you notice how much faster and easier we made the move for
Taggert when Ticutt was helping with the push?*
*I noticed. Lot more energy.*
*Energy increase feels geometric rather than additive. Which
is interesting. Ordinary sounds don’t seem to travel in here, but Linfyar can
make sounds and hear them a long way past both ends of our range. He tried out
the top end and didn’t get anywhere. Then he tried the low end. He located you
for me with some very low notes, about as far down as he can go. Don’t bother
telling me sound waves that long are lousy for echo location. It shouldn’t
work, but it does. Which means something, but who the hell knows what? I sure
don’t. But I don’t have to know how it works to use it. What I think is this:
we should link up with Linfy and give him energy to push his notes way out so
he can explore this miserable hole for us. If he can find some kind of, well,
edge, something to push against, we can try busting through it. I don’t know
where we’ll be if we break through, but just about anything’s better than this.
Even dead. Don’t you think? If any of you has a better idea, say something. No?
Right, then, focus through me. Linfy, I’m going to start feeding you some push;
pinch me if it gets more than you can handle. You start feeling about and see
what you can find.*
*Got it, Shadow.*
*Here we go. Start looking, imp.*
Avosing
the lines converge
Stretched out on a grassy knoll that kneaded itself to her
shape whenever she shifted position, a pleasant noisy stream running behind
her, huge horans rising on three sides of her, invisible kuskus singing in
them, their five-fingered leaves whispering just loud enough to be heard over
the water, Aleytys watched Avosing grow larger in a viewscreen thirty meters on
a side. Ship nudged into an orbit that kept it stationary over a mountain range
that ran through a broad continent, part woodlands, part immense prairies,
rippling grass that must have reached horizon to horizon for anyone standing on
the ground. “Where’s the trap?”
“There.” A flashing light in the mountains. “We are maintaining
position directly over it.”
“Any difficulty with probes or visuals?”
“Aleytys.” Ship sounded pained. Its voice had startled her
the first time she’d heard it. Shareem’s voice. For a while it curdled her
stomach every time ship spoke to her, but she didn’t try to change it.
Shareem’s voice. After what he’d done to her. Why? What did it mean? He
tormented her, he killed her, why did he have to own this small piece of her?
Lot of whys. There was an urgency in her to know as much as she could about
Kell now that outside urgencies no longer existed for her. He was dead, but she
had as yet unshaped plans for digging into him like a xenologist into a city
mound.
“And the trigger?”
“There also.”
An inert square bloomed on the image of the world, isolating
a single mountain, a huge long-dead volcano with a lake in its crumbling
center. The square spread out, another square bloomed in the center of it, a
schematic showing the pier, the landing field, the outer structures, the
confusing web of tunnels running through the mountain’s stone. At a confluence
of lines near the edge of the stone she saw the flare marking the scaffolding
that supported the mechanisms which created and held in place the pocket
universe and brought into being the umbilical joining the two when anyone
attempted to lay hands on the Ajin with aggressive intent. A short way on, a
pinlight flashed. The trigger. So the Ajin was home, waiting for her, though he
didn’t know that.
Aleytys sat up, the knoll shifting shape to conform to her
unexpressed wishes, reading muscles and posture to gain a disconcertingly
accurate knowledge of her intentions before she’d formulated them to herself.
“What’s down there?”
Beside the map, ship listed the number of mercenaries, technicians
and support personnel. Shadith, Taggert and Linfyar weren’t among those. Either
they had been sucked into the trap already or they hadn’t gotten this far.
Aleytys sighed. “Weapons? Anything to worry us?”
“Nothing the warbots can’t handle. I’ll watch. If the numbers
are too great, I’ll thin your weeds for you. Take Abra with you—we’re linked;
even stone that thick won’t break the bond.”
Aleytys got to her feet “I’ll do that. Get me to the
lander.”
The lander swooped down, ignoring fire from the base, shrugging
off beams and missiles with a contemptuous ease. It settled onto the landing
field and disappeared beneath a hot yellow dome as one side opened out to let
Aleytys, Abra and six warbots come sweeping out. The six ‘bots moved out in
tight circle about Aleytys, walking with the sinuous flickering stride of the
scorpions they vaguely resembled.
With the warbots wiping all resistance before and behind,
irresistible as a tsunami, she swept through the trees and the mercenaries,
burned her way into the main building; she blew the offices and central control
to smoking shards, moved farther in, striding along just short of a run, mouth
set in a grim line, hair blowing free; nothing could touch her, nothing could
stop her, into the lava caves she went, leaving two ‘bots to guard the mouth of
the main tunnel and two others to search out and destroy anything or anyone
that attacked them. Behind her the mercenaries and technicians and others still
alive began gathering whatever they could get their hands on and heading for
the boat, the fliers or the few hidden trails leading out of the crater. Some
among them stayed behind, those that had bought what the Ajin was selling; they
retreated into the rockfalls and sniped at the ‘bots or tried to work their way
into the tunnels and rescue the Ajin.
Aleytys stopped before the door to the Ajin’s quarters,
stood back while one of the warbots melted the lock out of it and kicked it in.
The ‘bot skittered inside on multiple multisegmented legs. Its armored scanners
whirled over the six surfaces of the room, its weapons pattered at high speed,
taking out the lasers in the walls, the mines in floor and ceiling, shedding
everything thrown at it, letting the remaining ‘bot shield Aleytys and Abra
from the flare-offs. The room was clean in seconds. The ‘bot skittered to one
side and waited.
Abra beside her, Aleytys strode into the room, looked
around. The walls were melted and congealing, splatters of cooling stone were
flung across the cratered floor, most of the furniture was torn and leaking its
stuffing, smoldering here and there, adding its stench to that of hot stone and
charred wood. A slim metal case leaned against a smoking chair, its neat,
precisely machined lines like a shout in all that disorder. “What’s that?”
Abra crossed the room, picked it up, opened the catches.
“Psychprobe. Portable. Suggestion: Taggert?” Aleytys shook her head.
“Impossible to say. Where now?” Abra pointed, moved ahead of her down the
hallway. One warbot followed them, the second stayed to guard the door. Abra
stopped at an open door, shone light into the room. The Ajin lay unconscious in
a mess of bloody sheets and blankets, a tangle-web smeared across his naked
body, claws at the end of two extensible rods set in wrist and ankle, blood
crusted about the wounds, a little still trickling. An hour since the attack,
not more, probably less. Shadith and Taggert; Abra was right about the probe.
She moved closer to the door. A metal arm flashed before her, stopping her.
“No,” Abra said. “Ship says don’t pass the door.”
“I hear.” As the arm dropped, she said, “Turn the light on
that small table by the bed.” A heavy silver ring gleamed in the harsh glare of
the light. She recognized it immediately. The trigger. She reached for
her power river, filled herself from it, pleased that it seemed to take little
more effort even though she’d taken off the diadem, reached for the
ring.
She couldn’t lift it.
That puzzled her. It wasn’t that heavy; couldn’t be if the
man wore the thing. She tried for a firmer hold, but her mindfingers slipped
off as if the metal were greased; she staggered backward as her concentration
slipped with her reach, landed with a whoosh against a foreleg of the
‘bot behind her. She straightened and went back to scowling at the ring. What
next? Send one of the ‘bots after it? She rubbed at the buttock that had
slammed into the ‘bot’s leg. Send it and lose it, if the ship was right. She
began prodding delicately at the ring with the fingertips of her outreach,
pit-a-pit-a-pit, throttling back the frustration that made her want to scream,
pit-a-pit-a-pit, soapy metallic feel under her mindfingers, couldn’t get a grip
anywhere.
Abruptly she slapped her side. “Aschla’s hells, I’m stupid
stupid stupid.” With a shaky laugh she reached for the bedtable and
began sliding it slowly and carefully toward the door. It moved with a touch of
reluctance, but came along to her tugging without challenging her hold.
She’d moved the table about a meter when a grayish patch
formed in the air above it. She stiffened, stopped the table where it was and
waited.
The grayness bulged and throbbed. It split, decanting a
clump of bodies clinging together. The clump hit the floor with a whistle,
several grunts, and a hissing curse, broke apart into five forms. Shadith
scrambled onto her feet, pulling Linfyar up with her. Taggert rolled up into a
crouch, scanning for trouble. Ticutt came up more slowly, holding himself in
tight control. Grey didn’t bother getting up, just lifted his torso, bracing
himself on his elbow. He grinned at the doorway. “Lee.”
She blinked back the tears that blurred her eyes; it was a
minute before she could speak. “Well. Good to see you. Grey. At least I think
so. You look like a silvercoat after a hard winter.”
“You pop the bubble?”
“Not me.” She nodded at the bedtable. “I was giving myself
fits trying to get hold of that ring.”
Shadith walked over to the table, poked at the ring. “This
the trigger?”
“According to Kell’s ship.”
“Uh. I take it he isn’t around anymore.”
“No.”
“Mmm. You know, I think your moving the table messed things
up just enough so we could crash out.”
“I doubt it. Coincidence, that’s all. That I was here.”
Aleytys turned to the android. “What’s ship say about the door?”
Pause. Abra stood poised, head tilted, light making a grotesquerie
from the planes of his nonface. “Ship says don’t go in yet. Ships feels a force
about the doorway. Ships suggests you get hold of the ring.”
“And what happens if Shadith tries to lift it?” Pause.
“Don’t know.”
“Shadow?”
“I can’t see spending the rest of my life in this room.” She
poked tentatively at the ring; over her shoulder she said, “What’s Harskari
think?”
“Harskari’s a long way from here, getting settled in body
and home. She said to say hello.”
“Ah.” She swung around. “And our common curse?”
“Sitting in a lokbox in the ship till I hand it over.”
“Um. That sort of complicates things.”
“I wouldn’t argue with you on that. You want a guarantee?
I’ll come after you if it comes to that. Promise.”
“You know I don’t mean anything like that, Lee. I’m just talking
to get my nerve up. Here goes.” She switched around again and reached for the
ring. She couldn’t lift it. When she tried to tighten her hold, her fingers
slipped off. “Shit.” She tried again. “Like it’s greased or something.” She
looked at her fingers, wiped them on her sweater.
Taggert touched her shoulder. “Let me see what I can do.”
His fingers slipped off no matter how hard he pinched. He tried shoving the
ring sideways off the table. It wouldn’t budge. The table tipped over, the ring
stuck firmly in the center of it. He picked the table up and set it on its
legs.
“That seems to settle that.” Aleytys looked quickly at Grey,
turned away; he was stretched out on the rug, his eyes closed, his gaunt face
still; he hardly seemed to breathe. “Tag, see if you can find something to push
that table through the door to me. Stay as far back as you can.” She glanced at
Grey, then Ticutt. “Hurry a little, please.”
Taggert frowned at the nearest of the claw rods, shook his
head; he prowled about the room, found a closet, a wooden rod holding some of
the Ajin’s clothing; he knocked it loose and brought it back, held it flat in
front of him. “Should be long enough.” He set the table close to the door, then
used the rod to nudge it through.
The table juddered through the doorway, the ring suddenly
loose, dunking against its top as it shivered from the rug to the tiles of the
hallway. Taggert stepped back and stood leaning on the rod, watching Aleytys as
she scooped up the ring. She ran fingertips over the incised design on its square
flat top. “I can’t read anything in this,” she said. “Abra, what about the
doorway now?”
A long silence, then the android spoke. “Ship says, still
activity around the doorway. Ship does not—repeat, does not—think you should be
the one to try crossing. Ship says Kell has certainly set special snares for
you.” Silence again. “Ship says since all the captives are out, she is going to
burn out the scaffolding, let the bubbleverse collapse. That should remove the
last danger. Ship says wait, don’t do anything yet. Ship is coming in low to
make sure of the cut, says she stops talking now because she is busy. Wait.”
Aleytys drew her hand across her forehead, down the side of her
face, pressed it against her mouth, her eyes fixed on Grey.
Shadith glanced at her, went to kneel beside him. “He’s all
right, Lee, just taking it easy.”
Grey chuckled suddenly, tried to sit up. Taggert dragged a
chair over to him, raised his shoulders so he could lean against it. He looked
exhausted but alert. His hands were shaking on his thighs; the cloth of his
trousers, bunched about wasted legs, trembled with the trembling of his hands.
“Don’t fuss, Lee.”
“I’ll fuss if I want. Look at you.”
“I have felt more heroic.”
“Well, it’s better than dead. I thought ...” She broke off
as Abra touched her arm.
“Ship says scaffolding is gone, archira. No activity
detectable about the doorway.”
Aleytys looked down. The ring was melting into smoke that
curled away from her hand, fading into nothing. Another breath and even the
smoke was gone. She flung herself into the bedroom and knelt beside Grey. She
caught hold of his hands, lifted them to her face, her eyes on his. He smiled
at her, the hurts between them forgotten for the moment, the need back.
“Stretch out,” she said after a while. “Let me work on you.”
Shadith scrambled to her feet, stood watching a moment as
Aleytys set her hands on Grey’s chest. Lee’s changed, she thought. More
settled, I think. That’s the word. Settled. Yes. She knows who she is now and
where she’s going. Linfyar brushed past her, went to poke at the sodden
figure of the Ajin, radiating satisfaction. The Ajin had never liked him, a
feeling fully reciprocated. Shadith sighed, stretched, then shooed him away.
The Ajin was twisted in sprawl that made her back ache as she inspected him.
She looked up as Taggert came to stand beside her. “How long does that gas keep
them under?”
“Couple hours.” He felt about his jacket, pulled out two
patch seals. “I’ll slip the claws, you paste these on.”
Shadith nodded. She pulled the backing off one of the Patches.
The claws whipped out of the Ajin’s wrist and blood started to pump. She
slapped on the patch, smoothed it out, moved along the bed, dealt with the
ankle wound as Taggert collapsed the second claw. She stepped back. “I’ll get a
wet towel so we can clean him up a bit. You pull the tangle off.” She felt in
her pockets. “I’ve got cord somewhere.”
“Never mind, Shadow, I’ve got slave wire.” She nodded. “Back
in a minute. And hey, you ought to hunt in those things you dumped for something
he can wear. Unless you prefer him wrapped like a piece of meat.” She looked
around. Aleytys was bent over Ticutt. Grey was asleep. “Just had a thought. And
you know what you can do with your funny faces. Grey and Ticutt aren’t going to
want to put those stinking clothes back on once they’ve had a bath.” Taggert
took out a flat tin. “Get the towel, Shadow.”
“Yessir, yessir, happy to serve you, yessir.” Giggling, she
trotted into the fresher. “Hey, Tag, you ought to see this, there’s a tub in
here big enough to float a harem.”
“Get the towel, Shadow.” Laughter in his voice. She pulled a
towel off the rack, bunched it in the basin and turned the water on. With a
groaning yawn, she stretched, then splashed handful of cold water on her face.
She yawned again, dabbled her fingers in the water. Got to talk to Po’
sometime soon; he’s probably whirling in his whatever with all that’s going on.
She wrung the towel out and went back into the bedroom.
The Ajin was laid out like a corpse, cleaned up, dressed,
bound with Taggert’s slave wire. Shadith checked him again. He should be waking
in a bit; when she touched him, she could feel a sluggish stirring. She
smiled, thinking about what he’d be going through when he did wake. You
earned every second of it too. Mmm. Harp. And a chat with Po’. She left the
bedroom and tried to leave the apartment, but the warbot at the door wouldn’t
let her pass.
“Lee.”
“What, Shadow?”
“Got some stuff I want to get. Tell that ‘bot to let me
out.”
“Go where? It’s quiet in here, but the ‘bots outside say
there are still snipers in the rubble. They’re clearing them out, but ...”
“I’m not going outside, just over to the rooms where the
Ajin put me. Left my harp there. I want it back. Send the extra ‘bot with me if
you’re nervous.”
“I’ll do that. You’ll probably need it to power the door. We
chewed up the control center when we passed through it. Before you go, Shadow,
Grey and Ticutt are going to wake starving. And Linfyar’s hungry. Any kind of
kitchen in here? I don’t want to leave until we’re all ready to run.”
“Linfy’s always hungry. God knows how big he’s going to get
before he stops growing. Kitchen. Uh-huh. The Ajin was pretty paranoid. Has a
separate power source and aircon system for these rooms. Kept his food separate
too, sealed in an autochef Kell had his androids build for him.” Shadith
grinned. “Poison tasters and all. Come on. I’ll show you.”
Lights flaring, the warbot crouched in the sitting room.
Shadith looked around, sniffed cautiously. With the door open the air wasn’t
too bad. The viewscreen was gray glass, a mirror reflecting the ‘bot, a figure
out of nightmare sketched in light and shadow. The room had a dulled dusty
feel, abandoned, though she’d been gone less than one night; it looked like any
cheap hotel room after the guests had left. She jerked the velvet curtain to
one side and went into the bedroom.
The air smelled staler in the bedroom; it was harder to
breathe in there. The harp in its case stood beside the bed where she’d left
it. She started to hoist the strap onto her shoulder, then frowned at the
screen. The Ajin’s stash. He had to have the gold and the sweetamber to pay off
whatever runner he dealt with. Those types never heard of credit. Should be in
his rooms somewhere. Now there’s a hoard I’d like to get my hands on. I’m
not riding free anymore; have to make my own way. Her reflection floated in
the glass, insubstantial as a ghost. Ghost. Old Po’. This is about the only
place I’m going to have privacy enough. Well, Shadow, quit dithering and do
something. She let the strap fall and stretched out on the bed, resting her
forearm across her eyes to shut out the lights from the other room. With her
tiredness in this the dregs of a very long night, it was hard to quiet mind and
body enough without slipping too far and dropping into sleep.
*What is happening there, Shadow? Who was that came down
like a fire wind?* (agitation, suspicion, anger)
*Hello, Old Po’. Relax.*
*Relax!*
*Sure. It’s over. My friends are sprung. The Ajin’s in
Hunters’ hands. And you don’t have to worry about that ship. Belongs to a
friend of mine. She tends to overreact at times, but she’s good to have around
if there’s problems.*
*I’ve got lice in my forest.* (indignant grumbling) *Blown
there by the big wind your friend made.*
*Hey, Old Po’, don’t you try telling me you don’t know what
to do with them. Hah! You and your soft sides, you run your forest hard and
tight, god help anyone tries to go against you. Which reminds me, let Perolat
know I’m all right, huh? Tell her what’s happened and why I came here. I’d tell
her myself, but that’d just make trouble for her. The closest I’m going to get
to Dusta is that islet where I parked my lander. Listen, Po’ Annutj, what I’m
gonna say is important. There’ll be trouble when Hunters hands over the Ajin. I
think I can talk Grey into hauling him off to Pajungg itself to turn him over.
That’d give you a nineday or so to get ready to handle the homeworlders. Ajin’s
been making them look stupid and small; when their egos start expanding,
they’re going to come out stomping. Um. Maybe it’d be a good idea to organize a
little guerrilla activity on your own, something to keep them honest without
being too serious about it. But that’s your problem now. How you deal with it
is up to you. ‘F you don’t mind, I’ll come back in a few years to see how
things worked out and we could have that chat we talked about but never did.*
*Ancient child, I’ll miss you.*
*Ahh, no you won’t, Old Po’, you’ll be a lot too busy.*
*Never too busy. The All keep you, Shadow.*
*Well, see you, friend.*
Shadith shook herself out of the half-doze and sat up. The air
in the bedroom was heavy and dusty, and it smelled. She caught hold of the harp
case’s strap, slid it over her shoulder, coughed, got to her feet, coughed
again, wrinkled her nose in disgust and went out.
Aleytys and the others were sitting at the Ajin’s dining
table, eating and listening to Linfy tell about their part in the Ajin’s campaign.
Taggert looked up, saw her, waved her to the empty chair beside him. Sensing
the divided interest of his audience, Linfy went back to eating.
Aleytys pushed at her hair, smiled at Shadith. “You’ve had
quite a time here.”
“Surprised the hell out of me first time it happened.”
Shadith began filling her plate. “My sisters used to do that. Not me. I thought
the art died with them. Apparently not. Though maybe it’s just the pollen.”
Grey set his cup down, shook his head. “Hard to believe.
It’s a good thing I didn’t get a look at you in there, Shadow.” He passed a
hand over shaggy hair. The gray streaks were growing into patches, more of them
than she remembered from the last time she’d seen him. He was relaxed and calm
now; the drawn look was gone.
She shrugged. “It’s a problem I’ll grow out of.” She touched
the belly of the cha pot—still hot—and filled her cup. “Where we going from
here?”
“That’s up in the air still, Shadow,” Aleytys said. “Me and
Linfy, we need lift to my lander. I borrowed it from a friend and he wants it
back.”
“That I can do. Come on board with me and tell ship where to
go.” Aleytys looked around the table. “What about the rest of you?” She
chuckled. “Between you all and the smugglers, there must be more ships than
rocks in the Belt.” Taggert nodded. “I could use a lift. The Ajin collected me
with the other runners, so I’ve got no way back. Besides, I always wanted to
see the inside of a Vryhh ship.”
Grey frowned. “Mine’s been in orbit about Avosing for the better
part of a year. For all I know the Pajunggs could have towed it away.”
Ticutt looked up. “Still there when I got here. I used it as
a drop station for my reports.”
Aleytys looked at her hands. “I didn’t see it, but I didn’t
waste time when I got here, just came charging ahead. Well, I was in a hurry.
Ship didn’t say anything.” She tilted her chair onto its back legs so she could
look through the doorway. “Abra. Come here, please.”
The android moved with silky grace into the opening. “Archira?”
“Ask ship to locate ... you tell it, Grey.”
As he ran through the characteristics of his ship and what
signals she’d respond to, Aleytys sat frowning at the table. She picked up a
fork and began drawing lines in a drop of gravy. When Grey finished, she tapped
the tines on the table and watched the planes of the android’s nonface.
After a moment’s silence, Abra said, “Ship says Hunter ship
is in the orbit described and appears undamaged.”
“Good. Tell ship to be ready to pick us up in about an hour.
What’s happening with the snipers out front?”
“Warbots report eleven killed, three injured, seventeen
fled, two still firing. All other life sources have left the crater. Ah! Now,
only one sniper left.”
“Something else we’d better get settled.” Grey sat up,
waited until he had their attention. “The Field Ops’ share of the fee. I’m out
of it, it’s up to you all, but it seems to me the one who’s done the most to
earn it is young Shadow here. Hunter or not.”
Shadith shook her head. “Just make complications.” She
grinned. “I figure the Ajin’s stash would be pay enough for my trouble.”
Taggert gave a shout of laughter. “I’m sure you do. Well,
Shadow, you awesome child, far as I’m concerned, you more than earned it.”
Ticutt nodded, then sat silent again, removed from all this,
locked in his head, fighting shadows he made for himself.
“Right. I’ll ask ship to find the stash for you.” Aleytys
set her fork across her plate. “About the fee. I’m out too. That leaves you,
Tag, and Ticutt; the two of you can figure percentages later. Who’s taking
charge of the body in there?”
“Grey,” Taggert said. “You’re Hunter of Record, Grey; the
rest of this is none of their damn business, those Pajunggs.’’
Grey sighed. “I was hoping to head straight home.”
Taggert’s pale eyes laughed at him; his off-center nose
seemed to twitch. “Time you stopped lazing around letting the rest of us do all
the work.”
“Umm. Grey.”
“Shadow?”
“I’d kind of appreciate it if you hauled the Ajin to Pajungg
itself before you turned him over. There’s some good people here who could use
the time to get set for what the Grand Doawai and his creeps are going to do to
them.”
Ticutt looked up. “Perolat?”
“Uh-huh. And a bunch more.”
He sucked in a long breath, let it out. “Add my voice to
Shadow’s.”
Shadith waited to see if he’d say more, but he was finished.
Grey hesitated. “Lee ...”
“I could take your ship in tow?”
He looked down at his hands, a private man who didn’t like
exposing his feelings to outsiders. “We’ve got some talking to do,” he said
finally. “Your ship’s as good a place as any.”
Wolff
the diadem cleared off the board
goodbye to the RMoahl
Wolff system.
Teegah’s Limit.
The Pajungg Hunt was completed. Grey, Ticutt, Taggert were
sitting in the Records and Accounting room at Hunters, flaking their file
reports. With Aleytys’ first ship signed over to her, Shadith had taken off to
hunt up Swardheld/Quayle so she could return his lander. She’d be back eventually;
the greater part of the Ajin’s stash was in Aleytys’s lokbox at Wolff’s only
bank.
The RMoahl ship was a dark blotch filling the screen.
“Call them,” Aleytys said.
A square bloomed in the center of the screen, in the screen
a face that only another RMoahl could love: dark leathery skin, flat nose, thin
horizontal nostrils, long upper lip, mouth a gash filled with omnivore’s teeth.
Antennae twitched from pompoms of orange fuzz. Great yellow eyes with slit
pupils blinked slowly. The RMoahl second, Mok’tekii.
“Show me to them.”
Mok-tekii’s antennae whipped about, the orange fur of his
pompoms stirred as if blown by an erratic wind.
Aleytys sat up, the grassy knoll remolding itself to support
her. “Hounds of the RMoahl, how would you like to quit this tedious watch and
go home?”
“Don’t mock us, Aleytys Hunter.”
“I do not mock, Mok-tekii Second. Or if I do, only a little.
You’ve complicated my life quite a lot, you know. Well, that’s finished now. I
have come into my heritage and rid myself of yours.” She opened the box on her
lap and lifted out the diadem, held it up, the flexible round draped over her
hand. “I hope you take better care of it this time. It’s empty now and hungry.
If you want it still, come get it.”
“Forgive us, despina. We do indeed desire the diadem, but to
come aboard that ship ...”
“I understand. Abra.” When the android was in the viewrange,
she pointed at it and said, “Abra will wait in the lock for whomever or
whatever you choose to send. Meaning no discourtesy, Hound, I’m quite as
reluctant to visit as you are.”
The diadem passed smoothly into RMoahl claws.
The koeiyi Sensayii appeared in the screen, went through an
elaborate salute. “All honor is yours, Aleytys Hunter. The debt is ours. Should
you have need, we three will come however far you call.”
Aleytys suppressed a chuckle. The koeiyi had shown little
sign he possessed anything resembling humor. All in the best heroic
tradition, she thought. Ah well, he means well. She sketched a bow
of her own, spread her hands. “No debt at all, koeiyi. Let there be peace
between my kin and yours.”
To her relief the koeiyi had nothing more to say. The square
blanked and the RMoahl globe ship backed away, began to gather speed. In
seconds it was beyond the reach of her screens, running toward the speed it
needed to slip into the intersplit and dive toward the RMoahl sun.
Wolff
signing off
Grey came to her. In a way his time inside the pocket
universe had been like a wild trek, stripping away confusions and hurt and
anger. He wanted her, needed her, yet he knew he could live well enough without
her if they couldn’t reach some accommodation mat would let them share a life.
It wasn’t going to be easy. She knew that. He knew it. And quietly he came to
her, without fuss he came to her, knowing her more intimately, in his way, than
those who lived within her head had known her. Understanding that her need for
home was far greater than his, he came to her.
He said beside her as they’d sat so many times, watching the
sun go down, watching one of the paler more subtle sunsets, a cloudless sky,
the glaciers summer-shrunken.
What she’d grasped on Ibex she knew more intimately now. In
the first part of her life she’d had a goal that was simple and essentially
extrinsic. What lay before her now was more complex. The thing she wanted now
lived in words like society, relationship, friend, compromise, patience,
involvement, building. And time. Vrithian had altered her outlook on a lot of
things. Time to be a part of Wolff in ways she’d never been. She didn’t even know
the parents of the girl who took care of her horses. Head had produced her when
Aleytys asked for someone. Who was she? What was her life like at home? Why did
she prefer a small cramped apartment built onto a stable? Why wonder they
suspect me, the Wolfflan, no wonder they don’t trust me. What do they know
about me? Nothing except rumor. She smiled to herself. Turn me into your
comfortable neighborhood housewife worrying about paying the bills and what her
kids were doing with whom. Kids? I suppose so. Now that I have a past and a
future to give them. My Sharl, my lovely son, you came too soon. I’m not going
to look for you; I’ve said farewell to you twice now and that’s enough. Well,
we’ve got time. If nothing else, you and I have time.
The last embers of the sunset died. The fire was down to
coals and the room was beginning to chill. Grey rose from his chair, stood
waiting for her.
She went to him, leaned against him, enjoying the mingled
odors of hair, flesh and clothing.
Wordless, they walked to the door. Their talking was done.
She touched a sensor, let him draw her into the hall.
Behind them the shutters rolled across the windows. Crawling
over the coals, the fire moved slower and slower until it died completely. The
house creaked and sighed into its summer temper and settled into a deepening
stillness.
Quester’s Endgame
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Quester’s Endgame
Diadem, Book 9
Jo Clayton
1986
“WELL,
WELL, IT’S MUD-FACE. SO YOU SQUIRMED YOUR WAY HERE.”
Aleytys turned slowly, trying
to control the surge of fear and anger that shook her when she heard that deep
fluid voice, a voice she’d heard only one time waking, a thousand times since
in nightmare.
“Mud,” he said. “Look at
that, all of you. Look at what you want to call Vryhh. I will not, I will not
have that slime call itself Vryhh. I will NOT.” Silence from all the Vrya in
the dome. “To the death, Mud,” Kell said into that silence. “I declare war
between us. I declare that you and any who try to help you, Mud, will die at
the hands of me and mine.”
Mastering her own rage,
Aleytys sucked in a breath, let it out. “To the death, cousin,” she said at
last ....
Jo Clayton has written:
The Diadem Saga
Diadem From The Stars
Lamarchos
Irsud
Maeve
Star Hunters
The Nowhere Hunt
Ghosthunt
The Snares Of Ibex
Quester’s Endgame
The Duel Of Sorcery Series
Moongather
Moonscatter
Changer’s Moon
Others
A Bait Of Dreams
Drinker Of Souls
Who’s Who And What’s What
For old readers of the series who are obviously folk of
intelligence and taste but alas not Mento-the-Marvels capable of memorizing
telephone books and regurgitating the contents on cue, for new readers who are
courageously plunging into the ninth (and last) book about Aleytys and the
diadem, here’s a combination orientation and memory jogger.
ALEYTYS: Born
in a mountain valley called the vadi Raqsidan on a world called Jaydugar,
raised in an agrarian, preindustrial culture. Psi-empath and translator,
healer, flamethrower and worrier. She’s had one child, a son, had him stolen
from her before he was a year old, gave him up again when he was about four.
She acquired the diadem after she ran from a barbecue where she was going to be
the roastee. In her travels from world to world, while she was searching for
her mother, she was (among other things) sold as a slave to provide meat for a
wasp queen’s egg, then she rode a smuggler’s ship as his bedmate and translator.
Finally she got a steady job with Hunters Inc on Wolff. In the bits of time
left over from her struggles to survive and go on with her search for her
mother, she got to know more about the diadem and the entities trapped within
it, acquiring three live-in friends and critics. Sometimes it got very crowded
inside her skull.
DIADEM, the: An artifact from an ancient extinct civilization.
Both a trap and an instrument of great flexibility and power. A focus for
psi-forces, a prison for the self-aware part of the wearer once the wearer’s
body is dead. Gold-wire lilies with jewel hearts set on a chain of flat gold
links. Once it’s on someone’s head it can’t be removed until that person’s dead
or until it’s temporarily deactivated. It swims easily from reality to reality,
invisible until its powers are called on. When Aleytys first acquired it, she
had almost no control over it; as she learned to know those within it, her
control increased but was never complete.
HARSKARI: The first to be caught. Jealous of her skills,
angry at the breakup of their relationship, an ex-lover constructed the diadem
and gave it to Harskari saying it was a peace offering. As soon as she put it
on, he killed her and threw her body into a volcano, where it burned to ash.
The diadem with her consciousness trapped within was untouched. Her lover’s revenge.
In the course of time, the diadem was ejected from the volcano during an
eruption, and lay sealed inside a clump of lava for eons until the working of
wind and water eroded it loose. All this time Harskari was awake and aware of
the nothing around her, hanging on to her sanity by the fingernails she didn’t
have. Civilizations rose and fell around her. The sun went nova and ashed the
life off the world. And still she was awake, aware. More time passed. A
wandering singer happened by, landed to do some repair work on the rusty
cobbled-together wreck she was flying world to world. She found the diadem,
dusted it off, was enchanted by its loveliness and set it on her head. And
Harskari finally had some company.
SHADITH: Singer and poet, the last of her kind. The
second trapped and the second freed. In the early days when Aleytys was still
ignorant of any technology more complicated than a water mill, Shadith provided
instruction and information and occasionally took control of Aleytys’s body and
talents to deal with things that were dangerous mysteries to the mountain girl.
Shadith is now installed in the body of a young girl, a hawk rider killed in a
skirmish on Ibex. Shadith prodded Aleytys into repairing the body and sliding
her into it, stabilizing her in the emptied flesh. She looks about fourteen, a
slight energetic girl with cafe-au-lait skin, chocolate eyes, brown-gold hair a
riot of tiny curls. In her original body—different appearance, different
species—she crashed on a primitive world and lay moldering in the ruins of her
ship for several millennia until one of the natives happened on her ship and
took the diadem from her crumbling skull.
SWARDHELD: The third of the trapped entities. Raised in his
father’s smithy, meant to follow his father’s trade as swordsmith and armorer.
Driven from that by his restless, rebellious nature (a repellent brat, he told
Aleytys), he joined a mercenary band so he could eat, rose to be companion and
war leader to a shrewd and devious man who managed to put together a small but
thriving empire, had to flee when the man was poisoned, discovered the diadem,
came back out of the mountains to avenge his friend and commander, became an
emperor of sorts himself with the help of the diadem, was poisoned in his turn
and joined the other trapped spirits. On a world called Nowhere he was sucked
out of the diadem by a floating ghost (a creature that preyed on life force),
but when the ghost was distracted by an attack from Aleytys, he broke free of
it and slipped into the body of a man just stripped of life. Supported by
Aleytys and the others, he managed to spark new life in the abandoned flesh and
found himself embodied for the first time in millennia. This accident and its
outcome showed Aleytys that it was possible for Harskari and Shadith to acquire
bodies of their own if they wanted them and found suitable ones.
RMOAHL, the: The diadem lay in their treasure vault for
generations until it was stolen by Miks Stavver. They are intelligent,
un-aggressive, communal, hierarchical, spiderish beings. And very very patient.
They are fanatical about their treasures; what they have, they intend to keep.
They will go to just about any lengths to regain what is lost, though they avoid
causing pain or injury almost as fanatically; their fearsome appearance is to
some degree deceptive; though they will fight effectively if driven to it.
STAVVER, MIKS: According to him, he’s the best thief in
known space. A compulsive gambler. Challenged by impossibilities. The only way
to steal anything from the RMoahl and make a profit on it was to get rid of it
very quickly indeed; the RMoahl hounds would go after the object and forget the
thief. His plans went seriously awry, he crashed on Jaydugar, lost the diadem
to a trio of local witches who passed it to Aleytys, collected Aleytys and got
them both offworld. He was her lover for a while and later, after they parted,
played surrogate father to her son when the boy ran away from home. Gambling
fever eventually did him in when he wagered money he didn’t have with beings
who had no sense of humor.
SHAREEM: A Vryhh. Aleytys’s mother. Caught in the delirium
of a swamp fever, she crashed on Jaydugar; too sick to defend herself, she was
enslaved and sold to the Azdar, Aleytys’s father. She recovered from the fever
to find herself pregnant. As soon as Aleytys was able to manage without her,
she left a letter telling her daughter about her and how to find her, then
wangled her way offworld, back to the life she was leading before the disastrous
days on Jaydugar.
KELL: A Vryhh. He loathes the thought of a
half-breed Vryhh and has tried before to destroy Aleytys. He maneuvered reactionary,
power-seeking Watukuu into secretly rebelling and trying to take over a colony
world in order to use it as a base to attack the government of the homeworld;
then he maneuvered that homeworld government into hiring Hunters Inc to deal
with the rebellion. He played games with the mind of Canyli Heldeen, the director
of Hunters Inc, so that she assigned Aleytys to the Hunt. He captured Aleytys
and started to torment her, but with the backing of the Three, she defeated
him, then let her need to heal dictate her actions, something she was sorry for
almost as soon as it was done.
LINFYAR: Aleytys went to Ibex to find Kenton Esgard;
according to the instructions her mother left in that letter, he could put the
two of them in touch. When Aleytys arrived, she found his daughter Hana in
charge of his house and business while he was roaming over Ibex, driven by his
need to extend his life, hunting a place called Sil Evareen where men were
supposed to live forever. In her search for him, shortly after Shadith acquired
her body, Aleytys came across a small boy running away from home and
castration. He had an extraordinarily beautiful soprano voice and his owner
wanted to keep it unchanged. He is about nine years old, covered head to toe
with short, very soft mottled brown fur. He was born without eyes, only faint
furry hollows where they would have been. His mobile pointed faun’s ears can
hear sounds far beyond the normal range of mammal ears; he has assorted
proximity senses that serve him almost as well as sight, and echo location for
more distant objects. He learned very early the arts of surviving in a place
where children born visibly mutant were put outside the gates once they were
weaned and left to the whims of weather and the hunger of predators. Aleytys
means to send him to University where he can get an education and further training
in music. He is not enthusiastic about this idea and keeps poking about for
some ways to postpone (preferably forever) such a dreary outcome to his
adventures.
Wolff
warning bell
distance and direction obscure
Aleytys stepped from the cradle lift and shivered in the raw
wind. She’d returned to spring mud and damp spring bluster, winter having come
and gone while she walked across Ibex. Behind her she heard Linfyar’s
complaining chatter as he felt that wind in spite of his fur and the blanket he
had wrapped about him, heard Shadith’s impatient replies. Smiling a little, she
started for the terminal building across the stained and cracking metacrete.
Wolff’s starport was kept deliberately crude and unwelcoming, only a rough
field with a few battered cradles for ships and shuttles, a squat mud-colored
terminal whose sole grace was a steep roof where dark red tiles rose to a peak;
the Wolfflan wanted no outsiders tempted to stay and put pressure on scarce
resources.
When she rounded the corner of the terminal, Aleytys saw
Canyli and Tamris Heldeen standing beside a flitter, the icy wind blowing their
coats and scarves into a shapeless flurry about them. Grey wasn’t there. Is
he still furious with me? She shortened her stride, excitement and
anticipation beginning to drain out of her.
Head’s smile was wide and warm. “There’s a prance in your
walk. You found what you wanted.” She held the back door open, stood watching
with quiet interest as Shadith herded Linfyar inside and settled beside him.
Tamris followed them in and sat beside Shadith.
Aleytys slipped into the forward seat, wriggled around and
sighed as Head took her place at the console. “I hope this doesn’t mean you’ve
got another Hunt I can’t refuse,” she said, an amiable weariness in her voice.
“I’ve got a visitor coming.”
“No ... um ... not a Hunt ...”
Aleytys turned to stare at Head, surprised by the hesitation
and uncertainty in the words.
“You were gone longer than I expected.”
“Ibex was complicated. Where’s Grey?”
“Hunt.”
Aleytys made a soft annoyed sound. “I thought he was done
with all that.”
“He was restless, needed a distraction. And Hagan was needling
him. He thought he’d better get out before he lost his temper and made things
worse for us.”
“Hardheaded idiot.” Aleytys moved restlessly. “When is he
due back?”
“Seven months ago.”
“What?”
“He’s disappeared.”
“Disappeared?” It came out scratchy. Her throat was suddenly
dry.
“Wait till we get to your house. The reports are there.”
“Right.” She looked at her hands, expecting to see them tremble,
surprised that they lay still on her thighs. She pressed down hard on the long
muscles. “Is he dead?”
“I don’t know.”
Aleytys slid down in the seat. She couldn’t comprehend it. Seven
months. Grey .... She stirred restlessly. “What’s doing with my home share?”
“Hanging fire.” Head went silent as she edged the flier
between two peaks of the angular and austerely beautiful mountains ringing the
cup that held the port, mocking the mud and ugliness of the field. “We’ve just
finished a fight over Dristig’s seat in the Forsaemal. I wanted Grey on the
Hunters board with me and Hagan knew it. He and his toadies started a nasty campaign
against Grey. And you.” Head chuckled. “Backfired on him. You weren’t here.”
Another chuckle. “Maybe the best thing you ever did for me. Wolfflan don’t like
backbiting. He did drive Grey into taking the Hunt, thought he’d won, but we
ran Sybille instead. He could handle Grey, make him explode and say things he
wouldn’t otherwise, but Sybille tied him in knots, made that snerp Lukkit he was
pushing look like a halfwit, couldn’t chew and walk at the same time. She took
Dristig’s seat in a sweep.” She was almost cheerful now, talking with an ease
missing at the beginning of the flight. “Hagan’s the next to go to the Wolfflan
for confirmation.” Her nose twitched. “I’d appreciate it if you were on Hunt
when that happens. It’s going to be a bastard of a fight.”
“Grey?”
“If he’s back by then. I know I promised not to push you,
Lee ....” She took the flitter up over a skim of clouds, shot a questioning
half-smile at Aleytys, her thick pewter brows raised over rounded eyes. With a
self-mocking shake of her head, she punched in the course for Aleytys’s house.
“We’ll have your home share put through by then. Sybille’s working on it.”
“Thanks.” Aleytys settled her head against the rest and
stared up at the flitter’s roof, seeing instead the leggy black orb of the
RMoahl ship waiting out beyond Teegah’s limit with that cursed patience, that
not quite threat. Wanting their diadem. Stavver was luckier than he knew,
getting rid of the thing. She wondered briefly what he and Snarl were doing,
expecting to feel the familiar loss and longing as she thought of her son.
Nothing. Still numb. She was as detached as if she were a ghost riding her own
shoulders watching her body perform, pulling its strings.
The snow had melted around her house, though droppings of
dirty white remained where shade was deepest under the trees. The gardens were
mud slopping about struggling plants, and in the field by the stream her horses
grazed at withered grass just pushing up new green shoots. Head set the flitter
down in the paved patio on the south side of the house.
A fire crackled briskly, driving the unused chill from the
sitting room; a pot of cha waited on a table beside a comfortable leather
chair. Aleytys felt the numbness break inside her, pain at loss and pleasure at
being home mixing uneasily in her. She dropped into the chair and stared into
the flames, quivering all over, fighting to keep control. Tamris poured the tea
and passed the cups around. She tapped Aleytys on the shoulder. “Lee?”
Aleytys sucked in a breath, let it out in a ragged sigh.
“Please.” She gulped at the cha, and the warmth spreading through her eased
some of the shaking. Tamris filled the cup for her again, and she emptied it as
quickly as she had the first, then she set the cup aside and turned to face
Canyli Heldeen. “Tell me about it.”
Head touched the fax sheets in her lap, lifted the top
sheet, put it back. “He left three weeks after you did. Told me he’d been a
fool, that his head was so scrambled he wasn’t up to dealing with Hagan, so he
was going to clear out awhile. A clutch of Pajunggs was here, looking for you,
as usual, but willing to settle for any Hunter they could get.” She fingered
the fax sheets and sighed. “Simple Hunt, a find-and-snatch. Should have taken
Grey a couple of weeks, a month at the outside.” She cleared her throat, held
out her cup for her daughter to fill, using the time to examine Aleytys, her
shrewd light eyes flicking from face to hands and back.
Aleytys said nothing, sat gazing at the fire, waiting for
her to go on.
Head cleared her throat again, set the cup down. “I didn’t
start worrying about him when he was gone a month—sometimes the simple ones
turn wild on you. After three months, it wasn’t a question of worrying. The
Pajunggs were getting nervous too; they wanted to know what was happening. I
sent Ticutt over to Avosing to find out what Grey was up to. First thing he
reported was that Grey had got to Keama Dusta—that’s the only city; it’s a
colony planet, sparsely settled, just a part of one continent. Anyway, Grey got
that far, spent a few days nosing about, then he vanished. Went into the forest
and didn’t come out. You know Ticutt; Methodical’s his middle name. He set up a
satellite drop, Grey’s ship, sent coded reports to it every night, and a
squealer pulsed them over to us. Then he went into the forest as Grey had. And
the reports stopped. That was three months ago. Pajunggs been on my back. Very
unhappy. But I waited for you. Hagan’s been exercising his tongue, or was until
Sybille asked if he was volunteering.”
“Ah.” Aleytys sat up. “And you want me to do the volunteering.”
“If you will.”
A strained silence settled over the room. The fire crackled
noisily, snapping and hissing; tendrils of adoradee vine tapped at the tall
narrow windows, a jittery slithery noise. The leather creaked under Aleytys as
she shifted position. “He’d really hate it, you know. Me running after him like
an overprotective mother after a half-wit child. Madar, Canyli!” She slapped
her hand down on the chair arm, the sound loud and abrupt. Linfyar spilled cha
on his leg, yipped and began rubbing at his fur with a napkin Shadith pushed
into his hand.
Shadith watched Aleytys, worried. She knew too much about
the ups and downs of the relationship between Grey and Aleytys and too much
about the bitter strength of the bond between them. She switched her gaze to
Head and thought about what the woman had just said: I waited for
you. TRAP. The word popped to the front of her mind and quivered there in
big black letters. She bit her lip, wondering if she should wait or say
something, but kept quiet when Aleytys spoke again.
“What a choice you give me,” she said. “In a few weeks my
mother will be here to take me to Vrithian. You know how long I’ve waited for
that.” Absently she brushed at her hair. Her hand shook a little; she brought
it quickly down and clasped it with the other. “But what if I am the only one
who can pull him out of that hole? Him and Ticutt? If they aren’t dead already.”
She bent forward, her hair falling forward to hide her face. Shudders moved in
waves through her body. Shadith got up from the floor where she was sitting
beside Linfyar and went to kneel by Aleytys, cradling Lee’s shaking hands in
hers.
“I’ve thought of that,” Head said softly. “I’ve also thought
about another time when someone came to us with a Hunt that was something else.
Grey sucked in might be an accident; Ticutt makes it a habit. A habit we have
to break, Lee. We’re in the bind we kept putting you in—we can’t afford to fail.
Our reputation is only as good as its last manifestation. We’ll have to send in
another Hunter to finish the job, but we can’t go on dropping drachs down that
hole. Two of the top four left, Sybille and Taggert, but I don’t think the
outcome would be different. Eventually we have to come to you. Interesting,
isn’t it? We have to come to you.”
Shadith felt a jolt pass through Aleytys, nodded to herself.
“Trap,” she said, “because you’re close to reaching Vrithian.”
Aleytys freed her hands, pressed the heels of the palms
against her eyes, pulled the hands down her face. “Kell.”
“One of Ticutt’s last reports.” Head ruffled through the fax
sheets, pulled one out, put it on the top. “He said he picked up a smell of an
alien mixed up with the Sikin Ajin, a master designer who built some things for
him that impressed the hell out of everyone around him. Just a wisp of a wisp,
but after Sybille he’s the best ferret we’ve got.”
“Lee.” Shadith caught hold of Aleytys’s hand and shook it
side to side. “Listen. Go to Vrithian. He’ll come after you, he can’t help it.
Send me to Avosing. You know what I can do. And he won’t be expecting anything
like me, if he’s hanging around there still. Linfy and me working together,
we’ll sniff out that trap and spring Grey loose before anyone knows what’s
happening. And Ticutt. You could probably do it better and faster, but look at
it this way—you there on Vrithian, me on Avosing, we’ll be coming at the same
problem from different directions.” She jumped to her feet. “You’ll be facing
Kell; you’ll have the hard part. Linfy and me, well, it’ll be a walk-over.”
“Linfyar? No.”
“Don’t fuss, Lee. He’s tough. Aren’t you, imp?”
“Uh-huh.” Linfyar flicked his pointed ears forward, then
back. “I want to go, dama, I do. It’s better than school.” Vast contempt in the
last word.
“No doubt, Linfy, but ...”
“Lee.” Shadith bent down and patted her arm. “Look, I’ll
take care of him. This is the best way, really it is.” She straightened, turned
to Head. “Want to bet Kell’s had a long look at all the escrow flakes? Want to
bet he’s even found a way into Hunters records, knows everything about all your
Hunters, down to the way they breathe? Send Aleytys to Avosing and you maybe
win, maybe lose. Send anyone else alone without backing and you lose for sure.
Send a Hunter, Taggert maybe, and me, not together, working on our own, while
Aleytys tackles the other end. You’ve got a better chance that way than any
other.” She spread her arms, then sketched a bow. “Aleytys isn’t so good on the
courtesies—she hasn’t introduced me. I’m Shadith. Singer and poet. We’ve met
but I was in another body then. Uh-huh, you got it.”
Head put her hand over her mouth; her eyes danced with the
laughter she couldn’t quite suppress. After a minute she said, “You look about
fourteen.”
“So? The body is, I’m not.” Shadith slanted a quick anxious
glance at Aleytys, who sat stone-faced not looking at either of them, then
fixed her eyes on Head. “I’m your wild card. Play me.”
“You think a lot of yourself.” Head’s voice was dryly
skeptical, the amusement gone from her eyes.
“Yeah.”
“Aleytys?”
“Lee’s going to Vrithian.” Shadith stepped back so she could
see both the women. “You have to, Lee, you know that. He wants to distract you,
keep you and Shareem apart. Use that against him. Go with your mother, distract
him with his own distraction, draw him off from Avosing so Taggert and I won’t
have to fight him, just what he’s left behind.” She started pacing back and
forth along the hearth. “Listen to me. He knows you too well. Remember what
happened the last time. He almost took you. If the three of us hadn’t been mere
to back you, where’d you be now? He’s had time to plan this. If you do what he
expects, he’s got you. Don’t go after Grey. Shake Kell up, disappoint him,
confuse him. Let me take care of the Avosing end. He’ll come after you—he’s got
to. Vrithian is his ground, well, I know that, but it’s not the ground he’s got
ready for you. Are you listening? Do you understand what I’m saying?”
“Is letting you get yourself killed the biggest favor I can
do for you?”
“Hunh, I like your faith in me.” Shadith clicked her tongue
with disgust, then looked more closely at the woman sitting crouched in the big
chair. “Stop trying to manipulate me. I know you, remember? I’ve lived in that
head of yours far too long.”
Aleytys sighed, straightened her back. “You don’t have to
beat the point to death, Shadow. I agree.” She stretched her legs out, lay back
in the chair, eyes closed, her face looking hollowed out. Her hands rested limp
and motionless on the chair arms. “Give us everything you’ve got on this, will
you, Canyli? Ticutt’s reports, the Pajunggs’ spiel. Anything else you can dig
up.” She lay still for several moments, then tightened her hands on the chair
arms and got suddenly to her feet, a quick twisting movement so full of violence
it was as if her body shouted, as if the grief, fear and fury she was holding
under taut control were close to escaping her grip. “I’m going north to make a
wild trek. It’s something I have to do.” She walked swiftly across the room,
turned in the doorway. “Shadow, if Shareem comes ... if she comes asking for me
before I get back, you tell her ... ask her ... you know.” She wheeled, knocked
her shoulder against the doorframe, caught herself, then sped off down the
hall, the click of her heels fading into silence.
“Ibex was difficult,” Shadith said when Head turned to her,
brows raised. “Painful.”
Head smoothed a square hand over the short thick helmet of
pewter-gray hair, the cabochon sapphire set in a heavy silver band catching
light from the fire and gleaming suddenly bluer than the blue of her pale eyes.
Those eyes were troubled. “She has only one of you left now.”
“Yeah.” Shadith rubbed her back against the edge of the fireplace.
“But her mother’s going to be with her. A full Vryhh. What about Taggert and me
going to Avosing? Are you going to do it?”
“Have I a choice?”
“Sure. Sit on your hands. “It’s me that’s got no choice. To
get Grey loose, it looks like I’ll have to finish your Hunt for you.” She
sniffed with delicate disgust, then grinned at Head. “Don’t you think you’d
better tell me what the Hunt is?”
“It’s in the data sheets.” Head spoke absently, looking out one
of the long narrow windows, seeing visions that disturbed her deeply. “No point
in making mysteries. Avosing is a Pajungg colony, the Sikin Ajin is a Pajungg
from the homeworld, was high up in the shadow government, what they call the
criminal side, made enemies and skipped out, ended up on Avosing, where he
stirred up a rebellion and has been a thorn in the official side. Grey was
supposed to hand him over to the Colonial Authority.” She rose from her chair,
crossed the shadow-filled room and stood beside the window, looking out at the
sunset reddening the glaciers on the mountain peaks. “They never spent much
time together, one or the other off on a Hunt or testifying on Helvetia. And
they had some spectacular fights. I never understood why they stayed together.”
She hitched a hip on the sill, leaned against the frame. “This hit her harder
than I expected.”
Shadith looked from Tamris to Linfyar and said nothing.
“The boy speaks interlingue quite well.”
“He’s a quick learner. And he sings like the angel he
certainly isn’t, and he has the appetite of a herd of caterpillars.”
“I hear you. Tamris, take Linfyar into the kitchen and see
what you can find to feed him.”
Tamris wrinkled her nose, but left holding Linfyar’s hand.
The boy whistled a scornful trill but made no other protest about being shunted
away; he was determined he was going with Shadith and didn’t want to annoy her.
After the door shut behind them, Shadith said, “Some things
I can’t talk about, too private, but ... The bond between them is, well, it’s
complicated, but it’s not going away. She came out of Ibex determined to make
peace with him, maybe start a baby—all that. She was excited and happy when we
landed. It was a long way to fall.” She wound a curl about her finger, frowned
at the floor. With a sigh she raised her head. “You think he’s dead.”
“Why would any sane man keep him alive? Grey dead and Grey
alive are equally good as bait. And Grey dead is easier to control.”
“Kell’s not exactly sane.”
“I wouldn’t count on him being as stupid as he is crazy.”
“Not count on it exactly, but there’s a sliver of
possibility he’s keeping Grey alive. Kell likes hurting things, and he knows
what Grey means to Lee. I’m hoping Grey makes an acceptable substitute until he
has Lee to play with.” Shadith shuddered. “Weren’t for Lee, I’d be hoping Grey
is dead.”
Head slid off the sill and began walking about the room, a
sturdy squarish figure, solid as the furniture. “It’s all guessing,” she said.
“Likely there’s no trap, no devious plan, no mad plotter. Just Grey tripping
over his feet.” She stopped by the cha pot, lifted the lid, let it clink back
down, moved on. “Just the Sikin Ajin being cleverer and more powerful than the
reports make him.” She stopped by the window again. “Clouding over. Be sleeting
before morning. The Pajunggs lying their collective heads off, more or less
normal for our clients. They all lie about something. Ticutt, getting past his
prime and careless for once.” She stopped in front of Shadith. “It could be
just that, a series of coincidences.”
“Could be.” Shadith traced a fingertip along the brand on
her cheek, the acid-etched outline of a hawk’s head. “Happens all the time. I
don’t believe it. Not a word. It’s Kell.”
“Yes.” Head swung around to look at the door. “Vrithian.
Will she come back?”
“Depends.”
“On Grey?”
“Some. And Vrithian.” Shadith stepped away from the bricks,
stretched and patted a yawn. “Oh-ah, I’m tired. All this emotion. Look, Canyli,
legends have a way of turning sour when you track them down. And this house,
the land, the horses, they mean a lot to Lee. And she likes the work; forget
how she bitches about it. And you’re the best friend she’s had in years.
Pulling up is going to be harder than she thinks. Even if Grey is dead.”
“I suppose it doesn’t matter. We’re committed whatever she
decides. A matter of survival. You hungry?”
“I could eat a raving silvercoat.” Shadith started for the
door.
“Reminds me, you should talk Lee out of the trek. It’s the
worst time of the year.” She opened the door and waved
Shadith through. “The silvercoats are coming out of their winter
holes hungry and mean.’’
“Good.” Shadith chuckled at the expression on Canyli’s face.
“She needs the toughening.” They walked together in a companionable silence
down the high-ceilinged hall with carved eiksjo panels and tapestries from a
dozen worlds, boot heels clicking a double rhythm on the intricate parquet,
heading for the stairs that led to the kitchen. “If you’re worried it’s a death
wish, forget it. I’ve been with her the other times. She’ll come out of it with
a lot of rubbish cleared out of her system.” A sigh, then a rueful short laugh.
“I rather wish I were going with her.”
“Why don’t you?”
“No. Not this time.”
Head was silent until they started down the stairs. She
glanced several times at Shadith, amusement at her own hesitations and
puzzlement on her face. Finally she said, “What does it feel like? Coming out
after so long? I get the weirdest double impression when I look at you, ancient
child.” She shook her head, laughing a little. “I get the feeling I ought to
mother you, and at the same time the thought appalls me.”
“God! so it should.”
“You had a kind of immortality. Now you could be dead and
gone tomorrow.”
“A short life, but a merry one.” She sniffed the air. “Haa,
that smells good.” A flash of a grin at Head and Shadith was clattering down
the last few stairs and pushing into the kitchen.
The Wildlands.
Mist and cold and fatigue.
Thicker than she remembered, the mist swirled around her, distorted
what she could see of the ground so that footing was never certain, and would
have disoriented her if the compass in her head hadn’t kept her on the line
she’d chosen. She ran through mud and slush, over ground still frozen, through
patches of ghostly desiccated weeds, forcing herself on and on until she was
stumbling along hardly able to lift her feet. She ran until the sun set and the
darkness magnified the sounds of stealthy movement thickening around her. She
spent the night in the crude shelter the Wolfflan provided for the first night
of a trek taken in this season.
In the morning she had the aches and uncertainties of her
body to cope with along with the harshness of the land and the brutal cold. She
began the struggle to relax into these things, to meld them into a smoothly
articulated whole, knowing this would have to be done morning after morning
when the night’s disturbed sleep with its surges of fear and anger and grief
would jar her out of that oneness of land and self. But, little by little, as
the days passed and the outer world sloughed away, the days and nights would
merge.
For a while her body and her memories distracted her, kept
her from the center she was trying to find. Grey’s ghost ran beside her in the
fog, along with memories of the time she’d come here to set aside the dream of
reclaiming her son. This time she came to Wolff with a dream that meant even
more to her, a dream perhaps as illusory as the other.
By the fourth day she’d collected a following of
silvercoats, gaunt shadows in the eternal mist, tagging her from cold camp to
cold camp. There was no fuel left in this stony wilderness; whatever there had
been was stripped out and used up by the first men and women coming to build
the cairns and make the wild trek in pursuit of the oneness with the
worldspirit that only exhaustion of mind and body would produce, that beating.
down of barriers between spirit and substance. Some came here driven by pride
and fear and shame; most of those died, the rest of them came back empty, pride
satisfied, shame and fear defeated for the moment. Nothing more. Other Wolfflan
came out centered, filled, changed—enough to keep the Wild Trek from
degenerating into a sterile game whose rules were only game rules that could be
broken without recoil if the player chose to win no matter what. After a
thousand years the Wild Trek was hammered into the flesh of the Wolfflan, into
the mythology of this narrow hardy people. They seemed to know by instinct that
if they gave up on this, they would start an inward spiral to destruction. Like
the immortals of Ibex, she thought, and wondered if those feeble, trapped
creatures had used her
blood and cells to free themselves from their machines. Wondered
if Kenton Esgard had begun to regret what he’d done to himself. Wondered if
Hana had worked her way into the Vryhh data and got her hands on her father’s
business.
But those things touched her only fleetingly, phantoms in
the mists, distractions from mind sores and body aches, from an anger so
all-encompassing it had no focus, or rather many foci. Kell. Fate. Grey. Her
own stupidities. Head. Hunters Inc. Harskari. Shadith. Shareem. Hagan. In turn
and all together, she raged at them for forgetting what they were, what she
was, raged at her powerlessness. No way to change the past. You could go over
and over and over what had happened, what you’d done, what other people had
done, you could see where you’d gone wrong, you could see what you might have
done, by force of will you could make yourself believe for a few seconds that
it had not happened, but you couldn’t change any of it, not really, and if you
lied to yourself, willfully blinded yourself, well, that was madness, a common
enough madness and one that had its good points. Some things were too horrible
to live with.
No fuel to fight the cold, no shelters after the first to
keep off the silvercoats and that cold. After a long day’s run she had to spend
a racking time gathering stones and building a rough shelter so she could
snatch a few hours of sleep with a degree of safety. Custom demanded that she
scatter the stones, but she had to come back this way and she’d do the
scattering then.
The first cairn.
She took a water-worn pebble from the pouch at her bell,
stood holding it a moment. She wondered what she should say, then shrugged and
tossed the pebble onto the cairn and went on loping through the fog.
Grey’s ghost ran beside her through the long gray days.
Neither spoke, but settled into the busy silences of snow and mist, hearing and
not hearing the rhythmic body sounds, the grunts and hoarse breathing, the
shish-shish of ghostly snow-shoes on snow that wasn’t there.
At least the snow is gone today, she thought. Grey’s
baby from his frozen sperm. Something to keep him alive, a part of him. No. Not
now. If he was alive, if he’d be there to share the joys and irritations of
raising a child, yes, oh yes, oh a hundred times yes. Without him—she’d had
enough of fatherless children. No and no and no, the harsh explosive denials
came with the thudding of her bootsoles. If Grey lived, if he lived, if Shadith
brought him out of the trap, if he came out of Kell’s torment not hating her,
oh yes. Having Grey’s baby now not knowing if he was alive or dead, that would
be a sickly smarmy necrophilia. As she ran, she wept, slow tears that were as
much grief for the child who might never be as for the man who was most likely dead.
Remembering that other run. The silence was deep between
them. A shared silence. In the night camps that other time, they were sometimes
lovers, sometimes just held each other. A good rich time.
Her mind was too busy. Her body had adjusted easily enough,
but she was thinking and suffering, grieving and filled with anger. The second
cairn.
She stood a long time by the pile before she tossed the
stone onto the sloping side, remembering all too vividly the bitter quarrel
with Grey before she left for Ibex. She’d come back expecting to retrieve the
relationship, to patch up once again the wounds they tore into each other. But
there was no time, no chance to repair the damage. That sat like fire in her
belly. No chance. Or if there was a chance, it depended on Kell’s madness and
his need to torment. She looked at the stone in the hollow of her gloved palm
and wondered. Should she hope he was alive if it meant torment of a kind she
couldn’t begin to imagine? Was any life at all better than being dead? Shadith
had deliberately opted for a finite life with death at the end of it, though
she was guaranteed immortality. What did that say? She tossed the stone and
started on.
Remembering the bad time after the second cairn, running
with Grey ... they moved in separate solitudes, turned in on themselves in the
grim struggle to maintain sanity as they moved over endless white snow through
endless white fog. An ice storm came suddenly on them and they were forced into
shelter. The days passed dark and dreary. They grated on each other until both
were at the point of screaming. They began treating each other with an exaggerated
courtesy that was bitter as the worst insult. When the storm passed over and
they emerged into the eternal mist, it was with such a feeling of relief that
the mere freedom of movement and the explosion of space sparked a surge of joy
in both.
Rain began falling, a steady sluggish rain, not icy but cold
enough to soak in to the bone and steady enough to turn the hard earth to a
treacherous slop. Clay soil, fine-grained and a good approximation of a
frictionless material when saturated, slowed her to a lurching walk. Strangely
enough, though the world wept drearily around her, though she was cold and
soaked, inhaling air thick with water, though her muscles strained because
walking in these conditions was a series of controlled falls, in spite of all
these things, the pain and rage inside her grew paler and began to flow away.
The pack of silvercoats was bigger now, and bolder. She
could smell the rank odor streaming off them. She could hear them clearly, that
coughing, yipping call of theirs. Late that afternoon she had to shoot two of
them to back them off her. Leaving the pack tearing hungrily at the bodies of
their mates, she ran on into the gray misery of the day.
The third cairn.
Gaunt and haggard, splattered with mud, she took out the pebble,
tossed it onto the smaller heap, then went wearily on. Too much still needed
working out. It wasn’t time to turn back yet.
Her long struggle was over; she was drifting, rudderless.
From the time she’d left her first home, she’d had the quest for her mother to
give a meaning to her life, something to work toward even when she had to
divert from the direct road because something demanded immediate attention. But
the goal was always there in the back of her mind, not urgent, not smothering
anything else, her own pale pole star. The quest was over. No more need to
search. Over. First deal with my mother, then settle down with Grey, keep on
Hunting, maybe raise a child or two, work my way into the ordinary life of
Wolff. For a while, at least, for as long as I can manage.
That’s what I planned. Madar knows what’ll happen now. Though
she couldn’t extinguish a faint spark of hope, Grey was most likely dead. And
if he is, what keeps me here? She brooded over the question as she ran,
half her attention on the silvercoats slinking after her. She enjoyed being a
Hunter. She even enjoyed having a name that meant something, though she found
it irritating at times. Canyli Heldeen was a good friend. The best. Sybille was
abrasive and a vicious infighter when her defenses were triggered, but after
their bad beginning, she’d turned into a cranky and half-unwilling friend,
defending Aleytys as much because she despised those who attacked her as from
respect and liking. Most of that fractious collection of individualists
assembled under the aegis of Hunters Inc. had grown into friends she valued.
And there was Tamris. She had a tendency to stand in awe now; later she’d make
a friend, much like her mother. Her life was what Aleytys had wanted for Sharl,
cherished, with a warm haven to return to from her forays into life. Canyli had
even managed to extend that carefully unsmothering care to her daughter’s first
Hunt, sending her with Aleytys, knowing Aleytys would let nothing harm her.
Tamris was so unscarred by life, so ... Aleytys shook her head, then regretted
her absence of mind as she lost balance and slid into the muck, crashing onto
hands and knees, bruising herself and bringing the silvercoats at her, feral
snarling shapes flashing from the rain, their pads better adapted than her
booted feet to the treacherous ground. No time for the darter, no time to get
to her feet. She crouched in the mud and burned. She threw flame from her hands;
her clothing ashed around her glowing body.
Silvercoats howled and died as the rain sizzled about them,
leaving them soggy black corpses with chalk-white bones showing through brittle
skin and burned flesh. Silvercoats fled howling into the rain, rushing in blind
panic from the fire horror.
As the howling diminished, Aleytys scowled down at herself.
Her clothing, her boots, her gear were smears of ash on her body, streaks of
ash running out from her feet; the darter was a blob of plastic and ashy metal
warped out of shape, half buried in the mud by her knee. She spat a few curses
into the drearily falling rain, but broke off. All that did was take the edge
off the fury that still churned in her. It did nothing at all for her embarrassment
at her stupidity.
She got to her feet and stood letting the rain chill the
heat out of her. Naked and shivering, she began to wonder if she would get out
of the Wildlands or leave her bones and flesh to mingle with the bones of the
ancient dead.
And discovered she had no intention of going back yet and
even less intention of dying. She tapped her symbolic power river and brought
her body heat to normal, healing her scrapes and bruises with an absent ease
that startled her later when she thought of it. She lifted her arms as high as
they would go, stretched her spine, rising onto her toes, letting her heels
slam back into the mud, realizing suddenly that she felt very good indeed.
Energized, vital, looking forward to the next day, looking forward to taking up
Kell’s challenge.
After a moment’s thought she kicked about in the mud until
she found the last pebble. She stood holding it a moment staring into the rain.
It seemed to her Grey stood out there seen and unseen, hidden then revealed by
the swaying curtains of rain. He lifted a hand in that way he had, amused and
affectionate, the way he was in the best of times, then the ghost image faded
into the rain.
Pebble in her mouth, she loped easily through the rain, her
bare feet finding an easier purchase on the slick clay soil than her boots ever
had. Why didn’t I think of this before? Hunh, tunnel vision, conditioned by
other folks’ expectations. Better watch that. Kell won’t honor my blind spots.
As the days passed she settled into the run, growing gaunter
since she had to stop and hunt her food, but she didn’t bother gathering rocks
for shelters now, simply set out intangible alarms to wake her if danger came
too near. Twice she woke to slice warning fire before the muzzles of hungry
silvercoats. She killed no more of them; it seemed both unnecessary and somehow
stupid, a distraction from the truth she was trying to find.
The fourth cairn.
Grey’s cairn, a small heap of stones three spans high.
Remembering what he told her. At the foot of a
thirty-meter cliff swept clean by icy winds, he built his cairn and carved his
name into the cliff side. He stepped back, examined the crude letters and
thought he should add something to tell the next one here what he’d learned in
the silence of the shelter, then he shook his head. Grey. It was enough.
Whoever came here would have found his own peace. Anyway, there were no words
for what he wanted to say.
Aleytys flipped the pebble on the cairn and traced the
letters still visible in the stone of the cliff after more than a dozen years
of weathering. The rain had stopped and the mists were temporarily burned away.
The day was clear and bright, deceptively warm where a bulge in the cliff
shunted the wind aside. She sat in the quiet warmth, her back close to the hard
gray granite but not touching it. She sat letting whatever would bubble through
her mind, holding on to nothing, letting all go, the hardest of all
disciplines, letting everything come and go as it would until the turmoil in
her stilled, until the grief and rage and self-dislike flowed out of her, until
even her joys stilled into quiet acceptance, until she was sitting in sunshine,
then starshine, then rain, then eddying fog, emptied of all things, emptied of
wanting and fear, until she was stone and wind and mist herself, her pulse slowed
until her body beat with the great slow beat of Wolff.
She blinked. Moved a hand. Spat hair from her mouth. Rocked
on her buttocks in a slow sway to break free of the trance she’d been caught in
for ... how long? She didn’t know; her body clock said it was more than a day,
and she accepted that. She was hungry. The problem of her future could wait.
There was time for that, time for all the momentous decisions she had to make.
Besides, experience had taught her long ago that most of those decisions would
make themselves when the time was right.
She got stiffly to her feet, looked down at her gaunt naked
body and chuckled at the thought of strolling into her house like that. Shake
them up a bit. Then she sighed and shook her head. In the vadi Raqsidan, where
she had been born and had lived for longer than the years she’d spent
wandering, nakedness was reserved for sexual intimacies. Wolff was like that
too. I’ll have to wander a lot longer before I shake that feeling.
Certain and uncertain, centered yet drifting, she moved
along the cliff and touched the letters of Grey’s name. If you live, my
love, if you live, Shadith will find you. If you’re dead ... so stupidly dead,
snuffed by a madman’s whim ... but what do you care if your dying had
significance or not? Dead is dead. If you are dead, my love, nothing matters to
you now. If I could be sure you lived, if I could be sure my presence wouldn’t
precipitate your death, if I could be sure, I would come for you forgetting
everything else, my mother, Vrithian, everything, nothing Kell could do would
keep me from you. I can’t be sure of anything. Ay-Madar, for a clear-cut
choice, something comfortably black and white. Doesn’t work that way, does it,
my love .... I want it to be me, but oh no it can’t be me, she’ll come for you,
child out of my head born into a new body. Like Swardheld. I didn’t tell you
who and what Swardheld was, I was too angry at you, I never let you know that
much of me, and oh my dear, oh my love, I’m sorry for that. Can’t change it
now, can’t change any of it ....
“Ahhh ...” She brushed her fingers over the chill stone,
then turned to begin the run back to the flitter.
Wolff
getting set
Aleytys walked into the sitting room and found Shadith
stretched out on her stomach on the rug in front of the fire, absorbed in the
slide of her stylo across a sheet of paper laid on a book, the flying angular
lines of her native script like bird tracks on the creamy white. Warmed by a
surge of affection for that ancient child, she leaned against the door-jamb
watching as Shadith stopped writing and began reading what she’d set on paper.
With an exclamation of disgust she wadded it up and flipped it away to join
similar wads scattered near the hearth.
Aleytys chuckled. Chuckled again as Shadith leaped up, twisting
to face the sound as she moved, wary and lethal as one of the silvercoats.
“Which is it? You bankrupt me paying for paper or you burn my house down?”
Shadith straightened, relaxed, ran inky fingers through her
tangled thornbush of brown-gold curls. “You look better. When did you get in? I
didn’t hear anything.”
“I wasn’t noisy about it.” She crossed the room, lowered herself
into a chair, propped her feet on a hassock and sighed with the pleasure of
being home again. “Anything interesting turn up?”
“Don’t know how interesting.” Shadith dropped into the other
chair near the fire and brought her legs up. “I went through the stuff Head
sent over, made some notes. Like to know what you think about them.” She laced
her fingers behind her head, gazed drowsily at Aleytys. “Unless you’ve changed
your mind about sending me.”
“No.” Aleytys frowned at the fire. “If I want to draw Kell off
Grey, I go to Vrithian and stake myself out as bait. I hate that, Shadow, you
don’t know-how much.” A half-smile, a glance at Shadith. “Well, maybe you do.”
“Mmm. What’s Harskari doing?”
“Brooding, I suppose. I haven’t heard from her since Ibex.”
“She’ll come out of that when she’s ready.”
“You said that before.”
“Yeah, and got my head chewed off. By proxy. At least she
can’t do it in person anymore.”
“More than time I found her a body. Maybe on Vrithian.” She
slid farther down in the chair, watched her bare toes wriggle. “Damn all
screw-ups,” she said. “I was settling in here.”
“You can hang on.”
“Think so?”
Silence stretched out, filled with small noises. The fire
snapped, popped and hissed, threw out a fan of warmth invaded by wandering
drafts. Wolfflan houses were built to minimize drafts, but during the
in-between times, the short autumns and shorter springs when the houses were
adjusting to rapidly changing temperatures, the chill crept about everywhere,
touched everything. A whisper of air curled around Aleytys’s legs, slid along
her body and tickled at the short hairs at her forehead, passed on to rustle
through the wadded papers on the hearth.
Aleytys stirred. “Kell! May his teeth fall out and his gut
have holes like a colander and may all he have to eat be bone and gristle and
hot pepper sauce. May everything he touches rot under his fingers. May he be a
hissing and a bad smell to everyone who knows him.” She sighed. “For all that’s
worth.”
“Yeah. There are worse places than this to come home to. I always
enjoyed getting back.” Shadith slanted a glance at Aleytys, chocolate eyes
curious and searching. “Don’t scorch the earth behind you.”
“I’m all right,” Aleytys said, answering the look rather man
the words. “I don’t know. I’m still not used to having him gone. I don’t know
how I’ll feel later. When I was flying back from the trek, I found myself
thinking when Grey gets back, then pulling myself up reminding myself
that it’s too damn likely he won’t be coming back ever. I’ve a feeling I’m
going to keep doing that, and it’s like getting kicked in the belly. But I’ve
got good friends here.” She closed her eyes. “Would you like living here,
Shadow?”
“Never in winter. Nice to come and visit for a week or
so—it’s a cushy little world, this.”
“Wolff?” Aleytys opened her eyes wide, stared at Shadith.
“Uh-huh. Everyone the same, lots of space, good living
thanks to the home shares in Hunters. Tell you what I think, I like my worlds
gaudier. Rougher. Full of life and anger and energy. Always something
happening, a soup of species and races and cultures, boiling over. Wolff is too
bland, people look alike, think alike. Live here all the time? No way.”
Aleytys closed her eyes. “Still ...”
“AH right, all right, you need this. That’s what I’m saying.
Leave yourself a way back. You want a resting place.” She pulled her hands
down, let them lie limp on the chair’s arms, grinned briefly at Aleytys.
“Wolff’s a great place for hibernating.” She wriggled in the chair. “Your mum’s
running late.”
“Said she’d be here.” Aleytys brooded at the fire. “She
will.”
“Aleytys.” The face in the comscreen was solemn and
strained.
“Shareem.” Aleytys felt a little strained herself.
“I’m stationary over the field. Come up for a while. I’ll
send a shuttle for you.”
“Right. Will you be down?”
“We’ll leave that for later if you don’t mind.”
“I hear you. Take about twenty minutes to get there.” She
hesitated, but there didn’t seem to be anything else to say and she didn’t know
how to break off. She and Shareem stared at each other for a long moment, then
each started to speak. Shareem grimaced, lifted a hand, let it fall; the screen
went blank.
The doll-like android bowed with liquid grace and left.
Aleytys stood in the middle of the oval room and looked around. Grass and
growing things, an impossible little waterfall making impossible music in the
heart of a starship. Light coming from nowhere with the pearly tinge of a
cloudy spring morning. Smell of damp earth and green growing things, elusive
flower scents. Muted by distance, a bird singing intermittently. Not quite
familiar but haunting, suggesting a dozen birds on a dozen worlds she’d
visited. A room in her mother’s ship, thick with her mother’s presence, though
Shareem was not there yet. Aleytys marveled at the quiet charm of the place and
felt exceedingly uncomfortable, as if somehow, at this late date, she’d
returned to her mother’s womb. Little prickles like the brush of electric hairs
ran over her body. Come on, she thought, enough’s enough. I’m as
unarmed as I’ll ever be.
“Aleytys.”
The sound came from behind her. She turned slowly, her stomach
knotting, a tightness under her ribs that hurt when she breathed. Her mother
stood under the graceful arch of an aphnyta limb, the dangling spear-head
leaves fluttering about her head and shoulders.
Shareem’s green eyes widened; Aleytys felt alternating snippets
of fear and longing, quickly suppressed. Fear? Breath caught in her throat as
she remembered suddenly (she didn’t quite know why) leaning tensely toward the
vidscreen in her ship pleading with Stavver to let her see her son. And being
refused. Because her son hated her so intently he would not even look at her. Something
deep inside her broke, something hard and cold she hadn’t known was there. Her
eyes blurred. She held out her hands. “Mother?”
Shareem’s hands closed on hers, strong and warm and shaking
more than a little, then they were hugging each other, laughing and crying.
They lay stretched out on long comfortable chairs that
shaped themselves to the contours of their bodies, black chairs in a small
black room with one wall that seemed open to space but was in truth a curved
transparent substance mat magnified what lay outside. Meditation room, Shareem
said, for times when the years got too heavy. They lay in the chairs with the
flaccidity that comes after great tension is suddenly relaxed, not quite at
ease with each other yet, groping toward an understanding of their likenesses
and differences.
Someone floating invisible above the two women, looking for
nonphysical signs of maturity (something rather different from age but too
often confused with it), would have thought Aleytys the mother and Shareem the
child. Shareem’s emotions ran more facilely across her face, through her body,
but there was more depth and passion in Aleytys. More confidence and
self-esteem. She had been forced by circumstances and a comparative lack of
mobility to live with the results of her actions, to pay (sometimes heavily)
for unconsidered acts. With few exceptions, one of them being the series of
events that led to Aleytys’s birth and the struggle afterward, Shareem had been
insulated from problems by Vryhh wealth and her Vryhh ship. If a situation
became uncomfortable, she simply went away and forgot what happened as quickly
as she could. It was a measure of her feeling for her daughter that she didn’t
do that, didn’t dismiss the child as an unfortunate accident, but fought to
guarantee Aleytys a place on Vrithian, took pains to make sure she wouldn’t
stay in the stifling culture of the Raqsidan. The outcome of that plotting,
what Aleytys was now, she found rather disconcerting; she felt dominated by her
daughter and didn’t quite know how she liked that, yet she was filled with
pride in her child and felt vindicated by her success.
Aleytys saw some of this. In spite of her wariness, she
found herself unfolding under the warmth of her mother’s approval—Was startled
by the ease and promptness of her capitulation.
“I’m glad you were a girl,” Shareem said after a long
silence. “Male Vryhh can be ... difficult.”
“Mmm.” Aleytys turned to look at her. “How many Vrya are
there?”
Shareem stirred, uncomfortable; the chair whispered as it
changed to accommodate her change. “Not many,” she said. The words were clipped
as if she found them difficult to say. “Maybe three hundred.” She stirred
again. “There never were very many. We were an experiment that got out of hand.”
She tried a smile, gave up on it. “The eldest, they don’t talk much about it.
Ummm. About a thousand when Hyaroll found the way to Vrithian. Most we ever
were was three thousand. We dwindle, Aleytys.”
“Lee.”
“Reem. That’s why I was able to get you acknowledged. I suppose
you’re not going to like this. Three of the Tetrad wanted to know where you
were, wanted you brought to Vrithian at once if not sooner. I squashed that
idea fast; Hyaroll backed me up. We thought you should grow up in a healthier
place than Vrithian.”
Aleytys waited awhile before she tried to answer, filled
first with anger, then resignation. A healthier place than Vrithian. Hard to
swallow Shareem’s easy passing off of those years of pain and struggle. “I
hated you for leaving me,” she said finally. “I hated you for a long time.”
“Hated. Not hate. What changed your mind?”
“I found out how helpless a woman could be ... lost my son before
he could walk ... lost him again, left him with his father because ...” She
closed her eyes, the pain with her again, unchanged, it never really changed.
“That didn’t work out—nothing I did for him worked out the way I wanted. I was
going to be the mother you weren’t, I was going to raise him with love and care
and never leave him until he grew old enough to leave me.” She lay silent for a
moment, then rubbed her hand across her face, opened her eyes and turned her
head so she could see Shareem. “Dwindle? Three thousand to three hundred,
that’s not a dwindle, it’s extinction. Except ... how long ...” She chewed on
her lip for a moment. “What about the longlife? Was that a lie? One man I ...
know believes in it.”
More silence. A shuddering sigh from Shareem. “The day you
were born, as far as I could figure it later, no way of being really sure, I
passed into my nine hundredth year.” She smiled. “Odd coincidence, whether it’s
exactly true or not, our sharing the same birthday. I had ... small
celebrations ... for us each year.” She cleared her throat. “I’m fourth
generation on Vrithian. You’re about it for the fifth. If we’re a
mistake, it’s self-correcting. Taking a long time, but we’re going to get
there. No more Vrya. All Vrya males after Hyaroll’s generation are sterile.
Except for two or three, and they all fathered short-lived sports. Damaged.
Distorted. And most Vryhh females are barren. Happened I wasn’t one of them.”
Aleytys chuckled, apologized when she saw Shareem frown. “I
wasn’t laughing at what you said, but something else. Kell and his obsession
with pure Vryhh blood. He one of the sterile ones?”
“Kell?” Shareem shuddered all over; the chair shuddered with
her as it tried to accommodate her movement. “Where’d you come across him! He
never said he knew you.”
“One of my Hunts and one of his projects crashed into each
other a few years back. Reem, he implied damn hard he was my ancestor and
yours.”
“Hunh! The only way would be cloning, and that doesn’t work
worth spit. What happened?”
Aleytys snuggled lower in the chair and sketched the events
of the Hunt on Sunguralingu, the eerie hare-weapon, the battle with Kell.
“That’s it,” she said. “I thought it was the disease warping him, so I healed
him. I was really wrong that time, wasn’t I?”
“You fought him, handicapped, you beat him flat, then had
the gall to take pity on him? Lee, he might forgive you by the next big bang,
but don’t count on it.”
“Yes. I know.”
“What did he do?”
Aleytys pushed up, swung her legs off the chair, sat with
shoulders hunched, hands curled over the rounded edge. She missed Grey with a
deep misery, felt like crying but lacked the energy to press out tears. “He tried
to destroy my son,” she said, her voice muted. “He’s going after Hunters now,
attacking my friends, trying to trap me.”
Shareem moved uneasily but didn’t sit up; instead she stared
at the curve of Wolff hanging over them. “I wish I could say he’s the exception,
but it wouldn’t be true. He’s just an exaggeration of the ordinary Vryhh
attitude toward the lesser species.”
“Lesser species?”
“His choice of words, not ... ah, I can’t say that.” Her
hands fluttered in small shapeless movements. “I might not say the words, but
... I act ... I treat people ... oh, I suppose as carelessly, as thoughtlessly
as he does. Not as meanly, I hope. I ... I can’t let myself get involved with
them ... they die so fast. Time, Lee, we’ve got so much, and it does funny
things to us. The Eldest, a lot of them anyway, spent centuries in labs ...
well, not exactly ... an umbrella word for all kinds of ... of fiddling around
with things ... projects. Think about having ages and ages at your disposal to
investigate anything at all that intrigues you ... and a secret world to maul
about ... its natives ... you can take from them anything you want, make them
do anything you want ... they’re born and they die between one breath and the
next. Think of it, Lee, even a single mind ... working on a problem for
centuries, turning it over and over ... hidden away ... coming out of hiding to
see what other mayflies, other worlds, had done with it ... stealing the best
ideas ... brooding over them. Think what that one mind could produce.” More shapeless
groping gestures. “But ...”
“But?” It was a whispered sound, drawn out, a soft
enticement to continue. Aleytys watched her mother struggling with an openness
alien to her nature, a painful honesty that the child Leyta inside Aleytys
thirsted to hear, evidence of something she’d desired without knowing it for
all the years of her life, a need almost as deep as the need for food or
breath, a need to know her mother really did love her. What Shareem was saying
was interesting in itself, but the feeling behind the words was what Aleytys
listened to.
“But they got bored, Lee, most of them. Bored! Sounds funny,
doesn’t it? The disease that kills us. Absurd, isn’t it? One by one most of the
Eldest took a dive into a sun somewhere. Or touched off the cores in their
domes. Or died in boredom-related accidents, too tired to take care. A lot of
the younger ones, we don’t go back to Vrithian much. I wander and trade and
amuse myself ... do a project here and there ... when I need something to make
me feel like I’m ... I’m not just a parasite sucking the life out of ... I like
the long ones ... the ones that take generations ... they make the time go ...
but they’re rare ... mayfly folk don’t have the patience. It’s a long time yet
before I hunt a sun ... but it’ll come. Everything wears out in time.” Another
gesture of her mother’s hand; she did have lovely hands, slender and shapely,
but she didn’t take care of them. She chews her nails, Aleytys thought,
and felt a surge of protective love for her mother; she wanted to scold her for
neglecting herself, wanted to cuddle and comfort her as if she were the mother
and Shareem her child. It was confusing and disturbing; she turned it over and
over in her mind, almost missing her mother’s next words.
“It’s a mess, Lee. The Vrya who stay on Vrithian are ...
well, we’re all dead ends, it’s a failed experiment, but they ... aah, it’s a
mess. You sure you want anything to do with it?” Shareem nodded at Wolff
swimming serenely over them. “That seems a beautiful world in its chilly way.”
“Come see my home.” Aleytys stood, held out her hand.
“Why not?” Shareem took the hand, let Aleytys pull her up.
“Any problems getting off the field? Wolff isn’t a Company world, but I’ve
heard they don’t like visitors.”
“They don’t.” Aleytys grinned. “But I’ve got pull.” The grin
became a chuckle. “Well, truth is I’ve got a couple friends with pull; all that
fuss and red tape is taken care of, you don’t have to bother with it, just hop
in my flitter and come see my house.” She followed Shareem from the room. “And
my horses. Um ...I’ve got a couple of people staying with me, but you don’t
need to see them if you don’t want to, not to talk to anyway.”
Shareem swung around. “What?”
“I’ll explain on the way down. If you still want to come.”
“Yes.” Shareem looked wary, withdrawn, setting aside emotion
and involvement with an abruptness that startled Aleytys and turned her wary
too. “Yes, daughter, it’s time you did a little explaining.”
Shareem stood by a window in the sitting room, her back to
the fire burning briskly on a huge open hearth; it made her a little nervous,
for she wasn’t accustomed to open fires inside living space. The whole house
made her nervous. Her daughter’s house. Even the ancient stone walls seemed to
hold something of Aleytys. When she’d gotten out of the flitter and looked at
it, she’d had the feeling it had grown in that spot like some gnarled old tree.
A narrow structure at least four stories high, almost a lopped-off tower,
plain, even ugly, massive. She felt the weight of it and wondered how Aleytys
could endure that weight pressing down on her. A few steps out of the flitter,
Aleytys stopped, closed her eyes, breathed in the rich soup of smells, raw
green, wet dirt, horse manure, damp fur, something dead upwind of them, all
carried undiluted on a wind that cut into Shareem like knives. She fidgeted,
not so enchanted with all this nature; the smells were getting to her stomach
and the wind was turning her into an icicle. Now, with the fire’s heat licking
at her back, with that wind kept firmly outside the double-paned windows, she
could watch with appreciation and pleasure the spring foals chasing each other,
the mares and stallion grazing in the greening pasture. Its yellow round
flattening and flushing to red, the sun started to pass behind sawtooth peaks,
their ancient massive glaciers chiseled by time and weather into intricate
folds and falls. The air outside had a clarity that gave everything a luminous
magical quality, hard-edged and immediate; the intensity of the colors scarcely
seemed to diminish as the light began to die. Shareem wrinkled her nose at the
display and thought, I’m not going to get any fonder of this world than I am
right now. She sighed and turned to face her daughter. “What are you going
to do?”
Aleytys was stretched out in one of the chairs near the
fire, her ankles crossed, a heel sunk in the padded leather of a hassock. She
held a long-stemmed glass about a third filled with a dark gold wine that had
gone even richer and darker as the light outside faded. The room was filled
with shadows; the only light inside came from the fire. “Vrithian,” she said.
“Shadith was right. Make him come after me.” She lifted her head, sipped at the
wine, let her head fall back. “Aschla skewer his liver, he couldn’t have picked
a worse time. Over two years since my last Hunt, I’m about cleaned out, enough
credit left to pay the taxes on this place and maintain the power tap while I’m
gone. If I’m not gone too long. And there’s fuel and overhauling and
maintenance on the ship. And Shadith. And Linfyar. No way around it, I’m going
to have to borrow on the house and land.” She took another sip of the wine, lay
back and gloomed at the ceiling. “Damn. Damn. Damn. I just last year worked
everything clear of debt.”
Shareem moved her shoulders impatiently. She’d never bothered
herself with such idiocies and didn’t intend to start.
Aleytys felt her discomfort and let the subject drop; which
didn’t help all that much because every time she did something like that
Shareem was forcibly reminded that her daughter was an empath and capable of
sensing every fleeting feeling, and some of those feelings she’d rather keep to
herself, nothing to be proud of, nothing she wanted anyone else to know about. Empath.
She didn’t get that from, me; who’d have thought that crazy clod who fathered
her might have something so wild in his genes.
Aleytys touched a sensor. The chair hummed around until she
faced the windows; another sensor and a second chair moved up beside it. “Come
sit down, Reem. We get spectacular sunsets this time of year.”
Shareem settled into the empty chair, though she wasn’t that
interested in sunsets and had already seen as much as she cared to of this
particular specimen. She watched her daughter instead. As the display continued
outside, the faintly stem set of Aleytys’s face softened, her eyes opened
wider; she looked almost happy, absorbed in the play of light before her, accepting,
vulnerable; she was responding to that miserable sunset with a passionate
intensity that Shareem knew she could never share. She tried to laugh at
herself—jealous of a sunset; what next?—but she could not bear to look at her
daughter’s face any longer.
When the colors had faded and the sky had darkened to indigo
with a few silver spangles, Shareem glanced at her daughter and was startled to
see tears silent and unforced sliding down her face. Aleytys wasn’t trying to
stop them or wipe them away. Her mouth was pressed into a thin line; she’d set
the wineglass on the floor beside the chair and her hands were knotted together
so hard her fingers were white about the knuckles and red at the ends.
Shareem must have made a sound, though she wasn’t conscious
of it, because Aleytys broke the grip of her hands, sat up, scrubbed at her
eyes. “Sorry,” she said. She groped beside the chair, found a bit of tissue and
blew her nose, tossed the tissue at the fire. She took a few deep breaths.
“Just as well I’m getting away from here. For a while, anyway.” She drew the
back of her hands across her eyes, managed a smile. “Grey and I used to sit
here like this whenever our times home coincided.” She groped for another
tissue, blew her nose again. “It keeps catching me by surprise, that he might
not ... never mind.”
She flipped up the top to the chair arm, danced her fingers
over the panel there, then settled back as the chair switched around again to
face the fire, a soft indirect lighting chased the shadows from the room, and
exterior shields hummed quietly down over the windows. A hesitation, then she
brought Shareem’s chair back to where it had been; she raised her brows, then
matched Shareem’s smile with her own.
“I’m not asking you to help,” she said. Shareem suppressed
an appreciative chuckle at the care in the choice of those words. Aleytys was
groping through a minefield that didn’t exist, but she couldn’t know that.
“Just get me to Vrithian and—” the same uninsistent quiet tones, the same
slightly hesitant speech—“and back off, and ... keep silence.” A lift and fall
of her hand. “I don’t want him more prepared for me than he is already. You
know Kell, I don’t. I don’t know what your loyalties are, Reem. If you’re
against me in this, please tell me. I won’t mind; after all, you’ve known him a
lot longer than you’ve known me. All I ask is, don’t get in my way. I don’t want
to have to go through you.” She shook herself, made a groping helpless gesture.
“I will, you know. He’s left me no choice. I have ... hostages, he’ll strike
against them, they can’t fight him. I think ... I think he’ll put off facing me
directly as long as he can keep me running ... and hurting. Swardheld, Shadith,
though they can take care of themselves better than most. Linfyar. Canyli
Heldeen and the other Hunters. Grey ... ah!” She looked down, then up, eyes
shining with a film of tears. “I know I just said back off, Reem, but I can’t
... I need you, Reem. Will you help me?”
I need you. Simple words, but they cut deep
and made Shareem feel like crying. Her arms ached to hold her daughter as
they’d ached before. More than once she’d taken her ship cautiously into the
mess around Jaydugar and hovered watching the world turn under her, had seen it
frozen in the depths of winter, burning in the long, long summer, yet she’d
never dared land and claim her daughter. So many reasons for not doing what she
half wanted, half feared to do. And all of those reasons seemed empty now, as
foolish as her urge to take a grown woman into her arms as if she were a
hurting child, rock her, soothe her, tell her mother would make things right.
Absurd, of course, and too painful to dwell, on, so she pushed the thought
aside.
“Help? Of course I’ll help. When he knows we’ve met, which
will be soon, I’ll be a target too.” She looked down at her hands, opened and
closed them, ran her thumb over her wrist where scars would have been except
for Kell’s autodoc; her stomach knotted and her throat closed up as she brought
up buried memories she’d never been able to wipe away, memories that surfaced
in dreams though she’d never let them up in the daytime.
“Lee ...” Her throat closed again; she swallowed and forced
herself to a measure of calm—what else was time useful for but to teach you how
to deal with your crises? “Lee, I don’t know how much use I’d be if this thing
gets sticky. He’s got a—I don’t know what to call it—if he gets close enough to
me, I’ll do just about anything he tells me no matter how I hate it. When I was
very young, a child really ... just out of basic training, ready to fight the
world ... you know—no, maybe you don’t—I ... he got hold of me and took me into
his dome. He was young too, same generation, born about a hundred years before
I was. And he’d just found out about the sterility thing. It was a shock; he
should have learned it before when he was younger and more flexible, but the
way chance turned, he didn’t. Too bad. And too bad he learned it in the way he
did, in bed with one of the more unstable Vryhh, a second-generation bitch
named Nallis.
“Where was I? I was as foolish as I was young. He was
healthy and handsome and had charm coming out his ears when he wanted to use
it.” She looked up, pushed the hair out of her eyes, a smile for her daughter,
filled with wry recognition of the difference in their experience. “You
wouldn’t know about that—I don’t blame you, Lee, if you don’t believe me, but
...” She spread her hands, clasped them together. “It’s hard to tell you what I
saw ... all the things that make up what we call brilliance. He shone for me,
glowed, burned, I can’t find the right word, Lee ... and a vulnerability, an
agony inside I could make him forget; I didn’t understand, and maybe that was
what he needed. We played over the face of Vrithian, running with the sun, with
the moons, seven-league boots on our feet, wings .... It could have been
different if I’d known what was wrong with him, but if I had ... I don’t know
... I didn’t know how to help him later.
“My mother warned me not to go with him the time he came to
take me to his dome, but I wouldn’t listen. She said no one can help you there.
I still wouldn’t listen. Years had ‘slid by while we were playing. I think you
don’t know what it’s like, being young and knowing you have immense stretches
of time ahead, there is no hurry for anything, you savor things, make them
last, they have to last. Years slid by and he was changing but I didn’t see it;
there were long intervals when I didn’t see him at all. Then he came for me.”
She dug around, found a crumpled old tissue and mopped at her face, sat tearing
it into shreds as she went on.
“I found out what he was doing when he wasn’t with me. Found
out fast and hard. He had herds of women in that dome, Vrithli, even reptiloid
females, though I don’t know what he expected from them. Women of all sorts
from outside the cloud, it was like a zoo in there, yes in more ways than one;
he kept them in cages of a sort. Some he lay with, some he just used in experiments.
I suppose he thought he might find some miraculous conjunction that would make
him whole, yes, whole; he saw himself as maimed, deformed. Nothing I said or
did ever changed that, even after I finally understood what was happening to
him. I tried to leave ... wanted no part of that mess. He wouldn’t let me go.
He’d sired no children on any of the women there, Warned them, either they were
barren or tricking him or sabotaging his experiments ... how they could do that
was something I never understood, because they were confined to those small
cells, but he was beyond being rational about it by then.
“All the time I was there he watched me, had spy eyes on me
when he was somewhere else, made me watch the tapes and tell him everything I
was thinking. Sometimes he couldn’t get it up with me, then he’d beat me ... on
the body where it wouldn’t show. He was always careful before visitors ... none
of them saw the women ... made me reassure my mother ... pretend I was content
... still in love with him, healthy, happy. More than once he almost killed me
... ruptured spleen, internal bleeding, you name it ... wouldn’t let me die,
though I’d have been glad to by then ... shoved me in the autodoc ... toward
the end I was deliberately driving him into rages ... either he’d kill me and
I’d be free of his torment or he’d injure me enough he had to put in the
autodoc ... addicted me to that machine.”
She passed her thumb over her wrist again, sighed. “Finally
I looked so bad he wouldn’t let anyone see me ... told everyone I was pregnant
... by him, of course ... having a hard time ... prone to miscarriage, so he
didn’t want me bothered. My mother didn’t believe him, but she couldn’t do
anything until she figured a way into his dome past his defenses. She got
Hyaroll to tease Kell away for a few hours ... got to me ... got me to open for
her ... got me out ... she and Hyaroll, she told me he was my father, but he
never said anything. They put my head together again ... though the seams show
if you know where to look ... and when they were done with that, I started
running. Been running ever since. I couldn’t bring you to Vrithian ... not a
baby ... you have to see that. I wish you’d killed him when you had the chance,
Lee. You should have killed him.”
Aleytys came out of her chair with an urgent suddenness that
startled Shareem, knelt beside her, put a hand on her
arm. “Forget what I said, Reem, just get me to Vrithian.
Then you take off, scoot as far away as you can.”
Shareem blinked. “Seven hundred years.” She patted her
daughter’s hand with absentminded affection. “A long time to run. But I had a
lot to run from. He didn’t give up on me, not even then. I wouldn’t go back to
the dome, but ... anything else, all he had to do was whistle and I’d come ...
nice little bitch, trained to heel. By that time he didn’t really want me, just
... he killed my mother, destroyed everything she was fond of ... but me ...
lay back for years, apparently resigned to defeat ... then he went to the
Mesochthon, registered a death challenge ... next day he ... he meant to get us
both, I think, but Hyaroll ... he discovered something ... I don’t remember
much about that time ... something about collapsed matter, I think ... I don’t
know ... he wanted Mother to come and help him celebrate, she was always his
favorite Vryhh, he was fond of me too ... in his way ... Mother ... one of her
damakin was about to foal, that was what she was playing with then, she liked
working with animals, this one was so gentle and trusting it was near extinct
on its home world, this damakin was about to foal and having a hard time so she
wouldn’t come ... and I went instead of her ... and Kell got a bomb through her
defenses somehow, turned everything to slag.”
She lifted Aleytys’s hand, held it briefly against her
cheek, put it with gentle precision on the chair arm. “How could he get away
with something like that? We Vrya never acknowledged the right of anyone to
judge our acts; we’re all sovereign nations, Lee, with a population of one.
Nations declare war on each other, don’t they? We call our wars death duels.
Kell did all the proper things, he issued a formal challenge at the Mesochthon,
then killed my mother. Too bad, but she wasn’t lucky or smart enough. Anyone
who thought different could challenge him. But there was no one. Hyaroll
wouldn’t, and I’d rather have jumped into the sun naked. I think Hyaroll must
have said something to him, though, because after that he more or less left me
alone. Oh, he’d play ... sick games with me, mock at me ... after a while he
got bored with baiting me and left me alone ... until I came to Vrithian with
news of a daughter, something he took as a personal affront. Do you understand
a bit more what’s waiting for you? Lee, what I’m trying to say ...”
“I know.” Aleytys got to her feet, went to stand with her
hands gripping the mantel, her eyes on the floor, her back to Shareem. “I think
you underestimate yourself,” she said quietly. “I think you’re a lot tougher
than you know. But what’s the point trying to prove anything like that? Reem, I
can’t find Vrithian without you, there’s no getting around that, but once I’m
there ... well, there’s no real reason for you to stay.”
“Lee ...”
“I mean it.”
“I know, but don’t you think abandoning you once is enough?”
“You won’t be abandoning me. Don’t be absurd, Reem. I’m a
grown woman; I’ve been taking care of myself for years in some very tricky
situations.”
“Yes, I hear you. Please hear me, daughter. Please, I’m done
with rationalizing my failures. I can’t do it anymore.” She forced a chuckle
that quickly turned real as her sense of the ridiculous woke from its coma.
“Stop mothering me, Lee. Don’t you feel a little silly trying to protect a
nine-hundred-year-old baby from her better impulses?”
Aleytys swung around, set her shoulders against the bricks.
“Habits. You make them without thought and spend years thinking how to break
them.” She closed her eyes. “I hate this, Reem. I loathe it. Hunting a man
down, killing him. While he lies helpless looking up at you ... me ... eyes
filled with terror and resignation. Ay-Madar, why can’t I heal crooked minds?
Oh yes, I’ve killed men and beasts before. With my hands, with my fire, with
weapons of one kind and another. And felt them die. Felt their fear and pain
and urgency and the nothing that’s suddenly there. I can block some of that.
When I’m fighting for my life, I’m too ... concentrated ... too busy ... to
feel—no, mat’s not quite right, feeling’s shunted aside, I shut off the meaning
of it. But slaughtering a helpless man ... you said I should have killed him
before ... you were right in a way ... I would have saved a lot of misery ...
my baby ... Grey ... Ticutt, who’s my friend ... you were right, I should have
killed him. I couldn’t, Reem, I couldn’t make myself do it. If the same thing
comes up again, I don’t know ....”
“If you want an honest answer. Lee, I have to tell you I
don’t understand a word of all that. Kell’s not a man anymore, he’s a thing; he
should be grateful to you for ending him.”
Aleytys drew the back of her hand across her eyes, pushed at
the hair by her face, tucked it behind her ears, looked at her hand, let it
fall. “A thing. “No.” She slapped her hand against the bricks. “No! I can’t
start thinking like that.” Her arms held straight out before her, she turned
her palms up. Her face went quiet and remote, but held no hint of effort, or
none Shareem could see. Tongues of flame hotter than the fire behind her shot
up from the hollows of her palms, swayed and shimmered for a short time, then
sank back into her daughter’s flesh. “If I start thinking like that, I’ll soon
be no better or saner than Kell. No. I’ll do this thing. He’s left me no
choice. Better or saner than Kell. No. I’ll do this thing. He’s left me no
choice. But not gladly. And I won’t let myself forget that what I’m Hunting is
a man, a wanting feeling intelligence.” She rubbed her hands along the bricks,
frowning at nothing, looking past Shareem at something only she could see.
Shareem sat silent. There was nothing she could say. She
found her daughter’s scruples absurd; as far as she could see they were
self-inflicted miseries Aleytys would do better without. She’d made her mild
protest; look what that had brought. Anything more and she could drive her
daughter away.
Aleytys dropped her gaze, smiled suddenly. “You kept truth
at arm’s length most of the time you were on Jaydugar, didn’t you? And that
letter, ah, that lovely misleading letter,”
“You know my reasons.” A small protest Shareem couldn’t help
making.
“The truth shall make you free.” Aleytys spoke softly,
sadly. “It doesn’t always, does it?” She slid down until she was sitting on the
hearth, legs crossed, back against the warm bricks. “But I prefer truth when it
won’t kill me outright. Makes life just a little simpler. And being able to
tell the truth—with a small t, Reem, always a small t—that’s so ... so ... I
don’t know ... so comfortable. No straining the brain to pretend I am what I’m
not, what you see is what you get, like it or no.”
“No doubt.”
Aleytys laughed, unfolded with a bounce, stretched her arms
over her head, snapped them down. “I’m hungry. You want some Wolfflan food?”
“What’s that?”
“Mostly meat and pastries, sweet glazes on the vegetables.
But there’s a place I know where the chef is accommodating and will spare the
sauces and singe a steak to your taste. I’m not much on domesticity—Grey did
all the cooking whence was home.” She went still, her face blanked, then she
shook herself and stepped away from the fireplace. “So you see, if you’re
hungry, it’s eat out or go back to your ship, or, I don’t know, not exactly
polite to work a guest, but the kitchen’s yours if you want.”
“No autochef? Me in the kitchen on my own—that would be a
disaster.” Shareem tried for a light tone, something to lessen the squeeze on
her heart as she saw her daughter grieving. “On Vrithian—and on my ship, I’ll
have you know—androids take care of that sort of thing. We’ll try your
accommodating chef. I’m sure I’ve eaten and enjoyed meals a lot stranger than
his.”
Aleytys nodded, started for the door. Over her shoulder she
said, “You know where the fresher is if you want a wash or anything. I’ll be
rounding up Shadith and Linfyar.” She saw Shareem’s grimace and grinned. “He
has private rooms, Reem—we won’t be putting on a show for the public. What
public there is.” With a wave of her hand she vanished into the hall; Shareem
listened to the diminishing clicks of her bootheels, leaned back in her chair
and rubbed at her forehead. Exhausting, this meeting a daughter she knew only
from record flakes and rumor. She had a feeling she was going to be worn to a
nub before this thing was over.
Aleytys sat in Head’s office in the chair where she’d been
presented with so many reluctantly offered and accepted ultimatums. She smiled
at Canyli Heldeen. “I expect to be back,” she said. “This is only a leave of
absence.” She scrawled her signature on the sheet and passed it across to Head,
took a sealed envelope from her shoulder bag, skimmed it after the leave
agreement. “These are the papers leasing my ship to Shadith for three years, a
drach a year. No use letting it sit around collecting dust and dock fees. At
the end of three years, if I haven’t returned to claim it, the ship’s to be
transferred to her name.”
“There could be problems about that, Lee—she’s a child.”
“Hardly.”
“Nonetheless, the way she looks is going to make trouble for
her.”
Aleytys rubbed at her eyes. “She’ll just have to deal with
that, Nyl. If it comes up. To tell you the truth, I wouldn’t want to make
anyone responsible for her actions—she’s too likely to do something off the
wall just for the holy hell of it and embarrass me and her guardian too.” She
shrugged. “If you run into problems with her looks, say her species matures ...
no, better let Shadow handle that and you just stare down anyone who objects.”
She settled back into the chair, sat with her hands resting lightly on the
arms. “Deed to my house and land, that’s in there too. If I don’t come back in
three years, or you don’t hear from me, house and land are yours, your personal
property.”
“Lee.”
“I said if.” She chuckled. “Not a very big if, my friend.
When are you sending Taggert off?”
“Three days after you leave.”
“Good. Shadith’s off tonight. She’ll have time to worm
herself into cover before he arrives. Is he going straight in like the others?”
“No.”
“Ah. Clever man. I won’t ask more.” She got to her feet.
Canyli Heldeen came around the desk, hugged Aleytys vigorously,
then walked with her through the outer offices and went down the lift shaft with
her, all this in a companionable silence. She knew what Aleytys wouldn’t say
aloud—that at the end of those three years there was a very good chance she
would own a house and horses, Shadith would own a ship. In the roofed flitter
yard, Canyli put her hand on Aleytys’s shoulder. “Take care,” she said, then
she turned and walked briskly toward the lift shaft, a square sturdy woman with
her mind already turning to a dozen more urgent problems.
“Right,” Aleytys said. She ran a hand through her hair,
tried to push away the thought that she wasn’t ready for anything, then she got
into the flitter, eased it out of the yard and started home, going over
everything that had to be done before she left, a very short list, half a dozen
items; she tried to think of anything she’d forgotten, but couldn’t dredge up a
thing, everything turned off that had to be turned off, the “girl who tended
the livestock warned she’d be in charge starting tomorrow and she should call
Head in any emergency, the loans finalized, credit in the bank with Canyli deputized
to handle it, gear packed and waiting. She looked out at the empty landscape
passing below her, bleak but with an austere beauty she appreciated more each
year. “Tomorrow. The Dance begins tomorrow.”
gameboard (first of two)
VRITHIAN IN THE MISTS
Second of five planets orbiting the star AVENAR which exists
in a slowly enlarging cavity within a cloud of faintly glowing gases and dust
DAY: 28.003 hours-standard YEAR: 585.001 days
Oblate spheroid, mean diameter 12,892 km Density 5.72 times
that of water Rotational axis tilted 24°
Four major continents (GYNNOR, BREPHOR, SAKKOR, ASKALOR)
Two large islands (LOPPEN, FOSPOR) Two major island chains
(SULING LALLER, FATTAHX-EDRA)
Bodies of water:
oceans: NORSTOR FISTAVEY, SUSTOR FISTAVEY, ISTENGER,
VATACHAVAR, RABAHAR
other: Seas of JUVELHAV, PAPUGAY
Gulfs of MACADAO, PEFAXO
Straits of TAVAKAY Lake SERZHAIR
Indigenes—two intelligent species with separate evolutionary
histories
ORPETZH: Warm-blooded reptiloids, tri-sexual (female,
male, neuter; though the neuter does not participate in sexual transactions,
conception is possible only when it is present; there is some indication that
even copulation does not occur in the absence of a neuter), oviparous (only
marginally so; the infant is born inside a translucent flexible shell,
continues to grow and develop for another thirty-five to forty days before
hatching), average adult height: female 160 cm, male 150 cm, neuter 120 cm,
average life span 50 years standard (approx. 31 years-local)
GALAPHORZE: Mammalian, bi-sexual, viviparous, average adult
height: female 155 cm, male 175 cm, average life span roughly equal to that of
the ORPETZH
Moons:
MINHA: mean distance 154,000 km, mean diameter 1,775
km. MINACHRON: phase cycle full moon to full moon, 12.04 days.
ARAXOS: mean distance 244,020 km, mean diameter 3,
462 km. ARACHRON: phase cycle, full moon to full moon, 26 days. A JUBILEE is
called whenever an ARACHRON ends with the Vrithian year, a minor festival
occurs each time MINHA and ARAXOS are full at the same time.
Vrithian: The Continents Gynnor And Brephor
_files/image002.jpg)
Vrithian: The Continents Sakkor And Askalor
_files/image003.jpg)
Vrithian
action on the periphery [1]
The Song of the Sorrows of Agishag
sung to the children of Agishag as they are initiated into
the rights and responsibilities of adulthood
the drums whisper
the hollow is dark
the torches wait for fire
listen
(listen, listen, listen: the word goes round and round the drumroom,
old ones hissing, hissing with anger and fear in the sibilant hot darkness, the
manai listening, the tokon listening, the naidisa listening, all listening with
fear and trembling)
once the Conoch’hi went where they willed
once the world was where the wind went and only that
touch the patterns of the line-Mother’s life weave
feel the wind in the life-Mother’s weave
(the mana Amaiki touches the narrow strip of her own life weave,
the knots and spaces that record the events she thinks worthy of memory and
telling, the sun in her eyes when she burst the shell, the first bean sprout
she coaxed from seed, little things and perhaps too many of them, her mother
calls her hoarder, but her fingers slide over the story of her short life and
bring her pleasure)
feel the pattern change
Hyaroll came
the Undying came and took the winds from the Conoch’hi
he set his hard hand on the Mother-of-All
the earth that feeds and sustains us
like a wild tedo he tamed her
like a herd of tedo he tamed us
the old he laid aside and would have slain
the life-Mother of the Conoch’hi rose up to him
the life-Mother sang him the worth of the old, the need of the young
he stayed his hand
for two hands of days and two more the old sang to him
by their song they bought their lives from him
but the sick and the crippled and the weak he took
the sick and the crippled he tormented, he changed
he sent them back to the Conoch’hi
strangeness came to the Conoch’hi
our ways were changed
our children were changed
we looked at them and could not understand them
through them came the dreams, the throwing of lots
through them came the ways of far-seeing, the knowing of tomorrow
and tomorrow
three decrees he gave to the life-Mother of the Conoch’hi
to the Hundred Families he gave these decrees
I will give you peace, I will protect you from the zuilders and
lallers
the shiburri, the shevorate, the stovasha and all others
I will heal the sick and send the rain and teach you what you need
to know
in return you will do these things for me
five manai and five tokon and five naidisa you will send to my
dome
to do my will and serve me in all ways
for five years they will serve within the dome
at the end of the five years they will return
at the end of the five years you shall choose five and five and
five again
thus he decreed and thus it was done
this was the second decree
the Conoch’hi will cease to follow wind and water
the Conoch’hi will cease to follow the tedo herds
the Conoch’hi will live in villages and learn the heart of bulb
and seed
of stone wood and iron
this was the third decree
the Conoch’hi will limit their numbers
for every six will seven only be born
any over that will be taken
any over will be sent away
then Hyaroll said
the Undying he said
live on the land as I have told you
live on the land within the borders I have set for you
live in peace and learn what you must
thus he decreed and thus it was done
Conoch’hi heard
Conoch’hi feared
Conoch’hi sorrowed for the lost ways
Conoch’hi obeyed
weep for your children, oh line-Mothers, life-Fathers, your children
are gone
you have sent away your naidisa that the numbers might be kept
you have sent away your daughters that the numbers might be kept
you have sent your sons away that the numbers might be kept
weep, Conoch’hi, your children are taken
rejoice, Conoch’hi, they are taken not lost
of our flesh and our bone far-speakers were made
out of pity and play the undying he made them
the far-speakers give the taken back to us
none is lost
new families and old
none is lost
save only one line
hear the song of the lost
(the singer’s voice stills with a dying hiss, the drums keep
beating; Amaiki trembles and strains to listen. To this point all
has been a repetition of things commonly known. What is coming is one of the
secret things that adults know but never tell children. Amaiki straightens her
back, touches her life weave another time, knowing she will not knot this song
into it. This is too secret, too sacred, altogether too terrible)
these are the names of the lost
Children of Agishag must not bear these names
forget nothing
say nothing
hear the ancient anguish of the Conoch’hi
hear the sorrow of the Conoch’hi
hear the names of the lost
Tahere oc cuji
Oojitay oc cuji ,
Marai oc cuji
Mriize oc cuji
Yonikti oc cuji
Je-mawi oc cuji
line cuji is no more
line cuji cast off that name
weep for cuji who were, hayal who are
praise hayal who cast off their cions and their name
praise hayal and remember what they’ve seen
these are the names of the children of the lost
you will not name a child from these names
forget nothing
say nothing
Kurim, Kiraz, Shakati
Fonnim, Fanasi, Fukati
Misi, Miji, Achavai
Nunnin, Chacai, Alvanai
Shijun, Shaki, Nugavai
Hyaroll cast fire at them
you have seen the black ash of them
loom and lot, Hyaroll burned them
hatchling and dartling, Hyaroll burned them
the air stank of them
the earth stank of them
the stench of their burning lay on us for two hands of days
six days and six the smell lay on us
this is how that came to be
six and six they left cuji,
adults and children they left secretly
they went out from cuji
Dum Cuji, the village of their line
in the night they went out
into the hills they went where the air smelled free to them
following a tedo herd they went
the summer passed.
they danced the tedo dance and waited the winter through
Hyaroll said nothing did nothing
nine hatched with the coming of the sun, six they had already
they danced the birth-blessing
then they waited
Hyaroll said nothing did nothing
the summer passed
they followed the herd south through the hills,
north through the hills
they hunted and danced and mocked the not-free
the Conoch’hi waited and watched
desire and hope and fear sang in them
Conoch’hi not-free watched the free and hoped
the summer passed and with the cold of winter
came the voice of Hyaroll
cull your numbers said the voice of Hyaroll
cull your numbers and send the excess to me
the Conoch’hi waited
the Six did not listen
the free would not send their children away
Hyaroll spoke again
cull your numbers
cease following the herds
go back to your village and live as I bade you
the free laughed and danced and would not hear the voice
the Conoch’hi waited
three days they waited
five days they waited
on the sixth day, the day of the thumb, the day of power and blessing
on the sixth day Hyaroll spoke a last time
so be it, Hyaroll said
fire came from air and clothed the free
they burned, their children burned, manai and naidisa and tokon
all burned
the hatchlings cried out and ran from the tents
fire leaped around them and they burned
when the Conoch’hi went to the hills
they found black ash and that only
the tedo had fled
the tents were ash
the free were ash
we showed you the black circle, Manai, Tokon, Naidisa
we showed you the circle of black rocks
no newa makes her nest there
no grass grows there
the water is bitter and no beasts come to drink
you have tasted the bitter water, the tears of the Conoch’hi
when you were children you were Conoshim’hi
the beloved of the earth
but you have tasted the bitter water, the tears of the earth
from this night you are children of sorrow
from this night you are Conoch’hi
oh weh, weh, the bitter water
oh weh, weh, the sorrow.
(Amaiki mana-that-was caresses the strip of her own life weave,
knots the sorrow knot into the cords, sings weh-weh with the others, but there
is no sorrow in her heart, only a savoring of knots and spaces to come, the
pattern of her life-to-be)
Agishag on Gynnor
_files/image004.jpg)
Vrithian
second bell
Hyaroll scowled at the woman standing before him. She
claimed to be one of his daughters when she came yelling to be let in. Might
well be, nothing against it. Reminded him of her mother, haranguing him like
that. A stupid acid-tongued bitch with a clever body and little else to
recommend her. Eybolli, her name was. This one whose name he didn’t know and
didn’t care to know seemed a faded copy of her, tongue and all. If he’d had any
part in making her he could see no evidence of it. At least she was running
down a little.
“We don’t want her here?”
“We?”
“The true Vrya on Vrithian.” “Ah. What of the true Vrya off
Vrithian?”
“They aren’t here.”
“A profound insight.”
She looked startled, then offended. It was faintly and
briefly amusing to watch her struggle with her spleen, but he was growing bored
and beginning to wonder what senile whim had made him let her into the dome.
She forced a smile, put her hand on his arm. He thought of slapping her silly,
pitching her into her flier and sending her off, but couldn’t raise the energy.
“Listen,” she cooed at him, “it isn’t so much of a thing, all you have to do is
change your vote. The others will follow your lead.”
“Oh?”
“So, maybe not Loguisse, but she doesn’t count if the rest
agree.” She patted his arm. “Come on, Daddy dear, do it, hmmm? You don’ even
know what she’s like. All you have to do is say nay instead of aye.”
“Go away.”
“What?”
“Go away.”
“I won’t. I won’t go until I have your answer.”
“You got it, same as it was the first time. The Tetrad will
recognize Shareem’s daughter as Vryhh.” He shook off her hand, spoke to the
android standing a pace behind him. “Megathen, get her away from me.”
She glared into the abstract planes of the android’s face.
“Don’t touch me. I’ll go.” She switched the glare to Hyaroll. “That dirty
half-breed won’t last a year. You wait. You’ll see.”
Vrithian
players moving on an oblique file [1]
Willow sat cross-legged, pricking blue lines into the skin
of her thigh. Her head down, she pretended indifference to what was happening
around her, but she was listening intently to Hyaroll and the female Vryhh.
He stood with his hands clasped behind his back, his feet apart,
planted like a boulder in the grass of the small lawn. Old Stone Vryhh, he
won’t listen, you wasting you breath, woman. Old Stone Vryhh, stealer of life
to fill the hollow in him. Go away, woman, leave him be. If that bitch stirred
him up, chances are he’d dump his collection back in the stasis boxes before
getting busy helping her or fighting her.
For several hundred years Willow had taken her life in small
discrete bites as Hyaroll rotated his vast collection of life forms, giving
them conscious existence until he grew bored with them. A few of them were
always waked together for their brief hours of life, but others in the group
came and vanished as ephemerally as mayflies. It was hard, this making friends
and losing them to Hyaroll’s whim; after the third waking she kept herself
apart from most of them, spending her time with two beings who seemed linked to
her, risking the hurt of losing them because she could not live without
affection and touch; she would rather be dead, finally dead, dead with no hope
of waking, than live like Hyaroll, unloving and unloved.
“Half-breed! A caricature. Pitiful. You voted against it at
first. Say something, Har. Why did you change your mind? No, I won’t believe
you changed, you let her maul you into it.” She went on with her rant, giving
him no chance to speak. “Mongrel bitch. Knows nothing of our ways. Why should
we have to ...” The bitter voice went on and on, laying epithet on epithet, all
washing against the stone of Hyaroll’s indifference.
Bodri and Sunchild. Friends. The only bridge Willow had
across the little deaths of the stasis box.
Bodri was grubbing about in the flower beds, singing his
grumbling songs to the worms and bees and the good bugs, zapping the pests and
parasites with stinging hairs that grew on several of his many fingers,
trundling happily about the garden on his six short stubby legs. With his heavy
high-domed carapace planted with vines and shrubs and flowering plants, feeding
him sun-strength for the blood-strength they took from him, he looked like a
many-times-enlarged beetle, but instead of mandibles and compound eyes, he had
a leathery black face rather like that of a wise old sheep and luminous brown
eyes that usually smiled with affectionate amusement at the world’s
absurdities. His snout was shorter and blunter than that of a sheep, his lips
and tongue more flexible, able to shape with ease the words he loved almost as
much as his plants. Four tentacles branched from his front shoulders, each of
these split into six delicate fingers of surprising strength—Willow blinked and
stared the first time she saw him at his most determined weeding, plucking
diseased shrubs bigger than he was from the stubborn earth. Antennae like fern
fronds sprouted behind little round ears; they extended his senses of hearing,
smell and touch far beyond anything his ears, nose or fingers could tell him.
They were lightly rolled now, curled up on themselves to escape the scratching
of the Vryhh woman’s shrill voice, but he was listening, Willow knew; he shared
the anxiety growing in her.
He’d been here longer man any of the other beings, at least
the ones Willow had met and spoken with; he was one of the first life forms
Hyaroll had collected. The last of his kind and he knew it. One day when he was
in a mood of gentle melancholy, he told Willow his folk were dying out even
before Hyaroll took him; the species had gone on too long unchanged while their
world changed about them. She squatted beside him, rubbing the tough supple
skin of a tentacle, saying nothing, letting him ramble on. Around the fifth
awakening, some four hundred years after his taking, he thought about joining
them, dying with his dying folk. Settling down in a corner of the garden and
stopping. Not eating, not sleeping, gradually shutting down mind and body. But
Hyaroll had learned too much about him and wasn’t ready to let him go; he
wasn’t sure just what the Vryhh had done to him, his memory was spotty about
those events, but his body was turned against him, would not obey him if that
obedience might put it in danger. After a short while he grew content with the
bits of life he had and seldom yearned for more.
Sunchild drifted in slow circles overhead, a shifting golden
shape invisible against the sun, hard to see even when he slipped down to brush
against treetops or hover over the ornamental lake. He came and went, came and
went, like Willow and Bodri pretending no interest in the two Vrya and what was
happening between them. Like Willow and Bodri he listened carefully to what was
said and not said, watched the woman move with angular energy about the sunny
patch of lawn, back and forth before stolidly standing Hyaroll, her voice
rising to a screech then disciplined back to calm, watched Hyaroll resisting
her with his silence, his stone face. Willow finished pricking in the design
and set the needle aside. Sunchild came floating down to squat beside her, shaping
as always into Otter’s form. The first time that happened, she was furious and
cursed him for mocking her grief, then listened skeptically as he explained he
could not help it, he caught that image from her too strongly for him to resist
it. She watched him trying to change and saw Otter’s face melting like hot
butter, reforming as soon as it melted. Go away, she said to him. I believe
you, go away for a while. She put her hand across her eyes, dropped it to cover
nose and mouth, then reached out to Sunchild’s slippery shine. Are you ghost?
she said. No, he said, nor demon. Just me. Yes, go away, she said, let me think
on this, let me make a song. Let me sing it with you, he said, I am a child
“alone, let me sing with you. Not yet, she said, my mourning is not done, give
me time to mourn my man, give me time to mourn my children, give me seven days,
Sunchild, then I’ll teach you to sing with me.
Now he squatted beside her and looked gravely down at the
blue lines she’d pricked into her hide, the double spiral sunheart and the
slanting wavelines, the water of mourning, the sun of joy. He pressed Otter’s
strong square hands on the reddened flesh (she felt only the lightest of
tingles) and smiled Otter’s lookatme smile as the redness went away.
Behind Sunchild the Vryhh woman changed her tactics, moved
close to Hyaroll, patted his arm, spoke coaxingly cooingly to him. “Come on,
Daddy dear, do it, hmmm? You don’t even know what she’s like. All you have to
do is say nay instead of aye.”
“Go away.”
“What?”
“Go away.”
“I won’t. I won’t go until I have your answer.”
“You got it, same as it was the first time. The Tetrad will
recognize Shareem’s daughter as Vryhh.”
During this last bit the iron man who served Hyaroll came
out of the house to stand beside him. Willow rubbed at her thigh and wondered
if Old Stone Vryhh had called him. Maybe he’d have that ironhead snatch up the
woman and carry her off kicking and screaming and cursing; be a sight if he did
and serve her right. Make a song I will to set ol’ Bodri giggling. If he
does it. Come on, Old Vryhh, I’m tired o’ her fussin.
Hyaroll shook off the woman’s hand, spoke to ironhead.
“Megathen, get her away from me.”
Willow leaned forward, biting back a grin, waiting.
The woman glared into the angles of ironhead’s not-face.
“Don’t touch me. I’ll go.” She switched the glare to Hyaroll. “That dirty
half-breed won’t last a year. You wait. You’ll see.” She whipped around and
stalked off toward the shaggy kadraesh trees and the wide white plates behind
them where the fliers landed.
Willow grimaced and turned away so Sunchild wouldn’t see the
disappointment in her face and ask about it.
Hyaroll stumped off toward the house, followed by the silent
ironhead, who moved as if he were made of flesh, not stiff metal; the iron men
that served the Vryhh fascinated and frightened and occasionally infuriated
Willow. She had talked enough about them to Bodri and Sunchild to grasp that
they were neither demons nor conjurations and she didn’t need to be afraid of
them, but sometimes she had the feeling that Old Vryhh was looking at her out
of their eyes. She didn’t like it and avoided them when she could.
“He looks old.” Sunchild sounded surprised and
shocked.
“Old Stone Vryhh, pretty soon he get so hard set he don’t
move no more.” Willow wiped the needle on a bit of leather and put it in the
case Hyaroll had given her a couple of wakenings ago. “He old like this dirt.”
She patted the ground beside her. “Always been old.”
“Not like this.” He turned the butter shimmer of his eyes on
her, blank eyeshapes blind as those in the ancient statues moldering back into
the dirt they came from that Hyaroll had set up in another part of the garden
so long ago he’d forgotten he had them. How Sunchild really saw was something
she didn’t understand, though he’d explained it a dozen times or more. She
passed her hand across her eyes, her mouth, ran the tip of her tongue along her
upper lip and lower. He was a golden god sculpted from sunlight as he knelt
beside her, his beauty hitting her like a blow. Every waking it did that at
least once, astonishing her anew until she became accustomed to seeing him and
forgot the form in the friend. He caught a bit of seed fluff floating past,
watched it dance on his palm, then shook it off. “Have you thought what’s going
to happen to us if Hyaroll dies? Seeing how he was today, well, the fear sort
of forced itself on me.”
She stroked her forefinger lightly over the new design on
her thigh, then clucked her tongue and slapped her thighs, beginning one
rhythm, then another and another, and finding no hope in any of them, let her
hands lie limply on her thighs. “I see this and that and it a burn in the
belly, a bad smell in the nose. Can’t make a song of a bellyache and a bad
smell.”
A rumbling chuckle and Bodri came trundling around, settling
himself on grass beside Willow with flirt of his carapace and a rustling sigh.
“Succinctly put, Whisper in my heart. Can’t reason without data, try it and
your brain rots, thus the bad smell.”
Sunchild blurred a little, developing delicate antennae in response
to Bodri’s emanations; Willow was the stronger sender, so he kept Otter’s form.
“Then we’d better start gathering some, hadn’t we?”
“Have.” Bodri’s antennae flared to full stretch, curled back
into their resting mode. “And I’ve been thinking.” He swung his big head back
and forth between them, the laughter gone out of him. “Three things. Maybe he
lets kephalos keep on running things after he’s dead. If we’re waking then, we
live out our lives here and that’s it. If we’re in our boxes, well, we won’t
know anything about it, we’ll just stay there till the power runs out and we
rot. A throw of the dice which it is when the time comes. That’s two possibilities.
The third one puts kinks in my entrails. He doesn’t like letting loose of
anything that’s his. What if he’s arranged that when he dies, kephalos opens
all the boxes and has one grand funeral fire with us for fuel? It would be
quite like the man to make sure no one else enjoys his possessions.” He looked
around, lowered his voice to a whisper. “I have been thinking it is time we
found a way out of being put back in the boxes.”
Willow nodded, then she frowned and looked suspiciously
about.
Sunchild watched her a moment, puzzled, then his mouth moved
into the archaic smile that curled the lips and missed the eyes and hinted at
mystery beyond mystery but right now only meant that he understood what was
itching at her. He moved away until he could shed form, then he began flowing
about the lawn, a flittering streak of light. He arced overhead and whipped
about them, darted down, slid into the earth, came up under the stone bench
were Hyaroll had been sitting before the woman came to destroy his peace,
flowed through it, went soaring into the sky, extending his substance down and
down and down until he was a faint gold stain on the air, one edge almost
touching the grass, the other almost touching the dome web. He quivered there a
moment, then snapped back together, came to squat beside Willow and Bodri, a meld
of beetle and boy, Otter’s face and body and Bodri’s fern-frond antennae.
“There are ears and eyes,” he said, “but no one’s listening; kephalos is busy
with other things, and Hyaroll, he’s sitting in a chair staring at nothing. For
what it’s worth, O source of all wisdom, I think you’re right, I think our end
is fire.”
Willow stared at him. “Little burning won’t do you much.”
“Leave it to Hyaroll, Willow, he’ll find a way.”
“Hmmp.” She pulled loose a blade of grass, chewed awhile on
the tender end. Holding the green strip between her teeth, she looked at
Sunchild, fluttered her hand like a bird in flight, moved it from near the
ground to as high as she could reach, then let it drop onto her thigh. “No cage
keepin you, Sunchild. How come you stay?”
“Is a cage. The dome. I can’t pass the barrier shields. The
forces that make it would tease me apart so thoroughly I’d never be coherent
again.” He laughed. “Like dropping an ice cube in that lake; it’d melt and
you’d never ever get it back again.”
“Hmmp. Is over everywhere? I walk five days that way and
that and that”—forefinger pointing, she moved her hand in a wide sweep—“and I
get to a wall. Over all that?”
“Like a lid on a pot.”
She patted the ground beside her. “Go down.”
“The pot’s the same as the lid, Willow in my heart. Hyaroll
likes to keep what he has.”
“Hmmp.” She turned to Bodri. “Eh Old Bug, you been thinkin
maybe how we catch Old Stone Vryhh and thump him good so he let us loose?”
“I fear not, little Willow.” Bodri curled his antennae tight
against his bulging skull and settled himself more solidly on the grass until
he seemed little more than a mound of rock and vegetation. He half-closed his
eyes and sighed noisily, ruffling the grass in front of him. “My folk were
never hunters, my Willow. Plants don’t run away or chase you to eat you. I have
tried to think of traps and ambushes and stratagems like that, but nothing
works right. I’m back to theorizing without hard data, and it’s a sorry ground
to stand on when your life depends on standing.”
Willow drew her legs up and wrapped her arms about them,
then sat glooming over all she knew about the dome and what it contained.
Sunchild watched them awhile, then jumped to his feet and began
dancing about the grassy oval, playing with the butterflies, chasing seed fluff
blown about by the erratic breeze. Though considerably older in actual years
than Willow and Bodri, he was very young for his kind and easily bored with
sitting still. And it was a late spring day of surpassing perfection and life
was strong and new about him. The smell of death coming off Hyaroll had
startled the what-if reflex in his mind and he’d spoken the thought as naturally
and easily as he absorbed and stored energy from the sun. And with the same
ease, he set the problem aside. He did not hunker down like Bodri and worry at
problems until he understood every facet and managed to tease out a number of
solutions whose choice depended on the effect desired. Nor did he find answers
like Willow in the concrete patterning of song and dance. He absorbed
everything around him, then let his cells rub up against each other until they
produced a collection of nonserial gestalts, an almost random flow of metaphor
into which he dipped a languid hand and came up with the answer or image or
poem or equation or whatever it might be that something in him felt was needed,
a zigzag sort of thinking that had many strengths and nothing at all to do with
rigorous analysis of a problem or the development of a line of action step by
hard-won step. So while Bodri scratched at old ground to see if he could find
something he’d missed, while Willow clicked her tongue and tapped her fingers
and worked her memory, Sunchild flowed from shape to shape to no-shape and
enjoyed the day.
“Sunchild talk to kephalos.” Willow smoothed her thumbnail
along a short thin eyebrow, drew it slowly down the side of her face. “Hmmmp.”
She looked into her palms, closed her hands into fists, opened them, rippled
her fingers. “Maybe he tickle kepha into openin a hole, we steal Old Vryhh’s
flier, go.” She flung one hand in an arc sweeping up. “Away-away.”
Bodri grunted. Tentacle fingers wandered through the garden
on his back, pinching and prodding, tending the plants like a girl lost in the
delight of brushing long thick hair. He wrinkled his black snout, yawned,
showing broad chisel teeth and massive grinders. “What’s the point of going out
of the dome? Where would we go? What would the other Vrya do to us?” He opened
his eyes wide. “And how long would it take for him to hunt us down? Day and a
half maybe, probably less.”
“Ummmp.” Willow gazed through the transparent dome at the
ancient hills, the worn-out old mountains reaching a few tough snaggles toward
the sky, the sun glittering on glaciers as ancient as the stone. She sighed.
“Can’t kill Old Vryhh. Catch him?”
“How?”
“Ummp.” She got to her feet, began wandering aimlessly about
the patch of grass, feet and body shifting into a few seconds of one dance,
then another and another, staying with nothing longer than a breath or two.
Bodri closed his eyes again. She was making him dizzy.
Sunchild came sliding down shifting into the fronded boy,
shimmering with excitement, losing his edges to no-shape. “Stasis box,” he sang
to them, his voice gone high and ethereal. “Push Old Vryhh in and forget him.”
gameboard (second of two)
AVOSING
Third of seven planets circling the green star ADIL-BADU
(Eye of the Jester) in the Pajungg constellation TAH BADU (God’s Fool), fourth
Pajungg-colonized world.
TAH BADU (God’s Fool): appears low on the horizon in
early spring (point of observation being DJIVAKIL, the planetary capital) in
the north temperate zone of Pajungg; it is a grouping of nine stars that the
Pajunggs see as a dancer kicking his feet in an extravagant caper. The Tah Badu
is an important figure in Pajungg myth, making an appearance in almost all the
hero tales, sometimes only mentioned, sometimes as a major force. He is the disrupter,
the trickster, the puncturer of pomposity; he can be very subversive to the established
order, and songs featuring him tend to be both obscene and dangerous, the
singer sometimes losing his tongue if not his head.
DAY: 32.111 hours-Pajungg The settlers could have produced
clocks that eliminated the extra seconds but clung instead to the best of home.
Every ninth day there is an extra hour added to keep the timing right, the
AMUN-BAR. The nine-day cycle suited them, the AMUN-BAR suited them. After several
decades it took on a mystical quality for the Avosingers. Life seemed brighter,
sharper, somehow more electric, more exhilarating than during the mundane
hours. The AMUN-BAR became their intimate connection with this new world,
something that separated them from homeworlders and outsiders. It was something
that could not be explained, only experienced.
YEAR: 367.001 days
Oblate spheroid, mean diameter 14,312 km
Density 4.06 times that of water
Rotational axis tilted 16°
No moons
Two major continents
BADICHAYAL (Jester’s Fantasy): lightly explored, sparsely
settled
ANGACHI (Nothing Much): officially unexplored; known from
orbital photographs to be mostly desert beyond the coastal fringes
Seventeen major island groups: officially unexplored; positions
known from orbital photographs
KEAMA DUSTA: Sole settlement large enough to qualify as a
city. Settlement and development of Avosing has been unusually slow for several
reasons. Few heavy metals, those present hard to get at. Pajungg reluctance to
disturb the home-world and the Colonial Authority further by permitting more
emigration. Pajungg refusal to grant permanent residence permits to
non-Pajunggs. Avosinger reluctance to take in outsiders. And the POLLEN.
POLLEN: Avosing is a pollen-saturated world with few
seasonal changes in the intensity of the phenomenon, though the mix of pollens
does change; the heaviest saturation is in the forest area and around its
fringes. These pollens are nontoxic but all are hallucinogenic to some degree;
the coarser grains must be breathed in or absorbed by the blood through
unprotected cuts to have any effect on an organism, but the finer grains can be
absorbed through the skin. The effect varies with the individual and the
particular mix of pollens he takes in. For most of the Avosingers, the most
important effect seems to be visions of the dead; it is as if the spirits of
the dead had migrated with the living to Avosing; it is not uncommon even in
the heart of Keama Dusta to see someone conversing animatedly with scented air
and shadows. This particular reaction is apparently determined by culture,
since smugglers and other visitors interviewed don’t share it. The Avosingers
have developed ways of coping with the pollen effect and have incorporated
these into their daily lives; they have become quite sensitive to their rhythms
and make sure they aren’t doing something vital when they’re due to tune out
the world. They have also developed several native counters to the pollens for
use during emergencies. These are kept secret and are sold to traders and other
outsiders for exorbitant prices, Avosingers being as practical as they are
mystically inclined.
SWEETAMBER: Avosing’s major resource The resinous
semifossilized substance produced by a dying Kekar-Otar tree, usually one with
a girth approaching a thousand meters, in conjunction with colonies of
jarbuatin, arthropods about the size of a man’s big toe. The jarbuatin consume
certain layers of wood within the tree and excrete a gelatinous substance that
over a handful of centuries, under the proper conditions, crystallizes into the
substance generally called SWEETAMBER. The crystals are quite hard when they’re
ripe, closely resemble black opal; when warmed against bare skin they interact
with natural oils to produce a delicate perfume that is attractive in all
senses of that word.
AMBERMINER: Any person, male or female, successful at finding
SWEETAMBER and staying alive to bring it out.
AMBERJACKS: gangs of men who keep to the fringes of the forest,
preying on amberminers. The forest usually gets them if the miners don’t.
INTELLIGENT INDIGENOUS LIFE: None known.
The Inhabited Regions Of Avosing
_files/image005.jpg)
Conversation with more information
about Pajungg and Avosing
a short reading with interpolations
Aleytys’s sitting room without Aleytys, late at night, a few
days before the departure of Taggert and Shadith, eventual destination Avosing.
Present: HEAD, SHADITH, TAGGERT
HEAD: Ortizhao pulsed this over from
University. Background on Pajunggs. (she ruffles through a pile of fax sheets,
draws out a small stack held together with a paperclip, passes it to Taggert,
locates another, gives that one to Shadith) You can read all that later. Let me
give you the more interesting parts, then if you’ve got questions I can’t
answer, I’ll toss them back to him and see what he says, (she lifts the top sheet,
runs her eyes down it, begins reading phrases from it) Pajungg is a theocracy.
Very stable. Lasted more than a thousand years standard. Very very slow progress
in basic science. Every little thing had to be passed through a church board to
see if it had the correct theological implications. Before Trader Madaskin
found them, they’d reached mid-industrial technology, inching into subatomic
physics.
TAGGERT: (scowling at his bundle of sheets) I’ve had
to deal with theocracies before. Touchy. You have to be born into something
like that to know how to survive the traps, (pause, slow tapping of fingertips
on the sheets) But we won’t be operating on Pajungg, Luck be blessed. Hmm.
Colonies. They can be more rigid than the homeworld, or looser, depending on who’s
doing the colonizing, fanatics or rebels.
HEAD: Breathe easier, Tag, you got the rebels.
It’s still going to be tricky, (looks at the sheet, reads) On Pajungg, the
ordinary believer measures his favor with his god by how lucky he is. The
hierarchy exploits this, rakes in a hefty percentage of most incomes; the
churches are essentially gambling casinos, (she looks up, laughs) Curb
yourself, Tag. Gambling’s a religion with them, (she laughs again as Shadith
grimaces at the half-pun, then reads some more) No taxes. Don’t need them. And
the richer you are, the holier. Closer to god. Chosen. More or less: Stealing
is blasphemy; thieves can be killed by anyone who catches them. Doesn’t rid Pajungg
of thieves, just the stupid ones. With that sort of selection, what’s left is
very slick indeed. Thieves don’t opt out of the system. Got their own
government. The shadow side, as they call it, runs very much like the licit
side. They’re heretics, not unbelievers. The Ajin got too close too fast to the
top men on the shadow side. Ajin. That’s an earned honorific meaning something
like the man with the nimblest of feet and fingers, or super-thief. He left
Pajungg for his health, but didn’t leave his ambition behind, (she looks up)
Slickest thief on Pajungg, that’s your target.
TAGGERT: But we’re hunting him on Avosing. Different
place, different mix of people, different rules.
SHADITH: How’d they ever manage to get offworld? Like
Taggert, I’ve seen a few theocracies. Stagnant is too mild a world.
HEAD: (switches sheets, glances at the new
page, looks up) Dropped in their laps, (reads) A free trader happened on them,
(smiles) Poor dumb son thought he’d found himself a rich new field to plunder,
(reads) The Grand Doawai wanted new worlds to rule. He had Madaskin brought before
him and questioned about his ship: when the Doawai wasn’t satisfied with the
answers he got, he handed Madaskin over to the engiaja-tah, the whips of god.
(looks up, no laughter this time, eyes move from Shadith to Taggert and back)
There are engiaja on Avosing too—do your best to keep away from them, (a short
pause while she reads to the end of the page, slips it onto the bottom of the
pile; she reads aloud from the new page) Can’t get answers if you don’t know
the right questions. The engiaja are very good at getting answers, they have a
lot of experience in the field, but they didn’t know the right questions. He
convinced them he had only the dimmest notion how his ship worked, that he knew
how to fly it and that was all he bothered to learn, why should he stuff his
head with more. They asked what was left of him where they could get ships like
his and the training to fly them, the knowledge how to build their own. He told
them. Told them how to summon another free-trader. Then they let him die. (new page)
Because they knew too much about the malice of the dying, they did not trust
his information. Pajungg lifespan averages three hundred years-standard. They
are patient. They waited for another trader to show up. Took a hundred years,
but one came. Him they treated politely. He sold them computers and software,
stole programs for them, kidnapped technicians and sold them as slaves to teach
the Pajunggs how to use the technology. And when they’d got all he could give
them, the Grand Doawai gave him to the engiaja with instructions to learn all
they could about the out-there. Then he sent ships scouting for suitable
worlds. Kept starflight technology tight in the church fist. Only engiaja and
fanatics fly the starships. (new page) Found four marginally useful worlds, set
up colonies on these, then panicked. Pajunggs willing to leave comfortable
familiar surroundings for danger and uncertainty were definitely not your
ordinary citizen. And once they got settled into the new world, well, a world’s
a big place and they were a long long way from home. The problems were different
on each world and pulled the colonists in different directions, but always away
from the hard hand of the church. About fifty years-standard ago the Grand
Doawai shut down all exploration and emigration and began sending out legions
of enforcers to impose tight church control on the colonies. He did fairly
well—even restless Pajunggs are a pretty calm bunch—then the Ajin showed up on
Avosing and started aggravating the itches in the body politic. They couldn’t
catch him and they couldn’t stop him; he wasn’t about to sweep the Avosingers
into kicking the home-worlders back home; they weren’t going to get excited
about any outsider, but they were willing to be amused by his antics and there was
enough disaffection for him to collect a sizable following and keep the
situation in a slow boil. Avosing’s a peculiar world anyway. Lot of smuggling,
the pollen, something fairly odd developing among the born-Avosingers. (she
looks up, smiling) Ortizhao has several students there, observing. Smuggled
them in, Pajunggs doesn’t know about them, the Avosingers don’t mind them, find
their questions funny most of the time. He thinks the Avosingers will kick both
the Colonial Authority and the Ajin offworld when they’re ready to act. That’s
the general situation you’ll be dropping into Questions?
SHADITH: Yeah. Colonial Authority’s a joke. Who
really runs the place?
HEAD: Good question. Hard to answer. The
grasslanders have developed a loose confederation between the villages,
communal sort of thing, no one obviously in authority, but a few men and women
who act as judges in disputes, settle questions of property value, act as
advisers especially in deals with smugglers. Only consensus to back them, but
everyone accepts their pronouncements. Why they’re chosen, how they’re chosen
(a shrug), Ortizhao’s students haven’t been able to figure that out, everyone
just seems to know who to ask for help. In the forest area—this includes Keama
Dusta—amber miners, especially the retired ones, play the same role as the
grassland judges. Just about everyone, whatever they do, if they live in or
around the forest, they give lip service to the Colonial Authority but go to
the nearest miner with their real problems. Ortizhao says he’s beginning to get
a glimmer of some organizing force behind all this but doesn’t want to talk
about it yet. And there’s always the pollen. That complicates everything.
There’s some kind of potion the Avosingers make that’s fairly safe to take in
small quantities that seems to nullify some of the worst effects of the pollen,
enough to let you move around without falling over your feet. The Pajunggs
provided us with some when we insisted. University has been working on it,
trying to duplicate it, but it’s an enormously complicated organic. Partly from
the liver of a fish the Avosingers won’t identify, partly from an herb mix they
say even less about. Doawai’s engiaja have never managed to catch anyone who
knew the ingredients, or they wouldn’t talk if they did get caught. Anyway,
right now we can’t make it or analyze it, so we do what everyone else does and
go by rule of thumb, one gram for every fifty kilos bodyweight every three
days. And hope you aren’t allergic to it.
SHADITH: Uh-huh. Given there’s Kell’s trap waiting
for the next Hunter, the Ajin’s probable paranoia about strangers, church
enforcers looking for anything they can stomp, a population that doesn’t care a
whole helluva for either side and is leery of strangers, and that invisible
government, I’d say we go in very carefully and very quietly ....
TAGGERT: And separately.
SHADITH: Right. And hope we meet in the middle with
our hands around the Ajin’s throat.
Avosing
developing a second line of attack
Shadith brought the lander down about two hours before the
local sunset; the globular little ship looked like a giant boulder and had some
very sneaky shields. Swardheld was noncommittal about where and from whom he’d
purchased that lander and even less forthcoming about why—though Shadith had some
well-developed theories about that. When she finally located him, he groused
about being left out of the game, but didn’t complain all that much, let her
have the flier and looked relieved when she left; he was nosing into something
that interested him rather more than Aleytys’s difficulties. Is that what’s
coming to us, Shadith wondered, do we drift apart and finally have
nothing to say to each other after so many years together?
She landed on a tiny island, little more than a volcanic
peak with touches of green, a few vines crawling up out of the sea, testing out
the land, their roots still deep submerged. The pebbly shore was alive with
small crustaceans that followed the vines out of the water, noisy with their
cricks and clatters. With Linfyar helping her, she carried smaller stones and
piled them haphazard about the lander until it looked as much a part of the
island as they did, then she and Linfy juggled the shell and its bubble-seal
across the groaning shifting vines, launched the shell and spent the straggles
of daylight locking the plastic bubble in place, getting wet and battered,
giggling and staggering about, beyond all expectation enjoying this misery
perhaps because it was the beginning of danger and excitement, perhaps because
they were young and healthy and simmering with unused energy.
Shadith pushed Linfy in through the hatch, tumbled in after
him, checked to see the gear was properly tied down, then stretched out on the
padded cot and started the motors driving the waterjets. As they eased away
from the shore, Linfyar curled up on the other cot, more subdued inside the
bubble: it shut off his major sense like a blindfold on a sighted boy. He
dabbed at his arms and legs with a spongy towel, leaving for Shadith all worry
about where they were going and how they were going to get there.
The shell ran low in the water, half the time almost
submerged, the Lokattor holding them on course. It was a rough jolting ride,
the shell tossed up by the wave it was mounting, slammed back down, over and over
and over, without respite. The motor that powered the jets was nearly silent,
any small sounds it made lost in the scramble of wind and water, but that silence
cost them speed—the shell forged steadily ahead, swept up and slammed down, cutting
across the long waves as it moved toward the mainland, but it moved no faster
than a man’s quick walk. A touch of insurance, perhaps not needed, but Shadith
took chances only where there some possibility of payoff. Not far to the north
was the large island that held the world’s sole spaceport and most of the
on-planet detection equipment, along with a garrison of church enforcers meant
to discourage illegal landings such as the one she’d just made. According to
Head’s notes, the Pajunggs were dickering with several Companies for satellites
and emission sniffers, hoping to cut into the hordes of smugglers hitting the
surface of Avosing, drawn like flies by the sweetamber and the drugs distilled
by the foresters from local plants, but they wanted the Avosingers to pay for
the scanners. The colonists got a good portion of their income from dealing
with those smugglers, and a lot of technology the church didn’t want them to
have; they weren’t about to put themselves out of business, though they were
too wary of the homeworld to be blunt about it; they just dragged their feet,
studied the proposed systems with skeptical intensity, made reasonable
objections and went on dealing with the smugglers, who had no more difficulty
than Shadith evading the limited resources of the Authority. Up the Avosingers,
she thought, may their shadows ever increase.
For four long hours the shell jolted across the ocean, then
Shadith brought it nosing into an inlet about a day’s march south of Keama
Dusta, found a place where the land sloped to a flat sandy beach and drove the
shell up onto the sand.
Standing in the hatch, she used a flamer on low power to
sweep a section of the beach clean of vine and the scurrying life swarming
there; with Linfyar perched on top of the bubble, ears twitching, pulsing out
exploring whistles, she set up a tingler fence to keep the sand clean and
discourage anything hungry that might come out of the forest tempted by the
scent of warm meat. I’ll keep my meat on my bones, thank you. She
wrinkled her nose at the huge dark trees that came to the edge of the low wall
of earth at the back of the beach, brooding in a silence filled with creaks,
crackles, rustling leaves, long wavering cries. “Definitely not in the dark,”
she said.
“What?” Linfy slid off the bubble and came to stand beside
her.
“We’ll spend the rest of the night here.”
“Sure. I’m hungry.”
“Well, help me unload the shell and hide it. Then we’ll eat.
Shadith spread her blanket close to the fence and sat
looking out across the water. She felt extraordinarily alive. Free. On her own
again, in her own body. Operating a scam of sorts, living by her wits and her
talents. Speaking of talents, wonder if mind-riding works on arthropods, the
big ones making all that noise. She reached into the forest and sought out
the most organized mind, meaning to slip into it and see what she could learn. Ah,
here we go. She started in, gulped in surprise, wrenched herself loose before
she was controlled by something operating in that mind, a mind that was so
close to true self-awareness, so close to true intelligence, she hadn’t a hope
of controlling it even without that other thing. Shaken but fascinated—no
hostility in that touch, just curiosity and a cheerful interest—she reached
again, more cautiously. *Who?*
*Who you?*
A giggle tickled through her. *Singer, poet, friend.*
Another giggle.
*Wanting?*
*Knowing. Hunting. Lots and lots and lots of things.*
*Patience, small voice.*
*Why?*
*Why not?* The presence withdrew.
“Now that’s a thing.” She pulled her legs up and clasped her
arms about them. “Did that really happen or am I zonked in spite of that liver
juice?” She giggled and dug at the wet sand with her bare toes. “Me with voices
in my head. Funny, uh-huh.”
In a half-dream, deeply relaxed, she drifted for several
hours until, toward dawn, mist rose from the waves and danced for her, silver
streamers that shaped themselves into forms she remembered from so long ago she
couldn’t count the years, her six sisters, Weavers of Shayalin.
She gazed at the graceful swaying images, black-and-silver
similitudes of Naya, Zayalla, Annethi, Itsaya, Talitt and Sullan. Six sisters,
weaving dreams and selling them to anyone who’d buy; from alien eyes, she gazed
and could not quite believe in them. Weavers of Shayalin, dancing dreams.
She watched the figures spin threads from themselves to
shape shifting images, icons out of memory, dreams she’d learned too well in
that long ago, that time long past.
But the dance was silent, it lacked the play of the blended
voices, was painful in that lack; when she could bear the silence no longer,
she began to sing the ancient croon that mated with that dance, faltering at
first because the human larynx could not produce all the overtones the Shayalin
throat could hold; almost of their own volition her fingers sought out pebbles
on the beach; she cupped them in a closed hand and clicked them together. Deep
within her she was aware it was all illusion, a creation of her mind and the
ambient pollen, but she was willing, more than willing, to accept the show and
enjoy this projection of memory outside her head.
As she worked herself into the croon, shaking the three water-smoothed
stones, the images of her sisters grew more detailed; eventually she thought
she saw Itsaya wink at her, saw Naya smile, Zaya shake her hips and grin over
her shoulder, saw each of the sisters acknowledging her with some
characteristic gesture. She let herself sink into the experience, her whole
body responding with both joy and sorrow.
Linfyar slept, hearing nothing.
The song went on. She moved in the dream dance with her sisters
as she had before, odd one out, half the age of the others, the link to store
the dance patterns, the shaping words, and pass them on to her children, her
six and then one, six sterile daughters and one fertile hatchling that could be
either male or female.
When the dawn was a faint red line on the horizon, when her
voice had grown hoarse, her arm weary, she stopped her song and watched the
similitudes dissolve into shapeless shreds of mist. As her concentration lapsed,
she felt the presence behind her, listening and responding. Laughter and
applause flooded over her. The presence retreated. She wondered again if it was
just a twist of her imagination, then shook her head. Something different
there, an alien quality she could almost taste, yes that was it, a different flavor
on the tongue. She watched water and sky redden, then fade to an icy gray with
the dawning.
When the sun was fully up, she woke a reluctant, grumbling
Linfyar, handed him a meal pack and began rolling up the blankets, buckling
them into the shoulder straps so Linfy could carry them. She collapsed the
tingler fence and tucked it in her pack, smoothed her hand down the outside of
the harp case, tapped her fingers on the leather, snapped it open, touched the
loosened strings, sighed at the dull toneless tunks she produced. “Well, that
can wait.”
“What?”
“Bury that when you’re finished with it.”
“Sure.”
“I mean it, imp.”
“I hear you.”
“Hunh.” She tied the case onto the backpack, slid her arms
into the straps of the packframe and rocked onto her feet. “We don’t want
anyone knowing where and when we came ashore.”
He whistled a short sassy trill, modulated it into a
breathy, cheery tune, kicked a groove in the sand, set the pack in it with exaggerated
deliberation. In an almost dance, he used his feet to scrape sand over the
pack, listening to the sounds the grains made so he’d know when the job was
finished, squatted and patted the loose soil down with finicky little touches,
smoothing it and smoothing it, passing his fingertips over the patch, smoothing
it again.
She watched a minute, shook her head. “Stop fooling, imp.
You’ve made your point. Here. Take this.” She tapped the blanket roll against
his arm. “I’m set. Let’s go.”
After she scrambled over the edge of the earth wall and
pushed onto her feet, she eyed the great trees uneasily. Not so long ago a
carnivorous collection of monsters very much like these had come close to
sucking her dry. She moved cautiously after Linfyar, relieved when she passed
through the margin of brush and fern to find no skirts of blood-drinking air
roots on the trunks. She stayed wary. You never knew what trees could get up
to, no matter how safe and rooted they looked.
The presence was suddenly there, laughing.
“It’s all right for you,” she said aloud, indignation
quivering in her voice. “You know this place.”
“What?” Linfyar turned his head, one ear quivering at her.
“Never mind.” She caught up with him, glared at the trees
around them, walked close beside him. Soft amused laughter sounded in her head.
She ignored it, but after a tense sweaty kilometer or so, she saw the humor in
the situation and grinned into the dappled shadow as she walked beneath the
trees. After all those years as a voice in someone else’s head,
who was she to object to a voice walking through her own?
* * *
They walked north, keeping to the fringes of the forest. Now
and then Linfyar would stumble, turn his head side to side, his pointed fawn’s
ears twitching. For the first time she thought to wonder what hallucination was
like for someone born without eyes. Imagined sound? What kind? Memories from
his old home? She started to ask, but changed her mind; she didn’t want to be a
part of the illusions, didn’t know whether he would hear what she said or distort
it into something else, perhaps something frightening. After several of these
episodes, she saw him shake his head and then his whole body, grin and begin a
lilting whistle, a raunchy trader’s song she’d taught him on Ibex when Aleytys
was off somewhere. She smiled. Aleytys fussed too much. Worried over things. In
a way Ibex was good for her, all those dreary little enclaves obsessed with
killing off everyone who was different and unless she wanted to spend a Vryhh
lifetime there she couldn’t change any of it; with all her power she couldn’t
boot them into righteousness. Still, just as well she grew up with that
uncomfortable conscience firmly installed—what would she be like without it?
Shadith shivered. I should be glad she worries—I wouldn’t
be taking this walk otherwise.
Halfway through the morning the presence came tickling back,
didn’t say anything, just hung around watching. She glanced at Linfyar to see
if he felt anything. Neither she nor Aleytys knew much about the limits of his
perceptions; he kept surprising them. He showed no signs of noticing anything
strange floating about. He was whistling, more softly now, spaced bursts of
sound, as if he were trying out his hallucinations, working on them, playing
with the tricks his mind was throwing him. She laughed. He swung around and
began to walk backward, grinning at her, his ears shivering and shifting about.
“I think you like this crazy world,” she said.
“Ay-yeh, Shadow.” He waited for her, turned around and
jigged along beside her. “Crazy-crazy.” He liked the sound of the doubled word,
said it again, “Crazy-crazy,” began chanting it over and over under his breath.
She worried for a moment about how he was going to find his way without his
locator pulses, but his proximity sense and whatever else he
had was working well enough, because he negotiated the
tangle of roots more nimbly than she, avoided patches of brush and low-hanging
tree limbs, all the while continuing the sotto-voce chant, changing words to
try out different combinations of sounds.
The world blurred suddenly, it warped and flowed into
strange shapes about her, images dripping down, melting into each other, color
melting into color, shapes ballooning, dissipating like smoke, shapes doubling
and redoubling. She stumbled to a stop, lost in this chaos, flung her hands out
groping for something solid. Anything. A small warm hand-closed on hers, held
it with a strength, that vaguely surprised her; she heard a gush of words but
understood none of them, their sounds as distorted as the colors and shapes,
understood only that it was Linfyar who spoke. Trembling with relief, she clung
to those anchor points, Linfy’s hand and Linfy’s voice, and let him lead her
until the confusion faded.
When the sun was close to directly overhead, they stopped to
eat and rest awhile; in a thirty-two-hour day it was a long time between dawn
and noon. As they ate they talked about things unconnected with this
disconcerting world, things back on Wolff, horses and colts, the vagaries of
the house cats, the song of birds that lived in the grove of trees behind the
house, the necessity or not for Linfyar to spend some years in school; they
tried out a few songs, blending their voices at times, at times Shadith singing
to Linfy’s whistle, at times he singing while she beat the rhythm with her
palms on the leather of her harp case. The listener in the forest drifted in
closer sometimes, sometimes retreated until Shadith almost couldn’t feel him,
but never quite went away.
Shortly after they started on, Linfyar staggered, then began
running. Shadith ran after him, caught him before he could hurt himself, hugged
him tight against her, remembering how much comfort she’d found in his touch
when she suffered chaos. Disoriented and frightened, he clung to her,
whimpering and shuddering. She looked about, found a knot of roots high enough
to make a seat, lifted him into her lap and rocked him like a baby, stifling
her urge to sing to him; it might make his horrors worse. Finally she heard a
long shuddering sigh and he relaxed against her. She risked a word. “Over?”
“Uh-huh, Shadow.” For a moment longer he nestled against
her, then he pushed away with nervous strength and stood on the bed of leaves
with feet apart, his body a shout of defiance; whistling as loud as he could,
he flung a scornful trill at the forest. “Hunh,” he said. “Stupid trees.”
Shadith laughed and rocked back onto her feet, the pack a
weight that grew heavier with each hour. A lot of hours ahead before they got
to the end of Linfy’s stupid trees. She thought of making camp here and going
on in the morning, then sighed and began walking. Might as well keep going. God
knew what prowled here in the dark.
Episodes of confusion came steadily after that, none of them
quite as bad as the first. Linfyar and she helped each other and kept moving;
their metabolisms differed enough for one to be clear-headed when the other was
muzzy. Irritated and a little afraid, she was tempted to take more of the
counteractant, but Head had warned her against that. “We’re running on guess
and hope,” she’d said, “and the fact that this glop has never killed anyone,
though a lot of different types have taken it. Both you and the boy are mutated
stock, no knowing what it’ll do to you; the only reason for chancing it is that
going in without it would probably be worse.” Shadith endured and Linfyar
endured and both kept moving. The exercise seemed to help. By midafternoon the
severity of the hallucinations had diminished so much that for Shadith it was
like looking at the world about her though a distorting screen. Shapes and
colors changed, sometimes did the melting trick, but she knew where she was and
what was around her no matter how wild the contortions got. Her mind and body
were adjusting to the world, a wrenching experience but one that seemed about
over. Linfyar was experimenting with sound, playing with what had terrified him
just a short while before, so she knew he’d passed his crisis and was enjoying
himself again; she watched him strutting along and chuckled softly. I told
Lee you were a tough little imp, she thought, and so you are, oh yes you
are.
When the sun was a hand’s breadth above the horizon and
shadows were swallowing the expanse of three-lobed ground-cover plant thick and
soft as moss that stretched from the forest to the outskirts of the city,
Shadith and Linfyar walked from under the trees and stopped after a few steps
onto the clovermoss, enjoying the sudden sweep of a brisk cool wind.
Linfyar bounced on the springy growth, bent and broke off a
stem, crushed the leaves and sniffed at them. “Walking on a mattress,” he said.
“Smells good.” He rubbed the sap off his fingers, drooped all over, put on a
pathetic little smile, turned himself into an image of extreme debility. “I’m
tired, Shadow. I’m hungry. Let’s stop.”
“We’re almost there, Linfy.”
“You said that before.” He dropped into a squat, looked stubborn.
“You’ve been saying that for the longest.”
“Well, it’s really true now, we’ve got maybe half a
kilometer to go. I can see it, Linfy, and if you listen, you can probably hear
something. Besides, do you want to spend the night around the forest? Remember
what we ran into on Ibex.”
He crouched where he was without responding, his fingers
wandering across the clovermoss, but his ears twitched, then swiveled in the
direction of the city. A minute more and he got wearily to his feet, no
play-acting this time. He really is tired, she thought. Poor baby. He
sighed. “When can we stop?”
“Soon as we find a place to stay.”
The inner city, the center of government on Avosing with its
tall sealed buildings and covered ways, where the homeworlders of the Colonial
Authority lived and worked, that city sat inside a high wall that was as
unnecessary as it was massive, serving as a visual symbol of the distrust all
of those inside it had for the world they were supposed to govern. The wall had
only two gates—airlocks fitted with baffles and filters and everything else
Pajunggs could think of to keep out Avosing ,air and the confusion it carried.
One gate led to the great cathedral casino, the other into the city proper.
Avosingers seldom used that one, for the city made them uncomfortable; they
went into it when they had unavoidable business with the Authority and
otherwise stayed away. The rest of Keama Dusta, the greater part, was a vast
sprawl of homes and businesses, huts and factories, taverns and warehouses,
shops and showplaces, a clotted rambling conglomeration without apparent
pattern to it.
Shadith walked into the fringes of the city, past crude
shacks that could have been eyesores but weren’t, structures thrown together
from scrap wood, nothing painted, bits of this sort of wood and that fitted
together into curving natural shapes, aged by time and weather into soft grays
and umbers, vines of the blooming sort twisting about the timbers until the
distinction between outside and in was lost. The strong slanting light from the
setting sun intensified the textures, adding strong blacks and reddish
highlights to the more muted colors. I think I’m going to like these
people, anyone with such a feeling for beauty. She wrinkled her nose as the
presence laughed in her head. Giggling fool, she thought at it. There
were no streets, no straight lines anywhere, just the irregular spaces between
the houses, some long and thin, some like roundish bulbs on a vine, all covered
with the vigorous clovermoss. Spaces filled with a ferment of life, children
running everywhere, food vendors with steaming everything on skewers over coals
and under heat lights, taverns with clusters of tables out on the moss, with men
and women sitting over beer and wine talking, laughing, men and women standing
about talking with the air.
A lean woman with gray-streaked hair sat on the clovermoss
in one of the nodes, legs crossed, back straight, hands resting on her knees, a
vague smile lifting thin lips, lost in some ancient memory, watching it move
before her, something cherished by the look on her lined leathery face. Playing
shouting wrestling slapping at each other, children ran and tumbled about her,
giving her a polite space to herself. When one of them dropped out of the game
to stare at a patch of air, the others left that same sort of space about him
or her and went on their games and he or she rejoined the action a little later
without comment on either side.
All this was very interesting, but she was tired and Linfyar
was stumbling along, clinging to her. She worked her way to one of the larger
nodes, found an unoccupied patch of clovermoss, settled her pack beside her
with Linfyar to guard it, unsnapped the harp case and sat tuning the harp until
she had it right.
She didn’t know what the local custom was for street performers—don’t
even have streets here—or what bureaucratic rites she was skipping, though
Head had said the Authority rarely stuck its collective nose outside the walls;
it was the invisible government she’d have to placate. Setting up and
performing should bring quick action on that; street people, even without
streets, protected their privileges. She got interested looks as she finished
the tuning and began a ramble across the strings searching for something that
felt right for the people and the place. More Avosingers drifted up and settled
onto the clovermoss waiting for her to begin.
Perhaps because of the long dreamvision the night before,
what finally felt right was the music of her people. She slid into the croon,
using the harp to amplify her range and provide the sounds her voice could not.
Almost at once her sisters were dancing again, frail ghosts swaying through the
sundown shadows and the gathering crowd.
Beside her Linfyar straightened his narrow shoulders and began
weaving his whistle into her wordless song, deepening and broadening the sound
as if he tied into her memories as deeply as she did.
The Avosingers listened like ancient clients, eyes wide and
dreaming.
And she was doing what she’d never thought to do, singing a
dream for others. She was the link who learned and passed on but never
performed except for her mother, her trainer, a link as she was. Before the
Kanzedor raid that killed her mother and cast her aside, that took her sisters
and her aunts, one of the many slave raids that stripped Shayalin of its weavers
and destroyed a culture that had lasted for millennia, before she was wrenched
from all she knew, sold as trash at the first bid, thrown on her own, her kin
vanishing forever, her world irretrievably out of reach (by the time she worked
herself loose, it had vanished as thoroughly as her family), before all that,
her duty was to store in her brain what could not be recorded or written down,
what her grandfather passed to her mother, her mother to her.
And as she made her music, it came to her that the weavers
of Shayalin might be reborn—not as they were, there were no more Shallal, but
something ... something might be done. Maybe there were people she could teach,
maybe a piece of that long-forgotten culture could live again. Hope throbbed in
her voice, and joy ....
When the croon was finished, she settled the harp against
her thigh and gave herself over to feeling good, smiling wearily as Linfyar
jumped to his feet and began moving through the wakening crowd, shaking the
collecting bowl, whistling a cheery coaxing tune, adding his charm to their
appreciation to milk a handsome coinflow from the Avosingers.
One of her listeners got to his feet, shook his head and
scuffed over to her, hands in the pockets of his shorts, a boy who couldn’t be
much older than Linfyar. “That’s Sojohl’s spot.”
“Any objection to my using it when he’s not around?”
The boy rubbed a bare foot over the clovermoss, wiggled his
thick reddish brows, worked his mouth, stared vaguely over her head as he
thought over his answer, scratched beside his nose, grinned suddenly, an
electric beam as effective as any of Linfyar’s. “Nah,” he said. “But you got to
move when he comes.”
“How far?”
“‘Nother k’shun over.”
K’shun, she thought. Emptiness. Right. This node is Sojohl’s
territory, whoever he is, and I move to the next empty node if he shows up.
“Thanks,” she said aloud. “I’m new here.”
“Yeah, I thought.”
She looked around. Linfyar was about finished; most of the
crowd was drifting off. She turned back to the boy. “You know a place I can
stay cheap? My friend and me, we need a roof and supper, been a long day, we’re
worn out.”
He looked her over, turned to watch Linfyar. She didn’t try
rushing him, feeling no urge to rush, though the sun was beginning to play
color tricks on the clouds overhead and the drifts of pollen that caught the
light and glittered through the thick air, making round rainbows that shifted
with the slow shift of the light.
“My mam,” the boy said, startling her out of her drift. “She
got a vacancy. You want, I could take you there.”
“Yeah, why not?” She clamped her teeth together to shut in a
yawn, snapped the harp back in its case. With a sigh of weariness and a feeling
she was bruised to the bone by them, she slid her arms into the packframe
straps, smiled her pleasure as the boy pulled her to her feet. “Mind if we wait
till Linfy’s finished? Your mother, however kind, will want to be paid.”
“Yeah.” He turned to watch Linfyar. His face was a little weasel’s,
all pointed, nose and mouth with almost no chin, close-clipped red hair like a
weasel’s fur; though he was as grubby as any boy would be at the end of an
active day, it was only a single day’s accumulation of dirt, no patina of
neglect about him; she’d seen the signs often enough in her wanderings. He
reached out, touched the harp case; pulled his hand back though she hadn’t said
anything. “You sing good.”
“Thanks.”
“That hard to learn?”
“Depends.” She untied her belt pouch and watched Linfyar
drifting back. “I’m Shadith,” she said. “Friends call me Shadow. You can.”
“Me, I’m Tjepa. Mam’s Perolat.”
“Well, Tjepa-si, I thank you.”
Grinning again, he sketched a bow, pleased with her and with
himself.
“How come you’re the only one come to talk to me, Tjepa-si?
Linfy’s getting a good take, so they must have liked us.”
“You sure don’t know much.”
“Tjepa, my friend, I have been here not so very long.”
He jerked a thumb at the darkening sky. “Is it really so
differnt up there?”
“All kinds of differnt.”
He eyed her skeptically. “I bet you don’t really know. I bet
you run away from home to here and don’t know nothing about nothing.”
“Hanh. Maybe you would, young Tjepa, and maybe you’d lose.
Different kinds, different times. I’m a lot older’n I look to you. So why no
talking?”
“Leavin it to me.”
She raised her brows but said nothing as she opened the
pouch and let Linfyar scoop the coins into it. After she tied the pouch back to
the belt, she said, “Tjepa, this is Linfyar, my friend. Linfy, this is Tjepa.
He says his mam can maybe rent us a room.”
Tjepa stared at Linfyar, fascinated. “You got no eyes,” he
said. “How do you know where you’re going?”
“Ears,” Linfyar said and wriggled his. He pursed his lips
and pulsed a rapid series of inaudible whistles at Tjepa. Shadith watched,
amused. Showing off, she thought. Wonder what other senses he’s using
and not saying. “You ‘bout this much taller’n me”—he measured off about an
inch between thumb and forefinger—“and you’re wearing shorts and a shirt made
outta some slippery stuff, don’t know what, and you got nothing on your feet
and you got a gap in your front teeth that shows when you talk.”
“Hey wild, Linfy, how you do that?”
Shadith tapped him on the shoulder. “Hey yourself, Tjepa-si.
Let’s go. It’s getting dark and we’re plenty hungry.”
He nodded and started off one of the side spaces, a snake
crawl that wriggled even deeper into the city, with Linfyar strutting beside
him, forgetting his fatigue as he played his tricks for his new acquaintance,
bouncing silent whistles off buildings around them or folk walking along, then
describing what he learned. Shadith followed the two boys, amused by their
antics and interest in each other. She worried briefly about Linfyar’s chatter,
wondering if he’d say too much about why they were here, but he’d learned survival
in a hard school; playing a role was as natural to him as breathing. He was
enjoying himself without giving Tjepa anything but the story they’d worked out.
She relaxed and drifted along, the edges melting about her now and then but
only small almost homey bits of disorientation. Rather pleasant, a floating
bouncy feeling. She came out of it with something like regret. A few turns
later she saw Linfy shiver and stop walking. Tjepa quieted, led Linfyar on
until he recovered, then plunged again into animated exchange.
Tjepa led them to a large rambling inn built close to the
city wall, a ragged circle of small independent apartments joined by a raised
wooden walk with a vaulted roof resting on irregular arches that looked grown
in place rather than shaped by any hand. Winding in and around the arches and
over the roofs of the apartment, luxuriant vines put out sprays of crimson or
saffron blooms or elaborate lacy leaves. The apartment-cabins had tall thin
windows with dark glass set in graceful lead tracery; they were built of woods
that had weathered to a silver gray, roofed with rough-cut shingles of the same
silken gray. The inn had a graceful unstudied ease; it sang to her of folk who
liked to touch and stroke, who had an eye for form and line, who had an
aversion for symmetry and repeating themselves, liking rather to take a theme
through subtly differing variations. It sang to her, We are a proud and
independent folk, we prize harmony with earth and air and each other. She
felt comfortable here; as she followed Tjepa through one of the wider arches,
she thought, I’m coming back here someday when I’ve got nothing on my mind
but enjoying myself.
Inside the ring of cabins and the covered walks there were
neat kitchen gardens where vegetables and herbs native to this world mixed with
those from the home world, both sorts growing with a vigor that reinforced the
feeling of kinship with earth and green growing things. She followed Tjepa and
Linfyar along the spoke-walk to the tower in the center. Roughly circular, it
looked like the lopped-off trunk of one of the giant Kekar-Otar trees, rising
three times as high as the cabins, the same kind of long narrow windows
scattered in a haphazard way that made it difficult to tell how the inside was
arranged, but suggested it followed the freeform flow of the covered walk. I
do like this place, she thought once again, and smiled at Tjepa’s back.
Tjepa’s mother, Perolat, was a tall lanky woman who looked
like a sister of the Avosinger in the meditative trance in one of the outer
k’saha, as much a kinship of spirit as it was of form. She’d seen a number of
men and women with that calm competent look, that detachment, that lack of
hurry, seen them sitting at tables over glasses of wine, seen them ambling
along talking quietly together, seen them in the crowd that gathered to listen
to her. Perolat sat stretched out in a comfortable chair with a glass of wine
at her elbow, watching pot lids bumping on the stove, wreathed in smells that
started Shadith’s mouth watering and her stomach cramping, reminding her how
hungry she was. Linfyar whistled a lilting trill full of happy anticipation,
but minded his manners and waited for Perolat to speak.
Perolat’s left leg was propped on a stool, metal and wood
and circuitry below her knee. She wore shorts and shirt like her son, making no
effort to conceal the prosthesis, She looked lazy and contented and wholly
unsurprised to see her son dragging strangers into her kitchen. She sat up,
smiled a welcome, raised heavy pepper-and-salt eyebrows.
“Mam, this is Shadith and Linfyar. They new in Dusta and
needing a place to say. She says call her Shadow. She play f-i-i-ine music.”
Perolat pushed a strand of soft gray hair off her face. “Musician?”
Shadith nodded, turned so Perolat could see the harp case
lashed to the pack.
“New here.”
“Uh-huh. This morning.”
“No ships down today.”
Shadith smiled. “How interesting.”
“Right. Your business. Hmm. Some rules we have here. I don’t
know how you pay your way, girl, and don’t get shook by what I say. You a
thief, that’s all right long as you touch nothing in the bebamp’n. That’s us
here outside the walls. Authority and cathedral’s fair game. Out here I don’t
care if you see sweetamber heaped high, you don’t touch. Not saying you are a
thief, you understand, but seems to me it takes more’n a few songs to buy passage
even on a smuggler’s ship, and you don’t look old enough, or—forgive me—lush
enough to whore your way here, though there are some clowns who like ‘em young.
Hmm. You plan to labor horizontal, do it outside the bebamp’n, don’t mess in
your nest. No offense meant.”
“None taken. How much for a roof and meals?”
“Five piah silver the nineday, food extra.”
Shadith frowned, then nodded; should have enough from the
collection to handle that. “I’ll take it a nineday at a time, if that’s all
right.” She sniffed and smiled. “And supper when it’s ready.”
“Good enough. Tjee, take your friends over to Gourd.” She
turned to Shadith. “I named them for local plants. Supper’s ten piah copper,
pay when you get back here. You can give Tjee the rent once you get settled in.
Supper will be ready in a half hour; come back here, I’ll show you where we
eat.”
Tjepa led them away from the kitchen along a covered spoke.
“Mam was the best amberminer on Avosing before she stepped into a senget nest
and got stung so bad. Me, when I’m old enough, I’m gonna be better.”
“Your mam, she had to quit because of her leg?”
“The leg she don’t have, uh-huh. There some baad burks out
there just waiting for you if you holdin amber. Got no nose, them, forest don’t
like ‘em, they hang around the outside waitin for miners to come by. You got to
be fast and tough for findin the lodes, then you got to be faster and tougher
to get th’ amber back. And the forest got to like you and you got to have a
nose to find it in the first place.”
“The amberjacks, they don’t bother you here?”
“Better not.” He waved a hand. “This part o’ the bebamp’n,
it’s all miners and their fam’lies. Ol’ jack he down to bones ‘fore he get
more’n two steps, and he know it. Like Mam said, what folk do outside is their
business, here’s home.” He stopped before a cabin, slapped his hand against a
metal plate set into the door. It slid swiftly, silently into the wall. Inside,
lights came on. He crossed the room, stopped by metal panels etched and stained
into a pleasant abstract of twisty vines, touched a sensor in one corner; one
panel slid aside, uncovering a bank of sensor squares and a small viewscreen with
a silver-blue shimmer. He ran a sequence on the squares, looked over his
shoulder. “Shadow, you and Linfy put your hands flat on here, then it’s you who
can make things work. Door too.” He waited until Shadith guided Linfyar’s hands
to the screen, then put her own there, then he said, “All right, you need
anything else?”
Shadith looked around. A comfortable room, all earth colors,
broad comfortable chairs, small tables, pleasant indirect lighting; a welcoming
room and more for the money than she’d expected. She touched the border of the
console. Almost a gift. I wonder why. She lifted her head, startled, as she
felt a familiar tickling nudge from the presence in the forest. Busy old
ghost, aren’t you? She clicked her nail against the metal. “This isn’t Pajungg
make.”
“For sure no. Mam got this stuff off a smuggler.”
“Should you be talking like that to strangers?”
“Ahh, you’re a right ‘un. Mam knows.”
“Hmmm. What will Linfy’s whistles to do this equipment? He needs
to find his way around but we can’t afford to pay for replacements.”
Tjepa frowned, shook his head. “Don’t know; maybe he better
hold off till I ask Mam.” He scowled at the screen. “I can work it, that’s
about all. Mam wants to send me to school offworld so I can learn stuff like
that.” He wrinkled his nose, shoved his hands into his pockets. “I don’t need
to know all that brakka to mine amber.”
“Maybe your mam doesn’t want you losing a piece of your leg like
her.”
“Hunh, Mam don’t worry about brakka like that; she just
don’t want to pay outsiders if she don’t have to.”
“See, Shadow”—Linfy’s ears were flicking about, he was almost
bouncing in place—“school’s a waste of time for Tjee. He knows what he wants.
Me too.”
“Hunh, you! What do you know? Tjepa-si, ask your mam about
up to ninety thousand per. About there. And before you go ...” She settled
herself in the nearest chair, pulled up a table. She scooped a handful of coins
from her belt pouch, spread them on the table so she could get a look at them. Copper
and silver, no gold. Octagonal coins with milled edges.
Keeping his hands pushed down in his pockets Tjepa sauntered
across to the table. “Hey, you did good, Shadow, that’s not even half, is it?”
“No.”
He glanced at her, turned very serious. “That big ‘un,
that’s a ten-piah silver. Musta been a miner—more’n some folk make a whole
week. The little silver ones, they’re piahs, one silver each. You give me five
o’ those, you’re set. Copper’s same as silver. Big ‘uns are ten-piah coppers,
little ‘uns are one-piahs. One hundred copper piahs make a silver.”
She slid five of the silver piahs off the table into her
hand, held them out. “Thanks, Tjee.”
“‘S nothin, Shadow.” He turned to go, turned back. “You
think you could teach me, maybe a little bit, get me started like, playin
something like ... like your harp?” He cleared his throat. “I can pay. A
little. I get an allowance, earn me a copper or two sometimes runnin for folk.”
She heard the wistful longing he was trying to suppress and
couldn’t withstand its appeal. “A little maybe, but Linfy and me we don’t stay
anywhere very long. It wouldn’t be much. Maybe a copper a nineday?”
He nodded. “I could go that.”
“Well, if you find out you like it, maybe your mam could
find you a real teacher. I have to tell you, Tjee, it’s work.”
“‘S all right.” With a quick wave he trotted from the room.
Linfyar was silent; she could feel him sulking. She ignored
him, emptied the pouch on the table and began sorting the coins out, counting
them and slipping them back into the pouch. Half hidden in a pile of coppers
she saw a small dark blob shaped like a teardrop. She held it to the light and
watched blue and green and red fires play in its heart. Flawed but still
sweetamber, and worth more than all the coins she’d collected. She closed her
fingers over the drop, warmed it, then brought it close to her nose and smelled
for the first time the fugitive sweet bite of amberscent.
“What’s that?” Sulks forgotten, Linfyar knelt beside her,
nose twitching.
“You cut deep enough, it’s why we’re here, Linfy.” She held
out her hand, let him take the drop. “Why everyone’s here.”
“Mmmmmh.” A long blissful sigh.
“I see you like it.” She chuckled, finished counting the
coins and sliding them back in the pouch. “Forty-three piahs silver, plus the
five I gave Tjepa makes forty-eight. Two hundred six piahs copper. Not bad for
an unadvertised improvised effort. Lovely friendly place, isn’t it, Linfy?”
“Mmmm.”
She looked around, frowning. He was sniffing at the amber,
his nose nudging at the drop, his ears laid back flat against his head, his
mouth drooping open. “Getting ‘high, are you?” She wrapped her hand around one
thin wrist, doing nothing right then but letting him feel her hold. “This isn’t
going to be a problem, is it, imp?”
He said nothing, just shrugged and set the amber drop on the
table. She took her hand away and got to her feet.
“We’d better start over for supper. I’m hungry enough to eat
my way there.”
Linfyar yawned and stretched, then got to his feet. He
stretched again, wiggled all over, patted his stomach. “Me too. And tired
enough to fall asleep in the soup.” He giggled at the thought, mimed swimming
motions as he followed her from the room.
The dining area was a long narrow room next to the kitchen,
one wall a shallow curve with tall windows that let in the starlight. The air
was scrubbed and just cool enough to milk an extra touch of pleasure from the
fragrant steaming dishes marching down the center of a long table made from a
dark glowing wood hand-rubbed to a high gloss. A dozen others looked up as
Perolat ushered them in, seven women, five men, all of them spirit-kin to Perolat.
Step into my parlor, Shadith thought. Seems like the invisible
government wants to look me over; is this luck or what?
“This is Shadith called Shadow, maker of f-i-i-ine music according
to my son, and her companion Linfyar,” Perolat said, then led them to vacant
chairs at the table.
The meal was a gentle but exhaustive inquisition. Perolat
saw to the serving while the others probed Shadith’s past, her attitudes, her
plans for her time on this world. The food was superb. Linfyar ate quickly,
fastidiously, using his proximity senses (mind fingers that didn’t get greasy)
to tell him where the food was, his nose to tell him what it was. A few
questions came his way, but he handled them deftly enough; the miners
concentrated on Shadith, courteous but persistent. She gave a thought now and
then to blessing her misleading appearance, something that otherwise was
growing into an irritating problem when she had to deal with strangers. Right
now, though, it was helping her. The miners were satisfied with her answers,
she could feel it, where they might have dug deeper if she’d looked older.
RASHADA: (tall lanky woman with skin tanned so dark it
was almost the color of the table, pale-yellow eyes, cool and assessing, not
hostile, merely wary) That was a remarkable performance this afternoon. You are
a gifted musician, young Shadith, but I think you were surprised by the effect
you had on your listeners.
SHADITH: (chewing on a bit of meat, swallowing, taking
her time) Surprised isn’t quite the word. Astonished. Staggered. Flabbergasted.
Same thing was happening to me.
MARAH: (plumpish woman, shorter than the others,
bland round face and deep-set eyes lost in shadows except for a glint now and
then) Then that dream-effect is something new. It didn’t happen on other worlds
you’ve visited?
SHADITH: (tearing open a warm flaky roll and buttering
it carefully, using the time to think about her answer) I have seen something
similar, but not of my making. A long way from here. A long time ago.
HALAMO: (tall lanky man, like Rashada’s twin, matching
her feature for feature, the same cool yellow eyes, the same long rather bony
fingers, , almost the same voice when he spoke) A long time ago? You look like
you’ve barely hit puberty. No offense. How old are you, Shadith?
SHADITH: Older than I look. Old enough I’ve touched a
hundred worlds and brought away a little of each. Old enough to leave my home
and people far behind. Actual years? I don’t really know. Easy for travelers to
lose track.
DIHANN: (a woman of stern and rather frightening
beauty, exotic cheekbones and cat eyes, reddish tinge to her hair, wide full
mouth, a way of moving, even sitting still and simply breathing, that made
Shadith think of tigers and leopards lolling in the sun; her voice was deep and
purring; she was the oldest of the women, lines in the velvety skin and the
beginnings of collapse in her muscles, but she was still powerful and vividly
attractive) Who are your people, ancient child, those folk you left behind?
SHADITH: You wouldn’t know them. The Shallal of Shayalin,
a world so poor and hard everyone left who could. My family is long dead. I
escaped by chance, and I travel because one keeps on living and new places have
new delights and there are always new places to see.
RANGAR: (oldest of the men, bald, hazel eyes, wide
thin-lipped mouth, deep lines at the corners, corrugated forehead, heavy
eyebrows) Shayalin. I don’t know the name.
SHADITH: Why should you? It was dead before you were
born. The last of the Shallal were exiles depending on their talents to
survive. And it’s a long long way from here.
GERADA: (a quiet, heavy-faced woman, thick dark hair
lightly streaked With gray, smoothed—into a meticulously neat knot at the back
of her head; she ate with precise small movements, a delicacy almost absurd in
the shift of large powerful hands; she interested Shadith because she did not
seem to belong among the more flamboyant members of this inquisition; there had
to be more to her than the silent uninteresting facade) What brought you here?
SHADITH: I could say chance, but who’d believe that?
I came for my own reasons. I came for the sweetamber like everyone else. I came
because this is a wild world and a strange one and I collect strange worlds. I
came because this is where the ship I was riding brought me. All of the above,
or any, or none. Take your choice.
MELOHAN: (small, slight, hardly taller than Shadith,
with fragile bones that looked as if they’d break in a high wind, perhaps the
youngest of the twelve, hair black as tar worn in a long braid that draped
gracefully forward over her left shoulder) What will you do here?
SHADITH: Sing, earn my way. Look about Keama Dusta
for a while, visit other parts of the world, leave when I’ve seen all I care
to.
KULIT: (tall lean woman with a short nose and
short hair that curled tight to her narrow head, large, rather prominent quite
lovely hazel eyes, eyebrows thin but strongly marked, flaring like wings so she
looked permanently alert, a voice like kaffeh smelled, deep, dark, rich) We
have a rebellion trying to gather force out there, guerrillas in the hills.
SHADITH: (giggle, flirt of her hand) Meaning, stay
out of the back country?
BERGEN: (small neat man, hairline mustache rather
unfortunately emphasizing very full red lips that tended to pout, hairline
brows to match, those wisps of hair dominating a soft-looking face) Unless you
think you’d be amused by the Ajin’s antics.
SHADITH: I don’t get any fun out of pain. If your
Ajin is like other rebels I’ve run into from time to time, he’ll land hard on
strangers in his territory. Too bad.
PEROLAT: Quite like other rebels, young Shadith. You’d
better stick to Keama Dusta until you leave us.
Perolat touched Shadith’s arm. “Wait a little and share some
belas with a few of us, you and Linfy.”
Shadith nodded, amused and a little irritated; she’d gone beyond
her second wind and was working on the third. Seventeen hours since a sleepless
night. But begging off wasn’t an option. What was coming, like the dinner
inquisition, would be a test, she had no illusions about that. For some reason,
probably that enigmatic presence in the forest and its unexpected interest in
her, she had a lot more attention focused on her than she wanted, maybe more
interest than her story could stand. As most of the miners strolled out,
clumped in small groups talking about minor events of the day, and a number of
quiet girls came in to clear off the table, Perolat swept Shadith and Linfyar
down a short hall and into a high-ceilinged room where three others sat about a
hooded fire. The windows were cranked open to let in the cool night air. Trial
by pollen, she thought, wearily amused. The dining room was air-conditioned
so Perolat wouldn’t waste her work cooking for dreamers and the smells and
flavors of her food would be appreciated without distraction. Perolat took her
to a plump cushion, murmured welcome to Linfyar as he sank down beside her. The
rustle of the vine leaves outside the windows, the stir of draperies, the
crackle of the fire that was the room’s sole illumination, a snatch of music
from a distant inn blown in on the night wind, shut off abruptly with the
closing of a door—these unobtrusive sounds gave the room a dreamy unreality
that Shadith found disastrously enticing, combining with her body’s more and
more imperative demands for sleep to give the feeling that events were slipping
rapidly out of control, even her own body was leaving her control. She tried to
focus, but her mind felt like mush and the food she’d enjoyed so much so short
a time before sat like a lump in her stomach, weighing down body and mind.
Perolat wheeled a serving table from one corner of the room,
on it a large glass pitcher and big-bellied glasses whose flatly rounded
bottoms fit comfortably in the hollow of a palm, a solid weight to them; good
to sit by that fire holding those heavy elegant glasses. The belas she poured
out for her guests was a lightly fermented fruit juice, heated and spiced with
something local that was tart with a pleasant afterbite. Shadith sipped at hers
and felt the fog draining from her head, some of the lethargy slipping out of
her body. This part of the test was going to be harder than dinner. She’d had a
lot of practice keeping her lies consistent. Now all she could do was be
herself and hope they liked that self well enough to accept her as an amiable
acquaintance so they’d leave her loose enough to go nosing after the Ajin. Her
mind drifted to Taggert. Wonder if he’s made his way here yet ... have to be
in position to spring him if he hit the trap and tripped ... wary, wily
man ... but so was Grey ... Grey was angry, maybe that’s what did him in ...
but it swallowed Ticutt, he wasn’t blinded by anger ... calm, deliberate,
precise ... cautious as a coyote around poison bait ... Taggert coming in at
some kind of slant ... good luck to him .... She sipped at the hot belas,
watched Perolat finish passing out the glasses and take her own back to a
chair, her mechanical leg making it difficult to get down to the floor.
The silence filled with night sounds stretched on and on. Linfyar
fidgeted awhile, finished his drink, curled up beside Shadith, his head on her
thigh, and went to sleep.
After a while Perolat stumped around refilling the glasses.
She settled back in her chair, her half-leg propped on a small hassock. “Know
any Pajungg music?”
Shadith yawned, blinked. “Never been to Pajungg.”
“Ah.”
More silence.
Ticha groped beside her pillow, brought up three curved,
crooked pieces of hard wood like fossilized rib bones, began slapping them
against her thigh.
Derek took up a long pipe made of a wood like Ticha’s
sticks. It had six holes cut into it and no valves. He tried a few notes, then
began playing a simple tune, repeating it over and over, winding through the
separate but related music from the sticks.
Awas left the room and came back with a huge gourd, strings
stretched across a hole cut in the belly. She settled herself and began
slapping a thrumming boom from the gourd, at the same time plucking the
strings, producing a third tune, different from the other two but blending with
them to produce a complex polyphonic music.
Shadith listened for a while, then began improvising a
wordless song, like and not like her ancient croons, feeling her way into the
music.
A flow passed around the circle, lapping her inside it. The
music went on and on, expanding, developing, returning to earlier themes, the
gourd player the leader if there was any real leader, the first to turn into
new lines; Shadith was content to follow where she led, singing softly in her middle
ranges most of the time, highs and lows when she was sure of herself.
Eventually Perolat began to sing, a rough untrained
contralto that seemed to hold all the pain and wanting in the world, and joy,
but a fleeting joy that touched a moment and went away, laughter in it too, the
kind that celebrated but had a hint of pain in it like the drop of black that
made white paint whiter.
Shadith stopped caring anymore if she passed the test, whatever
it was; she forgot there was a test. Never mind age, culture, species; these
were her kind.
Derek’s pipe went up and up and up, ending in a high
screech.
They collapsed in laughter, then sat up wiping eyes, while Perolat
went around again with the hot spiced juice, adding this time small saucers
with cheese-filled pastries and candied fruits that Shadith found a, bit too
sweet. Startled out of sleep by the pipe’s shriek and the jolting of Shadith’s
thigh, Linfyar sat up muttering, rubbed his nose. “What ...” He sniffed, his
ears pricked forward.
Shadith chuckled, handed him the saucer. “Here, I expect
you’ll like these.”
Awas leaned forward, arms clasped loosely about the gourd.
“I was there. At the k’shun this afternoon.”
“Ummm?”
“You and Linfyar shaped our visions so we all shared the
same one. Did you know that?”
Shadith straightened her back, rubbed at the nape of her
neck, wishing she felt a bit more alert. “You saw the same thing?”
“No ...” The word was a drawn out whisper. “That’s not exactly
what I said. Each person I talked to saw something that might be an
interpretation of a single theme. As you intended?”
“I didn’t know.” She moved her shoulders impatiently,
pressed the back of her hand against her mouth, pulled it down. The lie was
harder to get out than she’d expected; she liked them too well, these Avosingers.
Still, she hadn’t much choice, and she wasn’t working against them; from what
Head said and the impressions she picked up at dinner they weren’t that
enthused about the Ajin and his cause. “Maybe it was a freak thing; maybe I
can’t do it again.” She looked around at the quiet faces. “What dream would you
like me to try?”
Perolat smiled. “Something simple, something you know as
well as we do.” A chuckle. “Forest walking?”
“Hah. You’ve got a loudmouth forest.”
Soft laughter from all four.
“Mmmh, I should have the harp. Awas, would you let me borrow
that?” She pointed at the large gourd.
“Why not?” Awas hefted the gourd. “Watch out, it’s heavier
than it looks.” She tossed it to Shadith, who grunted with surprise when she
caught it, then watched in interested silence as Shadith plucked at the
strings, listening to the various sounds she could elicit, tapped and slapped
at the belly to produce assorted tunks and booms, gradually putting what she
learned together until she got a complex music going using about every
possibility for sound the gourd possessed, a feat not as remarkable as it
looked, since she’d done this sort of thing again and again on one world or
another in that first part of her life when she was still in her original body.
She let the music die, looked at the expectant Avosinger faces, then closed her
eyes and sought through her memory of Shayalin patterns and finally chose one
that seemed to fit the things she’d felt during her lucid periods as she walked
through the fringes of the forest. She drew her hand over her face. “Right,
walking through the forest.” She looked down at Linfyar. “Come in when you feel
it’s right, Linfy.”
She began with a muted strumming, clicking her nails against
the varnished surface of the gourd, humming almost inaudibly, gathering up the
stillness of the room, the night sounds drifting in, watching the flickers of
the dying fire; she let the humming expand into the pattern song, the word
sounds twisting and turning through the rhythms her hands were coaxing from the
strings and body of the gourd; she stared at the flames and did not see them,
saw instead her sisters in a circle swaying beneath the giant tress of Avosing.
Giant trees stretching out before her, away and away and away and away,
canceling wall and window, caught in an elusive balance between stillness and
motion, there in all their thereness, their extension into time-was and
time-will-be, grazing the sky and sounding the underworld. Her sisters dancing
in their shadows, singing polyphonic patterns, singing tranquillity in power,
singing forest heart and forest folk and how they twine together, strong in
serenity, quiet in deed, gentle in their power, singing the miners of the
amber, the fragrance of the amber, the shine and shimmer of the fires in amber
heart. Her sisters dancing in light and shadow, life surging up through them
like sap rising. The energy of the croon built and built, Linfyar weaving his
liquid lilting whistle through her voice and hand-music, then it broke off. Linfyar
broke off at the same moment, leaving the room to a shattering silence.
Shadith sat blinking, holding the gourd with trembling
hands, her mouth dry, her throat a little sore, her body drained of energy.
Perolat was lost in dream still, staring at nothing, tears
drifting unchecked down her angular face, a slight smile curling her lips.
Ticha and Derek swayed together, faces slack and quiet, lost
utterly to a dream it seemed they shared, her hand resting in his, her lips
moving with his in brief smiles that lifted the slack muscles of each face at
the same time in much the same way. Shadith was startled. Two clients linked in
a common dream—that she couldn’t remember ever happening even when her mother’s
sisters, master weavers, wove the dreams; similar, yes, variations on a single
theme, never the exact same dream. Well, she wasn’t truly a weaver, and her
family had never visited a world like this. She blinked, startled by a sudden
thought—or worn the body of a mindrider. Could she possibly do this without the
pervasive pollens of Avosing? Was her dream back in the k’shun not just wishful
thinking but a real possibility? Did she even want it to be?
As Shadith sat silently watching, Awas came swimming up out
of dream. She looked around, dazed incomprehension on her face for the first
few breaths, fixed her eyes on Shadith, wariness and a little fear in them,
then she grinned, her dark eyes disappearing into nests of laugh wrinkles, her
nose and cheekbones suddenly prominent. “I’ll be humbler next time I play
that,” she said, half amused, half serious, nodding at the gourd.
Shadith flushed. “That’s silly and you know it. What you
heard was part suggestion and part funny-dust.”
Perolat blinked slowly, looked around, raised her brows at
Derek and Ticha, turned to Awas. “I didn’t really believe it.”
“The Po’ Annutj.”
“You too? You think them?” Perolat nodded at the
still-dreaming pair. “I expect so.”
Perolat switched her gaze to Shadith. “And you don’t know
what you did, I’m fairly sure of that.”
“Did?”
“Showed us the Po’ Annutj.”
“I know what the words mean. Forest Heart. But ...”
“Loudmouth forest.” Perolat chuckled.
“Hunh.”
Ticha and Derek began to blink, eyelids clicking to a
different rhythm, their eerie synchronization lost.
Perolat looked relieved. “Where did you learn that music?”
“Part of it from my mother, part of it’s improvisation,
things I’ve learned in my wanderings.”
“Shayalin. That’s what you called your homeworld, isn’t it?
I have not heard of it.”
“It doesn’t exist any longer. I’m a double orphan. Lost my
family, lost my world.” She yawned, almost not getting her hand up to cover the
gape. “I said that before, didn’t I?”
“You’re tired,” Perolat said.
Shadith grinned sleepily at her. “Understatement.”
“Go home and get some rest. Your meals are on me tomorrow.
Thanks for tonight.”
Shadith swallowed a second yawn, her eyes watering. “If you
could tell me where it’d be all right to perform, I’d appreciate that.” The
words were clear enough in her head, but slurred and slowed when they came out.
Perolat looked around at the others. They nodded. “Any
k’shun that’s not being used.” She hesitated. “But you won’t be in the k’saha
long—the doawai will be calling you into the cathedral soon as he hears about
you. Inside the walls.”
“Walls?” Shadith shook her head. “No.”
“You’ll take in more coin.”
“Depends. I know those places—lot of strings on your take.
At least, that’s what I’ve seen before, and I don’t expect it’s different here.
I could have had lots of berths like that otherwise. Un-uuh.”
“You might not have much choice.”
“Warning?”
“Too strong. Just be careful. City”—she jerked her head toward
the north where the walls were—“and doawai, he’ll invite you first. Turn him
down, he’ll make your life a misery. Keep turning him down, he’ll send his
engiaja after you.”
Shadith yawned a third time, got heavily to her feet. “Then
I’ll move on.” She stirred Linfyar with her toe. “Wake up, Linfy, time we got
to bed. Too bad if that happens, Perolat. I like it here, like to stay awhile.”
She patted Linfyar as he got groggily to his feet and stumbled against her. “No
use inviting trouble.” She yawned a fourth time, surprising herself.
“And you’re asleep on your feet, child—no don’t tell me
again you’re older than you look. Derek, carry the boy. Ticha, give young
Shadow your arm. Sleep as long as you need to, child, then come see me and I’ll
fry you up some breakfast.”
A nineday passed.
Shadith lounged about, getting to know the place, saying
little, listening much, picking up threads here and there, finding nothing that
would get her to the Ajin without him suspecting what she was after. Hints of
rebellion, yes, whispered gossip, harangues by rebels sneaking into the
bebamp’n trying to stir up excitement and anger and recruit Dusters into their
cause. Nothing enough to give her a line on him.
Church spies snooping along the talishi, the wandering ways
that were the local streets, and through the k’saha; church enforcers stumping
arrogantly through the bebamp’n hunting down the negligent. These men wore
respirators and protective clothing; even so, one of them would slide into a
trance now and then and whoever he was harassing would take off before the rest
of the troop could react. Enforcers never walked alone. Too many disappeared
the time they tried that. Avosingers yielded before these troops, fading into
the narrow talishi, vanishing into houses, shops, factories, taverns, whatever;
vendors who couldn’t wheel their carts away tuned out on the world. Behind the
troop, life took up its ordinary ways, a touch of wariness in the most casual
conversations.
A pervasive resentment of all church and Authority forces, outright
hatred in some quarters. The amberminers and their kin standing aloof—except
when they helped the kin of those that disappeared or provided escape routes
for those the enforcers were after.
As the days passed, she confirmed what she’d suspected that
first night. Perolat and the twelve were the invisible government in Keama
Dusta. They took care of order in the bebamp’n, sentenced thieves to tending
the local gardens, repairing the water system, doing just about anything that
needed work to keep the community life flowing smoothly, they warned
wifebeaters, took rapists into the forest and left them (these weren’t seen
again, not hide hair or bone), warned merchants who were cheating customers,
especially folk in from the grasslands with money to spend, and if they didn’t
listen, they disappeared; they settled boundary disputes and quarrels about
goods and kinship problems with nothing but moral force to back their
decisions, moral force and community consensus, an elaborate system of
obligations, a web of services that bound man to man, woman to woman, built up
wholly outside the oppressive Colonial Authority and the officials the Pajunggs
appointed to uphold homeworld law.
Sing us a sad song, Shadow, they called to her, make us
weep, Shadow, sing of thwarted lovers and heroes dying young, sing us a sad
song, Shadow, oh Shadow.
Nineday. Market day. Farmers and ranchers in from the grasslands
to the north, flying in with produce to supplement the kitchen gardens, red
meat and fowl; fishermen with loads of fish, foresters in with herbs and tonics
and flasks of fancy liqueurs, loads of fine woods, new flowers and plants.
Shadith is mobbed, they won’t let her stop singing, won’t let her sing anything
but the Shayalin patterns, mobs of listeners filling the k’shun and overflowing
into the talishi.
Sing us a mad song, Shadow, Shadow, sing a nonsense to make
us laugh, sing us silly, oh Shadow, oh Shadow.
A miner came in from the forest with a pack full of amber.
Tjepa confided to Shadith that he’d cached ten times what he brought in to
spend with smugglers after he’d fixed up his family and sated Pajungg greed.
Everyone knew about it, no one said anything.
Sing us of triumph, oh Shadow, oh Shadow, sing to us songs
of silk and sweet ease, sing of our dreams, oh Shadow, wise Shadow, sing us of
triumph, oh Shadow, our Shadow.
An emissary came from the doawai, a minor hiepler in the cathedral
hierarchy accompanied by a decat of enforcers. He pushed through the listeners
and stopped in front of her. “Singer,” he said, “this is korbeday. On sukanday
you will sing for doawai.”
“Fine,” she said. “On sukanday I sing in Sebela k’shun.
Harm’s tavern edges it. If your doawai wants to sit and see, he can rent one of
Harin’s balconies.”
“No, no,” the hiepler said hastily, “you will sing in the
cathedral.”
“No, no,” she said, “I most certainly will not.”
“What?”
“I don’t like walls. The doawai wants to hear me, he comes
outside.”
“The doawai doesn’t come to people, they come to him.”
“Too bad. He must miss a lot that way. He’s going to miss
hearing me sing.”
“It’s an honor to be summoned.”
“It’s an honor I’ll live without.”
“You refuse?”
“Good, it’s finally sunk in.” She ran her hand across the
harpstrings, the sweep of sound a period to the discussion. “Now go away and
let me sing to these good folk.”
He looked around him, saw the numbers, felt the hostility
there. With a jerk of his head in a parody of a polite bow, he stalked off,
pointedly ignoring the crowd that parted before him and the silent enforcers
stumping along behind him.
Sing us a song, oh Shadow, sing us a dream of owning our
world, sing us, oh sing us of freedom, oh Shadow, of living the lives that we
want to have, sing us, oh sing us out of our apathy, sing us, oh sing us out of
our fear.
It was the excuse she needed, almost the excuse, anyway. The
next time the hiepler came, Perolat warned her, he’d bring a summons to a
hearing before a heresy judge and the offer to avoid it by coming with him
then. But he wouldn’t arrest her; that would come later when she didn’t show up
for the hearing. If she fled Keama Dusta, well, wasn’t that what everyone did?
If she ran into the outback and did her singing in forest and grassland
villages, who could say it was all a plot? From the bits and pieces she’d
picked up, she knew the area where the Ajin was most active; if she voiced her
resentment and her fondness for the world, if she sang provocative songs and
moved on before the Authority could land on her, chances were she’d be
recruited by the Ajin’s men. He might even order her brought to him directly.
She grinned into the darkness. Why not? What a propaganda artist I’d make. She
slipped out of bed, careful not to disturb Linfyar, and padded into the other
room, thumbed on the light, found the book she’d been reading and settled down
to wait the coming of the dawn. For one accustomed to four or five hours of
sleep, these sixteen-hour nights were a penance to be suffered far from gladly.
She curled up in a chair, opened the book and lost herself in the extravagant
fantasy, amused by the way the writer toyed with treason in the guise of
literature; the book had the church’s imprimatur—probably a lazy or stupid
censor passed it for publication, someone whose mind was on other things. Or
maybe he was a sympathizer; odder things had happened. She relaxed and let the
words carry her along. Four hours till dawn. No more thinking, just go with the
flow.
Early morning in the smugglers’ market.
A k’shun larger than most, within the miners’ quarter where
enforcers never came and even spies were rare. Pember k’shun, deep in a maze of
crooked talishi. You had to know
where it was before you could find it. If a church spy dared
show up there—they were ail known, even the youngest miner child knew faces and
names—groups of men and women and children began nudging and shoving him toward
the edge of the k’shun, working him away from the tables, never acting directly
against him, all done with the blandest innocence—but he was out of the market
within minutes of his arrival, and if he was too persistent at trying to get
back in, he was gently clipped on the head and removed, waking up later in some
other part of the city, usually drenched with one of the more odorous liqueurs.
Leaving Linfyar to running about with Tjepa and his friends,
Shadith wandered among the tables, astonished by the amount and variety of the
offerings, most of them forbidden by the church. She wasn’t much worried about
Linfy getting into trouble; like most young animals, Tjepa was a trifle wild
and could be thoughtless, but he knew from much painful experience that
anything too bad he did would be reported with copious incriminating detail to
his mother. Minor irritations the Avosingers would let slide, but there was a
line he knew better than to cross. It was a fuzzy, ill-defined line, and
sometimes he misjudged it—to his sorrow and sore behind. He came to their
morning practice session a few days ago, fidgeted a bit and wouldn’t sit down,
then rushed out an explanation; seems he’d tied two jinkas’ tails together and
dropped them in old Kaus’s chicken coop—an unrepentant grin, you should have
seen the feathers fly and the noise was loud enough to wake a wino after a wet
night—but the jinkas were Dihann’s pets and she didn’t think the joke was funny
at all and old Kaus was foaming at the mouth. “Mam, she tore up my
behind and I got to work a nineday doing whatever old Kaus tells me. And go
comb the jinkas’ fur and take care of them for Dihann.” He sighed. “All day.
Except Mam says I can still come for my lessons. If you don’t mind.” His
friends were much like him, three miners’ sons and a lone wild girl who was all
legs and hair and audacity, a version of what Perolat must have been at that
age. She almost envied that girl’s freedom; her own childhood had been strictly
disciplined, little play allowed, no one to play with; her sisters were almost
adults by the time she hatched.
She wandered among the tables, bought some books and a sack
to carry them in, thought about a silver filigree headband set with moonstones,
but it was too fragile to last through the turbulent times ahead. Enjoying the
bustle and color, she worked her way to the section where the bolts of silk and
avrishum, brocades and broideries were, loving the sheen and shimmer of them.
She rounded a high pile and stopped, her mouth dropping open. I don’t
believe it. Arel and his pet killer Joran. Vannik must be guarding the ship.
She strolled by the table, suppressing a smile. Here and
there among the offerings she spotted a bit of the old Queen’s jewelry. She
looked at the delicate gauzes and rolls of brocade, sneaked another look at
Arel. His bony sardonic face was much the same in spite of the years that had
passed since he left Aleytys on Maeve. I’ll have to tell her I saw
him. He’s looking prosperous. Not really so strange he’s here—this is
smugglers’ heaven. Wonder what he’d think of her now. She’s changed from that
naive mountain girl he bedded so sweetly those days. Shadith felt a heat
growing in her and quickly shifted her thoughts. Joran hadn’t changed much either.
Those cat ears still twitched all the time, some streaks of gray in the black
hair, no lessening in the aura of deadliness that clung to him. Funny to think
she knew so much about them and they wouldn’t have a clue about her. She
sighed. They’ll be gone in a day or two. Maybe after this job is done I can
hunt him up and say hello. Be interesting if ... Hah! Shadow, get your mind on
your business. Grey comes first.
She ambled on, picking up more about the Ajin in snatches of
conversation about her ... a jaktar robbed of revenues from the church casinos
in Windsweep and Sapulake ... a flier vanished over the forest somewhere north
of the Ular River ... a customs boat sunk in Moster Bay ... enforcers dropping
on Kotican just two hours after the Ajin cleared out ... a truck convoy of
enforcers and their gear vanishing between two checkpoints .... Every day I
linger here, she thought, that’s another day of torment for Grey. But if
I rush around like a fool, what good does that do anyone? I need my cover, my
excuse to get the hell out. She glared up at the administration towers. Come
on, you, I’ve defied you, do something! Come at me. Give me an excuse to cut
out of here. I have to go slow, I have to be covered all the way, I have to
keep out of Kell’s trap, or all this is wasted. Grey’s wasted, I’m wasted, do I
have to kick you in the gut? Do something ....
Shadith’s second nineday. She has just finished a
performance, is getting ready to join the celebration of the Amun-Bar. The hiepler
pushes through the stirring crowd around her, stops in front of her, reads from
a paper that she is required to present herself in the court of the Impor
Melangg to defend herself against charges of heresy and suspect activity; if
she agrees to come with him and perform in the cathedral while she listens to
the wise and benign teachings of the doawai, the hearing will not be necessary.
“I have said to you I will not come behind walls.”
“If you refuse again, your chattels are subject to
confiscation. That instrument”—pointing at the harp—“your pet, the singing
beast”—pointing at Linfyar—“everything you own.” The hiepler stared at her,
face set, eyes hostile. “Perhaps we should take them now.” He lifted his hand.
“No.” She leaped to her feet, thrust Linfyar behind her.
“You will not.”
Before the hiepler could react, the crowd started pressing
in on him and his escort, a low angry growl coming from a thousand throats, a
thousand pairs of cold angry eyes fixed on him and his entourage.
He knew Dusters well enough to understand what was not said,
so he contented himself with the pronouncement that the church considered all
minor children without adult relatives, Pajungg or not, as wards of the state,
under its authority and protection. Then he swung around and stalked off, his
escort scrambling after him, losing a good portion of their dignity in the
speed with which they departed.
Shadith grinned and dropped back down, began a comic song
she’d translated into Avosinger Pajunggeesh, the tale of an extraordinarily
maladroit but lucky spaceman. With Linfyar whistling and clapping in
accompaniment, she sang the Saga of Jigalong Jon until well into the Amun-Bar,
the miners and their friends clapping and shouting out the refrain while she
caught her breath and got ready for the next verse.
That night, after supper, she took Perolat aside. “Whatever
you all do about this,” she said, “don’t do it for me but for yourselves. I
don’t want to seem ungrateful, but I just as much don’t want that kind of
responsibility on my head.” To herself she thought, All those years of
living in Lee’s head, some of her fussing has rubbed off on me. She tried
to mock herself into her usual easy glide through life, but she couldn’t manage
the trick anymore. “Don’t push too hard, you miners, you’ll drive the church
into crushing you. I’ve seen it happen before. I won’t be even a proximate
cause of such a disaster.’’
Smiling, Perolat drew the tips of long fingers across
Shadith’s brow. “Such a serious child. We keep our freedom day by day, act by
act. If we don’t exert ourselves now and then, we certainly will be swallowed
up. We don’t allow our friends or our own to be harassed within the bebamp’n.
Outside, you’re fair game to the predators. Remember that.”
“I will. If I leave, you’ll know I’ve gone freely and will
take the consequences.”
“May they be small and light. The blessing of Po’ Annutj on
you and your reason for coming here.”
“Pero ...”
“No, no, what we don’t know, we can’t spoil. You mean us no
harm, that’s good enough.”
“You’re sure of that?”
Perolat laughed. “Come back sometime when you’re not tied
into fancy games.”
Shadith watched her go back into the kitchen, shook her
head. “Loudmouth Forest,” she muttered to herself, and started walking back to
her cabin. Another day of singing to satisfy pride and make the Pajunggs
think I’m going to hang around defying them. Tomorrow night, late, steal a
flitter from the Flying Man and hit for the back country. Have to leave the
flitter’s price with Perolat; don’t mess your nest, she says. Umm, better leave
most of the take with her, she’ll keep it safe until I can pick it up, god
knows what thieves they’ve got out there. Damn you, Kell, I hope Aleytys takes
your skin off an inch at a time. This is a good place; why’d you have to ruin
it? Tjepa, you crazy little jinka, I’m going to miss our sessions. You’ve got a
gift, don’t waste it, make your mam find you another teacher. This is going to
get tricky. Wonder where I should head. Kotican? Don’t think so, spies there,
called the enforcers when the Ajin showed up. Still, he did show up. Cabin’s
dark. Linfy must be asleep already. Maybe Windsweep. Nice name. Hey you out
there, you in the forest, give me a clue, huh? Chuckling, she palmed open the
door.
Dull crunch ... exploding pain ... nothing ....
Shiburr On Gynnor
_files/image006.jpg)
Vrithian
WITNESS [1]
A MISTRESS IN SHIBURR
My name is Xanca. I am not young. I am not pretty. I have
found being neither pretty nor ugly something of an advantage. Rich men marry
beautiful women to show the world their virility and their power, then they
fill houses in back streets with women like me. I work hard to learn my
patron’s needs and satisfy them. Half the time he doesn’t know himself what he
wants. How stupid these powerful men can be. Yes, I have great contempt for all
my patrons. How ...oh, you can tell from the tone of my voice. Most days I am
more careful how I speak. It’s the puatar, I usually don’t indulge when I have
company, it makes me careless. Your company too, and the funeral. Yes, my last
longtime patron died. With what he left me and with what I’ve saved the past
years, I am finally free. Like the undying. I have seen how their women walk,
arrogant as any man, not even their own men ruling them. I want to walk like
that. Me. Xanca. Well, I won’t, I’m not foolish. Free to be myself but not that
free.
The undying. They rub the gloss off everything. One thing I
noticed, whatever my patron said, whatever he did not say, the undying were
always in his mind, the demon mistress in that dome up there on the mountain.
He boasted to me of his wife. The most beautiful woman in Chiudu, a frail
creature with the prized fire in her hair. A most unpleasant woman if I believed
what he said about her, and I did. Some of it. Pour me another drink from that
bottle; being honest like this is cold, like I was stripping myself bare in an
ice-wind. Where was I, oh yes. I believed some of it, though not like he wanted
me to. I believed his tales because in her place I would have done much the
same. There. You see? Isn’t that honest? Cold, greedy and arrogant. I used to
dream of being her after I had to spend a long time with him being soft and
submissive, using every trick I knew to make his flabby member hard, cooing at
him, lending a soft accepting ear to his whining. She was supposed to have
demon blood in her. Now and then the undying have taken women from Chiudu, but
I’ve never heard there was issue from any of those couplings. None of the women
came back with child, the few that did come back. Still, the brightheads are
rare enough among us to raise the possibility and they’ve played that card to
lift themselves high, oh yes.
He had another mistress, the one he showed off when he was
with the other big men in the city. A beautiful child, fourteen at most. He
showed me her photo. They envied him, those hungry greedy friends of his, that
was the point of his having her. She is truly quite lovely, being kept by one
of his closest friends now. He told me she was like a beautiful beast, soft of
skin, very alive, filled with an energy that exhausted him almost beyond
bearing. Except that she was always at him to buy her things, he said he
wouldn’t know she could speak, hadn’t an idea in her head. Animal. That’s what
he thought of her. I tell you he knew nothing. He understood nothing. Not me.
Not himself. He would change nothing in his life even though the way things
were made him ill. Killed him too, I suppose. He bragged to me once how he and
his friends had sniffed out and secretly executed every member of a plot to
sneak up the mountain and attack the demon mistress there, drive her and her
kind from Shiburr. He feared the undying, but that was not the reason he was so
adamant against the plotters. He feared more losing his place, his wealth, his
position, in the shaking out if the demon fell. If he could, he would not drive
the demon from the mountain. If he could. Hah!
You say if I know all these things, if I despise my patrons
so much, why do I submit? I survive, my friend. I live as I must. If you seek
to lay blame on me for the way I live, if you seek to shame me for growing
comfortable with the humiliations I have endured, then I say to you that you
are no different. If the demon on the hill says to you lick the dust off her
feet, you will fall on your belly and lick.
I have little more to say and your bottle is almost empty.
But there are those among us who try to cast off the foot of the demon, who
have tried before and will try again. Me? Don’t be stupid. You know what I am.
Who would trust me with such things? I speak of rumor and tales you hear in the
street, and out of my most secret dreams, no more. I dream and I wait, my
friend, I dream and I wait.
Vrithian
on the oblique file [2]
Willow ran along the edge of the lake, her long thin
dawn-shadow jerking and gesticulating like a stick parody of a person, her feet
kicking up flirts of rain-wet sand, pounding a rhythm up through her body to
the top of her head, her breath coming in easy pants. She ran through ragged
patches of shorebirds scratching about for grubs and worms, startling them into
raucous, whumping flight, hardly higher man her head before they settled back
behind her. A freshening breeze tickled the water into pointed, tight-packed
ripples that whispered to the sand beside her beating feet; armadas of kimkim
cousins twisted in dark funnels out over the shallow lake, their high singing
hum floating above the water noise; fish leaping for the kimkim cousins beat
the water into a continual boil under these dark tourbillons.
She joyed in the dawning, in the sheen of sweat on her skin,
the drive of her small body, in the smells around her, wet earth, rock and
sand, the clumps of cattails in the shallows, old stems and leaves rotting into
silt, the sweet-sweet-sweet yunyiun flowers growing where rocks sprayed into
the water, stiff white, pink and crimson stars on rope-wide spongy stems,
arrowpoint leaves as thick around them as spines on a nagri’s back. Rotten
fish, bird dung, wet feathers, rich strong smells she sucked in with the clean
clear morning air.
She stopped running when she saw dimpled sand ahead of her,
and began kicking it up, searching for kimkim grubs. Hyaroll provided ample
meals for his zoo, but Willow sometimes preferred to find her own breakfast. In
a way it was a reassurance that however much she’d lost to time and distance,
she could still keep herself. And sometimes she simply had a craving for the
kinds of food he would never think of providing. She found a heaping handful of
the grubs, rinsed them in the lake and strolled along, cracking their shells,
stripping out the plump white flesh and crunching it with relish between strong
square teeth. When she finished the grubs and brushed away the fragments of
shell, she kicked up a flake of stone and hacked out a long piece of tuber from
among the yunyiun plants. She washed off the tuber in the lake, scrubbing away
the silt, the fine white rootlets, the papery outer skin. When she was
satisfied, she moved a few paces down where the water was clear, knelt again,
drank deeply, washing away the aftertaste of the grubs and the last bits of
flesh stuck in her teeth. Then she got to her feet, shook off as much of the
water as she could, scowled at the sun, pale and remote as if it wasn’t ripe
enough to let the warmth loose.
Holding the tuber in her left hand, she began running back
the way she’d come. The sand was a little drier now and the edge was off her
enthusiasm, she didn’t push herself but loped easily along, the weight of the
tuber adding an odd tic she rather enjoyed into the rhythm of her going.
When she dried off and warmed up, she slowed to a walk, took
out the folding knife Hyaroll had given her and began peeling away the fibrous
inner bark of the tuber, working with meticulous care and the attention she
gave every physical act. Hand-thinking, Hyaroll called it in the long-ago times
when he still bothered to talk to his zoo. The pale tan skin came away in long
strips, exposing the creamy inside little by little. When she peeled away the
last strip, she started to toss it aside as she had the others, but checked her
hand, caught , by a sudden thought, stopped and stared at the length of skin.
Then she tucked it over her waistrope, winding it several times about the rope
to make sure it wouldn’t work loose, started walking again, slicing off slivers
of the sweet crisp tuber and eating them as she went back around the lake
toward the sheltered oval lawn where Sunchild and Bodri would meet her later in
the day.
She sat on the grass, passing the rootskin from hand to
hand, rolling it between her palms, chewing at it, gently, so she wouldn’t
break the fibers. By the time Bodri came poking along, she had separated out
most of the long tough hairs and was examining them with satisfaction,
regretting that she’d taken a less than active interest in the hodgepodge of
plants and trees Hyaroll had collected along with his mobile specimens and set
out where the whim had taken him, leaving them to the care of the ironheads and
the lizard people who lived here already. At her first waking she thought these
folk were more specimens in the zoo, but when she’d followed her need to know
the land and traveled to the edge of the dome, exploring along it until she
circled the park, she saw them all around outside, working in fields, passing
to and from a clutch of low houses just visible on the top of a hill some
distance away. Not specimens, just slaves for ol’ Stone Vryhh, who made them do
whatever he wanted.
“What are you fussing at now, Willow?” Bodri came stumping
around a bush, settled himself with a thump on the grass. She stared at him,
startled. He never called her by just her name without adding a bit of fond
embellishment. There were dead and yellowing leaves on the miniature bushes in
his back-garden, and a flowerstalk held several withered blooms, a sure sign he
had sunk, into one of his rare melancholies.
She held out her hand so he could see the fibers. “I gonna
make me a cord,” she said.
His mouth worked, settled into an almost smile, and some of
the dullness left his eyes. “A very short one.”
“Seein if I could. Seein if these’ll hang together.” She
began teasing the fibers with her thumbnail. “Old Stone Vryhh, he got poison
plants around here too?”
“Why?”
She shrugged, began rolling some of the fibers against her
thigh, twisting them into a thin tight thread. Fiber by fiber she added length
to the thread, holding it up now and then to see how well it was bonding
together, how tight the twist was, how firmly it was set. She continued
working, clicking her tongue in a work song, deeply satisfied with how her
experiment was turning out.
“A noose for old Vryhh?” Drawn out of his gloom, Bodri had
edged closer to her and was watching with an intentness he usually gave only to
his plants.
“Mmmp. Maybe. Maybe bowstring.”
“Ah.” He unfurled his antennae to their full length, waved
them in slow graceful arcs, curled them back again. “Better not say any more.”
Absently, still watching her, his tentacle arms came from under his shell and
the thin strong fingers at the end of each began to prod among the garden
rooted into his back, nipping off the dead leaves and gently stripping away the
withered flowers.
She watched that from the corner of her eyes as she rolled
and twisted, rolled and twisted, happy that she’d roused him from his sorrows.
Though she hadn’t expected much from them, seeing the fibers in the rootskin
had started her thinking and remembering. Hands going quiet, she looked full at
him, frowning a little, then turned her head to look over her shoulder at the
house rising behind the treetops. She finished adding the last of the fibers
and wound the thread about her left hand, feeling a strength in it that was
changing her mind about its possibilities. “Old Vryhh,” she said, “he like
watchin you me makin plots. Like my folk laugh and clap hands at a song-dance.
He won’t do nothin long as we workin. He tell hisself I stop the funny ol’
things come time they ready to take me.” She fiddled with the thread, feeling
the hard twists. Fishnet maybe if the water don’t loosen it too much.
Somethin to do, anyway. “I thinkin, “ she said, “all kind plants here. I
thinkin you know how makin them grow, maybe you know what ones make poison.
Otter, other men back-back when ...” She fluttered her hand in a broken wing
drift meant to say long-ago, far-away, lost to me, oh lost to me. “When rains
come, they hunt papkush and dofuffay. Dry time they sit around makin bow,
arrow, chippin stone for point. Little arrow. So big”—she held her hands about
the length of her forearm apart—“and dofuffay he make two Bodri, some left
over.” She laughed. “So women we boil kakoya root till it sticky glop in the
bottom of the pot, poosha for the arrow. Poosha not for killin but for makin
sleep. Dofuffay hit, he run and run, then he fall over.” She flicked her
fingers out and up like a beast rearing, then made her fingers legs that ran
and ran, then she slapped her hand flat on the grass. “Then the men blood him,
cut him up. I thinkin we make poosha for Old Stone Vryhh.”
“Be ready for you, now he’s heard you say it.” Willow
wrapped the ends of the cord about her thumbs and tugged sharply at it, grunted
as it cut into her flesh. “Let ‘im watch. Take a while to make poosha right,
try it on Vryhh-size beast. Then we figure somethin.” She canted her head,
grinned at him. “Sunchild and me, we makin one piece here one piece there, now
you make your piece, eh-huh?”
Vrithian
action on the periphery [2]
Amaiki came to the garden early that morning, riding her skimsled
from the small neat house in the workers’ quarter tucked up next to the
downcurve of the dome, a delicate lacertine figure standing on the small round
platform, five long long fingers (narrow crooked thumb tucked neatly under)
resting lightly on the squeeze controls at the ends of quarter-circle arcs
coming from a narrow column rising before her, a smooth pebbly skin, mottled
gray-green, long soft folds of loose skin draping gracefully about her neck and
along her sides, those delicate seductive vertical folds seen and not seen
through the openings between the front and back of the brown-black tabard she
wore, a tabard with no decoration but subtle patterns woven into the cloth,
patterns that shifted with each movement she made, each push of the wind
against the cloth, a silent music in the play of light and shadow.
She came to the garden early intending to work on the circle
of tazukli bushes, coaxing them to grow in the candalabrum form that gave
maximum scope for the flitter-blooms that were even now budding on the side
branches. It was sensitive, demanding work that the androids simply could not
do, requiring the deftness of Conoch’hi fingers and Conoch’hi aesthetic
intuition, it was work she liked, the kind of work she needed after the dreams
that plagued her last night; three times she dreamed of fire and death and each
time woke not knowing if what she’d heard the odd ones saying had seeded the
dreams in her or if they were tomorrow dreams. If her family were here, she’d
know, through the lots and the echoes. She thought of calling them to the
corn-kiosk near the workers’ quarter. I will tonight; maybe the
dreams won’t come again. She maneuvered the skimsled into a rough shed
built next to the wall of Hyaroll’s house, took the toolbag from the shelf at
the back of the shed and went walking slowly through the clean clear morning to
the tazukli ring.
After she’d been working for around half an hour, on her
knees before a single tazukli, softening the strongest branches, straightening
them, curling them up at the ends, painting on the porous hardener that would
hold in place the curves she wanted, she heard the pat of the little woman’s
feet, the tongue-clicking rhythm of her walking song. She was always singing or
dancing, even when she sat she danced, except when she was absorbed in some bit
of handwork. One of the odd ones, but not so odd as some. Amaiki finished the
shaping with the click song in her ears, lending her some of the happy calm of
the woman on the far side of the shrubbery, began carefully pinching off buds
the wrong shape or in the wrong place. Death and fire, a bad time coming for
the Conoch’hi, if her triply repeated dream was true, but one cone’s dream had
little validity, it took a consensus of family, then line, then the whole to
reach reliably into tomorrow, to send the whole acting as one. In the life
weave of her line mother, the patterning of the whole was rare, once twice no
more. A single dream was nothing, born perhaps of a bellyache, a quarrel with a
co-wife or the naish of the love group, of fears or shame or a thousand other
things. She kept telling herself that, her mind knew it was truth, but the cold
knot in her belly would not go away.
She moved on her knees to another tazukli, deliberately choosing
a bush near where the odd one sat on the other side of the bushes. She’d heard
the three talking here some days ago when she came to assess the tazukli and
see how ready these were for shaping. Now she both wished and feared hearing
more. Her pointed leaf-shaped ears shivered; there was a strain in her neck as
she worked with the bush, cutting away the side shoots and sealing the cuts
with the graft tool. The beetleman was right, the sunthing was right, Hyaroll
was sinking into a lethargy that threatened them all whether he died or not.
The year she left Shiosa the upland rain was late and thin; this winter and last,
there was no rain at all. Wells were drying up, especially close to the dome,
where Hyaroll’s pumps sucked away every spare drop. For the first time in
memory, for the first time noted in the life weaves of the upland Conoch’hi,
the Vryhh Hyaroll broke the Covenant and did not bring the winter rains. Her
folk were beginning to leave the land; whole villages would be emptying soon
when all their wells ran dry. The line mother of the Yumoru in Dum Ymori came
to the caller kiosk, but Hyaroll would not talk to her. Old Stone Vryhh, the
little woman had called him. She was right. Heard nothing, saw nothing, wanted
nothing. Last year and this, Naish Ha-erdai, speaker of the fifteen, went to
him at the double full of the moons, saying it is in the covenant, O Vryhh,
give us rain or let us go. No rain came. They could not go. Amaiki tended the
tazukli with gentle care, listening to the exchange between the odd folk,
hearing the seriousness behind the words. With Hyaroll watching over their
shoulders they were going on with their preparations to attack him, working
slowly, meticulously, feeling their way along toward their final plan, knowing
it might be futile because nothing they could do would be secret from him, Old
Stone Vryhh watching their twists and turns with a rusty amusement, letting
them go on because their energetic activity filled the emptiness in him.
Amaiki let her hand fall onto her thighs as anger flushed
through her; the tazukli had not harmed her, though it was taking water that
her people needed. She closed her eyes and sat very still until her trembling
stopped. Though the beetleman and the little woman continued to talk, chewing
over what they’d said already, she no longer listened, concentrating all her
attention on the tazukli, working calmly, steadily; she had to finish what
she’d begun or harm the plant, and she would not do that; she curbed her impatience,
shut a mind-door on frustration and shaped the plant to the pattern in her
mind, sealing the cuts, stabilizing the curves, pinching away buds growing in
the wrong places. Again she dropped her hands on her thighs, closed her eyes.
Again she trembled all over as the rigid controls came off her emotions; rage
and fear flashed through her, strangling her, shaking her until she thought she
was going to fly to bits. She dropped her head onto her knees, whimpering
softly, until the spasm passed. She stayed folded up like that for several
breaths, then straightened her back in time to see a patch of golden light
slipping behind the trees, Sunchild joining his companions, whose voices still
sounded beyond the leafy screen. For a moment she thought of listening to see
if this creature would have anything to add, then she shook her head; no point
in it. Besides, she wanted rather desperately to reach out to her family, to
feel the gentle soothing mind-touch of the naish Se-passhi, who was their
far-speaker and the tie that bound each to each and all to all. Moving with
silence and precision, she collected her tools, cleaned them, inspected them,
then set them neatly back into their loops in the bag. She knelt listening a
moment to the noisy argument between the three odd ones, smiling, thinking that
they’d given over caring anything about what they said or who heard them,
knowing that he heard everything. They were trying to find a way to trap
Hyaroll, each punching holes in the plots of the others, everyone getting
nowhere. She stood, looked around at the ring of tazukli, the two plants shaped
stark and elegant next to the fussy prolixity of the others, a sigh her sole
farewell to a project that would have given her much pleasure.
Amaiki sat on the hykaros jewel rug, a gift from one of her
mothers, meant to help her feel back into family warmth while she was exiled
inside the dome. It made it easier for her to reach out to the far-speaker of
her own mate-meld. She crossed her legs at the ankle and looked slowly around
at the room with its muted earth colors, the intricately knotted grass mats,
the cushions, their covers weaving of her own and gifts from Kimpri, the panels
carved in low relief that Kimpri and Keran had made, the bubble glass in the
round windows, the scattered lamps, no two alike, giving off a soft golden
glow, making as many shadows as patches of light, perfuming the room with their
scented oils. It was becoming her place finally, after nearly two years of
nesting there. She sighed, closed her eyes. One by one, she brought the faces
of her mate-meld to her mind, dwelt lovingly on each: Keran, long and narrow,
eyes like amber fire, tinkerer extraordinary, builder of anything; Betaki,
round and chubby, sleepy-eyed and sensual, nurse and nurturer; Muri, tiny but
strong, fast enough to catch lightning on the leap, handler of the family
finances; Kimpri, dreamy and intense, a shaper of form and texture, weaver and
carver; Se-passhi, tinier even than Muri, the naish of the meld, deeply loving,
the bond in flesh.
Se-passhi touched her, folded round her, drawing in the
others, she knew them, whispered their names, felt behind them the ghost
touches of the hatchlings, one two three four—four?—a new hatchling, she poured
out her joy to them, absorbed their joy ... she sighed and opened her sorrow to
them and her need .... “Come,” she whispered, “come to me, I need to speak to
you ....” Whispering the words knowing what they received was not exactly words
.... “Come, I need you, I need you all ....” Se-passhi’s whisper came to her,
not words exactly, but when the murmuring was done, she knew with certainty
that the mate-meld would be at the corn-kiosk two days from this at noon, knew
also that they needed to see her almost as urgently as she needed them ... she
sent them love and a sigh of loneliness, caught the return then felt the
touches fade, felt the ache of loss that never lessened.
She opened her eyes, sighed again, her need for them as
strong as it was on the first days in the dome. More than three years of duty
left before she could hold them and be held. She drew her knees up, draped her
arms over them, rested her head on her arms. Two days. I will see them and
hear them. Can’t touch them, but at least I’ll hear their voices, see their
faces. Two days. How can I wait? Two days. She closed her eyes and let the
longing take her and pass away, sitting on the silky rug until she was empty
and calm again. Then she got to her feet and went into the small kitchen to fix
her evening meal.
The Island Chain Suling Laller
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Vrithian
WITNESS [2]
THE BLINDNESS OF TRUTH IN SULING LALLER
My name is Binaram Kay. Please, it is the only thing my own.
I am a reader of truth, rather what someone thinks is truth, this is the curse born
in me, yes, curse. You are skeptical, that is easily read, you think this is a
great power, to know when others are truly saying what they feel or lying to
you, I tell you there are as many reasons for lies as there are lies, no I am
wrong, at least twice as many reasons, and many of them are kind, many of them
come from a need to defend oneself from someone more powerful, someone who can
hurt mind or body. I am old, this is a thing I have come to understand after
many trials, many mistakes that hurt more than me. Blind? Yes. Not born blind.
I was just discovering the pleasures of babbling about anything and everything,
just able to run without tripping over my own feet, able to climb on things
without help, but not old enough to understand discretion, that lying by silence.
My mother was beginning to suspect my curse and tried to teach me to keep quiet
in the presence of my elders. Ah yes, I have to admit she had little success in
this, Juntar was a small village in the mountain spine of Rabikka and every
third person was an uncle, aunt or cousin. But you know the truth of this, some
cousins are closer than others. I made the mistake of telling a cousin he lied
when he denied sleeping with another cousin and getting her pregnant, then
proving it with the truth that lay behind his face. Therissa’s men came for me
that night and took me to Obbatar. They tested me for days. After the first few
days I began to enjoy all the attention. I knew they were truly interested in
me, I was petted and cosseted and let show off
in ways I found very pleasing, I was much too young to understand
what lay behind that interest. Ah well, I cried myself to sleep often enough
from missing my mother and my goat and my brothers and sisters, my uncles and
aunts and cousins, and everything I’d known in my short life, but that too
happened more and more rarely as I settled in to life at the Center. After
three months of testing they put me to sleep and gently blinded me to be sure I
wasn’t merely a muscle reader. Therissa was not interested in those. Oh it was
done quite painlessly and humanely, if that word can be used about such a
procedure, I was anesthetized and the optic nerve surgically severed, I was
kept half unconscious till the wounds healed. I can remember no pain, but you
must see I am very far from that child. Therissa? No, I’ve never met her. Of
course I have not, think about it, my friend. Are you truly comfortable this
close to me? Yes, I mean you to ask yourself that question knowing I don’t need
the answer. You see the value of a lie? If I had kept silent, you wouldn’t feel
this uneasiness. So you understand why she doesn’t come near her pets, only
watches us. Yes, yes, I am blind, but there are things I don’t need eyes to
know. Pets? Yes. What else are we? Kept in luxury. Look about you. Is not this
a pleasant world for an ancient blind man? How delicately they decorate for us,
such marvelous textures, such intricate but undemanding sounds, the falling water,
the wind chimes, the rock hollows that sing in storms and are silent when the
wind is gone. Close your eyes and use your ears, your fingers, and find how
pleasantly we are housed. Kept in luxury and bred at our keeper’s command. As
soon as I reached puberty they started bringing women to me. It’s quite
laughable how gullible I was then. I was far from the first truth-reader Therissa
put in her zoo; she knew better than to send the women unprepared. They loved
me passionately, all of them, I read the truth of that and responded, how could
I not? Each time one of them became pregnant, she was taken away and replaced
by another equally in love with me. How many children? I have no idea. After
the first dozen or so were removed, the wrench of parting became too painful,
so I stopped trying to see them with my fingers, stopped trying to keep the
voices straight, stopped learning their names, they were shadows, vessels of my
pleasure, they came and went like shadows. And after a while even that became
too painful, my body rebelled and would no longer perform the act. Ah well,
that too was a long time ago. My duties? Simple enough. A good watchdog
sniffing out weaknesses in my owner’s defenses, bringing her profit from
renting me out. Do two merchants conclude their deals, I am there to assure
both that both intend to live up to the bargain. Is there a question of theft
or wrongful death, then I am there to read the truth behind the faces. Is there
trouble on any of the sablas, I am led through the streets, my nose twitching,
to point out the plotters. No more. These old legs have too little spring in
them. But there are many to take my place, my own sons and daughters among
them. How many? Look about you. This place grows every year. Why? I have
thought about that often these past years. A whim. Nothing more than that.
Something to pass the endless years. And when she is finally bored with us, no
more velvet mosses and wind chimes, no more fine wines and fine food, no more
shelter from the malice of those whose lies we’ve ripped apart. A whim. A
playtoy to pass the time. That’s what we are, my friend. And all I can hope is
that I die before Therissa’s interest does.
Vrithian
opening moves in the primary attack
Shareem clicked her fingernail against the glass of the
screen. “That’s Loppen, that crab-shaped island there. The Mesochthon is on the
south coast, by the bay that’s rather like an old-time keyhole. Middleground.
Only spot on Vrithian where Vrya can meet without worrying that one will try to
kill the other.”
Aleytys glanced at the screen, but she was more interested
in watching Shareem. Her mother was babbling, throwing out snippets of
information as if they were chunks of meat churning to the surface of the stew
in her head. During the fifteen days out from Wolff, she’d been calm and sure
of herself, showing off her ship, reminiscing about the happier times in her
past, but as soon as she saw the gas cloud around Vrithian, she started getting
jittery about their reception. Aleytys listened to her with a sudden intense
surge of affection. Shareem clearly preferred not to look ahead more than she
absolutely had to, yet against her nature she had worked long and hard to set
up the arrangements that were giving her fits right now, forcing her to confront
anxieties she’d refused to think about before.
The lander circled down through the thin scumble of clouds
toward a force dome like a dewdrop shimmering on the chalk cliffs above the
water. Aleytys watched the ground come surging closer and was herself uneasy
about what waited down there. She’d tried schooling herself to expect very
little. Ibex had taught her about the grubbiness and trivia that could lie
beneath the golden glow of myth; Shareem’s jitters were wiping out any
lingering hopes she might find a home here.
Home. She thought of her house on Wolff, then of Grey. What
am I doing here, not ... no, I won’t think about that. She tightened her
lips in a brief unhappy smile. Shareem’s daughter. Oh yes.
The dome flickered. The lander passed smoothly through, settling
on a white ceramic target that looked absurdly like a giant porcelain dinner
plate laid carelessly on the grass.
A gleaming white tube snaked from the gleaming white cube
whose polished faces (two hundred meters on a side) were opaline with pale
images of everything around them, even the clouds flowing raggedly by overhead.
From the exterior sensors, a soft sucking sound, the tube mouth fastening over
the lock.
Shareem straightened her back. For a moment she looked
bleak. Then she stood, shook herself, pasted a smile on her face, willed a
gleam into her eyes and in a breath or two was the feckless ebullient creature
she showed to Head and Shadith, though never to Aleytys. “Come on, Lee,” she
said, laughing. “Time to meet your loving kin.”
A cavernous room. All white and black. All shape and springing
form, arch on arch, falls of frozen white laces, twists of thready black lace,
breaking the interior cube into irregular space. Spare white chairs scattered
on an asymmetric spiral of black and white tiles. Elegant backdrop for what
Aleytys saw at first as a horde of identical faces and forms, the same shade of
red hair, the same translucent pallor, the same green stares. A fantasy fugue
of peacock colors in their robes and tunics and trousers, this single difference
emphasizing how alike they were, male and female, sibling and non.
All those pale faces turned toward her. Some scowling and
hostile, others blank, waiting. No sign of welcome, no acceptance there.
As Aleytys followed Shareem into that intimidating silence,
the sense of clotted numbers dissipated. Maybe fifty Vrya, no more than sixty.
Her kind, all right, though her skin was shades darker, her eyes bluer. She
lifted the corner of her mouth in a half-smile, mocking the dreams and hopes
that had lingered after all in spite of her deliberate lowering of expectation,
stared back at them with those bluer eyes, throwing a silent challenge into
their silences.
The Vrya turned away as she moved passed them, took up the
conversations interrupted by her arrival. She caught snatches as she walked
behind Shareem.
“... local shamans had a witch-smelling last week. Nallis
and I got together and played a joke on them, dumped a load of phosphors on the
head boneshaker, he was getting uppity anyway, you should have seen it, how
they turned on him and ...”
“... Dromms crowned a new king. Went, of course, can’t let
them think they can do that sort of thing without one of us. Tedious, you don’t
know ...”
“... there was this idiot preaching against us all up and
down The Sheng, and believe it or not he was starting to get a following;
turned him into a torch, that stopped ...”
“... the Fospori they’ve developed this marvelous batik
process, it takes an age to make a meter square of it, I’ve set a couple thousand
working on ...”
“... Poyeska, Zeia and I, we came out of the clouds over a
shevorate herd, startled them, should have seen those idiot beasts run, went
for stadia without stopping, trampled a plavine camp, turned it into mush ...”
“... boring, Lally, you wouldn’t believe how boring my
Vrithli are, lumps that grunt at you, I tried to get them working on something
simple as woodcarving but they ...” Shareem stopped at the elbow of a man who
looked appreciably older than the rest of the Vrya. He was a head taller than
most, with heavy shoulders, powerful arms and legs, a lined, ravaged face,
expressionless now except for a hint of impatience as he listened to a woman
with a fanatical intensity to face, eyes, voice.
“... you must admit, Har, my breeding programs are more effective
than your neglect. What have you produced in your orpetzh but a vague sort of
foreseeing that takes statistical analysis of large samples to produce anything
reliable? Now I’ve got six lines of truth-readers and ten of dowsers and three
PK specials, though I have to admit I’ve got inbreeding problems with the PK
bunch, but I’ve had the last cadre of infants collected, put my best surgeons
to work on them. Thing is, gensurgery is such a chancy thing and the talent is
so elusive and androids are so limited. Har, I wonder if you ...”
“No.” He turned so abruptly he brushed into Shareem, shoving
her into a stagger backward. He caught her arm, held her up until she had her
balance again, then looked beyond her at Aleytys, his eyes intent, momentarily
bright with interest. The brightness dulled again in a breath or two. “Chasing
dreams,” he said, dismissal in his hoarse voice. “You’re a fool to come here,
girl. Give me your hand so I can play my fool’s part in this.”
He took her hand, bowed over it, straightened, spoke loudly.
“Welcome to Vrithian, granddaughter. So that you have a seat here, Synkatta’s
dome and domain is yours, my gift. The transfer is logged, Synkatta’s androids
and Vrithli await your arrival.” He dropped her hand, muttered, “Much good it’ll
do you, but I’ve kept watch there, purged the place for you. Kell and his herd
can’t get past my security. Call me when you’re ready to move in. My advice, if
you want it, is to get out and don’t come back. It’s a trap, girl, and the
bait’s not worth a handful of shit.” He stalked away before she could get a
word out, leaving her with her mouth hanging open, feeling foolish.
“Well, that went better than I expected.” Shareem sounded almost
complacent.
“Better!”
Shareem fluttered a hand. “Listen, Lee, he never bothered to
acknowledge me as his daughter even after he took me in, but look what he’s
doing for an offworld brat.”
“Reem ...”
“Oh, I don’t mind. He was fond of me before he got so
strange, he helped me when I needed help ... never mind, we shouldn’t talk
about such things here. Come, let’s get the rest of this over with.”
They wound through silent staring Vrya toward another corner
of the room, moving in a cold and hostile atmosphere meant to be intimidating;
it only made Aleytys angry enough to burn away any trepidation she’d been
feeling. She no longer cared whether these people accepted her or not; she’d
get her birthright confirmed, deal with Kell, then do what she wanted, Aschla
take the lot of them. Well, not Shareem. She smiled at her mother’s back.
Filiannis waited near the wall, seated in one of the
free-form chairs, a pair of identical Vrya silent at her shoulders. The twins
watched her quietly, their faces impassive, lowering their eyes as she came
closer. Don’t they realize they reek hostility and jealousy? Aleytys
wondered suddenly whether any of the fifty or so swirling around her ever
connected in any way less superficial than casual sex. The predators she’d come
across in the roundabout course that brought her here—deadly little Joran; wonder
what made me think of him?—the scavs on Nowhere, assorted company reps,
whatever, all of them had about as much feeling for others as a pack of hungry
silvercoats, yet even they knew more about reading nonverbal clues than this
bunch. She examined the twins thoughtfully. Her mother’s hand dropped onto her
arm. “Don’t say anything about them,” Shareem whispered. “Don’t talk to them,
don’t even seem to see them. They’re clones. Not very successful ones,
short-lives, limited minds, she just does them over when they fade.” Aleytys
nodded; I’ve seen worse, she told herself. Shareem smiled. “We’ll talk
later.”
Filiannis the poet, or so Shareem said. Hadn’t written
anything new for centuries. But I could have missed something, she admitted,
seeing her as I did only every hundred years or so. And I’ve never been much
interested in poetry anyway.
Filiannis leaned forward with considerable eagerness as
Shareem and Aleytys stopped in front of her. She didn’t wait for Shareem to
speak, but stood and held out her hand. When Aleytys clasped it, Filiannis said
(speaking so fast she was almost jabbering): “Welcome to Vrithian, Vryhh
daughter, Vryhh born to the Vrya.” Her hand was dry and smooth; the skin felt
like fine paper. She dropped back onto the chair, the twins retreating to stand
once more at her shoulders. Aleytys found herself thinking of them as children
in spite of their developed forms; they had an unfinished feel to them as if
they weren’t whole persons. Unsuccessful clones and aware of it, forced to stand
before her, the whole-person Vryhh-daughter they could never be. She fought
back a sharp stab of anger; it was unnecessarily cruel to create these
half-persons, even crueler to bring them here.
Shareem glanced at her, stepped quickly forward. “Hello, Filiannis.
Fia and Lia are looking especially well today. The blue suits them.” Aleytys
was startled and annoyed to find Shareem doing what she’d forbidden Aleytys to
do. I’m still an outsider until this business is over, she thought.
Filiannis smiled, but the energy with which she’d greeted
Aleytys was draining out of her. “They are well. We are well. Your absence this
time was short, Reem.”
“I had a good reason for returning.” She put her hand on
Aleytys’s shoulder.
Filiannis looked vague, then alert again. “Ah yes.” She
turned to Aleytys. “Yes. Karos and Agriotis were here a year or two ago. They
told us some exciting tales about your adventures, Vryhh-daughter.”
“Rumor, anassa. Don’t believe all you hear.” Aleytys lifted
a hand, let it fall. “Most of the time I was hungry, filthy, confused, bored
and frightened half to death. It wasn’t anything like exciting.”
“No. No.” Filiannis closed a hand about Aleytys’s arm,
closed it so tightly her nails cut into Aleytys’s skin, a naked greed in her
face and voice that astonished and repelled Aleytys. As if the Vryhh woman was
a leech getting ready to suck her dry. She stood without moving, waiting for
the woman to collect herself. “No.” Filiannis straightened out her fingers, letting
go of the arm, and with the falling hand seemed to lose most of her energy. She
stared past Aleytys at something, perhaps only a fragment of some ancient
memory, or a brush of suddenly recalled emotion. Her crumpled lips stretched
slightly; she turned her head, seemed startled to see Aleytys and Shareem still
near her. “You come and visit me, Vryhh-daughter, you be sure and do that.”
“Yes of course, thank you, anassa.”
Filiannis got to her feet. “My dome’s in Beyinne. Shareem
can tell you how to find it.” She walked off with Fia and Lia trailing silently
behind.
A cold knot in her stomach, Aleytys watched her walk off. Filiannis
looked almost as young as Shareem, time had left her shell intact, but the
inside was rotted out. When Shareem had told her of the suicides that thinned
Vrya numbers, Aleytys hadn’t understood, in a sense hadn’t quite believed her,
but she began to understand them now. If chance or nature didn’t kill her
first, she promised herself as she watched Filiannis vanish among the other
Vrya, if she ever came to such emptiness, she’d dive her ship into the nearest
sun. She turned to Shareem, started to say something. “Not here,” Shareem said.
Aleytys looked around, sighed.
Hrigis was another ancient spirit within a preserved shell,
the youthful elasticity of her body wrapped oddly about the ancient spirit
sitting like a shriveled nutmeat inside it. Though Hrigis was brighter and
sharper, more energetic than Filiannis, her green Vryhh eyes had all the warmth
and welcome of polished jade; perhaps she’d used up her whole store of emotion
so long ago she couldn’t even remember how feeling felt. Her voice was a rather
musical soprano, practiced and precise, counterfeiting the life she lacked.
“Welcome to Vrithian, Aleytys Shareem’s daughter, daughter of the line of
Tennanth, kin and kind.” She took Aleytys’s hand briefly, dropped it. “Go
warily, Aleytys, you have enemies here. Once Kell issues his challenge and you
leave the Mesochthon, you’ll be a target. I expect he’ll show up as soon as
this tedious little ceremony is completed. Do be careful. You’re more interesting
and I’m sure far pleasanter to have about than he is.”
Shareem caught hold of Aleytys’s arm and led her away. Her
hand was shaking; she looked frightened. “I thought we’d have more time,” she
murmured, “I should have known someone would get word to him I was bringing
you.”
“It had to come sooner or later,” Aleytys said quietly.
“Better now while we’re expecting him. Besides, it gets him away from Grey and
Shadith.”
“You don’t know what you’re talking about. At least he can’t
attack you until he announces his challenge, but I thought we’d have more time
to get dug in before he got here.” She pulled her hand down her face, wiping
away the worry with it, the effort concealed behind the smile evident in the
rigid set of her shoulders.
Aleytys looked around. “We’re more than slightly outnumbered.”
Shareem sniffed. “These? They’re terrific when they’re
beating up on unarmed Vrithli, but show them a real fight and they’ll dive for
cover.”
“Even mice are bad when they’ve got numbers on their side.”
“They won’t touch either of us here. Now shut up, one more
to go.” She raised up on her toes. “Right, follow me.”
Loguisse was the last of the Tetrad, the same mix of age and
youth, she was smaller than the other two women, with sharp but delicate
features, and (according to Shareem) a tendency to retreat into the intricacies
of her own mind. She was a mathematician working in realms so esoteric no one
else on Vrithian could come close to understanding what she did. Unlike the
other three Tetrarchs, she continued to work in her field, even left Vrithian
to attend conferences with other mathematicians. She maintained a steady
contact with a web of her peers across known space, using Ibex as a transfer
node for com-calls, since she could not speak directly from Vrithian without
revealing its location, something she was not about to do. Of the four
Tetrarchs, Loguisse was the one most fully committed to accepting her. Among
other reasons, she preferred Aleytys to Kell because he was too turbulent and
too unpredictable, too apt to destroy Vrithian and all the Vrya in his attempt
to fill the holes in his soul. Her hand was cool and dry, her fingerbones like
birdbones; they felt so fragile Aleytys was afraid of crushing them and glad
when Loguisse took her hand back. “Welcome, Aleytys Atennanthan, daughter of
Vrithian.” She smiled a little vaguely, then drifted away.
“Well, that’s it, Lee. You’re now a Vryhh of Vrithian.”
“Any reason to stay here longer? If I’m the excuse for this
party, I’m certainly not its shining light.”
“Let’s find Hyaroll and get him to let us in Synkatta’s.
Forget this bunch. I didn’t expect much from them, though I did hope Aglao and
Ruth and a couple others would be here.
They sort of promised ...” She looked around. “And Rodyom,
rats gnaw his toes, he probably forgot what century he’s in.” She wrinkled her
nose. “That’s one thing you’re going to have to live with, Lee—the best of us
isn’t all that reliable when it conies to remembering engagements.”
Aleytys chuckled. “Poor Mama—stood up by how many?”
“Hah, respect for your elders, child.” She began scanning
the crowd for the massive figure of the Tetrarch; with his size and width he
should have been easy enough to locate, but there was no sign of him. Absently,
Shareem said, “I didn’t want to give you a total disgust of your kind; I
thought I’d pull in some of the Strays, add some flavor to the mix.” She chewed
on a knuckle a moment, then started moving. “Help me find him, Lee. We’ve got
to get you installed in your new property.”
Aleytys followed her mother as she went quickly from divider
to divider, circling the huge room in her search, growing more and more anxious
as it became clear that Hyaroll had already left. “I didn’t expect a house
given to me,” she said. “Thought I’d have to buy one. As on Wolff.”
“Har’s head of Tennanth-line, Lee. Never mind what Kell told
you. Synkatta’s dome came to him when Kata climbed onto his funeral pyre and
lit the match. Hyaroll shut it down. Wasn’t anyone around he liked well enough
to bestow it on. Damn his thick head, he’s left us floating.”
“Well, well, it’s mud-face. So you squirmed your way here.”
Aleytys turned slowly, trying to control the surge of fear
and anger that shook her when she heard that deep fluid voice, a voice she’d
heard only the one time waking, a thousand times since in nightmare.
He was still thin, but it was a healthy leanness, not the
papery skin over chalk bones she’d seen on Sunguralingu. When she cured him of
the disease that was eating his life. His smile became a grimace as she took
her time examining him, that assessing gaze reminding him too vividly what he’d
been and what she’d done. She felt the fever in him, the need to wipe away the
memory of his weakness, but she wasn’t ready to deal with his rage. Or her own.
Not yet.
“As you see,” she said temperately. She heard Shareem’s
breath catch, felt her mother’s fingers closing warm on her shoulder; she
covered the hand with her own, grateful for the silent support.
“Mud,” he said, snapped his mouth shut. A moment’s tense silence.
“Look at that, all of you.” His voice was hoarse, slipping out of his control;
again he clamped his mouth shut. Another silence. Soft scuffle of feet as the
Vrya came closer. “Look at what you want to call Vryhh. Wash it till the sun’s
a cinder, you won’t get it white.” Another exploding silence. “I will not, I
will not have that slime call itself Vryhh. I will not.” Silence. “To
the death, Mud.” Silence. “I declare war between us. I declare that you and any
who try to help you, Mud, will die at the hands of me and mine.”
Aleytys sucked in a breath, let it out. “To the death,
cousin,” she said quietly, flatly.
His face went taut, his head back; she thought he was going
to explode and attack her, but he swung around and strode away, vanishing into
the nearest exit.
For several breaths after he left, there was total silence,
then a murmur of comment growing louder and more excited as the room began to
clear.
Aleytys felt chilled to the bone, anger gone ash inside her;
she was suddenly tired to death of all this, the sheer stupidity of it like
stones crushing her. “Looks like the party’s over.”
“I knew it would be bad, but he’s ...”
“He is that.”
Shareem opened her mouth, closed it, looked helplessly
around.
Aleytys moved her shoulders, shook her arms, straightened
her back. “What comes next? What do I do?”
“The ship, I suppose.” Shareem took a few steps toward an
exit, hesitated, came back. “My dome’s in Guldafel, but ... there’s almost
nothing, no defenses ... couldn’t stop a hungry mouse ... I’m almost never
there. I thought ... I don’t know ... I thought Hyaroll might take us in. But
that’s ... he’s not here. I’m sorry, Lee.”
“He gave me Synkatta’s dome. Why not go there?”
“We can’t get in until he unpeels it for us. That
maggot-head, what good does it do to give you the place if he doesn’t ...”
“I’ll put you up until you can get old Stone Ear’s
attention.” Loguisse. She’d come up behind them shadow-silent. “He’ll talk to
me most times even when he shuts out everyone else. I wouldn’t mind guests for
a few days, and Kell knows better than to worm about in my domain.
Besides”—eyes alight with silent laugher—“my androids will love having someone
to do for. They complain I need so little that half their circuits are rotting
from disuse.” She strolled away, leaving them to follow if they wanted.
Shareem brightened and started after her. “Thank whatever
gods there are, Lee, we’ll make it through the next two three days.” She was
almost dancing, her spirits soaring out of the mucky swamp they’d been plodding
through for the past several minutes. Aleytys followed, smiling, unable to
resist her mother’s pleasure. They stepped into the tunnel a pace or two behind
Loguisse.
“I’ve forgotten too much, Lee, tried to forget it, I
suppose. I’ll do better after this, I promise.”
“Forget that too. We should talk soon. I need to know how
this war works. What about the lander?”
“Best to leave it right here. He’s probably got in and
trapped it already.”
“But you said ...”
“Huh? Oh. The Mesochthon truce ground is just the hall
floor.”
“Aschla’s hells.” Aleytys caught hold of Shareem’s arm and
threw her back down the tube, ran ahead, flung a startled Loguisse after
Shareem. “Harskari,” she cried, “help me.”
The amber eyes come open and alert.
A weight about her head. The diadem begins chiming.
The air thickens about her.
A few steps ahead the floor cracks open; pieces
of the tube start to fly up and out, then they slow, freeze in place.
She struggles against the intractable weight of the air,
kneels and pushes the pieces of the floor aside; they resist her briefly, but
her strength is augmented in this state. She reaches into the hole, gets her
hands around the bomb, a black egg with narrow jagged cracks in the heavy
casing, the heat inside glowing a murky red. The bomb is small, about the size
of her two fists, but its mass almost defeats her. With Harskari urging her to
a cautious haste, she manages to pry the bomb loose and stagger to her feet,
cradling it against her stomach.
She lurches along an endless white tunnel until, with a
relief that almost undoes her, she sees daylight ahead and the green of grass.
Kell or his minions had pried the tube loose from the airlock when they
introduced the bomb. Wondering how she is going to dispose of it, she staggers
into the sunlight, Harskari warning her she is running out of time and
strength. She keeps moving. Past the landing saucer. Across the grass. She
bumps into something that feels like the skin on old gelatin, pops through it,
realizes that the skin must be the force dome. She slows, stops, remembering
that the dome is very close to the cliff edge. She blinks the blurring sweat
out of her eyes and finds that the third step on would have been a very long
one indeed.
Throw it,* Harskari says. *I can hold the stasis a few minutes
longer.*
Arms shaking, she takes another step and heaves the bomb
over the cliff edge, wheels and races for the dome, pops through it a breath
before Harskari lets go. The explosion finishes itself partway down the cliff
but is shunted away from her and the others by the force dome.
Feeling like a watery pudding, she crashed to her knees and
gasped in mouthfuls of shivering air.
Shareem came running to her, Loguisse following more sedately.
Aleytys looked up, smiled wearily at her mother. “I wish
you’d mentioned a bit earlier that the neutral ground stopped at the hall’s
edge.”
“What a thing ...” Shareem pulled Aleytys onto her feet.
“You look whipped.” She steadied Aleytys, pulled her daughter’s arm around her
shoulders and started walking with her toward Loguisse’s flier. “What did you
do?”
“Time for that later.” Loguisse’s cool, calm voice. She moved
past them, stepped onto the landing saucer. “You live up to your reputation.
Hunter.” She touched the lock. Over her shoulder, she said, “Wait there a minute.”
Aleytys clasped her hands behind her head, swayed back and
forth, stretching her muscles, feeling a treacherous euphoria flooding her.
She’d just been a hairline away from death. Cloud shadows swam in lyrical
silence across the shining white face of the cube, but nothing else moved,
there wasn’t a stray sound. “I’d have thought there’d be more fuss, Reem. A
bomb just exploded, but no one seems to have noticed that.”
“Oh, they did. They went the other way fast.”
“That’s how it’s going to be?”
“Till this is over.”
“Mmm. Why pick this tube?”
“Chance, maybe; or they mined all the tubes and only touched
off the one you went into. Does it matter?”
“I suppose not.”
Loguisse reappeared in the lock. “Come in now.”
Water from horizon to horizon, bright glittering blue, small
tight bumpy wrinkles packed close like pleats in a fan.
Three black midges come leaping at them from three directions.
Loguisse does nothing. They sizzle and phutt out before they come near the
flier. Other fliers dip in and out of clouds, so far away they are guesses on
the viewscreen; they don’t try to get closer. More missiles. Loguisse sits
quietly before the console, a bored look on her still face; the flier handles
whatever is thrown at it; nothing comes close enough to shake the air about
them.
As soon at the flier moved over the land, Loguisse woke from
her dream; a slight smile on her face, she bent over the console, reading the
flood of data, responding with a swift dance of her fingers over the sensor
panel. Apparently she guarded her domain as rightly as her dome. The flier
lifted, dropped, turned in a complex saraband across the dry harsh land of
Yashouk.
Loguisse’s dome was in the high uplands of Yashouk, in bleak
but austerely beautiful canyonlands. Wind-sculpted stone and narrow tortuous
canyons with water glinting silver at the bottom of a few. The dome spread over
the whole of a broad mesa whose precipitous walls were being gradually eaten
away by wind and water and time. Loguisse had lived there most of her ten thousand
years; in another ten thousand she might have to move if she didn’t do
something to stop that infinitesimal erosion.
The flier hovered over the dome while she did a final
glissade over the sensors, then it dropped slowly, merged with the dome,
dropped further into a hole uncovered as a pool slid to one side, dropped down
and down the stone shaft, falling into thick darkness, down and down until it
feathered to a halt in a vast cavern deep inside the mesa. Light bloomed about
them as it settled onto an oval platform some meters above the stone floor.
Loguisse spoke a single word. “Krasis.” Without bothering
with explanation or instruction, she swung her chair around, stood and walked
toward the lock, which opened smoothly as she approached, stayed open behind
her. She stepped onto nothing with a calm assurance that was immediately
justified as a white ceramic disk materialized under her feet and began
lowering her to the floor of the cavern. Rather impressed, Aleytys smiled and
relaxed. Kell hadn’t a hope of getting in here. A step ahead of Shareem she
went to stand in the lock, watching what was happening below.
As Loguisse drifted downward, a tall golden metal man came
with feline grace from a side tunnel and stood waiting. Another of the
fantastic androids of Vrithian. It was delighted to have its mistress back, she
could feel that—but how could a thing of circuits and crystals feel so
intensely about anything, how could it feel at all?
Loguisse stepped off the disk and sent it back to the lock
with a flutter of her fingers. “Kell,” she said. “You know his tricks. Keep him
out.” The android walked away, vanishing into the darkness from which it had
come.
Shareem brushed past Aleytys and stepped onto the disk, letting
it take her down. Aleytys gazed after the android, puzzled by the relationship
between Loguisse and her constructs. She certainly didn’t fuss about ceremony.
Robots, androids—not so complex and, well, beautiful as these—existed
otherwhere than Vrithian, but most folk who built or owned them demanded servant
manners from servants shaped like men. She rather liked the absence of that
mindset in Loguisse, but it made her uneasy, made the Tetrarch more enigmatic.
She stepped onto the disk Shareem had sent back for her and floated down. It
begins, she thought. I’m learning the possibilities wired into me. She
stepped off the disk, started to speak, then decided she had nothing she wanted
to say. Loguisse looked around, nodded, then started walking up the tunnel the
android had taken.
“Rest as long as you need.” Loguisse tapped a sensor by the
door. “If you want anything, this will call your attendant. ‘‘ She smiled
vaguely and left.
Aleytys poked about the small bare room. Perfect order, pleasant
enough, but it looked as if it had been wrapped in plastic for a long time and
someone had only just broken the seal. She nodded. This only confirmed what
she’d felt about Loguisse. The Tetrarch preferred her androids to people; they
went quietly about their tasks and left her undisturbed. She didn’t want
visitors. Aleytys and Shareem were unwelcome as fleas infesting her extended
body no matter what she said; they’d better find a way to leave soon if they
wanted to keep her friendly. Aleytys yawned. The long day had left her exhausted.
She stripped and showered, then climbed into the narrow bed and dropped into a
heavy sleep.
Glass strips tinkling in the wind, chimes sliding into her
sleep.
She began to wake.
Soft female voice replacing the chimes: Aleytys, Aleytys,
join us for dinner. Aleytys, Aleytys, you’ve slept long enough. Aleytys,
Aleytys, let Korray bring you to us. Touch the caller when you want her.
Aleytys turned over, murmuring drowsily, rubbed at her eyes.
The voice shut off. Muttering a little, she got out of bed. While she slept,
someone—presumably Korray—had brought a selection of long dresses to the room
and hung them on the air at the foot of the bed. She ran her hands through her
tangled hair and stared at them. One was blue-green, the color close to
matching her eyes, a soft clinging silk, cut to skim the curves of her body,
one side slit to the thigh for ease of movement, a scoop neck, long loose
sleeves. She wrinkled her nose at it. The second was so dark a green it was almost
black; it glowed with the sheen of fine wool. A looser fit; the skirt flared to
flow like water about her as she walked. The third was white, a stola made of a
supple silky material she didn’t recognize, heavy enough to hang in graceful
folds from the round gold brooches that held back to front at the shoulders.
Nice to have a choice. She looked about for the comfortably familiar shipsuit,
but whoever had brought the dresses had gone off with it, presumably to give it
a good cleaning. Lovely service, but I want the suit back. I damn well
couldn’t do much fighting or running in any of those.
She got to her feet, stretched, did a few breathing
exercises that woke her body up but did nothing much to clear the cotton wadding
out of her head. Rubbing her eyes, massaging the back of her neck, she walked
to the snug fresher and stood for a dreamy while with the shower beating down
on her.
I won’t stay here.
Amber eyes blinked open. *Certainly not here,* Harskari
said, acerbic amusement in her voice.
Aleytys shut the water off, stepped from the cubicle, began
scrubbing one of the blanket-sized towels over her body. “I meant Vrithian.”
*Going to run? He’ll be after you.*
“I know.” She dropped the towel on the floor and went to
make faces at herself in the steamy mirror. “Afterward.” She began dragging a
comb through her soggy hair.
*Leave afterward until you’re finished with now.*
“Oh, profound.”
*Mock how you want, you’re still running. It’s time to face
about and attack.*
“How? Where? Give me time to get my head organized.”
*No time left.*
“Loguisse bought me some. A day or two. I’ve bought time for
Grey. And Ticutt. Kell’s here.”
*Shadith should be on Avosing by now—the distances from
Wolff are roughly the same.*
“I know.” She pulled the comb a last time through her hair,
looked at the snarls of wet red caught in it, threw it at the tiled wall across
the room, watched it bounce. “Attack, hah! Attack what? Pin him down? Where? A
world’s a big place. And it’s his world. Only advantage I have is that I know
sooner or later he’s coming after me.” She edged a hip onto the sink, closed
her eyes. “Got to let him do that and hope to catch him hopping. Got to switch
his ground to mine. How? I can’t just go out and say here I am, hit me. Either
he says no thanks or he squashes me; too likely he puts his thumb on me and
turns me to a smear on the stone if It give him an opening like that. Leave me
alone. I’m trying to work it out.”
*Touchy.*
“Yes. I am.”
*If you don’t want me around ...*
“Now who’s touchy?” She smoothed her hair back, looked
around for something to tie round the queue she circled with her fingers,
shrugged and let it go, walked back into the bedroom. “What about our canceling
out the bomb? Think that jarred him any?”
*The missiles were a weak follow-up ... could have been deliberate,
make you underestimate him, maybe point you away from where the attack’s really
coming. In any case, he’ll be regrouping and planning something worse.*
“I know.” She walked around the robes, felt the material,
then pulled the dark green dress off its invisible hanger, gathered up the
skirt into loose folds and tossed it over her head. A wriggle or two and it
slid down over her body as if it had been made for her, which it probably had.
“Send a prayer to your gods whoever they are that Loguisse can give . me the
data I need.” She smoothed the closures shut. “Data we need.”
*Thanks for remembering.*
“Sarcasm is not at all attractive.”
*Remind yourself of that, Lee. Remember, I’m here until you
get around to finding me a body.*
“How can I forget?” She slid her feet into the heelless
slippers that matched the dress. “Keep your eyes open, oh wisest of mentors.
Once this war gets moving there should be a wide choice. Pinch me fast when you
see one you fancy. As Shadith did. I wonder what she’s doing now.”
*Up to her ears in a mess of her own making, no doubt.*
“I suppose so, but I’d a lot rather be there than here.”
*Really?*
“Aschla’s hells, I don’t know. Leave me alone.”
Korray took her to a room that was an elegant but chilly concoction
of glass and stainless steel with a floor that repeated the design of the
walls, white cloisonnй filling brushed steel outlines. Vines with heart-shaped
leaves the palest of greens wove through open spaces and took some of the
visual coldness from all that white and silver, but not much. Through an unglassed
arch came the sound of water playing lazily through the lobes of an angular
steel sculpture, dropping musically into a cylindrical basin, its bricks glazed
a bright blood red, their mirror surfaces a shout and a shock in all that
glassy glitter and washed-out green.
Shareem and Loguisse sat in separate silences at a
glass-and-steel table with three place settings laid out on it. Loguisse was
gazing abstractedly at the fountain, putting some problem through its paces;
Shareem was silent also, the lightness gone out of her face. She looked drawn
and tired as she folded and refolded a bright red napkin. If that is an
example of Vryhh homelife, no wonder she prefers to stay away. As she
walked toward them, Aleytys found herself wondering what Shareem’s childhood
had been like, the time before Kell, long before the death of her mother.
Sudden thought (sparked by the sight of the fragile-seeming silver-metal Korray
moving ahead of her): Were all Vryhh children raised by androids? That would
explain a lot. The elegant little android pulled the third chair out from the
table and waited to help her sit. She settled herself, then looked up through
the dome at the sky. Cloudless, pale blue, no sign of the sun. Was that east?
It was hard to say; she wasn’t adjusted to this world yet. She tried a tentative
smile.
Shareem winked at her, startling her. For an instant, just
an instant, her mother was the lighthearted laughing woman she’d been on Wolff.
Loguisse continued to look abstracted.
“I’m still half asleep.” An apologetic turn of her hand.
“What time is it?”
Loguisse blinked, slid round to face her. “Six hours after
noon. A twenty-eight-hour day.”
“Then it’s supper you’re offering.”
“More or less, though my staff can provide anything you feel
like eating.”
“I was a time coming. You’ve eaten?”
“We waited for you. Tell Korray what you’d like.”
“Oh. Umm, meat of some sort, green vegetable, bread. Local
produce. I’m not fussy about how it’s fixed. Cha if you have it.”
Korray shifted slightly; the new angle, altering the
patterns of light on the angular planes of its face, made it seem as if it was
smiling. It walked away with a delicate grace, a fluid almost fleshly flow. And
it was quietly happy; like Krasis it centered its happiness on Loguisse’s
return. Aleytys gazed at her hands. Programmed into them? Or something that had
slowly, slowly developed over the millennia androids and maker had lived
together. She hoped it happened that way; the other made her rather sick.
“Korray and Krasis were both designed by Synkatta; he had an
elegant touch with androids.” Loguisse was smiling at her, amused.
“Synkatta. If he could do that, why ...”
Loguisse shrugged. “He ran into the limits of his gift.”
“Oh. Where can I find Kell?”
“You don’t waste time.”
“I’ve wasted too much. I need information, anassa, I can’t fight
in the dark or sit around on the defensive too long. Fight him on his terms,
well, that’s not a good idea, I’ve got to shift the war onto my own ground.”
Loguisse nodded. “I’ll set Krasis to making extracts for
you, what I know of Kell and his resources. Will that do?”
“How can I say until I’ve seen what comes up? Is it too late
to try reaching Hyaroll?”
“You’re in a hurry to leave. Should I be insulted?” Cool
voice, spark in the greenstone eyes, irritation a fog rolling out of her. A
jolting reminder that Aleytys was taking too much for granted the great favor
Loguisse was doing her.
Aleytys opened her mouth to explain that she knew Loguisse
was uncomfortable with them there, but swallowed the words after another look
at the Vryhh woman. After a moment’s thought, she said, “I’m a danger to you,
Loguisse anassa. As long as I’m here. You’ve been very kind taking us in
despite that danger, nearly got blown to dust for it. How can I repay you by
putting your life more at risk?”
Loguisse said nothing for a long moment, her face
unreadable, her mind and emotions so controlled that Aleytys caught almost
nothing from her but a general skepticism. And a touch of relief. “I’ve been
trying to reach Hyaroll,” she said finally. “He won’t answer my calls.” She
leaned back as a trio of androids came in with a serving cart. “I’ll try him
again after we eat.”
Loguisse had no luck that night; it was midmorning the next
day before she got a response. Hyaroll looked as if he’d bitten into something
sour and couldn’t get the taste out of his mouth. “What do you want, Loguisse?”
“You present Aleytys with dome and domain and forget to key
her in,” Loguisse said calmly. “Kell could ignore those defenses you boast of
and take her while she is scratching about trying to get in.”
An impatient grunt. A crabbed gesture with one hand. “So
keep her there.”
“I’m willing. She’s not.”
“Take a pattern, flip it over to me.”
“Don’t be absurd.”
He scowled at her, chewed on his lip. “You know where it is.
Meet me there. Two hours. Local time. Got it?”
“Got it.”
The screen blanked. Loguisse swung around. “We’ll get you
keyed in, then we’ll come back here, Aleytys. You need to learn more than
Shareem can tell you about how to manage a kephalos.”
Shareem laughed, spread her hands. “I’ve spent too much time
offworld. Listen to the woman, Lee.”
Loguisse slid from the chair. “Come,” she said. “You don’t
need anything beyond what you’re wearing. Kell will keep his head down while
Hyaroll and I are around.” She walked briskly to the door and the bubble within
a bubble that protected this room, the heart of her dome, the point where
kephalos and Vryhh had closest contact, then turned and stood fidgeting
impatiently until they reached her.
They passed through the double membrane into the smothering
darkness of the maze. Aleytys took Shareem’s hand, reached for Loguisse’s and
let her lead them through the twists and turns ahead.
They emerged into the cavern close to the shrouded
machinery, the silent sealed workshop, nearly halfway around from the place
where they entered the maze. Apparently the maze changed shape and entrance at
established intervals following some principle known only to Loguisse; she’d
suspected it was changing again even as they passed through it, she had had a
feeling of movement, of oppression in that thick stifling blackness as if walls
were pushing at her, even though she saw and heard nothing.
She followed Loguisse toward the bulkiest flier, Shareem
trailing silent and unhappy behind her. Shareem wanted to be away, out of this
delicate steel paradise made for one. More than anything else, she wanted to
take Aleytys away and go back to the universe outside the cloud where things
were confused and perilous, but less hurting and certainly less confining; out
there she had space to move, she had her ship and her talents, and if things
got sticky or boring she could pick up and go somewhere else. Vrithian oppressed
her and Kell terrified her. Aleytys knew all that, was thinking about it as she
rode the disk up to the lock, and when she looked down she saw Shareem looking
down also, her shoulders slumped, her body radiating unhappiness. When Shareem
came up, she put her arm about her mother’s shoulders, hugged her hard, then
moved quickly to the passenger chairs. Shareem looked startled, then smiled and
followed without comment.
Synkatta’s dome was on the southern coast of Kebelzuild,
high on granite cliffs above a narrow beach where surf pounded endlessly, white
foam about black rocks, the bright blue sea stretching out to the horizon. This
ocean had a wider, wilder feel to it than the one they’d crossed to reach
Loguisse’s dome; perhaps because she was closer to it, perhaps because the dome
was farther north, the ocean here seemed to have more energy, more anger to it.
And I’m using this nonsense to avoid thinking about what could happen to us
if he doesn’t come. She glanced at Loguisse. The Tetrarch was silently
fuming as she kept the flier circling above the dome. Fifteen minutes passed.
Twenty. Thirty.
Aleytys squirmed in her seat. Ay-Madar, here I am,
helpless again. Hanging on one protector’s arm while I wait for another. Like
with Slower and Maissa on Lamarchos. Hauled here, dragged there. Kicked about
by the whim of others. Even Arel took me where he wanted to go, dumped me when
I wanted something else. The last few years she’d been making her own
decisions and running her own life; right now she was seeing more clearly than
she had when she was immersed in it how much control she’d had in spite of the
Hunts more or less forced on her, Hunts she had to admit, if she was really
honest with herself, that she’d enjoyed, dangerous and dubious as they were.
She fidgeted as quietly and inconspicuously as she could. Where in Aschla’s
stinking hells was Hyaroll?
Loguisse leaned forward. Hyaroll’s scowling face filled the
screen. “Gnats,” he grumbled. “Had to swat ‘em. You ready to follow me down?”
“Ready. Go.”
The face vanished; the image was a lumpy armored flier that
darted down at the dome,” a dark streak moving so fast it dropped off the screen
before Loguisse could move. She dropped her flier after him, followed him
through the dome. Then both fliers were sitting on landing saucers not far from
an odd whimsical structure it was difficult to call a house and a series of
gardens as disconcerting and prankish and lovely as the house.
Hyaroll walked stiffly the few steps to join Loguisse,
Aleytys and Shareem. He pointed at Aleytys. “Come.” Without waiting for a
response from her, he started for the house. Over his shoulder he said, “You
two wait here. She can do what she wants when the thing’s finished.”
Loguisse tapped Aleytys on the shoulder. “Go. No use trying
to argue with him. We’ll be over there by the fountain.” Shareem nodded
agreement and strolled away toward the fountain, a fantasy in twisting looping
bronze tubes spitting up spurts of water in a comical lilting strongly
rhythmical dance. Loguisse dropped beside Shareem on a bronze bench and sank
into the intricacies of some problem. Aleytys ran after Hyaroll, caught up with
him and walked along beside him. What she got from him was a feeling of
terrible weariness. It smothered almost everything else about him. Somewhere
inside that weariness was a hint of irritation, but even that was hollow and
without force. She walked beside her grandfather, saying nothing because there
was nothing he wanted to hear from her. She had the feeling that the slightest
obstacle, even a wrinkle in a rug, might stop him and he’d just stand there and
turn slowly slowly into stone. Yet he’d bothered to acknowledge her as his
granddaughter and fit up this dome for her. She found it hard to understand why
he’d stirred himself, what given when she felt in him. She thought of asking,
but that might be the metaphorical wrinkle in the rug.
He led her through flow-spaces, past doors and open rooms
maintained by the house androids, who were nowhere in sight right now; she
couldn’t even feel them ticking away around her, they must tuck themselves away
in closets somewhere after finishing the eternally repeated cleaning chores
about this house of ghosts. They wound deeper into the house through those
empty, echoing ... well, halls, slipping down and down into the stone of the
cliffs. A brief darkness, a sense of waiting around her, a maze of her
own once it was activated and deployed. A brief double tingle as he took her through
the inner pair of membranes and into a brightly lit all-white room similar to
the heart of Loguisse’s dome, though the instrumentation was less complex here.
Which was natural enough, given the differences between Loguisse and Synkatta.
Hyaroll put his big hand on her shoulder and guided her to
the command seat, a heavy black swivel chair fixed before the console. Without
letting go of her, he used his free hand to drag the dust cover off that chair.
“Sit there and don’t fight what happens.” He urged her toward the seat with
small pushes that made her feel like a bit of rag caught in the jaws of a large
angry dog. Annoyed, she resisted, tilted her head up and around. “Fight what?”
He dropped his hand. “Probes. Need to read you, get your patterns
into kephalos. Sit.”
“I don’t like things messing with my head.”
“Sit or forget it. Up to you.”
“Hunh.” She settled herself in the chair, felt it come to
life around her as Hyaroll began moving his fingers stiffly over the sensors.
The back moved, flexing and bulging, rising like a cobra hood over her head,
coming over and down, shaping itself to her skull. She tried to relax. Not the
time to wake the diadem. No danger, she thought at the thing, stay
quiet, I need this. The diadem did not manifest. She relaxed some more. The
hood closed over her face, shutting off light and air so suddenly she almost panicked,
caught herself just in time. She sat still, breathing as deeply, slowly,
steadily as she could. Probes came slipping into her head, tickling and
stinging, wriggling around. An obscene feeling. As if some repulsive stranger
had tied her so she couldn’t move and was feeling her up and she couldn’t do
anything to stop him. After those first ugly moments, though, she learned as
much from kephalos as it learned from her and she knew with a comfortable certainty
that she could destroy chair, console probes, everything, the whole of
kephalos—if she wanted to. This certainty gave her sufficient sense of control
that she didn’t need to destroy anything. All this was happening because she
let it happen. It was enough. She sat still and let kephalos read her. Time
passed. Finally the hood retreated, collapsing into the chair. She moved her
shoulders, straightened her back, swung around so she could see Hyaroll.
“Not yet. Stay there.” Hyaroll was frowning at a screen.
“Odd readings. Very odd.” He continued to work over the sensors, stopping
occasionally to stare blankly at nothing as if his memory had halted on him and
he had to dig deep to find what he needed. As he worked, she felt the room and
the house coming alive about her. More and more of the console lit up; numbers
and symbols began to flow across the screens. She didn’t attempt to read them,
though she did wonder if her translator trick would work with numbers and
number codes as well as it did with words and language. She didn’t especially
want to find out right now; her head ached enough already.
Hyaroll took the metal strip that slid out of a slot under
the sensor panel, stepped back. “It’s yours now. Or will be once I’m outside
the dome.” He gave her the finger-length strip of bluish metal. “Hang onto
this. It’s your key if you have to leave the dome. Come.” He started for the
membrane, waited for her without trying to pass through it. “Up to you now,” he
said. “Order kephalos to let me through.”
“How?”
“Say the words.”
“Aloud?”
“If you want. Or subvocalize.”
“I hear you.”
He put his hand out, tested the membrane, started off at a
much faster pace than he’d used coming here. Swearing under her breath, she ran
after him.
In the baronial great hall with its massive door, its
playful windows that were abstract patterns in crimson-and-sapphire stained
glass, its rugged ceiling beams and huge fireplaces, its rows of chandeliers,
Aleytys, feeling like the heroine in some ancient melodrama, caught his arm.
“Wait.”
He walked three steps more, dragging her along, then turned
to scowl down at her. “What?”
“Why are you doing all this?”
“Finishing something.”
“What?”
“My business.”
“Mine as well since it involves me. This isn’t idle
curiosity, anaks. I’ve a hard fight ahead. The more I know the better I fight.
I don’t understand you. I need to.”
He stared at her a moment, then shifted his gaze to look
past her at one of the bright windows. To her surprise, he smiled—a twist of
his large mouth, a glint in narrowed green eyes. The glint faded, his face
sagged, there was nothing left. “Blood,” he said. “Promised her mother I’d take
care of Shareem. Ianna, her name was, Shareem’s mother. Promised her that after
she pried Reem loose from Kell. Knew he’d go after her, wanted her to stay with
me. She wouldn’t. You’re a lot like her, Lee; saw that soon’s I saw you. Did
the best I could for Shareem after Ianna was killed. Reem’ll never amount to
much. No, no, don’t argue, girl. She’s not the worst, cares a lot about you,
that’s something.” He put his hand under her chin, tilted her face into the
red-and-blue light. “You’re a good child, Aleytys; you hurt when you see hurt.
Shareem showed us. Proud you’re my kin.” The words were fine, made her glow,
but there was so little feeling behind them that she ached for him. He must
have seen something of this, because he backed away a step, hand dropping to
his side. “Say it one more time. You shouldn’t have come, this world is too
small to fit you. I wind down to nothing, entropy embodied, soon unbodied.”
Another step away from her. He caught hold of the door’s latch. “You’re too
full of life, girl. Like sandpaper on an ulcer. Don’t call me again.” He tripped
the latch, pulled the door open and stalked outside.
By the time she followed he was halfway to his flier. She
stood in the doorway watching until the lock closed behind him, then walked
across to join Shareem and Loguisse by the fountain, the rising whine from the
flier drowning the water’s laughter. The flier rose and hovered just below the
apex of the dome, waiting.
Aleytys looked at the strip of metal in her hand. “What do I
do now?”
Loguisse blinked, squinted up at the flier, shading her eyes
with both hands. “Tell kephalos to open the dome.”
“Then whoever is out there waiting lobs an egg through and
boom.”
“Warn kephalos that you expect trouble, that the defenses
are to be at maximum alert. They should be adequate—Har set them up.”
“Thanks.” She thought a moment, getting the phrasing right,
then reached for kephalos as she had when she let Hyaroll out of house-heart,
gave the order.
Hyaroll’s flier shot up and darted away, taking out a
missile that pounced on it the moment it left the protection of the dome, and
kephalos ashed a pair that streaked for the hole. Then the flier was gone, the
dome was intact, and the fountain was playing its comic song loudly enough to
be heard over the wandering breeze and the very faint popping noises as the
remnants of the missiles hit the dome and sizzled down its sides.
Aleytys ran her thumb across the featureless strip of blue
metal. “Will this work for anyone who holds it?”
“No. Your brain and body patterns are coded into it. Holder
has to match those. As long as you’re alive. Once you’re dead, anyone can use
it.”
“Right. If I lose it when I’m outside, I can’t get back in?”
Loguisse looked thoughtfully at her. “You?” Her eyes
crinkled with her silent laugh. “The rest of us would have to find someone we
trusted to make a duplicate, not something especially easy on this world.” She
sobered. “If you lose it, come see me. I’ll make the duplicate.”
“That’s a relief.” She looked up at the last faint sparks of
the debris. “That was rather obvious of him.”
“Don’t disdain the obvious.”
“But don’t employ it.” She reached out a hand to Shareem.
“Let’s go back now, if you don’t mind. The sooner I learn all there is to know
about this dome, the sooner we’ll stop making a target of you.”
She stood alone in one of Loguisse’s gardens, a fantasy of
crystal and steel, three tall spindly trees with whippy limbs and diamond-shaped
leaves, a small crystalline fountain in the center, the water making spare,
simple music as it fell onto crystal leaves and ultimately into a shallow crystal
basin. The late-afternoon sun was low in the west, the tree shadows were long
scrawls across the short grass, dark wavery bars across the fountain.
Stuffed into her head, outlined on a handful of flakes in
her belt pouch, she had all that Loguisse saw fit to tell her of the general
functions of the kephalos in each dome and instructions about how she could
probe her own kephalos to find out its idiosyncrasies, since the kephaloi were
programmed according to the whim of their masters and creators, so that they
all had surprises set up to trap the wariest of intruders. Loguisse was terse
about this, and Aleytys didn’t push her. Her head ached already with the heavy
dose of Vrithian’s history, sketchy though it was, covering the ten millennia
Loguisse and the other Vrya had lived here, even sketchier when it came to the
hapless Vrithli used by the undying as toys to enliven the endless march of
days. She’d been given a skip-stone look at the two species native to this
world, their various cultures, and how those cultures had been distorted by the
presence and interference of the Vrya. It wasn’t a pretty story. It infuriated
her, though she said nothing of her feelings to Loguisse. Because the
Tetrarch’s interests were so detached from experimentation and ordinary life,
she allowed the Yashoukim within the boundaries of her domain to develop as
they chose, only emerging from her retreat when the intrusions of neighboring
domains grew too blatant, too annoying. Other Vrya, with less to occupy hands
and minds, kneaded their Vrithli like clay, punching and pulling them into the
shape they chose by whim or curiosity or obscure internal needs, ruthlessly
squashing or lopping off any attempt of those Vrithli to grow in forbidden
directions.
After watching the water for a while as it shot up and fell
back on the crystal leaves, a pleasant soothing sound, she dropped to the grass
and sat dreaming for a while more, listening to the water and the breezes
teasing the pale green leaves at the end of threadlike black stems. Kell first,
no choice there, then .... She yawned and smiled. Just as well Loguisse didn’t
know about her plans or she might change her mind about who’d disrupt Vrithian
most, she or Kell. She watched the water falling, changing color with the sky
about the setting sun, and felt a relaxing, pervasive relief, a sense that an
immense weight had rolled off her shoulders; she had discovered a task
important enough to keep her working for those uncounted years that lay ahead
of her, something to keep back the tides of entropy that had eaten Filiannis
and Hrigis empty, that was turning Hyaroll to dead stone. Prying Vryhh fingers
loose from Vrithli lives. She had no illusions about the transcendent joys of
such freedom; most Vrithli were probably quite satisfied with their lot and
would be extremely unhappy if they were forced to think for themselves. Too
bad. They’d just have to learn. Let them make a few tyrants of their own and
learn how to pull those down. I’ll be taking away their certainties and their
security. Not kind. Not even doing it out of moral outrage. Using them like the
rest of my folk have used them, entertainment. She smiled drowsily. Not so
bad as it might be. Maybe just as well I’m not going at this filled with
moral outrage and sure my way is right. Results of that kind of mind-set aren’t
so good. Some outrage, yes. Can’t get calloused or complacent. Long hard job,
and isn’t that nice. She stretched and yawned, looked around, oppressed by
the lack of color. Even the varied greens after a while lost vitality and might
have been only shades of gray. Everything in the dome was exquisite, and after
the first glance boring. Aphorism, she thought, unrelieved elegance
is ultimately boring. Loguisse wouldn’t notice; when she was here she evidently
spent most of her time talking with kephalos, going endlessly though esoteric
concepts Aleytys found incomprehensible and as boring as the landscaping. More
boring. When Loguisse tried to describe one of her current obsessions, Aleytys
waved her to silence. You lost me with the second word, don’t bother going on,
she said. Loguisse sighed, her momentary vivacity fading. Pity, she said.
Aleytys nodded, understanding well enough. There must be very few people she
could talk with about the things that interested her most. She bent over,
pulled loose a blade of grass and began tearing it into thin strips. Loguisse
misses conversation, I miss Wolff. Her friends there, her house, her
horses, she missed most of all unplanned accidental color, bright and dark,
pale and saturated, and the ebb and flow of people with all their ragged edges.
Maybe if she lived as long as Loguisse, she’d change her tastes, but she
doubted that. Maybe Loguisse had started out like her, relishing the variety of
life. She doubted that too. Ten thousand years. Impossible to say what a world
would be like after such a time, even more impossible to tell how a person
would change after that much time, though that person was yourself.
She sat awhile longer, listening to the water and the
leaves, curbing her impatience to be on her own again. That meant she’d be
hauling Shareem about—no big problem; she liked her mother and was occasionally
amazed at her flashes of courage, staying here when she could so easily by
somewhere else. Aleytys sighed, feeling guilty because she was irritated by
that courage, that effort. Everything would be so much simpler if Shareem would
just take off and let her get on with the fight. Unfortunately that sensible
course would destroy Shareem. Destroy. Melodramatic word, but I can’t think
of another that would fit. Well, once this is over, she’ll go her way, maybe
visit me now and again. The world will weigh lighter on both of us.
She got to her feet, brushed herself off and went inside for
the last uncomfortable meal in Loguisse’s dome.
While Aleytys spent hours down in the heart room, plugged
into kephalos, Shareem moved about the whimsical house of Synkatta. Bedrooms
sitting like oranges impaled on thick stalks, reached by clear glass tubes
extruded from the greater mass of the house; an infirmary like a soap bubble
painted with mirrors, filled with light inside, the outside reflecting
everything that fluttered past; and when you were tired of whimsy, sedate and
comfortable rooms of stone and wood and leather: a reading room filled with
books from a thousand worlds, a fieldstone fireplace, a sturdy desk of some
light tan wood with a tight grain; a music room; a kitchen filled with
stainless steel, more practical than aesthetic; that baronial great hall with
its rough-hewn beams and colored windows; a house that was an absurdity of
allusion and metaphor and with all that, comfortable. Shareem explored it,
happy to have something to do, opening the sealed rooms, bringing life back
into the emptiness, activating the androids, designing the meals (when she
could pry Aleytys loose from Kephalos long enough to eat anything besides sandwiches
and cha), feeling cozily domestic, content to do this minor bit of mothering.
She knew she was playing games with herself, but she was also happier than
she’d been in a long time.
Each day the flying bombs struck at them, others came
digging at them from beneath, but kephalos ashed the fliers and melted the
diggers, filtered out clouds of corrosive gas. At Aleytys’s instructions,
kephalos had warned the local Vrithli that absence was the safest defense in
this war between two undying. The fishing village was deserted, the farms were
left with their crops going to weed, the livestock was gone with the farmers.
All the Vrithli left without argument; they’d heard too many grisly tales about
those caught up in a death duel.
On the fourth day after their second arrival Shareem lay
stretched out on the grass staring up at the cloudless sky, hands clasped
behind her head. She winced as the daily missile whipped down at the dome,
dissolving as always before it came close enough to bother anything. Same time
as yesterday, same two prongs air and earth, same everything. Every day she
expected Kell to try something more complex, more inventive, expected him to
use the pattern he was establishing to catch them off guard, but each
afternoon, the same time, the same spot, the diggers came digging, the missiles
came arching in; each afternoon both prongs were as routinely destroyed. She
frowned. Loguisse could say don’t condemn the obvious, but it wasn’t like Kell
to be that obvious. He could be patient, that was certainly true; he’d waited
ten years to go after her mother. He might be counting on using up their
supplies, then overwhelming them with an all-out attack. But that would take
years, and Aleytys wouldn’t give him those years, he had to know that; besides,
the Tetrad would resupply her if she asked. There had to be something else he
was after.
She grimaced and forced herself to think carefully and seriously
about her mother’s death. All these years she’d fled from taking a close look
at it, reacting to grief, to guilt for being the survivor, to a fear that
thinking about it too much would force her to challenge him or forfeit her last
shreds of self-respect. Ianna and she had been closer than most Vrya and their
children, Ianna had carried her to term, though most Vryhh females decanted
their fetuses into android wombs and left the children’s care and education in
the cold capable hands of their androids. Ianna had given birth to her in the
old old way, had suckled her and kept her close until she was old enough to go
into intensive training in the labs and automated factories that turned out the
starships and other equipment the Strays needed and the Stayers coveted. Close.
They fought a lot and laughed a lot. And that day she stood with Hyaroll
looking down on the desolation that had been her home, feeling ... well, it was
certainly a good thing Hyaroll was there with her.
She didn’t remember much after that. There was a time, part
of it in the autodoc, part being coddled by androids, when she was only loosely
connected with her body, a time after that when Hyaroll put her to work in his
manufactury. She was better at model-making than he was, neater-fingered. The work
helped her regain her confidence. Later he took her out on his collecting runs,
got her fascinated with the cultures he inspected, the people he snatched. Took
a long time ... she was startled by how long. Nearly two hundred years until
she could stand on her own. She gradually drifted away from him, understanding
finally how relieved he was to see her go, though he’d never said anything
about her leaving. That still hurt. Her father. He’d never said it. Never. Even
now he said nothing to her, though he’d named Aleytys his granddaughter. For a
shaming moment she was jealous of her daughter, hated her a little, then she
pushed the feeling aside and scratched irritably at her arm. She didn’t like
feeling uncomfortable. No help for it. Ianna’s death. It made her queasy to
think about it. Abruptly she knew as surely as if he’d flashed the diagrammed
plan in front of her eyes, that he’d set a trap for Ianna, a trap in her
homeheart where she’d be most off her guard, set that trap in those quiet years
before she knew he was coming after her. He hid the bomb or whatever it was years
before he called challenge to a death duel. It wasn’t supposed to happen that
way, it wasn’t supposed to be so unfair a fight, but Kell was ... was
contemptuous of any rules he hadn’t made. I ought to know, she
thought, I ought to have seen this centuries ago. I didn’t think ....
She sat up, sick with sudden fear. All those stupid missiles
banging away that couldn’t hope to get through, all those diggers slagged,
those gas clouds rendered harmless ... misdirection. The magician’s stock. Look
over here so you don’t see what I’m doing over there. Distractions from a
danger already planted within the dome. To be activated when they were lulled
by the futility of his attacks. Thirty years, more, time when he knew Aleytys
would be accepted, time to watch Hyaroll. She knew how Hyaroll worked; who
could know him better? A putterer. Off and on, as his interest waxed and waned.
How many years to put Synkatta’s dome in order for Aleytys? How many years was
it vulnerable before Hyaroll did his final checks? Twelve years, and more, when
Kell knew what Aleytys was and was becoming, time enough to learn to fear her.
To learn her weaknesses as well as her strengths. A dozen years to make his
final plans. Probably discounting Shareem. He knows me too, he knows how
futile I’d be in this fight. She sat up, her skin crawling, shrinking from
the lightest touch. If she could have floated in midair, she’d have felt
marginally safer. What was waiting for them? Bomb? Most likely. Disease? Fire?
Poison? He had a universe to draw on. She got to her feet, moving as slowly and
delicately as she could. She couldn’t float, that was dreamwork, she had to
walk, her feet had to come down on the ground, had to bear her weight. She had
to breathe, though each warm ragged exhalation might be the key to set the
thing off. Whatever it was. Whatever gods there be, please please please
don’t force me to be the one who kills my child. She walked slowly stiffly
impossibly into the house, hesitating for an agonizing time before she worked
the latch; she had to get to Aleytys, had to warn her, warn her of what? Kell,
Kell, always Kell. She left the door open, but that might be the cue, closing
it might be the cue, who could tell, walked across the shining parquet floor—which
one of those inlaid bits of wood might be the trigger? where did I walk before?
should I pass that way again, is it safe, or should I take another way? She
crept along the flow-way to the reading room, remembering pain, remembering the
hard, bard birth, remembering the baby dark against her breast, her tiny golden
baby with a mass of bright red curls, stubborn even then, even when she was a
few days old, demanding, small fists kneading her breast as the baby sucked with
such unconquerable determination—all the memories she’d shut away so many years
ago. She reached for the sensor plate to open the door of the reading room, a
comlink in there tied to the heartroom. She hesitated—is this the one?—palmed
the plate and walked inside with that same slow stiff eggshell walk.
The desk. The link at one end, a tilted screen set into the
wood, a sensor panel. She reached out. Stopped her hand above the sensors
without touching any. A dozen times before, more than a dozen, she’d talked to
Aleytys on this link, scolding her into coming up for a hot meal. What if this
was the call that triggered the thing? She started shaking. If she called ...
and if she didn’t ... and the thing activated and killed Aleytys ...
Whatever she did or failed to do could trigger the thing. Anything
at all. Action or omission. She nearly screamed with frustration. And even
that, noise, that could be the trigger. The sound of her voice. She sighed, cut
the sigh short, froze a moment not breathing, then gazed down at the comscreen.
If action and inaction were equal risks, then it was easier to act than to
refrain, better to do something than just sit waiting. She tapped the code into
the link, sweat rolling down her face, sweat oozing from her palms, making her
fingers clumsy, slippery. Very slowly, very carefully she tapped the code into
the link, waited without breathing, didn’t relax appreciably when her
daughter’s face appeared.
“What is it?” Aleytys looked tired and irritable.
Shareem licked her lips. For a moment she couldn’t talk
around the lump in her throat. She worked her tongue, tried to swallow, gave a
short dry cough. “Lee.” It was a squeak that broke in half. “Lee, come up here,
it’s important.”
Aleytys looked at something out of range of the viewer, then
she leaned forward and shut down what she was doing. “Be there in a little,
Reem.” The screen emptied.
Hand shaking again, coated with sweat, Shareem tapped the
link off, then stood where she was a moment, hugging her arms across her
breasts, hands closed tight on her upper arms. Nothing happened. She walked to
the door, stepping as lightly as she could, afraid to put a foot down once
she’d raised it, but she had to and did, afraid to lift it again, afraid to
stir the air with her breath. Anything could be the trigger, anything at all.
Yet she could no more stay in that pleasant room than she could stop the
neurons discharging in her brain. She stood waiting in the great hall until she
heard Aleytys calling her.
“Here,” she said. It came out a whisper; she had to clear
her throat and repeat herself. “Here, Lee. In the hall.” She waited tensely
until she saw Aleytys coming toward her, then she moved in that stiff-legged
reluctant walk to the front door, reached for the latch, forced herself to grasp
it, then shove the door open with a single smooth push. Then she was outside,
wiping sweat from her face. They should be marginally safer outside.
“What is it, Reem? You look terrible.” Shareem looked nervously
at the door, then took another step away from it. “Lee, I ... I ...” Startling
herself and Aleytys, she began sobbing, caught Aleytys in her arms and held her
daughter tight against her, her face in her daughter’s hair, the daughter who
was taller and stronger than she was, stronger and more alive, so wonderfully
against all odds alive and back with her.
But it wasn’t a baby she held, only a woman she didn’t know
all that well, and when the first helpless reaction had passed, she stepped
back from Aleytys, flushed with embarrassment. “I ... I’m ...” She looked
frantically about, saw the patch of grass where she’d been lying. “... sorry,
Lee. It was just ...” She started toward the grass, and Aleytys followed
without saying anything.
Shareem dropped to her knees, swung her legs around until
she was sitting cross-legged, knee to knee with her daughter. “I was afraid
...”
“I saw that. What is it?” Aleytys leaned forward, took her hand
and held it between her own. “You’re still shaking. And sweating rivers.”
“I’m a fool.”
“No.”
She pulled her hand free, laced her fingers together. “Don’t
talk about what you don’t understand.” She looked at her hands, then past
Aleytys at the house. “I told you Kell challenged my mother to a death duel and
killed her.”
“Yes. So?”
“I run away from things. I ran away from that, never thought
about how my mother died. Until now, just now. I was stretched out here. The
missile came. Third hour after noon. Like yesterday, day before, day before
that. Kephalos took it out. Like yesterday, day before, day before that. Four
days, Lee. How long does it take me to get the point? But I finally started
thinking.” A small tight movement of her mouth, more a grimace than a smile. “I
do think. Now and then. Kell is never obvious. So what is all this for? Every
day I’ve been expecting some devious attack that takes everything we’ve got to
stop it. If we can. But nothing happens. Just those idiot missiles, and a few
frills to keep kephalos honest. But he got into my mother’s dome. Ten hours
after the challenge she was dead, the place was molten rock and miscellaneous
debris.” Her stomach was churning, and there was bile burning her throat. “I
always assumed he got through her defenses somehow.” She drew her hand across
her mouth, then scrubbed it along her forehead, scraping away the sweat, pushing
her hair off her face. “Ten years, I thought, so Ianna would forget how he
hated her, so she’d get interested in other things. A distraction. And I
thought, these stupid attacks, it’s the same thing, really. A distraction. And
I thought, why? And I thought, it’s obvious, if you look at it the right way.
He’s got something planted here waiting for us or him to trigger it. Could be a
bomb. Doesn’t have to be. Disease. Poison. Anything. And we’ve been here four
days. Anything could trigger it. Anything. Maybe time triggers it. So many
days, boom. Or whatever. Maybe the missiles trigger it—kephalos wakes his
defense nodes, and boom. Tomorrow? Any day after that? No way of knowing,
except it’s probably not today’s, though it could be on a delay circuit. You can’t
know how I felt, Lee. Lying there thinking all this, thinking I’ve got to warn
you, but anything I did might be the trigger, or anything I didn’t do. I was
about falling apart.” She looked down at shaking hands. “I still am. The
thought of going back in there ...”
“Ukh.” Aleytys closed her eyes. “Worms eat his festered
soul, I think you’re right, Reem. It feels right. It feels like something the
man I met would do. Hah! sitting out there somewhere gloating. Ay-Aschla, what
a time for Shadith to be on her own. I could use her instincts and training.”
She smiled at Shareem’s frown. “She’s not the child she looks, you know.” She
closed her eyes, and her lips moved. Talking to the other one, Shareem
thought, abruptly and absurdly jealous of that sketchy bundle of nothing.
Aleytys opened her eyes. “Reem, your flier. It’s armored, isn’t it?”
“But we left it sitting for a couple of days at the
Mesochthon. I know Loguisse went over it, and she’s the best there is after
Hyaroll, but Kell’s ... well ... Kell.”
“And I am Aleytys.” She blinked, smiled. “That sounds ...”
She got to her feet, took Shareem’s hand and pulled her up. “I don’t care how
it sounds, I’ve got more resources than he knows.” She frowned. “On second
thought, he knows I have the diadem, but he doesn’t know its uses, even I’m
still surprised by ... Never mind. Come on.”
Shareem sighed for what she’d lost. Aleytys liked her well
enough, that was comforting, but she could remember too vividly the child who
had filled her arms. She knew none of the vague dreams that flitted through her
head had many ties with reality. Babies grew up and as often as not left
wreckage in their wake; she could remember all too well the times when she’d
choked even under Ianna’s loose restraints, choked and kicked and said things
she nearly always wished unsaid. And there was this diadem thing, a reminder of
all the ties Aleytys had with other people, people she knew nothing about. But ...
Forget that, Reem, she told herself. Futility lies down that street.
You did what you did for Aleytys’s health of mind and body. And, she told
herself, whipping herself with it, because this so dearly loved baby was a
drag on you. You could have kept her. You could have gone back for her
anytime. You could have raised her on the ship, kept her away from Vrithian.
You didn’t do any of that. It’s over. You can’t go back. Live with it. She
looked at the house, shuddered. Out here in the garden, the summer sun beating
down on them, she could put her fears aside and almost forget them. She glanced
at her daughter. Whatever Aleytys feared, it wasn’t physical danger, physical
damage. Her daughter walked with that alert serenity Shareem had seen now and
then in the faces of the short-lives she moved among out beyond the cloud, men,
most of them, though there was a woman or two that came to mind when she
thought hard, a look that said without boasting they could handle just about
anything that came up. Not courage, not exactly physical competence, more a
state of mind. She didn’t know precisely what it was, but Aleytys had it.
Nothing Kell could do to her now would frighten her. Shareem felt a touch of
envy, even resentment. She pushed them away hastily—no no don’t think about
that, no no too upsetting.
The flier sat in the landing dish, squat and angular and
ugly without fuss or pretension.
“Wait here,” Aleytys said. Her eyes were fixed on the flier,
her hand warm, her touch hasty, rather rough as she stopped Shareem. She
approached the flier with taut, wary interest, vanished around the flier’s far
side, came back around the tail. Shareem knew she was forgotten, that Aleytys
was wholly concentrated on the flier. Aleytys dropped to a squat, went very
still, hands on thighs, eyes closed. Shareem sighed and dropped to the grass to
wait.
Time passed slowly, the afternoon filled with the mewls of
sea birds, the brush-crash of the surf, the sound of the crazy fountain, wind
chimes somewhere behind the house, and a low breathy booming sound from the
house itself. Aleytys didn’t move. Shareem was content not to move. Her eyelids
drooped, she dropped into a half-doze. And started, nearly falling over, when
Aleytys got suddenly to her feet and climbed into the flier. She stayed inside
a few breaths, then came back out with a small black ovoid carefully cradled in
her hands. Her face intent, she carried the ovoid to the cliff edge close to
the shimmer of the dome field. She stopped a moment. Opening a hole, Shareem
thought. She gazed at her daughter’s back, chewed on a knuckle as she waited.
Aleytys flung the black egg through the hole, stood
watching. Nothing happened for what felt to Shareem like an age, then there was
an explosion that shook the cliffs. Nothing came through the screen, and the
earth settled rapidly back to stability. Silence. Then the patter of water
hitting the screen and rolling down it, flowing back to the sea.
Aleytys came slowly back, her face thoughtful. “That wasn’t
it,” she said, “if there is an it. That’s another distraction.” She stood with
her hands on her hips, frowning at the house. “Hard to know where to start.”
She flashed a grin at Shareem. “I can understand your dithers. ‘S going to take
some doing walking back in there.”
Shareem returned the smile. She stayed where she was,
sitting on the grass, watching her daughter, contented and at ease now,
trusting Aleytys to take care of this threat—as empty a threat now as the bomb
that had blown a hole in the ocean. Aleytys was her shield, like the dome that
kept out missiles and gas, but more flexible and even more effective.
Aleytys moved her shoulders, slumped a little. “Can’t find
it from out here.”
“What are you going to do?”
“Think. Got a feeling looking for the thing is the best way
to set it off.”
“Depends on how you look.”
“Mmm, tell me something. Vrya aren’t empathic, that’s obvious.
Any PK, manipulation at a distance?”
“No. For sure, no.” Shareem chuckled. “That you get from
your father’s side. What a thought, that I should ever be pleased by anything
that man had.”
Aleytys ignored the last part of that. “Good. Limits the
places Kell can put things.”
“He knows what you can do?”
“He’s had painful personal experience with what I can do.
Mmm, it won’t be shielded, just hidden. I wouldn’t have to go looking for
shielding, it’d be shouting at me here I am. Hiding’s better—then if his
misdirection fails and I go looking, he could use that to trigger the thing.
Plenty of psi detectors about, easy enough to tie them into the detonator.
Kell, worms eat your liver, why wait so long? Why four days?” She started
pacing back and forth. “Reem, what am I missing? If it’d been me, I’d have
blown the thing no later than the second day. Why give us this much time to
think about what’s happening?”
“Something you haven’t done, something I haven’t.” She
pulled a blade of grass, used the stiff, pointed end to scratch along her nose.
“Hyaroll’s really the best, Lee. He’d spot anything too complicated, even a
timer, anything that took energy. Has to be something activated from outside,
probably mechanical. Like your psi detectors. No psi about, the detectors play
dead. Hah! That damn silly missile shower. Activates the same portion of
kephalos every day, say it advances a ratchet one notch each day until boom. If
we leave, he stops the missiles—logical, isn’t it?—and the trap’s set for next
time we’re here. Could be the fifth day, the sixth, the tenth, who knows but
that spider? Him sitting out there gloating. Pfahh!”
Aleytys said nothing, gazed past Shareem at nothing. “Nice
problem,” she said finally.
“Why don’t we just leave? Even if he doesn’t stop the count,
we’re safe.”
“Where do we go?”
“Hyaroll? Loguisse? Filiannis said to visit her.”
“Filiannis?” Aleytys chuckled at the expression on
Sha-reem’s face. “Right. And Hyaroll won’t let us in.” She tilted her head
back, gazed at the faint shimmer of the dome. “You know, I’ve got a feeling
we’d better not try leaving again. Maybe you’re right. Maybe he’d shut down the
count until we got back. Have to activate kephalos to get out. Want to take the
chance? No, me either.” She dropped to the grass beside Shareem. “If I can’t
come up with something between tomorrow and noon, I’ll get us both out without
opening the dome. Funny, in a way it was Kell who showed me how to do
that—well, made it necessary to learn. Thing is, though, that would leave us on
foot and more or less unarmed on ground he knows better than the both of us. I
like the odds a bit more even. Mmm, let me think ....”
*Harskari,* Aleytys subvocalized, *we’ve got a problem.*
Amber eyes opened. Voice dryly amused, Harskari said,
*Interesting. If you could find the bomb, you could disarm it, but to find it,
you’ll have to probe for it, and if you probe for it, you’ll set it off. If
it’s a bomb, it will come close to being a planet buster. To make sure he gets
you.*
*Could you hold something that powerful? Just in case?*
*Don’t know. If I’m close enough, if you can feed me enough
power.*
*Can’t stay. Can’t leave. Can’t do nothing. Can’t do something.
So what do we do?*
*Getting to be suppertime. A pleasant warm evening. Have
your androids serve a hot meal out here.*
*What? I couldn’t eat.*
*You have to, Lee. High-energy food. Much as you can. Force
it down if you must. Nothing is going to happen for a while. I have a
glimmering of an idea. I need time, Lee. I need to consider the resources of my
craft and the possibilities of the diadem. No reason for you to sit around
moaning.*
*I’m glad one of us sees some light.* She stretched, opened
her eyes, spoke aloud to Shareem, who was sitting and watching her. “Reem, my
head’s going around in circles for now. Anyway, I’m hungry. Get the Ikanom out
here and have it arrange an alfresco supper for us. Steaks, I think, a big
salad, anything else you’d like. You do that kind of thing better than I do.
I’m going to start thinking on my feet for a while—maybe that will be more profitable.”
Aleytys emptied her cup. “I was hungry.” She set her cup beside
her and lay back on the grass. “Walking help?”
“Not much. Reem?”
“No.”
“What no?”
“You can’t sent me off without you.”
“Reem, if I have to waste energy protecting you ...”
“No. If I’m here, you’ll be a lot more careful.”
“I’m not about to get myself killed.”
“But you’ll be that little bit warier if you’ve got me to
worry about.”
“Reem ...”
“No.”
Aleytys got to her feet and began pacing about the lawn,
saying nothing more, turned inward, brooding as she walked. Shareem dipped a
leaf of crisp green thrix into a pool of coldsauce and crunched it down,
drowsily content. She’d made her statement, put her foot down, and that was
over. She chewed and swallowed, feeling like one of the more placid ruminants.
Aleytys came back to the remnants of the meal, dropped into
a squat and scowled at Shareem. “At least you’ll spend the night in the flier.”
Shareem fished another bit of thrix from the salad bowl, grimaced
at it. “My aching back.”
“Please.”
“You’re trying something tonight.”
“I have to, don’t I?”
“Oh, all right. I can throw some blankets in the back, and I
suppose Ikanom can find some sort of padding so I don’t wake up with bruises on
my rear.”
“Thanks.” Aleytys got to her feet and went back to drifting
about this section of the garden, automatically avoiding obstacles, back in her
somber brood.
Shareem looked at the thrix again, popped it into her mouth.
She wasn’t worried. Aleytys would come up with something. She looked around her
at the debris of the meal, then tapped the caller, summoning the Ikanom to
clear up the mess. She wiped her mouth on a napkin, dropped it, drew her legs
up and sat with her back against one of the boulders scattered about the wild
garden, watching Aleytys wander about. What’s she going to do after this is
over? Stay here? Not likely. She’d be bored to stone here. Wolff? Probably. If
young Shadith—how good was she?—found Grey and got him loose from Kell’s trap. Grey.
She winced. But he was a short-life, a mayfly, nothing to worry about. She
watched her daughter fondly, dreaming of times to come when they could be
together, passing the decades, the centuries together, as she and Ianna might
have done if Kell had given them the chance. A long gentle dance of friendship,
visiting each other, going their ways, coming together again. Aleytys was a
shadow drifting through shadows. I should be terrified, Shareem
thought, but I’m not. Not anymore. Funny. Me and that dirt-grubber—what
did he call himself?—that Azdar. We produced her. It doesn’t seem
possible. She settled back against the boulder while Ikanom directed
kitchen androids that were clearing the grass of the supper leavings, a tall silent
graceful male figure, burnished bronze, the light of Minhas sliding along the
wonderfully crafted face whose shifting planes and hollows could be remarkably
expressive. I never knew Synkatta. Wish I had. The man who built
those androids and that house ... She made a mental note to ask Ikanom
about him when there was time.
Minhas swam full overhead through cottony clouds while Araxos
was a fat crescent low in the east. The house was a complex burr-edged blotch
in the darkness, silent and drowsy in the cooling night. Aleytys sat slumped on
a wooden bench by a small rambling stream, rubbing bare feet over the grass,
waiting with a mixture of impatience and reluctance for Harskari to come out of
her retreat. Nothing Aleytys could think of stood up to critical evaluation, developing
large uncomfortable holes as she tried playing out the line of action. She
stirred restlessly on the bench. “What am I doing here?” she said aloud. “I
should be getting Grey loose.”
Harskari’s eyes came open. *Shadith is quite competent,
Aleytys. You can’t do everything.*
*I could try.* She laughed, but quit that when it started
getting out of hand. *Sure Shadith is competent, but she’s not me. I know what
I can do, I need to get my hands on things ....* She opened and closed her
hands, wanting Kell in those hands right now; she wanted to pound Grey’s
location out of him. She gripped the edge of the bench. *Did you come up with
something?*
*Yes.*
*Well?*
The amber eyes slitted, Harskari projected an intense reluctance.
*Well?* Aleytys knew Harskari wouldn’t be hurried, but she
couldn’t help prodding a little.
*You’ve thought about passive detection.*
*You know I have, but ...*
*You couldn’t see a way to make it work without first
knowing what you’d be using it to find out.*
*Yes.*
*The diadem phases in and out of this reality depending on
the pressures you put on it. There’s no way anyone these days can detect it
when it’s phased out—*
Aleytys interrupted her. *The RMoahl. They’ve never had the
least difficulty keeping track of me.*
*Innate sense, I think.* Harskari made an impatient sound.
*Kell’s no RMoahl. Where was I? Oh, yes, no one but the Rmoahl can detect the
diadem when it’s phased out, yet Swardheld, Shadith and I are able to touch
you, use you in spite of being an inseparable part of that concatenation of
forces. I’ve had a long time to study it and intimate knowledge of it; it was
constructed by one of my people, a product of our common skills and the
uncommon skills of Traivenn. I think I know a way to tie your body temporarily
to the diadem so you can phase out with it. In a sense you join me in this
parody of existence. You should be able to pass through ordinary matter without
disturbing it. I’ve considered all the possibilities I can think of. Seems to
me the one place he could put the bomb—I think it’s probably a bomb—where
kephalos couldn’t detect it is inside kephalos. Out of phase, you should be
able to pass into kephalos without registering on any of its sensors or alerting
the psi detectors. Once we find the thing, I can half-phase you and hold it in
stasis until you can disarm it. That’s why I wanted you to eat and rest. Isn’t
going to be easy on either of us.*
Aleytys wrinkled her nose. *Pass through matter. Hunh. What
happens if I start sinking slowly and inexorably into the center of the world
and stay there as ash for eternity when our strength gives out?* She thought a
moment. *Or go floating off and end up an icicle in the gas cloud up there?*
She waved a hand at the silver mist making shimmery background for the moons.
*Aleytys, don’t be silly.*
*I feel silly.* She sighed and reached for the symbolic
power river, tapped into it and drew as much of the energy into herself as she
could hold without burning to the ash she’d mentioned a moment before. *I’m
ready. Let’s try it.*
The diadem chimed. She felt the familiar weight on her head,
then a strange chill passing through her body, starting at her feet, going up
through a suddenly tight throat; it made the back of her eyes itch and shivered
the roots of the hair at the crown of her head. An odd fluttery feeling like
wings beating inside her. The garden and the house fluttered like the wings
within. The air got darker as if the gas cloud were quenched and the two moons
had gone dark. Then it seemed she pushed through a membrane like that of the
field that guarded the househeart and found Harskari standing beside her, a
tall and slender woman with white hair and dark skin, wearing a slim dark robe
embroidered in jewel colors with designs that seemed oddly, disturbingly
familiar, though Aleytys knew she’d never seen them before. She knew she was seeing
Harskari’s memory of her former self, yet the figure seemed real. Solid. There
was a sourceless thick light around her. There was color, rich color darker and
more saturated than the colors she remembered in the garden; the foliage was
green ultramarine, stone and earth and wood were dove-gray, russet and tawny,
the textures about her mostly visual but no less rich for that, like those in a
brocade print made from forty blocks. No smells. And after a short while longer
in that eerie state, she was startled to find she wasn’t breathing. Or perhaps
it would be more accurate to say the shadow she cast in this other reality
wasn’t breathing. The relation between the sensing shadow and the body she
could no longer feel was something she didn’t understand and only made her head
ache—her shadow head—when she tried to work it out. Weird, she thought. Weird.
Harskari controlled her impatience and waited for Aleytys to
grow accustomed to this state.
Aleytys turned her head. Her shadow head turned and she supposed
her body’s head turned too. She saw, somehow, the garden around that body, the
house, and grew confused about just who or what was doing the seeing. I’m
here ... whole ... inside my own head. She willed herself to stand and
sensed that she was moving. Felt as if she was operating something made of
marshmallows and gristle. Enough body-sense left to let her move. Frightening
not to know exactly where her real hands and feet were. Frightening to have so
little sense of her own reality. Do ghosts feel like this? If so, I’d rather
never be one. So I’d better get busy. She willed herself to walk. Felt
herself bouncing on ground that was rather like good-quality foam rubber.
Harskari beckoned to her, turned and glided away.
For a moment Aleytys felt like a centipede deciding what
foot to start off on, then she was gliding after Harskari, not precisely
walking; it felt rather like the times in the fall before the worst of the
snows when the children in the vadi Raqsidan made ice slides and wore the
bottoms off their boots.
The house looked solid. Dauntingly so. The texture of the
stones was powerful before her.
Harskari—or her dream form—walked into that wall. As if it
were no more solid than a heavy fog.
Aleytys followed, found herself struggling to breath; she scolded
herself, telling herself she hadn’t been breathing for ... how long? Impossible
to say. The wall had the rubbery feel of the earth, it made little resistance
to her passing, but she was very glad when she emerged into the book room. The
things in the room had a strong presence, unreal, yet at the same time their
surfaces were energized, solid. As if they were finely made holographic images
that were perfect and at the same time obviously what they were. She was
gliding through a hologram, gliding through the dreams that the floor and the
walls and the furniture were dreaming.
She followed Harskari along the flow-ways as she’d followed
Hyaroll, down and down through the cellars with their racks of wine bottles,
jars of preserves, past the shrouded machines in the workshop that seemed to
exist beneath every Vryhh house. None of these dusty, nothing ever seemed to get
dusty in these domes, pity the poor android with its endless dustmop rounds.
Down yet further through the open maze—she found the fuss of threading through
the thing so annoying she left it undeployed, though Shareem scolded her about
that. Through the membranes without the membranes noticing her.
Through the face of kephalos.
Into another sort of maze. Snapping neurons of woven wire
and silica flakes and painted panels and a shimmer of continuous happenings,
almost visible thoughts. Kephalos dreamed too, hummed and sang conundrums to
itself, needing to use the parts of its enormous capacity that defense and the
care of the house and grounds left unused.
During the past four days she’d gotten used to the aspect of
kephalos that communicated with her, but what she perceived now was so much
greater that she faltered, disoriented, almost lost herself. Harskari came back
to her, touched her arm. Calmness and assurance flowed hand to arm. She looked
at Harskari and thought: I love her. This is my true mother, the
mother of my soul.
On and on. Growing astonishment at the sheer size of kephalos;
Growing sense of personhood about her. Kephalos as something far beyond
machine. Not it, yet not him not her. Kephalos thinking, dreaming. Then ...
Darkness thick, massive, ugly.
Tumor on the brain.
Death embodied in darkness, waiting.
She felt it before she saw it.
She knew it before she saw it.
When she saw it, it flooded her with fear.
Harskari moved to it, stood beside it, her hand on it.
Aleytys shuddered. Felt herself shudder. Like touching suddenly
and without warning a slug, feeling it pulse alive under your fingers.
Harskari’s voice came like another shock. “Hurry, Lee. Look
at it. Know it. Time runs away.”
She had to force herself to move closer to the thing. She
put her hand on it. Holograph hand, hollow and insubstantial. Hand sliding over
it. It was heavy, dark and solid even in this reality. Warm and vibrating,
purring along, not a real sound, but something slipping through the whole of
the body she was beginning to feel again as if the bomb was so powerfully
present in both realms that it gave a sort of reality to her dreamform, though
she also knew that was Harskari bringing her up to half-phase so she could
handle materials in the outside world. Harskari’s hand warm on her shoulder,
she touched and traced, found the psi alarms and pulled their sensor flakes,
found the electromagnetic sensors and pinched them free to hang dangling down
the sides of the bomb, found the tremblers, the scaly patches of the other
alarms, and peeled them loose, felt out the internal mechanisms of the bomb and
found what she thought was the ultimate detonator. Once again she began the
slow tracing of connections. Heat gathered in her. At first she didn’t notice
it, then she ignored it, then it was an agony that she couldn’t ignore, but she
kept on with her slow, thorough trace. Harskari drained off some of the heat
accumulating in her, but couldn’t do that much.
The bomb began to change. The heat seemed to be forcing her
into phase with it, or maybe the weight and malevolence of it was changing her
angle to reality. She muttered a quick warning to Harskari, not knowing if the old
one heard her, then began untangling and undoing all the traps, concentrating
fiercely, little strength in her hands and a clumsiness that gave her fits. The
bomb was reacting to her while she worked, arming itself, her work was a race
against that, a race where she had a slipping edge. Her fingers fumbled on, she
sobbed, felt rather than heard herself, drew on the remnants of her strength, removed
a section of the bomb’s skin, set the plug on the floor by her feet, then began
pulling flakes in the sequence she’d determined. Hands trembling, no feeling in
her fingers, every movement guided only by the sense that was not sight. Until
she finally bared the detonator and pulled it with an ease that seemed to make
a mockery of her pain and terror.
The bomb died.
She felt it die under her shaking hands.
She felt a great numbing release; her body quit on her as
her will quit. Harskari slapped her, shouting: “Quitting, are you? Lying down
on me. Letting Shareem down. Finish or it’s all for nothing. Finish. On your
feet or kephalos dies too. Take the detonator farther away from the bomb. I
can’t do it. I’m a phantom even here. Your hands are the only ones can do it.
Move, Lee. Move!” The last word was a shriek, Harskari’s eternal irritating
calm shattered at last. It broke Aleytys out of her lethargy, prodding her to
one last effort.
She pushed onto hands and knees, felt about for the
detonator, twisted some broken wires tight about her wrist. She stayed there
awhile, her mind drifting off whenever she tried to focus on anything.
Harskari’s hand came warm on her shoulder, guiding her, comforting her.
Dragging the detonator, she crawled under the maze of kephalos, nothing in her
mind but slide her knees, move her arms, slide-slide the knees, pat-pat the
hands, hear the detonator scraping, tumbling along beside her. On and on. No
sense of time passing. Slide-slide the knees. Pat-pat the hands. One-two.
One-two. A warmth on her forehead, a pressure halting her. “Lee. Lee. Lee.” For
a moment she couldn’t make sense of the sounds. Lee? Oh. My name. Yes. My
name. She lifted her head. “Lee, you can rest now. I’m phasing you back.
It’s over. You’ve done the job. Rest now.”
A wrenching and a twisting of her body, a flash of fire over
her skin, a pain more intense than any she’d known before. She was briefly
aware of a small dusty room. Dust? A cold stone floor. Real darkness. Thick.
Almost tangible. Weariness swept in waves over her. She plunged into a deep
dreamless sleep.
Loppen Var On Sakkor
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Vrithian
WITNESS [3]
A SHEPHERD IN EXILE/LOPPEN VAR
My name is Hattra lu Laraynne. As you see I am reduced to
the company of beasts. Look at them. My gettesau. More hair than wits, like a
lot of people I know. The scars on my face? Brands. Oncath on the right, Path
on the left. They stand for Oporlisha Faerenos (rebel traitor). Well, I was no
beauty to begin with. I sound bitter? I’m not, you know, just without hope for
my people and my land. Our undying has proclaimed that change will not happen.
The Matriarch leans on that; she will continue to rule and pass that rule to
the daughter who’s deft enough to poison her and disappear the other claimants.
The T’nink Intel (Temple of Nothingness) will not loose its hold. Our religion,
you see. We worship Nothing with great fervor. If you knew it, you would
realize I have just blasphemed sufficiently to get my tongue torn out. The
god-concept is Nothingness. You see the importance of the—ness, the vast difference
between Nothing and Nothingness? Ah, how blissful is the unknowing mind, what
joy to be ignorant of itchy slippery letters. Do you know what brought me these
brands? Stupidity. No, I didn’t do anything drastic or even particularly
courageous; I taught my son to read. Yes, that’s all. Well, you see, that’s
anathema here. As a matter of policy only certain people can learn to read, the
priests for the t’ninks around the country, the scribes for the Matriarch and
the trader families. Right. If you run a business, you must have a
t’nink-taught scribe to keep your records and write your contracts and you live
in an often vain hope that he won’t sell you down the drain accepting bribes
from everyone about. But the lu Laraynnes have always been rebels. Oh, not
overt rebels—that trait vanished quickly from Loppen Var. Anyone who stuck her
head up was killed. Among other things we did, mother taught daughter to read,
this from way back in the mists of forgotten times. Because of this lu Laraynne
prospered, though we let ourselves be cheated now and then for the look of it;
word got around we were lucky. I don’t mind telling you all this; the line is
wiped out. Cousins, aunts, grandmothers, mothers, all gone. Our undying, our
living god Avagrunn, she saw to that. She wants no changes in the rules she set
down for us. For longer than anyone can remember, she comes down from her dome
when there is unrest and adjusts the folk to suit her pleasure, slaying the
intransigent, punishing the others. Why am I alive? I don’t know. A sign
perhaps of the consequences of rebellion. Not much of a sign. I seldom go near
other folk, only go into the village when I need something I can’t make for
myself. Don’t talk to anyone, no one talks to me. Why did I do it? Ah, if you’d
seen him, you’d know. My firstborn, a beautiful loving boy, gentle and kind,
but with a hunger in him to know things. His father? You really don’t understand
how things work here, do you? Nothingness. He came out of nothingness, a gift
of the Great Nothing. What that means is pubescent girls go to the t’nink in
their town when they are ready for children and their mother allows it. They
spend thirty days there doing t’nink service in the day and lying with whoever
comes to their rooms at night. The priests? Didn’t I make it clear the priests
and scribes are always women? No. Every thirty days a levy is made of village
men in the middle range of ages, they do heavy work for the t’nink in the day
and go to the rooms appointed them at night, a different room each night so no
one, not even the priests, knows who sired what child. Afterward? Well, associations
do form between men and women, though they are not supposed to. As long as
there are no children of that association, no one says anything. My son, my
Juranot. I tried to keep him on one of the family farms, gave up my place on
the ruling board to stay with him. He didn’t mind, he had a deep and abiding
love for wild plants and animals, he made sketches of them in a little book I
had bound for him. And kept notes in that book about their habits. It was
dangerous, but I could not deny him that gift. Then priests came and took him
away, took him to do his service in the village t’nink. I warned him to say
nothing about the reading when I taught him. I had just time to warn him again
when they took him away. I wasn’t terribly afraid for him; he was quick and
wary when he had to be. But ah, he was beautiful.
That was the thing I feared. That was the trap that snared
him.
The undying came through the village when he was in the
t’nink.
Avagrunn saw him and desired him. Took him.
I had friends then. One of them saw what happened and came
to tell me, comfort me as much as she could.
He betrayed his teaching. How could he not—he was only a boy
and she is ages old in treachery and terror. He didn’t tell her anything, I’m
sure of that, but somehow he let her see he knew his letters. That was all
she’d need. They brought his head to me, priests and a squad of harriers. They
branded me and drove me from my home. They burned everything, killed my kin,
everyone except me. Me they left alive to remember and grieve over what I had
done. Oh yes, they sterilized me first to make sure none of my tainted blood
would be passed on. What can I do? Avagrunn won’t change. As long as she is
there, as long as her power supports the Matriarch, nothing will change. You
must understand, hope’s the only pain I couldn’t endure. I have no hope. I will
walk my quiet rounds the rest of my days. I will shear my gettesau each spring
and trade the fleeces for what I need to keep me for the year. When the time
comes I will die up here and rot and finally I will be some use again,
fertilizing the trees and feeding the scavengers. Regrets? I regret nothing.
What I did before I would do again. My beautiful boy, how could I cripple him
with unnecessary ignorance? Would I break his leg to make him limp, would I
pluck out an eye to destroy the lovely symmetry of his face? How much less
could I stop the reach of his mind? I accept no guilt for what I did; the guilt
lies with the undying, with Avagrunn. If I could get my hands around her
throat, I would test how undying she really is. But there is no hope of that,
so I have no hope. Ah, I’m tired of talking about this, it’s all foolishness
and futility. Go away. I’ve nothing more to say to you. Go!
Vrithian
action on the periphery [3]
Amaiki touched the screen to life, clasped her hands to stop
them trembling as she saw the loved faces: little Muri up front; Kimpri leaning
over his shoulder; Keran towering over all of them, a half-smile on her narrow
face; Betaki leaning against her, amusement warm in his slitted eyes;
Se-Passhi, their naish, in the curve of Muri’s arm. Dear, most dear, all of
them. Seeing them like this, unable to touch or smell them, was almost more
than she could bear. Then Betaki held up the newest hatchling, a tiny gold
naish, the blessing of blessings to a mate-meld. She gasped and bent closer to
the screen, her hand up to touch the little blind face, her heart so full that
she couldn’t speak. She made the blessing signs, the joy signs that should have
been made touching the soft soft skin, aching because she could not feel their
naishlet, could not smell the sweet-sour scent of the infant.
Muri cleared his throat, tapped his skinny forefinger
against the screen, finally catching her notice. “Haven’t named our naish yet,
Ammi-sim. Waiting for you.”
“Ah why? Muri-sim, I’m stuck here three more years.”
“We want you to tell the undying to let you go. He’s broken
his side of the covenant, two winters with no rain. Why should we keep our
side?” His high tenor roughened to a low growl; there was a general murmur of
agreement from the others.
Amaiki closed her eyes and breathed slowly until she had control
of herself; she hated fusses, hated getting into a flutter. Keeping her voice
low and quiet, she said, “It will be difficult. He does not listen to our
speaker here—why should he listen to me? I’ll try to make him hear me. Muri
meldbrother, have there been dreams in the Dums around here, dreams of fire and
death that could be reaches into tomorrow?”
Muri smoothed his hand over his lacy crest. “No one but us
left in Shiosa, Ammi. We had dreams, but who can say what they mean?”
“No one left?”
“The deepest well in Shiosa is sucking mud. We could drill
deeper yet, but what’s the point?”
“Ah. The meld dreams?”
Kimpri leaned over Muri, ignoring his disgruntled snort.
“Blood and death, Ammi. You remember Tamakis in Dum Hayash? Who was my
nest-sister?”
“Kimp-sim, I’ve only been gone a year and a half, not half a
life.”
“Feels like a life—the flavor of the meld needs your Spice,
love-sister. Anyway, she called me before her mate-meld left, a pretty good
far-speaker she is too, says she felt blood dreams all over the uplands.” She
straightened, brushed affectionately at Muri’s crest, flicked a finger against
the tip of an ear. “All right, all right, little cricket.”
Amaiki swallowed. “How long can you wait?” she said, her
voice hardly louder than a whisper.
Muri looked uncomfortable. “We thought we could stay out
your time, Ammi, but we can’t do it alone. Wolves prowling. Four-legged and
otherwise. The other night we talked things over and called line-mother in Shim
Shupat. She’s got space we can have on a ship for Bygga Modig. It leaves with
the tide Minha-new-moon. That’s seven days from today.” He fell silent, drooped
sadly, his quicksilver spirits gone suddenly dull.
Keran made an impatient sound, leaned forward, taller and
more angular than any of the others; she wasn’t a talker, was far more
expressive with her hands. “Am, uplands’re empty. Pinbo m’ cousin Likut’s line,
taken the year after I hatched, she a far-speaker, touched our Se-passhi, says
come and be welcome. Guldafel. Lot of taken there.” She raised a long hand,
signed love and retreated.
Amaiki signed back, then stroked the folds of skin about her
neck. “Nothing else you can do. I agree. Give me three days. If I’m not out by
then, Hyaroll won’t let me go. That gives you four to make the coast.” She
smiled at Keran, reached out touched the glass where her meld-sister was. “My
love, no one can convince me you’ve let our flier go out of shape, so you all
can spare me three days.”
Keran smiled gratification, nodded.
Muri erected his crest, opened his eyes wide. “We’ll be
early and wait the whole day.” He spread his hands, long fingers flickering
with signs for amplitude and good living. “A grand last picnic to say farewell
to the uplands. The hatchlings will love it.” He sobered. “And if the undying
won’t let go?”
Amiki moved restlessly, shifting her feet on the
beaten-earth floor of the com-kiosk. Nothing here was secret from the undying.
Nothing at all. But what did it matter? She had to do what her fate decreed, so
let him hear. Let me be as bold as the odd folk. “If he will not let me
go, I will get free somehow and come after you, my loves. Leave signs behind to
tell me where you are and I’ll find you no matter what. No matter how long or
hard the journey, I will find you.” That last was a promise she meant to keep,
a promise implicit in the formality of the words. She backed half a step from
the screen, fighting to control the emotion erupting in her; she was turning
into a stranger she didn’t quite like.
The meld made the love signs, the waiting and faithful
signs, then the farewell signs; Betaki held up the hatchling and moved the
little naish’s hand in a fluid farewell sign, the baby cooing and making small
sucking sounds. Amaiki gave the signs back, her eyes blurring, her control
deserting her again. She brushed at her eyes, blinked to clear them, unwilling
to miss a second of seeing them. Understanding this, Muri broke the connection
and all that was left was darkness.
Amaiki moved quickly out of the kiosk and went to stand by
the wall. She watched her family move out of the other side and climb into the
flier, stood leaning on the top stones while the flier lifted vertically and
turned toward Shiosa. It hovered a moment. She waved. It dipped a stubby wing
at her, a quick precarious move that could have been a disaster with anyone but
Keran at the console.
She stood watching until she could see the black speck no
longer, then trudged wearily to her dwelling to eat a light meal and gather her
courage before she tried to reach Hyaroll.
Vrithian
on the oblique file [3]
Willow sang: “This and this and this and this and this and
this,” scraping carefully at a shaft a little greater around than her biggest
finger, smoothing it, gradually tapering a portion at one end to the girth of
the tapestry needle set in that end.
Days ago, after she left Bodri brooding over the properties
of roots and how they could possibly get at a man who knew exactly what they
were doing, she rambled about the whole of the domed enclave hunting out and
collecting branches of the proper tight grain, girth, strength and
straightness. She brought these back to the hillside where she had her camp,
cut them into roughly equal lengths, then dried them on a frame over a smoky
fire. When they were ready for working, she sent Sunchild foraging for her. In
the lizard folk’s village he found a dozen tapestry needles, in Hyaroll’s
long-unused workshop he found glue, hones and an assortment of cutting tools.
He was limited in the weights he could manage, but he absorbed patience from
Willow and found what he considered a perverse satisfaction in the task.
She took the hone and began sharpening the blunt needles;
Sunchild squatted beside her, the squeaks and squeals of the hone affecting him
as catnip did a cat.
When the needles were sharp enough to prick a thought, Willow
chose twelve shafts from among the cured branches, reamed holes in one end of
each, then glued the needles into them.
Willow sang: “This and this and this and this and this,” and
handed the finished shaft to Sunchild. He heated up one hand and rubbed gently
along the shaft until it was polished smooth and hard as stone. He set it on a
cloth beside him and waited contentedly for the next.
Bodri was burming along to himself, a low rumbling tuneless
hum, working as intently as Willow, borrowing her worksongs to pass the time in
his tedious experiments. He was cutting up several different kinds of roots and
pods, tossing the chunks into the pot hanging over a small hot fire. While
Willow was hunting her arrow shafts, he’d been prospecting among the plants,
sniffing and tasting, bringing back samples to the camp, making decoctions of
them and testing these on birds and fish. He wasn’t satisfied yet with the
toxicity of his mixes or the speed with which they acted. The decoctions that
acted quickly enough killed just as fast in very small doses; the ones that
only stunned took too long to do it. They certainly didn’t want to kill the man—that
would ruin everything.
Willow’s camp was a dirt flat on the hill behind Hyaroll’s
house, trees thick on three sides, large boulders sprayed in an arc about the
downhill side. A small stream sang through the trees, ran between two of the
boulders down the long gentle slope to the lake. Beside that stream was a small
hut built of bark and wattle where Willow slept at night, where she kept her
tools and anything else she didn’t want rained on.
She handed a finished shaft to Sunchild, reached for
another, glancing downhill as she did so. Hyaroll was walking toward the
landing saucers. She held the shaft across her thighs, frowning. The back of a
flier was just visible over the kadraesh trees. “Old Vryhh, he going
somewhere.”
Sunchild set the shaft with the other finished ones. “Kepha
said he would. To meet that woman. You know, the one the Vryhh bitch was
yelling about.”
“Hmmp. Yelling.” She clicked her tongue, danced her fingers
on her thighs, over and around the shaft. “Singing her into the clan, huh?”
“In their way.”
She lifted the shaft, then set it aside and climbed onto one
of the larger boulders, waiting to see the flier jump up and dart away. One of
the lizard folk stepped from behind a bush and put a hand on his arm, stopping
him. Willow could hear their voices, but couldn’t make out the words. The slim
lacertine figure was filled with passion, talking fast, demanding something. He
listened briefly to it, then brushed it out of the way, more roughly—maybe—than
he intended, went on to his flier. The slight figure lay crumpled on the grass.
A moment later the flier passed through the dome, then
darted away to the northwest.
Willow stood on the boulder, looking from the vanishing
flier to the creature below. It stirred and sat up. She hummed the paka cat song,
moved her feet on the rock, curiosity growing in her. An impatient snort. A
quick jump from boulder onto grass. She ran downhill to the shuddering shape.
The creature was trembling all over, incapable of speech, unable
to stand. Willow moved cautiously closer, touched its shoulder. It jumped as if
her touch stung, then collapsed again and struggled for control of the emotions
wracking it. It wasn’t hurt as far as she could tell, just filled with a
seething mess of anger and frustration and fear. She remembered seeing this one
working here and there in the garden all summer, handling the plants with a delicate
touch that reminded her of Bodri. She squatted beside the creature, frowning,
humming snatches of song, trying to find a way to comprehend the hurt and help
it. Finally she began one of the go-’way-hurt songs she used to sing to her
children, faltering at first because these were songs she hadn’t sung since Old
Stone Vryhh ripped her from her family—but something about the pain in this
creature struck deep into her and drew from her responses she’d denied till now
to save her sanity. Singing that string of magic meaningless sounds, she
ignored the creature’s feeble attempts to push her away and gathered it into
her arms, across her legs, and patted its back and rocked it as she would have
rocked her babies. After that first resistance it went limp against her and
began sobbing, something that startled a tiny part of Willow because she didn’t
know lizards could weep. She continued to sing her go-hurt song, continued to
comfort the creature. No no, folk not lizards, no no, folk can cry, no no, folk
have ears not lizards. The sunlight shone a light leaf green through the
creature’s large pointed ears, the skin as fine and thin as the newest spring
leaf. Man or woman? she thought suddenly. Which is this? Cries like
me when I hurt. Can’t just look with folk, not like run-about beasts. Have to
ask. Yes, I ask. She let her song die and loosened her arms as the
creature’s shuddering diminished, then stopped.
The man? woman? pulled back, stiff with embarrassment. At
least that was what it looked like to Willow. Its face was a light olive green
with a smooth pebbly texture; ordinary eyes except they were shiny like melted
gold; a nose like a knife blade with wide flared nostrils, a long mouth, thin
flexible lips delicately curved; high cheekbones, rather hollow cheeks. Almost
no chin, but that didn’t make the face look weak. Mobile pointed ears much
larger than Willow’s. She watched the sun shine through them and reminded
herself again, this was another place and these were real folk, not spirit
creatures with animal forms. She shifted around so she was sitting on her
heels, her knees spread, her hands resting on her thighs, palaver stance among
her people. “You man or woman?”
The creature looked startled, then offended, then faintly
amused. “I am female,” she said. Her voice was clear, its sound very pure.
Willow sighed with pleasure hearing it. “My name is Amaiki,” the other went on.
“I am a conc of the Conoch’hi.”
Willow bowed her head, snapped her name sound on her fingers,
then said it in the common tongue Hyaroll’s teaching box had given her.
“Willow,” she said. “Old Stone Vryhh, what he doing to you?’’
A film slid over Amaiki’s gold-foil eyes. Her impossibly
long thin hands closed into knotted fists. She bowed her head, the trembling
back again, but only for a moment this time. She smoothed her tabard about her
narrow body, pulling out the wrinkles, tucked her legs under her, set opened
hands neatly on her thighs. For several heartbeats longer she was silent, staring
past Willow at the wind-teased grass on the hillside. When she spoke again, she
was outwardly composed, but in her voice was an angry helplessness that found a
powerful echo within Willow’s breast. “For many and many generations have
Conoch’hi served Hyaroll, for many and many generations has he shaped our lives
and made us depend on him, has he taken our children from us and changed them
or sent them away. He gave us peace, he gave us rain, he took our naidisa from
us. Look around you, Willow from far far away. How green and lovely it is in
here. But go to the dome’s edge and look out, then you will see dust and death
and a sun without pity. He does not call the rain for us, he sucks the ground dry
to feed his trees. Our children grow hungry, our children thirst, our plants
and beasts they die. Six days ago, oh Willow, my mate-meld came to the caller
kiosk. They are leaving the uplands, Willow, leaving me behind. They are taking
our newest child and our other four and they are going to the far side of the
world. They cannot stay and starve. I went to Hyaroll and asked him to let me
go with my mates-in-meld. He would not. I begged him to let me go. He would
not. I asked again and again until he would not see me, until he would not come
out of the house for fear of seeing me. I asked again today and you saw his
answer.” She stopped speaking, calmed herself, went on in a low quiet voice.
“If I could leave the dome, I could follow them still. They must be deep into
Istenger Ocean by now, but I could follow them. They promised to leave word for
me as many places as they could, so I could find them if only I could leave the
dome. I must ... I must ... I ...” Her throat fluttered as she fought for
control; her fingers moved in small gestures Willow read as distaste for her
own excesses—or what she saw as excesses. Willow scowled at the dome, its faint
flicker close to invisible against the cloudless sky. “He gone, but he leave
ears behind.” She lowered her eyes to Amaiki’s face, her hands touching her own
ears, dropping, clutching hard at each other; she hissed and pulled her hands
apart. “Time was once, I have a man, my Otter; time was once, I birth my Sparrow
my daughter who sing before she talk; time was once, I birth my Mouse, my
son-baby, my hurry-about baby. Before he walking good, hah!” She hugged herself,
rocking on her toes. “Before he walking, he still on tit, Hyaroll snatch me
away. Ay be-be, ay-yii, my Mouse. No more. No more.” She straightened her back,
dropped her arms. “Can’t go back, me. But you, hah!” She lifted a hand, made a
blade of it, chopped the blade down. “Him! He don’t do it again. I get you
out.” She spread her hands. “Don’t know how. Not now.” She got to her feet.
“You come, huh?”
Willow told the tale with hands, feet and body while Amaiki
sat primly on one of the boulders. Bodri was dour, resisting her passion and
insistence with his own; again and again he said, if we help her, Whisper in
the wind, we could wake Old Vryhh to work against us, let her wait, time is
coming when we’re ready to go against Old Vryhh, when we win, we’ll get her
out, wait, wait, he said, don’t kick up dust for Hyaroll to see, it’s safer
when the thing is over, it’s safer and more sure.
Willow only grew hotter and more determined. In a sense all
that they were doing now, the shafts she was fashioning, the bow she’d make
later, Bodri’s boiled messes, Sunchild’s erratic poking and prodding and his
small but useful thefts, all these things were games they were playing with
themselves, busying their hands and minds with what they could do so they could
hide from themselves their helplessness and futility. This was different, this
was something they could do here and now to frustrate the plans of the man
who’d stolen their lives from them for his amusement. She danced all this with
body and hands and the oblique allusions of her songs. “Now,” she sang. “It
must be now.”
Sunchild watched the battle unperturbed; he’d seen others,
though none so deeply felt. He had several things to say when the time came,
but there was no point in saying anything until Bodri stopped arguing, either
agreeing to help or refusing to listen to Willow any longer. While the argument
raged on, he amused himself trying out the shapes swimming so powerfully in
Amaiki’s mind. He felt her distress as he shifted from Keran to Muri to Kimpri
to Betaki to Se-Passhi and finally to the infant naish, running them off like
beads on a worrystring, but that distress didn’t bother him. His folk made very
powerful emotional bonds but also very few. His family was three now and
forever. Willow. Bodri. Kephalos. And the deepest, most intimate of those bonds
was with the awakening kephalos; in its way it about matched his mind age and
shared many of his interests, though its way of thinking was very unlike his.
Beyond those three who he loved without reservation and forever, no one existed
for him, not in any meaningful way. He could be confused and irritated with
them; he would play with them one way or another, but as soon as his interest
waned, he’d be gone; he felt no responsibility for them; they were images in
dreamland.
The debate was calming down. Bodri nodded reluctantly, Willow
smiled, turned to Amaiki. And saw her distress and saw Sunchild shifting. She gasped.
Jumped the short distance to him and slapped her hand through his substance,
not hurting him but startling him into cringing away from her, the flare of her
anger washing over him, whipping him with its nettle stings. He cried out, a
high keening whine like the sound the kimkim flies made late in the evening.
Her anger died. Willow knelt beside the quivering shapeless
lump of light and for the second time that day sang her go-’way-hurt song. She
stroked his outline, careful to keep her hand from breaking through the fragile
membrane of his surface tension, controlling her own shock and momentary
revulsion as he was first Sparrow, then Mouse, then Otter curled up on the
ground beside her. She softened the song to a crooning whisper, “Ah-weh, be-be,
ah weh.” She gave him a last gentle pat, then got to her feet. “He only
teasing,” she told Amaiki. “He don’t understand much about the way mamas feel.”
She nudged Sunchild with her toe. “I see you peeking, little sneak. Up. Tell
this mama you sorry for fussing her.”
Sunchild got warily to his feet, his form melting at the
edges, caught in the contrary urges pulling from the two women. He sneaked a
look at Willow, saw her hands moving in a scold-song, saw her smiling at him in
spite of that. He straightened himself out and firmed up, then he did a
graceful Conoch’hi bow with Conoch’hi signs expressing shame and repentance,
then looked at Amaiki slantwise from those blank beautiful eyes.
Amaiki had seen Sunchild before as he drifted about the gardens,
a butter smear of light half the time shapeless as any cloud; now, for the
first time, she saw his beauty and was startled by it. And deeply moved by it,
though it came in so strange a form. She saw him grin at her and take on hints
of Conoch’hi, just enough to drive home the effect of his grace. Understanding
then how little real feeling lay behind his charm, she grinned back. “Well
done, kushi-su, I have never seen a more graceful apology.”
Bodri snorted, then laughed, a papery rustle that sounded
like dried leaves rubbing against each other, but he said nothing, only moved
back to his fire and began stirring the mixture in the pot, his back turned to
them, disassociating himself from what was happening.
Willow traced the blue lines of a design pricked into the
dark brown skin of her side, then spread her hands, fluttering the fingers.
“Me, I don’t know nothing about getting out of here. Sunchild, he the one can
talk to kepha.” She turned to him. “So what do kepha say?”
Sunchild sidled up to her, pressed himself against her as
hard as his lack of mass would permit. She stroked the golden semblance of her
Otter and gave him the affection and acceptance he craved. Satisfied, he
retreated a little, keeping close enough to her so his form could stabilize
into the single shape. “Kepha knows he’ll die with Hyaroll. He doesn’t want to
die, Willow. He’ll do about anything he can to stop that. There’s not a whole
lot of things open to him. He can’t do anything that will hurt Hyaroll, not
anything. He can fiddle that some, make limits to what hurt means to
him. We been working on that. I figure maybe letting this Amaiki get away is
something he could decide won’t hurt Old Vryhh; so unless Hyaroll has given him
direct orders to keep her and the other Conochi’hi sitting in that village,
maybe kepha can open the way for her. And maybe not.” He scowled at Amaiki,
showing his resentment at her being the cause of his scolding, but he smoothed
out his face when he turned back to Willow. “Now Old Vryhh’s gone, I’d better
go have a talk with kepha, find out what he can do and what he’s willing to do.
Might not be the same thing.”
Willow nodded, looked at the sun, then at him. “Good thing
if this be drone before Old Vryhh get back. How long he going be gone?”
“Till he gets back”
“Hah, you. Not finny.”
“I don’t know, Willow, and kepha doesn’t either. Nothing
like this has happened before.”
“So go now.” She flapped her hands at him. “Go!”
He drifted into the air, flowed out of shape into a streak
of light, and as a streak of butterlight raced downhill and merged with a wall
of the house.
Willow folded her arms, rocked them. “No big badness in him,
he just a baby.”
Amaiki dipped her head in graceful acknowledgment, but said
nothing; she’d felt the bite of Sunchild’s malice and knew what he did, he did
for Willow, not her. There was a strong bond of fondness between these
disparate beings, almost a mother-child link, and she would put no stain on
that. And she would not stain her own being by speaking a lie she knew was a
lie.
Willow sighed. Trying to help this one was like fighting
against a haru-wind bringing in a spring storm. Not for you, stranger, ‘s
not for you I doing this, not just for you. She snapped thumbs
against fingers, looked at her hands. I sticking pins in Old Stone
Vryhh, hunh, he won’t feel them, him, but I know they there. I know. Good
‘nough. She said, “Ev’ry time I see Old Vryhh go out, it up there.” She
pointed at the top of the dome. “You fly one of those things?”
Amaiki shivered, then came out of her withdrawal.
Willow watched her shuck her shell. If she hadn’t seen and
felt that outpouring of rage and fear and hate down the hill, she’d have
thought Amaiki was as cold and unfeeling as the reptile she vaguely resembled.
Not so. Despite the surface, not so. She and Bodri had a lot the same feel to
them: neatness of hand and body—Bodri might look clumsy and sound like rocks
banging down a hillside, but he got about the garden with a surprising deftness
and never bruised a plant or even an insect he wanted to keep alive; precision
of thought and motion—Bodri was looser about this than Amaiki, but the effect
was the same, the control similar; dislike of fuss in all forms—which was why
Willow almost always won arguments with him; she didn’t mind noise and
messy emotions and turmoil and tears, she rather liked them. And she had more
staying power. She could keep on long after he was exhausted. Like today. He
wasn’t really convinced, he just didn’t want to go on arguing.
“A flier,” Amaiki said thoughtfully, then shook her head. “I
can fly one, of course, but two things about taking a flier. One, kephalos
might be willing to let me go, but I don’t believe he’d let me take off with
Hyaroll’s property. Two, I suspect the controls of those fliers only respond to
Hyaroll’s touch. Hmm. Maybe one of the larger skimsleds. That’s property too,
but nothing like the cost of an armored flier. I could bypass the level control
and hype the drivers to give me enough power for a jump through the dome. Hmm.
Tricky. Might turn the sled into junk. If I set in a cut-off switch maybe I
could save it ... use heavy-duty batteries, switch them for solar ... I could
travel at night, lay up during the day, let them charge ... less power, but a
longer range ... lot better than going on foot.” She nodded. “That’s what I’ll
do. I’ve been packed and ready to go for days. I’ll shift my things to the sled
garage.” She stood, pointed downhill at a low blocky structure separated from
the house by a thick planting of kadraesh trees. “I’d better be moving, Willow.
No matter what answer your friend brings back, it’s as well to be prepared.”
She hesitated, then gave an angular, formal bow with graceful hand gestures
that Willow watched with interest, liking the fluidity of the movements. “You
have fought hard for me, sister-friend, my line is deep in your debt. I shall
knot you with pride into my life weave and your story and your kindness will be
remembered through all generations that will be.”
Willow inclined her torso, touched head and heart, straightened.
“I have borne and lost, sister-friend. It pleases me to give a mother back to
her children.” She flung out her arms, laughed fiercely, smacked fist against
palm. “And do Old Stone Vryhh a mischief where it’d hurt if he had any feeling
left.”
With a laugh and a last farewell sign, Amaiki moved through
the line of boulders and started down the slope with that deceptively
unhurried, gliding stride that took her quickly toward the sled garage.
“You weren’t just arguing to be arguing.”
Willow looked over her shoulder. Bodri had taken his mixture
from the fire and was prodding at it with a limber twig from a murkka tree,
putting a tiny fraction of its paralyzing poison into the mess. He poked at the
decoction twice more and threw the twig into the fire. “I thought you were
getting restless,” he said. “But it means a lot to you.”
“Yes, old beetle, it really do.”
“You don’t talk much about your children.”
“No.”
He gazed at her a moment longer, then heaved a huge sigh
that set his back-garden swaying. “All right, Willow. Whatever I can do, that’s
yours.”
She smiled and went to squat beside him and scratch up where
his stumpy legs joined his body, her fingers working among fold on fold of soft
silky skin. He sighed with pleasure, his tentacle arm looped around her
shoulders and playing in the springy curls at the nape of her neck.
Willow was scraping with finicking care on the last of the
shafts, Bodri was ladling the cooled decoction into test tubes and sealing
them, when Sunchild came back. “This kephalos is almost as old as Old Vryhh,” he
said. Hands going still, Willow looked up. “So?”
“So Hyaroll has been working on it, adding to it, changing
it, multiplying its purposes, all that, for a long long time.” He glanced at
Willow, saw her scowl. “Like taking, um ...” He looked up. Several of the many
raptors inside the dome were riding thermals, coiling about each other as if
for the game of it and nothing more. “Like taking a vekvem up there and putting
more brains in his head, making him smarter and smarter and smarter until maybe
he’s smart as a person. Till he is a kind of person. You see?”
Willow shaded her eyes and looked up at the gliding circling
vekvem. “Can’t,” she said.
“But if you could?”
“Magic?”
“Something like that.”
“So. Kepha smart now and like a person, not a ... a ... an
ironhead know-nothing.”
“You got it. Different too. You, me, Bodri, we can move
around; kepha has to sit where he is—and well, Hyaroll keeps chains on him so
he can’t do much except what Old Vryhh wants.”
“Cut the chains.”
“Magic chains.”
“Thump Old Vryhh, make him take ‘em off.”
“Kepha can’t do that.”
“Us.”
“Kepha won’t let us. He can’t.”
“Magic, hah.” She spat.
“Way it is.”
“We can’t do nothing?”
“Didn’t say that.”
“Well, say what!”
“Well, kepha’s getting smarter all the time, doing it to
himself now; he was just a baby, but he’s growing up fast and he doesn’t like
being a slave.”
“Ummp. Big surprise.”
“You the one in the hurry. Listen. I’ve been talking with
kepha since we started this.” He waved a hand at the pile of shafts, swung it
around to include Bodri and his labors. “I figure what’s the harm, Hyaroll
knows what we’re doing anyway. Kepha can’t come right out and tell me what Old
Vryhh is planning, but he lets me know when I guess right. So, for sure, it’s a
funeral pyre with us all following Old Vryhh down to hell. Kepha is not not not
happy with that, but he can’t stop it, not just him. Thing is, he is
programmed, umm, he has to do whatever Hyaroll tells him to do. Old Vryhh’s got
careless. Doesn’t think much of us either. He just told kepha to make a summary
of anything we do he might find interesting. Might find. Hear that? Leaves the
choice up to kepha. Lot of things he can do with that. Like what we’re saying
now. Or the time I talk with him. He just tells himself it’s all too boring,
that Hyaroll wouldn’t be interested in it, so he doesn’t have to report it.
He’d stop us hard if we tried to hurt Old Vryhh, but as long as we don’t touch
him, we’ll be all right.”
Willow made a hissing impatient sound.
“Thought you’d like to know.”
She leaned closer to him, said very slowly, “He help Amaiki
go?”
“Hurry-hurry. This is what he says. He can’t open the dome
when Hyaroll is gone. He can’t open the dome anytime unless Hyaroll orders it.”
Sunchild paused a moment, touched her nose with a forefinger, danced back from
her, teasing her, his silent laughter pulsing waves of light through his body.
“But he can keep the hole open a short while after Hyaroll’s through. Long
enough to let the lizard lady hop out. If she can get up there. Kepha says if
she waits until he’s almost down on the landing saucer and jumps out fast, he
won’t notice anything’s happened. So you go tell her to be ready fast. Old
Vryhh’s on his way home, be here in about a half hour.” He bounced away,
perched on top a boulder. “I’d better get back to kepha. He’s nervous and
lonesome. It’s hard to be nervous and lonesome.”
Amaiki looked cool as morning, standing erect but relaxed on
the skimsled, a heavy dark cloak bound closely around her so it wouldn’t get in
her way, her long hands resting lightly on the steering bars. Willow squatted
in the shade of a hairy lod-bush watching her, watching the dome.
A dark dot came darting over the mountains, grew into the
flier, which hovered briefly over the dome, then sank through it, dropped for
the saucer. The skimsled hummed. The hum rose to an urgent whine. The moment
the flier slowed for the last meter before it touched down, Amaiki moved her
thumb. The sled shot straight up for a kilometer, then slanted south and passed
through the dome. For a breath or two she flew on a level, then arched down and
was on the ground again before the flier finished its settling. Willow crouched
where she was and watched Hyaroll step down from the lock. Grim-faced, but
without hurry, he walked away from the saucer, heading for the house. She tried
to read his face, but he looked more or less how he always looked. When he
vanished inside, she got to her feet and trudged uphill to her camp.
Sunchild came drifting down, squatted beside her, watching
her cut vanes from stiff feathers. “She got away,” he said.
“Hmp.”
“He didn’t notice anything.”
“Good.” She set the feather down. “I need more glue.”
“I’ll look about.”
She reached out, touched his face with her fingertips. “You
did good.”
“Me and Kephalos.”
“Hmp. All of us.” She grinned at Sunchild. “We whip his
tail, Old Stone Vryhh.”
Borbhal On Sakkor
_files/image009.jpg)
Vrithian
WITNESS [4]
A SHOPKEEPER IN CRASA DOR
My name is Tensio alte Nariozh. My mother came from one of
the best families in Borbhal, but her father was a gambler and lost most of the
estate, so she had to marry beneath her. My father was a good man in his way
but he had no polish and used to grate on her nerves with his loudness and his
crudeness; he never could learn to appreciate the gracious style of living she
found more natural. Though I shouldn’t say it, I know how it sounds, but really
just coming into a room he could make me wince. She wanted to send me to
Cabozh, to the University at Inchacobesh outside the capital, but my father
wouldn’t hear of it, I had to go into the business and learn it from floor to
attic, and I do mean floor. He had me pushing a broom with the slaves brought
up from Cobarzh. Tempestao, you wouldn’t believe how they stank, those turezh.
And lazy, good for nothing .... I won’t have one of them in my shop, not to
work and not to buy. It makes me sick to my stomach to think of them putting
their filthy hands on my silks and laces and velvets. You see how fine my goods
are—look at the light coming through that window and playing on the colors and
the delicate textures; you won’t find such goods anywhere else in all of
Borbhal. Perhaps across the Fistavey in Cabozh, but nowhere closer. Demons? Ah,
you must mean the undying. Please, I must ask you not to use that awful term in
my presence. They come in here several times during the year to look at my
goods, no I am not boasting, it is true, that’s the noble Algozar’s sign right
there, he had it etched in my window. You must have seen his dome on the cliffs
across the bay. He knows beautiful things when he sees them, oh yes. He talks
to me as if I’m one of the great ones, oh yes. The undying know, you
understand, they feel the good blood in my veins. I’ve done all I can to rid
myself of my father’s crudeness and pattern myself on my mother’s side of the
family, and I flatter myself that I know the courtly ways the undying expect.
In my circle they say I could go on very well at court back home. Why don’t I
go? There are jealous men, officials at court, who just won’t let any colonials
near the King. And my mother’s family, who could intercede for me if they
wanted, well, they live off the money I send them, but they won’t acknowledge
me. Bitter? No, no, of course not, just a little disappointed. I take comfort
in remembering I am the one with the noble mind and heart, the true scion of
our ancient line. Listen, the Governor himself comes to my shop when he wants
something especially fine. And his wife sends her dressmaker to me. His
mistress? I don’t talk about the private affairs of my patrons. I’m sorry you
asked, I thought you were another kind. I have said all I want to say. Please
leave.
Avosing
action on the second line [1]
Shadith woke to a throbbing in her head that blanked out everything
else. She drifted in and out of consciousness, aware of little beyond a thick
darkness around her and noises she heard and forgot immediately. Disoriented
and nauseated, she was too absorbed by pain to wonder who she was and what had
happened to her.
Gradually she grew aware of something outside the pain. Her
wrists were tied together, a smooth pole passed between them. Her legs were
tied at the knees and ankles to that same pole. He head hung loosely, bumping
back and forth with the swaying of her body. She was being carried like a pig
to a roast. Eyes slitted, fighting to ignore a headache that beat the worst
hangover she could remember, she used the motion of her body to shift her head
about and gain the widest field of vision she could manage without informing
her captors she was awake and aware.
The darkness was gone. She was being carried through a thin
greenish twilight. Forest. On the edge, as before. A man ahead of her, pole on
his shoulder, looked like an amber miner. That couldn’t be right ... they
wouldn’t ... no ... forester of some kind. More likely. Man behind her, much
the same. Big men, keeping up a smooth steady lope, used to being in the
forest. More of them behind her carriers. She took a chance when they went
around a slight bend, swayed out farther, fell back. Another pole. Probably
Linfyar. Poor Linfy. Her stomach was turning flip-flops. She kept from
vomiting by force of will alone. The nausea came and went in waves; once the
worst was over, it retreated for a while.
When the last crisis was over, she tried thinking again. Looks
like I won’t have to bother laying a trail to show I’m no provocateur. This has
to be the Ajin’s men, and isn’t that a giggle. All my fussing for nothing.
Wonder if old loudmouth is watching. Keeping his head down if he is. If I had
anything to bet with, I’d give good odds these bastards found my stash and my
hard-earned coin is sitting in their pockets. Shadow, my girl, this is a
promise, if that’s so I’ll take it out of their stinking hides. Hunh, I’ll take
this damn pole and make ‘em eat it, first chance I get. Lousy way to travel.
She relaxed as much as she could, putting herself into a shallow
trance so the bobbing of her head and the chafing of her arms and legs wouldn’t
drive her into trying something foolish. After a while the pollen took her and
everything melted about her; she drifted in a dull throbbing state where nausea
mixed with distant pain and a low-grade fever. By the time her bearers dumped
her in the dust before a weathered building, she didn’t much care who had her
or what happened to her. Her arms and legs were rubbed raw from the ropes and
the pole; her shoulders felt as if her weight had wrenched her arms from their
sockets. Her mouth was dry and sour. Her head pounded with each beat of her
heart. She wanted water desperately but knew she’d never keep it down. Just
give me something to wash my mouth out, that’s all. Cool water, rolling in
her mouth, cool water to splash over her face and head. Somewhere, not too far
away, men were talking; she could hear the different voices but they were too
broken and blurred for her to make out the sounds. Whoever you are, whoever
did this to me, whatever you want, you aren’t getting it. I don’t care what
happens. Anger built in her, the heat of it energizing her, chasing away
the depression of her spirits, driving off a good part of the fog in her head.
She pursed cracking lips and whistled, just a thread of sound.
A whistle came back to her a moment later, cautious, brief,
but familiar enough. She relaxed. He sounded all right, not too happy, but
intact.
Footsteps behind her. She closed her eyes, lay without
moving. A hand lifted her head. Pain took her so suddenly and completely she
couldn’t suppress a short sharp gasp.
“Jambi, you git, you hit her too hard. He’ll skin you if she
dies on him.” There was disgust in the voice and a rough gentleness in the
hands that soaked the crusted blood from her hair and scalp and applied a salve
that spread cool comfort over her head, even seemed to soothe the pain inside
her skull, though she knew that was nonsense. He dragged a pack of some kind
around, put her head down on it, shifted his position. As he cut away the ropes
around her wrists, she cracked her eyes so she could see him. A big man, with
shaggy gray hair, a lined impatient face. Could be one of the Sendir. Tjepa had
told her about them when he pointed out a Senda wandering through the market.
They didn’t like people much, came to Dusta maybe once a year to pick up things
they couldn’t make for themselves, to say hello to relatives, a friend or two,
then go back to their jealously hidden nests deep in the forest. He scowled as
he examined her bloody wrists, set them neatly on her body so the dust wouldn’t
get in the wounds, began working on her leg ropes. He went away when he had
them off her, but came back a moment later, lifted her head and shoulders and
braced them against a knee. He bathed her face, let her drink from a gourd
dipper. She swished the first mouthful about, spat it out, took another few
swallows, sighed with pleasure as the coolness bathed away the bitter dryness of
her mouth and washed dust and phlegm from her burning throat. He only let her
have a little, then peeled a hard candy and slipped it between her lips. “Give
you energy,” he said, “you need the sugar.”
She didn’t trust him all that much, but there was no point
in spitting it out. She sucked at the candy. Sugar and a bit of mint for
flavor. Maybe to cover what else was in the candy. That’s stupid. My head’s
not working. Why would he do that? And if he did, what does it matter? She
closed her eyes. I wouldn’t mind a short blackout right now, say
about three days long. He bathed her wrists, smoothed on more of the salve
and wrapped bandages around the raw spots. I should get the formula
of that gunk. No more Lee to heal the hurts—that’s one talent I wish I’d
yanked along with me when I jumped into this body. The Senda washed her
legs, put salve on them, bandaged them, then got to his feet with a smooth effortless
lift of his big body. A moment later she heard Linfyar squeal and go silent.
Thanks, man; poor little Linfy, maybe he’ll change his mind about adventures
after this. He dealt with Linfyar’s abrasions in that calm silence she found almost
as soothing as the salve, came back a moment later, dropped a canteen beside
her and went off, leaving her to care for herself now that she could. His
nurturance apparently had severe limits to it.
She lay still a few moments longer, reluctant to break into
her comfortable lassitude, but curiosity was almost as great a prod as thirst.
She rolled onto her stomach, got carefully onto her hands and knees, pushed up
until she was sitting on her heels, her hands resting on her thighs. No
double vision—at least I’m not concussed.
Some sort of abandoned settlement. The building beside her
looked like a trading post or storehouse and was well on its way to rotting
back into the earth. A stubby, shaky pier jutted into the water, a number of
planks gone, several of the piles listing at precarious angles. Water stretched
away from the shore in a vast gray sheet, rippling a little as the breeze
freshened, then dropped again. Ocean? Can’t see the other shore. If there is
one. No, not the ocean. Probably one of the lobes of Tah Badu bay. She glanced
at the pack her head had been resting on, grimaced. Mine. Harp case about a
step away from the pack. They scooped the lot. She scowled at the scars in
the leather, the thick coat of fine red dust. The shore here was mostly a heavy
reddish soil whose top layers had been baked and blown into dust as fine and
slippery as a graphite lubricant. What her harp would look like when they finally
got wherever it was they were going was something she didn’t want to think
about. Linfyar was curled up in the middle of the rest of their gear, looking
miserably unhappy; there was a rope about his neck, the other end tied to a
stake pounded into the dirt. Tethered like an animal. She closed her hands into
fists, bit down hard on her lip to keep her fury in. Like an animal. Someone
was going to pay for that.
Small groups of men stood about talking in mutters, looking
repeatedly out across the water. One man stood guard at the corner of the
building, a projectile weapon hugged under his arm. She saw the bore and
shivered at the thought of that lump of lead making hash of her insides. The
rest of the men had similar weapons, several wore laser pistols on their belts,
most had belt knives, one—hunkered alone out at the end of the rickety pier—had
something that looked like a meat cleaver with elephantiasis. His arms were
thicker around than her thighs, his shoulders bulged under the sleeveless tunic
that was all he wore on his upper half, he looked as if he could crash that
cleaver through one of the forest giants with a single swing. No regimentation
about this bunch of men, but a military patina on them that was enough to
confirm her suspicion about who had her. She’d seen soldiers wait like this
before with the endless irritable patience that had been drilled into them. Well,
he’s done himself a mischief with this even if he’s done me a favor solving my
problems about locating him. She looked at Linfyar tethered to the stake,
breathed hard for some minutes, tears of anger and frustration prickling behind
her eyes.
When she had control back, she drank from the canteen, then
smiled to herself at the contrast between her angry ambitions and her present
helplessness. With a wary eye on the sentry, she crossed to Linfyar, squatted
beside him. Using his home tongue, she muttered, “How you doing, Linfy?”
He lifted his elbow, flashed a grin at her.
“Want me to get that rope off you?”
“Not now,” he whispered. “I can get loose anytime I want,
Shadow. Creeps didn’t find the blade in my belt. I figure the more helpless
they think I am, the looser I’ll be.” He rolled over, put his hand on her knee.
“Don’t fuss, Shadow. Let them act stupid as they want—makes it easier to
clobber them later.’’
She caught hold of his big toe, shook his foot. “I might
have known,” she said.
A hastily muffled giggle. “Yeah, you shoulda.”
She’d forgotten what his life had been like, threatened with
death from the moment of birth when he made the mistake of being born visibly
mutant. He’d learned to scramble and connive almost before he could talk. And
when she and Aleytys had found him on Ibex, he’d been running from a gelding
meant to keep his voice from changing, leaping into the unknown with an
unquenchable zest and a shrewd trust in his ability to survive anything that
life threw at him, nine years of faun charm and deviousness. He didn’t waste
time on pride or worrying whether other people respected him, he concentrated
on surviving. “How’d they get you?” she said. “Dropped a sack over me. Used my
hand to open the cabin’s door. Brought you in a bit later. Cleared the place
out. Took off with us. Boat first, couple hours in that, then they walked, us on
those ... those poles.” He snorted his disgust. “I thought about yelling when
they took us through the city, but they were a bit too efficient and you were
limp as a dead cony, so I thought better wait till they got where they were
going and relaxed some. And till you woke up.” He hesitated. “Maybe I shoulda
yelled.”
“Glad you didn’t. Look, Linfy, I think these’re the Ajin’s
men.” She chuckled. “We spent all that time nosing about for a way to get to
him and here he’s fetching us right where we want to go.”
Linfyar touched her hand. “‘S all right with me as long as
they don’t put me back on that dumb pole.” His lips fluttered as he limned her
with the echoes from his silent whistles. “Shadow?” He sounded anxious, was
suddenly more of a small worried boy. “You sound a little funny. You all right?
You were out a long time.”
“A roaring headache, but I’ll survive, imp. It’s already
starting to go away.”
He sighed and straightened his legs. “I’m hungry, Shadow.”
“When aren’t you? Well, I’ll see what I can dig up.” She got
to her feet, feeling as creaky as the ragged building before her. The Senda was
nowhere in sight. She started for the sentry, stopped as his face went slack.
He stared at nothing, mouthed soundless words at that nothing. A second sentry
was immediately there, taking the rifle from the slackened grasp. He strolled
to the storehouse, leaned with elaborate casualness against the cornerpost,
watching her without seeming to. She walked over to him. “We’re hungry,” she
said. “You planning to starve us too?”
He ran dull eyes over her, produced a grunt. When she didn’t
go away, he said, “You eat when we do.”
“And when, O Jewel of Eloquence, will that be?”
“When we get where we’re going.”
“Oh joy. Any objection to me getting out some trailbars? I
see you brought my gear.” She waved at the heap beside Linfyar. “And you may
recall I haven’t had anything to eat for quite a while.”
“Don’t try nothing.”
“How could I, O Jewel of Wit? I don’t even know where the
hell I am.”
He grunted again and shifted the rifle to a more secure
hold, the barrel swinging around to point at her.
She decided to take his silence as assent, walked cautiously
away from him, keeping her movements open and slow, knelt beside the pile of
gear and went through it until she came up with the fruit-honey-nut confection
Linfy liked so much. She peeled it, then squatted beside him. “We seem to be
headed somewhere else before we settle for the night.’’
Linfyar nodded. “Heard,” he said, the word muffled by the
mouthful of bar.
Shadith looked over her shoulder at the empty water of the
bay. “Hurry up and wait,” she muttered. “Military mind never changes, I don’t
care what the species.”
“Huh?”
“Never mind. Hot air, that’s all.”
She sat on her heels and brooded. Taggert, where are you
now? How are you coming in? I suppose it’s just as well I don’t know,
considering where I am right now. Wonder if he’s already snuggling up to the
Ajin; probably he’ll even get Grey and Ticutt loose before I get anywhere
close. Just my luck, the Ajin won’t want me for propaganda, probably wants me
to sing lullabies to his harem or something just as vital.
The long day trickled endlessly on.
Shortly after sundown the soft splutter of a motor broke the
silence; not long afterward a broad-beamed boat nosed up to the dock and a big
man jumped onto the planks with a careless physical competence meant to impress
anyone watching. Shadith swallowed a giggle. Enter the Ajin. Lovely.
He strode up to her, stood looking down at her. How much he
could see was questionable; the sky was overcast, there were no lights, not
even a campfire. She looked up, nodded at him, looked away.
He bent closer, caught hold of her hair, turned her face up,
looked startled, let her loose and stepped away. “Manjestau.” A smallish wiry
man came out of the shadows. She made out a lined harsh face, one she hadn’t
seen before. “You sure this is the one?”
“I watched her do it.”
“This child?”
“Her and the freak.”
The Ajin moved over to Linfyar. “Why the rope?”
“So it wouldn’t run off. We figured the girl wouldn’t run
without her pet.”
“How good is she?”
“Good enough. Did it to me, and I was ready.”
“Interesting.” He walked around Linfyar and Shadith. “How
long does it take to put a crowd under?”
“Three-four minutes.”
“That fast?”
“I’d say.”
“And they all more or less see the same thing?”
“From what I hear. Didn’t want to ask too many questions.
Miners hanging about. Perolat. She doesn’t like us a whole helluva lot, and she
knows me. Didn’t want her thinking we were interested in the girl. Hiepler came
while I was there, wanted her for the church, threatened her. I figured this
was a good time to take her. Perolat would figure the kid ran to get away from
the engiaja.”
The Ajin came back and stood looking down at Shadith. “We’ll
burn honeyfat to the Lady tonight, Manjestau. Luck smiles on us today.” They
walked off together exuding satisfaction.
Hunh, pair of self-inflated prickheads. She dug at
the dust with her heel, stirring up a cloud of dust that made her cough. For
the moment there wasn’t much she could do except go along meekly with what they
had in mind for her. Thank whatever gods there be, there didn’t seem to be any
pedophiles among them. She didn’t feel up to coping with that sort of
complication. If they want me enough, maybe they’ll coddle me a little. Have
to wait and see what develops.
The men on the shore broke up into a number of different
squads; some vanished into the shadow under the trees, others moved swiftly to
haul boxes out of the storehouse and load them onto the boat, taking Shadith’s
gear aboard in the process, walking around her, brushing against her, ignoring
her and Linfyar, not quite stepping on them.
The Ajin himself cut the rope from Linfyar’s neck, lifted
the boy to his feet. For the first time he saw the shallow hollows where
Linfyar’s eyes would have been if he’d been born with eyes. Distaste strong
enough to smell rolled out of him, though he controlled it immediately and
patted Linfyar on his sleekly furred shoulder. “Sorry about that, boy,” he
said, a smile in his voice. A deep warm flexible voice he could manipulate with
an actor’s skill. “Some of my people are too scary for good manners.”
Thinking, Get your bigoted hands off him, you bastard, biting
her tongue so she wouldn’t say it, Shadith jumped to her feet and pushed
between them, trembling with the resurgent fury that threatened to burst out of
her control. There was a sick twisted loathing in the man that ran along her
nerves like vomit; he hid it well enough from everyone but her, but it was
foul. Linfyar put his hand on her arm. “Oh Shadow,” he wailed, doing his
pitiful act so well that for a heartbeat she was almost fooled, then had to
restrain herself from slapping him so violent was her relief. “Oh Shadow,” he
repeated in a trembly, die-away voice, “What’s happening? What is he doing?”
She sucked in a breath, let it trickle out, patted his hand
in silent gratitude. “Nothing bad, Linfy,” she said, injecting into her voice
the cooing condescension she felt the Ajin would expect from her, a semi-adult
calming the fears of a deformed child. “He’s going to take us someplace where
we can be more comfortable and have a hot meal and a bath.”
The Ajin smiled, a broad, charming almost-grin, his eyes twinkling
at her with an intent warmth that would have been more convincing if there had been
anything behind it but calculation. Her mind-riding gift was developing rapidly
into a full-blown empathic sense; Shadith wasn’t too sure she liked that. There
were things she absolutely didn’t want to know, and she resented other people’s
emotions—or lack of them—making demands on her. She didn’t want to know about
the Ajin’s xenophobia. Know about it! Feel it was more like the truth; it was
spreading its slime all over her. Have to remember to ask Lee how she blocks
out this kind of thing. God! What’s she doing now? The Ajin put his
hand on her shoulder. She stiffened a little, couldn’t help it, but he seemed
to find that reaction quite natural. Conceited slime. “Come, child,” he said,
wooing her with that voice like dark suede burnishing her senses; he turned her
toward the boat, walked beside her while Linfyar was left to follow behind.
“I’m sorry about this.” He touched her bandaged wrist. “Once you understand
why, I’m sure you’ll forgive us.”
She gave him an awkward little nod, her equivalent of Linfyar’s
pathetic act. Oh yes, O mighty conqueror, I’m just a pore little singsong
girl flustered by your attentions.
He was very good, kind and solicitous, settling her and
Linfyar on cushions in front of the wheelhouse, tucking blankets about them,
bringing them cups of hot spiced cha. She suspected there were drugs in it
meant to put her out so she’d not see where the boat was going. His prime base,
if her luck hadn’t run completely out. She drank. The cha was hot and clean and
refreshing. With a slight undertaste that told her she was right. Hah! Play
your games; I wouldn’t spend a rotten eyelash to find out where we’re going, I
just want to get there. Linfyar sniffed at his tea; she saw his ears
twitch, then he emptied the cup with innocent gusto, set the cup down beside
him and began singing softly, a plaintive lovesong from his home city; he sang
just loud enough to blend his clear pure voice with the sounds of wind, water
and the boat’s motor. When he began interrupting himself with yawns, he curled
up with his head in Shadith’s lap and went peacefully to sleep.
Shadith finished her cha and set her cup down; she leaned back
against the wheelhouse and felt the motor’s vibrations the length of her spine
and across her sore shoulders. It seemed to crawl into her bones and was as
soothing as whatever that drug was in the cha. Aleytys was suddenly on the bow
rail smiling at her, then the figure melted into a fragment of mist. Half
asleep, she saw the Ajin take up the cup Linfyar had used and toss it over the side,
but didn’t bother getting angry again. He was a nothing. He didn’t matter
anymore. Hollow man. Hollow. Hollow. Hollow man. Aleytys on the bow made out
of mist, she’s realer than you. Real, oh real, what’s real, am I real? A voice
in Lee’s head, a knot of forces in an ancient trap. Got a body now. That’s
real. Gonna have fun with this body, won’t lay it down till it’s old old old,
you hear that, body? Old old old.
*Hello, oddity.*
*Hello yourself.* She giggled. *Who you talking about odd?*
*You’re plotting something.*
*Plot, plot, got no plot.*
*Sounds more like got no brain.*
*You’re messing in it, you ought to know.*
*Ah. Sobering up a bit.*
*Sleepering up a bit.* She yawned. *Noble knight up there
drugged me.*
*You didn’t have to drink the cha.*
*Ah well, keep your illusions. I thought I’d be polite.*
*What do you intend?*
*My business.*
*My world.*
*So?*
*Be more respectful of your elders, infant.*
*Why?*
(chuckle)
*That’s no answer.*
*You first.*
*Why?*
*I was here first.*
*Can’t argue that.*
*Well?*
*My business.*
*We’ve been around that way once. Once is enough.*
*He your boy? I don’t think so.*
*You’re right.*
*Two great minds beating as one. How can I bear it?*
*You, ancient child, are a saucy snip.*
*Yeah.* She giggled. *A needle in the ass of authority.*
*The Pomp of pomposity.*
*Soulmate.*
*Not likely. I sigh with delight that you don’t know the location
of my hindquarters.*
*Oh, you have ‘em then?*
*In a manner of speaking. I don’t offer them for your prodding.*
*Keep it clean, I’m underage.*
*Under what age?*
*Fourteen. Fourteen thousand. Take your pick.*
*Why are you here?*
*Ah. Now that’s a question I’ve never heard answered satisfactorily.
Why am I? Why is anything? Or is all this a dream? Are you a dream, O loudmouth
forest, O Po’ Annutj?*
(an indescribable sound like solidified irritation)
*Tell me why you want to know.*
(sigh, long and long, with prickles of annoyance in it) *
Enough of this nonsense. Because, ancient child, I want the Ajin off this
world, I want him either dead or stopped. My friends suffer now, will suffer
more, and in the end, this world will burn if he has his way. Parts of me will
die beyond my power to repair and replace them. What grows between me and the
soft folk here will die. I think that would be a shame, a loss of richness in
the All.*
*Yes.* (a long pause while Shadith struggled with the sluggishness
of her .brain, the drug tightening its hold on her) *I came to pry two friends
out of his claws.* (pause) *Hunters. They came to get him.* (pause) *He ... no,
not him ... Kell ... the Vryhh ... set a trap, caught them.* (pause) *Going
after ... no ... that’s it. I get them, they get him.*
*The Senda who tended you is mine.*
*I wondered ... I didn’t ... why?*
*Liaison. Spy.*
(sleepy laughter) *That’s good gunk he has. One I owe you.*
*There are others like him. They’ll know about you, help
when they can.*
*Know? No.*
*Only that you’re mine.*
*Not yours. Not anyone’s.*
*Quibble. Friend, then.*
*All right.*
(feel of almost-maternal amusement and affection) *Go to
sleep. That’s a good child.*
*Up yours.*
*Keep it clean, ancient child. Remember my age.*
*What age is that?*
*Not half yours. Sleep. Sleep.*
*How can I with you yelling in my head?*
*Sleep. Sleep.*
*Good night, Po’. Go away, Po’.*
(laughter fading into silence)
Interesting, she thought, and drifted deeper into the
drugged sleep.
She woke to darkness and thought at first she’d slept
through the day and into night again, then realized the boat was burbling along
inside a cavern, plowing heavily against a powerful but sluggish current. She
sat up, looked around, then shook Linfyar awake. Bending down to him, she
whispered, “How big is this wormhole?”
Linfyar rubbed at his nose, yawned. His ears quivered. He
rolled out of his blankets and squatted beside her, listening intently. After a
minute he said, “They’re using radar to find their way; I’m trying to read
their beeps.” Another short silence. “Roof comes down close to the water
ahead,” he murmured. “About twenty meters. Boat’ll just scrape by.” He wriggled
uneasily. “Shadow, there’s things in the water.”
“What things?”
“Don’t know. Big things. Talking and making my ears hurt.”
“Come here, imp. Don’t listen to them.”
He curled his ears shut and climbed into her lap, sat with
his face pressed into the shallow valley between her small breasts. She pulled
a blanket up around them, then reached out and touched the things. Raw hunger.
Fury. A force too primitive and diffuse for her to control. Far too deadly to
challenge. “We sure don’t swim out of here, Linfy,” she murmured.
Some shapeless sounds from him, a sleepy shift of arms and
legs, then he was heavy against her, wholly relaxed, asleep again. The
blackness closed down tighter. The boat slowed until it was making little
headway against the current; she heard creaks and rasps where it was scraping
against the rock.
Then there was light ahead, blooming green and gold in water
smooth as glass. She rubbed watering eyes and sighed with relief as the weight
of stone lifted away.
They drifted into a round lake inside high craggy walls.
There were patches of lush greenery, but the cone of the ancient volcano was
mostly heaps of mottled stone, slides of scree slanting from the precipitous
walls. One of those slides jutted into the deep black water; after a moment she
saw it was a camouflaged wharf with a slot where the boat could slip in and
rest unseen from above. Beyond the wharf were more structures, massive stone
buildings built up against the wall, camouflaged like the wharf by the sweeps
of scree.
The Ajin helped her to her feet and with smiling courtesy
lifted her onto the dock, then stepped after her, leaving Linfyar to scramble
up how he could. Poor old bigot, no use getting mod at you anymore, silly
old fool, escorting your enemy into the heart of your power. He put his
hand on her shoulder and guided her along the wharf and into the largest of the
structures. The walls were not as thick as she’d expected, but these buildings
weren’t meant to live through a bombing; that was the meaning of the
camouflage. If the Pajunggs found this base, they’d flatten it, but a world was
a huge place, even so small a part of it as a continent, and they didn’t have
the tracers to locate him. Not yet. And they were terrified of the forest. No
native intelligence here. Hah. What they told themselves so they wouldn’t have
to go into the forest hunting it. She wondered about the other worlds the
Pajunggs had colonized, what they’d found there and quietly destroyed. Respect
for life and the rights of natives, all that was the luxury of settled peaceful
lands long after those natives had either been assimilated or destroyed. Unless
they had the power to resist cooptation. In the end that was what it came down
to, the possession of power in one form or another. Where law didn’t exist, the
survivors were those strong and smart enough to prevail. Kell and Aleytys, it
was the same thing. Po’ Anuutj, the miners against the Pajunggs and, yes, the
Ajin.
The hand on her shoulder turned her away from the main corridor
down the building and urged her down a side way that went out of the house into
the living stone of the mountain. She thought about his loathing of Linfyar,
who was recognizably of kindred stock, a handsome little faun with more charm
than was good for him. What would the Ajin be like once he had complete
authority over this world and came against the Po’ Annutj? They went back and
back into the mountain until she had the feeling she walked on a surface
precariously spread over a seething sink of molten stone; with a shrug of its
shoulders the mountain could drop them into its heart. She shivered.
The Ajin patted her shoulder. “Not much farther,” he said.
“I want to keep you close to me, make sure you’re safe.”
She did her awkward childish nod, but said nothing. Treating
me like a kid, she thought, being the tough but gentle father. Hunh. I
want a father like I want another head. She’d lived with Harskari far too
long to relish acquiring another mentor, especially this condescending bag of
air planning to use her and her gifts for his own purposes. I said it
right, out there on the bay. Hollow man, only his needs to drive him, no real
contact with anyone else. The rest of us are shadows cast on his desires. She
thought about Perolat and Tjepa! She thought about the Ajin selling himself to
Kell in return for support in his ambitions. I’d bet anything Kell built
this place for him and stocked it too. Wonder where the trap is? Wonder
what it is? Taggert, she told herself, I hope you know what you’re
doing. Another Hunter in the trap. Would that bring Kell running? God, I hope
not. I know when I’m out of my weight.
The Ajin palmed open a door, urged her inside. A huge false
window took up most of one wall, a viewscreen showing the mountainside with its
immense trees, the solemn silent beauty of the forest, the sunlight streaming
through occasional breaks in the canopy, bat-winged birds soaring and singing;
forest sounds came through subdued and faintly magical. Bright hangings broke
the chill of the black stone walls. The floor was dull metacrete, but a silk
rug hid its ugliness, echoing the abstract patterns in the hangings. A black
glass table with food steaming on black glass plates, cha in a pot covered by a
quilted cozy. Steel-framed chairs with black leather seats and backs. A black
velvet divan piled with brilliantly colored silk cushions. A cheerfully
inelegant room decorated by someone with a liking for color and no pretensions
to taste. The Ajin stepped aside to let Linfyar in, moved to the center of the
room. “These will be your quarters, singer. Bedroom and fresher through there.”
He gestured at a black velvet curtain between two of the hangings. “Rest and
take care of your body’s needs. I will return to talk with you tomorrow. No
need to worry about anything. No one will hurt you here. Just relax. I’ll
explain everything soon.” He smiled at her, a warm beaming smile, his brown
eyes twinkling with goodwill and appreciation, then made a rueful face, lifted
a hand in an apologetic gesture. “The door will be locked—I’m afraid it’s
necessary. For your protection, child, I promise you, that’s all. Some of the
men here aren’t as gentle with women and children as I’d like.” A last smile
and he left, the door closing behind him with a slight pneumatic hiss.
Shadith looked around, raised her brows. Their gear was
piled against the wall at the end of the divan. “Looks like we took the scenic
route.”
“Huh?”
“Never mind. Private joke.”
Linfyar twitched his ears, turned in a slow circle. In his
home-tongue he said, “Busy-busy, crawling with bugs.”
“Man wouldn’t trust his own mother. Better not count too
much on talking this way, my young furry friend. Your language is a variant out
of a large family; might not know it, but you come from the cousin races and if
their computer has translating capability, it won’t take them all that long to
get a good idea what we’re saying. Besides, if they get curious enough and
decide to stop being polite, all they really have to do is hook one of us to a
psychprobe.”
Linfyar shrugged, began moving about the room, his lips fluttering
to read what was around him, his nose twitching, all his senses operating as he
explored this new place. He followed his nose to the table, slid into one of
the chairs. Switching languages, he said, “Not going to starve us, anyway. Mmm.
I’m hungry.”
Shadith chuckled. “Me too, imp. Be with you in a minute.”
She left him sniffing at the dishes and pushed past the curtain.
A bedroom with another screen tuned to the same image. She
was grateful for those screens; they made the stone more bearable, though she
suspected they were two-way viewers. She dragged her hand hard across the
screen, made the glass squeal, grinned at the trees and birds she couldn’t
touch. Voyeur, she thought, but didn’t say it. She circled the wide bed
and went into the fresher. It was small and neat, with a flush toilet and a
shower cabinet, a large mirror over a basin. She took care of the ache in her
bladder, stripped to use the shower, annoyed that there was some fool somewhere
watching her. She started to step into the shower, then frowned at the bandages
on her arms and legs; she stripped them off and inspected the abraded flesh.
Most of the red was gone. Cautiously she touched her head. No swelling, no
soreness. Great gunk. Yeah, I owe you one, old Po’. Hate to wash it off, but
I’m too grungy to stand myself any longer. She found a cake of soap with a
pleasant herbal scent in a niche in the shower, laughed as she turned the water
on and adjusted the temperature. VIP treatment. Looovely. But you walk
eggshell-light. Shadow, you’re frosting on his cake; he can get along quite
well without you if he has to.
The water came hot and hard. She found herself singing, enjoying
the feel of the spray, then of the soap as she spread lather over her body. She
lingered awhile after the soap was rinsed off, letting the hot water beat
against her back, but she was hungry, so she finally shut it off and stepped
out.
She scrubbed one of the thick nubbly towels over her body until
she glowed, then wrapped herself in the toweling robe that hung on a hook
beside the cabinet. She tied the belt and went strolling back into the sitting
room, rubbing at her hair, humming the song she’d been singing.
Linfyar was eating neatly but steadily from a plate heaped
high with bits of meat and vegetables, washing down every other bite with a
gulp of heavily sweetened cha. “You sound happy,” he said. He sniffed. “And you
smell good.”
“A change for the better, huh?” She filled her plate,
settled into a chair across the table from him.
Linfyar stopped chewing, put his fork down and rubbed at his
nose. “You think maybe ... um ...” He shifted languages but was still careful
in his choice of words. “What we’re looking for, you know ... maybe it’s right
here. Funny if that’s right, don’t you think?”
“I think that’s something we don’t talk about, you hear?”
“I expect you’re right.”
“Funny or not, I expect you’re right too, Linfy.”
He picked up his fork, tapped a bouncy rhythm on the edge of
the plate, then started reducing the mound of food on it.
Shadith sat in the middle of the wide bed and began going
over her things, checking to see what the Ajin’s men had brought along,
harvesting a small collection of metal burrs from various parts of the clothing
wadded into the bags. She set them aside, continued with her inventory and came
across her hoard of coins. “Hunh, honest kidnappers.” All her possessions were
here, even an old polish rag she’d meant to throw away. She looked at the
clothing with distaste. All of them, underthings and everything, handled by
those creeps and invaded by a horde of bugs, worms eat his liver. Wonder who
does the laundry around here. I can wash a few things in the fresher basin, but
I want this whole mess cleaned before I wear any of it. She wrinkled her
nose at the small pile of burrs. Sneaky, yeah, and don’t he think he’s
clever. I’m supposed to find you and feel oh so confident. Happy to oblige. She
scooped the bugs up and flushed them down the toilet, then went back to the bed
and unsnapped the harp case. Someone had wiped the dust off the outside, but
more than enough had managed to ooze inside. With a grunt of disgust, she
lifted the harp out and set it down carefully, then slid to the edge of the
bed, flipped the case over and shook it out on the rug. She set the case down. Have
to go over it later with a damp cloth. She dug into the pile of clothing,
found that decrepit polish rag and began to wipe the harp, working very
carefully so she wouldn’t scratch it. When she was finished with the frame, she
wiped the strings, then plucked each of them to get the last grains of dust
off. And found another bug tucked up high on the inside of the frame where she
wasn’t likely to see it. She went to the sitting room to fetch a fork, detoured
to check on Linfyar. He had squirreled deep into the pile of silk pillows on
the divan and was asleep, snoring a little, almost like a loud purring. She
smiled at him, shook her head and went back into the bedroom.
Harp on her lap, she probed for the flat little patch and
finally managed to scrape it loose. It looked a bit battered, but she suspected
it was still in fair working order; they built those things to take a lot of
knocks. She held it close to one of the strings and made that string shriek at
it. Hunh, you bastard, hope that wrings your ears for you. She took the
bug into the fresher and flushed it after the others.
The Ajin came back the middle of the next morning. Shadith
sat on the floor gazing at the image on the screen, hands moving idly across
the strings, making a portrait in sound of her restlessness. She looked around
as she heard the door open, scowled and turned back to the screen, putting an
acid jangle into what she was playing.
He laughed, strode over to her, plucked the harp from her
hands, tossed it onto the divan, pulled her to her feet.
For a moment Shadith could not speak. She was so furious her
throat closed up on her, so furious she could only stand there shaking. She
stared at him blankly; when she could move, she marched to the divan, picked up
the harp, ran her hand over the frame, then the strings. She squatted, set it
on the floor and came slowly back up, turning to face him as she rose. “Don’t
ever ever do that again,” she said flatly. “Touch it again and I’ll kill you.”
“Watch your mouth, girl.” She stared at him, said nothing.
“Sweet little girls don’t go around killing people. Didn’t
your parents teach you that?”
She kept staring, still furious, though she’d calmed enough
to start thinking again. The little girl act—she could go on with it, but was
it worth it? She looked into that handsome smiling face and decided it wasn’t. Might
as well test just how much he thinks he needs me; let him start walking over me
and he’ll keep on tramping. “They taught me a lot of things,” she said, her
voice still flat and as cold as she could make it. “They taught me it’s both
stupid and discourteous to handle other people’s belongings without permission,”
She rushed on, drowning his attempt to speak. “They taught me that kidnappers
are thugs and men who steal girls are perverts or pimps and a pimp is lower
than a pervert. They taught me that real men treat other men and women, and
children, with the respect they expect for themselves and those who act
otherwise are only cheap imitations.”
He took a step toward her, hand raised, then checked
himself. As clearly as if she read the words on a tape issuing from his head,
she knew what he was thinking: Look, never mind what she says, she’s only a
silly little girl who doesn’t know what she’s talking about; anyway, there’s no
one to hear it. His eyes narrowed. She read the codicil in his face: But
be damn sure she’s not going to say such things in public. “Come, child,”
he said, “not so much heat. I’m sorry about the harp. Let me be honest and
confess it, I didn’t understand how important it was to you.” He patted her
shoulder, quite unaware of the effort she made not to knock his hand away. “Sit
down, please. I promised you an explanation today, and I’ve come to give it.
Ah. Good.” He smiled at her as she slipped from under his hand and seated
herself on the divan. “We aren’t kidnappers, child. Or pimps. We fight for
Avosing’s future, child, we fight to drive the tyrant from our world. We need
you, child, we need your gifts. I want to show you some of the things the
Pajunggs are doing to us. They aren’t pretty, and if this were the world I
dream of, you wouldn’t have to see these things, but I want you to understand
us. You saw for yourself what the Pajunggs wanted to do to you in Keama Dusta,
you know how the hiepler threatened you. We saved you from some of the horrors
I’m going to show you.” His voice was low and gently persuasive, a seductive
murmur caressing her ears, but she took no pleasure from it, was too aware of
the deep dislike he felt for her. Shit on this talent, she thought. I
can’t even enjoy my illusions anymore. No fun to be courted by someone you
know despises you. He sat beside her, careful not to touch her, providing a
low-voiced narration for the succession of images he cued into the screen.
The forest scene vanished.
Shaky, grainy pictures took its place, images captured by hidden
cameras under difficult conditions.
“This is where you would have performed.” The church casino,
great and noble room, low-relief sculptures ten times life size, the pantheon
of Pajungg gods, overlooking the games of chance; intent worshipers bending
over boards or watching lights flicker, playing their games in reverent
anxiety; hooded and robed croupiers; white-robed serving maids; hum of recited
prayers rising above the assorted clicks and clacks and slaps and rustles of
the games. “And this.” Whoever carried the camera followed an attendant through
the players and past the private rooms and out the back of the church. After
winding through a dizzying series of turns and twists he stepped into a cozier
milieu where child whores of both sexes dressed in filmy short robes displayed
themselves to men with a shared patina of wealth and power. A few of the
children were her apparent age, but most were younger, even a number barely walking.
“Slaves, all of them, sold by their parents.”
Another scene. A house burning, dark-clad enforcers standing
about, two of them holding the arms of a weeping man, others keeping the man’s
wife and children herded together.
“He never went to church, had several warnings; a bad
season, wilt in his gancha grain, disease in his stock, got into debt; next
year, prices were low, couldn’t pay his creditors; church seized the land and
goods; he’s the one set the fire, wouldn’t let them have his house. See what
happened to his sons and daughters.” Scene change. A slave auction, the children
going one by one to the highest bidder.
New scene. Twisted, savaged bodies barely recognizable as
something that might once have been human. “Some are men who joined our fight;
they were captured by enforcers. Some are men denounced to the church for
heresy.”
A miner who’d been caught hoarding amber, his body jerking
as massive jolts of electricity hit him.
More images documenting the cruelty of man to man.
Meant to evoke horror and disgust in her. Meant to convince
her to serve the Ajin and his cause. If she’d told him he was not so different
from the men he wanted to replace, he would have been angry, perhaps a little
hurt, but he wouldn’t have understood what she was saying. Because of his
background, Head and Taggert and even the Pajunggs had seen him as a cynical
manipulator only after power, but he was more than that. She remembered Head
saying the thieves are heretics, not unbelievers. He believed in what he was
doing, and like most true believers he was willing to use any means no matter
how repulsive to achieve his goal.
He grasped her shoulders, turned her to face him. “You see
how the Pajunggs corrupt and oppress us. We have to change that, child, and to
do that we have to convince all the Avosingers that change is possible.”
Bending closer, he went into a short harangue about morality, the sacredness of
home and tradition, sketching out a world where men and women knew their place
and stayed in it, where there was no disruptive change, where life went on in calm
comfortable channels. All very lovely, she thought, if you happen to
be a man. Perolat wouldn’t like it much, and Dihann, well ... She lowered
her eyes and swallowed a giggle at the thought of Dihann’s reaction to being
told she ought to subordinate herself to any man no matter how forceful and
dynamic he was. She listened and kept her eyes down, resigned to playing the
role he kept insisting on. It’s not for that long, she told herself, just
until I find Grey and get him loose. It made her feel like vomiting, but
she told herself she’d done worse things before this and survived them, she’d
survive this.
The Ajin led them back to the outer building, into a
glare-free white-tiled space, filled with banks of computers and viewscreens
relaying images from satellites even her lander’s sensitive detectors hadn’t
noticed. Kell, worms eat your liver, by god, you really want Aleytys, you’re
paying high for the chance of catching her. Men working with stone-faced
dedication at consoles, looking up to nod a quick greeting at the Ajin as he
moved past them, Shadith at his heels, Linfyar trailing behind.
They passed through into a darker quieter hall and finally
turned into a side room equipped as an infirmary, more gleaming white tile,
white-enameled machines and other instruments, many of them new-made antiques
in her eyes; like a lot of Avosing, a confusing mixture of late industrial and
contemporary technologies. It was a large room with uncertain echoes, the
bounding sounds making her itchy. It was a lot worse for Linfyar; he nudged
closer to her, trembling. She dropped her arm around his shoulder, hugged him.
“Roll ‘em up, Linfy, and hang on to me.” She looked from the Ajin to the small
dumpy man he was talking to, made a small hissing sound, cut it off as it started
to echo. “Hey,” she yelled. “I don’t like it here. I’m leaving.”
The little man turned spectacled eyes to her, the harsh
light glinting off the lenses making him look more machine than flesh. He
stepped to the bank of black rubbery switches, clicked one over, and the echoes
hushed so suddenly she almost stumbled as if she’d been pushing against some
force removed without warning. He came around the examination table and stood
in front of her, peering at her through those thick glasses, the pale yellow of
his eyes intermittently visible, the thin almost white lashes. “This child?”
“Apparently.”
“Mmm.” He stumped around her, his hands folded over I his
tight little paunch, high for a man, so high he looked pregnant. “Collar her?”
“No. Nothing showing.”
“Hm.” He took hold of her shoulder, started prodding at her
back.
She tried jerking away, but he held her too tightly, his
fingers digging into her muscle. With a grunt of effort, she caught hold of his
little finger, twisted it, then twisted away as he yelped with pain. “Keep your
hands to yourself, fool.”
“You ... you ... you ...” He raised a fist.
“Try it,” she flung at him.
The Ajin got a grip on her hair and jerked her back, snapped
to the other two men standing quietly in the background, “Take care of him.”
After the melee was sorted out, the man’s finger restored to
its joint, the Ajin swung her around, pushed her against the bank of switches.
“I’m getting very tired of your insolence, girl.”
She glared at him, all resolutions forgotten. “Biiig man, oh
I’m so scared. Ask me,” she yelled at him, turned it into a chant. “Ask me ask
me ask me. If you want something, ask me, don’t maul me about, ask me. I’m not
stupid, or deaf—don’t treat me like I am. Easy little words, ask me.” She grew
a bit calmer. “You didn’t like it when those creeps were fooling with the kid
whores—how come you’re treating me like a whore? Like you can do anything you
want with me and I shouldn’t complain? Huh?”
He stared at her, pulled his hand away from her hair and
rubbed it absently down his side. She’d hit something in him, she could feel
that, but she wasn’t quite sure what it was, and she was more than a little
startled and ashamed of her reactions. Lee’d told her a number of times she was
letting this body make her forget what the years had taught her; for the first
time Shadith was ready to concede she might be right. She’d gone through this
sort of scene more than once with her mother in those difficult days around her
first puberty, and here it was again. Oh god, do I really have to go through
all that misery again? She pulled her mind back to her present predicament
and waited for what he’d say.
“You are a child and female,” he said. His voice was cold
and flat, devoid of emotion. “You will do as you are told and create no more
disturbances or you will be punished. You will behave as a proper young girl
should behave; you will speak when you are spoken to and remain silent at other
times. You will be modest and quiet in your manner. And you will understand
that you are less than dust when compared to the great dream you are privileged
to play a part in. Do you understand me?”
Come on, Shadow, take a lesson from Linfy. She
sneaked a glance at the boy crouched out of the way under the examining table,
silent and inconspicuous as a small furry ghost. It took a minute, but she
swallowed her loathing and said, meekly, “I hear.”
They poked at her and prodded at her and sampled every fluid
they could think of (the yellow-eyed doctor watching her with angry spite, his
left hand bandaged, the little finger in a brace), recorded brain emissions
while she was silent and while she was running off scales and a song or two,
they fed her drugs and watched the results, put her under various sorts of
stress. For her own pride’s sake she made the results as meaningless as she
could, her mind and body control sufficient to let her duplicate results when
necessary, but it was a strain trying to keep the readings logical and remember
what she’d done before. A strain, yes, but also healing to her self-respect.
For the most part they ignored Linfyar; these were technicians, not real
researchers, and she was glad of it for his sake, since they had little of the
explorer’s driving curiosity and were willing enough to leave him alone as long
as they had her to play with.
Those tests lasted all that long day and most of the next
morning, then they announced that they were finished for the moment; it was
time to evaluate their accumulated data. She went back to her rooms and let
herself be locked in. Linfyar was asleep again on the divan. She scowled down
at him, wondering if she should be worried about the amount of time he was
spending in sleep, not certain her itchiness was anxiety about him or just
jealousy that he found such a satisfactory way to pass the endless days. She
was about ready to shriek from boredom. She’d already read through her handful
of books twice, she didn’t feel like sleeping, and she certainly wasn’t up to
fooling around with music, not in the mood. She went into the fresher and made
faces at herself in the mirror until she got tired of looking at herself, then
stripped and stood in the shower letting water as hot as she could stand it
beat down on her body, first her front, then her back. After a while she shut
the water off, wrapped the robe around her and ambled into the bedroom. She
threw herself onto the bed and lay with her head on her arms, breathing in the
dry dusty smell of the velvet bedspread. Body. Body. Body. Oh god, it’s so
easy to forget when you don’t have one what happens in the body. Easier to
dream when you’re a knot of nothing in a bit of sorcerous headgear gathering
dust somewhere. She went back to her earliest memories and began reliving
them, struggling to recall the smallest and most insignificant details,
drifting gradually into a heavy, nightmare-ridden sleep.
The doctor laced his hands over his paunch and blinked his
weak yellow eyes at her while his acolytes attached sensors about her head and
body, careful not to interfere with her ease of movement, making her rock and
sway, reach and fold. Other silent white-clad men were setting up microphones
about the chair. She watched all this without protest; even if she sang a real
croon, nothing much was going to happen in this sterile room with its scrubbed
air and literal-minded technicians. No pollen. No Linfyar to broaden the range
of the sound. But she wasn’t going to take any chances, she was going to give
them something that sounded similar to her ancient songs, but it would be
enough off, enough of the harmonics and overtones missing, that even with the
pollen it wouldn’t work the way they wanted. You’re not going to replace me
with a flake player. When one of the men signaled they were finished, she
looked around, straightened her back and resettled the harp. “Nothing’s going
to happen, you know. I’ve been about more than you think, and this is the only
world where I sing dreams. Must be the pollen.” She drew her hand across the
strings, making a soft drift of sound. “This air.” She shrugged. “And the
acoustics here are foul.”
“Play.” The light glinted off the doctor’s glasses and
showed the silver stopples in his ears as he adjusted them to shut off yet more
of the sound in the room.
Frowning, she plucked a series of single notes from the
harp, then what she could do patterned itself in her mind and she slid into the
almost-croon and sang it through. There was no trance effect even among the
acolytes; with the echo killer on, the song dropped dead into the sterile air.
She stilled the last sounds and sat with her arms curled about the harp, saying
nothing, waiting for the Ajin to show up, wondering just what he’d say to her.
If he said anything to her. He’d been conspicuously absent the last several
days.
The doctor opened out his ear stopples and darted busily
from dial to drum, muttering with his assistants, chattering into a flake
recorder, ignoring Shadith, who was quite happy to be left alone, though she’d
have been happier with something to occupy her mind and keep her from wondering
how much she’d given away that she’d rather keep to herself. She knew well
enough how much information a skilled researcher could tease out of a pile of
apparently unpromising data; her first owner had been an itinerant trouble-shooter
with a genius for spotting weak links. He had little use for women in any sense
of that word, but a passionate love of all forms of music. He bought her for
her small deft fingers and because he’d heard her playing a tin whistle she’d
sneaked into her cell. She traveled with him, getting from him everything he
could teach her, winning from him a reluctant affection and a generous
admiration for her tenacity and the speed with which she learned. She grieved
when he died, killed in a quarrel with a lover, not just because now she’d be
sold again, but because she was deeply fond of him and for the second time in
her life she was losing all she had of family.
The Ajin came in and stood frowning at her. “Why?”
She dropped her eyes to her hands. “I played what I’ve
played before.”
He took a step to one side. Behind him was his skinny aide,
Manjestau. “Well?” he said.
“Sounds like it.” Manjestau came closer, looked at the harp,
looked around at the room. “Probably right. Probably needs the pollen.” He
looked at her again. “And the freak.” The Ajin walked over to her, smiled down
at her, his eyes twinkling, his good humor apparently returned. “It looks like
we should have listened to you, child.”
She moved a little, stiffened as he started to frown. “My
name is Shadith,” she said quietly.
“Well, Shadith, I still need to be convinced you can do what
the reports say. Hmm. Tomorrow, I think. Outside somewhere.”
She plucked at a string, waited until the note died. “We
need to talk deal, Sikin Ajin. I don’t play this thing out of the goodness of
my heart. It’s my profession. My skills are for sale, I don’t give them away.”
“Right now I wouldn’t take them as a gift. Persuade me.”
“All right. Tomorrow. A free sample. After that, pay me.”
“If you’re worth it, we’ll work something out. Right now
there’s something I want you to see.”
“Shall I bring the harp?”
“No need.”
“Allow me time to put it in the case, please.” He inclined
his head.
She began stripping away the sensors. With muttered imprecations
one of the assistants hurried to her, collected the ones she’d removed and slapped
her hands away as she reached for another. She sat quietly letting him peel
them off with slow care, watching the Ajin move about the room, stopping a
moment to speak to the doctor, looking at the readouts, killing time, she was
sure of it, until she was ready, looking grave all the while as if he knew what
he was seeing. Apparently he’d forgotten the laws he’d laid on her the last
time they’d met—at least he seemed willing to allow her a certain degree of independence
as long as she didn’t push too hard. All right. She knew now she wasn’t
Linfyar; body aside, she wasn’t that young or that flexible; she knew too much
about what she’d turn into if she let her self-respect corrode too badly. The
assistant went away, cuddling his sensors to his bosom as if they were favored
children. She slipped out of the chair, snapped the harp into its case and left
it leaning against a chair leg.
He took her to the end of the corridor and into the mountain
again, only a short way this rime, and stopped before a heavy steel door. He
palmed it open, then stood aside until she walked in, following her, closing
the door behind them.
It was a high domed room with tool marks still on the walls.
Naked stone, exposed wiring, complex flake boards that looked as if they’d been
painted by an ancient ink master, a rough but powerful scrawl, compulsion
worked so intimately into the pattern that it drew her eyes and would not turn
them loose. She made an effort and turned to face him. “What’s that?” Even with
her back to the thing it was burned so deeply into her memory she saw the webbing
of darks and lights shadow-cast across his face and form. It made her dizzy and
uncertain.
He wasn’t looking at her, he was gazing at the thing with a
proprietorial satisfaction that told her he hadn’t the slightest idea what he
was seeing.
She glanced at it again, forced herself to look away. It was
disturbingly like the diadem—not its innocuous outside, but the way she’d seen
it from inside. Anyway, the closest any construct of this age had come to that
ancient trap. Kell. Worms eat his liver, why does he have to be such a
... god knows ... when he can make things like this? “Well?” she said.
“Have you heard of the Hunters of Wolff?”
“Who hasn’t?”
“My enemies sent them after me,” he said, a blend of triumph
and relish in his voice. “They didn’t know I have a patron greater than any
Hunter, a man who supports our cause without counting the cost in time or
goods. A Vryhh master designer made this, young Shadith, set it here as a trap
for my enemies. If I had to pay him for his time and work, it would have cost
me the total income of this world for a year. He gave it freely.”
“That’s his choice. You left me none. Me, I want to be
paid.”
He ignored that. “A trap for my enemies, young Shadith.
Look at it.”
“No. Makes me dizzy.”
He laughed, pleased by what he thought of as her weakness,
just one more proof, if he needed it, of the power of his mind. “Never mind,
then, look at this instead.” He put his hand on a bluish oval sensor, and a
viewscreen lit up at the back of the chamber. “There they are, the great and
indomitable Hunters of Wolff.” Two men hung in grayness, turning, writhing, horror
and pain graven into their faces. “There they hang, young Shadith, my enemies.
Hunters. In a nothing where they are neither dead nor alive, but fully aware of
what has happened to them. Where they listen to whispers from their most secret
fears. And it goes on and on, child, it never stops. That’s where anyone who
betrays me will find himself. Or herself. Do you understand?”
Shadith nodded, still staring at Grey. Alive. She shuddered,
but horror wasn’t a luxury she could afford right now. “Umm ... is that
permanent or could you bring them back? Say someone wanted to ransom them. Or
you maybe wanted to put them on trial to embarrass the Pajunggs, once you take
over here.”
“An interesting thought, child. You have a devious mind.
I’ll have to remember that.” He contemplated the two forms, smiling with quiet
satisfaction. “I could. Yes, I could. And I’m the only one who could. You might
think on that during the long nights, young Shadith. Right now, I feel better
with them in there where I know they won’t try spoiling my plans.” His hand on
her shoulder, he turned her to the door. “And there’s plenty of room for more
in there, that’s another thing to think about.” He touched the door open,
followed her out, took her back to her rooms.
Inside, he swung around one of the chairs from the table,
sat with his arms crossed along the back, facing the divan. He waved a muscular
arm. “Sit, child. Do you still want to bargain with me?”
She settled herself among the pillows. “I won’t do you much
good in that place, Ajin. And let me be candid. I will be even less use if you
try forcing me. I’m stubborn. You’re not a fool; don’t act one. Consider me a
mercenary and ply me with gold. Or the local equivalent. I don’t give a
mouthful of spit about your noble cause, but I do appreciate hard coin. Nice
cool rounds that rest heavy in the hand. That’s a cause I can put my heart
into. Slide a few my way and you’ll see fervor like you wouldn’t believe.”
“You’re young to be so cynical.”
“Not so young as I look; all species don’t mature at the
same rate.”
“Is there anything you believe in?”
“A full belly and a warm secure bed. That today will end and
tomorrow come whether I live to see it or not. I prefer being alive to being
dead, being rich to being poor. That’s about it.”
“You know what I want you to do?”
“I got a pretty good idea.”
“Can you?”
“All right. Honest again. I think so.”
“I won’t haggle. Conditional on the success of your performance
tomorrow, five kilos sweetamber, passage offworld, your word not to return with
the understanding that if you break it you join my pets in that pocket of
nowhere.”
“The price is right. Name the terms of service.”
“Five Avosinger years. You sing where, when and what I tell
you.”
“Three.”
“I told you, no haggling. Take it or leave it.”
“If I leave it?”
“Do I need to say it?”
“No. One small change, if I may. It’s for your benefit as
well as mine. Where and when is your business. What is
mine. Tell me the effect you want and let me decide how I’m going to get it.”
“That makes sense. You understand, I’ll have observers in
the audience.”
“I never expected anything different.”
“Deal?”
“Deal.” She smiled at him, knowing full well that even if
she did serve him faithfully and fervently for the next several years, all
she’d get out of it was a berth beside Grey. Honor was between men; breaking a
promise to a woman was as heinous a sin as farting in public. He got to his
feet. “Tomorrow, second hour after the noon meal,” he said. “That suit you?”
“Suits me fine.”
He nodded and left. After the door slid closed behind him,
she sat for some time without moving,—eyes shut, hands pressed hard on her
thighs, using breathing exercises to calm her mind and sort out the whirl of
joy and fear and hate and rage roaring through her. Finally she sighed and let
herself fall back among the cushions. Taggert, where the hell are you?
Grey’s alive, he’s really alive, but oh god, I’ve got to get him out of
there. Ticutt, poor old Ticutt, what a hell that must be for you. What am I
going to do? Never thought I’d miss witchface’s scolds, ah, Harskari, I wish
you were here, I’ll never tell you, I suppose, oh god, I wish you were here.
They were waiting for her, restless and close to hostile,
routed from card games and sleep, taken away from their screens and scanners,
their leave time, mercenaries that were the Ajin’s personal guard, the core of
his army, and the better part of the technicians that lived and worked in the
camouflaged buildings. Taken from whatever pleasure they were immersed in and
forced into the treacherous outer air to listen to some flat-chested halfling
sing at them.
The Ajin looked at them and smiled. “If you can get them,
you’re better than good, young Shadith. Look at them—won’t even sit together.”
He frowned. “Mercenaries. Tough men. Good fighters. But they’ll always retreat
just that fraction sooner than men fighting for something they believe in.
They’re here for coin, and coin is no good to a dead man.”
“My kind of people,” she murmured.
He was not amused. “Make them love Avosing,” he said. “Make
them cheer me. Make them ready to follow me into fire.”
“It won’t last.”
“You can do it?”
“I can but try.”
“Remember what you’re working for. Remember the five kilos
sweetamber.”
“I hear you.” She shifted the harp, got ready to play, then
lifted her head. “Don’t forget I told you. The effect wears off fast.”
“Play.”
“Linfy, you ready?”
“Yah, Shadow.”
She nudged him with her toe. “This one has to be good.”
“Gotcha.”
She sneaked a last glance at the Ajin and saw that he
believed in her enough to have filters in his nostrils and distorting plugs in
his ears. Cheer him, she thought, damned if I do, damned if I don’t. She
discarded what she’d planned and riffled through her stock of song patterns. All
right, sing a song of fierceness and glory, weave it around the Ajin, that
should do what he wants.
She began to play on the harp, the sound thin and swallowed
by the wind, then ripening into richness as Linfyar caught the mood and added
his whistle. She could feel the men resisting her, still resenting her,
determined to punish her with their indifference. She smiled to herself and
began the croon, the ancient words ringing out with all the power she could put
into them. And her sisters were finally there for her, spinning the dream out
of their ghostly substance as they made her voice theirs. She sang first
yearning for home, not the real home but the dream home men made for themselves
when they were far from that home in every way that counted, in years, miles, a
multiplicity of sins and sorrows. She watched the hard faces soften, shallow
eyes mist over with tears, not surprised by this; the mercenaries she’d known
had been easily sentimental when it cost them nothing. She teased them from
that sentimentality into dreams of glory and honor, all the things they wanted
to be or thought they were, fierce bold men of matchless skill, loyal to their
brothers and to a stem code no outsider could understand. A dream even the most
cynical and treacherous among them cherished deep in some comer of his
shriveled soul, though he knew in mind and gut that it had very little to do
with the real order of things. At first she’d been bothered by her complicity
in this manipulation of men for purposes other than pleasure, but by the time
she finished the croon and stilled the sound of the harp, she felt better about
what she was doing. At least, with this bunch. They lived quite comfortably
with the chasm between the ideals they professed and the things they did to
outsiders and each other.
The Ajin leaped onto the rock beside her and began a rousing
speech; after a few words he had them on their feet cheering. She stopped
listening and frowned at her hands. One thing to play on these men, but what
about the Avosingers? One time wouldn’t make that much difference—what if he
made her do it over and over again? I want out of this now. I can’t ...
But she had to. Until she could figure a way to break Grey and Ticutt loose,
she was stuck here, she had to compromise, had to do things that were hard to
live with. The Ajin squatted beside her, whispered, “Sing them quiet and reinforce
what we’ve done.”
We, she thought and felt her stomach curl into a knot. She
settled the harp and began a rousing song Swardheld had taught her, one he’d
picked up in his wandering since he’d acquired Quayle’s body; she had them
clapping with the beat and shouting out the chorus, then she cut it off and
sang a gentle, sentimental song of home, ending where she began, ignoring the
calls for more when she finished., sitting slumped and weary over her harp as
the Ajin sent them back to what they were doing before he’d ordered them out
here.
When they were gone, he came back to Shadith. “No more ‘conditional’—you’ve
shown me something I wouldn’t have believed. Would that work with any crowd,
one with women and children in it? More of a mix?”
She straightened, forced herself out of her gloom. “Once I
get the feel of the crowd, I think so.”
“Then you can’t just push button A and get result A.”
“No. People change. If you brought that bunch out again, I’d
have to sing something different. Slightly different. It’s nuances that make
the effect work. Or fail.”
He gazed at her skeptically. He didn’t want to believe her,
but he was out of his depth with music and didn’t know how to question what she
was telling him. She kept her face calm, smiling a little, tried to project
passivity and lack of interest in what he was thinking, though she read all too
clearly that he was a little afraid of her now and his dislike and distrust of
all women was working on that fear. I’d never last the whole five years even
if I meant to stay. When his fear gets too strong, I go into the trap with
Grey. Something to think about—how long have I got? How long before my
value is outweighed by the danger I represent?
He nodded, held out his hand. “Right. Come. There’s one more
thing we have to do, then you can get some rest. You look tired.”
“I am.” She let him pull her onto her feet, then followed
him back into the building, Linfyar trailing silent and forgotten behind them.
In the infirmary again. He stopped her beside the examining
table, stood looking thoughtfully down at her.
“Mess with my head and I can’t do that anymore.”
He nodded. “I believe you. Nuances.”
“Well?”
“You worry me. I haven’t got a handle on you.”
“The sweetamber. I stay bought.”
“Easy enough to say that here. Out there you might change
your mind.” He shook his head. “I don’t leave loose ends, Shadith. That’s why
I’m alive now and not bones in a crypt.” He made no apparent signal, but a
tangler wrapped around her. She heard Linfyar squeal with outrage and fear,
forgot her own fear as she screamed curses at the Ajin and fought to tear free
from the strangling bonds. A sting on her shoulder. Darkness knotted about her;
she heard a last whimper from Linfyar, then nothing ....
She woke lying on her stomach on the table, the Ajin looming
over her. He stepped back as she spat at him, so filled by rage she wasn’t
thinking, only reacting. Looking past her at someone on the other side of the
table. “Turn her loose.”
“She’s knotted up, ready to attack.”
He laughed. “That child? Am I so weak? Turn her loose.”
She felt the straps loosen over her back and legs, then fall
away. The interval had given her time to remember where she was and why she was
there. She sat up, winced as she felt a sharp twinge between her shoulder
blades. A tall thin man came round the table and held out her tunic. She pulled
it on with angry jerks, smoothed it down, then slipped off the table. “What did
you do to me?”
“Come over here.”
She followed him across the room to a tilted screen a meter
above her head. He touched a sensor and she saw herself stretched on her
stomach on the table. She saw the thin man make an incision in her back and
insert a small oval object among the bared muscles, sew it in place with a few
knots. He pulled the flap of skin over it and sewed that down, slathered on
some greasy liquid, covered it with a gauze pad held in place with adhesive
tape, an antique procedure that appalled her. The Ajin tapped the screen dark.
“Miniature thermit grenade,” he said, “tied to this.” He
held up a blob of back plastic threaded on a chain, let it dangle in front of
her a minute, then dropped the chain over his head. “You’re safe as long as you
stay less than a kilometer from me. And as long as I’m alive. If I’m killed
while that’s still in you, too bad. I won’t be worrying about anything or
anyone after I’m dead.”
She pressed her lips together, hugged her arms across her
chest.
He smiled lazily at her, calmly content with what he’d accomplished.
“It’ll come out as easy as it went in when your time’s up.”
“Oh, thanks,” she murmured. “How kind.”
His smile escalated into a chuckle. He was very pleased with
himself. “Come along, singer. You’ve had a hard day. Time to rest.”
She started after him, then remembered Linfyar. She stopped,
looked around. “Where’s Linfy?”
“What?” He stopped in the door, turned his head, impatience
limned in face and body.
“The boy. My companion. He was here. Where is he?”
“Oh. The freak. He started acting up, so I had him hauled
out. He’s back in your rooms.” He didn’t wait for an answer but strolled out,
knowing she’d follow.
She closed her hands into fists, looked around at the
carefully blank faces of the surgeon and his assistants. Then she followed him.
There was nothing else she could do.
Linfyar charged her and wrapped his arms about her in a desperate
hug, nearly squeezing her in half. She freed herself, laughing, surprised and
touched by the fervor of his greeting, glad the Ajin had delivered her to the
door and left without coming inside, though not without locking her in.
After he satisfied himself she was intact, Linfyar backed
off, still vibrating with a harrowing mix of emotions. “What’d he do, Shadow?
What’d he do?”
“Creep was making sure I have to stick close to him.” She
hesitated, uncertain about what to say; he’d better know, for it colored
everything she’d do from now on. She sighed and told him what the Ajin had done
to her.
He went very quiet. Then he screamed, a harsh tearing yell
whose only sense was in its sound, and started racing about the room in a
frenzy, banging himself against the walls, the floor, anything that got in his
way, shrieking obscenities and threats. She finally managed to catch and hold
him, shocked by the strength of his slight body and the fury churning in it; it
was as if all the things he’d let be done to him, all the tricks and little
betrayals he’d used to stay alive, all the humiliations he’d suffered had come
to a head at that moment, all that poison came spurting out of him. After a
short struggle, he collapsed against her, muffling soft wails against her
breasts, shaking all over, so hot he almost burned her arms as she held him tight
to her, rocked him gently, until the shaking and the whimpering stopped. She
held him awhile longer, held him until he pushed against her, wanting free.
When she saw his face she was startled in a way she hadn’t expected.
No tears. No signs left of his distress. Easy enough equation—no eyes meant no
tearducts. Obvious. But she’d never thought of it, accepting him with as little
understanding, almost, as the Ajin. She wrinkled her nose, watching him as he
dug among the pillows on the divan and settled himself, hysteria passing like a
summer storm, leaving little behind but a touch of weariness. He yawned,
stretched, wriggled about, then demanded more details about the insert. “Let me
feel it,” he said. “I want to feel it.”
Shadith stripped off her tunic and let him feel the bandage,
but stopped him quickly when he wanted to peel off the gauze and dig out the
bomb. “You’ll blow us both up, imp. Besides, it hurts. I don’t want you messing
with it.”
He darted around behind her and began feeling the bandage again.
“I can do it, I know I can.”
She scrambled away from him, caught up her tunic and pulled
it over her head. “Hai-ya, imp, calm down, will you? I mean it—you try anything
like that, and ka-boom, kid.”
“But I want to help, Shadow.”
“You are helping, Linfy.”
“But I mean ...” He broke off as she laid her hand gently on
his mouth.
She took the hand away. “I know, Linfy. It’s hard sitting
around waiting like this with nothing to do but fret.”
“What do you want me to do, Shadow?”
“Pay them no mind and sing when it’s time.” She switched
languages, sang the next words as if they were a snatch of song: “I’ve got a
plan, I think it can work, you know what I told you, he’s alive and he’s here.
But it’s gonna take time, my friend, and it’s gonna take thinking and it’s
gonna take remembering we can’t talk at all.” She added a few more sounds,
meaningless noises, and stopped singing.
Grinning, ears twitching, hands beating time on the pillows,
Linfyar sang back to her: “Oh yes, we’ll do it, we’ll fool them like silly fish,
oh yes, we’ll do it, I understand now.”
She held out her hand, smiled when he took it, said in
common Avosinger, “Besides, we’re getting good pay. Think about it, Linfy—five
kilos of sweetamber and our passage to wherever we choose. Not bad, eh? Better
than we usually get. So what’s a little glitch in the working conditions? Like
the man said, it’ll come out as easy as it went in.”
“Oh yeah,” Linfyar said; he slid off the divan, yawned and
groaned as he worked his small body. He stuck his tongue out at her, danced
away. “Not like that other time when we got stranded and if we didn’t stow away
on that half-wit’s half-dead ship we’d be there still.” He giggled and dived
past the velvet curtain into the bedroom.
Brows raised, she stared at the swaying curtain. Wonder
where he picked that up? Nine going on ninety, so help me. She yawned. Ai-iy,
I’m beat. Linfy’s right. Might as well sleep—there’s nothing else to do.
He was already asleep when she reached the bed, curled up in
a small furry tangle of legs and arms. She nudged him over, stretched out
beside him, lying on her stomach, her head on her arms. The anesthetic was
wearing off and the middle of her back felt like a sore tooth; as the thought
drifted through her mind, she giggled softly, drowsily. Odd place for a tooth.
The giggle made her back muscles move and stirred the wound, so she stopped
that and lay very still. A few breaths more and she was drifting into a dozing
dream state.
*Well, ancient child, you’ve landed yourself in a mess.*
*Old Po’, what you know?*
That you’ve got a bomb in your back. What are you going to
do about that?*
*Get rid of it when I’m ready to.*
*How?*
*Why don’t I leave that up to you? One of those spies you
were talking about.*
*When?*
*Not for a while yet. Don’t want to make our conquering hero
feel insecure.*
*You saw your friends.*
*You knew about that obscenity?*
*How could I not?*
*You know about Kell?*
“How could I not?* (feel of amusement) * Besides, you told
me about the Hunters and the Vryhh the last time we spoke.*
*My memory’s a bit hazy, but I don’t recall your saying anything
about any of this then.*
*You went to sleep on me.*
*Plenty of time before. Well, it’s done, no use wearing a
rut in my head. Why don’t you talk to me other times? When I’m awake.*
*Good question, oddling.*
*Which means you aren’t going to answer it.*
*You got it.*
*What I’m getting is rotten jokes.*
*Hard to do good ones in someone else’s language.*
*What are you?*
*What?*
*Should I say who?*
*It would be courteous of you to assume a who rather than a
what.*
*You’re the one invading a stranger’s head. Not me.*
*Not because you didn’t try.*
*One eensy time.*
*Mmm. Do you trust the Ajin to keep his word and take the
bomb out?*
*Course not. What I expect he’ll do, if he doesn’t put me in
that glop with Grey, he’ll take me someplace, Angachi maybe, and shove me out
when the flier’s over two three kilometers off the sand so he can see me
splatter when the bomb goes boom. Like he said, he’s a careful man.*
*Ah, you softsiders, you busy little murderers. You’ll be
the death of me, ah weh, you will. Unless, unless you’re part of me. Help me,
ancient child, help me live, help Perolat and Tjepa, Awas and all the rest,
stop this Sikin Ajin before he brings the bombs on us, the fire from the skies.
Did you know, only a dozen others can talk with me like this—the rest hear me
as siren song, a dream they long to find. Are there more like you out there, on
those worlds beyond my reach?* (sleepy chuckle) *Not hardly, Old Po’, but yes,
a lot of folks with gifts like mine.*
*You give me hope, ancient child, hope someday I can talk
with all of my soft sides. If I have the time. Give me the time, little
oddling.*
*Time for what? Are you any better than the Ajin, driving
these folk for your needs not theirs, playing with them, breeding them like
pets, sucking them into you?*
*The Ajin wants stasis, my oddling; what good would that do
me? The Ajin wants slaves worshiping him; what good would slaves do me?
Worship, what foolishness. I want friends to talk to, ancient child, my oddity.
Is Perolat a slave? Dihann? Awas? Any of them? Not likely. What I want is time
to bloom the latent powers budded in them. Make them more themselves, not
less.*
(sigh) *Don’t sell so hard, Old Po’. Me, I’ve got no choice.
But I sure wouldn’t turn down a bit of help now and then.*
(vast relief) *I like you, ancient child. Before you leave
perhaps you can find time to come visit me and we can talk without the pressure
of time and need.*
*I’d like that. And, hey, call me Shadow. Oddity and ancient
child, huh, I’m getting very tired of those.*
(warm amusement) *Go to sleep, little Shadow; I’ll find you
a surgeon, just call Old Po’ when you’re ready.*
Tikumul.
Grasslands stretching away on three sides, a low bank of
clouds beyond the low coast range, white fleece against the blue of a vast sky
soaring above a flat featureless land, a sky that filled the eyes and left
little space for the endless shimmer of the grass.
The k’shun in the center of the village.
Dust everywhere, no clovermoss to keep it down.
Families, single men, shifting restlessly about, talking in
small groups, killing time until the Ajin arrived. Children running about,
shouting, chasing each other. Trucks ringing the k’shun, women setting out
earthenware bowls on braced tailgates, chewy yellow gancha grain, meaty stews,
fowl bits fried in batter, crisp stir-fried vegetables, steaming pitchers of
spicy belas. Under the trucks, tubs of ice with kegs of beer, ale, and hard
cider.
The women working at the trucks took time off now and then
to gossip with friends they hadn’t seen face to face for months, only on the
com circuits, friends they wouldn’t see again for more months.
A hay wagon in the middle of the k’shun. Someone had hung a
painted tarp about the sides and set a truss of straw at one end. It waited.
The grasslanders waited with the same stolid patience.
The grasswinds blew golden whorls of pollen into the sky and
let it fall again, covering everything and everyone with a misting of yellow
that the sun turned to glittering gilt.
The Ajin arrived an hour late, greeted with shouts and
laughter and much excitement. As he passed through the crowd to the wagon,
mothers and fathers lifted their younger children to their shoulders so they
could see the man who dared to rebel against the government. Shadith walked
behind him with Linfyar trotting half a step ahead of her; she felt battered by
the exuberance around her and wondered how much they were committed to him and
how much he was simply entertainment, an excuse for this get-together. They
took the minor risk of coming to hear him—would they take the major risk of
fighting under his leadership? She began to understand more clearly the reason
he’d spent so much time and effort on her. She was there to find the fervor in
them and heat it up, to wake the anger in them and turn it to the Ajin’s
benefit. That thought was a sour taste in her mouth. She watched Linfyar scramble
up onto the wagon bed, followed him, stepping from hub to tire to flat. I
can’t do it ... ah, no, why bother trying to fool myself? I’m here. I’m
going to do what he tells me and hope I can finesse a little self-respect out
of this mess. A little forlornly she listened as the Ajin began speaking.
He was different out here, his weakness gilded over like the
farmers’ faces. He was a powerful speaker with an instinctive grasp of things
that reached deep and moved his listeners. He spoke to them of home and
children, of hard work, of savoring the fruits from that work. He spoke quietly
at first, but built to passion, and for that moment at least he believed fervently
in everything he said. Truth was raw in every word, and the grasslanders felt
it; she felt them responding. It was almost funny—the slickest thief on Pajungg
praising the virtues of hard work and meaning what he said with every fiber in
his body. Like the mercenaries, he knew what he knew, but exempted himself from
his strictures. She hunched her shoulders, hugged herself and felt miserable.
He roused that crowd until they were cheering, whistling,
stamping, then quieted them, introduced Shadith and brought her forward. She
settled herself on the straw and began playing the harp, starting quietly, as
the Ajin had. There was a spark of recognition somewhere in the crowd; one or
more had been in Dusta and heard her sing. Linfyar settled at her feet and
eased his whistle into the flow of the music. She began singing, using a
pattern poem she’d written during the week the Ajin gave her to let the
incision heal, a song like the other croons in the ancient Shallal tongue. She
was nervous; this was the first time she’d departed from memorized patterns,
and she didn’t know if it would work. For her soul’s sake, she was trying in a
subtle way to undercut what he was doing to these people.
Laughing with her, sharing her daring, her sisters danced
among the golden whorls of pollen. The new song brought them even more
intensely alive. She let herself relax and threw herself into the pattern,
singing love of land and home, love for everything that ran on that land and
flew in the air above it, love for their families and their neighbors, singing
love of freedom and need for self-respect, reinforcing everything in them that
made them sturdy, stubbornly independent, walking a tightrope as she struggled
to satisfy herself and confuse the Ajin about what she was doing. Yet when she
finished the pattern poem and saw the rapt faces, she was afraid of what she
had done; she had tried to insulate them against him, but there was nothing
precise about the patterns, not before and not now when she hadn’t sufficient
data to judge the responses. She settled back and watched the Ajin take them in
his hands and work them back into a frenzy with hatred of the Colonial
Authority and the fumbling ignorant homeworlders who tried to run Avosinger
lives, then he switched keys and painted a warm golden picture of life after
independence, finishing with a low-key call to follow him when the time was
right. His flier swooped down, hovered a handbreadth above the wagon bed until
the Ajin and the rest of his party were inside, then it darted away.
Half an hour later church enforcers descended on the
village, scuttled futilely about, irritating the folk there and winning more
converts to the Ajin’s cause than his speech and Shadith’s croon.
In the days that followed, they zigzagged across the
grasslands and the coastal savannas, touching down at town after small town.
Seteramb. Simbelas. Debaua-ben. Perkunta. Winds weep. Sulata. Tobermin.
Hatti-hti. Dubelas. Dabatang. Even Rhul and Rel just across the bay’s mouth from
Dusta. Stirring up the locals, skipping out ahead of angry and frustrated
enforcers, sometimes with hours to spare, sometimes in a desperate scramble
into the treetops where the enforcers feared to follow. Several times they
returned to base, where the Ajin saw reports of the rising anger in the
villages, the hardening opposition to the Colonial Authority. For the first
time he was keeping hold of more than a tiny core of supporters. He began
working harder, going farther and faster, pushing Shadith and Linfyar close to
exhaustion, riding a stronger and stronger high. And by some peculiar twist of
his psyche, he began seeing Shadith as a talisman, his good-luck charm. “You’re
my luck,” he told her and stroked her head, missing the flare of anger in her eyes.
“Soon, yes soon, the time comes soon.”
She was afraid he was right and wondered how she could reconcile
herself to her part in it. Toward the end of the third nineday, she’d had
enough of exhaustion and self-loathing. She waved her hands in his face,
showing him her battered fingertips. “No more,” she said. “Listen to me, I’m
croaking worse than an arthritic frog.”
He smiled at her, patted her hands. “Magic little hands.
Would a nineday do you, Fortune’s Child?”
“It would help.”
“It’s yours.” He chuckled. “I’ve work waiting for me that
will more than fill the time. And it would be as well to let the church calm
down. Don’t want them yelling for help from home.”
Shadith wandered unchecked through the base, speaking to no
one, only waving and passing on when a technician or a mercenary called her
name. She was Ajin’s luck; none of them would dare touch her or stop her from
going where she wanted. She stayed away from the Ajin as much as she could,
though he liked to have her near so he could touch her. Nothing sexual in it,
there was that small blessing, but she hated those careless pats and strokes. I’ll
have a dozen ulcers before I’m through, she thought, but kept a firm
hold on her temper and said nothing. A thumbstone, that’s what I am, a bunch
of worry-beads, a wela’s foot to rub for luck. Bad enough, but, ah, if only
he’d keep his fuckin mouth shut. He talks to me much more like I’m a half-witted
infant, I’m going to ... oh god, I don’t know. Damn. Damn. Damn. Grey’s so
close and there’s no way I can think of to get to him.
She thought up plan after plan, but nothing had a hope of
working. Time pressed in on her. She had only these nine days to do something;
after that he’d have her on campaign with him, then fighting his idiot war, and
no way she’d have enough free time to think of some way to break this
stalemate. Three out of the nine gone already, and her head felt like solid
bone. Ear to ear. Linfyar kept out of her way. Slept most of the time. That
irritated her, though she tried not to take her irritation out on him; it
wasn’t his fault she had a billiard ball for a head. Then there was the
ultimate frustration. She could see half a hundred lines of attack—if she had
still been inside the diadem and had the use of Aleytys’s body and her talents.
For a dozen years she’d helped Lee develop and hone those talents, and had had
the use of them when her knowledge and training were needed. No more. Never
again. I boasted about my wits and my long training in survival.
Hunh. Maybe the Ajin’s right to treat me like a feeble-minded twit. Fourteen
thousand years’ experience. Still, most of that was spent gathering dust in
that stinking RMoahl vault.
The Ajin could get Grey and Ticutt out.
No one else.
I don’t know what the trap is. He won’t talk about
that. (She’d tried getting him to show it to her, playing the pretty child
for him, but he’d only laughed at her and told her not to bother her little
head about such things; that day he was very close to dying, but she bit her
tongue and let him walk away.) It’s instinct. It has to be. He’s not that
smart. And I’m not that stupid. I’m not. And I’d feel it if he was suspicious.
He’s not. But he just slides away.
How can I make him bring them back? I can’t. No lever. Torture?
Doubt if I could do it enough to make him talk. And he wouldn’t give in to a
child no matter how much he hurt. To a girl child. Taggert. Worms eat your pea
brain, where are you? Drugs? Maybe Old Po’ could help with that. What do I
want? Something that would make him babble, get past his defenses. Damn, I’m no
biotech, even if I got enough blood and cells to run tests on. High up in the
shadow government on Pajungg, hunh, he’s probably protected every way possible
from folks trying to make him talk. Still, it’s a thought. And the only one
that has any chance of working.
By the time the fourth day neared its end she was ready to explode
from frustration. He wouldn’t let her out of his sight, even made her sleep in
his quarters. “Tomorrow’s an important day,” he said and passed a caressing
hand over her wild tangle of brown-gold curls, then touched her nose and pulled
an ear. “I want my luck close to me.”
She paced the room he put her in (“I’m locking you in,” he
said, “it’s for your protection, child of fortune, there are traps and alarms
all about this place, I don’t want you hurting yourself”); for one hour then
another she charged about that room trying to work off the jags of anger and
fear and frustration that wouldn’t let her relax enough to sleep. The more she
tried the angrier she got; the Po’ Annutj couldn’t talk to her when her mind
was tense, she had to be tired, and it was best when she was half asleep. But
she couldn’t sleep. When her body was exhausted, she lay down on the bed and
spent more hours staring at the ceiling she couldn’t see in the thick darkness
that came when she turned the lights out. Finally she crawled under the covers
and tried blanking out her mind. She concentrated fiercely on it, so fiercely
that before she knew it, she was fathoms deep in sleep.
A hand touched her shoulder, shook her gently. She came
swimming back to awareness, lay blinking up at the beautiful empty face of the
woman bending over her. One of the Ajin’s concubines; her brain was too stuffed
at the moment to remember the woman’s name. Didn’t matter. What mattered was
getting in touch with Old Po’. When she saw Shadith was awake, the woman bowed
slightly, then left.
Shadith pushed up, feeling as tired as she had when she lay
down last night. She scrubbed a hand across her face, rubbed at her eyes. A
breakfast tray on the bedtable. The smell of eggs and toast nauseated her. She
got up and stumbled to the fresher, splashed cold water on her face, then spent
some minutes staring numbly at her reflection in the mirror. Dark blotches
under her eyes, teeth like moldy tombstones. She inspected her tongue. Finest
thing in fur coats. At least with a hangover she’d have had some fun to remember,
but this ... With a groan filled with weariness and more than a little
self-pity, she pushed away from the basin and stumbled into the shower. With
hot water beating on her back and steam cleaning out her head she began to feel
like just maybe she wanted to live.
She rubbed herself dry and wandered back into the bedroom.
Her tunic and trousers were gone, in their place one of the soft white robes
the Ajin kept trying to make her wear. Which she kept tossing out, wearing her
own clothes instead. Wanted to make sure of me today, she thought. Prickheaded
idiot, I bet that’s why he kept me here. Making sure I’d have nothing else to wear
this once. She pulled on the robe, went and looked at herself in the door
mirror. Isn’t that too too sweet. She hesitated, thought about making a
fuss and insisting once again on her own clothes, but she simply didn’t have
the energy. She went back to the bedtable, took the covers off the food and
stood staring at it, then she sighed again, pulled up a low stool and began
eating her breakfast.
“Three men are coming to try selling me their goods. I want
you to tell me which of them I should trust. And which might be spies hired by
the Pajunggs or junk dealers who sell rotten wares.”
“What makes you think I’d
know?” She asked that with a cold knot tightening in her stomach.
“You’ve got a good ear for
sham and fakery—you saw through mine soon enough.”
“Well, why do you think I’d
tell you if I spotted something wrong? I’m not exactly fond of you, you know
that.”
“Ah, but you’re my luck, you
can’t help yourself. Besides”—he smiled that lazy complacent smile that always
made her want to bite him—“you have a strong interest in keeping me alive.”
“So I do.”
“Well then, keep your eyes
and ears busy, Fortune’s Child.” he wrapped one of her curls about a finger,
then slid it off again, a gesture that could have been intimate and
affectionate but wasn’t; she was the thumbstone again, the talisman whose touch
brought luck. She pulled away and settled herself on the hassock by his desk.
He laughed and tapped a
sensor. “Send Harmon in.” Harmon was a little wizened man, a few strands of
no-colored hair combed across a freckled dome. He fingered his sleeve cuffs
after he settled himself in the client chair. Plastic slivers in his cuffs with
compressed-air bulbs to spit them out. Some fairly potent poison on them, no
doubt. That went with the cold malice pouring out of him. He wouldn’t go
anywhere completely unarmed; he had to have his poison sting. He slipped a
flake from a slit in his cuff, tossed it onto the desk. “A summary of what I
can offer that is immediately available. Numbers and quality of all items are
indicated, along with the possibilities of resupply in case of need. More
exotic weapons are available on special order. They will, of course, take
longer to procure.”
Gunrunners, Shadith thought. My god, he’s ready to go. She
watched as the Ajin slipped the flake into a player and projected it against
the wall. A catalogue of hand weapons, energy and projectile. Tactical nuclear
weapons and delivery systems. Conventional explosives. More delivery systems.
An assortment of poisons, disease vectors, gases, mechanical traps, mines, implants
for personnel control, illustration of the use of a human bomb, tangler fields,
plasticuffs, a wearying list of similar items with an exhaustive description of
uses and capabilities. A final section with costs and delivery times.
The Ajin withdrew the flake
and set it on the desk in front of him. “Most impressive. I’ll let you have my
decision by tomorrow noon. If that’s agreeable?”
Harmon got to his feet. “No
later, if you please. You’ll understand I do not like to linger away from my
ship.” With a short jerky bow he left.
The Ajin picked up the flake,
ran his forefinger around the outside, a dreamy look on his face. He set it
down again, turned to Shadith. “Well?”
“What can I tell you that you
didn’t see for yourself?” She moved her shoulders impatiently. “A weasel.
Running just a bit scared. Probably won’t last much longer in this game. I’d
say his goods would be as advertised, though not prime quality of their kind,
and you might have trouble with resupply. Against that, you can probably get
more from him for a lower price than you could from a more secure dealer.
Depends on what you want.”
He laughed and ruffled her
hair. “Ajin’s luck,” he said, touched the sensor again. “Send in Sapato.”
Sapato was a genial golden
man, a deep smooth tan, laugh lines radiating from the corners of soft
chocolate-brown eyes. Easy laughter, the motions of gregarious fellowship, but
everything he said or did was just a little off. After he’d chatted with the
Ajin for a short while, she decided she didn’t need to be an empath to be
careful of this one. With a smile just a trifle too confident he tossed his
flake onto the desk and sat back as the Ajin inserted it in the player.
Shadith watched it for a few
beats, then went back to studying the man; there was something about him, she
couldn’t quite put her finger on it ... until she glanced from him to the Ajin
and back. She nodded to herself. Didn’t matter what she said, this one had lost
his sale. The two men were too much alike to tolerate each other. A lot of
repressed hostility behind those easy smiles. Sapato was a less successful
version of the Ajin, something he picked up as a subliminal message that left
him angry and nervous, though he worked hard to keep it from showing. And the
Ajin saw the man he might have been if circumstances had been only
slightly different; like the runner he wasn’t conscious of that. She watched
them both, nodded to herself. In a way Sapato was also a forecast of what the
future held for the Ajin if his revolution failed and he survived it. She
glanced at the screen, listened as a taped voice described the use of the
weapon pictured, a multishot rifle with exploding pellets, then presented
demonstrations of the rifle’s speed and accuracy and stopping power on
everything from a charging man to an angry changrain hombeast. Sapato’s was a
far more thorough and effective presentation than Harmon’s, showing the weapons
in action as well as describing their specs. Gunrunners had the most dangerous
profession in known space; instant death if any government caught them. No
trial, not even a farcical one. Worse if they were caught inside Company
territory. Profits were enormous, of course, but the field was a small one, its
members constantly changing as luck ran out for old ones and newcomers took
their places. It was a tribute to the rarity and worth of sweetamber that the
Ajin had attracted three of them and managed to get them bidding against each
other. She glanced at the screen, shuddered. A reenactment of an actual battle,
the fighters and eventual corpses provided by con tract-labor bosses, according
to the narration. I’d like to turn Lee loose on those, she thought, then
suppressed a sigh. Just like the runners, take one boss out and a dozen more
would pop up fighting to replace him.
The Ajin slipped the flake out and set it on the desk. “Most
impressive,” he said. “I’ll let you have my decision by tomorrow noon. If
that’s agreeable?”
Sapato got to his feet, waved a hand in an airy dismissing
gesture. “Take what time you need. You won’t find better than that.” He
sauntered out.
The Ajin scowled at the flake, pushed it away from him with
the tip of his finger. “Well?”
“Full of himself, isn’t he?”
“Very.”
“I’d say he runs a tight business, you’d get prime goods for
your coin, resupply’s probably fast and accurate. It’ll cost you top price and
maybe more. And he’ll have enemies. That could complicate everything, might
even have repercussions back here. A dangerous man, a little unstable, a very
bad enemy. Definitely what he says he is—that’s no Pajungg spy or tricky
swindler.”
“Right.” He touched the sensor. “Send in Colgar.”
Taggert! She caught back a gasp, concentrated on
breathing steadily, her eyes on the floor. So that’s where he’s been.
Setting up background. It’ll be deep and solid. She chanced another look
that made her wonder how she’d recognized him so swiftly. The thick head of
white hair was gone, his skull polished to a high gleam. He looked hard and
gray and mean, a statue cast from metacrete. Nothing left of the smiling man
who liked children and could sit for hours with his own, making up fantastic
tales to amuse them. This man was dangerous as an ancient blade quenched in the
blood of thousands. Dangerous to her too, though he didn’t know it. He’d have
to act fast, taking the Ajin out at the first opportunity. His time here was
strictly limited. Damn! If only I knew where and what that trap was, I could
warn him about it. Maybe he’ll be lucky. Hunh. His good luck is my bad. If
he killed the Ajin or hauled him off to Dusta, that meant a very messy and
altogether premature end to her tenure in this body, an appalling waste of
healthy flesh. While she was resigned to dying eventually as this body wore
out, she wanted to put that eventuality off as long as possible, meaning to celebrate
a lively old age. What a bind. She glanced at the projection. First cousin to
Sapato’s, same slick presentation, same blood and gore. Gah, Taggert, how
could you. Don’t be silly. Shadow, he’s doing his job. Time you did yours.
The flake finished its run; the Ajin slipped it from the
player and set it beside the other two. “Most impressive. I’ll let you have my
decision by noon tomorrow. If that’s agreeable?”
Colgar/Taggert got to his feet, gave the Ajin a grudging nod
and walked out with the lithe, noiseless stalk of a hunting cat.
The Ajin leaned back in his chair, smiling. “Well, Fortune’s
Child, what do you think of that one?”
“If you cut at him, he’d dull the knife. Got the charisma of
a rock, probably as efficient as they come, good merchandise, top price, no
bargaining, take his offer or leave it and goodbye to you. Not a man to like or
dislike, use him like a machine, won’t trick you, won’t give you a speck of
dust you don’t pay for. What else he is, god knows, I don’t.” She waited to see
how he’d react, feeling reasonably secure; he’d shown no signs before that he
was particularly adept at reading behind her smiles.
He played with the flakes, pushing them about. “Which one,
Child of Fortune, which one shall I buy from?”
She was suddenly confronted by temptation almost too powerful
to resist. Tell him to stay away from Taggert, send him away immediately,
save my life. No, I can’t. Might be a death sentence for him. God! She
gazed up at Ajin. Worms eat your miserable soul. Aloud, she said, “I can’t tell
you that.” She sucked in a long breath, let it explode out. “I won’t.”
He bent over and stroked her head. “Little luck ...” She
jerked away, got to her feet with some difficulty, cursing under her breath at
the narrow robe that hobbled her movements. “Look,” she said when she was
steady again, beyond the reach of his hand, “I’m a singer, that’s what I know.
I don’t know shit about that stuff.” She waved her hand at the desk and the
flakes.
He stiffened. “You will not use that kind of language, child.”
It was an order, his heavy teasing banished as he moved around the desk and
came to loom over him. “Do you hear me?”
She shivered, forced herself to lower her eyes. “I hear
you.”
He cupped his hand under her chin, lifted her head. He was
smiling again, the stern father banished. “Little luck, you have to be perfect,
don’t you see?” He drew the back of his hand along the side of her face, then
stroked the tip of his forefinger along her mouth. “You have a great destiny,
dreamsinger.” He took hold of her shoulders, turned her around, guided her to
the door. “Go back to your quarters, Fortune’s Child, and think about what I
said.”
She palmed her door open and went inside. Linfyar was curled
up on the divan, sleeping again. She sighed, ripped off the white robe and
threw it on the floor, strode through the bedroom into the fresher. With barely
controlled violence, she twisted on the water, yelped as she scalded her arm
and hastily adjusted the temperature. She stepped in, folded her arms on the
tiles, rested her forehead on them and let the water beat on her back. My
god. She banged her head against her arms. My god. What a mess. That
creep. That curreep. You have to be perfect. My god. Little luck. I’m going to
throw up if he doesn’t stop that. You have a destiny. Yeeuch. She shivered
all over, shut the water off and started soaping her body, scrubbing at herself
vigorously until she began to feel clean again. She rinsed the soap off, stood
letting the water beat down on her some more until the heat melted the tension
in her muscles and left her feeling limp. She rubbed herself dry, wrapped the
toweling robe about her, went into the bedroom and threw herself on the bed;
the hard night finally catching up with her, she drifted into a doze.
*Well, Shadow, interesting developments.*
*Hello, Old Po’. Tried to get through to you last night.*
*Beat yourself, didn’t you?*
*I know. Too well, I know. Listen, what I need from you,
it’s even more urgent now, I need something that’ll knock out the Ajin’s
defenses, make him babble, or maybe make him suggestible enough that he’ll do
what I tell him even though he knows it’s dangerous for him. Can you do that? I
mean, do you have some sort of juice that will do that?
*No, Shadow. I’m sorry, but ... no.*
*Shit. All that funny dust and there’s nothing like
what I want?*
*Shadow, remember, the Avosingers have been here only a few
hundred years. There’s been no systematic study of the plants here; the
foresters have stumbled on a few things, the grasslanders, but it’s been trial
and error and mostly error.* .
*But you ...*
*Me? I have capacity but almost no experience. Shadow, I
didn’t even know what writing was before you soft sides came. Have you any idea
how strange and marvelous and exciting I find that controlled and directed curiosity
of your kind? I’m sorry (sad and rueful self-mockery), come back in a few
hundred years and I’ll supply you with whatever you need. Now ... (sense of massive
shoulders shrugging)*
*Hunh. That about sinks my only plan. Taggert’s here.*
*Your friend.*
*One of them.*
*He’ll act against the Ajin.*
*Right.*
*Then you’d better get that thing out of your back.*
*I had thought of that. Yes.*
*Best not wait any longer than you have to. You’ve been fidgety
as a nervous flea the past few days. No one would take much notice if you went
wandering around the lake.*
“Haven’t before. Ummm. Might be a new problem. Ajin’s got
plans for me; they might include notions of keeping me pure. So to speak.*
*And he knows you’re virgin.*
*Huh?*
*He had the surgeon examine you after he tucked that
grenade in your back.*
*Creepy bastard. Eckh. If I bit him, I’d probably poison myself.
*
*No doubt. He’s quite pleased at how you keep yourself apart
from the other men here. One of the reasons you’ve had so much freedom this
time. You don’t have to worry about him for a while yet.*
*That’s comforting. All right. I can probably get loose and
stay loose for a while. What then?*
*There’s a sourberry vine by a stand of jemara trees on the
south side of the lake, near where it comes to a point. You brought in a spray
of its flowers two days ago.*
*Yes. I know the one you mean. Flowers didn’t last.* *Isn’t
a house plant. Inside the grove you’ll find a small glade, clovermoss growing
thick there. By the time you get there it should be mostly sunny, very
pleasant. Quite private. Parrak will be waiting for you.* *Parrak?* *He tended
you before.*
*Oh. Him. Good enough. He’ll do the cutting?*
*Yes. You can trust him—he trained as a doctor before he
came to me.*
*Nice to know. Ah, what a load off, getting that thing out
of me. But it means I go after the Ajin tonight, (shudder passing along her
body) You never said—have you any idea how that trap works?*
*None, I’m afraid. Shadow, be careful. I’ve gotten quite
fond of you and I’d hate to see you hurt.*
*That’s two of us. Umm. If everything falls apart and
Taggert and me, we have to run, swat anything that comes after us, will you?*
*With all I’ve got. You’d better start waking now, Shadow.*
*Yes. See you later, Old Po’.*
*Later ....*
She came out the door, sauntered casually past the squatting
guard and made her way to the water’s edge; she climbed over a flow of rocks,
circled another tumble of detritus, stopped as she heard voices. Manjestau and
the Ajin. She dropped onto a boulder and sat listening.
“... had to cut off the input; those vibrators scrambled
everything so badly the receptors were heating up, going to burn out if I left
them in circuit much longer. Luck knows what they’re getting up to in here.”
“I need them, Manjau, can’t rub them wrong until the bargain’s
made. Look, it’s only till tomorrow, then they’ll be gone. Once they’re settled
in for the night, put guards on the fliers and on the door to the guesthouse.
Only one way in or out, and no windows; that should keep them honest.”
“Talto’s in from Rhul, he says the Authority has put a squad
of enforcers in the Rumjat, says the pollen scares them into staying half drunk
and they’re starting to mess with the women, but you’d better talk with him
yourself, it might be worth taking a chance ....” Manjestau’s voice began to
fade as the two men walked off, heading back to the main building.
Shadith kicked at the boulder and grinned at the bright blue
water smooth and glassy as a mirror on this warm quiet afternoon. Clouds were
beginning to gather overhead, but as yet they blocked very little of the hot
glare of the sun. What a giggle. The only place in this whole damn base
where I can talk without the Ajin’s voyeurs watching me is the room of the man
who’s come to kill or kidnap him. Well, Old Po’. hope you’re enjoying that
little irony as much as I am. She slid off the rock and began rambling
toward southpoint.
Perrak spread a white cloth on the clovermoss and began setting
out his instruments. “Get that tunic off and stretch out on the moss.” He
bathed his hands in a liquid from a rubbery gourd, spread some on her back and
felt about with quick light touches of his fingertips. “Going to give you a
local,” he said. “The thing’s not in deep—I can feel the lump under the skin.
You must sleep on your stomach these days.”
“Umm.”
“This won’t hurt.” She felt a small sting, then for the
first time in days lost her awareness of the lump in her back. She almost went
to sleep as he worked, tension she hadn’t been aware of draining from her.
Death coming out of her body, control of her life coming into her own hands
once again. Never again, she thought, never again will I let someone
do something like this to me. Never. Never. Nev ... Perrak interrupted the
flow of thought. “It’s out. I’m going to put some stitches in your back. Don’t
worry about having them out later. There’s a plant in the forest that provides
a tough fiber I’ve used before in things like this. It’ll gradually be absorbed
into the body without marking it.” A low chuckle. “I’m sure you remember the
salve I used on you before. I’ve got a tin of it for you. Have your furry
friend put more on each morning.” He picked up a rectangle of flesh-colored
plastic and pressed it down on her back. “Don’t take a shower for a day or two.
This is going to hurt some when the local wears off; the salve will help a
little, but it won’t kill all the pain, you’ll just have to live with it until
you heal. If you can avoid it, don’t go jumping about much the next few
days—don’t want to tear the stitches loose. The wound’s in a nice place,
though. Not too many pulls there unless you try weight-lifting. Where’s your
tunic? Ah. Here. Put it on. Appreciate it if you amble about more before you go
in, give me time to get this stuff packed and hid and take myself somewhere
else. Mind?”
She smoothed the runic down, laughed as he helped her to her
feet. “Say hello to Old Po’. It’s a grand day for a walk, isn’t it? Did I thank
you, no, well I do. Believe me, I do.”
He looked at the bloody grenade resting in a shallow dish.
“Like to make him eat it.”
“A lovely thought. See you.” She waved and went into the
shadow under the trees, feeling light-headed and rubber-kneed and altogether
delighted with the day.
Around midnight.
Shadith woke from a heavy sleep, sat up, winced as the movement
pulled at the stitches Perrak had put in her back. She moved her shoulders. No
big problem. She knew the cut was there, but it wouldn’t slow her down if she
had to run or fight. She frowned at Linfyar, limply asleep beside her. Better
not get separated. If we have to run, I want no hostages left behind. She
shook him awake, whispered in his hometongue, “Get up and get dressed, Linfy,
we’re going visiting.”
She glanced at the night-forest image on the screen, sniffed
with contempt and slid off the bed; she was taking a chance that whoever was
supposed to be watching them had gotten so bored he didn’t bother anymore.
Wasn’t much of a chance; except under the Ajin’s eye, discipline in the base
was a joke. Besides, all the time she’d been here, she’d done nothing in these
rooms but eat and sleep, read and fool about with her harp. She dressed quickly
in the black sweater, vest and trousers Aleytys had found for her, checked the
pockets in the vest. Lockpicks, a couple of hollowed-out coins that fit together
and made a rapid-play probe for electronic locks, a long plastic blade with an
edge that could cut a thought in half, a harpstring with wooden grips at each
end. She found the tin of salve that Perrak had given her, slipped it in the
pocket with the garrote, dropped to her knees and pulled her backpack from
under the bed. Its stiffening ribs were thin but strong metal tubes about as
big around as her little finger. One was nothing but a tube with one end finely
threaded; two others came apart into compressed-air cylinders that screwed onto
the tube to make a simple but efficient airgun; the fourth held a dozen small
darts, crystallized sova that dissolved into the target’s flesh and put him to
sleep. It worked slowly, took ten to fifteen minutes to put the target under,
but it left no trace in the blood and the slow action meant that the victims of
the darts usually didn’t connect the tiny sting they made with what happened
later. She slid the tubes into the vest pockets constructed to hold them, got
to her feet and looked around. Unless her luck turned really sour, this was the
last time she’d see this room. She regretted having to leave the harp behind,
but a harp was a lot easier to replace than a friend or her life.
The guard at the entrance to the main building was taking a
leak against the wall and staring dreamily at nothing. They slipped into the
dark, overcast night without disturbing him and worked their way silently among
the rockfalls to the isolated guesthouse.
The guard at the guesthouse was more alert; if the runners
got out and made mischief, it was his skin and he knew it. He walked back and
forth in front of the door with a dedication that made her grimace. She moved
her head close to Linfyar’s ear, breathed, “Wait here; should be about time for
a guard change.” She pushed on his shoulder, went down with him. “Keep flat
till I get back. Might be a while.” She assembled the airgun, slipped in one of
the darts, then crawled carefully forward until she had a clear view of the
guard. With the patience of a cat, she watched him pace back and forth, back
and forth, dull steady trudging. Got the brains of a slug, tell him to do
it, he does it till you tell him go away. Ah for a nice imaginative man,
someone with intelligence enough to get bored, someone convinced of the
stupidity of all this. Time dragged by on feet as leaden as the guard’s. Back
and forth, back and forth.
Footsteps, quick and crisp, coming along the path. The
sentry lifted his rifle, waited.
“‘S me, Bigo, Jambi the goat, got to crawl out of a warm bed
and warmer arms to watch a rock grow.”
Bigo grunted and went stumping off.
Jambi shifted restlessly about. After a minute he shrugged,
yawned, started swinging his arms.
The airgun made the faintest chuff. A second later Jambi
winced, slapped at his neck; she was close enough to hear him curse the lake
midges. She smiled and settled herself to wait some more.
A soft brushing sound. Shadith lifted her head.
The guard lay crumpled in a heap in front of the door. She
scowled at him. First you bang me on the head, fool, now you haven’t the
sense to get out of my way. She eased another dart into the gun, went back
for Linfyar.
The corridor inside the guesthouse was dimly lit and deathly
quiet. She stopped at the first door, reached in and felt at the sleeper
inside. Harmon. Next door. Taggert. Awake and alert. She tapped the announcer.
A growly voice thick with sleep answered her. “Who is it and
what you want?”
She grinned into the shadows. “An old acquaintance come to
talk.”
The door slid open. Taggert bowed her in. “You show up in
the strangest places, young Shadow.” He looked past her, shut the door behind
Linfyar. “You and your friend.”
“Don’t we all. Got some things to tell you.”
“Thought you might.” He settled in one of the chairs, waved at
the divan.
“Grey and Ticutt are alive. I’ve seen them.”
“Ah.”
“It’s tricky. They’re hanging in some kind of bubble
universe, no way to get to them unless we get sucked in too.” She smiled at the
look on his face. “Don’t need to go that far. Ajin can get them back. He told
me. Just needs persuading.” She grimaced. “By a man. I could take the skin off
him a strip at a time and he wouldn’t say boo.”
“Any idea what the trap is?”
“He wouldn’t tell me, the slippery fool. Here’s a giggle, Tag—I’m
his talisman, his lucky charm. He rubs my head and expects the world to drop in
his lap.”
“From what I hear, it is.”
“He’s riding high, all right. Tag, can you move tonight?
Look, I’m pretty sure he’s going to buy from you; he was after me to pick his
supplier, but I wouldn’t then. I can let him push me into doing it in the
morning if you want, give you a way back in. So you don’t have to jump tonight,
but, Tag, I have to tell you, you’ll not get a better chance.”
He got to his feet, went into the bedroom, came out with a
slim metal case. “Take a look.” He touched his thumb to the lock, turned back
the top. “Figured I might have to ask some hard questions.”
She touched the woven metal cap, wiped her hand down her
side. “A psychprobe. They’re really getting the size down. I suppose it
operates from local power. Hunh. I thought Wei-Chu and Co kept those close to
home.”
“One of the advantages of being a runner, Shadow. You get access
to all sorts of interesting things.” He smiled. “And no need to explain them to
anyone. Salesman’s samples.”
“Devious. Hmmm. One of the Chus used something like that on
Aleytys once. A lot bigger, though. She blew it to blue smoke and cinders.”
“Ajin’s not Aleytys.”
“Not even close. Tonight then?”
“No use sitting around watching the walls erode.” He set a
tablet and a stylus on the table. “Give me some idea how this place is set up.”
She pulled a chair to the table, bent over the tablet.
“Landing pad here. They stick the fliers in under the trees. Camouflaged sheds
there and there. Manjestau, number two boy, he’s put guards on the sheds, but I
know about where they’ll be—we shouldn’t have any trouble with them. Here.
Here. And here. Won’t be changing again until dawn. Here’s where we are. Guard
here. Got him with the airgun and a sova dart. He’s out for at least four
hours. I snugged him against the wall with his rifle on his knees. He’ll be
more concerned with covering his ass when he wakes than he will be with what
he’s supposed to be guarding. Main building here, you were there this morning,
no, I suppose it was yesterday morning. Guard here. Have to take him out. If
he’s not already curled up sleeping. Here’s the command center. Got some
kreopine and detonators in those samples of yours? The more confusion we can
leave behind us ... right, I’m teaching a silvercoat to smell blood. That’s the
barracks, but we don’t have to worry about that, it’s shut off from the
offices, has a separate entrance. There are the technicians’ quarters. The
brothel. Down the other end, here, that’s where the mountain starts; so many
wormholes in it, it’d look like goat cheese if you cut it open. I don’t know
where half of them lead; I expect the Ajin doesn’t either. This is where he put
me. Around this twist and up a little higher, that’s where he has his cozy
little hole. No guards anywhere around there. He likes his privacy. During the
day he brings in one of his women to clean the place and cook for him ... umm.”
She tore the page off, pushed it along the table to him, began on the second.
“Kitchen here, study here. I’m the only one he’s ever taken in there, not even
Manjestau. He tells me his plans, strokes my head like I’m some fuckin dog—hah!
Forget that; I get a little hostile when I think about how ... Anyway, he likes
to boast of trapping two Wolff Hunters, I don’t know how many times he’s told
me he’d do the same to anyone who crossed him, and how he’s like brothers with
a Vryhh master designer who built all this for him and comes when he waggles a
finger. Where was I? Right. This is the room where his woman sleeps if he keeps
her overnight. Locks her in when he leaves her, I expect. Did it to me when I
stayed there. Sitting room. And that’s his bedroom. Nobody but him goes in
there. Ever. That’s where this gets sticky. The portal to the pocket universe
has got to be in there. Nowhere else it could be. One way or another, I’ve got
in just about everywhere. No sign of any funny business. Umm. I forgot. Here’s
where he goes when he wants to see Grey and Ticutt or show them off as sorry
warnings to anyone who might want to jump him. Ordinary sort of lock on the
door. I got in without any fuss.”
“Risky.”
She put the stylus down, rubbed at the back of her neck.
“Not really, Tag. Technicians were used to me snooping about, Ajin thought I
was just being female, so that was covered. A chance I might get sucked in, but
I figured it wasn’t likely. Seems to me either he keeps the portal’s trigger on
him, say it’s small enough, or like I said, it’s set up in his bedroom.” She
leaned over and tapped the sketch in front of him. “The machinery that works
the thing, that’s here.” She straightened. “I thought about lifting kreopine or
something like it from the arsenal ... um ... forgot about that, that’s around
on the other side of the lake. Anyway, I thought about blowing up that bit of
engineering, but there was too much chance that would strand Grey and Ticutt
where they were. Which doesn’t look like a very good place to spend eternity.
Or whatever.” She tapped her fingers on the table. “Our problem tonight is
getting at the Ajin. I don’t feel happy about going into that bedroom.” She
shivered, scratched at the back of her hand, the side of her neck. “Makes my
skin itch.”
She sat frowning at the spidery sketches with the scrawled
words dotted over them; after a minute he smoothed a big hand over his polished
head, pushed his chair back and went into the bedroom. She heard him moving
about in there, heard some scrapes and squeals, a thump or two, then he pushed
past the drape carrying two heavy cases. He set them on the table, thumbed the
locks open and lifted the lids. “Come take a look.”
What a relief it was just to be herself without the
complications of sex and rigid gender roles. With a rush of pleasure and
gratitude, she went to stand beside him, looking down at the neatly racked weapons
in the cases, rifles of several sorts, handguns, a dozen dark small grenades.
Understanding finally just how cramping the Ajin’s mindset had been. Except for
a few times when he was particularly obtuse and offensive she’d gotten so used
to being annoyed it was like having a low-grade fever. As with a fever, she
made allowances and lived at a lower rate, forgetting what being healthy felt
like. Until Taggert blew in and blew away her blinders, reminding her what it
was to be treated as a reasoning and responsible adult.
Taggert unclipped a fat-butted laser pistol. “Waste of time,
all this. Didn’t even make me open the cases.” He twisted the gun apart. A
shell. With fiber packing. He stripped the packing away, set the items on the
table beside the case. “Tanglers. Shock grenades. Sleep gas.” He popped one of
the rifles, cleaned off two thick rods about the length of his forearm. “Extensible
claws. Hunch to bring them paid off. I like that bedroom about as much as you.”
He lifted one of the rods, tapped the end. It expanded in half a breath until
it was stretching across the room. Another tap and curved claws spread from the
end. He clicked them against the door, twisted the end. The pole collapsed as
rapidly as it’d expanded. “What do you think? Stand in the doorway, don’t set
foot in that room, toss in one of the sleep-gas canisters, pull the covers off
him with a claw, make sure of him with a tangler, use a couple of the claws to
haul him out of there. Doesn’t matter if we damage him a bit—Pajunggs won’t
mind. Me either, as long as he can still talk.” His pale blue eyes narrowed to
slits, his long, off-center nose twitched, he grinned at her.
“I think you’re absolutely wonderful, oh man.” Giggling, she
dropped into a deep curtsy. “I worship at your shrine.”
“Snip.”
“Hush, you.” She looked at the case. “What else you got in
there?”
With a rumbling chuckle, big hands moving swiftly and
surely, he assembled a multiphasic probe and lockpick, assorted alarm sensors
and overrides. The Compleat Burglar Kit guaranteed to get the possessor into
most places he had no business being.
Taggert glanced at the readout cupped in his palm, thrust
out his other hand. Shadith stopped Linfyar, shifted her grip on the
psychprobe’s case, watched Taggert dig out one of the overrides. He set the
squat cylinder in the center of the tunnel, eased back and stood waiting, his
eyes on the readout.
Linfyar curled up his ears and pressed himself against
Shadith.
Taggert began pacing back and forth, watching the light bead
hop about on the face of the readout. After a tense few minutes, he walked back
to Shadith. “Too much,” he muttered. “Ajin’s got that hole covered like an
arkoutch expecting a cold winter.
“What’s the problem?”
“Field isn’t wide enough.”
“Two?”
“Can’t. They’d cancel. Maybe we’d better.”
“Cancel? No.” She went silent, frowning at the cylinder,
trying to remember all she knew about that sort of override. Pulsed subsonics.
Supposed to overwhelm the alarm, confuse it, keep it too occupied with what was
happening to its own circuits to notice the sound patterns it was supposed to
listen for. Obsolete alarm system, too easily countered. Couldn’t be Kell’s
work. Must be something the Ajin had bought for himself. Got cheated too. Or
maybe not. “All this stone?”
“Could be.”
“Mmm. Linfy.”
He stirred against her.
“I know it hurts your ears, but do you think you can listen
to that thing, then make the same kind of pulses, only louder? Well, louder to
you—we don’t hear them.”
His mouth shifted through many shapes, his ears unfurled a little.
He moved few steps away from her and stood poised like a deer on the verge of
flight. He stood like that, ears full out, body quivering, one moment, two.
Then he flashed a grin at her. He nodded, opened his mouth. His throat began to
quiver like a bird in full song.
Taggert glanced at the bead, lifted his brows, then nodded
to Shadith and started walking down the tunnel.
Shadith followed slowly, supporting Linfyar with one arm,
clutching the probe case with the other, slowly slowly along the dark tunnel
diving into the mountain’s rock, moist with seepage, thick with cold musty
smells, slowly slowly, every scrape a thunder in her ears, slowly slowly,
Linfyar straining, shaking, draining himself into the pulsing subsonics, slowly
slowly, Taggert stalking ahead of them, his eyes on the light bead, laying
another override, Linfyar struggling to hold the match, fitting himself into
the pulses as subtly as he fit his whistles into her croons.
The door to the Ajin’s room. Ponderous. Laminated plasmeta.
Complex internal lock. Shadith stretched out her mind-rider senses, felt for
the Ajin, found him, a ghostly touch, just enough to recognize him. As far as
she could tell (he was at the limit of her perceptions), he was sleeping, sunk
in the slough between dream states. Taggert knelt by the lock, examined its
external parts without touching them, then eased the electronic lockpick over
it. He sat on his heels and waited.
The pick flashed through families of settings.
Linfyar’s fingers dug into Shadith’s arm, and he sagged
heavily against her, but he kept the pulses surging out of his reedy throat.
The door started sliding open.
Taggert snatched off his pick and stepped inside, alert,
ready to counter anything set to jump him, though Shadith had told him the Ajin
didn’t trust any of his men enough to leave them loose in those rooms,
preferring to guard himself with more incorruptible mechanicals.
Shadith half-lifted Linfyar into the room as the door began
sliding shut. When she let go, he coughed and dropped in a heap; she set the
probe case down, knelt beside him, rested his head and shoulders against her
thigh. “You all right?”
He massaged his throat, managed a weak grin, amplified it
with a nod that made a soft brushing sound on the black cloth of her trousers.
He didn’t try to speak. She could feel his fierce pride. They wouldn’t be here
without him, and he knew it.
Shadith tapped his nose. “Yeah, you’re doing fine, eh, imp?”
He nodded again, pushed away from her, using her shoulder as
a prop to help him get back on his feet. With a little shake of his body he
brushed away fatigue and stood with ears twitching, waiting for what happened
next with the exuberant anticipation he maintained in spite of all hardship.
She laughed softly, got to her feet. “Wait here if you want,
Linfy. This shouldn’t take long now.”
He produced a faint scornful hiss and moved to join Taggert,
who’d been prowling about the room watching the bead dance in his readout. When
Shadith came over to him he murmured, “Dampers in the wall. No hand weapons
will work in here.” He smiled at her, his pale blue eyes shining with a gentle
amusement. “Just as well we didn’t bring any. He always leave the lights on?”
“Not in the bedrooms, but out here?” She shrugged. “I
suppose. The one night I spent here, I didn’t go exploring.”
“Right. Which way to the bedroom?” Shadith started past him,
but he caught her shoulder, stopped her. “Together. In case of surprises.”
With Taggert keeping a close eye on the readout and Linfyar
coming close behind, Shadith led them to the door into the Ajin’s bedroom. No
alarms, more dampers in the walls, some weapons, but they lay quiet; whatever
the three of them were doing, it wasn’t enough to trip their triggers. Behind
his locked door the Ajin slept the sleep of the just man he knew himself to be,
serenely trusting in the gadgets he’d installed to ensure his security,
undisturbed by what was happening around him. Shadith found she was looking
forward to seeing his consternation when he discovered he’d been trapped by the
girl child he thought he had cowed; she savored every moment of his quiet
sleep. When Taggert knelt before the lock, she stepped aside laughing to
herself; if he was the Ajin, he wouldn’t trust her with such delicate work, but
because he was Tag, she knew he was only indulging himself in one of his
favorite activities, teasing a lock open, not thinking of her at all. At
least the Ajin’s paranoia isn’t rubbing off on me.
He stood, touched the latch and waited until the door was completely
open, then moved the readout along the posts and lintel, being careful not to
move into the doorspace. No reaction. He slipped the readout into his pocket,
turned to Shadith, raised his brows. She shook her head vigorously, moved to
stand beside him looking into the bedroom.
It was dark but the darkness was not complete. Glow strips
stuck low on the walls provided a bluish light that was sufficient to show
shapes without detail. The Ajin lay on his back, his arms flung out, his chest
bare, blankets pushed into a crumpled roll across his waist. He was profoundly
asleep. Taggert handed her one of the extensible claws, took out a sleep-gas
canister and the tangler, transferred the tangler to his left hand, lobbed the
canister onto the bed, tensing as it passed through the doorway. Nothing
happened. The canister plopped down beside the Ajin’s shoulder and popped open.
Taggert slapped Shadith’s shoulder lightly, grinned at her. She squeezed his
hand, then listened to the Ajin’s mind, felt the rhythms change from sleep into
unconsciousness. Taggert held up the tangler. She nodded. Holding her breath
but not as tense as she’d been before he’d thrown the canister, she pointed the
rod at the Ajin, touched the trigger. The rod shivered against her hand; the
end shot out and out until the knob was bouncing lightly up and down above the
sleeper’s stomach. She twisted the base. The claws sprang out, opening like the
segments of an orange. Working with extreme care, she lowered them until they
were nearly touching the blanket; she eased the needle points into the blanket,
twisted the claws shut and drew the blanket off the bed, moving slowly because
she didn’t want to touch his flesh, she didn’t know why, but she listened to
the impulses and kept the pole clear of him. She opened the claw, dropped the blanket
on the floor, retracted the pole.
“What’s that around his neck?” Taggert’s voice was low, but
he’d given up whispering.
“Nothing to do with the trap. At least I think it isn’t.
It’s supposed to be a control; he planted a thermit grenade in my back that he
said would explode if I went farther than a kilometer from him. Or he died. No
problem. Friend of mine cut the grenade out yesterday.”
“Nice timing.”
“Meant to be.”
“I don’t see anything else on him. Not even a ring. He was
wearing one yesterday.”
“On the table by the bed, I think—at least, there’s
something small there.”
“Careless, if that’s it.”
“Maybe.”
“Better get on with the fishing.” He transferred the tangler
to his right hand, narrowed his eyes, swung his arm a few times to get the
feel, then tossed the tangler onto the Ajin’s chest. The sticky translucent
threads whipped out and bound themselves around his arms, his neck, winding
down around his pelvis and legs. Taggert sighed and took out another extensible
claw. “You get a wrist, I’ll go for an ankle, then we reel him in.”
Shadith nodded. The feeling came again stronger than before.
Don’t touch. She ignored it, extended the pole and positioned the claw
over the Ajin’s wrist. A click of Taggert’s tongue told her he was ready. She
lowered her claw as he lowered his, edged the prongs under and over the wrist,
then twisted them tight, the needle points sinking into the Ajin’s flesh.
“Right.” The word was an explosion in her ear. “Pull!”
Together she and Taggert began hauling the unconscious man along
the bed.
There was an odd humming in her ears. The faint blue light
seemed to waver. One moment she could feel the butt of the pole pressed against
her hand, then there was nothing. Nothing there. No light either. She shouted
and could not hear her voice. A horrible sucking feeling. Then she was drifting
in grayness, nothing but grayness, no smells, nothing to touch, no sounds not
even the sounds of her own body, nothing ....
Cobarzh On Askalor
_files/image010.jpg)
Vrithian
WITNESS [5]
A CLERK IN THE CUSTOMS HOUSE IN COBARZH (A COLONY OF CABOZH)
My name is Peixen. I work in the customs office. I have a
very important position with five men under my direction. Yes, it is a very
interesting position, there are always things happening about me, my hand is on
the nerves of government, I am like a doctor protecting the body of the state,
keeping out of it those things that will make the body ill. Oh thank you, I
have always thought I could be a writer if I had the time, a poet even. You
should hear the stories that come through my office. Why, just a day ago—ah-ah,
no, my friend, that is a secret, you can’t entice it from me; I am loyal to the
Governor and too sharp for you. Oh, that’s all right. Why yes, I’ll have
another. A quechax this time, since you’re buying. What’s the strangest thing
I’ve seen? Well, let me think. Yes, I can tell this one. There was this turezxh
from somewhere way back in the forest, didn’t even know what shoes were, hadn’t
had a bath since he was hatched, yes, a native, one of the orpetzh that infest this
place, with a head thicker than his stink. Get them all the time, just make
trouble, no more than beasts mat can walk about like men, that’s what they are,
don’t see why the government doesn’t treat them like beasts, sterilize the
males and set the females and the others to doing something useful, no, no,
that’s not a criticism of the government, certainly not, who am I to tell the
exalted what to do, they must have their reasons, no no, never say I criticize.
Oh yes, thank you, I will have another. A warm apology for sure. Another
quechax, crizhao, and don’t take so long about h this time or I’ll complain to
your employer. Where was I? Oh, yes, thank you. This turezxh. He wanted to go
to Fospor, at least that was what we got out of him. He had this big wicker
basket and he didn’t want to open it. In the end we had to call the guard to
hold him. Turned out in the basket was the biggest snake you ever saw. Big
around as a man’s thigh, and heavy! You wouldn’t believe how heavy that obresh
was, all wrapped up in coils until it filled the whole basket. Well, I ask him
why is he taking that thing to Fospor and he says a cousin of his has a circus
there and wants the snake to make the Fospri gape. That sounds reasonable
enough, doesn’t it? But I didn’t like all the fuss he made about opening the
basket. I said to myself he’s hiding something. So I made him take the creature
out of the basket and stretch it on the floor. You would have laughed to see
how nervous my underclerks were, backing away, looking over the counter with
just their eyes showing. Even the guards backed off. I’m sure they felt foolish
a bit later, because the snake was sleepy as a raw recruit back from his first
leave. Thank you. I think the comparison is very apt. There was nothing in the
basket but some leaves and grasses, I had them emptied onto the floor and went
through them with a stick, you never can tell what vermin these dirty turezxh
will bring with them. Nothing there. Even the captain of the guards wanted to
let the mushhead go with his torpid beast, but I smelled something wrong. Yes,
I’ve got a good nose for that sort of thing. There was a lump about halfway
along the obresh’s body. I ask the turezxh about the lump, he says it was a
porzao he fed the snake so it would stay quiet. And that seems reasonable,
doesn’t it? Wouldn’t you believe that? No, you’re right. I didn’t. My nose was
telling me there was something there, something more. The guard captain
wouldn’t touch the obrezh, but I take his sword and slice open the snake and
there’s this porzao inside all right, and inside the porzao there’s a sack with
fifteen emeralds in it, big enough to choke a man. Well, the turezxh he tried
to run off when he saw that, but the guards jumped him. I did it to serve my
country, it was simply my duty, you know, but to show you what splendid types
they are who rule us, they awarded me a bonus and an extra day off when they
didn’t have to do any such thing. The turezxh? The governor was more merciful
than I would have been, just cut his thieving hands off and let him go find a
living how he could. Just goes to show I was right a while back, should clean
them all out of the jungle, get rid of them, worthless beasts. Some softheads
say those beasts, nothings like that, they got rights, some of those traitors
in the ‘versity, sitting there with their books and salaries paid by the
government, paid out of taxes folk like you and me pay, traitors got no
gratitude, no feel for real life, looking down their stupid noses at an honest
working man who could be a poet or writer if he wanted to, anytime he wanted
to, if he could take the time from his work, and it’s important work too,
keeping out the filth that would corrupt sosh ... sozheety ... you know. Better
poet even so than them, a man, you bet, not a gutlesh ol’ woman .... Got to go?
Sh ... sorry ‘bout that ... good company’s h ... hard to fin’ ... Tempestao ble
... blesh you ‘n y’r f mly.
Vrithian
action on the periphery [4]
Dum Ymori. One hour from the dome. Silent, deserted, a
mourning wind blowing dead leaves into broken dead houses. Looted houses. Muri
said it, wolves on two legs prowling. Amaiki tried to grieve for the lost life
of the Dum as she guided the skimsled past the empty houses, but all she could
feel now was her own fear. The last time she reached to touch her mate-meld,
she’d sensed anger and frustration and alarm overlaying their welcome-warmth;
then she thought that blend was aimed at Hyaroll, now she realized how blind
she’d been; this was what they’d been living with, this desolation and danger.
That they’d waited as long as they had was a measure of their love for her. She
felt shamed by how lightly she’d held that love, by the anger she’d felt when
they went off without her. Sitting comfortable and well fed—and safe—in
Hyaroll’s dome, she hadn’t the least notion what was happening outside, what
the little less than two years she’d been away had done to the uplands and the
people living there.
She left Ymori behind and moved off the produce road into
the fields, but there were too many fences; they slowed her badly and she was
afraid of getting lost. She dug into the toolkit and found the graft tool,
adjusted the cutting beam until it reached out a body length from her, then she
took the sled back to the road, the tool ready for use if anything came after
her.
The rest of the day she rode stiffly alert along the gradual
sweep of the road, circling wide about two more deserted villages, seeing no
living thing except a few raptors gliding high overhead. Death and desolation.
How could he let it happen? It must have been coming for years; all this
couldn’t happen overnight. Could it? She could remember water getting short,
the planted acreage shrinking gradually, year by year, but the families were
still comfortable, everyone had enough to eat and hope that next year would be
better. The rains came, though they were shorter and lighter each year. Life
had diminished a little when the lot chose her to be one of the fifteen
servers, but with a bit of care there was enough to go around for everyone,
sometimes more than enough.
The day darkened swiftly once the sun went down; because of
her late start she’d planned to travel all night, but after she’d gone off the
road twice and nearly wrecked the sled, she crept along until she came to an
abandoned farm. Afraid to sleep in the house, since that seemed the most
obvious point of attack, she found an empty shed (it smelled like a tedo cote,
though her flashlight showed her walls and floor swept carefully clean; not a
wisp of straw or a tangle of fleece left behind) whose walls were tight enough
to keep any light from getting out and betraying her presence. She ate a cold
meal, heated water for tea on the portastove, sat in the doorway sipping at the
tea, watching a waxing Araxos swim across the faint glow of the skymist. The
difficulty, she thought, doesn’t lie in the amount of light, but in how
it is focused. I hadn’t noticed before how much I depend on shadows to judge
distances. She wrapped her hands about the cup, the warmth sliding down her
arms to join the warmth in her belly. In the distance one edinga howled at the
moon, then others joined the chorus. She shivered and gulped at the tea,
emptying the cup, desperately glad she needn’t force herself farther into that
half-dark with its deceptive shadows. She felt her alone-ness in her bones and
wanted to howl like the edinga; she’d never been so alone in her life, not
ever; even in the dome there was a naish to curl against when the ache of
apartness bit too deep. No naish here. If I stay like this any longer, I
certainly will start howling. She pushed onto her feet, feeling every ache
in every weary muscle of her body. I wonder if Hyaroll will bother
looking for me ... who’s to remind him ... not the odd folk. She patted the
earth with her foot, a reverent caress. Earth mother bless them and what
they are trying. She pulled the door shut; there was no catch on the
inside, but she pushed the sled across the opening and scattered metal tools
along it so she’d have their rattle to warn her if something or someone tried
to get inside. In the light of the flash she snapped her sleep-pad out of its
roll, wound a quilt around her and lay down clutching the graft tool. With
weary patience she disciplined her whirling thoughts, and once the quilt warmed
the chill out of her aching body, she dropped into a heavy sleep.
She woke shortly after dawn. The morning air was cold and
dry, though the sun was beginning to warm the chill away. Something brushed
against the boards near her head, there were other furtive rustles and
slithers; she lay stiff and frightened until she identified the noises: tikin,
ti-besh, mikimiki and others, small furry nibblers pattering about the business
of finding food. As she rolled out of the quilt she saw a flash of pale green,
a jiji darting under the skimsled, tail thrashing, skinny hairless legs working
frantically. A moment later it backed out with a thimble-sized t’ki pup in its
mouth. Holding the pup down with its slim, six-fingered forepaws, ignoring
Amaiki with the casual indifference she remembered with affection from the
jejin in her childhood home, it proceeded to swallow the pup, then grunted
itself in a comfortable sprawl on the end of the sleep-pad, a film descending
over its golden eyes as it began digesting its breakfast. Chuckling, her loneliness
temporarily assuaged, she tugged an end of the quilt from under the jiji,
laughed aloud at its squealing protest; she rolled and strapped the quilt,
packed the scattered tools away, turned the cock on one of the water cans to
draw water for her morning tea. Jejin had lived on Conoch’hi farms from the
time Hyaroll stopped the clans’ wandering, moving unhindered through the houses
and barns, the cotes and sheds, shaping nests in haystacks and cornbins, eating
insect eggs and larvae, chasing snakes away, keeping down the population of
various sorts of nibblers. Amaiki hummed contentedly as she checked the
monitors on the batteries. Left the dome midafternoon, quit traveling two hours
after sundown. She was surprised to see how little of the power she’d used, pleased
too. Still humming, she moved the sled aside and pulled the door open. Bright
cloudless sky. I might as well stay here awhile, she told herself
and felt an immediate relief. The thought of plunging into that unknown ahead
turned her stomach sour; she liked things to stay the way she knew them;
strangeness intimidated her. It was pleasant to have a viable excuse for
clinging to familiar things and places. She eased the sled outside and unfolded
the collector films.
After breakfast, she checked the monitors, sighed when she
saw the charging almost complete. There was still a hint of chill in the air,
so she tied on her cloak, then went wandering about the stead. A barn built of
wood and fieldstone, several corrals, a stripped kitchen garden where even the
weedgrass was dry and dead. She lifted the well cap, dropped a pebble down; it
rattled against the sides of the hole and stopped with a dull thud. Not even
mud left. The house was locked up, but the shutters had been pulled off and the
windows were smashed; what she could see of the inside was a mess. The wolves
had been here, cleaned out anything worth taking, spoiled the rest. In the
whole long span of the Conoch’hi life weave, the only thing that came close to
this sort of destruction was the hints and fragments of stories before the coming
of the undying, stories about raids by shevorate galaphorze, hairy tribes
living around Lake Serzhair. Maybe, after these thousands of years of peace and
safety, they were raiding again. No stink of galaphorze about, but this place
had been empty for a long time, and scent didn’t linger in air as dry as this.
Might have been Conoch’hi gone wild. It happened. She didn’t like to think
about that. Everything she knew was breaking apart.
She went back to the shed, her enjoyment of the morning
gone. Instead of the comforting familiarity she’d felt before, there was
nightmare, an edge of ugliness to everything about her. She eased an annoyed
jiji off the sleep-pad, rolled it into a tight cylinder and tied it to the
sled; she folded up the collector and guided it back into its slot, checked the
packs and cubbies, the water cans, made sure the taps were covered. From the
look of things the water would have to last her until she reached the river.
She took a last look around, saw the marks of her sandals in the dust. The wind
was beginning to rise, coming out of the southwest with that low keening-howl
she knew too well, the zimral that leached the soul and maddened the brain;
that hot persistent wind would blow away those tracks before night fell, she
knew that, but leaving them behind, there for anyone to see who came in time,
was like leaving bits of herself lying about. She found a long-stemmed weed and
went about the stead brushing away old footmarks and new; when she reached the
sled she stepped up on it, brushed out the last mark, broke the weed into small
bits and cast them away. She pulled her cloak around her, laced the front
together, drew the hood up and snapped the dust veil in place, then started the
sled and left the farm without looking back.
All that long day she saw no one, though she passed more
abandoned steads, more empty villages. Overhead a few raptors rode the zimral,
but any tedo or other large animals left in the uplands were hiding from the
wind and the sun. After all the millennia the Conoch’hi had lived here and
turned the soil and left, their bones to make it richer, the uplands were going
back to wilderness, dusty, dry and secret. She passed orchards where dead
leaves rattled before the zimral and dead limbs creaked a dirge for the dying
of the land. She passed vineyards where dead vines were a calligraphy of
despair. The uplands had come to life on the rains Hyaroll brought to them,
stayed alive because he continued to bring them, year on year, steady as the
ticking of a clock, year on year without fail, the centuries piling up, one,
two, three, ten, fifty, one hundred centuries of winter rains coming without
fail; what wonder no one thought to study the natural seasons of the land or
build reservoirs against the time when the rains might fail to come. Who could
remember what the natural seasons were? Not even the life weave went back that
far. We planted what we wanted and forced the land to shape itself to our
needs. What had been would always be. As long as the undying lived in the dome
there would be peace and plenty. Sometimes we railed against the hardness of
his hand when he took our sons, our daughters and most of all our naidisa, but
no one dreamed of doing without him. We were pampered pets, Hyaroll’s jejin,
charming in our way and useful, and like the jejin on that farm, we are left to
make our own lives when he nears the end of his. At least the jejin have
instinct to guide them. What do we have? The land takes back its original face.
So fast it takes it back. And we fly away from it as fast, hunting for another
master to make all right again. It was a bitter lesson she read that day in
the writing of dead vines and the rattle of dead leaves.
Two hours before sundown she came across another abandoned
steading. She stopped the sled and checked the monitors. Down by two-thirds.
She looked around. Clouds low on the horizon ahead, just a few ravelings but
more than she’d seen since she left the dome. The grass was sun-dried and
parched but not dead yet, and the orchard stretching away behind the house had
a faint flush of green to it; the tree limbs bent with a lively spring before
the push of the zimral; more than guess or elapsed time, these things told her
she was nearing the edge of the high plateau. Graft tool ready in her hand,
senses as alert as she could force them, she sent the sled humming down the
driveway toward the house.
She felt the emptiness of the place before she came to a
stop. Heavy shutters were closed over the windows in front, three rows of them;
the house was asleep, it wouldn’t wake till the line families came back. She
started the sled around to the back, easing it along at a creep. No sign of a
break-in; the wolves never left such neatness behind them. That made her
nervous; they hadn’t come here yet—was tonight the night they hit? There were
several barns and a silo. Well built and well maintained. The Conoch’hi who
held this land worked hard and were proud of their home and loved their land.
She looked about and mourned with them the need to leave what generations of
their line had built. It hurt because she was cone and sister to all Conoch’hi
and because it reminded her all too sharply of the home her meld and line had
left to wind and sun and filthy wolves who’d break and mess what they could not
use. She looked about, wondering what shelter would be best. Not the house.
Silo? No; if they rode kedoa—which seemed likely, not many sleds or trucks left
up here—they’d be looking for any bits of grain left. Sheds? No. They’d try
every door looking for what they could find. A shed was too confining, and even
if she could latch it somehow from the inside, the fact that it was closed
against them would make them all the more eager to get inside. She took the sled
over to the largest of the barns; it had double doors on the upper story, a
heavy beam jutting out from the roofpeak and a hayfork swinging from a pulley
screwed into that beam. She stepped off the sled, hesitated, then unfolded the
film. Be safest to go to ground immediately, but the batteries needed charging,
and for that the sled had to be out in the sunlight. She looked around. Trees
and a pair of small neat sheds between the barn and the house; it wasn’t
exactly hidden, but someone would have to get within a few meters of it before
he saw it. She pushed up the hook on the smallest of the barn’s doors and went
inside, leaving the door open so she’d have light enough to see what the inside
was like.
More light came in through airholes high up the sides of the
loft. The side where she walked was paved with heavy stone flags, worn down by
centuries of tedo hooves. Milking barn? Probably not; more likely shelter
during winter storms. The air had a dry musty smell, old hay and worms in the
wood; dust motes danced in the light beams streaming down from high above. She
pushed apart one of the stanchions, stepped into the old stone manger, stepped
over the lip onto ancient flooring that creaked and groaned under her sandal
soles. The center of the barn was a huge empty space with a thin scatter of rotting
straw spread out over the floorboards. As she’d hoped, the loft floor came
about two thirds of the way to the front of the barn, then stopped. She could
jump the sled into the loft and leave no sign anyone was about. If the loft
floor was strong enough to hold the weight. She walked under it and scowled up
into the dim twilight; the floorbeams looked strong enough to hold a flier. She
came back from under the floor, went quickly up the ladder and swung out onto the
planks. Stamping and hopping about, suddenly more cheerful because of the sheer
silliness of what she was doing, she started dancing with the sunbeams, kicking
up swirls of strawdust, until she slipped and landed on her coccyx with a thud
that jarred her brain. “Motherlost planks are hard enough,” she said. Groaning
and rubbing at her tailbone, she got to her feet and managed to reach the barn
floor without falling, though the tumble she’d taken had shaken her more than
she liked to admit. “What now? Take a look around, I suppose, then fix some
supper. It’s a cold meal for you tonight, Ammi-sim, no hot tea to chase away
the sorrows of the soul.”
She stopped by the sled and checked the monitors. The line
had crept up a little, how much was hard to tell, but there was still a long
way to go before the batteries were topped off. She did a few loosening-up
exercises, but they didn’t help much; she was bone-sore and getting sorer by
the minute. Stupid. Stupid. Stupid. Motherlife, I’d love to soak in a hot
tub for hours and hours and hours. Maybe I can fiddle some sort of hot compress
with the portastove. Maybe all this is useless pother, no looter coming, no
danger closing in on me. Can’t take the chance, Ammi-sim, you know that. The
least they’d do would be take away the sled. With it you’re reasonably sure to
make Shim Shupat, without it who knows ....
There was an elaborate garden behind the house; generations
of love had gone into its shaping. A small stream had run through it, falling
down a miniature mountain vista to murmur in meandering calm through a series
of pools where waterflowers had grown. Fed from the well, water had been pumped
into a mossy wooden tank; a small weir could be opened to let a constant stream
run down the tiny exquisite vista to the stream and the pools and finally
around to the troughs where the tedo herds had drunk. No water now, of course;
the waterflowers were gone, other flowerbeds had been dug up and replaced by
mossy rocks in a desperate attempt to hold on to some semblance of garden; most
of the shrubbery had been cut back or removed, a few ancient trees remained,
their leaves a withered green, small and dying. They held out as long as they
could. How much they must have loved this place. She was suddenly happy she
hadn’t seen her home again. I have good memories, she thought, better
memories than any of my line can have; I am blessed. Her own life-strip was
packed away in the sled, but she knotted the thought into her mind for working
later into the weave.
In that gray light that comes when most of dawn’s colors
have faded, she woke from a chaotic, terrifying nightmare, filled with jagged
flashes of fire and dark, with blood and mangled flesh, with screams and
crashes, with shouts and curses, opened her eyes into that cold grayness,
unsure whether she was awake or still dreaming, listened to sounds that seemed
to belong to that nightmare: high, hooting squeals from kedoa, shouted curses
and whinnying laughter, thudding scuffles of split hooves, shriek and squeal of
tortured wood, dull thumps, crash of breaking glass. As the sounds clarified
and she oriented herself, she began to understand what she was hearing. The
looters had come.
She drew her legs up, pulled the quilt more tightly about
her. Sour fluid flooded her mouth; she swallowed several times, drew her tongue
across dry lips as she sat listening to the sounds the wolf pack made as they
swarmed over the stead. Even worse than the fear that paralyzed her was the
sick understanding that these ravaging beasts were Conoch’hi, unmelded manai. Motherlost
females like me. Oh-ah, how? How? What happened to them that they could do such
things? The big doors rolled open suddenly; she shuddered and clutched at
the graft tool, sat without moving, almost without breathing.
“Mother-cursed leeches, they licked the place clean.” A
hoarse wild voice that brought her rudimentary crest erect and flooded her with
an equally wild hate that appalled her when she realized what was happening. As
fast as the land, she thought, we go back to what we were. Ah-weh, ah
mother of us all, help me.
“What about the loft, Napann? Want me to take a look?” A
lighter, easier voice, not so troubling, but the words brought Amaiki onto her
knees, the graft tool lifted and ready.
“No, anything worthwhile was in the house. This place is too
open—look at it, not even fresh straw left.” Footsteps going away. “Some good
stuff in the cellar, we’ll feast today ...” The voice faded with the steps,
though the mana kept on talking.
Amaiki sank back on her heels. After a minute she pulled the
quilt up around her, clutched it tight to her, but the shivering that shook
her, jammed her teeth together, blurred her sight, it wouldn’t go away. The air
warmed about her, grew brighter as the sun rose higher, but the chill still
lingered in her bones. A simple thing. Just follow her meld to the coast.
Getting out of the dome would be the hard part, the rest ... with a little
caution and the proper preparation, how hard could it be? Wild manai ... how
soon before they begin raiding for naidisa and tokon? Everything she knew and
cherished was falling apart around her, even what she knew of herself. Rotting,
she thought, dead and rotting. Mother-of-all, what will happen to us? She
sat without moving for a timeless time—until her stomach growled and reminded
her to eat. Throughout that interminable day she heard the wolf pack moving
about. They tore a shed down and set it on fire to roast something. The sickly
stench of half-burned meat drifted into the barn; she would not think about
what it might be. As the sun sank lower and lower, she began to wonder if they
meant to settle in for several days. She couldn’t survive that; already her
bladder had proved a problem. She’d pushed a pile of straw ends into one of the
back corners of the loft and voided on it, but her urine was thick from two
days of keeping her water intake to a minimum. The smell of it was strong and
lingering; anyone with half a nose coming into the barn would know someone was
there. If they ever settled down and went to sleep ... no no no, they’d have
sentries out, they’d chase her down, the sled wasn’t fast enough to outrun even
a runty kedoa. Go away, she thought, go away, this is too close to
the lowland, it’s not safe to sleep here, go go go. She loathed being
afraid, being filthy and stinking; her sense of her own worth shredded away as
the hours passed until she despised herself as much as she did those beasts
outside, but most of all she was terrified by that fierce animal part of
herself that was drawn to them. It was not only fear she felt that time the
mana Napann spoke. Go away, leave me alone, let me get on unhindered, go.
The interminable day finally ended. She voided her bladder
once more and was sick with the stench of herself and terrified someone would
come into the barn and smell it. The wolf pack rioted about some more, making
noises that sounded as if they were celebrating the moonrise, then grew quiet
as the night deepened. In the long silence that followed, Amaiki wrestled with
herself, finding in that silence and the night’s shadowed darkness the strength
to face her needs and fears, her new and unwelcome knowledge of herself. This
is what I am, she thought into the darkness, these possibilities are
truly within me; in the years of my life so far I have not had to find out so
much about myself as I have discovered this single day. Tonight (and probably
only tonight) I have a choice of paths. I can forget what I have seen within me
and confine myself to that Amaiki who was gentle and loving, with—all
right, admit it—a sometimes acid tongue, and a true gift for shaping and
growing the green world. I can be that woman but not limited to her; I can put
out other possibilities as a plant puts out sports, living with the good in me
and using the bad to energize me. I can join this pack, run free and wild
beneath the moons, answering to no one but my pack sisters, sloughing all those
responsibilities that tug and twist at me and will not let me alone.
Part of the choice was easy. The Amaiki of two days ago was
dead; it would be like living in a rotting corpse if she tried going back to
that one and denying what had happened. But the choice between the other two
was far more difficult. Now—especially now—the call of the pack was terrible
and powerful; even in the stillness she could hear their shouts and careless
laughter, and feel the communion they shared.
In the end—she laughed at herself when she realized just
what had made her choice for her, had to stuff the corner of the quilt in her
mouth to muffle that delivering laughter—she put the pack aside also. No noble
gesture, no reaching toward the rational, civilized self, no urge to duty
convinced her. It was the stink of her body and her yearning for a hot soapy
bath. She detested being dirty; her mothers used to tease her about her
compulsion to neatness, saying even her diapers had been models of decorum. No
long hot baths if she went running under the moons, no crisp fresh tabards
every day, no cool clean sheets to slide between each night. As things were
right now, it might be days, even as long as a year, before she had all those
things again, but she would one day, that she promised herself. She’d never
ever have them if she joined the pack. Toward dawn, at peace with herself
again, she smiled into the thick darkness and thought of Reran’s sardonic
laughter when she told them all of this night, of Muri’s vocal bewilderment, Betaki’s
understanding smiles, Kimpri’s snorts and Se-Passhi pressed warm and pliant
against her. Her breath came more quickly and raggedly; how could she ever
entertain the thought of never seeing them again? It was all this mess around
her, she was light-headed from not eating or drinking enough, that had to
explain it, but she was honest enough now to admit to herself that there was a
part of her that wanted everything the pack offered, that resented the others
of the meld even though she loved them all and was bound to them with ties she
would not and could not break.
In the gray light of early morning the wolf pack rode away
from the farm without discovering Amaiki or even suspecting she was there. She
stayed hidden a full hour after the last sounds faded, then jumped the sled
down and set it in the sun so the batteries could finish charging. She got out
a clean tabard, then used some of her too rapidly diminishing water supply to
scrub her body clean. She climbed to the top pole of the nearest corral fence
and sat there letting the sun scour away the last feeling of contamination as
it dried her body.
By the time she’d fixed a hearty breakfast and downed it
with several cups of herb tea, she was feeling better than she had in days, not
only prepared, but relishing the challenge of dealing with the greedy, thievish
and altogether detestable lowlanders between her and Shim Shupat.
Two days later, with no more shocks to her system, but her
opinion of lowlanders thoroughly confirmed, she hummed into the port city, sold
the skimsled to a dealer as furtive as he was miserly, and went looking for the
hall of the line-mothers and news of her kin.
Cobarzh On Askalor
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Vrithian
WITNESS [6]
SHAMAN ON THE STREET (ROSARO/COBARZH)
My name is Heomchi Kangavie, but folk here call me Aveyish.
Ah yes, that’s local street talk, means “old man” and is suitable enough; as
you see I am antique, not to say rotting in place. My father’s name was
Kugapolush-je Omudda-popakush, which is a mouthful in any language and means,
more or less, he who sees around corners no one else knows is there. A
mouthful, yes. When the Ujihadda—a salimsaram word for the hurry-hurry folk—came
down the river in their ships with roars in them like that in the belly of a
hungry akko-yo, he moved out of the mawlihip, that is to say out of his house
and away from wife and other, and sat beneath the Uyaggung tree. To most of the
salimsaram he said nothing, but to me he said: Before you are a man, Heomchi,
the Kwichi-jai will go away from the forest, the Kwichi-jai will go away from
the salimsaram. And after he said that, he said nothing at all. He sat for a
day, a night, a day, and sometime in the second night he died. It is so. I
swear it. He saw what I would be, what the forest would be, and would have
nothing to do with any of that. He couldn’t stop it coming so he stopped
himself.
Me? Oh, awhile I was a student in a church school, then the
daughters sent me across the sea to the hurry-hurry men’s homeplace. Awhile I
was a student in the university at Inchacobesh outside the capital. Awhile I
was a teacher. Awhile I was an author and a lion in the parlors, and the
Cabozhi damazelas used to stroke my scales and marvel that a beast could talk
like a man and so entertainingly too. But I had no kwi. I was like a tree
flood-ripped from the soil that fed me. I went one way wrong, another way
wrong, and turn and turn and it was all gone and I was a fat old fool dangling
from the fringes of the hurry-hurry world.
So with one thing and another, here I am.
It is to laugh, my friend, it is the world’s joke. The hurry
men stomped the kwi out of the forest, and turned their back on the devastation
they made, and kwi came to dance in the streets with the poor folk, hurry-hurry
poor and salimsaram poor and other sorts of poor. The Ujihadda chased it from
the forest and it ran here to live beneath their noses.
That’s one thing.
The Ujihadda came with their storm-god boasting his dominion,
I bow my empty head to him and go out of the forest. Now I sit here and see the
undying flying about their mountain, the undying who make small the storm-god
who makes nothing of hurry-hurry waitings and all their hurry this way, hurry
that. I see the Ujihadda crawl to lick the toes of the undying and remember a
forest boy not-quite-crawling to lick hurry-hurry toes and I see the Kwichi-jai
dance in the street come rain-blow or bluest sky.
The undying? They walk like gods among the peoples of all
lands. They even look like people, but they never change, never age; when they
come strolling among us they put on light like a body suit and who touches them
dies. They never bother to warn, what do they care? They care for nothing, we
entertain them by our needs and our striving, then they go away again. They
prick the bubble of hurry-hurry pride. You see? You see? And kwi lives in the
street and laughs.
Vrithian
action on the primary line
Shareem slept restlessly on her pallet in the flier, woke
with an aching head, soreness in her hips and shoulders where her weight had
pushed them against the thinly padded floor, a stuffy nose from the dust. Muzzy
and irritable, annoyed with Aleytys and Kell, she groaned up onto her knees,
massaged her temples, patted a yawn, then crawled out of the flier feeling
grubby and melancholy and wholly disgruntled with the fate that had brought her
to this pass. She straightened and looked around. “Whatever you did, we’re
still in one piece.” She stretched, ran her hands through her hair, rubbed bare
feet on the cool wiry grass. “Lee,” she called out. “Hoop hoop hoop, hey Lee,
breakfast time. Up, my girl, your mama’s hungry.”
The mewls of the sea birds, the distant mutter of the sea,
the drip of water in the fountains, that was all she heard. The house was
silent, the gardens quiet, nothing moving, shadows stark in the early sun.
Patches of frost lingered in the long shadows, and there was the smell of frost
to come in the air, a hint that the short summer was nearing its end. Shareem
pulled her toe across the powdery white, feeling the chill of it bite into her
flesh, watching the black line her toe drew lengthen and fade as the frost
patch faded. Abruptly she felt thrust back into time, into the primitive time
where nothing changed with any permanence, where everything recurred again and
again. In the seasons of her life it was Kell’s time again, a time of flight
and terror, but—or so she told herself and tried to believe it—the old theme
was turned on its back, this time Kell would be the driven one. She stared at
the silent house, suddenly frightened. “Lee,” she called, urgency in her voice.
‘“Lee!’’
No answer. Shareem fought panic. Dead? Fled? What ... She
forced herself to walk slowly toward the house. Slow and calm, she
thought, slow and calm, slow and calm, but she was breathing hard and
almost running by the time she reached the door. She tore it open, slammed it
back against the stone, but she didn’t care, she didn’t care if the noise
triggered the menace, she didn’t care about anything but Aleytys. In the middle
of the great hall she scrambled to a stop and screamed her daughter’s name.
No answer but the echoes.
She tried to control her terror, tried to think. Told
herself: Remember, you can precipitate the thing you want to avoid, you can
kill Aleytys, kill yourself, reduce house and hold to slag, let Kell win. She
hugged her arms across her breasts and tried to calm herself, dragging up the
ways she’d learned to shunt aside uncomfortable thoughts and shaming memories.
“Ikanom,” she called, her voice still ragged but settling into control.
“Ikanom.”
The android came from the back of the house, moving into the
hall with that liquid grace that all of Synkatta’s designs possessed. “You
desire, anassa?”
She cleared her throat. “Where is Aleytys?”
Ikanom went quiet, consulting the kephalos, at first
listening calmly, then turning its head so the planes of its face made a pattern
of puzzlement, then it faced Shareem once more. “It is difficult to say,
anassa. Within the dome, yes, somewhere, but precisely where is not at all
clear.”
Shareem swallowed, fought to control her fear. “Is she
alive?”
Ikanom went still. Shareem’s throat closed up. Its face made
a pattern of puzzlement again. “Kephalos is confused, anassa.”
Shareem waited, unable to speak.
“Aleytys archira is living but dormant.”
Shareem swallowed again, stiffened back and knees. “It is certain?”
“It is certain, anassa.”
“Then find her, Ikanom, bring her to me. It’s important.
It’s more important than anything kephalos has ever done. Find her. Bring her
to me.” She looked around. “Here. I think here. When I see her I’ll know better
what to do.”
“Kephalos searches, anassa. Would you care to eat while you
wait?”
She stared at the shifting planes of the android’s face. How
can I eat? She pressed her hand against her middle. I should. I
don’t know, yes I’d better. “Yes,” she said. “Bring me ... bring me an
omelet, toast ... um ... some shalla juice ... um ... a pot of cha. Over
there.” A small table and two chairs, in a deep alcove whose windows opened
onto one of the gardens.
“In twenty minutes, anassa. If that suits you?”
“It suits.” ,
Ikanom left. She walked with slow careful steps across the
elaborate parquetry of the hall floor and sat in one of the chairs, her back to
the hall so she needn’t see how empty it was, her shakes changing into
numbness, fear and anger blunting into passivity. If Aleytys failed last night,
this afternoon’s missile could trigger the tumor at the house’s heart. Or
tomorrow’s. Or a thousand other things. She didn’t care. Couldn’t care. All she
wanted was for this torment to be over, one way or another. If Kell walked in
the next moment with a knife to cut her throat, she’d lift her chin to make his
task easier.
Time dragged, each second an eternity. A few eternities
later one of the house serviteurs rolled up and began setting out her meal.
She stared at the food. At first her stomach rebelled, but
she forced herself to nibble at a piece of toast and sip at the fruit juice. In
a few minutes her revulsion vanished, and her hunger returned so fiercely she
had to discipline herself into eating more slowly.
Cradled by the quiet of the great hall, the hot meal scaring
away the worst of her anxieties, she began to recover her composure and back
away from that lethargy that was a kind of suicide. She sat a little longer at
the table, watching the day brighten outside, expecting to hear at any moment
that the kephalos had located Aleytys. After half an hour had slipped away, she
got to her feet and began wandering through the house, room to room, kicking
along the flow spaces, into closets and storage niches, prying into chests, not
admitting to herself she was searching for her daughter’s comatose body, just
looking. She poked her nose into every crazy corner of that crazy house and
found nothing. I’ll get close enough to her, I’ll feel her, I know I
will, she told herself; whether that was true or not, she felt nothing.
Midafternoon. She was in the bookroom passing a window when
she saw the flare of light that meant another missile had been destroyed. She
glanced at her ringchron. Right on time. Eyes closed, she listened. Nothing
happened. Either it wasn’t supposed to or Aleytys had pulled the thing’s teeth.
She dropped into the chair by the desk and sat with her head propped on her
hands, thinking. One place left. And I can’t get in there. Househeart. Tumor
on the heart. Yes.
Charged with sudden irrational certainty, she pushed way
from the desk and ran from the room. Along the flow-way, down and down, through
the cellars, across the vast manufactury with its shrouded machines and stores
of raw materials, past the undeployed maze, down down until she bounced off the
resilient membrane that protected the househeart. She pressed herself against
it; she could see the edge of the control chair—empty—a portion of the floor
and console, nothing there. For the first time she felt that Aleytys was truly
somewhere nearby; maybe it was imagination, maybe it was her need convincing
her to feel what she so desperately wanted to feel, but she knew Aleytys
was there. She had to be there. Nowhere else she could be.
Shareem pushed harder against the membrane. “Kephalos,” she
cried, “have you looked within yourself? She is here. I know she is.”
No response. In a way that was comforting; as long as
Aleytys was alive, kephalos’s programming held and it would permit no one else
into the house heart, would speak directly to no one but Aleytys. Calmed by the
continuing silence, Shareem backed away from the membrane and began the long
climb up to the living spaces. Shareem was pacing restlessly about the great
hall when Ikanom brought Aleytys up from the cellars. She heard the sound of
the door sliding, swung around, caught her breath when she saw what the android
held cradled in his arms. She hurried to meet him, touched her daughter’s
clammy skin, made a soft distressed sound when she saw her daughter’s drawn
face. “Infirmary,” she said, then rushed ahead of him along the flow spaces to
the bubble room.
Ikanom laid Aleytys on the broad couch of the autodoc and
stepped back, stood by the door watching as Shareem stripped the stained,
filthy clothing off Aleytys, stared in shock at the skeletal body, clicked her
tongue at the raw groove in her daughter’s left wrist. “You look like the tail
end of a seven-year famine,” she said aloud. Whatever had happened during the
night, it had cost Aleytys more than a third of her body weight. Her hair was
coming out in handfuls, her skin was roughened and reddened, large patches of
dead skin peeled up and fell away at the lightest touch. Her pulse was strong
but frighteningly slow; the readouts said she was sunk in a sleep so profound
it approached coma. Over her shoulder, Shareem said, “Ikanom, a sponge and warm
water.”
While the android was gone, Shareem looked more closely at
the readouts. Extreme fatigue and starvation. No serious cell damage. What
there was, Aleytys was repairing as she slept. The autodoc was monitoring this
and didn’t seem inclined to interfere. It recommended frequent small meals of
thick broth and hot sweetened fruit juices. Hold Aleytys up and let the
swallowing reflex take the food down, don’t try to wake her. Keep her clean and
comfortable. Nothing else was necessary. She’d wake when she was ready. The
autodoc was almost purring as it contemplated its mistress. In spite of her
distress, Shareem was amused by the proprietorial pride the machine took in
Aleytys. Autodocs were like that. Even Kell’s. She shivered, jumped as Ikanom
spoke softly behind her. “The water, anassa.” She took the basin and sponge and
began washing the dead skin and dirt from her daughter’s
skin.
* * *
The days that followed were the happiest in all her long
life. In this strange way she had her baby back, a very large baby to be sure,
but that didn’t matter. She washed and fed the sleeping woman, cuddled her,
sang to her, told her stories she didn’t hear, gave rein to the deep and
possessive joy she took in her daughter. When Aleytys woke, their relationship
would return to what it was before, a slowly developing friendship and
undemanding affection, but for now she had her baby back, and she reveled in
it.
The missiles kept coming, day after day, six seven eight
nine. Same time, right on schedule. And right on schedule kephalos destroyed
them. Aleytys stirred and almost woke each time, but Shareem took her
daughter’s hand and held it tight, singing softly to her, calming her back into
that revivifying sleep.
On the eleventh day there was no missile, so Aleytys must
have done whatever was needed. After feeding Aleytys her fifth cup of broth for
the day, she called Ikanom to the infirmary. “There was no missile today,” she
said.
“No, anassa.”
“There is a bomb or something similar inside kephalos.
Aleytys has defused it. I know this because there was no missile today; I know
also that Kell understands Aleytys thwarted his plan. Kephalos should be wary
these next days before Aleytys wakes.”
“A bomb?” Ikanom sounded startled. “Kephalos knows of no
bomb within.”
“So I assumed. So Aleytys assumed. There must be something
there, something dangerous, or Aleytys wouldn’t be in such bad shape. Kephalos
might police its innards, using the space where Aleytys was found as a starting
point. Most of all kephalos should use all the tricks bequeathed by Hyaroll and
Synkatta to guard against another penetration of its defenses. Kell would
destroy us all to reach her. Are there questions?”
Ikanom shifted its head slightly; the sculpted facets of its
abstract face seemed to smile at her. “Kephalos will be watchful,” it said, “and
kephalos will search within. This is a very disturbing thing. It must not
happen again.”
Amused, but careful to keep that from showing, taking
pleasure in its grace, Shareem watched Ikanom walk out. I say it
again, Synkatta must have been a fascinating man. Hyaroll could tell me about
him; they were friends. She frowned. From what Aleytys had said after he
left them, he wouldn’t be around much anymore. Aloof as he’d been the past
several centuries, she’d still miss him if he went. It was vaguely comforting
to know Hyaroll was there if she needed him. He wouldn’t like her bothering
him, would most likely make her life a misery while she was with him, but he
would take her in and protect her. At least, until now. She felt a touch of
panic at the thought, then she shook off her malaise. His growls must be a
temporary aberration; he had them now and then when he got fed up with people
and shut himself in his dome refusing to talk to anyone for a decade or so. He
got over those, he’d get over this. Aleytys mumbled something in her sleep.
Shareem bent over her, then climbed onto the couch and sat holding her
daughter’s head on her thigh while she wiped away the sweat beading the
sleeping face, then passed her palm over the stubble of regrowing hair; drawing
the back of her hand in a gentle caress down the side of her daughter’s face,
she began a soft crooning lullaby.
Through the long quiet days Aleytys regained the flesh she’d
lost; her skin regained its dark cream color; her new hair was as silky and red
as before, an inch long already, long enough to fall in loose curls after
Shareem shampooed and dried it and ran a comb through it. She worried off and
on about the length of the sleep, but the autodoc continued to tick contentedly
along and tell her not to fuss when she expressed her misgivings, so she
relaxed into the dreamy pleasures of tending her daughter.
Kell called several times, but she refused to talk to him, instructed
Ikanom to say nothing except that neither Aleytys nor Shareem wished to speak
to him. There were other calls, but Shareem took none of them either—except the
one from Loguisse. Even to Loguisse she said only that Aleytys was busy working
with kephalos, getting her defenses in order. Loguisse nodded, then warned
Shareem that they had better deal with Kell soon, since he was making
considerable progress among the Stayers, turning them against Aleytys, and his
converts were trying to pressure the Tetrad to revoke her acceptance. It was
all extremely annoying.
On the twelfth day of her sleep, about midmorning, Aleytys
stirred, opened her eyes.
Shareem felt a pang of loss, a rush of joy, sighed and
patted her daughter’s hand. “Welcome back.”
Aleytys sat up, put her hand to her head, felt the short
feathery curls. “What ...”
“When Ikanom found you, you were a wraith, hair coming out,
skin sloughing off. What happened?”
Aleytys looked down at herself, frowned at her wrists when
she saw how thin they were. “How long?”
“Twelve days.”
Aleytys swung her legs around, slid them off the autodoc’s
couch.
Hastily Shareem put her hand on her daughter’s arm. “Careful.”
Aleytys looked startled, then smiled. “I hear. Twelve days.
Huh. Missiles still coming?”
“Stopped with the tenth. Kell’s been calling, some of the
other Stayers. I haven’t talked to them. Except Loguisse. She says things are
getting difficult out there, pressure on her and the others to revoke. So far
the Tetrad seems to be holding. Harder Kell pushes, the stubborner they get.”
“Good.” She jabbed a thumb into a thigh muscle. “Mush.
Twelve days on my back. Time I was getting into shape. Give me a hand, will
you?” She wriggled toward the edge of the couch.
“You sure you should do this?” Shareem sighed as her daughter’s
hand closed about hers. “Shouldn’t you rest some more?”
“Rested a dozen days already.” Aleytys stood swaying.
“Madar! I’m weaker than a just-born foal.”
“Lee, you were almost dead.”
Aleytys laughed, a grim sound with little humor in it. “With
me, Reem, almost doesn’t count.” She closed her eyes and stood without
moving for a moment, then seemed to shake herself as if she were shaking off
the weakness that troubled Shareem; opening her eyes and letting go of
Shareem’s hand, she started for the door. Over her shoulder she said, “Tell me
everything that’s been happening while I slept. Loguisse is right—it’s time I
thought up some way to hit back at him.”
Shareem followed quietly, wanting to cry a little. Her time
was up, and it would never come again. She moved more quickly to catch up with
Aleytys, then walked beside her, telling her what had passed since Ikanom
brought her up from the heartroom.
The next day Kell called again.
After Ikanom told her, Aleytys turned to Shareem. “How do I
locate him?”
“Set kephalos after him. And ... um ... unless he’s changed
things more than I thought, if he’s in his dome, I should be able to tell from
what’s around him. Won’t take much.”
“Worth talking to him, I suppose.” She swung around to face
Ikanom. “Try to find out where he is, but keep it from him if you can. Transfer
the call here, but give us a few minutes first.” She settled in the chair,
watched the android leave, then smiled at Shareem. “Maybe you’d better stand
where he can’t see you—he might be a bit looser.”
“He’ll know I’m here.”
“Could be yes, could be no. Let’s give it a try.”
Shareem nodded, stepped to one side where she could see the
screen but be out of the pickup’s range.
Kell’s face appeared on the screen, calm, smiling a little,
the easy, confident, secretly assessing look of a. salesman about to go into
his spiel. “A new way of doing your hair.”
“It’s cool. What do you want?”
“To congratulate you.”
Aleytys chuckled. “And make sure I survived your little
joke.”
“I knew that when the last missile blew.”
“You were too slow, cousin.”
“Not cousin, Mud, I won’t have you call me cousin.” he lost
a fraction of his calm, then forced the smile back to his face.
Ignoring the interruption, she went on with what she was saying.
“You were enjoying yourself too much, cousin, gloating over my end. You gave
Reem time to remember how her mother died.” She shook her head. “But I won’t
count on more stupid self-indulgence like that; I expect better of you, cousin.
Or is that another mistake?”
“You made the worst mistake of your life, Mud, when you came
here.”
“Oh no, cousin, my worst mistake was threatening you like a
human being. I really should have killed you then like the viper you are.”
“Get out of here. Leave Vrithian. There’s no place for you
here, mongrel. You don’t belong here.”
“You get more boring each time I see you. Are you finally finished?”
The screen went abruptly dark, but not before both of them
saw the fury in his face. Aleytys swung the chair around. “Well?”
“He’s in his dome.”
“For the moment, anyway.” Aleytys frowned. “Something’s
bothering me. Why did he make that call?”
“I don’t know. Not just to rant at you. To make sure you’re
alive?”
“Hmmm. The little I know of him, everything you’ve told me
about him says he never aims where he’s going to strike. He’s so Aschla-cursed
devious I don’t see why he doesn’t bite himself and die of the poison.” She
tapped her fingers on the chair arm. “I wonder if this whole damn world isn’t
riddled with traps he’s set for me. Hunh. You said he called up two days after
the last missile?”
“That’s what Ikanom said.”
“And you warned kephalos before that to be very careful not
to trust him?”
“Uh-huh.”
“Then it’s a trigger. Problem is, for what?” She got to her
feet, began pacing restlessly about the room. “What? What? What?” She ran her
hand through her short curls until they were standing in twisted spikes about
her head. “I was being so damn sassy, Reem, crowing at him like a fool. It was
a mistake to talk to him. I hope ...” She stopped by the door. “I don’t feel
comfortable in here, Reem. Come outside with me?”
Aleytys walked restlessly through the gardens scowling at
nothing, forgetting Shareem, who moved quietly beside her, saying nothing,
content to wait until her daughter was ready to speak. Aleytys scowled at the
meticulously tended shrubbery. *Harskari,* she subvocalized, *what in Aschla’s
nine fancy hells is that man up to?* *Nothing Hyaroll could detect.*
*May his teeth rot and his tongue swell and strangle him, I
will not believe he’s got a whole string of bombs planted in here.*
*No. Not an attack this time. Information. Something that
will let him plan a confrontation on his own terms.* *Ah. A tap into kephalos.*
*Latent, like the bomb. Triggered from outside. A configuration
of forces that wouldn’t exist until it was triggered.* *Harskari, Hyaroll
checked the place.* *He missed the bomb.* *Yes, but ...*
*He’s ossifying, Lee; I’m surprised he can still make
coherent sentences.* *I don’t know ....*
*You don’t want to. Listen to me, dau ... Lee, it doesn’t
have to be that way. For some reason—and don’t ask me what it is—Hyaroll’s
running down; he wants to die and he’s going to do it, but it doesn’t have to
be that way. Look at Loguisse—I don’t say you’ll be like that either, but at
least she’s sharp and very much alive. Kept her contacts with the outside, has
an interest that keeps her brain exercised and excited. You could do worse.*
Aleytys said nothing for several steps, startled by the
small break in that impassioned speech. Harskari was jealous of Shareem. That
sudden realization was so painful she shied away from thinking about it. *How
much does Kell hear? Maybe I’ve said too much already.*
*Depends on how much of kephalos he’s gained access to. If
you continue to make a fuss about your worries and make some really wild
speculations, he’d probably discount your suspicions for a while. You told him
it was Shareem who suspected the bomb and warned you about it. If I had to
guess, I’d say you have a day or two to play the fool. And I wouldn’t count
anywhere inside the dome safe from observation.*
*Stinking voyeur.*
*Bothers you that much, look for the tap and pull it.*
*I could do that.* Aleytys scowled at a flowerbed, seeing
nothing of it. *I’d rather set some kind of trap for him ... ummm ... or go
after him. Look. If he didn’t know I’d left the dome ... remember, you took me
through the dome at the Mesochthon without having it opened for us.* She
grinned, suddenly, fiercely. *As long as he doesn’t know I’m out and roving,
and he doesn’t know we can pop right through his strongest defenses ...
ay-Madar, Harskari, do you know what he’s done with this tap? He’s located
himself for us, tied himself to his dome. Not a chance he’s going to be far
away from the other end of the tap. I said it, ay-yiii, I said it, silly
viper’s gotten so devious he bit himself.* She laughed aloud, danced around in
a circle clapping her hands, caught the startled look on her mother’s face and
settled down to a more sedate walk. “I’ve had me an idea,” she said aloud. “Let
me think about it for a bit, then I’ll tell you.” *Harskari,* she subvocalized,
*we’ve got to do something with Shareem. I can’t leave her here, she’s too vulnerable.
And I certainly can’t take her with us.*
*Loguisse. Would she help?*
*Splendid idea. Marvelous idea. Loguisse. of course. Even
Hyaroll treats her with respect. Shareem will be safe with her. Got to have a
good reason to send her, though. Mmm, if I could be sure Kell wasn’t listening,
I’d tell her about the tap and ask her if Loguisse might know how to root it
out. That’s a convincing reason for Shareem to go there, isn’t it?*
*Quite convincing. It could even be true. Does it matter if
Kell knows you know?*
*Good question. As a matter of fact ... um ... might even be
a good idea to let him know. Convince him I’m focusing still on defense rather
than attack. We could sit by the silly fountain and talk in low voices. I’m
sure he’s perfectly capable of filtering out that bit of interference, but it
would look as if I’m trying to keep the plan a secret.*
*Sounds good to me.* A brief silence. *lf you’re going to do
it, do it now.* The amber eyes closed and the feel of the ancient sorceress
vanished.
It’s going to be lonely, Aleytys thought. When the
last soul’s gone. When the diadem’s gone. Ah, now, what’s that going to mean to
me, when the diadem’s gone? She realized suddenly that she could lose more
than her last indweller when she shook the diadem off. Trap though it was, it
was also an instrument of power, a focus for her own talents. Would they grow
more diffuse, less accessible, when the focus was gone? How much of what she
could do did she owe to the diadem, how much was her birthright? I’ll find
out soon. I owe Harskari her body. She missed Swardheld and Shadith very
much, but she didn’t grudge them their bodies, their separate lives. Harskari
deserved as much or more from her. She thought of Shadith and smiled, but her
smile faded as she remembered where Shadith was now and what she was trying to
do. Suddenly irritated by all this devious convoluted maneuvering, she made a
small angry hissing sound.
“What is it, Lee?” Shareem’s hand on her arm drew her back
to the unsatisfactory here and now.
“Just throwing a small snit, Reem, because of all the foolishness
Kell is putting us through.” She looked around. In her blind wanderings she’d
brought them back to the smooth broad lawn spreading out in front of the house.
She pointed at the fountain of absurdities. “Let’s sit down over there; I’ve
got some things I want to tell you.”
“Yes, the water makes a pleasant noise. What is it, Lee?”
“I think I’ve figured out what that phone call meant. I
think Kell’s tapping into my kephalos.”
“He couldn’t, Lee. Hyaroll ...”
“Guaranteed the place clean. I know. But he missed a bomb
bigger than he is, and I think he missed this because the way Kell set it up,
it didn’t exist until he triggered it. A key word or maybe just completing the
call.”
“Sounds like something he’d do.”
“I’ve had an idea. Does Kell know more about kephalos than
Loguisse?”
“No one does.” Shareem sighed. “Not me, that’s sure.”
“I can’t leave here—he’d be on my back the minute I passed
the dome. Comlink, well, he’ll be listening to every word, and I don’t think
Loguisse would play, you heard what she told Hyaroll. You’ve got to go for me,
Reem. It’s dangerous, but he’s not so obsessive about you. He’ll know you’re
leaving, but not why, and I’ll have kephalos keep an eye on you as far as it
can. Will you do it?”
“You won’t do anything rash while I’m gone?”
“How can I? I’ve got to keep close to kephalos and hope that
snake doesn’t figure out a way to take control and lower the dome.”
“He couldn’t ... I don’t know ... it doesn’t stop, damn him,
why ... all right, Lee, I’ll go talk to Loguisse. And right now, if you don’t
mind.” She got to her feet with a quick nervous push, started away, came back,
touched her daughter’s face. “Be careful, will you?” Without waiting for an
answer, she swung around and ran for the flier.
Aleytys watched the flier leave, cold with a loneliness that
surprised her. The dome seemed empty with Shareem gone. She hadn’t expected it,
but she’d found a friend. Not a mother. A friend. She’d expected to feel hate
and rage when she saw her mother, but from the moment they met she simply liked
Shareem. She enjoyed her mother’s company. Shareem brought out the frivolous
side of her, helped her slough the gloom-and-doom feelings that only made bad
times worse.
She wandered restlessly through the gardens after kephalos reported
that Shareem had reached the limit of its sensors unmolested. She was unable to
settle to the planning she needed to do, even when prodded by a jealous
Harskari. The old one didn’t like seeing herself replaced in Aleytys’s
affections by her blood mother. That wasn’t exactly true, but Aleytys knew
Harskari had some cause for her bitterness. She realized after a while that
she’d stopped calling Harskari “Mother” while Shareem was about. Though she
seldom called Shareem “Mother,” though Shareem couldn’t hear or be hurt by the
conversations inside Aleytys’s head, though the old one had been her nurturer
for longer and in ways Shareem would never be, in spite of all these things she
could not call Harskari “Mother” any longer. And Harskari had noted the change;
the old one noticed everything about her. She was hurt by the change and all
that it meant. Aleytys was sorry for that; she owed Harskari too much, she was
deeply fond of that stem old spirit and distressed now as she saw the growing
disintegration of the strength that had sustained Harskari through the
countless ages since her first so inconclusive death. Harskari needed a body,
needed it soon.
Aleytys cursed Kell for thwarting any attempt to take care
of that need now that she was aware how imperative it was, cursed herself for
her complacency and blindness. Energized by that flare of anger, she stopped
her aimless wandering and moved swiftly around the house to the landing disk.
“Kephalos, bring up Synkatta’s flier.”
The disk sank into the ground. While she was waiting she
tilted her head and frowned at the dome. *Harskari, when you’re working that
stasis trick, I can keep moving though everything else slows down or stops.
What about a flier? Will its propulsors work inside that field?”
Slitted amber eyes, Harskari’s frowning face sketched around
them. *We had better try it on the ground first; I have no experience with
that.*
The flier came smoothly up, its shrouds stripped away by Ikanom’s
surrogate hands; there was a blue-black sheen to its sleek sides, a grace and
fluidity of line that was close cousin to the grace and fluidity of the
androids. *Lovely, isn’t it? Should be a dream to fly.*
Harskari wasn’t willing to be distracted by aesthetics. ‘If
you can fly it. You can’t ask kephalos to instruct you in its capabilities.*
*No, obviously not. I suppose we’d better get busy finding
out what I can do with it and what happens when you turn the diadem loose on
it.*
The flier was as responsive as a well-schooled horse,
stopping, turning, dropping, darting, maneuvering through the treetops. There
were no attack missiles; Aleytys could almost feel Synkatta shuddering at the
thought. There was a strong defensive screen and a laser that seemed more
suited to slicing stone samples to study in the laboratory than to defending
the flier. Harskari held the stasis about it and they found it could make a
creeping progress, enough to take it through the dome without alerting
kephalos. They tried tuning it to the diadem; the propulsors didn’t work at
all, but Aleytys found she could move the flier a short distance by willing it
forward. When they phased back into the original reality, she sat with eyes
closed, shaking with exhaustion, almost unable to move body or brain. Roused by
acerbic prodding from Harskari, she reached for her power river and drew in
energy to replace what she had expended. After a careful look at herself, she
was content to find she hadn’t lost significant flesh this time. As she stepped
off the landing disk onto the grass, she said, “A very pretty ship, yes. I
wonder what Hyaroll did with the starship.”
*Kephalos might know. If you care to ask.* *I think I might
be expected to ask. Aschla curse all this fiddling around; as soon as I leave
the dome kephalos is going to know something funny is happening.* *Leave the
key strip here.*
*Ah.* She chuckled as she started for the house. *Tucked in
my bed with a blanket dummy. Makes me wonder what you were like when you were a
kid.*
*None of your business. I was a very proper child.* *Hmm.
That’s open to some interesting interpretations.* *Hahh! go play your game with
kephalos.* *Seriously, when do you think we should leave?* *It would be a good
idea to reach him about an hour or so before the local dawn; his dawn is about
thirteen hours ahead of ours. What’s the local time? Fourth hour after noon,
plus a handful of minutes. Traveling time, giving ourselves some play for
emergencies, five hours ... I’d say we should leave here no later than the
first hour after noon.*
*Tomorrow? Aschla’s stinking hells, Harskari, you mean I
have to wait a whole damn day?*
*Up to you. We could leave earlier, get there earlier. Or
leave now get there around first or second hour after dawn. For more precise
timing you’d have to check with kephalos.*
*And wouldn’t that be a great idea. Hunh.* She leaned
against the door, frowning up at the faint shimmer of the dome. *I’m hungry.
Let’s make it tomorrow noon—that’d give us an hour to play with. I think we’ll
need to get past the outer rim of his defenses without tripping alarms.* ,
*Good.* The amber eyes closed.
Aleytys laughed and pushed open the door. “Ikanom,” she
called, “I’m hungry.”
The rest of the day crept along as she sought for ways to
make the time pass. She had a long rambling chat with kephalos about Synkatta’s
starship and found that Hyaroll had indeed taken it somewhere, but kephalos had
no idea where that was; moved on to ways of strengthening the dome where
everything she came up with either had already been done or was unworkable;
went from that to talking about ways of pinning Kell down so she could do some
attacking of her own rather than spending all her time and energy defending
herself. “Think you can do that? It doesn’t have to be precise, just give me
the general area.’’ That ought to stir his juices, she thought.
She left kephalos humming contentedly to itself; she could
feel a strong glow of pleasure from it as it sank metaphorical teeth into the
first hard problem it had had in years. Remembering her impressions as she
drifted through it when she was searching for the bomb, she decided that the
kephaloi could end up being the true immortals of Vrithian. Long after the last
Vryhh succumbed to the crushing weight of the ages, kephaloi in empty domes
would be talking to each other and forming a society that could last as long as
the world itself. She thought about that awhile, speculating on the nature of
that society, until her meanderings became so absurd she laughed at herself and
went looking for a book to read among the many shelved in Synkatta’s library.
About an hour after midnight she closed the book, a novel by
a writer exiled from Shiburr. The Vrya were a darkly threatening thread through
the narration, though they were seldom mentioned directly. The native Shiburri
went about their lives in the shadow of the domes, always conscious of the
undying, a consciousness that seemed to intensify all emotions, all struggles,
all relationships. The characters in the novel could not escape from that
awareness, though some tried to deny it; others shriveled into futility; a few
retreated so far they denied the world as well as the Vrya; some laced
themselves to the Vrya, letting the undying use them in return for power over
their own kind; the strongest concentrated resolutely on getting the most out
of their day-to-day lives, treating the Vyra like a storm or earthquake or any
other force of nature they couldn’t control but had to cope with. The main character
was one of these last. It was a depressing novel, a catalogue of the disasters
a good man could suffer, and it ended without hope, Shiburr unchanged and
without possibility of changing. She pushed the book off the bed and turned on
her back, lay staring into the darkness. After some minutes of chaotic thinking
that led only to knots in her stomach, she began the calming exercises Vajd had
taught her an eternity ago, cleared her mind and bludgeoned herself into a
heavy sleep.
Aleytys ... leytys ... eytys ... tys ... tys ... Aleytys ...
tys ... tys ... tys. She woke with Ikanom’s slender hand shaking her, its voice
echoing hollowly in her head. The nightmare-ridden sleep still clogging her
thoughts, she pushed its hand away and sat up, scrubbed at her eyes, then
emptied the cup of cha it handed her. “What time is it?”
Ikanom took the cup and refilled it. “Almost the ninth hour
of the day, Archira. Five hours till noon.”
Aleytys sipped at the cha, feeling some of the haziness warming
out of her head. “Ninth hour? Why’d you wake me before the time I set?”
“Shareem anassa waits outside the dome, Archira.”
“What? Let her ... no ... ahh.” She rubbed at her temple.
“No, let me talk to her first. Take this.” She handed him the cup and tossed
the covers aside, threw on one of the houserobes and padded across the room to
the comscreen. “Reem?”
Shareem’s face filled the screen. She looked weary and
strained; her eyes had gone dull. “Loguisse came through,” she said. Her voice
was as lifeless as her eyes. “Lee, don’t leave me out here ....”
“You look tired.”
“I haven’t slept ....”
“Just a minute.” She blanked the screen. “Ikanom, is there
anyone in the flier with her?”
“No other brain patterns register, Archira.”
“Good enough. Let her through and fix us some breakfast, you
decide what. We’ll eat in the bookroom, um, yes, a fire, please, and get a bath
ready for her.”
She touched the image back on. “Come on in, breakfast’s waiting,
a bath and bed.”
Shareem said nothing, just nodded and cut the contact.
Aleytys shook her head, pulled the robe tighter about her
and tied the belt. What miserable luck. Why couldn’t she stay with Loguisse
one more day? She ran down the flow-way and into the hall. Good thing
she’s so tired, she’ll be sleeping when we go, I suppose it won’t matter
leaving her alone, Kell will be too busy ... ay, Madar, I wanted her
with Loguisse just in case ... hah, better not think of that, I just have to
win, that’s all. She pulled the door open and stepped out. The flier was
quiet on the landing disk. Shareem hadn’t come out yet. Aleytys ran a few
steps, then walked more slowly, frowning. The lock iris began folding open.
*Harskari,* she said, *I think I’ve done something really stupid this time.*
Harskari’s eyes open, the diadem begins singing.
Shareem appears in the lock, a massive dark shape behind
her; she moves like an automaton. Aleytys remembers what her mother said an
eternity ago: “If he gets close to me, I’ll do just about anything he tells me
no matter how I hate it.” And I sent you out to him, she thinks, I
was being so clever .... The thoughts pass across her mind in a blinding
instant, then she is screaming and running at the flier in a nightmare of slow
motion, Shareem has come awake, suddenly, terribly, as the dark form’s arm
lifts she folds herself around it, fire explodes through her. No. No. No. The
words scream in Aleytys’s head, her mouth is open but no sound comes out, she
runs and runs through the eerie outphase world as the fire burning through her
mother’s body passes through her without touching her. She runs up the flame as
if it were a rope and drives her arms into that massive black form. It is like
trying to feel about in cold bottom-of-the-barrel molasses, he has protected
himself against her gift, the batteries are welded into their slots, if her
tractor fields would work in this outphase world, she still would not have the
strength to break the welds, the connecting wires are etched into the substance
of the armor, paint on high-density metal like that used for the outer walls of
starships, her hands scrabble about in him, there is nothing she can get hold
of, she starts to panic, remembers the shattered body of her mother, cannot let
him win, cannot, never, no, she finds the tiny drivers that power the joints,
Harskari half-phases her hands, she snatches anything she can, breaks it, pulls
it out, destroys those drivers, shoulders, elbows, wrists, down, hips, knees,
ankles, oh Kell oh Kell oh cousin, I can do this to you because you forced
me to learn it, up again, destroy the weapons, pull their packs, you
weren’t so careful here. Harskari there beside her, white hair whipping
about her dark worried face, Lee, she calls, Lee, enough, tend Shareem, Lee,
get away from him, I’m taking you back, Lee do you hear me. Harskari’s voice
finally is more than a mosquito whine in her ears, she finally comprehends what
those words mean, she backs away, out the lock onto the landing disk and
falls on her knees when the world moves at normal time about
her.
Shareem’s body completes its fall, splatting down beside
her. The weight of her flesh is back on her bones, so heavy she almost cannot
bear it. The stink of her mother’s flesh is in her mouth and nose, she reaches
for the power, fumbles and cannot find it, this has happened before, calm,
calm, be calm, reach slowly and carefully, you’re just tired, let the
water come in, let it pool deeper and deeper in you, this is taking seconds,
that’s all, it’s not wasting time, you can do nothing without the black water
.... She moves on her knees to her mother’s body, reaches out. Shareem seems to
see her, or feel her, the residue of life in her flinches away from the hands
that want to heal her, flinches, then flows away and there is nothing Aleytys
can do to stop it. She wants to die, she refused to let me make her live.
She is dead. My mother is dead.
Harskari was shouting at her. Something. For what seemed an
eternity she couldn’t take in what the old one was saying, then she did and was
appalled. “No! You can’t expect me to ... No! it’s grotesque, I won’t ... I
can’t ... you can’t be serious. No. Never. I won’t do it.”
*Why?*
“This is my mother, it isn’t stray meat.”
*Is it?*
“What?” Aleytys looked down at the cooling body; already it
had the empty flattened look the dead acquire. “No,” she said, “no, not any
longer, never again.” She began crying. For the second time her mother had
abandoned her, and this time was far worse than before, this time she knew her.
*I want that body, Aleytys. You swore you’d give me the body
I chose. Keep your word, it isn’t that much I’m asking ....* On and on Harskari
kept yammering at her; for some ghoulish reason she had to have Shareem’s
discarded flesh. On and on until Aleytys felt like screaming, until she knew if
she didn’t do this, she’d never again have a moment’s peace. And there wasn’t
time for her to grow accustomed to the idea, already the brain was decaying and
there was massive damage to the chest cavity that would have to be repaired.
Either she acted in the next few breaths or it would be too late. Let it be
done, she thought, let me be.
She bent over her mother and laid her hands on the chilling body.
Ignoring everything about her, she poured into it that power she’d been born to
use, brought the body to a pseudo-life that halted the decay. Harskari gathered
herself into a compact ball, wadding up the web of forces that was all the life
she had. Aleytys caught hold of it and flung it into the empty envelope as she
had done on Ibex with Shadith; no one to steady her this time, she had to do it
alone, weary and unhappy. When what was empty was filled, what was on hold an
instant before began to change. Stirred by the touch of Aleytys and the lapping
flow of Harskari’s minute fields, bones began to knit, seared flesh sloughed
away to be replaced by new healthy flesh, organs began to rebuild themselves,
the gaping wound closed swiftly, healed from the inside out, new skin spread
across the muscle, alabaster-white like the rest of her, other cuts and bruises
and burns healed, hidden by the remnant of the robe Shareem had worn. Harskari
was dimly aware of these, though Aleytys wasn’t, she was focused on rebuilding
the damaged brain, a long and tedious task with no allowances for error. Minutes
drifted by, an hour passed. The brain was more complex than the one Shadith had
inherited, the damage was more comprehensive. There were places where there was
so little left intact Aleytys had to use her own brain as a template, patching
the new in with the old, working with hope and a prayer the new sections would
meld with the old. When there was no more damage that she could find, she
flooded the body with her power water, kicking it over from death into life,
then she sat back on her heels and waited, ready to help if Harskari ran into
difficulties. The blaze of the old one’s spirit grew stronger as she slid more
deeply into the body. She blinked the eyes, moved the mouth, sucked in a long
breath and let it trickle out. She lifted a hand, wriggled the fingers, let it
fall back onto the grass, bent the knees, straightened them out, twisted both
feet from side to side. The mouth curled into a small smile. She braced the
hands against the grass and pushed herself up, straightened her back, squared
her shoulders, lifted her head. The small smile broadened into a grin. “You’ve
done it again, daughter.” The voice was a little mushy and held to a deeper
register than Shareem was accustomed to using, but there were enough
similarities to make Aleytys wince.
“Don’t,” she said.
“What? Oh. Sorry, Habit, I suppose.” With every word Harskari’s
control improved. She began a series of pulling, twisting, stretching
exercises.
Aleytys watched for a breath or two, then was aware of a
weight circling her head. She reached up, touched it, traced her finger about
the delicate cool wires of a flower petal. The diadem, gone inert when the last
of its captive souls escaped. She lifted it off, held it in front of her,
draped over her hands, flexible, fragile, lovely; a circlet of jewel-hearted
lilies spun from gold wire. She touched one of the jewels and felt somewhere
deep within her a single shimmering note. Jewel flowerhearts catching the
sunlight and splintering it into a thousand tiny gleams, it began to sing to
her, weaving a spell of longing about her; it was waking again, calling out for
new victims. With a cry half of pain, half of desire, she flung the diadem away
from her. It landed in a heap on the grass, gone inert again when it no longer
fed off the heat of her hands.
A pall settled over her mind. Hard to think. Her eyes
blurred. What ... Her symbolic black water seethed within her; she
flushed the fatigue poisons out of herself, but that didn’t help, the pall grew
heavier, pressing in on her; her head felt like a pumpkin someone was stepping
on. Someone ... she slid around, frowned at the inert lump of armor blocking
most of the lock ... squeezing her brain ... Kell ... trapped in the metal that
was meant to protect him ... memory: Kell, wasted from disease, sprawling in
the heavy embrace of his exoskeleton ... she could feel him now, feel the
malevolence pouring out of him, he’d tripped a switch, one she’d missed, and
cut out his mind shields, the shields that convinced kephalos there was no one
in the flier with Shareem, he’d cut them out and was attacking her. His body
was prisoner but his mind wasn’t. A massive blow shook her. She was pinned, she
couldn’t answer it. She wrestled with the hold he had on her. Stupid, stupid to
forget him, to concentrate so completely on Shareem’s body and Harskari’s
transference. She fought him, managed to move her arms, hugged them across her
breasts, bowed her head. She knelt in a silvery bubble, fragile as smoke,
inside swirling battering forces ... no escape ... no escape ... no ... no ...
creeping in like oil smoke ... hate ... anger ... tendrils of noisome smoke
brushing against the bubble ... it sagged ... she pushed against the weak spot ...
she was slow ... heavy ... without the diadem, weaker, sluggish ... the bubble
began to crumple as fear distracted her ... no ... no! Fighting the pressure
meant to snuff her like a candle flame, she raised onto her knees, brought one
leg up, put the weight on the foot, leaned forward, laid one hand on top of the
other on the knee, pressed down, brought the other foot forward, pushed slowly
up until she was standing, leaning a little forward. Step by step, driving
herself against the hurricane wind of his will, she moved toward him. He took
the pressure suddenly away. She stumbled, nearly fell, ran on two steps,
whimpering; instead of steady pressure, he was pummeling at her, punishing
blows that kept her off balance, staggering. She tripped over the rim of the
landing saucer, jarred onto her knees; she could feel his triumph as he drove
in, smashing her defenses down, squeezing her smaller and smaller. She curled
up, knees to chest, strength draining from her as he bore in and in.
Abruptly the pressure was gone. Only for a second. Something
had distracted him. She didn’t care about that; she built her bubble back,
struggled onto her feet and started for him again, seeing nothing but him, that
black beetle carapace crouching inert and broken in the lock. A flash of red.
His head and shoulders were free. Another streak of red. Harskari in Shareem’s
body kicking at his head from behind. Aleytys ran three steps closer, plowed
into the hate wind, leaned into it, fighting toward him, one foot sliding
forward, then the other, closing faster whenever Harskari could break through
the wind and jar him with a kick or a slap before she was flung back again,
disappearing into the interior of the flier. Anger turning to desperation, Kell
writhed about, fighting to trip the half-destroyed latches manually so he could
free himself from the armor, slamming brute mind-blows at her as he worked. She
staggered, crashed to her knees, fought back onto her feet; she was on the disk,
only two long strides from the flier, but she couldn’t cross that tiny space.
Couldn’t. Driven by hate, using a skill he had honed through centuries of
killing, he was stronger, harder, faster; without Harskari’s intervention,
she’d already be dead. He drove her back, knocked her feet from under her; she
crawled toward him, he flung her back, she floundered, blood trickling from the
corner of her mouth. Harskari dragged herself to him and slapped hard at his
head; he struck at her, knocking her into a sprawl. While he was distracted,
Aleytys surged onto her feet and dived at him, landing splayed out across the
massive legs of the battlesuit. Mind-fire seared her nerve ends, she screamed,
wept, clawed herself along. Behind him, Harskari pulled herself onto her feet,
stood leaning against the side of the lock, a hand pressed to her stomach,
breathing rapidly and shallowly; she lifted her foot, pressed it against the
wall. Her face went blank with the intensity of her concentration, then she
uncoiled from the wall, one stride into a leap, a kick to the head; in almost
the same breath Aleytys was up and surging forward; the kick drove his head
forward and to the right; Harskari twisted away, slamming into the side of the
lock before she could stop herself; the heel of Aleytys’s hand hit his jaw,
drove his head back the other way; he was tough, it only dazed him, he shook
his head slightly trying to clear it, but for the first time she was free
enough to use her talent, the talent muted by the discarding of the diadem; she
reached, put pressure on nerves until he stopped struggling, until he
almost stopped breathing.
She slid off the carapace, stood looking down at him a moment.
He’d changed so much after she’d healed him that other time; if she hadn’t seen
him at the Mesochthon, if he hadn’t identified himself there with his words and
manner, she would not have recognized him. I don’t know you, she
thought, not at all. We’ve come within a breath of killing each other and
we’re still strangers. A groan distracted her, and she went to kneel beside
Harskari. The old one was having trouble holding herself in Shareem’s body; the
breathing was harsh and uncertain, the eyes dull, the hands groping without
purpose, the mouth was making shapeless animal sounds. The body was injured
again, not quite so badly as before, only some cracked ribs and organ damage.
Sighing, Aleytys reached, poured more energy into the envelope,
supported Harskari as she tightened her hold, then closed her eyes and set the
body to healing its hurts. That was just as easy as before and just as hard. At
least healing is my own gift, not something I got from the diadem. Behind
her she felt Kell begin to waken; with automatic speed and skill she tweaked
the nerves again and put him back under, then was surprised at what she’d done.
Wonder if it’ll all come back, once I’ve practiced enough.
Harskari pulled away from her, moved her shoulders experimentally,
took a deep breath, expanding her ribs as far as she could, let the air explode
out. She got to her feet and bent over Kell. “He’s alive.”
“Yes.”
“You should have finished him.”
“Well, I didn’t.” She pulled her hand across his face.
“Things were happening too fast.” His hands were plunged beneath the chest
piece of the armor. “I need to know what he’s done to Grey. I need ...” She
dropped to her knees beside him, tugged out one of his hands and began fumbling
about inside that massive carapace for the latches that had resisted his fingers.
“Help me get this off him.”
“He’s not going to tell you anything. What do you want me to
do?’’
“Maybe he will if he feels helpless enough. See if you can
reach the latch for this front section—I think your side and mine have to be
tripped at the same time.”
“Right.” Harskari began groping about under the carapace.
“He knows you can’t ... ungh, I think I’ve got it. You ready?”
They unlocked the intricate pieces of the armor and laid
them beside Kell. Aleytys wrinkled her nose. “Must have taken him an hour to
get this on. Poor pathetic stupid wretch.”
“Lee, he’s dangerous.”
“He’s a better killer—you think that’s strength?”
“It’s the only kind he understands.”
“How do you know?”
“I know his kind.”
“What kind is that? Never mind, I was just thinking how
little he and I really know about each other.”
“You know all you need to know—what he did to you before,
what he’ll do to you afterward if you’re silly enough to let him go again.”
“Yes, yes, of course you’re right, but it ... it’s sad,
don’t you think? No, I see you don’t.” He started to surface, and she put him
under again. “Hunt up something to tie him with. Please?”
Harskari nodded. She got to her feet, hesitated. “Be
careful.”
Aleytys looked up, smiled. “Yes.”
Alert to signs of stirring, she hauled him from the lock and
stretched him out on the grass. She knelt at his shoulder looking down at him.
After a few moments she bent over him and brushed away the hair straggling
across his eyelids. She felt strange, uncertain ... a lot of anger, but it was
diffuse, hanging about her like the dust cloud about Avenar ... as if all these
years what she’d cursed and hated was an idea, not a man, and now she was
having trouble fitting that idea onto Kell ... at least while he was lying
there with the tantalizing vulnerability most sleepers have. Not that he was
asleep ... she felt the first stirrings in his brain and put him under again.
Again she was tempted to twitch just a little harder, it would be so easy,
painless for him and painless for her. She looked away, suddenly afraid. Easy.
Harskari came: back with a coil of coated wire, pliers and a
pair of shears. Aleytys got up to give her working room and wandered aimlessly
about, kicking at the grass, trying not to think about what was coming.
Harskari wrapped the wire about ankles, knees and wrists, then rolled him onto
his face and wired his elbows together. He wore a soft knitted silk shipsuit, a
dark blue-green that made his hands and face an icy white, his hair a shout in
the brilliant morning light. Harskari tightened the last twist, rolled him
back. “Package all wrapped, Lee, neat and waiting.”
Aleytys came back. She felt the stirring in him. “It won’t
be long now,” she said, reluctance and distaste in the slow words. She opened
and closed her hands, watching and feeling him swim up out of the darkness she
had nearly drowned him in, hoping that when his eyes opened and she saw and
felt the strong hate there, she could lose this helplessness before his vulnerability,
could lose this image of him as a beautiful battered boy and see the man who’d
done his best to kill her, who’d killed her mother. She tightened her mouth
into a thin line as the pain of that moment came back to her and the frustration
of it, the uselessness of that gesture. But she died of it, my mother died
to save my life; yes, one could look at it that way—one could hope she
did. That it wasn’t her version of the Vryhh sun dives. Futile act, stupid,
useless. Useless. What a snake hiss of a word. She tried to help me, but she
died. Tried and died.
Stand by Kell’s right shoulder. Smile. Harskari stands by
his left shoulder. Twin pillars of vengeance we are. Furies we are, with
retribution written on our brows. Oh yes.
How harmless you look, my enemy, flat out on the grass,
trussed up with that silly purple wire. Purple for a king. King Cobra.
Flattened by a pair of quick-foot mongooses. Purple, what a hideous color.
Wonder where Harskari found it? Silly, silly. King cobra wound in cheap taffy,
one of those poisonous colors they use for glop like that. Harskari, Harskari,
it’s lonesome in here without you.
Kell opened his eyes.
Her ambivalence vanished.
Enemy as implacable as time.
She recognized the finality of this encounter. It was rather
a comfort to know she had no choice. Gratitude was an odd bond between them,
but there it was. Hunter and hunted, bound in a kind of complicity until the
end of the hunt.
His eyes on her face, he moved his body in a rapid ripple
that put sufficient pressure on those wires to tell him there was no way he
could break them or break loose from them. He shifted his gaze to Harskari,
wasn’t quick enough to hide the flicker of fear when he met her serene green
gaze. There was already a change in Shareem’s body. A new persona wore it and
shone through it. He looked away.
As he turned toward her again, she felt a darkness
tightening to a knot, reached into him and tweaked those nerves again, putting
him under. There was no way he could stop that, as long as she acted in time.
As long as she didn’t let him distract her.
Harskari set her hands on her hips. “Do you think that’s
going to change?”
Aleytys moved a hand, dropped it back to her side, her eyes
fixed on Kell as she waited for him to surface again.
Kell’s eyelids flickered, opened.
“I can put you under faster than you can strike,” she said
quickly, hand lifted again, held as if she meant to push away whatever he threw
at her. “Don’t think you can fool me, cousin—I’m aware of every twitch in that
twisted brain.”
“What do you want?”
“Grey.”
“Haven’t got him.”
“He’s in your trap. Tell me how to release him.”
“You’re dreaming. What trap?”
“You’re lying. Do you think I can’t tell?”
“You want me to think you can.”
“Psi-empath, Kell. Among other things. How do I release
Grey?”
“Go suck a sun.”
“That’s your answer?”
“Only one you’ll get.”
“I see.” She sighed and stepped back. “Harskari, another
favor. Fetch me a knife from the kitchen. Make sure it’s sharp.”
“Let me do this for you, Lee.” Harskari scowled down at
Kell.
“No. Get the knife.”
“Why a knife? Wouldn’t it be easier ...”
“I don’t want it easier.”
Harskari pursed her lips, looked as if she wanted to argue
some more, but she finally nodded. “Watch him.” She swung around and trotted
toward the house.
“Don’t try it, Kell.”
He relaxed. “Deal?”
“Terms?”
“The answers you want. Peace between us. My life.”
“I wish I could believe ...” She dropped into a squat,
frowned at him. After a long silence, she sighed again. “I wish ... I was never
your enemy, Kell. I never went after you .... I’m afraid there’ll never be
peace between us as long as you’re alive. That’s the truth of it.”
“I’ll swear peace at the Mesochthon on forfeit of my place.”
“Why don’t I find that reassuring?” She turned her head,
spat on the grass. “Your word is worth that.”
His mouth pinched into a hard straight line. She watched him
struggle to control himself, a pinpoint hope beginning to burn in her in spite
of her skepticism, a hope that he was trying to deal with the madness that
drove him. Harskari came from the house, walking slowly, almost hesitantly. The
blued-steel blade of the knife caught the sun and gleamed with a dark deadliness
that Aleytys knew was mostly in her head, not in the knife. Pressing her hand
against her stomach as it lurched, momentarily distracted by the knife and what
it meant, she watched that blue-black sheen and forgot about watching Kell.
Fire and dark exploded over her
she fell down down down, shrinking as she fell
tiny twisting whirling fluff caught in a huffing wind
enormous pressure on her, squeezing her smaller and smaller
squeezing her to a point presence toward nothing nothingness
nada.
But the pressure faltered before nada, before the endpoint
when the point itself would vanish. It returned an instant later, strong as
before, but she’d had a breath to anchor herself, she’d had chance to fling up
walls about herself, then time to throw a tap into her black river, time to
understand that Harskari had thrown herself into this struggle; as before they
would whipsaw him, break his timing, his concentration. She sucked the dark
energy into herself and blew it out at him. Another break in the pressure;
laughter bubbled in her, and she stabbed out and tweaked those nerves he could
not protect from her. Turned him off as easily as she turned out a light when
she left a room.
Harskari laid the knife on his chest. “Listen to me next
time.”
“Thanks.” Aleytys pushed up off the grass where she’d curled
up under his attack, knelt close to Kell’s head. She swallowed as she saw the
bloody socket, the eye leaking its fluids, and understood how Harskari had
managed the distraction. She brushed the straggles of sweaty hair off his
forehead, sighed for what seemed the hundredth time. “I had to ask,” she said,
very softly, almost tenderly. “There was a chance he’d be reasonable.” Her hand
started shaking. She held it out, gazed at it a moment, then reached for the
knife.
“Lee, if you won’t put him down the easy way ...”
“Easy!”
“... then let me do it.”
“No.” She laughed, an ugly sound. “Aversion therapy, old
friend.” She looked at the knife, then at the unconscious man. “I could do it
so gently, you know, a twist and a pull and he’d be dead so fast he wouldn’t
feel a thing. I wouldn’t feel a thing beyond perhaps a tiny absence, a gap
where something used to be. And the next time, I wouldn’t bother fussing. Bad
man, crazy woman, pop! pop! angel of death sitting judgment pop! pop! and where
would it end? Old friend, I warned Shadith about the pull of her body and how
it would distort her reactions. I think it’s time to warn you about that same
thing. When you rode along as my resident conscience, you taught me well, my
best of teachers; don’t back off now.”
Harskari passed a hand across her face, looked bewildered
for a moment, then grim. She nodded, but said nothing.
Aleytys knelt without moving until she felt consciousness
stir in him, waited until he groaned with the pain in his mutilated eye, then
she pushed the sleeves of her robe up past her elbows, slashed the knife hard
and fast across his neck, hot blood splashing over her hands and wrists.
She felt him die, suddenly and hard. She died with him, but
unlike him, she came to life again a few breaths later. Shuddering, her hand
shaking so badly she nearly cut her leg, she bent to the side, set the knife on
the grass. She hugged her arms across her breasts, leaving bloody handprints on
the grass-stained white of her sleeves, and began to cry, gulping tearing sobs
that jarred her body but gave her little relief from the ache that seized on
her, the cold spreading inside her.
Arms closed about her. Someone who seemed an uneasy amalgam
of Shareem and Harskari held her and rocked her and sang softly to her until
the shock passed off.
With a last pat Harskari let go of her and moved on her
knees to Kell’s body. She began prodding at his torso with her fingertips,
avoiding for the moment the splotch of drying blood.
Aleytys started to rub her eyes, stopped, grimaced at the
sticky, browning stains on her hands. She wiped her nose on her sleeve,
avoiding the bloody handprint, sniffed, scrubbed her hands on the grass, then
on the skirt of her robe, turned up a part of that skirt, wiped her eyes on it,
blew her nose into it. She knelt watching Harskari a moment. “What are you
doing?”
“Kell’s key strip. His dome and ship should be yours now.”
Harskari began poking her fingertips into the glutinous mess at the neck,
clicked her tongue as she discovered the catch and popped it loose. She pulled
the front of the shipsuit open. “I thought so.” A wide soft belt about Kell’s
waist. She used her nails to dig under the overlapping end and pried it loose.
“Remember what Loguisse said. Seems to me if you’re the first to touch it after
he’s dead, that transfers some sort of control to you.” Wrapping the end around
her left hand, she jerked hard. Kell’s body flopped about, it groaned as the
air in his lungs was expelled, his arms and legs flailed briefly at the grass,
then went still as the body settled back. Harskari got to her feet, held out
the belt. “Here. Take it.”
“I couldn’t ...” Her revulsion faded quickly; there were too
many reasons why she must. Kell wasn’t her only enemy on Vrithian. She needed a
ship. Shareem’s wasn’t ... she couldn’t use it, not for a long long time.
Harskari might as well have that; no doubt she counted on it. War, Kell,
your war, and to the victor the spoils. Oh-ah-Madar! Spoils. She quelled a
rising hysteria and got shakily to her feet. “All right. I agree. I’ll claim
the things. No. You carry the belt. I don’t want to touch it, not yet.” She
looked down at herself.
“I want a bath.” The words came out sounding plaintive, like
a child calling for something she wasn’t sure she was supposed to have. She
closed her eyes. Madar! I’m falling apart. Giggles erupted from her
throat, surprising her. “All ye all ye out’s in free. Game’s over. I won. Won. Look,
at what I won ...”
Harskari mmphed at her, then led her back to the house.
“Bath and breakfast, that’ll shut off this nonsense.”
LOGUISSE: Take the body to the Mesochthon. Not pretty? Doesn’t
matter. Dump it in the middle of the floor. Declare the war over and yourself
the winner (chuckle), though that would seem rather obvious considering the
condition of your opponent. You’re supposed to hold yourself ready to answer
challenges. I wouldn’t worry much about that. There’s not a Stayer on Vrithian
who’d dare come near you.
The dome and the ship. Dome first. You’ve got his key strip?
good. Shareem tell you ... not Shareem anymore? That will take some explaining.
Right. This isn’t the time or method for explanations. Once you’ve made the
announcement, go directly to Kell’s dome. Yes, leave the body. Not your
responsibility after delivery. Where was I? Go directly to Kell’s dome. All
kephaloi are linked to the Mesochthon. Kell’s will be waiting for you. You
could have trouble with it; he was a very complex man. I suggest you tie Kell’s
kephalos into yours, use it to help you overlay Kell’s persona with your own.
If you run into something peculiar, give me a call.
The ship. Don’t—I repeat do not—try anything with the ship
until you’ve pacified kephalos. A loyal ship won’t kill you even inadvertently.
How long will this take? Optimally, three to four days. Probably
triple that. Congratulations. Come see me when you have a little time. We’ll
whip up some sort of celebration. And you can tell me about Kell’s downfall and
why Shareem isn’t Shareem any more.
Shareem’s Dome
Hastily erected shacks on a dusty rutted flat outside the
ground entrance to the dome. A few children, both kinds, orpetzh and galaphorze,
played together in the dust, watched over by a galaphorze female and an orpetzh
naish, sitting side by side on low chairs, chatting together as Aleytys flew
over, working on something too small for her to see.
Inside the dome: noise and bustle compounded as Harskari directed
the work, reshaping house and gardens to suit her tastes. Aleytys landed on a
dusty saucer, the dome opening automatically as she approached to let her
through.
She stood in the lock feeling battered by the indescribable
cacophony, the whiny rasp of saws; syncopated hammer raps; shouts from the
galaphorze swarming over the house, the orpetzh teeming across the land;
earthmoving juggernauts growling, grunting, clattering as they reshaped the
surface; drills biting into the earth; backhoes laying pipe. Energy and excitement
were thick as the noise—as if some huge beast long dormant had suddenly waked
to vigorous life.
Aleytys smiled. It begins, she thought. Vrithian
is changing. She stepped from the lock and began walking toward the small
section of Shareem’s house that Harskari had left intact, circling around an
orpetzh spading a flowerbed, then a squad planting an irregular line of small
bushes with smoky blue-gray leaves, jumped aside at the squawk of a horn and
the cheerfully obscene shout of the galaphorze driving a lumber sled toward a
knot of carpenters just visible behind three huge old trees Harskari had
exempted from destruction when the rest of the garden was swept away. When she
finally reached the door, she flattened her hand on the call plate and smiled
with relief as the door slid open. As she had a handful of times before, she
said, “Ah, Lampos, how goes the transformation?”
The damascened android bowed, the movement making his
tracery shimmer. “With noise and verve, anassa,” he answered as he always did.
“Where is she?”
“In the bookroom, anassa. Loguisse also.”
“Well ...” She was both irritated and amused. “That will
save me some traipsing.”
She stood in the doorway watching them. They were too engrossed
in what they were doing to notice her. Loguisse had finally found someone to
talk to. Once she’d gotten over her shock and skepticism, she was excited by
Harskari’s history and fascinated with that ancient science she impatiently
refused to call sorcery. Harskari’s people had worked more by instinct and
intuition than by any rigorous development of theory, and Loguisse was immersed
in an attempt to provide what she considered proper mathematical descriptions
of the forces and conditions Harskari described and illustrated. The two women
argued endlessly and with much passion over things Aleytys acknowledged to
herself she’d never comprehend. And Loguisse threw herself into the remodeling
of the house and gardens with a ferocity nearly equaling Harskari’s.
The closeness between Harskari and Aleytys might never have
existed. Aleytys was still uneasy when she saw her mother’s body walking about;
she found it disturbing, rather like watching a zombie prance on its coffin.
Shareem’s spirit ... soul ... persona ... whatever ... was gone. There was
nothing of her mother left, yet when she saw her mother’s flesh vibrant with
life, she could not come to terms with her mother’s death. She could not
grieve. That loss, that pain, was sealed up inside her until she was bloated
with it, about to explode if she couldn’t find relief. She drew her hand across
her brow, then smiled. “Looks like you’ve got half of Guldafel working here,”
she said.
The two women broke off what they were doing, looked around
at her, startled. Harskari set her stylus down, wiped her palms with a
handkerchief she pulled from the cuff of her sleeve. “Lunchtime already? Or are
you early?”
“Lunchtime. And more than time. I see I’ll have to tell
Lampos to make sure you eat something now and then.”
Harskari laughed. “Yes, Mama.”
Loguisse gave Aleytys a quick welcoming smile. “Just as well
we hire them. There’s been an influx of refugees from Agishag the last several
years, and Guldafel’s economy is showing the strain. Apparently Hyaroll has
cancelled all contact with the outside. The uplands of Agishag are reverting to
desert.”
Change, Aleytys thought. Ah well, it was never
going to be all sweetness and laughing. “He said don’t call him again the
last time I saw him.”
Loguisse looked austere. “All this interference with Vrithli
lives, it’s nonsense. Harskari agrees with me. We’ll guard our borders and
leave the rest.”
“I thought you simply weren’t interested in your Vrithli.”
Loguisse grinned. “That too.”
Lampos came to the door. “Archira, lunch is served. In the
hall where you wished.”
Harskari shoved her chair back and got to her feet. “Now
that I think about it, I’m starved. Did we eat breakfast?”
“Not that I remember.” Loguisse followed Harskari across the
room. “We started to, I think, but we got into the similarity equations and
...”
“No wonder I’ve got this hole in my middle. The tribulations
of a bo ...” She glanced at Aleytys, broke off. “Coming, Lee?”
“That’s what I’m here for.”
“Seems to me you invited yourself.”
“So I did.”
Aleytys angled the knife across her plate, set the fork
beside it. “I had a reason for inviting myself.”
“And we’re supposed to ask what it is?”
“No need to stir yourselves. I’m off.”
“What?”
“This evening. Ship’s tested enough and I... I can’t wait
any longer.”
“Avosing.” Harskari sighed. “Don’t hope too much, Lee.”
“I don’t, but I’ve got to know.” She lifted her glass,
tilted and rotated it so the last half inch of the golden wine slid across the
bowl, leaving a faint film behind. “I’m taking some of Kell’s nastier warbots.
Them and me ...” She managed a brief smile. “We can take on anything.”
“And if Grey’s dead?”
“I don’t know. Yes I do. I’ll go back to Wolff for a while
no matter what I find on Avosing. I ... I need it ... I need the people there.
And maybe Canyli can find a really horrendous Hunt for me. Take my mind off.”
“Coming back here?”
“In a while. When doesn’t matter, does it? The one thing
I’ve got plenty of is time.”
Arkadj On Brephor
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Vrithian
WITNESS [7]
A SHIPMASTER FROM ARKADJ
My name is Polado Barrega. My ship is the Marespa. home
port Veikro, part sail, part steam. My crew are all Arkadjonk. I won’t have
slaves on a seagoing ship; it brings more trouble than it’s worth, and if you
think I’d take on a Fosporat or a Yashoukki, let me tell you I wouldn’t trust
one of them within a cable of my ship. I used to have a Fospor linguist, but I
found he took bribes and screwed me bad a couple times, so the next time we go
out, he don’t come back; some haddyronk are thanking me for fresh meat. Since
then I have learned enough of this and that to do my own bargaining, though Yashoukkim
are all over the place like fleas and the Suling Lallers are getting hard to
figure. The undying there are drawing in, trying to shut honest merchants out
of Suling waters. You can still get into the harbor at Obattar, though you get
more stares than offers and you got to have the patience of a sneglok and you
got to have connections, and that I got. But it’s getting hard, yah, I tell
you, it’s enough to turn an honest man crook. Don’t know what’s happening, but
seems to me the undying are getting touchier than ever, and it’s making the
randts that run things so itchy you can’t tell where they’ll jump. Slangstra,
it’s hard enough in ordinary times to keep my ship fueled and make a stinking
little profit so I can feed my kids and lay aside for my old age. Yashouk
traders and Fospor merchants everywhere these days undercutting you; those
rotten little luggers can’t carry a load of spit but there they are, promising,
promising, half the time they’re pirates on the side, a land-trader’s lucky
they don’t take his skin and sell that. Then you get home and find some Fospor
naftiko anchored in your own port skimming off the cream while you get tangled
up in paperwork until it cost you a fortune in silver to cut through it and he
gone before you finish and half the time he kill the market for your best
goods. Slanstro-damned Fospor, weren’t for the undying, I’d get together with
Toricas and Gestang and lay a hard hand on Tropagora and put the fear of
Salanggor into those godless squeeze-pennies and sneaking cheats. Days like
this, I think I’m going to burn to ash from the inside when I think about Yashoukkim
and Fosporain and what they’re doing to me. Salanggor curse them, those
undying. I know they been here since my granda’s granda was a nit, and his
granda too, but anytime some hardworking merchant makes a change here and there
just to make things a little easier, they stomp him. Hasn’t never been a war,
no matter how bad things get. Smash an honest man but don’t give shit about
pirates; they can burn villages and sink ships and who gives one holy damn
about it? They just don’t want men feeling free, that’s all, they don’t want
men ignoring them, the shitheads; they want to play with us like dolls, that’s
it, they look down here and watch us and laugh. They don’t care what we think.
They don’t care how much we try. But if we start doing what we want to do, it’s
foot on the neck, face in the mud and breathe how you can. I could go up to one
of them and say I want to kill you, I could go up to haddyr-face Hrigis and say
I want to peel your skin off a strip at a time and feed it to you, I want to
chop you into bait and catch a hold full of fish with you. And she’d laugh in
my face and tell me to lick her feet and I’d be on my belly licking. Yah, I
tell you. And the bloodsuckers who run us, they’re worse, the Vennor and Vannish
and the leeches in the government sucking us dry and eating the meat off our
bones. No, I’d never talk this way to their faces, not them, those vipers are
too poisonous and too scared, they’d have me dead between one breath and the
next. And I can’t do one thing about it, no one can, because those parasites
are backed by the undying, yah, the undying prop them up and let them go on
draining us, stealing the breath out of our throats. But what can a man do?
Live by his wits and scrape around the tangle of paperwork. Smuggle what he can
and get what he can for the rest. I think of the undying and there’s a fire in
my belly. I think of them watching, they’ve come strolling by and betrayed me
with a grin more than once, I think of them watching and I wonder what it would
be like to live where there were no undying, to go about your days without some
demigod peering over your shoulder. I wonder. Oh yah, I wonder.
Vrithian
on the oblique file [4]
KEPHALOS TO SUNCHILD: Kell is dead. Hours, no more,
before Hyaroll goes.
SUNCHILD TO WILLOW: Kell is dead. Time is now. Now the bow,
now the anointed arrows.
SUNCHILD TO BODRI: Kell is dead. The time is now. Now
the herds, the helpers. Fetch them.
Sunchild flitted away to wind in an elaborate gavotte with
kephalos, a dance around the strictures that bound it. Kephalos was not to
notice what it knew was happening.
Willow watched Sunchild streak down the hillside. For a moment
she sat very still, then she got onto her feet with a swift surge of her small
body. “Otter hunts,” she sang. “Otter hunts in me. Watch, my children, watch,
Otter hunts.” Still singing, she dropped to her hands and knees and crawled
into her hut. The bow and arrows were wrapped in a fine cloth Sunchild had
brought her, the stoppered gourd of poosha sat beside the bundle. She gathered
these and backed out, clicking her tongue in the rhythm of her song.
Bodri came trundling into the camp. Humming her song, Willow
straightened, stared. She hadn’t seen ol’ beetle for more than half a
Minachron. He’d changed. The garden on his back was gone, replaced by a mosaic
of mosses. “What what?” she said.
“I will start a new garden when the effort seems
worthwhile,” he said.
“Your piece part, ol’ Bug. You get us in?”
“Had better, hadn’t I? Ah Willow, sweet Willow, trust me, I
have indeed worked out a way. While Sunchild keeps kephalos occupied, with its
consent, of course, we enter through the kitchen.”
Willow looked skeptically at him. “You climb wall, bang door
down?”
“No, Whisper in my heart, I walk through both doors.”
“And what do ironheads be doing?”
“You’ll see. It’s time we went.”
They went quickly down the mountainside, down the footpath
they’d used many times to reach the gardens or the lake, left the path and
circled to the back of the house where a high stone wall shut in the kitchen
garden. Bodri stopped Willow and drew her into the shade of a lod-bush, making
a grating, gnashing sound of pure irritation.
“What? what?”
“Lazy skelos, they were supposed to have the herd waiting
... ah! There. Look.”
A small herd of girilk came trickling out of the trees, coaxed
along by a pair of six-legs who trotted about them and touched them with
stinging feelers if they showed inclination to move in the wrong direction.
Moving at a lumbering gallop, Bodri crossed the grass to the
door in the wall. One of the long thin fingers at the end of a fore-right
tentacle slipped through the hole he’d bored through the hard tough wood and
touched the latch button. He drew it swiftly back as the gate began to swing
open. With a high warbling call he went through the opening, shoving the door
as far back as it would go. Willow followed him through, looked back. The
girilk were trotting toward her, driven into a honking run by the skelos. She
grinned. Sneaky ol’ beetle.
The kitchen garden was a half acre of cultivated land
protected from roaming beasts by a high wall a good three times Willow’s
height. Bodri settled himself into a crouch between two rows of peach—trees,
waiting for the herd to pass.
Willow broke away, ran between vine rows and crouched by the
trunk of an espaliered pear. She unwrapped the bow and strung it, slipped the
strap of the arrow pouch over her shoulder. She thought about nocking an arrow
but changed her mind. Keep the hands free until you get close to what you’re
tracking, Otter sang in her. Be loose and ready to ride the winds of
chance. Bodri and she were creeping up on Hyaroll, down the kephalos wind
from him. And kephalos would keep the wind blowing to them as long as they did
not harm Hyaroll. When Bodri had finished mixing the right poosha, Willow had
proved how benign it was by pricking herself with the point of an anointed
arrow, had gone down deep and come swimming out of sleep unhurt. Kephalos would
not betray them as long as they were true.
Bodri came rushing through the vines as silent as thought.
She grinned at him, excited and nervous and at the back of her mind weaving a
song of this hunt.
The girilk were munching briskly at some rows of thrix.
Bodri settled beside her, a mossy hump, head drawn inside
his carapace though his antennae curled up and out, quivering in a wind that
didn’t exist. She waited, Otter’s ghost watching over her shoulder, his
patience entering her, possessing her who had seldom been able to keep still
from one minute to the next. She was warm with his presence and quiet now with
a hunter’s unending stillness, waiting, waiting, waiting, for the door to open.
The girilk snorted and crunched placidly down the rows, leaving
a swath of kicked-up earth behind them. The skelos were nowhere about.
The door hissed into the wall and an ironhead came out, a
smaller one, more fragile than most she’d seen. It rushed at the girilk, who
snorted and shook their heads, danced away from it and began eating in another
section of the garden.
As soon as the door hissed, Bodri’s head came out, and he
surged onto his six feet, tentacles held in ready loops before him. While the
ironhead was busy with the recalcitrant herd, he moved with a swift and
powerful silence up the steps and into the house, charging the other one
waiting inside. It stopped what it was doing and stared, then three of Bodri’s
tentacles closed around it and the fourth searched over its torso, slid open a
panel and twitched a plug loose, killing it for that moment.
Willow followed him more sedately. While he was struggling
with the ironhead, she dipped the needle points of two arrows in the gourd of
poosha, nocked one of them and held the second between two fingers of her
bowstave hand.
A tiny patch of gold light flitted into the kitchen, bobbed
up and down in front of Bodri, then darted away. Bodri rushed after it, Willow
ran after him. They went up and up along a lazily spiraling ramp to a small
round room domed with colored glass where the sun came in hot and thick and
gold.
Hyaroll lay face down on a padded table. The ironhead
Megathen was kneading his shoulders and back, talking to him quietly. The room
was filled with small sounds, distant running water, the hum of insects from
some ancient summer evening, the lazy rustle of leaves.
Willow stepped past Bodri, lifted her bow and loosed the arrow,
smiled as it lodged in Old Vryhh’s rump, two fingerwidths buried in the mound
of muscle.
Megathen cried out and reached for the arrow. Hyaroll yelled
and started to swing around. Bodri brushed past Willow, almost knocking her off
her feet, charged at Megathen, wrapped his tentacles around the ironhead and
pulled it away from the table. Willow set herself again, nocked the second
arrow, then put it in Old Vryhh’s shoulder, high up in the muscle, taking care
to hit a spot where the point wouldn’t do serious damage.
A moment of stillness as Hyaroll stared at her, fighting off
the poosha longer than she’d thought possible, Old Stone Vryhh. To her
astonishment he smiled, began to lift a hand in salute. Before he could finish
the gesture, the poosha took him and he collapsed in a heap on the table.
Bodri held Megathen in a strangling grip, though the
ironhead stopped struggling the moment Hyaroll lost consciousness. Willow
danced across to the table. “Sleep long, no dream, sleep long, Old Vryhh, no
dream, Old Vryhh,” she sang to Old Vryhh, and shut his eyes for him. She pulled
the arrows out of him and tossed them aside, dipped into the pouch on her belt
and smeared some styptic paste on the wounds to stop the bleeding. No need to
worry about evil demons crawling into those wounds, though puncture wounds were
the worst. In the stasis boxes even demons slept.
Sunchild came drifting in, collecting the piece of himself
as he passed it. “Bodri, you can let Megathen go; I need his arms.” He hovered
over Hyaroll. “Willow-Willow, kephalos sends compliments on your aim.” He
drifted back to the door. “Megathen, bring Hyaroll down to the Reserve. Willow,
you and Bodri better stay here awhile. This next bit’s, urn, kind of touchy.”
Willow nodded. She had no desire to see that dread array
again, tiers on tiers of boxes marching into the darkness, meat lockers filled
with stopped lives.
Megathen picked up Hyaroll and followed Sunchild from the
room.
Willow unstrung her bow and set it aside, slipped off the
arrow pouch, checked to see if the cork was tight in the poosha gourd and put
that down too. Otter’s spirit slipped away from her, and she felt a sudden
grief. She squatted on the mossy rug. It was too warm and breathless in here
for her tastes, but she set that aside and began hunting among her song dances.
Her people didn’t fight wars, but now and then a feud started up between two
clans and went too far for the pa’tanish to reconcile them; then it lasted
until one clan or the other ran out of folk. Yes, she thought, yes, I
the lost living and my enemy he gone. It was a song that needed nothing but
the singer. It was a song that had no dance, no triumph, nothing but sadness.
She squatted by the padded table and sang against the small sounds the song of
the last alive.
Sunchild returned while she was singing. When she finished,
he came and squatted beside her. Otter to the eye. “Kephalos says thank you for
the song.”
Bodri’s antennae quivered; Willow said nothing.
“It’s done. He’s tucked away in a stasis box. He won’t die
now, so we won’t either.”
Bodri stirred after a while, shook himself, his carapace
swaying like a bell. “I’m hungry.” He started for the door. Still saying nothing,
even her body subdued. Willow gathered bow, arrows, the poosha gourd and
started out after him.
“Wait. The house is ours now. Everything. What do we do with
it?”
Bodri stopped at the door, backed around so he could see
Sunchild. “Not mine. Don’t like walls. If this place belongs to anyone now, I
would say kephalos has it. Maybe the two of you. Willow?”
“
“No.”
“You sure?”
She stroked her throat, drew her shoulders up, hugged her
arms across her breasts. “Can’t breathe this place.”
“You see?”
Sunchild quivered. “We see. Yes. Bodri?”
“Yes?”
“Kephalos gets lonesome.”
“Let me think.” Bodri curled up his antennae, closed his
eyes, swayed his big head back and forth. “Ah. Let kephalos make ironheads that
are just talkers, it can send them out and talk to everyone, so we’re
comfortable and it’s not lonesome.” Bodri chuckled, his carapace swinging side
to side in time with his laughter. “Not so different, after all—old Vryhh
wasn’t doing that much these last years.”
Sunchild lost his slightly forlorn look. “Yes yes, let it be
as it was, kephalos working everything and us outside. We’ll have to think what
to do with the sleepers, but there’s no hurry now, is there?”
Willow giggled, clapped her hand against her side and went
dancing out the door. “No hurry, no hurry, no hurry, none no more.”
Vrithian
action on the periphery [5]
Bygga Modig
Weary, aching, layered with grime, Amaiki hefted her bag of
belongings and joined the dispirited line of refugees filing off the ship.
Never enough water, food that would choke a varka, the stench of too many cones
in too small a space, day on day on day in a shuddering juddering sickening
slide and roll. And beyond the body’s suffering there was the raveling of the
spirit. Elbow to elbow with alien cones whose lines she didn’t know and didn’t
want to know. Elbow to elbow with galaphorze seamen whose stench nauseated her,
on a battered rust-bucket whose owner had the instinctive greed of all Arkadjonk.
The Marespa. She’d never forget it. Never. Its grime was ground into her
skin, its creaks and thumps and squeals and hisses had carved themselves into
her brain. Even now Barrega harried his men into prodding the weary line along
so he could wash his ship of them and rush back across the Istenger to cram
another load on board. The crowds were thinning on the wharves of Shim Shupat.
If he dawdled here he might even have to put out with a normal cargo rather
than this jammed mass of stinking life.
The wharf they tied to was at the far end of a busy crowded
port, the noise, the crowds, the smell, all worse than those on the ship, but
there was a different feel here, something freer and bolder that crept inside
Amaiki’s insulating coat of grime and gloom. Something wild ... it was hard to
say just what it was, but it called to that part of her which had responded so
disturbingly to the laughter and shouts and songs of the manai-gone-wild. She
breathed in a great lungful of the air, expelled it, sucked in more. She wanted
no trace of the Marispa’s miasma left in her lungs. She walked off the
ship with a straighter back, her ears up and forward.
With a growling impatience she worked her way through the
swarm of confused passengers that clotted the wharf, shoved herself to the gate
and the U-shaped counter where a bored galaphorze male sat questioning each
cone before he or she or na could leave the wharf, punching the answers into a
datarec, turning a few back, passing the others on, stamping some hands,
leaving the others bare.
NAME: Amaiki-manetai line Jallis meld Sinyas
PURPOSE IN COMING TO GULDAFEL: To join the rest of my
mate-meld who are already here.
THEIR NAMES: Keran-manetai
line Sinyas meld Sinyas
Betaki-tokontai line Yarimm meld Sinyas
Muri-tokontai line Sinyas meld Sinyas
Kimpri-manetai line Hussou meld Sinyas
Se-Passhi naish Sinyas
The galaphorze glanced at the readout, grunted, then waved
her through the gate. She walked down the crudely built chute that shuddered
and bounced under her feet. At the other end of the chute a tall conc female
halted her. “Hands,” she said.
Amaiki held out her hands, palm up.
“Over.”
Irritated but too weary to argue, feeling like a naughty
child hauled before the line mother, she turned her palms down.
With a grunt much like the galaphorze the cone motioned to
the left. “That way.”
The chute split into two arms beyond the counter where the
cone sat. Amaiki started down the left branch, looked over her shoulder. A
mate-meld was being directed down the right. A singling like her was the next,
hands inspected, waved after the meld. Another singling, hands held out, sent
after her. She shrugged and went on. No telling what criteria they were using,
and she was too tired to bother speculating.
The chute opened onto a noisy street. She stepped out, moved
aside to give those following room to go by while she decided what to do. None
of those passing along the street paid much attention to her, a glance or two
from the galaphorze and conoch’hi and other orpetzh moving briskly both ways
along the street, mixing with sleds piled high with boxes and bales. Horns
blatting constantly, shouts, laughter, voice raised in a sudden explosion of anger;
the noise was extravagant and bewildering, the colors were as raw and
confusing. She blinked; it was impossible to focus on anything; there were no
patterns anywhere she could find to give her a place to start as she tried to
make some sense out of the chaos around her. It was ugly and loud and strange
and she should have hated it—and she did hate it, but there was also something
seductive about the vigor and aliveness of the scene, something that energized
her.
“Ami-sim. Ami-sim.” Muri came running across the street, elbowing
his way through the walkers, darting around the sleds, exchanging unserious
curses with one of the drivers who came close to running over him. He slammed
into Amaiki, nearly broke her in half with the urgency of his hug.
Amaiki laughed and stroked his weedy crest. “Oh it is good
good to touch you again, sim-sim, my Muri, my sweeting, my jintii.”
He caught her hand and tugged her away from the wall. Frightened
and excited, she followed him into the confusion in the street, trying to
ignore the nudges and shoves from galaphorze and orpetzh alike. Orpetzh. Not
just Conoch’hi from Agishag, but cousins from all over the world, strangers
whose manners and smells and voices and languages were almost as alien as those
of the galaphorze.
Muri didn’t try to talk to her, but led her at a trot
through a maze of streets, deeper and deeper into the city, away from the waterfront.
Gradually the noise and confusion died to a manageable level. There was still a
disturbing strangeness about the place, and the thick lowland air was hard for
her to handle even after the months on the ship.
Muri slowed a little and turned into a narrow street with
high walls on both sides. Over his shoulder he said, “Not much further,
Ami-sim.”
She nodded, though he didn’t wait for her response. Muri
too-quick. Laughing inside for the first time in days, she hurried after
him.
He stopped before a door set deep in the wall, tapped the
caller plate and stood waiting.
In a moment the door hummed into the wall. Muri caught her
wrist and pulled her inside with him.
A garden like her own. Not exactly, the plants were strange,
but the patterns were as familiar as breathing, so wonderful, so comforting.
She tried to linger, but Muri hurried her on. “Pinbo has done well for herself
over here, Ami. This is her meld-house. Meld Likut-Dassha runs a trading
company and has shops in just about every Dum and galaphorze Garat in Guldafel.”
He pushed open a gate, in an archway, moved into another garden, this one not
quite so familiar. “Things are crazy here, Ami-sim. No work, the price of
everything, well, you wouldn’t believe what folk have to pay for a week-old
egg. Hadn’t been for Pinbo and her meld, we’d’ve had a miserable time. She’s
even found work for us. The undying here is rebuilding everything in her dome;
we’re going north soon as you’ve rested a bit. Good thing about that is the
undying is paying us in land. We’ll have a place for ourselves again, Ami-sim.
One year’s labor for the undying and that’s all.”
Amaiki jerked loose, cold and fearing and angry, all
pleasure lost. Undying. I forgot, ay mother, I forgot what I knew
coming across the uplands. The undying. Here too. Everywhere. Back to the
same futile dependence. She felt helpless and furious. Muri was staring at her,
surprised by the turn in her. “Undying,” she whispered, then spat. “Not again.
How could you, Muri, how could any of you ...”
“It’s different here,” Muri said, speaking slowly for once.
“I know, I understand, but you’ll see. This undying is hardly ever here, she
doesn’t want anything from us except what she pays for. It’s always been like
that, Ami. No one here depends on her for anything; they wouldn’t get it if
they tried. This is our chance to make a new life, a real life, sim-sim.” He
patted her arm. “I know, we all know. Come. You’re just worn to a nub, that’s
all. Whew! after that trip we could hardly move an ear.”
Struggling to deal with the anger knotting her insides,
Amaiki walked silently beside him.
“The one thing you’ll really have to get used to,” he said
as he led her into a court behind the main house, “is all the galaphorze about.
But they’re not so bad when you get to know them. It’s the other orpetzh that,
well, the way they act, ahhhgh, Ami ...” His ears flickered, his hands flailed
the air. She was startled into laughter, and after that the tension drained
quickly out of her.
Then they were in the guesthouse, touching and hugging, a
confusion of talk, everyone at once, no one bothering to listen, no one minding
that no one heard what they were saying.
Then Betaki brought in the new hatchling and gave na to
Amaiki. She held the small soft body close to her, felt the little mouth
sucking at the side of her neck, tasting her flavor, adding it to the other
flavors na knew as na’s own. She blinked away tears and couldn’t speak.
Se-Passhi pressed against her, the others made a circle about her, lapping her
in their warmth. All the aches and sorrows and the bitterness she brought
across the sea with her washed out of her. They’d be back, she knew that well
enough, but now there was no room for anything but a joy beyond words.
About midmorning the next day, they carried children and
gear aboard a Pel river barge and started north into their new life.
Cabozh On Gynnor
_files/image013.jpg)
Vrithian
WITNESS [8]
A MAID SERVANT IN DEIXCIDAO
My name is Meni Peraroz. What you see is what you get. Ma
was a servant and Grandma and they both married servants. I’m not married yet,
but if I can’t get away from here, that’s my fate too. One of those half-assed
would-be wolves out there prowling the halls. Then a kid a year until I die of
it or he gets bored and walks. Me? You got any idea what happens to women who
walk out on their men? Don’t be a fool, you. I got to get away before I get
stuck, yeh, yeh, forget it, wasn’t making no pun, you show where your head is.
Do I really think I’ll be better off in Borbhal or Cobarzh? Oh yeh I do. This
place is dead. Frozen. It’s a little looser out there, or so I hear. Do I
believe it? Sure. I have to, don’t I? Am I scared? You do ask stupid questions.
Sure I’m scared, but look what I’ve got here. Creepy old Zergo around the bay
in his dome, he likes things staying the way they are. He makes sure they do.
Every time someone here tries to do something different, the undying stomps on
him. Anyone with any push, he gets out young. Me? I’m going on for nine [about
sixteen standard]. Ma’s all right but my aunts and everybody else, they’re
pushing me to get married before I’m so old no man’ll want me. Even Her, she’s
pushing her fat nose in my business. Who? Her. The Mistress, who else? So what?
So I signed my name on the Agencharosh’s list. Course I can write, my ma saw to
that. I know most of us can’t, but she saved out some of her tips, hid it where
Dado couldn’t get to it and drink it up, and she hired a Tempestao half-priest
to teach me and my sister. She left last year, my sister did. We haven’t got
word one from her, but I figure maybe where she is it’s rough getting the coin
to send a message. Where was I, ah yeh, I signed my name on the Agencharosh’s
list, the bride list. Lot of those men who left want old-country wives. What if
I don’t like mine? Tell you. I run, that’s what. I figure there’s probably
someone I’m gonna like better. Yeh, I’ll get married. What else can a girl do?
But my kids will have it better. There’s always a way. Ma showed me that. But
you got to fight hard and you got to fight smart and you got to know you can’t
do much for yourself, but your kids will have it better’n you, or what’s the
use of living? Cobarzh. They say it’s wild and dangerous, but there’s land for
the taking. Fight smart and hold hard to what you got. I’m gonna make something
of myself. You’ll see.
Avosing
action on the second line [2]
Sucked through a too-small hole. Pain scraping along her
body. Disorientation. Terror. Anger. A smashing blow. Something stopped her
like slamming against a brick wall, then punted her into a vast nothingness
where she lost ail sense contact, even the feel of her own body.
More confusion. She never quite lost awareness, but for a
while all she had was an assurance that she still lived. Until she came to
rest, a quivering shivering nothing.
She couldn’t feel her body.
Rush of fear and rage that almost tore her apart. Fear she’d
been wrenched loose from her hard-won body, condemned to that tenuous existence
she’d known as a prisoner of the diadem.
After the first shock dissipated, she understood what had happened.
Attacking the Ajin’s body with those claws had triggered Kell’s trap.
Remembering Grey and Ticutt turning and twisting in the screen, bodies intact, she
clutched at hope and calmed herself further. She wasn’t as helpless as the
others would be, she knew this state (or one too like it for her comfort), had
learned to deal with it, circumventing its restrictions. What she’d done
before, she could do again.
Using her adopted gift and old experience, she reached, probing
through the nothing about her.
Linfyar. Screaming with his whole body, terrified, doubly
blinded now.
*Linfy, Linfy,* she sent to him, his name over and over, nothing
more, until her mind-voice punctured his panic and quieted him.
*Shadow?* Voice echoing like a shout in her mind, sense of
floundering.
*Hang on, Linfy, I’m going to try moving over to you.* Keeping
her hold tight on him, she willed herself toward him, the ache in her head this
brought on paradoxically welcome because at least she was feeling something.
Then she was touching something, though she still couldn’t feel her own body.
Not much. It was a blurred, dull stimulus that crept like a slow fuse along
her, slow currents stirring in a body almost turned off, but there, thank whatever
gods there be, there. Linfyar clung desperately to her, trembling all
over in agonizingly slow shudders.
*Linfy, Linfy, it’s all right, it is. We’re in the trap,
that’s all, but I’m going to get us out. Trust me, Linfy, trust me, haven’t I
got us loose before? Don’t worry, don’t fuss, I’ll get us out.* She rubbed her
hand up and down his back, pressing hard so she could feel what she was doing,
so he could feel it. Finally he lay quiet against her; some of his heat crossed
into her and she began to feel herself somewhat more. She started to pull away,
but he butted into her, clutched frantically at her. *Easy, easy, Linfy,* she
said. *You’re hurting me, imp, ease off or I’ll have bruises in places I wouldn’t
want to explain. Ah, that’s better. I know you’re sorry, imp. Listen to me. Let
me go. Grey’s in here too. And Ticutt and Taggert. I’ve got to find them,
Linfy. Umm. There’s something you can do. I can’t say anything or hear anything
through my ears, but your range is way wider than mine. You can help me hunt.
Try your top and bottom and see if you get any echoes, huh?* She thought a moment.
*If it doesn’t work, don’t worry, I’ll keep touch with you, you won’t get lost.
All right?*
She felt curiosity and a growing excitement in him, an excitement
that swamped his panic; turning his focus off his helplessness and setting him
to doing something about it made an immediate difference. He let himself swing
away from her, though he did keep one hand closed painfully tight about her
arm. She felt him get set, then felt the effort he was putting into throwing
out the sound, felt his disappointment when there was no return. Then he
started pulsing again, long slow beats that she didn’t actually hear but felt as
tickles across her skin. She stiffened, nearly choked on her excitement. I’m
feeling that. *I feel that,* she mind-yelled at Linfyar. *I feel that.*
Linfyar radiated glee, then pressed harder, delighted with the tickling thrum.
A sound that was a physical presence here, as solid as their flesh.
He let go of her, began turning in a slow circle, throwing
out the subsonics. He burned with excitement when he located another three echo
points evenly spaced about him.
*I did it, Shadow,* he sang to her. *I did it, way way down,
‘bout as far as I can go. Three and you, Shadow. Three and you.*
This was the final evidence that her body was here with her,
not just a hope and a prayer and self-delusion. *Splendid, Linfy. I’m going to
try reaching them. This one on my left first. Keep track of me, will you, and
tell me if I’m going wrong, huh?*
*Sure, Shadow.* He was a little trembly at the prospect of
her going away from him, but he had enough information coming in so he didn’t
feel wholly lost and could regain that stubborn independence circumstances had
built in him.
She pushed, ignoring the ache in her head, knew she
was drifting away from Linfyar because she lost the body-sense of his presence.
*Who?* she thrust at the faint warmth that drew her. *Who?*
After several repetitions and a slow drift closer, she got a
startled response from the presence ahead. *Who?* came back at her.
*Shadith. Friend of Aleytys. You?*
*Grey. Shadith?*
*You’ve met me.*
*No ....*
*When I sang through Lee’s body.*
*What?*
*Shadith the singer. From the diadem.*
*Lee!* More energy in the mind voice, then pain, then a sudden
fear and anguish. * Another dream.*
*No. Lee’s nowhere near here, and you’re not dreaming.* She
willed herself to drift closer to him; she couldn’t think talk and shift positions
at the same time, so she gave herself successive pushes between fragments of
speech. *Head ... sent me and ... Taggert ... after Ticutt dropped ... out of
... no, you wouldn’t know ...* In each of the pauses she surged closer. *When
she didn’t ... hear from you ... after four months ... Head sent Ticutt ... to
see ... what he could ... find out ... when he stopped ... reporting ... Head
waited ... for Aleytys, but we ... figured ... it was a trap for ... her, so
she went ... somewhere else ... suck Kell off ... so we wouldn’t have to ...
fight him off ... while we looked for ... you! Uh!* She wrapped herself around
him. *Grey?*
*Real?*
*Feel that.* She pinched his arm hard, pushing back her dismay
at how wasted it felt.
He shuddered, the contact closer to breaking him than those
eternities of nothingness. She held him and let him sob and struggle into calm,
knowing it was good that she was here instead of Aleytys to see his weakness
and help him deal with it. For his pride’s sake and Lee’s place in his life.
He’d dealt with Aleytys taking over his position as premier Hunter. After all,
he’d been expecting that to happen; he was aging and it was the natural order
of things for him to pass on into other aspects of Hunters as he withdrew from
active field service. That this had come before he was ready to retire and it
was his lover who replaced him, that had been difficult to swallow, but he was
strong enough in himself to accept that, and her special heritage had in a way
eased the transition. And he’d seen her grieve for her son, he’d comforted her
and helped her through it. This was different. Not something he wanted between
himself and Aleytys. Shadith was a stranger to him, a name, an acquaintance he
could trust enough to fall apart in front of without shame or a sense he’d have
to live with the memory of his breakdown every time he saw her. She waited in
silence, holding him, saying nothing, letting him wear through the reaction and
come shuddering back into control.
*Where’s Lee?* he said finally.
*Vrithian. Look, if you concentrate and will yourself along,
you can move. A minute, I can show you .... Linfy?*
*Uh-huh?*
*Got us located?*
*Yah.*
*Who’s closest to us? What direction?*
She felt the brushing tickle of his subsonics, then it moved
on. A moment later, sounding more confident than before, with more than a touch
of cockiness, he said, *Go left and ease back toward me, like you’re coming
down a lazy hill.*
*Gotcha. You hear that, Grey? No? Hmmm. Well, listen.* She
repeated what Linfyar had said, altering directions to fit his orientation. “I
think all of us ought to get together. I’m getting glimmerings of maybe a
plan.*
She felt the straining of his body, the hard knots of what
muscle he had left as he struggled to do something he didn’t know how to do,
powered by desire and will. They were moving faster, she was sure of it, she
could actually sense the medium, it felt like half-set gelatin. His will
blended with hers was more effective than hers alone. Her optimism increased.
If they could build up enough momentum in here, maybe she could jump them all
out. After all, she was experienced in this sort of leap, popping from the
diadem matrix into the body she was wearing now. Of course, she had Aleytys
powering that jump and guiding her, but maybe, just maybe ...
They slammed into another form. Grey grabbed at it; Shadith
wrapped herself around them both and did her best to steady their tumble. When
they were quieted, she touched the other. Ticutt. Cautious Ticutt, who
went into nothing without thinking it through three times and then again.
*Ticutt,* she said. *Shadith. A friend of Aleytys. Grey’s here with me.*
Ticutt went stiff. Even in his mind there was almost no response.
*You got that? I come to get you out of this, (chuckle) I suppose
I mean get us out now.*
Silence a moment longer, then quiet slow words, no emotion
in them, “spoken” with the mild precision of his ordinary speech. *A good
trick. If you can do it.* The mindvoice shook a little on the last words, but
he wouldn’t allow himself to show more of the terrors that haunted him,
couldn’t allow anyone to know how shattering his relief was. Grey could weep
and shiver and purge his self-created demons because Shadith was the only
witness. Precise and prideful, jealous of the reputation he had for his calm
assessment of possibilities in the most unnerving circumstances—and with Grey
there to see him falter—Ticutt could not allow himself to show any of the
demons working on him.
*Well,* she said, *I hadn’t planned on being in here with
you when I started this. But I’ve got an idea or two. Come on. Let’s go find
Taggert.*
*He’s here too?* Grey spoke more slowly than before; he was
running on the dregs of his strength, and there was nothing here to replenish
it.
*A little way off. Point us, Linfy.*
*Uh-huh.* Tickle of subsonics passing over them, moving on.
“Left again. Turn. Turn. Turn. Stop! Go on in that direction.*
*Got it. And you come over to us, Linfy. Then we start working
on busting out of here.*
*Got it.*
*Ticutt, if you put your mind to it, you can move yourself.
Keep hold of us and shove.*
This time she rode a power that woke in her a wild
excitement, like the times she’d handled Lee’s talent and felt that surge of
strength that was only barely within her control. They cannoned into Taggert
and went spinning into nowhere, finally steadied, rocked as Linfyar landed on
them, steadied again.
*Hi, Tag. That old acquaintance again.*
*Shadow. What the hell.*
*Me and Grey and Ticutt and Linfyar.*
*Grey! You all right, man?*
*He can’t hear you, Tag. Looks like I’m the only one who can
talk in here. Umm. Maybe not. Maybe I can be a kind of switchboard. Focus on
me, Tag. Focus on me, Ticutt. Focus on me, Linfy. Can you all hear me now?*
*Yes.* *Yes.* *Yes.* *Yes.*
Echoes bounced about inside her skull. She waited till the
worst was over, then she said, “Tag, keep the focus on me and see if you can
talk to the others.”
*Right. Grey, can you hear this?*
*Coming through. Sorry to hear you, old friend.*
*Sorrier to be here. What did it to you?*
*Got a chance to put my hands on the Ajin. Looked good, fast
snatch and out. No oppos worth mentioning. Got a handful of Ajin—and here I
am.”
*Uh ... huh! Ticutt, you listening?*
*I hear you both. Same with me. I got what looked like a
safe shot. I took it. Here I am.*
*Uh ... huh! Shadow, you still hearing this?*
*Yes. Looks like we tripped the trigger when we put the
claws in. Linfy, you listening?*
*Uh ... huh! Shadow.*
*Right. (chuckle) Listen, everyone. I said I had had a few
ideas. Grey, did you notice how much faster and easier we made the move for
Taggert when Ticutt was helping with the push?*
*I noticed. Lot more energy.*
*Energy increase feels geometric rather than additive. Which
is interesting. Ordinary sounds don’t seem to travel in here, but Linfyar can
make sounds and hear them a long way past both ends of our range. He tried out
the top end and didn’t get anywhere. Then he tried the low end. He located you
for me with some very low notes, about as far down as he can go. Don’t bother
telling me sound waves that long are lousy for echo location. It shouldn’t
work, but it does. Which means something, but who the hell knows what? I sure
don’t. But I don’t have to know how it works to use it. What I think is this:
we should link up with Linfy and give him energy to push his notes way out so
he can explore this miserable hole for us. If he can find some kind of, well,
edge, something to push against, we can try busting through it. I don’t know
where we’ll be if we break through, but just about anything’s better than this.
Even dead. Don’t you think? If any of you has a better idea, say something. No?
Right, then, focus through me. Linfy, I’m going to start feeding you some push;
pinch me if it gets more than you can handle. You start feeling about and see
what you can find.*
*Got it, Shadow.*
*Here we go. Start looking, imp.*
Avosing
the lines converge
Stretched out on a grassy knoll that kneaded itself to her
shape whenever she shifted position, a pleasant noisy stream running behind
her, huge horans rising on three sides of her, invisible kuskus singing in
them, their five-fingered leaves whispering just loud enough to be heard over
the water, Aleytys watched Avosing grow larger in a viewscreen thirty meters on
a side. Ship nudged into an orbit that kept it stationary over a mountain range
that ran through a broad continent, part woodlands, part immense prairies,
rippling grass that must have reached horizon to horizon for anyone standing on
the ground. “Where’s the trap?”
“There.” A flashing light in the mountains. “We are maintaining
position directly over it.”
“Any difficulty with probes or visuals?”
“Aleytys.” Ship sounded pained. Its voice had startled her
the first time she’d heard it. Shareem’s voice. For a while it curdled her
stomach every time ship spoke to her, but she didn’t try to change it.
Shareem’s voice. After what he’d done to her. Why? What did it mean? He
tormented her, he killed her, why did he have to own this small piece of her?
Lot of whys. There was an urgency in her to know as much as she could about
Kell now that outside urgencies no longer existed for her. He was dead, but she
had as yet unshaped plans for digging into him like a xenologist into a city
mound.
“And the trigger?”
“There also.”
An inert square bloomed on the image of the world, isolating
a single mountain, a huge long-dead volcano with a lake in its crumbling
center. The square spread out, another square bloomed in the center of it, a
schematic showing the pier, the landing field, the outer structures, the
confusing web of tunnels running through the mountain’s stone. At a confluence
of lines near the edge of the stone she saw the flare marking the scaffolding
that supported the mechanisms which created and held in place the pocket
universe and brought into being the umbilical joining the two when anyone
attempted to lay hands on the Ajin with aggressive intent. A short way on, a
pinlight flashed. The trigger. So the Ajin was home, waiting for her, though he
didn’t know that.
Aleytys sat up, the knoll shifting shape to conform to her
unexpressed wishes, reading muscles and posture to gain a disconcertingly
accurate knowledge of her intentions before she’d formulated them to herself.
“What’s down there?”
Beside the map, ship listed the number of mercenaries, technicians
and support personnel. Shadith, Taggert and Linfyar weren’t among those. Either
they had been sucked into the trap already or they hadn’t gotten this far.
Aleytys sighed. “Weapons? Anything to worry us?”
“Nothing the warbots can’t handle. I’ll watch. If the numbers
are too great, I’ll thin your weeds for you. Take Abra with you—we’re linked;
even stone that thick won’t break the bond.”
Aleytys got to her feet “I’ll do that. Get me to the
lander.”
The lander swooped down, ignoring fire from the base, shrugging
off beams and missiles with a contemptuous ease. It settled onto the landing
field and disappeared beneath a hot yellow dome as one side opened out to let
Aleytys, Abra and six warbots come sweeping out. The six ‘bots moved out in
tight circle about Aleytys, walking with the sinuous flickering stride of the
scorpions they vaguely resembled.
With the warbots wiping all resistance before and behind,
irresistible as a tsunami, she swept through the trees and the mercenaries,
burned her way into the main building; she blew the offices and central control
to smoking shards, moved farther in, striding along just short of a run, mouth
set in a grim line, hair blowing free; nothing could touch her, nothing could
stop her, into the lava caves she went, leaving two ‘bots to guard the mouth of
the main tunnel and two others to search out and destroy anything or anyone
that attacked them. Behind her the mercenaries and technicians and others still
alive began gathering whatever they could get their hands on and heading for
the boat, the fliers or the few hidden trails leading out of the crater. Some
among them stayed behind, those that had bought what the Ajin was selling; they
retreated into the rockfalls and sniped at the ‘bots or tried to work their way
into the tunnels and rescue the Ajin.
Aleytys stopped before the door to the Ajin’s quarters,
stood back while one of the warbots melted the lock out of it and kicked it in.
The ‘bot skittered inside on multiple multisegmented legs. Its armored scanners
whirled over the six surfaces of the room, its weapons pattered at high speed,
taking out the lasers in the walls, the mines in floor and ceiling, shedding
everything thrown at it, letting the remaining ‘bot shield Aleytys and Abra
from the flare-offs. The room was clean in seconds. The ‘bot skittered to one
side and waited.
Abra beside her, Aleytys strode into the room, looked
around. The walls were melted and congealing, splatters of cooling stone were
flung across the cratered floor, most of the furniture was torn and leaking its
stuffing, smoldering here and there, adding its stench to that of hot stone and
charred wood. A slim metal case leaned against a smoking chair, its neat,
precisely machined lines like a shout in all that disorder. “What’s that?”
Abra crossed the room, picked it up, opened the catches.
“Psychprobe. Portable. Suggestion: Taggert?” Aleytys shook her head.
“Impossible to say. Where now?” Abra pointed, moved ahead of her down the
hallway. One warbot followed them, the second stayed to guard the door. Abra
stopped at an open door, shone light into the room. The Ajin lay unconscious in
a mess of bloody sheets and blankets, a tangle-web smeared across his naked
body, claws at the end of two extensible rods set in wrist and ankle, blood
crusted about the wounds, a little still trickling. An hour since the attack,
not more, probably less. Shadith and Taggert; Abra was right about the probe.
She moved closer to the door. A metal arm flashed before her, stopping her.
“No,” Abra said. “Ship says don’t pass the door.”
“I hear.” As the arm dropped, she said, “Turn the light on
that small table by the bed.” A heavy silver ring gleamed in the harsh glare of
the light. She recognized it immediately. The trigger. She reached for
her power river, filled herself from it, pleased that it seemed to take little
more effort even though she’d taken off the diadem, reached for the
ring.
She couldn’t lift it.
That puzzled her. It wasn’t that heavy; couldn’t be if the
man wore the thing. She tried for a firmer hold, but her mindfingers slipped
off as if the metal were greased; she staggered backward as her concentration
slipped with her reach, landed with a whoosh against a foreleg of the
‘bot behind her. She straightened and went back to scowling at the ring. What
next? Send one of the ‘bots after it? She rubbed at the buttock that had
slammed into the ‘bot’s leg. Send it and lose it, if the ship was right. She
began prodding delicately at the ring with the fingertips of her outreach,
pit-a-pit-a-pit, throttling back the frustration that made her want to scream,
pit-a-pit-a-pit, soapy metallic feel under her mindfingers, couldn’t get a grip
anywhere.
Abruptly she slapped her side. “Aschla’s hells, I’m stupid
stupid stupid.” With a shaky laugh she reached for the bedtable and
began sliding it slowly and carefully toward the door. It moved with a touch of
reluctance, but came along to her tugging without challenging her hold.
She’d moved the table about a meter when a grayish patch
formed in the air above it. She stiffened, stopped the table where it was and
waited.
The grayness bulged and throbbed. It split, decanting a
clump of bodies clinging together. The clump hit the floor with a whistle,
several grunts, and a hissing curse, broke apart into five forms. Shadith
scrambled onto her feet, pulling Linfyar up with her. Taggert rolled up into a
crouch, scanning for trouble. Ticutt came up more slowly, holding himself in
tight control. Grey didn’t bother getting up, just lifted his torso, bracing
himself on his elbow. He grinned at the doorway. “Lee.”
She blinked back the tears that blurred her eyes; it was a
minute before she could speak. “Well. Good to see you. Grey. At least I think
so. You look like a silvercoat after a hard winter.”
“You pop the bubble?”
“Not me.” She nodded at the bedtable. “I was giving myself
fits trying to get hold of that ring.”
Shadith walked over to the table, poked at the ring. “This
the trigger?”
“According to Kell’s ship.”
“Uh. I take it he isn’t around anymore.”
“No.”
“Mmm. You know, I think your moving the table messed things
up just enough so we could crash out.”
“I doubt it. Coincidence, that’s all. That I was here.”
Aleytys turned to the android. “What’s ship say about the door?”
Pause. Abra stood poised, head tilted, light making a grotesquerie
from the planes of his nonface. “Ship says don’t go in yet. Ships feels a force
about the doorway. Ships suggests you get hold of the ring.”
“And what happens if Shadith tries to lift it?” Pause.
“Don’t know.”
“Shadow?”
“I can’t see spending the rest of my life in this room.” She
poked tentatively at the ring; over her shoulder she said, “What’s Harskari
think?”
“Harskari’s a long way from here, getting settled in body
and home. She said to say hello.”
“Ah.” She swung around. “And our common curse?”
“Sitting in a lokbox in the ship till I hand it over.”
“Um. That sort of complicates things.”
“I wouldn’t argue with you on that. You want a guarantee?
I’ll come after you if it comes to that. Promise.”
“You know I don’t mean anything like that, Lee. I’m just talking
to get my nerve up. Here goes.” She switched around again and reached for the
ring. She couldn’t lift it. When she tried to tighten her hold, her fingers
slipped off. “Shit.” She tried again. “Like it’s greased or something.” She
looked at her fingers, wiped them on her sweater.
Taggert touched her shoulder. “Let me see what I can do.”
His fingers slipped off no matter how hard he pinched. He tried shoving the
ring sideways off the table. It wouldn’t budge. The table tipped over, the ring
stuck firmly in the center of it. He picked the table up and set it on its
legs.
“That seems to settle that.” Aleytys looked quickly at Grey,
turned away; he was stretched out on the rug, his eyes closed, his gaunt face
still; he hardly seemed to breathe. “Tag, see if you can find something to push
that table through the door to me. Stay as far back as you can.” She glanced at
Grey, then Ticutt. “Hurry a little, please.”
Taggert frowned at the nearest of the claw rods, shook his
head; he prowled about the room, found a closet, a wooden rod holding some of
the Ajin’s clothing; he knocked it loose and brought it back, held it flat in
front of him. “Should be long enough.” He set the table close to the door, then
used the rod to nudge it through.
The table juddered through the doorway, the ring suddenly
loose, dunking against its top as it shivered from the rug to the tiles of the
hallway. Taggert stepped back and stood leaning on the rod, watching Aleytys as
she scooped up the ring. She ran fingertips over the incised design on its square
flat top. “I can’t read anything in this,” she said. “Abra, what about the
doorway now?”
A long silence, then the android spoke. “Ship says, still
activity around the doorway. Ship does not—repeat, does not—think you should be
the one to try crossing. Ship says Kell has certainly set special snares for
you.” Silence again. “Ship says since all the captives are out, she is going to
burn out the scaffolding, let the bubbleverse collapse. That should remove the
last danger. Ship says wait, don’t do anything yet. Ship is coming in low to
make sure of the cut, says she stops talking now because she is busy. Wait.”
Aleytys drew her hand across her forehead, down the side of her
face, pressed it against her mouth, her eyes fixed on Grey.
Shadith glanced at her, went to kneel beside him. “He’s all
right, Lee, just taking it easy.”
Grey chuckled suddenly, tried to sit up. Taggert dragged a
chair over to him, raised his shoulders so he could lean against it. He looked
exhausted but alert. His hands were shaking on his thighs; the cloth of his
trousers, bunched about wasted legs, trembled with the trembling of his hands.
“Don’t fuss, Lee.”
“I’ll fuss if I want. Look at you.”
“I have felt more heroic.”
“Well, it’s better than dead. I thought ...” She broke off
as Abra touched her arm.
“Ship says scaffolding is gone, archira. No activity
detectable about the doorway.”
Aleytys looked down. The ring was melting into smoke that
curled away from her hand, fading into nothing. Another breath and even the
smoke was gone. She flung herself into the bedroom and knelt beside Grey. She
caught hold of his hands, lifted them to her face, her eyes on his. He smiled
at her, the hurts between them forgotten for the moment, the need back.
“Stretch out,” she said after a while. “Let me work on you.”
Shadith scrambled to her feet, stood watching a moment as
Aleytys set her hands on Grey’s chest. Lee’s changed, she thought. More
settled, I think. That’s the word. Settled. Yes. She knows who she is now and
where she’s going. Linfyar brushed past her, went to poke at the sodden
figure of the Ajin, radiating satisfaction. The Ajin had never liked him, a
feeling fully reciprocated. Shadith sighed, stretched, then shooed him away.
The Ajin was twisted in sprawl that made her back ache as she inspected him.
She looked up as Taggert came to stand beside her. “How long does that gas keep
them under?”
“Couple hours.” He felt about his jacket, pulled out two
patch seals. “I’ll slip the claws, you paste these on.”
Shadith nodded. She pulled the backing off one of the Patches.
The claws whipped out of the Ajin’s wrist and blood started to pump. She
slapped on the patch, smoothed it out, moved along the bed, dealt with the
ankle wound as Taggert collapsed the second claw. She stepped back. “I’ll get a
wet towel so we can clean him up a bit. You pull the tangle off.” She felt in
her pockets. “I’ve got cord somewhere.”
“Never mind, Shadow, I’ve got slave wire.” She nodded. “Back
in a minute. And hey, you ought to hunt in those things you dumped for something
he can wear. Unless you prefer him wrapped like a piece of meat.” She looked
around. Aleytys was bent over Ticutt. Grey was asleep. “Just had a thought. And
you know what you can do with your funny faces. Grey and Ticutt aren’t going to
want to put those stinking clothes back on once they’ve had a bath.” Taggert
took out a flat tin. “Get the towel, Shadow.”
“Yessir, yessir, happy to serve you, yessir.” Giggling, she
trotted into the fresher. “Hey, Tag, you ought to see this, there’s a tub in
here big enough to float a harem.”
“Get the towel, Shadow.” Laughter in his voice. She pulled a
towel off the rack, bunched it in the basin and turned the water on. With a
groaning yawn, she stretched, then splashed handful of cold water on her face.
She yawned again, dabbled her fingers in the water. Got to talk to Po’
sometime soon; he’s probably whirling in his whatever with all that’s going on.
She wrung the towel out and went back into the bedroom.
The Ajin was laid out like a corpse, cleaned up, dressed,
bound with Taggert’s slave wire. Shadith checked him again. He should be waking
in a bit; when she touched him, she could feel a sluggish stirring. She
smiled, thinking about what he’d be going through when he did wake. You
earned every second of it too. Mmm. Harp. And a chat with Po’. She left the
bedroom and tried to leave the apartment, but the warbot at the door wouldn’t
let her pass.
“Lee.”
“What, Shadow?”
“Got some stuff I want to get. Tell that ‘bot to let me
out.”
“Go where? It’s quiet in here, but the ‘bots outside say
there are still snipers in the rubble. They’re clearing them out, but ...”
“I’m not going outside, just over to the rooms where the
Ajin put me. Left my harp there. I want it back. Send the extra ‘bot with me if
you’re nervous.”
“I’ll do that. You’ll probably need it to power the door. We
chewed up the control center when we passed through it. Before you go, Shadow,
Grey and Ticutt are going to wake starving. And Linfyar’s hungry. Any kind of
kitchen in here? I don’t want to leave until we’re all ready to run.”
“Linfy’s always hungry. God knows how big he’s going to get
before he stops growing. Kitchen. Uh-huh. The Ajin was pretty paranoid. Has a
separate power source and aircon system for these rooms. Kept his food separate
too, sealed in an autochef Kell had his androids build for him.” Shadith
grinned. “Poison tasters and all. Come on. I’ll show you.”
Lights flaring, the warbot crouched in the sitting room.
Shadith looked around, sniffed cautiously. With the door open the air wasn’t
too bad. The viewscreen was gray glass, a mirror reflecting the ‘bot, a figure
out of nightmare sketched in light and shadow. The room had a dulled dusty
feel, abandoned, though she’d been gone less than one night; it looked like any
cheap hotel room after the guests had left. She jerked the velvet curtain to
one side and went into the bedroom.
The air smelled staler in the bedroom; it was harder to
breathe in there. The harp in its case stood beside the bed where she’d left
it. She started to hoist the strap onto her shoulder, then frowned at the
screen. The Ajin’s stash. He had to have the gold and the sweetamber to pay off
whatever runner he dealt with. Those types never heard of credit. Should be in
his rooms somewhere. Now there’s a hoard I’d like to get my hands on. I’m
not riding free anymore; have to make my own way. Her reflection floated in
the glass, insubstantial as a ghost. Ghost. Old Po’. This is about the only
place I’m going to have privacy enough. Well, Shadow, quit dithering and do
something. She let the strap fall and stretched out on the bed, resting her
forearm across her eyes to shut out the lights from the other room. With her
tiredness in this the dregs of a very long night, it was hard to quiet mind and
body enough without slipping too far and dropping into sleep.
*What is happening there, Shadow? Who was that came down
like a fire wind?* (agitation, suspicion, anger)
*Hello, Old Po’. Relax.*
*Relax!*
*Sure. It’s over. My friends are sprung. The Ajin’s in
Hunters’ hands. And you don’t have to worry about that ship. Belongs to a
friend of mine. She tends to overreact at times, but she’s good to have around
if there’s problems.*
*I’ve got lice in my forest.* (indignant grumbling) *Blown
there by the big wind your friend made.*
*Hey, Old Po’, don’t you try telling me you don’t know what
to do with them. Hah! You and your soft sides, you run your forest hard and
tight, god help anyone tries to go against you. Which reminds me, let Perolat
know I’m all right, huh? Tell her what’s happened and why I came here. I’d tell
her myself, but that’d just make trouble for her. The closest I’m going to get
to Dusta is that islet where I parked my lander. Listen, Po’ Annutj, what I’m
gonna say is important. There’ll be trouble when Hunters hands over the Ajin. I
think I can talk Grey into hauling him off to Pajungg itself to turn him over.
That’d give you a nineday or so to get ready to handle the homeworlders. Ajin’s
been making them look stupid and small; when their egos start expanding,
they’re going to come out stomping. Um. Maybe it’d be a good idea to organize a
little guerrilla activity on your own, something to keep them honest without
being too serious about it. But that’s your problem now. How you deal with it
is up to you. ‘F you don’t mind, I’ll come back in a few years to see how
things worked out and we could have that chat we talked about but never did.*
*Ancient child, I’ll miss you.*
*Ahh, no you won’t, Old Po’, you’ll be a lot too busy.*
*Never too busy. The All keep you, Shadow.*
*Well, see you, friend.*
Shadith shook herself out of the half-doze and sat up. The air
in the bedroom was heavy and dusty, and it smelled. She caught hold of the harp
case’s strap, slid it over her shoulder, coughed, got to her feet, coughed
again, wrinkled her nose in disgust and went out.
Aleytys and the others were sitting at the Ajin’s dining
table, eating and listening to Linfy tell about their part in the Ajin’s campaign.
Taggert looked up, saw her, waved her to the empty chair beside him. Sensing
the divided interest of his audience, Linfy went back to eating.
Aleytys pushed at her hair, smiled at Shadith. “You’ve had
quite a time here.”
“Surprised the hell out of me first time it happened.”
Shadith began filling her plate. “My sisters used to do that. Not me. I thought
the art died with them. Apparently not. Though maybe it’s just the pollen.”
Grey set his cup down, shook his head. “Hard to believe.
It’s a good thing I didn’t get a look at you in there, Shadow.” He passed a
hand over shaggy hair. The gray streaks were growing into patches, more of them
than she remembered from the last time she’d seen him. He was relaxed and calm
now; the drawn look was gone.
She shrugged. “It’s a problem I’ll grow out of.” She touched
the belly of the cha pot—still hot—and filled her cup. “Where we going from
here?”
“That’s up in the air still, Shadow,” Aleytys said. “Me and
Linfy, we need lift to my lander. I borrowed it from a friend and he wants it
back.”
“That I can do. Come on board with me and tell ship where to
go.” Aleytys looked around the table. “What about the rest of you?” She
chuckled. “Between you all and the smugglers, there must be more ships than
rocks in the Belt.” Taggert nodded. “I could use a lift. The Ajin collected me
with the other runners, so I’ve got no way back. Besides, I always wanted to
see the inside of a Vryhh ship.”
Grey frowned. “Mine’s been in orbit about Avosing for the better
part of a year. For all I know the Pajunggs could have towed it away.”
Ticutt looked up. “Still there when I got here. I used it as
a drop station for my reports.”
Aleytys looked at her hands. “I didn’t see it, but I didn’t
waste time when I got here, just came charging ahead. Well, I was in a hurry.
Ship didn’t say anything.” She tilted her chair onto its back legs so she could
look through the doorway. “Abra. Come here, please.”
The android moved with silky grace into the opening. “Archira?”
“Ask ship to locate ... you tell it, Grey.”
As he ran through the characteristics of his ship and what
signals she’d respond to, Aleytys sat frowning at the table. She picked up a
fork and began drawing lines in a drop of gravy. When Grey finished, she tapped
the tines on the table and watched the planes of the android’s nonface.
After a moment’s silence, Abra said, “Ship says Hunter ship
is in the orbit described and appears undamaged.”
“Good. Tell ship to be ready to pick us up in about an hour.
What’s happening with the snipers out front?”
“Warbots report eleven killed, three injured, seventeen
fled, two still firing. All other life sources have left the crater. Ah! Now,
only one sniper left.”
“Something else we’d better get settled.” Grey sat up,
waited until he had their attention. “The Field Ops’ share of the fee. I’m out
of it, it’s up to you all, but it seems to me the one who’s done the most to
earn it is young Shadow here. Hunter or not.”
Shadith shook her head. “Just make complications.” She
grinned. “I figure the Ajin’s stash would be pay enough for my trouble.”
Taggert gave a shout of laughter. “I’m sure you do. Well,
Shadow, you awesome child, far as I’m concerned, you more than earned it.”
Ticutt nodded, then sat silent again, removed from all this,
locked in his head, fighting shadows he made for himself.
“Right. I’ll ask ship to find the stash for you.” Aleytys
set her fork across her plate. “About the fee. I’m out too. That leaves you,
Tag, and Ticutt; the two of you can figure percentages later. Who’s taking
charge of the body in there?”
“Grey,” Taggert said. “You’re Hunter of Record, Grey; the
rest of this is none of their damn business, those Pajunggs.’’
Grey sighed. “I was hoping to head straight home.”
Taggert’s pale eyes laughed at him; his off-center nose
seemed to twitch. “Time you stopped lazing around letting the rest of us do all
the work.”
“Umm. Grey.”
“Shadow?”
“I’d kind of appreciate it if you hauled the Ajin to Pajungg
itself before you turned him over. There’s some good people here who could use
the time to get set for what the Grand Doawai and his creeps are going to do to
them.”
Ticutt looked up. “Perolat?”
“Uh-huh. And a bunch more.”
He sucked in a long breath, let it out. “Add my voice to
Shadow’s.”
Shadith waited to see if he’d say more, but he was finished.
Grey hesitated. “Lee ...”
“I could take your ship in tow?”
He looked down at his hands, a private man who didn’t like
exposing his feelings to outsiders. “We’ve got some talking to do,” he said
finally. “Your ship’s as good a place as any.”
Wolff
the diadem cleared off the board
goodbye to the RMoahl
Wolff system.
Teegah’s Limit.
The Pajungg Hunt was completed. Grey, Ticutt, Taggert were
sitting in the Records and Accounting room at Hunters, flaking their file
reports. With Aleytys’ first ship signed over to her, Shadith had taken off to
hunt up Swardheld/Quayle so she could return his lander. She’d be back eventually;
the greater part of the Ajin’s stash was in Aleytys’s lokbox at Wolff’s only
bank.
The RMoahl ship was a dark blotch filling the screen.
“Call them,” Aleytys said.
A square bloomed in the center of the screen, in the screen
a face that only another RMoahl could love: dark leathery skin, flat nose, thin
horizontal nostrils, long upper lip, mouth a gash filled with omnivore’s teeth.
Antennae twitched from pompoms of orange fuzz. Great yellow eyes with slit
pupils blinked slowly. The RMoahl second, Mok’tekii.
“Show me to them.”
Mok-tekii’s antennae whipped about, the orange fur of his
pompoms stirred as if blown by an erratic wind.
Aleytys sat up, the grassy knoll remolding itself to support
her. “Hounds of the RMoahl, how would you like to quit this tedious watch and
go home?”
“Don’t mock us, Aleytys Hunter.”
“I do not mock, Mok-tekii Second. Or if I do, only a little.
You’ve complicated my life quite a lot, you know. Well, that’s finished now. I
have come into my heritage and rid myself of yours.” She opened the box on her
lap and lifted out the diadem, held it up, the flexible round draped over her
hand. “I hope you take better care of it this time. It’s empty now and hungry.
If you want it still, come get it.”
“Forgive us, despina. We do indeed desire the diadem, but to
come aboard that ship ...”
“I understand. Abra.” When the android was in the viewrange,
she pointed at it and said, “Abra will wait in the lock for whomever or
whatever you choose to send. Meaning no discourtesy, Hound, I’m quite as
reluctant to visit as you are.”
The diadem passed smoothly into RMoahl claws.
The koeiyi Sensayii appeared in the screen, went through an
elaborate salute. “All honor is yours, Aleytys Hunter. The debt is ours. Should
you have need, we three will come however far you call.”
Aleytys suppressed a chuckle. The koeiyi had shown little
sign he possessed anything resembling humor. All in the best heroic
tradition, she thought. Ah well, he means well. She sketched a bow
of her own, spread her hands. “No debt at all, koeiyi. Let there be peace
between my kin and yours.”
To her relief the koeiyi had nothing more to say. The square
blanked and the RMoahl globe ship backed away, began to gather speed. In
seconds it was beyond the reach of her screens, running toward the speed it
needed to slip into the intersplit and dive toward the RMoahl sun.
Wolff
signing off
Grey came to her. In a way his time inside the pocket
universe had been like a wild trek, stripping away confusions and hurt and
anger. He wanted her, needed her, yet he knew he could live well enough without
her if they couldn’t reach some accommodation mat would let them share a life.
It wasn’t going to be easy. She knew that. He knew it. And quietly he came to
her, without fuss he came to her, knowing her more intimately, in his way, than
those who lived within her head had known her. Understanding that her need for
home was far greater than his, he came to her.
He said beside her as they’d sat so many times, watching the
sun go down, watching one of the paler more subtle sunsets, a cloudless sky,
the glaciers summer-shrunken.
What she’d grasped on Ibex she knew more intimately now. In
the first part of her life she’d had a goal that was simple and essentially
extrinsic. What lay before her now was more complex. The thing she wanted now
lived in words like society, relationship, friend, compromise, patience,
involvement, building. And time. Vrithian had altered her outlook on a lot of
things. Time to be a part of Wolff in ways she’d never been. She didn’t even know
the parents of the girl who took care of her horses. Head had produced her when
Aleytys asked for someone. Who was she? What was her life like at home? Why did
she prefer a small cramped apartment built onto a stable? Why wonder they
suspect me, the Wolfflan, no wonder they don’t trust me. What do they know
about me? Nothing except rumor. She smiled to herself. Turn me into your
comfortable neighborhood housewife worrying about paying the bills and what her
kids were doing with whom. Kids? I suppose so. Now that I have a past and a
future to give them. My Sharl, my lovely son, you came too soon. I’m not going
to look for you; I’ve said farewell to you twice now and that’s enough. Well,
we’ve got time. If nothing else, you and I have time.
The last embers of the sunset died. The fire was down to
coals and the room was beginning to chill. Grey rose from his chair, stood
waiting for her.
She went to him, leaned against him, enjoying the mingled
odors of hair, flesh and clothing.
Wordless, they walked to the door. Their talking was done.
She touched a sensor, let him draw her into the hall.
Behind them the shutters rolled across the windows. Crawling
over the coals, the fire moved slower and slower until it died completely. The
house creaked and sighed into its summer temper and settled into a deepening
stillness.
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