Says the Chicago Tribune:
"When young Kincar, who was of mixed
Gorthian and Star blood, followed the Star Lords through the shimmering Star
Gate that permits transmigration in time, he found himself in a Gorth entirely
different from the one he had known. At first, the people looked the same; but
he found they were his foes, not his friends. They were the people his friends
would have become if they had made different choices at crucial moments. The
clash between the two co-existing sets of characters is full of violent action
and reaction.
"Andre
Norton writes with great depth of the possible worlds that might exist had
other paths been taken. One of the most provocative of the
current crop of science-fiction books."
Says the Detroit Times: "Science-fiction
fans will eat this one upl"
More quotes from the reviews:
"An action yarn to stimulate any red-blooded reader.'
—Cleveland Press
"Combines taut suspense with the
mysterious, heroic atmosphere of pure fantasy."
—Washington
Post
"Fascinating and well written... will keep the readers' rapt
attention."
—Saturday
Review
"A fast-moving, action-filled adventure . .
—Springfield Republican
"Exciting reading. Recommended."
—Library Journal
"A fascinating concept, masterfully handled by the author."
—Virginia Kirkus
ACE BOOKS, INC. 1120 Avenue of the Americas
New York 36, N. Y.
stah
gate
Copyright ©, 1958, by Harcourt, Brace & Co., Inc. An Ace Book, by arrangement with Harcourt,
Brace & Co., Inc.
All Rights Reserved
Printed in U.S.A.
Contents
prologue
inheritance
the battle of the
waste
no ship—but—
new-found world
a question of
birthright
legend come alive
false
gods
first foray
volunteer
storm, night, and
the shrine ill-chanced meeting a meeting with lord rud ordeal by mord the place
of towers trial of strengths rescue invasion
once more a gate—
PROLOGUE
History
is not only a collection of
facts; it is a spider's web of ifs. If
Napoleon had not lost the Battle of Waterloo, if the American colonies had lost
the Revolution, if the South and not the North had won the Civil War . . . The
procession of such ifs is endless, exciting the imagination and
spurring endless speculation. Sometimes the all important turning point can be
compressed into a single small action—the death of one man, a seemingly casual
decision.
And
if the larger history of a nation, or a.world, depends upon so many chance ifs, so also does the personal history of each and every one of us. Because
we are five minutes late or ten minutes early for an appointment, because we
catch one bus but miss another, our life is completely changed.
There
exists a fascinating theory that two worlds branch from every bit of destiny
action. Hence, there are far reaching bands of parallel worlds, born of many
historical choices. Thus, if some means of communication could be devised a man
might travel, not backwards or forwards in time, but across it to visit, for
example, a contemporary world which resulted from a successful Viking
colonization of the North American continent, or one in which William the
Conqueror never ruled England.
Since
this game can be envisioned on Earth, then why could it not also hold on other
planets out in the galaxy when men of our breed go pioneering there?
Imagine a world on which a Terran ship or
fleet of ships
lands. The space-weary voyagers, mutated
physically by the effects of their wandering, greet solid soil thankfully.
There is a native race, primitive to the point of barbarism. There is so much
the Terrans have to give, so without realizing their crime, they meddle. As the
generations come and go they begin to realize that each race must have its offn
fight for civilization, that gifts too easily obtained are injuries, that its
own destiny is the birthright of each world.
So,
regretfully, the "Gods" from the stars know that they have already
woefully harmed where they meant only good, that to save what may be salvaged
they must go. However, there are those of the half-blood, a mingling of Terran
and native breed, and there are those among the Terrans themselves who do not
want the stars, the endless new searching for a hospitable world on which there
is no intelligent native life.
Thus the old idea of parallel worlds awakes
anew and some dream wistfully of this same planet where some quirk of history
or the past decided against the rise of native life—the empty world they want
and yet the familiar one they love and are bounqr"to by many ties:
Next
would begin a search for a pathway across the many if worlds, a gate to open to such exploring. And there would be many
worlds—even some in which their own landing and their labors had taken a darker
and more forbidding turn, a world on which they might even meet themselves as
they would be when walking another lane of history and influenced by another
past.
These
Terrans centuries ahead of us, armed with technical knowledge we can only
imagine, might venture forth across time of an alien world, which could lead to
just such a chronicle of action beyond a Star Gate. . . .
I
INHERITANCE
This
had been a
queer "cold" season so far. No snow, even on the upper reaches of the
peaks, no drifts to stopper the high passes, warm winds over the fields of
brittle stubble, though most of the silver-green leaves of the copses had been
brought to earth by those same winds. Instead of cold they had experienced a
general drying-out to kill the vigorous life of wood and pasturage. And the
weather was only a part of the strangeness that had settled over Gorth—at least
those parts of Gorth where men beat paths—since the Star Lords had withdrawn.
The
Star Lords, with their power, had raised the Gorthians above the beasts of the
forests and had thrown over them their protection, as the lord of any holding
could now extend the certainty of life to one outlawed and running from sword
battle. But now that the Star Lords had gone—what would follow for Gorth?
Kincar s'Rud paused beneath the flapping
mordskin banner of Styr's Holding to direct a long, measuring glance along the
hill line. His cloak, sewn cunningly from strips of soft suard fur brought back
from his solitary upland hunts, was molded about him now by the force of that
unseasonably warm wind, as he stood exposed on the summit of the watch tower
alert to any movement across the blue-earthed fields of the Holding. Kincar was
no giant to boast inches rivaling a Star Lord's, but he was well muscled for
his years
and could and had surpassed his warrior tutors
in sword play. Now he absently flexed one of his narrow, six-fingered hands on
the rough stone parapet, while the banner crackled its stiff folds over his
head.
He had volunteered for this post at midday,
for no other reason than to escape the sly prodding of Jord—Jord who affected
to believe that the withdrawal of the Star Lords meant a new and brighter day
for the men of Gorth. What kind of day? Kincar's eyes—blue-green, set obliquely
in his young face—narrowed as he traced that thought to the vague suspicion
behind it.
He, Kincar s'Rud, was son of the Hold
Daughter and so ruler by blood as soon as Wurd s'Jastard went into the Company
of the Three. But if he was alive to walk this Holding, then Jord would be
master here. Through the years since he had been brought from the city to this
distant mountain Holding, Kincar had overheard enough, pieced-together bits of
information, until he knew what he would have to face when Wurd did depart into
the shadows.
Jord
had his followers—men whom he had gathered together during his trading
journeys—who were tied to him by bonds of personal loyalty and not by clan
reckoning. And he appeared able to smell out advantages for himself. Why else
had he come down the long trail two days ago, heading a motley caravan?
Ostensibly it was to bring the latest news of the Star Lords' departure, but it
was strange that Wurd had just taken to his bed in what coukl only be that ancient man's last bout with the old wound that had
been draining his strength for years.
Would
Jord attempt to force sword battle on Kincar for the Holding? His constant
oblique remarks had suggested that. Yet outwardly to provoke such a quarrel
when Jord himself was the next heir after Kincar was to court outlawing as Jord
well knew. And Jord was too shrewd to throw away his future for the mere
satisfaction of removing Kincar. There was something else, some other reason
beneath Jord's preoccupation with the Lords' withdrawal, behind his comments
on the life to come, that made Kincar uneasy. Jord never moved until he was
sure of his backing. Now he hardly attempted to veil his triumph.
Kincar
could not remember his mother, unless a very
dim dream of m.uted colors, flower scent, and the sound of soft weeping in a
shadowed night were to be named Anora, Hold Daughter s'Styr. But he could never
reconcile in his mind the fact that Anora and Jord had been brother and sister.
And certainly Jord had given him often to believe that whatever lay between
them, hate had been its base.
Though
he had been born in Terranna, the city of the Star Lords, Kincar had been
brought to the Holding when he was so young that he could not remember anything
of that journey. Nor had he ever seen the plains beyond the mountain ring
again. Now he did not want to. With the Star Lords departed, who would wish to
visit the echoing desolation of their city or look upon the empty stretches
where their Star ships once stood? It would be walking into the resting place
of the long dead who were jealous when their sleep was disturbed.
He
did not understand the reason of their going. The aliens had done so much for
Gorth—why now did they set off once more in their ships? Oh, he had heard the
blasphemous whisperings current among those who followed Jord, that the Star
Lords denied to Gorth's natives their great secrets—the life eternal with
which they were blessed and the knowledge of strange weapons. He had also heard
rumors that among the Lords themselves there had been quarreling, that some had
wished to give these gifts to Gorth, while the others chose to withhold them,
and that those who would give had gathered a fighting tail of Gorthians to
rebel. But since the Lords had withdrawn, what could they now
rebel against—the open sky? Perhaps in the hour of their leaving the
Lords had set a curse upon this rebellious world.
Though the wind about him continued warm,
Kincar shivered. Among his people were those with the in-seeing, the power to
drive out certain kinds of sickness by the use of hand and will. How much
greater must be such powers among the .Star Lords! Great
enough to lay a spell
upon a
whole world so that the cold came not? And later would there follow any
season of growing things once more? Again he shivered.
"Daughter's
Son!"
Kincar had been so occupied with his own
imaginings that his hand went to the hilt of his sword as he whirled, shocked
alert by that hail, to see Regen's helmed head emerge from the tower trapdoor.
But Wurd's guardsman did not climb any farther.
"Daughter's Son, the
Styr would have speech with you."
"The
Styr—he is—?" But he did not need to complete that question; the answer
was to be read plainly in Regen's eyes.
Although
Wurd had taken to his bed days ago, Kincar had not really believed that the end
was so near. The old chief had ailed before, had been close enough to the Great
Forest to hear the sighing of the wind in its branches, yet he had come back to
hold Styr in his slender fist. One could not picture the Holding without Wurd.
Kincar
paused in the hall outside the door of the Lord's chamber only long enough to
tug off his helm and drop his cape. Then, with his drawn sword gripped by the
blade so that he could proffer the hilt to his overlord, he went in.
In
spite of the warmth there was a fire on the hearth. Its heat reached the bed on
which was piled a heap of coverings woven from fur strips. They made a kind of
cocoon about the shrunken figure propped into a sitting position. Wurd's face
was blue-white against the dark furs, but his eyes were steady and he was able
to raise a claw finger to the sword hilt in greeting.
"Daughter's Son." His voice was only a faint whisper of sound, less alive than his eyes.
It died away in a silence as if Wurd must gather and hoard strength to force
each word out between his bloodless lips. But he raised again that claw finger
in a gesture to Regen, and the guard moved to lift the
lid of a chest that had been drawn forward to a new position beside the bed.
Under
Wurd's eyes Regen took out three bundles, stripping off coverings to display a
short-sleeved shirt of scales fashioned of metal with the iridescent sheen of a reptile's skin, a sheathed sword, and, last of all, a woven surcoat with
a device, new to Kincar, worked upon the breast. He thought that he was
familiar with Wurd's war gear, having been set to the polishing of it many
times in his younger days. But none of these had he ever seen before, though
their workmanship was that of an artist in metal, and he thought that their
like could not be equaled save perhaps in the armories of the Star Lords.
Shirt,
sword, and surcoat were laid across the foot of the bed, and Wurd blinked at
them.
"Daughter's Son"—again that
wavering claw pointed— "take up your
heritage—"
Kincar
reached for that wonder of a shirt. But behind his excitement at the gift, he
was wary. There was something in Wurd's ceremonious presentation that bothered
him.
"I
thank you, Styr," he
was beginning, a little uncertainly, when that hand waved him impatiently to
silence.
"Daughter's
Son—take up—your—whole heritage—" The words came in painful gasps.
Kincar's
grasp of the shirt tightened. Surely that could not mean what he thought! By
all the laws of Gorth, he, Hold Daughter's Son, had a greater heritage than a
scale shirt, a sword, and a surcoat, fine as these were!
Regen
moved, picking up the surcoat, stretching it wide before his eyes so that the
device set there in colorful pattern was plain to read. He gasped in
amazement—those jagged streaks of bolt lightning with the star set between!
Kincar moistened lips suddenly dry. That device—it was—it was—
Wurd's
shrunken mouth shaped a shadow smile. "Daughter's Son," he
whispered, "Star Lord's son—your inheritance!"
The
scale shirt slithered through Kincar's loosened grip to clink on the floor.
Stricken, he turned to Regen, hoping for reassurance.
But the guard was nodding.
"It
is true, Daughter's Son. You are partly of the Star Lords' blood and bone. Not
only that, but you must join with their clan—for the word has come to us that
the rebels would search out such as you and deal with them in an evil
way—"
"Outlawry—?" Kincar could not yet believe in what he
heard.
Regen shook his head. "Not outlawry,
Daughter's son. But there is one here within Styr's walls who will do rebel
will on you. You must go before Styr is departed, be out of Jord's reach before
he becomes Styr—"
"But I am Daughter's
Son!"
"Those within these walls have full
knowledge of your blood," Regen continued slowly. "And there are some
who will follow you in drawing sword if you raise the mord banner. But there
are others who want none of the Star blood in this Holding. It may be brother
against brother, father against son, should you claim to be Styr."
That
was like coming up with bruising force against a wall when one was running a
race. Kincar looked to Wurd for support, but the old lord's still bright eyes
held the same uncompromising message.
"Where
shall I go?" he asked simply. "The Star Lords have left."
"Not—so—" Wurd's whisper came.
"Ships have gone— but some remain— You shall join
them. Regen—" He waved a finger at the guard and closed his eyes.
The
other moved quickly. Almost before he knew what was happening, Kincar felt the
man's hands on him, stripping off ring mail, the jerkin under it. He was
reclad in the scaled shirt, over it the surcoat with its betraying insignia.
Then Regen belted on the new sword.
"Your cloak, Daughter's Son. Now down the inner stair. Cim awaits you in
the courtyard."
Wurd
spoke for the last time, though he did not again open his eyes, and the words
were the merest trickle of sound. "Map—and the Fortune
of the Three with you— Daughter's Son! You would have held Styr well—it
is a great pity. Go—while I still hold breath in me!"
Before
Kincar could protest or take a formal farewell, Regen hurried him from the room
and down the private stair to the courtyard. The mount that he had trapped in
the autumn drive pens two years previously and knew to be a steady goer, heavy
enough for good work in the press of a fight, and with an extra stamina for
long travel on thin rations, stood with riding pad strapped about its middle,
saddlebags across its broad haunches.
Cim
was not a beautiful larng, no sleek-coated, nervous highbred. His narrow head
whipped about so all four of the eyes set high in his skull could survey Kincar
with his usual brooding measurement. His cold-season wool was growing in
patches about the long thin neck and shoulders, its cream-white dabbed with
spots of the same rusty red as the hide underneath. No, Cim was no beauty, and
he was uncertain of temper, but to Kincar's mind he was the pick of the Holding's
mount pens.
But
Cim was not the only thing in Styr Hold that he could claim as his own. As
Kincar settled on the larng's pad and gathered up the ear reins, he whistled, a
single high, lilting note. He was answered from the hatchery on the smaller
tower. On ribbed leather wings, supporting a body that was one-third head with
gaping, toothed jaws and huge, intelligent red eyes, the mord— a smaller
edition of those vicious haunters of the mountain tops, lacking none of their
ferocious spirit—circled once over her master's head and then flapped off.
Vorken would hover over him for the rest of the day, pursuing her own concerns
but alert to his summoning.
"The road to the north—" Regen
spoke hurriedly, his hands raised as if he would literally push Kincar out of
the courtyard. "The map is in the left bag, Daughter's Son. Take the Mord
Claw Pass. We are blessed by the Three that storms have not yet choked it. But
you have only a short time—"
"Regen!" Kincar was at last able to
break the odd feeling, which had possessed him during these last few minutes,
of being in a dream. "Do you swear by Clan Right that this is a good
thing?"
The
guard's eyes met his with honesty—honesty and a concern-there was no attempt to
disguise. "Daughter's Son, by Clan Right, I tell you this is the only way,
unless you would go into the Forest dragging half your men after you in blood.
Jord is determined to have Styr. Had you been only Daughter's Son, not half of
Star blood, none would have followed him. But that is not so. There are those
here who will draw blade at your bidding, and there are those who look to Jord.
Between you, if you so strive, you will split Styr Holding like
a rotten fruit, and the outlaws will eat us up
before the coming of green things again. Go claim a greater heritage than Styr, Daughter's Son. It is your right."
For
the last time he gave Kincar full salute, and the younger man, realizing that
he spoke the truth, set Cim into a lumbering trot with a twitch of the ear
reins. But his hurt struck so deep that he did not once turn to look back at
the squat half-fortress, half-castle with the cluster of fieldmen's dwellings
about its walls.
The
wind was at his back as he took the northeast track, which would bring him up
to Mord Claw Pass and the way to the interior plains. As far as he knew, he was
heading into the broken, aimless life of an outlaw,
with the best future he could hope for One in
service as a guardsman under some lord who wanted to enlist extra swords for a
foray.
Could
Wurd's talk of a remaining Star ship—of his joining with the Star Lords—be
true? He had half forgotten it since leaving the old man. Kincar fumbled with
the left saddlebag and brought out a roll of writing bark. He had been trained
to read block characters, for part of his duties at Styr was to keep records. But such reading was not a quick task, and he let Cim pick his own route along the road as he
puzzled over the two lines with the small accompanying drawing.
Why—it
was clear enough! Those of the half-blood who wished to join the Star Lords had
been summoned. And the map was not unfamiliar—it covered a portion of the
countryside he had been set to memorize a year or so earlier. Then Wurd had still been able to ride and had carried on the tutelage of the Hold's heir, taking him as far as the
passes and pointing out in the wastes below where gatherings of outlaws might exist and where a
canny chief of a Holding might well look for future trouble. The map was the
heart of such, a section, a district of ill omen, rumored to be the abode of
the Old Ones, those shapes of darkness driven into foul hiding by the Star
Lords upon their arrival in Gorth.
The
Star Lordsl Kincar's hand went to the device on his surcoat. He had a sudden
odd longing to look upon the reflection of his own face in some chamber
mirror. Would his new knowledge make any change in what would be pictured
there?
To
his eyes he had no physical difference from the other youths of Styr. Yet, by
all accounts, the Star Lords were giants, their skin not ivory-white as his own
but a rich brown, as if they had been hewn from a rare wood. No, if this wild
tale were really true, he could have nothing of his sire in face or body. Under
his helm his hair curled tight to his skull in small rings of blue-gray.
Through the years it would darken to the black of an old man. But it was
rumored that the Star Lords also had hair growing upon their bodies— and his
skin was smooth. Away from Styr who would know his alien blood? He could
discard the surcoat, turn free guardsman—maybe in time raise a following tail
and gain a holding of his own by legal sword battle.
But,
while he made and discarded half-a-dozen such plans, Kincar continued to ride
along the path that would take him over the Mord's Claw and into the wasteland
shown on the map. He could not have told why, for something within him shrank
from the acceptance of his inheritance. While he revered the Star Lords and had
hotly resented Jord's sneers, it was a very different thing to be of off-world
blood oneself. And he did not like it.
The
day had been half over when h^ quit Styr. And he did not halt for a rest,
knowing that Regen must have fed Cim well. When the track they followed
dwindled into a forking trail, he came upon Vorken sitting in the middle of
the open space, fanning her wings as she squatted upon the still-warm body of a
small wood-suard. He was heading into a country where game might be scarce, and
wood-suard was tender eating. Kincar dismounted, cleaned the beast with his
hunting knife, giving Vorken the tidbits she hungered for, and slung the body
up behind his pad. It would do for the last meal of the day.
Their
way up was a winding one. It was a caravan track, only used in times of war
when the more western routes were preyed upon by guardsmen. And he was sure
that it had not been traveled this season at all—the wastes beyond having too
ill a name.
When
the slope grew too steep, he dismounted, letting Cim pick a path where the
mount's clawed feet found good hold. He scrambled along through scrub brush,
which caught at his cloak or the crest of fringed moid skin on his helm. And he
knew he was lucky that the season was so warm he did not have to fight snow as
well, though here the nip of the wind was keen. Vorken took to hovering closer,
alighting now and then on some rock a little ahead of her companions' slow
advance to whistle her plaintive call and be reassured by Kincar's answer. A
mord, once trained to man's friendship, had a craving for his presence, which
kept it tractable even in the wilds where it could easily elude any hunter.
It
was close to sunset when the vegetation, dried and leafless, was all behind
them and they were among the rocks near to the pass. Kincar looked back for the
first time. It was easy, far, too easy, in the clear air, to sight Styr
Holding. But—he caught a quick breath as he saw that the banner was gone from
the watchtower! Wurd had been right—the lordship had passed from one hand to
the next this day. Wurd s'Jastard was no longer Styr. And for Kincar s'Rud
there could be ho return now. Jord was in command—Jord s'Wurd was now Styrl
n
THE BATTLE OF THE WASTE
An
overhang of
rock gave Kincar shelter for the night. He had crossed the highest point of
Mord Claw Pass and come down a short distance to the beginning of the timber
line before the daylight faded. But he had no wish to push on into the
wilderness beyond during the dark hours. Though the mountain shut off some of
the wind, it was far colder here than in the valley of the Holding, and he set
about building a traveler's small fire in the lee of the rocks while Vorken
settled down upon the pad he had stripped from Cim and watched him intently,
spreading her wings uneasily now and again as she listened to sounds from the
stunted bushes and trees below them.
With
Vorken's ears at his service, and Cim's alertness to other animals, Kincar
needed to do no sentry duty. Neither would leave ths fireside, and either or
both would give him swift warning of danger. He was in more peril from wandering
outlaws than he could be from any animal or flying thing. The giant sa-mords of
the heights were not night hunters, and any suard large enough to provide a
real threat would be timid of fire.
He
cut up the meat Vorken had provided, sharpening a stick on which to impale chunks for roasting. And in the saddlebags he
found the hard journey cakes of wayfarers, which packed into their stone
solidity enough nourishment to keep a man going for days through a foodless
wilderness. Regen was an old campaigner, and now that Kincar had time to check
the contents of the bags, he appreciated the thought and experience that had
gone into their packing. Food in the most concentrated forms known to men who
hunted or raided through waste country, a fishing line with hooks, a drag
blanket folded small, its wet-repelling surface ample protection against all
but the worst storms, a set of small tools for the righting of riding gear and
armor, and, last of all, a small packet wound with a fastening of tough skin
that Kincar tackled with interest. Judging by the care with which it had been
wrapped, he was sure it must contain some treasure, but when the object was at
last bared to view in the firelight, Kincar was puzzled. He was sure he had never
seen it before—an oval stone, dull green, smoothed as though by countless years
of water action rather than by the tools of men. But there was a hole in the
narrower end, and through this hung a chain of metal.
Plainly it was intended to be worn.
Tentatively Kincar shook it loose from the
hide covering and cupped it in his palm. A moment later he almost dropped it,
for as it lay upon his flesh, its dullness took on a faint glow, and it grew
warm as though it held a life of its own. Kincar sucked in his breath and his
fingers tightened over it in a jealous fist.
"Lor,
Loi, Lys," he whispered reverently, and it seemed to him that with every
speaking of one of the Names, the stone he held pulsed warmly.
But
how had Regen—or was this a lost heritage from Wurd? No one within Styr Hold
had ever dreamed that a Tie had lain in its lord's keeping. Kincar was
overwhelmed by this last evidence of Wurd's trust in him! Jord might have the
Holding, but not the guardianship of a Tie. That was his! The trust—and perhaps
someday— He stared bemused at the fire. Someday—if he were worthy—if he proved
to be the one Wurd hoped he might be, he might even use its power! With a
child's wondering eyes, Kincar studied the stone, trying to imagine the marvel
of that. No man could do so until the hour when the power moved him. It was
enough that a Tie was his to guard.
With shaking fingers he got the chain about
his throat, installed the stone safely against his skin under coarse shirt,
jerkin, and scale armor. But it seemed that some measure of heat still clung to
the hand that had held it. And when he raised his fingers to look at them more
closely, he was aware of a faint, spicy fragrance. Vorken gave one of her
chirps and shot forth her huge head, drawing her toothed beak across his palm,
and Cim's head bobbed down as if the lamg, too, was drawn by the enchantment of
the Tie.
It
was a very great honor to be a guardian, but it was also dangerous. The Tie
could weave two kinds of magic, one for and one against mankind. And there were
those who would readily plant' a sword point in him to gain what he wore now—if
it was suspected to be in his possession. Regen had given him aid and danger
tied together in one small stone, but Kincar accepted it gladly.
Without
worry, knowing that he could depend upon Vorken for a warning, he curled up
with cloak and blanket about him to sbep away the hours of the dark. And when
he roused from a confused dream, it was to a soft cluttering beside his ear. Vorken
was a warm weight on his chest. Outlined against
the coals of the dying fire, he saw the black blot of her head turn from side
to side. When he moved and she knew he was truly awake, Vorken scuttled away,
using the tearing claws of her four feet to scramble to the top of a rock
—making ready to launch into the air if need be. Her form of defense was always
a slashing attack aimed at the head and eyes of
the enemy.
Kincar felt for his sword hilt as she stared
into the dark. There was no sound from Cim, which meant that Vorken's more
acute hearing had given them time to prepare. What she warned against might
well be far down the mountainside. The fire was almost dead, and Kincar made no
effort to feed it into new life. His senses, trained during long wilderness
hunts, told him that dawn was not far off.
He
did not try to go out of the pocket in which they had camped. Vorken still gave
soft warnings from her post. But, since her night sight was excellent, and she
had not taken to the air, Kincar was certain the intruder that had disturbed
her was coming no nearer. The sky was gray. He could pick out the boulders
sheltering them. Now he set about padding Cim, lashing on saddlebags, though he
did not mount as they edged out of the hollow. Vorken took to the air on scout.
Cim's claws scraped on the rocks, but within a few feet the trail began and
they walked in thick dust. Kincar chewed on a mouthful of journeycake, giving
the major portion of the round to Cim. That must do to break their fast until
they were sure they were safe.
The trail came out after a steep descent upon
the lip of an even more abrupt drop. But Kincar did not move on. Crouching
there, he brought Cim up with a sharp tug at the ear reins, hoping that neither
had been sighted by the party below.
His first thought—that he
spied upon a traders' caravan-was disproved in his second survey of the camp.
There were six larngs, all riding stock—no burden bearers among them. And there
were six riders on the bank of the small ice-bordered stream. The larngs bore
the marks of hard going, their flanks were flat to the bones, and their
cold-season wool hung in draggled patches as if they had been forced through thom thickets.
But Kincar was astonished by the riders, for
three of the figures seated on the bank were women, one hardly more than a
child. Women in the wastelandsl Of course the outlaws
raided the holdings and took women to build up their clans. But these were
plainly not captives, and their traveling cloaks were fine garments of tetee
wool such as Hold Daughters had. They were on good terms with the men, and
their light voices were pitched as if they spoke at ease with clan brothers.
What was such a party doing here? They were
not out for a day's hunting, for each lamg bore traveling bags, plump to
seam-bursting. Kincar longed to see their faces, but each wore the conventional
travel mask under a well-wound turban of veil. For a moment he had a wild
suspicion— This was the waste where the Star Lords had
ordered their people to assemble. But there was no mistaking the pale skin of
the nearest warrior. He was of Gorthian breed, no being from
outer
space.
As
Kincar hesitated, uncertain as to whether he should hail the others, there was
a startling scream from Vorken and then the deep, braying roar of a hand drum.
Those
below were on their feet as if jerked up by ropes laid about them. The women,
tossed by their escorts into the riding pads of the waiting larngs, galloped
off, one man with them, while the other two warriors reined in their mounts
with one hand, holding swords free with the other. There was the sound of a
running larng, and a war mount burst out of a screen of brush. Kincar, already
up on Cim, paused to stare at the newcomer.
His
larng was a giant of that breed—it had to be—for the man who bestrode him was
also a giant. His wide shoulders were covered with a silvery stuff that drew
light even in the gray of early morning. Both of the waiting warriors rode over
to take a stand beside him, all three wheeling to await some attack.
Kincar
found the zigzag trail down the cliffside. Recklessly he did not dismount but
kept the lamg to the best speed possible, as loose stones and gravel rolled
under Cim's scrabbling claws. The path took one of its sudden turns, and he
caught sight of a battle raging in that river clearing.
Men
in the tatters and rusty mail of outlaws, some on foot, a few riding gaunt
lamgs, leaped out of the brush, a wave to engulf the three who waited. But
those three met the wave with licking blades. There was a confused shouting,
the scream of a dying man. Cim's forefeet were on the last turn and Kincar
leaned forward, whistling into his mount's ear that particular call that sent
the larng into the proper battle rage.
They
burst through the stream in a spatter of high-dashed water, were up the
opposite bank and racing toward the melee. Vorken, seeing that Kincar was on
the move, planed down to stab at an unsuspecting face, sending the man rolling
screaming on the ground as her bill and claws got home. Cim, as he had been
schooled, reared, using his forefeet on the dismounted men, while Kincar clung
to the riding pad with one hand and swung his sword to good purpose with the
other. There were a few wild minutes, and then the roar of the hand drum once
again. A man at whom Kincar had aimed a stabbing thrust broke and ran for
shelter into the brush. And when Kincar looked about for another enemy, he
found that, except for the bodies on the ground and the three men who had been
attacked, the pocket meadow was clear.
One of the warriors dismounted to wipe his
blade on the grass before sending it home in its sheath.
"Those
scouts have now had their fangs 'drawn, Lord Dillan-"
The man who had just sheathed his sword
laughed, a harsh sound lacking mirth. He speedily contradicted his fellow.
"For the moment only, Jonathal. Were they of the common breed one such
lesson would suffice. But these have a leader who will
not let us away in peace as long as blades can be raised against us."
The
giant in the silver clothing looked beyond his own men to study Kincar, a frown
line showing between his brows, though little else was to be seen of his
features because of the traveling mask across cheek and chin. Something in
that close scrutiny brought Kincar's head up. A thrill of defiance ran through
him.
"Who
are you?" The question was shot at him as quick as a sword stab and as
sharply.
"Kincar
s'Rud," he replied, with none of the ceremonious embellishment he should
use by forms of holding courtesy.
"—s'Rud—"
the other repeated, but his tongue gave an odd twist to the name so that it
came out with an intonation Kincar had never heard before. "And your
sign?" he pressed.
Kincar
had tossed aside his cloak. He twisted a little on the riding pad so that the
other could see the device worked so boldly on his surcoat—that device that
even yet did not seem right for him to wear.
"—s'Rud—" the
giant said again. "And your mother?"
"Anora, Hold Daughter
of Styr."
All three of them were staring at him now,
the warriors appraisingly. However, he must have satisfied the big man, for now
the lord held his hand, palm empty, over his head in the conventional salute of
friendship. "Welcome to our road, Kincar s'Rud. You, too, have come at the
summoning?"
But Kincar was still wary.
"I seek a place in the waste—"
The strange lord nodded. "As
do we. And, since the time grows very short, we must ride in haste. We
are now hunted men on Gorth."
They
might be satisfied with his identification, but he had had none from them.
"I ride with—?" Kincar prompted.
The
silver clad lord answered. "I am Dillan, and these are Jonathal s'Kinston
and Vulth s'Marc. We are all wearers of the lightning flash and followers of
strange stars."
His own kind, the mixed blood. Kincar studied them curiously. The two
guardsmen, at first glance, seemed no different from well-born holding men.
And, though they showed Lord Dillan a certain
deference, it was that of clansman to close kin and not underling to hold
chief.
The
physical difference between Lord Dillan and the others was so marked that the
longer Cim picked his way behind the leader's mount, the more Kincar came to
suspect that he now rode in company with no half-blood but with one of the
fabulous Star Lords in person. His great height, the very timbre of his voice,
betrayed an alien origin, even though his helm and face mask and the tight
silver clothing concealed most of his body and features. Yet neither Jonathal
nor Vulth acted as if their leader was semidivine. They displayed none of the
awe that kept Kincar silent and a little apart. Perhaps they had lived all
their lives in the shadow of the Star-bom and knew no wonder at their powers.
Yet in the battle the Lord Dillan had not slain his enemies with shooting bolts
of fire, as legend said he might do, but used a blade, longer and heavier than
the usual to be sure, but still a sword much the same as that now girded to
Kincar's own belt. And when he spoke, it was of common things, the endurance of
a larng, the coming of full day, matters that any man riding in company might
comment upon.
Vorken whistled her warning from above their
heads, and all of them glanced aloft to where she skimmed, wings stretched,
gliding on the unseen currents.
"You are well served, Kincar," the
Lord Dillan addressed him for the first time since they had left the meadow.
"That is a fine mord."
"Aye, a battle bird of pricel"
Vulth chimed in. "She is quick with her beak where there is need. Of your
training?" he ended politely.
Kincar
warmed. "I
picked her from the egg.
She has had two years of coursing. The best of Styr's hatchery for five seasons
at least."
Those whose presence Vorkens' scream had
heralded now came into view ahead. The three women on their
weary larngs, their escort trailing a length behind with an eye to the rear.
He flung up his arm in welcome at the sight of their party and pulled aside to
wait, but the women took no heed, keeping on at the best pace their larngs
would rise to.
"You have drawn
teeth?" the warrior hailed them.
"We
have drawn teeth," Vulth replied with grim satisfaction. "They will
press us again, but there are now fewer to answer the drum."
As
if his words had been a signal, again that ominous roll of sound struck their
ears from the back trail. But it was muffled by distance. The hunters had
dropped well behind their quarry. Lord Dillan pushed his mount ahead to fall in
with the women. They exchanged words in a low voice, and one of the women
pointed in a westwardly direction. The Star Lord nodded and brought his lamg to
one side, letting the women pass. With a wave of his hand he sent their guard
pounding in their wake, while the remaining four slackened speed once more—to
provide a rear guard.
Kincar
saw with woodswise eyes that they were following a marked trail that had been
in recent use, its dust churned by lamg claws in ragged lines. Lord Dillan must
have noted his examination, for he said, "We are the last of the ingathering.
We have come from Gnarth."
From half the continent away! No wonder their
mounts showed bones through thin flesh and the women rode with the droop of
weariness in their cloaked shoulders. But certainly they had not been hunted
along all that distance? To underscore that • thought, the hunt drum rolled
again—this time closer. Vorken sounded her war call, but when Kincar did not
wheel to face the enemy, she circled over their heads in widening curves,
spiraling up into the new day, her keen eyes on the ground, her attention ready
for any move from Kincar that would send her once more in a vicious dive
against his foes.
The clumps of leafless
brush that had narrowed their path since they left the river banks dwindled
into patches of small twisted scrub, arid as dried bones in the now waterless
land. And the blue earth under foot was pied with patches of silver sand. They were
plainly heading into one of the true deserts of the waste. Yet the spoor of
those before them was plain to read, and those with whom Kincar now rode appeared
certain of the route.
A sun arose, bringing with it the sickly,
warmish wind that was so out of season. And, with the wind, the sand came in
thin clouds to plague them. Kincar improvised a mask. He was inured to the
usual wind grit that bothered city dwellers traveling, but this was something
else. Cim closed two of his eyes and veiled the others with his transparent
inner eyelids but showed no other signs of discomfort as he trotted along.
Vorken soared above the worst of the eddies.
Outcrops of rock, carved by wind and the
tempest-bome sand grains into weird sculptures, rose along the trail, as if
they were the ruins of some long-sacked holding. And the track wound about
among these pillars and towers until Kincar found himself losing his sense of
direction, the more so since he could not pick landmarks ahead through the
quick flurries of wind and sand.
He was reduced to following Lord Dillan
blindly, and only confidence in that leader kept him in control of a growing
uneasiness. He was hungry, and water—the thought of water—was a minor torture.
They must have been traveling for hours. How much longer would they shuffle on
across this barren waste?
Kincar dragged on the reins, forcing Cim to
rear up. The roll of the drum had sounded in his very ear! Yet Vorken had given
no warning! Then he heard Vulth's voice, muffled by the mask.
"It is the echo, younglingl They stamp yet far behind us— not now have they outflanked
our path. But loose your blade in its sheath; it will drink again before
sundown—if we find us a proper battleground."
Ill
NO SHIP-BUT-
The
WErRD echoes of the drum made Kincar edgy. To have
it blast from one side and then the other grated on his nerves,
and he longed to draw his sword and ride with the blade bared across his knee,
ready for attack. But those with whom he rode made no such preparations, and he
was ashamed so to betray his own uneasiness.
At
the same time he speculated concerning their goal. A sky ship
berthsd here? Among all the rumors that dealt with the secrets of the
wastelands, there had never been one that hinted at such a thing. Those ships
at which all of Gorth had marveled had been in the great landing place outside
the gates of the now forsaken Terranna. And they were gone, through the pale
rose of Gorth's sky, never to return. Had one ship been set here, apart from
its kind? When, from time to time, there came short breaks in the force of the
grit storm, Kincar held his head high, trying to catch a glimpse of the shaft
of metal of a sky ship, which would dwarf all about it.
But, though they bored steadily into the
desert land, using the track winding among the pillars, there was no sign—save
that same faint road—that man had ever gone that way before. The pillars were
growing fewer, and, now that they did not hem in the road, there was the danger
of going astray in the fog of wind-driven sand. Lord Dillan slackened pace,
sometimes halting altogether for a moment or two, one hand close to his chest,
his head bent over it, as if he consulted a talisman. And after each such move
he altered their course to the right or left.
Then, as quickly as it had
arisen, the wind died, the sand lay once more in dust-fine drifts, and the land
about them was clear to the view. They were on an upslope, and far ahead Kincar
sighted moving dots of figures, which must be the women and their guard. Those
bobbed to the skyline and then were suddenly gone. They might have been sucked
down in the sand. A downgrade lay beyond, Kincar surmised, and a steep one or
they would not have vanished so quickly.
Jonathal brought his larng up beside Cim, wiping
the matted dust from his mouth mask with the back of his hand before he
commented thickly, "That was a dry coursel And
I've never relished a fight without a cold draft to sweeten the throat—"
"A fight?" Kincar had not heard the drum for a time. He
had hoped that the storm had shaken their pursuers from the trail.
"They must attack
now." Jonathal shrugged. "This is the last throw of tablets in the
game. Once we are over that ridge"—he jerked a thumb at the
rise—"they will have lost. We are the last of our kind. With us through,
the gate will close—"
Kincar did not understand that reference to
the gate, but he understood very well the scream from Vorken's long throat, her
skimming dive that carried her black shadow back over the sand dunes toward the
pillar-studded land from which they had' just emerged. And now, at last, he
drew his sword, rolling his cloak about his left arm as a shield, ready to snap
it into an opponent's face if the need arose.
Figures slipped from pillar to pillar,
silent, dark, misshapen. Kincar watched that sly, noiseless advance, set his„
mouth hard. For five years or more he had ridden in holding spear-festings
aimed against outlaws, and once he had served in a real foray against Crom's
Hold. In the last two festings, in spite of his youth, he had taken out Styr's
banner as Wurd's deputy. He had known such warfare since his small boy's hand
had first been fitted to an even smaller sword hilt under Regen's patient
teaching. But this was something else—he was sensitive to a change, wary under
a threat he did not understand.
Vorken
wheeled back above him, shrilling her battle cry, but not attacking since he
had not advanced. Cim shifted foot under him. They must feel it, too, this
difference, this odd threat that promised worse than slash of sword, thrust of
footman's spear, clash of mounted man against his kind.
His
sword dangling from his wrist cord, Kincar brought up his right hand to jerk
off his dust mask, drawing in more freely the air for which his lungs felt a
sudden need. Jonathal was on his left, sitting at ease on the pad of his gaunt
larng, a smile curving his mouth as he watched the pillars with a sentry's eye.
On the right Vulth was making a careful business of adjusting his cloak about
his arm, testing each fold as he laid it ready. But Lord Dillan, his one hand
laced in larng reins, his other still held to his breast, had not drawn his
weapon at all or shed his travel mask. Above the strip of silver stuff that
matched his garments, his odd light eyes were on the pillars and what moved in
their shadows.
"Ride
slowly," he bade them. "We do not fight unless they push us to
it—"
"They
will not let us away out of their jaws," warned Vulth.
"Perhaps
they will—unless he who leads them gives the order—" Lord Dillan did not
relax his watchfulness or turn his larng after them as the other three followed
his orders and headed on.
Kincar was last, reluctant to leave. And at
that moment Vorken went into action on her own.
Whether the mord misconstrued Cim's movement as an advance, or whether her
natural wildness sent her in, Kincar was never to know. But she gave vent to
one last whistle and snapped down in a glide toward the nearest pillar.
He did not see the bolt that caught her in
mid-air. No one could have sighted the silent, swift stroke. But, as Vorken
shrieked in pain, one of her wings collapsed, and she hurtled down toward the
sand. Without pausing to think, Kincar sent Cim skimming back to where Vorken
lay, beating her good wing in a vain attempt to win aloft again. Her cries were
growing hoarser in her pain and rage, and she was hurling spurts of sand into
the air with her four feet as she dug fruitlessly with her claws.
Kincar was off Cim. He hit the ground already
running, his cloak whipping out to net the frenzied mord. To take her up
barehanded was to court deep tears from claws and beak. Somehow he scooped up
cloak and struggling creature, cradling her tight against his chest while she
snapped and kicked in fury.
There was a shout of triumph from the
pillars; a shaggy wave came out of hiding, heading straight for Kincar. He
retreated, watchful. His sword was ready, but .Vorken's struggles hampered its
free use. He was facing spear points, clubs, in the hands of lithe-moving
footmen, and in that moment he realized that the uneasiness he knew was truly
fear. The openness of their attack was so removed from their usual methods of
battle that it alarmed him as much as the stench from their unwashed bodies
made his empty stomach chum.
He
gave the cry to summon Cim. But, though the larhg obediently trotted to his
side, Kincar could not scramble up on the pad, not with the still-fighting
Vorken pressed against him. Yet he would not abandon the mord.
"Yaaaaa—"
The shout of the outlaws echoed about him in a worse tumult than the beat of
the drum. And behind the footmen, better clad and armed, mounted men were joining
in the rush to ride him down.
Then
a larng dashed between him and that advance, the sand fountaining about mount
and rider. Vulth thrust and raised a dripping blade for a second stroke. More
men boiled from the pillars to get at them both.
With
the fraction of breathing space, Kincar had gotten up on Cim, his sword banging
from its wrist cord. He let the reins hang. The larng was well enough trained
to need no guidance during a fight. The mount was snarling, pawing at the sand,
and he reared when he felt Kincar's weight on the pad, clawing down one of the
spearmen.
Vorken must be half stifled. She had ceased
to struggle, and Kincar was grateful for that as he fell to such sword work as
would cut a path for Vulth's withdrawal.
A
voice shouted incomprehensible words. Lord Dillan replied in the same tongue
with a single bitten-off sentence. His blade was out,.and
he rode beside Jonathal as if they were the two arms of a single warrior. The
outlaws broke, snarling like the beasts they were, and ran, but the mounted men
behind them were of a different breed. Jonathal's larng snorted and spun around
despite the efforts of its rider to control it. Then it fell with the
slack-legged force of an already dead animal and Jonathal was crushed under it,
only the soft sand saving him from mortal injury.
Kincar
brought Cim up to split the skull of the bareheaded outlaw who had his point at
Jonathal's throat as the other fought to pull free of the larng. Then, above
the hum of the drum and the cries of the fighting men, there struck a peel as
shrill as Vorken's calls. Up over the rise, toward which they had been headed,
boiled a group of riders. There were only five of them when Kincar could at
last sort them out, but somehow the fury of their charge magnified their numbers
into double that score.
They
swept past the four, scooping up the outlaws and bearing them along by the
force with which they struck into the melee. But they did not pursue past the
line of the pillars, wheeling there so shortly as to make their lamgs rear and
totter on their hind legs. Then they pounded back. One paused to let Jonathal
scramble up behind him before they went on, drawing the others with them, over
the ridge and down into a deep cup of valley, a bare valley that lay like a
giant pockmark in the desert waste.
As
they swept across the crest, Kincar reeled, his knees almost losing their grip
on the riding pad. The sensation of bursting through an unseen barrier was part
of that shock. But with it, and worse, had come a thrill of white-hot pain. So
sure was he that some chance-thrown spear had found its target in his body that
he stared stupidly down to where he still clasped the muffled Vorken, expecting
to see metal protruding from his breast and wondering vaguely how he had
survived a blow of such force. But there was no spear point showing, and, as he
straightened again, he knew that he had not been hit. Only—what of that stab of
agony, the pulse of heat and pain that he still knew beneath scale coat and
underjerkin?
The
Tiel For some reason beyond his knowing, its unique properties had been aroused
in that second when he had topped the ridge. The why of it he could not guess, and he dared ask no questions. Those who were
guardian of a Tie in the Name of the Three held that honor secretly, a secrecy
accepted without complaint as one accepted the other burdens and rights such a
duty laid upon one. He did not dare to touch the place above his heart where
that throb beat as if in promise of worse to come.
In
the heart of the valley was a camp—a hasty affair of small shelters put
together with blankets and cloaks. These were not being speedily dismantled,
men throwing rolls and bundles on the backs of lamgs. Beyond the camp stood
something else, as different from the primitive shelters as one of the Star
ships might be from a trader's wain.
Two
pillars of bright blue metal had been based in piles or rocks, the supporting
stones being fused into a stability no storm could shake. They were erected
some five feet apart, and suspended between them was a shimmering web of some
stuff Kincar could not name. It was bright; it glittered with racing lines of
rainbow fire that ran ceaselessly crisscross over it—yet it had so little real
body that one could see through it to the opposite wall of the valley.
Kincar
shifted Vorken's weight upon his arm and regarded this new marvel intently. He
had come here expecting to discover a Star ship. He had found a web strung
between metal poles. What had his trust in his chance-met companions drawn him
into? As far as he could see, they were now trapped. The outlaws need only make
one last rush to wipe them out—for there were no more than six men waiting
here.
Of
those six, four were wearing the silver dress of Lord Dillan, and they were of
the same giant stature. They had put off their travelers' masks, and he could
see the alien darkness of their hard faces, the features of which lacked the
mobility of those he had known all his life. One of them now raised his hand in
a salute, which Lord Dillan answered. Then that other lord took in his big
hands the leading lines of three of the waiting larngs and moved toward the
shimmering web. As they watched, he stepped between the supporting pillars.
There was no discernible break in the web.
For a moment the rainbow lines rushed in to outline the figure of the Star
Lord—then those colors fled again to the far corners of the screen. But the
Star Lord and the larngs he had led—were gone! They did not reappear on the
opposite side, and Kin-car blinked at the wavy sight of the rocks beyond where
no one—no thing—walked at all!
Vorken
gave a faint chirrup in his arms; the tip of her beak pushed forth from the
wrappings that netted her. Cim blew noisily, clearing the sand grit from his
wide nostrils. But at that moment Kincar could neither have spoken nor moved.
It
would appear that the tales of the Star Lords' magic, the wildest tales of
all—at which sensible men had laughed indulgently—were true! He had just seen
a Star. Lord walk into nothingness, which perhaps a Star Lord might safely
do—but what of the rest of them?
'Tis the gate, youngling!" Vulth's knee brushed against Kincar's as the
other rode beside him. "The gate to give us a new
world."
The
explanation meant exactly nothing to Kincar. A ship that went out to the
stars—aye, that could he understand. He was no
ignorant fieldman to believe that the sky over one's head was merely the great
Shield of Lor held up between men and a terrible outer darkness without end.
And he knew well that the Star Lords had come from another world much like
Gorth. But they had come in ships where a man could live, the fabric of which
all curious ones could feel with their two hands. How could one seek another
world by walking through a veil of shimmering stuff?
His
hand flattened over the Tie and his lips moved in the Three Names of Power.
This was a magic that the Star Lords had not—a magic native to Gorth. And at
this moment it was far better to cling to such a talisman than trust to a veil
that took men out of sight in an instant.
It
was apparent that Vulth knew what to expect and that this wonder was no magic
in his eyes. Cim picked his way through the draggle of
tents in the wake of Vulth's mount, but Kincar neither urged him on nor tried
to restrain him. Now one of the half-bloods had taken the lead ropes of two
more laden larngs. And, as had the Star Lord before him, he went forward with
the confidence of one walking a city street into the web where the colors
haloed him for an instant of flaming glory before he vanished, the animals
after him.
Then
it was that Vulth turned and caught Cim's dangling reins. He smiled
reassuringly at Kincar.
"This is a venture better than any
foray—past even the Foray of Hlaf's Dun, youngling. Past even sky
voyaging—"
Kincar,
clutching Vorken with one hand, the other resting above the branding heat of
the Tie, made no protest when the warrior sent his lamg straight on toward the
screen gateway. He was aware only dimly of sharp glances from Star Lords who
stood nearby, for his full attention was on the web. He could not throw aside
the thought that he was about to be engulfed in a trap of some kind beyond his
imagining. He braced his body stiffly against the inward shrinking of his
nerves, against the impulse that would have sent him pounding away not only
from the gate but from those who controlled such a device.
Vulth vanished into nothingness; Cim's head
was gone. Kincar was drowning in a sea of color. And on his breast the Tie
burned with a force that seemed to char through flesh to his heart. He bit back
a whimper of pain and opened dazzled eyes upon a world of gray stone—a world in
which life itself seemed alien, intruding, a world of—no, not the dead, for
there had never been life here at all—but a world that had never known the
impress of a living thing. How he sensed that, Kincar could not have
told—perhaps such knowledge came through the Tie.
He straightened painfully,
conscious of a party crowded on the stretch of rock plain. But he did not see
Vulth's eyes upon him, the odd shadow on the older Gorthian's face as he
witnessed Kincar's obvious distress. Nor did Kincar follow when the other
dropped Cim's reins and rode on to join the group waiting, by a second portal a
half mile farther on.
There
was a second portal—the same blue metal poles supporting another rainbow web.
Only, before this one was a box contrivance where the Star Lords were
clustered. One of their number knelt before that box, his hands resting upon
it, a tenseness in his position arguing that he was
engaged in some act of the utmost importance.
Cim
wandered along, his head drooping. Kincar drew a slow and painful breath. The
hurt of the Tie had eased a little. Only when he was directly in touch with the
Star Lords' magic was it so great an agony. If they were to pass through another
such gate, could he stand it? He tried to fix his thoughts upon the Three. The
Tie was Theirs, the right to bear it had been set upon
him by Them—surely they would aid Their servant now—
He tried to watch those about him, gain some
hint of what this was that they must do. There were women here, laden supply
larngs, a full caravan of travelers. But in all, the party numbered less than
thirty, and only six of those in sight were Star Lords—all the rest must be of
the half-blood strain.
There was clearly clan feeling among them,
the easy meeting of kinsman with kinsman. Only he felt set apart, torn from
all he had known. If only he could know what was happening, where these gates
led, what lay before them now! Of one thing he was growing increasingly sure—they
were headed into an exile that would be permanent.
A
Star Lord burst through the first gate. He ran toward his fellows. Those
gathered by the box looked up, their faces strained and bleak. If he bore a
warning, they had too little time to act upon it, for through the first gate
poured a jumble of mounts and men, swinging bloody steel, and two of them rode
double.
The Star Lord at the box
moved his hand, bringing down his palm with a smacking force. There was a
ripple of green on the second web; the hue became blue, then purple-red as it
moved.
Lord Dillan reeled through the first gate.
Only two steps beyond it, he staggered about and brought up his hand. What he
held Kincar could not see, but from his fist there sprang a spear of light that
burned bright in the gloom of that gray world. It struck full upon the first
web. The stuff curled, wrinkled, and was consumed as a cobweb fallen into a
flame. Between the posts one could see only the barren rocks.
But those who had waited
here were now in a hurry to be gone, as if the destruction of that one web was
not enough to save them from their enemies. Kincar was caught up in line, and
he dared not protest, setting his power of endurance to meet what might chance
at his second passage through the magic gates.
It came as an agony worse
and deeper than either of the earlier two attacks. He thought he must have
cried out, but no one near him took note—perhaps they were too intent upon
escape. He was conscious that the sky above was no longer gray but a familiar rose, that Cim's feet crackled through dried field grass.
And Vorken stirred in his arm, crying peevishly.
He looked about him dazedly. This was not the
wasteland. He saw a roll of wide plain, the rounded mounts of foothills in the
distance, and above, the loom of mountains. A chill
wind puffed into his face, bringing with it icy particles of snow, and more
white flakes were swirling down in an ever thickening fall.
NEW-FOUND WORLD
Kincar
shivered.
Dare he free Vorken from her wrappings in order to bring the cloak about them
both? Injured and frightened as she was, the mord might well rend him—for there
was a vast, sinewy power in the small body he pressed so tightly against his
own. And the burning torment on his breast had sucked from him both strength
and inclination to struggle.
So
intent-was Kincar upon his own problem that the growing clamor about him meant
very little. He gathered, only half-consciously, that the Star Lords had been
forced by a sudden attack on the outer gateway into action that might prove
highly dangerous. And there was a dispute that ended only with the destruction
of the second gate, the one that had brought them into this range of open,
rolling land. For better or worse, they were now committed to this place,
wherever it might be.
Kincar
hunched over Vorken, squeaking to her softly in his closest imitation of her
own voicings, cautiously loosening the cloak. To his great relief she did not
respond with an instant thrust of stiff legs armed with dagger talons. And when
he dared to drag the folds entirely away, she crouched, staring up at him,
almost as if her fierce nature had for once been cowed by the events of the
past hours. She reached out with her forefeet and took firm hold on the breast
of his surcoat as she might cling to the bare bole of some tree she had
selected for a roost.
Kincar
shrugged the cloak about them both, though his movements were slow because of
the trickles of pain that ran
ST^R GATE
from the Tie across his shoulders and along the
nerves of his arms. It was good that he need not draw sword now. He doubted if
he could raise the weight of the blade.
But
he did examine Vorken's injured wing, finding across its leathery surface a
finger-breath of raw brand, a burn. She allowed him only a moment's inspection
and then turned her head and licked at the hurt with her tongue, meeting his
further attempt at examination with a warning hiss. And he was forced to allow
her to tend her hurt in her own way, only glad that she was content to ride
under his cloak without protest.
The
Star Lords were marshalling them into line. This open country in a gathering
snowstorm was no place for a camp, and they were heading through the swirls
toward the foothills where some form of shelter could be expected. To
Kin-car's eyes the country was oddly deserted. This was too good crop land not
to be included in some holding—yet there was no sign of wall, no view of field
fort, as far as he could see. By some magic the Star Lords must have brought
them into a section of Gorth where there were no holds at all. He was very
certain they were on Gorth. The sky above them was pale rose,
the grass, dried in clumps and edging out of the already covering snow in
ragged bunches, was that he had always known. Aye, this was somewhere on
Gorth—but where?
At a
shout he brought Cim into the line of march. There
were no familiar faces near him. And he was too tired, too plagued by the Tie,
to try to seek out Jonathal, or Vulth, too shy to look for Lord Dillan in that
company.
Luckily
the snow did not take on the proportions of a blizzard. Tired, hungry, cold as
they were, they could keep one another in sight. But there was little talk
along that line. They rode with the suppressed eagerness of those who have been
long hunted and who now seek a sanctuary, intent upon winning to such a goal.
As the foothills came into clearer view, a pair of scouts broke from the main party
and galloped ahead, separating to search the high ground in two directions.
Cim was only plodding. He had not eaten since
they had left the pass camp—had that only been this morning? He must be allowed
rest, food, and that very soon. Kincar was debating a withdrawal out of line,
to give the larng some journeycake, when one of the scouts came pounding back
at a dead run. The excited gabble of his report was loud, though his words were
not clear. Some sort of superior shelter had been located—it was ready for
them. And, as if to underline-their need for just such as that, the wind
moaned across the empty land and brought with it a thicker flurry of snow,
while heavy clouds scudded in the sky. A blizzard was not far off.
The
wind might be a broom the way they were swept by it into a narrow valley. But
the gloom of the dying day could ■ not hide—hide
or belittle—what awaited them there. Kincar had seen many marvels since he had
ridden out of Styr. And this was not the least of them.
Here
was a hold such as a lord of limitless acres might dream of building. Its
square towers bit into the reaches of the sky; its walls had the same solidity
as the gorge rock in which it was set. And it spanned the narrow valley from
side to side, as if, massive as it was, it served as gate as well as fortress.
In
the hollow of a doorway—a doorway so wide that at least three burden lamgs
might enter it abreast—stood one of the Star Lords, in his hands a core of
yellow-red light blazing as a beacon to draw them on through the murk of the
snow. But above, in that dark bulk of tower and wall, there was
no other light—only shadows and a brooding silence, which seized upon and
swallowed up the muted sounds of their own progress down the valley. Kincar
knew that this fortress was a dead, long-deserted pile.
As
it was deserted, so was it subtly different from the hold forts he had known,
not only because of its size, but also because of some alterations of line.
Those who had erected this had not first practiced on the building of such as
Styr— they had had other models. Then Kincar thought he understood. This was
some hidden hold of the Star Lord. It probably guarded the field on which their
last ship stood. He knew that their city of Terranna had been far different
from the native holds. And that business of the gates had yet to be made clear.
But this then was the goal toward which they had headed. He slid down from Cim,
cradling Vorken in his arm. Under him the ground was unsteady, and he was
forced to snatch at the riding pad with his other hand to keep his balance.
Still
holdling to Cim, Kincar went on slowly until the doorway arched above him and
he was in a passage lighted by one of the Star Lords' flares. There was no side
opening in that passage, and it brought him into a
courtyard, ringed in with hold walls, into which some snow was shifting
down-though the major part of the storm was kept off by those same walls. Here
two more flares showed a stall section under a roof, a structure that could
only be a mount pen, and Kincar, through habit, headed for it.
Perhaps
it was the effect of the Tie that made him move as if in a foggy dream.
Mechanically he went through duties that had been drilled into him in
childhood, but his sense of curiosity and his awareness of others about him
were oddly dulled. It might have been that only Cim, Vorken, and he were alive
in that place.
Cim
entered one of the stalls readily enough. There was no blanketing hay for its
flooring, and Kincar's boots grated on stone flagstones^ As he loosened his
cloak, Vorken struggled free of his grip and fluttered her good wing,
sputtering her distress, until he lifted her to where she could cling to the
top of a stall division, a poor substitute for her roost in the hatchery, but
it appeared to satisfy her for the present.
Then
he stripped Cim of pad and bags. With an undershirt from his scant wardrobe,
he began to rub down the snow-wet flanks, press the excess moisture from
shoulder and neck wool, until Cim bubbled contentedly. But with every movement
of his hands and arms Kincar's fatigue grew so that he was obliged to lean for
long moments against the wall of the stall panting. He kept doggedly to his
task, ending by feeding the larng crumbled journeycake in his cupped hands and
holding up to Vorken a strip of dried meat from his provisions.
Cim
folded long legs in the curiously awkward stance of a lamg needing rest. And
the coarse crumbs of journeycake were still on Kincar's tongue as he fell
rather than lay down beside the mount. He reached for his cloak and pulled it
up, and then he remembered nothing at all—for a dream world engulfed him
utterly and he was finally lost in a darkness without
visible end.
Pain—dull and not biting as he had known it—still centered on his
breast.
Kincar tried to raise his hand to ease it, and a sharper nip caught one of his
fingers, completely arousing him. A toothed bill above his chin, red eyes staring
into his, a whistling complaint—Vorken crouched, on him. His head rested on one
of Cim's forelegs and the heat of the lamg's body kept him warm. But his breath
puffed a frosty cloud in the air.
Someone
must have closed the door of the stall pens. He was looking now at ancient
wood, eaten by insects, splintered by time—but still stout enough to be a
portal. Vorken, having seen him fully awake, walked down his body and, trailing
her hurt wing, crossed to sit on the bags^ and demanded to be fed from their
contents.
Some
of that strange fog that had dulled his mind since he had dared the web gates
had been lost in slumber, but Kincar still moved stiffly as he stretched and
went to answer the mord's demands.
Though
the outer door of the building was in poor condition, as trails of snow
shifting under it and through its cracks testified, the structure itself was in
as good repair as if it had been hewn from the mountainside. He marveled at
those huge blocks of stone that made up the outer walls, laid so truly one upon
the other that the cracks at their joining were hardly visible. The lord who
had raised this hold must have been able to command master workers in stone, or
else this was more of the Star Lords' unending magic. For all Gorth knew, those
from off-world could command the elements and tame the winds, if it was to
their desire. Terranna had been a marvel. The only point that puzzled Kincar
now was the aura of age that clung to this fortress.
Of
course Gorthian time was a matter of little moment to the Star Lords with their
almost eternal life. They could die in battle right enough, or from some
illness. But otherwise they did not show signs of age until their years had
equaled five, even six life spans of the natives—three hundred years was not
unknown for men who in that time displayed no outer marks of age at all. And
among them before the withdrawal there had still been some who had landed on
Gorth almost five hundred years earlier.
But,
though they had such a length-of-life span, they did not produce many sons or
daughters to follow them. That had been first whispered and then said boldly
abroad. And when they took Gorthian mates, the issue of such
marriages were also few—two children to a marriage at the most. So their
numbers had remained nearly the same as when they had first landed their sky
ships, a limited number of births balancing deaths by battle or misadventure.
If
they were responsible for the building of this hold it must have been erected
soon after they reached Gorth, Kincar was certain of that. This type of stone
exposed to the open air darkened with the passage of time. But he could not remember,
save in the scattered stones of a very old shrine, such discoloration as these
walls displayed. Yet history had never placed the Star Lords far from their
initial landing point of Terranna. And where was this?
His
thoughts were interrupted by Vorken's demand, which arose from a hissed whisper
to ear-punishing squawks, punctuated by the flapping of her good wing. As he
went down on his knees to burrow in the bag that contained his food, the door
to the courtyard opened with a protesting scrape, letting in a blast of frigid
air and a measure of daylight.
There
was a chorus of grunts and sniffles from the lamgs in the line of stalls,
impatient for feeding and watering. Both men who entered carried buckets
slopping over at their brims. In spite of Vorken's protests Kincar got to his
feet. And the first man uttered a surprised exclamation as he caught sight of
the young man—just as Kincar himself was mildly astonished to see that the
other was one of the silverclad Star Lords setting about a pen task normally
left to a fieldman, and no concern of a swordwearer. "And who are
you?"
"Kincar s'Rud." Vorken, completely losing her temper, snapped at his hand, and he
tossed her a meat stick from the bag.
"And
soon to be an icicle by the look of you," commented the Star Lord.
"Did you spend the night here?"
Kincar
could not understand his surprise. Of course he had spent the night with Cim.
Where else did a warrior sleep on the trail but with his larng? The stone was
hard, aye, but a warrior did not notice such discomfort—he must be prepared to
accept as a matter of course far worse.
The
half-Gorthian with the Star Lord set down his two buckets and chuckled. "Lord Bardon, he but follows custom. In enemy territory
one does not separate willingly from one's mount. Is
that not so, youngling? But this is not enemy territory now. Tend to your
beast and then in with you to the hall. There is no need to freeze in the line
of duty." Then he added with the bluff good humor of a captain of
guardsmen to a new recruit, "I am Lorpor s'Jax, and this is the Lord
Bardon out of Hamil."
Hamil—another far distant district in the west. Indeed this in-gathering had caught up those
from odd corners of the world. Having fed Vorken, Kincar fell to and helped the
others care for the line of larngs. The animals, used to sparse feeding during
the cold months, were given slightly larger rations of journeycake because of
their recent hard usage. But most of them were already settling into a
half-doze that carried them through the short days of snow-time, unless their
services were needed. Cim's upper eyes were fast closed when Kincar returned to
his stall to collect bags and Vorken, and his lower ones regarded his master
with a dull lack of interest.
Vorken allowed herself to be picked up, but
scrambled out of his arm to cling to his shoulder, balancing there a little
uncertainly, her injured wing trailing down his back. Lorpor inspected the burn
on the leathery skin and whistled softly.
"Best
show her to the Lady Asgar—she has healing knowledge. Perhaps she can cure
that so this one may fly again. A good mord—of your own
training?"
"Aye. From the shell. She was the best of the hatchery at
Styr."
Lorpor
had fallen into step with him as they crossed the snow-drifted courtyard toward
the middle portion of the hold. And now Lord Bardon shortened pace so that they
caught up with him.
"You came in with
Dillan?" he asked Kincar abruptly.
"Aye, Lord. But I was not of his
following. I am from Styr Hold in the mountains—" Kincar volunteered no
more information. He found Lord Bardon's sharpness disconcerting—hinting that
he had no right to be there. Yet Lord Dillan had received him readily, so
perhaps this brusqueness of speech was peculiar to Lord Bardon. Never having
been among those of the pure Star blood, Kincar could only watch, listen, and
try to adapt to their customs. But he felt no ease in their presence as did the
other half-bloods such as Jonathal, Vulth, and Lorpor. In fact, that ease of manner between them and the Star Lords in turn
made him oddly wary of them. And for the first time he wondered about his
father. Why had he, Kincar, been sent away from Terranna, back to Styr, when
still a baby?
True,
it was the custom that Hold Daughter's Son lived where he was heir. But neither
was such a boy kept so great a stranger to his father's clan and kindred. Kincar
had always thought of his father as dead—but— His boot sole slipped on a patch
of snow, and Vorken hissed a warning in his ear. What if his father still
lived? What if he was to be found among the lords of this company? For some
reason Kincar, at that moment, would rather have faced a ring of swords barehanded
than ask information concerning the "Rud" whose name he had always
borne.
"Styr
Holding—" Lord Bardon repeated that as though trying to recall some
memory. "And your mother was—?"
"Anora, Hold Daughter," Kincar
returned shortly. Let this Lord know that he was not of the common sort.
"Hold Daughter's Son!" If that had not registered with Lord Bardon,
it did with Lorpor. His glance at Kincar held puzzlement. "Yet—"
"Being
half-blood," Kincar explained against his will, "I could not raise
Styr Banner. There was Jord s'Wurd, Hold Daughter's brother, to dispute."
Lorpor
nodded. "With the trouble hot about us, that would be true. And to set
brother fighting brother is an evil thing. You did well to seek another future,
Hold Daughter's Son."
But
Lord Bardon made no comment, merely lengthened his pace and was gone. Lorpor
drew Kincar through a doorway into a hold hall that was twice the size of any
he had ever seen. Huge fireplaces at either end gave a measure of heat, not
from any pile of well-seasoned logs, but from small boxes set on their hearths
to radiate warmth—some more Star magic. Riding pads were stacked to furnish
seats, huddles of traveling bags and cloaks marked the occupancy of
individuals or families, and there was a babble of sound through which the
deeper voices of the Star Lords made an underthread of far-off thunder.
"Leave
your bags here"— Lorpor pointed to a place on the pads—"and bring
your mord to the Lady Asgar."
Kincar shed his cloak in the heat of the
chamber before Lorpor guided him out of the main room of the hold into a side
chamber, which jutted out like a small circular cell. The half-blood halted at
a cloak hung curtainwise and called.
"Lorpor, with one who
has need of healing skill, my lady."
"Let
him enter and speedily," came the answer, and Kincar stepped through to
face a woman.
She wore the short divided skirt of a
traveler, but she had put aside all head and shoulder wrappings, except for a
gold and green shawl caught over her plain green bodice. It was her face that
startled Kincar close to forgetting all manners, for this was the first Star
Lady he had ever seen.
In
place of the long braids of a Gorthian woman, her hair was cropped almost as
short as his own, and it lay in waves of gold as bright as the threads of her
shawl, doubly bright about the creamy brown of her skin. The eyes she turned
toward him were very dark, under level brows, and Kincar could not have guessed
at her age, except that he did not believe her to be a young maid.
She
saw at once the purpose of Kincar's visit and held out her hands to Vorken,
giving a chirruping cry. Knowing the mord's usual response to any touch, Kincar
tried to ward her off. But Vorken surprised him by climbing down along his arm
and reaching her long neck, her hideous head, to those brown hands.
"Do
not fear, boy." The Lady Asgar smiled at him. "She will not savage
me. What is her name?"
"Vorken."
"Ah—for
the Demon of the Heights! Doubtless it suits her. Come, Vorken, let us-see to
this hurt of yours."
The
mord gave a short leap, beating her good wing to the lady's grasp.
She
carried the mord over to the full light of the window, examining the drooping
wing without laying hand upon it.
"A blaster burn. But luckily only the edge of the ray caught. It can be restored—"
She held Vorken close to the wall, and the
mord, as if obeying some unspoken order, caught at hollows in the store with
all four of her feet, clinging there while the Lady Asgar went to some bags and
brought forth a tube of metal. This she pointed at Vorken's hurt and held it so
for a long second.
What
she did or why Kincar did not know. What he was acutely conscious of was the
Tie, again awakened to angry life against his flesh. And, perhaps because this
was the fourth time he had known such torment, he reeled back against the wall,
unknowing that his face was a haggard mask, that Lorpor was watching him with a
surprise close to horror. Only dimly did he feel an arm flung about his
shoulders, was only half aware of being brought back against a sturdy support
that kept him on his feet, while the Lady Asgar spun around, her astonishment
altering to deep concern.
V
A QUESTION OF BIRTHRIGHT
Only
for a moment did Kincar
remain so steadied, and then, the stab of the Tie less, he pulled away,
glancing up to see that it was Lord Dillan whose hands still rested on his
shoulders. The rigid brown mask, which, to his untutored eyes, served all the
Star Lords for a face, had a new expression. And Dillan's voice, when he spoke,
was warm with concern. "What is it, Kincar?"
But the young man freed himself with a last
twist and stood, one hand at the breast of his scaled
shirt, schooling his body, his nerves under control. He who carried a Tie was
honored above his fellows, as well as burdened, but his guardianship was not
for the knowledge of others—certainly not for the outland-born Star men. So he
fronted all three of them with the same wariness he would face a company of
strangers in a time of clan feud when enemy was not yet sorted from friend.
When he made no answer,
Lord Dillan spoke to the woman.
"What
happened?" He used the common speech, purposely Kincar suspected. Kincar
himself wanted nothing more than to be out of that room and away from their
prying eyes.
"I
used the atomar on the mord—it has a ray-burned wing."
"The
atomar," Lord Dillan repeated, his attention once
more fixed on Kincar, as if by his will he could force the truth from the young
man.
"He
fears the Star machines—" That was a newcomer speaking, and there was
contempt in his voice. Vulth stood in the door, eying Kincar as he would some
wood creature
brought in by a hunter. "It was so that he
flinched upon passing the gates—as well I saw. Doubtless at his hold they held
to the old belief in night demons and howling terrors—"
Kincar
was ready with a hot retort to that, but he did not give it voice. A good
enough explanation for his behavior if they had to have one, one that made him
less of a man, that was true, but it was better to shrink in the regard of
these (though that in its way carried a hurt also) than to reveal what he carried.
A
brown hand closed about the wrist of his sword hand, keeping him where he was,
and the Lady Asgar was beside him. Something in her manner must have relayed an
order to both Vulth and Lorpor, for, after glancing from her now impassive face
to that of the Lord Dillan, they went out, Vulth unhooking the upturned corner
of the cloak door and letting it fall to give the remaining
three privacy.
Kincar
tried to follow, but that hand still gripped his wrist. Short of forcibly
twisting free, he could not leave. But when the Lady Asgar spoke, he lost his
desire to do so.
"The Tie of the Three
is a heavy weight for the bearing—"
His
hand flattened convulsively against that weight. Mechanically he gave the
proper response.
"To
the bearer it is no weight, it is a lightener of
loads, a shortener of ways, a brightener of both day and night."
Now
her hand dropped, away. "So did I think!"
Swiftly her fingers sketched a certain sign between them in the air, and he
stared at her wonderingly.
"But"—that
was half protest, half unbelief—"you are wholly of the Star Blood. You do
not tread the Rod of the Three!"
"To
each race there are certain beliefs granted." She spoke as she would to a
child under instruction. "We, too, have our powers—though they may not
take the same form for our worshiping. But all who follow Powers of Light give
faith and belief where it should be. I, who am counted as a wise woman among my
people, share in part the learning of the Three. Could I give you these signs
were that not so?" Again she cut the air with brown fingers—those ten
fingers so alien to his own twelve. "But, Kincar,
this you must know for your own protection. Some forces which we bend to our
use can in turn make a Tie serve as a transmitter, should one be within the
range of their influence. And the greater the volume of that
force, the greater its focus upon the Tie. To cross the web—" She
shook her head. "You must bear wounds now as deep as if a sword had struck
you down. Those must be treated before evil comes of them." "As you treated Vorken?"
She
shook her head. "That force would only add to your torment. The healing of
Gorth, not the healing of Star lore, must be brought to your flesh. But that
healing is also mine. Will you suffer my tending?"
He
could accept her knowledge; she had given him good proof of what she knew. But Lord Dillan? She might be reading his thoughts, for now
she smiled and said, "Did you not know that Lord Dillan is also a
healer—of our clan? Though his healing reaches out into
twisted minds instead of serving lamed bodies. He has taken the Inner
Path, been a disciple of the Forest, with the Seven Feasts and the Six Fasts
behind him these many years."
"I
was a man of Gormal sVarn." Lord Dillan spoke for the first time.
"Though that is indeed now many years behind us—"
Gormal sVam! The leader on the Path who had
lived many years before Wurd's grandmother! Again that oppressive feeling of
the past that clung to these walls and was also a part of the Star people
lapped about him. But in that moment he surrendered his will to the two, given
confidence by their learning.
It was the Lord Dillan who aided him with the
buckles of his scale shirt, helped him draw off the jerkin
and soft shirt under it, while the Lady brought out from her bags small jars, two of which she opened, spreading a rich fragrance of dried summer
flowers and grasses in the cold, too ancient air of the place.
The Tie swung free, but at the point where it
had been cradled tight to his flesh, there was a deep scored mark of angry red,
a brand of burning as deep as if white-hot metal had been held there to his
torment.
The
Lady Asgar produced a skeleton of leaf, which lay like a cobweb across her
palm. On this with infinite care she spread creams from her pots, first dipping
from one and then the other, blending the oils into the wisp of thing she held,
working with the care of an artist applying the last touches of color to some
masterpiece. Vorken climbed down the wall and crawled to her feet. The mord's
head swayed to and fro on her long neck as she savored the scents that came
from the pots. And now and again she gave a beseeching chirrup.
Lady
Asgar laughed at the mord's excitement. "Not for you, winged one."
But the mord continued to crouch before her with hungry eyes upraised.
The
web-leaf with its healing salves was applied to Kin-car's breast, adhering
there as tightly as if it were another layer of skin. But neither Lord Dillan
nor the Lady touched the Tie. But she studied it carefully and asked, "Are
you a Looker, Kincar?"
He
made haste to deny any such power. "I am nothing, Lady, save Kincar s'Rud,
who was once Hold Daughter's Son to Styr and am now a
landless man. This came to me from Wurd who was Styr. And it came secretly. I
found it among my gear when I was quit of the Holding. I have no power of its
bestowing, and I think that Wurd gave it me because by right I was Styr and
only ill chance took my inheritance—"
But
Lord Dillan shook his head slowly, and Kincar could read the dissent on the
Lady's more expressive face.
"A
Tie does not pass by chance, Kincar, you know that. If Styr was a guardian,
then his was the need to select the one who came later, and the man he chose
would not be fitted by birth or kinship, but by what lay within him. Also the
Tie is always given secretly, lest evilly disposed ones intercept it and
corrupt its use to their own purposes. You may not yet have the powers, but who
can say that you will not—"
It was the Lady who
interrupted. She stood rubbing her ringer tips slowly together and so dispensing
a flowery scent to the cold room. "The Tie is of the Gorth we know. I wonder
whether it will function in this Gorth also—"
Kincar
had picked up his swordbelt. The plaster had not only soothed the burn, he was
feeling more vigorous than he had since he had passed through the web gates.
"The Gorth we know—this Gorth—" Those two phrases rang oddly. As he
hooked the belt about him, he puzzled over their meaning.
"This is Gorth?"
he ventured.
And
he was relieved when Lord Dillan nodded. But then the Star-born continued
bewilderingly, "This is Gorth, but not the Gorth into which you were born,
Kincar. Nor is it the Gorth we would have chosen to enter. It is a Gorth
strange to us and one in which we are friendless and alone."
"You
mean—by your magic, Lord, we have been transported over the bitter water seas
to the far side of the world?"
The
Lady Asgar sat down on one of the riding pads, and straightway the mord climbed
into her lap. She sat there, allowing Vorken to nuzzle her scented hands, and
now and then stroking the mord's grotesque head.
"We
have been transported, aye, Kincar. But not across the seas.
Explain to him, Dillan, for as he joined us so late, he will know nothing of
what we have done, and we must all face what comes to us with
understanding."
"It is this way." Unconsciously
Lord Dillan began with the phrase of a song-smith, but his frowning seriousness
said that this was no account of fancy. "When it came time that we must go
out of Gorth—"
There Kincar found the courage to ask a
question that had puzzled him since the news of the Star Lords' withdrawal had
come to Styr. "But, why, Lord, was it necessary for you to go from Gorth?
Aye, men of ill will have raised their voices. But we never heard such talk
until the Lords first said they were going. You have brought the people of
Gorth up from forest-dwelling barbarians. Why do you leave them without the
shield of your protection when you have so much to give them? Your magic—could
it not be shared?"
Again both of them shook their heads.
"Instead of being a protection to Gorth, we may have been its bane,
Kincar. When a man-child stumbles about the hall, still unsteady on his feet,
do you set in his baby hands a war sword and leave him to his own devices? Or,
worse still, do you give him such a weapon and strive to teach him how to use
it before his thoughts are formed to know good from
ill? In our own world we are an old, old people with a long and dusty trail of
years between us and the beginnings of our history. We are the warriors of
mature years, though still with many failings in judgment, and in Gorth we have put sharp swords into the hands of little children. We thought
we were aiding Gorth to a better life wherein man could have many things he had
not. So we taught and wrought with our hands and spread out the fruits of our
learning for the plucking of those who wished. But, as children, they were
attracted by the hard bright things, the metal which could be forged into
blades, the mind-turning which could set one man
against another. Had we not landed upon Gorth, had we not meddled, perhaps it
would be a happier world, a greater world—"
"Or there could have
remained just beasts," Kincar said.
"That
is an argument-answer which has come readily these past years," the Lady
Asgar answered. "But it is a too ready one. And we have it on our hearts
that we may have guided children's feet into false paths. Aie, sadness,
sadness—" The words of her own tongue came from her, slow and heavy as
tears, and Lord Dillan took up the tale once more.
"So
there grew three groups among us. There were those who said that, though it was
very late, perhaps even now if we withdrew from Gorth the memory of us, the skills we had taught, would gradually become
overlaid by time in the minds of men, and that Gorth could build a world of her
own—twisted by some of the gifts we had so rashly given— but still returning to
her own heritage, re-fashioned in a way native to her. Then there were those,
luckily a very few, who were of a different mind. There will always be bom, in
every race and species of man, Kincar, certain individuals who have a thirst
for power. To them an alien race, should it not be as advanced as they, exists
only to serve them. Among us these few were not satisfied with things as they
were, but for a different reason.
"They
desired full rulership over Gorth, wanted the men of Gorth as servants and
slaves. And secretly they began to circulate stories among those landless men,
the outlaws, who were willing to form a fighting tail for any lord who would
bring them much loot and rich living. Those of them that we could, we brought
to justice secretly." His mouth was a thin line and the force of his will
was almost a tangible thing as he spoke. "Thus they pushed us into hurried
decisions. The major portion of our company voted to take to the ships, to go
out once more into space seeking another world, one where there was no native
race we might corrupt by contact. But-"
And
here the Lady broke in as if this section of the tale was more closely hers.
"But
there were others of us, Kincar, who, though we were not of mixed blood, had
taken Gorth to our hearts. And when we came to think of raising
from her, we could not bear it. So we sought another path of flight. And two
men who had been working for many years—lifetimes—on a problem in research thought that they had the solution. It is a
difficult one to explain, but it offered us a way to leave the Gorth of
troubles for another Gorth in which we might live as we wished. And we labored
to turn their theory into fact. This you must tell of, Dillan, since you were
one of those men." She smiled at the Star Lord.
He
squatted on his heels, and with his forefinger drew lines on the dusty floor as
he talked.
"This
has been a theory among our people for a very long time, but until this past
year there has been no proof of it in fact. To explain it— Well, Kincar, think
upon this. Are there not times in a man's life when he has a decision to make
which is of major importance in shaping his future? You had the choice of
joining with us, or of remaining at Styr to fight for
your rights. Thus, at that moment before you rode from that Hold, you had two
roads—two separate futures— and probably very different ones."
Kincar murmured assent.
"Then
this is true, as we have proven. There now exist two different Gorths for
you—one in which you stand here with us, one in which you held to Styr."
"But
how could that be?" Kincar's protest was quick. "I stand here—I do
not battle against Jord in Styr—or lie dead from his sword!"
"This 'you' stands
here—the other 'you' is in Styr."
Kincar
blinked, distrusting this new thought. Multiple "yous"—or
"I's"—all acting separately, leading different lives? How could
Kincar s'Rud be so split? Once more the Lady Asgar came to his rescue.
"The
Kincar who chose to remain in Styr," she said softly, "would not be
the Kincar who came through the gates in our company, for, by his very
decision, he made himself a different person in a different world. He is not
you, nor have you now any part in him—for that world is gone."
Lord
Dillan studied the lines he had drawn. "But as it is with men, so it is
also with nations and with worlds. There are times when they come to points of
separation, and from those points their future takes two roads. And thus,
Kincar, there are many Gorths, each formed by some
decision of history, lying as these bands, one beside the other, but each
following its own path—"
Kincar stared down at those faint marks. Many Gorths, existing one beside the other but each stemming from
some crossroads in the past? His imagination caught fire, though still
he could not quite believe.
"Then," he said slowly, trying to
find the right words, "there is a Gorth into which the Star Lords never
came, in which the wild men of the forest still live as do the animals? And
perhaps a Gorth from which the Star Lords chose not to withdraw?"
Lord Dillan smiled; he had an eager look.
"That is so. Also there are Gorths—or at least one Gorth, we hope—in which
the native race never came into being at all. It is that Gorth we sought when
we came through the gates."
"But which we were not given the time to
find," Lady Asgar murmured. "This fortress proves that."
"Had
we not been hunted there at the end, had we had but a day—or maybe only an hour
more—we might have found it. Still, with the knowledge we have brought with us,
we can open the gates once again—just give us a fraction of time."
But
even Kincar was able to sense that behind those brave words Lord Dillan was not
so sure. And he asked a question.
"Where
are we now? Who built this fort? It is not of any fashion that I know. I
thought it to be a hidden hold of the Star Lords."
"No,
it is none of ours. But it will give us good shelter for a necessary space. Had
we only been granted more time—!"
"At least"—Lady Asgar put Vorken
gently on the floor and got to her feet—"your destruction of the gates
brought one advantage. If it did not serve us very well, it served Gorth—since
Herk came to his end in that blast."
Lord
Dillan sat back. "Aye, Herk is safely dead. And those he gathered as a
following will quickly melt away, their own jealousies and passions driving
them apart. He was the last of the rebels, so Gorth is now free to seek its own
destiny, while we may seek ours in another direction."
He
stood up, and now he smiled at Kincar with a warmth and true welcome. "We
are but a handful, yet this is our venture and we shall have the proving of it
to the end. Let us seek out the materials we need and we shall have a new gate
with time enough to choose which world it will open to us."
"Lord!" Vulth relooped the door
curtain. "The gate box has been reassembled—"
"So!"
Dillan was away without farewells, but the Lady Asgar put out a hand to stop
Kincar when he would have gone after.
"It is not so easy." She was grave.
Behind her serenity she was considering some problem. "The time before we
can build another gate may be a long one."
"In Gorth—the old
Gorth," Kincar commented, "the Lords had all
the magic supplies of Terranna to aid them in such a building. They have been
forced to destroy some of that. Can they find such magic here?"
She stood very still. "You bear with you
that which must give you ever the clear sight. Aye, that is the stone within our
fruit—perhaps for us a gate may not rise again. Dillan
will try to rebuild, for that is his life. But his efforts may come to nothing.
I would know more of this Gorth—for our own protection I would know. How far
back in time was the turning which cleaved our Gorth from this one? Who built
this hold and why did they forsake it? Are we in a world emptied by disaster—or
one only too well peopled? That we must learn—and
speedily."
He thought he could guess at what she hinted.
"I have not the Sight," he reminded her.
"Nay. But you are closer to Gorth than those of
full Star blood. And you wear that which may bind you closer still. If the
Sight comes to you, do not deny it, speak aloud—to me or to Lord Dillan. It is
in my mind that Herk forced a bad choice upon us and ill shall come here. See,
I have not the Sight, either, yet foreboding grows upon one. And you?"
Kincar shook his head. He could not pretend
to a sensitivity he did not have, and, privately,
neither wanted nor thought he would ever develop. So far the only effect that
the Tie had had on him was physical. He could play guardian, but he was
willing to relinquish even that task when the time came that he could pass the
talisman to one of the proper temperament to make full use of its powers. Wurd
had never been a farseer nor seer, yet he had held the
Tie in his time. Guardianship did not always accompany use.
He marveled at the tale he had heard of
worlds beside worlds. But had he no premonitions and he wanted none. He would
give thanks for his healing, for Vorken's, but he was not ready to join forces
with the Lady Asgar in that way. And she must have guessed that, for she smiled
wearily and did not try to detain him longer.
LEGEND COME ALIVE
The
gale was brisk, but there
was no more snow, and the wind had scoured away the early fall, save where the
powdery stuff clung in pockets between trees and rocks. Vorken swung on a high
branch, her large head seeming to shake disparagingly above the surrounding
countryside as she kept watch. If any creature stirred there, she would mark
its path.
Kincar
leaned against the bole of the large tree, surveying the domain that their
fortress guarded. It was indeed a holding of which any great lord could well
be proud. Beyond the narrow neck of the entrance valley, which the hold spanned
from wall to wall—an efficient cork to front any enemy—the land opened out into
a vast valley ringed about with heights. There might be passes over those
mountains, trails out of the valley that did not pass the hold, but so far the
newcomers had not discovered them. And all indications pointed to the
assumption that the valley of the hold was the only practical entry into the
open ground beyond.
From
this distance up one of the flanking mountainsides, one could trace the
boundaries of old fields, see the straggle of tree stumps, fallen branches, and
a few still sturdy trunks marking an orchard. Aye, it had been a rich land,
well able to provide a rich living for the hold—once.
But
now no harvests from those fields or orchards lay-except as powdery dust—in the
storerooms of the fortress. Men must hunt, prowling the wooded slopes of the
heights in search of game. So far the results had been disappointing. Oh, now
and again one would chance upon a suard or some forest fowl. But they were
thin, poor creatures.
This was the first day Kincar had deemed
Vorken healed enough to take afield, and he was pinning his hopes upon her aid
in a profitable hunt. But, though she had soared and searched in her usual
manner, she had sighted nothing. And her rests, during which she clung to some
roost well out of his reach, muttering peevishly to herself, grew longer and
closer together. The mord might turn sullen with such constant disappointment
and refuse to go on unless some success came soon.
With
a forlorn hope of flushing a wild fowl, Kincar started ahead, thrusting through
any promising stretch of shelter brush. A few scratches and a more intimate,
and unwelcome, acquaintance with local vegetation was his only reward. However,
he kept to the task.
He
heard the stream before he found it—the tinkle of free running water. Then he
saw, rising from the narrow cutting in the hillside, misty white tails that
might be breath puffed from a giant's lungs.
To
his surprise there was no edging of ice on the shore line, and it was from the
surface of the water those smoky lines rose. Intent upon the phenomenon, he
cautiously slid down the steep slope. There was a disagreeable smell, as well
as steam, about him—a strong, acrid odor that made his eyes water as a warm
puff drove into his face, setting him coughing. Very warily Kincar put out an
investigating finger. The water was not clear, but a reddish-brown,
and it was hot enough to sting. He raised the wet finger to his nose and
sniffed a fetid smell he could not give name to.
Eager
to see from where it sprang, he traced back along the cut until he found the
place where the discolored water bubbled out of the mountain's crust. Yet that
was not a spring, but a round hole, water worn and
stained red-brown, an exit from some depths beyond. Kincar could perceive no
immediate use for his find, but, in spite of the odor, the warmth of the water
was welcome in the chill, and he lingered, holding hands ill-protected by their
clumsy wrappings into the steam.
He was watching the brown
swirls of the water, without close attention, loathe to climb back into the
cold, when an object bobbed to the surface of the oily flood, struck against a
stone, and would have been swept on had Kincar not grabbed for it. He snapped
out a pair of pungent words as he scooped it out, for here the water was far
hotter than it had been downstream. But he held the prize safely—the thing that
had come out of the mountain..,.
It
had begun as a chip of wood, buoyant and fresh enough to possess still the pale
yellow color of newly cut zemdol. But it was no longer just a chip. Someone had
used it for idle shaping such as he had often seen a man do in Styr, to try out
a new knife, or for the pleasure of working with his hands through dull hours
in the cold season. The chip now had the rough but unmistakable likeness of a
suard. There were the curling horns worn in the warm seasons, lost in the cold,
the powerful back legs, the slender, delicate forefeet— a suard carved by one
who not only had an artist's skill in his fingers but a good knowledge of
suards!
Yet
it had bobbed out of the heart of the mountainl And it
was not of the fugitives' making, that he was sure of. Where had the builders
of the fortress retreated—underground?^ Kincar was on
his feet, searching the wall of rock and earth from which the stream bubbled,
striving to see on its surface some indication that there was an entrance here,
that someone who was a hunter of suards and had tried out his knife upon a
fresh chip of zemdol had a dwelling therein.
They
had all puzzled over the history of the hold. There had been no signs that it
had been stormed and sacked, no visible remains of. those
who had reared its massive walls for their protection, tilled the fields
beyond. And the Star Lords said that such a place could not have been taken
easily, not even by the weapons of which they alone possessed the secret. They
were inclined to believe that some plague had struck down the valley dwellers
without warning. Except of that there was no evidence either. All the rooms,
from nooks in the watchtowers to eerie hollows hacked out of the rock under those same towers' foundations,
probably intended for dark purposes the present explorers did not care to
imagine, were bare of anything save dust. If the
people of the valley had gone to plague tombs, they had carefully taken with
them all their material possessions.
Kincar turned the chip over. This was evidence
of other life in the mountain land, though he could
not be sure how far from its source the water had carried it. But he was inclined
to believe that the temperature of the flood, far higher here than it was
downstream, suggested a beginning not too far inside the mountain. And it might
be at that birth spring that the carver had lost his work.
The desire in Kincar to get to the root of
the mystery was strong. But no one was going to move those tons of earth and
rock. So at last, having put the chip in his belt pouch, he climbed out of the
cut, which held the hot stream, into the frostiness of the upper air, where the
wind bit doubly sharp because of his respite in the warmth.
He whistled to Vorken, and her answer came
from farther down the slope. As he worked his way along, he saw her take to the
air again in an ascending SDi'ral,
and he brought out the weapon Lord Dillan had entrusted to him, to be used only
if they were sure of a kill. One held the tube balanced— so—and pressed the
forefinger on a stud. Then ensued a death that was noiseless, an unseen ray that killed, leaving no mark at
all upon the body of the slain. Kincar did not like it; to him it was evil when
compared to the honest weight of sword or spear. But in a time when a kill
meant food—or life—it was best.
Vorken no longer cried, her'circles for
altitude were bringing her up level with the peaks.
Plainly she was in sight of her quarry. Kincar waited where he was to mark her
swoop —there was too good a chance of warning the prey if he went on right now.
The mord brought her wings together with a
snap he could hear plainly through the dry, cold air. Now she was at strike,
her four feet with claws well extended beneath her as she came, air hissing from her open bill.
There was a high scream as she vanished behind treetops, and Kincar ran.
He heard the beat of thumping feet through
the brush and crouched. A suard, its eyes wide with terror, burst between two
saplings, and Kincar used the strange weapon as he had been instructed. The
animal crumpled in upon itself in mid*-leap, its try at escape ending in a roll
against a bush. Kincar ran up—there were no claw marks on it. This could not
have been Vorken's prey. Had they had the excellent good luck of finding a
small party of the animals? Sometimes the suard, usually solitary creatures,
banded together, especially in a section where there was poor feeding.
Rudimentary intelligence had taught the animals that concentrated strength brought
down small trees whose bark proved cold season food.
Kincar paused only to bleed the suard he had
killed, and then he sped on—to discover his guess had been right. A tree, its
roots dug about, had been pushed to the ground and a goodly part of the tender
upper bark shredded away. A second suard lay on the scene of the feast,
Vorken's claws hooked in its deep fur. She welcomed Kincar with a scream,
demanding to be fed, to have the part of the kill .rightfully hers. He set
about the gory task of butchering.
The suard Vorken had brought down was
prepared for packing back to the hold and the mord was eating greedily before
Kincar moved to the other kill. As a trained hunter, he walked silently to the
place where the second body lay—so silently that he surprised another at work.
As he caught sight of the figure hunched above the suard on the bloodied snow,
saw those hands busy at the same task he had just performed, he froze. This was
no partner from 'the hold. Unless one of the children has slipped away to trail
him—
Then the other turned to strip back a flap of
furred hide. This was not a child in spite of the small body, the hands half
the size of his own, which worked with the quick sure-ness of long experience.
The face beneath the overhang of the fur hood was that of a man in his late
youth, a broad face bearing the lines of bleak living. But when the stranger
got to his feet to walk about the suard, his -head could not have reached a
finger width above Kincar's shoulder. As he himself was to the Star Lords, so
was this one to him. The compact body, muffled as it was with furs and thick
clothing, showed no signs of malformation—the manikin was well proportioned and
carried himself as might a trained warrior.
But had the other been as tall as Lord Dillan
himself, Kincar would have jumped him now. To see this dwarfish creature calmly
about the business of butchering the suard he had killed, preempting meat so
badly needed in the hold, was like waving a bit of fresh liver before an
uncaged mord and daring it to snap. Kincar sheathed his Star weapon and crossed
the open space in one flying leap, his hands settling as he had aimed on the
thief's shoulders. But what happened an instant after
that was not part of his plan at all.
The stranger might have the size of a lad not
yet half grown, but in that slight body was a strength that rivaled Kincar's.
Startled as he must have been, he reacted automatically as one trained in
unarmed combat. His shoulders shrugged, he wriggled, and, to Kincar's
overwhelming astonishment and dazed unbelief, he found himself on the ground
while the other stood over him, a knife blade stained with suard blood held at
striking distance from his throat.
"Lie still,
lowland rat"— the words were oddly accented but Kincar could understand
them—"or you will speedily have two mouths—the second of my making!"
"Big talk, stealer of
another man's meat!" Kincar glared back with what dignity he could muster from his position
on the ground. "Have you never learned that only a hunter skins his own
kill?"
"Your kill?" The manikin laughed. "Show me the wound
with which you dealt that death, my brave-talking hunter, and I shall deliver
you the meat."
"There are other ways
of killing than by sword or spear."
The
manikin's lips flattened against his teeth, drawing a little apart in a snarl.
"Aye,
lowlander." He
spoke more softly still, almost caressingly. "There are such ways of
killing. But your sort have them not—only the 'gods'
kilL so." But he spat after mouthing the word "gods" as a man
might spit upon the name of a blood enemy. "And no 'god' would give a
slave his power stickl You are naught but an outlaw who should be turned in for
the price set upon him—to be used for the amusement of the 'gods' after their
accursed way."
There
had been outlaws in the Gorth of Kincar's birth. He could readily accept the
idea that such men lived here also. But these "gods" were something
else altogether. However, his immediate problem was to get safely out of the
range of that knife, and his swift overthrow had given him a healthy respect
for the one who now held it.
"I
am no outlaw. I am a hunter. My mord flushed the suard in their feeding ground.
One she slew, the other I killed as it fled. If you would have proof of that,
look behind those bushes yonder where you will find the other made ready for
packing. Or, better yet—" He whistled and the blade descended until he
felt the chill touch of the metal on his throat.
"You
were warned—" The manikin was beginning, when Vorken swooped upon him.
Only the overhang of his hood saved his face. As it was, the mord hooked claws
in his jerkin and beat him about the head with her wings. Kincar rolled away
and got to his feet before he called the mord off her victim. And ready in his
hand now was the death rod of the Star Lords.
Vorken
flapped up to a tree limb, her red eyes holding upon the manikin. But he lay on
the ground, his attention all for the weapon Kincar had aimed at him. And his
expression was the bleak one of a man facing inevitable death.
"Who
are you, wearing the body of a slave, carrying the death of a 'god'?" he
demanded. "Why do you trouble the hills?"
Now
that Kincar had his captive, he did not quite know what to do with him. To take
a prisoner down to the hold, there to spy out their few numbers, their many
lacks, would be folly indeed. On the other hand, to turn the
man loose on the mountain, perhaps to arouse his own
people, that was worse than folly. But to kill as a matter of expediency alone,
that was an act Kincar could not commit.
Vorken
stirred, uttering her warning, and a moment later they heard a musical whistle,
unlike the shrilling of the mord. Kincar answered eagerly with the rest of the
bar. The figure who tramped through drifted snow to
join them did not come with Kincar's light hunter's tread. And at the sight of
the silver clothing the manikin froze as a suard youngling might freeze under
the shadow of a mord's wings—seeing raw death above it with
no possible escape.
Lord Bardon, leading one of the pack larngs,
came to a halt, the animal's head bobbing over his
shoulder, the luck of the rest of the hunting party to be read in the small
bundle lashed to its back. He surveyed the scene with open surprise.
"What have we here,
Kincar?"
"A
thief of another hunter's kill!" snapped the other. "Also
a teller
of tales. What else he may be, I have
no knowledge."
The
manikin's face was twisted with hate, whitened with something deeper than fear,
a dull despair. But he made no answer, though his glance swung from the Star
Lord to Kincar as if the last sight he expected to wonder over
was such a friendly relationship between the two.
"Who
are you?" Lord Bardon came directly to the point, and then added—as if to himself—"and what are you, my small friend?"
But the manikin remained stubbornly silent. There was about him now the air of one about to be put to some torture,
determined to endure to the end that he might not betray a weighty secret.
"He has a tongue." Kincar's
exasperation broke out. "He was free enough with it before your coming,
Lord—with all his talk of 'gods' and 'slaves'! But what he is or where he
springs from I do not know. Vorken brought down a suard— a second, fleeing, I killed with the silent death. While I butchered Vorken's kill, he was busy here. And so I discovered him thieving—"
For
the first time since Lord Bardon had appeared on the scene the manikin spoke.
"Aye,
and but for that mord of yours, you'd have been meat, too, lowland dirt!"
"Perhaps so." Kincar gave credit where it was due. "He is a warrior, Lord, overturning
me with some trick of fighting when I closed with him. But Vorken came, and I
was free to use this—a threat he appeared to understand"—he held out the
death tube—"though how that can be is a mystery—"
Lord
Bardon's eyes were like light metal, cold, with a deadly luster in his dark
face. "So he recognized a ray blaster. Now that is most interesting. I
think it is important that he comes with us for a quiet talk together—"
The
manikin had drawn his feet under him. Now he exploded for the nearest cover
with the speed of a spear throw. Only this time Kincar was prepared. He crashed
against the captive, bringing them both to the frozen ground with the force of
that tackle. And when he levered himself up, the other lay so
quiet that Kincar was for an instant or so very much afraid.
But the prisoner was only stunned, the rough
handling leaving him tractable enough to be stowed away on the larng along with
the meat. So encumbered they started back to the hold, making only one short
side trip to look at the steam stream Kincar had chanced upon. Lord Bardon
examined the carved chip and then looked to the trussed captive on the larng.
"Perhaps our friend here can tell us
more concerning this. He is well clad, at home in these ranges, yet we have
seen no other steading or hold. If they dwell within instead of without the
mountains, that would explain it. But he is a breed new to me. How say you,
Kincar; is he a dwarf of Gorthian breed?"
"I do not know, Lord. He seems not to be
in any way misshapen, but rather as if it is natural with his kind to be of
that size—just as I do not equal you in inches. There is in my mind one
thing—the old song of Garthal s'Dar—" He began the chant of a native
song-smith:
"In
the morning light went Garthal Sword in hand, his cloak about his arm. A white
shield for his arm, And he raised his blade against the inner men, Forcing
their chieftain into battle, Forcing them to give him freedom of their ways,
That he might come upon his blood enemy And cross metal with him Who had raised
the scornful laughter In the Hold of
Grum at the Midyear feasting—"
"The inner men," he repeated.
"They were long and long ago—if they ever lived at all—for many of the old
songs, Lord, are bom from the minds of men and song-smiths and not out of deeds
which really happened. But these 'inner men' were of the mountains, and they
were small of body but large of deed, a warrior race of power. Or so Garthal
found them—"
"And there are other tales of 'inner
men'?"
Kincar
grinned. "Such tales as one tells a youngling who would have his own way
against the wisdom of his elders, warnings that should he not mend his ways the
'little men' will come in the dark hours and spirit him away to their hidden
holds beneath the earth—from which no man ventures forth again."
"Aye,"
mused the Star Lord, "But in such tales there lingers a spark of truth at
times. Perhaps the 'inner men,' who have vanished from the Gorth we knew, are
not gone from here, and we have laid hands upon one. At any rate he will supply
us with much which we should know for our own safety."
"I
do not think this one will talk merely because we bid him."
"He
shall tell us all he knows, which is of interest to us." Kincar measured
the greater bulk of the Star Lord. In his brown hands the manikin, would be a
girl child's puppet to be sure. Yet the half-blood shrank from the grim picture
his imagination produced. To slay a man cleanly in battle was one thing. To
mishandle a helpless captive was something far different—a thing he did not
want to consider. But again it was as if the Star Lord had the trick of reading
minds, for the other looked down at him with a hint of smile in his eyes,
though there was no softening of the straight line of lip and jaw.
"We
do not tear secrets from men with fire and knife, youngling—or follow outlaw
tricks for the loosening of tongues!"
Kincar flushed. "Forgive, Lord, the ways
of your people are as yet strange to me. I was reared in a hold of the mountains,
not in Terranna. What do I know of Star Lord life?"
"True
enough. But not 'your people,' Kincar, but 'my people.'
We are one in this as in all else, boy. You have an inheritance from us as well
as from Styr—always remember that. Now let us bring this song-smith's hero into
Dillan and the Lady Asgar and see what they can make of him to our future
profit."
VII
FALSE GODS
Stab
Lord ways for extracting information from unwilling
captives were indeed strange to Kincar, for questions were not asked at all.
Instead their prisoner was given a seat before one of the heat boxes in the
great hall of the old hold and left to meditate, though there were always those
who watched him without appearing to do so.
After
the first few minutes of lowering suspicion, the captive watched them openly
in return, and his complete mystification was plain to read on his face.
Something in their ways or bearing was too odd for him to comprehend. He stared
wide-eyed at Lord Jon who was patiently teaching his half-Gorthian son the
finer points of sword play before a fond and proud audience of the boy's mother
and sister. They were both busy with their needles at the mending of
under-tunics—while the younger brother watched with envious attention of one
ready and willing to change places with the other boy at any moment.
And
when the Lady Asgar came up behind Kincar and put a hand on his shoulder to
gain his notice, the prisoner, seeing that friendly gesture, shrank in upon
himself as if fearing some terrible outburst in return.
"This
is a new thing you have found for us, younger brother," she said.
"Dillan is coming, though he is loathe to leave
his calculations. So this is one you think might be straight out of the saga of
Garthal the Two-sworded?"
"It
is in my mind, Lady, that he is close to the song-smiths' recording of the
'inner men.' "
Vorken fluttered down from her chosen perch
high in the roof to claw beseechingly at the Lady's cloak. Asgar laughed at the
mord. "Now then, Vorken, would you have me in tatters because of your
impatience? Being of the female kind yourself, you should know better than to
tear clothing that can not easily be replaced. Ha—up with you then, if that is
how it must be." She stooped, and the mord sprang to her arm, climbing to
her shoulder where she rubbed her head caressingly against the Lady's and
chirruped in her ear.
"You
have done very well this day, Vorken," Asgar continued as if the mord
could understand every word she said. "More than your
part. Now be patient, winged one, we have other business to hand."
But
when she came to stand directly before the prisoner, the manikin crouched low,
drawing in upon himself as if he would turn his body into a ball under the
blows of a punishing lash. Nor would he lift his head to see eye to eye with
the lady. His whole position suggested one awaiting death— and no easy passing
at that. And it was in such contrast to the spirit with which he had faced
Kincar that the latter was puzzled.
"So—what
have we here?" Lord Dillan came to them, giving Kincar an approving pat
upon the back as he passed. "This is your meat thief, boy?"
"He is more," remarked the Lady.
"But there is a second mystery here. Why are we so fearsome to him?"
"Aye." Lord Dillan reached down and, with a hand gentle
enough but with a force that could not be denied, brought up the manikin's head
so that he could see his face. The captive's eyes were squeezed shut. "Look upon us, stranger. We are not your enemies—unless
you wish it so—"
That
must have pricked like a sword point upon a raw wound. The eyes snapped open,
but none of them were prepared for the black hate mirrored in their depths.
"Aye,"
the manikin snarled, "the 'gods,' are never enemies —they wish the good of
us all. Hear me, 'gods,' I give you homage!" He slipped from the pad to
the floor, kneeling before the Star Lord. "You may slay me after your own
evil fashion, 'gods,' but Ospik will not beg for his life!"
It was the Lady who spoke first. "There
are no gods here, Ospik, nor do we have a liking for such titles even in jest.
Why do you name us so?"
His
broad mouth shaped a sneer he could not prevent, and his inner hatred fought
against remnants of self-preservation. "How else should I name you—save
as you have taught Gorth? You are the 'gods' from the far stars. Though what
you do here in this ruin is beyond the imagining of a simple hunter. What you
do here and with them—!" He pointed to Kincar, to the family of Lord Jon
busy with their own concerns just out of earshot.
"Why
should not kinsmen be together?" questioned the Lady softly.
"Kinsmen!" Ospik repeated the word incredulously. "But the young warrior is a
lowlander, a Gorthian, and you are one of the 'gods'! There is no kinship
between slave and master. To even think of such a blood-tie is red death for
the slave!"
Lord
Dillan's eyes had grown bleak and cold as he listened, and the hand that had
continued to rest on Kincar's shoulder in the greeting of a comrade tightened
its hold, crushing the scales of the younger man's shirt down on the flesh
beneath as he stood steady under it. Only the Lady Asgar continued her inquiry
with untroubled serenity.
"You are very wrong, Ospik. All those
within this hold share a common heritage, at least in part. Those who seem to
you Gorthian have also Star blood. Jon, whom you have been watching, is now
schooling his eldest son—and that is his wife, his daughter, and his younger
son—a large family for us. This is Kincar s'Rud." She indicated Kincar.
"And Rud, his father, was brother to Dillan who stands before you. No slaves, no masters—kinsmen."
"Lord Rud's son!" Ospik's teeth showed in an animal snarl, and he gazed at Kincar as if
he would spring full at the young man's throat in the mord's muderous attack. "Lord Rud with a slave son! Ho, that is fine hearing!
So he has defiled himself has he—the great Rud himself has broken the first
law of his kind? Good hearing—good hearing! Though no one shall ever hear it
from my telling—" His head moved from side to side like the head of a
cornered animal.
Kincar
was bewildered, but he clung to the parts he understood. So Lord Dillan was
close kin—somehow that was a thought to give warmth, a warmth
as steady as if it arose from a heat box. But the manikin's
talk of a Lord Rud who had broken the first law? How did Ospik know his
father? Asgar spoke first.
"Rud,
brother of Dillan, is dead, Ospik. He was killed almost twenty warm seasons ago
when he went into a bitter water storm to save seamen trapped on a reef by the
floundering of their ship—"
Ospik
stared at her, and then he spat. "I am no addle-wit —not yet." Again
his shoulders hunched under that unseen whip. "Lord Rud rules at U-Sippar,
as he has since the memory of man. No 'god' would raise his shortest finger for
the saving of a Gorthian out of the bitter water!"
The
Lady Asgar caught her breath. "What have we found?" she demanded,
clasping her hands together until the knuckles were hard knobs. "Into what
kind of a Gorth have we come, Dillan?"
"To
the one of our worst fears, it would seem," he made answer grimly.
"The one which we perceived only palely and have always dreaded."
She gasped. "No,
chance would not be so cruel!"
"Chance? Do you think that there is chance in this, Asgar? I would say it is
part of a large design beyond our knowledge. We have striven to undo one wrong
our kind wrought on Gorth. Here is another and far greater one. Shall we always
be faced by the results of our troubling?"
Ospik
had been looking from one to the other, glancing back at Lord Jon, at the
others busy about their chosen tasks in the hall. Now he got to his feet, his
hand outstretched to the two before him, his fingers curled about one another
in a curious pattern.
"You are no 'gods'!" he accused
shrilly. "You are demons who have taken on their seeming. By Lor, Loi,
Lys, I bid you be as you really are."
Kincar answered that invocation with one of
his own. "By Lor, Loi, and Lys, I tell you, Ospik, that
these are Star Lords, though perhaps not of the kind you know. Could a demon
remain while I say this?" And he repeated the sacred Three Lines in the
older tongue he had been taught, feeling as he said them an
answering warmth from the talisman he wore.
Ospik
was shaken. "I do not understand," he said weakly. And Kincar would
have echoed that, but he had sense enough to turn to Lord Dillan for an
explanation.
"Ospik,
we are truly of the Star blood." The Star Lord's words had the impact of
truth. "But we are not those whom you know. We have come from another
Gorth. And in spirit we are opposed to the Lords of this world—or at least I
would think it so from what you have told us."
"The
'gods' have done much here," Ospik returned, "but never for the good
of Gorth. I do not know what mazed story you would tell me now—"
Later Kincar sat in the ring of warriors,
half-blood and Star Lord gathered together, listening to Lord Dillan.
"That
is the way of itl In this Gorth our kind brought a worse fate than the one we were fleeing from.
Here our breed landed in arrogance and seized the country, making the natives
slaves. All our wisdom was used to hold Gorth with a mailed fist. Only a few
bands who have escaped to the wastes—or are native to those sections as are
Ospik's people —are free. This is the evil Gorth that ours might have
been."
"We
are a handful against many." Lord Jon spoke musingly. "Yet this is in
a manner our ill—"
"Aye, a handful. And this I say—which is only good war wisdom—we must make no moves
until we know more of what lies here." That was Lord Bardon. He alone
among the Star Lords in the hold had been born in the Star ships before the
landing on Gorth. He had chosen to remain with this party because he had
Gorthian children and grandchildren —a daughter sat in the circle of women to
the left, two boys of her bearing were among the children.
Kincar was only half listening, being more
set upon estimating the fighting strength of their party. Fifty in all had
essayed the adventure of the gates. Twenty of these were women and young maids,
ten were children. Of the remaining males eight were Star Lords, ranging from
Lord Bardon to the young Lord Jon—Sim, Dillan, Rodric, Tomm, Joe, and Frans. It
was difficult to know their ages, but none of them had the appearance of a
Gorthian past his fortieth summer. The mysterious change that had come upon
their kind during the voyage across the void had set its seal heavy upon them.
The twelve swordsmen of half-blood were all
young, but all tested fighting men, and Lord Jon's eldest son could soon be
numbered among them. A good tough force—with such behind him no man would
hesitate to foray. And the Star Lords had their own methods of fighting. Aye,
had he been faced with an attack on a hold, Kincar would not have hesitated to
raise his banner for a spear-festing.
But they were not going up against any hold
or Gorthian force, they were to front Star Lords, twisted, vengeful Star Lords
who used all of their secret learning to hold the rule of this world. And that
was a very different thing. None of them here were so
unblooded in war as to vote for a spear-festing
before the full strength of the enemy could be ascertained.
However, they had won Ospik's support. The
mountaineer, at first without comprehension, was at last forced to accept the
evidence given him. Now he was eager for-an alliance between his people and the
hold party. It had been hard for him to think of Star Lords as friends, but
once he could believe that comradeship possible, his agreement was wholehearted.
And it was decided that he must return to his own hidden stronghold and promote
a meeting between his Cavern Master and the others.
Before nightfall Ospik was on his way. But
Kincar had a private puzzle of his own keeping him silent. He was in Cim's stall,
spreading dried grass he had brought to bed down the larng, when a brighter gleam of light by the door told him he was no longer alone.
Lord Dillan noted with a nod of approval his efforts to make his mount
comfortable.
"That
is a good lamg." There was a hesitancy in that
opening. The Star Lord had come to speak on a subject far removed from the care
of mounts, and Kincar sensed it.
"He is Cim." Kincar ran his hands
caressingly about the pointed ears of the kneeling beast, stroking the callous
spots where the reins rested. "I found him in the trapping pens, and he
has been mine only since then."
Inside
he was as shyly hesitant as Lord Dillan. Since that hour in Wurd's death
chamber, when the tightly ordered existence that had always been-his world had
broken apart, when all security had been reft from him, he had tried to push
aside the truth. It had been easier to accept exile from Styr, the prospect of
outlawry, than to believe that he was not wholly Gorthian.
Now he did not want to face the fact that his
father had been a man such as Dillan—perhaps resembling Dillan closely, since
they had been brothers. Why—because he was afraid of the Star Lords? Or was it
that he resented the mixture of blood that had taken from him the sure, ordered
life of Styr? He never felt at ease in their company as did Jonathal, Vulth,
and the others who had associated with the aliens from birth.
Perhaps his reluctance to acknowledge his
mixed bloods was fostered by the fact that of all of them here in the hold, he
alone had no outward marks of non-Gorthian heritage. Some of the others were
taller than natives, others had eyes of a strange color, hair, features— And at
a moment such as this, when he was forced to realize his bond with off-world
kin, his first and strongest reaction was a wariness, the wariness of a man
compelled to imposture and foreseeing exposure.
Dillan set the lamp he carried on the floor
and leaned back against the stall partition, his fingers hooked in his belt.
"Rud's
son," he said quietly, giving the proper name the same unfamiliar turn of
pronunciation he had given it at their first meeting.
"You do not see him in
me!" blurted out Kincar.
"Not
outwardly." When Dillan agreed so readily, Kincar had a pinch of nameless
discontent. "But in other ways—"
Kincar
voiced the question that had been in his mind all afternoon.
"Ospik
says that a Lord Rud rules this district for the Star Lords. Yet how can that
be? For if the Lórd Rud who was my father is dead these many years— Another
Lord-maybe a son of full Star blood?"
Dillan
shook his head. "I think not. This is a tangle we had not thought to find.
Perhaps in this Gorth there are counterparts of us—the selves we would have
been had chance, or fate, or the grand design taken another road. But that
would be a monstrous thing, and we would indeed be caught up in a
nightmare!"
"How
could a man face himself in battle?" Kincar had followed that thought to
its logical end.
"That
is what we must discover, youngling. Let it suffice that the Rud who rules here
is not he who fathered you— nor could he be—"
"Aye,
Ospik made it plain that in this Gorth. Star Lord and native do not mate—"
"It
is not that only." Dillan brushed the comment aside impatiently.
"Nay, it is that the Rud who, by his way of life, his temperament, is
content with things as they are in this world is not the Rud of our world. They
would have no common meeting point at all. Rud was born in our Gorth three
years after the landing of our ships, thus being my elder by a full twenty of
warm seasons, the son of another mother. He had four ladies to wife—two of Star
blood, two of Gorthian inheritance. Anora of Styr was his last, and she
outlived him by less than a full year. He left behind him two sons and a
daughter of full blood—they departed on one of the ships— and one of
half-blood, you. But of you we were ignorant until Wurd sent us a message three
months ago when he foresaw what might be your fate under Jord's enmity. He had
kept you apart from us, wishing to make you wholly Gorthian that you might
serve Styr the better, so that you have none of the common memories that might
help you to adjust now. But Rud, your father, was rightly one to stand
sword-proud, and glad we are that his blood lives on among usl" "But
you are of Rud's blood."
"Aye. But
I am not as Rud. He was a warrior born, a man of action. And in a world of
action that means much." Dillan smiled a little wearily. "I am a man
of my hands, one who would build things I see in dreams. The sword I can use,
but also do I most readily lay it aside. Rud was a
mord on the hunt, ever questing for adventure. He was a sword-smith rather than
a song-smith. But it is hard to describe Rud to one who knew him not, even when
that one is his son." He sighed and picked up the lamp once more.
"Let it rest that the Rud we knew was worth our allegiance—aye, our love.
And keep that ever in your mind should fate force us to foray against this
other Rud who holds false wardship in this Gorth-"
He lingered at the door of the stall.
"You have made Cim comfortable. Come back to the hall now—we hold
warrior-council in which each swordsman has a voice." a They
ate in company, sharing the fruits of hunting and portions of their dwindling
supplies with scrupulous accuracy. A hungry mord, Kincar recalled, was always
the best hunter. No one here went so filled that he could not move mord-swift
in attack. He chewed a mouthful of suard meat deliberately, savoring its
fat-richness to the fullest extent.
The
war council had come to a decision. They would hunt for the present, work to
stock the hold with what supplies they could gamer, perhaps trade with the
inner men for extra foodstuffs. For the moment they would not venture forth
from the valley guarded by the hold. They were far, Ospik had assured them,
from the lowlands where the Star Lords of this Gorth kept control, where the
might of strange weapons held slaves in hard bondage. But the thought of those
who were their counterparts using such perverted power had driven the Lords
into a brooding silence. And Kincar suspected that even were Lord Dillan to
produce another gate, a new road to still another Gorth, he might not discover
any among his peers willing to use it yet. They felt a responsibility for this
world, a guilt for what the false lords did here.
Now they mounted a sentry in each of the watchtowers on the hold,
marked.out patrol paths for the morrow, divided duties between hunting and
scouting among all the company, so that a man would alternate in each type of
service.
When
the meal was done, the Lady Asgar came to Kincar, in her hands one of the small
singing-string boards of a traveling song-smith.
"Kincar,
it is said that you have in song memory the saga of Garthal and his meeting
with the 'inner men.' Since we have this day proven a part of that story to be
no tale but the truth, do you now let us hear all of Garthal's spear-festing
and the Foray of Loc-Hold."
He
took the frame of the singing-strings on his knee shyly. Though he had played
song-smith in Styr Hold, he had never thought to do so in such company as this.
But "GarthaTs Foray" was a song not too well known nowadays, though
it had been a favorite of Wurd's and Kincar had had good lessoning in its long
swinging stanzas. Now he struck the two notes and began the rising chant—the
tale of how Garthal went forth as a holdless man and came to Loc-Hold, and how
he was later cheated of his fight-due so that he fled to the mountains with
anger in his heart. Those about him, Lorpor, Vulth, Lord Jon, Jonathal, drew
their swords and kept time with the sweet ting of blade against blade, while
eyes shone in the lamplight and there were the voices of women bringing in the
hum of undersong. Not since he had ridden out of Styr had Kincar known that
sense of belonging.
\
FIRST FORAY
They
had their meeting with
the chief of the "inner men." He came warily and armed, with a
covering guard who prudently prepared an ambush. All of these precautions
proved to the men from the hold the deep-seated distrust of, and hatred held
for, the alien rulers of the plains by the native Gorthians. But at the
conclusion of their council, the chief had been forced to admit that there were
now two kinds of Star Lords in his land, and the later-come variety were not
the wrathful "gods" he had always known. He did not go so far as to
reveal any of the details of his own keep, though he did agree to a measure of
trade—to supply dried fruits and coarse meal for one of the inexhaustible star
torches.
The
"inner men" were by long training fire workers in metal. They
produced, for the admiration of the hold, coats of ring mail, fine, deceivingly
light in weight—but, unfortunately, fashioned only to fit the small bodies of
their own race, as were their beautifully balanced swords, which were too light
and too short of hand grip for the newcomers. Lord Bardon, surveying these
regretfully, went on to other plans. And the next day when he was in the
hunting field with Kin-car, he suggested that Vorken be set about the business
of marking down game, while the younger man aid ,him
in a
different search.
"A sapling?" puzzled Kincar. "For a new kind of spear shaft, maybe? But such as we
seek now would be too slender, would break at the first thrust which had any
power behind it."
"Not a spear. It is intended for another
weapon, one from the older days on the Star world from which our fathers came.
It was a favorite there of primitive men, but it was so well used that the old
tales say it gave him an advantage over warriors clad in mail."
At
the end of the day they returned to the hold with a good selection of different
varieties of tough yet resilient wood lengths lashed upon the larng-burden of
meat for the pot. Vorken, not being under obligation to consider the worth of
saplings, had proved a more alert hunter than the men.
Since
Lord Bardon had only hazy memory to guide him in the manufacture of the new
weapon, they spoiled many lengths of wood, choosing others badly. However, at
the end of three days they produced crude bows. Arrows followed. They learned,
mainly by mistakes, the art of proper heading and feathering. Now three
quarters of the population of the hold had taken a hand in the work, and the
hall after the fall of night was a fletcher's workroom.
They
discovered that the pull of the bows depended upon the strength of an
individual—that the mighty six-foot shaft that served Lord Bardon could not
even be strung by any half-blood, while Kincar—with a smaller and lighter
weapon —could hit the mark in the trials just as accurately and speedily,
though perhaps with not the great penetrating force of the Star Lord.
Oddly
enough, only Lord Bardon, Lord Jon, and Lord Frans among the full-bloods showed
any proficiency with the bow, and there was much good-humored banter aimed at
their fellows who were unable to turn marksmen by will alone.
"Too
long at machines," Lord Bardon observed as Dillan's arrow went woefully
wide of the mark for the third time in succession. "This is no matter of
pushing a button; it needs true skill."
Lord Dillan laughed and tossed the bow to its
owner. "A skill not in my hand
or eye it is certain. But we cannot say that of our brothers."
For, as the full-bloods found it something to
be laboriously learned, the half-bloods took to archery with a readiness that
suggested that the Three must have given them the gift at birth, to lay dormant waiting this moment. From practice at a
stationary mark set up in the courtyard, they advanced to hunting, and the
rewards came in an upshoot of meat supplies and the growing pile of suard skins
to be plaited into cloaks and robes against the chill of the storm winds.
The
cold weather had closed in upon them with true harshness. There was one period
when they were pent for five days within the hold, the snow-filled blasts sealing
the outer world from them. Any plans for scouting into the lowlands must wait
upon more clement days.
Lord Dillan and his assistants had to set
aside their work on the machine intended to open a gate upon another Gorth. Too
many essential elements had been destroyed with the other gates. And, in spite
of their questioning of the inner men's smiths and metal miners, some of those
could not be rediscovered even in the crude state of unworked ore. They did not
speak of this within the hold, though it was generally known. Instead, men
began to plan ahead for a lengthy stay there. Talk arose of working the fields
in the deserted valley. Surely land that once had supported a large community
would provide a living for their own limited numbers.
At
last came a lull between storms, when the sun was
dazzlingly reflected from the crusted snow and the trees cast wide blue shadows
across the ground. It was a day when the crisp air bit at the lungs as a man
inhaled, but at the same time set him longing to be out in the open.
Kincar
stood on the crown of one watchtower, with Vorken marching back and forth along
the waist-high parapet before him, stretching wide her wings and giving harsh
voice to her own private challenge. This was the season when the mords of the
hatcheries took mates, and Vorken was lonely as she had never been. It would
seem that in this Gorth her kind were either uncommon or had never evolved from
the large and vicious menaces of the mountain heights.
She was so restless that Kincar was worried.
Should she go out in search of her kind, she might well never return. Yet he
knew that if he tried to restrain her by caging, her restlessness would develop
into a wild mania centered only upon escape, and she might beat herself to
death against the walls of her prison. In order to keep her, he must leave her
free, holding to the hope that she would come back at some time of her own
choosing.
With
another eerie cry, she gave a leap that carried her up and out, climbing in a
tight spiral until he could not see her at all. He beat his cold-numbed hands
against his thighs, striding back and forth to keep his feet free from the
frost-deadening chill as he waited. But there was no Vorken planing down wind,
no shrilling whistle. It was as if the mord had gone out through some hole in
the sky.
"She
is gone?" Snow crunched under Lord Bardon's boots. "I thought the
wild fever must be on her when I saw her this morning."
"I
couldn't cage her," Kincar argued in his own defense. "Without a
hatchery she would have gone mad in a cage."
"True
enough. And, though we have not sighted any of her breed here, boy, that is no reason to think that they do not exist.
Perhaps in the lowlands she will discover a hold with a hatchery."
That was poor comfort, but it was the only
hope he had to hold to. And he knew that in setting her free he had saved her
life.
"To
lay bonds upon any unwilling living thing, whether it be man or beast, is
evil." Lord Bardon rested his hands upon the parapet and stood looking
down the cleft of the entrance valley toward the plains. If all they -had heard
was true, there lay a bondage far worse than the
alliance between trained mord and hunter. "Service must be rooted in the
need to form part of a pattern. In that way it is security of mind—if not
always of body. Vorken serves you in some ways, and you in exchange give her
the returns she wants. At present she must be left free for what is important
to her, as is right. And now, Kincar," he glanced down with a smile,
"I have a service to offer you. Aftr many delays our friends of the inner
mountain have decided that they may offer us a measure of trust. They have sent
a message that they will show us a sheltered and secret way to look upon one of
the main highways of the lower country and assess the traffic that passes
there." "In this weather?"
"It would seem that the cold season does
not hit so heavily in the plains as it does here. Also the Lords of the
lowlands have their reasons for keeping the lines of communication open. Where
men live in distrust and fear, speedy travel is oftentimes a necessity. But, at
any rate, we shall be able to see more than we do from here. And if you wish,
you may ride with us."
The
party from the hold was a small one. Ospik and one of his fellows, Tosi, served
as guides. Behind them rode Lord Bardon, his huge bow slung over his shoulder
to point a warning finger into the sky, Lord Frans, Jonathal, and Kin-car. They
were mounted on larngs who protested with muttering grumbles against being
urged into the cold, and they led one of the burden breed to carry provisions
and additional robes, lest they be storm-stayed out of shelter.
Ospik's
trail led to the side of the mountain near which Kincar had charted the warm
rill, and then it zigzagged crookedly back and forth in a dried watercourse
where many rock piles made the footing so chancy they dismounted and led their
beasts. The path, if so it could be termed, ended in a screen of brush before
the mountain wall. But that screen was not what it appeared, for they pushed
through it into a dark opening that might have been a deep running crevice.
But,
as they advanced and Lord Bardon triggered a torch to light them, Kincar marked
the signs of the tools that had turned a fault of nature into a passage for
men. However much it had been wrought to provide a way through the mountain
caverns, it was not one much used by the community of indwellers. As they threaded
their way along it into a cave that fanned far out into deep darkness, their
light bringing to life sparkles of answering fire from crystals on the walls,
and then to another narrow passage and more cavems opening into one another,
they met no one else, heard no sounds save the murmur of water—and those
arising hollowly from their own footfalls. The whole mountain range, Kincar
marveled, must be honeycombed with cave, crevice, and cavern, and-the in
dwellers had made use of them to their own advantage.
Once
they edged perilously over a narrow span set in place to cross a steaming hot
flood, their heavier bodies and the bulk of the larngs going one at a time over
a bridge made for manikins, choking and coughing as they passed from the fumes
of the boiling water. And once or twice they caught a whiff of carrion reek, a
distant rustle, as if some nightmare creature had crawled aside from their way,
unable to dispute the light of the torch.
Time
had no meaning here. They might have spent only hours, or a full day in the
depths. Twice they halted to rest and eat, both times in grottoes of prismatic
crystal, cupped in a circle of fire-hearted jewels, with the lace-tracery,
formed by countless centuries of drip, making palace screens and drapery. It
was a world Kincar had never conceived of being, and he explored with Jonathal,
each pointing out to the other some particular wonder before or above.
Fountains frozen before their spray streamed away, a tree, a fruit-heavy vine, they were all to be found. And in company with those
were creatures out of a song-smith's dreams—fair, grotesque, horrible.
Ospik laughed at their surprise, but kindly.
"These are to be found many places elsewhere." A pride of possession
colored his words. "And many far better. There is
our Hall of Meeting—"
"Jewels in the wall!" Jonathal touched a flashing point on a copy
of a tree limb.
Their
guide shook his head. "Jewels, aye, are to be found. But none of these are
real gems, only bits of rock crystal. Take them away from the cavern and you
will have nothing remarkable."
"But—"
Kincar burst out—"to think of this buried under the earth!"
Lord Frans smiled. He had not moved about,
but sat cross-legged, his back against the haunches of his resting lamg.
However, he had been studying what lay about them with some measure of the same
eagerness.
"It
is the earth which formed this, Kincar. And, as Ospik has said, tear this out
of its present setting and the magic would be gone from it. It is indeed a
wonder worth traveling far to see." He drew a small tablet from his belt
pouch and with a stelo made a swift sketch of the frozen vine.
When
they went on from that last cavern of crystal, the way was again dark, the
walls crannied. Kincar forgot his amazement in a growing tension. He glanced
now and again over his shoulder. Though he never saw anything but the familiar
outline of Cim and, behind the mount, a glimpse of Lord Frans, yet he was
plagued with a sense of being watched, a feeling that if he could only turn
quick enough he would see something else—and not a good thing.
His
hand was at his breast, flattened above the Tie lying there. That touch was not
to assure the safety of the talisman but to reassure himself—as if from the Tie
he drew a feeling of security against that invisible lurking thing.
The
passage now sloped upward, so that they climbed. Tool marks on the walls spoke
of the labor that had gone into the opening of this way, but it was a narrow
one, so that they went one after the other, and some outcrops of rock in the
roof forced both Star Lords and larngs to stoop, the stone brushing the crests
on the others* helms.
After one last steep ascent they came into a
cave, wide, but with a small opening through which had entered a drifting
point of snow and beyond which they could hear the whistling wind of the outer
world.
Ospik trotted to this door and stood there,
sniffing as might some burrow creature suspicious of the freedom beyond.
"Wind up—but no storm," he reported with assurance. "By sunup
you will have a fine perch from which to go a-spying. But that is some hours
off, so take your ease."
Tosi
had already gone to a section well out of line with the cave mouth. And he
busied himself there pulling from a crevice a supply of dry and seasoned wood,
some light and white as old bones, which he kindled by a coal carried in a
small earthenware box, making a fire they crouched about. At last, wrapped in
their fur cloaks, the lamgs forming a wall of animal- heat to reflect the fire,
they dozed away what was left of the night.
The
cavemouth faced northeast, so that the dawn light was partly theirs, making a
warning of gray when Kincar was shaken gently awake by Jonathal. He rubbed
smarting eyes and swallowed bites from the journeycake pushed into his hand.
They left their mounts in the cave, Tosi volunteering as Iarng tender. Then the
four from the hold, with Ospik still as guide, went out upon a broad ledge and
found themselves on a mord's perch above a valley.
There
was snow here, sculptured by the wind. But in one strip it had been beaten
down, mushed with dark streaks of soil into a grimy path. And it must have
required a goodly amount of travel to and fro to leave such well-defined
traces. Yet the surrounding country was wild, with no other evidences of
civilization.
"Your
road to the plains," Ospik pointed out. "For those who use it, you
must wait, Lords. Those who travel it do only by daylight."
So
they drew lots for the post of lookout, and the rest went back to the shelter
of the cave. Kincar, having the first watch, amused himself with the laying out
of an ambush plan, such as Regen might have done. This was a proper place for
such armed as they were with the bows. For man-to-man combat after the old
fashion it would not have served so well. Here on the ledge one could stand and
pick off all lead men in a first surprise, leaving any force below without an
officer to rally about.
The snow deadened sound, and a cortege came
into view with a sudden appearance, which shamed Kincar out of his notion of
himself as a seasoned warrior. His warning hiss brought out the others to creep
across the ledge.
Kincar,
used- to traders' caravans with their lumbering goods wains, or the quick trot
of mounted warriors, watched
the
present party amazed. There were men mounted on larngs to be sure,
Gorthians—though there were differences in arms and clothing to be observed.
Yet behind that first clot of riders came something else. Two burden larngs
clumped along about ten feet apart, and linking the first to the second was a
chain of metal. From this issued at spaced intervals—in pairs—other chains,
smaller. And each of those— there were four pair of them—ended in collars, the
collars clamped about the throats of stumbling, reeling, moaning figures.
A second pair of lamgs so linked, towing more
prisoners, came into view. One of the captives fell,
was dragged along the ground. A rider trotted up, and a whip swung with the
intention of maximum pain to the fallen. But, in spite of the blows rained upon
him, the fallen one did not stir. There was a shout, and the lamgs halted while
the riders held a conference.
"Who
are those?" Lord Frans demanded hotly of Ospik. The mountain dweller
regarded them slyly from the corners of his eyes.
"Outlaws or slaves—ones who fled from
the plains and are not being returned to their homes. The lucky ones die before
they reach there."
The rider who had used the whip now slid from
his pad and unhooked the collar of the captive. Her jerked the body ■aside,
then kicked, and the limp form rolled into a ditch.
There was no need for spoken agreement, for
any order, among the four on the ledge. Bow strings came back in unison,
twanged as four hands reached for the second arrow, eyes already on a new mark.
A scream, a hoarse, startled cry, the clash
of metal against metal as a sword was drawn. But four of the slave guards were down, and
one of the chained captives had seized upon the whip, using its stout butt to
twist at his prisoning bonds.
It
was a slaughter rather than a battle. And the archers proved the worth of their
weapons over and over again, shooting larngs so that the riders could not flee.
Ospik leaned perilously close to the rim of the ledge watching the deaths below
with glistening, hungry eyes.
Twice
the guards turned on their captives to kill. And both times they died before
their blows went home. In the end only those chained to the dead burden larngs
were still alive. Ospik spoke first.
"Now
that was a mighty killing, Lords—a mord feeding as shall be remembered long.
But it will also bring boiling out those to hunt us down in turn."
Lord
Bardon shrugged. "Is there a path down from this sky perch of yours,
Ospik? We needs must see what can be done for those wretches below."
"If your head is clear, you can take
it!" The mountaineer dropped over the lip of the ledge, hung for a moment
by his hands, and then went from one hold to another as if he were a wall
insect. The others followed him, much more slowly, and with—at least on
Kincar's part—some misgivings.
VOLUNTEER
They
came out of
the brush into the open space bordering the road.
"When
the prisoners are loose," ordered Lord Bardon, "collect what arrows
you can."
"Now
that is indeed wisdom, Lord." Ospik gave tribute. "Let the wild
beasts feast here, and no one can say clearly what was
the manner of these men's death."
Jonathal
had plunged ahead and was prowling about among the bodies of the guards,
examining their belts. Now he called and held up a locking rod. But, as they
all started toward the chained ones, the man who had worked vainly with whip
butt to break his way free gave a wailing cry and crouched, his eyes wild with
hate. The whip lash sang out, striking Lord Frans's arm. Lord Bardon jerked his
companion out of lash range.
"We
should have thought. Take cover, FransI To these we are the devils they fear
the most!"
Jonathal
used the lock-rod on the chain, freeing it first from the dead lamgs. The
half-dazed captives went into action, pulling it back between them, slipping
their collar chains out of its hold. They were still paired by the collars, but
they were no longer fastened between the slain animals.
For
the most part they hunched in the snow, blinking stupidly, their spurt of
energy exhausted in that one act, save for the whip wielder who got to his feet
and faced his Gorthian rescuers with a spark of spirit. His face was swollen,
with angry cuts under smears of dried blood. He might have been of any -age,
but he handled himself as might a trained warrior, and his head was up. Broken
and bruised he was in body, perhaps, but not in spirit.
"What do you?" the words came
haltingly, mumbled, as puffed and torn lips moved over broken teeth.
Jonathal
wrenched a cloak from one of the dead guards and threw it around a shivering
woman before he answered.
"We make you
free."
The
man turned his battered face so that his one open eye went from Jonathal to
Kincar. Apparently all intelligence and curiosity had not been ground out of him
by ill treatment. But neither was he willing or able to accept them readily as
friends. Kincar gave the best proof of peaceful intentions he could think of,
pulling a sword from the scabbard of the nearest guard and holding it out, hilt
foremost.
That
one unswollen eye widened in disbelief, and then a hand shot out, clawed about
the hilt, and spun it out of Kincar's lax hold. The man panted as if he raced
up the mountain.
"That is the way of it," Jonathal
approved. "Get free, get a blade in your hands.
And it is up swords and out at them!"
But Kincar believed that the captive did not
hear that at all. He was too busy using the hard knob on the sword hilt to pry
at his chains. Most of the others were apathetic, and all bore such marks of
ill usage, men and women alike, that Kincar fought a rising nausea as he worked
at the stubborn collars. Then Jonathal chanced upon some trick of their
locking, and after that they tossed them aside. A few of the released made for
the bodies of the guards, raiding for provision bags. And Kincar and Jonathal,
much as they disliked the task, had to struggle with the weak creatures to see
a fair sharing out of the food.
Kincar
was on his knees beside a woman, trying to coax her to taste the coarse meal
bread she held in her hand and stared at with a pitiful blankness as if she
could not connect it with food, when the man to whom he had given the sword
came up. He now wore a guard's armor jerkin and a helmet, and he was sucking a
strip of dried meat, unable to attack it with his teeth. But he carried the
sword, unsheathed in his other hand. And he watched Kincar warily.
"Who
are you?" he mumbled, but in that muffled voice there was the snap of
command. "Why did you do this?" The bare blade gestured at the
littered road, where the dead were being stripped for the advantage of the
living.
"We
are those who are enemies to any rule which sets men in chains." Kincar
chose his words carefully. "If you would know more, come to our
leader—"
"With
the point of this resting between your shoulders will I come."
The blade caught the light of the rising sun.
"Well enough." Kincar pulled a robe
about the woman and stood up. "My hands are open, hold captain." He
gave the man the title that seemed to match his manner.
Without
looking to see if he did follow, Kincar walked to the screen of bushes were the
Star Lords had taken cover. But another had sought that same way before him. As
Kincar thrust aside leafless limbs, he saw Lord Bardon and Lord Frans with
Ospik, who was passing across arrows he had collected. Only, the
three intent upon that reckoning were not alone there. One of the guards
had survived the attack, not only survived it but had traced the source of that
sudden death.
Perhaps the surprise of seeing who had led
it—Star Lords—had kept him quiet at first. But now he crouched behind Lord
Bardon, concentrated fury plain to read on his sleek face, a slender
needle-knife ready in his hand. And Kincar, knowing very well how that
murderous weapon was used by an expert, threw himself forward.
He struck the lurking guard waist high, but
he did not carry him to the ground as he had planned. The fellow wriggled in
his grasp, loose enough to strike down at Kincar with the knife intended for
Lord Bardon's throat. Kincar's hand closed about that swooping wrist just in
time, halting the blow when the point was almost into his flesh, kicking out to
upset the other's balance. Fire scored down the side of his underchin; then the
blade caught in the top of his scale coat and snapped. Before the jagged end of
the blade could reaeh his eyes as the other struck, they were torn apart by a grip neither could hope to break. The hands
that had pulled Kincar loose released their hold. "He got you, boy!"
Blood
dripped on Kincar's chest, trickling down over his surcoat. Then Lord Bardon's
fingers under his chin forced his head up and to one side as the other assessed
the damage.
"A
scratch only, thanks be!" the Star Lord exploded
a moment later. "We'll get a pack on that to stop bleeding and you'll
live, youngling—" There was relief close to laughter in his voice. But
when he spoke again, his voice was ice hard. "Put that one in storage,
Frans. He can answer some useful questions. And"—engaged in pushing Kincar
back against the face of the cliff so he could get at his wound, Lord Bardon
sighted the ex-slave who had followed the younger man—"where did you spring from?"
"He
was one of the prisoners." Kincar got out that much of an explanation
before Lord Bardon's fingers, busy with a dressing, pressed him into silence.
"And
he would like to see the color of our blood," suggested Lord Frans. He
had trussed the guard efficiently, leaving him lying at the foot of the rise.
Now he stood empty-handed facing the newcomer.
But
if the man had come with swift death for his overlords in his mind, he did not
move to attack now. To read any expression on his torn and battered face was
impossible, but he stood watching Lord Bardon's hasty work with bandage pack,
his eye flitting now and again to the cursing prisoner, his late guard. When he
spoke, it was to ask the same question he had earlier made to Kincar.
"Who
are you?" Then he made his bewilderment clear in a rush of words.
"You wear the guise of the Black Ones, yet you have slain their loyal men,
released us who are condemned slaves. Now you tend the wound of a lowlander as
if he were a kinsman. And the guard, who is one of your followers, dealing
death and torment at your command, lies in bonds. I ask again, who are
you?"
"Let us say that we
are those who have been sent to put an end to trouble in this land. Though we
bear the outward seeming of your rulers, we are not of their kind. Can you
believe that?"
"Lord, I have witnessed three great
marvels this day. I have seen the despoiling of a slave train; I have seen men of my race
and Dark Ones move with a common purpose as kinsmen, with a care for one
another as true battle comrades have. And I have seen one set in rule over us laid in bonds by you. Can one who has seen such deeds as
these not believe? And now that I have looked upon you fairly, I can testify that
you are not as the Dark Ones—though you wear their bodies. By Lor, Loi, and
Lys—" he went to one knee and held out his sword, hilt extended to Lord
Bardon—"I am your man—I who swore by the Forest Altars never to render
service to any outland lord."
Lord Bardon touched the sword hilt, but he
did not take it into his hand, and the other's eye shone. He was accepted by
fealty and not as a bondsman, and Lord Bardon's knowledge of that ceremony
impressed him still more deeply.
He was on his feet once more, the sword
slammed smartly into sheath.
"I await orders, Lord—"
That reminded Lord Frans of the problem to
hand. "We can't just turn these people loose on the countryside. They
would die or be scooped up by another patrol."
"What about it, Ospik," Lord Bardon
asked the mountaineer. "Will your chief suffer us to take such a party
through the ways?"
Ospik plucked at his lower lip. "You
have struck a smart blow at the 'gods,' outlander. But, suppose those are taken
again, they will blat out all they know and speedily. All men talk when the
'gods' will it. We have kept our land because its secrets were not known—"
"Once they are in the valley of the
hold, Ospik, I do not think they will fall prey again."
Ospik nodded. "There is that to
consider. But I have not the final word; I can but be
a messenger. Come you with me and speak to our chief yourself."
"And in the meantime? What if there is another body of guards along this way?" asked
Lord Bardon.
"As
to that—get these back into the shelter of a side gulch here. It is a place you
can easily defend if the need arises, and it is out of sight."
So
they brought the released prisoners, the possessions of the guards, anything
that might be of use to the captives, into a small side valley Ospik showed
them. Archers on the heights above might well hold that camp against a strong
attack. And they remained there as Bardon went back with Ospik into the
mountain ways.
The
shock of the captives' sudden change in fortune was beginning to wear away, and
a handful of the men bestirred themselves, under the command of the man Lord
Bardon had enlisted, to shepherd the less alert of their fellows and arm themselves from the spoil of battle. Seeing that their
leader appeared to have matters well in hand, the three from the hold remained
aloof, save when physical help was needed. But when the temporary camp was in
some sort of order, the leader came to them, saluting Lord Frans with upheld
palm.
"We
are at your command, Lord. Though perhaps you do well not to
walk among us until those know you better for what you are. For their
fear and hate for those you resemble—in outward form—runs
high, and it is seldom that we have a chance to approach a Dark One within
sword distance. Someone, with dulled wits and a good reason, might well attempt
to try your deathlessness with metal—"
"But you do not think
as do they?"
"Nay,
Lord. I am Kapal, once Band-leader to free men of the wastes—until I was
trapped arid collar-tamed (or so they thought) by the Hands of the Dark Ones.
We have fought, and hid, and fought again ever since the Dark Ones sent to
enforce their rule upon the fringes of the Barren Lands. Mostly we die, our blades in hand, cut down in battle. We are very few
now. When they took Quaar, they left but a
handful of
posts, and these can be overrun one by one, as they will do. We die, but we die
free! Only"—his eye flickered from Lord Frans to the tall bow the Star man
carried—"mayhap with weapons such as these to kill silently and at good
distance, men need not die so hopelessly any more."
"It may be so. We shall see—"
Kapal
manifestly took that as a promise of a brighter future. "Let me
out into the Barren Lands, Lord, with such a hope to voice, and I shall bring you a hundred hands of good men to ride
beneath your banner! I can be gone within the hour if you wish."
"Not
so. It is not given to me to have the ordering of this matter, Kapal. And what of these?" Lord Frans pointed to the late
captives. "Are any among them minded to raise blade against their late
masters?"
"Perhaps
they are so minded," Kapal admitted. "But most of them are broken in
spirit. Two, mayhap three of them could rally to a battle call. The rest—"
He shrugged. "They have worn the collar chain too long."
"So
do I think also. But what if they are given a measure of safety, a stretch of land where they may rest without fear,
will they sow seed and reap, hunt meat, and work thus for a community that does
not ask sword service in return?"
"That they might well do, Lord. If you know of such a place—safe from the Dark Ones' raids. But
then you must have come from there!" He glanced from Lord Frans to Kincar
and Jonathal. "It is plain to see that these, your guardsmen, have never
known the bite of chain or whip, and yet they wear not a Hand's brand upon
them—"
"A Hand's brand—?"
"Aye, lord. Those who are one in spirit with the Dark Ones bear their seal for all
men's seeing. Look you!"
He
crossed to the prisoner. The former guard spat filth, but Kapal stooped to
fasten fingers in the other's hair, holding up his head and pointing to a mark
just above and between the other's brows. Set deep in the skin was the brand
left by hot metal, a small, threefold figure familiar to Kincar, to Jonathal—but reversed! And at that
blasphemy both of the half-bloods raised fingers in the blessed sign to
repudiate such vileness. Kapal saw their gesture, and when Lord Frans echoed
it, he burst forth:
"The Three—you give service to the
Forest Ones, Lord?"
"I
give service to a belief of my own, of which the Three are another
manifestation, Kapal. Good thoughts and beliefs have the respect of any man,
whether they be his own by birth, or native to his
friends and kinsman. But here, I think, a certain symbol has been deliberately used vilely—"
"That is true, Lord. For those who serve
the Dark Ones with their full will allow themselves to be marked thus, and take
pride in it—so that all others rnay see it and fear them. But there are those
who do not fear, rather do they hate!" He loosened his hold, and the
prisoner's head fell back to the ground.
"It
follows a very old pattern." Lord Frans spoke more to himself than to those
about him. "Sneer at and degrade what might be a banner of hope to the
slave. Aye, an old, old pattern. It is a ripe time for
the breaking of such patterns!"
They
were never to know what argument Lord Bardon used successfully with the ruler
of the inner mountain in behalf of the rescued slaves. But in the late
afternoon he returned with the message that they might use the passages to
take the company to the hold valley. It was a long, slow trip. And they had
left two heaped piles of stones to mark graves in the gulch. The woman Kincar
had tried to coax into eating was gone, and with her an old man whose wits
wandered so that none of his companions in misfortune knew his name or where he
had been taken.
More
than a day was spent on that journey, for they had to rest many times, the
larngs carrying the weakest when the passages permitted riding. The men Kapal
had indicated as being worth recruiting for spear-festing formed a unit under
the wasteland leader, accepting his commands readily, and they alone of the
rescued were interested in their strange surroundings.
The prisoner stayed in the
hands of the hold party, his safety was only assured with them. But, as they penetrated
deeper into the' winding ways undergrond, his defiance seeped out of him and he
was willing enough to stay very close to his captors, tagging either Kincar or
Jonathal as if he were a battle comrade.
At
the fifth rest period Lord Bardon called Kincar to him. "By Ospik's
reckoning we are now not too far from the entrance in the hold valley. Tosi
will go with you as a guide; take your larng and ride for aid. Many of these
are close to collapse and we cannot carry them to the hold. Get extra mounts
and more food—"
So
it was that they brought the weary party into the fortress where the freed
slaves, their wounds dressed, their hunger eased, sat for the most part in dumb
surprise at the life about them. But the Lord Dillan called a council of war in
the upper chamber he had taken for his own—and to this Kapal alone of the
rescued was summoned.
"The
guard is wide open to probe," Lord Dillan said of their prisoner.
"Doubtless that is used regularly upon him by his masters. The man he
was—he might have been—was destroyed when they set that brand upon him. By that
act he surrendered his will and they can use him as they wish. It is a horrible
thing!"
"So
we agree. But we cannot concern ourselves too deeply now with what has been
done in the past. We must think of what lies before us. The question is, dare we, with our few numbers, make any move against the
entrenched strength of these tyrants?" asked Lord Bardon.
Lord
Jon broke the long moment of silence. He was the youngest of the Star Lords,
perhaps by their reckoning as youthful and as inexperienced as Kincar had been
in the company of Wurd and Regen. Now he asked a simple question.
"Dare we not?"
Lord Dillan sighed. "There it is. Being
what we are, striving toward the goal we have set for ourselves, we must
interfere."
"Aye. But not foolishly, throwing away any
advantage we may have," Lord Bardon cut in. "We must make our few
count as well as an army. And we must know more of the lowlands before we
venture there. Wring that guard dry of all he knows, Dillan. And let us set a post on that road, take what toll we can- from
other slave trains passing. Then—send a scout into the lowlands—Kapall"
Soothing
dressings about the outlaw's head covered all but one eye and his mouth, but he
arose limberly.
"Kapal,
what are the chances of a scout into the lowlands?"
"Few and ill, Lord. They have control posts along every road, and all travelers must
account for themselves. To one who knows not the land it is impossible."
Lord
Bardon corrected him. "Nothing is impossible. It is merely that the right
way is not clear at first. Supposing a Dark One was to travel, would any dare question him?"
Kapal
shook his head. "Lord, the Dark Ones never travel. Death comes not to them through age, but metal enters their
flesh as easily as it does ours. They live well protected and only go forth
from their hold in air-flying wains, the magic of which they alone know. Just
one sort of man wquld dare such a scout—"
"And
that?"
"One bearing the mark of evil—he could
pretend to be a messenger."
Kincar's hand sought what he wore secretly.
His eyes went from man to man about that circle, studying each in turn. Already
he knew the answer. Of all the hold party he was the only one showing no trace
of alien blood. The scout could only be his.
"I will go—"
He did not realize that he had said that
aloud until he saw Lord Dillan look at him, caught the grim approval in Lord
Bardon's appraisal. His hand was at his lips, but it was too late.
STORM, NIGHT, AND THE SHRINE
KrNCAR
stood at one of the narrow windows in the Lady Asgar's chamber. The sky as seen
through that slit showed clear rose. It was going to be a fair day, and the
wind that swept the snow from the courtyard had died away.
"Is
it not a matter of time?" he asked without turning his head.
There
was no answer, for there was only one they could make, and so far they did not
voice it.
"You
cannot do it—not and still wear the Tie." Lord Dillan put into words what
Kincar had known for long hours since he had made that impulsive offer. "I
am not sure you could do it in any case. Such an act might cause an unthinkable
traumatic shock—"
Now Kincar faced around.
"It is a mark only."
"It
is a mark which negates everything in which you believe. And for one bearing
the Tie—"
But
for the first time in long minutes the Lady Asgar moved. "This devil's
mark must be set upon its victims with some ceremony. And the very ritual of
that ceremony impresses its meaning upon the new servant of evil. It is a
thing of the emotions, as all worship—whether of light or dark forces—is a
matter of emotion. If a thing is done without ceremony, or if it is done in
another fashion altogether—"
"You mean?"
"That mark is made with a metal branding
rod, is it not? Well, it is in my mind to reproduce its
like another way— without ceremony. And while it is done Kincar must think upon
its falseness and the reasons for his accepting it. Let him hold the Tie in his
two hands and see if it repudiates him thereafter."
He crossed to her eagerly. "Lady, let us
try!" If this was the answer, if he could have the mark without suffering
inner conflict-She smiled at him. "I have many forms of magic, Kincar. Let
us see if my learning reaches so far. Do you hold the Tie now and think upon
what you would do for us and why. If all goes well, we shall transform you into
the seeming of an obedient Hand."
He
was already clad in the alien trappings of one of the slave guards, assembled
from their loot of the road attack. Now he brought out the smooth stone that
was his legacy and trust from Styr's lord. With it between his palms, he
whispered the words of Power, feeling the gentle glow which answered that
invocation. And then he closed his eyes.
Concentrating
upon the Tie he waited. His flesh tingled under a pressing touch upon his
forehead. Three times that pressure. The nothing at all.
The Tie was quiescent, nor had it gone dead as he
feared.
"Is
that it?" asked the Lady Asgar. "That is it!" Lord Dillan'
replied.
Kincar
opened his eyes and laughed. "No change. The Tie did not change!"
Lord
Dillan released pent breath in a sigh. "You had the right of it, Asgar. He
is free to go. Give' her the Talisman, Kincar, it will
be well guarded—" But he paused at Kin-car's shake of the head.
"Not
so, Lord. It has not repudiated me. Therefore, it is still my trust and I
cannot resign it elsewhere."
"If
it is found on you, if they so much as suspect you wear it—! The result might
be worse than you can imagine. In our Gorth it must be borne secretly, though
there it was an object of reverence. What would it be here?"
But
Kincar was restoring it to the usual place of concealment beneath his
clothing. "All that may be true, Lord. I only know that I cannot render it
up to anyone unless it is ready to go. That is the nature of a Tie. Were I to
leave it here, I would be drawn back speedily, my mission unaccomplished. It
is a part of me until my guardianship is done, which may come only at my
death—or earlier if it is so willed."
"He
is right." The voice of the Lady Asgar held a troubled note. "We
have never learned the secret of the Ties, as you know. It is his trust and his
fate. And somehow"—she hesitated and then added her last words with a
rush—"it may be his salvation also!"
Together
they went through the hall into the courtyard. It was a very early hour, and no
one noted their passing. Cim was padded and ready. And Kapal walked the larng
slowly back and forth.
"You have the map?" he asked as
Kincar took the reins from him and swung up on the mount. "Think again,
young lord, and let me take on a slave collar and go with you!"
Kincar
shook his head and smiled a little crookedly. "Back to your wastelands,
Kapal, and raise those men for a festing. Be sure I shall take care, and all we
have learned from that guard is safely here." His hand went to his forehead,
but he did not touch, remembering what was painted there.
The
captive had talked, freely, in detail. Lord Dillan, the healer of sick minds,
could have thoughts forth when he wanted them. And all that other had recounted
was now Kincar's—the passwords for the frontier posts, customs, manners,
minutiae that should take him safely in and out of U-Sippar, city of the
lowlands.
Now,
wishing no formal farewell, he headed Cim through the outer gate and rode out
of the hold into the morning, down the cleft toward the openness of the
lowlands. He did not once turn to see the fortress. As he had ridden out of
Styr, so he now left this new security to face a future that might be largely
chance, but in a small part of his own making.
The promise of a fine morning did not last.
But at the same time the wind that pulled at his cloak was surprisingly warm.
And that was a warning to the weatherwise hunter. He could now be heading into
one of the thaws of mid-cold season, when drenching rains blanketed the countryside,
making traps of mire for the unwary—rains that turned in seconds, or so it
seemed to unfortunates caught out in them, to icy sleet and freezing cold once
more.
That map, supplied partly by Kapal and partly
by their prisoner and memorized by Kincar, gave him a mental picture of a broad
expanse of open plain. But between him and the first outposts of the plains
civilization was a stretch of woodland. He had intended to ride south along the
fringe of this to a river, then follow the bank of the
stream seaward. But perhaps the forest would provide better shelter if the
threatening storm broke before the day's end.
This Gorth had a different history than his
own, even before the coming of the Star ships. That much they had learned in
the past two days. In his Gorth the aliens landed upon a planet where the
native race was just struggling out of barbaric tribal wanderings, a world
without cities, without villages. The holds marked the first settlements of
tribes influenced by the new knowledge of the outworld men. So their customs,
laws, ways of life still held many elements of the nomads.
But this Gorth had already been well advanced
from the primitive when the Star Lords had come to crush a rising civilization,
hunt to extinction the native rulers who had built such fortresses as the hold,
proscribe the old learning, the old religion. Where the Star men had striven to
raise their own people, here they had reversed the process and attempted to
reduce them to a dull level of slavery, not even equal to suard and mord or
larng—for those were beasts, and their savage independence was rebom in each
new generation.
Far from interbreeding with the natives, the
outworlders here considered such a linkage of blood unspeakable, something
obscene, so that Kapal found it extremely hard to accept as a fact that the
hold men were partly of mixed-birth. But that might work to their advantage in
another way, for the ranks of the Dark Ones here were exceedingly thin. A
handful of births in a generation, and many deaths by assassination, by duels
among themselves, kept the balance uneven.
Between
each Dark One and his fellow there was only uneasy truce, and their guardsmen
warred for a whim or an insult that had no meaning to the natives. Fear
fattened upon night terrors, was not to be sated, even on battlefields or in
burnt-out holds. Yet at the hint of an uprising—and in the beginning there had
been many as Kapal testified—the mutual distrust and jealousy of the aliens was
forgotten, and they combined forces to deal quick death. Of late years the few
remaining sparks of freedom were to be found only in the wastes. And now the
alien rulers were methodically stamping those out, one by one, as might men
bringing boot soles down upon insects scurrying hopeless in the dust.
Cim
kept to the ground-covering lope of his best journey pace. This wide stretch of
snow-covered grassland was better going than the crooked trails of the hill
country, and by mid-aftemoon that same rising land was but a faint purplish line
to the northeast. Still the warm wind blew steadily, and the snow melted under
its touch, allowing yellow grass to show in ragged patches.
But
the mount was not happy. He kept raising his head into the wind, snorting now
and again. And twice he increased the length of his stride without any urging
from his i;ider. They stopped for a breather on the
crown of a small hillock, and Cim gave voice to a shuddering cry. Shadows moved
in the far distance, and Kincar's hand went to his sword hilt. Not for the first
time he regretted that he had had to leave his new bow behind. But those
distant lamgs had the elongated look of riderless mounts. A
band of wild ones. There should be good trapping here come warm season.
Loose Cim and a couple of other trained mounts to toll the herd into a pen— Why, they should be able to supply all the inhabitants of
the hold with a second lamgl
But
would they still be in the hold at the coming of warm days? Foreboding swept
away his hunter's enthusiasm. There had been little said during the immediate
past of other gates, new Gorths to come, not since they had discovered the ills
of this one. He was sure that the Star Lords were determined to do what they
could to set matters right here before they essayed another passage through the
ribbon rivers of cross time. And that did not mean that they would be
peacefully hunting wild larngs.
Kincar
twitched ear reins to call Cim to the duty at hand, and the larng began his
steady, distance-eating lope once again. His rider was certain that the thick
line of the southwest marked the outer fringes of the forest he sought. And he
was none too soon in that sighting, for the wind that wrapped around him now
was as warm as a heating unit. The patches of snow were very few, and those
grew visibly smaller.
Clouds
now came rolling up the rose curve of the sky, driven by that too-balmy wind,
clouds heavy and dark with rain, their sides as bulging as the water bags of
wasteland travelers.
The
first big drops spattered on his shoulders, caught in Cim's cold-season wool.
Kincar pulled the flapping edges of his cloak about him and ducked his head,
wishing he could pull it down between his shoulders as did a Lacker lizard. Cim
shook his long neck, snorted disgustedly, and then fairly flew, an arrow
pointed at the promise of shelter, still distant as it was.
They were well soaked before they made it
under the trees. In leaf those would have been a good canopy. But now the rain drove among bare branches with a
knife-edge force. And the warmth of the wind was gone; rather there was the
bite of sleet. Where the moisture ran across bark, it was freezing into a
clear casing of ice.
Somewhere
they must find covering. Kincar's first annoyance became apprehension. The
massing clouds had brought night in midaftemoon. Blundering ahead might lose
them in unmapped territory, but to halt in the icy flood was to invite
freezing.
Kincar
tried to keep Cim headed southwest, working a serpentine path that, he hoped, would bring them to the river. At any
rate they must keep moving. He was on foot now, the reins looped about his
wrist as he picked his way between tree trunks. And he must have unconsciously
been following the old road for several minutes before he was aware of the
faint traces left by men years before. The larger trees stood apart with only
saplings of finger-size growth or low brush between. Then a tearing flash of
blue-white lightning showed him smoothed blocks tilted up in the soil—a
pavement herel
It
appeared to run straight, and he turned into it, knowing that he dared no
longer wander aimlessly in search of the river. At least a road went somewhere,
and if he continued to grope his way along its traces, he would not commit the
lost travelers' folly of moving in circles. A road tying the mountain district
to the sea was a logical possibility. If he kept to it, perhaps he could even
avoid some of the lowland outposts. And heartened by that, Kincar plowed along,
towing the reluctant Cim, showered by the bushes he pushed between.
But very soon it was apparent that to find an
ancient road for a guide was not enough. He had to have shelter, warmth,
protection against the continuing fury of the storm. And Kincar began to search
the gloom for a fallen tree against which he might erect a hunter's lean-to-.
It was Cim who ended that. The larng
squealed, gave a jerk of his head to bring Kincar's arm up at a painful angle
before he could loose the reins. Then Cim reared, threatening Kincar with his
clawed forefeet as he had been taught to savage a spearman in a fight. Caught off
guard Kincar dropped the reins and stumbled back to avoid that lunge.
Free,
Cim moved on, only dimly seen in the thickening gloom. He bobbed aside, struck
away between two trees, and was gone before Kincar could catch up. Panting,
floundering, the Gorthian hurried ahead, striving to keep the larng in sight.
And from time to time he caught a glimpse of the lighter bulk of the mount.
Then Cim disappeared entirely. Half sobbing
with frustration and rage, Kincar blundered on in the general direction in
which he had last seen Cim, only to come up against a barrier with force enough
to rebound into the prickly arms of
a
dagger-thorn bush.
His
outstretched hands slid over stone glazed with the icy skim of the rain. A
wall—a building—1 Then those hands met nothing at all,-
and he had found an opening. He hurled himself forward and was out of the pelt
of the storm, under a roof he could not see. Cim grunted, having found this
shelter before him.
Kincar
scuffed through a mass of leaves. Small branches cracked under his weight.
Throwing aside his water-sodden cloak, he swept that debris together with his
hands, before he brought out one of the mountaineer's clay boxes with its
welcome coal.
At first he was too busy with nursing the small fire to life to inspect the
structure into which Cim had led him. When the flames took hold, he looked
about him for the supply of fuel—and found
it woefully limited. Drifts of leaves, age, and a few rotten
branches, none of promising size. He had brought in the smallest scraps
before he noticed that another door opened into an inner chamber.
There
was very little hope of finding any more wood in there, but he had to
investigate. So Kincar crowded by Cim and stepped through that other doorway.
The firelight did not reach past its threshold. But it was not the dark that
made him hesitate—nor was it any visible portal.
When
Kincar had passed the alien gates of the Star men, that talisman he had borne
had taken fire from their energy, had been to him a burning brand to torment
flesh. What he felt now was far different.
There
was a gentle warmth—no stabbing heat. But, above and
beyond that, a tingling, exhilarating feeling of aliveness, of senses brought
to a higher pitch, a new depth of awareness. And with it a belief in the Tightness of all this—
How
long did he pause there, allowing that sensation of well-being to envelope him?
Time had no meaning. Forgotten was the fire, the need for wood to feed it, the
drum of the storm on the walls and roof that encased him. Kincar moved on into
a dark that was at once warm, alive, knowing, wrapped in a welcoming security
as a child is wrapped in a suard robe for sleeping by its mother.
There
was no dark now. It hung before his physical eyes, but he walked with a truer
sight. His fingers were swift and sure at the throat of his ring jerkin,
loosening it, the other leather jacket underneath—his shirt. Then the Tie was
in his hands. It glowed green-blue—with the sheen of fertile earth after the
growing rains, of newly budded foliage.
Before
him was an altar, a square table of stone, uncarved, fashioned with the same
rugged simplicity as the shrine—a plain table of stone.
But Kincar had seen its like before, though never had it been given to him to
awaken what lay there, to summon what might be summoned.
A
table of stone with three depressions, three small pockets hollowed in its
surface. Its edge pressed lightly against his thighs now, bringing him to a
stop. He did not have to stoop to use the Tie as it was meant to be used, a key
to an unlocking that might occur only once in a man's life time and that
changed him from that moment.
"Lorl" He called the Name clearly
as he dropped the stone in the depression farthest to the left. "Loi!" Now that upon the right.
"Lys!" The center.
And the echo of the Three Names hung in the room, making music of a kind.
Were there now three glowing circles upon the
wall? Three heads, three faces calm with a non-human serenity? His mind coached
by hoarded lore, the hundreds of legends, might be playing tricks and seeing
things that his eyes in truth did not report.
Lor—He of the Three who gave strength to a
man's body, force to his sword arm—a youth of beauty—
Loi—He
who brought power, wisdom, strength of mind— a man of middle years with
experience deep written on his quiet face—
Lys—She who gave gifts of the heart, who put
children into women's arms and friendship in the heart of one man toward
another. Did
a feminine face center between the other two?
What
Kincar did see he could never describe. He was on his knees now, his arms on
the altar encircling the depressions, with the Tie glowing bright and
beautiful in the hollow that was Lys'. His head drooped forward so that the
mark of shame he wore touched on the sacred stone, yet there was no deadening
of the Tie glow.
And he slept. There were many dreams. He was
taken on journeys and shown things that he would not recall when waking, and in
his dreams he realized that and was sad. But there was a reason for that
forgetting, and that he must accept also.
Perhaps it was because this was a deserted
shrine, and the force pent there had not been released for untold time, that it
poured forth now in a vast wave, engulfing him completely. He was changed, and
in his dreams he knew that, shrank from it as earlier he had shrunk from the
thought of his mixed blood.
It
was morning. Gray stone walls, a flat table under his head marked only by three
small holes, in one of which rested a pebble with a chain through it. Kincar
got to his feet and strode out without another glance at that dead room, for it
was dead now. What had activated it.the night before was gone—exhausted.
ILL-CHANCED MEETING
That
odd feeling of
being cut off from the everyday world passed as Kincar stepped into the outer
room of the shrine, just as his now dim memories of the night, of drawing upon
the stored power of the Three, faded.
A
blackened spot on the floor marked the fire he had started and abandoned hours
ago. Cim hunched by the wall, his body heat, now that he was sheltered 3from
the direct blasts of wind and wet, keeping him comfortable. He opened his top
pair of eyes as Kincar crossed to him, moving his thick lips to suggest that a
sharing out of supplies was now in order. But, though Kincar crumbled
journeycake in his hands for Cim to lick away with every sign of healthy
hunger, he himself ate only sparingly, more out of a sense of duty than from
any inner demand.
The
storm had deposited an encasing crystal film over all of the
outer world. But the sun was up, and it was chill enough to promise no more
unseasonable thaws. Such storms as yesterday's usually
meant a space of fair weather to follow. However, the treacherous footing made
Kincar decide against riding until they were out of the wood, and he picked a
way with care back to the old road, Cim willing enough to follow him now.
It had been indeed a long time since any
traveler had used this particular track. The forest was fast reclaiming it each
season, uprooting, burrowing under, growing over.
Only, those who had laid down these stones had been of the same clan of master
builders as the men who had erected the hold, and they had not intended their
handiwork to last only a short term of years. So the wild had not yet won.
Kincar guessed by his hunter's knowledge that
he was now heading west, if not angling so much to the south as he had first
planned. And since he was well concealed on this forgotten path, he determined
to keep to it, believing it should bring him through the forest and into the
open country about U-Sippar where he would have to travel with greater care.
It
was late afternoon before the trees began to thin, and Cim pushed through the
last screen of the forest into the country bordering the sea. In fact, this
tongue of woodland had run out very close to the ocean's edge. But the port the
road had once served was now a tumbled ruin of roofless buildings, battered by
storms and time alike, with only slimed stone pillar heads to mark the wharves
that had once extended into the brown-gray water.
Ruinous
as it was, some life still clung to the place. A battered boat had been hauled
well up on the shingle, turned bottom up with the scars of recent repairs on
its rounded sides. And from a hut of ill-matched stones came a trickle of
cooking-pot smoke.
As
far as Kincar could see, there was no sign of any guard post, no suggestion
that the mercenaries of the Dark Ones were in command here. Some fisherman, he
surmised, had thrown up a shelter in the ancient port to net over grounds so
long abandoned as to be worth searching once again.
He
had allowed Cim free rein, and now the larng continued to jog along the
overgrown, soil-drifted road, winding a way among fallen debris. Kincar,
running a knowledgeable eye over the buildings, their windows like the arched
hollows given skulls for eyes, believed that the place had been despoiled in
battle, a battle in which the inhabitants had fought without hope but with a
grim determination, from house to house, wall to wall. Even the beating of many
seasons' rains had not erased the stigma of fire. Splintered wood, powdering
away, was riven with the blows that had beaten in doors and window coverings.
No wonder this had been abandoned after that
day. Not many could have survived the sacking, and if the victor had not chosen
to rebuild— Perhaps it had been decided to leave this
as a warning and_ a threat for all time. In his own
Gorth, traders had been handy men with a sword. They had to be; most trade
roads led across wild lands. And while they did not spout challenges in every
man's teeth, they drew blades in their own defense, forcing many an ambitious
hold lord to a quick change of mind when he nursed some idea of an illegal tax
because a trade route lay across his land. If this had been a town of traders,
well then, the attackers had not had matters all their own way. And, Kincar,
having no idea of the rights of the matter, but guessing much, was very pleased
to think that true.
Seashore
birds, scavengers of the tides, shrieked overhead. But, save for that thread of
smoke and the boat, the shore was empty of any other sign of life. He did not
know how far he was from U-Sippar, though that city being a port,
he need only follow the shore line to find it. But—which
way-north or south? And to journey on through the coming night was
unwise. A lost traveler could, by rights, demand a lodging
at the nearest dwelling in his Gorth—perhaps that custom held here.
Kincar
headed Cim for the hut on the shore, the hint of food cooking being
irresistible at the moment. A fisherman probably lived on the results of his
labors. Kincar visualized some dishes, common enough on the shore no doubt, but
luxuries in the mountains—shell fish for example—
Cim's
clawed feet made no sound upon the sand, but possibly Kincar had been under
observation for some time through one of the numerous cracks in the walls of
the hut. Before he had time to dismount, or even hail the house, a man came
out, shutting the wooden slab of door and taking a stand with his back against
that portal that suggested he was prepared to defend it with his life.
In
his right hand he held a weapon Kincar had seen only once, and then it had been
a curiosity displayed by a trader. A straight shaft curved into a barbed point,
resembling a giant fishhook—which in a manner it was. The trader had explained
its use very graphically to the astonished men of Styr Holding. Hurled by the
experienced in the proper manner, that hook could pierce armor and flesh, drag a mounted man down to where he could be stabbed or battered to death. And
this fisherman handled the odd weapon as if he knew just what it could do.
Kincar looped Cim's reins over one arm and
held up his empty hands in the old universal gesture of peace. But there was no
peace mirrored in the other's set face, in his sullen eyes. His clothing, in
spite of the harsh weather, was hardly better than a collection of stained and
grimed rags, leaving the scabbed, cracked skin of arms and legs bare to elbow and knee, and the hollows beneath his cheek
bones spelt starvation. If he got his living from the sea, it was not a good one.
"I
come in peace," Kincar said slowly, with the authority he would have used
speaking to a fieldman of Styr.
There
was no answer, no indication that the other heard him. Only the hook turned
slowly in those hands, the sullen eyes remained fixed on lamg and rider—not as
if they saw only an enemy—but also foodl
Kincar sat very still. Perhaps this was no
fisherman after all, but an outlaw driven to wild desperation. Such men were
truly to be feared, since utter despair pushes a man over the border of sanity
and he no longer knows danger to put a rein on his acts. Somehow Kincar was
sure that if he drew his sword, if his hand traveled a fraction of an inch
toward the hilt, that hook would swing—
His own eagerness—eagerness and
weakness—undid the hook man. Kincar kneed Cim, and the larng read aright that
twitch of the hands, that stiffening of the other's jaw muscles. The hook
scraped across his shoulder, caught in his cloak. Then in a flash he had it and
with one sharp jerk snaked its line through the other's hands with force enough
to pull him off balance and face down in the sand. There was no sound from the
disarmed man. He lay quiet for a moment
and then, with more speed than Kincar would have credited to him, threw his
body in a roll to bring him back against the door of
the hut once again. He huddled there on his knees, his back braced against the
salt-grayed wood, his hands on either side of the frame, plainly presenting his
own body as a barrier against Kincar's entrance.
Kincar
freed the hook from his torn cloak and let the ugly thing thud to the ground.
It was well out of the reach of its owner, and he had taken a firm dislike to
handling it. But he did not draw his sword.
"I
come in peace," he said again firmly, with an emphasis he hoped would make
sense to the man at the hut, penetrate his fog of desperation. Again he
displayed empty hands. He could ride on, he supposed, find shelter elsewhere.
But this other was in the proper frame of mind to dog his trail and perhaps
ambush him along the shore. It was too late to keep on riding.
"Murren— P"
That call did not come from the man, but from inside the hut. And at it the guardian flattened himself
still tighter, his head turning swifdy from side to side, in a vain attempt to
hunt escape where none existed.
"Murren—?" The voice was thin, a ghost of the sea birds' mournful cries. Only some
carrying quality in it raised it above the pound of the waves.
"I
will do you no harm—" Kincar spoke again. He had forgotten that he wore
the clothes of a guard, bore the false brand. He only knew that he could not
ride on—not only because of his own safety, but also because there was need to
find what lay behind this stubborn, hopeless defense of the hookman, and who
called from behind that closed door.
"Murren—?" For the third time that cry. And now something more, a thud ringing
hollow against the worn wood, as if one within beat for his freedom. "Murren—dead?" The voice soared close to hysteria, and for the first time the man without appeared to
hear. He flattened his cheek against the wood and uttered a queer hoarse call
of his own, like a beast's plaint.
"Out—Murren—!" the voice demanded;
the beat on the door grew louder. "Murren, let me
out!"
But the man held his position stubbornly,
hunching his shoulders against the slab as if the disobedience of that order
was in itself a source of pain. Kincar flicked the reins, and Cim advanced a
step or two. The man shrank, his snarling face upturned, his eyes wild. He must
have recognized a larng trained in battle savaging, he expecting those clawed
forefeet to rake him down, yet he held to his post.
He
could guard the door, but he could not contain the whole hut. There came the
sound of splintering wood, and the man leaped to his feet. Too
late, for a second figure wavered around the corner of the hut. Its
clothing was as tattered as that of its guard, but there was a difference
between them.
The man who had fought to protect the hut was
a thick-featured, stocky individual of the fieldman breed. He might be a groom
of larngs, a guardsman in some hold, an under officer even. But he was no war
chief nor hold heir.
The
newcomer was of another class—wholly Gorthian, of noble blood as far as Kincar
could see, and no beaten slave. He was plainly at the end of his strength as he
reeled along, with one hand on the hut wall to support himself. The youthful
face raised to Kincar was delicate of feature, wan and drawn, but his shoulders
were squared as if they were accustomed to the weight of a scale shirt.
He
came to stand by his man, and they both fronted Kincar, weaponless but in a
united defiance. The young man flung back his touseled head to speak.
"You
have us, Hand. Call up your men. If you expect us to beg for a quick death, you
shall be disappointed. Mur-ren has been left unable to plead—if he would—which
he would not. And I am, as voiceless in such matters as your knives have left
him. Let the Lord Rud have his pleasure with us as he wishes. Not even the Dark
Ones can hold off death forever!" What had begun in defiance ended in an
overwhelming weariness.
"Believe me—I do not come from Lord Rud,
nor do I ride as one of any tail of his." Kincar strove to put all the
sincerity he could muster into that. "I am a
traveler, seeking shelter for the night—"
"Who
expects a Hand to speak with a straight tongue?" Weariness weighted each
word. "Though how lies profit you, I cannot see.
Take us and make an end!"
Murren
put his hands on the boy's shoulders and endeavored to set him back, behind
his own bulk. But the other resisted.
"This
is the end, Murren. Whistle up your men, Hand of evill"
Kincar
dismounted, his empty hands before him. "I am not hunting you."
At
last that got through to the boy. He slumped back against Murren, whose arm
went about him in support.
"So
you are not hunting us; you have not been sent out of U-Sippar to run us down.
But then we shall be your favor gifts for Lord Rud. Collar and take us in,
Hand, and you will have his good wishes."
Kincar
made a move he hoped would allay a measure of their suspicion. He pulled a
packet of journeycake and dried meat from Cim's bags and tossed it across the
space between them. It struck against Murren's foot. The man stared down at it
as if it were a bolt from one of the Star Lords' weapons. The he released his
hold upon the boy and scooped it up, bewildered at what he found within the
wrappings.
Murren
thrust a piece of the cake into the boy's hand, giving voice to his own avid
hunger with a whimpering cry. They crammed the food into their mouths. Kincar
was shaken. The captives he had helped to free on the road had been, with the
exception of Kapal, so sunk in. their misery that they had hardly seemed human.
He had tended them as he had tended Vorken when her wing had been singed, as he
would have Cim. But these two were no slaves, apathetic, animal-like in their
acceptance of degradation and pain.
"Who
are you?" The boy had swallowed the cake, was now sucking on a stick of méat, eying Kincar as Kincar might watch Lord Dillan
engaged in some Star magic.
"I am Kincar of Styr—" It was
better not to claim s'Rud here. And he must keep always in mind that this Gorth
was not his Gorth. That Lord Rud, the tyrant of U-Sippar, was not the Lord Rud
who had been his father.
"Styr—"
The other shook his head slowly; the name plainly had no meaning for him.
"In the mountains." Kincar gave the setting of Styr, which
probably did not exist in this Gorth.
The
boy, still holding the meat stick as if he had forgotten he had it in hand,
came forward to stand directly before Kincar. He studied the half-Gorthian's
face with a searching that must have planted every line of it in his memory forever.
Then with one finger he touched the mark, dropping his hand quickly.
"Who are you?" he asked again, and
this time with a lord's authority.
"You have the truth—I am Kincar of
Styr—out of the mountains."
"You dare much,
mountain manl"
"How
so?"
"To
wear that and yet not wear it— Nay"—he shook his head—"I ask no
questions. I wish to know nothing of what brought you here. We may be danger to
each other."
"Who are you?"
Kincar countered in his turn.
The
other answered with a wry smile. "One who should never have been born. One who will speedily be naught, when Lord Rud finds
me, as he must—for we are close to the end of our wayfaring, Murren and I. I
have no name, Kincar of Styr, and you had best forget that our paths ever
crossed. Unless you choose to win a goodly welcome at U-Sippar by taking me
there—"
"In the meantime," Kincar said with
deliberate lightness of tone, "will you grant me shelter this night?"
If
the boy was coming to accept him—if not as a friend, at least only a minor
menace—Murren was not so disposed. He showed his teeth in a mord's hunger grin
as Kincar came forward. Impulsively then the half-Gorthian did something that
might have endangered his life, but it was the best
example of good will he could think of. He went
back, took
up the hook, and skidded it across sand and
gravel. '
Murren
was down in a flash, his fingers on its shaft. But as quickly the boy caught
his arm.
"I
know not how you are tossing your chance sticks in this game," he told
Kincar, "but I accept that you will not act after the manner of those
whose foul mark you wear. Murren—not this onel"
The
older man mouthed a protest of yammered sound, and in that instant Kincar saw
the real horror that had come upon him—he was tonguelessl But
the boy pulled him aside from the hut door.
"If
you would claim shelter, stranger, it is yours. Silence can be exchanged for
silence."
They
had a fire, if they had no food, and in the hut there was a measure of warmth,
walls against the night wind. Kincar tethered Cim nearby and gave the larng
rations, Murren, ever at his side, turning the hook in his hands, kept only
from its use by the influence the boy held over him. When they were all three inside,
he stationed himself before the door, his sullen, very watchful eyes daring
Kincar to a false move.
But
the half-Gorthian was very content to settle down by the driftwood fire, hoping
in time to gain some scraps of information from his chance-met companions. If
they were outlaws of the coastlands, as the boy's talk of Lord Rud made it
clear that they were, then they knew U-Sippar and
could set him on the trail for that city. But to ask questions without raising
suspicions was a delicate problem.
He was no student of men's minds. It needed
the skill of Lord Dillan or the Lady Asgar to allay others' fears and make them
talk freely. And there was very little time in which to work. Oddly it was the
boy who gave him a good opening.
"You ride to U-Sippar?"
"Aye-"
The boy laughed. "You could not be
coming from there. The search for us is up. Watch how you walk—or rather how
you ride—man from Styr. Lord Rud's mords hunger, and
they are appeased by those who cannot give good account of their
activities."
"Even those wearing
this?" His hand arose to his forehead.
"Now perhaps those wearing that. A secret was broke in U-Sippar." His
lips twisted again in that smile that was no smile. "Though all its parts
were smashed, as a man brings down his boot upon a oil-crawler,
yet Lord Rud is not certain that is so. He will question all and everything
for many days and nights to come. Think three times before you ride to that
city without a tight tale, Kincar."
Had he accented that word "three"?
Kincar took a chance. He spread out his hand in the glow of the fire, the red
gleam making plain the movements of his fingers as they shaped a certain sign.
The boy said nothing—he might not understand.
His features were well schooled, and he sat quietly for what seemed a long
period of time. Then his own right hand went up in the
proper answer.
"More than ever, it is
well that you keep from U-Sippar!"
But
already all warnings were too late. Cim did not have Vorken's superlative
sight, but he had keen senses, superior to those of men. Now outside he
shrilled a challenge to another male larng. The three jumped to their feet.
"This
was an ill-chanced meeting, man from Styr," said the youth. "You have
been caught with us. But you can still save yourself—" He waited tensely,
and Kincar grasped his meaning.
To
claim these two as his captives would be his passport to favor. Instead he drew
his dagger from his- belt and tossed it to the unarmed boy, who caught it out
of the air with a skilled hand.
"We shall see ill-chanced for
whom!" Kincar returned.
XII
A MEETING WITH LORD RUD
To Kincar
there was no sense in
remaining inside the hut, to be poked out of hiding as a cau-rat would be poked
from its nest by a boy. Swordplay needed space. But he had to thrust Murren out
of the way at the door, and the boy needs must scuffle to follow him. The
tongueless man was still making his protesting yammer as they came out into
the twilight.
That
fading light was yet bright enough to show that indeed their luck had run out.
A ring of mounted men was closing in about the hut, and every other one of them
balanced a lance ready to use. On Cim Kincar might have fought his way free.
His larng was trained and strong enough to override these scrubby animals. But
it never occurred to Kincar at that moment to desert the other two.
Only
Murren was alert to such a possibility, proving himself
more warrior than fieldman. It was he who sprang onto Cim's bare back and then
leaned down to swing at the boy. His fist connected with the other's jaw, and
the slight young body went limp. Murren got his master across his knees and
drove Cim inland, swinging his hook as he charged against the wall of riders.
And the very ferocity of his attack disconcerted the enemy as much as it
astounded Kincar.
The
hook rose and fell, and a stunned man tumbled from his larng, making a break in
the wing. Murren used it, Cim leaping through like a hunted suard. Some of the
party went after him at the shouted orders of their officer.
But
the four or five who remained headed for Kincar, who set his back to the hut
wall and waited tensely. Could he bluff it out—say that Murren and the boy had
been his prisoners and had escaped? But the facts were too plain.
Murren had been armed and Cim had been there
for his use.
Lances against sword. It was an unequal contest at the best. He held his cloak ready to
entangle a lance point. Had the encounter only come at night, he might have had
a thin chance of escape.under cover of the dark. But they were between him and
the sea—no hope of swimming out—and there was a long open stretch of flat shore
before one came to the nearest ruins of the old town. However, surrender
without a fight was not to be thought of.
That
was what they wanted. The nearest warrior hailed him.
"Put down your sword, stranger! The
peace of the Gods between us—"
Not the peace of the Three—but the peace of
the Gods. The false gods. And any peace of their
offering meant nothing. Kincar made no answer.
"Ride him down!" came a growl from the nearest lancer.
"Not
sol" someone objected. "Lord Rud must have speech with any man found
in the company of—" The other speaker bit off his words as if fearing an
indiscretion. "Take him prisoner if you do not wish the Lord to overlook you, lackwit!"
They came at him from three sides. Kincar
threw the cloak, shore away one lance point with his sword. Then a larng reared
to bring down its raking claws. He flung himself sideways and went down on one
knee. Before he could recover, a lance butt was driven against his back with
force enough to burst the air from his lungs and carry him down into the sand.
They were all over him in an instant, grinding his face into the shingle as
they whipped his arms behind him and locked his wrists together. Then they
allowed him to lie there for a space, choking and gasping, while they held
consultation over him.
For the time being Kincar was occupied with
the suddenly difficult job of breathing. And he had not yet given over gasping
when he was raised and flung roughly face down over the withers of a sweating
larng.
It
was a cold ride through the night, for Kincar had no cloak. It seemed that the
riders were so well acquainted with the route that they dared travel it in
darkness. Or else they were in such a well-founded fear of their overlord that
it was worth the risk to carry him a quick report. However, a head-down journey
was not an inducement to logical thinking or the forming of future plans.
Kincar was only semiconscious at the end of that ride. When he was tumbled from
the larng, he was as limp as a pair of saddlebags.
Dull pain reached through the general fog as
a boot was planted in his ribs to turn him over. As he lay sprawled on his
back, a light flashed blindingly into his eyes.
"—is he?"
"—bears the mark—" "Whose
man?"
Fragments of questions that
had very little meaning. And then one order to bring action: "Put him in the cells and then
report. If he was with the young one, Lord Rud must know it."
They did not try to get him to his feet.
Fingers were laced in his armpits, and he was dragged across a stone pavement,
bumped downstairs. The fetid smell of damp underground closed about him along
with a deeper darkness. Then he was shoved backwards so that he rolled down a
few more steps. There was the slam of a door, and light was totally gone.
He had come to rest in an awkward position,
legs higher than his head, and now he tried to wriggle backwards on a level
surface until his feet slipped from the stairs. He was bruised, still groggy
from the ride, numb with cold. But he had suffered no real
hurt, and he was aroused enough to think rationally once more.
They had mentioned Lord Rud, so it followed
that he must now be in some fortress of U-Sippar. And he had entered under the
worst possible disadvantage—captured while com-panying with fugitives hunted by
the district's ruler. They had noted his brand but had not marked its falsity,
so he still had a faint chance to pass himself oS as a man following some lord
living at a distance. It was a very slender hope, but it was all he had left,
and now Kincar made himself go over his story, testing its weakest points.
When
that story had first been concocted back in the hold, they had never expected
him to face one of the Dark Ones in person. His general instructions had been
to enter U-Sippar as an unattached Hand seeking employment, but with enough
loot in his pouch to keep him for a space before he had to take service. He was
to keep away from the fortress, from the guards on duty there. And here he was
in the very heart of the place to be most shunned.
Supposing
that Lord Rud—this Lord Rud—was gifted as Lord Dillan with the power of acting
upon men's minds. Or if he was not so himself, he could
summon those who were. For the first time a new idea broke. If in this
Gorth there was a Lord Rud, might there not also be a Lord Dillan? What would
it be like to confront a Lord Dillan who was different? That thought spun
slowly through Kin-car's mind.
Now, he told himself, he had only to remember
that these Star Lords were not those he knew, that he must not be misled by
resemblance. And he had as yet to see .the proof of Lord Dillan's statement
that men could have their counterparts in other worlds.
Time
in the dark was not a matter of minutes and hours. It was a thing of cold, and
growing hunger, and cramp in his pinioned arms, aches in his bruised body. He
squirmed across the floor until his shoulders met a wall, and then, with
infinite expenditure of energy, he was able to rise to his feet. Now by
movement he could fight the cold, be in better shape to meet the ordeal that no
doubt awaited him.
Using
the wall as a guide he encircled the chamber. It was bare of any form of
furnishing save in one comer where he padded over a heap of musty straw,
perhaps the bedding of those unfortunates who had preceded him in its occupancy.
He came to the stairs again. And for want of a better seat
huddled there until the chill from the stone drove him up again.
How many times he circled, rested, and then
circled
again,
Kincar did not try to count. But he was seated when he felt a vibration in the
stone heralding the coming of his jailors. He was up and facing the door when
that portal crashed back against the wall, and light flared at him from above,
blinding him once more.
"Up
on your feet, are you, dragtail?" demanded a voice with that sort of
hearty humor that is more sinister than a curse. "Have him forth, you
stumble feet, and let his betters see if he's ripe for the skinning—I"
Figures
plunged out of the source of the light, hands fastened on him, shoulder and
elbow, and he was propelled up the stairs and out into a stone-walled corridor.
More stairs, then the light of a fair day, as they issued into a courtyard.
The
men who hustled him along were guardsmen of the common sort, with flat, brutal
faces, the spark of intelligence low behind their uncaring eyes. Their officer
was a huge man. Kincar almost believed him of off-world breed until he saw the
Gorthian features and the devil mark between his eyes. He grinned, showing
tooth gaps, leaning over Kincar until his foul breath was thick in the younger
man's nostrils. One big hand dug deep in Kincar's hair, pulling his head back
at a painful angle.
"The
mark right enough," remarked the giant. "But you'll find that will
not save you here, youngling."
"Do we pin him,
Sood?" inquired one of the guards.
The
giant loosed his grasp on Kincar and slapped his open palm across the
questioner's face, rocking him so that he stumbled against the prisoner.
"Tighten
your lip, dirt! He's pinned when Sood says pin and not before. But he'll cry
for pinning before we get the irons to him, so he willl Nay, larng scrapings,
he goes to the hall; you get him therel You know who
is not ever pleased to be kept waitingl"
The man who had been slapped spat red. But he
made no protest at his rough disciplining, not even the inarticulate one of a
glare at Sood's back as the giant marched ahead. Kincar was pushed on across
the courtyard and under a second archway into the living quarters that were
officers' territory.
They shuffled under an arch of rough stone
into another world. Here was no stone, no native cloth arras as were stretched
across -the walls of Styr's Hold to keep out cold-season drafts. On either hand
the walls were smooth with the sheen of a sword blade. They might have been
coated with metal. And over their pale gray surfaces there was a constant dance
and play of rainbow color, which appeared, until one focused steadily upon it,
to form pictures in an endless and ever changing series of ghostly scenes.
It
was totally unlike anything Kincar had ever seen or heard described, and he
guessed it was born of the off-world magic of the Star Lords. But he kept his
surprise under control. He must appear to be familiar with such if he would
carry out his pose as the ex-retainer of another lord in search of a new
master.
A
curtain of shimmering stuff fronted them. Without any touch from his guards, it
parted, drew back against each wall to allow them through. Now they had come
into a wide room. Sun flooded it from the roof, filtering through an intricate
patterned crystal, which threw more rainbows on the floor. Evenly spaced about
were a number of doors, each veiled with the strange curtains, while in the
center was a square pit, some benches beside it. On those nearest Kincar, two
Gorthians sat stiffly. There was no ease in their manner. They might have been
fieldman bidden to eat at a hold lord's table because
of some whim of that lord, wary at what would chance should that whim change.
They did not turn their heads to look as Sood and the others tramped in but
kept their attention upon the man at the other end of the pit, as a novice
swordsman watched a master-of-blades during a lesson.
Here Sood, too, was dwarfed for all his giant's brawn, made to dwindle in an odd fashion. He
was no longer a roistering bully to be feared, but a servant attendant on a
lord of power. He advanced no further than within a foot or two of the occupied
benches and stood waiting to be noticed.
The lord of this fortress, he who held in a
child's discomfort fighting men and who dwarfed Sood, lounged at ease on a
couch removed from the Gorthians by the width of the pit. He was lying full length on the padded surface, his head supported
by his crossed arms as he watched something below. And there was no mistaking his birthright. This man was of the Star breed.
Hitherto
Kincar had seen the off-worlders only in their silver battle dress, simple
clothing designed for hard usage. This man wore a robe of some light fabric
under which every movement of his muscles was plainly visible. He was as
massive as Lord Dillan, but the clean, fine lines of Dillan's body were here
blurred as if someone had tried to copy him from the same mold but with no
master touch. There was a curve to a jaw line that should be square and sharp,
a rounded softness of lip arid chin. His hair was the most alien—a dull dark
red, thick and straight.
Kincar
had time for that appraisal because the Dark Lord was intent upon the pit. Then
there came a thin squeaking from that opening, and he laughed, levering up his
head to see the better.
"Well
done!" He might have been cheering on some warrior duelist. "I win
again, Calpar!"
There
was a duet of agreement from the two Gorthians. But they were still watching
their lord rather than the pit. Now he looked up—to sight Sood's party.
"Ah,
Sood—" His voice was rich, almost caressing, only
Kincar felt a sensation of cold as if he had walked bare-bodied into an ice
storm. Here was something he had never met before. He had known awe with Lord Dillan, and to a greater degree with the Lady Asgar. With
Lord Bardon he had felt the admiration of a warrior in the train of a rioted
chief. But none had given him that daunting of spirit, that feeling of being
less than a larng in their sight. From this man he did not even strike the
interest he would give to Vorken— he was less than a well-trained beast.
But
that realization was consumed by a growing heat within him, a heat that flamed
outward, as the heat of the
Tie
had eaten inward when it had been so cruelly activated by the Star Lords'
magic. Perhaps the men of this Gorth had been beaten long ago into accepting
that valuation of themselves—but he had not. Kincar
fronted the Dark Lord straightly, striving to keep under control both his
aversion and his defiance.
"What have we here, Sood—" The purr
lapped across the pit.
"The
one who was taken at the hideout of fJiose, Lord."
"The one who aided in their escape, aye. Brings,forward
this hero—" I
Kincar was shoved ahead, to the very lip cw
the pit. But those who pushed him remained a little to theVear, sheltering behind him from their ruler's
attention.
"And who may you be?" The Lord addressed Kincar
directly. f*V
"I am from the mountains, Lord—Kincar^or Styr who
was lately Hand to Lord Seemon—" He had chosen the lord
who had ruled the captured guard, and heo4d it
would
prove a good choice. ' N
"And why, my good Hand, did you leave
the service
of Lord Seemon?" _ ,
"There was a sword quarrel set upon me/
ft£rd. I killed
my man, but he had brothers who took blade cVath to meet
me one by one—" . >
Lord
Rud laughed. "You are an unluckj^Uar/, are
you not, Kincar of Styr? First you kill a man with Brothers to be active in his favor and then you make a
long journey only to meddle in what concerns you not, so y»u come to an ill
fate in U-Sippar. Tell me, Kincar of Styr, Whwdid you befriend those
dirt-eaters you met upon the shore?'
"Lord,
I knew nothing of them, save that they said they were flying also from a blood
feud—"
"They said? Ah, but I think that one of them was
incapable of saying much, or had he miraculously grown once more a certain
important piece of his body which had been stricken from him?"
"The young man said it, Lord,"
Kincar corrected himself.
He
knew very well that Lord Rud was playing a game with him, that sooner or later
the alien would give an order to finish him.
"So they were flying from blood
vengeance were they? Apt enough. But they will
discover that one does not fly from some kinds of vengeance. They are within my
hand, even as these—"
He made a gesture at the pit, and for the
first time Kincar looked down into it. What he saw was a Gorthian scene in
miniature—a thread of stream, trees no higher than his tallest finger,
clearings he could cover with his palm. Yet water ran, trees and grass grew,
and other things moved. A suard the size of a flying beetle grazed on open
land. And on a trampled bit of ground lay—
Kincar swallowed. Great was the Star
magic—but thisl He could not believe what his eyes reported. The inner men of
the mountains were manikins, but what were these tiny things? Manlike in form,
manlike in their deaths, but surely they were not, had never been living
thingsl Then he knew that his astonishment had betrayed him, for Lord Rud was
watching him closely.
"One could almost believe," his
silky words came deliberately, "that you had never seen the 'little ones'
before, Kincar of Styr. Yet it is in my own knowledge that Lord Seemon has a
fine company of such and that pit wars are the leading amusement in his hold.
How odd that one of his men should be so ignorant of them! Perhaps we should
ask you again, and with greater persuasion, just who you are and what you do in
U-Sippar, Kincar of Styr. Not only do you keep very ill company for a loyal
Hand, but also your past seems hazy, and that will not do at all. Not at
all—"
"Lord, not all the men who serve one of
your greatness are admitted to the inner chambers." Kincar seized upon the
only argument that might save him. "I was no chieftain, nor a captain, but
a young warrior. What amused my betters was none of my affair."
"Your
wits are quick enough, that is certain." Lord Rud
yawned.
"Quick-witted natives are good sport. Sood, we have a puzzle here—"
The
giant quivered in his eagerness, as a mord quivers before being signaled to the
hunt. "Aye, Lord, shall we have him forth to the pins?"
"Sood,
Sood!" The other laughed. "Always impatient.
Break a man and then expect answers from the bloody bits. No, Sood, here are
quick wits and perhaps something else." Lord Rud paused. His eyes—hard, dark, and yet with a fire in their depths—raked over
Kincar. "I wonder, now, I wonder. Could Seemon have made a mistake
in the dark?" He chuckled softly, as if nourishing some amusing idea. "Not the pins, Sood—at least not yet. It is a wearying business, this living ever penned within walls. I need amusement.
Remove this Kincar but keep him in good condition, excellent condition, Sood.'
I want him whole of body and-mind when I summon him again. Meanwhile, Kincar of
Styr, you had best examine your conscience, reckon up
the number of times you have twisted the truth to your own profit, for we
shall have another time for questions and then I shall have straight answers! Oh, aye, I shall have them; Kincar of Styr,
for am I not a god?"
He
had a breathing space, if a limited
one. Kincar clung to that. Every hour so won was a small victory for him. He
presented a problem to Lord Rud, and as long as he continued to interest the
bored ruler, so long might he hope for a slender
measure of safety.
But Kincar breathed easier when he was out of
the rainbow-walled inner chambers into the open day. Sood did not return him
to the foul underground cell where he had been pent on his arrival. Rather he
was marched up a flight of stairs into a tower room, which, bare
as it was, had a crude bed, a table, and a bench, and might have been the
quarters of a very junior officer. They loosened his wrist bonds and slapped
coarse provisions on the table befoie they left him. Rubbing his wrists and
wincing at the pain of returning circulation in his blue, swollen hands,
Kincar crossed to the window to look out upon U-Sippar.
ORDEAL BY MORD
Though
he was viewing it from an
unusual angle, looking down upon those roofs and towers instead of up, still
U-Sippar presented the unreal aspect of some city visited in dreams, where the
most commonplace is linked with the bizarre. Here were ancient stone buildings,
the work of the native Gorthians who had reached for the stars with their
towers and sharply slanted roof-trees before the stars came to them with such
devastating results. And from that honest stone sprang other structures,
excrescences frankly alien to this earth. There were not many of these, only
enough to distort the general outline of U-Sippar into something faintly
corrupt and debased.
The
fortress was part of it, a monstrous hybrid crouched upon an artificial rise,
so that its shadow moved menacingly across the packed houses below with the
climbing and setting of the sun. Half of it was of the stone, the rest of it
new. And that portion flashed metallic, cold, smooth,
like a sword pointed to sky.
Kincar could count four—no—five similar
structures in U-Sippar. They could not all be dwelling places of Lord Rud. But
surely each housed some measure of Star magic. The one farthest from him was
planted so that sea waves washed about its foot. Though there were ships in the
harbor, anchored there for the cold season when no trained mariner attempted
passage into the freakish winds, none were tied up near the tower, and what
purpose it might serve was beyond Kincar's powers of speculation.
Having seen U-Sippar, or as much of that city
as could be viewed through a window slit, he set about the morg
urgent business of seeking a way out, not only of
that room, but of the fortress itself. Unless he could shrink to less than
Vorken's size—and possess her wings into the bargain—he could not attempt that
window. And a single testing told him that the door' was secured from thé outside.
An examination of the bed made it plain that bare hands could not rip loose
any part of it for an improvised weapon, and the same was true of table and
bench. He had been stripped by his captors of his outer ring-sewn jerkin and
his belt, so even the empty sheaths of his weapons were gone. And since he was
no hero of the song-smith's creation, he could not blast his way out with a
well-tried spell.
But
at least he could eat. And coming back to the table Kincar did just that. The
fare was coarse, rations such as were given to the rank and file of guardsmen.
But it was not prison fare, and he finished it to the last crumb of soggy
milt-bread, the last swallow of sour frangal juice. Then he threw himself on
the bed and tried to prove his right to Lord Rud's charge of quick wits.
Lord
Rud! Was this the man his father had been in that alternate Gorth? Strange— His
hands folded over the comforting bulge of the Tie. Had a change in history
also wrought a change in a man's nature, the way Lord Dillan insisted that it
would? This Lord Rud could not be the man he had heard extolled in the hold.
This ruler was corruption, evil power, fear and death; the odor of his
character was an evil smell throughout his stronghold.
Kincar
wondered what would happen if the truth were made plain to this Dark One. And
in the same instant he knew that no act, no betrayal, would be more fatal. No
matter what chanced with Kincar of Styr—as long as he could, he must lock lips
and mind alike against telling what he knew.
Had
Murren and the boy escaped? Cim was better than any of the larngs he had seen
in the troop that had captured him. And Murren's desperate dash might just have
broken through the circle with enough force to give them the necessary start,
since Cim had had a period of rest and was fairly fresh, and the troop mounts
were weary at the end of a long day. That escape had been wholly Murren's
improvisation—the boy would not have deserted another to the Hands of Lord
Rud, though, because he bore the mark he did, the fugitives might have believed
Kincar was in no great danger. What was the crime held against those two? From
the bits he could piece together, it was enough to stir up all U-Sippar. He
wished that they could have been picked up earlier by men from the hold.
So,
in place of planning, his thoughts drifted from place to place, until, at last,
the needs of his body could no longer be denied and he slept, while outside the
sky over U-Sippar darkened into night and it seemed that Kincar of Styr was
forgotten by his guards.
He
was aroused by a cry so familiar that he lay blinking at the roof overhead,
hazy as to where he was, certain for the space of an instant or two that he lay on his pallet within Styr's walls. That
shriek, ear-torturing, came from the hatchery on the watchtower, where Vorken
was doubtless exerting her authority over some rebel. Vorken was ruler
of the Styr hatchery; let any other moid challenge her at its peril.
Vorkenl
Kincar sat up as he remembered. Vorken was gone and Styr, too, was farther away
than if the whole of Gorth's sea lay between him and its towersl There was a square patch of sun on the floor of his prison.
It must be hours late into the morning. And he had been visited during sleep,
for a jug and a plate, both filled, stood on the table. Apparently, if Lord Rud
had not yet made up his mind concerning Kincar's disposal, his men were still
under orders to treat their captive well.
Kincar ate as a duty. There was no reason to
believe that such coddling of a prisoner would continue, and he'd best take
rations while they were still coming. It was again fare of the most common
sort, but it was filling and designed to satisfy men who were ready for a
spear-festing.
While
he munched away, he twice more heard the challenge call of a mord. But his
window gave him no sight of any. The hatchery might be at the crown of the same
tower in which he was locked, but mords always sought the heights when they
took wing. That cry set him to a restless pacing, and, as time passed with a
bar of sun creeping from crack to crack across the rough slabs of the floor,
his impatience grew.
There was no doubt at all the Lord Rud
planned some unpleasantness for- him. And, knowing so little of U-Sippar, of
this fortress, there was very little he could do on his own behalf. He would be
as a child in Sood's paws, and the giant would be very pleased for a chance to
subdue him physically. As to matching wits—who could match wits with the Star
men?
The
shaft of sun crawled on, disappeared. Kincar was by. the window again, studying his knife-edge view
of the city, when the outer bar of the door was drawn. He faced Sood and the
two who had brought him there the previous day.
"Have
him out!" Sood bade his underlings with the loftiness of a Star Lord, or
his own interpretation of such. And he stood aside sucking his teeth while the
other two roughly rebound Kincar's wrists and gave him a shove doorwards as a
reminder to move.
When
he would have passed Sood, the giant put out a hand and held him. Fingers bit into flesh and muscle as Sood pawed at
him, as a man might examine a lamg for sale. And from that grip there was no
wrenching away.
"There's
good meat on him," Sood remarked. "The sky devils will not pick bare
bones after all."
His
two followers laughed nervously, as if it were very necessary to keep their
officer in a good humor. But neither of them ventured any comment upon Sood's
observation.
They
went down the stairs and crossed the court. As they went, the majority of the
men in sight fell in behind. And they did not re-enter the inner section of the
fortress but trudged on through another gate and down a road, past three
encircling walls with watchtowers and ramparts.
U-Sippar's
fortress had not been built in'the center of the town but straddled the narrow
neck of land that extended into the sea bay from the main continent. Apparently
those who had first planned the city's defenses had had nothing tc fear from the ocean, but wanted a sturdy barrier between
their homes and the interior. Now the party went inland, from the fringes of
the town to a wide stretch of open field.
There
was snow here, but the drifts had been leveled by the wind. And it was open for
the maneuvering of mounted troops or for the staging of a spectacle. Kincar
suspected that it was to be the latter use now. There was a gathering of
Gorthians about the edges of that expanse, with mounted guards to keep a large
center portion free.
As the party with the prisoner approached
from the road, there was another arrival. Out from the upper parts of the
fortress shot a flying thing. It had no wings, it was
not living, but some magic kept it aloft, hovering more than a man's height—a
Star Lord's height—overhead. It circled, and as it passed over the natives,
they fell face down on the ground. Then it swept up to
confront Kincar and his guards. Lord Rud sat in one of the seats upon it and in
the other—
Kincar
had been warned—but until that moment he had not truly believed! That was Lord
Dillan! But not, he told himself fiercely, not the Lord Dillan of the hold. This world's Lord Dillan. if he had not been
prepared, he would have betrayed himself in that moment. Lord Rud was smiling
down at him, and that smile, gay, charming, was colder than the air in which
their breath smoked blue.
"A
fit object lesson, brother," Lord Rud said to his companion.
But
Lord Dillan leaned forward in his seat to study Kincar with a searching
intensity. He spoke, his deep voice a contrast to Lord Rud's.
"He is no Hand."
"He bears their mark—"
"Then
it is no proper mark. You!" Lord Dillan spoke to
Sood, at the same time tossing to the giant a small box he had taken from his
belt pouch. "Use that upon a piece of cloth and see if you can rub away
that mark."
Sood
ripped loose an end of Kincar's shirt and, dipping it into the paste in the
box, scrubbed away with vicious jabs at the mark on the prisoner's forehead. The brand sign, which had resisted the rain and withstood all
inadvertent touching since the Lady Asgar had set it on him, yielded.
Sood's astonishment became triumph, and Lord Dillan—this Lord Dillan—nodded in
satisfaction.
"As
I told you, brother, this is no man of ours. Best keep him for questioning. If
someone has dared to plant the mark, they will dare other things. And the fault
which you hold against him is relatively minor. What if he was found in the
company of escaping slaves—do not all outlaws tend to herd together, until we
gather them up? Or was there something about these particular slaves?"
He was eying his fellow lord sharply. And
there was a dull flush on Lord Rud's face. He flung up his head.
"You
rule in Yarth, brother, I in U-Sippar. Nor did I ask you hither; this visit was
of your own planning. In another man's lordship one does not ask questions
concerning his dealing of justice. This is an outlaw,, come into our land to
seek out knowledge to aid that rabble which others seem unable to beat out of
their mountain holes, I will deal with him so that there will be few willing to
follow him. Sood, make ready!"
Under
his control the flier bounded higher into the air, so that Lord Dillan must
clutch at his seat to keep erect, and then swerved to one side to hover.
However,
Kincar had no attention to spare for the actions of Lord Rud and his brother,
for the guards were on him, stripping away his clothing. His jerkin was slashed
so that it could be drawn off without unpinioning his arms, and the shirt
ripped in shreds to follow. But the man who tore at that paused, his eyes round
and questioning, and he drew back hastily.
Sood, too, had sighted the talisman on
Kincar's breast. The big man stood, his mouth working curiously, as if he must
suddenly have a double supply of air for laboring lungs, and a dull stain crept
up his thick throat to darken his weathered cheeks. These men wore a brand that
divorced them utterly from the Tie, but the awe of that talisman held them as
much, if not more, than it would a true believer. Perhaps, Kincar had a flash
of insight then, perhaps it was because they had ritually denied all that the
Tie represented that it now possessed the greater power over them.
The
giant was tough-fibered, far more so than the man who had pulled off the last
of Kincar's shirt, for that guard's retreat turned into panic flight. He threw
the rag he was holding from him as he ran blindly down the field.
His
comrade was not quite so moved, though he took his hands from the
prisoner—Kincar might have been a fire coal—and shuffled back, his terrified
eyes watching the captive as if he expected the latter to assume some monstrous
guise. And he cried out as Sood's hand came up slowly, his fingers reaching to
pluck away that round stone.
Sood
had his brand of courage. He had to have an extra measure of self-confidence to
hold his leadership among the bullies of U-Sippar's fortress. It was not by
size and weight of arm alone that he had won his under-officership in Lord
Rud's service. Now he forced himself to a task not one Gor-thian in a
hundred—in a thousand—would have had the will power, the hardened fiber, to
attempt. Wearing that mark, proclaiming himself so to
be what he was, yet he was prepared to set hand upon the Tie. From a barracks
bully he was growing to a far more dangerous man.
"By
Lor, by Loi, by Lys," Kincar said, "think what you do, Sood."
The
gentle warmth that had answered his invocation of the Names told him that the
stone was alive. What it might do to a branded one he could not guess, for to
his knowledge such a happening had never occurred in the Gorth of his birth.
There were oily drops gathering along the
edge of Sood's helm; his mouth was twisted into a skull's grin of tortured
resolve. His fingers came closer. About the two there was a great silence. The
wind had died; there was not even the plop of a larng's foot in the snow. The men
of U-Sippar were frozen by something other than the cold of the season.
Sood made his last effort. He clutched at the
stone, tugging at it so Kincar was dragged forward, the chain cutting into his
neck. But that chain did not break, and the stone fell back against Kincar's
skin, a blot of searing fire, to cool instantly.
Rud's under-bfficer stood still, his hand
outstretched, the fingers bent as if they still held the Tie. For a second
longer than normal time he stood so; then, holding that hand before him, he
began to roar with pain and the terror of a wounded beast, for the fingers were
shriveled, blackened—it was no longer a human hand. Being Sood, he was moved to
kill as he suffered. His left hand brought out a knife clumsily; he stabbed
blindly with tears of pain blurring his sight.
The
sting of a slash crossed Kincar's shoulder; then the point of the blade caught
on the Tie. Sood screamed this time, a high, thin sound, too high and thin to
issue naturally from that thick throat. The knife fell from a hand that could
no longer hold it, and the giant swayed back and forth on his feet, shaking his
head, his hands before him—the one shriveled and black, the other red as if
scalded.
Wounded he might be, but the blind hatred of
the thing— of the man who y wore the thing—that had blasted him,
possessed all his senses. Kincar, his hands bound so that he could move only
stiffly, was forced into a weird circling dance as the giant lurched after him
to accomplish by weight alone what he had not been able to do with steel. Sood
might lack the use of his hands, but to his slighter opponent he was still
formidable.
The
fate of the giant must have bewildered the rest of the guard. None of them
moved to interfere with the two on the field: Kincar was so intent upon keeping
away from the other that he heard a whistle only as a distant sound without
meaning.
But
the answer to that whistle had a great deal of meaning for both circling men.
Lord Rud, baffled by the happenings of the past moments, but in no mind to
lose control, had chosen ruthlessly to sacrifice the crippled Sood in company
with this captive who knew too much. Where it had been planned that one naked
prisoner would be exposed to certain death, two men moved. But the death was
already in the air, and it would strike. Perhaps it would be all to the good.
Sood was something of a legend in U-Sippar arid should he be struck by a
supernatural vengeance and the tale of it spread, it
would put the countryside aflame. Let him die quickly, by a familiar means, and
all that went before could be forgotten.
Kincar
had not understood his fate at the whistle, but seconds later he knew it well.
There was no mistaking the cry of a mord sighting meat—alive and moving
meat—but yet meat for a hungry belly. And he guessed the type of death to which
he had been condemned. Had his arms been free, had he a sword in his hands, he
could have delayed that death—for a short space. But he could not have kept it
away long. Against one well-trained mord an armed man, providing he was mounted
and had a cloak, had a bare chance. Against a full hatch of them, that mounted
warrior was lost, picked to the bones before blood had time enough to flow to
the ground.
Sood
was deaf, blind, unheeding of everything but Kincar. All the pain and shock of
his hurts had crystallized into the urge to kill. He moved ponderously with
deadly purpose. But, because he tried to use his hands time and time again,
Kincar managed to elude his hold. The giant cried aloud, a wordless noise that
was half plaint from pain, half demented rage at his inability to come to grips
with his prey.
Perhaps
it was that sound that drew the mords to him first. By rights the scent of the
blood welling from the cut on Kin-car's shoulder should have brought them down
upon the younger man. However, the rushing wings centered on Sood, and they
struck.
The
giant's cry swelled into a roar once more as, still only half aware of his
peril, he beat at the swarming flesh-eaters. First he tried only to brush them
aside so that he might attack Kincar. Then some spark of self-preservation
awoke, and he flailed his arms vainly, his face already a gory mask.
Kincar,
backing away from that horror, caught his boot heel on a turf and went down.
His fall attracted several of the wheeling mords, and they swooped upon him.
Claws bit into his upper arm, a beak stabbed at his eyes, and he could not
restrain the scream torn out by his repulsion and fear.
But
that beak did not strike him; the claws were sharp but they did not open
gashes. There was the hiss of an aroused and angry mord, and the one on his
body struck upward with open bill at another come to dispute her perch.
"Vorkenl"
She
chirruped in answer to her name. Vorken who had sought her kind in the mating
season had found them—in the fortress hatchery of U-Sipparl And, knowing
Vorken, Kincar could also believe that during her stay there she had with the
greatest possible speed assumed rulership of the perches. Now it was only
necessary for Cim to come trotting onto the field to make this truly an adventure
of a song-smith's devising.
Only it was not: Cim who came to take him
away from the murderous, horrible heap of twisting, fighting mords. It was the
flier of the Dark Lords. And the false Lord Dillan with his own hands dragged
Kincar onto its platform before it flew back to the fortress.
xrv
THE PLACE OF TOWERS
Thebe
was the crackle
of speech in the alien tongue of the Star Lords. Kincar, seemingly forgotten
for the moment, pulled himself up against a pillar, while Vorken chuckled
throatily and waddled in a half circle about his feet, very proud of herself.
The
wrangle continued. Lord Rud sat on a bench spitting out angry answers to a
stream of questions Lord Dillan shot at him as he paced up and down that end of
the hall, sometimes bringing his hands together with a sharp clap to emphasize
a point. At first Kincar was so bemused by the wonder of his own escape from a
particularly grisly death that he did not speculate as to why he had been
lifted from the field. Now, from the gestures, from the sullen attitude of Lord
Rud, the aroused state of this Lord Dillan, he guessed that his rescue had been
made against Rud's will.
And
this was borne out as the false Lord Dillan came striding away from his brother
to stand before Kincar, looking him up and down.
"You are a priest of
demons, fellow?"
Kincar
shook his head. "I have not followed the Threefold Way," he replied
as he would in his own Gorth.
That
face—he knew every line of it, had believed that he could recognize every
expression its muscles could shape! Yet to look upon it and know that the man
who wore it was not -the one to whom he had given his alle'giance was a
mind-wrenching thing, much harder than he had imagined such a meeting could be.
"So—we
have not yet stamped out that foolishness!"
Lord Dillan whirled and shouted a stream of angry words at Lord
Rud. The
other did not register only sullen denial this time. He walked toward them
alertly.
"This
one is from the mountains," he said in the Gorthian speech. "Look
closely, Dillan. Has he the appearance of a lowlander? Without a doubt a
creeper from some one of those outlaw pockets, trying to spy upon his betters.
He should have been left as mord food—"
"Mord
food, you fool!" Lord Dillan's exasperation was so open that Kincar looked
to see him strike the other. "After what he did to Sood in the face of all this city? We have gone to great trouble to rout out
this pestilent worship. Do you not see that the tale of what happened out there
is going to spread and grow with the telling? Within days we shall have secret
altars sprouting up again, spells being mouthed against us, all the other
things to tie rebels together! You cannot erase from a thousand minds the
manner of Sood's death. No, this one must be handled by the council. We must
have out of him every scrap of knowledge, and then he must be reduced to
groveling slavery before the eyes of his own kind. Abject life, not a martyr's
death—can't you see the sense of that? Or, Rud, is it—" His speech slipped
once more into the off-world language, and brother glared blackly at brother.
"We
shall take him ourselves," Dillan stated. "We want no more natives
seeing what was not meant for their eyes, hearing things certainly not intended
for their ears. Send a message that we are coming by flier—"
Lord
Rud's jaw jutted forward. "You are mighty free with your orders in another
man's hold, Dillan. Suppose I do
not choose to leave U-Sippar at this moment. As you pointed out, that scene on
the field will doubtless provide fuel for rebellion. And my place is here to
stamp such fires to ashes before they can spread."
"Well
enough. Remain and put out your fires, though if U-Sippar was under proper
control, I should think there was no need for such careful wardenship."
Lord Dillan smiled slyly. "I shall take the prisoner in for
questioning—"
It
was very plain that that was not to Lord Rud's taste either.
"He is my prisoner,
taken by my men."
"True
enough. But you did not assess his importance until it was driven home to you.
And your reluctance now to turn him over to the authorities argues that you may
have some hidden reason to wish him quickly dead." Lord Dillan fell to
studying Kincar once more. "What is this great secret, fellow, for which
your lips must be permanently sealed? I wonder—" His hand closed about
Kincar's upper arm, bringing the younger man up to stand under a clear shaft of
light. He eyed him with an intensity that had something deadly and malignant in
it.
"The
Great Law, Rud," Dillan spoke very softly. "I wonder how many times
it has been broken and by whom among us. The Great Law— Usually
the fruits of its breaking can be early detected. But perhaps now and again
such cannot. Who are you, fellow?"
"Kincar of Styr—"
"Kincar
of Styr," the other repeated. "Now that can mean anything at all.
What is Styr, and where does it lie? Should it not rather be Kincar
s'Rud?"
He
had guessed the truth, but in the wrong way. Perhaps some shade of surprise in
Kincar's eyes convinced his questioner he was on the right track, for Lord
Dillan laughed softly.
"Another
matter for the council to inquire into—" Lord Rud's face was a mask of
rage. "For that you shall answer to me, Dillan, even though we be brothers! He is not of my fathering, and you cannot pin
law-breaking on me! I have enemies enough, perhaps of close kin"—he eyed
his brother hotly—"who would be willing to set up a tool, well coached, to
drag me into trouble by such a story. Look to yourself, Dillan, on the day, in
that hour, when you bring such an accusation before the council!"
"In
any event, he needs be shaken free of all information. And
the sooner the better. It is to your own advantage, Rud, that he tells
the full and complete truth before all of us. if he is
not the fruit of law-breaking, let us be sure of that and speedily."
As if to draw his brother away from a
dangerous line of investigation, Lord Rud asked, "But why did Sood suffer?
Let us have a closer look at that thing he is wearing—"
He
reached for the Tie. Kincar pulled back, the only defensive movement he could
make. But before those fingers closed upon the stone, Lord
Dillan had slapped down that questing hand.
"If
you value your skin, you'll leave that alone!" he warned.
"Do
you think that I'll be burnt as was Sood? Why—I'm no ignorant native—"
"Sood's
fate was aggravated because he wore the mark," Lord Dillan explained
almost absently. "But we have no inkling as to the power of these things
or how they can be used against alien bodies. And until we do know more, it is
wisest not to meddle. I have only seen one before, and that was just for an
instant before its destruction by the witch doctor who had been wearing it.
We'd overrun his shrine at night and caught him unawares. We'll have plenty of
time to deal with this—and its wearer—when we get them to the towers. And that
is where we should go at once."
They
were talking, Kincar thought bitterly, as if he had no identity or will of his
own except as a possession of theirs— which, he was forced to admit bleakly,
was at that moment the exact truth. The only concession his captors made to the
fact that he was flesh and blood was to throw a cloak over his half-bare body
after they had put him aboard the flier, to lie, bound wrist and ankle, by
their feet.
Vorken
had protested such handling, and, for an instant or two, it appeared that she
would be destroyed for her impudence. Then the false Lord Dillan decided that
her link with Kincar must be thoroughly explored. She was muffled in another
cloak and bundled in beside Kincar, where her constant tries for freedom kept
the improvised bag bumping up and down.
To
fly through the air was a terrifying experience. Kincar had ranged the mountain
heights since he had been large enough to keep his seat on a lamg pad and
follow Wurd hunting, in the years before the old lord of Styr had been reduced
to level country riding and at last to his bed. And Wurd's acquaintance with
sheer ledges, far drops, cliff edges had been wide.
But to stand with ones' boots planted on solid rock and look out upon
nothingness was far different, Kincar discovered, than to rise into that
nothingness knowing that under one was only a flat
platform of no great thickness.
He
fought his panic, that picture his imagination kept in the forepart of his mind
of the platform dissolving, of his helpless body turning over and over as it
fell to the ground below. How had the Star men been able to travel the sky and
the depths of space? Or were they alien to this fe'ar he knew? He wriggled
about, but all he could see of the two were their feet. The Star Lords of his
own Gorth had had no such fliers. However, they might well accept such
traveling as natural.
There was, a windbreak on the front of the
platform, and he was lying behind the control seats. Yet the chill of that
journey bit deep, and the cloak was but small protection. As the minutes
passed, Kincar's panic subsided, and it seemed to him that from the Tie spread
a gentle heat to banish the worst of the cold. He had been afraid on the field
when the mord hatch had turned their attention to him, but that was an honest
fear to be fully understood. Now he knew a queer apprehension, the same quiver
of nerves and tenseness of muscles that a swordman knows before the command to
charge is given at a spear-festing. He tried to school himself with the
knowledge that for him there would probably be no return from this flight.
Against Gorthian captivity a man could plan,
foresee. But among the Star Lords what chance had he? There was but one
thing—Sood's amazing experience with the Tie and this Lord Dillan's wariness of
that same token. A slim advantage—perhaps. He had
listened to talk in the mountain hold. There were unseen
powers—"energies" the Lord Dillan he followed called them. Some of
these energies had activated the between-worlds gates through which they had
come into this Gorth. And during that passage the Tie had also proved to be a
conductor of energy, as Kincar could prove by a scar he would carry until he
passed into the Forest.
The
Tie, in addition, might have its own "energies," which would be
inimical to the aliens. That night in the forgotten shrine, the talisman had
been recharged with the power native to it. It must carry a full supply. If he
only knew more of its potentialities! But he had had no desire to follow the
Threefold Way, to train as a Man of Power—for he had understood that he could
not have the Way and Styr together and his heart had lain with Styr. So all he
had to guide him were the mystical invocations of any believer, the legends and
half-whispers. Had he been adept with the Tie, what might he not have
accomplished—what could he not do?
The
flier swooped, and Kincar fought sickness from the resulting flare of panic.
Was it falling, coming apart to crash them to the earth?
But the swift descent slowed. Walls flowed up
to cut off the light. They might be dropping down the mouth of a well. The flier
came to a stop with less force than that with which a foot is set upon the
floor, and both Star men arose. They had reached their destination.
Lord Rud made no move toward the captive. It
seemed that he disliked laying hand upon Kincar. But Lord Dillan pulled the
half-Gorthian up, cut the thongs about his ankles and, surprisingly enough,
those about his wrists also. His arms fell heavily to his sides, his hands
swollen. Lord Dillan picked up the bag containing Vorken and thrust it at him.
He caught it clumsily, making a silent resolve not to display any sign of the
intense pain any movement of hands or arms cost him.
"You will walk quietly where you are
told." Lord Dillan spoke with the exactitude of one
giving orders to a slow-witted child. "For if you
do not, you shall be burned with this force stick." He had taken
from his belt a rod not unlike the one Kincar had used in suard-hunting.
"It will not kill, but the pain will be worse than death by mord, and you
shall never be free of it. Do you understand?"
Kincar nodded. He could believe that the Dark
One meant exactly what he said and uttered no vain bluff. Could he hope for a
speedy death if he attempted flight? Would he flee if that were the end? As
long as a man was alive, he could nourish hope, and Kincar had not yet reached
the point where he would try for death as a hunter tries for an easy thrust at
his prey. Carrying Vorken, he obediently followed Lord Rud out of the chamber
where the flier rested, down a sideway, while behind tramped Lord Dillan, weapon
in hand.
The
living quarters of the fortress at U-Sippar had been of alien workmanship and
materials. The narrow passage in which they now walked was as unlike that as that had been from the Gorthian architecture upon which it had been based.
Here were no flitting rainbow colors, only an even sheen of gray, which, as he
brushed against it, gave to Kincar the feel of metal. And the passage ended
after a few feet in a stair ascending in a spiral, the steps no wider than a
ladder's treads. Kincar grasped the guard rail, Vorken in the crodk of his left
arm. He kept his eyes resolutely on the legs of Lord Rud going up and up,
refusing to yield to any temptation to look down into the dizzy well beneath
them.
They
passed through a series of levels from which ran other passages, emerging from
the floor of such a level to climb again through its roof. Kincar could not
even speculate upon the nature of the building in which so unusual a staircase
formed the core. On the third such level Lord Rud stood away from the stair,
turning into a side corridor, and Kincar went after him. So far they might have
been in a deserted building. Though the noise of their climbing feet echoed
hollowly up and down that well, there had been no other sound to break the
quiet, no sign of any guardsman or servant on duty. And there was a queer,
indefinable odor— not the dank emanation of the hold walls, of U-Sippar's
fortress, but in its way as redolent of a remote past, of something long closed
against the freshness of wind and cleansing sunlight.
The passage into which Rud had turned was
hardly more than a good stride long. He set his palm flat upon a closed door,
and under that touch it rolled back into the wall so that they might enter an
odd chamber. It was a half circle, a curved wall ending in a straight one—the
shape of a strung bow, the door being in the straight wall. Spaced at intervals
along the curved surface were round windows covered with a clear substance
strange to Kincar.
A
padded bench ran along the wall under the level of the windows, and there was
an equally padded covering on the floor and over the walls. Otherwise the room
was bare of either inhabitants or furnishings. Lord Rud glanced around and then
stepped aside to allow Kincar to enter. When the Gorthian had passed through
the door, he went out and the portal closed, leaving Kincar alone.
He
pulled loose the covering about Vorken and evaded the exasperated snap of her
bill, loosing her on the bench where she waddled along with her queer rolling
gait, her claws puncturing its padding and having to be pulled out laboriously
at every step. Kincar knelt on the same surface to look from one of the
windows.
No
U-Sippar lay without. The structure he could survey was totally unlike anything
he had seen on either Gorth. Beyond were several towers, not the square stone
ones he had known all his life. Fashioned of metal, they caught the sun and
reflected its beams in a blaze of fire. All were exactly alike, round with
pointed tips that stood tall in the sky. Kincar surmised that a similar
building harbored him. Linking all of them together—by pressing tight to the
transparent pane he could just make them out—were a series of walls-walls thick
enough to contain corridors or rooms. But those were of the native stone. Metal
towers—pointed—
Kincar's
swollen hands closed upon the edge of the window until he felt the pain of
that grip. Not towers—no, not towers. Ships! The sky ships of the Star men—here
forever earthbound, built into a weird fortress. He had heard them described too
many times by men who had visited Terranna on his own Gorth not to recognize
them. Was this the Terranna of this Gorth? It could be nothing less than the
heart of the Dark Ones' holdings.
On his own Gorth
those ships had gone forth again—out to the stars. Here that must be
impossible. They had been anchored to the earth. They had rooted their ships,
determined to possess Gorth for all time.
As
he studied that strange mating of ship and stone, Kin-car could spot no signs
of life. Nothing moved along those walls, showed at any of the round ports that
now served as windows. And there was a sense of long absence of tenantry about
it all. A storehouse—Kincar could not have told why that
particular thought took possession of him nor why the conviction grew that
he was right. This must be a storehouse for the aliens. As that it would be
well guarded, if not by warriors, then by the magic the Star men controlled. A
race who flew through the air without wonder would
have weapons mightier than any sword swung by a Hand to protect their secret
place.
The age-old thirst that arises in any man at
the thought of treasure tempted Kincar. This whole city, fortress, whatever it
was, must be thinly populated. If he could get free of his present lodging and
explore—I But the door was sealed tightly. Vorken hissed from the bench. She
was uneasy in this closed room as she had never been in the hold. Kincar
went from one window to another. Three merely showed him other aspects of the
tower-ship building, but the other two gave him a view of the countryside.
There
were no trees, but odd twisted rocks. Some, with a puff crown of snow, were vaguely familiar. He
had certainly seen their like before. Then the vivid memory of their ride
through the wasteland desert to the first gate returned. There were no signs of
vegetation here, unless its withered remnants lay under the snow. But in the
distance was the bluish line of hills, the mark of mountains. And seeing those,
Kincar's hopes rose illogically.
Vorken's head bumped against him. She raised
a forefoot to scrape his arm and draw his attention. Though none of his race had
ever believed the mords lacked intelligence, it was generally conceded that
their mental mazes were so alien to that of mankind that communication between
the two species was strictly limited to the recognition of a few simple
suggestions, mostly dealing with food and hunting. But it was plain that now
Vorken was trying to convey something in her own way. And he did what otherwise
he would have hesitated to try, since mords were notoriously averse to
handling. He sat down on the bench and lifted her to his knees.
She
complained with a hiss or two. Then she squatted, her red eyes fastened upon
his as if she would force upon him some message. She flapped her wings and
mouthed the shrill whistle she gave when sighting game.
Kincar's
preoccupation with Vorken was broken by the sudden heat on his breast. The Tie
was glowing. Somewhere within the ship-tower an energy
was being loosed to which that highly sensitive talisman responded. He
hesitated. Should he take it off lest he risk a bad bum and incapacitate himself—or should he continue to wear it?
To
his overwhelming surprise, Vorken stretched her skinny neck and butted her head
against him, directly over the Tie, before he could fend her away. She pressed
tightly to it, lifting her claws in warning when he would have moved her,
giving voice to the guttural battle croaks of her kind.
The warmth of the Tie increased as the mord
pressed it tightly against him. But that did not appear to disconcert Vorken.
Her battle cries stopped. Now she chuckled, the little sound she made when she
was very content with her world. And Kincar himself felt relaxed, confident,
fast losing his awe of both surroundings and captors.
TRIAL OF STRENGTHS
That
sense of well-being
persisted. Vorken's beak gaped in a yawn. Her eyes closed as she huddled close,
her grotesque head still resting against him. But Kincar felt far from sleepy.
Instead he was alert mentally and physically, as he had never been before that
he could remember. The feeling that there was no task beyond his accomplishing
grew. Was this how the full blood of the Star breed lived? It must bel This supreme confidence in one's self, the certainty that no
difficulty was too great—
Kincar
laughed softly. And something in that sound struck below the surface of his
present well-being, brought a tinge
of doubt. Perhaps because of the Tie he was doubly alert to any hint of danger.
Did that emotion, the self-confidence, stem from the energy in the talisman, or
was it more magic of an alien sort? It would be very easy to work upon a man's mind—if you had the Star resources—to give him an elevated belief
in his own powers until he was rendered careless. So very
easy.
There
was one way of testing that. Kincar lifted the Tie by its chain, slipped the
chain over his head, and put down the stone at a short distance from him on the
bench. The warmth on his flesh was gone. Vorken stirred. Her head arose as she
regarded Kincar with an open question. But he was too preoccupied to watch the
mord.
Pressing
in upon him, with the force of a blow from a giant's fist, was an overwhelming and devastating panic, a fear so abject and complete that he dared not move, could only get air
into his cramped and aching lungs in short gasps. His hands were wet and
slippery, his mouth dry, a
sickness ate
him up inwardly. In all his life he had never known such terror. It was crushing
all identity from him, turning him from Kincar into a mindless, whimpering thing! And the worst of it was that he could not put name to the reason for
that fear. It was inside him, not from without, and it was filling all of his burnt-out body shell—
Vorken
squalled, a scream that
tore at his ears. Then the mord struck, raking him with her claws. The pain of
her attack broke the spell momentarily. He made a supreme effort, and by its chain drew the Tie back into his hands. In
those sweating palms he cupped it tight as Vorken ripped at him. But once he
had it, the panic was gone, and when the chain was again over his head, the Tie
resting in its old place,
he sat weak and shaken, but
whole and sane once more—so whole and sane he could not quite believe in what had struck him as viciously as the mord.
Blood
trickled from the scratches Vorken had given him. Luckily she had not torn
deeply. Now she crouched once more on his knees, turning her head from side to
side, giving voice to a whimpering complaint as one of her punishing forefeet
raised to the Tie. It was that talisman that had saved them both from utter
madness—the why and wherefore of that deliverance being more than Kincar could
understand. He could only accept rescue with gratitude.
Kincar had left Styr with no more training
than any youth who could confidently aspire to the lordship of a holding, and a small, mountain holding at that. He had ridden away under the shock of
the abrupt revelation of his half-blood, unable to quite accept that heritage.
Wurd's secret gift of the Tie, with all that meant, had been an additional push
along a new path of life. His painful experience at the gates, and his
acceptance thereafter by Lord Dillan and the Lady Asgar as one who had rightful
guardianship of a power they respected, had tempered him yet more. Perhaps his
volunteering for the expedition into the lowlands had been born of a spirit of adventure, rooted in the quality that sent any young warrior
to a spear-festing. But with it had gone the knowledge that he alone of the hold was fitted for that journey—
What had happened that night in the forest
shrine he did not understand. He was no adept to be
able to recall the work of the Three. But now he believed
that he had ridden away from there subtly altered from the Kincar who had taken
shelter. This last ordeal might be another milepost on his road. He
would not be as the Star Lords, nor as the ruler of Styr that he might have
been had Jord not taken from him that future—but a person he was not yet able to
recognize.
Kincar
was sure he was no mystic, no seeker of visions, or wielder of strange powers.
What he was—now—he did not know. Nor did he have the time
to become acquainted. It was better to accept the ancient beliefs of his
people—his mother's people—and think that he was a tool, mayhap a weapon, for
the use of the Three, that all he did was in Their
service.
There
was a security in that belief. And just now more than anything else he desired
security, to trust in something outside his own shaken mind and body.
He
had been right in his surmise that he would be allowed scant time for
self-examination. The door of the chamber rolled back into the wall. Vorken
hissed, flapped her wings, and would have taken to the air in attack had not
Kincar, fearing for her life, made a hasty grab for her feet.
Lord
Dillan stood there. He did not speak at once, but, though he did not display
surprise by any sign readable to Kincar, the latter thought his alertness
astonished the other.
"Slave—"
The harsh grate of the Star Lord's voice was meant to sting, as the whips of
the Hands had stung their miserable captives.
Kincar
stared as steadily back. Did the Dark One expect from him a cringing plea for
nonexistent mercy?
Now
the wand of power was in Dillan's hands as he spoke again.
"We have
underestimated you it seems, fellow!"
"It
appears that you did, Lord." The words came to Kincar as if someone else
who stood apart and watched this scene selected them for his saying.
"Rud's offspring in
truth!"
Lord Dillan laughed. "Only our own kin could stand up against a
conditioner set at that leveL Let him try to deny this
to the council. Come—you!"
He
gestured and Kincar went. Vorken had struggled free of his grip and now
balanced on his shoulder, a process made painful by her claws. Yet he was glad
to have her with him, a steadying reminder of that other Gorth where a man could not be so beset by magic.
"Upl"
The single word set him climbing once more, up the ladder spiral of the
stairway. On the next level they came upon something he had not sighted from
the windows. Connecting one ship with another, strung far above the ground,
was an aerial bridge—temporary, Kincar judged, for so lightweight a creation
could not survive the first real windstorm.
But
frail as it was, it was also now their road. Kincar clung with his full
strength to the hand rope, some of the fear he had known on the flying platform
sweeping back. To stop at all, he guessed, would be fatal. So he made the
crossing, step by step, his attention all for the port door ahead.
He
was within a foot or two of that door when he remembered Vorken. He had no way
of escape—that he could see now—from the towers, not with the armed Lord Dillan
ready to blast him. But perhaps Vorken could be saved. Still holding to the
guide rope with his left hand, he half turned, flicking out with his cloak, at
the same time giving the hunter's call for a sky search.
Was it by luck alone that the edge of the
cloak entangled with the Star weapon? He had been well trained in the
swordsman's art of using the enveloping fabric to bewilder and disarm an
opponent, but he had never attempted such a throw under these adverse circumstances. Skill or luck, he engaged the
rod until Vorken was up and away, rising can-nily not in her usual spirals but
headed in an arrow's flight for the distant hills.
Oddly enough, Lord Dillan made no effort at
retaliation. He loosened the cloak, and it went flapping down into the chasm
below them, where Kincar dared not look. He had not been lucky or skillful
enough to have dragged the weapon from the other, and now it was centered upon
him.
"Go
on," Lord Dillan ordered, and Kincar, sure of Vorken's escape and
treasuring that small triumph, went ahead, passing through the port into the
second of the Star ship towers.
Two
more of the Star Lords awaited him there—but neither were doubles of those he
had known in the hold. To be faced by a Lord Frans, a Lord Bardon, a Lord Jon
who were not what they appeared would have added to his burden at that moment.
These men were all younger than Lord Dillan, if he could judge the age of the
Star breed rightly, and both looked soft, lacking that alertness of mind and
body his captor possessed—traces of which Lord Rud had displayed. They had that
inborn arrogance that comes not from the authority of a man who has rightfully
held leadership over his fellows through innate traits of character, but that
which is based instead upon never having one's will disputed, and having
absolute power over other intelligent beings by birthright alone.
Neither
concealed his amazement at Kincar, one asking Lord Dillan a question in their
tongue. He snapped an impatient answer and motioned them on.
"Follow!" he told
Kincar tersely.
They
were about to descend another of the spiral stairways. Descend it! A glimmer
of a plan was born—a fantastic plan—perhaps so fantastic that it would work!
Success would depend upon how quickly Kincar could move, whether he would be
able to take his guards by surprise. He did not think too highly of the
newcomers, but Lord Dillan was another matter. However, the cloak trick had
worked against him. Kincar could only try, desperate as the plan was. And,
making his first move, he clutched at the hand rail of the stair. What he
intended might well burn the flesh from his hands. He must have some protection
for them— He was bare to the waist; there was no way to tear any strips from
his hide breeches. If he only had the cloak again!
One
young Star Lord was already passing through the first of the well openings. He
was the only barrier between Kincar and the realization of his plan. And he
was wearing not the tight weather suit of Lord Dillan but a loose shirt of some
light material.
Kincar started down the ladder with a meekness he trusted would be disarming. The steps were so narrow, the
incline so steep that he hoped Lord Dillan would have to give a measure of his attention to his own going and so might be a second or so late in attacking when the prisoner moved.
The young lord was disappearing into the well
at the next level now and Lord Dillan was waist-deep in the first, Kincar on
the stair between them. The Gorthian threw himself forward, his weight on his
hands. To the watcher it might seem he had missed a step. His foot swung out
and caught the young lord on the side of the head. The other gave a choked cry and caught at the floor. It was that instinctive move to save
himself that aided Kincar. He landed beside the alien
and tore at his shirt, the thin stuff coming away in his hand. He pushed
through the well opening, pulling over the half-conscious man to block it after
him, and slid down the spiral, with only his hands on the rail as support.
He
whirled about, wondering if he could brake his
descent now. There were shouts behind, perhaps calls for help, and the clatter
of boots. Friction charred the cloth under his hands, pain bit at his palms,
but he held on. Two more levels, three; there was a regular din behind him now.
Beneath him, two levels ahead, was solid floor, and he made ready as best he
could to meet it. With dim memories of how he had taken falls in his first days
of riding, he willed his muscles to go limp, tried to ball together, and prayed
against the horror of broken bones.
There
was blackness, but even in the semiconscious state he still strove for escape.
When he was again truly aware of his surroundings, he crawled on smarting hands
and aching knees down a narrow corridor.
Praise
be to the Three, he had come through that landing
unbroken, though his body ached with bruises. Wincing at sharp stabs, Kincar
got to his feet and lurched on, only wanting now to put as much distance
between himself and the noise as he could.
The walls about him changed as he stumbled
over a high step. They were stone, not metal, now. He must be within one of the
walls that tied together the ship-towers—far nearer ground level. Surely here
he could find a door to the outer world.
Though
he did not know it until afterwards, Kincar was perhaps the first prisoner
within that maze who was in command of his mind and body, unbroken by the conditioner.
To the men who hunted him, he was an unknown quantity they were not prepared to
handle. They did not give him credit for either the initiative or the speed and
energy he was able to muster.
The
stone-walled corridor wove on with no breaks of either windows or doors. He
sped along it at the best pace he could keep, nursing his scorched hands
against the Tie, for it seemed to him that there was some healing virtue in the
talisman. At least it drew away the worst of the pain.
To
his dismay Kincar came to a second of the ridge steps, marking the entrance to
another ship-tower. But there was no turning back, and, with all the chambers
that must exist in the ships, he could either find a hiding place or access
through a port window to the top of a connecting wall. The dim light that
radiated from both walls of stone and of metal showed him another spiral
stairway. He made a complete circuit below. Two doors, both fast closed, and
neither would open. He dared not linger there. Necessity sent him climbing.
The
first level gave upon more doors all closed, all resisting his efforts to
force them. Another level, the same story. He leaned,
gasping, against the hand rail, fearing that he had been driven into a trap
with the Dark Ones able to pick him up at their leisure.
The
third level, and as his head arose through the well, he could have shouted
aloud his cry of triumph—for here a door gaped. In his eagenerness he stumbled
and went to one knee. And in that moment he heard the unmistakable pound of
feet below.
He fell rather than sprang through the door.
Then he set his hand flat against it as he had seen Lord Dillan do. It movedl
It fell into place behind him! He could see no way of locking it, but the very
fact that there was now a closed door between him and the stairwell gave a
ghost of safety.
The
corridor before him was a short one, and he burst into a small, round room. The
walls rose up to the open sky— He had seen it—or its like before—for here was
berthed a flier like the one that had brought him here.
He
was trapped. There was no climbing the smooth walls of the well that held the
flier. Soon—any moment now—the Dark Ones would be through that door he could
not lock, would take him as easily as one roped a lamg in the spring trapping
pens. Why they had not already been upon him he did not know. As he hesitated
there, he heard, more as a vibration through the walls than a sound, the
pounding feet. But there was no fumbling at the door. Kincar guessed that his
pursuers had gone to the next level, that the closing of the door had
momentarily hidden his trail. Should he—could he dodge out now and backtrack
while the hunters were on the higher levels? He could not bring himself to that
move. The wild slide down the well ladder in the other tower and his run through
the passages had worn him down; his energy was fading fast.
What
did he do now? Remain where he was until they searched from chamber to chamber
and found him? He swayed to the flier, dropped on one of the seats within it,
his hurt hands resting palms up on his knees. If he had only the proper
knowledge, he could be free—away without any difficulty at all. The buttons on
the panel before him were frustrating—if he only knew which ones—
The
vibration of the hurrying hunters reached him faintly. They were coming back
down again—or could that be reinforcements arriving from below? Dully Kincar
studied the controls. Nothing in his dealing with the Star men he knew had
given him a hint of their machines. But he could not be taken again—he could
not! Better to smash the flier and himself than to sit here tamely until they
broke in.
Kincar
closed his eyes, offered a wordless petition to those he served, and made a
blind choice of button. Only it was the wrong one. Heat walled up about him as
if a cloak had been flung about his shivering body. Heat answered that button.
He counted one over, relieved that disaster had had not resulted from his first
choice.
A shaft of light struck upon the rounded wall
before him, flashing back into his dazzled eyes. It startled him so that he
triggered the third button before he thought.
He grabbed the sides of his seat in spite of
the pain in his hands. His gasp was close to a scream, for the flier was shooting
up, out of that well, at a speed that almost tore the air from his lungs. The
machine broke out of the well, went on and on up into the sky. It must be
stopped—or he would reach star space. But how to control it
he had no idea.
With the faint hope that the function of the
button next to the last one he had pushed might counteract it, he thrust with
an urgent finger. He was right, inasmuch as that sickening rise stopped. But
his flight was not halted. The flier now skimmed forward with an equally
terrifying speed, as might an arrow shot from a giant bow. But for the moment
Kincar was content. He was not bound for outer space, and he was headed with
breath-taking speed away from the towers. He crouched on the seat, almost
unable to believe his good fortune.
When he grew more accustomed to flight, he
ventured to look below, keeping a good grip on the seat and fighting vertigo.
The same chance that had brought his finger to the right button had also
dictated the course of the flier. It was headed across the waste plain, not for
the sea lowlands and the cities ruled by the Dark Ones, but toward the distant
mountain range—only not so distant now—where Kincar might have a faint hope of
not only surviving but eventually rejoining those at the hold.
There remained the problem of grounding the
flier. Just at the moment he had no desire to experiment—until at least one
mountain lay between him and pursuit. And, thinking of pursuit sent him
squirming about to look behind. The Dark Ones must have more than just one such
flier—would they take to the air after him? But above the rapidly diminishing
dot of the fortress he could see nothing in the air.
What
might have been two—three days' travel for a lamg flashed below in a short
space of time. Then he was above the peaks he had seen from the ship-towers,
skimming—just barely skimming—over snow-crowned rock. If he only knew how to
control the flier! Its speed was certainly excessive. His elation gave way once
more to anxiety as he imagined what might happen should the machine crash
head-on against some peak higher than its present level of flight.
RESCUE
If
no other flier
arose from the ship-towers to intercept Kincar's runaway transport, something
else did. He first knew of his danger when a piercing shriek of rage and avid
hunger carried through the rush of air dinning at his eardrums. Compared to
that challenge, Vorken's most ambitious call was a muted whisper. Kincar stared
aloft and then shrank in the seat, for what swooped at him now was death, a
familiar death, well known to any Gorthian who had ever roamed the mountain
ranges.
Vorken
was a mord, but she was counted a pygmy of her species. Among the frigid
heights lived the giants of her race, able to carry off a lamg at their
pleasure. And their appetites were as huge as their bodies. They could be
entrapped with a triple- or quadruple-strand net and men well versed in the
tricky business to handle it, but such a netting meant days of patient waiting,
luring the creature to the ground with bait. Once on the surface of the
mountainside or plateau, they were enough at a disadvantage to be snared,
though it was always a risky business, and no one was surprised if such a
hunting party returned minus one or more of the hunters.
No one had ever faced a sa-mord in the air.
No one had lived through an attack made when the attacker was wing borne and
free. And Kincar had no hope of surviving this one.
With
the usual egotism of a man, he had reckoned that he was the aim of those claws, whereas, to the sa-mord he was merely an
incidental part of the thing it attacked. It made its swoop from the skies,
talons stretched to grasp the flier, only to discover it had not properly
judged the' speed
of this impudent air creature, missing its
strike by a foot or more.
It
plunged past in an instant, screaming its furious rage, and was gone before
Kincar could realize that he had not been pierced through by those claws. Had
he then been able to control the flier, he might have won free or tired the
creature out to the point where it would have given up the chase. But such
evasive action was beyond his power. He could only stay where he was, half
sheltered by the back of the seat and the windbreak, as the flier bore straight
ahead, while behind, the sa-mord beat up into the sky for a second strike.
Like
their smaller relatives, the sa-mords had intelligence of a sort, and most of
that reasoning power was centered upon keeping its possessor not only fed but
alive. The sa-mords were solitary creatures, each female having a section of
hunting territory where she ruled supreme, ready to beat off any of her kind
who threatened her hold on sky and earth therein. And to such battles each
brought accumulated knowledge of feint, attack, and the proper use of her own strength.
So
when the sa-mord now struck for the second time, from a yet higher point, she had recalculated the speed of the flier and came
down in a dive that should have brought her a little ahead and facing the enemy with waiting claws, a favorite fighting
position.
Only
again mechanical speed proved her undoing, for she hit directly on the flier's
nose. The windbreak was driven into her softer underparts by the force of that
meeting. Claws raked across the shield, catching on the seats, as she squalled
at her hurt. Kincar, wedged in as flat as he could get, felt rather than saw
that gaping beak that snapped just an inch or two above him as blood spurted
from torn arteries to flow greasily.
The machine faltered, dipped, fought against
that struggling weight impaled on its nose. It was losing altitude as the
sa-mord beat and tore at it. Only the fact that the flier was metal, and so
impervious to her attack, saved Kincar during those few moments before they
were carried into a thicket of snow-line scrub trees. There the sa-mord's body
acted as a shock absorber and cushion as they slammed to a final stop.
Kincar,
the breath beaten out of him by the sharp impact, lay where he was, the stench
of the torn creature thick in the air. Gone was the heat that had enfolded him.
Shivering in the lash of mountain wind, he at last fought his way out of the
grisly wreckage and staggered along the splintered swath the flier had cut. One
sa-mord to a hunting territory was the custom. But there were lesser things
that could scent blood and raw meat from afar. Weaponless he could not face up
to such carrion eaters. So, guided more by instinct than plan, he reeled
downslope.
Luckily
the flier had not crashed on one of the higher crests, and the incline was not
so straight that he could not pick a path. Here the scrub wood was thin. It was
possible to set landmarks ahead to keep that path from circling.
It must be far past midday, and he would have
to find shelter. From upslope there came a muffled yapping, then a growling,
rising to roaring defiance. The scavengers had found then- feast, and there was
no hope of returning to the wreckage. In fact, that din spurred Kincar to a
faster pace, until he lost his footing and fell forward, to roll into a snowdrift.
Gasping, spitting snow, he struggled up, knowing that to lie there was to court death. Only by
keeping on his feet and moving did he have the thinnest chance. Fortunately the
sky was clear of clouds; no storm threatened.
That fall and slide had brought him into a
valley with a trickle of stream at its bottom. The water
was dark, flowing quickly, with no skim of ice. He wavered down to it and went
on his knees. Now he could feel the faint, very faint warmth exuding from the
riverlet. This must be one of the hot streams, such as he had discovered in the
hold valley. He had only to trace it back to its source and that heat would
grow, promising him some protection against the cold of the coming night.
It was an effort to get to
his feet again, to flog his bruised body along. But somehow he kept moving,
aware through the fog of exhaustion that there were now trails of steam above
the water, that the temperature in the valley was rising.
Choking and coughing from the fumes, he fell against a boulder and clung there.
He had to have the heat, but could he stand the lung-searing exhalations of the
water?
Slowly he went down beside the rock, certain
he could go no farther, and no longer wanting to try. It all assumed the guise
of a dream, and the inertia of one caught in a nightmare weighted him. There
was the grit of stone against his cheek and then nothing at all.
The sa-mord loomed above him. He had been
very wrong. It was not killed by the flier, and now it had tracked him down. In
a moment he would be rent by claw and beak. Only it was carrying him up—higher
than the mountainsl They were swinging out over the
waste to the ship-towers. A flier bore him—no sa-mord but a flierl The machine was rising at the nose—it would turn over, spill
him down—
"Get him up if you have to lash html We can take no chances on this climb—"
Words
coming out of the air, words without meaning. Warm—it was warm again. He had not been
killed in that fall from the flier. Now he was lapped in the waters of the hot
riverlet, being borne with its current. Watery, he saw the world only through a
mist of water, and before him bobbed another dim figure. Then that shadowy
shape turned, and he saw its face and knew that there was no escape. Lord
Dillanl They had traced him, and he was once more a prisoner.
"Not so!" He heard his own cry as
shrill as a mord's scream as he tried vainly to win free of the current, away
from the Dark One. But it was no use; he could not move and the riverlet
carried him on.
It was night, but not the total dark of the
U-Sippar dungeon, for stars swung across Lor's Shield resting above him. And
those stars moved—or did he? Dreamily he tried to work out that problem. The
homely smell of larng sweat had driven away the stink of the river. But he was
still swinging as if cradled in water.
"There is the beacon!
We are almost in now—"
In where? U-Sippar? The ship-tower fortress?
He had solved the mystery of the movement around, under, about him, realizing
that he was lashed securely in a hunter's net swung between two of the burden
larags. But how much was real and how much was a dream he could not tell. He
closed heavy eyelids, worn to a state of fatigue in which nothing at all
mattered.
But
perhaps he was too tired for sleep, for he was aware of arriving in a
courtyard, and roused again to see the one who loosed the fastenings of his
net.
It
had been no use, that wild attempt at escape, for it was Lord Dillan who
gathered him up and carried him into light, warmth, and sound. They were back
at the ship-towers, and now would come the questioning—
They must have returned him to the padded
chamber. He was lying on the softness of the bench there. Feeling it, he kept
his eyes closed obstinately. Let them think he was unconscious.
"Kincar—"
He tensed.
"Kincar—"
There was no mistaking that voice. They might
duplicate Lord Dillan but—the Lady Asgar? He opened his eyes. She was
half-smiling, though watching him with a healer's study. And she was bundled in
cold-season riding clothes, her hair fastened up tightly beneath a fur hood.
Vorken sat on her shoulder appearing to examine Kincar with a measure of the
same searching scrutiny.
"This is the hold?" He doubted the
evidence of his eyes; he had been so sure he was elsewhere.
"This
is the hold. And you are safe, thanks be to Vorken. Is that not true, my strong-winged
one?"
Vorken
bent her head to rub her crest of bone peak caressingly against the Lady's
chin.
"We were hunting in the peaks and she
came to us, leading us to a feast—" Asgar's expression was one of faint
distaste. "And from there it was easy to trace your path, Kincar.
Now"—she stooped over him with a horn cup in her hand while someone behind
raised his head and shoulders so that he might drink—"get this inside of
you that you may tell us your story, for we have a fear that time grows very late
indeed."
It
was Lord Dillan who supported him. But his own Lord Dillan and not the dark
master of the ship-towers. Braced comfortably against that strong shoulder,
Kincar told his story, tersely with none of a song-smith's embroidery of word.
Only one thing he could not describe plainly, and that was what had happened to
him in the ruined shrine. And that they did not ask of him. When he told of his
meeting with the fugitives at the shore, Lord Dillan spoke for the first time.
"This
we have heard in part. Murren could not master Cim, and the beast took his own
path. He brought them to our gates, and they were found by Kapal and a foraging
party. We have heard their story, and it is a black one." There was a dark
shadow of pain in his eyes. "It. will be for your hearing later. So—you
were taken by the ruler's men," he prompted, and Kincar continued.
There
was Vorken's providential appearance on the field where he had been condemned
to death, and then the interference of the Dark Lord Dillan—
The
man who held him tensed at his description. "Not only
Rud—but 2—here too?"
"Did we not know that it would be so for
some of us?" queried the Lady Asgar. "And in the end that may prove
the one weapon we have. But where did they then take you, Kincar?"
His memories of the ship-towers were so
deeply etched that his account of the action there was more vivid. Both of the
Star-born were moved by his recounting of his trial by fear.
"A conditioner!" Lord Dillan spat the word. "To have perverted that!"
"But that is a small perversion among so
many," Asgar pointed out, "for their whole life here is a perversion,
as well we know. Because that particular machine is a tool known to you,
Dillan, it may strike more deeply home, but it is in my mind that they have made
use of all their knowledge— our knowledge—to weld slave chains. And mark
this—the conditioner was defeated by something native to this Gorthl Kincar
believes that he was sent on this path, and it seems to me that he is right,
very right! But you escaped from these earth-bound ships, and how was that
done?" she demanded of the young man.
In
retelling, his flight from the weird fortress sounded matter-of-fact and
without difficulty, though Kincar strongly doubted that he could face it again.
Action was far easier to take in sudden improvisation than when one knew what
lay in wait ahead.
When he had done, the drink they had given
him began its work. The aches of his bruised body faded into a lethargy, and he
slipped into a deep sleep.
He
woke again suddenly, without any of the normal lazy translation from drowsiness
to full command. And when he opened his eyes, it was to see the youth from the
seashore hut seated not far away, his chin cupped in both hands, studying
Kincar as if the other held some answer to a disturbing puzzle. The very force
of that gaze, thought Kincar, was enough to draw one out of sleep. And he
asked, "What do you want?"
The other smiled oddly. "To
see you, Kincar s'Rud." "Which you are doing
without hindrance. But there is more than just looking upon me that you
wish—"
The
boy shrugged. "Perhaps. Though your
very existence is a marvel in this world. Kincar s'Rud," he repeated the
name gravely, not as if he were addressing its owner, but more as one might
utter some incantation. "Kincar s'Rud— Kathal s'Rud-"
Kincar
sat up on the pad couch. He was stiff and sore, but he was alert and no longer
weary to his very bones.
"Kincar s'Rud I know
well," he observed. "But who is Kathal s'Rud?"
The other laughed. "Look at himl They
have told me many things, these strange lords here, and few of them are
believable, save to one who will swallow a song-smith's tales open-brained. But
almost I can trust in every word when I look upon you. It seems, though we can
both claim a Lord Kud for a sire, it is not the same Lord Rud. And that smacks
of truth, for you and I are not alike."
"Lord Rud's son—" For a second
Kincar Was befuddled. Lord Dillan had spoken of
brothers—no, half brothers—who could name him kin. But they had gone with the
Star ships. Then he understood. Not his father—but the Lord Rud of this Gorth,
that man softened by good living, rotted with his absolute power, whom he had
fronted in U-Sippar. "But I thought—"
"That there were no half-bloods here? Aye!" The boy was all one bitter protest. "They
have even spread it about that such births are impossible, like the offspring
of a mord and a suard. But it is true, though mostly we are slain at birth— if
our fathers know of it. To live always under a death sentence, enforced not
only by the Dark Ones, but by your other kin as well—it is not easy."
"Lord Rud found out about you; that was
why you were running?"
"Aye. Murren, who was guardsman to my mother's
kin, saved me twice. But he was handled as you saw for his trouble. Better he
himself had knocked me on the head! I am a nothing thing, being neither truly
of one blood or the other."
As he had studied Kincar, so now the other
reversed the process. This was no duplicate other
self, no physical twin, as were the two Dillans. So some other laws of chance
and change had intervened between them. Kathal, he judged, was the younger by
several birth seasons, and he had the fine-drawn, worn face, the tense,
never-relaxed body of one who, as he had just pointed out, lived ever with
danger. No happy memories of a Wurd or of the satisfying life of Styr were
behind him. Would he have
been as Kathal had he been born into this Gorth?
"You are safe
now." Kincar tried to reassure him.
Kathal
simply stared at him as one looks at a child who does not understand how
foolishly he speaks.
"Am
I? There is no safety ever for one who is s'Rud—no matter how it may be in the
world from which you came."
"The Lords will change
that—"
Again
that bitter laugh. "Aye, your Lords amaze me. I am told that all here are
full or half-blood—save for the refugees and freed slaves you have drawn in.
But what weapons have your lords? How can they stand up against the might of
all Gorth? For all Gorth will be marshalled against this hold when the truth is
known. Best build another of these 'gates' of which they speak and charge
through it before you feel Rud's fingers on your throat!"
And
Kincar, remembering the ship-towers, the flier, could agree that other weapons
and wonders must rest in the hands of the Dark Ones. His confidence was shaken
for a moment.
"—and
a deft, server you shall find me!" That half sentence heralded Lord
Dillan, who pushed through the door curtain, walking with exaggerated care
because he held in both of his hands an eating bowl, lacy with steam and giving
off an aroma that immediately impressed upon Kincar how long it had been since
he had eaten. Lord Bardon was close behind him, his fingers striving to keep in
one bundle several drinking homs of different sizes.
Following on his heels came the remainder of the Star
Lords, dwarfing the younger half-Gorthians with their bulk.
Kathal
slipped from his seat and backed against the wall. He gave the appearance of a
man about to make a lost stand against impossible odds. It was Lord Jon who put
down the leather bottle he was carrying and smiled.
"Both in one netting. Feed yours, Dillan, and I'll settle this one and see that his tongue is
properly moistened for speech." His clasp on Kathal's shoulder was the
light one he would have used on his own son, and though the half-
Gorthian
fugitive had not lost his suspicion, he did not try to
elude that grip.
Kincar
spooned up the solid portion of the stew and drank the rich gravy. He had had
no such meal since he had ridden out of Styr. Joumeycake and dried meat were
good enough for travelers, but they held no flavor.
"This,"
announced Lord Bardon, but his tone was light enough to war with the sense of
his words, "is a council of war. We have come to learn all you can tell
us, sons of Rud."
Perhaps
Kathal flinched at a title that in this world meant shame and horror. But
Kincar found it natural and was pleased at that link with the soft-spoken but
sword-wary men about him. A measure of that confidence that had been frayed by
Kathal's suspicions was restored. He had seen the Dark Ones, and to his mind
none of them were matches for the Star men that he knew.
"We
shall begin"—Lord Dillan took charge of the assembly as he was wont to
do—"with a naming of names. Tell us, Kathal, who are the Dark Ones—give us
a full roll call of their number."
INVASION
"It
can never be
set one piece within the other properly again!"
Kincar
sat back on his heels. There was a broad smear of suard fat across his cheek
where his hand had brushed unnoticed, and before him lay
a puzzle of bits of metal salvaged from the broken flier. Brought from the
point where it had cracked up, the machine was in the process of being
reassembled by the Star Lords and half-bloods alike, neither certain of the
ultimate results.
Lord
Dillan sighed. "Almost it would seem so," he conceded. "I am a
technician of sorts, but as a mechanic it appears I have a great many
limitations. If it could only remember more!" He
ran his greasy hands through his close-cropped
dark-red hair. "Let this be a lesson to you, boy. Take notice of what you
see in your youth—it may be required of you to duplicate it later. I have flown
one of these—but to rebuild it is another matter."
Lord
Jon, who had been lying belly-down on the courtyard
pavement to inspect parts of the frame they had managed so far to fit together,
smiled.
"All theory and no practice, Dillan? What we need is a tape record to guide
us—"
"Might as well wish for a new flier
complete, Lord." Vulth got to his feet and stretched to relieve cramped muscles.
"Give me a good sword tail, and I'll open that box for you without this
need for patching broken wire and shafts together."
Lord Bardon who had earlier withdrawn from
their efforts to fit the unfitable together, protesting that he had never
possessed any talent for machine assembly, laughed.
"And where do we recruit a tail for
spear-festing, Vulth? Lay a summoning on the mountain trees to turn them into
warriors for your ordering? From all accounts any assault straight into the
face of danger will not work this time. I wonder—"
He was studying the parts laid out on the stones. "That gear to the left of your foot, Dillan—it seems close in size to the rod Jon just bolted in. Only a suggestion, of Course."
Lord Dillan picked up the piece and held it
to the rod. Then he observed solemnly, "Any more suggestions, Bard? It is plain that you are the mechanic here."
Kincar
was excited. "Look, Lord. Ifv that fits there,
then does not this and this go so?" He slipped the parts into the pattern
he envisioned. He might not know Star magic, but these went together with a Tightness his eyes approved.
Dillan
threw up his hands in a gesture of mock defeat. "It would seem that the
totally unschooled are better at this employment. Perhaps a little knowledge is
a deterrent rather than a help. Go ahead, children, and see what you can do
without my hindrance."
In
the end, with all of them assisting, they had the flier rebuilt.
"The question
remains," Lord Bardon said, "will it now fly?"
"There
is only one way to test that." Before any of them could protest, Lord
Dillan was in the seat behind the controls. However, even as his hand moved
toward the row of buttons, Kincar was beside him, knowing that he could not
let the other make that trial alone.
Perhaps
Dillan would have ordered him out, but it was too late for that, as
inadvertently the Star Lord had pushed the right button and they were
rising—not with the terrifying speed Kincar had known in his last flier trip,
but slowly, with small complaints and buzzes from the engine.
"At
least," Lord Dillan remarked, "she did not blow up at once. But I
would not care to race her—"
They
were above the hold towers now. And Vorken, seeing them rise past her chosen
roost, took to the air in company, flying in circles about the machine and
uttering cries of astonishment and dismay. Men walking, men riding lamgs she
understood and had been accustomed to from fledgling-hood. But men in her own element were different and worrying.
Kincar, with only too vivid memories of the
mountain sa-mord, tried to wave her away. Vorken could not smash the flier with
her weight as had the giant of her species. But if she chose to fly into Lord
Dillan's face, she might well bring them to grief. Her circles grew closer, as
she swung in behind the windbreak, her curiosity getting the better of her
caution. Then she made a landing on the back of the seats and squatted, her
long neck outstretched between the two who sat there, interested in what they
would do next.
"Do you approve?"
Lord Dillan asked her.
She
squawked in an absent-minded fashion, as if to brush aside foolish questions.
And seeing that she was minded to be quiet, Kincar did not try to dislodge her.
Dillan
began to try out the repaired craft. It did not respond too quickly to the
controls governing change of altitude or direction. But it did handle, and he
thought it could be safely used for the purpose they planned. After flying down
the wide valley guarded by the hold and making a circle about the mountain
walls, he brought the machine back for a bumpy but safe landing in the
courtyard.
"She
is no AA job, but she will take us there—" was his verdict given to the
hold party and the natives from four liberated slave gangs. The hold archers
now kept a regular watch on the mountain road and freed all unfortunates
dragged through that territory.
Kapal had assumed command of these men, and
out of those who still possessed some stamina and spirit, he was hammering a
fighting tail of which he often despaired but bullied and drilled all the more
grimly because they fell so far below his hopes. He had taken readily,
greedily, to the use of the bows and was employing both the men and the few
women from the ex-slave gangs to manufacture more. Now he insisted that it was time
for him to lead his band in some foray on their own.
"It is this way, Lord," he had
sought out Bardon the night before to urge. "They have been slaves too
long. They think like slaves, believing that no man can stand up to the Dark
Ones. But let us once make even a party of slave-driving Hands surrender, or
rather let us blood our arrows well on such eaters of dirt, and they will take
new heart. They must have a victory before they can think themselves once more
men!"
"If we had time, then I would say aye to
that, KapaL for your reasoning is that of a leader who knows well the ways of
fighting men. But time we do not have. Let the Dark Ones discover us, and they
have that which will blot us out before finger can meet upon finger in a
closing fist. Nay, our move must be fast, sure, and merciless. And it should
come very soon!"
Kathal had given them the key to what might
be their single advantage. Occasionally the Dark Ones assembled at the
ship-tower fortress. In spite of their covert internecine warfare, their
jealousies and private feuds, they still kept to some fellowship and a certain
amount of exchange of supplies, news and man power.
Though
they laughed at native traditions, stamping out any whenever they found them,
they themselves were not wholly free of the desire for symbolic celebrations.
And one such, perhaps the most rigidly kept, was that marking their first
landing on Gorth. For this anniversary they assembled from all over the planet,
making a two-day festival of the gathering. It seldom ended without some
bloodshed, though dueling was frowned upon. The natives, excluded from the
meeting, forbidden even to approach within a day's journey of the ship-towers,
knew that often a Lord did not return from the in-gathering and that his domain
was appropriated by another.
"It
has been our hope that they would continue to deal with each other so,"
Kathal had said, "using their might against their own kind. But always it
works to our ill, for those Dark Ones who treated us
with some measure of forbearing were always the ones to return not, and the
more ruthless took their lands. Of late years there have been fewer
disappearances—"
"How
many Lords are there left?" Lord Frans had wanted to know.
Kathal
spread his fingers as if to use them in telling off numbers. "Who
can truthfully say, Lord? There are fifty domains, each with an
overlord. Of these perhaps a third have sons, younger
brothers, kinsmen. Of their females we know little. They live secretly under
heavy guard. So secret do they keep them that there are now rumors they are
very, very few. So few that the Lords—" He had paused, a dark flush
staining his too-thin face.
"So
few," Lord Dillan had taken that up, "that now such as your Lord Rud
has a forbidden household, and perhaps others do likewise. Yet they will not
allow their half-blood children to live."
Kathal
shook his head. "If the Lords break that law, Lord, then they are held up
to great shame among their kindred. To them we are as beasts, things of no
account. Mayhap here and there a half-blood, who was secretly born, lives for a
space of years. But mostly they are slain young. Only because my mother had a
sister who kept her close did I come to man's age."
"Say perhaps one hundred?" Lord
Bardon had kept on reckoning the opposition.
"Half again
more," Kathal replied.
"And they will all be at the ship-towers
twelve days from now?"
"Aye, Lord, that is the time of the
in-gathering."
The
hold began their own preparations, working all day and far into the night, for
if at no other time all the Dark Ones would be together, then they must strike
here and now. They dared not wait another whole year, and they could never hope
to campaign against fortresses beaded clear across Gorth.
As soon as they were certain the flier could
take to the air again, the first party, mounted on the pick of the lamgs moved
out, armed and prepared for a long ride across the mountain trails that the
inner men had shown them.
Kapal
and his ragged crew, or the best of them, padded through the secret ways of the
mountain with Ospik for a guide, heading for the agreed-upon point overlooking
the waste plain on which the ship-towers stood.
Kincar
had expected to ride with the other half-bloods in the mounted party. But, as
the only one who had ever been at the ships, he was delegated to join the Star
Lords.
The
flier would carry four at a time—reluctantly—but it would rise and, at a speed greater than a lamg's extended gallop, get them
over the ranges to the last tall peak from which they could look down upon
their goal. All wore the silver clothing insulated against the chill, giving
them more freedom of movement than the scale coats and leather garments the
Gorthians and half-Gorthians were used to. And Kincar, clad in a suit hastily
cut to his size, moved among them looking like a boy among his elders.
On the heights they took cover, but four
pairs of far-seeing glasses passed from hand to hand, Kincar having them in his
turn. And so they witnessed the arrival of swarms of fliers at the towers.
"That makes one hundred and ten,"
Lord Bardon reported. "But each carries several passengers."
Lord Dillan had the glasses
at the moment.
"I wonder, Bard—?"
"Wonder what?"
"Whether those ships
were ever deactivated?"
"They
must have beenl Surely they wouldn't have built them
into those walls otherwise—"
"Ours
were not. In fact, Rotherberg said that he didn't believe they could be."
"Do
you mean," Kincar demanded, "that they could take off in those ships
right now, as the Star Lords did in our Gorth?"
"It would solve a lot of our problems if
they would do just that, but I hardly think they will oblige us by trying
it." Lord Dillan did not answer that. He continued to hold the
glasses to his eyes as if memorizing every detail of
the ships. " "No arrivals for
a long time now," remarked Lord Bardon. "Do
you suppose they are all here?"
"It
would appear so. We'll wait until morning to be sure." Lord Dillan was
still on watch. "We'll camp and leave a scout to keep an eye on them."
The
camp was a temporary affair, set up in a gulch, with a heat box to provide them
with the equivalent of a fire and journey rations to eat. Kincar took his turn
at scout duty close to dawn. There had been no more arrivals at the ship-towers
in the darkness, and the party from the hold concluded that all the Dark Ones
must be in the fortress.
"We
could use double our numbers," Lord Bardon remarked as they broke their
fast.
"I could wish more for Rotherberg of
Lacee." "Hmm." Lord Bardon gazed hard at
Lord Dillan. "Still thinking of that, are you? But none of us are
engineers—we would not stand here if we were. Those who had that in their blood
chose to go with the ships."
"Nevertheless,
I believe we should keep the idea in mind!" "Oh,
that we shall do." Lord Bardon laughed. "Should I chance upon
the proper controls, I shall set them for a takeoff. Meanwhile, the escape
hatches seem the best entrances— we should be able to reach them from the tops
of those walls. Shall we head for the nearest?"
"We
shall. And before it grows too light." Again the
flier was pressed into ferry service, transporting their small band across the
waste to the base of one of the corridor walls close to the foot of the nearest
ship-tower. Lord Sim swung overhead a rope with a hook attached-twin to the
weapon Murren had used. The prongs caught on the top of the wall and held
against his heaviest tugs, and by the rope they climbed up.
Lord
Tomm planted himself with his back against the smooth side of the ancient ship,
bracing his feet a little apart to take weight, and the lighter Lord Jon stood
on his shoulders, facing inward so that he could touch an oval outline that
showed faintly on the ship. With a tool from his belt he traced that outline
carefully, and then pushed. It took two such tracings to cut through the
sealing, but at last the door came free and they were in the ship.
Kincar
was the third inside, sniffing again that odd musty odor of the silent tower.
But Lord Frans, following him, gave an exclamation of surprise as he stood in
the corridor.
"This is the Morris]"
"Their
Morris," corrected
Lord Dillan. "You can guide us, Frans. This is twin to your father's
ship—"
"The
control chamber—" Lord Frans frowned at the wall. "It has been so
many years. Aye, we'll want that firstl"
"Why?"
Lord Jon wanted to know. He was looking about him with some of Kincar's
curiosity. Himself two generations younger than the
original space travelers, the ships were almost as strange to him as they were
to the half-Gorthian.
"If she is still activated, we will be
able to use the scanner."
While
that meant nothing to Kincar, it apparently did to the others.
Lord Frans guided them, not to a center well
ladder-stair such as Kincar and his captors had used, but to a narrower and
more private way, hardly large enough for the Star men to negotiate. The steps
were merely loops of metal on which to rest toes and fingers. They went up and
up until Lord Frans disappeared through a well opening and Lord Bardon after
him. Then Kincar climbed into one of the most bewildering rooms he had ever
seen.
There were four padded, cushioned objects,
which were a cross between a seat and a bunk. Each was swung on a complicated
base of springs and yielding supports before banks of levers and buttons to
which the controls of the small flier were the playthings of a child. Above
each of these boards was a wide oblong of opaque stuff, mirrors that reflected
nothing in the room. Kincar remained where he was, a little overawed by this array of Star magic, with a feeling that to
press the wrong button here might send them all ofl into space.
Lord Dillan walked across the chamber. "Astrogator." He dropped his hand on the back of
one of those odd seats, and it trembled under the slight pressure.
"Pilot," he indicated another. "Astro-Pilot."
That was the third. "Corn-Tech." The fourth
and last was the seat Lord Dillan chose to sit in.
As
soon as his weight settled in the chair-bed, the bank of buttons slid
noiselessly forward so it was well within his reach. He was in no hurry to put
it to use, dehberating over his choice before he pressed a button. Above the
control bank that square mirror flashed rippling bars of yellow light, and Lord
Jon broke out eagerly, "She is still alive?"
"At
least the corns are in." Again the words meant nothing to Kincar. But he
would have paid little attention to any speech at the moment. He was too
intrigued by what was happening on the screen. It was as if Lord Dillan had opened
a window. Spread out there was a wide picture
of the wastelands and the mountain range as they existed outside the ship.
He
had only an instant to make identification before that picture changed, and
they were looking at a room crowded with a mass of metal parts and machines he
could not have set name to—
"Engine room,"
breathed Lord Jon softly, wonderingly.
Another movement of Lord Dillan's finger, and
they had a new view—a place of tanks, empty, dusty, long
disused.
"Hydro—"
So
they inspected the vitals of the ship, cabin to cabin. But in all their viewing
nothing was living, nor was there any indication that anyone had been there for
a very long time. At last Lord Dillan leaned back, sending his support
jiggling.
"She is not the
one—"
Lord
Bardon was studying the banks of controls fronting the pilot's seat. "They
would be more likely to hole up in the Gangee. After
all she was the flag ship. Hm—" He did not sit down in the pilot's place
but leaned across to move a lever.
There was a brilliant flash of red in a small bulb there, and from somewhere
about them a voice rasped in the speech of the Star ways.
"She's still
hotl" Lord Jon exploded.
Lord Dillan smiled,
a chill smile that Kincar knew he would not care to have turned in his
direction.
"And
she will be hotter." He arose and crossed to join Lord Bardon. "Five
hours ought to give us time enough. Let us see now—" He counted levers and
studs, peered closely at dials, and then his hands flew, weaving a pattern over
the board. "Let us be on the way now. We'll try the Gangee next."
"She'll lift?"
demanded Lord Tomm.
"She'll
certainly try. In any event shell wreck this part of
the building."
They
made their way back to the wall top, out into the early morning sunshine. Lord
Dillan pivoted, examining each of the other towers.
"Might as well split up now. Jon, you and Rodric, Sim and Tomm, get in
those other end ships. If they are empty, set them to blow—five hours from now
or thereabouts. Bring with you any of—he rattled off a string of queer words
incomprehensible to Kincar—"you come across in their store rooms. We'll
try for the Gangee."
They nodded and separated, heading for
different ships.
ONCE MORE A GATE-
There was a different
"feel" to the Gangee.
They made their entrance
through the old escape port of the ship without opposition or discovery. But,
as they clustered together at the foot of the ladder to the control cabin, even
Kincar was conscious of a faint heat radiating from the walls about them, a
lack of dead air long sealed in.
"This is the one." Lord Bardon was
satisfied. "Controls again?" Lord Frans wanted to know. "Just so!" The words were bitten off as if Lord
Dillan was reluctant to make that climb. Did he think they might find others
occupying that chamber?
But he sped up the ladder, Lord Bardon at his heels, and the rest strung
out behind.
They climbed by closed doors on every level. And twice Kincar, brushing against
the inner fabric with his shoulder, felt a vibration through the ship, like a
beat of motive power.
The
control cabin, when they reached it, was, at first inspection, very little
different from that of the Morris—the
same four chairs, the same banks of controls, the same vision plates above
them. Once more Lord Dillan seated himself in the Com-Tech's place and pressed
a stud. They glimpsed the outside world, and then the picture changed. The
engine room—but this one was not silent, dust-shrouded. Rods moved on dials set
in casing. The Hydro garden was stretches of green stuff growing, and the Star
Lords were surprised.
"Do you think they are planning a
take-off?" asked Lord Jon.
"More likely they keep the Gangee in blast condition as a
symbol,"
Lord Dillan replied. "Which may be their salvation now—"
Once more the picture
flickered and cleared. Kincar started. It was so vivid, so clear,
that he had the sensation of looking through an open window into a crowded
room, for it was crowded.
An exclamation in his own tongue burst from
Lord Frans, echoed by one from Lord Jon. It was an assemblage of the Dark Ones
they spied upon.
"You—Great Spirit of
Spacel Dillan, there you are!" Lord Bardon's voice shook as he identified
one of those men. "And Rud—that is truly Rud!
Lacee—Mac—Bart—but Bart's dead! He died of the spinning fever years ago.
And—and—" His face was a gray-white now beneath its weathered brown, his
eyes wide, stricken. "Alis—Dillan, it's Alis!" He flung away toward
the other door of the chamber.
Lord Dillan barked an order, sharp enough to
send Kincar moving. The other Star Lords were frozen, hypnotized by what they
saw. Only to Kincar to whom it was just a company
of aliens did that command have meaning.
"Stop him! Don't let him leave this cabin!" >
Lord Bardon was a third
again his size, and Kincar did not know how he could
obey, but there was no mistaking the frantic urgency of the order. He hurled
himself across the door, clasping the stay rods on either wide, imposing his
body between Lord Bardon and the portal. Lord Dillan was hurrying to them, but
he did not reach there before his fellow had crashed into Kincar, slamming the
half-Gorthian back painfully against the ship metal, before he began tearing
at him, trying to drag him away.
A hand caught at Lord Bardon, brought him
partly around, and then a palm struck first one cheek and then the other in a
head-rocking duo of slaps.
"Bardon!"
Lord Bardon staggered, that strained stare in
his eyes beginning to break. Lord Dillan spoke swiftly in their own language
until Lord Bardon gave a broken little cry and covered his face with
both hands. Then Lord Dillan turned to the others.
"They
are not there, understand?" He spoke with a slow
and heavy emphasis, designed to drive every word not only into their ears, but
also into their minds. "Those down there are not the ones we know—knew. I
am not that Dillan, nor is he me."
Lord
Jon caught a quivering underlip between his teeth. He was still watching the
screen longingly, and Lord Dillan spoke directly to him.
"That
is not your father you see there, Jon. Keep that in mindl This
I know." He swung upon them all. "We must have no speech with these,
for our sakes—perhaps for theirs. There is only one thing to do. They have
poisoned this Gorth, as we to a lesser extent poisoned ours. And now they must
go forth from it—"
He
had laid his hand on the back of the pilot's seat when Bardon spoke hoarsely.
"You can't blast them
off without any warning!"
"We
will not. But they shall only have enough to ensure their lives during
take-off. There must be payment for what has been done here—the risk they shall
run in entering exile will be toward the settlement of that account."
The
Star Lords were occupied with their problem, but Kincar had been watching the
screen again. Now he ventured to interrupt.
"Lord, are they able
to see us as we do them?"
Dillan
whirled, his head up, to front the vision plate. There could be no mistake; the
party they spied upon were quiet, all heads turned to face the screen. And the
blank astonishment of most of their expressions was altering to concern. That
other Lord Dillan moved, advancing toward them, until
his head alone covered three-quarters of the plate.
It
was something out of a troubled dream to see one Dillan stare at the other, if
only from a screen. A huge hand moved across the corner of the plate and was
gone again. Then a voice boomed out above them, speaking the Star tongue.
Dillan, their
Dillan, snapped a small
switch beneath the plate and made answer. Then his hand swept down breaking
contact, both eye and voice.
"We
have little time," he said unhurriedly. "Dog that door so that they
may not enter until they burn through—"
It was Lord Frans and Lord Jon who obeyed.
Lord Bardon remained by the pilot's chair—until Dillan turned on him.
"We shall give them more than just a
slim chance, Bard.
Once in space they can make a fresh start. We are not
dooming them—" ;
"I
know—I know! But will
the ship lift? Or will
it—" His voice faded to a half whisper.
"Now,"
Dillan told them all, "get out—away from here— as
fast as you can move!"
Kincar
was on the ladder. The fear of being trapped and torn skyward was very real.
Lord Jon and Lord Frans came after him. All three were in the outer air before
Lord Bardon joined them. And he lingered in the hatch, one hand on the rope,
waiting.
They
were hailed by the other parties. Lord Jon waved them off with wild arm
signals. Then Lord Bardon dropped from the hatch and a last silver figure
appeared in the oval opening. He brought that door to behind him and slid down
the rope.
"Run,
you fools!" he shouted, and Kincar found himself
pounding away from the Gangee
along the top of the wall.
He had no idea how a space ship, especially one built up by masonry would take
off, but he could guess that the results would be earthshaking at ground level.
A large arm clamped a viselike grip about his
waist, and Lord Dillan gasped, "Jump now, son!"
He
was borne along by the other from the top of the wall. They hit hard and
rolled. Then he was punched into a ball half under the other's bulk as the
ground under them rocked and broke. There was the clamor of mistreated metal,
the rumble of a world coming to an end, and a flash so brilliant that it
blinded him—to be followed by a clap of noise and a silence so complete that it
was as if all sound had been reft away.
Broken
lumps of stone rained noiselessly from the sky. There was no sound at all.
Kincar struggled free^of a hold that was now only a limp weight. He sat up
shakily, his head ringing, red and orange jags of light darting back and forth
before his eyes when he tried to focus on his surroundings. His groping hands
were on warm flesh, and then on stickiness that clung to his fingers. He rubbed
impatiently at his eyes, trying to clear them. But, above all else, the dead
silence was frightening.
He
could see now, if only dimly. Red crawled sluggishly over a silver back beside
his knee. Dazed, he rubbed his eyes again. A ringing began in his ears, worse
when he moved, making it very hard to think-But he
could move. Kincar bent over the quiet body beside him. There was a gash on
the shoulder, a tear in both the silver clothing and the flesh beneath it.
Already the bleeding was growing less. Cautiously he tried to move the other,
exposing Lord Dillan's face slack and pale. The Star Lord was still breathing.
Kincar steadied the heavy head on his arm and ripped open the sealing of the
tunic. Under his fingers there was a steady heart beat, though it seemed too
slow. The flier—if he could find the flier and the supplies on it—
Kincar settled Dillan's head back on the
ground and stumbled to his feet. He had an odd sensation that if he moved too
suddenly he might fly apart.
Before he could turn away, another silver
figure hunched up from the ground. He could see Lord Jon's mouth open and shut
in a grimed face, but he could not hear a word the other said. Then others ran
toward them. Miraculously they had all survived the blast-off of the Gangee, though for long, anxious moments they were
afraid that Bardon had been lost. He was discovered at last, stunned, but still
alive, on the other side of a cracked and riven wall.
Kincar was deafened, unable to understand the
others as they gathered at the flier. Dillan, revived, bandaged, and propped up
against a heap of rubble, was giving orders. Both Jon and Bardon were unable to
walk without support, and the rest were busy exploring the remaining ships and
coming back to report to Dillan. Twice they brought boxes to be piled at the
improvised camp site.
Lord
Frans used the flier to ferry their spoil and the injured to a point well out
in the waste, several miles from the ship-towers. Where the Gangee had formed the core of the queer structure, there was now a vast crater,
avoided by the Star men, smoking in the morning air. And the walls that had
tied it to its sister ships were riven, reduced to gravel-rubble in places.
Studying the remains, Kincar marveled that any one of them had survived. He
might have been even more deeply impressed by their good fortune had he possessed
the information shared by the men around him.
"—took off to the
mountains—"
He had been watching soundlessly moving hps
so long, with a growing frustration, that at first he did not realize he had
caught those words, faint as a whisper, through the din in his head. Lord Frans
was making a report of some importance, judging by the demeanor of those about
him.
Men scattered to the ships at a trot, and the
flier returned. Lord Dillan and Kincar were motioned aboard her, to be
transported to the mid-point camp. Then the others came in groups until they
were all well away from the ship-towers. They must have triggered the other
ships, all of them. Those slim silver towers would follow the Gangee out into space, untenanted and derelict.
Again
his ears cleared, and he caught a sharp hail. A string of mounted men were
riding out in the waste, the party from the hold. They rode at a full gallop,
as men might go into battle, and Vulth spurred well ahead, a
Vulth shouting news as he came. He threw himself from his mount and ran
up, to skid to a stop before Lord Dillan, his aspect wild.
"That demon—the one with your form,
Lord—he has turned the freed slaves against us!"
Kincar noted an empty
saddle among the oncoming party.
Where was Jonathal? Two of the other men were
wounded. "They will circle back to the hold—"
Lord Dillan cut through that crisply.
"Aye, that is his wisest move. So we must get there speedily. Frans, you
take the controls—Sim—"
"Not you, Dillan!" That was Lord Bardon's protest.
"Most certainly mel Who
else can face him so successfully and reveal him to be what he is?
And"—his eyes went to Kincar—"and you, Kincar. This may be the time,
guardian, for you to use that powers"
Dillan's energy got them on the flier after a
flood of orders had sent the mounted party around to come at the hold from the
plains side with the remainder of the Star Lords in their company, leaving the
wounded, Lord Bardon and Lord Jon to stay at the waste camp and check on the
blast-off of the rest of the ships.
The flier lifted over the ridge, heading
straight for the hold. Lord Frans pushed the limping motor to its utmost, and
there was no talk among the men in her. A familiar peak cut the sky before
them—they were almost to the valley.
"He'll use your face as his
passport," Lord Sim commented.
"Asgar will know the truth."
Aye, the Lady Asgar would be able to tell
true from false, but could she distinguish that in time? And how had the false
Lord Dillan managed to get out of the Gangee before
she blasted into space? Kincar speculated concerning that, but, having seen the
preoccupation of his companions, thought it better not to ask for any
explanations.
From the air the hold appeared to be as it
always had been—until one marked a body lying before the door of the main hall
in the courtyard. Save for that grim sight there was no other sign of life—or
death.
Frans
brought the flier down in the courtyard. Now the ringing in Kincar's ears could
not blot out the clamor issuing from the hall. He was on his feet, his sword in
hand, but he had not moved faster than Lord Dillan. And running side by Side they entered the core of the hold.
A handful of Gorthians, the women among them,
were backed against the far wall—but they were aimed and waiting. Towering
among them stood the Lady Asgar. And she faced a silver figure who was the duplicate of the man beside Kincar. Fan-wise
behind the false lord was a rabble of ex-slaves. Kapal,
writhing feebly as if he would still be on his feet to match blades, lay with
the Lady Asgar's people. And beside her, half-crouched to spring at the
false Dillan's throat, was Kathal s'Rud.
The hold people were at bay, held so by the
weapon the false lord fingered—the blaster with which he had once threatened
Kincar. One of the slaves in his tail caught sight of the new party. His mouth
opened on a scream of undisguised terror, and he flung himself to the floor,
beating his fists against the stone pavement and continuing the yammering
screech, which-went on and on. His fellows cowered away, first from him, and
then from their erstwhile leader as they saw the other Lord Dillan.
Even one with an iron will could not keep his
attention from wandering at that interruption. The false lord glanced once to
what lay behind him, giving those he held in check their chance. The Lady Asgar
was at him in a fury, striving to wrest from him the blaster, while Kathal and
Lord Jon's eldest son leaped to her support.
The rest of the party from the flier rushed
in. Dillan, fresh stains of red seeping out on his bandaged shoulder, faced
himself—but the likeness between them was no longer mirror-exact, for the
Dillan of this Gorth snarled, his face awry in a grimace of rage. Asgar had
torn the weapon from him. Now his bare hands reached for his rival's throat.
Kincar, as he had done to save Lord Bardon
from the needle knife, clove through the distance between them, his left arm
striking hard against the false lord's thighs, his sword tripping the other up.
And they smashed down on the pavement as others of the half-blood piled upon
them.
When the false lord was
safely pinned by Kathal and two of the others, Kincar sat up.
"Who are you?"-' demanded the
prisoner of his standing double.
"I am the man you would have been had
history in Gorth taken another path—"
The false Lord Dillan lay rigid; his mouth
worked as if it were a struggle for him to force out the words. "But who— where—?"
"We
found a path between parallel worlds—" Dillan was alert to the Gorthians
more than to his captive. Those of the ex-slaves who had followed the false
lord were shrinking back. One or two whimpered. And the one who had howled and
beat upon the floor was drooling as he stared vacantly at nothing. They were
close to the breaking point.
It was the Lady Asgar who spoke to Kincar,
drawing him to his feet with both hands and the urgency of her orders.
"This is a task for you, guardian. Give
them something— a sign—they can fix upon. Or they may all lose
their wits before our eyes!"
He tore open the sealing of
his silver tunic and brought out the Tie. On his palm it emitted that soft glow
of awakened power. And he began to chant, watching the glow brighten. Those of
the half-blood took up his words. The sonorous sound filled the high vault of
the hall. The stone warmed in his hold. He held it out to the Lady Asgar, and
her larger hand cupped over it, sheltering the talisman with her alien flesh
for a space as long as the chant of a line. There was no alteration in that
glow, no harm to her.
Kincar turned to the Lord Dillan of the hold.
In turn, that man's hand, broader, darker, arched without
hesitation over the stone. Once more one of the Star blood
passed that test.
Last of all the
guardian stooped to the false lord. That Dillan, too, was not lacking in
courage. His mouth set in a
mirthless smile as the hand Kathal freed reached for the stone.
But
in spite of his courage, his determination, he could not cup the Tie. It
flared, pulsing not blue-green but a malignant yellow, as if some strange fire
sent a tongue out of it at the encroaching hand.
"Demon 1"
A bow cord sang, and a feathered shaft stood
from a broad chest. The man on the floor arched his back and coughed, tried to
fling some last word at his double. It was Kapal, clasping his bow to him, who
laughed.
"One demon the less," he spat.
"I care not if all his fellows be on the trail behind him. There is one
demon the less!"
"There
will be none to follow him." The live Dillan spoke above the dead.
"They have returned to the stars from which they came. Only this one broke
from the ship just before it blasted—taking a flier. Gorth is now free of his
breed."
From somewhere words flooded into Kincar's
mind, began to pour from his tongue in a wild rhythm. He knew he had never
learned them by rote, and together they formed a fearsome thing, a curse laid
upon men in this .world and the Forest beyond, upon their coming and going,
their living and dying. The very beat of those words upon the air invoked
strange shadows, and as he uttered them the ex-slaves crept about his feet,
drinking them in.
Then from curse the words turned to promise,
a promise such as the Three- sometimes set in the mouths of those inspired by
their wisdom.
"Lord—" It was Kapal who broke the
silence that fell when he ended. "What is your will for us?"
"Not
my will." Kincar shook his head. "Do you live like free men in an
open land—" But that fey streak still possessed him. He had one more thing
that he must do. The Tie was dead now, a lifeless stone. For him it would never
again grow warm or live. His guardianship was at an end. It must pass to
another, perhaps one better fitted to use it as it should be used. He was but a
messenger, not a true wielder of the Threefold Power.
"I show you a man of your own to lead
you—" He turned slowly to face that other who was also s'Rud.
Kathal's
hands came up slowly, as if they moved by some will outside his own. Kincar
tossed the talisman into the air. It flashed straight across the space between
them into those waiting hands. And as the stone touched flesh once more, it
glowedl He had been right—the Tie had chosen to go from him. He could not, if
he wished, take it again.
A faint promise of the coming warm season
mellowed the stone at his back. Kincar breathed the fresh air from the courtyard.
Vorken squatted on his shoulder, chirruping now and again.
"Stay with us,
Lords—we need you—"
They
had heard that plea repeated so many times during the past months. And, as
ever, the same patient answer came.
"Not
so. Us you need least of all. This is your world, Kathal, Kapal; shape your own
roads through it. We did not sweep away one set of alien rulers to plant
another. Take your fortune in your two hands and be glad it is truly
yours!"
"But—where do you go,
Lords? To a better world?"
Out in the valley was the shimmer of the now
complete gate, erected from materials looted from the vanished ships. Did they
seek a better world through that portal when on the morrow they went into a
second self-imposed exile? Kincar reached for his bow. Would they ever find a
Gorth to fit their dreams? Or did that greatly matter? Sometimes he thought
that an endless quest had been set them for some purpose, and that the seeking,
not the finding, was their full reward. And it was good.
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bought by sending 40#, plus 5<f. for
handling costs, for each book to ACE BOOKS, INC. (Dept. M M), 1120 Avenue of the Americas, New York 36,
N. Y.
best book yet. It's a complex tale of adventures on a remote planet in
several alternate universes, so that the protagonists find themselves at times
battling with their own evil selves-as-they-might-have-been - a concept that
sounds confusing, but is crystal clear as Andre Norton sets it forth. Her
inimitably vigorous storytelling and sense of high emprise are heightened here
by a delicate touch of mysticism — and by the creation in the hero's pet mord, of the
most fascinating alien animal since Heinlein's Star Lummox."
-NEW YORK HERALD-TRIBUNE