THE SECRET OF COSMIC POWER
Far
down in the violet darkness something moved. Something alive.
Raft could not see clearly yet, but he heard the deep cavern come alive around
him with those moving shadows, converging upon him. He could see only their outlines, but there were shadows that looked like
wings, and great talons. Some of the creatures were dwarfed, and some were
giants, beast-snouted. Others were nearly shapeless masses that flopped and
dragged their shining bulks toward him.
No two of them were alike. The logic of
anatomy had gone wrong, somehow, and Raft felt a chill of darkness settling
around him.
They
were monsters from pure nightmare, but they were more than that. They were an
ancient race, degenerated into savagery now, which yet held the secret of a
cosmic power that could create life ... or
annihilate it completely.•..
Valley of the
FLAME
Henry Kuttner
ACE
BOOKS, INC. 1120 Avenue of the Americas New York, N.Y. 10036
valley
of the flame
Copyright
©, 1964, by Ace Books, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
Magazine version, Copyright, 1947, by Better
Publications, Inc.
Printed in U.S.A.
I
FACE
OF A GIRL
Far
off in the jungle an
animal screamed. A river-moth flapped against the screen, nearly as large as a
fruit-bat. And very far away, subsensory, almost,
Brian Raft could hear the low pulsing of drums. Not unusual, drums on the Jutahy, in the great valley of Amazonas. But these were no
signal messages.
Raft
wasn't an imaginative man. He left all that to Dan Craddock, with his Welsh
ghosts and his shadow-ppople of the lost centuries.
Still, Raft was a doctor, and when those drums throbbed in the jungle something
curious happened here in his little hospital of plastic shacks, smelling of
antiseptic. Something he couldn't ignore.
When
a sick man's blood beats in rhythm with the distant drums, slow or fast as the
far-off echoes set the pace, a doctor has reason to wonder. . . .
The
great moth beat softly against the screen. Craddock bent over a sterilizer,
steam clouding up around his white head so that he looked like a necromancer
stooping over a cauldron. The drums throbbed on. Raft could feel his own heart
answering to their rhythm.
He
glanced at Craddock again and tried not to remember what the older man had been
telling him about his wild Welsh ancestors and the things they had believed.
Sometimes he thought Craddock believed them too, or half believed, at least
when he had been drinking.
He'd
got to know Craddock pretty well in the months they had worked together, but he
realized that even yet he knew only the surface Craddock, that another man
entirely lived in abeyance behind the companionable front which the Welshman
showed him, a man with memories he never spoke of, and stories he never told.
This
experimental station, far up the Jutahy, was a
curious contrast, with its asepsis and its plastics and its glitter of new
instruments, to the jungle hemming it in. They were on assignment just now to
find a specific for atypical malaria.
In
the forty years since the end of World War II, nothing yet had been discovered
any safer than the old quinine and atabrine
treatment, and Raft was sifting the jungle lore now to make sure there might
not be some truth in the old Indio knowledge,
hidden behind masks of devil-worship and magic.
He
had hunted down virus diseases in Tibet, Indo-China, Madagascar, and he had
learned to respect much that the witch-doctors knew. Some of their treatments
were based on very sound theories.
But
he wished the drums would stop. He turned irritably from the window and
glanced once more at Craddock, who was humming a Welsh ballad under his breath.
A ballad full of wild, skirling music about ghosts and
fighting.
Craddock
had talked a lot lately—since the drums began—about ghosts and fighting. He
said he smelled danger. In the old days in Wales men could always scent trouble
in the wind, and they'd drink quarts of uisquebaugh
and go out brandishing swords, ready for anything. All Raft
could smell was the reek of disinfectant that filled the little hospital.
And all the wind brought to
him was the sound of drums.
"In
the old days," Craddock said suddenly, looking up from the sterilizer and
blinking through steam, "there'd be a whisper in the air from Tralee or
Cobh, and we knew the Irish were coming over the water to raid. Or maybe
there'd be something from the south, and we'd get ready for the men of
Cornwall. But we'd know. We'd know."
"Rot!" Raft said.
"Okay.
But I felt something like this once before." Craddock sucked in his
breath, a curious look of fright and incredulity on his wrinkled brown face.
He turned back to the steam-cloud, and Raft watched him in puzzled wonder.
There
was a mystery about Craddock. He was a biologist, and a good one, but for
thirty years or more he had hung around the Jutahy
country, never venturing farther away than Manaos,
living precariously as a sort of jungle general practitioner.
Raft had added him to the party on impulse,
since
Craddock knew the country and the natives. He hadn't ex-
pected too much of the Welshman in the laboratory,
for
something had happened to Craddock's hands—they were
badly maimed. But he was pleasantly disappointed on that
score. -(
Raft
watched the mutilated hands working with hypodermics, twisting plunger from
tube, deftly pulling the hollow needles free. Craddock had three fingers on
one hand, and the other was a claw, with oddly stained and textured skin. He
never spoke of what had happened. His injuries didn't look like the scars of
acid burns or animal teeth. Still, he was surprisingly deft, even when liquor
was heavy on his breath.
It
was heavy now, and Raft thought the man must be deliberately timing his motions
to the rhythms of the drums. Or perhaps not. Raft
himself had to pause consciously and break step with the beat. And some of the
sick men in the ward were alive, he thought, solely because the drum-beats
would not let their hearts stop pumping.
"A
week now," Craddock said, with that rather annoying habit he had of
catching another man's thought, or seeming to. "Have you noticed the
charts?"
Raft
ran a nervous forefinger along the lean line of his jaw. "That's my
job," he grunted.
Craddock
sighed.
"You
haven't lived in Brazil as long as I have, Brian. It's the things you don't
usually notice that count. Up to a week ago, this plague was killing off the
Indians fast. The vitality level's gone up a lot in the last seven days."
"Which
is crazy," Raft told him. "It's accidental—just a cycle. There's no
reason. The drums have nothing to do with it.
"Did
I mention drums?" Raft glared,
Craddock
put the hypos in the sterilizer and closed the lid. "The drums aren't
talking, though. It's not Western Union. It's just rhythm. And it means
something."
"What?"
The Welshman hesitated. His face was in
shadow, and his white hair gleamed like a fluffy halo in the overhead light.
"I think, maybe, there's a visitor in the forest. I wonder now. Have you
ever heard of Curupuri?"
Raft's
face was a mask.
VALLEY OF THE FLAME "Curupuri? What's that?"
"A name. The natives have been talking about Curupuri.
Or maybe you haven't been listening."
"I
seem to miss a lot around here," Raft said with heavy irony. "I
haven't seen a ghost for months."
"Maybe
you will." Craddock turned to stare toward the window. "Thirty years.
It's a long time. I—I've heard of Curupuri before,
though. I even—"
He stopped, and Raft breathed deeply. He'd
heard too, but he didn't want to admit it. Superstition is apt to be
psychologically dangerous in the jungle, and Raft knew that Curupuri
was a widespread belief among the Indios. He'd
encountered it ten years ago, when he was younger and more impressionable. And
yet, he thought, it's the only possible god for the Amazon Basin.
For
Curupuri was the Unknown. He was the blind, ravening,
terrible life-force that the Indios think is the
spirit of the jungle. A savage, primeval Pan, lairing in the
darkness. But nothing so concrete as Pan.
Curupuri moved along the Amazon as vast and inchoate
and yet as tangible as life itself. Here in the jungle one realizes, after a
while, that a god of life can be far more terrible than a god of death. The
Amazonas is too alive. Too enormous for the mind to comprehend, a great green
living thing sprawled across a continent, blind, senseless, ravenously alive.
Yes, Raft could understand why the Indios had personified Curupuri.
He could almost see him as they did, a monstrous shapeless creature, neither
beast nor man, stirring enormously in the breathing fertility of the jungle.
"The
devil with it," Raft said, and drew deeply on his cigarette. It was one of
his last cigarettes. He moved to Craddock's side and stared out the window,
drawing smoke
gratefully into his lungs and savoring the second-hand
taste of civilization.
That
was all they'd had for a year—second-hand civilization. It wasn't too bad.
Madagascar had been worse. But there was quite a contrast between the sleek
modern architecture of the home base, the Mallard Pathological Institute
overlooking the Hudson, and this plastic-walled collection of shacks, staffed
by a few Institute men and some native helpers.
Three
white men, Raft, Craddock, and Bill Merriday, were
here. Merriday was plodding but a good research pathologist, and the three of them had worked well
together.
Now
the work was ready to be wound up, and presently Raft knew he'd be in New York
again, rushing by air-taxi from roof night-club to club, cramming the
excitement of civilization into as short a time as possible. Then a little
later, he realized, he'd be feeling a familiar itch again, and would be heading
for Tasmania or Ceylon or—somewhere. There were always new jobs to be tackled.
The
drums were still throbbing faintly, far off in the dark. After a while Raft
left Craddock in the lighted lab and wandered outside, down to the river,
trying not to listen to the distant pulse of sound. . ..
A
full moon rode up from the Atlantic, brightening the great pleasure-city of
Rio, swinging up the Amazon to the backlands, a huge yellow disc against a
starry backdrop. But across the Jutahy was1
the jungle, black towering walls of it, creeping and swarming with a vitality
that was incredible even to a scientist. It was the fecund womb of the world.
Hot
countries mean growth, but in the Amazonas is1 growth gone wild. Its rich alluvial soil, washed down for ages along the rivers, is
literally alive; the ground beneath your feet moves and stirs with vitality.
There is something unhealthy about such abnormal rioting life, unhealthy as the
flaming Brazilian orchids that batten on rottenness and blaze in the green
gloom like goblin corpse-lights. . . .
Raft
thought of Craddock. Odd! That inexplicable mixture of incredulity and fear
that Raft thought he sensed in the Welshman was puzzling. There was something
else, too. He frowned, trying to analyze a vague shadow, and at length nodded,
satisfied. Craddock was repelled by the drums but he was also drawn, attracted
by them in some strange way. Well, Craddock had lived in this part of the
forest for a long time. He was nearly Indio in
many ways.
Something
moving out on the surface of the river, sheet-silver under the moon, roused Raft
from uncomfortable thoughts. In a moment he could see the outlines of a small
boat, and two heads silhouetted against the silvery water. The men were pulling
in toward shore and the hospital's lighted window.
"LuizI"
Raft called sharply. "Manoel!
We've got visitors."
A feeble hail came across the water, and he
saw the two outlines slump down, as if the last efforts of exhaustion had
brought them to the landing. Then came excitement—the
boys running with lights and shouts, everybody who could walk swarming to the
doors and windows to watch. Raft helped beach the boat and superintended as the
two almost unconscious men were carried up to the hospital.
One
of them, he saw, wore an aviator's helmet and clothing; he was beyond speech.
The other, a slender, bearded man, rather startlingly graceful even in this
extremity, lurched toward the door.
"Senhor,
senhor," he murmured, in a soft voice.
Craddock
came out to help. He stopped dead still on the threshold, though crowding
bodies hid the two arrivals from sight. Raft saw a look of absolute panic come
over the Welshman's face. Then Craddock turned and retreated, and there was the
nervous clinking of a bottle.
Bill Merriday's
stolid, intent features were comfortingly normal by contrast. But as Merriday, bending over the aviator, was stripping off the
man's shirt, he suddenly paused.
Til be hanged," he said. "I know this
chap, Brian. Thomas, wait a minute. I'll have it. Da
something ... da
Fonseca, that's it! I told you about that mapping expedition that flew in a
couple of months ago, when you were in the jungle. Da
Fonseca was piloting."
"Crack-up," Raft
said. "What about the other man?"
Merriday glanced over his shoulder.
"I never saw him
before."
The thermometer read
eighty-six, far below normal.
"Shock
and exhaustion," Raft surmised. "We'll run a stat C.B.C., just in
case. Look at his eyes." He pulled back a lid. The pupils were pin-points.
"I'll
take a look at the other man," Merriday said,
turning. Raft scowled down at da Fonseca, a little
uncomfortable, though he could not have said exactly why. Something seemed to
have entered the room with the two men, and it was nothing that could be felt
tangibly. But it could be sensed.
Frowning,
Raft watched Luiz milk a specimen from the patient's
finger. The overhead light fell yellow and unsteady on da
Fonseca, upon a glitter of sudden brilliance from something that hung on a
chain about his neck. Raft had thought it a religious medal, but now he saw
that it was a tiny mirror, no larger than a half-dollar. He picked it up.
The
glass was convex, lenticular, and made of a dark,
bluish material less like glass than plastic. Raft glimpsed the cloudy,
shapeless motion of shadows beneath its surface.
A
little shock went through him. The mirror did not reflect his face, though he
was staring directly into it. Instead he saw turbulent motion, though there was
no such motion in the room. He thought of storm-clouds boiling and driving
before a gale. He had the curious, inexplicable feeling of something familiar,
an impression, an inchoate mental pattern.
Thomas
da Fonseca. He caught the extraordinary impression,
for a flashing, brilliant moment, that he was looking into da
Fonseca's eyes. The—the personality of the man was there, suddenly. It was as
though the two men were briefly eri rapport.
Yet
all Raft saw was the driving, cloudy motion in the mirror.
Then
the storm-swirl rifted and was driven apart. From the tiny lens in his hand a
vibration ran up the nerves of his arm, striking into his brain. He stared
down.
Now
that the clouds had cleared away, it was not a mirror, but a portrait. A portrait? Then a living portrait, for the face within it
moved. . . .
A mirror, after all, then. But no—for that was certainly not his own face that looked back at him
out of the small oval.
It
was a girl's face, seen against a background of incredible richness and
strangeness that vanished as he looked, because she leaned forward as if into
the very mirror itself, her head blotting out the remarkable background. And it
was no painted picture. She moved, she saw—Raft. He drew his breath in sharply.
There was never such a face before. He had no
time to see her very clearly, for the whole unbelievable glimpse was gone in an
instant. But he would have known her out of a thousand faces if they ever met
again.
The
look of delicate gayety and wickedness in the small, prim curve of her mouth,
the enormous translucent eyes, colored like aquamarines, that looked, for a
moment, into his very solemnly above the sweet, malicious, smiling mouth.
There could be no other
face like it in the world.
Then
the mists rolled between them as they stared. Raft remembered later that he
shook the lens passionately in a childish attempt to call her back, shook it as
if his own hands
could part those clouds again and let him see that
brilliantly alive little face, so gay and solemn, so wicked and so sweet.
But
she was gone. It had all happened almost between one breath and the next, and
he was left standing there staring down at the lens and remembering the
tantalizing— oddness—of that face.
An oddness seen too briefly to understand except as something curiously
wrong about the girl who had looked into his eyes for one fraction of a second. Her hair had been—odd.
The
eyes themselves were almost round, but subtly slanted at the corners, and with
a blackness ringing them that was not wholly the black of thick lashes, for a
prolonged dark streak had run up from their outer corners a little way, accentuating
their slant, and giving a faint Egyptian exoticism to the round, soft, dainty
face with its rounded chin. So soft—he remembered that impression clearly.
Incredibly soft, she had looked, and fastidious.
And wrong. Racially wrong.
The
mirror was blank again, and filled with the trembling fogs. But, very briefly,
it had opened upon another world.
u
DRUMBEAT OF DEATH
Luiz was staring at Raft in surprise. "S'nhor?" Luiz said.
"What?" Raft answered. "Did you speak?"
"No." Raft let
the lens fall back on da Fonseca's bare chest.
Merriday
was at his side. "The other man won t let me look at him," he said
worriedly. "He's stubborn "
"I'll
talk to him," Raft said. He went out, trying not to think about that lens,
that lovely, impossible face. Subjective, of course, not
objective. Hallucination—or self-hypnosis, with the
light reflecting in the mirror as a focal point. But he didn't believe
that really.
The
bearded man was in Raft's office, examining a row of bottles on a shelf—fetal
specimens. He turned and bowed, a faint mockery in his
eyes. Raft was impressed; this was no ordinary backwoods wanderer. There was a courtliness about him, and a smooth-knit, muscular grace
that gave the impression of fine breeding in both manners and lineage. He had
also an air of hardly concealed excitement and a certain
hauteur in his poise which Raft did not like.
"Saludades, s'nhor," he said, his too-bright eyes dazzling in the light. Fever,
perhaps, behind that brilliant stare. His voice was deep, and he spoke with an
odd, plaintive undertone that held a distant familiarity. "I am in your
debt."
His
Portuguese was faulty, but one didn't notice that. Raft had a feeling of
gaucherie, entirely new to him.
"You can pay it right
now," he said brusquely. "We don't
want the station contaminated, and you may have
caught something up-river. Take off your shirt and let's have a look at
you."
"I am not ill, doutor"
"You
recover fast, then. You were ready to pass out when you came into the
hospital."
The black eyes flashed wickedly. Then the man
shrugged and slipped out of the ragged shirt. Raft was a little startled at the
smooth power in his sleek body, the muscles rippling under a skin like brown
satin, but rippling very smoothly, so that until he moved you hardly realized
they were there.
"I
am Paulo da Costa Pereira," said the man. He
seemed faintly amused. "I am a garimpeiro."
"A diamond-hunter, eh?" Raft slipped a thermometer between
Pereira's lips. "Didn't know they had diamonds around
here. I should think you'd be in the Rio Francisco country."
There
was no response. Raft used his stethoscope, shook his head and tried again. He
checked his findings by Pereira's pulse, but that didn't help much. The man's
heart wasn't beating, nor did he apparently have a pulse.
"What
the devil!" Raft said, staring. He took out the thermometer and licked dry
lips. Da Fonseca's temperature had been below normal
but Pereira's was so far above normal that the mercury pushed the glass above
108°, the highest the glass tube could register.
Pereira
was wiping his mouth delicately. "I am hungry, snhor" he said. "Could you give me some food?"
"I'll
give you a glucose injection," Raft said, hesitating a little. "Or—I'm
not sure. Your metabolism's haywire. At the rate you're burning up body-fuel,
you'll be ill."
"I have always been
this way. I am healthy enough."
"Not
if your heart isn't beating," Raft said grimly. "I suppose you know
that you're—you're impossible? I mean, by rights you shouldn't be alive."
Pereira smiled.
"Perhaps
you don't hear my heartbeat I assure you that it's beating."
"If
it's that faint, it can't be pumping any blood down your aorta," Raft
said. "Something's plenty wrong with you. Lie down on that couch. We'll
need ice-packs to bring your temperature down."
Pereira shrugged and
obeyed. "I am hungry."
"We'll take care of
that. I'll need some of your blood, too.*
"No."
Raft swore, his
temper and nerves flaring, "You're sick. Or don't you know it?"
"Very
well," Pereira murmured. "But be quick. I dislike
being—handled."
With an effort, Raft
restrained an angry retort. He drew the necessary blood into a test-tube and
capped it. "Dan!" he called. There was no answer. Where the devil was
Craddock?
He
summoned Luiz and handed him the test-tube.
"Give this to Doutor Craddock. I want a stat C.B.C." He
turned back to Pereira. "What's the matter with you? Lie back."
But
the diamond-hunter was sitting up, his face alive and alight
with a wild, excited elation. The jet eyes were enormous. For a second Raft
watched that stare. Then the glow went out of Pereira's eyes and he lay back,
smiling to himself.
Raft
busied himself with ice-bags. "What happened up-nverr
"I
don't know," Pereira said, still smiling. "Da
Fonseca blundered into my camp one night. I suppose his plane crashed. He
couldn't talk much."
"Were you alone?"
"Yes, I was
alone."
That was odd, but Raft let
it pass. He had other things on his mind—the insane impossibility of a living
man whose heart did not beat. Ice-cubes clinked.
"You
a Brazilian?
You don t talk the lingo too well."
The feverishly brilliant
eyes narrowed.
"I
have been in the jungle a long time," the man said. "Speaking
other tongues. When you do not use a language, you lose it." He nodded
toward the bottles on the wall. "Yours, doctor?"
"Yes. Fetal specimens. Embryonic studies.
Interested?"
"I know too little to be interested. The
jungle is my—my province. Though the sources of life—"
He paused.
Raft
waited, but he did not go on. The strange, eyes closed.
Raft
found that his fingers were shaking as he screwed the tops on the ice-bags.
"That
thing da Fonseca wears around his neck," he
said, quite softly. "What is it?"
"I
had not noticed," Pereira murmured. "I have had a difficult day. If I
might rest, it would be nice."
Raft
grimaced. He stared down at that cryptic, inhuman figure, remembering the odd
malformation of the clavicle he had felt during his examination, remembering
other things. Some impulse made him say,
"One last question. What's your race? Your ancestors weren't Portuguese?"
Pereira
opened his eyes and showed his teeth in an impatient smile that was near to a
snarl.
"Ancestors!"
he said irritably. "Forget my ancestors for tonight, doutor.
I have come a long way through the jungle, if you must know it. A long, long way, past many interesting sights. Wild beasts,
and ruins, and wild men, and the drums were beating all the way." His
voice lowered. "I passed your ancestors chattering and scratching
themselves in the trees," he said in a purring murmur. "And I passed
my ancestors, too." The voice trailed off in an indescribably complacent
sound. After a moment of deep silence, he said, "I would like to sleep.
May I be alone?"
Raft
set his teeth. Delirium, of course. That accounted for
the senseless rambling. But that imperious dismissal was intrinsic in the man
himself.
Now
he gathered his rags about him as if they had been ermine. He seemed to fall
asleep almost instantly. From his recumbent form there breathed out a
tremendous vitality that set Raft's nerves jangling.
He
turned away. A heartbeat so faint that it was imperceptible?
Ridiculous. Some new disease, more
likely, though its symptoms were contradictory. Pereira seemed in
perfect health, and yet he obviously couldn't be.
There
might be another answer. A mutation? One of those curious, specialized human beings that appear
occasionally in the race? Raft moved his mouth impatiently. He went back
to check on the aviator, conscious of a queer, rustling alertness permeating
the hospital, as though the coming of the two men had roused the place from
sleep to wakefulness.
There was no change in da
Fonseca, and Merriday was busy with stimulants. Raft
grunted approval and went in search of Craddock.
Halfway down the hall he stopped at the sound
of a familiar voice. The diamond-hunter's low, smooth tones,
urgent now, and commanding.
"I return this to you. I have come very
far to do it, s'nhor."
And Dan Craddock replying in a stumbling
whisper that held amazement and fear.
"But you weren't
there! There was nothing there, except—"
"We
came later," Pereira said. "By the sun and the waters we guessed.
Then at last we had the answer."
Raft let out his breath. A
board creaked under him.
Simultaneously he heard a—a sound, a susurrus
of faint wind, and felt a sense of inexplicable motion.
Startled,
he hurried forward. The passage lay blankly empty before him. Nothing could
have left the laboratory without his knowledge. But when he stood on the
threshold he faced Craddock, and Craddock alone, staring in blank, astounded
paralysis at nothing.
Quickly
Raft searched the room with his eyes. It was empty. The window screens were
still in place, and, moreover, were so rusted that they could not be removed
without considerable noise.
"Where's
Pereira?" he asked curtly.
Craddock turned to face
him, jaw slack. "Who?"
"The man you were just
talking to."
"I—I—there was nobody
here."
*Teah," Raft said. "So I'm crazy. That wouldn't
surprise me, after what's happened already tonight." He noticed a booklet
in Craddock's hand, a ring-bound notebook with its leather cover moulded and discolored by age. The Welshman hastily stuffed
it into his pocket. Avoiding Raft's probing eyes, he nodded toward the
microscope.
"There's
the blood. I must have bungled it somehow. It's all wrong." Yet he didn't
seem unduly surprised.
Raft put his eye to the
lens. His lips tightened.
"So I am crazy,"
he said.
"It is funny, isn't
it?" Craddock said, inadequately.
It
was more than funny. It was appalling. The vascular system has certain types of
blood cells floating free, of course; they have a definite form and purpose,
and intruding organisms may affect them in various ways.
But
this specimen on the slide showed something Raft had never seen before. The red
cells were oval instead of disc-shaped, and in place of the whites there were
ciliated organisms that moved with a writhing, erratic motion.
And moving fast—too fasti
"They've slowed down a lot since I first
looked," Craddock said. "In the beginning they were spinning so
quickly I couldn't even see them."
"But what sort of bug would do that?
It's destroyed the phagocytes. Pereira ought to be dead, if he hasn't a white
blood cell in his body. No, there's a mistake somewhere. We'd better run some
reagent tests."
They
did, going through the routine, but found nothing. To every test they could
devise, the reaction was that of apparently normal blood. Furthermore, the
writhing ciliate things seemed not to be malignant. When toxic matter was
introduced the ciliates formed a barrier of their own hairy bodies, just as
phagocytes should have done, but three times as effective.
A
specimen slide glittered and trembled in Craddock's mutilated hand.
"It's
an improvement," he said. "Those bugs are better than whites."
"But where are the
whites?"
"Deus,
how should I know?" Craddock's fingers slid into the pocket where he had
placed that discolored notebook. "I'm not in charge here—you are. This is
your problem."
"I
wonder if it is," Raft said slowly. "Just what was there about
the—sun and the waters?"
Craddock
hesitated. Then a wry, crooked smile twisted his mouth.
"They
appeared quite normal to me," he said. And, turning on his heel, was
gone.
Raft stared after him. What was behind this?
Craddock obviously knew Pereira. Though how that interview had been held, Raft
did not know. Ventriloquism? He snorted at the
thought. No, Pereira had been in the laboratory with Craddock, and then he had,
seemingly, walked through solid walls.
Which meant—what?
Raft
turned to the microscope again. There was no help there. In the sane, modern
world of 1985 there was simply no place for such irrationalities. Incidentally,
where was Per-eira now?
He
wasn't in the office where Raft had left him. And as Raft hesitated on the
doorway, he heard a sound that brought blood pumping into his temples. He felt
as though the subtle, half-sensed hints of wrongness had suddenly exploded into
action.
It
was merely the faint pop-popping of exhaust, but there was no reason for the
motor launch to be going out at this hour.
Raft
headed for the river. He paused to seize a flashlight. There were faint shouts.
Others had caught the sound of the engine too. Merriday's
bulky form loomed on the bank.
Raft
leveled the light and sent the beam flashing out into that pit of shadows. The
smooth surface of the river glinted like a stream of diamonds. He swung the
beam.
There
was the motor launch, ploughing a black furrow in the
shining water as it melted away into the gloom where the flashlight's rays
could not penetrate.
But
just as it vanished the light caught one full gleam upon a face—Pereira's face,
laughing back across his shoulder, white teeth glittering in the velvety
beard. Triumph was arrogant in his laughter, the elation Raft had sensed
before.
There
was someone with him; Raft found it impossible to make out who
that someone was. The Indios were running along the
cleared bank, and a couple of them had put out in a canoa,
but that wouldn't help. Raft drew the pistol he always carried in the jungle.
The thought of sending a bullet after that arrogant, laughing face was very
pleasant.
"No, Brian!" Merriday said, and pulled down his arm.
"But he's getting away
with our boatl"
"Dan Craddock's with him,'* Merriday said. "Didn't you see?"
The
pop-popping of the motor was fainter now, dying into the dim murmur of the Jutahy drums. Raft stood motionless, feeling bewildered
and helpless.
"Nothing
we can do till morning, anyway," he said presently. "Let's go back
inside."
Then
a voice he did not know jabbered something in Portuguese.
"He
has gone back to his own land—and he has taken something with him."
Raft
flashed the light up into the face of the aviator, da
Fonseca, his flyer's cap gripped in one hand as he fumbled at his throat,
groping, searching. The pupils of his eyes were no longer tiny. They were huge.
"Taken what?" Merriday said.
"My soul," da Fonseca said quite simply.
There
was a moment of stillness. And in that pause da
Fonseca's words fell with nightmare clarity.
"I
had it in a little mirror around my neck. He put it there. It gave him the
power to—to—" The thin, breathless voice faded.
"To
do what?"
Raft asked.
"To
make men slaves," the aviator whispered. "As he did
with the doutor."
Craddockl Raft had a sudden insane relief that the
Welshman had not, then, gone off willingly with Pereira, in some mysterious
unfathomed partnership. Then he was furious with himself for instantly
accepting such a fantastic explanation from a man so obviously mad.
Yet it was an explanation.
There seemed to be no other.
"Let me down," da
Fonseca said, stirring against the hands that held him upright. "Without my
soul I cannot stay here long."
"Carry him
inside," Raft said. "Bill, get a hypo. Adrenalin."
Da Fonseca had collapsed completely by the time
he was laid gently on a cot. His heart had stopped. Merriday
came running with a syringe.
He had put on a long
needle, guessing Raft's intention.
Raft
made the injection directly into the heart muscle. Then he waited, stethoscope
ready. He was conscious of something—different. Something changed.
Abruptly
he knew what it was. The drums. They were louder,
shouting, triumphant. Their beat was like the throbbing of a monster heart—of
the jungle's heart, dark and immense.
Da Fonseca responded. Raft heard the soft
pounding through the instrument, and those heart-beats were timed exactly to
the rhythm of the Jutahy drums. His lids lifted
slowly. His voice was hollow, chanting.
"He
goes back now—and the gate of Doirada opens. to his coming—He goes back—to the sleeping Flame. By the
unseen road, where the devils of Paititi watch at the
gate of Doirada. . . ."
Louder roared the drums. Louder beat da
Fonseca's heart. His voice grew stronger.
"The
sun was wrong. And the river was slow—too slow. There was a devil there, under
the ice. It was—was—"
He
tore again at his throat, gasping for breath. His eyes held madness.
"Curupuri!" he screamed, and the drums crashed an echo.
And were still.
There
was silence, blank and empty. As though at a signal, the Jutahy
drums had stopped.
Da Fonseca fell back like a dead man on the
cot. Raft, sweat cold on his skin, leaned forward, searching
with his stethoscope at the bared chest.
He heard nothing.
Then,
far out in the jungle, a drum muttered once and was still.
Da
Fonseca's dead heart stirred with it. And fell silent.
Ill
GATE TO PAITITI
With
ftve Indios Dr. Brian Raft went up the Jutahy after Craddock and Pereira. He went with his Hps thinned grimly, and a deep doubt in his mind. Merriday he left at the base hospital, to wind up the
experiment and send the records back to the Institute.
"You
can't go alone," Merriday had said. "You're
crazy, Brian."
Raft nodded.
"Maybe. But we worked with Dan for nearly a year, and he's a white man. As for
Pereira, sometimes I'm not entirely sure that he was a—man."
Stolid Merriday
blinked.
"Oh, but that's
nonsense."
"I
told you what happened. He had no heartbeat. His temperature was crazy. And the
way he walked through the laboratory wall wasn't strictly normal, was it?"
"Da Fonseca said some queer things before he died, too.
You're not starting to believe them, are you?"
"No,"
Raft said. "Not yet. Not without a devil of a lot of proof. Just the same,
I wish I'd got a chance at that notebook of Craddock's. Pereira said he was
returning it. And that stuff about the sun and the river being too slow. Two
people mentioned that, you know; da Fonseca and
Pereira. Moreover, Dan seemed to understand what it meant."
"More
than I do," Merriday grunted. "It's
dangerous for you to go up-river alone."
"I've got a hunch
Craddock went up-river, a long time ago.
What he found there is a mystery." Raft
shook his head. "I don't know. I just don't know, Bill. Anyway, they
didn't have much fuel aboard, and I think I can catch up with them." *T
wish you'd let me go with you,"
But
Raft wouldn't agree to that. In the end, he went out alone, the Indios paddling the big canoa
untiringly up against the current. He had supplies—what he could get hastily
together—and guns and ammunition. The natives helped him find Pereira's track.
For, all too soon, the diamond-hunter left the river.
"Two men
walking," Luiz said, eyeing the underbrush.
Walking.
That meant either that Craddock was going willingly now, or else there was
force being employed. Hypnosis, perhaps, Raft thought, remembering the lens-mirror.
More and more often now he recalled the exotic, paradoxical face of the girl.
How she tied into the mystery he could not guess, but remembrance of her made
him more willing to seek out the solution.
So
they went westward toward the Ecuadorian border, where a thousand little rivers
rise to pour into the great Solimoes that feeds the
Amazon itself. Ten days and ten nights they traveled. . . .
On
the eleventh morning the Indios were gone, even the
faithful Luiz. No sound, no alarm—but Raft was alone
when he woke. Perhaps they had deserted. Perhaps the jaguars had got them. The
beasts had been holding a devil's sabbath
in the forest during the night. Raft didn't find any traces.
His
lips drew down more grimly, and he went on, slower because tracking was hard
work, for another ten days. He pushed on doggedly through the green breathing
walls of the silent jungle, which pulsated with invisible life— never sure that
the next turn of the way might not bring him face to face with the deadly giboya, or one of the omnipresent jaguars, or Pereira
himself.
He could not have done it at all except for
the years of rigorous outdoor life and tropical experience. But he kept on his
quarry's track.
Then,
in the end, he found what the dying da Fonseca had
called the unseen road.
The
day before, from the height of a crest—he was getting into mountains—he had
seen the great valley, an "immense horizon-reaching bowl of fertile forest
stretching further than his eye could follow. It was an ocean of moving green.
But the track led down into it.
There
was a roughly circular space down there where the shade of green was different.
It must be very large, for it was far away—miles in diameter. Partly it seemed
to be cupped between mountains, and Raft caught the flash of a river far off
circling around the nearer curve of it. Perhaps fifty miles in diameter, the place
was, but distances are deceptive in the forest. He followed the trail, and it
led him directly toward that oasis of green within the green.
Raft
had stood the trip well. His face was more deeply seamed, his eyes were
red-rimmed, yet he felt little weakness. A sound medical knowledge helped him
there. Fevers were rife in this country. Fevers, but no Indios. Animals only, and
chiefly the jaguars.
Animals! The place swarmed with life, Raft
thought wearily. Eveiything around him was movement,
the bright flutter of insects and brilliant birds, the watery gliding of a
snake rippling to cover, the smooth, furtive motion of the big cats, the
erratic hysteria of tapir or peccary. All about him was the jungle itself, like
a vast composite animal, terribly alive.
Then,
in a clearing, he saw plainly the tracks he had been following. Craddock's, and
the diamond-hunter's. Per-eira
had been leading. A rare blaze of sunlight glanced down from overhead, picking
out the colors of leaf and flower.
At
one spot in the green wall Raft saw something curious—an oval tunnel curving
away into the matted jungle as if some gigantic serpent had passed this way,
pressing the vines and trees aside, flattening the floor, leaving its own shape
carved out of the living vegetation. The footprints led across the clearing
toward that green tunnel of gloom.
The footprints stopped
halfway across the open space.
Instinctively
Raft looked up. But there were no trees close enough. With a long sigh he let
the pack slide from his shoulder, but he didn't let go of the rifle.
There
was a path, he saw now, beginning where the footprints stopped, six feet wide,
depressed a little below the surface of the ground.
Odd!
He
went forward—and jerked back, startled. Something had touched him. An invisible,
cool tangibility that stood unseen here in the quiet air of the glade.
Raft
put his hand out cautiously. It was halted in midair. A
smooth, glassy, invisible surface. He explored the surface by touch,
since sight could not help him. The thing seemed to be a hollow tube, nine or
ten feet high—he threw pebbles to test that—and it was made of some perfectly
transparent substance, on which not even dust could settle.
As
Raft glanced along its unseeable winding length into
the jungle he could observe how it pressed the trees aside to make way for it,
supporting hanging orchids in midair, stopping the flight of a humming-bird
that dashed itself in bewilderment against the solid air.
As
he stood there, wondering, the first deep roar of the jaguar echoed through the
clearing. Raft whirled, lifting his rifle. He could see the leaves vibrate to
that deep-throated sound, but of the jaguar itself he could see nothing.
Yet it must be very near—it must be very
large—and it must be on the verge of a charge, Raft decided, listening to the
coughing breathing of the great cat.
He
was in the open here. Coming to a quick decision, he bent, seized his rucksack,
and tossed it behind him into the invisible tunnel. Rifle at the ready, he
backed after it, and under his feet the yielding earth gave place to something
hard and smooth. The great, echoing yell came once more, reverberating
strangely from the tunnel walls.
Then
something soughed past him. A whispering—dim, distant,
fainter than a breath. Before him, like heat-waves in the air, a shimmer
swept across the tunnel-mouth.
Instantly
all sound ceased. Raft's ears rang with the dead, intense silence. He reached
out into empty air, and it was not empty.
Across
the mouth of the tube stretched the same glass-smooth barrier
that were walls and roof and floor to him. The doorway was closed. The gate—the Gate to Paititi?
A
trap?
Had Pereira set this snare?
Raft
patted the stock of his rifle. All right, a trap, then. But he wasn't exactly
unarmed. He'd go ahead, since that had been his intention anyway. Only he would
not go it blind. He would be ready.
There was no sign of the jaguar. He put the
pack on his shoulders and started walking. The footing was smooth, but not
slippery. Something seemed to hold his feet down. This wasn't glass. It was,
perhaps, a force-field, an invisible screen of pure energy. Da
Fonseca had spoken of the unseen road.
Check.
He
hiked on, across the clearing, into the forest, not letting himself wonder too
much yet. There was plenty to think about. Raft had long ago learned the trick
of shutting his mind to thoughts which he was not yet ready to entertain.
He had closed his mind time after time in
these twenty days to one recurring vision—the gay, solemn, radiant face of the
girl in the mirror, seen impossibly in one glance, and never to be forgotten.
It
was not exactly a path. Had Raft not known that he walked in a tunnel, and had
it not been for the utter, dead stillness, there would have seemed no reason
for alarm. The jungle still rose solid and shadowy about him.
Butterflies
fluttered brilliantly past. Birds trailed their fantastic plumage through the
leaves. Now and then a cloud of tiny stinging puims
blew past outside the stuff that was not glass.
Magellan,
very long ago, had written of Brazilian trees that gave soap and glass,
distorted versions of the hevea that
flows rich latex. There was often truth in legends.
The Seven Cities of Cibola—they were real, even though they had never been
paved with gold.
Vespucci,
Raft recalled from some dark cranny of memory, had mentioned a Lake Doirada, somewhere in the sertao,
with shining cities on its banks. And the kingdom of Paititi,
that da Fonseca had spoken of. In the old days bands
of mamelucos had gone out on more than one expedition to
find Paititi.
He
could recall only fragmentary scraps. Paititi, where
some of the natives were dwarfs and some were giants, some had their feet
turned backwards, and others had legs like birds. The usual
legendary yarns.
Nobody had ever found Paititi.
Raft
got the torch out of hi$ pack. The path had been sinking deeper and deeper
below ground level. Now, a few yards ahead, the black depths of a tunnel
loomed. The tube was plunging underground. It was impossible to keep one's
footing on that breakneck slant, and Raft advanced very cautiously, wondering
how Pereira and Craddock had managed it.
The
light stabbed out. There was nothing to see but the compressed earth walling
him in. The tunnel angled down steeply. Too steeply.
Raft realized abruptly that he had gone too far. Something had tricked him, a
shifting of balance, a—a warping of gravity, it seemed. For, he realized unmistakably,
an unknown force was keeping him upright as a fly keeps its footing on
perpendicular walls.
For an instant giddiness made his head swim. This ramp was not perpendicular, of course,
but he had no suction cups on his feet. Nevertheless he maintained his balance
on a slope of at least forty-five degrees.
Pure energy, he thought.
Walls of forcel
He
went on down, though now he had no way of telling whether he was climbing or
descending. Only logic showed that, since it was dark, he was probably going
deep into the earth.
Then,
after a long time, came a sudden change. Light glowed curiously from around a
curve ahead. Dim light, more like a darkness alive
with twisting, coiling refractions. Raft went on warily.
It was water.
It
went over and around the tunnel in a smooth, swift, glassy current,
foam-marbled, perfectly silent, gleaming in the beam
of the torch.
Raft
thought, The Children of Israel went upon dry land in the midst of the sea, and
the waters were a wall unto them.
Still
another miracle occurred on a journey beginning to be laden with miracles.
Raft's jaw set a bit harder. He went ahead, vaguely hoping that what had happened
to the Egyptians wouldn't happen to him. If that wall should break, it would
be unfortunate.
The
wall did not break. He went forward into a long period of blackness, broken
only by the light beam. He was, he realized, very far down now. For all he knew
he might be descending a completely perpendicular path, the warped gravity of
the tunnel making such a fantastic descent possible.
A
faint glow warned him to switch off the light. Darkness closed in, but it did
not last for long. His eyes adjusted themselves to a dim violet glow that
seemed to come from all sides, above, below, everywhere. Vertigo made Rafts
head spin sickeningly.
Far,
far below him, but at an impossible angle, seen slantingly through the
transparent floor, was the jagged curve of an immense cavern.
In
a moment more logic asserted itself and the vertigo grew even worse, for Raft
saw now that it was he himself who stood at that incredible angle, not the
apparently tilted cave. It was bathed in faint violet light. The walls were
crags, the roof, high above, dripped with stalactites that glittered wanly in
the dimness.
The
cave was narrow and curved right and left out of sight. The tunnel swept down
in a dizzying arc and vanished into a spot of darkness in a distant wall. Raft
knew that he should be totally unable to keep his footing on that tremendous
slide. But as he advanced gingerly on the invisible flooring, it seemed the
cavern and not himself was defying gravity.
Far
down in the violet darkness something moved. Something
alive. Raft could not see it clearly. Beyond it was another motion, and
up among the crags of the walls, still more motion.
The high, narrow, violently tilted cavern was coming alive all around him with
those moving shadows which converged upon him as he stood frozen there in
midair.
Devils
of Paititi.
Biologically
they were impossible. He could see only their outlines, but there were shadows
that looked like wings—and great talons—and—and other things. No two of them were alike. The logic of
anatomy had gone wrong, somehow, and Raft's mouth felt dry and sour.
They
had seen him, obviously. They were moving sluggishly toward him, with a slowness more disturbing than any speed—as if they knew
they could afford to take their time.
A
shudder shook Raft. Though he knew that Pereira and Craddock had come this way,
suddenly his footing did not seem so secure
on that airy bridge.
He had the sensation of
toppling on the brink of a pit thronging with monsters from pure nightmare. If
there were a break in this tunnel of glass, disaster would overwhelm him.
Biological sports, he told
himself, and went on.
Ten
minutes further along the dark tunnel he came to a fork of the way, the first
one he had encountered. There was no clue aS to which
way he should turn. At random Raft took the right-hand branch, and this time
luck was with him.
The
ending of the tunnel was an anti-climax. He saw the circle of light long before
he reached it. It was a deep, clear radiance which seemed to block the passage.
Another force-wall, Raft thought, like the substance of the tube itself. But
it was different in that it reflected light, or glowed with a cool brilliance
of its own.
He
touched the smooth glossy surface of it. Nothing. Simply light made tangible. Light that was, he saw, growing
paler as he watched.
Shadows
and shapes appeared in the cloudy whiteness, ghostly and strange. A wavering
outline darkened and altered. It was man-shaped, and Raft's gun slipped easily
into his hand. Beyond the figure were other dim traceries, tall columns, and
what seemed to be a stream.
The
light faded and was gone. With a whispering murmur the barrier dissolved.
The
stream became a staircase, dropping steeply away from Raft's feet to the floor
of an immense hall empty save
for the columns, huger than the Karnak pillars, that marched in diminishing rows into the
distance. Empty, save for these, and for the girl who stood facing him, ten
feet down the stairway, very lovely, and—with something subtly wrong about her
round, soft face.
She
moved her hands quickly. Behind Raft a whisper sang softly. He looked back, in
time to see the barrier of the light spring into being across the tunnel's
mouth.
The road back was closed.
JANISSA
She
was as he remembered her
from that brief glimpse in da Fonseca's lens. There
was a prim, gay touch of wickedness about her small mouth. The shadowed eyes
were aquamarine, given a subtle slant by the darkness about them. Her hair
was—was tiger-striped.
Honey-yellow
and dim gold, it was a cloud about her head, so fine that it seemed to fade off
into invisibility.
Her
garments, blue and gold, clung so closely to her slim body that they seemed
like a second skin. At her waist was a wide belt, and now she thrust something
into a pocket of it as she smiled at Raft.
With
that smile her face changed. It was infinitely appealing, completely tender
and welcoming. Her voice, when Raft heard it, was as he expected. A rippling
murmur, with that same familiar haunting undertone he had caught in Pereira's
voice.
The
language was unknown to him, though. Seeing this, the girl switched to
stumbling Portuguese, and then, shrugging her slim shoulders, tried an Indio
dialect that Raft knew, though he had never heard it spoken in quite this way.
"Don't
be frightened," she said. "If I guided you this far, do you think 111 let anything harm you now? Though once
I was afraid, when you hesitated at the fork of the road. But you took the
right turning."
Raft
had holstered his gun, but his hand still lingered on its cool, reassuring
metal. In the same dialect he answered her.
"You guided me
here?"
"Of course. Parror does not know; he was too busy getting
enough to eat outside." She chuckled. "He hated that. He's a good
hunter, but burning meat over open flames—ugh! Parror
is not as complacent as you may have thought."
"Parror?" Raft said. "Would that be Pereira?"
"Yes.
Now come with me, Brian Raft. You see that I know your name. But there's much
that I do not know, and you must tell me those things."
"No,"
Raft said. He hadn't moved from his position at the top of the staircase.
"If you know so much, you know why I came here. Where's Dan
Craddock?"
"Oh,
he's awake now." She took a tiny lens from her belt and swung it idly.
"Parror gave me back my mirror when he returned,
since it was no longer needed to keep Craddock controlled. So I was able to see
you coming through the jungle. You had looked into my mirror, and after that I
could see you. Which was lucky for you, or you'd never have been able to open
the gateway to Paititi."
"Take
me to Craddock," Raft commanded, feeling very unsure of himself,
and therefore acting very sure. "Now."
"All right." The girl's hand touched Raft's arm, urging him down the steps. As they
descended the enormous columns seemed to rise above them, the vastness of the
huge hall becoming more and more apparent.
"You haven't asked me
my name," the low voice said.
"What is it?"
"Janissa,"
she told him. "And this is Paititi. But you must
have known that." Raft shook his head.
"You
may know a lot about the outside world, but it's a one-way circuit. The only
place I'd ever heard of Paititi was in a
legend."
"We have our legends
too."
They
were at the foot of the stairs. Janissa guided him
across the hall and through an arched opening into a mosaic-walled passage.
There
were symbols on those walls, but they struck a note entirely strange to Raft.
Once or twice he noticed pictures, but the figures in them seemed to have no
resemblance to either Janissa or Pereira—Parror. He had no time to observe closely.
The
girl led him into a smaller hall, up a stairway, and at last into a round room whose walls were softly padded with velvet, cushioned
and quilted in patterns like flowers. The floor was padded, too. The whole room
was like a great pillowed sofa.
He had a moment to take it all in—the
cushiony room, its strangeness and luxury, and the rich, deep colors of the
velvet. He saw at one end of the room an oval door of some semi-translucent
substance opening upon dim light, and in another wall was an archway, broad and
low, which looked out upon moving trees.
There
was something rather startling about the trees, but he had no time to look
closely. He caught the fragrance of a breeze, though, smelling of flowers and
damp jungle lushness where the sun seldom shines, and realized that he had come
out at last upon the surface of the earth somewhere, after the long journey
underground.
"Sit down and
rest," Janissa said. "YouVe
come far.'*
Raft shook his head.
"You said you were
taking me to Craddock. Well?"
"I cannot do that yet.
Parror is with him."
"Good." Raft
touched his gun. Janissa merely smiled.
"In
Parror s castle—in this land where he has power— you
think that will help you?"
"I
think so. If it wont, there
are other ways." He unslung the rifle from his
shoulder and leaned it against a cushioned wall. "I don't know what land
of superman Parror may be, but I'll bet he can't
dodge a bullet."
"A bullet? Oh, I see. You are both right and wrong. Your weapon would have been
useless against Parror outside, but in Paititi he is more vulnerable."
Raft
stared at the strange, lovely, disturbingly different face upturned to him.
"Meaning what?"
"Parror
does not know that you are here. So—"
"But
Parror does know," said a very soft, smooth
voice. Raft whirled, surprise heightening his pulse and making his breath
catch. Parrorl
He
had come soundlessly through the oval door, and Raft realized, with some
distantly logical corner of his mind, that Parror
must have been much farther ahead than he had thought, for the man had had time
to bathe and change from his ragged garments. The black beard was trimmed to no
more than a velvety shadow outlining the heavy, but curiously delicate chin.
The
garments he wore were thick, soft, gleaming like dull satin, and fitting so
perfectly they might have been literally painted upon his body. He was
fingering an odd weapon like a silver whip that hung from the broad jeweled
belt he wore.
Raft
felt suddenly very unsure of himself. This was too different a meeting from the
one he had been anticipating. For this was not the jungle. There was, very
definitely, something about Parror that made Raft's
skin crawl. Wrong-wrong—a racial wrongness he could not define. He had felt it
about Janissa, but not with the violence he felt now.
Arrogance
clothed Parror like a garment. He was in his own
environment. He was regally confident. Raft had an uncomfortable
realization of his own awkwardness and crudity and, from the mockery in the
velvety black eyes, he knew that Parror
shared the thought.
Parror lifted his lip in a fastidious smile. ''You
were not needed here," he said, in the Indio dialect. "But perhaps,
after all, I can find a use for you. Yes, I think
I |
yy can.
"We may, Parror,"
Janissa murmured, and for an instant unsheathed
swords seemed to flash between the two.
"Listen,
Pereira or whatever you call yourself, we're going to have a talk," Raft
said angrily. "Now. It'll be fast talking,
too."
"It
will?" Parror murmured, and moved the silver
whip jingling in his hand.
"Where's Craddock? What did you do to
him?*'
"I
did nothing. I showed him a certain mirror. Through it he saw—well, I do not
know what he saw. But he was tranced."
"Wake him up. Take me to him."
"He is awake now."
"He'd
better be," Raft said coldly, his eye on Parror's1 whip and his
fingers touching a cool gun-butt. "You killed da
Fonseca with this same funny business, didn't you?"
"Killed
him? The mirror is mine. I lent it to him and took it back."
"Yours?" Janissa breathed.
Parror ignored her. "What happened after that
is no concern of mine. I had no further use for da
Fonseca. And his tongue might have been a danger."
Sudden
rage flooded Raft. The bearded man's arrogance, his indifference, even the
subtle wrongness he could not put a name to made all
the tension of the past three weeks crystallize into a hot fury. A bullet was
not enough. Raft wanted to use his hands.
"You
bichol" he snarled. "If Craddock dies I'll
break your filthy neck. Take me to him."
He lunged forward and seized Parror's shoulder, feeling a savage delight in coming to
grips with the man at last.
He
knew judo. He was well-muscled and agile. But he did not expect Parror to—explode.
It
was as if the handsome bearded face vanished and a demon glared out through the
flesh and bone of the features. In that instant of utter, inhuman rage Raft saw
the lips flatten away from Parror's teeth in a tigerish snarl, and he hissed shockingly as he struggled to
tear free. Raft felt the smooth surge of muscles, and the power in them was
shocking too, out of all proportion to that sleek, long-limbed slender-ness. There was a moment of straining conflict.
Behind
him, above the roaring in his ears, Raft heard Janissa's
voice.
"Brian! Let him go—quickl"
The desperate urgency of
her tone made Raft respond.
Shaken,
a little dazed by his own anger and by the sudden, explosive violence it had
roused, he released Parror. He felt oddly dazzled. He
had never seen any human being, sane or mad, in the grip of a fury as sudden or
as demoniac as Parror's.
There
was another thing, too. The closeness of the grip had revealed a new, totally
unexpected feature. Under the muscular arch of Parror's
chest Raft had felt a steady throbbing that was unmistakable.
And
yet—back in the base hospital—the man had had no heartbeat!
Parror drew back, shook himself, relaxed into an imperturbable
dignity. Miraculously, the insane fury was gone as suddenly as it had been
roused.
"You
must not touch those of our race in such a way, Brian," Janissa said softly. "If you must kill, then kill. But
not maul."
Raft's own voice sounded
strange to him.
"What is your
race?" he asked, and his questioning gaze moved from the girl's demure
face to the man's enigmatic dark eyes.
Parror said nothing. He only smiled,
a long, slow, infinitely proud smile. And Raft read the answer. He had been seeing
it more and more clearly every moment that passed, in every smooth, flowing
motion of his body, even in his insane, inhuman fury at being touched. Inhuman indeed. Raft remembered what Parror
had said in the hospital.
"I
passed your ancestors, chattering and scratching themselves in the trees. And
I passed my ancestors, too."
Yes,
Raft knew now that he had passed them in the jungle unseeing, many times. They
had gone silently by in the underbrush, on great padding feet, the shadows of
the forest gliding across the shadowy markings of their bodies. He had heard
their roaring in the dark, and seen their lambent eyes in the firelight.
He
thought he knew, now, what race Parror's was. And Janissa's.
Not
human. They came from a different stock. As a physician who had done biological
and anthropological work, Raft knew that the incredible thing was not
theoretically impossible. Evolution is not rigid. It was an accident that had
made man the dominant, intelligent race. Accident, and
the specialization of opposing thumbs.
Our
ancestors were simian, arboreal, using those flexible hands to build the
foundations of civilization. But in a different setup, the ruling race might
have descended from dogs or reptiles or cats.
Cats.
It
struck Raft suddenly, and he was shocked by the realization, that of all
animals there is, except for the rodents who do not use it, only one which
shows signs of developing an opposing thumb. The domestic cat does occasionally
have an extra toe on each forefoot. An opposing toe.
The owner names it Mittens or Boxer and
thinks no more about the matter. But given a little flexibility in that extra
member, and given time and a favorable environment, such as this secret world
of Paititi he did not yet know, what miracles might
now develop!
Feline stock. That, perhaps, explained a great deal, but
it did not clear up the entire mystery by any means. Raft still had no idea of
the connection between Parror and Dan Crad-dock, nor exactly what was the lens-mirror that had
killed da Fonseca. There were many other problems as
well. Too many.
He
noticed a tenseness ripple through Janissa, as though
she had bristled. The word sprang unbidden into his mind. Almost
simultaneously, he caught a distant noise, the tramp of feet, the ringing of
metal upon metal.
Parror did not seem surprised. He turned toward the
translucent door, and shadows loomed against the pale panel. There was a knock.
"Parror?" Janissa said. Her voice held a question.
He
spoke to her briefly in the tongue Raft did not understand. She looked quickly
toward Raft. Her eyes grew blank. A veil of demure withdrawal dropped down upon
her. Suddenly, with a smooth, lithe motion, she was on her feet and vanishing
among the trees beyond the arched portal.
Parror called a command. The oval swept up and
vanished. Across that threshold, silhouettes against faint light,
came men. Men?
They
wore close-fitting chain-mail, very finely meshed. Glittering caps of tiny
metal links, interwoven into designs, protected their heads. There were ten of
them, and each had at his belt a thin, bare blade like a rapier.
They
had the same mingled strength and delicacy of features that marked Parror, the same lithe, flowing agility. The taint of the
tiger was in the way they moved, and the way their slanted eyes glowed intently
on Raft.
Parror had stepped back, with a little shrug, and
the ten men, without pausing, closed in on Raft. He realized his danger, though
none of them had drawn a sword. He sprang toward the wall where his rifle
leaned, saw that he would be intercepted, and snatched out his revolver.
Thin,
wiry metal burned like a hot brand about his wrist. Parror
had lashed out with his whip. The gun spun from Raft's grip. He felt the onrush
of charging bodies, but, curiously, none of the soldiers touched him.
The
shining rapiers were out, flickering, gleaming, weaving
a deadly mesh all around him. Up and down, feinting, dancing, the steel sang,
and Raft drew back, respecting the menace of those glittering swords. He swung
toward Parror, but the bearded man had retreated and
stood by the open archway, watching alertly.
"He speaks the
Indio?" a deep voice asked.
Parror nodded. A soldier with a bronzed, scarred
face gestured toward Raft.
"Will you come with us
peacefully?"
"Where?" Raft countered.
"To
the Great Lord."
"So
you're not the big shot around here," Raft, said to Parror.
"Okay, I'll play it that way. Maybe it won't turn out exactly as you
expect."
Parror smiled. "I said I thought I could find
a use for you," he murmured in Portuguese. Then he relapsed into the
cryptic tongue of the cat-people, and the scarred soldier asked a quick
question. Parror's answer seemed to be satisfactory,
for the man lowered his rapier.
"Well,
Craddock, will you come?" The guard looked at Raft and spoke in Indio.
Craddock?
Raft started to answer but Parror cut him off. There
was another quick, enigmatic exchange.
Raft interrupted.
"My name's not
Craddock. I'm Brian Raft, and I came here
after Craddock. That man—" He pointed at Parror "—kidnapped him."
"I'm
sorry," Parror said. "Such a trick won't
work, and I cannot help you now. The Great Lord rules here. You must talk to
him. Best to go with Vann."
Vann, the scarred soldier,
grunted.
"He's
right. Lies will not save you. Come! As for you, Parror
. . ."
He spat out a few words Raft could not
understand. Par-ror's eyes narrowed, but he made no
reply.
A
point pricked Raft's back. With a longing glance toward his fallen gun, now,
with rifle and rucksack, in the hands of the soldiers, he moved unwillingly
forward. Over his shoulder he looked hard at Parror.
"I'll be back,"
he said, a world of promise in his tone.
Then he stepped through the
oval portal and was in Paititi.
VALLEY OF WONDERS
Again,
and ever after
that, he was1 conscious of the indefinable strangeness about the
lost land that set it apart from any other of which he had heard. Raft had read
tales of hidden civilizations, of Atlantis, Lemuria,
and fantastic survivals from the past.
But
in Paititi he found nothing of such arabesques—no
jewel-city set down on an uncharted sea, no isolated world cut off from the
earth outside. Nevertheless Paititi was as Secret, as isolated, as if it had been on another planet.
It
was too alive to be regarded as anything but a vivid, vital reality. Mixed with
that tremendous vitality which pulsed through Paititi
was the strangeness that hung like an intangible veil between earth and sky,
the thing that had made this secret valley a place blessed and cursed as no
spot on earth ever had before been.
Something
had leaned down and touched the soil of Paititi, the
trees of Paititi, the very air that breathed through
alien leaves, and there had come a change. It was as though the touch of that
unearthly thing had altered all that dwelt here, changing and transmuting until
what remained was different.
It
was a valley, probably a meteoric one, Raft thought, remembering that
fifty-mile-wide circle of jungle he had seen from above. But it was well
camouflaged. No earthly trees could have fulfilled that task, and no earthly
trees grew here. Looking out across that dim twilit land, he was reminded of
the columnar pillars that had marched across the
hall where the invisible tube ended. Pillars of Karnak— but dwarfed by comparison with these trees that
might have upheld the sky itself.
Yggdrasil is
the tree of life which Norsemen say supports the world.
Only the largest California redwoods could
have approached their sheer magnitude. For each one, in diameter, was as thick
as a city block is long. They grew at irregular intervals, a half-mile or more
apart, and they towered up to a luminous green ceiling which was incredibly far
above. A tree five miles high!
Up
they plunged into that green sky, and down into the depths those vast columns
fell, like arrows of titan gods deeply embedded in the earth.
Their
roots, Raft thought, might tap the very roof of Hell. Without branches, smooth
and straight, they grew until, at their tops, they burst into a rank lushness
of green.
Yet
that green vault was translucent. At one point, almost directly overhead, an
emerald brilliance told of the noonday tropic sun. But in the valley itself hung a clear, cool dawn-light that hid nothing.
Transparent
as the air was, the trees themselves made a barrier. Raft could see a curving
arch winding down from where he stood, fifty yards or more to a path that disappeared
into that mighty forest. From far away came a very low, scarcely audible
rumble, almost below the threshold of hearing.
That
was all. Except that Vann tilted back his head and stared up questioningly.
Raft followed his example.
Behind
him were smooth walls and towers, the bulk of Parror's
palace that jutted out from the base of a rock cliff, an escarpment which swept
up and up till it vanished amid the ceiling of green. And dropping toward them
with nightmare slowness was a cloud of rubble and stone.
"It's only a landslide/* Vann said
casually. He pushed Raft forward. "There's no danger.**
"No danger!"
"Of course not." The soldier was surprised. "Surely you know why."
Again
Raft looked up. The avalanche was perceptibly nearer, but by no means as close
as it should normally have been. A great boulder struck a ledge, bounded out,
and Raft fixed his gaze upon it.
It fell slowly—slowly!
It
drifted down, revolving gently as it fell, floating
out in an arc that ended briefly at one of the castle's turrets. It rebounded,
doing no harm to the structure that Raft could see. It dropped past him, so
sluggishly that he could make out every detail of its craggy surface, and
embedded itself in the ground below.
That boulder had not been featherlight.
Yet it had floated down as slowly as any feather.
"Move,
Craddock," Vann said, and pushed Raft away from a watermelon-sized rock
that struck the ramp and bounded away gently. The other soldiers, looking up,
shifted casually to avoid the falling stones. Raft, utterly dumbfounded,
stared up.
"I thought it would
wreck the castle," he said.
"No,
The ones who built here built for an eternity,"
Vann told him. "Not our race, but they were very great once."
"What the devil made
those rocks fall so slowly?"
The soldier shrugged.
"They
fall faster now than in the days of our fathers. But they are still not
dangerous. Only living things can harm one of us. Now we've talked enough.
Come."
He
took Raft's arm firmly and led him down the aerial pathway. The soliders followed, their arms clinking softly, mesh-armor
murmuring metallically against steel blades.
Yes1, Raft thought, they had
talked enough. Or else not nearly enough. Mystery
after mystery was piling up here, and no sooner did he seem to solve one puzzle
than another appeared.
The
fact that this race sprang from feline stock explained much but it certainly
did not begin to explain boulders that dropped from the sky as lightly as
air-inflated, toy balloons.
Nor did it solve the mystery that surrounded Parror's actions, or Janissa's.
At first the girl had seemed friendly. Then she had given up to Parror without an argument. Moreover, the soldiers thought
he was Dan Craddock.
Parror had taken advantage of that twist very neatly, and Raft knew there was no use trying to prove his
identity to Vann. But when he was taken to the Great Lord, presumably the ruler
of Paititi, there would be a chance then. Unless, of course, the Great Lord was a hairy savage who wore human
skulls at his belt.
Raft
grinned wryly. Savagery there was in this land, he knew already, but it was not
barbarous. There was a high culture here, an intelligent civilization, though
it was alien. A feline world would be strikingly different from a human one,
yet the same basics would apply. An isosceles triangle was the same on Earth or
Mars.
Unfortunately,
he probably would not be dealing in geometry. The subtler pitfalls of
psychology loomed before him, and in that feline and anthropoid might be very
dissimilar. A cat people, in fact, would not be builders.
They
would be artisans. Vann had already said that some other race had built Parror's castle. A race that had been
very great once. When? A thousand years ago? Or a
million? It had taken man eons to evolve into rational beings, and
evolution moved at a predetermined rate. Not even mutations could create an
intelligent cat-race from feline stock in a few generations.
There was no use even in wondering about such
things now. He stepped from the smooth footing of the ramp on to an ordinary
dirt pathway that led off among the colossal trees. Now, with his feet actually
touching the ground of Paititi, he felt the
strangeness of his surroundings more strongly than ever. Those incredible
columns seemed to be moving toward him, a giant
Birnam Wood malignantly alive. Trees!
For they were trees, not Jurassic cycads, not tree-ferns. He could tell that. They were true trees,
but they should have grown on a planet as large as Jupiter, not on Earth.
They
were sanctuaries as well, retreats for living organisms, he saw as the trail
passed near the towering wall of one. From a distance he had thought the bark
smooth. Instead, it was literally covered with irregular bumps and swellings.
Vines
slid across the trunk like snakes, creeping with a slowness that belied the sudden flash of tendrils as— tongues?—snapped
out to capture the insects and birds that fluttered past.
Rainbow
flowers glowed on the leafless1 vines, and a heavy, sweet scent
drifted into Raft's nostrils. From something like a shallow shell that jutted
from the trunk a lizard darted out, seized a vine, and carried it back,
writhing, to its water-brimming den. There it proceeded to drown the snaky
thing and devour it at leisure.
But the reptile was no lizard. It was1,
Raft decided, a saurian. Only three feet long, it
nevertheless reminded him of the great caymans that teem in Brazilian rivers. Except, of
course, that crocs are meat eaters.
The
saurian was no freak, for there were others just like it. Swelling pale
excrescences bulged on the tree, like wasps' nests thirty feet tall, with
myriad window-openings from which bright eyes glittered at Raft. Furry brown bodies moved rapidly across
these nests, little mammals with tapir-snouts, but adapted to tree-life.
There
were other parasites on that enormous tree, like the great crimson leech that
clung to the bark and sucked sap out to nourish its hideous length, and the
inch-long, hairless, white creatures like monkeys that lived like Bee upon the
sloth things that clambered with extraordinary agility in pursuit of insect
prey.
It
would have been symbiosis, except that the parasites had nothing to give the
trees upon which they lived as on a world. Trees and living vines and the
rubbery pale moss that bordered the path, there was no other vegetation here.
But
of the fantastic there was much. Before Raft's amazement had died they crossed
a brook, a half mile further on, by a narrow bridge that might have been made
of glowing plastics. No fish were visible through that glassy trans-lucence, and as Raft looked down, he felt that nothing remotely
normal could ever exist in those enchanted waters. For the stream, too, was
wrong.
It
was silent. It did not purl and ripple softly over the rocky bed. Small
cascades and waterfalls dropped, with hypnotic, quiet slowness, into the pools
beneath. Ripples spread out very gently, very slowly, to die against the mossy
banks.
It
was not water. Water it could not be. It seemed half congealed.
Yet
when Raft, with a questioning glance at Vann, knelt beside the brook and lifted
cupped hands to his mouth, it was water. Droplets escaped from between his
fingers and floated down gently to fall upon the thirsty moss.
Slowly
as the boulders that had dropped upon Parror's castle
the waters glided on—silently. It was Oberon's glade, where sorcery lay heavy.
The sweet fragrance of the living vine-flowers hung on the clear air.
What spell holds this land, Raft thought?
What magic stooped and touched it once, long ago? Surely a god walked here
once. But what god? One of Earth,
or one from beyond even the stars?
Silently,
he let Vann urge him along the path. The sooner he reached his destination, the
sooner his questions might be answered.
But
the monotony of the journey grew tiring at last. Once a castle, a small
structure compared to Parror's fortress, was visible
under the shelter of the forest, but the soldiers by-passed it without a
glance. Raft eyed the scar-faced Vann.
"How much further have
we to go?"
"It is still a long
way."
He
was right. The hours' dragged past, and Raft's occasional glances at his wrist
watch made him conscious of a puzzling new factor. They must have covered more
than fifteen miles, but his watch said that only fifteen minutes had passed.
Overhead that brightness in the green vault had not moved. The sun, apparently,
stood still over Paititi.
Nor
had it moved when, a long while later, they came out of the forest at the edge
of a mile-wide clearing—or what seemed to be a clearing.
Directly
ahead, blocking the way, stood a turreted palace that
would have seemed huge except for the trees that dwarfed it. Even so, it was an
enormous structure.
What
lay beyond it Raft could not see, but he could make out a shapeless pale cloud
that hung in the sky beyond those thrusting pinnacles, a formless whiteness
that seethed and curled slowly into new suggestions of luminous hugeness.
A
broad river ran toward the castle, and under it. The torrent plunged into a
high-arched opening beneath that architectural colossus, and was lost.
Raft
was stumbling and exhausted. The two long journeys, first through the
underground tube that led to Paititi, and then this
fast hike, had turned his muscles to water. He was so utterly tired by now that
he saw his destination through a sort of mist; and Vann's voice came from a
long distance away. He let himself be urged forward, mechanically moving his
legs to keep up with the soldiers.
There
was a courtyard. Figures moved about it. A throng of brightly
clad figures, with the half-Egyptian faces of the cat-people, all intent on the
spectacle in their midst. A high-pitched singing came from a man
crouching atop a high stone block.
Exultant
wildness shrilled out as he chanted a song in the language Raft did not
understand. The crouching man played some complicated string instrument that
sounded vaguely like the bagpipes.
In
the center of the courtyard two men were fighting. One was a giant, tall,
smoothly-muscled, with a strong face already masked by blood. The other man was
more remarkable. Raft's eyes were drawn to him.
He
was like Parror, and yet unlike. In place of the
sleek, powerful look of the puma, this man was as lithe and swift as the
hunting cheetahs of the old Hindu rajahs.
Supple
and light, his hair a fine mist about that strong, delicate face, the man
sprang out of his opponent's way, laughing, and slashed down with claws.
He
wore a glove, a gauntlet, that was tipped with three
curved metal blades like talons. Needle-sharp they were, for three long cuts
opened like mouths across the larger man's bare chest, and blood spouted.
The
minstrel's song rose to a thin shrilling in which there was something drunken
and almost mad. The music sang and sang. It cried of love and death, and in it
was the choldng, musty smell of fresh blood.
Turn and dodge and slay.
Metal
grated as the two taloned gloves clawed together. The
men bounded apart as though on springs instead of muscles of flesh. The giant
shook his head, wiping crimson from his eyes. The other paused, with a careless
gesture, to glance at Raft. His irises were blazing yellow. He had slit-like
pupils.
His blond hair, almost orange, was oddly
marked by shadowy patterns of cloudy black. As he smiled, Raft almost expected
to see the sharp teeth of a predatory leopard. Red droplets fell from those
murderous gauntlets to a brown thigh. He called a question.
Vann
answered, and the yellow-haired man lifted one shoulder impatiently. He spoke a
few casual syllables, and turned back to the giant, lifting a taloned glove.
For
answer his opponent leaped in, and the two agile figures were again lost in
that deadly, graceful dance. Vann,, his eyes glowing,
touched Raft's arm.
"Come. You must sleep now."
Raft's
brief excitement had died. The dull stupor of exhaustion made a protective
barrier around Raft. Without another glance at the duel, he went with Vann
through a portal, along halls and up spiraling ramps, lost in a foggy dimness
of sheer physical tiredness. He felt Vann's hand halt him at last.
"Sleep, now. Darum will see you after you've rested."
"Darum?" Raft saw cushions at his feet, and dropped
heavily upon them. "Who's Darum?"
"You
just saw him fighting. He is the Great Lord. He rules. But now he fights, and
after that—"
Vann's voice died away, merging with the faint, drowsy humming of—of
what?
A
purring, sub-sonic vibration thrilled through Raft. Deep, comforting it
throbbed through the very structure of the castle. As though
the castle lived. As though the hidden pulse of life stirred in the
stone.
That alien whisper lulled
Raft to sleep.
MAD
KING
Many hoots later, Raft awoke, refreshed but stiff and aching.
Colored light came through tall windows, pastel patterns that shifted and
glowed on the pallor of the thick carpet.
He
was in what seemed to be a sleeping-chamber. There were mirrors on the walls,
many of them, and the room, he noticed, had no corners. It was a silken, padded
nest, strewn carelessly with silks and pillows, and with low, round couches
here and there.
There
was an oval door in the wall, but no shadow loomed against it. That did not,
however, mean that there was no guard. Raft yawned, stretched, and felt his
muscled and joints crackle with stiffness. But, aside from various dull aches,
he felt alert and ravenously hungry.
The
dim humming still vibrated through him. He turned to the window, pushed open a
pane, and stepped out onto the balustraded porch
beyond. There he paused, staring.
Overhead
the sun had moved a fraction—that was all. He saw it vaguely, for a towering
pillar of mist dimmed his vision. Looking down, he understood the reason.
Beneath
him a gulf opened. The porch overhung a broad platform lower down which jutted
out over an abyss clouded with white fog. A silver torrent of ice shot out in an arc and
fell away into that incredible depth.
Not ice, no, for it moved slowly. It was the river
that flowed beneath the castle, to drop into the gulf that lay directly under
Raft. He tried to probe the depths, but the
boiling maelstrom of mist baffled him. The cataract
fell and was lost.
Fell—slowly. Mist rose slowly too, a gelid
ghost towering high above the castle. The deep humming was louder now, and the
stone beneath Raft's feet vibrated to its murmuring. Sub-sonic.
The crashing roar of a waterfall, resolved by some physical warp or distortion
into that dim throbbing he felt rather than heard.
Frowning,
Raft left the balcony. He was beginning to understand a little now. His mind,
refreshed by deep sleep, was clearer. Slow water, stones that fell like
feathers, a sun that dragged itself wearily across that green sky. Time, it
seemed, was different here. Was this lost land actually on Earth? The same Earth that held the Amazon Basin, and Rio, and New York?
Perhaps not.
He
tried to fathom the mystery of the oval door. He could not, but it slipped
upward and vanished suddenly, and Vann stood on the threshold, his scarred face
alert.
"So
you're awake," Vann said in the Indio. "Good. Darum
wants to see you, but he's resting now. You'll want a bath."
"And
food," Raft said. "Does Darum wear those
gloves all the timer
Vann
called a command over his shoulders. Then he stepped forward into the room,
smiling.
"Only for tourneys. He's less dangerous when he wears the gloves. I'll show you the bath,
Craddock."
"I'm not Craddock. I
told you before I'm not Craddock."
But
Vann paid no attention. He moved levers on the wall, and part of the floor slid
aside, revealing a shallow, wide basin filled with a liquid the color of creme de menthe. Gratefully Raft slipped out of his ragged
clothes and lowered himself into the bath. Vann watched with a grimace of
distaste.
"It'll
take several washings to get you clean," he remarked. "Here." He found a jar and sprinkled blue powder into the water. An astringent, tingling sensation ran
across Raft's skin.
There
were brushes, many of them, instruments like Roman strigils,
and other gadgets Raft experimented with under Vann's guidance. The water was
awkward to handle because of its sluggishness.
Once
Raft dropped a brush. He watched it float gently down till it dug a hole in the
water, a hole that gradually refilled, while ripples crept out to the rim.
But
a bath was luxury, and the aches began to leave Raft's muscles. Vann watched
unblinkingly, commenting once on the coarseness of his prisoner's hair, and
providing a gleaming unguent which Raft's skin absorbed leaving him stimulated.
Finally a page appeared, pushing a wheeled table laden with unfamiliar food,
and stood motionless, struck with amazement as he eyed the figure in the bath.
Vann
gestured, and the loose-limbed, dapper youngster, with his daintily malicious
triangular face, bowed and fled, without removing his startled gaze from Raft.
"No
wonder he's surprised," Vann remarked. "Your musculature is so
different from ours that you looked deformed to him. But I'd like to fight you
some time, if opportunity arises."
"Thanks,"
Raft said. "You'd have a fine time cutting my throat with one of those
gloves."
"Not at all." Vann smiled savagely. "Killing is a different thing entirely. The
point in murder is not to be found out. But a fight, a duel—they're very seldom
fatal." He found tight garments like his own and helped Raft don them.
"I'd have too much of an advantage if I wore the gloves. What weapons do
you use usually?"
"Rifles," Raft
said. He explained about duels.
"Strange,"
the soldier said. "I should think there'd be little satisfaction in
propelling a missile. You wouldn't be able to feel your blade go in. There'd be
no physical pleasure."
"All
right.
We'll box, fight with our fists."
"Depending on impact alone? That doesn't
seem interesting. Don't you use swords at all?"
"Some
of us do," Raft said. "But I'm no swordsman myself. What was that
you said about murder? Is homicide legal here?"
"No,"
Vann said. "We're not barbarians. A murderer has to pay restitution, if
he's found out. But only the stupid are caught."
"Oh,"
Raft said blankly, tackling a pulpy, acrid fruit like an orange. "There's
a police force, then?"
He had to explain, but finally
Vann understood.
"We
have specialists in detection. If a murderer can escape their skill, he's safe
enough. The trick is—I think—to conceal the motivé. Killers are caught because they haven't disguised
their motives." He shook his head deprecatingly.
"Just
what is the set-up here?" Raft asked. "Does Darum
rule all Paititi?"
Vann nodded.
"Yes. The set-up is—well, that of any
civilized land." "Sure. Homicide for fun.
How is it you can talk the Lidio tongue?"
"You
aren't the first outsider to enter Paititi. We have
had brown-skinned men here in our fathers' time, though it has1 always
been difficult for us to leave our valley. Parror's
ancestors had captive Indios
sometimes, and most of us know the language."
Raft
thought that logical. Linguist ability was a mark of the cosmopolitan, and a
cat-race would certainly be cosmopolitan, even if it never left this hidden
valley.
"And Portuguese?"
"What?"
"Falam
portugués?"
"That is strange to
me," Vann admitted.
"Then Parror
picked it up? And Janissa,
too." Raft nodded thoughtfully.
Then
he remembered the aviator. "Was there a man of my race here, a man named da Fonseca, who had a machine which flew through the air?
About—about fifty sleeps ago?"
Vann's
face lighted up. "The machine that flies fell into Paititi
about four hundred sleeps ago, killing all but one man, whom Parror took to his castle. Yes, that was da Fonseca, for with his aid Parror
read the notebook you left in the Cavern of the Flame."
Raft put down a morsel untasted.
"Four
hundred sleeps?" he said, a queer hesitation in his voice. "Over a year ago. How long have I been in Paititi, Vann?"
"I
captured you yesterday," the soldier said. "And that was directly
after your arrival. I was watching for Parror's
return from the outer world. So I knew when to strike."
"I
see," Raft said, though he didn't. "What about this notebook, and the
Cavern of the Flame? What's that?"
"You did not see the
Cavern?"
"I
saw a cavern, with some unpleasant creatures in it. Is that what you
mean?"
A
shudder shook Vann. Briefly a touch of fear showed in his eyes. "No—no.
That is not what I mean." He changed the subject abruptly. "You must
see Darum now. Are you ready?"
"As ready as I ever
will be, I suppose."
"Very well." Vann stood up, turning toward the door. Raft accompanied his guard into
a dimly-lighted hall and along it. After a while Vann broke silence.
"The
Great Lord has fought and had his pleasure afterward, and slept. He will be
strange now. A word of advice, Craddock."
"I'm—well, what is
it?"
"Something hangs in the balance
now," Vann said thoughtfully, his gaze on the floor as they walked.
"For myself, I am not sure. I am on neither side as yet. Darum, too, hesitates.
"He had you taken from Parror before the—the final step could be taken, but he may
yet side with Parror. If he does, that will be well
for you. Or perhaps evil, in the end. I cannot see
that far ahead. But I will say this, since you are of an alien race, you would
do well to heed it. Darum—is mad."
A little shock went through
Raft. He stared at the soldier.
"Mad? Your king?"
"Yes."
"And he rules?"
"Of
course," Vann said. "Why not? For often he is1 not mad, and when he is, that does not
matter much. But with you it may mean the difference between life and death.
Perhaps," he went on musingly, "life and death for Paititi. Remember that Darum is
not your kind."
"I hope not,"
Raft said candidly.
"He
is of our land," Vann murmured, and his eyes were luminous. "Now—I
hope you live. For I'd enjoy a duel with you, Craddock.
And here is your way." He held aside a heavy tapestry, revealing a dim
corridor. "Go in."
"Thanks," Raft said.
He stepped forward. Behind him, Vann let the
curtain fall. There was silence, except for the never-ceasing vibration that
shook the castle. Even here its steady humming could be felt.
Raft walked toward another drapery that
barred the way ahead.
A different race, he thought, and a different
species. They murder for intellectual pleasure and duel for physical
excitement. They see nothing amiss in a mad king.
He hesitated before the curtain. Then he
pushed it aside and stepped through, into a ruddy darkness.
The
dim, faint glow came from all around. How large the room might be Raft had no
way of guessing. He saw shrouded shapes looming before him, and, in heavier
shadow, something stirred and looked at him with eyes that were glowing disks.
A cool, sharp perfume was in his nostrils. That infernal humming seemed to
shake the dark air.
There
was no sound. Raft, after a moment, moved forward. The eyes watched him
steadily. At last he could make out a slim figure reclining on a bulkier,
shapeless mass—the smooth outline of a jaw, and the cloudy mist of hair fading
into invisibility.
Raft stood there, waiting.
He
sensed that this was not the same man he had seen fighting and laughing in the
courtyard. There was a difference, even physically. In the gloom a change had
come upon Darum, a strangeness that was indefinable
and yet unmistakable.
"Sit
down," the king said, in the Indio tongue. Even his voice had altered. It
was passionless, like music heard from very far away.
Raft fumbled, found a couch, and dropped upon
it. The eyes had a touch of green in them as they watched. "Listen," Darum said.
At the king's feet a shadow stirred. Its soft
curves were those of a woman, but from that vague figure a subtle breath of
terror breathed out, chilling Raft. There was a sound, almost a voice. Woodwind and sighing strings-plaintive, questioning.
Again the king spoke.
"Yrann wonders. She wonders why you come to Paititi, Craddock. Music is her voice, for she will not
speak. But she asks who are you? What is your world?"
The soft strings sang
again. Sang a question.
Raft leaned forward, as though to break the
spell. But the king's eyes held him.
"He
is a god, Yrann. Craddock was in the beginning, and
now he comes again, very near the end. Since his eyes first saw Paititi, a race has been born and draws close to the
shadow. The shadow that the Flame casts over all living
things."
The
sighing oboe-flute spoke of a gathering darkness, of a cloud that stooped above
the land.
"And
yet there are other shadows," the king whispered. "There was a woman
once, Yrann, whose loveliness burned like magic
fires. Fires that could make men drunken. A fire that could make men mad, as I know. As I know."
Stealthy
fear circled Raft's heart. Poignant, eerie, the music sang, and the dim gloom
showed the half-seen, half-veiled curves of soft skin and rounded shoulders. At
Darum'S feet Yrann swept
slim fingers across sobbing strings.
"And
the fire burned," the king went on softly. "In all Paititi there was none so
beautiful as this woman. When she danced, the tall trees inclined in homage.
When she smiled, the stones bowed down."
A
note of pride crept into the wordless song. The sundrenched spring of green
forests came into the dark chamber; the sound of laughter, and flaunting bright
cloaks, and clashing steel. The music pirouetted into a gay, lilting dance.
Heavily
the king's voice broke in. The music sank to a whisper.
"There
was a man who loved this woman. He took her for his own. And she laughed.
Laughed—knowing power as well as beauty, growing drunken
at the thought of ruling Paititi. Of
ruling the man who was the king."
Proud, triumphant, the song
rose. Ivory arms gleamed.
"And
her eyes fell upon a man who was not a king. But she knew that in her arms, any
man might be the emperor of the universe, and the equal of the gods. Nor was
she wrong. If her embrace meant death, death would be sweet poison."
Tinkling, mocking laughter, and an undertone
of sadness in the music now.
"She
was faithless," the king said, his words falling heavily as stones into
the still air. "Those lips were faithless. And the arms of Yrann sought another, and the white body of Yrann yearned too."
The
song hushed almost to silence.
"Long ago. Very long ago. Now she is no longer faithless.
Nor is the king sorrowful. Maidens dance before him. They ask his love, but he
has none to give. His love is for Yrann, most
beautiful of all womankind, and she—she loves him now."
Tender,
obedient, the oboe murmured softly.
"But
the king is mad," the quiet, cool voice said, and the music died into
stillness. "There was a red hour long ago when the madness entered into
him. That hour will not pass, Yrann, and love and
madness dwell forever side by side."
For
a long time, there was no sound but the faint vibration of the cataract making
the castle tremble in its iron grip.
"We
speak together, Yrann and I, of things forgotten and
things that are not forgotten," the king said at last. "But music is
her tongue now." His voice changed. "Yrann
must not die, though Paititi dies. I think that you
hold a certain answer in your hand, Craddock, and whether I let you open your
grip upon that great secret is something I cannot tell yet. We must talk first.
There are many questions."
For
the first time Raft spoke. He moistened his lips,
"One
question has to be settled first," he said.
"And
that is?*
"I'm
not Craddock."
The eyes watched him. Raft plunged on.
"I tried to tell your soldier, Vann, but he didn't believe me. I don't
know what story Parror had. It must have been a good
one. For Craddock's in Parror's castle now, his captive.
I came here to rescue Dan Craddock, and my name is Brian Raft."
"I cannot believe
that."
"Why should I Her Raft asked. "What could I gain?"
"You
might have many reasons. And yet Parror is clever
too. If he had wanted to gain time, he might use deception."
"Janissa
knows who I am. The girl in Parror's
castle."
"But
will Janissa speak the truth?" Darum asked. "Her mind is like a wind, changing and
changing. Tell me your story, then. It may be a He, or it may not. But I will listen."
Raft
talked. He marshaled his thoughts as clearly as he could, though the ruddy
dimness of the room played strange tricks on his nerves. When he had finished,
the glowing eyes of King Darum were half-closed.
"Go," Darum said.
Raft
hesitated. The deep voice sounded again, more comm andingly.
"Go,
I said. We will speak again later. Now I must test your story."
Raft
stood up. From the half-glimpsed figure at Darum's
feet that exotic, haunting music breathed out again. Caressing,
gentle, and indefinably sad.
The king's eyes watched
him.
Stumbling,
Raft moved across the chamber. He felt the velvet folds of the curtain against
his face. He lifted it, stepped under its soft drape. Behind him light flared.
The music rose shrilly. Raft half-turned.
On
a dais strewn with cushions Darum was standing, his
face hidden as he looked down at the figure at his feet. Nor had Raft's guess
been wrong as to the loveliness of those ivory limbs, that half-veiled
beautiful body. But Yrann's face was not veiled.
And her face was—horror.
Into Raft's mind flashed
unbidden memory of the cruel
taloned gauntlet he had seen on the king's hand.
Something terrible and savage and mad had destroyed the beauty of Yrann's face, leaving her goddess body untouched.
The king looked up. His
eyes met Raft's.
Raft
stepped backward into the corridor and let the shielding curtain fall into
place.
V
DREAD FLAME
His watch said minutes had passed, but Raft knew that it had
been hours since his interview with the lord of Paititi.
Impatiently he waited in his apartment, left alone with his puzzled thoughts.
He could not fathom the trick of the door, and Vann, after escorting him back
here, had not reappeared. From the balustraded porch
nothing could be seen but the torrent pouring lazily into the abyss below.
The
room was sterile. It was beautiful, luxurious, but it held nothing that aroused
Raft's interest. Inaction was twanging his nerves into tense irritability. He
seemed the only thing not frozen into semi-stasis in this strange land.
A
long time had passed when from beyond the window he heard his name called
softly. He knew the voice. A stir of excitement quickened him as he hastily
stepped out on the balcony. But there was nothing.
Only falling
water. Lazy falling water.
"Brianl"
The low call came again. "Brian Raft!"
He
leaned over the rail, and found himself looking down into the soft, familiar
face of Janissa. The aquamarine eyes were darker now,
almost purple. She was clinging to grips and footholds on the castle's wall,
crannies where it seemed not even a squirrel could find lodgment.
Catching
his breath, Raft leaned down, extending his arm. But Janissa
murmured a quick warning.
"Get
a cushion, Brian. Bring it. No, I'm safe enough here. Do as I say."
He hesitated, turned, and
hurried back into the room,
where he snatched up the nearest cushion and
carried it out with him. Janissa had not moved. Her
slim body was flattened against the stone.
"Hold
it by a corner. Yes, that's it. And lower it toward me, very carefully. Don't
lose your grip on it."
Raft
obeyed. There was a sudden whir and a flash of steel, and the cushion was
almost torn from his hand. From the smooth wall beneath the railing a fan of
sharp blades had leaped out, one of them impaling the pillow as Janissa's flesh would have been pierced had she continued
her climb.
Her
teeth showed in a smile.
"Now
it's safe, I think. Give me your hand." With feline agility she clambered
up, writhing between the swords so that no blade or edge touched her. On the
balcony she shook herself, patted her hair, and took the cushion from Raft.
"You're
alone? I thought you would be. I asked questions before trying this
climb."
"You
might have been killed," Raft said, looking down into dizzying emptiness
where the slow cataract poured into bottomless deeps and the slower mist wreathed
up in a swaying tower. Then he turned to the girl and, as he met her smile, he
felt a little dizziness that did not come from vertigo.
This
was the face that had drawn him over miles of river and jungle almost as
unerringly as Craddock's trail had drawn him. No one, he thought, could have
looked once upon this delicate, soft, malicious little creature and not wanted
to look again.
In their first meeting he had been tired and
bewildered. Today he could gaze more clearly into the aquamarine eyes and the
gay, yet prim face of this contradictory girl. He stared frankly, trying to
make the clear gaze waver.
Janissa laughed.
"We've met before, remember?" she
jibed. Raft grinned.
"Sorry. It was just— Do
your people here know how beautiful you are?"
"Men
of all races must be very much alike," Janissa
parried demurely. "We must think about you just now, Brian Raft. You're
in trouble."
"Trouble
you walked out on, I remember." He did not mean to let her attractiveness
blind him to that memory.
She shrugged litheiy.
"What
could I do then? Now I've walked in again, and you must forgive me."
He
glanced over the balcony rail and shuddered, "You certainly did take a
long chance. Lucky you weren't killed."
"Not
by a fall. Not my race! Though if you hadn't been here to
spring the trap, I might have had some trouble. Let's go in. We may be
seen from another balcony."
She
stepped through the window, stared around, and tossed the slashed cushion
away< "Now we can talk."
Raft followed her, seeing how supple was the movement of her round, smooth limbs as they glided
beneath velvety garments. She tilted him a sweetly wicked smile over one
shoulder and shook the cloudy tiger-striped hair. There was a mound of silken
cushions against the nearer wall. She laid a hand on Raft's arm and drew him
down beside her to a cross-legged seat among them.
"We have much to tell each other,"
she said. "And perhaps not a very long time to do it
in."
"You'll have to start, then. Remember, I
don't know anything at all."
"I suppose not," Janissa murmured. There was a soft roughness to her voice
when she lowered it, a luxuriant roughness, like a purr. "Not even
Craddock knew, really, though he-created—our race. And now he does not remember
certain things. So Parror will have to build a device
that—"
"Suppose you start at the
beginning," Raft interrupted her. "First, where is Paititi? On my own planet?"
"Yes.
We know that, for some of us have gone through the unseen road to the jungle
land outside. Not many, and only guardians, like Parror
and myself. I went once and only once. It was
horrible. Your world is frozen. Nothing moves.
"When
we meet others outside, you know, we have to force ourselves to do everything
as slowly as people in a nightmare. Otherwise we'd be only a blur when they
looked at us. But we cannot live long outside Paititi,
unless we carry something of the Flame with us."
"The
Flame?"
Raft echoed. "The Flame?"
"The
Flame is the source of all life," Janissa said
soberly. "In our whole land there are only two amulets that hold a little
fiery seed of the Flame itself. We do not know how to make them. These two are
very old, our heritage from the ancient race that lived here before us."
Her eyes narrowed. "Parror has one. I should
have the other. It's my right as Guardian. But the king claims it, and—well,
never mind. I have my plans. The time is coming
when—"
"Please,"
Raft broke in. "First tell me about this business of speed, and your
people moving faster than ours. Why?"
"The
Flame is sinking," Janissa said in a somber
voice. "That is why Parror sought out Craddock.
You see, Paititi was not always as it is now. In the
old days, generations lived and died during the day, and other generations in a
night. And before that, hundreds of generations in a day.
The cycle slows now. Water moves faster than in the days of our fathers. Our
memories go back a long way. We have written records, but certain things we had
to guess. Before we were human, long, long ago, another race dwelt in Paititi.
"That
race built these castles. Men and women not of our species
but akin to yours, strong and wise and happy, dwelt in this land and lived
beneath the Flame. Then the Flame sank and slept."
Raft
scowled. "That race died?" "It did not die." "What
happened to it?" She looked away.
"As
you came through the unseen road, you must have seen a cavern there—a dark
place where things crept and flew in shadow. You saw the monsters that dwelt in
it. Those things—their ancestors—built this castle, and Parlor's castle, and a hundred others. But as the Flame sank, they sank below the
level of beasts. We know that now. But we did not always know."
Raft
tried to marshal the facts. "The first race degenerated, eh? As your own evolved?"
"They
degenerated long before we had the first glimmers of intelligence. I said that
the Flame slept. Craddock wakened it, millions and millions of cycles ago. We
know that, because our ancestors penetrated to the cave of the Flame, and found
certain things there—a cloth sack, metal containers, a
notebook with symbols we could not read.
"Not
until da Fonseca came here, in his machine that flew,
did we have any knowledge of the real truth, though we had often theorized. Parror and I took da Fonseca and
through him learned the contents of that notebook."
"Millions
of cycles?
Craddock isn't that old!"
"The tides of time are altered in Paititi," Janissa said.
"Craddock awakened the Flame, and our race was
given birth. Now the Flame sinks, and that means great
evil."
Dan Craddock! How much did
he really know about the man, Raft wondered. For thirty years the
Welshman had wandered the Amazon Basin. Why? Because of some secret he had
stumbled on, long ago?
"What is this
Flame?" he asked.
Janissa made a curious symbolic gesture. "It is
the giver of life and the taker-away of life. It is Curupuri."
Raft
stared at her. "All right, leave that, then. What do you want?"
The eyes shaded to purple again. "I am
of royal blood. In the old days there were once three kings, enemies. They
fought, and two were conquered. But the two vanquished kings were not shamed.
They were given the hereditary honor of guardians of the Flame. They dwelt,
after that, in the castle Parror holds now, while the
conqueror dwelt in this place, by Doirada Gulf. It
was so for generations. Until now."
She seemed to bristle.
"Parror uses me—uses me! And I am of blood no less royal than his own. I held the secret of the lens, which he
needed, but now that he has Craddock, he can waken
the Flame, and I will be stripped of my birthright." Her eyes glowed.
"Holding the castle of the Flame is a trust. We guard. Parror
intends to break the trust, and act on his own, without waiting for the king's
decision. That will be a shameful thing. It will bring shame on me, one of the
guardians."
"Yet
you helped him murder da Fonseca," Raft said.
"You helped him kidnap Craddock."
"As
for the murder, I did not know he intended that. The spell of the mirror can be
broken, but it must be done slowly, carefully, or the victim will die. I had no
love for da Fonseca, yet I did not want his death,
and I would have stopped Parror could I have done so.
"Craddock—well,
Parror lied to me. He told he
he would do no more than bring Craddock here. I would
not have trusted his word alone, but he gave me logic I could not deny. False
logic, I know now. For he will get the knowledge he needs from Craddock's
brain, and waken the Flame. That—that—" She hesitated. "It may be a
very great sin. I am no longer sure what is the right way,
Brian."
"Well, one way is for me to get out of
here and see Crad-dock," Raft said practically.
"I
cannot get you out—yet," she told him. "But the rest is easy. I have
the mirror. See?" She drew the little lens from her bosom and held it out.
Raft, remembering da Fon-seca,
found himself instinctively glancing away.
Janissa laughed softly.
"There's
no harm in it, unless the psychic cleavage is violent. Look into my
mirror."
"Not so fast,"
Raft said. "How does it work?"
"We
know much of the mind," Janissa said. "The
device is—is a mental bridge. Once it has caught the matrix of a man's mind, it
can be put en rapport with that man. Each brain has a
different basic vibration. You could not use the mirror alone, Brian, for it
needs a trained mind to direct. But with my aid, you can. Look."
He
obeyed. In the tiny lens the gray storm-clouds misted and swirled. They were
driven aside. Tiny and alive, Raft saw the face of Dan Craddock.
He had a stubbly white beard. His eyes were
bloodshot, and he looked utterly exhausted. Beyond him Raft could make out
vague outlines. Silks, he thought, of many colors.
"He
is alone, and resting," Janissa whispered.
"So you may speak with him freely."
"Speak?"
"In the mind. Look closer now, while I summon him."
Raft stared down at the lens. He saw Craddock's gaze lift, and sudden awareness
spring into them. Raft heard his name!
He
did not hear it. He sensed the impact of Craddock's thought. Abruptly he was
conscious of nothing but his friend's presence. The room about him darkened and
vanished. There was present only the odd feeling that Janissa
was here, somewhere, alive and guiding.
"Dan. Are you all
right?" His thought formed words.
"All right, Brian.
Yes. You?"
"So
far I'm alive, anyway," Raft thought grimly "Jan-issa's
here."
"Good.
She managed to tell me a little. And Parror's told me
more."
"Is he—has he tried
any tricks?"
Craddock grinned wanly.
"More or less. He's the most dangerous altruist I've ever met. You shouldn't have come
after me, Brian."
"You
should have told me the set-up back in the hospital, when Parror
first showed up," Raft pointed out. "But that's water under the
bridge. What we've got to figure on now—"
"I
didn't know," Craddock interrupted "When Parror
brought da Fonseca to the hospital, I hadn't the
least idea what was going on. When he showed me my notebook, I was—well, as
flabbergasted as I looked."
"You were here before,
though."
**Yes.
I was here Thirty years ago by our time, a hundred million, maybe, by Paititi's time. For it's
variable There's the flame
"Tell him," Janissa's thought urged.
Craddock nodded.
"Yes,
I—I'd better, I suppose. Though thirty years ago I hadn't much idea what I was
getting into. I was pretty young. I was on the trail of the secret medicines
the Indio witch-doctors were supposed to have around here, and that's how I
stumbled on the unseen road. It wasn't closed then. It lay wide open. A trap,
as it proved."
"A
trap?"
"One set by fate," Craddock thought
grimly. "I went on, though, past the cavern of the monsters, and to the
place where the road forks. One branch leads to Paititi.
The other leads to the thing the Indios call Curupuri."
"The Flame/' Raft
supplemented. "What is it?"
"I
don't know. Radiant energy of some kind. It may be
alive. It may not. But certainly it's nothing that ever was spawned on this
earth. Paititi's a meteoric crater, Brian, and I
think Curupuri came to this planet in a meteor.
Perhaps it was the meteor. It's—life."
"The creator and the
destroyer," Janissa put in quietly.
"Destroyer? Yes. There are forms of energy we know nothing about. Sometimes we see
them through telescopes, in the giant nebulae light-years away. The stuff of
primal energy, spawned in interstellar space, where that tremendous force can
safely exist. It can't exist—safely—on a planet. Not unless the planet is still
gaseous, still molten. Curupuri, the thing that fell
on Brazil in a meteor ages ago, is a source of life, Brian."
"A
living thing?"
"Too colossal for us1 to conceive of or measure. You know the Arrhennius
theory, that life reached Earth in the form of spores, drifting through space
on light-pressure tides. Well, that's fair enough, but what gave life to those
spores?
"It's
the old chicken or the egg problem, with a difference. The spores may have
been the dust, the waste-products of things like the nebulae. Or that vast
force raging in space may have had power to create life in dust, a galaxy away.
I don't know. I'm theorizing, that's all. But radiant
energy, vibration, power—they're tied up with it, somehow."
Craddock's tired face
brightened.
"And
the merest fraction of that energy fell on Earth once, in a meteor. It must
have been a microscopic amount, for anything more would have devastated the
planet. Growth, unchecked. I guessed some of that, and
learned a little more, from records I found in Paititi."
"Records? Left by whom?"
"I
didn't know then. There was no one in the valley, no life except birds and
insects, peccary, tapir, and the jaguars.
Remember the jaguars, Brian. They're
important. Meanwhile, I found those records in what is now Parror's
castle.
"They
weren't unlike the written Indio language. I suppose that's where the Indios get their lingo in the first place. Anyway, I found
out the truth. Curupuri had given life to Paititi. The merest touch of that energy has made the
Amazon Basin the most fertile and prolific place on Earth."
Raft nodded.
"Keep going. How does
this trick work?"
"In cycles. There are cycles in suns, giants and dwarfs, and in nebulae too, though
our lives are too short to comprehend them. When the Flame is at full tide, a
certain type of energy pours forth from it. The result is peculiar."
"Time is speeded
up?"
Slowly Craddock shook his head. "No. Not
objectively. What happens is a metabolic change. The rate of growth is
tremendously increased. Not only in men, in mammals, but in
all living things. When the Flame is at the top of its cycle, a man may
be born, live a complete life, and die in one second. Yet it will be a lifetime
to him.
"Inanimate
things are not affected, of course. The radiation won't make stone crumble
faster. It influences living cells only. The animal world,
and plants. That is what happened."
"The
Flame wakened," Janissa supplemented. "And
in its light all things sprang to life."
"Yes.
Long ago. But that cycle was more normal. The First'
Race, the one that built these castles, lived here, evolved, and—and then the
Flame sank. They did not die. But apparently the radiation is a false stimulus.
"When
the Flame's power falls below a certain level, its rays are actively malignant.
Cellular tissue may be stimulated, but it can also become cancerous. When the
Flame sinks, there is a retrogression. It's freakish.
It's—horrible."
"I saw what was left of the First Race/*
Raft mentioned. "Those monsters in the cavern."
"Yes.
They saw their fate coming, and made plans. They were skilled scientists. They
found a way to rekindle the Flame before its cycle had been run, but they
failed to do it. Because it was dangerous. If they
were not accurate to a hair's breath, if they failed to control the Flame
exactly, it would mean total destruction. The radiation would rage out
unchecked. The Flame would devour itself instantly, but in that instant Paititi would be seared lifeless."
"They didn't do it,
then."
"No.
They waited. Each generation thought it could live out its own span. Each
generation let the problem go on to its children. And the children thought the
same. In the end, the beast-minds were too dull to comprehend.
"The
creatures that had been the First Race remembered only the Flame, and they
found their way to the cavern where you saw them. Their nearness to the
radiation keeps them alive, and they've lived and bred there in the dark for a
long time."
Raft frowned.
"But the cat-people. How did they come into being?" Craddock's eyes held a touch of
deep horror. "I created them. I—wakened the Flame."
KHARN, THE TERRIBLE
Visualizing that scene of thirty years ago, Raft could picture a
younger Craddock lost in wonder before the secrets he had uncovered, feeling a
dangerous exaltation burning in his mind, and, of all the world, the only man
who knew of that tremendous, intergalactic Force that blazed hidden in the
jungles. Yes, he could understand why Craddock might have been tempted to
meddle with forbidden forces.
"I
wakened the Flame. The records I had found, they told the way. I couldn't
understand all of it, but I understood enough. Too much.
That was when—" Craddock held up his maimed hands—
"I
succeeded and I failed," Craddock continued. "For the Flame wakened
raging with power, too much power, though it was far beneath its—maximum. I was
lucky to escape as I did."
The worn face held horror again.
"Against
that flaming terror I watched my hands change. I saw the living flesh alter. I
saw human tissues writhe and blacken into something that was—was a blasphemy,
Brian. Even as I ran, I could feel those—things—where my fingers had been. I
could feel them—writhing!''
He drew a deep breath, went
on more steadily.
"I
escaped into the jungle, and there I amputated—those horrors. I had my surgical
kit. There wasn't sulfa in those days, but I managed. I thought then I'd never
go back to Paititi. My career was ruined, of course;
my hands were— not hands.
"Yet something kept me in the Amazon
Basin. I was too close to the Flame once; part of it touched me, and I could
never leave Brazil after that. Sometimes I thought I could hear Curupuri in the Jutahy
drums."
He nodded.
"Then I did hear it, after thirty years.
Parror brought something of the Flame with him when
he came down the river, and the Indios
sensed it. That incredible vitality sent its message through the jungle. When I
saw Parror for the first time, in the hospital, I
felt that same life-energy I had found in Paititi. It
was faint, but I couldn't mistake it. I was afraid.
"Parror came to me in the laboratory and gave me my
notebook. He'd traced me through that. There's the woods-telegraph, and he knew
my name. He'd left Paititi on a crazy chance, hoping
I was still alive, hoping to find me.
"And
he succeeded. He told me I must come back to Paititi
with him, and of course I said no. Then you came along the hospital hall."
"I
remember," Raft nodded. "But you were alone in the lab."
"Remember
Parror's faster metabolism. He could move at
tremendous speed when he wanted to, in our slower world. He had to restrict
himself and do everything in slow motion when we were watching. He simply ran
out so fast you couldn't see him. Later, he hypnotized me with his mirror.
Though I knew what I was doing, I couldn't help myself. Not till I woke here in
his castle. Now I know the truth, but I'm helpless."
"What
is the truth? You mean the cat-people evolved in thirty years from
primitives?"
"From
the jaguars of the valley," Craddock supplemented. "But it was not
merely thirty years. Thirty million or billion, with the
radiations pouring out from the Flame. Remember I told you a man could
live a lifetime in a second? What took place in our world over a period of
eons, happened in Paititi in three decades.
The metabolism, the life-rate, was speeded up so enormously that the jaguars
evolved in hours or days to savages. And thence to reasoning
beings. Their paws became hands.
"They
learned to walk upright. If we could have looked down on Paititi
from above, in those times, we would have seen the shapes actually flowing,
living flesh melting and changing." He paused, glancing at his hands.
"Yes,"
he went on, after a time. "The cat-people evolved and became intelligent.
They created a culture of their own based on the older culture that had
preceded them. The other life-forms in the valley reached dead ends. Only one
species becomes dominant in any milieu. Here it was the cat.
"Only
lately, the Flame has begun to sink again. When I wakened it, I gave it an
artificial stimulus, and its flare-up will die as swiftly. In another
generation or two, it will sink beneath the danger-level, and then the
malignant radiations that destroyed the First Race will come pouring
out."
Quickly Raft sucked in his breath. "I
see. I'm getting it now, finally."
"Yes.
That's why Parror abducted me. Because the records of
the First Race that held the secret of the Flame no longer exist. I left them
in the cavern then, and they were destroyed by that horror. As
I would have been destroyed if I'd stayed longer. Parror
thought I knew how to waken the Flame."
"Don't you?"
Ml could
not understand all the records," Craddock admitted. "I told you
that. I can waken the Flame, but I can't control it.
That's the danger."
"Not
even Parror will risk that," Janissa
suggested. "Until he finds the knowledge he seeks, he won't take
chances."
Craddock
gestured urgently. "Someone is coming. Parror, I
think."
Janissa touched the mirror. "We can speak no
more, then, until he is gone. But tell him nothing, Craddock."
"How
can I?" the man asked. Then gray clouds blotted out his face.
Raft
leaned back, realizing that he was sweating and exhausted. Janissa
watched him sympathetically.
"It
is not an easy road unless you know the way," she told him. "But it
is a road we must take again,"
"Yeah. I'd like to get my hands on Parror
personally. Or see him in my rifle-sights."
"Perhaps
you will, later." The cat-face was somber. "You see, there is still
danger. Craddock did not understand all the old records, but he read
them."
"Sor
"The
memory is in his mind. It is forgotten now, hidden away, but it is not lost.
Such memories can be recovered. And if they are, Parror
will know how to use the wisdom of the First Race."
"He
can dig up Craddock's memories, eh? Mnemonics-hypnosis, I suppose."
"Not
easily." The girl looked troubled. "He is working on a device that
will aid him."
Raft's
lips tightened. "But if he succeeds, he'll try to waken
the Flame?"
"He
will, and there is the peril," Janissa said.
"The First Race supposedly learned how to control Curupuri,
but their experiment was never performed. How do we know they found the
answer?"
"We don't."
Janissa moved uneasily.
"It
may mean destruction. The Flame unchecked, raging through Paititi. Many of us think as the First Race did,
that we can live our lives safely, and let our children make the test. But the
Flame sinks fast. The waters run more swiftly than in the old days. We do not
know when the danger-level will be reached. And—and the king has not yet
decided/'
"Which side does he
favor?"
"Who
knows?" she asked, shrugging. "We cannot read Darum's
mind. Many in Paititi want freedom to live as they
always have. They are willing
to procrastinate rather
than risk extinction. But there are others who think differently.
"I,
for one, do not know, Brian. I know only this: I have my trust. I am of royal
blood, and must guard the Flame. Against Parror if
need bel When the king decides, I'll obey him.
Meanwhile, Craddock has the answer locked in his brain. An
answer that may mean death or life."
Raft
stared toward the open window and the cloudy veil that hung above the great
deep beyond. His voice was low.
"There's
one thing, Janissa. I'm in this game now. I don't
know quite where I'll fit, but I'm not just a spectator any
more." His eyes hardened. "I don't like being pushed around. Darum—Parror—even you—have been
treating Craddock and me like chessmen. And there wasn't much we could do about
it, because we didn't know the answers."
She watched him
unblinkingly. He went on.
"We
were dragged into this. What we want most is to get out, back to our own world.
If you'll help us, we'll help you. So let me tell you this straight. You don't
mind if Parror gets the secret of controlling the
Flame, but you don't want him to use it. Not without the king's permission. Right?"
"That's correct."
"Fine. Then it's simply a matter of convincing Darum
that I'm Brian Raft. He had me captured because he thought I was
Craddock."
Her green eyes flashed. "Darum has left the castle, with a band of soldiers. I've
learned that."
"Then
he believed me! He went to get Craddock himself." Raft hesitated. No, he
realized, the king had not taken his word for the substitution. Instead, Darum was investigating the possibility, cutting the
Gordian knot of uncertainty by going directly to the source—Parror.
"Parror is resourceful," Janissa
said. "I don't know s . ." She
shook her head, the soft curls stirring with her movement
"Well,
what am I supposed to do? Sit here waiting till Darum gets back?"
The girl pondered.
"Let
me use the mirror again," she said at last. She took out the tiny lens,
bending her head to stare intently into those cloudy depths. Raft saw her start
"What's wrong?"
"Wait."
She held up a warning hand. "It is difficult to get through. There's a
barrier ..."
She straightened, thrusting
the mirror back into her dress.
"Craddock
is tranced," she said. "Not the spell of
the mirror, but a kind of hypnosis. Parror is taking
him somewhere—I can't see where. But they have left the castle."
Raft
bit at his lower lip. "Can't you communicate with Craddock at all?"
"I can catch only a
few stray thoughts. Not much."
"Can
you find out where they're going? Try again, Janissa,
If we could discover that, it might help."
She
took out the lens, bent above it in an agony of concentration. Raft saw
diamonds of perspiration glittering on her forehead.
"It's hard. His mind
is veiled."
"Try!"
She
let the mirror drop, amazement in her eyes "No* Kharn—no!
He'd never go there!"
Raft
gripped the girl's slim arms. "Kharn?
Is that where the Flame is?"
Janissa drew away, shivering.
"Oh, no. I thought he might take the unseen road, but to go to Kharn. He must have some method of protection I know
nothing about. Or else it's suicide."
"What is Kharn? Where is it?"
"At
the source of the great river," she said. "The
river that flows here, under Doirada Castle.
That is Kharn. But no man goes there."
"Why
not?"
Janissa seemed to draw inward into herself.
"The
Garden of Kharn has life which isn't like ours. There
are beings in Kharn who are—I don't know what. I've
never been in the Garden. But I've been near it, though. I've felt something
reaching out to touch my mind, something cold and crawling and deadly."
Raft uttered a harsh laugh.
"I'd be willing to
face any ghost if I had my rifle back."
"Kharn is unhealthy," the girl said quietly. "If Parror has found a way to protect himself against the
Garden, he's wiser than I thought. But I fear for Craddock."
"Why?
Parror will take mighty good care of Dan Craddock,
till he gets the information he wants. Apparently this Kharn
is taboo. Which is fine for Parror.
He can take his time getting the information he wants."
A change had come over Janissa.
"This
alters things, Brian. When Darum reaches Parror's castle, he'll find Parror
gone. But if he knew his quarry goes to Kharn, he
might intercept him, if he goes fast." She rose to her feet in a lithe,
smooth motion. "Yes, this changes the face of our plans. I must get to Darum and warn him."
"I'll go with
you," Raft said.
"No,
you cannot. You couldn't leave by my path." She waved toward the window.
"And there are guards outside the door."
"I can take care of
them."
"You are not that
strong. I must move fast, and alone."
Raft caught her arm as she moved away,
"At least tell me how to open that door."
The elfin face smiled up at
him maliciously.
"Lay
your hand on the brightest spot of light. But you'd better wait here for my
return, Brian. A door sometimes has more than one lock."
They
were on the balcony now, and Janissa swung a slim leg
over the railing.
"You 11 be back?" Raft said. 1 promise.
"Her
mind is like the wind," Darum had said. How much
could Raft trust this cat-girl of an alien species?
He
gripped her arms hard. He drew her toward him. That slim, strong body tensed in
revolt, but Raft's mouth came down hard and covered hers.
After
a moment he let her go. There was a touch of mockery in his eyes now.
"At
least, you may not find it so easy to forget now," he said.
Janissa
touched her hps with questioning fingers. She stared
at him.
"No," she said
enigmatically. "I shall not forget—that."
She
slipped over the balustrade and was gone, writhing to avoid the keen blades,
clinging precariously to the face of the stone. Raft watched her descend till
her figure vanished around a turret. Then, still undecided, he returned to his
luxurious prison.
He had solved nothing.
He
had learned a great deal, but nothing that could be of immediate use. Except—he
nodded—the key to the door. That might be of very real help. Unless he wanted
to sit here quietly until Janissa or the king
returned.
He
found a heavy metal statuette, wrapped it in a silken scarf, and went to the
door. He stared at the translucent panel, seeing now that glowing flecks of
light moved slowly within the oval, like pallid moon-flames caught in a lazy
current.
The
brightest spot of light.
He
found it and laid his palm over its glow. But nothing happened. The fleck slid
from under his hand He tried again, with no result.
A
door has more than one lock. That was what she had meant, then. Smiling sourly,
Raft tossed his weapon away and returned to the balcony.
Janissa
had descended, but he could not follow her. He had no illusions on that score.
Nor would any rope he might improvise reach to firm footing. He bent and tried
to break off one of the swords. All he accomplished was the wounding of a
finger.
Raft
swore softly and savagely. After that he felt a little better. He dropped on a
pile of cushions and tried to plan It was difficult What he wanted, obviously,
was to get out of Paititi and take Craddock with
him The way to do that—what was the
method?
He knew the road out. Once back in the Amazon
jungle, he'd take his chance, even without a rifle, But
escaping wouldn't solve Raft's problems now.
The amulets, Parror's,
and the one taken by the king. They, apparently, gave the possessor power to live outside Paititi, to slow down the metabolism to a speed normal to
life beyond the valley's cliffs. But the effects were variable. Back in the
hospital, Parror had once moved too fast for human
eyes to observe
Suppose,
then, Raft thought, he and Craddock managed to escape. They might reach the Jutahy. They might get a week's start, or a month's. But in
a day pursuers from Paititi could overtake them. With
the aid of the amulets, Parror or the king could
flash through the jungle in pursuit,
and kill or hypnotize with Janissa's
trick mirror. And back he and Craddock would go to Paititi.
So he was up against a dead
end there.
It
was difficult to judge time. The sun didn't move appreciably, and the
second-hand on his watch went so slowly he couldn't see its progress. He was
living at an abnormally increased rate of speed here, which meant that in Paititi he was on more nearly equal terms with the
cat-people. Once outside, that slight advantage would
be instantly lost, as his metabolism slowed to its former rate.
The
psychology of a feline race—that might be the answer. . . .
Raft
was lost in thought for a long time. He roused when the panel opened to admit
not Vann, but a guard and a page, with a food-cart. After the meal he again
fell into his reverie; It should be night now, but the
days in this land would be as long as the nights, abnormally long.
Basically
the people of Paititi were feline, as he was of
simian stock. Monkeys are curious. The instinct of curiosity is strong in the
human race. But cats lose interest quickly. They are not builders. They had
taken possession of these castles, reared long ago by the mysterious First
Race, and renovated. Cats were essentially hedonists. But the factor of
intelligence was a strong influence, and one whose strength Raft could not
estimate.
Could
he base any plans on rules of logic, in a land where the human factor was so
alien to his own experience? A race of cats might have unpredictable,reactions. . . .
Low,
urgent, warning, a wordless murmur whispered softly from across the room.
ASSASSIN'S PLOT
Raft was on his feet facing the doorway before those last
echoes had died. The translucent oval was open now, the way of escape clear.
But barring his path was a figure, veiled in soft grays, her face hidden, and
both loveliness and horror breathed out from beneath the shrouding veils.
Her
hands, slim, pale, were bare, and held an instrument unfamiliar to Raft, though
he had heard it before. Again the white fingers moved across intricate strings
and keys. Once more the music breathed out. More urgent now,
summoning him.
"Yrann?" Raft said questioningly. The shrouded head
bowed once. He stepped forward.
"The
guard?"
Yrann
beckoned. She turned toward that inviting portal, and Raft was at her heels,
but warily. The corridor outside held no menace.
The
guard was standing motionless. He did not turn his head. By the door, he stood
frozen, his eyes wide, staring at a milky, glittering little sphere on the
floor at his feet.
Raft's
eyes were drawn to that globe. Colors were moving and coiling slowly beneath
its surface. It was growing larger. . . .
The
soft, urgent strings roused him. Yrann moved forward,
bending to lift the sphere and hide it in her veils. The spell snapped. But the
guard, Raft saw, still was motionless.
He
pointed to the man and raised his brows questioningly. The music sounded
reassuring, somehow.
"The guard will not wake. Not for a
while. The spell holds him"
Raft
noticed that the oval door had closed behind him. Yrann
was beckoning again. Which meant exactly what? Treachery?
Perhaps. The cat people were unpredictable. But, at
least, it was better than sitting in his prison waiting, and Raft felt quite
able to protect himself against a woman.
He followed her along the
corridor.
She
took a circuitous route, Raft thought. They met no one, with the exception of a
page who came hurrying toward them from the distance. Instantly Yrann pressed Raft aside, into a shelter behind a velvet
tapestry. The page passed unsuspiciously, bowing to Yrann as he went. Then, after a moment, the journey was
resumed.
It
ended before another hanging that Yrann thrust aside,
urging Raft through and letting the drape fall again. Now that familiar dim
light—or, rather, absence of it—made Raft close his eyes briefly. There was
utter silence.
Through
the stillness Yrann s music sang. Her fingers dwelt
on his arm.
She
guided him forward, making no misstep even in this vague gloom. Swiftly they
approached the silk-heaped dais where the king had sat.
The
shrouded form beside him began sending out emanations which were curiously
ominous.
"What is it, Yrann?" Raft said. "What do you want?"
The
oboe murmured, the strings twanged, and there was something evil in the minor
notes that sounded.
The music held malignance.
Yrann touched the cushions of the dais
reflectively. Her hand lingered on the softness where Darum's
body had lain. Then again that cool, wordless song whispered evilly, with a conspiratoral secrecy about it. It was heavy with suggestion.
Yrann turned toward the back of the dais. Curtains
hung there. She held one aside, beckoning till Raft came to her side. Gently
she guided him to a little alcove in the wall.
She
pressed something into his hand. And stepped back, letting
the curtain drop.
Wait, the music said. Wait
now.
He
was in utter darkness. But he knew what it was that he held. His free hand
investigated cautiously. And recoiled from vicious,
razor-sharp metal.
He
pulled at the curtain. Yrann's harp-oboe shrilled
sharp warning. The velvet fell back.
Then soft footsteps fading into stillness. A rustle. He sensed
that Yrann had gone.
But
he knew unmistakably now why she had brought him here.
Working his lips as though he tasted
something unpleasant, Raft leaned back against the wall. Yrann
had helped him, if only for her own purposes. Now the idea was to get out of
the castle, somehow.
On
the curtain before him a ghostly, pale movement was visible. His eyes
had adjusted now, and he could make out a shadow, man-shaped, cast on the
fabric—the shadow of a man whose hand held a long-bladed dagger.
His own shadow. He turned. Behind him was no wall, but one of the familiar oval doors.
But its glow was dimmed, and the crawling flecks of light were very faint.
He located the brightest
one and laid his hand upon it.
The
oval panel lifted and was gone. Instantly a blaze of light dazzled him.
His
weapon ready, Raft waited, blinking. But there was nothing alive in the room
before him. Only a fantastic glitter of brightness and shining metals, a richness of flamboyant color that contrasted strangely with the gloom of
the chamber behind him.
Struck by a new thought, he stepped back, through the curtain, and swung it into
place. The material was opaque. No hint of light filtered through. If Yrann, or anyone else, entered, his hiding-place would not
be betrayed by an oval glow on the dark hanging.
Satisfied
on that score, Raft again entered what he saw to be Darum's
treasure-vault.
If
he expected a hoard of gold and diamonds, he was disappointed. There were
diamonds, highly polished and many-faceted, but they seemed to hold equal place
with quartz crystals that were used for the same purpose of jewelry and
decoration. There was metal here, curious alloys in which hints of rainbow
colors rippled, like oil on water. And weapons, many weapons.
The
blades were of good quality, which was to be expected, for manganese,
beryllium, and chromium were found in Brazil. There
must be deposits of the elements here in Paititi.
Certainly there was silver, for delicately shaped and engraved vases of it,
burnished and sliining, were set in a row around the walls.
It
was the loot of a strangely alien civilization. Some of the objects the cat
people found beautiful were ugly to Raft's eyes. One set of very plain, sleek
metals reminded him of Brancusis. His gaze followed
arcs and curves that were curiously satisfying and oddly suggestive, though he
realized he could probably never completely understand the principles that
underlay the art-forms of this race.
There
were more utilitarian objects. Many of them were dueling-gloves, with their
razor-keen triple talons curving out viciously from the fingers. Raft picked up
one of these, jeweled and ornate, and drew it on his hand. The claws ran the
full length of his fingers, he found, and instinctively his hand tensed and
curved.
Encrusted
as it was with gems, the glove could be used as a handy substitute for brass knuckles. Which would
probably shock the cat people, Raft thought sardonically, as he slipped the
gauntlet into a capacious pocket he had discovered in his garments.
There
were a number of maps, engraved in metal, and jewel-framed, too heavy to be
portable, but interesting. One seemed to show Paititi.
Raft could make nothing of the symbols, but he located Parror's
castle, and the great gulf into which the torrent poured.
Thoughtfully
he traced the river back to its source, where a tiny ring of zircons surrounded
a few cryptic markings. The Garden of Kharn,
eh? Where Parror was
heading, with his captive Craddock.
Another
map showed the castle itself, and was made with a dozen thin metal sheets that
lifted on hinges. Raft studied this closely. What he wanted was a way out.
Unfortunately, he found orientation difficult, until he managed to identify his
own prison apartment. After that, it was easier.
Finally
he drew back, nodding. Yes, he thought he could find his way now.
Yrann's music came urgently to his ears.
Raft
whirled toward the door. Nothing. But the song kept
on, warning, shrill.
He moved forward. The shape of a familiar
object on a shelf caught his glance.
It was a revolver, a small, ornate weapon of
mother-of-pearl and silver filigree. Beside it lay a heap of cartridges. Raft
swept the cartridges into his pocket and lifted the gun, staring at the
initials on the butt. TDF—Thomaz da Fon-seca, the aviator who had
crashed in Paititi. His
revolver, then.
It was not Raft's own heavy, powerful Colt,
but it was far better than a dagger. He slipped his finger through the guard,
saw that it was unloaded, and deftly thrust shells
into the chamber. Then he stepped across the threshold and waited,
his hand on the curtain before him.
Yrann's music had changed. It was softer now,
welcoming. But under it ran a counterpoint of menace, a soft susur-rus of treachery and evil.
"Parror had escaped me, Yrann,"
the king's low voice said. "There was another man from outside in his
castle, I found traces. But they are gone. We could find no tracks."
The wordless song was
questioning.
"They
are still in Paititi. I had guards at the gate to the
unseen road. Parror will not get at the Flame till I
am willing. Nevertheless, I do not know where he is, now."
Tenderness breathed across
the strings—and hidden hatred,
Darum sighed.
"I
was ready. I was ready for anything I might find. I even thought Parror might take the unseen road to outside, and I was
ready to pursue him even there But how can I find him when he has vanished with
this other man?"
Raft
rubbed his jaw reflectively. He knew where Parror had
gone. If he told the king, would that help?
Yrann played lightly, and now slumber breathed out
from the hollow crying of the pipes.
"Yes,"
the king said "Yes, there is always this, Yrann.
The world does not come into our chamber here." He sighed "There is
nothing here but our love."
Sleep,
the music said. Sleep, my lover and my king. Only sleep—and wake no more.
But
Darum sensed no menace. His breathing grew quieter
Drowsiness crept through the curtain, taking Raft in a warm embrace. Yrann's music was magic.
Dark
magic, Raft thought angrily. He shook his head savagely.
After a time Yrann's
arm -crept through the soft barrier, touching Raft, pulling him forward. The glare of light from behind him struck
full on Yrann's face—or what should have been a face. With a wordless sound she pulled her veil in place.
Raft felt her gaze go from him to the treasure chamber. But the harp was
silent. It asked no question.
The
curtain remained looped back, and the light struck out to the dais, where Darum lay asleep, his face relaxed and peaceful. He stirred
uneasily. Yrann's fingers rippled across the strings, and the king was silent once more.
Yrann
touched the little revolver hesitantly. Then she pulled the dagger from Raft's
bent, where he had placed it, and thrust it into his hand. She pushed him
forward, pointing to the dais.
Raft
halted. The veiled face was lifted to his. He shook his head slowly and
emphatically.
"No,"
he said under his breath. "Even if that would save my life, I don't think
I could do it."
Yrann's hand poised over the harp-strings, somehow
threateningly. The tableau held for a moment. Then she must have seen that he
meant what he said. She made a dreadful snarling sound deep in her throat and
snatched the dagger from Raft's grip, whirling toward the sleeping long. Her
draperies swirled as she bent and plucked at Darum's
shirt, tearing the thin silk open. Darum murmured and
stirred in his music-drugged sleep. Yrann swung the
dagger high, poised it.
Raft's
reaction was instinctive. He had begun his leap forward before he saw what
gleamed upon the king's bared chest, something square and shining, on a silver
chain. Something that seemed to give out light that quivered like the pulse of
life itself.
The amulet!
There
was no time to examine it. There was no time to ask questions and be sure.
But
Raft had an inner certainty which needed no confirmation. A man could not look
upon that shaking gleam and not recognize it.
With one hand Raft snatched at the amulet.
The chain snapped under his violent pull. With the other he seized Yrann's as her knife began to plunge downward. She snarled
again and bent like a bow against him, fighting hard for the weapon.
They
swayed together beside the couch, battling in desperate silence. The harp
crashed to the floor. A string broke with a ringing snap. On the couch Darum sat up dizzily, peering at the dimly seen figures
reeling before him.
Then
with a suddenness that made Raft stagger, Yrann
released the knife. She sprang back, stooping to snatch up the harp. Her
fingers swept across it, dragging a wild discord of alarm from the strings.
Waken! Beware!
Loud
with ringing urgency, the music crashed against the walls. The king struggled
up, shaking his head, crying out confused questions. But he was caught in the
shaft of fight from the treasure room, and could see Raft as no more than a shadow—a
shadow, and a glint of threatening steel.
The
music screamed and wailed. There was a distant sound of running feet
Cursing
under his breath, Raft whirled and raced for the door by which he had entered,
praying that it was open. He swept the drapery aside, saw an open passage
before him, and plunged into it. Now he was tagged as an assassin. That meant
he had to escape, and fast. The king might listen to explanations, but the
probability was that he wouldn't, especially since they involved Yrann.
The
map he had seen burned in Raft's mind. If he got off the track once, he knew he
was lost. There should be another branching corridor here, at about this
point.
He
dodged into it, but did not slacken his pace. The sound of distant, aroused
voices gave him warning. He gripped the revolver tighter. It would be more
useful than the dagger. As for Yrann, he knew now
what she had intended. If necessary, she would have killed Darum
herself, and put the blame on Raft. Which was thoroughly
human as well as feline.
Twice
he hid behind curtains while guards raced past. Once he stopped, not breathing,
before an oval door, wondering what lay beyond. It led to escape, he knew, but
there might be soldiers behind it.
There
were. Shadows showed against the panel. Raft turned silently and raced back,
knowing he was lost now. Unless another way opened up before
him, which wasn't likely.
He turned into another passage, where windows
stood open in one wall. Glancing out, he found himself staring, not into the
Gulf of Doirada, but at the river, where it curved in
and finally poured over the edge of an arched opening, beneath the castle.
Beyond
the mossy plain loomed the enormous pillars of the forest, sanctuary if he
could reach it. But the river lay far below, and was flowing too fast. It would
sweep him into the abyss, if its rush gripped him.
Too
fast?
Not
in Paititi, where the metabolism of all living things
was speeded up so enormously. For all its power, the waters below glided past
so smoothly, so gently, he might have been watching the gentle boiling of a
cloud-river.
Raft
thrust the revolver into his pocket, closing over it a fastening. The contrivance sealed it tightly, which indicated the pocket
might be waterproof. That would help. Raft gave a quick glance to left and
right. He saw no one, though the sounds of pursuit were louder.
Then
he climbed into the window-frame, two hundred feet above that molten silver
cataract—and dived.
)
NIGHTMARE GARDEN
One thing Raft had forgotten, and the fantastic thing was
that he had time to remember it as he fell. The rate of speed of a freely falling body does not vary. Friction of air has some effect, but
very little when an object weighing a hundred and sixty pounds, in the form of
a man, drops free.
Raft's
metabolism had been tremendously accelerated by the radiation that pervaded Paititi. He was living far faster than in his own world.
And he had seen immense boulders float down lightly as feathers from the
towering cliffs.
To
his own mind, he did not fall. He dropped gently as in an elevator,
utterly stunned with surprise, so astonished was he that the truth did not
strike him immediately. When it did, there was nothing he could do about it.
Gently
he revolved as he drifted down. Beside him the wall of the castle slipped past.
At any moment someone might come out on a balcony and see him. A thrown spear
would be dangerous. It could be thrown sufficiently fast to impale him, since
the wielder could easily gauge the rate of Raft's fall.
He
had never felt so helpless and naked in his life. It was like hanging free and
unsupported in interplanetary space. He had time for a hundred questions and
fears to pass through his mind before, finally, with agonizing slowness, his
body struck the waters of the torrent.
His
mass was the same, and he sank, angling slowly in the direction of the current.
But he was breathing perhaps a hundred times faster than normal, so there was a new
danger. Under ordinary conditions he could have
held his breath until he reached the surface. As it was he might not emerge
above the water for five minutes!
Now
the accelerated metabolism was helpful. Raft managed to turn and swim up,
though it was like moving in glue, against that slow, inexorable thrust of
driving waters. He was a fly drowning in syrup. But the fly reached
the surface at last.
Under
ordinary conditions he would have been swept over the brink into Doirada Gulf, but his stimulated time-sense fought the slow
pressure of the water. He fought his way upstream. He dragged himself to a shallow pool and collapsed, gasping.
There
was no time to rest yet, though. He was not yet out of range of pursuit. Nor
did he think he could cross the clearing to where the forest began without being
spotted.
Wildly he stared about him,
searching for a hiding place.
Reeds
grew thickly about the margin of the pool. The water itself was roiled with
thick mud, and opaque. Raft found a hollow reed, tested it, and made use of an
old trick. He simply lay down in the water, anchoring himself by gripping
embedded rocks, and breathed through the improvised lifeline.
He
could not see, but he could not be seen, either. The cat people might discover
his hiding-place, of course. Yet the chance was worth taking, Raft thought,
remembering the difference between feline and simian psychology.
The
pursuers would expect him—as a descendant of simians—to depend on flight, and
probably to head for the forest. They would themselves be too fastidious to
hide in dirty water if any other way of escape opened, and automatically might
expect Raft to think in the same manner. If so, they would be mistaken.
His
eyes shut, Raft concentrated on breathing. It was not too easy.
The amulet—could that help him now? It
contained a spark from the Flame, from the tremendous energy-source called Curupuri. And it had the property of lowering the metabolic
rate, somehow.
If,
instead, it accelerated metabolism, Raft would have been more satisfied. It
might actually do that, but that seemed improbable.
The
sparks, probably, were keyed to the original Flame, kept powered by induction,
unless they were each complete in themselves, like a
speck of radium. To decelerate would mean that Raft would become the equivalent
of a living statue among enemies moving like flashes of lightning.
Anyhow,
the amulet was in his sealed pocket, and could not be secured without mining da Fonseca's revolver. It was something to be investigated
later. There was nothing to do now but play possum, and wait.
So Raft waited, while the chill of the river
crept stealthily into his flesh, numbing nerves and muscles. He forced himself
to wait, unhitching his mind till he seemed to float in a vacuum where neither
light nor sound existed, nothing save the slow, jellied motion of the current
in the pool. He couldn't afford to wait for nightfall. It might be several
weeks, to his time-sense, before the sun dropped out of sight.
There
were, Raft thought wryly, certain handicaps to a land where metabolism had gone
so fantastically haywire.
Anyway,
Darum had not caught Parror.
That arrogant individual had taken Craddock to Kharn,
which lay at the source of this very river. What lay in the Garden of Kharn, Raft, hadn't the slightest idea, Janissa
had feared it. And she wasn't easily frightened, Raft surmised. His thoughts
drifted toward the girl, with her strange, dark-circled eyes and her
tiger-striped hair.
For
no apparent reason, he thought of Balzac, and the French writer's story, **A
Passion in the Desert." Then he had the connection: a man's love for a—had
it been a lioness? Or a leopard. Not a jaguar, anyway.
There were no jaguars in the Sahara. Janissa?
Feline she was, but she waS
human too. Though child of an alien species, she was no beast, no stalking
beast of prey. Raft caught himself.
"Good
grief!" he thought. "Am I imagining I'm in love with the girl? I've
seen her just twice, in the flesh. It's novelty. I'm attracted by her exotic
strangeness. When I get out of here, in five years or so, maybe, I'll meet a
girl from Peoria and marry her." The very term marriage made him realize
the fantasy of the situation. He grinned inwardly.
"Biologically
I rather imagine it's impossible. Besides, such things don't happen. I
certainly wouldn't want my wife going out at night to sit on the back fence and
howl."
Nevertheless
the thought did not entirely leave him. The union of two races, two species,
rather, had never occurred in the history of biology. He broke the problem
down into basic equations of genes and chromosomes, and that passed time, but
finally made him feel foolish. Eventually he was glad to raise his head warily
above water and prepare to emerge.
A long time had passed, and the alarm must
long since have died down. No one was visible on any of the castle's many balconies, nor could the courtyard be
seen from here. But if Raft attempted to cross that open plain, he would
inevitably be spotted.
He
could keep to the river—though its slow, powerful current was a danger. So he
set off upstream, hugging as closely to the bank as he could, crawling mostly,
swimming at times, and keeping the reed always ready. Once, at a suspicious
flash of movement, he lay hidden, but he was overly cautious then. By the time
he reached the forest, he was freezing cold and bleeding from scraped elbows
and
wrists.
He
hoped the cat people did not trail by scent. It was unlikely. They were a
civilized race, and the dulling of certain senses is the price evolution
exacts. The lower species, depending on scent and sound, have those faculties highly
developed. On the other hand, man's vision is far more powerful and more
easily adjustable than the vision of most beasts.
Darum would not know his destination. The closer
he got to Kharn, the safer he would be from pursuit.
A
cyclopean tree shut out the turrets of the castle. Raft went on cautiously for
perhaps half a mile. Then he opened the sealed pocket, made sure his revolver
was dry, and put the dagger into his belt. The amulet he took out for a closer
inspection.
It
told him nothing. A spark of fire glittered in the depths of a cloudy crystal
chip that was in turn set in a thick metallic lozenge, square with rounded
corners. The flat gem could, he found on experiment, be revolved like the dial
of a safe. He turned it cautiously.
There
was no change, except, perhaps, for a freshening of the breeze. How could he
test the device?
His
watch, of course.
Luckily
the watch was waterproof. He stared at the dial, noticing that the second hand
was moving very slowly. He turned the crystal on the amulet again and the
pointer moved faster. Another turn, and it raced.
Which meant that his metabolism was correspondingly slower.
Would
the amulet also increase the rate of life? If so, that would solve many
problems. He could get to Kharn, perhaps, even before
Parror arrived there. But he was doomed to
disappointment on that score. The amulet could retard metabolism, but it could
not increase it beyond the rate prevalent in Paititi.
That
meant the spark, undoubtedly, was attuned to the Flame itself, radiating at the
same energy-rate, and moving in the same cycle. Well, Raft didn't want to be
handicapped by moving more slowly than the rest of his temporary world, and he
adjusted the device till it was as he had found it.
He
now put it in the pocket that held the revolver, and went on. He was
estimating, as well as he could remember, the velocity of a bullet, and
wondering if, under the current conditions, any target he fired at might be
able to dodge lead.
He
must remember to use the gun at close range, the closer the better!
The
use of artillery would be handicapped in Paititi. If a bomb were dropped on Doirada Castle, the cat
people would almost have time to dismantle the structure and move it elsewhere
before the egg landed. No wonder the species fought with steel, instead of propellents. Only an energy-ray could be truly efficient
here.
Which explained, Raft decided, why mental powers were so highly
developed—Janissa's mirror, Yrann's
hypnotic sphere. Timelag would be minimized with such devices.
The
whole inanimate part of the valley was indeed under a spell, such a one as had protected the Norse god Baldur. There could be
few fatalities through accident. Not when stones floated, rivers ran like
treacle, and a man fell as slowly as Alice descending the rabbit-hole!
As
he went on, he paid more attention to the life around him, the curious
creatures that used the gigantic trees as hiding places. In the cool, clear
light he could make out new details.
The flower-bright vines, with their dangerous
tentacles, slithered swiftly across the bark. There were many of the three-foot
alligators, lurking in the pools they themselves seemed to have constructed on
the trunks, shells that resembled the cups rubber-workers fasten to the hevea bark as they drain their milky latex.
The 'gators had surprisingly flexible claws. Raft noticed a couple of them constructing
their pools, scraping resinous wood from the tree and making it into a kind of
cement with a fluid they secreted from salivary glands.
Only the sloths were truly familiar, and they
were all the stranger because of the rapidity with
which they moved. The true sloth hangs motionless by its claws, as its tongue
flashes out to reap a nutritious harvest of insects. Its metabolism is
abnormally slow.
But it was not slow here.
As
for the inch-long parasites that crept through the sloths' hair, Raft found
those creatures too unpleasantly familiar to be truly interesting. Only their
ape-like tails kept them from resembling too closely the species that was not
dominant in Paititi, though it might be elsewhere.
Most
intriguing were the brown furry mammals in the apartment-house nests. They had
sucking-disks on their paws, which were none too efficient, but their elongated
snouts ended in tabs of flesh like the extremity of an elephant's trunk, a finger and thumb, which they used as
man might use his hands. Its prehensile delicacy was
amazing.
Raft wondered what the interior of the nests
was like. He felt that what lay inside might be surprising.
Underfoot
was only the moss. There was no underbrush. Those incredible trees seemed to
have sucked all the nutriment out of the ground, leaving so little that only
moss could flourish. That gave a logical explanation for the tree-parasites.
Where
else could they live, except in a closely integrated society, where hunger made
an automatic check-and-bal-ance? Even the trees were
part of that inexorable system, for they had drained the earth of life. And in
return, they were hosts to other species.
Species had reached dead end in this land.
They would never evolve to dominance, as the cat people had evolved, Raft
surmised. They had found their balance.
And, meanwhile, he had to
find Craddock.
Keeping
a wary eye out for possible pursuit, he followed the river. Never at any time
could he see more than a half-mile ahead. The trees made a maze. But the river
itself was a guide. Raft plunged on doggedly, until at last exhaustion forced
him to rest.
There
might be shelter on one of the encrusted tree-trunks, but life was too teeming
there. None of the things seemed to venture to the ground, however, and Raft
finally lay down on the river bank, in lieu of better shelter. He might be
attacked while he slept, but there was no way of guarding against that. He
laid the revolver ready and slept, hoping for the best.
When
he awoke, he went on again. Nor had he far to travel now. An hour's walk, as he
estimated time, brought him to a wall which blocked further progress. It was
only twenty feet high, dwarfed by the trees, but it was of some age-resistant
plastic or alloy, and had eroded scarcely at all.
To
left and to right it stretched away and was lost amid the trees. But it was
broken at one spot by an archway, through which the river poured. Sediment had
built up a narrow ledge bordering the water, a precarious path that led beneath
the arch.
Unhesitatingly
Raft stepped out on that muddy trail. He could see faint outlines that might
have been footprints, and, further along, his suspicion was confirmed when he
observed a track that was unmistakably that of Craddock's heavy boots. He was
very nearly at the end of the trail.
Ahead he could make out irregular vegetation
darkening that hemispherical opening, blocking his vision. He went on, more
carefully now. There were bushes, he noted with surprise.
He
began to push through their tangled mass, and abruptly drew back, contact with
the things startling him. Their texture had been unlike the rough, bristly
texture of plants. They were warm.
They were not plants.
Lacy
filigrees, arabesque nets of interwoven mesh, made a curtain on each side of the river. They were grayish-pink, reminding
Raft unmistakably of the neutral structure of a living body, networks of nerves, raw and unpleasant. Nor were they
rooted like plants.
They quivered, vibrated.
They drew back to let him pass.
As
he stepped forward, they drew into themselves like contracting anemones touched
by an intrusive finger. A dozen grayish, irregular little balls hugged the
ground, blending with it in protective camouflage.
Beyond
them lay the Garden of Kharn, a sickly, yellowish
tangle of vegetation blocking Raft's view. He could see the guarding wall
marching to left and right, curving in to form what must be an enclosure. There
were none of the giant trees within the wall, though their columns loomed above
and beyond it.
Raft
moved on, keeping to the river bank. The bushes were strange to him, though he
was no botanist. They seemed a rather impossible hybrid of fungus and true
plant. They were fern and mushroom in one.
Oddly
he thought of them as vampires, draining life from the very ground.
That
forest was not normal—no. The cyclopean trees outside were friendly by
comparison. They, at least, were as immense and aloof as gods.
But
these plants,'these sickly hybrids,
grew with a rank luxuriance that was in itself unhealthy. Movement crawled
through the yellow jungle, not the wave-motion of wind, but secretive, stealthy
movements which made Raft's scalp prickle.
Very
faintly, scarcely noticeable, he felt a presence in the Garden. And he knew,
then, why Janissa had not wanted to speak of Kharn.
For
that intangibly sensed presence was not malignant. It was worse. It was cold
and distant and alien.
And, intrinsically, it was
very evil.
Raft moved even more cautiously now. There
was menace here, the more ominous because he could not define it. It was a
brooding, enigmatic presence which was sensed by the cat-people as well as by
himself. This added up to significance.
Felines
and simians react in different ways to the same stimulus. Cats are notorious
for their acceptance of the supernatural, which meant simply the supernormal,
vibrations and radiations too subtle to be sensed fully by mankind. Psychic
menaces that would give a man cold chills would rouse a cat to purring ecstasy.
Similarly,
cats react violently to a canine menace—a wolf— whereas a man simply reaches
for the nearest weapon.
This
malignancy, therefore, was a presence alien to both feline and simian.
Perhaps,
it was alien chiefly because of the altered evolutionary standard in this
hothouse valley of forced growth. There was an odd sort of familiarity about
that unseen presence. Raft felt certain that he had encountered something of
the sort before, and often. Yet never had his living flesh shrunk from the mere
nearness of any creature as it did now. Whatever dwelt in the Garden of Kharn, it was nothing remotely normal or healthy.
He
stepped beneath the broad leaves and mushroom-caps of the forest. A sulphurous yellow light filtered through from above, lacking
in the cool clarity of the atmosphere outside the Garden.
The
ground underfoot was spongy, a moist, slippery muck into which his sandals sank
mushily, with an unpleasant sucking sound. It was not silent here. There were
furtive, quick movements all about him, hidden in that yellow jungle.
He was an intruder and felt it. A fleshy stem
bent slowly toward him, sticky juice exuding from its surface. The sweetish
odor of the liquor was sickening. Raft stepped away, and the branch rose slowly
toward the perpendicular, as though it was dragging itself painfully upright
against the fetters of gravity.
Yes, the forest was conscious of him. But
there were no cannibal trees here, no gigantic Venus fly-traps that could
swallow him whole. There was something horrible about the straining, awkward
motion of those heavy leaves and stems.
The
place was alive with insects. The forest crawled with them, flies, moths,
butterflies, a myriad varieties crept and buzzed and fed on the ichor the trees sweated.
Some
of the fungi had hollow caps like huge bowls, and the stench that rose from
those liquid-filled basins was overpowering. Yet it was not entirely
unpleasant.
Attar
of roses is sickening in quantity, but the merest suggestion of attar has the
opposite effect. Had the forest not sweated their perfume till the very air was
saturated with it, Raft might not have objected. As it was, his clothes were
moist and stinking with the stuff before he had traveled more than a few yards.
The
trail of Parror and Craddock was well marked. There
were other tracks in the soil, ambiguous prints Raft did not recognize. But he
ignored these to follow his quarry. Parror had headed
directly toward the center of the Garden.
One
of thé pink webwork
creatures crept slowly into view. A filament of raw nerves, it crawled up the
stem of a
fungus and pulled itself into the liquid-filled
cap. It immersed itself, floating motionless, its
tendrils spreading out like the hair of a drowned woman.
A
little creature, plated like an armadillo, rolled into view. Raft watched it
warily. All over the armored body sharp spines stuck out.
It
rolled toward Raft, but he avoided it easily. The spines looked dangerous. They
might be toxic. Luckily the creature could not move fast.
It rolled into the jungle
and was gone.
Raft
went on. He saw another of the armored animals, but it was licking the stem of
a fern-mushroom, and did not notice him. Then a clearing opened ahead, and it
was— carpeted.
That
was Raft's first impression. Patterns of flowers, arabesque
and exotic, blazed with a riot of color within a circular expanse twenty feet
in diameter. But they were not flowers. A queer, smooth glaze seemed to
overlie that expanse—and it was a carpet, after all. The meaningless, twisting
pattern was the first touch of vivid color he had seen in the saffron forest.
Raft
stood scowling, sensing more strongly now that dim pulse of a living presence
in the Garden.
Slowly
there crept into his mind the thought of a voice-whispering.
CREEPING MENACE
It came so slowly, so imperceptibly, that eerie
voice, that Raft could not tell when it took form and shape in his brain. Yet
it was not exactly a voice nor a thought. Rather, it
was something akin to each, but with a difference. Communication is aimed at
what psychologists call empathy—the transference of the senses from one mind to
another, so that perfect understanding may be approached. It is rapport, never
complete, always groping— Till now.
Because the Intruder understood Raft. With its ancient wisdom it knew the very
structure of his soul. Like ivy sliding through crevices in a wall, the thing
permeated Raft, as though he stood bathed in a light that flowed into his body.
As though he were a living sponge through which tidewater stole.
The slow tide mounted.
The
heavy scent of the forest was not so unpleasant now. Raft could sort out the
component elements which made up the perfume, the sharp, pungent fluid that the
armadillo-creatures liked, the warm, oily, sweet ichor
that fed the nerve-things Other juices, musk-heavy,
eucalyptus-keen, salty and sour and pungent were present. It was oddly
fascinating, this business of analyzing the odors and recognizing each one.
For they were, in essence, food-odors. Not human food. But nevertheless those
smells stimulated the purely physical part of Raft and, through that, struck
deep into his mind.
Feeding was an integral part of the
life-cycle, the purpose for which all things were created. Dulled senses could
not appreciate the pure ecstasy of absorbing nourishment. Only specialized
beings could understand the delight which went through every cell of the body.
The nerce-things. They lay immersed in their warm, steaming liquor,
tingling with electric pleasure as they absorbed the fluid that was food and
drink to them. The armadillo-beasts. The feeling of taste on the taste-buds of a tongue. Cool
liquid slipping down a dry throat, sharp and refreshing. The
pleasure of taste, and taste alone.
You have always known
hunger, Brian Raft.
He
was standing in the center of that patterned carpet, he noticed. It did not
matter. He was trying to concentrate on that message, that inviting whisper
which spoke to him of delights so purely physical that they transcended
anything else.
Not
only animal-beings, but plants as well, knew hunger and satiation. For plants
fed through their root-sytems, set deep into the
breathing earth that is the primal source of all life. Something utterly unimaginable
crawled through Raft, the physical sensation of having roots, of feeling
himself absorb nourishment through vegetable tissue. Plant-cells.
He was part of the earth itself, and it fed him.
He sank to his knees on that smooth, vivid
carpet.
Now
he was looking up at a shimmering dance of faint light. He was on his back,
arms flung wide, and a tingling, delightful warmth was
saturating him. He was on quicksand which very slowly, very gently, settled
beneath him.
Or
it was not settling. It was he who was dissolving, being absorbed into that
alien substance on which he lay. He was becoming part of the composite, hungry
life that beat distantly all around him, murmuring in the slow motions of the
trees, shuddering through the very earth.
You have always known hunger, Brian Raft. You
are one. I am many.
Therefore
feed and be content, the silent voice said. Sip the sharp, tingling essence
that nourishes the armored beasts. Steep yourself in the warm smoothness of the
liquor in the fungus-cups. Thrust roots into the soil, and know the subtle
delight of a feeding which permeates all of you, body and mind.
Brighter
grew the swirling mists. They blotted out vision. But there was no need for
eyes. The trees were blind, yet they thrilled with ecstasy as their roots
sucked up food.
The
trees?
No, they could not feel. And yet they could.
Something bound them to all other life here, by an unbreakable cord. The Garden
of Kharn hungered and was fed.
Memories flashed through Raft's mind. The
Intruder was questioning, seeking, probing for what? He remembered the sharp
catnip taste of beer, the peppery spiciness of curry, the fresh hot taste of
newly-baked bread. The sweet juice of tangerines was in his mouth, and the
heavy richness of cocoa. The aromatic tickling of old brandy.
Eagerness
touched Raft. The probing grew more violent. He half roused riimself from his trance.
Still the memories were dragged into the
forefront of his consciousness. The tastes of things he had known once, elsewhere.
Where, then?
In a world where brandy was sipped from sleek
glass inhalers, where bread was baked in ovens, where cocoa was served in cups,
on tables upon which white linen was spread. Association clicked in Raft's
brain. He remembered more than food now.
He remembered civilization.
And with that thought came realization of himself, of
Brian Raft. He was not a sensuous machine for sucking up nourishment.
The bright mists swept down like a shrouding
blanket. The Garden of Kham sent its heavy perfume
like a tide over Raft. But he remembered, very suddenly and chillingly, another
Garden, and a Tree which had borne strange fruit A
command that said, "Ye shall not eat of it."
You
have always known hunger, Brian Raft. Feed as I feed. Know ecstasy as I know
it.
A still, cool, distant voice, infinitely alluring, impossible to resist,
although it, too, aroused memory. That indefinable familiarity was stronger now. The presence that
infiltrated the Garden was one that Raft had known before, in different form.
Then he remembered.
And
the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely
die.
The
blind shock of realization stabbed through Raft with abysmal violence. His
muscles jerked into tenseness. He attempted to spring up, and found that he
could not.
That
gelid carpet had flowed upon him, over him, as he had lain motionless.
Yet
it was possible to move. With infinite effort he dragged his arm down till his handclosed over the hilt of the dagger. He could feel the
treacherously pleasant embrace of the thing all around him. A winding sheet
that would have absorbed him, he thought, as he lay helpless.
He
stabbed up, claustrophobia bringing dry panic to his throat. He slashed in a
blind frenzy of panic till the living carpet was ribboned.
The worst part was that the entity did not try to flee. It let it itself be cut
to rags, till all that flowery beauty was torn and spoiled. Raft stumbled away
into the dubious shelter of the saffron forest, choking for a breath of clean
air. He felt filthy and contaminated.
It revolted him that any one of his senses,
the purely animal one of taste, could be so treacherous!
What
monstrous dead-end evolution had developed such a devil's Garden as this?
It
was more than symbiosis. It was an attunement of alL
life within these walls. Outside, on the cyclopean trees, various species
killed each other, ate, propagated, and died. But in Kharn
there had been a gradual absorption, a bond growing into existence between
plant and animal life.
One species—dominant!
Raft presently saw that
species.
Deeper
in the forest, the shapeless mound of flesh lay under a transparent hemisphere
that seemed to be unbreakable. Raft yielded to impulse and smashed a rock down
upon it, without result. He did not wish to fire his revolver, for fear of
forewarning Parror, but he had an idea that a bullet
would not harm that protective barrier either. Immersed in a watery liquid the
gray mass floated. Small conduits like arteries led down into the ground.
A brain? Only partially. Sections of it were abnormally developed,
others vestigial. There were other additions which Raft could not understand.
But he felt more strongly than ever the intangible evil that throbbed out from
the thing.
For
it was reptilian. Here in Kharn the reptilian species
had become dominant, subjugating all other life into a fantastic rapport that
made the Garden itself a single entity. There was no really recognizable
intelligence in the being. Reptilian instincts are not mammalian, and a
tremendously evolved reptile might have nothing at
all in common with other creatures.
The thing lived only for
the specialized pleasure of taste. It had developed the necessity of feeding
into a sensory ecstasy that was exclusive of all other faculties. Intelligence
there might be, of a sort, but it was applied only
to purposes that would aid the monster's dominant instinct.
Through
the Garden, through living trees and living flesh, that horrible, ravening
hunger-urge had swept. Trees and flesh ate as their—brain—commanded. In return,
they transmitted their sensory reactions to the reptilian thing that had gone
beyond the touch of any sense but one.
Impregnable,
alien, living only for blind delight, the horror floated within the
transparent dome.
Shuddering,
Raft turned away. Once more he turned to the easily-discernible trail of Parror and Craddock. The sooner he caught up with them, the
sooner he could get out of the Garden. Unless they themselves had fallen victim
to Kharn's menace.
They
had not. The white gleam of pillars showed ahead. A figure was visible there,
working at something, and Raft recognized Parror's
sleek hair and the velvet beard that shadowed the jaw. The Flame's guardian
sensed Raft's presence instantly. He whirled, eyes
narrow, and then, relaxing, laughed.
The
familiar anger began to rise in Raft. As always, he was conscious of Parror's calm arrogance, his complete self-assurance. He
tried to fight down the feeling.
"So
you got away from Darum," Parror
said, smiling with some secret amusement. "You're shrewder than I'd
thought. How did you know where to find me?"
Raft ignored the question.
"Where's Craddock?" he asked,
Parror's head moved slightly. Beyond a pale column
lay a motionless figure, eyes closed.
"There
he is. Don't bother to take out your knife. He's unharmed." Parror finished winding up a thin coil. He dropped the
silvery wire into a pocket and fumbled there for a moment. When his hand
emerged, it wore one of the taloned gauntlets.
"You touched me once
in anger," Parror said silkily. "I haven't
forgotten that. I've no further use for you or Crad-dock."
He was almost purring. "I've an extra glove. Here."
Raft
said, "Thanks. I can take care of myself." He had an idea that might
remove the careless smile from Parror's face. It
would be a pleasure to do just that.
He
took out the jeweled glove he had stolen from Darum's
treasure-chamber and slipped it on his right hand. Parror
nodded.
"You
learn fast," he said, flexing his fingers so that the dull claws spread
and closed menacingly. Raft poised himself and waited silently.
Dull
claws.
They
were bright metal where they joined the gloves, but their three-inch blades
were stained dark. Raft suddenly guessed the significance of that. He had an
idea that if those razor-sharp talons penetrated his skin, he would die, no matter how slight the wound.
Treachery, to a feline, was
not dishonorable, it seemed.
Too late now to call a halt. Parror was
stalking forward, his eyes shining. Moreover, Raft still had an ace in the
hole. But he dared not fail.
Then
Parror sprang. He was laughing, his velvet motion
almost careless, as he came in with the agility of a jaguar. With rippling,
nimble speed he charged, swerving at the last moment, while the talons raked
straight at Raft's face.
Raft
ducked under the slash. His hand came up, clenched into a fist. That short,
deadly blow cracked solidly against Parror's chin.
Raft felt flesh grind against his knuckles as hard gems ripped through skin and
grated on bone.
Whatever
Parror had expected, it was not this. He was flung
back, dazed and reeling, and for a few seconds was actually unconscious as he
wavered there. Then the blinding berserk rage dropped upon him like a scarlet
cloak. His lips flattened. His eyes flamed green. His face was that of a devil—
or a beast.
Raft
had torn off his glove. He held da Fonseca's revolver
now, and he was smiling coldly.
"Come
on,** he whispered. "Come on, Parror.
It's just what I want. Close quarters. So I won't be able to miss."
Parror's
gaze flashed to the weapon. Briefly mad fury and caution battled within him. He
strained forward with tigerish blood-hunger in his
contorted face.
He—hissed!
Raft
started to walk toward his opponent. Parror snarled
something that sounded like an oath. He made a furious, baffled gesture and
whirled away. Raft's finger tightened on the trigger, and, on impulse, he sent
a snap shot after Parror.
Either
he missed completely, or the bullet was too slow in this accelerated world. For
the cat-man was gone in the saffron jungle. The tangled underbrush swallowed
him.
Raft
shrugged and turned to the motionless Craddock. He worked on the man for a
short time. Respiration was slow, and the skin was moist and clammy. Shock,
probably. And with good cause, Raft thought, his mouth twisting into an ugly
shape.
At last Craddock's eyes fluttered open. There was intelligence behind them, not the
hypnotic stupor Raft had feared. He managed a crooked, weak smile.
"Brian. How—how's tricks?"
"Okay,
for the moment," Raft said. "How do you feel?" "Nearly
normal," Craddock murmured, his voice growing stronger. "It's just
reaction from hypnosis, I think. It'll pass." "Don't try to get up.
Just take it easy." "Where's Parror?"
Raft
explained. Craddock nodded slowly. "He won't be back. He got what he
wanted." "You mean—what?"
"Information. He had a machine, a little gadget that
probed my mind. It dug up memories I didn't even know I had. That was why he
brought me here. He needed time to adjust the thing to my brain. I'm of a
different species, so there were difficulties. But he solved them." Raft
frowned.
"Too
bad he's such a devil. He's smart.'*
"He's
no devil, except by human standards," Craddock said oddly. The maimed
hands lifted. Craddock rubbed his eyes and shook his head as though to clear
it. "A different psychology. To them, the end
always justifies the means. Parror's end is-to
stimulate the Flame. Curupuri."
"And
he can do it now?"
"When
he gets the equipment he needs. That'll take time." "Yeah," Raft
said thoughtfully. "And Darum's got the unseen
road guarded by his soldiers." "Darum?"
"The king of Paititi. Listen, Dan. Do you feel strong enough to
tell me what happened?"
"There
isn't much," Craddock said. "I was in a trance, but I could see what
was going on. Parror brought me here. He had a
claw-tipped glove he'd poisoned, and he fought off some creatures with it,
pretty nasty specimens."
"In
here? In the Garden?"
"The
yellow forest," Craddock said doubtfully. "Yes, it was here. When we
got to this place, he rigged up a barrier of some sort, with wire. I don't know
what it was. But it worked. It must have. We weren't bothered after that.
"Parror put his gadget on my head and kept adjusting it,
dragging out all the memories I'd ever had. Eventually he got the secret of the
Flame. The part I'd read, from the old records of the First Race, but that I
hadn't understood,"
Craddock
hesitated.
"Funny.
The symbols were stored up in my brain, though I never knew what they meant.
You never really forget anything, you know, Brian. It's all there, in your subcons'cious, layer after layer of submerged memories
that go back to the time your brain first became capable of storing up thoughts
and impressions.
"Eventually
I remembered. But I had to write it out. It had been written, not spoken. The
Indio language is a degraded version of it. Just the same Parror
figured it out. And he's going to waken the Flame,
when he gets the equipment ready."
"That's
dangerous," Raft said.
"I
suppose it is. Still—" Craddock looked at his deformed hands "—I
risked it once. Blindly, of course. Parror knows what he's doing."
Raft thought of that
tremendous power unleashed and raging unchecked through Paititi.
"I wonder."
Craddock
shivered a little. "I hope so, Brian! If the Flame ever gets out of
control, the game is over."
"We'd
better get out of here. This isn't a safe spot. Are you able to walk yet?"
"Sure,
if you can help me a little." But Craddock was still weak, and he needed
more than a little assistance as they retraced their steps through the saffron
jungle. Raft supported him over the rougher spots, and he leaned heavily on the
younger man's arm.
They
kept a sharp eye out for Parror, though Raft felt
certain that the Flame's guardian had left the Garden by now, intent upon
gathering the equipment he would need for the ultimate experiment.
Nevertheless,
there was still danger. Kharn—watched. Raft could
sense the hidden, reptilian menace lurking in the yellow shadows under the
trees.
They
were almost at the river-gap when Raft touched Crad-dock's
arm and they halted. There was something ahead, blocking their path. Not the
nerve-bushes, but a sickly, saffron thing which lay like half-solid dough along
the bank for twenty feet or more. Raft's brows contracted.
"It wasn't here
before," he said slowly. "I don't like it."
Craddock
straightened and drew a deep breath. "Guess I'll have to stand on my own
feet for awhile. You may need both hands. See those pseudopods
sliding this way? The thing's alive."
"An
amoeba?"
"It isn't that. It's—there's no sharp
line of demarcation between animal and vegetable here. It may be protoplasm
but, I think, it's allied to those fern-mushrooms. If it caught us we'd
probably get digested. However, it's slow."
"Yeah. But it's big. You feel up to ninning?"
Craddock drew himself
together. "Okay. Where?"
"Let's
move along the shallows here and then run like blazes for the tunnel."
Craddock nodded. They stepped into a cold,
slow current and waded forward, feeling the water slide leisurely around their
legs as they watched the jellied, saffron entity on the bank. They came abreast
of it, and the tunnel-mouth lay only a little way
ahead.
Raft
began to think, as he splashed on, that they would make the tunnel without
trouble after all. The monster of Kharn, he told
himself, was not a creature of action. Its danger lay in the mind. It used
purely mental power to attract and overpower its prey. Nor was it accustomed
to highly developed minds, able to resist. Perhaps it had never needed to
develop physical offense.
The
water suddenly boiled just before them, sliding with nightmare slowness from a
round saffron arm. A pseudo-pod, stretching after them from the bank, broke the
surface. Another lifted out of the water close behind it.
They
tried to circle farther out to avoid them, but the footing shelved off steeply
into dangerous depths. The pseudopod reached
inexorably out—farther—farther—and touched Raft.
It was .filled with a
living, hothouse warmth that made his flesh crawl. It wound about his
waist, its moist heat striking inward against his skin as if digestion were
already at work upon him.
He felt its strong pull toward the bank. He
tried to get out his knife, but another coil came up from somewhere and laid a
warm, wet embrace about his arms, fastening them to his sides. He felt himself
being pulled shoreward, and struggled hard to keep his footing in the slow
water.
"Hold firm,
Brian!"
Craddock
stumbled forward, Hps set, fighting his own weakness.
He
got the knife from Rafts belt with a violent surge of effort, and slashed at
the tentacle. That yellowish, half-fungoid flesh
gave like cheese. It had surface tension, apparently, but it was not more than
half solid. Craddock slashed, and the pseudopods fell
away and were washed slowly, slowly off down the current. The incident was like
a nightmare in its gentle, deliberate, inexorable sluggishness.
The
whole mass of the thing was sliding into the stream now.
"Come on," Raft
said, "Can you make it?"
He
seized Craddock's arm as they ran for the archway, the water sucking like glue
around their feet.
On
their right the entire bank seemed to be giving way and dropping toward them in
a hungry, malignant pile that could afford to take its time.
Craddock's
weakness hampered them. The water parted reluctantly under their splashing
feet. It was like running through semi-liquid rubber, with the great, slow,
yellow thing rolling its bulk forward to intercept their way.
The mouth of the tunnel opened before them,
and the nerve-networks that acted as sentries made a quick, concerted,
abortive motion to stop them, as if the whole valley answered a single brain,
as perhaps it did. But Craddock slashed weakly at them with the knife, and when
the blade had severed two or three the rest shrank and folded down out of
harm's way as the two men plunged through.
"They've—stopped,"
Craddock panted, glancing back. "They won't—follow outside, I guess."
"Keep
going," Raft urged him grimly. "No use taking chances now."
They
stumbled on, out of the gloom at last into the cool green light from the leafy
vault, far overhead, that roofed Paitrti. It was like
finding sanctuary.
But not quite. A quarter of a mile away, rounding one of the giant trees, a little
column was moving steadily toward them. Raft groaned.
"Darum's soldiers. That looks like—yeah, it's Vann, all right.
Come on, Craddock. Maybe we can make it."
"I—I
can't." The older man staggered as he tried to keep up with Raft's quick
strides. "Go on ahead. Don't mind about me."
Raft halted and shrugged. "They'd have
caught us anyway. We'll wait, I guess. And fight it out." He touched the
butt of the revolver, and watched that glittering column draw nearer.
Finally,
the column deployed, showing two score of soldiers, wary, armed men who spread
out to surround their prisoners. Vann's scarred, hard face was impassive.
"You're
captives," he said. "There'll be time for a duel later, if you want,
but the king needs you both now. So you are Brian Raft, after all, eh? And this
man is Craddock?" He stared curiously.
"What does Darum
intend to do?" Raft asked. "Cut my throat?"
"No," Vann said.
"Not yet, at least. Where is Parror?"
"Gone. I don't know where.**
"We'll
find him." Vann issued swift orders. Half of the group broke up, spreading
out into the forest
"Now
we'll go back to Doirada Castle. Meanwhile, you can
tell me, Raft, what lies in the Garden of Kharn. I'd
have entered it to carry out my orders, but not with any pleasure. What devils
lair in Kharn?"
"I'll
tell you later," Raft said wearily. He let the revolver drop back into his
pocket. "Right now, I'm too tired to care. Let's go back to Doirada."
POWER OF SCIENCE
Quietly they stood before the king, waiting, in the dim-lit room
where Yrann's harp had sung. But it was brighter now.
The veiled woman was not around. In her place Janissa
sat on a cushioned couch near the dais. She had looked at Raft once, given him
a cryptic smile, and turned back to watch Darum, who
squatted cross-legged amid his silks,
Darum watched Raft out of hooded eyes.
"You
think I am going to kill you," he said. "Why? Don't trouble to
answer. I can read that much in your face. Because you tried to kill me, with
that knife Vann took from you. Also because you stole my
amulet."
Raft attempted to speak,
but the king lifted his hand.
"Wait.
Your race is not as mine. I see no great evil in your attempt at murder. You'd
have succeeded had you deserved to succeed. Since you didn't—" He nodded
"—it is over and done with. What is past is past Tomorrow you may try
again, or I may, and succeed. And I will take back the amulet too. Meanwhile, Janissa has told me a great deal."
"When
I found you'd escaped, Brian—I told Darum," the
girl said. "I knew you'd gone after Parror,"
"Yes,"
the king said silkily. "And I wanted Parror. He
goes too far, I think. After all, I rule in Paititi,
not Parror."
"For
a while," Raft said quietly. "If he starts the Flame, and it gets out
of control, you won't rule anything."
"So
he learned Craddock's secret." Darum sighed.
"He is outlawed now. Every man's hand is against him. And I have
guarded the unseen road so he cannot enter it. I do
not think he will reach the Flame."
"Parror is clever," Janissa
said.
Craddock
broke in.
"He'll need instruments. I know that
much. It'll take time." Darum shrugged.
"I
am no scientist. I know only that there is danger both ways. If the Flame fades
below a danger level—well, Janissa? What then?"
"We
will become as the cavern-beasts," she told him. "We will degenerate
as the First Race did."
"But
when that day will come none can say. In our lifetime, or our
children's, or perhaps not even then. And if Parror
tries to rouse the Flame, and fails to check it, that will mean immediate
destruction."
"He
doesn't think so," Craddock said. "He's sure he can control the
Flame."
"But
can he?" Darum leaned forward. "That is
what I seek to know. Can he—surely?"
"I
wish I knew," Craddock said. "Parror got
certain memories out of my mind, but they were mere superficial memories, not
knowledge. I don't even know what most of the symbols I wrote down for him
meant. I didn't know thirty years ago, when I translated part of the
record."
"The
record that was destroyed when the Flame wakened," Darum
said. "A secret only Parror and you know
now?"
"I
don't know," Craddock said. "It was dragged out of my mind by
hypnosis. I wasn't conscious most of the time. I've only the vaguest idea what Parror intends to do."
"Well,
the first step is to capture Parror, so he won't
rouse the Flame," Darum said practically.
"I hope my guards will find him soon. Meanwhile, how am I to deal with you
two?"
"Why not just let us
go?" Raft said slowly.
"Simians
are too curious. Your race would try to enter
Paititi. Two species, both dominant, cannot live
together successfully.**
"Why not?" Raft asked. "There's the possibility of mutual benefit."
"Our
minds are too unlike."
"I
think you underestimate Parror, Darum,"
Janissa said. "He's clever, and he haS more knowledge than I. There are—powers connected with
the Flame that not even I understand. But Parror
understands them. Also, I have heard legends of a secret way to reach the cave
where Curu-puri burns."
"He
must not reach the Flame!" Darum said.
Raft
glanced at Janissa, and drew courage from her steady
gaze. "Suppose he does, though. In spite of everything.
That means that he'll waken the Flame. If he makes a mistake, nothing can save Paititi. Right?"
The
king nodded.
"True."
"All
right," Raft said. "Here's an answer. Forestall him*
Darum
jerked his head up to stare. "Waken the Flame ourselves?"
"Why not?" Raft asked. "We've got the science of two cultures here in this room,
which gives us an edge on Parror. Janissa
knows the Flame. She's its hereditary guardian. I know biochemistry, and
Craddock isn't a layman. And you must have technicians here."
"We
do."
"Well,
then, what's to
prevent us from making the device ourselves?"
"The
question of possible failure," Darum said.
"The First Race never tested their machine. They waited too long. There is
absolutely no way of foretelling whether it would actually control the Flame.
Trial and error is the only way, and one error means destruction."
"There i£ a way," Raft said. Janissa breathed a
question.
Raft
took out the amulet. Seeing it, the king's eyes narrowed.
"You
know what this is, Darum. It holds a spark of Flame. It is the Flame, but too tiny to be very dangerous. Why
not use this as the control? If this spark from the Flame itself can be
stimulated, and leashed, you'd know the machine was successful."
Darum
shrugged.
"Parror may have the same idea," Raft continued.
"I hope so. But in case he doesn't, we'll have the jump on him, and know
definitely whether the device the First Ones planned is safe."
Darum
hesitated.
"Perhaps
that is true."
Raft
talked fast. "If this works, it'll remove the menace of the Flame forever.
It'll mean complete control of that source of energy. The threat of
degeneration will be removed from Paititi completely.
Suppose we do fail—well simply be right back here where we stand now, won't
we?"
"He's
right," Janissa said breathlessly. "It's a chance, Darum. The only one, if Parror outwits us. And it may mean safety for Paititi forever."
Darum
did not speak for a long moment. Then he nodded slowly.
"I
agree, then. Janissa, this is in your hands. And now
leave me. We will talk later."
The
girl led them out. Behind them the lights dimmed, and, as Raft moved along the
passage that led from the king's chamber, he heard a murmuring of faint music.
Yrann. Should he have warned the king against her? Perhaps. But he doubted whether Darum
would have believed him. He shelved the thought for future reference.
Meanwhile
Craddock was pulling at his arm.
"Brian." "WelF'
"I
didn't want to queer the pitch, but—" His voice lowered "—you forgot
one thing. I can't remember what Parror dragged out
of my mind. He forced it out with his gadget, but I was in a trance. I don't
remember now."
Janissa
had overheard even Craddock's soft whisper.
"It
is well you didn't mention that to Darum," she
said. "But I think the problem can be solved. I don't know what device Parror used. Nevertheless, when a gate has been opened
once, it opens more easily the next time. I have some knowledge of the mind,
Craddock, and possibly we can succeed."
"We'll
get it out of you," Raft said. "If it means a course in psychonamicsl"
It did, almost. Raft had used medical
hypnosis himself, and could help Janissa, who
otherwise might have been hindered by the alienage of
minds, the more than racial difference between Craddock's thought-patterns and
her own. But with Raft as mentor, the secret wisdom was slowly, painfully
pulled into the light.
They
did not sleep. Some drug like benzedrine,
Raft guessed, kept them alert and stimulated for their long sessions. There
was technical equipment in the castle, and there were scientists as well, though
their knowledge lay chiefly in the realm of the psychic. Many allied sciences
were represented among the cat-people. Surgery was highly developed, as was
biology.
It
was Craddock's subconscious they were probing, and it was like fishing in a
teeming pool. Too often they caught the wrong fish, till they learned the right sort of bait to use. But finally symbols
began to take form on the pad that was always ready to Craddock's hand. He
scribbled a line-hesitated, corrected himself—and, step by step, pieced out the
record he had read only once, thirty years before, but which his subconscious
mind had never forgotten.
"If
Parror hadn't opened the way, we'd never be able to
do this," Janissa said later as she was standing
on a balcony with Raft, taking a well-earned
breathing-space after a particularly arduous session. Before them the
slow cloud of mist hung like an enormous tower.
Raft
looked at her. He remembered his half-mocking question of long ago, whether two
species could mingle. But logic did not seem so important now. The warm, living
presence of Janissa was more vital.
Till
lately he had not known her, really. She had been a paradoxical, fascinating girl who had revealed few of the traits that
make humanity human. But now, since they had been working together, he had come
to understand her more, and to know that he would never be able to understand
her fully.
That
sweetly curved, softly malicious little face, with its hint of diablerie, its
lovely, feline strangeness, was more attractive than he dared admit to
himself. The aquamarine, shadowed eyes were turned up to his . . . Eyes of Bast, whose velvet aloofness guards the night of Egypt. Yet
she could be playful too, gay as a kitten
might be, and with the same endearing charm.
Now
as he stood there, something hidden and secret flashed between them. There was
no need for a physical embrace. It was subtler than that. But, briefly, it
seemed as though a veil had been lifted, a veil
that hung between two beings who had been alien.
His
hand stole out and touched hers. They looked out across Doirada
Gulf, to the colossal columns of giant trees that supported the sky of Paititi.
He
thought, Only here in this lost land beyond space and
time, could I have found Janissa.
They were silent. Speech
was not necessary. Hand in hand they stood, lost in the warm, comforting
awareness of each other's presence, until Craddock's voice called them back to
the work of harnessing the Flame.
What
could harness such a tremendous force, a power which burned in the heart of the
spiral nebulae and kindled giant suns? The chain that bound Fenris-wolf? What was the Flame?
They
did not know. But men do not know what electricity is, either. Yet they can tame it with insulated wires. What was needed here was
insulation, but not only that. There must also be a means of stimulating the
Flame. A safe way.
That
was not easy to find. First the last fragments of the lost record had to be
taken from Craddock's mind. Time after time hypnosis probed into his memories,
and gradually the cryptic symbols made longer lines on the recording pad. Janissa could read those symbols for her own language was
founded upon it, as her own civilization was built on the earlier culture of
the vanished First Race. Also technicians were helpful.
For there were semantic difficulties. Raft knew the Indio dialect thoroughly, but
he did not know the intricacies of Janissa's more
highly developed language. There were symbols she could not explain to him.
Then a chemist, perhaps, would sketch charts, electro-chemical hookups, or
atomic patterns, until the answer clicked in Raft's mind.
He
was no technician, though, and could not have built the device alone. Nor could Janissa. But his
different background of human science was invaluable in casting light from
another angle on the problem. There was the matter of the amulet, for example.
''When
you turn the stone, it slows down metabolism," Raft pointed out.
"That means the radiation is blocked at a variable rate. What blocks it? Something opaque to the vibration, eh?"
The metal?" a physicist hazarded.
"It's an alloy of chromite. Vanadium,
perhaps. We'll have it tested."
For,
though the last secrets of the records in Craddock's memory had been discovered
by now, there were still gaps. In the days of the First Race, different
elements had existed in the valley, elements which were now exhausted.
They found that the truth lay not only in the
material of the amulet's setting, but in the intricate interlocking of alloys,
a very tiny machine powered by the induced radiation of the energy-source
itself, the spark in the crystal. That crystal was simply quartz, but how the
radiant atom had been put into it Raft couldn't guess.
The
secret, then, lay in a complicated arrangement of various alloys that seemed to
block the energy-output of the spark. Part of this knowledge they gleaned from
Craddock's hypnotically-stimulated memories; the rest they found by simple
analysis. There was, finally, a dead end.
For they knew what elements they needed, and some of them no longer
existed in Paititi.
Then
the practical value of an alien culture was demonstrated. Raft thought of the
possibility first. He had brought considerable equipment to Paititi
in his rucksack, medical supplies, concentrated food in little tins, and there
were his personal belongings, as well as Craddock's.
His
watch yielded platinum, which was vital. There was tin to be found in the
rucksack, and the firearms were taken apart to provide a treasure of necessary
metals.
The
laboratories of the technicians swiftly analyzed the loot, broke it down, and
formed new alloys. Given the raw material, they could, at last, work out the
equation.
The
machine, when finished, was not large. Specifications had clearly indicated its
proportions. It stood on a tripod, coming approximately to Raft's chest, a
surprisingly simple device of crystal, metal, and hollow tubes.
The integral part of it was the fuse, which
floated free in a mercury bath atop the gadget. This was the safety, the innocuous-seeming
footlong tube that had the power to control the
tremendous radiations the rest of the machine was built to stimulate.
"Parror's bound to fail," Raft said. "Those
special alloys— they don't, exist in Paititi. He
can't possibly make the safety control, and without it he'd know the experiment
would be too dangerous."
Janissa was less certain.
"Parror has a blind confidence in himself. He might try to
substitute other materials. The sooner we test this, Brian, the better I'll
feel."
But
the test was not spectacular. The thing was handled by remote control, to
minimize the danger. Even with the tiny spark of energy in the amulet, there
was peril.
Raft
used a scanning glass to examine the amulet, five hundred feet away on the
mossy plain. He looked briefly around the crowd that surrounded him—Craddock, Janissa, the technician and, with a silent prayer, turned
on the power. Nothing happened. Machine and amulet remained as they had been.
"Doesn't it power the
spark?" Janissa breathed.
"It
ought to stimulate it," Raft said, and moved the needle on his rheostat
device. He moved it too far. From the amulet a spear of light shot straight up,
and simultaneously the moss for a hundred feet around sprang into— life! It
writhed and crawled visibly, the ordinary progress of growth accelerated
incredibly by the radiation of the stimulated spark.
Hastily
Raft adjusted the rheostat. But he was smiling. He knew, without the need for
further experiment, that the machine was a success. It remained now only to
discover whether its power could control the Flame itself. Raft thought
it could, since it would, via induction, have
all the Flame's power.
But
the danger struck too soon.
FLYING DEMONS
Brian Raft wakened to see Janissa's
face above him. The light she carried glowed through the darkened room.
"Brian!"
He
blinked at her. "Janissa—what's wrong?"
"It's
Parror," she said. "IVe
touched his mind. He's on his way to the Flame."
That
brought Raft bolt upright. "Good god! You're sure?"
She
nodded, her eyes shadowed with fear.
"His
barrier slipped for an instant. I had been watching my mirror and, suddenly, I
felt his thought. He goes by a secret way to waken
the Flame."
"Where
is he now?"
"In the forest somewhere. I could not tell. I could see only what he
intended, and the secret way he will take. Brian, we must stop him
somehow."
"We
will," Raft said. "Wake up Craddock. Then we'll rouse the king."
Janissa
slipped away, and Raft hastily donned his garments. His mind was working at
top speed. He could not have guarded against this contingency, yet he felt at
fault. Parror must have a duplicate machine, but it
could not possibly be successful, without the special alloys that did not exist
in Paititi. If Parror
aroused the Flame, disaster would result.
The
three of them went to Darum's suite. Vann was
guarding the entrance, since it was the hour for sleep. He
stared at them curiously, his scarred soldier's
face hard. But when he heard the nature of their errand, he let them pass.
"Nevertheless,
I'd better go with you," he said, falling in at their heels.
"Assassinations have been cleverly managed before this."
Lights
softly illuminated Darum's chamber. The king himself
was there, relaxed on the cushions of his dais. He sprang awake instantly as
they approached. His hand dropped toward the silks and came up with a
long-bladed dagger. But he said nothing.
"There's
no need for weapons " Raft growled. "Parror's got his own and he's ready to use it.*
"Parror?" Darum let the
knife fall. "You mean—the Flame?"
"Tell
him, Janissa."
She
explained swiftly. The long frowned in indecision. "You say his machine
will not work?"
"Oh,
it'll work all right, but it will wreck things without the safety device,"
Raft pointed out. "Our only chance now is to get there before him, if we
can. And if we can't, we'll take our own instrument. We may be able to check
the Flame before it's too late."
"I
was dreaming a strange dream," Darum said
slowly, "I lay dead, I thought, here in my own chamber, and a shadow hung
pver Paititi. A shadow of light. Of life. But it
could not bring life back to me, and it had power only to destroy, I wonder,
now, if the vision will come true."
His
voice was remote and strange, as if the memory of the dream had carried him
back into the dream itself.
"It
was a true dream, so far as the shadow goes," Janissa
said. "There will be death for all of us, unless Parror
is stopped."
"Death!" the king murmured as if he
had heard only that one word out of all she said. "Death."
Raft thought he recognized something in the timber of the soft, deep
voice. He had heard Darum speak that way before. If
the madness was coming back upon the king, at this moment of all moments when
action and clear thinking was needed, ghastly things might happen.
"Parror will reach the Flame before you," Darum said in a soft monotone. "That much I—see."
He dropped his head suddenly and hid his face in his hands. "I see no
further yet." His voice came muffled. "Death—death
in my dream. This room is full of death!"
The voice was wild now, but his face was
still hidden. Madness wailed in the deep resonance of Darum's
words, and yet there was conviction too, as if even in his madness he knew he
spoke the truth.
"There
is death here," he shrieked. "Too much death for
one man. I shall not die alone. I think you must fail with the Flame, Janissa, Craddock, Raft! I think
you must fail and doom us all, for this room reeks with death."
Raft
felt a thrill of horror. Utter conviction rang true in the king's voice. Conviction and madness.
"Death
over all Paititi!" said Darum,
lifting his face suddenly and showing them a wild and shining glare that saw
nothing before it.
And suddenly "Death!" wailed a
shiver of resounding strings from the curtains behind him. If ever music spoke
a word, that music spoke and threatened. The promise was as clear as the sudden
flash of a bared blade. It needed no articulation to speak its single syllable
of prophecy.
The
curtain swept aside, and Yrann's veiled figure stood
there, fingers poised above the still-quivering strings. Faceless
and veiled, like the Norn Atropos, ready to cut the
thread that held Darum's life.
For
a moment nobody moved. The room was too full of that certainty of doom which Darum's mad voice had made them all believe whether they
would or no. For that instant, against all hope and reason, even Craddock, even
Raft, knew certainly that there was no chance for life. In the single moment,
they were all as mad as the king.
But
only Raft understood what happened next. Only he knew what must have passed
through Yrann's clouded mind. Death hung over Doirada Casde and the whole world
she knew. The king had spoken, and in this moment there was no doubting the
king. And she had waited so long for vengeance. The Flame would rob her of it
now, unless— unless—she acted.
One
last wild shrilling cry came shivering from the harp-strings. With the same
motion that swept music across the instrument she flung the harp aside,
letting it crash to the floor with a last jangling discord of its own.
She
moved forward with a swift, stooping rush toward the couch. Her white hand,
darting from the veils, was like a flung weapon in itself as she snatched up
the long dagger he had dropped. Headlong, she hurled herself against him,
swinging the blade like a scythe.
He
was off guard. He tried to rise, to leap away from the blade's glittering descent,
but the tangling silks caught and betrayed him. He managed only to writhe
aside, so that the first blow only raked his ribs in a glancing wound. Yrann, still silent, brought up the knife again with deadly
singleness of purpose.
Then Raft had her.
He
felt her arch against his restraining arm with the desperate strength he
remembered from their other struggle in this room, and a shock of unreasonable
horror went through him as that veiled face turned to his.
She
flung herself against his grip with a cat's sudden, explosive fury, and with
one last frantic surge broke free. Springing back, still gripping the dagger,
she turned her faceless gaze toward the king.
He was on his feet now,
facing her, ready. Her chance was gone. She knew it. They could see the
knowledge slacken the tautness of the lovely body beneath her veils. They heard
her sigh once, deeply, in the tense silence of the room.
Then
she moved suddenly, her draperies swirling like slow smoke, and sank the knife
hilt-deep in her own heart!
Motionless,
speechless, they watched her sink to the floor. Red came slowly out through the
gray veils pinned by the knife against her.
Darum brushed past Raft. He knelt beside Yrann. His hand went out, poising over the veiled face. But
he did not touch the gauzy webs that hid her.
"Yrann?"
he said. "Yrann?"
But she did not stir. The red stain widened
upon the gray.
Darum's fingers closed upon the hilt that stood up
from her chest. He knelt there for a heartbeat, his hand caressing the weapon
as if it were Yrann herself. Then his grip tightened.
He
tore the knife free, dripping scarlet drops, and rose in a lithe, inhuman
motion, facing Raft. His hps had flattened back, and
the fight in his eyes was the dark blaze of pure madness. He lifted the blade,
and the red droptf spattered in an arc across the
carpet.
Raft
stood motionless, his mind racing. He was too close to the king, and he was
unarmed. There was no way of escaping that blow, unless he came to grips with
the man, and he had no illusions about which of the two was stronger. Power
flowed tremendously through the feline's rippling body, and madness lent it
double strength.
"You
saved my life," he said in a hissing snarl. "You came between us! You
turned the knife against her as surely as if you held the blade. What use do
you think life is to me now?" His features convulsed in the mad inhumanity
of feline rage. "You—ape!"
Darum sprang.
From behind Raft a thin, shining flash of
light darted, to quench itself in the king's throat Darum's body arched. He strained to take one step more
forward—to keep the dagger raised for its blow-Then with shocking suddenness,
all the strength went out of him and he dropped to the silks with the lithe,
silken limpness of the silks themselves. His fingers released the dagger, and
he pulled the rapier from his throat, blood gushing from wound and mouth as it
came free.
"Vann,"
he said, and coughed. "Vann. We have dueled
before—but never thus."
Vann's deep voice answered
heavily.
"I
served you, Darum, but I serve Paititi
first. Yrann was not worth any man's love."
"She
was so beautiful," the king whispered. "She could not bear to
die—with Paititi—without slaying me. She hated me
always. And—and—" He tried to choke back blood.
He
lifted himself on suddenly strong arms and dragged himself forward a few feet.
He ran gentle fingers down the dead woman's arm. Her harp lay where it had
fallen, almost beneath her fingers. He touched the strings, and their sad music
hung forlornly in the quiet air.
"I
would have crushed Paititi," Darum
said. "I would have—crushed the world—for her. Rather
than have her harmed. She was so beautiful."
The
king's head fell upon the soft body of Yrann. The
tiger eyes closed. One hand sought for and found Yrann's.
His blood mingled with
hers.
The red stream flowed
slower and slower—
And flowed
no more.
Vann stood motionless, his
heavy shoulders sagging.
"Go
now, while there's time," he said. "I did this to save Paititi, and now I find myself wondering whether I have
struck steel into the wrong throat."
"Vann," Janissa said.
"Take
them away, Janissa. Take these men from another world
out of the king's presence. Let them stop Parror if
they can."
"Parror?" Craddock whispered. He touched Raft's1
arm. "We'll have to move fast." "Yes," Raft said
tonelessly.
He
turned and led the way out of the chamber. His face was gray, and sweat stood
out in fine droplets on his cheeks.
Once outside, he did not
mention the king.
"We'll
need the machine," he said. "It's a portable, so we can manage the
weight. But 111 want some
straps."
They
found silken scarves that would do as well, and the machine was adjusted on
Raft's back. The fight alloys' made its weight less than its bulk would have
indicated. That would help, since fast travel would be necessary if they hoped
to forestall Parror.
Silently they left the castle, darkened now
for the sleep-period. Outside the cool, clear daylight of Paititi
was dazzling.
"We should have
remembered weapons," Craddock said.
"It's
too late now," Raft told him. "Janissa,
you'll guide. Do you know the secret way to the Flame?"
"I
think I can find it, yes. The thought in Parror's
mind was clear enough. But it is a long way."
Yet
it was shorter than they expected. They did not head for Parror's
castle. They angled off toward the base of the rock barrier that guarded Paititi. Four hours of fast travel brought them to it.
There, however, time was lost as Janissa searched for
the secret entrance.
"There
are ruins here," she said. "Ruins of the Old Race.
There should be a double column. Parror was thinking
of it when I read his mind."
Silently
Raft pointed. With a little cry Janissa ran to the
spot he indicated. She felt the smooth surface of the rock-face, searching for
a key.
Silently, smoothly, an oval
opened in the bare stone.
Raft turned to stare back the way they had
come.
"No
sign of Parror," he said. "He may be ahead
of us. Or he may not. We'll soon know." He followed Janissa
and Craddock into the opening. Behind him the hidden door closed.
But they were not in darkness. A pale, cool
glow came from the walls and roof and the smooth floor on which they stood. The
tunnel wound upward at a steep slant, and the silence made Raft feel the blood
beating in his ears.
"Come on," he
said, shouldering the machine.
It
was not long, that passage in the cliff. It made a short-cut through the rock
to the cavern of the Flame. But, before them there was another cavern.
An
oval door barred their path. Janissa opened it
easily, but she did not pass through the portal. Raft saw her slender figure
poise, hesitate, and shrink back. He brushed past Craddock.
"What is it?" he asked. Janissa did not answer.
"The
First Race," Craddock said, in a breathless voice. "The
First Race!"
It
was the cavern Raft had seen when he had first entered Paititi.
Leprous violet light bathed the dripping stalactites and crept over the
thrusting stalagmites that made an up-thrust forest. High overhead, slanting
down at a dizzy angle, was the gravity-defying, nearly
transparent tube of the unseen road, made visible now only because of the
hordes of creatures that crawled upon it, as though striving to break through
the glassy barrier.
The monsters!
Raft
had seen them before, but only dimly. Now he felt his throat go dry and close
with loathing.
Bat-winged
and beast-snouted, degenerate and horrible, the things swarmed in the violet
light there in the great cave. They were the descendants of what had once been
the First Race, the mighty civilization that had reared the proud castles of Paititi.
And fallen now—fallen into
the primal pit of horror.
The
baleful radiations that had once raged through Paititi
when the Flame waned long ago had changed them to demons. Few were alike. Some
had immense bat-wings, while others flopped and dragged their fat, shining
bulks among the stalagmites. And some were dwarfed. Some were giants. Some had
the clawed feet of giant birds.
Straight
as a lance across that arena of terror ran the path they had been following, a
faint white glow that ended at the farther wall, before an oval panel that was
obviously a door.
"Through—there?" Craddock said.
Raft
looked at Janissa. She was white-faced, but she
caught her breath and stepped out of the tunnel's protection, into the violet
light of the cavern.
"Well
run for it," Raft said. "If we can reach that, other door, we'll be
all right."
They
ran, panic spurring their heels. The sight of the nightmare horde flapping and
crawling and leaping all about them was horrible. And the
thought of those black talons actually touching them—it was not a good thought.
A
stir went through the monsters, a ripple of interest. As Raft ran, he saw from
the corners of his eyes that shapes were converging upon them. But the three
were more than halfway across the cavern now, and there was more than an even
chance that they could reach their goal before the monsters rallied to
investigate.
Raft
reckoned without the winged beings. Something struck him heavily from behind,
sending him to his knees. He struggled to regain his feet. Janissa,
glancing back, saw what had happened, and with a little cry, ran back to help
him.
A nightmare shape, scaled and horned like a
medieval demon, sprang at her—caught her in its grip.
Cursing,
Raft plunged forward, heedless of the creature on his back. His fist smashed
out into the face of the monster. It was driven back, screaming in a thin,
high-pitched wail of agony.
That was the signal. From all around the
devils of Paititi swooped and lumbered and dragged
themselves toward the intruders. Raft went down under the weight of
foul-smelling bodies. He was blind with nausea and hatred and revulsion. His
fists hammered at pulpy flesh, and the shrieking grew to a shrill crescendo.
That
sickening odor almost choked him. The touch of the monsters against his skin
was loathsome. They felt like fungoid things, like
dead creatures raised to a ghasdy
similitude of life. And the faces were ghoulish demons.
Craddock came back to use as a spear a fallen
stalactite he had picked up. Raft was relieved of his burden for a moment. He
staggered up, looking for Janissa,
He saw her, in the midst of
a group of monsters.
He
had enough reasoning power left to find another fallen spike of stone before
going to her rescue. The creatures, interbred and degenerate,
were physically weak, but they had the advantage of numbers, and Raft realized
that the sheer weight of those deformed bodies could press him down and smother
him. His hps lifted in a snarl, he charged forward,
stabbing with his improvised spear.
He
felt flesh tear. He heard the squealing redouble in volume. The monsters came
at him like a wave. They had the feeble malevolence of rats. As he went down on
his back he tried desperately to turn, to shield the precious burden he
carried—and failed.
He
heard the machine's crash as it was crushed against the rock beneath him. .
There was only hopelessness then, and blind
hatred, and a feeling that he was drowning in floods of evil, living flesh. But
he fought on. The remnants of the machine were ripped from his back. He lashed
about him savagely with the sharp stalactite, till at last he had cleared a
little space free of the monsters.
As
he stood there, panting and half-naked, he saw that they had fought their way
almost to the door. But at his feet coils and broken crystal and twisted metal
told of the wreck of the machine that could save Paititi.
One
thing remained whole—a foot-long cylinder of burnished alloy. It was the
safety fuse that controlled the device's stimulating power. Raft snatched it up
and thrust the tube into his belt.
"Brian," Craddock
called. "Here!"
Raft
lifted his spear and rushed. The monsters had learned the menace of that sharp
spike of stone by now, and there was a little flurry as they gave back. Janissa was with Craddock, the two of them back to back,
though the girl was unarmed. But she was bristling with fury, her hands clawed,
like a cat roused to anger.
"The door," Raft
said. "Open it, Janissa."
He
cut a red path for her. The worst danger was the flying monsters. More than
once Raft swung up his weapon in time to rip the flesh of a swooping demon that
came rushing down at him from the violet depths above. He fought on, grimly
silent, conscious only of those devil-masks, distorted and horrible, glaring at
him, spouting crimson as he struck, screaming in thin, wailing agony.
"Brian." Janissa shrilled. "The door!"
He
saw with surprise that it lay open. Craddock, white hair flying, broke through
with a stumbling rush. Together the two charged that waiting portal.
They
reeled through it. Raft whirled, thrust out at a pressing horde of monsters, as
Janissa's hand swept out.
The oval door closed—barring the cavern. The
high screaming gave place to silence. "They smashed the machine,"
Raft said hopelessly.
RAFT CHOOSES
Craddock was panting with excitement. His eyes were tired looking
and weary.
"You
saved the safety fuse," he said. "Maybe that's enough. If Parror's machine is a duplicate of the one we built, maybe
we have a chance, even yet."
"It
has to be, unless the man's a complete fool," Raft said. "But if we
can stop him before he wakens the Flame, that'd be even better." He caught
himself and laughed. "Parror's probably behind
us, not ahead of us. If he passed through that cavern, they'd have broken his
gadget too."
"Unless
he knew another route," Janissa put in somberly.
She tried to adjust her tattered garments, with fastidious, feline delicacy. Rait thought, watching her, even now she's half cat.
Then
something quivered through the air about them, a burning shaking vibration that
raced through their bodies, quickening the living flesh and was gone. A low
thunder faded into silence.
White-faced,
Janissa turned to Raft. Her hands went out
helplessly.
"The Flame!" she
said. "It—wakes!"
With
a curse, Raft sprinted forward, the others at his heels. To fail now, so close
to success, would be intolerable. The tunnel was miles long, it seemed.
It
ended at last, though not before that warning vibration had rushed in deep
thunder through them twice more.
Each time the effect was stronger. Each time
the force grew more vital, more alive.
Janissa
fumbled at the door, searching for the key. At last, the panel slipped away and
was gone.
They
stepped out on a small balcony of rock, from which a curving ramp twisted down
to—to what?
It
was dark, too dark to make out details clearly. Emptiness, it seemed,
stretched far out above and below them.
Yet
there was light. It was too faint to be more than a hint, or else it was too far away below him. Raft leaned on that dizzy
railing and stared down, down, down almost to the bottom of the world, an
immeasurable gulf in which one flicker of brilliance gleamed.
But it was not vertigo that
struck Raft then. It was fear.
Fear
plain and simple, and reasonless. He knew that feeling.
Once, in Madagascar, he had had to go through
a guard-hut where sentries were sleeping. A noise, a false move, would have
meant spears through his body. He had known then that they were going to waken.
He had felt it, with every bit of his mind and every inch of his skin.
Like
that. Something down below, where the light was, so vitally alive that he felt
himself standing on its palm.
And something more as well. It was the jungle. Or the life that makes up the jungle. Steaming,
fertile Amazon forests, roaring rivers, all that teeming, tremendous
life that stirs in the green moist heat of the tropics. Blind and terrible and
hungry—there in the abyss burned the energy that rages in the heart of the
great nebulae, the destroyer and the awakener—Curupuri!
"The Flame
sleeps," Janissa breathed.
But
in the depths was a distant brightening. A low sound, below the threshold of
hearing almost, deepened and grew louder. It became an intolerable thunder,
crashing out like the roaring birth-pains of a god-
From that gulf that dropped toward the heart
of the world—far down—very far below—rose the Flame.
It
expanded and lifted, a spear, a tower, a mountain of purest
brilliance burning with intolerable fires. It was the essence of life. Raft
felt himself, his whole body, swinging toward that kindling torch.
His
mind swept toward it. His soul swung out across the abyss.
The
thunder crashed deafeningly against the walls. The Flame brightened, blazed and
towered—pulsing with eagerness—mad with delight—with ecstasy of living.
Beneath
him, Raft saw, was a darker shape. Two shapes. The silhouette
of a man, standing beside a machine that was curiously familiar.
Parrorl And the device he
had built from the First Race's records!
As the Flame brightened, Raft sprang toward
the descending ramp. He raced down it, praying that he would be in time. That
unchecked violence—Parror might not recognize the
symptoms, blinded as he was with egotism—but Raft knew that the Flame was
wakening uncontrolled.
The spark in the amulet had
not reacted in this manner.
The galactic force of a nebula—raging unchecked in Paititi. Perhaps loosed on the whole world!
Down
he raced, toward his quarry, while the fires brightened. They blazed with
supernal brilliance and began to fade. The column of light slowly sank
unwillingly. The thunders subsided.
Now
Raft stood on the glassy, transparent floor of the cave. He looked down once,
and reeled dizzily. He was standing unsupported above a gulf that dropped down to earth's burning center.
He dashed toward Parror.
And Parror ran to meet him.
The light came from below,
casting curious shadows on the man's face. Raft saw he was wearing one of the
talon-gauntlets, snarling silently as he charged. Raft had no objection to
killing Parror, but quelling the Flame was more important.
He slowed, pulling the safety fuse from his belt.
"Parror!" he shouted, in the stillness as the thunders
died. "Your machine's out of control! This will restrain it."
Parror did not even hear. He was lost in a berserk
blood-thirst, blind and nearly insane with the
demon's rage that Raft had seen before. His clawed fingers, tipped with sharp
steel, slashed at Raft's face.
Raft
did not duck quickly enough. His cheek was laid open, agonizing pain darting
through him. The fuse spun from his grasp.
He
closed with Parror or tried to. That agile body
leaped out of reach. Again the claw ripped down, and again. A blaze of pain
stung Raft's chest and side. Raft struck out savagely, but Parror
eluded his driving fists.
Thunder crashed. The light
from below brightened.
The
Flame leaped from its bondage, bellowing with delight! The fires surged
up—poured up—sprang high as though trying to return to their interstellar
cradle.
Again the claw reached out.
Raft
felt a razor drawn across one eye, and sight was suddenly altered.
Half-blinded, his cheek torn to the bone, his nose almost ripped away, he sent
blow after blow at his elusive enemy,
Janissa ran in, threw
herself between them.
Parror balled his fist and struck her hard and
clean upon the jaw. The girl was flung back, to crumple motionless on that
glassy floor.
"You taught me that,
Raft," Parror purred.
Raft
mouthed frenzied curses. If he could only get his hands on that smiling devil,
sink his fingers into that bearded neck.
Intolerably bright blazed
the Flame.
The thunders raved and crashed within the cavern. This time the star-kindled
fires did not sink.
Higher
they rose, and higher—questing—eager. Wakening from slumber to a life beyond
the conception of earthly minds!
Suddenly,
amazingly, Raft could see from both eyes' again. The agony in face and body was
gone. The dripping of blood had stopped. He saw a look of amazement cross Parror's face.
The
radiations from the Flame healed. They rejuvenated living tissue with
miraculous speed. They hastened life.
Craddock's
voice cried something. Raft could make out only a word or two through the
thunder, but he saw Craddock, thirty feet away, running toward the distant
machine. In Craddock's hand was a foot-long cylinder Raft recognized.
Raft
never knew what Parror thought was happening. He saw
the cat-man whirl, cry out in a thick, furious voice, and take one step after
Craddock.
One
step. No
more. For then Raft had him.
But
it was not easy. Raft had never battled a jaguar, but he was battling one now.
The mad, raging fury that filled Parror had turned
him into a wild beast. The eyes were all green now, blazing with hatred and
blood-thirst. Writhing, struggling, gasping, the two crashed down together.
The Flame rose ever higher. The thunders were
an intolerable ache drumming against Raft's skull. That shadowless,
inter-galactic light burned into his brain.
The claw tore at his face,
and instantly the wounds healed.
Snarling,
as helpless in the grip of murder-lust as Parror
himself, Raft surged to his knees, with an effort not even his enemy's strength
could resist. Nothing existed, for a flashing, crimson second, but that
red-stained claw.
He
caught Parror's. arm in a
judo grip, and broke it with savage fury.
For
a moment he held the man motionless. That was enough. The power of the Flame
healed bone and tissue, but Parror s wrist and lower
arm jutted out at an impossible angle.
But
he fought on, with teeth and nails and feet, though Raft's fingers were clawed
deep into his throat. Inexorably, with the blind savagery of his kind, he
fought on until not even the Flame could bring life back to his strangled body.
Then Raft looked up.
Far
across the cavern stood the machine on its tripod, perilously close to the
Flame itself. And moving painfully toward it, like a man breasting a strong
wind, was Craddock.
Craddock?
Something
about that shape made Raft catch his breath. The outline was altering even as
he watched. Raft remembered Craddock's maimed hands, and the power that had
destroyed them, the same star-born energy that now thundered through the
cavern in burning ecstasy of awareness.
The figure still gripped
the fuse-cylinder.
Raft
got to his feet. He began to run after Craddock, but the distance was too
great. Nearly at the machine now, the figure was fantastic.
It was not Craddock. It was
not even human any more.
The
living flesh boiled and altered and flowed under the monstrous force that could
create whole universes. Something utterly inhuman, at last, stumbled and
dragged itself forward into the full blaze of the radiation.
And yet there was a human
purpose.
It
reached the machine. For an instant it crouched there, adjusting the fuse.
Beyond it, Curupuri shouted in cataclysmic fury as
the fires poured torrentially up from the abyss. One instant of utter madness,
while the power of universes, of galaxies, stooped and touched that cavern-One
instant—and then the thunders died. The Flame pulsed once, twice, and sank.
With a sigh almost human, the fires of life dwindled and dropped into the great
gulf.
There remained, far below, a point of light, burning with unquenchable fires. Harnessed!
The
fire that had come from beyond the stars was harnessed.
Tamed—chained—by the flesh to which it had once, long ago, given life.... Janissa
stirred.
Fear
came into her eyes. She raised herself against Raft's supporting arm to look
around questioningly. Then her gaze came back to Raft's.
"It's over, Janissa," he said. "The Flame sleeps."
"The machine is
working?"
"Yes.
Parror had made a duplicate of ours, after all. But he didn't have the safety fuse. Once
Craddock inserted that, it worked."
"But,
Craddock?"
"He's
dead," Raft said quietly. "He died, I suppose, because he had to.
The man who once wakened the Flame died to quell it again. This time, I think,
the danger is over forever."
She watched him.
"I
tested the machine," he said. "It's exactly what's needed. The First
Race were right, after all. They waited too long to
build their own machine, or they'd never have become monsters. Anyway, the
Flame will burn, will send out its radiations, at this
normal rate forever."
"Normal?"
Raft nodded. "I altered the adjustment.
Not to the danger-point, but so that metabolism in Paititi
will be the same as metabolism in my own world. There's no barrier now. The
talismans aren't necessary."
"I can live in your world? It won't
be—slow?"
"Your world or mine, Janissa," he said. "You can choose."
But
she had chosen already. And so had Raft. He had made
his decision long ago, he thought, the first time he had seen Janissa's face in the little mirror. She had drawn him
across the miles into the lost land where the Flame from infinity had burned
and, after all, there was no choice. What problems the future might hold could
be solved, somehow,
"We
need not go back through the cavern of the monsters," she said.
"There is a way to reach the unseen road from here."
Raft's lips found hers.
But
he was thinking: My world will be strange to you, Janissa.
I will make you happy, if I can. And I think I can, for I love you.
But
will you turn back, sometimes, and remember? Will you remember Paititi, and the great trees that hold up the sky? Will you
remember the castle above Doirada Gulf, where the
white cloud from the cataract hangs forever in the sky?
Will
the heritage of the jaguar stir in your blood, Janissa,
to memories I cannot share? Or will you find contentment in my world?
Silently
Raft let Janissa guide him toward the way that led to
freedom, and to a destiny he could not foretell. But the girl's hand lay warm
in his, and that, for the while, was enough of an answer for them both.
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Deep in an unexplored jungle, Brian Raft sought the secret of the
legendary VALLEY OF THE FLAME. Somewhere there was a radioactive fire that
could perform miracles of super-science. Somewhere there was a place where
cat-people prowled, where time was altered, and incredible mysteries held their
secrets of power and ortune for the daring
discoverer.
Henry Kuttner, master of science-fiction,
tells one of his most amazing adventures in this un-sual
novel.