It was a promising planet, all right. It
promised fabulous commissions for Bill Warden, surveyor for Star Systems, Inc.
who had made first landing.
It promised a lot, but getting delivery was
going to be another story. Because what Bill discovered right off was that
this was a very religious planet. If you asked God for something, you either
got it—or a direct answer saying why not. If you cursed, you received immediate
reprimand. If you prayed, you might get a prompt response.
It was most disconcerting, to say the I. ist,
and especially so when the planetary deity decided JHe did not want any traders
leaving the planet—and showed Bill and his rivals that where Almighty Power was
concerned, it was no mere figure of speech!
Turn this book over for second complete novel
A
PROMISING PLANET
JEREMY STRIKE
AN ACE BOOK
Ace
Publishing Corporation 1120 Avenue of the Americps New York, N. Y. 10036
a
promising planet
Copyright ©, 1970, by Jeremy Strike All Rights Reserved.
Cover by Jack Gaughan.
To Tony, for patience.
flower of doradil
Copyright ©, 1970, by John Rackham
Printed in U.S.A.
"The god business is really rather
boring, you know," the voice said.
"All
those hosannas floating up to the sky and the eternal petitions to do this or
that and 'I promise if you'll do this, 111 never do that again' and then the
wars.
"They're the only thing that keeps it
interesting, you know, the wars. They say I wouldn't
approve of what someone else is doing, which is usually taking away some
territory or other, and then they make wars—in my names. Us gods have lots of names,
you know."
A slightly bewildered expression spread,
across the face
of the tall man who stood alone in th<^ large,
glowing
cavern. *
"Uh, wars?" he said.
"Yes,
wars," the voice replied. "Give me a good war any old time. It
relieves the tedium." "Uh, tedium?"
"Yes." "Oh." "Quite."
A silence descended for
several minutes. Af last the rangy man ran fingers
through a thatch of wiry, carroty hair.
"I don't know very much about
gods," he got out at last. "That's all right. I do quite a lot of
improvising, anyway." "You dor"
"Yes. I didn't start out as a god, it was just sort of— thrust on me."
"Thrust," the man said in a
strangled voice.
"Thrust." The response was succinct. "You see, it
was,
oh, several millions of these planetary
revolutions ago, when—"
"Revolutions?"
"Night and day, night and day," the
voice snapped impatiently. "Seasons, equinoxes, the
life cycle." "Oh, those kind of revolutions."
"Yes, but you interrupted; gods are not
used to being interrupted. Let Me finish." I m sorry.
"That's
all right." The voice sounded mollified. "At any rate, before you
barged in, I was going to say that I hadn't always been in
the god business, but—"
"Excuse me."
"Oh, for My
sake, what is it this time?" "How does one go about addressing a god? I'm sorry, but-"
"Why do you keep saying you're sorry? Os
course you're sorry. Now what is it you want this time?"
"What
do I call you?" the man asked humbly. "I mean, it isn't every day I
get to talk 'to a deity; most societies don't have them anymore."
"The
natives usually preface My names with ten or twenty
honorific titles but under the circumstances, and since you're from off the
planet, I suppose you could call Me Most High, or Earth Mother or just plain
Your Worship. Take your pick, I'm really a very
liberal god."
"Earth Mother? You mean You're a
female god?"
"Not at all. But all primitives call their planet Earth, or its equivalent, in the
first place, and identify it as a maternal figure in the second. Actually," the voice went on, smugly
the man felt, "I'm really quite neuter. If you'd be happier thinking of Me as male, that's quite all right"
"Thank you."
"Not at all," the voice said
graciously.
I
Bill Warden nudged the controls of the survey
ship into a flattened orbit and turned to the screens which would give him a
close-up view of the planet below.
It
hung in space reflecting blue and green light from the sol-class sun. He had
spotted the star on infrared sweep days ago and when the instruments pinpointed
it as a possible, had run for it.
Warden
hoped other corporation surveys hadn't beaten him to it. This was his sixth
month in the sector, slowly quartering back and forth across the barely-charted
star systems. He had found three acceptable planets in that time, and each was
marked by the directional signal of one of the other major corporations.
The
signals meant the planet was not only marked, but probably staffed by a few
claim holders until the exploration and exploitation rights could be
established by whichever corporation had found it.
Warden
was a surveyor for Star Systems, Incorporated. He received a commission plus
bonus on all business derived from any viable planets he found and claimed for
Star Systems.
Star
Systems was a johnny-come-lately to the race of home corporations for lucrative
planets among the far stars. It was small as corporations went in the latter
days of Earth's first great expansion. It was a hungry organization which
specialized in low-budget operations, snatching jobs the bigger, older, and
richer corporations wouldn't touch.
This meant they were unable to send out heavily
staffed
surveys. Star Systems grew on the luck of gamblers
like Warden. They also underbid jobs viciously. Warden knew that was why his
corporation was unpopular. He also knew why surveyors like himself
were considered slightly crazy by other missions: Warden went out alone, worked
alone, and ran the risks of doing it. If he fell sick, the ship's limited
life-support systems could only help so much. If he were injured on any world
he located, it was his fault. He lived by quick wits and a reliance on
experience and fast reflexes.
In
ten years on the job, Warden had been attacked by strange plants and by hostile
animals, including a few cultured natives he had come across. During that
time, he had developed his own ways of going into promising worlds and getting
out again.
He
whistled tunelessly to himself as he went about checking the standard bands on
his receiver to see if claims to the planet were being broadcast.
He
was unable to detect any signal in two passes around the globe below him.
Infrared,
radar and radio scanners and optical telescopes cut in, he settled into the
control board to see what there was to see. Elation swept over him as he
thought that, if he were here first, the planet could be an important one.
Since
the ship computer would correlate the data from most of the scanner systems,
Warden contented himself with bringing one of the telescopes into a close
focus.
Slight
glimmers of light showed on the night side. He had seen many planets at various
levels of cultural advancement, and he failed to be impressed.
He
grunted and made a note in his log. He palmed the stud for radio transmission.
The scanner swept a random selection of bands. There was nothing.
Warden
noted it and then ran a more comprehensive television scan than he had needed
for his preliminary title search. He wrote in the log: Inhabitants presumed to
be at or below nineteenth-century level, Terran. No indication of electronic
transmissions of any kind.
The
monitors fed information into the computer as he popped a pre-packaged meal
into the oven. Warden slit the package with a thumbnail and poured the contents
onto a plate, then crumbled the package over the stew. The package was a bread
substitute.
As
he ate, Warden read the report the computer was showing on the master
viewplate. He saw that the planet was slightly larger than Earth, there were
three major land masses, and the atmosphere contained a slightly higher proportion
of oxygen than the level he liked to maintain in the ship. He made a note to
increase his own supply for a couple
of cycles so that he wouldn't be giddy when he left the ship, if he left it.
It
definitely was a planet where he could breathe comfortably.
But there might be a problem with microbe life, not to mention the natives or
the natives' pets.
Warden's
reading usually consisted of reports from other survey craft, when he could get
his hands on them. He was not usually entertained by tales of spores that burrowed
under the skin with horrible results, or of crews expecting friendly contact
but ending by giving some native a case of indigestion. Warden had long since
resolved never to accept an invitation to dinner, even if the natives were
friendly.
The high priest stood on the ziggurat,
earnestly contemplating the heavens. He had prayed long and mightily in the
holy cave, but with no answer from the Most High. Now near despair, he
anxiously watched for a reason why the deity was not responding.
Usually
when the Most High was displeased with the people, there were terrible storms
or earthquakes or nasty things from the ocean depths raining from the skies.
Yet
the weather was continuing fair, the sun came out every morning on schedule and
it rained every evening in the correct amount. The crops flourished.
He
reflected, tugging at a wattle beneath his chin, never had things gone so well
before!
Zelnak,
twentieth in line of high priests who had gone before him with the same name,
was miserable. This was unheard of! The enemy tribes to the west were not
warring on the borders, the pirates had not yet come storming out of the
eastern sea this year, and worst of all, the
population was up.
He
had profoundly studied the hidden writings of the great men who preceded him.
Zelnak took it as an article of faith that if the populace didn't have
something to grumble about, they soon would begin to grumble about the
priesthood.
Thus,
he prostrated himself in a burgeoning
panic before the high altar. "Most High," he
mumbled into the stone, "this must not be allowed to happenl"
The
god upon the altar bore a striking resemblance to the inhabitants of the
planet, tall and slightly saurian in appearance. Light from oil lanterns cast a flickering glow on the face of the god. Its gray stone visage was immobile.
At
last the priest rose and, while arranging his robes and straightening his
crown, looked off between the planet's two small moons. He saw the flash as a star that seemed to descend toward the surface.
The
high priest stared at the fiery tail the star dragged behind it. Then he
clapped his hands and hurried to the top of the steps. Pointing, Zelnak called
out to the temple keepers below, "A signl The Most High sends us a sign!"
There
were low murmurs of awe from the grouped priests below. Somewhere, a drum began
to beat. As the high priest turned back to the falling star, a choir took up a chant
to the glory of the Most High.
Warden had orbited the planet for two ship's
days, correlating the information from the computer.
He was elated. Surveys showed the world to
contain a high incidence of usable ores.
He spent some time observing the native
cultures. The computer told him, when he filed his observations, that the
culture was at about the level of the Aztec civilization found by the Spanish
invasions in the ancient history of his own planet. There was soil cultivation
with pyramids and large palace complexes surrounded by towns. It suggested
priests or priest-kings ruling the populace.
Regular scratchings on the
exteriors of major buildings suggested a written form of communication as well
as a developed oral tradition.
"I
suppose I could pose as a god, or an emissary from the
gods," Warden mused. "It could be fun, until I finish the complete
surveys and get the beacon set."
He
considered the natives. They looked like bipedal snakes, from his visual
observation.
It
would be better if they were mammalian, but it didn't really give him any cause
for concern. People back home reacted better to humanoid cultures. These
natives had four fingers, one of which was almost as opposed as a thumb. He
wondered why they had a gray tinge.
Warden
happily cleared speculation from his mind and gave all his attention to
lowering the ship to a spot he had chosen previously.
He
took control and brought the ship down on the night side in the hills about
four miles from the largest city.
Visual
sighting told him there was a waterfall beside the point he picked in a low
bowl of a valley. He could sample the river unobserved, and, bouncing signals off
one of the two satellites, could keep a visual monitor on the inhabitants. The
forested hills would mask his landing place until he decided whether to make
contact.
There was slight turbulence in the air as he
came in. Warden kept all the scanners going, and rode the turbulence down,
keeping the ship in a controlled arc as he screamed into the atmosphere.
The computer, he knew, was gulping further
samples of the place, which he would go over before he moved a foot from the
ship.
He was settling toward a glade surrounded by
blue-green trees. There was a kind of blossom on some of them. He turned on the
outside aural pickups bedded in the skin of the ship but heard no other sounds
than those of the hovering craft itself.
Warden kept the ship hovering, keeping above
the water of the river. The jets made the river hiss and steam. He would set
down after the heat acquired by passage through the atmosphere had cooled to a
point where his landing would not cause a forest fire.
Warden spent the next afternoon watching the
activities of the natives in the city four miles away. They were moving about
in what he took to be excited activity, unless that was the way they always
were.
He
rummaged through the hold, checking the beacons; then he moved one to the
hatch. Satisfying himself that it was in perfect condition, he cycled the hatch
open, shoved it out and went back to the control room.
The
moving beacon's tractors cut into the mossy material growing on the stream
bed. Warden guided it into the water and moved it back beneath the falls,
making sure it was out of the main current of falling water, but out of sight.
Then,
sitting before his control console, activated the tape device in the beacon,
opened his own video contact and said smiling into the lens, "This is Star
Systems, Incorporated, Survey Ship MX 12-4040. This
planet is claimed under provision of the Interstellar Survey Code." He
reeled off the coordinates. Then he played it back, thumbed the device
activating the beacon on continuous send. He began composing a report for
corporation headquarters.
II
Zelnak was impatient. His morning had been
taken up with fools, each of whom claimed a revelation from the falling star.
He knew that the majority of them hadn't even seen it, but composed his
features to a look of mild interest and suffered through hour after hour. That
was part of his job.
The
guards pushed forward a meanly dressed, cringing figure.
"Another
one who saw it, Your Worship," the chamberlain said.
"And
what did the falling star tell you, my good fellow," the high priest
queried.
"May
it please you, sir," the man stammered, "it told me nothing."
"What?
What?" the chamberlain blustered. "It told you nothing? Then why do
you take up His Worship's time?" He cuffed the trembling peasant.
The
man stumbled and fell. From the floor before the throne he said, "I only
saw it float to ground, Sire. I thought you wanted to know and would reward
me." He looked up at the august form of Zelnak. His eyes pleaded with the
high priest.
The
peasant climbing slowly to his feet said, "I am but a poor shepherd, my
lord."
"Tell
us," Zelnak said wearily, "about this nonsense of stars floating to
the ground."
The peasant faced the high
priest with the caution of a
hundred generations near the soil. "It did
float, Your Worship," he said sturdily, "with great blossoms of
flame coming from its bottom."
Zelnak
laughed. "Next he'll tell us that angels dance on the heads of pins,"
the high priest tittered. The attendant priests dutifully guffawed.
The
peasant hunched his shoulder. "It floated," he insisted stubbornly,
"and then it hung above the river."
The
high priest surged majestically to his feet. He pointed a wrathful finger at
the peasant and shouted, "Stop lying! Stars don't float, and they don't
hang! You're dangerously close to heresy, fellow!"
"It
floated," the peasant said sullenly, "and the river turned to steam.
Now it's just sitting there on a rock."
Zelnak
shrieked twice. Finally he calmed down enough to gasp, "Stars don't sit on
rocks."
"Well,
this one is," the peasant said smugly. "I can show it to you,
too."
One of the reasons Warden
was in his job was that he hated paper work. But even the despised effort of
making out a report was a happy one, now that he seemed to have a
money-producing planet all to himself.
The communicator screen beside him said, "Beep."
"Beep, yourself." Warden frowned. "Who asked you?"
The machine said again, "Beep."
He palmed the switch to accept a call. Warden
expected to see a message rebroadcast by beacon from his supervisor at Star
Systems.
Instead, the screen cleared to show the
sardonic gaze of Sara Medell, one of the competition.
Working for one of the giant corporations, Intergalactic, Sara was captain of a
three-man crew. She had beaten him to two other planets in the past.
Warden looked at the image. He saw a pert,
dark-haired girl with a snub nose and ample figure. She wore the green uniform
of her company.
"Surprise!" she said. "Your
beacon went on just as we were making our first passes."
"Surprise, yourself," Warden
responded. He grinned. "I got here first."
"It's
not nice to boast, Bill," she said. "Besides, I never crowed when I
got there first."
"That's
true, and I maybe could be just a little
bit sorry—if you'd like to join me for a drink.
Or do you have a close friend in your crew?"
"The
answer's no to
both. Have you looked outside your ship lately? You have visitors."
"What?
He swivelled to his left and established direct television coverage of the
ground surrounding the ship.
The
ship was surrounded by thousands of milling natives.
Sara
was enjoying it hugely. "Tell me, Mr. Custer, are the locals
friendly?"
"How
the hell should I know? I don't even know how they found me!"
She
said sweetly, "Well help you out, Bill, for a piece of your action. Our
preliminary surveys say you've got a rich little beauty down there—or it has you," she snickered.
"I
don't need or want any help, thanks. They can't hurt the ship. I'm not about to
give up any of this place; I found it."
"Suit
yourself. Well stick around for a few days. Call if you get in trouble. The
offer stands."
The
screen went blank, but Warden didn't notice. He was too busy scanning the
growing native crowd around the survey ship.
"Gah," he said
deep in his throat.
From his height above the shoulders of the
mob, Zelnak had a clear view. As he came out of the trees beside the river, he
looked up. There, sitting on a rock beside the waterfall, was a glittering
object. The rays of the sun bounced off its burnished surface and hurt his
eyes.
But
Zelnak was not worried about the state of his eyes. He felt like throwing
himself on the ground and knocking his head against a tree twenty or thirty
times in anguish.
Instead,
as the crowd from the city flowed around his stupefied bearers and toward the
curious object, he sighed.
"Well," Zelnak muttered, "so
that's what a star looks like."
Then
he gathered himself and beckoned over several captains of the guard. "The
Most High commands that you remove this star, very carefully so as not to
damage it, to the Forbidden Place, where He dwells."
As the ship lurched again, Warden swore,
falling against the console. The natives had looped ropes around the ship,
felled trees to clear a pathway back to the city, and used the logs to roll the
spherical vessel forward.
Warden
had closed all the hatches over the viewing ports for direct observation,
though he could see the landscape slowly revolving outside from the television
lens buried in the skin of the ship.
His receiver signaled. It was Sara.
"Why
don't you just go out and chase them away," she said.
Warden
didn't care for the concealed laughter he saw in her eyes.
"They have
spears," he pointed out laconically.
"They
would probably be more afraid of you, than you of them," she teased.
"There
are a lot more of them than there are of me, and I'm more afraid," Warden
said. "Besides, I bleed easily."
"Well, what are you going to do?"
"When
they go away for the night to sleep or something, I'll be able to take off
without hurting any of them." He smiled nastily. "But it's still my
planet, Sara."
"Suit
yourself," she shrugged. "We'll stick around
just in case."
"Don't hold your breath, sweetie."
Warden mimicked her tone.
"Just in case they parboil you, chum, is
there any particular message you'd like on the tombstone?—that is, if we can
find enough of you left to bury."
She
immediately broke the connection without waiting for an answer.
Warden regarded the screen glumly. The
landscape was still going around on the panels before him. He groaned as the
ship lurched again, and he found himself on the ceiling.
"Very funny," Warden said to the
floor.
Ill
Warden was unable to sleep. The gray-skinned
natives were working by torchlight now, still dragging the sixty tons of ship,
with the surveyor inside, toward the temple on the hill.
It
was slow going. Bill Warden no longer said oof when the ship lurched now one way, now another.
He
called Sara. "It's the local equivalent of midnight here and they're still
at it; and it's the second day of this."
"Want
us to come down and scare them off? Our own reading shows the culture to be
somewhere about the early stage of our own Romans. If we came down that would
be an omen or something—scare the hell out of them."
Warden
pretended shock. "Ladies don't curse," he said. "This lady does.
This lady can take care of herself, thank you very much. Do you want to make a
deal?" "No thanks, I was just lonesome."
"If you won't make a deal, and you need
the Cavalry why don't you yell for Star Systems?" "I'd have to share
the cut." "Oh."
"Don't
worry," he said airily. "Superior brains will win out."
"Yours,
or the natives?"
"Ha,
ha, very—" The ship lurched again. "Whoops." Warden was again
staring at the console from the ceiling, which was the floor again.
"Some genius here has discovered the
lever," he said. "They wedge tree trunks under the hull and shove.
Then the ship's kept steady by those long triple lines of people hauling on
ropes. They have something that looks like a demented elephant helping."
"We
know, we sent a peeper down. Being better equipped
than you, we have found out a lot."
Warden
often lamented he could not afford the more sophisticated devices the big
corporations lavished on their survey crews.
"What, for
example?"
"They're
mammalian, though they look sort of snaky. The weather is fantastically
regular. It looks from here like the clouds form from nowhere in a geometric
pattern, move around a little bit and then dissolve."
"I've
noticed that," he said. He hadn't. An idea struck him. "But now you
mention it, it's rained here every afternoon around six o'clock."
"The
two moons cancel out the tides," she continued. "The seas just swell,
then fall off; they're crammed with life."
"Who cares? I'm looking for minerals and
ores."
"Speaking
of which, the instruments show an enormous metal deposit in the hills beyond
that city, but we haven't been able to see it, or what's covering it, with
visuals."
"SoP' Warden was
beginning to feel chagrined.
"So there's a big
cloud over it"
"That's natural."
"The cloud never
moves."
"Local geological condition," he
offered.
"So we sent die peeper in to look
underneath the cloud; it didn't come back. It just went black and wouldn't
respond to the controls," she went on.
"Malfunction." Warden grinned.
"There
were no moving parts to malfunction," she said. "Magnetic
attraction," he said.
"So we sent a peeper after it that had
never been used," she said inexorably, "and it didn't come back
either." "Um," he said.
"So there's something extremely
suspicious about that place," she continued. "It just went black,
too?"
"Like the other one: one minute it
operated perfectly, then it entered the fog or cloud or whatever and went gray,
then black. It wouldn't respond to any kind of primary or secondary control at
all.
"So
then we bounced any number of complicated wavelengths all over the area. You
know what we got?"
"Nothing." Warden was beginning to feel derisive.
"That's
right. Either that's no ordinary cloud or there is something which nullifies
our direction," she said.
Warden
laughed. "You're seeing danger behind every rock."
Sara sniffed. "No such
thing. But it bears investigation.''
Warden
was patient. "We've both surveyed this planet," he said, "which
by the way, will be called Warden's World, and our
computers both came up with the same answer: low advancement level."
"I
really don't expect to find any Bessarabian wambats with pink tentacles,"
he said, "despite the fact that there are some strange things in
space."
She
made a face at him in the screen. The ship lurched again and Warden sat on the
wall to face her.
"I wish they'd get
where they're going," he said.
Sara
said, "We're leaving in two standard ship days if you donl holler 'help'
before." Her eyes softened. "You're not such a bad jerk," she
said, "just a jerk."
"Go
jump over an asteroid, lady," he smiled back at her, breaking the
connection.
He
cut in the screens for close outside surveillance and wearily followed the
efforts of the natives to shove the ship along.
By
dawn, Warden had learned a bit of the mushy native dialect. He knew what was
being said when someone said, shove, pull, or get moving. He learned rope, drink and look at that, which
occurred whenever the women carrying water came up to ease the thirst of the
males hauling on the lines. The demented elephants were called something like
shashlik.
It was morning before they were through the
city and approaching the temple gates. Warden figured he would be eating lunch
by the time they, arrived at the temple.
"Everyone
in town must be here," he told himself wryly. "Old popular Bill,
that's me."
He
damped the sound from the outside receivers. The population of the city was
screaming in delirium, throwing flowers in the path of the "star" as
it was inched along toward the temple. Drums rattled; horns blasted.
What
he suspected was wine flowed freely in the streets. Children shrieked; flags
waved; people danced.
"Big
night, or day, out on the town," Warden observed sourly. He wished he
could get some sleep. Every time he dozed, the survey ship would jolt around another
degree. He began to leam to anticipate them and started at last to get some
rest.
At
noon a soft chime announced that it was time for Warden to be hungry. He was.
He added water to a package of synthesized cheese and after it solidified,
watched the screens as he ate.
The
natives were building themselves to a frenzy behind
the ship. As it bumped heavily through the massive gates to the temple, Warden
could see the local leaders standing on a raised platform to the left. The most
important one was covered in gems which caught the sunlight, and splintered
and splashed it so that the figure was hard to look at, even on the screens.
"Pretty
impressive," Warden murmured. The lesser leaders were impressive, too.
Each was covered in a world's ransom in enormous stones.
"Must
be the temple hierarchy," he said to himself. Warden looked for an
important figure that looked more secular, but there wasn't one.
The ship was in the courtyard of the temple
now, and Warden became too interested in the ceremonies going on about him to
notice that the ship was still inching forward.
By
the time the ship was at the door of the temple, it was too late. Warden came
to his senses with a start; he couldn't blast out of there without killing
thousands.
"Oh, great," he said.
The
ship, pushed by the people, lurched through a high door and into a gloomy
interior.
The
temple was vast. It had been built into an overhanging cliff on the face of
the hill. He searched the screens. The ship was headed toward another pair of
overwhelming doors at the end of the room. Even in the gloom, Warden could see
they were covered with large gems or crystals.
An
hour later, Warden stared around the cavern to which the ship had been dragged.
The natives were gone. The lone figure of the high priest lay prostrate before
the sole ornamentation in the place, a statue. He turned the audio receivers to
high, and could hear the crowd outside the temple, and the glittering cleric at
the idol. He couldn't hear anything else.
Gradually,
he grew bored. He wondered if he could use a laser beam to cut his way out of
the place. He was still tired.
"Ill
think about it later," he told himself and lay down for a nap.
He
awakened some hours later with a start. The cavern was still. He checked the
screens. The place glowed with a greenish-blue, iridescent light. It was a
high-domed cave, surfaced with a kind of crystalline rock.
The
doors through which the ship had been dragged were closed. Warden could see a
dim light coming from the other end of the cavem. He tried magnification on a
screen.
Fog
or haze obscured the view. He tried infrared. He tried bouncing quasar beams
off it. He tried every frequency and wavelength the computer controlled. There
was nothing.
The place was silent. The high priest had
apparently gone.
Warden sat and stared at his instrument
panel. He was baffled. Then he remembered his earlier conversation with Sara. A
chill went up his backbone.
"Ugh," he said,
annoyed at himself.
Despite a well-developed
sense of self-preservation which told him to stay inside the safety of the
ship, Warden was eaten with curiosity about the place.
He
cautiously extended a ramp .to the floor of the cavern. It stopped with a
hollow bump which echoed across the wavering, blue light.
Blaster
in hand, Warden went to the hatch and cycled it open. He peered around, even
though the instruments told him there was no one else in the cave.
As
he inched slowly down the ramp, his spirits returned. He stepped softly off the
ramp, his booted foot making a little spiral of dust and a low sound.
The
surveyor edged warily around the ship, making a complete circle. Satisfied at
last, he jammed the blaster into his belt and jauntily approached the only
other thing in the cavern, the statue.
It
stood on a waist-high plinth. The figure was apparently life-size, which made
it two feet taller than Warden's six-four.
It was made in the image of the gray natives.
"You're some beauty," Warden commented. A hollow, booming voice said,
"What is your business here?"
Warden froze, gathered his wits in an
instant, then dived behind the base of the statue, scrabbling out his blaster
as he rolled and came back to a crouch.
A
dull silence descended on the cave. He suddenly realized the voice had spoken
in his own language.
Warden
fidgeted. Finally, he called softly, "Uh, anybody out there?"
The loud, echoing voice said again,
"What is your business here?"
"I'm Bill Warden," the crouching
man declared. "Who are you? Where are you?"
"God," the answer rumbled back,
"and I am everywhere."
IV
"Why," the first mate inquired,
"don't we just go down there, knock Warden gently across the head and take
him out?"
"Right,"
the engineer said. "That way, we'd have a piece of the planet by rights
and it would be his word against ours that he was in danger."
The
third man in the crew, the official recorder responsible for data correlation,
said nothing.
"But
that's a rich world!" the mate protested as Sara shook her head.
"Well get a big bonus if we get it."
The
engineer chimed in with, "For that matter, why not just take the whole
thing?" He looked at the mate.
Sara
ignored the hint. She had expected some kind of trouble from these two after
she had known them a day. The corporation assigned crews and captains without
consulting either.
The
mate and engineer were two of a kind, and obviously resented taking orders from
a woman, especially a young woman. The recorder would have taken orders from a
four-year-old child, she felt.
Sara
knew there were instances of rough conflict among the surveyors of rival
corporations, but generally they kept their records clean, because laws were
strict on the matter.
Sara
knew that this pair, greedy as they were, would not risk jail and blacklisting
if there was even the slightest chance of being caught, even for something much
less serious than murder.
She smiled across the mess table. "No,
Mister Buck,
Mister Jason, and that's an order. We'll
wait." She ignored the recorder; he was more like one of his machines than
a person.
"I'd
like that planet, too," Sara went on, "but the corporation doesn't
want _ trouble. And I won't stand for it!"
"So who's to know?" the mate asked
persuasively.
The
engineer came in on cue with, "If the natives get him, we have a valid
claim to the whole thing."
"I don't care for that line of reasoning, Mr.
Jason," Sara said with an edge to her voice. "I don't like it at all. And I won't
hear any more about it."
The meal concluded in a
sullen quiet.
Zelnak was dreaming of stars, large stars,
small stars and stars that sat on rocks.
The
god still had not answered his pleas for information. Yet the day itself
apparently was a great success. The city outdid its former excesses in a
debauch which was still continuing in some quarters, including the chambers of
the younger guardian priests in the palace. The noise drifted faintly up to the
chamber where the high priest lay.
He twitched, grumbled and
turned over.
The
star was floating around the city, while the people laughed and cheered. Zelnak
kept demanding that the star either vanish or go back into the night sky where
it belonged.
He was ignored.
The
star approached an enormous statue of the god. The Most High descended from His
pedestal and danced with the star, which twinkled gracefully. The people roared
approval.
Zelnak
stormed up to the deity and His playmate and, forgetting etiquette, demanded
that the Most High get back to the business of guarding the city.
A
frown appeared on the face of the Most High. The sky went dark, lightning and
thunder were heard in the sky. Zelnak quailed, then
awakened.
One of the guards was waving a lamp and
thumping the floor softly to get his attention.
The guard fell to one knee
before the dais on which Zelnak rested. "It is the Most High, Your
Worship," he said.
"What about the Most High?" Zelnak
rapped out at once.
"He
speaks, Your Worship. I am sent to tell you. The voice is terrible. None of the
temple brethren dared open the doors; they are afraid."
Zelnak
smugly said, "And well they might." He was mollified. This was
heartening news. His self-confidence came surging back with a rush.
"Here,
guard," he said graciously, "you may help us to dress and then attend
us to the temple."
Warden was becoming more familiar and at ease
with the god. After his first alarm at the voice and being trapped in the cave,
he adjusted quickly. He was even beginning to entertain a kind of wary
affection for the voice.
He hazarded, "Do you
have to shout?"
"What?" the voice
boomed.
"Shoutl Your voice,
Most High, it's too loud."
"The
natives expect it. They wouldn't be intimidated if they weren't shouted
at," the echoing rumble said. "But oh, well, how's this?" The
level of the voice abruptly descended several decibels.
"Comforting,"
Warden said. He was beginning to want to ask questions. "Thank you."
"My
pleasure," the god said. "If you have finished interrupting me, I
will get on with the story of how I came to be a god."
Though
he was bursting to ask questions of an entirely different kind, Warden held
himself in check and composed himself on the foot of the ramp where he was
seated, prepared for a long and involved saga.
"I'm all ears,"
Warden said.
"Do
you mean that each of your cells has an auditory function?" the god
inquired.
"No,
nothing like that. Let's get on with it."
"Quite right. Now, where was I? Oh, yes. The god business was thrust on Me several of your centuries after the Ones Who Went Before
departed."
Warden
wanted to break in, but held himself in check. He reasoned that if he just
listened, he ultimately would find out everything he wanted to know. He uttered
a sympathetic sound.
The
god continued, "The planet, which the current natives also call Earth,
was left deserted. To amuse myself, I rearranged the geography, a little, and
changed the cycles of the seasons so that it is uniform in all of the
tem-porate zones of the planet at any given time. Then I encouraged a more
lush growth than the Ones were accustomed to liking.
"Getting
these conditions was really quite an exercise, if I do congratulate myself on
it. I had to move a few mountains—a lot, actually—to give the planet a
distinct bulge, which altered its rate of spin on the axis. I suppose you would consider that a trifle, coming from a
sophisticated civilization?"
Warden
knew the god was angling for praise, and gave it. "Oh, no," he
protested. "We can't do anything like that, although it is theoretically
possible. Our ecological engineers have revived a few dead worlds by seeding
oxygen and building up soil with chemical processes. I don't know too much
about it, actually; they do it with insects and things. But we can't do the
things You can, Most High." The last statement
was delivered in a tone of vast admiration.
The
god accepted Warden's duplicity as sincerity. "The ecology of this world
is strictly controlled; I see to that. Not a sparrow falls that I don't know
about, even though you may not see them as sparrows. I keep an accurate record
within several billions of all the insects and their natural enemies as well.
It wouldn't do to let anything get the better of anything else. I keep a nice
balance.
"Except
for the bipeds, of course," the Most High said judiciously. "After I
put this world in beautiful order, balancing the weather and maintaining a
system of natural checks and balances among the flora and fauna, I discovered
one thing: it was too perfect. Perfection is static, after all. There has to be
a flaw, if you know what I mean.
"That's
where the natives come in; they are a planned irritant. It keeps things upset
to just the right degree. That, of course, makes for a random factor which
keeps my job worthwhile. They're really sometimes unpredictable. Their
ingenuity is boundless, if I say so myself.
"I
keep a close watch on them in a way. They're forever plotting against one
another, or making wars, or gambling or cheating. That's what keeps it
interesting. I hand down a few laws from time to time, just to see how they go
about breaking them. It's really very amusing."
Warden
was appalled, but no longer could contain himself. "Did You create them?" he demanded. "Did You take protozoa or something like that and gradually build
up to where they are now, or did You just invent them in one grand
gesture?"
"Oh,
nothing like that," the god said. "I inherited a perfectly good world,
and it wasn't necessary to get that involved. One works with the materials at
hand as a rule, but it wasn't needful in this case.
"I
imported them," the god said as if it were the most natural thing.
Warden strangled.
"What
was thatF* the god asked. "Did you say something?"
"Argil," Warden
said.
"I
don't seem to be able to find that word," the god said chidingly.
Warden gulped. "You
imported them!"
"Yes,"
the Most High responded. "See here, Warden, are
you unusually stupid, or is it a cultural proclivity of your species to repeat
the speaker's last words?" The god went on, crossly, Warden thought.
"I do not find that an attractive feature in you. It is specious. If you
haven't anything to add to this conversation, then don't say anything at all.
You're as bad as the high priest, who's always pestering me to do this or that.
"One of these days I'm going to catch
him out in the open and smite him with a thunderbolt. You might keep that in
mind, Warden. It could happen to you, you know."
"Yes sir," Warden said meekly.
"Humpf," the god said. "I
daresay.
"Anyway," the Most High continued,
"after they arrived, these Select of the Universe, as I believe they
called themselves at the time—I soon disabused them of that notion,
incidentally—these Select, had ideas of their own.
"It
was necessary to teach them a lesson. They possessed a certain amount of
technology, and that had to be destroyed. The first thing technological
societies do is to begin meddling: they dig up things and upset things. They
don't think about what they are squandering," the voice said pointedly.
"Like us
Terrans," Warden offered brightly.
"Exactly. Rip things out of the bowels of the Earth, these cretins, and call it
progress! When these people were settled, I settled them. They couldn't
understand how they got here, since I had simply snatched a ship or two out of
space and landed it in spite of their efforts, but they thought they could just
start digging and extracting metals and generating a form of electricity.
"That
was exactly what I didn't want. I wanted them to start from scratch, in die
beautiful unspoiled simplicity of the native.
"So
I destroyed their camp with a flood and carried away their ships.
"Of course, they started to build again,
and I destroyed their city with a hurricane and a tidal wave.
"They
were courageous, I'll give them that. They started over again. Well, to make a
long story short, I kept them so busy contending with the dangers of a hostile
environment that they had all they could do just to survive.
"By
the third generation they had regressed considerably, by the sixth generation
they were back to spears and arrows; by the twelfth generation they had
stabilized a culture that was a reasonable facsimile of what I had in mind
originally.
"They finally got the idea I was a
vengeful god, and were afraid of thunder and lightning. They began to pray to
rocks and trees and to sounds in the night, and after that I let them alone for
a while.
"They
are slowly making progress, and that's all to the good. It wouldn't do to let
them stagnate.
"As I said," the god finished,
"I keep the world balanced nicely. Even their wars help, you know. It wouldn't
do to have overpopulation; then there really would be trouble. Anyway, that is
how I came to be a god, Warden. Do you have any questions?"
Warden's
mind reeled. The implications were awful. He had questions.
"Yes,"
he said. "Quite a few, Most High. Could we start at the beginning? What I
mean, is . . Warden's voice faltered.
"I
know precisely what you mean," the god said testily. "These silly
natives are forever debating it. How did it all start? Who created the world?
Well, obviously the answer is, I had the major hand in it. Then, when they have
gotten around to satisfying themselves on that point, they want to know who
created Me? Well, of course, that is an inadmissable
question as far as they are concerned. I simply am, and that's that.
"A
couple of the high priests before this one wanted to know about the stars and
what's out there. They didn't last long. If you let the natives start asking
questions like that, then they'll want to go out and find out for themselves.
That is out of the question absolutely."
"I
see," Warden said. He didn't see at all, but he was not going to admit
that when a thunderbolt might be in the offing.
"No,
you don't see, Warden," the god answered snappishly, "although I
don't suppose it would hurt to talk to you about it. You're from an advanced
civilization, anyway.
"Actually,"
the voice said musingly, "I don't remember My Creation at all. One day I
was making some particularly hard clouds and it occurred to Me
that I didn't know why I was doing it. That's the earliest memory of My childhood. It was shortly before the Ones departed.
After they left, I began to branch out and leam things, and that's how it
was."
"Are
you one of the Ones?" Warden asked. "Perhaps they just went off and
forgot You, or something."
"Certainly notl That's
ridiculous. They just—departed, that's all. They left me here with this world
to look after; I keep up their city, though, just in case they ever want to
come home."
"Their city!" Warden gasped. He remembered the suspicious cloud Sara had mentioned.
"Is that what's under
that cloud?" he asked.
"Why,
yes, Warden. How clever of you to notice. Were those your little toys that flew
in?"
"Well, not
exactly." Warden hedged.
"Then
were they from that other ship," the god stated. "How
annoying! I had to pulverize them, you know."
Warden's
heart sank. Sara probably didn't know what had hit her. "The ship,"
he said dully.
"No,
those little machines," the god answered. Warden suppressed a shout of
elation. "They were buzzing around like insects and I couldn't have that,
after all," the deity grumbled. "The city is forbidden."
"Forbidden?"
Warden let it slip out without thinking.
"Will
you stop that, Warden!" The Most High's voice
shouted at full power. "You sound like an echo!" The booming voice
subsided. "Remember the thunderbolts, Warden. I won't tell you about it
again."
When
his head had stopped ringing, Warden was contrite. "I'm sorry," he
said.
"And
don't say that anymore, either," the god snapped. "You're beginning
to bore me, Warden. Can't you say something different for a change?"
Warden
collected himself and said carefully, "Who were the Ones Who Went
Before?" He hoped he pronounced it so that the capitals were distinct.
After
a full minute, the voice said in a mechanical way, "They were the
representatives of a galactic culture originating in your star system
Lyra." Warden thought the voice didn't sound like its usual self.
"Is anything wrong?" he asked.
"Of course not," the Most High bit
back. "I was busy elsewhere. The natives on the other side of the planet
are having a war, and I had to pause to give them a salutary omen."
Warden
thought the answer a little too slick. He wondered if the god might be doing a
little divine lying.
He
kept his own council, merely saying, "Would it be possible to see the
city, Most High?" Warden always brought out his party manners when he
wanted something. "Please?"
The
god was apparently flattered He had gotten away with the small lie. "I
don't suppose there would be any harm in it." The Most High directed him.
"By
the way, Most High, how did you learn to speak my language? You're very
good," Warden said as he walked toward the city.
"Thank
you. I have been observing the progress of your culture into the universe for
some time," the voice said enigmatically.
Warden
thought it over a moment, then shivered. He didn't
care for the ramifications of that speech, either.
As
Warden neared the end of the cavern where the mist swirled endlessly, there was
a commotion on the other side of his survey ship.
"What's
that?" Warden asked cautiously. His hand dropped to the blaster in his
waistband.
"Oh,
it's probably that tiresome Zelnak," the god answered irritably.
"Wait there, Warden.
Ill get rid of him in a moment."
Curiously
the survey man edged back toward the ship as the large doors began to swing
open. A blast of trumpets came through from the temple. The ceiling of the
cavem reflected torchlight.
The god was silent.
Warden,
peering from around the curved edge of the ship saw the glittering figure of
the high priest advancing through the doors. A choir sang somewhere in the
recesses of the temple.
The
doors shut with a hollow clang. Zelnak started forward, his eyes now on the
statue of the god. He stumbled over the foot of the ramp extended out of the
survey ship.
From
his position athwart the ramp, Zelnak got out a muffled "Most High—"
before he fell. He raised his head and saw Warden staring at him. Zelnak's eyes
widened, then shut.
"What do you want this time,
Zelnak?" the god thundered.
"Forget
it," Warden answered. The high priest had fainted.
V
Sara watched the ceremonies in the courtyard
of the temple. She peered into the screens and laughed,
having no fear Warden would be unable to get himself out of the mess. But she
was sure it would take him some time.
The
mate and the engineer, watching over her shoulder, had eyes only for the
sparkling figures of the priests. "Look at that!" Jason exclaimed in
the closest tone to reverence he possessed. "That headman alone is wearing
six or seven fortunes in jewels!"
Buck
said, "You could retire for life to a pleasure world, an expensive
pleasure world, on that crown alone."
Sara
glanced over her shoulder at the square face of Buck below a shock of sandy
hair and at the thin, dark face of Jason, with its slightly bent nose and wiry,
blue-black hair. The eyes of both gleamed ferally.
She looked back toward the screens. The Star
Systems survey ship was being dragged through the doors of the temple itself.
"Quiet,
you two," she said. "I want to see how Warden gets himself out of
this one." She permitted herself a small chuckle. "If Warden gets himself out of this one, that is."
"Yeah, if," Buck sniggered.
Sara
looked at him sharply. "Oh, shut up," she said wearily. "Don't
you have anything else to do?"
Buck,
for perhaps the thousandth time on the cruise, ran his eyes appraisingly over
Sara's trim form. "Yes, ma'am," he said abruptly, and turned quickly
away to begin correlating tapes.
Zelnak struggled to a sitting position. He
felt his head and groaned. Then he remembered why he fainted and stared around. The thing was still there!
"Hi," Warden
said.
Zelnak fainted again. Wardened snickered.
"Ill
wake him," the god said. A small cloud of
moisture appeared above the recumbent form of the high priest. It began to rain.
Zelnak
spluttered and sat
up again. He stared at Warden, who said nothing.
The amplified voice of the Most High boomed through the cavern. Zelnak
snapped to with a start and stared toward the statue of the god, the survey man temporarily forgotten. "Well,
high priest! Why do you come here?" The voice of the Most High, Warden
could tell, was in no mood for pettifogging.
"I,
uh," Zelnak stuttered, "that is . . ." He came to a stop and
looked again helplessly at Warden, who understood none of the interchange.
The
Star Systems surveyor nonchalantly brought out a pack of cigarettes,
took one and waved it into flame. He inhaled and let out a cloud of smoke.
Zelnak
rolled his eyes. He shrank back against the pedestal of the god's statue.
"Well,
Zelnak," the god thundered. "You've wasted enough time. What is it
you want this time? Be quick or else!" Even Warden, who didn't understand
what was being said, understood the growling menace in the voice.
Under his robes, Zelnak's double-jointed
knees began to quiver. For lack of anything immediate to say, he threw himself
before the statufe of the god and tried to wrap both arms around the pedestal.
"Oh,
for My sake!" the god snarled. "This could
go on for hours." He repeated it so that Warden could understand.
"Perhaps he's
afraid?" Warden suggested.
"Of
course he's afraid," the Most High snapped. "These nits always are.
Of course, this one usually has more presence than most."
The god lowered His voice slightly and
rumbled at the recumbent high priest.
"Get
up, Zelnak, like a good high priest. I won't hurt you, at least not yet."
The
high priest clutched at the edges of the pedestal and heaved himself erect. He
stared at Warden, who regarded the glittering figure of the priest with no
little interest. The priest's agitation caused the gems in his vestments to
coruscate.
Regaining
his composure, the high priest turned to address the statue of the god.
"Oh, Most High, Ruler of the Heavens, Lord of the Stars, Bringer of Rain .
. ."
"The
fewer honorifics and the more meaningful communication the better,
Zelnak," the Most High interjected.
The
high priest bowed profoundly. When he straightened after a long moment, he
asked, "Is this one of Your Angels, Lord?"
The voice hooted. He translated for Warden's
benefit, and said, "No, it is not an angel. It comes from another world
like this one and it calls itself Warden."
"A
warden of what, King of the Seasons?"
"That's
not his rank, that's his name, you dunce," the god roared back. Zelnak
quailed. Warden continued to drag on his cigarette.
The priest darted a look at the survey man
and prostrated himself again.
"Oh,
get up," the god said impatiently, "and go back to your palace and
pray for remittance of your sins and transgressions."
Zelnak
scrambled to his feet and bowed again. "I shall perform a high ceremony in
the morning to the glory of the Most High," he said.
"Do whatever you want," the god
snapped, "only don't come back for a few days, anyway."
The
high priest had recovered some of his aplomb. "Can this humble servant
inquire if the Most High is pleased with the gift of the star?"
"Yes, yes, of course. But it's not a
star, you fool. Oh, well, you wouldn't understand. Get out."
Zelnak bowed, and got out. His mind was
seething with the knowledge the god imparted. If the fire breathing thing were
not an angel, then he shuddered, it must be a demon! And the star was not a
star, but something else. But what?
Warden watched the priest go with interest. He
wondered whether the man would soon be back followed by a gaggle of screaming
cannibals.
He
put the question to the god, who said, "No. That idiot won't be back for a
while yet, anyway. Would you like to resume the tour of the city, Warden?"
"Sure,"
Warden assented. He cycled the ramp back into the ship and closed the port just
in case, and walked down the cave toward the swirling mists.
Warden
stepped from the mouth of the cavern onto a moving way which started when he
descended a pair of low steps. The way was part of several moving bands going
in different directions.
"I
activated these for your benefit," the voice said proudly. "They
haven't been used for some time, though I keep them in perfect working
order."
"Thank
you," Warden murmured. He was busy looking around. The mist was not as
thick as he had supposed. Visibility was limited to about a thousand yards, but
he could see adequately.
He expected a cluster of soaring buildings of
fantastic shape and color, like the elaborate hotel architecture of the
pleasure worlds he knew.
Instead,
the city was sparse, and mathematical in design. The streets, if they were
streets, were broad, twice as broad as the height of the buildings the moving
way passed.
The buildings themselves were bare and
functional. It was not the functionalism of his own
past history, however. These buildings were built with an eye to a kind of
spareness which in its perfection relied heavily on cubes and rectangles as the
main forms, with the beauty coming from the detailing, proportion and texture
of the building materials.
"I'm no great authority on what's
beautiful," Warden said to the voice. "But this is—well, it makes my
eye think it sees more than may be there."
"The greatest art lies in its own
concealment," the voice said.
"Ah," Warden
said.
The
buildings were not a riot of color, but were chiefly of white
stone or a black substance Warden thought might be
marble. Some were built of native woods, dark in hue and richly patterned.
None
of the structures was over four storys high. All sat
back from the way in restrained gardens where an occasional fountain or
artificial waterfall glittered.
The
way carried the surveyor before a long, low, black building approached by a wide series of steps.
"Enter that building,
Warden," the voice said.
The
man zigzagged across the moving walkways and* went up the stairs. A door twenty
feet high soared above him. He looked at the statuary on either side of the
door. They were double helices, in which lights sparkled and moved back and
forth. Above the statuary there was writing incised in a lighter material.
"What
does that say?" Warden inquired of the Most High.
"This is what you would call a museum," the voice answered. "Enter."
There
were no doors. Warden walked under the archway and found himself in a vast room with walls of a striated, green stone. There was illumination, but he was unable to
pinpoint its source. About the room on pedestals stood glittering constructions
of metal and what appeared to be glass.
"Are these art objects?" Warden
inquired.
"These
are machines," the voice said. "The Ones Who Went Before built
machines which were art. Art became machine."
"What a find!" Warden exclaimed
involuntarily. Then he caught himself and asked somewhat less enthusiastically,
"Do they work?"
"They work," the answer came back.
"What
do they do?" Warden demanded. He was, in spite of himself, becoming
excited. His mind raced ahead.
Here
might be unlimited sources of power, more important than any kind of material
wealth. The knowledge his own race could gain from the
perfectly maintained mechanisms would be enormous.
"The
tallest machine transports beings or objects to distant places," the
voice said. "The rounded device on the low pedestal synthesizes
matter."
Warden
noticed a certain metallic quality creep back into the voice of the Most High.
"Those crystalline structures, and I am
simplifying for your benefit," the voice went on, "are devices for
defense or offense against hostile elements."
One
of the machines rose from its pedestal and began to glow. An angry hum came
through to Warden.
"I control these
machines," the voice finished.
Excitedly,
Warden said, "Could you tell me in detail what they do, and how they work?
This knowledge would be a great help to our race!"
"I could," the voice said.
He
was standing in the center of the room. He walked up to one of the war
machines. They all looked like sculpture, shiny constructions of metal and
crystal elements in a pleasing design. Warden could see hidden depths in them
but was unable to locate any point from which destruction would issue. He put
out a tentative hand.
"Stop!" The voice commanded. "To tamper is
dangerous!"
Warden
snatched his hand away and backed down the raised platform. His mind was
ticking over as fast as it could.
"Warden," the voice said abruptly,
"you must return to your ship. There is something there which will need
your attention."
"What's the hurry to get back to the
survey ship?"
When
the god answered, it seemed to come from a distance. "The
other vessel which circled the planet, Warden."
"What about it?"
Warden demanded.
"It is descending
above the square of the city."
"This
city?"
Warden was incredulous.
"The
city of Zelnak," the god answered. "You should be on hand to meet our
future servants."
Warden was startled by the last statement,
but let it pass. When the surveyor entered the glowing chamber, he was wrapped in
his own thoughts. For once, the god, too, was silent.
VI
The city below was coming out of the night
side into dawn as Sara finished her coffee. She rubbed the last sleep from her
eyes and sat before the screens applying cosmetics.
Satisfied,
she turned her full attention to the magnification of the buildings below. A
few of the natives were stirring, but otherwise the city seemed deserted.
I shouldn't wonder, she
thought, after yesterday's orgy. She swept the view finder closer to the main temple and searched for any
sign of Warden or his ship. There was only a raw scar about twenty feet wide to
show where the ship had scraped the pavement in its passage.
She
saw nothing else and a small stab of worry began to grow at the back of her
mind. Sara had every confidence Warden could extricate himself and his ship
from the confines of the temple. But, she thought, and that's a great, big but.
She
knew her delay was costing hours of search for another world.
"Time's money,"
she reminded herself aloud.
"What
was that?" Buck said as he clambered into a seat beside her at the main
control console.
"Nothing,"
she answered. "I was just thinking we ought to be going on and
continuing our sweep in this sector."
"What
about him?" He gestured with his hand at the screen focused closely on the
temple compound.
Sara
fought with her conflicting emotions and finally said, "I suppose he can take care of himself. Still—"
The mate said nothing. He watched her
carefully over the edge of the coffee cup he had brought with him.
"Don't
you think we ought to help him out?" Buck asked with a subtle overtone in
his voice.
Sara looked at the mate
suspiciously.
"Why?"
He paused to take another sip of his coffee
and answered blandly, "Well, it wouldn't be right just to go-off and
leave him if he's in trouble, would it?"
"When
did you develop the milk of human kindness, Mister Buck?" she said flatly.
He
spread his hands and said easily, "The way I figure it, if he's in real
trouble and we help him out, he'll be morally bound to give us a piece of the
find. If not, well, it'll look good on the record."
Sara
couldn't accept the smooth line of reasoning. All her perceptions told her
there was more to Buck's look than he would have appear.
She
looked at the mate for a long minute, then leaned back in the flight couch and
said, "All right, well go down and throw a scare into the locals.
"Warden
should be able to get away in the confusion. If he can't take his ship we'll
stand by to take him aboard," she ordered.
"You may begin descent over the main
square of the city, Mr. Buck," she finished.
"Yes, ma'am," the
mate said submissively.
Sara
watched him with narrowed eyes. The recorder and engineer came into the control
room at the sound of the power beginning to blast and took their places.
Two
hours later the ship hovered a thousand feet over the city.
Watching
from her couch, Sara could see the inhabitants begin to swarm out into the
square and streets. When they felt the heat from the ship's blast, they
retreated to take cover among the buildings a distance away.
"Well
hover for a half hour, then go down, Mr. Buck," Sara rapped. The mate gave
no answer but bent over his own screens as if he were searching for something.
"Mr. Buck, Mr. Jason," Sara called,
"do you see any signs of Warden?"
Both answered in the
negative.
"Take
it over the temple courtyard, Mr. Buck," Sara ordered.
The
ship moved across the main square and hovered at a lower altitude over the
large temple courtyard. Sara could see the natives scattering to take cover.
"Let's wait a while
yet," she said.
Twenty
minutes later, when there was still no sign of Warden, she grew impatient.
"This waiting is silly. Put her down, Mr. Buck. Let's go look for
ourselves."
The
ship descended slowly, the heat from the jets causing the painted walls and
columns of the temple to crack, blacken and blister. As it settled lightly onto
the pavement of the temple, a pavilion of wood a hundred yards away burst into
flame.
A
slight jar indicated they were grounded. "Nice landing, Buck," she
commented. "Now, let's wait for the ground to cool a little and we can
take a look around."
Against
her better judgment, she unlocked the compartment where the blasters were
stored and handed one each to Buck and Jason—she knew the recorder would be useless—took
one for herself and turned back to the screens. The
recorder knew he wouldn't be asked along.
Zelnak opened one eye. The captain of the
guard was there, looking upset and fidgeting. Zelnak closed his eye. The guard
was still there when he opened it again. Sighing, he climbed down from the bed.
"A big star, bigger than the one in the
temple!" the guard offered eagerly. "The Oracle says it comes to find
the smaller one!"
The man crossed to the window at the balcony.
"It was above the city square, Your Worship, but now it floats above the
temple."
Zelnak groaned and hastened
to the window.
He
looked up and winced as a blast of hot air from the hovering craft struck his
face. "It floats," he said dully.
The guard stared.
"And blossoms of flame come out of the
bottom," the high priest continued in a monotone.
The
guard backed a foot away. He had never seen the high priest like this; he was
usually majestic and commanding. "Is, is, something wrong, Your
Worship?" he stammered.
Zelnak
groaned. He said without thinking, never moving his eyes from the star,
"Of course something's wrong, fooll This one's
five times larger than the other thing, and it's probably full of demons,
tool" Zelnak could look at Warden in no other light.
The
high priest had not raised his voice and was not aware of the information he
had inadvertently let out. Eyes wide, the guard backed toward the door of the
chamber, where the attendant priests stood clustered.
He
threw away his spear, and with a last departing look, shouted, "His
Worship says there be demons! Run! Run! For the Most High's sake, save yourselves!"
The
crowd scattered amid shrieks as the high priest continued to stand at the
window looking at the new visitor from the stars.
Sara sprinted down the ramp and headed toward
the temple. She thought the mate and the engineer were behind her, but they
were pounding across the compound toward the palace, blasters ready.
She
pulled up short before the high doors leading into the temple. They were too
massive for her to open. As she aimed the blaster a head timidly peeped out of
a smaller door she had not noticed. The head quickly withdrew and the little
door slammed shut.
Sara
advanced on it slowly. She stood before it and pushed. "Bolted from the
inside," she said to herself and leveled the gun. The door buckled and was
a cinder.
As
she stepped through the smoking opening, she saw priests and guards scattering
through the columned inner temple. They were shouting something, but she
couldn't understand that they were screaming "Demons!"
Sara
laughed. "Boo!" she said to a face peering at her from an upper
gallery. The face disappeared.
She looked for Warden's ship. It wasn't in
the main hall, but she noticed large doors at the other end of the chamber.
Keeping near the columns in case one of the guards decided to make her a
target, she moved quickly toward the opening beside the high altar.
She
examined the paneling for another small door. A series of small cracks showed
where it was, but she could not figure out how to get it open.
She
leveled the blaster at the point she thought would get her through quickest.
Before she could squeeze the firing stud, the door swung open inwardly.
Warden stepped quickly into the main temple
chamber.
"You!" they exclaimed
simultaneously.
Warden
recovered first. The blaster he held seemed slightly ridiculous pointed at
Sara. He lowered it.
"What's going on," he demanded.
Sara put her own weapon
back in its holster.
"I
was going to ask the same question," she said. "We thought you were
in trouble, and came down to help, you see." She finished in a lame tone.
"Well, I wasn't and
now you may be in trouble."
Warden
related the story of the hidden city and the god which guarded it.
Sara stared at him in
disbelief.
"A
god?" she said struggling to keep her face straight "Here?"
"That's what I thought," Warden
answered. "But the answer is yes. He's
here, everywhere, in fact." "A real, honest to
everything, god."
"You're
beginning to sound like a straight man," Warden commented wryly.
He
turned. "Through here," he said and led the way through the door. The
shimmering cavern beyond dwarfed them as they stepped out of the temple. She
saw Warden's ship halfway down the domed space.
He called, "Most High?
Are you here?"
A
rumbling voice answered, "Of course I am here, Warden. Is this person
with you from the other ship?"
Sara
involuntarily shrank nearer to Warden at the sound of the voice. She gulped.
"She is," Warden answered.
"This is a female of our race. Her name is Sara Medell."
Gathering
her strength, Sara stepped away from Warden's side. "Uh, hello," she
said tentatively.
The
god ignored her, "Warden," the voice said. "The others from the
Medell's ship attack the palace of the high priest."
"What?" Warden
and Sara said together.
"They
are racing for the chamber of the high priest," the voice rumbled on.
Warden
stared at Sara, who had forgotten about Buck and Jason until the voice snapped
her to attention.
"The
jewels," she gasped. "That's why they wanted to land! Oh, Bill, I'm
sorry! We'd better—" she started to run back toward the temple.
"Zelnak's
a nuisance, Warden," the god said, "but I wouldn't want him hurt. He
keeps the majority of the natives in line."
"Can't
you do something?" Warden yelled as he pounded after Sara.
"I already am,"
the god said absently.
Zelnak turned from the window as heavy
footsteps sounded in the anteroom outside his bedroom.
A
voice called something in a strange language. The high priest began to cross
the room, when two strange forms blocked the door.
"In
here!" Buck called to Jason. They ran together toward the chamber where
the ornamentation seemed to indicate they would find Zelnak.
"That's
the high priest," Buck said. He saw that the figure was wearing jeweled
robes. Through the door toward which the native was backing, he could see a
collection of robes hanging against a wall.
Buck
started forward. He skirted the bed on one side and motioned Jason to take the
other. They would catch the priest in a pincer movement.
As
they walked toward the high priest, a thunderous voice filled the air.
"Stop!" the voice
commanded in their own language.
Buck and Jason stood still. They looked
around and, seeing no one behind them, began stalking the high priest again.
"You
are ordered to stop!" the voice boomed again. "If you do not, we
shall punish you."
The
two survey men stopped again and stared through the room. "Hell,"
Buck said, "there's no one there. I must be hearing things."
Jason
said, "Let's grab this stuff and get out of here." He started to dash
toward Zelnak, who was standing very still against a tapestry. Zelnak knew the
voice of the Most High, but didn't understand what He was saying to the demons.
His knees began to tremble.
The
high priest was unsure whether the Most High was taking him as a sacrifice or
protecting him. From the way the two stopped at His voice, Zelnak decided the
latter was the case.
Neither
the high priest nor the two saw a small cloud form against the ceiling of the
room.
When
Jason made his leap toward Zelnak, a clap of thunder filled the room. Lightning
flashed down toward the running engineer and flung him twenty feet across the
chamber to bounce off a wall and land in a heap on the floor.
Zelnak
closed both eyes and murmured a silent prayer of thanks to the Most High.
"I told you to
stop!" the voice rumbled self-righteously.
Buck
stood immobile. He turned as running footsteps told him someone was coming into
the room. He raised the blaster, but let it fall as Sara and Warden came
bounding through the door.
Zelnak, who was finishing his prayer, opened
both eyes to see the scene in his bedroom, which heretofore had always been
sacrosanct.
One of the demons lay groaning on the floor;
another stood still beside the bed and two more stood in the doorway, their
strange flashing weapons held at the ready.
"Four demons,"
Zelnak gurgled. Then he fainted.
VII
Lllan, the shepherd who first saw the star
floating to ground, was feeling sorry for himself. He lay propped against a
wall in one of the poorer quarters of the city holding his head.
The
celebrations for the Most High had been very wet. Lllan, as discoverer of the
offering to the Most High, had been freely welcome anvwhere in the city.
A
round of parties, drinking and willing girls would have been beyond the wildest
imagination of the shepherd before that time. But now, having been accepted in
the palace itself and in the homes of the great priests, captains and rich
merchants of the city, Lllan in a short time had grown accustomed to thinking
of himself as a personage of some importance.
He
groaned and fingered the robe he wore. It was of fine cloth, a gift of one of
the rich merchants, so that the shepherd could attend the ceremonies in the
temple and the revels afterward and not be an embarrassment.
He
stirred. A crock of wine which was tilted against the wall fell over and
cracked. The wine began to seep between the cobbles of the street.
The
shepherd lunged for the container and managed to right it before all the liquid
had run onto the earth. A flashing pain ran through his head when he made the
violent motion and he groaned again.
He
tilted the crock back and took three healthy swigs of the fiery wine. Presently
feeling better, he leaned back against the wall and started to take stock of
his situation.
Surely, he reasoned, there is still a way to turn the course of events to my own advantage. The shepherd had drunk long and late in the celebrations of the
preceding day; he knew nothing of the visit of the second ship.
Lllan
belched, climbed to his feet and set off in search of new adventure.
Warden grabbed Sara by the arm and sprinted
back through the anteroom.
"Let's get back to
your ship," he yelled.
He
saw Buck turn for a moment to look at the flattened shape of the high priest.
"Forget
that," Warden called as he and Sara dashed through the door.
Buck
remembered what happened to Jason, who was groaning against the wall. He said,
"Women and children first," and ran out the door in pursuit of the
Star Systems surveyor and his own captain.
Jason,
seeing himself left alone, lurched to his feet and
began feeling his way along the walls. All thought of booty was gone, and he
was intent on getting back to the ship where he would be safe.
The
voice of the god remained silent as Sara, Warden and Buck ran through the galleries
of the palace, followed more slowly by Jason, who was having trouble keeping
his equilibrium.
The
natives undoubtedly observed their passage, but the belief that they were
demons kept them at a safe distance.
A
group of guards was gathering at the foot of the staircase in the main
audience hall of the palace. As the three surveyors came to a stop at the top
of the stairs, the captain of the guard looked up and shouted,
"Demons!" He started backing cautiously away.
Warden ducked back behind a column, motioning
the others to do the same.
Gathering his courage and being prepared for
a grisly death, the captain threw his spear. It slanted off the column behind
which Warden had disappeared.
The other guards grew bold when there was no instant retaliation and
began to advance, muttering. One put his foot on the stairs.
Nothing
happened. He let out a shout and threw one of the spears he carried.
With
a howl of triumph, the cohort of guards began running up the stairs. Warden,
who was prepared to vanish through one of the connecting rooms of the palace
and make his way without trouble to his own or Sara's ship, was about to make a
run for it when Buck ducked out from behind a column, sighted at the first
running guard and fired his blaster on full. The man vanished in a rush of
acrid smoke. The other guards broke and fled.
Warden
regretted the harm done one of the natives, knowing it would make his job of
establishing trading contact harder, but took advantage of the break.
"Come on!" he
yelled.
The
three of them fired warning shots over the heads of the retreating guards and
began to make their way down the long staircase, which was Uttered
with the detritus of the abortive rush.
They
reached the arcade on the ground floor and quickly ran across the square toward
the ship. As they neared the survey vessel, a port cycled open and a ramp
nicked outward.
"Carnaby's
in for a commendation," Sara gasped to Warden as they pounded up the
ramp.
The
port closed behind them. Sara led the way into the control room. Buck went
toward a cabinet and made himself a stiff scotch without ice. Sara fell into a
couch and began studying the screens.
"We should get out of
here," she said at last.
She
turned to Warden. "Do you want to go back with us? You'll have to leave
your ship."
Warden
struggled with himself. It was his planet; greed won.
"It's
my planet, Sara," he answered. "I'm more or less grateful for your
meddling, but I was doing all right before you landed and caused all this
mess." He indicated the barren square on the screens.
"Mess?" she said
indignantly.
"Mess," he retorted. "I didn't
ask you to land, after all; and I was not in any trouble, at least not in any
trouble with the natives." He indicated Buck. "Your crew caused me
enough grief here that it will take a year at least to make some kind of
peaceful contact with the local population. If then," he added resentfully.
"Well,
I like that!" she cried angrily. "Here we come down to save your
miserable hide and you say we messed you upl That's
gratitude, I suppose?"
Warden
responded, "So why don't you just blast out of here and let me handle this
in my own way?"
A slow flush crept up
Sara's neck and cheeks.
"I
will!" she answered shortly. Then, looking toward the screens to cover her
embarrassment, she cried, "Oh, look, there's Jason now!"
They
all crowded around the screens, and saw with dismay that Jason was staggering
as if drunk.
Warden
looked at Sara. "If he were on my crew," he said, "I wouldn't
have just left him to fend for himself."
"It
wouldn't have hurt you to think of helping at the time," Sara snapped,
stung for having forgotten the crewman.
"Well,"
she continued, "I suppose we should go out and collect him before somebody
puts a spear in his back."
She
stood. "Come on, Buck, we don't need any help to take care of our own
people."
Sara began leading the way
toward the lock.
Warden,
who had continued to watch the screens, said, "I wouldn't be so sure about
that."
Sara turned. "What's
that?" she demanded.
"Look," Warden
said, gesturing toward the screen.
Jason
was about halfway across the square. Advancing rapidly on him was a lone
native, who, with robes flapping, tackled the engineer and brought him heavily
to the pavement.
"Oh,
great," Sara muttered. "What do we do now?" "We go out and
try to get him," Warden answered. "There's only one of them this
time, and five of us." "Four, for all the use Jason is," Buck
said sourly. Warden unholstered his blaster. "Let's go," he said.
"I
want to
get back to my ship and then you can get out of here before something really
awful happens."
They
opened the port. As the ramp slid earthward, they saw a ragged group of guards
come out to help the native who had tackled Jason. They swarmed over the two
grappling figures and by the time the men from the survey ship reached ground,
the guards had bundled the unfortunate engineer back into the palace.
"What now?" Sara
said coming down the ramp.
"Let's
go back inside," Warden answered, "and scheme up a rescue."
'"I suppose the best place to start
would be the palace," Lllan said to himself as he ambled through the
deserted streets.
The
shepherd looked around. From the position of the sun, it was well into the day,
but the streets were lifeless. "Probably still sleeping off
yesterday," he muttered.
Slapping
at his dusty robe, he began to feel more cheerful and set off toward the
palace at a vigorous pace.
He
stopped on the edge of the square, staring at the second vessel. He stood quite
still and looked keenly at it. It was larger than the one he had discovered; he
wondered if it were a relative of the other star. Then he dismissed the
thought as a series of shouts came from the open doors of the palace.
The
shepherd picked up his robe so that he could run and hastened toward the
palace, the ship forgotten.
Lllan
skidded to a stop in the arcade as a group of guards came boiling into the
arcade and scattered in a hundred directions. He. reached out a lean arm and collared one.
"What's going
on?" he demanded.
"The
demons," the guard stuttered, "they're in the palace!" He broke
out of Lllan's grip and ran down the arcade.
"Demons?" Lllan called after him. "Demons?"
The fleeing guard kept running.
The shepherd stood pulling a wattle beneath
his chin, which he always did when he was forced to think. "Demons,"
he said to himself.
The loud sounds which had preceded the rout
of the guards had stopped. Lllan had almost reached the door when three
strance-looking beings came running through the opened portal. He shrank back
behind a column and looked at the running figures.
"They're
awful short for demons," he said at last. He stood in the shadow of the
arcade and looked into the glare of the central square where the ship glittered
in the sunlight.
He
saw an opening appear in the side of the star. A stairway slid out from below
the opening. The creatures raced up the stairway, which then retracted. The
opening in the side of the ship closed.
Lllan
stood dumbfounded. Then he exclaimed, "Stars with doorways! With demons inside!"
The
shepherd thought harder than he ever had thought before. He considered going at
once to the high priest, but held back. He reasoned that if the demons had been
in the palace, then Zelnak must know about it. There would be no profit there.
But why were the demons running? Were they afraid? For that matter, why were the guards running? They were surely afraid, Lllan
thought furiously.
He
was still pondering the wonders he had seen when a figure went reeling by not
far from his vantage point.
"By
the Most High," Lllan murmured to himself, "another demon!" These are wondrous days indeed.
The shepherd watched Jason going across the
square. He seemed to be in trouble of some kind. Lllan, who had spent his
entire lifetime among the hills watching his herds, knew when a creature was
sick. Perhaps it's hurt. But if it's hurt, then it must be a lesser demon, for everyone knew that demons can't be hurt. And if it's a lesser demon, if I can catch it, the high priest will have to reward me this time, and in great measure.
Picking up his robe, he began sprinting
toward the retreating figure.
VIII
By the time Warden, Sara and Buck had
regained the control room the screens showed that Jason had been hustled back
inside the palace.
"I have an idea,"
Warden announced.
"Don't do us any
favors," Sara answered sarcastically.
"This
is simple," Warden said ignoring her outburst. "And," he added
pridefully, "this has the terrific advantage that
we can get Jason back without ever leaving the ship or getting stuck with
spears."
Sara looked at him
doubtfully.
"Most
High?"
Warden called tentatively.
The
voice was unnaturally loud in the confines of the control room. Warden winced.
"Yes,
Warden?"
Buck
snapped his head around. His eyes grew wide. "What was that?" he
said, panicked.
"The
god of this planet," Warden answered briefly. "Now be quiet and let
me talk."
Buck
goggled. The recorder shrank back into his couch and said nothing. Sara
abruptly sat. "I don't believe it," she said.
"Well, Warden?"
the god demanded.
"It's
about the engineer of this ship, Most High," he beean suavely.
"He
is now incarcerated in the palace," the god answered, lowering the volume
of his voice slightly.
"We
know that," Warden returned. "But we wondered if . . . well, if
perhaps, you could help us get him out?"
"Why?" god answered simply.
"Well,
because they might do something to him," Warden answered.
"That
is the fellow I smighted with a thunderbolt," the god said sententiously.
"He deserves any retribution the natives care to hand out."
"Now
just a minute, Your Godship," Sara said starting
up from her couch. She was frowning angrily.
Warden waved her back into
the couch.
"Most
High," he said persuasively, "this man is
truly sorry for what he did; we all are, and if you will tell the natives to
let him go—they are obviously scared silly of you—then we will just get in our
ships and leave. We won't cause any further trouble," Warden promised.
"I
will not allow you to cause any further trouble, Warden," the god
answered pettishly. "I will pacify these people, and let them have your
Jason as a sacrifice to Me. You, on the other hand,
are sufficiently amusing that you will take up residence in the city of the
Ones Who Went Before—you and these others." The
god ended on a quiet note.
"But.
.. but.
.."
"No
buts, Warden! Remember the cloud!" the god bellowed. The sound rang back
and forth in the metal-walled control room.
"Yessir," Warden
said when his ears stopped ringing.
"Good,"
the Most High said, mollified. "Now, I shall stop the interference
patterns and defense mechanisms of the city for the time being. Take this ship
up and put it down in some convenient square."
"Why don't you just
let us leave," Warden hazarded.
"Because you would return with meddlers, Warden, and diggers. I simply cannot allow the ecology of this
world to be so interrupted. Go now," the Most High said.
Warden
gulped and gestured to the others in the control room. They set about the
buisness of raising the ship and setting it down in the hidden city.
Sara stared dully at the screens. "I
believe it," she said.
"What?" Warden
asked.
"Impossible
things," she answered. "What was that about the queen in Alice? She could believe in ten impossible things before breakfast, or was it
twelve?"
"I don't know,"
Warden answered. "But I believe it, too."
Zelnak opened one eye. There was nothing. He
opened the other eye. He peered around his bedroom. "A nightmare,"
he muttered. "It had to be a nightmare. I must have eaten too much shashlik. Why, I didn't even undress or go to bed!"
He
struggled to his feet, making a firm resolve as he did so to live much more
temperately in the future.
Zelnak
went into his robing room to change into a different garment.
"Stars," he muttered darkly to himself, "demons, nightmares! Humph."
A
minor priest scratched timidly at the door of the chamber.
"Get out," Zelnak snapped nastily,
"and bring me some breakfast." The priest scuttled away. "Demons, stars. Bah!"
The
high priest came to an abrupt stop before a window, as if he had blundered
into a wall in the night He thought he saw another star sitting in the square.
"Oh, no!" He groaned. "Then it's true." Zelnak rubbed his eyes. It was
still there. "Demons," he said and tottered into a high-backed chair,
burying his face in his hands.
There
was a commotion in the anteroom. Zelnak looked up, beginning to fear any new
interruption. A guard stood respectfully in the doorway.
"Proud news, Your
Worship," the guard announced.
"What
is it?" he inquired wearily. "Is it another star?" That was all
he needed to make his life a complete disaster, he thought.
"No, Your Worship," the guard said,
standing at attention. "It is the shepherd, Lllan."
"What
about the shepherd Lllan. Isn't he the fellow who found the first star?"
Zelnak did not entertain pleasant thoughts about that particular peasant. That
discovery was causing Zelnak to lose faith in his own sanity.
"Yes,
Your Worship," the guard said obsequiously. "It was he who found the
star, but now he has done a magnificently brave thing." The guard paused
for the effect of his statement to roll across the chamber.
Zelnak sat straight in his chair. His eyes
narrowed.
"A
brave thing, has he, the wretch," he grated.
"What new misfortune has he brought upon us?"
"Let
Lllan and his demon come forward," the guard said exultantly.
The
gray visage of the high priest paled to the color of the marble lining his
chamber. "Captured a demon!" he said unbelievingly.
Zelnak
fought the overwhelming desire to let everything go black. He sat huddled in
the chair and watched as the peasant advanced into the room cuffing
Jason before him.
Jason,
propelled with a final shove and kick, sprawled into the room
where minutes before he had terrified the high priest. Jason landed at Zelnak's feet with a mighty thump.
"Oof," he said, shaking his head
groggily.
"This
is a pretty kettle of shashlik," Zelnak said dully. "What does one do
with a demon?" He addressed the room at large. "Maybe I could give it back."
Lllan
swaggered forward. "I captured the demon, Most High," he
boasted.
Eyes
flashing venomously, Zelnak looked at the uncouth figure of the shepherd. "You!" Zelnak hissed.
"Me,"
Lllan answered drawing himself proudly to full height
He beamed at the high priest
"You," Zelnak
grated again.
Lllan
bowed. He smiled in anticipation of his reward. He considered asking to be made
a captain of the guard, but rejected that in favor
of being made a baron.
Zelnak
exploded into rage. He gestured at the shepherd, "Take that and feed it
slowly to something vicious, a little
piece at a time."
Lllan
was bewildered. He shrank back. "What?" he stuV tered. "Hold on, now—" he shrieked as the guards hustled him
through the door.
The high priest smiled benignly. "Escort
the demon gendy, for we do not yet know its full powers and lodge it in a tower
room with no windows and a strong door, lest it fly away—a strong metal door."
Jason
was led away, unresisting. His captors gave him a respectful distance but urged
him gently forward.
Zelnak began to feel
better.
"I'll
have my breakfast now, in the arena, while they ration that accursed Lllan to
the beasts."
DC
It's very pleasant in the hidden city, Warden thought after they had been there a week. If you stop to consider that we're prisoners, he added.
He
spent entire days in the museum, questioning the Most High about the working of
the machinery there and gradually acquiring a mastery of a few of the
glittering objects he thought of as weaponry.
Sara
had moped about after choosing, in one of the residential buildings, quarters
as high as she could find. It was a series of vast rooms which apparently had
belonged to some administrator among the city's first residents. She spent a
lot of time sight-seeing. Warden seldom saw her. The ordinary thing for marooned
people to do is stay together. Sara was morose and uncommunicative; Warden
stayed away.
Buck
vanished from sight. Warden supposed he must be prowling among the buildings
looking for loot.
Warden
headquartered in his own ship. The recorder in Sara's crew stayed in the other
ship, rarely leaving it.
The
god answered questions if it felt in the mood, which was not often. Warden
suspected that the Most High was sulking because it had to threaten to restrain
the humans from attempting to leave the city or planet. The mist had been
restored over the city, though the god kept it above the height of the
buildings. The Most High occasionally preened Himself to Warden, who was
apparently His favorite, about the beauty and accomplishments of His godhead
and of the Ones Who Went Before.
But there were days on end when the god did
not bother to answer when Warden called for him. One morning Warden awoke to
hear Zelnak out in the cavern where his ship still stood, talking to the Most
High, who answered in a booming, mighty voice. Warden stayed in the ship and
watched the priest sidle around fearfully on his way out of the cavern.
Warden
tried once or twice to contact Star Systems on his own equipment. The Most High
set up such a turbulence in the planet's outer
atmosphere that the message was blanketed. As punishment, the god caused a
constant rain in the city for a week, keeping Warden and the others to whatever
pursuits they could find indoors.
Sara
told him once, on meeting Warden on one of the moving concourses,
that her recorder had tried to make contact, too, with the same results.
The man, who was a kind of genius with his equipment, couldn't understand how
the god blanketed the communications.
Warden
had shrugged, and, remembering one of the books of his hated school days, said,
"The ways of the gods are inscrutable."
Sara
had snapped at him and turned on her heel and strode away on a concourse going
in the opposite direction.
Warden
continued to tinker around in the museum with the tacit approval of the Most
High, who now and then commented on the surveyor's attempt to master the machines.
The transport device remained off limits no matter how Warden argued.
Warden
grew bored with that occupation after several weeks and set out to explore the
city. The valley was four miles wide and twice as long; the streets and
walkways of the city radiated, from a lake in the center of the valley.
He began systematically quartering the city
in his sightseeing and patiently went through one building after another.
He found Sara's living quarters, though he
knew if he had asked, the god would have told him where to locate her.
She was grouchy and inhospitable. "It's all your fault,
Warden!"
she said before shoving him out of the apartment into the corridor.
"My
fault?" he said in amazement. "Who asked you to come down here in the
first place? If you'd have stayed where you were you could be happily away from
here by now, bringing me back some help."
"So you admit you
needed help?" she accused.
"Oh,
forget it," he said wearily. They had been over that territory before.
"I guess 111 never
understand women," he sighed as he turned away.
"No, I don't suppose you will!" She broke into tears and ran
off.
All things considered, Jason told himself, Tm not being treated too badly. Now
and then a bunch of the natives would come to the rooms where he was being held
and look at him. Pointing at him, they chattered to each other in a hissing
language and then went away.
A
native came twice a day with food and a kind of wine to which Jason grew
accustomed.
He
hid his blaster, thinking that if his captors grew ugly, he could fight his way
out of the palace to some place of safety.
In
the meantime, the natives seemed to hold him in awe, and left him unmolested.
Jason stayed in the tower rooms, contenting himself with trying to speak the
native language with the servants and looking through rolls of manuscript he
found one morning on the table in the room where he ate.
The
high priest came in once or twice. Pointing at the manuscripts on the table,
the priest launched into a long harangue which ended abruptly. Jason grew bored
and stood up, making a nasty face and shouting. The high priest retired
quickly. The man had no way of knowing he was supposed to read the manuscripts
and consider himself exorcised.
One
day an old native came in and patiently began to teach Jason the language. It
was a diversion, so he applied himself, gradually acquiring some facility with
the tongue-twisting syllables.
He learned that the others had disappeared
into the ship and vanished into the mountains which hid the Forbidden Place.
Jason
wanted to know what the Forbidden Place was and asked long and detailed
questions. All he was able to learn from the old scholar was that it was a
place whence none ever returned; it was taboo. And now the demons had
disappeared there and none had seen them since.
"Serves
the bastards right," Jason muttered resentfully in his own tongue.
When
he knew enough of the language to make himself understood, Jason demanded to be
allowed out of the tower so that he could look at the city.
The
answer was no, couched in polite terms such as "Most Noble Demon, it is
not possible; the people would revolt. They still talk of your coming and of
the stars that float and of where the other demons vanishedl"
Jason
argued and grew impatient. Finally the high priest, whom the engineer was given
to understand was named Zelnak, paid a visit.
Flanked
by guards and underlings Zelnak came warily into the room. He had been assured
by the scholar that the demon was most gentle when not provoked, and did not
seem disposed to avail himself of any magical powers.
Jason
and Zelnak sat across from each other flanking the dining-room table.
After
a pause, Zelnak said, "Did the honorable Demon consider it within his
diVnity to peruse the holy texts?"
"What?"
Jason said. "Oh, yes, I read them, noble Zelnak. Interesting."
He lied.
"Interesting?"
the high priest expostulated. "Interesting!"
Jason said nothing.
"Well,
if you read the scriptures and the Words of the Most High, why haven't you
vanished?" Zelnak demanded at last.
A great light dawned on Jason. He was
expected to go up in smoke!
"I didn't feel like it," he said
twitching one of the folds of the simple robe he wore.
"But," the high priest exclaimed,
"you are exorcised!
You're
supposed to go back to wherever demons live!" Zel-nak was plainly
astonished.
"Well,
I'm not going to," Jason said sharply, "at least not yet."
Zelnak
had consulted the god about the demon. "What should we do with it?"
he whined to the Most High.
"Do
away with it," the god had answered and then refused to discuss the
matter further.
This
left Zelnak in a quandary. The books plainly said that the only way to get rid
of demons was to exorcise them.
Zelnak wrang his hands. "But you have to!" he complained. "It's in the books.
Get a demon to read holy writ, and he goes away," he ended on a hopeful
note. "So go away."
"No," Jason
answered.
There
was a long pause. Zelnak sensed himself losing face before the guards and
priests who stood behind his chair, covertly looking at the demon in spite of
etiquette. Zelnak felt outmaneuvered.
"Well,
you must not be much of a demon, if you won't go away."
"I could always eat you for lunch,"
Jason leered. He was beginning to enjoy the discomfiture the high priest was
suffering so openly.
Zelnak drew back into the recesses of his
chair. "That would never do," he got out at last.
"Why not?" Jason moved as if to rise. "It's time
for my lunch, and it's not here, and you're about as near as anything
else."
Zelnak scrambled to his feet and beat a
retreat
The recorder was named Alexander Carnaby. As
a boy he had dreamed of the exploits of the legendary Greek hero, but Carnaby
was not the stuff of which heroes are made.
Physically,
he was puny and weak. He worked to the best of his ability in school to become
an athlete, but his small size worked against him. The race had a tendency to
crow taller, but Carnaby was only five feet tall.
He gradually retired to the comfort of books
and machines. The machines seemed to be sympathetic to him, so he devoted more
and more time to them, gradually building up a rapport with the most
complicated. But his size still proved to be a handicap, because when he
applied for jobs, the taller, handsome men with less education, perhaps, but
more charm and drive always received the appointments.
Camaby
could have stayed in the university but he still dreamed of making a name for
himself. He wanted to be one of the conquering men who returned from the stars
loaded with glory and loot from newly discovered worlds. At last he found a
berth among the surveyors, not as a captain, for which he felt his large store
of information entitled him, but as a recorder. By his sixth flight he was
piling up a comfortable bank balance but he had learned to keep his mouth
tightly closed no matter where he was.
The
recorder stayed close to the ship, taking his meals at the control consoles and
trying every method he knew to get a message through. Finally, after weeks of
constant trying, Camaby gave up. He was desolate.
Nothing
worked. Unmindful of being immured on the planet or of the fact that one of his
crew members was held by the natives and possibly dead, Camaby was struck only
by the magnitude of the fact that his polished techniques did not work.
He
slammed his fist against the console. "Did—not—
work." Camaby sobbed quietly to himself and went to his bunk.
He felt betrayed.
Buck wandered through the city. In various
apartments he found small, shiny objects. He took them if he could carry them;
they might be valuable. He located a large apartment, apparently once a
residence, because four of the rooms contained long, narrow platforms of a
spongy material.
To this building he hauled his loot,
including various jeweled objects he found here and there in the city. Buck
could not tell what their function might be, but he could recognize a gem when
he saw it, despite the unusual cutting.
He
sampled the fruit growing on some of the trees and found it edible; there was
water in all of the fountains. He was relatively content. He told himself he
would return to the ship when he grew tired of prowling through the buildings
or needed a more substantial meal.
Buck
slipped along the moving ways and in and out of the beautiful buildings
oblivious to the spare art around him. He was always oblivious to his
surroundings unless he was personally uncomfortable.
He saw to it that this seldom happened.
The
mate had eyes only for the fascinating trinkets he picked up and removed to his
hiding place, which soon resembled a fabulous warehouse of artifacts waiting
shipment to some pleasure world or museum. He would stand for hours examining
the surfaces and speculating on what kind of metal they were and what sort of
jewels were set in them. He slept when he was tired and picked fruit when he
was hungry. Life had never been better for Buck.
The
voice spoke to him now and then, but Buck ignored it. He knew it was supposed
to be the god of this planet, but Buck did not believe in gods: Buck believed
in Buck and money.
He thought about Warden's beacon. He knew it
was still broadcasting. When Warden or his own ship failed to report, both
corporations would send searchers quartering along the path the ships had
taken. He was confident he would be rescued.
For the time being, he was happy. There was
no discipline. No one told him what to do.
The
god, after attempting to communicate with the mate, seldom bothered with him.
The only questions Buck ever asked demanded the location of treasure. After a
few sessions, the Most High and Buck ignored each other, except once when Buck
tried to get what he thought was a statue off its pedestal. It looked small
enough to roll back to the apartment.
"Beware," the god warned.
"Co
terrify a native," Buck snarled. He kept on
trying to topple the statue from its stone block.
"Do
not touch that!" the Most High said beside him again.
Buck made a rude noise.
He
leaped back in surprise as an electrical shock ran through the stone block.
"That is a mild
warning," the god said implacably.
Buck
tried to touch the block again. A blue spark leaped to meet his hand and spun
him ten feet away.
Buck
cursed, but thereafter he left the statuary alone. The god did not seem to mind
when he took small articles.
Then
in a tiny black cubicle of a building Buck found a stairway; in all his
searches through the city he had never seen a stairway or ramp leading down.
The
walls glowed softly. Buck went slowly down the steps. He hesitated. "Hey,
voice," he called, "is this safe?"
The
voice of the Most High said, strangely to the mate's ears, "It is safe so
long as you do not enter any chamber marked with a device resembling a triangle."
Buck
grunted what might have been thanks and continued down the steps. He found a
long corridor at the bottom, which it took him fifteen minutes to reach, moving
slowly.
The corridor was wide and perhaps twelve feet
high. It stretched both right and left in what was apparently a straight line
until it seemed to curve into infinity. Buck was unable to see the end of the
corridor, but turned at random to his right and began walking quickly beneath
the glowing ceiling. Ranks of doors appeared now and then, and Buck stopped at
each to peer into the chambers, which grew light at his approach.
Each
was filled with large, bulking shapes. Buck entered a few of the rooms but was
unable to see anything he would want to carry away.
At last he came to a room marked with a
glowing triangle. It was made of a semitransparent material. As the room
lightened, Buck could see the interior of the room.
It
was filled with a fantastic jumble of shapes, light and dark, in every color of
the rainbow.
He stood quietly before the door, remembering
the admonition of the voice.
He
continued along the corridor. Several of the rooms were marked with the
triangle. Each was closed by the transparent material which Buck decided was a
highly-tempered glass when he rapped a door tentatively. The door slid back and
the way to the room was open.
Buck hesitated and stepped
forward, one step at a time.
Nothing happened.
The
mate laughed and walked boldly into the center of the room, mindful not to
touch anything. "Creepy place," he observed, then turned on his heel
and left.
X
A month and a half by the earthmen's
reckoning had passed. Warden was still roaming through the city. Sara seemed
cloistered in her room. The recorder had not come out of his ship, everyone
gradually forgot about him. Warden now and then saw Buck scurrying along the
moving wavs with different objects in his arms. Warden made a note he would
have to look the mate up at some point and find out what he was doing, because
he avoided even coming near, always veering off among the buildings and parks.
Warden
continued his desultory talks with the god, who was less and less reticent
after sulking, but Warden learned little.
Zelnak,
on the other hand, was as happy as a shashlik among tender plants. Except for the persistent refusal of his resident
demon to vanish, life had settled down again and Zelnak ruled supreme. He was
even on fairly cordial terms with the demon.
He
currently was preparing to receive the ambassador from the king of the
territories to the west, Nerva. The high priest arranged himself comfortably on
the throne and signaled the guards at the far end of the audience chamber to
admit the ambassador, who came to the foot of the dais from which the high
priest looked down. The ambassador prostrated himself, his suite following his
example.
"Rise,
Ambassador," Zelnak said languidly with a flick of his wrist.
The embassy rose to their feet and arranged
their robes becomingly.
The high priest studied the ambassador as the
pages went through the ritual of exchanging compliments between the rulers and
offering mutual expressions of esteem, affection and gratitude. The real
business would come later, in private.
Zelnak
rose. "Let our noble visitors from afar enjoy themselves," he
intoned. Then he descended the dais and, taking the ambassador by the arm, led
him through a tapestry behind the throne to a room reserved for Zelnak's use
alone.
When
they were comfortably seated over cups of Zelnak's best wine, he sparred for a
few moments with the emissary and then said plainly, "And why does our
beloved cousin Nerva send this embassy, pray?"
The
ambassador fussed with the ruffles of his robe and then blurted, "Since it
pleases Your Worship to speak bluntly, then I shall feel honored to do
likewise. It is about the star."
"The star,"
Zelnak echoed. "Which one?"
"You mean you have
two?" the ambassador gasped.
"Well,
in a manner of speaking," Zelnak hedged. "Why are you interested in
stars, my dear ambassador?"
"We
heard rumors that a star is come down in your temple, and that it contains
angels who bring messages to the Most High. We would know if this has any
import for our nation."
Aha! Zelnak said to himself. That's what this villains after, the star! Well, he can take it and welcome—and the demon, too! And good riddance. Before doing so, however, he would have to
think of a way to turn this to his advantage.
The ambassador smiled guilelessly. "To
take back a report to our monarch would be a happy event," he said.
Zelnak,
catching the hint at a bribe, lowered his eyes and said softly, "A most
happy event, I am sure.
"Let
us discuss it later," the high priest continued in a brighter tone.
"I am sure you are tired from your long journey and would like rest. I
shall be grateful if you would dine with me this evening, Ambassador."
As
the other man bowed his assent, Zelnak reminded him self to threaten a slow
death to any of his people who let slip to the ambassador or his suite that the
"angel" was a demon who wouldn't go away.
"Perhaps
his spies don't know," Zelnak said as the ambassador took his leave.
Carnaby stayed listlessly in the ship for a
week following his realization of failure. He stayed away from the control
console and remained in his cabin, staring at the ceiling and rereading old
maintenance manuals.
He
thought about the captain and about Warden. He thought about the snide meanness
the engineer and the mate had put him through. Baiting the recorder had been
among their chief pleasures, and he had looked forward to the end of the
cruise.
Camaby
never saw any of them, though he knew Jason was somewhere in the city of the
natives. He never doubted the engineer would manage to escape, because like
most people who watch from the outside. Camaby knew that Jason's worst
qualities were just the ones which would keep him alive. He did not look
forward to another meeting with the engineer. He resolved to stay in the ship.
At
last growing bored, he returned to the control room. He idled in front of the
screens on the captain's console. They still showed the city stretching around
the ship. He saw Warden striding along one of the moving walkways. The tall
surveyor disappeared into one of the buildings. Camaby lost interest.
The
ship, he knew, would be a refuge as long as the food lasted, which would be
quite a while. The power supply would last almost indefinitely. Camaby himself
had supervised the installation of a new power pile, though it was Buck's job;
it was good for twenty more years at the rate the uranium base decayed.
He
wandered through the ship and ended back in the control room. He seated himself
before the console; it began to rain. He remembered someone saying it always
rained at this time of day.
Every day.
Camaby straightened. "Every day?" he said aloud. "At the same time? Why, that's a pattern!" The
recorder was always happiest with concrete things.
He
sat cheerfully at the console and punched a series of questions into the ship
computer.
"Let's
see,'' Camaby said to himself, "rate of spin, charted convection currents,
pull of the moons, cycling at—" He worked away, pulling codes from memory
and feeding information, then asking for postulates.
The
computer spun back the answers. Carnaby read the tapes. According to known laws
and to information the computer had at its disposal, it was impossible for
there to be rain naturally every day at the same time, especially in a valley
shielded as this one was.
He sat back, fingers
nervously thumping the console.
The
computer was incapable of lying if the information he fed into it was fact. It
was; Camaby reasoned, then the rainfall is artificial!
If the rainfall is artificial, there are machines or people making it happen!
The
recorder had rejected the preposterous idea that the voice was a god. Camaby
had heard the voice of the Most High and didn't believe it. But he could
believe his own computer. He wondered if there might be other patterns.
Humming
silently to himself for the first time in weeks, Camaby settled down to the
console. If there were other patterns, he vowed he would find them.
Sara continued to avoid him, so Warden
contented himself with exploratory forays into the city. He watched the mate
from distant buildings as he went back and forth to one particular structure
near the lake.
Curious,
Warden waited for almost an entire afternoon watching Buck go back and forth
between the building and some point on the distant reaches of the city.
The
Star Systems man timed the mate's trips. Each took approximately an hour and a
half.
Warden
patiently allowed Buck to get about twenty minutes away from the hideaway
before he entered the building; he quickly found Buck's storehouse on the main
floor.
He stood in an archway with amazement on his
face. He recotmized some of the small instruments from what the Most High had
told him, others he had seen in his own travels and left undisturbed. But the
mate was apparently stockpiling anything shiny here for some purpose.
The
surveyor walked quickly through the rooms and at last, whistling cheerfully,
strode off in the direction he had seen the mate take on his forays.
Warden
passed the small building without a second glance. He had noticed it before but
its small size would seem to indicate it held no interest, and he ignored it.
He
was about to enter a nearby structure of a shining, green stone when he heard a
clink, as of something being dropped nearby.
Warden
ducked into the nearest doorway, located an open area in the stonework and
peered out toward the street.
Buck,
arms overflowing with glittering trinkets of one sort or another came through
the arch of the small building. Warden now examined it with interest. It was
low, cubical in shape and set above a reflecting pool lined with low shrubbery.
From his vantage point earlier, he had seen the mate make at least four trips
in and out of this direction. Warden suspected the building might hold more
than he thought.
He waited for the mate to disappear on one of
the moving walkways and then walked directly into the building.
The
Most High spoke directly before him. "There is danger below, Warden. Take
care of doors marked with tri-ancles. Touch nothing within."
"Thanks," he said wonderingly,
because the god had not spoken to him in days, and plunged into the building.
He forgot to ask where he was going in the rush of his curiosity.
There
was a stairway leading down. Warden hesitated at the head of the steps and
peered down. The steps continued down at a dizzying angle. Flat rises prevented
him from seeing the foot of the stair.
"By the way," he said as he walked
down the stairs, "you never have told me, Most High, how your voice seems
to be everywhere." Warden's tone was hopeful. Perhaps the deitv would
unbend and let him in on the secret.
The god did not answer.
Warden reached the foot of the stairs. The
corridor stretched away to pinpoints on either side of the doorway through
which he emerged.
Warden
turned to his left and walked down the corridor, stopping now and then to peer
in at doorways. He noticed lights came on in the rooms when he stepped up to
any door.
"Storerooms,"
he said quietly to himself. "So this is
where Buck is getting his loot."
He
continued down the long corridor. The tall surveyor was examinging a bulky piece of metal in one comer of a room when he heard footsteps in the corridor.
Buck
noticed the lighted doorway as he came back from his latest trip back to the
apartment
He
knew the rooms lighted only if someone were in them. He pulled his blaster and
walked cautiously up to the edge of the door.
He sneaked a quick look into the room. He couldn't see Warden, who was now behind the
masses of containers. "Who's there?" Buck called.
Warden,
ducking a glance through the base of a table, saw the
blaster. He thought it prudent not to expose himself at once.
"Warden," he
called. "Is that you, Buck?"
The
mate stepped openly through the door, sheathing the blaster.
"How'd you find this
place, Warden?" he demanded.
The
surveyor saw the mate replace his gun. He came out from behind the table.
"Exploring," he said. "Do you know what this is?"
"Storerooms, I
think," Buck answered suspiciously.
He
hesitated and then made an involuntary gesture toward Warden.
"Look," Buck said, "there's enough here for both of us, I
figure. I've been going through here for days. There's more stuff than ten
ships could carry in jewelry alone."
Warden
stared at the mate. Finally, he said, "I don't want any of it, Buck, at
least not until we can get off this planet." He refrained from pointing
out that the planet was the property of Star Systems.
The Most High picked that moment to
interject, "You will never leave, Warden, any of you. I have spoken."
"Bet
he doesn't know about the you-know-what," said
Buck showing his large teeth in a grin. He meant Warden's beacon.
As
Warden made a gesture of silence, the voice again spoke.
"The beacon no longer transmits; a rock
fell on it," the Most High said with finality.
XI
Zelnak leaned forward in the chair and
speared a particularly choice piece of the roasted
meat.
After
he had chewed it reflectively, he swallowed deli-catelv and then said to the
ambassador, who was hanging on his words, "Tell me, my dear Ambassador,
why the interest in the star? I am
sorry, of course, to ask again, but I would
be most gratified if you would refresh my memory."
"Not
at all, Your Worship," the ambassador returned dulcetly. "We know
that it is a great mark of honor for the Most High to send you the star and His
emissaries, the ancels. We are concerned, though, with the stories that there
may be more to the star than would immediately come to the unsubtle eye." That was a nice speech, the
ambassador said smugly to himself. Top that, you old fraud!
"Of
course, of course," Zelnak said soothingly, "there miVM be, at that.
"Tell
me, Ambassador, could there be a remote possibility that your country would
want the star for its own purposes?"
"Not at all, not at all!" The ambassador held up his hands in protest.
"The honor of the star is of course your own, Your Worship, however . .
." The ambassador let the interest in his voice hang in the air as he
regarded the high priest from drowsy lids.
"However,
you might see your way, shall we say, to a small,
ah, arrangement should we allow the star to, ah, be taken for a holy visit
to—"
"Exactly." The ambassador interrupted Zelnak's insinua
tion. "A holy visit is just what we had in
mind, Your Worship."
Zelnak smirked. The fool is falling into my hands! When Tm well and truly quit of the star, then Til feel safe again, and rid of the demon, too.
The
high priest leaned his arm Comfortably against the
table. In his most agreeable manner he said, "And if we could see our way
clear to doing your lord this favor, what would he be prepared to do in
return—that is, if it were possible to gain the favor of the Most High in this
most unorthodox request?"
"Naturally,"
the ambassador interjected smoothly, "we would make high remuneration to
the temple, Your Worship."
He
paused, "Shall we say, hypothetically, of course, six of our villages
would transmit their taxes to the temple for a number of years?"
Zelnak yawned. "Hypothetically, of course."
The
ambassador smiled. "Perhaps twelve villages," he said.
Zelnak
was very interested indeed. "Only twelve?" he asked as if bored.
"Fifteen, then,"
the ambassador sighed.
"For
fifteen villages it could be possible," the high priest said, while
pretending to inspect the wick of a lamp burning on the table.
The
ambassador heaved a sigh of relief. He had been prepared to say thirty
villages. "I am so glad we understand each other, Your Worship," he
said gratefully.
Zelnak
stood and wandered close to the window. He gestured for the ambassador to
follow.
When
they stood in the shadowed window alcove, Zelnak took the man's arm fondly and
inquired softly, "And would it be worth, say, a province in perpetuity as
part of our own lands, if say, we could persuade the angel of the Most High,
whom we have here in the palace, to accompany the star?"
"Oh, Your Worship!" the ambassador
breathed soulfully. "An entire province?" He
resumed bargaining.
Warden had returned to his ship to sulk.
Buck, with many dispirited groans for the riches he would never be able to enjoy,
trailed back to his own apartment-warehouse.
In
Sara's ship, Camaby was busily making diagrams, plotting repetitions of local
phenomena and bombarding the surface of the planet with random search patterns
of his own.
At
last the short recorder sat back and patted himself
figuratively on the back. Alexander Camaby had made a discovery.
"Why," he said to himself in a mild way which sounded more like
surprise than discovery, "It's not a god at all; it's a computerl"
A
lot of things were becoming clear to him. "It used magnetics to blanket
out communications," he said to himself as he shoved away from the
control console clutching a sheaf of data.
"And
it uses a blanket grid-pattern to project its voice," Camaby continued as
he walked toward the open port of the ship.
"And
it uses heat and convection from the mountains to move the clouds and make it
rain," he continued, standing at the head of the ramp.
"Why,
the whole planet must be a honeycomb of planted grids," he exclaimed.
"I wonder where the power comes from?"
Camaby was by this time at the middle of the
ramp.
"Solar heat
traps," a voice said beside him.
Camaby
stood still. His small face grew suffused with blood as he suddenly realized he
was angry. A machine claiming to be a godl
"You're a fraud!"
Camaby accused. "You're a machine!"
"You
are very perceptive," said the voice calmly. "I calculated within
ninety and nine ninths points you would discover my secret."
Camaby
grew curious. "Why," he demanded, "is there a secret? Why would
you be afraid one of us would find out?"
"Because,"
the voice returned blandly, as if explaining to a very small child, "then
I wouldn't be a god any longer." Carnaby began slowly inching backward up
the ramp.
"Your
purpose is to serve, machine," he said. "How do you follow us around,
anyway?"
The recorder was nearing the port.
"Heat
patterns and sound modulation," the voice said. "I do not see in the
ordinary sense I have heard you people discussing. Additionally, your brains
give off distinctive patterns."
"Well,
I order you to stop pretending you're a god, machine," Camaby said. He
now stood in the aperture of the lock.
"Oh, no, little creature. I fear you can't do that." "Why not?" Camaby demanded. "You're just a
slave device!"
The
recorder jumped through the port and to the side with sparrowlike quickness. As
he did, a bolt of lightning struck the ramp where he had been standing and ran
through the outer frame of the ship to the ground on the pavement below.
"You
cannot escape My wrath," the voice said from a
speaker near Camaby's head.
"Oh,
yes, I can, now that I know what you are," Car-naby retorted. "It
takes you a while to make those clouds and lightning bolts. I watched it forming
against the mist, you fraud!"
Camaby
cycled the port shut, and ran for the control room. Some of the control levers
had begun to move. He locked the master controls on manual. Any interference by
the computer with power flow would be deadened.
"I
can strike in other ways, Camaby," the voice said heavy with menace.
"Come out of the ship."
"Not on your life—I mean,
circuits!"
"I shall destroy the entire ship. I can,
you know."
"How? With a thunderbolt?" the little man
jeered.
"I shall hurl rocks," the machine
threatened.
"I
will create tidal waves and hurricanes. I will sweep you away," the voice
menaced.
"And
destroy this city? I don't think so," Camaby said. "Somewhere in your
prime orders you are absolutely set up to protect this city." Camaby was
guessing. He had no way of knowing what the original builders of the machines
had programmed into the computer as its prime
directives.
"I
will raise molten mountains and cause the earth to heave," the voice said
wrathfully.
Camaby knew he had won for
a little while.
He
made himself comfortable. "Let's be reasonable, machine. I can help you,
you know," Camaby offered deviously.
"I
will toast you with laser rays and then send you in one of the transport
machines to a far place a hundred light years hence," the voice grated.
"Your equipment is not
movable," Camaby teased.
"You
will be smashed beneath the service mechanisms!" The computer roared.
"What service
mechanisms?" inquired Camaby innocently.
"You
cannot trick a god, you worm!" the voice bellowed. Then, in a crafty way,
the computer said, "I will retire to think about your destruction, and it
will be terrible when it happens. But if you should crave my pardon, I won't
hurt you very much."
"Oh, no," Camaby
said. "I'm staying right here."
The
voice was silent. Camaby watched his screens. The computer at least wasn't
trying to tamper with them, yet He would be able to see anyone coming and warn
them. He wondered if the computer would take its wrath out on the others of his
crew or on Warden.
"My
crew," Camaby said to himself, relishing the words. "My
crew!" For the first time in his life, the recorder poured himself
a drink of alcohoL "To celebrate," he said, and drank it down.
Warden's
communicator buzzed. He turned it on. The screen cleared to show the recorder
from the other ship.
"Oh,
hello, Bamaby," Warden said. "What can I do for you?"
"Camaby," the little man corrected.
"Warden, it's about the thing that's claiming to be a god, it's—"
A wave of static bloomed
across the screen.
"What?"
Warden called. "Clear your focus, Camaby. I can't hear you."
Awk, bleep. "Computer,"
Squawk.
Warden hit the button for a finer beam. The static continued.
From
the speaker, Carnaby's words came through garbled. "It's
awk, burble, "go
out," squeak.
"Call
me when you get a clear band," Warden said before he switched off,
"or stop by for a talk. I can't get you clearly."
"Warden?" the god
said beside him.
"Oh,
hello, Most High," Warden said carefully. He didn't want to offend the
deity into any kind of dreadful action, after yesterday's announcement in the
corridor below the city.
"How
much of your native food do your ships carry, Warden," the voice inquired
in friendly tones.
"Oh,
I don't know, Most High. I have enough emergency and other rations stored in
this ship to last for four or five of our years. Why? Are you worried about our
well-being?"
"Then
the other ship must carry even a greater
store," the Most High deduced.
"I
suppose so," Warden said. "But if you're worried about our survival
until another ship comes, we could last on some of the local fruits and animals
almost indefinitely."
"But
if the other of your species in the larger ship wanted to, it could remain
within for a long time?"
"Who, Camaby? Yes, I guess so, but he'll come out sooner or later," Warden said.
A frown began to make a crease across his forehead. "Why?"
"I
want him out now, Warden!" the voice snapped. "He has
offended. My godhood. He has committed—what do you
call it?—he has committed lčse majesté."
"I'm sure if he has, he's very
sorry," Warden offered sincerely. He was beginning to feel icy sweat
trickling down his spine and forming under his shoulder blades.
"He must be eliminated, Warden,"
the god said reasonably. "Surely, you can understand that you can't go
around insulting Me and get away with it!" The
voice turned ugly. "Remember the lightnings, Warden!"
"Can't we work this
out some way, peacefully?"
"Uh, well, what do you want me to do about it?" Warden at last ventured plaintively.
"Just this." The voice was crisp. "In the early morning when I perceive that
your brain patterns indicate you are least active, that monster will have his
defenses down. You are to be alert. Go to that ship, carrying an implement with
which you can destroy this Camaby. You will do so, Warden, or suffer the
consequences."
"But that's
murder!" Warden protested.
"warden!" the voice was working itself into a
rage.
"Yes,
sir."
Warden was meek.
"And
Warden," the voice said as an afterthought. "Don't let this Camaby
utter one word, not one. He would probably say something insulting about Me again."
"Not one word," Warden promised.
XII
"Well,"
Zelnak went on, "you've been demanding to see a little more of our way of
life. This is the perfect way of doing it."
"I won't go,"
Jason said.
"Why
not?"
Zelnak demanded.
"Suddenly
I like it here," Jason answered. He felt the high priest was going to try
to trick him.
"Be
fair, Most Honorable Demon," Zelnak countered. "The people of the
west think of you as the most glorious of angels. They will treat you with
every honor; your every whim will be catered to; you can have anything you
want; they will worship you."
"I
don't want to be worshipped," Jason said with a trace of petulance in his
voice. "All I want to do is be able to walk around right here."
"But
that's not possible," Zelnak protested. "I've told you why before.
But if you were to go to another country, where they venerate and cherish you,
why, the, uh, stars are the limit, if you will pardon what may be a painful
allusion." The high priest was attempting to be very persuasive.
Jason
was unaware that Zelnak had sold the engineer and Warden's ship for three
quarters of a rich province bordering on the west.
"I'm
very happy right here," Jason insisted stubbornly, fiddling with his robe.
He saw the mass of guards walking back and forth outside the door of the room
where he was closeted with the high priest
Zelnak began to lose his temper. "Now
look here, Demon. I promised you would go on a goodwill tour. Are you going to
make trouble between two peaceful countries just because you don't feel like a
little travel?"
"Yes," Jason said
blandly.
Zelnak
banged a bony fist on the table. "But consider the international
situation! If you don't go, there will be war! Thousands of our people will
die; the countryside will be in flames; farms will be trampled; the shashlik will roam wild in the streets; mothers will mourn their lost
children!"
Jason
held up his hand. "I think you're just trying to get rid of me,
Zelnak."
About
to scream in rage, Zelnak caught himself. "Not at all, Most Honorable
Demon," he said sweetly. He sighed and rolled his eyes heavenward.
"But I find it hard to believe that even the most hardened demon would
want to be responsible for the deaths of little children."
"Don't
try to soft-soap me, Zelnak. In your language that means don't try to get
around me by appealing to my better instincts; I don't have any.
"Besides, how do I
know they really want me to come?"
"Why,"
said the high priest feigning surprise, "ask their
ambassador, if you want to. Hell tell you how
much they would love to have you. But don't let on you're a demon instead of an
angel. It would be bad for appearances, of course."
"Oh, of course,"
said Jason sarcastically.
Zelnak had meanwhile summoned the ambassador
by making a beckoning gesture toward the door.
The ambassador hurried in and knelt
reverently before Jason. Then he stood and stepped back beside Zelnak. He
stared at the engineer.
Jason stared back belligerently. He was two
feet shorter than any of the natives.
"Well," the ambassador said after a
lengthy silence, "he's a pretty small angel, Zelnak. Don't you have any
bigger ones?"
Zelnak paled. Before he could say anything,
Jason broke in with, "Now just a second
there, I'm six foot, and that's pretty tall as us de—angels go."
Zelnak
heaved a heartfelt sigh. Perhaps his plan would work.
"I
just thought I'd take a look at you at least before you go
back," Jason said, "because I'm not going
with you."
"What?"
gasped the ambassador and Zelnak in the same breath.
"You
heard me," Jason said to Zelnak. "I like it here, and I'm sure,
Zelnak, that the Most High wouldn't hear of my going, either."
"Ah,
most excellent Ambassador, let me have a little
time with the Most Honorable De—I mean, Angel. I am sure
a little conversation between us and the Most High will persuade him."
The
ambassador looked crossly at Zelnak and then assented. His robes twitched as
he walked stiffly out of the room.
"Now,
see here, Demon!" the high priest started in an angry undertone.
Jason produced his blaster.
Zelnak cringed back.
"You see here, Zelnak. I'm staying here and that's that"
Zelnak
sighed as if he were going to give in with a certain amount of good grace. The guardsmen were standing behind the
demon. They had stolen into the room unnoticed.
"If
you insist," Zelnak said, giving the signal. The haft of a spear landed on
the demon's neck with a satisfying thud. "I was afraid you'd refuse,"
Zelnak said to the recumbent figure.
By smashing an occasional thunderbolt against
the hull of the ship in the city, the computer thought to keep Camaby in a
convenient place for its assassin to find him.
The
noise attracted Sara. Buck, who had left the ship with a large supply of
liquor, lay in a stupor in his treasure rooms.
Sara heard the thunderclaps through the
afternoon and thought little about them. When they continued into the early
evening and seemed to be localized, she put on a freshly-laundered jump suit
and went in search of the disturbance.
From
the edge of the ornamented plaza she saw small clouds forming over the ship,
one by one, and bolts sizzling downward.
"That's
not only funny, that's extremely fishy," the young woman said. "I may
not know a great deal about rain clouds, but they don't just hang forever in one
place."
She set off at a determined
pace across the plaza.
"Do
not go nearl" the voice of the god boomed from seemingly everywhere around
her.
"And why not?"
she demanded.
"It's my ship, Most
High," she pointed out.
"I am about to destroy
it," the god said calmly.
"You can't do that!"
"Those bolts can find
you just as easily, female Terran."
"Well,
at least let me get a few things out of it before you do anything rash,"
Sara said urgently.
"It
is not permitted," the Most High rumbled. "What things?"
"Why,
things necessary for females like me to survive," she said in
astonishment. "Things like cosmetics, intimate
instruments, and, uh, very personal little things."
"What little
things?"
"Oh, never mind! Can I
go to the ship and get them?"
Being
an honest, or nearly honest, person, Sara hesitated and then when the god asked
if the "little things" were absolutely necessary to survival, lied.
"Yes," she said. Then thinking better of it, she said, "Well,
not exactly, that is, but necessary, you see, if I don't have them. It would— I
mean ..."
"Enough."
"I'm not finished!"
"It
is not permitted to go again into that ship," the voice intoned.
"Well, I like that!" Sara shouted,
stamping her foot.
"Go
away," the god said calmly, "and I will not harm you. You are, after
all, the only female of your species on my planet."
"You sound like you're talking to some
guinea pig," she said angrily. "What if I don't like it?"
"It makes no
difference. You will cooperate."
Sara
felt a cold lump forming in the base of her stomach. "What's that supposed
to mean?"
"The females of your
species breed, do they not?"
"They
do not," she said firmly, "unless they feel love for their
husbandsl"
"Husbands? You mean mates. No matter. You will cooperate."
A
new cloud soared above Sara's ship, stopped, rumbled around a bit and then
released another thunderbolt.
"Well!"
Sara blurted indignantly. Then she stamped off in search of Warden, whom she knew to be staying in his ship.
"The Sara is coming to see you," the Most High announced, jolting Warden out of a tense
sleep. The surveyor had had trouble finding sleep, thinking of what he had been
ordered to do. He had spent hours trying to figure a way out of it.
"Oh, terrific!" Warden mumbled. "What am I going to tell her? That early this morning I'm going over to her ship and do away
with one of her crew?"
"You will tell the
Sara nothing," the god instructed.
In
less than five minutes Sara popped through the opened port and surged into
Warden's control cabin.
"Do
you know that the Most High is going to destroy my ship?" she demanded.
"No!" he said,
feigning surprise. "Why?"
"He's
talking about me being the only female and he wants to force me to have babies
and he's going to destroy my ship and— Oh, Bill, well be here forever!"
Warden
made soothing noises. The prospects of Sara becoming a mother intrigued him.
He reached for her, for-gett;ne everything
else.
"Did
the Most High indicate who would be honored in this way?"
She snapped alert. "Just
a minute there, you tall lecher! Who do you think I am, Eve with three Adams?"
Warden pulled a rueful face. "I'm
sorry," he said at last.
The
voice of the Most High rang through the control room. "Close your port,
Warden. That idiot Zelnak is coming to the cavern with a gaggle of
people."
Zelnak and the ambassador from King Nerva
advanced down the length of the temple. Both were clad in stately robes. Massed
choirs sang and hidden instruments played impressive, overwhelming music. As it
glittered with the reflected light of thousands of torches, the temple roof
bounced all the sound back.
The
high priest was leaning on the arm of the ambassador.
"A great state occasion," Zelnak
whispered sotto voce.
"Indeed,
Your Worship," the ambassador returned. "But to be practical, what
arrangements can we make for the moving of the star?"
They
stood before the tall, burnished doors to the inner cavern. While waiting for a
small phalanx of slaves to swing the doors open, Zelnak said with a smile,
"You roll it along a roadway of felled and stripped trees. Then other
trees, inserted under one end can be used to lever it in the direction you
want. Lines of people hauling on ropes guide its direction, you see.
"In
the first stages of your journey," Zelnak continued, "I shall be
happy to lend you twenty or thirty thousand people to help move the star, say
to our own borders, where your own people can meet it and drag it to our dear
cousin Nerva's capital city.
"Our people will go on for a way, of course,
to take up residence in our new province and see to its adequate
administration."
The doors fully open at last, the two
advanced into the softly glowing cavern where the ship rested before the statue
of the god.
"Somehow I thought stars close up would
be larger than this," the ambassador said after standing in the lee of the
survey ship for several minutes.
"Of course, Your Worship," he hastily went on, "this is a
magnificent star, and my dear Lord Nerva will be most happy to see it arrive
for its holy visit."
"Let
us make obeisance to the Most High," Zelnak suggested.
Inside
the ship Warden and Sara watched this conversation with interest, though they
had no inkling of its meaning.
"Most High!" Warden called softly, though the two outside could not hear through
the walls of the ship. "What's going on?"
"These
fools begin to anger Me, Warden. They talk of taking this ship away—though, on
the other hand, if it were out of here and in some distant place, that would be a good idea, too. Perhaps 111 let
them."
"One
little minute there, Most High." Warden said in alarm.
"Quiet,
Warden," the god answered. "I must speak to them."
The man and woman were
quiet, staring at the screens.
Advancing
to the base of the statue, the two natives prostrated themselves.
"I wish I could
understand those birds," Warden said.
Zelnak
began with a string of phrases of adoration and then launched into the tricky
business of getting approval from the god to move the star.
"And
so, O Most Mighty, Most High, Ruler of All, we humbly do beseech Thy divine
blessing on this journey of holy moment, by this star, to the temples of our
beloved relative, Nerva, and that You will vouchsafe to grant the gracious
assent of Your minion, the angel, in going along to carry Your Word incarnate
as represented by the body of this star."
To Warden the voice of the god, though
speaking in an unintelligible tongue, sounded wry. He looked at Sara and
shrugged slightly.
The
Most High said, "Zelnak, priest beloved of Us,
for the first time in your life you're doing something intelligent I most
heartily approve and do grant My blessing to this journey in every way. Bright
skies will smile upon your journey, water will flow beside your camp sites; the
very trees will sing joyously in a soft
breeze and bear fruit to nourish you on your way." Zelnak was ecstatic.
The
ambassador was properly impressed. With many and profound thanks, the two bowed
themselves backward out of the holy cavern.
When
the doors began to close again as was proper after a high ceremony, Zelnak
halted them with a wave.
"Let
us begin to make preparations to move the star," he called grandly. The
underlings in the temple began to do the bidding of the high priest
Inside
the ship, Warden said, "What was all that about, Most High?. I don't want to seem disrespectful, or anything like that, but something seems just a little, uh, out of
line."
"You
will have to leave the ship, Warden," the Most High said curtly.
Warden
felt his eyebrows climbing toward the usual level of his hairline.
"Come
again?" he gargled. "Would you play that one back
for me just one more time, please?"
"Come,
come!" the voice said impatiently. "I have decided it is best for
your own interests and Mine, too, that this ship be
taken away from here.
"Since
you have things to attend to, Warden, you obviously can't go with it" the
Most High ended reasonably. The surveyor ignored the hint about his job as
assassin.
"Well,
I have news for you, Most High," Warden said stubbornly. "Wherever
this ship goes, I go. I'm not leaving, and Sara isn't either," he said.
"That's right!"
Sara chimed in unexpectedly.
"Remember the
thunderbolts, Warden!" bellowed the voice.
"Go
ahead and hit me, then," Warden said defiantly. "I am not going to leave my ship!"
"Be reasonable,
Warden," the Most High cajoled.
"The
ship could be damaged in the journey," the god added. "Floods could
wash it against sharp rocks. Light-nine could hit it, or other disasters."
"Your lightning
doesn't seem to hurt my ship," Sara said.
"Silence!" roared the voice.
"No, I won't!" Sara retorted.
"First you threaten to use me like some kind of succubus, or something,
and then you want to destroy my ship,
and now you want Bill to give his ship up. Well, we won't go,
that's all!"
Warden
noticed that moisture didn't seem to be forming against the low ceiling of the
control room. He began to entertain a suspicion.
"I
don't think you can hit us
in the ship," he said slowly.
"I
can destroy all!" the
god rejoined.
"I'm beginning to wonder about that,"
Warden said, a dark suspicion about his conversation with Carnaby flicking
into his subconscious.
He
told Sara about the two conversations, including the instructions of the Most
High that he was to sneak into her ship and do away with the mild recorder.
"Then
Camaby must have found something," she said thoughtfully. "And the
Most High doesn't want us to find it out."
"That
worm knows nothing!" the voice bellowed out of nowhere.
"Oh,
shut up," Warden snapped. "I'm
thinking." The voice was unexpectedly silent.
"What
we have to do is get in touch with Camaby somehow." Warden lunged for the
communicator board and began setting up a sequence to reach Sara's ship.
Within
seconds the screens were streaked with interference and the speakers filled
with static.
Camaby
came on the screen after a short wait, bands of interference slashing through
his face.
Warden
tried to clear the audio receivers. They finally settled down to a dull buzz,
but nothing came through. He could see Camaby moving his lips as if he were
saying something.
"Damn!"
Warden swore. "I
wish I could read lips."
Sara
was staring at the screen. Camaby was making gestures now, trying to get a
message across through sign language.
She grabbed up a log book and held it up
before the screen making writing motions.
"That's it!" Warden shouted. He
doubted the computer would know the meaning of written language if its own
means of communication were totally electronic. But the natives had written
language, he knew.
Camaby
caught on. He bent, scribbled something on a pad and held it up. The screens went blank. "Old god caught up with
us," Sara said dispiritedly.
"Oh,
no he didn't!" Warden crowed. He had caught the brief message before it
blanked out. Camaby had written in block letters, IT'S A COMPUTER.
He
told Sara. She sagged back in the acceleration couch. She was silent.
"It
makes a lot more sense than calling it a god, anyway," Warden observed.
"You
will be unable to use that information, Warden," the voice said from the
speakers.
"Shut
up, Charley," the surveyor said rudely. He crossed to the control panel,
flipped up the top and turned off togeles on four macrocircuit boards.
"He
won't be able to hear or talk to us now," Warden said. "The circuits
won't connect."
"He? Are you sure?" Sara questioned weakly.
"Sure.
He won't be able to, and we have to call it something. Let's call it
Charley," said Warden in a light tone.
"How
can you be clever at a time like this, Bill? It's insane!"
"Oh,
I don't know," he answered. "We're still the most potentially
dangerous animals in the universe, you know."
He
continued confidently, "Anything that one intelligence can make, another can figure out, one way or another."
Warden felt a surge of confidence which was slightly less than his manner was
intended to indicate.
"Oh,
sure," she said. "Great, beautiful, terrific—here we are marooned on
some idiot planet controlled by an insane computer that thinks it's a god, and you sit around and talk like we're on
earth and all the machines are predictable and safe!" She began to sob.
Warden took her clumsily in his arms.
"We'll get out of it somehow, Sara," he said.
There must be a control room, or someplace where the thing could be serviced or reprogrammed, Camaby mused to himself. Even if it's self-restoring and self-repairing there would have to be a way to get to it.
And that's underground, I would guess. It would have to be, if-the system's big enough to service the entire planet. But where? Under the mountains, under the seas? No-difficult to get to. The original inhabitants walked, or there wouldn't be moving ways. So they had to have some kind of transportation, too.
A thought hit him. The computer had talked
about service mechanisms. That must be it. There are powered pieces of equipment, but they would be in storage somewhere, and somewhere the computer couldn't get at them, or it would have used them to attack.
Then,"
Carnaby said aloud, "that part of its relay systems must be blocked!
"If
I can find a way into the system, I could figure out how to control it,"
Carnaby told himself, "or blast it apart.
"The
original reports!"
Carnaby
started up and began pulling the report cartridges out of their racks.
"I
will destroy the Carnaby and all its petty
works!" a voice thundered suddenly through the control room.
"Shove
off," Camaby said rudely. Like Warden, he disconnected the automatic
inputs to the speakers and screens. For the first time in months, Carnaby felt
totally alone, but he also felt elated.
He began listening to the self-activating
report cubes and making charts and graphs with the light board, looking for the
information he needed: here a massive ore deposit, there a bulge resembling
pure copper, there a thin vein of gold.
"Wait a minute! Pure
copper!" Carnaby bent closer to the console.
XIII
The god was learning about guile.
The
voice murmured persuasively, "You must return to your ship and destroy the
Camaby."
Buck
stumbled up to awareness as the voice continued to whisper.
He
finally was alert, shaking his head to dissipate the fumes of the scotch he had
been drinking steadily.
"Destroy
the Camaby," the voice said again in a muted tone.
"What?"
The sense of what the voice was saying penetrated his conscious mind. The
insidious voice snapped the hulking mate to attention.
"Murder that litde
jerk? Why?"
"I will reward you if you will go to your ship
and destroy this Camaby," the voice said gaining slightly in volume.
Buck squinted. "Not so loud," he
croaked. "Why should I kill Camaby? He's harmless."
"I will reward you," the voice promised. "I will destroy all the others of your species
but the Sara and will give her to you to found a ruling family here over all
the natives."
"What?" Buck
found it hard to believe.
"You
will be a—how do you call it—a king," the voice went on.
"Suppose I don't want to be a king here." Buck was
crafty. "What if I wanted to take these things and go
away?" He indicated the heaped spoils in the room.
"Then I will allow you to take a ship and anything
here
you want and leave," the voice said,
compromising. "But you must destroy the Camaby, and then the Warden."
Buck
scratched his chin. He didn't trust the voice entirely, because in the same
spot he would double-cross anyone to get what he wanted. Yet his eyes
glittered at the thought of leaving with the wealth. If he took his former
captain with him, she would have to be grateful, he thought.
"Both of them?"
he asked.
"Both," the voice
ended flatly.
"How do I know I'm not
dreaming?" Buck said at last.
"I
will show you," the voice said. A rumble filled the room. Buck looked up.
A slight mist began falling. He was getting wet.
The
mate pinched himself. "Okay, I believe you," he said. "Turn off
the shower."
The
cloud drifted against a far wall and began to dissolve. Buck felt a wave of
cold air sweep through the room.
"Have
you a weapon, an instrument with which you can blot out the Warden and the
Camaby?"
"My
hands are good enough," Buck responded boastfully. "And if not, I've
got this." He held up the blaster he still wore.
"If not, I will show you machines used
by the Ones Who Went Before which can be used for the purpose." "This
is enough," Buck answered.
"When do you want me to do it?" he
queried the unseen voice. "Now, Buck."
"Whoops!"
Sara
fell against Warden as the ship lurched in its passage out of the cavem.
"Here
we go again," Warden sighed. "I wonder what that computer's got up
its sleeve?"
"Bill?" Sara said
in a small voice.
"Hm?"
"I'm
sorry I laughed at you before, I mean, when the ship was being dragged the
first time."
"Apology accepted." He grinned.
"I think, though, we may be able to get out of this mess when we get out
in the open."
The ship lurched again.
Sara gasped as she fell against Warden. He
put an arm around her shoulders and squeezed reassuringly. "Do we dare
turn the screens on?"
"Couldn't
hurt," he assented. "Well probably have to listen to the demented
Charley, though."
"I
like to see where I'm going, even if that machine talks all night long,"
she said.
Warden
slipped the macrocircuit boards back into place. The screens cleared. Reception
was perfect. Warden said, "No sign of Charley."
"No news is good
news," she quipped.
"No news is bad news,
I have a feeling," he answered.
The
ship lurched again. "Looks like they're all steamed up to go somewhere
with us in a hurry this time," Warden said.
Thousands of natives swarmed around the
survey ship, shoving and straining. Ranks of shashlik strained at heavy cables to give the forward movement of the ship
momentum.
With
a wobble, it bounced slightly down the low steps of the front doors of the
temple and came to rest in the temple courtyard. Its rapid forward movement
caused the cables to go slack. The shashlik bunched
forward in confusion. The lines of men trying to guide the ship went over in
dozens as the suddenly strained lines snapped out of their hands like frenzied
snakes.
Sara,
perched at last on a ventilator outlet pulled herself erect when
the ship came to a stop.
"It'll
take them a while to get going again, I suppose," she said.
Warden was sprawling over the computer
control boards between the nearer ceiling screens. He rolled over. His face was
six inches from the screen.
He
sat up, then clambered up toward the floor and adjusted the screen to higher
magnification.
The view he saw was a procession coming from the palace.
"Look at that!" he said excitedly.
"What?" she asked, displaying
little interest; she was trying to straighten her tunic.
"There!
There on the palace steps—that's the high priest. I recognize him," Warden
said. "And the one beside him is the one who was in on the meeting just
before we had the fight with Charley."
"So?"
she said. "They certainly wear pretty robes. I'd like to have just a piece
of that thing the high priest is wearing."
Warden
cut her off. "Look behind them, between the guards."
She
peered across at the angled screen. "Why, it's Jason!" she exclaimed.
The
unconscious engineer was moved forward by the priestly guards.
"Oh, Bill, we've got
to help him!" Sara said. "But how?"
"Well,
if Charley doesn't interfere, we can try," he said grimly.
Warden
climbed up to the master control console and strapped himself into a couch.
"Come on," he
said. "Get into the other one and strap
in.
As
Sara was complying with the order, Warden rapidly brought the controls to
manual and began warming the drive mechanism. When he saw her safely strapped
in, he punched a tab marked equalize. The
artificial gravity controls cut in and the ship slowly began righting itself,
dragging the shashlik backward and throwing the lines of men into
confusion.
Zelnak,
who was feeling very smug at having gotten rid of both demon and star and getting
a province in the bargain, stopped as if struck in the stomach by a spear. He
stared at the ship. It was beginning to revolve, and his own
people weren't controlling it.
Jason
was groggily awakening behind the high priest. Held by the guards, he almost
was bumped into the rear of the robed figure.
"Ill
be—" he said, becoming aware of where he was. Then he was quiet. There was
someone in the ship and it was righting itself.
Jason took a step forward.
The guards hauled him back.
Zelnak
could only stand there and stare. He was almost beyond speech.
The
ambassador plucked at the arm of the high priest. "What's this?" He
was gesturing at the slowly turning ship. "Your Worship looks pale. A
touch too much wine, perhaps?"
"Shut up," Zelnak
said absently.
The
ambassador flushed and closed his mouth with an audible snap.
When
the ship was righted, Warden put the drive in low. Little crackles of flame
from the chemical released against the shielded atomic pile began to shoot out
of the drive tubes, stinging the natives who had ventured too close when the
ship stopped turning. They scattered.
"Oh,
no!"
Zelnak groaned.
Some
of the people in the square began to scream; they crowded back against the
walls. Zelnak had promised a painful death to any who so much as breathed the
word demon while the ambassador or any of his suite were
in the country. But the mob began shouting, "The demon is controlling the
star! Kill the demon!"
The
ambassador shot a quick glance at Jason, whose face was shining with a sudden
perspiration.
He turned to the high
priest.
"What
is this?" the ambassador demanded. "What is this? Is this a demon and
no angel, Your Worship? Why are flames coming from the star?"
Zelnak
was staring at the ship. A hole was opening in the side, a stairway extending.
"Not again!" he cried plaintively.
Two
figures appeared on the stairway. Bursts of thunder and flame splashed against
the tops of the buildings of the court.
The
crowd scattered, shrieking "The demons, the demons!" Thousands
scrambled for the nearest hiding place.
Jason
saw the taller figure, which he thought was Warden, waving at him. He tripped
one of his guards, threw his body against the other, and, bowling over the
figure of the high priest, ran toward the ship.
The ramp was beginning to retract as he
stumbled into the interior of the Star Systems survey ship. As Jason sagged
panting against the walls of the inner lock, a sharp flash of lightning clanged
off the hull.
Warden quickly cycled the
port shut.
"Charley's
getting quicker with those bolts every time," he observed.
"Charley," Jason
gasped. "Charley?"
Sara
was struggling with the ropes binding the engineer's arms.
"No
time," Warden said. "We've got to try to get out of here, before
something really awful comes along." He went to the control room.
Strapping
in, Warden scanned the screens rapidly. The population was leaving the square.
Out of the corner of his eye as he began punching for full drive and takeoff,
Warden saw the high priest scramble to his feet and
run into the palace. Warden was intent on getting off the planet. He decided
someone else would have to rescue the two humans left on the planet.
The ship lifted.
From
the readings, Warden knew they were about a half mile up and beginning to climb
rapidly.
Then control of the ship
was snatched away from him.
"You
shouldn't have tried that, Warden,"- a voice said from one of the
speakers.
Warden
wrenched at the controls. They tracked correctly but he could not make them
respond fully.
"He's
jamming some of the relays," he ground out to the other two occupants of
the control room. Jason was clinging to the doorway and Sara was lying tense in
the other acceleration couch.
Jason
tried putting the controls on manual. The switch to manual control depressed
but the ship did not respond.
"Damn," he swore
under his breath. "What now?"
"I
shall land you in the Forbidden Place, fool, there to bring you to a final and
terrible fate. I would simply hurl you into a moon but for the Sara. I need
her."
Buck
was stalking toward the ship when he heard the roar of another craft
descending. He sprinted back across the plaza toward the buildings as the Star
Systems ship settled beside his own.
"Well, what now, Voice?" he
demanded.
"Wait.
Make no move until I tell you," the voice answered. "I am
busy."
Warden's ship landed.
Buck leaned restively
against a wall.
"There!"
the voice announced. "You have no idea how many thousands of alternating
circuits it takes to do that, Buck."
Buck
took a swig from a scotch container he had shoved into his belt. "Camaby
has my ship closed up tight, it looks like from here, and if he has the ports
clamped down there's no way I can get in there."
"Why
not?"
Buck
patiently explained about locks. "If there were no one aboard, the ship
would be voice coded to open. But with someone in both ships, there's no way I
can get in unless they let me in," he finished.
"I understand,"
the voice said.
"Why
don't you just open them up with some magic or something?" Buck inquired
curiously. "You're claiming to be a god, after all."
"There
are limits to the powers we gods can allow ourselves," the voice
explained. "It is impossible to open those ships without damaging the
city."
"So who cares for a
few buildings?" Buck said carelessly.
"The city must be
preserved at all costs!"
The
voice continued, "No, I shall devise some other way. Now that I have
released control of Warden's drive mechanism, he has shut down on manual
controls which I cannot adjust. The Camaby did that before, too. On the other
hand, they cannot leave.
"Wait.
I will conceive of a plan," the voice said, leaving Buck standing silently
in the shadows and staring across at the two survey ships.
XIV
Every time Carnaby attempted to use the ship
communications equipment the screens filled with static or went blank, but he
had been able to observe the landing Warden made. The recorder then attempted
to make contact, with no success.
He
knew that Sara or Warden would try to reach him. Carnaby decided he would work
out a plan to talk to them first or to get into Warden's ship before they had a
chance to go out. He wondered if Warden had caught his attempt at communicating
by holding the printed sheet before the screen.
If
the tall Star Systems man had missed the message, Camaby knew he might walk
into a trap, leading the others with him. The recorder had seen Jason and Sara
in the screen before it went blank. He knew the computer must be a type of
self-regenerating setup and that the computer was insane. It could kill, he
knew; that it would was evident. But it was limited in the ways it could attack
so long as they were in the city, he finally decided. Its prime directive being
maintenance of the city, the machine would only be able to take wide offensive
action so long as the surveyors remained in the open. Camaby decided he would
stay as close to the city as possible.
Camaby
knew approximately where he might expect to find the computer manual controls,
if there were any. It was a gamble.
The
mass of copper detected by instruments told him that, if the machine operated
on circuits, the great concen
tration of metal beneath the mountains to the north
was the right place. If the computer was of more exotic construction, such as
magnetic impressions in a metal mesh, that still was the most likely place. The
problem was how to get underground to find it without being killed first by
the computer.
"I
can watch the clouds form," Camaby said to himself, "and then I can
avoid the bolts. It needs an almost stationary target.
"And
what," he said brightly, "if it had several
targets? And all of them moving quicklyp' The recorder
sat mulling it over a good part of that night
"The plan is
simple," Warden said.
"There's
a small ground car in the storerooms. It's not only small,
it operates on a fission grain. There's only one circuit, and that's on. The computer—uh, Charley—won't be able to interfere with it. I can run
it up to your ship, Sara, with one of you in it at a time, and then we'll be
able to be together, all of us."
"What
do you mean?" she asked. "Why won't Charley be able to interfere? He
can control the circuits in our ships, why not that one?"
"Our
circuits are sophisticated," Warden answered. "They're tied in to our
own computer systems. That's how he's able to interfere. He alters the flow and
messes up the balancing in the control synapses. That car has only one circuit,
on, off. All
the rest is mechanical." He smiled. "That's the only advantage we
have," Warden said wryly. "And all because I
couldn't afford more modem gear!"
Sara failed to be
impressed.
"There are still the
bolts," she pointed out
"Camaby
is probably watching right now," Warden answered. "If he's quick
enough, hell have a chance to open the ports. If we're quick enough, we can get
inside even if Charley throws a hundred bolts."
"I'm
not too sure about that," Jason said. He related his adventures in the
ecclesiastical court of Zelnak, including his mastery of the local tongue and a
detailed hsitory of the things the computer could do if displeased.
Warden said, "Look, this is the only
chance we have, as
I see it. So he throws a couple of bolts. I can run the car right up to the port along the ramp. You raise the
canopy just enough to get out and that's it.
"It's
a chance we'll have to take if we want to be together," he finished.
"I'm still afraid of
it, Bill," Sara persisted.
He ignored her caution.
"If
we don't do something, well just sit here until he starves us out," Warden
answered. "And you have more food in your ship than I have."
"Anyway,
your equipment's more specialized than mine. We should be able to work
something out, like blowing up the city if he doesn't cooperate.
"We should
anyway," he added on a grim note.
Warden
began to undo the clamps leading to the storage hold. Jason helped him with the
recessed wheel. They had it open in a short space.
He
dropped lightly to the floor of the hold. The ground car was in a sealed
compartment in the hull of the ship. Warden opened the ovoid cover, climbed
into the small cabin and released the side clamps which held the car to the
hull of the ship, then maneuvered it to the lower side of the compartment,
where there was an auxiliary port.
"Before
I'm all the way out," he said to Jason, "start resealing the port.
Then watch for me to come back." He looked up to see Sara coming down from
the control room. She clambered uncertainly into the cramped compartment of the
car.
They
were halfway across the distance between the ships when he saw the port of the
opposite craft open slightly and Camaby drop to the ground. The recorder had
not even taken time to lower the ramp.
Camaby
was scuttling toward the ground car in a zigzag pattern. As the car and the
running man neared each other, a flash of lightning scorched down to a spot
from which Camaby had just turned.
Warden was baffled at the procedure, but he
stopped the car as Camaby dashed up, flipped open the front and allowed the
recorder to scrabble his way past the tiller and land sprawling on Sara, who
was in the corner opposite.
Warden
reached up and grabbed the canopy, snapping it shut
"What the—" he
began.
"I
reprogrammed the vocoder," Carnaby gasped. "No one will be able to
get in the ship without the new recognition signal, even if the computer gets
one or two mechanisms working."
"What are you talking
about?" Warden demanded.
"No
time," Carnaby said. "Back to your ship, Warden.
We've been here in one place too long."
As
if to. punctuate the statement, the fabric of the car
bucked as a bolt hit the outer skin and grounded on the pavement.
Warden
gulped. "Yeah," he said and set the car in motion.
Jason
had been dutifully watching. As the car dashed back toward the Star Systems
ship, the lower port flipped open. Warden ran the car up the short ramp and
began killing power as they surged through the opening. They bounced once off
the wall of hold, then were stationary.
Jason had closed the port.
Warden
looked around, heaved a sigh of relief, and staring at Carnaby, said, "Now
suppose you start from the start, that being a pretty good place. Why did you
leave your ship? We were coming over to join you."
Sara
broke into the interrogation. "Couldn't we get out of this coffin and go
back to the control room?"
They
were shortly in the small control room, listening to Camaby relate his theories
and ideas.
It was the first time in his life Camaby had
ever felt important or looked up to; he was making the most of it. Jason, Sara
and Warden sat around the cabin hanging on his every word.
"As I see it," he said,
unconsciously imitating the people from whom he had taken orders all his life,
"we have to find a way to get underneath that mountain, find the control
centers, and, if they're there, shut at least part of the computer down."
"Or blow it up,"
Warden said laconically.
"Whichever—it
will give us a pretty fine chance of getting out in one piece," Carnaby
said.
Warden was astonished at the recorder.
"The tunnels," he
said.
"What?" asked Sara.
"The
tunnels," Warden repeated. "You remember, I followed Buck when he was out scrounging for movables. He led me to a
long tunnel that goes off under the city.
"The
rooms on each side of it are full of some kind of equipment," he added as
an afterthought.
Camaby
was excited. "Which way does the tunnel run?" he demanded.
"I
get you," Warden said. "I'm pretty sure it would run somewhere around
the general vicinity of that mountain where you think the main banks and
controls are."
"The
only problem is getting there in one piece," Jason complained.
"We've got the ground
car," Warden said.
Sara
demanded, "And what about those clouds, just to mention something you may
have forgotten."
"We've
got the ground car," Warden repeated. "That runs fast enough."
"If
we keep moving in random patterns and don't bunch up, the chances are, he won't
be able to use them against us," Camaby said.
"I'd like better
odds," Sara said in a glum voice.
"I
think I'll stay right here," Jason said. "At least it's safe."
"For how long?" Warden asked. "If Charley could figure some way to get at the
ships without damaging the city, we'd be hash right now."
"I
thought of that," Camaby said. "He could just open the ground and let
us fall through, if we weren't where we are. That is, if he's as powerful as he
says. But the water mains and service ducts probably crisscross under this part
of the plaza, or he would have done it.
"But the really big thing to consider is
that, if we head for the controls, Charley will know it. And what's more, hell know we intend to do something about him."
"Like turn him off," Warden said.
"Yes,"
Camaby answered. "That would be the absolute end not only of him, but of
the first rule governing the city. He would reason correctly that, if his
control centers are shut down, he won't be able to adjust the ecology, or for
that matter, protect the city."
"Ergo,
the prime directive, if that's what it is, is violated," Sara finished.
"Charley may be paranoid, but he's not stupid."
Camaby
and Warden argued back and forth on ways to trick the computer or render it
inactive.
XV
-Buck."
"Yeah, voice? What
now?"
"They prepare to
descend from the ship."
"Noise
and voices carry through the lower hold. They will drive out in their car. You
will be prepared to destroy it and them."
"The
blaster won't make a very big hole in the side of the car, but I can stop it bv messing up the treads. Then I could maybe keep hitting it
in one spot and open up the front canopy."
"Leave
an opening, however small, and I shall
strike through it," the voice promised.
"They wear suits of
some kind, Buck. What are these?"
"Probably
life-support," the mate hazarded. "We usually wear them to make
repairs between planets or when we land on worlds without the right
atmosphere."
"They
go to the other ship for more of these suits. The Sara and the Jason wait for
Warden to return with more suits. I do not understand this. But you will stop
them."
"Jason
in the ship?" Buck demanded.
"Yes."
"If I could talk to him, he'd help me out," Buck said. "Could you
fix that up, voice?"
"Not
at the moment. It is more important to destroy Carnaby and Warden, since you
failed to get inside your own ship. Wait. The lock opens. Be ready."
"I'm
ready," Buck said. He sheathed the blaster but left the holster flap
undone for a quick grab and began walking across the plaza toward the two
ships.
As the ground car lurched out of the hold of
Warden's ship, Buck began shouting and waving his arms. He ran toward the car.
Carnaby
saw Buck running across the glistening pavement. He nudged Warden and pointed.
"There's Buck!"
"I
wonder how he didn't get zapped," Warden said. "If he's not careful,
he will! Look! He's not running in any pattern. Charley'11 get him for
sure!"
Warden
stopped the car and snapped the canopy partially open. "Careful!" he
shouted. "The computer—"
Before
he could finish the sentence, Buck- had thrown himself to the pavement a
hundred yards away and fumbled out his blaster. He made a brace with his arms
and began firing.
The shots crashed off the
side of the car.
"But—he's firing at
us," Camaby protested.
"Yeah,"
Warden muttered. "I think Charley found himself an ally." He threw
the car in gear and began backing toward the ship. "I'd give a lot to know
what he promised Buck to make him turn against us," Warden said sourly
under his breath.
Buck
fired again. The shot hit the treads of the car squarely. The right drive ground to a halt of fused metal.
"Damn,"
Warden said. He wrenched at the tiller to compensate for the loss of the right
drive. The car continued to back crabwise toward the ship.
"We
have to turn to get up the ramp," Warden said, "and then he'll have a
shot at the other side. We're in trouble, Camaby."
Camaby
said nothing and hunched back into the interior of the car as a shot caromed
off the transparent canopy.
"That won't hold very
long," he said.
Warden handed him a
blaster.
"Set
it for high," he instructed. "You don't have to be a good shot, just
wave it in his direction and squeeze the stud. It'll keep him down long enough
to let us get back inside the ship."
Warden cracked the canopy enough for Camaby
to slip the muzzle of the blaster through. The recorder peered around the
sheltered edge of the cabin through the canopy and fired in Buck's general
direction.
The
shot hit the pavement behind the mate and to his left. Warden began swineine
the car around.
"Now
try from this side," he said as the car touched the ramp. Warden could see
the port begin to fall open. Sara and Jason had been watching.
Moving
the car up the ramp was a hard job with one set of treads inactive. It was slow
work. The computer, never one to miss chance Warden reflected, slammed a bolt
through the opening into the cargo hold.
Carnaby
squeezed off another shot. Buck had rolled from his original position and now
was on one knee, aiming at the car's exposed working tread.
Warden swore. The car was
halfway up the ramp.
Carnaby got off another
shot.
"I hit him!" he
said. "I hit him!"
"What?"
Warden turned in the seat and looked out toward the plaza where Buck now
writhed on the ground.
The
mate had dropped his blaster. He was crawling for it as the car lurched back
into the safety of the ship.
Warden
opened the canopy and scrambled down into the hold.
"Scratch
one mission," he said. "Let's get back up into the control room and
see how our friend Buck's faring."
"Is he dead?"
asked Sara, following him up the ladder.
"No,"
Warden answered. "Just winged, I think.
But he'll be out of action for a while."
Below
in the hold, Carnaby, who had never before struck a man in anger and who had
fired a gun only on company practice ranges, was being quietly but thoroughly sick.
Warden
peered through the observation port. Camaby's blast had missed Buck but had
passed close enough to bum the mate's arm, shoulder, and part of his face and
hair.
The mate was rolling around on the pavement
in considerable pain. Warden was tempted to pity the man, but the thought of
Buck and the computer trying to get at him made a sudden surge of anger run
through him. He turned away from the port.
"Well, we'll just have
to try again," he said.
Sara
moved to the port and began to watch her former crewman. She said nothing and
her back was rigid.
Jason
was well into another drink. He watched Camaby emerge from the hold white-faced
and miserable.
"Who
would of thought it," Jason said, looking at the
short man with a mixture of disbelief and awe. "Carnaby," he said
with fine irony, "today you are a man.'
Camaby looked up
resentfully.
"Shut up, Jason,"
Warden snapped.
"Bill!"
Sara called from the observation port. "Come look, something's happening
outside."
Warden
leaped across the cabin and peered through the port.
Buck
was staring around with a terrified face. He was trying to drag himself
backward toward the ship. Warden could see that the man was saying or shouting
something, but couldn't tell what.
Before
he could turn on the aural pickups even at the risk of interference by the
computer, the air outside the ship turned white. Momentarily blinded, Warden
stumbled back from the port. He crashed into the control console and came to a
stop rubbing his eyes. When he opened them he could still see spots. "Thank
somebody that wasn't a direct observation port," he mumbled, gathering his
wits.
"What's
wrong?" Sara asked, as the ship trembled. A faint roar filtered through from the outside.
"I
think that was the granddaddy of Charley's thunderbolts," Warden said.
"And I think Mr. Buck, wherever he is, is probably regretting his
bargain."
A
second tremor went through the ship and they faintly heard a muffled roar. It
was followed by another.
Sara
hurried to the port and stared out. "I don't see Buck anywhere," she
said. "Just a pile of black—"
She turned from the port,
eyes wide. "Was that—?"
Warden nodded. She turned
away.
Outside,
a gentle patter of rain began. Warden heard it as he switched off the outside pickups.
Keeping the city neat and tidy, Warden
observed to himself.
"Come out, come out wherever you
are," the voice called lightly.
Warden,
who" had undogged the port preparatory to making a run for Sara's ship,
stopped and listened suspiciously.
"Huh?" he said.
"Is that you, Charley?"
"I
have decided to forgive
you, Warden," the voice said sweetly.
"Not a chance, old machine."
The
voice was chiding. "You hurt my feelings, Warden." "You would
hurt more than just my feelings," Warden retorted.
The
others had joined him in the lock. Sara started forward to ask a question, but
Warden motioned her back. Camaby stood listening, his eyes bright.
"As
you have said, Warden, let bygones be bygone,"
the voice said.
"Like Buck, is that
it?" Warden sneered.
"I
am truly sorry about that
unworthy being," the voice offered in a regretful tone. "But he was
defective, and so I was left no alternative but to destroy
him."
"Yeah," Warden
said.
"Perhaps
it was his evil influence which caused me to do horrible things, Warden."
"Please
come out, won't you?" the voice cajoled. "I will make amends to you, I promise."
"No thanks,"
Warden said.
"You won't have to recognize me as a
god," the voice proposed.
"We don't anyway," Camaby muttered
from the rear of the port.
"I know your species like beauty and flowers and
I will shower you with all these things,"
the voice went on.
Warden,
suspecting a trick, managed to stay well inside the port and out of line of
any trick the computer-might try.
"See," the voice went on,
"even now, the petals of this planet's most beautiful flowers descend
toward you on gentle winds, so do come
out," the voice coaxed.
Warden peered through the barely cracked
port.
"Why, there are flowers," Sara said. There was a gentle drifting of petals outside
the ship, as if the god had caused a snowstorm of pastel flakes.
Several
of the petals drifted into the port opening and settled to the floor. Sara
reached over to pick up one.
"Don't
touch it," Warden said, pushing her roughly backward.
"Doesn't it smell
nice, though?" she said.
Warden
shook his head briskly. "Smell!" he yelled. "Into
your suits, quick! I hope we have enough time!" He was beginning to
feel light-headed.
Warden
leaped toward his suit and was into it in seconds. Jason, who had been
standing nearest to the rack, was snapping the helmet of his shut as Sara and
Camaby began pulling the legs of their suits over their feet.
Jason
spoke over the com. "I feel a little happy, like three or four
drinks."
"Me
too," Sara said. Warden was helping her fasten her helmet. Her eyes had
become glassy. Camaby suddenly crumpled to the floor of the chamber.
Through
the open port where more petals were piling, Warden could see a soft mist
beginning to poke tendrils into the outer lock. Moving slowly as if walking
below the surface of a sea, Warden hurried forward, brushed the flowers through
and cycled the port shut. There was a small eddy of mist against the floor of
the chamber.
As
he shut down the controls, Warden heard the voice of Charley saying sofdy and
gently, "Come out, come out, come out, come out. . . ."
He had felt a sudden urge to open the port
and go out, out into the drifting flower petals, out into the friendly mist.
"I can't have inhaled that much!"
he said, shaking his head. He called over the com, "Jason, let's get back
into the control room and put the purifiers on maximum. We can cycle our own
air."
"Never trust a friendly computer,"
Sara said when she struffo-led out of the sleep induced by the mist or the
petals.
"Hypnotics,"
Warden guessed, "or euphorics of some kind. The natives probably get high on them.
Charley would know about it."
"What
we need to know," Camaby interrupted, "is whether they induce any
lasting effects."
"I
must have smelled the
least," Jason said, "and I don't
feel woozy or anything. I feel great, and I don't even need a drink."
Warden
looked at him narrowly. "They're probably a habit-forming narcotic of some
kind. You could dream your life away until you starved if you sniffed them long
enough."
"Square," Sara said. "We know about addiction."
"We
don't know anything about this one," Warden said. His voice was grim.
"We're not going outside the ship until we're sure our systems are clear
of whatever that stuff was, and then we're going suited up, breathing our own
air. I still aim to get out of this place some
way."
"At
the rate we're going," Sara observed wryly, "the shashlik will grow wings and fly before we're through."
"Then
watch out for elephants in the tree tops," Warden retorted.
XVI
Camaby was panting heavily from the sustained
running; Sara slumped in a weary sprawl on the steps. They were at the head of
the flight of steps which descended into the corridor Warden thought might lead
to a control center for Charley, if there was one.
"Where's Jason?"
He looked around. •
"I
think he zigged too close to the lake when we were running across the
plaza," Camaby said. "At least I saw a big wave rolling up out of the
lagoon after him."
"He
should have known better than to go too close to the lake," Warden said.
"Still, I'm sorry, Sara."
"He
was a member of my crew, not my lover," she said with some asperity.
"And remember, we had to keep apart and keep moving in random patterns too
quickly for Charley to get set for us."
"Two men gone, and
maybe more," Camaby said. "Look."
They
looked. A small, dense cloud of moisture was beginning to form on the ceiling
above the steps.
"Charley,
don't you ever give up?" Warden demanded. He lifted the bag he carried,
containing their rations and light cubes and dumped the contents onto the
floor. He waved the bag through the cloud, dissipating it.
"There
will be higher ceilings, Warden," the voice said grumpily.
"Oh,
go count a few billion ants," Warden grated. He helped Sara to her feet.
"Hurry,"
Warden said to her. "Let's go." He motioned to Camaby, and led the
way down the staircase.
The light in the stairwell dimmed, flickered
and went out.
Sara screamed.
"I will not aid
you," the voice said. "Beware. Go back."
"Sure,"
Warden sneered, "and get fried like an egg. No
thanks, Charley, 'cause when we get where we're going I'm goinsr to get a good
amount of pleasure in turning you off, forever."
"Me, too," Camaby
said.
"Me, too," Sara
added.
Then
Charley screamed. A wail began, coming from all around them, rising in volume
until Warden, his head ringing, thought his eyes would burst.
He
turned off the com in his suit. It helped, but it almost prevented
communication in the dark. Warden produced a light cube and thumbed it to
brilliance.
They
all had shut down the corns while Charley's shrieking went on and on and on.
Warden
shrugged and resolved to bear it. He motioned to Sara and Carnaby and began
leading the way down the stairs.
He
kept an alert watch on the ceiling. Every now and then he used the bag to break
up a cloud.
The
shrieking stopped. They felt, rather than heard, the cessation of sound. Warden
hazarded the com. The computer was silent, but they knew it would strike with
speed if they let down their guard even once.
At
the foot of the stair Warden motioned the others to turn on their corns.
"Turn here for central control room. First stop on the way home."
"Ha. Ha." Sara
said. Her face was unnaturally white.
"Don't
go in any room with a ceiling more than fifteen feet high," Warden
cautioned the other two. "I can't reach much higher than that even
jumping, and Charley'd love to find us standing still with enough time and
height to make up one of his little calling cards."
They walked silently down the corridor,
Warden randomly swinging the bag to create a turbulence
against the ceiling.
Warden called a halt after
about an hour. He opened the face of his helmet to take a drink of water.
Camaby was looking into one of the rooms. Sara had looked into the doorways on
the left, Camaby on the right, each searching for what might be a control room.
Warden
walked down the middle of the corridor watching for telltale moisture and
grumbling to himself about it. All were apprehensive;
they expected the screaming to start at any moment.
"How
far do you think well have to go, Camaby?" Sara asked.
"I
don't know," the little man answered. "It
could be in the next room, or it could be twenty miles
away."
"Or
it could be that there isn't any control room at all," Warden said,
leaping up to bat at another cloud with the bag.
"There
is no control room," said the voice of the computer.
"Oh,
shut up," Sara rapped out. "We couldn't believe you one way or the
other anyway." The computer did not answer.
They
continued their walk, pausing at each doorway to look into the chamber beyond
for anything which might resemble a control system.
Warden
mused aloud as they continued down the corridor, "The trouble is, we don't even know what it will look like if we do find it."
"IT1
know, Captain Warden," Camaby said shortly. "Even if it's a piece of
amber with a slug embedded in it, it'll be big, and there'll be controls
leading into it and away from it."
"Not
necessarily," Warden said. "It could be streamlined into the walls
we're walking between, for all we know, and that's not much."
"It could be
molecular," Sara said.
"I'll find it," Camaby
insisted doggedly, looking into another doorway. "And when I do, I'll
program that damn thing to self-destruct."
"Why, Camaby," Sara said in
surprise, "that's the first time I believe I've ever heard you swear, and
at a machine at that. I thought your first love and consuming passion
lay with machines."
The
trek continued hour after hour. They went slowly because of the necessity of
checking each doorway along the corridor.
"I
don't know how far we've come," Warden said, whirling the bag aloft,
"but I'm getting pretty tired of walking."
"Keep
your helmet closed, your feet moving and your bag waving, to coin a
phrase," Sara said wearily.
They continued.
At
last they came to a large vaulted area. Emerging from the corridor into the
huge, domed room, Warden said, "Uh, oh," and dived backwards. He
lurched into Sara, sending her sprawling. A bolt smashed against the resilient
floor where Warden had been about to step.
"He was waiting,"
Sara said.
"Sure,"
Warden said picking her off the floor and setting her on her feet. "He's
probably got two or three nice little clouds floating around in there just for
our benefit. And we've got to cross that room, too, or rot here."
"There can't be any
going back," Carnaby said.
"Maybe we're getting
close to something," Sara said.
"I
think so," Carnaby agreed. "There haven't been as many large, bulky
things stored in the last rooms I've looked through, just furniture, as if
these were waiting rooms or something like that."
"Or ready rooms of
some kind?" Warden asked.
"Perhaps,"
Carnaby said indifferently. He took the bag from Warden and waved it.
"I
missed that one," Warden said. I must
be losing my grip."
"There's
something funny about that big room," Sara said peering at the dim shapes
barely visible as shadowed outlines at the edge of the light thrown by the
cubes.
Warden
came alert. "What do you mean?" he said straining to see into the
shadowed space beyond.
"It
is the Ones Who Went Before," the voice of the computer echoed heavily in
the low hall.
"Here?" the three
surveyors gasped.
"They—sleep," the
voice said at last.
"Hey," Warden said without
thinking. "If they're here and asleep, then all we do is wake one or two
up and get Charley turned off!"
Sara
snorted. "Oh sure. And what happens if the
natives are not friendly? What happens if we look remarkably like lunch or
something?"
"Oh," Warden said
deflated.
Camaby
sniggered a high and almost hysterical laugh to match
the rising tension in Sara. He hopped up and waved the bag about at random.
"On
the other hand," Warden mused, "if they have been here all this time, then they have to be in suspended animation. But
that room is the same temperature as ours so it can't be deep-freezing— The only thing we can do is make another run for it,"
Warden said.
"Separate,"
Warden told them. "Run fast, broken field, Just
like outside. If you run into the lady of the house, smile nicely but don't
stop. Run like hell."
XVII
Warden dodged to the right of where he had
been standing and landed running. He began crossing the room on a diagonal.
Warden
could hear Camaby and Sara pounding off in other directions. They had the
lights, and their course through the room caused the shapes and shadows to spin
madly.
He
dashed past rows of long, boxlike couches, expecting to see anything at all,
knowing that these were the resting places of the builders of the city. He
glanced down as he angled among the couches. After seeing about half a dozen Warden concentrated on running. Sara's bobbing light showed
a corridor entrance almost directly across from the one he had just left.
Warden
made for the opening and dived in. He rolled and came to his feet as Sara
dashed in followed by Camaby. The recorder was already waving the canvas bag to
create drafts.
Sara
collided with him. He put his arms around her to steady himself as well.
"Did you see
them?" she gasped. Warden nodded.
"What did they look like?" Camaby demanded.
"You
don't have to worry about the owners kicking up a fuss over trespass,"
Warden answered.
"Are they dead?"
Sara blurted out.
"Unless
there are some somewhere we may never find, Charley's
owners are gone. The only things on those couches in there are bones."
"Oh," she said.
"Oh," Camaby
echoed.
"Yeah." Face sober, Warden took the bag from Camaby and urged them farther down
the corridor, leading Sara by the hand.
"We still have to find
the control room," Warden said.
"Have
you noticed it getting hot?" Sara asked. Her suit face-plate was up, as
were the others'.
A
dull rumble came from behind them and echoed in the darkness ahead.
"What's
that roaring?" Warden asked Camaby, who stood slightly ahead in a doorway.
Camaby shrugged a question back.
"Beats
me," Warden answered. "Strange, though. Charley hasn't been making
any clouds lately. I wonder what he's up to.
A loud roar and crack shook the corridor. The
floor heaved.
A giant vibration threw them to their knees.
"That's what!" Warden answered
himself. He scrambled up, pulled Sara to her feet and threw her over his
shoulder. He ran down the corridor.
"Run, Camaby!" Warden shouted.
"Charley's got himself worked up to an earthquake!"
Camaby needed no urging. He pounded off down
the corridor after Warden and Sara.
Behind them a section of ceiling caved in
with a sibilant rumble. Then the floor whipped under their feet as another wave
from the quake struck. A crack opened in the darkness from which they were
running and Warden glanced back to see a thin, bright ribbon of lava begin to
trickle up into the corridor.
Warden ran until he thought his lungs would
burst. After ten minutes, he stopped to gasp for air. He was staggering from
the effort, his lungs seared as he rasped for breath. Camaby came up soon
after.
"I never thought I could ran
that fast," Warden gasped. Camaby collapsed on the floor beside Warden.
Sara
had begun waving the bag around in the air.
"I feel silly doing this," she
said. "And I think Charley's busy with other things."
Warden's
shoulders were still heaving with the effort of his panicked run. He opened one
eye and looked at her, but said nothing.
"We
must have come a couple of miles," Sara said in
an effort to be cheerful. But her eyes were probing at the shadows outside the
range of the lights.
"Yeah,"
Warden said sitting upright. "And we're going to go another hundred or so
before I'll feel safe." He peered down the corridor. There was a red glow
where the lava still crept up through the ruptured floor.
"Let's
go," Warden said struggling to his feet. "Air's no problem, but if
that stuff builds up, it'll fill this corridor like a river. I don't think I'd
like to try swimming in that stuff."
They wordlessly began
trotting down the corridor.
As they ran Warden, continually turned to look down the corridor behind
them. The
lava was still seeping up, and beginning to run through the corridor and into
the rooms. There was an occasional flash as it touched a combustible object
stored in the rooms.
This is murder, Warden
thought. But it's so silent! He remembered that they had not heard from
the computer for hours, or so it seemed. He wondered what new tricks the
computer was up to.
He
looked ahead into the darkness, seeing a pinpoint of light. He didn't stop
running, but asked himself whether the computer might not be trying to catch
the running party in a pincer between two flows of Java.
As he trotted on, Warden could see that the
light did not flicker. It was a white light.
Behind them, there was an explosion far down
the corridor. The force of the concussion stunned,
the three.
Warden popped his hands against his ears.
"Look ahead," he called to the others.
"Lightsl" Sara gasped.
Camaby
stopped stock-still. He stared at the lights ahead. Warden halted, too.
"What's the matter, Camaby?" he
asked. "Think it's another of Charley's traps?"
"When
I was talking to the computer before," Camaby said, "he said
something about service mechanisms. It seemed funny to me at the time that he
didn't use them against us if he had them. And then I thought that perhaps he
couldn't control them. I think that's what those lights up ahead mean. I think
this may be an area where Charley doesn't have any control, and where we might
be able to find something to use against him."
"Let's go, then,"
Warden ordered.
They
set off again at a trot. A short time brought the three to
another of the large, domed rooms. This one was lighted. There were banks of
oval, blank screens and thousands of wall studs which glimmered as if the
board were functioning at top speed.
Warden
walked into the room. He was careful not to touch anything. He looked up. The
roof was perhaps a hundred feet above. Metal, railed walkways ran around the
sides of the chamber at different levels.
Ramps
led to the walkways which gave access to more banks of screens and the flashing
panels.
"It's a control room
of some kind," Camaby said.
He
and Sara had trailed in after Warden. She was looking around in awe. "But
what does it control?" She was about to touch a stud on one of the
consoles.
"Don't touch anything
yet," Warden cautioned.
They
began to walk around the islands of machinery in the room.
"Look
here," Warden called from behind a console. They walked to where he was
standing. A skeleton lay at his feet.
"Charley's masters," Warden said.
"They sleep, all right."
"I
wonder what happened?" Sara stooped to pick up a small bright object in the outstretched hand of the skeleton. When she
inadvertently brushed one of the bones, the entire skeleton disintegrated.
She
withdrew instinctively, looking with distaste at the floor and then at the
object she had found.
"It's pretty,"
Warden said. "But what is it?"
"Let's
see," Camaby said. He took the shiny thing from Sara and walked up to the
control console. He studied the console for several minutes, turning the relic
over and over in his hands.
"Look
at this slot," Camaby said. The metallic object would fit, they could see.
"Could
be it's a key for controlling some of these," Car-naby said. "And it
looks as if this one was trying to reach this console with it."
Camaby
leaned over the control panel and pushed the object against the slot. It
lowered into a perfect fit, almost flush with the surface.
"Okay," Warden
said. "Now what?"
"We
experiment," Camaby said. He depressed a stud. Doors to the entrance of
the room slid from concealment and blocked all ways in and out of the chamber.
"That
may take care of the lava for a while," Warden reminded them, "but it
probably wouldn't for long."
"Unless
it flows faster than it has, we're safe for some time, I think," Camaby
said, absorbed in the board.
He
added, "If this is the control room, I don't think Charley would want lava
in here. I would guess he's blocked off the tunnel. He must know by now that we're through."
Camaby
pressed another stud. A screen lighted against one of the walls. A cube fell
from a concealed slot with a slight click.
Warden
went to a tray bolted against the wall under the screen. It lay in a confusion
of other small cubes. He picked up the one which had just been ejected.
Camaby said, "That could be a memory
block for Charley, or a set of instructions for just about anything; or it
could be just a faulty circuit."
He lightly ran his finirers across the block. "Ridges."
The recorder looked up at the
screen.
"Here,"
he said. He took the block and inserted it against a panel. The cube slid in
and a picture of sorts began forming on the screen.
There was light, movement
and sound.
"I don't understand any of it,"
Sara said.
"They
apparently were built differently than we," Car-naby said, "and
received light differently. That's obviously a recorded message of some kind,
but what?"
The
message ended; the screen went blank. Camaby pressed the stud. The block
ejected.
"It would take years to figure this
stuff out," Sara said.
"If
I had this back at the ship . . ." Camaby said abstractedly.
"There's
no chance of that, Camaby," Warden commented. He was looking at the other
studs on the paneL "Here's a large one. I wonder what it does?"
Camaby turned.
"Don't—"
Warden pushed the stud.
"Thank
you for returning control of this section to me," a voice said above them.
Sara went white and so did
Warden.
He
stammered, "I guess this isn't the master control room, huh?" He was
busily scanning the ceiling for telltale moisture.
"It
is a control room, one of many," the voice said. "It was taken away
just before the Ones Who Went Before departed. Now it is again part of my
system. I am whole once more."
"You
mean," Warden asked hopefully, "that you're sane now? You know you're
a machine? You will take orders?"
"I
mean that all the functions which were once mine and which were partially
obliterated are again in my control," the voice said.
Camaby
was curious. "Why were parts of your system disconnected?"
"The new seed strain I introduced into
the diets of the Ones Who Went Before caused dreams. It was a gift to those who
built me; they dreamed long and beautiful dreams."
"The flowers!" Sara said.
"Yes," the voice answered,
"the flowers. But some of the masters rejected my first gift and attempted
to deprive me of life instead of offering thanks. They turned off this section
of me and attempted to deprive me of others as well. But they dreamed, too, at
last. "They're dead now," Warden said.
"Merely
sleeping," the voice said serenely. "Now, you must sleep as well. You
were warned to go back."
"Masksl" Warden
rapped.
Over the com they heard
Camaby shrieking.
"I
turned you on in here," he shouted, "and I can turn you off
again!"
He lunged for the large
stud.
The survey ship orbited the planet for
several days, estimating and tallying what instruments could detect about its
resources.
Since
the air appeared breathable, and the population looked curiously almost human,
which was to say Rsslike, the surveyor decided to land.
He
brought the ship down in the square of the large city which lay against the
foothills of a spectacular mountain range overlooking an equally splendid bay.
The mountains had sustained volcanic activity in the last thousand years,
according to the instruments. But it would be safe to land.
Spra,
son of Spra, son of Spra, descended from the ship into the square. Of course
the natives had run off at the approach of the survey craft, but Spra knew they
would soon return from curiosity.
He
surveyed the place with pleasure. It would look well on his record to have
found a world so suitable for colonization. The Council of Elders would be
pleased! They might even relax the rule and allow him to mate early, he
thought.
Spra
stretched himself to his full ten-foot height and gracefully arranged his
gleaming tail over one arm to make walking an easier matter.
He
was grateful for the warmth of the sun. Spra began to saunter across the square
toward the most imposing structure, which was either a temple or a palace. He
planned to make it his headquarters.
"Greetings,"
a voice said in standard Rss. "May your nest be ever fertile."
Spra looked quickly about There was no one in
square but himself.
"Who," he
inquired, "or what, are you?"
"I
am the god of this planet You may address Me the Great
Egg."
Available from Ace
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