WANTED: ONE ENGINEER
FOR MANAGERIAL POSITION IN IRUNIUM.
WAGES HIGH. DEATH BENEFITS SUDDEN.
"I am the Contessa Perdita di
Montevarchi. Here in Irunium the only law is my will.
"I
shall seek out another engineer. But this time he will be a real engineer from
a dimension that understands these things, from Slikitter, probably from Earth.
He will be treated with respect because his function is valuable to me. Almost
inevitably he will terminate as this offal terminated, but that is to be
expected of imperfect tools.
"He will not at first see the slaves in
the mines and I do not wish him treated as a slave. My mines must continue to
produce gems for my trade across the Dimensions. An engineer is needed so I
shall find one...."
Turn
this book over for second complete novel
KENNETH
BULMER
novels available in Ace editions:
TO OUTRUN DOOMSDAY
THE KEY TO IRUNIUM*
CYCLE OF NEMESIS
THE KEY TO VENUDINE*
THE STAR VENTURERS
THE WIZARDS OF SENCHURIA*
* Books having the same characters as The Ships of Durostorum.
THE
SHIPS OF DUROSTORUM
KENNETH
BULMER
AN ACE BOOK
Ace
Publishing Corporation 1120 Avenue of the Americas New York, N. Y. 10036
the ships of durostorum
Copyright ©, 1970, by Kenneth Buhner All Rights Reserved. Cover art by Jack Gaughan.
Printed in U.S.A.
I
All the Valcini stood up respectfully when the
Contessa entered the high conference room. The fear and dread in which they
held her showed gauntly in their nervously-stilled gestures, their too-brightly
ingratiating smiles, the way the overhead fluorescents
slicked on oily foreheads.
The
room itself, its narrow windows gibbeted by black and gold walls, hung in long
coral drapes, breathed an air of refined cruelty. The Contessa did not deign to
notice the Valcini until she had seated herself at the head of the table,
sitting in a carved golden chair splayed on dragon-feet. The Valcini sat in a
nervous scraping of wooden chairs. She looked on them and was not pleased.
"So there has been
another accident in my mines."
Her
soft syrupy voice twitched ripples of fear along the men's nerves. They wiped
sweaty hands furtively on their fawn slacks and shirts.
"The
accident could not be helped, Contessa—" began a gray-haired Valcini
sitting at her right hand, his bulky face taut with strain, his lips shining
bluely.
"Could not be helped! Why do you think I let
you live? Why is it that you Valcini live and batten on my bounty? For love of you?"
They could not answer.
Her
white face smooth and soft with costly ministrations, her violet eyes wide and
seductive, her rose-bud mouth too soft and scarlet-sweet, she glanced around
the circle of men at the table with sugary venom. Clad all in white in a silken
robe that fell sheer from her shoulders and with her dark hair high-coifed and
sprinkled with a treasury of gems, she dominated that room of fierce and cruel
men. She jerked the chain attached to a bracelet around her left wrist.
"We
take delight in serving you, Contessa." The senior Valcini spoke with a humbleness past all toadying.
"I hope you do, Doeltor. For your sake."
"The
accident was caused by a cave-in on the new workings." Doeltor gestured
vaguely. "We Valcini employ out-world labor for mining and sometimes the
labor is unintelligent—"
"Sometimes I"
Her
disgusted exclamation followed by a vicious tug at the chain attached to her
left wrist brought a whimpering cry from the creature bound by a necklet to
the other end of the chain. His red velvet suit made him look a ghastly parody
of an organ-grinder's monkey. His enormous domed head, partially covered by a
blue velvet cap with a feather broken at the tip, looked lumpy and skintight
over a massive skull.
"Quiet,
Soloman!" Her sugary voice thickened. "Bring in the engineer
responsible."
The double doors opened in
a clash of bronze.
Honshi
guards, their wide frog-faces staring, hustled in the cringing form of a man
clad in a gray tunic. Smears of dirt and blood stained the gray cloth. The Honshi
prodded him forward with their barbed spears, hissing: "Hoshool
Hoshool"
"So
this is the miserable specimen—look up, gandyschell, look up at me."
The
engineer whose brown face showed a gray parched horror and a despairing dread
turned his eyes up, the whites bloodshot. He licked spittle. One arm hung
broken and unsplinted at his side. He moaned.
"Pynchon,
isn't it? Chief Mining Engineer Pynchon? There has
been another accident in my mine, Pynchon. Slaves are dead, Pynchon, slaves who
cost a great deal to bring here across the Dimensions. Many weeks' work have been lost, Pynchon. What do you say, Pynchon, to me,
about these bad things?"
"I
am—sorry—Contessa."
"Sorry. I see. And?"
"The
tools are bad, Contessa. Only the Erinelds know real mining. The slaves are
unwilling—"
"You
have whips and guards to use them. I hear
the seam you were following turned and you did not allow for this and you
undercut into the biscuit band and then you brought down the duricrust."
The engineer let his head
droop in defeat.
"I
shall not be cruel to you, Pynchon. Many people say I am wantonly cruel; but this is not so. I shall be kind to you, Pynchon." She gestured negligently to the
nearest Honshi guard. "Kill, him, now."
The
short stabbing sword went in steel bright and came out blood red.
Pynchon
grasped his spilling intestines and fell on his face, dead.
Honshi
guards, the withered scraps of human hair and skin fleering from their helmet
spikes, cleared away the mess. The woman in white did not look once, but sat,
her fist knuckling her smooth chin, brooding.
Then she stared icily at
the waiting Valcini.
"I,"
she said with conscious pride and arrogance. "I am the Contessa Perdita
Francesca Cammachia di Montevarchi. Here in Irunium the only law is my
will."
Sleekly oiled heads nodded
eager confirmation.
"I
shall seek out another engineer. But this time he will be a real engineer from
a Dimension that understands these things, from Slikitter, probably from Earth.
He will be treated with respect because his function is valuable to me. Almost
inevitably he will terminate as this offal terminated; but that is to be
expected of imperfect tools."
"Yes, Contessa.."
"He will not at first see the slaves in
the mines and I do
not wish him treated as a slave. Is that understood?" "Yes,
Contessa."
She
stood up, jerking the glittering silvery chain so that Soloman whimpered and
jumped after her like a scuttling pug dog.
"Very well. My mines must continue to produce gems for my trade across the
Dimensions. An engineer is needed so I shall find one. I shall take a guard
and—ah—Char-nock." She flayed them with her eyes. "And where best to
look for a mining engineer than in a mine?"
II
When \ the disaster sirens ripped the night sky apart
all over Hodson, J. T. Wilkie was in no position to hear them. His position,
apart from being highly undignified and ex-
tremely dangerous, was also extraordinarily
uncomfortable.
Up
top, the firetrucks, the ambulances, the rescue teams would be hurtling through
the cold and raucous Canadian night toward the Old Smokey pithead where the
flames would be shooting up like blasphemous flowers of evil. Up there all the
taut nerve-pulsing drama of a major mine disaster would be unleashed.
Down
below, J. T. Wilkie tried to pull his head out of the tracks of the Joy
Continuous-miner by bracing his trapped arms against the warm metal tracks and
the coal-encrusted clay floor. Coal dust and smoke filled his eyes and nose and
ears and mouth and bells ding-donged in his head like deranged tramcars.
Through the room and pillar workings of Old Smokey sharp dust clouds billowed
on the skirts of the explosion shockwave that had hurled J. T. into his present
ludicrous and perilous position.
He knew he didn't have time to feel fear; he had to get
his head out before he choked to death. With a final
tremendous pull that nearly tore his ears off he wrenched
out and staggered back from the Joy to crash into the mi-
raculously still-intact wall. The pillar thickness here had
been fined down to its near-limits and a certain amount of
goaf lay about. Inevitably, J. T. Wilkie crashed headlong
over the waste. *
Absolute
blackness clamped down. Somewhere a man screamed; very soon that sound died.
His
eyes felt as though grit the size of best nuts clogged under the lids. He
fumbled around for the flashlight slung on his belt and blinked painfully as a
shaft of white light cut into the swirling black miasma.
He
endured a coughing spell, and spat gobbets of black. He felt as though someone
had run him clean through the works of the Joy.
"Is that you, J.
T.?"
The
voice coughed up from a shining splintered pile of freshly-broken coal fallen
from the roof. Dust coiled as Wilkie lurched across.
"Polak? Is that you, Polak?"
"Yeah."
The
heap of coal heaved and like a minor subterranean explosion in itself the burly
coal-blackened form of a man wrenched free. J. T. grabbed a thick arm and
heaved.
"I
might have guessed." He coughed, the tears running down his face and
signally failing to cut grooves in the sweat-packed coal grime. "It'd take
more than a mine explosion to kill you, Polak."
"Damn right. Anyone else—?"
In
the flashlight gleam Wilkie shook his head. " 'Fraid
not."
Polak
shook himself and then switched on his own helmet light. All the main lamps in
the road had died when the roof smashed down.
"We're
cut off down here, Polak." Wilkie stated the obvious. "The bang went
off down number ten road, I think. We caught the backlash." He grunted
with furious resentment. "This ought to teach me to come to the
face—"
"You're
always too eager, boy," rumbled Polak. "You should've left the real
mining to pitmen. You civil engineers and your fancy machines—"
"Go
on, say it," Wilkie snapped back. He humped around and sat down heavily on
the motionless Joy. Its multiple engines had long since stopped. "Blame
mining machinery for this mess. If you'd been working with hand and pick, like
you always talk about—this would never have happened—eh?"
"They
had accidents back in the old country. By damn, J. T., we're in one hell of a
mess!"
"They'll get us out.
How far can we go back?"
The
lights showed the answer to that. The square-cut corners of the room showed
sharp through the dust on two sides. On the third the roadways lay piled
roof-high with cascaded coal. The lights flicked around eerily as the dust
settled.
Polak coughed and spat.
"We could try the
conveyor—"
"That's out. It just
disappears under a pile of filling."
They
were stuck down here, in this small choked room, with only the Continuous-miner
with its ripper head and cruel fanged chains for company.
Polak
stumbled in the erratic light across to the sheer wall. He picked up a crowbar
that .had been flung so hard it had bent to a forty-five degree angle, and
bashed against the wall. He waited. Then he bashed again. The concussions made
J. T.'s head ache.
At last the big man threw down the bar
disgustedly.
"Not a cheep—"
"They'll find us. They'll sink a bore down—it's the air I'm worried about."
"Polak grunted. "You're
the engineer, boy, even if you're only still learning."
"I'm
a mining engineer," Wilkie protested, stung. "I've got a diploma to
prove it."
"Sure.
A scrap of paper. Well, wave it now and get us out of
here."
"Huh."
There
followed a long period of waiting, punctuated by intermittent bashings of the
wall by Polak. Each time they listened for any answering knocking and each time
only blankness responded.
The
canteen of warm water Polak produced tortured them with its fragility—so tiny a
drop of water to last them in their dust and thirstiness for who knew how long.
Wilkie began to wonder if he ought to feel really frightened.
The
thing was, he told himself over and over again, he needn't have been down here
at all. This Saturday night he'd fixed up that long-cherished date with Madge
and everything was arranged. As a feckless young mining engineer who chased
every girl he could he'd felt a strong fancy for Madge. She'd been different
from Sheila and Toni and Marie. He'd been on to a good thing there. Polak,
well, just because the husky miner had befriended him in a stupid brawl when
he'd first come to Hodson—inevitably a fight over a woman in a bar—Wilkie had
chosen to carry out the last checks when Polak was on shift. Then they were
going to paint Hodson red.
Instead—
Instead,
here he was, stuck down a pit in a major mining disaster. His training told him
eloquently enough that this blowout was a big one. Probably a lot of men had
lost their lives. The whole pit would be a shambles. They were stuck right up
at the face in a small room cut off from the main workings,
"Oh,
geeze, this is going to, be a lulu," Wilkie wailed sorrowfully.
"You
said they'd be listening for us and boring for us," Polak said roughly.
"Snap out of it, J. T."
They
sat in darkness. Polak wanted to conserve his helmet lamp's battery—Wilkie's
own helmet lay smashed beneath the Joy—and his
flashlight wouldn't last long if they kept it alight continuously.
Once,
Polak grumbled, "If I'd known this would happen I'd never have come to
Canada, straight I wouldn't."
But for the most part they
sat in silence as well as darkness, occasionally banging the wall and hoping
for a return signal.
The
air began to taste foul with a foulness that did not originate in thick coal
dust.
A trickle of coal dust ran
down the face.
The sound sent shivers down
Wilkie's back.
"The
roof!" he said, jumping up and falling over a chunk of coal. He sat up and
spat.
"Keep
still!" Polak moved cautiously forward, switching on his lamp, probing
the face with its beam.
More dust rivuleted down.
Then a chunk of coal dislodged from the top
and tumbled down. Another followed. Both men backed off. "It's
them!" yelled Polak with sudden emotion. "But that way?" asked
Wilkie.
Before
he could say more the whole face collapsed in a thunderous smother. Coal and
chips and dust flew. A warm yellow glow sprang into being, shining refulgendy
through the gash in the coal seam.
Choking,
gagging, the two men shielded their eyes as the light brightened.
The
crack in the coal wall shattered down across the seam. Bright edges glinted.
Chips flew.
Then—J.
T. just didn't believe this—a squat brown naked man with a scarlet rag tied
around his bald head squeezed through. He ripped a protruding slab of coal away
with a small pick. His face shone with sweat. He looked frightened and yet,
somehow, driven. His eyes rolled as he focused on the two pitmen.
"Who the sweet hell
are you?" blurted Polak.
The
squat man squeaked something in a language neither man recognized. Heralded by
a fresh splattering of coal shards another squat brown naked man squeezed
through. They stood, like Tweedledee and Tweedledum, staring at Wilkie and
Polak.
"But
they came through the face!" said Wilkie. He repeated that. "The face! They couldn't—it's all solid coal up there,
right through the seam."
"They couldn't have,
boy, but they did."
The
two brown men, the streaks of coal on their skins strange, like ritual
tattooings, beckoned.
"They—they want us to
go through."
Polak humped forward.
"Well,
of course. There's no way back—and these guys must have come from
somewhere!"
"But-"
"You got any better ideas, J. T.P"
J. T. Wilkie swallowed. His mouth tasted of
coal—as it would—and also of the diyness of fear. "I suppose not."
Helped
by the agile brown men Polak and J. T. forced their way through the crack in
the seam toward the source of the yellow light.
J. T. Wilkie had never overbothered his head
about much apart from chasing girls and learning all he could about mining. The
two passions he recognized with inner glee were closely related. He remained
young for his age. He glanced at big Polak as they straightened up on the other
side of the crack before he dared to look at what they'd climbed into, and he
saw that his comrade was taking all this in his stride as being in the natural
order of things. J. T. wasn't so sure.
They
stood in a small oval chamber quite unlike any room that a pitman would win
from the coal seam. The mouth of an opening showed ahead, jagged and irregular,
and the yellow light flooded from this softiy, unlike the whiter brilliance of
a helmet lamp.
"Well," said
Polak.
"This is giving me the
creeps," said J. T. Wilkie.
"If
you're thinking, young J. T., that we're dead and this is hell, or that these
odd pitmen here are—what d'you call 'em?—Trolls, then snap out of it. All kinds
of men work the pits in Canada, you know that."
"Yeah. I work 'em." But J. T.'s repartee rang with a dank and hollow
sound in the strange chamber.
Urged
by their rescuers they ducked down to enter the tunnel and scraped and slipped
along in the unchanging yellow radiance that broke in such strange reflections
from the shining coal. With all his new-won mining engineer's knowledge so
laboriously earned, Wilkie still could not sense the closeness of direction and
distance that Polak intuitively knew.
Their Joy had been working six degrees to the
end; but here the tunnel had been driven straight through with little concern
for the cleavage planes so that both a bord face and an end face showed in
stubbily broken-sharded edges. The thin deposit of cleat spar scintillated with
crystalline brilliance along the severed cleavage planes. J. T. wished for a
cage to the elevator with the lever set to: up-fast.
The air grew colder.
"We don't seem to be going up,"
fretted Wilkie.
"Just
so this damn tunnel gets big enough for a man," grunted Polak and then
bashed his head into a projecting ledge of coal which brought on a shower of
coal and curses.
A
scampering up ahead indicated where more of these strange gnome-like little men
crowded back down the tunnel. Evidently, their work in opening this short
jagged tunnel to the trapped men over, they were on their way back to the
surface.
Their
shadows capered after them along the floor and walls in macabre parody.
The
source of the yellow radiance ahead revealed itself as a shaft of light shining
up through a jagged hole in the floor. The squat men jumped down through the
pillar of radiance one after the other.
Swallowing,
pushing on jocularly by Polak, Wilkie followed.
He
landed awkwardly on a clay floor and sprawled over. Things moved in the edge of
vision. Shadows writhed in the cavern. Hands pulled him upright. He squinted
against the light which poured from a single enormous crystal pulsing now he
was so close. He blinked.
He still didn't believe
what he saw.
Beyond
the glowing crystal the cavern opened widely, onto a vast columned
cathedral-like space. The squat men scampered forward clearing the area in
front of him.
Like
an icon bathed in light the woman in white stared down enigmatically upon him.
He saw the sheer white dress, the high dark
hair sprinkled with gems, he saw the soft white face and the rosebud mouth,
he saw without understanding the little manlike thing that gibbered and
capered at the end of a glittery silver chain. He saw; but he didn't believe.
In a
syrupy soft voice she said, "I know you are J. T. Wilkie; but I do not
know this other. Welcome, J. T. Wilkie. I have saved you from your mine
disaster and you owe your life to me."
This—under a coal mine?
This—deep in the subterranean bowels of the earth?
No—J.
T. Wilkie shook his head firmly—no, he'd been hit on the head by a flying chunk
of coal and he was having nightmares or hallucinations—or else he was dead.
in >
The woman said,
"I am the Contessa Perdita Francesca Cammachia di Montevarchi. You may
call me Contessa." She jangled the chain which, J. T. Wilkie saw in his
dazed condition, was attached to a bracelet around her left wrist. The likeness
of the little mannikin attached to the other end by a collar around his neck
escaped Wilkie. That big lumpy bald head, those ridiculous velvet clothes —he
shut his eyes.
"You
are not dreaming, J. T. This is all real, this is all happening. Come now, for
we have a journey ahead of us."
A
man's voice speaking a language Wilkie did not understand—all snarls and
hisses and grunts—spoke with venom. He opened his eyes. The man wore a blue
shirt and breech-clout and many weapons protruded from his broad leather belt.
His swarthy face with its curled black moustaches looked indecently alive.
The Contessa snapped something tart in reply
and the man's half-drawn sword snicked back into its scabbard.
"Who is this?" asked the Contessa
sweetly.
"I'm
Polak." Big Polak shouldered forward. He looked as though his face would
explode.
"You may accompany us. Now—hurry."
At
once everyone began a rapid march through the cavern. The glowing crystal,
unsupported by anything Wilkie could see, floated through the air after them.
He
shrank away from it. Hell, manl This couldn't be for
real.
Polak nudged him.
]]What a dish, J. T.l"
"Uh—sure. It's a funny old dream, though."
"I don't believe this is a dream, by damn." J. T. Wilkie, too, was
beginning to believe that insane idea.
They hurried on. The cavern came to an abrupt
end as the clay walls swept around to join ahead of them.
Everyone stopped. An air of expectancy
settled on them.
"There's no way
through here," rumbled Polak.
"A
dame who can find her way down underneath a coal mine can find her way out of a
cave," snapped J. T. with sour fear. If this was for real, then he'd damn
well let it be and take it as though it was really happening.
"What now,
Contessa?" he asked brightly.
She smiled. Some of the squat
men flinched.
She saw that instinctive
shrinking away.
"The
Erinelds know when to dig and when to disappear. In you I see a sense of humor,
J. T. I like that."
"It'll
take machinery to dig through that lot," said Polak. He stared
challengingly at the woman.
She stared back.
"We
go—another way." She shook the chain sharply. "Soloman!
Put us through—the crystal last."
He
mowed and gibbered and then stood transfixed, as though suddenly smitten with
paralysis.
J.
T. Wilkie could have sworn there were more of the squat brown men—the
Erinelds—a moment ago. They seemed to be thinning.
"It
was extremely difficult to find a Portal close to an Earthly mine," said
the Contessa. "Oh, there were some in Western and Eastern Germany and a
few in Hungary and other of your confused petty states. But that part of your
world is—" She cut herself off abruptly, as though annoyed.
An
Erineld standing a couple of yards from Wilkie vanished.
He gasped.
Another
Erineld moved up to the spot vacated by the first and before his second foot
touched the ground he, too, silently, mysteriously, impossibly, vanished.
Only,
moments after, the soft plop of air filling the vacated space told that anyone
had been there at all.
Now the big swarthy
blue-clad man vanished.
"You
next, Polak."
The Contessa pointed and as though in a daze
Polak moved up and right before J. T.'s eyes vanished from sight. "I don't
believe—" J. T. began.
He
moved over to where Polak had been, feeling silly, feeling sick,
feeling—feeling the soft touch of grass, wet with dew, feeling hot summer sun
on his face, hearing the swarthy man in blue shouting something. He stood there
on the lush grass of a great valley and then went bowling over as the glowing
gem materialized right where he was and struck him shrewdly in the back of the
neck. He yelled.
Moments
later the Contessa and the little being she called Soloman materialized beside
the crystal.
The man in blue shouted
again, angrily, gesticulating.
Wilkie followed the
direction of his pointing arm.
Around
the lip of the great valley tiny black dots showed like a frieze against the
burning sky.
The Contessa frowned.
"Palachi,"
she said. Soloman gibbered and capered, his gigantic bald head wet with sweat.
The
sight of those enigmatic black blobs on the horizons upset the Erinelds, who
clustered and began squeaking in their high-pitched voices.
"We
must make haste through this Dimension," said the Contessa, shaking the
chain.
Soloman
began to lead on, followed by the others, with the crystal, now lifeless in the
sunshine, drifting along in the rear. Soloman sniffed. His tiny wizened face peered this way and that.
Lashing
at Soloman with words that, although not understood by Wilkie, yet made him
wince, the Contessa goaded the misshapen little man.
At last, a hundred yards up
the valley, he halted.
Once more the Erinelds
began to disappear.
As
they did so the black blobs on the valley slopes grew larger. Wilkie realized
they were charging down toward the fast disappearing company. He could make out
no shapes, but the menace that breathed from them gave an
urgency to this fresh series of vanishments and he was happy to feel a
sudden shift in the earth beneath him and to find himself dropped about a foot
onto rough rock and scree. All about him reared jagged mountains, their tops
cloaked in snow, with long falls of glaciers pouring in frozen whiteness to
fantailed spreadings.
Cold bit into him.
They began to march again, this time directly
toward a glacier. No one said much. This was a time for scrambling over loose
stones, skirting boulders, for hugging oneself to keep warm.
At last Soloman stopped at
the foot of the glacier.
"As you see, J. T., I have taken a great deal of trouble to rescue you from certain
death," said the Contessa pleas-andy.
"I'm duly grateful, Contessa. But,
assuming all this is real, can't we get out of this
cold? I'm freezing."
She laughed,
a soft tinkle of uncanny merriment.
"This
is real, J. T. We are making our way through the Dimensions back to my own land
of Irunium. There, we shall rest and recuperate. But, now—" She tugged the
chain cruelly and Soloman cheeped. "Put us through, little man, and
quickly."
"Dimensions?" said
J. T. Wilkie.
This
time they slid between the Dimensions one by one until Wilkie's turn came. He
didn't blink an eye. He was getting used to this by now—and that very thought
gave him the screaming heebie-jeebies.
All
around him now stretched a smiling sun-soaked landscape with an atmosphere
very different from that of that first valley where the black blobs had crept
down the mountainside with deadly menace. Woods clumped between rolling
downlands. High clouds cavorted in a brilliant sky. The air smelled sweet.
Polak
took in a deep breath. He looked across at a stream that tinkled musically away
to itself.
"I
could do with washing off some of this coal dirt," he said. "A pitman
kinda gets—um—grubby."
The
Erinelds were relaxing now, squeaking among themselves. The blue-clad man
threw himself down, on the grass, picked a long stem and began to chew the end
reflectively.
The Contessa nodded.
"The
next Gate is some distance. The ships will be here soon."
"Ships?" said Wilkie. "Gates? Dimensions?"
She
laughed her silvery tinkle that, at the time, Wilkie with his passion for
chasing pretty girls thought very attractive.
"You
will understand everything soon, J. T. My agents on Earth were able to go
directly up to Canada from New York. But I could not bring you back to Irunium
that way. We have to take a roundabout way."
"That, I suppose," said the smart
J. T. Wilkie with some acuity, "was because we were down the pit?"
Her rose-bud mouth looked
very red in the sunshine.
"Don't
forget that, J. T. You were down the mine—trapped and almost dead. The rescuers
haven't even got near the end road yet."
"They'll
try—" began Wilkie belligerendy. Then he stopped.
He had to believe. They'd come through the
Dimensions to this place, he had to believe; they'd left Old Smokey and the
disaster back on Earth, he had to believe; they were here in some outlandish
otherplace—oh, sure, he had to believe now.
He had to believe.
The
shakes hit him then and he put his hands over his ears and lowered his head and
tried not to be sick.
"Now,
J. T., for your information, your mine was a long way underground. We have come
through these Dimensions where the ground level more or less corresponds with
the level of the mineshaft, although we had to do some jinking here and there.
But now we must go through to a Dimension where the ground levels are the same
as on Earth and Irunium. Otherwise"—she sniggered as though at a private joke—"we'd come out in my country fixed fast deep in the
ground."
Dully, Wilkie said,
"That wouldn't be funny."
"Naturally." She sounded vexed. "I thought you had a sense of humor, J. T."
He had to believe—didn't
he?
"I
had Soloman pick a route relatively easy as far as natural hazards are
concerned. All these Dimensions are Irunium-like—which means Earth-like, too, I
suppose. I have a vast and incredibly beautiful chart of the Dimensions from
which to plot my courses." She sniggered again, a sound this time that
brought Wilkie's head up. "David Macklin would give his soul for that!"
"Who's-?"
But
she went on: "So you have nothing to fear from unnatural Dimensions, from
shifting ground and laval seas and distorted
time-sequences, or anything like that. Look— the ships are coming."
Polak
came back as Wilkie scrambled up. Water spun from the big pitman. Now he looked
his topside self, beefy-faced, huge-muscled, dark hair wild with water-stiffened
brilliance, his wide mouth and cheerful features making him the epitome of the
man-of-action with no thought for the morrow.
"Have
a wash, boy," he rumbled. "Waterll make a man of you."
"Look there,
Polak," said Wilkie, pointing.
The
ships slid through the air like shuttles. Steadily, un-deviatingly, they came
on. Wilkie could see no wings, no propellers, no sails, no jets. Each ship
looked to be just a curved-ended, squared-off hull, with structures raised on
the high decks without much thought for streamlining. They all sailed about
five hundred feet above the ground, and as the land dipped and rose so the
ships dipped and rose with it.
"I've
never seen airplanes like those before," said Polak, vigorously rubbing
his shining hair.
"They're
not airplanes," began the knowing J. T. Wilkie. "They're—" But
he stopped. He didn't know what they were.
"Ships," said the
Contessa.
Each
hull was about two hundred feet or so in length, broad in proportion, with high
towering decks. There were eight of them, all brightly painted and gilded with
a multitude of fluttering flags and banners.
Wilkie
tore himself away from the fascinating sight at Polak's forceful remarks and
went down to the stream where he stripped off and plunged in, gasping and
shivering, and gave himself as good a wash as he could without hot water and
soap. Then he put on his grimed pit clothes again and ran back to the group.
The leading ship, still remaining five hundred feet in the air, had lowered a
wicker cage on a rope.
The Erinelds took turns to
be hauled up, two by two.
Polak
went up alone and Wilkie went up with the blue-clad man whose fierce swarthy
face showed a strange animation as they swept up into the air.
He
said something with a low savage joy that both chilled and exhilarated
Wilkie.with its dark hint of promised action. They reached the boom swung out
over the side and the wicker cage swung inboard. J. T. Wilkie stepped down onto
the main deck of the ship.
The
feel of it surprised him. Expecting a soft swaying motion he braced himself to
the unexpected hardness of the ship's motion, her rock-steady undeviating
progress. Whatever supported this ship in the air had no need of air currents
or buoyancy tanks.
Men on the decks clustered to watch the
arrivals. Clad in gay incongruous clothes with scraps of armor leather jerkins,
bright open-necked shirts, they looked a cheerful raffish bunch with open
laughing faces, huge moustaches, pointed beards, and with a liveliness and high
spirit that obscurely pleased and comforted Wilkie.
At the Contessa's arrival they aahed and
oohed and
Willde
recognized bosom companions in the highest pursuit of all.
Without
a glance for the bright eyes and laughing faces of the crew, the Contessa swept
imperiously into the stern-castle. Four decks high, it spread upward with a
stepped overhang. Many large lanterns decorated the rails. Any comparison with
a sailing ship was shattered at once by the absence of masts and sails.
The man in blue shepherded
Wilkie along.
The
hunger in this man puzzled Wilkie. He kept glancing" at
the ship, at the crew, at the rows of ballistae that snouted out in broadsides
from the ranked ports. When they reached the stemcastle they entered a
low-ceilinged cabin furnished with benches and tables, couches and cabinets,
all of solid workmanship. No thought seemed to have been taken to weight.
Everything was solid and tough. Whatever supported this ship, then, appeared
not to have lift/weight problems.
The
Contessa halted at the foot of a staircase—not a ladder—sweeping up on the
port side.
"I
need rest and refreshment before we reach our destination. Charnock will see
to you."
At
Wilkie's blank expression she showed a flash of pert annoyance and then rapped
out a couple of sentences to the man in blue. He nodded. The Contessa swept
grandly up the staircase followed by Soloman hopping at the end of his
glittering chain.
The
man in blue shouted to an Erineld who carried a pack slung over his shoulders.
Opening the pack, the man in blue produced a flat wooden box with brass
fittings. From this he took a band that, to Wilkie, appeared to consist
entirely of flaming jewels. He thrust this into Wilkie's hands. Wilkie looked
at it. Furiously, the man in blue snatched it up and clamped it over Wilkie's
head, the ends pressing in above his ears, the jewels lost in his hair.
"Now,
for the sake of Black Naspurgo himself, do you want wine or water?"
Wilkie choked off his gasp. In some strange
way the jeweled band translated what this man said. He could, at last, speak to
him. And now, as the voices from outside rolled in, he could understand what
the crew were saying, what the Erinelds were saying—he could communicate with these
people.
"I—" he stammered. "Wine, I
think."
This man, then, must be
Charnock.
"And, listen, miner, we called for the
ships to meet us there because we did not wish them to know we had come through
the Dimensions. Do you understand? You will not mention this to the
sailors."
"All
right."
Folak
shouted: "Hey, J. T. Can you understand what he's jabbering about,
then?"
"Yes, Polak. Don't ask me how. There's wine on the way."
"That's my boy."
From
an inner door a girl walked toward them balancing a silver tray on which
rested a bottle with ice-cold patterns of frost misting on the glass. Three
glasses nestled. Chamock nodded swarthy approval. He lifted the botde by a
wicker handle and began to pour.
Wilkie eyed the girl.
Young,
with a high-colored, fresh face, she looked wholesome and clean—and not
particularly intelligent. Her clothes were the usual mishmash worn aboard ship:
a short skirt, a red shirt with a leather jerkin over it, a scarf over yellow
hair.
Polak
took his glass with a lick of the lips. He lifted it.
"Well,"
he said. "Here's to the Contessa." "The Contessa," said
Wilkie, sipping.
Before
Chamock could reply a loud and excited hail from outside dragged their
attention away from the wine.
"Ships!"
yelled the voice. "Ships! It is the accursed
Corforan!"
At once pandemonium broke out aboard ship.
Chamock
threw down his drink and dragged out his sword. His face looked bleak.
"Now
we are in trouble!" he blazed. "The Contessa will not be
pleased!"
IV
Everybody rushed out on deck..
The crew appeared to be milling in confusion
and yet in a few moments Wilkie saw that each was in his place— and he
recognized that here a system of discipline operated which worked in a way that
perhaps he had not yet in his young life encountered. Men stood to the ranked
bal-listae and began to wind up the twisted thongs powering each half-bow.
Other sailors ran up with sheaves of bolts, their heads sharply-pointed or
squared-off for the battering punch. Other men sprinkled sand and carried
buckets and cleared away raffles of rope and gash wooden lumber.
The ship was clearing for
action.
"Gulp!" said J.
T. Wilkie. But he said it to himself.
Over
the side and away across the brown and green land beneath, he could see,
clearly and in frightening detail, the floating shapes of ten ships. In the
line ahead, they bore down to cross the bows of the ship in which Wilkie sailed
leading her own line of eight.
Someone
breathed heavily at his side and he turned to see Polak standing there with a
ridiculous steel cap on his head and an enormous cutlass-type sword in his
fist.
"By
all the saints, I'm going to enjoy this!" roared Polak. "I haven't
had a good fight since the night we belted those steelmen for them dames in
Clancy's Bar and Grill."
Wilkie remembered that night, and he shuddered.
"I
like a good fight too, Polak. But, geeze, feller—this is for real! Like—with
swords and guns and things—or at least catapults."
Chamock laughed evilly, his
rapacious face alive.
"They
are not catapults, miner, neither are they tre-buchets or petraries. They're
ballistae—as anyone who knows anything about artillery can see."
The
words came clearly to Wilkie, in recognizable form, although what the original
language made of them he couldn't know.
"Yeah,
well," he said truculently. It was about time he warmed himself up for the
fight. "I'm more used to a—a molotov cocktail myself."
"Oh?" said Chamock, staring
wolfishly over the side. "Taste good?"
"Hoo, boy," said Wilkie, pleased.
"What
the hell is he yapping on about?" demanded Polak. "When does the
fight begin? I'm not too pleased at the idea of jumping across nothing to get
at those guys over there."
Whenever
J. T. Wilkie was out on the town with Polak supposedly chasing dames they
always ended up in a fight.
Bad
company, J. T. had often sighed, was sapping both his morals and his supply of
natural teeth.
He'd
always remember his old mother saying to him, when he'd been about to set off
for the wicked city and college: "Now, son, you be
like your father and get a good trade in your hands."
J.
T. Wilkie had always known what he wanted to get into his hands.
In
the briglit sunshine the two lines of ships sailed nearer on convergent
courses. Clearly, now, the enemy—the accursed Corforan—would cross their bows.
This should, according to all Wilkie knew of the subject, confer on them a
great advantage.
"Can't
they get any more speed out of this tub?" he demanded.
Charnock
threw back a reply without looking away from the enemy line from which bunting
and flags flew bravely. "I forget, you know
nothing of the Dimension of Duros-torum. The secret of the force that powers
the Ships of Durostorum is known to few; but all know that they must fly at
five hundred feet from the ground and they must travel at twenty miles an hour.
These are unbreakable laws ordained by science."
"So
we can't get above the enemy and chuck rocks on 'em, then?"
"No.
That is why we have the tower." Chamock pointed back to the center of the
ship.
Here,
in the waist, men were erecting a wooden latticework tower, hauling it upright
against the sun with long ropes over pulleys and blocks. At the top a walled
platform showed two large holes in its floor.
"Archers
shoot from those lofty ramparts," said Charnock grimly. "And rocks
are thrown. But the enemy do the same."
Polak, looking, got the idea.
"Charming," he grunted.
Wilkie
could see the enemy line's towers, already erected and
their tops crowded with fighting men. Even as he watched he saw baskets of
stones being whipped up to provide ammunition. He swallowed.
"Perhaps," he said in a careless
jesting way. "Maybe it might be a good idea if I found a helmet, or a coat
of mail?" Polak looked at him. "A leather
jerkin?"
Polak grunted.
"Well, let me borrow your miner's
helmet, then, Polak. Since you're wearing that thing."
An abrupt and extraordinarily loud thwunk
interrupted him. He jumped as though goosed. In the Jhick wooden bulwark before
him the head of a ballista bolt showed a leering black metal grin through the
yellow splintered wood.
"What
the-!"
"They have begun
shooting," shouted Chamock.
Now
the air filled with bolts. Men screamed and died as the flying chunks of iron
bit. Splinters of wood flew. A raucous order, shrilled above the noise, brought
all the gynours of the ship to the ready.
Then
the ballistae twanged with a singing reverbatory thwunking and the return
flight of bolts winged toward the enemy line.
Wilkie jumped up and danced
with glee.
"That hit 'em! They
didn't like that!"
"Here comes the next
broadside!"
At
that moment of involvement an Erineld skipped up to them. The squat brown man's
face showed stark fear.
"The
Contessa says you must come indoors at once! At once!" he squeaked.
"Do you hear? Come indoors!"
"My
oath!" roared Polak. "Now? When we're going
to have the father and mother of a fight?"
"By
Black Naspurgo!" rasped Charnock. "We must go-but—the fight—the
ships—"
"You
know," said the diplomatic J. T. Wilkie as the second broadside thwunked
and clanged about their ears, "it might be a good idea, at that, to get
under cover."
They
scampered on the heels of the Erineld up the deck and into the sterncastle. The
Contessa met them in a foul temper.
"You incredible morons! You insufferable
cretins!" She put a hand to her breast, the fist hard and clenched
in anger. "Did I bring you, J. T. Wilkie, all the way from certain death
underground to be killed in a stupid brawl on the ships of Durostorum? You imbecile!"
"Here, Contessa,"
bumbled J. T. weakly. "Steady on!"
"It
is the Corforan who fight us, Contessa," said Charnock, his evil swarthy
face alive. "We must—"
"You
must do nothing that I do not tell you to dol I know you are of Durostorum,
Charnock, even if you are not of these ships' peoples—but you must never forget
that you are one of my bargemen, a high officer of my bargemen! If you do
forget—" She did not finish that, but she smiled very sweetly.
Chamock lost all his swagger, his live
eagerness for battle. He shrank. His swarthy face grayed.
"Yes, Contessa,"
he mumbled. "I do not forget."
"Soloman
can get us out of this. We approach a Portal that will take us through to
Myxotic. It is an unpleasant place, but we can pass through there and put
ourselves well on the way to Irunium. Ah, how I long to be back in my own sweet
Dimension again!"
"Yes, Contessa,"
nodded Chamock, completely cowed.
"Hold
on a minute," rapped Polak, following the, to him, one-sided conversation.
"Are we running out and leaving the fight? Leaving these guys to fight
those fellows out there? They're outnumbered here, you know—ten to eight.
And—"
She
rounded on him, drawing herself up, her breasts
straining the sheer white fall of her robe. She glared levelly at him,
browbeating him into silence by sheer personality.
"What
you do, Polak, is your concern. But Soloman here is the only Porteur for a
hundred miles—a thousand miles —for all of Durostorum, for all I know. And I do
know! li you stay here, here you will always stay. I want J. T.—
not you."
"Here,
now," said Wilkie, alarmed. "Come on, Polak. It's not our fight. We'd
better stick with the Contessa."
"I don't like running
out on a fight, but—"
"That
is settled, then." She swung back into the cabin, making Soloman slap
around her. "As long as you work for me, Polak, remember that I am mistress
here."
Polak was left scratching
his head.
Inside
the cabin the Erinelds clustered, their squeaking cheeping down to silence as
the Contessa entered. Char-nock, Polak and Wilkie joined them. Soloman began to
stiffen up and to take on that glazed look of complete absorption in otherworld
affairs.
"Make it smooth and quick, little man,
and remember this ship is moving all the time."
He
bobbed his grotesque bald head and then his eyes unfocused and his body
trembled into stillness and the Erinelds began to disappear.
They
vanished fast. Sweat poured down the gigantic domed head. Polak vanished,
followed by Chamock and then Wilkie found himself plummeted into what he took
to be the Calgary Stampede on a fast Saturday night.
Hordes
of hosts and herds of long gray backs humped and wallowed past. He clung to the
remnants of a splintered log hut, gripping into the slivered bark with grasping
fingers, and feeling each savage impact of tusk and horn as a personal blow
aimed at his own personal liver and lights.
Polak
clung next to him, bellowing: "Where the infected hell
are we?"
The
Contessa with the screeching Soloman hanging by his chain inches over the
roaring flood of gray-backed beasts screamed dire warnings and threats. The
Erinelds supporting her on the splintering logs scrabbled for footing. One
slipped and immediately was swept away in the animal flood, a tattered crimson
scrap.
The
log hut lurched. It moved a foot bodily. Now Wilkie could see the wild pig-like
eyes of the monsters flooding beneath. He could make out their tusks and their
bristly whiskers. They ran over an invisible ground hock-deep in upflung dust.
The noise sounded like the downtown subway
through an open door.
They
clung on. Even J. T. could see that there was no way back. If Soloman put them
back through the Portal they'd materialize five hundred feet up in the air.
They didn't, as it happened, have any parachutes with them.
That,
decided the disgruntled J. T., represented a reprehensible oversight on
someone's part.
Part
of the log hut's wall collapsed to be whirled away as matchwood. The roof had
long since gone. The floor heaved like a bad Channel crossing in midwinter. At
dire peril of his life Charnock crabbed across and helped the squeaking
Erinelds to support the Contessa. Soloman was hauled up, choking, and he clung
like a frizzled monkey to the others. They clung on.
After
two hours of agonized expectation the flood of gray hogbacks dwindled, thinned
and at last ceased.
"Whew," said Polak as the
thunderous noise died.
"You can say that
again," huffed scared J. T.
V
Although he had long since decided to believe that all
that was happening to him was real, J. T. Wilkie gave a long sigh of relief and
renewed exasperation as the helicopters slanted in to a landing. They had left
that inhospitable land of Myxotic and crossed three more strange and eerie
otherworlds through the Dimensions before coming out to a plain of grass where
modem Italian-built helicopters awaited them.
Now,
after a swift but boring flight southward, they were landing in this world of
Ininium on an area that, if Polak's calculations were correct, would directly
correspond in their own Dimension to Manhattan Island.
"Yes,
J. T.," the Contessa said, striding ahead with Solo-man skiprjping along
at her side. "Right where we now are lies New
York. But you could never cross over, though you tried all your life. You have
to be a Porteur or possess a Porvone Portal of Life—" She broke off
sharply as Char-nock reacted. She laughed scornfully. "I know, Chamock, that the Porvone are more to be feared than the
worst tortures mankind can invent, but they are not here now. Brace up,
man!"
Chamock
mumbled a reply. He didn't like the trend of the conversation,
that was for sure.
They
walked toward a long serrated wall, flushed with rose by the dying sun. Towers
and minarets and spires rose in the sunset beyond. Sentries prowled the
ramparts. Wilkie felt his tiredness dragging on him. He had been promised a
bath and food and a bed. Ri^ht now that was all he
wanted. Later, very definitely, he'd get back to the main pursuit. . . .
The small city within its encircling walls
crouched against the grass plain. A river wended past, silent except for an
occasional plash and no ships sailed its current. Within the walls the hush
seemed to Wilkie a strange and indecent thing. Here in these wide squares and
terraced colonnades and broad avenues should be laughter and lights, singing
throngs of merrymakers. Instead, all was quietness and dimness, lit by
occasional lamps as the sun went down.
"You will be shown your quarters, J. T. Polak may share them. He, too, will be
useful to me." She smiled as a small pneumatic-wheeled electric car
circled up. She sat without a trace of fatigue. Soloman put his great head on
her lap and went to sleep at once. "I will order everything you will
need. There will be a selection of girls from which you may choose. But
remember, everything you owe to me—your life, your continued
existence—everything! And now, good night."
And the electric car hummed
away into the dimness.
"Girls?" said
enraptured J. T. Wilkie.
"There's a catch in this
somewhere," rumbled Polak dubiously. He stared around at the silent city,
frowning. "Yeah, but, Polak—she did say girls!"
Polak burst out into a coarse
guffaw. "You know, boy, I hate to admit this to you of all people, but
after what we've been through I'm not too sure—myself—"
"Yeah," said
crestfallen J. T. Wilkie. "Me as well."
Laughing,
drugged with fatigue and released emotions, they staggered off after Chamock.
He led them through vast dim rooms within what seemed to be a palace, although
Wilkie was now too tired to care what it was, until they reached a cozy suite
of rooms overlooking the river. Here he showed them where everything was and
then retired.
As
he went, hé said, "You are an important man in Iru-nium now, J. T. Just
remember that. The Contessa's word is absolute law here. That is even more
important to remember. Good night."
"G'night,"
yawned Wilkie. Then: "Hey! What about the
girls?"
But the door had closed
firmly.
"That
doohickey you've got over your head, J. T., is damn useful. Remind me in the
morning to see about getting one for myself."
"Okay, Polak. It would
be useful."
They
bathed in warm scented water and ate a meal of fruits and soft buttered bread
and drank some more of the fiery wine. Then, scarcely able to keep his eyes
open, Wilkie said, "Even if the Folies Bergères pranced in here in the
altogether I think I'd roll over and sleep. G'night, Polak."
"Well, J. T. We're in Irunium.
Now," said Polak as he lay down on the other bed. "I wonder what the
Contessa wants you for, boy? Hey?"
But J. T. Wilkie could not speculate on that
fascinating topic for he was fast asleep, his mouth open and his arms outflung,
dead to the world. Dead to all the worlds.
The
following morning, after a shower in the superbly equipped modem bathroom and a
meal served by a silent lad clad in a gray tunic, a meal of crisp bread and
golden butter, of lavish helpings of eggs and ham, of toast and marmalade and
coffee, they were escorted by Chamock, spruce and crisp in new blues, down to
the private audience chamber.
Chamock
now wore a scarlet cocked hat. It suited him. Its arrogant feather sprouted
insolently.
They
passed other men clad as he was in the halls; but none wore the scarlet cocked
hat. They wore scarlet kerchiefs tied around their heads and from their pointed
ears swung golden bells.
"The
Contessa's bargemen," Chamock said. "Of whom I have the honor to be a captain."
"Bully for you, Chamock," said J.
T. Wilkie.
"When
do I get one of those translator things?" grumbled Polak.
Wilkie passed on the request.
"Well,"
said Chamock doubtfully, "I don't know about that. The Contessa has given
no orders. ..."
Polak
kept tugging at the collar of his new gray shirt. They had donned the garments
left in their room because their own pit-soiled remnants had been taken away.
Now they both wore gray shirts and slacks, and hideous two-tone shoes with
pointed tips. Their underclothes of nylon bore the mark of a well-known U.S.
mass manufacturer but were comfortable.
Wilkie said, "We'll see about the
translator thing when we see the Contessa, Polak."
Through halls and corridors and up long
staircases they were led. They passed a number of men dressed in fawn shirts
and slacks, and wearing the ghastly two-tone shoes, and Wilkie did not fail to
notice the heavy automatics belted to their waists.
Also they passed numbers of men and women
wearing gray tunics or shirts and briefs. These people did not wear guns. They
wore sandals instead of shoes. They looked quiet, withdrawn, and they always
stood out of the way as Chamock passed, with a swift genuflection.
Wilkie
wasn't too sure of that arrangement, not just yet. The conference room into
which Chamock led them might have been an electronically-organized operations
room of some multi-billion dollar corporation's headquarters in New York. They
sat in comfortable chairs indicated by a withered gray-haired man wearing a
modish business suit. The boardroom's table shone with so much polish Wilkie
had to avert his eyes. Electronically-programmed diagrams gleamed on the walls,
a telephone complex stood in one corner and a teletype frame chattered beside it. Beside that, Wilkie could only
conceive it, stood a Stock Exchange ticker—ticking.
"Shades of Thomas Alva
Edison!" he said on a breath.
The
men in the room, wearing fawn shirts and slacks and with automatics belted to
their waists, rose as a far door opened and the
Contessa walked in. As before, she wore a sheer white gown, her dark hair
high-coifed and sprinkled with jewels, and Soloman capered at her side.
"You
may sit down," she said, after she had seated herself at the head of the
table.
Acute
J. T. Wilkie could not fail to observe the unease of these men, their sweaty
foreheads, the way they touched their mouths. The Contessa sat serenely and
surveyed them.
"Gentlemen—this
is J. T. Wilkie. He is our new Chief Mining Engineer." She gestured.
"The other one will also be useful. He is called Polak. He is J. T.'s
friend."
"Yes, Contessa,"
the sigh soughed round the table.
"J. T.—these are representatives of the
Valcini—they are of this Dimension and they obey me. Your duties will be direct
and simple. You will run my mines for me and, more particularly, you will
instigate an accident-prevention program, and you will prospect for new
diggings."
"Now just a
minute—"
"What about my
translator, J. T.?"
"Hold
on, Polak. They want me to run their mines for them!"
Polak chuckled. "What's the ore?"
The Contessa, whose face had shown increasing
ire at Polak's interruptions, softened. The Valcini cringed. "Brak—find
Polak a translator band!"
The
withered man in the business suit rose from the notes he had been taking and
went out, to return a moment later with a band for Polak.
"These bands are the latest models, a
vast improvement on the old eight stud and lever types. We get them from
Altinum. As to the ore, Polak—we mine for gems!"
As she spoke her whole face changed
expression. An entranced inward look of complete absorption with a topic that
obsessed her transfigured her face. Her violet eyes widened and then the soft
rounded lids half-closed with a look of intoxicated pleasure.
"For
jewels," she whispered. "Here in Irunium we mine for the most
wonderful gems in all the Dimensions!"
"I'm—ah—more used to
coal—" began honest J. T. Wilkie.
"Coal,
iron, diamonds, opals—what difference is it to an engineer? When I discovered
that your Old Smokey mine was the nearest to a Portal I had the engineers there
checked out. You were the one that best fitted, J. T."
"You mean you chose me?" squeaked ƒ. T.
"Of course." She brushed away his babbled incoherencies. "Now, ƒ. T., I have to
use labor that is unsatisfactory. We are given malcontents from other
Dimensions' governments, runaways, criminals of the
worst kind. Also we employ indentured labor—the Erinelds are our best pitmen—and
our use of machinery is minimal. You will change all that"
"But I've a
contract—"
"Any
contract you entered into on Earth is invalidated by your death. For, J. T.,
and mark me well, you would now be dead but for me. You owe me your life. I
offer you an opportunity such as few young men can ever have dreamed of. Here
you have everything! Money—it is yours. Power—you have that as my Chief
Engineer. Leisure—the nights here are wonderful with fiestas and parties and
languorous loving—we have a fine amphitheater—there is the river—oh, yes, J.
T. What I offer you can seldom have been offered to a man of Earth
before!"
A
fat Valcini with a sweaty face and mottled hands nodded. He ventured to say:
"You can imagine all the delights of your Dimension's Imperial Rome,
Arabian Nights, Forbidden City, Hollywood and the Restoration Court all rolled
into one and multiplied by a thousand."
"And,
my dear Ottorino, that would not convey a tithe of the
sheer hedonistic pleasure available in my Dimension!"
Ottorino cringed. "Assuredly, Contessa."
Polak's
face relaxed and his eyes uncrossed. "Sounds a big deal, J. T.," he
whispered. "You ought to cut yourself a slice of this!"
"J. T.!" The Contessa's voice
rapped over Polak's breathy rumble. "I have imperfect servants and they
are not to be trusted—even my beloved Valcini know that the miners we employ
hate us, in spite of all we do for them. So you must help me make my mines
produce more for me."
J. T. Wilkie, for all his youthful eagerness,
felt he was being swept up in a current of events and spilled along, head over
heels. Did he want to be this enigmatic woman's Chief Engineer?
"My
main concern here is diamonds. I do not, as yet, control all of Irunium—but I
will, I willl Here a quirk of past geologic evolution has resulted in a
fantastic pipe of diamonds being turned almost through ninety degrees, so that
it runs almost horizontal—"
"Geezel"
exclaimed Wilkie. "That sounds terrific!"
"It
is, my impetuous young engineer! We have been working
it for a long time and the work goes on—by hand. I feel that machinery can be
brought in with advantage. That is where you come in."
"Ah—yes. . . ."
"You
will also see to the accident-prevention program. After that, we know there are
opals out in the desert, and many other precious gem stones. All this work is
worth doing, J. T. It is a noble work! For it brings
me—us—wealth and power beyond the dreams of ordinary mortals."
She
checked. Her bosom rose and fell with a rapidity observant J. T. associated
with extreme passion. This woman, clearly, was obsessed not just with gems but
with the power such jewels would bring her.
She
went on in a firmer and more clipped tone: "Ot-torino, since you are so concerned
over our new Chief Engineer you may take him on a tour of my city of diamonds.
But, and mark me well, do not take him down the mines yet. You understand,
Ottorino?"
He bobbed his head. "I understand,
Contessa."
She
rose and everyone jumped up rapidly. With a tinkle of Soloman's glittery chain
she left the room.
That seemed to be that, then. J. T. Wilkie
was hired.
Outside
in the sunshine on the broad marble steps, Char-nock excused himself and took
off for the bargemen's quarters. Still Wilkie hadn't asked him what the
Contessa's barges were. Ottorino, puffing under his corpulent weight, started
them off down the main street leading to the central square. The architecture
reminded Wilkie vaguely of a chaotic jumble of Egyptian and Assyrian buildings
with their heavy columns and leafy capitals, their brilliant earth-coloring and
ornate gildings. Many statues of impossible chimeras stood among other statues
to which Wilkie could not give any name.
A long low building with
the almost universal flat roof set back from the pavement attracted Ottorino's
first remarks.
"That is the Academy of Porteuring
Science—" "The what?"
Removed
from the Contessa's blighting power of persona-reduction, Ottorino regained
some of his habitual command. He must be a big man among the Valcini to be in
the Contessa's councils, at that, Wilkie surmised.
"Soloman,
the little mannikin, is a Porteur. He has the power to bring objects and people
through the Dimensions. Many people have this power latent within them, unknown
to them. Here, in the Porteur Academy, the Contessa trains and perfects chosen Porteurs in their Siegler-given talent. We
trade all across the Dimensions."
Polak
whistled. "We could be onto a gold mine here, boy-"
"A diamond mine, I think the Contessa
said.
"And
here is the hospital." Ottorino led them up the curving drive lined with
shrubs toward the tall white buildings flashing a myriad windows at the day,
"You have a lot of sickness here,
then?"
Ottorino
spread his spotted hands. "No. But the Contessa is a stickler for the
done thing. Any culture must have a modern hospital—it is necessary—and so we
have this great and wonderful building." He stopped speaking, put his hand
to his mouth and glanced around quickly.
"Don't
worry about that, pal," said Polak grandly. "We have the same trouble
back home. Millions spent on hospitals to cure people who wouldn't get sick if
the cash had been spent on them first."
"If,"
fumed good old J. T. Wilkie, "you bring politics into this dream world
we've found, Polak, I'll—I'll divorce you I"
"Huh!"
scoffed the big pitman, a great smile disfiguring his face. "Dream world,
is it?"
In the hospital they saw sterilely-clean
wards with nurses in starched uniforms, medics with equipment at the ready, the
latest surgical appliances laid out, and one elderly Valcini in an end bed
suffering from varicose veins.
"It's
an impressive place," said Wilkie. "Should be
useful if there's an epidemic, or a war."
As
he spoke an end door swung open and two creatures strode in. J. T. Wilkie
jumped straight up in the air and lit running. He hared up the end of the ward,
found the door shut, climbed up on a bed and prepared to defend himself. Polak wasn't far behind.
"What's the matter?" shouted
Ottorino.
Wilkie couldn't speak.
"Th-theml" rumbled Polak, his face
gray.
Ottorino turned, puzzled.
"The Honshi? Haven't you met them yet?"
Both Earthmen dumbly shook their heads.
They
are loyal soldiers for the Contessa. They come from another Dimension. Now,
please, come down off that bedl"
The
Honshi hissed. Wilkie got the idea they were laughing. The sound pulsed
obscenely in the sterile ward. He stared at the Honshi.
He saw their wide frog-like faces, the
wedge-shaped cheeks of gray and yellow with a lick of blue around the ehops,
bent strutting legs, reddish metal armor and tall conical helmets with the
scraps of skin and hair fleering from the spikes. He saw all this and sensed
the ferocity in those five-foot-six-inch frames and he swallowed. He wouldn't
tangle with a Honshi, or with one of their short leaf-shaped swords.
Reluctantly, Wilkie and Polak climbed down
off the bed.
The
door opened again and two gray-clad men came in carrying between them a man who
lolled his head, lank black hair damply dripping, whose only clothing, a loincloth,
showed dabs and splotches of the blood that matted his naked back. That back
looked to be all bloody pulped flesh with no shred of skin remaining.
A
Honshi guard pointed to a bed and the two gray-clad men carefully put the
unconscious man face-down.
"What-?" began Wilkie.
Ottorino
held up a hand. "A most unfortunate accident in the
mine. This poor fellow had a diamond roof fall on him. You can see his
back has been lacerated. But we will look after him."
"He looks—" Wilkie started to say,
but Polak chopped him off.
"His back looks like he's been
flogged!" Ottorino nodded seriously.
"A very good description, Polak. Indeed it does. Now you can see why it is so
important for J. T. to institute proper safety precautions and avoid terrible
accidents like this. We go out this way."
Still perturbed by the incident, Wilkie
followed Ottorino and Polak out the door. As he went the Honshi guards closed
up on the two gray-clad men.
"Hoshool
Hoshool" said the Honshi and the men cowered back and then, obediently, ran
off.
The door slammed.
The fresh air smelled good
to Wilkie.
VI
"We look after the welfare of our workers with the
utmost concern," said Ottorino, leading them along the main street toward
a strange rambling building of many thick columns and rounded domes. "And
they repay us with hostility and hatred and suspicion."
"Most
workers don't like the bosses," said Polak laconically.
They
went up the marble steps, each one a good hundred yards wide. There were a
hundred of them. By about halfway Ottorino paused for a
breath, panting, his face turning an interesting green hue. Many Valcini
passed them going up and down. None of the gray-clad menials was to be seen and
no Honshi guards stalked. Wilkie had seen a couple more since that horrendous
encounter in the hospital and he still hadn't got over that initial shock of
revulsion.
"What
is this place, anyway?" asked Polak. Ottorino gulped a few times and then
stoked enough air to answer.
"This
is the Temple of Siegler. We now stand on one of the most sacred spots of
Irunium—to a Valcini."
"Oh,"
said Polak, losing interest at once. "I thought it might be a bar."
Lack
of air alone slowed down the Valcini's indignant reply. J. T. Wilkie, good old
tactful J. T., said, "I guess that's an interesting place, all right. I'm
not one for fancy religions myself, much. But they sure come in handy at the
right times—or, more likely, the wrong times."
Polak
had the message by now. "Yeah, sure," he said, growling, and
beginning to mount the stairs again.
The building's many domes floated on a host
of thick and stalwart pillars. Lavish color and jewels and gilding glinted and
glittered everywhere. Here, too, stood men on guard who, while manifestly
Valcini, were clad in outlandish brightly-colored armor. Wilkie was reminded
of ancient Japanese armor he had seen in museums. But each man cradled a heavy
automatic rifle. There was no mistaking those weapons.
"We guard our
own," Ottorino said complacently.
Not
allowed by Valcini regional custom and religious law to enter the temple, they
kicked their heels while Ottorino ducked in for whatever obscure rites were
performed here. When he came out he looked more down in the mouth than ever.
Wilkie nudged Polak, and the two Earth-men refrained
from comment.
Still,
Polak couldn't help saying, "Religion sure gives a guy a thirst,
Ottorino."
"It
will soon be time for lunch." Ottorino stumped down the stairs. "We
ought to have time for a quick one first"
"That's my boy,"
rumbled Polak approvingly.
Ottorino
cheered up when they reached the main avenue again. All he said was: "A
girl Porteur vanished from the Academy some time ago. We have been unable to
find her. Yet she must be in the city of diamonds somewhere. We have an
intelligence system operating from the temple; they could tell me
nothing." He sighed. "And I must report failure to the Contessa."
"It
seems to me," said astute J. T. Wilkie, "if a girl
can Porteur through the Dimensions you'd never stop her if she wanted to
take off. I mean— Hell! She's only got to go up to a Gate and—bingo—she's
gone!"
Ottorino
spread his spotty hands. "No, J. T. It doesn't work quite like that. As
far as we know all the Gates within the city and for a long distance around are
known. No one could reach those Gates—which are Honshi-guarded —without
discovery."
"Um. Well, there must be a Gate you haven't found."
Ottorino
looked unhappy. "Yes. That must be it—I am very sorry to say."
Shrewdly,
Polak said, "What did the dame want to take off for, anyway, if they're
all so happy here?"
"I
told you." Ottorino spoke more purposefully. "Many of our workers are
scum, criminals, disaffected. They refuse to labor for what they receive—we
have to feed and clothe and support them—and they steal from us and run away.
They laugh and scorn our attempts at friendship. Charity is a dirty word.
Laziness and dispirit combine to make them lazzaroni of the Dimensions. They
hate us—they hate us diabolically."
"Maybe
they figure they're not getting a square deal," put in Polak.
"It's
not that. There are certain persons who are continually attempting to destroy
us. From other Dimensions." He glanced at the two
Earthmen. "From your Dimension. People who envy our wealth and power and our lives here. Who
want to take it all for themselves. Already they have
fomented a rebellion over in the Big Green among imported workers, and—"
"Big
Green?"
"The Cabbage Patch. We had mines beside a vast tropical forest. Now we do not own them,
although we have taken steps to deprive their products to those cowardly Dargan
who took them from us. The man who leads this vile conspiracy against us—and against
the Contessa—is one David Macklin. He—"
"Oh,"
said Wilkie. "The Contessa said he'd give his soul for a map she
has."
Ottorino
snorted. "The devil Macklin has no soul. He and his cohorts seek to
destroy us. Any trouble we have always originates with them."
Looking
at his comrade, J. T. saw that Polak had made up his mind. Never one to believe
anything he read in the newspapers, Polak, a strong union man, had reached his
decision.
"Some
guys are never satisfied," he growled. "I've seen 'em—fouling up things
for everyone else just for their own selfish ends. Scum—you're right, Ottorino.
Still—J. T. and me, we know how to make diat sort of trash work. Hey, J. T.?"
"Uh, sure, Polak. But I'm just an engineer, remember."
"You
make the plans, J. T., and I'll put 'em into execution. We'll win the
Contessa's diamonds for her!"
Ottorino looked relieved. They were walking
now toward a smart-looking building of verandas whose windows flashed in the
sun.
"This restaurant is a favorite of mine.
We can have that drink, Polak, and then we'll eat." He nodded to the pavement,
composed of extraordinarily large slabs of stone. "All below here is
honeycombed with the old workings, before they hit on the present pipe."
Wilkie began to get an inkling of the history
of these people as they went into the restaurant and found a table. The very
mundaneness of this midday meal surprised him. He had expected exotic
trimmings. And yet—why? For a working midday meal you
needed a table, a chair, eating irons—and grub.
Polak
drank beer he swore was as fine as any that had ever come out of Pittsburgh.
The feeling of being pushed about, of being hustled, left
Wilkie as he digested a leisurely meal of steak and onions-
very terrestrial fare—with all the trimmings and with a
couple of cups of coffee to follow the blueberry pie. He
ate with an appetite. Polak had made up his mind to
throw in his lot with these people of another world, and
J. T. Wilkie decided to do the same. His mining knowl-
edge, so dearly bought, was going to pay off big. But
big! He sweated a little as he thought of what this could
mean. ~
The
strangeness of the place, the repulsiveness of the Honshi guards, the eerie appearance of some of the people he saw, all
combined, could not detract from that shining dollar-filled harvest he saw
ahead of him. He would fly high on the proceeds of his stint in Irunium.
That
afternoon they saw more of the city including the factory area and the
amphitheater—an otherworld Colosseum—where, Ottorino said with a snigger,
sometimes a small part of the Big Green could be let loose. A small part, he said, with another knowing giggle.
Polak just laughed and said
he'd like to see that.
A
great fiesta was planned for the evening and night, and Wilkie just had time to
stop Polak from asking if it was in their honor. He had to acknowledge to
himself that he'd stopped the big man in case the answer was
"No!"—and that was an answer he did not want to hear.
"They
certainly know how to enjoy themselves, these Valcini!" enthused Polak
that night as the torches flamed over flowing fountains of wine, over the nude
gilded bodies of dancing girls, over piled platters of delicacies culled from a
hundred different Dimensions. The night rang with laughter and song. Music
filled the streets and squares. Lounging crowds of Valcini, their sober fawn
shirts and slacks discarded now in favor of a bewildering variety of exotic
costumes, rioted through the streets in a blaze of color and enthusiasm that
grew ever wilder as the night progressed.
Polalc took off after a sprite wearing
nothing, and Wilkie, incensed, chased after them, looking for the sprite's
sister. Gaily-painted women jostled among the throngs. Most of these women wore
masks of grotesque and concealing intricacy. These were the Valcini women.
Their paints made of them leaping flames of desire. No wonder, decided Wilkie,
Polak had made his decision to stay—the big man had always had a good nose for
dames.
A
group of vivid Valcini clustered at the entrance to a narrow alley leading off
from the amphitheater road. Tonight, everyone had been told in a tannoy
announcement, there would be no games in the amphitheater. Groans and catcalls
had followed this, to be immediately swallowed up in more riotous fun. Now
Wilkie ran on to join the laughing cheering throng.
"Go onl" the
Valcini were yelling.
"That's
the idea!" And: "Keep it up!" And: "You can do it!"
And, other, less savory catcalls.
Wilkie
looked. He blinked. After one horrified instant when he thought the man was
Polak, he wrenched himself around and ran off. That, for sure, wasn't for him.
For
some reason at the next intersection the lamps that brilliantly illuminated the
rest of the city of diamonds were dark. Shadows engulfed him. He halted.
He
thought Polak and the girl had gone this way, but now there was no reason to
follow. He must find another girl. For himself.
About to turn back, he was arrested by a
strange slithering scraping, a clinking rattle that baffled him.
He looked into the shadows.
Out
from the shadows into the remnants of light crept a Honshi. His helmet was
gone. Blood trailed along the flags of the paving. The Honshi was trying to
hold his lower abdomen and at the same time to propel himself. His wide-eyed
frog's face looked gray, glazed, dry like bark.
"Hoshoo!" he
wheezed in a croaking guttural.
J.
T. Wilkie killed his first instinctive response. Instead, he jumped forward to
the creature's assistance.
Three
more Honshi ran back into the light. They looked fierce, mean, their swords wet
with blood.
Two Valcini, not in fiesta clothes but clad
in the ubiquitous fawn, followed. Their automatics fired with flat cracks back
into that slot of darkness down by the amphitheater. Shrieks and screams ripped
the night down there.
"What's going on?" yelled Wilkie.
He
saw that the wounded Honshi wouldn't last long. A barbed spear protruded
through his back, the haft snapped off and dragging on the .pavement. Blood
fouled Wilkie's hands nauseatingly. That blood smoked a green ichor in the
lights.
"The
scum have broken out!" yelled a Valcini. His dark face showed swarthy and
vicious in the erratic lighting.
"They're
trying to get out this way," shouted the other Valcini. He brushed a
blooded hand across a bloodied forehead. "But we've got reinforcements
coming."
"What
about Polak?" screamed Wilkie, frenzied.
"Did you see my pal—a big fellow, black hair, laughing—he was chasing a
girl—?"
"No sign of him."
The
Valcini reloaded. They seemed comforted by the lights, even though a barbed
spear flew wickedly to clang into the paving between them. A file of Honshi
trotted up, carrying wicker shields covered in leather, long spears low and
leveled. They began to advance into the darkness. An electric truck whined up
and a portable searchlight burst into lurid life, plunged a dagger of radiance
down the alley.
In
that light Wilkie saw the crowd of ragged men and women screaming and dancing
abuse, hurling spears that fell short. Some of them wore Honshi helmets, the
scraps of withered skin and hair swirling giddily.
The
Honshi line advanced at a trot, shushing their weird: "Hoshoo! Hoshoo!"
Wilkie
understood, now, why the Honshi were not issued with firearms.
More
Valcini arrived, some still in fancy costumes, began to advance in rear of the
Honshi. Ottorino was there. He thrust an atuomatic rifle into Wilkie's
unwilling hands.
"Go
on, take it, J. T.! They are killers in there, mad dogs who slaver for our
vitals!"
Poetic,
foul, unjust—but true. Wilkie took the rifle. He knew how to use it, all right.
The
fight lasted a lot longer than Wilkie might have expected. Those ragged men and
women up there fought like demons, hurling themselves at the Honshi like Hons
flinging themselves at Assyrian chariots.
Gunfire
stabbed the night. Like a grotesque parody of a Goya, the Honshi and Valcini
advanced. Some clutched sudden death as spears pierced them. Others screamed as
flung knives tore into exposed faces. But the firearms, the disciplined Honshi
line, could not be overthrown. Steadily, the Valcini and their alien guards
moved down the alley. They moved on. Amid smoke and blood and slaughter they
moved on to clear up this minor and petty revolt sparked off by fiesta.
But J. T. Wilkie did not go
with them.
He stood, graven, above the
bodies on the paving.
The
naked sprite was underneath, her arms outflung, her breasts thick with the
blood that gouted from Polak's broad back. He had tried to shield her. Clearly,
he had fought until he had been beaten down, near senseless. The bodies of
ragged gray-clad men, wolfish of face and lean and hungry of limb, clustered
where Polak had fought. Clearly, he had battled to the last and then, in those
final despairing moments, had sought to shield this unknown girl with his own
broad body just because she was a girl—and Polak always had known how to treat
dames.
J. T. Wilkie just stood there.
Bereft, desolated, stricken J. T. Wilkie
stood above the mangled body of his comrade. Polak . . . Polak.
VII
Polak had been pubicked.
J. T. Wilkie did not remember very much of
the events following that awful discovery in the blood-choked alley.
Vaguely
he was aware of running into the shadows and firing the automatic rifle empty
at distant capering devils. He felt Ottorino's fat fingers on his arm, words
spoken, pressures applied to draw him away from
horror.
As
the new day dawned and the city settled down and the workers were roused out
for the morning shifts, Ot-torino guided Wilkie back to that restaurant of
shining verandas and on the ground floor sat him at a table and ordered strong
black coffee.
"Pubicked," choked Wilkie,
distraught. "Polak—he's dead, and—"
"I
told you the workers were scum, J. T. But we know that some of Macklin's
friends sparked off that revolt last night. It failed. But we did not capture
anyone of importance." Ottorino's fat pig-like face gleamed with sweat.
"Had we done so we might have discovered information."
"I
can understand them hating you Valcini. But I'm just an engineer. Polak—Polak
was an engineer. He didn't mean them any harm. We were going to help
them!"
"Siegler
knows all things, J. T. The machinations of David Macklin, and his henchman,
Alec Macdonald, and others of like kidney—they are the ones who really murdered
your friend Polak."
"But
that worker scum pubicked him! Now I know what those scraps of withered skin
and hair are the Honshi wear on their helmets! Scalps—scalps just aren't in the
same league."
"The
girl too," said Ottorino. "She was one of them, yet she was kind to
one of us, so they killed and pubicked her too."
"On
my world," choked Wilkie, his head still roaring and the dizziness of
horror still fuddling him, "they used to shave the heads of girl
collaborators. And there's a connection for you. Oh, my God! Pubicked!"
"Drink
your coffee." Wilkie drank, tasting the rich bite of a lavish spiking of
brandy. He began to feel the bitterness and the vengeance in him driving out
the sheer numbing horror.
"I'll
make them work!" he said, his hands grasping the cup. His knuckles shone
like skulls. "Ill work 'em! They'll bring up more
diamonds for the Contessa than they've ever seen before!"
^es, J. T."
"And
one step out of line, just one, and 111 set
the Honshi on 'em. I won't forget!"
Charnock
dropped by for coffee and a bracer. His swarthy face looked parched and he was
near exhaustion.
"I've
been up all night too. We've found out a little more. A bunch of Dargan came
across the sea of grass from the Big Green. They—"
"Them!"
exploded Ottorino as the girl brought Charnock's coffee. "I remember
them!"
"They have to come
far?" asked Wilkie, thinking.
"In your Dimension, J. T., the Big Green
is about where Rome is—Rome in Italy, that is."
Charnock
went on: "They were led by the hunter they call Todor Dalreay of Dargai—a
very dangerous man. He is working for David Macklin now, of course."
"I'll
have no mercy on any of them," said J. T.
Willde out of his anguish and misery.
A
golden blast of trumpets attracted everyone's attention. Chairs scraped back as
men and women of the Valcini crowded out of the door. Ottorino smiled.
"The
Contessa is taking her morning constitutional. It is quite an occasion for
those who do not come into such close contact with her as I—or, us, I should
say, J. T."
Charnock
went out the door, evidently expecting the other two to follow him. Ottorino
stood up and Wilkie, with a quick sipping motion, finished the last of his
spiked coffee. Ottorino bent down to him.
"It
will be of particular importance this morning. By her presence she will restore
confidence."
Wilkie
half rose to stand up and, bent over, his eye caught the serving girl who had
brought the coffee. She clearly imagined everyone in the restaurant's lower
floor to have crowded to the door. She wore the usual gray tunic with more of
an air than most of those he had seen, and a bright scarlet flower nestled
behind her ear. She was speaking quickly and savagely, frightened, not looking
into the restaurant where she must have seen Wilkie looking at her, but toward
a large wooden cupboard against the wall to the side of the serving counter.
"Now!"
she said in that intent, savagely frightened voice. "The bitch is on her
street-walking stunt again!"
Ottorino reacted.
He
snapped erect. He moved forward arrogantly, his face stiff with hatred.
He
grabbed the startled girl around and dragged her by her shoulder, forcing her
down, so that she stared in appalled fear up at him. Wilkie caught a glimpse
of shining brown hair, a pleasant round face with a snub nose very saucily
upturned, and hazel eyes that darkened now in shocked surprise and horror. The
girl's face drained of blood. She stared at Ottorino sickly.
"Now, my girl! You'd better explain yourself, and quickly!"
Wilkie stepped after Ottorino around the end
of the counter. He experienced a chaotic mix of emotions; knowing that he
should feel sorry for the girl he yet could feel only the thick hatred for her
kind pulsing in him.
"So
you're another one of the scum, the disaffected," snapped Ottorino with
purposeful power. "We shall root you all out, very soon."
He stopped speaking.
The
cupboard door had opened without a sound and a young man stepped out. The young
man's rather sharply pointed nose, thin face and narrow mouth did not repel
Wilkie as he might have expected, and this was perhaps because of the haze of
freckles across nose and cheeks that lent him an open boyish air.
The
girl said, "It's time, Tony—and it's down there! I'm sure of it!
Tony!"
For
the young man had pointed a small revolver at Ottorino. The gun shook.
Tony
said roughly, "Shut your mouth, scum! I'll blow
your guts out for two pins! Get in behind the counter—and move fast!"
A trapdoor
had been flung up in the floor to the rear of the counter and a ladder revealed
itself. Tony pointed down.
The
girl said, "Get down, vermin! You should have gone out like the rest of
the customers! Now you're likely to get killed."
Because there seemed nothing else to do
Ottorino and Wilkie climbed down the ladder. The gun in Tony's thin and nervous
fist menaced them all the time.
The
cellar contained the usual racks and bottles of a restaurant cellarage. In the wall a dark opening
showed.
"Through there, and step lively!" The gun jerked the command. "Val,
where's the flashlight?"
The girl shone it down the
passageway.
For
a man at the wrong end of a gun, Ottorini, it seemed to Wilkie, acted with
consummate ease and calm. He glared at Tony. "I should like to tell
you—" Ottorino began.
Tony
shouted excitedly: "Shut up! We know your sort. Valcini! Vermin! Get
through there or I'll shoot you here and now and chance—" He cut himself
off.
Ottorino
glanced at Wilkie and ducked his head to enter the tunnel, saying:
"Another revolt. It is tiresome. Invariably they will be caught and
punished."
"We
won't be caught this time!" the girl, Val, said in a kind of whining scream of triumph. They all
went through and the flashlight picked out walls of hard-packed earth.
The
covering to the tunnel lay thrown to one side, its outer face an exact match
for the wall of the cellar.
"Old
tunnels, left over from the days when the mines were near the surface here, as
I told you, J. T." Ottorino still carried his poise. Wilkie sweated.
"These poor deluded scum never learn."
"Shut
your mouth, Valcini, or I'll shut it for youl" blustered Tony.
Wilkie
began to wonder just how effective a threat that small revolver was. It shook
wildly in Tony's thin hand. He guessed he hadn't fired yet because they were
too near the restaurant and a shot would bring instant attention. Ottorino had
made no attempt to unbuckle the flap of his holster. The further they went
along the tunnel the greater their danger, then.
Tony said, "Is it near, Val?"
"It
took me a long time to find. Just—" Now it was the girl's turn to revert
to that fear-filled manner she had shown when first she had attracted Wilkie's
attention. She looked uncertain, frightened, small and lonely. She shut her
eyes. A feeling of strain emanated from her. She flicked her eyes open.
"Ahead. You gave the message to Gait, Tony? He will be waiting? For they'll be after us soon."
Ottorino swore. "What is this? A Porteur? Here?"
Now,
clearly, Wilkie saw the fear in the Valcini. The calm air vanished. Ottorino
began to sweat again.
"I
realize—this must be the girl Porteur who escapedl What the Contessa will
say—"
Tony
interrupted with vicious satisfaction. "To hell with the
Contessa! All the time Val was working as a slave for you! Working in different places looking for a Portal. And she
found the scent of one, right here, in the old mine
tunnels."
"That's not possible!"
"Oh,
yes, Valcini—to your eternal damnation and the glory of Arlan!"
Light
from a source ahead showed them to Wilkie. He realized he and Ottorino had
stumbled headlong into the middle of a carefully-laid escape plan. The man and
girl wearing the gray—slaves, they'd said?—had waited for the ritual of the
Contessa's morning airing to take attention away from them. Now they stumbled
along to join the rest waiting for them. Tony had come to bring Val, the
Porteur, and now—
And now here they were, eighteen or twenty
men and women crammed into a square room beneath the ground into which six old
mine tunnel mouths opened. Lights glowed down. Tony and Val ran in, pushing
Ottorino and Wilkie ahead. Tony waved his pistol, excited, his face working
with his hatred of the Valcini, his pent-up emotions blazing.
"Val
thinks it's here, right enough!" he shouted. The
people fell silent. Their filthy faces peered with blind animosity.
"These two Valcini must be dealt with."
"Hold
on!" interrupted Wilkie violently. "I'm not a Valcini! I'm just an
engineer—"
Wilkie
felt the fear in this cramped room. This bunch of people in their drab gray
tunics looked as though they would kill without remorse. They carried bags and
satchels and blankets, many hefted swords and spears, and at least six carried
rifles. They looked as though they intended to go on an expedition.
Val
shouted in triumph. She pointed down a narrow mine shaft that looked abandoned
and crumbling. A rope hung down into the darkness.
"Down
there," a dark-faced, haggard man with a wild shock of black hair said
with savage satisfaction. "Our way into another world!
Our escape, away from all this!"
He
spoke to a young, wild-looking man with a mop of tow hair and the look of a
chained beast.
One
by one the men and women slid down the rope into the shaft. Many carried lights
and these flashed up and sent eerie shadows skittering. Val perched at the lip
of the shaft and stared hypnotically down. A concentration of power coalesced
in her face; all the immaturity, all the round cheerfulness, all the saucy
piquancy had been banished as though her features had held no other than this
taut intent gaze of absolute concentration.
The
lights slithering down the shaft spurted one after the other, died. It was like
throwing lighted matches into a pool. Ottorino was frenzied with fear now, his
eyes alive and furtive like a weasel's. Tony kept the wavering gun pointed
between the Valcini and Wilkie.
"We're
getting away from this accursed place," whispered Tony. "The
Valcini, the Honshi, all the vermin! We're getting away through a Gate into a
new, fresh, clean world—a world where we can set up
our own people, get back home, begin a new life!"
A
heavily-bearded man crisped orders. "Nyllee, Carlo, Mina—go on down!"
These workers were vanishing from this
Dimension; through the power of this girl Porteur, Val, they were stepping from
one world to another. J. T. Wilkie began to see that they might not take him
with them, and they might not let him live to tell on them. Ottorino had
reached the same conclusions.
Tony
kept ranting on about the fresh clean start they would make in the new world,
but Wilkie scarcely heeded him. The thought occurred to him that if Ottorino
tried to draw his gun Tony might shoot at the Valcini and give Wilkie a chance
to knock the revolver away. A slender chance; he could see nothing else.
The
girl the black-bearded man had called Nyllee, a strong, red-haired,
doughy-faced chunk of animal dynamism, mentioned something about a frog's
bowels and jumped recklessly down the shaft.
"Tony!"
shouted Val, her concentration held like a Christmas tree bauble on Twelfth
Night.
Ottorino
threw up his hands, screaming. J. T. Wilkie, heroic J. T. Wilkie, took a
headlong dive for the far corner of the room. He rolled over and hit into the
wall all asprawl. In a distorted vision he saw Tony leap down the shaft.
Ottorino began to fumble with his holster. Val flung him a single look, a cold,
hard, hating, remembering, look— and jumped.
Ottorino
snatched his automatic out. He lumbered to the shaft, fired down, emptying the
magazine. For all the good that would do, even Wilkie knew, he might as well
have been blowing peas at a steel wall.
In a snarling rush of husky bodies and
glittering steel and brandished weapons a party of Honshi and Valcini erupted
into the subterranean chamber. Chamock in the lead yelled as he saw Ottorino
and Wilkie.
"J. T.! Are you all
right? Ottorino, what-?"
"Scum! They escaped!" Ottorino choked on his own suddenly released fear
and vented anger. "They had a Porteur with them—down the shaft—"
"Get to the college!" rapped
Chamock to a Honshi at his side. "A Porteur—we must have a Porteur down
here at once!"
The Honshi slapped his spear haft,
"Hoshoo'd" and departed at a dead run.
"The
Contessa—" began one of the young Valcini. "Let's get this sorted out
first, before we think of any
more
trouble," grunted Chamock. His fierce swarthy face glowered down the
shaft.
Wilkie
stood up, guessing that the girl, Val, had seen the onrushing Honshi before he
had. A strange, vagrant feeling for her brushed his mind; then he swept it away
with a single burst of hate. It was her sort who had murdered Polak and
pubicked him.
The
Academy of Porteuring Science stood nearby and moments later under the impact
of the escape a Porteur pushed his way down the tunnel. Wilkie took a quick
note of the man's grotesque appearance and then he snatched an automatic rifle
from a startled Valcini, shoved up front. After the first fighting group of
Honshi leaped down the shaft, their goggle eyes staring and apprehensive, to be
snuffed out from this world, J. T. Wilkie shouldered Char-nock aside and
leaped.
He
dropped down the mine shaft and then, with only the faintest of shudders
through his body to denote he had passed from one Dimension to another, he
tumbled on to strike in a blinding smother of whiteness. Cold bit into him. He
could hear a frenzied screaming. He could hear gunfire. Directly before him a
Honshi leaped up, flinging his spear away, to pitch forward and stain the snow
with his green lifeblood.
Wilkie
lost his balance on the snow slope, began to pitch
down toward the howling fugitives below. Their rifles barked at him and their
spears looked cold and hard and sharp in that frozen waste.
VIII
Bullets gouged the snow at his feet. The snow half-blinded
him. He chattered with the unexpected cold. The automatic rifle went skittering
away somewhere. A Honshi fell on him and he writhed away, nauseated, green
ichor staining his gray clothes.
All about him men shouted and fought.
Then Chamock grabbed him.
"It's
no good, J. T." The captain of bargemen gasped. "They're picking us
off—we'll have to go back."
A Valcini, his left arm
dangling, screamed for the Porteur.
"We'll
have to put on warm clothes! We can come back and hunt them down! But, for the
sweet sake of Siegler, get us out of here!"
Valcini
and Honshi began disappearing. Spitting out a mouthful of snow, J. T. Wilkie
staggered upslope. Chamock half-pushed, half-carried him.
"I
doubt if it will be necessary to come back. Those people will freeze to death
in this dimension."
He
sounded grim, purposeful, and—and? Wilkie wondered at the tone of Chamock's
voice.
When
he whipped back into the mine shaft a makeshift basket and rope hauled him back
to the lip. He crawled out, to be followed by Chamock. Wilkie took a deep
breath.
"Thanks, Chamock. You
saved my bacon then."
Chamock's
thin smile held no warmth that Wilkie could discern. "I did my duty. The
Contessa would have been —displeased—had you died. Don't talk about it."
"Ah—yes," said
deflated J. T. Wilkie.
Then,
like an ugly revolver firing to reveal a cigarette lighter, Chamock said,
"Anyway, I like you, J. T. And, remember, I'm not a Valcini. Nor are you."
Not
quite sure how to reply, Wilkie said, "So that's the Porteur."
The Porteur, very obviously, was not a human
being.
That
is, J. T. Wilkie corrected himself, not a human being from Earth or any
Dimension where people like Ter-rans lived. But that he was a human being
possessing intelligence and spirit, that, too, was
obvious. Despite the fact that he looked a simpleton, with a high bullet-shaped
head protruding above a ruff of dark stringy hair like a monk's tonsure, dreamy
eyes and smidgen of a nose and loose, foolishly-smiling mouth, flapping ears
like bam doors and shambling gait, he must possess that special spark of
intelligence reserved for species that come to dominate their environment.
"Gangly?" said Chamock,
off-handedly. "Yeah—at least they sent us a good one."
Hearing
his name, the Porteur rose from the lip of the shaft. All the men and Honshi
who were coming back were back; the others would be left to the snow and the
cold. He advanced with a lopsided smile.
"Chamock? Was it much of a panic, yes?" "But yes," said Chamock,
grimly.
Wilkie
noticed that a small but alert-looking Valcini whose fawn shirt carried red
tabs on the collar and whose pointed automatic did not waver from Gangly's
midriff now relaxed. He coiled up the long glittery chain that depended from a
bracelet around his left wrist. Around Gangly's neck the hard iron band's loop
was snapped open.
The
Valcini noticed Wilkie watching him. He laughed unpleasantly.
"There
wasn't much chance that the Porteur would try to jump down and escape-through
the Gate. But we of the Porteur college have to be
alert. So—" He rattled the chain offensively.
Wilkie
decided he didn't like this one.
Chamock
was speaking more easily now, watching the guards depart.
"Gangly isn't his real name, of course. He comes from—hey, Gangly, just what Dimension do you come from?"
The
Porteur's lopsided smile froze.
"You
call my Dimension Lisifutz—it is a mild and pleasant place."
The
impediment in Gangly's speech must be ironed out by the translator band, Wilkie
guessed. The shambling man from Lisifutz had trouble with dipthongs and
aspirates.
"I was
brought here by the Contessa's men and I learned
of my gift—my gift of catapulting people and things through the
Dimensions." He spoke directly to Wilkie.
For
a moment Wilkie wondered why; then he recognized that he wore a gray shirt and
gray slacks, outstanding among the Valcini fawn. Gangly, too, wore a gray sacklike
garment ending in a ragged kilt, cinctured by a broad leather belt. On his
back, boldly stitched in bright scarlet cloth, a huge pictured eye, open and
glaring, stretched from shoulder to shoulder. J. T. Wilkie sought for the
parallel that sprang to mind from his own world; sought and failed to remember.
"I—er—uh," he said, quite unable to reply in kind.
Gangly
looked disappointed.
Chamock
chuckled. He had regained his own poise. "Those poor devils must all be
frozen meat by now. And, Gangly, don't make a mistake. J. T. here isn't a
worker like you—he's the Contessa's Chief Engineer."
"Oh!"
Gangly looked crushed.
"Get
on, scum!" rapped his guard. Together they went
down the
tunnel, the huge shambling man with the bullet-head and the neat alert little
Valcini.
"That's
a strange one," remarked Charnock. "Come on, J. T. I need a drink. I
think some of that damned cold got into my bones."
"Me, too," said
J. T. Wilkie.
Ottorino,
still clutching his empty automatic, joined them. He had not entered that cold
other Dimension. Now he began to reload, blustering a little.
"They
may not all be frozen, Charnock. I think the Con-tessa will order a full-scale
search party."
"If she does, all right." Chamock led them back into the restaurant,
which had been cleared of customers, and helped himself
to a drink. "That's up to her."
Drinking
a generous whisky, Wilkie said, "I think I'll volunteer to go. I owe those
people something."
"Look,
J. T.," said Charnock patiently. "You've got to forget your pal
Polak. That's over. Like us all, you work for the Contessa. She decides what's
to happen."
"And
your job," added Ottorino pontifically, "is to win diamonds. You are,
anyway for now, the mining expert we need."
So,
for the next few weeks, that was what J. T. Wilkie was.
What the Contessa had told him of conditions
here was absolutely true. He lived a life of sybaritic luxury. The wealth was
prodigious. Anything the heart could desire was brought in from a hundred
different Dimensions. Somehow, though, he couldn't arouse his old enthusiasm
for chasing girls. Always when he saw a smooth leg, or a skirt swinging, or
heard a girl singing, his mind flashed to memories of Polak. The hideous
memory of Polak, dead and bloody, filled his mind. He dreamed ghastly dreams.
He left the girls severely alone and devoted himself to mining.
The
pipe of diamonds lent itself to machine excavation. He at last descended and
saw Erinelds at work, their naked brown bodies sweating with exertion as they
hacked with pick and shovel. He made notes, checked the strata, dreamed up
plans. Finally he went to see the Contessa with his scheme.
They
met in the room that Wilkie had tagged as the Thomas Alva Edison room. The
Contessa was in a most foul and unbeautiful temper. She sat in her chair and
scowled on the few senior Valcini as Charnock and Wilkie entered. Wilkie felt
the cold breeze of her regard chill him like that snow slope in that unknown
Dimension had.
"I
can't attend to you today, J. T.," she said with barely controlled
civility. A man wearing what appeared to be bulky black armor and girded with a
sword and hand-weapon of some outlandish partem stood at her side. He wore a
translator band and he looked hostilely at Wilkie.
The
Contessa- swirled a white hand. "I've just come back from a Dimension
called Narangon—the foolsl The blind stupid foolsl
Well, they'll pay, I'll see to that!"
"The
Wizards of Senchuria are still alive, still standing across the
Dimensions," said the man in the black armor. "We need a Portal,
Contessa. That's for sure."
"And
do you think the Porvone, God rot their perverted souls, will sell us
one?"
"No, Contessa."
"Well, then, how do you propose we
obtain a Portal?"
Chamock
shook himself. The Contessa eyed him bale-fully. "I see you still do not
relish talk of the Porvone, Charnock."
"No,
Contessa." He spoke humbly. "They are worse than anything man can
ever imagine. They keep their Porvone Portals of Life to themselves."
"And I want one! I want one!"
The
black-armored man stroked his reddish moustache and began to say with heavy
emphasis: "If the Contessa requires a Porvone Portal of Life, I
will—"
"No,
Wayne! I need you for the plans in hand. You know that." She looked with a
frowning concentration on Wilkie.
He did not speak.
"Tell
me, J. T. Why do you not pleasure yourself with the girls I provide? Are they
not to your liking? You know we have the pick of the Dimensions."
"It's
not that, Contessa." He swallowed. He thought of Polak, pubicked.
She smiled. The Valcini moved uneasily. She
leaned forward so that her breasts thrust against the thin white stuff of her
gown. Soloman clucked at the end of his chain. She smiled more widely,
regarding him with her level violet gaze.
"Is it, perhaps, J. T., that you
desire—me?" He heard Chamock gasp. He saw the face of Wayne, the black
armor sheening and softly clanking below, and saw the frown clamp frozen on
that brutal face. The Val-cini were out of this, now.
How to answer?
He tried to smile—and
failed.
"If I speak the truth,
Contessa—"
Her abrupt displeasure
flayed him.
"Those who do not tell me the truth do
not live to lie again! Now, J. T., do you wish to sleep with me?" He
swallowed. Hell—what a mess!
"It
would be—" He stopped and started again..
"On my world we do not expect girls—" No, that was no good. Well —to
hell with it, then. "Yes," said romantic J. T. Wilkie. "You must
know that."
"Ah!"
Her smile blossomed widely now. "You have at least a heart, J. T. But do
you not know what happens to peasants who love a princess?"
Almost—but,
mercifully, not quite—he'd blurted out, "But you're not a princess, you're
a contessa." Instead, he said firmly, "I do not expect to and until
now had not thought about it. The truth is—"
"Yes?" archly.
The truth is that
Polak-"
Her
smile withered. "Your friend, the big bumbler who was
killed? Well, what about him?"
He
couldn't explain. He contented himself with: "I've been upset. I'd like to
pubick all those—those—"
"Vermin?"
"Yes. Polak was a good
friend."
She
leaned back. The tip of a pink tongue flicked out to wet those scarlet rose-bud
lips.
"You
must forget poor Polak, J. T. He was a good man. But he is gone. His death is
just one more price we pay for what we have. Now, J. T., remember, I promise
you nothing. I hold out no hope of reward apart from my gratitude—and that has
been enough, in the past, to make men move mountains for me."
Wilkie
nodded, obscurely relieved. He just hadn't thought of the Contessa along with
all the other dames he'd chased. They weren't in the same league.
Charnock moved abruptly at Wilkie's side, and
was still again.
The Contessa nodded.
"My plans have been interrupted by this
nonsense on Narangon. I had the Infalgon ready to wipe out the Wizards of
Senchuria, but David Macklin and his accursed cohorts interfered. I will deal
with them, one day! But now I need a Porvone Portal of Life. Tomorrow I expect
a messenger from a Dimension called Slikitter—a place where we buy many of our
scientific requirements—and then we shall see!" She rose, dismissing them
all. "Tomorrow, J. T., come to me. And I will tell you what we shall
do."
IX
That night a girl came to Wilkie's apartments. A slip of
a thing with high breasts and rose complexion, with a tinkling laugh and
wearing a silver gown that floated about her body, she pirouetted for him in
the dusk. "Don't you like me, J. T.?"
"Sure,
sure," he said tiredly. "But not tonight,
Josephine." She pouted. "You're mooning after the
Contessa!" About to snap a tart retort, he hesitated. He wasn't, was he?
"It's
not that," he said lamely.
She
flounced around him, at once languorously appealing and vixenish. Then,
abruptly dropping her artifices, she approached him closely, smiling up into
his face. "There are many things about Irunium, J. T., and about the Contessa,
you do not know." She turned, smiling in a way that brought all Wilkie's
senses alert. She darted for the door, then paused on
the threshold, smiling tantalizingly at him.
"Well,
J. T., at least you've proved to me that you don't chase girls, just as you
told me today!"
And,
with that shattering remark, she was gone.
J.
T. Wilkie stared in baffled astonishment at the closed door. It couldn't be!
But—but those last gestures, that imperious voice, that reference to a
conversation he had had with her today— Could that have been the Contessa
herself? In some other guise?
Impossible!
But he remembered the whispered stories of
the Valcini, of the Contessa's alter egos, remarks he had scarcely noted. But
now . . . Nowl
He did not sleep well.
Promptly
on time the next day he met Charnock in the anteroom to the Thomas Alva Edison
conference room.
Chamock,
wearing a smart set of blues arid with, his scarlet cocked hat very rakish, was
deep in conversation with another captain of bargemen dressed as he was.
"Look,
Pontius, I know," Chamock was saying fretfully. "You know I'm a good
bargeman."
"There
is no room for anyone who is not a good bargeman, Chamock."
This
man, Pontius, although dressed as was Charnock, carried himself with a more
authoritarian air. From his pointed ears swung a sunburst of golden bells. If
Wilkie had thought that Chamock's swarthy face was that of a devil, Pontius,
with his scarred, leathery and evil visage must be the king of devils.
"You'll
do whatever the Contessa wants, Chamock! By Siegler, you will!"
Charnock
nodded stiffly. "I shall, Pontius. And I will still swear by the potent
Black Naspurgo himself!"
The
two men stood for a moment, toe to toe; then Wilkie's presence obtruded itself
and they relaxed, turned to scowl at him.
"Ah, J. T.,"
Chamock ground out. "You are welcome."
Pontius
grunted something half beneath his breath and swaggered off. As he went, he
called over his shoulder: "Don't forget, Chamock. You're a loyal
bargeman!"
"Confound
that Pontius!" Chamock rumbled to Wilkie as they turned toward the door.
"He gives himself airs."
The
complaint, even Wilkie knew, among equals, was not without precedent.
This
morning the Contessa, for the first time since Wilkie had known her, sat on her
chair without her glittery golden chain and without her personal Porteur,
Soloman, gibbering and clucking by her side. Her dark, high-coifed hair fairly
shimmered with gems. Over her sheer white gown she had draped a very large
fortune in gems. They sparkled so that Wilkie's eyes watered.
The
Contessa, evidently, wished to impress more than she habitually did.
"These
plans, J. T.," she began abruptly. "They are good and workable.
Someone will have to go through to your Earth to buy the machinery."
"I'll-"
"Your
work, for the moment, is done. My agents on Earth can do the .commercial
trafficking. Everything is in your notes. You have been very thorough."
"Thank you,
Contessa."
"You were not so
grateful last night, J. T."
Was there a mischievous
sparkle to her eyes?
Agonized J. T. Wilkie stammered.
"Oh,
yes, J. T. The stories about my alter egos are quite true. But that would have
been cheating you, would it not?"
"I—I—"
He stumbled around the words, not knowing what to say, feeling cheap,
feeling—truth to tell—extraordinarily frightened. Were there no bounds to the
witchery of this woman?
Mercifully he was saved from a coherent
answer by a burst
of golden trumpet notes. The far doors swung open. A double file of bargemen
entered, captained by Pontius. Front and center marched a being who drew Wilkie's fascinated gaze. Becoming accustomed to
outlandish forms and figures, the shapes of aliens, yet each time he
encountered a new form of alien life he could not but fail to respond. Now he
looked with chill revulsion on the envoy from Slik-itter.
Tall was the Slikitter, tall and thin as a
concrete lamppost. His skin color was yellow and his features constituted a
countenance that might be called a face, if a nose-snout, pale watery eyes and
a round funnel-shaped mouth could warrant such a mundane description of
alienness. Clad all in a dazzling bright red scaly material that fell in shimmering
folds and creases about, his angularity, he stood, proud and composed before
the white magnificence of the Contessa di Montevarchi.
Conventional
greetings were exchanged translated through the facilities of the bands, and
Wilkie watched with fascination as the relative stances of these two, unknown
alien and the Contessa, were established. Here, he saw clearly, was a being
from a Dimension of some power.
There
was talk of some differences in the past, then in due time the Contessa said,
"And the Portal?"
Without
hesitation, the Slikitter said, "I regret, Contessa, entirely
impossible."
Anger
and displeasure flashed from the Contessa. She drew in a sharp hissing breath. "What have you to offer?"
"We cannot obtain the Porvone Portals of
Life for our own use. I am aware that you know of our own casements, the
Slikitter Windows."
"I
know. I remember Palans Rodro—the Bold!—ha! the fool!
Well?"
The Slikitter shook his
head.
"We
cannot make any available to other Dimensions, Contessa. It is against our law.
One day, perhaps, the law may change—"
"Then change it
today!"
"Impossible."
A
senior Valcini, standing to the right of the Contessa's chair beside the
black-armored Wayne, put his head forward in a suggestive thrusting movement.
He looked as though he might have stepped from a Rembrandt portrait of a master
butcher.
"Isn't
it well known that the Slikitter Windows are fallible? That they have little
power? That they, in truth, are nowhere as efficient as a Porvone Portal of
Life?"
"Quiet,
Pfitzner!"
But
the Slikitter reacted. His funnel-shaped mouth reticulated. "We have a
Slikitter Window in operation at the junction of our two Dimensions, between
Slikitter and Iru-nium, a casement through which I have just come. We supply
you with scientific devices far superior to those
obtainable elsewhere. I have the new contract for your signature now. But I
did not come here to be insulted."
They
quieted him down. Wine was brought. Conversation broke out sporadically.
"Slikitter!" Charnock told Wilkie in a disgruntled whisper. "I prefer to get
our stuff from Altinum or Earth."
"The Contessa will handle him all
right," said Wilkie. "That girl can handle anyone!"
"But
you have not come here entirely empty-handed," the Contessa was saying in
her sweetest manner. "I am sure you appreciate the respect we have for
Slikitter invention."
If a twitch of a nose-snout and a rolling of
a funnel-mouth was a smile, then the Slikitter smiled.
"You have heard of
Durostorum?"
At Wilkie's side, Charnock
tensed.
"Ah!" breathed the Contessa di
Montevarchi. "Yes, I have
heard. And you—you confirm?" "I confirm." "Then we can
bargain."
The bargaining passed in a complicated
technical series of legalities that spelled one word to Wilkie: greed; but he
felt bewilderment at what they were bargaining over. Various consignments of
jewels were mentioned and the Con-tessa was able, with a sidelong glance at
Wilkie, to promise an unexpected increase in production. She did not specify
any requirements for machinery. Wilkie felt relieved. He didn't relish working
with Slikitters as mechanics down the pit.
At
last the Contessa leaned back and took a gentle sip from her jeweled platinum
goblet handed to her by a half-naked copper-skinned maiden. She reflected.
"Very well. We are agreed. You will tell me the exact location and the
circumstances. For I own,
indeed I do, that it is strange for the Porvone to venture to so backward a
world—and yet—"
"They
go where they list." The Slikitter put down his empty wine glass.
"They are not to be trifled with."
"Don't
worry about that on our score. I do
not intend that I or
any of my people shall even see a Porvone. I will have no truck with them. We shall not encounter them."
"That is a
promise?"
"That is final!"
"Thank
Black Naspurgo for that!" rumbled Chamock under his breath. His swarthy
face looked gray and parched at the horror of his own inner thoughts.
Wayne
clashed his armor with unnecessary violence thrusting back his sword. His
brutal face looked ugly and dissatisfied and petulant.
The
Slikitter and the Contessa exchanged ritual farewells; then Pontius and the
bargemen escorted the alien out. Wilkie caught himself. Hell, Pontius and most
of the bargemen, the Honshi, even the Valcini, were aliens—as was Gangly. But,
somehow, the Slikitter had breathed an aura of alienness transcending those.
Thoughts
of the alien kept obtruding on J. T.
Wilkie's existence over the following few days. He knew the Contessa was
brewing up some grand scheme unconnected with diamond mining. There was much
activity in the city. Skimmers were collected, their oval chassis and rows of
seats covered over by plexiglass canopies, hanging unsupported in lines
outside the walls. Purpose animated the city of diamonds.
Chamock told him: "We use your
terrestrial helicopters a great deal, but recendy Altinum has gained the contract
with its skimmers, sweet little craft. Your technology boys will have to
extract their digits."
"I'm sure," gawked impressed J. T.
Wilkie. He gawked again when the Contessa, in a curtly brief interview,
informed him that he would accompany her on the journey to Durostorum.
"Collect
yourself safari equipment and a weapon; Char-nock will help you. And, J. T., as
your work is finished in replanning the mines here, you might think I can
dispense with you." She smiled sweetly. "So I could. But I reward my
faithful servants. Remember, J. T., you still work for me, and owe me your life
and loyalty."
"I
won't forget, Contessa." J. T. Wilkie, fervent J. T. Wilkie, meant every
word.
The
joumey began early one bright day that Wilkie, whose reckoning had been shot,
estimated to be a Friday.
A
dozen large skimmers loaded with Valcini and Honshi set off due west, crossing
the silent river, heading out toward the
horizon-rimming mountains. Chamock joined Wilkie in the rear seats of a
skimmer. Chained to his left wrist shambled Gangly.
"The
Contessa is bringing a number of Porteurs," Char-nock said briefly. "Insurance."
The
glittery metal chain carried a molecular arrangement that would prevent Gangly
from escaping Chamock through a Gate. Pressure of a button on the bracelet
could shoot a painful electric current into Gangly's nerves. "To keep him
in line," observed Charnock. He did not speak with any vulpine show of
satisfaction at the information.
The
first Portal through which they all went, skimmers and people, bodily, took
them into a vast and open land of lakes and sea inlets, of pine forests and
tundras. They flew for three hours due west. Wilkie had seen no sign of the
Contessa.
"She
is traveling in her personal barge, with a crew captained by Pontius." Charnock
shook the chain reflectively. "I have you and Gangly here."
"She's
entitled to a little comfort, surely," observed Wilkie. "After all,
she is a woman."
"Yes,"
said Chamock, and said no more. Wilkie learned that Wayne, still clad in his ominous
black armor, was leading a parallel force to obtain the other Porvone Portal of
Life that operated at the other end of the Gate from Durostorum. The mission
was important
but,
according to Ottorino, not as difficult as that undertaken by the Contessa.
"That's
just like her," enthused J. T. Wilkie. "Trust her to take on the
tough nut herself."
The
skimmers traveled just like Greyhound buses; the sensation would have been
dismayingly ordinary but for their helicopter-like ability to skim through the
air and rise and fall easily tiirough the airlanes. The next Gate took them
into a Dimension where the skimmers had to be abandoned. They had sewed their
purpose in bringing the expedition over the longest physical distance and now
the people would go forward on foot, slipping one by one through smaller Gates
on the way to Durostorum.
Wilkie
well understood that they wouldn't go back by the way they'd first come—those
unending heavings of gray hogbacks in Myxotic. He thought of Polak,
instinctively, and rejected the thought with passionate hatred for all the
enemies of the Contessa.
Charnock,
because he had charge of the Porteur Gangly, knew where they were going. In the
next Dimension they popped out one after the other into a world where the air
filled with blowing bubbles. Like those myriads of soap bubbles blown by happy
children from rings dipped in detergent, the rainbow-glistening spheres flew
and drifted and whirled about them. Wilkie became enchanted with their
iridescent beauty.
A
group of bubbles blew lightly into his face and burst and at each soft pop a
single musical note of exquisite melody released itself as though from
captivity and chimed in unison with all the other bursting bubbles. The safari
party danced laughing through the rain of melody.
A pain lanced through
Wilkie's head.
He saw Charnock rub his
forehead, wincing.
The
bubbles blew faster and thicker, bursting unceasingly now, each chiming note
lost in the cadences of a hundred more. The sounds grew. Now the air rang with
the tocsin note of thousands of breaking balloons of music.
Gangly yelled.
"They'll drive us mad!" He dragged
at the chain.
Now
everyone was running, their hands clasped uselessly
over their ears, their eyes streaming, their heads ringing.
The infernal babel bludgeoned with sheer
insensate music into Wilkie's head. He screamed. Eveiyone was screaming. They
ran drunkenly for the next Portal.
The Porteurs flung the people through the
Gate at top speed. Wilkie sprawled forward onto dry sand that gritted at once
into his eyes and against his teeth and felt that infernal tocsin ringing still
in his head.
The
safari crowded on a reddish sandy beach and huddled, waiting for their senses
to return.
At
last they gained a semblance of control. Wilkie looked out to sea. He gaped.
The water out there looked—odd. It rolled
sluggishly against the dry sand without wetting it. The sea looked sludgy, like
ointment, like grease. The dryness in the air rasped painfully in Wilkie's nose
and throat. He heard the Contessa's rapid, controlled voice. "This is a
bad world. Soloman, get us out of it fasti" The glittery chain tinkled as
Soloman capered. "The whole water content of this world has turned into
polywater," said the Contessa. "All the water, all of it, is one
giant molecule, balanced and perfect, and deadly."
"Polywater,"
said Wilkie. He'd heard of that, all right. Gangly shouted: "There are two
Gatesl" Soloman capered and began to lead off toward the crimson eye of
the setting sun. Everyone followed. The Porteurs began to put the safari
through, as usual now in their drill, a group of fighting Honshi first, then
some Valcini, armored and carrying automatic weapons, then more Honshi. The
sand burned through Wilkie's shoes in surging waves of heat. His
eyes and throat and nostrils stung and pained with dry heat. The
Contessa with Soloman came to stand directly behind him.
Chamock went through, followed by Gangly. "Your turn, J. T.," said the Contessa, in this moment of
scientific dread unconnected with aliens wielding swords, as superbly poised as
ever. Ottorino, at her side, licked his lips raspingly and tightened his
grip on his automatic.
Thinking what a gal was the Contessa, J. T. Wilkie went catapulting between the
Dimensions.
He
rolled over on stones and sat up. Immediately a net of fine silken strands
entwined itself about him. He struggled and merely tied himself up worse. He
started to yell and a club bashed him over the buttocks. He could see Gangly and
Chamock tied up. Just ahead of him the rocks were stained with brilliant green
ichor, and the bodies of half a dozen hideously dead Honshi showed where they
had fought until death.
"The monsters!" Chamock was shouting frenziedly.
Wilkie saw—and shut his eyes and tried to
keep from vomiting.
From
a round and slimy body the size of a horse the aliens' upper members sprouted
in a swirl of tendrils. They moved swiftly on another twin bunch of tendrils
coiling across the ground. And their heads—their heads! Instead of heads a
bunch of tendrils grew up from the top sections of their bodies. Each separate
tentacle coiled and twisted with savage animate life. At the tips of some
tendrils unblinking eyes glared at the newcomers, at others ears tunneled in
their screams, and at others wide pink mouths gaped with pointed jet-black
teeth like buzz saws.
After
that first brief fight the safari members had been overcome with the nets as,
one by one, they had crossed into this Dimension.
"Oh,
no!" yelled Wilkie. Ottorino had appeared, to be at once engulfed in a
writhing net. "The Contessa!" screamed distraught J. T. Wilkie.
"The Contessa is due to come through next!"
X
"The Contessa!" screamed J. T. Wilkie, struggling un-availingly to free his hand and grab his new
gun. "These things will trap her next!"
All
around him the rippling motion of tendrils coiling across the ground sickened
him. The skin flushed an unwholesome pink, with mucous running freely from
open pores to lubricate the things' passage, like snails.
"She's got to be stopped!"
Charnock yelled. He dodged a club that beat
down viciously at him. "Gangly! Do your stuff! Ottorino!"
Ottorino,
still entrapped in the net on the spot where the Gate existed, vanished.
"Thank God!"
breathed J. T. Wilkie.
He shuddered at the thought of the Contessa's
white body clutched in the writhing tendrils of these vile monsters.
A cudgel descended with shrewder aim, knocked
Char-nock unconscious. Wilkie thrashed. He could reach his gun if—he felt the
blow on the head as though from a long and hollow distance. The last thing he
saw in this new and horrific Dimension was the coiling tendrils rippling along
the ground beside his face, vanishing as a gray haze descended over his senses.
The
things possessed extremities like the feathery limbs of barnacles. . . . Their
sensory organs were carried on waving constructions like those of Plumose
Anemones. . . . Their locomotion was carried on like enlarged and separated
snails' lower rims. . . . Slowly, through nightmare and horror, J. T. Wilkie's
senses returned.
Over
the rocky ground a thin moist covering of algae grew with a livid and mocking
greenness. The nets were jerked until their occupants groaningly understood and
crawled erect to be herded into a line and prodded forward. Stumbling and
tripping, the remnants of the safari jogged along the high shoulder of a
mountain to descend with painful slowness into the spreading valley beyond. In
all that panorama of algae-green rock and loose scree, of stunted pine and
straggly gorse bush, not a single column of smoke, not a house, not a bridge,
nothing told of human occupation.
Once
off that high shoulder the rippling undulations of the things' tendrils
slackened speed. They cautiously freed the nets and, stripping their prisoners
of all weapons, stripped away their clothing also. Perhaps because they did not
notice them in their hair the translator bands were left. Wilkie breathed
deeply, feeling the cold damp bite of the wind. His
flesh cringed and his goose pimples shuddered. Any fear he had left in him
since being trapped down Old Smokey with Polak had been driven out by his
subsequent experiences; but he knew he was afraid, deathly afraid.
Roped together by strands of the silky nets,
the wretched people stumbled down the mountainside. Chamock, whose glittery
chain had occasioned a thrumming keening of interest from their captors,
perforce led Gangly, and Wilkie followed Gangly, to be followed in turn by a
hideously frighened Honshi. After his "Hoshoo's," like those of his
comrades, had been followed by savage beatings, he went on down, gasping and
wheezing and cowed.
"Where is this,
Gangly?" whispered Chamock.
"We took the wrong
Gate from that world of polywater," said Gangly in his mangled words, the
translator translating perfectly. "I don't understand what Soloman—"
"Don't think about
it," advised Charnock.
"He
is the best Porteur I know of in all the Dimensions." Evidently, Gangly's
mystification would not be stilled.
The
valley drew nearer and then, fragmentarily as they lurched down a widening
trail, Wilkie saw the waiting monsters and their batch of captives. Strange
creatures sat or lay huddled beneath the nets. He saw shapes he could not
categorize, he saw human beings, he saw things he knew
he would never forget. All, he surmised, to judge from the naked skins of the
humans, had been stripped bare. That, obviously, was a sensible precaution when
you were dealing with life forms whose offensive weapons were unknown to you. .
. .
The
two parties of captors and prisoners joined and then they marched on side by
side. Across from Wilkie trudged a small, reddish-brown little man with the
longest arms Wilkie had ever seen. He hugged the arms around his head so that
for some time Wilkie thought he was an orangutan until he spotted the
undeniably human cranium that—despite his pug-like face, all wrinkled lips and
squashed nose and large shining eyes—gave clear indication that this little
four-foot high person was a human being.
The little creature
stumbled on short legs.
"Hold up,
friend," said Wilkie sympathetically.
The wide eyes regarded him
unblinkingly.
"I
do not understand what you say, but you are in the same position as myself. We are to be eaten. It is very humorous."
Wilkie
thought his translator band was playing him false. The punctiliousness,
and the last snapper at the end. Humorous? Well,
hell, yes, he supposed so, to be eaten by animate tendril-waving monsters. . .
. Very funny.
Wilkie
gave a big smile and shook his head vigorously. Then he jerked it sideways, and
rolled his eyes.
"Escape? I would like to try, but these un-treed monsters hold us securely. My
name is Councilman Mobril and I come from a world called Myrcinus—all beautiful
trees and free swinging avenues between the branches."
"J.
T. Wilkie," said the young man, thinking.
Just
ahead of Councilman Mobril stumbled a white-skinned girl whose golden hair
swirled down around her knees. Wilkie hadn't seen her face; all he could see
was that long gorgeous mane of shining golden hair, her white arms with the
thongs biting into the wrists, her long and slender legs with blood already
oozing from her feet. Ahead of her and to Mobril's rear trudged things whose
anatomical descriptions would have invoked crabs and lobsters had queasy J. T.
Wilkie been inclined for cataloging. He thought the girl—if she was human—must
be very beautiful. She might have for a face a horror like that weirdness from
Slikitter.
The march staggered on.
The sun took a long—a very long—time to set.
All that night they were given nothing to eat or drink nor were they released
from their bonds. Wilkie worked on his, but the silk defied every effort to
break it.
The
night grew extremely cold and unpleasant. They huddled together for warmth and
by moming after fitful and unsatisfying sleep, roused out to cudgel blows for
the cruel march to begin again.
Again,
in the order of their fettering, Wilkie marched alongside Mobril.
People
began to fall down from weakness and were bludgeoned back into line. Some,
refusing to rise, were separated and Wilkie did not see what happened to them.
He was glad he didn't.
"You
seem to understand what I say,"
Mobril said, once, as they traversed a valley seemingly identical with the one
they had crossed the day before. "I fear
we have not much further to go. The girl in front will not last the
journey."
The girl, naturally watched by curious J. T.
Wilkie, seemed to him to be swinging along well, but the telltale trails of
blood oozing from her feet told their own story.
"Yes," he said, shortly.
About to renew his exploration of Mobril's
statements and to express his ideas on escape, Wilkie stopped. Chaos broke out
ahead. Screams shrieked into the air. The silken ropes tugged wildly and people
fell heavily.
Mouths opened along the trail.
Horrified, disbelieving, Wilkie saw a mouth
open in the rock at his side, a vast, slit mouth like a mollusk opening its
shell, like a horse chestnut splitting with spines inward, the stretch from
side to side wide enough to gobble at a single gulp one of the crab-lobster
people.
His
exoskeleton cracked with a great snap as the mouth closed.
Charnock
scrabbled up, kicking a spray of loose stones into the mouth at his side.
Stupidly, Wilkie felt the silk rope slacken on his wrists and he turned. The
Honshi who had been attached to him was just disappearing into a leering mouth with
a final despairing: "Hoshoo!"
All
along the trail the tendrils coiled "and flickered and cudgels rained
ineffectual blows as mouths opened and closed. Some animal form who lived burrowed into the rocks and who showed merely a
hungry mouth now fed avidly. Whether it was just one animal with a hundred
mouths, whether it was a hundred animals, Wilkie didn't know but he jerked up
and ran like a crazed maniac away. The rope attaching him to Gangly pulled, and
then Gangly and Charnock were pell-melling downslope after him in a flying haze
of loose stones. Mobril and the girl followed, shrieking. Other people were
breaking free and, mixed with the tendriled monsters were leaping mouths, being
caught and gulped, falling, scrabbling up, flying in lunatic panic.
"This
way!" yelled the girl, the first words Wilkie had heard her speak. Her
voice for all the fear held a throaty golden note. They leaped after her.
Stones showered.
They
raced on, the breath hot and hurting in their throats, their limbs heavy, the
sweat blinding them. At last the girl fell heavily and her golden hair swirled
about her like a shroud.
Wilkie dropped onto a knee beside her and
brushed the hair from her face. J. T. Wilkie looked. Dame-chasing, heart-free
J. T. Wilkie looked. . . .
"She
saved us!" panted Charnock. "Those damn mouths are all downslope
where we were going. They're gobbling up people like flies in a
flysnapper."
Down
there it looked like fleas on a griddle. With horrific rapidity the fleas were
vanishing. . . ."
"Here come the monsters!" yelled Mobril.
With pink-flushed tendrils undulating, the
monsters streamed downslope, avoiding the greedy mouths, intent on recapturing
their prisoners.
"A Gate!" said Charnock. His evil
face showed a grim determination. "Gangly! A Gate—is there one near?"
"Quiet!
I'm trying—" Gangly went stiff. He began to rotate like a plastered
weathervane. Knowing the importance of the miraculous gift possesed by the
bullet-headed being, Wilkie held his breath in suspense.
"A hundred yards, more or less—that
way." Gangly pointed.
Willde hoisted the girl up, the silken cords
still binding her to Mobril, began to run. They all ran.
"Hurry!"
chirruped Mobril, apparently quite unfatigued by their privations and
starvation. "Hurry!"
Of
course, the fuzzy thoughts caromed around Wilkie's skull, Mobril would
understand about Portals through the Dimensions for hadn't he said he'd come
from another world? But the girl? She was a puzzle. .
. .
"Here!"
snapped Gangly. Now he was performing the task for which he had been trained
and which he, among only a very few privileged individuals could perform, alert
and professional and very much in command, ordered them into a circle. They
wrapped their arms around each other's bodies and held on. Wilkie felt warm
firm flesh beneath one hand and Charnock's leathery hide beneath the other and
then he was falling, falling. . . .
"Where are we going?" yelled
Charnock. "It doesn't matter where—anywhere out of here!" That last frenzied
yell had been Wilkie's. And now they were pitching helplessly through massive
leaves that battered at them, cascading cups of water, sending insects buzzing
swarmingly out of their way, falling and falling and falling helplessly through
the breaking fronds of enormous fems.
Wilkie
felt a torturing wrench. The girl's body jumped in his arms. He flung a look
upward. Up there Councilman Mobril with his long brachiating arms held onto a
fern and looked down in agony as his newly-found and newly-lost comrades
toppled away below him. "I tried!" he screamed down. "The rope
broke—" He vanished above them in the massive fems. As though being lashed
by whips, Wilkie cried out as the fronds barbed his body. A
cupped fem splashed water in a gout into his face and without thought,
as greedy as those seeking mouths in that other Dimension, he sucked in water.
His crackled lips and parched tongue throbbed at the contact.
"The Gates!" Gangly still held fast to Charnock and to
the girl. "They are often—together—near—there is another —but we are
falling fast—" He broke off to shriek as a fem whipped across his broad
back.
"You've got to put us through,
Gangly—you've got to!"
The
girl fastened wide greenish eyes on Wilkie's face. He grasped her body more
roughly, pressing her to him.
He
smiled. She tried to smile back and gasped as fronds split past their entwined
bodies.
The
bump, when it came, drove all the breath from Wil-kie's body in one savage
whoosh. He lay on grass and guessed that every single bone in his body must be
broken and smashed and ground to powder.
After
a long raggedy silence during which a blue sky and a bright and cheerful sun
and the song of birds seeped into existence around them, Gangly wheezed:
"I think—I really do think—we are in Durostorum."
"Now
may Black Naspurgo be praised!" exclaimed Char-nock.
And he laughed.
Feeling
every bone in his body vibrating, J. T. Wilkie laughed too.
"So, we got here!" he said, and
laughed until he choked. The girl lay quietly, unconscious, lax and altogether lovely
under the brilliant friendly sun of Durostorum.
XI
"Have you never cut your hair, then, Sharon?"
He
took the translator band gently from over that flowing golden hair where she
lay comfortably on the bunk and donned it himself. She waited until he was
ready to listen.
"No, J. T. Never." She made of J. T., even through the
translator, a soft sighing languorousness: "Zshaytee," so that that
"J" became suddenly to Wilkie hard-edged and ugly. "No—except
to trim the ends to stop them from splitting. It is not our custom where
I come from in my Dimension of Leon."
About them the subdued noises of life aboard
one of the ships of Durostorum carried on with none of the creaking of wood
and slapping of water associated with any terrestrial vessel. Picked up at last
and with Charnock's native knowledge to guide them, they were now en route for
a Durostorum Hold where they could think what next to do. All J. T. Wilkie
wanted to do was know more and yet more of this golden girl who had so
disastrously overturned the habits of a lifetime.
The
translator band changed hands as they spoke; later they would obtain one for
Sharon's own use.
"We
of Leon know much of the Dimensions, but- there is always more to learn. We
care a great deal about the life sciences; perhaps we are tardy with physics
and electronics. We trade across many Dimensions and I was a member of an
advance party crossing into a fresh clumping of worlds—"
After
Wilkie had made his obvious interruption, she went on, smilingly: "The
Dimensions seem to tend to clump —rather like grapes on a vine. We know very
many of our own bunch; the ones you mention are all new to me. The old idea of
using the leaves in a book to illustrate the Theory of the Dimensions falls far
short of the actuality. We find mostly human beings—people like you and me, J.
T.—scattered across all the worlds. But there are—others."
"Yeah,"
said remembering J. T. Wilkie. "You can say that again."
"My
party was ambushed by those—those TobTdiacs—those horrible creatures."
Wilkie
put a hand on her shoulder and pressed. Her wrists had been bandaged and so had
her feet—and, to his intense surprise, so had Wilkie's. City-bred people were
not adapted to clambering over rocks without shoes.
"Their
trade is as horrible as they are themselves. One cannot hold their appearance
against them, for that was nature's doing, and we of Leon understand these
things. But the TobTdiacs—well, I suppose the only way one can describe them is
to say they are the Slavers of the Dimensions."
"Charming," said J. T. Wilkie,
luxuriating totally in the radiance of her personality. All the TobTdiacs in
the Dimensions wouldn't part him from this girl—not now.
"We
believe there must be other and superior intelligences at work behind these
Slavers, instructing and dominating them." She pulled the sheets down
around her shoulders; despite the ventilation the little cabin was warm.
"But they are not of importance now. What is, is—how
do we get home?"
"There's Gangly."
She handed him the band. "Yes. He is
good. We have our own highly-developed Porfeurs. I am, I'm afraid, only a latent myself. There are many like me."
"I've
a job to do for my Contessa," Wilkie said with some firmness. "After
that I'll think about getting back. But you—surely your people will come
looking?"
She
shook her head, the doubt dimming the radiance of her face. Despair for her
twisted in Wilkie's guts. Hell, he'd never felt like this before chasing dames!
Chamock put his head in the
doorway.
"Feel better
now?"
"Sure—say,
Charnock, can't your pals rustle up a translator
band for Sharon? This over-to-you routine is strictly out of the Ark."
"I'll
fix up two-way transmission as soon as possible." Charnock looked a new
man. Even his ears were different; then Wilkie saw the pointed tips were gone.
"Yes,"
Charnock nodded. "The Contessa's bargemen were recruited from the
pointed-ear brigade and we normal men later on assumed
that as part of the uniform. Uncomfortable."
"So I've been
told," said Wilkie, thinking of home.
"Is Sharon fit enough
to come on deck?"
Clad
in a white shirt and a blue skirt, her feet in shapeless old felt slippers,
the girl climbed the companionway. Wearing borrowed unharmonizing clothes,
Chamock, Gangly and Wilkie stood with her at the rail.
The
sky stretched away above, white and blue, for an immense distance. Beneath them
the fields patterned the ground with cultivation. People, working down there,
looked up and waved. Durostorum, clearly, was a wonderful world.
The
air frisked their hair, combed and trimmed now, and blustered into their faces,
making talk not difficult but zestful. Everything appeared larger than life
here in Durostorum.
"Yes,
J. T. This is my home Dimension." Chamock looked hungry, drinking up the
scene, like an eagle surveying his kingdom. He had taken the glittery chain off
Gangly and wore it coiled up around his left arm. "I'll go back to the
Contessa. I owe her—well, never mind. She has strange powers, leave it at that.
But I'm going to enjoy myself here, don't fret over that!"
"What
about the damn Portal?" asked eager-beaver J. T. Wilkie.
Gangly
gmnted.
Feeling suddenly as though champagne bubbles
had exploded up his nose in his brain, Wilkie said, "What's that, Gangly,
me old fruit? Do I detect the contempt of the hand craftsman for the
soullessness of the machine product?"
"All
I'm saying," said Gangly stubbornly, "is that a Portal is there, static.
A Porteur can go from one Gate to another, freely—"
"Praise be," interrupted Chamock. "Look!"
"—and
a Porvone Portal of Life takes up enough power to light up a village!"
finished Gangly with stringy obduracy.
They all looked where
Chamock pointed.
Rising
from the checkerboard of cultivation a high mesa rose, a sheer-walled
level-topped mountain about a mile across and a thousand feet in the air. The
dots of flying ships moved to and fro at their five-hundred-foot high level,
halfway up that sheer rock face.
Color
and light and reflected brilliance broke from the city perched atop that
massive bastion.
"A
Hold of Durostomml" Chamock smiled wolfishly. "And—luckily for me—a
Hold with which my people are friendly right now. There we can talk
business."
The
ship bore on through the air, her flags fluttering bravely. The crew clustered
to watch the approaching Hold.
"Just
remember," Chamock said wamingly. "My people of Durostorum do not
know of the Dimensions. Traders from across the parallel worlds come and go
without betrayal. You remember, J. T., how we waited for the ships when we
took you to Irunium?"
"Yes. But all of
Durostorum isn't like this, surely?"
"Of course not!" Chamock chuckled. "We have great seas and tropic forests, polar
caps and chains of mountains; but all across our temperate areas you have this
equable climate, these massifs where Holds can be built and cultivation
protected, and we are not a numerous people, as yet." A far-off look took
his eyes then, as though he entered a race-dream. "We are not the first
intelligent species to live in Durostorum. We are indigenous to the world; but
those before us built cities and communications networks and then destroyed themselves. All they left were the power sources for the
ships—"
"Ah!" said knowledgeable J. T.
Wilkie.
"The
heart of every ship is the power box—small, compact, capable only of retaining
almost any weight at five hundred feet and of being guided left or right and of
going from speeds of zero to about twenty miles an hour—your measurements,
naturally. How it works, when if ever the power will fade, no one knows. We
find the power chests at sites of the older civilizations. They are the most
precious commodity Durostorum boasts—apart from the courage of its peoples.
And, naturally, they are ■ sought after and coveted above price."
"You
mean by that set of euphemisms that you can't buy one, you have to find a new
one or fight someone else for theirs?"
IYeS-"
"Could lead to a state of perpetual
warfare—" "Unfortunately, in the past it has. We have a written
history of fifteen hundred years. But now, we are trying by union and
conference to eradicate those old barbarous ways."
The
ship moved in a solidly sweeping bowbend to the starboard of another ship leaving
the Hold. Flags waved and dipped. Wilkie could see the rows of ballistae snouting
through the red-painted ports of the passing ship.
"Don't
forget," Chamock said. "Don't lose control of your tongues and babble
of the Dimensions. You know what would happen if you talked like that on your
Earth."
"Yeah,"
said world-wise J. T. Wilkie. "You wouldn't touch the psychiatrist's couch
on your way to the nut house."
"I have
a lot to do to organize our transport to Hold Graynor, where I expect we'll find the Contessa fuming at our lateness. She'll have gone
on through the correct Gates. Here." He took off his translator and handed
it to Sharon. They could still understand him. "You can borrow this until I get back.-I don't
need it at home."
"Amen,"
said Sharon, with a swift and mischievous smile. "We have a cellular
translator far more efficient than this clumsy jewelry contraption." She
pouted. "I lost
mine back with the Tob'kliacs."
"You'll have to get some for us,
Sharon," said Wilkie politely.
She
nodded with odd formality. "Agreed. We will sell
you a supply of translators. We can bargain later for what you will pay."
"Uh?" said fazed J. T. Wilkie.
"Don't forget, J. T. We trade across the
Dimensions." "Like Altinum?"
Gangly
shook his bullet-shaped head. "No. Altinum's wares are brought by
middlemen. Altinum is rather like an advanced copy of your Earth, J. T. They
don't know of the Dimensions—and we don't want them to. Suppose your
overcrowded millions of Earth knew of Durostorum, or Iru-nium, or any other of these
fertile Dimensions where the population is measured in the thousands? Wouldn't
the stampede crush the locals in the rush?"
"Um," nodded
Wilkie. "I won't argue that one."
When
Charnock returned on board, his face showed a gleam of pleasure. He wore a brand-new
translator band in his hair. He carried a bulging valise whose contents,
spilled out in the little cabin, revealed fresh clothes, weapons, maps and
money. Wilkie picked up the seven-sided angled coin and whistled.
"Neat, Charnock. How
did you manage it?"
"I
saw a factor here who trades with men from the
Dimensions. The Contessa's name procured me all I required."
"Good
old Contessal" enthused loyal J. T. Wilkie.
"She's not the gal to let a guy down."
Guardedly,
they then had to explain just who the Con-tessa was for Sharon's benefit.
Oddly, Wilkie couldn't seem to find the right words.
In
their new clothes and carrying their new possessions, they paid off the ship's
captain and went ashore. In the bustle of the city that constituted the living
spaces within the perimeter of the Hold's massive walls they found lodgings
until they could book passage on a ship heading in the general direction of
Hold Graynor.
More
and more Wilkie came to realize how self-possessed, how composed, how assured a
girl this Sharon from Leon was. Cool, with her long flowing golden hair, she
moved with feline grace and yet, he knew, her strength had been enough to
sustain her in that ghastly experience with the TobTdiacs when her
city-accustomed feet had failed her. Well, his had too, hadn't they?
Bonds
of friendship were being forged between the four interdimensional travelers.
Gangly, it was clear, hankered after returning home to his Lisifutz. Yet, so
Wilkie believed and wondered if he was a mere credulous fool for the supposition,
Gangly wouldn't take off without them. He'd put them through a "suitable
Gate and get them home first. Or so Wilkie thought. Wilkie pondered.
Gangly, from Lisifutz. Charnock, from Durostorum.
Sharon, from Leon. And J. T.
Wilkie, from Earth. A strange bunch to be tramping the
Dimensions.
Very strongly and with a chilling depression,
Wilkie understood that this little waiting period in their search for the
Contessa's Portal was very much the lull before the storm. What lay ahead of him
he could not know. But there was
Charnock, evil-faced, grim and to be relied on in a battle. There was
Gangly, the Porteur, on whose fate all their fates hinged. And there was
Sharon, the golden girl from mysterious Leon—whose fate, so J. T. Wilkie was
with astonished pleasure discovering, he intended should in the future be bound
up with his.
They
lodged on the top floor over a wine house where the sheets were clean and the
sanitary arrangements, run from the city mains, not too objectionable. With his
bullet-head swathed in a huge turban-like scarf, a common enough form of
headgear among men sailing the clouds, Gangly, with a braided corner half-drawn
across his face, could pass without much comment. As a freak, he had passed
muster on the ship, and no doubt would do so again.
Coming
back one midday from a stroll along the battlements
of the Hold's gray stone walls, Wilkie saw Sharon striding along the rutted
street ahead of him. He quickened his steps, as always when he saw her,
feeling the thump of blood through his body. She wore a new orange dress, but
her golden hair was unmistakable.
"Sharonl" he
called, expecting her to halt and turn.
She
went striding lithely on. He ran, skipping over the cobbles, laughing, catching
her arm, swinging her around.
"Sharon! You teasing
minx! What—?"
It wasn't Sharon.
"Yes?"
she said with pert acerbity. "I—I'm sorry—that is—"
She
looked just like Sharon. Yet, this close, there were minute differences: her
hair was a darker tinge of gold, her nose not quite so straight, her mouth less
warmly curved and her eyes—her eyes were brown.
"You must have made a mistake," the
girl said with that frigid tartness. She jerked her shoulder away and marched
off with just that lithe swinging walk of Sharon's.
"Well, I'll bel" said perplexed J.
T. Wilkie to himself.
When he reached the lodgings Sharon was not
there; but Chamock and Gangly in animated conversation looked up at once as he
entered. Their faces showed excitement. Clearly, there was news.
"I
have information about Leon," Charnock began at once. "My trader
friends tell me a party from Leon is in this city! That means—"
"So
that explains the girl," exclaimed Wilkie. He told them of his encounter. "So Sharon will be—oh, hell!"
"She
understood you?" said Gangly sharply. "Yes, she would."
When
Sharon returned she did not at once mention that her friends had reached the
city, and Wilkie could not bring himself to broach the subject. Chamock and
Gangly had retired to the other room. She sat down, swinging one long leg over
the other, leaning back so that a long and warm expanse of bosom showed between
the cleaving edges of her red-dyed leather jerkin. Her breasts strained the
calf. Wilkie eyed her moodily. She lost her laughter and frowned instead. She
pointed imperiously at him. "J. T.! Don't you like me, then?"
"Hah!" said J. T., who had half-invented the line.
"Now
what's that supposed to mean? You saved my life and ever since you've treated
me like—like—well, I don't know what. On Leon we'd say like a creche-baby."
"You know how I feel about you,
Sharon."
"Aah!"
Her languorousness enveloped him with a headi-ness he found dizzying. He put a
hand on her hair, stroking feeling the slender smoothness. She sank back on the
bed among the rumpled pillows, pulling him with her.
"J.
T. You silly boy! I don't know what you've been waiting for all this
time." As his fumbling hands brushed aside the soft leather and his head
bent, she arched upward, sighing suddenly. "Ah, J. T.
You nearly lost me today!"
Then
he closed her mouth with his, feeling the softness and ripeness of her lips,
the warmth and forgetfulness of at last succeeding in the chase. She put her
arms around him and, willingly, blindly, lustfully, he sank down.
She was, even J. T. Wilkie had to admit, very
good.
Later on when she was in her room tidying up,
Char-nock and Gangly came back.
"I've fixed a ship," Charnock said,
with an undercurrent of savagery in his voice that had been absent so far since
they'd landed in Durostorum. "And I've booked for three."
"Hey!" said J. T. "Hold it,
Chamock, me old warhorse. Sharon's coining with us!"
"Is she now?" said Gangly, smiling
foolishly.
"Yes?" Chamock thrust his beak-face
forward. "So I can book another one. So she is. Why, J.
T., why?"
J. T.'s pure joy could not be undercut by
embarrassment
"Why—she's with me, nowl"
"Yes?"
Chamock's evil face leered. "That's nice for you, J. T. She's coming with
us to risk her life at Hold Graynor for love of you? I'd like to believe it, J.
T. I really would."
XII
That night J. T.—all agog, all aglow J. T. Wilkie—went
to Sharon's small room. She waited for him by the window so that the streaming
radiance of Durostorum's moon shone pallidly on her sheer golden fall of hair,
on her white body, on the liquid sheen of her eyes. He took her into his arms
hungrily.
"Your
people are in the city, Sharon. You could go with them."
"You would not come
with me?"
"I have this Portal to
obtain—for my Contessa."
The
fragrance of her body overwhelmed him. "I think J. T.,
I will go with you if you will not go with me."
He
didn't think of Polak until they lay together half side by side, half entwined
in the narrow bed, breathing gendy again, her breath a rose-petaled
warmth on his naked shoulder.
How would Polak have
handled Chamock now?
Coiling
a strand of her hair between his fingers, trying to speak casually and yet not
too distantly for a newly-enraptured lover, he said, "What do you think of
Char-nock, Sharon?"
"He
is—strong. He is—devious. I think, too, that somewhere within him is a great
evil. He suffers, does that one."
"That
could be true. But—" And here the old crass J. T. Wilkie blew apart his
detached reserve: "Do you like him, Sharon? Could you—that is—could
you—?"
She
tinkled a silvery reproof. She could, he realized with a dismaying
too-lateness, have been extremely angry. "I love you, J. T. Haven't I
proved that?"
"Yes."
"So forget Chamock. He means nothing
between us."
So,
perforce, J. T. Wilkie—besotted, love-blind, lustful, J. T. Wilkie—cataloged
Chamock under the heading: "Outplayed rival."
A
couple of days later they went aboard the ship that would take them all the way
to Hold Graynor. More than one ship joined. A convoy formed. Their ship—Jade Ladylike
all the ships of Durostorum
was outfitted as a fighting vessel as well as a merchantman. A convoy of
warlike materials dispatched by the city was en route for Hold Graynor. Chamock
bit his lower lip fretfully.
"I
don't think the Contessa envisaged the current situation," he told
Wilkie. "If we're to grab that Porvone Portal somehow—"
"A
bit of a dust-up might help us, surely?" said Wilkie. He had found, to his
astonishment and then delight, that Chamock took absolutely no notice of the
new relationship between Sharon and J. T. For a rivel, then, he played a clean
game. "Give us a spot of cover?"
"You
don't understand what warfare on Durostorum means, J. T. This could interfere
with the Contessa's plans. And, J. T., she has to have that Portal!"
"Well,
I know that, Chamock, me old flower. Yo;i can rely on me. I owe the Contessa a whole lot more than I can easily
say. Yes—" He broke off, to think with more than a little vacuous grin, of
the Contessa di Montevarchi's offer. It never rained but it poured.
"Just so long as we grab that Portal for the Contessa. That's our job. That's why we're here."
"Gangly?"
Chamock grimaced. "He's a funny old coot
He's adjusted to being a Porteur working for the Contessa. He's not a slave,
you know, J. T. I think he's loyal to you and me, at any rate. We've been
through a lot together."
"You can say that
again."
"We've
been through—" began Chamock, with one of his rare flashes of wicked
humor. But Wilkie was used to that old gambit, and cut off the bargeman.
"Okay,
Chamock, me old fruit. The Portal of Life—and
then—home!"
"Which, though?" said Chamock, and
this time the somber grimness of his question remained real and vivid.
J.
T. Wilkie spoke as nature intended when Wilkie said: "Well sort that one
out when the time comes."
"This warring
complication, though," Chamock fretted.
Tve heard about your Earthly wars, J. T. Our
battles are more—" He hesitated, groping, then said, "More formal,
although that's not right, either."
"I take it that there are no more powerful weapons?"
Chamock
gestured to the ranked ballistae, the crewmen in their bronze and leather armor
working over crossbows and spears and swords. "Only what you see."
"We could have done
with a few automatic rifles."
"I, for
one, don't want anything like that brought through to Durostorum—not yet."
"No, Perhaps you're right."
Nearing
the uplifting massif on which perched Hold Graynor, Wilkie began to wonder if
those sentiments were not those of wishful thinking. He speculated that perhaps
the most rapid advance in weapon technology might not through inevitable
evolution lead on to universal peace. Certain it was, even without gunpowder,
men could find destructive ways of fighting quite adequate to sicken the
squeamish and victimize the vanquished.
Hold Graynor lay sullenly
at bay under siege.
Somewhere
in those uprearing walls of rock, sheltered behind those massy bastions, a
Porvone Portal of Life waited for them to come and find it and pluck it out for
the Contessa. Looking on the scene as they swam nearer through the air, Wilkie
saw the darting shapes of ships of Durostorum swarming at their five hundred
foot level . . . barely halfway up the sheer slope of the massif. He saw rocks
flung down by catapults, hurling brands of fire arching into the city; he could
faintly hear the chirring storm of arrows and crossbow quarrels and the high
thin yelling of fighting men. The distant sounds chilled him.
Around
the flank of the massif a line of ships swept in deadly array. Green and black
flags flew from every fighting tower and every poop deck lantern. The squared
snouts of ballistae grinned through red-lined ports. From every vantage point
aloft aboard the ships the glitter and gleam of weapons threw a challenge
across the airy spaces.
"The Graynor!" shrilled the
lookouts.
The crewmen, buckling final straps of their
armor, snatching up weapons, rushed to their action stations. The gynours bent
over their ballistae. The captain, a stout, armored, bearded man with a
multi-flagon-capacity stomach, requested Sharon to go below. For answer she
picked up a half-pike, sharp and balanced, and laughed in his face.
"Very well, young missy. But your blood be
on your own head."
Other
girls, clad in leathers and armor, perched along the outriggers of the fighting
towers, bows in their hands, taut with the expected onslaught.
Wilkie
swallowed down hard. "It looks, Chamock, me old fruit, as though we're
going to carry on that fight we left off to go through into Myxotic."
"It is not the Corforan.
Otherwise, yes."
The
first bolts from the enemy ballistae began to sing into Jade Lady.
Splinters whined cuttingly.
Wilkie felt some comfort in bis armor and his helmet, but he kept on wanting
to duck.
The
line of attacking ships, kept by their ancient power boxes at the same height
as the ships they attacked, bore in to board stragglers. The convoy, although
outnumbering the attackers, by that very concentration could not maneuver,
could not be' anything but the flock attacked. Bright shards of light arched
beneath the sunshine as blazing arrows flew. The fire-fighting squads leaped
into action with leather buckets and hoses, dousing down, cursing.
"When
you fight a ship of Durostorum," Chamock yelled above the hubbub,
"you seek higher ground. At five hundred feet up, if the ground under you
is higher than your opponent, "you can fire down on him."
"Yeah,"
said Wilkie, staring with a lopsided grimace at the crossbow a crewman thrust
into his hand.
"Here,"
snapped Chamock. "Hook on, wind up, engage, unhook, bolt in, aim, press the trigger. Easy. Now you
try."
Wilkie's
first shot passed feet beneath the keel of an approaching ship. He cursed and,
suddenly, seized with the antics of warfare, wound up the bow with an excess of
energy. This time his bolt fell somewhere aboard.
At
his side a man staggered back, hands to his ruined face, yelling as the blood
pumped out, his burgonet tumbling onto the deck. More bolts flew. The air
filled with the chirring arrow storm. Frantically, Wilkie reloaded, aimed,
shot.
Riding disdainfully ahead, Jade Lady
would in a few seconds
crash stunningly into the beam of an approaching ship. Wilkie braced himself
for the impact. When it came he was thrown full-length on the deck, his
crossbow flying from numbed fingers. On his knees, Charnock cursed and surged
up, dragging free his two-handed sword.
Staggering J. T. Wilkie crawled to his feet. Men leaped the gap as the two ships swung
together. Rocks smashed down from the towers, gashing holes through the
decking, splintering planks, knocking fighting men into the air. Screams
splintered like splintering wood as men fell five hundred feet to the uncaring
ground below.
Now
the ballistae on the broadside could be shot directly into opposing ballistae.
Jade Lady's
gynours had waited with
loaded weapons, enduring the storm, until the right moment arrived. Then they
loosed and with a hell-defying crash the tripled bolts and balls smashed and
crashed and gouged their way into the vitals of the enemy.
A
man with black and green armor jumped for Wilkie. The upraised ax looked
exactly like a butcher's cleaver ready to degut a carcass. Wilkie yelled,
ducking.
"Now
Black Naspurgo take you!" shouted Chamock, hard, and his huge two-handed
sword swung level with the deck, clove the black and green armored man.
Straight on went that double-handed blow to lop the arm from an assailant who
tried to pike Wilkie from the side.
"Come on, J. T.!" roared Chamock.
"Get stuck in!"
Scrabbling
up a short spear and using it like a rifle's bayonet, Wilkie managed clumsily
to parry the swirl of sword-blows from his next opponent. Then, more by luck
than judgment, he slipped past the guard and drove the spear point in.
Wilkie shut his eyes. He swallowed down vomit.
"J. T.! Duck!"
He ducked.
The decapitating blow passed an inch over his
helmet. He jumped up, incensed.
The
fresh fighting man facing him grinned with a snaggle of brown teeth and cut
again.
"Try
to hit me when my eyes were closed, would you!" raged J. T. Wilkie. He
jumped forward, caught the blow on his metal-bound spear haft, and thrust,
hard. He jerked the weapon free, swung about cat-footed, spotted Sharon piking
a man to the deck, and ran full-tilt at the leather-armored fighter who
assaulted her from the side.
This time there was more science and less
brute force about his thrust.
The
deck swarmed with the contorted figures of struggling men. Blood made the
planks slippery. From the fighting towers archers poured down their selective
rain of death. An arrow glanced from his helmet, caromed to stick quivering in
a splintered bulwark. He yelled and dived at green and black knotted around
Charnock's swirling blade. The great two-handed sword, fully six feet long in
blade alone, shirled and whirled and cleft and clove. Wilkie added his
spearwork and Sharon, a sprite of death, piked away at his side.
Minutes
later, panting and yet filled still with that mad blood fever, Wilkie saw that
the deck had been cleared.
The
sudden surprise attack by the ships from Hold Gray-nor had failed to prevent
the convoy from going through.
J. T. Wilkie threw the
spear to the deck.
Revulsion gripped him.
He
staggered to the side and emptied his stomach on the smiling land of Durostorum
five hundred feet below.
"Right
well you fought, lad," said the paunchy captain, cleaning his bloodied
blade. "My thanks."
Sharon
thoughtfully wiped her pike head. She looked at Wilkie's green and white face.
"It
wasn't pretty, ƒ. T.," she said with practical female logic. "But it
was necessary."
"I—I suppose so."
"If not—" and she
pointed.
The
ship astem of them in the convoy flowered like a blazing bonfire. Sparks shot
out and drifted downwind. Men, screaming, jumped. Other ships sheared away.
That ship—doomed and destroyed, drifted funneling a waft of smoke and flame
through the airlanes—might have been them. But they had fought a good fight,
and they had survived.
Wilkie
knew, vaguely, that he had fought for Sharon's sake, for the Contessa's
sake—but, most of all, he had fought for his own sake. He wanted to live.
Other
ships of Durostorum moved out to chase those marauding ships from Hold Graynor
and at the universal top speed of twenty miles an hour conclusive action could
be avoided until the rocks from the Hold rained down to chase off the chasers.
The convoy had won through.
The
ships tethered from a multitude of anchors and, looking down, Wilkie saw they
were in the midst of an encamped host.
The marauding ships vanished into clefts in
the rock of the massif.
Wilkie eyed that daunting ring of rock and
masonry walls.
"In there?" he said.
"For
the sake of Black Naspurgo himself, J. T.I" roared
Chamock, still with that fighting élan
flowing through him. "We'll find a way I"
Like
a ring of ants besieging a table for the jam laid out at the top, the men
swarmed about the mighty Hold. Entrenchments advanced toward the foot of the
cliff. Palisades concealed ballistae and catapults and mangonels. Rocks flew
through the air all the time. Blazing brands arched upward like rockets.
Ceaselessly, the circling ships of Durostorum prowled, hurling brands upward,
in their turn being hit by return shots. The uproar stunned the eardrums.
Chamock soon had their
status sorted out.
Among
the thousands of men in the besieging host the presence of four more mouths
made little difference if those mouths fed strong arms and backs and willing
hearts, scheming brains.
The
size of the encampment ringing the Hold astounded Wilkie.
"I
don't know if it's good news or bad," Charnock growled after he returned
from his investigations. "My own Hold is not represented here. It gives me
a certain freedom."
Evidently,
by her quick nod, Sharon followed what he meant, even if J. T. Wilkie did not.
"Why are they besieging
this Hold?" she asked.
Chamock wiped a leathery
finger over his moustache. .
"There
have been evil things happening. Men have been disappearing. Girls,
too. From all the surrounding countries owing allegiance to the
neighboring Holds. Where the cultivated land of one
Hold meets the next there may be desert, rivers, uncultivated land, or a neat
division with rock markers. Graynor has been acting with an unusual violence
recently. The general saying is that there is an evil spell on the place."
Gangly
clucked, taking off his ridiculous helmet that, perched on his turban, made him
look ten feet tall.
"That's the Porvone. I don't like this
at all."
"We will not meet a single
Porvone," Chamock snapped wrathfully. "The Contessa promised
that."
"I
know they will be using human tools. They will not show themselves. But, still
and all. . ."
"Graynor
has an evil reputation because the Porvone are using this Hold as a base for a
Portal of Life."
"That's
like saying Hell stinks because the Devil lives there."
"We'd better pay off this ship and get
our tents set up below. I've fixed up a place with the gynours."
"Why?" asked Wilkie, alert.
Charnock
chuckled, good-humored but grim. "Because, my dear J. T., they are sapping
their way in. They're driving tunnels through the rock up into the Hold. And
you, old comrade, are a miner—a Chief Mining Engineer, no less!" His
chuckle became a hoarse laugh. "You, J. T., are elected sapper consultant
to the besieging forces!"
XIII
With sweating,
filthy, trembling hands J. T. Wilkie thrust the cold iron chisel into the cleft
in the rock face and battered the burred end with the hammer, over and over. A
loud crack signaled the obdurate rock's eventual shattering. He bashed the
chisel from side to side, dislodging shards of rock, then
knocked it free. He leaned back on his haunches and wiped a weary hand over his
face. Then he picked up the chisel again and thrust it into the next crack.
Inch
by inch they were burrowing their way through the solid rock of the massif.
After a week of this intense and agonizing effort they had advanced a pitiable
eight feet.
The
debilitating cruelty of the effort involved shocked and depressed Wilkie.
Gasping at each savage blow of the hammer he kept at it. A crude tallow dip,
flickering and erratic and smoking, gave a mockery of light to his work so that
he lived in fear of mashing his fingers under ever succeeding blow. Rocks fell
to bounce from his helmet; the damn thing stifled him, yet to have discarded it
would have been lunacy.
Naked save for a filthy breechcloth, he
labored on for a full hour's shift. Then, replaced by a swarthy crewman from a
ship of Durostorum, he crawled back to wash and rest and eat. He felt
absolutely done in.
Chamock, spruce and military with his giant
two-handed sword slung down his back, met him at the mine head.
Here,
sheltered by a high work of stones bonded together on a natural shelf halfway
up the side of Graynor's rock face, the sappers' camp had been formed and
disguised as a mere assembly point for the assault troops who labored twenty
feet higher up the slope.
Wilkie
felt bemused at the long slanting rays of the sun. A cooling breeze laved him
as he washed. All around sappers swore and refreshed themselves ready for the
next shift.
"You all right, J. TT
Wilkie
rubbed the rough towel over his chest with a dullness of spirit he couldn't
shake off.
"Chief
Mining Engineer!" he said, mocking and bitter. "So that's what I am!
I've been digging in there—" He couldn't go on.
Charnock clucked
sympathetically.
"I'm
no miner, J. T. I'm a fighting man. I understand how to use weapons, how to fly
a ship; mines give me claustrophobia. I hated going to collect you, you
know."
"It's
not as though we're doing any good. It's taking all this effort and pain—and
when we get near the surface they'll sink a little shaft down and rub us out as
they choose. Countermining, you know," he finished sarcastically.
"Well, what else can
we do?"
Wilkie tipped the filthy
water out of the bowl.
"As
soon as the Contessa gets here—" Charnock said in a frail attempt to boost
Wilkie's spirits.
"Yeah!"
flashed disgruntled J. T. "When she doesl What's
keeping her, that's what I'd like to know. We could do with a whole triple
shift of Erinelds down there."
"The
Contessa's ways are the Contessa's ways. She will move in her own sweet
time."
Wilkie
couldn't answer. Everybody ducked as a rock whistled down from above, struck
the parapet and rebounded over and down to the plain five hundred feet below
in a splintering of rock chips. Apart from that reflective ducking no one took
any other notice of the projectile.
"For
a siege this is a washout!" burst out J. T. "Sharon's off shooting
arrows, Gangly's digging on the other shift, you're strutting about with your
damn great sword like a tail—and I'm cutting my fingers to the bone. I tell
you, Charnock, I'm getting fed up!"
"Come and have something to eat and then
you'll feel better. The tunnel's bound to get through to the surface."
"Hal"
Over
a meal of crusty bread and bumed meat from some dubious source and with a
plentiful supply of coarse raw wine, Wilkie did, surprisingly, begin to thaw.
All
around the massif as the sun set lights broke out in the camp of the besieging
hosts. Lights twinkled down from the Hold of Graynor. Another night of siege
began.
"If
we could get machinery in there," Wilkie said, wiping his chin where the
red wine dribbled, "we could go through a Gate and line up
something."
"We
can do nothing like that without the Contessa's decision."
When
Gangly came off shift and joined them around their smoky fire in the rough
lean-to they had built from scraps of rock and timbers, he looked excited, his
smidgen of a nose wrinkling, his loose mouth slobbering. When he was cleaned up
and feeding, he told them.
"I'm sure I sensed a
Gate beyond the tunnel."
"A
Portah-in the rock?"
He
shook his high bullet head. "No, no. The massif must have been an extinct
volcano; it's filled with detritus."
"That
adds up," said Charnock. "The centers of the Holds slope up toward
the walls usually."
"I
think the Portal must exist somewhere beyond the ringwall, in the open. Maybe
there's a wide funnel leading to the surface."
"I
don't know Graynor," rumbled Chamock. "But we can find out!"
"And,"
added Gangly as Charnock rose to his feet, "the Portal is massive.
Massive!" He shook his head in wonderment at what his special power had
vouchsafed him.
"You
said the Portals tended to occur near together, didn't you, Gangly?"
Wilkie began to perk up. "It fits. The Porvone are using one, and there's
this other."
Gangly
grunted and reached for the wine. "I shall have to think of ways and
means." He lifted the goblet with a distant air, as though already
somewhere poised between the parallel worlds and out of the ken of ordinary
mortals.
In
consultation with the leaders of the besieging hosts who wished to tear down
the evil spirits dominating Graynor, Captain Gobli of Jade Lady
agreed to undertake the
hazardous mission. Fighting men filed aboard the ship. Sharon joined, together
with Chamock and Wilkie.
Gangly,
in his element, checked over everything and everyone against some complicated
calculations in his mind.
"You sure you know what you're doing,
Gangly?" asked Chamock, fretting, pulling his great sword up higher.
"Perfectly. We will have to move physically in this Dimension of yours, Chamock.
Then we can return. I know."
"I'm glad someone
does," remarked Wilkie caustically.
Skirting
the massif buttressing the Hold of Graynor they set off westward into the blue
horizon band with the sun shining on their backs.
Steadily, at twenty miles
an hour, they sailed onward.
Gangly
became extraordinarily preoccupied, refusing to talk.
"Well,"
enthused J. T. Wilkie. "I figure the Contessa would be pretty proud of us
if she could see us nowl"
Sharon nesded up to him as they stood in the break of the stemcastle.
"Why
are you so fanatically loyal to your Contessa, J. T.?" She smiled and,
reaching over, nibbled his earlobe. "I really think you love her more than
you do me."
He
squeezed her waist. "You know better than that, Sharoh. Sure, I owe her
allegiance. She saved my life. My pal was killed and pubicked by people trying
to injure her, and she's a wonderful woman—but, don't you see, there's no
comparison." J. T. Wilkie, brash dame-chasing J. T., chuckled and grabbed
Sharon and kissed her. "You and she will get along just fine. You'll
see!"
For
the expedition both Sharon and Wilkie had dressed in leathers and armor, bronze
and flexible. They carried those useful and lethal short spears and swords hung
at their sides. They wore burgonets, the flaps up now.
With
a serious demeanor Gangly, somehow gaining in poise and stature and with
nothing left of the clown, took up station amidships. He stood wide-straddled,
his arms folded on his breast, his head high and proud.
With
a sudden impatient movement he snatched off that ridiculous swathing turban and
helmet. His bullet-head gleamed in the sunshine.
Wilkie
experienced a sudden wrenching in his stomach, as though he had twisted a gut,
and then the ship, with a lurch, righted herself and floated serenely in the
air of a different world.
Overside,
the long gray rollers of a sea that stretched from horizon to horizon poured in
lacings and patternings of green beneath their keel.
"Where?"
yelled a dozen voices. Shouts and shocked cries arose. Pandemonium threatened
to break out.
Captain Gobli, his paunch shaking, rushed
frantically about, quite unsure what to do. Chamock grabbed him,
quieted him down. Wilkie heard words like: "Special dispensation,"
and: "Perfectly natural," and: "No fear before the men."
At twenty miles an hour the
ship bore due south.
Again
Gangly positioned himself. His breast rose and fell as he breathed in deep
measured preparation.
Once
more that jerk, that wrenching of his stomach, told Wilkie they had traveled to
another world.
This
time he looked over and saw wheat fields, reticulated, stretching from horizon
to horizon. A long concrete road cut the wheat fields, bordered by telegraph
poles. At a crossroad he saw a large signpost, unmistakably what was a gas
station, a few automobiles raising dust. He thought the printing on the
sign—large and bold—could have been: Wichita—topeka.
But he couldn't be sure at the height and distance. He felt faint. Kansas!
Could it be? Could he be home?
At
twenty miles an hour, five hundred feet up, the ship of Durostorum sailed
serenely through the air of the Midwest and the only Earthman aboard sweated
it out, waiting to be hurled away from his home world into another alien
Dimension.
This time the lurch was
more severe than before.
Wilkie
glanced quickly at Gangly, forgetting in his entranced preoccupation with his
mission among the Dimensions all thoughts of Earth.
Gangly looked ill. His face had shrunken.
Great globules of sweat rolled down his flaccid features. His bullet-head
looked as though a bucket of water had been hurled over it. He staggered and
grasped the struts of the wooden fighting tower for support.
"You all right?" Wilkie asked, concerned. He and Sharon ran
to Gangly. Chamock joined them with Captain Gobli.
Gangly
swallowed with difficulty. "I am—all right. It is difficult, transporting
an entire ship of Durostorum and all her fighting men. But I can do it!"
Sharon brought a cloth and bathed Gangly's
forehead and bullet-head. He smiled thanks.
"I
have to find large Portals. The ship is big to move. . . . But the next one
will be the one! Durostorum! The Hold of Graynor!"
Only then did Wilkie think to look over the
side.
The ship moved above low lying cloud banks,
flushed pink and rose by the early sun; through the gaps lakes and rivers and
forests were visible and yet half-enwrapped in coiling arms of vapor.
Concentrations of round-domed buildings showed by the rivers, and canoes
flashed sparkling paddles, churning the water.
A man yelled, quick and high. The sound of crossbows being hurriedly wound
clanked around the decks.
Wilkie
looked up. He gasped. Boring in toward the ship flew cat-like creatures, all
banded orange -fur and white whiskers, with bat-like wings that rose and fell
with a frenzied beat. Insensately the flying felines hurled themselves at Jade Lady
to be met by hurtling arrow
and singing quarrel, by flashing blade and deadly thrusting pike.
Like
a mammoth of the snows surrounded by snarling sabertooths, Jade Lady
struggled on. Wilkie joined
in, thrusting with his spear, ducking, feeling the quick fear clogging his
throat, panting, anxious to be gone from this unexpectedly hostile Dimension.
His
spear slid ineffectually over the orange banded fur of a giant flying feline
falling fully on him. He rolled, managed a dabbing sort of baseball bat swipe,
knocked the thing off him, saw with profound gulping
thanks the sure pike point come spiking down. Sharon laughed, hurling the
still-struggling aerial cat overboard off the head of the pike.
"You were slow that
time, meamoro!"
He
struggled up. Unexpectedly hostile Dimension? Don't
let anyone fool you—all the Dimensions, but all of them— were hostile.
"Tripped," he
said snappily.
Charnock's
two-handed sword a circled disc of silver disposed of two, three more felines
with each whirling vicious revolution. Chamock chanted as he fought, the first
time Wilkie had heard that.
Gangly,
the object they strove to protect by their violent exertions,
sagged against the wooden fighting tower. He cringed back as a cat smashed
against a strut by his head. That only the forepart of the cat struck near him
made no difference to his flinching fear. That, Wilkie saw with a pang, was not
like the old stubbornly immovable Gangly. Shifting such a mass as Jade Lady
through the Dimensions was
telling on Gangly's Porteuring stamina. The flying swarm, spitting and
snarling, fell away from the ship.
Sagging back himself, J. T. Wilkie giggled.
"What will those people down below say when it rains bits and pieces of
flying cat?"
Chamock
began at once to wipe his six-foot blade, his face blazing with the battle
lust.
Gangly
swallowed and managed to husk out: "One more time. We will come out within
the Hold of Graynor. You must do—do what you must. Leave me. I—I shall need
time to recover."
Abruptly,
terribly, horrifically, J. T. Wilkie understood a stark fact he had overlooked
before.
If
anything happened to Gangly—then he, J. T. Wilkie, would be stuck in another
Dimension for the rest of his life.
This
Porteur, this funny old coot called Gangly, was the only Key to Earth that
Wilkie could call on now.
In
whatever Dimension they sailed now, Gangly, as the Key to Durostorum, could
bring them halfway home. There was always Sharon. . . .
"Hey,"
he said, fighting his own emotive thoughts. "What did you call me back
then—meamoro?"
She
glanced up with the self-same swiftness displayed by the flying felines.
"I called you that?"
"I
know the translator bands vary, they leave proper names, they alter some
things, and I know Gangly has a special band fixed—but you did say
meamoro."
"Well,"
she flashed. "Don't keep on repeating it like a loon!"
Refusing
to tell Wilkie what the word might mean—he had ideas, what with the old heat of
combat and jazz like that—she cleaned herself up. They all readied themselves
for this final leap back into Durostorum.
The care with which Gangly had mapped their
journey had been apparent in the heights of the ground—and the one ocean—over
which they had materialized. The largest drop had been about two feet.
Fervently, Wilkie prayed Gangly had made no mistake this time. Everyone waited.
The crewmen of the ship of Durostorum had given up wondering about what was
happening; miracles, all tied up with the evil they had come to Hold Graynor to
fight. Some chuckled coarsely: "We're fighting fire with fire!"
Silently, Wilkie suspected that what motivated their sword arms was the tempting thought of
plunder.
Upward
of a thousand men and women manned the ship, for the people of Durostorum
seemed to accept their wom-enkind in battle as part of the natural order of
war. Many waited impatiently below decks, between the ranked batteries of
ballistae, four decks to a broadside. Their fierce buzz of conversation acted
like a drug, spurring men on. Gangly poised himself, drunk with exhaustion,
half-dazed, half-blinded, still forcing on those
uncanny powers to hurl this whole war-machine and its crew through invisible
walls back to Durostorum.
Jade Lady swung to a halt and hung, unmoving, above those low-lying cloud banks
below.
"Now!"
shouted Gangly, hard and high and with frenzied fanatical effort.
The
ship shuddered. Wilkie felt his bowels contract. He kept himself upright,
grasping Sharon, looking out with open eyes he would not let blink.
The
sunshine vanished. They hung now within a dim space of shadows, a narrow
funnel-shaped pipe that stretched upward to an arching roof of stones and rocks
fully four hundred feet above their heads. They were inside the old cone of the
volcano.
The ship of Durostorum moved beneath them.
Over
the side, narrowly visible, was just discernible the ground—the ground a bare
twenty feet beneath their keel!
The
crewmen gaped. Captain Gobli gaped. Gangly slumped exhausted and unconscious to
the deck, his work accomplished.
At first only Chamock realized the
inevitable. "The ship!" he yelled. His swarthy face showed demoniac
determination. "We're going up!" Still giddy, Wilkie understood.
The ships of Durostorum, with their ancient
source of power, always floated five hundred above the ground. Now the ground
was twenty feet below. And above—above was a roof of rock and stone, crudely
lit by fissures and glowing fungi, four hundred and eighty feet above them.
They
were going up—they were going up like an express elevator.
And when they hit. . .
"Everybody below decks!" screamed
Chamock.
The
ship surged, rising like a cork, like a rocket, like a bubble of air released
from a sunken wreck. Everyone began a stampede below, choking the
companionways. Wilkie grabbed Sharon, began to ran
for the sterncastie.
"Gangly!"
yelled Wilkie. Chamock scooped up the unconscious Porteur,
began to run after Wilkie and Sharon.
The roof swept down like the lid of a closing
cauldron.
Chamock cannoned into Wilkie,
bashed him stumbling forward into Sharon. They collapsed into the open doorways
as—
The ship struck the roof. ...
XTV
With some measurable fraction of the force of an underground
nuclear explosion Jade Lady burst through the crust of rock in the center of the floor of Hold
Graynor.
The
floor split open from the central point of impact, cracking like a shattered
mosaic, tumbling, roaring, fountain-ing dust and rock chippings. Like some
nightmare Aphrodite rising from the waves, debris crowned, Jade Lady soared aloft through the shattered wreckage
of that rocky shell to float five hundred feet above the invisible ground of
the cone bottom. Movement away from the hole she had so catastrophically
created would bring her over the inner Hold floor and then, inevitably, she
would be flung up again to hover at five hundred feet.
Now
she hung in a tangled mass. Smashed, her back broken, her stem and forecastles
stripped and flattened, her fighting top crushed like a child's matchstick
castle, she dribbled debris into the chasm.
Shrieks and screams tore from her. Men and
women, their holds slipping free, tumbled over to fall away below. Timber,
ropes, furnishings, barrels, stores of all kinds, spilled from her shattered
sides.
Jade Lady, quite literally, was falling to pieces around her power box.
Soon,
all that floated in the air five hundred feet above the ground would be that
small enigmatic box.
Perhaps
it was that the four hoboes of the Dimensions had not quite plunged bodily into
the stemcastle and lay sprawled on the threshold that they were saved of the
few who lived through that debacle.
They saw the stemcastle crush down like a
carton beneath a foot. The roof of rock, before it split, squashed down on
stem and forecastle and left, for a minute pro-1 portion of time, a
free space over the waste between them. In that open area the four lived.
With
rocks sliding away from the deck, stripping with them ballistae, men, women,
barrels, ropes, planks, the uproar choked and deafened and blinded them. When
at last, thankfully, Jade Lady rose into the sunshine streaming wreckage they could stagger up and gulp
and look about them, dazed and bewildered—but alive.
Spitting dust, Chamock
glared over the side.
"We've
got to get off the ship and over that crust of rock before it all goes!"
he snapped. Even as they watched more of the rock crust that was both roof
through which they had burst and floor to the Hold cracked and fell away. Of
the over thousand souls aboard Jade Lady perhaps four hundred now crowded to the
shattered rails.
Planks,
ropes, spars were thrown out. Rickety bridges were constructed. The area lay
directly in the center of the Hold and above them in a complete circle towered
the bastions of Graynor. Over the rocks toward them ran parties of fighting
men, their weapons flashing.
"No
time left now!" grunted Charnock. He grabbed Gangly, shouted at Wilkie,
and charged for the rail.
Across a raffle of wreckage, all moving and
swaying, their feet slipping and sliding with heart-stopping danger, they
clambered across to solid ground. Others followed. A band
gathered, ready weapons brandished.
"We've
no time to get involved in a fight," gasped Wilkie. Gangly was reviving,
rolling his eyes, moaning. "We came for that damn Portal—and that's what
we'll get!"
"Right." Chamock pointed toward a cleft in the rocks
a hundred yards off, away from that shattered cone opening. "Come
on!"
In a bunch, Gangly being shoved along among
them, they set off. Other people follqwed their move.
A large, redheaded, beautiful girl with smooth clear features,
ran with a young freckle-faced man whose brandished ax indicated clearly his
capacity to use it. They hared after Wilkie, and the swarthy-faced crewmen of
the destroyed ship of Durostorum chased after them.
The cleft led to a tunnel angling up toward
the ramparts.
Captain
Gobli, his paunch heaving, shouted: "To the shipyards! If we hold a
berthing space for our own ships, we take the Hold!"
That had been the plan, to secure a landing
stage within one of the clefts so that the prowling ships could sail in and
their crews fight their way up the flights of stairs to the ramparts within the
Hold. It might still work. Chamock drew Wilkie back and, with Sharon and
Gangly, they watched the others roar off.
"They
11 mayhap win their battle, but we've the Con-tessa's fight to win,"
snarled Chamock, his face showing his agony at this betrayal of fellow
countrymen.
Up
the stone corridors they ran, their feet slapping echoes from the walls. Once
or twice Wilkie turned with vulpine sharpness, thinking he heard the following
pad of feet, but each time the corridor returned an empty hollowness to his
searching gaze.
Chamock
hauled them into a stone-cut chamber with heaps of sacks piled at one end.
Trails of com ears showed golden tears in the lamplight.
"Right, Gangly. How do you feel? It's all up to you now—again."
Gangly
swallowed. He rubbed a hand over his bullet-head. He shivered. "I—I
wondered if I could do it. By thunder—but I did it, though! All that mass, a
whole ship of Durostorum and crew—I moved it all through a Portal!"
"More
than one Portal," said Wilkie sofdy. "But now, me old fruit, we have
to find the Portal where the Por-vone have set
up."
"It's
about," nodded Gangly. "I can sense it near. They would have kept it
well concealed. Very well hidden."
"But
you can find it for us, Gangly, can't you?" The quick eagerness in
Sharon's words, the intent thrusting posture of her head, the golden hair
bound up now beneath the burgonet with still enough to hang down like a golden
curtain about her ears, surprised J. T. Wilkie.
The
Hold of Graynor had been thrown into confusion by that abrupt incursion of a
ship of Durostorum. Men ranged within the citadel seeking the intruders. More
than once the party had to skip quickly into shadowed hiding to avoid flaming
brands and menacing weapons.
Yet
Gangly led them on a straight path, following that uncanny instinct that told
him the exact location of a Gate
to another Dimension.
Inevitably, they met
guards.
Whirling
his great sword in two-handed combat, Char-nock leaped forward. Blurring to
dizzying speed, the long blade lopped through arms and upflung shields,
decapitated, sank deeply into inadequately armored bodies. Wilkie and Sharon
with their spears went in hard, prodding and thrusting, clearing away the
guards whose slavering attempts to pull down Chamock from the side all fell
away in red ruin. Even Gangly, wielding a stump of pike shaft, cracked a few
heads.
The guards, mere mortal
men, gave way.
Only
one, a giant wielding a sword that could have been the sister blade to
Chamock's own, gave them trouble. Then the Contessa's bargeman showed his
mettle. The long blades rang and sang as they clashed. In and out and round and
round the fighters danced in their duel of death. Tough as was his opponent,
the man facing Chamock did not possess that evil-faced man's sheer driven
determination. Like a barracuda churning through a victim fish Chamock whittled
his opponent down and then, with a final swishing blow, struck him to the
ground.
As
Gangly dived for the dropped two-handed sword, Wilkie saw Sharon pushing
something back beneath her bronze armor. She smiled bravely at him.
"I thought,
then—" she said, faltering.
"We're
there," said Gangly, surging upright with the double to Chamock's sword
gripped in his fists. "Through that oaken door. . . ."
Just
what Wilkie expected inside the room he could not have said. Magic, sorcery,
super-science, he just had no clear idea. What he saw, while at first glance
seemed mundane, shrieked at him with the complete failure of their quest.
That
square opening, about five feet tall and two feet across, showed the complete
faceless blackness of utter nothingness. Blackness like that looked indecent.
Set into the far wall the Porvone Portal of Life leered at them across the
tessellated paving of the room. At its side a control panel, small, the size
of a high quality tape recorder, sat on a spindly-legged table. From the panel
thick cables coiled to the base of the Portal and to a power source keyed in to
busbars and a frame fronting a dynamo and generator crouching in the far
recesses of the room. With that rig running no wonder the stories of demons and
possession were rife in the Hold.
But
the thing that held J. T. Wilkie in a stasis of regret at complete failure was
held in the hands of the three men who turned at this unceremonious entrance.
Their faces were not those of Durostorum. Smooth, well-fed, hard and merciless,
they were the faces of scientists geared to an evil regime. Or,
so shattered J. T. Wilkie considered with sick despair.
In
their hands these men held unmistakable high-energy weapons, barrels of coiled
baffles, cone-shaped muzzles, butts of plastic slick under the lights that were
not oil lamps or rushlights but brilliant fluorescents.
Chamock,
recognizing the death in those weapons, drew himself up, his bloodied sword
high and glittering.
The
men wore simple high-collared tunics with many jewels emblazoned in arcane
patterns across their chests. They frowned now, as though interrupted.
"You
know it is death to enter here," their leader said in a soft
snake-like.voice.
Through
stiff lips, Wilkie blurted out: "Haven't you heard the racket outside? The
Hold is takenl The enemy have broken through!"
"Still it is death for you—"
Directly
to Gangly's rear, where he stood with his foolish great double-handed sword
upraised, Sharon stood quietly, breathing shallowly, her face set and hating.
Wilkie saw her reach into her armor where she had pushed something back and
draw out what was, as unmistakably as the weapons held by these servants of the
Porvone, a handgun. Chunky of butt, with a smooth flared barrel, the thing
looked compact and deadly. She lifted it, leveled it, leaned around Gangly and
fired three times.
Three
lances of intense magenta light streaked out, making Wilkie blink the tears
back. His vision coruscated with flashing afterimages. Where
the three men had stood toppled now three cadavers with heads and arms and
legs and not much else.
The stink of heat-flashed burning meat filled
the room.
"You—!" shouted Chamock, shocked.
"That's my girl, Sharon!" yelled
Wilkie, enraptured.
Sharon
disgustedly wrinkled her nose. "You know I met my people, J. T. They gave
me a weapon as insurance. It has not been necessary to use it before."
"Huh? Well, I suppose those fights we
went through—no," he finished lamely. "No, I suppose not."
With an eagerness that sat strangely on his
misshapen form, Gangly, the professional Porteur, crossed lumbering-ly to the
Porvone Portal of Life. He put down the great sword. He ran his hands over the
control panel lovingly, yet disdainfully.
"This
is it!" he said, with deep feeling. "This box contains all that is
necessary. I was fully instructed by the Contessa. That Slikitter knew what he
was talking about. The box takes power from there"—he pointed at the
dynamo and generator—"and sets up a force that creates an electro-mechanical
pathway between the Dimensions through a Gate."
"I wonder—?"
began Chamock.
Gangly
nodded. "Wayne will be waiting at the other side. He had the easier task.
As soon as this Porvone Portal is disconnected, he will know we have succeeded." .
He
didn't bother to switch off the portable control panel. His thick fingers
simply ripped out the connections.
Where the achingly black emptiness of that opening onto another world
had been now showed merely a deeply-cut recess into the wall. Marks showed clearly where the wall had been
cut away and built around the Gate.
Gangly took up the control
box by its carrying strap.
"We
have merely to position this by any Gate we choose, connect a power supply, and
we have a working Porvone Portal of Life."
"Just
what the Contessa ordered!" chuckled happy J. T.
Wilkie with fatuous satisfaction.
"What
the Contessa ordered!" repeated Chamock in a different voice. He shifted
his great sword to his left hand, moved in a blurring of speed, took Sharon's
little gun away with a single contemptuous twist. "Now!"
"Huh?" huffed shocked J. T. Wilkie.
"Oh,
J. T.!" said Sharon, white-faced, rigid, frightened. "My people told
me stories of your Contessa—stories I could not believe because you trusted her
and I love you—oh, J. T. I think that now we—"
"What about the
Contessa?" said J. T.
"My orders, J. T., from the Contessa herself. I am sorry. I find I do like you, J. T., and
you, Sharon. We have been through a lot together; but—but the Contessa!"
Char-nock's evil face, that J. T. Wilkie thought he had seen through as merely
a hard world-daunting mask to the essential man beneath, now clearly showed
anguish and agony at what he must do. "I dare not disobey the Contessa! I
must kill you, J. T., and you, too, now, Sharon. I must!"
"But why, Charnock? Why?" Wilkie pleaded. "I'm loyal
to the
Cootessa. You could go, take the Portal, leave us
here—"
The bitter agony writhed on
Chamock's devil-mask.
,"No, J. T. You do not understand the power of the Contessa. Yes, she is evil,
cruel, eveiything a man must hate, but she holds me in thrall. There are powers
I do not understand, forces that compel me to act, to do things I shudder at
doing! Oh, J. T., when I kill you, you will be a free man, unlike me!"
"For the sake of our
comradeship, show us mercy!"
"For
the sake of the Contessa di Montevarchi, I must kill you now!"
"No!"
"I must serve the
Contessa! I must!"
"The Contessa—the bitch!" The new hating voice had no time to swing
all their heads around in shocked surprise, so locked in their bitter and
desperate argument and blind to the open door, before a man catapulted in and,
bloody ax held high, charged straight for Wilkie.
In
galvanic reaction Wilkie dodged and brought his spear up. The ax clanged
against the metal haft, twisted, sent the men spinning.
"Tony!" screamed
a girl's voice.
A
sliver of steel hurtled through the air, cracked the gun from Chamock's hand. A
redheaded girl bounded in, screaming something about a frog's more disgusting
habits, took a great hack with a sword at Chamock, whose left-handed parry came
up only just in time.
Sharon
went diving for her gun. Gangly shoved himself back out of the fray. With a fending-off
prod of his spear at Tony, Wilkie brought the shaft back and bashed the butt
into Chamock's solar plexus. The big man grunted and, apparently not the
slightest hurt or slowed up, started a lethal swipe at Wilkie's head.
Desperately trying to duck that long blade, Wilkie thought his chips had
finally ran out.
Chamock stilled. The blade hung, then,
slowly, lowered. Panting, Wilkie scrambled up. The gun in Sharon's hand
centered steadily on Chamock's midriff.
"No more, Chamock. And you
two—still!"
"Now,"
puffed Wilkie. "We can look at the situation more calmly." He clunked
his spear on the floor. "You," he said to the freckle-faced man with
the sandy hair. "I remember you, Tony. And you," to the girl.
"When you escaped down the abandoned mine shaft in the city of diamonds in
Irunium. That seems a long time agol But—but you're different—different—"
"I'm
Nyllee. Sure, we're different. We stayed with the Wizards of Senchuria. They
change people—for the better."
Chamock moved and the gun
flicked and he was still.
Tony
said, "We were separated from those who escaped, Valcini. We were caught
in a flood and found we were in a Dimension called Durostorum. Nyllee here
always likes a fight and so we signed up. There didn't seem anything else to
do—and we had an idea there might be some hocus-pocus with Portals going on
here, give us a chance to get back. We saw you aboard Jade Lady
and bided our time to kill
you." He finished with bitter self-mockery. "We should have killed
you as soon as we saw you, Valcini, and you, bargeman."
"I'm not a
Valcini," snapped Willde.
"You work for the
Contessa—"
"Do
I?" He looked at Sharon. He thought a tumbled riot of new and painful
thoughts. "I don't know—not any more."
"When
we've finished telling you about her you'll hate yourself so much you'll slit
your own throat."
"The
Contessa will not be mocked," said Chamock, hoarsely. "She has ways
of knowing what goes on in the Dimensions. She will squeeze you all so dry,
you—"
"She
tried to destroy the Wizards," Nyllee burst out violently, comparing the
Contessa to a frog's debauched night affairs. "She is evil, vile, she may
have succeeded, we do not know—we had weapons, but they exhausted their charge,
the panecos. Our friends—" She sounded distraught in the aftermath.
"I
heard her mention," said Wilkie, "that she failed to destroy the
Wizards of Senchuria. She said something about—the Infalgon,
was it? A man called Scobie Redfem. They failed."
"Ah!" Both Nyllee and Tony expanded,
smiling.
Chamock
ground out words like a Joy Contmuous-miner spitting coal. "Are you going
to kill me now, J. T.?"
That thought was not rollicking J. T.'s idea
of fun.
Gangly,
a silent observer, spoke softly. "Chamock dare not return to the Contessa
without the Porvone Portal, J. T. As for me—" His ridiculous head moved as
though dismissing his own importance.
"Yes,
J. T. Kill me now. At least I will gain my freedom!"
"The Contessa," choked Wilkie. A blind fool? A deluded lapdog? A cretinous simpleton? Yes, oh, yes, he had been all those
things—and more. But kill Charnock?
Sharon's
blue eyes did not leave Chamock, but Wilkie knew she was leaving this decision
to him.
"No,"
he said at last. "Gangly, you can put thse people where they want to
go." He turned to Nyllee and Tony. "Where—?"
"Montrado," said Tony.
"Narlingha," said Nyllee.
They
checked, looked at each other, then, together, said,
"Senchuria."
About
to reply in his lumbering way, Gangly checked. His pointed head turned, long
before the others heard the clap of air from the recess in the rock wall.
A
man appeared through the Gate where the Porvone Portal of Life had been
erected. A bulky, brutal-faced man clad in black armor, wielding a sword. In
his belt over the armor power-weapons hung in holsters that swayed with the
violence of his movements.
"Come on, you stupid steechla!" he
rasped out. From the glittery chain attached to his left wrist a young, pallid,
half-naked girl drooped, her face twisted with pain. The iron necklet cut
deeply through the wisp of pink silk at her throat. Her eyes were closed.
"Wayne!" shouted Chamock, high and savage. "What! Traitors! Treachery!" Wayne's bull roar battered across the room.
He rapped the sword away and with crackling speed drew an energy-weapon. He
leveled it at Sharon. But that moment of
weapon-change had been enough. Sharon fired first. Her magenta blast of power
smashed the shadows from the room in a ferment of brilliance, missed Wayne,
cut through the glittery chain.
"Put
us back, filthy steechla!" roared Wayne. He reached a massive left hand
for the soft shoulder of the girl. Her eyes flew open. Chamock jumped for the
recess and on the way snatched the portal control panel box from Gangly's
nerveless hand. Gangly fell back with a cry.
Wayne, the girl Porteur, and Chamock,
vanished. The silence smoked with drained energies. Then a smooth, cultivated,
easy-paced voice said, "You are quite all right, Sharon?"
Men stood in the doorway, men dressed in neat
silvery-gray tunics and pants with calf-high boots, men with hard yet
confident, friendly faces, men with heavier weapons from the same stable as the
magenta-beam weapon given to Sharon.
She laughed, a choked cry that released her tension and emotion.
"Oh, yes, Lybore, oh,
yes, I am all right!"
They
crowded into the room, these men from Leon, tough, patrician, in command.
"We
seem to have opened up a whole new volume of Dimensions." said the leader,
Lybore, smiling at Sharon. "A volume in which there are many trade
opportunities. And there is this Contessa we warned you about, Sharon. Now you
perhaps are ready?"
She looked at J. T. Wilkie.
"These
people," she said to Lybore, indicating Nyllee and Tony. "We are
obligated to transport them to the Dimension of their choice. This man, Gangly,
is free to go where he lists."
"Ah,
so. A
Porteur, then?" said Lybore.
"Yes. And a friend."
"And
this man—this rather ragged and frazzled specimen of humanity?"
Sharon
laughed. "This is J. T. Wilkie. I imagine he wants to go to a Dimension
called Earth."
"Well,
now," said blossoming J. T. Wilkie. "The Con-tessa's got her Porvone
Portal of Life. And I know her for what she is—or some of it, according to poor
old Chamock. But he'll be okay now."
Gangly nodded solemnly.
"The
Contessa—I feel regret, and yet, if she is so evil, if she's so, so—"
Gangly said gently,
"She is, J. T."
"Well,
then, I'm well rid of her. But—hell and damnation! I've lost all that pay that
was coming to me."
"You
were facing the ultimate double cross you were sure to get if you went back."
"Um.
Yes. But—" He looked at Sharon. She lowered her eyelids, a most
uncharacteristic and artificial gesture for her.
"I
think, though, before you guys drop me off back in good old Hodson on Earth,
that 111 take a little swing through the Dimensions with Sharon." He tried
to look modest, did dame-chasing J. T. "Wilkie. "We've
a little unfinished business to attend to."
He took Sharon's hand. She squeezed it
firmly.
"Well," he said with a huge soulful
sigh. "I guess that's my dame-chasing days finished."
They
went out together, out from that Hold of Duros-torum, to journey across the
Dimensions to home—wherever that home might be, Leon or Earth.
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